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Page 42 text:
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BELOW: Senior Kathy Sheridan searches for an appropriate article for a current events report, RIGHT: Science projects, papers, and religion abstracts demand wide varieties of research ma- terials. Linda Vogt attacks thematic complica- tions with exploratory strategy. imc: SN. Q' rs i 38
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Page 41 text:
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rt, drafting draw creative schemers Arts and drafts designers conjure up crea- tive schemes. Fashioning avant garde media into Paulite- patented prototypes, art classes chart 1969 calendars, draft house plans that potentially threaten to upstage the most unique blueprints in House Beautiful, and design posters just a little bit better . Q-tips and mascara brushes find their way into the artists' collection of useful oddities. The entire school knows that silk screen production is underway when art students begin wearing the colorsl' of their innovational designs on uniforms and hands. Level-headed draftsmen pursue the mas- tery of draft-craft . Drafting classes delineate three dimensional projections and haunt class- rooms with tape measures and note pads to determine if St. Paul measures up architec- turally. When assignments pile up, drafting aces echo their own favorite formula for suc- cess: If you can't make it, fake it. Through every misadventure, quick-draws are hooked on a feeling for artistic schemes. ,.,.1u...., ABOVE: Two heads are better than one , concludes Steve Weitzmann as Sister Cather- ine Philip offers constructive criticism. ABOVE LEFT: Janet Biermann inspects final prospects for the Scholastic Art contest. FAR LEFT: Five-finger finesse proves handy as Joe DeSchryver labors over drafting pro- jections. BELOW LEFT: With a variety of art projects simultaneously underway, Jan Kramer, Nancy Kliber, and Lisa Fisher offer better ideas to an appreciative Lisa Ferrell. LEFT: The usefulness of a T-square is never to be underestimated. Mike Nally grapples with the impulse to show Mike Pendy what drafting is really all about. 37
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Page 43 text:
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Library cures homework 6victims'g Paulities-check out novel sources The library, third floor refuge for home- work victims, serves as the most novel brain food supplier in the school. Where else could seniors, saddled with re- search papers, conveniently go back in Time for current event reports, or uncover fables that Bullfinch forgot? Where else could under- classmen, seeking a way into or out of science projects, check out the few facts that lend some scientific basis to foregone conclusions? St. Paul's library offers all the conveni- ences of GPPL - a modern, newly-installed check out desk, private study booths, and a continuous influx of updated references and study helps. Memos from the desk of Mrs. Romig , alert teachers to the arrival of spe- cial interest editions, and students to overdue books Kas is most often the case with seniors suffering from locker build-upj. A minority of nine Paulites, who read shelves instead of texts during study periods, serve as student librarians and members of the library club. LEFT: With reliable library sources near at hand, a pre-test study marathon puts Ed Millenbach and Pat Greenmiller in the know . ABOVE: Mrs. Romig, moderator of the Library Club, discusses the use of a new set of references with student norarians Marlene Kain, Karen Peterson, Bob Arene, Mary Schaffner, 1-tick Fisher, Nancy Waechter. Martha Kratz, Lynn Kerby, and Sue Smale. 39
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