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Page 29 text:
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Marshall Crenshaw Marshall Crenshaw played to a sparsely filled Esby in September. The Red Rockers opened for Crenshaw, focusing on the better songs from their Columbia release, Good as Gold. They rocked the audience with Fanfare for Metropolis, Dreams Fade Away, and their MTV hit China. It was a brief 45 minute set, but the crowd, small as it was, loved it. Cynical Girl, Someday, Some- way, Whenever You ' re on My Mind, and There She Goes with Another Guy, were some of the more popular Crenshaw tunes. The audience clapped and cheered, but lacked the energy that is a vital element to an entertainer ' s performance and an audience ' s en- joyment. Despite the lack of people, the concert left the crowd humming the tunes they knew and liked best. The overall reaction and participation were a disappointment to all those in SAB who worked so hard to put the concert together. Marshall Crenshaw 25
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Page 28 text:
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Women in Communications - Direction for the 80 Women in Communications - Direction for the 80 ' s was the topic of a panel discussion co-sponsored by the GSC chapter of Women in Com- munications, Inc. and Colloquium in Communications in May. The panel, comprised of four professionals in the field of commu- nications, featured Dr. Lynn Martin Haskin, national president of WICI and assistant professor of journalism at Penn State — Delaware County. Other panelists were Laura Dawson, assistant director of public relations at the Children ' s Hospital of Phila- delphia; Marilyn Phister, producer of AM Philadelphia on WPVI- TV; and Don Haskin, associate edi- tor and daily columnist of the Phila- delphia Daily News. 24 Women in Communications
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Page 30 text:
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The Rat was a lot quieter than usual the evening of February 28. It was the last episode of the 1 1 year series M A S H, and all were invit- ed to the farewell party. The M A S H Bash attracted a large crowd to the Rat. Students sat drinks in hand and watched as their favorite zany characters said good- bye. At one point during the night, the crowd raised their glasses in toast to the 4077th, and very few people escaped without shedding a tear or two. The final episode of the series practically shut down the campus as people rushed home from meetings, rearranged schedules, and called in sick to work. It was worth it; afterall, many of us grew up with Hawkeye, Klinger and the gang. The series is over, but not forgot- ten. It will live on in its reruns, and someday when someone asks, What was Hawkeye ' s real name anyway? , we will smile at the fond memory of a television character who became a friend. 26 M A S H Bash
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