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Page 20 text:
“
Never a dull moment in a beginning teacher’s life! Those seniors who took their places in the class rooms of Anne Arundel County found problems quite different from those pre¬ sented in the model set-up of our Campus Elementary School. Their rooms were full of chil¬ dren from crowded defense areas. The Junior Class of 1943 had little time for merely being jollv, for it was a changing and chatoic world which it faced. In accord¬ ance with the accelerated program, it entered teacher training on June 8. Running around the track in physical education, beating rhythm sticks in music, solving brain-teasers in mathematics, and painting innumerable stencils in art, filled the hot but enjoyable summer. The happy jaunt to Ocean City for a picnic is a sample of class good times. The heavy, rough waves which kept the most un¬ steady members of the class rolling about in the breakers were responsible for a good many sore muscles the following day. The end of the summer found Marian Pranis, Dorothy Wanex, Betty Wood, Mary Jane Wood, and Ellen Libis on the honor roll. After these three months of exposure to professionalized subject matter, in Septem¬ ber the class was eager to apply its knowledge in the Campus School. First attempts caused the fading of some of those intelligent ex¬ pressions for a few weeks. Junior days were busy ones filled with observations, confer¬ ences, and regular classes; and junior nights were a hodge-podge of seatwork booklets, lesson plans, advanced assignments, models of anything from the solar system to a beav¬ er’s dam, and ? ! . The music program given bv the fifth grade, Book Week activi¬ ties, and the Christmas P. T. A. program gave student teachers opportunity to expe¬ rience varied teaching problems. First row, seated — Riley, Wanex, Cooper, Noble, Ruark. Second row, seated — Reinhold, C. Pusev, Pranis, Collins, Schmick, E. Libis. Standing — Adkins, Wood, M. Murphy, Pittman, Downing, Truitt, Nelson, M. J. Wood, Brown, Gross, Mezick, Cooper, Young. u Gn=Campus or”
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Page 19 text:
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CLASS OF 1943 Marion Wheatley A C McFadden Wilson .U. S. Army Seaman Alwyn Wooten .U. S. Navy CLASS OF 1940 Lieut. Charles Elliott . U. S. Army P.F.C. Austin Loreman . Harry McCann U. S. Army Lieut. Carl Pusey . . U. S. Army O.C.S. Ralph Ross . . . U. S. Army S’m’n James Shockley Henry White . . . . U. S. Army Pvt. William W right • U. S. Army CLASS OF 1941 T Sgt. Mark Atkinson John Austin U. S. Armv Ensign Brady Bounds . . . . U. S. Naw P.F.C. Edward Bowen . . . U. S. Army A C Audrey Christopher . . . U.S. Navy Sgt. Harry Davis Edward Dougherty . U. S. Armv Lieut. John Eichnor . . U. S. Army Ensign Hamilton Fox . . U. S. Naw A C Edward Hayman . . . . . U.S. Army Virgil Hickman . . U.S. Coast Guard P.F.C. William Ingersoll . . . U. S. Army Lieut. William Kent . U.S. Army Lieut. Charles Lavery . U. S. Armv Richard McNeal . . . . U.S. Army Lieut. Eugene M. Messick . . . U. S. Army Fred Messick U. S. Marine Corps A C Jean Price . U.S. Armv Lieut. Robert Schockley U. S. Army A C David Somerville . U. S. Army Pvt. Carroll Speck U. S’. Army Lieut. Howard Stevenson U. S. Marine Corps A C Fletcher Walls . U. S. Army CLASS OF 1942 Lieut. Albert Atkinson . U.S. Marine Corps Lieut. William H. Blades U. S. Marine Corps Melvin Bradley . . U. S. Army Willis Conover . , . U. S. Army Seaman Jack Custis . . U. S. Navy Preston Evans . . . . U.S. Navy A C Robert Gibson . U. S. Army Pvt. Robert Grier . . U. S. Army Lieut. Robert Hii.l Donald Horner Seaman James Kerr . . . U.S. Naw Helen Laws . . . . . W.A.A.C. Lieut. Fred Marvel . . . . U.S. Navy A C William Newcomb . . . U.S. Navy Charles Schwatka . . . U. S. Army Cpl. Lee Smith . U.S. Armv Lieut. Eugene Sterling . U. S. Army Pvt. Carroll Walsh . . . . U. S. Army Yeoman Lynn Walter . . . . U.S. Navy A C How ard Wells . . . U.S. Navy Lieut. Charles Wieland U. S. Army Elizabeth Williams . . . W.A.V.E.S. Bill