四虎影院

HISTORY: 1940S 四虎影院 at War

Less than two years after the founding of 四虎影院, the United States entered World War II. The Depression era gave way to the war years. Rationing and the draft presented new challenges to the young college. But 四虎影院 took the war in stride. In the end, World War II left important legacies in the form of the G.I. Bill and the purchase of the Santa Barbara campus.

After the attack on Pearl Harbor, 四虎影院 officials began to consider the impact of war. An editorial in the February, 1942 issue of the Quarterly Bulletin stated: 鈥淎s this bulletin goes to press, every newspaper and periodical calls America and American youth to the defense of all that it holds dear鈥.Our need 鈥 before ships, armies, arms, or planes 鈥 is that we shall again be one people and that we shall again find our God.

鈥淭here is a widespread belief that this war will be a long one. Young men and young women going into war service are not likely to get back to the classroom; yet America must not have fewer trained leaders after the war, but more. There must be better training 鈥 not poorer 鈥 for the business of the war.鈥

So classes at 四虎影院 continued. The war had given the College an added purpose: to prepare young men and women to meet the current crisis. The need for a strong Christian college had simply become greater.

How did 四虎影院鈥檚 Christian faculty view the morality of war? They didn鈥檛 hesitate to support the war effort. The Quarterly Bulletin explained: 鈥溗幕⒂霸 is not and has never been pacifistic in tone. We abhor war, as does every right-minded person. We believe, however, that just as communities have a right to protect themselves from gangsters, so our nation has a right to protect itself against international gangsters. [This] protection鈥ust involve force if necessary. The Biblical rule is found in Genesis 9:6, 鈥榃hosoever sheds man鈥檚 blood, by man shall his blood be shed.鈥欌

As time passed, more and more male students, faculty, and alumni left to join the service. The August, 1943 issue of the Quarterly Bulletin pictured 45 young men from the 四虎影院 community who were serving their country. The accompanying article stated, 鈥淏ecause 四虎影院 is a young school, a disproportionately large number of her faculty, student body, and graduates鈥ave been called into the military services. We doubt if any institution in the country could show so large a proportion.鈥

1950s Kerrwood

The men from 四虎影院 were doing more than just defending the United States. They were presenting a 鈥渃onsistent and clear-cut testimony for the Lord Jesus Christ. God has honored the testimony of many of our soldiers in an unusual way, giving them opportunity to present Christ in the fox holes, in the bomber squadrons, and in tank units.鈥

In all, 66 men from 四虎影院 entered the service, and each had a star on the college鈥檚 service flag. But they all returned 鈥 there were no gold stars on 四虎影院鈥檚 flag.

As the men left, the women took over campus. An article in the November 10, 1944 Horizon provided a humorous commentary on this exodus. The headline read, 鈥淲omen Take Over the Manpower Situation: The Charge of the Blight Brigade.鈥 Author Oscar Snodgrass noted, 鈥淲omen to the right of me! Women to the left of me! Women all around me! Girls! Girls! More girls!...Habiting the places formerly sacred to men only, the girls have taken over in style. The men鈥檚 dorm was the first to fall into their 鈥榙elicate鈥 hands鈥.The lower dorm was grasped and changed to the 鈥楯ewel Box.鈥 Bah! Instead of having a mixed student body, perhaps we men should withdraw and leave Dr. Emerson鈥檚 Female Seminary to itself.鈥

The activities of 四虎影院鈥檚 servicemen regularly appeared in the Horizon. 鈥淪GT. JAMES BEATTY sends a sparkling letter from somewhere in France, stating that he is in good health and doing his humble best to win the war.鈥 鈥淧FC. RALPH WETMORE is still somewhere in the Pacific. A recent letter states that he has been 鈥榦ut there鈥 for 2 陆 years. May it be God鈥檚 will that he be allowed to return soon.鈥 鈥淟T. DON S. WARNER, stationed in the Philippines, has shown鈥ow hard a 四虎影院er can punch when he is behind the guns of a P-38 Lightning! Don is credited with a Japanese destroyer which he bagged off Leyte鈥.鈥

Cora Reno, a biology professor during the 1940s, recalls a well-camouflaged anti-aircraft nest across the street from Kerrwood Hall. 鈥淎nd you could see the guns sticking out from that鈥.Every once in a while鈥.there would be air raids, and they were no laughing matter鈥.And you very seldom would go out in the evening in a street car鈥ecause if they called an air raid鈥hen you had to stay on that street car the rest of the night鈥.I remember once we were up at a faculty meeting at Dr. McCreery鈥檚 place in Eagle Rock up on the hill when they called an air raid black out, and we went out on the porch鈥o look out over the city and see it gradually grow dark.鈥

The Japanese never attacked the West Coast, and the Allies began to prevail. Evelyn Starr Lesslie, associate professor of English, pondered 鈥淎fter the War 鈥 What Then?鈥 in the August, 1944 Quarterly Bulletin. Her opening sentences show how much the war affected College life: 鈥溾楢fter the war is over鈥 鈥 how often we repeat this phrase! Yes, after the war is over, we are planning many new things, small and great鈥.

