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Page 22 text:
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-e.-,,-:gg 5 Board of Trustees AN ZANDT JARVIS is president of the Board of Trustees of Texas Christian Uni- versity. He has had this office since 1928. Mr. Jarvis has been a member of the board since 1908. The Board of Trustees is composed of twenty-two members, including the officers. This does not include R. M. Rowland, the attorney for T. C. U. The members are elected for a term of four years. - The main meeting of the Board of Trustees is held the second Thursday in Febru- ary of each year. At this meeting the members of the faculty for the next year are elected. There is also a meeting held on Friday of the ' first week of school in September. The final one of the . ' year is held on Commencement Day, each June. 1. 1 The trustees whose term expires in 1931 are: M. E. U xiii Daniel, Breckenridge, Dan D. Rogers, Dallas, Andrew A N' Sherley, Anna, W. S. Cooke, Fort Worth, and H. C. ' . s 9 Garrison, Austin. Those whose term expires in 1932 N 1 are: Van Zandt Jarvis, Fort Worth, D. C. Reed, Austin, B' . ' T. E. Tomlinson, Hillsboro, Lewis J. Ackers, Abilene, Mrs. Ida V. Jarvis, Fort Worth, and E. E. Bewley, Fort ,gf X K Worth. The term of the following expires in 1933: Charles Wheeler, Fort Worth, S. J. McFarland, Lubbock, D. G. McFadin, Dallas, H. W. Stark, Gainesville, and L. C. Brite, Marfa, and those whose term expires in 1934 are: H. H. Rogers, Tulsa, Okla., S. P. Bush, Allen, L. D. Anderson, Fort Worth, R. S. Sterling, Houston, and W. W. Mars, Fort Worth. Q VAN ZANDT JARVIS President 'l 'lx i rly
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Page 21 text:
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The Message of the President To the Class of I930 . The Need of A Working Philosophy of Life ODAY, industry, politics, international relationships, even religion and social con- ditions combine to produce an uncertain and panicky world, but for every note of despair and for every siren of fear there must be a call to faith and courage. In this day when radical humanism seeks to make faith in God an obsolete aHairg when we are being told that a desire for immortality is only sellishness, that sin is a mere com- plex, that guilt is a neurosis and that salvation is only for neuroticsg when penologists affirm that crime is only a disease, and psychology assumes that we need a psychiatrist more than a saviorg when we are being told that science and education and culture can convert wrong into right and immorality into morality, and thus banish the moral mists and the spiritual perplexities of our day and generation, it is time for the college grad- uate to place a new emphasis upon the personality of God and upon faith in and friend- ship with Him as the Greatest spiritual adventure of our time. Here is the great need of our time: a spirit of adventure, a new faith in spiritual values, a discovery or the re-discovery of things that men may live by. Instead of the haunting illusions of life we need today a working philosophy of life. I affirm that we must choose between a shining Faith with its adventures or a malig- nant Fate chuckling in the darkness. We cannot dispose of the great landmarks of our religion and civilization flippantly. No great life can be lived without a great convic- tion, a great passion, and a great purpose, only these lead us to a philosophy of great living. No great life or civilization long survives the downfall of its gods. We must wor- ship something bigger and better than ourselves. It is not a question of what this philosophy will put into our pockets, but of what it will put into our characters. Life is not a formula or a set of rules, but the obedience to certain great fundamental principles. Christianity is a way, a pathway into the unseen. The Disciples of Jesus said, How can we know the way ? They asked for a map. Jesus informed them that there were no milestones among the stars. The man who takes a great principle into his heart commits himself to an uncertainty. He must be prepared to meet unexpected calls and new responsibilities. He must set sail with sealed orders upon an uncharted sea. That takes courage, involves risk: but nothing ventured, nothing won. A being who lives in thoughts that wander through eternity, who is haunted by feelings he cannot fathom, who is pos- sessed of cravings time cannot satisfy, must have a leadership that is infinitely wise and a kinship that is divine. The quest for a leader brings us inevitably to Jesus Christ, the incomparable and matchless flower of the race who with a spiritual originality un- surpassed gave us the highest revelation of the Father, and by the power of His resur- rection brought life and immortality to light. In this solemn hour when you are taking a tearful farewell of your loving and devoted Alma Mater remember that the thing she most covets for you is your discovery of a working philosophy of life. Her fondest hope is that while lingering in these halls you have evolved some point of view, some firm convictions, some attitudes of soul that will give assurance of the reality of spiritual values, of life, the worthfulness of a high- minded, generous, hopeful life, and ideals that are not illusions, in short, that when you pursue beauty, truth, and goodness, when you love and believe and sacrifice, when you set honor above self-interest, and spiritual fellowship above physical satisfaction, and go on to the end believing that good is still to come, you are not playing the fool, chasing bubbles or rainbows, but are setting your lives in pursuit of real and lasting values. This is the highest reward that can possibly come to you from your four years in these classic halls. I WM T1lll57If1I-7I
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Page 23 text:
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V v 4 N .A , l s 29 , ' . 'Q A BALLARD BILLINGTON CAHOON ENLOW FALLIS HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS JOHN W. BALLARD .....,,,................................................ Professor of Business Administration B. C. A. fNew York Universityj, 19163 C. P. A. fState of Texasl. F. E. BILLINGTON .................................................................. Professor of Christian Minigtyies A. S. fUniversity of Oregonj, 19033 A. M. fUniversity of Oregonl, 19133 B. D. fEugene Divinity Schoolj, 19025 Ph. D. fLaFayette Seminaryb, 18923 M. R. E. fBoston Universityj, 1923. MRS. HELEN CAHOON ...................................................................... Head of Voice Department Studied with Max Heinrichg with Mme. Marcella Sembrich. BONNE M. ENLOW ..............,....................................... Head of Home Economics Department B. S. CCollege of Industrial Artsj, 19243 Graduate Study CColumbiaJ. L. D. FALLIS ................................................................................ Professor of Public Speaking A. B. fUniversity of WashingtonJ, 19049 Graduate of Curry School of Expression fBostonJ, 1911. Colby D. ll-llall The Dean Dean Colby D. Hall, who has been connected with Texas Christian University for about twenty-two years, received his A. B. degree and Classical Diploma from A Transylvania, and his M. A. from Columbia. Being an administrative officer, he has part in all matters of administration, employment of teachers, curricular rec- ords, and matters of discipline, he is also chairman of the classification committee. COLBY D. HALL .4 in Dean Thirty-om:
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