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Page 2 The Collegian Thursday, February 25,1965 my^& rvieedie By THALIA n neither remember nor pro- le atom and toe latest Plus ca change.. . So begins a French proverb 1 nounce, but freely translated lt Or, ln other words, despite toe power of I germicides, student government survives. Even toe Student Leaders are getting edgy over toe thlnly-veUed hostility Uiat greets each appearance of those HtUe blue closets by the Activities Booth. Student CouncU has been evicted from chambers by an art class, and Student Court has turned 'Judicial review* to 'Judicial review and review and review and review and....* Obviously, student government has either to regroup or be re¬ placed by SPEAC or General KhahnOr both. So, a complete constitutional revision is ln toe works. The docu¬ ment ls not yet complete.butoneoftoe things lt would do ls replace class officers with Student Senators, four to be elected at large from each class. The candidate who gets too most votes wUl act as class president, when necessary, desplto the logic that this job should go to toe person who gets toe LEAST votes. Supposedly this set-up should give toe class representatives some function other than compiling Tokalon or Blue Key points. However, some Student Leaders were afraid that an election at large would discriminate against minority groups, such as women, or bring ln people who reaUy didn't want toe Job after all. Whatever these suggestions were intended to mean, they brought forth toe brlUlant Idea that under the now constitution the status quo be maintained by designating toe Student Senators as: Freshman Senator-President, Freshman Senator-Vice President, Freshman Senator-Social Chalrman....and so on, ad nauseum. Plus ca change.... -World wire FSC tOO^Y SDX will meet Sigma Delta Chi, men's pro¬ fessional Journalism society, wUl discuss toe progress of a planned photo contest during a meeting at 6 PM ln Business 242. Ad-hoc committee to aid constitutional revision Thursday, February 25, 1965 The Collegian Page 3 An apparently ented Student Executive Commit¬ tee last night approved toe ap¬ pointment of an ad-hoc committee to serve as an adjunct to toe Constitutional Revision Commit- By a unanimous voice vote, toe executive committee approved the appointment of six persons to serve on toe ad-hoc study group. The purpose of toe committee will be to study and make recom¬ mendations pertaining to toe 'ad¬ ministration and toeorganlzaUon of coUege related activities out¬ side toe classroom.* Those approved were Jim Wright, Dee Mosier, Ginger Cor- dray, GaU Friesen, Gordon Rauser and John Staley. Douglas Dirks and Ernie Kin- US bombers kill 100 Congs Thousand-pound bombs drop¬ ped by U.S. B57 Jet bombers klU- ed at least 100 Viet Cong rebels ln one of six strikes in support of Vietnamese troops, Vietnamese mUltary sources reported today. New details of Wednesday at¬ tacks were reported as Lt. Gen. Nguyen Khanh flew to Hong Kong en route to 'exUe* as an observ¬ er to toe United Nations ln New York. He had been stripped of power earlier ln toe week. Khanh told newsmen he would seek U.N. support against toe Viet Cong. At a news conference he did not rule out the posslbUlty of negotiations but said lt could not occur untU toe Communists halt their pressure and the non- Communist countries support South Viet Nam. Ruby faces court Math Club members wUl hear a discussion of Paradoxes to MathemaUcs by Michael Haley, a graduate student, to Social Science 210 at 1 PM. The public Baptist Union group The Baptist Student Union group will meet tonight at 8 o'clock ln toe CoUege Religious A tape recording by BUI Law- son, a 1963 Baptist Youth World Congress delegate to Beret, Leb¬ anon, will be played. Anyone attend. Jack Ruby appeared today to Dames slate partv be headed for another court ses¬ sion to determine whether he has become insane since he shot and killed Lee Harvey Oswald 16 The Texas Court of Criminal Reds reindicted WASHINGTON (UPI)-A feder¬ al grand Jury today reindicted toe Communist Party of toe U.S.A. for falling to register as a Communist acUon organiza¬ tion controlled by toe Soviet Union. University Damos, an organi¬ zation for toe wives of college students, wUl hold a card party tonight at toe home of Mrs. John Davis, 9400 East Belmont Ave., Prospective new members arc welcome to attend. For further Information, contact Mrs. Gene Zimmerman, president, at 227- 1933. