Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK)
- Class of 1954
Page 1 of 148
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 148 of the 1954 volume:
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1954 V GUYMOH, OKLAHOMA ses.ok SCHOOL EL TKiRE Clydella Spenner—Editor DEDICATION__________________ 3 SENIOR HIGH_________________ 4 ADMINISTRATION______________ 6 FACULTY ____________________ 9 CLASSES____________________ 17 SENIORS____________________ 19 JUNIORS ___________________ 35 SOPHOMORES__________________45 FRESHMEN ___________________57 EIGHTH GRADE________________67 SEVENTH GRADE_______________75 ACTIVITIES__________________85 SPORTS ____________________103 ADS________________________121 INDEX _____________________139 kejicatm To a lovely old lady we dedicate this, our 1954 El Tigre. We think she was never more beautiful than when she posed for this portrait in all her old-fashioned finery. She has raised her family and now sits back to relax and re-live her memories, with only a few of her sons and daughters about to give her a feel ing of happy usefulness, of still being needed and wanted. For the many hundreds who have loved her and left her for homes of their own, she will always be the only GHS. Long may she live, and long will we hold her in our hearts. —5— w Our School Home Since October. Although the interior work on the Ponhondle's largest auditorium wos not completed until January, 1954, GHS classes moved into Senior High's sixteen room class-wing in October, 1953 Built by the Hoke Construction Company of Stillwater, Senior High wos designed by Architects Caudill, Rowlett, Scott and Associates. Here GHS students can relax in the social court, adjoining the classrooms. In the classes themselves, the latest improvements in lighting, ventila- tion, and arrangement give maximum comfort to the individual. Soft pastel colors in the decor throughout the building make living in GHS a gracious experience. 7kiA J £enicr Dedicated To Our Youth, The Hope Of Our Country. Guymon's wise and far-sighted Board of Education, along with our progressive leader. Superintendent George W. Spenner, spent long hours in the planning of this magnificent School for Today and Tomorrow. Their achievements were acknowledged by the Panhandle area at the Dedication Service on Sunday, Jan. 17. Around the conference table here are Superintendent Spenner and Board members—Wallace Jackson, vice-president; Paul Willioms and John Grav. members; Howard Singleton, clerk; George Ellison, treasurer; and Homer Long, president. A Real Worker Rests. For a quiet moment Superintendent George W. Spenner relaxes in the pleasant west-end lounge area of Senior High. He proudly surveys the dream building which became a reality because he, the school board, and progressive Guymon taxpayers saw a need and met it. A jdt wit 4cm! Director of destinies in one of the Nation's most beautiful and modern high schools is Principal C. S. Hacker. A big man in more ways than one, Mr. Hack- er's good humor is infectious, his manner down-to-earth, and his success as an administrator assured. fHaif ue pteJent cut principal? Central Junior High's more than 287 boys and girls rely implicitly on Principal E. M. Alden's good judgment, integrity, and understanding. Faculty and stu- dent body alike respect him for his firm stand on matters of policy, his sound educational practices, and his attention to spiritual values. iet A ajk AUetK. Out faculty cccpetate... ..... Ploy On The New Stage. A momentous decision must be mode by Mrs. D. K. Adams, dromo cooch ot GHS—what play will get the nod for the first presen- tation on Senior High's mammoth stage? James Roach, debate, rodio, and speech coach, suggests a favorite of his. There's Music In The Air. Mrs. Herman Henderson and Hoover Fisher see to it that instrumental and vocal groups are constantly at work on concert numbers to delight the radio ond live audiences. 1954 has seen some of GHS' greatest musical presentations, thanks to our band and orchestra director, Mrs. Henderson, vocal director. Hoover Fisher, and our commodious Senior High Auditorium. Faculty Coffee A-Brewing. Four o'clock coffee with hot buttered scones! That's a treat for tired teachers, enjoyed several times this year. Here Mrs. Scott Hecht of the voca- tional home economics department, and Mrs. Margaret Holland, art instructor, confer on table decor with Miss Mildred Russell and Miss Ethel Deakin. Miss Russell teaches Eng- lish to seventh graders, while Miss Deakin is treasurer of all school funds and a high school algebra teacher. matt if... They Met In Tigerland. Who said teoching and romance won't mix? All GHS rejoiced when Miss Ardis Nasset, girls' physicol education instructor, became Mrs. Coy Gibson last summer. Mr. Gibson combines ninth grade English with a heavy coaching assignment in junior high. Dish Drying Is Routine. The Byron Lee's ore one of seven man and wife teaching teams in Guymon's schools. And team work is the order of the day if home and school are to combine successfully. Dish dryer Lee is also a junior high social studies teacher. Mrs. Lee admits she would rather teach mathematics in junior high than wash dishes. A New Fangled Paper Grader? R P. Duke, trades and industries co-ordinator, is all ready to sign up for a teacher's little helper, until Robert Meisner explains that his newest vocational agricul- ture gadget is a grain cleaner. Of course, machinery- wise Douglas Dobbs, shop teocher, wasn't fooled for a minute anyway. Machines Don't Mystify Us. Miss Margaret Wright, driver education instructor, who knows what makes a cor tick from one end to the other, has no trouble operating a simple little machine like our new movie projector. GHS' American history teacher, Mrs. R. J. Herbel, is just os proficient a projectionist. Both hove graduate credit in audio-visual education. can pcct Luscious Is The Word For Our Library. Senior High's three Eng- lish teachers, Mrs. Victor Martin, Mrs. Grester Lamar, and Robert Al- lison, ore at a loss for words (if an English teacher evter could be) to ex- press their appreciation for Senior High's wonderful new library. Mrs. M. C. Hamilton, librarian, divides her day between senior and junior high. Business Is Our Business. Enthusiastic about their new commerce department with its fine fluorescent lighting and louvred ventilation are Mrs. John Grammer and Miss Aleida Robinson. They like the way no shadows fall on typing man- uals, nor breezes flutter shorthand pages. Mrs. Grammer, who spends her mornings only at GHS, teaches shorthond and bookkeeping. Miss Rob- inson has capacity classes in both first and sec- ond year typing. —12— Spanish Room Is A Rendezvous. There's a Latin-American feeling of ease about the colorful serope-draped Spanish room which appeals to busy coaches like the Tigers' football mentors. Jack Mayfield and George Washington. Both men round out full days with history or social studies classes. IL Huh! Not Bad! Junior High's Herbert Bahm ond U.P. Lindley hove just completed on inspection of Charles Pruet's science department. They have seen his biology lecture room, his chemistry laboratory, ond his tiny, but perfectly appointed kit- chen. Mr. Bahm has general science classes in Junior High. Mr. Lindley teaches the ninth graders algebra. How About A Game With Mexico City, Coach? Basketball coaches, Vernon Yates and Cyril Glass, might be persuaded to combine a cage and Spanish trip down Mexico way, since Mr. Glass is both Tiger Bee coach and Sponish teacher. Nice Work If You Can Get It. Harold Hunnicut new high school mathematics teacher, decides that helping Helen Fern Glaze run her PX board has its advantages. Mrs. Glaze operates her adding machine, takes a letter, runs Mr. Spenner and his office, and never fails to moke everyone happy as the school's number one receptionist. Transfusions Unlimited! A never ending life stream of students pours through Central Junior High School into Senior High. This spacious buff brick building, fronting Academy Street, was completed in 1948 and houses one of the Panhandle's largest and best equipped gymnasiums. Below is shown the newly remodeled Band Hut on James Street, another vital artery to GHS All Tiger band members put in a long and strenuous apprenticeship period in Mrs. Herman Henderson's Hut. Main arterie of jW£ ate tkeJe. -14- Whot Leorning Opportunities! Academy Grade School boys and girls, playing on her wide grounds, can look forward to golden years in a never static school system. Such an edifice as the ultra modern Shop and Agriculture Building pledges ad- vantages never dreamed of in days gone by, opportunities to learn many practical and interesting skills, apart from the usual three R's. (juijtncn prcwAeA much tc children Our Farmer's Daughter. Marie Welch, 1954 El Tigre Queen, is a product of one of the fine farms in Guymon's trode community. Marie was accorded the El Tiore honor by on all-GHS vote. This is the second time she has been singled out for distinction by her fellow students. She was junior high's football queen os a ninth grader. Kindness ond serenity are native to Marie. She is as good as she is beautiful. An excellent student, this year she dis- covered an unknown talent; she is odept with power tools, and, os o member of the girls' woodworking class, she has turned out some exquisitely finished furniture. This she will use in her new home, for this farmer's daughter, who is now engaged, plans soon after her graduation from GHS to become a farmer's wife. Church work is near and dear to Marie, and we see her on the right, ready to attend one of Guymon schools' Holy Week services. We Just Can't Wait! Drouth and dust tormented seniors began pocking for their May 17-20 Lake Murroy trip just oftei our first black duster in February. Here on the windy, sun-crocked margin of Guymon's miniature Lake Sunset, senior officers display some of their duffle already assembled. Vice-president fed Powell represents the masculine fishing fac- tion, always considerable in number. Elizabeth Gurwell, class secretary, and Ann Beaman, treasurer, are ready for radio- ing, tennis, or roller skating. If the fish aren't biting, 1954 prexy, Jimmy Reese, will head for Ardmore's famous golf course. But wherever we go, whatever we do, we'll have the time of our life! denier ' y reate At if ear. I9S4... —19— Bobbie Achord Coahoma, Texas 2; Publications 2; Pep Club 2, 4; Girls P. E. 1, 2, 3, 4; FHA 2; P. E. Council 4. Lou Adams Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3; Bosketball 1, 3; Track 1, 2; Football 1; Art 4; Teen Town. Wilbur Albrecht T l 4 Marilyn Allen Mixed Chorus 1, 3; Glee Club 1, 3; Junior Play 3; Publications 4; Class Editor 4; Teen Town 1, 2, 3, 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Li- brary 4; Girls P. E. 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 3, 4; Cheerlead- er 2, 3. We Were Proud. When Jimmy Reese, our 1954 senior president, in a simple, sincere speech of acceptance, received for all of us the new Senior High School Build- ing, every heart at the Dedication Service, Sunday, Jon. 17, was filled with a mingled pride and humility. Among the many dignitaries seated on the stage is, at Jimmy's right, the principal speaker, Dr. M. L. Wardell of the University of Oklohoma faculty. Dr. Wardell, one of our first GHS administrators, sits next to our present super- intendent, George W. Spenner. u?e Micate Mary Ann Beaman Glee Club 1, 3; Junior Play 3; Publications Business Manager 4; Class Secretory- Treasurer 3; Class Treasurer 4; Spanish Club 3, Sec- retary 4; Girls' P. E. 1, 2, 3, 4; Teen Town 1, 2, 3, Secretary 4; National Honor Society 4; Senior Who's Who Girl 4. Gordon Bennett Mixed Chorus 1, 2 ,4; Glee Club 1, 2, 4; Mixed Quartet 4; T l 3; Usher 4; Meet Ariz- ona ; Moth Club 4. Tigers Take Off For Texas. Envious GHS-ers watch the football boys off for a Wolf hunt down Dalhart woy. Last to load are some upperclassmen who hoped to bring home the big Lobo pelt—Ted Powell, Ward Lile, Jim Reese, and Jim Moyer. Ronald Bradshaw G Club 2, 3, President 4; Chess Club 4; Tennis 4; Spanish Club 3, Pres- ident 4; Meet Arizona 2; National Honor Society 2 ,3, Vice-President 4; Oklahoma Honor Society 2, 3, 4; Teen Town 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 2; Foot- ball 1, 2, 3, Captain 4; Junior Play 3; Mixed Chorus 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 3. Joanne Bentley Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 3; Teen Town 4; Girls P. E. 1,2, 3. Eugene Boren Glee Club 1; Speech Play 4; Football 2; Bas- ketball 1; Track 1, 2; Speech 4; Pep Club 4. (treAA up... Bill Bridges Junior Play 3; Football 1, 2, 3; Track 2, 3, 4; Pep Club 4; G Club 2, 3, Vice-President 4; Baseball 2; Basketball Monager 1; Senior Stand Man- ager 4. Dorvna Lee Bryan Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Pep Club 2, 3, 4; Girls E. E. 1, 2, 3; Meet Arizona 2. Togged Out For Tea! PEO Senior Teas grow lovelier each fall! Here Mrs. George Aycock, hostess, chats with Barbara French. Seated at the exquisitely appointed table, Mrs. E. L. Buford pours fragrant cups of the spiced brew for Marie Welch, Bethine Carter, Jane Neff, June Gum, Sammy Davis, and Miss Aleida Robinson, our co-sponsor. clean up Hollis Cluck Band 1; Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 4; Tratk 1; Glee Club 4. Billy Coldiron Mixed Chorus 1; Glee Club 1, 4; Football 1, 2, 3; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Pep Club 4; G Club 3, 4. Betty Dorr Mixed Chorus 3, 4; Glee Club 1 ,2, 3, 4; Quartet 3; Junior Play 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Speech 4. Drat That Duster! Oh, that fateful February Friday when Colorado blew into our nice clean Senior High by the bushelful! Mrs. Martin, a veteran of th.e Dirty Thirties, uses the slow but sure cure, abetted by the Publica- tions goon squad—Kay Le Master, Clydella Spenner, Marilyn Allen, Mari- lyn Martin, and Barbara French. You Silly Women! Scorning the tedious Martin method, Mr. Pruet and his chemists use the Navy technique: Fred Fajen swabs the deck, while Bill Bridges, Lou Adams, and Eddie Davy re-arrange the dust on the walls. —23— Sammy Davis Mixed Chorus 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2; Teen Town 3, 4; Oklahoma Honor Society 2, 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 3, 4. Bill Deane FFA 1, 2, 3, 4; Art 4. Aeli AceteA ctf Clwr maAcctA