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Page 29 text:
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79 S- Duc! I-281 Brorkmun Melia Marks hlumek Kuelling 'Tnnnleliff Clark Loaeli Honorary Senior Senior Senior Sophomore Junioi Faptaln In-ir: Fnrwarr 'en r orwar Gi ard Fnrwa min s vc min s 57 mi f 1 I l ite F d 1 I lit lil 11L Opt It T3 puill Baigsfgaff Basketball is to the winter season what football is to the fall, an activity which develops the participants, creates school spirit, and enter- tains the public. The season is welcomed by both students and towns people. One or two home games every Week for several weeks. What fun! The Ord students pack the east section of bleacher seats while the visitors and home fans fill the west section. The band arranges it- self on the stage, Wilma, Harold, and Charlotte find handy front seats in the cheering sectiong officials get settled at their tables, the handsome score board is put in order-and we are ready for an evening of thrills and excitement. No, the stage isn't quite set, for the picture isn't com- plete until the Girl Reserve-Hi-Y candy table is placed in its position by the door. What will the preliminary be? A Junior High game, a second team game, or both? One gets his money's worth when he goes to an Ord game for he always sees two matches, and often three. And the be- tween-halves demonstrations, alone, are worth the price of admission. The boys' and girls' gym classes from Grade School to High School take their turns in entertaining with folk dancing, pyramid buildings, tumb- ling stunts, and volley ball. The teams hardly have time to get off the floor before the gym folks are on it with their mats, nets, or other equip- ment. The spectators cheer, laugh, exclaim, even gasp, but always ap- preciate the evidence of the fine work that is being done as a regular part of our physical education program. The band, here as in football, plays an important part. Sometimes only a part of the band is represented, occasionally the Hi-Y band fur- nishes the music, but when the game is a very special one the whole band is out in full uniform supporting and supplementing the cheering sec- tion. The l935 graduating class took several of Ord's championship fel- lows and the veterans of last season, Clark, Tunnicliff, Adamek, Marks, and Blessing, along with less experienced men, worked hard to follow in the footsteps of the 1935 Loup Valley Champions. Although St. Paul
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Page 28 text:
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-- Uganficfaam KM imtsfz Events RED AND WHITE BANQUET The first of the winter events is the Red and White Banquet, Decem- ber 4, sponsored by Miss Crouch and the Cheer Leaders in honor of the Loup Valley Championship football team. The banqueters haven't a chance to forget the purpose of the occasion for footballs grace the cen- ters of the tables while pairs of white candles and red crepe paper form miniature goal posts. The band plays pep music during the meal, be- tween courses Dorothy Auble, Ruth Auble, and Mary Beranek play tap- dance football, an Virginia Sack sings a football solo. Evelyne Loft as toastmaster introduces the speakers who play an imaginary game of foot- ball from kick-off to touch-down. Those who pass words, rather than balls are Coach Brockman, Assistant Coach Cowel, John Misko, Jess Kovanda, Dean Marks, and Dale Melia. Ruth Koupal and Dr. Blessing. ANNUAL CHRISTMAS PROGRAM From Thanksgiving until Christmas strains of Christmas carols can be heard throughout the building as the musical organizations rehearse for their part in the all-school Christmas program. When the night of December 19 arrives the girls' glee club is found seated on built-up seats in the front of the auditorium while the boys' club is seated on a sec- tion of the bleachers to make room for the capacity crowd which always comes out for this occasion. After the playlet, i'The Lost Merry Christ- masf produced by the Junior High Students, the glee clubs present their part of the entertainment. The impressive and colorful play, Why the Chimes Rang, based on the beautiful old legend climaxes the program. The main characters of the play were Mildred Waldman, Vera Severns, Paul Carlsen, Barbara Dale, Ronald Rose, and Armona Beth Achen. CARNIVAL Ever since the carnival of 1934 the question has been asked and re- asked, Can't we have another carnival? At last the answer is yes, we need money to finance the annual, and the date is set for February 14. Word spreads throughout the school and the frolic begins advertising itself. Classes get busy and nominate their candidates for King and Queen of the Carnivalg the committee makes plans and orders suppliesg students save pen- ' nies and talk carnival. Everything but the weather promises a highly successful activity. The fourteenth is a day of feverish activ- ity. By five-thirty the Carnival Company has moved in and Dull Care has moved out. Bed- lam breaks loose, carnival band, noise makers. and hawkers all competing for attention. Amateurs perform, puppets come to life, as- piring young athletes wrestle, staid business men try their hands at games of skill. When one sees his favorite King or Queen lagging behind, he puts his hand in his pocket, brings out a quarter and buys another half-dozen tickets. At eleven all gather in the auditor- ium to see Allen Zikmund and Evelyn Kokes crowned King and Queen of the carnival. Midnight finds cluttered halls and con- fetti strewn floors-but there is one hundred ninety-five dollars in the cash till. 36 1271
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Page 30 text:
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e Cwanficfsal won the coveted honor and trophy for the 1936 season, the Chanticleers made a splendid record. In the regular schedule of games Ord suffered defeat at the hands of only two of the neighboring towns, St. Paul and Bow. It was hardly expected that we could win from Hastings and Kearney, and although Hastings found us easy, the Kearney game was close and well fought. The Chanticleers lost the Loup Valley Champion- ship to St. Paul by only three points, but lost to Lexington in the Class A tournament at North Platte by sixteen points. A mere glance at the following 1936 basketball schedule shows that there is more than one way of spelling Champions , ORD HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Date tml Score Umummewit S4 url- lilnrm' December l5 51 Hui-we-ll 12 H141 December 20 25 E1-ivson 5' 11:11 January I! lil Sl. I':xul :If ln-41 January T 24N Snmrvnul Il Sara-nts .Ianuary 10 Sill Ib.1i11wL-lwng lil mul January IT ili Scotia 233 Urfl .lanlnry 21 321 Imup Pity 111 41111 .l:1nu:l1'y 21 21 Kvurlwy Zll lvrfl .'anil'l1'y Nl lil liuu-nnzl In ll Iva-nnzl Fs1b1'l1'x ry l 321 .X Vwirllex 21 Urwl Feln'l11u'y T 10 ll :Minus ll ll lstinpgs Felwriiziry ll 15 R1-nlavyu lil-W If lnwl LOUP VALLEY TOURNAMENT Fe-ln-nfux x Z2 lil Swrul-nl ll .NW-lfllil l-'L-ln-um x 'li IU SZ I' :nl li! .Nw-:uliu 14X-lmrlvlli IEP .Xa-r.,fIi.u IR .Xu-,ullu CLASS A TOURNAMENT lXlll'c'h 03 23 I.:-xi'lu74nl ll Nu I'l:ll!0 Girl ,CTW Icwvvl llnskvll Zulkoski llln-ssiuu Hllgrlu-s Karla Fnrlsn-n 'Xssistant Junior Solvlxonmre ll-ntvx' Snnhmnme .l unior Student ioach Gu xrfl I4'o1'w:11 nl Hom:1'u1'y lin tml F.:rwz1x'cl M'xn'1g:e1' 25 points 17 points V311-lain 350 IHHHIS 12 ll0iHlS 10,1 pt-:nts 36 291
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