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Page 64 text:
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communications 58 hours in the union, typewriters, editors, station managers, pictures and photog- raphers, air time, news, deadlines and panic distinguished those who worked on communications
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Page 63 text:
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brganizations
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Page 65 text:
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poage and waatti are top editors for the 68 wyo I Paula Waatti, Co-editor 1968 WYO What a year of experience it was. It all began last spring when we applied for 1968 WYO editors, and were hired. Then, sometimes we wondered how we could have been so stupid. It was a year filled with long-distance phone calls, trips to Missouri-Laramie- Casper-Keeline, telegrams, headaches, Friday and Saturday nights in the office, tears and worries. It was not knowing how we ever made that last deadline with- out flunking out of school or dropping dead. It was Miss Tobin calling to see if we really did stay out until 5:30 a.m. It was our roommates who wondered what we looked like. It was all those people who dropped in almost every time we were in the office to see how the WYO was coming. It was people saying I don ' t know how you do it, when we didn ' t either. It was blaming the U.S. Post Office for being incompetent — when they were. It was Joe Cupp on the end of our frantic calls to Marceline telling us not to worry because it would be okay. It was really making our original idea of Wyoming — you come to life. It was Paula nervously smoking and struggling over that ?! copy that so-and-so turned in. On the other side of the desk, Judy was also smoking, her temper sometimes boiling over disputes with photog- raphers. But it was fun. Choosing color photographs was like giving ourselves a present. Reading a page of copy with no misspelled names almost caused hys- terics. It was learning how to work with people and getting them to work for us. Sometimes it was learn- ing we could not trus t anyone, even each other. It wos the feeling that we were on the brink of something big in our lives and this was it. Judy Poage, Co-editor 1968 WYO ' ' V I L
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