Louisville Collegiate School - Transcript Yearbook (Louisville, KY)
- Class of 1951
Page 1 of 128
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 128 of the 1951 volume:
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Earns rfrlpi UIDB ?lUlll5hlllB QEUIIBQIHIB btfjuul ,, X he O I Q w N NLM I I X 5 THE TRANSCR PT BOARD 4 The TIGDSCIHH Board 111 L1 Xss11L111c f'C11U11S As51sta11t 1Lc11to1s X11 hciltms 191111111111 111111 Edltms Spruts Edmns 1' 01111111 fXdx1s111 195 1951 M1111 1 L11 1 C1 V H111111d J 1111 51111111 M111 F1tf1111g11 11111 1111111 111 1111111 IS 1 V 141.11111 1 14111111 S ll 1 S1 1111511111 1111191 14111111 M111 511111 N 11111 Rutlgdgn 511111 L1I1dLI11'JLIfjL1 551111 bp1ld111g, MIS X1c111111L Eflillll'-A - '1 ici' .., ..,. ,.... ......,.. C 1 1'1 1 11 l'Ivc11'l1 .1 1 1 I ' ................... 11011 1111111111111 '11U ' '1 ' 1 1 ' ' 1 ' ' . .,.,............., 1 ' 3 'L 1 1 1 ' ' Business 1X1111111gc1's ...1... ...... .... C l 11111 Pfciffcr N11 1 1 1211 ..,.................,... 1 'i 1'1' .'1 '1 .'1 K 1' '1 l' ' , ......,....... 1 1 ' l' 1 1 1' 1' E .1 . 1, 1 - A 1' 1 ' 1 1- , Y , Z . I I I Y A v-1- ' ................,.. vm.. A ' i THE LOUISVILLE COLLEGIATE SCHOOL MISS HENDY LEE HAMILTON We, the semors dedlcate thls Trar1scr1pt to MISS Hendy Lee Ham11ton for her sense of humor, for her deep conslderatlon and personal mterest ln each 1nd1v1dua1 We were the SGHIOFS And now we realrze How preclous thls year was to us We wrll hold forever The rrchness and depth Whrch have been ours Senror Stud3 a xessel Of hrlarrty frrendlrness And hlgh hopes A book thrown here A coat tossed there A record an aroma The hall wlth ltS bulletxn board Alvxays clusterlng grgglrng gnls And tanglrng rushlng classes Studs Hall no VOICE But shuffled feet eraser scratches A honkrng horn and guarded glances The exhrlaratron of a game Breathlessness of just Hue seconds The hugs the shouts the tears An ejye to the future Always an extra dessert uneaten The falr the pandemonrum Of Chrlstmas p1cn1c skrts Forever a meetlng after school Sunburns after Sprrng Vacatron Electrons and the nerxous Expectatrons of announcements Rehearsals for Commencement Whlte dresses a red rose A longrng rn our hearts These are the reasons Well wrrte back Well send our chrldren here We were the Senrors And now we 1931126 How precrous thls year was to us G V E ' 7, 1 Y V . . . . I v .7 ' I 7 3 5 . . ' , . , , 5 7 ' Mid-morning laps around the field, y . O. , . . .. 2 7 . 7 s , , N W A 7 L . 1 . , y - , WWW ,.........! CO nmr HAR 5 15 4ffrfFv 6 ' Q0 f nn 40 99SDQ Q X X I ago IJ P fs f X , MQ K A x:f :J I1 A IT - , v ml 5 I IJ P7 I 7? GQ X 4,3 A 2 F if 1' 0 I? x I ,ffrk H f K 585 5 l f QDX 22 Q Q, In G A 9, Q Q. cl, ' : c xv! Q. Q' M xy 9 ff X gf k KJ .Q ' A f xxx 5, X X X 1 AJ- T 5: 1 4 gg - '5-' 1 '5':7' Ss.. Smiling, fo Spfak flu fluff: Rzzfcfzfefzz zfzzwf mmm H I ,1 . . , W , f A, - k, f s 7 , v I . 7 , f 0 - - fm' QF' ALICE BARBARA ATKINS Laugh and be merry xemembu Bettm the xx olld with '1 song Bettex the xx oxld xwth a Bloxx m the teeth of the wxong W -v-uf Z CHARLOTTE ELTON BONNYCASTLE TXK1Xt ex erw page my thoughts go stray 'mt 1211 ge Dovm m the meadow where 1S 11che1 feed And Vx 111 not mlnd to hlt then prope1 talge A , il!! My book I'd fain cast off. I cannot read. 2 SUE MORROW COX Was never face so pleased my mmd There is a lady sweet and kind, 'iff FRANCES ARTHUR CUMMINS S xx 1ft ind du e sw allow s fhght 50C1Ct of hex hc Ill vnu sl 1111 not hmm 2, A ,, 'MHP ' . 'ctasisthe f ' ' 3 But the . ' 5 ' xx ' M' z ' ' CAROL HOLLAND CUTCHI Ask ,- NS 111fu1 hand m art an actue mmd GRE WV1th TCHEN VO N EVERBACH A dancex of sulpr Xouthful xxmsome Qmlle of ' - ising grace. ' - ' 5 ness Honest labor beaxs a lox ely face MARTHA LEE FUNK HELEN STRATTON HAMMON W1th C,1e.at Helceness buuung passxon Speak with great moderation: but think ' G - .... ' ' .va FLSIE GAYLORD HILLIARD Wlth hlgh ldeals md standuxd fi A1e blended common sense and pleqsam xx us 1 . . ' ' ' 2 C ' rmly fixed. ' ' 2 . 'z V hh, mm ANNE MCGILL HOGUE A luvelx m11d 1 0 d hshxoned COl.11I6hX A 1ct1cence ue ofte n fall to find 'met modem t o hex s1ende1 Hugel ups 'hr .. ,l A - - E ' . .J W' ww' 3 CLARA BARBARA PFEIFFER A lover of frank honesty and truth. f.',:' 'z I1 ictlxe QIUII d15D1iylUg 5 M11 md peed 'M-W0 J JANE EDMONDS SMITH A Sml And cues that seek fO1 txuth s thought Nw l . 'le that covers many a seriou , , , , ,Y LORRAINE CRAWFORD WHITLEY She was young .md bllthe and fall Flrm of DLIIDOQQ sweet and stxong THE TRANSCRIPT 7 30 00 5 8 30 8 40 9 00 0 12 9 15 9 40 9 43 10 30 10 59 1100 1115 11 30 12 00 12 30 12 35 12 45 1 45 2 00 2 35 3 05 3 14 3 15 A Typlcdl Senlor Dciy Martha drags 1n to do homework Helen arr1ves to Wake Martha up Gretchen carts 1n plle of books 1Laur1e parkmg carl Gay puts on coffee CLaur1e st1ll parkmg carb MISS W1ttme1e1 bulldozes senlors 1nto assembly l1ne H1storX class Helen asks for 1nk Martha asks for 1nk Allce drops glasses case repeatlng what has already been Sald Sue asks for 1nk KLHUTIG stlll trx 1115 hardj Clara asks for 1nk Laur1e and Frances pluto 1n together French class comes 1n to find a test on the board Tests 1n B1ology Bonny What IS a nematocy st Carol O o o h h what a stupld questlonl Pecuhar smell Gay forgot to put yxater 1n the coffee pot Carol tells 1oke everybody laughs Chem1stry mercury experlment Jane cllmbs wall Claxa has puckered l1ps f0bv1ously allerglc to somethlngj Hogu1es nose wrmkles Slgn She just caught on to Carols yoke Lat1n class tr1es to hear M1ss Hamllton ox er cracklng of gum Enghsh senlors fhng open wlndovss Carol ra1ses hand Teacher calls on Gay Carol s hand st1ll 1n a1r r1gormort1s Week end plans made Clara sol1d Jacksons to VIC Study Poker game ensues Semors get entangled 1n gym sults and snap to 1t Subs enter gym fresh and clean Game begms Magn1f1cent game over Subs leaxe fresh and clean General stampede for m1rrors and l1pst1ck We Would D1e lf All the Sen1ors were found 1n the l1brary Sue Cox stayed at school a full day Ex euone took gym Frances had mllkbottle legs The bells rang on t1me Calol galned Welght We d1d our B1ble The class agreed We knew w1th whom we NVGIS gomg to the dance 24 8: ' I A . Q ' 8:1 . . A . 9f 1 V ' ' U. ' ' ' 91 M ' E. ' 'A ' ,, . I 2 ' 7 - .- - - 7 f ' b 1 . 11110 Carollstill laughlngg Hoguieldoesmget ir. A 7 '7 7 . THE TRANSCRIPT Senior Closs Will We the Senlors leaxe to you These thlngs to cher1sh 1n 52 Atk1DS leax es slammlng the door Bonny castle leaves her 3bll1tX to cllmb fences to Marlene Cox leaves wlth a Slgh of rellef Cumm1ns plutos out Cutchlns leaves her curves to L1bbx Helm Everbach leaves name Grendel to anyone who wants It Funk leaves Ed Perry under the table Hammon leaves Prlnceton rel1c to whomever gets the pornt H1ll1ard leax es her purchaslng power to Mered1th Pferffer gladlv leaves her sarcasm to Creal Sbmlth leaves blowlnk her dnose Whltley leaves after thlrteen years The whole class leaves Senlor Studx rn a mess The Perfect Senlor Ha1r Subtlety Exes Calmness Srnlle Thoughtfulness Laugh Brlskness Teeth V1X3C1ty Dlrnples Conversat1onalAb1l1tv Complex1on Dlgnlty Faclal Expresslons HOSp1tal1tX W31Sf P0158 H1pS Partx Ab1l1ty Hands S1Hg1DgVOlCe Legs Gracefulness Fxgure D1spos1t1on 20 Carol Cutch1ns Frances Cummlns Jane Smlth Laur1e Whrtley Allce Atk1HS Helen Hammon Bonnv Bonnycastle Clara Pfelffer Anne Hogue Martha Funk Sue Cox Gretchen Everbach Gay H1ll1ard ' 7 9 . . . . 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M W M M M . - F .UH Li' N 52 xr, I f- 'U ' , 0 X f ,, - E A E TRANSCRI The Foo The fog xxlth outstl etched glOp1I'1g paws Mol es bllndlx thlough the lnkx black Its sllent sealchlng steps sllp thlough The blades of QIHSS Fear clutches gnaxxs And teals mx achlng soul apalt Then as mx splllt smks below It cleeps awax and leax es no trace Except a scarred and wounded healt A heaw sense of ue lllness Consumes mx thoughts and suffocatcs The tlnx flame of hope Wltlllll Llke clouds xxhlch choke the sky vllth dalkness The fog Cl eeps softlx back to me And gently drles mx meltlng tears The xxlnds caress and cool mx face Mn fearful soul feels soothed and flee Hou lox elx seems the world agaln Wllh all lts fresh and XVOHd911Y1g llfe The shade of feal has left my ex es Mx glance looks out no longel ln nl SXIIIII I xx alk and as I walk I see the wolld before me It 1S mlxed and muddled as the branches of a tlee One blanch extends toward the left aw ay fl om the others Thls blanch 15 alone IH ldeas dlffelent from lts bl othels But 1t grows and vt eax es ltself closel to the lest Ulltll one dax It takes most of the sunshlne fl om the best But suddenlx lt 15 stopped fl om lts darlntg cllme And on othels sunshlne It can no longer dlne Because lou see thele 15 One Who IS strongel bx fal Up xx hele the heal ens meet and shlnes the North SI31 When Exll Ib trled and all 19 for one Then bl3l'1Cll95 llke thls SllI'll1k IIOYII the sun N Ill 111111 xlx S 30 T H P T v . .v 'V T I vxv 3 I . -. Y , ' uv I 7 I ,If 7 I 1 7 v w I Q sl 1 . ', , . , K. 1 X ' - r ' v - ' ' 1 7' ' ' ' . , , . Y . O 1' 7 4 3 7 7 7 . U 7 . . 1. . , I 1 ' ' 7 If Q .I 9 Q I ' Class Twelve , . 4 , ' , 1 1 1 ' - ' ' .L ' Y . ' . 1 . ' Y- V , , . ' 1 ' , . . . ' a , ' ' - . . ' . ' C .' ,J . ' ' , ' V , ' . ' . . y . Y . , , ' 1 ' 1 . he Q S rm: Clalsi Iil1'X'0Il THE TRANSCRIPT HE ROOM was close and the a1r seemed as though It would choke me Gammg control of the urge to plunge through the crowded doorway I followed the alsle to the front of the mass1ve assembly hall and there turned to the left Approximately three rows of curved tables faced a huge speakmg platform Behmd these tables were seats crowded w1th nervous sweatlng people who bore a look of almost unbellevable pam and d1scontent Some stared at the huge flag stretched across the front of the room as 1f 1ts br1l11ant hues were all that could keep them awake The tables were filled wxth men 1n sh1rt sleeves and opened t1es desplte the apparent formalxty of the meet1ng Before each delegate was a plaque bearlng the name of the country whlch he represented How 1ron1c that one small word could contam so much' As I squeezed my way between the stralght backed chalrs to the last seat on the thlrd row of tables I heard the speaker glve forth a yell emphaslzed by a VICIOUS poundlng of h1s Hst I reallzed qulckly that the disturbance of my late entrance added to the evldent boredom of the audlence had drlven h1m to action Hurrledlx I took mv seat consclous of the eyes that were drxlled at my back The speaker seelng that h1s shout1ng VOICE had awakened many contlnued talkmg on a shrlll pltch For many days now the problem before the assembly had been that of aggresslon Would the represented nat1ons because of the greedy actlons of an lmportant power declde to take defimte steps? Steps that would eventually and lnevltably lead to a full scale war Never before had the movements of such remote nat1ons affected not only the country for wh1ch I stood but the whole world It was all so vast so lmmense The problem of any organlzed SOCIGIY was now the problem of the entlre world Here I was to cast my vote for people who trusted 1n my waverlng judgment So many thoughts and ldeas were knltted 1nto my bram that to attempt to stra1ghten them out would be not only 1mp0ss1ble to accompllsh but also dangerous to sanlty As the speaker fimshed h1s oratlon a busy stlr of papers and chalrs marked the begmnlng of the votlng These few men would declde the fate of the world Whatever thev m1ght vote would only declde whether the ultlmate destructlon of man should be now or later I glanced at those representatlves whose belllgerent and avarlclous att1tude had 1n my op1n1on opened the wav to struggle Then I turned my gaze to the1r opponents who ln rlghteous appralsal of the1r actlons felt they had done all that was humanly possible to avold the loss of l1fe and love Next were the small weak nat1ons whose fate was hangmg IH the balance I plctured myself above all th1s watchlng wlth a perceptlve and lmpartlal eye the foollsh actlons and words of a senseless soclety bent on destroylng 1tself How remarkably slmple It all appeared but yet how 1 f lly entangled' Suddenly all my thoughts turned to the reallzatlon that I must do someth1ng someth1ng to lllumlnate the1r slghtless mlnds I sprang to my feet and shouted for recogn1t1on by the cha1r Horr1fied I found myself faclng a room packed with countless expressions all turned to mlne Although my vo1ce quavered I contlnued Knowlng what I wanted to say but not how to express myself I faltered ever so often Strangely enough I saw I had the rapt attentlon of faces YVl'11Ch had been so prevlously bored 32 7 7 7 - 1 . . 7 x ' . . v ' . . . . V . 1 - 1 , . , . , . . 7 . . ' 9 . . Y . 1 ' u nf a i 1 A ., - 3 7 1 ' 1 ' 1 ' v pa n-u-- . , . ' Y . 