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Page 10 text:
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may day SURFIN ' USA r Pȣ . my
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Page 9 text:
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nts Invited to Discuss Effects of ' 77 culiun Revision Monday in Wampler Community Council mic Dean Howard i dents Stan Escott, Knechel, department Embers to attend this % editorial challenges ir strength and ■ - each night? Is it just a ca ' ipus-wide party, or what? I think it ' s the new curriculum blues. New curriculum has taken all students by surprise. Students don ' t know how to react r h — This helps them for they ' re behind again! Grades are droppi Studen ' - a day and then j new .piove think inslate i-tiadi- jspects voiable 8 where suppW; ,bs than Date. there aie ieaques as national sutvev. comp aiisons V check the surveys oi schools? First, ho0 ls, m done on « n a u cted bv • Mudina °f on Education CAMPUS PALS EW STUDENTS JUS Pals greeted a confused mob f an on September fourth with and, fortunately, many ■W iaCt0 u q h a °- : u ™,pd enougn- P S achievements. c ute to the 13 LTcourse grades topic counts s count. But also { creativity, P portar tive can be very imP it yo . bcell Systematical. teI ests and ta J tuni ties you analyse Graduate schoo AID AND RHINES faces all of us! The choice is ours. We can: (1) Hunk or drop out of college. 12) Have no social life at all (no extra ' lar activities). » pass and have a social life. • „ou.t what has made ' ■ir opinions and jige. jt ahead in the .■hat needs to be ties of number Sd out what the a e new curriculum? thfbe to compare the the present one. What Jrid, why does that particular such a difference? fert of the question choice ts this: do students voice their ' ftrafrfWf. so J. now a0 tnev voice k rHeart )ver the heart. Under the me of the sport in which :ttered. .. , .. . ar a»- he pizza globes specially cannot be replaced, ' ' she making a plea to have all of ibes brought back to the e ones which were taken ial dinners in the cafeteria. they are returned, nobody 1 for taking them. to the candles, Williams is : water pitchers, 200 salad iny other forks, spoons, cups, glasses and flasks to back under the same ' -eight Campus Pals, who -om a field of applicants , met their groups at the y night. Pals st - and a few games initia, mers th one years gs with these Asjions involved Assocand just plain Tucker and PoP not a Irvine et scheduled stude tne P ast ' n ' s -ourths of the «ch free time. ' °ss did not run ,i extra leisure, ide by R.A. ' s. ' •gram were nearly n felt that the fdk down class her girl said that •Jped her meet males from ..itroduction to nor plus in the [ 6 I OpetU Ut Crufland Library Use Up 10-12 Percent I used to be able to use the library and find a quiet spot in it . . . now I don ' t go because I can ' t find a place to study ... the nooks are taken up ... the only time I go is to use the Reader ' s Guide . . . complained one student at the recent discussion on curriculum changes. Library usage is up, according to head librarian Allen Willmert, by at least ten to 12 per cent. However, he noted that the library has traditionally had high attendance records from November 1 until Thanksgiving break. This is the period when students have term papers due-after Thanksgiving, you don ' t find too many people researching for a term paper, he said. READING DAY When asked about reading day attendance, Willmert affirmed Academic Dean Howard Book ' s statement (at the Curriculum Change Forum) that the library was used little on that day. But Willmert added that students may have been studying elsewhere. Willmert estimated that 40 per cent of the students get their studying done before the reading day, and spend their time resting for exams; another 20 per cent use the day for what it was meant to Ua ... ,-1 f.-. r nwA tka .jmnininn Aft rVI -AlK
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Page 11 text:
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4 x . 4 Only twice per year are MC students allowed to legally skip classes. One of those times is Camp Mack Day and the other is MAY DAY. On these days, beginning with Fri- day, students are able to participate in numerous planned activities. Some of the activities include canoe races, trike races (complete with creative dress), water balloon and kangaroo races and the spectacular Spartan Spoketacular. Other activities during the weekend in- cluded a movie, a dance, and a play by the Kenopocomoco players. Left: Roger Cassell is caught by Steve Hammer in the Spoketacular. Below: A safely caught water balloon. Below left: Dawn Jones peddles down the straightaway.
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