Lexington High School - Minute Man Yearbook (Lexington, NE)

 - Class of 1939

Page 25 of 104

 

Lexington High School - Minute Man Yearbook (Lexington, NE) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 25 of 104
Page 25 of 104



Lexington High School - Minute Man Yearbook (Lexington, NE) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 24
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Page 25 text:

Through the ni' gl 1, 54. o -R Y, 3SaP one aLEXINGTON CLARION M' Just before dusk on the night of the rain last week, six stalwart footballers plowed across the oozy junior high lawn-marching right over the crisp grass that had seen its first drink of rainwater in Weeks. They call themselves Minute Men, but they're not the men we like to think they are unless they recognize the mission of sidewalks, and appreciate the beauty of the school grounds. KF? At some time in your life haven't you had the diabolical desire to get even with the dentist! At last it has been accomplished! Delmer Tuc- ker did it. At two-thirty one morn- ing he got the dentist up to pull a tooth for him. KF The Welles-Wells broadcast has turned into a well, well sequence. While one group of thought is de- manding a federal investigation, an- other is requesting a repeat per- formance. KI? Results of the straw vote taken by the civics class of L.H.S., seem to show that Cochran leads in the race for governor, Coffee for con- gressman, and Reed for representa- tive of the thirty-sixth district in the Unicameral legislature. Of course, everyone that didn't vote had extremely good reasons such as, I don't want to, 'Tm too hungry now, 'Tm getting too old, It's too early in the evening, 'Tm a very poor citizen, I don't vote, and 'Tm in a hurry. It seems that many are against slot ma- chines. The vote was 111 for them and 242 against them. Kfif Oh, dear! Oh, dear! sighed Marge Carroll at the typewriter Monday at six o'clock as she was rushing to get Gypsy Jim's picture ready to be mailed to the Cozad Local for a cut. Shall I send this to Mr. Davis? asked Marge. Goodness! NO! gasped Charlotte Newman, he's the undertaker! Don Moss, always in the huddle, inserted, Bill won't need the under- taker until AFTER the play. il? Bob DeFruiter, '36, now attend- ing the University of Nebraska. and working part time in a bank, is do- ing the things he has always dream- ed of-that of competing in athlet- ics and going to school. Bob says that he likes his books even better than his freshman football. Those who know Bob's love for athletics can guess what school must mean to this champion state miler and Min- ute Man halfback. A good way to spend 35 cents! WVateh Bill Kelly in Gypsy Jim. VOL. 4 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1938 NO. 4 Gypsy Jim To Be Presented By Junior Class Thursday Evening 33 Drabness of Blake Home Bill Kelly in GYPSY JIM SUPT. MiLLER ANNOUNCES PROGRAM FOR THIS WEEK E As a special observation of Educa- tional Week, Supt. Glenn Miller has arranged a program to be given in ithe auditorium for the parents, No- vember 8, at 7:30 p.m. Education for Tomorrow's America, will be the theme of the program. Band and glee club numbers will be furnished by the music depart- ment, under the direction of Everett Ewing. Supt. W. C. Bloom will be the main speaker of the evening. Refreshments for the patrons will be served after the program in the ihome economics room. Also, at this time, the teachers will be in their rooms ready to greet the parents. Night school will be held in the three ward buildings Tuesday, No- vember 15, from 7:00 to 8:30. Pat- rons will have an opportunity to ob- serve the regular class work of the schools at this time. Miss Mitchell learned at the -teachers' convention that the origin- al oratory and extemporaneous speaking will probably be included with debate in the declamatory con- tests this year. It is likely, also, that the sub-district contest will be eliminated for class A schools. Hclieved by Comedy Costume and Fantasy With Bill Kelly as the leading character, the juniors are preparing a fanciful comedy, Gypsy Jim, for presentation November 10, at eight o'clock at the high school. When the play opens, the audi- ence views the unhappy Blake fam- ily whose heart-strings are about to be torn ruthlessly. Bill in gay gypsy costume, with an infectious smile, brightens the atmosphere of the Blake home and captivates the ro- mantic heart of Lucy Blake CWan- da Highj. Gypsy Jim has the difficult task of causing Mrs. Blake lCharlotte Newmanj to forget her deceased .twin brother, and to revive her in- terest in the family. Harry Blake, the discouraged hus- band, is impersonated by Don Gunn. Bill Staton plays the son's part and Vyrl Anderson that of a boarder. Assisting in the development of the story are Ferdinand Kopf as George Worthing, and Milton Stear as Harold Kent, who are business- Imen. Darren Hoilibaugh is Jen- nings, the butler. Mary Jane Thomas as Estelle, and Jim Roberts as Daniel Glazer, are characters of intrigue in the roman- tic life of Lucy. The small girl of the cast is depicted by Pat Naff- zinger as Grace. Gypsy Jim, is an enchanting comedy with plenty of sentiment, action, and a pholisophy of living unselfishly. Intermingled are hu- mor and fantasy. SCIENTIST MAKES LESSON i0N LIGHT ENTHRALLING Burst of applause all but raised the skylights in the auditorium last 'Wednesday afternoon when Harry IC. White, scientist, entertained and -instructed for more than an hour in a fascinating way. Starting with the earliest meth- ods of lighting, he showed the de- velopments, interspersing his de- monstrations with gesticulations and jokes that kept the audience in a pandemonium of mirth. Almost breathless, except for Ah's the students watched the display of painted cloth in its un- Ibelieveable beauty under the black ray. r l

