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fy' X ai ,. 13 '19 . .lu 1 :wi ' Y Ay nr I Q fx 35 5 ,Se V A R . ,. X wsu? -' L. ,, X , X , L -s Mm ,1 ll 4 -41 A Seniors WALTER BLAIR, JR President ROBERT ERB Vice President STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES First Semester Carroll Nesbit Leon Arbogast Robert Bechtel Walter Blair Luther Martin Alice Pardee Hoover Rhodes Maude Sassaman Betty Scholl Helen Simpson Second Semester Carroll Nesbit Leon Arbogast Robert Bechtel Walter Blair Luther Martin Hoover Rhodes Maude Sassaman Betty Scholl June Silbfrugh Helen Simpson Dorothy Wagner ,I ,C + FACULTY ADVISERS 1 Mrs. Person Mr. Heckart Cu X FLORENCE WEHR Secretary LEON ARBOGAST 'I'l'8BSUIBI' 'U 14 ...-.4., A-, .., ,. ,AA .,
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Page 19 text:
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Diary Found Member of '35 Lewisburg, Pa. CL. H. S. Newsl Jan. 27, 1950. Yesterday an old and dusty diary was found by one of the high school school pupils tucked away ln an attic. Thinking that it might be of interest to several persons of the 'as L. H. s. Class still residing in Lewisburg, we are pub- llshing the following pages. June 1, 1935-To think that we com- pleted four of the best years of our lives last night when we were handed those little black books! It hardly seems possible that at last we have ac- complished what we have striven so hard for these past years-a back- ground for our whole life. It was not all hard work, however, for there were good times, many inter- ests in clubs, plays, and sports, and of course our friendships, the thing that binds a class together. Many of us L. H. S. Class long before we got into the swing of things, we put on such very entertain- ing programs in chapel, and we turned out for parties and games. In general you could find us most any where that something was going on. That has been the case throughout the four years: we have always turned out, almost to a member, for everything. And then when our second year came around, we were ready to show what we could do. We had a high average in scholarship. We made money on our first party, a thing un- heard of in those days. We were in- terested in sports and in most every- thing else includlng a new Rifle Club. Then came the very short Junior year: at least, it seemed short to us. Many troubles over hard work and money matters. There were our class rings and pennants to buy and the have RIWGYS been wgethel' thl'0Ugh the: class was robbed of thirty dollars, IOWGI' grades, but we added to OUT, when the school vault was broken into. friendships and numbers upon enter-l HOW We did go out for sports! The ing this school. On looking back over that period of entrance, there flashes before the eye a picture of happy-go-lucky ex-eighth graders entering the doors of our be- loved high school. Perhaps we enter- ed with a bit of swagger, for were we not the largest Freshman class this high school had ever seen, but this was mainly to cover up a. bit of awe and fear we held for the big buildings, dig- nified seniors, and grim-looking facul- ty. After we had been crammed into every available room and our schedules arranged for us, we found that the building wasn't so big, and the Seniors loved jokes just as we did, and the teachers weren't grim at all but just wanted us to understand that we were here for work and they would play with us when the right time came. It wasn't girls won the soccer championship, and the winning basketball team was captained by a Junior and made up of quite a few Junior girls. To end that eventful year we gave the departing senior class a reception that they will long remember. After three month's vacation came our last and most delightful year. It is N with regret that we leave our home for these past four years to go out into a World still unsettled, but with a happy store of memories and a firm founda- tion to begin upon .... The diary contained more, but not having room to print it we ask you lf you are interested to turn to your 1935 Oneida and read for yourself the history of that Senior class. Helen Simpson 15 .
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