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Page 31 text:
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Cheerleaders Our cheerleaders for this year were Georgia MoCausland-sophomore, Mary Reed-sophomore, Dorothy Kaelin-sophomore, Virglnlg Thelss-senior, Rose Best-Junior, and Norma Shellhamner-Junior. For the year 1949-50 there was no election of cheerleaders. Six girls tried out and Coach Ketter decided to have them alternate as reserve and varsity. Georgia, Dorothy, and Mary have each served two years and have earned their letters. Their uniforms for this year were gold satin blouses, red satin skirts and white moccasins. Virginia and Norma have each served three years and have earned a bar on their letters. Rose has served her first year and will receive her letter when she has completed her second year of cheerleading. These girls wore gold corduroy skirts and weskits, red blouses, and red moccasins. They have enooyed being cheerleaders and have backed a swell teami Library Staff This year 1949-50 the library had at its head Mies Ciccone. The library staff. Rose Best, Helen Newbold, Bob Rice, Bob Reger, and Marilyn Brunell, along with the advisor have made many new rules and regulations. The library has many new books that have been reviewed in the school paper, in the column Jane Reads and Rites. Every Wednesday Miss Phillips comes up to use the library to enter- tain the smaller children. The library can be used for reference work or for entertainment. There is a two-cent a day fine for over-due books. Honor Society The National Honor Society for the year 1949- 50 consisted of three members. Virginia Theiss, a senior, Ralph Shawberger, a senior, and Larry Sun- bury, a Junior. The teachers chose these students by voting. The four qualities considered were: scholarship, service done for the school, leader- ship, which includes personality, and character. Fifteen per cent of the senior class is elegible and one Junior is inoluded in that amount. The choice was very close and there will be others chosen next year. As one can see by the number chosen, only three,that it is a great honor to belong to this organization Movies The students of K. H. 3. have had the opport- unity to see 65 movies this year. Of the 65, Smith of Mlnnestta and Here Come the Coeds were full-length movies. Out of the other 60 odd shows suoh titles as How to Study.Norway,Fall of Germany. Lincoln. Headlines of the Century, and Daniel Boone were enjoyed by the whole student body. Be- sides these were others, both sound and silent, pertaining to almost every class. These were shown privately in the individual class rooms by Roy Stewart and Roy Keller, who have taken over the responsibility of projecting these films.They have done a fine Job this year. 27
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Page 30 text:
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OFFICE WORKERS Rlngggggggglllllllllllilll There is the bell. I see Jeannette Reed is at her Job in the office again. She collects the morning's absence lists, tyres Mn McNuttb letters and does everything in general. You can find her in the office during the offlc, third, seventh and eighth periods of the day. As the bell for the second class rings, we find Roy Stewart on his wey to the office where he takes care of the office, and answers the telephone during that per- iod. What'8 that? I hear music. Oh, it is Just the radio in the office where Ralph is listening to so» hillbilly music from W. I. C. A. The office is blessed by Ralph's cheery oresence the fourth period in the morning. Pat Lawrence has charge of the office fifth period. Pat collects the after- noon's absence lists. She is a very necessary person on the office staff. As the bell for sixth period rings, we see Norma Shellhammer coming towards the office. She also answers the telephone and takes care of other things that come up during that period. COOKS I do believe I smell food. M-n-m-m if we would follow that aroma it would lead u8 right down to the lunch room. There we would find three women busily at work pre- paring our hot lunches. The first woman I came to is Mrs. Mildred Lawrence. Mr9. Lawrence is our Lunch Room Manager , she had done all the planning and buying of our food this year. Her assistants are Mrs. Florence Carter and Mrs. Lounetta Reed. Helping our cooks, I find three seventh grade girls. These girls have an important part of lunch program—they wash the dishes. We have had excellent lunches this year and several wonderful holiday lunches. Maybe in some book you might find this