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Page 32 text:
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Recipe: Initiation» 1949 Style Ingredients: Sixteen freshman girls wear- ing pin curls, bib overalls, loud shirts, one logger, and one high-heeled shoe; and twenty-seven freshman beys wearing friv- olous hats and dresses of various lengths. Add: Vengeful Seniors armed with vicious schemes. Blend: Into a program featuring Danny Doody, complete with diapers, taking a bubble bath; Roberta Conway as scrubwoman washing Danny's diapers; Lorraine Hunter giving Dean Burns a manicure and pedicure with exotic finger-nail polish; Bob Wier in blackface singing april Showers11 with helpful seniors dousing him with water and pelting him with eggs and tomatoes; Billy Klansek brushing his teeth with shaving cream; Patsy Stalcup, Marilyn Cunningham, Dick Norick, and Charles Powell passing oranges under their chins; Charlotte Boyle and Henry Van Dyke doing a hula dance in grass skirts; 3ud Haley and Pat Murphy styling the NEW LOOK ; Barbara Fletcher and Glen Harper leading the school in a yell 15 for Roundup. Next: Parade all victims down Main street (.r, for inspection and treat them all to a mixer dance. Tofta-ro
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Page 31 text:
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JUNIOR PROMENADE Oh, please cotne to our Prom on the first of May. We shall dance and play and we'll all be cray In an old Dutch garden by an old Dutch mill If the Junior class may have its will. In honor of the class of forty-eight. Our partv will begin at half-oast eight. Proms are always special affairs, but the orom that the class of '49 out on seemed more soecial than ever. Amid the doubtful scent of tulips, lovely girls and handsome boys danced beneath the starry, cheesecloth sky of an old Dutch garden. Punch was passed through the window of the sky-high mill, and the music was furnished by the Blue Flames of Billings.
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Page 33 text:
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1,1 YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU ANNUAL SENIOR P LAY APRll 174? by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart -;hhhh:-)hh:- Mrs. H. C. Hulstone, Director -:hkhhhhh:- The horae of Martin Vandorhof was just around the corner fron Columbia Ihiva'sity. The room was what is customarily described as a living room, but in this house the terra was something of an understatement. An every-man-for-himself room would have been more accurate. For here meal3 were eaten, pl-ys were written, snakes collected, tap dancing practiced, xylophones played, printing presses operated— if there were room enough there would probably have been ice skating. In short, the brood presided over by Martin Vanderhof went on about the business of living in the fullest sense of the word. From Grandpa Vanderhof down, they were individ- ualists. From Grandpa (Chiles Graham), the grandest individualist of them all, down, the characters were continually upsetting the hone headed by Penelope Sycamore and her husband—Mitzi Vedova and Larry Hunter, Others such as Mr. DePinna, Turla Turley, a man who came to deliver ice eight years ago—and just stayed, and Charles Meznarich as Donald, a relief man, added much laughter to the three-act comedy, Marjorie Boyle as Essie, Tom Anderson as Boris Kolenkhov, and Mary Belivoau as Rheba (who was glad she was colored) furthered the high pitch of light-hearted entertainment. Ralph Lloyd was Ed, who halved his time between xylophone playing and printing; Pat Glancy was Henderson, Internal Revenue Collector. The glamor touch entered the play through Patsy Plenger's version of lovely rnd ambitious Alice. Joining the Syconoro3 in providing more merriment was the Kirby group: Frank Lekse and Beverly Goodman as the parents, and Dick Pratt as Tony. Others rounding out the cast were Mary Rux in the part of Olga, and Kerry Bartlett and Bill McKiornan as G-Men. The make-up was handled by Mildred Sealey, Natalie Glotch, Charlene Edraison, Bob Watts, Marian Wacker, and Dorothy Larson.
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