Louisville Collegiate School - Transcript Yearbook (Louisville, KY)
- Class of 1950
Page 1 of 146
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 146 of the 1950 volume:
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GFEIIIEFFIII1 X o Zllibe lnuishille Qllullegiate Scbunl Q V 5 Vvlw fm M A I S 5 THE TRANSCR PT BOARD TY L TH1n1sQ11p1 BLXIIU E1111111 111 Und A 51111 lfl Pfl11111s Assnt 1111 hdvms L111s1111sx IL, 1 1 51311118 Ecl11111w P 111111x 31111 INUI 19QQ 1950 11114 PIXIJI LX P11111 111 1 J 1x lx TTQIL11 1111111111311 1 X H111 S 11111111 11111 wx Q11 S 11111 I' x C1101 CL1111 1115 ll I1 111s NI1111111L 1 Q , . 1 PJ ' ' , J ,. 1 sp I' ......,........., Ccj' I '11 XIII jx' Wwwd P01 .' 13111-1' 1 ' Q , ....,..... .,...,. 1 v - L Cai' 'i1'21I'C1 J RIz1111g'1-1's .,.............. ,I'11g,jgy' H:1wl1 .I111111 Q1111111 A11 1561111115 .....,..,..,.....,...,.. Gwen H1-ul G11 f ' I'TX'111'b41c'l B11 ' 1 C1I .IX'U1Cl P1111 r1g1'1 11115' I'lcli1r11's ..,............ H11 -1 fl .wI111T1l Ja 1 'l4'1111 z ' QI: .' ' .,.....,...,.......,.. Cla '11 P1'1'1i'1'L:1' 9111 1.111111-111e111jg111' 1, ,4 , , '1 .. , 1 1 l 1 ., .,.........1........ . ,. . THE LOUISVILLE COLLEGIATE SCHOOL MISS VIRGINIA WITTMEIER We the Semors d6d1C3t6 our Transcmpt to MISS Vlfglnla Wlttmelef Wlth gratltude for her guld ance and smcere fr1er1dsh1p Collcgmte Our own Lauded by manv Lamented bv soma Endured by C1 few but .1 Grand Alma Mate: IHX1I'1C1b1G she stands Affectlonatelx lemembeud Endeared to us forever L1 ma Pklllllli C llss I lu Sf .C . . , ., ' 7 . , . . 7 1 17 v. ' 1 v, . 7 1 U ,, 7 Tearfully left, X 'I 1 2 X111 Egyxxxx Axx - ' ' S 'HI-lv 5 ' ' 1:55 ., g l 0 N ' 4 I Shofzq 111 ffl 10 M11 6 Z1 mek, fo 1m1'azz!110fz'oyzf'ff , . . x i t N' ,, . .. . .' 'v , f Q ' , f 1 3 ANN BRENT ALTSHELER A qulet dlgfllty And sweet attractlve grace 5 ABETH MA DDOX BAKER ELIZ f poesy the realms o ld of fancy h s had a gllmpse mto ents from that wor She a And brought back fragm J' JULIE MONTGOMERY BAQUIE A smooth and steadfast mmd Gentle thoughts and calm des1res 'wmsvfff C ANN BALDWIN BROWN As merry as the day IS long gf CAROLYN JEAN BUHNER t the gentle-st hear The m11dest manners and Y Y' 1 5 , 1 g , W' ' Q PATRICIA ANKENEY TREBEIN FLYNN Youth galety and all the Whlle these her aud1ence begulle A charmmg manner 75 A fa Y BONITA BLIGH GRISWOLD As sklllful mwndger who 0 exsees each part Rather than actor she d1s,pI1ys her art 'hr J MARGIE CHURCHILL HELM She can play Puck Wlth many elfish wlles How captures she hen audlencev Not by smgmg but with ewes and smlles 2 VIRGINIA ELLEN KING She has a merry love of llttle thmgs And a brlght flutter of speech Whereto she brmgs A threefold eloquence volce hands and ey es 1 1 , . JOYCE EVELYN MILES She was a capltal m1m1c And her odd and funny storles enthralled her frlends 'Ma .px ' H 3 HAQQ5' K ELIZABETH CECIL NORMAN Yet none wxth more hberal scope Surveyed the sphere of human thmgs l' JOAN BAGBY POTTER Wxth thee C0l1NQlS1llg I folget ill tlme INEZ BENTLEY PRYOR She hath a happy Smlle a puckered brow A careless ease, a commendable perslstence me ELIZABETH ATKINSON RASH Much have I travelled through realms of gold ? TIS not so easy to see below the surface Where dally mterests and phllosophlc thouvhts are strangely mlX9d GWENDOLYN ELIZABETH REED BETTY STARKS RODES Wxth grace to vsm wxth heart to hold S-r'4'LM. DOROTHY CAROL SMITH A happy soul that all the vxa Y To heaven hath a ummers day L RACHEL MACAULEY SMITH Fear not to touch the best t The tru th shall be thy warran if ELLEN HENRY SPALDING She IS full of enthuslasm And the Joy that comes wxth good sportsmanshlp .J CORNELI A SPEED d Calc del ldes Spmt that xumklc h ldmg both hxs SldCS And Laughtel 0 N...r ' 4 MARY KAYE TARRANT A mmd strong and determmed A Splflt courageous and optlmlstlc 3 MARY LEE WOOD Of loyal natule and of noble mmd 4' fe . rf, W A I 1 Q a f, 1 I E TRANSCRI A Semor Remembers The thr1ll of wmmng IH a Blue Gold game The 1mpromptu speeches at each banquet That speual Fr1dax look when the cl1ck of h1gh heels IS heard 1n the hall And a Semors car packed w1th laughmg g1rls at 1 The Chr1stmas partx w1th Santa Claus The Glee Clubs XOICGS ra1sed 1n Adestes Fxdeles The feelmg when the last exam IS through And the eYc1tement of planmng tor sprmg events Mondax mormng gOSS1p IH Semor Studx Lunches sen ed Outblde IH sprmg And sunbathers xuth then arms IH classroom wmdows Class d1scuss1ons ID home1oom meetmgs Gay laughter and a tr1endlx greetlng These are thmgs that haxe made our h1 h school days These are thmgs that I w1ll m1ss next xear Xlxm Hoon Cllss Txxelxe 31 T H 1 ' P T 7 ' ' ' ' ' 115g v , ', ' an ' 17 7 r - ' ' ' ' ' 77 The quick blush and smile that comes with Happy Birthdayug 1 1 v 7 1' ' 1 ' . .1 ,' ' . 1 ' ., ' .. ' 1 csv 1 I 1 , 1 1' 1 ' 1 V 1. 1 y -. , . Y ' 1 , 'cf 1 ,. D 1 THE TRANSCRIPT l-low We Remember Them Altsheler Baker Baqule Brown Buhner Flynn Grlswold Helm Kmg M1les Norman Potter Pryor Rash Reed Rodes Smlth Smlth Spaldm Speed Tarrant Wood Altsheler Baqule 8z Rodes Brown Buhner Flynn Grlswold Helm Kmg M1les Norman Potter Pryor Rash Reed Smlth C Sm1th R Spaldmg Speed Tarrant Wood Leaves Leaves Leaves Leaves T eaves Leaves Leaves Leaves Leaves Leaves Leaves Leaves Leaves Leax es Leax es Leaxe the1r blushes at the Seventh Street Stat1on Leaves er Leaves er Leaves er Leapmg around Dr1v1ng UD a car Smelllng of burnt wood And her spontaneous comments Ghdmg In her pantaloons Wlth her green cushlon Regulatmg the llght swltches Trylng to explaln her Jokes In Dancing class Volclng Ethel s op1n1on Tellmg Jokes Laughmg In stocklngs every Fr1dav And her strange songs Makmg a speech R8.1S1l'1g her eyebrovss Apo1og1z1ng Crackmg gum Havmg a good t1me Blushlng 1n B1ology As Iolanthe Semor Wlll Leaves Wlth the nose on her face classroom remarks to Mary McChord calmness to Jan1 pantaloons to the hlghest b1dder floor space to Semor Study energy to Carol Cutch1ns engagement rlng to Nancy S1mon asldes to Shakespeare closmg Senlor Studv door a bottle of mllk to Meredlth her wardrobe 1n Senlor Study to the Junlors w1th the Drploma her men to Ahce Atk1DS er s1lence to the Sophomore class er parklng place to any hlker er hlgh heels to Clara Mr Lee forwardlng letters e B1ology class to MISS Hutchlnson John Mason Brown to Mrs Monroe SI' el' GI' EI' The Sen1ors leave tackv Tuesday to the Sophomores and to the Junlors we leave our College letters on Hle 32 ' Qofiffll H ' f. ' JR. ........ . g ......... . ., Baker: . . ...'.'.'.' ...' .I .I ..fLeaves in .order to get home before dark. I ' ........... h ' , ' ............... h ' ' , ' .............. h - ' I . ', '.ffff1f1 h ' ' . ' , . ........... h ' ' , ' ........... h ' v , D015 v-1 Ann Brown n 1 Brown v-4 1 per 6 CD1 GDI I v-4 v-1 JD r-4 1-4 v-4 I-4 v-4 44 O Of t Ed h -A 'D He dead eeting the M UYSG CO L9 nden p0 To take a corres rf H67 Form ng the th rd party Herd ng the stray lamb tat ve from rator 11 stance ope arepe h 1 Tb 08 Tob VCS 0 9 th heck W th To wder vPo ab B S OH Joh is e Ca M f-4 4.1 YOXV I-4 P11 .-4 v-4 ,-4 ri v-4 Er-I y winner 8 ng 1 Own 1-1 1-4 r-1 Q4 Ile ets y ck k t v-0 YC you C U mr- A I ..... ............ ' 'This is getting bad ........... To get those curtains ined ..... Inventin an antidote for peroxi e Carolyn Jean. . .C ber ............. I 1' k bout you . . .To marry an ice-cube and i Co ' an 1 e 1c1 es .................. i ........... i ................. 'K i .............. .............. G at S . 'i ........... 1 .........,... Is Bim here yet? .........,... T wr' i i umn ..................... Margie ......... Litt e Cherub .......... 'tNow, Joe said ................ To be sophisticated ............ Serving Presbyterian Suppers Virginia ........ B ................ A ............. To be a dam il ........... i 1 ' B Joyce .......... Long-p aying record .... Do you promise? ............. To teach itt e cic es to be R bering th fect p an gg bi ergs .................... ecy ........... Ichabod ................ I simp y can' inha el ......... To get her egs tan ............. Kicking over a responsibility oan ........... The constant co d ....... What do you think about that? .To itch her wagon to a star .... Society i I . ............ A 'ack-in-the-box ...... Don't panic .................. ' . ' li got to ..................... . Gwendy ........ Mr. Be vedere .......... My opinion is-N .............. o e r sen i i i Wa Whd Be mont ...... .. B tty .......... 1 ' ' I ft i li ...... L n Di ......... i 5 s rol ........... Ki ty C t .............. Do you think he thinks I e a mai man ............... Blushing ik him?'y .................. . Rache ......... Cocker Spanie ......... think I fee sick ............. To be ferocious ................ Being dy lien ........... A Powers Mode ........ 'tOh, I hope it's mushy! ........ To catch a 'oke on time ........ Belang a second Mar ene itrich i ........... Hyena ................. 'iGood morning, Mr. Lee ....... To catch up With the forward Sayin ' ' e ' ......................... right time K ye ........... er etua Debutante. . . Ho d that ine ................ To be a cut-up ................. ' ' Derb ' Ma ry ........... he kerboard .......... Oh,. ' kidding! ........... To be bat-gir for the Colonels. .Giving awa , twocfi ' for THE TRANSCRIPT Heorven Help Us Gvx endv d1d not hate an op1n1on Inez took her clothes home Kaye d1d her French Chemlstry class was all there for a test Ann Altsheler stayed at school all dax Carolyn Jean threw a tantrum The x lctrola ln Senror Study was there and workmg Our gym su1ts fit Baker had all her belongmgs The radlators worked 1n French class Ann Brown moy ed agaln The Perfect Senlor Han Ex eb1 ows E5 es Nose Mouth Laugh Teeth D1mples Cornplexlon Colormg Fac1al Expresslons Hands WHISI H1ps Legs Ankles Intellect W1 Po1se Good Nature Energx Vu aclousness Betty Rodes Joan Potter Inez Pryor Kaye Tarrant Calol Srnlth Julxe Baqule Nlna Speed Joy ce M1165 Ann Altsheler Rachel Smlth Mary Wood V1rg1n1a Klng Ann Brown Bonrta Gr1swold Ellen Spaldlng Gwendy Reed Peggy Rash Betty Baker Carolyn Jean Buhner Cecx Norman M31g1G Helm Pat Flynn V . Y .. U . '. , . 1 1 7. . . . 7 . .W -nn. ...u gs.-..wqqn44s-...ana 7 1 7 ......... ........... U . .f . 7 . ' ' - 1 1 7 1.1.14-queen.-w--vu-un Y M 7. 1' M .. .....,....... . ...... ..... 34 oq hears one q- the Aokes lemon Srumr 'Joan N no. Pnn 'fell DQ 1Okc.S 'X K.,.f-'X Hen X Eloody bu: X, K fumcf vlcior ous s If Fautknen and fxfvv' Wepner our dx qo.+or moq he mai n peace Oi: Br-fdqe qame rcfaumes undh fn. plaqs L +able. o non OU 4-epioe W- artlso Ko.-4e d se 'YS 'Yff Xo.1'Es'T vid-sm YALE hem :O-rq books Gllalw' oh l ry-.0 e chemisyq books 1 4 i tl rw v, 'f Nl LJ 0 f cgi' A fl A T AA K a ! , ' l, Q kj Traqgdq 9 AL X Ouwpsea x ff K If xv 3 3 3 , I . fs Q I K c ' X X FK-,X C L V Qi gy.. I Co THE TRANSCRI 6 00 05 5 8 20 .3 8 .3 8 40 8 45 8 50 8 55 9 4 10 00 10 05 10 10 10 30 10 35 10 40 10 50 10 55 11 00 11 01 11 02 11 15 11 20 11 25 12 35 12 45 12 50 12 55 5 1 55 2 00 2 02 2 03 2 25 2 30 2 35 3 15 A Typlccrl Senlor Day Pat wakes up to do H1story Pat goes back to bed a quo1 bon'? Peggy arrlves Rachel pa1ks and the group starts walkmg N1na gets up Rachel and group arrlve The The SGDIOTS go to assembly The senlors come back from assembly school comes back from assembly B1ology class starts MISS Hutchmson arrlves They carry the formaldehyde v1ct1ms out frog IH hand Kaye havmg glorlous tlme mutllatmg Poor Frog' Bell rlngs Senlors rush for door Woops' False alarm' Rachel says But Mrs Monroe Rachel explalns her po1nt of VIEW Rachel gets the po1nt across Mrs Monroe had sald so all along school goes to assembly The Recess at last T1me out for a shag Candy sale beg1ns Candy sold out Ellens allowance gone Inez gets rema1ns Chem1strv class has tea party Sulphur blows up Wanted coughee all along H1St0Fy of Art class st1ll 1n Senlor Studv Hlstory starts w1th a bang' M1ss Wlttmeler calls on V1Tg1D1a V1rg1n1a understands the quest1on V1rg1n1a st1ll trymg Lunch Red wlgged v1s1tor enters French class Baker and Peggy start argulng and Joyce starts Mrs Wandrey has someone to fllng open wlndow Joan leaves French room for coat Joan returns wlth coat Argument st1ll gomg full blast m Latm class Latm class leaves Baker and Peggy leave Joyce st1ll translatlng UD translatmg Latm 36 P T el -x 7 . 8:1 ' . sro ' . ' :'1 ' . I 0 ' . ' 121 . l UPPER SCI-IUCIL I I me, T THE TRANSCRIPT Quo VGCIISQ My llfe 1S d1a1ned bx tux 1al1t1es Mx words are meamngless confuslon My days are a long successlon of blank banal1t1es And mx Splflt IS sp1awl1ng to dlffuslon I decelve myself 1nto hunger and th1rst I entrap my 1nd1v1dual1ty Wlth hab1t I find that I have put the last thlngs first My thoughts are as f'lurr1ed as tracks of a rabb1t I am not one and large I am many and small Ixe no t1me to be great Im too rushed to be tall Tomorrow I ll change fwas not th1s once tomorrow J Ex en as I Wflte ID meamngless sor1ow I know as surely as dark comes w1th mght That I am small and 1ncapable of he1ght B11 rm Bxun Cl 155 Txulu The Storm The heavy storm comes blacklv It stlcks 1tS ugly head through the door of the earth Spreadmg unt11 lt blots out the azure sky L1ke mk IH an overturned 1nkwell It comes stealthlly s1lently Crouchmg l1ke a t1ger wa1t1ng to spr1ng It p1cks 1tS prey and sprlngs Rushmg forward 1n a torrent of uncontrollab e feroc1ousness It spreads sw1ftly never haltlng It IS lmplacable never merclful It IS dec1s1ve and never falls Thus the storm rushes on Always scowl1ng behlnd 1tS thlck dark mask Workmg 1tself up to such turbulence That It seems to explode wlthln 1tself Uncontrolled lt destroys everythmg 1n s1ght It snarls and Sp1tS fire The ram comes down In sheets of sharp b1t1ng drops The damage done The storm slxnks sllently away Sat1sfied that lt has completed 1ts m1ss1on Then once more the calm blue sky appears St1ll IH 1ts peace and tranqu1ll1ty It soaks up the damage w1th ltS perfect1on and beauty Defeatmg the purpose of the storm Nhm FITZHLC11 Class T111 38 Y I I ' - I7 f- l U 7' ' ' I ' ! 1 Y - , r 1 , - Y . V . ' . 7 Y 7 , . And then slips slowly in, 7 9 I 1 ' - ' , . I . . . 7 . L 7 7 . . ., u 7 7 , . U . . . 9 7 , . , . 9 Y 3 THE TRANSCRIPT lt ls Gwen To No Mon to Venture For Along the Rodd of Llves Sherwood Anderson I' WAS a cold and smoggy day I had come downtown to meet a frlend who was supposed to Walt for me at the corner of a certaln street If we had known that lt was to be one of those davs when the weather has a hard t1me makmg up 1ts m1nd whether to snow ram or sleet I m sure we would have chosen another spot As It was I arrlved at the chosen rendezvous wlth a mlxture of feehngs I had walked two blocks through the weathers undeclded elements and was thoroughly frozen I pulled my coat closer around me and regarded the red faced people who were momentarlly standmg at the corner My frlend was not there I glanced at my watch and noted that It was five mlnutes past the hour I looked at the people agaln to make sure that I had not mrssed hlm but It was too apparent 1n my hopefulness that he was not there I was not alone IH my Waltlflg Near me stood a woman She was t1red t1red from walkmg and carry1ng the heavy shoppmg bag from store to store She had the look of someone who had never known the pleasures of l1fe Certa1nly she longed for them but her hfe had been one of d1s appomtments and m1ser1es I notlced the book that she was carrymg and read the t1tle Seven Storey Mountam It was a l1brary book I looked at her agaln and saw what a slngle glance was not able to tell me She was not t1red from walklng She was t1red because she was 1ll very 1ll I saw and by the way her whole body shook wracked by a deep cough that the reason she had the book was her desxre and longlng for pleasure amld so many hardshlps and her great hope that It would come through constant dlscouragements as llght through darkness I looked up agaln to see that she was watchmg me her gray eyes gomg through me l1ke an arrow D1d she see D1d she see my l1fe by lookmg at me as I had tr1ed to see hers? I could feel the blood creeplng up my cheeks and I turned away pretendmg to look at my watch agam I had come to reallze 1n the past few years the k1nd of l1fe I led It was not a real l1fe but an 1m1tat1on of l1fe 1tself a shallow l1fe Suddenly xt was lmportant to me to know whether she understood what my llfe was Dld she have the lnslght to guess what I really was or dld she envy mel I wanted to know but when I looked around there was only ernptmess where she had stood the ram poured down harder and harder I looked at my watch X7IRGINI-K KING Class Tu elxe Wlshful Thlnklnq I W1Sh that IH the hard bone of my skull Instead of formless grey matter whxch IS so dull I Wlsh that there were l1qu1d hght Pure blue water or the a1r of a wlnter nlght Gmzx RELD Class Tuelse 39 by the way her hands trembled when she opened her cheap leather purse THF SFN WF E-4 ... .J : o TE III ? 2' ja mE Q1-4 QC I-'SZ W. 25' EO U 23 : se -52 :P ET 45 Sv E51 C32 Eff QLUI QP.,- . D23 : .: N255 . G2-'11 iii fi LQ Sim ,Mai ,,.m Qin :::D.. CDT. 71.2 3933 E35 .155 ff' EEE wig ,Ez : :.. :EU 'fri 255 uJ::. - U :rg 42:2 mga: Ei? 391 A511 :LAW V3.2 Ulla THE TRANSCRIPT In Shollow Depths HE DISTANT muslc slowly faded away Gleam1ng objects all about turned from sharp Whlte to gray and from dull hazy gray to black Colors ran together l1ke thousands of tlny r1vers and became a huge ocean of Jet The water all around me was slowly soaked up 1nto the sponge of blackness Then for a long wh1le there was absolute darkness and utter sllence Slowly the curtaln of darkness drew back and I was standlng on a ledge far above c1v1l1zat1on where I could taste the clouds D1rectly below It was pltch black but I could see the wavmg tree tops sllhouetted agalnst the last red streaks of the sunset Every second the glow of the already gone sun grew d1mmer and dlmmer The great black clouds of nlght were beglnnlng thelr nlghtly vanqulshlng of the sens1t1ve less warr1or l1ke clouds whlch reflected the last preclous rays ln p1nks lavenders and gold I was stand 1ng completely alone 1n a strange but marvelous and fresh world Then just as Dusk fastened her gray cloak there was a great tumult 1n the sk es I looked up and saw a cloud l1ke volcano eruptlng And from It rose a swlft and cruel wlnd L1ke a geme from a maglc lamp lt grew larger and larger and shadowed the whole sky The trees no longer made sllhouettes I heard a murmur then a roar1ng W1thout warnlng the genle caught me IH h1S arms then mercllessly dropped me I felt myself fall1ng falllng I had been swept from my marvelous world to be plunged 1nto an unknown and forebodlng one My body was turnmg over and over wh1le 1t was speedlng downward through space A gllmpse me and t1ny as a pen polnt Would I fall forever? Another gllmpse showed just a slrver of sky and two lofty leanlng chffs r1s1ng to the sky But then I saw the turbulent purple waters raclng and gurgllng below me each wave l1ck1ng 1ts llps IH antlc patlon of 1ts v1ct1m They reached up to grab me and hast1ly snatched me from the dry a1r I d1dn t feel the molsture of the water unt1l I stopped d1v1ng deep 1nto the depths It was as lf the waters had opened thelr 1aws to recelve me Suddenly a current crossed the path of my fall and I was wh1pped around l1ke a newly hooked fish All at once I was sucked 1nto a glgantlc funnel VVI'11CIl wh1rled me so fast my head dld not feel a part of my body my eyes were forced shut my arms were slammed to my sldes and I could not move a muscle of my own accord The once freezlng swlrls of water became l1ke scaldlng lava My m1nd left me I was no more Water filled my body The blood was squeezed out of me by the tremendous pressure and velocxty and water was the blood for my vems I was surrounded bv and at the mercy of sw1rl1ng l1qu1ds through whlch there was no outlet Then just as lf a great faucet were suddenly fhcked off the d1n ceased All the roar1ng foarnmg seethmg and slurplng subslded All was dark The d1stant muslc became agam detectable 1n drastlc contrast to the wxld reckless notes that had Just faded from mv ears The darkness was p1erced by sharp whlte objects The glare bl1nded me even through closed evehds L1ght squeezed the water from the sponge of darkness and I felt 1ts detested wetness all about me 41 X 7 7 ' ' 7 7 , Q - . . I 7. I 1 , , . - , - A , - . A . 