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Page 27 text:
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J J.. I J 1 I t tr-'n f ' ig 'Ll l .12 tai' Lil ,JT ,F 3,1 T' tilt' Z pl-'ft -, lf' giifflf rt-f if t- tr E11-:ZA Ullfllq 11,6 ll 'I'I'llfl lf- lvllzs l.lll., l.!l iqig: ll I .I 13-1. N I,: l1'I i r 45' Wig' tx .-'I ta. :fl ftp.,-'-. lf. ,L QI .'.l I l :I t . t. tl' -I I ll: t ,r A I 1 ,N lf' ' r - f' ll' - 'alt ' ull ' ti . ,IES .1 A l t I , tt fl QQ! gilt . tt. t in FRED E. ADEN . . . registrar and counsellor at CU since l929 . . . has not only devoted his interests to the line of work he is now in, but also to religious service . . . Nebraska Wesleyan University, Washington Univer- sity, Columbia University, Boston University . . . from 1919 to 1922 was director of religi- ous education and community service at Grace Community Church in Denver. . . director of Wesley Foundation in Boulder, 1922-25 . . . extremely interested in the Cos- mopolitan Club and what it stands for . . . instituted Freshman Week, which has proved to be an invaluable aid in the orientation of new students . . . well adapted for counsel- lor's work by an amiable, sunny disposition . . . spends most of his time and derives his greatest pleasure from getting acquainted with and befriending young people. HARRY CARLSON . . . dean of men . . . baseball coach for fourteen years . . . B.P.E. from Springfield College and M. A. from Clark University . . . director of athletics at Melford School and director of Physical Edu- cation at Hamline University . . . big league baseball experience . . . very reserved, never talks much, but always has something to say when he does talk . . . many hobbies in the field of sports . . . all-around sports- man . . . enjoys baseball, fishing, handball, tennis, but reading is his favorite occupation for leisure hours . . . beautiful new home . . . picked a wife with similar interests, she was a physical education instructor at the University Hill school . . . the proud father of a beautiful, blond daughter in grade school. LYDIA E. BROWN . . . dean of women . . . busy, capable, sympathetic, intelligent . . . Vassar graduate . . . earned her M. A. at Wisconsin . . . awarded scholarship to study at Sorbonne in Paris . . . taught history at one time . . . unusual ability in interior dec- orating, helped plan construction, equipment, and staffing of Memorial Building, dormi- tories, Wornen's Club, and Faculty Club . . . evidence of her good taste is found in her own lovely home . . . has no time for hob- bies, meeting people is a favorite recreation . . . as capable in her home as in her office . . . has travelled Widely in Mexico, Hawaii, and Europe, but still likes Colorado best . . . vice-president of A. A. U. W .... sponsor of many, many groups. IACOB VAN EK . . . born in Sioux Center, Iowa . . . B. A., M. A., Ph. D. from the Uni- versity of Iowa . . . professor and dean of Arts and Sciences since 1929 . . . married Eve Drewelowe, Well-known artist in the Rocky Mountain region . . . awarded the Albert Kahn Fellowship in l928-1929, ob- served governments and customs in sixteen countries . . . remembers the names and faces of a surprising number of the students . . . statewide reputation for ability to ana- lyze political and social problems . . . fa- vorite subject for speeches is what makes Hitlers and Mussolinis . . . would rather teach than anything else . . . never misses a football game . . . noted among students for his fairness. Page 21
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Page 26 text:
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To the Students of the University of Colorado: THE COLORADAN is your yearbook. It is the permanent record of the personal and non- academic phases of your college life. The encouragement of wholesome activities and inter- ests is as much a part of the Uni- versity function as the arrange- ment of its curriculum, for it is in th se associations that you learn the art of living with other people Through them you learn how to promote a program or a good id a by means of persuasion rather than force and to submit to the d cision of the rnaiorlty when you have not been sufficiently persuasive or when the idea was PRESIDENT STEARNS AND FAMILY not qulte Us good GS You had thought 1t You learn the tech nique ot making your personality felt and you also learn how to submerge your own individuality in the group when the common good demands united action. You learn to accept both victory and defeat gracefully You develop that supreme attribute of democratic leadership-the ability to cooperate with your victorious rival in the public interest All these are the Ways of democracy the voluntary cooperation of a free people rather than the regimen tation of a dictatorship a leadership based on merit rather than on status. Today when democracy the World over is threatened it is not enough merely to cherish it as an abstract ideal. An ideal Without a mechanism for its realization can be a futile thing. We cannot have an effective democracy unless We master the democratic processes. The hope for the future preservation of our idcal of free government depends in large measure on the manner in which the students of today utilize the democratic experience of their college days to meet the problems they will face as citizens. ROBERT L. STEARNS Board of Regents Formulates policies authorizes all business and assumes all responsibility for the general and stipulated welfare of the University MEMBERS PRESIDENT ROBERT L STEARNS MR EUGENE A BOND DR LAWRENCE W COLE MR CARL D MCKINLEY E RAY CAMPBELL DR V B FISCHER CLIFFORD W MILLS Front Row CAMPBELL STEARNS MCKINLEY BOND Back Row COLE FISCHER MILLS 9 .. .9 . l 9 l .. . . I , D I . MR. . . . . MR. . . 1 if ,AM l W 7 Ffh ' .M ,
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Page 28 text:
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