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)—The Duke of Orleans, afterwards King Louis Philippe of France, once Uved ln Kentucky .and was among toe first LoulsvUle musicians. THE GALLERY Folk Center & Coffee House Located on Olive near Palm Open Frl. & Sat. Nltes (8 p.m. -1 a.m This Week—Featuring: JOHN ADAMS 2 Shows: 9:00 & 11:00 75C cover charge Collegian Published five days a week except holidays and examina¬ tion periods by toe Fresno State CoUege Association. Mail subscriptions $8.00 a , $15.00 a year. office Business 235, telephone 222-5161, Ext. 441, 444, 448. Business office Agriculture 220, telephone 222-5161, exU 256. Editor .NORMA E.WALLACE Advertising managor...... ...»........—...... Phil Young Assistant advertising mana¬ ger...............David Gunter Sports editor... Bob McCarthy News editor....... Eva Altlntop Day managing editors........... Harley Becker, Done De- Lay, Pattye Opdyke, Jim Tucker. appointed chairmen to handle Governor Brown wUl also at- ^ty for ^ of ae ^ring nd the activities and be here rtm^ events ^ FSC. tor the inauguration and part of, Ernle jo^ey jum,,,. aaa3 the open house. president, reported that posters In other business at the meet- „,„ toformatlon about this year's ^™ _ . " „ Junior-Senior prom will go on Jay Evans, the raUy committee display today. chairman, reported that he has The idea for toe c according to student president Herm Howerton, arose with toe realization that toe present Con¬ stitutional Revision Committee would be Incapable of handling certain 'broad* areas. These areas Include such items as student representation on ad¬ ministration and faculty commit¬ tees, toe coordination of all col¬ lege agencies concerned with stu¬ dent life and the legal Implica¬ tions of a new constitution. students, appointed by Howerton but approved by student councU, two faculty members, the student president and three admlnlstra- Sharon TUly, toe PanheUenlc CouncU president, reported that toe Spring Sing, scheduled for Greek Week, has been cancelled because only one group elected to participate. BUI Bettinelll, the public rela¬ tions committee chairman, re¬ ported that an all-campus open house, originally scheduled for AprU 30 and May 1, has been can¬ celled for the latter date. •An effort wUl be made,* Bet¬ tinelll said, 'to allow as much exposure as possible of toe cam¬ pus on AprU 30. •The Inauguration of Dr. Ness,* he said, «wUl provide toe main event of activlUes planned for Friday.* California Scholarship Feder¬ ation members, toe cream of the grade point average high school student crop, wUl be personally Invited to visit FSC and view toe faculties on the day of the open THE BEARD OF AVON ■ today is that perennial favorite of English major* xH.uliir .-mini pl.-a.-er. thai px..l sport and gren William Sliakc-*|x-nr<- (or 'The Swedish Nightin is ,..\:iiiiiiif tin- iier-istHit theory that Shakespeare d, of tin- l'm-ilii-" as hi- is jocularly culled) is -1 the play •rencfts that the hi of an illitenit v all :„ Iiiim-iiiuii nf lii- time, hut h:iM-hnll. led. It used to break young Isaac's p every morning, put on uniform. i(! contest. KverylKMly has a iK-ifeell\s|ilemliil time until ,.sgllost(<irBoat)sli,mslip.iiii--,,l|nlilime-I{ieha,dllI Irowns his cousin, lint t Malmsey, This leads to n lively mi. during which everyone is killed. The little ilnc Spot lea and eerily. And urhen next thou buyest Pertonnal buyett at*>*>me new Burma Shared regular or menthol, which toak- eth ring, around any other lather. Get thee to a pharmacy! Board endorses new Cal plea The Fresno County Board of Supervisors will redraft their resolution urging toe establish¬ ment of a University of Calif¬ ornia graduate school ln Fresno. The redraft wUl eliminate an implication that they also en¬ dorse an undergraduate branch. The redraft proposal was ad¬ vanced at Tuesday's Supervisor meeting by Supervisor Jefferson E. Hahesy after toe original draft was submitted by County CouncU- man