Ok , I finally found it;
http://www.delcampe.net/page/item/id,156545897,var,Amelia-Earhart-in-1937-Debris-Purdue-University-yearbook-excellant-condition,language,E.htmlEnlarged text;AMELIA EARHART AT PURDUE UNIVERSITY
In 1934, Purdue University President Edward C. Elliott heard Amelia Earhart speak at a luncheon and was so impressed with her talk that he asked if she would visit Purdue and give a lecture for the women students. Earhart spoke at a banquet at Purdue on October 17, 1934, and discussed “Activities for Women After College.” After several talks with President Elliott, a contract was negotiated in 1935, stating that Amelia Earhart would be employed by Purdue University as a visiting faculty member at a salary of $2,000 per year. From the autumn of 1935 until her disappearance in July 1937, Earhart served as Consultant in the Department for the Study of Careers for Women and Technical Advisor in the Department of Aeronautics (part of the School of Mechanical Engineering) for Purdue University. Earhart was attracted to Purdue because at the time it was the only university in the United States with its own fully equipped airport. She was also impressed that practical mechanical and engineering training was available without discouragement to the women students on campus. At Purdue, Amelia lectured, conducted conferences with Purdue faculty and students, and initiated studies on new career opportunities for women. Perhaps most importantly, she served as an example of a successful modern woman for the female students at Purdue. While working at Purdue, Amelia stayed in South Hall (now called Duhme Hall), a women’s residence hall on campus. South Hall students vied with each other to sit at Amelia’s table in the dining room for meals. Buttermilk became an overnight favorite beverage on campus because it was Amelia’s choice. The coeds were not supposed to sit with their elbows on the table, and Amelia, being somewhat informal, would usually eat with both elbows on the table, her chin cupped in her hands. When the students asked why they couldn’t sit with their elbows on the table, the standard reply was “As soon as you fly the Atlantic, you may!” Amelia’s husband, George Palmer Putnam, first put the idea of a “flying laboratory” airplane for research into President Elliott’s mind. Elliott thought about it for a while, until the autumn of 1935, when at a dinner party at his home, Amelia outlined her dreams for women and aviation, which seemed very similar to Elliott’s own ideals. Amelia also spoke of her desire to conduct studies on how long-distance flying affected pilots physically and mentally. Before the evening was over, fellow guest David Ross offered to donate $50,000 as a gift toward the cost of providing a machine suitable for the flying laboratory. Further donations totaling $30,000 in cash and equipment were received from J. K. Lilly (of the Eli Lilly drug company), Vincent Bendix, and manufacturers Western Electric, Goodrich, and Goodyear. The $80,000 formed the basis of “The Amelia Earhart Fund for Aeronautical Research.” The primary objective was to develop scientific and engineering data of vital importance to the aviation industry. The Earhart Fund financed Amelia’s “flying laboratory,” in the form of a new Lockheed Electra airplane specially outfitted for her at the Lockheed factory. It was delivered to Amelia in 1936, and it was in this plane that she disappeared during her world flight attempt in 1937. In 1940, George Palmer Putnam donated Amelia Earhart’s papers, photographs, medals, and a few personal belongings to Purdue University. In 2002, Putnam’s granddaughter, Sally Putnam Chapman, donated an additional group of Amelia Earhart personal papers to Purdue. These included personal letters, poems, and Amelia’s famous pre-marital agreement. The Purdue University Libraries Special Collections now owns the largest, most comprehensive collection of materials relating to Amelia Earhart in the world.
I am unsure if this information is somewhere in a later date debris yearbook, the seller's description using solely his/her research mixed along with information taken from other sources,or written by someone from Purdue.