University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD)

 - Class of 1917

Page 24 of 282

 

University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 24 of 282
Page 24 of 282



University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 23
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Page 24 text:

sr „ jeEVE t Cg 1 more and more liberties, and it is expected that in the near future even the Proctor s} ' stem can be dispensed with. Along with the steady increase in the usefulness and efficiency of our College has gone increased success with our athletic teams. Only a few years ago teams from the Maryland Agricultural College went through season after season and seldom met any college team from out of the boundaries of Mary- land. Last fall State ' s football team went through a schedule that would have been a credit to any so-called secondary college in the United States, and came home with colors flying. In one of the most brilliant football games ever staged in Maryland, the State championship was decided when State ' s wonderful eleven merely toyed with the touted Ho])kins ' team and rolled up fifty-four points to her credit. This success is not merel}- a transitory thing. Our athletic teams have been rapidly developing year after year. In the near future the new athletic field will be completed, and we will have a stadium as good as any in tlie South. The student body is increasing rapidly, and every indication insures the success of future athletic teams at Maryland State. Calvert Hall is the beautiful new building which has rc])laced the old dor- mitories, destroyed by fire in 191J. Although the fire (jccurred the year before ihe Class of iQi entered College, we feel that the fire was somewhat of . ' j blessing in disguise. The building ve ha e now is worthy of the new College, while the old barracks were sadly inadecfuate. The new Agricultural Building will fill a long-felt need, and when it is ccjmpleted the efficienc} ' of our College will be greatly enhanced. Surely the change has been great. We are only beginning on the new era of our College, and e ery pros])ect is bright. We have a better College, a larger Faculty, more students, greater athletic teams and an enlarged scoi)e of work. The beginning of the Maryland State College is indeed an auspicious one. We believe in her, and feel confident that, as the years pass on, we will feel prouder and prouder of our Alma ] Iatcr and her sons. At the birth of the new College, and with our hopes and aspirations for its future, let us not forget the old. Let us ever bear fervently in mind the memory of the Maryland Agricultural College, and may Maryland State be a worthy son to that dear old College which, in name, is no more. 18

Page 23 text:

iSEVisfLL i ®Ij? mh mh lljp Nfui HE old College has passed on. It served its j urpose well. Its purpose was but to pave the way for the advent of a stronger, and better, and more useful institution than itself. T t old — the Maryland Agricultural College — was merely the infant of the College that is now growing and developing into manhood, and which will soon be the leader of our State and the educator of its children. Every great man had a childhood. It was so with the Maryland State College. There is nothing more com- forting in old age than to have pleasant recollections of a clean, useful childhood, and it will ever be thus with our Alma Mater. Her infancy was spent in honest and useful endeavor, a never- failing balm to maturity. Every child must grow up, every rosebush must produce a bud, and that bud will slowly develop, until finally the mature flower bursts forth in all its glory and splendor to fulfill the part for which it was placed upon this earth — to make the dreary spots a little brighter and to give new vigor to some weary wanderer along the path of life. The Maryland Agricultural College developed step by step, until finally the bud was no more. In its place we have the full-grown flower. When we stop and look about us we realize how great has been the change in our dear old College in the last ten years. She has grown in size and scope of work. Ten years ago the Maryland Agricultural College was small and comparatively inefficient. The student body was by no means as large as it is today, and the Faculty has increased twofold in the last ten years. The old days are pleasant to talk about, but, compared to the easy life the students now lead, they were far from ideal. We, who have only three hours of drill a week and inspection of the dormitories once in seven days, cannot imagine jumping out of bed in the morning, i)utting on uniforms and going through ten minutes of setting-up exercises before breakfast. That was the life of the old days, and for the old College it was a good one. The entrance requirements for our College have been raised until she stands on an ecpal footing with any college in the United States. The curriculum has been remodeled and the work so increased and perfected that a student who graduates from M. S. C. is equipped to make his way in the world in competition with the graduates of any other educational institution in the United States. Due to the more advanced entrance require- ments, the average age of the students has been raised, which has made possible the Proctor system of control in the dormitories. Students are being allowed 17



Page 25 text:

Ifuxmtll M. A. C Farewell, Old Maryland, a long farewell ! Farewell, dear Alma Mater, kind and true; Though we have ever loved thee long and w ell. We must to thee now bid our sad adieu. Some whisper that thou now art of the past, Vith cherished hopes forever left behind. Not so ! For thy sweet lessons hold we fast, Thv treasured memories around our hearts we bind. Thy glory, uncontined by Old Line State But by thy sons proclaimed throughout the land, From Plymouth Rock to wondrous Golden Gate, Is sung by those who ' round thee take their stand. And never shall the sun ' s bright glory shine Upon the end of our belov ' d M . A. C. Until the last devoted son of thine Has crossed life ' s wild and restless sea. The College old regime has passed away; But straight upon the ashes of the old Flas flamed the dawn of a far greater day, I ' he destiny of Maryland to mold. Allegiance to the new we gladly bear ; But toward the visions of the olden days — The glory that was M. A. C. the fair— We backward turn our still enraptured gaze. Farewell, then, Alma Mater, ever dear! Whate ' er thy fate may be, in weal or woe. We pledge our hearts fore ' er to hold thee near, Thy strength and shield to be from every foe. 19

Suggestions in the University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD) collection:

University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

University of Maryland College Park - Terrapin / Reveille Yearbook (College Park, MD) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920


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