Black Mountain College Bulletin/ Bulletin-Newsletter, Vol. III, No. [7]. July 1945 - Page 1 |
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BLACK MOUNTAIN COLLEGE BULLETIN BLACK MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAROLINA CALENDAR Fall Quarter Winter Quarter Spring Quarter Summer Quarter Each Quarter IS 11 weeks Sept. Jan. . Kpr. July
Object Description
Title | Black Mountain College Bulletin/ Bulletin-Newsletter, Vol. III, No. [7]. July 1945 |
Other Title | Announcements 1945-46 |
Creator | Black Mountain College (Black Mountain, N.C.) |
Date | 1945-07 |
Subjects |
College publications--North Carolina Soldiers--Education (Higher)--United States College teachers--North Carolina--Black Mountain College students--North Carolina--Black Mountain Universities and colleges--North Carolina--Black Mountain Education, Humanistic--North Carolina Universities and colleges--North Carolina--Curricula |
Place |
Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina, United States |
Time Period | (1929-1945) Depression and World War Two |
Abstract | This original college publication includes information about education in a time of war and lists faculty, students (1944-1945 school year) and other groups associated with the college. |
Description | Original bulletin that includes information on education in a time of war, the accelerated program, veterans' education, community work program, admission to the student body, payment of fees, summer sessions, and lists of the faculty, the Board of Fellows, the administrative staff, students for the 1944-1945 school year, and the advisory council. Released by Stuart Atkinson. |
Physical Characteristics | 15 pages |
Format |
Periodicals Informational pamphlets |
Rights | Courtesy of Western Regional Archives. Prior permission from the State Archives of NC is required for any commercial use.; |
Requirements for Use | Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader for PDF files. |
Language |
English |
Collection | Black Mountain College Research Project. North Carolina Museum of Art. Western Regional Archives |
Local call no. | BMCRP, Series VI, Box 75, Folder 21 |
MARS ID | 61.12.6 (Sub Series) |
Digital Collection | Black Mountain College |
Digital Format |
application/pdf |
Audience |
All |
Full Text | BLACK MOUNTAIN COLLEGE BULLETIN BLACK MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAROLINA CALENDAR Fall Quarter Winter Quarter Spring Quarter Summer Quarter Each Quarter IS 11 weeks Sept. Jan. . Kpr. July Newsletter EDUCATION IN WARTIME Black Mountain College has extended its curriculum and revised its calendar to meet the demands of the war. " While the immediate and future need of educated citi · zens is more important than ever, the present demand for practical effectiveness and speed is also obvious. The accelerated program described below makes graduation possible in three years or less; students are to be en · couraged to enter at as young an age as is feasible; new courses both academic and practical provide training for immediate needs; and continued emphasis on a democra~ ic way of life and on physical development builds the moral and physical stamina so essential to these times and to all times. While adapting itself to the war effort the College retains the basic function of higher education as its major ob · jective: training in thoughtful action, transmission and enhancement of our cultural heritage, and development of a consciousness of those principles for which we are now struggling. The enormous social, economic, politi;: al, and ethical problems that the war brings with it - and which the peace will render even more difficult - can be solved only through the application of deep understanding, imaginative intelligence, and true conviction. Education must prepare youth, young women as well as young men, to deal with these problems, to solve them. Wisdom cannot he improvised; good judgment requires a seasoned mind and disciplined feelings. Black Mountain College Bulletin Special Issue for July, 1945. Issued seven times a year, in August, September, November, December, January, February and April. Entered as second- · class matter November 4, 1942,' at the Postoffice at Black Mountain, North Carolina, under the Act of August 24, 1912. 