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Page 25 text:
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Page 26 text:
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a to - . . ' . . - ., VN K0 ,.,,.,-.-. . -- :A A va- .plpviz wg 5: ,--':, 3 ': -f.,,- ::: :-: :sf -L5,g,.,i4vL n I, 'ML' nj ', 'ii -'...T1.- -1:1-,NA:t,LL.,..-a -- ..ff - 'lr L: jfs ' ' - I ks, ,,1, '-. '. -l'r f ,. '- ' ' T -.,-g 5 Xl'-nv of us know the discouraging conditions which faced President Ilrvan when he first came here, seventeen years ago: Two rude . bugd- Enqsa Su,-I-,mndeql by a cabbage patch, the most elementaiy couise of situ y, but few students, no faculty, the former president and board of iegents ciased flown a hill and through a wire fence at the bottom by students with rotten eggs: and most serious of all, a bitter political f1gl'1l1.COUt11'l1,18.llY being waged 'll 'llllSf the few who dared to call themselves the friends of this college zdea . mr . l . I , here, for a college at that time it waslnot. No organization, no money, no faculty, no friends, but many and active enemies-what more unpropitious circumstances could well be imagined for the upbuilding of a great college? But. as we alumni know best how unfavo-rable those conditions were, so do we know best, with the proof -of the years before us, that the Man was stronger than the conditions against him. President Bryan threw himself into the work with his characteristic energy and with a determination tocreate something, and he made a great college. Courageously he faced the difficulties in his path, unflinchingly he set himself to the task of overcoming them, magnilicently has he builded. r In accomplishing' this his task was inconceivab-ly harder than if he were to begin in 1910. Seventeen years ago technical and scientific education were comparatively new things. There were no well defined courses to be found in such subjects anywhere. There were not even text books to be had in many of the subjects now studied. All the work of developing our college as it now is had to be conceived in the imagination, planned along a definite line of thought as to what the function of the institution was eventually to become, and afterwards modified in detail by experiment in its practical workings. Thus. with scarce a guide post to mark the way, a true course had to be found through an almost wholly unexplored educational domain. It was not a work of days and weeks, but months and years. Gradually standards were raised, a faculty was gathered together. new courses were introduced and the great conception of the college was slowly but surely evolved. Its relation to the ccononnc needs and resources of the state was determined, and its breadth and sc- :pe established upon a sure and lasting foundation. O-ur president has made it a great college. It stands today as a monument to his enterprise and cf-uragc, the great gift of his life to you and to me, and to all sons and daughters of our fair state. A I ne accomplishment of this, the building of the college, were stupendous tasks. cren il every condition had favored it. But such was not the case. ll had to be won by lighting and by suffering. President Bryan had to !ll?5.ilJHllC necessary work to Fight-for money for the college, to struggle with rCQ'lSl:iru1's. to explain and explain and explain to ignorant narrow-minded pflnicrans not broad enough to understand educational needs. Nor was this plrcQp51ipsE.umI hcgip'g1giSEh1gll1a1igLle3',tc1'imifial-npnclend politicians to- be met with SUHIUI. 3 I 1 . I C o ent ure tie Jittei hostility of -such small- t men, iac to endure the mud-shnging of their paid newspapers, He llzi A ' ' ' - , , - Q . l l- U' llQlll T01 the college at cr ery foot of the way, hampered, cribbed and 18
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