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Page 31 text:
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Bette Lowery Anthony Mang Agnes McKenna Barbara Meyer Sharon O’Neill Frank Polsak Dorothy Rech Donna Riley Gerald Sandvig Bill Seitz Jack Shields Bob Skagen Janivee Smith Leon Stalcup Dennis Thompson Nancy V'Dovec Bob Weigum Jo Anne Wise
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Page 30 text:
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Claudia Fletcher President Dale Hourgardy Vice President Donna Askwig Ray Birkett Dan Bevis Jean Ann Bowman James Brown Jack Congdon Marcia Conway Bill Fields John Fisco Jim Ford Jean Godfrey Jerry Hamilton Joy Kilby Pat Korenko Catherine Kowalczyk Leroy Langan Carl Langsather Anna Lekse
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Page 32 text:
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(Continued) In Oregon, Dorothy Jackovich has become a stenographer for the New York Life Insurance. Dot is struggling hard to top the fastest speed record in typing and shorthand. She is also giving voice lessonsto Arthur Godfrey on How to Conduct a Conversation. Also traveling between Oregon and Bismarck, North Dakota, is the famous Industrial Arts teacher. Bill Klansek. Bill has designed a bedroom set that can be converted into a kitchen or living room set for those who desire living in compactness. On the Hawaiian Islands lives the luscious secretary, housewife, Marian Kozeliski. Marian is the secretary in her husband's big office. She's trying to prove to her husband that a forty dollar hat is the one and only for her hair style. Switching clear across the other ocean into Europe we find Patrick J. Murphy. Pat spent a month in Paris ejplaining his new discovery. He is now the noted Edison who found a way to take light and con- vert it into electricity and through light make more light. Virgie Nelson has become a secretary for the writers of the movie hero, Bomba, down in Africa. She plans on settling down in a small mansion some day. Whizzing from Africa all the way back into the United States into Montana we go to Missoula. Here we find the top smoke jumper of the time, Bud Nies. Bud, who just loves forestry, can cut down a tree and have it partly cut up in five minutes. Up in Canada where you can’t find mountains much higher anywhere else we are lucky to find Dick Norick. Dick spends days in the hills with the animals as a wild life specialist. He tells us of his gold findings, which started the gold rush of 1964. We read magazines and newspapers every once in awhile to see if we can find news of any of our 1952 class. An article reflects toour eyes that Charles Powell, a famous historian, has found Cleopatra's lost tomb. Chuck always did like history. Once we relaxed in a theatre to see a movie. In the newsreel we found Metro-Goldyn Mayer award- ing top honors to Ralph Puckett who has become a top movie projectionist. Ralph accepted the reward deeply, and on his face was one of his usual blushing smiles. Also on the newsreel was a short on Gary Seitz. Gary has become an architectural designer who through his engineering genius invented a self- cleaning meatblock for his dad’s meat market. They asked him if he learned much from his trip to the Yukon with Crowley. He said, Oh, I don't know. In Chicago we find June Snell. June has become a woman District Attorney. She studies day and night for her career; and even to save financial problems she does her own stenographic work. Through her we find that Pat Stalcup is the head music instructor at a hugh high school. Pat's temperamental feelings sometime overwhelm her, and she turns to politics in good old Montana. On into New York we see signs all over announcing the piano concert played by Thomas Thomas. He is playing at Carnegie Hall, and the theme of his music is called I've Got the Blues. He plays this in competition with Harry S. Truman, who has turned to piano playing also. All over New York we hear about the great movie projectionist, Lorance Tucker, Lorance has earned the distinction that he can out laugh anyone in the theatre’s audience, and what a man. Man! Back to the opposite coast in California we find John Richard Way. Richard is in Los Angeles as a jet plane designer. He also flies them; and just for laughs, he gives rides to anyone who wants a thrilling sensation. From California we go back into' Hawaii again. Bob Wier is here being a wonderful architect. He has a big office of course and likes leisure time. On the side he has built a new mortuary. We have finally covered the Senior Class of 1952 and may luck fall upon all.
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