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Page 27 text:
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,. L 3.? , Connie Cooper offers her husband a plate of home-made brownies. She finds time to cook and clean after finishing her duties as a secretary at the University. Thc Coopers relax and wonder about the future. Theyit glad they had a head start on married life. Bill Fankhouser studies in the living room of the apartment he shares with his wife Mona. Married students settle down, do better academically 0n the average, accord- ing to University studies.
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Page 26 text:
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24 500 Married Couples Combine Homework, Homemaking At BG Bill and Connie Cooper had dated one another since early in high school. Last June they were married, after a three-year separation, and moved to Bowling Green to share Bill's senior year. To make ends meet, Bill holds an assistantship in the athletic publicity office and Connie is secretary in the journalism depart- ment. After their working day, the Coopers shop together, and in the evening Bill studies while Connie straightens their threesroom apartment. Week ends call for entertaining other married couples or an occasional movie. The young Coopers expect an addition to the family in June. The Coopers are typical of the more than 500 other married couples on the campus. According to the registrar, Bowling Green has the largest percentage of married students of any Ohio college. Ten percent of the freshman class alone is married. Nearly all the married students at the University have one thing in common. They may be struggling to finance both education and a family, but they learn much from one another by working together for their goals, and face the future with the confidence that arises from common understanding and experiences. Marilee and Ken Moore finish dinner dishes in their trailer kitchen. Ken is a junior; Marilee completed her freshman year last spring and this year worked as a secretary in the news serv1ce office. Jack Ward gulps his morning coffee as wife Susie feeds their young daughter. As with most non-student wives, Susie Ward holds down a full-time job, working at Wood County Hos- pilal.
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Page 28 text:
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A . ' Founders Quadrangle, facing East Wooster St.., was completed and occupied this year. 800 Women Filled Founders In J anuary Mass Moving Day
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