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Page 26 text:
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? x:£ :rxxx ; ' rx:i 1 ' J •Hi ' Ml H H n H Ml r-l H ;Ki iM] I 1 H N K ■ ' Hi ■X: ;H P H I ' RdFESSoR E. i TRUEBLOOD Chairman of the Oneral Committee T N most amateur productions it is the actors alone that get the praise. The 1 final curtain finds flocks of friends crowding their congratulations with words of praise and hearty handshakes. The coach, the producer, the property man, etc., are usnallv left forgotten to gather up the odds and ends for next time. Hut in this -iubilee- it is different; to Prof Ed. and tlie committee go the first words of ' honor for by their unstinted efforts they have made the Diamond Jubilee possible. liss Clara Comstock has been untiring as director of the dancing groups. A list of names including all the workers in the original committee and the group of sub-committees woul.1 be too large to print so only those on the original committee will be named here. They are E. P. Trueblood, chainnan. D. M. Edwards, Harlow Lindley. Clara Comstock, and Martha Doan. Alumm mem- liers: Walter Woodward, Atwood Jenkins and Lucy Hill P.inford. A. K HI i M H H H i n K) ' x XX X x.x: x ■ - wm SS L . - - — Page twenty
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Page 25 text:
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(A MESSAGE FROM PRESIDENT EDWARDS) EARLHA; I has now reached a maturity that gives her prestige. The seventy- five years of useful and glorious past give cause for congratulation. The thousands of students prepared for useful service, the high ideals inculcated, the breadth of vision given are all items of importance. If one were to consider only the men and women who have served Earlham as teachers and administrators it would be to see a group of splendid men and women who saw in service for Earlham an opportunity unsurpassed to serve their day and generation. But add to this group the members of the Board of Trustees, the interested members of the Society of Friends and those who have given of their means to finance and endow the institution, and where will you find a more splendid company of idealists. Perhaps 25,000 students have attended Earlham since 1847. These have come from and gone to all corners of the earth. They have entered all lines of occupa- tion. Onlv a few have failed to give a good account of themselves. ; Iany have achieved distinction. The large majority have served or are serving well the interests in their hands. Physically Earlham has grown fairly satisfactorily. Additional plant and equipment have come as needed for the most part. The plant and equipment are now well adapted to the needs, except in a few particulars. We are permitted during this seventy-fifth year to reminisce — to look back- wards and take stock of the past, but not merely for congratulation and felici- tation. We must learn the lessons of the past in order that we may make the future more glorious. As we call up the men and women, the ideals and standards, the attempts and the achievements of the past, we should remember the appropriate text of Scrip- ture — Wherefore being compassed about by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lav aside everv weight and run with patience the race that is set before us. What is the race set before us Manifestly it is to carry forward to greater perfection the work so well begun and the standards so splendidly estab- lished. The needs of the college are many and some of them urgent. A gymnasium adequate to meet the physical and social demands is perhaps the most urgent. Increased dormitorv facilities are much needed. ] Iore endowment must be secured. To falter or hesitate in the presence of these tasks would prove us to be unworthy successors of the founders of our college. We will go forward in their spirit and meet the needs as they met them. — D. I I. Edwards. Page nineteen
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Page 27 text:
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ISABEL HENLEY May Queen 1932 iiHaii (ipurruH of IFonurr llrars 1875 — J Irb. Tennessee Tomlmson Phillips •. . . .Santa Ana, California 1878 — Mrs. Bertha E. VVildman Hickman Springfield, Ohio 1880— : lrs. Delia Keever Meek Plummer, Idaho 1882 — Miss C, Augusta Mering Indianapolis. Indiana 1886— Mrs. Edna Stubbs Cathell Richmond, Indiana 1891 — Mrs. Miriam A. Harrrson M vrick Greenbboro, North Carolina 1896 — Miss Jessie Brown Bellefontaine, (Jhio 1902 Mrs. Mae Simpson Barrett Nashville, Tennessee 1906— Miss Pearl Rhmehart Dayton, Ohio 1911 — Mrs. Catherine Hartman Woodward Richmond, Indiana 1916 — Mrs. Sibvl Loufbourrow Eowen Georgetown, Illinois Page twenty-one
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