7 . . . , . CLASS TEN! 33 CLASS ELEVEN THE TRANSCRIPT Continued from Page 32 Mx friends I beseech xou to wipe all thoughts from your mind except the common sense of what we are doing Never has the outright term war been used in the presence of both opposing enemies We are too subtle to lesoit to such simplicity We disguise the issue under various treaties and acts of aggression such as this one In our hearts we feel the unspoken truth May I ask both sides frankly lf thex could enumerate 1n a written list the things for which thex are fightmgo Because of my lack of knowledge or rather because of my partial beliefs I cannot state what would be on one list On the other I feel sure Christian ideals of freedom would stand at the top If asked if we would die and see all we loved destroyed for our ideals our sense of heroism would say yes I cannot believe a man full of self loxe as so many countless millions are would do this if actually faced with the stark situation Only grosser characters could or would state that we are contending for material galn Others would loudlv volce that we are fighting for the right to worship God God does not live in an oigamzed pol1t1cal state but in the hearts of man Either both sides must There is only one way out As senslble people blessed with the power of reasoning aware of the truth how can we let it slip beyond us'l I stopped and motionless stared at the attent1ve people before me In their ex es I saw a light which glowed with understanding Did they too feel as I felt Could they conceive how painfully clear it all was? The gavel pounded behind me Weakly I turned to my seat The chairman began speaking perhaps opposing my words I never knevx All I saw was the same look of arrogance mingled with despair return to the ex es of the audience I knew then that I had failed War would go on IAIXE, NIIIIIHR Class Elcxen A small hurt feeling Was lx ing in a crumpled heap on the ground Havmg been knocked into lflflfllte nothmgness By a package of mean thoughts Wrapped in cruel words And tied with a harsh tone XIAR3 FITLHLQH Cl Iss Elcxcn 34 cc 7 ' , ,' ' .f 7 V ' t , . . . 7 4 . . . . . 7 1 -X n . I 7 ' as ' ' ' as 1 ' 7 I 5 7 sacrifice until they cry for mercy, or We are faced with total annihilation. . r . . , . . . . ,, 7 7 ' 7 . 7 I ' . - A I . 7 I D l . . , . 7. 7 . . all I l 7 1 ' .. 7 5, WF' N Nz' 5 G THE SENATE THE TRANSCRIPT The Golden Leash N THOMAS HARDYS novel Tess of the D Urberv1lles Tess speak mg of her soul leavmg her body says A very easy way to feel em IS to l1e on the grass at nlght and look stralght up at some b1g brlght star and by Hxlng your m1nd upon It you w111 soon find that you are hundreds and hundreds o m1les away from your body wh1ch you dont seem to want at all ACCOfd1Hg to Emerson the soul descr1bed as a l1ght shmes for all It shmes for the greatest men to the lowest and knows no boundar1es of SOC1ety or of educatlon So It shone for Tess She had a real God but d1d not know H1m and therefore the stars were her 1nfln1ty the most abstract and lnfimte th1ngs she knew Nature was her a1d the catalyst of her apprehenslon as lt IS to many for It IS lnterwoven w1th God By means of these stars she felt as Emerson says that shudder of awe and dellght w1th wh1ch the 1nd1v1dual soul always m1ngles Wlth the un1versal soul Of course Tess does not reallze the cause yet she feels the enthus1asm wh1ch IS perhaps the reason for per purlty The character and durat1on of th1S enthus1asm VHTISS w1th the state of the 1nd1v1dual from an ecstasy and trance and prophetlc 1nsp1rat1on to the famtest glow of vlrtuous emot1on fEmersonJ Wh1le lymg there on the grass at n1ght she transcended not only all the world but all t1me Then she was at one w1th humamty felt her 1nclus1on and knew there was no d1st1nct1on of corporal soclety on her The beauty of the soul IS lmmense Thls beauty dazzled Tess and as there IS no place for the banal body amldst th1s awesome gl1tter Tess thought she had left It behlnd Clare of the same novel 1n the same s1tuat1on would most l1kely have real1zed that h1s soul was transcendlng phyS1C81 mater1als Perhaps he would have d1scerned that though Tess s ldea was rxght her words were wrong because her soul d1d not leave her body Her soul d1d not leave her body because It was never of her body the soul 1S an 1mmens1ty not possessed and that cannot be possessed It has no dates nor rltes nor persons nor speclaltles nor men The soul knows only the soul the web of events 1S the flowlng robe IH Wh1Ch she IS clothed The soul does not fly away from our bOd19S but 1S eternal as our bod1es certa1nly are not Yet the soul ga1ns lndlvlduallty from the person and IS as 1f on a golden leash of 1nfin1te length the loop of Wh1Ch 1S 1n the hand of one belng We are for our souls often a way of express1on For 1nstance Tesss love for Clare was her soul breathmg through her affectlon Tess d1d not know th1S but she d1d know that apprehenslon Wh1Ch made her aware that her soul was not conta1ned 1n her body HELENI Hlnnrox Class Twelve Red A red cloud sweeps the earth Chlldren sobbmg crymg A red hand t1ghtens the g1rth Men fall1ng dylng CATHLEEx PFEIFF1-:H Class Eleven 37 1 ll 1 - 11 1 1 1 ' ' fl , 7 7 7 , 1 - - 1 1 , 77 ' ' - 1 1 1 , , . . . - 1 1 , 1 u . ,, . - 1 1 . . . . H 1 - . . ,y 1 . , . 1 . H . . ,, . 1 , . 7 7 9 . , . . 1 , . . . . H . . ' 77 LL ' - 1 1 , Q ' 1 . . . . . ,, 1 , . . . , 1 1 - 1 7 Y . 1 1 . 1 , . 1 1 1 ' THE TRANSCRIPT Proud of Thelr Son HE TRAIN charged 1nto the l1ttle stat1on at Wrlhamstown Massachu setts full of exclted boys some of whom were not famlllar YV1Il l Its hlsslng and lungmg but manv of whom knew almost every seat 1n the wa1t1ng room and every crack 1n the cement floor How many tlmes they had stood on that floor Waltlng for the tram that would take them home and to a very gay vacat1on' The mad scurry had started Everyone was try mg to get off the tram carrymg golf clubs Sk1S 1ce skates along wlth the same old beaten up sultcase w1th a ragged but stlll gaudy seal on lt that very clearly made It known that the owner went to W1ll1ams College W1ll1amstown Massa chusetts N1m Webber and Frank Glasser p1led out of the tram mlraculouslv able to hold on to thelr debrls and managed to h1tch a r1de off some m1ll1ona1re S son who was Stlll try1ng to make an lmpresslon by drlvmg h1s flashy Lrncoln convertlble to the statlon to say h1 to the guys After thmgs began to qu1et down and the people had found thexr rooms and become acquamted w1th the1r roommates they began to look around at the bl11ld1IIgS w1th the attltude of Well here I am for another vear I guess I had better make the best of It and get to work J1m and Frank managed to get to thelr room and unpack by throwlng everythmg 1n a couple of drawers and slammmg them shut I m golng to take a look around and see what k1nd of people we have surroundlng us Want to come? Sald Frank rather absently No that s O K I ll go later I vs ant to clean my gun and finxsh unpacklng room leavlng the door w1de open Jlm sat on the bed starlng straxght ahead of hrm and reached for the gun whlch was lylng beslde the bed on the floor Half heartedlx he reached for the can of grease and a dlrtv rag whlch he kept ln an old fishmg tackle box He began to rub the gu 1 hghtly never once takmg h1s eyes off the wall It certamly seemed an awfullx long tlme s1nce he first entered Wllhams but now at last there was onlv one more year and he would have h1s degree 1n Bus1ness Admlnrstratlon He really had worked the last three years but thls year he had to work narder because he knew that 1f he wanted lt badly enough he could be an honor student and more than anythlng J1m wanted to please Ms father He had to graduate Ph1 Beta Kappa and he knew he could The wmter passed 1nto early sprmg and there never was a dav that Jlm dldnt come back to hls room and study late 1nto the nlght Fmally sprmg faded IDIO early summer and there Was less than a week before graduatlon Jlm as always came 1nto h1s room and started studylng Frank looked up from the top of the bed and spoke 1n an almost fatherlv tone Say GENIUS I know that drploma means a lot to you but honestlv you study too much You dont need to work that hard I never saw anyone who could work as long and as hard as you do Look at that day outs1de' You could be playmg tennls or even just taklng It easx llke me D1d you ever trx bemg lazy just domg noth1ng for a wh1le I know there IS a four hour exam tomorrow I haue xt too but really there ISU t much vou can do about 39 . . l . l l . Z . . - . ., . , . 7 .1 . . . y . , I . 7 l. . , . . . . 7 7 - . , . . 7 . . . , Y 7 ' ' ' H ' H . . . 7 . . . . U 1 7 .1 7 . ,, . LL 7 ' . ' . ,, . V L5 7 5 7 ' ' ,, , . . . . Well O.K. Then I'll be back sooner or laterf' With this Frank left the , . . . . F 7 Y- 7 . . ' A 4 7 . 7 . . ,. . .1 . ! ' -xv 7 I ' Y 7 . f I Q , - 11' . - , . 1 . . . . ' H . . ' . , 7 v .J 7 . . , . . . My . ' . v 7 ' . , M THE TRANSCRIPT PI'OllCl of Tl'l91I' SOII Contmued lt now Look why don t you just relax and we can go 1nto town and have a couple of beers Look Frank I know you re just trymg to help but you can take thls exam wlthout studylng lf you want to but 1f you don t mmd I 11 do It my own way' J1m snapped J1m went 1nto the exam room wlth facts svummlng around 1n h1s head He had to make a good grade on thls exam because It meant that he elther graduated Ph1 Beta Kappa or not The exam began and J1m read lt over H1s hands were wet w1th persplratlon and shak1ng almost uncontrollably H1s mlnd was blank nothmg made sense and h1S thoughts were completely frozen Thmk th1nk you fool' he Sald over and over aga1n to h1mself What IS meant by purchasmg on the rnarg1n You know you dope th1nk' For that moment he knew fr1ght Just as a drownmg man knows It and then ID one panlc str1cken moment he looked over and read the answer off B111 Ba1ley s paper As knowledge crept back to h1m the fear slowly left and he found hlmself wr1t1ng what he knew was to be an A paper He knew everythmg now and lt made h1m feel good because It reassured h1m of graduatlng w1th a Ph1 Beta Kappa key and a degree 1n Busxness Ad m1n1strat1on J1m left the examlnatlon room wlth a llght heart and It wasn t unt1l he reached the door of h1s room that he reahzed what he had done He had sat on h1S bed and held h1s head IH h1s hands and thought for a long tlme He couldnt understand why he had done such a thmg He knew every quest1on on that exam It was as though somethlng had blocked h1S thoughts and when he saw the answer the block was broken Frank entered the room very quxetly and J1m dldn t even know he was there unt1l he felt a hand on h1s shoulder and heard a soft bewlldered vo1ce saymg Why d1d you cheat J1m'7 You knew that exam well enough to do It w1th your ey es closed It wasn t necessary to cheat was 1t Frank I don t know I got scared all of a sudden I couldn t even th1nk couldnt th1nk of the slmplest quest1on When I looked over at Balleys paper I don t know what happened but somehow I was able to th1nk agam and after that I was fine I couldn t have passed that exam lf I hadnt cheated What am I golng to do? I cant go see the dean' If I d1d go he wouldn t let me graduate You know what you ought to do Frank sa1d I m afrald I can t tell you anythmg else Youll just have to go to the dean unless you can IIVG w1th yourself otherw1se The next day found J1m 1ns1de the deans office The stern rather elderly man looked at J1m and asked lf there was anythlng he could do J1m told h1m the whole story try1ng to g1V9 a calm appearance because he knew that the dean s scavenger eyes were Watchlng every move he made Well son I really admlre you It took courage to come see me even though you knew what the result would be Now lf the declslon were up to me I would let you go ahead and graduate But I want you to understand where I stand too I cant go around makmg exceptlons to rules just because I feel the person has learned h1s lesson There are too many good 40 . , . . ' 1 77 u 1 - - ' 7 7 7 . . . . , . , . . 7 77 ' 7 SG 'l ' 77 ' ' ' CK , , . . . . . . ,, ' ' 7 7 ' . . - , , . . , . ' I ' ' - H 77 7 7 cheated and he knew that that could mean his discharge from school. He 7 ' . , . . . . , . . ,, . . V 7 ' ' ' , 9 ' yy . , . lk 7 7 ' 7 ' 7 7 , . . . . , , . . . 7 7 7 7 ' 7 . . , . 