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Page 13 text:
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NEW YORK UNIVERSITY UBHVERSVTY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SHENCE UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS, NEW YORK 53, N.Y. OFFICE OF THE DEAN To the Class of 1961: Among the l3O classes which have graduated from University College, yours is unique in having seen four different men in the Dean's Office. Since September 1957 you have known as my predecessors Deans Baer and Still and Robinson. Merely reciting these names is one way for me to pay tribute to these friends and colleagues of mine. It is also a way to emphasize how much Change has presided over University College during your years here. You will presently begin to date your remembrance of things past in terms of changes. You'll be speaking of an event which occurred prior to Mr. Price's coming to Student Center, or about the time ground was broken for the Gould Hall of Technology, or in the year that Mr. Ricci was given the Great Teacher's Award, or in the very week that the ducking trough journeyed to the Mall. Changes in environment -- a new teacher on the staff, a new building on the site of an old one, a modification of a curricu- lum or of an athletic schedule, the inauguration of coeducation -- we readily observe and date. The interior, personal changes you have undergone individually in the last four years occur day by day, almost too subtly for notice. Yet they have the greater importance. Conditioned by changes everywhere in your college days, in the college and in yourselves, you now enter the days ahead pre- pared. Remember that amid a changing world, and itself constantly changing, your college yet remains the same -- a stalwart symbol of Verity. Turn back to her often to remind yourself to be flexible when change is demanded, to be steady when steadfastness is the highest virtue. The first Dean who has been able to address a class graduat- ing from University College as Nlads and girls,n I greet you in the good academic phrase, Ave atgue Vale. , .A 1 J. W. Knedler, Jr.
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Page 14 text:
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NEW YORK ITNIVE RSITY COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS NEW YORK Ladies and Gentlemen of the Class of 1961: You are now at the threshold of a most interesting professional career. The completion of your course of study entitles you to a degree from your Alma Mater. I hope that your stay at University Heights has been rewarding and of lasting benefit. I hope that we have been able to instill in you a feeling of loyalty to your classmates, professors, the Heights and the University at large. I am sure you will agree with me that you spent a very arduous four years to obtain your degree. However, the harder you work for something, the more value it seems to acquire. While many of you will continue on to graduate school, those of you who are leaving college to practice your profession will find in it a career of great satisfaction and rewards. Those who do continue on to graduate school will enJoy the thrill and excitement of additional educational attainments which will prepare them for the many advanced co cepts so necessary to understand in order to solve the problems of the future. The years to come will bring you many satisfactions, and I hope that you will share these with us by co dng back to visit our campus as loyal alumni. There is no greater pleasure for the professor than to meet with his successful former students, to see them grow and mature, and to share the many reminiscences which are recalled by such meetings. Your success is our suc- cess. The best of good fortune to all of you. Cordially yours, I John R. Baga ni
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