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Show READING GROUP | Cattle Drive Shadows on the Snow A Rock A Warm Wind Blows Beneath the Shade of a Cherry Tree Sue Singleton Yvonne Eckersley Sandy Shaum Janet Harris - - - = - - 7 10 18 14 Janet Harris - - - - - = VW Haiku Diane - - - - - = 20 Hokku Hokku Tanka Tanka Kathy Alley Susan, Stieee |) s Vickie Stein Vickie Stein - - a= - te «+ - = = «= = 20 20 21 21 Barrett - Susan - .- - - - - 21 Sue Singleton Margaret Black- - - - - = - 24 25 Company Calls Janet Harris - - - - cae Stitzer SOCIALITE THE JUDI LEWIS GROUP with II Loney Read Needle in the Haystack ee David Hester The New Neighbor April Cartel ne Spent The Vacant Lot Pemin) - - - ae - > - - - - ne is Seo ey ih = 23 = 36 a og s ane eee ae - Flys Fre en ee ae Don’t Call Me Marie My Friend Gordon Diane Barrett Suis ‘Simmg Saturday Margaret Black- The Drowning Caron LA—" ae ie - - ee eams ie Rn - - me > Og ie ie her appearance as she approached it. = - Pete Belliston Diane Barrett, Larry Ruth Austad April Perrin Clyde Turpin, Susan Stitzer Margaret Black Vickie Art Proofreader She dropped her dark head with 11 squinted in the bright light from the BP opaque corners using. Huston, Stein, Sam LaBaron Carolyn Watkins Annette Read Judi Lewis smoothed her the black sleeves an “I wish you would be more “Oh, mother, don’t get so excited. I'm sure whatever you wanted me for has waited until now. Besides, | had to go down town with Joan. | charg- ed a new dress for Saturday night.” Betty walked past the doorway where her mother stood and started up the stairs at the end of the hall. leather of e folded you home early today.” window, and turned up the of her mouth into a fake straightened hall. considerate. | needed you to help me after school. You knew | wanted her § 18 the raided the dust cloth she had been her hand, licked her index finger and ran it along her dark eyebrows. Betty stepped back from the mirror, She Fred Bluth Sue Ann Singleton Editor Assistant Editor Business Manager Fiction of crown belt, Poetry into the long mirror. She checked citi al pie os on for ae sti the tiles cig smile, then down into a serious pout. STAFF Nonfiction oat ao ed he ahi you came from the living room doorway. “Do you realize that school has been The leather dull gray-tiled room. heels on her black patent shoes clickas she strode toward have where ae “Betty, quietly. and closed the door it open entered smoothed down a few strays on the READING GROUP Ill And au books on the floor and fished in her No luck. She purse for a comb. ae We pushed door, foot, left her ae es te dria lecned:-taguinet Betiiinoneclan 26 the restroom READING climb m ' Tercet A Leaf Sonnet Sally See Oh. Oh. her Mrs. Marsh’s followed her dull, watering daughter's eyes movements her “Charged?” down the hall. voice quivered. She shook her head disparingly and returned to the dimly lit room and her dusting. That evening, Mr. Marsh sat at the table in the kitchen, waiting for Mrs. Marsh to finish putting the silverware on for supper. ‘Where is Betty? I've called her twice to come eat.” He scowled in the direction of the blouse, bent down and gathered her books into her arms, being careful not to wrinkle her sleeves. She left the restroom as casually as she had come in, even though the tardy bell for her next class had already rung. The grandfather clock in the entrance hall ticked away the twentieth minute after five as Betty opened the front door. She turned in the doorway to wave to the girl in the shining red car just pulling out of the stairs. “She hasn’‘t left her room since she (3) |