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Page 25 text:
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I booked up. Bill Reese makes his mi-yearly investment in texts at the iiversity Store. The bookstore vened 'in the University Center last rar. Not all phases of registration are Growing tired of waiting inlines, senior crowded, One worker, Greg Herndon, Jeff Majors props himself on a Universi- said that his job was to sit in this desert- ty Store cash register. ed hallway and guard the door. ug. .4 ,p'-, N,-1 O 5 . Y ,fs .V 1 . A .W., ' , f yr, 1 F' f' . .2 'V ,, A ,Q 'I' i I A. 1 cw., me new scenery of registration was urdly noticed through the traditionally ng financial aid lines. ff .1-N Greg Vincent Even the help of a registration worker does not make the process any simpler for student Nancy Goss. cHughes said, After a mo- ent's consideration, he ad- ed, l guess they do good for re number of students in- Jlved. For spring registration, ad- iinistrators hoped to do even etter by further spreading ie traffic, Gantt said. Conges- on in the fall had been created by having all activities on the third floor. So in the spring the process was spread across the Center's three levels. Despite the problems, Gantt said the move to the University Center would pay off in the long run. l think it will be a good facility, he said. Q ' Tim Bland and Curtis Brown Curtis Bro wn WHS, wud,-' ggi .... - ., Philip Key Debbie Haller Registration 21 .TZ
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Page 24 text:
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Ch nge Pla ce A new location for registration had a debatable influence I had nothing to offer anybody except my own confusion. - Jack Kerouac, On the Road lt was the same story in a new setting. When the University Center opened in 1981, one of the ac- tivities affected was registra- tion. The process would, theo- retically, be less of a pain in the new facility. ln the fall, Llniversity Center- style registration made its de- but. Whether it was actually simpler than registration in the former location depended on who was asked. Bill Adams, registration su- pervisor, said the two-day affair ran smoothly, partially because of the addition of new equip- ment. Two computer terminals and one printer were added. But the new location also had quite an effect, he said. Everything was centralized in the University Center, Ad- ams explained. Before, stu- dents had to go to too many different places to complete the process. lf things ran smoothly, they did not do so immediately, Ad- ams admitted. There were a few bugs in the system during 20 Student Life 'Qt H ,H :wit W4 ,ww x nil the first half-hour, but there were no big problems after that, he said. Wilson Gantt, dean of admis- sions and registrar, also said he considered the change success- ful. He said one complication was a rush for financial aid the first morning. But Gantt, like Adams, set the financial aid section of the system apart from registration itself. In registration, Gantt said, We didn't have any lines. But several students noticed an overbundance of lines in the process. One, senior Larry Hol- land, after standing in the pay- ment line for W2 hours, said, This is the biggest line I've ever seen. Another senior, Karen Shi- pley, called the lines phenom- enaI. Some unfortunate students Philip K even waited to get in line. had to wait two hours just get a schedule, said stude Dianne Littlefield. And then there were s dents like James McHugh McHughes, a freshman who not know the ways of regist tion, arrived at 8:30 the fir morning. At 3:30 that afta noon, he was still in line. lt could be run a little better, an exhaust
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Page 26 text:
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Mgerfff ha 'V Q if-'f -' f Three'bed rooms like this were com- mon sights in the fall. Jennye Mason sits at her make-up mirrow while suite- mate Gela Barrett chats on the phone. Checking in at Hester Hall, Benita Mar- tin receives assistance from R.A. Lori Williams. Q ffm M-uf mmafac A-sw' A99 22 Student Life Www 4 . Valerie Allison During August, a record number of students made housing . . . Too Dorm Crowded Murray State is known many as a suitcase collegn but the phrase took on nf meaning for some stude when the fall semester beg The reason? They were pled fplaced three to a roo because of the annual housi: overflow, which caused a cord number of crowded roon in August. This left many students predicaments like Kell O'Brien's - living out three boxes and a suitcase, ' periods of up to three week O'Briens's case was typi of the problems that ar when three people w squeezed into a two-per room. She was the third r mate, meaning that the ot two girls had planned to l together. When I got there, they ready had both closets fill and everything was in
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