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Page 23 text:
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Morning: a time for hustling While many students are just beginning to rise, the 7:00 breakfast crowd at Pattie Cobb is eating to the sounds of the Beach Boys and those at American Heritage are choosing between the usual selection of doughnuts and eggs. The scrambled eggs and coffee are necessary eye-openers to those students who prefer to eat rather than sleep in the pre-class hours. The sidewalks which were once desolate are s 7 becoming busy. A few students break into a sref i ss'i half-run as the 8:00 bell rings and class com- which Dr. Gary Elliott is discussing ' Anglo-Saxon literature and briefly describing the sounds of the language. t ln Olen Hendrix 207, Elaine Thompson is explaining the techniques of sewing on the top collar of a jacket in Clothing Tailoring. Kent Pate, Rick Cook, Vickie Carrier and several other art students are completing line drawings demonstrating blind contour in their Two-Dimensional Design class, which are due to be finished at the end of the period. lt appears, as one of the students jokes, The really good artists procrastinatef' I Monday mornings are filled with classes for most students. With an average of 57 classes beginning on the , hours of 8:00, 9:00, and 10:00, it is an ideal schedule to get most of the classes out of the way in the mornings, leaving the afternoons sparsely filled and with a lot of available time for other activities. . . A ten-minute interval for changing classes makes more ofa dash than a walk for students who must go from the American Studies Building to the distant New Gym, or from Harbin Hall to the Heritage Building. Whatever the distance between classes, lgowever, the tight schedules make Monday mornings a time for ustling. ' C mences for Literature of the Western World in 1. , CASUALLY sitting on her desk, Dorothyvwright reads a paragraph in French to her Elementary French class, which' meets at 10:00. s 2. BOB GUTIERREZ completes an oil painting for his Introduction to 'Painting class in his spare time. T . I I . y ' I 1. I 3. MARK HOOPER begins his Monday morning with an 8:00 Elementary Hebrew class, which meets in room 108 of the Bible Building. j 4. ATIENTIVELY, Paul Symanowitz listens into Selected Letters to Christians. 5. LATE NIGHTS make sleepy mornings for David Mitchell, who catches some sleep in his 9:00 New Testament class. ' ' , ' 6. CHILD DEVELOPMENT class, meeting at 8:00, provides Home Economics major lulia Wells with the opportunity to work directly with children. one Day - 19
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Page 22 text:
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Page 24 text:
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1. DEAN PRYOR makes the usual long list of Monday morning announcements at second chapel. 2. TOMMY CARR reads a letter while Debbie Fagan checks the Tri Kappa club box for new announcements. 3. GOOD COMPANY makes the cafeteria food better for Eugene Conner and Sylvia Pectol. 4. THE BREAK between chapel and lunch provides Lynn Watson with a good chance to check for mail. 5. LONG LUNCH LINES make students recall the advantages of home. -'.. H, L , . -- 7 'L ff me i. .i ' ' . -F . hir E- -fi 71 1 i e I , . - 5' Q L - ' 1 it K ' 1 U53 ,,,, 'M .W , V , XA 5 ,Q K : V fl, E fly.. . x M. .L ig e- a t X X' 4' ' A i e us f -Q, ' ,I r Q i 4 1 M ti A Midday: the everyday grooves 20 ' One Day 1
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