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Page 29 text:
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Sealed Robinson. ileimaiit. Cliapman Standing Hales. Davis. Stoner. Snyder Vosst-rs. Switk. lJnkliart. Nt-H You listen bewildered as the talk turns to proportions-you try to help lay out a feature page and end with a headache and a page queerly gone askew. You watch the art editors and marvel at their skill. Timidly you ask if there's a little typing you might do. Then suddenly you're talking the lingo, too. You write feverishly, eye on the calendar, anything to get done before the fast approaching deadline! The advertising section goes to press-the covers arrive-bills pour in to the harrassed business manager's con- fusion. The wind-up now-those last pic- tures to take, and then the mumps epidemic sweeps the school and holds up everything. Finally the day arrives when the last copy is on its way to the engrav- ers-the last literary masterpiece is typed. It's finished! But rest assured you'll be writing senior personals, balancing the budget, selling ads, selling Spys, measur- ing, pasting, counting words in night- mares for countless months. And the stench of rubber cement will be with you always when you think of The Spy. .l.
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Page 28 text:
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ciiiiirt- .xml liar-i HIE SPY Strange-this business of worlchy on The Spy. You sign up as a junior .1 ,sured that your witty remarks and novel ideas will malce you the shining light of the editorial stafifg your winning personality and high pressure technique will make you the financial genius of the business staff. Then you find yourself on the staff. You sit at a long table confronted with the elephantine task of putting words on paper. You try to write senior personals and find that your witty remarks are labeled corny by your literary col- leagues. Your novel ideas, you learn, were used in The Spy of 1908 or 1922! Or you go bravely forth to sell ads, and you stand shakily on the curb taking deep breaths before facing one of our local tycoons and trying to impress upon him the great advantage to his company of a page in the high school annual. You learn a new vocabulary as the editor and the photographer tall:-zinc etching --halftone-bleed top and right-mortise here--tilt right ten degrees-l -s. Coulter. Boyer Nlonroe. Andrews. Hcitunan Miller. Dysingvr. Sayre. Klockner. Crissingcr. Phipps
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Page 30 text:
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