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YOUR 1988—89 BASKETBALL
· SCHEDULES AND
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 5_i ,.RES,DENT Make Your World 1n Ours _ {
  I kG Ir *62 _ _ . . . l E
 5; Octoulfgvrili UK IS G big place, even when you consider |ust The Lexington l IE
  FRE$'DENT·ELE€T campus, but thaT's an advantage in choice that leads you to a niche y}
jg  B'“°;O2‘i:;r 7l of your own . . . Getting In, Getting On with College!7  
T Q  TREASURER The enrollment process, scholarships; where you live and where  
Y  M8 JOB T- MOM '88 you eat, what there is to do as a student at UK . . . Choices! T3 ‘ fl
 Q  SQQSLTIQY From scientific labs to concert halls, from supercomputer to primitive  
 i Isy Bmmtreid *48 art, from LKD fun days to United Way campaigns, students find a it
  E l8¤i¤9*<>¤ new world of choices here . . . Students Today, Alumni V  
 T AS°O§|/QEQEQTAFFT Tomorrow! T6 Nine students share a bit of reflection about their ;;
 l  my Brumtretd *48 individual experience at UK.  
  ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR jl
 . Be V: C. Whitaker '58    
_ ; EDITOR , lt
  liz itowarcl Demoran     Q  
 »  /68 . . . if
 I 4ssr. EDITOR Doris Wilkinson '58, Dan Fulks and Larry Walsh are three represen— I 2 "
  *”YJ°l”’”5°" '86 tatives of faculty committed to undergraduate teaching. l
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  B 8T:F;=_ There’s More than One Way l
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  MSO §;°'lf;fd Gone are the clays when education only took place Inside the I 2 y
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  Brenda Daugherty l [ ;;
  Ruby Hardin 2  
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Be tvv. Nelson *52   Beat I l  
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Q Ileonidas Bachas, an assistant professor "Because an enzyme is a biocatalyst, ology, structural engineering, learning The
  , of analytical chemistry at UK, has re- you can get a very sensitive technique styles, biotechnology, foreign poht-t·_ ,;,.,1,
I reiverl a $96,501 rrant from the Nation- because ou am lif the si nal,” he environmental health and s ace exriit). K »
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1 i al Institute of Health to study methods said. ration. mm
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:, of using enzymes and antibodies to Bachas hopes to develop a method of Most of the lecturers are from I K, {JW,
  , measure hormones and vitamins. attaching one vitamin per enzyme, but several come from throughout the `[
    'l`he grant will be extended for five which will improve the procedure’s nation. mp
ii ; years to cover much of the 15504,122 “‘detectionlimits.” "Every program is different,°’ I?ur» mn
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fj cost of the protect. Practical applications of such a tech- ley said. "We cross many discipline. ’ {N S‘
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t; _ diagnosis and biotechnology. "They’re excited," she saidoi the Shgp
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  _ , il;. · UK/IBM EXCEL Program back to school. {
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    , A Sgygd   the Univgygity Of Kentucky SE1[lSI`3C[lO1'l. BLM “W€’I`€ still I`€flHlfl ·_ ll.   `
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if   PIP"` wfnmg {O UK [WO Ycqfs agot award from the Association of Continu-   V- tot
ii   . B‘“h‘l'” he °OmI“‘t°il "'}"l}y}'i"l fc} ing Higher Education duringa regional A $10,000 scholarship endowmet at nrt
  . Tfdff I on ffimpoum *_ O MO Oglm meeting injackson, Miss., April 29. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and Yiilt stan
if i j , _ lmf)("iiml(’°—hm“ {iw Slml)lc‘ such as UK officials presented the plaque to University in Blacksburg, Va., has one
it V { f , l i fmmsilmil {md S°°hu1“’_ to _thC more Kailash _]oshi, site general manager of been named in honor of Univcrsi   0 "
if i Q (msi) i X mlil;()f;` ° dm l u‘l_T{lnl:' I _ IBM Lexington, last May 6 in the Car- Kentucky President David P. Roseiw. uaw
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Zi; 1 . [U in`: Lila;     Ii·;‘:'?(tl\>";`(i`;igtvwlifx nahan Conference Center. Roselle, who was provost at Vilr ima Sv. il
if _ I ‘ _‘ ‘ · ‘ ` fa h_ h The presentation concluded the Tech for four years before comu- to tow
‘_ ~ ““f“‘·_ ‘"”5"“ "“"“'"°;}SS‘}l*   '“ week-long distinguished lecturer series. UK, gave the 1nstitute’s 1988 · fm- "ff
;Il( ilbllllbl I Il vt\IIlU;lIl}[ Uh \I[c1H]ID O? Ltwc WcI.€   that this pI.OgI.an,l got Ingnccrnent address Saturday,     \,`.;l.>.
