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Page 18 text:
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sam- -NR E 14
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Page 17 text:
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' B adley A o ces S5 Ill0Tuiti nl r ByDICKLIEN n It is a funny time of year. It comes, in its autumn maj- ty, just after the September Sillinesa of the new football ason goes away and before the March Madness of basket.- ll's final days. We call it October Omni ten d it is grand fection inqeed. Writers affhpgted it get tt: thinkilrgrifhgi sorts of impossible things could happen. Like this, for instance: 'D Qn fl good day, maybe Bradley's football tum could :Infect 140015111 8 Same of whatever it is those lads down there play is turdgy afternoons. Sd WS imP0ssible, pf course, but you'll have to admit this e hgs yast potential. If the Illini aren't busy Jan. 1 land More ns lnttle doubt that they won't bei, maybe we could fix M a game for them with the Braves. 1 ml' I I We could call it a bowl Halle, or something like that. and l1fl Wh0le lol of people could come and watch. They would all I ve 19 be Bradley' Sllldfllm. lhoullh. because must adult Peo- ms just don't like cgllgge football and by that time nobody vI !l wifnttao watch lllmols anymore. Not even Pete Elliott, If s s I ere. ivl PFOUIINY. to keep thc game even, Bradley wnuldn't pass TY OYQCII for nobody wants to soc those fellows catch the bull cury time the quurlerlmck throws it. Even Northwestern, 'Fpnch :gt nn on-tho-slnot-conference between couches and play- rs decided not to more 100 points, was merciful. :fi M In f3lil'Ilt'SS to Illinois, thoughjit should be pointed out that fylqlenlllini are in such a horrible predicament because the fine Inzh school athletes in this state are not .loyal to the state Kari-.'un':aity. They are going away to school, to places like lnwa gi al Ohm Stale and Nonhwcstern and they are playing their .mntlmll there. u pgn. J wi Couch Elliott decries this. If we are to improve Illinois Qtball, he says, these outstanding boys must come to Cham- 735' Maybe we could play our game in Bloomington, Pete El- iw-tt's home town. Surely a lot of the hometown folk would mt to come out and watch. A If we were to play our ple in BKQHIUII, would then in he someone in the crowd wha could think back to when etc and his brother Bump were sensations In the local high fl Y leir football at Michigan. ool? They were among the statin belt. All they played ,H Cupid Has His Annual Dayg IP if: By msn? mwcz 1 f' ny .lumr FISCIIEIR lim that the null!! with lk dnoorayngn colde :Q clams at eight dcloskc for 3li'00dCll.l holde Lfwh bathed very tree la with ' wlolr :maketh fall the led ld lic e flour Wm that unto chords OVOY, all We bright been lakes Mum- nu the um ua lm sr wrecks, ,pp pink pills have habla! only ,H,1notlent'l alle, It Modest: have night Ip ol lflllllfd olde, Im lone: folk ta ISI Us hlln Chilli. n nut into doggy will lilci- il on chmod Iliff lhdnodnlly from ovary bruno ! :wan union, nmol, nd pr- lly JUDY YISCIIBI Ilene the Itllc Christan bells, lilvnhln. What 1 world ol tllhp lid lhllr tlllslag he-tolls. lov they llllil. llllll. iilll. ln thoeodealpus slr! lla! they ffl' u ovary :Illia ltihlfs but hgh: to tingle lnutlclptln nn All the Kill!! Ill all puking. lldlg wildly to all In inning dolly, llllllg gladly, llinlag idly to Ill ln, Throwing union In the sultan, ltllyllg vlllly, studying lard, Gflllflf out that one Iut paper, Writing nt A Christan ard, Knplsg lllq, dna, tllo, ll 5 DSC lnllc rhyqg, To the thdanhlatla that so luocqntlfiulil, from the balls, holla, bella, bella, holla, balls, hill, Frau the can and pouvsaaoua- hg Chriltlu holla. The Beanie Tradition Much to the chagrin of Bradley B-Club members who en- joy chasing Bradley freshmen around campus in the name of acmraditiong the annual Green Beanie Bonanza appears to This prompts us to make a few observations. No one seems to be missing them. Freshmen girls are happy because those darn things were always interfering with much pampered hair styles anyway. Neither are freshmen dismayed over this failure to further cultivate-with the aid of paint buckets- one of Bradley? swred traditions. They never really enjoyed lookgng like L bunch of refugees from an off-beat monastery any ow. And to many faculty members-who were frustrated at their own inability to distinguish Beanie A from Beanie B -thq deaq tggggggsljapresentsgustep tqward the mature audi The following 'Guest EdltorInl was reprinted ln the Oregon State Dally Barometer 0l September 21, 1982. Originally, it appeared in the September 12, 1962 luuo.of the Daily Californian. The Rushing Game Many campus co-eds play a rather exciting game a couple times each year. It's called sorority rush and it's really stimu- lating fun. The rules of the game are, not so oddly enough, very simple. There are two teams participating: the inners and the outa-rs. Simply. the object in for the outers to be absorbed by the inncrs with enough ceremony to give both sides the il- lunion that thc cntiro bit is meaningful. A very rigid training program is necessary tor the game to he run smoothly: In other words keeping everyone too busy to realize how ridiculous they look. The inners learn such ed- lfalionul practices am how to light solneone's cigarette in the pruper manner: how to nit on n rug, at the same time look- ing sophisticated: and how to converse on an absorbing intel- ledual level. Me-mm-hilv. hm-k on the hill, the outers are also given wurthwhilv training. llnw to light their cigarettes when the girl hulalimz tha- match is shaking the flame nervously: how ln make lb inner ful-I sophisticated while sprawled out over u rung: mul how in liste-n to a less than shallow conversation and make thu- nth.