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Page 30 text:
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WILL 26 We, the Class of 1950 of Boardman High School, being of sound mind and body, do bequeath our possessions, in order to leave a more perfect school to those who are in great need of such belongings. Article I: To Mr. Tidd and the faculty werleave quiet and solitude. Article II: To the innocent freshmen we leave all fermenting fruit, our spacious lockers, battered equipment, cheating meth- ods, and any other miscellaneous residue. Article III: To the other unfortunate ones we leave the following possessions: Charles William Anderson bequeaths his willingness to help to Judson McConnell. Roseann Patricia Andio bequeaths her secretarial ambitions to Donna Jones. Barbara Kathryn Ashmus bequeaths her daily walk to school to Marilyn Amey. James Lawrence Baker bequeaths his hat size to Robert Hammar. James Curtis Banks bequeaths his brain to the Harvard Medical School. Mary Jean Banks bequeaths the remainder of her peroxide solution tof Sally Hess. Frederick Jacob Baun bequeaths his love of flying to the birds. Robert Henry Bayne bequeaths his daily forty Winks in study hall to Gordon Frame. Edwin Paul Beede bequeaths his mechanical genius to James Nichols, Annette Lois Best bequeaths her eyes to Ellen Peterson. Nancilee Black bequeaths her baton to Martha Clark. Alice Mathilda Borson bequeaths her droll witticisms to Nancianne Martin. Barend Richard Bosch bequeaths his horn-rimmed glasses to Walter Spikell. Joan Gretchen Brown bequeaths her diving exhibitions to Ronald Green. Kathleen Ann Brown bequeaths her contagious giggle to Delores Allen. Bernard Peter Bucheit bequeaths his basketball title Dead-Eye to Jerry Suess. William Howard Bush bequeaths his speedy scooter to the Junior Fire Department. Carmel Ann Campolito bequeaths her Frankie Lane renditions to Carole Bodine. Rita Frances Capuzello bequeaths her efficiency to Nancy Pilgrim. Charlotte Ann Carlson bequeaths her Swedish air to Al Hammar. Donald Gifford Carter bequeaths his neat appearance to Walter Mer- mis. LeRoy Willis Case bequeaths his piano renditions to Ramon Zupko. Joan Lilyan Catherman bequeaths her title of class redhead to Carol McCrudden. Shirlee Adele Chabut bequeaths her dancing shoes to Marilyn Evans. Roseann Citano bequeaths her peaches-and-cream complexion to Linda Curran.
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Page 29 text:
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HISTORY As the Mid-Century Class of Boardman High School receive their diplomas, their thoughts inevitably turn to the years of work and fun behind those impressive documents. There are many tears and many more laughs in the history of the Class of '50, Let's go back into the years gone by, across the arch, 'way over to the other end of the build- ing, where the class made its debut in September, 1938, when a group of little tots with excited smiles occasionally showing missing teeth came beaming into the first grade of Boardman School. Don Neapolitan was the fighter of the class. He was always beat- ing up his older brother, or at least that was the way he told it. And Jane Garver was such a daydreamer! Could it be that she was already having visions of a tall dark man in her future? Little Nancilee Black was such an unsanitary child! She took a bite of someone else's klondike, and Miss Maclntosh made her throw it into the wastebasket. Nancilee was so humiliated. She wept bit- terly! And who was that cute little blond tyke? Why, of course! Joe Roller. He was such a good little boy. He always wore his leggings when it was cold. Poor little tot! He always had such a hard time pulling them on, too. In the second grade we were busy little architects and carpenters building a Dutch house in Miss Fischel's room. It was a beautiful house, and we were really proud of it, even though the high school shop boys did most of the work. Miss Detrow's room was the scene of a busy hospital after school. Janet Scott was the nurse, Noreen Clark, the ambulance driver, the pencil sharpener, the ambulance siren, and poor little Ronnie Royal was usually the patient. If he wasn't sick when they started, he usually was when they finished with him. In third grade Miss Blunt's Room put on a Christmas play, and Jeanne Kinney was an angel in it. Too bad she stopped acting when the play was over. Fourth grade ushered in an epidemic of jacks. Miss Riley's room even had organized teams that played tournaments during recess. And in the winter we had ice slides on the terrace and always came in half-frozen and covered with snow. Then we hung our wet mittens on the radiator, where they dripped dirty water and gave the whole room the delightful odor of hot, wet wool.' Romance began to take its toll in the fourth grade when Tom Mears kissed Joan Pritchard in the cloakroom, and Noreen Clark and Ronnie Royal were just simply madly in love. Now isn't that hurrying Mother Nature a little, kids? QD' That mean Joan Brown teased poor little Lucille LaMarca until she was in tears because she had to sit with Dave , ,.,.., U V Larson. Now, Joan, that wasn't very nice A , Q, . t, - .f-. 'ifff fit-fi, - I :v.f5'.'-' '2f1..-'W'-',.r,. t ' - P- , iiifliifizc - - C Tift- i ' 5 'iijg N .- 7:3 ff: ? ' vw -2- f , nr 2:4 ' . . ,V I K.. .- f' A2 . ' - ' ,t Nl ,5,'l'fE, fContinued on Page 1081 ..
