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Page 17 text:
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RUSH HOUR. Scurrying out of the building, students hurry to begin weekend pleasures. 4-1' Q. 1. F ,fa fo GO FISH. Kathy Weems and Kathlene Crowder, average two hands of cards during their lunch break. LAZIN' after school on Friday. Tommy Mar- tin relaxes with his favorite Snoopy paper- back, Paperbacks rated with Hazen students . . . they were easy reading and carrying. 1 3 I' ffii if 5 J as Q arg' D t ,Q 8 , i fn X 81,4 ff foopy if x i Q 3 xy T.G.I.F.l13
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Page 16 text:
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Togo In 'I'.G.l.E 12l Cheafp Thrills TIGOII B NAP TIME. Otis Ware, eighth grader, finds something better to do in study hall than study. Waiting for Friday, students caught up on lost sleep. IS IT TIME? Sophomore agri boys wait anxi- ously for the end of school. Students were seen roaming the halls and standing in door- ways forthe signal so they could leave. I sure will be glad when Friday gets here. Sports, extra curricular activities, and news of the weekend overshadowed Monday 'blahs' at HHS. Though students and faculty found Mondays and Tuesdays 'slow' days, a definite change in mood appeared as Wednesday roll- ed around. Students became alive with weekend anticipation, teach- ers perked up, and talk focused on FUN. Typical of any school on a seven- period day, students looked for- ward to last period on Friday. An increase in hall traffic and vocal buzzing in classrooms made it ap- parent that the final bell 13:45 p.m.J was about to ring. Whether stand- ing in doorways or inching to the front of the room, students waited on the 'signal' and theirace began. Running to get a back seat on the bus or hurrying to getxto their cars before the West Cleveland traffic jam, students looked and acted dif- ferently on Friday. Shouts of What's happenin' could be heard as far as three blocks away from the school. Weekend plans stirring, the general attitude among students was, Thank Goodness lt's. Friday. DRI? DRY. Photographer Carol Svestka, junior, finished up a week's printing. All negatives had to be drip-dried and prints had to be cooked on a special dryer. Monday hlahs vanish as Friday approaches
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Page 18 text:
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REGISTRATION BLUES. Sophomore jimmy Robison waits for Mr. C, B. Watter- son to issue him a locker and books. Senior high students registered on August 21, and elementary and junior high on August 22. School officially began August 23. t tt is Q55 1 IIASSI-Ei IIASSI-E8 IIASSLES STUFFED UP. Sophomore Ritchie Gerety experienced difficulty in keeping the con- , tents of his locker together. Locker problems were worse for those who occupied top lock- EFS. 141 Cheap Thrills frustrations antagonize even the calmest Hall traffic varied! Trying to beat the rush, students dodged, el- bowed, and fought, some days in an attempt to get to class. Cuts and bruises seldom resulted but push- ing annoyed everyone. Semester registration proved the most tiresome of all school routines. Waiting in line for hours, students checked-in in seconds. Arriving at the head of the line, un- derclassmen discovered no books were available for many classes. Adding to their inconveniences, many were separated from their friends and were placed in alternate classes. Food frustrations plagued upper- classmen. Hungry beings, they raided coke and candy machines be- tween classes and frowned A LOT when the machines were empty, Particularly disappointing to seniors were calls of no seconds on pizza or chicken and dressing in the cafeteria. Grades and tests were traditional hassles . Losing sleep over exams proved to strengthen academic standing but worked hardships on students' dispositions. In addition, lack of parking spaces and themes for talking and chewing gum tail- ored the year.
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