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| Last call |
Joseph Engle | The Communicator
The classroom looks like a slaughterhouse for plastic people. There is an arm on this table, a leg on that one, a row of ears on the back counter, and two plastic men standing up in the front of the room.
“This is the gluteus minimus,” said SFCC Anatomy and Physiology instructor Gary Brady while pointing to the backside of a life-sized dummy.
Brady went on to explain about the muscle amid an avalanche of Latin. This is Anatomy and Physiology, and it is almost 8 p.m.
Starting at 7:30 p.m., Brady’s Anatomy and Physiology lab class is the last show in the evening at SFCC.
The class meets twice a week, Tuesday and Thursday. Lecture starts at 6 p.m. and runs till the lab portion starts at 7:30 p.m. It is 9:30 p.m. by the time the class is over, long after most students have gone home.
Night classes offer an opportunity for students who work during
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| Helping hands |
| Ian Reynolds pushes screws into the sides of an artificial foot, surrounded by the sounds of a band saw ripping |
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