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Page 17 text:
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DEANS This alumnus followed a four-year plan of study in Paris upon graduation from the night life of the local Arc Building. WARREN C. PERRY returned to the University as an instructor and eventually became director of the School of Architecture. His fingerprints are found on the blueprints of Edwards field. A bundle of practical and executive advice, CHARLES DERLETH, Jr., has been tied up in the University since 1912. Aside from duties as Dean of the College of Engineering, he has been a consulting engineer for the Golden Gate and Bay Bridges and many campus buildings. He ' s credited with more constructive work as a judge of Homecoming floats. His rule is the slide rule. He ' s always digging around—in the materials of his European agricultural studies and in his flowerbeds at home. CLAUDE B. HUTCHISON, Dean of Agriculture and director of the Agricultural Experimental Station, has an alias that takes up three quarters of a page in Who ' s Who . But it doesn ' t say there that he is a mountaineer, a fisherman, and a pipe smoker who swears off periodically every few months. EVAN HAYNES entered college by examination, after spending high years at a trading post in Northern Canada. Dodging bullets in and prospecting in the Mojave Desert preceded his law school training. acting Dean of the School of Jurisprudence, he is writing books about Selec- tion and Tenure of Judges and Equity . SIDNEY B. MITCHELL ' S work covers books. From his shelf on the floor of the storehouse he deans the School of Librarianship which he He was once president of the California Library Association and is now head of the California Horticultural Society. He cultivates students, irises, daffodils.
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Page 16 text:
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Builder of youth and brick barbecue pits, member of numerous scientific literary societies, author—that ' s FRANK N. FREEMAN in a nutshell. As Dean of Education he plans the entire student-teacher program, scattering psychology throughout the agenda. For relaxation he mixes mortar Saturday afternoons. He is jovial, with a free and easy manner among his students. Noted for satility, E. T. GRETHER holds the positions of Dean of the College of merce, Professor of Economics, Chairman of the Committee of Courses, Editor-in-chief of the Journal of Marketing, as well as Papa . The portrait includes two daughters and a thrt,e-year-old son who toddles in his father ' s footsteps. COLLEGE Winding up a trail which has led him throughout America and Harvard, DONALD McLAUGHLIN down last fall at this university as Dean of. the College of Mining. An expert in geological sciences, he has been delegate to the Pan-American Scientific Congress. tain climbing and photography combine exercise pleasure for the white-haired dean. To quote the Pelican, slightly misquoting the Daily Californian, quoting Dean of the College of Letters and Science himself, I am no actor who sumes now one role, now another. I am a professor, a chemist, a dean, an ex- army man, and yes, thank God, still a skier. The sum of the parts is equal the whole, JOEL HILDEBRAND. Here is a professor who never blows up in spite of continued proximity to ex- plosives. The Dean of Chemistry is editor of the Prentice Hall Series , member of the National Academy of Sciences, author of three and a handful of Little Willie jokes, and winner of three thousand Presenting WENDELL M. LATIMER.
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Page 18 text:
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OUTSTANDING Raconteur of the first order, ERNEST BLOCH leads a colorful life as composer, traveler, and teacher. He is affectionately bed Johan Sebastian Bloch by his students here, but at his ite retreat in Switzerland he ' s the Mushroom King to the tives. Europe has also been a field of study for our Man of the Woods , JOSEPH KITTRIDGE, who emerged from the U. S. forest service to join the faculty ten years ago. Once a delegate to the Stockholm Forestry Convention and a student of the forests of Finland,he now spends free time playing tennis with graduates. Hailing from St. Louis, HAROLD BASSAGE came to our campus this year as co-director of Little Theatre and lecturer in Dramatic Art, having seen two seasons on Broadway and nine seasons in Eastern Summer Stock. He compares notes with another parative newcomer, JOHN CONDLIFFE, who came from the blackouts of London to those of California to join the faculty as professor of economics. He was formerly associated with Economic Intelligence of the League of Nations, and is known for his interest in world peace and post-war reconstruction. RALPH S. MINOR professor of physics and director of School of Optometry has an eye for optics. The former of the Ex Committee of the American Association of Teachers tinkers with type of his own press, printing everything from Christmas cards to directories. With the aid of other ed matter that really matters, he is raising funds for the $150,000 Optometry Building. President AGNES FAY MORGAN must have been born a gavel in her hand. She leads the Women ' s Faculty Club, Home Economics Department, the State Nutrition and then some. With the anti-gray filtrate factor she plays biochemist for the Agricultural Experiment Station. From anti-gray of the lab to the anti-red of the stadium goes our activity queen every football Saturday afternoon. Man or mouse? EDWARD CHASE TOLMAN knows the from his studies of the psychology of motivation. Students have seen and heard of his ' mazing experiments with rats and Following a long visit in Cowell this year, the former of the American Association for the Advancement of continued to write books and articles for the numerous societies that claim his membership.
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