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Page 27 text:
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i i i i i j i i i i i i CATHERINE BRUNDAGE is that great Broadway star featured in “Podunk Express.” JUNIOR NEARD is still trying to find someone to be his “Hungarian goulash.” JIM TSCHIRGI is running for senator of Wyoming. HELEN DAUDERMAN is still greatly interested in Australian aviators. NORRIS DAVIDSON has taken over the Chemistry classes in S. H. S. DORA DeLAPP is the better half of a stormy beet-growing partnership. PETE DELIRAMICH has finally grown up. Oh yeah! LUCY DESTEFANO owns her own hair-dressing shop, and every hair on her head is still perfectly groomed. MARY DROBISH is happily married to the man of her dreams. LYNORE ECKERMAN is still riding in the P. D. Q. truck. EMMA JEAN TOWNS hasn’t decided yet whether she would rather pick water “Lillys” or live in “The House That Jack Built.” BETTY JEAN TROUTT is still happily married to Harland Staples and thev have several little “Fish” now. ROSALIE JEAN BINDER has fulfilled her ambition as an aviatrix. ALLEGRA SCHOOLCRAFT has now taken over the position of gym teacher. DARLENE SAYLES is still playing her part well. JUNIOR RAY is still a play boy. KEITH SALISBURY is now a member of a great symphony orchestra. ANNA MAE FRAZEE is still a tomboy. DOROTHY SMITH is still waiting for the “Don.” ELTA BURDEN is now the secretary of the president of some big manufacturing company. NAOMI JOHNS is still the same, sweet, more-or-less quiet girl, whose thoughts alone keep her company. LEROY JOHNSON is president of the Booker T. Washington College. ELAINE URBACZKA is carrying on her father’s business. ANNA LEE VARNER and Johnny are living happily ever after. HELEN POLL and CHUCK MINICK are wowing the high-school students with their dancing. DOROTHY BAKER is still the most popular girl in Buffalo. (We hear that she is spending her vacations at Brigham Young.) NADINE DOYLE tells us while she is out walking in the “Lane” her favorite bird is the wood-“Becker.” BERTHA DREGOIW is still wanting to be loved by Tschirgi. ANN DROBISH is still happily married. CAMERON HUSDALE is still tossing around a favorite line. PATRICIA MacLEOD is a charming hostess in her new home in Buffalo. LYLE REALING is still sweet, shy, and brilliant. DOROTHY CROSBY is now Mrs. Dean Olson and will further her plans as a housewife. DOROTHY DAVIS is another Florence Nightingale. JOE DRIEAR is a secretary to a certain party. SHIRLEY EVANS is leading an all girl orchestra. ROSE ARNIERI is running her own Beauty Shoppe in Chicago. OPAL AVERILL is cooking for Bob. JAMES MORGAN has settled down on a certain ranch with a certain Kiri- PHYLLIS ODIORNE has a part in the opera at the Grand Opera House. MARY HELENA OOST is continuing her career as an actress, after her success in the senior play. MARGARET PAROBECK is a nurse in an army camp. MARGARET SESNA is a stenographer in Washington, D. C. MARIE SURRENA is as full of life as ever. GLEN SALES is still sleeping his way through life. (Continued on page 60) I I i i i i i i i ) i i i i i i i i j i i i i i i i i I i i i i i ! I j I I I I I I I i Twenty-five
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Page 26 text:
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MARIE COLMAN and FLORENCE KAWULOK are both very successful secretaries. EDGAR SYMONS is a strict mathematics teacher. ALBERT LOUIS MORGENWECK is the most wanted bachelor. KENNETH BURRUS is traveling with the world’s best basketball team—but that is a small matter compared to the loss of Switzer. ERIS CONNOR is the society editor of the Chicago Tribune. MARJORIE CRAFT has just built a two room house at the edge of the golf course. FRANK CROSS is running a large cattle ranch in Texas. ROBERT FISHER is a radio technician in the big town of Rawlins. LIONEL GROSS is Chicago’s most prominent lawyer. JESSIE HALE is still “Hale” and hardy. JANET HAYWOOD is called the one woman newspaper of New York. HUGH WEST is manager of the Community filling station and his helpers live in the trailer in the back. CHARLES STORY is blasting on his trombone and still his main ambition is to be a band leader. He sells his pictures for profit as a side line. JOHN (JOHNNY) URBACZKA still has his sweet blond curls, and Ruthie fixes them for him each morning before he goes to work. GEORGE WATERS is one of the well-known coaches in America. (He still carries on a romance for pastime.) GERALDINE (GERRY) WOOD is dashing all around the world still as rattle-brained as she ever was. BETTIE SNIVELY is general manager of Red Owl. HOWARD CAMPBELL is mayor of Sheridan. MARIE