New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1934

Page 13 of 296

 

New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 13 of 296
Page 13 of 296



New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 12
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New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 14
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Page 13 text:

.' J. 'D 1 EDUCATIONAL RISE OF CHANCELLOR HARRY WCODBURN CHASE AT DARTMOUTH By HERMAN H. HORNE, Proferror of llae Hirlory of Education and of lhe Hirtory of Philosophy. Dr. Clmrehr Teacher al Dmvmozztla. N those days, the first decade of the twentieth century, Dartmouth College, at Han- over, New Hampshire, was receiving the stamp of nationality under the administration of William jewett Tucker, one of America's great college presidents. Students were making the long trip to Dartmouth, before the days of autos and buses, from all sections of our country. Boys born and bred in New England who were accustomed to think of Harvard, Yale, and other colleges of their region, began to become Dartmouth-conscious and to set their faces toward the granite of New Hampshire and the old college of Daniel Webster and Rufus Choate, now small no longer. h And so came Harry Woodburn Chase from the town of Groveland, Massachusetts, where he had been brought up as a scion of old New England stock. His father was a quiet, reserved man with practical interests in life. His mother, whose middle name he bears, was a woman of unusual intellectual brilliancy, whose two sons were her jewels. The home life was not-luxurious, and its interests were not material. College for Harry was an ambition fulhlled. As in life, there are many types of persons in college-the social, the athletic, the routine, the literary, the business, the uplift. Young Chase was always the scholar. His quick and capacious intelligence made learning a pastime. He read widely, especially in French literature. He wrote stories for the college magazine in French. His grades were high without effort on his part. His genius turned work into play. His versatility easily surmounted every academic hurdle. His youth was full of promise, all were agreed on that point. Yet he was no academic recluse. His allowed cuts were taken. He had intimate friends. He helped found a new local frater- nity. He kept in touch with his old associations. Trying out many subjects his facile and penetrative mind searched through the ranges of philosophy, where it was my job both to direct and keep up with him. Plato and Kant espe- cially engaged him, and his life came to rest on the ethical imperatives. What the home had planted, Dartmouth tended. The rest is but fruition. lt was but natural that two decades later Dartmouth should crown its own work and DARTMOUTH STUDENT his with an honorary LI..D. 1 2 '

Page 12 text:

To HARRY WOODBURN CHASE Eighth chancellor, brilliant leader, indomitable lighter, administrator of unquestionable ability, we dedicate the 1934 Commerce Violet. In your first year at New York University you have given generously of your vision, courage scholarship, but transcending all you have cn- deared yourself as a beloved friend.



Page 14 text:

AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA By R. B. House, Executive Secretary Under the wise, informed, tolerant, but always vigorously progressive guidance of President Harry Woodburn Chase, the University of North Carolina in slightly more than a decade 0919-19501 expanded its plant by a capital investment of approximately six million dollars. Its maintenance funds increased from S217,000 a year to 3880,000 a year. Its student body increased from 1,028 to 2,825. Its faculty increased from 66 to 158. Specifically, twelve university departments, the Graduate Club, and the administrative offices were all housed in new buildings or in newly worked over build- ings. One of the most beautiful stadiums in the country was erected, and the whole expansion was capped by a magnificent library. A student union building, a memorial bell tower, and a new auditorium were begun. In its organization, divisions of student welfare, a School of Commerce, of Public Welfare, of Engineering, the Institute for Research in Social Science, and the University Press were added, and the Division of Extension was greatly increased. The salary scale of the faculty was more than doubled. Professor Ogg, in the volume entitled A Survey of Rerearrls in the Humewirlir and Social Scienrer, compiled by the American Council of Learned Societies, says: The leadership in the new research movement in the South is traceable to one institution and to certain men and women in it, namely, the University of North Carolina. The explanation of this leadership seems to lie in an unusually keen appre- ciation of the possibilities of service to the people of the state, in the presence in the faculty of many vigorous, ambitious, and productive scholars, and in liberal support of research interests by the administrative authorities, facilitated, no doubt, by the notable economic and industrial development which the state has of late experienced. This expansion and enrichment coincided almost exactly with the beginning of President Chase's administration in 1919. President Chase measured up fully to the responsibility and the opportunity which, unsought, were placed on his shoulders at a time when as a member of the faculty since 1910 he was enjoying distinction A won in the field of his own specialty, psychology. In 1918 he had already been promoted to the deanship of the College of Liberal Arts. President Chase gave himself with humility and consecration to the problems that confronted him and himself grew to distinction in the process he guided. The University is in part an achievement of his spirit, he is in part an achievement of the University's spirit. Norm-1 CAROLINA FAREWELL 13

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