I i l°I'lmm'   ‘} Pdmpf W I ( Mmmm O recognition? said _]an Hurley, UK`s More than 20,000 persons atte-.— in Mi t
tw y` ill wits. uriissuc. Thc hrst EXCBL program was oi- c1uc1rng3,80O undergraduates. MM
l As part ot the procedure vitamins or ~ - · .
tl _ ‘ ` f€I`€Cl l1'1 S€ptCI11b€I` 1985. SIHCC that The Scholarship endowment l']2·.ll€(  Cllfs
tl_ t hormones are attached to enzyme mole- time (WO [O Your pmgmms have been for thc UK president will give 3 gl. ,,,1,,
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~ in ·‘ _      ul? H mln nu] W ll; 1 The purpose is to broaden awareness $600 a year-_ tht I
_ ` UM ) °> l$5$‘H° lu? to ° Ufumm [1* of academic issues and research and to
amount ot vitamin in the sample. kindlc ,m cmhuqhsm {Or learning
  [ IBM selects about 50 employees to `
ii ‘   ‘ participate in each series. This week’s
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Curriculum Clusters    ‘  
learning The University has received a $90,954 University Studies incorporates five   ‘ ’ ‘*v_>2v: T; t-4;. §{_§}#,};;"Q' - i  
policy. grant from the National Endowment for areas: basic skills (mathematics and for- · . .. ‘i °’,ii,?___i_            
e exg>lo— the Humanities to aid in the develop- eign language skills); inference and $""' 5   ig; "` i V_'•_»*_ Q_   
ment of UK’s new University Studies communicative skills (calculus or logic ·: ·ii  iz;]   v .· l  `  
im VK, l’t»1>gram. plus statistics, university writing re- _ ,___e ._’, 5 js `· - `     l J   
1out the The University Studies Program is a quirement and oral communications); fw * _ e- W- 1   ·   _'_‘$!§" ,  
redesigned undergraduate core currieu- disciplinary requirements (natural sci- §;     ‘ `_ ` ·~ · _;E ,  i ;
fi {flair lu;n which went into effect with the ences, social sciences and humanities); " » \ " Y .  
>li¤<"· ii frtshman class entering this fall. The cross-disciplinary requirement (a pair of ‘ ` ’  ; it
`l<- nt—.v curriculum emphasizes relation- complementary courses), and the cross- in    
3l~0l tht ships between diverse academic special- cultural requirement, dealing with the it ¥  
iii \‘~ "tc tits to provide a broader-based liberal Third World or with a non-Western I   . t  
’€Y1 wilt ars education. civilization. -· N   i I  ~  
` The NEH grant funds a 13-month The effectiveness of the cluster con-   __ e,  i` i  
21001* Ul strdy of"clustered" courses which be- cept will be evaluated in May 1989   €¤   -_,; ·lf—?? A · gi
PC' fm gm May 9 with a three-week seminar when the humanities professors will re- S  
Hill]? 1   lb. UK humanities faculty to aid profes- convene to examine the results in a The key eleinenl in predicting noiscy  
21UOl *-if sti-s in defining the relationships be- 4-day evaluation session, says Swift. Scybcrt explains, is predicting ine  
i\\·¢€¤ €&€h 0th€1"iS €0UI`$€S- amount and type of vibration. Noise is  
ClUSt€T €0UTS€S €1T1Ph&$iZ€ th€ I`€l3‘ also affected by the size and shape of the >l
p titinships in such varied-yet-related Quiet Down, Pleqse innenine  
·— V- cotrses as medieval civilization and   "Fny [he png; l() years, engineers il
vmct at m· dieval art, yielding a broader und€1‘· Can helicopters be made quieter? UK have been able to predict vibration, but  
and YLIIC stgnding ofhow various studies €l‘1h3f1C€ engineering professor Andrew Seybert they haven't been able to go that next E
Va., flew Unc another. will try to find out, working under a step to predict noise. lt’s a very broad, .
