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Page 15 text:
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EVERETT FRASER fbvloiul WHEN DEAN EVERETT FRASER began to study law, he intended to be a politician. But before I was half through, he said, I knew that politics was no place to try to combine money-making with honesty. After serving his apprenticeship with a law firm in Halifax, Nova Scotia, he be- gan teaching law and studying economic and international affairs after class hours. In 1917 he came to the University as a professor of law and in 1920 he became dean of the law school. In 1928 he pre- sented the case for the University fUni- versity vs. Chasej in which the constitu- tional status of the school was determined, and the freedom of the University from legislative control established. Administration KATHARINE DENSFCRD llfffl THE TRADITION of the Lady with the Lamp has presented an ideal and a challenge to every generation of women since the beginning of professional nursing. Katharine J. Dens- ford has met that challenge ever since her first practice work sent her to Vassar Training camp for war nurses in 1918. She did not intend to be a nurse when she graduated from Miami University and went on to get her M.A. at the University of Chicago, but since leaving her academic teaching position at Bismarck, North Dakota, she has devoted herself entirely to the nursing profession. She came to the University as director of the school of nursing in 1930. HAROLD S. DIEI-IL llfffi BORED WITH TEACHING mathematics and athletics, Harold S. Diehl, Dean of the Medical Sciences, found in medicine a constant challenge and stimulus to his mind. There is always something new to learn, he says of his profession. Dr. Diehl was with the hospital unit in France in 1918, and stayed with the American Red Cross to help in the rehabilitation of Poland after the World XVar. Director of the Student Health Service from 1921- 1935, he is deservedly proud of its de- velopment. For five years he has been studying colds and their prevention. The tennis coach here at one time, his present recreations include sailing, fishing, and camping in the mountains. EDWARD M. FREEMAN frigbil IT ISN,T THE FAILURES who are most interesting to Edward M. Freeman, Dean of the College of Agriculture, Forestry and Home Economics. I-Ie prefers to help and advise the bright students who are actually on their wayf, At the recogni- tion assembly in the spring he makes sure that everyone who has done outstanding work receives some honorary mention. I Wfhen he himself was a senior, he began teaching botany in the Arts college. His work on wheat rust took him to the United States Department of Agriculture but he returned to the University as head of the school of plant pathology. For twenty-two years he has combined that position with administrative work as dean.
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Page 14 text:
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Aidiaainisttratiota ANNE DUDLEY BLITZ frigblj THERE is NO DAY OF REST for Dean of Women Anne Dudley Blitz. Even on Sunday she has the troubles of 7,000 women on her hands. Parties and house rules, student govern- ment and jobs for working girls all come under her watchful eye. Her most thrilling achievement of the year is the building of the new women's dormitory, for it has been one of her pet projects for years. It is a strange week when she gives less than three talks, she says she wishes she were the Dionne quintuplets. Her hobbies-one Pekinese dog, one Angora cat, a collection of early American glass, and her own antique jewelry that she makes of silver and semi-precious gems. DR. RUTH BOYNTON lrigblj DR. RUTH BOYNTON just grew up with the Student Health service. She was serv- ing her internship at University hospital during the World war influenza epidemic when fraternities, partially emptied by enlistment and the draft, were used to house patients. She was here during the second epidemic in 1922 when the base- ment of Pillsbury was filled with beds for women and the Union with beds for men. As the University grew, Dr. Boyn- ton increased her staff and its facilities until she is now director of a health cen- ter nationally known for its experimental studies. Busy as she is, she still has time for the League of NVomen Voters, pho- tography and gardening. WALTER C. COFFEY Q Ucfll culture under his supervision, Walter C. Coffey, dean and director of the Depart- ment of Agriculture, has more than a Campus unit to administrate. He directs the activities of the College of Agricul- ture, Forestry and Home Economics, the four schools of agriculture and six ag- ricultural experiment stations located throughout the state, the fourteen short courses for men and women actively en- gaged in farming and allied industries, and the state-wide extension division which has agents in every Minnesota county. His own major field is sheep husbandry which he taught at the University of Illi- nois before coming here in 1921. WITH EVERY PHASE of University agri- w RALPH D. CASEY jbelowj PROPAGANDA IS HIS SPECIALTY but Ralph D. Casey, chairman of the department of journalism, is no propagandist. Instead he writes text books and edits the Journalism Quarterly. Since he left active reportorial work on the Seattle Post-I1zie1Iige11fm', he has been a professor of journalism and student of public opinion. Two years ago as holder of a Guggenheim fellowship, he spent a year abroad studying public opin- ion in England. His most recent work is a chapter, Public Opinion in Wartinie in the book XVar in the Twentieth Cen- turyf' He is chairman of the editorial committee of the Board of Publications, governing body, and of the Minnesota Editors' Shortcourse.
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Page 16 text:
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.A.eClI'Jr'1u1.1i11SilffIdi1Q11 CARRCLL S. GEDDES frigbtl BLACKSTONE XVAS NEVER A 1X4ATCH for activities in the tug-of-war for the time and talents of undergraduate Carroll Geddes. Dean Fraser finally ugaven him to the Uni- versity by suggesting that the law was not for Carroll. Now his hobby and his business are the same-people. His experience on the Union Board of Governors, the lnterfra- ternity Council and the Senate Committee on Athletics and as 1927 Homecoming chair- man led to his position as financial adviser and brother confessor to student organizations. He believes that the student body is wiser and more serious today than it has been in the past, but it still has plenty of problems for him to solve. WILLIAM F. LASBY I rigbll PHI BETA KAPPA and a member of the International Association of Dental Re- search, Dean Wfilliam F. Lasby of the School of Dentistry admits that his voca- tion is his favorite hobby, and he always has time to show visitors around the large dental clinic which he helped to plan and build seven years ago. Since he began teaching at Minnesota in 1908, many of his students have taken prominent teach- ing positions in the United States and foreign countries. Dean Lasby's prize pos- session is a portrait album of the present faculty of the Dental School given to him this year when the alumni gathered to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the school's founding. SAMUEL C. LIND llfffl THE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY can thank pure chance for its twinkle-eyed, smiling Dean Samuel C. Lind. His inter- est in the field of physical science began almost by accident. During high school he had majored in languages-Old Eng- lish, Greek, French, Spanish. In his senior year he took a course in chemistry just to H11 the natural science requirement. It fascinated him so much that he decided to go on and today he is a recognized scientist. He is especially noted for his research in the field of radium. Although his fellow students at Leipzig called him uJenny,', he denies any relationship to the singer and admits that he can't sing a note. ...V.ff-yeas ., --.-. , V aaa-my ifK.-Q.-f-ima,aaa-Q-Asa-.ati fs.: fjav--.f... .. ai, WY.. is- . 1, .. a Zgjzfifi, s a sh we wif Q Q 0 g3?36g..wg X, g.. W X tio M . , gg 4 1. ORA M. ORA MINE? tration of . can talk fol museum. lr act of the prohibiting the men vs practice! 1' Michigan a in geodetic termining t and Canada taught civi astronomy versity befi 1920. He s1 a clear ni gl
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