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Page 8 text:
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Page 7 text:
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THE GYPSY TRAIL , MX? is ,te .36- 35.'i7 E fs The tireless efforts of over fifty students, and the devoted work of Miss Eleanor Dee Theek, resulted in one of the best Senior plays that has been produced at Shortridge. The Gypsy Trail, by Robert Housum, was given in Caleb Mills Hall on May 5, 1933, before a large and appreciative audience. The cast was headed by Paul Boxell, Phyllis Ent, and Eugene Fife, who admirably took the parts of Michael Rudder, Francis Raymond, and Ed- ward Andrews. Marion Sperry starred as Mrs. Widdimoreg and Harry Till as Stiles, Lewis Smith as Johnnie, Elaine Oberholtzer as Ellen, Jane Shide- ler as Janet Raymond, and Stephen Bailey as Mr. Raymond did excellent- ly in minor parts. The first act is laid in Mr. Raymond's garden, in Cleveland, Ohio. Michael Rudder, the reporter, in an attempt to get a story about Mr. Raymond's chemical merger, agrees to kidnap Frances Raymond for Ned Andrews, her conventional lover. Ned arranges that the kidnapping is properly chaperoned by his grandmother, at his summer home called The Breakers. The second act is laid at The Breakers , where Mrs. Widdi- more, Ned's grandmother, finds out that Michael is the boy for Frances, and not Ned. Michael convinces Frances of the situation, and everything looks rosy. Michael, however, suddenly decides that he could never stay off the gypsy trail and settle down to married life, so he runs away from Frances. A climax is reached in the third act when Michael comes back to claim Frances, who has almost accepted Ned. The committees were as follows: Publicity, Jack Ochiltree and Betty Messick, Wardrobe, Edith Moore and Louis Candedog Stage Managers, Howard Jewell and Doris Young, Stage Crew, Maurice Moore, Hugo Hor- ner, Olds Spencer, Wayne Hertenstein, Dick Titus, Harold Morford, William Dillon, and William Dunne, Property Chairmen, Carl Scheidker and Mary Beth Livingston, Property Crew, Wanda Carter, Peter Lambertus, Sam Martinez, Catherine Heard, Betty Vanderbilt, John Walker, Doris Van- Horn, Luther McCoy, and Virginia Mary Wheeler, Prompters, Betty Cook and Virginia Sawyer, Teaser Committee, Dan Morse, Sam Martinez, Wayne Hertenstein, and Dick Titus. Walter Scheidker acted as Teaser Advisor. Fowler Summers acted as House Manager. Special credit should be given to John Aeby, Frank Wood, and Robert Overman for their patient work as understudies. The Gypsy Venders who sold candy during intermission and helped in the Teaser were as follows: Mary E. Voyles, Barbara Haines, Kathryn Kilby, Lillian Weil, Miriam Waldo, Clara Jane Anderson, Marjory Hennis, Marjorie Pyke, Margaret Sloan, Carolyn Rose Strauss, Barbara Ballinger, Jean Coler, Margaret Anne Clippinger, Agnes Coldwell, Virginia Mary Wheeler, Jean Anderson, Betty Messick, Marian Johnson, Jane Beasley, Harriet Wiley, and Mary C. Funkhouser. Stephen Bailey. - an 8 H' '
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Page 9 text:
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JUNIOR CLASS ACTIVITIES The activities of the Class of '34 began with the election of the elass officers on November 23, 1932 in Caleb Mills Hall. Those who were elected were: Don Morrison, president, Marynette Hiatt, vice-president, Aline Bailey, secretary, Robert Mueller, treasurer, and Bill Koehne, vaudeville chairman. The student council representatives who were elected from the list of forty candidates, were Helen Taggart, Jane Brown, Mary Alice Shively, and Dorothy Braden. One of the largest groups of oflice seekers ln any class campaigned energetically for a week before the election. The other candidates seek- ing the presidency were Jim Birr, Richard Eiler, Gordon Messing, and Jim Shoemaker. The list of candidates for vice-president included Evelyn DeWees, Phoebe Jacobs, Jean Knowlton, and Marjorie Zechiel. The aspirants for secretary were, Mary Lou Brandlien, Virginia Carson, Eleanor Firth, Harriet Jane Holmes, Janet Meditch, Anita Reavis, and Dorothy Jane Reed. Estella Disz, Clarence Gault, Robert Marks, Mary Jeanette Sellers, and Trevis Spencer ran for the ofiice of treasurer. Dick Agster, Sam Dobrow, Tom Garland, Fred Jacobs, Myrtle McDade, Gertrude Osborn, Edith Rus- sell, Eliot Scales, and Palmer Ward aspired to be vaudeville chairman. The class maintained the custom of honoring those members of the Senior class who had made the highest scholastic records. On the Honor Day program held on May 24, a gold key was presented Arleen Wilson by Aline Bailey, Junior secretary, and silver cups were given to Lucy Ann Balch, Julian Kiser, and Jeane McWorkman by Marynette Hiatt, Junior vice-president, Bob Mueller, Junior treasurer, and Bill Koehne, vaudeville chairman. The Juniors climaxed their successful year with a dance on June 2. Little did anyone realize that he was entering the gym as he gazed upon the entrance disguised as a picturesque mill towering high overhead. The atmosphere was typically that of Le Moulin Rouge or The Red Mill. The punch tables proved to be most popular, and the small tables placed about the room supplied added glamour. Morton Davidson's orchestra furnished rhythmical music for those wishing to dance. The entertain- ment was well planned and well received. Much credit is due to the Social Committee for such a gala afternoon. This group was composed of Martha Moore and Paul Krauss, co-chairmen, Emma Gene Tucker, Bill Wright, Jane Wynne, Clarence Warren, Clarence Gault, and Charles Huston. On May 18, the Junior members of the National Honor Society were announced. They were Aline Bailey, Rosalind Barrows, Willis Blatchley, Aloyse Bottenwiser, Dorothy Braden, Jane Brown, Ralph Burns, Virginia Carson, Charlotte Cox, Richard Eiler, Henry Fauvre, Betty Finch, Mary- nette Hiatt, Mary Alice Hicks, Harriet Jane Holmes, Charles Huston, Jean Knowlton, Robert Lipton, Dorothy Martenet, Janet Meditch, Gordon Messing, Elizabeth Myers, Marjorie Newman, Martha Norman, Carolyn Rehm, Mary Jeannette Sellers. Richard Smith, Madeline Trent, Frank Streightoff, Jean Van Riper, Richard Voyles, Charles Williams, and Stew- art Williams. The Junior class owed much of the success of the year's activities to the class sponsors, Mrs. Nell Merrick Thomas and Mr. Enoch D. Burton. Anne Bailey.
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