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Page 32 text:
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Fashion is here to stay. Not that it won’t change, mind you. Every year new styles or even complete new attitudes towards dressing emerge. And just as we recognize the 50s by saddle oxfords and poodle skirts, someday people will recognize our college years by the way we wore ... tank watches jogging suits t-shirts
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Page 31 text:
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The Way We Wore
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Page 33 text:
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ACU Gets a Tastem of International Seventy-three students rep- resenting 26 foreign countries flavored the ACU campus this year with culture, unusual languages and a new perspective on international These students chose ACU for various reasons, but each went through the same steps to receive a letter of acceptance. Like all ACU students, they presented academic credentials either in the form of secondary school or university transcripts. Unlike most applicants, foreign students must present scores on an English test. They also must show evidence of financial ability to meet expenses while in school because they are not eligible for loans or Clint Howeth, director of ad- missions, said the number of foreign students has increased in the past few years. ACU receives about 20 new applications each year, and 50 percent or more are accepted. Each of these students had a unique viewpoint of his new surroundings, and most agree that Americans are friendly and ACU is a good school. Few admit to having cultural adjustment problems. Differences between the U.S. and their countries are great, but many come from large, developed cities in which lifestyles are similar to those in this country. These countries are often in the news, and the reality of many situations only comes to the students via letter or telephone calls from home. The individualism of these ACU students is best expressed in their own words and thoughts. This represents not an ending, but a continually increasing foreign student population at ACU. Ok Boon Han and Mi Sun Cho are two of the four Korean students who attended ACU this year. Ok is a senior social work major and Mi is a senior religious education major. They live together off campus. Mi wants to work with Sunday school education programs when she returns to Korea. “It’s good for children, but it is lacking in our country,” she said. Both girls gained experience by working with the Highland Church of Christ education program for experience. Mi chose to study in the United States because the “education field is the best in the world.” Because the U.S. is an advanced country, Ok said she thought she could learn a lot here, so she wanted to come. Ok was encouraged to come to ACU by a professor at Korean Christian College who graduated from ACU. “He said ACU is the best one in the U.S.” She said since she belongs to the Church of Christ, it was God’s plan for her to come. When Ok returns to Korea, she hopes to become a children’s counselor for the church. But before going back she wants to get her master’s degree. Language is the biggest problem the women face, especially in class, Mi said. Ok says the problem is that the professors think American students and Oriental students are the same. Despite the problem of difficulties in understanding English, Ok says she loves the professors. “They are so nice and are intelligent,” she said. The girls like other things about being in the states. Mi likes picking up pecans and American food, but says “we cannot cook (American food).” She also likes the size of Abilene in comparison to the large crowded city she comes from. Abilene is more like a family, she
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