9 ' ' 7 . 7 I I ' 7 , . I . . 7 . . 7 7 7 ' , . of the ledge, on which I had been standing, flashed by - - - now, far above . . 1 7 . I . 7 . . ' v . . . . ,. . . . . . . , . . I . I , . 4 7 . 9 7 I I . I . . . I . , I . 1 1 ' ' 7 ' 7 E ID SI'151llOW DSIDIIIS Concluded Onlx mx heau b1eath1ng d1stu1bed the tranqu1ll1ty Gaspmg and sput te11ng water I lnfted st1ckx ex elaihes and looked up to see a hlu11ed show G1 nozzle HH Lx ll XXIXION Marvelous lnvenhon C95 To me the phone Is L1 X1 onduiul thlnp But It dx 1XLb mothex uafx To heen 1t 11113, It goes, lnceasantlx NQXGI btoppmg And to .anew C1 lt qtucklx Keeps ue hoppmg At tunes 1t5 fO1 Mom Othe1 tunes fo1 Daddx Some loquac1ouS adult Lass1e Ol ladd1e COIIUIIUCIIIX commg A1e Calls, lol us dlughtels I fC3l we use the phone Max be ITIOIC th m we ought e1 The constant Illlglflg Th1ovxs Mom ID 1 state Shell pull the phone from he vxa If It keepi up at thlS 1ate' But We must know the 9OSS1p And also the homevwolk Bes1des It s ouch fun To mdulge 111 the phone Work Mothel she hovsle And Daddx he bellovxs Go do xoux homework And cut 1t sho1t wlth the fellows But l1fe must Q0 on And lt cwnt VNIIIIOLII Illklllg Bless the du puente bCIlCVC thlg And do 111 IX xxlth then squwwklng 42 lss lluu ur llx C Iss 'lcn TH TRANSCRIPT , Y 7 H 1 . .4 W .. . ' 1, ., .X . ' . , , , . J . . ' 7 . , . Cl1.'fi '1 . 1, y 5-I I ,- ' .'v,. ,. ,.,ly 11. -I J' 1' -- rv 7 1 1 ' , ' 1 . ' . , ' 1 , , . . ,. E ' ' ' .x x , . . , -,- V . . 1 71 I Z 1 7 , . t fll L! 7 , , . - -1 . ,M , , H Y x . , . , i. ' . Y 1 c K. 11 1 v rwi 1 . l , .I . . 2 ft 1 . Y .01 1 Y-v In -11 uxx ,lzff '- , 57? WMA or ww. . ,Qs 1. it dig Y X, , Q59 Q fd 3 f ' A Q19 x'g4f,f?'T Iwi' ' 3 . 4 . A11 ,5,Q'f 5 4 ,If-:E 9 , IQ 4 ff' I. 'vi Q Mizz. ' ,,.4'Z? 914. 'N All -' THE TRANSCRI Tlme Txme IS to some a hand SW1ft1'IlOV11'1g oer a clock Plantmg 1tS dreaded bland Of age l1ke fOSS11 rock Tlme cuts destroy s knocks down Each v1ct1m that lt meets Green grass becomes dr1ed brown All thmgs It grabs and eats No thmg on eaxth I know Escapes th1s monster T1me xxl SNIIII IS Llcycn Just as Ere on 1ts hghtnmg course Strlkes and rums W1th revengeful wrath Death damaglng and Vanqu1sh1ng Takes l1y es 1nto 1tS sweepmg path Death arrlves you are there then gone Th1S real1st1c world ot dreams Ot tangled thoughts and hopes lt seems The sound1ng of the mfant s cry Tells to the world that lt 15 here But 1f lt knew what l1fe can hold Would lt not cryf Wlth HHXIOUS fea Ioxcn NIILLQ C xnolux lux BUIINIR Cllss Tyyclyc The Future The tuture lb a bllfldlflg thmg A foggy space Where only dreams can leally brlng A true rehef It 15 a m1st that s settlmg down On blackened woods Confuslon and uncertalnty creep Am1d the boughs And somewhere ln th1s black expanse A challenge calls And then we step wlthout a glance To vague tomorrow Cn IIILLI-KRD Class Elcycn 44 P T I I 7 5 ' - ' s 7 ' . A 7 . .7 .i 7 - S A 7 5 g. , , 1 . Clays 7 I .. I - - , 7 l 7 .7 . . I ' 7 h - I 7. ' 7 ' Has freed a traveler from its web , , .. . . , . .g I . U , r? Y v 1 -1 - A w ak Af A 4, L A 'A 7 A . .1 . , 1 . 7 .4 . 1 7 3 IA Y A K L 4 Y 75 hose N S bq'B0.YkUll'h 'Donn lmnul-I' C-06125 Nifth Famous Lllsl' LAJordS pvc!! Q X Oux ep orxiev 1 Y W Sophmove U. xatsahr v Ghosh! bak! T eomn 4.....J bw-,gi PA Q Or ICA I I NJ l :chad -5 X x vw-9 VG Uuuu UN U AA S fdrfvm wsn h ...fb S uJr r Ev' knuln 1.1 s Q.. an 5 'Vo be 5 H 4. ':'vu1 5:61-N-v. 'Q I Mgvxenq 9-----9 at Q., 1. X. qu' nu' Q Q. Lx,poHo0 u V 1 hem. we umm. Luc C L 5 vnnq uw C Owl Yfwo dl A Puri-uve QC- Q Vous 77' '53 M N v VERXI 6-MMR? 4 IW 3 Qf 'H G M J Hqvm 'N' 'Q Euuqweek when 1 C'-J' W-H WU' So 0-XM sq M vatnxi sl 1 Y hkuqh Elan-ov Hvsqdls L73 eff N-Ml. 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V D r O , P- f .- Mo vm QVC i S-A A I O in L - , Q 'QV THE TRANSCRIPT A New World NGELA closed the door of the barn The last cow had been mllked and she was glad to be finlshed w1th her evenlng chores The sound of the dlnner bell drlfted down from the farmhouse Angela d1d not hurry because she knew lt would take the farmhands several mlnutes to come up from the field She turned and walked up the h1ll backward so that she could see the beautlful sunset The sun was just s1nk1ng below the mountaln top and the sky had turned 1Ht0 a mass of plnk and blue and cr1rnson Angela longed to be nearer the mountaln even on 1ts very peak so that she could see the whole world and touch the sky w1th her hands For a moment her heart was hght as she dreamed of th1s wonder ful exper1ence but as she trlpped over a stone she was brought back 1nto the present world She saw two of the farmhands pass her and look at her w1th that strange look on the1r faces that she had seen so often Frag ments of the1r conversatlon came to her Angela odd sort of g1rl always daydreammg Angela sucked 1n her breath but she was used to that sort of remark now The achlng feehng d1d not grlp her heart as lt had when she had first heard s1m1lar phrases It must have been about three years ago when she had first come to l1ve at the Spencers at the age of thlrteen She had gone lnto the vlllage on an errand and as she entered the general store snatches of the women s con versat1on reached her ears Angela orphan Mrs Spencer says she IS qulte queer reads so much takes long walks by herself The boys and grrls at school d1d not understand her elther She would much rather read or go for a walk 1n the beautlful woods than bounce all over the countryslde ln a Jeep w1th a crazy bunch of boys and gxrls Gradually they had stopped askmg her and she was left completely alone Angela entered the kltchen her head bent so that her blonde halr cov ered her cheeks and her brown ey es were lowered She washed her hands at the s1nk and sl1pped 1n bes1de Susan the Spencer s ten year old daughter It was d1SgL1St11'1g Angela thought that the farmhands hardly ever washed the1r hands and the1r overalls always smelled of the d1rt and sweat of the fields Mr Spencer was d1scuss1ng the plgs and the gra1n crop Wlth the workers Angela gazed at the p1cture on the wall She loved that p1cture It showed a MCXICHH vlllage and 1n the background was the church and the bell hlgh 1n the steeple Angela wondered how It would be to stand 1n the Steeple and watch the people worklng and sleeplng or how lt would feel to be that bell r1ng1ng out so that everyone could hear you Please do Angela Ive just got to go Angelas dream was rudely broken as she real1zed that Susan was speakmg to her The ch1ld s eyes were eager w1th exc1tement Angela srruled at her as everyone else stared at Angela Mrs Spencer was say1ng She s been begglng you for several mlnutes now to take her to the square dance tonlght Angela had never been to a square dance before because they d1d not lnterest her but 1f Susan wanted to go she would take her A few mlnutes later the two glrls were walklng down the road It was 46 Y Y 1 - 7 - 7 7 . . H . . ,, . 7 , . . . , . 7 7 ' U - - 77 Y - Y . . . . , , . 7 7 7 H 7 ' 77 7 , . . . . . , , . . u , . . ' 7 ' 77 7 7 7 ' THE TRANSCRIPT A New World Cont1nued a beautlful mght The stars were twlnkllng and the a1r had the cr1spness 1n It that only comes w1th autumn The leaves crunched under thelr feet as they walked 1n sllence Angela felt free now w1th the same hght feelmg she had earller when she dreamed of bemg on the mountamtop The glrls walked on down the road passmg the farmhouses Wh1Ch loomed dark and shadowy IH the deepenmg tw1l1ght F1nally they reached the vlllage The aud1tor1um was brlghtly lxghted and yellow beams shone from the wlndows and door Angela could hear the squeakmg fiddle whose beats were accented by stamp1ng feet and clapplng hands Susan and Angela squeezed mto the stuffy room packed w1th people and found two seats Susan sat on the very edge of her chalr her eyes brlght and her feet golng ln t1me to the mus1c Angela leaned backed and looked around her The fiddler and the p1an1st were playlng wlth great vlgor as the caller droned 1n h1s nasal volce Alamen rlght and a doesy doe Swlng your partners and away we go Angela looked at the couples on the floor who were mostly boys and glrls her age They were all laughlng and the glrls full sklrts were b1llow1ng out as they whlrled round and round The1r faces were flushed and the1r halr was dlsorderly By now Susan was falrly bounclng out of her seat w1th ex c1tement Oh I want to dance Angle May I9 she sa1d Well go on replled Angela and watched as Susan ran off to a group of fr1ends Why do these people l1ke th1s thought Angela The heat the smell the no1se lt s all so loud and d1sgust1ng to me I hate lt The mus1c grew wllder and faster and the heavy boots stamped fur1ous1y on the floor Angela s eye caught a couple 1n the mlddle of the floor The g1rl s cr1mson sklrt was gettmg fuller and fuller as her partner swung her tlghtenmg h1s gr1p around her walst They were laugh1ng and talkxng gally as they revolved on the floor Suddenly as Angela watched she felt her heart beat faster and her hands became wet and clammy Her cheeks were flushed and she felt as 1f she were on flre What IS wrong Wlth me she wondered Why do I feel th1S way? Then as her eyes remalned fastened on the red sklrt d1zz1ly sw1ng1ng she knew She wanted to be that g1rl out there She wanted to be held 1n a boy s strong arms and laugh and shout Wlth h1m She wanted to dance and wh1rl around and around and let the mus1c pound through her body maklng her fast mov1ng feet respond to the frenzled beat She dld not understand th1S new feellng th1s longlng to JOIH the others all she knew was that she wanted to shout and dance and Llve She looked at a group of boys standlng near her but thelr backs were turned Oh can t you see that I want to dance? she Cfled s1lently As lf 1n answer to her unvolced questlon one of the boys turned around but glanced away qulckly Llke a dash of ICG water ln her face the reallzatlon came to Angela that no one wanted to dance w1th her She was the g1rl who wrote poetry mstead of play1ng and never W1Sh6d to 3o1n 1n the fun Angela ached 1ns1de The mus1c and the sw1rl1ng bodles st1ll called her 47 v 1 - 1 . . . . . H . v - yr . . , . . . u - as - v 7 ' -r ' LL as - v 1 - cz - - aa cc - 1 ' 1 . . , . . . ,, , '- . . , . . . , . . . 1 ' 7 - xc ' ' as ' 1 u - av - , . . . , , - - v . . 7 an r n ' - ' . , . . s 1 . ' , - v THE TRANSCRIPT A New World Concluded but she could not answer Never had such a yearnmg filled hex She leaped up from her seat and hurr1ed to the group of boys Dance wlth me Jake she begged Aw you don t know how Oh yes I do please Oh go away was the answer You dance wlth me Paulo she demanded of the next one Ha are you klddlflgo Drop dead Suddenlx Angela felt xery weak as though her legs would not support her much longer and she turned from the group I must get out she thought She rushed for the door out lnto the cool 1mpersonal nlght whlch enx eloped her Two farmers leanmg agamst the door watched her as she hurr1ed bv and then one shrugged his shoulders muttermg to the other one That queer Spencer glrl guess she doesnt l1ke danclng elther NI un NX oon C I rss Txulxc Sora s Mornlncg ARA HIGGINS woke up to see a dark and dmgy room A ragged shade was pulled down over a wlndow 1n attempt to keep out the llght Sara looked across the room and saw her tw1n brothels snug hand of her slster The baby crled pltlfullx Sara 1umped from he1 bed and COIT1f01tGd the ch1ld The sun had begun to r1se and a gust of wmd blew furlouslx Snow flU1119S had fallen and the frozen earth was a m1xtu1e of snow and soot Sala 1eal1Led her mother was slck and she would have to do all the house wo1k get breakfast and take the chlldren to the settlement house before she went to school She dressed hurrledly and ran down the stalrs to fix breakfast The k1tchen was dusty and cobwebs made the room have a gray dlngx effect The brlght yellow walls had turned gray and cracks of plaster ran through the wall llke great r1ve1s In one corner was a table whlch would seat four A small o1l burner substltuted for the stove and next to It was a mldget lcc box The slnk xx as filled Wlth dlshes because Sara had been too exhausted to wash them last mght Sala fixed a breakfast of bu1 nt toast trled eggs and warm m1lk because the ICG box wasnt workmg She placed an egg on a tray and took It to her mothe1 The chlldren play ed w1th lumps of coal whlle Sara d1d the dlshes and stralghtened the house as best she could She plcked the chlldren up and took them to the settlement house Where they would remaln unt1l she came home from school Sara started toward school w1th a feellng of respons1b1l1tv Rau BooT1I Plus III ht 48 gg ' 97 7 1 ' KL Y 1 73 , . 45 Y i 57 7 u ' 66 V!! 7 Y ' LL ' 77 , . . it ' ' 97 , . . 7 7 .1 Y SL 77 Q . . y . V . ' , . . 7 . . , . ' . , 7 C6 ' T 7 ' ' ' 77 l 7 7 Iac: H H I 1 gled together under a thin blanket. She turned over and felt the cold . ' . 7 Y Q i 7 D . . y . . . . J '. V . 1 . , . , . . 7 . . . . 7 ,L . , 'Q 'fd L, F ! , waxy' ' ., 9 Q' L ' ' WA . 1: , 'T S, I ' ,ah I A-Q ,. ,, .M 1 1 ,, ,, V, 1 A , 'M 4 Q W ,, if 4 W THE TRANSCRIPT The Seofsons T1ny and laughlng the Cherub of sprmg Dances w1th llght ln a shade freckled grove Toneless and murmur1ng songs he s1ngs L1ke the wh1rl1ng water of t1ny brooks Wet h1llS1deS after an Apr1l ra1n Smell of the sea 1n the d1m mornlng l1ght P1nk and gold Sk1ES as near draws the nlght Soft green l1ght through a crystal pane H1gh 1n an 1nd1go sky the hot sun Unbl1nk1ngly stares down at Summer s brown fields Through wh1ch the shallow1ng rlvulets run Br1ght colored flowers the garden x1elds A snake sllthers out of h1s w1nter la1r And basks h1s long sequ1ny length on a stone Sh1mmer1ng water and sh1mmer1ng a1r Bees fill the day wlth thelr low s1ng1ng drone CFISP dancmg leaves and melted gold trees Br1ll1antly color the land 1n the fall Can th1s th1ng be death when always one sees The glor1ous wreaths whlch obscure the black pa '7 Thus would I d1e when my tlme IS come Exultantly blazmg 1n final mad glory Before my red leaves turn to rlch black loam To nour1sh sprlng flowers renewlng the story Sllver and gl1nt1ng l1ke steel IS the ICG Its edge IS as hard and as cuttmg and cruel The bare bleak trees l1ft thelr shorn arms and tW1C6 The rabb1t tracks c1rcle the frozen pool And HOISES are muffled 1n soft falhng snow A s1lent and eerlely warm1ng bed The tombstone so wh1te no longer can show For all thlngs are Whlte and dead BFTTX Bunn Class Twelve A Moonllt Memory Moonhght nlghts Sa1ls stretchmg for the stars Shadows flngermg over the dark waters The heavens s1ng1ng thelr nex er forgotten songs The breezes whlsperlng ID reply Trees standlng s1lhouetted agamst the m1dn1ght blue And the wh1te whlte salls reachmg for the d1stant Sk16S CAROIYN IFAN. BU111s111 joxcr. N11Lrs Class Tw elxe 50 1 ' 1 7 1 1 1 . . , . - 7. . U 1 1 1 1 v . 1 1 , . 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 V ,- aff 75 1 7 1 7 - 1 1 1 , . JILL' Y, y 'JRHE TRANSCRIPT The Wlnd HE WEATHER couldnt have been more perfect It was all anyone could ask for the warm sun shmmg down from the sky so stately and royal 1n 1ts V1V1d blueness It was fall and the leaves were turn 1n 1nto thelr beautxful hued colors orange red yellow and brown The grass was st1ll a lush green It had not yet glven up 1ts l1fe to become the famlllar dull dead brown of wlnter It was the tlme of year of energy and freedom of the w1ll to do and accompl1sh There was a cr1sp fresh w1nd that played through the a1r wakmg all who dared to sleep who dared to forget the beauty of Autumn 1n all 1ts splendor and glory Down the lane a car sped through the row of trees through the maze of pamted leaves The car was magnlficent to behold It was long and sleek a beaut1ful sh1ny blue polxshed l1ke glass Wllh br1ght chromlum tr1m The machme gl1nted and sparkled as the warm sun was reflected 1n the cold sh1ny metal The motor was also marvelous In 1ts sound there was force and power and a low busy humm1ng lns1de th1s root of power sat a man He was tall and handsome rn a rugged way H1s face was suntanned from golf at the club h1s features were sharply cut A determmed look lurked especmally m the clear blue eyes and the square chln He was young but he was not struggllng not anymore at least He had wanted to become successful and he had done so through h1s own determlnatlon and the wxll to succeed He was powerful He had forged h1s career that of a lawyer l1ke a sculptor would make a statue tear1ng down here bu1ld1ng up there throwmg away somewhere else unt1l the deslred effect the finlshed and perfected end was achleved It was a forceful end The man was not perfect yet but 1n t1me he would be Only exper1ence was lackmg m the analys1s He had such self confl dence and the personallty about h1m that the older men at the club sald A fine boy there Hes bu1lt his own career Nobody handed hxm a desk unfeel1ng you m1ght say It was true He had made hlmself what he was As a small boy even before h1s father had dled he had wanted to be a lawyer a real good one He had sald these words to hlmself many tlmes And he had succeeded Now at twenty elght that was what he was real good lawyer But It d1d not stop there It had gone beyond that He wanted to be a blgger and better lawyer the bxggest and best the most powerful It was undlsputed among those the proverb1al those that he was definltely on h1s way towards that goal He can t fall they all sald He was dr1v1ng down a beaut1ful lane of trees 1n a br1ght sh1ny blue car to h1s club Suddenly there was a br1ght yellow flash the screech of brakes gr1nd1ng to a stop too late a muffled scream then sllence never end1ng sllence The qulet of death She was very small only about five or maybe s1x w1th the most beautlful blonde halr he had ever seen long and wavy She wore a yellow dress Her face was sweet and very mnocent She must have been full of sparkle and energy he thought before I d1dn t mean to though It was all an acc1dent How could It have been my fault? She ran r1ght that face those lovely blue eyes I wonder what they looked l1ke before therr l1ds slowly closmg under the spell of sleep and now so stlll so llfeless Her body but I can t look at lt now I mustnt th1nk about It mustnt take lt so ser1ously Its not my fault How how full of l1fe she must have been sw1ng1ng from a tree 51 7 I . . , . g . .l . - : U , . U - . . 