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Page 32 text:
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Senior Qiass Legend ( Continued) ganizations, and by holding important offices in other campus organizations, such as the B. S. U., the Dramatic Club, the Bar Association, and the Pre-Med Club. Especially were the juniors and trans- fers active in the Literary Societies, the class of 1935 having the largest per- centage of members of any class in those organizations. Nelson, Fagan, White and several other juniors were reliable members of the debating team for their last three years. Juniors played promi- nent roles in the Dramatic Club, and junior co-eds won much distinction in that organization. The class was well represented in the Ministerial Associa- tion, and our classmates did some valua- ble work in that field of our college training. Others training to be lawyers, William Woodrow McKnight .... Stewart, Mississippi Candidate for B.A. Degree. Roland McPhearson Clinton, Mississippi Football, i; Basketball, i, 2, 3, 4; Tennis, 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1; Chemistry Club, 1, 2. bfi John Lafayette Magee, Jr. . . . Brookhaven, Mississippi Band, 1, 2, 4; B. S. U. Council, 4; Director B. T. U., 4; International Relations Club, 4; Physics Fellow, 4; Secretary Music Club, 4; Three- Year Club. C lie • SENIORS Robert William Martin, Jr Clinton, Mississippi Ministerial Association, 1, 2, 3, 4; B. S. U. Council, 4; Biology Fel- low, 3, 4. Page twenty-eight
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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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Page 33 text:
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John Oates Massey Bay Springs, Mississippi Band, i, 2, 3, 4; Pre-Med Club, 3, 4. Andrew Eugene May Newton, Mississippi Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4. SENIORS Charles Ellington Middleton . . . Clinton, Mississippi Sunflower Junior College, 1; Delta State Teachers College, 2; Band, 3. Leger James Morgan Prentiss, Mississippi Band, 1, 2; Hermenian, 2, 3; International Relations Club, 3; Col- legian Staff, 1, 2, 3, 4; Editor Collegian, 4. Senior Class Legend ( Continued) doctors, and scientists, were highly valu- able to their respective clubs. Randle, Paul Farr, and Downing headed the list of juniors in the then exclusi ve Music Club. Hollis Hot” Kelly was elected pres- ident of our class for 1933-34, and made a valuable leader in all phases of our college work. Alfred Habeeb, an- other junior, was head cheer leader for the session, and others gave faithful serv- ice from being assistant managers of athletic teams to being good waiters in the dining hall. In January, 1934, the Choctaw war drums were muffled in salute to one of the bravest warriors ever to fight for his tribe. Tragedy stalked on our campus when James Monroe Lee, of the class of 1935, died in a Jackson hospital after a serious operation for blood-poisoning. t a 9 e twenty-nine
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