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 I A UNIVERSITY IS A PLACE I
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 ITISASPIRIT . . . V
ISSUIZ1  I I I
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IIIIIII   All too infrequently, the lives of many generations of undergraduates are IPI I I
~ l· · I   touched by the magic personality of one individual, whose influence is so far-reach- I I ·
  ing, so dramatic and so valuable that the influence is felt and remembered as long I .  
__\I ‘  as life lasts. I I I `
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mos lvm. III  Such is the story of Marguerite McLaughlin. I I
0 in our    I" _ _ I
I_I_I_IIIIIII¤     From l9l4 until she was assigned to a change-of-work status by the University I ‘
Q ILICII     in l952, Margie McLaughlin, as she was so affectionately known by University of   I I
,I.IIIIII.I· ..5h I  Kentucky students and alumni, contributed her time, her devotion, her loyalty and   I
it ut tht " Q her leadership to the institution from which she was graduated and of which she   .
orguni/=Z1   was an essential and dynamic part, until her death. I  
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I PIII.I;III,;_   Other columns of the ALUMNUS will relate her achievements and her contri-
I. IIIIIIIIIIII . I butions, but to those of us whose destinies she guided from undergraduate days I I
§I~(»IIiIt·,. A;- { until the moment of her passing, she always will be a legend of love and tender- _
1 with lim   ness and compassion and understanding. {  
' · arf; To     I .
I Il.lIIII?lII_III·   Margie, whose devotion and determination over a period of more than half   Ii I
ICH, I IMI.   a century made it possible for the University of Kentucky Alumni Association to   I   I
Q thrive and to function through bad years and good, said her goodbye to life on the I II ·
.I(1t-his tlm  I afternoon of Alumni Homecoming Day, November 25, I96l. How appropriate, that I I Q
nys I .i:.’  I God, in His infinite tenderness, should call her to her eternal home within the I   I
nrc ll¤<*I*`·*  I sound of cheers from thousands of homecoming alumni of the University sne   I
I- (il l{¤`Ilii*   served and loved.   I;I. Q
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Ish:-Il?iII.;E   We will think of her always as one who was young at heart, and while time I . I
III; the slur   and nature and age take toll of that which is mortal, the spirit of Margie McLaugh-   I I
rho KIIIIIIFII   lin will continue to burn in the hearts of those whose lives she touched with the I _
Im and IIIYI   unquenchable flame of immortality.     I -
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