Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA)

 - Class of 1936

Page 17 of 194

 

Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 17 of 194
Page 17 of 194



Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

cock, after a popular and successful year as Pres- ident, was succeeded by Janet Anderson, an earn- est red-head of surprising modesty. The women report unusual success in the Big Sister plan. The Associated Men Students, proceeding more or less reluctantly to compulsory Wednesday chapels, planned and executed a satisfactory Men ' s High School Day, besides bringing a new constitution into painful birth. Last year found Bill Andrus behind the gavel. Since the consti- tution was largely of his siring, his eloquence in constitutional procedure was singular. Lectures of every description were heard at the meetings. Dr. Arthur Coons, as Dean of Men, hovered over each assembly with ready Socratic advice. Track notoriety and a winning smile carried Jer- ry Isett into the presidency of the men ' s body for the year 1936-37. 11

Page 16 text:

bulletins, the Administration may well be for- given a modest inflatus for having contributed to what appears to be an increasingly singular phe- nomenon — the achievement of a balanced college budget. So native to the activities of that body has such an accomplishment become, however, that it may be without trembling considered an administrative policy. As 1936 edged its way into the calendar came the announcement that provision had been made for the erection of the Helen G. Emmons Health Center Memorial, scheduled to reach completion by June and giving to the College a distinction shared by few institutions. Certain lesser campus improvements justify the benevolent smile of the man in the Comptroller ' s office. Particularly gratifying to undergraduates these summer days was the repair of the Library fountain. The fact that frequent administrative excursions through the college grounds may be observed leads one to suspect that the unstudied beauty of the campus is not purely a happy landscape accident. No significant curricular changes have been effected by the Administration during the past scholastic year, although the Curriculum Board has kept a sensitive eye on the fluctuations of contemporary experimental education, to be pre- pared to meet any scholastic demands which changing standards might make on college cur- ricula. The strengthening of the Music and Art Departments, however, has had particularly sat- isfactory results, both in the quality of instruc- tion and in student response. Occidental College has kept substantially abreast of the times in less purely scholastic re- spects, likewise. The advent of scholarship into government has not been without its effect on this campus. The Department of Economics, aside from giving one of its members to govern- ment, has, on more than one occasion, dropped an advisory pearl into needy Washington laps. Dr. Charles F. Lindsley and Miss Elizabeth Gilli- land were Occidental ' s contributions to the West- ern Association of Speech Teachers Convention, held in San Francisco. Dr. Lindsley featured the opening of the convention with a lecture. A Christmas vacation trip took Dr. Osgood Hardy to the American Historical Association Conven- tion, held in Chatanooga. There he survived the Democratic climate and delivered a lecture to the Hispanic section of the convention. A four months ' sojourn in England last summer fur- nished Dean Robert G. Cleland with interesting conversational matter for the remainder of the year. Mysterious research in the Fowler Hall labyrinth more than once attained to outside pub- lication in scientific periodicals, and the English Department occasionally invaded the public press on specialized subjects. A quiet but unusually cooperative student Ex- ecutive Committee guided Occidental undergrad- uate life during the 1935-36 school year. Stu- dent Body President Al Hartley acquired a solid reputation for efficiency and modesty during his year as chairman of the Executive Committee. Vice-President Billie Vincent lent a dark-haired charm to all social conventions and somehow contrived throughout the year to disentangle her identity from that of her twin sister. Martha Messick, although pressed by social obligations, wielded an efficient secretarial pen and appears to have collected the only complete set of min- utes in the executive files. Student government progressed smo othly through the complete year. The Council maintained a cautious conservatism, kept its constituents happy with a full social program, including various Friday mixers, dances, and Tiger Day, and in general lived up well to everything that had been expected of it. Elections for the 1936-37 year brought out the heaviest balloting in college history. Guy Nunn, succeeding Al Hartley as President of the Asso- ciated Students, finds himself surrounded by an Executive Committee of encouraging merit. Alice McDowell successfully aspired to the vice-presi- dency and has already proven herself a social fire- brand in arranging teas, dances, and other femin- ine addictions. Helen Hornberger temporarily forsook her selected male following for a larger constituency to get herself elected to the secre- tarial chair, where she has indulged a fetching and entirely original shorthand. The present Council sponsored a mixer, the revival of the Sabretooth publication, and a successful Tiger Day celebration. Largely dedicated to the aesthetic, the Asso- ciated Women Students occupied themselves with the Procession of Lanterns, May Day, and the benevolence of the Big Sister Plan. Of more interest to males was the feminine sponsoring of the Co-ed Hop, with women allegedly paying the bills and furnishing transportation. It was cov- ertly understood, however, that the women would get it back in later dance invitations. Ruth Bab- 10



Page 18 text:

Dr. Remsen DuBois Bird President ADMINISTRATION Dr. Robert G. Cleland Vice-President and Dean of Faculty Dr. Arthur G. Coons Dean of Men 12

Suggestions in the Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) collection:

Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Occidental College - La Encina Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941


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