vCf$l   0 l`Th€ goal is to U¤il)’ the U¤dCI`§¥`&d‘ new $69,895 grant from NASA. complicated problem," he said. i
{0St‘l‘·»`· U?’*` l€€U`¤l¤§ CXPCVWUCCW $2*YS LOWS Seybert, who specializes in acoustics- Certain noises are more objectionable  
Vit" illlil S"· 'fb 21 PYOICSSOY Oli Classics and dim- related research, will not be designing a than others, he says. Sounds with a lot i
0mit·» W W Of [bf? U¤lV€V$l[Y S[Udl€$ PI`O§’¥i?im~ new helicopter. Rather, he’s working of tonal content tend to be more annoy- l
*88 ‘ "“` Willis Pam Oli U“iVCf$lfY Sfudlcs is Onc on computer models that will help ing, and sounds near 4,000 hertz are at if
Ma) fl- “'?l>' Of hclping Sfudmqts Obtain a broad` designers predict the amount of noise the frequency at which the human ear is  
attc-izlct er and innye eehercnt undwstandlng Of generated by helicopter gearboxes. most sensitive. Good design, he says,  
hell ll ll¥<‘lY` €UlU11`¤l h€¥`lmgC·H Among the benefits of a quieter heli- would reduce or eliminate these sounds. l  
um. fill "Th€ NEH Study Of €lU$t€Y €0UYS€$ enpter drivetrain would be easier com- A recent advertisement proclaims ·
rsone- in in the hum&¤itl€$ is 3 Stmng begin' munications in the cockpit, he says. " . i . the end ofthe noisy dishwash-  
ttiig," says Swift. "Over time, we hope Seyberys i—eseni~eli is part nin eeniin- er." Seybert says manufacturers of con- -  
it n;·.ttet  tzltntey eenrses will bg developed in the ning ellrnn tn (levelen eeninniei ineelels sumcr products are interested in noise  
V6 3 ._’ir tizrxiral sciences, social sciences and in in enable inelnslyinl designers ie mnke reduction, in part because quieter ma- |  
xs stta len  ztrtgts which combine the sciences and noise reelneiinn nn integral peri el` ehineg are often pepeeiveei ag being ni` ,  
th< humanitics.” the design process—whether they are lJ€lt€1`qUi1lity.  _  
designing aircraft or household ap-    
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"The whole idea of engineering ‘ l
design is to predict how well a machine I . i-
will perform, before it’s even built. But l  .  
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  i VVe live in the information age, where He said his article looks at various “l was primarily interested in lm. i
  1 words such as communications, net- communication problems that have swering two research questions,"jttlm.