7 , . l ' . l . . 7 . . . 7 7 J 7 7 7 , . ' 7 - 1 ' 9 , . , . . . , I - , . v. . , 1 , . 7 7 . Y I ' ' 7 . . . , H , . . . with his name on it. A self-made man I call him, kind of hard though. . . ,, . 7 7 . 7 64 77 ' ' ' , . ' KK I ' 1 ' 9 9 a H ' - I Q A , ' I , ' 7 1 ' ' S6 7 ' 77 ' . , . . Q - I . , 4 . I . 7 7 7 7 n I 1 4, . , 7 . 7 . . , . a , l ,t . . . 7 . . , , 7 7 ' , 0 4 I , . . , . . , , . I , u . ' . . . . , , THE TRANSCRIPT The Wlnd Contlnued dancmg on the lawn runnlng to k1ss her father comlng home from a day s work the father and her mother whats gomg to happen? I mustnt stand here starlng Ive got to take her home But where does s e oh that must be It over there through the trees He stooped down and plcked up the llfeless body He nosed the sh1ny blue car through the dense traffic and pulled up 1nto a parklng lot bes1de the bu1ld1ng 1n whrch he worked H1s fingers trembled He was glad that nothmg else had happened It was nrne oclock and the town was al1ve wlth H0159 trafhc and confusron The pollceman on the corner blew h1S whlstle and the l1ttle boys and g1rls crossed the street on the1r way to school The grocer was standmg out 1D front arrangmg h1s frults and vegetables for the day s customers The drugglst was rolllng down h1s awnlngs and the Jeweler had 1ust unlocked h1s door Open for buslness the slgn Sald All these men had somethlng 1n common Another day had passed another was beg1nn1ng 1n the routlne of the buslness world The horns sounded loud and blarlng dlsturbmg h1s thoughts They kept straymg Oh yes the Melmer case I must see to It today The brakes screeched and the horns honked The man walked 1nto the bu1ld1ng and onto the elevator Good mornlng J1m I mustnt act so Jlttery What s wrong Wlth me anyway? Good mornlng Mlss Carlton MISS Banks Flne thanks Im 1ust dandy Stop lhlflklflg about It Its on the rad1o and 1n the newspapers every day Chlld run over by car Ive seen lt there a hundred tlmes Anyway I couldnt help It She ran rlght ln front Clndy they Wha oh yes thats fine MISS Mason Tell h1m Ill call later about two He got out the papers on the Melmer case and began to work It was mterestmg work try1ng to find the needed facts d1gg1ng through the f11es Above all It kept h1S mlnd occupled for a whlle at least perhaps for an hour or two even Then 1t came agaln the Slght of the blood the stalned dress the blonde halr and then the look the horrlble pltlful str1cken look on the parents face They hadnt blamed hlm No they werent even angry Just paralyzed It would have been better rf they had He could have gotten angry too anythlng but the horrlble passlve expresslons on the1r faces I don t thlnk I ll ever forget as long as I llye Ive got to keep workmg That W1ll take my mlnd off of It Work alwaxs helps ln a case hke th1s they sax fthe much used they maybe the rat1onal1z1ng thexl I dont know what Id do wlthout the firm and yet 1ts st1ll there If only It would stop commg back to me the look on the1r faces thlngs l1ke th1s happen every day all the tlme Its not unusual Then whx 1tS those horns 1f they would only stop odd though I dont belleve Ixe ever notlced the nolse before Pathet1c thats what It was maybe money would help They wouldnt take that though Money cant repay what Ive done Thelr only ch1ld too they sald It wouldnt have been so bad 1f there had been others but 1ust one It wasnt my fault They Sald that too Then why can t I forget'7 52 . . . . , 7 T , . J . . ' , . . Q h . . . , ' . :Zz E: ic :k , 7 7 - 1 - - . . , . . . . . I , ' x u - va - ' ' ' . ' , ' . . . . .. , . . - . ' . 7 . , . . , . L6 ' ' 77 , . , .. , . H . . . . ,, , . , , .... , . . . . . ,Q . . . - ' n v - ' . , . - . . . I . . . M , . . . . t say her name was. Cute name, klnd of dlfferent . . . Cl 7 ' ' 7 . . . x , , , 77 . 7 . I . . , . l ' I . . - - Q 7 . ' ' ' . ' . 2 . 7 7 7 7 . , , . . . , , . . J, . . - . J ' . 7 - 1 . . , . , . , ' .... I y n . Q q y l - . U . . . V , ' If , . U . . . . . . , . . . . , . 7 . , . 1 - . . . . , M - , . , 7 . . . , .... , , . 1 n 1 7 v , I , V Y A , . . . Q 7 . , . . . , Y 7 I , . THE TRANSCRIPT Tl'1G Wlnd Contmued She hked to run and play Clndy was always runnlng and Jumpmg they sald The horns honked and the brakes screeched but the man d1dn t hear The man p1cked up the papers put them 1n h1s brrefcase walked out of the office and left the bu1ld1ng He got lnto h1s car threw h1s brlefcase onto the seat and drove out of the parkmg lot mto the street A cur1ous feehng serzed hun It was not exactly fear but apprehensron of what was to come next It couldn t hap pen to h1m aga1n he told h1mself It just couldnt Once was enough for anybody Why was he so tense H1s hands were trembllng on the wheel The lrght turned green and the shmy blue car wlth the powerful motor lurched forward only 1t d1d not go as fast as lt usually dld The car went out of the smoke and fumes of the c1ty 1nto the oncom1ng dusk The curtaln opened for h1m and he was swallowed up llke a glant eagle de vourmg h1s prey He entered h1s apartment and stood qulte st1ll H1s mlnd was full It was overflowlng w1th torturlng thoughts that penetrated h1s very soul He was standmg 1n the center of the room starlng out 1nto space h1s gaze looklng through out and beyond all human barrlers Yet they were un see1ng eyes He was looklng so far but he was see1ng so l1ttle A woman entered the room She was colored and had a slmple face w1th a klndly expresslon Dlnner at seven S1I'9 The eyes suddenly moved and slowly verv slowly as though waklng from a deep sleep they brought then' focus back to the present H1s VOICE when he spoke was low and tremblmg Thats thats fine CHSSIG thank you I guess that Wlll be all now You may go On the wall just above the mantleplece there hung a plcture of a small grey boat The sea was angry and foarnlng The waves were dashlng Wlth mlghty force onto the deck of the vessel Darkness and shadow were there to axd destructlon and to add to Natures power The val1ant sh1p looked as though It had been tosslng and turnlng tosslng and turnxng on and on 1n unrelentlng motlon It was odd how real the plcture looked he had thought so at 1ts purchase l can even see the wind lashlng at the salls a very messenger of power and destructlon The end was at hand The waves were there the sea and the darkness and the wmd om mpotent A smgle breeze and all would become changed How calm and yet how powerful The eyes turned upon the plcture The Forces of Nature at a Glance was 1tS name They llghted upon the small broken boat Funny he thought I never really not1ced that llttle shlp before Always saw those powerful breakers and that wmd It IS hard to see though I cant see where the t1tle fits ln w1th the boat though He rolled over and over on the bed back and forth back and forth H1s face was wh1te It was deathly looking and stramed The persplra t1on covered h1s face H1s pa1amas were damp and l1mp The bed clothes were rlpped and torn In h1s clenched fist was clasped a DISCS of torn sheet It was held verv t1ghtly for th1s was a matter of llfe and death Elther the m1nd would k1ll or be submerged ln ltS memorles The brakes 53 . - J - 1 - 9 1 , . 7 7 - 9 , . . . . . , , . 7 .. 1 a y - v ' u - - aa , . 1 . a , . as v s - ' . . . , , . . uv a 1 . . , . . v 1 7 ' j , . . , . . . ' . , . . ' , . . . v v - THE TRANSCRIPT The WlDd Concluded screechmg stop stop stop but they d1dn t and he knew they wouldnt But st1ll l trled he thought I d1d my best Yes he dld h1s best It was always h1s best The blonde ha1r the blue eyes the yellow dress and the blood they all were there once more engulfmg h1m C1ndy Clndv speak breathe agam just once more Let life come once more let lt run rampant through vour l1mbs Death came and swallowed you up It smothered you w1th IIS waves rushlng out and over drownmg you The waves broke over the sh1ps deck the car crushed the ch1ld and the man? the sea of Death emerged vxctor1ous I mustn t let It drown me too he thought It s llke an octopus reachlng out w1th 1ts tentacles to strangle and suck out l1fe I d1dnt mean to do It It wasnt my fault I can t l1e here It m1ght k1ll me lf I do I must get up and get out Hurry before It s too late He hurr1edly put on h1s clothes and ran out of the apartment and 1nto the car H1s face was w1ld and terr1 fled H1s llmp ha1r hung down on h1s forehead Hls eyes were red and blood shot No longer were they apprehenslve They were completely and wholly terr1fled They were as afrald of a l1v1ng death as of death ltself Hls mouth was no longer firm above the determlned square cut ch1n that had become such a part of h1s personahty HIS l1ps were trembllng l1ke a httle boy trymg hard not to cry It was p1t1able because he d1d not know would never know The motor roared and the gears clashed Out out It ever stop? L1ke the t1ck of the clock or the throb of pa1n from a wound It was always there Or l1ke yes yes IIS true the r1ng1ng of a bell toll1ng death Death all power ful Out he droxe out from the hauntlng thought of Death 1nto the darkness and Death ltself No no he thought lt cant be Not agam not twlce Once maybe yes but tw1ce no It couldn t happen to the same man twlce But there lt was the yellow flash rlght 1n front of the shlny blue car Screech went the brakes All rlght thls t1me I ll swerve I couldn t posslbly h1t lt then Then the car turned abruptly from 1ts path Then a crash was heard amldst the squeaklng of the brakes that were gr1nd1ng rn thelr effort to stop but would never qulte succeed Glass lay across the road crushed and smattered the smell of gasol1ne penetrated the dark n1ght The shlnv blue car was dull and broken the motor was qulet and altogether powerless Who was the all powerful v1ctor'7 Was lt the man ly1ng so st1ll across the road'7 Then perhaps the thoughts ln hlS mlnd that had led hlm there The m1nd It IS a tangled compllcated web of fear and happlness of love and hate of sorrow and of despalr a storeplace for memorres It IQ also the merc1less tool of death It was complete There were no glarlng headllghts to break IIS spell It was s1lent too Not even the crlckets made a sound nor the owls or wh1ppoorw1lls So s1lent the nlght It breathed 1n IIS 1ntens1ty There was only one thmg to mar the quletness A soft gust of wlnd suddenly arose and carrled a small yellow plece of paper from the center of the road away and out 1nto the darkness EI LEN SPALDIM' Class Tvs elve 54 . . , , . ' 1 ' 7 f ' . . . ' U , . b . , . . . . . , , 1 ' ' 7 . . 7 . ' . ' l . 7 7 . ' 7 . . , . , . I n . , . - 7 .,. . . U , A. U , . . . . - . , . , , . . . . . , . . . , . . , . . , . g . . . a . . , he rode, out of the thought. It haunted him, kept coming back. Wouldn't - I . - - . , . , , , . . . . - - Y . . 1 . , l , . . , . . 7 7 ' 7 ' 7 7 . . , . . . - . , , I. - s ' 7 7 ' , , . I . , Q Q If I ' . - I . . I , . . , w 7 7 ' ' ' a . , . 7 C V F RANbL PT The Shepherd Hlgh Upon f1 g1a55x 11111 A 5heph1111 511111115 111111 111 1115 11111115 111 1101115 .1 511 1 1 1 1111118 LX 5 he 1101115 cl 111111111 H0 11115 111 Spun and 111 cl 1115111 11111115 H15 11.1115 1111 go 01 H15 1101315 1111 111 B111 h1 ha5 110 110111111 xe He ITIOX e5 111111 10 Jap.111 110111 11111111 1101 110 1L1l11X 1115 1 11111101 1100 F101T1 1111111111 R01111 111 11C11b B111 111151 110111 110 XX1l11C1L1 f01 111111 an he 15 1101 51111511011 11110 1110 1111115115 110011001 A111121 he 10211115 whe1e 111011 and 110.11515 311 1310111115 51110 hx 51111 111 111105 110111111 A01055 1111 111.1111 111a11x 1111105 he 5.1115 115 11 dX 05 1111 11f1501155 and 11 has 110 50111 S1111 he d0eQ 1101 111111111131 111111 he 15 1101 52111551211 O1110 a 111511111 1.11111 he steps The 5110105 2110 1111111 111111 1111111 1111111 101111111 1011115 H1 18 1101 5111511111 1101 .JG T H 1 T ' ' R I : 1 5 ' 5 21' '1111 ' Q05 ' f 1, L. , v 1 1- ' . .k. . ,J ' , 3 . L. , ,. 1. 111111 1 1 -1' 150 ' 1 -' 1 x X 1' N 1 1111011011 1121111 111111 G1'01'i1111 00111111'y 511 d 1 . Y 54' X. S1111 1 .' 11131 7 X ' A ' V - ' 1 1' ' - 1 1 ' 1 ' ' .. V THE TRANSCRIPT Tl'l6 Sl1Gpl'l9TCl Coneludel does he Wonder A pamter s brush has left a golden dot upon a udge Behmd the 11dg,e 1t slowly slldes The grassx h1ll IS black and there thls shepherd stands and 1n h1s hands he holds a staff and 1n h1s ex es he holds an awe A xx onder more Wonderful Than any mortal hand max Clalm 1nto the skx and nlght the stars smg he'1venlv The Wlnd a lullabx to thls ethereal dome The shepherd s1ghs He feels the presenee of the God and he IS S3t1Sfl6Cl IIYIIIX lxrmu Cl Iss Elf x en ln those xx hom others max condemn as bad I alxx axs find some l1ttle thlng to make me glad That thev are fr1ends of m1ne In those vxhom others laud xv1th hOHOIS hlgh l find IH pralslng them up to the skx Thelr sms 1n note decllne Where some feel quallfled to draxx the l1ne Txx een clean souls and those not ld hes1tate to draxx 1ust such a l1ne Where God has not I on POIII-ll iss fxxc xc e . If . , 4' x ' x -A' f V . .1 7 V , . 1C fy I Q Up . V 7 . 4- C un N . , Cnr? it ,Cu V Y 7 . 4 . ' 7 7 Y U I . , . ' 7 ' l 7 1 - 4 , . Y . . . 1 Q ' Cla ' '-l'- THE TRANSCRIPT The Phllosophers Stone S WE GLIDE through the dark the blueness of our car IS absorbed IH the blackness of the mght The trees and bushes are green only 1n memory for the absence of day has robbed them of thelr color Now they are brlefly recreated 1n blank greyness by our headllghts and when we ale gone they dlssolve 1nto v1sual non exlstence The n1ght IS vague and d1rty no golden stars gleam from a velvet sky The l1ght on the dashboard should cheerfully replace the star g1v1ng body to the dommance of man over nature but tonlght that l1ght seems over brlght and glarlng The rad1o IS playlng a loud fast tuneless song that remlnds one depresslnglv of an anlmal 1n pam Suddenly the character of the mght changes the red neon slgn of a filhng statlon over the h1l1 dlffuses a sense of mystery through the alr The Whlte mght moths Hy sw1ftly by l1ke souls 1rres1st1bly drawn to an unholy gathermg before the flammg throne of the Monarch of the Under world The darkness seems fllled w1th unknown belngS who watch w1th av1dly glowlng eyes as our car speeds past A stagnant pond sh1nes murk1lx wlth the momentary l1ght we g1ve and then IS gone But now 1n the sky the moon appears and wlth her calm platlnum l1ght dlspels the mystery The clouds form lrregular squares 1n the clean blue qullt of the sky 3g3lHSt whlch the trees are sllhouetted 1n bold hand palnted patterns BE'11x Burl R Cl iss Txulxc Twas but a moment that I saw hlS face Yet 1n that Heetlng moment knew h1s soul I looked 1nto h1s eyes and saw It there A soul profound and deep as any chasm As clear as any pool that sh1nes IH sun And calms and cools ln darkened hours alone I knew h1s soul I knew 1ts 1nner l1ght HIS Joy at wakenmg to the sun and warmth HIS s1lent sadness at the close of dag. I felt h1s hope h1s falth 1n man and God I knew h1S fear of lonel1ness and death And shared the deepness of h1s love for man I was alone IH rushlng crowds of men Yet when I saw the beauty of h1s soul 1Twas merely that a face 1n passlng crowdsj I knew that I would never be alone I felt a close and secret understandmg Wlth one Id never seen would see no more Save 1n some summer dream when calm content Recalls h1s face the face that gave me hope The greatness of h1s glft I can t express I only know to me lt brought an end To lonel1ness RAFHFL SXIITH Class Txxelxe 58 - I 7 , . v , . ' V . v , - ' 9 7 . 1 7 . . . .7 A I nf 1 I b . I g 1 , Y v I 7 ' .-1 ,Iva 4. , . J a 9 x 1 s r s Q 1 a 1 , . . , Q ' s a v , . . . , ' 9 C 1 r L TRANSCRI 19 The curta1n r1ses The actors take thelr places And the play begms A flash of sunhght The carefree days rush bx And that 1S youth The stage grows dark A wh1sp of ,rex and tears And that lb age appeal The curtaln closes But w1ll It nex er TISS agaln When wlll we know? A Hymn for Sprmcg To Robelt Southwell T15 sprlng the buds are Jox ous They slng thex elng alwax Our hearts fly forth before them To thee bounden duty we pax An1rnae nostrae laudant Am1det the su ard the flow ers Thrust then heade and slng A hymn of pF31SE thanksglung Whlch through the woods doth rlng An1mae eorum laudant Te Chrlste hodle Through copse and wooded bower The tender beastles go They prance laugh for the pure 1oy Of l1v1ng here below An1rnae eorum laudant Te Chrlste hod1e IVVIS our soule are beau Wlth the beauty of thx earth Of gladness hope and pleasance Of wx there IS no dearth Anlrnae nostrae liudant Hodle et eernper te 39 lox CE XIILES Class Tu elx e Prem Rxsn Cllss Tu elxe T H 9 P T . c , 7 by UY7 l Y 7 I y 1 u ' , 1, 7 . Q y ' ' v ' ' 9 1 ' T1 A 7 ' . , ' . ' - - ' V .I , V . V ' V 'I 7 Te, Christe, hodie. 7 ' . 1 v X 1 . . . C . . . F. 7 7 ' u 1 ' 3 V , . . 7 7 ' I A C Y 'Y . 