Bailey .U. S. Army A C Everett Bennett .U. S. Army S’m’n James Clark .U. S. Navy P.F.C. George Clendaniel .U. S. Army Sgt. Samuel Colgain .U. S. Army Leon Conner David Dayton Edward Dyson James Elliott .... Merchant Marine Ben Guthrie Ensign Thomas IIardy .U. S. Navy Lieut. William Hollis .U. S. Navy Sgt. James Hyde .U. S. Army Harry Jones Pvt. Ralph Kirby .U. S. Army Pvt. Ben Nelson .U. S. Army Thomas Price T Sgt. Jon Reid .U. S. Army Pvt. Robert Reid .U. S. Army William Renshaw Thomas Richardson . . . Merchant Marine Lieut. Howard Roberts .U. S. Army Lieut. Jack S ' ciiockley .U. S. Army P.F.C. William Slemmer .U. S. Army Ensign James Thompson .U. S. Navy Pvt. James Wright .U. S. Army CLASS OF 1944 William Adair .U. S. Army Pvt. Wayne Cawley .U. S. Army Pvt. William Chatham .... U. S. Army Elwood Day Wilson Howard Pvt. Marion Leiby .U. S. Army P.F.C. Ralph Pennewell .U. S. Army A C Robert Potter .U. S. Navy Seaman William Rittenhouse . . . . U. S. Navy Pvt. Edcar Ryle .U. S. Army A C Hugh Smith .U. S. Navy Kirby Smith CLASS OF 1945 Oscar Carey .U. S. Navy Pvt. Joseph Colgain .U. S. Army Edward Dryden .U. S. Navy Pvt. Calvin Gibson .U. S. Army Harry Groton .U. S. Navy George Reaves .U. S. Navy Meigs Russell .U. S. Navy Pvt. A. C. Smith .U. S. Army Pvt. Louis Vollmer .U. S. Army CLASS OF 1946 Pvt. Ernest Cullen .U. S. Army Pvt. Robert Martin .U. S. Army Pvt. Henry Mikelait .U. S. Army FACULTY Lieut. Paul Hyde .U. S. Navy C.P.O. Benn Maggs .U. S. Navy Henry Nelson .... Merchant Marine Pvt. John B. May .U. S. Army Grace N. Strickland . . . W.A.V.E.S. Missing in action. 2 5
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Page 21 text:
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There have been rumors to the effect that the junior First Aid class had a “jinx” on it. The staff photographer took pictures of this efficient-looking group on two occasions and Dr. Matthews wasted a roll of movie film with the same result — the pictures were all bad! When the class returned after the Christ¬ mas holidays, in the language of the stories they had just been teaching children, “a great surprise lay in wait for them.” Be¬ cause of the war-time need for teachers, half the group was to do its practice teaching in Anne Arundel Countv under the supervision o f Dr. Matthews who was also to give them instruction in English. The end of the first semester came quickly, but not so soon that the energetic juniors could not find time for their dance, originally scheduled for March. Exams were not over until noon on January 23, but bv five o’clock the gymnasium had been transformed into a little schoolroom with red, white, and blue roof, and all things necessary for class to “take in,” including desks of first grade size, giant rulers and slates, books and charts, and a very startling curriculum. From “roll call” to “dismissal” the dance was fun, overshad¬ owed only by thoughts of parting from class¬ mates on the following day. On January 25, twelve senior girls (the juniors of two days ago) stepped into their teaching jobs on the Western Shore. Here at S. T. C. six of the remaining group pre¬ pared for practice teaching in the Campus School, and six enrolled gaily in methods courses — their serious teaching days still nine jolly w eeks away. Since all the class officers, Edna Schmiek, Marian Pranis, Ann Noble, and Dorothy Wanex had gone, a chairman for the re¬ maining group w ' as necessary, and Virginia Lee Downing was chosen. t he Junior Class is one that will be glad when summer school comes bringing class Off-Campiii 99 reunion. The first meeting promises to be a talkative one with on-campus seniors eager to know what “teaching is really like” and off-campus seniors expecting an explanation of such things as how the words “Look away, look away, Miss Black ” managed to creep into Dixie. Top — Find the teachers: Ann Noble and Marian Pranis. Center — That determined teacher is Betty Wood. Bottom — Dottie Wanex can’t escape physical education work. 2 7
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