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Page 14 text:
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JUNIORS First row: Mrs. Jeanette Tatlock Sponsor, Marlene Cox, Carol Clore, Dorothy Foster, Pattv Collins, Mary E. Brown, Mary Let Tolliver, and Mrs. Clara L. Milligan. Sponsor. Second row: Lorene Staggs, Martha Day, Carolyn Cord, Lola Hutson, Ellen Reed and Lucille McCloud. Third row: Donald Warren. Boh French, Ruth Johnson, Phyllis Grcve, Connie Mae Van- llook, Betty Handley. Fourth row: Harold Stams, Phillip Hodgkin, Donn Spencer, Russell Stockwell and Richard Hockett. SOPHOMORES First row: Wayne Seybold, Helen Hester, Alice Brown, Winnie Wendall, Betty Miller, Richard Johnson and Donnie Whitecotton. Second row: Barbara Allen. Mary L. Brown. Man.1 Allen, Lucreta Hester, and Helen Anderson. Third row: Larrv Servies, Raymond James, Burnani Tolliver, Boh Hannah, and Eugene Redden. Fourth row: Mr. Edwin Hoffhaus, Sponsor. Keith. Greve, Boh Greve. Page Twelve
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Page 13 text:
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Senior Class Prophecy Flash! Flash! Good evening Mr. and Miss Waveland High School, and all the fish at sea. This is Walter Winchell brought to you by Gamble's cigarettes, the cigarette with the million dollar flavor. More doctors smoke Gam- ble’s than any other cigarette. Says Dr. George W. Wasson, renouned surgeon of Brownsvalley Medical Center, I have smoked Gamble’s Cig- arettes since I was in the seventh grade. They’re wonderful!” Flash! Flash! China, May 25. I960: The big torpedo boat. Zippit, reached here from America at exactly 9:36 center of the world time. Crew report nothing exciting on trip. Con- sumed one quart of milk and three sandwiches on way. Distance between two continents cut many miles by new routing. Said to have cut through melted lava for 7,000 miles of trip. En- countered no snow. Crew, captained bv the honorable Earl French, who was well-known among students of Waveland High School as member of class of ’49. Capitol City: Governor Robert Wendall con- ferred with Speaker of the House, Windbag Walker and President of the Senate, Loon feather Miles today regarding the building of 30,000 miles of highway across the Atlantic Ocean in the near future. Chief engineer. Raymond Deere, and his assistants. Dolores Bavless and Velma Crimes, who will have charge of the con- struction of the watery highway, were also pre- sent at the conference. Podunk Center: Word has been received here that Miss Faye Reynolds, famed Metropolitan Opera star, who formerly lived here will give a broadcast tonight over XYZ. She will sing, “Yes, There Is No Fog In My Eves; But You.” Los Angeles: Mrs. Artie Shaw just gave birth to twin boys. She was formerly Miss Barbara Hughes. Hollywood, May 24. I960: Fairmount Studios headed by Richard Seybold, announce today the find of a new star. They discovered her making sauerkraut out of garlic in an east side apart- ment in the slum district of New York. She is Mrs. Jessie May Newell. She will co-star with Karl Moser in the picture release, “Flames of Youth.” Miss Barbara Staggs wrote the plot. Lighting effects by Mona Lee Hester. This pic- ture has taken three days and a half to pro- duce at a cost of tin stupendous sum of $6.50. Chicago: Mr. and Mrs. Richard Seybold an- nounce the entrance of their daughter into Miss Maxine Oswalt’s Select School for Girls at Sunny Slope on Chicken Creek. Mrs. Seybold was formerly Miss Loretta Newell. Des Moines, Iowa: The annual convention of the Windy Liars Club is in session here this week. President Bill Newell presided over the opening session. Miss Betty Bryant, who won the prize last year for telling the biggest lie, was a guest of honor at a banquet given at Bal Minch Hotel last evening. The principal speak- er of the evening was Gale Grimes, past presi- dent of the club, and present international presi- dent of the club. This club has the largest mem- bership of all the clubs in existence. Yale: Coach Davis of the Yale football squad announced here today that he expects to white- wash the team of Coach Tatlock of the Army when the two squads clash in the California Rose Bowl next Fourth of July. Paris: Madam Martha Lou Fuller, world’s foremost design r of dogs’ clothing announces that she will enter the field of designing for men’s and women’s clothing next fall. She pre- dicts that her styles will set the pace for the whole world. Rattle Creek Sanitarium: Dr. William Keys today announced that the sanitarium staff had discovered a way to combat laziness in school students. This new discover)' is expected to revolutionize the scholastic records of the nation. In his studies Dr. Kevs was ably assisted bv Bob Wheeler, who used Waveland High School stu- dents for experimental purposes in the research work. Wriglev Field: One of tin world’s best sellers seems to be “How To Chew More and Bigger (Continued on page 25) Page Eleven
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Page 15 text:
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FRESHMEN First row: Miss Rose Schaeffer. Sponsor. Violet Reynolds, Gene Handley, Ray Spencer. Patricia Hodgkin, Robert Hester, James Wasson. Keith Morgan. Second row: David Grimes. Charles Hutson, Rosemary Miles, Virginia Nunn, Betty Starns. Rita Martin. Third row: Bill Keller, Rosemary French, Vesta Cotton, Phyllis Bougher, Opal Tracy. Fourth row: Bill Payton, Phyllis Johnson, Evelyn Hughes, Duane Kelly, Bill Wheeler and Dale Sowers. EIGHTH GRADE First row: Mr. Leon McGaughey, Sponsor, Dean Sowers, Leonard Sewell, Karen Reed. Ruth Seybold, Richard Smith, Dale Mitchell, Robert Harbison, Lester Martin. Second row: Juanita Grew, Martha M. Priebc, Lob Cr.mes, Mary Ann Newell, Mary Jane Wheeler, Janet Williams, Jack Robbins. Third row: Jack Day, Marjorie McClure, Barbara Waltz, Dean Milligan. Bonnie Rey- nolds, Shirley Woodcook, Billy Joe Rivers. Fourth rote: Daryel Newell. Don Horton, Bill Redden, Blaine Tracy, Doris Pollock and Martha Mason. Page Thirteen
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