Wanda Drake Mixed Chorus 2, 3; Pep Club 1; Speech 3, 4; Girls P. E. 1, 2; ''Meet Arizona 2. Luther Dunkerson Basketball 1, 2, 3; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; T l 4; G Club 2, 3, 4. Wilbur Evanson Woodward 1, 2, 3; Mixed Chorus 4; Basket- ball 1, 2, 3; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Audio Visual 1, 2, 3; Base- ball 1, 2, 3; Junior Play 3; G Club 4. ________ Fred Fajen Band 1, 2, 3, President 4; Orchestra 2; Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Jun- ior Play 3; Publications 2, 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Teen Town 2, 3; National Honor Society 2, 3, President 4; Ok- lahoma Honor Society ), 2, 3, 4; G Club 3, 4; Chess Club 4; Spanish Club 3, 4; Brass Sextet 3, 4; Quartet 2, 4, Golf 1, 2, 4; Class-Treasurer 2. __________________________ to Auell out Aeniot trip tfuhct... Roy Francis Band 1; Mixed Chorus Reporter 4; Junior Ploy 3; Basketball 1; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3; FFA 1, 2, 3, Secretory 4; Teen Town 2, 3, 4; Crops Judging Team 1, 2, 3, 4; G Club 2, 3, 4; Usher 4; Audio Visual 2, 3, 4. Elizabeth Gurwell band 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 4; Glee Club 1, 2; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; P. E. 1, 2; FHA Vice-President 4; Closs Secretary 4. June Gum Band 1; Mixed Cho- rus 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Speech 4; P. E. 1, 2; T l 4. Barbara French Band 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Junior Play 3; Pep Club 1, 2, 3( 4; P. E. 1, 2, 3; Spanish Club 3 4. Everybody Loves Elmer! Tigerland's faithful mas- cot, Elmer, saw himself doggy-ditto-ed all over town when seniors sold these little orange and black pooches as a fund building project. Aren't they cute! gurgle the unpockers—Ann Beamon, Mrs. Martin, Clydella Spenner, Marilyn Allen, Glenda La Fevers, Sherli Johnston, and Virginia Collinsworth. Chorles Hobson Band 1, 2; Mixed Choi us 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2; Football 1; T l 3, Presi- dent 4. Lorry 3, 4. Might Band 1, 2; T l Richard Holder Football 1, 2, 3, 4; G Club 4; T l 3. Kenneth Holmes Glee Club 1; Track 2, 4; FFA 1, 2, 3, Sen- tinel 4; Livestock Judging Team 1,2, 3,4. take time cut Hurry! Here's Mr. Hacker! Third hour English IV sen- iors love to live dangerously. After all, the coke ma- chine is just too close to the classroom door. But this little nickel-nabber has netted us many a dollar for the Trip Fund! Sherli Johnston Mixed Chorus 3, 4; Glee Club 3, 4; Quartet 4; Speech Play 4; Publications 4, 9th Grade Editor; Teen Town 3, 4; Speech 4; P. E. 3; Run- ner-up Choir Sweetheart. tc make Ahh cut Who Me... Ann Fit In Anywhere! What greater compliment can a girl have? And her senior classmates who gave her a rousing vote os their Who's Who Girl of 1954 had many other fine things to say about Mary Ann Beaman. In fact, we wish that some of the oldsters who fuss about the faults of the present generation could read those ballots for Ann. They would find that the Class of '54 placed high values on the age old qualities of goodness, truth, and beauty. We chose Ann for a number of the usual reasons— her membership in Notional Honor Society, her many class and activity secretary and treasurerships, and her important post as business manager to El Tigre and Tiger Tales. But these were not the actual reasons why Ann was named as Who's Who Girl. Those real reasons go deeper. They have to do with the inner Ann. 1954 girls liked her quiet manner, her friendliness to faculty, friends, everybody—always. They liked her good grooming and lack of bad health habits. Everyone spoke of her regular church attendance and her competence as Worthy Adviser of Guymon's Rainbow Girls. But it was the boys who had the nicest things to say about Ann. They likea her clean-cut good looks and, most of all, her intelligent attitude toward good moral behavior. Again the '54 seniors say, We like Ann! Glenda Lo Fevers Pauls Volley 1; Glee Club 1; Band 2; Or- chestra 2; Mixed Chorus 2; Speech Play 4; Publications 4, Index Editor; Teen Town 1, 2, 3, 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Speech 4; Spanish Club 3; Director of Speech Plays 4. Peggy Landess Bond 1, 2; Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3; Glee Club I, 2, 3; Teen Town 3, 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; P .E. I, 2, 3; Spanish Club 3. Loretta LeGrange Mixed Chorus 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2; Speech Play 3, 4; Teen Town 1, 2, 3, 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Speech 3, 4; P. E. 1. 2 3 4; Office Receptionist 4. Kay LeMaster Mixed Chorus I, 3; Glee Club 1, 3; Jr. Play 3; Publications 4, Sophomore Class Editor; Teen Town 1, 2, 3, 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; P. E. 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 3, 4. Sharon Lewis Mixed Chorus 1, 2; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Speech 4. I Some Sweatshop! We'll cast our vote to have the Queen Carnival outdoors next year. That old Gym was just too, too cozy! But Ronnie Bradshaw, Spon- sor Pruet, and Virginia Collinsworth give their all for votes for the Queen, and incidentally shekels for the Senior Trip. •Sell vcteJ for a queen... —28— Joe Williams Day, Monday, Mor. 8. If we didn't know Joe Williams so well, we'd hove been worried about his hat size changing that March Monday. To begin it all, his family gave him a handsome graduation wrist watch. Then the faculty of GHS announced that he had been elected to National Honor Society. To top it off, his own class, the 1954 seniors, overwhelmingly voted him their Who's Who Boy. On our ballots we mentioned his loyolty to GHS, his two year managership of the football team, his presidency of his sophomore class, his prowess this year as a Tiger basketball guard. We listed his good grades, his service to vocal music groups, his dramatic talents, and his lead- ership in student affairs. But most of all we showed our admiration for Joe's straight, unprejudiced thinking, his toleration, or, os some of us said, his broadmindedness. We liked his wit, his wise-cracks, and his good humor. We liked his going regularly to church, and we were very proud that he is Guymon's DeMolay Master Councillor and a Chev- alier of the same Order. And we were glad Joe was born in 1936, so, along with the bunch, he will graduate with the Class of '54. A GOOD JOE! a 4 (fine MeA tc Jce... —29— Grace Longbrake Mixed Cho- rus 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Speech Play 2, 3, 4; Jr. Play 3; Teen Town 1, 2, 3, Judge 4; Pep Club 2, Cheerleader 1, 2, 4; Speech 1, 3, 4; P. E. 1 2, 3. Tabby McMurry Band 1, 2; Jr. Ploy 3; Speech Play 3, 4; Teen Town 2, 3, 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, Cheerleader 4; Speech 3, 4. Marilyn Martin £and 1, 2, 3; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1; Mixed Chorus 1; Publications 4, 7th Grade Editor; Spanish Club 3, 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; P. E. 1, 2. Austin Morgan Mixed Chorus 2; Jr. Play 3; Publications 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Foot- ball 1, 2, 3; Teen Town 2; Speech 2, 4; Math Club 4; Chess Club 4; G Club 2, 3, 4; Ushering 4; Class President 3. Coach Morgan's Teoring His Hair! What he wouldn't give for Babe Didrickson Zaharios, or a poaded cell. These senior girls are cute, but what they don't know about basketball! Anywdy Austin should remember that the girls' interclass games are nothing to get too steamed up about, are they, Loretta Le Grange, Bobbie Achord, Clydella Spenner, Ann Bea- man, Marilyn Allen, and Kay Le Master. have a cute cafe Sextette... Jane Neff Mixed Chorus 2, 3; Teen Town 3; Pep Club 1; P. E. 1, 2; Meet Arizona 2. Bernice Phillips Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Teen Town 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Speech 1, 3; P. E. 1, 2; Spanish Club 3. Bill Phillips Track 2; FFA 1, 2, Bill Piero M ed Chorus I; 3; T l 4. Track; T l 4. No! No! No-No-No! No! Senior co-sponsor. Miss Aleida Robinson, simply won't be tempted by those caloric little teasers with the creamy cara- mel coating and the rich nougat centers, os she helps concession sponsor stoke Kandy Kate. A woman has to watch her figure, and her figures, when she is the finance sponsor. Ted Powell Glee Club 1; Jr. Ploy 3; Speech Play 4; Football 1, 3, 4; Track 2, 3; FFA 1, 2, 3, President 4, Panhandle Dist. President 4, Livestock Team 1, 2; G Club 3, 4; Audio Visual Club 2, 3, 4; Vice-President Sr. Class 4; Pep Club 4; Speech 4. Lela Mae Randolph Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Student Director, Drum Ensemble; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4, Stu- dent Director; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Teen Town 1, 2, 3, 4; National Honor Society 3, 4; Oklahoma Honor Society 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Meet Arizona 2; Girls State 3; Ac- companist of Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4. make cur fycuccrJ Mace -31— r; R. L. Rawlins Band 1, 2; Mixed Chorus 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2; Golf 1, 2; ''Meet Ariz- ona 2; T l 3, 4. Jimmy Reese Mixed Chorus I, 2, 4; Glee Club 1, 3; Quartet 4; Junior Ploy 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Football 2, 3, 4; Track 2; National Honor Society 3, 4; Speech 4; Class President 4; Class Vice-President 2, 3; G Club 2, 3, 4; Chess Club 4; Audio Visual 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 4. ■■■Larry Shaw Mixed Chorus 1; Glee Club 1; Junior Play 3; Basketball 1, 2; Football I, 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3; Teen Town 1, 2, 3; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; G Club I, 2, 3; Usher 4; Audio Vtsual 4; Football co- captain 4. Clydclla Spenner Band 1, 2, 3, Vice-President 4; Orches- tra I, 2, 3; Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 3; Junior Play 3; Publications 4, Editor of El Tigre; Teen Town 1, 2, 3, 4; National Honor Society 3, Secretary 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Speech 4; Library 3; Spanish Club 3, Treasurer 4; P. E. 1, 2, 3, 4. 4ebte tfcr 4 'iMA Dorothy Reust Mixed Chorus 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2; Pep Club 1, 2, 2, 4; P. E. 1, 2; Meet Arizona 2; Spanish Club 3, 4; Speech 4. —32— Bill Thorne Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 4; Bosket boll 1, 2, 3; Track 1; Teen Town 1 2; Golf 1, 2, 3, 4; G Club 2, 3, 4; Football Man- ager 2; Meet Arizona 2. Crystal Tucker Band 1, 2; Orchestra 1, 2; Junior Play 3; Speech Play 4; Teen Town 2, 3, 4; Speech 3, 4; Senior Football Queen Candidate 4; Girls' State Delegate 3; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4. There's A Lull In Our Life. Two minutes to go until the final whistle on that nippy but nice night when we wal- loped the Dodge City Crusaders. Concession Sponsor Pruet rallies his senior stand clean-up detail—Leslie Winters, Gordon Bennett, and Bill Deane. Eager beavers Billy Coldiron and Grace Longbrake have jumped the gun and are already closing up the candy boxes and cleaning the pop corn machine. U l,Foo Marie Welch Mixed Chorus 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2; Teen Town 3; Class Secretary 1, 2; Office Receptionist 4; Pep Club 1, 2, 3, 4; P. E. 1; El Tigre Queen 4. Joe Williams Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3, President 4; Glee Club 4; Junior Play 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 3; Teen Town 3, 4; Pep Club I, 2, 3, 4; G Club 2, 3, 4; Class President 2; Spanish Club 3, Vice-President 4; Football Monager 1, 2; Meet Arizona 2; National Honor Society 4; Senior Who's Who Boy 4. I 060 Charles Vestol New Mexico Military Institute 2, 3; FFA 1; Teen Town 1, 4; Boxing 2, 3; Chess Club President 4; Usher 4. itt that old cold Jetties Maud-.. —3S- Leslie Winters Mixed Chorus 1; Track 2; Teen Town 1, 2, 4; T l 3, 4. tfcr the trip to Xake Hturraif! Roe Nell Yates Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Jr. Play 3; Teen Town I, 2, 3, 4; National Honor Society 1, 2, 3, 4; Oklahoma Honor Society 1, 2, 3, 4; Library 1, 3; P. E. 1, 2, 3; Secretary of Class 1; Spanish Club 3. Kenneth Yotes Mixed Chorus 2, 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Jr. Play 3; Football 3; Track 1, 2, 3; Teen Town 1, 2, 4, Marsholl 3; G Club Secretary 3, 4; Base- ball 2. Watch The Juggling Act! Leslie Winter and Bobbie Achord forget their cold noses and ears in the fascina- tion of watching Principal Hacker manipulate his coffee and his Corona-Corona. Even the grade schooler is in- trigued by the perils of the procedure. Woe betide the surrounding spectators if the Tigers get a touchdown, because our principal will leap to his feet! Leon Williomson Mixed Cho- rus 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1; Football 1; Track 1, 2, 3; Library 1, 2, 3, 4; Chess Club 4; Math Club 4; Meet Arizona 2; Tennis 4; Baseball 1, 2. Banquet Bound! Boutonnieres and corsages carefully stacked in the back seat, junior class officers leave Senior High early to check table decorations and then act as hosts to the 1954 seniors, faculty, and board members at the Junior-Senior Banquet. Just an hour earlier, Geraldine Bartels, closs secretary, and Pat White, president, were bobby- pinned and blue- jeaned, helping Johnny Crowder, vice-president, and Howard Rigg, treasurer, put the final touches on the decorations for GHS' biggest night, the PROM JuhicrJ juAt can t be topped . —35— or blarneyed •. First Row: (reading down) Viola Albrecht, Max Bailey, Jim Bald- win, Arnold Bartels, Geraldine Bartels. Not Dry In Oklahoma! Si Perkins finds that the actor's life is a dry one os he practices for the Junior Play, Friday, March 12. Si was Principal Lundquist in No More Homework. —56— HarPer Ctto More 3h mework Coach Hit Harpy? No, it was the other way around, as you know if you saw Mike Brown, Johnny Crowder, Pat Higgins, and Sonny Colgin in the Junior Ploy. Other Characters'' in the cast were Trulia Spragins, Betty Wallin, Si Perkins, Pat White, Darline Sullens, Jan Demuth, Phyllis Wood, Max Bailey, Jeannette Clifton, Carrie Lou Langston, Ward Lile, Jerry Houser, Lorna Gross- man, and Larry Keenan. First Row: (reading down) Lanny Bauer, Jackie Beer, Bob Bromlow, Mike Brown, Nadine Calvert. yitie £enhr Hiqk A firAt plaif • • • -37— like ferhJ and femmeJ... frig Is This Trio. Three