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Page 29 text:
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SECTION H9-3 ltopl First Row: Veronica Scott, Gloria Glas- gow, Eileen Deon, Linda Randolph, Sandra Nelson. Second row: Everett Crosson, Barbara Epstein, Patricia Montague, Yvonne Miller, Diane Marimow, Judith Eckerson, Roland Brock. Third row: Kay Freeman, Charlene Drew, Jean Robinson, Marie Collins, Arnita Thurston, Antonia Lewis. Fourth row: Robert Shub, Larry Nachlas, Richard Weissberg, Eugene Cunningham, Kenneth Tig- nor. Fifth row: Neil Potosh, Amiel Segal, Phillip Posek, Stanley Bialek, William Mulroy, Austin Harris. SECTION TOZA3 First row: Peggy Williams, Shirley Hunter, Vivian Monroe, Ruby Ferebee, Annie Jackson, Josephine Gray, Joan Green, Rosemary Crutchfield, Virginia Elliot. Second row: Barbara Qualls, Yvonne Wilkinson, Melba Syphox, Judith Wills, Betty Woodland, Irma Contee, Anita Embrey, Roberto Wigenton, Miss Mayfield. Third row: Estelle Johnson, John Soles, Willie Thompson, Oliver Clark, John Oliver, John Davis, Edward Car- penter, Bill Kelly, Thomas Graham, Sidney Peoples. Fourth row: Cliflord Arnett, Richard Jordan, Stewart Neal, Robert Fletcher, James White. 0 9 X 25
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Page 28 text:
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the younger sei scans new horizons English . . . geometry . . . biology. Racking their brains to remember the day's homework assignments, these third semesters are getting ready to head home. llllll The word is antidisestab- lishmentarianism. Now show its derivation through the Sanscrit and use it in a sentence. Giving a typi- cal spelling test is Mrs. Kern. 24 When we walked into Roosevelt for the first time, doing everything in our power not to get stepped on, it was a real change from iunior high. Just last June we were the big wheels. Now we had trouble iust trying to get to the auditorium. Plowing through a billion upperclassmen, plus having to ask direc- tions at every corner, left us in no condition to go farther than the last row. As we plopped down in our seats, we saw that we were not the only ones who were tto put it mildlyl petrified. It didn't comfort us to see ourselves dished out to section teachers like a hunk of mashed potatoes to a hungry chow line, either. Finally it was time for all the new teachers to take all their new pupils to all the new section rooms for all of us to get acquaint- ed. That wasn't as easy as you may think. Have you ever seen thirty kids all trying to sit in the last row? Neat trick if you can do it. By the time we were iust getting comfortable, the bell rang, and we went shuffling around trying to find our first period class. Third semester leading third semester, the blind leading the blind. This went on for days, bumping into people, going up the wrong stairway, arriving late for classes. By the time the first ad- visory rolled to a close, we were wondering if it was worth living in a world of such confusion. But, like all inevitables, this too we learned. Eventually we knew this school like the back of our hands, and it only took four and a half months. By the end of the third semester there just wasn't anything we didn't know. b '
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Page 30 text:
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...-., -1' 4 SECTION 118-3 ltopl First row: Sylvia Williams, Grace Talbert, Roberta Franklin, Glennet Davis, Brenda Chidel, Sandra Rubin, Rita Lenkin, Gail Futterman. Second row: Benece Goldfarb,Jeanne Marshall, May Yee, Joan Ellis, Lisa Brisker, Patricia House, Bar- bara Wolozin, Myrna Siegman, Mrs. Kern. Third row: Patricia Barclift, Steve Newman, Daniel Dowling, Marvin Davids, Martin Salins, Kenneth Gatlin, Joyce Raum. Fourth row: Morton Hyatt, Tommy Brooks, Marlin Ehrlich, John Wells, Robert Garland, Ran- dolph Creasman. Fifth row: Robert Guill, Tasos Bechas, John Wood, Louis Dobkin, Anthony Hertz. 26 an pr SECTION 215-3 First row: Mary Woods, Mishie Boykins, Yvonne Nicholas, Florence Howard, Linda Young, Marguerite Grune, Betty Young. Second row. Robert Hill, Roxie Naiarian, Mary Zimalis, Marcy Brigham, Sylvia Johnson, Eulanie Forsythe, Blanche Ellis, Mrs. Smith. Third row: Charlotte Scott, Maxine Brinkley, Lena Upshaw, Sarah Tinker, Victoria Hirsh, Thomasina Avery, Robert Meade. Fourth row: Milton Williams, James Yee, George Craigie, James Howard, Harry Johnson. Fifth row: Robert Rankin, George Goskins, Nathan Monroe, Edgar Smith, Harry Slocombet
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