Monday, May. 11, 1936
Permanent Loan
In the days of its famed first president, Horace Mann (1853-59), Antioch College at Yellow Springs, Ohio, kept the world of education humming with new progressive ideas. To Antioch in 1920 went tall, baldish President Arthur Ernest Morgan with ideas even newer. President Morgan split the college's students into two groups, shipped one off for five-or-ten weeks of work in offices or factories while the other studied on the campus. No professional educator but an engineer who helped harness the turbulent Mi ami River after the Dayton flood of 1913, President Morgan was released on leave from Antioch three years ago to serve as chairman of the Tennessee Valley Authority Last week Antioch's trustees an nounced that their loan of a president to TVA was permanent, that in President Morgan's place they had chosen his protege, Dean Algo Donmyer Henderson. Tall, dark, wiry, President Henderson is 39 and, like his predecessor, a jack-of-all-trades who has earned his living as a lawyer, an accountant, an officer in the U. S. Army.
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