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Page 33 text:
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DEAN OF WOMEN Louise Troxell Greeley THE University of Wisconsin is indeed fortunate to have for its Dean of Women as versatile a personality as Louise Troxell Greeley. To just say that Mrs. Greeley is qualified for her all-important post is not putting her good qualities strong enough. Those who have come in contact with her — regard- less of the capacity in which she may have acted — • are unanimous in exalting her aptitude as an execu- tive as well as her most pleasing personality. Like her counterpart, Dean of Men Scott H. Goodnight, Mrs. Greeley too comes from Kansas, Cottonwood Falls to be exact, where she attended the public, primary and secondary schools. Later she matriculated at the University of Kansas, majoring in Chemistry. After a very successful career as an educator, she married and then continued to broad- en her education through extensive travel abroad. After 14 years of housewifing it, to use Mrs. Greeley ' s own words, she returned to the education field and for the past 6 years has most capably served the citizens of Wisconsin in her present position. Always very active in women ' s organizations, dur- ing the past year Dean Greeley was chairman of the University section of the National Association of Deans of Women. Mrs. Greeley has much faith in the present gen- eration and is especially interested in a program of personnel work to include the education for and development of mental hygiene. In addition to her very strenuous activity in preserving the dignity of the University ' s Women, she also finds time to dine with her husband and to address various women ' s organizations throughout the state. Although an ardent hiker, golfer, swimmer and baseball enthusiast as well as an accomplished con- tract bridge player, Mrs. Greeley ' s chief hobby is gardening, hler flowers have never failed to place in a flower show, and she expresses the hope that some day she may be able to own her own farm — • and really garden as I do so love to do — she briefly puts it. 11
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Page 32 text:
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PERHAPS no faculty member represents so com- pletely the University of Wisconsin to parents and citizens of the state and country as the Dean of Men. The nature of his office brings him in daily contact through interview and correspond- ence with men and men students whose problems are of every kind and type. As Dean, Scott hi. Goodnight presides as chairman of the Committee on Student Life and Interests, directs student loans and scholarships, supervises and approves housing for men, acts as advisor to the freshman men ' s honor fraternity. Phi Eta Sigma, of which he is national president. Such work makes him the over- seer of all out-of-the-classroom activity, fraternity and extracurricular, in which men students partici- pate. The only man in the country to hold such an office in addition to a Deanship, Dean Goodnight is known also as Director of the Summer Session. Long hours of preparation, during the winter, of reports and budget, as well as careful choosing of faculty, are a regular portion of his organization and directing of the six weeks summer school. Scott Goodnight, a native of Jackson County, Kansas, came to Wisconsin as an instructor in German from Eureka College in Illinois, and earned his Ph.D. here. The years 1898-99 saw him study in Europe, and in 1906-7 he attended the great Uni- DEAN OF MEN Scott Holland Goodnight versity at Leipzig, Germany. The duties of German School Director were taken over by him in 1911, those of Associate Professor of German in 1912, those of Dean of Men in 1916, which duties forced his resignation from active teaching several years ago. Beyond the official life of the University, Dean Goodnight delights in shouldering a gun and chas- ing cottontails through Wisconsin woods; enjoys smoking a corncob pipe while fishing near his lodge on Black Oak Lake in Michigan; scratches his head many times to remember the many people who greet him and honor him In every part of the coun- try; chuckles at the suggestion that he is known In Deans ' meetings as a dangerous adversary; is very proud of his dog, Mickey, his title, Faculty Bil- liard Champion, his activity in undergraduate days in football, basketball, and baseball. As a speaker before student groups in hig h schools and colleges, before Alumni groups, and before other gatherings of every nature. Dean Goodnight has made clear the aims and activities of this University to citizens of this and other states. 26
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Page 34 text:
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ADMINISTRATIVE THE directorship of the College of Engineering, Involving not only administration of the Civil, Mechanical, Electrical, Chemical, and Mining and Metallurgical branches, but also the supervision of the Engineering Experiment Station, was taken over by Dean Turneaure in 1903 to succeed Dean J. B. Johnson. Cornell University graduated an able civil engineer in 1889, who is known for his book on pub- lic water supply, and whose efforts have long been concentrated on the proposed building of a new and fireproof Hall of Engineering. The chief delight of Dean Turneaure is in outdoor life, and friends who have climbed mountains with him tell of the Dean ' s practice of suggesting bridges and arches which might be projected over mountain canyons seen as he walked along. DEAN FREDERICK E. TURNEAURE Dean of the College of Engineering THE intense popularity that Lloyd K. Garrison en- joys among his law students has been won by a dynamic personality and intellectual ability known and respected the country over. A direct descend- ant of the great Abolitionist, William Lloyd Gar- rison, the Law Dean, a liberal himself who came to Wisconsin In 1932, served as chairman of the New Deal Labor Relations Board, has mediated recently in state labor difficulties. Under his energetic Influ- ence, Wisconsin ' s Law School has earned a rising reputation as a training school for able prospective barristers. DEAN LLOYD K. GARRISON Dean of the Law School THE elevation of E. A. Birge to the Presidency of this University in 1919 saw George Sellery, au- thority on Medieval History, Phi Beta Kappa man, MacKenzie Scholar at the University of Toronto, take over the duties of Dean of the College of Letters and Science. Though born a citizen of Can- ada, Dean Sellery became a citizen of the United States after coming here thirty years ago, rose to prominence In the field of history, was appointed acting President here in January of this year. The conservatism of his nature is reflected in the fact that he has never owned an automobile. He is known among students for his stiff upper lip and love of rigid discipline. Is admired by students for his excellent taste In clothes. GEORGE C. SELLERY Doan of the College of Letters and Science 28
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