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Page 32 text:
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LESLIE ALEXANDER is defy-' ing the laws of heaven and of earth in his perpetual motion airplane in which, by the aid of the fourth dimension, he makes trips to Mars. Huving been graduated from a correspondence school of dune ing. DOROTHY ANDERSON is tlu leading dancer of the age. Is it possible? Hasn't some wily woman got him yet? No. RALPH ANDREAS, the perennial bachelor, is still free and playing Romeo” off stage. Here in an original calline: LAURA BECKSTROM is doing a thriving business as barber, shaving the trophie? of the head-hunters of Borneo. OLGA BERGGREN has written a book. “How Alike Are the Americans and Norwegians.” thereby proving the great difference between the two peoples. Y'our beloved classmate, IRENE BERQUIST, is internationally known as the composer of sublime organ music. Here 1 see that INEZ ALLARD has let her affection for the greater sex run so far that she is even now engaged in raising a whole farm of bachelor but- - W Helpful EINEZ ANDERSON is lending her sweet voice tc the teaching of voice culture to her flock of singing parrots. ELDON ANGEL has done almost the impossible; following in the trail of Mr. Y'oung. Eldon has become the liberal-minded professor at the New Marshall. Because of her fondness for basketball, MARGARET BEN-SON is sending a large portion of her fortune to the New Marshall in order that the girls may have freo access to all athletic contests; she expects this action to do away with the most common alibi which is used as an excuse not to attend the games. NORMAN BERNIER is easily holding his place as sheik of the Hottentots of Chicago. I see kind hearted LOIS BET-LACH as the efficient, though sentimental chairwoman of the society for the protection of decrepit cats. She would! Page Twenty-six
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Page 31 text:
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- 1 1926 CLASS OFFICERS THE JUNE CLASS Four long years ago, so it seems, some one hundred and thirty scrambling, enterprising freshmen entered Marshall. They were Marshall's first freshmen, the class of 1928. In their earnest desire to get to class quickly, they often collided with mighty seniors, who heaped abuse on their poor, little heads. As sophomores they did not dash quite so madly in their search for knowledge. They felt as though they knew ever so much and that it didn’t really matter whether they went to school any longer or not. They became juniors. Now, indeed, did they blossom out in their new raiment and become prominent in athletics, in music, and in service to Marshall. As juniors they organized and really became the Class of 1928. They ordered class rings and pins and displayed them proudly. Then, they were seniors! The leaders of the school! Their days were filled with bustling activity. They now reorganized and elected their present class officers. As seniors they shone in many ways. Many of them became envied members of the National Honor Society. Ella Halverson and Dorothy Nelson led their classmates in scholarship. Walter Mork, Jack McCulloch, Jerry Thune, Joe Burris, Herbert Keller, and Frank Kammerlohr contributed much to the school’s athletics. Bonnie Bristow and Elizabeth Rudesill excelled in girls' sports. In dramatics, Kendrick Wilson, Annie Emily Shipley, and Doris McDonell surpassed all others. Irene Berquist received honorable mention in several original music contests. In literature, Don Peterson and Doris Janzig excelled. As an interviewer and as Editor-in-Chief of The Judge Catherine Quigley won a name for herself. In art, Dorothy Nelson and Carl Perlstrom showed talent. And so did the June Class of 1928 become Marshall’s first real graduating class. Page Tuenly-five
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Page 33 text:
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Now listen to this: EVELYN BOLSTAD—you know Evelyn —who is devoting her sweet young life to the care of her dog, Verbella, which she maintains is a direct descendant of the famous Flora, is elated after winning her first blue ribbon. With great success DON BUCHER has taken over America's best correspondence school of public speaking. SUSAN CEDERSTROM has achieved the desire of her school days in marrying a farmer; she is busy helping her husband, the lucky Howard Schultz, churn butter and milk cows. It is with utmost pleasure, apparently, that GENEVIEVE CONNERY favors the world daily in the Tribune ’ by means of her column of excellent advice to those helplessly in love. It is rumored that the silent partner is Dick Williams. FLORENCE COON is busily engaged in restoring the moose and elk to Northern Minnesota. Little originality herself! EVELYN CRANE is starting a new fad by her amazing device whereby women's hair assumes the color of their frocks. BONNIE BRISTOW, who, you will remember, was so good as to save the Girls Club from certain destruction, has won a prize for receiving the largest contribution in her Salvation Army pot at Christmas time. Well! Well! JOE BURRIS turned out to be quite the cavalier; he is a devil with the fairer sex at the University of Mississippi. GORDON CHAMPION is now engaged in Haltering the socially high personages of Minneapolis in his photographic studio which he has just opened. With her sweet simplicity, affability. and bashful modestv, HELEN ALICE COOK is setting a unique and worthy example for the younger generation. I see that ELSIE CRAGG is the matron of Devil’s Island, the inhabitants of which are all deported convicts; she is said to have reformed many murderers to better ways. It seems a pity that RUTH CUT LER. such a promising young architect, should fall into the arms of a handsome film hero and elope with him. Page Twenty-seven
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