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Page 23 text:
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I, JAN BALSTRUSAITIS, will my ability to get my car I, I, I, Class Will SENIOR CLASS WILL out of the ditch to Mike Webster. RAY BATKE, will my ability to drive carefully to Fred- die Sylvester. RICH BATKE, will my sleep in Sociology to any Jun- ior who may need it. MARY BOLAS, will my light straight hair to Martha Vermillion. PHYLLIS BOSWELL, will my blond hair to Dorothy Zapotoczky. BETTY BRAMLEY, will my shy, quiet ways to Dot Phillips. DENNIS BURDETTE, will my ability to be a good Re- publican to Mr. Rios. BRAD BURTON, will my A-Bone to Jim Humphrey: May he rest in piece. BILL CASE, will my ping-pong ability to Wesley Tib- bitts. WALT COLEMAN, will all the fun I have had in high school to any underclassman who likes fun—and what one doesn’t? JEANNETTE DAMON, will my ability to confuse bookkeeping class to Barb Olden. Let’s see if you can do as good. AL CVANCIGER, will my pheasants to Roger Feess. ARDINE DEMETER, will my long hair and quiet ways to Bev Hartman. DOT DONKIN, will my ability to pass Mr. Rios’s am- biguous American Government quizzes to the Juniors. JANICE DUNCAN, will all my HISTORICAL novels to Mr. Rios. BARBARA DUNLAP, leave my short hair to my sis- ter, Marge. JOHN EDWARDS, will my-timid ness, quietness, bash- fulness and ability to keep quiet in study halls to Bar- bara Hanacek. ROGER FEESS, will my ability to get along with Mr. Wagner to any person who has trouble doing so. FAYE FOWLER, will my ability to keep quiet in study hall to Tom Rickbrodt. TIM GEE, leave Highland for good. ALICE GIULIANO, will my typing ability to Jim Hum- phrey. DALE GOOD, will my nickname of “Possum” to EI- win Rickert. PHYLLIS HARD, will all the mechanical pencils I've broken to anyone who can fix them. ROY HARTMAN, will my ’39 DeSoto (top speed 25 mph) to Mr. Jedlicka and the Driver Training Class. EUGENE HATCH, will my ability to get along with Mr. Kahl to Chuck Miller. DOROTHY HIRSCH, will my ability to keep quiet in Consumer Living Class to Bud Fogle. , BOB HUMMEL, will my shy and soft-spoken manners to Rita Yost. , VINCE KOPFSTEIN, will my English ability to my brother. IRENE KUFCHAK, will my abundance of long hair to Shirley Nelson. 19 I, — Lem! JOE LEE, will my ability to skimp through Mr. Kahl’s World History to any Sophomore. DOLORES LEHMAN, will my ability to twirl a baton to Connie Neiheiser. BETTY MAXIMUK, will my freckles to Phyllis Rick- err. BILL MILLER, will my position on the Hi-Lites staff to anyone with enough ambition to take it. NANCY MORRELL, will my height of 5’2’” to Renee White. NORMA MUDRA, will my driving ability to my broth- er, Roger. JOHN MYERS, will my ability to drop rear ends and transmissions to Bud Fogle. JEANNE NASH will my 16 credits required for gradu- ation to Ed Twyman. JERRY NEHRENZ, will my ability to make a warped Cedar Chest to any Junior who can make one. CLAUDIA OWENS, will my first million dollars to Mr. Rios so that his wife won't have to support him. LEROY PELOT, will my ability to sit and listen to Mr. Wagner's jokes to any Junior. LARRY RICHEY, will my tremendous laboratory tech- nique to any future chemistry comrade adventurous enough to use it. GARY RUCKEL, will my ability to milk a cow to any Junior girl who wants it. MARIE SACHER, will my shorthand ability to Larry Swain. MARILYN SILBERHORN, will my freckles to Sally Scanlon. , JOE SMITH, will to Darwin Steele a pair of scissors to cut the hair out of his eyes. DAVID SNYDER, will my ability to get all A’s in So- ciology to Gary Peterson KAY SNYDER, will my long hair to Mary Giuliano. DARWIN STEELE, will my bass drum to Amy Donkin. DON STINGLEY, will my curly hair to David Owens. LEE SYLVESTER, will my ability to make a plumb bob in shop class to Roger Bowman. , GEORGE THOMPSON, will my Buick to anyone with an oil well to keep it running. RALPH VITT, will my kettle drums to the Cooks. , DENNIS WERTZ, will my ability to miss school and get away with it to anyone that wants it. , LARRY WILSON, will my attendance record to Mary Giuliano. , WHEELER WILSON, being sound of mind, hereby will one broken jig saw blade to Mr. Wagner's shop classes. , PAUL YOUNG, will my nickname of Yo-Yo to any- one who needs a good nickname. , CAROL ZENK, will my ability to study in study hall to Bob Whitehead. , SPENCER BERG, will my ability to play basketball to Bud Fogle.
