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Page 15 text:
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1. Arranging a layout pattern for print, John Barth and Jim Johnston concentrate on Mr Parker s ideas. 2. In Miss Alt’s Home Ec class Pam Grachowski makes a homemade apple pie. 3. Sketching scenes of Lake George and surrounding trees in the park are Pat Horn and Virgina Redding. Home Ec., Art 1 1
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Page 14 text:
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Students construct own ideas in shop Advanced wood shop classes built shelves in the football concession stand and refinished antiques, while the general woods classes made speaker cabinets, cedar chests, tool boxes, and gun cases. After getting the basic concepts of electri- city, students in electricity classes could make strobe lights, color organs, and radios from kits. They also learned house wiring techniques, a good background of the skill. Students were required to do two kit form projects and to repair any other broken ap- pliance thev had at home. Students in drafting classes gained insight in how to visualize objects from three dif- ferent views, to see how things are made from a set of plans, and to draw a floor plan of their home. Besides having to turn in a w ritten report, oral report, and notebook, power Mechanics enrolees learned how to perform tune-ups on their own or their parent s car and worked with small engines. 1. Cleaning a ceramic piece for art class, Carolyn Aton prepare s for the final touches. 2. Taking time for welding bumpers in metal shop Calvin Caldwell applies to shop safety rules. 3. In print shop Mark Anderson and Stanley Dick are concentrating on running the heidelberg 1 0 Shop
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Page 16 text:
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Science classes take field trips Going on field trips instead of going to your classes is usually a lot of fun, and educa- tional too. The science classes took a num- ber of trips this year. They went out to the dunes at the National Lakeshore, twice down to Sullivan s Cave, and to the Planetarium in Chicago. Math students who qualified, went to the regional math contest held in Crown Point. The old math books were replaced this year for nearly all of the math classes, and the Comprehensive Senior Math course was re- placed by the College Algebra course. There was a change in teaching methods, also, with more recognition given to the needs of voc- ational tech students. 1. In beginning biology class sophomores Evanthia Bai- istatos and Meme Payovich study onion cells. 2. Becky Brooks sets the timer for Dave Strom as he prepares to take a psychology test. 3. Hobart s Little League park offers science students chances to study ecological succession of the area. 12 Math Science
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