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Page 19 text:
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Llasi plill and Testament It Could Be You It Could Be You SeniorClass of Nineteen Hundred Fifty-Eight ofCleveland School. Being of sound mind and sane judg- ment, and realizing that, in the general scheme of events, we shall soon lay aside the cares and worries (and the pleasures, also) of student life, do solemnly will and bequeath to our herein named beneficiaries the things herein mentioned, possessions we believe to be ours by right of inheritance. Any other will bearing our signature is hereby declared null and void. After finishing our themes and placing our chewing gum under the cafeteria tables, we dispose uf all our other char- acteristics, habits, talents, beloved possessions, and worldly goods as follows: Section I. We will our thanks to the School Board and local committee for providing us teachers well-qualified for the position that they so capably filled. Section II. To Mr, Lanier we wish to express our many thanks for the interest and leadership he has shown us during the past year. Section III. Our thanks and appreciation go, also, to those same aforementioned teachers for so patiently and tirelessly aiding usalongthe rocky road of learning. We are very conscious of the fact that, left to ourselves, we would have been side- tracked into more pleasant,but less profitable paths. So to you, we will a sincere Thank You. Section IV. To Mr. Cashion we leave our gratitude for doing all the work around school for us. Section V. To the lunchroom staff we leave all we did not eat. Section VI. To our parents we leave our deepest appreciation for their helpfulness in our time of need andtheir guidance in helping us overcome our problems and making a success of this our first phase of education. Section VII. To the buildings and buses we leave our deepest sympathy after the care we gave them for the past twelve years. We leave a gift to Cleveland School as a token of appreciation. Section VIII. To the undergraduates: To the Junior Class, who will be the Seniors in the forthcoming year, we leave the dignity we should have had, hoping they will be more successful in maintaining the same than we have been. To the Sophomores and Freshmen, we leave our hopes that before long they will occupy the position that we now occupy. Section IX. The Annual Staff of '58 leaves to the staff of '59 all our errors and mistakes so theirs will be much better than the '58 CLEVANA. Section X. We, as individual Seniors, leave to the underclassmen the following: Item I. I JOHNNY FAUST do will and bequeath my bus No. 21 to anyone who wants it, and also to Gladys Eller I leave my locker No. 69 and hope that she can control the mice that pass through it. Item 2. I BARBARA ANN JOHNSON will my job in the lunchroom to anyone who wants it. Item 3. I DELTON BARRINGER do will and bequeath my big, loud mouth to Allen Faust. Item 4. I BURETTE PARKER, not having anything but a feeble mind and a broken body, take everything with me. Item 5. I BONNIE PLYLER do will and bequeath my height to Susie Stewart and my position as a senior to Leila Phifer. Item 6. I WAYNE CLINE do will and bequeath my bus No. 8 to Walter Koontz and my love of school to Butch Rumple. Item 7. 1 BILLY MclNTOSH do will and bequeath my position as F. F. A. President to Allen Faust and my bus No. 46 to one who can drive it - my brother Tommy. Item 8. I DONNA McDANlEL do will and bequeath my seat on the activity bus to anyone who is fortunate enough to get it because I know they will get a real charge out of riding beside Sondra Somers to basketball games. Item 9. I J. C. COBB will my position on the basketball team to Clyde Harkey. Item 10. I ROY BECK do will and bequeath my position as a senior to Allen Faust any time he can fill it. Item 11. I BOB GLOVER do will and bequeath my bus No. 61 to Gerald Correi I, my position as F. F. A . Treasurer to Allen Faust, and my position as Co-business Manager of the Annual to Catherine Hewitt. Item 12. I MILDRED DILLON do will my title as Miss Hi Miss to Mary Jane Moore . Item 13. I JERRY SIMS do will and bequeath,my bus No. 61 to Gerald Correll, the Annual Staff to my brother Tony. Item 14. I ANNETTE HINCEMON will my honor{?) of being a January bride to Neita Stout. Item 15. I ANITA DILLON do will andbequeath