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Setting a New Tone
Orley R. Herron became the seventh
president of Greenville College in 1970 and served until mid-summer
1977. Coming to campus at the end of a period of interim leadership,
and with relatively little knowledge of the college or the church,
Herron faced the immense task of becoming known and setting a new
tone on campus. Being the first and only president from outside
the Free Methodist Church (originally a Baptist, he later joined
the Free Methodist Church), and the first with experience at a major
public university (he was chief assistant to the president of Indiana
State University), Herron was received enthusiastically by the college
and the community. A handful of the church's leadership, however,
remained distant and sometimes suspicious.
A person with charisma, President Herron first set himself to the
task of infusing the college with a new spirit, and the local community
with a new attitude toward the college. Begin an ordained minister,
as well as an educator, Herron spoke and wrote often of the power
of Christ to give faculty and students a positive, optimistic, "can
do" attitude toward life. At this particular juncture in Greenville's
history, a new spirit of hope and optimism was clearly needed.
In the governance of the college, Herron's era saw the implementation
of the professional faculty council model, and the reorganization
of the trustees into a working committee structure. With the baby
boomers increasing the college's enrollment to a peak of 895, new
faculty with doctorates were added. As existing faculty also completed
doctorates, there was an increase in the proportion of doctorates
from around 20 percent to more than 40 percent of the total faculty.
Also, new trustees, with an increasing number coming from business
and executive roles, were added with the expectation if increased
financial support.
"A Principled Campus"
In addition to a new spirit, a revised governance structure, and
improved faculty training, Herron was faced with a student generation
whose parents and pastors had not taught as normative a life-style
as had characterized earlier generations. Regulations on dress codes,
curfew hours, entertainment, and other such matters were being questioned
nationally, in the churches, and thus at Greenville.
Herron's response was to develop what he called a "principled campus,"
with less emphasis on rule-governed behavior. This he spoke about
in chapel and before the students and faculty. Biblical principles,
he said, should be internalized, and a developmental approach followed
in helping students grow into that maturity to which Christ calls
them. Even so, there was on occasion or two when a few students
would protest the college for its alleged legalisms by carrying
picket signs when the trustees came to campus for board meetings.
It was during President Herron's tenure that an answer to the long-standing
need for a new science building was finally begun. Burritt had first
cited the need in 1910, and under Marston existing labs had been
improved. During Richardson's time bids for a new building, to be
located where the tennis courts are today, came in considerably
over projections, so plans to build were canceled. The seventy-fifth
anniversary campaign funds, raised toward the cost of the new building,
were used to pay the architect approximately $70,000 and the balance
of around $200,000 placed in reserve. President Herron was able
to use these funds, combined with a $300,000 bond issue, to lay
plans for constructing the brick shell of the present Snyder Hall
of Science.
Herron left for the presidency of another college in the summer
of 1977. The completion of the science building, as well as the
raising of the balance of funds (total cost: nearly 1.4 million)
was assumed by Herron's successor, W.
Richard Stephens. Dr. Stephens, the eighth president
of Greenville College, completed sixteen years in office. A review
of his years will follow in a later chapter.
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