This black and white photograph shows Art Linkletter walking down a hallway and carrying a broom. A few students are visible in the background. On the wall behind him is a display advertising 4-H, a youth organization run by the USDA. On the display is a picture of the Salem Mall in Dayton, Ohio. Work Week was a precursor to Humanics-in-Action Day, which takes place every fall at Springfield College and reflects the school’s long tradition of community service. The 1969 Work Week was particularly ambitious and productive. As one of the kickoff events of a capital campaign led by Art Linkletter, the famous television personality, students hired themselves out to local businesses and individuals. Over one thousand students contributed more than three thousand hours of labor to the effort, and the contributed $34, 570.81, to the capital campaign. The funds raised helped build the new library, athletic fields, and science center. In the course of their labors, the students also consumed more than six hundred gallons of gasoline, six hundred gallons of coffee, and 1,600 doughnuts (all donated by local businesses and Springfield College staff).
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