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Show DEAN OF 36 MeJti DEAN OF /. CLU/ Travel, golf, literature, and law all figure in the life of the witty dean of the law school. Dean W. H. Leary has numbered among his numerous activities newspaper work, presidency of Literary Monthly, a part in the establishment of the Fort Douglas Golf Course. By no means least of all, the dean "rolls them in the aisle" as a toastmaster. DEAN OF Ml me6 dnd d-nqlnzzllna Son of Dutch pioneers who struggled hard to send him to college, Dean R. B. Ketchum is sentimental about "ole swimming holes" and brush fires at night. His most characteristic line of defense for frivolous engies is "Boys will be boys." In the days when Utah Engineers really were "boys," he frequently needed more than this gentle assertion to bail them out of trouble. Lane. Making intensive studies of leprosy, Dean Lyman L. Daines' frequent visits to the Louisiana leprosy colony and his medical discoveries make his return anxiously awaited by patients there. A trip to Europe, for study and travel, is in prospect. For diversion he, with his three sons, hikes nearby mountain trails. With his wife he is frequently seen at the theater and opera. |