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Page 32 text:
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fv.WTl7-7-' K .fly , - ' ' ' 'T WTAE' 'X f 1 al dl 1 6.7, N , .f I 1 ,- X +1 w W. k 4 'f X f L-fe . fs. cf- is ' ,,n 0 L. , rl' il3eliefve lt Or ot One stormy night, ten years after the signing of the Constitution, Benja- min Franklin sat dreaming over his old diaries. He thumbed through them idly, reading the passages that excited his interest. In the one for 1787 this brief sentence caught his eye: Washington told about a wonderful vision he had had. Strange how encouraging that was, he mused. It would be interest- ing to know what they did after they left school. Out of the shadows in a corner stepped a young man of about twenty- seven. I heard your wish, Mr. Franklin, I'll be glad to tell you what we '39-ers have been doing since Mr. Washington saw us: Betty Beaty left yesterday for a concert tour in Argentina. Helen Thomp- son and Regina Reitemeier went along to get atmosphere for their next novel, Tropic Teaparties. They flew down on the Flying Fish, one of a fleet of luxury clippers owned and operated by Robert Craddock and Joe Craighead. The stream-lined interior of the plane was designed by Leonamae Finnegan and Earl Murphy. The passengers felt perfectly safe because the plane itself was constructed of a new lighter-than-air metal, discovered by scientists Raymond Dickey and George Rupp. It was also equipped with a defroster in- vented by Lloyd Stark. Richard Lorimer and Earl Hostetter, dashing pilots, and Elizabeth Ann Wilson, diminutive hostess, added glamor to the trip. Donald Carson has risen to stardom in a new all-American tragi- comedy, The Popcorn Man, written by the famous team of Cash and Craw- ford. Catherine Christian is equally famous as the voice instructress to the President's wife. Lucy Ann Deesz and Anne Elner Parlapiano, fashion author- ities, say that the recent trend toward trousers for women is definitely out. Luella Wiley, Geneva Taylor, Martha Bibb, and Elaine Bunce run a hat shop which features chapeaux designed by Juanita Nagle and Charlotte Richwein, Charles Sordelet has a lot of fun running a restaurant and night club where cash customers are insulted and actually like itg Carl McClain and Wayne Mc- Cluskey are the bouncers, and Roland Yarberry is the head waiter who knows all of the famous people by name. Roy Scott acts as master of ceremonies in the floor show, and Maxine De Nio, who has replaced Sheila Barrett, satirizes New York society with scathing mimicry. Margaret Ann Hatton sings torch songs with James Milstead's all-girl orchestra which includes Mary Pauli, Berniece Hyde, Melicent Foster, and Mabel Manire. Barbara Comiskey and Leroy Canterbury have usurped the place of Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire as the nation's favorite dance team. Lucille Frasier is assistant to George Perry, a famous magician, who pulls pedigreed white rabbits, raised by Kenneth Graham and Ruby Findley, out of a trick silk hat made by Dumbolten, Dibble, Diggs, and Co., makers of stage supplies. Charles Kenady, publicity manager for Wayne Van Arsdale, the Billy Rose of 1949, has already begun his campaign to make the Pueblo Exposition of 1950 the greatest show on earth. Matt Kochevar and Fred Herring, oil magnates, are the chief backers of the venture, according to a statement issued - V 1 7 i , Page Twenty-four J -rf :QP f .. L.. '99 1 -fl ,SW 1 Db i lfx 'iff-i ,..Z:gkPfi-ff 5 11- iv Q 2140? gi.. fg R A 4- X 1 U 5 ni f ,ef 5 I 1 f,..Q 1 l' 5 l ? If' f l ',.-:gala is 'Pg .f E-,Zend Z XM!-XY? .L ,iv
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Page 31 text:
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'cur 93' lp Lg I I4 I ark N , 4 ' Q I I I I f rum in r, aeffw' ANNIE LAURIE YOCHAM ELVIN YOAKUIVI BETTY YOUNG , , 1 J -x. if ' I I .,rg-Q ,. , 3A .Q . H. , sl- X ,. - fr., it ,, 11 Q Qelfdwg :NX I A if I ii ffxil J - . W I IX KT JIM GAGLIANO gi, LN C50 Centennial o o Some see you only as a building of brick and stone: I can see beyond the surface to knowledge you have sown. You taught me patience, ideals-fine and clean-- Plus hope and faith to face the future all serene. You taught me to win: you taught me to lose And always the best part of life to choose. You gave me work, play, vision, richer living, A curb to envy and hate, a greater joy in giving. All bitter things I conquered: courage I did gain To face the world's sternest problems and honor to attain. Time marches on, and very soon I must leave Your sheltering walls: new tasks I must achieve But an aching sense of loss numbs my heart Because from you I am soon to depart. -ERNIE GOTTULA. GSS Nm fxffrl' - ,ge gililjci:-,,, Page Twenty-three -,Q 2 :g1' , X ., - ...TG 'arms 'T-1 .X IX X 4s.. -.. -:itl ' N 5 , , ,t-mar' M' fi, , X TF i ll ' QQ' 1 ,X ' I . J A -1 lv ' Ill E Q I M ..l ll I i M i E W ff NO
