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Page 12 text:
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Our Board of Education is composed of a group of seven business and profes- sional men who cooperate with the prin- cipal in establishing a sound field of edu- cation for the students. We little realize the many duties and plans the Board works on and carries out for the benefit of our school. Their work this year included the selection of well-qualified, efficient teachers, main- taining sufficient safe transportation, hir- ing the nine bus drivers, seeing that the buildings and grounds are kept in repair, and employing men who keep the build- ing clean and in first-class condition. The Board holds one regular meeting each month. This year some changes were made due to the popular election. The first half of the year Urie Barnes, Ioe Batten, B. W. Cunningham, I. W. Forbes, C. E. Maxwell, and Henry Souder were the members until their terms expired. loe Batten and C. E. Maxwell were re- placed by Bill Hamlet and Ed Swanson who will serve for the next four years. Delores Souder was temporarily appoint- ed until the new County Superintendent, H. A. Derfelt, takes over his duties in luly. We deeply appreciate the work this group of loyal citizens is doing to make our school life pleasant and profitable. i' ir 'lr BOARD OF Eight SHH.I.Sf1H.I. DELORES SOUDER, HENRY SOUDER, URIE BARNES, HM FORBES, ED SWANSON, BILL HAMLET
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Page 11 text:
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amZ14i!1Jafay1 The excitement of graduation is over, the annual party has been chalked up marking the final social event of the year. The Freshmen are plotting their revenge for next school term, the Sopho- mores are calling themselves Upper Classmen , and the luniors are begin- ning to feel next year's responsibility. The farewells have been reluctantly ut- tered and the last of the lingering Sen- iors have disappeared from the campus. And so another nine months of school vanishes leaving its usual trail of memories. Gee, its been swell-of course there has been work even drud gery at times but somehow everything always turns out CK and ends in play and fun lts hard to believe such a perfect year is gone Oh l know we should have studied harder stayed awake in recitation oftener wasted less time doing noth ing made those last minute plans earli r could have even been more successful romantically by making dat s more often But it wasnt bad at all met a lot of grand kids made a lot of new friends grades could have been worse and classes werent nearly so dull as one might imagine them All in all its really surprising Just how much has really been accomplished this year in C C C H S lpersonally think l94l could be classed as All American and as the youth of today preparing to meet the challenging future we mean to make all other years the same em, Q , K A .fly 4- S 0 0 Q it NN I . D -fin x J' r 'ra k 0,0 'V' PY fb Z9 f 447112722 bm 75'Zz' wzl and 73015 l ' l A 62,5294 x Jai ff , l , x ' I I J 'S' 0 'la . ' ....... f 91,0 .H In s , f ' Jag '76 i i ..,.. l 6 Seven
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Page 13 text:
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W 0 0 0 The greatest part ot the immense VV,V i task ot making the wheels go 'round in our large school system talls on our principal, W. L. Brown. He is a friend to all. His advice, guidance, and inter- est are well recognized by the student le ll body. l-lis rational judgment, quiet, im- pressive dignity, conservatism, and etticient management go together to make him respected and admired by all who know him. The valuable service which Mary Cunningham and Dolores Wagner, our 'U ottice assistants, render daily to us is W a most important cog in the machinery VJIDN ot our school. With tireless energy they sign excuses, do correspondence for the teachers, mimeograph tests, keep all books and tiles, record our grades, keep the activity tickets, and advise L-l 1 ' - '- studen s on academic and extra curri WA LLOYD BROWN cular activities. MARY CUNNINGHAM DGLOHES WAGNER O F F I C E SLNYLSISSV ara. ffs. .. 1r1ffr...'.,rts. ' . . 1.3m-'-mmmwf www . 4
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