Volume XXV, Issue 5 Educating Women to Excel October 3, 2007 ON THE INSIDE: Reviews p. 2 Editorials p. 3 Campus Activities p. 4 WEATHER TODAY: Few Showers. Low 68, High 85. Thursday: T-Showers. Low 68, High 84. Friday: Isolated T- Storms. Low 67, High 83. Saturday: Scattered Showers. Low 65, High 81. Sunday: Partly Cloudy. Low 63, High 86. Monday: Partly Cloudy. Low 62, High 85. Tuesday: Partly Cloudy. Low 57, High 80. Source: www.weather, com Information retrieved 'Hies. Oct. 2 at 5 p.m. Why Don't You Just Go and Read? Kaitlyn Briggs StafifWriter I'll start this article off by saying that I am an English major. Now that doesn't mean that the first draft of this article was devoid of errors, that I can spell every word in the dictionary, or that I'm even a good writer but it does mean one thing -1 read. Ok, by read I mean skim. There is no way, minus the intervention of angels (and I mean the real kind), that I could read 450 some odd pages in just two short nights. I mean it took me 3 days (only because I had to work) to read the last Harry Potter book, but Amber McKinney Staff Writer I've been trained since I was little to be polite, to be sweet, to be respect ful, and to be agreeable at all times. It's just the way things are in the rural parts of the South; women are raised to be self-sacrificing and kind even when they don't feel like acting that way. I remember one time my mom and I were talking about something that had annoyed both of us when the phone rang. My mom went from being angry and upset to automatically pleasant and energetic when she answered the phone. I'm tine same way. When I'm awake and alert, I smile when I'm not happy, and I act as if everything is that's not college level reading, oh, and it's inter esting. My grandmother was an English teach er, my grandfather a History teacher and I owe my love for litera ture to them. I remem ber reading and acting out scenes from Mark Twain's The Adventure of Huckleberry Finn. We were in the graveyard and I got to be Tom, my sister - the dead cat, dangling from her ankles and giggling though the entire cold reading, my grandmother was the ever energetic Huck. She instilled a great reverence for literature in me and I am sorry to Why I Like okay even when it's not. I think my catchphrase has become "Hi, how're you?" because it's the polite thing to ask anoth er person when you first see them. When I'm sleepy, my social conditioning melts away. As long as I'm tired, I can't put up a wall to block out the part of my personality that people might not like. I don't feel like I have to make people happy or make sure I don't insult anyone. 1 just don't think about performing the social graces that have been ingrained since childhood. If I'm sleepy, I might talk back to some one, turn down an offer to go somewhere, or, hor ror of horrors, actually tell a friend what I really think about their opin- say that such a love for literature has diminished with each passing year I struggle with the inordi nate amount of reading I am assigned in my mul tiple English classes. Now there is a ridicu lous amount of reading in other majors besides English. Off the top of my head I can imagine that Communication or Sociology, Psychology and even Biology all pro vide students with more texts and articles than they imagined existed on the subject. Many a stu dent has lamented that they are overwhelmed by the amount of reading that they are assigned in their classes. Once dur- Being Tired ions. It's refreshing to say exactly what I think even though it may come back to bite me in the morn ing. When I'm sleepy, I don't have much control over what I say. I can remember times when it's been twelve o'clock at night and I'm talking about whatever I wanted to say during the day but didn't. I say whatever's at the tip of my tongue or whirling aroimd in my head. Ideas come rushing out of my big mouth whether I want them to or not. I might be philosophical, wondering why God made the grass green and the sky blue and not the other way around. I may become a poet, declaring such lyrical verses as the cres cent moon looks like a ing a class discussion I tried to give the class tips on how to remember what they had read by taking notes and writ ing down the characters. I also commented that I was currently taking five English classes that involved and exorbitant amount of reading -1 was accosted by a cho rus of "but aren't you an English major?" This question brings me back to my original point; I'm not a super human reader. The question that I'm posing here is this: Why Read cont. on pg. 4 watermelon rind amid a hundreds of white seeds. I might even tell embar rassing stories because I can laugh at myself without shame when I'm sleepy. Most people think I'm just silly and ran dom when I get this way, spouting off whatever comes into my mind. They laugh and think I didn't really mean to say it, that I didn't really expect a serious response in return. Truthfully, I did mean it, but in the morning I'll pretend I didn't. I'll laugh with them, the Superego expressing its dominance again. At that time right before I fall asleep, I think about things that Tired cont. on pg. 4