GRADUATION Seniors face many changes at graduation time BOXES and suitcases, waiting to be hauled home to dozens of slates, litter the hall of girls' dorm near the end of the year. CHATTING on the sidewalk, faculty members and seniors wait for the presentation of diplomas in the Administration Building. Graduation is a time of change. It is a time to weep and a time to rejoice. It is a time to be sad over memories to be tucked away into a scrapbook. A final hand shake with a favorite roommate, that l ast club banquet, Dr. Ganus' farewell speech in chapel, a walk past the lil y pond and a package of potato chips from th e Student Center before a long drive away from four years - all form a procession into the future. It is a time to rejoice - a ti me to carry into the future the gains of four years' work and play. It brings a time to stand alone, independent, to achieve - children learning in Wyoming, discoveries made in physics labs, dollars earned, victory in Viet Nam ... It welcomes a time to live - for each individual to find life for himself. Two hundred graduates take with them into the future a part of the past. 249
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