Alcala Yearbook 1992-1993

VISTA Informing the student body

Friends and coworkers - Kelly Benton and Mele Feazell enjoy the festivities at the Vista Christmas Party.

from the Associa ted Students, and funding came strictly from advertisement revenue and subscriptions. "It was a positive move for both organizations, " said Greg Harkless, Edi tor-in-Chief. "Now we can both focus on our particular organizations." Some of the benefits gained by the separation are that edi– torsreceivepaymentandequip– ment will eventually be re– placed. "The Vista staff worked well as a team this year," said Mele Feazell, Managing Editor. "It will be difficult to replace the seniors that are graduating." The publication will lose 15 key people from editorial and advertisement. However, de– voted readers will still be able to turn to the College Life sec- tion and find Flu's Views.

It becomes a habit and an expec– tation for USD students to be able to pick-up a Vista from the stands on Thursday afternoons. Some students flip through lei– surely, reading headlines and look– ing at the photos. Some turn to the Intramural page to see how they ranked over the weekend, and oth– ers open up the back page to see how farOff-beatpushed the bound– aries. What most students don't see is the chaos that occurs at deadline -– Tuesday night layout. Creativity seems to flow at midnight when editors are being kicked out of the UC and there is not enough text. White areas become works of art, otherwise known as space fillers. Some students may have noticed that the Vista took on a new appear– ance. This was not the only change that the Vista encountered. This fall,the Vista autonomized itself

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I OWE, I OWE, IT'S OFF TO WORK I GO... Mario Lopez, Bill Homan, and writer work diligently on a story.

Off-Beat Outlook - Jennifer Scarborough and Bill McGowan prove that there is life outside of the Vista office!

Vista

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