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Page 16 text:
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Linda Spencer and Eddie Robinson are found when thoughts are too weighty for words. Karen Ehret on the Hass stage captivates her au¬ dience with calypso routine. Today is but an interlude for the foreseen and unforeseen — a blend of yesterday and tomorrow. Miss Huss pageant contestant, Connie McLean, pictures teenage grace. Today they A teenager is a mass of slowly dy¬ ing dreams who, seeing not beyond the hill of youth, feels that the more im¬ portant things for which he pines must eventually come to him. Thus, through his unmolested youth which, with enough desire, may easily be trans¬ formed into anything, a teenager be¬ comes the symbol of hope. Aside from being the symbol of hope, a teenager is the symbol of happiness; for being still close to childhood, he may look upon the world with some amount of fresh wonder; and one must admit that even the biggest prob¬ lems, such as those of going steady or being first man on the football team, smack of joy. Adorned in black, Eleanor McArver, one of Frank L. Greenwave’s “paid” mourners, sneaks a smile at the camera. 12
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Page 17 text:
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Today for the Huss population is the effervescent yet evanescent teen years! are teenagers: But let us not suppose that being a teenager involves only happiness. For many, the teenage years are ones of emptiness when young blood surges hut in vain, and youth is but another meaningless step toward the grave. Thus, all in all, we must consider even the greatest of teenagers as a tragic figure who, though he feels that he is moving toward some peak in life, is but moving toward that time when his childish emotions must become meaningless and lost in the oblivion of the material world where he is left with nothing but the heartless and use¬ less appendage of age. —Robert Waterson Class of ’66 » Caught in typical teenage action, Cathy Price interrupts telephone con¬ versation to register surprise for the photographer. Trying to shoo away stage-fright butterflies, Jane Withers and Linda Garland pause to collect nerves before again facing their audience. Shooting for a two-pointer, Ronnie Doster, typifies freshman action on the court. Senior Sherry Diehl on many occasions has shared her talent as violinist with varied Huss audiences. i 13
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