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Page 31 text:
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if.a5A.p.1,,..'..'.f,'.fL.., .Lf Q., Z3 : Vunior Virginia .1 i Barry Reynolds, Steve Cole, Melvin Gehrs, and Byron Katcher use study hall to finish mathematics assignments. Rhonda Ditmars finds General Math an excellent refresher course for reviewing the fundamentals of mathematics. world presents challenges the answer. athematical answers are r the solu- igures, but ,ng in crea- s a mathe- lit, it has to it iswrong. r decisions cap you, all ere right. one might ing every solution to every problem. The thing, a person has to learn isthe pattern of the procedure, and he will find he soon has the solution. Centralites wish only that their lives fitted in such a clear-cut pattern. So again the analogy of math and life is illustrated. This applies in even greater intensity to the lives of math students at Central High School. They can start their- four years of math with General Math or Algebra I and end a com- plete course with Calculus and Math Analysis. Centralites strive to take the coldness and turn it into creative thinking and reasoningg to take the precision and let it challenge their calculative minds, to take the obvious and prove it just that. In setting up a proof for an algebra problem, Diana Green and Becky Pfander learn the method of deductive reasoning. Junior Galen Herring demonstrates the advantages of the slide rule in solving problems in his Algebra II class.
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Page 30 text:
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- In an attempt to solve a trigonometry problem, Tim Taylor and Hilton Sander employ the use of a graphing board. Tim Ashworth finds the solitude of the Central halls, during classes, a welcome place to make up a mathematics test. Using a blackboard compass in geometry class, Junior Virginia Purvis tries to determine a circle's circumference. Rhonda Ditn course for rev l Mathematical world preset Cool, precise, obvious, if you know the answer. This is the way it stands in the mathematical world of Central High School. It's a world without emotionsg the answers are already calculated before you discover the solu- tions. Math presents cold facts and figures, but it is not so mechanical that it's lacking in crea- tivity at Central. Probably nothing is as precise as a mathe- matical equation. It cannot be half rightg it has to be one-hundred per cent right. If less, it is wrong. So it is with the decisions of life. Your decisions will either be of benefit to you or handicap you, all depending on whether or not they were right. Math is really not as complex as one might think. There is a procedure in finding every solution tc to learn is find he soc that their So ag illustrated to the liv School. Tl with Gene plete cour Centralite: into creati precision . minds: to 1
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Page 32 text:
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Sophomores Terry Martin and Steve Sanders preserve old speci- experiment is being tried for the first time this year under mens permanently by embedding them in bio-plastic. This the supervision of their biology teacher, George Athens. f'! Mr WWW IKM ' , W, I .,,, I ,,,, 1, Z i i General scie Veronica Ta New Worlds unfold as sci Mike Coleman, Pat Senne, Roger Wright, Jerry Riggs study water electrolysis in chemistry as Mary Ward takes notes. Scienc realm of 1 covered ar ciples yet facts that human en and the b. knowledge ulation, tl developme ment. The tunity seel Centra tists for ' biology, c acquaint t To keep u velopment its materi textbooks 1 are respor to present
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