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Page 20 text:
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w It ' s not ij0ur photo by Tommy Rowe ■ms. The word may make new students shudder with dread from the stories they have heard through friends and family members, who have experienced residence life. However, in actuality living on campus is not as bad as some peo- ple make it out to be. Svire, you have to share a bath- room with all the girls on our floor, freshman Erin Poe says, but I ' ve met some pretty nice people while waiting to take a shower. That is exactly what dorm life is all about — not communal bathrooms — but meeting new people and making friends. Most of the friends I ' ve made I ' ve met in the elevators or in the halls, she said. Aside from meetiiig lots of new people, residential living also pro- vides students with a variety of activities to keep them entertained and involved in campus life. Residence Hall Association, of which all residents are members, sets the norms by which the resi- dents live. The group works with the Office of Housing and Residence Life to make improve- TAKING A LOAD OFF. Watching after a group of the kids from a Parents ' Night Out evidently has worn this RHA member out. TRICK OR TREAT. Neighborhood kids roamed the halls of the dorms in search of treats on Halloween. IN YOUR FACE. Housing Residence Life Director B.J. Mann takes a pie courtesy of Audrey Morgan during an RHA fundraiser. ments in the residence halls th would better suit those who lii there. RHA also prc vides mar activities for residents. The: include events svich as dances, p throws, game nights, and more. Tl group even plans special nights f parents of resident students. . In addition to activities, livii in the dorms provides many oppc tunities for leadership roles on cai pus. Residents are encouraged try out for such positions as FOI advisor (a volunteer who hel] freshman and transfer studen adjust to life at UNA), Peer Revie Board, a stvident group that coon 16
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Page 19 text:
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• a - I itr -- nm o .- ' To top it oft, participants won small cash prizes for thoir ist stores of useless information. Who would have thought lowing where the treaty to end the Civil War was signed )uld be worth $5? The team with the most points by the id of the game show earned $100, with second-place win- ng $50, according to freshman Clifford Drouet, a partici- jnt of Brainstorm. On Wednesdav morning a rock-climbing wall was set in the Guillot Center atrium while lM inflatable obstacle •urse stationed in the second-floor ballroom brought back irnival memories for students. During the early part of the week, students battled other Nature while decorating squares of campus side- alk with various chalk art. ' Tt was freezing that morning. It was really cold and indv and the chalk kept blowing all over the sidewalk, id Laura Beth Daws, who was in charge of Spring Fling [tivities for Alpha Delta Pi. However, the weather turned beautiful when organiza- )ns painted the Guillot windows with cheery designs, a ing tradition. They were all very colorful and creative. Everybody id a good time hanging out in front of the Sub, Daws id. Also on Wednesday were the highly-anticipated field mes, which were given theme names. The three-legged ce was dubbed Speedy Gonzalez while the tempting- unding Tequilla Twister was the moniker for the Dizzy zy. Running for the Border was the trolly-ropes race, a game in which two groups of six people stand on blocks of wood and race to the finish line by pulling themselves along with rope. On Thursday Henry Welch, a regular at the Birmingham Comedy Club, performed, and Spring Fling winners were announced. Nick Shelton (Sigma Chi) and Kelly Yates (Zeta Tau Alpha) were voted Spring Fling King and Queen, respectively. ZTA swept the first-place awards for window painting and sidewalk chart art in the women ' s division, with Fiji winning window painting and Sigma Chi picking up first- place honors for chalk art in the men ' s division. The BCM captured first in both window painting and chalk art in the co-ed division. La Vida Es Una Fiesta! festivities ended on Friday evening as an estimated 600 people attended the opening comedic act of John Witherspoon and main attraction Mark Curry ' s stand-up performance in Flowers Hall. Curry is best known as M ark Cooper of the now-defunct TV series Hangin ' Witli Mr. Cooper. When the show wrapped. Spring Fling 2001 was official- ly over. However, the week of laughs, goofing off, spirited competition and bean-spitting contests unmistakably light- ened the mood on campus and helped ready students for the dreaded antithesis of Spring Fling week: finals week. - Kimb ly West 15
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Page 21 text:
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derim es residential judicial proceed- 3, and Resident Assistants, those D manage the floors in each hall. In many ways, campus living ke being in a small community, s Szebenyi says. You can eat e, you can sleep here, and your reation and entertainment is tt - much here, too. You can get ether with friends to watch vies, eat dinner, or exercise, ving campus is like going out of n, which really makes the cam- feel more like home. In addition, dorm-dweller Erin • adds, if I didn ' t live on cam- pus, [there probably would be some times] I might not make it to class. Living on campus does have its adxantages, and those advantages far outweigh the cc ns. The people that you live with become your second family, Candace Herron says, and tiiat is what residence life is trul - all about. — Ben Rock CLOWN CALLS. Emily Alexander dressed as a clown for the kids who were trick-or-treating for Halloween. Rice Rivers Powers Lafayette LaGrange 17
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