Baker Junior High School - Rocket Yearbook (Austin, TX)

 - Class of 1954

Page 69 of 88

 

Baker Junior High School - Rocket Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 69 of 88
Page 69 of 88



Baker Junior High School - Rocket Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 68
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Baker Junior High School - Rocket Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 70
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Page 69 text:

THE BAKER ROCKET PAGE THREE SENIOR CLASS WILL We, the ninth grade ot Baker Iunior High, being of unreason- ably sound? mind and body, do hereby leave our earthly and un- earthly possessions to our under- classmen. Sherry Bailey-My nickname of Shorty to Betty Snowden. Ann Baldwin-My romantic imagination and personality to someone bashful. Ioan Beard--My ability to have iun in math under Mrs. Walden to Lillie Mae Clopton. Ioyce Berry-My record of go- ing steady tor 22 months to Peg- gy Parrish. Raymond Bohls-My g o o d grades to anyone who needs them. Barbara Brill-My ability to open my mouth at the Wrong time to any poor innocent creature. Ianelle Cain-My ability ot making lUU's on a Social Studies test to some lucky lowerclass- man. Roger Campbell-My ability to be bad to Raymond Sherman. Paula Casey-To my sister, Lil- lie Faye, my kindness. Ann Cavett-My place as vice- president oi the Footlight Players and my ability to make gruesome faces to Donnie Tew. Arthur Chester--My love and sympathy to Mr. Pine, who has had to teach me. Lynda Cox-My ability to Work in the library to Ierry Ann Fra- zier, who will be in the seventh grade next year. Carolyn Crider--My love for baseball books to Darlene Inman. Irving Cutter-My algebra book to Earl Dean in hopes that he can get better grades. Melvin Dailey-My, flat top to Bill Hamilton. Alice Dawson-My bloodshot eyes to Lillie Faye Casey. Dennie Dement-My baton to Avis McFarland. Nancy Dement-I, Nancy De- ment, do hereby will my ability to crack While singing a high note to Claryce Smith. Iimmy Doherty-My hair to Mr. Gilman will Pine because he is tearing his out in Algebra class. Viress Doyle-My math book and grades to Mrs. Walden and Mr. Pine. Wayne Fickel--My physique to Willie Thurman. Tommy Flowers-My hair to anybody that can take care ot it. Georgia Foelsing-My love for baseball to Mary Sue Schwartz. Carolyn Folkes-My long hair to Pat Foreman. Dean Franks-My almost black hair to Lavada Dockens. Kathryn Giddens -l, Kathryn Giddens, will my rosy cheeks to Charlotte Currier. Barbara Grice-My ability