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The Gold Bug, Western Maryland College, Westminster, Md. PAGE THREE DR. ROBERT KELLY WILL President A. Norman Ward has had Wide Educational II NEW YORK TIMES EDITOR TALK DURING BROADCAST Experience; Is Founder of Liberal Arts Movement WILL ALSO BE SPEAKER Dr. Robert Kelly will speak in the Dr. John Huston Finley, assoetate edi- Nationnl Broadenst of the Liberal Arts tor of the New Yor'" Times since 1921, College Movement cu November J.l from educator, and author, will be one of the the lnrg~~t hook-up ever nrrnnged for speakers on Saturday, November 14, at All)' uatlcnnl iurcrest. the eouvention ill washington, of thc ITe is well fitted, til rough his many Ameriean Libetnl Arts Colleges. eduentloual surveys, to understand and to Dr. Jtinley received his A. B. degree be thoroughly familiar with fhe contri trom Knox College and his A. )J. from but.lou that the Liberal Arts College hila the same college. lie received the degrec ci"iliz made and is Hl:lkiug to AmeriCfIll Doctor I of J~T... D. from Park College. He also nttco. llOlds a t.. a. D. from Colgate, New He received his degree of of York Uuiveraitj-, and Univcrait y of Ver Laws from De Paull' in 1907 and since mont and n J. V. D. hOln thc Utriversity then has helJ the office of president and of Pennsylvania dean of PeHn College. Oskaloosa, Towa, Dr. .Finley was president of Knox Col president of Ea rlhmu College, Richmond, lege for flve Jenrs. He also served 11~ Indiflna, lecturer on college ndminlstra prcsi(]l'llt of the Col!cgc of the Cit)' of lion at 'l'eneher ts College, Columbln, Nell' York from 1903 to 1913 and from Ncw York U"i\'euity and at the Scr 19.13 to ]9~1 as president of the Ijujver bonne. sity of Ithe State of New York. At the Dr. _Kelly is editor 01' the Association same time that he was president of the of Auiericnu Colleges Bulletin and since latter he was a commissioner of ednca 1919 has been permanent executive sec tion in New York State. reta!')' of this usscciutiou which with the He wna a Harvard exchange lecturer Liberal Al'ts College .1!ovcment and rue on the Hyde Poundation, at the Scr- American Council on J<~du~ation is spon bonne, Paris, during 1910 and 1911. In Boring Suturd ay night's broadcast. HIlS he was" member of the American Already the results of Dr. Kelly's \rm)' Education COlmnissioll in Pmucc. study of edu~"tion have been given to He was the PIli Betn Kappa. orator at us ill his wl'itiugs on "'L'he Liberal Ocl- ll~rynrd in InG. lege Curriculum, 'I'heolcglcnl F.ducatioll book .French the Dr. iu Americ~," "'I.'eudcncies in College America. Finll;Y's crowned Oll by the. Aendemie iu was Administration" and "The Effective College." 1.'rnncaiae flll(! nwnnled the gold oncdal The National Institute of Social of the. Geographic Society in Pa.ris. Sciences, the Amcrican Socicty of thc lIe was vi(~C'presidunt of thu National LegiOll of liOH(Jt, Tho:; Administrntive fnstitution of Arts lind Letters n.ud :t Conuniltce l\nd Committee on Financial member of tile .'\m('rican Aenrlemy of and Fiduciary 11attl'rs of Federal Coun Arts and Lett('rs in 1927. He is presi eil of ChurChes, The Qui.ll aud the Alli dent of tho Immigrant Educational Coun" ance Francaise fire proud to elaim Dr. eil and hOllor president of tho American Kelly as ona of their members. ..\ssl)ei3tion of Tcat.hers of French. PROF. M. J. SHROYER NEW ADDRESSING SYSTEM SPEAKS IN BAKER CHAPEL ADOPTED BY GOLD BUG Proft?ssor:M. J. Shroyer, of the West· minster 'l'heologicld Scminary, spoke to As a fllrtller advancemcnt in tbe policy GOLD tlw college fatult.\, nnd students in Baker of s.\'stem the ha.s becu BUG, 1I, new which addrCllsing give adopted will Chap~l, Sund~y e"ening, November 8, on :ts oIT-campus subscribers bctter service. the text: "Ye nre the snIt of tile. earth." There I Jesns ndllressed th~se words to n mul Under the uew piau, the GOLD :BUG and titude on a mount in Galilee. "'il! be composed, plnnt printcd, of folded, TimCll in the addressed Thc were proud Rom:111S in the crowd, but Pl'inting Company. This will enable ~~~~~ ~;~~: ~~':;re t~\~~r al~~~r~:~~etai~l~~~ tile eircuJlltiou managers to get Ihe sub· lllclnde tl!