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Page 15 text:
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5K1 ninG X5'nb-Gf'F1nAr-Gf'X1i'-dn'ii X0-4Q.v- -cn 'nib' nv-4' 5'-mb-'F ' ab- QE1 wif QB!! MEM' 4.15, ' 45-, ,-5' ,gy ,155 5, fmwl my My ' my i f my R 1E N 0 Q A H I wwf agp my ' my 6 ww 3 -an . .un-f.-e,4-chff.e,1-Gw.- new -dv, .-as-.. ., .-ff:-, .-fn. -ch- in unfolding and another year had to pass before they fertilized, but most of you. under the hoe of your favorite teacher. Mr. Taylor, looked ahead, longing for the fulfillment of your dreams for knowledge. Your buds became blossoms and the color of your dominant characteristics changed with the unfolding of the larger bloom-bright red, the color of warmth and light. Then came autumn. Leaves have their times to fall and flowers to wither, and the autumn of your days came as soon as you were ready. Very brilliant was your foliage that year, very rich your fruitage, as the little bud of the FRESHMAN year, grown into the flowers of SOPHOMORE development, became the richer, more necessary, and more satisfying fruit of autumn. You went in your most brilliant foliage and full regalia of JUNIORS to the Junior-Senior banquet. You supplied most of the members of the Athletic Associa- tion in that year. That year you also had the distinction of making the Daisy Chain for the Senior Class of You had your first class rings which you displayed with great satisfaction. It was indeed the harvest of all early planting-the reaping of the results of all dreams, lgopes and efforts. The glow of your radiant knowledge flushed the whole year with the mellowness of sunset splendor. But even as this stage passed on into eternityg the fruit was all gathered and stored away within your memories and with snows of all the past in hoary wisdom upon your head, you welcome the approach of winter and your SENIOR year. The flowers had long ago decayed, and the seeds of a new life were stored away beneath the soil of your understanding. ready at the call of the coming spring to put forth their new shoots and push forth into the new world. Rugged in your young man- hood and womanhood, clad in spotless snow and frost protecting the yet immature germs of developing life from the blighting atmosphere, you now stand at the end of your course. The SENIOR year was indeed a busy year in your history. This year a new teacher joined the faculty ranks. This teacher, Mr. Leggette, did umch to make that year a memorial one. He organized a Dramatic Club which had three success- ful public performances. John Oliver's initiative and originality were developed a great deal this year with the help of Mr. Leggette. John gave several plays written by himself in that year, which were very successful. A high school orchestra in which your SENIOR class was well represented, was also organized under the talented direction of Mr. Leggette. In that year the Junior class gave a very de- lightful Junior-Senior banquet, which, of course, was enjoyed by all. In the middle of the year, the Journalistic Club started in full force with Walter 'Whitsett as editor and Elizabeth Mason as reporter for the Senior class. Your graduation seems a sadder time than you expected. The world outside is cold. You know not what to expect from its bleak, bare atmosphere, but you must never forget that tomorrow you will enter into a renewal of life in a glad, bright, glorious, new Springtime-Freshmen in life's school-as green and fresh again ever you were in school. You must face the seasons of life and as the new year in your life dawns- Be Thou the Rainbo-ac to the Storms of Life. Frank J. Wliitteniore, III, Class Historiaiz. G if -fb. 3f'f'iFf'nir- iffps-dh 'X' dr- ab. 2 ff- -fb. 9 ab- 'P X-f' ab- Q 'ski' 151- -'Er 51 .151 .51-' mar' 151' N 1 W I ' W' l W I t W Il Q 3 5 W W I . wi . W1 1 9 I osx, elff5'ss f'elffN 3x,,Q0a'30C1xf'e,04fN 'GN 1s,,f'g'GN ,s,4 Qwfil as., Q KfN.ns,Jb 15
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Page 14 text:
