Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK)

 - Class of 1941

Page 20 of 84

 

Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 20 of 84
Page 20 of 84



Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 19
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Page 20 text:

i 16 THE QUILL MAGAZINE Q E 2 ' lg or 50511 May We flcyz' fpeuon our By EDITH: MAE oossYN 2-Cents' Worth? Not many years ago some of us were strolling daily through the halls of dear old E. H. S., planning dates, discussing our friends, chat- ting, comparing classroom notes, and doing all the other things you do. in the meantime we have acquired years and experience. So, along with our best wishes, we want to give you something practical. We want to tell you how to ' Make hard times easier ' Make good times better ' Advance to better jobs ' Squeeze all possible profit from talents and abilities ' Overcome handicaps ' Improve advantages Yes, we can tell you how to do all that. We paid quite a bit for the secret, but we won't charge you for it. You'll find it wrapped up in one little Word: WORK. Think about it, wonit you? incidentally, we are proud to have been the builders of this book and we 'co liment the students and fac embers who Put so much r it. BW 9 om pa ny, ,Pu ' .hers E VE R PU ING CO. r s ess 'J eip Hmm 7 Broa ay f' :Nuo it a he J- it lf. A sport for every student and every student in the sport, is the motto of Enid High's intramural program directed by Miss Nelle Moore and Mr. Wallace Lawson. This pro- gram is given to interest the students in a number of activities which they may enjoy during and after their educational program. To enable the students to play different intramural activities with greater skill and enjoyment, instruction is given in the physi- cal education classes with all of the activities being carried on outside of class. Intramural managers are chosen by popular vote of the students in their respective class groups. The Senior managers chosen were: Frances Weber and Hannah Lou Stout for the girls, and Kennett Ball for the boys. Selected from the Iunior class were Betty Durbin and Sally Kershner for the girls, and Doug Korthank for the boys. The Sopho- more girls elected Clara Mae Deal and Hazel Pearce, while the boys chose Samuel Kerman. Some of the duties of these managers are the scheduling of contests, turning in and reporting contests, and obtaining officials and score keepers. Activities for the boys and girls carried on in this program are basketball, volleyball, badminton, golf, table tennis, horseshoes, archery, tennis, softball, and free throw. For boys only are the sports of touch football, soccer, and track. Besides the intramural managers there is a manager for each team, appointed by the team competing in one or more contests. This manager is the point of contact between the team and the intramural directors. Some of the regulations of the team are as follows: no student who has been award- ed a varsity letter shall be eligible to coni- pete in the sport or its associate in which he won a letter, former intramural champions in individual sports fexcept trackj shall be ineligible to compete in the activity in which they won a championshipg if any rules are violated, a forfeit will be made. An award will be given to the best all- around girl and boy athlete. Points are obtained for each team by the winning of a game, and extra points are attained for being an intramural champion or a runner-up, With fifteen on each team there are fifteen teams composed of boys and twelve teams made up of girls. The first activity on the boys' part was the free throw contest won by Kenneth Rich- ardson with a score of 38 out of 50. Runner- up was Tom Cavin throwing 34 out of 50. Charles Duff carried off the table tennis con- test with Le Roy Russell coming up second. For the touch football title the Ramblin' Wrecks won over Kickapoo Ioy Iuicers, lack Lenox, manager, with Bud Everitt as their managerg others on the winning team were lack Holland, Bobby Biggs, Frank Drake, William Fry, Tom Burnett, Vernon Shock- ley, Harry Cummins, lack Croom, Wallace Cole, Dick Crawford, Bob Patterson, lack Stewart, and Warren Maupin. The girls have also done wonders in their part of the intramural program . Virginia Ruth Everitt defeated Pherne Bracher in the finals of the table tennis tournament. The two final matches of the table tennis tourna- ment were played in the auditorium with the students as spectators. The basketball tournament was won by the Gingersnaps with the Comets taking second place. Man- ager of the Gingersnaps', and her team are Mary Io Vogt, manager, Betty lean Scott, Hermine Stejskel, Margie Hutson, Catherine Edwards, Doris Earley, Gloria Felton, Muriel Ellison, Betty Vogt, Norma Rhinehart, Elaine Farrant, Kathryn Mahan, Harriett Wicker, and Mary Gosney. in the volley ball tournament the Comets turned the tables and defeated the Gingersnaps . Lor- aine Lawter, manager of the team, and Lily Latchaw, Anne Latchaw, Dottie Webber, Pat Eddleman, Matilda Harrison, Ethel Cowsar, Ioan Rainey, Delores Webber, Olive Nichols, Eva Nell Dockum, Phyllis Smith, Maxine Ellison, and Darlene Smith make up the volley ball champions. Winners of the table tennis tournament went to the State Meet at the University of Oklahoma at Norman, May l, 2, and 3. Other contests and their respective win- ners were to be played off at a later date with the award being made in assembly May 20. Representing the girls in the State inter- scholastic Meet at Norman, May 1, 2, and 3, were the winners of table tennis, tennis sin- gles and doubles, archery, and badminton. The boys entered in golf, table tennis, horse- shoes, and badminton. At the Mid-State Meet held at Norman, Eva Nell Dockum and Phyllis Smith were defeated in the Hnals of the tennis doubles tournament. Others who entered the tennis match were Ann Mahoney and Virginia Everitt, and Betty Hinman and Mary Io Vogt, Ervan Holtmann and Harold Schneid- er,, Richard Collins and Danny I-Ieisler, Iunior Iones and William Fry. Wendell Towell, lack Burke, Iack Holland, and Billy Shelton composed the golf team which placed second in the conference, with Classen High School taking first place. While lack of space in the gymnasium and equipment limited somewhat the activities planned for the intramural program, an in- creasingly large number of boys and girls availed themselves of the opportunity to play. The intramural program has been the result of years of growth, having its beginning under the direction of Miss Nelle Moore and Perry McCoy, and expanding to its present size.