my place as a dignified senior to my cousin Elaine and myshorthairto Nancy Hartsell. Item 16. I FRANK KYLES leave my position as a senior to John Holder. Item 17. I BEN BEEKER do leave all the girls at Mt. Ulla to Jim Coulter and hope that he has more luck than I did. Item 18. I LINDA LOWERY will my position as a senior to fny sister Cheryl. Item 19. I LARRY WRIGHT do will my position on the football team to Arthur Brown, hoping the team will atlasthavea winning season, and my love for girls to Eugene Moore. Item 20. I PEGGY HODGE will my bus No. 56 to Carolyn Ketchie and my position as a senior to Alice Graham. Item 21. I LOUIS SNIDER do will and bequeath my ability to date such a wide variety and so many girls to Allen Faust since I do not need this ability anymore. Item 22. I ROY SWANSON do will and bequeath my ability to work on cars to Fred Mowery. If any possessions of value have been overlooked, we ask that the same be presented to our coaches and that proper disposal be made as they see fit. We hereby appoint Mrs. Ruby Gulledge, our class advisor, as sole executrix of this, our last will and testament. Witness my hand and seal, and the hand and'seal of the affixed bona fide witnesses, this day in May in the year of our Lord, one thousand, nine hundred, fifty-eight. Witnesses: BILLY MclNTOSH ROY SWANSON Signed DELTON BARRINGER Testator
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Page 18 text:
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mtors Climax JERRY KEITH SIMS Sims Class Reporter 1; Class President 2;Class Reporter 3;Class Secretary-Treasurer 4; F. F. A. 1, 2; Baseball 1, 2, 4; Senior Play 4; Snapshot Editor of Annual 4; Superlative: Most Attractive 4. SAMUEL LOUIS SNIDER Snider F. F. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 4; Bus Driver 1, 2, 3, Sub. 1, 2; Glee Club 2, 3. ROY R. SWANSON Lightning Football 1, 2; Baseball 1; F. F. A. 1, 2, 4; Junior Play 3; Senior Play 4; Monogram Club 4; Superlative: Best All Round 4; Annual Staff Advertising Editor 4. . LARRY GENE WRIGHT Wright Football 1, 2, 3, 4; F. F. A. 1, 2, 3; Vice President 3; Beef and Swine Judging Team 3; Marshal 3; Monogram Club 3, 4; Beta Club 3, 4; Co-editor of Eagle Eye 4; Glee Club 2, 2, 4; Proofreader of Annual 4; Superlative: Most Intelligent 4; Junior Play 3; Senior Play 4. a
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Page 20 text:
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Person to Person Well, I guess it's the gypsy in me. I don't know any other reason why my class chose me to foretell the class prophecy. I will now gaze into this crystal ball to see what the future holds for this grand class of 1958. Turn onward. Turn onward Oh time in your flight Let me see the graduates of '58 Ten years from tonight! Here it is Mcy ,, 1968; and I find myself substituting for Ed Murrow as commentator on Person to Person. I do not feel that I will be taking advantage of Mr. Murrow's illness if I use this time to let you see what each member of the Senior Class of '58 of Cleveland School is doing after ten years. Our first visit tonight is to the huge gym of Western Rowan High School in North Carolina. DONNA McDANIEL has kept the boys overtime to make them practice. Donna says they haven't lost a game yet-neither girls nor boys. To some it may seem odd for Donna to be coaching boys as well as girls, but we who know her know she's always tackle anything. She seems to be doing very well at it, too. , Donna tells us that another classmate JOHNNY FAUST is principal of W. R. H. S. and is also serving as Marriage Coun- selor. We decided to visit Johnny as he lived just across the street from the school. Above the wailing of. several brats, Johnny says that LINDA LOWERY has served as his private secretary for several years. We are fortunate to find Linda in the study of Johnny's home. She is working on some reports for the school which just have to be finished. Linda tells us that her experience as a senior office assistant to Mr. R. O. Lanier was quite helpful. As we leave Johnny's home and start back to our car, we are almost hit by two motorcycles. Fortunately, they stop in time to avoidhitting us. Gee Whiz! It is BOB GLOVER and BILLY MclNTOSH. Both boys say that they are now traveling all over the UnitedStates on their motorcycles doing dare devil acts. Why they even had motorcycles in