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Page 25 text:
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ACTIVITIES A psychology professor said, One of the most important parts of a college education is learning how to live.” Text-book info is just the first step to a happy and successful life. Learning to live with people is an art in itself, and it is towards this end that the University sponsors a host of extra-curricular activities. There is no reason for a U-M student becoming a recluse. Even those who harbor the most serious of life’s goals may find relaxation through such mediums as the band, student publications and the student association. Many a top-notch journalist or politician got his start through college channels. And for those who are more military-minded, tin Air Force and Army ROTC provide an escape from book drudgery as well as preparation for the future. Even the casual coke date in the slop shop is a lesson in the give and take of a well-rounded life. Some of it is hard work, like poring over the last forms of Hurricane copy at two in the morning, or sweating out the heat of a political campaign, but it's worth it. It's those extra-curricular activities that students remember long after the A in English or Philosophy is forgotten. And it's the success in these fields that helps determine those students whose names appear in the coveted “Who’s Who in American Universities and Colleges.' This is living! ◄ THE LIGHTS GO DOWN in the Orange Bowl and the U-M’s Band of the Hour takos the field to present precision drills. 23
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Page 26 text:
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JACK BOHLEN. president KATHERINE HUGHES, secretary GLORIA DITTUS. treasurer WALLY LEVINE, vice president SA Takes Step Forward, Forms Prexy’s Council m The student association is the campus version of po liliral supervision in the mock style of national democracy. It is fur more than a student hod) figurehead. Its influence touches every organization on campus and its wide scope ranges from |iencil sharpeners to the President’s council. Perhaps the biggest accomplishment of this governing hod) which follows the age-old principle, of the students, by the students and for the students- was the formation of the President’s council. Appointed representatives of the student body met regularly with Pr. Bowman F. Ashe. I -M president, in informal discussions of current campus problems. Council members appointed by the Senate were Jack Bolden, SA president; Jerry Grccnlierg, IFC president; Shirley Dunlop. Panhcllcnic head; Fred Berlow, Inter-Club council president: Eleanor Stnrkstcin and Wayne Winder, independents. In another venture, the SA converted Beaumont lecture hall into an authentic-looking court room, complete with witness stands and jury booths. Circuit Court Judge J. Fritz Cordon presided over a three-hour “mock trial” in which spectators, jury, defense and prosecution were all I -M students. Not to lie overlooked were the less spectacular achievements of the student association, such us the installation of much-needed pencil sharpeners in the classrooms of the Memorial building. The 30 senators, who represented the four U-M classes and law school, were directed through the year by Jack Bohlrn. SA president. Others who held top offices were Wally l.c inc, vice president; Kacky Hughes, secretary; and Gloria Dittus. treasurer. 24
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