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Page 92 text:
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,wuffl JJ 'UJW7 RG DWG Netgl S X',l ,t I 1 xml the M tn tm a mm- lam! init. -um .v I taaluexng the- tx.iatixmr.t. img ky! X A ltmlym Educ' W infant mga-rtmpaiuit on 4 new I ,ru nt ma .a,m,,,. 10015.11 g,,,,,, nt prck .nut -hm'-! la- -an h--lin N Ednor ...a . .,.. .... l wrw 4- .Q .,,,,., flint students thuxr items Nm about varnimnal -.4-.5 ..,,, ,f-,- 2',1,'1,,,Q cnemlvs wmsns-cannaa salgada, Barbara De mapa, caro- louln Iyn Howell, Anna Sotelo, Carolyn Morris, Olga Rulzg Stand- Thfw ing: Dale Hancock, Arnold Gates, William Archuleta. g ,mr :i! ' 15- lOpal Gilland, Nancy Gilbert, Nelda Morgan, Sophie Rivera, Jeanette Allen, Diane Dabcevich, Janie Rhoades, Pat 0'l.eary, Jo Ann Hodges, Mary Black, Judie Greenhaw, Meredith Sage, Kelleen Hogan, Standing: Cecil Mitchell, Tom Winters, Bill Baugh, William Noriega, Jim Nelson. affix l'l1Cl I was s we Fl K . lm, . 3. is S ' ag. Msncsoss RILEY ,,,,Z I,,,Lf.',Zf Business Manager :2 nt. fa-pr. H g w aandieaxf-. fs AMONG ALL fha subiects aff-YM' ' ered at B.H.S., one, iournalism, can Zstood out because it was so ,iff Qrewarding and enioyable, even mf? wthough it required more work than the average class in school. -'Y ' fy The Chronicle staff was di- TL , vided into two groups, classes ,,,, ' 'for beginning and advanced wrt 1. journalists. Students new to -'lf' ,iournalism concentrated their work on learning the fundamen- asp.. :tals of news writing. These be- IU f mginners were amply repaid for :dm n their toil and pain, by the thrill ,N 'of seeing their polished PYO-31 5 1 M ducts on a printed page of the !Copper Chronicle. F. ln l956-57, a class was org- 'anized in advanced journalism, 0 where many different phases ot ' journalism were undertaken. ,During the first semester, the ,',jf Q group functioned as a creative fy, Uwriting class, in which literary 1 writing was started. Selected' ,samples of this work appeared M rin the -special Christmas edition :of the paper. The second semes- N K ter found the class turning to a wmv ,new field of interest. Since the l ll 'history of Bisbee High School AM' 'had never been completely l ' compiled, and because a new school was being discussed, the t group decided that the writing mi of such a history would result X not only in an important refer- ,,,,,h ence paper but also in a great ,, ,, service to the school. Their great- .M t est achievement, however, was, .-. if of course, their part in the pub- att. Iication of the newspaper. XI-1 ' It is no wonder that with the 'H ,combined talents of the two X tgroups of iournalists and their ' outstanding adviser, Mrs. Rachel lf -it ors in competitions from Colum- bia Scholastic Press Association, National Scholastic Press, and Pacific Slope Press Association. l Riggins, the paper won top hon-
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Page 94 text:
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' x 'i Fourth Annual FOLLIES ERNIE BEYER, M.C.g Don Bays, M.C., Angela Dabcevich, Business Mgr., Pat Harris, Director, Judy Bennett, Di- I'eClOI'. ACT ONE-Alex Mills, Martha Bihlmeier, Carolyn Howell, Phyllis Mullins, Sulta Copeland, LeRoy Brockbank Paua lvanovich, Elizabeth lvanovich, Suzanne Dugan, Damaris Riley, Linda Ollson, Linda Warren, Doris Heath Marlene Bingham, Magdalena Mendoza, William Archuleta, Connie Salgado, Nancy Gilbert, Ann Travis Shirley Baumkirchner, Gayle O'Leary, Barbara DeLeon. THE 1957 CUPRITE FOLLIES was out of this world, in more ways than one. The theme, Silly Satellites, provided interplanetary travel for a large and appreciative audience of space tourists, who assembled in the Lowell School Auditorium on March first. The tour included visits to nine planets and the planetoid, Square- doniag the variety of entertainment ranged from concerto to rock 'n roll, from Charleston to bop. Received with bellows of laughter and great rounds of applause, members of the cast ended the performance with the feeling that another Follies had been a rousing hit. -90-
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