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Page 31 text:
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Dean T Lawrence Davis ISI B A Q C D Ed.D., LL.D. CIILLEGE 0F PRACTICAL ARTS AND LETTERS HE faculty and administration appreciate, more than my words ca.n relate, the spirit of good cheer and the perseverance which have characterized your group since that September day in 1936 when you became freshmen in Boston University. Your hearty co-operation has helped to maintain the csprit de corps for which the College of Practical Arts and Letters has become favorably known. If, in your vocational pursuits, you demonstrate the same enthusiasm - especially the same eagerness to co-operate - with which you have approached your tasks a.t the University, you cannot fail to a.ttain a high degree of success. You always will cherish the thought that you were students here While the traditions of Anderson ltiemorial Centre were being estab- lished. I hope you never will forget that you are cordially invited to participate in the activities of the Centre and to assist in making it a popular meeting place for the alumnae. As you leave the College to go out into a world not al- ways friendly, you have our assurances of a never-ending interest in you and your problems. Your friends here desire to assist you whenever possible. They will rejoice with you in everything that may bring happiness to you in the years ahead. 1271 l
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Page 30 text:
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COLI.EGE 0F BUSINESS AIIMINISTBATIIDN AREXVELLS are not often pleasant, for normal people cannot separate With- out a degree of sadness. But sometimes the separation is not geographical, only a change of relationship, and that, happily, is the case when a class of young people graduates from College. For four years or more there has been a relationship of teacher and student: that is now to be changed. But the rela- tionship has been more - teachers and students have become friends, and that relationship may continue throughout life. It has been our happy experi- ence at the College of Business Administration that friendship has ever held first place, so developed and nurtured through the years that the passing from the status of student to that of alumnus has served only to strengthen the bond. So as you, members of the Class of '40 leave our class-rooms, you do not leave our hearts. VVe are still friends, with the same warm fellowship that We have enjoyed so long, the same desires to serve each the other, the same hopes for each other's success and happiness. Speaking for every member of the faculty as much as for myself, I rejoice in the success you have so far attained and look with confidence for the worth y achievements of your future. f W l95l xnmmiiammmwi i'i' 'H ' ' ' ix A www 1 RTT? If L' i Wil gilt? ef S LA J 'BQ N I F, .lx EZQLQ gr-X i. . 1 - ' . 's 1 .,,,,, l 1 N X1 'f ew 'Q Q 5 is X4 -' 'e X ' ' 1 f-K - . - '+V it X x l Qi'-,y5'q,, as -lli'Tf '7'i e e 'limi 'Ni , ,, i l ' I 1 ze Vrtv - l xi ' Dean Everett YV Lord A.B., A.lNI., Ll D Lxtt D
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Page 32 text:
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CIILLEGE 0F MUSIC HE last of your four years in College has been overshadowed by War in Europe, and although the United States is not actively engaged in this war, we have always been conscious of the cloud hanging over the world. lklany of you have no doubt wondered what the effect would be on the musical pro- fession if the War should spread across the Atlantic, or even continue in Europe for several years. The present war conditions resemble those of twenty-five years ago, and there is no reason to believe that music would not repeat its former service, both during and after the conflict, in providing stimulus and comfort to combatants and non-combatants. Music offers to the individual what the individual is qualified to receive. Seek and ye shall End. Your training at College has taught you to seek music which is the best of its kind. May your influence always be toward urging people, young and old, to follow this precept. VVhen through graduation, you sever your present connection with the College, it is not necessary to say good-bye, for past classes have kept up their relationship with the College, and I earnestly hope you will do the same. lQ8l Dean John P lNIarshall D.lNIus. F T C L
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