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Page 33 text:
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Did You Notice-- 1942 NADYNE ALLEN going to church with Elga McLean . . . ETHEL ANDERSON billed on a sister act in New York City . . . DOROTHY ASHWORTH still Waiting for her millions . . . EARL BARTON singing Pagliacci in grand opera . . . ED BETZ nursing Sadie through major operations . . . ETHEL BREEDEN selling Fuller brushes . . . HAZEL BROWN paying the last installment on a perambulator . . . J OSEPHINE BURLEY painting the clouds with sunshine? . . . MARY CAREY editor of Amber Tattler . . . MARGARET COE still waiting . . . EMMETT COLYAR still looking for a perfect blonde his own height . . . BILL COMAN graduating from high school . . . BRUCE COOIL tooting the tuba in Cuba . . . BLAINE COOK calling on Dorothy Lane . . . ELSIE CRAMER tickling the ivories for the Lucky Strike Orchestra . . . MAX- INE CROCKETT still wearing Mell's ring . . . JACK DAVIS pulling teeth . . . LLOYD DYER gone native in Socialist Russia . . . DOROTHY EWY follo-wing in Marsie's footsteps . . . IRIS EASON soothing some patient's brow . . . ROYAL FAIRE at a Grange dance with Ethel An- derson . . . FRANK FALK driving with the Normal Mystery Girl . . . . ULA FOX Mrs. Hanley and family . . . EVELYN GRENDE, belle of Tyler . . . CARL HAIR chief potxato grower of Death Valley . . . KENNETH HARMON going with Pauline Manfred . . . MARGARET HARRIS still taking English . . . HENRY HICKS competing for Edna Ferrell . . . DWIGHT HOFFMAN a second Edison . . . ROCKWELL HORN hunting a dancing teacher . . . BERNARD IIVERSON strong man lifting two-ton weights in a circus sideshow . . . BILL LEAN run- ning from some heart-broken woman . . . JEAN LIEDLOFF.still fond of NACL lSaltJ . . . RUSSELL LINDQUIST delivering Chronicles in his Austin Delivery Truck . . . GLENNA LOWRY playing the Normal school widow . . . FRANCES McCALL monopolizing the hamburger sandwich trade . . . GRACE MILL fat lady in Ringling Brothers Circus . . . MAXINE MILLER some man's office wife Cyou know-his sten- ographerj . . . IDA SHOWALTER-Mrs. Pence . . . HAZEL SMITH- Leap year partying Blaine Cook . . . ALICE SOOY professional pinochle player . . . HERMAN STRAUGHN keeping books for J. P. Morgan . . . JEAN STRONACH still admiring Curtie . . . ARLEEN TAYLOR a rolling stone gathers no Moss . . . KAY MOHS still thinks it's leap year . . . CHARLES NELSONg a second Tilden . . . WILLIAM PARK- ER buying a new Ford 11924 Modell . . . CATHERINE PURVIS librar- ian at Custodial School . . . MARCELLA ROLFE using the 50th bottle of Hairmore on her eyebrows . . . CURTIS RUDOLF declaring it's the principle of the thing . . . RAY SALT tasting cheese in the Salt Lim- burger factory . . . HELEN SCHNEIDER still partial to chemistry instructors . . . HAZEL THOMPSON still chaperoning her sisters . . . LOUISE VAN PATTEN letting her hair grow . . . ERNEST WATER- MAN preservi. ,: that schoolgirl complexion . . . GORDON WHITTAK- ER being manager of the J. C. Penney store . . . IDELLA WOLFE still pursuing redheaded Normal boys . . . NORTON WOLFE succeeding Clarke Gable . . . CLARA WOLLAN bringing teachers roses.
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Page 32 text:
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Diary of a Senior Girl Sophomore: Heavens, I feel terribly grown up! The first thing they did to us at school was to change our seats and now I can't sit by my best pal any more. Mr. Hodge is such a brute! All I did was to ask Susie who that adorable new curly-headed blonde bo-y is. His name is Ray Salt and the girls are after him already. We moved over to the new building and Miss Fryer had us all carrying books. I didn't know there were so many books in our library, anyway. And Diary! Can you im- agine what Mr. Buechel did to those snooty Seniors-Bob Brown, and Evelyn Conley and some of them. He locked them into the Chemistry Room with something like hydrogen sulfide and when they came out-!! The new building is swell but they forgot to put walks in across the two side lawns. I have a premo-nition about those lawns. Wait till the snow goes off! The Sophomores are all going to the Junior Prom and so I am. I haven't a date-I'm too young, of course. And I'm an awful dancer. But I'm so thrilled-it's going to last until eleven o'clock! By the way, there were lots of Sophomores in that Operetta Hulda of Holland. It was grand. Next year we'll most all be Juniors. Junior: It's been an awfully long time since I wrote. I've been a Junior for almost a year now and so many things have happened! First came the Junior play, Adam and Eva, and although it was not terribly successful financially, it helped decorate for the Prom. The Prom was just simply elegant! It was awfully formal and I had a new long dress. Gee, I felt sophisticated! And I didn't get home until one-thirty! It was a winter Prom and the roads were very bad. My shoes are simply ruined, thanks to Curtie. Margaret Coe stopped going with Norton right after the Prom, too-. That. dance had an awfully bad effect on the school. The Junior-Senior Picnic was certainly a wild and Wooly affair. It was at Newman Lake and a great deal of luke-warm pop and Marsy's potato salad was consumed. CI won't give her all the blame. We really brought it ourselvesj But we really had a gorgeous time, all considered. Ed Betz didn't go. He said he had to mow lawns. You know, Seniors are not such a bad lot, after all. I'm a little sorry to see them go. And I'm almost a Senior now! Senior: What an eventful year this has been! The new teachers have proved to be awfully nice, in spite of first appearances. We had play hours quite regularly and there were several special dances. The Red C's were initiated-and how! Of course we went to the Prom-and, reluctantly, I must admit it was nearly as good as ours! It was in the Spring and the flowers and fountain were lovely. Also, last but not least, the punch was the best in my High School History. I wonder what they put into it! I'm not graduated yet, but I am beginning to have hopes. By the way, the redheaded boy from Davenport was here for the Prom. Quite a sensation he created. At this writing, the Sneak has not yet occurred, but I feel sure it will. Also there's going to be a Sophomore Hop, too. Even though I'm terribly glad to be through with High School, I'm slightly sad about it, too. You know, out of our sixty graduates, five began in the first grade together. They are Marcella Rolfe, Jean Stronach, Billy Lean, Russell Lindquist, and Jack Davis. Anyway, we've had some grand times in this battle-scarred building and I'll never forget it l
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Page 34 text:
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