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Page 7 text:
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Our Town Willkie High Our school, Willkie High School, can be compared to a town. We all live here five days a week for nine months of the year much as we do in our own homes. Our city building, on the first floor in the front of the building, is our principal's office. Our mayor and judge is Mr. Copeland; his clerk, Mrs. Collier. Our government is ihe student council. Our homes here in our town are our classrooms where the teachers preside. Here we study, work, meet our friends and learn the essentials of life. The streets are the halls overrun by pedestrians. Our community center is our Panther Den where we now have a cafeteria. Our civic center is our auditorium where Chapel services are held and plays are given. We have a public library, a movie theatre, and a street department. The city newspaper, written by students, is published once every month and sold to the many citizens throughout the year. But let us look at our city more closely and see the minute details.
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Page 8 text:
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Our Streets . . . The halls of our school can be compared to the streets of a busy city. For example, both have fast and slow moving traffic which you encounter if you venture down one of our halls between classes. The first, fast moving traffic, is a menace to life and limb because of those who rush pell-mell from class to class knocking or pushing aside all interference just for the joy of being first. Those students who by some quirk of fate are always found walking in twos, and the students who simply cannot walk any faster are found in the slow-moving traffic. This type causes most of our traffic jams. We have our up and down stairs which are much like one-way streets. One thing they have in common is that some people always seem to be going in the wrong direction. These are generally either freshmen who don't know any better, or seniors who think they can get away with something. We also have our parking meters or lockers. We have two separate areas—one for boys and one for girls. There must be some confusion as to just where these lockers are located, for there always seems to be boys clustered around the girls' lockers. Although there are a few boys occupying lockers in the girls' areas and vice-versa, for the most part, these are restricted zones. Page Four
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