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Page 455 text:
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'-,fmt -L ...ll F , l ,3 Arsonist or careless smoker? 157 ON JANUARY 22, following a dinner at Mon- ti's Steak House, officers elected to lead the student body for the second semester were installed. Approximately 900 students voted in the December 8 election. lt was announced later that this number was a record for voting at Phoenix College. It was an exchange of old presidents for new January 22. Semester I Semester ll AS Pat Kurtz John Smith AMS Malcolm Read Chuck Orwig AWS Joan Ellen Clark Mary McEowen NEW STUDENTS, Cabout 600 of themj were shown their new campus as they toured from points of interest lclass- roomsl to points of necessity Kthe cat- eteria and snack barb, T K .J .1 a' . fr: lk mimi MFI' l l 7 ya. c fill M wk
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Page 454 text:
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wif' L l.. sw. wif- - 1 rrtr rs A9 4 Fi 'Q Vu liz: 1 - 41 . , J, ni' 1 .1 I 1 5. ig., 'V -1 A 1 rf 1 -i, -' Wj: sw gif A ' 1 , ,gi rf r 1 1 li q L 1 ,L v 1 lf , f 4, N 1 It I, 'J -, , . .K ff . s , he 3 1 ll l l I l 1 1 U Cl L. '11 'F' 1 v L '1 i - I W. 15.9, N mtg, A:'j,Q-jgf 75,1 - .' if- 'H - ' .2 ., elf, '.,, A - Louise Turley, Janet Wade, Julia Johnson, Ka- ron Merrill, and Edna Anderson snuggle under .'S'?',Q . ' vwg . O' HN .y it 5 fs ,A5'N.!r- - Y N 'Rl 1 T7 4 1 1' il.- 1 tv -y,5.,.,. ll' x A , t rt,,,, A-xg' NX fm- 1-P- 'U sl 1l,l'fMiX ,S lg Z was X X 1 Xxx. I 6 X e.'3i'XlQ N Q4 'Q vllyx' f' vii A tix i 1 v Ak!-QW ,um 54 l lr 4 Q1 Y? ,,.1.,4, A ' U ' 5 fix xx il N QE Xxxll 1 K will Xsvwx 'X X Xi I .J s blankets to keep warm early on the morning I of January 12. 9 9 Forum Assembly - Vance Packard W 12, 23-25 Second Semester Registration 6 7 8 16-18, 21 Semester Finals 22 AS-AMS-AWS Officers Installation 28 Second Semester Classes Resume I9 J' m 7- aa 7'-1: J' 1 .2 3 If -I 1 rs.. , , a l l -. f--- c am '77 .3-ff' '76 -27 9 so 31 ON THE MORNING OF JANUARY 12, hud- dled bundles ot anticipation waited com- l tortably for pre-registration. By 8:00 a.m. lthe scheduled time for doors to open! more than a thousand students were hi- bernating in front of the cafeteria, over tires and under blankets. The apparent appeal of receiving an early registration number caused the early morning camp-out. Bundled groups close- ly resembled the wearied armies of Han- nibal camped at the base ot the Alps. January also ushered in other interest- ing campus events. Vance Packard, the second speaker in the Assembly Forum Series, visited the campus. AS, AWS, and AMS held their second semester installa- tion dinner. Some Phi Chi C?l members were also there at 5 a.m. for registra- tion.
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Page 456 text:
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ABOUT THE PLAY: The Adding Machine was the first in Phoenix College's experimental series of plays. The purpose of Experiment was to provide students and playgoers with new plays, or new methods of produc- tion for older plays, and new ideas in theatrical presen- tation. In The Adding Machine, Elmer Rice has exposed the minds and souls of people. With withering insight he has laid bare the starved and bitter littleness and the huge universality of Mr. Zero's character, the slave type, that from eternity to eternity expresses the futility and the tragedy of the mediocre spirit. Mr. Zero is a pathetic figure symbolic of one social or character level. Nagged by his equally pathetic wife, he kills his boss because he was fired from a iob he held for 25 years. His conviction at the trial, his iourney through paradise, his meeting with odd philosophical characters, and his return to earth all proiect a social belief which goes to make him a generalized failure. Mr. Zero is the Everyman of any age, descend- ant of the apes, Egyptian pyramid builder, Roman galley slave, Medieval fief, and now unemployed bookkeeper, as a result of the In- dustrial Revolution. He is soon to return again to operate a super-hyper adding machine in the automated tomorrow. THE ADDING MACHINE Directed by Mr. John Paul Stage Manager and Assistant to the Director - Jo Ann Yeo Assistant Stage Manager - Roger Miller Production Manager - Bob Johnson Mr. Zero ........................................................................ Lewis Schaflander Mrs. Zero ............................................... ............................ J udy Shogren Daisy Diana Dorothea Devore .... ....... C arol Norton The Boss ..................................... ......... C huck Smith Mr. One ................................. ......... S pyros Petros Mrs. One ..... ...... A nn Valenzuela Mr. Two ...... ................. L arry Lift Mrs. Two ..... ....... P eggy Thurston Mr. Three ....... ......... T om Warner Mrs. Three ..... ..,.. G izelle Beke Mr. Four ....... ...... R oger Miller Mrs. Four ...... ..... J o Ann Yeo Mr. Five ........ ....... D an Thiehoff Mrs. Five ....... ....... D iane Froese Mr. Six ....... .... W arren Katzke Mrs. Six ,.,,,,,,, ..... S haron Soule Policeman ......... .... B ob Johnson Judy O'Grady ,,,,,, ........ D onna Gill Young Man .,.,,,, ...... T om Warner Shrdlu ,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,, ......... A l Gibbons A Head ,,,,.,.,,.,,,,,,,,,, ........ S pyros Petros Lieutenant Charles .... ..... D ennis Turner Joe ,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ..... D an Tl'llel'l0ff l wonder what it's like to be really kissed, Daisy dreams as Zero predicts: I'll bet he'll give me a raise now that I've worked for 25 years. Oblivious of the other's inner self, each works on at his monotonous bookkeeping.
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