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Page 31 text:
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SENIOR CLASS HISTORY KENNETH ILES, Fourth Honor Student It was in the autumn of I929 that we, who were to be the class of '4I, found ourselves at the beginning of a new adventure. a formal education. in the public schools of Logan and vicinity. The first six years of our journey passed quickly, and we were on the threshhold of junior high school. Here we encountered new subjects, new teachers. and a new phase of learning, but as these grew more familiar. we found them much to our liking. Soon we had gained the cherished position of freshmen where we made many new friends among the rural and parochial students who had entered junior high for the first time. lt was that year that we received the first real taste of high school life. At our first class meeting we elected the following officers: Lois Heyde, president: Robert Shaw. vice-president: Willis Denny. secretary: and Martha Ann Kinser, treasurer. The following year we entered senior high as sophomores, and again we encount- ered new subjects, new teachers, and new privileges. That year, in addition to our officers, we selected our class colors, green and white. and our flower, the lily-of-the- valley. Lois Heyde was reelected president: Bill Bryan, vice-president: Martha Ann Kinser, secretary: and Ruth Schaal, treasurer. We closed the year with the sophomore banquet on May I2, at the K. of P. Hall. Later in the evening we attended the junior-senior dance. At the beginning of our junior year we were faced with the task of raising money for the junior-senior banquet at which time we were to entertain the seniors. With this in mind we elected the following officers: Lois Heyde, president: Barton Holl, vice-president: Robert Shaw, secretary: and Harold Kessler, treasurer. We succeeded in earning the necessary funds by sponsoring a turkey raffle and by selling candy. The crowning event of the year was the junior-senior banquet held at the Masonic Hall and the dance, which, for the first time, was held in the high school auditorium. At last we were seniors and it was hard to realize that the seemingly short years spent in high school would soon be ended. We elected the following officers to represent our class: Kenneth Iles, president: Lois Heyde, vice-president: Bill Bryan, secretary: and George Graham, treasurer. To close the year we were guests of the juniors at the junior-senior banquet, held in the Masonic Hall. We are at the beginning of a new existence - To some it will mean the continu- ing of their education, to others it will mean the beginning of the work through which they will make their contributions to society. But whatever the future may hold in store for us, the memories and values of our association in Logan High School shall never be forgotten.
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Page 30 text:
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SALUTATORY NEAL BEERY, Second Honor Student Parents, members of the faculty and friends, ln behalf of the nineteen hundred and forty-one senior class of Logan High School, I welcome you to our class night exercises. We feel that on this occasion we must attempt to express our appreciation and sincere gratitude to all those who have aided us in the preparation for the changing world which we are about to enter. We acknowledge our indebtedness to our efficient school system, to our superintendent, principals, instructors, board of education, and also to our parents, who have sacrificed to provide such an efficient school system. We realize that the amount of their efforts cannot be measured, and we are also determined that those efforts shall not have been made in vain. It is important that we set our goal extremely high and constantly endeavor through honest efforts to achieve them. We may encounter difficulties all along our way, but perhaps they will be only opportunities to test our abilities. We remember that Nature's motto is Onward. Again the class of nineteen hundred and forty-one bids you welcome. VALEDICTCRY BARTON HOLL, First Honor Student This is an age of science, invention, and progress. Ours is the most advanced civilization of the ages. Man can propel himself through space at a speed of five hundred miles per hour: he can make his voice heard for thousands of miles. All this has been made possible by the work of men who, like us, were faced with a challenge. Theirs was the challenge of a better life through material advancement. Ours is not only the challenge of material advancement but also the challenge of spiritual ad- vancement. We are entering an uncertain world which we must in our own way conquer, not by the force of arms, but by the application of the knowledge we have acquired in order to make a happy and successful life. At this time of farewell to our high school life we realize we are better equipped than many to meet our challenge. You, the people of this community, have guided us and given us our start. You have made possible fine public schools equipped to prepare us for the life we now begin. To you, our teachers, we owe a debt of gratitude for the knowledge and the guidance you have given. Fortified by all these, we go to meet our challenge with confidence.
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Page 32 text:
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