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Page 11 text:
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MARGARET FINCH tGene'1'al Coursey Senior Secretary-T1'easu1'e1' '34, '35'g G. R. '31-'35 WM. RONALD WALSH fGeneral Coursey Senior President '34,'35g Hi-Y '34g Student Freshman Class President '31, '32: President '33, '34: G. A. A. '31-'35g Pep Club '32-'35: Shakspearean Plays '35: Operettas, Pickles '32, Cher- ryblossomu '34, Wishing: Well '35: Arcturian Club '34, '35, Secretary-Treasurer '34, '35: Music Contest '30-'34: Na- tional Honor Society '35. Council '32-'35: Operetta, Wishing Well '35: Arcturian Club '34, '35: Football '31-'34, Captain '34g Basketball '31- '35Z Track '31-'35, DONALD LEE VETTER fGeneral Coursey Sen- ior Vice-President '34, '35g Hi-Y 1534-215g Shakespearean Plays 355 Football '32-'35g Golf '33-'35: Intramurals '31- Sllillliilllllg a b ackwaril l o 0 k the seniors of 193.5 may View a high . school career rich i11 1l'l911'101'lC'1. b116ll11l1dl'0fl and tour fresh- 111611 entered school 111 1931. In p organizing our class we chose I Margaret Finch, president, Lyle BTC-hlilllll, vice- presidentg Myrle Fairchild, secretary and treasurer. Some of the more venturesoine ones launched forth in fields of athletics or music. Thus ends the first uhapter or introduction to high school hte. One hundred two sophomores returned the fol- lowing year. NVQ' eleeted Myrle Fairchild, P11181- dent g 'Billy Birch, vice-presideiitg Rex Quakenhush, secretary -and l1'P4?l'Sl11'01'. Xvise fools we were called, and with our wiseness we galloped gaily along, carefree Sophs ------- and another year glided by. Perhaps last year has taken its tolls from those carefree ranks, for i11 the fall of 1933 only ninety- three were enrolled as juniors. This year new re- spo11sihilities were heaped upon our shoulders. XVI? went a trifle crazy and presented our class play, The l1O011G'y-lglllu, and We soared into the strato- Roherta 'File won scholastic laurels as Valedif: May, 1935 gf sphere f o r th e J u 11 ior-S e 11 ifo r Banquet. To lead us' suc- apgffully along we chose Merle XVithan1, presidentg Marjorie Hutton, vice-presidentg George Fittell, secretary and treasurer. Time rolls around to the tall of 1934 Zlllll only sevelity-seven of us accept the grave responsibility -of being seniors, its disillusioiis, its thrills, its' ac- l30111DllSll111G11fb2, under the leadership of lional-il Walsh, president: Donald Vetter, vice-presidentg Margaret' Finch, secretary and treasurer. Hliooltiiigr into the future was the theme of the ref-eption which we grave the juniors i11 a setting of magic crystal and airy silver balloons. Tl19l'G'S a time in everyo11e's lite when they df-- sire to sow their wild oats. We sowed ours May 7 when we presented with great success R-ollo's XVild Oat . 1 Reverend Mr. Roy D. Plott of the Metllodist Epis- copal Church was chosen to deliver the Baccalaur- eate address. A former graduate of Beloit High Sehoolin the class -of 1915, Mr. Guy Keeler, will grivo the C01l1l'l1G1llfQ1ll0l1l address. torian and Merle hvltllkllll as Salutatorian. Page Nine
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Page 10 text:
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Troians Cn Parade .... The biq parade this qear included a crustal ball, a banquet Hawaiian, Helen of Trou in the hospital 'carnival and other colorful events. NVhether it is school clothes or formal dress, tacky day or banquet night, Beloit High School has wh-at it takes to give the social side of school life its fullest Hlld most colorful meaning. In leafing through the first pages of these memories let us visualize once more the joys of those carefree days. The air is filled with tense excitement. Girls ga.ther in small groups here and t.here, chattering eagerly about how they look, as girls do. Deep voices strike a masculine note of app1'oval. The swish and rustle of yards of taffeta, the contrast of dark dress suits, the gleam of candle light on glis- tening crystal and airy silver balloons add a note of formality to the affair. Now you remeinber-the Senior-Junior Recep- tion given at the Rose Room on M-arch 9 that you had stored away in y-our box of memories. Those first formal occasions! The invocation was given by Ronald WValsh, senior class president, and the response by Bertha Lynch, jluiior class president. What does the Future Hold, a song composed by Merle lVitham, was sung by the girls' trio, Merle WVitham, Vir- ginia Ballard, and Helen Golladay. The trio also sang WNinter Wonderland. The program closed after David Ebey forcas-ted the futures of several students present while gazing into a crystal ball. There comes a time in every personis life, it seems, especially when 0119 is young, when the de- sire to sow wild oats is heeded. Thus it was witih the seniors of Beloit High School. 'iRollo's XVild Oat was the title of the senior play which was given May Tth at the high school auditorium. A large, responsive audience attended the play, and it was a financial success. O11 the wings of haunting Hawaiian music let us be carried back once 1ll01'C' into a setting of exotic Hawaiian grandeur. As we tu1'n another page of our memory book let us again visualize the Junior-Senior Banquet. given in the Methcplist Church on May 14 as it appeared to us them. ' Hawaiian fern and potted palms, tiny fresh pineapple and orange candles reappear as if by magic throughthe portals of memory. Dark palms in silhouet-e decorate the menu cover. Inside is found the menu in true Hawaiian style. MENU Ambrosia Chicken a' la Hawaiian New Potatoes Buttered Peas Toasted Sponge Pacific Paradise Pineapple Fluff Sea Foam Cafe' Noir Lazelle Smith, Trojan artist designed the menu cover. . Page Eight l May, 1935
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