7 77 . D N 77 ' IL 7 ' s , . . , . . . ' a ' 77 V . . . , - . . . , . , , , . r , ll - . , '7 D . . . , , l Q .I - THE TRANSCRIPT Proud of Thelr Son Concluded actors 1n th1s world that would soon catch on and take advantage of me Im sorry that you had to learn your lesson the hard way young man I really am Im afrald you wlll not be able to graduate from Wllll3mS J1m looked down at h1s watch and saw that It was almost eleven The tra1n was comlng at eleven thlrty and h1s mother and father would be on lt He left the deans office h1s heart almost too heavy to beat How could he tell h1s parents? J1m remembered comlng home from prep school and the eager look 1n the1r eyes when they questloned hlm about school They were so very eager for h1m to make good grades and to graduate wlth honors because Mr Glasser had never been able to go to college Hls father had d1ed when he was st1ll 1n hlgh school leavlng beh1nd h1m qulte a few debts so that he had to go to work dlrectly after hlgh school J1m remembered h1s father s worn grey wool coat that had seen 1ts best days several years ago Thls coat was worn every day for ox er twelve years by h1s father Once J1m asked h1m why he dldn t get a new coat and he answered rather qulckly and nervously that coats werent rnade as well now a days and that he dldn t really need a new coat J1m knew somehow that h1s father was dolng th1s for hlm How could he tell them They both knew what a college dxploma meant It assured h1m of success 1n the buslness world and secur1ty for h1S father These were the thmgs h1s father d1dnt have J1m was stand1ng on that same gang plank 1n that same dlrty l1ttle statlon when the tra1n once more came charglng 1nto the statlon From the second car from the end a rather old lookmg couple got off standlng erectly and proudly When they caught Slght of the-1r son the1r eyes and faces seemed to glow wlth pr1de for the1r son was to graduate tomorrow They were so proud of the1r son' GEIJRCIA BRUTON Class Ten One moment there were sklrts Long blllowy and wh1te Tw1rl1ng slowly softly Wlth an lmaglned lrrldescence The waves of mus1c caught them On the1r swellmg crests The next moment they blurred And faded 1nto gleamlng m1st lVIoonl1ght subdued the1r lrrldescence And the mus1c left the1r folds To soar headlly heavenward A lone figure defined 1tself The composer of It all D1rect1ng h1S lnstruments to retard Creatlng the crescendo by h1mself The lover suspend1ng fantasy The art1st the poet the melodlst of l1fe Hausx Hfnrxrox Class Twclxe 41 v a v , . . .. ,, , . ., . . ' 7 . , . . 1 , . . , . v 1 1 . . . ., . ' 7 - a ., . ' 5 ! . . . , ' . 1 , . T 7 7 v 7 L s 7 1 1 , ... y 1 ' . . , C 1 THE TRANSCRIPT Cn The Mountcun SHOULD LIKE to lue on the pmnacle of a mountaln for from there I could look down and see l1fe as It truly IS The mountaln would be hlgh enough so that I could see all the br1ght and happy spots whlch the sun had shone upon yet It would also be close enough for me to see and understand why other parts of the world are so sad and m1Xed up How can we ever hope to understand why we are l1v1ng and what we should do and try to accomphsh when vxe ourselxes are IH the m1dst of l1V1I'1g9 To clearly understand a s1tuat1on or problem one has to be able to see all s1des of It and 1udge lt Wlth an open mmd and a heart vshlch has not been 1nHuenced by prejudlce and old 1deas If each person had a mountaln of hls own he could cl1mb up on lt whenexer l1fe seemed unfalr or confuslng from aboxe Im certa1n that ex eryth1ng would seem r1ght aga1n for he could see hlmself IH relat1onsh1p to all the other m1ll1ons of human belngs 1n th1s world For the first tlme he would be able to put together the unflmshed puzzle of h1s l1fe and clea1ly see how the pleces of the past and present fitted together Lately Ive been th1nk1ng qulte a lot about a game I used to love to plav Bllnd Man s Treasure Th1s game was certalnly made for humans because 1t IS a perfect example of the way 1n wh1ch we l1ve and go bllndly on through l1fe w1thout knowlng 1ts true values In th1s game one person was selected the headman h1s Job was to choose some object and h1de 1t 1n a dark room so that no one would know what the ob1ect was It was a te1r1bly eXc1t1ng game because no one knew what he was lookmg for people stumbled madly around the p1tch black room and grabbed the first th1ng they happened to touch The person who plcked up the r1ght ob1ect and showed It to the headman won the game and was env1ed by the other players I remember how proud I was when I won I was so sure I had outsmarted everyone else and had really succeeded IH do1ng someth1ng wonderful though Im not certaln what I never thought to ask myself what I had accompllshed or whv I was so happy ox er w1nn1ng lm afrald I often st1ll play th1s game but although the rules are the same 1ts name IS l1fe 1nstead of Bl1nd Man s Treasure Someday though I shall cl1mb that mounta1n and then I shall be able to see the real l1fe the world IS Ilvlng There IS no easv or clearcut solutlon to th1S problem there are too many answers to apply to us all I w1sh I would remember more often that God gave us l1fe but that we determme the way lt IS l1ved If I could forget my self and honor and obev God more 1nstead of always do1ng what I want perhaps I would be able to find that mounta1n jA1xE SXIITH Cllss Txselxe F11 9 The long red tongue 1lCkS up all 1n ltS path There IS a gleam 1n the coals that are IIS eves Hungry It leaps on and on A roar1ng crackllng laugh on IIS l1ps Consumlng Then all IS black The fire IS sat1sfled NMR1 STOIL Cllss Ten 42 , , . . 7 , . 7 1 7 . . - 1 Y 7 ' 1 7 1 . - 1 . . . . 7 . 1 . . 7 , . y . - 1 1 , , , . . . sc ' 1 11 1 7 - .1 7 ' . 7 U ,,. . . . . 7 1 . ' 1 1 1 - . 7 . . ' ' as 11 ' , . . - 1 7 1 1 - Y 1 .1 ' , . . . . 1 1 . . . . H . , ,, 1 1 - ' 1 1 . , v , . ' Y 1 1 f 1 .1 7 . 7 I 1 7 1 v L , - v- u . 1 1 1 1 2 These ilauins UA fd Um 13 Muna W cmd MP1 W SQ mizmau 1 Q Qgcevtcsfzs wr .X LJ F Oux' Gmqd df S l P N I iff, QA, ff' 3 ,i Qshhhhll ff, X E33 2 Mmvilw-Graham fb old hd 03.3 uv' V3 '::M Zlrno coxnpn W oud' x I mt o X - l-' ' CX K ' 'V Smurf . OG 1 0 f .X V' .- . K 'ij I' im X- 1 W .J 1 1 N-I . 1 S V g o dx! X I XX LT5?1f -r 0 V 5, 2,32 k 2, K - 4 M Q la? n rf1Lf1 1,ZZ?:iI , , 1 q - q .f V' ' f:. 131. Q ,f ' ' I ' witqlxt 59 Z . l 1 dmlul? G 0 - Us 0 -, 1 gl ' .. g , ,, lf ' . 1 10 l ,T , ww 1 'fy' .. .K LAQGQL' Aw . ,A-Z I . n , E5 59,00 ' ' In ' N-r X l i W ' ' 66 0' , - I ' ri U h of!!-h ali? . X F . I V' - ag? .. nu x fo: , .X sg f A 1 ,1 , .. A S . O Q! I 4- x Q Q , xv , A A6 ax X l O F L, 4, G' x - A vc' Q 0 - L1 '5Yu.s WUIY1 Z Ons. on ok Sfbfifm I :Z Q Lnxivx 1 Qnrud I? 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Navman THE TRANSCRIPT Blmd Spots N THE Sunday papers magaz1ne sectlon there was a sc1ent1fic art1c1e on the blmd spots 1n our eyes statmg that everyone has a bl1nd spot ln each eye Proof was establlshed by an experlment you could try for yourself st1ck a postage stamp on a wh1te sheet of paper and about 4 mches from It draw a small dot Then hold the paper at arms length and closmg your left eye keep your r1ght one on the dot and slowly brlng lt toward you The amazlng dlscoverv IS that you can see the stamp at arm s length and agaln when It IS very near you but there IS a space IH between when xt completely dlsappears Do not our conceptlons of each other co1nc1de w1th th1s experxmentq In the first place our v1ews of one another are not dlrect as one does not look d1rectly at the stamp and 1tS 1ntr1cate lmes are not perce1vable If we trled to look dlrectly at am one we could not haxe nor could we ever hope to have a perfectly clear v1ew So when we speak of v1s1on It IS understood that It IS always hazy At arms length vou can see a person because you are seemg h1m for the first t1me perhaps from the other s1de of a crowded room You see hlm talk1ng laughmg reactmg and xery often you have a flash ldea of h1s character Th1s m1ght well be called a first 1mpress1on or 1ntu1t1on Your v1s1on IS unhampered now because you see h1m as a separate bemg not close enough for your Judgment to be shaded 1n any way Then fate pushes th1s arm closer to you When you are well past an 1ntroduct1on you wonder at how rldlculous your first 1mpress1on was for now all the bellefs and prejudlces 1nst1lled 1n you slnce chlldhood go 1nto play There 1S no way to refraln from belng skeptical of th1s person And unfortunately the hand of mcompatlblllty often stays the process of really gettmg to know someone These perlods of no more than acqualntances are our bl1nd spots Rarely do we pull the arm of frlendshlp close enough to see the 1ntr1 CHCIGS of true self as clearly as possible If we do we often find that ln sp1te of It all our first vlews were nearer correct than we had surmlsed The very fact that compat1b1l1ty has not broken down but rlsen above the envlronmental barr1ers of skeptlclsrn and gulded op1n1on IS what clears our v1s1on agaln as we know a person well It lS a p1ty that the progress of so many of our fr1endsh1ps IS cut off 1n the verv m1dst of our bllnd spots Hsusx HAMMON Class Twelve The Seolrchers They stand 1n t1ght small groups and talk The walls catch up the1r empty words and throw them back Thelr sm1les are vacuous the1r faces Stlff and blank From somewhere comes the forlorn txnkle of a plano and c1garette smoke drlfts uncertamly above them A Chmese 1dol S1tS on the mantelplece watchmg w1th 1mpass1ve eyes Now one by one they go coats are thrown over shoulders clgarettes extlngulshed They dlsappear 1n a fiul ry of sound Empty h1ghball glasses l1e about the room The 1dol S1tS w1th scornful ey es upon them LEE EFLRIES 44 Class Ten . , . . . . . Y . V . , a a ' .1 , . . . . v 7 nf ' h 7 7 ' ' 1 1 nf 7 7 ' 7 ' , Gi Y 71 . ' ' . . . Y 7 7 1 , . , . . . . 7. . 7 .... . . . . . 7 , . ' cs ' as - 1 1 , . . 1 7 . ul ' Y v , . , . , . , Q s 7 . . . . . Y 1 CLASS EIGHT 49 CLASS NINE THE TRANSCRIPT Return WAS AGAIN on the old stone steps that used to lead dlrectlx through the door and 1nto the hallway of mx home But there was no hallwax now only a bare foundatlon and stone steps were left of a place that was once full of l1fe One corner about ten feet hlgh of the br1ck house was left standmg Onlv th1s for the rest had been destrox ed All seemed so lonely Tlme stood st1ll here There was no past present or future for they were all the same I stood on the foundatlon and looked around me and all was desolate as far as the eye could see There were no l1v1ng creatures 1n Slght except for a few b1rds flylng ox erhead I could not tell the kmd Wlth the brlght sun shmmg down from an azure cloudless sky upon p1cturesque 1u1ns I ought to haxe been happy and seen It as a beaut1ful dax I would have had my memorv not been clouded w1th thoughts of the laughter and ga1et3 that had once rung 1n those forsaken halls I thought I would l1ke to brlng back the old tlmes l1ve over mv happx moments or go back to the past so many xears ago where I felt free to do most anyth1ng and dxd W1 h would never be granted and I left mx home as I had found It aftel rn nx years abandoned and devastated forgotten by all but me S AR -XII BELKN AP Cl iss Elffht Room For A Heart They are as one a whole In th1s fam111ar glowmg room The a1r IS heavy The walls colorful The muslc blast1ng Here they laugh and exult Sometlmes cry and fear A great throbbmg body One breaks away leax es the room A steel cool a1r Sl1C8S the heavmess She walks down the hall alone In the rooms on elther slde she looks Here has been 1nd1v1dual1ty Here has been 1ntense thought Here have been ldeas and muses They call 1n wh1spers to her eager mmd Yet she turns IH her steps to return To the warm room from wh1ch volces stream They too call but shoutlng and to her heart IILLLN Hfxxrxfox Cl1ss Tvstlxe 48 l 7 Y V ' 7 Y . . . , 7. I V - o v V Y 7 Q I I 7 . . 1 . ' v ' ' V 1 ' U . 7 . U . . , V7 a I - . . I. not thmk or worry about what the future mlght brmg. But I knew thxs Ee M' , , V' . z 'D 3 7 . . 