Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL)

 - Class of 1943

Page 14 of 188

 

Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 14 of 188
Page 14 of 188



Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

ternity houses were excited enough to listen to news bulletins instead of the professional football game in progress. Later in the evening they drifted off to the movies. Some sat up late listening to the same news items repeated again and again. No one was prepared for rqlay in classes Monday morn- ! ing-it was only the beginning of a slight tendency toward an it doesn't make any difference whether I study anyway atti- tude on the part of many students. Profs dismissed their eleven o'clock classes early so students could hear President Roosevelt's message to Congress. In Seymour Hall fsee picture on page 65 nearly a hundred stu- dents and faculty members gathered around the radio--a serious, tight-lipped circle. And after the president had spoken his S00 words, the group stood silently at attention while the National Anthem came over the radio. That afternoon Colonel Porter told the 200 military students that they should plan to stay in school until called. Every stu- AMERICA'S NUMBER ONE private citizen, Williaiii Allen White of Emporia, Kansas, captivated students with friendly chapel talk in October. He is shown below visiting the Phi Delt house and being shown around by college-treasurer McClelland and Corky Cordell. dent should finish his college career if pos- sible, he said. During the week following the declara- tion of war, Dr. Paul Van Zeeland, former premier of Belgium, was on the campus as a speaker on the Finley Foundation. He told Knox students that democracy and American youth would win the struggle for freedom. But he was quick to point out that the way would not be easy-a sentiment echoed many times later during the year. Dr. Van Zeeland's addresses help- ed clarify the whole bewildering situation. President Davidson paid tribute to Van Zeeland's work in an open letter to Knox students in the Student issued the Friday after Pearl Harbor. He went on to say that the college would not slacken pace, 'because education will be more needed tomorrow than today or yesterday . . . our task is to guide our college experience- possibly remake our program-so that it will be of greatest use in the days and years ahead . . . The prophesied changes in the program Were quick to come. The next issue of the Student announced that the second se- THE HONNOLD LliCTURllR for the year, Rockwell Kent, distinguished artist and lecturer, chats with Fran Parker, George Brown, and Bill Polhemus at the Phi Gam house. Mr. Kent was on the campus for three weeks and became well-acquainted with manylstudents. 8

Page 13 text:

CHAPTER ONE Knox In a i ar Year mln Reaiew September, 1941-that meant school and the business-as-usual sign for some six hundred young midwesterners. The dor- mitories and fraternity houses again came to life. After a summer's silence, the new crop of campus chat- ter and the current rqcll Une- 3 I. M juke favorites C El- mer's Tune and 144 Zane! Chattanooga Choo- Choonj joined with the old reliable bell above Old Main's Amer- ican Gothic to form a choral background for an American scene. The stage was set in the same old way. There were different faces Csome of the familiar ones wcren't back because Uncle Sam had taken a handj, different jokes, different tunesg but it was the same old plot -for the first act, at least. The author added a couple of lines by Williain Allen Wliite and othersg minor changes were made in the stage business-a murder , different football scores, different chapel programs. But only those who had roles in the production thought that it was some- thing entirely new and different. Those who thought it was new and dif- ferent loved itg those who knew it was old stuff loved it too. It was just college life- and whether the actors knew it or not, it was symbolic of something worth keeping. The show was playing to a full house. The Hrst act included rushing and football and Homecoming and vocational guidance conferences. The curtain came down on a song and dance routine called Christmas Prom. According to the playbill a former premier of Belgium was to take a promi- nent role at this time. But a short, yellow-skined fellow who didn't know his lines or his place made a faulty entrance and tried to grab the spot- light. That was December 7. There were no spectacular reactions to report. No one attempted to offer any epic- making statements as to the part of Knox College in the world at war. Certainly changes were made, but through it all it was obvious that a majority of those in- volved had their feet on the ground. On that Sunday afternoon, men in fra- l5liJXi'lf was lo he found at Knox .IS it could be found at few places throughout the world during a hectic year. The opportunities to meet together in the homes of fae- ulty members were to be appreciated even more in mem- ories than during the peaceful evenings themselves, 7



Page 15 text:

mester would be shortened to permit earlier graduation. This move was made at the recommendation of the Student Council. A week later it was announced that beginning with the summer term Cin itself an innova- tion, Knox would be on the quarter sys- tem. This latter change meant far- reaching revisions in the Sched ule of courses Gfzanqe 7a '7f1e Qumien Squaw and credits. A faculty committee spent long hours making the revisions, but even then it was May before the new catalogs were available. Other changes? There were not so many. The athletic program went on uninterrupt- ed-the only noticeable change being the increasing difficulty of finding transporta- tion for the teams. During the month fol- lowing December 7, various students were engaged in such frivolous tasks as working on Kampus Kapers , planning winter for- mals, and going on the air', with station WKC. The Siwash Broadcasting Company was the most important addition to the extra- curricular program at Knox. The brain- child of two sophomore boys, its founding and maintenance entailed a tremendous amount of time and effort on the part of a large number of enthusiastic students. The Knox Theatre had a busy year, its third production, The Skin Game , offered drama with up-to-date significance. Enter Romeo , the Kampus Kapers for 1942, had no signihcance whatsoever other than the fact that it offered alleviation from the seriousness of the march of events-and the fact that it maintained its status as a com- pletely student-produced effort which an editorial in the Student proclaimed was proof that student initiative was not dead on the campus. Strangely enough, another speech activity, debate, did not particularly flourish in a year when arguments and bull sessions were rife in every house and dorm. TI-Ili XVAR HAD LITTLE' EFFECT on the exterior of the college, the campus retained its peaceful setting. But there were changes beneath the surface. The above shot was to have appeared on this book,s cover-until the war called for a more military angle. Another of the extra-curriculars, the publications, felt the war only to the extent of a little economizing. Business-as-usual prevailed in the music department-except that the glee club trips were cancelled. It should be noted, too, that there was an amazing increase in student interest in the band and orchestra. The new Knox-Civic Symphony presented two unusually ine concerts. Fraternities and sororities did not ap- pear overly-worried about the international situation despite the frets and cares of na- tional chapters. There was a drop in en- rollment at the beginning of the second semesterg approximately fifty students left school, a slightly greater percentage than usual. The graduating class was not par- ticularly aifected, although its total mem- 9

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