澳门六合彩开奖结果2023

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LEADERSHIP

Blaisdell Again Chooses 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023

Beloit College, in need of a president, looked west to 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023鈥檚 President James Blaisdell, who was a Beloit graduate and had been a well-loved Beloit professor. Having declined an earlier call from his alma mater in 1917, Blaisdell gave signs that he was seriously considering the offer this time around. In order to retain him, Trustee George Marston pressed the other members of the Board to commit themselves more fully to the 鈥淭hree Million Dollar Campaign,鈥 which had not progressed as Blaisdell hoped. That commitment may have played a role in Blaisdell鈥檚 decision once again to decline the offer and to stay at 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023.

Dean Ernest Jaqua

With the retirement of Dean Edwin Norton, 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 sought its second dean of the faculty, and President Blaisdell settled on Ernest Jaqua, a scholar whose career he had followed for years. Due to a his recent acceptance of a position as dean of men at Colorado College, Jaqua was unable to accept when first offered the position in 1922, so Blaisdell kept the position open for him, and Jaqua came to 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 in 1923.

CAMPUS

Mason Hall of Chemistry

In 1923, students and faculty at the College were excited to see the completion of construction of Mason Hall, a state-of-the-art chemistry facility. The impressive reinforced concrete structure stretched the entire length of the block from Fifth to Sixth streets on Harvard Avenue; then the westernmost of 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023鈥檚 buildings, it extended the boundaries of the campus. Wilson Lyon wrote that the building was considered 鈥渁n ornament to the campus and to the city,鈥 not only for its design, which included an imposing tower, but also because its more than one acre of laboratory space and up-to-date science facilities were among the most coveted in the nation.

Planning for Mason Hall was initiated by a gift from William S. Mason, a trustee, businessman and philanthropist from Chicago. Mason, a friend of Judge Charles G. Neely, who had taught Constitutional History and Law at 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 since 1912, had, in 1915, covered the cost of landscaping the south side of Sixth Street between Harvard and Dartmouth avenues. According to Neely鈥檚 remarks at the dedication of Mason Hall, Mason, who had requested that his name not be mentioned, had visited the College one day and asked President Blaisdell what was needed. When a women鈥檚 dormitory, an athletic field, and a gymnasium were suggested, Mason seemed uninterested, but he was excited about the idea of a chemistry building.

Mason鈥檚 first thought was to extend Pearsons Hall to create improved facilities for chemistry, but over the course of several years, it was decided that an entirely new building would be constructed. With the onset of war, the cost of the projected building nearly doubled. Mason cemented his position as a great friend of the College by donating $100,000 over and above the $200,000 he had already given. The design of the building followed the recommendations of Associate Professor Edward P. Bartlett, who had studied the newest chemistry facilities throughout the country. Bartlett was determined that 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 would be 鈥渙ne of the strongholds of chemistry in the Southwest,鈥 and the completion of Mason Hall launched a new era of science at 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023. In Wilson Lyon鈥檚 words: 鈥淭he two stories and basement of Mason Hall of Chemistry, with its 80 rooms and an acre of laboratory space, must have seemed a paradise to the students and faculty who previously had known only the chemical laboratories in the basement of Pearsons Hall.鈥

Crookshank Hall of Zoology

Mason wasn鈥檛 the only new building completed in 1923. The north side of 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023鈥檚 science quadrangle took form more quickly than anticipated. In 1921, with plans already in the works for Mason Hall, another friend of the College, David Carnes Crookshank, offered to give a building for Zoology. Crookshank owned citrus acreage in La Verne and was a member of the board of directors of the California Fruit Growers Exchange. He was also a contractor鈥攈is work for the College had included the renovation of Holmes Hall and the construction of Harwood Court鈥攚ho foresaw the benefits of combining construction projects. Although his donation of $100,000 to the College came in the form of common stock and bonds (from the Keystone Iron and Steel Works in Los Angeles), the trustees worked out financing that allowed the project to be undertaken at the same time as Mason Hall. Taking advantage of a dramatically rapid course of events, President Blaisdell, during morning chapel on April 25, 1921, announced that construction was set to begin immediately. As Charles Burt Sumner wrote: 鈥淭he assembly was excused, marched to the ground, and at the President鈥檚 word the steam shovel started the work.鈥

Crookshank Hall鈥檚 facilities鈥21,000 square feet of laboratories and classrooms designed with the participation of Zoology Professor William Atwood Hilton鈥攃ould accommodate 200 students working simultaneously. The building was shared with Botany and housed that department鈥檚 herbarium. Along with the equally new Mason Hall, and with improvements in Pearsons Hall for Physics and Mathematics, 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 now boasted state-of-the-art facilities that would serve for years to come. 

ACADEMICS

Professor Everett S. Olive and 鈥淧rimavera鈥 

Everett S. Olive, pianist and composer, came to 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 as a professor of music in 1923, and soon thereafter, began to compose College songs, including one of 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023鈥檚 most revered songs, 鈥淧rimavera.鈥

ATHLETICS

澳门六合彩开奖结果2023-USC

澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 and USC football inaugurated the Los Angeles Coliseum with its first event on Oct. 6. The L.A. Times鈥 Bill Henry reported: 鈥淭he USC Trojans swallowed the 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 Sagehens, 23-7, yesterday but found the gravel-fed bird from Claremont entirely too tough for easy digestion.鈥

STUDENT LIFE

The Sagehen

First published in 1923, The Sagehen was 鈥渢he first comic magazine put out by 澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 students.鈥 

Hiking Club

The 1924 Metate (published by the junior class in 1923) included a women鈥檚 organization called the Hiking Club. The group served as an information bureau, providing information on trails and organizing overnight trips and short hikes to allow members to 鈥渂ecome acquainted with the mountains and canyons near Claremont.鈥

ELSEWHERE

  • President Harding died of a heart attack and was succeeded by Vice President Calvin Coolidge.
  • Roy and Walt Disney founded The Walt Disney Company.
  • Adolf Hitler led the Nazis in the so-called Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, an unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the Bavarian government.