Page 24 text:

.si t ATHLETIC . ,,'v - .X H422 .- nuff, x 121 I C , ' .. S- I xi I BY f L5 A . Harold Riley and Bill Banks MINUTE MEN TIE BISON IN CLOSING ROUND After three quarters of what seemed to be a no-score encounter, McCook and Lexington locked horns for a 7-7 draw here October 14. Early in the fourth quarter Mc- Cook started their drive from the Bison's thirty-four yard stripe, With a six and one-half yard average the Bison carried the pigskin across in eleven charges. After McCook kicked to Lexing- ton they exchanged a number of plays and then the Minute Men started a march for their goal. It took seven charges and three passes averaging two and one-half yards per play. Fans seem to feel Richards used his bulk and experience in holding his point of the line. The backfield showed much improvement since the game with North Platte. CALLAWAY TOPPLES 26-7 BEFORE LEXINGTON GUNS Rolling up a score for each quar- ter, the Minute Men swept the Cal- laway Trojans windward for a 26-7 loss here Friday night, October 21. With Taylor averaging 10 yards to the plunge, Lexington bolted down the turf to capture 6 points in the first quarter. A blocked pass in the second round set up stakes for Taylor's second touchdown. Dupli- cating his teammate's feat, Fore- man treked goalward twice in the succeeding quarters. Swirling on a fake conversion, Walbridge scuttled around his own left end and crossed the stripe for the extra point after Foreman's first counterg Taylor's boot made the next singleton. A few minutes before the iinal gong, Callaway set up a weird aer- ial attack that ended in a score. Two plays later the game ended. Injuries prevented several of the lirst string from entering the fray Friday night, but the second fiddlers played the Trojan warriors' death song with regular Minute Man swing, RESERVES WIN 7-0 OVER NORTH PLATTE Lexington Reserves, led by Cap- tain Walbridge, grabbed a 7-0 vic- tory from North Platte, here Octo- berp13. Both teams played tight de- fense the whole sixty minutes. In the last of the fourth quarter, Walbridge intercepted a North Platte pass and returned it seventy yards for the only touchdown of the game. Dean Stuckey smashed the center of the line for the extra point. THE I-IUDDLE l fl 11, V,-4 0 ff Wa., yfv' QWW' '- 9 4:11259 Here's something for your history book! Last Friday was the first time in ten years that both Lex- Kington and McCook have scored in the same game. Only one penalty was called in the entire game, but as both teams were offside the down remained the same. Such a fray is proof that two teams can iight hard and clean. Although the much improved Lex- ington junior high team out-downed and out-yarded their opponents here, October 13, they were unable to strike pay dirt over the young Hol- drege Dusters. The young but beefy Holdrege lads rubbed the Minute Boys' noses in the Phelps county soil, 14-0, in their first tussle earlier in the season. Too much Dodd, or t'Too Much Callihan, was once the explanatory opening phrase for Lexington's de- feat in the days when those boys ran wild for Gothenburg and Grand Island. Now that they fly the crim- son and cream for Nebraska, we understand the why of those Cor- rigan drives. Our yearning for re- venge has subsided, and given place to a feeling of pride for the Platte valley terrors. Your Candy Headquarters! Caramels, Chocolates, Cherries Nestle Bars VON'S REXALL STORE When your time is so valuable that you count it by minutes- Don't forget that minute at the MINUTE MAN BOB BAILEY A Minute Man who will be long remembered! Who? Bob Bailey-that versatile, pleasant senior who is ac- curate on the offense and a line smasher on the defense. Of magnetic personality, this Min- ute Man center is also an active member of the Spiz and Hi-Y. He was cabinet member of the Hi-Y last year. One of the three members of the junior class to be elected to the coveted membership in the Na- tional Honor Society, he has proved to be the kind that takes honors lightly, but responsibility seriously. Last week he was selected by the administration office to represent Lexington in the Young Citizen's Contest for Dawson county, and was captain of the McCook-Lexington gamehtwo noteworthy duties. Bob's ambition is to fly up in the blue, and we grant he'll go far. c-:Ann I, , , l, I Football season is on! Join the pigskin parade By getting your footwear -at- PAT'S . x The Kutz Shop Style Without Extravaganccu x Big Game Hunt is on! Buy the Shells That get the ducks ROSENBERG'S up You'll Feel ' -' ' Like 5? QV' ' Q Swinging W ::,: 1,5 : Down the I Avenue in those Suits -- Cleaned at LINCOLN'S



Page 26 text:

