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Show z t aa | t “What we have the most of" Meet Fred Rol Carl at WSC... Sime The only category that females | showed a real difference from : males in is that of age. The greater number of female students attending Weber are 19-20, or 31 percent. More students, of both sexes, take 11-12 credit hours than any other class load. Armed with these facts the computer produced a list of four males and six females that exactly matched “what we have the most of’ at Weber State College. eat 7 te this day of equality. For the male student the computer showed that 68.4 percent are single, 83.1 percent are white and 86.6 percent are Utah residents (of the entire studentbody 55:75 percent live in Weber County). Males living at home total 70.5 percent and 86.4 percent are full-time students. The computer pulled very close parallels for the female student at Weber State, 71.6 percent are single, 85.1 percent are white, 93 percent are Utah residents, 75.3 percent living at home and 81.7 percent are full-time students. ie students than female but it was decided to find one of each sex in meen: efor Dentar) Sirs oR Often the “unusual” student is featured, the elderly, the one with the most children, the unique - but the students which we have the most of - can be overlooked. In an attempt to “find” what the student is like that attends Weber State College in the greatest numbers - the computer was consulted, via Harold Wiese, Registrar. A few statistics began to bring that composite student into focus. Weber does have more male Here are the two who answered the telephone first. Meet Fred Calvin Rabe, yes...white, single, a Weber County resident, living at home with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Rabe, 3673 Eccles Ave. His father is the WSC director of photography. To complete the “composite” “Gene frequency is the proportion (fraction of, percent, ratio) of a gene in a population(gene pool), explains Professor Bert Winterton to a heredity class. Fred concentrates on the equations and later confessed to even having the same blood type as ‘‘most” people-0 positive. he is a full-time — student, enrolled in 11-12 credit hours, and is 25 years old. A personable, fun-loving young man, Fred graduated from Ogden High School in "73, attended Weber part of one year, then quit to work and save money for an LDS mission to Hamburg Germany, 1975-77. a / Upon his return he worked until school started and Leaving the Science building, Fred and classmate, Danita Gallegos, walk across campus to the next class. Page 6 returned to the Technology Department, changing his emphasis from manufacturing engineering to carpentry. He will receive an associate degree in carpentry this spring and plans to go on for a Bachelor of Arts degree in Business Management. He has been a recipient of a scholarship from the National Association of Homebuilders, a private scholarship from donations made by area contractors. Also included in “future plans” is marriage, some time this summer, to fiancee Betty Winger. Joining in dances with the LDS Institute Exhibition Folk Dancers is just one of the many activities Fred, right, is involved in. He is also assistant to studentbody president Bryan Steel and student representative on the athletic board # At the Institute Fred is missionary committee chairman, and 9 sub-commitee chairman of registration and religious programs. |