better groomed, more octive Tigerlonders you won't find than Carrie Lou Lang- ston, Pat Higgins, and Becky Moyer. How Green Is Our Classroom! Juniors find the English III room on oasis of greenery in GHS, made cool and inviting by lush ferns and myriads of African violets. Plant expert Mrs. Lamar gives some of her green thumb secrets to Arnold Bartels, Marjorie Lockett, and Larry Foutz. -58- First Row: Johnny Claycomb, Jean- nette Clifton, Harold Colgin Second Row: Johnny Crowder, Juanita Darr, Jan Demuth. Third Row: Charles De Spain, Raylene Duke, Duane Eden- borouah. First Row: Beverly Elliott, Ray Fran- cis, Lorno Grossman. Second Row: Cloanno Gum, Pot Higgins, Allan Hinds. Third Row: Wanda Holmes, Jerry Houser, Winona Johnson. Don's In Dutch Again! Aided and abetted by a loyal little band of boosters, Bouncing Bromlow may be able to snag an excused slip and fix that F. Irma Lowry, Patsy Neiman, and Wanda Holmes look hopeful, but Bill Cornell seems almost as unconvinced as Mr. Hacker. adore fitartha.., First Raw Lorry Keenon, Loreotto King, Corri« Lou Longston We Juniors Aren't Fickle. Lost year Martha Smith was our fovorite, and she still is. Born in Joplin, Missouri, in 1937, she come to Guymon when she was a fourth grader. Nothing dashes her spirits, not even a Dirty Thirties black duster like the one she's helping to clear out here. Martho is as light and breezy as the feather duster she is wielding, but she is not all fluff. Few Tigerlanders con boast a more impressive activity record -three years in band, four years a Pepper leader, faith- ful to her church, choir and Rainbow. Martha gladly gives one hour of her busy day to serve as office receptionist. She loves square dancing, ball games, her little broth- ers, her dog, and everybody. And everybody loves Martha! PICK! admire £chhij... Sonny Should Be Spelled Sunny. When Sonny Col- gin come bock to school this yeor after winning a whole semester's bout with a troublesome illness, we all felt like cheering. Not only the juniors, but oil GHS missed his grin, his girl troubles, and his good grades. One good thing come out of his illness; Governor Johnston Murroy named him Honorary Commodore of the Oklahoma Navy! Now he's back and into everything again—junior ploy, chess club, math club, publications, band ond choir. He used to play basketball and football before his size caught up with him. He's not big in stature, but big in all the things that count—courage, faith, and fellow- ship. Outside of school, he's Junior Councilor of DeMolay and vice-president of his church youth fellowship. He likes serious books like The Robe, but relaxes over chess problems and sketching. No wonder he's the jun- iors' Who's Who Boy. We wish he were triplets; then each class could have him! build brains u itk becks... Moybe Books, Maybe Boys. If we didn't know whot good students Winona Johnson and Alice Mans ore, we might wonder just whot they are searching for at the reference shelves. Actually, the girls are just surprised to find Tiger ring champs Jack Beer and Charles McMullen booking instead of boxing. First Row: Marjorie Loewen. Second Row: Blanche Love. Third Row: Irma Lowry. Fourth Row: Anita Lundgrin, Donna McDonald. Fifth Row: Charles McMullen, Alice Mans, Elinor Meigs, Johnny Moreland, Becky Moyer, Si Perkins. or checkmate a claAAmate... First Row: Worren Peterson, Joe Powers, Ralph Ralstin, Howard Rigg, Jessie Roubidoux, Jim Samples. Second Row: Martha Shannon, Duane Shepherd. Third Row: Martha Sloan. Fourth Row: Lavoy Smith. Fifth Row: Trulia Spragins. W keep mctihf up The Big Move! Even Joe Powers, Worren Peterson and Duane Shepherd look timid as they enter the new Senior High with the first load of choirs from Old Foith- ful. But Jeannette Clifton, Lorna Gross- man and Martha Shannon, woman-wise, see only the decorators' fresh, inviting colors—aqua, watermelon, lemon, char- treuse, and coffeecream. First Row: Betty Sue Stewort, Darline Sullens, Karen Thrall, Franklin Town- send, David Trent. Second Row: Betty Wallin, Peggy Watkins, Pat Watts, Pat White . Third Row: C. J. Wilkin- son, Delseenia Wilson, Phyllis Wood. Lucky Tigerionders ore the eighty-eight sophomores who will spend three whole yeors in our beautiful new Senior High Building. We've never hod it so good, say Percy Tomlinson, class president; Gay Boston, secretary-treasurer; and Raymond Buhl, vice-president, all perched on the commerce room stairs. Behind them may be seen the unique ventilating louvres used throughout the building. £ehicr Hijk £epkA ate A olid... —4S— First Row: Jerome Beer, Bill Bellamy, Duane Bennett, Aaron Berg, Wayne Booth, Audine Boren. Second Row: Gay Boston. Third Row: Donold Bromlow. Write To The Point! Lavella Dunkerson, Alberto Harris, and Dewey Deane sharpen up for on English II precis practice in Mr. Allison's spic-and-span classroom. Smart as paint... Ireose Point and Crystal Boll at the All-School iamival! Confetti covered Lucy Masters creates cosmetic catastrophe on the face of Richard idders in the sophs' Beauty Shop . . . Double, ouble, I see trouble ' moans fortune teller, Jim- iy Don Hughes, GHS' most talented female im- ersonator. First Row: Ross Bryan. Second Row: Raymond Buhl. Third Row: Nancy Bunger, Gary Burkleo, Lloyd Burton, J. C. Byers, Pot Campbell, Jerry Calvert. £cpk put the punch First Row: Carolyn Coleman, Billy Cooper. Second Row: Duane Cooper, Eugene Cooper, Betty Coulter Third Row: Gail Crowder, Joy Dee Curtis, Dewey Deane, Robert Den- ny. Socko! Some Hop! Soy Sophies. GHS Peppers' Homecoming Sock Hop, after the Tigers' grid tus- sle with Alva's Goldbugs, October 23, was one of a series of fun-rousing fund raisers in the Cen- tral Gym. Among the revelers here are Audine Boren, Billy Lewis, Jim Samples, Eugene Boren, and Tommy Medley. in parties and Peppers... First Row: Louise DeSpain, Lavella Dunk- erson. Second Row: Jim Dunlap, Ruby Dye, Delmer Elliott. Third Row: Wayne Evanson, Norma Foutch, Joy Forbes. Kay French. Come On, Sophs, Shout It? Well-trained in junior high school, pep leaders Joy Dee Curtis and Gail Crowder can lead a class yell practice in the circulating area or join their fellow Peppers in an ear-splitter for the Tigers. —49— It's No Fun, Snow Fun! Tim Neos, on the ground, is reody to soy Uncle! Even dry Oklahoma snow like that one the week after semester exoms feels pretty wet when you're the man under. Hove a heart, Bobbie Sue Stewart, Judy Noonan, Audine Boren, Tommy Fulton, Billy Lewis and J. D Grider! ,4 1|§ J|P First Row: Tommy Fulton. Second Row: Nancy Grice, J. D. Grider. Third Row: Robbie Hale, Alberta Harris, Barbara Heard, Barney Horrocks. 7hetf Jhto churn... Water, Water Everywhere! Jerry McVey, Fike Morgan, Dean Moore, and Wayne Booth could get a drink in any clossroom in Senior High, but it's more comical to cut a few capers woy down at the west end of the circulating area where teachers seldom tread. —51— and uater caper... like Qeva... She's a Collector. Pretty Cleva Melton, who come to GHS this year from Jay, Oklahoma, is the sophies' Who's Who Girl. We know they miss her at Jay, because she was their T l Sweetheart last year. All of her sophomore rooters, and they were many, said, She's so friendly, on their popularity bal- lots. They liked her good grades and her getting right into GHS activities like chorus and outside organizations like Rain- bow. Cleva admits to collecting scatter pins, but modestly does not mention another collection of hers—a dozen or so sophie and upper class male hearts. TOO First Row: Jerry McVey, Lucy Masters. First Row: Tommy Medley, Clevo Melton. W Percy... He Really Rates. Leadership was the quality every sophomore most admired in Percy Tomlinson, according to popularity votes. As president of his closs, he has won the respect of all GHS. Quiet, studious, and always agreeable, he is an honor student. Percy's church work is one of his major interests. He finds time for football, but he is most active in FFA as a reporter and lead- er. He has represented the local chapter and Oklahoma as a representative at the Waterloo, Iowa, FFA Meet and has placed in the State Grain Show. PERCY'S OUR PREXY —53— Looks At Books. Mrs. Hamilton's beautifully plonned and executed library bulletin boards are always conversation pieces. Some sophomore bookworms—Pat Campbell, Barbara Heard, Richord Sidders, and Gary Burkleo—help start the 1954 book Veor rolling. First Row: Dean Moore, Fike Morgan. Second Row: Mary Jo Morgan, Alice Mussman, Dorothy Mussman. Third Row: Timmy Neas, Leonord Nicholas, Judy Noonan, Robert Northrup, Leona Peterson, Glenn Phillips. W First Row: Jimmy Pieratt, Margaret Rolstin, John Rawls, Earl Reust, Jimmie Rogers, Vivian Rowell. Second Row: Rosie Rye, Gene Shaffer, R. J. Sherril. Third Row: Richard Sidders, Quinten Smith. We Learn About Life. Even a lobster's habits can be exciting when our new Dioiogy teacher, Mr. Pruet, launches forth on one of his discussions, decide Patsy Tucker, Betty Coulter, and Corky Northrup. -5S- but Mill Mu4if Acme... Crime Doesn't Poy. So say the sophies, and they ought to know. They ore the class who couldn't wait for a good legal initiation. They hod to go and initiate themselves, and on a day when our El Tigre photographer was out of town at that. But this bit of meller- drammer from their January assembly will give you an idea of the kind of tricks they can cook up. Bobbie Sue Stewart, Kay French, Jimmy Don Hughes and Margaret Ralstin need only a snowstorm and an overdue mortgage to complete the tragedy. First Row: Bobbie Sue Stewart, Theron Titus. Second Row: Percy Tomlinson, Patsy Tucker. Third Row: Benny Wal- lis. between jkehahifaHJ, First Row: Yvonne Webb. Second Row: Frank West, Don Wilcox. Third Row: Oneda Williams, De Vonna Wilson, Gary Wingard. You Need Our Pep. Ira Bromlow, Jimmy Claycomb, and Jim year re-fuel the fires of Senior High enthusiasm. Ira serves his Lee is the ninth grade president. Lee are typical of the bright, energetic, eager students who eoch class as vice-president, Jimmy is secretary-treasurer, and Jim tf Hth jrafotA an tin urinA... —57— ate priced and queenly First Row: Max Baker, Jerald Barker. Second Row: Loretta Bauer, Max Behne, Carla Bentley. Third Row: Marcetas Berg, Glenda Birt, Low- erence Ray Birt, Frank Block. Fourth Row: Billy Bledsoe, Douglass Bly, Bobby Boston, Milton Bridges, Betty Bromlow, Ira Bromlow. No Dowager Humps for Us! Posture perfect as Bali beauties are Fannye Johnston, Irene Le Grange, and Pat Samples, putting into practice Mrs. D. K. Adams' speech class poise pointers. First Row: Kathryn Brune, Bobbie Burleson, Ronald Chodick, Mara lee Chenoweth, Jimmy Claycomb, Wallace Cluck. Second Row: Donnie Corbin, Dixie Lea Cox, Ann Davison, John Ross Deakin. Third Row: Max Dearing, Clarence Eaton, Dorene Fisher. Fourth Row: Gary Furnoce, Tommye Lou Glaze. Cub Kings Chose Her Majesty. Football Queen, Carla Bentley, holds a picture of the unbeaten Tiger Cubs who named her and her attendants, Fannye Johnston and Mary Rye, to the royal court, held at the half-time of the Liberal game in Memorial Stadium, Friday, November 1 3. —59- eager beaver in basketball... Faces? It's Legs That Count on the Court! But these lithe-limbed Tigerland lassies have faces, and, if you could see them hustling the ball in Mrs. Coy Gibson's gym class, you'd recognize Delores Nall, Priscilla West, Pat Samples, and Grocie Grider. IM  f • l; • II First Row: Wayne Green, Dean Gribble, Grade Grider. Second Row: Jerry Hackworth, David Hale. Third Row: Donald Hen- derson, John Hess. Fourth Row: Ernest Hight, Eddie Hobson. Fifth Row: Mary Hobson, Dalton Holmes. aw4 alutaifA Oklahoma booster A... Cowboys and Indians! Thot's for Us! Richard Dickerson, Jimmy Claycomb, Jim Lee, and Jack Moreland long for the days before statehood, as Mr. George Washington points out the boundaries of old Indian Territory to his Oklahoma history class. can cock a cupcake far... We re in the Goody Racket. My name's Friday. My pal is Joe Romero. We had a hunch to investigate those odors coming out of Mrs. Scotty Hecht's ninth grade cooking class. We found three luscious brunettes—Mary Hobson, Shirley Talcott, and Glenda Main—baking cupcakes. We just got a lucky break. Dum di-dum-dum! First Row: Don Krug, Jerry Kusch. Second Row: Joan La Fevers, Shirley La Fevers, Douglas Landess. Third Row: Jim- mie Lee, Irene Le Grange, Tommy Le Master, Judy Loe. Fourth Row: Glenda Main, Henry Martin, Reese Martin, Myrum Mayfield, Frank Miller, Jack Moreland. cut WkcA Wkc Seif... Two Sports Mon Is Dick. Our football captain, Richard Dunkerson, a Texan from Snyder, carried the pigskin right into pay territory for Oklahoma and the Guymon Tiger Cubs. In bosketball a formidable guard, he helped the Cub cagers tally those tremendous scores. But we ninth graders are proudest of Dick because he knows us all and manages to find time to make all A's , as well as G's in athletics. NOW, First Row: Lorry Morris, Lois Mouser. Second Row: De- lores Nall, Roberta Neal, Alberta Nelson, Joe Perry, Bobby Pickard, Eddie Phillips. Miss Pep Personified! The door opens. Grade Grider bounces in. Pep rally at 7:00, she announces, and junior high fires up. That Grider girl is a Guymon notive, a Pepper with three years experience, and our Who's Who Girl because she makes us hoppy with her smiles, her energy, and her honor roll grades. IFIRE TONIGHT! First Row: Tommy Pierce, Sharalee Piersall. Second Row: Joe Reese, Jean Ann Rehard. Third Row: Melva Jean Rice, Pat Rodman, Marshall Rogers, Mary Rye, Pat Samples, John Sanders. We're the Cubs from Junior High! We Couldn't Be Much Prouder! And if you connot hear us, we'll yell a little louder! shout Gracie Grider, Lois Mouser and Carla Bentley. Those Cubs ore easy to yell for, because do they win! First Row: Shirley Talcott, Tom Town- send, Betty Trent, Geraldine Tucker, Jerry Wadley, Bonnie Wall. Second Row: Keith Watson, Laura Fern Wells, Margaret Welsh, Priscilla West, Wen- dell Williams. Third Row: Jackie Will- iams, Alvin Wilson, Charles Wilson, Jimmy Wilson, MarVella Wilson. Fourth Row: Bryan Wright, Shirley Yates. x!e0SAij0$t' ,s on Bulletin Board, Max. Max Dearing stands by to transf Mr. Alden s semester examination schedule from the principal's office to tl front bulletin board. Watching the Zero Hour in the making are Jean Ar Rehard, Dean Gribble, Jackie Williams, and Tomie Delle Smith With Flogs and Bible! What a wonderful way junior