The Lexington Clarion Published bi-Weekly by the news writing class of Lexington High School Printed by The Lexington Clipper STAFF Editor-in-Chief ........... Marjorie Carroll Associate Editors ............... . .... ...Emogene Diefenbach, Ethel Pedersen Business Managers .................. Ilugh Stuart, James Burnett, Arthur Teetor Advertising Managers ................ Charlotte Newman, Marianne Zimmerman Athletic Editors. ..Harold Riley, Bill Banks Sports Commentators ................ Kenneth George, Clyde Taylor, Ray Brown. News Commentators ................. Mary Ellen Davidson, Alice Sorensen, Charlotte Reiter Feature VVriters ..................... Marjorie McFarren, Dean Lantz, Doro- thy Duryea Proof Readers ....................... Ruth Haworth. Alyce Hofreiter, Agnes Delahunty Illustrator .............. John Edwin May Columnists ...... Don Moss, Irwin VValker Activity Reporters .................. VVilma Chadwick, Addison XValbridge, Manrene Banks, Lois Buck, Olive French, WVillis Raser, Evangeline Lind- blade, Laurence Tyler. EDITORIALS I A JUNIOR MEDITATES I am a junior. Next year I shall graduate and have the task of choosing the right road to take for my profession and my future. As I sit here looking at you, and you my classmates, I hardly realize we are almost ready to pass to a dif- ferent period in life! or should I say a new world? When I was a freshman I felt grown up. The juniors and seniors were far beyond but still I felt passed. But now take the places me in knowledge, my childhood had it is different! We of those we once looked up to. I see new people in plays and musical programs. I see new faces, new friends, but how I long once more for the chance to linger in the halls with those of other years. This year another class goes outg another will come in. This means new acquaintances and friends, but yet there's a longing for those old stand-bys. Are we ever satisfied? No, but, my freshman friends, take cogniz- ance of all that's here for you. We go to school together only once and it is never long enough. James Lipps, sophomore, return- ed Tuesday to his former home in I P 1 DEMOSSING Yoon VOCABULARY ---D. Moss In a previous issue, I attempted to explain that a bromide is the fellow who repeats bearded jokes, and rides a stolen horse in the re- partee parade. A sulphite is harder to describe because-well, did you ever try to photograph an eel? He's explosive, spontaneous, and at times, shocking, but not a yawn-generator. In L.H.S. there are dozens of bromides, but I say to the highly eulogized minority of sulphites, t'Don't get cocky: 'Insane asylums are full of sulphites'. Tliey're not all there, however, just as not all bankers are in Leavenworth. You up there on the shelf, saw a sulphite in Harry White, Wednes- day, and learned that the difference between coal oil and kerosene is ten cents. S afzazzmd We have always heard that we would get into trouble if we told more than we knew. Now that the Welle's-Wells caprice has erupted the inner-tubes of us think-hers, we are convinced that dust column writ- ers are headed for the same no good end. Saucy red heads seem to be pre- valent in L.H.S. Certain youngins' Dorothy Duryea and Bill Banks add to the double features, as well as Paul Hanson and Dorothy Suphler. . Jean Smith and Pedunk Staton have been doing a lengthening job of making the long and short of it. . We see Diemer has gone back to torment her alumni . . . she seems to have swarms of them. Perhaps A Pocket Full of tMaybe nightmaresl . The Duffy-Hirsh affair has been rather a one-armed get together- Oh, well, who are we to judge. . . umni ,Q Norman Coffey, '29, now teacher in Holdrege, underwent an appen- dectomy, October 27. Stanley Neil, '35, is one of the two student photographers for the 1939 Plainsman, annual of Ne- braska Wesleyan. While in L.H.S. a member of the Na- Society, editor of the Man, which won first Stanley was tional Honor 1935 Minute honor rating, and was valedictorian of his class. lar work, he Besides doing his regu- now teaches two night classes in chemistry laboratory at Wesleyan. Janice Farley, '37, a sophomore at Nebraska Wesleyan, has been select- ed as the alto soloist at the First Presbyterian church in Lincoln. She will sing under the direction of Pro- fessor Oscar Bennett, head of the music department at Wesleyan Uni- versity. She was also chosen by Professor Bennett for the part of v You'll be the Belle of Autumn, The Glamour Girl of the Omaha. Village Clever lines! Mystery! AND Gyp- with your hair done at the sy Jim ! That's the junior play, BON TON November 10. K , New Shipment of WTNTER SPORT COATS fSpecial, 510.953 EVANS SHOP WE INVITE I all students and alumni to headquarter - at the - MOSS CAFE K K Gretchen, in Student Prince, a light opera to be presented in De- cember. You can get That Sticking Meal That Needs Repeal at HAGADONE'S PHOTOGRAPHS for the Yearbook Carefully Done at a Moderate Cost The best way to preserve i the present for the future. HEBREWS ' -- x l Invisible Half Soles make your old shoes new. i Have them nepaired at N I M I E'S Open Evenings and Sunday

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Lexington High School - Minute Man Yearbook (Lexington, NE) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Lexington High School - Minute Man Yearbook (Lexington, NE) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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Lexington High School - Minute Man Yearbook (Lexington, NE) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Lexington High School - Minute Man Yearbook (Lexington, NE) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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