7 V . Y 7 K. ? . V . G ' 1 C , . ' T. THE TRANSCRIPT The Island HE STOOD on the deck of the dlngy steamer the sun playlng hop scotch on her slmple cotton dress A soft bonnet del1cately framed her l1ned face unusually brlght w1th expectatlon Th1S was what she lad walted and dreamed for almost a decade and yet she wondered 1f thlS was the solutlon S1mon had been so confident that It was yet he was only human He had nelther the power to look 1nto the future nor to tell what frult It mlght bear But hadn t they talked th1s out over and over aga1n and hadnt they dec1ded It was the only solut1on Stlll the uncertamty had not completely vanlshed as she drew 1nto the port of Monterey Th1s small town seemed almost l1ke the fountam of youth to Betzer Hernsey All she could remember was the dead CIIIES of Europe and thelr dead occupants People here hurrled about and obvlously knew thelr destlnatlon They had a place to go and people that welcomed them The old doubt and 1nsecur1ty crept 1n Had she a place IH th1s mass of scurrv mg creatures? Could she compromlse w1th herself and begln a new l1fe The small qu1ck pressure on her hand changed her concern to l1ttle Nanette who stood close to her grandmother her eyes wlde open w1th wonder ment and chlldhood fantasy and exc1tement showmg 1n her entlre tlny belng She expected so much from Amerlca To her It would be a falry land where people ate 1ce cream and cake and m1lk and meat any tlme they wanted To her the streets would be llned wlth gold and the houses made of cheese As they neared the dock the grandmothers fatlgued searchlng eyes closely examlned the many 1nd1v1duals dlrectly adjacent to the steamer It had been so long slnce she had seen Marner Maybe she had forgotten' It was not unhke Marner to forget How many tlmes she had forgotten her books as a chlld and how often she had forgotten to get the water from the sprlng at dusk every evenrng' How often Granny' Oh Granny' Theres Boubou Look Granny shes throw mg me a k1ss You see dear Grandmother told you shed be here And look I be lreve she has a present for you under her arm It was always llke Marner to have presents She thought they were the cure of all CVIIS Nanette Sald good bye to Tomsle her brlef playmate of elght weeks and was soon 1n the arms of her xery much mlssed mother Betzer watched the Small cloud of ecstasy wh1ch enclrcled the two and recalled Sxmon s wor s It w1ll be a new experience for Nanette She w1ll have an opportunlty to develop as a chlld should She Wlll recelve the care and attentlon that was not IH our power to glve her In the next moments she saw the truth and wlsdom 1n S1mon s words and w1shed he were here to share her reallzatlon You re look1ng well Mama sald Marner th1nk1ng how much she had aged sxnce her last v1s1t to Venaspl almost ten vears ago and I know vou and Nanette must be completelv exhausted from your exceedlnglv long tr1p How long was It now ' Elght weeks Tell me D1d Nanette act llke mother s sweet l1ttle g1I'I9 But I wont keep you standrng on the deck 1n the hot sun Wlth such s1llv chatter The car IS rxght over here Betzer was not equal to the long SNV1ft strldes of her daughter It was a hot day and the last few davs on the steamer had been extremely t1r1ng Although 61 , - 9 ' ' 5' 1 - a . . . , . . , . . . . 9 , - 1 , - , . . s 1 . . as s 1 a , 1 . , y - ' - as LL 3 1 9 - 7 ' va - ' 1 1 I . . . , L6 - - f - ' - sv . . . , cc 1 - 11 - - - r 1 - . . . . M ' 9 U 7 . . . , . ' . , . . , , ' ' ' ' ' va . . V 1 K . I ,, . THE TRANSCRIPT The ISldI'1Cl Contmued Nanette had found a great deal of pleasure playlng w1th Tomsle st1ll there were long hours ent1rely dependent on Betzers or1g1nal1ty Nanette was an mtelhgent ch1ld and her mmd required an mtelllgent audlence As they drove along the c1rculat1on of a1r ln the car and the gentle breezes were as refresmng as the first rob1n heard after a storm has sub s1ded and her senses were qu1ckly revlved She envled the crowd that hustled along the streets of Monterey, env1ed the1r nonchalance and seem 1ng unawareness She had an overwhelmmg deslre to be a part of them to walk up and down the streets to peer 1nto the w1ndows d1scuss1ng the latest style and to be conversmg w1th a fr1end Agaln the questlon arose Why am I here? She felt as 1f she were 1n m1d stream where the rocks beh1nd her had been washed away and she W1Sh8d Slmon were here to reassure her as he had done so many tlmes durlng the1r marrled l1fe They entered Marners ramblmg and somewhat med1eval house The grotesque graystone frame work startled and rather dlsappomted Betzer The sun no longer played on her dress and yet the sky was as clear as It had been SIHCC the1r departure from Venaspl She watched Nanettes react1on and saw the llttle glrl p1ck1ng a rose w1th her th1n small boned hands She percelved that thls was another llnk 1n Nanette s slmple and wonderful Chlld reasonlng Th1s was the castle and 1n lt her 1mag1nat1on would be allowed to travel the passages leavlng behlnd the freshness and v1vac1ty of youth To Betzer lt was an adjustment Wh1Ch she was not sure that she alone could handle She felt l1ke the host of a paraslte l1ke a baby expected to crawl and yet unable As they entered Marner Sald 1nadvertently It s a small place but we love lt Her vo1ce was lmmedlately caught by the walls and thrown back w1th an echomg force She sat by the w1ndow look1ng out her crochetlng momentarlly dropped restmg gently folded 1n her lap The leaves would be fall1ng there now and 1n the center of the palnted v1llage IH the town square such as It was there would be huge bonflres clearlng the surroundlng area of the leaves that had fallen so profusely Everyone would help Th1S would be the center of communal l1fe durlng the fall months You would share your amb1t1ons and real1t1es w1th the person next to you wh1le you would rake the huge p1le of leaves the1r rustl1ng lend1ng emphasls to your remarks There were securlty and brotherhood among these peasants and lt was these that Betzer mlssed most There the world revolved 1n exeryone here the world revolved around her and she was not connected and had relatlvelv small contact w1th the completely separate axle She was not a part of 1ts steady rhythm Each had an 1nd1v1dual rhythm and the two d1d not co1nc1de She was lookmg 1n her nose pressed agalnst the pane It could not be hers she had not the means Wlth whlch to buy lt She had taken up crochetmg to shut out the complete boredom that had become a constant heckler She tr1ed to recreate the sxmple envlron ment that had been so close to her before She had hoped to see l1fe and 1ts wonders and l1ve aga1n through Nanette But that was unheard of Nanette had become too much l1ke her surroundlngs She had lost the gleam that had so stubbornly marked her as an 1nd1v1dual She was now an 1ntegral element of the bustllng crowd feelmg the1r emotlons and IH complete accord w1th the1r steps Betzer was not a partlclpant but an 62 1 . , . . . ' 1 , . - 1 1 1 1 , . . 1 . . . . , . . . . , . 1 - 1 ' 7 1 . 1 ' if 7 ' 79 ' ' ' , . 24 2? S P? 1 1 1 1 1 , , , 1 , . . . y ' 1 , , . , , , . . , , . 7 ' 1 THE TRANSCRIPT The ISlc'iI'ld Cont1nued observer She could observe but not comment She could not be the torch Wlth wh1ch to burn these dead belngs She d1dnt possess a pretentlous enough flame The strong memory of S1mon was her only compan1on on th1S 1S0lat9d lsland She often felt h1s firm hands and heard h1s soft reassurxng tones Each day was a block 1n the unceasmg attempt to bu1ld a br1dge from th1s lsland to the malnland As t1me passed Betzer felt more as lf she were walkmg 1nto the calm serene atmosphere of eternlty and she wanted to turn back to the cross roads and there be Jomed by S1mon who would share the long road w1th her Th1S 1dea had become a rolllng stone IH her mlnd Jolned by other stones of d1scontent and lonellness She was golng to be Wlth S1mon no matter what the cost' Wlth S1mon 1n Amerlca It mlght become the most beautlful place on earth but now It was a grotesque unproportloned v1sual1ty 1n her m1nd growlng larger and larger But I only have seven hundred dollars Well what do you thlnk we oughta do Joe? We don t usually do busl ness at that low pr1ce Oh but please' That s all the money I have now But once he IS over we can make up the rest Okay Lady but 1ts gonna be a loss to us But as long as We get It sometlme I guess It don t matter when Well slnce you re a coastal town It ought to cut off about two weeks of travellng Aint that about rlght J1l'Il9 All 1n all Id say It d take h1m SIX months We gotta Contact h1m and make arrangements wlth our agents about the t1me and the boat Well keep ya posted though Lady Dont forget you re not to con tact h1m 1n anyway' No' We have to have complete co operatlon from you both Yes Thank you Im more grateful than words can express In the bareness that had surrounded Betzer before there now bloomed flowers The seeds had been sown and the results were becomlng apparent She contlnually analyzed the th1ngs around her 1n terms of what S1mon S reactlon Would be and thought how he would l1ke th1s and be amazed by that and adore th1S just as she had done She would agaln feel the sensat1ons that had so utterly engulfed her th1s t1me she would be 1n structlng h1m she would be the calm and understandlng one and S1mon would respect her for It The br1dge would be completed by h1s arrlval and then she too would become a part of the scurrylng mass from whlch she had been so long separated The fall passed qulckly and wlnters effects were lessened bv the con stant hope of what spr1ng would brmg The country would be lovely 1n the spr1ng and Slmons arr1val would make It even more beautlful She planned the conversatlon they would have when he landed She would make h1m feel connected Wlth Monterey lmmedlately She would ant1c1 pate his doubts and erase them 1nstantaneously She would make It so easv for h1m Thus her dream became more V1V1d She had already begun to l1ve the 63 . l. . . . , . 7 7 7 ' 7 . 'f . . Q . . y . , . Pl: if Z 2? GG 77 L6 ' . 7 ' s ' ' ' 77 L6 l 7 ' 7 ' ' 7 77 KK ' 7 . ' 7 7 ' ' ' 7 77 , . I can't thank you enough. How long w1ll xt be before he arr1ves'? K4 Y . 7 . . . . . , . , . . . . ' , ' . . ---er-- ' 77 C6 7 7 7 1 1 - s ' ' ' 77 H - - ' LG . 7 . 77 7 . . . . . , ' 7 , . 9 .. 5 I . . , Y 7 . . , . . , . I . I THE TRANSCRIPT The lSldI'1d Concluded l1fe she so ferv1dly des1red She l1ttle expected to FGCSIVG a telegram on that February n1ght We are sorry to lnform you that an un1dent1f1ed steamer was sunk 1n the PHCIIIC k1ll1ng several passengers among them S1mon Kernsey The paper laz1ly fluttered to the floor She her br1dge and her 1sland had been suddenly swallowed up by the sea IXEZ Pmon Class Tu elxe Sprmq From where I stand upon the h1ll The world no longer cold and st1l1 Is turnmg out 1ts 1nner self Fresh green peeps through 1ts dr1ed brown sk1n A sea of peace the wound of s1n Cleanses washes chaste and pure And I can hear a soft Wh1sper Urgmg all thmgs to wake and st1r VIOISIS Wlth velvet frocks Are gavly danc1ng near moss rocks Wh1te blossoms d1pped 1n honey dew Are wakenmg to sprlng s Hrst morn Spr1ng when love and hfe are born Class Tw elve Ducxhty I s1ng of ra1nbows and laughter I s1ng of shadows and death Mx lvr1c floats up to k1SS heaven My d1rge drops down deadened and sad Cry stalllne water the founta1n Leaps up from IIS wh1te pr1st1ne base Laughmgly scatters 1tS droplets Carefree and lovely It falls Pagan and w1ld 1S the danc1ng Its colors are br1ll1ant and gay Leap1ng my heart Joms the mus1c Joy IS the theme of the sonfff But there IH the shadow a figure Threatens Wlth menac1ng eye Ch1lled runs the blood from my heart Fea1ful It dances no more The tombstone IS wlnte as the founta1n Blood IS as br1ght as the day Gax l1fe IS the tw1n of her brother Whose colors are somber and sad BETTH Bunn Class Tw elxe 64 . . 7 . . . V . Ki ' ' ' ' . . . . ,, 7 7 ' ' 7 7 c Y I . 7 7 7 , . V ' ' v 7 . . , , . IANE SRIITH 7 . 7 7 7 .1 .1 7 7 . . -1 7 . .7 7 7 7 7 7 7 Y . .7 D' 7 7 1 7 , . 7 7 7 C 7 7 CLASS ELEVEN CLASS TEN THE TRANSCRIPT Comrdde Streets HAVE not1ced that all streets have a d1St1HCt personallty It IS the general comblned effect of all the houses and bulldlngs on that street They may be stately d1gn1fied and snobby or warm sympathetlc and a 11ttle dlsordered Usually the houses on a street are of the same general type but each IS d1st1nct 1n 1ts own way And just l1ke people these characters respond to your mood It s not so much the people 1n the street that count though the1r presence has some bear1ng on the effect of the street When Im happy most streets seem to reflect my mood and they YEJOICC Wlth me The sharlng of my feellng makes me all the happler and Im sure the street 1S happler too Of course there are a few grumpy 1nd1v1dual1st1c streets wh1ch refuse to respond but these are rare In the1r sympathetlc pleasure when Im 1n a good mood the bu1ld1ngs take on a Jaunty appearance They seem stralghter stronger sm1l1ng Even small and dlrty houses seem grubby but happv The DOISGS of the cars the chlldren the barklng dogs are sharp W1th Jog Of course th1s conv1v1al atmosphere cannot GX1St unless I am sensltlve enough to the personallty of a street to PEFCGIVB It In a large degree It depends on me The same thlng can happen when I m sad There IS a consollng feellng change but the good old street w1ll be falthful Streets can be pollte too They have the sense and the manners to sympathlze wlthout belng nosv They m1nd the1r own buslness It seems that the houses cannot sympathlze and console as well 1n the early morn1ng as they do later The mellow afternoon or dusk even n1ght t1me IS better That IS when the houses look softer and more gentle They are too brlsk 1n the morn1ng Often It seems that people detract from the lovely feellng of comradeshlp that a street can have For lnstance Fourth Street Wlth 1ts crowds of bust11ng people all busy Wlth the1r own BHHIFS could never FGJOICE W1th me or care lf Im sad Its just too busy Another street where there are houses on e1ther Slde Wlth not too many people would be more conv1v1al The pervadlng atmosphere comes from the street ltself People can be a part of It but only a l1m1ted part There IS one street I know of wh1ch doesn t llke me Its name IS Everett CEC1 Nonxnw Class Twelve Make today your sole concern Yesterday cannot return Work today plan not to borrow Tomorrow s t1me must come tomorrow Ever s1nce the world began Today has done the best It can To what avall does man 1n sorrow Dream of yesterday and tomorrow? Ion POTTER Class Tuelxc 66 . ' 7 . . 7 7 7 . 7 , . . . . . ' . . , , . , 7 . . ' . , . . , . , . . . , ' 9 . , . , - 4 . . . , . . n . , , I . v ' 7 7 . . . - , . . , . . , . , . in the same, unchanging houses. Circumstances and people in my life may 3 ' 7 ' , . . D . Q . , . , I . . 1 . 7 7 . , , . , . ' . . . , 7 7 , . . . , . . , . . L 1 , . , . 7 . C my 7 V THE TRANSCRIPT Night and Strength FELT that I couldnt live enough see feel think enough The night was cold and sharp because it was wholly alive The moon was bright and strong until the clouds brushed over it hiding it for brief moments from my eyes Brisk refreshing puffs of wind surged around me im patiently The night was strong and active The wind was blowing the moon joyous and living Surely I couldnt remember this well enough Could the air ever again be so charged with energy? Could I ever be that happy again? Gray clouds were rushing in the sky eager for their turn to whisk past the moon suddenly silver and striking I experienced a feel ing a recognition of the oneness of the great power there with me Stark trees were awake from their usual winter sleep their twigs reaching out 1n the air The cold brilliance of the moon glowed over the hill only to be darkened with clouds and then to shine again A nameless Joy seemed to vibrate with strength and purpose There was no place for anythlng petty that night for if thoughts unworthy of the big moon and wind had dared to come the power of the night would have crushed them It was not a night meant for humming for whispering reading or any thing gentle or soft It was made for shouting for marching for a great symphony But that was not for me to take part in I was only to feel the wind see the moon and strive to keep the moment How little was the world and its people how big the great clean sky' To be alone there was blue whlte horizon But they could not end the greatness they could not l1m1t the light and power because that light that power that living strength came not from me nor from the night but from one all powerful purpose CPCY NORNIANI Clflss Twelxc The Ioke T WAS dark outside the little cabin in the mountains Ma and Pa had gone to the prayer meeting leaving Jamie in charge of h1S little brother Tom and his baby sister Tom who was restless after a long day 1n school had been working since supper in the shed on some new contraption Soon he tired of th1S and hunted for something to do It came to him suddenly that it would be a splendid idea to play a Joke on his brother and sister He grabbed an old sack and proceeded to the front of the cabin The wind whipped at his legs and he felt giddy with excite ment They would all have a good time laughing at his Joke Jamie heard a loud knock on the cabin door and yelled asking who it was No one answered but the knock came again He opened the door only a crack and a frightful creature staggered in Its head and bent back were covered with a dirty rag and it gave forth a moaning sound Jamie screamed in Ch1ld1Sh fright He snatched his fathers gun and shot not knowing that this thing that fell dead was his own play ful brother SAR an SL AUCIITILR Class Nine 67 , . . . 4 , , , . . . Q , . - Q. - Q , . . 7. . . 7 ' - ' . a , ' . , ' 1 1 - , . 7 ' 1 , . 5 . . . , . ' . . , . . . , U . - ' Y 7 . 7 ' , '. g . , . being with a great united company. The dark trees stretched along the . . - Q I . I . . Q U , , a 1 ' 1 L' ' 7 i 7 1 . 7 , . . - 7 - 7 3 7 . . , . . i 7 ' , 7 . . . , . , . . ' 7 CLASS EIGHT 68 CLASS NINE THE TRANSCRIPT lsoldtionist T WAS not yet dawn and a cold blank light filled the world Summer was just giving way to autumn and although she still held possession of the daylight the nights were bitingly cold The mist rising from the river a damp grey vapor chilled the lad who was hobbling along the bank but he paid no attention He was about twelve years old the age when most boys are filled with independence and devilry the age when they run from their pretty girl cousins efforts to kiss them the age when they spend their lives in alternately terrifying and delighting their parents But this boy was not a normal twelve year old this was Peter H1s straight brown hair thatched a head that was too large for the frail body underneath it His face was pale and dominated by his large blue eyes filled with the longings for grandeur and with dreams of him self glorious and dominating noble and courageous He traveled with swift but spasmodic steps his left leg hung withered and limp and he helped himself along by means of a stout stick that forked at the end a very primitive sort of crutch He was running to not from He was going away to Join the navy as a cabin boy He had V1S101'lS of himself as the captain of his own ship commanding calmly and decisively in a furious battle against overwhelming odds Peter was the youngest son of the village cobbler a solid and well respected man who was known for his stout shoes and reasonable prices He had begotten a considerable brood of children five girls and four boys Only the death of his wife had prevented an increase in the number for the cobbler regarded the present ratio as unbalanced and dangerous too many girls would make sissies of his sons As a matter of fact this worthy gentleman had often reflected to himself that it was really worse than it sounded because Peter really shouldn t count he was not aware of them and partly because he didnt care anyway H1s life was neither happy nor unhappy only dull He was outwardly ignored by the other children although they often laughed and mimicked him when he was not looking He could not do the things they did there fore he was an outsider But Peter wrapped himself in dreams as he sat on the warm stone bridge outside town and nobody was there to make fun of him The sun rose higher into the sky and great golden pillars of liht shot up towards heaven in the spaces between the trees The saucy Bob white on a high limb warbled his egoistic song Bob white' Bob white' Bob white' Peter turned aside from the river to walk parallel with it through the forest along a thin little path attenuated from lack of use He looked around as if seeing the beauty of the forest for the first time The trees were tall and majestic somehow they comforted him with their strength and he felt immune under their protection The floor of the forest was brown and mossy with a few twigs here and there There were no bushes or vines which might choke the splendid trees they had long sinc been cleared away Long centuries of hunters had decreased the animal popu lation of the forest to the wary few but Peter still saw an occasional squirrel or a rabbit moving rapidly and then freezing into immobility in an effort to deceive this alien visitor The chug of a mill could be heard in the distance Peter did not lsten to it but It beat as a part of hlS unconscious This nostalgic throb had 69 , . . . , . - . - . . , . . , . , - , . , .l . . Q . . . , . 