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Page 272 text:
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Steve Weaver, Robert Cross, Nancy Beckham, Ronnie Hanna, Phillis Rutlenbarg, and Paul Herring set up the tape recorder and other machines used in the listening lab. ' tudents Assisted Upon becoming seniors most girls find that they have had enough sit-ups, aerial speedball, and 600 yard walk-runs in physical education, but these nine girls felt that the enjoyment was well worth the responsibility. They were fTOP ROWj Linda Rutherford, Cathy Cole Betty Mur- dock, Parn Baggett, Cindy Swearingen, Becky Hurst, Vickie Loutherback, Virginia Bates, and Cheryl Anderson. in Man Department One of the mast rewarding experiences in life is seeing one's finished project after weeks of hard work. Dianne Gregory and Sharyn Diddie directed jackie Ramsay, Rita Woodall, and Joe Garrison in storing the completed mobiles which hung in the library during the month of March. 268 Above: Telephone calls, messages, and errands exhausted fr. to IJ Shelia Duecy, Kay Randow, Jackie DeLuca, Teresa Clark, Lynn DeLuca, Dana Copeland, Karen Gibbs, Nancy Danton, Marilyn Davis, Sarah Hunt, Pat Lampe, Marilyn Griffin, and Sherrie Cook, assistants to Mrs. McCarthy. Below: Playing hookey was next to impossible due to the hard efforts of fr. to l.j Melissa Megarity, Pat Caulfield, Barbara Steakley, Joyce Bush, Charlcye Dasher, Ann Jablonawski, Betsy Woodard, Pat Caldburg, Patty Magill, and Jan Marstaller. Seniors Brian Ready, Barry Anderson, and Tommy Perkins, and junior Pat Dougherty were the male assistants who were constantly called on to run projectors in the visual education room and to bring other electrical equipment to the classrooms. an I ual-My
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Page 271 text:
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Thomas Mahler, Larry Martin, and Buddy Royall worked demonstration examples ona large slide rule. Tests, tests, and more tests kept the mathematicians in practice for the In- terscltolastic League contests. Some people worry about common sense, others long for some good old horse sense, but these Richfield stu- dents worked for number sense. What is number sense? Mr. ,lohn C. Lattimore, sponsor of the Number Sense Club, called it 'lspeed and accuracy in the art of com- putation. The members of the club, which met before school, worked to enter the District lnterscholastic Con- test held in April and then hopefully, to go on to the Regional and State Contests. Closely related to the Number Sense Club was Miss Emily Kattner's Slide Rule Club which was organized in December. Members worked for speedy accuracy in slide rule computation, and also entered the Inter- scholastic League Contests. MATH CLUBS PRACTICED ART OF COMPUTATIO Below: David Levy and Larry Curles explained a problem from one of the Number Sense tests to John Scott Butler.
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Page 273 text:
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Choral assistants Paula Blankenstein, Judy Rustin, and Lois Lutes find time between their duties of check- ing roll and writing letters for Mr. Hawthorne to sing with Karen Town- san. Shelving was an endless task for Beverly Ham- mond, Terry Turner, Pat Roberts, Jimmy Wiat- horn, Janet Blasingame, Sharon Tucker, and Elizabeth Barrett fabove leftj. Above, Diana Stokes, Karen Jones, and Connie Crow checked out books to Betty Rose McNamara and Jane Martin while Diana Dieckow processed cards. Preparing the more than 2,000 books for usage was an endless process of checking pages to be sure that they were in the correct order and in good condition, fixing check-out pockets and cards, and classifying the books according to the Dewey Decimal System. Sophortaores Sharon Broom and Shirley Jones fleftj got pointers from John Spain, Gloria Hopkins, and Jolm Scott Butler. t -Wrr -K,. , .1 if I 'I
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