Word: wheelwrighting
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...Alumni Bulletin," in printing the Memorial Hall letters, pointed out that restoration of the tower would cost up to $100,000 and that "it seems a fair question whether this project is the most desirable channel for so much of the University's unrestricted funds." William Bond Wheelwright '01 answered in a succeeding issue with "a fairer question: . . . Does the Corporation deny it is its legal duty to maintain its property in proper condition...
...line-up for the psychiatrists: Dr. Joseph B. Wheelwright, British-educated Jungian; Dr. William A. Bellamy, Freudian; and Dr. Sam Nelken, an "eclectic" analyst who teaches at the University of California Medical School. For the priests: the Rev. Victor White, a Dominican, professor of theology at Oxford and lecturer at Carl Jung's psychiatric institute in Zurich; the Rev. Mark Hurley, principal of Oakland's Bishop O'Dowd High School; and the Rev. Willis J. Egan, a Jesuit, professor of theology at the University of San Francisco. The moderator: Dr. Carl Jonas, both a Roman Catholic...
...psychiatrists must have some basic system of values, too, objected Psychiatrist Wheelwright, though they try to avoid injecting their own values into therapy. When a patient has an inadequate value system of his own, "one of the [psychiatrist's] jobs is helping him choose one." This bothered Father Hurley. "Is there no goal or standard?" he asked...
Believing that 16th century Dutch architecture would blend well with the Gold Coast surroundings, Wheelwright hoped to design a Flemish castle in miniature. Once the plans were approved, he sailed to Holland, and traveling through the canals by tugboat, spent two years gathering the antiques and curios that were later to adorn the walls of 44 Bow Street. The building was at last completed at a cost of only...
...that the building nears the half-century mark, the need for repairs makes problems of money even more pressing. During the war an "Overseas Issue" published through the efforts of W. B. Wheelwright, President '01, garnered $3,000, most of which was earmarked for needed restoration. More serious repairs, particularly a new tiled roof, are planned. Often during Cambridge's ample rains, rivulets of water trickle down the rough, brick walls, and gathering in pools on the floor of the Great Hall, remind Blot and Jester that the Lampoon needs renovation once again...