7 - 7 3 . ' ' . , . . 1 , . . 7 . . I . 7 y . . . 1 7 ' 7 ' 7 , - 7 . ' 7 I ' 7 . Y , . But his father's reflections had never disturbed Peterg partly, because - a 1 . . , , . . 3 . ' , . ,- 2 ' , . 7 . . l , , 4 . . . . L6 . . ' . - , - . ' . ' . ,, . . . . , . 2 I . . . 1 Q - -I . Q 1 . P - 9 . Y . . - . . 5 , . THE TRANSCRIPT lsolatlonlst Cont1nued called many a young wanderer home by the 1mage of a small town rn the early morn1ng before l1fe ofHc1al1y beglns but lt d1d not sway Peter Nevertheless he gradually came to know that somethlng was troublmg h1m and he reallzed that the someth1ng was a comb1nat1on of fatlgue and hunger He had not come very far but h1s weak frame was not con d1t1oned to long treks Nor had he eaten breakfast or provxded h1mself w1th food before startlng because he had feared so much that someone would stop h1m and he would lose hlS opportunlty to become great Now h1S hunger became more acute every moment He leaned agalnst a tree to rest and after a moment s thought drew a sllng shot and a round pebble out of a rear pocket The use of thls apparatus was h1S one sk1ll he had practlced It dally unt1l he had become an expert lt was the one thlng he could do as well as or better than the other chrldren He made It ready and walted He Walted a long t1me before a llttle brown rabblt evldently young and foollsh hopped 1nto l1ne of v1s1on Peter took careful alm the stone h1t the rabblt square on the forehead daz1ng lt He scrambled over to lt qulckly grasped lt firmly Wlth one hand and pulled an old kmfe out of h1s belt Wlth the other Just as he prepared to sht 1ts throat Wlth the rusty blade the rabblt revlved and began to struggle franctlcally lts small nose twltched 1n paln and 1ts large lumlnous eyes bulged beyond the1r sockets as 1f It were belng strangled Suddenly Peter was also lnfected by the terror He stared at the rabblt 1n horror and slowly loosed It It bounded swlftly away and Peter rose supportlng h1mself unsteadlly on h1S home made crutch H1s l1ps trembled and h1S eyes stared forlornly not wlth plty but W1th recogn1t1on He had seen h1mS6lf so clearly 1n the struggllng rabblt As he walked on he staggered and h1s features twlsted themselves 1nto a grlmace of horrlfied recogn1t1on and shame He had dreamed such great th1ngs and then had seen reallty he was one wlth the rabblt They belonged to a common brotherhood the brotherhood of the weak and fearful H1s COIlV1Ct10l1 Hooded h1m he recalled past msults glossed over by h1s own Wlll not to see them He saw hum1l1at1ons that he had pa1nstak1ngly velled from h1s own Slght He looked down at h1s leg trylng to see It as others saw lt Shrunken and wr1nkled the knee bone protrudlng knobblly lt hung l1mply loath somelv wlthout llfe And then a great hatred filled h1m he hated the world for see1ng lt thus he hated h1mself for hrs 1nab1l1ty to r1se a ve It and most of all he hated the leg xtself whlch held h1m back from great deeds and made h1m an obgect of r1d1cule In sudden determlnatlon to domlnate lt to make lt do h1s blddmg he flung h1s crutch aSlde and sprang forward trylng to run as he had seen others run But that free rhythm and effortless speed that he longed for so passxonately could never be h1S He took one step and fell h1s bad leg gave wav s1cken1ngly 1n Splte of h1s 1mmense effort to keep It strong H lay on the ground and crled He clamped h1s teeth on the strlngy grass h1S body Stfalned taut 1n lnadequate agony Then he slowly relaxed and lay calmly for a long tlme on the grass almost as lf asleep He was th1nk1ng hopelessly and clearly What can be done? ObVlOUS1y there was noth1ng He accepted h1s fate coldly It was so 1r1et11evabl3 and unchangeably so He got up and l1mped over to the 70 , . 7 . . , . , . . . 7 n , '- 7 , . ' - ' u 7 a v ' 7 9 ' 7 , . 7 7 7 ' 7 Q ' 7 7 7 7 ' 7 ' 1 , . , . 1 , . 1 a 1 ' . 1 ' a v - ' 1 a 7 - 1 . v - 9 Q D ' , Y 1 7 ' - - ca ,, . . . l . 1 Q. 7 . , . THE TRANSCRIPT lsolat1on1st Conuuded r1ver where he washed h1s hot face ID the cold water Then he turned back towards h1s home If hfe there was not happy and glorlous It was as much so as It would ever be for Peter And ex en as he started back he began to repalr w1th new dreams the wall of lsolatlon he had bu1lt He would fill the holes torn 1n It by reallty he would thlcken and remforce that wall unt1l It would be lmpregnable and he could never be hurt agam BEI 11 Bam ll Class Twclxc Slumber PCIIIIGSIP ' W1th half closed eyes and W1CkGd leer I peer around to see whos here Seventeen palrs of large cold feet Vvlggllflg and squlrmmg under the sheet NO1Sy moans and crles of pa1n As one of our members collapses agam' Gruesome faces drawn and sad Cause two hours sleep IS all we ve had In case you wonder at the phght we re 1n Its after a party of slumberm ' So all of us tens wlthout sleep nearlv dead Rush to our houses and collapse on our beds The long funnv mght has slnce passed us oer And all that IS left IS our sp1r1t NO MORE' ' ' lNAxC1 RUTLfDcE Class Ten An Experlence To Forget T WAS a beautlful day Just the sort of day to see Santa Claus I had promlsed my two cousms J1ll and Johnny that I would take them downtown to see Santa and then to a mov1e Everybody m the Clty must have had the same ldea In Stewarts people were pushing and shovmg the1r wav around but finally I managed to push my way to the end of the l1ne After a couple of struggllng hours the blg moment finally came At that moment an enormous slgn approached us saymg that Santa was 1ll and had to eo home The chlldren were very dis appomted but I told them that we could see Santa another day It was then and there that lt happened Johnny ran away I chased hxm all around the store and Hnallv maneuvered hlm 1nto a corner 1n the book department I took a firm grlp of Johnnys hand and pushed my Way down to the basement to look for J1ll I Spled her samplmg the free candy and cook1es I hurrled out of Stewarts so that thev could not get 1Ht0 any more trouble So I thoufht but as vou can lmaglne J1ll bumped 1nto a Salvatlon Army cup and the entlre thing Spllled After plckmg up all the monev we hurrled on I was certalnly glad when we reached the theater for nothmg could happen here but pokmg people 1n the chm and knocklng off hats PATH Tnosr Class Ewht 71 , . ' 7 Y . . , , 7 l-- lr, ' I I . ' ' 'I-IU. . . , a Y Y Y ' 7 . , . a ' ' 1 1 .1 . . . . , 7 M 1 1 . . 5 7 . , . ., v . ' 3 . , 7 .- , . U . y . ' 7 . 7 nf, ' . C s 5 THE TRANSCRIPT Baby Brother Chubby cheeks B1g blue eyes Deafenmg Shfleks Early to r1se Curly ha1r T1ny clothes Teddy Bear Wr1nkled nose Broken lamps P1le of toys Dented pans Fra1d of NOISE Full of tr1cks When alone NOthlHg cl1cks Away from home Lots of fun Not much bother Got to run For Baby Brother XIARC Alihl Srxrox Cllss Ten Laughter F YOU l1sten to the people of the world the most common sound you w1ll hea1 IS laughter for It IS a un1versal language Human belngs are the only creatures that can laugh and as such are the most laughed at thmgs on earth Wherever you go vou w1ll always understand a laugh or at least you w1ll th1nk you do even though there are many d1fTerent tx pes of laughter There lS the pol1te unenthus1ast1c laugh the t1red SlllV g1ggle the shr1ll laugh of someone be1ng t1ckled the loud guffaw of a fat self satlsfied bus1ness man amused by h1s own Joke the nervous uncertam laugh of one who IS not qu1te sure he knows what you are talk 1ng about and the wonderful laugh of someone who IS completely happy 1f such a person 9X1StS Laughter comes to most people It 1S one of the first sounds a baby makes long before he can talk The laughter of a very young ch1ld does not alwavs represent amusement but often Just happ1ness Manv people laugh when they are rel1eved from a worry and once 1n a wh1le people laugh when they are extremely angry The best k1nd of laughter IS that shared w1th someone else and I thlnk the funmest k1nd IS the g1ggle that can no longer be suppressed All 1n all laughter IS a good th1ng desplte the fact that It can somet1mes be unklnd for to laugh IS to haxe a moment of complete freedom Xhm NICC noun C llss Tc 11 73 , . . 1 . 1. . 1 1 12.'.' . a , . 1 ' 1.1 v 7 V ' a 1 1 ., 1 a v ' v V y ' 77. 7 A ' M 1 ' ., 1 f 1 a - v 1 ' v - . v 7'1 x ,LM HE TRANSCRIPT A mellow night Breezes blowing Solitude A Hash of metal Piercing laughter A shattered n1ght ll1L1x Il-XNIXION Lllss hlcxrn HE STREETS xxcxe filled vxlth their usual t1alT1c and long lines oi cars fox med behlnd the t1af'fic light Green xellow 1ed it bhnked in lts monotonous routine An occasional horn sounded blatantlx as an 1mpat1ent Cll1X er IIIQCI to huux the 1mpe1v1ous light It was green again The fiat lice ol 1 bus loomed closer and stopped xxheie I was standing on a xxlndx co1ne1 I stood w 11t1ng as the bus spilled out 1ts load Ex erx one xx as out I stai ted foixx aid But no theie xx exe txvo more people A l1ttle man in a CIIIIA giax coat xx lb causing the delax He xxas X618 lame and had to lift his heaxx club loot IN h1s hands and put it down in front of him Shocked I saw '1 blg man in back of hlm thoughtlesslx pushing his pushing because he couldnt see the lame man Quit xour pigheaded iackass pushing xou big ape' the lame man flung ovei his shouldei xx1thout looking back His beady black exec gloxx ered dehance and his xoice snarled with ready antagonism Shut up you dntx little xunt' Qu1t stallin snapped the big man quickly Feeling beiore him he followed in his careful wav as the lam man hobbled up the cuiblng The l1ttle man had not turned around yet I xx as hurrying forward wanting to say to the l1ttle man That man can t see xou' Hes blind' But I could not reach them through the crowd In despair at the heartbreakmg thlng that had iust happened 1t occurred to me that here was what was the matter in our world The two men each with a great misfortune 1n his own life were too wrapped up in them selx es to take the trouble to find out the reasons for the others behavior As my bus pulled away from the corner I looked back for a last glimpse of them making their separate ways down the busy street CECH NORMAN Class Txxclxc The Warmth of summer sun upon mv face Upon the bended grass 1n wide and fragrant fields All this IS m1ne lf I but care all m1ne These stars that ghsten 1n the skx on n1ghts When clear CTISD breezes whisk the clouds from off Thelr faces hinting worlds of radiant light All this IS mine if I but look all m1ne Thls breeze that whispers through the he1ghts of pine Or sighing dying lost as we are lost In avenues of w1nd 1n silent peace All this IS m1ne lf I but listen mine RXCHFI SNIITII Cl Iss Txx elxe 74 T S 1 1 I 1 ' 1 Q VX' Y. I ' ' I Q . ' I ' 1 1 1 ' I . 1'. -I I 3 r , , I . I, V 1 xx 'QV . N . . l . . 1 'z 'z ' ' ' ' ' 1 ' ' . ' x . Y' X, 1 1. 1 2' ' L1 1 ' ' . 7 lv 3 . . . , . ' 1 . , . t A L ' ' ' 7 - 1 1 73 1 S' V- 7 7 1 V , way lorward. As I looked closer, I saw his cane. He xvas blind. He was 1 I C 1 I I I 41 ' 7 - ' ' y ' 77 , W , 7 1 ' 1 .1 1 -1 7' ' ' V 7 , I ' 1 . 11 K I .1 Y . A 11 -, 7 - , - ' 1 71 ' ' 7 .7 7 ' 7 7 ' .- ' u ' 7. 1 7 1 7 7 7 ' 77 1 7 , I a , 5 - V ' ' 1 1 7 . . 7 ' Y . XT L ' 73 Y! 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LUre.iche,d QFQLX e of if QSVX 5 'QQ 0 is Qgxg' R smog ang porwafcl Q Q, Q X S Q Q9 'r br, R702 Q 17 Cv . 60u4,o Q h Lu 4- x '7,v 'A C2041 and marfha, runmnq Q Qfound fhe hock e-1 held Q-f I0' befowf GQLLA4-4 THE TRANSCRIPT Seven Yeors Forgotten HE ICY wmd clanged the shutters of the anclent house It whlstled across the moors and through the meager clothmg of Damel Auld Dan1el as the people of the moor were wont to call h1m pulled hls th1n coat hlgher around h1s red ears half frozen wxth cold and w1th qulckened steps as fast a pace as he could muster w1th a touch of rheumatlsm headed towards the l1ght of the manor house Somewhere across the moor he heard an eer1e howl Auld Damel started but attr1buted th1s sound to some lone wolf m the same cold desolate state as he or perhaps lt was just the w1nd for nothmg would be out on such a nlght when the ground was frozen hard and the trees had a protectlve coat1ng of 1ce on thelr dark boughs When the w1nd blew through the trees the chnkxng 1ce resembled ghostly chalns or the sound of breakmg glass Th1s stlrred Damel to st1ll greater speed He thought to h1mself that perhaps 1t was sxlly to go SIX mlles to dellver such an lnslgnlficant grft but he mlght as well flnlsh hrs Journey Eventually he reached the house and rapped palnfully on the frosty w1ndow wrth hrs half numb hand Soon a large red hand on the 1ns1de pressed agamst the glass and Wlped away the heavy coatmg of mlst and frost so that IIS owner mlght see the v1s1tor who knocked at such an hour on such a nrght Now Damel observed a cheery face pressed hard agalnst the cold glass peerlng out 1nto the darkness Who IS lt a volce called from the cheery red mouth Damel hobbled up to the door and answered T1s Auld Damel Who? Who d1d ye say lt was? Auld Damel Let me rn out of the cold please She hurrled to open the door and shlvered as the lCy blast a mere sample of the weather outs1de shot 1n the door Well come IH mon ye rnust be near t freezmg Yes freezmg I am Wheres the young ma1ster'7 Who? The young marster that s who I come to see Ye may be t wonderm wot Im dom out on s1ch a nlght Well I had nothmg t do so I carved a llttle shlp for the young marster As he sald th1s the wrrnkled old face broke 1nto a smlle and he contmued Its been slven year s1nce I come here and I brought the young boy a toy He was vurry pleased and las nlght I sard to myself Perhaps I should take that young chap a Chrrstmas present agarn see1n as how pleased he was w1th the last one I gled hxm That was SIVGH year ago th1s very Chrlstmas Eve S1ven year ago Dan 1 An ye havent seen the young malster s1nce then? Well you are go1ng to be surprlsed Auld Danls tlred old eyes turned to her 1n bewrlderment and then to the door whlch had just opened A l1ght of famt recognltron came across hrs face as he exclalmed Now ye look famlllar could ye be the xoung boy s brother Young boy? The voung man looked puzzled 7 . . H . ,, . . 1 1 ' 1 1 1 , . - cs - 11 - 1 1 1 1 , . 7 u - ' 11 ' - L41 - - 77 , . as - ' 11 u ' ' 11 - 1 1 , . u - 1 - 77 1 1 - as - 1 ' 11 , . . cs 11 an ' 1 1 - 1 , . , . , . . . , - 1 1 . . . ,, . . . . . . H , . . 1 1 1 - 1 1 - ' 4 1 . . . , . 1 . . , . . . ,, me - 1 1 - - , . - - 97 . , . as 77 77 - ' - Y . . ,L . . 1 1 , ,1 .73 me 11 . V . THE TRANSCRIPT Seven Years Forgotten Concluded Yes l1ttle Tom I am Tom Danlel looked even more confused and then he understood Why Tom boy I guess s1ven years IS a longer t1me than I had thought You re nearly grown now and I brought ye a llttle sh1p I carved for ye I guess my mlnds play1n trlcks on me aga1n Tom laughed D1d you really th1nk I was st1ll a llttle boy'7 Why Danl xt s nlce to see you aga1n but you shouldn t have walked SIX m1les 1n thxs terr1ble weather Come 1n by the fire and get warm Auld Dan l shook h1s head slowly I dunno how 1t IS my memory must be fa1l1n me but Merry Chrlstmas anyway Tom And the strong youth and the fa111ng old man walked together 1nto the next room whlle the sound of church bells came floatlng dlmly over the moor XIAR1 STOLL Class NIIIG The Bus T WAS a cold b1t1ng afternoon as I stepped on the bus People jammed and pushed forcmg me 1nto the back Wlth a qulck lurch the bus started off aga1n It was strange to Watch the herd of humans crowded together fall backwards as the bus jerked forward I looked around me and saw a heavy set mlddle aged man s1tt1ng 1n Jarred back 1nto real1ty and the surround1ngs h1s expresslon changed from a glassy eyed frown to an alert awakeness Hls eyebrows llfted momentarlly h1s mouth opened sl1ghtly and he looked al1ve for the first tlme He looked at me for a moment I th1nk he really saw me Then as the bus r1de became smooth aga1n I watched h1m drlft off 1nto another world Although phys1cally there he was fadmg away aga1n It was a strange experlence to watch h1m for as h1s m1nd wandered h1s eyes became dull and h1s cheeks sagged sl1ghtly I wondered what he was th1nk1ng He seemed puzzled and bew1ldered H1s brow was kn1t HIS eyes st1ll on me stared through me and saw noth1ng Do people always wonder and worry dur1ng l1fe I thought Towards the front of the bus were a g1rl ln her twent1es an old man and a m1ddle aged woman Frowns on all the1r faces I wanted to shake each one and tell them not to let l1fe Sllp through the1r fingers' No one seemed al1ve Th1S dreammg and seml I1V1I'lg IS l1ke a d1sease 1t plants IIS germ 1n you and slowly beg1ns gnawmg unt1l It weakens you I dldnt want 1t to slnk 1ts ugly teeth 1n me I dldnt want my l1fe to be rumed Maybe I was all wrong perhaps people are very happy on the average w1th few SEFIOUS problems and confllcts I hope so' 78 K6 ' 77 , . Cl 77 ' . , . ,L . . . 7 7 ' , . . , . ' 7 - 9 - ' 77 H . . . . , 7 ' 7 7 . , . . , . . . . 7 - - ya v - as ' ' 7 7 . . , , ,, 7 , 7 ' , . . , . , . ' s , . the seat opposite me. When the bus started, he suddenly seemed to be 5 ' . , . . U . . 4 Z . . . . I y 7 ' . . , . . I 1 . 7 ' 7 , . 7 I 7 . ' ' ' . - . , . . v v ' . . , . . . . . , . l I ' . u Z . 