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Page 25 text:
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- Administration gwfj l - x l Em'i'n L. Crank, M. A. Wnsros W. Cook, Ph. D. DEANS OF TI-IE COLLEGE ECAUSE he is young himself and embodies in his basic makeup many fundamentals , of the typical youthful spirit, since he too traveled the selfsame path not so many years ago, Dr. Wilton VV. Cook is excellently qualified to fill the position which he now holds. Stern and steady when the occasion demands, yet friendly and amiable With all his disciplinary duties, he is counted a friend by every boy in the college. He is never too busy with the routine of his work to take time out and have a chat with any of the boys who have a problem to solve, offering his advice, not in a dominating manner, but confidingly and freely, to be taken or rejected as the seeker sees fit. Drawing him closer to his college and closer to his boys is an instinctive collegiate spirit that finds him in the midst of every activity that the college sponsors. VVhether it is a football game, a tea, a dance, a debate, or a minstrel, you may rest assured that Dr. Cook will be there. You may be sure also that he will be surrounded by a group of friends, who are ready to enter into any activity that he proposes. Qualified by years of experience as a teacher, a psychologist, and a counselor, Miss Edith L. Clark serves as a mother to every girl Who enters the college. She advises and directs the girls in every legitimate undertaking that they engage in. Religiously, intel- lectually, and socially, Miss Clark is a strong influence for better living on the campuses of Texas. She remains in almost daily contact with every woman who enters the college. Her duties are not merely limited to the disciplinary cases that arise. Far from it. From the moment that they enter college until the proud time when they receive their degrees from the hand of the President, their lives are inescapably coincident With the direction of Miss Clark. She superintends and directs into proper channels the activities of the Women students, she helps needy girls find Work, she sees that all rooming houses are properly maintained, she settles cases involving any infraction of the college rules, and she arranges and aids in the carrying out of the social activities of the college, being vitally interested in the Young YVomen's Forum, The Mary Arden Club, and other similar clubs. P180 2'
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Page 24 text:
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Administration i 'Di-:iw W. bl. lVlcCoNN1-:i.I., Ph. ll. DEAN McCONNELL HE appearance of this annual marks the closing of another year of purported effort toward the cultivation of the mind. Some two thousand students and approximately one hundred instructors have been working to this end. The outlay in time and effort, to say nothing of the money cost, has been considerable. May we not, therefore, pause in the frenzied rush to write examinations designed to test our knowledge of the courses pursued, for a moment's reflection on less obvious but perhaps more enduring achievements? If effort has not been useless, one may find evidences of growth in respect to one or both of the following: Self-Confidemxe--One is prone to minimize one's own ability until he has discov- ered the fact that the ones about him who are most successful are, nevertheless, aware of their own limitations. The consciousness of one's own strength as well as one's own weak- nesses and the knowledge of another's weakness as well as his strength make for courage and self-confidence. A year of residence and study on the campus should add materially to the recognition of ene's personal abilities and capacities. Tolerance-Intolerance is a mark of weakness. The real student discovers that with increased knowledge and consequent recognition of his own powers he possesses no monopoly of superior ideas, and that some of his beliefs and practices are as indefensible as those that he observes in others. Such an attitude is fortunate, for it tends to develop, in the mind of the discoverer, an attitude of tolerance. It is a fact obvious to any observer that the novice is more likely to criticize adversely the artist because of fancied flaws in technique than is the artist who sees glaring weaknesses in the performance of the novice. It is a hopeful sign when education develops its possessor to the point where he can graciously accord to others tolerance in proportion to the tolerance others are forced to accord him. W. J. MCTCONNEI.T., Ph. D. I' lb L 0 x A i
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Page 26 text:
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gC 22 Administration P. IC. MCDONALD, M. A. THE REGISTRAR N CONNECTION with college the average student is inclined to consider only the things that savor of culture and the collegiate mood. He considers the athletic teams, the coaching corps, the instructors, the departmental heads, and the president as an integral part of a great organization. In later years, these things chiefly hold their place in the memory of the student. Perhaps the most serviceable part of the college is overlooked. All too often the student fails to consider the valuable work that the large technical staff, under the able direction of Mr. McDonald, renders them. He forgets the vast service that is done for him in the process of registering, the filing of credits, the giving out of mation. From the time that he enters school until he holds his last position, his life and work is vitally connected with this office. From the hands of the registrar to diverse points all over the country there runs a maze of connections that directly joins him with each of the hundreds of students that have attended this institution. Mr. lVlcDonald is willing at all times to answer the slightest indication of an inquiry that approaches him over this series of contacts, making the slightest question of the former student a personal question of his own, searching and striving until he finds the solution to the problem, and then communicating it to the questioner. And finally, whenever an old student returns to the campus, Mr. McDonald always is able to greet him by name, recalling some experience that he had in the old days, putting the facilities of the college and himself at his se'rvice grades, the awarding of diplomas, the filing of transcripts, and the dispensation of infor-
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