to blush so easily to Carol Moore. Helen Hausman-My locker to Dee Dee Williams. Craig Hayden--My long black if-'l hair to Bob Young. Gerald Heath-My A-I-'s in Al- gebra to Allan Rogers. Delores Henderson-My good grades in science to any 8th gra- der. lo Roye Herber-All ot my boy friends to Marie Herrin. Henry Hodges--I leave Don Meyer my ability to draw. Saundra Hoskins-My ability to get along with Mr. Pine to Dar- lene Dailey. ' Bertha lngram-To Mary Grice l will all oi the good-looking boys. Wilson Iensen-My place in Mr. Pine's paddle line to Billy Linder. Margie Iohnson - My s h o rt blonde hair to Dee Dee Williams. Timmy Kanetzky--I will Baker to my brother. Nancy Kelly-My braces to my sister, Ioyce Kelly. Norma King-My complexion to Barbara Dean. Linda Kleinschmidt--My quiet- ness to any loudmouth. Lester Lang-My big brown eyes to Mr. Pine. Margaret Laybourne-My tardy permits to Virginia Barron. Nelda Mangham-My helpful and beloved boo hoos to Billy Linder. Donnie Martin-My flat-top to I. T. Pruitt. Patsy Martinez-My locker and books to the 8th grade. Ierry Marx-My curly hair to any boy in the 8th grade. David Melber-My flirting abi- lity to David Kennedy. Leon Miears-My math book to Mr. Pine, so he may use it again. Bennie Miller-My ability to get kicked out ot class to Allen Ro- gers. Delbert Moberg-My athletic ability to Walter Dollar. F.. C. Mowdy--Mr. Pine to Al- len Rogers tor math. Io Ann Neel--My ability to gig- gle to Betty Hetzel. Sam Olguin-My ability not to get the car on Friday night to Charles Dodson. Harriet Palmer-My place in Algebra to Mary Lynn Metz. Gayle Parr-My place by Nancy Ramm in advisory to Wil- lie Thurman. Pauline Perry-My ability to come to Training Union often to Sue King. Yvonne Platt-My voice to Dee Dee Williams. Clarence Pruitt-My ability to get in trouble to Ernest McCar- ver. Nancy Ramm-My abiltiy to say things that embarass me to San- dy Hitchcock. Sue Rodgers-My ability to es- cape Mr. Pine's paddle to any unsuspecting eighth grader who may need it. Shirley Rowland-My braces to Mary Nell Greeson. Lupe Santos-My dumbness to Tony Santos. Ierry Scarbrough-My most precious fortune ot friends to Peggy Parrish. Ioyce Schmidt - My history grades to Marilyn Schmidt in hope she will keep them good. Liz Schwab-Leaves her danc- ing ability to Sue King. Tippa Scott-My citizenship to my little sister, Mary Ann Scott. Flo Seekatz-My love tor math and Mr. Pine to someone in the eighth grade. Iohn Sherrill-My ability to get caught playing hookey to Bob Young. Martha Sherrill-My figure to iContinued on Page 71

