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Page 74 text:
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Drama Club officers were Scott Laidig, Vice-President; Mary Lou Harmon, Secretary; Hugh Wallace, Treasurer; and Linda Myers, President. QUIET, PLEASE Ends Busy Year for Drama Club Drama Club members were very busy in 1960-61. Their projects included sell- ing tickets to class plavs. serving as ushers, helping make-up crews, and providing properties for dramatic productions at Te- cumseh. In addition, the club produc ed a one-act play entitled Quiet, Please, the story of two feuding Ozark Mountain brothers. The cast of this play included Larry Reyn- olds and Ronnie Phipps as the brothers. Other members of the cast were Sue Stude- baker. Daryl Woodard. Doris Foster. Bar- bara Wolter. Judy Spence. ABOVE: Members of the Christian Society try to persuade two brothers to speak to each other after years of feuding. BELOW: Suspicious looks fly back and forth between Jeff and Judd. BELOW: An unexpected guest, Catherine, eventually brings about a temporary reconciliation between the two brothers.
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Page 73 text:
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Community and World Projects - ll-H I FRONT ROW: Sandy Loy, Shirley Davis, Barbara Durbak. Judv Eben, Pam Richendallar, Diane Evans, Patty Kurtz, Joy Benedetto, Barbara Shade, Dawne Evans, SECOND ROW: Joyce Knell, Susan MacGillivray, Judy Wolf. Ethel McKinney, Judy Boring, Johnnie Payne, Mary Lou Harmon, Joyce Farling, Ann Elliott, Carolyn Taylor. THIRD ROW: Roberta Miralia, Donna Hecathorn, Dorothy Rinehart. Mary Jo Stanley. Diane Hall, Phyllis Copenhefer, Imogene Stambaugh, Jackie Shilling, Janice Baird, Michele Arnett. Vicki Rhoades. FOURTH ROW: Barbara Wol- ter, Judy Nye, Linda Myers, Linda Allison, Judy Spence, Janis Armstrong, Marilyn Bezona, Linda Rogers, Joanne Whitacre, Barbara Polen, Sandy Stewart, Pam Winter. Mix together 100 pounds of white shirts, 10 dozen St. Patrick's Day cookies and 100 dollars worth of dimes. Stir with twelve officers and two advisors. Let jell for nine months and the resulting product is the story of the 1960-61 Y-Teen year. The Y-Teens is a service organization to which any sophomore, junior or senior girl may be- long. During the year each group must com- plete three service projects: one for the school, one for the community and one for the world. Examples of such projects in the past year were the senior collection of white shirts for Dr. Schweitzer, the juniors' Dr. Dooley workday and the sophomores' collecting for the March of Dimes. In the spring the Y-Teen girls held their an- nual Y-Teen Mother-Daughter banquet. The colorful and amusing theme selection was the circus. Officers who made the many Y-Teen projects successful were seniors Janis Armstrong, Mary Jo Stanley, Diane Hall and Judy Eben; juniors Kathie Layton, Carole Edwards, Becky Cobaugh, and Janie Studebaker: and sophomores Barbara Kitchen. Dottie Myers. Sonnie Thuma and Cindy Herman. All three Y-Teen groups were joint- ly sponsored by Miss Barbara Miller and Miss Nancy Virts. Scrubbing, raking, and waxing for the Dr. Dooley workday were Kathie Layton, Ethel McKinney, Judi Jones and Georgialee Jackson. Sophomore clowns at the Mother-Daughter ban- quet make a wild turn in the tricycle race.
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Page 75 text:
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During the year, Mr. Davies, of Ohio Edison, demonstrated the effect of various light bulbs on colored fabrics at a Home Economics Club meeting. 1,350 what?? 1,350 cookies were baked by the Home Ec. Department for College Night refreshments. Needles and thread are the order of the day when the home ec girls clean and repair the football and bas- ketball uniforms and practice jerseys. This job is just one of the many performed in service to the school by this organization. Almost every girl in the department belongs to this club, which was primarily organized to promote in- terest in the field of home economics. The Home Eco- nomics Club is a charitable organization as well as social. This year the girls took toys which they made themselves plus candy and fruit to Shawen Acres Chil- dren's Home. The club sold Christmas cards and re- ceived a silver tea and coffee service for selling 120 boxes. The members also planned a tea for their mothers, teachers, and themselves. FRONT ROW: Becky Simpson, Kay Horrocks, Shirley Davis, Nancy Malone, Judi Jones, Christine Elliott Lois Lykins, Bonnie Burns. SECOND ROW: Donnah Trueblood, Judy McKnight, Barbara Durbak, Mary Ann Cook, Joan Gibson, Betty Nickell, Barbara Lawson, Linda Stanley. THIRD ROW: Judy -Boring ; Gayle , Tuvell, Judy Wo l , Susan MacGillivray, Janice Jennings, Carol Stone, Betty Good, Janice Wolf. FOURTH ROW : Gloria Siefert, Elaine Crutchfield, Shirley Demmitt, Linda Rogers, Barbara Polen, Janice Baird, Carolyn Davis, Mary Jo Stanley. 71
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