From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Author: drobik.5@osu.edu (page 16 of 62)

OSU linguist ‘went the extra mile’ for students, University

Kenneth Naylor, 1975

Kenneth Naylor, 1975

Kenneth E. Naylor was a professor whose research was world-renowned but spent much of his time, too, as an adviser and mentor to students. Consider this: During his 26-year career at Ohio State, Naylor supervised seven Ph.D. dissertations and was adviser to 31 master’s degree recipients. He served on more than 30 University committees, both at the College department levels. In a Lantern article published after Naylor’s 1992 death, David Patton, assistant director of the Center for Slavic and Eastern European Studies, said: “He always went the extra mile, and that’s how he’ll be remembered by students and colleagues.” 

Naylor, who was born in 1937 in Philadelphia, was first and foremost an expert on Slavic languages and culture. He received his bachelor’s degree in 1958 from Cornell University and his master’s degree in 1960 from Indiana University. From there, he studied at the University of Chicago, taking a year off to study at the University of Novi Sad in Yugoslavia with renowned linguist Pavle Ivic. He returned to complete his dissertation on Yugoslav linguistics at the University of Chicago and was awarded his Ph.D. in 1966.

He came to Ohio State as a Professor of Slavic Linguistics, later becoming a specialist in Slavic and Balkan Linguistics and Culture. He was known for his knowledge of the area, both at home and abroad. In 1984 he received the “Jubilee Medal 1300 Years of Bulgaria” from the People’s Republic of Bulgaria and in 1989 the “Order of Yugoslav Flag with Gold Wreath” from the Republic of Yugoslavia for his study of the Serbo-Croatian language and Yugoslav literature, as well as supporting cultural ties between Yugoslavia and the U.S.

In 1990, Naylor was called to testify before the U.S. House of Representatives, Foreign Affairs Committee on the ethnic rivalry in Yugoslavia and the development of a Serbo-Croatian language. He was commended by those he met in Washington for his clear testimony and demeanor, as well as his knowledge of the area and the people.

Dr. Naylor continued to teach at Ohio State until his death on March 10, 1992.

John Mount, a Buckeye through and through

John Mount, 1941 class runion, 1991

John Mount speaks at his 1941 class reunion, 1991

A reporter once wrote that it took a World War to keep John Mount away from Ohio State. And it can honestly be said that John Mount’s stint in the U.S. Navy is the only time in his adult life that he ever left the University for a significant amount of time. Think about this: Mount’s service to the University has spanned roughly seven decades – more than a third of the University’s total history.

Mount, whose association with OSU took him from student to professor to University administrator, died Thursday. He was 95 years old.

John Mount was born on June 10, 1918 in Butler County, Ohio. He attended public schools before coming to Ohio State on scholarship in 1937 to study agriculture. While at the University, he was a member of Sphinx, Gamma Sigma Delta (National Honor Society of Agriculture), the University Livestock Judging Team, and the Townshend Agriculture Education Society. He was President of the College of Agriculture Student Council, as well as the University 4-H Club. He graduated in 1941 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Agriculture. He accepted a job with OSU’s Agricultural Extension Service directly after graduation, then took a leave of absence to join the U.S. Navy, where he fought in the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Pacific theaters. He returned home in 1946 to his alma mater, leaving again briefly to complete his master’s degree at the University of Wisconsin in 1949.

John Mount, (top row, right), with the University 4-H Club, 1940

John Mount, (top row, right), as a student with the University 4-H Club, 1940

After returning to OSU, Mount held almost every job possible within the College of Agriculture and the University administration. He served as assistant 4-H leader, professor, and assistant dean and secretary within the College of Agriculture. In 1957 he became the Administrative Assistant to the President, and the following year became Secretary of the Board of Trustees. In 1960 he was named Vice President of Educational Services.

In 1968, Mount was appointed Vice President for Student Affairs, then a new position. It was probably the greatest challenge of his career at OSU, given the turbulent times in which he served. At that time, campuses like OSU’s roiled from sometimes tense and violent demonstrations over the issues of civil rights, women’s rights and the Vietnam War. Mount served as the administration’s liaison with students demanding deep changes in University operations. Mount spent countless hours negotiating with them. During the spring of 1970, an especially contentious period, Mount spent so much time meeting with students that he was admitted to University Hospital for a short period for exhaustion.

Mount with student Tracy Barber, no date

Mount with student Tracy Barber, no date

In 1970 he became the University’s first Dean of University College and Vice President for Regional Campuses. It is from these posts that he retired from in 1983 after 42 years of service.

Even in “retirement” there was no question of his leaving Ohio State. He remained involved in 4-H activities, served as the grand marshal of the 2004 Homecoming parade, and was one of six University professors to teach the OSU History course offered annually. Most recently he held the title of faculty emeritus.
At the Summer 1993 Commencement, Mount was awarded OSU’s Distinguished Service Award, for—at that time—almost 50 years of service. In 1983, the University Board of Trustees officially named the then-University College building after him.

During his retirement, Mount continued to volunteer with Freshman Orientation, saying, “I’ve been paid for the things I really enjoy doing. I don’t mind volunteering my time.”

– Filed by C.N.

“Wedded Husband” married Chinese culture with English language at OSU

Hong Shen, 1919

Hong Shen, 1919

Nearly 100 years ago, a young man from China studying ceramic engineering at OSU wrote a play in English that was performed in University Hall. It was likely the first-ever English-language play written by a Chinese national to be performed in the U.S.

The young man’s name was Hong Shen, the play was called “The Wedded Husband” and it was performed in University Hall Chapel on April 11 and 12 in 1919 before a capacity audience of 1,300.

 

Shen was studying at OSU on a scholarship paid by the Chinese government. It was his first play written in English; previous works – “Fruit Vendor” and “Which Is It?” had been performed at his alma mater, Tsing Hua College in Beijing.

 

University Hall Chapel, c1900

University Hall Chapel, c1900

The play was co-sponsored by OSU’s Cosmopolitan Club and the Chinese Students’ Clubs of OSU and Oberlin College, and all of the men’s parts were performed by Chinese students who, like Shen, had been sent to the U.S. by the Chinese government under the provisions of the Boxer indemnity fund.

 

According to a Lantern article, Shen received a telegram from professors at Goucher College and the Columbia School of Fine Arts to reserve tickets for them. (They were going to be in Columbus for a meeting of the Methodist Centenary Movement.)

 

The play is about a young woman, Miss Wang, who is arranged to be married to a gentleman named Master Chen. She agrees to the marriage out of filial devotion to her father but during the ceremony, she falls ill. The doctor suspects she is a victim of the plague that is ravaging the city and orders her to be quarantined. Master Chen, however, defies the order to care for his wife. He ends up dying of the plague, while Miss Wang recovers. She is then arranged to be married to Master Yang, but when she hears of how Master Chen risked his life for her, she changes her mind and remains a loyal widow.

 

Last November, OSU’s Institute for Chinese Studies put on a revival of the play in the Roy Bowen Theatre, in the Drake Union. It was part of a series of events honoring Shen, who left OSU in 1919 to study dramatic arts at Harvard before returning to China where he eventually became an important figure in modern Chinese theater, film and drama. His daughter recently donated a collection of his works to the University.

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