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Page 6 text:
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Me 194 Pber Staff y Editor-in-Chief .............. .e -.......... Jane Hardin Associate Editors ...... 5 .. Carolyn Kane, Bob Murray Sports Editor .,..............4,.g.. f..-.. R ay Dennis Business Manager ....s of ,....s-...ss.W,.. Glenn White Advertising Manager ,.......a.... Carleton Patterson, Jr. Assistant ...a.......a........ .- ...-a..... Jane Dodds Sales Manager .........ea.e......,.. Mary Jane Tuttle Assistant ,e........a...a-..... a..,....a S ue Burnside General Adviser ..e, ..-L - fdiforial Ellen Anderson, Sue Burnside, Janice DaLee, Jane Dodds, Mike Fitzgibbon, Ann Harrell, Ruth Harrell, Frank Kane, Kitty Keller, Don McLeese, Tom Milldcbrandt, Betty Middleton, Charlotte Mill, Glenice Render, Mary Jane Smith, Mary Jane Tuttle. CONTRIBUTORS: D. L. Pyle, Bob Carnahan, Connie Coulter, Carol Crane, Lee Dalton, Eleanor Ellis, Bob Kohr, Elizabeth Phelps, Mary Quinn, Amy Roosevelt, Beverly Stanger, Jack Stcelman, Mary Taylor, Betty Lou Thurman, Bill Wyckoff. Plrofo rap!! PROFESSIONAL: Arnold Studios, Theodore Czerlcowslti, G. G. Steelman, Birmingham, Michigan, and Lyndon Studios, Dexter, Michigan. STUDENT: Bill Golling, Bernard Levinson, Lynn Lyle, Janet Zinser. O COVER DESIGN ..e............. Betty Lou Thurman 9 ART STAFF--, .a.. . Lee Dalton, Fred Samuelson, Betty Lou Thurman imiaiixt-:tub z .Q Q bgggnigt Vida B. Mcciifhn Clerical Adviser--- ........ iAdele Halladay Betty Adams, Mary Ellen Darval, Nona Davison, Herbert Doyle, Peter Freeza, Stella Freeza, Norma Kemsil, Doro- thy Jackson, Betty Joyce, Muriel Locltrow, Connie McGirr, Dorothy Olin, Joyce Olson, Helen Sprague, Marjorie Thomas, jere Uppleger, Doris Wade, Nell Wakefield. Business ADVERTISING: Virginia Bostwiclt, Carol Crane, Janice DaLee, Barbara Fox, Elizabeth Gellatly, Dorothy Harri- gan, Nlartha Harrigan, Ann Harrell, Ruth Harrell, Caro- lyn Kane, Connie McGirr, Doris McKee, Frank Mulhol- land, Joan Pasher, Pat Peabody, Elizabeth Phelps, Glenice Render, Diana Roosevelt, Carolyn Wells. SALES: Allen Ailcens, Ellen Anderson, Nancy Ball, Mary Ann Cabral, Jack Daeschner, Janice DaLee, Jane Dodds, Audrey Durning, Eleanor Ellis, Martha Eby, Nan Gil- breath, Bob Goldman, Marilyn Gould, Beverly Grier, Ann Harrell, Ruth Harrell, Mary Henderson, Pat Hyland, Kitty Keller, Rachel Kirn, Don Lewellyn, Lynn Lyle, Betty Middleton, Carol McCutcheon, Charlotte Mill, Nancy Neumann, Patty Peabody, Elizabeth Phelps, Fred Phister, Mary Quinn, Diana Roosevelt, Dorothy Scott, Joan Scud- der, Carol Smith, Mary jane Smith, Carolyn Wells. 4 :- N 'E E H 5. W :S O 5? 9. Fi. -u C 2.- 3. N 2. C :J O 'WN U7 91. D- 5. :z 5 W :- tn U :- O 2. 9? 1 5. 5 rn :r W Q3 5 n. ET UQ ll P Io Xl-I Quan. I A7 .' -9' Iii Copyright 1943 by Jane Hazdin and Glenn White.
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Page 5 text:
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Page 7 text:
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ALDWIN students contribute both to the actual winning of the war and to constructive preparation for the peace that must follow. The necessities and innovations of war time serve a two-fold purpose at Baldwin. We render valuable service to our country now and at the same time store up a reserve of knowledge and skills for use in the post-war world. Never before in the long history of the United States has so much responsibility been placed upon so many people. And the high schools of America have gladly assumed their own special share. We have made our watchword SERVICE, and we have lived up to its challenge. It is, then, this year of work and preparation that the PIPER, 1943, will seek to com- memorate. Baldwin has done her best to relieve the manpower shortage in Birming- ham. Students swell the war-depleted ranks of community employees, over one-third of the students now have part-time employment in local businesses and offices. After the war these people will find that they possess a deep well of experience from which to draw for future work. Nor have we neglected the farmer. A call from the land brought droves of students to the farms as harvesters. By saving his crop, we helped both the farmer and ourselves and liked the job so well that many students plan to migrate to the farms this summer. Our peace-time vocabularies have been augmented and have taken on new meanings, we place emphasis on the useful and are learning that some home front jobs must be done in the back yard. Practical courses enroll us, and we have found that, in spite of our trepidation, we enjoy them. We are up to our ears in volunteer work. Most of us have at least one non- paying war job. Attack in all its aspects is a fearful thing, but we have tried to prepare against it. Through elected representatives we instituted protection for our school and our community, and we have trained groups of volunteer mes- sengers and first-aid experts. Baldwin will not be wanting if an emergency does arise. To meet the requirements of endurance and stamina set up by war- time training, a compulsory program of physical fitness was established this year. In those hours we may relax from the grind of the day and yet learn how to co-ordinate our efforts with those of others. In addition, we have been able to keep our interscholastic sports. Above all we have maintained our sense of balance. All work and no play will soon wear even the strongest down. It is not an easy thing to interrupt the busy rush of war for fun and recreation, but we have managed to do this. Plays, speakers, assemblies, and just plain simple humor all contribute to the general air of zestful living that characterizes Baldwin. A year of hard work is almost finished. In days to come we may look back upon the year with the deep satisfaction and justifiable pride that come from the knowledge of a difficult job well done. Right now, however, we must keep living up to the demands of each hour, using to the utmost the training and experience given us. We students have learned that by working together, the seemingly im- possible can become a probability. Therefore, with high ideals of service, with faith in ourselves and our country, with quick response to every chal- lenge, let us face the future unafraid and unfalteringly.
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