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Page 29 text:
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tudents Attain Poise Throu il CLASS Participation In SECOND-YEAR TYPING class, Marilyn Trinklein and Sharon Flynn are engrossed in a speed test. Their goal is accuracy, neat- ness, and a speed of at least 50 words per minute. JUNIOR ART or LIVING students, Sally Sorgatz, Ruth Herman, Alice Pero, Char- lotte Leddy, and Marion Haubenstricker read the Vogue magazine as a source of informa- tion on fashions, one of the class projects for the year. AGRICULTURE students, Lyle LeCronier, Arden Clare, Bob Wegner, and Richard Popp select research material from a map in Mr. Howard Lytle's class. This class is an aid in helping boys to become better farmers. IN MACHINE SHOP class Lyle LeCronier and Rohert Schuette inspect the mechanism of a machine. This class prepares students for home craft and aids in making a decision for industrial work. Q.. ,IUNIOR GYMNASIUM CLASSES go through the exercises which are a part of the physical education program. The girls are marked on the number of exercises they can do, neatness, and general class participation. This class meets on alternate days to art of living. HoxiiiMARING CLAssEs, at the close of each semester, have a party to display the know how acquired in class. Here, Barbara Haynes, janet Wootl, Madge Foster, Doris LaLonde, Pat Sliwinski, Joann Schultz and Shirley Suclcey, of Miss Norma Hile's foods class, relax after their Christmas party. IN CRAFTS CLASS, Madeline Nelson, Janice Bovay, Don Stricker, james Enzer, and jack Guttowsky weave rugs. Such projects are exhibited in the hall display cases. ART CLASSES decorate the school Christmas tree in the front hall for the holiday season. Other projects include posters, showcase dis- plays, charcoal drawings, and water paint- ings. Left to right are: Ralph Teenier, on the ladder, Arlene Seehase, Patricia Dice, Virginia Ostermann. M IscIIAN1cAI,. DRAWING class leads students Conrad Seidel and Ronald Krueger into drafting intricate designs. This work pre- pares the students for industrial work or further architectural study. LIBRARY is the study period for all Hillites. The two libraries on either side of the auditorium accommodate about 210 students each period. Here, Malcolm Hopper gets assistance from Mr. Harve Light, as Frank Jank does some concentrated study. Golden Jubilee! 25
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