CAPILLUPO is head supervisor at Sheridan County Memorial Hospital. LILAS CARROLL is the same slender, quiet little girl she always has been. VIRGINIA HOUX still thinks she is as unusual as she does now. JUNE SEXTON is driving an ambulance on the coast. CLETA SHAFFER is the most popular usherette in the largest theater in New York. DOROTHY SHELDON has received a permanent position in the Civil Service. JEAN HURST is just as charming as ever. JACK HUSMAN is now an admiral in the United States Navy. DON SIMMONS is reading the latest book on “How to Play Basketball.” BOB BAKER is the student body president at the University of Podunk. CONNIE CARD is teaching dancing at Podunk. JOE CUSICK is taking lessons from a famous authority on “How to Grow Up.” VIRGINIA FOWLER remains as popular as ever. BETTIE REINHART is visiting in Ranchester. IRENE WOLFE is “Harpin’ ” as always. JANE STEPHENSON is as sweet and nice as ever. All the “blue jackets” are trying to catch some stray disease; PATTY LIVINGSTON is a navy nurse. In New York, we find one of Arthur Murray’s star pupils, GENEVIEVE TIMM, trying to teach the New York population to dance. FRIEDA REHFELDT is a secretary to one of the higher-ups in Washington, D. C. LOYTLE BROWNELL is married to that “certain one” in Casper. MARY LOIS WEBB and MONTANA FLORY have “joined the navy.” RUTH LENZ is going to College and hoping for something more attractive to come along. VENUS MATTHEWS is still trying to find a suitable “career.” Twenty-four
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Page 28 text:
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Excerpts from the Will of 1942 To Charlie Olson we leave the right to always pester any other girl in the clarinet section of the band, now that Pat MacLeod is gone. To Florence Olson we leave the title “All American Girl.” To Paul Juroshek we leave the right to sit on the bench just once next fall. To Evelyn Colman we leave the right to have a girls’ “Ag” class of her own right away. To Bob Cook we leave the tag of ownership to pin on Phyllis Hume. To Margaret Badget we leave the right to act sensible—just for a change. To Helen Frazee we leave the privilege to go out with a boy. To LaVaughn Kincaid we leave a book of stamps so she can answer all the letters from the soldier and sailor boys. To Louis Plachek we leave the title, “All American Blond.” To Mary Gwen Shellinger we leave the title of “popular”. To Dorothy Upton we dedicate the song “Sweet and Shy.” To George Grace we leave a gun with a true “Trigg-er.” To Leonard McEwan we leave a bar of soap to wash the looks he ! gives Chuck Olson. j To Fred Wright we leave more head (Morehead) lettuce for his health. To Paul Smith we leave the right to be an assistant manager (Archibald) of the Nash Finch Co. To Wyoma Wilson we leave a love bug bite so it will always be I “hoiten”. To Glenn Johnson we leave a ticket to the Freshman Mixer. To Connie Card we leave a more secluded spot than the main hall to discuss her dates. To Josephine Brown we leave the right to be where the Buffalo roam. To Betty Morehead we leave the “Wright” to attend all shows with Freddy. To Wayne King we leave the right to go with Roberta as much as he likes. To George Demchok we leave the privilege of holding hands with Jane Cline for one hour each day. To Leona Long we leave the privilege of reserving a table in the cafeteria during the noon hour. To Ronda and Wanda Troutman we leave the privilege of meeting a pair of twin brothers. To Mary Ann McAllister we leave the right to be the only girl in the advanced Algebra class. To Annabelle Birdsall we leave another bottle of peroxide cause we think she makes such a cute blond. To Eddie Ekis w'e leave two permanent back seats on the left-hand side of the Wyo balcony. To Jack Matica we leave a lasting friendship with Gordon Legerski. To Neil Richardson we leave a dollar instead of a “Shilling-(er).” To Mildred Arnold, although she’s no Chinaman, we leave her all the “Rice” she wants. To Margaret Arnold we leave the memory of Big Goose on the night of her birthday celebration ? To Emma Cline we leave a book entitled “Silence is Golden.” To Arleen Haines we dedicate the song “Dark Eyes.” To Bernard Ekis we leave a “Cooke.” To Frances Miller we leave the song entitled “Stay As Sweet As You Are.” To Wray Carroll we guarantee one more date with Virginia. To Don VanBlitter we leave the right to go steady with a certain senior girl. To Arthur Washut we leave “Butch’s” charms with the girls. Twenty-six I I I I I j I i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i ! i i j
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