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Page 31 text:
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Page 32 text:
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CLASS HISTORY The Senior Tribe of 1954 has gathered its braves over a period of years from many different places. Before our great tribe was organized, we had two groups of little papooses in training. In the Central Tepee, among those who began training early for a place in our tribe were Judy jackson, Jane Edgett, Roger Sherman, Lucille Thompson, and Wilma Volles. At the same time in the Rockwell Tepee, Emily Clark, Frances Colway, Peter Gasparini, James Field, Mary Jones, Janet Kimpel, Robert Keyes, Ronald Gates, and Charles Bottum were commencing their tribal careers. For eight glorious years these two groups blazed new trails of progress and accomplish- ment while gathering along the way new members who helped to make our tribe a noted one. Some of those adopted by the tribe of the Rockwell Tepee were Donald Ingerson, Richard Parton, Genevieve Peterson, Susan Shields, Ethel Miller, and Shirley Ouderkirk. At the Central Tepee the clan now consisted of such new members as Thomas Yotmg, Kenneth Finlay, Gay Whalen, Sally Luchsinger, joan Murphy, Beverly Isgar, Marjorie Hahn, and Richard Karb. Finally the Rockwell and the Central tribes were prepared to band together to begin their new adventure in high school. During the Freshmen year our tribe was led by the guiding spirit of two Chief Advisors, Mr. Gaylord and Miss Knights. As our tribal leaders we selected Carl Heck, president, Eugene Karb, vice-president, Marion Isbell, secretary, and Richard Parton, treasurer. The one event which highlighted the tribal activities of the year was the production of an Arthur Godfrey Talent Show' which proved both successful and entertaining to the participants,as well as to the audi- CDCC. With George Covert and Janet Mullen as newly-adopted braves, the Sophomore tribe held its powwows in the cafeteria. This time we chose as our Council of Chiefs: president, Carl Heck, vice-president, Gay Whaleng secretary, Jeanette Newtong and treasurer, Richard Perry. Miss Glasser was Chief advisor and peacemaker of the clan. Throughout the entire year we were pri- marily concerned with enjoying our school activities to the fullest extent possible, and so we did at a good old-fashioned Christmas party where all the braves willingly related legends of heroic deeds performed by their fathers. The idea of making wampum had not yet occurred to us, but before long we became an enterprising tribe whose sole purpose was to augment the tribal treas- ury. Once again in our junior year we called the clan together in the cafeteria where Miss Glasser continued to assume the role of Chief advisor. The tribal leaders for this notable year were Carl Heck, presidentg Nancy Mara, vice-presidentg Genevieve Peterson, secretaryg and Judy jackson, treasurer. A momentous project was then inaugurated as we proceeded to collect wam- pum for the Big Powwow in New York City. Cooperation was the keynote of our success in such business ventures as selling popcorn, soda pop and apples at our football and basketball games. In addition, two other projects, a paper drive and an Alumni Banquet, contributed to the contin- uously mounting wealth of our junior tribe. However, let us emphasize that we, the junior Braves, did not approve of all work and no play as was evidenced by our Junior-Senior Prom,
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