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Page 22 text:
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Class Prophecy - A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A HIGHLAND DOCTOR May 23, 1965 Doctor DAVID SNYDER is a very famous graduate of Highland High School. His day is very busy, but one day in particular was special. In his hospital was everyone of his classmates, and he decided to visit them. First, he went to se CAROL ZENK. Carol is a nur- sery-schoolbus driver. She is in the hospital because one little tot bit her leg! Doctor David next visited JEANNE NASH. Jeanne is a famous actress. Her producer be- lieves in realism—she’s in the hospital with a broken leg from jumping a victory cheer. In the next semi-private room was JEANNETTE DAMON. Jan is an airline host- ess, resting from a seige of air sickness. Bunking with her is Navy General DOTTIE HIRSH. Dot fell out of her ship into the water and she couldn’t swim. In the next ward was MARY BOLAS, a private sec- retary. Mary had jammed her fingers in her typewriter. DOTTIE DONKIN, a child psychologist, was kicked in the shins by a loving charge. IRENE KUFCHAK, a di- rector of a Business and Comptometer’s School, is resting from shock when ALICE GIULIANO passed her secretari- al course. KAY SNYDER, a professional cheerleader, has a sore sacroiliac MARILYN SILBERHORN, a T.V. cook, has ptomaine poisoning from eating her own cooking, and NORMA MUDR4A, a fiddle player for the Boston PopCorn Orchestra, is in the hospital for sore ears. She listened to too much of her practicing. Before going into the next ward, the doctor was join- ed by BETTY BRAMLEY, the Superintendent of Nurses. Together they entered the ward. Here they saw JAN BAL- TRUSAITIS resting in the sunshine. While on her way up the ladder of success in her modeling career, she sprain- ed her ankle. PHYLLIS BOSWELL, a novelist, writing a book called “Common Every Day Words to Use,” has writ- ers’ cramps. ARDINE DEMETER, a T.V. commentator, has laryngitis. JANICE DUNCAN, a college professor, pretended to be ill, because she was being chased by the college fellows. BARBARA DUNLAP, the fastest typist in the world, has a sprained little finger. The doctor felt hungry and went to lunch. He rush- ed back to finish visiting the girl ANNAMAE HUFF, a perfume manufacturer, has a cold and can’t smell a thing. FAYE FOWLER, an assistant to Einstein, has a broken thumb where her employer absentmindly stepped on it. PHYLLIS HARD, a children’s book illustrator, has am- nesia and now she illustrates adult books with baby pic- tures. DOLORES LEHMAN, a beautician, is in the hos- pital with burned, frizzed hair. BETTY MAXIMUK, an interior decorator, had surgery after she swallowed a mouth- ful of pins. NANCY MORRELL, a ballet dancer, has a black eye from falling on her ballet shoes. CLAUDIA OWENS, a beauty expert, is resting from a bad time mak- ing over a thoroughly homely woman. And last of all, the doctor visited MARIE SACHER, a narrator for edu- cational films. The day was well spent and doctor being very tried, went home and slept soundly. The next day he visited the fellow graduates again. In the first ward was AL CVANCIGER, a dairy farmer, who was kicked by one of his prize steers. LARRY WIL- SON, a pilot, faints at high altitudes. RICH BATKE, an electrician, was working on a light cord and was shocked. ROGER FEESS, a long-distance truck driver, got home- sick twenty miles from home. DARWIN STEELE, a jew- + 18 eler, is in the hospital