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Page 26 text:
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If Professors Quay Grigg, George T. Vane, and F. Garvin Davenport aid students enrolling in English classes. +V ,N Mr. Walter H. Mayer, Spanish department, advises Terryl Alwin about her fall schedule. 10 Struggling to arrange his schedule, a student checks the long list of classes already closed. Registrcition: tedious lines, higher tuition, new courses More considerations than just long, slow-moving lines faced the 1244 students who registered for classes in fall. For the first time, pictures of all students were taken for use on plastic ID cards, as well as class pictures for the Liner. Two new majors were offered: Anthropology, previously part of the Sociology department, and American Studies. In addition, many new courses were added in existing fields. English majors, especially, found the entire field revamped with a larger variety of courses. A record tuition of 551,320 greeted the freshmen and stu- dents not on guaranteed tuition. Hamline's record enrollment represented over half of the states and 13 foreign countries, including japan, Israel, Kenya, Sweden, Chile, Canada, Korea, and Portugal. For returning students making few program changes, the annual procedure was relatively uncomplicated, but tiresome lines, coupled with the compromises made to arrange an in- volved schedule, left many others frustrated and weary. 'wr'-5 sly piggy, T' 'N V ,n Q iff: wi.
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Page 25 text:
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,,, ., ,, .,.,,, ,, ,,.,,.! , , , ., irq' z t 12 ,. r' I E Registration area for freshman English courses be- comes congested as freshmen attempt to find English classes that are still open and will fit into their programs. Parents help to move new students into Drew. Q. N- . t . ' . W 5 Glenn Nicholson explains tentative plans for future campus development displayed at the Congress booth on Activities Night. s
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Page 27 text:
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A rose is a rose is a rose. Marge and Roger Sargent enjoy their Saga plastic flower along with lunch time pizza Three new houses increase total campus living space Although this year's freshman class of 336 was smaller than last year's class, campus housing was again crowded because of the greater retention of upperclassmen and a larger number of transfer students. Due to the need for more living space, three new freshman houses were opened raising the total number of houses to 21. King House, 797 Pascal, became a girls' freshman house, while Osborn and Beyer, at 1495 Taylor and 1470 Englewood respectively, were opened for frosh men. The student body of 1244 was the biggest in Hamline's his- tory. Nearly one-third of the students lived off campus, 580 occupied the three dorms, and 200 lived in campus houses. Three young married couples served for their first year as head residents in each of the dormitories. In their capacity as head residents, Bob- and Judy Toensing fManorj, Ed and Carol Myers QSorinj, and Wendell and Kay Vandersluis CDrewj, supervised the dorms and worked with the student counselors. The food showed marked improvement in quality and variety with the addition of Saga Food Service. Complete salad tables, limitless seconds, special holiday dinners, and the re- decoration of Drew Dining Hall were all part of Saga's pro- gram for improving the atmosphere of dorm eating.
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