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Page 105 text:
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CRUNCH-Paul Ross, vice chairman of IOC, which sponsors SIGN NOW, PAY LATER-Four Monarchettes man their booth, which encouraged Club Day, samples the cookery from the hamburger sale. Sev- girls interested in joining the drill team to sign their guest book. They are eral clubs sponsored food sale booths, which added to the Marilyn Gander, Judy Henbach, RayMonde Hessing and Gayle Smith. tempting aroma drawing crowds to the Quad. PASS THE MUSTARD-Gary Collins and Karen Ross add stuffings from the relish table to their Club Day hamburgers. p Frenziecl Selling fl is a campaign poster for class elections, which ran simul- with Club Day. '25 , ,.. ,ER cw i if 11 lr
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Page 104 text:
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in if i ,'i P' 7 BEFORE-The calm before the storm lingers on the Quad on the morning of Club Day before booths have been set up. THE STORM BREAKS-Hours later, the Quad is transformed into a seething mass of students and booths, each vying for top attention. 4 if .... H33 fl L H, ll. 98 Each semester Inter-Organization Council HOC! sponsors a Club Day in which many campus clubs participate. The purpose of Club Day is two-fold--to orientate new students to campus clubs and to round up new mem- bers for the clubs. On Club Day, campus organizations set up booths in the Quad area in which they will either sell something Iusually foodl, display the opportunities available through member- ship in the club, or offer a place to sign up and ioin the club. A record was broken in the spring semester Club Day this year when more than 20 clubs participated, filling the Quad area. Some of the booths this year included the selling of hamburgers and apple strudel as well as a sports car display. Club Day Whip lT'5 A TRIUMPH-Linda Cohs and Bob Zarit go over tt .Sports Car Club exhibit from the inside out. In the bacl -v,grL.,, , 'YR' -Ti . 1' A 'T 11 'ff -Qi ' 7
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Page 106 text:
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-ie i V-,J 4, ' fish . .il W Wk 0 'Vo QR ,gf L-.ax-z,' VALLEY STAR-Valley's weekly newspaper, is put out by lFront Rowl: Pat Willett, Joel Schwarz leditorl, Arline Ballonoff lfeature editorl, Tony Cifarelli lnews editorl, Craig Altschul lsports editorl. lBack Rowl: Ali Sar, Dan Fapp lclub editorl, Tony Giaimo iart editorl, Roger Graham lad managerl , Kent Thompson and Kenneth DeVol ladviserl . . X W l REPORTERS-Journalism 2 students who bring in much of the campus news are iFront Rowl: Wayne Lennon, John Millrany, Ted Woodson, Dudley Nich- olson, Rochelle Marks, Jeanne Morris. lBack Rowl: Ian Ehrlich, Bill Homer, Frank Kaplan, Frank Tier- nev, Mike Cerasc and Don Hutton. The News Bureau, linked with Valley's iournalism department, offers the prospec- live professional iournalist the invaluable opportunity of working as correspondent for local Los Angeles area newspapers. Dr. Esther Davis sponsors the bureau, which serves 17 local papers. Additional- ly, a -Journalism Advisory Committee, con- sisting of nine representatives of local newspapers, serves the needs of the en- tire department. Nine members of the News Bureau served in the past year to cover campus news for such papers as the Burbank Daily Review, the Van Nuys News, the Valley Times and the Citizen News. it The Valley Star serves the two-fold purpose of providing students of Val- ley with an educational iournalism laboratory and a school newspaper. ln the laboratory, students of the iournalism department learn the ways of modern newspapering through an on-the-iob situation which is created by their weekly four-page publica- tion, the Star. l The paper has distinguished itself in many ways, maintaining an all- l American rating from the Associated Collegiate Press for the 'lOth straight semester, while placing among the best at iunior college iournalism com- petitions throughout the state. l Scribes Recorc NEWS BUREAU--Frank Kaplan lrightl, student director of the bureau, leads Harriet Rochlin, Frank Tierney, Marianne Porco and Mike Cerasc in their work with the community papers. 5,
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