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Page 127 text:
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KspcufiEwy ARCH Every member of the Fourth Estate suffers periodically from paper rash. Symptoms are glassy eyes, frenzied fingers, and general feyness. As April drew near, the Arlington staff was in quarantine- no visitors allowed. A Communist spy ring was discovered and broken up during the Journalism I semester exam. Featured were America ' s Sweethearts Susan Bryant and Jack Maguire and their daughter Linda Grafmiller, wardrobe mistress Susan Ronson, foreign spy Bill Nuhfer, OSU alum Carole Kime, and FBI agents Peggy Lang and Betsy Talbot. Jan Crawford played the publicity manager, Tom Mansfield the head of the science department, Mike Storm the Chief of Police, and Karen Dahle, Vicki Hittle, Jenni Dingledine, and Mimi Williams members of the movie stars ' entourage. ' Co-editors this year were Susan Bryant and Jack Maguire, who studied journalism at Northwestern University last summer. Susan won third prize for a news feature at the High School Press Club of Central Ohio and Jack a second prize and a first place at the Journalism Association of Ohio Schools. News-feature editor Carole Kime won a second prize for her interview with Patrice Munsel, and Jan Crawford won a trophy for his advertising. And at last the ARLINGTONIAN must confess that Linda Ann Willards, the paper ' s most often quoted student from Mt. Nebo Air Base, Arkansas, is purely fictitious.
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Page 126 text:
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Paper Left to Right: Vicki Hittle (Circulation Manager), Karen Dahle (Assistant Business), Mimi Williams (Copy Editor), Mrs. Joyce Ricketts (Adviser), Jenni Dingledine (Copy Editor), Betsy Talbot (Sports Editor), Tom Mansfield (Sports Editor), Jack Maguire (Co-Editor), Jan Crawford (Advertising Man- ager), Carole Kime (News-Feature Editor), Mike Storm (Advertising Editor), Susan Bryant (Co-Edi- tor), Susan Ronson (Feature Editor), Peggy Lang (Feature Editor). Absent: Linda Grafmiller (Manag- ing Editor and Photography Editor) Quiet, please! Miss Randall is below! ARLING- TON1AN editorial advisor, Mrs. Joyce Ricketts, often pleaded as the staff worked busily in the tiny journalism office located above Miss Vera Randall ' s English room. The office was furnished this year with several chairs and a type- writer, which were bought with the Buckeye Trading stamps JR, the pass lass, was forever collecting from her staff- rophytes. The staff began its year while the rest of the school was still on vacation, thus enabling students to receive an ARLINGTONIAN the second day of school. A special on the Student Council elections was distributed on March 27. Double issues were printed for both Christmas and gradua- tion. The ARLINGTONIAN members were the only people in school who majored in car. They were always leaving school to run to the printers, engravers and even to see Miss America! Too many fried hamburgers at the staff Christmas party caused a momentary blackout in the west wing.
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Page 128 text:
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Annual To members of the NORWESTER staff, April 1 did not bring a fond anticipation of A- pril Fool ' s Day. On the contrary, that was the dreaded date - the dead- line for all of the NOR- WESTER material to go to press. It is no wonder that staff mem- bers and advisers alike went beserk. Climbing walls, delusions of grandeur, and broom flights were common. Annual fever had really broken out. Sara, where are the extra layout sheets? Haven ' t those copy sheets come yet? Miss Randall, will you please proof read this so I can type it? Have you made the ap- pointment for that picture with Mr. Hildreth? The final deadline ' s when, a week from Monday? These and other similar frantic cries could be heard on Wednesday after- noons in and around room 116. Production began during the summer. The staff members chose a theme, took pictures, and wrote copy. When school opened a new theme was chosen. Hundreds of pictures were taken and retaken, while many more articles were written and rewritten. The staff buried in their work, soon discover- ed a mascot who laid the groundwork for many mirthful and mournful hours.
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