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Page 23 text:
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W fi'lv I M u I I 'v 4:.-:' ' 49 -r,Q v rm Y ' ' Q 'f' I ! 'rv 1. v-L A -1- - f, 6 Y v h 'L In .1 V, S . 1 I-r' -. ' fa F , 'fh'fe30' , r v r - I .-I-' , 1 f N'
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Page 22 text:
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1 Y .Lx xx Xi' w. cmss Hrsfroay Twelve years ago in the fall of 1954 around thirty A first-graders walked into the halls of the Lhdemn grade A-f building . Out of these thirty Duills nine will gnmhat in l945. They are Betty Garrison, Eloise Shanafeit, Emmalou Wilson, Gene Custer, Dick Early, Richard Dmdnrt Abige Smith, Jack Thompson, and Tom Waymire. Miss Pau- line Churchill was the teacher. We were a pretty brash- ful and timid group of students those first few weeks. But after new friendshies were made and new experiences gained, our long career in Linlawn had started. if ,. H? ,-Z ..- -N f In 1955 we entered the second grade. Miss Stoops was our teacher. We were rather uncertain as to whedmm we would pass on to the third grade since one of theres quirements was a 5-minute subtraction-addition test. 1956 found us in the third grade. Miss Emmalou f Shambaugh was the teacher. It was her first year out of f College and we had a good time trying out a new teacher. I In 1937 we entered the fourth grade. Everyone was ' glad to be promoted upstairs for his fourth grade rin-. school. Helen Kaufman became a member of our class that , year. Miss Irma Small was the teacher. Q the fall of 1941 we became freshmen. 'Greenhcrn' f that we teacher year in our own became members of our class that year. They were Wabash 1940 found us in the high school building at We liked it very much even though we did miss the were taught the dreadful long division The was hiss ecotten 1959 we entered the sixth grade It ww our hat the grade building and we had things pretty'much way we thought Emmelou Stitz and Donna Rife from lr Tinkle was our teacher last fif teen minute recesses and the long noon hours tawhich we were accustomed. Dick Weesner from Wabash joined our class that year. 1941 saw us in the eighth grade----our entering high school. Von Williams was our in junior high. His work was to fit us for and the last before main tea : High schoog work was well done. ' n I. .ff 1938 saw us in the fifth grade. This was the yeag,.x YL J a xx tx. V In A , . -g- , X f A'fl . 4 . . 4 If - f 1 if X 1 4 In is the senior word for it. This was the year that our LX, I class reached its weak in enrollment ---- 38. we were db vided into two sections to give each student the best , possible chance in classwork. Evelyn Miller,entered ar I .f' . .!, X. L
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Page 24 text:
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class from Indianapolis that year. In the sophomore year things really began rolling. Some of the boys were regulars on the second team. Our enrollment dronped to 26. Another new member who wasi become a senior entered our class that year. Shewashith Pollitt from Shelbyville. The next year, our junior year, was one of someimp portance. We were finally nuoper-classmen.n Thus meant an active part in varsity athletics, junior play, and junior-senior banquet. In 1945 we became seniors. The senior year is one that you wait on for eleven years, and then it is over before you know it. This is the year that most of us realize for the first time, how valuable TIME reallyis. Every student has said sometime in his school life that he would be glad when it was all over. How true that is in the early stages of the game. But when the month of April comes and we know that in a few weeks we will be gone from Linlawn as students forever, we change mn' minds 0 Commencement brings down the curtain on the first act. The next acts will be the hard ones, but also the best ones ---- -because the first one was spent at school -------in LINLAWN. nAll the world's a stage, . And the men and women merely players.h CLASS WILL We, the Class of 1945 of Linlawn High School, County of Wabash, State of Indiana, being of soundnini and good judgment, and in good spirits, do hereby make, execute and publish this our last will and testament in manner following, and do hereby, by these presents revoke any and all wills by us heretofore made. First, to the high school teachers we leave the Juniors, Sophomores, Freshmen, the boys and the girls that will follow us in this grand march of youth. we hope that these teachers will be able to make something of the oncoming classes and have more brilliant records to report than have been made by the Class of 1945. Second, to the Juniors, we leave the honor ofbeing the Class of 1946. May your flag proudly wave over the
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