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Page 11 text:
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ABOVE—FIRST ROW: Hazel Goodwin, Rachel Means, Louise Grange, Dorothy Litzner. SECOND ROW: Russell Arndt, Ward Baker, Douglas Hall, Maurice Kuhn. ABOVE RIGHT—FIRST ROW: Virginia Kuhn, Madolin Hackett, Lorraine Ulrey. SECOND ROW: Esther Nugent, Max Kraning, Alice Baker, Roy Broman, Darl Wood. RIGHT—SEATED: Jane Sasse, Lola Jane Rosenberger, Emily Barracks. STANDING: Louise Carlberg, Lucine Jones, Florence Erwin. BELOW—William Middleton, R. W. Warring, Edwin Clark, Herbert DeCroes, Dwight Marsee, Everett Sprague. BELOW RIGHT—SEATED: Katherine Zeis, Ruby Perkins, William Ulmer. STANDING: Russell Stout, Arthur Nygard, Frank Chapman, Rae Hardisty. Mr. Thurston, and Mr. Steele do not appear in the picture.
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Page 10 text:
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Urges Physical and Mental Fitness Theodore Correll divides his time between Main Junior and high school. By September of this year, Eldon Schalliol, instructor in English and social science, had been taken by the draft. Soon after, the Navy parade began. Raymond F. Struck, basketball coach and instructor in health, Arthur Nygard of the social science department, and Maurice Kuhn, biology specialist, were lured away by handsome blue uniforms and Navy commis- sions. Edwin Clarke of the machine shop left at the end of the first semester to give industry a lift. Teachers as a whole have become scarce; men who teach are virtually unobtainable. So Mr. Emmons has had to “borrow from Peter to pay Paul.” Mrs. Maurice Kuhn helped out until spring vacation, then left to join her husband. Mr. Robert Warring and Mr. Earl Stine were transferred from Main Junior School and Mr. Teaching isn't what it used to be. Teachers are asked to teach more things in less time. In step with new requirements and in view of the fact that students spend less time on the bench- es before leaving for college or a part time job, existing courses must submit to careful evalu- tion before they are boiled down or stream- lined. The English department is leading the way in that direction. Furthermore, teachers supervise and encourage defense stamp sales and all sorts of drives. They form the task force for the government rationing program. Early morning and noon classes are becoming more common. Shop teachers might as well move in for most of them carry on in night school after the rest have called it a day. SEATED: Lynetta Wilson, Helen Stoddart, Jean Cravens, Virginia Martin. STANDING: Lora Duguid, Margaret Moist, Rebecca Kabel, Emily Davidson, Elizabeth Evans, Leila Heimbach. SEATED: Mary Dunn, Martha Miller, Ruth Foulke, Beulah Buchanan, Jane Briggs. STANDING: Armin Amos, Harry Hatcher. Log
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Page 12 text:
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STUDENTS Carry Increased Kesponsibility With Mr. Broman elected chairman to suc- ceed Mr. Kuhn and Dick Wardell replacing Walter Schlegel, the Board of Control goes the usual pace supervising school finances. But the Student Council is growing as many arms as an octopus. As soon as students stopped wor- rying about limitations on their authority and began to do things, they were up to the eyes in work. Hall traffic was improved early in the year when a one way stair system was intro- Miss Wilson's successful management of the football concessions gave the council their first money in pocket and with it they instituted badly needed dance classes and frequent mix- er dances. Odd jobs, like the Red Cross drive among the students and plans for a service flag, have fallen to them. They inspect lockers daily, furnish hall guides and are working on library discipline problems. They meet every two weeks, and are rapidly gaining stature as student leaders. Miss Wilson has replaced Mr. Kuhn as adviser. duced — with students on guard to remind offenders. Board of Control - SEATED: Mr. Kuhn, Miss Perkins, Mr. Hatcher, Mr. Steele, Alyce Joyce Clark, and Janice Schmidt. STANDING: George Phillips, Walter Schlegel (withdrawn), and Walter Barkes. Mr. Middleton, Miss Wilson, Mr. Bro- man, chairman, and Richard Wardell do not appear in the pic- ture. oe] et a Student Council SEATED: Elwin Zeller, president, Bruce Chamberlin, Bill Bancroft, Dick Sprague, Elsie Belli, secre- tary, Doris Birtwhistle, Janice Cone, Mary Louise Philion, Carl Vanderlin, Juanita Wilson. STANDING—FIRST ROW: Richard Swadner, Edward Watson, Bob Barnard, Jim Granger, Jim Stefoff, Jule Steinke, Doris Jenkins, Dar- lene Kaiser, Lora Frisoni, Frank Mickels, Jack Deethardt, George Fry and Mr. Kuhn. SECOND ROW: John Crawford, Emil Pozwilka, John Hulecki, Maurice Hahn, and Bob Coyner. Page 8
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