  I \,\'()l`l(ll\g 2l[](l (`()|']1I)UiLTI"llI'\l{(Y(l Zl.I`C l)21I']' Ol`[CI'] HCC()YT]pZ1I']l€(.l COlOI']lZZltlOn, such as SOI] Says. éélillrst, arc Older adults lll()1`1·
; 1 died about on a daily basis. conquerors’ inability to speak and likely than younger adults to make t;tt1-
  1 ()llit·ials at the University ol` Pennsyl- understand the indigenous language. tious decisions? Second, are older arlttlts 
1i·   vania and ()xlord University Press, as "It’s a difierent kind ol assignment more likely than younger adults tt,
11   well as ltuntlrt-tls ol` international schol— because the artiele’s length is deter- employ strategies and experienrt- tt,
1i 1   ars, have developed a relerence set that mined by (the emphasis placed on) the compensate for possible informztxltm 
ij   rctlects this locus on communications. subject,`” Betts said. processing declines? The popular on-
il   'l`ltt· l`our—volumt~ "Irtternational ception is that when we get to age ty; til
    l·Znt·yt·lopt-tlia ol` (Zomtnunications," so our memory starts failing anti its 
  wltirlt was dui- out in _]uly, attempts to. TO BUY Oi- NO·|·1·O BUY? harder to make. decisions-—that xw alte-
il` (`Ollll)l`(`ll(`USl\'('ly (`()VCI` Zlll 2lSl)(`C[S ol   COITIB ITIOYC cautious OI`CODSCl`V21[1\'<` i i
  cotnntunication throughout the world. Aiici. C2ii.€1~u11y Considering piimhkisc The results ofithe stuidy showed that
  _ Raymond Betts, director ol the pricci Siyiiiigi [uci economy, resale Vu1_ there was no dtilerence in total dccisiott
  Univt·rstty ol` Kt·ntut·ky’s Honors Pro- uci miiimcmmcc cost, riding COm1~Oi.i7 time between the two age groups. liu
  · grillll, (`(lIlIl`ll)llI(‘(l ()I](` ol` lhl` (‘D('yCl()1)(?’ roolrlincss and handling, [hc 65_yC2u,._   yOl.lI’lgCI` adults Llscd twice HS ltlllfl
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1 t·x·erytliing lroin speech and non—verbal miw Vciiiiimi decision. This sample, Johnson stys,   
language to cinematography and citi- wiiyiimlp shows that the older participants ttcrt   
ii All1hl)tll](lltl(ll(). ttwciii ii wumti. like ii mighi be morgqglhcientideeis1on—mal\ets. i ii 1
1* 1 A   the name oi` a car, and we wanted to C §)l€l€I_gm_uP tcndcd to u“° ""l‘*‘   
1l _       make thisitask as realistic as possible," Wcifjll kéhrfummoni bllh  mi"   
    i         says l\/Iiitzi johnson, UK post—doctoral  ih fC mb   Gin  ual-‘;°t°il§}l` 11 —
1; t 1 1 li       lellow in the Department of Behavioral °‘1° LM, PIB? as? PULV Or _°>"""l°°
11 1 ‘   g     gficiicci and then eliminating some ol the tar. 
E1   = \     ln the l`all ol` 1987, Dr. johnson and On that i°aSlS· The YO““%“Y group l lm] 
  i ‘   { · i 1  T A research assistant l\/[ary Pietrukowicz Tom Often QITPIOYCFI Fm i‘““a_’“l‘ VV`' lm
isi . 1 —$»e•__€’ is  , » · , amttmmtt it may ol` mcmmy (ma mts Stratcsvt ¢><¤m¤¤1¤s@ll Ol ltr ls 
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  ` ’ »   unteers who Incl the age and health Cllmmmc thOS€ ¤h¤r¤¤t¢¤S¤¢S dill: mi 
    ‘ · _ g requirements lor the study. These re- u“l‘T‘P_°·Y$““‘ and narrow [lm {Wil O 
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ii `1 i J i fl to approximate the educational level _JOBUSOU>dJlj1StIjnCld€maHY· YVai’i`fmil)
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i-   which was conceived in 1982. Hisiarti- 100 Clusscs at UK' Sh$.uSc`   ,1
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  I I   IT'S TRUE. THE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY IS A BIG PLACE."23,000 STUDENTS, 5,400 FACULTY MEMBEP   I  YO,
        N EARLY 150 BUILDINGS, THE EIGHTH LARGEST POLICE FORCE IN THE STAIE. Bm ALONG WITH ITS SIQL; E    
      COMES SOME VERY IMPORTANT ADVANTAGESMA FACULTY OF WHICH 98 PERCENT HAVE THE FHGHE;·     II  
  I I   DEGREE OF CERTIFICATION POSSIBLE IN THEIR FIELD, A STUDENT TEACHER RATIO OF 15 TO 1, CHI ,.    
