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Page 84 text:
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Row Row Row Row Row Row Row 1T 2, I-if SENIOR SCHOLARSHIP JoAnn McClain, Joanne Jones, Rose Mumper, Doris Plankell, Janet Miller 2-Frances Snyder, Betty Reese, Eleanor Wildermuth, Peggy Fruchey, Juanita Parks, Zoetsa Fillips -Mary Moore, Ernestine Worrell, Martha Jane Roberts. Mildred Killian, Bill Gciser, Ruth Alice Miller -Claudine Renz, Phyllis Tuttle, June Webb, Barbara Bowman, Bob Ashba, Bill Reid, John Timmerman Row 5- Row G Norma Jean Rakestraw. Marilyn Baker, Marcine Percy, Laura Mac Gnafzi, Fran- ces Ousley, Doris Levy, Mary Smith, Ber- nard Miller -Henry Timmerman, Tom Leech, Betty Hardesty, Joan Jennings. Don Snow, Doyle Phipps, Bob Creviston, Tom Hild- reth, David Jenkins, Gerald Coon WHO'S WHO Joanne Hinklc, Ruth Alice Miller, Jean Heinze, Bill Geiser Bob Ashba, Wayne Wells, Marcine Percy, Ben Green Waltemath Henry Timmerman, Dick Zimmerman, Laura Mae Gnagi, Frances Ousley, John Timmerman, Jim 1 1 1 l
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Page 83 text:
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7' oabadoarfhn and Ma que aders' Play TROUBADOURS MASQUERADERS President - - - Marcene Percy President - - - Helen Weaver Vice President - - - Joan Lutes Vice President - - Richard Foulkes Secretary - - Laura Mae Gnagi Secretary - - Barbara Breckenridge Treasurer ---- Glen Webb Treasurer ---- Nancy Heil Advisor - Mrs. Jessie E. Rhonemus Advisor - - MiSS A- Ruth M001'0 TROUBADOURIAN PLAY CAST MASQUERADERS PLAY CAST Miss Groze - - - Abby Gene Thomas Aunt Susie ---- Joyce C0U'l9l' Miss Cavendish Mrs. Wragg - Jimmy North Beatrice - - Mrs. Arthur - Sir Charles Jasper Maurice Mullins A Woman - Dierctor - - Business Manager Property Managers Wardrobe Mistress Stage - - Orchestra - - - - - Jean Everett - Dorothy Miller Dick Zimmerman - Francis Snyder - Marcine Percy - Doyle Smith - - Jack Davisson - - Marilyn Knipp Mrs. Jessie W, Rhonemus - Pat Rhinebarger Joan Hinkle, Jean Heinze - - Dena Fillips - - Don Slaybaught - Don Snow, his Trumpet and his Band Jay He,-bert . - - - Elizabeth Else Scarlet Deane - Jeanette Elliott Laura Dawson - - Mary Lou Ebersbach I Madame Zola - - - - BHUSY Lindsey Mrs. Edward Dunning CCynthiaJ - - Portia Lark - Omar Graves - LaSalle Johnson Johnny Rogers Slick Conway - Director - - Business Manager Property Managers - Mary Lou Sandifer - - Judy Bice - Richard Foulkes - - Dick Sisler - Charles Townsend - Jack Myers Miss Ruth Moore Bill Keeling Mary Helen Altstetter and Lou Anna Hennon Stage Managers - - Art Neth and Don Staup An unlighted stage, a curtained alcove, a fortune, a dumb woman, a bottle of poison, and A Murder Has Been Arranged by the Troubadourian Club. As is customary with the club the Troubadourians again presented a mystery play. Sir Charles Jasper was to give a dinner on the stage of the Saint James Theatre, London. This dinner was for the members of his family, in observance of a Weird anniversary. Then, after the clock had struck eleven, Sir Charles was to inherit the tidy iigure of two million pounds. It seems that many years before a man had been slain in the theatre: a dumb girl had appeared and the ghost of the murdered man flirted on to the stage after the dumb girl's death, so that the murderer was revealed. This, according to the prophecy, was to be repeated in fifty-live years, The zero hour, at which the prophecy was to be fulfilled, was on the night when Sir Charles had everything set for his party. A most important part in the scheme of things was that Maurice Mullins, only near rela- tive of Sir Charles, was to inherit the fortune in case of Sir Charles' death prior to eleven o'clock. Miss Groze, Sir Charles' secretary, was Mullins' first wife and wanted a share in the fortune. Mrs. Wragg, a superstitious cook who is very devoted to Beatrice, Sir Charles' young wife, supplied the humor of the play. In love with Lady Jasper is Jimmy North, a sentimental young fellow who comes to the theatre disguised as a reporter. At the point when Maurice Mullins enters things start to be arranged and the play slides on to an unexpected end. A mystery farce, Aunt Susie Shoots the Works , was presented by the Masqueraders Club. Aunt Susie Stowe, an eccentric and man-hating spinster who lives alone, learns that her late lamented schoolmate, Cora King, has willed her her property. She Wires her favorite niece, Joy Herbert, telling her to meet her on the following afternoon at the King residence. Joy arrives. accompanied by her colored maid Scarlet. While they are waiting in the supposedly deserted house for Aunt Susie, a series of mysterious and hair-raising events occur. Just as they are about to make a terrified departure Aunt Susie arrives, calms their fears, and informs them that she has inherited not only the house but a sausage works next door as well, DOROTHY MILLER -7 7-.
