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Page 25 text:
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IP GRADY S. PATTERSON, College Registrar WORTH H. COPELAND, Bur The library staff. Seated: Louise Bethea, Carlton West, librarian. Standing: Mrs. Folk, Minnie Kallam, Mrs. Pritchard, Mrs. Earley, Mrs. Quinn, Mrs. Bridges, and Mrs. Howe. Registrar ' s staff: Seated are Winifred Royall. Mrs. Mar- garet R. Perry: standing. Mrs. Ann Fonts, Grady S. Pat- terson, Mrs. Imogene Kirk, Mrs. Nell Gentry. i nn Bursar ' s staff. Worth Copeland, bursar. Mrs. Virgniia Cocke. James B. Cook, Jr.. Mrs. Hannah Hollifield. ■ In ' '
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Page 24 text:
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raE Administration Fnini thi ' iii.ii lilc-tldorcd rotunda in ilir n-nli-i uf W.iil Hall slrni ihr .idniiiiistratixc otticcs. llic lilis dial huld Wake Forest Clollr c tnycthcr. Ail prrliiirnt inloiination concernint; the cnllii;i- is housed in this archi e. The college hierarchy also operate from here. The Dean of Men, Dr. Daniel B. Bryan; and Deaji ol Women, Miss Lois Johnson, combine experience with intuitive know-hou to i;uide students throut;h dilfieult times. The Registrar, (irady S. Patterson, perlornis cr well the difficult jol) of keeping up with lial students lia e done, are doing, and must do in their scholastic work. W ' orth H. Copeland, the Bursar, a title describing aptl - his position, must cope with the e.xasperating enigma of Wake Forest ' s none-too-copious liudget and many monev- varv students. J. GLENN BLACKBURN, College Chaplain DR. GEORGE C:. MACKIE, College Physician DANIEL BUNYAN BKYAN, Dean of the College LOIS JOHNSON. Dean of Women MARVIN A. FRANCES, Director of Sports Publicity RUSSELL H. BRANTLEY. JR., Director of the News
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Page 26 text:
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Charles S. Black, Professor of Chemistry, shows his stu- dents a really simple experiment. The jol) of running a college is never an ea.sy one, and this ear the impending move to Winstun-.Salem brought a flux ol new problems and responsibilities to harass the lacultv . .Aside Ironi the strain of an accelerated schedule and the actual remosal problems of the college, there was also the realization that this was the last year on the be- loved old campus, aiid that soon many old friends and familiar places must be left behind. At the same liuic. hinve cr, the liUuie looketl Ininht. The new campus at Winston, with its practically unlimited potentialities, served as an effective beacon, and with their eyes on this goal, both the administration and the professors buckled down to meet the strenuous demands. Over in Wait Hall typewriters clacked and telephones rang busiK as the administrative heads and their staffs tackled the numerous tasks of reorganization .ind ex- pansion in addition to their usual duties. The Registrar ' s oHice gathered in a rising flood of applications. Faced with the prospect of a student body greatly increased in size, Dean Johnson and Dean Bryan planned and revised in order to meet the consequently greater problems in store for theju. The Bursar and his assistants furrowed their l)r(j s uvi-v (lie financial picttnc and ni.Kie a aliant effort to extract reservation fees from currently enrolled students who planned to continue studying in Winston- .Salem. In his olfice. President Tribble shouldered one of the heavier shares ol the binden, performing his duties with energy and patience, while in Winston Vice-Presi- Faculty Cecil VV. Alford, In- structor in Sociology Charles M. Allen, As- sistant Professor of Biology L,.A John W. Angell, Asso- ciate Professor of Re- ligion Andrew L. Aycock, Associate Professor of English 22 3 W ' = ' WWBiRffiPWWl ' atfWlliWWftWgB
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