This is the address given by Wilbert E. Locklin at his inauguration as Springfield College's ninth president on April 30, 1966. A section of the speech is in italics, where he diverges from his prepared text and applauds the generosity and courage of the students and board of trustees. He begins the speech by thanking four groups of people: the board of trustees, the Springfield College community, his family, and Milton S. Eisenhower, the president of Johns Hopkins University. Locklin then draws parallels between Johns Hopkins, where he studied and worked for many years, and Springfield College. He describes his search for the basic institutional philosophy of the college, which, he decides, is Humanics. He says he has learned the most from...