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Page 25 text:
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] Home economists MISS RUTH PROCTOR and MRS. MARY BIDWELL ably trained the future housewives of America. d away at homework MRS. EVELYN SKLEPOWICH enjoyed working — and laughing — with her Eng- lish students. MRS. JUNE WARD meets the first quali- fication of a good English teacher: she likes to read the literature she teaches. COACH BRUCE A. WILSON kept in shape by running from the gymnasium to the driver education building. Looking forward, no doubt, to summer vacation, MRS. MARGARET BLACK- WELL and MR. RAYMOND RIGGIO, special education teachers, thumb through an atlas, listing the sites of interest. 21 rmmmmmm gm-
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Page 24 text:
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Oh, I didn ' t know you you were watch- ing, says MRS. CLEO ZEHNPFENIG, home economist. Lesson One. This is a dress, explains MISS MARGARET McFARLANE, as MISS MARY SCHOOLER, fellow home economics teacher, holds the object under discussion. We slaved Everyone should be grateful to these agriculture teachers, MR. HAROLD SEIGWORTH and MR. ZOLA S. Dubois. After all, their students will be in charge of our food supply someday. MRS. ROBERTA ADAMS quietly reads the latest bulletin for the English depart- ment office, Rules of Grammar. The first rule is this: A preposition should not be used to end a sentence with. When stvdents left MRS. MARIE MAC- KENZIE ' S history class, they were breathless — not from the classwork but from the walk up the hill. But, despite geographical disadvantages, Mrs. Mac- kenzie managed to instill historical knowledge in her pupils ' minds. 20
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Page 26 text:
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When you hear Charge! in the Auto Shop, it doesn ' t mean that a person is experiencing a thrilling sensation or that we are launching an attack against the enemy. To MR. CHARLES WEBBER and MR. GEORGE MOSHER it simply means that they are charg- ing a battery. There, I con print my name — goody, goody, ejaculates journalism student Lynda Smith, as MR. RICHARD J. EPP, printing instructor, and MR. ROBERT PHILLIPS, journalism instructor, supervise. We learned tricks Th is interesting and useful substance is known to the experts of the subject as xylem — wood to most of us, lectures MR. GEORGE BRONSTRUP, weilder of the woodshop. MR. RALPH H. INGERSOLL doesn ' t need to eat; he runs on electricity, and teaches it, too. MR. IRVING E. HICKS, machine shop teacher, is working on his new invention, a sophomoric dpi-anilatnr. 22
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