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platoman Society About a score of years ago Central’s first literary society was organized, known as the “High School Debating Club.” It admitted both boys and girls to membership. It is safe to presume that in such an organization of school boys and school girls not more than eleven twelfths of the time was devoted to serious debating and literary wor while the other twelfth was spent in having a good time. It is even probable that the smaller part was oevoUd to work and the rest of the time to play. At any rate it is known that some of the more serious boys and several outsiders got together and formed an entirely new society for boys and work only. Thus in bssb the Platoman Society” was organized. In that year they gave their first open session, a modest little entertainment in a study hall in the old building. Each year the open sessions grew better and were carried out on a larger scale. No longer were they given in the afternoon in a study hall, but at night in the new assembly hall. The year of the first open session was also the year of the first contest with the C. L. C. Unless one has been a member of either of the two rival societies, one cannot judge of the excitement and the spirited rivelry that exist during the whole year, gradually growing stronger and stronger as the contest approaches, and reaching the climax on that night. During the early years of their existence the societies were obliged to hold their meetings any where they could, but when the new building was added, they were all provided with rooms adjoining the assembly, “Plato Hall” was on the fourth floor in the extreme northwest corner of the building. The very thought of it brings a flood of pleasant recollections of the meetings held there. The members of the society sat on three sides of the room while the president and secretary were at the other side, all forming a hollow rectangle. No Plato who ever attended a meeting in that room can forget it. But those good old times are gone. We have been deprived of open session, contest, and even our room. We are worse off now than we were in our first struggling years. Why was this done? Surely not as a punishment. Let us hope is was far some other reason and that by next year Central’s societies will have all their former privileges restored to them. ALBERT J. BONE. -2?-
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Page 30 text:
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Officers and Members of COLORS; Old Rose and Blue. YELL: Nika! Nika! Rip, Ra, Re! Notabena, C. L. C. OFFICERS. MISS ZOE FORD Mr. Edgar Lovejoy Mr. Geo. Mulford Mr. Will P. M. Stevens Mr. Ralph Byrne Miss Olive Stone Miss Mabel Ai.len the Central Literary Glub. MEMBERS. Celia Abernathy, George Mulford. Edith Gillham, Will Stevens, Barton Hall, Tom Scruggs, Kate L. Holloway, Alberta Smith, Edgar Lovejov, Allen Withers, Loyd Morrow, Raymond Barnett, Elsie Gillham, Fred Pugsley, Zoe Ford, Will Gill, Katherine Harroun, Earl Alltn, Ray M. Merrill. Olive Stone, Ethel Murray, Ruth Lowry, Leon A. Searl, Gladys Jones, Diller Wood, Sena Hutchings, Ralph Byrne, Mabel Allen, Oakley Lemming, Van. Hammett, Daisy Kirk. McClain Alexander, PAST MEMBERS. Arthur Byrne, Roy Standish, Will Lawrence. Tucker Buckner, Roy Russell. President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, -Critic, Sargeant-at-Arms, Reporter. -J!0-
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