Page 68 text:

PAGE TWO THE BAKER ROCKET CHESS TOURNAMENT TO BE HELD MAY 17-21 Mr. S. D. Mcl..emore has an- nounced that chess tournament will be held May 17-21. The chess tournament is open to any boy who can play chess. He doesn't have to be an outstanding player to enter either. At first the tourna- ment will be played by elimina- tion and then by round-robin. The chess club has been grow- ing. It now contains some 35 to 40 members. They are as follows: Richard Starwich, I. W. Sanders, jerry jones, Ray Belcher, Warren Routon, Darrell Dungan, Robert Sullavan, Cecil Catchings, Leon Hanson, Errol Schuyler, Richard Mannix, Raymond Sherman, Bob- by Boyd, Bob Young, jerry Mo- gonye, Dickey Kemp, Charles ,C a n tw e l 1, David Biggerstatf, james Atchison, jesse Freeman, james Norman, Anthony Petrick, Bennie Engelke, jack Wagner, Gene Mayes, Earl Dean, Frank Lain, Leroy Henderson, Mike Drousche, Sammy Franks, Cotton Watford, joe Prewitt, jerry Polk, Leroy Eastburn, Lamar Anderson, lrving Cutter, Bobby Wykes, Ar- thur Chester, and Gene Mallard. STUDENT ACTIVITIES END SCHOOL TERM ln the good ol' Summer Time is probably a phrase which will come to the minds of many Baker- ites at the nearing of the summer vacation months. As we near these summer months and the closing of the school term, we begin to think of all the activities which have or will round up the school days. For instance the school picnic which will be held soon at Shipe Park. There will be free hot dogs and soda water for everyone, as well as the refreshing cool water for swimming. The Student Council will also round up their school days with a picnic and swimming at Barton Springs, which all plans to be an enjoyable afternoon. May 14th was the day set aside by the journalism class to have their Press Club Dinner. This ac- tivity took place at the Hitchin' Post and entertainment was per- formed by the journalism students themselves. MAY 3-8 MARKED FRIENDSHIP WEEK Monday, May 3, opened the first activity for Friendship Week. Starting at 7:30 and lasting until 8:30 a sunrise dance was held to enable students to get their Friendship books signed. There was also dancing for those who wanted to dance. The books were put out by the student council and were sold for 15 cents. The sec- ond day was used mostly to get books signed. On Wednesday there was a big treat for the girls. The boys were supposed to carry the girls' books to class for them but the treat went to the boys Thursday because the girls car- ried the boys' books. On Satur- day, May 8, from 7:00 to 10:00 there was a Hawaiian Dance. A Friendship king and queen were also announced at the dance. For more fun the seventh, eighth, and ninth grades at Mc- Callum were invited to the dance. That concluded the schedule for the week and here are a few notes from the teachers: Please try to have a pen or pencil with you and contact teachers before and after school or between classes if you would like for them to sign your Friendship Books. NIGHT OF THREE ONE ACTS Baker Auditorium is where the Footlight Players presented two nights of one act plays. The plays presented were: Ladies Alone , The Dear Departed , and l'm a Fool which was Baker's contest play. The members of the casts were: l'm a Fool , johnny Sher- rill, Carol Wycofi, Emily Ford, Barbara Grice, Dicky Kemp, Becky Hatherly, and Glenn Noble. The Members of Dear De- parted ' were: Ann Cavett, Ethel Kidder, Laneta Stefka, Arthur Chester, Irving Cutter Donny Tew and Wilma Anderson. The cast of Ladies Alone is Avis McFarland, Sandy Hitchcock, Dar- leen Inman, and Sue King. 9th GRADE STYLE SHOW l guess we have some pretty well-dressed gals in the ninth grade now. lf you saw the Fashion Show they gave tor the P.T.A. April 13, you can understand why. The girls modeled the dres- ses they made in homemaking. The theme was April in Paris and there were three scenes. The first was for the more casual dres- ses, the second was for the round-the-clock dresses, and the third scene was for the real dres- sy dresses. Miss Nell Ann Holdaman, the student teacher, was the narrater for the show. The girls who mo- deled in the show were from Mrs. I-1arville's second and sixth period classes. They also gave the style show in assembly on the 15th of April. Congratulations to the girls on their wonderful dresses. They were very beautiful. A HUMAN SUNBEAM Everyone knows that one can't confine a sunbeam, no matter how hard he tries. But does every- one know that a human sunbeam is pretty hard to confine too? The source of the sunny personality of a human sunbeam is the heart. When the source of something is as deep as that, it is pretty hard to squelch. Have you ever no- ticed that when a happy person is around a sad one, the sad one usually becomes gay instead ot the happy person becoming sad and depressed? lf you haven't, you notice the next time you are around some people like that. Maybe the happy person will be you. l,.l. AWARD RECEIVED BY BAKERITE April 5th Bakerites had two treats. One as you recall was the assembly given by Texas School for the Blind. The other was, Ed- gar Smith received a beautiful Placque. Edgar received this for his Champion Holstein Heifer at the Fredericksburg Stock Show. This show was held August 25-27, 1953. Edgar belongs to the 4-H Club for which he raised this hei- er.



Page 70 text:

