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Page 11 text:
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HEADLINES OF HONAKER HIGH 1950 » 1951 Hear ye! All students interested in drama now have the opportunity to participate in either of the two DRAMATICS CLUBS introduced this year. With the founding of these clubs came the privilege to join two clubs instead of one. HONAKER BASKETBALL FANS lost sleep and cheered till they could hardly talk, but it paid off when our teams came through to win both boys’ and girls’ CHAMPIONSHIP OF RUSSELL COUNTY. Yea team ! More hearts were light and gay when two Honaker students received medals for sportsmanship. These were SYLVIA BARTEE and BUD GENT. Four players made “THE ALL COUNTY TEAM.” They were PATTY WYSOR, BOBBIE VANDYKE, ED DEED, AND PERRY BOYD. A one-act play contest was staged and “WHICH WAY TO BOSTON” represented our school in the district at Marion where it won a SUPERIOR RATING. Our prize speaker, JOYCE WILSON, brought the GIRLS’ PUBLIC SPEAKING TROPHY to Honaker and our Girls’ Prose reader, NANCY ALBERT, also won a FIRST PLACE which entitled her to a trophy for her school. MR. NORMAN SHIPLEY, Honaker’s oldest old bachelor, was mar- ried February 17th to Miss Frances Compton of Richlands. The Juniors are wondering if the old married “grouch” will be as good a sponsor as the “gay bachelor.” One of the most beautiful and impressive events of the year was the CHRISTMAS PAGEANT of the NATIVITY OF CHRIST presented by the elementary grade. The stage scenery and lighting effects were man- aged by the Speech Class. The three TRI-HI-Y CLUBS entertained the deserving mothers of the members with a Mother-Daughter Banquet, March 19th. THE BETA BANQUET was carried off in grand style and dignity as is characteristic of the Betas. The SENIOR BANQUET was a gala affair in the private dining hall at Martha Washington Inn, Abingdon. Each year WILLIAM H. DANFORTH through the DANFORTH FOUNDATION, offers a copy of his book, “I DARE YOU”, to one boy and one girl who graduate in each high school each year. This book is awarded to those persons who present a four-fold development. ANNA RUTH STUMP and MACEL HOLLIDAY were chosen by the high school faculty, a§ the girl and boy most representative of religious, mental, physical and social development during their high school careers. — 13 —
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Page 10 text:
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SENIOR HONOR ROLL HELEN SMITH ETHEL FLETCHER ANNA RUTH STUMP MACEL HOLLIDAY billy sample SYLVIA BARTEE bill e sue dye AZEL LOWE sAMIS — 12 —
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Page 12 text:
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Class History Now that our days in hlonaker High Scdiool are nearly over I can look back to September of 1917 when one hundred and twenty-nine hoj’s and girls from Pine Creek, f’inney, Swords Creek, Big A. Mountain. Drill, and Honaker Elementary Schools walked shyly, and half-afraid into the freshman classes. What a step we had made! What a eliange we were ex|)eriencing as we gave uj) reading, writing, and arithmetic for such holy terrors as mathematics, literature, and social science. How formidable those teachers ap})eared as they looked down their noses at us quaking freshmen 1 Everything was hard and strange until the end of school when we went to the freshman picnic and learned after all that the teachers were human and that they were as eager for a little fun as we. Then in the Sophomore year, we were no longer afraid. My how we looked down upon those poor dumb freshmen ! The teachers c;dled us “cock}’” and “smart” but what a blessed relief to he able to find our way around and to no longer fear biology, French, algebra and things which had seemed so foreign the year before! We could really relax and believe that we were a vital ])art of the school. The Junior year was the high light of our life in Honaker High. ETom Sunny Tennessee came our Junior Si:)onsor, Mr. Norman Shipley. He was young and unattached. My how the girls’ hearts skipped a beat as he discussed dancing in the dark at the Junior-Senior prom! El very picnic, every party showed how joyfully we had enjoyed ourselves, and with what implicit obedience we followed the command of that stern voice of Mrs. Miller. And now, having endeavored to picture the Class of 51 during those happy school days which must, to the future student of educational skill, lace our class among the best classes of Honaker High School, I shall not invite attention further to us as E’reshmen, to us as Sophomores, to us as Juniors, but to a greater class, to us as Seniors ! As glorious as were these school days, it is on the last act of the drama — our graduation from Honaker High School, and the future that will follow this gradu- ation — that we must look to see the Class of 51 at its best. A year or more after our graduation, our class will say, “We are conscious that we haven ' t humbly tried to do our duty.” The bright faces which Iiave shone in the morning, but have become obscured by hard studies in the afternoon, sometimes break forth, and after our greatest events throughout High School, the publication of the annual and senior plays, our faces shone with a greater si)lendor than ever known before. So here graduating in the field is the remnant of a class that had once been the most redoubtable body of working classmen of Honaker High School, the greatest leaders, the noblest gentlemen and the fairest ladies, of our time, expecting to slip into the uncertainity of the future, now suddenly stepping forth from the gloom of weary school days into the S})lendor of making a living ! The only sorrow on our horizon is the dec}) concern that we feel for those who dropped by the way side. What would have been the fame of old Honaker if 129 seniors would have remained with us until this eventful day! — Billy Ed Sample — 14 —
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