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Page 24 text:
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JlFat i department i Mrs. Louise Linville Mr. Virgil Fryman Mrs. Imogene Crumpler Mathematics is taught in high school to help develop a systematic method of thinking. Since all walks of life require some calculation, each student must have two years of mathematics. At Mason County High there are seven mathematics courses offered: General Math, Advanced General Math, Algebra I, Algebra II, Plane Geometry, Solid Geometry, and Trigonometry. Sharon Morrison and Brenda Cracraft explain their problem to the rest of Mrs. Linville's plane geometry class. Mrs. Crumpler helps Donnie Lowe with a math problem while Kenny Pickrell looks on. Buzzy Curtis tries to convince James Foley and Shirley Hughes that the problem he and Arlie Mitchell solved was more diffi- cult than theirs. Mrs. Crumpler seems very proud of her freshman algebra students: Martha. Rees, Caroline Boone, Judy Roberson, Mary L. Sledd and Janet Mitchell. WAV
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Page 23 text:
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department General Science, Advanced Physical Science, Bi- ology, Chemistry, and Physics are taught in our still-new labs. Each graduate must study at least two of these subjects. Susan Hamilton and Garnet O'Cull work efficiently on a chemistry experiment while Mr. Fields watches. Mr. Fields, Bill Hay, Charlotte Griffith, Eugene Bradford watch as Bill Gale plays'' with the ripple tank which the physics class has just constructed. Bobby Curtis and Bobby Boone are back seat drivers as Mike Faurest cuts away in biology class. Mr. Fields and physics students—Jimmy Cooper, Kay Yancy, Clyde Dempsey, and Arthur Henderson—study sound. Tommy Clary, Eugene Bradford, Roger Clark, Kay Rawlings, and Buddy Sledd experiment in physical science class.
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Page 25 text:
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(Socia (Science department Mr. John Snider History is taught to provide a guide for the future by learning of the past. All persons and countries have made mistakes and, by learning of others, maybe we can provide for the future by not making the same mis- takes. Sociology helps students to learn to live together better, and civics and interna- tional problems help them know why we live as we do. Mrs. Louella Anderson Mr. Snider tries to tell Connie Fegan and Johnny Conley that Tennessee is Kentucky, but they know better. Mrs. Anderson's freshman geography class seems amused with some interesting fact about one of our western states. it— Mrs. Anderson helps Corky Middleton with a question in international problems while Pete Woodroof day- dreams about cars. Mr. Snider impresses world history students Bobby Johnson, Mary Groves, Steve Souder, and Mary Henderson with the tourist attractions in beautiful Kentucky. Mil niTiem mu 21
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