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Page 8 text:
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Page 7 text:
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yvenmv- ,Lk 3 ff! pf Lu., f QI. N . ff A 5953. . , ' 42' gp fpnffiwfgffm ' ' - f 1 CJ Lg..t'L .fLP'?'If'k'iQ fj AWM4 f E anT: s 'i. Tai' isaiiar' ll in m m a's'ws' is't's1s'a75s 'sya-s' ff. Jyft fN 4 df sa, mmm gtg gina U Fw' lg i lg gg qtrrnriiaa mgfgzgggi -r -, 5 ' f Hi- ,,' W J. 1: 'Q 'ff-:J 4 fu' .fw lfimfia C -alfiia .. Quia? - 3 r '9'fLH'y1ris:iQf 'sz QM '-if-2. rx- -- 'asia , 1: TC, ' ik.. f-35:-2' ' 9 J nn ., it Q'l' long ago we ! .ffl were talking with ' ' an alumnus who was visiting the eampus for the first time in many years. Qn the whole. he seemed pleased by what he saw. Qur sur- prise was the greater when he roared. What have they done to my Quadrangle? Now we had always regarded our triangular Quadrangle as a time- less sort of plaee. Certainly any- one who has ever tried to tell tilne there by the index-less sundial or the still less aeeurate Mess llall eloek may well so eonsider it. We said we didn't notiee any ehange. Qfeourse. the First Class had moved off to lleason llall, abandoning their quarters under the Mess llall to the Set-ond Classmen: but we didnit think the differenee was ap- parent on the surfaee. Why, they've got paved walks here! snorted our old grad in dis- gust. .Mul what are they doing with flower beds in a military sehool? We used to kiek up the dirt when my outfit marehed through here. ,M the time we didn't think a lot about it. ln faet, we still favor our paved walks over any return to a possibly more maseuline gravel surfaee in the Quadrangle. Wie reealled our eonversatiou only when all the newspapers and magazines began to insist that we are half- way' through a eenturyg everybody started to eontend that there have been a lot of ehanges during the past fifty years and that there will be a lot more in the years to eome. All will ret-all that this was the year that Time ehose Winston , qt Churehill as the Man of the llalf Century. By vote of the sports writers. ,lack Dempsey was ae- claimed the fighter of the last fifty years. with ,loe Louis running a poor seeond. To llabe Ruth went the honors as baseball player of the period. and some people thought that F. ll. li. or Wioodrow Wilson easily outelassed Timeis Churehill. l'ivery'where people were taking stoek and eyeing the future. liin- stein was even ehallenging gravity itself. To us at Culver. nothing seemed very mueh altered. Notre Dame had carved out another undefeated autumng Company ll had lost the regimental football gameg ,lohn L. Lewis' miners were out on strike, and some men with shovels were digging a diteh aeross the eampus. lfverything was completely normal. Yet there was that matter of the Quadrangle. Apparently it had ehanged. Then, too, we had heard that a series of lagoons once oeeu- CAL pied what is now the First Class Carden. That the .Nrtillery used to be drawn by horses we knew. for we had seen pietures of it. within our own experienee, lleason llall had beeome a reality. the new Chapel promised to materialize. and the old lnhrmary had undergone an amazing transformation. As we write this. we are aeutely aware that another ehange is imminent: a lot of us are going through the Cate soon. and a new First Class is about to eome into being. Culver does ehange. So we deeided that perhaps we had better get down in the reeords somewhere the Culver we have known. the Culver whieh we. in all modesty. are. 'llhe stairs of Heason llall received hard wear this year. 3
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Page 9 text:
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1-ef-fm' 1 ' YWisv'zf'1WtiY'w f.:'1'f'z2zs'. arfwa7f'F'?fm1ii'3Ir -'r.91f'ri'x1..V: f'rf '1ff'fw A' f rxqigw ww- N . pills .ki g 1. ml WNERQA C its Ui Q THE CORP OF CADET 1950 'fl L OR one thing, 7 ' - bunch y A 7 we are a me 1 of fellows who have been get- ting along nicely together for some time. We do, of course, have our share of quarrelsg and differences of opinion are as frequent as they are vociferous. Those there are who proclaim the superiority of Kiss Me Kate over South Pacwc, while others regard the former with undisguised con- tempt. Concerning our classes there is apt to arise fairly violent dis- agreement. The devotees of canasta and the champions of bridge have locked in frequent and unresolved combat. It would be foolish to deny the persistence of organiza- tional rivalries, the trooper still rather looks upon the artilleryman as an unfortunate sort of chap, basically sound and all, but a little misguided. All this, though, is mere surface noise. Fundamentally we have learned to live together, to respect each other, and to have a lot of fun in the process. Our minor First Class Harmony in Beason Hall. arguments and scuflles simply em- phasize the fact that we are pretty much the best of friends. Herein we suspect that we differ little from those who have gone before us. That raises a point. We started this book with an eye on the fact that changes do occur at Culver as elsewhere. Yet we can go too far in stressing the importance and inevitability of change around here. Some of the finest things do not alter. For all the fact that Beason Hall now rises on what formerly was a dreary piece of ground, we think that the fellows within are probably very much like the First Classmen of other years. To be sure, their slang is tinged with new words that will be antique in half a decade. Their favorite movie stars are likely to be June Allyson or Ava Gardner instead of Clara Bow. And probably the songs from those musical shows we mentioned above will get a better response than would Pagan Love Song. In all, though, we imagine that down deep the men at Culver, like many aspects of the place itself, remain about what they always have been. For example, we don't notice or anticipate much change in that intangible reality, the Cul- ver spirit. Most of all, we are sure that at Culver today the bonds of friend- ship existing between cadets are as firm and lasting as ever. The intimate give-and-take between roommates, the devotion of a man to his organization, the pride in class, the deep friendship of a stu- dent for a few particular friends, all these important things remain untouched by time. 5
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