high classes begin each new day! Visitors are always impressed with the spiritual quality of the short morning devotions at Central. Here Max Keenan, eighth grade secretary-treasurer, corries Old Glory; Glenda Hamilton, vice-president, reverently holds the Good Book; Max Tomlinson, reporter, takes a staunch American stand; and Morris Lile, class president, holds the flag of Oklahoma. Cigktk gtadetA ate AeticuA... —47— First Row: Jackie Achord, James Adams, Barbara Allen, Sandra Allen, Jimmie Behne. Second Row: Mike Belanger, Naomi Berg, E C. Birt, Kenneth Blackburn. Third Row: Ray- mond Boaldin, Gary Boland, Robert Brewer Fourth Row: Kenneth Brinkley, Waldo Bryan an aiuaijA avid ccllectcrA First Row: George Campbell, Barbara Coleman, Bennie Cooper, Clevon Costner, Donita Coulter. Second Row: Joanne Dale, Clay Dean, Sherry Deere, Judy Dickerson. Third Row: Morrison Donaghe, Eugene Dunkerson, Robert Dunkerson. Fourth Row: Delva Dunn, Milton Glenn. and realty rabid readers... k ' x v Snowbound'' Conies Alive. When Mr. Cyril Glass read Whittier's famous winter classic to his eighth grade litera- ture class, E. C. Birt brought to school a collection of wood carvings his father had made when he was actually snow- bound. Barbara Allen, Nelda Smith, Mr. Glass, Marvin Taylor, and Pat Miller find E. C.'s collection of hand- carved figures foscinoting. —69— Far Away Places Intrigue Us. The Vikings came to America from this part of Europe ' points out Morris Lile to Sheron King, Judy Longbotham, and Waldo Bryan in Mr. Bvron Lee's history class. First Row: Wynono Greer, Max Grossman, Glenda Hamilton. Second Row: Sue Hays, Lulie Horrocks, Carolyn Hull, Judy Johnston, Joanne Jones. Third Row: Max Keenan, Wynell Keith Joonne Killough, Sheron King, Carl Kirk. First Row: Goil Koch, Eddie Le Master, Morris Lile, Raymond Linde, Doris Lockett, Judy Longbotham. Second Row: Lo Vonna Love, Phyllis McRae, Leono Masters, Ned Maston, Joe Motzek, Pat Miller. Third Row: Jim Moon, Clark Nash. Information, Please! Eighth graders who know it's in the book and aren't afraid to spend a little energy looking for answers are Bennie Cooper, Max Grossman, La Vonna Love, ond Wynona Greer, all in Mrs. Hamilton's well-run junior high library. —71 — leek it up token Mumped... vote ifot tflax... -72- First Row: Don Peck, Artheta Peterson, Annette Qual- line, Eddie Rehord, Levada Reust. Second Row: Milton Reust, Vancy Rice, Birdie Ritter. Third Row: Dudley Simmons, Joyce Scott, Mary Smith. OUR MAN! Give Us More Like Max! Our eighth grade Who's Who Boy, Max Keenan, is an ideal American boy. He just misses honor roll by a few points but makes up for his deficiency there in an abundance of the qualities that count when it comes to living. Every ballot cast for Max mentioned his politeness, his kindness, and his dependability. A bullet passer and ground gainer, he accounted for many TD's this season. His coaches and his classmates like to see him perform on the Cub cage teams. First Row: Joyce Koy Sproles, Irma Stamper, Dan Stewart, Marvin Taylor, Max Tomlinson. Second Row: Larry Tux- horn, Patsy Tyler, Connie Wall, Dale Wall. Third Row: Janice West, Verle West. It's Who's Who Day! And little groups of eighth graders get together to discuss their favorites before voting. The quiet gym at noon hour makes an ideal spot for Joyce Kay Sproles, Carolyn Hull, Patsy Tyler, Sandra Allen, Mary Lee, and Delva Dunn. talk cvet cut It kcJ Wkc (jitl.... —75— First Row: Joe Wilkinson, Dovid Wiliams, Danny Wil- son, Dolly Wilson, Madeania Wilson, Sonia Winters. Second Row: Kay Watkins, Harold Wood. Two Years Our Favorite. We eighth graders know something good when we see it, so again this yeor we pick Glenda Hamil- ton for our Who's Who Girl. All A students aren't always popular in teen age circles, but who can help liking busy Glenda, who makes something special of everything she does, be it a band solo, a history map, an assembly appearonce, or just the quick, worm smile she gives you os she hurries past. ALL A AND Nl —74— Just Wait! We'll Grow. About 1959, when we graduate from Senior High, you'll be surprised to see us weighing 185 pounds or so and six feet tall, like some of this year's seniors. That is one of the great things about being a seventh grader—our bod- ies will grow, but best of all, our minds will fill with the wonders packed in the next six years. Robert Life, president of the seventh graders, stands by the entrance to Mr. Spenner's office. Vice-president Daryl Sprogins holds the door open, and class secretary-treasurer, Eddie Campbell, is beside him. Seventh grader are AurpriAihg... -75- First Row: Stephen Agnew, David Bailey, Dorothy Behne, Ronald Berg, Gory Birt. Second Row: Lois Black, Darlene Blackburn, Charlene Boston, Cozette Bratton. Third Row: Barbara Broce,’ Diana Brown, Ralph Bryan. man the it muscle meter a ... Bikes Are a Man's Best Friend. You don't even have to pat them on the head. Albert Trent, Lyman Smith, Ronald Berg, and Ron Gass use theirs for pleasure and business, like paper routes. First Row: Mary Burgan, Robert Buster, Eddie Campbell, Charles Cluck, Phillis Cook. Second Row: Jerry Cooksey, Dorothy Cotton, Donna Dale, Elmer David. Third Row: Jerry Davy, Doris Deere, Sandra Dow. make frith the tnuAic... Chorus Hour Seems So Short. Seventh grade girls delight in singing and take a professional's interest in learning the theory of music which Mr. Hoover Fisher, new GHS vocal director, stresses. Tigerland's Band Needs Them. Mrs. Keith Henderson, bond director, knows that these seventh graders who practice faithfully will help to win concert trophies in GHS soon. This trio is composed of Dorothy Behne, Donna Dale, and Charles McBratney. puffi and pucker tfcr hand • First Row: Charles Dunn. Second Row: Yvonne Eaton. Third Row: Patricia Enns, Jacqueline Fields, Roberta Frantz, Ron Gass, Raymond Haigood. Fourth Row: Joe Haynes, Anita Hess, Janette Johnson, Lois Johnson, Tommy Johnson. . «u a 4• .  •$ •£ nk ‘3jf ;:s ; aiSKHhl First Row: Linda Jones, Horrison Keith, Jimmie Kennedy, Sally Kippenberger, Kay Krone. Second Row: Laddie Kuykendall, Barbara Lay, Tommy Lee, La Vonne Le Grange. Third Row: Robert Lile, Nelda Longbrake, Charles McBratney. Fourth Row: Jim McKittrick, Gerald Mallard. Fifth Row: Clyde Mans. i —79— Isn't Art Wonderful! To moke beautiful objects with their own hands is the exciting experience of Mrs. Margoret Hol- land's seventh grade artists. Here Eddie Starkey, Tommy Johnson, and George Peterson look on enthralled, as Nelda Longbrake and Jacque Reese complete ceramic figurines. Basketball Is Still a Game. We play hard, like to win, but Coach George Washington reminds us that one team always loses in any game. These up-and-coming Cub-to-be cagers are Daryl Spragins, David Bailey, Tommy Lee, Charles Cluck, and Robert Lile. leant tc be Tiger CubJ... And Hard To Beat! In a popularity poll or a ball game Jacqueline Fields is a winner. We seventh graders like Jackie's attention to good grooming, her yell leading, her good fellowship, and her way of livening things up. Our Who's Who Girl is a chorus member, a speech enthusiast, and a Girl Scout. AND SWEET First Row: Freddie Sledge, Larry bmith. Second Row: Lyman Smith, Woody Smith, Daryl Spragins, Leon Stacy, Eddie Starkey, Gerald Stewart. ON THE BALL! First Row: Ronnie Taber, Wilma Townsend, Albert Trent, Peggy Trotter, Joyce Watts, Glenna Wilcox. Second Row: Luana Winters, Mary Woodrum. Bang-Up Basketballer! Our Who's Who Boy, Jerry Don Davy, is always in on the tip-off and always in the right place at the right time on the basketball court. We like the way he plays football too and envy him his flair for clothes. Art and speech classes help to give him poise and personality plus. I Master Musicians Are We. Our most talented and reliable instrumentalists from all grade levels ore hand-picked by Di- rector Keith Henderson for membership in Guymon's finest musical organization, the High School Orchestra. In constant demand for public appearances at important civic events are these artists: First Row: Phyllis Wood, Tommye Lou Glaze, Sandra Allen, Bobby Glaze, Douglas Bly, Linda Jones, Darline Sullens. Second Row: Patsy Tyler, Cloy Dean, Sheila San- ders, Raylene Duke, Si Perkins, Gail Crowder, Martha Smith, Judy Longbotham, Viola Albrecht, Sally Kippenberger. Third Row: Larry Foutz, Barbara Heard, John Deakin, David Trent, Virginia Sturdivan, Carrie Lou Langston, Tommy Medley, Jim Baldwin, Johnny Crowder. Fourth Row: Trulia Spragins, Mrs. Henderson, Betty Wallin, Lloyd Burton, Barbara Allen. Pity The Bosses! The French horn players ore lucky; they don't have to lug heavy instruments at the Tiger Band's mony intri- cate half-time football demonstrations— Charles Cluck, Gary Bland, Carrie Lou Lang- ston, Virginia Sturdivon, and Morgaret Welsh. Ifcu can t teat We Like This Kind Of Wind! The many wood- wind performers in our band add spice and color, especially in parades such as the Santa Claus event at Liberal and at Amarillo's Tri- State Celebration. Here, grouped around Mrs. Henderson's podium are Darline Sullens, Kay Claycomb, Margaret Bragg, Si Perkins, Eliza- beth Gurwell, Beverly Elliot, Diano Brown, Sharon King, Karen Thrall, Jean Ann Quinn, Delva Dunn, Nancy Bunger, Alice Mussman, Roylene Duke, Carol Neff, Shara Lee Piersall, and Sandra Dow. cut (jH£ Bawd! —87— This Will Moke A Mon Of You! The Sow, Toot, Push, and Blow section shine up their over-size tune makers for the big Ross Rizley Welcome Celebration. You heard them too ot the Dedica- tion of Senior High and in the Pioneer Parade —Lloyd Burton, David Williams, Robert Buster, Barbara Allen, Lynn Miller, Jerry McVey, Joe Reese, Eddie Le Master, Fred Fajen, John Dea- kin, Ted Matson, David Trent, Jerome Beer, and Douglas Bly. Heart Throbs And Drum Beats! We challenge you to find a prettier parcel of percussionists anywhere in the nation—Tommye Glaze, Phyl- lis Wood, Clay Dean, Carolyn Hull, Sandra Allen, Trulia Spraglns, Betty Wallin, Harold Wood (He's handsome!), and Sally Kippen- berger. Jim Overslept! Boy! Thot old eight o'clock bond practice rolls around early! Jim Baldwin was half way to school before he remembered it was picture taking day for the trumpeteers— Johnny Crowder, Jim Baldwin, Joe Perry, Tom- my Medley, Henry Martin, Clark Nash, Morris Lile, Joe Matzek, Howard Rowlins, Bill Shakle- ford, and Daryl Spragins. Enid Or Bust! The Enid Band Clinic and Con- tests are a must for faithful band students like these saxophonists—James Moon, Gail Crowder, Clydella Spenner, Judy Longbotham, Joyce Sproles, Jimmy Quinn, Charlene Boston, Kay Dunn, Kay Krone, Mary Lee, Barbara Heard, Martha Smith, Joy Curtis, Lorry Foutz, Glenda Hamilton, and Mary Key. 3.  fi r Black Robes, Orange Stoles—We're Tigerland's Choir! From their initial appearance during the first semester at the October Choir Concert until their last number at the Senior High Commence- ment, the 1954 Mixed Choir mode many successful appearances under the leadership of Director Hoover Fisher. Among these were the all-school American Legion Armistice Day Program, the Christ- mas Concert at Victory Memorial Church, the Senior High Dedi- cation, the PAMC Workshop, and the Panhandle District Contest. Members of the Choir shown here ore Lela Mae Randolph, Blanche Love, Jeannette Clifton, Betty Wallin, Trulia Spragins, Nadine Calvert, Darline Sullens, Oneda Williams, Viola Albrecht, Leona Peterson, Phyllis Wood, Betty Dorr, Winona Johnson, Marjory Lockett, Peggy Watkins, Gay Boston, Kay French, Rosie Rye, Devonna Wilson, Dorma Lee Bryan, Geraldine Bartles, Jimmy Reese, Joe Williams, Margaret Ralstin, Raylene Duke, Pat Higgins, Martha Shannon, Carrie Lou Langston, Wilbur Evanson, Jerry Calvert, Bobbie Stewart, Bill Cornell, Sherii Johnston, Gordon Bennett, C J. Wilkinson, Roy Francis, Jackie Williams, Richard Sidders, Fred Fajen, Bill Thorne, Bill Bellamy, Don Wilcox, Charles McMullen, Hollis Cluck, Arnold Bartels. Leon Williamson. Talk Of The Town! Known simply as THE TRIO Phyl- lis Wood, Jeannette Clifton, Darline Sul lens, and their accompanist, Betty Wallin, have charmed the community with their lilting songs since they first appeared os a seventh grade ensemble. Now all juniors, they hove al- ready received scholarship offers from nearby universi- ties and colleges, alert to their entertainment talents. Senior Hijk 4 Ckcit JiHfJ These Women Adore ''These Men! And Tigers one and all purr with pleasure when the Girls' Quartette harmonizes. In the foculty lounge Trulia Spragins, accompanist, divides the group —Kay French and Winona Johnson from Ray- lene Duke and Sherli Johnston. High Road Or Low Road? Primarily a group destined to sing for fun in assemblies or at informal gatherings, the lads and lassies in this quartet are at their best with popular or semi- classical songs like Loch Lomond. Accompa- nist Jeannette Clifton is seated beside Richard Siddars, bass. Behind them are Gordon Bennett, tenor; Geraldine Bartels, alto; and Margaret Ralstin, soprano. at all major School events. —«9— Jit At Chcif £toeetkeart, iela tflae Three Candidates Are Picked. Only girls who have been active in Choir for two or more years are eligible for Sweetheart honors. Two senior girls, Sherli Johnston and Lela Mae Sullens, and a junior, Pat Higgins, were 1954 contenders named by the forty-eight members of Mr. Hoover Fisher's musical organization. Six Years In Choir Her Record. Lela Mae Sullens Ran- dolph, our 1954 Choir Sweetheart, was honored at the first annual Sweetheart Concert, Thursday, Mar. 25. Lela Mae, who at Thanksgiving time this year was married to Ralph Randolph, GHS '53, has served six years in junior and senior high vocal groups. For the past two yeors she has been choir accompanist. Active in the high school band, Lela Mae is also organist at her church. Her name appears regularly on GHS honor rolls, and for outstanding service to her school and community, she was named by our faculty to membership in National Honor Society in 1953. —90— Future Homemakers Learn Many Arts. Mrs. Hecht's FHA girls show a real zest for acquiring the social niceties which make up gracious living. Senior High FHA officers learning table setting here are Elizabeth Gurwell, vice-president; Lorna Grossman, president; Cleva Melton, treasurer; and Betty Stewart, secretary. In the lower picture junior high's FHA officers pre- paring a publicity board are Joan La Fevers, treas- urer; Gracie