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Page 31 text:
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Randall Myers - voted sheriff of the year; his press statement; Which way did they go? Trina Phillip5 - recovering from a dislocated hip that she received while trying twist in a phone booth at the age of 85. Larry Pearson - received his law degree in 1970. has just recently won his first case. May 1986. John Peake - knows what's behind the green door; John peeked and got poked. Glen Smith - Five Star General of the Arsenal. Charles Trump - chief accountant of Internal Revenue. Steven Myers - soda jerk, broke his arm while making a milk shake. Philip Vogt - according to a repon from congress. Senator Philip Vogt’s picture will appear on the next issue of 61 stamp. John Smith - has written his first book. I was a Teenage Frog. Ronnie Smith - had bout with Joe Palooka; much prestige was gained from the tenth round. Herbert Vincent - teaching first period study hall. Anyone who comes in late must get an excuse; he doesn't want anyone to beat his record of eleven unexcused tardies. Charlene Smith - head of the Home Economics department in Clarksville High. Kenneth Stoner - president of Yell University. Faye Herndon Smith - tired of the common name Herndon, she married a Smith. Cecil Johnson - lost the 1968 election because he couldn’t find a place to buy brown derbies. Barbara Mastin - is in Reno suing for her tenth divorce and is considering remarrying her first husband. Gene Spencer - is running a weasel farm in South Dakota and just made his first million by selling fur to the Eskimos. Tommy Humes - head cook on the Navy ship the Maryland. Larry Turner - after receiving the Phi Beta Kappa Key at Hanover, has decided to be an educated bum. Lana Grace - is living from the royalties from her first book. First Aid for Burns, which has been made into a movie with Charlie Weaver playing the title role. George Whitlow - has just bought out the American Tobacco Co. ... he wants to roll his own. Sandy Stewart - struggled through business college in six years and is still trying to find a secretarial job. Earl Roseberry - an instructor of calisthenics at Culver Military Academy. Beverly Small - after winning her second oscar, she has decided to make only 3 movies a year and devote the rest of her time to finding a small husband. Barry Newton - English Literature professor at Podunk University. James Watson - campaign manager for Richard Nixon, who is still losing. Stanley Oglesby - is now an ace reporter for the New York Hearld Tribune. Shirley Hawkins - has just opened the third branch of her orphanage in Baltimore. Business is so good. says Shirley, that I might start opening chains all over the country. Ronnie Thomas - has just won a gold medal in the Olympics. Pat Allen - is in good condition after getting her arm torn up in the mimeograph machine at work. Tommy Gladding - has become a transportation engineer. In other words . . . he's a bus driver!! Cora Meador - has put her talent to good use and is now a maid for John D. Rockfeller. 29
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Page 30 text:
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Charles Johnson - now over all-purpose painting business. Barbara Mayfield - bashed her husband's head in with a baseball bat . . . he snored. Jerry Van Meter - pleading bankruptcy . . . from buying transmissions. Tommy Ledbetter - traveling abroad with a trained ant-eater. George True - fulfilling his desire to be a policeman ... car 54 where are you? Gail Crowdus - having received her degree at Indiana University is now teaching the cannibals to do their cook- ing on modern ranges. Margaret Garriot - is now teaching at Charlestown High School. Paul Mackey - has a ball of string 200 miles long. Pat Thomas - finally won her case. Sharon Turner - won an award from the Pcpsodeni Toothpaste Co. for her famous smile. Jimmy Morrow - now gone ... his family is suing Dr. Hartman for his unfortunate diagnosis of Morrow's disease. Billy Jones - has a gum wrapper ball weighing 500 lbs. Joe Lyons - has been tamed by a little blonde ringmaster, she found his roar was worse than his bite. Eva Hoessle - famous dancer fell while doing the swan dive. David McKercher - smash hit as drummer on Howdy Doodie's peanut gallery. James Taflinger - still trying to settle the dispute of Jones and Mackey over who has the most ingenius hobby. John Sweeny - a corporal in the Air Force, is doing what he could never quite do in his Pontiac . . . fly. Dorothy Hoessle - official reindeer custodian at Santa Claus Land. Linda Morgan - lives in the middle of the African jungle with her husband, a noted authority on snakes. Brenda Pacey - has her own basketball team, The Charlestown Pacers. Coli Nazario - commercial artist making the covers for The Saturday Evening Post. Lana McCoy - married into the Turner family . . . now isn't there something familiar about that name? Sandra Waites - drives a taxicab in New York City. Pamela Zehner - manager of Zchner's Zaney Zoo. Beverly Maples - has inherited the Maple Sugar Company provided her name remains the same. Ronnie Matthews - world traveler, commonly called a hobo. Paul Blevins - partner of George True. Barbara Lutgring - president of the newly established CARHOPPERS UNIONS. Dorie Marble - just won Mrs. America award. Shirley Gregory - recently rekindled an old love affair and is engaged for the first time. Peggy O'Neal - has been engaged for ten years, but says she and Paul will not marry until he can find a job. Tommy Sanders - has just set a record for the possible number of cows milked by him in a day . . . fifty. Emily Spurrier - is now racking balls at Ovies's Pool room. Robert Schindler - now has his degree from Northwestern and is employed by Morgan Packing Co. as Chief Label Licker.
