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Page 26 text:
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Gold ,ml 5-ve rvwv rr U' l4'm0 u ?l 35 is KW B-df Bikini like zinc and sulphur clouds billowing skyward are a familiar sight to Mr. Lester Bolander's Chemistry I students. radio studios, the 'lVoice of Tech, Atop Stuart Tower! Completion of the technical facilities of the studio made it the medium for all-school pub- lic-address-system programs, bulletins, and emergency announcements. ln the Mathematics department the surveying class was resumed in the spring semester with the campus as well as the classroom as its 'lworkbookfl And once again, in the spring, this department had contestants in the lndi- ana State Mathematics contest. In I9-18-'-P9 homemakers of the Home Economics department were presented Mary Louise Mann, head librarian, right, dis- cusses a new book with library staff. Seated fleft to rightkz Glodene Loucks, Virginia Moore, pupil assistants. Standing: Marjorie Schock, Dorothy Busby, Letha Coakley, librarians.
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Page 25 text:
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. S 4-nil 5, Miss Ruth Stone's Latin class examines map of ancient Gaul to supplement its translation of Caesar's military campaign. Music-on-record for classroom study was the Eng- lish department's new addition: English VHNI, where the phonograph record and great writers of great music are the subjects, was first offered in the fall of I9-18. Q -fini R X Ji U f' fps .x , 1, uP' 4-Nui Stagecraft classes erected a duplicate Freedom Train for Supreme Day for pupils to study the history of democracy. By popular demand, once again, in the spring of l9-19, English VIIIC, an advanced creative writing course, was resumed. Radio Expression class members participated in the first year of full-scale operation of their own Nationalist and Federalist senators and representatives gather on Statehouse steps for a city-wide student legislature, ,...-:1- F '? KOR TON . . -,.- sn ,.i ,. . .cus-.Av 0 3-..L:a.-.uk - .N-T. A.- ....:.....,.4.z-9. -.....s. fhn..5..-iafl --l-La.i..l- lv, A-, 'A' al' '-Q Qu
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Page 27 text:
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with two new refrigerators and twelve new stoves, placed in two foods labora- toriesg and a greater number of boys signed up to be taught the accom- plished art of fine cooking. On Klay l2, a Spring Fashion Show of clothes made by girls in each cloth- ing class was presented in the Forum. Also included in this department's activities was the making of new satin skirts for yell leaders and capes and caps for newly-elected R.O.'l'.C. girl sponsors by students of the Dressmak- ing and Nlillinery Shops. 'l'hroughout lf?-lS and I9-I-9, student horticulturalists of the botany classes made up corsages and delicately green- tinted white carnations for the Service Club sales in 'lireadwell Hall: re- planted several campus tlower beds: and made their animal spring gardens, north of Treadwell Hall. American Problems, a Social Studies course, was first offered in I9-P8 as a required study, combining economics and sociology into a course designed to Dixie Allred explains the land contour in Asia to Russell Dennis using one of the Physiography department's globes. In Radio Expression classes, students write, direct, pro- duce, and take part in skits before live mikes in the stu- dios of WATS. Practicing a crowd effect are, left to right, Richard Berryman, Joan Chambers. Richard Stanfield, and Janet Spall. All-school broadcasts pre- sented from WATS are su- pervised by faculty members Mr. C. S. Stewart, left, Mr. W. A. Rush, and Mrs. Ressie Fix. Y 9 x 23
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