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Page 41 text:
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award-winning yearoooh compiling directory information, writing copy, captions, running headings, and proof- reading grew in importance as deadlines passed unmet. The old adage hard work never killed anyone was questioned again and again during the year, but the truth is that hard work is fun when the finished product is re- warding. -Nx Junior staff members Eunice Paul, Katharine Hughes, Charles Floyd, and Creola Coleman label and prepare pictures for layout envelopes. Marsha Yarborough proofreads copy which is being typed by Drucilla Capps, staff secretary. Junior and senior staffs crowd around a work table to read in the Scholastic Press Review about the first place award which the MIRROR received. if N
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Page 40 text:
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Mirror staff works Hard for production Nancy Coleman, business manager, informs Editor Kathryn Davis that there is a substantial balance on hand to begin the new publication. Always on the alert, Photographer Stewart Slotnick, focuses on Barbara Gainey, feature editor, and Louise Davis, club editor. Ginny Marshall, sports editor, and Grier John- son, assistant, interview Coach Mc-Donald for athletic scores. Behind the drawn shade on the door of room 20, was a mad house of activity. Early in the year, our adviser, Mrs. Lane, intro- duced juniors to the basic principles of year- book production and seniors participated in the refresher. To bleed or not to bleed be- came an important question in layout pro- cedures and words such as overburn, crop- ping and reverse print were tossed about with aplomb. Advertising space was sold in the fall, monies collected, and an intense sales cam- paign conducted. Editor Kathryn Davis supervised the work of her section editors, and business manager Nancy Coleman re- ceipted monies, billed advertisers, clubs, and kept her journals intact. Stewart Slotnick roamed the campus, snooping around corn- ers and butting into classrooms, clicking the shutter on' interesting subjects for photo- graphy. Tasks such as identifying pictures, alpha- betizing, labeling, cropping, drawing layouts, 1 fl Ann Terry and Sandy Creel get instructions for doing the freshman section from Senior Editor Jane Crowgey.
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Page 42 text:
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n Editor Ann Cox and Business Manager Spiky Metts look wer a recent issue of the Inkling. Sxciting issues of flnfiling provide Producing a newspaper which provides entertaining reading and at the same time presents an overall picture of the school is the aim of the Inkling. Valuable experience is provided stu- dents on the staff who expect to someday enter the field of journalism as a profession. Issues of the paper are entered in competition with other school papers throughout the state and nation for judging and journalism awards. Moving day, generally dreaded by all, was a joyous occasion for the Inkling. With the help of the Student Council and the shop, new quarters were built in the basement. A divided room, providing space for classroom and laboratory work, with cab- inets for filing, bulletin boards lining the walls, and individual desks for editors called for a celebration and open house was held on December 18. Reporters Rosamund Floyd, Tom Bourne, Jimmie Rogers, Edward Apple- white, and Sylvia Jo McKellar compile news for the next Inkling. 38
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