High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 51 text:
“
CLASS POEM From these grounds we shall part And with our leaving; there’s hope in our hearts To strive and struggle; to further our goals To gain higher standards we must embark. The Class of 1960 is leaving now; with hope and zest To carry the portals of Dear Old Kittrell To meet life’s rugged test. Our days here have been taskful And our memories have been bright, Of all our days in many ways To follow in the right. The joys and sorrows that we shared Of friendship that we knew, Will fit us for a better world If we'll but follow through. Farewell “Dear Alma Mater” To you we will be true, For all our days in joyous ways We owe so much to you. May we be worthy in all ways Like children of one fold Forever, and a day from now Our cherished blue and gold. —Mamie D. Evans. SENIOR CLASS SONG Tune: GOD OF OUR FATHERS Words: Rosetta Hall We the Seniors of Kittrell High, Extend to you our last good-bye. Though we regret our time has come, To call our year’s, our year’s work done. Though we will miss you with all our heart, This is the day we've worked for from the start. Now that our dreams have all come true, We say good-bye, good-bye to you. Well its bzen one long year of working, But finally we've made it through. Our parents, teachers, and president, Did the best, the best that they could do. The time for parting is very near, Into the world we go from here. Though we are going, our hopes are high, Farewell Kittrell, Kittrell farewell.
”
Page 50 text:
“
PROPHECY My crystal ball is slowly gazing into the future about five or six years, in the City of Philadelphia. There I'm looking at a white ranch styled home where Mr. and Mrs. Thomas West live. Wait! Look, there on the porch stands Mrs. Mamie West now, looking in the best of health. » Sorry, I can’t stay, but my crystal ball is very anxious to travel on to New York. In New York, I see Miss Grace Sims, and Miss Barbara Scott going to Miss Marie Wal- ton’s Beauty Salon. The beauticians in the salon are Miss Walton, Miss Ethel Barnes, and Miss Ernestine Redd. Gee, ladies, your hair looks very nice! Leaving Marie’s Beauty Salon we travel across town and there we see Miss Bernice Smith trying out for her first big play on Broadway. Good luck, Miss Smith! To the fair city and state of New York we've said our farewells, for now I must travel closer to my destination. Hi Fellow Students— My next stop is at the nation’s capital in Washington and there we see Mr. Notr- man Cobbs and Mr. Charles Taylor as congressmen. They always liked to talk politics. A couple of doors from where the congressmen are meeting, we see Miss Ruthvin Wil- liams as the first lady to be Secretary of Foreign Affairs. Walking down Pennsylvania Avenue, we see Miss Ruby Watkins, modeling the dress Miss Smith will be wearing, created by Miss Pearl Redd. Leaving that section of Washington we travel to “Cortez Peters Business School,” where we see Miss Margaret Carter as one of the main instructors, with Miss Helen Shepperson as Mr. Peter's secretary. Still in Washington, we visit our President who is sick in Walter Reed’s Hospital and his nurses are Miss Fannie Turner, and Mrs. Arlean Ross. Keep up the good work! At the same time, something revolutionary is being invented by another Edison, only this Edison’s name is Mr. James Wiley. To the nation’s capital we say good-bye, but my crystal ball and I will be spinning your way again. Help! I hear a call for a social worker in Los Angeles, California. Miss Flossie Oliver is answering that call, as she has always done in the past. My crystal ball is slowly fading now going through all the dust and snow into the large state of Arizona. Wait! Go back! I thought I saw a cattle ranch about a mile back. Wait! I did!- It belongs to Mr. James Wood and Mr. Robert Crawley. Who is there as their business manager? Why none other than the capable Mr. McDonald Bagley. The ranch is so large, but directly on the other side of the ranch sits a large school. Samuel Jackson’s School of Singing and Dancing. The voice teachers are Mr. Jackson and Miss Christine Irving. The dance instructor is Mr. Henry Redd. Well my crystal ball is getting tired, so 1 must journey back home to Texas. After entering Texas, I see an Engineering Plant owned and operated by Mr. Robert Hamlin. Miss Elsie Booker is head of the Mathematics department. Two blocks from the plant, I see a funeral home, which is under the direction and supervision of Mr. Ronald Ward, a licensed director and embalmer. His business associate and friend is Rev. Richard Hale, one of the largest ministers in town. The crystal ball’s last stop is at the home of Miss Rosetta Hall, a history teacher at Prairie View College, Prairie View, Texas. Well, finally my crystal ball has returned, so until its awakening period, I shall say, “Good-bye.” —Rosetta Hall.
”
Page 52 text:
“
SUPERLATIVES s Charles Taylor Ruby Watkins Most Athletic Marie Walton Most Likely to Succeed Samuel Jackson Flossie Oliver Most Attractive Ronald Ward Christine Irving Best Personality Robert Hamlin Barbara Scott Most Cooperative Henry Redd Eisen Bogleee Most Conscientious James Wiley Margaret Carter Most Reserved Robert Hamlin Flossie Oliver Most Business-Like Henry Reed Maneewalran Most Studious Norman Cobbs Ruby Watkins Most Popular Ronaidaward Mamie Evans Most Versatile Norman Cobbs
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.