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Page 32 text:
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= C H A O S Freshman Class Top Row (left to right). — Marthabelle Gilmore, Genevieve Irwin, Marie Tanner, Kathryn Chapman, Marjorie Sprague, Nellie Bare, Rachel Stuart, Martha Randle, Mae Markin. Center Row (left to right).— Robert Leopold, Jay Engle, Francis Reeve, Don Arnott, Willard Black, George Ballinger, James Cooper, Charles Waling. Bottom Row (left to right).— Orlan Swartzell, Virginia Kresler, Julia Randle, Kath- ryn King, Clarol Nees, Bernice Cornwell, Ellen Kresler, Edna Axen, James Han- sen, Ivan Williamson. Top Row (left to right). — Opal Sunderland, Lillian Kruse, Ardis Maines, Iris Comer, Margaret Gifford, Marie Wartena, Geraldine Roth, Maxine Martindale, Anna Reed, Virginia Ross. Third Row (left to right).— Charles Waling, Paul Gates, Hollis May, Donald Corn- well, James Hopkins, Vincent Stalbaum, Lee Reed, Reed Pennel, Edward Ramp, Max Robinson. Second Row (left to right). — Myrtle Dayton, Margaret Mullady, Alice Sayers, Loretta Abbott, Mary Potter, Blanche White, Dorothy Frye, Eva Jenkins, Laura Hurley, Mary Ruth Elder. Bottom Row (left to right).— Robert Mayhew, Ralph Amsler, Jay Wood, Harold Flem- ing, Maurice Hammond, Laverne Paulus, Harold Rowen, Vernon Phegley, Cecil Hooker. 19 2 1
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Page 33 text:
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CHAOS Freshmen Class History Class Colors Old Rose and White Class Motto “Puto itaque sum” (I think, therefore I am) Class Flower Lily of the alley On September 6, 1920, nearly seventy-five children, conceived in green- ness, but dedicated to the proposition that all classes are created equal, en- tered into this High School. They received their assignments for the next day’s work and were dismissed for the remainder of the day. By the end of the first semester the class had lost about five of its members, some on ac- count of sickness and others because they thought their time could be more profitably spent at home. The class organized on the twenty-second day of September, Maurice Hammond being elected president. At a later meeting plans were made for a class party. This class party proved to be a great success. The Freshmen were continually tormented and called green by the upper classmen, but they bravely took all this, for were not these upper classmen Freshmen at one time? During the latter part of the year a won- derful change came over the Freshmen, however, for they were no longer the green, unformed children that had entered in September, but were trans- formed into bright and industrious (?) students of R. H. S. VIRGINIA KRESLER, ’24. 19 2 1
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