3 ACCELERATED PROGRAM Under its war- time accelerated program the College operates on Ii system of four quarters per year of eleven weeks each. Under this plan students may come for either three or four quarters each year, but because of the war emergency they are encouraged to attend four quarters and hasten their graduation. Students, as heretofore, will continue to graduate when they are prepared to do so, the average time being at the end of twelve quarters. VETERANS' EDUCATION The College expects to participate in the program of education for members of the armed services returning to civilian life, as provided for in the Veterans' Rehabilitation Bill ( Public Law 346) passed by Congress in June, 1944. COMMUNITY WORK PROGRAM In response to the present national demand for food production there is considerable emphasis upon farm work this year in the work program. This includes such work as the planting, tending, and harvesting of crops, and the clearing of forest land for pasture. In addition, experience leading to the acquirement of skills in building and construction and related to studies in architecture is obtainable through activities in connection with necessary maintenance and repair. Once a student's personal responsibility is established, leadership is developed through opportunities to direct individual projects which range from road building to operating the College Bookstore. These projects are open to men and women equally. An important element in such work is the development of physical fitness. Members of the community now devote an average of three or four afternoons per week to this program. ADMISSION TO: STUDENT BODY The College has never had fixed regulations concerning the age or scholastic background of applicants for admission, since it has preferred to consider each individual case upon its merits. Although most applicants are of usual college age and have completed a four- year course in accredited secondary schools, younger students, or students who have not finished secondary school, have been admitted when their records indicated that they could carry college work. Almost without exception such students have proved to be ready for college. In the present emergency the College will encourage students of this kind to apply, provided their secondary school principals or headmasters recommend them for college entrance before graduation. Although the College knows that genuine education cannot be accelerated beyond a certain point, it does believe that those who can proceed rapidly should be given the opportunity to do so. 4 PAYMENT OF FEES The yearly fee is payable as follows: Full Fee Reduced Fee Six weeks before beginning of term $ 200.00 $ 200.00 On entrance $ 400.00 2/ 5 of balance Opening date of next quarter '$ 400.00 2/ 5 of balance Opening date of third quarter $ 200.00 The balance The College cannot guarantee that a place will be reo served for any student after a date six weeks before the beginning of the term unless $ 200.00 has been deposited with the College by this time. This deposit is not refundable except at Faculty direction if the student withdraws after this date, since a withdrawal from a reserved place at the last moment may create a vacancy which otherwise would have been filled. When students are admitted after this date the deposit must be made within ten days of notification of acceptance and before arrival. If a student attends all four quarters in a given year, the extra fee for the fourth quarter is due as follows: one · half of fee for this quarter thirty days prior to opening date of quarter; balance on opening date of quarter. The only other fees are: Application fee $ 5.00 Contingency deposit $ 25.00 Examination for graduation $ 25.00 Fee for late payment of any bill $ 10.00 The application fee must accompany application for ad · mission to the College and is not refundable. Applicants who are accepted by the College should make the con · tingency deposit of $ 25.00 within ten days of notification of acceptance, since admission does not become effective until this deposit is received. It is not refundable if the new student fails to enter. While a student is in attendance it must be maintained; but any unused portion of it is refunded upon graduation or withdrawal. Bills are payable on the date of the bill and if not paid within ten days are subject to the fee for late payment. In cases where students are called into military service charges are made on an exact pro rata basis up to a week preceding the date of induction into the armed forces. Any amount in excess of this that has been paid is refunded. All future tuition payments although contracted ' for are of course canceled. COURSES The following courses were offered during the first three quarters of the 1944- 45 Session and represent, in a somewhat limited way, the area covered in a given year. The curriculum for 1945- 46 will be much less limited than this, since additions will be made to the Faculty. For other courses that may be available, consult the College catalogue. Courses are given when there is sufficient demand for them. Tutorials for advanced students are given when need arises, and are not listed below. 