Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV)

 - Class of 1943

Page 26 of 136

 

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 26 of 136
Page 26 of 136



Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 25
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Page 26 text:

TIN FISH — that means torpedo in submarine language. The phrase, the smoking lamp is lit means Camels are in order — for with men in the Navy, the favor- ite cigarette is Camel. (See below.) HIDE-AND-SEEK. A deadly game of it with the T. N. T. of depth charge and torpedo. That ' s a game only for steady nerves! But what isn ' t these days— with all of us fighting, working, living at the high- est tempo in years. Smoking, too— per- haps even more than you used to. If Camels are not your present brand, try them. Not just because they ' re the favorite in the service or at home- but for the sake of your own smoking enjoyment, try Camels. Put them to the T-Zone test described below and make your own comparisons. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Winston-Salem. North Carolina g| sHi The T Zone where cigarettes are judged The T-ZONE — Taste and Throat— is the proving ground for cigarettes. Only your taste and throat can decide which cigarette tastes best to you . . . and how it affects your throat. For your taste and throat are absolutely individual to you. Based on the experience of millions of smokers, we be- lieve Camels will suit your T-ZONE to a T. Prove it for yourself! FIRST IN THE SERVICE- In the Navy — in the Army — in the Marine Corps — in the Coast Guard— the favorite cig- arette is Camel. (Based on actual sales records in Ship ' s Service Stores, Ship ' s Stores, Sales Commissaries, Post Exchanges, and Canteens.) -THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS l V GYROSCOPE OIRL — Pretty Rosemary Gregory (above) calibrates automatic directional devices at a Sperry Gyroscope Co. plant, and she ' s just as partial to Camels as the fighting men who depend on her precision. She says: Camels suit me berter all ways. For my taste and my throat, Camels are tops with a capital XT '

Page 25 text:

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Page 27 text:

Monday night before deadline, in the midst of incidental mid-semesters and themes, we began searching for pictures to illustrate the feature, Unwritten Legend . So, storming the library in search of Mr. B., we took the keys to the Alumni Room (third floor to your right), and proceeded to sit on the floor and rummage through a cabinet full of Bethany pictures, momentos, and history. The pictures speak for themselves. It is surprising all the honest enjoyment one can get looking through Bethany ' s past: Mrs. Bourne ' s photo- graph album, the old sorority and fraternity pic- tures, — records of people and things you ' ve heard about and perhaps know. We became interested in a yellowed book bearing this flyleaf inscrip- tion, Purchased from second-hand book shop in Cleveland by the College. March, 1934. 75c. It was the third volume of the Stylus , printed in 1853-54 at the Harbinger printing office, Beth- any. The Stylus was the product of the three lit- erary societies on the campus, the Neotrophian, the A.L. (?) Institute, and the Adelphian, pre- decessors of our present soroities and fraternities. It must have had a rather wide circulation. Poems, jokes, literary criticisms, essays, letters, ed- itorials, and incidents of campus life in the fifties were the principal contents, and most of it was very literary, amusing, and intellectual. A Beth- any publication did have a staff once. We thought you might enjoy some of the bet- ter exerpts from the book in future issues. A rather apt one is from the introduction to this volume: Our publication is the mouthpiece of the students of Bethany College, and they, more im- mediately, are concerned in its prosperity. We would earnestly commend to their attention the necessity of doing everything in their power to increase and sustain its worth as a literary pro- duction. In brief, to give it such a position as they would wish it to occupy as their represen- tative. By it, in a measure, they are judged abroad. As a body, their intelligence and intel- lectual worth is estimated, as it may have merit or demerit. Its circulation is not confined to this vici nity alone, but it also goes abroad. Furthermore, it is the duty of every student to write for its pages. Not that they may ex- pect every communication to be deemed worthy of insertion . . (but) . . Many, very many, minds do not know their own strength, and hence it is well to submit themselves to the judg- ment of others; for others may see much worth and promise . . Thus we may draw out and give occasion for the exercise of real mental worth, where it before lay dormant. And we should not neglect it because we are young, and flatter ourselves that we have ' plenty of time. ' We may not, after we leave college, have the opportunity of cultivating the taste for such an accomplish- ment. Bethanian Volume 34 Number 2 November 1942 Unwritten Legend 4 From the Front 10 An International Report 10 Nose Trouble 11 Familiar Faces 12 Bethany Faces the War 16 Bethany Blue Book Mary Jane Heifer and Ed Harris 17 For Campus Delivery 18 I Got Etiquetted 18 Exchange Clippings 19 O ' taanhation EDITORIAL STAFF B. A. Plank, Editor Tommy Boyd Ray Rappaport Bill Young LITERARY STAFF Herman Steinberg Evelyn Burtis Gene Miller Virginia Perry Carol Krews Barbara Trese Marcie Bright Lorraine Parkins Gertrude Drautz June Galm Mary Jane Heifer Ed Harris Olga Karp, Make-up BUSINESS STAFF Tom Committee, Sandy Steinman, Co-Managers Kitty Jones Sheldon Kohan Mariah Smith Bob Smith Marion Culley Speed Koval Chief Photographer George Hoak Associate Bctbtrtliau, a magazine of features and photographs, pub- lished each month from October through May by the Student Board of Publications of Bethany College. Entered as second class matter on January 14, 1920, at the Post Office at Bethany, W. Va., under the Act of March 1, 1879. Subscription price: Four dollars the year. Volume XXXIV, Number 2. Page Three

Suggestions in the Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) collection:

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949


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