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Page 47 text:
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- ;ftS V • -Fili. ODDS HDD EDD8 THE CRANIUM, 1937 Paje Thirty-seven
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Page 46 text:
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TRIBUTE OF LOVE TO OUR HOUSE MOTHER Our three short years are over But leaving, we want all to know That within you, we found, a heart of gold And a cheer that scattered every woe. You shared our many sorrows With a sweetness unsurpassed But when it came to pleasures You, too, sang unabashed. We all wish we might linger And live life as we had With you, our dear House Mother Always there to make it glad. Tis only a little thing, this offer A tribute of our love But in our hearts it rises A prayer to Him in Heav ' n above. Mary T. Kochut, ' 37. THE CRANIUM, 1937 Page Thirty-six
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Page 48 text:
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CLASS HISTORY HIS year a class of sixteen must depart from the Osteopathic Hospital. It seems strange that it is we, ourselves, who make up this class. The years that we ' ve studied and worked together have passed much too quickly. Now we part, each to go her own way. Whatever the future may bring, may every graduate of the Class of ' 37 cherish pleasant memories of her days in training. With these thoughts in mind we record a brief history of our three years together. The Class of ' 37 had its beginning on September 4, 1934, when it was accepted into the Osteopathic Hospital School of Nursing as Preliminary Students. We came from as far north as the Great Lakes, East as far as the coast, South as far as Delaware and West as far as the Alleghenies — twenty-two of us. To outsiders our entrance was an ordinary event, to us it was a supreme moment. We were Nurses! However, this superior feeling was soon lost under the strict rules of the institution. We felt that few privileges had been granted us. After a few difficult days we settled down to our scheduled routine and worked zealously, endeavoring to win the respect of upperclassmen as well as fhat of the doctors. The first few days were made easier for us by a party given by the Student Body in order that we might become better acquainted and the same week a dance was held at College Hall in our honor. Next came four months of intensive study with exams to be passed, long, tire- some days and all too short nights. During this time several of our number left us, and our class was reduced to eighteen. The next thrilling event in our career was our Capping. We were superbly happy that night. We had been accepted as Nurses. Following the Capping came the Christmas party. Then a day-and-a-half holiday for the Christmas Season in order to enjoy our families and old friends whom we had neglected due to our busy life in training. Another semester of classes began — more exams to be passed and then well-earned vacations. A year had passed, we had a new group among us, we were no longer Junior Nurses, we were Intermediates — a glorious feeling. The second, year was harder but more enjoyable than our first; with classes, floor work, good times, get-togethers in the nurses ' home, reorganization of our Student Body, our Amateur Show (at which time unrecognized talent was brought forth), the College dances, and Charity Ball and the glamorous success of the Nurses ' First Spring Formal. All of these helped to make the year pass quickly. Vacations came again, another class graduated, another entered and we were Seniors — Sixteen of us. Senior activities opened with a weiner roast at New Hope with Doctor Drew as our host. Then came our affiliation with the Philadelphia General Hospital. This surely was a new p lanet in our little sphere. At first the vastness of the place (Continued on page jS) THE CRANIUM, 1937 Page Thirty-eight
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