Robert M. Walsh. Hahesy said he objected to toe clause which said toe community supports a University of Cal¬ ifornia campus to the area. Walsh said he Included that secUon on toe resolution be¬ cause toe former Board had gone on record ln favor of an under¬ graduate campus. Supervisor Joseph A. Reich, a part-time Instructor ln toe health education departments, supported toe redraft move. Integration apathy will be speech topic Guy Sherman, ex-president of toe NAACP chapter to Fresno, wlU speak on toe apathetic state Fisher Bill causes teachers shortage The Fisher BUI, which re¬ quires an academic major and leads to Increased enrollments, "♦" wUl result ln a need for addl- Uonal personnel at Fresno State. Dr. Richard Spangler, chair¬ man of toe economics depart¬ ment, said his department has had a 34 per cent enroUment In¬ crease over last year and has hired Claude Fay Anderson, and ls to Uie process of hiring addi¬ tional help. Also toe department has a new part-Ume faculty member, Stan¬ ley Bennett, he said. Besides toe Fisher BUI and enrollment Increase, Dr.Spang- ler believes that an Increase in government Jobs for economists and toe expanded teaching of economics ln high schools are other reasons for toe boost of enroUment to his department. Dr. Francis Wiley, of toe history department, said his department has hired two new Instructors, Dale Schroer and Jack Eblen, and two part-Ume faculty members, MarjorleSmith Kolstad and Robert Case. Dr. WUey describes his de¬ partments lower division class¬ es as 'fuU to running over* and upper division classes as Dr. WUey said Uiat Dr. Rob¬ ert Comgys, who has been on sabbatical leave studying to toe Library of Congress to Washing¬ ton, D.C.,has returned to toe department this semester. Or. William Beatty, chair¬ man of the sociology-anthro¬ pology department, says his de¬ partment had to close all upper division classes also. The de¬ partment has one new member, David Brewer. ARTHUR RENNY Art Renney is DG Anchorman Art Renney, a junior business administration major was crowned Delta Gamma Anchor¬ man at their recent formal. As toe new Anchorman, Ren- ney's duties are to help toe girls with buUdlng floats or decora¬ ting for rush. He will be toe sorority's dinner guest every Monday night, host at all functions, and wlU also enter many of toe contests during toe our community. Sherman, a guest speaker for toe Student PoUtlcal Education Action Committee (SPEAC), will speak today at 1 PM ln Educa- lon-Psychology BuUdlng 112. He will explain toe actions of the NAACP movement ln Fresno and how they are Implemented Sherman has stated that he feels that toe NAACP has not been as active as It might be to toe Fresno area. Bom to Mollne Di., Sherman graduated from toe University of Illinois ln 1949 and was an active member of toe Student Racial Committee on that cam- Yearbook order deadline nears Six rose girl finalists will be honored A dinner wUl be held Tuesday to honor toe six finalists ln the Alpha Gamma Rho Pink RoseGlrl The girls are Carol Newton and Susan Schlatter, freshmen general education majors, both sponsored by Graves HaU; Judy Edson, a sophomore history ma¬ jor, an Independent; Jenny Berg, a freshman Spanish major, spon¬ sored by Kappa Kappa Gamma; Sharon Steward, a freshman Eng- * * Nurses pick needs as institute topic The Four Dimensions in Com¬ mon Human Needs wUl be the top¬ ic under discussion AprU 2-3 when toe Fresno State CoUege nursing department sponsors tho annual Nursing Institute. Dr. Gerna Puckett, research investigator, reports Uiat toe physical, social, spiritual and psychological aspects of human, needs wUl be discussed. The In-' stltute wlU be one of a series of five resulting from a grant from toe National InsUtute of Mental Health. Dr. Jerome Grossman, chief of the California Bureau of Health n health a community s HILLS VIEW GOLF COURSE •Coffee . Shop Putting Green •Driving Range •Private and i Group Lessons SPECIAL — 75? Green Fee with FSC ASB Card. Monday- Friday. EducaUon, education The institute wUl be open to nursing personnel, professional organizations, lay people, and students from universities and state coUeges. Pi Omega Pi, business group, installs officers Six