7 ' 7 7 y Y .i 4 1 7 Y ' I . , , , . . . . Y l 7 1 I Q3 RX if EQ fi-9. -EE D Us F3 j Q! C5 G' 'ET Sf 9 2 T' f 45 HOSE lens M fm 9388 an Q 23' be F53 M155 woman z Y cn sscewury p KN CHSE you DON T UNDER5 memo ok was vs snuv G Q W f f X LOW 0' 1 x x W5 BQ B461-f J' GQNKU OPDl?,94AoNl C,f01XJlPt MNFQ '55 'Gui Pwmac O35 uemae FREE J-3 Y'-QLND 'Wm 'aemenmsn G 'W uHu'rg THE 1 Jo fx ff kj 'FSQ ' Guess Lfab 7' X Sam f We L 3 - 4 me ff If' - 22359 ' ' H , ,JN Q? ,. Q, Q0 c - U ,X ', ll f QOQ 3 QQX ' F: L Kg Ay, 5 , . ff x x 1 I 1, 'Q 50 , , vb i I 9 - - M 5 - f ' ' .... fe'-F. Xl I Xf 00 f YS' -' W ' 2 X ' 0115 454 f ,L 5 EN '-J ' n V f , , ., X f .VM-42 . . ' Z ,, H me- 5 ff, . S ff H X x, sl If 0 JP I x ,,.T:l, ' 'fa 0 0 fq Ly y a .6 T E TRANSCRI T Stdlrwcty Cf Llfe vt allled up the wmdmg sta1rway My relaxed hands brushed the soft yelx et of the rall as my feet made a gentle tap on the gleammg marble I held mv head hlgh and my l1ps were parted 1n an easy sm1le O reachlng the top of the landmg my shoe touched the gentle carpet and I sank w1th a Slgh Before me I saw a maze of blue yellow soothmg tlanslucent colors I stood ln the center my halr flashmg ln the powerful blaze of the spotllght Around me Whlrled forms m sharp black and whlte curlously blendmg w1th the creamv foam of colors My bram was pulsmg wlth a thousand new thoughts and ldeas My feet were Hy mg 1n a thousand ll'1tI'1CHtQ steps as I moved to the throbbmg muslc Sud denly I ran to a group of laughmg g1rl1sh faces Jolnlng them ID thelr gay fun Wlth a sllence and bleakness that numbed my allve senses the hghts went off the color yanlshed and the muslc stopped I Jumped to my feet and hurr1edly began to mount the second fllght of stalrs My feet were not so sure my step not so llght and my face bore no smlle The St8lFS echoed wlth a hollow tone and fearmg the sound I qu1ckened my pace As I reached the landmg my courage found and laughter of a world wa1t1ng Wlth open arms the arr1val of another tender soul Before my searchmg gaze 1n harsh tones of brown and red were l1stless people The1r faces were not often l1t w1th a smlle but now and then a roar of deep throated chucklmg blended Wlth a shrlll g1ggle These people were not all that I saw others were runmng and rushmg sometlmes hurl1ng headlong 1nto one another The1r eyes had a frantlc stare and thelr gropmg hands seemed to be searchmg Eagerly I stepped 1n the teemmg mob and soon found myself Jommg thelr sense less actlons Space and eternlty were lost 1n bfllllant colors and I searched on and on Weary I fell to my knees and the sweaty crowd trampled me down A small magnetlc object pressed 1tS coldness to my feverlsh palm and opemng my eyes I saw a golden cross Its brllllance penetrated mv flesh and set my heart weepmg ln Wlld Joy I ralsed my shoulders found my footmg and rushed to the fllght of sta1rs that opened before my gaze Thls tlme the steps were not hollow and my feet were firm Fabulous muslc filled my ears and heedless of the turbulent mass below I reached at last the th1rd and final landmg of the changmg stalrway My eyes d1d not see my ears d1d not hear but my soul felt the eternal peace and presence of God JANE NIILLFR Class Eley en The Rodd To Pdrddlse The road IS long and hard And grows steeper by the day But one can master It If one can learn to pray CATIILEI x P1'Ell'I'l lx Qllss Eluen 50 H P 1 ' ' ' ' 7. 1 A 7 ' 7 Y ' , 7 7 . . . 77 7 . 7 D 7 . . 7 7 . I . . . . I . , ' 1 . . . 7 7 7. . . . 7 . . 7 - u 7 7 .f ' 7 . 7 . . . Q .7 ' . 7 , . 7 I . . , 1 , . - ' . l , 7 I new footing, and the awesome noises turned into the shouts, weeping 7 v 7 v I . . . , . . - , ' 1 . g ' . 7 7 ' 7 7 ' 7 , . 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 E NSLRI Qde For A Plckle Hearted Gul Daxhng how can xou doubt what I sav 1Wa1t t1l tomolrow bud and xou ll be on xour was Dont you behexe mb loxe fO1 xou IS true QYeah fox xou and the other tu entx twoj How can Xou be so skeptlcal B1ll5 QI hope that s h1s name or Id sule feel s1llx J Hou know my k1SS95 are tm xou alone KRIING could that be Stexe on the phone J VM hat d1d Xou sax You beg me to maux fLast mght Im qu1te sure l sa1d ves to Larxvj Youll haxe to go now Im so soux my dear fPhew ln 'mother few minutes John Wlll be here'j CL xrxl C L Ifll Cllss Twclxc A Basketball Game The teams came out on the floor In the mldst of a mlghty roar The ball was gn en to the center The star the best Bob Vanderx entor The game xx as turlous wxld and rough Vandexxentor trled to show h1s stuff He shot and shot ITIISSGCI and mxssed The crowd booed IHSSGCI and hlssed At the half the score vs as even Ex erx one Sald g1V8 It to Stephen When Stephen got the ball He was the worst of all The Coach was IH despanr All he dld was tear h1S ha1r He called Vanderx entor to h1s sxde Do somethmg the score IS st1ll tled Vanderventor recelved the ball He looked at the C1OWCl smlled at all Tlme was runnlng out As Vanderx entor Wheeled about Vanderventor ach1ex ed h1s fame In the last mlnutes of the game Vanderx entors team had won He Could now zest his dutv done lun Boom ul Cllss X L TH TRA ' PT 1' 1 1 1 . .. N ' V 1 ' V 7, Y ' 4 1, 1' ' ' , , , . . ' 0 . 1 Y ,- . , V - 1 7 ' ' v V ' ' , - , , ,- ,. 7 ' 1 ' 11, C I ' 1 19 V ' 1 1 V ..19 1 ' I ' x 1 1 ' 1 - ' 1 7 ' ' ' 1 ' lu lxs and C. lxs 1 . . V ' 'f 7 A Y 9 7 ' 7 i , c . -V ! Y , . . W YL Y Q , , ' As ' - 77 .1 5 ' , , 7 1 nh ' ' ' ' 77 . . . . , . 7 .4 y .1 v 1 ,, - ,l.','.lIl' THE TRANSCRIPT E ARE LIVING 1n a network of webs spun 1ntr1catelx from the beglnmngs of c1v1l1zat1on A man IS born and from h1S first breath he starts to weave and bulld h1s web He creates h1s world and surrounds hlmself w1th acquamtances dlstant and close whlch make up the Hbers of h1s ex1stence To l1ve successfully there 1S only one th1ng that 1S essentlal Th1s IS a form of educatlon but not the klnd of educa t1on that 1S learned 11'1 books To surv1ve a person must acqulre the ab1l1ty to get along w1th other human be1ngs he must bu1ld for h1mself a relatlon to the rest of the world whlch IS firm and constant a strong web H must educate hlmself 1n human relat1ons for It IS 1mposs1ble to be an 1solat1on1st The 1nd1v1duals vxeb centers around hlmself for all men are self centered the world revolv1ng around them A man 1S the m1ddle of the web whlch he has bu1lt and supportlng h1s EXISIGDCB are the relatlons and fr1ends he has acqu1red The center of h1s network IS closely woven w1th the people he l1ves w1th every day Th1s IS most l1kelv the strongest part From It branch out fibers of fr1ends and acqualntances all the people he has ever come 1n contact Wlth all relatlng to the center It would be an unusual man who d1d not cons1der h1mself the center of a web wh1ch supports h1S ex1stence Survlval depends on the ab1l1tv to create a strong web to have enough rellable supports to hold the center of the web 1n place The man who SPIDS a stalwart web possesses the mvaluable CapaC1ty of understand1ng others Those whom he does not understand are the weak l1nks 1n h1S web wh1ch break An 1solat1on1st cannot GXISI for he IS the center of nothlngness and IS blown asunder ln tlme and h1story The exceptlonal man after he has bu1lt h1s web w1ll attempt to escape from the center and become less of an egolst He l1ves a more var1ed l1fe by cl1mb1ng out on the latt1ce work of h1s web He makes the effort of try1ng to g1V6 hlmself to others 1nstead of expectmg others to contrlbute to h1S exlstence He becomes less self centered and therefore l1ves a happ1er and better l1fe Irrevocably he st1l1 cons1ders hlmself the center of h1s web forever he conslders hlmself a part of the web of others In the course of a mans l1fet1me a mult1tude of wlnds w1ll sweep through h1s web and try to blow It asunder Quarrels wrong dec1s1ons problems left unsolved w1ll tear away l1nks 1n h1s web The strong man w1ll not y1eld and he Wlll surv1ve bu1ld1ng back the tears 1n h1S web Countr1es are the centers of webs War destroys the web of nat1ons the smaller weaker port1on be1ng blown away 1n the w1nd of m1l1tary force Bus1nesses are also the centers of webs completely dependent on the support of the populatlon The eX1stence of all humans depends on the strength of Vafled ret1cu lated systems and the ab1l1ty to ad1ust relatlons wlth others not to break them An 1solat1on1st w1ll only be caught IU the web of others as a crass flv 1S trapped 1n the web of a sp1der Gm HILLIARD Class Tu elxe 52 . . . Y a V ' s 7 V ' 7 ' .1 o , - . . 7 . , , v , . e v . .. , . 1 - 7 , . 7 . . , V .. . ' 7 . , . . 7 ' 7 1 7 1 - y , . , . . . . . 7 - 1 r . 1 v ' ' 7 7 . ' s ' . 1 . . U . v .. ,V 1 THE TRANSCRIPT l-low Muslc Affects Me E CAN l1sten to mus1c and be affected by It elther act1vely or passlvely Some people prefer to appreclate mus1c by qu1et1y 11s tenlng to It over and over aga1n catchmg fam1l1ar themes and antlclpatlng the hlgh note reached by a v1ol1n a sudden throb of the drums or the mellow phlase of a French horn Everyone must enjoy mus1c by s1tt1ng passlvely or else we would not have such tremendous crowds attendlng concerts I too am moved by th1s form of mus1c appre c1at1on but find an even better one 1n be1ng affected act1vely Stlmulated to express the mus1c by dance I b6ll8VG that mus1c IS mood Mood may be expressed e1ther through the physlcal aCt1V1ty of the body or the tongue Some find thelr means of expresslon through creatlng 1n words what they feel 1n the most meanlngful way Others are 1ncl1ned however to speak through danclng Thls way of expresslon 1S becomlng more and more popular as we become better acqualnted w1th modern or abstract danc1ng therefore mus1c and dancmg become 1ntegrated arts There are exceptlons to th1s expresslon 1n such C1aSS1C3l works as Beethoven s Symphony No 5 1n B Flat Melancholy works of such klnd could hardly be danced to and should be llstened to on ralny days On the other hand there are other works w1th a slow tempo whlch are very emot1onal Undertow by Schuman IS a choreographlc p1ece wh1ch IS slow but can be wonderfully expressed But then take someth1ng l1ke Galte PHFISIEHHE or some of the move ments from the Masquerade Sulte You have such revelat1ons of galety or ballroom scenes that you find that you cannot llsten to lt passlvely but that you must be moved Wlth the t1de of the mus1c Seml classlcals of Kern or Cole Porter played by the sweeplng v1ol1ns under the dlrectlon of some such conductor as Kostelanetz seem to elevate you You sense the awe of belng placed on a hllltop W1th the sun beatlng down A half sensat1on of the v1ol1ns represents the wlnd blowlng to a h1gh p1tch then dvmg down to a low note I hardly find myself able to QXPEIISUCG th1s elatlon pHSS1V9ly consequently lt leads to an expresslon through dancmg W1th the commg of 1azz mus1c a new type of dancmg must be mtro duced so We now have what IS known as Jltterbugglng If that sounds teen aglsh to some let us expand It by saylng we were lntroduced to the Charleston the Shag and all k1nds of Hops People couldnt very well express themselves to th1s mus1c by the trad1t1onal dances Proof of the trad1t1onal expressxon of danclng can be found from the cultural ballet found 1n C1V1l1Zed countrles to the nat1ve dances of the unc1v111zed trlbes 1n Afr1ca Man has always found th1s means of expresslon because there IS someth1ng about mus1c that seems to drug us It seems to c1rculate through all parts of our body filllng each ve1n Wlth some pulsat1ng rhyhm Even 1f we aren t on the dance floor we start rhythmlc mot1ons of the hands or feet upon hearmg the contagxous tempo of a pl6Ce Before a ch1ld can walk or talk he w1ll hold to the hands of h1s parents, and to the accompamment of the radxo wlll dance for the n1ce people A very old man l1kew1se can be seen affected by mus1c Too old to express h1mself very heartlly he contents h1mS6lf W1th whlstllng and tappmg hlS foot never findmg It too heavy to keep tlme w1th the mus1c Fnncss Cuxnuxs Class Twelxe 53 . . 1 1 1 , . 1 - 1 1 ' 1 1 - 1 . , , . L 1 1 cc 1 - 77 ' , . 1 . H ,, . . . . . . . U . . . ,, - 1 1 as - 77 ' ' I ' 1 1 1 . - 1 1 . 1 ' , . ' 1 - 1 1 1 - - 1 1 . . , . ' 1 . 1 ' ' ' H ' ,Y , . . 1 1 - . Y . . . . . 1 1 . ' 1 E TRANSCRI Forqotten I-Ie1Oes W11e1e t11e 11111u111a111 stleam ghstem Whe1e the 11111u11ta111 pmes toxx G1 We 111x1 111111111e1e11 111111911 111s11t s11111s 1111111 '11111 111111 Whe11 su111111e1 laets IOIGX G1 We hax1 xz11111u1S11e11 171711919 the 1351 xx 11111111 1-,heat11e11 111s bx111111 511631111111 111s sxx 11111 and fe11 V10 111xe 1111111 V11 111x1 11111u1.511t 11422111 111 1111 x1111111 Ou1 111111111 11111u1.fht 1111111 the 11u11s 111 x11111 111111 We haxe xx1111 x11u 1111 Dust 111 dust saxs t11e prophet A1111 xx1 11 1XG ISIUIHECI 111 the ea1t11 A1111 111 H1111 xx1111 made us T 1 111111 11115 11111111 1111 11u1 S11 IX T111 xx 1118136111121 st11a111 k1111xxs 11 But 111111 11811118 11111 11111 11111111e1s 1111 1 11111 V1 e 111 11111311111 Il lus No Escape I xx 8111.611 111 1111 t11xx I1 A111111 the 111a11s 111 1111 tl 111 11111 1111 11111x1 A1111 though I xx1111111111 b111111lx up and 1111xx I1 I 111u11:1 11111 11111111 I XKEi1k9C1 I1'1 the xa11ex T111ough the pea1e 111 1Ipp111lQ Q1 ass and 1111213111 floxx e1s But sud11e111x a C1 ue1 x1111d 5x1111e11 about me T1e W11111 of me111111xf T1e S1115 11311111 11111 '-111 I xv111t T1e xxaxes I 511111 1111 xx 1x15 x11l1 1111511 11111 1111 11 1111111 111x boul I t111exx mx 51111 111111 them A1111 thex 1oa1e11 11111 LI'11S11Gd ox 81 1111 BOYS I xxa1k 111 11a1k11e5:. A111111 the 1:ax1111s '11111 sh111111xx5 111 Death And x11t11 1111 stalks 11111 1111111111x 111 X011 I C111 111x11 1111Q11 S1111 S1 11111x1 flux T111 54 TH PT L . 1 .,L. .. . , ,. v, 1 'S ,A J '. . . 1 1 2' '1 1. VX Q71 ' ' X 7 ' l . . ' . '. ' . ', . ' , 7 ' ' 1 111 '1 r 1 1 X 1 '. ,.' - . ,X .. ' z Q 1 3 ' . ' f' 1111 -1 '11s. 1 we ' 1. 511.1111 111w1:111111 C1135 fXi1111 Y. Y ' A - . ' 1 ' 5 ' 1 '11 C2 1- K Vg 3'? 'Y ' . 1 ' .AX Y . 1 v 1 1 ' V ' 1 . 1. , ... , I k Y CK - . . W, ., . I 1,. .. , 2 . 3 1 , ,' ...l -. r ' 7 7' 1. ,. . 2 ,.k , . 1. ' . , ' . ., A vxx fc .1 ' I' D . v' X .. V- 1 ., ', H2 1151 I vt xl I l 1. 11. 