Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC)

 - Class of 1922

Page 31 of 124

 

Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 31 of 124
Page 31 of 124



Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 30
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Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 32
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Page 31 text:

A -i it fd iff: . THE ARROW ,..,,, .... ..., .. j ii 4 Q I 1 fxc- K 2 4.4 xl U I If 54 .- 1 ,,.,.nu- i I 1. L,,nl1llll l 'I Ip' r W- ,mmm 1'-rmnnm , .f-' 'FA '- ,z ,.-SPV ! IIII IlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllIIIllIIIIIIIIIIlIIIllIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIlllllllIIIIIIllIIIIIIlIlIIIlllllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII-'fQ'HY'52'5'g -L - 'A Senior Class History HE. fall of l9l8 brought not only peace to the world by the signing of the I, armislice, but it also brought to Due West a band of girls, about seventy ' strong, representative of o-ur Southern states, to enter as freshmen in the Wo'man's College. Thus we started our mountain climb in a year his- torically important. The first stretch on the new road was trying, for, like X0 freshmen, we were ignorant and unaccustomed to rules and regulations of college life. Quickly learning what was expected of us and what to expect of others, we no longer moped about like forsaken creatures, but entered on the climb with a friendly spirit. Our interest in every phase of college life was lively. The three representatives of the freshman class on the vansity basketball team were hard to beat. After a delightful rest of three months, we returned to find a decrease in number, and also that our retention of last year's work was at a low ebb. Realizing our state, we hastened to make ready for the next allotted stretch on our climb. The mountain side was rich in its store of knowledge, and with our past experience as a guide and our new tackle as a means, we probed far into its contents and drank deeply of the Ptierian spring, as is shown by the fact that Lois Glenn, one of our class, won the medal offered for the best student in Bible. Again we made a good showing in athletics. Our dramatic ability was a great aid to the Castalian and Amelian Literary Societies in the presentation of the plays staged in their annual celebrations. The new members who came to us in our junior year have done credit to all. Mabel Pressly and Margaret Phillips, both all-round girls, joined us. Bertha Ashworth, gifted with the best contralto voice in college, stepped into our ranks before the year was over. She is the possessor of the McBride voice medal, won in l9l9-l920. Yet among the faithful few who had made the climb thus far together was skill displayed, for Eula Mae Dillingham won the medal for the greatest proficiency in piano. There were two new organizations that found a place in the college during our junior year, both of which looked to our class for material? and support. In the first of these, the orchestra, our class had six performers, one the pianist. We were a help also in the other, the Student Dormitory Government, by having one of our girls on the council. All of us helped to shoulder the new responsibilities and to enjoy the new privileges given to students. Our academic work brought obstacles which, at the time, seemed almost insurmountable, but were overcome when we applied ourselves to them and followed the directions of our teachers. All along the way we have enjoyed our work in the Young Women's Christian Association, which has been such a help to us. We have contributed spiritually, musically and intellectually to its growth. We have been urged on in our pull up the mountain side by the thought that there were joys that awaited us when we had gone the last mile of the way. Truly, we have found joys awaiting us in our last year in the Woman's College. When we assembled McCain Library E kine College Page flvcnly-seven rs Q Due West. SC 296-U-9 J

Page 30 text:

ffggi-5B?N Q s 2. 21 0 af' T 'I '-Q IAU' Jllll ,,, , nllllllllullllli...nlnn ...., - ' 1 i 'EZgf3f:'L2?5H.2IlIlllII IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllll lllllll llllllIIIIllllIIIllllllIIllllIIIllIIllIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllll llll IIIlllIIIIllllIIIlllllllIIIlllIllIIllIIIIIllIIIllIlIIllIIIIIIlllllllllllllaullllllh. enior Class Poem Softly, surely time steals ong E'en though your life ebbs or lingers long, 'Tis not for earthly power to stay. Steadily each pilgrim comes and goes, Like unto the duration of 3, rose Which buds, blooms and fades in a clay. Yesterday, in this strange silent scene, We felt very wealc and earthly small, We were planted by a Hand unseen. Most unworthy in this large dream hall. As soft zephyrs through the treetops sigh As all who strive to live long should know All things lovely did our presence greet, That the sunshine of watchfulness shares, But we lay helpless at Nature's feet Amid the rain's soft and gentle care, ln this wonder garden 'neath the slcy. The life of the least Hower that grows. But the fairest rose that ever grew ls not destined to escape life's due Which mars the wonder, the sweetness of life. 'Tis the rose that has the will to endure, And because of this gift, so great and pure, It shall wear the petals of filmy white. We were pruned and trimmed with greatest care, Lest indolence be found lurking there. To ruin character of perfect shape. Sin hasn't played its dreadful game of scorn, Nor pierced the body with the fatal thorn That God maturity must withhold. Pure, sweet rose, holding your head aloft: Gentle, modest rose, with petals so soft, As temptations circle you around- For they come with ever-ready snare To drink thy goodness and beauty rare- Stand firmly rooted to the solid ground. E.. HUNNICUTT. Page twenty-six



Page 32 text:

,f-3 :Q be -x vs-F ' 21 242 f aii'g.g.f-N KW 3 A T ' llllllllll lllll lllllf n-.fl .... ,. .mlllllhm1in.. ...mu .... , .HE 3 T .531 I - .. fe -N, -7 V Anal -fmns.,Y-- H ,i, . , fgg 42ss::,f.hfwuiilmuummm IIIIIIIllllIllIIllIIllllIIllIIllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllIllIIllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIllllIllIIIIIIllIlllllllllllllllllaululll ,I last fall we naturally found ourselves at the head of activities and organizations. For- tunately, senior privileges lightened our load. Yet the greatest joy and honor conferred on us as a class came in the form of a banquet given by the junior class on October 22, l9ZI, a date long to be remembered by all, when, dressed in frills of satin and laces of gold, we were so royally entertained. As a result of the basketball game between junicr and senior teams on Thanksgiving Day the trophy cup was tied with gold and black and placed on the senior dinner table. Black and gold again triumphed on December IO, when the freshmen and seniors met on the basketball court, thus making us sole heirs of the trophy cup. This year is one of pleasure, in that it is a year of recitals and a time of degrees. Two of our class are to give graduating recitals in piano, one in voice, one in expression. We also have an artist in our group who will take a diploma in art. Along with the A.B. and B.lVlus degrees, we have two girls who, after majoring in home economics, are prepared to be housewives. We fain would linger amid such joyous surroundings, in the pleasant association with each other and our beloved teachers, but our underclassmen are saying, Move on: we are ready for yoLu' place, and the world is calling, Come to fields white for the har- vest. So, after enjoying the mountain experience in college life for a season, we must climb higher peaks and do nobler things to repay those who have sacrificed for us, and to hasten that day when we shall have gone the last mile of the way to find eternal joys awaiting. And so we leave, deeply grateful to you, our Alma Mater, for the noble and good that has been instilled in us while within your walls, and trusting that we may be able to make the lives of those with whom we come in contact richer and fuller for having been here these four years. Page twenty eight

Suggestions in the Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) collection:

Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Due West Female College - Arrow Yearbook (Due West, SC) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 47

1922, pg 47


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