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Page 108 text:
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litifivr if ' Honor Requirements 1. Highest Honor Roll-E in 4 solids or equivalent. 2. General Honor Roll-No grade below M, with 3 E's in solids or no grade below S, with 2 E's in solids. 3. Attendance Honor Roll-No absences or tardies. NoT12: Gym Grades count only in quantity of work. A passing grade meets quality requirelnent. What Highest Honors Means to Me Iivncvx Louise RIERCHANT Xfvllili is the meaning of E's achieved you ask? I answer, Effort to complete a task, Endeavor, Experience, and Evaluation In viewing the vivid vistas of Education: Gleams, varied and rich. of the noble past- Culture the artists have created to last, In music, words, color, and marble- castg Gleams of the present that teach one to think and feel That give one poise with the problems of life to deal: Gleams of the future with dreams of soul for the goal Of service, sympathy. and duty whole. Wliat to me is the meaning of an E ? The Excellence of a faculty supreme Wliose inspiration l shall e'er esteem, VVliose counsel a guiding star to me will be. To Northeast Junior High, all loyalty! What Highest Honors Means to Me HENRIETTA BoNAvn3z To be 011 the highest honor roll in Northeast Junior High School does not mean that I am exceptionaly brilliant or gifted, nor that I am a child of luck. All things seemed to have worked together to instill in me a desire for study. I believe that my love for books dates back to my great-grandfather, the Duke of Buckingham, who was an accomplished student at Oxford, and who came to America tired of court life. Here he lived by his literary genius, and perhaps I may have inherited something from him. My parents, both college graduates, have always expected high grades from me and have given me every opportunity to get them. But the greater credit is due to my teachers, each of whom has coached me with marvelous patience. My schooling has extended over many states, starting at the age of six, in Marys- ville, Kansasg then to Omaha, Nebraska, my birthpaceg on to Denver, Coloradog thence to Kansas Cityg back to Denverg and again in Missouri. I have traveled as far east as the Atlantic Ocean, visiting my relatives in Penn- sylvania and New York. I have also been in St. Paul and Minneapolis and have seen the immense wheat farms of North Dakota. Our vacations have been spent in Wyom- ing, over tl1e Great Divide in Colorado, and in the famous Missouri Ozarks. This may have given me a larger and broader experience which has aided my studies. I never anticipated receiving scholarship honors and have probably not yet re- alized what they shall mean to me. I am very grateful to my teachers who this year have contributed so much to my progress. l lffa Ninety-four Q o o o Q E zap Aa Azfigmfzw nw my I
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Page 109 text:
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:xref if 319' X g - efzvi l Honor Scholarship Pupils f:1'l'.l'l Row: Bonavicz, Henrietta Bigbce, Donald Bohier, Milton Bloclgett, Evelyn Campbell, Athaliene Ellis, Ralph Fields, Frances Fox, Anna Griffith. Geraldine Bark Row: Rnshllailm, Pcicmzrriv, Newton, llfcrchauf, Bobier, Yo-img. Svrmnl limo: lldfcclmv, Ccmwfvbcll, NItll1lGIlj', Fox, Primzzi, l'Vz'-iser. Ellis, lfVaIlafc', Bonazrics, Polfcr, Pugh, Offer, Sharp. Highest Honor Roll McAfee, Merrillee Merchant, Evelyn General Honor Roll Means, Lynn McClean, Vera Newton, Esther Nnnnelley, Anna Frances Orter, Kathryn Petersen, Dorothy Potter, Virginia Primm, Marguerite Pugh, Mildred Sharp, Andrew Stanley, Eleanor Summers, Edna Mae Waite, Lucille Wallace, Dorothy Weiser, Dan Young, Arthur Lira-1:11.11 forzh 4Qfigq5x5w fm ,ov 6x..ow-4 Ninety-five
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