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Page 22 text:
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The Greater State College By Uean Clovu o Iv r,iii ,. (. I.IIVII ' Sliiili-iils tlu- tuciity-sixlli (I;i of May. 1SS4. the Watauga Club aduptcd a prospectus of its priuciplcs which contained the following clause : W ' c proceed upon the assumption, which cau- Mot lie denied, that there is iu our community a serious lack of accurate and practical inforniation upon the most common economic questions which arise for our consideration. Al the next regular meeting of the Clul) one of its members read a paper upon Indus- trial Kducation and the Feasibility of Establishing an Industri.-d School in Xorth Carolina. Thus in the minds of this grocp of f.ar-seeing Aoun.i; men was conceived the North Carolina College of ■ Vgriculture and Mechanic Arts which has now grown into the Xorth Carolina State College. Every organization in its Tiormal growth passes ihrough three distinct p eriods; namely, the Period of Enthusiasm, in whicli all acclaim the jiraises of the new organization; this is folllowed by what, for l.icl of a better name, we call the Period of Depression, during which period the enthusiasm of the new or.ganization is soniewdiat abated and, having come lo be looked upon as a matter of course, the organization does not attract so much attention and has man obstacles to overcome and some opposition to encounter: in surmounting these obstacles and subduing its opponents the organization emerges again into its greatest period, that is, the Period of Achievement. The history of State College has followed very closely thai of ,l11 otlier organizations. I ' Voni the enthusiasm at its opening it has had its days of struggle against lack of funds and equipment, it has met opposition and overcome it. and we sec it today emerging into its greatest period of Achievement and Service. In his N ' ew Year greeting to the students President I ' .rooks saifl ; The School of Agriculture will present a new purpose, and its aim will seek a larger life for the people of the State: the School of Engineering will measure more accurately the natural resources of the State and give a new meaning to undeveloped industries : the School of General Science will afford a better understanding of the physical world and our dependence upon it: and the School of Social Science will explore the laws governing human rel;it ' onsliips and our adjustments to them. . ' lready we see this program of development hegiiming to mtfold. To our dormitory system is lieing added one of the most attractive and convenient units in the South : thcre has been added to our teaching staff a Professor of Physical Education .-ind Inter-collegi:ile . thlet:cs who will have as his headquarters the Frank Thoni])s in Ciymnasium, the fotmda- tion for which has already been laid: our facilities for nient.il ilevelopment and research will be greatly increased by the completion of the new Library building; and our aesthetic natures will be enriched by the beautifying of our eampu-. according to di finitely thought out idaus of a skilled I,an lscape Architect. In proposing a name for the Watauga Club, Honorable W. J. Pcele said: In Watauga County there is trickling down a mountain rock a stream of water no larger th.ui a nian s finger — clear as crystal and sparkling like silver — which is the source of a mighty river that turns many thousand spindles and Hoats many ships of commerce. Let us begin with ifty and n rv jmrposc to serve our State and wc may liecomc a mighty force for the 1.: moral and material advancement of its grand old commonwealth. So the North Carolina State College, the child of the W.itauga Club, like the stre.im from which the Club selected its name, has grown through these thirty-four years of its history from a bubbling sjiring in 188 ' ) to a great and niiglity stream ever increasing in its volume and its usefulness and ever contrilniting more and more to the richness and fullness of the life of North Carolina and reaching out through its graduates to the uttermost parts of the world. Page Eighteen
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Page 21 text:
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Dr. E. C. iiRduKs President of the College Page Seventeen
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Page 23 text:
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Administration EuGENK Ci.vDE Brooks President Edwin Bentlkv Owkn Rci islrur ArTIU ' k Finx Bo wen Treasurer Louis HiNES Harris - - SteiK ' ord Edward S. King General Seeretarv, ) ' . M. C. .-I. + 4 -t BOARD OK TRl ' STEES GovERNtiR Cameron Morris, E.v-Offic o Cliainnan C. M. Andrews T. B. Attmore 1. I . r.l ' CToN R. L. lilCRNIIARDT P. S. B(.VD 11 O. I ' lRI-.M MiTT I). M, I ' .ITK W . A. Bleluck H. K. BURGWVN Sam I ' EL V. F.R soN loiix W. Carroll John W. Clark O. L. Clark F. H. COFEEY R. M. Cox ' . Iv Daniels M. L. Davis }. F, DiGGS A. .M. Dixon R. H. Edwards I ' .. B. Everett O. .Max Gardner C. W. Gold II. I ' . Grier. Jr. T. I.. GWVNN ( ii ' ;oR(;p; 1 1 am pton Charles L ' . 1 1. rris M.MRICE Hendrick ' P. 1 1. Holmes, Jr. Ci1ARI.es . HORNE Dk. J. M. lloKNER E. R. Johnson R. L. Lambeth W. D. Larooue W. S. Lee D. B. McCrarv Dickson McLe. n Imi McKiNNON L. IL Mann Raymond Maxwell Cl.svTon Moore Harry L. Nettles R. N. Page S. F. Patterson Cl.vhence Poe I,. J. I ' oiSSON |. E. Porter W. R. R. DFORD J. E. Ramsey George R. Ross j. 11. s. minders L RK SoiIIRES T. T. Thorxic C. F. ToMLlXSON I. !:!. Tucker T. E. ' ann R. T. Wilson C. D. Welch Cl. UDE P). W ' ll.l.l.S.MS W ' . ]L Williamson Page Nineteen
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