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Page 16 text:
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Page 15 text:
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■ ; ■; l-J .J» ;» 7W ' ■ ' K- ' -:- f r- .y Came your junior year, and Paul Revere ' s ride looked like a short walk, the way you covered Boston. This city just reeks with culture and education and entertainments . . . there are museums, and concerts and stage shows and operas and lectures and exhibits and . . . the Old Howard and Fenway Park and Joe and Nemo ' s and Scollay Square and Jack and Marian ' s and the Kenmore Theatre and China Town and Boston Garden, and . . . And, of course, things still kept buzzing at the University . . . The Shelton Hotel became Shelton Hall and the home for 475 co-eds . . . music, art, and theatre arts were combined in the new School of Fine and Applied Arts . . . Sargent Camp celebrated its 25th year with the University . . . Joseph Perry became the new Treasurer of the Trustees, Mrs. Katherine Oettinger, Dean of SSW ... A 200 car-motorcade left Boston for Worcester and the televised Terrier-Holy Cross game . . . Leopold Stokowski directed the Chorus and Or- chestra at Symphony Hall and Carnegie Hall ... Pi Kappa Epsilon won first prize at the last PAL Stunt Night . . . CGE sponsored a Renaissance Festival ... 52 Seniors were chosen for Who ' s Who . . . Dean John McKenzie, Father Norman O ' Connor and 54 students were selected for Scarlet Key . . . The Theatre Arts division ' s first play was The Chief Thing . . . Senator Morse of Oregon and Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam were the principal Founders ' Days speakers as the University examined the Free and Responsible Citizen ... 60 students fenjoyed the first All-LI Winter Carnival . . . Sammy Eisen played for the Greek Ball . . . CLA broke PAL ' s streak and won the Scarlet Key All-U Stunt Night . . . Guy Ormandy played for the Junior Prom, and Eileen Farley, S of N was selected as the Queen . . . MED joined in heading a new center for paraplegics . . . SFA sponsored a coffee hour on the Shelton Roof tor BLl and BC students . . . several hundred underprivileged children were the guests of the University and were taken to a Red Sox game by various Llniversity Organiza- tions . . . 600 enjoyed PAL ' s last May Day Festival . . . These things you phoned home every once in a while. bargain hasemeut and there were activities off-campus, too . . . China Touni II
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Page 17 text:
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So now you ' re a senior, and you can ' t be bothered with: Freshmen, making your bed, extra-curricular acti ' ities, bHnd dates, pep rallies, white bucks, eight o ' clock classes, or next year ' s tuition raise . . . you ' re primarily concerned with getting a job; catching up on sleep, tearing up old exams, finding someone to marry, and getting a home-cooked meal. . . . B ut as the year slipped away, you were also concerned because there was a $10,000 fire at JC . . . CIT began to have classes in the Jones, McDuffie and Stratton building . . . there was a new CBA, CLA smoker in the basement ol CLA . . . Dr. Emil Hartl was elected president of the Alumni Association . . . the bookstore opened a selF-service annex . . . WBLIR adopted a new format with emphasis on more live shows . . . University field was assuming a ' ' new look as the third base pavilion was leveled and portable stands were added for lootball games . . . the first Llniversity-at-Home program was held Oct. 13 . . . more than 450 university men caught their first glimpse of fraternity life when the IPC began the rushing season with an assembly, followed by 1 1 days of open house . . . . . . and suddenly you were a senior!
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