new officers have been in¬ stalled Into toe Gamma Sigma chapter of Pi Omega PI, business education organization. President Robert F. Haller, a senior business education ma¬ jor, Introduced his new slate of officers at the organlzaUon's last meeting. Serving with HaUer are Vice president, Ron Castro; Treasur¬ er, Pat Howell; Secretary, Mar- Uyn Goodenberg; Chaplin, Jo-el Thaxton; and Historian, Mary Miss Goodenberger was ap¬ pointed Student CouncU Repre- sentaUve, and Edward Delaney was appointed publicity chair- Ad man cites bargain offers •Many students, especially the new ones, overlook many bar¬ gains offered to students by ad¬ vertisers to The Collegian,* said PhU Young, advertising manager. Some of the better bargains he cited were free car lubrications, student discounts on haircuts, au¬ to repairs and various types of recreation. Many advertisers of¬ fer students charge accounts without a co-signer. •Our clients offer definite ser¬ vices loour readers or they would not advertise,* he added. 'Most services are useful to every stu¬ dent throughout his coUege ca- He mentioned that toe adver- Cost of toe yearbook ls S3.50, which ls paid when lt ls re¬ served. They may be ordered ln toe Student President's of¬ fice to the Bookstore BuUdlng. Yearbooks wUl be distributed from the middle to the end ot May. Scholarship is available A scholarship of $850 a year has been made avaUable by the Fresno Cotton Exchange ln mem¬ ory of honorary and deceased members of toe Exchange. The scholarship wUl be a- warded to a student who is ma¬ joring to agriculture on toe basis of need, scholarship, and Indi¬ cated Interest ln cotton grow¬ ing, ginning, merchandising or technical allied fields. The re¬ cipient must be from one of toe cotton growing areas of Calif- er- Interested students should ap- tlsers were aware, ror me most piy a( u,e financial aids office part, of toe time and money f tors Involved to going to school March so they gear their advertising accordingly. These people are also govern¬ ed by a code of ethics laid down by toe Board of Publications. •Student response has been good to toe past,* he concluded, •and conUnued Intelligent read¬ ing of The Collegian advertising wUl be beneficial to both student Gamma and Margy Llpe, a fresh¬ man physical education major, sponsored by Baker Hall. Free-lancer will talk to lady scribes Miss MUlle Gaumnltz, a grad¬ uate of Fresno State College and now a free-lance writer for agri¬ culture publications, will discuss toe woman's role to agriculture Journalism at Theta Sigma Phi meeting tonight. The national women's profes¬ sional Journalism fraternity, wUl meet at 7:30 o'clock to Business 242. The organization wUl also be¬ gin its spring rush at this meet¬ ing. Upper division and second semester sophomores Interested In Joining should attend the 7 PM business meeting. Women with a major or minor to Journalism, radlo-tv, or com- muncatlons are eligible to Join. College dean (Continued from Page 1) of financial aids, wUl speak to toe afternoon on the college's scholarship and loan program, the National Defense Education Act Loan Program and toe Work Study Program. Thomas. Evans, head of toe division of engineering, wUl dis¬ cuss toe schools engineering pro¬ gram and guide toe councUors on a tour of toe engineering fac¬ ulties. Dr. Frederic W. Ness, FSC president, will officially wel- como toe group and speak on toe future of toe coUege at a lunch¬ eon ln toe coUege cafeteria. hristfinsflifs Italian Food Served In The Italian Garden Di Cicco's Pizzeria FOUR SONS OF ITALY w 530 N. Blackstone -ARROW- ^ Cum Laude button-down oxford... Stop in and see this handsome shirt at your earliest opportunity. You're sure to find just the right stripes and colors you prefer in our wide selection... for they were chosen for the college men on bur campus. $5.00 UNIVERSITY SHOP 966 Fulton Moll
Object Description
Title | 1965_02 The Daily Collegian February 1965 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | Feb 25, 1965 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search |
Page 2
The Collegian
Thursday, February 25,1965
my^& rvieedie
By THALIA
n neither remember nor pro-
le atom and toe latest
Plus ca change.. .
