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

 - Class of 1925

Page 13 of 536

 

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 13 of 536
Page 13 of 536



Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 12
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Page 13 text:

P all that he undertook. From his student days thoroughness was a Watchword with him. After a brilliant college course he fitted himself for his chosen field of mathematics at Johns Hopkins University, then the leading graduate school in America, and after a three years' course was elected to the headship of the Department of Mathematics at Penn State, beginning his work in September, 1893. Since then, taking hardly a single vacation, he gave his best to the college. He wrote no books, he gave 110 thoughts to selfish advancement, he chose rather to build himself without reserve into the institution and into the lives of his students. More than ninety per cent. of the alumni have come directly under his influence. As a teacher he was thorough and inspiring. He stood inflexibly for high standards of scholarship, and for clear thinking and accuracy and individual initiative, and he was able to inspire his ideals into those who worked with him and into his classroom work. As a de- partment administrator he was tireless, always courteous, always con- siderate of his instructors, always taking upon himself more of the load than ever he assigned to any of his workers. As a member of the Council of Administration from its inauguration until near the end of his life, he had a voice in shaping all the policies out of which has grown the Penn State of today. The thirty years, the full total of his professional life, which he gave to the college cover almost exactly what may be called the sec- ond period in the history of Penn State-the era of expansion. The pioneer period, that time of seed-sowing, of doubts and fears, of pov- erty and exlemporization, of smallness in everything except vision and faith, that period of the early leaders, the founders strong and great -Pugh, McAllister, Beaver, Atherton and others, was closing when he began his work. The year he came, 1893, saw the dedication of the Engineering Building, the first great step in the expansion of l9l

Page 12 text:

JOSEPH MOODY WILLARD By Fred Lewis Pattee F4 IED December 10, 1923, Joseph Moody Willard, in the g iifty-ninth year of his age and the thirty-first year of his service to the Pennsylvania State College. The ranks of 'am Mraz that small older group which worked through the criti- cal transition period of the institution have been sadly depleted of late.. Once again death has taken from the faculty its senior member. Professor Willard was of old Puritan stock, a native of New Hampshire, and a son of Dartmouth her college. He came from a sturdy ancestry which had been in New England since pilgrim days. One of his line, Joseph Willard, was President of Harvard, another on the maternal side by pledging his property in the critical days of the Dartmouth College case, saved the institution from disaster, and in grateful recognition of it the college has perpetuated his name in one of its halls. No alumnus was ever more stamped by the best his alma mater had to give him than was Professor Willard. Often he talked to the men of Penn State of the Dartmouth ideals and often in freshman mass meetings he read to them the stirring words of the great Dartmouth Ode, dwelling feelingly on the lines: Around the world they keep for her Their old chivalric faithg They have the still North in their souls, The hill-winds in their breath, And the granite of New Hampshire ls made part of them till death. A chip of New Hampshire granite, he was inflexible in all that touched the strong fundamentals of characterg he was as dependable as his native granite foundations, he was earnest, active, thorough in . E81



Page 14 text:

...Y.-..- . an ' 'f v . 1 , A 7. ti- fl- Q., 1 1 1 no the college and it saw the beginnings of real appropriations by the State Legislature. In the thirty years that followed, a great univer- sity was shaped out of a small country college. It was a period that required creative builders, men of vision, men of steadiness and cau- tion in moments of perplexity, men willing to sacrifice themselves for the college and the Commonwealth. lt was a glorious opportunity such as comes to few men, and Professor Willard threw himself into it with all his sturdy New England soul, to it he gave all the great endowment of his inheritance and of his training. And the college forever will be the richer because he clave to it in the days that were dark and helped to guide it with his strong ideals. He was broader than his class-room and broader than the halls of administration. He gave of himself richly for the religious life of the college and the community. It had been during his undergraduate days that the Y. M. C. A. movement had begun its strong course as a power in the colleges. He had attended the earliest conventions and had felt to the full the spell of Moody and Henry Drummond, that spell that so mightily laid hold of John R. Mott, and Robert E. Spear, and Sherwood Eddy, and sent them into the work that has so shaken the student world for a generation. He brought the vision and the compelling power of this experience to Penn State, and for thirty years he was undoubtedly the leading worker and counsellor of the Y. M. C. A. at the college. He was a strong worker, too, in the church of his denomination in the village. As a citizen, standing always for the betterment of civic conditions in the borough, as a charter member of the Phi Kappa Phi honor society whose secretary he was up to last ,luneg and as a jovial member of the college literary club to which he contributed many rich hours--in many divers fields he will be long remembered. His home life was an ideal one. He was married in 1897 to Miss Henrietta Norris Nunn, of Baltimore, and his home on the campus has l10l

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

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Penn State University - La Vie Yearbook (University Park, PA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928


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