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Page 28 text:
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Job? College? No matter what the subject. Mr. Doepke's conversation is always helpful. You’ll get there someday. advises senior Jack Doran to a seventh grader. We Enter School as Girls and Boys But of course we study In the senior room! 24
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Page 29 text:
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Salutatorian Pat McGInty and Valedictorian Myra HONOR STUDENTS: Too row. left to right: M. Baascn, Janz familiarly skim through one of the more difficult S. Short. E. Dorweiler, B. Roehl. D. Bergman. P. McGinty. books In the library. Bottom Row: M. Praught. S. Stodola. M. Janz. E. Oen. But Leave as Young Men and Women For the past four years Wavzata lias been a wav of life for us, the class of 1956. In its sacred wails are stored all the laughter and joy. sorrow and heartache of the students who. attended it. Wavzata is all the fun and happiness of being young. The games, dances, clubs and parties are activities we will never forget. It is the fads, crazy sayings, and nonsense of a carefree bunch of teen-agers. But as the years passed, and we look back on our many experiences, we reminisce on memories that will remain with us always. . . . When as freshmen, the girls dyed their hair red or green and wore their fathers’ long white shirts . . . our first Homecoming attendant, Bonnie Dykhoff . . . Freshman float . . . the Drama Club plavs: Lucky Penny, Is My Face Red, and Every body Likes Pretty' Things . . . our Daisy Mac, Irene Borsheim . . . the girls’ gym class overnight in Sween's barn, and “My Stomach is in a Commotion” . . . ji a a mope” . . . class officers, Mimi Baasen. Ann Shaver, and Jerry Martin . . . decorating for Homecoming as sophomores, will we ever forget all our work on the “Underwater” theme? . . . our second prize win ning float . . . attendant, Mary Hartwell . . . officers Ann Shaver, Ginger Quay, Stephanie Stcn, and Mary Hartwell . . . Sno Week representatives, Irene Borsheim and Jon Ricke . . . our Li’l Abner, Gary MacPhcrson . . . Judy Vogel and Ginger Quay heading all our outstanding salesmen which resulted in surpassing our goal of $2,000 by $200 in the magazine sale . . . the great acclaim our class play “Curtain Going Up” received from everyone . . . “surrre you are” . . . getting our class rings . . . Faye Jennings, our junior attendant . . . Rene' Erickson being the first person from Wavzata to go to the state contest in Declamation . . . the tremendous success of the “Blue Hawaii Prom at Woodhill and all the fun at Taylor’s Falls the next day . . . our outstanding class officers. Bill Lund. Jim Locke, Marilyn Praught, and Edris Dorweiler . . . Jim Locke and Gary MacPhterson representing us at Bovs State . . . LuWanna Willey going to Girls State ... at last, our fabulous senior year . . . the riotous Wayzatan pepfest. and Stodv’s newspaper outfit . . . cheering sections at games . . . the drastic fate of the Senior Homecoming float . . . our pride when Carol Maki was crowned queen . . . Dick Reed being voted Most Valuable Player in the Lake Conference . . . Senior Room . . . the outstanding success of Sadie Hawkins . . . posing for senior pictures . . . the Wayzatan’s mascot, Bluepy” . . . corridor romances . . . fabulous week-ends . . . meetings, meetings, meetings . . . pizza at Mac’s . . . Marc’s war dance . . . our team and the many exciting games . . . cramming for tests and exams . . . Carolyn Petersen winning a trip to St. Louis as National Orchestra Representative . . . eating feasts—at the Oasis and the Ranch . . . horse laughs . . . Sno Week . . . “sec ya later, alligator . . . class officers. Gan- Macrherson, Richard W illis, LuWanna W illey, and Carol Maki . . . our Baccalaureate sen-ice . . . the night of Commencement . . . W'ayzata commemorates the never-to-be-forgotten importance of music. The gay, noisy music of the band at a football game, the slow, dreamy music of the orchestra at a dance, and the fast, cheerful music of the band at an assembly. On Commencement night, as we walk down the aisle toward our diplomas, the moving, majestic music of Pomp and Circumstance will play a major part in this all important moment of our lives. W’c, the class of 1956, entered Wavzata as boys and girls, but we leave as young men and women, toward new responsibilities and a new life. 25
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