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Page 30 text:
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N ll lc1,..x1aIA Pfxslltt IO - 1976 lx A le A .P. Sept. 2 5. IQ 38. N Dr. WILLIAM Pamsser. has been elected to the chair of Economics at Oberlin XIX College and will assume his new post at the beginning of the second semes- , ter. Dr. Preissel has long been recognized as one of America's experts in the Q field of economics. He is only to remain at Oberlin for two years, at which if time he will go to Oxford as Visiting Professor, to return after one year to America and hold the Irving Fisher Chair of Economics at Yale Uni- sll versity. . in A .P. July 17, I9 38. N Mf. RAYMOND MEAD and Mr. SIMON SURABIAN have volunteered to take Vt over the drive for an all American Summer Camp Fund. This fund will be f used to give those children crowded in the cities an opportunity to have at least two weeks of country life every summer. A.P. Jan. 18, 1938. ' Mr. Louis SMITH will take over the Springfield Republican and it is expected that the paper will take on a new lease of life. Mr. Smith has been W long before the public, by means of his articles in the New York Times. N Much of his success he attributes to his experience while in college as'pub- licity agent of a city paper which gave him ample opportunity to observe and ff study conditions of society. 5. lx i Now this ingenious paper is of necessity brought to a close and though this prophecy may be in error to a certain extent, it nevertheless in the mam lx followed those outstanding characteristics of the individuals above mentioned. ii We are upon the threshold of achievement, and as the most versatile class 5 that has ever graced this institution, we feel certain of success. It IS hoped ill that those who follow in our footsteps, and tred where we have trod, will N obtain inspiration. ill Q We may build more splendid habitations, ll Fill our rooms with paintings and with sculptures, N But we cannot buy with gold the old associations. by -Longfellow. ll li N .ly N .tl C9 K K 54 Ai' moi
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Page 29 text:
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x' . lol..-ink PAsT1cc1O iozoli 3 Vg W 3 pr 3 . .4 -----M - ' W ' i lx A.P. May IO, 1938. ik Mr. .lol-IN COOKE in company with Mr. GORDON GEER are going to take i, QR over Jointly the coaching of the University of Porto Rico. Mr. Cooke has ia . been especially successful with the baseball teams he has coached, as has l Q, Mr. Geer- in basketball. They expect to develop teams that will come to the ik Nl. United States playing while here games in baseball and basketball with i N smaller colleges and universities. X X X N A.P. sepi. 19, 1938. 'F it Mr. C.LYDE BENNER in company with Mr. BESTER VVEED is managing the iR- N new Ziegfeld Follies which are to have their initial performance at the New il lip Amsterdam Theatre on Wednesday night, Sept. 23. Mr. Benner announces XX several new specialties that have been directly imported from Paris. These ii in two gentlemen met with great success in their last year's production, How Y fl Do You Do. A ' I sir A.P. Jan. 25, 1938. ' iw V Mr. JOHN ROGERS and Mr. GERIM PANARITY have been sent by the U. S. V J i u it Government to investigate and report upon the condition of the Slovakian hi, I peoples in the Balkan countries. The U. S. Government feels that European ilk countries are unduly exploiting these peoples and their natural resources. ix V Mr. Rogers and Mr. Panarity are experts in their fields, having written il J omtl a book u on The Natural Resources of the Balkan States . ' Emu y P g .1 . lx ll . X .li A .P. A przl 14, 1938. Nb il Mr. GUSTAF CARLSON is preparing to open the Rockfellor Research Labor- l' X atories for public inspection. Mr. Carlson has gathered together some of N the most remarkable specimens of chemical work that have been produced in N it this country in the past ten years. ik N hw A.P. Nov. 10, 1938. -N' X1 x f A Mr. CLIFFORD GRIFFITH has accepted the position of efficiency expert of the li iii U. S. Steel Corporation. Mr. Griffith has made remarkable strides in the fi field of economics and statistics having addressed most of the important it 5 business clubs and societies in the countr . .4 y X l rx N 5 A.P. Dec. 19, 1938. A , . . . . . . , Nl Mr. SAMUEL GRIFF has finished his investigation of the islands of the Pacific ip, .I and will report to the Mandatory Commission of the League of Nations. il ill Mr. Griff has for years been recognized as an expert upon Far Eastern iv questions and his being called in to advise the Mandatory Commission is a ig it fine tribute to his recognized ability. tw' N . f l 5 A.P. Aug. 18, 1938. .1 Mr. THORNTON PITCHER, the renowned banking expert, is to leave on Sep- ilk 5 tember IO for Germany, where he will meet in conference with all European . experts and compare the outstanding features of the American and European lm Q systems. He hopes to bring back to America many innovations that will if W. expedite the present American system. iw , 'N f. .pp rl . 1 . ..... l29l
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Page 31 text:
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- f.- , ff - - -f -f L f ,PT , Ak 1, , 1.1 1 , 475' ,Q ,,. f S42 41.45 !4,3.iL pA g4' Eff f LI.-XHK l'.XS'I'lCClU 1063 HISTORY -1 ci M ,im CLASS HIS'I ORY OF THE CLASS GF 1926 louis Y . SMITH four years ago most of us were to receive our high-school diplomas. Even then there was the usual assemblage of mothers and fathers, of brothers and sisters aunts and uncles and may be a best girl to watch the boy receive the desired parchment And even then mothers tried to hide their tears, fathers glowed with pride at their sons- chips of the old blocku-and best girls prayed that their charms over the boy might prevail forever. And ifter the diplomas were distributed there were the usual handshakings, the introductions to lnstructors the good-byes to classmates and the trip home. During that vacation four years ago we wondered what college, if any, we would enter There was Harvard and Tech, and Aggies and many more. And there was Clark a little college, but known throughout the world. Clark made no hulabllloo its student body was small and it had no football teams to spread its name but it did have one of the most remarkable facul- ties ever assembled at any college ind its reputation in educational circles was the best So the wlse ones chose Clark. Little did we know what a great evolution we would undergo what new tields would be opened for us, what ideals and ideas would be fostered or shattered. The coming four years were to effect tremendous changes In September 1977 we registered at Clark University, to the number of eighty two the largest freshman class recorded. On that opening day we filled the main corridor and then overflowed into the other buildings. The school was new to us and we were new to the upper classmen. So we wan- dered through the halls the lecture rooms, the laboratories, while our Older brothers wondered how such a bunch of gooks, nincompoops, rubes and what nots could be assembled in one spot at one time. We were greenhorns', ind were tre ited as such Ever under the supervision of a sophomore police force armed with broad stout paddles we could not profane the sacred grass of the campus with our footsteps we must enter by the rear doorg cigarettes musts be given upper classmen for the asking and horror of horrors! we must wear a flaming red 1 . 4 1 . . . , V K . . ,, . . 2 1 . . . , 9 . ' - . . . , ' 5 . . ' ' ,z , . 1 K . . , . 9 ---s ' s . . 9 i ' . 2 z . . ' 9 . 5 7 h V V- ,V .1 f f 7,77 ,yy ,yf -af if ' 1 .L- l31l ,
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