5 ARTS Drawing Painting Design Beginning Weaving Advanced Weaving Verse Writing Introductory Writing Playwriting Dramatic Production Journalism Rhythm and Melody Counterpoint Elements of Form and Structure in Music Vienncse School of Music after Beethoven Chorus Ensemble Violin Piano Woodworking House Design - Plan Analysis House Design - Fundamentals of Construction Elementary Architectural Drawing LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE American Literature Modern Poetry Elementary French Intermediate French German for Beginners Herman Melville: An Introduction to American Writing William Blake and the Ro-mantic Period in England Greek Tragedy Greek Comedy Moliere and Contemporaries Medireval Drama Bible MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE Calculus Introductory Mathematics Basic Mathematics Matter and Energy Biology SOCIAL STUDIES History of the United States Cultural Anthropology Social Problems Social Change Economics Fall, winter, spring Fall, winter, sprmg Winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Fall, winter, sprin~ Winter Fall, winter Fall Fall Fall, winter, spring Fall, winter, sprin~ Winter, spring Fan, winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Spring Fall, winter, spring W" inter, spring Fall, winter, spring Winter, spring Winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Fall Fall Fall Winter Winter Fall Winter, spring Fall, winter, spring Winter, spring Spring Fall, winter, spring Spring F all, winter Spring Fall, winter Spring Winter, spring Psychodynamics of Creativity Culture of the Renaissance Dialogues of Plato Outline of Western Culture SUMMER SESSIONS Fall, winter, spring Winter, fall Winter, spring Spring 6 Since Pearl Harbor Black Mountain College has been at work all year round, and the Summer Quarter which was an innovation has become an institution. In summer the normal life of the College continues~ though with a partly changed personnel. Hence the summer is a time when students may tryout Black Mountain College, and when Black Mountain College may try out students. After attending the Summer Session out of curiosity or more or less casual interest many students have remained as regular members of the College community. The chief items on the summer schedule this year are courses offered by Music and Art Institutes. The staff for the Black Mountain College 1945 Summer Art Institute includes: Dr Walter Gropius, founder and first director of the Bauhaus in Germany and the present head of the Department of Architecture at Harvard University; Lyonel Feininger and Fannie Hillsmith, painters; Ossip Zadkine and Mary Callery, sculptors; Paul Rand and Alvin Lustig, advertising artists; F W Goro, scientific photographer on the staff of Life magazine; Berta Rudofsky, designer, leather work; and Dr Alexander Dorner and Dr Karl With, art historians and art theorists. Anni Albers, a member of the Art Department of Black Mountain College, will give a course in textile design. Josef Albers, the head of the Art Department of the College, will give courses in basic design and color. Paul Beidler, the College architect, will give a course in architecture. During the Institute the practicing classes will be open to art teachers and art students, beginners as well as advanced students. Lectures will be given periodically for the whole College Community and for the general public. Various exhibitions will accompany the lectures and classes in which modern teaching methods will be stressed. Running concurrently with the Art Institute will be a Second Summer Music Institute, under the direction of the College Music Department. The guest faculty for the Music Institute includes: Erwin Bodky, pianist and harpsichordist of the Cambridge Collegium Musicum, a member of the faculty of the Longy School of Music; Carol Brice, concert contralto; Frances Snow Drinker, flutist, formerly a member of the faculty of the University of Louisville; Dr Alfred Einstein, music historian