University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK)

 - Class of 1951

Page 13 of 584

 

University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 13 of 584
Page 13 of 584



University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 12
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Page 13 text:

liip|H-il that Millie iiiiracic (iiil l kciji AiiiciiiM (iiit cil it. Stitchi ' d tliiounh tile easy ii ' laxcd patti-iii of lollrjic lilc a tin- scarli ' t thrc-ail ot iiim-m-y. Tlu ' war in Kuropi- wasn ' t at all liki- tho j;allant, soim-how sportsmanliki ' v ai our elders icmenihereii, hen anks went aeross the atei to iliMhaij;e a deht to l,ata ette. l ' cii Iroiii here, the l ' an ei ami tin- lielli li cli e hombers were tii;;hteniii; . So w c were eil-i-oii- mIou I laietree, aiiil I ' cril ii:i c its own peiiiliar .est to eani- pii- lile. ' { ' lie eai l ' ' ' (l-Sl is .hH ' eicnt m iiKin wa s, hut Miiiilai in Ml man others. We iiail the Hurkes-W ' adsworth bill then vxhii ' h beeame a :i eallinn lor Selective Service, and we registered tor the draft, and expected to be called as .soon as ' he .school term ended. What ' s so different about that? I ' er- h.ips like l ' ' 40-4l, this ear will he the curtain fall foi ' an- other epic scene in history ' s constantl rew ritteii melodiaiii.i. .Act II, in which .Americans finally came to the bitter reali a- tion that no other nation was strong enouf;h to take the initi- ative in the ine itable shoot-out between two incompatible ideologies. ' l -n years ago we told each other with regret and resignation, that we ' d have to throw in with the sct-upon and help destroy Hitler ' s homicidal legions. The big trouble about 1940 was that there had been tw en- t -two years of no war, and homo sapiens got to ha c .i little old war exeiy once in awhile to keep from il iiig ot boredom, and in spite of the fact that ,ill of us were scared aiul de- pressed around O.U. we were .also undeni.ably exhilarated Religi.m pla IsiH sllnlillls. Pii-siilini Cniss pauses in from tit the library lo chat with students. and a trifle eager at times to rid the world of National So- cialism. So you got to take that into consideration when I tell ()u the autumn of 1040 was a splendid time to be ati t).l ' . stiulent, with lU ' without a car, even if you were broke as most ot us usual l were. .A little more of that rose-scented goose grease, please. JL t ' s eas to become confused, looking over vour shoulder this wa . One minute oil are shocked at the great changes. 1 hen, .itter ou ' c peered astigmatically at those changes, oii wonder if tlie aren ' t for the most part superficial, if by and large the similarities aren ' t slightlv more amazing than the di.ssimilarities. Having been here during the past three ears and accepted the growth those years have efifected, the other changes that meet the coursing e e should be conimon- place. Huildings are buildings, hut people are .something else again. .No matter how much dough the Hoard of Regents scrapes up, (Hi can ' t build new people. .And people never seem to change much except that there are more of them or less ot them and the ratio between the various sexes Huctu- ates trom ear to ear. Romance pii)h.ibl tlourishes on the campus today prettv much the w.i it li.is every year since liS ' )J, when there were iinl ' ' students. Knowing very little about the matter as it applies ill l ' ' ()- l, I would venture to guess that the chief difference between now and 1940-41 is that we spent more time out-of-doors. The campus itself was the best place to take a girl in those earless days. Kvcrywhere von looked, shrubbery. .And the ratio then was one girl and bov for everv campus nightw atchman. Where buildings now crowd out

Page 12 text:

BVIOUSI.Y there have been man} physical changes in the University in ten years, as there have been in the town of Norman. Both have mushroomed, and both seem dcteiinined to keep spreading out. Any student who has been here two or three years has seen how much expanding O.U. and sur- rounding countryside ha c done. The remodelled stadium, the enlarged Union building, the Quadrangle, the new power plant, the geology building, with other projects not yet begun. AH this in three years. Assume that this growing has been going on since 1940, and try to picture what O.U. must have been like then. In 1940 Lindsay Road was the southern cit limit. O.L ' . had no parking lot then because none was needed. Instead of a parking lot, O.U. had a no car rule. Students weren ' t allowed to possess love buggies, and a man was not as he now is considered handsome if he had warts and a ellow Cadillac convertible. Everybody walked, except the more daring renegades who kept cars in rented garages around town and sneaked out for a joyride now and then. In 1940 there was no Kaufman Hall ; where it now stands existed at that time a kind of landscaped rendezvous with trees and shrubs. The golf course was then practically out in the coun- try as there were no buildings south or east of it except the .shanties of Hooverville in the shadow of the water tower. From Hooverville to Parkview Apartments in ten short ( ' ars. There was no Sooner Citv then, only a handful of houses on Jenkins, and where tlu-ri ' are now men ' s doinii- tories facing the practice football fields across Lindsay Road, in 1940 there were stables and corrals for O.U. ' s horse- drawn artillery, and for the polo team, and for the women ' s physical e iucation curriculum. Yep, things sure have changed since 1940. For one tiuiig I ' m five years older. And in that penultimate yeai ' of Amer- ica ' s peacetime era, I thought the coeds were all women, whereas now all the coeds seem to be very young girls, just a bunch of pretty kids. They must be rushing them through high school nowadays. Ah, time, like the lady poet said, turn backward in your Hight. To a year when the campus looked very much like a campus and less like a brain factory, to mellow autumn after- noons when walks in the country were the best possible ex- cuse for cutting a class, when we used to play hookey to watch girls play hockey back of Hester Hall, when there was more to do on the campus, for free, and you could walk across any campus street without being run down by a guy in a maroon convertible hurrying to keep a date in Chickasha or Tulsa or Ardmore. There was something leisurel and collegiate and poign- ant about everything back in 1940. A war was consuming Europe like wildfire, and we feared we would get singed but A ccmvertilik- tnp cl.nvii, a il



Page 14 text:

Fratcrriit iiu-ii likl an t-ariust tanxvill i. rushffs lietiHc pltdgiiig. Hill KairKs ami Kannine Little get a hig kick cult iif tiilk (lancing at the Y mixer. sIu lent gather leaves. Ihe (I. I . -l-exas . ggie hallgaine

Suggestions in the University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK) collection:

University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

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University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

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University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954

University of Oklahoma - Sooner Yearbook (Norman, OK) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

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