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Page 308 text:
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Editor Mary Anne Fleming Managing Editor Diane Musgrove Business Manager Rod Teuber Art Editor Cliff Spencer, Jr. Copy Editor Brenda Taylor Photography Coordinator Grant Shimanek Photography Editor Tom Quick Lab Technician Linda Vulcanio Production Manager Dara Brannan Art Assistant Steve Braker Art Assistant Phillip Jones Copy Assistant Eileen Trupia Head Proofreader David,Baca Photography Assistant Terry Durneil Adviser Mr. J. Douglas Tarpley Excalibur '81 was created by the yearbook staff of Evangel College, Springfield, Mo., and was printed by Walsworth Pub- lishing Company, Marceline, Mo. Press run was 1,725 copies of 304 pages. Paper stock is 801b.enamel, clay coated. Binding is on 160 pt. binder board, Smythe sewn, rounded and backed. Body type is 12 and 10 pt. Optima. Cutline type is 8 pt. Optima. Headlines are set in rOptima and Times Roman in sizes from 18 to 48 pt. Format and Letraset Ietterin is used to add special emp asis to stories throughout the book. Excalibur contains 24 pages of four-color photographs. Class Eortraits were taken by Year- ook Associates, Millers Falls, Ma. All black and white prints were processed by Linda Vul- cano and Tom quick of the Excalibur staff. All feature photo- graphs lacking credits were taken by Grant Shimanek of the Excalibur staff. Cover photo: These classic Ford cars were used with the courtesy of the owner, Mr. Bill Harrell of Springfield, Mo. Although the gray roadster is the more valu- able, the blue Ford is the more popular model of the two. Photo by Cliff Spencer. Two fans in a crowdoi football supporters lift their hands demonstrating how they feel about the Crusaders-No. tH-no matter what the score. , Michigan had grown to like that five-foot girl from Louisiana, even if she was a little Clutzy and took three hours to get ready for a date. Teachers did more than pass out grades. .They listened to problems and prayed with students - models of Christian witness that graduates would strive to attain in their work. Leaving Evangel was hard for most students. Even if they saved enough pictures, lance editions, play and Harvest Festival programs, and concert ticket stubs, to fill 50 pages of a scrapbook, they could not capture the Evangel experience in just memorabilia. Individual growth, finely tuned abilities, friendships with people who supported and helped reach goals - these were the marks of the Evangel experience. 6 Val Aldrich The hood ornament of this 1959 Jaguar timported from : Englandy is representative of the strength of a classic. r Photo taken courtesy of Mr. Best of Kenai, Alaska. 304 Conclusion WALSWORTH PUBLISHING COMPANY l MARCELINE. Missou R1 Mesa
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Page 307 text:
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Howard Tripp Leaving a lasting impreSsion he alarm pierced the morning's peaceful- Tness for the last time. A glance around wthe room showed that the end of the school-year had come. Only bare necessities - tooth brushes, a few books, and traveling clothes-had escaped being packed in a box or suitcase. The alarm clock could now be stuffed into the small space of the only open box. The room, which had once displayed the personalities of two students through posters, photos, and a knick-knacks, had now returned to the barren state it was in last fall when they came. The school-year was over, but the experiences and changes of each student were not so easily tucked away. The days when students had pushed themselves to class while others basked in the sun, the nights when they had dragged themselves to the library to study as an escape from laughter and blaring music in the dorms, had paid off during finals week. That quality which Mom said her son or daughter could never display - self-discipline - had become an integral part of his or her character. The first exegesis or critical review, which students thought they could never write, had been joined by others. Lab manuals, which displayed question marks and blank spaces on the first few pages, had been completely filled. After four years of lectures, papers, and exams, seniors in biblical studies exhibited their accumulation of knowledge before a panel of department instructors. The music majors, who had spent long, lonely hours in the practice rooms singing or playing their instruments, performed their senior recitals. Students entering graduate school took grueling comprehensive entrance exams. Relationships had developed between the least likely people. The girl who had thought her roommate was sinful because she wore designer jeans, and the guy who couldn't believe his disgusting suite-mate could go a month and a half without washing his clothes, somehow had become fond of these people with Hungodly habits. . The first-string basketball player from b o Mak'mg of awe Cathy Evans, junior, talks over the spring schedule with Bruce Moore, sophomore, as Carol- dean Churchill, junior, waits in line with them. New computers kept the spring registration lines moving, except during computer breakdowns. Winston tarry, junior, par- ticipates in the drill team activity at a football game. The drills at games were only a part of the team's activities. t J 3w? w 15;, .- 295 a u .. ??:sz : e - b V12, iIt loyrc Hadhousen A man Ihinking or working is always alone, - Thoreau. Late night studying is characteristic of finals week for most students. Conclusion 303
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