So begins a French proverb 1
nounce, but freely translated lt
Or, ln other words, despite toe power of I
germicides, student government survives.
Even toe Student Leaders are getting edgy over toe thlnly-veUed
hostility Uiat greets each appearance of those HtUe blue closets by
the Activities Booth.
Student CouncU has been evicted from chambers by an art class,
and Student Court has turned 'Judicial review* to 'Judicial review
and review and review and review and....*
Obviously, student government has either to regroup or be re¬
placed by SPEAC or General KhahnOr both.
So, a complete constitutional revision is ln toe works. The docu¬
ment ls not yet complete.butoneoftoe things lt would do ls replace
class officers with Student Senators, four to be elected at large
from each class. The candidate who gets too most votes wUl act
as class president, when necessary, desplto the logic that this job
should go to toe person who gets toe LEAST votes.
Supposedly this set-up should give toe class representatives some
function other than compiling Tokalon or Blue Key points.
However, some Student Leaders were afraid that an election at
large would discriminate against minority groups, such as women,
or bring ln people who reaUy didn't want toe Job after all.
Whatever these suggestions were intended to mean, they brought
forth toe brlUlant Idea that under the now constitution the status quo
be maintained by designating toe Student Senators as: Freshman
Senator-President, Freshman Senator-Vice President, Freshman
Senator-Social Chalrman....and so on, ad nauseum.
Plus ca change....
-World wire FSC tOO^Y
SDX will meet
Sigma Delta Chi, men's pro¬
fessional Journalism society, wUl
discuss toe progress of a planned
photo contest during a meeting at
6 PM ln Business 242.
Ad-hoc committee to aid
constitutional revision
Thursday, February 25, 1965
The Collegian
Page 3
An apparently
ented Student Executive Commit¬
tee last night approved toe ap¬
pointment of an ad-hoc committee
to serve as an adjunct to toe
Constitutional Revision Commit-
By a unanimous voice vote, toe
executive committee approved
the appointment of six persons to
serve on toe ad-hoc study group.
The purpose of toe committee
will be to study and make recom¬
mendations pertaining to toe 'ad¬
ministration and toeorganlzaUon
of coUege related activities out¬
side toe classroom.*
Those approved were Jim
Wright, Dee Mosier, Ginger Cor-
dray, GaU Friesen, Gordon
Rauser and John Staley.
Douglas Dirks and Ernie Kin-
US bombers
kill 100 Congs
Thousand-pound bombs drop¬
ped by U.S. B57 Jet bombers klU-
ed at least 100 Viet Cong rebels
ln one of six strikes in support of
Vietnamese troops, Vietnamese
mUltary sources reported today.
New details of Wednesday at¬
tacks were reported as Lt. Gen.
Nguyen Khanh flew to Hong Kong
en route to 'exUe* as an observ¬
er to toe United Nations ln New
York. He had been stripped of
power earlier ln toe week.
Khanh told newsmen he would
seek U.N. support against toe
Viet Cong. At a news conference
he did not rule out the posslbUlty
of negotiations but said lt could
not occur untU toe Communists
halt their pressure and the non-
Communist countries support
South Viet Nam.
Ruby faces court
Math Club members wUl hear
a discussion of Paradoxes to
MathemaUcs by Michael Haley,
a graduate student, to Social
Science 210 at 1 PM. The public
Baptist Union group
The Baptist Student Union
group will meet tonight at
8 o'clock ln toe CoUege Religious
A tape recording by BUI Law-
son, a 1963 Baptist Youth World
Congress delegate to Beret, Leb¬
anon, will be played.
Anyone
attend.