high school! I knowthey en- joyed sporting around on their motorcycles, but I never thought they would carry it so far as to earn a living with them. What's that I smell! Smells like something burning! It is. As soon as Bob, better known as Muff, sees that the swanky Hotel Barringer in Cleveland is on fire, he rushes into the gym to get Donna, better known to us as Flowe. Muff imme- diately used the ham radio system on his rubber-tired horse to contact the Flowe-Muff Fire Department of Scotch-lrish. Naturally we followedthe crowdand wentto the scene ofthe fire. Oops! I'm sorry. Why yourface is familiar. DELTON BARRINGER! What are you doing here? My, my, owner of this hotel! No wonder you're upset. After the fire is extinguished and the excitement has subsided Delton gathers his wits and tells us that PEGGY HODGE, another of our classmates, is a guest in his hotel. She is going from school to school teaching Drivers' Education. We go up to Pfiggy's room, and she tells us how much she enjoys the traveling which accompanies her work. She also tells us that BONNIE PLYLER is a professional make-up artist and consultant. Bonnie has her salon in the lobby of this hotel. Peggy goes with us to get Bonnie, and then we all go to see the floor show. BEN BEEKER is guest M. C. for the night. He has been making headlines in the sports world as a star football player for the Washington Redskins. Who appears to entertain us butBURRETTE PARKER! His singin' andshakin' have caused him to replace Elvis as the idol of all teenagers. No wonder he was selected as most talented senior of '58. We notice a familiar looking profile at the next table. He seems to be taking notes. Upon further investigation we find that is LARRY WRIGHT and that he is now a famous news reporter for The New York Times. His staff heard that Ben and Burrette were to appear at the hotel that night, and he was sent down to cover the show. Since Larry is such an up to-date reporter, he knows and tells us about the rest ofthe class and what they are doing. What he tells us causes us to make the following visits. Since itis nearer, we go firstto LOUIS SNIDER's brick mansion in Cooleemee. He seems to have done quite well forhim- self. He is President of Erwin Cotton Mills, is married, and has five lovely children. While we are at Louis's, ROY BECK, his wife, and four children come to visit. Roy and Louis were always great pals, and one tried to keep up with the other. They are still doing just that. Although Roy is one child behind Louis (this is understandable since he got a later start), hisbeing Vice President of Paola Cotton Mil Is in Statesville proves be is up to par otherwise. WAYNE CLINE has replaced Mr. T. E. Hendren, who recently retired from teaching Agriculture. Just last year Wayne was chosen North Carolina's State Farmer by the Agriculture Department in Raleigh. What Larry has told us takes us next to a large building in Detroit, Michigan. In the main office we find ROY SWANSON and J. C. COBB. They are now Co-Managers of the Ford Motor Company. They tell us that JERRY SIMS is driving their '68 Thunderbird in the races at Daytona Beach. They certainly have chosen the right occupations. BARBARA JOHNSON seems to have done very well for herself. She and her husband, Howard, are Co-Managers of Johnson's in Charlotte. We find Barbara dishing out ice cream as she did food in the cafeteria ten years ago. We now go to Florida where we find the Miss America Contest in progress. MILDRED DILLON has just been crowned Miss America of 1968. Now we go the West Coast where we find the Miss Universe Contest in progress. We understand that ANITA DILLON was just crowned Miss Universe. Since these two girls were always contesting for beauty honors in high school, is it any wonder that they now hold these titles? This will really knock you! We find none other than FRANK KYLES serving as Chief of Police and directing the Miss Universe Contest. , Yours truly is now Mrs. Doyle Enloe living in Brevard, North Carolina. Well, my days are usually fil led between taking careof two children andbeing news commentator forChannel 1968 in Asheville. Mr. Murrow will be back with you next week. Good night, Mr. Murrow. Good night, friends. This is Annette Enloe saying good night for Person to Person. ANNETTE HINCEMON Prophetess
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