High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 16 text:
“
5 ts ? Lv- 1 .55 .W President CHARLES F. WISHART Twenty-one Years With Wishart About the time most of the present seniors were learning to toddle, Prexy Wishart came to Wooster. As the toddlers grew, so Wooster grew. In 1919 there was a plant of fourteen modern buildings, to-day there are twenty-five, some new, others aging, but all part of the Wooster scene. In those twenty-one years at least 31,075,000 have been invested in buildings and land for the college. In 1928-29, while alumni could still show their love for alma mater in a monetary way, the resources of the college were increased about a million dollars, mostly for endowment. Douglass Hall sprang up for men, and later, to be impartial, Babcock Hall for women. So Wooster has grown physically and financially. Under Prexy the college has also added a cubit to its scholastic stature. The faculty has doubled, the endowment WILLIAM R. WESTHAFER, Dean of the College has doubled, but so has the student body. Accordingly, Wooster's needs have doubled. Recently Prexy jolted his board of trus- tees by saying that Wooster must have one million dollars to mark time, and two mil- lion dollars to march ahead in the next ten years. He said that it now costs S700,000.00 a year to run Wooster. Under Prexy, then, Wooster has begun a drive for two million dollars. The object is to increase endow- ment funds, to enlarge the library, and to improve the campus. In a speech before the Presbyterian Gen- eral Assembly of 1937, Prexy pled for Q11 decent endowments, or Q21 decent inter- ments. Wooster has been training students for sixty-nine years, yet is not decrepit. Wooster, though not so big, is quite robust. The Index feels with Prexy that it is still too early for the burial.
”
Page 15 text:
“
vi' f? -2553 ' ' ' ' 1 ' ,4 , . 'I I V J ' ' -'35,-pg -- , -Jw s,u21i '!'v l ,Nu . Q, H 1.1 ff . N X X, f' 'ifx - L . f lu-'55 r ' 5: Q. V5 4 , . , . . fl -. ..:... AI' 2- H., '- :' f iff . . ' I fl T el k f 'whl,? lx 5 ' t :g i , 4... X V 4, .:-, VL . 1. in , 495.- qiw X J 1 I Fx ,N ' 2' 1 Y '-T 4 ' l .W Z u ' r L f . ' W n I 5 S 'C ' - . . u I .X 1 K' 5 u 'nv w , 5 , E . . 4- ,. 4 4 i rf 1 1 - E V, W A5 X 1 ' . , 23 F X 1 . ff 'im my I Wg - 1 J' 4 lr , ' ER - 1 ' -- 51, , gg gb-.aw 'U A:,.-, -5-U' ,Y - , . ,, . N . w i, I 1 'O' I A Fi ,. ' i F, 09? lm! J' H H H LA X I1 . za -- .p 1 z.. , FG, H Q.-. . . M. ,:,..'f1 HN .y YW :M ,W X mlm, .. . - ' i ,,,, , 1 , Qgaf 'HSWYQ-P - L K J. Wzhr .w-ZQszg, W7v I 4 f a' L H ' V -' SW' Q l . -, rw 9 , IEEL 'JF R . . i A ' ' 1! LI .- . Q 5 , Lil, ,W W 1 V -im-TU xml ?.w:w.wa5E3 gm. wwxfwwww 2452 KN V ga 1 W Wg Y I 1 w x Y ! v w
”
Page 17 text:
“
A Day With the Deans The Deans' Office. . .The Dean of Men? I-Iello. . .Yes, that card came from this office. I want to see James about his cuts. Has he been ill? No? He's been afraid to come? He'd better anyway. Yes, he's worked hard, but sixty-seven cuts mean a loss of credit...Well, he should have knowng it's in the Handbook. The Deans' Office . . . Long distance for the Dean of Women? It's very nice to have you so appreciative. . .We send those letters to the parents of all students who have grades below C. Home encouragement means so much. . . No, I wouldn't take her out of college . . . Yes, D is considered an unsatisfactory grade, but a student can graduate if three-fourths of his work is C. . . That's right, one-fourth may be D, thirty- one hours. . .Thank you for calling. The Deans' Office . . . Not at all . . . We always welcome constructive criticism. RACHEL MACKENZIE, Dean of Women RUTH LAMBORN '42 l. The Deans' Office. ..The Dean of the College? Yes, I have charge of chapel programs. . .I'm sorry, we'd like to, but it's against college policy to have political candidates appear on the chapel platform . . .No, I'm sorry, we don't lend our band. . . No, nor the uniforms. The busiest place about the college now- but for thirty years we got along without a dean. Then the process of evolution be- gan: first one dean, next two, and now for twenty years we have had three. Deans are the administrators of college rules, the President's first line of defense, buffers between students and faculty. Counsellors, storm troops in time of stress, and general custodians of the academic, social, and re- ligious traditions of Wooster. The coat- of-arms of the office-a shock absorber up- held by three caryatid deans, not recum- bent. BOB LOWERY '41 J oHN BRUERE, Dean of Men
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.