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Page 32 text:
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--T' r Class History In the f3ll of 1958 one hundred and forty-five of us - whatever you want to call us - entered Charlestown High School. During the rush of being Freshmen we decided to elect our officers for the 1958-1959 season. Marlene Bruce was elected President; Vice President. Judy Chambers; Secretary. Julie Hester; Treasurer, Don I Bush; and Reporter, pat Allen. Our Sponsors were Miss Norma Sue Engle and Mr. Thomas Hardman, who carried us through Clifty Falls State Park, on our school outing. That was the good ole days when D . B . started the marshma How fight up in the rafters of a shelter house. In 1959, one hundred and thirty incoming Sophomores enrolled. Our officers were; President, Mike Hall; Vice President, Bob Braswell; Secretary. Julie Hester; Treasurer, George Whitlow; and Reporter, Don Bush. This year we were awarded with a trip to Springmill State Park. Mrs. Mary Lcshcr and Mr. Harold Reis were graciously elected as our sponsors. No one could tell whether it was the cold weather or something else that kept Mr. Reis in the bus. 1960 brought back one hundred and fourteen Juniors with the one thought of hard work ahead. Class Officers were Mike Hall, President; Ronnie Matthews. Vice President; Julie Hester, Secretary; Mike Donnell, Treasurer; Pat Allen, Reporter. In order to sponsor the Junior-Senior Prom and Banquet we sold concessions at the ballgames, held bake sales and sold stationery. With the direction of Mr. Eugene McLemore, we were able to have a pleasing class play entitled. Not In a Thousand Years. A great comedian was born that night when Dave McKcrchcr stepped through the one and only tree on the scene. Later we began working on the Banquet and Prom, after so long a time, to please the Seniors and our sponsors, Miss Kay Smith and Miss Norma Sue Engle. Oh! Wc can’t forget Mr. Nicholson. The Banquet and Prom themes were Dutch Gardens and Stairway to the Stars, respectively. Wc also chose our class flower, the tulip; our colors, light blue and white; and our motto, “It’s a hard road to success. And believe us, it really is. Suddenly 1961 rolled around and we started our final year at C. H. S. with one hundred and four seniors. Our class officers were; President, Don Bush; Vice President, Shirley Campbell; Secretary, Emily Spurrier; Treasurer, Bill Hartman; Reporter, Julie Hester Donnell. Mrs. Virginia Gladding and Mr. Jack Risinger were our class sponsors. Our class projects used for making money were; paper drives, fruit cake sales, Pirate stickers, and selling of Christmas Trees. Our activities were the Senior play Who Dun it, the unforgettable Beat-nik Dance, the dramatic Hawaiian Luau, and our long awaited trip to Chicago. As wc Seniors leave C. H. S. . this year of 1962, wc carry with us many fond memories, one of which the slogan, Sectional Champs of 1962, the good times we have had, of friends and teachers and to the under- classmen, the future Seniors of C. H. S. we wish the best of everything.
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