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Page 31 text:
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Page 33 text:
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Professor Hoot A. Ndmakelotanoise Reports The Tragedy of 1950 It all started years and years ago when the site of Greybull was just a lot of sage- brush and Indians. The most important specimen left in later years in this river bot- tom was an old disreputable grey bull. So guess, my absorbed readers, where Grey- bull got its label! In the year '37 or thereabouts six naughty little nasties, Pat, Mick, Dale S., Har- old, Alma, and Roberta, dealt Mrs. Foe a miserable year and a half in kindergarten as she attempted to pound a few fundamentals into their dense little heads. Without any results she turned them over to Mr. Andes, principal of the grade school, to do with them what he wanted. The first day of school was agony for the first grade teachers who received the '38 beginners. The first day the class was torn apart and putasunder by dividing them into two divisions, one half under Mrs. Palmer, and the other half gave Miss Jacobson a rip-roaring time. Before lonf the present class of '50 had been trained to be quiet conservative children. fBe1ieve it or notl. Therefore the lower grades whizzed by very uneventfully except for a few plays, programs and other great dramatic contri- butions. As the class advanced, naturally they took in many new members to add to their already large enrollment. As the seventh grade flashed by, Freda G., Nada Olsen, Larry B., and Vance C. contributed to the advancing class. People of Greybull were greatly amazed at the brilliant operetta, Rumpelstiltskin, put on by the Junior High in '46, Yes, that's right, the class of '50 graduated from the eighth grade with flying Colors. Members of the class that were given honor awards were Patty Nau,Alma M., Dawn V. W., Harold M.. Larry B. and Delmar Davis. Feeling grownup and sophisticated, the little green freshmen approached high school but much to their surprise the high and mighty seniors took the air right out of their sails and really initiated them properly. That first week of High School will be one to remember. Fun, laughs, and excitementprevailed over the school that first Friday, but much to the class's enjoyment and pleasure the senior class honored them with a dance. Later in the year the class, under the direction of their sponsor Mr. Rice, had a very stupendous hayride. Things seemed to have been going naturally because allwere hap- py to begin three months vacation at the end of the first year.
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