at Smith College and the author of Mozart: His Character and Work; Roland Hayes, concert tenor; Eva Heinitz, assistant first cellist of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra; Hugo Kaudel', composer of many works for different instrumental and vocal ensembles; Josef Marx, oboist and English horn player in the Metropolitan Opera Company; William Valkenier, first horn player of the Boston Symphony Orchestra; and Emanuel Zetlin, associate concert- master of the Metropolitan Opera Company and a member of the faculty of the Manhattan School of Music. Through the courtesy of Music Mountain of Falls Village, Connecticut, the Gordon String Quartet will be a part of the Institute for the last three weeks of the summer program. The quartet will give a series of six concerts of classic and contemporary music. The Music Institute will feature music lectures, tutorials, open rehearsals, concerts, and courses on the rise and development of vocal and instrumental polyphony with special emphasis on the small ensembles of chamber music. The concerts, lectures and classes of the Music Institute will be open to the stridents and teachers of the Art Institute. Students of the Black Mountain College Summer Session may enroll in any music and art classes for which they are qualified. They may also attend all lectures and extracurricular events. 7 ART INSTITUTE 1945 Advertising Architecture Architecture Art History Art History and Theory Basic Design Color Contemporary Art Graphic Design Leatherwork Painting Painting Painting and Composition Photography Sculpture Sculpture Textile Design Woodworking MUSIC INSTITUTE 1945 A Capella Chorus Bach's Work for the Violin Chamber Orchestra Collegium Musicum Creative Music Education The Literature of the Viola da Gamba and the ' Cello Polyphony Through the Ages Paul Rand Paul Beidler Walter Gropius Karl With Alexander Dorner Josef Albers Josef Albers Robert Motherwell Alvin Lustig Berta Rudofsky Lyonel Feininger Robert Motherwell Fannie Hillsmith F. W. Goro Mary Callery Ossip Zadkine Anni Albers Mary Gregory Edward Lowinsky Emanuel Zetlin Erwin Bodky and Heinrich J alowetz Erwin Bodky Edward Lowinsky Eva Heinitz Erwin Bodky, Alfred Einstein, Heinrich J alowetz, Edward Lowinsky In addition to music and art courses, the following curriculum is planned: ANNI ALBERS Textile Design Art School, Berlin; Kunstgewerhe School, Hamhurg; Bauhaus, Weimar; Bauhaus Diploma. With Weaving Department of Bauhaus, 1925- 1929. Work in weaving exhihited in Europe and the United States. Weaving in permanent collections of Nat~ nal Museum of Munich, and Textile Museum, Zwickau. 8 Black Mountain College since 1933. Emanuel Zetlin Erwin Bodky Josef Marx Josef Marx Carol Brice Heinrich J alowetz SIEGFRIED SCHWARTZ Prohlems of Modern Economy Economic and Social Aspects of the Machine Age GERTRUDE STRAUS German Conversation and Reading MAXDEHN History of Mathematics MAXDEHN Greek Philosophy Position to he filled later. H. MC GUIRE WOOD Construction Prohlems Position to he filled later GEORGE ZABRISKIE Shelley MARGARET BEIDLER Writing Advanced Writing Prohlems of Style and Performance in Ensemhle Playing The Song ( Four Lecture Demonstrations ) The String Quartet Three Hundred Years of Keyhoard Music Use of Wind Instruments in the Eighteenth Century with Special Reference to the Ohoe Wind Ensemhle HERBERT MILLER Introduction to Sociology Nationalism and Minorities . Tutorials hy appointment SUMMER QUARTER COURSES 1945 FACULTY ENGLISH: BIOLOGY: GERMAN: SOCIOLOGY: ECONOMICS: PHILOSOPHY: PSYCHOLOGY: MATHEMATICS: ARCHITECTURE: JOSEF ALBERS Art Royal Art School, Berlin; Kunstgewerbe School, Essen; Art Academy, Munich; Bauhaus, Weimar. Positions in German public schools; at the Bauhaus, Weimar, Dessau, and Berlin, 1923- 1933. Appointment to a professorship, 1930. Works exhibited widely in Europe and the Americas. Represented in public and private collections. Guest Lecturer, Harvard Graduate School of Design, 1936- 1941. Visiting Instructor, spring semester and summer school, Harvard University, 1941. Summer courses at Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1943, and Lowthorpe School, Groton, Mass., 1943, 1944. Black Mountain College since 1933. MARGARET BEIDLER Writing Earlham College, A. B.; Bryn Mawr College; Pendle Hill School; Mills College, M. A. Position at Friends School, Ram Allah, Palestine, as instructor in English literature and composition; assistant to deans at Earlham College, Pendle Hill and Mills