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Page 29 text:
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Page 28 text:
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Y' .. ' ' .. . . xl 2-:r '! f'T' . SF. ?1t 'ta S-.? 4 ' I '- ' U .. Y J. fill. 5' . .1 -Tw af. .. :fLJ33l??.f ' My H U , .cf 1 14. . . w ..irf.,, :xg - ', f.1iV:'.551,., , , W , .,.. 'N ., -. V, f 1 ,E 1. , , n ,-.-1, f-I--535-fy - ...1, fr ff, ju-,gbgv ',.,,,,,1,, 1 M- Y-i'gAgg:5:..z:s,l L.Le.1i .2123 Exit'-ffsiai-a-1.ffm-JQELE-wiefiaxzzef15512 --w:::vf,4 .:ai:..iQj. x-1:-sans-135:-wmesw .. EMMA L. GRIDLEY . Attention! Ready! Draw! This is kind and patient Miss Gridley. She talks about artistics, paintings, architects, etc., and shows you how to make baskets and weave little rugs. Oh, yes, she quite frequently reminds you of the necessity of going abroad in order to understand art. But, of all things, she even expects you to find beauty on the surface, in lines anddby grouping. I-Iurryli' That's her advice. , MRS. DANNETTA M. ECKDALL . g A Mrs. Eckdall teaches you to see things as they are by making you draw them. She has a philosophy of her own through which she interprets all things in the world as light and shade. Queer, but she loves her pupils and thinks them dearS. She urges you to study de-tail in all objects. Some students are thinking of erecting a bronze statue. to her honor with this epi- gram inscribed: All parallel horizontal retreatinglines ,tend to vanish on a level with the eye. A good teacher, because she makes you see and observe the beautiful in the most unexpected places. KATHERINE MORRISON A 'Miss Morrison is another who has her abode in the drawing department. Draw? Well she insists on the necessity of being able to draw, especially if you are in Drawing la. Charcoal? Always had more on my hands' than on my paper. Never will forget that class as long as I live. Couldn't ,draw at all, yet she was so patient with me. She is a good teacher, and kept me busy doing my sketches. - HERBERT H. BRAUCHER Professor Braucher teaches the boys and girls to hit the nail onthe head: to measure, cut, square, and smooth avboard. Manual Training? Yes, that's what he calls it, but I'd call it carpentering. Mechanical Drawing is another subject of his. He is not particular. Only. requires the students to draw the plates in 'pencil first and then ink them. Lines must be of different width and show contrast or they won't be accepted. No second best is allowed. He has no assistant, but is a whole department unto himself. MRS. BETH WARNER MULL . , Mrs. Mull reigns in the Home Economics Department. 'She is rather small and always walks in a big hurry. I-Iot water surely must be scorching! A sworn enemy of dirt. Hates it worse than poison. Her office is room No. 23, in the basement of the main building. She is busy as well as her Students. Even with her numerous duties, She is kind and ready to help others, even unto making a menu for a football training table. GERTRUDE FLINN Miss Flinn's way is marked by an abundance of pins and needles, needles and pins. Her room is full of high tables and chairs. On the walls of the room are scattered queer looking papers, cut into all shapes and sizes. My best girl told me they were patterns-funny things, I don't see what they are patterned after. Now, you see it'S just this way, SQLYS MiSS FUH11- The C19-SS sees how it is. but I don't. . 15
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Page 30 text:
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- - f ,.q+-.-.,....-g---....a-,.-qa.xa..- ....a..,- LYMAN C. WoosTER If you want to learn about plants, rocks, bugs, insects and other critters, enroll in Dr. VVooster's class. Witli the aid of those queer looking charts and pictures hanging on the wall, he can tell you lots of things you didn't know before. Evolution, did you say? Yes, he believes in evolution, but in the broader meaning of the term. It sometimes embarrasses new students' to have him stroke his chin, and point his fingers at them. Travels, a great deal and always comes back with rocks and fossils in every pocket. He is a fresh air enthusiast and raises chickens as a side line. Has 'em trained, tho', so they won't scratch up his garden. That smile is a perpetual one-it wonlt come off. Iinterested in athletics? Well, I shouldhope. Never was known tovmiss a game. He has written many pamphlets and books on botany, Zoology and geology. , - ' LOTTIE E. CRARY e i 1Miss,Crary is the genius of the biological department. She knows all about flowers, grasses, bugs, insects, etc. Busy? Always busy. No one ever saw her when she wasn't working away at something. Loves to get out in the spring and work with the flowers. Bugs! Bugs! The most interested person in Bug4 o1ogiy, you ever saw-has a collection of three-legged wriggly onesi' that she shows her classes. She has each of them named and can tell your their characteristics, peculiarities, good and bad points. And what is more. she expects you to remember all about her- pets Miss Crary is a thorough teacher, enjoys her work and possesses the gift of making her students enjoy it. CHARLES R. PHIPPS p . Phipps is the farmer of the faculty, that is, hehteaches Agriculture. Tells the boys how to raise corn and feed swine, how to keep the bugs out ofthe wheat, etc. He is a pleasant fellow and always ready to help. Never to be caught loafing, but busy all the time. If you will peep into room No. 19 you will see some of the results of his labors. VVhen it comes to coaching football he is right there. Coached the Scrubs last fall and brought the boys out of it so that they gave the varsity team a chase worthy of notice. Yes, a man in- terested in' the school and doing things for the school. . FRANK U. G. AGR-ELIUS This man is a K. S. N. alumnus, who went to K. U. to work, but could not resistthe, back to K. S. N. habit. Unlike many other people, he is interested in little things, that is, Microbes. He teaches Botany and Zoology in the Science Hall, and spends all of his spare moments growing bacteria and studv- ing them through Queer looking machines. Takes great delight in his work and gets next. That corrugated smile indicates that he believes in fun as well as work. He always has a story at the physiological moment. . l T
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