Grider, vice-president; Ann Davidson, president; and Shirley La Fevers, secretary. IcuatJt mu Color To The Front! Betty Trent and Ger- aldine Tucker use swatch collars to help Mary Rye select just the right tone for her spring wardrobe. Growing By Leaps And Bounds. Compare this picture of Voca- tional Agriculture Director Robert Meisner's FFA Chapter with that in the 1953 El Tigre You'll find twelve more boys—a 28% increase; and you'll see how much taller these healthy, happy farm boys con get in a year. Front Row: Don Wilcox, Dewey Deane, Robert Lee, Clarence Eoton, Max Baker, Wayne Green, Robert Hutchinson, John Deakin. Second Row: Gene Shaffer, Bobby Denney, Dalton Holmes, Bobby Neville, Lanny Bauer, Ralph Ralstin, Ted Powell, Roy Francis, Percy Tomlinson, Ken- neth Holmes, Frank West, Jimmy Wilson, Tommy Pierce Third Row: Jimmie Behne, Ronald Johnson, Raymon Lunsford, Dean Gribble, Arnold Bartels, Lawrence Birt, Bill Deane, Jerry Calvert, Earl Reust, Duane Cooper, Bryan Wright, Delmer Elliot, Leonard Nicholas, Mr. Meisner, Jerome Beer Back Row: Larry Sturdi- van, Glen Phillips, Wayne Booth, Wayne Keenan, Don Krug, Virgil Brune, Allen Hinds, Jim Dunlap, Johnny Hess, C. J. Wil- kinson, Ray Francis. Long As A Pioneer's Whiskers! The Panhandle, with a well-spaced rain or two, can grow fine grass crops, os Bob Meisner points out to his grass identification group: Wayne Booth, Don Wilcox, Frank West, Del- mer Elliot, Robert Lee, Bobby Denney, Glen Phillips. Jerry Calvert and Earl Reust. Powell Holds A Pow Wow. Master Farmer candi- date, Ted Powell, president of Guymon's FFA, refers to the club manual in planning a spring program with his officers: Lanny Bauer, treas- urer; Kenneth Holmes, sentinel; Roy Francis, secretary; Ralph Ralstin, vice-president; and Percy Tomlinson, reporter. Denney Is King! A king and a runner-up is the proud record of the Guymon Chapter whose Bobby Denney and Glen Phillips placed first and second with their wheat samples at this yeor's Wheat King Contest at Enid, sponsored by the Oklahoma Crop Improvement Association. Why Didn't You Tell Me She'd Kick? Bill Deane might have gotten that shiner from a cow that didn't like his judging, but Ray- mon Lunsford, Glen Phillips, and Virgil Brune of the Dairy Cattle team tell us otherwise. As Simple As A Sample! You can't fool these Crops judges when it comes to grain selection. Boys who placed first at the Pamsey Voca- tional Agriculture Meet to nelp win the All-Around Trophy for Guy mon are Earl Reust, Arnold Bartels, Robert Lee, and Roy Francis Next Stop Is The Skillet! Mothers, you should take Ralph Rolstin, Ray Francis, Allen Hinds, or Lanny Bauer with you (next time you go to the butcher shop. These boys know good steak, as a first place award in Meats judging at the PAMC Meet proves, to say nothing of their first at the Northwest District Livestock Show at Enid, March 12. He Con Turn On A Dime. Winner of the Tractor Operators' Contest at the Texas County Free Fair last foil was Arnold Bartels, who can really herd one of these iron horses. Virgil Brune, no slouch with a tractor himself, looks on. tc Jaif We re in the 99 H —91— Wonted: Dishwasher Husbands. We prom- ise never to nag our men to fix the screens or repair the chairs. We'll do it ourselves, say girls' shop workers Peggy Landess, Joan Bentley, Bethine Carter, and Bernice Phil- lips. Not Bored At The Drowing Board! Mr. Dobbs' mechanical drawing classes are al- ways a pleasure, but, in the new shop build- ing with its north light, this practical class has token on a new appeal for boys like Dusty Dunkerson, Sonny Colgin, and Si Perkins. We Get Psycho-ed. And no couch is needed either. The State Depart- ment of Public Safety thinks up a new machine to reduce traffic fatalities. Here State Troopers Phil Froneberger and Wayne Reed administer psycho-physical tests to Percy Tomlinson, while Barbara Heard, Gail Crowder, and Tim Neas owait their turns in Miss Wright's Driver Training class. 94— We drau and drive. {right And Early! Well, early anyway! T l Coordi- nator R. P. Duke wonts his boys and girls to rise and hine in time to eat a good hearty breakfast, groom or their jobs, and be at class in Old High by eight 'clock shtarp! Looking happy about the whole busi- ness ore three partsmen—Wilbur Albrecht, R. L. Raw- ins, and T l Club president Charles Hobson. Stand- ng are Dusty Dunkerson, a tire repairman. Bill Pier- att, engine lathe operator, and Duane Shepherd, auto £hut-eije M. 7 L Coffee Would Be Better. T l operates the coke concession in Old High, but along about bell time the boys and Mr. Duke would gladly trade it in on a new tangled coffee maker. Bill Phillips and Larry Height are carpenters by trade. Howard Rigg, T l vice-president, is a radio and TV repairman. Tilting his coke is Leslie Winters, a body and fender man. Beside Mr. Duke is Warren Peterson, a sheet metal worker. Send Us More Women! T l class is light on the female side this year, so the only two girls, Elinor Meigs and June Gum, landed officers' jobs as club parliamentarian and secretary- treasurer. At their jobs Elinor is a telephone operator and June is, believe it or not, a butch- er! The four boys on Old High's stairs are Jerry Houser, tire repairman, Howard Melton and Joe Powers, butchers, anci Bill Bridges, cleaner and spotter. —9S— Big Red's Green! Tiger Toles Editor, Becky Moyer, and Pub- lications Sports Editor, Austin Morgan, interview Merrill Green, 1954 University of Ok- lahoma football sensation. Becky also edited the junior section of El Tigre, while Aus- tin did the sports pages. Made It! Tiger Bee sports re- porter, Pat Campbell, outruns the bell to deliver his copy to Robert Allison, who helps the staff co- ordinate Tiger Cub and Bee news. That Lucky Buck Idea Worked! Mrs. Martin, Publications adviser, and Ann Beaman, business manager, are always brewing up new ways to make money. They would like to give everybody free Tiger Tales and El Tigres but my, oh, my, those lit- tle rascals are expensive! Hi, Suckers! Carrie Lou Langston and Pat Higgins, who joined the Publications group at mid-year as apprentices get to clean the sup- ply shelves, do the not-so-popular Exchange posting, draw dummy pages, and even write a little gos- sip. But they will get their reward next year as full-fledged editors. PublicatichA Mi A, —96— Quiet, Puh-leese! Glenda s Filing! If talking to your- self is a sign you're slipping, Glenda Lo Fevers has slipped! She mumbles along about so-and-so on such- and-such a page, ond woe betide the stoopnogle who decides to change a page number. The Tiger might just as well try to change his stripes—that index is sacred! Keep it jf uffli . Draw, Cut, And Paste. Little Tiger, the creotion of tions artist, Geraldine Bartels, simply scampers from her pen unbidden. We think he is sweet, not too bright, but soulful. Do you? . . . Kay Le Master grins os another outraged individual sticks his head in our door to complain, I smell escaping gas! Personally, we staff members will miss that rubber glue smell next year. Kay was sophomore ond senior class editor for El Tigre and always handy with the cutter-upper. It's All Yours! Clydella Spenner, your 1954 El Tigre editor, is proud to present your first new Senior High yearbook. She wishes all of you could have been on staff, although it might hove been a bit crowded in our vest-pocket size Publica- tions room You'll never know how many laughs, and headaches, you can have until you've edited an .annual. Who's This Little Monsker? All unidentified pics are little monskers in Publications' jargon. Here Sherli Johnston, Mari- lyn Allen, and Marilyn Martin sit on the hot seat —our panel heated floor—and puzzle over the mix-up Sherli is also asso- ciate editor of Tiger Tales, while the Marilyns double as feature writers and exchange editors. TlliHE —97— Democracy Thrives On These. In our accel- erated society, brains and leadership, high moral character, ond devotion to duty are the mark of t e outstanding citizen. GHS recognizes and salutes these National Honor Society members as our Best Citizens in 1954—Jeanette Clifton, Joe Williams, Tru- lia Spragins, Geraldine Bartels, Jim Reese, Ann Beaman, Mike Brown, Rae Nell Yates, Sonny Colgin, Ted Powell, Pat White, Jan Demuth, and Austin Morgan. Now You Tell Us! Sophomore probation- ers find out why they were elected to NHS. The Brain Trust needed some fur- niture movers for their annual spring installation service. These boys, who will have to maintain their high grade aver- ages to remain NHS members, are Rob- ert Lee, Percy Tomlinson, Pat Campbell, and Jerry Hull. NATIONAL Z HONOR. SOCIETY Out heAt in WST. —98— It's In The Book! NHS vice- presi- dent, Ronnie Bradshaw and presi- dent, Fred Fojen are simply ignor- ing secretary Clydella Spenner's frantic urgings to set up the stage according to club rules. Are we going to use this beat up old can- dle again? sniffs Lela Mae Ran- dolph, treasurer. We create beauty in Art. Ceramics Line The Walls. There is a speciol thrill in store for the art student who takes his first perfect bit of ceramics from the kiln. Betty Mc- Donald, Sharon Lewis, Lorna Grossman, ond Jimmy Don Hughes show whot happens to a piece of greenware from mold pouring to glazing. —99— It's In The Bog. Boys in particular like the pound, punch, and practicality of leathercraft. Here Wayne Evanson inspects a hand-tooled bag. Kenneth Holmes happily hammers out o design like those on the display boord. Thot is a handle Billy Deane is attaching to a purse, while Jim Rogers laces a thong into a clutch bog. Tools must be kept in order, so Mrs. Hol- land, instructor, helps Quentin Smith at this routine job. Florals Form A Background. A talented artist herself, Mrs. Holland displays two of her own exquisite florols to inspire postel artists, Ger- aldine Bartels and Sammy Davis. Grace Long- brake ond Barbara French hurry to finish their Christmas purses. Figurines Take Form. Against a background of postel still-life studies, Peggy Wotkins and Alice Mons clean ond inspect their ceramics. Painstakingly glaz- ing and painting their creations are Ramono Roa and Loretta King. We Covered Ground! Lorry Keenon and Jan Demuth, all around speech students and junior debaters, along with the girls' team of Rosie Rye and Pat White, have competed successfully with schools from thirty-six towns in Texas, Kansas, New Mexico, Missouri, Louisiana, and Oklahoma. The two Guymon debate teams tied each other to put a double clinch on their win at the Northwest Intact Tourna- ment ot Alva. Speech gceA to 7W« In A Little Red School House! Every Thursday at 2:05 this theme song announces that GHS is on the air over KGYN. Speech instructor James Roach's directions in announcing and program operation have made real radio men of Ted Powell, Austin Morgan, Jim Reese, Joe Willioms, Jan Demuth, and Bill Coldiron. Mushrooms Coming Up! Mrs. Adams' drama class almost turned this ridiculous comedy into a trag- edy—the audience nearly died laughing at the antics of Sherli Johnston, Clydella Spenner, Pat Hig- gins, Crystal Tucker, Roe Nell Yates, and Tobby McMurry. Mrs. Adams and Line Coach Carrie Lou Langston watch the prompt book. —100— SOAPBOX McCarthy Or Monroe? Any discussions we've overheard lately have been about the stormy senator or the beautiful blonde, but Mr. Roach and his Speech I discussion groups scorn such trivialities. Hashing and re-hashing a problem of Capital Punishment here are some of the class—Martha Shannon, Jimmy Reese, Grace Longbrake, Austin Morgan, and Ted Powell. Clipped From A Sunday Amarillo News Globe. Winners of an invitational debating tournament at Amarillo High School yesterday were the Guymon, Okla., girls' team of Rose Marie Rye, left, and Pat White, and the Lubbock boys' team of Boone Bracket, left, and Willis Naylor. The teams won their divisions in competitions with high school debaters from Hereford, Perry- ton, Midland, Dalhart, Darrouzett, Tulia, Amarillo, and Tucumcari, New Mexico. The question debated was The President Shall Be Elected by Direct Vote of the People. —101 — Flexibility—And Fun Too. We can t help liking basketball better than setting-up exercises soy PE girls Potsy Tucker, Nancy Bunger, Bobbie Sue Stewart, Joy Curtis, Robbie Hale, Loretta Le Grange, and Margaret Ralstin. Junior-Senior High Mix-Upf Games are great levelers, so a mixed group of girls from the two schools pose happily here. Standing are Kathryn Brune, Louise De Spain, Jacque Reese, and Alice Mans. Donita Coulter ond Bobbie Achord kneel in front. Marvella Wilson, Loura Fern Wells, Priscilla West SharaleeViersall GlenH M'' a, etes no her objective. First File: Lo°enoeBoue OWe,h' A° DQV'S°n' Gr°C'e Gfider Si th Fi,e: Be,tv Bromlow MarceJas Berg, 7oTh n' bLc CoHo'LnHy,' P. C. prcwteA pctie. —102— A Jimmie Reese All-District Tiger Jimmie Reese is tackled hard by two Kansans from St. Joseph's Military Academy, Hays. Larry Shaw Ronnie Bradshaw All-District Roy Francis Jim Moyer GUYMON-O, BOISE CITY-7 Guymon High School's Tigers were the perfect hosts in their season opener at Memorial Stadium here, Friday, Sept. 11. They sent the Wildcats home with the long end of a 7-0 score. The Cats' lone touchdown came early in the first quarter on a pass interception. Late in the last quarter Tiger Jim Moyer went over from the ten yard line, but the play was nullified on a penalty. GUYMON-12, DALHART-26 Trailing 12-0 at the ha I f-t i me, the Tigers fought the Da I ha rt Wolves toostandstill in the second half at Dalhart's Memorial Stadium, Friday, Sept. 18. But the half-time margin was the differ- ence. Tiger fullback Mike Brown smoshed off tackle 47 yards for the first TD. Jimmie Reese, halfback, went over from the four for the second tolly. Coaches Jack Moyfield and George Washington Hard luck ride the Tiger ... —104— Ward Lile TtyerJ take 2, drop 7in 'S3... +• a yjw Jerry Johnson Ralph Ralstin A Mighty Important Trio! Coaches May- field and Washington are loud in their praises of these three monogers—Word Lile, Ralph Ralstin, and Jerry Johnson. It tokes a lot of washing, packing, sorting, loading, and un- loading to keep a bunch of forty or more foot- ball boys clean, happy, and well-organized. These boys win G awards and jackets just as though they participated in gridiron play. Ted Powell Mike Brown Wilbur Evanston Dusty Dunkerson Eddie Davy All-District All-District All-District Jimmie Reese stops an Alva drive with Tigers Roy Francis and Max Bailey in on the Goldbug blockade. —105— duAt the fcuJterJ 20-6... GUYMON-20, BEAVER-6 Out for vengeance of lost year's defeat by Beaver's tornadic Dust- ers, Jim Moyer rambled 80 yards on on intercepted pass to give Guymon's Orange and Black a 6-6 halftime tie-up in Memorial Stadium, Friday, Sept. 25. Wilbur Evanson and Jimmie Reese started tossing passes with Dusty Dunkerson and Jim Moyer on the receiving end, to set up the other two Tiger sixpointers scored by Moyer and Reese. This game marked the first GHS win of .the season. GUYMON-6, WOODWARD-32 Woodward's rampaging Boomers bopped the Guymon Tigers 32-6 in the district conference opener for both teoms in Woodward Stad- ium, Friday, Oct. 2. Woodward was in complete control of the whole game, leading 20-0 at the end of the first half. Late in the fourth quarter, Wilbur Evanson, formerly a Woodward Boomer himself, scored the Tigers' solo TD. Bobby Bromlow Johnny Claycomb Tommy Fulton David Yates Jan Demuth Johnny Moreland Two Beaver Dusters call holt to halfback Jimmie Reese's eight yard drive —106— Tiger Mike Brown runs into trouble otter gaining 15 yards against the Crusaders from St. Mary's-of-the Plains, Dodge City, Konsas Max Bailey Jerry MeVey Bill Lewis Percy Tomlinson Raymond Buhl Jack Beer C. J. Wilkinson GUYMON-67, ST. MARY'S-13 GHS Tigers, rebounding from the loss to Woodward, tromped the newly organized St. Mary's-of-the-Plains Crusaders 67-13 of Dodge City, Friday, Oct. 9. Johnny Moreland, filling in for Jim Reese, sparked the Tigers with four touchdowns, Jim Moyer scored twice, and Billy Lewis, Mike Brown, Dusty Dunkerson, and Eddie Davy each counted one TD apiece. Mike Brown booted seven conver- sions with deadly precision. TIGER B SCOREBOARD Guymon. 