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Page 93 text:
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ILI ' JUIH when the rush is on, this group of business experts know how to keep the copy moving. See Pat, Corinne, Bev, Kathy, Gail. Barbara Edilor-ln-Chief IWEllilllil THE 1963-64 OWL A newspaper is the window to a school. The individual and the team, the student and school condense into one four -page slice of newsprint. It is through the Owl that others come to see TC not as a building on a hill, but as a personality, vibrant, young. Special ac- tivities of the Owl Staff included a Press Day at St. Bonaventure Uni- versity and the Columbia Press Conference in New York. — D.F. Fledgling reporters Elaine Diggs, Kalhie Frazier, Tim Whitley, Mary Ford, Joan Heinicke, Karen Andrews discuss with Linn Bowersock their important task of taking over the paper in the last edition of the year. Can they keep it a Medalist?
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Page 92 text:
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Edilor-in-chief Barbara checks with senior reporters on material for the next issue. They are Betsy Becic, Kathie Gregory, Judi Green, and Barbara Rohde. Medalist . Medalist 11 KM F iu IJ5 Wtm ' 1 £ = SBBB BHB B i Kv H HHjBTvw Dan Finit Maddie Page 2 Editor Page 3 Editor 88 . . . 31 edalist Pam Business Manager Medalist
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Page 94 text:
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Sports Editors Richard Herbig and Gary Woifsheimer were all set to give Joan Sanders a hard time. Editor of the senior portrait section, Joan agrees cheerfully that it would be great to give every senior a full page. Business Manager Marilyn Cross and Editor-in-Chief Mary Ellen Finigan are pleased: they have just received permission from Richard Riebling, editor of the Cornegie Tech Quarterly to adapt a poem Through Many Doors in any way they wish. The poem ' s youthful interpretation of school life gave Hilltop editors their theme. The only motion is the second hand gliding across the face of the sleeping clock ... 302 is quiet, empty. Unusual! ' Definitely! A few hours previous, lights blazed, typists darted in and out, staff members sorted pictures;. copy editors ground out rewrites. The room was filled and vibrant. Why! ' The Hill- top was aborning. A yearbook grows from a mound of unidentified pictures and unedited copy into a verbal-pictoral record of most important moments. The Hilltop staff took candid shots of classes, club activities, athletic events, and wrote descriptions of classes and extra-curriculars, then unified all in modern layout about a central theme. This takes time and effort. But — the time was spent, the effort eagerly made, and the Hilltop written for you to relive and reminisce about the past. — M.E.F. 90
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