High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 19 text:
“
Diff' s Q?f fi gs Senior Class History fContinued From Preceding Page! At the beginning of the year we carefully selected the following capable class officers to supervise the activities of our last year: President ...........i.............,............................................ Dewey Rinehart Vice-President ........... ,,.,..,.,,,,,,, R obert Blank Secretary-Treasurer ,...,.,. ,,,,,,, J 0 Anne Walters News ReDOI'ter ,...............................r............................. Carolyn Wilson A few weeks later a committee of three members, Byron Daw- son, Waldo Douglas and Edna Deck, was appointed to take charge of our candy sales for the year. At this time we wish to express our ap- preciation to those who have so faithfully patronized us during the year The most wonderful event of our high school days came in Nov- ember 8, when' we entered the new school building which we had stead- ily watched being constructed. It then became our place for the remain- der of our school days. Our sincere thanks and gratitude go out to those who have sacrificed and dilligently worked to provide rs vxith stch in rdequ-ately equipped building to make our work more enjoyable and ef- ficient. In January the annual staff was elected. The advertising manag- ers immediately started their work to make possible one of the biggest and best editions of THE WAYNE ever published. The individual pictures were taken February 10, and group pic- tures of the various classes and organizations in both Junior and Sen- ior high, and the grades were taken on March 18. And so we come to the last chapter. We linger wistfully over' it's pages, but finally the end must enevitably come. We all join our talent and enthusiasm in supporting and presenting our last dramatic attempt, the Senior class play. We regretfully receive the royal entertainment which the Junior-Senior Reception brings. It is with mingled sadness and anticipation that we come to Baccalaureate and Commencement. And now, we gently close the book and bravely and eagerly turn our gaze to- ward life's new and greater adventures. LENORE BOWDLE
”
Page 18 text:
“
W2 S iii Senior Class History Class Motto: The elevator to success is not running, take the stairs. Class Flower: Delphinium Class Colors: Blue and White Thirty-six ambitious students enrolled as Freshmen in the fall of 1934. It was a different kind of school life that we had entered, and it was several weeks before we were fully acquainted with the customs and requirements of high school routine. We were considered only in min- or parts of the high school activities and it looked like the four years ahead of us would be dreary and strenuous. But when we showed the upper classmen what we had to contribute to athletics, scholarship tests and musical activities, we then stepped into the places we were destined to fill. The Freshman year with all it's new interests was busy and en- joyable. The Sophomore year soon arrived. We had lost several of our class members. New and more perplexing problems awaited us in our studies as well as in our social life. We now had made real places for ourselves in our high school activities and found them to be of great in- terest. Our Junior year brought thrilling experiences. The first import' ant one was the selection and presentation of our class play, A Sweep- ing Victory. It proved to be a lot of work, good fun, and as nearly as we could make it, a REAL sweeping victory. About the same time, too, we chose our class colors, blue and white and our class flower, the del- phinium. After much debating class rings. were- selected and by the middle of January the Juniors were proudly displaying their Jewelry. At the Kirwan Hotel we honored the Seniors with the annual Junior-Senior Reception. This was the last big event of our Junior year. It seemed impossible that on September 7, 1937 this group of 22 students could be enrolling for the last time in Wayne High. Eleven of our number had entered grade school together in 1926. Our great in- crease had come in 1930 when our school district was enlarged. Four students have been with us since then. This year we have had one new student come to us from Spencerville. Our final emollment is now 23. tContinuecl On Next Pagej
”
Page 20 text:
“
n Class Prophesy The members of the class of .1938 have been very much interested in psy- chology, psychoanalyses and psychiatry. Naturally they get all wrought up about their repressions and complexes, defense mechanisms, and rationalizations. So when the famous psychiatrist, Professor Abdullah Freudson-Brilling op- ened.a consulting room for the mentally unfit and the intellectually unsettled in Way- nesfield, our earnest students rushed to see him-not that they were uiifitg- unisetjtled or un-anything-but just to be psychoanalyzed. 4Last night I went to Professor Freudson-lBrilling's office, and as luck would have it he wfasn't in. To kill time I looked through the magazines on the table-Mcd-' ern Priscilla, December, 19105 Literary Digest, June, 1927 3 The Etude, February, 19383 and Gramma's Home Companion, April, 1890. But I wanted something snappy. and then I found a black covered notebook at the bottom. Being curious I looked at it and there I saw the names of my classmates-:md what I found out! have no fear that what I'm telling you is incorrect as it's exactly what the psychiatrist wrote about members of the Senior class who had consulted him: Stanley Brown, a stolid, slow moving chap, will never display either speed or animation. Can be trusted never to hurry. He will become a plumber's assistant, the kind who looks for the monkey wrench and can'l find it. Erma Louise Sproul is a nervous, inquisitive type. Will be a fine reporter because of her intense interest in everybody s business .and her cast-iron nerve, which cnables her to penetrate where she is not wanted, without embarrassn ext. Gertrude Williams shows signs of a very fvast worker. She will be the first woman to commute from America to Europe by the great Northern Airway. She will operate two candy stores, where she will seil her famous fudge-one in london and the other in New York, and will spend the alternate day in each, traveling back and forth at night. Robert Blank has an athletic body and a lethargic mind-the patient type. He likes to sit and wiatch things, his calm disposition, combined with his ingrained inertness, makes him the ideal type for a sports promoter. ' Jo Anne Walters has a very cheerful and loving disposition. Her place will be no other than superintendent of nurses in a large hospital. Rosalie Sproul is .a strange case, troubled by a recurrent dream in which sh: is a canary bird being chased by a cat. She told me she thought this meant that she would be a pet shop owner. Quite wrong. She will be a great singer. Dewey Rinehart is a splendid example of perfect self control. He never stut- ters, stammers, hesitates for a word, has no complexes and no bad habits, and doesn't mind how'late hours he keeps or with whom he keeps them. He can talk very rap- idly and his enunciation is perfect. He will be awarded a gold medal by the internat- ional Academy for the Preservation of Speech as the world's most famous radio an- nouncer. Ruth Ulrey shows tokens of an undecided mind, a vacilliation of purpose. She has decided what she will do in life-and changed her mind-every day for a year. She will guide uncertain boys and girls into their proper life work for she will be head of the Vocational Guidance Department of a large co-educational institution in the Middle West. Lenore Bowdle is of the quiet type. However she will be a famous violinist and will be at the head of a concert tour through Europe. Don Bondurant is an interesting case. An overdevelopcd imagination and an under developed digestion are producirg a wonderful result-the ability to concoct 1he weirdest tales at practically a minutes notice. 'lhis .ability is so remarkable Ptlhat his conversation consists almost entirely of weird tales. 'lhose who know him well never believe him, and strangers se'dom. Being an intelligent young man, he will turn this talent to account. He will become ia real-estate salesman, selling Florida lots by the gross to inhabitants of Labrador and igloos to the dwellers in the Sahara. tContinued On Next Page!
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.