11 THE TRANSCRI Dlsllluslon I am alone In ex ery crowded room Alone to scorn The babble of humanlty Ha1sh laughs Resound as 1n a tomb And cut untll I long to Shflek and Hee I burn to tear At cursory lemarks And r1p apart The slander of the weak Oh to grasp The struggle IH mv heart And soothe wlth med1tat1on T1l the turmoll ends For solltude Goes hand 1n hand Wlth peace And I can llye W1thout mv hated frlends Cylll' TC Ill' X h.Nl HB-XC II I-louse By The Seo Twas on a h1ll I saw my house Where no one dwelt lDSldS And looked w1th1n IIS barxen rooms The lonellness they felt The rooms were large but lacked th Ot loye and laughtel gay W1th glowlng lamps to cut the dark And sun to brlghten day But Whlle I mused about th1s place Of beauty and of awe I wondered why lt stood alone So proud so flerce so tall spark So large 1n stature yet so small That ever It W1ll be W1th1n the depths of mv own heart Where pry 1ng eyes cant see And as I thmk back to th1s spot So Well recalled 1n m1nd So Well lmpressed upon my heart I see that none can find The teehng of the moment when I found thls heavenly place And the pleasuxes of these memoues Whlch tlme cannot erase 56 Cl Iss Tu n lx c X xcx Hlllllbtl C1188 Elucn P T 7 7 .1 7 1 T 7 7 7 ' 1 . r 4 ' 7 1 g .V I . . a In hopes they might confide in me - , e 7 7 Y 7 . ' 9 7 7 ' ' 7 7 7- ,V 7 ' r 5 U 7 . y , ' ' ,vbkff :Q THE TRANSCRIPT The Prlsoner HAT thmgs do I remember? The fa1l1ng sun shot a quest1on1ng beam through the nalrow w1ndow and ID the r1bbon of hght the dust partlcles danced The prlsoner knew exactly how many mlnutes and seconds were left be fore the nlght swallowed up llght and w1th lt l1fe Oh you wouldnt understand lf I told you No one has ever under stood You would thlnk you saw 1t all clearly and really lt would mean nothlng to you But I guess I ll tell you anyway It was Just a sensatlon th1s first thmg l1ttle enough to carry around IH your heart for twelve years you ll say I was slttmg at my desk before a Latm grammar and for the last l1ttle wh1le I had been look1ng at some kxnd of conjugatlon It seemed to me that I had been studylng It very hard for I had thought of nothlng for some tlme so I closed my eyes above the page Not a word had stuck on my memory I couldnt even thlnk what had been before me for the last half hour As I opened my eyes I saw the street and the dull houses accented aga1nst the even duller sky It was an ugly street even on a fine day and now w1th the cold damp background It seemed as hopeless as the llves that had vtound out the1r short cycle IH 1tS walls I put my hands to my head and almost screamed but the stern rules I had practlced so often clutched the sound 1n my throat and lnstead I gave a sort of strangled sob At that moment the very sprrng of my l1fe all the moorlngs of my m1nd had been reduced to dust and my soul as empty as a blown eggshell had been caught up by the w1nds and dashed aga1nst the leaden S Y At last I manged to get my eyes down to the grammar and somehow my m1nd found rest 1n the steady unchanglng verb endmgs and I caught my breath lean1ng aga1nst them I have never felt such complete despalr You dont understand I know you dont Why do you try to pretend? Oh now you re hurt I wont say anythmg more on that subject Ill tell you the other th1ng you ll understand It better I guess I had wandered qulte far from home on one of those days you dream about but almost never recogmze a day llke th1s warm and heavy Wlth the sweetness of summer Towards evenlng I had sat down 1n a field and trled to read but the moanmgs of a Roman prlsoner seemed dull 1n compar1son w1th the br1ll1ance of the present I la1d the book down and leaned back on the warm grass The sun tangled ltself 1n my eyes and I shut them aga1nst It When I opened them agaln I was dazzled Then I saw someone walklng qulckly towards me I knew as he approached me that 1n another m1nute I would see h1m no longer that he was a part of the warm field and the blue sky and that wlth the settlng sun he would go He sat down beslde me and took my hand I d1d not start up or greet h1m as the old self the real self would have done and he talked of thmgs I cannot remember and yet they are burned on my heart Then the sun set the nlght came on as swlftly as xt does now for lt only seems to creep to hurrymg mortals And when the shadows covered the h1lls1de he was gone I got up as the old self would have done and went home but I was not the same Somethlng lI1S1dP me was sat1sfied a longmg was fulfilled and my search was ended My head was empty Wlth youth and sprmg and new found love The shadows had fallen and the l1ttle cell was dark The woman bowed her head and llstened The t1me was come SALLY BINIGII-XXI Class lX1ne 57 ' 77 ii . . ' . . , . KI 7 ' l , . . I . - .' , 7 . . . . , , 9 7 7 , . . 7 ' 7 - 9 ' a 7 . y . . . 7 7 . - , 7 7. 7 I 7 k . . . 1 4 , . . , l u before or since. That's all it wasg just a half moment of total darkness. 7 7 9 l y - I V - 7 ' 7 . ' ' . 1 , , 7 ' 7 ' 7 . . , I . . . , . , 7 7 U ' , , : Z . . . , . ' 1 . . . e , . , . , , 7 ' . - ' 77 THE TRANSCRIPT Dressmq Room HE GLARE of naked l1ght bulbs lS dom1nant Below above and beh1nd there IS a color v1olent theatr1cal color and the bl1nd1ng l1ght IS 1I1t6I'1S1fl6d by m1rrors Each va1n bulb admlres 1tS sh1ny nose ln the glass beh1nd It and occas1onally when one burns out lt leaves an empty decayed black hole 1n th1s row of g1ant teeth The counter Wh1Ch serves as a dresslng table would seem to extend 1nto 1nf1n1ty except for the 1nd1v1dual d1v1s1on marked by cosmetlcs Every d1v1s1on breathes a speclal personallty for these are the dressmg tables of a theater They are dancers homes for four or five hours of the even1ng as revealed by the r1bbons and plumes placed helter skelter on a Whlte slat rack aboxe the m1rrors the handmade shoe cases na1led to the backs of ldentlcal cha1rs the lambs wool the open cold cream 1ars the blaze of rouges and l1pStlCkS the wet wash rags the scraps of soap the powder puffs IH need of a good scrubblng the m1rrors Wlth the1r assorted paraphernal1a there are names wr1tten 1n 1lpSt1Ck and eyebrow penc1l pxctures and very often someones false halr hanglng grotesquely 1n a SW1tCh The core of the room IS the gaudy costumes each an adventure 1n ltself hang1ng on wh1te poles 1n the center where the1r colors appear to be made more br1ll1ant are the very soul of the room when lt IS empty but ln the chatter and rush of ltS occupants the1r role IS small A damp grey concrete floor runs the length of thlS Jungle of color and llghtS and term1nates under three gleam1ng enamel bas1ns seldom empty and never clean Th1S scene 1S reflected 1n a full length m1rror at the OppOS1t9 end of the floor put there for convenlence but w1th an lronmg board forex er h1nder1ng ones v1ew Th1S IS a summer theater and so the fans great deformed metal monsters always hum to themselves as 1f they feel that thex must add the1r part to the gay chatter the frequent explos1ons of a g1ggle the exclted Wh1SpG1 Whlle drawlng an eyebrow or the teaslng retort when a good show IS ox er and s1ngers and dancers V16 for the bas1ns and look forward to the work of the day ahead C111 TC111 N Ex ERB ACH Cl us Tu elx e The Pdsslnq Tlme T1me you Sllp so smoothly through my fin ers' An autumn dav a laughmg glance that l1ngers For a wh1le And now IS gone A once seen sm1le Remembered through the years And then I am alone The old man w1th the shears Has cllpped the last frayed thread T1me W111 you laugh at memor1es now dea LAURIE XVHITLEX Cllss Tvs elve 58 ' 7 7 . . , . A . , 1 , I - 7 . . . ' 7 , . , . . - . y u . y . . . . A l 7 ' 7 , 7 A 7 . . , - . , . . . y. . . f 3 . 7 Y ' , . . 7 . . 7 by the brutal strength of the bulbs and the mirrored reflections. They . . . 7 . ,- I . , 7 . , . ' 1 , . . . . 7 . . , . . . y I 7 Y 7 7 . V V . 1 . . M . . . . , Q Q . 1 . 1 . ' ' '17 Z Y .fy 5 . Y . . di, THE TRANSCRIPT The Frlend HE SNOW was fallmg IH l1ttle wh1te sw1rls when Rebecca Marlowe stepped off the school bus She turned the collar of her coat up to close out the cold but the bxtlng wmd crept relentlessly through the warm garment The street hghts had been turned on early but on the street where Rebecca l1ved only a few remalned burnlng most of them had been shattered by stones thrown by the ruffian gangs who l1ved 1n thls part of town Home to Rebecca was a two room shack 1nhab1ted by her mother grandmother four brothers and three slsters As she entered the house she notlced some brlght yellow str1ps of cloth hanging at the wlndow Oh Mums curtams' She squealed w1th dehght Her mother came from the kltchen w1p1ng her hands on her apron her eyes beamlng proudly Mrs W1ll1S you know the lady I work for was golng to get r1d of them Can you fancy that? She was golng to throw them away' I asked her rf I could have them and she Sald that she dldnt see why I wanted the old thlngs but that I was welcome to em' She walked over and stralghtened them tenderly saymg Ive always wanted curtalns they glVe such an a1r of n1ceness to any house' Just then Tommy D1ck W1ll1am and Johnny Rebeccas brothers burst through the door gleefully shoutlng about the new fallen snow and her mothers attentlon was turned to tales of thlngs that had occurred at school that day After supper Rebecca left the house to go to the church walk she let her xmaglnatlon run loose She was a grand lady at one of them fancy balls that she had read about the snowflakes gl1sten1ng 1n her dark ha1r were her Jewels and the shadows hoverlng around her were dashmgly handsome men When she reached her dest1nat1on th1s dream was mterrupted by the ant1c1pat1on of the real 1oy to be had wh1le playlng the p1ano She entered the church and knelt down for a few mlnutes thank1ng God for the pr1v1 lege of us1ng the church p1ano and asklng H1m to bless her famlly and frlends Then she rose and went downsta1rs The l1ght made a golden clrcle l1ke a spot l1ght on the p1ano and everyth1ng else was closed off from VISW As long as Rebecca could remember she had come here every evenlng to play th1s very same p1ano It was her closest frlend she knew every scratch and scar on the marred surface and she herself cleaned the keys every week Runn1ng her fingers down the keyboard lov1ngly she won dered what l1fe would be l1ke wlthout th1s mstrument her frlend But she d1d not thmk long about th1s for to her th1s was an lmposslble sltuatlon As she played muslc filled every corner of the room It st1rred the very crypts of her be1ng and she was completely absorbed and happy When It was tlme to go home she reluctantly rose from the p1ano bench turned off the l1ght and ran ga1ly home In bed later that nlght she lay huddled 1n a small heap 1n the m1dd1e of the bed whlch she shared wlth her small s1sters It was terrlbly cold and she could not sleep She thought how n1ce 1t would be not to be bothered w1th a body You would never be cold hke thls You could do so many wonderful thmgs flv off and v1s1t all the extreme parts of the 59 ll I II 7 7 . , . ' 3 n . 1 66 77 --. ' ' y . 7 Q Q I . Q l 7 7 LL ' ' 7! ' ' . , - l- 1 . 7 7 AL . . . 1 . ' 7 . ' 7 Q. I . . , . K ' 7 4 7 77 , . ' ' ll 7 7 7 ' . ' ' 6 ' 7 77 , . . . . , 7 7 7 . 7 7 9 ' , . . I a , 4 . I . , where she went every nlght to practlce on the b1g p1ano. Dur1ng the , ' . . 1 , Z 7 , - -. . , . . . 7 - 2 . , , . . , ' I . . 7 . . . . , U . . .. , g I . - , , - I , 1 . , I 7 . - u THE TRANSCRIPT T119 FI'l91'1d Concluded world see Jup1ter and Mars travel to the Sun go underwater and see the fasclnatlng creatures that l1ve ln the depths of the sea Her thodghts ran on and on and on then suddenly they stopped she held her breath maybe she m1ght even be able to play the most beautlful of all musxc w1th the angels' Flnally she fell asleep The next dav passed qulckly and at last It was tlme to go to the church Rebecca hurrled swlftly down the crowded streets hummmg a happy tune After her prayers she walked down the stalrs and hurr1ed along the corrldor to the muslc room She opened the door and groped m the darkness for the l1ght swltch But the prano was gone' Rebeccas hopes and dreams 1n fact her whole world came crashlng down about hex She remalned mot1onless for a Whlle then automatlcally her legs began to walk and to carry her down the corrxdor back up the steps and out of the church She moved as one would 1n a stupor she just couldnt beheve 1t' Her Fr1end was gone' What was left? She started across the street Suddenly she was bl1nded by br1ght hghts and a car came zoom1ng out of the darkness l1ke a monster bearmg down on her Brakes squealed lndlgnantly but lt was too late' A crowd gathered around the small body ly1ng so st1ll 1n the street her pulse Oh I m so sorry shes dead A woman 1n the crowd began to crv and sald She was so young she had so much to llve for' BARBY KNEBELIXANIP Class Ten The Leader Walk walk you coward you You re through w1th hfe Llfes through Wlth you You were to be one of the best What happened to you D1d you not keep Wlth the rest? You turned to trlckerv and dECE1t W1th th1s you thought You could not be beat You ga1ned power w1th your wrong Now you rule many But not for long Whv were you caught Oh Povx erful One? D1d you not cheat the law W1th what you had begun? Walk walk you coward xou You re through w1th lxfe L1f9S through Wlth you NIERLDIIII Sus rm Class Elexen 60 ll ' Il 3 ' L D 9 . . . . 