Marion Coats (1885-1962) — President, 1927-1929
"Of late, certain facts have led us to hesitate, to question, not so much the worth of a university education as it is, but whether there are not other domains which could be, and which need to be examined, and with which the universities do not as yet deal effectively...We are increasingly aware that rapid as our scientific advance has been...its failure to discover panaceas for out ethical, religious and social difficulties is conspicuous...We are in need of a new technique - not of fact but of value, and it is the obligation of the modern university to devise this technique. Its basis will not be the rational and precise thinking characteristic of growth in science - but an establishment of the rules of validity in the realm of appreciation, of aesthetic judgment, of cultivated taste."
Sarah Lawrence College Catalog, 1927-1928Constance Warren (1880-1971) — President, 1929-1945
"I consider myself to have been the most fortunate person in my profession to have had the opportunity to share in the early development of this College. Its infancy and adolescence have been fraught with many anxieties and growing pains, but always the cooperation of the faculty and the support of the Trustees have made its steady growth possible. I doubt if there is another college in the country where such unanimity of purpose and such helpful give and take have prevailed. May they long continue!"
"Future Plans," Alumnae Magazine, June 1945