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Page 64 text:
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After typing her story into the computer, Annette Kleithermes checks for errors before changing disks. 8chool Publications members are ffront to backi Tiffany Thompson, Sarah Buhr, Francine Voss, Brenda Joyce, Jessica Peters, Bev Joyce, Rose Kuster, Lisa Hoover, Karen Koenigsfeld and Paula Helmig. mf 94:4 4' Joumallsm members are ffront rowj Sarah Roberts, Jeana Brandt, fsecond rowj Mike Bunch, Kerri Kaullen, Dana Bryan, Tena Robertson, Annette Kliethermes, Karen Fain, Melissa Tyree, Kendall Gobeng fthird rowj Lonnie Wolfe, Spencer Kem- mer, Lesa Reynolds, Christy Ackman, Lisa Holliday and Paula Niekamp. 60 f Clubs Nw 1 7 T havin story son, Tl' nalis ding that chall writt WGS WGS
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Page 63 text:
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,fan i.--ia-1wvmw-. 1q.-.mQ+f -- .F uv- ii wx will X SNK X X X l xx Q ' I 7 A, Y a4r'r X !..,,ww,fwm' X ,f , . jr f -:,.f'1.,:,.-- A, X .te-'rf b: . :- , aw ft S . l 322: ' so - . W X sts.: -. 5 W ,,'Q ' f, X x X bs X XX X ss , s .Q 'K C 1 Playing detective Lance Bright, Brian Gentges tries to make Annette Wichmannsacquaintance. Casting a spell, Francine Voss shows off her magic snarl as Mother Hectate in the senior play. QW-1' 151 Nervousness subsides, learning begins The audience may have ex- perienced emotions of suspense and humor but little did they know the cast was experiencing the same emotions, but for a different reason. Late into the night at dress rehearsal, they began to get ag- gravated with each other because no one knew his lines one hundred Percent and they were getting anxious. Someone even suggested using cue cards. Everyone laughed dl the idea but later on it sounded good, The space behind the cur- l-ffh: was so crowded with flif-trulveis cramming their lines 'TW they kept missing their cues. '-fu? dress rehearsal, good r'Hrniahce? we of us thought we'd pull it -ir -..,,,- W - ,- W - ,A- off, said Lori Whertvine, female lead, but we did! On opening night, after the jitters wore away, they felt a little more confident. Sure, we made a few mistakes, but we always managed to cover Practice helped us become closer because of helping each other daily, said Rhonda Koenigsfeld. for each other, said Lori. The play was a big success. The kids did a really good job and a lot of people came to see it, said Duane Crane, co-sponsor. Getting those performance jit- .-- -? 5l'f '- ' -1- -V . - '- ' - ters wasn't unknown to the SpeechfDrama students either. They presented two plays on the last day of school for the final weary students. The speech squad members also competed in a contest at School of the Osage and at Chamois in a conference meet. Annette Wichmann took se- cond place in Prose at Osage and at Chamois. l think a speech class helps a person's self esteem and confidence, said Annette. Although the other speech students didn't win medals or trophies, they seemed to agree with Sarah Hock who said, 'It didn't really matter it l won because l tried and that was the important thing. V ' -.uw..1.iw,- .a...,L.t...... ..,-...M
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Page 65 text:
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. I. tg - 'gwwvg .X-If 4 wil 1 Ng ' ' 1 gi:-: :Q . 'cv 'Q pf Working on the senior paper, Christy Ackmann, Tammi McCuskey, Tena f S-.,'t.,-.aww 3 X' as--47. 4 , . . ff,t,u,. MZWY j f , ,Q --ZX., -:V ,' .M f , x, -G., W-.,,,, U .,., I ' 1 ' , 'M-. -.,,,mh A I.. X 'Z' ,,w ,. f V A . X Kf hfgmifm . ' fm ,, .M .v ,, ' W- ,fn Www . R i - ' . .. . ,, Robertson, Lisa Holliday and Kerri Kaullen . N-:. . .,v-:.. prepare their creative contributions. Cropping a picture, Rose Kuster works on her Homecoming layout. Performing for the School Publications class, Paula Helmig demonstrates the hula. Rewards result from hard work The most difficult thing was having to write, print and correct a story in one day, said Tena Robert- son, newspaper staff member. The Walkin' Wild took the jour- nalism class time to produce. Fin- ding the unknown about an event that most people were at was the challenge reporters found. Once written, the story had to survive Ad- visor Patti Cases' red marks. The story was then typed into the com- puter which was known to occa- Sionally eat a story. The story WHS printed and corrected until perfect - which was seldom under three times. The school publications class iound that producing a yearbook was even more work. The hardest part is picking a theme and know- ing that the decision has to be final once you've started, said Jessica Peters, editor. The secret Who Says? theme was brainstormed when staff members began talking about how other schools conveived Seeing my story and knowing people were reading it made me feel good, said Missy Tyree. LHS. The color scheme was taken from the Rick Springfield concert emblem of Tao which featured red lettering on a black background. The strive to do something dif- ferent and unique brought in the use of copy burned over pictures, tilted shots, boxed quotes and abundant artwork. Some of the yearbook details weren't as much fun. Trying to write copy on an organization you know nothing about is really frustrating, said Francine Voss, yearbook staffer. But as the year ended, the hard work seemed to pay off for the ex- citement of receiving All Missouri honors at the Missouri ln- terscholastic Press Association's state competition for the second year. The yearbook staff was pleas- ed knowing they were the only ones who knew the secrets the yearbook of 1985-86 held. ill .auf-n-at -hd-4'0'U -O ,
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