University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN)

 - Class of 1940

Page 18 of 342

 

University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 18 of 342
Page 18 of 342



University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 17
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University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

Adminmtrefion WESLEY E. PEIK I rigbfl I HAVE so MANY HOBBIES that I don,t have any, declared Wesley E. Peik, Dean of the College of Education. He might have added that he is in so many organizations and on so many committees that he himself can scarcely list them all. His Hrst study of teaching techniques was experimental. He had just finished his senior year in high school when he was hired as the only teacher in a country school that had sixty pupils. His educa- tional methods and standards have changed a good deal since then. ln the meantime he has completed his education at Columbia and at Minnesota and done independent work in educational research. ERNEST B. PIERCE lrisbfl FORTY-FIVE THOUSAND ALUMNI keep in touch with the growing University through the alumni ofhce and its active secretary, Ernest B. Pierce. He first came into close Contact with the students as registrar of the University from 1904 to 1920. He points with pride to the Presi- dents, trees on the lower knoll whose planting he supervised when he was chair- man of the Committee on University Functions. An alumnus himself, he was a member of the 1904 national champion- ship basketball team and still keeps up his own athletic program. It was his class that contributed the University hymn, Minnesota, Hail to Theef' Today he is a leader in the Coffman Union drive. RUSSEL A. STEVENSON llfffl TO KEEP FEES DOWN is my main ob- jective, says chairman of the Fees Com- mittee Russel A. Stevenson whose oflicial position is Dean of the School of Business. A professional accountant before he be- came a professor, Dean Stevenson believes that accounting is the best fundamental training for a business career. He also worked in the evaluation of public util- ities. Whenever he can, he spends his vacations climbing mountains and he has already topped many of the peaks in the Rockies and Canadian coastal ranges. Last summer he tackled Mount McKinley in Alaska, but he did his climbing the easy way, in an automobile, and he never did reach the top. ROYAL R. SHUMWAY lbelowj THE MAN XVHO KNOWS all the reasons why students fail is Royal R. Shumway, Assistant Dean of the College of Science, Literature and the Arts. As head of the Student XVork Committee he gets his in- formation first hand-from the quak- ing students who answer his little White notes. Genial, fatherly, with an undeni- able resemblance to Irvin S. Cobb, Dean Shumway just smiles at the old excuses and looks behind every failure for the ugermsu that breed E's and E's. Thirty- seven years of teaching and counselling have made him wise. A dealer in failures, he is a success himself not only at work but in one of the rarer carpentering skills, master cabinet-making.

Page 17 text:

DXVI HT E. MI NICH G N lllulowj BIOLOGY IS so INTERESTING that after twenty years Dwight E. Minnich, chair-- man of the Department of Zoology, still thoroughly enjoys his classes. That is why his classes enjoy Mr. Minnich. During the summer he continues his Zoological re- search at Mount Desert Island Biological Station in Maine where he is studying the physiology of animal behavior. His cur- rent project is investigation of the re- action of lower animals to light, but he isn't interested in Zoology alone. He is a collector of a great many things--among them antique furniture and Hne prints of natural history subjects that date from the seventeenth to the nineteenth cen- turies. EDWARD E. NICHOLSON Administration MALCOLM S. MAC LEAN llfffl A HLORD or THE PRESSU before he became a faculty man, Malcolm S. MacLean, Dean of the General College, once was owner-editor of the Lagoona Beach Life in California. H: filled so many editorial and reportorial positions on the Minneapolis T1'ib1z11e that he understands every phase of newspaper work as thoroughly as he does the problems of education. This is his twenty-first year at the University. He is no mere amateur with a camera although he does photographic work purely as a hobby. Several of his prints have been shown in the International Salon exhibits, but he still likes best of all to take pictures of his old dog Sox. ' I' 'NVILLIAM T. MIDDLEBROOK as Ilefij A A BIG-BUs1NEss LIAN with education for sale is XVilliam T. Middlebrook, Univer- jdfiff? . sity Comptroller, whose duty is to keep his ten million dollar enterprise well in the black. Six new buildings in a single year are financial problems enough for one man, but he has more than museums and dormitories to worry about. Securities and real estate and cash on hand have to be balanced against purchases of everything from thumbtacks to telescopes. XVhen his books are in order he likes to slip away to his camp on Whiteish Lake to hunt, or Esh in the wilds for muskies. His favorite campus project-a snow week bigger and better than that of his old school, Dart- mouth. Ifiizbfl WHEN EDXVARD E. NICHOLSON, chemis- try instructor, began helping solve stu- dent problems back in 1895, he would never have believed that forty-four years later there would be 10,000 people com- ing to him for advice in a single year. But that is the number of students and par- ents who are helped annually through his office. In 1916 his counselling experi- ence led to his appointment as first Dean of Student Affairs. Since then not even hunting and fishing have been able to compete with student problems for his wholehearted interest. He is proud that of the thousands who talked things over with Dean Nick last year only seventy- live had to come to him for discipline.



Page 19 text:

saab .v..f s Y - --X-f--my M..--51 fi R R ' . N Nts. ,. RODNEY M. WEST lbelozuzl MOST STUDENTS FINISH four years of col- lege without ever seeing Rodney M. West, Registrar of the University, but he is the man who controls both their admission and graduation. For twenty years he has been admitting freshmen, directing the maintenance of their grade records which are kept in his office, checking the tedious Work of putting their names in the ad- dress book every fall, and finally approv- ing their application for a degree. He himself was a university student in 1902. In 1909 he joined the teaching staff as instructor of chemistry and eleven years later he succeeded E. B. Pierce as Regis- trar of the University. Since 1920 he has held that position. JOHN T. TATE llfffl ALTHOUGH Mosr PEOPLE call him head of the Arts College, John T. Tate personally emphasizes the science in his title, Dean of the College of Science, Literature and the Arts. His outstanding work in the field of physics was recognized last year in his election to the presidency of the American Physical society, whose publications he has edited since 1926. He assisted in the formation of the American Institute of Physics in 1931. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and former president of the local chapter of Sigma Xi. He came to Minnesota in 1916 as an instructor in physics and in June, 1937, became a University dean. THOMAS A. H. TEETER lflfffl BEING DIRECTOR of the second largest summer session in the country would be enough for most men, but it is merely the beginning for Thomas A. Teeter. Besides approving the budgets of the several de- partments, he is chairman Of the advisory committee handling questions of policy, staff appointments, announcements, pub- licity and class schedules. Then it is up to him to arrange convocation programs and represent the president's ofhce in all matters during the summer session. 'When he finally does take his vacation in Sep- tember, he first goes to his summer cabin near Brainerd and then is off to preside over the meetings of the Deans and Di- rectors of Summer Sessions. MALCQLM M. WILLEY lffsbfl SELECTING CONVOCATION PROGRAMS that will bring 4,500 people to Northrop Au- ditorium every Thursday is only one of Dean Malcolm M. Willey,s jobs as As- sistant to the President. He came to the University as a professor of sociology in 1927 and still edits the Sociological Re- view. Before that he had been a news- paperman on his family's own Pll1f71ll7lZ Pazfriof, a Connecticut weekly. Not un- til 1934 did he undertake the multiple duties of University front man. NVhen he isn't busy correlating the work of the scores of administrative ofhcers on cam- pus, he can usually be found in the garden or the library of the house de- signed for him by Frank Lloyd Wfright.

Suggestions in the University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) collection:

University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943


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