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Page 24 text:
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JUNIOR CLASS
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Page 23 text:
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,44- .P Class lilisto y Gossip of '28 Time: Summer of 1933. Place: Home of Dorothy Klingler. Cast: Mary Adams, Dorothy Klingler. D: Oh, hello, Mary. M: Oh, Dorothy, I'm so glad to see you! D: Isn't college grand? How do you like it? M: Oh, it's scrumptious! But don't you kind of miss the people we knew a few years ago? D: Oh, dear!-Weren't we funny as Fresh- men? M: I felt so lost: everything was so big, and we mixed our classes. Remember when we got into Mr. Herr's room. and we had to dissect a dead cat! We thought we were in Ancient His- tory, but we didn't know it was quite so ancient. Who was our president? D: Oh, John Hall. At Piggleteria we had a fish-pond, with all the girls dressed in overalls with fish-poles and John was the biggest Fish there. Speaking of presidents, wasn't Martha Gene our president for the Sophomore year? M: Martha Gene? You mean that girl who thought the Bridal Chorus was Horses! Horses! ? D: Yeh: and that year we had seats in the Senior Assembly and didn't we think we were it? M: We thought the teachers would take us for Seniors: but one of 'em asked Mr. Hirons how the eighth-graders got up THERE. D: But, when we were Juniors! That was the year that made history. The first Senior- Junior and the first dance in the new gym. M: First high-heeled slippers. Ouch! D: Half the football and basketball teams were Juniors. And we got to be members of- the Furriners' Clubs. M: That was when Nancy Desch thought the penny ante was her father's Scottish relation until she ran the gambling joint for the Pig- gleteria. D: And we had one debater on the first team. Because she talked so much, they put her on in self-defense. M: All our bright lights shone on the schol- arship and rhetorical teams. Why, we were so bright then that the sun took his first vacation in a hundred years! D: Oh, make it a thousand. And we finished off by giving the Seniors a royal hop and a sprightly feast. One of the druggists told me he made S150 on Blue Jay corn-plasters that next week. M: Dick Kelly surely had a fine class to pre- side over, didn't he? D: Here's to Dick Kelly, the best president a Junior class ever had. He was only a milkman's son, but his face cowed many a girl. Dick Wil- liams and Miss Stockdale ran things pretty well in our Senior year, too. M: Dick Williams-I can't remember him. Was he that prize-fighter that always had a black eye? D: No: he was the sheik of the school. He had hair-curlers-er-ah-I mean curly hair! M: Our all-star Senior football team won the championships and beat North Denver High. And Yale refused our challenge! After that we intro- duced the Juniors to old man Society and old lady Etiquette. D: Basketball was what you might say BALLY good that year. M: And the Senior play! My dear, if so many people weren't around, I'd say you were simply heavenly. For weeks we went about with our heads full of orphan asylums, cranky-red-haired uncles and divine lovers and loveresses. D: Wasn't our debating team noble that year? They went to Denver on the school's money and visited the City Park. After they left, the magpies and parrots simply gave up and died. M: Yeh: and we started the precedent of Sneak Day. D: Only like the weather, it was all wet. Oh, dear, those pictures! Dick Kelly was the smart one, though. He had more pictures tha11 anyone else: but, as he says, it's hard to be in a dark room for three hours and get nothing but nega- tives. M: Don't you remember the Senior picnic, when we all fell in the river, and for eats we had snake-tail soup, minced ants and finished off with peeled noses? D: Ho-hum! Baccalaureate and Graduation, when we all dressed up in our best clothes. We called them dresses, but they must have been pajamas, because we slept through the speeches of Kephart, Adams, Adams and Desch. M: Yes, and I never want to see a dandelion again, after those boys gathered so many of our class flowers. D: Must you go? M: Absolutely. Don't press me to stay. I've enjoyed it so much. D: Do come again and we'll have a gorgeous talk about old times. M: Cwalking offb Good-bye, my dear. D: Good-bye.
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Page 25 text:
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Junior si, ,... , ...... ...... E ...........,. L time ea Phil Albritton James Arms Jack Baker Harry Benge Hugh Blackstone Nancy Blodgett Nadene Borschell Evelyn Bowden Margaret Bradfield May Broadhead Persis Brown Wayne Brown Cathryn Bryant Beatrice Burckhalter Alyce Cannell Lena Cardman Christine Carpenter Vedamay Champion Lorraine Chiesman Marian Coles Mamie Cooper Annabel Cotton Marguerite Crump Robert Denslow Leona Derington Thomas De Rose Richard Dittman Lloyd Divine Lela Dixon Reva Downey Irene Dunston Nevada Ennor Dee Felmlee Laurence Ferguson Eva Forsman Clarice Freeman Barbara Garms Russell Goddard Willard Goff Herma Guillet Lee Hall Clarence Hannigan Christine Hartzler Samuel Hay Lewis Headrick George Hill William Hirons Lois Lee Hoodenpyle Narcissa House Alice Howell Nellie Hoyt Floyd Hughes Richard Hughes Carl Horn Charlotte Hyre ORAL SHEPARDSON President. Sumner Wickersham ..... Vice President Annabel Cotton.- ..,L Secretary-Treasurer A. M. Cravenl .....L.... -- ..Y.w. AdV1S6I' Mildred Ingelhart Mildred Jaros Oscar Jaynes Donald Kerrigan Ruth Kerstetter Winona La Munyon Olive Lane Malcolm Larson Glen Lee John Lemcke Gladys Lockard Grace Lockard Gwendolyn Lockard James Long Alice McCarty Ewing McClain Dorothy McGinley Dorothy Maclnnes Gerald McKeel Lawrence McMahan Louise McMahan Angelina Marasco Grace Mattison Lucile May Fay Meders Erwin Meders Dorothy Miller Loraine Miller Dale Minshall Glenn Moore Robert Morgan Helen Mulford Edith Noe Doris Norviel Jack O'Connor Helen Odem Donald Olson Helen Parks Frank Patterson Henry Patterson Sara Payne Alice Peck Wallace Peck Raymond Perry Lawrence Phenix Winifred Phillips Edward Pitts Evelyn Pulliam Rae Marie Puryear Frank Randall Rachel Rega Carl Rettig Sidney Rogers Cecil Rooks Virginia Rucker William Rump Mary Ryan Raymond Schneider Marguerite Schriefer Thelma Segelke Pauline Shellenberger Oral Shepardson Beulah Sherman Herschel Shriver Meredith Sims Helen Smith Carroll Southwell Helen Stewart Elma Stough Norel Stout Willis Strain William Sullivan Dallas Sutton Theo Sweetman Hazel Thacker Harold Thompson Velda Thompson Bradley Thorne La Vern Thorpe Gladys Tirey Helen Townley La Vernie Treacy Thomas Tysor Joseph Walsh William Walsh William Weaver Herbert Westcott Crystalene White Sumner Wickersham Mignon Womack Orlin Wood Edwin Woolverton
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