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Page 31 text:
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Patricia Jean Cline bequeaths her seat in the Varsity to Sue Anne Detchon. Noreen Joan Clark bequeaths her snappy stitching to Lida Smith. Betty Jean Cosier bequeaths her dignified manner to Audrey Mc- Caughey. Ronald Ralph Daus bequeaths his scooter accessories to William Rozi- nak. Gloria DeAngelis bequeaths her natural curly locks to Rosemary Dun- don. Louis Joseph DeMarinis bequeaths the rest of his ear to some hungry horse. Patricia Livia Dempesis bequeaths her quiet manner to Gloria McMullen. Peggy Lou DeVassie bequeaths her shy smile to Alice Dempesis. John Henry Dudley bequeaths his sleepy look to Francis Sandstrom. Thomas Raymond Dundon bequeaths his well-worn path to Columbiana to Jerry Carlson. Betsy Carol Dustman bequeaths her Wim, wigger, and witality to Betty Brown. Arthur William Einstein bequeaths his vocabulary of words for the boys to Al Hammar. ' Joan Barbara Ellis bequeaths her rides on the basketball bus to Carol Ransom. ' Thomas Ronald Evans bequeaths his stature to William Remner. Margaret Elsie Eyster bequeaths her mathematical genius to Margaret Williams. Ivan Roger Farrah bequeaths his corn tooth to Fred Ginder. Donald Lee Feicht bequeaths his kindness to Carroll Smith. John Albert Findley bequeaths his first name to Joan Dow. Donald Lawrence Frame bequeaths a new door knob to Mr. Eversole. Robert Allen Frondorf bequeaths his corduroy pants to Lloyd DuVall. Richard Clyde Gamble bequeaths his last name to Robert Saul. Ronald Warner Hammar bequeaths his Gene Krupa rendition on the drums to Donald Miller. Donna Ann Harpold bequeaths her crown to the next lucky football queen. Neva Jean Hartman bequeaths her artis- tic ability to Marilyn Parshall. James Peter Hazenstab bequeaths his love of English to William Zeisler. Donald Ray Heed bequeaths his shoul- ders to Charles Atlas. James B. Herald bequeaths his crew cut to Karl Podolsky. John Richard Hershberger bequeaths his chemistry resources to Frank Gus- .. I, x tinella. , 5 fContinued on Page 1301 V . ' f.. Q- -5 ,Q egg:-:1 ' '35 7 .6 2 5ff7f1'f?i'lii. l . -w .2S.? -hae: f A- '-fS'i,i'f.'-,.1-SM .N 3 '- Q '-zsfflvsf-Eg:.Z3?5,. -I .. -xg Ag-13'-' :nl xi' , 1' PP' W K - J f :, :Veg gn L, 3 7 , ,, ck. 1-.C 2 2 -2 . , .. J., . 35- - , '-g,l1.-.ifg Q J f-fha 5,1 l as: 31: .,,, 5. Qi., , . . , V. 45, gi. . -r '. ,L V ,,,5.,. .isp In 2.1-1 ' 51- Yup 'Q ' css .sg 5 - . . 1- 5 -.54 .PV I, j 5 I 5 , ,X 1 A7 : 1-Q I 3, :F -- I r - , J F r, ' . - ' 4 . c -.1 I , ' V I X a x' -. - ' .. ' 'i , ' 1 -, ' .2 - - I 3.: 3-, A :Q - ,. 4 ' .. , ig E gn ,-V 5 .' x T, 12,1 ,- lg
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