  LENGING CLASSM/{I ES WITH AN AVERAGE ACT SCORE ABOVE 22, LIBRARIES WITH A TOTAL COLLI*     N II`;
  · I I TION OF OVER TWO MILLION ITEMS. I IT IS BECAUSE OF ITS SIZE STUDENTS CAN FIND A WORI 1)      
II I I I OF THEIR OWN HERE. IT DOESN’T TAKE LONG FOR MOST STUDENTS TO MASTER THE LEXINGTCL I    
I I CAMPUS. DORMITORIES AND CREEK ORGANIZATIONS CAN PROVIDE A FOUNDATTON FOR FRIEN 2-      
II   SHIPS THAT EXTEND FOR YEARS BEYOND THE CAMPUS EXPERIENCE. CLASSMAT ES BECOME STU} FY      
II _   BUDDIES. EACH YEAR COLLEGIANS CROSS PATHS WITH FAMILIAR FACES, AND, YES, PROFESSORS AI E    
      APPROACHABLE! I UK, TOO, IS DOING BETTER WITH THE DELIVERY OF STUDENT SERVICES.   .¤I    
  I I ON -LIN E, COMPUTERIZED PROCESS OF REGISTERING FOR CLASSES JUST BEGAN. MORE AND BETT3. I      
  PUBLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE TO HELP STUDENTS TI—IROUGH THE ADMITTANCE PROCEDURES AF . D      
IY ACADEMIC REOUIREMENTS. CAREFUL READING AND THE WILLINGNESS TO ASK FOR HELP MAI- E    
  I THINGS WORK. THE BUREAUCRACY IS SUR\/IVABLE! I HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS, AND EVEN 7T I    
  I AND BTH GRADERS, CAN START NOW TO TAKE THE SURPRISE OUT OF THE COLLEGIATE EXPERIENCE    
    AT UK. HIGH SCHOOL COUNSELORS SHOULD HAVE A BOOKLET ENTITLED, PLANNING FOR UIG°ERIENCE AT YOURALMA MPCTER. '    ff 
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  Getting In, Getting On 3dmlSSl0f1.iO UK. Also, some programs information about residence halls along l V  
p_   have application procedures and with a housing contract and application.  
Et by   Your daughter, Susan, has finally deadlines which difier from those for Housing rates include utilities, local -  
_ __ 2_   tlwcided on the college she wants to general University requirements. Read telephone service, basic cable television . 5
DL-; E  4 amend, and itls UK. That’s great! the University catalog carefully! service, and furniture. All residence l
   Y Bait, what do you do now? What does j / halls are stalled by well—trained hall ‘ l
lE`· f J sl e do? Susan   ffgen aocgibtgd Naw · · · directors and resident advisers and 24- 5 .  
T  Assuming that you are financially fhé advzsmg c0?2f6f€71c€. hour security is provided. {
{20   (  prepared, you don`t have to do All ¤€W fl"€Sl1m€¤ 21DCl IF21¤Sl`CF Students living in the residence halls  
  anything. Yet. $iUd€mS MC F€qUl1`€Cl to P1Ii€¤llege Test (ACT) by December of Dllfmg llw C0¤f€¤`€¤C€, Susan will guarantee a housing assignment nor i  
' i )` é  lv r senior year in high school in order m€€i With Pm 3€¤€l€ml€ 2i€lVl$0T- ¥`€§l$I€¥` affect admission to UK. >`
    to ggt ggngidgrgtign by [hq; priority fOI‘ Cl2lSS€S 3I'lCl 2lSl< all ofthe quCS[lOl”lS la
  YY   gp \·Cp[2)_nCC d21[c_ I-Icy   SCh()Ol Sl]C W2lI'l[S to ZlSl( HbOLl[ [TIC CHITIPLIS 21HCl          
at Q   Q-glidzmcc Cmmsclm- Wil] havc AQT what to expect from University life. High School Grudgpoim Average A  
Alt l;   ri gistration forms, information about r · 2_002_49 2‘50_2_gg 3_00_3_4s 3_50_4_00 _ E
if  _ rt gistration deadlines, test dates and l/l/(1676 wzl! she [ZOB!) 34 I
 _\]   lwations. The University reserves the right to r
 - VVhen she fills out the ACT Student require freshmen students to live in _ 33 j  
Tl tt  Q l’ ohle Report and checks UK as her University residence halls if space is 32
g li. st college choice, Susan has available. But, during the past few 31 7  
(Ig:)  , zi tomatically made application to the years there has not been enough space 30 {_
  L~~iiversity. The ACT results are for everyone applying. If Susan wants 29 _ il
A}     lhrwarded to the Undergraduate to live in a residence hall she should 28 '  
ig A lmissions Oflice and no other submit the housing application prior to 27  
7.].; I   application is necessary. the time she applies for admission to US 26 V ";
’   She can also apply to UK by the University!   25 ~  
\](_p   Sllbmitting a traditional application Application and acceptance to the EE 24 s  
~ ·—· 4   ul ing with her high school transcript. University and application and   23  
y.  _ AVYT results must also be sent to the acceptance for University housing are   22 I  
U) ‘ l  llidergraduate Admissions Ofiicc. two separate processes.  
