Northeast Michigan Oral History and Historic Photograph Archive

The Campus Update Vol.2, Iss.2, 26 September 1979, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

CAMPUS UPDATE, September 26, 1979, ene ) K-12 College Independence Register before October 9, Vote November 6 Register in the Secretary of State’s Office corner of Campbell and Ripley You can make a difference eons skills Center provides student assistance By Rhonda Pomranke The Learning Skills Center is loca- ted in the Natural Resource Center on the second floor. It is open from 9:00 am. to 4:00. p.m. Monday through Friday and from 6:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Karen Riegle, Co- Ordinator of the center, explained the many purposes of the Learning Skills Center. It is there to give instruction to students with special needs in different cours- es. For example, tutors help with reading, writing, math, and sciences. It sida instruction in STs nen to ide ° rey and The Learning Skills C ed the Survival Skills Course this summer and the placement testing during orientation. All Audio Visual equipment is housed in the Learning Skills Cen- er. The staff and students can take these out for their use. Finally, there is the walk-in pro- gram where a student can come in for help at anytime and receive it from a tutor. Square meal replaced by snacking “One square meal a day--that’s all a typical student eats, according to a nutrition study done at Virginia Tech U. Seventy-three percent of those tested said they ate what they considered a meal only once a day, while the rest ate only two meals daily. Despite the fact that the stu- dents reported regular snacking, bloodtests showed their nutritional health was good. Tony & Ray’s Sporting Goods 366-1245 20% OFF Brook Running Shoes All Raquetball Equipment earth begins work By Shari Ratz This year marks the tenth anniver- sary for earth magazine. The magazine is an annual publi- cation which consists of essays, poems, short stories, photography, drawings, news articles, and features written by area citizens. Anyone from grade school on up is welcome to contribute their creative works. The officials of earth include Editor, Deb Beroset, Assistant Edi- tor/Photographer, Rex Eccleston, and Advisor, Terry Ha The actual staff consists of ACC Library open for service By Shari Ratz The ACC Library, room 250 NRC, is available for use. It contains many sources for obtaining information, including 29,053 books and 2,668 reels of microfilm. Fiction and Non-Fiction books can be checked out for two weeks. Back issues of magazines and newspapers, most of which are on microfilm, can be checked out for one week. Ref- erence and Reserve books are avail- able for use in the library only. Another source of information is the vertical file, which contains pamphlets and other materials on a variety of subjects. These are also available for one week periods. All of these reading sources are listed in ‘the card catalog under title, author, -and subject headings. Also available is a copy machine and a reader printer, which makes copies from microfilm. There is a small fee for the use of these machines. If problems arise, ask Mr. Hart- wich, head librarian; Miss Klein, library technician, or any of the stu- — dent assistants for help. Library hours are Monday through Thursday 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.; Friday 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Holup reorganizes IM Sports For the first time in six years; the Intramurals and Athletics at ACC are combined in the same depart- ment. Robert Holup is this year’s 1M Sports Director. Holup’s former pos- ition at Northern Michigan Univer- sity as 1M Director is a big plus fac- tor for ACC.s program. As 1M Director, Holup has reor- ganized the structure of the sports. This involves dividing the various sports into men’s and women’s teams. The sports this year are flag football, floor hockey, volleyball, basketball, bowling, and softball. Student and faculty members are invited to participate. Holup hopes various campus groups will sponsor their own teams. Play begins this week. More infor- mation is available at oe oe Education De; ment libel suit The U. of lowa Daily |owan news- paper libeled a local couple in 1975 when it ran an article calling their tavern ‘ ‘a gay bar’ and likening it to. “a_Tokyo dive,” a judge ruled recently. The judge ordered that Student Publications Inc. and a former assis- tant news editor pay $3,000 in damages. DI publisher Bill Casey says SPI is appealing to the judge to with- draw the judgment award because it is “improper under the findings Publishers appeal THE 100,000 WATT VOICE OF ALPENA MICHIGAN September 16, 1979 Last THis TITLE/ARTIST Mi cOLUMaIA an a5 2. 2 5 NCL NEVER LOVE THIS WAY AGAIN Wacwiox, anisTa 21 10 LONESOME LOSERVLimie Auer Sano CAPITOL 31 11 SAIL ON/Commedores 34 12. SUSPICIOUS/Eadie Rabon 13. LET'S GO,The Cars. 14 GOOD-BYE STRANGER/Supertramp. 16 HEAVEN MUST HAVE SENT YOU. MOTOWN ISLAND RECORDS: 8, ATLANTIC: COLUMaIA - SIRE coLuMaia SO 20mm CENTURY 2 BON ‘sroP TILL YOu GET ENOUGH ES/RoI Ii unas SINS Bt 24 MORNING DANCE Seven ya INFINITY. 1 2. SIGHWAY SONG B ectoot arc + 26 SATURDAY NITE H Sro00 ARICLA 43.29 GETITRIGHT Gerry Aarterty oA 13. 28 OLDON T+umpn RG, 38-29 SPOOKY ARS. POLVOOR 38. 30 WHERE WeRE vou POLvOOR 31 RINT THAT A SHAME/Chesp Tro eI 32. DIMALL THE LIGI Danna Sune CASABLANCA “Hae a COKE and a Smile” ~ 4) ))) La )) ——4 of libel per quod.” Under lowa Law, Casey says, the premise is that no damages can be awarded unless they were alleged or proved during the trial. The plaintiffs in the case, he says, did neither. The 1975 article was a review of an erotic poetry reading held in the plaintiffs’ bar, which, Casey says, at — the time was known widely for per- mitting homosexual displays of af- fection. RESEARCH PAPERS 10,250 on File — All Academic Subjects - Send $1.00 for your up-to-date, 306-page mail order catalog. ACADEMIC RESEARCH P.O. LOS ANGELES, CA 90024 NAME “222 ADDRESS aoe CITY _ STATE zie eee eae

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