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Page 30 text:
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Senior C ass Legend ( Continued) days shoud be ended. But as a class, our spirit was one of fellowship and harmony as we planned to reach high achievements during the second half,” and as we planned for our personal lives and goals during our last two years of college. After the summer vacation of 1933, about seventy members of the class re- turned to the campus in September to enact the important roles in all college activities during their junior year. At this point in our career, we were joined by some forty or fifty transfer students who entered in the junior class. These men joined in all the class and campus activities and several of them won cam- pus honors during their two years here. When they joined us, we said Wel- come!” At the end of our careers, they Everett Irl Howell Lula, Mississippi Editor Freshman Edition of Collegian, i ; General Secretary B. Y. P. U., 2; Fellow in Physics, 4; Three-Year Club. James Shirlee Hutchinson .... Ruleville, Mississippi Sunflower Junior College, 1, 2; Glee Club, 3; Band, 3, 4. Hollis Hinds Kelly Burns, Mississippi Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Honor Council, 3; Secretary-Treasurer M Club, 3; M Club, 2, 3, 4; Presi- dent Class, 3; Pre-Med Club, 4; Vice-President Class, 4; Secretary Honor Council, 3; Captain Basketball, 4; Chemistry Fellow, 4. SENIORS Ray Franklin Koonce Grenada, Mississippi Dramatic Club, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 3; Literary Editor Tribesman, 4; Secretary-Treasurer Dramatic Club, 4; President Sunday School Class, 3; Executive Council, 4; Associate Director-General B. Y. P. U., 4. Page twenty-six
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Page 29 text:
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Marlee Gordon Drew, Mississippi Football, i, 2, 3, 4; M Club, 3, 4; Track, 1, 2, 3; Honor Council, 4; Executive Council, 3 ; Most Deserving Student, 3. 4. Charles Pate Gunter Jackson, Mississippi Copiah-Lincoln Junior College, 1, 2; Band, 3, 4; Glee Club, 3, 4; Music Club, 3, 4; Jazz Orchestra, 3; President Glee Club, 4; College Quartette, 3, 4. SENIORS tfi Poxey Hall, Jr Columbia, Mississippi Philomathean, 1, 2, 3, 4; Philomathean Attorney, 2, 3; Collegian Staff, 1, 2, 3; Assistant Business Manager Collegian, 3; Distribution Manager Collegian, 2; Debating Council, 4; Pre-Law Club, 2, 3; Baseball, 1. Zachary Taylor Hederman Jackson, Mississippi President Student Body, 4; Assistant Business Manager Tribesman, 3; Business Manager, Tribesman, 4; Assistant Manager Football, 3; Man- ager Football, 4; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Captain Track, 4; President Class, 1; Reporter Class, 2; Secre tary-Treasurer Class, 3; Executive Council, 1, 4; Chairman Executive Council, 4; Honor Council, 1, 4; Vice- Chairman Honor Council, 4; Median Council, 1, 4-; Vice-Chairman Median Council, 4; Athletic Council 4; Glee Club, 1; Pre-Law Club, 1, 2; Hermenian Literary Society, 2, 4; M Club, 3, 4; Most Popular Student, 4; Most Promising Senior, 4; Most Influential Student, 4; Most Courteous Student, 3, 4; Best All Round Student, 4; Distinction. Senior Ql ass Legend ( Continued) hand at stunt nights and various cele- brations with his Bands, Square Dances, and Newsite Follies. In May of 1933, the sophomores put on their annual campus reception. All the flower of chivalry was in bloom again and many a maiden found the young Southern gentleman quite irre- sistible at this gay affair. Everyone had a lovely time, as, to put it in the ver- nacular, we put on the dog.” With the second semester examina- tions, the halfway mark of the history of the class was reached. Members looked back over two years of college life with mingled emotions of pride and desire to better their achievements, and to reach their goals in life on the cam- pus, and to make preparation toward reaching their life’s goal when college h Page twenty -foe
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Page 31 text:
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Rudolph Erick Larson Raymond, Mississippi Ministerial Association, i, 2, 3, 4. CAe • SENIORS Charles Leroy Lewis . Neshoba, Mississippi Hermenian, 1, 2, 3, 4; Anniversary Staff, 2, 3 ; B. S. U. Council, 2, 3, 4; Vice-President B. S. U. Council, 4; Dramatic Club, 1, 2; Bar Asso- ciation, 2, 3, 4; Assistant Manager Basketball, 2, 3; Head Manager Basketball, 4; Social Science Fellow, 4; Chairman Honor Council, 4; President Class, 4. ifi Henry Eager Love Hattiesburg, Mississippi State Teachers College, 1, 2; Glee Club, 3, 4; Quartette, 3, 4; Dra- matic Club, 3, 4; Music Club, 4. Archie Lee McCormick Rose Hill, Mississippi Philomathean, 1; Clarke College, 2; International Relations Club, 4. Senior Class Legend ( Continued) are just as great friends to us as those with whom we worked throughout the four years. The junior athletes were the main- stays of the athletic teams throughout the 1933-34 session and in all sports showed the promise of excellent play- ing which they have fulfilled as seniors in 1934-35. Football, basketball, and baseball teams depended upon the jun- iors for fully half their positions, and the members of the class of ’35 won honor for themselves in every appear- ance on the gridiron, on the court, the turf, the track, and the diamond. The juniors began to train them- selves for the positions they would hold in their last year by working at such posts as assistant editors and business managers of the Tribesman” and Col- legian,” vice-presidents of musical or- Page twenty-seven
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