Page 82 - YB1942
P. 82
vIe/ivi/ies t!t~wl~u!t/a1fS ... . . . for evidence of the crammed-pack schedules that every student makes out for himself, count the heads that huddle around the official bulletin boards for news and views of campus organizations, listen to the endless string of announcements that follows the ding of the Dean's bell at lunch, look into McDaniel Lounge any evening (especially a rainy or cold one) and find that a meeting is in process, or listen to the bedlam in the Gold Bug office on paste-up night when a hole inevitably appears in the dummy. College students are not satisfied with a heavy schedule of classes; they consrandy dub inro their days other interests that eat up hours of energy but contribute to their joy in college life. After a week of sorority and fraternity meetings, club meetings, deadlines and debates, the tendency of all is to inquire "why doesn't the government legislate a thirty-hour day?"