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Page 25 text:
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Honor Society The National Honor Society was founded in Kingsville in 1942 for the purpose of honoring out- standing boys and girls in our high school. To be- come a member of this society, the candidate must possess the qualities of Leadership, Scholarship, Character, and Service. The candidate must take some part in leading extra-curricular activities. He must be in the upper third of his class; he must have a good moral character; he must be willing to do the little routine services for which there is usually little honor and glory. The faculty chooses the candidates by secret ballot. Only 15 per cent of the senior class and five per cent of the junior class can be chosen for this honor. The people chosen as juniors automatically become members in their senior year. The following persons belong to the society. Evelyn Hinkle, Mary Jo Loesch, Bill Smith, and Art Wilkinson of the Seniors, and Mary Reger and Burton Bartram of the Junior class. Library Staff FIRST ROW—Alice dayman. Margaret Derry. Marilyn Simmons, Carol Oren. SECOND ROW—Mary Reger. Marion Hoover. Mrs. Konnert, Mary Lee Bo bey. THIRD ROW—Shirley Pickens. Shirley Kapala. Linda Wilkinson. Linda Westcott. Arlene Randolph. Student Council FIRST ROW—Linda Westcott. Mary Reger. Evelyn Hinkle. Nancy Westcott, Carol Oren. SECOND ROW—John Konnert. Mr. Sprague, Burton Bartram. Bill Webster. THIRD ROW—Bill Smith, Wilson Osburn, Frank Bobey, Glen Beardsley. Senior Play The Senior Class presented their Senior Play “The Nitwits” on the evening of October 27. The story was most intresting. The cast was as follows: Tommy Winters (Bill Carlson) when confront- ed by his mother (Evelyn Hinkle) and father (Da- vid Webster) with the problem of earning money during the summer before they’ll send him back to college, puts an ad in the paper for people who fear they are insane. His theory is that people who fear they are insane are really perfectly normal. But he and his assistant Steve (Wilson Osburn) aren’t prepared for the bunch of “nuts” who come to them for help. There’s Miss Constance Dimwiddie (Helen Wolfgang) who is a spinster starved for affection. Henry Short (Kenny Smith) is jealous of his very flirtatious wife Madeline (Virginia Good). Maude Middleton (Wilma Louden) is disturbed by her leaping tendencies. Bert Baxter (Fred Roerdanz) has murderous impulses. T. T. Trumbull (Bill Schreck) is an elderly gentleman who fears his senres are failing him. Sallyjean Gould (Nancy Carter) can’t figure out why men are always fol- lowing her. Milton Geer (Frank dayman) is a poet who feels in tune with the infinite. Not only do the boys have trouble with these “nuts” but also with the cook, Nellie (Annabell L’Aoreaux), their two girl-friends Jean Hammond (Ruth Simak) and Lou Prentice (Mary Jo Loesch), two asylum guards (Ronnie Means and Bill Mc- Garry), and a policeman (David Webster). Ushers were Russell Westcott, Bette Risley, Vir- ginia Good, John Holcomb, Richard Simmons, Charles Green. Tickets—Virginia Good, Bette Risley, Arthur Wilkinson, Bill Smith. Advertising—Fred Roerdanz, Frank dayman. Prompter—Bette Risley. Stage Manager—Dale Hayes. Director—Mr. Richard Scannell.
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Page 27 text:
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Band BOTTOM ROW—Lois Emery. Elizabeth Ebemole. Barbara Cedar, Rose Ann Olin. Carol Oren. Carol Marrison. Chief Majorette, Jerry Paulson, Lucille Hinkle. Judy Blenman. David Bartram, Joan Davis. SECOND ROW—Mr. Roland Graves, Richard Sherwood. David Flack. Donald O’Bell. Ra mond Vanek, Ruth Nutter, John Ernst, Shirley Hinkle. Robert Louden, Sandra Pickens. THIRD ROW—John Konnert. Nancy Westcott. Glenna Bancroft. Loraine Carter. Margaret Derry, Janet Hinkle. Sharon Sulin. Mary Reger, Wilma louden. June Bartram. FOURTH ROW—Nancy Carter. Shirley Pickens. Jean Williams, Kenny Smith. Beverly Stevens. Marilyn Simmons, Elinor Reed. Charles Page. Virginia Good. Lyle Clark. Johnette Easkin. FIFTH ROW—John O’Bell. David Shank. Bill Smith. Ladimar Kubichek. Ronald Means. Richard Mandrake. Harold Weaver, Bur- ton Bartram, James Burch. Leroy Campbell. BOTTOM ROW—Mrs. Genevieve McCausland. Roberta Mansfield, Connie Kauffman, Nancy Westcott. Carol Marrison. Glenna Bancroft. June Bartram. Lois Emery, Shirley Schlick, Mary Reger, Carol Oren, Jean Davis, Linda Hadlock. SECOND ROW'—Peggy Bean. Lucille Scruggs. Sandra Bancroft. Joan Davis. Janet Hinkle. Janice Weaver, Evelyn Hinkle. Jean- nette Weaver, Nancy Doman. Loraine Carter. Helen Wolfgang. THIRD ROW—Betty Schlick. Annabell L’Amoreaux, Barbara Meyer. Linda Wilkinson. Elinor Gehring. Linda Westcott. Mary Jo Locsch. Ruth Simak, Carol Gran, Marian Hoover, Shirley Pickens, Carol Carl. FOURTH ROW—Johnette Eakin, Eleanor Faulkerson. Shirley Kapala, Barbara Lovejoy. Charles Page. Jeff Miller. Beverly Stevens. Marilyn Simmons. Alice dayman. Virginia Good, Nancy Slater. Sandra Simon, Maigaret Derry. BACK ROW—Kenny Smith. Victor Tiscenko. James Burch. I.adimir Kubichek. Russell Westcott. Frank dayman. Richard Man- drake. Bill Smith, John Reed. Joe Rodebajgh. John O’Bell. Duane Cleveland. Junior Class Play The Senior Class presented their Junior Play. April 9, 1954. It was entitled ‘’Love Is In the Air.” This was based on a series of radio episodes en- titled “Trouble With the Truitts.” The play gave some of the trials and tribulations of the Truitt family. A very funny show.
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