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Page 18 text:
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ENOCH A. Bryan, President Emeritus Research Professor of Economics and Economic History ]pr. £. A • Bryan I T WAS the class of 1900 during its junior year which had the initiative to undertake so daring an enterprise as the publication of a college annual. The third class was about to be ush¬ ered forth into a heartless world when class number four, by a bold stroke, placed its colleagues on the pages of written history. With the exception of the next year, every class since has contributed its volume to our history, and the Chinook is now as much of an institution as any other part of the State College of Washington. The Chinook has seen the college grow with its growth and strengthen with its strength. While such a vol¬ ume must, in the nature of the case, present the annals of the college gener¬ ations, yet it reflects truly their his¬ tory. Whether in athletics or speech or other activities on or off the campus, it is a story reflecting honor on the alma mater. { OSMAR L. WALLER, Vice-President Emeritus Dr. Q L Waller S TATE COLLEGE graduates are mak¬ ing good in the world’s work. Ad¬ ministrators and teachers in turn are made happy by the evidences of the successful work done by the State Col¬ lege students. An educational institu¬ tion is always to be measured by the success and usefulness of its graduates in helping to develop the resources of the state and of society. A wise teacher will never lose an op¬ portunity to help a student acquire a correct understanding and an interest in the fundamentals of subjects stud¬ ied, and to keep before him the service such studies will ultimately render in a life work. The student should commence to make a study of the things he is inter¬ ested in very early in his educational program, keeping in mind that suc¬ cess will depend upon interest in the professional work he is selecting for a £ life’s job. 14 —
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Page 17 text:
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E. O. Holland, A. W, Davis, S. A. Kimbrough, C. W. Orton, B, A. Perham, W. A. Ritz Board of Regents U NDER the law of the State of Washington, creating and establishing the State College of Washington, it was provided that a Board of Regents, consisting of five membe.rs, appointed by the Governor of the State, should have vested in them the management of the State College of Washington and its experiment sta¬ tions, the care and preservation of all property of which the institution shall be¬ come possessed, the erection and construction of all buildings necessary for the use of said college and stations, and the disbursement and expenditure of all money appropriated to this institution. Members of the Board Honorable Clarence D. Martin, Governor of the State of Washington. Charles W. Hinton, Treasurer Ex-Officio. W. A. Ritz, Walla Walla, President. A. W. Davis, Spokane, Vice-President. S. A. Kimbrough, Spokane. B. A. Perham, Yakima. Charles Orton, Sumner. E. O. Holland, Secretary Ex-Officio. — 13 —
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Page 19 text:
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W. C. KRUEGEL, Bursar l F. T. BARNARD, Registrar ursar Registrar D IRECTING the financial welfare of the State College of Washington is William C. Kruegel, Bursar, who heads the personnel of the business of¬ fice of the college. Besides handling the business transactions of the Stu¬ dent Loan Fund and of the college din¬ ing hall, this office acts as the treasurer of the Associated Students and of the various other student organizations. W. C. Kruegel was graduated from this institution with the class of 1902, the first class to be given degrees from the Washington Agricultural College. I N THE Registrar’s Office are kept the records of all individuals, both faculty and student, since the begin¬ ning of the institution. Up to the pres¬ ent, there are better than 32,000 indi¬ vidual records. President Emeritus E. A. Bryan has aptly described the office as being the Alpha and Omega of the institution. It is the first office a student contacts when he is ready to enter college, and it is the last one with which he checks when he is ready to graduate. — 15 —
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