Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI)

 - Class of 1981

Page 27 of 328

 

Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 27 of 328
Page 27 of 328



Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 26
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Page 27 text:

dorm is named after the first president of the Union, Rev. Peter A. Brooks, S.J. — The engineering building is completed. Because of the increasing threat of war, the building has been hurried. Since all of the fund-raising goals have nor been met. the interior walls are of bare cement block. — The threat of war becomes the reality of war as the Japanese bomb part of the U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor. For the next four years, the armed forces virtually run the campus. To graduate students more quickly so that they may serve in the military, the school adopts a trimester schedule until 1946. XAHyirn, ir.MWKsm He grabbed my by my elender neck I couldn’t cell nor scream, And dragged me to his dingy room Where we could not be seen. He tore away my filmy wrap and looked upon my form, f —1 I was so cold and damp and peered While he was hot anc warm. Hi8 feverish lips he pressed to mine. ; Sr 1 •, I couldn’t make him stop, I - — He drained me of my very self. I -—«■ I gave him every drop, He made me what I am today, That’s why you find me here, A broken bottle thrown away mh» t once was ull of beer. Alumna Mary Klctt Dunphy shared her college scrap was on a trimester schedule. This report card is for the book with the 1981 Hilltop. July semester. Note that report cards have not really Left: Apparently the student mentality hasn't changed changed very much since 1944: the grading system is much over the years. Beer even finds its way into fine basically the same, but back then, absences were re-literature. ported! Right: During the Second World War, the university 23

Page 26 text:

Above: A view of the upper campus. looking south on 16th Street, including the Dental School. Hospital Annex, Medical School and Gymnasium, about 1944. Note the barracks between the Medical School and the Gym. Opposite Page Above: Registration. 19J8. That year, less than one-third of the students were women. Fighting The War At Marquette The battlefields of the Second World War were thousands of miles away, but Marquette played an important role in the war effort. By the fall of 1941, more than 1.000 male Marquette students and faculty members had been drafted. Most of these men received deferments until actual fighting began. The fighting began on Dec. 8. 1941, the day after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The effects of the war were felt almost immediately. The military literally took over the campus. Students in the medical, dental and engineering schools became members of the armed forces almost automatically. Most of the liberal arts, journalism and speech students were drafted for combat duty. In order to graduate students more quickly so that they could participate directly in the war effort, Marquette adopted a trimester calendar. Until 1946, there was no summer vacation, and a class was graduated every four months. There was such a rush to get students through Marquette that, alumna Eunice Grobe I.anbrecht, 1948. remembers. New Year's Day was a triple-absence day. By May 1943, 2.300 Marquette students and faculty were in active duty. Although many of them were decorated, one Marquette alumnus received a citation for his innovative and unique service. Lt. Emeron F. Bachuber, who graduated from the dental school in 1937, pioneered dental treatment in battle. He had inadequate equipment to work with at the front, and had to improvise with spare tools and salvaged parts. The military occupation and trimester calendar continued through 1946. After that, the military remained on campus, offering programs that proved to be forerunners of the current ROTC program. In 1946, the campus was inundated with new students who were taking advantage of the G.I. Bill, which aided veterans in getting a college education. 22



Page 28 text:

' Part Four: Intermission (1946-19M) Finally, after 13 years of hardship, the country took a breather. Along with the rest of the country. Marquette entered a new era. The Forties brought rampant inflation and consumerism. The Fifties brought the Red Scare, the McCarthy hearings, the emergence of television and rock n' roll, and the beginnings of the civil rights movement. In the early Sixties, the baby-boom generation came of age. All of these social phenomena profoundh affected Marquette as it was forced to bring its ancient Catholic tradition into a rapidly-changing. anti-traditional society. 1946 — Enrollment reaches an all-time high at 4.732 as the campus is flooded with veterans making use of the G.l. Hill to fund their educations. To ease the overcrowded conditions created by the sudden influx of students, pre-fabricated barracks are installed behind the Science lluildmg (currently called Marquette Hall) and the Medical College. A library, a larger union and more classroom space are desperately needed. 1917 — Enrollment jumps to over 7.(XX). Plans to permanently ease the overcrowding 24

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