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Page 24 text:
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MARGIE WHlTTLESEYfD. D., don't you think Margie's a good actress? Vv'e do. RAYMOND WIKEGINS -- Texas Wig' gms is the mischief maker in room 217. IVIARJORIE JEAN WlLDfThE inseparf ables-Marjorie Jean and Susan. FRANCIS WILKS - Deed is our aquatic star. MAURICE WILLIAMsHOne of our in- dispensable football managers. CATHERINE WILMER - The Lady Who Couldn't Be Kissed. Why, Catherine! fAsk Randallj JOYCELYN WlLSON - Beautiful hair, gorgeous teeth, what more do you want? MARY JANE WILSfJNfNE3C, polite, and a friend of all. MAYME WILSON - To be Frank, Mayme does all right. RALPH WILsoNi Dynamite is a small package with a lot of boom, NLLLIE WISE - Quiet as a little IHOLISE. MERLE WITHROW-Ross lost a prize when Merle moved to the city. AL WOEDL-AH athlete. Big, strong, and handsome, too. ANDREW WOEDL-fAn efficient Stu' dent Council member. MARJORIE Wooo-fHer interests een- ter around a grad.j A tiny, cute brunette. DON WRIGHT -- Fitting competition for Lawrence Tibbett. BILL WRIGHT-- Pesty is his middle name. ZELLA WRIG1-ITfShe's rather quiet, with little to say. HAROLD WYNN - He's an artist worthy of mention. 'icottonf' RUTH YAEKLE'N63f as a ping walk' ing model from Vogue, DoRo'rIIv ZECI-IER-Tennis and talk' ing are Dot's favorite pastime, LouIsE ZERFASS7W0Uld you like a copy of How to Worry Success' fully, Louise? JAMES ZOLLERSYAS a golf player, he rates ace high. ALFRED ZUGEHOER- Click! What's that? Only Zugie and his camera. Virgilian Medal Vera Richardson American History Club Award Pearl Martin Ben Strauss Red Cross Essay Contest Ruth Cawein, Connie Plapp, Bob Black
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Page 23 text:
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RILDA TIPTON -- We hardly know shes around, shels so quiet. MARY TOIZERGTE -f XVe all want her ior our nurse, HERNIAN TURGE -f Blow, Gabriel, blow! MARIAN TRAIJTHWEIN--Another dark haired quiet girl. WYLRNON TilEMBLY7Jl!St an allearound athlete, with good looks and every' thin'. BROWN TRVMAN fn Why say any' thing? You all know him. RoIxERT TeIEv W- Nice, nifty, and pesty. HAZEI. TURNER Y Ten easy ways to hold your boy friends. EDWIN TLlRPI1J'TO find him, just look for Ruth! ERMA ULhi'N93C little girl whose interest lies in hooks and Willie. DAVID URMSTUNfD3V6 likes acting, Doris, his pipe, Doris, and oh, yes, Doris. RUssELI. VAILfQuiet and studious. That is, in school he is. HOW.SRI7 VAN SYCKLE i- Howardk only wish is that certain people would learn his name and not call him BifCycle. LIICILLE VETTER-Is she a whiz in biologyl WII.LIANI VII3OUREK7'Did anyone no' tice that twofbit hair cut Bill carts around? CLARENCE VoGEI.iHe gets our vote for class i'Pal, IVIARTHA VooEL-Where'd you get those eyes? HONVARD VORNHEDERfThS star un XVest Side Baptist. GERALDINE WAREORD-Dancing, sewf 1ng7Gerry is good at anything. KATHRYN WARNDORE - Does a tall blonde have anything to do with the song i'My Buddyn? RICHARD WATKINs-The trouble with Dick is'--he studies too much. CLARENCE WEAVER A- just a grocery boy at heart. JOHN WEAVERffNOW we know who handles the money, don't we, John? BETTY XVEBB f Seamstress supreme, sweet and blonde. Joi-IN XVEBB7uBl!tCl'!n haircuts are his specialty, also Louise. CATHERINE WEBER-What a piano player! What a singer! What a talent! GARNET WEBERfThE greatest prob' lem on her mind is catching the Lindenwald bus. RICHARD WEBER - Are we glad Catholic High gave you to us! Boanin WELCH- Bobbie is her daddy's little sunshine girl, DON WEI.Ls4Takes school as one long vacation. ROWENA WI-IITAKER-Why clon't you speak? Really, people Clon't bite. BETTY WHITTINGTONfThC girl with the smile.
