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Includes Jrs.; Grads to Contribute to Guide College Conference Includes Jrs.; Grads To Contribute To Guide Juniors will be invited for the first time to the college conference, 1:30-4:30 p.mo, Tuesday, December 30, according to Mr. Charles Saltzman, director of guidance. One of the end results of the annual conference will be a U-High "consumers' guide to colleges", he adds. The loose-leaf book will list information in several helpful categories about colleges attended by U-Highers who have agreed to fill out lations and fraternities in campus questionaires about their schools. social life. "A few years from now, " Mr • Questionaires for the college stud­ Saltzman explains, "a U-High sen­ ents will be passed out before the ior may be able to find 20 different program begins. opinion sheets on a college that he is Refreshments Planned interested in attending." Purpose of Refreshments planned by Tony Kil­ this conference, he continues, is for bert, treasurer of the senior class, graduates of U-High to bring back and Mr. Herbert Pearson, dean of the facts of college life to the pres­ students, will be served. ent U-High juniors and seniors. According to Mrs. Carolyn Smith, Graduates of the last four classes senior counselor, the conference has are being contacted for the confer­ been scheduled for the Christmas va­ ence by Linda Lewis, senior class cation this year so more students secretary. Mrs. Margaret Fallers may have the chance to attend. has obtained the graduates' present addresses. Grad To Open Stephen Dunham, '62, a senior at In previous years only members of REHEARSING for next Friday's Photo by Stamler the immediately Princeton university, will give the graduated class were holiday assembly, the a capella main address afteropening1remarks invited to the conference. Mr. Saltz­ choir is directed by Mr. Joseph by Lab Schools Director man says the broader invitation list Gardner. Singers, from left, are: Red Cross Plans Party, Francis V. Lloyd and Principal Willard Con­ is the result of the Guidance staff's BACK ROW-Claudia Highbaugh, Ellen greve. conclusion that student opinions Irons, Lynn Warren, Mary Scranton, Gifts For Needy Children change as an individual continues Tony Kilbert, Hugh Wilson, Chris Deer­ Students will be separated into through college and that opinions ing, Susan LeFevre and Sarah Lincoln. Christmas party at the Sixty-third street opportunity center at groups with four college students of from students at a variety of levels MIDDLE ROW - Sharon Henderson, whom they may ask questions. are desirable. Harriette Yeidel,_ Meredith Warshaw, whichchildrenwillplaygames, sing songs and be served refresh­ Graduates atthe conference Al Cunningham, Bob Aldrich, Lee Turk­ ments is among holiday projects being planned by U-High's Red will be The conference is sponsored by the asked to talk about the facts of col­ evich, Larry Caroll, Sonya Baehr, Sue Cross chapter o senior class and Guidance depart­ lege life that don't appear in college Suchocki, Hazel Singer and Karen Kleppa. A similar party also may be given at the Hyde Park community ment. BOTTOM ROW-Kitty Picken, Sonja center. catalogs, according to Mr. Saltz­ Christy, Norm Altman. Tom Fitzpatrick, Red Cross members also are mak- man. These areas would include Miss Marguerite Jackson is college Bruce Friefeld (hidden), Margie Calm, the roles of religion, intergroup re- counselor. Jackie Thomas, Shirley Jefferson and ing stuffed animals of old cloth and ren 's hospitals and orphanages. A Judy Feldman. crosswordpuzzles for gifts to child- collection box was placed outside the libra~y for students who wished to Assembly Cast To Take donate cloth. The Red Cross workers are mak­ 'Rhino' On ing the puzzles for young children. Spotlights Tour The answers are printed on the back. Taking their show on the road af­ Sue Dennis is seeking volunteers ter two remaining performances for the projects. here. 7:30 p. m. tonight and tomor­ 2 Holidays row inBelfield423, thecastof "Rhi - By WENDY HOLLAND noceros" will present their Drama Donors Get "The Sound of Celebration", a pa­ Workshop production at St. Paul's geant depicting the rituals of win - Episcopal church. ter's two most important religious The performance, 3:30 p. m. Sun­ Free Dress Da-y holydays, Christmas and Hannukah, day, will benefit the Central States A free dress day today is rewarding will highlight this year's winter as­ Youth Cooperatives' scholarship contributors to the Student Union's sembly, 2-3 p. m., Friday, Dec. 17. fund. Donation will be $1. 25 for a­ Toy Drive, which continues through Seventh period classes and part of dults and 75 cents for students. next Friday. 