Page 19 text:

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Page 21 text:

Emu l-lion Scuooi. I7 fa ALL-SCHOOL PRODUCTION ff E' ll By MAXINE DEARDORFF Few girls get as far as high school age without at least once setting as their highest ambition the role of an actress in a New York theater. hlost of them get over this desire in a short time, but the ones who still cling to the acting as their careers usually go to an actresses' boarding school. ln such a boarding school is laid the scene for Stage Door, the fourth all-school produc- tion presented at the Education Building on December 10 under the discriminating direc- tion of Miss Hazel Hatch. This highly dra- matic three-act play was written by Edna Ferber and George Kaufman, and centers about M1's. Orcutt's Footlights Club, a club for girls on the stage. After proving extreme- ly successful on Broadway. this play moved across the country and was made into a 1110- tion picture where it gained nationwide popu- larity. Pay having thirty-two in the cast, Stage Door set a new high in the number of char- acters in any Enid High School production. In the complicated life of modern New York City the actresses struggle for the success of obtaining the lead in a well-known play, al- ways wondering what the fates have in store for them as their rewards, either the attain- ment of their coveted goals of fame in the theater, or dismal failure and unhappiness. VVithin a few short months out of the eighteen girls who live at the liootlights Club, Kaye, whose footsteps seem to have been dogged by disappointment and hard luck, commits suicide, and lovely self-centered Linda, after leaving her home and her de- ALL-SCHOOL PRODUCTION voted mother, lVlrs. Shaw, is accidentally kill- ed in an automobile accident. But all 'is not so gloomy, for Louise marries an old sweet- heart and settles down to small-town life, and glamorous Iean reaches a fame through the movies, but the success of determined Terry is the greatest of the group. Although offered a motion-Picture contract, she clings to her ideal of acting in the theater and is given the lead in the now-famous Keith Bur- gess play, The rest of the girls including sarcastic, clever Iudith, constantly followed by Lou Nlilhauser, dancing, carefree Pat, talented Russian Olga, independent, ambitious Ber- nice, Ann, the girl who thinks the world would be better without men, sweet Southern Bobby, eternally in love with Texan Sam Hastings, socialite Kendall, and bored, beau- tiful Nladeline, are forced to content them- selves with bit parts. Unsatisfied Big and Little Nlary add to the complicated situation by contributing their humorous comments. Nlattie, the capable scolding colored maid, completely dominates houseman Frank, her shiftless, but well-meaning husband. Terry's fContinm'd on page 59j

Suggestions in the Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK) collection:

Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

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Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

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Enid High School - Quill Yearbook (Enid, OK) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

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