The front lawn Whore dates are made, and book roportg oxchangod The tempo and tho times ... back from the war were the men and womon . . . back to the subway college . . . some back to become '48 graduates . . . some never to come back except in memory and memorials. . .. The tempo and tho timos had changed . . . men of 30 and pigtails of 17 took oxams together . . . khaki shirts and tight fitting swoators filled the halls . . . the old ratio of two men to each girl reigned again . . . and the coeds liked it. . . . The vet was back . . . tired, eager to get his degree as fast as he could ... he became tho plodder, the leader. . . . Tho first change camo on Doccmbor 8, 1941 ... it was the turning point . . . tho beginning of tho exodus of men from the campus, of soldiers from this country, of Fascism from the world . . . President Roosevelt spoke to the nation . . . the col- lege—faculty and students—listened and heard him call for a declaration of war . . . heard him plead for a better world to omorge from tho ensuing blood and destruction. . . . The tempo changed . . . tho fever of war replaced the scho- lastic calmness . . . values shifted . . . War Bonds and acceler- ated courses became important ... air raid drills and prayers for victory made academic lectures seem insignificant . . . the glamour of uniforms replaced tho casualness of college clothes.... The times were different . . . buildings onco unknown to female smiles, except for a girl engineer or two. now had their halls filled with coeds . . . the armed services left only a scat- tering of men to walk with them ... 12 girls entered in Septem- ber '42 and passed through Lincoln Corridor . . . the following February 20 more coeds were admitted . . . soon there wore
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Tho railroad to collogo Crossroads Thursday: sounding oli in tho trianglo was changed, rearranged, a new steam table was installed, but nothing could be done without a place lor the students to meet, to relax, to shoot the breeze.... As the world's worries became less acute with the defeats of Germany and Japan, the College's difficulties increased ... it throbbed with tho beat of tho incoming flow of students ... it struggled, expanded to absorb them ... registra- tion in the Fall of '46 almost developed into a riot . . . the schedule fell days behind ... 50 new classos wore added ... a now system was insti- tuted . . . the beginning of the torm was post- poned . . . finally, the confusion subsided . . . but it wasn't until September '47 that students and tho administration could look upon registra- tion day without a feeling of approaching panic. ... The times kept changing . . . AA books be- came procious again as vots returned to the teams . . . the prospects for winning teams in- creased the demand for AA books . . . linos formed again at tho tickot sales like a haunting spectre which refused to leave the school. . . . A world's disease infected the College as charges of anti-semitism wore leveled at Prof. William Knickerbocker in April 1945 and shocked the school .. . accusations were brought against tho Chairman of the Romance Languages De- partment by four members of his department . . . Hillel led tho demand which rosultod in in- vestigations by the General Faculty, and Student Council . . . the decisions were to dismiss the case.... What were tho times . . . they were bad . . . hate and prejudice had not been wiped out by the blood of men. ... What was the tempo . . . there was unrest . . . men who had fought and boys who folt thoir first stubble of beard found racial prejudice and segregation at the college. . . . Army Hall Administrators were attacked . . . first tho Veterans Association charged that dor- mitory fees were being used to pay for the cost of the building's conversion . . . that the author- ized funds were boing diverted . . . the American Veterans Committee asked its lawyer and ac- countant to check the books . .. finally the rental was reduced. . .. On the heels of this came more charges . . . chargos that an anti-union policy was used in tho hiring and firing of Army Hall employees . . . a faculty committoo appointed by President Wright found validity in the charges . . . one man was rehired ... one remained fired. ... The decision was scarcoly roached when the Frederick Douglas Society accused tho same
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