8th period classes will not meet be­ The play also may be given before Contributors of the new toys cost­ cause of the assembly. audiences at neighboring high ing between 7 5 cents and $2, which The pageant will draw together spo­ schools, according to Assistant Di­ will go to needy children at Mary ken narrative, actor movement and rector Debbie Groban. McDo.vell settlement house, received music. tags permitting them to wear "any­ Members of the prefreshman uni­ thing they wanted" (short of a bathing fied arts drama class are prepar­ suit) to school today, according to ing the play. Enthusiasts Become Chairman Frannie Fishbein. Hannuk.ahand Christmas music will Frannie, one of a group of S. U • be sung by the a capella choir. Crowd Mothers representatives who recently visited Mary McDowell, says that Christ­ Mr. Richard Boyajian's 8th­ mas is an unhappy occasion for the Jrs., Srs. Plan period Animal Behavoir class children there unless U-Highers pro­ students in room 312 are vide them with toys. Movie Party proud to announce that they Frannie requests that toys be gift­ are grandparents of baby rats wrapped and labeled with the age and Photo by Stamler Jmiors and seniors will get together and baby mice. Two lively sex of the receiver and description PLANNING U•.HIGH's first college conference for juniors, too, senior class for a movie party, Friday, Jan. 14, rats who reside in the room, of the toy. The boys and girls at officers meet with Senior Counselor Carolyn Smith. The officers, from (time to be announced) probably in P-eamrt'Bilttet and Jelly, start­ the house, she says, are 6-14 years left, are Peter Heydemann, president; Margie Mintz, vice president; Tony Judd 126. ed the blessed events by giv­ old. Kilbert, treasurer; and Linda Lewis, secretary. A movie selection committee has ing birth to approximately 20 been set up to suggest a film. pink, squeaking baby rats. Refreshments will be served in the Sugar and Spice, a mouse lady cafeteria following the film. and gentleman, not'about to U-Highers Study New Trier Gov't Other plans for the movie party are let Peanut Butter and Jelly get To observe the plan by which New an Epstein of the Student Board and. we may implement some of it into tentative. all the attention, countered Trier high school students supervise Bob Storr and Joe Kenig of the Stud­ our school operation." Tonight's sophomore party, 8-ll with their own crowd of bab­ their halls, study rooms and library, ent Council. U-High's representatives planned p.m. in the cafeteria, has been ies. four U-Highers planned to accomp­ "We're going to New Trier to see to speak to New Trier student lead­ planned around a "Wild, Wild West" Five of the seven pairs of any Mr. Dennis Duginske, Student how the method of self-government ers to find their views on the self­ theme. rats and mice in the room Board faculty adviser, to the Winnet­ operates there and to get ideas for government system. Refreshments will be served, en­ have produced families. Ro­ ka school yesterday. the future," Mr. Duginske explained. Mr, Duginske was to talk with fac­ tertainment is planned and the Cam - mantic, isn't it? The students are Wendy Blum (pres­ "We won'ttake the system 'part and ulty members to see how they feel els will play for dancing. ident of the Student Union) and Norm- parcel' and bring it to U-High, but concerning the subject. Youth Can Handle Kenig Gets U-Highers Break UNICEF 0 Midway Post 'Trick Or Treat'· Record Future, CDSC Hears Senior Joe Kenig has been appoint­ ed business and advertising manager A record $1, 100 was collected in this year's Halloween campaign Today's youth is inheriting a world of overpopulation, megalopo­ of the Midway by Editor Jeff Sterno for UNICEF, the United Nation's Children's Fund, according to lises (chains of cities with virtually no rural areas between), David Hahn continues in the same Mr. Edgar Bernstein, faculty sponsor. possible food shortages, and Negro control of politics in the inner position. Though the door-to-door "trick or treat" collection attracts The job had become too much for ;;... city, but youth will be able to face these situations better than their major participation among younger children, many U-Highers aid­ one person, Jeff said. ed by escorting youngsters around -t: parents might, according to Mr. Joe Templeton, WBKB newscaster, 0 keynote speaker at the 10th annual Next year the Midway staff plans their neighborhoods or collecting Jeff Stern, a memberofU-High's Red again to separate the positionso The door-to-door themselves. o:::; convention of the Chicago district new president showed poor taste in Cross chapter. ri. of the Illinois Association of Stud- his comments. paiitionof business manager former­ Mr. Bernstein also feels that U- ent Councils November 18 at Wells In his first campaign speech, Ted ly was titled managing editor. The Mr.
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