Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)

 - Class of 1943

Page 29 of 343

 

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 29 of 343
Page 29 of 343



Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 28
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Page 29 text:

sneezes or the sprains, the Hygiene Department headed by Dr. Arlie V. Bock provided prompt and eflicient solace. Most students chose to study. And when they did they had access to thousands of books well-classified by the numbers of capable librarians, under the direction of Keyes Dewitt Metcalf. Not even the autumn blackout of Boylston upset the methodical exactness of the staff. Less in the lime' light than these bookworms, but equally important were the many members of the Maintenance Department. The part of Harvard that never changes, the buildings and equipment, was their province. Business Manager Aldrich Durant and Dining Hall Director Roy Westcott provided the physical comforts and Publicity Director Arthur Sampson the emotional angle. There were others, many too numerous to name but all deserving of mention. They were the worksg they made Harvard click. From the moment when Chairman of Admissions Rich- ard M. Gummere said okay to the end of their college career, '45 and '44 saw the University through the eyes of its adminis- trators. And the visions they evoke in future years will be more the product of these men than of professors, as much of biddies as of instructors. ,,,.4--V x lux Dean R. F. French held office from March to October of this year. Dean Hanford discusses undergraduate academic affairs at periodic meetings with assistant deans in his office in University Hall. ' 'T V ar.. .saw . ,..:,..,?,,-T: 7' ' if-Y . l in r l 1 Jl29l

Page 28 text:

professor of history, as Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Beset by a constant stream of new freshmen, vari- ously termed '45, '45a, and '46, Freshman Dean Delmar Leighton plunged into a flood of problems. Settling freshmen in a university hopelessly entangled in war-time confusion was no picnic even with two capable assistants and a corps of beautiful secretaries. The Law School put in a patriotic year. It lost most of its students to the armed forces, and lent its faculty dean, james McCauley Landis, to the government as chairman of the Office of Civilian Defense. Edmund Morris Morgan, acting Dean of the Faculty in Landis, absence, guided the dwindling crop of lawyers through the year. Another major change in graduate administrative personnel came with the appointment of Donald Kirk David as Dean of the Business School. Dean David replaced Wallace B. Donham who, however, remained on the Business School Faculty. Where Dean Morgan's tasks slackened, Dean David's increased with the impetus of the war. Both the army and the navy introduced special courses training men for supply work, and in so doing presented the engaging problem of integrating the military with the regular graduate instruction. This problem-the planning of a program satisfactory for immediate exigencies and yet in line with the national war effort-plagued all the graduate schools. Thus overwhelming demands for doctors forced the Med School, under Dean Charles Burwell, to grind out M.D.'s at an unheard-of rate and at the other end to admit undergraduates without diplomas. Thus, too, everybody not precisely necessary to the war effort tried desperately to be so. More immediately concerned with the undergraduates as individuals were the ofhcers of administration. Known to some but strangers to most, they pulled the strings that regu- lated the studentls daily life. Dedicated to helping the student function better, they worked to keep him in shape, in health, in books-in just about everything. Inter-collegiate athletics, developed under the eye of Director of Physical Education and Athletics William J. Bingham-now a major in the army-put some in shape. Inter-House athletics on a broad scale together with the newly instituted compulsory conditioning program took care of the rest. And for those few who played too little or too much, the ones with the Edmund M. Morgan ftapj is Acting Dean of the Law School while james M. Landis works as head of the Office of Civilian Defense. Wallace B. Donham fnziddlej, retiring Dean of Business School, discusses problems with Donald K. David, the new Dean. Charles S. Burwell, Dean of the Medical School, has been an ac- tive member in the Infantile Paralysis and Cancer commissions.



Page 30 text:

THE FACLI LTY President Conant fvigbrj leaves the White House with Bernard President Roosevelt on the national rubber problem. As in the Baruch and Karl T. Compton of M. I. T., after reporting to last War, Mr. Conant is again doing vital scientific research. iso?

Suggestions in the Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) collection:

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

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Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

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Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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