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Page 22 text:
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, v. ,,-, M ff Wa wr .w'ffffwf w f' V',' rsr f W ffff 77 r ,Y i i - ' rrii 1 ' f t f ARSTON HALL . . . Here science and mathematics rule hand in hand. Full of charts, formulas, test tubes and Bunsen burners, Marston, once the home of navy classes instructed in the art of War, resumes her civilian role with peacetime scientific studies. 18 Jh C wasi his I hous men live. rose High Cntr: were the was eral the hall zine was the Fri a nd
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Page 21 text:
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....,.....-..l.-........ .6 Gymnasium ilding con- acilities for swimming, he building thletic field directors of as well as ilub Room, ed by those are proudly ck UI. At izations on tic achieve- lepleted by vell only in I in the thegym is the shouts iing red of :he pigskin Glmpe! Iohn Cano Chapel, of all the buildings on the Hill, is perhaps the one most familiar to the student from the Hrst moment on the campus. Here he finds the offices of the president, vice-president, dean, regis- trar and treasurer, down- stairs are the offices of the business manager and the personnel director. ln the auditorium students meet for chapel three days in the week, for plays, forums, Tatler Revue, Achieve- ment Day, commencement. Here also, is the Co-op Book Store which is one of the busiest, most-frequent- ed places on the campus. The William Iewell Press and the office of the Tatler and Student are located in the chapel building. These various important cogs in the college wheel make it an important, busy center of activity for every mem- ber of the faculty and stu- dent body. Usually something is ' -fi if I Q , dy ,. 0 .v . 2 going on in the auditorium, a play is being re- hearsed, someone is practicing on the piano, bang- ing hammers announce the setting up of scenery for a new Players' production, or perhaps someone is just sitting there studying Spanish aloud. The chapel steps are a favorite congregating spot, especially the last minute before chapel begins. The lobby is crowded with students thronged around the bulletin board reading the announce- ments just before and after chapel. The Co-op is seldom empty during school hours. Gallons of cokes, tons of ice cream, pounds of sugar, and pecks of potato chips have been consumed here in the years of the Co-op's existence. Fall, winter, or spring, the Hcoopv seems to hold an indefinable appeal for most Iewell-ites. The Tatler-Student office is hardly large enough to hold an open newspaper, much less plan one, and the two staffs can never work there at one time, but those who work in this enlarged closet grow rather fond of it, and the close association with the members of the staff make the work all the more interesting. The work of the 'William Iewell Press is invalu- able to the college. The Student, Taller, Church and College, and The William leufell Bulletin are only four of the publications printed by the Press. It, like the Chapel itself, is indispensable. No campus tour is complete without seeing Gano Chapel, and a detail not often overlooked by visitors to the Hill is the large trophy case in the lobby, proof of Iewell's prowess in many endeavors. 17
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Page 23 text:
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1 4 - 1 fa ., A 2 .. 9 z fr . ' 1 za ff AM 5 ji - 9 wi 6 A is I 3 7- f ifffil :ff Wg ' :M , Z Ah Ml 11 of asses Ldies. ..M6!V056 One warm, spring-like night, when it really wasnat spring at all, we took the camera man with his pockets full of Hash bulbs houses in which the feminine members of the Iewell family live. First on the list was Mel- rose Hall. We climbed the long flight of steps leading to the entrance, rang the bell and were greeted by Mrs. Fristoe, the gracious house-mother. It was just after dinner and sev- eral of the girls were sitting in the reception hall reading. Mrs. Stanley, the dietician and superintendent of the dining hall had just opened her maga- zine to show an article to the girls who looked over her shoulder. The evening paper was the object of attention for the other three girls and Mrs. Fristoe. We took the picture, thanked the girls, Mrs. Fristoe and Mrs. Stanley, threw away the used flash bulb, and started off on a tour of the on our way down the sloping drive. Melrose houses more than seventy lively co-eds who find time for study, midnight snacks, bull- sessions, and sometimes, even sleep, in the regular 24-hour day. f Ali, 6 4 , 1 A4 Q? , Q 2 ag Q . 19
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