saying, Away to a student's heart is through his stomach. I do believe the students have fallen for the cooks as well as their cooking and are looking forward to having them back next year. INDUSTRIAL ARTS The eighth, ninth and tenth grade boys of K. H. S. who took Industrial Arts in 1949-1950, made projects of all kinds. They made tables, desks, lamps, book racks and other articles of furniture. The Sophomore boys made an equipment room in the boys locker room as part of their curriculum. Printing programs and tickets for the Junior and Senior plays and for other ac- tivities, have also kept this class of boys busy. For one six weeks period, the Freshmen boys took over the study of Home Econ- omics and learned a few tricks on how to cook and run a home. With the new advisor, Mr. Sprang, this year has been an active and profitable one in Industrial Arts work. HOME ECONOMICS The Hone Ec. Classes are well under way with Miss Jones, instructing.There are about forty-five girls enrolled in the Home Ec. 8, Home Ec. I and II classes. During the first semester, the Home Ec.I and Home Ec.8 classes cooked and baked The students brought fruit and vegetables from home to can and also the Ingredients for baking and cooking. The Home Ec. II class sewed. They made dresses, skirts, blouses, slacks and also nsjamas for the Red Cross. They learned many different kinds of materials they did not know before. The mid-year arrived and Home Ec. I and 8 classes auit their cooking and baking to start their beginners course of sewing. The Home Ec. II class or advanced class adjusted from sewing to cooking and beklng • They also brought their ingredients from home so they could also make a full recipe of anything they made. They bake, cook meals, prepare luncheons and desserts. As the year draws to an end the girls all are better in baking,cooking and sewing. 25
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Page 32 text:
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First Row; Maureen Wharram, Edna Shreve, Delores Derry, Norma Shellhammer, Rose Best, Donna Wick, Pat Lawrence, and Loveda Day; Second Row: Miss Farabaugh, Nancy Herl, Rita Nojonen, Marilyn Brunell, Dorothy Kaelin, Oeorgene Brunell, Betty sword, and Georgia McCauoland; Third Row; Marilyn Louys, Roy Stewart, James Theiss, Shirley Bush, Helen Newbold, Virginia Theiss, Carol Krause, and Raymond Bruckman; Fourth Row; Robert Sharp, Merrill Davey, Bob Rice, Larry Sunbury, Stanley Kolasinski, Dean Keller, and Lloyd Ogren. The 1949-50 Centra-Light Staff under the advisory of Miss Farabaugh, has com- pleted its year of work with six good issues of the school paper, and finally the school annual, the K-Lite. At the head of of the Centra-Light staff are the editors Virginia Theiss, and Pat Lawrence. Not quite as important now, are the assistant editors,Rose Best and Norma Shellhammer. The latter will make their appearance in the lime light as the editors of the 1950-51 Centra-Light. The editors' Job is to assign the articles. That is the easiest taskjhowever, the hard part comes when the articles are due and they have to go around and collect them. That doesn't sound hard at all, does it? Well the trouble begins when they start to collect the articles and find very few people have even thought about them since they were assigned. So, with only a day or two before the dead line, everyone suddenly decides to start writing. When the articles do finally come in, there is very little time left for the editors to proof read and correct them. Now let' 8 take a look at some of the backstage scenes, as we shall canl the ». One of the most important group of workers on the Centra-Light Staff is the business staff. If it wasn't for the business staff the Centra-Light Just wouldn't be avail- able. If ever you have seen four fellows tramp out of the school at one time, I assure you, it was the business staff. The business staff's Job is to sell advertise ments. These advertisements are important because they are what pays for the school paper. The ten cents you pay for your copy takes care of the front page. The busi- nesc staff are also the ones that take the unfinished paper to the printers, then re- turn after it when it is finished. All the trips these boys make to Ashtabula for advertisements and to Conneaut after the paper are made with their own cars. They also devote their own time from school, which they don't object to, to do this work. So this year the business staff has done a wonderfifl. Job in making the paper possible. 28
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