1 7 . , . . . 1 . , 1 , . . , . .t 1' 7 Y . - . , ' 1 One man bent over her and, while the crowd waited breathlessly, felt L6 7' Y 37 , . . . . ' ' Li . .1 3 7 ' 77 7 7 7 ' ' - . , . , -1 ! 7 7 . 7 7 7 , .1 7 7 ' ' . Y . , . X 2 1 V , I 'dir sv ' 'flew-1-r ,f,.f,,: H in -mug L wo-- ,.,. I Q ffm e Q if I' ZZ 1 IJ! I ,Ju ,, Q. ' f 1 -Bm. A Yi '..4'r nv- Q Q41 ----nw 11 .llila THE TRANSCRIPT All The World s A Stdqe ond All The Men dnd Women Merely Plotyers HE PLAY 1S ox er The actors vuthdraw from their stage and Wlpe from their faces the masks of another day The day has been successful for some uneyentful for others But nevertheless the heavy gray curta1n of dusk falls again and enx elops 111 its folds the great stage of llfe with 1ts bright lights backdrops and machines The finale lS over and the actors return to their homes l1wes and reality Another day has been crossed off the calendar of many and for a whlle these people are free to live their own 11x es each one different and to enyoy the comforts of a l1fe untarnlshed bv the deslre for recognltlon success and money The ox erture lS already beglnnlng first it IS heard in the lumble of t1a1ns cars and buses while the never ending theme 15 carrled out in the constant tread of feet poundlng on pavements The curtain rises and here again we see our fam1l1ar actors their masks in place and their bodies toughened for work All are people you know the frlends you haxe your assoclates 1n business and the every day people you meet on the street All look different 1n the1r masks but underneath these are hidden sorrow hate love frustration anger and cup1d1ty Remove their day time disgulse and there before you stand mdlviduals These people these actors are like everyone else ln that each has h1s own role which he must act out as long as the play goes on Some play tl3g1C parts a few comedy some starring roles while the xast maiority fill minor roles But all in all each one must fill h1s part until death rings down the final curtain Nxxcx HUTLEDCIL C llss Eluen 'Vly heart and soul felt heaxy I could not understand Could not reach qulte far enough To grasp His Waltlllg hand Sad how sad my trembllng mind l could not make my goal Until God smlled down at me And loosed my fretful soul Loosed my bonds unhappiness Until my heart felt free But God was not quite so near As 1n my misery Ninn FIILIILLH Qllsb Eleyen 62 ll I 1 II . 7 . 7. . . ' 7. V - 1 r Y ' 7 5 1 , . , . 7 7 ' . .Y i . 1 1 ' . -Y ' N . . .Y . . 1 1 . . .1 1 1 .,' , ' y ' ' . . ' '. . ' . ,, 1 1 Q Q 1 ' ' Y v 7 - 7 v a . . . Y 1a 1 .1 . . ., Y 5 7 7 7 ' r r 1 . 1 . ' 1 1 - 1 Y .17 7 1 u ' 3 5' w ,Y lr.. 1 7 rf' . .1 Y 7 . . . 1 . 1 1 1 7 1 1 , 1 . . 7 A, , ,., ,- T 11 v C E TRANSCRI Mld Summer M1411 summer xx hen the a1r hangs pOlS6d Autumn has not cr1nged the trees Exen the sun l1ght l1es enchanted Sprlng has long s1nce cooled the breeze f aflfx 1 Each green leaf hangs dead and qu1et The warmth IS hum1d mo1st and langu1d ln fields the gram 13 yet un scx thed Golden pools oi sun and shadow Sway across the dustx budge Everx l1fe has stopped a moment Wo more wa1ls the small gray m1dge W1ll NVIIYEGY ex er come all laden W1th wmd and storm and sleet and ha1l W1ll these fields grow brown and frozen Ch1ldren plnched and harvest fa1l Yet IH a dax a week a month Brown and red and golden xellow Fluttermg sloxxlx from the trees But for one moment all 19 perfect Let us th1nk It w1ll not change For '1 l1ttle l1xe 1n the present Though soon xx1ll come the vxmd and ram S 111 131x111 1 The Dusk C llss Nmc The NVlf1d draxxn dusk xx hlch searches hurr1edly Among the xx11nkled faces of the leax es And runs a coolmg breeze beneath the eaves Has lost 1tS landmark 1n etern1ty Between the dax and blackened n1ght Unnot1ced 1n 115 s1lence comes txx1l1ght No goal except a mutab1l1tx 63 mr XXIIII Ll lss Ixxclxc T H P T A ' Q v . A 7 1 - 4 ' ,y No. a bre of air is moxfng, 1 . . . Y H -1 V . 7 . -cf ' 1 . D ' ' n Y . v 7 7 A Avv' ' 7 7 Autumn VVlll swlftly turn the leaves, -VV 7 ' 1 C l , . Y V , .lxr 1 43 J: .xx 1 1 ,H A . - 7 v . . 11' 1 . 19 I ' Y l.,x13 f ' 'rm' ., . , THE TRANSCRIPT The Rodd HE WORLD has as many d1fferent temperaments and appea1ances as lt has l1v1ng 1nd1v1duals for It IS only what each person s psf, cho log cal attltude thlnks It to be Every one IS golng along h1s ovxn road 1n l1fe and as he travels a plcture of h1S surroundmgs the people and hap pen1ngs he meets and the road ltSe1f are belng 1mplanted 1n h1s m1nd Th1s p1cture wh1ch 1S so fixed and stagnant at one moment suddenlx seems to change 1n the next moment from a st1ll lmage to a verv com pllcated and mov1ng one Howeve1 It 1S not the plcture or the objects 1D It WhlCh change lt IS only the llght Wlth wh1ch he looks at lt Just as the sun can transform the earth from a dark and mysterlous place Hlled w1th qu1escent shadows 1nto a l1v1ng world of a thousand d1fferent colors so can the d1fferent l1ghts of our personal1t1es bel1efs and ages alter the appearance of the world as we travel along 1ts road The ch1ld SklpS happlly along h1s road for the most part and catches h1s first gl mpse of the world on each Slde Because he lS young and fresh so seem h1s surroundmgs and h1s eyes are lncessantly openlng wlde w1th wonder and surprlse at ob1ects to whose s1mple and pure beauty man has become numb The ch1ld rarely has to trax el alone through the world h1s road 1S filled Wlth any fr1ends h1S 1rnag1nat1on des1res When he grows t1red he can r1de on one of the soft furred w1ld an1mals wh1ch he has captured 1n the Afr1can jungles or l1sten to the mult1 colored b1rds as but he gets up agaln as eas1ly as he went down perhaps lt IS because h1s fleX1b1l1ty has not yet been hardened by age The ch1ld IS too small to see a very b1g port1on of the road stretchmg before h1m but the part he does see IS Flled w1th beauty and dehght' The cool green grass IS a soothmg bed for h1s wearlness and he lS humbled by the blue blankets of the heavens above h1m The grown ch1ld now a man cont1nues along the same road but h1s personal1ty and bellefs have been chang1ng If he IS belng beaten down by fallure and has become sad and dlscouraged the road seems crooked and full of treacherous holes th1s road whlch once stretched so lovlngly before h1m now has so many Slde roads branchmg off 1n all d1rect1ons that lt IS dlfficult to remember whether he IS 1n a detour or the maln road The detalls of the lovely scenery on elther s1de have become blurred and h1s eyes have become so accustomed to looklng 1nto the d1stance ahead that lt lS hard to dlscern the ob1ects at hand The fresh and won dermg hght IH h1s eyes has now clouded the brlght happmess he once saw has faded 1nto grey m1sunderstand1ng On the other hand 1f the man Hnds real and profound happlness as he travels along the road of h1s l1fe he can clearly see all the beauty about h1m and he becomes humble as he dld when he was a ch1ld for he has truly found goodness amldst a herd of bo1sterous and cruel wrongs Th1s mans road stretches peacefully out before h1m Whlte and pure agalnst the greenness of the valley Just as the rece1ver of a g1ft and not the g1ver determlnes how much lt means to h1m so lt IS Wlth l1fe God gave thls present to ex ery l1v1ng thlng but the 1nd1v1dual must dec1de 1tS xalue ME SNIITII Cl us Tu ch L 64 . . . . . . . . 7 , I - 7 i . . . I V . . . 7 . .. , , - A I . . - 7 . . . - . . ., . . 7 7 .fy h 1, . . . , 3 . . 7 7 7 ' 7 1 , , 7 . ' ' ' r ' , . I . . -. , . I . . . , 4 - they tw1tter h1gh above him in the trees. He often falls along the way, Z , - 1 . I . . D . 7 7 . 7 1 7 . Y . y - . . . 7 . 7 . v Q 1 . 7 ' - 7 1 . ' ' Z 7 - , , - 7 7 , . . I . 7 . 1 y . . I. . 7 7 ' ZS: 71 YJ f I 4 --4 -4 : jlmw Q o-goth-F ha WI f 5 m5ho.-rn K us Wu. Koh 0 A hiibc-hui p LVM-I-:O-5!.5k' Ck oo 4-r Y' 2 V10 5 VQQJK BWI' 1 OVW Sf ed. nie? 21:55 lick M 5 f 'Hhu.-X15 'ii f, 7 ff ,Ml Q Compu... mu,-a.. N:aL.+ q.?hNn. so C av Q N gSPCL4'S1h' X LJ? K 51 5 I Uormgn -'Q LQW55 0- max: S 5. X 4 dom Ma. mn3S x'x0-1'Y1sx'x'Ol'N 592 ncLs her- -rho,-,Q AQ sl was 'SE Q 9.fs.2!!.l!-1-4,lr!e on 's cpoqp.-uSvLw.,,,., ' N N IX l I V . W 1 fx, If I. .-. mq vu' , ' f', Lg.+ZlL -' it '1 'N l'fW'f'f'a .. Af -- 4 ML la 'Q 'rf' ' B a 1'-Ps H R , W ' 9 n. r , , I 'nhl 1 .ar , -- ' 2 ' ',,, : C' 3 adn? , 'L ' U- : rg-v n X s I B+ BQ A x I! x fhb 11, ' ' dw Q4 49' 4,3 .,7. ,? f y . 6'os'x Q 'yfg f' '1 Q a - T? . u V ,F ,oh S' s . TF' ' I .1 I 'IV' 5 -.. A . ,- fi Q5 ' K - awww , , 1 'M' y 'v' it ' 2 , V A 61, ' , 11 U w J ' 5 t'n fx H ff X If rx 3 , 'X 'XXNF-. . ' W- :rf ' . - - , - W ., 'T' Y W A. P3 H Er' IS fx X : . tg? Q! .I as M 1 1 N N V di U J ' mag fgk-li 'K K W ni ,sn . ., Y 5 u . THE TRANSCRIPT l-ler First Performance S ONE BY ONE the dancers left the theater a small figure remained huddled in the corner of a dresslng room Her garments were shabby and soiled In one hand was a stubby pencil and lylng at her Slde was an autograph book with Marta inscrlbed on the cover Her long black hair lay gracefully on her shoulders and the expression on her face was much too serious for one so small In a moment little Marta began to stir She yawned rubbed her eyes and sat up A look of bewilderment filled her face She looked around the dimly l1t room and her eyes suddenly sparkled with excitement Hanging around the walls of the dressing room were costumes of dlfferent pastel colors and varied sizes In another corner of the room there were new toe shoes neatly arranged Marta didn t waste a minute She sprang to her feet took off her dress and selected a light blue tutu from the wall Carefully she slipped lt on and then fitted herself in a pair of toe shoes All this time the thought of being alone or afraid had not entered her mind After she had adjusted her toe shoes she ran quickly to the magnificent stage As she approached it she felt the entire theater come ahve She could hear the orchestra tuning up in the pit and the chatter of blue sets painted a picture beyond description For the first time became frightened for she knew that everyone was wa1t1ng to see dance and she wanted so much to please her audience The curtain rose and as the light gay music reached her ears she transfigured Marta made a lovely entrance She floated lightly gracefully across the stage doing bourees and pirouettes Her leaps tourjetes were done with the greatest of ease All at once the dance was finished and the silence closed 1n on She knelt on the stage looking out toward the audience a desolate thetic little figure xIARIA'X NIE R Asn E SQ GI' 9 311 311 her P Class Ten Looking into the face of God I thoughtfully stretched on tiptoe Then turned my head qulckly And glanced at the World around me Pretending to let my gaze Linger with admiration on each object Then I sat down And stubbornly began to pull up Huge handfuls of turf But that was really foolish For all the while My eyes were longing to return to His face And see there That He had known all along NI-my FITZHLGII Class Elex en 66 Y D 4 , . . . , , audience. The stage was beautifully decorated. The purple lights on the , , l . . h - . , . . , f . . ' j d . . I I 1 7 , . I' , N n XNXX N,-5 , .,..x..x.X 'fllnun ' , Q 6.9 f 'v , 1 , N ,7 'G .R AQ! . :'f,........ uf Q . , in I I, ' ln, .. D I O. if M 3 A 4 1' ' Q 9 A fl , I Q -.. 5 q THE TRANSCRIPT My Trlp To Scum Lotus UNKIE AND Irene 1nX 1ted Daddx and me to x1s1t them IH St LOUIS We went on a T WA plane We flew at nlght both wajys We went to the Zoo We saw all klnds of ammals h1ppos and baby hlppos a guaffe who was eatlng hav zebras and raccoons that were eatlng fish pandas that looked llke P1a1r1e dogs that d1g tunnels The duck pond had swans black and also wh1te ones I saw p1nk Hammgo b1rds thex say they feed them beets to make them plnk The penguln was a l1ttle black thmg wlth a vshlte f1ont The monkeys wexe the most fun The monkexs were 1n the cage One play ed on the rope He d1d all kmds of tucks the othe1 one play ed vtlth a bucket He put the bucket alound h1s neck and then swung on the rope The babv monkexs We1e so tmx Thex ran around and acted l1ke b1g monkeys but they xx ere the httlest thmgs The polar bears vt alked around and went lnto the1r house The mountam goats were runnmg around all ox er the place 1ust llke mx blother J1mmx There we1e two old goats vtlth beaxds that grew down 'fo the1r feet They would t11p ox er the1r bealds and llmp When the ele phants put then trunks thlough the wues people thlew them potato ch1ps C13CkQ1 Jacks and peanuts One elephant drank water from a fau et I dldnt want to leaxe the zoo but we had to go back to Punk1e and llenes and get ready to Hx back to Loulsvllle The Botllet The crowd IS hushed The hghts are low The cu1ta1n rlses The spothghts glow The mus1c begms The dancers appear They begln the1r dance To notes firm and clear All too soon the ballet 1 The audlence applauds They long for more The ballermas come For the1r curtam call Thex bow w1th grace We know thats all 68 BARBARA X xx CLP uh Class One SOGI' N nm li xsu Cltss Fue . . . . v. Y Y. . . . . 