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Page 30 text:
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gastory of the Glass of Q5 EARLY four years ago - in 1932 - one hundred and nine Freshmen entered Cvia the rear doorj Mt. Healthy High School. At first, of course, they were ridiculed and taken advantage of by the upper class- men, but as the season progressed there appeared on the freshman horizon, students of outstanding ability, both scholastic and athletic. They won the intramural basketball championship, and four boys made the regular basketball team, six, the soccer team, and six, the baseball. As sophomores, they still retained their place in the sun. There were ninety-seven of them, twenty-four of whom were on at least one of the athletic teams. Several mem- bers of the class helped to make up the glee choruses and the orchestra. Six sophomores entered the Hamilton County Scholarship Contest, with Thomas Austing and Carl Engleman proving themselves especially worthy of this honor. There were eighty-three left to organize the Junior class. This was the first year class officers had been elected, but all arrangements went smoothly, and at the end of the year the Juniors entertained with a Junior-Senior Prom. That year they were better represented in all activities than ever before. This year there are sixty-six Seniors, the largest class ever to be graduated from Mt. Healthy High. They have always tried to do their best for M. H. H. S., and as they go out into life, may they never forget the knowledge and spirit of fair play gained here. Twenty sw
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Page 29 text:
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Twenty- five JOSEPH DEIFEL New Burlington Although joe seems rather a quiet chap, we have found that he is well able to relish a joke and rejoice at fun . Then too, he does not neglect his books. CLAUDE MEYERS E Springdale Claude is an agreeable young man, always ready to share the difhculties of his friends and to lend assistance. His cheerful spirit and sociable nature have won for him a desirable place in the esteem of his fellows. . WILLIAM MCGEE Q - TYL -e' Springdale We have found Bill to be a very likeable person with a most ingratiating smile. Ordinarily he has little to say, being satisfied to spend his eifort in thinking. Because of his spirit of self-reliance, Bill seems certain to succeed. RAYMOND PACKER1' 7?CMM l Mt. Healthy Basketball, 3, 4. Baseball, 3. Soccer, 2. Hi-Y, 4. During his four years at high school, Ray has often worn the Red and Black proudly and to the satisfaction of the student body. Somewhere he ac- quired the motto Fair and Square and he tries to live up to it. GEORGE H. PopP d? Glen' Chorus. I Mt Healthy S A In his junior year, George entered M. H. . ., coming from Wfestern Hills. He soon found a place in the chorus and by his good nature, has won many friends. ALBERT TRIPPEL ' Ml. Healthy Al is a person who never has any trouble so far as the other fellow knows. This is a splendid trait which we hope he will always possess. GORDON WERNZ 5 Mt. Healthy W. When you see a fellow hurrying through the corridor, you will probably be right in guessing it is Wernz, for he seems always in a rush. However, he takes time to do the things which are expected of him, and that is what counts.
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Page 31 text:
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C9ur girst Qrade First Row Qleft to rightj: Burdsall, Fehrman, W'olf, Heiszl, Nott, Seheidt, Stout, Packer, Cossaboom, Wernz, Schibe, Hochscheid. Second Row: Hcnschen, Meyers, Young, Schwarz, Scheidt, Murray, Klenk, Mertz, Knox, Wfhitton, Mor- ris, Reisinger, Weber, Ritz, Urban, Asbury, Gerand, Smith, Schmalz. Third Row: Miss White, Keeling, Graybill, Bax, Girty, Ruff, Craig, Schibe, Robinson, Steiner. Fourth Row: Case, Walters, Davis, Smyth, Ruehrwein, Ferdon, Duvall, Schultz, Hornung, Bailey, Taylor, Bailey, Abbott, Miss Hoop. N this group there are twenty-two boys and girls who have been fortunate enough to remain together during the entire twelve years in the Mt. Healthy Schools. They are: Louis Fehrman, Earl Wolf, John Heisel, Raymond Packer, Ewing Cossaboom, Howard Hochscheid, Hazel Meyers, Robert Schwarz, Rosella Klenk, William Morris, Robert Ritz, Lorine Urban, Marjorie Asbury, Virgil Keeling, Marian Bax, Wyatt Davis, Pauline Smyth, Marian Ruehrwein, Marilee Duvall, Betty Schultz, and Ruby Hornung. Since the entrance of these boys and girls into Mt. Healthy High School, they have been joined by students from various districts. In this their senior year, they will be graduated as the largest class ever to leave Mt. Healthy High School. Twenty-sever:
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