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Page 24 text:
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CHARLES THEODORE YEARTY Augusta, Ga. “Charlie By Golly” 1959-60—Pvt. Co. D; PFC Co. D; “A” Team Football; Non- Com Club; Baseball; Captain A” Team Basketball; Block C Club. 1960-61—Sgt. Co. D; 1st Sgt. Co. D; Non-Com Club; Baseball; Co-Captain A” loam Football; A Team Basket- bull; Block “C” Club; Senior-ol-the-Month; Senior Superlative. JOHN ALBERT ZAPPITTELLO II Conneaut, Ohio “Zap” 1958-59—Pvt. Co. C; PFC Co. C; Non-Com Club. 1959-60- Sgt. Co. C; M-Sgt. Ball. Stall; Non-Com Club; Department Award; CERO. 1960-61 — Capt. Co. D; Cross Sabre Club; Honor Council; CERO; Captain Training Cadre; Senior Superlative. WALTER KEITH STARL1PER Waynesboro, Pa. “Star” 1957-58—Pvt. Co. C. 1958-59—Pvt. Co. C. 1959-60- Pvt. Co. B; PFC Co. B; Non-Com Club. 1960-61—Cpl. Co. C; Non- Com Club: Training Cadre. BENJAMIN JOSEPH STATON Foreston. S. C. “Beaver” 1957-58—Pvt. Co. Bd.; Orchestra; B’ Team Football. 1958- 59—Pvt. Co. Bd.; Cpl. Co. Bd.; Non-Com Club; Orchestra; Flight Club; “B” Team Football; Bugler. 1959-60—Cpl. Co. Bd.; Non-Com Club; Orchestra; “B” Team Football; President Flight Club; Bugler. I960-61-Sgt. Co. Bd.; Sgt. 1 C Co. Bd.; Student Director Orchestra; President Plight Club; Non-Com Club; Assistant Coach “B” Team Football: Golf leam; Bugler. FRANKLIN KIRBY WHITLOCK Mont Alto, Pa. “Witty” 1960-61—Pvt. Co. B; PFC Co. C; Non-Com Club. BOYD ADAM WILLIAMSON Spartanburg, S. C. “Beak” 1954-55—Pvt. Co. C. 1955-56—Pvt. Co. C. 1956-57-Pvt. Co. C. 1957-58—PFC Co. B; Cpl. Co. B: Non-Com Club. 1959- 60—Cpl. Co. B; Non-Com Club; 1960-61-Cpl. Co. B; Pvt. Co. B; Non-Com Club. THEODORE CARL WILSON. JR. Kingstree, S. C. “Will” 1958- 59—Pvt. Co. Bd.; Orchestra. 1959-60—Cpl. Co. Bd.; Sgt. Co. Bd.; Non-Com Club; Orchestra. 1960-61—Capt. Co. Bd.; Pvt. Co. Bd.; Cross Sabre Club; Honor Council; Orchestra. GENE CHRISTY WOODARD Rocky Mount, N. C. Chris 1959- 60—Pvt. Co. B; Honor Roll, 1960-61-PFC Co. C; Pvt. Co. C; Non-Com Club. 20
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Page 23 text:
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KENNETH EDSEL SCHLOSSER Savannah. Ga. Sell loss 1957-58—Pvt. Co. C. 1958-59—PFC Co. B; CpI. Co. B; Non- Com Club; Rebel Staff. 1959-60— M-Sgt. Bait. Staff; Non-Com Club; Training Cadre; Library Staff. 1960-61 —1st Lt, Batt. Staff; Cross Sabre Club. ROBERT PENMAN SCHOLL Madison. W. Va. Penrod 1960-61—Pvt. Co. A; PFC Co. A; Non-Com Club; ”A ' Team Basketball; A Team Baseball; Rebel Staff. LUTHER CONWAY SHELTON III Greenville. S. C. “L. C.” 1958-59—Pvt. Co. B. 1959-60—PFC Co. B; Cpl Co. B; Non- Com Club: Flight Club; Golf Team; Block C Club; Honor Roll; DAR Award. 1960-61—Cpl. Co. Bd.; Non-Com Club; Bloch C” Club; Orchestra: CERO; Feature Editor Buxjfe; Captain Golf Team; Honor Roll; Flight Club. MILTON GRIER SIMMONS Hemingway, S. C. “ Gregg 1960-61—Pvt. Co. B; PFC Co. B; Non-Com Club. DAVE WILLIAM SIMMONS Hemingway. S. C. ‘Midget” 1956- 57—Pvt. Co. C; PFC Co. C; Non-Com Club; CERO. 1957- 58—PFC Co. C; Cpl. Co. C; Non-Com Club; CERO; Barbell Club. 1958-59—Cpl. Co. D; Sgt. Co. D; Non-Com Club; CERO; Barbell Club. 1959-60-Sgt, Co. D; Non-Com Club: CERO; Barbell Club. 1960-61 -2nd Ll. Co. B; Pvt. Co. B; Cross Sabre Club; CERO; Barbell Club. DAVID VARLEY SMITH Tiplonville, Tenn. Smitty” 1958- 59—Pvt. Co. B; Honor Roll. 1959-60-PFC Batt. Staff: Sgt. 1 C Batt. Staff; Non-Com Club; Honor Roll; Library Staff; Feature Editor Bugle; Junior Scholarship Award. 1960-61 —1st Lt. Co. C; Cross Sabre Club; Honor Roll; Library Staff; As- sistant Editor Bugle; Sigma Epsilon; Block C” Club; A Team Football Manager; CERO. CLASS OF 1961 JAMES ALLEN SOWELL. JR. N. Charleston. S. C. Jimmy 1957-58—Pvt. Co. B. 1958-59—PFC Co. B; Cpl. Co. B: Non- Com Club; Flight Club. 1959-60—1st Sgt. Co. B; Non-Com Club. 1960-61-Capt. Co. C; Cross Sabre Club; CERO; Honor Council. OVID OSBORNE SPAIN, JR. Greenville, S. C. “Toby” 1959-60—Pvt. Co. A; PFC Co. A; Non-Com Club. 1960-61- Sgt. 1 C Co. C: Non-Com Club; Rebel Staff. 19
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Page 25 text:
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THE SENIOR PROPHECY 1 wo score and nine years ago our contemporaries trough I forth upon this campus a new class, conceived in the memory of hallowe d tradit ions and dedicated to the proposition that we should all meet once again in this year, 2000 A. D. We are the first to arrive on the campus and, as wc do (we notice many changes). In the middle of the grounds wc see a tall, four-story, ultra-modern classroom building surrounded by beautiful shrubbery. About one hundred yards to the left of the classrooms stands the new glass-fronted, one-million- dol- lar library, which holds a total of almost three hundred and fifty thousand boobs. At the crest of a small hill we notice four huge