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Page 29 text:
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Q T ll-lllE HOME FRONT llN ACTION The girls of Luther College have formed their own Red Cross unit. This unit folds band- ages, working in five rooms of Larsen Hall vacated by men now in service. It meets twice Weekly, every Monday evening and Saturday afternoon, to give as many girls as possible an opportunity to contribute some time to a not- able and necessary task. The girls average about 1000 surgical dressings each week. Mrs. Ham- let Petersen is in charge of the group, and girls from the upper classes act as supervisors. More work for the Red Cross has come from the Pi Kappa Tau girls, who have made afghans for the Red Cross both semesters this year. Every member was required to knit three six- inch squares as her contribution to each afghan. The VV.S.G.A. has been selling war stamps and bonds for the past two years. Every Wecliiesclay morning before and af-ter chapel there is someone ready to change dimes and quarters into stamps for victory. House presi- dents have taken the lead as victory saleswomen. Wlieii, in the spring of 1943, a nation-wide contest was conducted to find a war bond queen among students, Luther participated. Each war stamp pur- chased gave the buyer the right to cast a vote for one of four candidates. Wiiiiier of the campus contest was Olive Sharpee, elected war 'bond queen of Luther College. The contest for bond queen of 1944 resulted in victory for Inez Brunsvold. Remembering the successful bond drive that featured the previous year's con- test, the students participated enthusiastically, buying many dollars' worth of stamps and bonds and casting their votes for their favorite representative. Miss Brunsvold received her title at the coed banquet in May, when Student Body President Robert Nelson ofncially crowned her bond queen of the year. 23
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Page 28 text:
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WE PLEDGE OUR SERVICES oumsmu 1...-...H fs: f 'l'4a.. f l an-satin.,-an mama--aa ESTERN UNIO ruahauum mn .T -w bm- Lua-y uvnrr rmmnrms pi umm. mwapiusrawnanbfmzn www! D 150 J DL neconxn sown 1015A nec a 1941 PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT uAeniNcTou nc LUTHER CDLLEGE Exvnesses ITJ WHJLEHEAHTED LOYALTV TO vou Ann T0 Tas UNITED SYATES ccveRnue'r IN inns noun or census we PLEDGE ous SUPPORT T0 wnsrzvex uzAsuazs You nzsw IT nLcsssnR1 T0 TAKE nu PnoTEcTluc sue NATuhu ITS niunrs ann LIBERTIES LUTHER COLLEGE FJUNDED nuninc THE CIVIL was sv PATRIOTIC AMERICFNS or naswscnin DESCENT nunlmu Tae ai venus or HER zxrsrencc Hn- ALWAYS naspcnnin TO use counrar S CALL TODAY use sons inn DAUGHTERS STAND asinv TD Auswea THAT CKLL scans LUTHER COLLEGE o J H Paaus PRESIDENT ueuALn Jounsau Pnzsuneur or sTunsNr nonv sconce ULVlLDkN PRESIDENT ur ALUINI ASSDCIATIJ On the morning of December 8, 1941. the student body and the faculty of Luther College adopted a resolution pledging full support in the emergency. It was worded and telegraphed to the President of the United States on the same day. The College has kept its pledge to the ut- most. The service Hag is symbolic of Luther's greatest contribution-her men and women. Al- mostdaily more Norsemen enter the armed ser- vices. There are Norselnen in the army. the navy, the coast guard, and the marine corps besides the women's services. In 1942-43 it was the duty of the Defense Council, a group of students chosen by a facultv connnittee. to keep a file of the Norsemen in the service. It also had charge of the service flag. In order that the absent Norsemen might ac- quaint themselves with the current campus news and the whereabouts and activities of other alumni and former students. the college bi- weekly publication, College Chips. was sent to them. There were on the campus in 1942-43 the V-5 and V-7 Naval Reserve groups. These men received intensified training preparatory to receiving' naval commissions. The V-7 group ZZ had charge of the campus flag. raising it in the morning and lowering it at night with impres- sive ceremony. The first Luther man on the campus to be sworn into the Naval Reserve was Ray Franck. Ray. a. V-7 enlistee. was an outstanding Luther man and a high-ranking student. He was sworn into the Naval Reserve in a ceremony conducted on Navy Day, October 27, 1942, during chapel exercises. A The V-7 group was called into active service in the spring of 1943. Among those included in this call were eighteen seniors. Special com- mencement exerciscs were conducted for them on March 25, 1943, when the eighteen men . received their degrees. X !1 TN 1 gg - ' . Ji:-..i ' on ul V NT-CH 'Q ua armani- X , 1- . - 1- Q '1 A n nagglnml NGWQUMI xillllgvoll J. C Wlhglvli nqpncu- C-nnaminr hu satan nlhn url-rqlmnluv 5 ' ' mu I IA ll ll- ill ll A . A nl -in Tim! Y I . f - 0 . 1 ' N Q k . v , , . f Q S I I , . ,. . . , . . ' l215P , Q U
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Page 30 text:
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'Yfi wgofff' Nl F OQZA x0 x' . I Q X 1 I Q 5 3 iv- an 'r fl Tn' rn ff, 1 C 17 Q: I Sv C' ' 6 Luflwr College slvlrlmifs fool keenly the ojffocis of wa-r-upper olo.ss111,nzf are in a 1'11.1Tno7'zfty and tho 1'0spo1zsib1'lifg of leafl- crship ho-.9 fallen, into the honrls of nom.- prmwlrtfivoly few. The student lzoflg is bo- oofmiwg preflonmumtly fonzmivm, classes orc small,mo1'e h'lI'0ll7l'0fl-QC musf bo assim- 'ilntorl in less fvimeg afftitudcs are sfufl'z'011s. We nzwiss uzvcmy of om' fornwv' CZFISSIIIIIZFCS now figlzting for tho 'irloals Lufhm' holds door, we miss the lower class follows who would stay only long enough. fo gel' of'- qlzzairzfecl and learn what our college sfmmls for before they, foo, wont fo serve Hzclr cfou.nt1'y. We cz-ro SC'l'7'0'1lS-l'lI,l'llfl6d, ffovmorhcfl wfizflz our 7101.0 -rospo-ns'ibilfities, but we are happy, too, fin our 1-ongmzial 1'olc1tio'nsl1,ips and we are c'c1w'gifng on, ll0lfl'Il'7lU tho torch of learning high.
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