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Page 25 text:
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LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF THE CLASS OF 1952 We, the Senior Class of 1952, of Midland City High School, realizing that we are leaving our high school days behind to enter an unknown world, do hereby make this our Last Will and Testament. ARTICLE I We, the Seniors of 1952, leave with friendship and understanding the prized possessions below, hoping they will be received in the same spirit in which they are given. ARTICLE II To our principal and faculty, we leave our sincere appreciation for a job well done. ARTICLE III To our parents, we leave our profound respect and deepest love for standing behind us throughout our school years, for sharing our disappointments as well as our success and for making it possible for us to obtain our education. ARTICLE IV To the freshmen, we leave our place on the front steps. Make good use of it. ARTICLE V To the sophomores, we leave our trials and tribulations and our long looked for SENIOR PRIVILEGES which we always planned for but never seemed to have gotten. May you improve our plan. ARTICLE VI To the juniors, we leave our dignified ways. ARTICLE VII To the dear old building and grounds, we leave the peace and quiet that is here after we are gone. ARTICLE VIII RUTH LINGO leaves her cute ways to Rebecca Windham. LORETTA TAYLOR leaves her sweet disposition to Naomi Massey. JANIS REYNOLDS leaves her writing ability to Billy Joe Bass. GEROLENE MARSHALL leaves her facial expression to Judith Glenn. MARTHA THOMPSON leaves her talent and ability to sing St. Louis Blues to Betty Danford. OLIVE WARD leaves her ability to sing Belle Bottom Trousers to Peggy Walding. MARY MATHIS leaves her charming disposition to Betty Adkins. HAZEL ROBERSON leaves to Edna Crooms her dancing ability. NELL JENKINS leaves her love for typing to Billy Raley. CHARLES PRINCE leaves his arguing inclinations to Delma Matthews and his big feet to Larry Turnipseed. CAROL PALMER leaves to Virginia Marshall her technique of getting a man. MARIAM MARSH leaves to Sally Kennedy her thrill at basketball games, especially tournaments. BRYAN CARLILE leaves to David Dozier his singing ability. SUE McNEAL leaves her ability to mix school and marriage to Sue York. JEANETTE CHAPMAN leaves her ability to act her age to Evelyn Marshall. BILL McCALLISTER leaves his ability to stay out of trouble to Ted Yeomans. BONNIE ADKINS leaves her title of Miss Midland City to Nell Condrey and also her height to Joann Dykes. ROBERT MORING leaves his ability to aggravate to Virgil Skipper. RUTH WOODHAM leaves her name and all that goes with it (except her boyfriend) to Canora Woodham. JACKIE KING leaves nobody nothing. He will need absolutely everything he has. LETTIE ENFINGER leaves her daring (BLUE) eyes to Thelma Woodham. FRANK SELLERS leaves his way with the girls to Dan Buffkin. MARTHA RICHARDS leaves her cute smile to Elna Woodham. HOWARD LEE leaves his ability to Goof-off to Jennings Windham. RANDAL TICE leaves his love for English to Bo Paramore. BENNIE CORBIN leaves to Wade Glover his athletic ability. CHARLOTTE RICE leaves her desire for a diploma to Jerry Smith. SARA TIDWELL leaves her quiet reserved ways to Winifred Richards. In witness thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and seal this sixth day of December in the year of one thousand nine hundred fifty-two. Signed, Sealed and Delivered in the Presence of the Senior Class. Nell Jenkins, Testatrix
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Page 24 text:
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CLASS PROPHECY OF ’52 SENIORS I had just boarded a plane for an around the world expedition to study conditions of children in other countries. My trip was being sponsored by the Alabama Conference of'the Methodist Church. To my great surprise I recognized the pilot as Randal Tice, a former classmate. This reminded me that it had been ten years since our high school days had ended. He told me about several other classmates. He said that Frank Sellers was a farmer down at Pinckard; Robert Moring was manager of his father's car business in Pinckard; and that Mary Ivey Mathis was also living in Pinckard keeping house. At my stop in Washington D. C.. I decided to do a bit of sight-seeing. There I met Ruth Woodham. our class beauty, doing a very good job as a secretary. She said Nell Jenkins, her husband and son were living on a cattle farm in New Mexico. Hazel Roberson, the wife of a famous baseball star, was living in Minnesota. After leaving her, I went into a bookstore to purchase a novel. I saw an interesting title written by Victoria Hardy. While reading the introduction, I discovered to my great amazement that it was written by Janis Reynolds Hardy using the former as a pen name. My next stop was in New York City. I had always wanted to see this great city. While strolling down Fifth Avenue, taking in all the sights, I saw three familiar faces. Instantly I recognized them to be Lettie Enfinger, Olive Ward and Ruth Lingo. Lettie and Olive were nurses at Charity Hospital in New Orleans. Ruth was a nurse in the city hospital of New York. The former were vacationing with Ruth. The four of us had dinner together and talked over old times and old classmates. I learned that Martha Thompson was doing a wonderful job as a housewife in Ozark. Jeanette Chapman was a bookkeeper in Panama City. Martha Richard was a typist in Dothan. Bonnie Adkins, the wife of a former M.C.H.S. graduate, was living in Dothan. Mariam Marsh was living in San Antonio combining homemaking with her job as a clerical worker at Lackland Air Force Base. Carol Palmer was living on a prosperous farm near Midland City. Sarah Tidwell and Charlotte Rice were secretaries in Atlanta. Howard Lee was now operating his father's market in Napier Field. We had discussed all that each of us knew, so we parted with the promise to keep in touch with each other. Many days afterwards, I found myself in Korea. This was to be my last stop in a foreign country. I went to see the head missionary in Seoul. To my great surprise I discovered it to be none other than Gerolene Marshall and her husband. A week after my visit in Korea I was back in the U.S. While looking over San Francisco, I was in store for another surprise. I met Sue Roberson McNeal and her little daughter. She was living a few miles from San Francisco. At the airport in Nashville I recognized the mechanic to be Bennie Corbin who was checking the air- planes as they prepared to leave. He told me Bill McCallister was manager of a furniture company a few miles from there. My last stop was a visit to Midland City. To my great joy, I arrived in time to see a big football game between Midland City and Clio. Another surprise was in store for me here. Charles Prince was the coach for Midland City. During the game I met Bryan Carlisle who was a big time farmer near Midland City. At last 1 was returning to my work in Montgomery. While walking to my apartment, I was thinking that I had missed seeing only one member of my graduating class, when suddenly I bumped into some- one. That someone turned out to be Jackie King. After apologizing for being so rude, I learned he was assistant coach at Sidney Lanier High School. Suddenly I awoke to find I had only been dreaming. But what a wonderful dream it was. I had seen all of my classmates established in their careers. I wondered ould this be true,and somehow I knew that it was. Loretta Taylor Class Prophet
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Page 26 text:
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CLASS POEM OF 52 Our Ship must trim it’s sails; No more the harbor of school Protects us with it's love, Teaching us each rule. Now we enter the Sea of Life With learned minds and true heart, Willing to fight each strife. That tries to tear us apart. As we bid farewell our heads are bowed, Sorrow fills each heart; for we leave behind Teachers and friends who make us proud We are a part of this valiant mankind. - Janis Reynolds Class Poet CLASS MOTTO Not merely to exist, but to amount to something in life. CLASS COLORS Gold and Green CLASS FLOWER Gladiolus
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