('sc scl£·nghteous, haughty Ro scribers' copies in the mail n.t.the same that llUlns. time campus. the pllper fUl'ther is distributed on is safcgunrd the A 'rhe words of the1rnster were address· was Church I their cd to thelloor people in the multitude- Dr. Albert Norman W~rd, tile leader lems connected thel'Cwith, while attend· thnt m)' na.me Westcrn on :Maryland files Col as uow prol'ided in that the address is president of the meek, trusting souls-those who were in the organization of the Liberal Arts ing a. meeting of !Jle Coullcil of stamped directly OJ! e/lch copy, obviating mounling. Jesus blessed the poor, the College 310vement, is the president of Boards in Chicngo 8m'eral years ngo, one legc. They listcned to whnt I had to delays which were liable to occur wheu on head with meek, nud mourners, and told them that Wcsten. 2Ifnryland College, located at afternoon the pap~rs Rllilounccd t~e great sa". 1 stand themelllory bl'red of Dr. Wal- and the which ad(lrcss a wns risk printc(} becoming the wr~PJler, bo'wcd r~n beforc of detached theirs 1I"~S the Kingdom of Hea\'en. lie Westminster,1IfarJland. gift of James B. Duke for educlltJoll nud lace .Butterick and Dr. E. C. Sage. from tile paper. asked them to lift up their eyes to tI,e Pr('sident Ward isa nati1"eof Hnrforu other philantllr!}pies. Then was con' 'I'hey were men who never forgot the e"il 1I'orl(l, and again reminded them County, l\larylnnd, lind is connected witll cci"cd in Ids brnin the idea of the Liberal common toueh, and though dead, they Fnrther impro,"cmcnls have been ef· thut they were the saving force of the families which loe~ted in earlicst Colon· Arts College i\lovemeut. fected along other lines. The mnke·up world. ial da.l·s in Virginia, Mllrylnnd, and All i.ntcrcsting extrnct from his ad· yet li,-e in the ~emory of the iusti~l' of the GOLD BUG has been made more It wa~ a forceful ,,'n), to elllpllasize MassnchllscttS. One of his a!tcl)stors, dress at the Cllie~go COllferellC(l, March tions they befrIended. They earned compact by having the type mntter set' Ihe the fact of the worth of the poor, com Coptain John Ward, was on~ of the 18·~O, 1930, whell the. Liberal Arts Col· onr snIt eanseto their the Boord, and Education reo closer together, enabling the paper to General "'liS Ilmt monplaee person. EYer'yone was aware lege 1fo"emellt was orgau.izecl is here gil'e more actnnl news on {l[lch page. Jamcstown, later of the imlispensability of snIt. Salt was enrlier settlers at is now Harford who Counl.y. gi"cn: Bonrd granted us an np~ropriation of This feature also contributes to the gen· to what removed oue of the prime necessitics of life. Tile eral ehoraetcr of the weekly, giviug it an of. the Roman then reaJir.ed thut he wns !lot so One branch gil'ing to family the settl('d in New "Scveral yonrs ago, while tIIO Coun ~I;~~i~O~~~i~~t~3~1~:0~gn~~ti ~~di~\~:l ';~ appenrance similnr to tbnt of a cOllven I..yman Engl~nd, nnl.ion Without the necessnry in the schcme of things. Beecher snd his illustrious s(ln_, lIenry eil of Church in Bo~rds of Eduention ",ns their !lIe npproprialion. Education Board gift I tional metropolitan newspaper. session in afternoon General of Chicago, the Professor Shroyer renmrked that this Ward Beecher, nnd the great Assyriolo· Beginlling with this issue, the staff te..xt alw:lYs furn.ishcd a good basis for gist, 1Villiam Hayes Wnrd, long editor of papers j!reat brought of the Mr. ~nnouncelllellt B. Duke of doubt ,·ery much our whethcr 11'6 eould plans to giye its reuders more pictures funds James InH'C increnscd gift endowment the an old·f:ahioned sermon. There are The IIldependent. President Ward WruJ to education nnd to other pllilan· caeh weck. The ent.a from the 1931 is· many illustrations of the necessity of thropics. I was deeply imprcssed by by an\, considerable amount. :But be· sue of tits ALOHA have been turned nnd salt. But today salt is' so common nnd Ie 110W heads, the announCClllont nnd "'ent to Illy c.;nae·of givcn the our hclp endowment eneouragement grown ol'er to the GOLD BUG, which hns ac· hns thus so unattractive that who wants to be the of study in room to thiuk it over. The more I frlllll $250,000 to approximntely $900,. quirCll a new steel filing eab;nct in wllich snit! Who wants to be the se~solling' eorge Wasil thonght nllOllt it, the more I became 000, and its plallt from a valuation of to c:Itnlogue and storelhem until ncede(l. It wonlll be suell nn uneventful career ingtou University, from Wllich lie received convinced that the wcalth of this lhree·qunrtcrs of a lnillion to n. mil· for anyone. the degree of Master of Arts, and in country, if rightly appealed to, could lion find a hnlf. ADVER.TISE TN THE GOT_D BUG Do these words, "Ye nrc the salt of which he further pursued work towurds had wlwt Realizing the enrth," hn\'e nlly message for liS' the Doctor's degree. He was ordaine(l a be moboli1.ed in }'or the the interClit mOliOy <>f Chris· this us nnd for sOllie three beeu
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