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Page 48 text:
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Sr. Carmella welcomes James Madell, Michael Sechrist, John Cain, Kathleen Colegrove, Mary Rita Supple, Peggy Sheehan and Joel Sweet to her homeroom and introduces them to her Board of Education. Ronald Limoncelli, Carol Coveney, Wil- liam Knott and Frances Shon hand in iheir finished projects to Sr. M. Declan. John K. McCarthy, Carol Rockett, John De- laney (standing), Barbara Schmieg, Marie Sheehe and Douglas Smith begin the first step in their American Heritage reports — finding appropriate articles. Michele Devon, Carol Morrell, Robert Kessing, and Thomas Hair skim source material for notes — the second step. 44 JUNIORS 2 6
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Page 47 text:
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Uh7 ' Morning chatter on the upper ssS floor is lerminated as Mr. Teta ushers Louise Richard, Catherine Walsh, Joan Farmer and Robert Schieftn into their homeroom. Mary DeSocio, John Grady, Patricia Ryan, Thomas D ' Andrea, Michael Wesneski, (standing) Christine Dooher and Elizabeth Merriam call home to find out the good (.• ' ) news on the day report cards come out. f %, ' ' J 1 ■ !■ Joan Coffey, John Hughes, Catharine Creighton, Amelia Ciarrocca, Barbara Dooley and Joseph Brewer indicate our newly acquired landmark.
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Page 49 text:
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The junior becomes more aware of the world around him. He sees that there is, indeed, a greedy world out there, waiting to ab- sorb him into its cold complexi- ties. He learns of the past. He learns why and how his Ameri- can government is run and why the Civil War was fought. The junior learns to examine exalted deeds and heroes with merciless questioning. The junior learns to make the other man back up his statements. Test tube and slide rule provide the weapons of his ofifensive. Interpretation of liter- ature and the stern demands of clear exposition temper his strat- egy. The junior finds that the Church of his ancestors is not perfect. It is not perfect, he learns, because it is composed of imperfect men. But this does not disillusion the junior. This know- ledge makes him aware of him- self, his own faults, and those of the world around him. He begins to understand and to grasp. Reality, still refracted through the prism, takes on a different light. The junior is formed, ready to go to the an- nealing process of the senior year. Donna Moseh, Bailey Bowers and Barbara Augustine pause for idle chatter after lunch. Ronald Limoncelli, Carol Coveney, William Knott and Frances Shon hand in their finished projects to Sr. M. Ueclan. Ann Kennedy is outnumbered b Richard Clark, Anthony Morrow, Robert McCarthy, Michael Donovan, James Carmody, Gary Richmond and James Giordano as they discuss the MmyU-aj ' s Bo s ' Views on Girls. 45
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