1967-1968 Yearbook

STUDENTS IN DORMS Night in dorms brings chores, relaxation, study After 10 p.m. has separated the sexes, both retire to a more informal way of life in the dorms. School clothes rapidly give way to shorts and robes. For boys dorm life brings the unfamiliar chores of sweeping and making beds. For both boys and girls there is time for relaxing in front of the television. During special events the color set in the New Boys' Dorm attracts large crowds that fill the chairs in front of the set and then the space behind the chairs and under the chairs. In the spring, residents of the New Girls' Dorm made a nightly routine of calisthenics in the hall. For some the atmosphere is ideal for study. In the dorm it's done on the floor or bed without the distractions of having a desk, teacher and no stereo. Although the sexes are separated at 10 p.m., communication continues. Telephones in both boys' and girls' dorms are constantly busy until well past midnight. HANABA MUNN studies books and class notes on the floor in the American Heritage Center which housed -girls in the foil. GIRLS in New Dorm do Women Marine exercises shortly before meeting traditional 10 p.m. date with becoming pumpkins. 237

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