College. Author of a number of published stories, verses, and magazine articles. . Black Mountain College since 1945. PAUL BEIDLER Architecture University of Pennsylvania, B. Architecture. Positions as Student Instructor of Watercolor Painting, University of Pennsylvania, 1929- 1930; Staff Architect for archreological expeditions of University of Pennsylvania Museum in Egypt, Iraq, and Italy, finally serving as Assistant Director in Iraq; Architect for British Museum in Palestine, 1930- 1934; Apprentice to Frank Lloyd Wright, 1934- 1935; with architectural firms of Jan Duiker in Amsterdam, Holland; Claude Stiehl in Honolulu, Hawaii; Webster and Wilson in Los Angeles, California, 19351938; Practicing Architect, 1938- Black Mountain College since 1945. DAVID R. CORKRAN American History and Literature Wesleyan University, Middleton, Connecticut, A. B.; Harvard University, M. A.; University of Chicago, Columbia University. Positions as Head of English Department, Lowville Free Academy, Lowville, New York, 1923- 1925; Head of English Department, North Shore Country Day School, Winnetka, Illinois, 1926 · 1944; Instructor in Winnetka Graduate Teachers' College, 1932- 1944; Demonstration Teacher in Summer Institute for Teachers, United States Indian Bureau, Chilocco, Oklahoma, summer 1937; Acting Headmaster, North Shore Country Day School, 1935.1936; Assistant Headmaster and Dean of Boys, North Shore Country Day School, 1936 · 1944. Contributor to Progressive Education Magazine and the English Journal. 9 Black Mountain College since 1945. WILHELM MAX DEHN Mathematics University of Grettingen, A. M., Ph. D. Assistant in Geometry and Analysis, Technische Hochschule, Karlsruhe, 1900- 1901; Privat Dozent in Mathematics, University of Muenster, 1901- 1911; Professor Titularius, 1905; Professor Extraordinarius of Mathematics, University of Kie1, 1911- 1913; Professor of Mathematics, Technische Hochschule, Breslau, 1913- 1921; Professor of Mathematics, University of Frankfurt, 1921- 1935; Acting Professor of Mathematics, Tekniske Hoiskole, Trondhjem, 1939- 1940; Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Philosophy, University of Idaho ( Southern Branch), 19411942; Visiting Lecturer, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, 1942- 1943; Tutor, St. John's College, 1943- 1944. Black Mountain College since 1945. * THEODORE DREIER Mathematics Harvard College, A. B.; Harvard Engineering School, S. B. in E. E. Positions with General Electric Company, 1925- 1930; Rollins College, 1930- 1933. Black Mountain College since 1933. * On leave of absence 1945- 46. * JOHN EVARTS Music Yale University, A. B.; Yale Music School; private instruction, Munich; Hochschule fuer Musik, Berlin; composition with Hans Weisse, New York; Concord Summer School of Music. Position at Milhrook School for Boys, 1931- 1932; Assistant Music Critic, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1932- 1933. Black Mountain College since 1933. * On leave of absence for the duration of the war. MARY GREGORY Woodworking Bennington College, A. B. Position in Art Department, Cambridge School, 1937- 1941. Black Mountain College since 1941. FRITZ HANSGIRG Chemistry and Physics University of Graz, Ph. D. Research Chemist with Fanto Oil Company, Austria; founder of Electrothermic Company, Switzerland; honorary lecturer of Applied Chemistry and Electrothermic Processes at University of Mining and Metallurgy, Austria; consulting engineer and Vice- President, American Magnesium Metals Corporation; Vice- President, Japanese Magnesium Company; Consulting Engineer for Per · manente Corporation; designer of Henry J. Kaiser magnesium defense plant at Permanente, California. Inventor of many industrial processes, including carbothermic magnesium reduction process. Black Mountain College since 1942. HEINRICH JALOWETZ Music University of Vienna, Dr. Phil.; composition with Arnold Schrenherg. Conductor of the Deutsches Theater in Prague, 1916- 1923; 10 conductor at the Opernhaus in Cologne, 1925- 1933; con- * FREDERICK ROGERS MANGOLD Spanish and Linguistics Princeton University, A. B.; University of Wisconsin, M. A., Ph. D. Positions at Louisiana State University, 1929- 1930; Colorado School of Mines, 1930- 1931. Fellow in Spanish, University of Wisconsin, 1931- 1934. Black Mountain College since 1934. 