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<p>program was eliminated.</p>

<p>Wayland was vividly remembered by members of the Brown community, including <a href="page.php?w=Charles_T._Congdon">Charles T. Congdon</a> and <a href="page.php?w=James_B._Angell">James B. Angell</a>, who are quoted in the Encyclopedia Brunoniana.</p>

<p>Charles T. Congdon wrote in his Reminiscences of a Journalist (1880):<blockquote>He was disobeyed with fear and trembling, and the boldest did not care to encounter his frown. He was majestic in manner, and could assume, if he pleased, a Rhadamanthine severity. It was a calamity to be called into that awful presence; and no student, of whatever character, ever made the least pretence of not being frightened at the summons. ... However loosely our tongues might wag, we thoroughly respected and even reverenced the president; and upon public occasions, when he put on his academic gown and cap, we were rather proud of his imposing appearance. ... In his later days, I have been told he exhibited marked urbanity and sweetness of disposition. Certainly there were small traces of either when any undergraduate was detected in an act of meanness or a flagrant violation of the university statutes. He had a heavy foot for a student's door when it was not promptly opened after his official knock.</blockquote></p><p>
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