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Page 27 text:
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— Cittle Genre
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Page 28 text:
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Class Prophecy Our life has three phases: past, present and future. The past, with all its happiness, tri- als and troubles, is behind us. The present is with us. But the future is yet to come. That is what concerns us most now. The other nightI hada dreamin which Isaw everyone as he may be years from now. There were severalcities, andin each one a member of the graduating class had become famous. In Washington, D. C. I saw Rita Lamb worrying about a lot of figures, as only the Treasurer of the United States can. Then the White House came into view, and, as presidents will go, there sat the newly elected President of the United States, Dewey Hardin. Againthe scene chang- ed, but this timetoa laboratory, where Webster Sawyer, a famous scientist, was working over his chemicals. In the Senate stood Elvin Hopkins, where naturally a big debate was g oing on. Next came the city of New York, a radio station, and Byron Farlow, M. C. of his new radio show, ''Stop the Noise! ’ In another studio several people were rehearsing the N. B. C. Hit Parade. Paul Perry lead the orchestra, and Rosalie Johnson and Harold Wall sang the hit songs of the day. Inafashion show just beginning, Bobbie Ann Pugh came down the center aisle wear- ing a beautiful evening gown. She wasmodeling inthe very exclusive shop of Betty Davis. Next, the Metropolitan Opera crossed the scene; Leonard Johnson, thefamoustenor, sang the concert music written by none other than John Marsh. Inanother building Ruth Presnell sat behind her glass-topped desk, writing articlesfor The Saturday Evening Post, while Bouneve Farlow painted the illustrations. Elizabeth Redding-was the hostess of the. Statler Hotel, where Mary Ann Highfill, the National Women's Golf Champion, had just-arrived. Then I seemed to skip half way across the nation for the next city, Chicago. Kathleen Stan- ton lived there with her husband. Frances Traille was in the convent to become a nun. Another skip and this time to Hollywood. At the studio of M. G. M. Earl Redding, the chief cameraman, was getting ready to shoot a picture in which SESE Holland was the star. On the next set Lloyd Cox wa s taking the place of Roy Rogers as ''King of the Cowboys . Then across the ocean to England I went. There Billy Gill, the King's jester, made the king laugh, as he was supposed to do. Then back to the good old U. S. A. again. Gwen Plummer is in Mississippi with her hus- band, who is a General in the Air Force. Raleigh is next on the list. Pat Underwood andher husbandare living in this city with their daughter, who incidentally, looks just like Pat. Leroy Darity is at State College coaching the boys' basketball team. Dorothy Jarrett is still busy with her secretarial duties, as she is the confidential secretary of Governor Billy McClintoch. Elizabeth Byrd is at Woman's College in Greensboro teaching. Peggy Hill is at Wesley Long Hospital specializing in brain surgery. Next is the telephone office, and Jewel Sheppard in her role as chief operator. Peggy Allred is a special nurse at the new High Point Hospital. I've come back to the old hometown, Randleman. There goes a rich bachelor down Main Street in his Cadillac. He is Irvin Coltrane. Then I saw Edward Redding, the sheriff of Randolph County, chasing a gang of notorious robbers. He has enlisted the help of Tommy Myers, the town detective, to find the ringleader of the gang. Frances Harris, Tommy's secretary, has been a great help to him, too. There comes Franklin Hunsucker, bringing milk to Hinshaw's Ice Cream Plant, owned by Ernest Hinshaw. Mary Reitzel was coming down the street with her husband, a minister. Then I hired a taxi to take me out to the Randleman High School. The driver was Page Jones. Jack Coble, the principal, met us at the door and offered to show me around the new school. First, we visited the Home Economics Department, where Elizabeth Wiles was trying in vain to teach some boys to cook. Betty Jo Pugh was teaching piano to a dirty, freckle-faced boy. Margaret Routh was coaching the girls' basketballteam. Bynum Adams was teaching Agricul- ture, while Nancy Ridge was struggling with the third grade. That seemed to be all the people who came back to R. H. S. So then I went back to the main part of town. At the Randleman Dry Cleaners I found the co-owners Eugene Heath and Donald Allred, those two inseparables.
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