7 7 . . I . 7 . U . . , . , . . V7 7 5 ' ' I 1 1 4 ' . 7 . . V . 's . 7 7 1 ' 7 I 7 . I ' -' - - r 1' ' 9 , ' , 1 , 7 . . Y 7 . :J 3 1 7 .- . . Y . . Y 1 ' , . ,' - 1 U U. V ' 7 - Y 7 . . , ,, . c . ' 7 Y ' , 7 , . Y - T 1 v- C a 7 a 1 1 7 I 7 - 1 3 1 Y l ' V 7 7 9 X uw I v r.. AQQFS F VF 9 X AND QFVFN 1 P.. u- 1 1 ,... 7 V THE TRANSCRIPT Blrds Y GRANDMOTHER has an old bush by the s1de of her house One day she saw a couple of blrds They were bulldlng a nest The blrd would slt there all da5 on her eggs Fmallx the eggs hatched They were l1ttle red blrds The mother flevx back to the nest often to see and to feed her babx b1rds The father was around Xen seldom They were l1ttle and fuzzx They were gray too I went oxer to my grand mothers house each week end to see them One day the mother b1rd d1d not come to the nest all day We were golng to feed them 1f the mother blrd d1d not come home A l1ttle boy whose parents mx grandfather and grandmother knew was over that part1cula1 nlght and he went home to get a flashhght so we could see whether the mother was on the nest She was there on the nest keeplng her bables warm We were reheved to know that she was there because 1f she wasnt we mlght have had trouble look1ng at them They had already grovxn The mother d1d not haxe to do so much feedmg The father was around less and less The next vxeek end was much more eXc1t1ng My grandmother sald that the b1rds had fallen out of the nest and had flown away I went to see 1f she was teaslng me but she wasnt The nest was sure enough empty Thev had gone wav to bu1ld thelr own homes my grandmother sa1d Ex IL Du Cl Iss One My Klttens I have two k1ttens They tore my yarn mlttens They a1e fr1skv and gas But what wlll mother say 9 SL sAN 41 I LX Cllss Two 70 V ' I . I V . . I . . 7 ' . Y ' 7 ' - Y 'VV I h Y I 7. 7 . 7 ' Y - 7 - 7 ' . . n . I 7 n 7 . I . with the little birds. The next week-end my grandmother and I were ' . 1 4 v A ' 7 . . 7 7 - I 1 i .. 7 . . I Y ASSFC1 TWO TP RFF' AND FOI R ,- -1- ,. r v T E TRANSCRI T The Life of Ginger Y NAME rs Ginger I was born rn Bedford Kentucky on Decem ber 12 1945 Mx mother was the most loving affectionate mare I haxe ex er seen although I onlx knew her for the short period of tvxo months One dax when rt was snovxrng xery hard and the ground had a thrck coat of snow on rt Necolra as my mother was called was running rn the field when all of a sudden I heard a sharp crx from the other end of the field It was Necolra and I knew she was rn trouble I raced ox er as fast as I could Then I savx her lying on the ground still with shock I knew she had broken her leg Four men ran ox er to her wrth a gun Bx that time I was so frightened I couldnt stand up so I fell to mx knees I heard the gun go off and the men carried Necolra out of the field That was the last I exer saxv of mx mother I xx as xerx lonely wrthout Necolra and vtas afraid of anx one who came near me After fixe months of terror '1 xerx nice kind girl named Lxnn came to see me exerx dax After a while I came to know Lx nn verx xx ell I ex en ran to meet her when she came to see me When I was old enough to ride Lx nn was xerx patient xxrth me I will nex er forget the first dax she put a saddle on mx back and a brt rn mx mouth I was amazed but I was not afraid because I trusted her We became xery good friends and xxe haxe a lot of happy times together If rt hadn t been for Lx nn I strll might be lonelx SL mx C ru xr. Lllss Scxerr Mx dear Mrs Stout Is surely worn out Because she takes care Of more than her share A child runs here While one runs there One cries out While the others shout It seems their onlx fun Is to jump and run But she s strll a smiling one Ex en when her dax rs done SIS-XX XILLx C lrss Txxo 72 . . ' 7 A - 7 I ' 1, , , . . , . 7 a rf - 7 7 ' 7' 7 . . . - - . . 7 ' 7 .7 . . c, . . , . - , , ' 1 . . . , . . 7 . v . , . U , 7 Q . . . ' s 7 7 7 7 7 ' ' 7 ' 7 1 . y . 1 ' ' '. y . I C 7 47 I mf r 7 - 7 7 ' 7 7 I 7 ' ' . v Y 7 . y, . 7 I 1 lf ' ' ' 7 7 7 . 1 7 . . . . . . , ' 7 Y . N 7 , . 7 .7 5 . ' I 1 f Y 1 L Wm Y A 441' I , -1 I j v 1. 7 . . s I Y 7 ' , ' ' 5 v 7 ' A 'sir .Y A 4 7.- 1 V X58 UNF' XND L RE bl HOO F 1 The Stung Nose Once 1111011 a tlme 111e1e xx ai a 1111le beau He xxas xe1x 11u11Q1x T1111e xx as .1 1101 111xe 11ea1 He s111e111c1 1101111 011111 1 111 11111 xx ax He X119 151111 1111 111 9111 1115 1110 111111 1101111 111 11 H 1l1EC1 10 11111113 1111 1111 u XR s 1 1 e 1112- 1ee stung 11s 'IOSL 1 QIIL 1111 11111 H1 xx 1 11 11111111 11111 110111 1111 1111 lg I KHIXN 111 Bears Beane s1e1p IH 10g A11 x11111e1 111ey1111x 111e 111 V11 11111 1111 s1111x1 '111ex 11111 the S1111 NXN 1 My Story O111 111113111 211111 s110xxx 11111 1 1,01 111511 111 1311111111 111 1111 s1111xx 1 11111111 xx 1111 111 Q11 home O1 11161111 cl 5111111 man T11111 a 131113111 11111 11111e 111 me 1 xx a111ed 10 go .11111 bee M1 Sun S0 up 1110 s1111111a111 I 01111111111 T110 1101115 1a1e1 1 xx as 1111Q111g 111e11 110111 b6.11 1111111 11110 2111111111 111111e 10 1111 1111111 1Ju1 Su1111x J1 111 1ilC1xCC1 1111 110xx'11 1111 s111e1 111 S1ssx 1V1111111 1 11011se L11 s11e 11111 11111111215 011 1111 s1111s 11111 H111 1111 1 110 1111 11 1 mx 155 1111 SC111301 1111911 I xx 11k 1101111 1111111 50110111 I 11e1 111G1JILQ1CS 111111 11111 111111 I S1110 P11111 I 111113 B 1 111111 5 1 NXX 74 T H , T R A N S C R I 1 T ' 1 v X ' ,I ,, L. v - , - v' , 1 ' Q ' 1- 1 5 1 1 'z 2 ' 1.5 M 1 xx'11 151' 1 '1 '. e 1 1 111 1111 111.5 11,11 1111 . O 1 1 5 1' 1 . 51. H1 1d ef 1 '1. 1 'e11 1'ig1 1 2 '1 21 'aj 1 11111. 111 111111.-1 AI .111 Class 'I' 1' if .. K. , ' S ' 'gs f1 YH I A 1 nf '- ' v ' 1 X ,A AV. t S111 ' .'Xl.l.1fN C1111ss T111 3 1' L. . 1 . V 3- ' -1 ' Z v' 4- ' 5 h. V' ' ' Q 1 ' '1' ' ' ' . 1 A 11 'e T v Y 1 . H. . . 1 . xv A I X . v 1 ' 7 1 I v' - 1 1 ' 1 ' L - V Q . , . 1 X ' Y Y, X . ., , '. . T111 .' 1 zu j 5 . fi '1 1 21 11151 01' 1011 11111. 1 112ld ex '111 1. Q .'X1.1.1N C11 1 '1 'J 1 2 -1. 111 3' ' 101. S11 .1 111.111 Cf111ss '1'11'11 E TRANSCR The Flower Gofrden I am golng to moxe 1nto a new house I xxlll l1xe near mx glandmothel and I vxlll haxe .1 HOXXCI garden I wlll have 10595 and tuhps and sun flowers I hope My grandmother IS almost a flower god she lox es floxx els so much She has flowers everywhere and she IS gomg to glxe me a floxx er garden of mx own I wlll be able to walk OXCI to my QIHl1Cll'IlOlllE?1 s to tend mx garden She has the pxgttlest buck will vylth flowers beslde 1t SLLXNXL HIIXI Cllss Onc That blooms ln the Sprlngtlme It b11Hg,S memorles to g1rls and boxs To cheer them along the way Tnxm Xuox C l Iss Txx o The Anlmofls Chrlstmots At Chr1stmas tlme an1mals get ready for Chr1stmas too They ale aw fully busx If you go 1nto the forest x ou wlll see for yourself The squ1rrels wlll be huntmg for Chrlstmas tlees How about the F3blD1tS9 They w1ll be huntmg tor Chr1stmas trees too Soon Chrlstmas Exe w1ll come and all the amrnals w1ll be 1n bed wa1t1ng to hear Santas relndeer on the roof Then to sleep thex go and walt untll Cl1lN1StH13S to open the1r p1 esents Xxx SAND: ns C llss 'lxxo 76 T H I P T . 7 A L - v. I I 7 N 1 . y' . ,Y . , . K ' ' . 4 S ' L - I 1 s v 7 7 1 . . . . y 7 r I ' 4 rg 1 ' 'lk' Y 1 The sun is like a rosebud 1' T ' 1 ' v V 7 I ' A I 1 . . . . i 7 Q - H . 7 . . . . . . . . , . 7 I I ' I RC QVQYW SEQ, ,Jn N N 0 QB ! i 4 Z Q 26 -ox AOA f ? 1 Qfffwj 6' IC 'Q Q M y 0 To Q Ph Digg, OTITQ eJE,,-' ' Q 'gf 2 MX ' 'I x X, 63 , 5 Ib f -f I ff! A f ,1 4 -f 4-zl'T,, ff M' Q I 'jr S XM THE TRANSCRIPT The Senate The Senate 1S one member larger th1s year as we have asked the new Dance Club to be represented The most lmportant const1tut1ona1 act1on was the amendment of the lo1ter1ng rule It 1S now clearer and more exact Two new projects have been completed The Senate sold stuffed an1mals of the school colors Also a school scrap book has been begun We hope these projects w1ll be contlnued wlth as much success 1n future vears The Servlce Club HE SCHOOL sponsors many worthwh1le and servlceable act1v1t1es through the SSTVICG Club 'Ih1s year a Greek baby was adopted v1a Save The Ch1ldren Federatlon to take the place of dependent Leon as food and clothlng for the baby As members of the Junlor Red Cross we filled 72 Chr1stmas boxes A Kentucky school rece1ved Chr1strnas presents books and almost S1Xty dollars thanks to the w1ll1ngness of the students The Communltx Chest Drlve and other such eiforts were sponsored by the SEFVICG Club A new field of work has been oifered IH whlch varlous classes volunteer to serxe for a few hours a week IH such places as ch1ldrens hOSp1t3lS and homes fO1 the aged Money for these numerous act1v1t1es IS ralsed not only through the annual skatmg partv and moues but also through the eagerness and co operatlon of the entlre student body 78 H ' l ' 3, , - 7 t1ne Crockaert, who is now self-supporting. We supply such necessities ' 7 7 7 U 7 . . . - - l V . . , . 1 7. - . V . THE TRANSCRIPT The Glee Club Th1s year the Glee Club was composed of twenty members who rep resented every class 1n the Upper School They gave a program at Thanks glV11'1g and a month later sang several songs at the Chr1stmas program Last Aprll three soarlng first sopranos two happy medlum seconds and five deep rumbhng altos sk1pped happlly off to the Kentucky All State Chorus here 1n Lou1sv1lle and had a marvelous t1me s1ng1ng W1th many other h1gh school groups from all over the state The last program they sang was before the students and the1r parents on School Sunday Under Bonny Bonnycastle s leadershlp and Mlss Seelbach s 1ncessant enthusiasm patlence and understandlng the Glee Club has undoubtedly never had a more wonderful or enjoyable year -uh. Athletlc ASSOCIGIIOH HE ATHLETIC Assoc1at1on has carr1ed on the good works done last year to even better ach1evements thls year under the excellent lead crshlp of AIICG Atkms Wlth meetmgs at least once a month the ASSOLl3t1OH has tr1ed to gxve glrls engagmg 1n the dxfferent sports a certaln a1m by awardmg emblems to those who have shown co operat1on sklll and achlevement IH every sport at the end of the hockey season and the end or the year In order to pay for the emblems candy sales have been g1V6l1 very successfully and Colleg1ate stlckers and pennants have been sold MISS Verda our new athletlc dxrector has helped exceedmgly to make thls one of the best years for the Athletlc Assoclatlon 79 , , . . 7 1 v 7 7 , . . , . . a 7 7 ,N W at f sf Q Hi I 4 , l , . . . A ..... ' 7 1 . Y . - . . 3 , . . . , , ' Y 9 ' I THE TRANSCRIPT ' Drdmcxtlf' Club Mrs MHVIS McGhee who has appeared IH plavs at the Llttle Theatre and the Arts Club d1rected Letters to Lucerne as the annual pxoductlon of the club At the tryouts students were judged on volce ab1l1ty to read the part and su1tab1l1tv to character On Apr1l 20th the tender slncere plav was produced for an enthuslastlc audlence The Dance Club to be a colorful addltlon to the schools extracurrxcular act1x1t1es Th1s club was organlzed for mterest and partlclpatlon 1n modern dance The1r presldent represents them on the Senate The members have presented a concert based on the XHYIOUS sectlons of the dally newspaper Shortly after th1s performance Tudor Halls dance group came for a day of d1s CUSSIOD and work on dance technlques W1th the capable guldance of Mrs Rlchard Mahanes we expect to see many excell nt programs 1n future years 80 . . , V A . U . ' Cl 77 ,, ' 1 I v ' ' . . . . . , . , l . .1 ' 7 7 The Dance Club is a relatively new organization, but one which promises . . , . . V. . . 7 . . ' . 7 I 7 . , . U- I . I . , THE TRANSCRIPT Pcrndemonlum H1S YEAR the Pandemomum has been prlnted outslde of school for the first tlme IH 1tS hlstory Through the work of 1tS staif and the energy of 1tS leaders It has become a more attractlve more lnterestmg and 1n general a more readable pubhcatlon Money was ralsed bv the Sprmg Style Show held on Aprll 6 Th1s event has become an annual dellght and IS prepared and looked forward to for weeks Congratulatlons to the edrtors of Pandemomum for keeplng us up to date w1th thelr monthly rssue The Trcrnscrlpt shows to cotton candy Wlth PYIZGS and games m between Hard work beautlful autumn weather and a large enthuslastlc crowd made the falr a huge success In January we gave a party based on Fllms Food and Fun for the seventh through the twelfth grades The prlce of adrmsslon was of course a llterary art1cle All who came w1ll agree that everyone had a marvelous tlme and that It was well worth the wr1t1ng The Transcrlpt Board of 1950 51 has had a lot of fun puttmg th1s year book together and only hopes that you w1ll enjoy It as much as they have enjoyed presentrng lt to you Many thanks are due all those who have contrlbuted 1n any way to help make th1s Transcrlpt as wonderful as poss1ble 81 N OCTOBER the Transcript put on its annual fair, complete from dog x L .S X THE TRANSCRIPT The Blues The Blue Captam Encouraged by her ever ready smlle and unwaverlng Splflt the Blues have been led to many v1ctor1es and have been glven an 1I'1Sp1I'1I'1g example of sportsmansh1p ln defeats Jane Smlth w1ll always be llked and respected by both teams she Wlll nex er be forgotten by the Blues l-loclcey Team Basketball Team Janet Flynn Janet Flvnn Mary Amble Hutcherson 'Vlarv Amble Hutcherson Anne Hogue Anne Hogue Becky Wood Nleredlth Smy the Margaret Slmon Margaret Slmon Sally Spaldmg Sally Spaldmg Frances Cummms Frances Cummms Laur1e Wh1tley Nancy Creal Nancy Ackerly V1Yg1H13 Blckel Barbara Tway 84 Jane Smith Jane Smith V . 