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-fb- 5: my nib' if-.Abs -wif -dna,-f'--A, ,br ,,,b,. v- a -ea,Q,,a't-X. 51 15: dh Q 5- 151 151 3 was ggi vyl my yy Q W1 y wig! up v xy: -.-ms. .wh-,C vvffbf- .-ax 0CfNy ,rK1T4v .-ff:-1 Claxss HIS'l'CDltX' -As told by Father Time Life is a full-blown year. YVith all things in their season: Thus in your school career. Rach change hath rhyme and reason: The seasons come and go Hach with its gifts in hand, That you may see and know How well all life is plannedf, Four years ago on the fifth of September. nineteen hundred and thirty-one. about one hundred children entered Reidsville High School for the quest of knowledge. I may compare this beginning to the spring-the time all green and growing things are fresh and verdant in their newness. What more fitting than that in this time of life. you as FRESHM HN entered high school! Many were the mistakes that you made as you wandered listlessly through these halls trying to find the teachers who taught those bugaboos called Latin and Algebrag how many of you found your- self in utter consternation when it came to choosing the course of knowledge to pursue. As I passed through the hall on that bright September morn, exactly twelve minutes after the bell had run. I heard twelve year old ivalter ivhitsett inquiring in characteristic lingo, YVlgere in this world do I find that teacher of foreign language? I have looked all over the building and all the teachers look like Americans to lllt'.H However, he located the Latin teacher in due tilne and became a star student in the course. His talent in art resulted in excellent posters in that work. The FRESHMAN Latin Classes took an active part in the Christmas pageant, which was given entirely in Latin. Iilsie Marston. Louise Sharp, and Ethel Gregory showed unusual talent and Latin Club. After patient direction by your splendid teachers, timid little souls, very green originality in planning programs for the and sweet in dewy innocence, began to receive the first seeds of knowledge and felt the first pull of the plow and the cultivator in this spring of your career. Even timid little Guy Chaney who had always played with girls and had been thought of as Mothers baby boy began to blossom into a real I reshman. He actually threw a spitball one day when the teacher wasn't looking. That year your class was introduced to such clubs as, Literary Society, Latin Club. Mother's Club, and Hi-Y Club. Quite a number reported for football and basketball. Several seeds such as .loc Hooper and Pete Truitt didn't fertilize that year but waited a year or so. The March winds and April showers were yery nciessary to the budding of the shoots of knowledge in the lf'It.l'lSHMAN mind. for they brought forth an abundance of May flowersg and summer time came upon you almost before you knew it. so delightfully did the one season blend into the other. You were SOPHOMORHS. The skies were much bluer and the sun shone more warmly upon you. The flowers unfolded little by little. Slowly but surely you came out into the light of day. Again, other little buds, such as 'KSquat Garner and Monk Brame were slow f My my 1 my W1 my W1 xg-ip W1 .-rn.. .uh-. .-an -an -am. .-ms.. .ul-w1...f.-GNN. U 12 3,- fl W' A9 -mb-, ex v0G304,z
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Page 16 text:
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ab- f..b.G'rs+.4,. auf'-ab. 51 45 1:51 5 may E, 51 vw my ,A xw W1 W1 1 , my- xy: an-, A441-,Xe,,.-:fa-. .-cw,.,, .-cm 'A -cfs. .-as ' '-mini ' ' 5511 my . -fm BE THOU THE RAINBO -xb- 1157 WW 1 ,MTN .A1 rainlmrc' is a pcrfcci flzing By rclriclz a man can plan llis Ziff, For c'zfcr'1f lzuc can sinful for virtues Tlzaf will last lllflillgll foil and strife. There are times in each existence lvhen work and sacrifice, trouhle, despair, Gloomy shadows, darkened pathways, Loss of faith-seem everywhere! And then quickly, as it descended, Gone are gloom and toil and strife, Because to one this creed was given, Be thou the rainbow to tl1e storms of life.' Perchance a wanderer, dazed, hewildered, Starting toward l1e knew not what, Heard a voice from unknown places Talking directly to his heart- A voice that hy Heaven was given the power To guide a man through gloomy night By advice, which wisely counseled Be thou the rainbow to the storms of life. This wanderer had ust completed VVhat he thought had him prepared For every crisis, grave or Simple, But alas, he was not spared The pain that comes with cruel experience, A teacher of the great and small, Experience, the deadly fighter, O'er which we triumph, or hy which we fall Paid the price though keen the knife, For he had learned to hear l1is suifcring fr Be thou the rainhow to the storms of lifefl And now, on this great day of honor, Every heart will raise a prayer That with courage, glory, victory VVe may hravely hear our share. YVL- are thankful for the guidance That has led us, hy its might To victory, at graduation, hy Be thou the rainhow to the storms of life. .,, afX',.5,,s W1 959 V , .-mai, , . y 9 Ofll -mb- QE, xy! wh- Elsie Fogleman Marston, Class Poet. ' '-dn' 'nth -sb-5 'nb-' 'ab-9 'ab- uyz my W1 ay my my Qnleloaaegelean , -04750, MGP 0620- .wD0,, -r6N,.,u4fNv, 14 1 ii 'X Q -.co A, 9 ' :EN , V, Wm, , , .,, ,-Xi zKfN . ,la
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