Tag Archives: Frank C. Ewart

p. 303 – The Cutten Period, 1922-1942

evaluation the student’s entire concentration program and viewed the comprehensive examination as a means to that end.

The Colgate Plan attracted nationwide attention as a somewhat radical experiment in higher education. The President and faculty were asked to discuss it at conferences; articles on it were published; representatives of other institutions carne to the campus to study it. Perhaps its highest recommendations came in the form of adaptations of various segments and the use of its Survey texts by other colleges. Though it was not related to the Colgate Plan, Eugene T. Adams of the Philosophy Department and eight faculty collaborators in 1942 published The American Idea, a discussion of aspects of American culture which served as a basis of a course they taught during part of the World War II period.

Of particular interest, also, were instructional approaches which the Departments of Psychology and Political Science developed independently of the Colgate Plan. Professor Donald A. Laird stressed the experimental approach in psychology and was responsible for setting up a laboratory in 1928 in which undergraduates studied sleep under controlled conditions with themselves as subjects. Dr. Rodney L. Mott of the Political Science Department suggested the Washington Study Group which for the first time spent a semester in the capitol in 1935 under the supervision of Dr. Paul S. Jacobsen, ’27. This innovation aroused the interest of prospective applicants to Colgate, served to stimulate students already enrolled who sought to meet the high standards required for appointment to the group, and afforded a unique opportunity for first-hand, quasi-laboratory experience with many phases of the national government.

As an incentive for high quality work in the new curriculum, commencement programs, beginning in 1932, noted the seniors who had won honors in tutorial work and their departments of concentration. In 1933 the designations “summa,” “magna,” and “cum,” were first used to show outstanding attainment in the whole academic program. To encourage freshman interest in scholarly achievements and to make them aware of Phi Beta Kappa and its’ purposes, the local chapter of the organization in 1928 established the Phi Society in imitation of such a group at Denison University. Professor Frank C. Ewart of the Romance Languages Department had brought the idea before the group and was active in promoting its adoption at other colleges.

p. 252 – The Merrill Presidency, 1899-1908

under Professor Thomas were among the most popular. Students saw them not only as a means for learning skills useful after college but also as training for the several oratorical and debating contests which engendered as much undergraduate enthusiasm as intercollegiate athletic competition.

To relieve Professor Moore of his courses in French, Frank C. Ewart, a Denison graduate who had studied at Chicago and Heidelberg, joined the faculty in 1899. In 1900 he added Spanish and in 1903 Italian and in 1907 seems to have introduced the use of the phonograph for instruction in speaking.

The arrival in 1903 of Everett W. Goodhue, a Dartmouth alumnus, to teach economics and sociology enabled Professor Spencer to offer additional history and political science courses until his departure in 1905 to become one of Woodrow Wilson’s preceptors at Princeton. His successor was Adna W. Risley, A.B., Colgate, 1894, who had studied at Chicago and whose modern approach is indicated by the “Catalogue” (1906-07) statement that the basic course in political science emphasized “practical citizenship” rather than “Theoretical government” and featured student reports on the government of their own localities.

Additions to the Science and Mathematics staff included: Roy B. Smith of the University of Michigan, who had studied at Heidelberg, in Chemistry; Arthur W. Smith, Chicago, in mathematics; and Harold O. Whitnall, Ph.B., Colgate, 1900, who did postgraduate work at Harvard, in geology and biology. They were promising young men hired to assist Professors McGregory, Taylor and Brigham, and were to round out their own careers as worthy successors to the earlier generation. Herman T. R. Aude, Colgate, 1905, who was in the group from 1905 to 1907, returned in 1920 to teach mathematics until his retirement in 1949. Mention should be made also of Albert B. Stewart, more nearly a contemporary of Taylor’s, a graduate of Bucknell, who came into the Department of Mathematics in 1909, after a career which covered secondary education in Pennsylvania and at Colgate Academy.

No newcomer of the Merrill period made a greater mark on Colgate than Ellery C. Huntington who arrived in the fall of 1900 to take the place of George W. Banning as Instructor in Physiology and Hygiene and Director of the Gymnasium. Inheriting the title of “Doc” from his predecessor who was an M.D., he quickly won the esteem and affec-