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Page 20 text:
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ll z (Class Late in November, long after the rest. Kxcitement rose high in the Sophomore Clan. We were to choose officers for the year To follow the Senior and Junior plan. First we elected Barb president With Kate Sulli following as vice. We knew that they were good enough To keep us from thin ice. Pat Varossi as secretary. To take our minutes every time; Then Billy Van as treasurer To guard with care each dime. Last but not least Miss Shannahnn. Our class adviser true; She has done her best to guide us straight And she succeeded too. There hasn't been much to do this year With seniors and juniors around But we have had a splendid time And to our leaders we’re bound. Thus ends the Sophomore narrative The (Mass of Thirty-Four; We’re all coming back this coming year And stay for two years more. LESLEY BARKER, ’34 Eighteen
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Page 19 text:
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3uuiitr Class 3itsfitr Early.in September, 1929, on the day school opened, Miss Gibson foun 1 a group of adventurers huddled together in the study hall, look- ing around wondering if they were going to like their new home. Under the leadership of Francis Chase, their President, this group of Freshmen enjoyed several social activities, most important of which was a sleigh ride. The next year Miss Shannahan found the same group, a little more sophisticated and given the name of Sophomores. Francis Chase was again our President. Mr. Schultz thought the Sophomores could blow off some of their steam and energy on a “gym frolic,” and time soon proved this speculation so, for we had the time of our Sophomore lives. Last fall, Miss ('ussier found us all on hand and ready for good hard work. For were we not Juniors and was there not hard work before us if we wished to carry on our laurels from the preceding year and add far better ones in order to be worthy of our Junior rings and enjoy our Junior Prom. Our aims as Juniors were to get our rings, to succeed in our prom, to begin earning funds for the Washington trip, and to become Seniors. Most of us have succeeded in all our aims. Great thanks should be given first to Alice Smith, President, and then to the rest of the class officers without whose faithful guid- ance all would have been lost. BESSIE BOOTH, 33 MARION E. EDDY, ’33 Seventeen
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Page 21 text:
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(Ehc Jfri'shitmu Class On an exciting day last fall we students of the eighth grade found ourselves seated in the study hall of high school. We had all looked forward to it since we started school. During the winter, as there were no parties or sleigh rides, the girls had inter-class basketball games. At the end of the varsity sea- son, the boys had an inter-class tournament. The Freshmen, as usual, came out at the bottom. We elected class officers under the supervision of Miss Healy. The officers elected were: Wayne Overbagh, our future basketball hero, president; Curtis Betts, who is always leading in all honors, vice presi- dent; Catherine Sirchia, not only because of her penmanship but be- cause of her happy ways, secretary; Dorothy Forbes, one we can trust and like because of her good humor, treasurer; and our well loved teacher, Miss Healy, as class adviser. The Freshmen have had three assembly programs. They were: “King Lazy Bones,” in charge of Miss Shannahan; an imitation of the Fleishman’s Hour, put on by James Carscadden; and a pantomime directed by Miss Healy and Miss Gibson. Although we cannot yet take a trip to Washington, as the Seniors have done, we expect to go to Albany. The Freshmen have been studying hard this year so that they may pass on and become Sophomores next year. WAYNE OVERBAGH, ’35 MARY GRUNER, ’35 Nineteen
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