7 7 ' HE TRANSQRI E3 Bus Concluded But xx hy was I xvorrylngo I 1ust couldnt let xvo11x grab hold ol me aftel I had seen xxhat It can and does do I trled to hght back Youth lb supposed to be the best tlme of vour l1fe I xvondered 1t It were t1 ue The1e I was xvorrxmg agam How could I stop 1t It couldn t xx IH ove1 me' Just then the dr1ver called out my street I deter mlned to show ex erx ore that It wasn t such a bad world sm1led 1nd 1umped hghtlx off the bus I looked up IH the sky and sfmxv the sun shmmg My XVOFIICS of onlx a mmute ago had vamshed completely and Sxruu C llss Elcxcn Drlver s Lament For drlvlng a car You have a zeal You are qu1tc good Behmd the xvheel The roads are stra1ght The lanes are cle At tlmes hke these You have no fear But parkmg 15 Another thxng And oh' the troubles It can brmg' A tlny space A monstrous car You 16 elther too near Or else too lar You bump vou scrape Then out once more Forxx ard and back You open the door Not close enough Now tell me when Ill d1e1t I haxe To do lt agaxn So out xou go All red 1n face, And then some smart guv Steals voul place' ,Xxx Bnoxxx C lass Txx clxc 79 T ' P T V r - Y' I ' ' I 1 1 1 ' x 1 . - C I . X , ' 1 . ' .' 'K I ' . I . ' , , ' 3- . . ' 1 L, 1 ' 2 K V' . .7 c L. . I V! I 7 I had learned the lesson I, myself, was trymg to teach. j.xN1-1 I I . A T l I 7 ar, C I . . Y 7 7 1 7 1 V Y 7 , . . . V ' 7 THE TRANSCRIPT Mood WOff19d perplexed I look out 1nto the nlght And 1n the darkness that prevalls The twlsted sycamores stretch the1r slender branches They seem l1ke restless leopards Stra1n1ng the1r l1mbs to reach the sky And now my mood has changed I look agam the trees have changed Relaxed they now l1e back agamst the cushlon of the sky Qullted Wlth brlght stars NIARX XVoo11 Cllss Twelve The Mlnd Versus Feou' EAR IS the road block of our m1nds It prevents our whole hearted enqoyment of most past1mes It causes unrest and d1ssat1sfact1on and the fru1tless search for an 1ntang1ble securlty Fear IS d1sda1ned by the w1se fa1thful man It has a great 1nHuence on the average man It IS the weapon of the ev1l man We fear that wh1ch we have never experlenced no matter Whether our ant1c1pat1on IS Joyful or terrlfled If lt IS someth1ng we awalt wlth Joy fears ar1se 1n us that we w1ll be d1sappo1nted If we expect a dreadful occas1on to arrlve soon our m1nd fills Wlth conjectured horrors augment mg the true reasons for doubt There IS also fear of repeat1ng an act1on performed before We fear lt elther because lt was pa1nful or because It was DICE and may not turn out to be so n1ce next t1me The only defense agamst fear IS havmg fa1th and confidence falth IH a supernatural power who w1ll protect you confidence 1n your fellow man upon whom you are dependent and confidence 1n yourself W1th these weapons our m1nds could eas1ly d1spel fear The trust that would come 1f all acqu1red these attr1butes would make peace come to all the world as eas1ly as speech or wr1t1ng comes to one person NIARCIE HELNI Class Tuelxe L1ft Your I-leod Often l1ft your head up hlgh And remember th1ngs gone by The sun the moon the w1nd and stars W1ll always penetrate the bars Wh1Ch keep us from our care free days And they w1ll lead us through the haze Nature has a way of findlng An answer to our quest1on1ng If we l1ft our heads up h1gh And see the thmgs before our ey es BOXITA Cmsxx oLD Class Tu elxe 80 1 1 1 1 1 V 1. i 7' 1 1 1 1 V ' 1 1 1 ' ' 1 7 . 1 , . , . c 7' . 1 1 1 . - Y .11 1 ' 7 vv L, sf W' if af K X, as '4 ,H , -- L, WTI' M f V n-.gg 3 Y Wifi. A J M rf .f Yi If 3' w Ag' wha .V S+ .y 73 Y , 3 xv, ,ze 2 P' 'f 6 'kr , f 17 if W wb 4 '. f, yr ' v '3'E'. af 'MQ ,fu - ? ,H - ' Q Q 4 ' 1 ,Q gal' ,. f .X ... ,. ,ff 1 X Quxjxxk 9111.1 v 1 THE TRANSCRIPT Irrequlorr Poem If th1s IS l1fe then let me IIVS Drxnk golden draughts of the mornlng sun Straln to the utmost the powers I have Sleep rn the coolness where dark waters run Race w1th the breezes that cleanse the a1r G3lD1Hg mx strength from the heax ens hot glare Let no one say that I d1d not try For Ixe stretched every fibre to touch the s y Let me remember that slnce I shall d1e I must l1ve tautly and tlghtly now That absolute goal I may never atta1n But the effort alone 15 enough to gam Bm rx B xmu Cllss 'lxulxc The shores of th1s land are swept by w1nds of t1me The waves of the sea roll endlessly day by day In valn unceaslng effort to reach thelr end As s1ngly thev each w1ll plunge to thelr rest on sand Then only to rxse w1th a swell of 11fe to roll Anew hav1ng caught but moments of Heetmg peace Are men 1n thelr constant 1nfin1te hopes fO1 peace But rlpples 1n seas of wlllful eternal gods? Ideals and perpetual v1s1ons of men are they But Whlte caps on oceans vast 1n thelr blue expanse? Of t1me and tossed by hfc 1nto deep obl1v1on Submerged 1n the hollow lnfinlte depth of th1s QXISIEDCQQ RACIIII SNIIIII Qllss 'lxxtlxc It I could selze upon one crx stal ce1ta1nty Id drop lt 1n my damp deluded soul And through that shapeless mass 1ts force would sear D1ssolv1ng all the restless gropxngs That serve as center of my be1ng When once Id clutched thls cry stal certalnty Mx fingers would not ever let lt go Its burnmg pam would soothe Drffuse a warmth throughout me I haxe no cry stal onlv one conv1ct1on Someday Ill grab some plece of granlte Reshape my soul to fit 1ts Jagged shape And crumbhng ln mv clmgmg hands It W1ll fall to earth and settle 1n the dust Curx Riu: Cllss 'Ixulxc 82 . . I I , I I . 7 7 . . , . . , 7 1 7 I ' ' 9 ' f k . . I . , 7 7 Y S , . , . , . . . 7 1 . , . . . . , . . . I But wh1te caps m ceaseless motlon as stlrred by w1nds , . I . Q ,I . , . I Liu' 1 73 Y 1 , . . 7 , . 7 ' n 7 . 7 7 , 1 . . Q ,, 7 THE TRANSCRIPT Peace T WAS the hour at the end of the day when the sun feebly struggles to retaln her power over the earth when agalnst the w1ll of darkness she sends her rays gently down now cool and pale hav1ng lost thelr golden fire As I walked down the long dark corrldor my footsteps echoed uneaslly the1r sharpness magmfled as they were tossed back and forth Here and there a t1m1d needle of llght prerced the a1r and stabbed agalnst the uny1eld1ng brlck Wall but all else was darkness I reached the end of the corrldor and stopped The srlence closed 1n around me as lf Waltlflg 1mpat1ent for my next move I reached for the smooth cold handle of the door and turned It The door of heavy carved oak W1th 1nsets of luml nescent gold glass reluctantly y1elded and sl1d open I stepped 1ns1de and stood qu1te st1ll afrald to shatter the peace of th1s hour by my breathmg I looked around me and my heart beat faster at the beauty The sun s rays wh1ch had seemed so feeble before had turned the wm dows of the Cathedral 1nto ln 1ng fire l1ke pulslng Jewels they transformed the darkness wh1ch surrounded them 1nto deep velvet All llght had been 1mpr1soned 1n the small p1eCQS of glass and had changed them for the moment 1nto l1qu1d sapphlres radlant rubles mysterlous emeralds I stepped forward and ascended the steps 1nto the chancel No longer were my footsteps sharp now they were soft cloaked ln the tenderness of the cathedral I stepped before the Cross whlch was barely d1st1ngu1shable 1n the gloom and bowed The flame of a sol1tary lamp near the altar tossed and l1cked at the globe 1mpr1son1ng lt A tall shadow graceful as a cypress bent by the w1nd was thrown far 1nto the depths of the ce1l1ng I went to the s1de wall slowly feelmg my way for here the darkness was lntense I reached the small box Whlch I knew so well grasped 1tS well worn door and opened lt I felt softly for the small knob and pulled It down As It reached the bottom a qulver went through the whole church as 1f lt shared my ant1c1pat1on The second knob was connected and a deep breath resounded through the Cathedral I moved gently to the bench and sat down runnlng my fingers along 1ts carved border and feel1ng the l1fe w1th1n lt The keyboard of the organ Walted for my touch and the church had become qu1te sllent W1th a hesltatlng finger I touched a key a clear crystal note flew from the organ wavered echoed and dled away L1ke sllver threads the notes wound through the a1r now slowly now faster now gentle now commandlng They wove a web ln the dark ness wh1ch glowed w1th a tenuous beauty I played the last note tossmg the last thread agalnst the ce1l1ng The darkness agam folded rn and the gossamer was enveloped 1n shadow I turned from the organ left the bench and agaln touched the knobs W1th a Slgh the breathlng dled away but the Cathedral st1ll vlbrated as though callmg It back Slowly heSl tat1ng I descended the steps and looked agaln at the wmdows whlch though more subdued st1ll smouldered W1th an 1nner fire Aga1n I turned the knob of the door the door reluctantly sl1d open I stepped 1nto the world agaln PEGGY RASH Class Twelxe 83 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 , . , . - 1 ' 1 , . , . , , . 1 1 ' , . 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 ' 1 1 - ' ' 1 , . 1 1 - 1 - ' , ' 1 , . 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' ' - 1 - 1 ' 9 y - . 0 1 1 ' 1 ' ' 1 1 , . , . 7 THE TRANSCRIPT The Rodd Somewhere somehow Ill surely find The way that I must go A road not void of any wind Or earthquake storm and snow And on that road Ill live my life Nor turn from it aside Accepting sickness love and strife My chosen way Ill b1de And on it I will travel till Mx tedious Journeys oer And then Ill sit in happv still And see the ruts I wore And those who live in later years Will never know of me Yet this road washed by mv tears Less dusty then will be GAY HILLIARD Class Eleven Dofy The Dawn like a maiden all rosy with love Casts shy glances down from her heavenly bower And her lover the silvery mist sinks to earth The Noon like a warrior in armor of gold Clashing and clanging the shield of the sun Shoutmg and whirling exulting in war Waves high his proud standard Who dares meet his mig 'P The Dusk like a mother all tender and kind Tucks tired Earth to rest between blankets of grey And fearing her child would be frightened by dark She hangs out the moon to keep shadows awav The Night in dark majesty stalks the black sky Aloof and alone in his marvelous cloak That hung fiom his shoulders and fastened with stars Sweeps knoxn ledge from men and distinction from earth BIITTX Bum Class Tw elx e 84 3 7 7 , . , . . 7 . . , . y r , ' . 1 ' ' 7 .1 5 , . . . 7 . 7 , . . V. , . . - , 3 7 7 Adoring and fainting with joy and delight. 7 7 . . . . . , . . , , . . . ht. V 9 . 3 l 7 9 7 . . . 7 Y - . , H 1 ' . 7 Y . . . 1 C I I y 7 W fum 'O'fg 'Po a s iff' QW Y 1 WM! , T7 3' ggi f Z 'AX , n at 1 If: f -f I 'xgb' THE TRANSCRIPT The Athletic Associcmon HE ATHLETIC Association IS a group of girls chosen by the school to promote sportsmanship and interest in athletic accomplishments and to award emblems This year the members of the association were Ann Brown Ellen Spalding Kaye Tarrant Jane Smith Clara Pfeiffer Anne Hogue Frances Cummins Helen Hammon Gay Hilliard and Alice Atkins The Association took on a nevx Job this year The president took locker lnspectlon at least once a week This has worked very well A new constitution for the Association was written last year We made We haxe also sold Collegiate Pennants to the school in an effort to earn money to pay for the referees and refreshment after the games with other schools 'lhe Athletic Association sponsored a pep rally at the beginning of the year when new cheerleaders were chosen for each of the Blue and Gold teams The emblems and trophies were given out on Class Day This year in awarding them we put more emphasis on spirit and improyement than on ability Nevertheless a girl had to have ability in order to receive an emblem There were so many deserving girls this year that we instituted honorable mention for those who showed special spirit effort and im provement Everyone seemed to take a great deal of lnterest in sports and the Athletic Assoc1at1on wants to thank you all for your marvelous spirit and cooperation 86 .u U . . A Z 7 . 7 , . ,n - Y Q , 7 7 ' . . . . . , n a few additions and a little revision. r . . ' s I 7 . . . . . H . H ' . ' . . . , - THE TRANSCRIPT POllllCCIl Sclence Club The Pol1t1cal Sclence Club IS a group of Jumors and senlors who are 1nterested 1n learnmg more about the1r mun1c1pal government and about the var1ous publlc SGFVICGS Th1S year speakers have talked to the club about the work of the Board of Aldermen the C1V1l Serv1ce Board the Publ1c Welfare Department the Board of Educatlon The club has v1s1ted the Safety Department the General Hospltal the Kentucky Prlntmg Press for the Bl1nd and has attended one of the mayors beef SGSSIOHS The club has one representatlve 1n the Senate of the Student Government Assoclatlon Pdndemonlum In October 1949 Pandemonium was able to buy a new mlmeograph The glrls have begun typmg the stenclls themselves so that all the work of pl1bl1Sh1I1g Pandemonlum IS now done by the staff plannmg the ISSUES wr1t1ng stenclllmg mlmeographmg stap11ng and d1str1but1ng There are twenty seven glrls on Pandemomum th1s year the largest staff ln the hxstory of the paper and because of th1s the ISSUES have been longer and fuller Pandemomum sent delegates to the meetlng of the Kentucky H1gh School Press Assoclatlon 1n Lexmgton March 31 and Apr1l 1 where problems of publlshlng a H1gh School newspaper were dlscussed Pandemomum gave 1ts annual style show of Bycks clothes Aprll 28 87 , U. . . , 1 U . , . . Q - 7 1 ' 9 it ' 77 , . . - . . , , . . . mach1ne wlth the money whlch was made on the style show last year. 1 . Q . . . . Q :I 1 1 , 7 7 . 1 7 . . ' ' v 3 G .n . . I . , y ' . , n . ' , D - THE TRANSCRIPT Glee Club The twenty fixe members of the Glee Club had an enrovable and hard workrng year We sang a cantata at the Chrrstmas program whrch was broadcast over WHAS a selectron of songs on Aprrl fifth before the school and an anthem at School Sunday Twelve members of the Glee Club were fortunate enough to be chosen to srng rn the Kentucky All State chorus rn Max The conscrentrousness of the members and the able drrectron of Mrss Crampton combrned to make thrs one of the best Glee Clubs that we haxe had Drcrmortlc Club Thrrtx members of the Dramatrc Club haxe grxen two productrons rn May Jane Eyre bx Charlotte Bronte rn the mrddle of the month and You Cant Take It Wrth You bx Kaufman and Hart just before the close of school 88 - 7 - ' - N. y . . . ' ' 7 7 . V. . . . . 7 . .yy 1 1 . y .Y . . 7 Y 1 . . ' . ,, 1 1, . v ' ' ., 1 THE TRANSCRIPT 'X SGTVICG Club HE SERVICE CLUB IS the organ1zat1on at Colleg1ate Wh1ch acts for the school IH supportmg var1ous worthy organ1zat1ons One of our projects for the past two years has been the support of a Belg1an war orphan Leont1ne Crochaert through the Foster Parents plan for War Chlldren Bes1des contrxbutmg her food and lodgmg the SEYVICG Club packs boxes for her and wr1tes her weekly letters Knowmg that there are people here 1n the Unlted States who need help just as badly as those 1n Europe we have sponsored a Kentucky mounta1n school through the Save the Ch11dren Federat1on for several years Our foster school at present the P1ne H111 School 1n Montgomery County The SGTVICQ Club also acts as the agency through wh1ch frlends are collected for several Clty Wlde drlves durmg the years W1th the whole hearted support of the school we conduct campa1gns for the Commun1ty Chest the March of D1mes and the Red Cross 89 in . up eg! Y -A 21-' Q91 . 'il , ' ra ,Ejkge 5. . 4' Sem,- -are ,H H , . - 1 1 x ' 1 1 - - as xx - , . - IS 1 , . WQWWWQ My OR 75 vw: split!! 94,19 6' Q. , ,W ff f 'Qgyfjfy 'Za '32, l'f'o' I 4 lv CE W bl-N X' V, 545' 'fm W ,f O .AQ X9 1, 2 uibs whiisu NMS no ,' VO 0' fx., I V O O O 0 V Q7 Q Q Q 1 Q O a 54 1':s':'fj7l N ' -'Z wg-7 5.f , XJ., ,ol N 'x , 23,3 K , N ' x iv KK V RQOQQ ' - .X ' 4 Q X , xiivvgi f ff ' -X Af V. X LN ' ' Z 5 X V 74 0 2,7 ay! l if . I ' 1,75 THE TRANSCRIPT Blue Cclptcun Though modest qulet and unassumlng she has the love and admlratlon of all as a fine leader and a great frlend Her sportsmansh1p and deslre to w1n w1ll lead her team to v1ctory She shows her great athletlc ab1l1ty ln every game 1n every sport Slncere enthuslastlc and cheerful she w1ll always be remembered by the Blues as the best captam ever Con Gold Captclln Kaye Tarrant an excellent athlete but a greater leader In every game she shows her determmatlon and ab1l1ty to lead the Golds forward Through her frlendlmess enthuslasm and conslderatlon for all she w1ll always be held ln the hearts of the Golds Whether ln vlctory or defeat her sportsmar1sh1p places her h1gh 1n the op1n1on of everybody Con gratulatlons Kaye You have made It a wonderful year for the Golds 92 gratulations Ellen Spalding. You deserve it. l - THE TRANSCRIPT Basketball Team 50 Hockey Team 50 Kaye Tarrant Clara Pferffer Helen Hammon Ann Brown V1fg1H1a Klng Al1ce Atk1ns CISS Pfelffer Ellen Spaldlng Sally Spaldlng Jane Smrth Ccaptamj Frances Cumrruns Joan Potter Anne Hogue Inez Prvor Nancx Creal Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue IBQQX, flu: ll W U14 VI Ellen Spaldmg Qcaptalnj Jane Sm1th Anne Hogue Frances Cummlns Inez Pryor Margle Helm Joan Potter Cecy Norman Margaret Ann Slmon Janet Flynn Sally Spaldmg Mary Arnble Hutcherson Kaye Tarrant Ccaptalnl V1Yg1H18 Kmg Ann Llndenberger Nlna Speed Clara Pferffer Helen Hammon Gwendy Reed Clss Pfe1fTer Ahce Atk1ns Ann Brown Ferns Lmdenberger Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold I I I I GW SNQ3 I qi . . vj 7Q 1, lf U x . xlla-. Va' v I L.,J l - . . Nina Speed -'------------ G01d Eleanor Tarrant .......... Gold 93 Hi ,J 2' :- AQ' xg iw sg . ' 'STE gg 'lfagqff 9 mah i I' ' fm: W WX D EF-1 5r:l-loo 5 ' 'W 31- W5 Q ' ff ' VF-1? A W 5 1 Y! if ' fs: 'I 14 ZMH. ! K ,4f?i4? f-ff' THE TRANSCRIPT N1qht The moon Comes out at noon But the stars Come out at mght The Angels come out at nlght But they are never 1n s1ght The blrds slng and slng and slng And the trees sw1ng and swlng and sw1ng l3a1mAux C RAXI s Lllss Thrm Q The Broom You often see me upslde down behlnd the k1tchen door Or whxskmg some b1tS of bread off the untldy floor Sometlmes my d1gn1ty IS lowered By sweepmg up the street But I can boast of one thlng Behlnd my tra1l 1ts neat Oh my at one t1me of year I carry wltches through the stratosphere But I guess I should not brag To bear on my back such a grotesque old nag Who holds 1n her arm a green eyed cat And carrles on her shoulder a bllnd black bat Fu LDI x XI 1LLx1oT1 Klttens Tar Baby and Spoky are two llttle Perslan klttens that are always 1n trouble Sometlmes when Im walklng around the house thev peep out from behlnd a shadow and they look llke ghosts When I want them to play they wont play and when I want them to move they wont do It If you had them I bet you would feel the same hum STEWART Cllss Four My Godfather H1s name IS Uncle Davles HIS cheeks are so red because he laughs all the t1me He got marrled a llttle after he was forty If vou want I w1l1 tell you about h1s Wlfe Aunt B1ll1e Before she was marrled she was B1ll1e Gledhlll I would lxke to sav that they have a baby but they dont haxe a baby But 1f thev do I hope It IS a glrl Bovs are so rough Nloxxu Siolms Cllss Om 96 . 7 7 . 7 7 W y 1 1 4 I Y 44 . . . 7 7 . . . , 7 5 7 7 ' 1 Q . . I 1 Class Seven . . , . ' .1 Y ! ' a . . V , V . . . 7 , V I uf 7 V . 