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Page 22 text:
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COMMITTEE X Incorporating all activities not included under C.S.A. commit- tees is the lab of Committee X. At the beginning of the year the committee sent out interest survey sheets to all students in an attempt to discover what activities were most desired. As ai result of the survey, four activities were set up. Monthly square dances and waltz parties were held in the Cave. Every Monday evening in Nourse parlors the Music Listening Group meets for a program of classical music. Opportunities in craft activities were offered by the Art Workshop. Heads of the committee are Howard, Baldwin, chairman, Saurwein, Knauss. POINT COMMITTEE The point committee has been able to present this year con- crete facts and figures, revealing the type and distribution of extra-curricular activities among Carleton students. Headed by ca-chairmen Elaine Stetfensrude and Bill Eifrig, assisted by Barbara Nordley and Joe Williamson, the committee obtained individual information as well as statistics concerning the group as a whole. On the basis of its findings, the committee made the following suggestions. The committee can easily be made to serve as a go-between between those who wish to participate and those who are able to provide opportunities for participation. Activities Day should be expanded to include all clubs and activities on- campusg special counsellors should be present to advise students on choice of activities. All clubs should elect in February, to allow the committee to OK nominees for offices, on the basis of the number of points accumulated by the nominee. Records of past activities, interests, and participation plans for the com- ing year should be made available to every advisor to enable him to better counsel his advisee. Members of the committee pictured above are: Stettensrud, Eifrig, Nordly. CARLETON SERVICE FUND Although the '48-'49 quota of 56,500 exceeded last year's goal by 5500, CSF had collected 56,825 in cash and pledges by November 55 because of the enthusiastic response a new goal of 57,100 was set when the campaign ended. The remaining pledges were turned in March 'I. Harold McCarthy, chairman, was assisted by treasurers Stu Pfaft and Bill Eifrig, and CSF Board members Helen Coe, Ed Brenner, Jo Nickells, Gordy Meyer, Carol Frase, Jean Baldwin, and Dick Newman. This year, for the first time, the CSF Board and dorm captains were assisted by faculty mem- bers who solicited from their colleagues, thereby eliminating the need for students to solicit them. Dean Flint was faculty advisor. The Carleton Joint Relief committee was taken over by CSF this spring and, in exercising a function of the old committee, it sponsored a clothes drive for overseas relief, a campaign that began March 21 and ended after spring vacation. Members of the committee in the picture are, first row: Frase Coe, McCarthy, Baldwin. Second row: Meyer, Eifrig, Newman Brenner, Pfaff. kv 8.3 4
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Page 21 text:
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STUDENT FACULTY COUNCIL By the looks of the picturef the Student-President Gould committee is a bit one-sided, however, when the three deans, Miss Beasley, and Miss Coulter are in attendance, the ratio of six faculty to ten students a bit more representative. Everything from a share-the-profits plan for conserving electricity to the matter of making the arb a state game reserve is discussed a these informal meetings under the chairman- ship of President Gould. This is not an all-powerful law-making body but rather one which discusses matters of interest to the Carleton community and makes recommendations concerning these matters' to the proper organizations. The past year the group has heard Tom Morgan belabor the societies, Dean Kille deliver an address on the merits of Comprehensives, Doris Grieser and Louise Lee fight for more liberal women's rules, some of Dr. Gould's best iokes, and many other controversial items. The Student- Faculty committee pays rich dividends to the entire educational community of students, faculty, and administration. COLLEGE ACTIVITIES COLLEGE ACTIVITIES COUNCIL The College Activities Council has been active this year in helping to coordinate the social activities of the school so that they are more completely within the aims of the college as o whole. The committee is made up of student representatives from the maior social organizations, and faculty and administration representatives, Miss Coulter, Miss Gill, Deon Lewis, Dean Jarcow, Dean Flint, and Dr. May. The group, working in committees, attempted to draw together the odds and ends of social policy and start on a con- structive policy of organizing and making them meaningful and consistent. It has initiated temporary rules in situations which demand immediate decisions and has recommended the type of rules which it feels should be decided upon in the future. Through personal interviews and discussions with club members and various active groups, the Council has tried to help those organizations re-evaluate their aims and purposes. Most important of all is the Council's report to the Executive Committee of the Faculty concerning the type and amount of social activity which is being carried on and its recommendations to this group for their study and re-evaluation of the entire extracurricular program at Carleton. Members of the council pictured above are: Palmer, H. McCarthy, Kenyon, Cuddeback, Gill, Balich, Meier, Busch, Olson, Naylor. gl 'W'X -he it gn uf 'fr
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Page 23 text:
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E T 1 E ueqi eg ttf, H tt -SS In N Es fm, -.H .gf f B f .A I Q E is f Y, . -is 'xx I. -is x eg. me a lm mx is gm mugs H H Wit - ? H H -21 . il. 3.,fll Zii ggf S ,i in ef-55 mmf, E i ...Q '1- miW 1K Co-chairmen Ray Busch and Weasel Olson Defying popular sentiment, government investi- gating committees, and the World's Greatest Newspaper, the Carleton College Social Co-opera- tive this year moved one step closer to Moscow in an effort to supply more and better social functions for the student body than were possible under the old regime. For the first time Co-op received a ten-dollar allotment from the college comprehensive fee of each student, thus auto- matically creating logtxl student participation in the organization. Not only does Co-on receive more money than it did under the voluntary member- ship system, but it can schedule a wider variety of activities, free from the former problem of limiting participation to Co-op members. Anything from a formal dance to a splash party can now be pre- sented by Co-op for the benefit of the student body as a whole. Without appearing too pink for the right-wing members of the college community, co-chairman Ray ,Busch and Mary Louise Olson, aided by secre- tary Doris Palmer and treasurer Harry Kircheimer, managed to provide adequate proof of the work- ability of the new communal plan. A varied suc- cession af formals, Saturday night dances, open houses, exchange dinners, campus shows, hayrides, concert trips, bridge tournaments, and American and foreign movies practically eliminated the prev- alent social apathy of the typical Carleton student Club Carleton and the Telemark, VViscansin, ski week-end were perhaps the most thoroughly en- joyed social events of the year. The latter, planned by Bill English, chairman of the trips committee, provided breaks in bones as well as in the academic grind, but proved to be a highly successful occa- sion for all concerned. Club Carleton, alma mater's own imitation of the big city, functioned smoothly once a month in a variety of night club atmos- pheres from hillbilly to Chinese, replete with floor show, Coca-Cola and dilute sarsaparilia soda. All in all, it was a highly successful year. Pro- viding an adequate social program for a thousand students in a town which offers few entertainment outlets is no small chore' a great deal of credit is due to the officers of Co-op and to the various com- mittee chairmen and workers who presented a pro- gram which compares favorably with the social activities available at most larger universities in towns better equipped to supplement such a pro- gram than Northfield . ,eexi an t -st
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