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Page 28 text:
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Juniors Front Row: Phyllis Kepler, Clara Grolemund, Gayle Dixon, Connie Colella, Betty Larson, Priscilla Holt, Shir- ley Anderson, Nancy Cook, Bettie Bauer, Helen Ericson, Mary Aveneli, Lois London. Row II: losephine Di- cello, lean Fees, Patricia Cronin, leannette Bowen, Monalee Brinkley, lean Fleeger, Phyllis Lundburg, Mary Gardner, Marilyn Larson, Lorna Larrow, Alice Kohlepp, Ann Cartwright. Row III: Blanchard Brock, loyce Haight, LaRaine Dougherty, lanet Carlson, Ioan Anderson, Irene Carlson, loyce Carlson, Lorraine Kraft, Betty Cuthbertson, Connie Hadley. Row IV: Hugh Clifford, Iohn Bonadio, Bob Hetrick, Wallace Dyne, loe Chit- tester, Kenneth Cartwright, Ray Cartwright, Theodore Hermanson, Roger Kennedy, Richard lohnson, Ioseph Carlson,!Kenneth Anderson. Row V: Bruce Kernpf, William Gustafson, Robert Hanna, Richard Anderson, lames Bovard, William Boyd, Gene Ackley, Tom Goodwin, Bob Cadden, Richard Dahl, Gene Hayduck, Not in Picture: Kay Rudler. History The old halls of learning greeted us, the . class of '49, as we assembled once more for a year of fun and study. Gt course we elect- ed the cream ot the crop as class officers. The first spring breezes brought tryouts tor the class play, Dear Ruth , our big obs jective for the year. Another spring feature brightened an al- ready dazzling yearg the Iunior-Senior Prom, with its garden of gowns and flowers, was something to remember. lrene Carlson and Lorna Larrow served as co-chairmen for the gala event. Our athletic-minded youth participated in all the sports with lim Bovard making the All State Class B Basketball Team. Bravo, 49ers, you're winners through and Shall we ever be able to do it right? through 1 26
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Page 27 text:
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OFFICERS Edgar james - - - President Deane Alexander - - Vice President Pat MacEwen - Secretary jim McDade - - - Treasurer Mr. Stuart Edwards - - Adviser Remember when we were just beginning our long trek through high school? We were young and gullible and very unworldly. We were timid, noisy, shy, boastful, and awk- ward all at once. We couldn't dance be- cause our feet were hooked on wrong. We trembled when an upperclassman spoke to us, and we were afraid to ask questions for fear of seeming too stupid. But we had fung we made a lot of new friends, acquired new ideas, and determined to be more sophis- ticated each day. E After almost three years of grinding away, we began to wonder about that soph- istication. Of course, we weren't seniors yetg maybe that was the reason. But we'd given parties and gone to parties. We'd taken tests just for fun and almost blown up the chem lab testing for unknowns. We'd struggled and gasped through two years of Latin or Spanish and had enough English stuffed into us to last a lifetime. We'd even given the spiffiest prom in years. ffiemember all that purple crepe paper we cut? and all the green balloons we blew up? and all the ladders we pushed and climbed?l We put on a play and boast- ed members on varsity teams. Still, there wasn't quite the air about us as there was about the seniors. Oh well, we were saving it for next year. Seniors Whcxfs a little cold weather among friends? Then at last we were the uppermost up- perclassmenl We planned big things and carried them through, too. By backing an- other play, conducting a highly successful magazine drive, and through a raffle and bake sale sponsored by our mothers, we earned the distinction of totaling the high- est class treasury on record. The senior boys were the main cogs of our football team and our champion basket- ball team. From our class came literary ed- itors, the school president, the A. A. officers, and athletic managers. As a special favor the seniors must take the dreaded midterms but we didn't minde much. We seemed to have an infinite num- ber of P. D. teachers on hand, but the days for that required term paper we-ren't so in- finite! This year we took even more tests just for fun and dragged home assign- ments by the tons. The last few months, however, were ours: Announcements, our last prom, the mem- orable Washington trip fremember those paper sacks filled with water?l, commence- ment, moving-up exercises, parties galore, and finally topped off with the alumni dance. The sophistication? We were so busy we'd never even noticed except once. That was the day that cute little freshman looked at us in awe and said, Boy, just wait till l'm a senior! Remember?
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Page 29 text:
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OFFICERS Ioseph Carlson - Thomas Goodwin - - Connie Colella - Howard Sanford - Mrs, Dorothy Paxton - President Vice President Secretary - Treasurer - Adviser Iuniors 1 These cold juniors try to keep warm without cz fire! Front Row: Emma Mathys, Elizabeth Lorenzo, lo Ann Long, Sylvia Skerl, Rose Varisano, lean Walter, Pa- tricia Pelican, Vivian Tengstrand, Mildred Trurnbell, Mary Louise Rietter, Connie Nelson, Shirley Walter. Row II: Helen McKenna, Beverly VVeiser, Eileen McCauley, Marilyn 'Weirich, Iosephine Orizon, Marilyn Rice, Charlotte Popowski, Charlotte Prindle, Rachaellitaymond, Iulia Nicolazzo, Katherine Zerbe. Row III: Donna Lee Roller, Marlene Mertz, Loretta Smith, Rosemary McKenna, Mary Ann Stemberger, loyce Swed- enjelm, Ioyce VVillman, Mable Moran, Arlene Swanson, Eleanor Swanson, Iosephine Recsny. Row IV: Tom Zoolc, Ralph Walker, Carl McNeil, Dan Wallace, Ronald Peterson, George Rietter, Iohn Swanson, Charles Woodford, lames Thompson. Row V: Howard Sanford, Fred Willman, Vlfilliam Swanson, Ierry Petruzzi, Larry Wilson, Iohn Milford, Frank Schrieber, Larry Oyler, Vincent Parker.
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