for shock when his Hope Diamond was stolen and Darwin hadn't had it insured. SPENCER BERG, speed champion, caught cold from a breeze he cre- ated when he ran the mile dash. And JOE SMITH, a Pa- risian hairdresser, received a broken nose, when one of his clients’ husbands became jealous. In the next private room was GEORGE THOMP- SON, a millionaire, with ulcers from eating too many foreign foods. The next ward was very interesting to the doctor. Here he saw DALE GOOD, a cattle raiser, in the hospital because he ate some of the famous Good Beef. Joe Lee, a Navy Ensign, walked in his sleep and he forgot he was in — mid-ocean! BOB HUMMEL, a bank president, is hiding out from his nagging wife. But EUGENE HATCH, a secret service agent, is after Bob, who really isn’t as safe as he thinks. The next private room was guarded, because behind those doors is President WILLIAM MILLER. The Pres- ident has callouses on his hand from playing too much golf. The next ward held PAUL YOUNG, a Model T Ford salesman, with a sore nose which he received by sticking it in the wrong door. JOHN EDWARDS, a pianist tic- kled the keys until they had too much, and they tickled him back. RALPH VITT, a drummer, was hit on the head while serenading his love. WHEELER WILSON, a stamp licker for the government, has a sticky tongue. BILL CASE, an advertiser for an elevated shoe company, grinned so wide his mouth stuck in place. And of course, JOHN MY- ERS, a professional model photographer, has a broken jaw where he walked into a door (??). On the next floor, WALT COLEMAN was having a complete nervous breakdown. He sold too many annuals while he was at Highland and it still affects him. LEROY PELOT, a boxer, is resting from exhaustion. He was chas- ed around the ring until he collapsed. TIM GEE, a weight- lifter, has sprained muscles. RAY BATKE, a designer for Happy Honeymoon cottages, has a slight concussion. While inspecting one of his homes, the roof fell in. BRAD BUR- TON, a scrub-man, has washwoman’s knees, and they hurt. JERRY NEHRENZ, a pickpocket, got his hands caught in a mousetrap. The poor doctor was walking more and more slowly. Finally he came to the last ward. He opened the door and pricked up immediately. In this room was LARRY RICH- EY, a chorus director, with a case of nerves. In fact, he’s so nervous he keeps losing his musical beat! GARY RUCK- EL, a sun lotion manufacturer, has a terrible case of sun- burn. LEE SYLVESTER, a carpenter, hit the wrong “nail” and broke his finger. ROY HARTMAN, a dairy farmer, specializing in Holstein, has spots in front of his eyes. DENNIS BURDETT, a medicine man for “The Cure All for Man and Beast’, was originally ill with indigestion, but now he’s sick from third degree burns in the stomach. VINCENT KOPFSTEIN, a text-book salesman, was at- tacked by the A. S. A. (Anti-School-Association). And DON STINGLEY, a tack manufacturer, sat on his own product. Doctor David had ended another day at his hospital. And what a day that was!) He went home to his lovely wife and five girls and lived happily ever after.
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Page 24 text:
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B. Arnold R. Balke D. Baxter J. Gorman M. Giuliano G. Hartman B. Hartman R. Hazen T. Leatherman H. Long R. Louk J. Mcllvired T. McVay C. Miller T. Rickbrodt P. Rickert B. Ruckel L. Schiele P. Sheehan L. Swain P. Berger S. Valentine A. Warner M. Webster L. Bergstrom D. Zapotoczky 20
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