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Page 18 text:
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IA snackj gets to be a ritual, something you can look forward to when you go to class. Janet Thomas Hunger julie Scheunemann samples April Rowe's favorite ice cream during a study break at Braum's with Terry Manuel. Photo by Teresa n d Mathis. Look Bakery Allen Chapman Student Ac. tivity Center, TU's newest at- traction, is in tune with the needs of the student body, of- fering a variety of sweets to please any palate. Between classes, students congregate there to indulge study habits, social habits and sweet tooth habits. Says Maria Guihn, Since I moved off campus, I spend all my time between classes in ACAC eating and do- ing homework. The bakery, an already tried and true success, offered a wide selection of reasonably priced goodies. The TCBY frozen yo- gurt cart, new to the campus, was always filled with many fla- vors for students to enjoy. Rice crispy treats are by far the favorite in the bakery, says assistant director of Allen Chapman Activities Center, Boyd jones. The runner-up would have to be the MRM cookies. ACAC personnel understand students often suffer from a sweet tooth attack. 'Tm stuck in here every Thursday afternoon doing Ma- cIntosh demonstrations, says student Greg Peters, I can al- ways sneak off to the bakery for a few minutes and get a cookie to help me get through the afternoon. Through its various services, ACAC always was there to see this need satished. The students who gathered there to talk or study were usually seen munch- ing something good. Wendy Thomas A care package from home via the ACAC bakery takes the form of a birthday cake for Chris Hilberth. Photo by jay Strother. -N - XLNFS .a tacit:
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Page 17 text:
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MW KKG Rush Chairman Betsy Crocker reads off the list of new pledges to Kappa Kappa Gamma members Lezlie Wewers, jackie Gaylord, Heather Latta, Anne Davis, Kris Cutler, Noemi Galang, Pam Pankratz, Elaine Sanders, Holly Brower, julie Nilsson,janine Atterberry, and Kelly Hemmert. Photos by Brad Hoffman Lisa Mitchell and Karen Haefner share a sisterly smile while Ann Hayes and Ann Phelp cheer in the background. Rushed ,thaw
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Page 19 text:
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When Hunger Strikes is everyone knows, a sweet th is an urgent matter, not easily Jred, with no conception of ez a dilemma Wendy Shaffer is iliar with when she says, Ice .m, 24-hours a day! 'U students will go to any gth to satisfy it. Some head to ,1m's while visions of sundaes ce in their heads. Perhaps the of of collective unconscious in the surprise of seeing several if TU students there with the e idea. Other more adventur- students head to Tippin's at and Memorial for a piece of k bottom or French silk pie. It would be impossible for some people to imagine sitting through a lecture without their favorite can- dy. Forjanet Thomas, who says her favorite food is sugar, particularly Snickers bars, a treat gets to be a ritual, something you can look for- ward to when you go to class. The more yuppy consumer finds his way to the candy counter to in- dulge in jelly belly candies of un- expected flavors such as pina co- lada. Those with aggresive tenden- cies prefer the rubber-confection- ary taste of gummy bears, always decapitating them before ingesting. The reasons used to justify this sweet tooth are as diverse as the ways it is satisfied. Sweets pro- vide a reward for a job well done and a consolation when things aren't so good. Sometimes they're even lunch. The best kind of sweets, though, are those from home. Students ea- gerly await the arrival of care pack- ages with all your favorites from home. If word leaks out, you are expected to share your good for- tune. Maybe, if you are lucky, your roommate will share his or her next package from home with you, too. Wendy Thomas 0906 Dana Bradford offers a selection of The Country's Best Yogurt to Tracie Evans. Photo by Teresa Mathis. Hunger
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