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Page 10 text:
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Evelyn Wicks hiodesty is color of virtue.H Member of Glee Club. rlans to work as a Beauty Operator. Robert Bowman Paul Nailor This lad is always gay and always hasa word to say. Outstanding player on Basket-ball team. Clara Mae Bell Laboring towards dis- Her hair is light tant aims sets the mi nd Her eyes are blue in a higher Key, and Her aims are high puts us at our best. Her ideals true . Char 1 otte Fr' ankl in Donald Beers Youth comes but once -'what meet delight, a in fi lifetime- quiet life affords. Af'-UW11 Staff and Sta' Nut brown hair and tic staff. P18113 TDt8.K6 eyes of blue, up Beauty Culture . Jewell Lintner Be merry if you are wise. Basket-ball-Fast guard in the game withawin- ning spirit and attiuie. Itwill probably be house- keeping after this year . Ernest Sasse Speech is great, but silence is greater. Ernest is quiet and sincere, Meets 1ife's'troubles without a tear. Kathryn Mayhorn Patience and gentle- ness is power. Tall and slender with light hair, blue eyes. Interested in boys.
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Page 9 text:
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William Moods nSuccess isooming up to the level of' our bestl' Played on sccondtean of Basket-bill. Inter- ested in Agriculture. Wilma Rinehart HThe talent of suc- cess is nothing more than doing what you do well.W Annual Staff and Static Staff. Interested in Commercial Jork. Mary Strayer Hxsunny personality with a big heart E match.H Basxet-ball forward deserving of comment. Housewife is her am- bition. William Barton HOne can't always be a hero, but one can df ways be a man.u Guard on basket-ball team, was fast and a continuous player. In- terested in teaching. Leo Armbruster nEither I will find a way or I will make one.H On Static Staff. In- terested in science. Elanstogo to college. Mary Jane Reid nTis quality mm quan- tity that counts.n In basket-ball she played guard and was always there on the spot. She is interested in teaching. Junior Black WShort in stature and itw a ghi.he's after.W Joe was a classy fav ward in basket-ball and could handle the ball with great accuracy. won popularity contest. Grace Beers HA merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance.n Gra.ce's work as for - ward is outstanding. .lon beauty contest. Interested in being a housewife. Merlin Hinkle uStudy is vexation not to be mixed with education.W Center kxbasket-ball and high scorer in df most every game. Annu Staff andStatic Staff.
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Page 11 text:
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n vifwlweumwd- v THE CLASS PICTURE I hesitated when I was asked to prepare this picture of the Class of 1935 for your inspection. I was not an artist, and everybody knew it. Any of my teachers could tell you that I was never especially proficient in drawing any- thing--except attention--and could never paint anything successfully--not even my own'face. Besides, the Class of 1955 is a very lively subject for even an expert to attempt to sketch. They are never any of them twice alike, nor apt to be found twice in the same place or position. Just ask Evelyn wicks, be- cause she can tell you all about the different positions. Even a snap-shot could never catch them in anything better than a blur. Besides, I am only one person of decidedly individual opinions, and could look at my classmates thru my own eyes only. I cannot see them as they see themselves, nor even as you might see them if you might stand for a time in my position, and be able to look at them from my point of view. But, as it seems my fate to be expected to hold the mirror up before these seventeen boys and girls that power that would as I can only paint them in them. This, then, dear who have been my classmates for so long and be to them Burns says, NThe Giftie gie us see oursel's as ithers see us.N such words as appear to me to express them as I see friends, is the Class of 1935, as I see it today:--CI To am sure you will pardon the exact measurements, as I would make a better car- penter than I would an artist, and have always been very fond of mathematical statistics. I speak in figuresn The Class of 1935 is made up of seventeen members--eight boys and nine girls. We range in age from Robert Bowman's sweet sixteen years, six months four days to Junior B1ack's nineteen years, five months and ten days. Ie range in height from Mary Jane's five feet and four inches--medium heels, bright colored beret--to Merlin Hinkle's six feet and three inches, with or without his silk stockings. We range in weight from Grace Beers's one hun- dred and eight pounds Cfeather-brains and allb to Merlin Hinkle's one hun- dred and sixty five pounds. Taken altogether as one in body,as we are supposed to be in spirit, we make up an individual of sufficient age to know a great deal, if he's ever going to 1earn,for he would be two hundred and eighty-nine years old--surely an age of wisdom and power, and dignity, verging upon veneration. Our height is eighty-eight feet and ninety-nine inches which certainly raises us far enough up in the world to allow us to tower above our enemies and look down upon the inferior undergraduates. You can see, too, what a heavy proposition we are by thexfact that to Grace Beers's dainty and thirty-nine pounds. the same either with or cusation,and we do-not taken altogether, and even giving due consideration figure, we tip the scales at exactly two thousand Some one has libelously hinted that this weight is without Grace, but we think this is hardly a fair ac- expect any of you to give it any consideration. Our hand is certainly large enough to get a good firm grasp upon the affairs of the world, as well as upon our own individual concerns, for we wear a one hun- dred and thirty two size glove. Our head is of sufficient capacity to hold even the vast amount of knowledge we have been cramming into it for the past four years, for we require a hat that measures seventy and five-twelfths. And if we do not make the success in life that we desire and expect, it will surely not be because we cannot gain a foothold upon the world's battleground, by way of our colossal understanding, for we wear a No. 106 shoe. This is the Class of 1935 in her big moments. Then even her class picture has to be taken on the installment plan. But we have not at all times such a mighty sense of our vastness. Sometimes our pride sinks to a mere average ca- pacity, and Miss Smith assures us we have a splendid capacity for averages. We have been cital of the The girls it is a case investigating this line, too, but will not bore you with a re- resultant statistics. are all Merry Widows, except Grace Beers and the girls wonder if of coming events casting their shadows before that make so many boys envy her. We are all American, for though we may be descended from many different nationalities, we are all united under the red, white and blue of the Star
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