Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA)

 - Class of 1908

Page 23 of 614

 

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 23 of 614
Page 23 of 614



Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 22
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Page 23 text:

Os D LA VIE 11 George W. Atherton, LL.D. President of the Pennsylvania State College June, 1882-July, 1906 .3 .33 A U Heaven doth with us as We With torches do, Not light them for themselves: For if our virtues Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike As if We had them not. Spirits are not finely touched But to line issuesf' 1- RESIDENT ATHERTON was one of the rare characters which measure up to the standard of Sir Philip Sydney's idea of a gentleman- High erectedithoughts seated in a heart of cour- l tesy. Courtesy, helpfulness, consideration for others was in- born in his nature because high thinking was inborn in it. Over fifty of the sixty-nine years of his life are an unbroken record of absolute devotion to high ideals. As student, soldier, teacher, lawyer, politician, college presi- dent--nowhere is the standard lowered, in every position the man rings true. Born into the world physically strong, he had, as a boy, exuberant spirits and abounding joy in mere living, which made the ordinary duties and tasks of a country boy's life no hardship to him. He once wrote of these days: My early habit of regular industry became so much a part of my being, that I cannot recall the time when I ever looked upon work as anything but a natural and blessed privilege. An obstacle, a difficulty or hindrance of any kind, was simply an occasion for the application of a little more energy and persistence and courage and helpfulness. The idea of being thwarted by it was one of the unthinkable things that never presented itself to my mind. I have found, too, that my familiar knowledge of common things and common Ways of think- ing, acquired in the country, has been of inestimable advantage to me in dealing with the ordinary matters of daily life. g The ordinary matters of daily life were seldom shirked or overlooked by him, and his happy method of dealing with them was no small source of strength and usefulness. A In a character so finely balanced as President Atherton's no single trait overshadows others. A deep-seated love of truth made him scrupulously careful to get at the factsof any matter brought to his attention, and equally careful in the simplest statement of opinion on any subject. This habit of mind, this weighing of thoughts and expression, helped him to ac- quire that remarkable vocabulary for which he was noted. He seldom

Page 22 text:

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Page 24 text:

O o 12 PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE . I . l . HONIE OF DR. ATHERTON lacked the exact and fitting word to express his thought. Love of truth was the basis ofhis fine, accurate scholarship, the breadth of which amazed many a man of affairs who came in contact with him. All his life he remained a student. His busiest years were never so full as to crowd out daily study. Aside from his special held of political and economic subjects, in which his interest never Hagged, and in which he kept abreast of the times, he was constantly forging ahead in linguistic study. Classically trained at Yale, he left college equipped with Greek, Latin and English, and began teaching the classics. Later, he took up the study of German. After he became President ofthe Pennsylvania State College he took up French, gained sufiicient mastery of it to read any French book almost as easily as an English one, had little difhculty in using the lan- guage in general discussion when travelling abroad, and made a transla- tion of at least one important French work on Political Economy. Later, he took up Spanish with similar success, and had begun Italian. All this was clone largely as a diversion of mind, in the midst of the administrative work of the college which taxed his energy to the utmost. In addition to other things, he was giving more or less continued and exhaustive study to Magna Charta, and had ready for the printer, at the time of his death, a revision of a brochure which he had published in 1900 on the subject. So brief a sketch can scarcely touch upon the field of his activities. - - - -'1-'---- M.,-5' ,Avi -V .su w-m.1.,.,....,.,1 5 .-.. .' .f .ff -- - - . . - f . . . K H ' ' ' ' '-v-'f v+-41 1+. 'hiv-:Am-Anya-qaxmvau--4-1,-,--,.,, - . ., , ..

Suggestions in the Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) collection:

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911


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