Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL)

 - Class of 1973

Page 27 of 322

 

Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 27 of 322
Page 27 of 322



Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 26
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Page 27 text:

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Page 26 text:

. - ' LL. .-:1 ff-1 -tl' 'il' ffn ofa 1-iw v-YQ fl' 'fo v-fo v-fo f-fo 1-fi ff! 1-f4 Nffltf-'TI ,bmi ,if-Tf,iFf.f,1F'1f,1?ik . , Jrff,t, 5,t'-1f,iF- J,i?7,1F-'4f,iF-'ff,iF-?f,xF'7 well-earned victory. A story that is not so old and yet not so new says that a one-time famous athlete climbed the tower at an obscure hour and fastened the end of a stout twine to the bell rope. Then he threw the ball of twine out to his accomplice, and the two of them walked casually away unrolling the ball as they went, until they lay concealed on the other side of the railroad tracks. Just as chapel began, the string tightened on the ball, and peal after peal rang out, until chapel was dismissed in desperation, and some one climbed the tower and cut the twine. This same student nearly broke up an academy commencement by climbing across the ceiling above the chapel to a seat of vantage over the platform. He had previously prepared a series of holes through which he sifted pepper slowly but steadily. The pepper was quite invisible to the audience, but the effect was not. Both graduate and faculty were seized with violent fits of coughing and sneezing for apparently no reason at all. Perhaps the most treasured is the tradition of the dorm ghost, for there is one, you know. They say that he asked before he died to be buried on the campus, for some reason he could not be buried in a common cemetery. What the reason was I do not know. Some say that he was an old abolitionist and that he was an enemy of Masonry, and that the cemetery belonged to the Masons. That is neither here nor there, he was buried where the dormitory stands. When that build- ing was put up, he was moved to the place where he now rests. He is supposed to walk at times, but never when the dormitory is full of girls. Pour years ago when there was scarcely any one there, a number of people noticed a light in one of the rooms which was unoccupied and locked. One of the house boys went to the room during the day, but the light was off. The room was once more locked and left, but night after night the light was seen late in the evening, although never on in the morning. A strange thing about it was that the shades would be at different heights at differ- ent times. One night a friend of mine who lived under the room that is supposed to be haunted was awakened by a heavy tread outside her door. She was alone, and she knew that there was no one on the third floor. The slow footsteps passed on up the stairs and apparently through the locked door above. She could hear them overhead for some time, and then they ceased. Too frightened to sleep, she waited for several hours to hear them descend, but they did not come down. She tried to think that some one in the dorm had gone up the stairs, but in the morning questioning proved that no one had moved from his bed. Last of all there is the great tradition of Wheaton, which every one who has learned to live and love in these halls holds as a priceless possession, and that is the Spirit of Wheaton. It is hard to tell you what it is like,-just as it is hard to explain the fragrance of an exquisite flower, or the magic that hides in the hour after sunset, or the grandeur of the distant swell of chords played on an organ, or the light shining through a stained glass window. It is not shouting yourself hoarse at a game, and yet it is there. lt is not the giving to some one else without a murmur or a change of expression your most prized possession, and yet it is there. It is not friendship nor loyalty nor Christianity, and yet it is excluded from none of these. It is the child of the struggles of the people of long ago, who planned and builded and lived and loved with this vision. It is the incense of their tears and joys, their forgotten pleasures and dead youth. And it is joined to them, to us, and to heaven by invisible gold chains that find their strength in prayers. And sometimes, perhaps at dusk when the wind is scudding across the campus, and the shadows steal out and lay their fingers upon you, and you are conscious suddenly that you are alone with the wind and the sky and the shadows and God, then as suddenly the Spirit of Wheaton will lay hold on your heart and bind it so tightly that neither life nor death, sorrow, joy, nor for- getfulness will ever break those bonds. Margaret Mortenson '25 from Tower, 1928 'N 0-'fs 'N fl' 'N 4-'A rs' IJQ IJ r 0 N 1-'4 r-'N if xx N-X r- 0 Os A A - v-'H ' :Ja f-'N :JG 0' 0-.4 rxikr-6 tgr4.F'1 ,iii QLWJQLVJQ 1562F6Q1,9f JV-?J,1Fff11F'?f:iYf:1?ffjF?f:tFif,1F?f,1F?7,U' L4 M



Page 28 text:

ff' MN '21 FYQ Al' 'YA' 'fd 'ta 141 v-7-s rl' f-ff! fri 4-'as f-'fs 1-'Q a-'N 4-94 1.-.1 V vc V'rf if ri-M' V'V'v'Vi'V'V .flt .1 ,L JAL .1 ,M ,P-11.1. .fp-ff,t, jL , , ,jg .J,tY,t,'7f,t?-ff,1?'ff,m, J41?ff.t?'ff.tF' MR. PRESIDE T Presidents have added a great deal to campus tradi- tions, in fact, it is traditional to have a president! Wheaton has had four. Ionathan Blanchard arrived in 1859 and retired in favor of his son Charles in 1882, who reigned as Charles l until his death in 1925. Relationships between king and subjects were no more strained in those days than in these, tales of mis- chief by lively students are plentiful. One especially dark night a group of prankish young men stole into the elder Blanchard's barn and removed his carriage, taking it to a distant spot. joking over the contempla- tion of his predicament on the morrow, they had al- most departed when a deep voice from within the con- fines of the buggy startled them: Gentlemen, would you be so kind as to pull me back to where you brought me from? And somebody got taken for a buggy ride! The tenor of Charles' forty year reign was in no small measure due to a character which differed mark- edly from the somewhat austere mein of his predeces- sor. When father introduced son to the college family he said, You will find him a much sweeter man than I am. He does not take after me . . . He was undoubt- edly an unusual man - for example, he remembered people by geography rather then by name. He was popular as a speaker, and on one occasion was slated to speak at Moody Church. At the last minute he found that his train had changed its schedule. Realizing that a large audience would be waiting for him, he set out to find other means of transportation. Prom the stationmaster at Wheaton he found that nothing in the way of freight or passenger trains could possibly help. Snatching at the hope that he might be able to catch a fast freight from West Chicago, he boarded a train and stopped to inquire there. They were sorry! Then as a last resort he asked, What will you charge for an engine to take me into the city. The station agent replied that he could not ride on an engine unless a car were attached, which service would cost 5550. The president of a struggling Wheaton was not rich, and S50 seemed a prodigious sum - but the appointment must be kept. He was soon riding his one-man train into Chicago. And when he later visited the offices of the Northwestern Railway to settle ac- counts, he was told that there would be no charge! Following the Blanchards, Dr. James Oliver Buswell, Jr., ruled wisely and well for fifteen years. It was dur- ring his jurisdiction that the faculty decided to copy the senior habit of sneaking lofficiallyj, and retreated for pre-autumn discussion and fun in 1937, spending a rainy day at Lake Geneva. Since than the retreat has been broadened to include three days, and has become an annual fall event, but since 1940 Dr. V. Raymond Edman has been the beloved presidential leader of the affair. from Tradiquette, 1950 President V. Raymond Edman and friends v ,v, 1, 1, o ,v,, ,v ,v,, ,J X v ,r,. r v., 1 1. 1 ,v.,,, 9- 0 Us f 00 Q A V ,A an ff 04 0 r-4 'A alt .tt -1.11 .ut lv ftt, .f,t, ali .gt LQ!! N-fflir-fra. Ja, Ja, .fa J.L .QL JBL 141, JON

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