25 Dalhart .. 0 Guymon..47 Elkhart ...15 Guymon.. 7 Liberal 6 Guymon. 44 Elkhart . .. 7 Guymon.. 0 Liberal ... 25 Record: 4 wins, 1 loss trample £t. iHari J 67-13... —107— 3' 29 5 Jim Moyer falls across for a touchdown against Beaver Bobby Denny 3 Virgil Brune Wayne Evanson Jerry Hull Wayne Booth f fr Arnold Bartels GUYMON-6, ALVA-46 Alva's Goldbugs, coming back strong after last year's defeat, put a damper on a capacity GHS Homecoming alumni crowd as they ripped the Tigers 46-6 in Memorial Stadium, Friday, Oct. 23. Alva bottled up the Bengals and were leading at the half 32-0. Mike Brown, Tiger fullback, scored Guymon's lone touchdown on an intercepted pass, with less than one minute remaining in the game GUYMON-6, HAYS CADETS-31 In wrapping up first place in the KO Conference, Hays Cadets clob- bered the Tigers 31 -6. One of the most powerful teams encountered by the Tigers all year the crashing Cadets went on to win state wide honors in Kansas prep football for 1953. The Tigers showed the Kansans some power during intervals of the game but only once could muster enough drive to score, when halfback Percy Tomlin- son snared a Tiger aerial in the end-zone. place foe flU-feiMrict men... —108— fight tc the laAt uhiAtle... GUYMON-6, LIBERAL-26 Liberal's Redskins scalped the faltering Tigers 26-6 at Liberal, Saturday, Nov. 7. Freezing weather and sleet had delayed the game one day. Guymon was unable to get a drive started un- til late in the game when Percy Tomlinson smashed over on a line buck for the only Orange and Black marker. GUYMON-O, GARDEN CITY-18 In dropping their last game of the 1953 season, the Tigers, plagued with injuries and illness, staged one of their best per- formances of the year. The Buffaloes scored all three of their TD's in the first half. With the opening of the second stanza, the Tigers outfought the Buffs every inch of the way, but neither side managed to reach pay territory. f Fike Morgan Jerry Calvert A Queen Is Crowned. Her Footboll Mojesty, Queen Trulio Sprogins of the junior class, wears the Tiger helmet crown placed on her head by Captain Ronnie Bradshow at the half of the Homecoming game with Alva in Memorial Stadium, Friday, October 23. In the lower picture Eddie Davy escorts senior queen candidate Crystal Tucker, while Larry Shaw leads in sophomore Audine Boren. Queen Trulio is on the arm of Ronnie just before the coronation. kcHcr football Queen 7rulia. —110— Cubs have their best SeaScn Five Wins, One Tie, And No Losses. That's a record any Guymon team would be glad to hang up, and that's the record Coach Coy Gibson's little Tiger Cubs made in 1953. The plucky baby Tigers showed football fans some of their greatest thrills this season as they scored I 65 points to 52 for their opponents. Junior high teams who felt the Cubs' fury were Dalhart twice, Boise City twice, and Liberol once. The little Kansas Redskins gave the Cubs their one scare in o return game, a 19-19 tie. Front Row: Doug Landess, Dean Gribble, Robert Hutchison, Donnie Corbin, Jim Claycomb, Jack Moreland. Second Row: Jim Lee, trainer. Bob Neville, Wendell Williams, Wallace Cluck, Tom LeMoster, John Hess, Larry Sturdivan, manager Max Baker. Third Row: Richard Dickerson, Jack Williams, Ira Bromlow, Joe Reese, Don Krug, Jerry Wadley, Bryan Wright, Gerald Baker, manager. Back Row: Coach Coy Gibson, Max Keenan, Max Dearing, David Hale, Eddie Phillips, Gary Furnace, Donald Hen- derson. Lucky Friday, November 13! Wallace Cluck and Mary Rye stand on one side of Queen Carla Bentley and Cub captain, Rich- ard Dickerson, Fannye Johnston and Jerry Wodley on the other side. The coronation took place the night the Cubs scalped Liberal's little Redskins 39-14 in honor of their queen. Golly Whot o Gob of 'Em! Top Row: Ted Powell, Joe Willioms, Roy Froncis, Richord Holder, a Lorry Show, Bobby Bromlow. Second Row: Ralph Ralstin, Percy Tomlinson, Tommy 9 Fulton, J. C. Byers, Jock Beer, Jimmy Reese, Wilbur Evonson. Third Row: Eddie Davy, C. J. I Wilkinson, Johnny Cloycomb, Johnny Moreland, David Trent, Virgil Brune. Mike Brown, ■Mox Bailey, Bill .Thorne. Bottom Row: Dusty Dunkerson, Austin Morgon, Jerry Colvert, Jon Demuth, Raymond Buhl, Bill Coldiron, Johnny Crowder, Dennis Lile, Freddie Fajen, report- j —112— Out etteJ ate pet A Let It Blow! We Prance Wherever We Go! All over the tri-state area when the big Tiger band marches in parades and cele- brations, our majorettes and twirlers add snap and color to the event. Carrie Lou Langston, chief drum maiorette, wears her full parade uniform here, minus her toll white bearskin shako. Twirlers at her riaht and left are Phyllis Wood, Darline Sul lens, Gail Crowder, Roylene Duke, and Karen Thrall. Tigerettes Toke A Five. It is almost impossible to stop this quintet of whirling dervishes long enough to take their pictures. Leaping and posturing in perfect rhythm, our Tigerettes and their Ruf-Nek leader, Larry Keenan, have displayed and inspired the finest pep in years. But here style-wise Mrs. Lamar, their sponsor, wants the girls to show you on unusual view of their new costumes. Holding their newest megaphones are Tabby McMurry, Grace Longbrake, Gail Crowder, Joy Cur- tis, Martha Smith, and Larry Keenan. -115- Wc Clicked Against Clinton! Coach Vernon Yotes beams proudly on the Tiger hoopsters for their 53-40 win over Clinton at Guymon's first Christmas Holidoy Festival, December 28-29. Kenneth Yates wrestles for a rebound, as Austin Morgan, Jim Reese, and Dennis Lile are poised alert to pounce on the ball. Austin Morgan Senior forward, co-cap- tain, 3 year letterman, 10.9 point aver- age per game, 21 games. Jimmy Reese Senior guard, 2 year let- terman, 1 1 point average per game, 21 games. OitDe eager are AenicrA... Joe Willioms Senior guard, 2 year letter- man, 4.9 average per game, 21 games. Kenneth Yates Senior center, co-captain, 3 year letterman, 10.4 average per game, 21 games. Fred Fajen Senior forward, 1 year letter- man, 1.4 point overage per game, 20 games. Eagles Clow Out A Close One, 52-50. Fred Fajen, Tiger forward, tries for a rebound in the game with Hugoton here, January 26. —115— 'J 'm frill be back in 55 nny M °re ond 9uQrcy Sop Hco s fw Larry Foutz Junior forward. Coach Vernon Yates' Guymon Tigers found themselves facing one of the toughest basketball schedules in the school's history in 1954, with the only returning lettermen Joe Williams, Jim Reese, Kenneth Yates and Austin Mor- gan The Bengals dropped four out of their first five games. Amarillo's Golden Sandstorm dusted the Orange and Black, 49-40, in the season's opener here and again at Amarillo, 77-53. Borger Bulldogs accounted for the other two losses, biting the Tigers, 75-42, at Borger, and then topping them, 56-46, at home GHS Tigers first broke into the win-column by stopping Ulysses, Kansas, 47-42, in a tune-up for the Guymon Christmas Holiday Cage Festival, December 28-29. The winning streok held out, and the Yatesmen took two out of three of their Festival games, downing Clinton, 53-40, and Alva's Goldbugs, 56-54. The loss was to the Class AA cagers from Midwest City. A victory over Liberal's Redskins on January 5 gave the Tigers their first win in 1954 and a 1-0 standing in the KO Conference. But the rough and ready Hays Cadets toppled the Tigers two in a row, the first of these a 59-57 heartbreaker. Two games slipped away from the Tigers to the Hugoton, Kansas, Eagles, one by a 52-50 count. In another KO Con- ference tilt, Guymon was chilled by the powerful Garden City Buffaloes, 73-69, in on overtime period, giving the Bengals a 1-3 record in conference play. Guymon's Cats Johnny Crowder Junior guard. Johnny Claycomb Junior for- ward. then dropped three more in a row—the first to Ulysses, February 1, giving, the two teams a split for the season; the second to Waynoka's Railroaders at the Alva Invita- tional Tourney, February 5, and the third to the Clayton Yellowjackets, who were slated to win State in New Mex- ico, Class A. This was the Bengals' last home game and the last appearance for the five senior members of the team Embarking on a four game road trip, the Yates clan scalped the Liberal Redskins, 60-43, and edged out a close one for revenge on Garden City, 52-49, setting up a second place in the KO loop with o 3-3 record In a New Mexico swing, Clayton retained their mastery over the Tigers, win- ning 54-29, February 26, as the Tigers closed out their regular schedule. In their final game of the 1953-54 season, Blackwell edged out the Tigers in a squeaker, 45-43, in the semi-finals of the Class A Regional Tournament at Alva, March 4, 5, 6. Along with their record of 6 wins to 15 losses, the Tiger score book shows an offensive average of 48 per game, with a defensive average of 54.3. —116- Out cage futute look bright B's Post A 7-10 Record. Coach Cyril Glass and his Tiger B squad showed real power in 1953-54 against very strong opponents. The Bees won from Clayton, Felt, two from Liberal, Garden City, two from Hugoton, and Ulysses. They lost two games to Amarillo, Borger, and Hays and one game each to Clayton, Garden City, and Ulysses. B team members are C. J. Wilkinson, Ralph Ralstin, Duane Bennett, Gary Burkleo, Percy Tomlinson, Jim Samples, Tommy Fulton, Coach Cyril Glass, Raymond Buhl, and Jerry McVey. Gibson Boys Moke It 17-2 In '53-'54. Coach Coy Gibson and his Freshmen squad are the proud owners of a record of 17 wins and only 2 losses this season. The Cubs, extending their winning skein from last season, reeled it out to 33 straight before Phillips, Texas, Junior High snapped the string. The Cubs, getting a briefing here from Coach Gibson, are Ira Brom- low. Max Baker, Jimmy Claycomb, Jackie Williams, Jerry Wadley, Dean Gribble, Jack Moreland, Wendell Williams, Ger- ald Barker, Laird Hale, Max Dearing, Eddie Phillips, and Richard Dickerson. —117— Slide Rule Sophisticates! Did you ever try to figure out one of the blasted things? No luck? We thought so! But Harold Hunnicutt's Math Club smorties—Sonny Colgin, Gordon Bennett, Leon Williamson, Si Perkins, Mike Brown, Charles Vestal, and Austin Morgan—find slide rules os simple as sliding down hill. —118— Club ate ttump A... One Picture Worth Ten Thousand Words. Audio Visual Club, sponsored by Robert Allison, is popular and practical for student projectionists who carry cards entitling them to show films. GHS will be well supplied with movie operators for at least two years, as only Ted Powell and Jim Reese are sen- iors. Underclassmen are Gary Burkleo, Dewey Deane, Duane Laird, Leonard Nicholas, ierry Hull, and Dwight Laird. Hablan Espanol! Southwestern USA likes to be neighborly with our friends south of the Border. The bi-lingual boys ond girls in Cecil Glass' Spanish Club seated before the big map they drew themselves are Jimmie Reese, Bobby Denney, Wayne Booth, Larry Foutz, Joe Williams, Fred Fajen, Bobby Brumlow, Billy Lewis, ond Ronnie Bradshaw. Standing are other Spanish speaking cartographers— Marilyn Allen, Ann Beaman, Marilyn Martin, Kay LeMaster, Barbara French, Sammy Davis, Dorthy Reust, Clydella Spenner, and el pro- fesor, Senor Glass. King Charles Kibitzes. The Chess Men was organized early in February with Charles Vestal winning the first play-off and the title Chess King of '54. Char- ter members of the club are juniors Mike Brown and Sonny Colgin and five other seniors besides Chorles—Leon William- son, Fred Fajen, Ronnie Bradshaw, Aus- tin Morgan, and Jim Reese. We Wux Robbed! Pitched out of their cozy Boiler Room Club House, the Natural H-onery Society were forced to hold their final meeting of tne year in the open, handy to the coke ond candy ma- chines End man on the back row is the boys' h-onery guest for the meeting, the Lyceum Muscle Mon, who felt right at home with this intelligent group. Shoes off ond pants rolled up for a quick, quiet get-away, the boys wont you to know they have their rules too. To be eligible for NH5 , you must be a Character and have Leader- slip, Scholar-skip, and serve Vice; and besides you must know the meoning of the Club Song, Smoke Gets in Vour Eyes. Yatato! Yatatal At lost reports the Family was still trying to get Ralph married off, so there would be one more home where dear old Uncle Spurty could spend a week. No wonder Gladys looks disgusted! Ralph isn't getting any younger, you know. Short And Long Of GHS. The Roa and Cluck families must have used different brands of Vigoro on Ramona and Hollis. JuJt ffccl H around! —119— Spic And Span—Our Lunchroom Ladies! Behind the shining new steam tobies in Acad- emy lunchroom stand the cooks who serve our noon meals hot and savory. They ore Mes- dames A. J. Hilty, manager; Roy