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The Fiftieth Anniversary:
1920
Excerpts from: “History of the Ohio State University",
VIII, Semi-Centennial Celebration. by J. Lewis
Morrill
Official records, however
complete, printed addresses, however glowing, cannot preserve
the atmosphere of the Semi-centennial celebration at the Ohio
State University. For there is in these the note of wordy
ostentation and of pride, "cut-and-dried," that does not reflect
the warmth and the felicity of the occasion, intimately
remembered…
"Jubilee Day," October 13,
was the curtain-raiser. The crowds were not large, but already
the alumni homecoming wave had begun to flow toward the campus.
Scores of the graduates were grouped in the shade of friendly
and familiar trees beside the Long Walk over which the academic
procession moved from the Library to the Gymnasium for the
opening ceremonies. Other bevies of early reunionists were
clustered in the Hollow, near the Spring, that day. The campus
buildings received them constantly with the older professors as
hosts. At Fifteenth Avenue, the main gate to the campus,.
there had been erected a large "information tent" to meet
the obvious need of many of the
older graduates who were back for the first time in years. At
all campus entrances were posted large signs pointing the way to
alumni registration headquarters in Ohio Union where clerks
worked in relays throughout the week in a futile attempt to
register the homecomers. Literally hundreds of those who made
the pilgrimage back to the campus were never registered-some,
through their own neglect; many others, because they did not
have the patience to stand in line at the registration booths
during the crowded hours…
Certainly [no official address]
was richer in interest than that of Doctor William Oxley
Thompson, President of the University, who described the
personalities and the service of the four past Presidents of
the University, his predecessors. The presence throughout all
the week's exercises of Doctor William Henry Scott, the only
living ex-President, who delivered the first invocation, was in
itself a benediction upon the ceremonies.
No event on the week's program
excited greater pride than the opening exercise on the afternoon
of "Jubilee Day," when the representatives of the other great
institutions of learning in America rose to deliver to President
Thompson the greetings and the congratulatory messages accorded
to the University in its fiftieth year. All present rejoiced in
the happiness and graciousness of phrase with which the
President acknowledged these witnesses to the honor and esteem
in which Ohio State is held in the collegiate world of America...
Thursday, October 14, was given
over mainly to educational conferences and addresses, with
particular reference to the service of the land-grant college in
American education. Doctor William F. Peirce, President of
Kenyon College, was the presiding officer of the forenoon, with
[other] Ohio educators on the speaking program. The afternoon session was under the direction of Doctor
William J. Kerr, President of Oregon Agricultural College...
By Thursday afternoon the alumni
had begun to descend on the campus as an army. Social events had
been postponed as far as possible so that week-end visitors
might attend the most of them. The first of these was the Golden
Jubilee Reception and Ball, held Thursday evening downtown at
Memorial Hall, which had been specially decorated by University
artists for the occasion. The formal reception here was
followed by dancing.
Friday, October 15, was
probably "gala day" of the Jubilee. It had been set apart on
the calendar of the celebration as "Alumni Day." The speaking
program of the forenoon was one largely of reminiscence,
including Doctor T. C. Mendenhall, a member of the first Faculty
and present Trustee of the University; Doctor W. H. Scott,
former President and Emeritus Professor of Philosophy; Lowry F. Sater of the Class of '95, a prime mover in University and
alumni affairs for the past quarter-century; and Paul M.
Lincoln, Class of '92, President of the Ohio State University
Association, official organization of the alumni.
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