1 U V . 1 ' J 1 THE TRANSCRIPT The Go ds The Gold Captain Clara Pfeiffer a good sport and a better friend Because of her deter minatlon and Wonderful sp1r1t she has been one of the best captains the will always remember Clara and the many benefits they have gained from her capable leadership Hockey Team Basketball Team Clara Pfeiffer Clara Pfeiffer Ferris Lindenberger Ferris Llndenberger Eleanor Tarrant Gay Hilliard Nancy Rutledge Alice Atkins Mary Fitzhugh Mary Fitzhugh Ann Lindenberger Ann Lmdenberger Jane Miller Debby Newman CISSIS Pfeiffer CISSIQ Pfeiffer Helen Hammon Helen Hammon Patty Trost Sarah Slaughter Kak1 Booth Myra Warren Jan LeLaur1n 83 1 1 L Golds have ever had, inspiring sportsmanship from both teams. 'The Golds 5 1'-5' 1 A K -bd. w1Uh1n-pw' ,H Q7 :jp eww OSF In consider-ataon of fhe payment of Dollars The Trcznscnpt Loulsvnlle Coliegnate School hereby agrees to msert your page advertusement In its June l95 number Sohcuted by Payment Renewed Charged Termf. Full page S1200 One half page 6 so 008 fhnrd page 4 50 One 51 xfh page 2 E0 You are hereby authorized io mserl' our adverhsement m The Transcrzpt Lou xu Nc Colltg atc School to occupy page m the Tum l9b assue for whech we agree to pay 'Sngnature Terms Full page 1pl2 00 One half page 5 6 50 One Hurd page 4 50 One guxth page 50 Paymenf Rec. d Suhcnted by Chafged ses 1 can , ,195 Q . . 4 . , . A ---n - i .?-? qv- . -T - I 1 . I :A 1' 'i1-it I T4 I . . 1 -.ii . - i . - ' - -l 1- I -.-.i......i,.. A Y -.,,i-,N-i- Q 8 ' MLW M, M ununamrl Kam? 025215 ffm 11953 Whip. 5 Xb K 7k Ui O8C9'UC4,Cj ' :7Pffw-Qwffg-2nr.Q ia, 5f,a1nL,n ak ALA J GBA? fz.a.'J5fo.u.u.6Z5 u. V YWQQMM smzwf Vnssl mT1 R Q, STUPPY LELRURHEE: Q 4 W K ff u-mwwdbx Jpniixnmril Fw-wwhfwif' X .,.,,,'.,5f,., , 'Q SHORE' ew fgvwh k IRGQE. Y 1-A CVM! I YIU5 Bnfaanaossa MEHQIVWV af-ffwwfzgu-I-J :fir-5 yavgj du' it G Bran ima 7-'P mwq h'Jo.Xhm.flDaC1Q 0,1606 U-3604 M 1' 2 U 61. O 9 .gs -Xl 'go acl. 1 .10 .QQ ,gg C o . . w' ax ' ' ' . -LA, ' ' 1 -,A . 0 ' - .J 15 h I Vg ' .L Ulm o Hin? l 0 Q U6 H .KAFGHTET Kuff Q v if M E1 . C cv-is ' ' Q ,X 5 0u. c' Q . Uri dw ' x MW' ' LL, 'U 'm uslfrrmyg, A all er fi, l0VE. OU ,, 4. ' a v ack KG ' 2 88 Qvqin.cR-imdu-Qhuim-lk 72-5525 'wx the 'o-mvusa g5Qf4ff11Ma4a, AMAZUNS R61-mf-iii xii RQQH :ia Qaeda rx sw PHUQG? ww Qing he P285 BM mai' ,AT E ipglglngmi Qi ww L?f717Z2727Lf QE! Ho Lax BLUE 'U r AVQQNA b gg ' ' QP Q wx, as 00 0 x 515 - , N Q If ,gl 5 'V' oo X7 5' 'ce' ' 4 ' ' Q ,s I . . ' 'B NC ' '? Qf55 of-f ' 1 1 I ' K 1 1 Dem Ke. 4 ll s 58 W I . as , , n 1 W T xhl , fm, 90 655911 si 1 'f Rf , f,eN'o Q 00 I gc 0 o 0 0 0 M uri-Am.m'f.4.,4v.n -li-G' .U Com9limF.nTs OF - , .o.. ,X 'A .fs . . 0 - 0 - gxf?-fiLv'q'-'Q-.-lfg1'6S-i4pv,:5,-:L . 8 E TRANSCRIPT lumopeprsdn .HD 91,11 ul dm IUSUI lrq HOINHI ITD Sql ul dm U0 I I L Pamwmizv These Advortisol THE TRANSCRIPT Comphmente, THE 8TH GRADE 91 of use Putmuize Those Acivcrtisc-1' THE TRANSCRIPT DRESSES - COATS - HATS SPORTSWEAR - ACCESSORIES jemuf .Emi umm 640 SOUTH FOURTH AVENUE 92 I O O Please Patronize These Advertisers i BRGWN Sz WILLIAMSCDN TCDBACCCD CCDRP Compliments 0 ' THE TRANSCRIPT Comphments THE COWAN BUCK SI-IGP 94 of PlL lSL I '1t1'onim- The-sc Adx'L1'1i.m1's THE TRANSCRIPT EQUITABLE FEDERAL SAVINGS CS LGAN ASSQCIATIQN Incorporated ..,if y+ S, APPRGVED INVESTMENT FOR TRIJST FUNDS AND FIDUCIARIES CLRRENT YIELD 3 NET Each account lnsured to a rnaxlmum S10 000 00 Federal SHVIHQS Sa Loan Insurance Corp 604 W JEFFERSON STREET LOLISVILLE KY JA 0991 J y r L 1 i . . of , . by , . Please P: t'o1.ize- 'I'he-sc :xxCIVL'I'IIrL'I'f f 5 THE TRAINSCPIIT Comphmeutb DELPI-HC LITERARY SQCIETY QC of I I u w 1 I lill' min '1ms- Adv His I SPALDING LAUNDRY Sz DRY FLEANING C 1' Y 5 of THE TRANSCRIPT YOU LL LOVE THIS COMFORTABLE HANDSEWN MOC Wlth or wlthout buckle In black brown green or red And with that wonderful flexlble sole Bend V X Double em up And watch them return to thenr ortgmal shape Use Your Regular Charge Account gwwa 4 BOOTERIE 633V2 S 4th Plewse Patromze These Advertxsers 98 Y I I , 0 em , rg -' f W, o Twlst 'em ', J ixtg' , 5 '1i-'J ' 1.. f ' '- . 'W .1 NL. H Q N-Q. ..,. wi, f K . . THE TRANSCRIPT Compliments of JAN . . . VICKI . . . MARK JACkson 2618 0 55' LOUISVILLE 99 from lqllltfi PNEBILESG. Please Put1'o1zize These Advertise 'S THE TRANSCRIPT Comphments IEFPERSQN MEAT MARKET IN A HURRY REMEMBER T 501.05 IP 100 of 5 . - N T P1 P't' '. Tl: Ad 1i Q 'I' II I-I 'I' II A N S C' I? I I' 'I' Cwmplimcui s of A FRIEND PFEIFPER 61 PFEIFFER GENER XL INSLP XNCE Stlrlxs Bld CL x J 01 IUI , Y 1 Y I v I . L Li . 1 A 1 V . -. . 2 '. g. L11 .III I'lf,-zwv I':111'rm1m- 'I'I1n-sv :XCIX'f'l'IIb - 'S THE TRANSCRIPT Luck of The Ir1sh to You' Donegal cmd Berlqore BARQN S APPLIANCES Incorporated ADMIRAL TELEVISION AND REFRIGERATORS Phone cLay 1332 962 BAXTER AT HIGHLAND Samuel Baron Pres Lou1sx111e 4 Kx 102 I Please Patrouize These Advertisers THE TRANSCRIPT WKLO YOUR ABC STATION 1080 On Your Dial BOARDMAN STANDARD SERVICE STATION Zom and Rner Road ATLAS TIRES BATTERIES AND ACCESSORIES TAX101 9104 10 . ' , , Y . 0 T - Pla-use I'ut1'm1izL- Tin-su ACiVL'l'T.1S','l'S 35 THE TRANSCRIPT But Vhshu Flum WUVIPRY BICKEL MADRID GARAGE PD AND c LTHRIE S11NOH171H Bmkgs Pap med W ISIHIIQ Lulu IL mmm OPILIN 04 HOL RS Q Arxutl 10-1 ,. Y' . ,. . 7 - IJ R, v , v 'J I I as ' 'Q ' Frfmt End VVo1'k Storage 1 1 L 3 Pl ,Luc Pz111'm1ix0 'l'l1L-sv . 1' 'sn-Vs 'I' II E 'I' R A N S C' II I P 'I' IOXI' mn KISSIS UNCLE BEN ZIPPII PINC IJINIDI I S PI' 'NILII S PI XS GEC G FETTER CQMPANY Qomplctf. Ofhu Outfitters LOLISVILLE I KENT LCICX IU ' 1 x ' 1 w ' 4' 3 ' A I x I 1 I , L. 1- - 1 -III? XY. Main St. JAcksrm T131 - 1 , - - - - 7 y I .xsv II.II.1'rr!.Ih' 'I1I1l's .'XrIX'-1'I1:I fr I THE TRANSCRIPT Comphmcnts A FRIEND Remember, When You re Downtown at Mealtlme Thele are two Blue Boars to sen e 5 ou 644 S Fouxth and 410 W Walnut Dellclous Southern style food plepared the Wa5 you l1ke It and modest Luncheon on xour next shopplng trlp BLUE BOAR CAFETERIA CO Incorporated 644 S Fourth 410 VV VValnut Plel c Patlomlc The c AdXL1t1SClS 106 of prices that will fit your budget like a glove. Meet your friends for . O . as 2 ' 5 H' ' ' THE TRANSCRIPT Compliments Compliments of of A FRIEND A FRIEND HIGHLAND KNIT SHOP 1022 Bardstown Road Phone Hlghland 6606 Compllments A FRIEND 107 of Please Pzxtronize These Advcrtis 's THE TRANSCRIPT Compliments TOUR of 'CRAZY FARM' A FRIEND Comphme-ms MAXWELL ALLEN PAUL BQLUS BARBER SHOP HATS BY ALBERTA Colony Wax Next to St Matthews Tllangle A Sz P Palkmg Lot Men Women cmd Chxlchen 3738 Flankfolt Axe Halrcuta Spcudltx TAX 101 8482 108 of - V v , - ' ,- A K A 1 V . 1 . Please Pzxtrcmixv The-sc :XdYUl'liSL'I'S 'IHL TRXNSCRIPT COYNIJl1INLIll H J SCHEIRICILI CO Kltchgn md Dlndte A FLIIUIILIIL Phone CHer0kee -1621 LOUIS M Wlll1Dg6I WILLINGER S SERVICE GENERAL REPAIR WORK Wllldld Batterles Luber Fmer Fllters 7209 T lxlorsulle Ro 1d LOUlSVlllG 0 Ky VOLK CLEANERS Compliments SPECIAI OINL DAY SEPVICE Plant and Ofllce L ILIAS CQURTNEX 5707 F1 znklmt Axe SCHOOL OF DANCE Telephone TAxlo1 -l e P Adx lse IOJ , i S ' ' 3 Z A X X - ' - x X h .Q . . , I L' il' 'l ' Z I A -, . . x W Guaranteed Free Moth proofmng T - of J ' l 1 1 - x J V 'L L. 'L ' ' ' ' . -1 I t' '2 31 Pleas utmnize These . 'Crt' rs I THE TRANSCRIPT Compliments H. L. GARRETTS of A ERlEND MARKET Compliments THE SIGN QE THE PINE TREE FRENCH BEAUTY SHOP Sewmg SUPPIIQS -170 Maitm Brow n Bldg St Matthews Sewing Center JA 8356 Hai pei Treatments Anna V Blackburn H111 Tintlng Facials known lie it and Cold xx ix es Pl ist Pitionize These Admins 110 of BE 1212 3924 Westport Road Dobro, Radio and all nationally carl 2' ' '. 'A'C1'5 THE TRANSCRIPT FAHEY SERVICE STATION Compliments Brow nsboro Rd 8: Crescent x TA 9237 A FRIEND Compllmems ALMQND CCDCDKE B10 1dWay Chulolet 114 Webt Bmxdwxdx New Nanz and Neuner C0 Inc JGHIX VVILLIAVIS 86 CO Flow ers For All Occasmns Ynud Goods Dxessmakexs Fmdmgs Notlons 3023A Flankfmt Axe BE 2681 LOLIISXIHG 7 Kx St M lIALhf,XNS K Pls Q P txomze The Q 'xxdXQltl 111 V . ot of ' E 1 7 ' X P- rw 1 Q vi v ' V Y Q, n . C V 4 1-11 Breckinridge Lane BE 2-112 Q . Q A y. Aus Q1 ' ' 5 . '-' SQYS THE TRANSCRIPT 1 Compliments 4 of MEN S SHOP A FRIEND S909 Flankfolt Axe TA 30-11 TAx1O1 8921 FRANK U GOHMANN PHARMACIST Frankfort Ave and Vernon LOu15x111e Kx THRIPT FOOD MARKET NAVES 100 C165CeDI AXE Beauty Salgn Quahtx Foods at Lou GI Prlces Phone JA 0681 Home 9 30 to 3 GIOLQIIGS Fresh IVIL its Xegetiblcs 633, 5 Foumh Smut WE DELIVER 200 Bunhgnn Bld P Cl e P IIIUIIIIK The Adxutl Q1 112 . I 1 v Q v '- Q. c . . 0 . T , . , . ,1 ' . ' V . , v - C . 1 Y .1 ., - . ' C ' . 0 , .Q . . , 1' 1 1 1 1 - Y , 1 n 5. X. xi -, L xp y ' 'Nl , . 1 . 1' 3 KJ' ,,. las z ' 'J -so 'S 's THE TRANSCRIPT Good Food at Compliments Colonial Cottage Restaurant 1061 BH1Clb1OXXl1 Rd A YOUNG S FOR BFTTER FOODS .Znd and lVI1gnol11 Z Free Dellx C1108 Dfulx 'J Phones MAQnol1a 1870 THE CASUAL SHQP Motor Parts Depot 1103 Bzndstoxxn Road Bmok 81 Jacob SUQEWS H1gl1l311Cl -1089 Lou15x1lle 3 KX Phone CLax 1646 Plea Q 13111011116 The AcxQ1t1 Ll 113 ' - of I .J ' ' a 'e . . .' Qi' Womens and Girls' Sports 1Vea1' YOL11' NAPA Jobber' 1' Ase 1'-' THE TRANSCRIPT FRANKEL-KLAPHEKE DRUG CO. Compliments Incorporated of TAylor 2545 2546 A FRIEND St Matthews KV PAUL SEMONIN CO REAL ESTATE Starks Bulldlng JAckson 2375 ROPPEL S MARKET 3 Phones Tax lor 1734 ANDREW KRAUS 85 SON Qualltx JGVV6l1b Buds Eye Frosted Foods Jewelry and Watch Repalllng GIOCSFIGS and Meats BEADS RESTRUNG Fl esh Dressed Poultrj, FI3l1lifO1t and Cannon Lane 6291!2 S 4th St 4th Floor Loulsxllle 6 Kx Please Pltlonlze These Adx 91115615 114 1 ' 403 Theatre Bldg., Louisville 2, Ky THE TRANSCRIPT compiimems of VOGUE BEAUTY SHOP 1827 Bardstown Rd Compliments of A FRIEND WEINBERGER S Serxing the Cornmunitx for 30 Years Standaid O11 Seixice EDVK ARD L SCHWARTZ 3616 Bron nsboro Road Louisxiiie Kentuckx Gas Oil Greases Phone TAX lor 9983 Compliments ORALEA S COOKIE JAR TAxior 1923 P 1 c Pitionme The L -Xclxciti Lis J I 4 V 4 7' 4 ' ' of 3 Tires Tubes Batteries Y y . f A K -J lczsl 1' ' THE TRANSCRIPT IVY'S MORRISONS ' l FGGD MARKET Ladies Appare Shop 1105 Rav Avo 19-10 Harvard Drive III LOUISXIIIG U Kx DGLFINGER S FINE CHINA GLASS AND SILVER Saunders Repxoducuon Furmture Shop DELL PATRICK IIIISIIOIS 1311 Baldstoxx I1 Pold ROAD SERVICE TERRY S QTGYEICOQ SERVICE TAX 101 9717 .3800 Lexlngton Road Tues Blttolles NVWSIIIII Pohsh mg, Lubxmatlon ACCGSSOIIGS xll Tel. A .7510 f C, U I ' 7 f E ' ' I 2 . . A . ' ', E ' c ' I - IIIghland 6447 ' fy ' -A To P11-also I':1lr'm1iz0 'I'l1osu Ad 'v' isa-rs 116 THE TRANSCRIPT Compliments Compliments of of THE ST. lVIATTHElVS PFEFFERS BAKERY KNIT SHOP Compliments A l7RlEND GARY S rummunh 3l5VK'1llacc Axe St Matthews KX Tmuswau linens bltnkee Hind quilted down 'ind TAxloi 9710 xxool comfoite Vie haxe Wationillx Adxeitised Gitts -Xc iti ll of - 7 . X v i vf v ' - 1 3 C I C 1 ' J-'- ..Y ,, L ' Z., ,,.'. '. Merchandise 'it 'i Po ular Price. , , C L p Colony Way 5929A Franktrurt Ave Please Pzitmnize These . ive' 'sers T THE TRANSCRIPT Congratulations and Good Luck SCOTTY'S FOOD MARKET SENIORSI Brownsboro Road JAN1 and ARTIE Comphments Horace Allen Ir Comphments Comphments T T0 S gl TEENS LA REE BEAUTY SALON H Y The Ouse of Outh 2009 Bonnycastle Hlghland 6637 Hlghland 5618 Baldstovxn Rd at Boom Qdbtlo 118 of , . of of 44 77 7 -I P7 Please Putronize These Advertisers T HE TRANSCRIPT Compliments of A FRIEND Compliments of PLEHN'S BAKERY St Matthews Phones JA 4294 5 6 7 Barret Ave 8z Chrlsty STBOI-IM S MARKET FINEST GRCERIES COUNTRY HAMS MEATS 85 VEGETABLES CAPONS DUCKS FRYERS GUINEAS SQUABS Sz TURKEYS Comphments Ashbury Berman Drug Co Prescmptlon Spec1a11st VAN S MEN S SHOP of St Matthews 2112 Bardstown Rd TAv1or 3630 3639 Reg INO 2925 Hlghland 7216 Ta11o1mg 119 , - - - Q I 7 5 7 3 I 7 of 7 7 V - . . l Please Patronize These Advertise '
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