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Page 13 text:
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Page 12 text:
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THE WAR YEARS « « . v ■» ■ A •. • « vvi V
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Page 14 text:
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THE WAR YEARS He had been lying across his bed, dozing, on that quiet Sunday after- noon when someone shouted into the room and said that a guy on the radio said Pearl Harbor was being bombed. He didn ' t now where Pearl Harbor was but he new that the news must mean that somebody was starting a war with us. Suddenly he got a queer feeling that the world in which he had been living only a few seconds ago had just disappeared forever and that he was in some strange new md of existence. It was an un- comfortable feeling; so he quic ly got up to join the bull-session that he new the news would start. y)N DECEMBER 7, 1941, the United States began to change and Lehigh began I y to change with it. The national phases came rather slowly because the country was in a stupor for weeks after the paralyzing shock of Pearl Harbor. Lehigh was shocked too. But there was no mass hysteria, no rushing to recruiting offices. The men were excited, of course, and they rushed around quite a bit, but all their rushing was done in circles, the same circles that everyone else rushed in in those days — that is, everyone except those in the Philippines who were too busy to get excited. The first war casualties at Lehigh were the quizzes that had been scheduled for the Monday and Tuesday following the Pearl Harbor attack. Most professors were of the opinion that the student body was far too excited to take quizzes, and most students believed that the faculty was far too excited to make them up. Keep cool, was the keynote of messages from President Williams and Dean Congdon which appeared in the Tuesday issue of the Brown and White. Wilkes McClave, president of Arcadia, urged that Lehigh men continue with business as usual. It seemed that everyone expected the student body to do something rash — like resigning from school in a body and enlisting in the Marines. However, according to a survey made by the Brown and White a few days after the start of the war, only seven men had definitely decided to leave college and enlist. The remainder of the students were fighting within themselves to decide the question of just what their duty was. For a few days the feeling of We ' ll crush Japan within a month swept over the campus as it did over the rest of America, but soon the big, black headlines about Official U. S. Navy Photograph [10]
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