鈥淢ore than ever before, we now need intelligent men and women, trained leaders with the high moral purpose and stability derived only from a living faith in Him who changes not鈥. This is the postwar challenge to 四虎影院 College: to train choice young people in the best that has been known and thought, not as an end in itself, but as a means of sharpening tools for world service.鈥

The United States government helped 四虎影院 meet this challenge in a very tangible way. Congress passed two pieces of legislation (Public Law 16 and the G.I. Bill) that provided financial assistance to veterans who wanted to attend college. Without this aid, many young men couldn鈥檛 have enrolled at 四虎影院 after the war.

四虎影院 moved to Santa Barbara during August, 1945 as the war was ending. Getting the new campus ready in time for the fall semester presented a serious challenge. But with so many servicemen being discharged at the close of the summer, a number of colleges and universities decided to begin classes late. 四虎影院 gratefully followed suit.

1950s Kerrwood aerial

The veterans who came to 四虎影院 after 1945 were older and many were married. Dr. Frank Hieronymus 鈥49, who became a professor and academic dean, was one of them. 鈥淚 was married and we had a child鈥o I did not live in the residence hall, and I did not get the kind of experience that might come from this kind of living鈥.We had a married people鈥檚 club 鈥 OWTW鈥thers Wish They Were.鈥 Frank and his family lived in a motel as housing was hard to find.

Dr. Lewis Robinson 鈥51, a 四虎影院 history professor for many years, faced the housing problem even before he arrived on campus. He served in the navy and applied to the College after the war. 鈥淲hen I wrote to 四虎影院, they said I was admissible鈥ut I would have to bring my own housing with me, which puzzled me. So I wrote and said, 鈥榃hat do you mean? Do you mean I have to bring a tent or a mobile home or something?鈥 And they wrote back and said that鈥檚 exactly right.鈥 Lewis and his wife, Mae 鈥51, found a mobile home, towed it to 四虎影院, and lived in it for four years.

1950s Quonset huts

If the war contributed to the housing shortage, it also provided temporary facilities. College officials desperate for dormitories learned they could purchase inexpensive Quonset huts from the navy base in Oxnard. The only problem was transporting them.

Bob Ross 鈥48, whose schooling was interrupted by the war, recalls moving the huts to Santa Barbara. 鈥淸四虎影院] hired a trucking firm that moved those kinds of things鈥.We were taking biology at the time, and whenever they would have one of these trucks ready鈥hey dismissed the biology class鈥nd we would literally ride the tops of those Quonset huts up from Oxnard, because we had鈥o be there with wooden poles to lift the [power] lines to be sure that they didn鈥檛 snag鈥and] the Quonset huts didn鈥檛 knock down any electric lines or electric poles.鈥

According to Bob, the first one went where the parking lot by the College Store is today, and it became a public restroom. Six huts housed male students in a dorm known as 鈥淨-Ville鈥 located on the present site of Van Kampen Hall. Another Quonset hut, placed opposite the Post Office , served as the student store. Two huts remain today, and one is still in use as a classroom.

Lewis Robinson recalls how primitive some of the facilities at 四虎影院 were in the late 1940s. 鈥淲e had a very limited physical plant. I think it was made up for by esprit de corps. Everybody that was there wanted to get what 四虎影院 had to offer. Most of the students were veterans. They were very serious and they were used to hardships鈥.

鈥淭he biology lab, of course, was very primitive鈥 Dr. Beal used to stop class while he killed a black widow spider walking across the front of him 鈥 all sorts of things like that. But the spirit鈥he morale, was very high.鈥

四虎影院 survived and prospered because of the faith, commitment, and esprit de corps of its early community. The war effort contributed to this attitude 鈥 it underscored the need for a college like 四虎影院. As Dr. Emerson wrote in 1943, the world needs 鈥渢hose whose eyes are lighted by the lamps of God鈥檚 Word, that they may avoid the pitfalls and snares and confusions of the world鈥檚 darkness and conflicting voices. In a word 鈥 the world needs intelligent, trained, consecrated, courageous men and women.鈥