-r believe it sounds ubsurhimz. Tha-n. much tm :noun-anytime less than never is too noon-R-aluy lrush day! arrives: tension mounts, pulses quick- en, you knmv. sm if something important was happening. The entire campus holds its breath. mainly because all the eos- meticn being um-d make it terribly difficult to do much else. The uutors descend from their lofts, down. down to the gn-vk-luln-lvd dwelling below. Drcssed'in party clothes, gleam- ing wilh mslcntutioun newness. they come, championing the cama-n of nulvety, coyness. and virginity. The inners smile, the outera smile. The af fair looks like a toothpaste commercial. But then comes the moment-of-truth. The inner! distrib- ute their hidu to the outcra: they have made their choices based on extensive contact with outera, maybe tau minutes of amor- phoun convernution. It In said In the rule-bool: of the f1NltIllQ that the winner In the girl who receives a bid from t 0 homo of lor choice. In truth. the winner ll the eo-od who was slut enough not to play the lame at all. Elliot Sicilian!!! Oxford vs. BU Tonight Oxford vs. Bradley. Sound strange? There are very few fields In which Oxford University of England and Bradley University could compete, but one of these fields-debating-will be explored this evening at 7 o'- clock in Jobat Auditorium. At that time, William Nadal and John lebonnell of Ox- ford wlll debate against Charles Roth and Douglas Ducate ,of Bradley. The topic for debate will be, Resolved: That com- munint China should bo admitted to membership in the United Nations at once. Area Jaeoplo as well as students are invited to view the :iobttaan tg attend a reception in tho Btudsnt Center follow H0 . IVITI D I Was Born This article is an answer to the UGLY rumor going around campuS that I was never born. I stategin all sincerity that I was not a fig' ment of my parent's imaginatwn- To set the record straight I check- ed the family-tree and under one of the broken branches I found .a diary kept by my parents. This ns what really happened . . . Oncscore and two years ag0 my parents brought forth to thefse United States a new baby, concew- ed for laughs and dedicated to the proposition that he too could be equal. Since then they have been engaged iw a great conflict, test- ing how long their baby Ol' any baby so conceived and so spastic can be endured. The parents of the world met and had a great debatf about that conflict. They Came U dedicate a university as a place ti send these babies. It was altogethl er fitting and proper that they dic this, besides it was their money. But in a larger sense, I canno1 consecrate - I cannot dedicate - I cannot Hallow - the way the: dumpvd us. The brave men am women, living and dead, who rem this paper you have the power te add or subtract. The world wil little note, nor try to remembe: what I say here, but it can neve' forget if it trys bo remember. I is for us the living, rather, to b1 dedicated to the unfinished worl which was so nobly advanced ye nevertheless unfinished. It is rather for us bo be here de dicated to the great task that wa nevc r finished - our education With this in mind I highly resolv -that this university, under Va: Arsdalc, shall have a new birth 0 leaminf:-and that the universit, of the student, by the student anw for the student shall not monk around. -DAVE TRASI I4 any 4, png, The Thats Chl Winter Formal, Blue leo Fantasy , vu hold sz fm W . .. .i... . I C . I Scarlet Rzbbmgs , Y By JACK WALSH mapping his suspondon. Ho was Q, i I H have always had a tender spot greeted by a 0h01'I-I:-9fL0'Yl:Hfhd lggggm-.gn Chief JQEN WEIBBBOD r Adviul' Business Mnnnyzer MACK HERNDON JAMES J. DYNAN RICHARD LE sam: U P Aldlfllf Editor! .... ..... IA wrmeo Roh, Sandy Bruce, Dick Lim 1' ,...-.
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Page 19 text:
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THE HUNGRY DREAM OF KNOWLEDGE that we have known at infinite moments of our lives, that has broken our hearts, maddened our brains and torn the sinews binding our lives asunder, has driven us to learn and still drives us beyond all reason. We have struggled up unconquered crags searching for it,' tumbled down the sliding kaleidoscope ofthe circling years in quest of it as of a Grail, and lost our years in the exertion. Some of us will fail, and yet remain unresting in the hope that we shall find it, make it ours forever . . . when . . . and the hunger will remain eternally unsatisjied. We who hunt will know anguish . . . and the sorrow of being close as a touch to truth . . . and yet missing the touch. We remain mute when a word might have possessed it . . . we hesitate to knock and the door never opens . . . or worse, we will be satisfied to rest on the threshold in the vain notion that we have explored within. And some . . . some few will succeed . . . will know what truth there is to be known . . . and dreams will leap the barriers of here and now . . . and wisdom shall be once more ......
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