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Page 18 text:
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Ckcufferecl Koume ZW ir Plato and Euclid proved that a triangle had a firm foundation, ex- cellent balance, and was equal in all ways. Likewise, the three facits of the Girls' League triangle, friend- ship, loyalty, and purposefulness, have proved a Hrm foundation for this girls' organization. The three colors of this symbol are gold, blue, and white, representing courage, truth, and integrity. The symbol is original at Murray, designed by Helen Landis, a graduate of 1941. Strictly female! Absolutely NO men allowed! This is the pass- word of all members of Murray's Girls' League. This feminine group forms the largest organization at Murray. The third Wednes- day of every month Hnds all girls in the school deserting the male members of their classes, and gathering in the auditorium. October, the first meeting of the year, found Ioyce Woodbury taking care of entertainment by playing her own piano compo- sition, The Little Moron Learns Boogie. In November, Miss Florence Vest's expression classes amused everyone with a short skit, and Miss Audrey Kenevan arranged a musical program. Are you a slick chick? Would you like to be what is known as a glamor girl? These questions were answered at the Ianuary meeting. Mrs. Sue Scarborough, head of Fild Schlick's beauty salon, revealed many helpful beauty hints. Sticky faces and sticky hands were the telltale marks on most of the students in February. The caramel apple sale was onl Anyone loooking in room 210 those days saw Rita Dressler and Iudy Stopf up to their noses in apples, with Marjorie Wetterstrom supervising the gooey goings-on. That same month, Girls' League celebrated its ninth birthday. April brought the new picture contest. What poses! What pictures! Its popularity may make it their annual event. With the able assistance of Miss Catherine Daly, Girls' League adviser, this club had become Murray's most prominent feminine organization. .It was not beauty butkoriginality that counted in the Girls' League Snapshot Contest. Looking over entries arc, seated: Margery Finger, president: Mariorie Wcttcrstrom, program chairman, standing: Miss Catherine Daly, adviserg Rita Dressler, vice presidentg Iudy Stopf, sccrctaryg Ioycc Woocllnury, treasurer. Page Sixteen
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Page 17 text:
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h. , X r X N. ,A 4. xx, X r K , C- , w , . I sr . . X W 'S I y g,Xl0!0l llfL9 MnLnown CA6l,l0f6l 6 0 Current magazines in the library are enjoyed by Patricia Carlson, Bill Lee, and Marcia Williams. 0 Many busy hours are spent in the Library Club Workroom. Here lean Ansley files away old magazines while Allan Arnason and George Semple cheek out classroom sets. K 0 Library Club members stop to view their exhibit which carries out the Book 'Week theme, Books are Bridges. ' First raw, left to right: Mary Curley, Roger Adams, Beverly Gulden, Robert Christensen, Gerry Busse, William Hilgedick, Donna ' ' ' f ' E l M t Wood, Iudith Best, Robert Bulger, Helarne Bjorntlahl, Vernon Hanson, Marllyn Gavin I Marjorie Walker, Iean yer, argare Stopf, William Kellcrmann, Helen Iansen, Helen Finger, Iean Ansley, Nancy Eyler, Ianet Lehman O Gene Gray, Robert Nixon, Robert Hays, Roger Wood, Lindsay Christlieb, Allan Arnason, Charles Grose, Carl Iohnson, Iohn Rutford. - s 3' fs -1 as t , I it he 5 M24 my fe. 89 an Q Page Fifteen l
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Page 19 text:
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ui! anc!.Sirof!.S1ri6LL5 Seated, left lo right: Ianice Engebretson, Astrid Haugan, lean Lewis, Nancy Eylcr, Ioan Ianncck, Betty Olson. Slnnrling: Bill Hilge- dick, Enid Larson, Leroy Gardner, leanne Malecha, Bob Erickson, Barbara Remington, Lorraine Addington, Roger Adams, Alice Krantz, Ianice Christopherson. From the time they chew a pencil over their Hrst headline, journalism stu- dents look forward to the Quill and Scroll initiation. The B average student must be on the Murcurie or Pilot business staff, or a contributor to one of the publications. Besides their bi-annual initiation, spring finds them doubling as auctioneers as they sell souvenir Pilot pictures. As a service club the group checks alumni files and sponsors a creative writing contest each year. l mm nou D A Q L, I . ' L9 is SCRQLL Long before underwater pens had been invented, peo- ple of culture wrote with graceful quill pens on parch- ment scrolls. As time passed, their quill and scroll became a symbol of good writing. When an international hon- or society was set up for high school journalism, the quill and scroll became its logical emblem. Pictured here are wearers of the time-honored badge. Newly initiated Quill and Scroll members, Leroy Gardner and Ian- ice Engebretson, receive their pins from Roger Adams and Geraldine Markley. Page Seventeen
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