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Page 23 text:
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EXTRA! GRADUATION EDITION Neck POST After a day off to catch up on sleep, homework and creative writing pieces, the crew appeared back on the job each Monday. The typesetter's proofs had been returned, and assorted pairs of eyes poured over them in frantic search for errors. Each editor pulled out his trusty scissors and paste to attack his dummy. It was at this point that an editor was likely to dis- cover that somewhere, somehow, some- one had goofed, and that an entirely new layout was needed. Yet, miracu- lously, by four everything was in order; and the finished product was rushed off to the printer. . . . And as Wednesday morning again approached, the staff took deep breaths and dived into their happy Guide Post goes to press task once again. They were content for they knew that, in Great Neck, al- most everybody reads the Cnide Post. Through it all the typists’ fingers speedily flicked over the keys in the Cage” catacombs. Work was occasion- ally interrupted by frightened, fren- zied cries of Where's my headline sheet? or Who brought the cookies today?” writing, in which all present partici- pated, remained. By sunset, with all articles and headlines finished and ready for the printers, satisfied Guide Post slaves slowly trudged home (or to After five o’clock only Guide Post Dr. Kotzmon and A. Schloesser, Sports Editors Cotiom row—B. Milmon, J. Schloessingcr, News Editors. Top row—E. Foust, Feature Editor, M. Mogzis, Coordinating Editor. editors and a handful of die-hard regu- lars remained in the building to keep the janitors company. Coffee was served to these valiant few as they crowded about the weary sponsor's desk, each with a multitude of queries. Meanwhile at cafeteria work benches the news staff struggled over the paper's final format. New and different ideas lit up their faces; and after many possibilities had been discarded, someone inevitably came up with a suitable layout. Then, only the tedious ordeal of headline Maddy Magzis' car, known as Guide Post’s golden chariot). F. Eliol ond J. Sherry, Art Editors,• J. Gozoi, Copy Editor.
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Page 22 text:
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EXTRA! ARISTA EDITION Great GREAT tvlECK. MEW YORK Sic transit gloria Monday, the first day of each school week, completed the cycle. One sponsor, Mr. Fields, and assorted staff members heaved sighs, plunged the cage” into dark- ness again, and sent another finished issue to the printer. Thereupon they Enid Schildkrout, Editor in Chief brooded, somewhat happily, over the next three-day session of writing, edit- ing, and assembling the Cnide Post. Thus each week Editor-in-Chief Enid Schiidkraut and her staid staff mem- bers, Esta Diamond, Lori Plesser, Barbara Milman, Joan Schloessingcr, Ellen Faust, Ellen Kaplan, Maddi Magzis, Linda Friedman, David Katz- man, Alan Schlosser, Judy Gozan, and (what a list!) Mike LaMonica, pro- vided their classmates with extremely palatable journalistic fare: startling scoops on sundry topics; candid com- ments on and by faculty members, fellow students, and administratore; Esta Diamond, Associate Editor radical but brilliant editorials; master- pieces of creative writing; and imagina- tive, futuristic cartoons. While writers wrote, Art Wasser- spring handled the paper's advertising ton and her girls typed, and typed, and . . . The weekly cycle commenced each Wednesday as the first drips and draps of assigned copy began to trickle in. Each editor, having formed a glorious mental picture of the layout for his page, set about trying to fulfill his Lori Plesser, Assistant to the Editors accounts, Richard Fine managed prob- lems in higher finance, and Judy Tick- Mr. Fields, Sponsor vision. After re-writing, cutting, and snipping were completed, said glorious layouts often had to be thoroughly re- vised to the dismay of their creators. Thursdays were the Big Days. All the torments and frustrations of the week were forgotten as each page slowly began to take form. News staff members busily re-wrote last minute news flashes; sports reporters checked their statistics; and feature writers carefully revised their syntax and guessed where commas belonged. 18
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Page 24 text:
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Wendy Shore, President Jill Schutz, Vice-President Arnie Dcxe, Recording Secretary Barbara Rose, Corresponding Secretary JUNIOR PLAYERS Junior Players provided an outlet for widely diversified interests and talents; while they learned the ins and the outs of theater production and developed various theartical skills, Junior Players—painters, carpenters, scriptwriters, and actors alike—shared a desire to experience the thrill and glamor of the stage. Each bimonthly Junior Players meeting was highlighted by the club program,” productions exclu- sively by J. P. members, for J. P. members. Everyone got a chance to emote. For the public, Junior Players presented two three-act plays and a children’s program. In November John Pat- rick's warm-hearted comedy. The Curious Savage, was staged; in January children of the community were de- lighted by The Clown That Ran Away; invigorating spring breezes wafted gently over You Can't Take It With You by Kaufman and Hart. Supervising the many on-and-off-scene activities were Wendy Shore, president; Jill Shutz, vice-president; and Charley Saunders, business manager. Mr. Borovika was assisted in coordinating and sponsoring the club's activities by Miss Estabrook, Mr. Conger, Mr. Franke, and Mr. Miller, who aided in the areas of costuming, ticket sales, and scenery construction and design, respectively. There is more to J. P.’s work than audiences imagine. Remember: The air was still, the stage was quiet, when cleaving the hush, one of the actors burst forth with and let there be light! Contrary to all precedents, there was no light! To the horror of all concerned, the audience faced a Charles Saunders, Treasurer Mr. Borovicka, Sponsor
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