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Page 27 text:
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Town and yahoo! united by newfreelv '1?. ':. Q, ring. 119, ,j. Ag,-.Egi- ', -i.. ..f, ,J V-'ffuf 'qi 2.'ky4X fr ,L 'Pc ' 4 1 5 -,ali V, k . 5' v ..f. .. Lthff, I A ,Q ,I ggrfr 1j f.'f1Q Q 'vw .wc fr swf. fp.,-fqy ,A if .fi 7 I 1 N the fall of the year, the reporters for Newsreel ventured to the Sidney-Record Enterprise to get the Q low-down on how their weekly write-ups were put into 1 print. Mr. Edward Roelle helped to show them around. In the first row: Nancy Villecco, Ann Knight, Sheila Gerig, Lucille Abramson, Mr. Edward Roelle, Joyce Barnes, and Richard Maylott. In the second row: Markley Opdyke, Edward Weeden, Francis Borchert, and Albert Bremser. Absent from the picture is Editor Joan MacDonald. ADVISOR - MRS. RUTH PECKHAM SEATED--Edward Ray, Elaine Erb, Patrick Simpson, Joanne Bolonda, Nancy Haynes, Barbara Davis: STANDING--Mary Tyne. JOSH Bl'uSh. Barbara Bulkl. Charles Glenn, William Young. EWSREEL is the Newspaper club to which Freshman through Juniors may belong. This club's main function is to give the school news to the townspeople through its weekly column in the local community paper, The Sidney Record- Enterprise . Freshmen students with outstanding writing ability are chosen for this organization and re- main on the staff until they are Junlors. The Edi- tor of Newsreel is always a Junior and his or her job is to give, collect, and proofread assignments. This club gives its reporters experience in the writing field and helps to develop their sense of responsibility toward assignments given them . k'g4I',,v.' 4 . A . .' . --J' sb J . . . . . 'ff Jw ' Eight gurls now have one lone boy in the middle, K .h T, ,H -A I 'Tun ,T at the subway station homeward bound from the Columbia Scholastic Press Conference in New York City. 14 -fwf'- '+ 5 '13si Ti73ii' 12-23-1 23
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Page 26 text:
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rfff I ,A ., X., I-+ra.2 , FRONT ROW--Joan Brush, Phyllis Curtis, Patti Rogers, Cecile Mikulak, Patsy Baker, Joan Burger, Nancy Villeccog SECOND ROW-- Virginia Miner, Ethel Hellerud, Shirley Segall, Phyllis Vollert, Susan Smith, Kathleen Mason, Janice Risley, Elizabeth Miller, Nancy Haynes, Sally Segall, Patricia Runyang THIRD ROW--Patricia Greene, Barbara Burki, Nancy Sharp, Irma Tognola, Lucille Abramson, Joyce Barnes, Mary Tyne, JoAnn Isbell, Elaine Erb: BACK ROW--Joanne Holmes, Sheila Gerig, Frank Metrzyk, Nicholas Danforth, Edward Weeden, Manuel Bickos, John Cleaveland, Patrick Simpson, Joanne Bolanda. EDITORS: FRONT ROW--Joyce Lipp fPhotographyj, Margaret Burlison fGradesJ, Sharon Mason Ulssistant Editory, Marilyn Hort fEditor-in-Chiefj, Louise Davis fArtj, CC D Margaret MacLach1an Uunior Editorj, Ann Knight QClassesJ: BACK ROW--Jeanne Burlison fActivitiesJ, Ruth Hediger fBusiness Managerj, Nancy Butler QSportsJ, ' Helma Bremser fSeniorsj, Margaret Ann Hager fCurriculumj. ADVISOR - MRS. RUTH PECKHAM ' EW YORK, here we comel This was the thought of eight girls and one boy as the train carried them on their way to New York to the Columbus Scholas- tic Press Conference. At this meeting they gathered loads of inspirations for making the yearbook better, more interesting and original. The 1952 Reflector was awarded first rating by the C. S. P . A. and also N. S. P. A. This year's staff has been very serious minded, for they realize the importance of this Sl400.00 proiect. The staff has been trying to make the yearbook a memory book of the important events of the year in the Sidney Central School District. The hardships of getting people to take pictures, get- ting enough snapshots for the sections, making up the dumm and getting the Reflector out to the publishers be- fore the deadline, are some of the problems which face the staff. The business staff is busiest in November. They have si, .4 charge of two proiects to finance the Reflector, the W-.... magazine campaign and sellingvsubscriptions. The num- ber of magazines ordered equals the subscriptions sold so Ei ht ms and one lone bo in the back round won there is not any loss. 9 - Y - 9 for the arrival of the tram that will whisk them away to New York to the Columbia Scholastic Press Conference. 22
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Page 28 text:
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business manager, takes her staff to the Record- about the cost of pub- Chase, Patricia Runyan, FRONT ROW--Margaret Ann Hager, Ruth Hediger, Bernice Cockcroft, ,ra Marilyn Hort, Nancy Butler, Phyllis Curtis, Mary Lu Glazier: SECOND ROW--Sharon Mason, Joan Nichols, Lucille Abramson, Patti Rogers, Barbara Henderson, Sheila Gerig, Ann Knight, Sally Segallp THIRD ROW--Phyllis Vollert, Patricia Greene, Virginia Miner, Patricia Morris, Margaret MacLach1an, Cecile Mikulak, Joyce Lipp, Susan Smith, Ethel Hellerudz BACK ROW--Irma Tognola, Nicholas Danforth, John Cleveland, Bruce Clarke, James Fisk, JoAnn Isbell. ADVISOR - MRS. ANN HIEIMER Editor Helma Bremser and her assistant Frances Borchert learn from Ed Roelle, a worker at the Enterprise office, how their paper is put together 'fliveryone ready the school paper p---W rm. saousv arcane-nnsszvms: Jeanne Burlison, Enterprise to inquire lishing the Maroon and White. Members of the staff are--Vella Cowan, Jeanne Burlison, Kalma Barbara Wickes. U64 24 EWSPAP ER reporters ll Sounds exciting, doesn't it? After sitting up late on Thursday nights to beat the deadline, the aspiring reporters hand in their assignment on Monday. flatei The edi- tor, Helma Bremser, after begging, pleading, and threatening, finally manages to get the manuscripts to the printer on time. The Maroon and White is published monthly. It contains feature articles, sports news, fashion news, club news, recipes, iokes, and also notices of coming events. The staff had a bake sale to raise money to help publish the paper-and to help defray the cost for E. S. S. P. A. This fall Helma Bremser, Sharon Mason, Frances Borchert, Joan MacDonald, Patti Rogers, and Mrs. Heimer, the advisor, went to E. S. S. P. A. fEm- pire State School Press Associationl at Syracuse University. Besides finding new ideas for their paper, they also enioyed watching a football game between Syracuse and Holy Cross.
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