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Page 32 text:
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it i JLt a. ■ ' 3fe . W i .§ ' ; T Fr» President, Lucile Hiatt. Secretary, Marianna Dickinson. lEaribam Ball tutottt ((kntmtmntt Girls are supposed l always be good, but just to prevent any latent, Eve- like tendency to the opposite, a staunch and vigilant Student Government is maintained in the girls ' dorm. Of course loud noise during study hours, mid- night feeds, surreptitious buzzing would never enter the heads of an Earlham I tall resident, that goes without saying, but, well, it looks better to have some central authority td deal with any ease of manslaughter, arson or movie madness that may arise. Hut this year that central authority has had. as is the ease in Hundy. remarkably little to do. An interesting joint committee composed of members of the Student Councils of both dormitories has been formed under the name of the Inter- Dormitory Committee. This group takes upon its shoulders the regulation of affairs in which residents of both communities are concerned. Their jur- isdiction extends even to the palaces of the silent art over in town and woe be it to the unlucky Freshman who ventures to lead his Earlham Hall friend within those mysterious realms without i .w discretion. Twenty -f ' ' v
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Page 31 text:
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President, Robert Loree. Secretary, Lclaml Calvert. Imtfiy dtufottt (faixwttimmt Fewer times this year than ever before luis a serious individual lapped at a startled door with the cheering information that you are wanted to appear before the Student Council up in Prof. Hadley ' s room. There have, per- haps, been less calls this year, less trouble of all kinds for the Student Gov- ernment to meet than ever before. Midnight sessions have been a minus quantity and peace and quite reign throughout the halls. This absence of destructive work has given opportunity for the Council to turn its attention to a field that has heretofore been neglected, namely the en- couragement of the social life of the dorm. The members have been plan- ning several ways in which the Council may become a vital, constructive ele- ment upon the campus and not merely a watch dog and a court of punish- ment. One new move ahead is toward a regulated class scrap, and more innovations are promised later. Twenty-three
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