Bailey, T. E. Hollond, John Sanders, Virgie Barker, Floyd Music, and E. W. Sullens. We Love The Halls Of Ivie. It was the Closs of '54 who christened Harvey Ivie's wide and long expanse of asphalt tiled corridors The Halls of Ivie. What with glass walls and waxed floors, Senior High's custo- dian spends many a shining hour. Here he demonstrates his combina- tion scrub maid, waxer, and polisher to T. E. Holland of old GHS and R E. Yates of Central Junior High All three of these men do everything they can to add to the comfort and convenience of their buildings. E. W. Sullens Is Your Man. Comes a ticklish repair job, some fine car- pentry, or a fancy stage set—the call goes out for Acodemy Custo- dian, E. W Sullens. Here he sup- plies something the architects for- got—dust stripping for the front door. El Tigre's Pet Principal. Everybody in GHS knows Academy Principal, Frank Carrier. He's always around, looking glad to see us in his building at lunch hour. But El Tigre's staff think he is tops be- cause his closs picture money is one of our largest financial oids for your year book. Here are helping han J -120— (jOAA 'JellerA JeuelerA WHAT A LOVELY PLACE TO WORK! GHS alumno. Fran Faris, agrees with Martha Smith that working with the exquisite modern tabic settings, jewels, and watches is certainly a pleasure for clerks at Goss Zellers. Henneclif flgeHcif WHEN A FARMER NEEDS A FRIEND. Master Farmer candidate, Ted Powell, discusses an insurance problem with Mr. Zellner Glenn and Mr. Merrill Kennedy, authorities on real estate, insurance, ond investments. —121 — WiUch J Jeu elrif All Nationally Advertised Brands Of Wotches DROP A HINT,Mr. WILSON. If the right word should reach the right peo- ple ot the right time, two sparkling new watches will soon adorn the wrists of Martha Shannon and Juanita Darr. ■m LOVE THIS STORE! Everything to delight a woman's heart is found ot Nosh Bros. —from Cadillac convertibles to automatic washers ond dryers—and even the handsomest clerks in town, or so thinks Sherli Johnston, as she surveys Mr. John Shannon, Fred Fajen, and Mr. Arnett Von Dyke. Waj t fcrcA. JJtnp ertteHt Cc. —122— fcehhlj J Xahc t Big Boy Burgers Steaks Curb Service Highway 54 HOW ABOUT APPLE PIE A LA MODE? Fike Morgan, Cloanna Gum, and Bob Denney won't hove any trouble selling these custom- ers some of Mrs. Denney's homemade pastry to go with those steaming cups of DENNEY'S coffee. Compliments of Xaht (jamAch YOUR MAGNOLIA DEALER Butane—Propone 10 Quinn Street CHARLES GOES CAREER QUESTING. Mr. Lain Gorrison, who likes his business and boys, takes a moment off to encourage Charles McMullen's interest in motor fuel retailing and whole- saling. PRETTY PEGGY PONDERS. Next year's senior, Peggy Watkins, studies a file of QUALLS enlarge- ments, as she awaits her turn before genial Roy Qualls' camera. Like many Tigerlanders, Peggy solves her gift problems with the gift that keeps on giving, a photograph. —125— fexaA Countij tfletcf Company FORD FOR 1954—MORE THAN EVER THE STANDARD OF THE AMERICAN ROAD MAX, MIKE, AND THE NEW MERK! ''Enough to make a man leave his chess board, decide Max Bailey and Mike Brown. Tiger grid stars, as they view Ford's magnificent 1954 Mercury. tcngA Agency INSURANCE H. W. Long C. D. Long C. L. McKinnon IT'S CARL TO GHS. Like Long's Agency itself, Mr. Carl McKinnon is a great friend ot Guymon High Here he chats with football captain, Ronnie Bradshaw, about the ins and outs of the insurance business and the ups and downs of the grid season just past. m Bringing the Best to the Great Southwest T. M. Raburn, Manager DIG THAT DISC! Former GHS speech teacher, Marvin Stites, now a KGYN announcer, shows Johnny Moreland and Dennis Lite how the local station files its platters. S. 0. (jarAt IfluAic Co. Pioneers in the Music Business in the Oklahoma and Texas Panhandle PHYLLIS WEAVES A MELODY. Tone, touch, and modern air—all delight GHS pianist, Phyllis Wood, seated here at one of Garst's charming little spinets. Garst Building 417Vi N. Ellison icttf J S4 fcrtoe % HUH, LIGHT OUT HERE, ISN'T IT? Johnny Crowder and Patsy Tucker make a daytime stop at the populor 54 Drive- In theater to pick up one of Mr. Bill Long's handy weekly movie programs. SaSil ftlcrtcH 'a tttuAic and doth He A pita I A NEW LA ROSA! Mrs. John Strong comes up with the latest recording to enthrall Kay Le Master, senior collector of hits new and old. The City Waticnal Sank FRIENDLY BANKING SERVICE Member F. D. I. C. INSIDE OUT! Mr. Everett Krone, cashier, takes Leona Peter- son and Raymond Buhl backstage for a teller's-eve view at the City National. tflaAter Cleaner A S H GREEN STAMPS 111 E. 1st Guymon, Okla. CLEAN AND SHARP AS A HOUND'S TOOTH! Mrs. C. H. Brown presents some o Master Cleaner's superlative work for Charles McMullen's critical inspection. fcairif Hreetn FOOT LONGS SUPER-BURGERS Fountain Service Malts and Shakes Highway 54 at Main Street IT'S ALL IN THE FAMILY. Tigers Wilbur and Wayne Even- son help their dad make Dairy Kreem one of Guymon's fav- orite snack bars for all ages. (juijtncH Tire Trader Co. ARE THESE TIRES AUTOMATIC? Ward Lile wants something that will change itself, but Tony Duran and Mr. R. M. Ford won't have much trouble selling him a set of these white side-walls. —126— M 'lijiBTr S4 titctcr Cc. DE SOTO SALES AND SERVICE DE SOTO GETS OUR VOTE! Cor conscious Tigerlonders, Charles De Spain and Leslie Winters, find just what they want—power and beauty—in the 1954 De Soto presented here by salesman Frank Mears. Waldrop Ca h and Carry Cleaner The Best in Cleaning, Tailoring, Hat Blocking 304 N. Main Guymon—300 NICE BUT EMPTY! Kenneth Holmes and Dusty Dunkcrson, GHS seniors, are duly impressed when Mrs. Waldrop displays a perfectly cleaned two piece suit, but where's the owner? —127— XahgAtch fiuick SALES AND SERVICE Call 35 223 W. 5th Guymon, Okla. BIG AND BEAUTIFUL! Sold says senior Lou Adams, ofter one look at the 1954 Buick displayed in their Fifth Street salesroom by James Langston, Jr., Byron Long, and Ralph Higgins. ttarriAch A JaAkich £hc 2 FEATURING NATIONALLY ADVERTISED LINES FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN Exclusive But Not Expensive TANTALIZING IS THE WORD. Irresistible are the car drops with matching pins, bracelets, and necklaces which Mrs. Fran- ces Harrison is showing Karen Thrall and Lucy Masters. Alexander Iftctcr Cc. OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE GET THE FEEL BEHIND THE WHEEL! Oldsmobile's advanced body styling for 1954 makes it the automobile which appeals most to Tigerlander Roy Francis. Naturally, Mr. Word Williams of Alexander Motors approves his choice. faerbA hrug Cc. DERBS DRUG CO. SALUTES BETHINE! 19S4 senior, Bcthine Carter, hos been a fountain girl ond clerk at the friendly corner drug store oil through her four years at GHS. Billy Deane, her classmate, could tell you how much the customers appreciate her and the careful attention to their wants at Dcrbs. 3it At VaticnaI Sank Guymon, Oklahoma A GOOD BANK TO TIE TO Member F. D. I. C. NOTE-WORTHY VISITORS. Mr. Julian Schaub puts two young GHS “borrowers, Anita Lundgrin and Bill Cornell, at ease, as he demonstrates the typical First National courtesy in making out a loan. Mr. Shaub is himself a GHS alumnus, Class of '34. GIFTS - PRESCRIPTIONS - PHOTO SUPPLIES - COSMETICS - TOILETRIES - JEWELRY LIKE A MAGNET. The photographic supply counter at Jackson's draws camera conscious Larry Shaw, Jim Reese, and Johnny Claycomb. -129— Western Che tire let Cc. CHEVROLET CARS AND TRUCKS STEADY, EDDIE! Chevrolet's beautiful blue Bel Air with the matching interior, plus the Davy super- shoulders, there's a combination to melt any Tiger lassie's sales resistance. Heif-Perrif Jbi t Cc. YOU BET WE HAVE IT. Delmer Elliot learns from Mr. Howard Singleton that if it's tractor parts, sales, or service that you need, KEY-PERRY is the place to go. fc J £tcte The Finest in Men's Clothing Exceptional Dry Cleaning LET'S GET A WESKIT. Si Perkins is showing off the town to newcomer, Larry Foutz. Naturally, one of their first stops is the D J, where Mr. Corl Hunt displays the newest masculine foi- ble, the checked weskit. —130— Ddeal 'Joodf £tore Better Food For Less THE SOUTHWEST'S SHOPPING CFNTER Hey, Joe! Williams boy, you may miss the sack with that stalk of crisp IDEAL celery, but you're not missing Ann Beaman's charm. And it's no use, Betty Wallin, that son-of-a-grocer. Sonny Colgin, is going to make you pay for those tomatoes, come-up-and-see-me-sometime look or no. HhutJoh 4 ZleHatcrA, %c. Gordon Bennett, math shark, takes over his father's desk for a few minutes to show Cleva Melton and Bobbie Stewart one of those big checks Knutson's Elevator pays to farmers —and farmers' wives. Western Auto AaMc. Boys will be boys, and who wouldn't in WESTERN AUTO'S Toyland, where Mr. A. J. Trent uses some Santa Claus salesmanship on Don Wilcox, Pat Campbell, and Si Perkins. Plymouth fUleh iHctcrd DODGE Your Money Buys More in '54 , especially when it's the new Dodge you're buying, agree Mari- lyn Allen and Gene Boren, GHS seniors. TIRE REPAIRING fllleh Tired TIRE RECAPPING —Wholesale and Retail— Telephone 295 Guymon, Okla. Jerry Houser points out some pleasing Goodyear and Firestone prices to Fellow Tigerlanders, Billy Deane and Bobbie Achord. -152- lri-£tate £uper Market WE GIVE S H GREEN STAMPS Such super sales-people os J. D. Grider, June Gum, and Joe Powers can't help drawing crowds of satis- fied customers who delight in Tri-State's easy-on-the-budget meat and grocery prices. £tanfiel4 Printing Company ROYAL portable typewriters Jim Samples, Barbara Heard, and Gary Burkleo get a lesson in type-setting from GHS alumnus, Larry Wells, a Stanfield employee. CjrayA Featuring 'The Right Clothes at the Right Time. Photographer Roy Qualls didn't hove to remind Roylene Duke, Trulia Spragins, and Darline Sullcns to look pleas- ant at Groy's. Those smiles of approval at saleslady Irene Burgess ore a tribute to Gray's exquisite new line of blouses and sweaters. —135— MEET ME AT Jairiflancl GOOD THINGS TO EAT AND READ 507 N. Main Phone 832 Just right for a Tigerland twosome like Martha Smith and Charles Vestal is this setting in FAIRYLAND with Mr. Oliver Caudle, proprietor, standing by for orders. Ccca-Cola Settling Co. THE PAUSE THAT REFRESHES 1307 N. Main Guymon, Oklahoma COCA-COLA'S Noel Palmer loads o truck with America's favorite bottled beverage for senior stand workers. Bob Vickeifml Market .......... . . ... . ah f Pierce A 3oo4a Hollis Cluck, student clerk, waits patiently as Pat Higgins and Marilyn Martin pinch, pick, and choose from the always fresh meats and vegetables at NICKEYBILL'S and PIERCE'S. —134— tfcAtchA and Appliance A Phone 51 Guymon, Oklo. Bro-ther! There's plenty of space for our Dogwood fixin's in the new GE refrigerator , exclaim Bob Lee and Gary Wingord, as Mr. Charles Boston displays the large frozen food compartment. Cellar ((a £kee £tcre We Specialize in a Perfect Fit 520 N. Main Phone 115 Elizabeth Gurwell, GHS senior, gets some pointers in perfect fitting of the style-perfect footwear Mr. J. E. Edwards is displaying to Bernice Phillips and Sammy Davis. (jleh 6?eck ferug £tcre PERFUMES — COSMETICS — DRUGS Corky Northrup Cokes up in man-alone style with only vi- vacious sophie Audine Boren, a RECK fountain girl, to distract his dreams. -155— CAtkerA hreAA Zr fieautif £kcp Honey blonde Crystal Tucker and Titian tressed Tabby McMurry choose cashmeres for their sweater collections from the exciting new jewel tones displayed by ESTHER, Mrs. Bill Houser. Sha kau 'j JlcuerA Serving Guymon and Surrounding Areas There' o touch of Mexico at BRADSHAW'S in the exotic cacti and tropical house-plants Judy Noonan, Joy Curtis, and Gail Crowder are considering for those teachers' desks in the new Senior High School. £tu4ic PORTRAITS OF DISTINCTION —Expert Hand Coloring— J. K. SPROLES Carrie Lou Langston is a regular customer at SPROLES where she approves of the fine camera work, coloring, and finishing, or enjoys a chat with her steady , studio helper, Austin Morgan. —136— 'Jctiler Oil Co. CHAMPLIN MOTOR OILS HI-VI Wholesale-Retail Farm Delivery 24 HOUR SERVICE 102 E. 1st Tel. 252 Guymon, Okla. Huh? rejoices Clydello Spenner, that's less thon I ex- pected, as Becky Fowler computes that on-the-go Spenner girl's oil and gas ticket at FOWLERS. tflcderh Jccd Market Quality Groceries and Meats 1209 North Main Phone 810-J Marie Welch, Joanne Bentley, and Bethine Carter practice the new American principle of Do It Yourself , as they sack succulent salad stuffs from Harry West's MODERN FOOD MARKET. ''Widen Your Horizons with Our New Wide Screen American and (dcifal Theater Congratulations, Senior Class of 1954 IT'S BANQUET AND PROM TIME IN TIGERLAND! Mrs. Walter Brooks of ETHEL'S hos just the formats to make those Tiger male hearts miss a beat and please Nancy Bunger ond Betty Coulter. Cthel fare £kop GUYMON'S EXCLUSIVE SHOP FOR WOMEN B. L. Semtner, President Paul Bennett. Vice-President. In Charge Yearbook Division Richard Struck, Production Manager SEMCO COLOR PRESS, INC. 129 Northwest Third Street Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Surrounded by tradition . . . —137— Zckccl U INDEX —A— ACADEMY GRADE SCHOOL BUILDING, 15. Achord, Bobbie, 20,30,34,102,114,132. Achord, Jockie, 68. ACTIVITIES DIVISION PAGES, 84-85. ACTIVITIES SECTION, 84-120. Adams, Bessie, 9,37,100. Adams, Jomes, 68. Adams, Lou, 20,23,127. AD DIVISION PAGE, 121. Agnew, Stephens, 76. Albrecht, Violo, 36,88,86. Albrecht, Wilbur, 20,95. Alden, E M., 8,66 Allen, Barbara, 68,72,85,86,87. Allen, Marilyn, 20,23,24.30,97,114,118,132. Allen, Sandra, 68,84,86,87. Allison, Robert, 11,96,118. Anderson, Bobby, 124 ART, 99. AUDITORIUM, 4. Bahm, Herbert, 13. Boiley, David, 76, 81. Bailey, John Max, 36,43,105,107,112,124. Boker, Max, 92,1 11,117. Baldwin, Jim, 36,84,86,87. BAND, 84,87. BAND HUT, 14. Barker, Jerald, 58,111.117. Bartles, Arnold, 36,38,88,92,93,108. Bartles, Geraldine, 35,38,88,89,97,98,99. BASKETBALL, 114,117. BASKETBALL, JUNIOR HIGH. 117. Bauer, Lanny, 37,92.93. Bauer, Loretto, 58,102. Beaman, Mary Ann, 19,21,24,27,30,96,98, 118,131. Beer, Jackie, 37,107,112. Beer, Jerome, 46,85,87,92. Behne, Dorothy, 76 78. Behne, Jimmie, 68,92. Behne, Max, 58. Belanger, Mike, 68,85. Bellomy, Bill Horoce. 