Hurriedly, Professor Wooten volunteered to find a place for the
elderly visitor.
"There'll be a place for me," said Dr. Masius with confident
dignity.
And indeed there was a place for this emeritus professor who
had come back to share the pleasure of this great day, a day which
he had helped make possible by his own scholarly achievements.
On the same day of Olin dedication, the Alumni Association
conducted its meeting and luncheon for the first time in Morgan
Hall and for the first time elected a woman as an honorary alumna.
Gertrude Rugg, retiring after forty years as registrar under a
beatitude of blessing and with emeritus status, relinquished her
position of "not work but delightful fun" to Athena Pappas.
Boynton Hall meanwhile had become a beehive of administration,
complete with organization charts, vice-presidents, and
directors of development. There were new committees-
Development, Finance, and the Industrial Advisory Council--all created
to give the president a hand in running the growing institution.
Talman W. Van Arsdale, Jr., was the first executive vice-president.
There were to be two deans--one, the dean of students in charge
of student relationships, admission, placement, and counselling;
the other, the dean of the faculty in charge of academic programs
and faculty relations. Donald G. Downing was appointed to the
first post in 1955; M. Lawrence Price to the second in 1957.
With his booming voice, his merry, twinkling eyes, and a deep
dimple creasing his cheek, Dean Downing--in the words of the
students--had been a "terrific teacher." "Why?" said one boy
when asked for the reason. "Well, he enjoyed what he was doing
and he made it clear that he enjoyed it. Whenever we didn't
understand anything, he apparently loved the challenge of
explaining it again, or another way, until we did understand."
Dean Downing's zest for campus life was doubly effective
when he transferred to administration, especially in the felicitious
capacity as Dean of Students and Admissions. At this desk he
came in contact with all of the boys, not just a few of them, and
the whole school benefited because of his aptness in human
relationships.
An avid sports enthusiast, Dean Downing attended as many
games as possible. "The Dean believes a good athlete can also be
a good student," the Athletic Department reported with pleasure
and surprise.
When Dean Downing suffered a stroke in 1964, it was a tragedy
that hit the whole school hard.
By the time the personable and capable Dr. Van Arsdale had
resigned to become president of Bradley University, the position
of vice-president had become so thoroughly justified at Tech that
an alumnus and trustee of the Institute, James C. Walker, helpfully
stepped in at a dollar a year for one school term. In 1962