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Page 33 text:
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Students learn skills in Mechanical Drawing that will help them in their life's work. luniors! Upperclassmen at last! Now it seems that :he days are not long enough to complete our many asks. We find that our days are spent . . . examin- ing the contents of test tubes, discussing American Literature . . . one of our most challenging tasks is learning American history, which, from the size af the book, looks as if it started in the year 1000 B.C. And if all this weren't enough we have to find time to squeeze in class meetings to plan for our prom. Paul is looking for a fiction book in the library, a filmstrip on atoms to his chemistry class. Angel gives an oral report as part of her training in Bible Mrs. johnson is explaining the technicalities of typing. Page 27 Mr. Sloan's class holds an old fashioned spelling bee. i
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Page 32 text:
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Miss Hughes explains kingdoms and phylums to biology students. . v.., mp sss te . Sophomores are introduced to Shakespeare in f Julius Caesar. Driver Education is a new course in our school. We of the Sophomore Class are proud of the scholars in our class who are in the junior Honor Society. Girls learn to cut out gored skirts as part of their Home Ea. training. We Sophomores don't mind staying in the back ground this year, because next year we krow we'll be in the spotlight! We are usually found adminis tering artificial respiration, drawing geometric fig ures, reciting amo, amas, amatf' and listening with rapt attention to those immortal words, lit tu. Brute? We are beginning to think seriously about the future, for we are becoming important in our school. Geometry is an elective subject of Sophomores. Page 26
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Page 34 text:
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Vsiftit 5 tizxi'i l sit? ,gal affix viii! rss' Tsai , 1 ' 'fi at Dorothea and June add neplusultra to their vocabulary. During the tea for club officers, David shows jc-an. Carole and Ann the many tools used in farming. ii' at 3 A ,Q r 5 I i ,. aw . V All I hear is static! says J. D. to Mr. Pyle. Ronnie is sitting at Miss Smith's desk in crowded Trig class It cloesn't seem possible . . . but we're Seniors now. Seniors are often seen , . . immersed in English literature, lost in a jungle of mathematics in 201, preparing to take important places in the business world, discussing the problems of democracy. Though we look foward to the years to comeg we will always remember the many happy years we spent in high school. Seniors receive first hand information from representatives We Seniors spend many hours of research in the library of many colleges. for material to be in our themes. Page 28
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