Page 162 - YB1964
P. 162
As a good-humored, affable man, Dr. Ensor doesn't lose interest in the students, but frankly regrets that his contact with them is so limited and that he has so little opportunity to visit and joke and enjoy the youthful company around him. Realizing that complaints accompany students and that complaining is a privilege of the students, Dr. Ensor recalls with ease and a hearty laugh his days as a student, with gripes, grumbling, and campaigns about such things as dining hall management. Although he has been here since 1947, Dr. Ensor sees little change in the student body as a whole-shorter skirts, different slang, but basically the same in that students are here to do a job and are, for the most part, accepting their portion of the responsibility. Spring has that special appeal to Dr. Ensor as well as to the other winter-weary members of the college community. He looks forward each year to the Rose Cup Ceremony and Trumpeter Tapping on his lawn, and finds time for a round of golf or puttering in the rose garden, or for a few minutes of contemplation on the Hill at sunset.
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