La Sierra College - Meteor Yearbook (Arlington, CA)

 - Class of 1984

Page 18 of 208

 

La Sierra College - Meteor Yearbook (Arlington, CA) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 18 of 208
Page 18 of 208



La Sierra College - Meteor Yearbook (Arlington, CA) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 17
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La Sierra College - Meteor Yearbook (Arlington, CA) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

,..T,...,q,... f?z.i:..'.i 'IGI be extrtzvtigant in cost or ap- rafzce. extrente in length, or senti- trnsm' orgtornuil in design. Slaeks niay be worn only when riding horseback or on .iesigiuited outings. The nearing QI, men 's shirts is not in keeping li ith the grace and refinement uhicli should t'lZt1f't1t'lc'I'I.It' a Christian young woman and should be excluded from her wardrobe. .llodesty requires hose to be in- coiispilioits and long enough to permit no exposure ofthe body. Heels should be low and broad enough to support the weight. This ex- cludes anything higher than Cuban heels. High heeled slippers or party sandals may not be worn on any occasion. The use ofsuch cosmetics as rouge, lipstick, mascara, eyebrow pencil, brightly colored pomade or fngernail polishes, cheapen the wearer, ana' young women are asked to dispense with them. Bathing suits should be as conser- vative as may be obtainable. The neckline must always be modest and inconspicuous. L'nder DRESS FDR MEN, it merely specifies that: Young men are expected to dress in a neat, orderly, and conservative manner. avoidingfreakish styles orfads. GOOD FORM DEMANDS that neckties, suit coats, or sweater coats, be worn to meals, in classes, in the library, and at all public exercises. COM- PLIANCE WITH THIS STANDARD IS EXPECTED, with such expecta- tions as may be announced to the stu- dent body. The next school year opened with a new cafeteria. one which students still frequent in its greatly remodeled and enlarged version. Sixteen years after moving into La Sierra Hall, the gluten gourmets moved out, finally leaving those with morning classes in peace. That December, the Japanese bomb- ed Pearl Harbor. As the American war machine mobilized, it sought places to set up training camps. To someone in the Army, the La Sierra College farm seemed a godsend - lots of open space relatively close to both Los Angeles and San Diego. The Navy also began to ponder the military value of our school, but they thought the buildings would make an ideal hospital complex. Negotiations in Washington may have saved young recruits from camping among the cow-pies and the campus from convalescing sailors, but rumors to the contrary were in vogue that Christmas vacation. ln fvlay of 1942, Cossentine left for L'nion College and Lowell R. Rasmussen was elected his successor. On the last day of May, the school con- ferred its first bachelor's degrees -fif- teen students received their Bachelor of '1 l t,. ri ,E , rf ' 4. hrss. l Gigi Science degrees for completing the pre- medical program. What could one expect to pay for school back then? Well, the school bulletin warned that room, board, and tuition would lighten one's wallet by 5409.15 FOR THE WHOLE YEAR! Of course, student labor was cheap - pay started at twenty-five cents an hour with the best workers sometimes mak- ing fifty cents per hour. That meant that depending on your salary, you could pay off your school bill in somewhere between eight and sixteen hundred hours. Compare that with this year's school costs and labor rates. It would take over two-thousand hours of work to balance the books - that's working forty hours a week every week of the year while you're going to school full time! During the war years, the school sponsored the La Sierra Medical Cadet Corps, a paramilitary group which trained Adventists for noncombatant military service. At this time, campus socialities had a problem to grapple with which nearly eclipsed those posed by the student handbook - the numerical inequality of the sexes, in- duced by the local draft boards. The state produced another problem, seen by the faculty as far more serious than the disproportionate boyfgirl ratio. Sacramento wanted girls to take PE classes. What would they wear? Ob- viously they couldn't wear dresses, and long pants were equally out of the ques- tion. Some of the radical faculty members suggested shorts, but Vic- torian morality prevailed and the first girls' PE class did their calisthenics in bloomers. Some members of the faculty faced more serious problems. Even though he had done three years of graduate work in the University of California system, L. R. Rasmussen was against faculty members studying for their doctorates at worldly universities. Since no Adventist institutions were accredited to grant Ph.D's, those faculty members desiring a more complete education were in a bind. Nevertheless, in 1945, Keld Reynolds, Wilfred Airey, and Cecil Haousler became the first faculty members to receive doctorates. In- terestingly enough, all three degrees were in history. That year fifty-seven students

Page 17 text:

1 Y :Lf 1 5 1 ,.,.--- 1939. ln 1933 both the Seventh-Day Adventist board of regents and the Northwestern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools accredited the school. This made possible the develop- ment of two new programs, pre-nursing and pre-dentistry, inaugurated that fall. 1934 saw the addition of a TWO YEAR pre-med program - chalk one up for the good old days! The school also built a swimming pool where the Communication Arts building now stands. Of course, the ad- ministration's prohibition of mixed bathing valiantly upheld student morality. Miss Wallace, the dean of women, led the faculty in their attempts to limit the students' opportunities for any type of co-educational activity. The cafeteria had separate male and female entrances, and monitors controlled stu- dent seating to prevent couples from forming strong attachments over din- ner. Dating was further inhibited by a rule which forbade students to have a car either on campus or in the im- mediate vicinity thereof. For many years, the only exception was an older student who drove his pickup to deliver the milk for the school dairy. In 1937, the school mourned the pass- ing of W. J. Hole, who had been a strong financial supporter of the school since they had purchased the campus from him. He never saw the school benefit from his last contribution, 10,000 dollars toward a new auditorium - he died a few days before Hole Memorial Auditorium's dedication. The Loma Linda Food Company reorganized and moved out from Loma Linda. They augmented the campus work program by providing jobs for nearly 50 students in their modern facility and paid a generous eighteen cents an hour! By 1939, the enrollment of over four hundred students had severely cramped college living accommodations, promp- ting the school to build Calkins Hall, and start on Angwin. Nevertheless, ten girls had to move into three temporary rooms in the HMA basement. That year, the school changed its name to La Sierra College and received accredita- tion as a three year college from the Northwestern Association of Secondary and Higher Schools. In 1940, Angwin Hall opened its doors, its construction partially underwritten by PUC's dona- tion of 5,000 dollars. That year's student handbook reflects standards which have become quite quaint with the passage of time. Under DRESS FOR WOMEN it carried the following items: No dress should be shorter than one-third the distance from knee to the floor, nor longer than six inches from the floor. Skirts should be modest in cut and should not contain slits. Only one dress is needed for all social functions at the College. It 'E I fW 'fWi 1 History 13



Page 19 text:

Above: Erwin E. Cossentzne left La Sierra College in 1942 for Union Collete. Above right: A room in the men 's dorm in the very early days of LSC. Styles then in both dress and decor contrast greatly from today's. Right: The war years were years of change for the world and LSC was no exception. As the state required Physical Education classes for the women, the school was faced with a problem of dress. Seen here was their decision - bloomers in the PE Held.

Suggestions in the La Sierra College - Meteor Yearbook (Arlington, CA) collection:

La Sierra College - Meteor Yearbook (Arlington, CA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

La Sierra College - Meteor Yearbook (Arlington, CA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

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La Sierra College - Meteor Yearbook (Arlington, CA) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

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La Sierra College - Meteor Yearbook (Arlington, CA) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

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