College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH)

 - Class of 1941

Page 17 of 193

 

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 17 of 193
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Page 17 text:

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Page 16 text:

It was laid in a Persian market, and all the pageantry, pomp, and color of the East were present. The story is derived from the Arabian Nights tales. Scheherezade, played by Bunny Leach, is a princess who tells count- less stories to amuse Sultan Bud Rahtz. The action developed through group dances and concluded with a prayer in oriental style. The most colorful dance was perhaps the slave-girl dance, in which fourteen dancing girls rose from a cloud of smoke. The most amusing incident of the performance was the picket- ing of Aladdin by a so-called magicianls union. Commencement Week Is Finale The last week of the school year is Commencement Week. Events follow each other in rapid succession. The Senior picnic is Wednesday-the class journeys to a near-by lake, plays, dines. Thursday night Will Bradley's band holds sway over the Senior Prom. Friday, alumni begin arriving for the eventful week- end, and Friday evening seniors present a play. On Saturday, alumni gather for confabs. In the evening, they play host to the seniors at a banquet and dance. Sunday morning, the first of the two great events of Commencement takes place when Prexy steps to the pulpit in august academic robes and delivers the baccalaureate sermon. The chapel is filled to over- flowing. Eyes are misty as seniors file from their pews for the last time as undergraduates. Monday, June 16, dawns, and seniors are tense. They form in long lines, march through the seated spectators to their places under the cathedral of elms, and as Senator Norris, commencement speaker, makes his address, they realize that they are seniors no more. X., ' 1 I' ,' 1 54 l ' lit .fix 'V Wjftllixl J-xx J ,x u. 'ff Egg Q J i -Fl Li i-.. zsflf--- if f tx , U X X CN ,1 x f , K TLQJSQ K h -Z1 I X Z 21 . L 1 s i 1 WL' . l if ig I ' A - p g f fn SENIOR WEEK is the climax of a col- lege career. Academically, the sheepskin represents the culmination of four years of effort. Socially, the senior prom is the finale of the student's lifetime as a college student. The senior picnic sketch- ed above, is his last informal social function as an undergraduate: the sen- ior prom his last formal function. The baccalaureate is an impressive church service held the Sunday before com- mencement, at which Prexy delivers a farewell message to the seniors. COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES inspire a wealth of memories. Past are the ar- dors of study, the cramming for exams, the unforgettable formal dances, the bull sessions that ,followed them, the ex- citement at football and basketball games. As they march up the aisle, seniors try to form new perspectives that will guide their living in a new world away from a sheltered campus. I5



Page 18 text:

TRUSTEES hold office for three year terms. There are always thirty members on this all-powerful body. Front row: William H. Miller, William F. Weir, Hugh I. Evans. Birt E. Babcock. Charles F. Wishart, Mrs. Albert D. Frost, Miss Lucy L. No- testein, Richard L. Cameron. Second row: Iohn D. McKee, W. Dean Hopkins, Marion A. Blankenhom. Howard F. Lowry, Daniel C. Funk, Bruce Knox, Robert R. Woods. Carl V. Weyqandt, Henry W. Taeusch, Arthur F. Blaser. Iames R. McLaughlin. Back row: Iohn Robinson, I. Campbell White. Not pictured: Mrs. Wilson Compton, I. Harry Cotton, Earl L. Douglass, Oscar C. Hagen, Adebert P. Higley, William H. Hudnut, R. Lincoln Long, H. B. Manton, Iohn McSweeney, Iames W. Morgan. Edward D. Roberts, Iohn R. William, Robert E. Wilson. Iohn Tiedtke. Patricians Plan Policies Three times a year, in October, March, and members are elected by them. They decide J une, the states of Illinois, Massachusetts, upon the honorary degrees to be given. New Jersey, New York, Members of the Board 01110 and Pennsylvama ADMINISTRATION of Trustees come from Send Slome Qfkcheu' more Olllc? Page varied backgrounds-tea- illustrious citizens to the Alumni .... . . 23 campus of the College of Wooster. Here the citi- zens join forces in the body known as the Board of Trustees. The thirty members of this govern- ing body of the institu- tion are elected for terms of three years, ten members each year. - Chairmaned at pres- ent by Arthur H. Comp- ton, the Board of Trustees has final control over college policy and management. Faculty Auditor ..... . . Book Store ......... . . Business Manager . . . . . Dean of College .... . . Dean of Men ....... . . Dean of Women ......... Director of Dormitories . . Hospital ................ Library ....... ........ President ............... Secretary to President. . . Student Aid ............. Treasurer . . . . . Trustees.... chers, preachers, authors, daughters, business men, professional men. The coeducational principles of Wooster extend to the Board: Miss Lucy L. Notestein, associate edi- tor of Reader's Digest, and Mrs. Albert D. Frost, daughter of the former president, John Campbell White, are present repre- sentatives. As the source of final judgment, the Board stands as a bulwark of control between Wooster and the World. Galpin Hall, the Administration Building

Suggestions in the College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) collection:

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944


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