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Page 19 text:
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nomena in terms of physical principles. It is using the methods of physics on the subject, biology. Long-winded pundits from the Sun and Board of Trustees gasped at that one.j It was in the field of Biophysics, of course, that Bronk attained his wide professional rep- utation. As professor at Pennsylvania, as director of the Eldridge Reeves Foundation for Medical Physics, and later on as professor of physiology at Cornell Med, his name had grown in affluence in this new field. But at the same time Cagain the paradoxb, Bronk was striving for a coordination of the sciences with one another, and attempting to find for his students a rapprochement between the spe- cialized fields of physical investigation and the broader, more parabolical implications of the liberal and classical arts. So great a reputation had he made for himself in the latter activity in fact, that newspapers and magazines singled out that particular facet of his educational philosophy for underlined comment at the time of his appointment as Hopkins' new president. The Evening Sun observed that, He thinks the University, with its emphasis 131 Dean Hawkins . . . School of Business . . . on graduate study, is the place for him to con- tinue his efforts to coordinate the sciences and link them with .the needs of the people. And Hopkins undergraduates, however, chilled by the importance attached by the new president to university work at the graduate level, could at least be assured that the notable advances made under Isaiah Bowman toward a broad- ening of the collegiate curriculum, whatever the field, would be continued. And in Bronk the biophysicist they would also find a man who, unlike most literature students, had also digested Coleridge's metaphysics, and who was as likely to discuss his college-editing days with Drew Pearson as the need for a new cyclotron.
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Page 18 text:
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Dean Kowwenhoven . . . School of Engineering . . . changing Hopkins myth. What his eventual place in the history of the University would be was yet, in the spring of '49, a question only the Levering bums were willing to answer, but general consensus among undergraduates had already carried him far along the road to pop- ularity, a feat-which, in many students' eyes, meant the battle was half won. The hand- shake, the warm interest in the curious stu- dent's problems, the kind words which were made the more impressive by their obvious sincerity-all made Detlev Wtilf Bronk Four- O with traditionally indifferent Joe Colleges at an early date. In many ways, the history of Bronk's ca- reer led many to think of him as inevitably on the road to Hopkins. Born in New York in 1897, the son of a divinity student who was at the time of his son's birth working on his doc- torate, Bronk seemed from his childhood to have been cast in the mold associated with the graduate university. Schooled at Swarthmore and Michigan Cwhere he received his doctorate in 1926j, he had been an assistant power engi- neer even before receiving his bachelor's, had taught physics at Pennsylvania before begin- ning graduate studies. Every step listed in Who's Who seemed the tryout for a bigger job later on. An ensign in the Naval Air Corps in 1918, he was to become Coordinator of Air Research for the Air Surgeon's Office, Head- quarters A.A.F., in the second war. An under- graduate at Swarthmore, he was to return in 1926 as associate professor and later Dean of men. His days of instructing there behind him, he was to return to Pennsylvania in 1929 as Johnson Professor of Biophysics. QThe alert if occasionally incautious Hopkins News-Lek ter scooped the held in '48 by finding the short- est definition of Bronk's chief interest. Said Dean Cox in a News-Letter interview: Bio- physics is the description of biological phe- -112
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Page 20 text:
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Zylzere wad a campud loo, if you ever noticed it . eanwhile, somewhere along the line that had led from Howard St. to Home- wood and from Gilman to Bronk, something had been changing at Hopkins. Where aca- demicians the World round had once raved about its leadership, Hopkins was now looked on as a school living on its laurels. Newspaper- men like john Gunther, once warmly partisan i er N f?Z'i-if fi?--e ei?
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