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Page 14 text:
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For Some, This Others, The ANTICIPATION OF A COOD LUNCH is evi- dent on the faces of these students. Morton students may either buy lunches or bring them to our cafeteria. S ” ii ' -«w • ,r ■ ■» h nM :“Tfrr ' kit -isii % -“•«£ « ' v V . ■ » w % J STUDENTS NEED NOT WORRY about having proper supplies, for the bookstore is well- stocked with supplies to fulfill almost every need. Judy Kominiak shows a notebook to Leonard Bissa, Martha Wolfe, and Alan Berg- FROM THE FIRST WEEK OF SCHOOL seventh hour is devoted to rigorous drilling and prac- ticing of formations by the band, in prepara- tion for football games.
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Page 13 text:
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Are Really Going to Study STUDENTS ARE A GREAT aid to the office personnel, for they are relieved by students who perform routine duties such as making a record of absentees and filling out admits. Roberta McGee and Rita Ko- vach offer assistance to Dennis Orr, Karen Pitzele, and Bill Banas. BEFORE AND AFTER SCHOOL this scene in the library is quite normal. Helpers, who put books in their proper places on the shelves and check out books, enable Miss Allman to attend to more complex duties. SHOUTID CREETINCS, bubbling conversation, and the click- ing of locker combinations characterize our halls each day as the semester progresses. Page Nine
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Page 15 text:
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Comes Easy; For Pull is Hard The turning of the calendar to September rudely broke the lazy summer silence and once again woke us to the realities of a new term. Gone were the care- free, rollicking days of summer; school had come for another year. Then started the dreary but not too monotonous days of school life. We attended classes, lab sessions, and lectures that stretched our minds to encompass the most worthwhile thoughts of the past, present, and future. Our thoughts turned to reading, writing studying, and more studying. Day after day we fol- lowed a routine schedule, but with hardly a dull moment. Our lives will always be filled with regimen- tation, but no doubt the routine of our high school years will be best of all. WITH SQUADS drilling, bands practicing, and gym classes cheering their teams on, Ed Guzis finds it hard to concentrate in his seventh hour study hall. IT’S EASY to concen- trate on studies and at- tend to a monitor post as well, so Pat Weiss discovers. Monitors are required to maintain at least a C average. Pag e Eleven
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