Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL)

 - Class of 1958

Page 89 of 184

 

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 89 of 184
Page 89 of 184



Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 88
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Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 90
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Page 89 text:

ART is Goon LIVING 'i if I tion by lverd. Yr i in A thing of beauty is a joy forever,'y once penned a famous Victorian poet, and the students of the CHS art department are inclined to agree. 'lihat's why they're taking the Zlrt courses offered which instill in the student an appreciation of beauty. Our art program is divided into three classes. In Art I, the budding Rembrandts study the fundamentals of line, color, texture, and harmony. A certain amount of work is done in drawing, advertising, and graphic art, but time is also devoted to design in dress and home crafts. Art l progresse sto Art II, a laboratory course in advanced art problems with emphasis on self-expression and individual techniques. llore practically, the Art lll classes learn skills in applied design. 'llhey work Ray Carlton portrays Inspira- Q: a l 2 l V, in s. l s all ii MRS. Nl YLDRED BATES Paint pots, brushes and easel are the lift- of .lIrs. .llylzlrnl lfnres, our Chamberlain art teacher, who last year began an active progratn in art. Xluch of the work on scenery for as- sembly plays and posters is done by Blrs. Bates and her art classes. A l5.S. graduate of 'liampa University, Klrs. Hates teaches adult classes in art in addition to her student classes at C.H.S. on construction and crafts with such materials as papermache, clay, etching, and block printing enabling the student to fa- miliarize himself with the use and care of tools in applied art. ART CLUB ls it Picasso, Rembrandt, or da Vinci? If you're a mem- ber of the Art Club, chances are you know the answers to questions like that, and probably a little bit of the history of the painting and its artist. Linder the supervision of Xlrs. Xlyldred Bates, art in- structor, the members of the club delve into the mysteries of art, and learn the true meaning of art for art's sake. Eligi- bility is determined upon the submission of one or more origi- nal paintings to the sponsor. ART CLUB-Left to Right: Mara Pero. Pat Casiday. Dorothy Burden. Nancy Jo Hickman. Lewis Stone. Patricia Hrazeal. Betty Fulford. Walter Wilson. Cynthia Goodman. Joy Peverell. Bark Row, Left to Right: Fred Jenkins. Janice Davis. Audrey Brook- Far from being merely abstract in their purposes, the members of the Art Club perform many useful services to the school and projects which add up in dollars and cents. They sponsored the art exhibit at Chamberlain the proceeds of which brought many paintings to be hung in the halls of our school. A dance in Xlarch provided money for the frames for the paintings. The Art Club created settings for the l.iv- ing Picturesu assembly which the Drama Department enacted. ins. Leon Perdomo. Nlrs. Mildred Bates fSponsorI. Joe Bryan, Buddy Nlontal, William 0'DeIl. Eddie Parnell. Susie Barnes. Patty Kelly, Sharon Powers.

Page 88 text:

Ar' 'ti H1 resin NHSS MARGUE RITE RAMSEY D. C. . Diversified Co-Opera tive Training On the job every hour of the dayl That's what the sched- ule says of fllrs. Ranmfy at CHS, and truer words were never written. Klrs. Klarguerite Ramsey is IJ.C.'I'. co-ordinator, a job full of perplexing problems and interesting experiences. She helps the U.C.'l'. students find their line of work and gives them further help when they go out to secure their jobs. She received her l3.S. in education from the University of Florida and this year replaced lllr. Ernest lllaney as D.C.'I'. teacher. D.C.T. MEMBERS-First row, left to right: Ann Hess, Evelyn West, Ewanna Overstreet, Bonnie Wood, Jeanie Shubert, Mona Jane Banks. Sylvia McQuire, Edith Whittle. Ann Jones Benschoter. Second row: Bob Dowdy. Alton Hall, Calvin Den- I s as .C 59 s -w.,,,,1 sa.. 'ii f. s . 1 rg i ev-N. Dr. J. N. Pickron is assisted hy Edith Whittle as he examines a patient's teeth. Earn while you learnl 'l'hat's the motto of the Chamberlain IJ.C.'l'. Club, flliversiiied Co-operative Training, mind youlll' These students go to school in the morning, arriving earlier than the other students, and study the basic high school subjects. ln the afternoon they go to their jobs. The entire course is under the supervision of lJ.C.'l'. Co-ordinator, Blrs. Nlargaret Ramsey. All members of this club must have at least a C average, be approved by both co-ordinator and school officials, and be physically able to work. nison. Ralph Fernandez, Leo Pals. Jesse Jacobsen, Ralph Ciccarello. and Charles Arnold. Mr. J. A. Turner Jr.. Vice Pres. of Tampa Armature Co.. and Calvin Dennison examin- ing winding of a stator of an engine. Nr .,, 4 ww' Mr. Arnold P. Saraw, Vice Pres. of Jim Walter Corp. explaining work to he done to Ann Hess. standing, and Sylvia McGuire. who are both DCT students training as file clerk and stenographer respectively. 'llheir outstanding social event is the annual Employer-Employee Banquet when the D.C.'l'.'ers get a chance to meet the boss. coco ommcs JU'T5f4..f,5 ociifefii c 3Of GCi0!UPOfiF'!J 5 J. H. Taylor on right, manager of the Hills- borough Drive-In Theatre, examines the rec- ords maintained hy Ralph Fernandez. DCT student, who is manager of the concession Stand.



Page 90 text:

R. V. Hill supervises welding by Kenneth Little and Malcom Campbell. Learning To Do Doing To Learn Earning To Live Living To Serve FUTURE FARMERS OF MERICA Boys check machines in Ag. Shop. Left to Right: Clark Vechnalc, George Soule. Larry Glaze, Bert Hatcher, Wayne Jeffcoat, R. V. Hill, Lavern Storch, Kenneth Little. Front: Malcom Campbell. and Glenn Manning. ,ll Future Farmers are farmers with futures. Combine qualities of energetic nature, ambi- tion, and farming interest, and you have an FFA member. These boys, students of agri- culture in Chamberlain, have found a way to work vocation in with education. 'lihey study improved methods of farming and each boys carries out his own home project in some phase of this vocation. Qualifications for membership are an inter- est in farming, and productive enterprise. He must also be a student of vocational agriculture and be prepared to stay in FFA until he is twenty-one, or has been out of school three years. Besides their own individual projects, the FFA boys work behind the concession stand at football games and in the parking lot behind General lllills, lnc. during Florida State Fair and Gasparilla. The money is used to send boys to the state and national FFA convention. First row, left to 1-ight: Bob Barnes, Ronald Brame, Clarence Byers. Cecil Cox, George Soule, Malcom Campbell. .lohn Wilsky. Clark Yechnak. Robert Boutwell. Walter Casey, Dennis Diaz. Eugene Rightmyer George Smyth, Jeff Elwood. Charles Roberts. James Greathouse. Lewis Briggs, Kenneth Little. David Skipper. Lavern Ctorch. Lewis .lack- son, Jerry Mortimer. Joe Williams. David Donald- son. Carl Cold. Glenn Manning, Bob Masters. Mar- vin Campbell. Charles Shell, Bob Walters. Hob Vetzel. Serond row: Bobby Kazar. Leven May. Ronnie Cakora. Tommy Alderman. Larry Glaze, Steve Beinert. and Wayne Jeffcoat.

Suggestions in the Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) collection:

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Chamberlain High School - Totem Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 181

1958, pg 181


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