;;::.ETING THE ~ • • • • • • Looki ng back on this year , there are many things we will forget . A yearbook tries to recall some of the most outstanding events of the year . However, the days themselves will blurr , along with many of the small happenings that made up the bulk of our weeks . Many of the everyday occurrences around which our favorite memories are entwined will never be recorded . CIRCLE • GmlNG T TOGETHER • A TIME FOR HUSTLING • BE ::t Z o .... ::t Our year was not composed of one big Spring Sing or a continual Homecoming. These are the exceptions to the ordinary and sometimes they are the most disappointing. To label a collection of only the outstanding events " student life" is inaccurate. Of course, it is equally impossible for a yearbook to report all , or even most , of the typical. After all .. " A lot can happen in a day Today is Monday, October 24th. Predicted to be a warm day in the mid-70's, it is Veterans' Day and the birthday of Dr. Olree's secretary, Terry Ryan. In a sense, it is a replica of yesterday and a pattern for tomorrow. But things will happen that will make today an origi nal. As the incipient rays of light appear, the day has already begun for many. At 5:00, there is a change in shifts at the Heritage switchboard. The breakfast cooks are going to work . Across campus in Grad Dorm, Danny Cox, who has been out of town for the weekend , shuts off his alarm clock for fifteen minutes of dozing; Sylvia Tuggle, in Dykes' House, routinely blow dries her hair; Doug Hudson, wishing to grow a beard , shaves off last night' s stubble; and a solitary jogger faithfully makes the rounds at College Park. The circle has begun. m ~ Z t: :t m ~ ~ I • • • • • § ~ HUSTLING to morning classes, students on the patterned sidewalks make an interesting ,;ght as seen from the top floor of the Olen Hendrix Building. YOAr GROOVES • :; .... NG IT EASY 0 One Day. 17
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