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Page 24 text:
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22 THE TARGET m THE MANDOLIN AND GUITAR CLUB. Upper Row, Left to Right: Evelyn Denham, Jane Reilly, Mabel Avila. Lower Row, Left to Right: Tom McGuire, Allan Hargear, Elizabeth Mclndoe, Muriel Durgin, Anito Avila, Kenneth Wvnkoop, Dudley Underhill. PIANO CLUB. The Piano Club met for organiza- tion on January 6th with 44 members. The officers elected were: president, Clare Lenfesty; vice-president, Paul- ine Elder; secretary, Fred Peters. The plaj ' ers now enrolled are: Pauline El- der, Camille H nes, Kathryne Hall, Louise Lawton, Laura Bolton, Doro- thy Ellingwood, Lillian Leland, Ade- laide Kibbe, Irma Ridley, Helen Maher, Louise Runckel, Hazel Bar- ton, Gertrude Seaver, Margaret Gies- ler, Clare Lenfesty, Marjorie McCul- lough, Hazel Niehaus, Amybeth Pay- son, Grace Scrantom, Eleanor Mead, Edith Landon, Grace Greet, Muriel Durgin, Blanche Eastland, Jean Scot- ford, Lorena Edwards, Sylvia Leland, Fred Peters, Roberta Holmes, Ira Herbert, Albert Becker, Natalie Ray- mond, Anita Foss, Helen Heavey, Ernest de Reynier, Florence Biddle, Virginia Peck, Esther McCullough, Billy Heine, Richard Dehmel, Zella McCreary, Helen Gray, Alice Peder- son, Elaine Rambo, Charlotte Arnold. Three very satisfactory programs have been arranged, one for each month. At the January meeting Paul- ine Elder played Harmonious Black- smith, by Handel; Camille Haynes, Venetian Boat Song, by Mendels- sohn; Lillian Leland, Twilight Sere- nade, by Heins; Kathryne Hall, Sil- ver Star, by Bohm. The program of the February meet- ing was composed of the following numbers: Chaminade ' s Flatterer, by Laura Bolton; Heller ' s II Pensero-
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Page 23 text:
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THE TARGET 21 McKINLEY BAND. Upper Row, Left to Right: Warren Burke, Neal Klemgard, Ralph Beals, Clarence Mitchell, Walter St. John, Walter Clark, Lowell Schultze, Allan Ingalls, Norman Taggard. Lower Row, Left to Right: Robert Dunn, Arthur Bellman, Ford Barrett, Raymond White, Hartley Hathaway, Hubert Kenny, Scott Elder. 6. Sextet from Lucia ....Donizetti Clarence Mitchell, Walter St. John, Ulysses Patchett and Scott Elder. 7. (a) Marche Des Mandolin- isto Mezzacapo (b) Florentine Gavotte R. J. Carpenter McKinley Mandolin and Guitar Club. 8. Walzer Marchen (1st move- ment) Edw. Schutt The Gunderson Trio. 9. The Spanish Dance Tschaikowsky McKinley Stringed Orchestra. 10. Priest ' s March from The Magic Flute Mozart McKinley Brass Quartette. 11. Romance Beethoven Helen von Ende. 12. (a) Miserere from II Trova- tore G. Verdi (b) The American Favorite H. Prendiville McKinley Band. 13. Papillon No. 11 Schubert Helen Maher (Representative of Piano Club.) 14. The Evening Star ....R. Wagner Clarence Mitchell accompanied by Stringed Orches tra. 15. Carmena Waltz ....H. L. Wilson McKinley Glee Club. 16. Selections from Prince of Pilsen. McKinley Orchestra.
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Page 25 text:
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THE TARGET 23 so, by Louise Runckel; Rameau ' s Sarabande, by Helen Maher; Nol- let ' s Elegie, by Dorothy Elling- wood; Rogers ' Etude No. 10, by Margaret Geisler; Leo Delibes ' Piz- zicati, by Gertrude Seaver. On March 31 another attractive group of selections was given. Ade- laide Kibbe rendered Godard ' s Au Matin ; Grace Scrantom, Chopin ' s Mazurka ; Hazel Niehaus, Lang ' s Flower Song ; Marjory McCullough, Poldini ' s Birds of Passage ; Clare Lenfesty, Chopin ' s C Sharp Minor Waltz. GLEE CLUB. Our Glee Club is one of our strong- est organizations, composed of some of the best vocal talent of the school. They are studying Gloria and Car- mena, with excellent results, assist- ed by the accompanist, Clare Len- festy. The sopranos are: Dorothy Armstrong, Evelyn Denham, Lulu Foss, Imogenc Hall, Tay Cutler, Grace Greet, Mary Ames, Lois Pearce, Maybelle Irvine, Ivy Mehrten, Bessie O ' Brien, Phyllis La Shells, Anna Love, Virginia Wynkoop, Katherine Wilder, Grace Conzelmann, Camille Haynes, Esther Schenkel, Emma Quillinan, Anita Foss, Miriam Mack, Vivian Thaxter, Helen Jackson, Eliz- abeth Thompson, Edith Wieland, Elizabeth Lee, Gertrude Montgomery, Marjorie Merriman, Henrietta Pey- ser, Florence King, Eula Lee Smith, Gladys Wann, Genevieve Jefferson, Lois Brock, Alice Gibbs; altos, Paul- ine Elder, Leda Van Haren, Dorothy Blean; Charlotte Arnold, Anita Avila, Elise Houghton, Florence Thaxter, Marjorie Moore, Elizabeth Mclndoe, Natalie Raymond, Edna Wheeler, Glory Howard, Dorothy Perkins, Jean Scotford, Louise Lawton, Elinor Stillman, Evelyn Lewis, Marian Woolsey, Maxine Davis, Adelaide Kibbe, Alice Queen, Helen Maher, Isa- bel Avila, Jane Reilly, Leitha Hatha- Elizabeth Roberts, Louise Runckel, way, Dorothy Manasse, Ada Minifee; bases, Charles Whitworth, Francis Kelsey, Clarence Mitchell, Donald Goss, Thomas Harris, Raymond Gil- man, John Daly, Edward Ritson, Fred Paul, Teddy Michels, Edward Gunn, Walter St. John, Frank Hall, Leigh- ton Dyer, Edward Barnard. SWIM — SWIMMING — SWUM, SWUM Now it ' s Spring, most beautiful; Soon it ' s Summer, not so cool; Then we swim from noon right on Till at four our clothes we don. Later, though, our backs we feel; At our mothers ' skirts we kneel, Pray to her our backs relieve. Soon from her relief receive. Weeks and weeks we hardly go From the house, our backs burn so. Lounge around, we have no vim, Wish we ' d never learned to swim. Swim, the verb I used to hate, Worst of all, it had no matt. Now IV learned to hate it more. ' Gainst that word I ' ll wage a war. Later, when the summer ' s gone, When I lie or walk or yawn, Swim, the verb that spoiled the best Time of the year, the time of rest, Comes to mind, I think it o ' er. All the time dislike it more. Never did a word sound so Cruel as swim. I think I know! WILLIAM HOSSELKUS.
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