PAGE FOUR THE BAKER ROCKET Gllazn Hrnphvrg 1954 CLASS PROPHECY E The Baker Seniors of 1954 pro- phesy that: The nation will soon be well supplied with secretaries because we give them Barbara Brill, Paula Casey, Dennie Dement Cshe might later turn P. E. teacherl, Ncmcy Dement, Georgia Foelsing, Kathy Giddens, Barbara Grice, Io Roye Herber, Helen Herrin, Saundra Hoskins, Liz Schwab, Betty Voight, Barbara Wilder and Carol Wycoff for that magnimous pro- fession. By either l958 or l959 the De- troit Lions will have a winning streak in the person of Wiley Wy- man. Somewhere along that time the St. Louis Cardinals and the Cleveland Indians will be neck and neck in the world series with David Melber on the Cardinals and Don Renner on the Indians. Gerald Heath and Delbert Mo- berg will be right up in the big leagues too but we don't know which team. Our air force will prosper in a few years when Roger Wilkinson, Wilson Iensen, Lester Lang, and Curtis Conrad join, and Bill Young designs the planes for them to pilot. Ella Dean Franks and JoAnn Neel will also take to the air as stewardesses. If you get sick you'll have somebody to go to because We prophesy that Irving Cutter will be a doctor, Ann Cavett will be a psychiatrist, Ioan Beard will be a lab technician, Ioyce Berry, Martha Smith, and Wanda Thur- man will be nurses. Musicians from Baker will be: Singers: Alice Dawson, Delores Henderson, and Yvonne Platt, Concert violinist Shirley Rowland. We predict that Melvin Daily and Roger Fleet will achieve their lifelong ambition of passing to the lUth grade. Linda Cox, Carolyn Foelks, Flo Seekatz, Patsy Martinez, Virginia and Tink West will settle to the peacefulC?l task of Wann, down being housewives. don't prophesy, we con- We demn Carolyn Crider and Cecile Stagner Cas P. E. teachersl, Iimmy Doherty Cstudying law at AGCMJ, Bertha Ingram Cgoing to business schooll, Tippa Scott fstudying law at U. of TJ, and Irene Wag- ner and Charlotte White Calso Collegel to more school. Gee, you poor souls. Criminals fwill shudder when they hear the name of F.B.I. agents Sam Olgin and Iohnny Sherrill. Various other Bakerites pursu- ing various other occupations are: Ann Baldwin and Sue Rodgers who will be mission workers, Ia- nelle Cain, who will be a typist or librarian four crystal ball was a little cloudy so we couldn't be surel, Roger Campbell who will be a comedian the hopes to someday be as good as Mr. Pinel. Viress Doyle who will live on a horse ranch and raise-guess what?--horses, Wayne Fickel who will work with the Shell Oil Com- pany at Houston, Craig Haydon who will be a designing engineer, Henry Hodges who wil be a com- mercial artist, Ioyce Schmidt who will be a telephone operator, Iames Spaw who wil be a con- struction engineer, Donnie Martin Palmer who will be an interior decorator and Leon Miears who will be a rancher. Of course, there are some peo- ple who really won't amount to much like Richard Wolfe who will only be a millionaire and have a Cadillac and a Iaguar to match each of his 300 suits, Nancy Ramm who will marry a millionaire and travel all over the world and eat every kind of food there isp and Raymond Bohls and Ierry Marx who will be such successful busi- nessmen that they will have plenty of time off to go fishing. There are a few other things that some Bakerites will do: Clar- ence Pruitt will make McCallum's lloasketball team, Ierry Scarbor- ough will be the friendliest enemy in the world, Margaret Laybourn will be an Old Maid fdon't quote usl, Nelda Mangham will see every state in the union before she's 2l CI don't see anything wrong with the biggest and bes- testi, Bennie Miller will stay out of trouble fat least for a whilel, Gayle Parr will see Hawaii and France, Thomas Flowers will be- come president of the I.F.F.L. Cln- ternational Federation of Free Loadersl, Sherry Bailey will grow to be 5' tall, and Martha Sherrill will make a complete collection of diamond rings set in platinum itat chancel. Last, but certainly not least, Arthur Chester will Cand I quotel never imagine himself not to be otherwise than what it might ap- pear to others that what he was or might have been was not other- wise than what he had been would have appeared to them to be otherwise. fThanks to Mr. who will be a mechanic, Harriet Lewis Cm-1-011.5 cEnd quote., Q EV Hyde Park Hardware fuefyni E ll ' tij 1-5 HARDWARE - sPoRTlNe eooos TELEPHONE 6.5, ,O l AV4 Sherwin-Williams Paint FEMININE FASHIONS 395 Congress 4l2l Guadalupe Phone 5-3225 2904 Guadalupe Austin. Texas Ro Cox Service . . . Y ' 30' North Side Phone 5-9421 E 670' Your Friends sin I ' D I Weftznd E smfrrs I 42fdy8- D5-Zi ea er D 'i H'g a

Suggestions in the Baker Junior High School - Rocket Yearbook (Austin, TX) collection:

Baker Junior High School - Rocket Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Baker Junior High School - Rocket Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

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Baker Junior High School - Rocket Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 78

1954, pg 78

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