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Page 30 text:
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IGURNALISM Hard work and late hours Are the journalists, fate, For these alone are what Keeps the paper from being late. Skills such as creative writing, copyreading and typing are necessary for the success of a high school news reporter. At Carter Mr. Randall R. Seely trains future best-seller authors by sponsoring CHS's bi-weekly tabloid, The Eagle Record, and during this training period students learn the fine points of the aforementioned skills. Mr. Seely,s grin seems to imply that either Gay Schuchard has told him a funny, or Charldean New- ell is definitely making too many errors in typing. However, Mr. Seely somehow manages to remain happy even when press day rolls around. USIC Four 'B's, not three Dominate the musical worldg Beethoven, Bach, Brahams, and bop Keep all harmony lovers in a whirl. Harmony between the choral and instrumental sec- tions of the school musical department as well as harmony among the different voices and instruments inside the two departments makes the musical world at Carter one of the finest. Miss Edith Winston and Mr. Charles Hoffman instruct Carterites in the knowledge of choral music and band and orchestra music, respectively. Miss Winston's chorus classes are usually slaving away on some large-scale program to entertain the student body. Mr. Hoffman directs the band at football games, programs, and parades 5 often the stage band is called upon by outside organizations to furnish an evening of music.
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Page 29 text:
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IKTHITRII. ARTS Whirr, grinding, perking, Sanding, drilling, ever, ever, On some project, always working, Which someday might be Finished? Never! Despite the poetry, many beautiful and useful things are turned out in Shop classes. Bill Danford gets instructions from Mr. Bill Kamenitsa, Wood and Metal Shop instructor. T-squares, 450 angles, Sharp pencils, careful work .... Drawing students with these must tangle If in the drawing room they dare lurk. Mr. Herman Musick directs Carter's popular Mechanical Drawing classes. Here he shows Don Shaver, Frances Kimber- ling, John Roach, and Jo Ann Argo the intricacies of a three-sided rule. ART Teaching future Van Goghs and Pi- cassos At Carter is our own Mr. Curry, But everyone's sympathy to him should go. Those Eagle copywriters just wouldn't hurry. Pencils, oils, watercolors, crayon and ink along with pottery, plastics, metal and wood are medias used by artistic Carter- ites in Mr. Ed Curry's third floor art classes. Right, Charlotte Thetford and Roy Russell watch a demonstration on the lapidary. Mr. Curry also sponsors the Annual.
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Page 31 text:
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RCTC A good motion picture on warfare, The crack of a carefully aimed rifle, The study of tactics and technique, Show that R.O.T.C.'s no trifle. Ray H. Erdman, right, with James Goodwin, and Ben- jamin Knight, both United States Army Sergeants, direct Carter's R.O.T.C. They use films, manuals, lec- tures and experiences to teach teenage military men the fundamentals of Army procedures. Company rivalry, target practice, commendations, rifle teams, and a drill platoon are special features of the Reserve Officers Training Corps. PHYSICAL EDUCATIO S'When viewing the excitable antics Of Carterites on field or in gym, No one can resist voicing, tho sometimes in panics, 'Cest la guerre' or iVive, la femrne'! Coaches Truett Cooper, Pierce Scott, Grover Pearson, L. H. Dixon and Lon Goldstein, left, see that no young man is deprived of the privileges of participating in athletics. These five strive to help all boys improve themselves physically. Mrs. Tommie Tilford and Mrs. Frances Matthews, below, instruct such PE activities as volleyball, basketball, tennis, folk dances, health and good grooming. Physical education is a favorite of most lassies, and these two Hgalsn are partly to blame. ....,.vf I9
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