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Page 26 text:
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(Burls’ -Athletics A t the beginning of the fall term nearly all of the girls turned out for basket¬ ball. Gradually the number diminished until now there are only a few. It is due chiefly to the great interest of the lower classes that our team has been so successful in the games. The team is worthy of much praise for their hard work. Every one has played her position well. The lineup consists of the following: Centers—Esther Sink, Isabell Murray; Forwards—Jane Leist, Carleen Frates (Captain) ; Guards—Betty Bentley, Evelyn Cook, Dorothy Savercool. Miss Miliken, our coach, deserves much credit for the exceptionally good training she has given us. Without her help our team would have been helpless. BOONVILLE Our first game with Boonville was a close one. But we showed them the correct way to finish a game. The result was that we won by the score of fifteen to sixteen. CALISTOGA Our next game, with Calistoga, was a very close one and resulted in a victory for the home team. Much action was shown during the playing. We felt proud of defeating them as they had a good team. The score was twenty- five to twenty-eight. GEYSERVILLE The third game, with Geyserville, was a bad defeat for us, the score being twenty-five to twelve. The players from both sides played well. Their forwards deserve much credit for the way they handled the ball. The two sides were in good spirits. Geyserville treated us to a good supper at their local hotel, which we enjoyed greatly. We were taught the “treat ’em rough” system, and hope to do a little better next time. The last game we played was also with Geyserville. The game was full of pep and the score, 16-18, in favor of Geyserville. This was quite the roughest game of the season, but as usual we were only the imitators. Much practice and time has been given to baseball and the results were sur¬ prisingly good. No outside games have been played but the Sophomores ran off with the bacon in the interclass games. Many girls have played tennis and from tryouts we will undoubtedly have a good team. Our only handicap is the lack of courts on which to practice. But watch us and see what we do!
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Page 27 text:
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O n this summer evening in April, I am thinking of my school life. Deepl) lies in my mind the fond remembrance of that day in August, 1919, when seventeen poor, bashful, and innocent Freshmen were enrolled in dear old C. H. S. It was a large class, but still we feared our upperclassmen, as all baby Freshmen do. Nevertheless, we did not lack ambition, courage and ability. Ah! now we are Juniors. The Junior Class of 1922! We are now on the path of success. Three years of school life are almost completed. Behind us we leave a spotless record. We will not stop to recount the many trials and joys of our class, though the way in which we met both kinds of experiences is highly commendable. Before us lies the future, not the past. Every member of the class knows the importance of education in this day. As Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors we have always been prominent in school activities. Forward! is our watchword. When finally we reach the goal we have so long been striving for, we will proudly think of the class roll: Betty Bentley, Bernice McPherson, Bernice Grant, Carmelli Perli, Lelia Cannon, Ethel Smalley, Mary Bassetti, Clifford Adcock, Aldice Saunders, and Wash Hiatt. The Juniors hope that all of our members will labor to the end of the four years though it has always been said, “greatness comes only to a few.
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