Jack Ruby appeared today to Dames slate partv
be headed for another court ses¬
sion to determine whether he has
become insane since he shot and
killed Lee Harvey Oswald 16
The Texas Court of Criminal
Reds reindicted
WASHINGTON (UPI)-A feder¬
al grand Jury today reindicted
toe Communist Party of toe
U.S.A. for falling to register as
a Communist acUon organiza¬
tion controlled by toe Soviet
Union.
University Damos, an organi¬
zation for toe wives of college
students, wUl hold a card party
tonight at toe home of Mrs. John
Davis, 9400 East Belmont Ave.,
Prospective new members arc
welcome to attend. For further
Information, contact Mrs. Gene
Zimmerman, president, at 227-
1933.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)—The
Duke of Orleans, afterwards King
Louis Philippe of France, once
Uved ln Kentucky .and was among
toe first LoulsvUle musicians.
THE GALLERY
Folk Center & Coffee House
Located on Olive near Palm
Open Frl. & Sat. Nltes (8 p.m. -1 a.m
This Week—Featuring:
JOHN ADAMS
2 Shows: 9:00 & 11:00
75C cover charge
Collegian
Published five days a week
except holidays and examina¬
tion periods by toe Fresno
State CoUege Association.
Mail subscriptions $8.00 a
, $15.00 a year.
office Business 235,
telephone 222-5161, Ext. 441,
444, 448. Business office
Agriculture 220, telephone
222-5161, exU 256.
Editor .NORMA E.WALLACE
Advertising managor......
...»........—...... Phil Young
Assistant advertising mana¬
ger...............David Gunter
Sports editor... Bob McCarthy
News editor....... Eva Altlntop
Day managing editors...........
Harley Becker, Done De-
Lay, Pattye Opdyke, Jim
Tucker.
appointed chairmen to handle
Governor Brown wUl also at- ^ty for ^ of ae ^ring
nd the activities and be here rtm^ events ^ FSC.
tor the inauguration and part of, Ernle jo^ey jum,,,. aaa3
the open house. president, reported that posters
In other business at the meet- „,„ toformatlon about this year's
^™ _ . " „ Junior-Senior prom will go on
Jay Evans, the raUy committee display today.
chairman, reported that he has
The idea for toe c
according to student president
Herm Howerton, arose with toe
realization that toe present Con¬
stitutional Revision Committee
would be Incapable of handling
certain 'broad* areas.
These areas Include such items
as student representation on ad¬
ministration and faculty commit¬
tees, toe coordination of all col¬
lege agencies concerned with stu¬
dent life and the legal Implica¬
tions of a new constitution.
students, appointed by Howerton
but approved by student councU,
two faculty members, the student
president and three admlnlstra-
Sharon TUly, toe PanheUenlc
CouncU president, reported that
toe Spring Sing, scheduled for
Greek Week, has been cancelled
because only one group elected
to participate.
BUI Bettinelll, the public rela¬
tions committee chairman, re¬
ported that an all-campus open
house, originally scheduled for
AprU 30 and May 1, has been can¬
celled for the latter date.
•An effort wUl be made,* Bet¬
tinelll said, 'to allow as much
exposure as possible of toe cam¬
pus on AprU 30.
•The Inauguration of Dr.
Ness,* he said, «wUl provide toe
main event of activlUes planned
for Friday.*
California Scholarship Feder¬
ation members, toe cream of the
grade point average high school
student crop, wUl be personally
Invited to visit FSC and view toe
faculties on the day of the open
THE BEARD OF AVON
■ today is that perennial favorite of English major*
xH.uliir .-mini pl.-a.-er. thai px..l sport and gren
William Sliakc-*|x-nr<- (or 'The Swedish Nightin
is ,..\:iiiiiiif tin- iier-istHit theory that Shakespeare d,
of tin- l'm-ilii-" as hi- is jocularly culled) is
-1 the play
•rencfts that the
hi of an illitenit
v all :„
Iiiim-iiiuii nf lii- time, hut h:iM-hnll.
led. It used to break young Isaac's
p every morning, put on uniform.
i(! contest. KverylKMly has a iK-ifeell\s|ilemliil time until
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