Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL)

 - Class of 1960

Page 65 of 204

 

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 65 of 204
Page 65 of 204



Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 64
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Page 65 text:

HT' W. f-. -s.- THE COLONIAL DIARY of James Essex is one of the many projects undertaken by Violet Hicks in her eleventh grade English class. CHANGING THE FLAG on the typical Elizabethan theater to announce the com'ng of Macbeth is Roy Nelms. FUTURE TEACHERS OE AMERICA LEARN TO TEACH WHILE THEY ARE TAUGHT DONT THROW ERASERSV' pleads a future teacher in the midst of chaos, during her first attempt to substitute teach a pri- mary grade. Although the atmosphere may be boisterous at times, potential recruits of the teaching profession are encouraged by Mrs. Thelma McDonald, and Mrs. Lallie Godschalk, co-sponsors of the Future Teachers, to take advantage of such an opportunity to gain prohtable experience and increase their interest in the teach- ing vocation. Projects undertaken are the selling of doughnuts to raise money for a scholarship for a worthy F.T.A. member, and the presentation of an apple to each CHS teacher during National Education Week. Members must maintain a C average and an interest in the teaching Held in order to sustain membership. The club also pre- sents annually, an award denoting outstanding devotion and service in the Held of teaching to a faculty member as 'Teacher of the Year. FUTURE TEACHERS-Front row: Mrs, Thelma McDonald, Saundra DeAmbrose, Merilee O'Berry, Alberta Davidson, Karen Krebs, Sue Knopke, Bonnie Jensen, Jullia Cooper, Sara Abbott, Donna Blanton, Mrs. L. M. Godschalk. Second row: Judy Bowman, Janice Smith, Linda Ann Gilchrist, Rosalyn Knight, Pam McCollister, Peggy Netterfield, Lynne Holland, Sherry Higgins, Liana Vande-Spiegle, Sue Holt, Sally Holt. Third row: Lillian White, Frances Hannaway, Mary Louise Falcon, Laura Leclford, Sharon Brad- ford, Carol Sue Moore, Margaret Burlington, Sharon Ann Bailey, Sally Glomp, Susan Vierday, Virginia Horton, Doris Mickler. Fourth row: Diane McBride, Sharon Lee Myers, Terry Hunter, Edith Ann Mayo, Mary McCreary, Heide Brose, Lynn Crowe, Jean Ann Genau, Mary Marrone, Hillary Ann Davies, Sandra Johnson. Fifth row: Sue Bearss, Linda Reils, Ann Davids, Bonnie Behrman, Lana Lawrence, Faye Littell, Sharon Howell, Carolyn Volllrath, Ann White, Virginia Dowling, JoAnn Lavender, Sandy Hazelton. Sixth row: JoAnna Flinn, Karen Seith, Gertie Scarcella, Shirley West, Beth Joeb, Gretchen Graves, Diane Miller, Nancy McGoan, Charlene Messier, Maureen Prieste r.

Page 64 text:

DlD YOU KNOW . . . there are 99 ways to say, I love you? Look them up in the new dictionary in room 'I0l. WHAT PEOPLE WON'T DO for a dictionary these days! A certain class here even went so far as to buy one with some of those wonderful TV stamps! Of course, we appreciate this because a dictionary is an indispensable commodity when it comes to writ- ing, or just anything. One can always find something else in it-- new and interesting. Adding to the appearance as well as the ease in using the dic- tionary, a turntable was provided by one of the boys who made it in his woodshop class. XAJWSQ 1 garb S . il on 'gi 9 . Q . .-'iv 4 9 AL. , v '41 it V sl' u 'Diffs ' CHARTER STAFFERS of the new CHS literary magazine take editing duties seriously. Seated are J. D. Mason, Julie Cooper, Jimmy Jeffers, Judy Chambers, and Nancy Knight, Standing are Alberta Davidson, Nancy Vaughan, Miss Joanne Hecker, and Parker Rakocy. BEHIND THE LECTERN Judy Lynn Prince practices maintaining poise in public speaking. IT'S NEW! . . ENGLISH DEPARTMENT SPONSORS CHS LITERARY MAGAZINE A MAGAZINE that didn't exist a year ago, is now going to give Chamberlainites a chance to share their achievements in creative writing. All those endless themes and numerous other tasty tidbits will have a chance to entertain not only the teachers here, but many others as well. A display case of writ- ing, the new magazine will be a sort of window through which people may view the school. Mrs. Lallie Godschalk Mr. Kenneth Belliveau



Page 66 text:

'MON CHERE AMI, writes Sully Wood as she composes u letter to her French pen-pal. Students taking French have on avid interest in writing to their pen-pulls. S tt tg ' 1 -it V is X a I Q! I YA NE ZNAYOU, sing Julie Cooper, Paul Smuill, and Kathy Livsey, dur- ing Russian class. It seems as if no one understands them! FIRST STEP TO UNDERSTANDING OTHERS IS KNOWING THEIR LANGUAGE IN THIS SHRINKING world of ours, it daily becomes necessary for one people to know more about another. By the study of others' languages, we learn more of them, and even gain appreciation and deeper understanding for our own culture as well as theirs. Chamberlains Language Department of-lets just about the most varied courses of any school in the state. Latin, with its agelessness, offers students, not a dead language, but one very much alive. Of our own vocabulary, more than 60 per cent is based on the Roman language. Not only through ours, but also through many Romance languages, Latin still lives today. Spanish, with its color, brings rich and often exciting life to CHS students. We in Tampa, can realize the importance of this language even more because of the Spanish ancestry claimed by some of our Tampans. After a thorough foundation in Spanish I rt FQ 'Q . L. ' t. '. . MRS. ALMA BENSON MRS- VERTA COX and ll, students are offered a Spanish III class in which the entire year is devoted to conversing in Spanish only. French, with its beauty and diplomacy, transmits to those who study it the eloquence of expression, and vivacious quality of speech that is always associated with it. French, the language of diplomacy can be used in many ways-even in modern day science. Something new has been added to the Language Department at CHS-a course in Russian. The class of ambitious boys and girls who have a keen desire to try to understand the amazing people of that vast nation have learned a new vocabulary, practiced sing- ing folk songs, and read classic short stories in Russian. They en- joyed a brief incident of conversation with the wife of Russian representative to the United Nations, Madam Kusnetsova. if., MR. FRANK FERNANDEZ MRS. JOAN HERNANDEZ MRS. ELIZABETH STONE

Suggestions in the Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) collection:

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 23

1960, pg 23


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