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Page 16 text:
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LASSES began at once, even though the furni- ture had not arrived. Gradu- ally the campus was cleared of cornstallcs, and a few trees KW, , few ' ' I A-xxsmmkrrwbgrewm , .L-,, ,. M . My W , , f, ff ?Q2aas11?:'fE777ff'rMm-.-- mfefffm gqfm.t,,.,,fw ,Q 4, -,lwwfw ,--H , .-,W.,....,. -N-M, ' f -.E 1 i l ,J ,, f, . ' 'Mn-N-N--Avia' ,L V-if-:Q i131?'2 . -, We A ' We - were Planted to keel? the ' d ' h lc A d' f 522?l5?i5 S f1 Wm S 111 C ee - CCOF mg fe' fm rrra nw A9 ifg fri., :If f N K . I. 0 I .fn I-,z . -f.v.L1MA3L::hjg?f2N fgiigzfgfl ,gif 22, fy. LJ. , 1 ' 7 e ,W -wi We- 'M F ' . N1 ' Q: ,:,,,..:. --2+-12 W g,e'e' Mr. Ne1ll s plan, the college ,,, y iv ,Q A ' ffl wi l 5 Q we W ...M wi . -ml:-I -'bg V I l was str1ctly for men only, and wglfgf --.Q. ff A I -- --.3 iff it Wffoiflt Un- AF' ' :21 1? .'i'w' F ' ' L - - f ln the f1rst 111116 years Macal- ti 3,3 at 3, 4555 it , 'ww -f?'W111?yf'Wq5f Y - V ' S - QQ 5 g5fg,,f'gg45Y avi f .,j if 4 7 : i ester S IIEIITIC 21 CHIC O11 t C rgajiqf' r ef-wif- ,pg ff .-iw ,r,, X ,f e '+A s: f-+- Mffpw if X ---M ---,-. W. 3, S, M .. lf, A .Mn lv- A S SCPS l1'1S O 0116 UH F6 may R455 , 'V gs. fifgf . x A -, I V :I male students. But durlng gw lf 13 ggj ' 't,gW e '1x - iv! ' la it Q IQ ' z ff ' A L + that mme the women of the mfg? ff W ee ' f 4 1 r sf 5 g . ffmi.??l'eg2 nat1on had begun to emerge . L, , from the sec:lus1on of the A , 'V ' W '5 :JE -- 1 Ji 4 -..kf :V -K4-:::r5v: +-,...-q.,..a qwgqwa-.mm.:.w .: .w ,m- ,,. V- ' N ,., I ' 5 f yjq'-ff,f?V :if if M '- . . . ., ,,.,, I home and the Board of Trus- la eff, K f L F if 7 ififgffglz 'Wv7?ef , 5 H ,L .gf CAQ 'E'Nlf' Ek-li-W Hg' Vx-f 22 A - 3 5 :ww l 25 52125625155 tees became convmced the fi at il :gre L 231 , L 1:: '?Ti'3 45 evwgw L2 ' , 5- QL-. ,f s xg . iff : N - .. we aggx h S ' iefeffik M B ri? Le f,ffi:H A WCFC CFB to stay. O 111 , QL? Q: :gg k ' ' i f H 1 f 'eg grey V it fl 1 for a flve year trlal run, 1 r'e'- Macalester became co-educa- in f ' ye 1 ' , L ' A are - A 'L W.. . .. tm VQXQX Yi? 5 .wi L ow ,S 1 fn. ..,. avr., i.,.,,,. :Q-.., ,- --,, ,, t, if M . f -V- -.w,,4..z ., rf A., lj ,ew lona . A NSQWQ Y, L Xyk w9,,,w:.,Qggg A K ,f ,txk,..,W LMJW 'Q-if TJ-gi , l ifiggififiw-af :L frvff lf A -f X arg? A SUENCE HALL L .ttt -W-ea L 4 T' A . uf,Tv1r'7fx.feQ55 QL rg .,,,t.ntJ.,., ..t,, , Q :MNWM4 , A amffgv I ' X Page Ten WALLACE HALL
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Page 15 text:
“
ACK in the days of Romanesque architecture and sweeping moustaches, Macalester College was one lonely building on a wide expanse of prairie. That was in 1885, the year the East Wing of Qld Main was formally dedicated. But that was not actually the beginning, for Macalester had already had a fair sized history, starting with the Baldwin Academies of St. Paul and Minneapolis, founded in 1853 and 1873 respectively. Their founder, the Rev. Edward Duffield N eill, then solicited aid from Mr. Charles Macalester of Philadelphia for converting his school into a college of the New England type. Mr. Macalester donated the elegant Winslow House, a summer hotel at St. Anthony Falls, which was sold to raise money for the East Wing. In 1884 the Synod of the Presbyterian Church of Minnesota hired the Rev. Thomas Mc- Curdy as President of the college, and the next year Macalester welcomed all men students who would take the train out to the St. Anthony station and walk through the cornfields to the campus. CHAPEL I Page Nine
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Page 17 text:
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ACALESTER grew both in size and reputation, and it became quite a task to huddle all the college activities into the East Wing. The top two Hoors served as men,s dormitory, while the matron lived on the iirst floor. The basement housed dining hall and kitchen, the quarters for the janitor-engineer, and the science laboratory. The chapel occupied room 104, and what little was left had to do for classroom space and office. To make matters worse, the panic of '93 had struck the Twin Cities full force, and no less than thirteen banks closed. Macalester's accumulated obligations of one hundred thousand dollars with which to start the year made the outlook seem so dismal that the Board decided to put a padlock on the doors and give up the school. GYMNASIUM HE GREAT Columbian Exposition was being held in Chicago, and the late Dr. James Wallace was in that city when he heard what the Trustees were planning to do. He hurried back to St. Paul to prevent such action, and after much argument the Board agreed to open the school only so long as funds be provided for its current support. The funds were not actually provided, but the college stayed open, and things improved considerably although the debt was not paid for a number of years. More room was needed so desperately that the benefactors of the college dug deep, and in 1895 Old Main was opened. Macalester had always shown a lively interest in athletics, a baseball team having been organized the first week the college was open which remained undefeated for seven years. So naturally the gymnasium in the basement of Old Main proved to be one of the most popular features of the new building. Handball remained the principal sport for a number of years, and was played both in intramural and intercollegiate competition. Then basketball was introduced, and it was soon apparent the Macalester gym would offer no end of unusual plays with a row of posts right down the center of the Hoor. Page Eleven
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