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Page 29 text:
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MASCOTS
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Page 28 text:
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UfJjFfJfflH ™ BETTY CAROLYN SMITH EMILIE MARGARET TILLEY MARVIN MITCHELL SPIVEY RUDOLPH HOUGH WALTERS ARTHUR RAY TALLEY, JR. SHELBY JEAN WILSON KENNETH MATTHEW TALLEY NATHAN MACK WOODLIEF sciHons BILLY RAY YEARGIN I BETTY CAROLYN SMITH— F.H.A. 1,2,3,4; F.H.A. Vice-President 3; F.H.A. President 4; Band 1,2,3; Monogram Club 1,2,3,4; Williamsburg Trip 3; Beta Club 3,4; Basketball 1,2,3,4; Junior Play 3; Club Editor of GREENBRIAR 4; Advertising Staff of GREENBRIAR 3; Office Clerk 4; French Club 3,4 . . . MARVIN MITCHELL SPIVEY— Monogram Club 1,2,3,4; Basketball 2,3,4; Baseball 1,2,3,4; Advertising Staff of GREENBRIAR 3; F.F.A. 1,2,3,4; Presi- dent 4; Beta Club 3,4; Glee Club 2,3,4; Bus Driver 4; Williamsburg Trip 3 . . . ARTHUR RAY TALLEY, JR.— Monogram Club 1,2,3,4; President of Monogram Club 4; Football 1,2,3,4; Basketball 1,2,3,4; Baseball 1,2,3,4; Sports Editor of GREENBRIAR 4; Superlative (Most Popular); Williamsburg Trip 4 . . . KENNETH MATTHEW TALLEY— Latin Club 2,3; F.T.A. 3,4; Junior Play; Junior Class President; Williamsburg Trip 3; Advertising Staff of GREENBRIAR 3,4; Photographer for GREENBRIAR 2,4; Band 1,2,3 . . . EMILIE MAR- GARET TILLEY— Monogram Club 2,3,4; Class Treasurer 1,2,3,4; F.H.A. 1,2,3,4; F.H.A. Camp 2; F.T.A. 3,4; French Club 3,4; Beta Club 3,4; Williamsburg Trip 3; Basketball 1,2,3,4; Advertising Staff of GREENBRIAR 3,4; Office Clerk 4; Superlative (Most Original) . . . RUDOLPH HOUGH WALTERS . . . SHELBY JEAN WILSON— F.H.A. 1,2,3; Latin Club 2; Office Clerk 3,4; School Store 2,4; Monogram Club 3,4; Basketball 2,3,4 . . . NATHAN MACK WOODLIEF— Monogram Club 4; Football 4; F.F.A. 1,2,3,4 . . . BILLY RAY YEAR- GIN— F.F.A. 1,2. niiikiiiiiiiiiiii
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MUUUWtAlW! SENIOR CLASS PROPHECY Listen all ye men and women, youths and maidens, and little children. Listen all ye people of Fuquay Varina and surrounding communities to the words of wisdom from the lips of your prophetess, Kathryn Rowland, who now speaketh to you of things which must shortly come to pass. Behold, I am in a vision and it is the year of ' 66 and as I enter the beautiful and spacious drugstore on Main Street in downtown Fuquay, my heart is thrilled to see the proprietor, gray- ing Phillip Harvell, slightly bald Hubert Shearon, town mayor; and portly Boyd Collier, prominent den- tist, discussing the personnel of the new hospital just outside the city on 15-A. In the new hospital Ralph Crabtree is Chief of Staff; Annette Roundy is Head Nurse; Treva Ogburn is Dietician, and Robert Stevens, Billy Ray Yeargin, and John Mack Callis, whose col- lege days were deferred because of their Uncle Sam ' s orders, are interns. Lo! the scene changes and I ' m transported to the auditorium of the Fuquay- Varina Junior College where C. P. L. home economist, Nancy Keith is teaching a cooking school composed of young homemakers. I recognize Betty Baker, Marie Sherian, and Jean Wil- son, though each have added considerable pounds since high school days. Present also are three of the ad- ministrative staff — Dr. Priscilla Holloway, capable head of the English Department; Dean of Men, Waver- ly Fitzhugh; Phd., Emilie Tilley, of the foreign lan- guage department whose Comment-allez vous? is genuine and warm; and the Business Administrator, Mollie Ashworth. Just outside I hear the sound of a patrolman ' s siren. Imagine Jerry Oliver citing author- ess Sallie Carden to appear in court before Judge Doro- thy Adcock for speeding 90 m.p.h. in a restricted zone. Swiftly I am transported to far-away places. Dark Africa — and the faces of the natives glow at the mention of missionary Carolyn Hilliard who has labored so