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Page 25 text:
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M iiii in i min i iin T ni ii in i inimi ii f ii i i n i i i iii i ni i ii r n nr nni i iiii fniiiniiinhnniTTTT DEAN W. F. SANDERS Hiimni i ii i i i i i n i m iiii n i i i inim ii iiii i i iii ni i miim i n i m r iiiiinKiiiiiiiin i ii niiii i iilil l li li lH 111 mi l l Him i iiim i ' until HtltlMII IMIIIMIU ' ' i i m n! m i m n n 111 m m Walter Frederick Sanders, A.B., A.M. Dean Walter F. Sanders returned to Park last fall after a year’s work at Ohio State University, where he held a fellowship in the field of Higher Education and School Administration. Through the cooperation of the Presbyterian Board of Education he visited several Presbyterian colleges and conducted research relative to the supervision and improvement of teaching in the field of Higher Education. Dean Sanders received both his A.B. and A.M. degrees from the University of Chicago. Ohio State University has admitted him to candidacy for a Ph.D. degree, for which he has completed his resi¬ dence work and for which his research and subject for thesis have been approved. Previous to 1911 Dean Sanders taught at the Harvard School in Chicago. He is a member of the Modern Language Association of America, American Association of University Professors, National Education Association, American Scandinavian Founda¬ tion, American Legion and the Missouri State Committee of the Y. M. C. A. Also the following honorary organizations have admitted him to their membership: Who’s Who in American Education, Who’s Who in America, Theta Alpha Phi, Pi Kappa Delta, Beta Pi Theta and Alpha Delta. He is pledged to Phi Delta Kappa. A study of the college curriculum this year was made under Dean Sanders’ direction. Such administrative activity may be cited as the source of the reputation which Park College enjoys among the institutions of higher learning. Dean Sanders has written several educational articles. “Supervision of Instruction in Higher Education’’ and “Honors Work in a Small Middle Western College’’ have appeared in issues of School and Society, and an article on “How We Teach at Park Col¬ lege” by Dean Sanders appeared recently in “The Bulletin of the Association of Amer¬ ican Colleges.” iminuiMimiiJinniii i miGnn i nuiuuiu iiiiimmi ' . iiimmur iimmminninmiriTiTiTTrii : A I T H « KNOWLEDGE [ 19 ] LABOR CHARACTER SERVICE
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Page 24 text:
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HniHinimrTTT •’ H ii Mi ii umiiiin i n i ii.i i uiimm n ii nmmn i nm riiii m i m iir ' H iT nnmm n n n 111 n n i m m i m i i ll ' ll 1 1 1 i! i n n M BOARD OF TRUSTEES iiinminimmimiimiirnn miiiiiiiiiMiimiiimini ii-nri7 rrrmiiiiiiiii m iiimmmiiiii mini n i mm m u i nmiT ' wgi.A,.. m. mw I ■ dPjpi --— .....— r . -¥ . ' ' : ; 5 viiaBKfkr . Davis, Mann, Hawley, Thompson, Porter, Brokaw, Melcher, Scott, Myers, Elliott, Ralston, Templeton. To the loyal group of men and women known as the Board of Trustees is due much credit for the progress the school has made during the past years. These people give freely of their time to the advancement of Park and guide it true to the ideals of Colonel Park, who wrote in the charter of the college: “It is the earnest desire of the friends of this institution that it be established and built up by wisdom and stand forever and go on improving like the older institutions of Europe and America. To accomplish this purpose it is suggested that the Board of Trustees look most critically into the way things are going and make wise provisions for future contingencies . . . Let the eyes of these guardians pierce every nook and cor ' ner and thereby insure wise and skillful management of the institution. Let them pro- vide the best instructors and make the best provisions for their institution their funds will permit, going no further.’ ' Mr. Homer B. Mann of Kansas City, Missouri, is president of the Board. Mr. Charles L. Brokaw of Kansas City, Kansas, is vice ' president. The office of treasurer is filled by Mr. J. A. Bowman, also of Kansas City, Missouri. Mr. David M. Knight is secretary of the Board and business manager of the college. The other members are George A. Lawrence, Galesburg, Illinois; Rev. L. W. Hawley, J. P. Tucker, R. B. Elliott, Parkville, Missouri; A. O. Thompson, J. L. Porter, George H. Davis, George H. Bunting, Miss Elizabeth Scott, Rev. H. C. Rogers, Dr. Wilson A. Myers, Geo. Melcher, Kansas City, Missouri; Robert Johnston, Rev. J. W. Maclvor, St. Louis, Missouri; W. C. Ralston, Topeka, Kansas; Rev. W. C. Templeton, Dodge City, Kansas; L. H. Wakefield, Seattle, Washington; and Isadore Samuels, Denver, Colorado. 11 m i n i n 1 1 u i iimi i i i i inuT. nrun rp 1 • ’niinTri ' i ' iiriiin ' inniiiimiuinMnnmiirriniuiimiMiniTniimmini [ 18 FAITH « KNOWLEDGE LABOR CHARACTER S E R V I C ur i niun ni m i nmnniminiiinn lumimnn ir immnunim i unnmnininmii
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Page 26 text:
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.imiLi n m 11 m ii i Lmiiimiiimmiw i m muiiiiiiLuii rpnnniiiE i ii iiiiniiiimminnmn i im ,f, rr r mr Mrs. Ruth H. Schall FACULTY Faith, Knowledge, Labor, Character and Service, these are the five pillars of Park. United they blend into the Gothic arch of the institution. They do not stand alone; each supports the other. All are necessary to produce the graduate whom Park desires. Foremost in this process of construction are the members of the faculty, those ever present masons of the five pillars, who seek to give us knowh edge, who strive to found in us a faith, who set our labors into motion, who endeavor to mould in us characters for service in the world. For the past eleven years Mrs. Ruth H. Schall has been dean of women at Park, having charge of all policies regard ' ing the young women of the college. She is also the super ' intendent of women’s family work. The English department of the college was founded more than forty years ago by Professor Henry S. Verill. Professor Ethel E. Lyon, who came here in 1915, became head of the department in 1922. She received her A.B. degree from Ripon College and her A.M. degree from Columbia University. Professor Lyon spent the summer of 1930 in study at Cambridge University in England. Miss Virginia Lee Cole has finished her third year at Park. She is an instructor in English and has charge of the journal ' ism work of the college. She was granted the B.J. and A.M. degrees by the University of Missouri. Miss Esther Sullivan, also an instructor in English, came here this year after spending a year in Yale, doing graduate work in dramatic art. She received her A.B. degree from Otter ' bein College and her A.M. degree from Ohio State University. Public Speaking has long been recognized as one of the important departments at Park. Professor F. W. Beers, who received his A.B. degree from Northwestern University and his Ph.D. from Ruskin University, is head of the department. This year the debate work has been under the supervision of Professor John Barnes, who received his A.B. and A.M. degrees from Northwestern University. Park has just finished a most successful debate season, winning twelve out of four ' teen men’s debates and all of her intercollegiate women’s debates. At a tournament held in Winfield, Kansas, last December Park ' s men debate team won second place, de ' feating debaters from sixty colleges in Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Nebraska and Texas. This year Park entertained the State Old Line Oratorical contest as well as the central divisional meet. A great deal of interest was aroused among the students of the two lower classes in the Verrill Declamatory contest, the results of which were not avail ' Forrest W. Beers able in time for publication. Ethel E. Lyon NmiiimiimLiiiiiiimnimimiiiiiiiii ' iiuiiiiiiinmTiniuiiiinniniii TnnTiTimnn FAITH KNOWLEDGE [ 20 ] LABOR CHARACTER S E R V mnmE
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