Chattahoochee High School - Yellow Jacket Yearbook (Chattahoochee, FL)

 - Class of 1964

Page 33 of 152

 

Chattahoochee High School - Yellow Jacket Yearbook (Chattahoochee, FL) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 33 of 152
Page 33 of 152



Chattahoochee High School - Yellow Jacket Yearbook (Chattahoochee, FL) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 32
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Chattahoochee High School - Yellow Jacket Yearbook (Chattahoochee, FL) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 34
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Page 33 text:

The C. H.S. High School side never saw the like of this class again or before ... the new 7th graders, now enriched by Aileen Kingry and Roger Beasley, took their place with a resound- ing bang!!! What other class dared to add and the 7th graders to the school song, to set the C. H. S. band in an uproar by winning first chair positions, or to nettle Mr. Hollis clear out of Chattahoochee! Linda Hewett came to school one day half dressed, Karen was the school's Halloween Queen that year, Mike, Lynn, and Roger were on the Junior Football Squad, and Mel- anie and Laura were Junior Cheerleaders. The class again hoarded their P. T. A. money for the class trip. Nobody new came in the eighth grade. The class just got settled to a new routine of verb conjugations and locker room brawls. Melanie was a cheerleader again, Lynn, Bernard, and Roger played junior football, Shirley Ann got Mr. Coley's promise that she would be the first senior to graduate. Shirley dropped a brand new comb down the toilet and Mary was the terror of the girl’s P. E. class. Once again the P.T.A. $25 went toward the class trip. After one week of freshman initiations for the class, it was banded forever . . . they were now fully and strongly in the school song, school functions, and plenty of trouble . . . Tommy beat up Donald, Mike and Bernard got hurt in P. E. Frankie Booth, Karen Stoops, and Linda Ethridge graced the ninth grade as newcomers. Melanie and Lynn were voted class favorites, Karen and Byron won the American Legion Award, several of our athletes made the ”C club. Guess which class won the $25? Kenneth Rabon joined us in the tenth grade. The whole class was busy learning to change tires for Mr. Coggins, catching insects for Mrs. Brown, and completing Science Fair projects. Billie June was a majorette, Laur%, Karen, Melanie, and Mike made N. H. S. and guess who didn't win the P. T. A. money? We lost Judy Smith, Linda Sue York, and Marie Barfoot. The sophies had a great class project . . . the father-son basketball game which brought us over $700. Linda Sue returned in the 11th grade. Class rings, the class trip to the New York World's Fair, and the prom were topics of conversation for the J. A. J. 's (a nickname for the class). Melody and Pam got engagement rings, tfara and Lynn represented the Juniors in the homecoming court and a few students had wrecks that year. Linda and Lynn were class favorites, and all the class waged a running battle with the seniors for school prestige! David Turnage moved to Marianna only to return his senior year and help the Bulldogs beat the Jackets. As mighty seniors, with the addition of Lee Price, the class brings its short full life to a grand finale, with two senior girls, Bobbie Jo and Carolyn, acquiring Mrs. degrees before grad- uating. Carol Ann got an engagement ring. There were honors - Linda was homecoming queen! Laura, Aileen. and Shirley Ann were Tobacco Festival contestants, and Laura was the county's Junior Miss, ,gara won a teacher's scholarship. We lost Byron when he was offered a scholarship to Emory-at-Oxford and accepted. Lynn and Ronnie made all-conference at the Panhandle Tournament. There were mistakes - Shirley Ann forgot her tights, Mike forgot the policy, Faye and Linda moved one too many desks, and there were good times everywhere and always . . . As the grand ole class waits impatiently for our last and greatest moment, graduation, we can remember these and many more incidents that helped make C. H. S. the livable, lovable school we feel it is. This year has been the beginning of the end for the 1964 graduating class - but it has really been a good one!!!

Page 32 text:

I9J2 drom Ais cfaij day forward 1964 This year's senior class has always been extraordinary. From its very start, and with every rising year, the 1964 class has compiled more and more fame and honor for themselves. It all started in 1952. The charter members of this class were Jim Freeman. Karen Jubanks, Mike Jones, Faye Wester. Shirley Evans, Bernard Howell. Carol Ann Lowry. David Whiddon, Melody DeVane, Laura Gholson. Lynn McLarty. Linda Sue York, David Turnage, Byron Perry, Bobbie Jo Phair, Carolyn Locke, Marie Barfoot, Billie June Booth, Melanie Reynolds, Shirley Ann Renfroe, Linc Hewett. Pam Hardisky, Donald Jackson,JSara Boykin, Annett Corbett, and Ronnie Bundy. This was a year of love and war for most of the students . . . Squirrel Tail managed to catch and kiss both Laura and Karen behind a big tree, t ara gave Ronnie a black- eye for catching her fellow in a game of chase and Billie June got a paddling for chasing boys around the room. The class was already winning fame for itself - the $25 P.T.A. money was used to buy the school a new record player. In the second grade Lynn gave his first stage kiss to Pam. Mrs. Franklin's room gave daily weather reports. All the boys played chase the girls , and the class saw the first snow they could remember. The P. T. A. prize money again went to us. No one new showed up for the third grade - but learning to write, to be quiet in the lunch- room, to dance the Mexican Hat Dance, and to dodge Mrs. Clower's rulers, scissors, books, etc. , took plenty of the slack out. Linda got hit by a car that year, Faye broke her arm and Annett broke her leg. Jump rope and yo-yos were going out - everybody who was anybody had them- selves a family and a straw playhouse . . . boy, was straw rustling a crime!!! That year the $25 took the class on a train ride. Johnny Sagers joined the fold in the fourth grade and Linda.and David were chosen for the May court. Knitting was the big pastime . . . and we, the kids . . . even the boys. . . . had at least two long nails and a ball of yarn with which to work during every recess. Flutophone lessons and multiplication tables took up most of that year. There were no reading groups that year - but the class initiated an after lunch reading hour to enjoy the works of Laura Engelles Wilder and the great novel. Wagon Wheels. One bit of sadness for the class: they didn't win the P.T.A. $25. In the fifth grade the class welcomed Nicki Garmon, Judy Smith, and a new Principal, Mr. Coley, with whom a few in this class became very well acquainted. The classes learned to participate and experiment that year . . . they tasted real moonshine, fried an egg in alcohol, caught lots of critters for Mrs. Grubb, did the hula in assembly, put on quiz shows, rubbed them- selves with poison ivy to see if it really worked, and tried out that stuff called mistletoe . . very popular with them now! The girls formed the Dixie Girls' Club to exchange Nancy Drew myster- ies and to admire Elvis, the boys discovered midget football. The $25 P.T.A. money paid for a new flag. The sixth grade, the class's halfway mark, finally came. Barbara Bowen. Mary Cox, Tommy Sunday, and William Vickery joined the group which was up to its ears in such grown-up activities as junior band, midget football, little league, cheerleading, and junior majorettes. Several kids fell unconscious from blowing on their thumbs, Lynn got his pants wet, we all learn- ed to dance, and Mrs. Watson's room gave a real live graduation!!! The class meant to be re- membered by the elementary grades, and they really are ... on the desks, lunchroom tables, restroom walls, paddles, playground equipment, auditorium seats, sidewalks, etc. The $25 they won that year was saved for the class trip already being planned.

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