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Page 31 text:
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Sophomore Class FRONT ROW SECOND ROW Wilma Hamm Vivienne Richardson Edna McCoy Susie Floyd Irene Durnal Lucille Young Mildred Nevins Dorothy McClarey Ardys Richardson Jeanette Young ABSEN T Fern Galyan Agnes White Estle Sluss Morse Sluss Ross McC1ung Elbert Young Lloyd Brock Ross Sluss Woodrow Young Frank Poling Pauline Baugh
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Page 30 text:
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union Class Hzlsfrorgf QJFU Dear Readers: We have decided to send you this letter so that you may understand us clearly and know how we spend our time. We started our High School career on a particular sunny day in September, 1927. It was such a very encouraging beginning and therefore has made us a. very prosperous class. There were twenty-two of us in the Freshmen y-ear. And as you already know, a Freshman year is a year of observation. So we observed! How- -ever, we carried a few honors along with us. Our social accomplishments were by no means small. So from Freshman observation we grewlinto Sophomore knowledge. When Freshmen we thought that perhaps a little learning had pierced the armors of our brains, but as Sophomores we knew that a great deal had. Two men helped to make the basketball team. Sophomore year is usually considered the most uneventful of all High School years. We now occupy a higher seat of elevation. We are Juniors. We have learned the true extent of our knowledge, but we're standing up bravely under the blow. Our prestige as an athletic class increased, but our reputation as a brilliant literary class was in a lower state of decay than usual. We are trying to help this by writing a newspaper containing High School happenings. Whether it will be a success or not we do not know. Our biggest social event this year will be the Junior-Senior banquet which we shall give sometime in April. We earned some money from a class carnival entertainment in October. We must admit that this closes our history as the Junior class of U. H. S. in 1929. But hoping to gain greater honors in the future both in athletic and social events we remain, Yours truly, THE JOLLY JUNIORS
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Page 32 text:
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U- - '-- :ii ---Z? -M -Ei fn- 1. -A+-- .:- --:4 I Sophomore Class Hzlsftorgf THE HAPPY SOPHOMORESH Many years perhaps we've spent In the grade schools so dear Our minds and backs we've b A But weve learned to laugh at . We were jreshies and a jolly bunch In nineteen twenty-eight. We let the Sophomores give us a punch Anal now we're up to date. We're still a very happy group Ani hope to be friends with you We'll work together ansl make the loop Till we graduate in thirty-two. We, the pupils of Unionville High School, entered in nin-et-een twenty- eight, as little freshies, of course, we were better than they gave us credit for. Nevertheless several boys and girls went out for basketball and ac- complished as much as could be expected. M One great event was the Sophomores initiating us when we were Freshmen. We looked forward to the year when we would be rulers or rather Sophomores. Now we are Sophomores and accomplished as much as we thought was necessary. We are leaving behind in the Sophomore Class the horrid Latin translation and foresake forever those unreasonable theorems, axioms, and postulatesg we go on into the Junior Class only to take up something perhaps more difficult, as the professor says, to broaden and make us able to reason things out for ourselves. 1 Those who do their best in school Pm sure will follow the 'Golden Rule'. iiiiiiisiii i--s-5-isis. :1 .a A .141 - - ..... - ... . 1 i
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