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Page 281 text:
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Engleman Experimenting means the testing of some suggested truth. Engleman, as an experimental residence hall, has a peculiar responsibility and a burden, and that is to be truly experimental, to take a theory and to muster the courage needed to put it into practice. The deletion of one late permission slip and the allowing of friends in the lobby until midnight is not experi- mentation—it is inchworming toward a goal which is both vague and dubiously valuable. It lacks the verve and daring characteristic of an experimental situa- tion. If we are to experiment, let us not hesitate to hasten toward that goal already actualized by other colleges and universities— the total acceptance of re- sponsibility for one ' s own actions. ROW 1: Sue Meier, Jeanne Halter, secretary; Kathy Kubach, Kothy Stover, resident assistant; Mary leath, resident assistant; Rita Lisy, resident assistant; Sue Sherrange; Brenda Bonnar; Margaret Molnar, judicial vice-president; Lynne Foster ROW 2: Irene Metz, resident assistant; Sandy Jasper, Nancy Habeck; Carol Sumilas; Rosemarie Simione, resident counselor; Jann Burkhardt, vice-president; Roxane LeRoy; Karen Erwin,- Anne Ruip, Bonnie Grubb, treasurer; Jan Zalimeni ROW 3: Janie Pyle; Nancy Ostrander; Nelia Andberg, Noreen Fetherson; B-J Williams, president. 277
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Page 280 text:
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ROW 1: Donald Hursh, III, Tim Tassone, James Burnett, Tom Ruple, Troy Barker ROW 2: Glen Kile, Frank Latona, David Mitchell, Philip Mascara, Carl Polka, William Russell, David Weigel ROW 3: Joe Grisola, Gary Howieson, Robert Kron, Michael McCormick, David Nichols, Ronald Lerman, Richard Johnson, Gary Gale, William Murin, Laurence Condow, Stephen Brandehoff, Richard Treleven, Richard Turner, Joseph Sergak. This is the year of Lake Hall. With an imaginative residence hall body, and an enthusiastic counselling staff, Lake exudes an air of excitement. The Lake Hall Examiner gave the Kent State campus something new in residence hall newspapers, while Novemberfest opened the doors of opportunity to talented students from other halls by offering them a place to perform. Lectures and informal seminars by prominent and in- terested professors helped to ignite the intellectual spark of Lake residents. The Lake Hall library, its floats, mixers and open houses exemplify the pride, enthusiasm, and friendliness of its residents. These are, in fact, the products and extensions of the Men of Lake Hall. Lake ROW 1: Dieter Sems, secretary; Dennis Guenther, vice president; Jack Bonar, presi- dent; Peter Stofflet, treasurer ROW 2: Regis Pongibove, Paul Planchon, Jim Edler, R. J. Planisek. 276
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Page 282 text:
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there were some who got lost and some who were never close enough to the road in the first place . . . but there were many more who found more than beer and broads . . . there were those who led and those who followed . . . those who found the road found the mud along its sides and in its holes . . . they found the pavement cracked and the scenery dingy . . . they also found there were other roads but they stayed and today are better for having walked the longer way . . . i cannot relive 9 months for 375 . . . but i can remember and through the heavy fog of what once was i see the differences of many forming the unity of a group . . . a group that was known as THE GUYS OF CLARK HALL ROW 1: Bill Gibbons, chief justice; Rip Vallecursa, vice president; Dennis Tichy, president; Rob Woodall, Richard Tuskes ROW 2: Jim Doeberling, Jay Salovara, Terry O ' Donnell, treasurer; John Gearhart. 278
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