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Page 13 text:
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AND SQ TO CLASS: When the preliminary hello-screaming and On Ou schedule-making are done with, enterprising seniors look around the class-room to see how much Honor Society material they are up against. lU-B's learn not to buy elevator permits. Books are dis- tributed, Work is outlined. r Way FRONT: Doris Malrnsberry, Englishy Margaret A. Dennison, English, l, G. Hickox, Sociology and Mental Hygiene, Marie O'Rourke, History, Edith Paddack, Englishy William B. Gass, Mechanical Drawing 1 s , I I Coaches Every One Dwight B. Lafferty, Commercial Geographyy Pierre F. Hill, Mathemattcsy lesse O. Beck, History. The How of It Ro Kuiala and lack Clagett give oar to Mr. Ge g Y E. Nickel, Machine Shop. Where there are sixty-five in- structors and every variety of sub- ject taught, no schedule need be typical. However, in a six hour day, each pupil attends his guota of classes. Blond-haired Roy Kujala is guid- ed by Miss Paddack in home- room. He learns from Mr. Nickel in machine shop and Mr. Gass in mechanical drawing the funda- mental practices, valuable for later employment. To help the de- fense program the shops also con- duct night classes for adults. Roy values a guiet study hall Cunder Miss Malmsberry's super- visionj to concentrate on his American History-taught, in this case, by Miss O'Rourke, Whose classes are swell Cif you like historyj. Mental hygienist, Mr. Hickox, gives Kujala the Hlow down on why our brains tick as they do. Miss Dennison tells her classes, including Roy, not to con- and fuse Henry Wadsworth Poe Edgar Allen Longfellovveor is it the other way 'round? After reg- ular hours, our athlete's career is in the hands of the football coaches.
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Page 12 text:
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PWN5 PR oemmvx CARD What a Convenience the Bicycles Are Peggy Spurrier, Dwight Hayes, Richard Moherman, Dick Creclger, Dorothy Dixon, lack Madden, Ella Newhouse. And so, every morning, from all directions, packed like sardines in busses, rattling along in jalopies, trudging on foot Qespecially since rationed tiresj, or peddling bi- cycles, we come to Harding. Well-known to all is Booster Week, the time we realize what a school like ours really means. B for Belongingn is the challenging slogan. A thrill of enthusiasm hits us we learn songs and cheers ' X . if.: df . o.??s7Jg.tEc.'r3!.oo ll M HomERoom .9 5' Llffmcvi . 1 G ZMMX ' Lad 2. Wd. nf ff Q 417. 3 ,COL-A? Siij? r .Dfw nav, 4 IIMMJ' !0Ql8o Jr-mclwi laffhl' A-:Uv-ess f'7!5'6 l 8 and louy activity tickets. Miss Newton gladly takes our money Chard-earned, tool and gives us our magic card that leads the Way to dances, games-among other places. Mr. Scheig puts music in our throats at B assemblies, and Miss Porea stirs enthusiasm for the Belonging campaign. Mer- rill Tall-story Cooley and loel Corny-joke Yost add zip to the week. We Belong Cornelia Porea, Iournalism and Commercial, Merrill F. Cooley, Law and Englishp Florence M. Newton, Mathematics, Ioel T. Yost, Bookkeepingg Carl F. Scheig, Music.
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Page 14 text:
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PUVl L-'S PRXRANK CARD A ' ...fn 1 1 - I M' .4 K E -- r - u .N Home Room r 5 Mud, r 20 no 4 ot6!4f-W4154' 206 1 fy J. 7 N6 60,54-lfv 301' -6 I . uf 8 'yy' I' W 9 - J Y PM 1' E cape-Exam Day M R tl l VanMetre and lUB Geometry class. Sorrows of a lU-B often begin at 7:45. The early morning class is one outlet for our crowded classroom situa- tion. Now tune Rae Harper struggles with one of Mrs. VanMetre's famed blue book exams-an excellent de- vice to check up on how much we didn't learn. Gym class, conducted by Miss Eaton, is a welcome pause in the march of grey-matter. Those basketball Chatter Club STANDlNG: Margaret L. Woodland, Latin, Dorothy E. Hart, Historyg A. Margaret Eaton, Physical Ed cati u on. ROW TWO: Mrs. Kathryn T, McCurdy, French F k E H H t y TOIH . GYHUF, IS Of . ROW ONE: Charles E. Corlett, Bandg Mrs. loseph Thoman, English. IO in games barely give lune Rae enough time to put on a new face before the bell whisks her off to the involvements of grammar with Mrs. Thoman. An early lunch is consumed by the musical-minded Har- dingites who tootle horns un- der Mr. Corlett's baton and get in tune for the football seaf son. lune Rae keeps up on her dates fi. e.-dates like l492j under Miss l-lart's tute- lage. She stumbles through Gaul with Caesar in Miss Woodland's class. Mr. Har- nar, her homeroom teacher, may well advise her to drag books home, for her full sched- ule allows her a rare study period. ln this study hour, she meets Mrs. McOurdy.
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