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Page 85 text:
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CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS
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Page 84 text:
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N These social science students for ' one of the many panel discussion which discuss numerous phases N the field. SOCIAL SCIENCE Students in social science aim to develop in themselves an understanding of man and of his human relationships, responsibilities, and potentialities. This objective is pursued through an analysis of Christian social principles, of political, social, and economic phenomena as well as the philosophic and aesthetic expression wherein man reveals his aspirations. This awareness fbsters a spirit of civic cooperation and a climate of international understanding. SPEECH AND DRAMA Since the days of Demosthenes and his mouthful of pebbles, methods of teaching speech have swiftly improved . . . and the woman of the Crest is versed in the newest and the best of these. From ber seat in the classroom Where she evaluates the literature of the drama it is a minute-metamorphosis to the stage where she becomes for a time a half-starved Jewess seeking free- dom in an attic or to the director's chair where she demonstrates her ability to direct plays in which other members take part. 78 Pat Denton gives some last minute instructions to the cast of her one-act pla Debbie Brown, Jane Sladek, and Karyn Osweiler. ? I n.1 s p U-4.
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Page 86 text:
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STUDENT COUNCIL . 1 A . .-,x,, 'G.6 C7 gp, ff Responsible for campus spirit and extracurricular life are these executive board members of the Student Association: first row, S. Sedgwick, M. C. Hyland, J. Lampe, L. Holme, P. Lampe, A. A. Simonsg second row, R. Costello, B. Pierzynski, L. Burgfechtel, D. Kaczkowski, M. Richardson, M. J. Anderson, A. Moehlenhof, and Colleen McNicollg third row, J. Keeler, S. Hemple, H. Ven Horst, and B. Mizicko. This year's program of the Student Association was highlighted by diverse activities under the capable leadership of the Student Council. Opening the calendar with a Leadership Workshop, the Student Council directed the attention of campus leaders to Marycrest goals. With Freshman Orientation Week two hundred 'cbeaniesw sprouted on campus, disappearing just before Homecoming in October. Student Council mem- bers planned and organized busy Homecoming weekend at lVlarycrest. Joining forces with the community in civic action, Marycrest students, under the sponsorship of the Student Council, canvassecl Davenport for the Muscular Distrophy Drive and the Red Cross Drive. The concerns of weekly business, three proms, and the all- campus fund-raising Mardi Gras completed a busy year for the Council. Lf
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