faithfully in the village recently built by the Charles Sauls Construction Company. Meanwhile, over in nearby Southern Rhodesia, Mary Aiken is con- ducting Gene Barbee and Dan Chappell, famed enty- mologists, on a tour of her plantation in a search for a new species of tobacco worms. Moscow — Harriet Davis, famed sociologist, makes Pravda ' s front page headlines with her sweeping re- forms behind the Iron-Curtain. Paris — Jean Campbell and Annette Eatman are busi- ly exporting their exotic new perfume (extracted from mulberry leaves by an ingenious process) to the American dealer Allen McLean. New York— at the office of the New York Times I see the editor James Byrd busily sorting out informa- tive news sent in by world correspondents Jimmy Caviness and Jimmy Holloman. — Carnegie Hall — Bob- by Jones and Doris Jones, famed jazz-playing duo, are making their formal debut. Hollywood — Sonja Averette enjoys a swim in the elaborate swimming pool she designed for singer Mit- chell Spivey. El Paso — Dude-Ranch proprietor, Rudolph Wal- ters is teaching the vacationing private secretaries, Shelby Davis and Peggy Myatt, the art of horseback riding. Southern Louisiana — Jackie Langdon is feeding her kennel of chinchillas their ration while her next- door neighbor Frank Benton raises cane. Joyfully, I accept an invitation to fly to Washing- ton, D.C. with Bobby Dean who has gained a deg ree of fame as a transcontinental pilot. Imagine my sur- prise as I gaze across the aisle and recognize a former classmate, the Rev. Arthur R. Talley, Jr., who is Senate Chaplain. As we stop by the White House to speak to the President of the LJ. S., Bobby Jeffries, I am amazed to see Katie Crabtree being congratulated by the first lady on her novel, THE CARE OF LITTLE FISHES, which is the nation ' s number one best seller. Katie is visiting her sister Betty Sue who is secretary to U. S. Senator Nathan Woodlief. What a sursprise as I regis- ter at the hotel to see a delegation of old time class- mates, Robert Clark, Thomas McGee, Peggy Passmore, and Virginia Griffis, who have won the trip to the nation ' s capital as a result of superior salesmanship in their chosen field — insurance. The telephone rings and, with delight, I hear the voice of Linda Rhyne — army nurse, who has just returned to the states after a tour of duty in the Far East. She brings joyful news of Jimmy Sears, world renowned traveler and lecturer, whom she has had the pleasure of seeing and hearing in China. My plane is delayed and hurrying to board a trans- continental airliner nearby are Peggy Powell and Shir- ley Kinton, government secretaries. The minutes pass and as my plane approaches I recognize a woman pilot. She is none other than Celia Midgette with Betty Buf- falo as stewardess. She tells me of seeing actress Marie Farmer having a manicure in the beauty salon of Juanita Revels in Paris. We stop for lunch in Richmond, Virginia — and are delighted to find Billy Mize as proprietor of a swanky restaurant. He tells us of seeing Sherrill Jones, big league ball-player, in a music store listening to a recording of Moments to Remember as sung by Mary Ellen Rowland, contralto. I return home (which is in Raleigh, N. C. ). On my way to the church where I am Director of Religious Education, I stop at Raleigh ' s Pharmaceutical Supply Company where the owner, well-known Kenneth Tal- ley is discussing a new drug for the treatment of mumps with the former Carolyn Smith, Margaret Page, and Alberta Clayton, whose children are in school together and are indeed having a swell time. Suddenly a veil is drawn over the future, shutting out the things that are to be and I don my cap and gown for the big moment of graduation, confident that only good shall follow all the days that are to be for the fair and talented members of the Class of ' 56. twzmmvm 26 KATHRYN ROWLAND Prophetess
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