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Page 30 text:
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CENTRAL JUNIOR f ANNUAL REFL Mn ngLQ U ECTOR Scenes from auditorium activities under the direction or Harry Graves Miller and Wilbur C. Huber-.Q -wtf 26 R41-
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Page 29 text:
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CENTRAL JUNIOR ssl Autumn Days Shivering, quivering, tearful days, F retfully and sadly weeping: Dreading still, with anxious gaze, Icy fetters 'round thee creeping. O'er the cheerless, withered plain, Woefully and hoarsely calling, Pelting hail and drenching rain On thy scanty vestments falling. Sad and mourning are thy ways, Grieving, wailing Autumn days! Flora J. Eastman -L rl: Pk Bk BLlSteI' BFOWII I have a little dog, His name is Buster Brown, He's the cutest little thing That ever lived in town. He can turn a somersault, And jumps through your hands, ANNUAL REFLECTOR nQef 43Elg5 w.9u YOUI' SeCel't If, what you hear, you repeat, And cause much trouble to another, Then you, in shame must retreat To a place where there is no other! And your friends all will shun you, Making you think them unkind. But you may teach them to love you, U By keeping what you hear on your mind. Lorraine Patick 21 24 ,lf if My Little Niece Little wee toes, A small pug nose. Lips like cherries, And love she carries. Cheeks like roses, In pictures she poses. Bright blue eyes, Healthy and wise. Her little curls so tight, But when it Comes to Candy, K .And her complexion so light. On two legs he can stand. SIX teeth S0 Smfllll, She hardly cries at all. Jeanette Schramke. Doris Adams ig: :lc bk qs J 1, 3, ,ig Compensation Spring Fever Give to me more of beauty, That I may hold in my heart, Remembering, When I must face Each stark unlovely thing, Each stricken place. Within my soul there is a shrine Heaped high With beauty that is mine. Memories I shall not ever lose, Gather one by one. And I Can walk with poverty, Despair, and wretchedness, Holding my spirit high, untouched, Crowding each hour with duty, , Because of that unblemished shrine Heaped with beauty. Clara Richards :n -.2 wk :F 6' Central So glorious and grand, In a crowd you'd be The one to take the stand. So stately, yet so common, So large, yet so small, Friends meet and greet Within your every wall. You stand so erect, On God's ground, Not another like you Could ever be found. In this world there are many Schools today, Still Central beats them all, Come whatever may. , Hel Central, Central, en Haremski. The last days of school Seem hard, though we try To work at our best And make the hours Hy. There's iishing and swimming, And sports of all kinds To give kids spring fever, And torture their minds. So, good-bye, good old Central, We'l1 see you next fall, When summer is over We'll be back, one and all. Daryl Staebel 3 P? if fl! Limericks by a Limerickster There once was a flea and a mouse, Who chased all through the house, Until one dark day They had a hot fray, And nothing was left of the house. There once was a young man from Kai Foo, Who had an awful ka-choo. He couldn't say a line, 'Cause he sneezed all the time, And now he's in a nut-cracker zoo. , Daryl Staebel -32 F if F S Teacher fin geographyl : Where is the Red ea? johnny: The third mark down on my report car . - Pf25lf4+ BGA
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Page 31 text:
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NJ! CENTRAL JUNIOR mai ,kan ANNUAL REFLECTOR The Junior Little Theatre Players HE Junior Little Theater Players are under the direction of Mr. Harry Graves Miller and Mr. Wilber C. Huber. They have presented five extra-curricular attractions during the year. The first presentation was Stunt Nite. More than one hundred pupils participated in this event. Four one-act plays was the next dramatic attraction. A Marriage Proposalv was the first of the series. The characters in the play were portrayed by Ruth Mary Stone, Henry Zacharias, and Thurston Mason. Corinne Goepp was student director. The second short play was Who Says Can't ? The cast included Bob Kampfert, Jeannette Jones, Bob Granse, Dorothy Voise, Florence Fuller, Earl Walton, and Allan Schall. June Morrell was student director. The Mystery House was given next, on November 16. The cast included Charles White, June Morrell, Corinne Goepp, Don Smith, Henry Zacharias, Bob Granse, Erma Duquette, Mary Troy, Allan Schall, Howard Meyers, and Marwood Weber. The Passing of Mr. Peal was the third play given. The cast was composed of Arlene Sind- linger, Iola Strobel, Marion Pfaff, Anna Barach- kov, Robert Webber, and Charles White. The student director was Marwood Weber. Georgie Plays His Hand was the last of the one-act plays. Doris Le Gear, Bill Ditz, Angeline Main- olfie, John Church, Charles McCleod, and Betty Miller completed the cast, with Betty Pratt as student director. The second, and last long play was The Spanish Onion. The cast was as follows: Arnold Zapoleon, Bob Henning, Webster Cook, Mar- wood Weber, Harriet Ysberg, Betty Pratt, Elaine Plater, Ruth Mary Stone, Lauretta, Gaudreau, Bob Kampfert, Angeline Smokoska, and Charles Chereton. The last presentation of the year was for one- act plays. A Weakness for Nurses, including Ann Finlay, Angeline Smokoska, Louis Cheisi, Angeline Mainolii, Richard McDonald, Dugald Wilson, was the first one, with Marion' Pfaii' as director. The second one-act play was The Mayor and the Manicure. The cast was composed of Bob Henning, Corinne Guepp, Dorthy Voise, Mar- shal Lyttle, and Anneliese Wierzbicki. The student director was Bob Kampfert. The third play was Farewell Cruel World. The cast was Marjorie Germain, Jeannette Jones, and Arnold Zapoleon, The director was Ruth Mary Stone. Box and CoX Was the last of the plays. Howard Meyers, William Ditz and Betty Jo Safford com- pleted the cast, with Arlene Sindlinger as direc- tor. The auditorium department has contributed largely to our school's success this year, and we sincerely hope that next year it may be credited with the same. Corinne Goepp 6508.9 Business Business collectively names those mercan- tile interests that require ability in the keep- ing of accounts, the management of finances, and the carrying on of money transactions. To develop these we start in the 9th grade. The Work consists of reading units or chapters on transportation, communication, banking, filing, personal financial records, home budgets, etc. Along with this each student is given a project book. With the chapter projects are work which adds to business education. Teachers are trying to develop one to become a careful, conscientious, and eflicient worker in the bus- iness world-one whose services will be satis- factory both to yourself and to your employer. Angeline Smokoska cyan A CI'8Zy R9CltHtlO1'l It was midnight on the ocean, Not a street car was in sightg The sun was shining brightly, And it rained all day that night. It was evening and the rising sun Was setting in the West, The fishes in the pine trees Were cuddled in their nest. 'Twas a summer day in winter, The snow was raining fast, A barefoot girl with shoes on Stood sitting on the grass. The rain was pouring downward, The moon was shining bright, And everything that you could see. Was hidden out of sight. While the organ peeled potatoes, Lard was rendered by the choirg While the sexton rang the dish rag, Someone set the church on fire. Holy smoke, the parson shouted, Anrl the poor guy lost his hairg Now his head is just like Heaven, For there is no parting there. Copied by G. L. Hainer Pl? 'lf li' sk In the progress of life don't take notice of the order, right about, but. be sure you are about right, and then go aheadf' 'Wf27l1+' IQID
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