11 * On leave of absence for the duration of the war. ALFRED KAZIN * ALFRED LAWRENCE KOCHER EDWARD E LOWINSKY ductor of orchestra concerts in Vienna, Prague, Cologne, Berlin; summer school, Conservatory of Toronto, 1939. Black Mountain College since 1939. Visiting Lecturer in English and American Literature College of the City of New York, B. A.; Columbia UlIi · versity, M. A. Positions at the College. of the City of New York, Queens College, the New School for Social Research. Literary Editor of The New Republic, 1942.1943, and now Contributing Editor; Associate Editor of Fortune, 1943 · 1944. Author of On Native Ground and of numerous essays and reviews which have appeared in The New York Times Book Review, The New York Herald- Tribune Book Re · view, The Saturday Review of Literature, The Antioch Review, The Sewanee Review, Scribner's, The New Re · public, Fotrtune, The Virf{ inia Quarterly Review, The Partisan Review. Consultant on staff of The Oxford Companion To American Literature. Guggenheim Fellow, 1940- 1941; Carnegie Grant, 1941. Architecture Stanford University, A. B.; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Pennsylvania State College, M. A.; New York University. Positions as Head of the Department of Architecture, Pennsylvania State College, 1916 · 1925; Head of the De · partment of Architecture, University of Virginia, 1926 · 1928; Editor of The Architectural Record, 1928- 1° 38; Visiting Professor of Architecture, Carnegie Institt: lc of Technology, 1938- 1940; Practicing Architect, 1916Author of Early Architect; ure of Pennsylvania, Culor in Early American Architecture, New Materials and New Construction Methods. Black Mountain College since 1940. · On leave of absence for the duration of the war. Music Hochschule fuer Musik; University o! Heidelberg, Ph. D. Concert accompanist; teacher of piano and theory at Konservatorium, Stuttgart; private music teacher in Holland; teacher of theory at YMHA music school, New York. Music Teachers National Association and Musico · logical Society of America. Author of Book of Children's Music, Monograph on Or · lando di Lasso, Secret Chromatic Art in the Netherlands Motet. Black Mountain College since 1942. SIEGFRIED SCHWARZ Economics University of Prague, DrJur.; University of Vienna. Corporation lawyer, industrialist, Liberec, Czechoslovakia. THEODORE . RONDTHALER History University of North Carolina, A. B.; Princeton University, M. A. Positions as Instructor in English, University of North Carolina, 1920- 1921; Reading Fellow, Princeton Uni · versity, 1922 · 1923; Head of English Department, Hun School, Princeton, 1923- 1924; Head of Latin Department, Salem College, Winston- Salem, 1925- 1927; Teacher of History and Principal, Clemmons Consolidated School, Forsyth County System, North Carolina, 1929- 1944. Black Mountain College since 1945. Violin State Academy of Music, Munich, diploma; Teachers' Seminar of the State Academy of Music, Munich. Member of the Studeny String Quartet. Member of the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra since 1942; concert violinist. Psychology and Philosophy Universities of Berlin, Zurich, Munich, Grettingen, Dr. Med. Positions with Charite and Poliklinik Hospitals, Berlin, 1919- 1933; University of Berlin, 1927- 1936. Guest Lecturer at Universities of Amsterdam, Groningen, Leyden, Utrecht, 1933; Sorbonne, 1935. Practicing physician, 1923 · 1936. Editor of Nervenarzt, 1928 · 1935. Author of Wesen und Vorgang der Suggestio'n, Atlas der Elektrodiagnostik, Geschehnis und Erlebnis, Vom Sinn der Sinne. Black Mountain College since 1938. * O!" leave of absence 1945 · 46. GERTRUDE ELISE STRAUS * ERWIN WALTER STRAUS HERBERT A. MILLER Social Science Dartmouth, A. B., A. M.; Harvard, Ph. D. Positions as Professor of Sociology, Oberlin College; Ohio State University; gave courses at Yenching University, Peiping, China; lectured at universities of China, India, Syria; Professor of Social Economy, Bryn Mawr; survey of immigrant conditions and school facilities for immigrants, Cleveland, Ohio, for Russell Sage Foundation; division chief, study of immigrant heritages, Carnegie Corporation; Visiting Professor, Temple University; Beloit College; Penn State College; Director of American Seminar for Refugee Scholars, summers 1940 · 1943. Author of The School and the Immigrant; Old World Traits Translated; Races, Nations and Classes; The Beginnings of Tomorrow. Black Mountain College since 1943. 