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Page 23 text:
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DEAN WAHL Unfamiliar to most Oreadites, but of great significance in Kansas City hospitals, Dr. Harry R. Wahl is Dean of the Kansas University Medical School. Brought up in medical surroundings (his father was a doctor) and Johns Hopkins educated, Dean Wahl is proud of his profession and the men whose training he directs. His school of medicine ranks high in the nation. Dean Wahl is a specialist in pathology and a member of Sigma Xi, A.O.A., and Phi Beta Kappa. He insists that the first prerequisite for the medical profession must be the individual ' s unimpeachable integrity. No medical recluse, he has been active in international clubs and debating societies. Does he favor national socialization of medicine? He answers, Please, let ' s not debate that one. —Allan Cromley DEAN WERNER Can two live as cheaply as cm? What is the best frat on the Hill? These are samples of the 64 dollar questions encountered daily by Dean of Student Affairs Henry Werner. Besides being an adviser to men, he counsels the functioning of most campus activities and evidences his re- search chemistry background by teaching a class in food analysis. He regards himself as a listening post and certainly not a campus conscience. Englishborn, witty, and approachable, Dean Werner laughs about the change in coed conventions on the campus; in former days a crimson tipped cigaret butt would have been cause for faculty consternation. Routine-hating, he starts each day with a certain prayer: Please make today different from yesterday. His prayer is always answered. —Allan Cromley DEAN HABEIN A Minnesotan by birth, a Jayhawker by adoption, Miss Margaret Habein just happened into the teaching profession. Came the evolution into administrational work, a few positions in girls ' schools, and presto- K.U. ' s new dean of women. Tall, youthful Miss Habein likes people, and consequently, her job. In her few weeks in office she has found nothing but top people. She is extremely impressed with the sense of responsibility and keen interest in the school taken by the students. And I don ' t limit that to girls, she quickly adds. This is her first position in a coeducational school, and she is finding the new male problem most interesting. Growing up in the land of lakes made her a fiend for winter sports— skiing, skating, and ice boating. Her favorite game is basketball, however, and her primary worry at the moment is seeing only half the games this winter in crowded Hoch. —Don Diehl
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Page 22 text:
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DEAN LAWSON Very few college students, graduate from K.U. without at one time having changed enrollment or dropped a course; when this happens, the man they must convince is Paul B. Lawson, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts Sciences. Bald, bluff but candid, he startles many a freshman with his quick-spoken and positive manner. Born in India of Methodist missionary parents, he enjoys the associa- tion with his congregation at West Side Presbyterian Church, where he preaches every Sunday. He is proud of his easy accessibility to the student; he confers with more students than most college deans. To the often-voiced student anxieties as to what to major in, he advises, Don ' t worry too soon about specializing; master what you are doing now. —Allan Cromley DEAN MOREAU A lawyer ' s most important qualification is self-confidence. This is the opinion of stocky, sly, self-confident Frederick J. Moreau, Dean of the Law School. A showman in the classroom, he is a Philadelphia lawyer at wriggling out of student snares. (This showmanship is practiced with a different twist by the whistlers in front of the law barn. ) Dean Moreau has never been in politics, thinks men of the legal profession have a superior understanding of human nature, does not re- gard lawyers as being overly cynical. He believes that the ability to read carefully will always create a demand for legally trained men in all reaches of society. On the international situation he quotes Francis Leiber: The difference between governments is that ' over there, ' governments charter liberties; here, people charter governments. —Allan Cromley DEAN SWARTHOUT That din and babel one hears as he passes Frank Strong comes from the School of Fine Arts. Administering this wonderful institution where the women outnumber the men is regal, stern, visaged Dean Donald M. Swarthout. Born and raised, as he terms it, in a menagerie of musical instruments, he studied abroad four years at the Royal Censervatoiy of Music in Leipzig and one year in Paris. This is his 24th year at Kansas University. His cousin, Gladys Swarthout, appears this winter in the university concert series. Although probably classed as a longhair in the jazz vernacular, he has a sympathetic ear for swing; he enjoys some of the music of Kostelanetz and Goodman. His one qualification: that swing should not be all-absorb- ing in the person ' s musical appreciation. —Allan Cromley Kaufman-Graham
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Page 24 text:
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all photos by Hank Brown 1 er aw 0 M1C1; Candid The roar of motorcycles is heard with the screams of pedestrians as mechanized Jayhawkers burn up the hill to make that 8;00, Duane Postlethwaite calmly sheds the life blood of Parisian Knights, an ex-tax `cab, which was dastardly done-in by the Fourteenth Street hill, Bruce Coffin and Elden Kiddoo get ready to strike out for Bailey Lab atop the ATO skooter, mod- ern man ' s answer to the horse. ,ay 1 III it -..■••••■••■■•=.
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