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Page 33 text:
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, K? 5,3,5?.n39yq-yg5g.3,75.pq.v55,3M!.a,-.71-rm..n-?,,,ff?,,,I ,, by Elizabeth Laferl, Herring's secretary. Hazel Krall and Lucille Gonzales are planning to install a merry-go-round with music in swing time at the Expo- sition. Edwin Barksdale and Henry Wigton will do trick and fancy roping from the backs of the wooden horses. Duane Barnard, internationally known television expert, says his exhibit, featuring Rachael Smith, will wow 'em. Doris Clawson, Carol Gilbert, Margaret Elliott, Betty Jane May, and La Vora Williams have opened a clothes shop for red-heads. They say they know from experience that red-heads are hard to match. Madge Crews, Elouise Schnack, Dorothea Parsons, and Marjorie Stubblefield, newly-weds, are con- sulting Margaret McCoy, dietician, and Jeanne Clark, inventor of a non-fall- able chocolate cake, about what to feed hungry husbands. Incidentally, some of them live in those new collapsible houses manufactured by George Bolt and Robert Hench. Patricia Kettering, Maurine Benson, Pearl Eddington, and Jeanne Merrell are busily selling powder puffs for pampered puppies to Betty Young, Wilma Wright, and Gladys Cross, all millionaires by marriage. A new experimental school has been started in a Pueblo suburb, and Lee Dameron surprised us by becoming the English teacher. Lois Bronson, Maxie Cotter, and Ruth Gillham are conducting classes in How to Handle Parents. while Elwood Gerken and Mary Ellen Dempsey assist John Donaldson, psychiatrist, in handling the children. In the same school, Ernie Gottula, our Whizzer White, is the football coach, and Leroy Kirkland directs the basketball squad. Francis Madison teaches Latin, Mary Lefller, physics, and John Ted Liggett, a course in home economics. Grover Jacobs and Robert Keith,!state senators, are battling to increase the appropriation so that the school can afford to hire Dorothy Barr and Virginia Bevens, famed authorities on school economy. Goldie and Glenis Belle Brandon, hair stylists, created the surrealist coiffures which Oclah Marchbanks, Dorothy Mae Smith, and Bette Lou Pierce display in Three Sensible Young Women. This Elm was produced by Carl Shope and Paul Sordelet, photographed by Duane Gould and Charles Lieser, and directed by Elmer Downey. Eldee Swope and Velma Dull were technicolor advisers: Lois Rankin and Lorraine Brummett designed the costumes: Louise Smith, Barbara Donaghy, and Peggy Heaton collaborated on the screen play: and Alvin Lipton, Dan Jarrett, Joe Hudson, and Charles Griflin built the lavish sets. Other Hollywood stars from our class include: Sammy Fasula, a daring stunt man: Oliver English and Bob Glover, comedians: Morris Hanley, noted villain: and Charles Brady and Preston Gunter, latest Clark Gables. Jane Rowley and Violet Rilinger have become the Hrst women Fuller Brush salesmen. Bob Vining, Don Scott, and David Watkins are handsome life-guards. Urban Setter, Jim Gagliano, Elvin Yoakum, and Arthur Lewis are fearless firemen, while Byron Lewis, Fred Henderson, and Bill Horner cruise around in a police radio patrol car. Helen Leonard, Ruth Harrington, Thelma Hayse, Merle Johnson, Priscilla MacRitchie, and Ellie Mae Lucas, all pretty nurses, help to cool the patients' fevered brows in the Epstein and Hanley Sana- tarium for Tired Businessmen. Doctors Hench, Ramsey, Beatty and Owen are listed on the hospital staff. Page Twenty-five rf -2 777 9 W' 'W' U' 'E TNWW' 'E '?m2: !'E , s 2 xg Zlflfif ll K jx W1 C' iw- SZ M wi' K M, 5 1 E r lilfifllt H f l ,4 5 ei 4 Elle A ,Z 'NMA , I lumir gr in i U g Af .,.mJll' . ' . at if . w r tsl ,Qs at of ' ' i .wi l.l 4 ,fl 1 ..- A .1-.... rx' 1 0 U, ' , . , Y 1 ,X .59 ,. 1-f'.,.nfti ' ' .FL , -- -f QT We ,,.. 1 s , 5-f-1. .-. , ,en y -g'Q-: A
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