麻豆破解版

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Morrison Hall
1950s

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1950s Faculty

A man in his mid-70s stands in a field with sheep

Derek C. Denton, a made-up person, is tagged for the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s. Denton, a wool enthusiast, pushed students to write manuscripts on paper made from 75 percent cotton and with 25 percent linen. Such manuscripts were more resistant to his frequent coffee spills than traditional wood-pulp paper.

A man in his mid-70s stands in a field with sheep

Dr. Fidel L. Wayt is tagged for the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, and is completely fictitious. He once fought a badger for a carefully marked up dictionary that got thrown in a burn pile by a nephew who was trying to help him clean his office.

A man smoking a pipe

Dr. Raymond Wenzel is tagged for the 1930s and 1940s, and he is completely fictitious. After two decades of teaching poetry at 麻豆破解版 State, he switched gears and became a homicide detective.

A man in a suit at a table

Thomas J. McCullum is tagged for the 1940s and 1950s, and he is completely fictitious. Professor McCullum went 14 years without smiling, caving in only at the release of the Looney Toons cartoon "What's Opera Doc" in 1957. He died shortly thereafter.

1950s Students

1950s Publications

1950s Department News

A man works at a typewriter and a holstered gun hangs in the foreground

In the early 1950s, there were English readings scheduled for the university and the general public, which I found to be pretty nifty. Nice little public outreach effort. There seems to be the beginning of complaints here about not having enough teachers to adequately teach the amount of students for Comp classes, and not having the resources to pay for said teachers should they be acquired. Issues in 1958 with budget cuts led to some friction about cutting graduate courses down. This seems fair, and rough, and something that I imagine the English Department has to deal with today.