Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI)

 - Class of 1967

Page 147 of 330

 

Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 147 of 330
Page 147 of 330



Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 146
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Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 148
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Page 147 text:

teran photographer, Scott Robertson, shows newcomer n Pratt some of the cameras. M pf Q59 airn co-editors, Barb Darling and Cory Beneker, refer to st year's issues to get ideas for their own. lJ ' Collecting information for his weekly ccflumn, sports editor Chato Hill talks to Coach Heick about the Maples. Helping with final corrections, Kathy McCleish and Helen Lom- bardo proofread a dummy sheet. Responsible for making and selling the athletic programs are Dave Martens and Mike Saltsman. JV Q ik in is ssh 'E Mary Henne 04,5 4 i fi I Sam Henry ., , my no , i v will I 4 WA! -arf ...f Mary Herman U Jeff Herriman Craig Heyl Lee Hickman

Page 146 text:

Margaret Honnold, Highlander editor, edits a story while her co-editor, Dee Kin- caid, makes final corrections on a dummy sheet, trying to meet a deadline. Newspaper staff produces weekly Weekly publication of the Highlander involves the work of many people. Editors, page editors, reporters, typists, photogra- phers, artists and the adviser all have specific tasks to perform, and no issue can be finished unless each does his work. Stories are assigned at the beginning of the week by the co-editors, Margaret Honnold and Dee Kincaid, and are researched and written by reporters and other staff members. After being copyread, stories are typed, corrected, and pasted down on large dummy sheets. Headlines are written, pictures are assigned to one of the student photographers and a cartoon idea is chosen. The staff must meet a deadline almost every Monday night. The last minute work of paste-up must be finished, captions writ- ten and typed, and then the dummy sheets are finished. After this the printer takes over. On Friday the newspapers are returned and distributed to the students who have activity tickets. Students received 33 issues of the Highlander this year, some of which were six pages in size, but most four pages. As advertising manager, Sue Kiltie finds herself on the phone much of the time, soliciting ads. Marsha Brown, Mary Risdon, Mike Hubert and Bill Hatcher write news and feature articles. 5. uf 'Q ,nnfi f B159 .mn ' f 1 neg , it? 3-. - . ff. , Q 'viii . 44' ,,, by is-55 . pw ,125 - ' . . . I-if aj ,- -.9



Page 148 text:

45 Marcia Koren and Nancy Nitschke work hard on the cards for the index. Sports editor Jim Boyce carefully cuts a picture 'for his page. . ,.,,:: , ., ...., , A , . ' W' ',.J'fie2l As homeroom editor, Mary Richardson, types many lists of names. ,. Q! f- :ZS V y ' V- . gg hu v i -.i.,.. . ,,,l.f 8' ' 'L ',,.f,1.f ,fc W . N ' ......-- Piper adopts new, vertical style for 1966-67 Plans for the 1966-1967 Piper were in the making over a year ago. Last spring all students interested in the yearbook attended a series of training sessions where they learned and practiced page layout. By June Mr. Hammel had selected editor-in-chief Julie Clark and five section editors. Over the summer Julie went to an editor's workshop at Indiana University and planned the general order of the yearbook. Setting a precedent, the staff decided upon a daring, new style in which vertical columns were employed. In addition to this dramatic departure from last year's Wa-26 horizontal layout, the staff voted for a different treatment of senior pictures after con- siderable controversy. Rather than devoting a separate section to the graduating class, it was decided to arrange senior pictures throughout the book on the right hand column of each spread. Once school started in the fall, the staff began operations with the new blueprint. Julie assigned workers to section editors, who in turn delegated the specific areas of school life to be covered. The entire staff set to work selling advertisements to local merchants. In November the yearbook sales began. Staff members solicited in homerooms and also sold yearbooks to doctors and dentists of the community. All seniors received orders for the Piper as part of senior dues. As the year progressed, professional and school photographers took many pictures of Seaholm in action. Yearbook students carefully examined the red proofs and chose the most descriptive and representative shots. The staff then cropped the selected red proofs and fitted them into layouts. After proofs returned from the photographers as finished pictures, students pasted them down on the final page plans. Copy and cap- tions were written to tell the story the pictures did not. With Mr. Hammel's approval, the staff sent out finished pages to the printer in an effort to meet deadlines. In June the yearbook staff reaped their iust reward. The yearbooks came. Pipers were distributed in the library to some T800 expectant Seaholmites. While working on the Piper after school, staff members Marg Alic, Wendy Erb, Jeanne Chisnell, Gwen Henley, Kathy Clark, Karen Vannette, Lynn Skaistas, Diane Lewison, Jean Petit, Nancy Halmhuber, Anna HQ' ,..

Suggestions in the Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) collection:

Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981

Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

1984

Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986

Ernest Seaholm High School - Piper Yearbook (Birmingham, MI) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 230

1967, pg 230


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