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Page 22 text:
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COOKS AND JANITORS RENDER SERVICES left to right: June Pryor, Eunice Schafer, Pat Patterson, Viola Kelly, Ruth Clark, Betty Carmody, Edna Smith. ASSISTANTS left to right: Patricia Maddox, Laura Durham, Cheryl Kirk- bride, Tedd Aupperlc, Bill Tasker. As the sun breaks over the horizon, we find our cafeteria ladies trudg- ing to LCHS to begin their long day. Preparing enough food for six hundred students each day is a full time job, but through it all, these ladies find time to joke with the students and chat with the teachers. Their capable assistants help to lighten the load considerably by washing dishes, pouring milk, and selling desserts. Our maintenance staff, familiar person- alities around LCHS, are always the first to arrive and the last to leave the building. Their duties range from sweeping the floors to repairing equipment; and, during our extracurricular activities, one of the crew is always on hand to keep things in running order. 18 BACK: Roscoe Smick, John Stauthammer, Virginia Blanquart. James Sholl. FRONT: Offo Stahl.
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Page 21 text:
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HELEN SCHMIDT Latin, U.S. History As a change from reading and studying for teaching preparation. Miss Helen Schmidt finds pleasure in driving her Chevrolet to shopping centers, on vacations, and in visiting friends and relatives in other cities. Miss Schmidt also enjoys watching TV; her favorite personality being Pat Boone. Mr. Jack Clinton is indeed a busy man. Among his outside interests are gardening and his Number One Son, Randy. He also enjoys taking colored slides of places he has visited, namely Mexico and the Southwest. At right, Mr. Clinton is getting ready to take some movies of his family. JACK CLINTON Spanish FACULTY ENJOY SPORTS A graduate of Nebraska University is Mr. Rich- ard Barnett. He is a member of the honorary Math fraternity, Kappa Mu Epsilon. In his spare time, Mr. Barnett enjoys outdoor sports, fishing and stamp collecting. At right, he admires a prize catch he landed on a recent fishing trip. RICHARD BARNETT Algebra, Geometry, and Trig v if » Mr. James Adams, carries his en- joyment of mathematical calculation over into his hobby of bridge. He also gains pleasure from collecting stamps. At left, he is shown looking over sev- eral pages of new stamps ready to be placed in his album. Mr. Adams also makes peanut brittle at Christmas. An out-of-door enthusiast, Mr. Donald Bangert, devotes many lazy summer days on the banks of his favorite fishing pond trying to catch his quota. For a Math teacher, Mr. Bangert has a very green thumb. He enjoys growing and caring for plants. He also experiments with them through grafting. JAMES ADAMS General Math, Algebra I, II 17 DONALD BANGERT Geometry, Algebra I, II
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Page 23 text:
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GIRLS LEARN HOMEMAKING TECHNIQUES Another important phase of Home Ec is cooking. The freshman girls learn how to make salads, bis- cuits, cookies, and later in the year they prepare breakfast. As they advance in their Home Ec training they learn how to cook meat and vegetables and how to can fruit. During all four years of Home Ec the teachers try to teach their girls to budget their time wisely so they will be efficient housekeep- ers. Each girl must learn the seven basic foods and how to include them in their meals so their fami- lies will receive nutritious diets. Proper table setting and serving technique is also stressed. In the picture, Mrs. Clara McCraith, Con- nie Speck, and Marilyn Harris watch as Pat Bozark and Anita Johnson demonstrate the proper way to pour water and coffee. This busy little freshman, Shar- on Staley, is diligently working on her first Home Ec sewing project, under the supervision of her teacher Mrs. Ann Clinton. The freshman students are required to make a skirt and a blouse which they model in the annual F.H.A. Style Show. In Home Ec II the girls must make a garment with fitted sleeves and a fitted waist. Party dresses or formals are usually made in Home Ec III. Finally in the fourth year of Home Ec, the girls make lined suits. Besides making these various projects, the girls are taught the parts of the machine, how to wotk the at- tachments, and they learn the various tricks and short cuts to make their sewing easier and fast- er. These tips are kept in a note- book for use in the future. 19
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