barracks buildings, enclosing four large quadrangles, with gently sloping ramps leading to each of the three floors. Patton Hall, where the cadets enjoy their fabulous meals, is enclosed on three sides by glass and is large enough to seat the entire cadet regiment at one time. It looks like the Carlisle Golden Cyclones have brought back their third victory in a row from the cadets at West Point. We see smiles on tfie faces of the football team of 1961. Larry Bozeman, our right halfback, has come to see us from his quarterhorse ranch in Greensboro, N. C. Arthur Brabham, who was our hard-driving fullback in '61 and is now the owner of the Baltimore Colls, smiles brightly after hearing the news of the victory. The brightest smile of all comes from our 61 quarterback. Roily Fagan. Roily has joined us from the beaches of Florida, where be is the owner of a large pavillron at Fort Lauderdale. ' Big Hersch Hcrschelman, whom we remember as one of our big tackles, joins us from the Navy, where he is in command of the battleship Hemlock. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald I . Perdue have emerged into our midst from the heart of Florida, Ronnie was our star guard in 1961. Our most athletic senior of ’61, “PeeWee” Yearly, who now owns Spalding Sport- ing Goods Company, joins his fellow teammates of that great 1961 football season. We notice a large Greyhound bus driven by Richard Polk pulling in from points north, Richard J. Hoffman, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, while climbing off the bus, tangles his feet in his judicial rohe, causing his judicial wig to fall from his judicial head. We see James DuMars on his knees, sifting the sand with his fingers in search of his glasses which were crushed under the wheels of the bus as it pulled away. As the bus drives off we see the frantic figure of Ralph DeRentz, who is desperately trying to climb out of the hack window. It seems that he was so busy beating his bongos that he forgot to get off. A cold wind whips in from the north, and who should arrive hut Moose Moore, wrapped in a parka, carrying a large sign advertising ‘Great Northwest Snowshoes.” Butch is the presi- dent of the firm. From the direction of Anderson comes Ricky Raihle, a re- formed Yankee, driving his latest new car. He’s wrecked a total of one a year since he graduated. It seems that Rick has re- organized some sort of singing group up there'--the Debbic- tunes, ’ or something like that. With a screech of tires, Kenny Schlosser arrives in a Pontiac. Kenny was severly injured in his youth by a herd of termites who mistook him for a toothpick but is now doing quite well. We walk into the library and are not surprised to see Billy Goodwin and Ward Griffin revising the history of the War Between the Slates. They weren t satisfied with the last outcome. Over in a corner we spy Max Ford, three-time winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for Literature, looking over all the old edi- tions of the Rebel, still convinced that the 1961 edition was best. Looking upward, our breath is taken away at the sight of two lone figures floating up-side down toward the earth. Buddy Shelton and Teddy Wilson seem to have gotten tangled in their parachutes while trying to get out before the satellite went into orbit. The tests for the Air Force Academy are getting rougher. We bump into Bill Fraylick, who is dragging a huge projector by the cord and has a large bag of reels over his shoulder. We tried to tell him before that the Sunday movies bad been dis- continued, but lie refuses to listen. J ravis Johns is following close behind him. Being, also, a non-believer, be wants to keep order in the show. It should he an easy job. Looking to our right we see a grayhaired old man wearing a Carlisle uniform. Well, if it isn’t Wes Clem! We reckon that one year of post-graduate work wasn I enough for him. Pulling up in an old pick-up are Pete DeShields and Wally Hallowes, fresh from their ‘cracker’’ factory in Georgia. They’ve never been able to escape the Georgia characterization laid down by Erskine Caldwell. Under the old oak tree, from time to time, we see Ken Owens sitting, history book in hand, studying and slowly doing the hanihone. Oops, he missed a beat! As we gather in the new, million dollar auditorium, we are greeted by Carlisle’s Commandant of Cadets, Colonel John A. Zappitello. But wait—late as usual, in rush the former editors of the Carlisle Bugle, Doug Kornahrens and David Smith, who have spent the past thirty-nine years roaming the vast slretches of the Gobi Desert, seeking lo understand the true philosophy of life. We are met here to decide whether this class, being so con- ceived and so dedicated sbalf long endure. We know it shall, for it is the best. So saith tbe prophets. David Smith, Doug Kornahrens, Prophets, Inc. 21
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