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Page 10 text:
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The Early Worm was the play chosen by Miss Ruth Corley's class. Included in the cast were James Kirkman, Phyl- lis Kling, Mary Thorson, Bill Vezain, Richard Shute, and Rosalie Gambo. Thanksgiving recess-and the turkeys wer'n't the only things stuffed by the 26th. What we were wondering was where all those identical vases came from in the play UNellie McNabb , which starred Mary Ann Gass, Patte Burr, Isabelle Irrgang, Ken Anderson and LeMoyne Grude. Hear tell the cast practiced right up to curtain time. All the boys ate lipstick that night. And didn't Patte Burr's cigarette make a lot of smoke backstage? A'Slip Ahoy , another of Miss Isabelle Sanders, plays, called for uniforms, as it took place in a barracks at Great Lakes. An all-male cast composed of Dale Rowlee, Dick Eichelkraut, Norman Sampson, Earl Riebe, Glenn Wiley, Vernon Drews, Dick Knott, Harold Mc- Cormick, Bill Shaw, Wen Anderson, Fred Johnson, Fred Tress, John Baietto, Dick Zuege, Bill Pierson, Ken Anderson, Jack Armstrong, George Chandellier, Bob Donahue, LeMoyne Grude, Paul Sheedy, Harry Troup, Don Clemens, and Darrell Shawback put on a realistic performance. To compensate, ten girls put on 'tWhat are You Going to Wear?,', a completely feminine play. In a variety of costumes were Joyce Pyle, Adele Barron, Marge Hilpipre, Mary Lou Moran, Shirley Brun- dage, Elda Johnson, Phyllis, Stevenson, Mary O'Connell, Peggy Pool, and Jean Cavanaugh, who gave out with a light bit of comedy. Peggy Pool, by the way, received an 'topening night telegram . Sugar and Spice , just like its title, was both sweet and tart. Taking the parts were Jane Gay, Jack Baietto, Hildegarde Fosse, Barbara Peck, and Bill Pierson. One of the most unusual plays of the evening was The Boor , starring Glen Wiley, Dick Eichelkraut, and Virginia Roose, all of whom did an excellent piece of acting. DECEMBER -The band came back from the festival at Dixon singing Three O'clock in the Morning , thanks to two blowouts. -Opening of the basketball season with La Salle here. Remember the sudden and unexpected appearance of the benches in the pas- sageway? They are conducive to study -but what kind? -Pointers for conduct on the road were given out by Sgt. Berlin, of the state police, and for days after the stock reply of the humorists was, I'm a fence post . -Seniors elect Clem Clemens, presi- dent, Phyl Stevenson, vice-president, Bill Pierson, secretary, and Dick Zuege, treasurer.
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Page 9 text:
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he sighted the two girl sports reporters from the Mendota high school paper. Another point for woman suffrage! -Johnny Suehr elected captain of the '46 football squad. -Remember the day the Home Ec club initiates romped around the cafeteria in pigtails tied with green ribbons, sans makeup? They were formally received into the club at a picnic at Buffalo Rock in the evening. NOVEMBER -The Junior Red Cross began its annual membership drive. One of the JRC projects that occasioned much student interest was the afghan knitted by the students in Mrs. Hen- trich's home room. The Mooseheart game was called off be- cause of the polio threat. -The Civic Council reorganizes under the supervision of Mr. Willy. At the football picnic Mac , Pork , and Weisbrock-three babes in the woods-got lost. Mr. Hankenson ended up with a Charley horse, which every- body maintains was inflicted by the cheerleaders who were showing the varsity how to play football. -During National Education week many downtown store windows featured ex- hibits from OHS clubs and classes. We chose the history exhibit picture as a reminder that this school year saw the publication of Mr. Burke's book, The Ladder of History , written in collabo- ration with Upton Close. All the freshmen were on their best be- havior at the Council tea. The first time the student body has ever left the auditorium in anything less than a stampede was when Otto Schacht asked them to. Gilbert Love appointed head basketball coach. The Hep Squad commences-too bad they had such a short life. We noted Jack Armstrong's promotion to captain in the play There's One in Every Company . Other members of the cast included Mike Balint, now of the U.S.N., Ralph Hoyt, Bill Ullrich, Bob Lattimore, Louis Ohlendorf and Clarion Johnson. A three-part comedy, Will You Marry Me? , demonstrating the differences in proposals during different periods, was ably cast. The 1800's were pictured by Evaline Lewis, Margaret Ulrich, Ed- ward Smalley and Doris Madden. The Victorians were Ruth Bradish, Reba Nelson, Francis Withrow and Blanche Gagliardo. The moderns included Grace Coffey, Darlene Clark, and Felix Norman. The third play put on by Mrs. Dorothy Rotter's senior English classes was 'tEverything Nice , and the cast con- tained Wayne Harvey, Jean McLean, Helen Bennington, Virginia Roose, Mar- jorie Werner, Lorraine Corcoran, and John Highland.
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Page 11 text:
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-Eyes popped when Dot Chase and Adele Barron turned up at the Retailers party with two former Dixon athletes. -The week before Christmas was very gay, except for those victims of the flu epidemic and the Christmas extras who were all dragged out. Among the fes- tive touches were the Art clubys Christ- mas window in the front door, and the Christmas assembly, at which the glee clubs sang and Chaplain Merrill Powers spoke. -Our first peacetime Christmas in four years. JANUARY -The floor was slickg the music was goodg the decorations were Ucute at the Senior dance, but too many must have been recuperating from the Sub-Deb and other New Year's Eve parties the night before. -Afraid to miss the science trip to Chi- cago, twenty-five boys almost trampled the nine girls in their hasty attempt to get on the bus. -No test in physiography. Marilyn Weise, Cheryl Barton, and Gloris Atkinson really made the Strea- tor fans gasp with their acrobatics be- tween the halves of the basketball game. -The football boys felt themselves amply rewarded after the Lions club banquet. The yearbook staff' finally managed to sponsor the first all-school dance of the year. EXAMS-need we say more. And with the beginning of the second semester the Navy returns Mr. McKay and the Army gives back Mr. Propps to OHS service. -The seniors want to know where the freshman girls got that professional technique as demonstrated at the Hori- zon club's Hanwacipi dance. FEBRUARY Batavia, a newcomer to the OHS basket- ball schedule, takes an easy one from the Bucs. The Speech club returns to existence under Miss Heidingerls direction, and work is begun on contestants for the speech contests. If Mexico is as Chuck Ingold, Virginia Roose and Colleen Reilly demonstrated it in their Hoor show at the Ningun Chicle dance, no wonder Miss Mess re- turns to Mexico periodically. -With Kirby Todd as ringmaster , the Civic Council's t'Hard Times party real- ly went over with a bang. Why? Even the male walliiowers got away from the wall. -No school, thanks to Mr. Lincoln. The basketball squad played on empty tummies at De Kalb, due to a delay en route-blowout, to you.
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