12 ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF GEORGE ZABRISKIE Writing Duke University, A. B. Author of The Mind's Geography, Like the Root. Guggenheim Fellow, 1942 · 1943. Black Mountain College since 1944. H. Me GUIRE WOOD Building Construction Antioch College, A. B. House designer and builder, Rochester, New York, and Delray Beach, Florida, 1927 · 1941. Black Mountain College since 1942. STUDENT OFFICERS Patsy Lynch William McLaughlin Eleanor Smith Thomas Raleigh Rector Chairman of the Board of Fellows Chairman of the Faculty Treasurer Assistant Treasurer Secretary Registrar Assistant Registrar Librarian , Plant and Construction Dietitian Josef Albers Theodore Dreier Mary Gregory Fritz Hansgirg Heinrich J alowetz Edward Lowinsky William McLaughlin Erwin Straus H. McGuire Wood Theodore Dreier Josef Albers Herbert A. Miller Theodore Dreier Theodore Rondthaler Mary Gregory Herbert A. Miller David Corkran NellA. Rice H. Mcguire Wood Dora Schwarz BOARD OF FELLOWS 13 14 S;~ UD~~ S. J § J4- 194S _ AI~ n;( R& haral'l: pin Philadelphia, Albee, Nancy Accord, Baker, Vera New York, Bauer, Marilyn Jean Cleveland, Bennett, Peggy Apalachicola, Braunthal, Jagna Woodside, - Brown, Samuel E., Jr. Wilton, Burton, Sue Kay New York, - Bush- Brown, Dick L. Atlanta, Carr, Dorothy Tryon Winchester, Chernoff, Judith Sybil Brookline, Gormany, Norma Jeanne Lancaster, Couch, Joan Potter San Angelo, - Cowan, Curtiss Wishon Palo Alto, - Daniels, Marvin New York, - Davis, Norman Elihu Kingston, Dinkowitz, Roxane Norwalk, Ehrman, Irma Flushing, --- Forberg, Charles L. Minneapolis, Goldsmith, Janet Beth Mansfield, -- Gropius, Beate E. South Lincoln, - Harrigan, Anthony Hart Charleston, Heling, Janet C. Long Island, Keiser, Joan Elizabeth Williamsport, Kelley, Elizabeth Fulton, Lynch, Patsy Gay Clayton, MacKinnon, Ann Wellesley, Marden, Helen W. Watertown, McCanna, Alice Maria Pelham Manor, ...:.. McLaughlin, William R. Easton, , oel, Layton C., Jr. Merion Station, Osbourne, Elizabeth New York, - Paul, Max New York, Pearson, Lorna Belle Nyack, Phelan, Mary Sterling St. Louis, - Raleigh, Thomas Joseph Elizabeth, Ramsey, Janet Harvey Westport, Rees, Janet F. Arden, - Reiss, John J ames Milwaukee, Rosenbluth, Helen Joyce New York, Schauffier, Anna M. Prairie View, Schauffier, Katherine S. Prairie View, - Schuyler, Harold Harner Lewisburg, Schlein, Eva New York, - Schmitt, Conrad Victor Wauwatosa, Schmitt, Elizabeth Marie Wauwatosa, Slater, E. Jane Ogden, Smith, Eleanor Robson Bay City, Smith, Nancy Alice West Allis, Sones, Han; iett S. Dorch~ ster, Stack, Jean Shirley Minneapolis, Stieglitz, Alicje Kew Gardens, Swift, Lucy Houghton New York, Teasdale, Suzanne F. St. Louis, Wight, Earlene Ann Cleveland, ...: woldin, Edwin Judd Somerville, Pa. N. Y. N. Y. Ohio Fla. N. Y. Conn. N. Y. Ga. Mass. Mass. Ohio Tex. Cal. N. Y. N. Y. Conn. N. Y. Minn. Ohio Mass. S. C. N. Y. Pa. Ky. Mo. Mass. Mass. N. Y. Pa. Pa. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. Mo. N. J. Conn. N. C. Wis. N. Y. Ill. Ill. Pa. N. Y. Wis. Wis. Utah Mich. Wis. Mass. Minn. N. Y. N. Y. Mo. Ohio N. J . John E. Burchard Cambridge Mass. Director, Albert Farwell Bemis Foundation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cuba. Professor of History, N. C. D. C. N. Y. Cal. Md. N. C. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. C. D. C. N. C. Mass. Mass. Mass. Mass. Ohio. Mass. Tenn. Los Altos Fort Salonga Cambridge Concord Newton Centre Dayton Asheville Ethel C. Forbes Lucy Gage Nashville Professor of Elementary Education, Peabody College Adrian J. Dornbush Washington Associate Director of WPA Art Program Francis F. Bradshaw Chapel Hill Dean of Students, University of North Carolina Josephine W. Duveneck Arthur S. Adams Ithaca Assistant Dean, Collel!' e of Engineering, Cornell University Fernando de los Rios New York Former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Spanish Republic John Dewey New York Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Columbia University Walter Gropius Lincoln Chairman, School of Architecture, Harvard University Ethel E. Dreier Walter Locke Editor, Dayton Daily News Sarah Goodwin Joseph Katz Baltimore President, Joseph Katz Advertising Company Herminio Portell Vila Havana Instituto Cultural Cubano- NorteAmericano; University of Havana Samuel S. Cooley Black Mountain Captain, U. S. Army Medical Corps Anna D. Jamieson Karl Terzhagi Winchester Professor of Soil Mechanics, Harvard University Malcolm Ross Washington Director of Information, National Labor Relations Board Herbert W. Sanders Black Mountain Executive Secretary, Blue Ridge Association Robert R. Williams Attorney ADVISORY COUNCIL |
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