1 ' V I ' A ' THE TRANSCRIPT My Ddddys Comp T MY Daddys camp 1n Canada they have log cabins In the mam lodge they have a fireplace in the middle of the room They kill bears and use their skins to make rugs In the winter the snow IS so deep that two families have to stay up there so that they can keep the snow off the roof to keep it from cav1ng IH One t1me my grandfather got lost from his guide My father rang the church bell and two Indian guides went out to find h1m When anyone gets lost they ring the church bell There is an old tepee made out of bark that the Indlans made years ago There are so many interesting things up there There are wolves sleigh dogs deers and porcuplnes One porcupine was under a porch We had to watch Mlke because the porcup1ne might throw pines at him There are many anlmals up there When you take a walk 1n the forest the blrds just sing and s1ng Have you ever heard of a man who eats fish for break fast? Mr McClain does We have to cross a lake to get to the camp My Daddy takes us out 1n a canoe on the lake and We have fun Class One Butterflies The butterflies are fluttering All over the world We see them coming down To llght upon a girl Their food IS the honey That comes from all flowers They take It home to the1r babies In late afternoon hours There are butterflles of all kinds Of all colors and shades You may have a special one But I thlnk they re all okay' NIARX PARK CROSS Class Fiwe The Odd Glrl Once upon a tlme There was a little glrl who wouldnt mind She never Sald yes and she never said Its hard to belleve but it 1S so She never went east she never went west But sometimes she would take a rest Shed sleep and sleep and sleep some more And sometlmes dream and sometimes snore BEWY SUE Lukrxs Class Fne 97 I , . . . . h . . U D , . - , . l . . it . ,, .D ADEL.-XINE SNYDER 7 7 - v ' r . . , . ' KL 77 ' llho 97 , 1 - . . 7 Y , . L . I Y CLASSES F VE S X AND SEVEN b-4 r-4 HE Fumes lt IS Sprlng The woodmen were chopplng trees down When the vxood men went to lunch the fa1r1es came out and danced IH a clrcle They danced together 1n the meadow Thex were so happy that lt was Spxmg When people came out the fa1r1es dlsappeared The people saw falry foot punts and they knew that the fa1r1es had been there They looked and looked but ther never could see the fa1r1es Sanur IXTLLX Cllss One W1lly Couqhdrop NCE upon a t1me IH a medlclne cab1net there was a coughdrop named W1lly He was very sad because he hated med1c1ne and was medxcme He had tasted medlclne before It was sweet on the outs1de but xery sour on the 1ns1de W1lly was 1n a brand new box of cough drops He was afrald that m1ght be eaten today He hoped that he would not be eaten because he felt very sour 1ns1de and very sweet outslde The box had nex er been used and the person m1ght throw the rest of the box out just because he was sour today All of a sudden W1lly heard Jlmmy coughlng W1lly was very sad because he m1ght be eaten J1rnmy s mother came m the bathroom and opened the cablnet and got out the box of cough drops She opened the box and got out W1lly W1lly was very sad All of a sudden W1lly was swallowed and he heard Jlmmy sax that that was the best cough drop he had ex er tasted W1lly was happy and d1d not feel sour at all In fact he felt very sweet -XxxL P1 rr ll Lllss Slx A Sprlnq Day It IS a warm sprlng day The breezes are playlng on the rlch carpet of green grass The fragrance of the new flowers smell 1S llke perfume The b1rds twltter about flndlng odds and ends for thelr nest bu1ld1r1g The sun makes a rosy sunset beh1nd the h1ll Now the Chlnese ch1ldren can haxe thelr day N nu Rasu C1155 Four 99 T TRANSCRIPT . . . 7 - y .. . . 1 . Y . T- I . 7. .. . , ' - he ., y ..- ' '. ' he u' Y .. . y Q - I I . 1 . CL' . , . . r ' 7 ' , .. 7 ' r- THE TRANSCRIPT Bo Lost O WAS a fuzzy 11tt1e bear who 1lVCd w1th h1S mother 1n a cave near the woods Bo 11ked to roam but h1S mother would not let h1m One stormy mght Bo woke up and declded I W111 roam tonlght so he ran out of the cave and 1nto the woods He wandered for a 11ttle wh1le and then he Spled some blackberr1es H ran towards them He ate some and felt better but later he began to grow sleepy so he lay down ln a bramble patch and went to sleep When Bo woke up 1n the mornlng It had ra1ned and he couldnt get up He Slghed and sald It s awful cold I W1Sh I were at home The w1nd had blown the brambles t1ghtly agalnst h1m Ive got to get out of here because today IS Monday and that s a school day he Sald He Hnally got out and started out of the woods He soon found h1s way out and started for school I won t go 1n because they Wlll make fun of me because I don t have anythmg on so I WIII say my secret call to Teddy Toad So he went to the w1ndow and Sald Squeak Squeeeak Bo ran home and h1s mother spanked h1m but was glad to see h1m also The next day Bo went to school and told the teacher what had happened Never do that aga1n Bo Sald the teacher Bo never d1d ISABEL F OSHEE Class Four Seasons SPRING In the Sprlng the flowers bloom The trees bud and the baby leaves come on the trees The ch1ldren play They are so happy that the w1nter s over Easter comes 1n the Spr1ng The Easter Bunny br1ngs me eggs and a chocolate bunny SUMMER In the Summer lt IS warm The days are long I l1ke to play and wade 1n the water Sometlmes we have PICHICS That IS so much fun FALL The leaves turn pretty colors Some turn gold and yellow some turn red and even brown We rake the leaves IH the Fall and Jump 1n them The squ1rrels find nuts and h1de them I l1ke to watch them They run up and down the trees Sometzmes they stop to eat then they go back to work The farmer cuts the wood for the fireplace The mother cans food for w1nter The days are gettmg shorter WINTER It IS cold The snow IS on the ground I l1ke to make snowballs and a snowman We have snow fights too We l1ke to Slelgh r1de down the b1g h1ll It IS dark at SIX o clock The days are short TRACY Axrox Class One 100 - - sa - I ' as - 7 7 . . . . ' e Z . . . ' f 7 ' ' U 7 ' 77 ' . y , . . . - KC 7 ' I 7 77 ' , . H 7 ' ' I Y 7 . , . 1 ' ' H - - - - - - - - - - - - 77 7 7 ' A mouse!, screamed everybody, and they all came runnlng out. lk ' 77 ' ' . 7 7 ' . . Q , ' 1 ' ' 7 Q . . . , I THE TRANSCRIPT The Ground l-log NCE there was a ground hog Hrs name was Drnk Drnk couldnt wart trll Ground Hog Day Hrs mother sard that pretty soon Ground Hog Day would come Drnk and hrs mother went to town to get Drnk a new surt Drnk saw a lrttle red wagon Drnk would love to have rt Hrs mother told Drnk to go look at the tovs Hrs mother asked the lady how much the wagon cost It cost S2 55 So Drnks mother bought rt Drnk went over to the place where the wagon was He sard Where IS the wagon that was there? The lady sard that somebody had bought rt Drnk looked very sad rndeed Drnk and hrs mother went home Hrs mother told hrm tomorrow was Ground Hog Day Drnk was so happy that he could not sleep that nrght The next mornrng he woke up and ran down starrs There by the brg charr was a red wagon Drnk was so happy that he went outsrde and took a rrde down the brg hrll NANCY Rrcmx Clrss Four Trm And Blozeowcty AD how far away rs Blue Rrver Valleyq asked Trm Carson Not far son Whv'7 Oh I just wanted to know answered Trm A lrttle whrle later Trm saddled hrs lrvely lrttle pony Crrcket and rode away rn the drrectron of Blue Rrver Valley When he got there he dls mounted took hrs lunch out of the saddlebags and unsaddled Crrcket Then he clrrnbed to the top of Strlts Rock Qso called because of rts herghtj and took out hrs brnoculars After eatrng hrs lunch he trarned hrs brnoculars on the valley and slowly moved them along Suddenly he stopped He had found what he was lookrng for There almost drrectly below hrm stood a creamy golden palomrno Hrs name was Blazeaway and Trm was determrned to capture hrm Qurckly he saddled Crrcket and trotted to a clump of trees close to Blazeaway Then he took hrs rope and crept to a throwmg drstance of the palomrno Suddenly Trm stood up Startled Blazeaway reared But before he could touch the ground agarn the rope dropped lrke a snake around hrs neck Trm had tred rt to a tree so the horse couldn t get away When Trm reached home hrs father was so surprrsed he almost farnted Trm where drd you get that horse? he demanded At Blue Rrver Valley But how? I roped hrm Well I never' hrs father sard That nrght Trm could not go to sleep He tossed and turned and finally when he heard Blazeaway call to hrs herd he got out of bed put on hrs bathrobe and boots and hurrred out to Blazeaways corral The horse shred away from hrm as he opened the gate but finally wrth a burst of speed he shot past Trm and was soon out of hrs srght Trm went back to bed and was soon asleep And Blazeawayq He gal loped far away to hrs herd and the freedom that he loved so well Prxxs Ilurrrrsox Class Frxc 101 . . . , . U . . , . . ' ff ' ,7 ' . , . I ' 7 I I . . I rl . . . ,, . xx , . . as va a ' M ' if ' 77 ' 7 5 ' a v 7 7 ' 1 a p , - ' 7 ' Y r . , . , . 7 . . . . , . , . y . . KK A ' YY , . . if ' 77 me sa ' as ' ay an 77 - ' , . . ' Y Y Y , I - 1 , . 3 7 , . , . 4 - , . . v X 1 CLASSES TWO THREE AND FOUR E TRANSCRI The Courtshlp Of B1lly Beetle B1lly Beetle went courtmg to h1s lady falr Betty Beetle was her name a beauty oh so ra1e Good morn1ng sa1d she What have xou brought me Ive brought a W1Sh sald he What 15 1t sa1d she I want vou to marry me Oh no' Sald she A fine pa1r we would be Im as pretty as a queen In soc1al clubs I should be seen A housew1fe I should not be A queen 15 much better for me So Betty went to her soc1al club But all she got was a Very cold snub A lowly housew1fe you should be As the rest of us you see So Betty sadlx turned awax And B1llx 'ind Bettx were l'YI3lI'1GCl next day Bxlmxlu Xloom md Cllss F111 Tony ONY was a cat Jane Marshalls cat he was b1g and yellow he looked fierce but he really was gentle as could be Jane lox ed h1m verv much and let h1m do what he w1shed such as ly1ng on her s1lk p1llow or gett1ng as mLch food as he wanted and so of course he lox ed her too One day when Jane came home from school she wanted to play Wlth Tonx but she couldnt find h1m So she sa1d to her mother Oh dear mother I can t find Tony Im afrald he IS lost We ll put an ad 1n the lost column 1n the paper Don t worry we ll find h1m Sald her mother comfortmg her daughter So they put an ad 1n the lost column 1n the paper The next morn1ng the doorbell rang Jane opened lt there stood a Cat Is th1S your Cato she sa1d No but thanks anyway Sald Jane Two other people came w1th cats but not one of them was Tony That n1ght Jane was IH bed but couldnt go to sleep suddenly she heard Tony mew1ng under her w1ndow she 1umped out of bed told her father and mother and they went down sta1rs and opened the front door There stood Tonv by seven l1ttle baby k1ttens Tonx wasnt a boy after all Ismu FOSIIII C l lss Four 103 sa ' - 11 1 ' 7 7 an Y Y 11 sz 1 - 11 i - . . 41 1 v - 11 ' 46 YV 11 v ' aa 11 - as ' , 11 1 ' 1 - BL 7 7 Y ' , ' 77 Y . 56 ' U Lf Y 77 1 1 ' .Y U17 7 7 I X 7 .1 C r mf ' .' A . . 'l 1 .-XNN1: ID11c'1'zx1.xN ' , . . 4 ' V A L . 1 X , . Y 7 7 , . 7 1 U , , . Y A 1 7 , . 7 7 7 7 ' ' if ' ' ! Y 1 , 1 ' A 11 7 7 ' li 7 ' ' 7 7 ' 1 . ,, . . , . it ' 77 ' 'Y S5 73 ' 7 ' ' ' Y . . , ' 7 1 M . 7 , 7 M . . . - - 4 THE TRANSCRIPT Leo The Lonely Lion There was a little lion Leo was his name He was very lonel5 Because he had no fame cried all day cried all night cried when it was dark cried when it was light One dag Leo found a bear Who was so very cute And to his great surprise The bear play ed a flute Leo asked the little bear lf he would be his friend The little bear was happy And they were happy till the end Xxxi Diiimnx BITSA Lxsixr Cllss Fun Tom s Rocket Ship NE WARM dax in August Billy Ridei vx as sitting on his front steps trying to think of something to do when Tom called him to come ox er to the clubhouse right away Torn was the inventor of the club and was alwaxs thinking of things to do so Bill went When he got there Tom was showing every one his plans for a rocket they had to do was build it He had all the materials they needed except the nails so Phil Went down to the store to get some While he was gone Tom got everything organized and explained the rocket ship to David When Phil got back ex eu thing was readx to begin Torn gave instructions and they started Working The ship was going to be just big enough for four people to squeeze into After about a Week the iocket ship was finisned and everyone was readx to go First Tom got in and then everx one else got in Tom started the rocket ship and it went off the ground After a minute Bill looked out to see how far fiom the vxorld they were and found they were onlv about foui feet Just at that moment the Whole thing Lame down ker plunk on the ground Tom got out and then ex erx one else got out Thex went back into the clubhouse to think As soon as thex were seated Tom pulled another paper out of his pocket and said Heie are the plans foi mx new Jet propelled airplane Now all vie haxe to do is build it Sxux l+AnxsLrx Cl iss Six 104 I 5 7 He ' , He ' ' . He ' ' , He ' ' . 7 7 , . 7 . 7 . . 7 7 . . .L 7 , - 3 - 7 V7 . . . 7 . 7 7 . 7 . . ship. He said that this rocket ship would take them to the moon and all 7 ' 3 - 1 7 77 . 7 . 7 . . 1 1 ' ' 7 7 7 . l U , 7 l . . 7 . 7 7 . . ' 7 7 . 1 7 . ., . I , 7 - 7 ' y .fy ' fy , . 7 ' -f 7 1 ' ' 44 1 1 , . 7 . . 7 7 7 . . . 7,, THE TRANSCRIPT Our Trlp To Florida HEN we went to Florida one of the places that we saw was Silver Springs We got on a big glass bottom boat and took a boat ride We looked through the glass bottom of the boat and saw a lot of fish We saw many dlfferent shapes sizes and colors One was orange with black spots and wings The man who was dr1v1ng our boat had two loaves of bread He threw It out of the window to the fish They would come to the top of the water to get the bread and we could see them better The next day we hit Miami The second day I was there I went with two friends and got a boat The girls were sitting on the end of the boat They would dive into the water and come up agaln I trled it and I dldn t come up They had to dlve for me I saw a lot of toads and fish when I was 1n the water I was 1n the middle of the Ocean I could not get out of the boat because the water was too deep When they took me back to mv mother she said What did you come back here for? She thought that I was hav1ng a good time SLSAN 'XLLEN Class One Lament Of A Cdnolry Im just a poor canary Im IH a gllded cage I eat a special birdfood Thats supposed to be the rage I wish I was free Across the fields to fly Other birds have that privilege Why not I9 Cllss Stun A Storm All IS quiet and peaceful On a lovely spring day All the l1ttle children Haye gone out to play The sky begins to darken Thunder roars and lightning crashes Ram against the housetop splashes Children run ln every d1rect1on To look for some klnd of protection Wind howls and the rain beats faster People fear it may become a disaster Suddenly the ram stops Out comes the sun spreading a golden ray To end another spring day Frorsrz Lum xm nun FLFXF Ill RSI Cllss Stun 100 . , . . . , . . , . D Q ' LK ' l 77 u . 7 ' ' I .' g :J as , . , . . I , . Z NIARY AGNES Fosmzl-1 f 7 S 4 7 42 . ll ' ' ' THE TRANSCRIPT WAS the mght before the dog show and all through the house not a creature was st1rr1ng except the dog He was nervous and you m1ght sav he had a terrlble case of the butterfl1es The only thmg that he had to show was that he was a dog HIS name was Combl nat1on and It fitted hun perfectly He was part CO1116 part spamel part dachshund and part any other dog you can thlnk of He belonged to a l1ttle old lady named Mrs OConnely She was Irlsh She would talk all dav ID her Irlsh tongue to nobody else but Combma t1on But Comb1nat1ons Chlef worry was the dog show Mrs OConnely was sure he would w1n There was to be a SpGC18l pr1ze and nobodv knew what lt was for If Comb1nat1on dldnt w1n a rlbbon Mrs O Connely was sure he would w1n the speclal prlze Well the next day came Comblnatlon was scared Both of them squeezed 1nto Mrs OConnelys Model T Ford It was tlme to glxe the awards Combmatlon dldn t get a rlbbon but he got the spec1al prlze lt was for the most unusual dog Mrs OConnely and Comblnatlon were xerx happy NIARX PA1ut Cuoss Susle Makes Frlends USIE felt Very shy as she slowly walked up the steps of the school bu1ld1ng All that week and the next she trled to make frlends but she could not One day she ran home crymg and sa1d Nobody hkes me Her mother sa1d Dear 1tS just a matter of makmg frlends and I w1ll tell you three Q31 slmple rules N0 l Sm1le when you are mtroduced or meet someone No 2 Be mterested 1n the person and she w1ll be 1nter ested 1n you No 3 Don t be bossy The next day SUSIE went to school and saw Jan1e Sm1th on the school steps Jan1e sa1d a cold Hello Susle smlled and sa1d Hello Jan1e Jan1e sa1d nothmg all mormng but at recess she came over and Sald W1ll you play wlth me Susle sa1d I w1ll be glad to What would you l1ke to play? Catchers answered Jame Jame and SUSIE played all recess As she walked SUSIE s heart thumped w1th exc1tement and 1ns1de her there was a warm frxendly feelmg because she had made a fr1end BA1nsA1u Nloon Cllss Flxe 106 5 7 . . . 4 M - I ' 7 5 . , . . . . U, . , 1 1 1 I , . 1 y .I . , . A . , . . . , , . . 7 1 1 1 , S 1 1 . 1 a , V Y V . - Y V A xili , . Class Flvc . . ' ' ll ' Y, 7 5 ' . M . , . . . . 7 ' v ' ' KK Y, , . . . . H . ,, . 7 7 ' . . , Ei 7 19 ' ' Sl ' ' 77 , . . BL 13 ' , . . . . , 2 , THE TRANSCRIPT A Little House It IS spr1ng The 11ttle house IS bv the brook A llttle girl named Jane l1V9S 1n the l1ttle house She l1kes her house because lt IS new On warm days she will wade 1n the brook by the l1ttle house X 11xGIx1A C,-XS1 am Class Txxo Monkel ONKEL was a clrcus monkey One day Monkel s tr1ck was about to go on but the rmgmaster couldnt find Monkel He looked ln the animal tent no Monkel He just couldnt find Monkel' Apparently Monkel had slipped away 1n the nlght Monkel was having fun sw1ng1ng from tree to tree As lt began to grow dark Monkel couldn t find anyth1ng to eat Monkel looked and looked but he couldn t find anything to eat When he was about to g1VB up he spied some grapes He popped one 1nto his mouth My they were sour' HIS face puckered up Well anyway 1ts food he exclalmed and walked away His feet were so t1red he saw a haystack Finally he drlfted off to sleep He woke up 1n the morn1ng He felt someth1ng wet across his face It was a cow s tongue Get away shouted Monkel He got up and scratched his head like he always d1d when he was thinking If a cow had l1cked him he must be near a farm He walked a m1le and came 1n Slght of a house He walked 1nto the barnyard He could tell that the farmer had been 1n the barnyard just before he got there There was some corn spr1nkled on the ground He p1cked up a few kernels and then he saw the circus caravan He ran out of the barnyard and when the rlngmaster saw Monkel he grabbed him and took h1m back to the CITCUS Monkel never ran away agaln NANCY RASH Class Four Sunset The sun IS slnklng 1n the west The birds are return1ng to the nest The long legged colt so happy and gay No longer wants to frisk and play The old cow walks as slow as she can Up to the barn to fill the m1lk pan The cat before the fire IS rosy and Warm The m1ce scamper forth sure of no harm As I watch these animals make ready for mght My eyes are heaxy and my heart 1S l1ght FIELDEX XVILLNIOTI' Class Sexen 107 '7 .Y l. ,. . , . . ' , . . . , . , . . Y ' ' 7 7 l ' H . ' 9 77 . ' ' V l 7 ! ' 7 ! ' , . CWhat a good place to sleep! J . . - , I ll 77 . ' ' : . . C . 