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Page 20 text:
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At a irathrrinK of the Student Council, Bernice Pfeiffer and Virginia McClain exhibit Kagleian Follies postern made a n part of the council’ activities. THE LEADER OF THE BAND By W inton Solberg Although THE STUDENT COUNCIL cannot grant W. P. A. allotments, it does voice the opinion of the student body. And rightly too, for it has a large and representative membership. Each junior and senior home room delegates one member; the juniors have a member-at-large; the sophomores have six. Presidents of Keystone, senior class, junior class, and the monitor board attend all meetings. The president of the student council is aided by a vice president, secretary, and treasurer, in governing the activities over which they have control. Faculty adviser Charles W inner gives legal advice and his room to the meetings. Because the beginning of this school year was filled with so much activity concerning the new auditorium, the Council was delayed in its organization. However, it showed its worth when a successful pageant, based on Aberdeen's civic organizations, was paraded before the townspeople. The Eaglcian Follies was the first program presented by the student council in the new high sc hool assembly. Held late in February, it entertained a large audience which appreciated a program that added to “Follies history. In order to feel the public pulse, as it were, an assembly advertising.the Follies was presented by the Council. An entertaining court scene was shown with the defendant. Eagleian Follies, winning the verdict “Not Guilty of the many accusations brought by the prosecuting attorney. The Student Council was organized first in 1936 and has grown in size and student opinion until it has been marked as a decided step towards a freer, more understandable type of scholastic government, able to cope with the new equipment and a larger student body. W’inton Solberg was president of this year's Student Council. Dick W atson was vice-president, Marjorie Lewis, secretary, and Gaylen Ferguson, treasurer.
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Page 21 text:
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Clerk Thiel look amu»ed. Judge DeVey scared, and Jurors Calene. Barber, and Smith slightly bored ax the culprit mixes hix right hand ar.d swears to tell the truth. TELL THE TRUTH, BROTHER By If' a Id on Thiel 8 IIIK SHAME-FACED DEFEiNDAN I' shuffles into the court room he is greeted with: “Step forward and raise your right hand , boomed out in a baritone voice of the presiding justice. After the defendent has been sworn in, he is tried by a procedure much like that which is used in our municipal and state courts today. Students are called before this court for any infraction of a set of rules enforced daily in the halls by Central’s policemen, the monitors, and deemed necessary by the administration. Every Tuesday and Thursday it is part of the routine of the court personnel to pull their tousled heads from beneath the sheets and at an unthinkable hour wend their weary way to court to mete out punishment to those luckless individuals who have intentionally or unintentionally violated the hall rules. The rat-a-tat-tat of the “Girl at the Typewriter comes from the desk of the court stenographer, whose duty it is to take down the testimony and facts of each case. Such records are kept on file for reference. Cases are tried before a jury of seven members comprised of students in the upper one-fourth of their class. The cases of both the defendant and the plaintiff are heard. Student lawyers are instrumental in ascertaining that the jury is the possessor of all facts which have any bearing on the case. A sergeant-at-arms maintains order and demands that the “silence, which is golden”, prevail. I he function of the court is to maintain certain disciplinary measures which must continue if Central is to hold the national ranking that it now has among coeducational institutions throughout the nation.
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