46,88. Bennett, Duane, 46,109,117. Bennett, Gordon, 20.26,33,88,89,118,131. Bentley, Carla, 58,59,65,102,111. Bentley, Joanne, 94,112,136. Berg, Aaron, 46,59,109. Berg, Marcetas, 58,102. Berg, 68. Berg, Ronald, 76. Birt, E. C, 68,69. Birt, Gary, 76. Birt, Glenda, 58. Birt, Lawerence, 58,92. Black, Harold, 58. Black. Lois, 76. Blackburn, Kenneth, 68. Blackburn, Patsy, 76,77. Bledsoe, Billy, 58. Bly, Douglas Arthur, 58,85,86,87. Boo Id in, Raymond, 68 BOARD OF EDUCATION . Boland, Gary, 68,85.86. Booth, Wayne, 46,51,92,108,118. Boren, Audine, 46.48,50.110,135. Boren, Gene, 21,48,114,132. Boston, Bobby, 58. Boston, Charlene, 76,84,87. Boston, Goy, 45,88. Bradshaw. Ronald, 21,28,98,104,107,110, 112 118,124. Bragg, Margaret, 86. Bratton, Cozette, 76. Brewer, Robert, 68. Bridges, Bill, 22,23,95. Bridges, Milton, 58. Brinkley, Kenneth, 68. Broce, Barbora, 76. Bromlow, Betty Jane, 58, 102. Bromlow, Bobby, 37,106,112,118. Bromlow, Don, 39,57. Bromlow, Ira, 58.111,117. Brown, Diana, 76,84,86. Brown, Mike, 37,43,98,105,107,112,118, 124. Brune, Kathryn, 59,102. Brunc, Virgil, 22,92.93,108,112. Bryan, Dorma Lee. 22,88. Bryan, Carlan Waldo, 68,70. Bryan, Ralph, 76. ' Bryan, Rcss, 47. Buhl, Raymond, 45,47,107,112,117,126. Bunger, Noncy, 47,84,86,102,137. Bunger, Mary, 77. Burkleo, Gary. 47,54,117,118,133. Burleson, Bobbie, 59. Burton, Lloyd, 47 84,86,87. Buster, Robert. 77.85,87. Byers, J. C, 47,112. Calvert, Jerry, 47,88.92,109,112. Calvert, Nadine, 37,88. Campbell, Edward, 77. Campbell, George, 69. Campbell, Pat, 47,54,96,98,118,131. Corner, Frank, O., 120. Carter, Bethme, 22,94,112,128,136. CENTRAL JUNIOR HIGH BUILDING. 14. Chodick, Ronald, 59. Chenowcth, Maralee, 59,102. CHOIR, 88-90. CHOIR QUEEN, 90. CLASS DIVISION PAGES, 16,17. Claycomb, Koy, 86. Claycomb, Jomes, 57,59,61,111,117. Claycomb, Johnny, 38.106,112,116,129. Clifton, Jeannette, 38,44,88,89,98. CLUBS, 118 Cluck, Charles, 77,81,85,86 Cluck, Holl s, 23 88.1 19,134. Cluck, Walloce, 59,111. Coldiron, Billy, 23,32,101,112. Coleman, Barbora, 69. Coleman, Carolyn, 48. Colgin, Harold, 38,41,43,94 98,118,131. Coliinsworth, Virginia, 25,28. Cook, Phillis, 77. Cooksey, Jerry, 77. Cooper, Billy, 48. Cooper, Duane, 48,92. Cooper, Gene, 48,109. Cooper, John 69,71. Corbin, Donald. 59,111. Cornell, Bill. 39,88.128. Costner, Clevon, 69. Cotton, Dorothy, 77. Coulter, Betty, 48,55,137. Coulter, Donita. 69,102. Cox, Dixie, 59,102.. Crowder, Go.I, 48,49,84,86,87,94,113,136. Crowder, Johnny, 35,38,84,86,87,112,116, 12! . Curtis, Joy Dee, 48,49 85,87,102,113,136. Dale, Donno, 77,78. Dale, Joanne, 69,75,77. Dorr, Betty, 23,88. Dorr, Juanita, 38,122. David, Elmer, 77. Davis, Sammy, 22,23,99.118,119,135. Davison, Ann, 59,91,102. Davy, Donny, 77.83. Davy, Eddie, 23,105,110,112,130. Deokin, Ethel, 9. Dealkin, John, 59,92,85,86,87. Dean, Clay, 69.84.86.87. Deone, Billy, 23,3192.93.99,114,128,132. Deane, Dewey, 46,48,v2.1 18. Dearing, Max, 59,66,111,117. DEDICATION, 3. Deere, Doris, 77. Deere, Sherry, 69. Demuth, Jan, 39,98,100,101,106,112. Denny, Jon Robert, 48,92,108,118,123. De Spain, Charles, 38, 127. De Spain, Mary Louise, 49,102. Dickerson, Judy, 69. Dickerson, Richard. 61,63,111,117. Dobbs, Douglas, 11. Donoahe, Morrison, 69. Dow, Sandra, 77,84,86. Drake, Wanda, 24. DRIVER TRAINING, 14. Duke, Raylene, 38,84,86,88,89,113,133. Duke, R. P., 95. Dunkerson, Eugene, 69. Dunkerson, Lovella, 46,49. Dunkerson, Luther, 24,94,95,105,112,127. Dunkerson, Robert, 69. Dunlop, Jim, 49,92. Dunn, Charles, 8. Dunn, Delvo. 69,72,84,86. Dunn, Kay, o5,87. Dye, Ruby Pearl, 49. Eaton, Clarence, 59,92. Eaton, Yvonne, 78. Edenborough, Duone, 38. EIGHTH GRADE, 67-74. EIGHTH GRADE CLASS OFFICERS, 67. Elliott, Beverly, 39,84,86. Elliott, Delmer, 49,92,130. EL TIGRE QUEEN, 18. Enns, Patricia, 77,78. Evanson, Wayne, 49,99,108,126. Evonson, Wilbur, 24,88,105,112,119,126. FACULTY, 9-13. Fojen, Fred. 23,24,85.87,88,98,112,115, 118,122. FFA, 92,93. Fields, Jacque, 77,78,82. Fisher, Dorene, 59. Fisher, Hoover. 9,77. FOOTBALL, 103-112. FOOTBALL, JUNIOR HIGH, 111. FOOTBALL QUEEN, 110. Forbes, Joy, 49. Foutch, Norma, 49. Foutz, Larry, 38,85,86,87,116,118,130. Francis, Ray, 39,92,93,108. Francis, Roy, 25,88.92.93,104,105,112,128. Frantz, Roberto, 78 French, Barbara 22,23,25,26,99. French, Janice Kay, 49,88,89. FRESHMAN CLASS, 57-66. FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS, 57. Folton, Tommy, 50,106,112,117. FUN, 119. Furance, Gory, 59,111. G CLUB, 112. Gass, Ron, 76,78. Gibson, Ardis, 10. Gibson, Coy, 10,111,117. GIRLS' PHYSICAL EDUCATION, 102. Glass, C. R., 13,68,117,118. Glaze, Bobby, 86. Glaze, Helen Fern, 13. Glaze, Tommye Lou, 48,59,84,86,87. Gleen, Melton, 69. Grammor, Mrs. John Green, Woyne, 60,92. Greer, Wynono, 70,71. Gribble, Dean, 60,66,92,110,117. Grice, Noncy, 50. Grider, Grace, 60,64,65,91,102. Grider, Jomes, 50,115,133. Grossman, Lorno, 39,44,91,99. Grossman, Max, 70,71. Gum, Cloanno, 39,123. Gum, June, 22,25,86,105,115.133. Gurwell, El.zobeth, 19,25,84,86,91,119,135. Hacker, C. S., 34. Hackworth, Jerry, 60. Haigood, Raymond, 78. Hale, David, 60.111.117. Hale, Robbie, 50,102. Hamilton Glenda, 70,74,85,87. Harris, Alberta Faye, 46,50. Hoynes, Joe. 78. Hays, Sue, 70. Heard. Barbara, 50,54,85.86,87,94,133. Herbel, Alice, 11. Hecht, Louise, 9. Henderson, Donold, 60,111. Henderson, Keith, 9,86. Hess, Aneto, 78. Hess, John, 92,60,111. Higgins. Pat, 38.39,88,96,100,116,134. Hight, Ernest, 60. Hight, Larry, 26. Hinds. Allen, 39,92,93. Hobson, Charles, 26,95. Hobson, Edward, 60. Hobson, Mary, 60,62. Holder, Richard, 26,1 12. Holland. E. T„ 120. Holland, Margaret 36,99. Holmes, Dolton, 92. Holmes, Kenneth, 26,92,99,127. Holmes, Wanda, 39. HOMEMAKING, 91. Horrocks, Lulie 70. Houser, Jerry, 39.95. Howell, Merlin, 51. Hubbard, Carolyn, 51. Hughes, Jimmy, 47,50,99. Hull, Carolyn. 70,72,8 . Hull, Jerry, 51,84,98,108,118. Hunnicutt, Harold, 13,118. Hutchison, Robert, 60,92,111. INDEX, 137-139. Ivey, Harvey, 120. Jameson, Lee, 75. Johnson, Janette, 77,78. Johnson, Jerry, 28,51,105. Johnson, Lois, 77,78. Johnson, Ronald, 61,92. Johnson, Tommy, 78,80. Johnson, Winona, 39,42,88,89. Johnston, Judy, 0. Johnston, Fannye 58,59,61,102,11 I. Johnston, Sherli. 25,26,88,87,97,100,122. Jones, Linda, 79,86. JUNIOR CLASS, 35-44. JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS, 35. —K— Keenan, Lorry, 30,100,113. Keenon, Max, 73,78,111. Keenan, Woyne, 61,92. Keith, Harrison, 79. Keith, Mary, 70. Kennedy, Jimmie, 79. Key, Mary, 85,87. Kiliough, Joanne, 70. King, Gracie, 61. King, Loretta, 37,40,99. King, Sheron, 70,84,86. Kippenberger, Solly, 79,84,86,87. Kirk, Carl. 70. Koch, Henry, 70. Krone, Kay, 77.79,84,87. Krug, Don Wesley, 62,92,111 Kusch, Jerry, 62. Kuykendall, Laddie, 79. Loy, Barbara, 79. La Severs, Glenda, 24.28,97,119. La Fevers, Joan, 62,91,102. LaFevers, Shirley, 62,91,102. Laird, Dwayne, 1 18. Laird, DwighY 1 1 8. Lamar, Mrs. Grester, 12,38. Landess, Douglas Poul, 62,1 11. Landess, Peggy, 28,94. Langston, Carrie Lou, 38,40,84,86,88,96, 100,112,113.136. Lee, Jimmy, 57,61,62,111. Lee, Mary, 2,85,87. Lee, Robert, 51.92 93,98,119,135. Lee, Tommy, 79,81. Lee, Patricia, 10. Lee, Byran, 10. Le Grange, Irene, 58,62,102. Le Gronge, La Vonne, 77,79. Le Grange, Loretta, 28, 30,32,102. Le Master Edwin, 70,85,87. LeMoster, Kay, 23,28,30,97,118,125. LeMastor, Tommy, 50,62,1 11. Lewis, Sharon, 28,99. Lewis, Bill, 48.51,107,118. LIBRARY, 138. Lile, Dennis, 41,112,114,125. Lile, Morris, 70,71,79,85,87. Lile, Robert, 81. Lile, Ward, 20,41,105,126. Linde, Raymond, 71. Lindley, U. P., 13. Lockette, Doris, 71. Lockett, Marjory, 38,41,88. Loe, Judy, 62. Loe, Peggy Earlene, 51. Longbotham, Judith, 70.71,84,86,87. Longbrake, Grace, 30,99,100,101,113,119. Longbrake, Nelda, 79,80. Lowen, Marjory, 42. Love, Blanche, 42.88. Love, LoVonne, 71. Lowry, Irma, 39,42. Lundarin, Anita, 42,128. Lunsford, Raymond, 92,93. Main, Glenda, 62, 102. Mallard, Gerald, 9. Mans, Alice, 42,99,102. Mans, Clyde, 79. Martin, Henry, 62.85,87. Martin, Harold, 62. Martin, Mary, 23,24,96. Martin, Marilyn, 23,30,97,118,134. Master, Leona, 71. Masters, Lucy, 47,52,127. Moston, Ted, 71,80,85,87. Matzek, Joe, 71,85.87. Mayfield, Myrum, 62. Mayfield, Jack, 12,104. MECHANICAL DRAWING, 87. Medley, Benny, 88. Medley, Tommy, 48,53,84,86,87. Meigs, Elinor, 42,95. Meisner, Robert. 11,92. Melton, Cleva, 52,53,91,131. Melton, Harold, 95. Meumer, Marilyn, 77,80. Miller, Edward, 62. Miller, Frank, 0. Miller, Gayland, 88. Miller, Patrick, 69,71,85,87. Moon, James, 71,85,87. Moore, Dean, 51,54. Moreland, Jack, 61,62,1 11,117. Moreland, Johnny, 42.106,112,116,125. Morgan, Austin, 30,96,98,100,101,112,114, 1 15,1 18,136. Morgan, Fike, 51,54.109,123. Morgan, Mary Jo, 54. Morris, Larry, 63. Mouser, Lois, 63,65,102. Music, Phillis. 88. Moyer, Jim, 21,104,108,109. Moyer, Rebecca, 38,42,96,97,136. Mussman, Alice, 54,84,86. Mussman, Dorothy, 54. —Me— McBratney, Charles, 78,79. McDonald, Donna, 42. McKittrick, Jim, 79. McMullen, Charles, 42,88.123.126. McMurry, Tabitho, 30,100,1 13,119,135. McRae, Phyllis, 71. McVey, Jerry, 51,52,85,87,107,117. —N— Nall, Delores, 60,63. Nash, Howard, 71,85,87. NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY, 98. Neal, Laura, 80. Neal, Roberta, 63,102. Neos, Timmy, 50,51,94,109,116. Neff, Carole. 84,88,86. Neff, Jane, 22,26,31. Neiman, Patsy, 39. Nelson, Alberta, Jean, 63,102. Neville, Bobby, 92,111. Nicholas, Leonard, 54,92,118. Noonan, Judith.50,54,136. Northrup, Robert, 54,55,135. OLD HIGH SCHOOL, 3. ORCHESTRA, 86. —P— Parrish, Glann, 77. Peck, Don, 73. PEPPERS, 113. Perkins. Si, 36,42,43.84,86.94,118,130,131. Peterson, Artheta, 73. Peterson, Leona, 54,88,126. Peterson, Warren, 43,44,95. Perry, Joe, 63,84,87. Peterson, George, 80. Phillips, Bernice. 31.94,119,135. Phillips, Eddie, 63,1 11,1 17. Phillips, Glenn, 92,93,109. Phillips, Bill, 31,95. Pickard, Bobby, 63. Pickard, Shirley, 79,81. Pieratt, Bill, 95,31. Pieratt, Jimmy, 55. Pierce, Thomas, 64,92. Piersall, Sharalee, 64,84,86,102. Powell, Ted, 19,21,31,38,92,98,100,101,105, 1 2,118,1 1. Powers, Joe, 43,44,95,133. Pruet, Charles, 13,28,31,33,55. PUBLICATIONS, $6, 97. Qualline, Annette, 73. Quesenbury, Sammie, 81. Quinn, Jean, 84,86. Quinn, Jimmy, 85,87. —R— Ralstin, Loretta, 81. Ralstin, Margaret, 55,88,89,102. Ralstin, Ralph, 43,92,93,104,112,117. Randolph, Lela Mae, 31,88,93. Rawls, John, Jr., 53. Rawlins, Howard, 81,84,37. Rawlins, R. L„ 32,95. Rayburn, Lyle, 134. Reed, Ronald, 81. Reese, Jacque, 88,102. Reese, Jimmy, 19,20.21.32.83,98,100,101, 104,105,106,112,114.118,129. Reese, Joseph, 64 85,87,111. Rehard, Everett, 73. Reust, Alice, 81. Reust, Dorothy, 32.118. Reust, Earl, 55,92,93. Reust, Lavedo, 73. Reust, Melton, 73. Rice, Glenna, 81. Rice, Melva Jeon, 64,102. Rice, Vancy, 73. Rigg, Howard, 35,43,95. Ritter, Birdie, 73. Roa, Ramona. 99.1 19. Roach, Jim, 9,101. Robinson. Aleida, 12,22,31. Rodman, Pat, 64. Rogers, Jimmie, 55, 99. Rogers, Lila, 79,81. Rogers, Marshall, 64. Roubidoux, Jessie Lee, 43. Rowel, Vivian, 55. Russell, Mildred, 9. Rye, Mary, 48,59,64,91,102,111. Rye, Rose, 55,88,101. Samples, Jim, 37,43.49,115,117,133. Samples, Potricia, 58,60,64,102. Sanders, John, 64. Sandoval, Corina, 81. Scott, Joyce, 73. SENIOR CLASS, 19-34. SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS, 19 SENIOR HIGH BUILDING, 5. SEVENTH GRADE, 75-83. SEVENTH GRADE CLASS OFFICERS, 75. Shackelford, William, 81,85,87. Shaffer, Terence Gene, 55,92. Shannon, Martha, 43,44,88,101,119,122. Shaw, Larry, 28,32,104,1 10,1 12,129. Shaw, Mike, 81. Sheperd, Walter Duane, 43,44,95. Sherrill, Roland Jay, 55. SHOP, 15. Sidders, Richard, 47,54,55,88,89. Silsbee, Bonnie, 77,81. Simmons. Dudley, 73. Sledge, Freddie, 82. Sloan, Mortha, 43. Smith, Larry, 82. Smith, La Voy, 43. Smith, Lyman, 76,82. Smith, Martha. 40,86,87,113,116,121,134. Smith, Mary, 73. Smith, Quinten, 55, 99. Smith, Tomie Delle, 65,66,102. Smith, Woody, 82. SOPHOMORE CLASS, 45-56. SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS, 45. SPEECH, 100,101. Spenner, Clydella, 23,24,30,32,85,87,92, 97,89,100.112,118.136. Spenner, George W., 6,20. SPORTS DIVISION PAGE, 103. SPORTS SECTION, 103-117. Spragins, Daryl, 81,82,84,87. Spragins, Trulia, 37,43,84,86,87,88,89,98. 110,115,133. Sprolcs, Joyce Kay, 72,85,87. Stacy, Richord, 82. Stomps, Irma, 72. Starkey, Eddie, 80,82. Stewart, Betty Sue, 44,91. Stewart, Bobbie, 50,56,88,102,118,131. Stewart, Donald, 72. Stewart, Gerald, 82. STUDY HALL, 138. Sturdivan, Larry, 65,92,1 1 1. Sturdivan, Virginia, 65,84,86. Sullivan, John, 65. Sullens, Darlene, 37,44,84,87,88,113,115 133. Sullens, E. W. 120. TABLE OF CONTENTS, 2. T l, 95. Talcott, Shirley, 62,66,102. Taber, Ronnie, 83. Toylor, Marvin, 69,72. Thorne, Bill, 33,88,1 12. Thral. Karen, 44,84,86,1 13,127. TITLE PAGE, 2. Tomlinson, Max, 72. Tomlinson, Percy, 45,53,56,92,94,98,107, 1 12,1 17. Townsend, Franklin, 44. Townsend, Tommy, 66. Townsend, Wilma, 83. Trent, Albert, 76,83. Trent, Betty, 66. Trent, David, 44,85,86.87,106,112. Trotter, Peggy, 80. Tucker, Geraldine, 66,91.102. Tucker, Crystal Ann 33,100,110,119,135. Tucker, Patsy, 55,56,102,125. Tuxhorn. Larry, 72. TWIRLERS, 113. Tyler, Patricia, 72,84,86. Vestal, Charles, 33,118,134. —W— Wadley, Jerry, 66,111.117. Wall, Bonnie Lou, 66,102. Wall, Connie Sue, 72. Wall, Dale, 72. Wallin, Betty, 44,84,86,87,88,131. Wallis, Benny 56. Washington, George, 12,61,104. Watkins, Marilyn, 74. Watkins, Peggy, 44,88,99,123. Watson, Keith, 66. Watts, Joyce, 83. Watts, Patricia, 44. Webb, W.lma, 56. Wells, Laura, 66,102. Welsh, Margaret, 66,84,86. Welch, Marie, 18,22,33,136. West, Frank, 92,56. West, Janice, 72. West, Priscilla, 48,60,66,102. West, Verle, 72. White. Patricia, 35,44,98,101. Wilcox, Donald, 56,88,92,118,131. Wilcox, Glenna, 83. Wilkinson, C. J., 44.88,92,107,112,117. Wilkinson, Joseph, 74. Willioms, David, 74,85,87. Williams, Herbert, 66,111,117. Willioms, Jackie, 66,88,111,117. Williams, Joe, 29,33,88,98,101,112,115, 118,119,131. Williams, Oneda, 56,88. Williamson, Leon, 26,34,88,118. Wilson, Alvin, 66. Wilson, Chorles, 66. Wilson, Danny, 74. Wilson, Delseenia. 44. Wilson, Devonna Lou, 56,88. Wilson, Dollie, 74. Wilson, Jimmy, 66,92. Wilson, Madeania Jo, 74. Wilson, Marvella, 66,102. Wingard, Gary, 56,135. Winter, Luana, 79,83. Winters, Leslie, 33,34,95,127. Winters, Sonia, 74. Wood, Harold, 74,84,87. Wood, Phyllis, 44.84,86,87,88,113,125. Woodrum, Mary Francis, 83. Wright, Bryan, 66,92,1 1 1. Wright, Margaret, 11. Yates, Kenneth, 34,112J 14,115 Yates, R. E., 120. Yates, Rae Nell, 34,98,100. Yates, Shirley, 66. Yates, Vernon, 13,114. J n S S £ niei‘ D rfres- - M DfT) en 7 Th z S ys Ye 2 —
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