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Page 10 text:
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Club Acliviiies. Alhlelics Are Necessarg .f 41 Aboveheryone is willing to lend c helping hand us the Debuteens complete one of their service proiects-the annual bundle drive lo col- lect cloihlng which is given to the needy. 1 i . :L as-1.1L max: . at
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Page 9 text:
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Wlulla In Warren Biller's shop class, iunior David Gibson begins to run off the admit slips used by Ho-Hi students to be admitted to classes after an absence. Instructors. Students Linger in Classroom The classroom world is as small as a grammatical question and as large as the human mind. lt is a conglomeration of personalities, abilities, ideas and opinions. Hobart High students were chal- lenged during this academic year by a faculty of 55 instructors, some with many years of seniority, others just having successfully made the transition from the world ofthe fraternity pin and collegiate honor society. But to learn is not merely to have student and teacher, it is a relationship between these two individuals, and it is this that HHS has strived to achieve. Students lingered over questions that generations before them had pondered. School became more than four confin- ing walls, for education is a door creak- ing open to cz vast expanse of the un- known. College prep courses were added- o dress rehearsal of the real thing. Conceivably, a Brickie might in one day move from the microscopic world of the amoeba to a lit class with a philo- sophic strain. Our generation lingered in the realm of books and ideas-and grade cards --and how effectively it did so will be measured in terms of the contribu- tion it makes to the world in which it lives. I Loft-Junior Linda Kinney discusses with the Dean of Girls Mrs. Flora Cox the noontime selling of tickets and the publicity campaign for an upcom- ing dance at the high school.
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Page 11 text:
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Outlets From School Routine for Students A student needs activities and out- lets, since school life can become pretty frustrating and confining. You are stu- dent No. 824, locker No. 438, gym locker No. 25, homeroom No. 2l8, ranking 'l8th in your class, wearing uniform No. 34, classified lA by the Selective Service, with a grade point average of 3.2. But Hobart High provides many and varied means of relaxation and self- expression for its students. Clubs, rang- ing from Debuteens to the Science Club, provide an opportunity for each to ex- press his individuality and to be more than just a number. Athletics are an integral part of an educational structure which empha- sizes education of the total individual. Ear-muffed fans threw their brisk cheers across Brickie Bowl to mingle with the smell of popcorn and the in- cense of autumn. Football and tennis gave way to collapsible bleachers in- side the warm gymnasium, Soon snow melted-bringing baseball, golf and track. Generations lingered again at Homecoming, as nostalgic alumni re- turned to a tissue-papered weekend, Seniors sang the alma mater for the last time. We must leave, but the memories- from the wild, hysterical final mo- ments of a football game to the quiet inner glow felt from the satisfaction of a science protect-will linger forever. Seniors Ralph Peters, Dave Walker and Phil Heller forget about conversation as they concentrate on eating pizza at the annual Pizza Supper sponsored by the Hobart High Honor Society. left-Hobart High boosters yell encouragement to the football team as the Brickle offense begins a drive toward its goal during the last moments of a home game.
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