Dickinsonian, March 9, 1944
Red Cross War Fund Campaign to be held in Carlisle. Pan-Hellenic week scrapped due to war-time restrictions, with the exception of the Pan-Hellenic Dance.
Red Cross War Fund Campaign to be held in Carlisle. Pan-Hellenic week scrapped due to war-time restrictions, with the exception of the Pan-Hellenic Dance.
Pan Hellenic dance held in the Beta House. Senior girls attempt to raise funds to buy a jeep for the cadets.
Leo Tolstoy's youngest daughter spoke in Chapel. Official dates of the Sesquicentennial were set as Oct, 20-22, 1933. Men's Student Senate and representatives from each dorm (including Metzger Hall) meet to discuss changes to Dickinson's rules and laws. Faculty releases their view on the campus' social rules. Article on prominent professions for graduates of Dickinson. Students contemplate the way that student government operates with separate senates for men and women and if they should make one senate for both sexes to utilize.
The results of the student poll on national politics are announced. The Debate Teams goes up against the University of Pennsylvania. The President of a university in China gives a talk about present day China and Eastern views. Hostilities between members of two fraternities are broken up by a tear gas bomb thrown by a Carlisle policeman. The Union Literary Society will disband. A date is set for the Pan-Hellenic dance. Feuding between two fraternities ends in armistice.