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Page 20 text:
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message from the president To the Students of Tulane University: The school year 1951-52 has been one of splendid progress for the University. A new men ' s residence hall for freshmen students was opened in September of I 95 I , and plans are being studied for three additional ones. The Warren hlouse for women is being doubled, and will be ready for occupancy in September of 1952. hHutchinson Memorial Building is being enlarged. The research facilities not only in the Medical School but throughout the University are expanding rapidly. An Alumni HHouse located on Willow Street has been purchased. This home will make available adequate office space and a proper reception center for Tulane alumni. The great educational foundations have seen fit to award Tulane substantial grants for the improvement of teaching and research. Perhaps more significant than any other single achievement is the University ' s increase of its endowment fund. From private individuals, corporations, alumni, faculty, staff, and students, two million dollars were raised in the preliminary effort. Another million and a quarter to be matched by an equal sum from the General Education Board is the goal for 1952. The fine support which the University received from its students in this drive testified to the solid morale and sincere school spirit prevailing in the student body. I feel that we are living through a period of great development at Tulane University, and I am certain that future generations of Tulanians will applaud the considerable and significant contributions of the class of 1952. f uj-ui L arrollton ..J artL
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Page 19 text:
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Miss Anna E. Many, Counselor to Wonnen, three times Acting Dean, Professor of Mathennatlcs, and a person without whonn we cannot imagine Newcomb, defies Gaylord hiauseur. Spurning yogurt and wheat germ, she retains an unbelievably youthful vitality by simply working out the problems of seven hundred some- odd students and, we dare say, some faculty, one by one, and realizing that most of them are not, as the sti ' dents think, impossible. When university students, and especially Newcomb students, see Miss Many, the smile given her, as the smile received, is not polite, but spontaneous. To Miss Many we are hon- oured to dedicate the 1952 JAMBALAYA. MI ' .s Ann i E. Many dedication
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