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Page 24 text:
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Mrs. LaFon processes a recent novel for use In the library. Typing a certificate is a minute task in the job of Mrs. Post. Secretaries Oil Unseen and Vital School Machinery Five secretaries serve Roseburg High School. Mrs. Julia Thorn, Mrs. Sandy Dodd, and Mrs. Pauline Rains work in the main office. Mrs. LaFon works in the library, and Mrs. Post works in adult education for Mr. Kennedy. Being secretary to the principal and co-ordi- nating all office work amply fill the time of Mrs. Thorn, head secretary. Besides handling all of Mr. Teter's correspondence, Mrs. Thorn budgets the District funds alloted to the high school. She keeps personnel records of all teachers and trains office assistants. Mrs. Rains is records secretary. She processes all student grades, sends transcripts, posts test scores, and attends to cumulative folders. She is the proverbial teacher's memory. Both Mrs. Thorn and Mrs. Rains work through the summer, preparing schedules and the curriculum sum- mary. Mrs. Dodd is attendance secretary. When the bells ring, Mrs. Dodd rings them. When the daily bulletin is read, it's because Mrs. Dodd has mimeographed it. She watches and records all student attendance. In the library Mrs. LaFon is Mrs. Monger's girl Friday. Though she works only from nine to one-thirty, she is as valuable as if she worked all day. She does all library typing, including book orders, catalog cards, and book cards. To expedite office business, head office secretary Mrs. Thorn (phoning) needs her capable assistants, Mrs. Dodd (left) and Mrs. Rains. 20 Secretaries
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Page 23 text:
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Student council made many concrete im- provements this year. Money acquired from ap- ple machines went into a club fund from which deserving clubs could secure appropriations. Deciding which clubs and organizations were eligible for aid was one of the council's time- consuming jobs. A committee expedited the re- vision of the constitution to accommodate the change to a three-year school and to include im- peachment provisions. The council bought a coming-events board and a class point board for the main hall. Engineering homecoming ac- tivities was a major responsibility of the coun- cil. After an all-school vote for a service drive, it organized the details. Following the with- drawal of seventh period due to poor utilization, council, in conjunction with the first period rep- resentatives, recovered it by pledging improve- ment in future seventh periods. Though Student Council meetings were sometimes sparsely at- tended, much was accomplished. Big Bill Holborow, good-natured Sergeant-at-Arms, turns seri- ous as he leads the student council in the flag salute. Bruce Long exhibits to the student council a coming events board which the council purchased for the main building entry hall.
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Page 25 text:
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Miss Esther Dyor, B.S. —Business Machines, Shorthand, Typing Senior Class Advisor Mrs. Audrey Greenan, B.A. —Business Machines, Typing Junior Class Advisor, RWR Miss Betty Maxwell, B.A. —Bookkeeping, Typing Functional Efficiency Typifies Business Department “Business Education provides an opportu- nity for all students to gain an understanding of the economic and social business world in which they live. It provides training in those phases of business that concern every member of organized society, and vocational training for those who wish to earn their living in business occupations. It affords learning experiences which enable students to become well-adjusted, responsible, and loyal citizens who can meet the needs of a changing society. This is the philos- ophy of the Business Education Department. To- day's world is a world of business. It is a prac- tical world of wide-awake thinkers. Certain skills are vital to business careers. Besides ac- quiring vocational abilities, business students learn about business form and etiquette. Even students not planning to become accountants, stenographers or secretaries can profit from learning typing skills and the forms of business correspondence. And they do. Jim Beamer observes Mrs. Wicklands exact typing techniques. Mr. Ralph Snyder, B.S., M.B.A. —Bookkeeping, Business Law, Retail Selling Faculty Business Manager Mr. Chris Wames, B.A. —Bookkeeping, English, Transcription Mrs. Florence Wickland, B.S. —Business Machines, Shorthand, Typing FBIA Business Department 21
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