Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL)

 - Class of 1976

Page 21 of 248

 

Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 21 of 248
Page 21 of 248



Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

Round and round the lot in search of a place Where to park it: that is the question. Whether 'tis nobler to search for a spot farther away from the building and arrive late, or just take that faculty place ahead there, or - horrors - a spot marked with Xl The latter will probably mean suffering the slings and arrows of an outraged Bradley Security Officer who passes by and spots your junk parked in an un- authorized place, But, as so many students claim, I bought a decal and theres no place to parkf' so they put it any place, end up getting a ticket, and X,......' the Security office in Macmillan Hall finds itself with 300 to 600 outstanding violations during any one semester i'lt's only when departments hold special conferences, or an activity in the Student Center or Field-house that brings hundreds or at times thousands of visitors on campus that we have problems, Director of Security David Baer explained. Once last year we had 3,000 farmers in the fieldhouse and cattle cars, trucks, vans, and anything else that moved parked all over campus. At times like that, we suspend ticketing everyone. We know there aren't enough places available. For the 800 student places existing on campus, approx- imately 1,760 decals have been issued out for the year 75 76 making the parking placefparkers ratio about 2 Zfl while the faculty placeffaculty ratio runs fairly close to 1 to 1 That may seem lncredibly unfair but you have to re member that a lot of those student decals go to people taking night courses or maybe just one course in the day When they vacate the spot after a couple hours its free during peak hours said Baer I thmk we re very fair about ticketing said a member of the Bradley Security If we see that there really IS a lack of space available we avoid ticketing So noble or not as the case may be you still have to pay a S1 to S10 fine for parking it in the wrong place One arrow s not too bad but a quiver full can get expenslve x

Page 20 text:

Ile Olde Sweet Shoppe Mountains of mouth-watering chocolate covered pea- nuts - jars of indescribably delicious M6iINI's - fresh, buttered popcorn - scrumptious maple nut goodies. It's enough to give a diabetic lascivious nightmares in bed. But for most of us, the nightmare is probably those three pounds weive put on over the semester from being lured by an inviting aroma to that hidden cubby- hole in the Student Center known as the SWEET SHOPPE. I never did know the regular customers by name, but as soon as I saw that familiar face, I'd think, iPis- tachios, or iSpicettes', or whatever the student was addicted to, says Mrs. Twila Ford, the former candy ladyi' who has greated all the candy addicts at Bradley since the fall of 1972 with her warm smile. Everyone always asked me how I stayed so slim. Mrs. Ford remarked, I can only imagine what they'd be doing if they were back here: eating up the profits. But there really isn't much profit involved in the SWEET SHOPPE operation, according to Student Center Games Area Director, Merlin Potter. VVe only make about S500 a year' from the sale of the candy. It was set up more as a student service than as a big, money-making deal The shoppe was established in 1972 through funds given by the Bradley Dads' Association, after its proposed creation was made by Student Center Director, E.I. Ritter. I got the idea when I attended an Association of College Unions International meeting in 197I,n said Ritter, Hand in 19712 we decided to set it up with the ticket sales booth. The prices have gone up quite a bit during the three years I worked there, says Mrs. Ford, but the number of customers increases every yearf' For sure that favorite corner of bubble gum, nuts and nut fana- tics is always a busy place. The mornings are usually occupied with ticket sales for the latest fieldhouse concert, the early afternoon with candy, gum, nuts, soda and popcorn sales and at about 3 p.m., like clockwork, the place is seiged by grade school kiddies wielding their quarters and dollar bills for after- school goodies. Final exam times is when everyone has the munchiesf reported Mrs. Ford with a wide smile. Sometimes the kids will be a penny or 20 short for the tax, but I'd say that 9992 of those who promise to come back and pay do so. Since November of '75, Mrs. Ford has been moved into the Student Directors office doing secretarial work and she misses the tiring but satisfying work in the SWEET SHOPPE. In the three years I worked in the shop and ticket booth, I can't think of any individuals who were disagreeable or complained about having to wait long for candy or tickets when the lines got rather long. The SWEET SHOPPE still beckons many a potential diet- er to its window, caught like flies in a spiderweb of sweet delight. It's funny, though, how you never notice how addicted you've become 'to the place your- self until you realize, embarrassingly, that she's weighing out candy for you before you even ask for it. No, make that red licorice today instead of black, I said, turning red, myself. I



Page 22 text:

Ltr ' ' .' 1 Q' lm! if I - K I ' - -1 tl .. . 5 1 2 S F A' ,f ' N X' -Q7 -f ' 6 . ,- ' ? '-1-G-Lg. v-..- N omanly Waves weather collegiate tradition A dead man is worth more than a liye woman. found a Peoria widow and student of political science at Bradley U., Barbara Yan Auken, who was refused credit by a department store which offered to continue charges under her dead husbands name. job equality, right to establish personal credit. proper recognition of the housewifes important role in society - these are a few of the goals of the National Organization for Women QNOWD which now has some 70,000 members nationally. Yet the success has been little and far between till now, as Ms. Van Aulten, President of the Peoria chapter of NOW admitted. The disparity between incomes for doing similar work has grown wider. Theres an enormous gap between the gains that people are made to believe exist and what really is happening. A lot of tokenism is going on, and as Gloria Steinem says, 'Tokens are for the subway. They are not meaningful indications of changefu Today the importance of women in th American economy is still essentially as a consumer - the housewife buying for her family. A survey in 1975 of 160 well-known business and industrial concerns on employment trends for college and university graduates showed employers expect to hire the same number of men this year as in 1975, but 'TW more women. Yet todays career education is still backward, aiming more at men than women, according to a spokesman for CATALYST, a nonprofit organization founded to increase opportunities for college- educated women. 1'Testimony given before congres- sional committees on equal rights in employment and education revealed that the majority of todays undergraduate college women, currently numbering 4.2 million, are still being steered toward tra- ditional 'girl' courses such as english, education, and fine arts, and away from hard subjects such as science. math and businessf' which accounts for the scarcity of women engineers, accountants, and business administrators in todays economy. But Bradleys dean of the College of Engineering and Technology, Dr. Peter Bulkeley has contra- dicting statistics. The number of female students enrolled in the school of engineering has increased from nine in 1971, to 55 this year. With the nation confronting such problems as the finding and exploration of new energy sources,

Suggestions in the Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) collection:

Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

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Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

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Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

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Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

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Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

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Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

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