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Page 18 text:
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16am to a 64W Wamcm Tell me: how does it feel and to think of yourself for the first time to set down your suitcases in Conard's lobby as having grown into the stature to accept a key to a Conard room of a Conard woman? 1 I J
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Page 17 text:
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After the senior organization meeting was held on January 14, nobody was really surprised that his classmates had elected Bob presidenteexcept possibly Bob himself. At the senior recog- nition on February 15, he talked briefly with two other presidents, he morning speaker, Dr. C. Dorr Demarray, president of Seattle Pacific College, and Dr. P. W. Christian, Bob's own c o I I e g e Iresident. But college life is not all work and no play. Bob rarely isses a chance to go skiing at Spout Springs, and when his studies u-rmit, he likes to play basketball and badminton. With Larry agnussen he often plays handball at the Walla Walla Y. On Saturday nights, Bob usually dates. For the lyceum featuring Amparo lturbi with the National Artists Symphonette, he dated Georgene Thompson, freshman nursing student from Conard Hall. She was helping him celebrate that night. For Bob had something to be glad for besides the company of a pretty girl. On February 5 twenty-seven WWC students received letters of acceptance from the schools of dentistry and medicine at the College of Medical Evangelists. Bob was among them. Again, nobody was surprised, this time. And Bob? I've worked toward this for years, he said. 15
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Page 19 text:
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.- Whatsoever things are lovely, says Mrs. Evans, looking at a sunset, a treasured book, a Christ- mas tree. The words are taken from the Conard text, which she grew to love some years ago when she herself was a Conard woman; it hangs now in her office, a crayon sketch showing a continuous pattern of whatsoever things . . . worked around a woman holding a lily. This year, with 386 dormitory women, Conard was filled to capacity-320; West Hall housed thirty-four and Union, nineteen. It was necessary to open a fourth resi- dence, called Mark Hopkins Hall, where thirteen were billeted through the first quarter. V Miss Budd's friends keep adding to 'her collection of sixty cups and saucers, displayed in her Conard apartment. They are all different but two, and each is ornamented with her name flower. Conard women who return to visit renew their acquaintance with Miss Budd and check on how much the collection has grown since they last saw it. 17
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