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Page 21 text:
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+ If Shakespeare Were Alive Today He Would Say: If music be the food of love, swing it. —Twelfth Night Fill your bones with aches and don’t think of the morning after. —Twelfth Night Bob: Here’s my hand. Croff: And mine with my heart in it. —The Tempest 0 heaven were Mooch But constant, he were perfect. —Two Gentlemen of Verona As ill luck would have it, 1 cannot tell what the Dickens his name is, He was only a pickup. —The Merry Wives of Windsor Some rise by sin, and some by virtue fall; That’s the long and short of it. —Measure for Measure and Merry Wives of Windsor Harold was never precise in promise keeping. —Measure for Measure O, Lucy, what a breaking up there was! —Hamlet Speak low if you speak of love, But are you men good and true? —Much Ado About Nothing Sigh no more, Mary, sigh no more, Men were deceivers ever,— One foot in sea and one on shore To one Hurst constant never. —Much Ado About Nothing On seeing Martin, he would say, “Sits the wind in that corner?” —Hamlet A Casanova among ladies is a most dreadful thing. Much Ado About Nothing A Big Apple rotten at the center Oh’ what a good “truck” he can pull. —Much Ado About Nothing God made him, therefore, let him pass for a man, I dote on his very absence. —Merchant of Venice. Love is blind and lovers can’t see The silly things that they do. —Merchant of Venice Many are harmful unnecessary cats. —Merchant of Venice On seeing a group of high school students he would again repeat “Lord, what fools these mortals be.” —Midsummer Night’s Dream Of whom would he say “My heart is true as steel?” —Midsummer Night’s Dream Men are April when they woo, December when they wed: maids are May when they are maids, but the sky changes when they are wives. —As You Like It Tush! Tush! fear boys with “Bugs”. —Taming of the Shrew Home-keeping youths have homely wits. Fish not, with this melancholy bait For this fool simpleton. —The Merchant of Venice Old in limbs, young in judgment. —The Merchant of Venice This day methinks is but the night time sick. —The Merchant of Venice We wonder about whom Shakespeare would say this------- One man in his time plays many parts— One man in his time rehearses many love scenes. Signing off, Margaret Crane and Nancy Brown. Nineteen
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Page 20 text:
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Class of January, 1939 Aspaas, Esther Aspaas, Mary Ruth Auda, John Barham, Ed Barnhart, Rollin Bell, Virginia Bird, Kenneth Booras, Pete Bradley, Dick Branch, Edgar Burton, James Corley, Kenneth Davis, Vernon Dregoiw, Marie Elmgren, Byron Fellows, Dorothy Jean Gavos, George Griffin, Eloise Grimshaw, Lyla Hamilton, Rosalie Hammond, Tom Harrison, Zola Geraldine Heaton, Glenn Jones, Anita Juroshek, Mike Kelly, Gerald King, Mary Jane Leech, Lorene Maclin, Kathleen Martin, Junior Matney, Bob Oelke, Clayton Phillips, Harold Pickell, Bonnie Jean Pullin, Bob Rardin, Jack Schnorf, Margaret Seymour, Thomas Sheldon, Warren Soltis, Rudolph Sommermeyer, Margaret Taylor, Helen Van Waning, Verle Walker, Pauline West, Gerald Williams, Howard Williams, Nellie Jane Wood, Dick Eighteen
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Page 22 text:
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Excerpts from the Will of 1938 To Eddie Jacobs we leave the title “Sweetheart of Sheridan High.” To Ina Mae Crafton we leave the privilege of looking disarranged once in a while. To Billy Mumper we leave an airplane without any gasoline so he’ll come down to earth with a bang. To Jack Rarden we leave a blank diploma for 1940. To Dick Yentzer we leave a speedometer so he will slow down on curves. To Patricia Tyson we leave a revolving desk so she won’t have to turn around so much in study hall. To Pete Booras we leave an all state position on the basketball team. To Esther Aspaas we leave daily letters from Frank Kalissinsky. To Ida Rossa we leave congratulations for her excellent grades. To Carl Smith we leave a pat on the back for every basket he has made for the team. To Glenn Sheely we leave a box of matches so he can return the cigarette lighter he borrowed. To Elizabeth Urbatchka and Charles Endicott we leave a “ring” for their daily “rounds.” To Billy Irwin we leave a nice long pencil. To Billy Carroll we leave the answer book for Chemistry Unit tests. To Leora Butterfield we leave part interest in “Borden’s” canned products. To Alice Hertzler we leave the title “Stay as Sweet As You Are.” To Florence Baker we leave the official title of “Fixer Upper,” with our sincerest appreciation. To Avis Walker we leave anything she wants. To Mary Ruth Aspaas we leave $100 to put in her elephant bank to support Bud. To Pauline Walker we leave a set of traffic rules. To Dick Wood we leave Emily Post’s book on “Etiquette.” To Maxine Cotton we leave a “ball” but no bat when she graduates. To June Diener we leave the right to walk in her brother’s footsteps. To Frances Lewis we leave a rope so she can tie the final knot with Mr. Riley. To Elwood Livingston we leave an extra pair of eyelashes. To Bernell Wallace we leave a few more dimples. To Dal Shobert we leave part interest in Joan Clark. To Alfred Wood we leave a “cookie.” To Dorothy Jean Fellows we leave pleasant memories of Wilford. To Billy Parker we leave a magic wand so he can make a living for his one and only. To Geneva Small and Betty Christenson we leave a book entitled “How to Control the Giggles.” To Anita Jones we leave a Mexican that can speak English. To Jim Irwin we leave a new “Shirley” tie. To Howard Williams we leave a book on “How to Prepare Lessons Before Class.” To Dick Bradley we leave the right to play football on the basketball floor. To Helen Meyer we leave a claim on A1 Roberts. To Jim Norden we leave a permanent date with Gorrell. Twenty
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