Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS)

 - Class of 1928

Page 27 of 42

 

Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 27 of 42
Page 27 of 42



Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 26
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Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 28
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Page 27 text:

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Page 26 text:

K ,s - . . V 1 .iq 1.9 l ll in l IX lx A IN Q I l L NEEWOLLAH - I. J. C. added to the gayety of Neewollah last fall by entering two floats in the parade. The one which represented the whole college was a huge green and gold basket of sweet peas. Six of our prettiest girls were chosen by the student body to ride in the basket, dressed as flowers. Misses Austin, Broehl, and Bryan planned the fioat and supervised its construction and decoration. They and the many students who helped with the work deserve much praise for their patience and artistry. Their success is shown by the fact that our float won third place in the floral section. The Pep Club entered a float also. It repre- sented the ideal college: a broadcasting station where lectures are given, and a receiving set by the so-called student's bedside. GIRLS' BASKETBALL There is no intercollegiate athletics for girls in the Junior College Con- ference, but the girls of I. J. C. organized a basketball team and played a series of games with the class teams of the high school. They lost only one game, the first one they played with the Juniorsg and they defeated the same team in two later games. They won all their other games with the Seniors, Sophomores, and Freshmen, thus winning the championship. The girls who played are Mary Catherine Ryan QCaptainj, Madlyn Rhodes, Velma Snook, Doris Peck, Dorothy Slocum, Violet Shiery, Winifred Bryant, Bernice Shile, Ida Miller, and Lula Tallman. MUSIC . The college has been represented at various times during the year by a male quartet. They sang at the Christmas program of the University Women's Club, at several college functions, and on the booster trips. The personnel has varied somewhat, the final choice being Millard Knock, first tenor, James Corser, second tenor, Floyd Colburn, first bassg and Orrin Hamlin, second bass. They were trained by Mr. Klassen. The girls' quartet, while it has not appeared in public as often as the other, has practiced faithfully and has fur- nished entertainment for several programs. The members of the quartet are Wilda Dunbar, first sopranog Madlyn Rhodes, second sopranog Alene Bassett, first altog and Alice Wycoff, second alto. During thefirst semester there were a college mixed chorus trained by Miss Hardy, and an orchestra directed by Mr. Goepfert. BOOSTER TRIPS The plan followed last year to attract out-of-town students to I. J. C. was so successful that it was used again this year. Groups were sent out to high schools in the towns around Independence to advertise our school and to show high school seniors the advantages of coming here. Mr. Kirby, chair- man of the booster committee, wo1'ked out the plans for the trips. The pro- grams included violin wlos by Frank Dancer and Millard Knock, numbers by the girls' and boys' quartets, a reading by Bernice Shile, and talks about athletics and other activities by Frank Clampitt and Harold Brooks. The Pep Club, who accompanied the entertainers on trips, furnished an added attraction in the Way of songs and cheers. Page 24 il' LU 1- ...wiis-mi.nun-an-goes'leur-,gigs-.4-me-Miqu-oqgii-unnogvwqumqss-oar'



Page 28 text:

N...-A--y...-.f.,f.,-mn..,,..q-.ws.a. o v.-,.,..m-.psnwew---v..u1fl jll It 1X Customer: Which leather makes the best shoes? Coffee: I don't know, but ba- nana skins make the best slippers. Marjorie: I think we have a cy- linder missing. Dorothy: I'll bet those mean kids down the street took it. Patchen Crushing to the li- braryD: I want the life of Caesar. Miss Russell: Sorry, but Bru- tus beat you to it. Mr. Harter: In what battle did General Wolfe, when hearing of victory, ery I die happy ? Frank Dancer: I think it was his last battle. I have been on this train seven years, the conductor of a Mis- souri Pacific train, just pulling in- to Tyro, said. Is that so? said Alene. Where did you get on? Neighbor: So you think Fred only dates with cripples. Mrs. Goodwin: Well, he has to have the car even if the dance is only two blocks away. Velma Snook: Who gave you the black eye? Violet Shiery: No one, I had to fight for it. There was a young lady named . Lizzy Who made every guy she met dizzy, She'd terrible clothes And a horrible nose And a mouth that she always kept busy. -Estella Gunnell. Sweety: What is the cure for seasickness? Salty: Give it up. Page 26 Q-uma.. Xg 421 I 1, 33 Joe's dancing reminds me of a Chinese opium den. How come? It's full of hops. Greenlee: Mrs. Price worships her husband, d0esn't she? Hazel Mortimer: Well, she cer- tainly places burnt offerings be- fore him at every meal. Tate: I heard you were sick. Sapp: Yes, I had the clothing sickness: a 'coat' on my tongue and my breath came in 'pants'. Dick Graves: Say, Lloyd, how did you get that red on your lips? Lloyd Vrooman: That's my tag for parking too long in oone place. Bob Switzer: How do you play hookey from the correspondence school? Frank Dancer: I send them an empty envelope. My subject for today is 'tHell announced the minster Blair, And after that we'll sing the hymn, Tell mother I'll be there. Co-ed CDrinking a sodaj: Oh, my sucker is broke. Ed Undignantlyl: Well, you don't have to broadcast it. Farmer: Did you see my pig sty? Visitor: Quite fashionable, what? Hogs wearing cravats! The kin you love to touch. Your papa. The first deck of the Ark con- tained all the known animals of the world except the two little black and white striped ones on the second deck. -va. 1-1,-.v-.,.,.-.-.4.,.p-n-u,:.,.-.

Suggestions in the Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) collection:

Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Independence Junior College - Inkanquil Yearbook (Independence, KS) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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