Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH)

 - Class of 1941

Page 25 of 100

 

Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 25 of 100
Page 25 of 100



Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 24
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Page 25 text:

TOP-KNOT 1941 PROPI-IECY Camp Mohawk for Female Draftees Wild Cat, Oklahoma June 5, 1961 Miss Genevieve Leonard Collossal Studios Hollywood, California Dearest Geevie: It seems like years since I saw you last, and I'm simply bubbling over with news. Dear, I'm so delighted over your recent successes! How you do make men swoon when you flash on the screen. Why even the other night, I thought I'd lost Joe for good, for he wouldn't say one word to me on the way home after seeing your latest movie, Love Rules the World. Perhaps it's a good thing you're way out there in Sunny California . . . oh, by the way, does it really rain there all the time, or is that just rumor running wild again? But now I'm getting away from the purpose of this letter. Dear, the reason I am writing is to let you in on the simply appalling news that the Class of 1941 at C. S. G. is drafted. You just don't know how lucky you are to be an entertainer, for they're exempt to keep up the morale of the armies. CNote the plural, for that's what it's come to be.J It seems that Uncle Sam ran out of males and so we women must get in and do our share, too. I The first day at the camp for draftees was full of surprises for everyone. I was embarrassed no end when I didn't recognize my old classmates. My, how time changes a person! Why, it seems like only yesterday, instead of 20 years ago, that Mrs. Stoddard lsuch a dearl was scolding us. Most of the girls are married, but not to confuse you, I'll stick to the maiden names you know them by. Quite by accident, the first person I saw-one who was having a rather hard time being able to tell the quartermaster her size for a uniform-was Vir- ginia I-Iildreth. You remember Jinny, I'm sure, famous for her Thoity-Thoid Street lingo, and always keeping the home fires in detention burning. Well, Jinny, as I said before, has had such a difficult time making herself understood, for now her accent is so pronounced, it's almost another language, that she's resorted to the use of sign language. After obtaining my uniform, I decided to look over the kitchen, as I l 23 I

Page 24 text:

big brown eyes, to be used when- ever needed. To Patty Stewart: Jean Moore and Barbara Reed leave their capacity for absorbing all the knowledge they are expected to absorb. To Patty Scott: Geevie Leonard and Frankie Frederiksen leave that spirit of adventure which keeps them out nights, when they should be studying. To Mary Jane Greer: Ann Gumble and Betsy Scherr entrust the sacred leadership of Miss Miller's Smuggie Club, with the hope that Janie will keep burning the bright flame of this spirited organization for another year. : Joan Deckman artistic ability, to paint much moment's notice. To Margie Stearns leaves her coveted which enables her needed scenery at a To Sue Carlile: Marguerite Hillman leaves her marksman's eye, so that Sue will invariably know what is go- ing on. To Mary Jo Smith: Patti Teachnor TOP-KNOT 1941 bequeaths her way of looking as if she had not a care in the world, and Patsy Eidson her inspired look of devilment. These to be used only one at a time. To Margie Wood: Jinny Hildreth re- linquishes that bubbling exuberance that is hers around three-ten. To the Class of 1942: The Seniors leave the dignity and poise that goes with the status of a Senior, and also their amazing dexterity in whipping up class plays on the spur of the moment. To the Class of 1943: The Seniors leave the leadership of the Gold Team -handle with care-and also their abounding joy in all things athletic. To the School: The Seniors leave the newly decorated stage, and their fond hope for bigger and better theatrical productions. To the Class of 1947: The Seniors leave their Hag and mascot fa little moth-eaten but we love itj and their thirty some tags as a warning of what not to do. our hand and seal hereto. on the third This we reluctantly decree, and set day of June. in the year of our Lora' nineteen hundred and forty-one. 1221



Page 26 text:

COLUMBUS SCHOOL for GIRLS always was a domestic soul, and you'll simply die when I tell you who I found browsing around concocting luscious dishes and looking as if she actually was enjoying it . . . None other than Mary Reynolds! The next person I saw was Ann Stoneman, who was warming some milk. Stonie is as cute as ever, and you can well imagine how surprised I was to learn that she is the mother of five handsome youths. Stonie just couldn't be drafted without them, so with special permission from Mary Brent Davis, who is the General, she set up housekeeping in the camp. When I went over to see Stonie's house, which was truly a relief from the usual tents, I met many more of the girls. Tossie Heaton was bisecting a frog in the middle of the living room floor, and simply fascinating Stonie's offspring. Tossie is the Biologist of the Century, and because of her knack wth children, she had written and lectured on The Relative Importance of Biology and the Child. Rather deep for me, but with her able assistant, Derry Jane Mooney, Tossie's quite a success. Mary Brent Davis and Ellen Butler, the two commanding officers, were bustling and bustling about taking care of the affairs of the camp, so I didn't see much of them. But I hear they've both done a splendid job of reorganizing the plumbing so that the hot water no longer comes out of the cold water faucets, and vice versa. Carolyn Little and Frances Frederiksen haven't become adapted to army life as yet, and have been quite a problem. After life in New York, it must be quite dull: but then with Juanita Cornett and Sue Sun fwho worked for the Florida Chamber of Commerce for many yearsj to cheer them up, I'm sure they'll snap out of their despondency. Alean Brisley has turned out to be quite the little U7 soldier. Besides winning a couple of medals for submitting the greatest variety of ways to cook beans, she has proved to be an example to the other soldiers by actually going on a diet in the wilds of Oklahoma. Sally Steinhauser and Marguerite Hillman became partners in an act of great daring. My dear, I almost fainted when I saw itl Sally puts an apple on her head and Marguerite, who always was a crack shot, shoots it off at 100 yards away. Quite a feat! Ann Gumble and Marjorie Essex have become the two most popular girls in the camp. You see, Ann brought her convertible. as she just couldn't part with it, and Marjorie her horse, for the horse just couldn't part with Marjie. l24l

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