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Page 28 text:
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4 Top row: Glen Hicks, Emma Jean Ruth, Clair Sykes, Mabel Lucas, Victor Fatz, Barbara Van Horn, William Baumann. Second row: Robert Craig, Elsie Mae McSweeney, Charles Christofferson, Alice Elliott, Robert Brust, Florence Elliott, Elmer Bokovoy, Evalyn Bear, Donald Gall. Third row: Margaret James, Vernell Fisher, Dawn Gallagher, Audrey Rody, Rudolph Larkin Jr., Dixie Schoonover. Fourth row: Calvin Fultz, Marjorie Manley, James Allen, Eldon Adams, Emily Myers, Melvin McLauchlin. Fifth row: Rosalie Cameron, Dale Allen, Margaret Collins, Henry Grossman, Joyce Gall, Kenneth Young, Helen Christenson, Cecil Roddy, Esther Humphrey. Sixth row: Albert Morris, Beryl Schultz, Delbert Long, Lillian Bokovoy, George Elliot, Florence Cooper, Clarence Willson, Betty Callison, Arthur Kleinschmidt. Seventh row: Kermit Rody, Dorothy Ritter, Ellen Eveleth, James Morger, Edna Rowe, Beatrice Klay, George Paul, Elva Whitehorn. Not in picture:. Ted Brummer.
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Page 29 text:
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| | | | fa beellS: THE PIONEER PAGE 27 FRESHMAN CLASS HISTORY Entering the gates of El Rancho FBHS for the first time, came we fifty-seven cow punchers, headed by the stalwart Senor Chester Halley. The second puncher, through the gates, was Senor George Wackerlin, who later left the ranch to work in another posi- tion. Following came Senorita Margaret James, who kept track of the cowboys’ activities. Fourth in line, carrying the pay roll, rode Calvin Fultz. Trailing along behind on a little gray burro was Miss Evans, the “Mexicali Rose.” Immediately after our appearance, we were subjected to torturing hours of discom- fort and embarrassment. To make up for our discomfort, the veterans gave a ficsta in our honor. After a few months of hard labor, we in return, threw a shindig for the older punchers. Some of the senoritas “slung hash” in the chuck wagon while music was furnished by the Senores Nelson. In the wee hours of the morning, we cowboys crawled into our bunks and slept soundly until sunrise. The ranch work continued as usual throughout the winter. The ranch owner’s brand, which was “B,” had been formed from rocks on a nearby hill by a group of cow- punchers formerly employed at the rancho. One warm spring day veteran cowpunchers, at the rancho, decided that the brand needed freshening up. No sooner said than done, and we younger cowpunchers trouped up the hill. By means of whitewash, which some- one dug out of the bunkhouse, we really improved the appearance of the brand. Back to the ranch and our work we went, until our employer gave us all a vacation until roundup time. 40 SING A SONG OF FACULTY Now, Carpenter is a funny name, That always mixes me. First we’ll start with Hagie, Why Carpenter isn’t a carpenter They say he’s good and kind. That I cannot see. But when he’s in the study hall He sure does make them mind. If Miss Hagie didn’t teach here, And figure out our plays, Mr. Zile is large and tall, They wouldn’t cut our study hours, And sure is quite a man. And shorten up our days. Mathematics is to Zile As Peter is to Pan. Miss Fechter is an athlete, She teaches tumbling girls, Miss Evans, now, is different. Some people sure have all the luck She’s small and gay and kind. Why wasn’t I a girl? But you’ve got to know your English, That you soon will find. I could go on forever, (As Freshmen always do) Mr. Ide says “blow the horns, Of rulers, books, and faculty, And beat the drums a plenty,” Oh give us something new! But when you come to “cresendo” You’ve got to do it gently. We say please make the teachers go, And tests and books, we’ll ban; Hess handles all the nitrogen, But we couldn’t do without ’em And volts and ohms and fizz. I am speaking man to man. For he’s got a scientific brain —Robert -Brust ’43. That makes him, what he is. on Miss Cooney makes the candy bars And frosted cakes. Yum! Yum! QUOTATIONS How do I know they’re very good? Well, you see, I’ve tasted them. “Wisdom is ofttimes nearer when we stoop than when we soar.’—Wordsworth. Hammers, bits, and framing squares, “No man is justified in doing evil on Are always needed here. the grounds of expediency.—Theodore For you see it’s Mr. Hindle’s room. Roosevelt. We're working here, don’t fear! “Young men think old men are fools; but old men know young men are fools.” — Miss Buckland with her charming smile, Chapman. Makes everybody happy, “Reading maketh a full man, confer- But her assignments, people say, ence a ready man, and writing an exact Make them all slap happy. man.’’—Bacon.
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