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Page 85 text:
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Wf1o3'W!1o?????? The The most popular boy - The The must handsome boy - The The most popular girl loveliest girl - shyest girl - - most bashful boy - Marcine Percy - Wayne Wells Frances Ousley Dick Zimmerman - Jean Heinze - Ben Green Ther girl with the best personality - Ruth Alice Miller The boy with the best! personality - Jim Waltematll The neatest student - - The most courteous student The one most likely to succeed The most active student - The wittiest student The cutest couple - - Joan I-Iinkle John Tirnmerman - - Bill Geiser Henry Timmerman Laura Mae Gnagi Joanne Hinkle and Dick Zimmerman Hey, Joe-who would you consider the cutest couple--Huh?-you did-well, O. K. Oh, of course she's cute but l voted for-she is lovely, isn't she? This goes on for an interminable period until the results are finally in. The Weekly Mirror many years ago starred the Who's Who feature which has become an annual poll. In the following years the Student Council took it over, and the results are fea- tured in the Annual Mirror. The second and third choices for the contest were as follows: Pat Roberts and Joan Lutes. most popular girl: Jim Waltemath and Ben Green, most popular boy: Joanne Hinkle and Har- riet Sandifer, loveliest girl: Wayne Wells and Dick Grainger, handsome boys: Marcine Percy, Pat Roberts, Wayne Wells and Henry Timmerman, best personalities: Pete Newland and Bar- bara Bowman, neatest students: Henry Timmerman and Jean Heinze, most courteous students: John Timmerman and Marcine Percy, most dignified students: John Timmerman and Ruth Alice Miller, most likely to succeed: Jim Waltemath and June Webb, most active students: Bill Geiser and Bonnie Custer, wittiest students: Kenny Harrod, Corrine Keve, and Ben Green, Betty Reese, cutest couples. AUDREY CANTERBURY Sembr Scbolarsfztv Cream rises to the topg smoke descends. Scholarship had its zenith and its nadir. Time is necessary in any action: in ascension, declination, or immobility. ln the years a person spends in school, he is proving himself either the gold, the dross, or that greater portion, the medium. The same holds true for life in its entirety. We don't label ourselves rationalists, but we believe most action has a cause. There is some reason why a few of our students rise to the top in our school as scholars . . . the refined product of education. We believe it is because they spend their time collecting facts. When Elbert Hubbard penned his choice morsel of philosophy on bookplate collecting, he began it with a very fascinating sentence: Life in this world is a collection, and all the men and women in it are collectors. The only question is, 'What will you collect?' Most men are intent on collecting dollars . . . We like to think of scholars as collectors of knowledge. Scholars are students, although we would hardly call some students scholars. Then let us say that it is the quality and value of the gatherers collection that rates his ability as a collector. lt is the magnitude and quality of the student's erudition that marks his classincation as a scholar. Knowledge, the intangible, produces the tangible. Knowledge is the basis for all progress. Without knowledge nothing worthwhile can be constructed. E. DON SNOW -79- T
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