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Page 25 text:
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Class Prophecy AY! What is the date today? Why it's June 3, 1955, already! How time just sails by! Today is the time we promised we would return for a visit to our old home town where many a happy school day was spent, and which, incidentally, has risen to the rank of one of the country's twenty largest cities. Shall we be on our way? Arriving at the center of town, we notice a new bridge spanning the mighty Miami River, which our taxi driver, Dick Potter, informs us was constructed by the foremost engineer, Francis Wilks. Now, alighting from the taxi at our destination, we enter the towering office building which houses the mighty Hamilton Daily Tattletale which prints everything it sees and everything it doesn't see. After being admitted by the doorman, Earl Blount, we're hurried into the main office which is filled with such skilled typists as Dorothy Stevenson, head typist, Jean Snively, Ada Bowling, Imogene Scofield, Casimir Barcik and jean Lambertson. At this moment, some of the gofgetterftype reporters enter and we recognize among them our old chums, Straub Connelly, john Reister, Jim Sellers, Don Schmerr, and there too is Hamer Hazard, who has just interviewed that famous tennis star, Kenneth Minnich, who is visiting his par- ents in Hamilton. Finally, we are admitted to the city desk and find none other than Louis Bruck surrounded by tele' phones, and his Secretary, namely Doris English, who is perched coquettishly on his desk. As we walk in, Doris scurries down and suddenly attains a very busif nessflike manner. Louis greets us warmly and offers to show us the entire routine of the press. First, he said, he wanted us to meet the new editorfin-chief who, we discover, is none other than Marie Byrd. She succeeded to these heights after many years of assisting the former editor, Walter Heermann, who retired to study plant life and fossils in his old age. As we are leaving this office, Dick Stephenson rushes in with a weather report for the next edition and leaves just as quickly in order to eat lunch at the corner drug store owned by jim Rudolph. This next room is the art room for the cartoonist, declared Louis, and going in, we encounter Louis Brown and George Bremer creating a strip called Susy, the Sassy Shoe Shufflerv and Bob Guy doing one called Bachelor Bob, the Heart Throbf' After chatting a few moments with them we depart and en' ter the office of the funnies editor. This may surprise you, said Lou, ubut Miss Byrd finally put him in his place, and entering, we stand agape -! for there is Bob Black, who has just been informed that after all these years he has finally received that long anticipated invitation to visit the White House. After thrusting cigars into our hands, Bob bounds out, and his secretary, Louise Peters, automatically grabs her hat and coat and tears out, too, so that we're left all alone. Lou invited us into the advertising room, and here we find Marjorie Jean Wild going over the lists. At the top we notice Justine Bremer, Kate Fitton and Violet Butts advertising a showing of their latest gown creations, with Marge Gruber, Carolyn Pabst and Doris Koskinen modeling. Next on the list is an ad sent in by Dorothy Lancaster, who says she found a young man on her doorstep resembling Bob Cleaver, and will the relative please come and claim him. At this instant, Don Wright enters with a mongrel on a chain and wants to advertise that he found it, but he doesn't know what kind it is, ljle says he asked the janitor, Marcus Hudson, and the office boy, Saxton Cogswell, but neither seemed to know. Sonny said it looked rather like Bob Rinck, so perhaps it was his, Farther down, Hubert Roth is offering either to sell his house or trade it for a car and a trailer, Some housel In the hmarriage license news we note Catherine Wilmer and Bob Randall heading the list, and second are Ruth Schmerr and Ed Turpin. Suckers! Stumbling over papers and ticker tape, we're led into the receiving room for market reports, where Don Falk and Christian Buettner are in charge. The John Marcum Steel Corp. has gone up onefquarter point, Mildred Golden's Chicken Hatchery is down three' eighth points, and Harvey Hensley Paper Mills ref mains the same. Passing immediately into the sports rooms we find Al Woedl, the sports editor, and John Stobbart, his assistant, writing up items for the sports page. Al has just interviewed Coach Eric Childs from Theodore Sandelius University, and Coach Childs promises a speedy football team starring the offsprings of such celebrities as Capt. Russell Slipher, Tom Galbraith, Chas. Orme, and Ed Mullins and Ed Cappelli, while the basketball season looks promising with such stars as cofcaptains - George Dreher jr. and Stephen McMullen. Little Stevie has overcome the handicap of a height of only four feet eleven inches, Coach Childs declares, We also notice that a new swimming record for the 220 was broken by Ed Schmitt. In the bowling alleys, we see such renowned names as Lee Schaefer, Herbert Kurtz, Floyd Hibbard, Vernon Trembly, Russell Schneider, Gerald Best, and Victor Richardson, At this moment, our attention is directed to the feminine angle of sports in which we find the national champion basketball team includes Betty Reimer, Ruth Gilley, Elnora McElravey, Eileen Pochard, Jean Penwell, Evelyn Arnold, Fern Peyton, and Frances Cusic. Eva House has recently brought the Davis cup back to U. S. A. for her great tennis performance. Insisting that we now turn to a literary phase, jack escorts us into the editorial room, where we find Hope Carter reviewing a current book rage by Phyllis Milligan called Chemistry and What It Has Done for Me. Alma Hollin is seen writing an editorial on 'RFoods'l, and Bill Bruck putting the final touches on an editorial called Frogs, A new serial called
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