Newspapers / St. Andrews University Student … / Nov. 6, 1975, edition 1 / Page 5
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BARRON, one of the standouts of the 1975-76 SA soccer 1, sends one down the field in last week’s St. Andrews - /|antic Christian game. (Photo by Billy Howard) LION Welcomes Back The Students Of St. Andrews Now Open In The College Union Science Olympaid St. Andrews has gained in ternational recognition for its science faculty and facilities within the fifteen years since the College was founded. On Saturday, November 15, high school science students and teachers from throughout the eastern United States will have an opportunity to avail themselves of those resources at St. Andrews’ Second An nual Science Olympiad, a competitive event designed to test the students’ basic knowledge of chemistry, biology and mathematics. The Olympiad is designed for high school sophomores, juniors and seniors, as well as their teachers, "nie day-long event will be broken up into ten competition events dealing with chemistry, biology, physics and math. These events go by such unusual names as “Chamber of Horrors,” “Mathematical Pentathalon,” and “Name That Organ.” Not only will the St. An drews Science Olympiad provide an opportunity for science students to test their knowledge, it will also give them a chance to meet St. An drews’ noted scientists and to discuss scientific interests with them on an informal and personal basis. The event will also give the participating students an op portunity to see the College’s science facilities and major instrumentation in the spacious St. Andrews science lab. An important idea behind the Olympiad, according to its coordinator, Dr. David Wet- more, is that fun and en joyment are vital elements in the process of learning new disciplines. Conducting the Olympiad along with Wetmore, a chemistry professor, wiU be Arthur L. Applegate (biology); Donald G. Barnes (Science Division Chairman); John C. Clausz (biology); G. Tyler Miller (chemistry and human ecology); William H. Morgan (mathematics); William H. Sommerville (mathematics); James Stephens (chemistry); and Clarence E. Styron (chemistry). KIM McRAE, longtime photographer for THE LANCE and the yearbook as well, opened an exhibit of her photos in the Vardell —Gallery yesterday. Kim. who interned with Southern Living magazine last January, is especially interested in the myriad of human faces that make up life, as exemplified in this photo. At The Movies “Rachel, Rachel” Directed by Paul Newman and starring Paul Newman with Joanne Woodward, James Olson, Estelle Parson. Joanne Woodward has made a career in recent years of playing middle-aged women. This penchant, however, has led to sane of the best films of recent years, this one in cluded. “Rachel, Rachel” deals with a 35 year-old teacher’s fall from virginity and her subsequent fall from her fall (the love affair slips up). Sanehow it ends sort of happily. £ 8. Aerial search 9. Organizing vigilantes. 10. “You catch it, TU cook it.”
St. Andrews University Student Newspaper
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Nov. 6, 1975, edition 1
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