  What are Susan’s chances for By applying for housing early (before 21 E
*lCl{,   ui ceptance? She needs to know this: Christmas) Susan may be reasonably 20  
  freshman admission to UK is based on sure that something will be available Z lg l ~ gl
QC-L   tlwec things; high school grades, ACT when she enters school in the fall. Ig T8 °  
  rtisults, and successful completion ofthe She should also indicate on her ACT SE 17 I  
A, sl   l`<<]L1lI`€Cl pre-college curriculum. Student Profile that she would like to Og ‘ 16  
  il ogether, they should predict the live in University h0using—if she is gg, 15 l  
D. ip   probability of earning at least a "C" planning to apply for admission   14 4  
  gi ade-point average the freshman year. through Enter—ACT. Students may also EU 13 .  
ENT   Remember, too, that certain- · indicate the need for University 12    
’   wllcges, and some programs within housing on regular application for H    
R I   wllegcs, have admission standards and admission. ln either case, each 2.(X)—2.49 2.50-2.99 3.00-3.49 3.504.00 l    
‘   witeria higher than those for general applicant will receive more complete High School Grade-Point Average    
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II I I _eIIII.mI IUHIIII. I0 IIIIIIII wI`{]II/ud}, _ _ I tAC[l\'l[lCS—lY1(I`iiITlLlI`Zll soltball, lootball, Memorial Col1seum on Monday, (tht- 1 IIIIIII
It I l IIII_I,I, III.I, IWII IIIIIIW IhI.I, ll IIIIII, III xolltyball, basketball, and held days. tieket olhee opens at 8 a.m.), lot thtn   IIIIIICIII
  I I III) II- IIII_I, WIIIII III IIIIIIII IIIgI,IhI,I1_ l.·II.SI Help is usually needed inorganizmg own tickets. Or, they can wait until   IIIIIIIIII
II* I I_III,II gm IIIIISI I.I,IIIII,SI du, IIIIICI. IIS II these and other events, so 11 Susan and/ Tuesday when the guest tickets go on   IIIII IIIII
  l I,IIIIIIIIIIIIII,I IIIIII SIIIIIIIII IIIIIII or _]udy have a spet:1alItalent or hobby sale. Guest tiekets are $$15 lor stadium   IIIIIIC II
  l IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIS IIIIISI III.I.II.I, III dw SIIIIII. to share, the opportunity is there lor seats, and $10 lor zone seats.   ` IIVIIC
  I envelope. They should get their room tlwm to makc lhclr mark- Basketball tickets usually go on salt-   IIIII IS IA
42 1 l assigntnents between lunc and z\ueIust. Wl · · Sunday Hf Memorial COliS€um. The   i
2 ,1 · . 1 za! z the reszdence hall; are ull? 1 1 t. 1111fl Sul
l- l l Susan and ludv each will be A II {OI. U . .I II   . Cl00i`$ OP€1'1 Bil 12 NOON, but lll0 l1¤CS   Whc
1 , . ‘ z s non- niversi OUS1 r 11 - 1 1  
l, provntletl with tt single hed and nnattress II II II II D II ISI (I Y I OII?& R b¢g1¤t<>f<>rml<>¤g l>¢i<>r¢1h¤¤1 and   III . SILII
1 . ’t‘ 2 IC C21 0 u en ‘ ", -   1
II wuli pad, desk, desk lamp, desk chair, B It Su I I. II ISI} LC often wrap around the Coliseum.   III IIIICII
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