7 ' 1 1 Z , . r 7 ' ' ' , . C . ' THE TRANSCRIPT Chrlstmcis lt ls Fun On ChrIstmas I got so many toys I got a TonI doll I got two of the LIttle Women dolls If I told you all the thIngs I got for ChrIstmas I would never finIsh so I am golng to say good bye X7IRGINIA CASPAIII Class Tw o ln The Sprlnq Sprlng IS a wonderful thlng The chIldren lIke to play The boys and gIrls all over the world w1ll Sklp and hop and the flowers are ID bloom In the sprIng SUSAN PATTERSON Class Tvso SquIkIe Swank The Squnrrel QUIKIE Swank the squIrrel was a baby squIrrel about one month old but he could stlll be mIghty bad One day whIle he was In school fthat IS klndergartenj he was eatIng hIs ICG cream cone A cute lIttle glrl squlrrel whose name was PInky saId May I have a bIte No' Sald SquIkIe Swank the squlrrel and gave her a sock IH the nose Makmg other people sad made hIm happy He was taklng hIs second bIte when MISS Doodledope the teacher made hIm throw It away When school was out SquIkIe Swank the squIrrel met PInky eatIng a great bIg glant lol1Ipop He asked for a lIck PInky gave hIm a lIck Wlth her ruler PInky Sald How was I supposed to know what kInd of lIck you wantedq No saId PInky you wouldnt glVe me a bIte of your ICE cream cone SquIkIe Swank the squlrrel Sald See If I ever glVE you anythIng agam PInky Sald You never dId In the first place Yes I gave you a haIr to remember me by I knovs Sald PInky but It had stIckers In It to stlck me Squlkle Swank the squlrrel could not w1n so he declded hed have to be good to have frIends BI TTY SUI- I Lklxs Class Flxc Beorunful Wlnter One wInter mornlng I woke up and found snow flakes fallmg and thex looked lIke lIttle wh1te dlamonds spreadIng all over the place When the sun came out our yard looked lIke dlamond land When school was out I went home We made a snow woman but the next mormng when we went down to look at the woman her head was gone NANCI XxXA'I'I' Clflss Four 108 ' 7 , ' . 7 c 1 , . 7 ' ' ll . ' 77 7 7 ' 4, ,, . . . . . . . 1 , . . ' ' , ' , - . 7 . . g. ' I 7 7 - ' ns. - - as , . Squikie Swank, the squirrel said, Wah-wah, a lick of your lollipopfl K . . . . . L ,77 . 3 Cl 7 .77 . . . . H . . . . ,, 7 7 A ' ' ' K6 ' ' 77 , . KL . 77 7 - ' Li 7 77 ' ' LL ' ' ' ' ' 77 7 7 ' . . . . , , 7 I 7 7 2 : , I ' c .V l . 7 A . . . V 7 I 1 7 7 y THE TRANSCRIPT Spunky HERE was once a l1ttle skunk named Spunky He was a cute l1ttle skunk but nobody l1ked h1m because of h1s smell All Spunky had was a yo yo so he played wlth It all day One day Spunky had a good 1dea he thought he could get some pamt and palnt hlmseli a brown color and nobody would know who he was So he got some berry JUICE and dropped some mud 1n It so It would get brown and then he palnted hlmself brown When he had pa1nted hlmself all brown nobody knew who he was When Spunky saw Teddy the bear and Reddy the fox he sald I am from the North Pole but It got too cold for me so I came to these woods to l1ve So here I am Lets go swlmmlng sald Teddy and Reddy Oh no Cfled Spunky the water w1ll be too cold Oh come on fraldy skunk I bet you can not even swlm Oh alr1ght Ill go Get your sults on and come down to the pond Ten mlnutes later they were all down at the pond readv to sw1m Teddv Jumped off the log first Reddy Jumped 1n next but Spunky would not because he was afra1d that h1s palnt would come off But finally Teddy and Reddy made Spunky come 1n and much to thelr surprlse when they all got out there was Spunky the skunk standlng rlght before them Spunky' crled Teddy Yes Reddy It IS I Wont you play w1th me? I promlse I wont make my smell I Just use It when I get mad and lf you plav wlth me I wont make It work So please play wrth me All r1ght Spunky sa1d Teddy we w1ll play w1th you wont we Reddy? Yes we w1ll Spunky old pal we w1ll LULIE HARRISON Class Four Bloickle M BLACKIE a l1tt1e black lamb I l1VS w1th my mother father my s1ster and my brother We l1ve on Farmer Browns farm Every mornlng Farmer Brown gets up early to mllk Bossy thelr cow At five o clock ln the mormng the rooster crows Farmer Brown has a Wlfe and two chlldren The1r names are B1lly and Betty B1lly and Betty come to the pasture every day to play w1th me Every mght about five I always go to the kltchen to get some left over food that the Brown s dont eat One day I went to the barn to see what was 1n It Up on the rafters I saw a black thmg It Jumped at me I ran to the house Farmer Brown came out to see what was the matter He ran back 1n the house and got a gun and shot the black thmg I later found out that the black thlng that had Jumped at me had been a panther It had kllled a lot of sheep and lambs Farmer Brown gave me a blg p16C6 of lettuce CAROL Axxls ROARII Class Fne 110 I ' KL I . 7 Y 7 7 ! ' 77 H I ' ' ' 15 ' H 77 ' , it ' ' 77 LA , ' I I ' 77 as ' lv , ' , I sv , . . nf ' u 1 64 71 ' I Spunky skunk! cried Reddy, Is that you?,' 64 ' ' 7 ' ' 7 , . . 7 V , ' - as H ' . 77 ,' K6 ' ' ' 3 H 1 Y 7 7 7 66 D ' ' H 7 7 I 7 ' . , . . . 7 ' 7 7 . . , , . , . . ' 7 7 - ' l as ' I 7 THE TRANSCRIPT Wllderness Forest ILDERNESS Forest 1S a very beautlful forest w1th b1g towermg trees long needled pmes and stately elms There are da1s1es vlolets Queen Anne s lace and any other kmd of w1ld flower you could thmk of peeplng ID and out of rocks and dancmg among the trees Whenever theres a baby born 1n Wllderness Forest theres a celebra t1on But when Sylvester Skunk was born there were no congratulatlons It wasnt that the forest folk drdnt l1ke the skunk famlly It was just that they couldn t stand the1r smell for they were not deodorlzed skunks Poor poor Svlvester' Hes five now and doesnt have any frlends or brothers or s1sters Poor Sylvester he doesnt have anybodv to play w1th One day whlle he was walkmg through the forest trymg to figure out a way to get someone to play Wlth he saw some men cookmg some dehclous smell1ng food Yum yum thought Sylvester Id certalnly l1ke a taste of that food So he walked up to one of the men and tapped h1m on the shoulder Excuse me sa1d Sylvester Could I please have some The man took one look at Sylvester yelled Skunk' and ran Behlnd h1m ran all the other men Poor Svlvester' Nobody l1k6S h1m not even men He sat down and crled and Cfled and cr1ed so hard that he put out the Ere Just then Patty Porcuplne Squeekle Mouse Rollo Raccoon ran up w1th all of the forest creatures followmg them Sylvester you put out the fire and saved the forest from burnmg' crled all the forest creatures So I d1d exclalmed Sylvester So I d1d The next day there was a blg parade honorlng Sylvester Now Sylvester w1ll have many fr1ends to play w1th EL1.1xL HURs1 Grade Sex en The Llttle Soulboott There was a llttle sallboat sa1l1ng out at sea Wlth 1ts sa1l so b1g and wh1te and lookmg r1ght at me It salled rlght pass my wmdow golng very fast and at a dlstance could see 1ts sa1l and IIS mast Then It salled away away out to sea And then I walted for It to come oack agam to me ANN. FARNSLE1 Class Four A Trlp To The Llbrdry Well to begln the story Frrst we went upstalrs We 11stened on the earphones We heard Lrttle Black Sambo Johnny Appleseed and Hansel and Gretel We d1d not hear much more but we d1d get to walk on the glass floor A g1r1 1n our class got a shock but rt d1d not hurt much and she was very DICE about lt In the basement we saw Rumpelst1ltsk1n We also saw the broadcastlng statlon X7IllCINIA CASPARI Class Two 111 . 7 7 ' 7 . , . . 7 1 1 1 ' 1 1 - 1 , . , . . . , . . , . 7 7 ' 1 V ' 1 . , . 1 1 . V . ' v 1 ' ' ' ll 77 li 7 ' - 1 1 1 - 77 an 77 1 Ac 77 , , . . . sc 77 1 1 Y 7 ' ' ' V ' . 1 1 1 1 44 - H , . nz 1 77 - ca 1 77 1 1 ' . . . . . , . . , . 1 . , . . ' 1 ' 9 ' 1 . , . 1 . . K .l 7 Sh-M PRE SCHOOL AND F RST GRADE E TRANSCRI Flre Preventlon Week The firemen sleep at the fire statlon When the alarm sounds thev Jump up put on thelr clothes and sl1de down the pole They Jump on the fire truck and they are off to the fire When they get to the fire ex eryone gets to stop the tire After the fire has stopped they all get on agaln to go to the fire statlon Thex take off the1r clothes and go to bed to Walt for another fire Susu l'x1'lrnsox Cllss 'lxxo A Summer Scene One brlght summer day A l1ttle man passed mv way If you ll come my way sa1d he You ll see the most beautlful th1ng to b And when I passed the blg oak tree I saw the most beautlful thlng To see A rmg of falrxes brlght and gav Had been danclng all the day The l1ttle man was an elf And he laughed and danced In splte ol hxmself You w1ll see a summer scene If your eves are xery keen To see I OLISI FITLHL C11 f llss Slx The Ioke In The Volcdno NCE m Madagascar came a man who was from another country Everythmg the ruler told h1m he thought was DICE But when the ruler told h1m about the dangerous volcanoes he laughed The ruler Sald Well lf you laugh at thlngs l1ke that I just bet you twelve dollars that there IS not any th1ng funny about an erupt1ng vol cano Dan sa1d he could not pay that much but the k1ng sa1d he could The next day Dan took some corn over the volcano to the barn All of a sudden the corn spllled 1nto the xolcano Dan was mad But then the volcano started erupt1ng So he ran down the sldes of It He thought I never should have laughed But as the lava came runnlng down the sides he heard small pops As soon as It was over the rulex sa1d no one got k1lled but It was not funm elther Dan sa1d no But as soon as Dan and the ruler went up there he saw popcorn ln the hole of the volcano Thev both laughed So the ruler gate Dan twelve dollars CIILRIE SCHOLI Cl ISS Fne 113 T H P T l 7 ' V 7 KG Y V 75 'I H 9 , - - , eV! J Y C . 7 You'll see the most beautiful thing , , H V . V . . Y . . 7 . . - va ' U - ' . . 7 I , . . GK ' 93 I I . . . .y . A 7 v 1 ,, 7 . Q 7 igpv I v THE TRANSCRIPT Stormy N lqht One n1ght I woke up and I heard the ra1n on the roof It was hghtnlng and thundermg The w1nd was blowmg and the trees were swavmg back and forth It sounded l1ke people runn1ng up and down the street INANC1 STI xx A111 Cl iss F0111 Bcrrboro The Mllkbottle NCE there was a mllkbottle named Barbara One day Barbara was readmg a book when all of a sudden someone plcked her up and put m1lk 1n her Of course all m1lkbottles have to be filled w1tn m1lk sometlme Barbara wondered what k1nd of mllk she would get th1s t1me In five m1nutes she knew It was wh1te m1lk Barbara Sald What IS your name? Mme IS Barbara Why do you want to know? asked the m1lk crossly Well Sald Barbara I thought We could make fr1ends s1nce we are go1ng to be together so long I guess you are r1ght My name IS Wh1te Mllk Jr the fourth fifth s1Xth seventh and e1ghth Barbara looked around On one Slde of Barbara was a mllkbottle named Anne and on the other Slde was a bottle named Betsy All of a sudder sent back to the m11k factory and hved there happ1ly ever after w1th Anne and Betsv rm SILCIUQR Lllss Fnc As I look out my wlndow I see trees dotted w1th red green and gold leaves Sometlmes a cr1sp brown leaf falls 1nto the r1ch green carpet of grass Once 1n a whlle a b1rd twltters laZ1ly 1n 1tS nest The caw of a crow sounds far away The w1nd begms to blow the leaves fall l1ke ra1n drops 1n a terr1ble storm the wlnd qu1ets down All 1S st1ll' NANJC1 lhsu Cllss Four Scilly S Dog Sally s dog IS named Tarbaby He IS black and he IS a cocker He IS a droopy dog w1th long ears He came from Mammoth Cave He sleeps w1th Sally on her bed He l1kes her llttle stuffed k1tten He takes It by the ears and yanks lt Also he l1kes my Panda Bear You should see the marks that he has made on lt When It ra1ns and he comes 1n the house he p1CkS up h1s feet Wlth long halrs and shakes them all over the house At mght when Sally goes out he howls 1n h1s pen He gets scared He IS a nulsance but we love h1m SUSAN SPALDINC Class One 114 r . , ' , , ,. 1 Z L, . '. . ,, ' , . . It 37 ' ., . Ll 77 ' Ll ' ' 7 7 ' 97 L6 . I . - . ' 7 'H 7 7 ,' - as , I . . there was a big bang. One of the milkbottles had fallen out. Barbara was 7 Q . . . . 5 . . I , . . . . ' 1 , . . K THE TRANSCRIPT DRESSES - COATS - HATS SPORTSWEAR - ACCESSORIES ennq func! 640 SOUTH FOURTH AVENUE 111 I U C Please Pzatrcmize These Aclvcrtisers THE TRANSCRIPT MADRID GARAGE SRD AND GUTHRIE SIHTOHIIIHW Bxaknb Repaued Washllug LLlbI1C.'1'E1OIl Front End VVo1k Stora e OPEN Z4 HOL RS 111 . l A D A. . I Q - . 1. 1 . C V . , O. G ' T Pluusu IJZltl'0IliZL' '.I'hvsv Aciva-1'Iisc i THE TRANSCRIIT Lomp11mentS THE TEEEERSQN MEAT MARKET 104 106 Em Jeffuson ANIhe1bt 9061 111 of - - x EI ' I 1A'1.' I t1' iz- Thus- AC1X':'1l,i'1'.' THE TRANSCRIPT CUINIJIIITIE ms THE SQPHOMCDRES llb . . X 1 of Ph-znsv I'11t1wmixv '1'hvw .'XdY01'USL'1'S C I BRCDWN AND WILLIAMSCDN TQBACCG CQRP F TRANS IPT Class of 50 LCS Congratul xtlons from the YWCA Cafeterla COllGg13tG uppem bchoolels befole the mox 10 aftel school Fudax drop bx for lunch We1e on B103dXK ax Compllmgnts ol M155 lxflxltlf, Abma Duutor ol YWCA C xlcteua Please Pmtxomn 'lhpm Adxuusu 120 T H A C R 1 , . . . ' z ' J! v Y- 1 v v at Second, where it's easy to park. I V ' X .Z a ' x x -lf L. 'Ax 1 VXA v,.'L.x.S F FOR THE CASUAL GIRL Mr Allen has or1g1nated somethmg new 1n Suede hats for The Casu 1l Clothu whlch 15 tops for the Sprlnq and Summer lVlf1ny M1 Allen 658 S -1th Stxeet Bernhelm Bldg Room 309 please P IIUIIIIC The e XClXQll.lSQlS 171 TH. TRANSCRIPT new styles and colors for the Thrifty l950. - Z1 ' ks .L THE TRANSCRIPT Comphmenti A FRIEND 12? of Plcasc Patronizc Those Advertisers THE TRANSCRIPT Comphments Tl-IE EIGHTI-I GRADE N MARRET and MILLER We Telegraph Flowers Anywhere On the Hfth day He created the Plants and Flowers So why thmk for hours? Say It Wlth Flowers OPEN 360 DAYS A YEAR Smce 1878 Cherokee Road 123 of J. S. AIILLER ' 814 Pl P't' Th Ad' n' S THE TRANSCRIPT BCDARDMAN STANDARD SERVICE STATICDN zom and Rwef Road ATLAS TIRES BATTERIES AND ACCESSORIES TAv1m 9154 BARGN S APPLIANCES Incorporated ADMIRAL TELEVISION AND REFRIGERATORS Phone CLav 1332 962 BAXTER AT HIGHLAIND Samuel Baron P1es LouISxI11e 4 Ky 124 o I T 1 . y. 3 ' 7 ' Please Patronize These Advertis ' THE TRANSCRIPT Comphments SPALDING LAUNDRY CS DRY CLEANING CQ .iii RFEE PAINTS Comphments I F KURFEES PAINT CCD Guaranteed b Good Housekee ng Please Pdtromze These Adx QIIISCFS 120 of gg, if f ' I Zz am P I, of . . . Un on num, 600' t 0, 'Gb Q J I 'I Ng 9+ '45 lDVllllSlD,NK' 1 ' y v I THE TRANSCRIPT NEW NANZ AND NEUNER CO., INC. FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS 141 Breckinridge Lane Phone BE1mont 2412 LOUISVILLE 7 KY FINE PORTRAITS FROM THE CAMERA WALTON I ONES FRANCIS BUILDING LOUISVILLE KY 126 , . O F 7 Please Patronize These Advertise' THE TRANSCRIPT Compliments of A FRIEND PAUL SEMONIN CO REALTORS Starks Bulldmg JAckson 2375 19 Please Patronize These Advertisers -7 THE TRANSCRIPT WM T SMlTl-l AND COMPANY Extends Greetmgs and Best Wlshes To The Graduatlng Class of 1900 Remember When You re Downtown at Mealtlme There a1e tuo Blue Boa1s to serve You 644 S Fourth and 410 W Walnut Dehclous Southern st5 le food pxepared the way you l1ke lt and modest puces that vull fit xour budget l1ke a glox e Meet your frlends fO1 Luncheon on xour next shopplng trlp BLUE BOAR CAFETERIA CO Incorporated 644 S Fourth 410 VV Walnut Please Patmmze These Adxeltlsels 128 . . 9 1 J - , . -V 1 7 . . 9 . 7 -'. ,' , ' 7 ' . . Y X . . O . I . .' ,.'. THE TRANSCRIPT Compliments H. L. GARRETTS f MARKET 0 PAUL TAFEL JR WHEN IN NEED BOOKS BIBLES TESTAMENTS and CHURCH SUPPLIES V1s1t The BAPTIST BQOK STOBE .511 319 Guthrle Street Phone CLay 4419 Lou1sx1lle 2 Kentucky Infants to Teen Age Apparel THRIFT FOOD MARKET Juven1le FUTHITUTQ 105 Crescent AVG J A C K 85 J I L L Quallty Foods at Lower Puces SHOP INC Grocerles Fresh Meats Vegetable casePt TeeAxoIss 129 of 0 o v - l , 1 , S HI. 7698 ' 2222 Bardstown Rd. WE DELIVER Pl' at ronize h s d ' 1' i'e THE TRANSCRIPT Comphments Comphments of of HARCOURT AND CO A Comphments THE SIGN QE THE PINE TREE Comp11ments Comphments PFEFFER S BAKERY SMITH DISTRIBUTING CO 130 of of of Y L Please Patronize These Advertisers THE TRANSCRI T Greenhouse Fresh Flowers ComP11m9H'fS MINISH Sz POTTS FLORISTS sr MATTHEW s HI 6700 1577 Bardstown Rd KNIT SHOP CHEROKEE HARDWARE CO HARDWARE HOUSE FURNISHINGS Your Fr1end1y Naborhood Store Bardstown Road and Longest Ave HIgh1and 0012 Hlghland 0013 Proprletor R L CBFIISIE MOH1t6 Insured Mothproof Clean Comphmenfs 1n Process at no extra cost SANDERS CLEANERS LA REE BEAUTY SALON Frankfort Ave Bonnycastle TA 8164 TA 4444 Hlghland 5678 DeI1verv SGFVICE Please Patromze These Advert sers 131 P of BEAUTIFUL CLEANING ' g - - - of ' i THE TRANSCRIPT Compliments Compliments of of IVY'S FOOD MARKET YUDOFSKY FURRIERS Compliments EARL E BROWN REALTY CO JA 2222 P110119 Hlghland 7096 MORGAN S MEN S SHOP PATTIE S HAT SHOPPE CUSTOM TAILORING 1914 Bardstown Road HABERDASHFRS PATTIE BINDER PROP 3908 Frankfort Axe TA 3541 132 of 7 7 7 J ' r Please Patronize These Advertisers THE TRANSCRIPT FRENCH BEAUTY SHOPPE 420 Martin Brown Building Compliments of A FRIEND WEINBERGER S Complete Floral Service FRANCES FLOWER SHOP vi 1 BATES GILBERT 1 BATES 1000 Bardstown Road Phone Hlghland 4036 Compliments of FRANKEL OBRECHT DRUG CO ST MATTHEWS I Please Putronize These Adve1'tise1'.' 133 THE TRANSCRIPT JOYCE'S HATSHOP 1558 Bardstown Rd Compliments of A FRIEND Compliments BRGWN BCDOTERIE 625 So 4th STROHM S MARKET FANCY GROCERIES MEATS AND VEGETABLES Phone JAckson 4294 JOHN H WELSH Photographer Hlghland 1713 Resldence Hlghland 6315 1318 Bardstown Rd Loulsxllle 4 Ks Please Patronlze These Advertlsers 134 of 7 Barret Avenue and Christy l I b V' 7 .V' THE TRANSCRIPT MCINTYRE BEAUTY AU REVOIR 86 Fellow Inmates 217 Martm Brown Bldg, Trlsh and Jam Complxments of YOUNG YEARS INFANTS AND CHILDRENS WEAR 1060 Bardstown Road Nancy Graves Carolyn Graves In apprec1at1on of the KINGSLEY WALKER shown us Flowers Walker Axenue Frankhn 0512 Please Patromze These Advert sers 13 O Hospitality and Courtesy FLORIST A. J. ' A ' v i 5 THE TRANSCRIPT Comphments of A FRIEND GRASSCD SHOES CRIB TO COLLEGE SHOES 624 South Fourth Axe Loulsx 111e 2 KX DGLFINGER S FINE CHINA GLASS AND SILVER 136 A 7 . V. , Y 7 .f ' I Please Patronizc These Adverti
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