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Show File 13 I U needs elite status I BY BRUCE PINGREE As a senior class member, I want Pete Dixon to know that there are several thousand people who are not happy at all with the decision that he and his committee commit-tee have made. Aside from the rational ra-tional reasons for not making such a decision, there are plenty of irrational irra-tional reasons. It is a known fact that the general gen-eral state of physical fitness of our generation is abominable. By the time a person is a junior or senior, he is usually beyond hope. Juniors or seniors are wrecked one way or j another. If he is not a victim of debauchery or dope, then the ' overwhelming debilitative effects of too much study has destroyed both psyche and body. On the other hand, there is still hope left for underclassmen, and if they walk several hundred yards to i their classes and back to their cars, perhaps they can slay iJ shape. I There is another serious probj lem to the issue. Besides dcprivina our nation of physically fit pe.j pie, (thereby endangering (-security), (-security), a classless society v4 be created. There wiU be nobody1 who is considered inherently , perior except faculty membKsj and since I am not a membeij that group, I do not think lis ought to be considered supeno anyway. , There may be parking1;! lynchings as some haughty frw-man frw-man attempts to usurp the Fj ing lot of an exhausted senior as the senior and his coll burn the freshman in P' es J the war and parking pto j. Pete Dixon, if any of tl K pens, you -Jcnow who wdl W the responsibility. ,; If the campus plana"? J tee thinks that they w Ua 'of underclass fans by ttoPj sal, let them remember are alienating as many W j they are gaining. f I hope that all ofmyJ upperclassmen wfll d Dixon and his conuJ that others will carry toourstudentbo y ea J As for my part, ' Pla" at every freshman I see- |