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Page 15 text:
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ia We find that what we came to college for was knowledge after all, and we hurry to philosophy with a theory of our own to be tossed into the general discussion. We work in the Jabs until long after dark. There are discussions where we can air our pet ideas and have them judged. In the Spring we invade our own home towns and attack the unsuspecting citizen with ques- tionnaires for a sociology paper. All these are a part of our college life. PHI BETA KAPPA Back Row: Jane Farwell, Su- zanne Rose, Doris Barrett, Evelyn Fay, Margaret Joy Tibetts, Mary Scoit Powell Front Row: Anna Mulno, Agnes Sheff, Elizabeth Hoye, Eleanor Haggett, Marjorie Rush Concentration Of course some of us do better than others. In February came the announce- ment that seven students had been elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Society. At the initiation banquet Eleanor Haggett, Dusty Barrett, Jane Farwell, Elizabeth Hoye, Anna Mulno, Polly Powell, and Sue Rose received their gold keys. Four others from the class ot 1941, Evelyn Fay, Mardi Rush, Agnes Sheff, and Margaret Joy Tibbetts had joined this society during their Junior year. { Page 11 }
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Page 14 text:
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Ceremony Gap The Chapel is one of the first buildings we learn to love when we come to Wheaton, and the services held there on week-day mornings wil] be among the last things we will forget when we leave. We remember Dr. Park’s words, and in our minds we hear them again against a background of Bach on the organ. In the Fall we watched the Seniors take their places, sober in their caps and gowns, and now we recall the ex- citement of the March services and the announcements of election results. New officers for old organizations. The end of the old order; the beginning of the new. ’ er nee Day Founders’ Day means the color of hoods; the solemnity of the procession; the Wheaton Hymn; last year’s seniors, now alumnae. This year our speaker was Allardyce Nicol] of Yale, who talked on the modern theater. Resplendent Se ac al
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Page 16 text:
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This year, resplendent in its new, psy- chologically-designed quarters in S. A. B., the College Government Association began the task of carrying out and modifying the policies inaugurated last year. Every Monday night, impressively capped and gowned, Cabinet gathered around its shining table. The officers, Evie Fay, President; Eleanore Beane, Vice President: Jane Wrather, Secretary; and Helen Lewis, Treasurer, discussed Wheaton’s policies with Social Chairman Betty Brown, and the House Chairmen, Agnes Sheff, Eliza- beth Bowman, Jean Hare, Carol Tilling- hast, Margaret Joy Tibbetts, Margaret King, Hastie Price, and Ruth Hirschland. With our best interests in mind C. G. A. aimed for a larger degree of self-govern- ment among us, with fewer restrictions and penalties. This year they claim to have borrowed their theme song from Gilbert and Sullivan in their endeavor “to make the punishment fit the crime,” whenever such evils were necessary. The number of penalties that the Council did find it necessary to inflict was so small that it illustrated a victory for our new liberal system. As results of C. G. A. Board meetings, when the Dean, House Fellows, and repre- sentatives from classes and organizations joined the Council, innovations which are hoped to facilitate campus activities were presented for our approval. For instance, it was decided that more members of the junior class should be enabled to have ex- perience as members of Council. Therefore, the position of Junior House Chairman of Everett was created and it was decided that the Social Chairman should be elected from the junior class rather than the Senior. The Board also suggested that the Junior House Chairman of the White House should hereafter be elected by the student body. The ambitious Council undertook a complete renovation of the point system in order to assure more equal distribution of positions in campus activities. Another innovation was made in estab- lishing the S. A. B. House Committee to look after our popular young addition. It is Jane Williams, the chairman, whom Evie { Page 12 }
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