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Page 25 text:
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SENIOR CLASS PROPHECY On the subject of happiness, Dale thought of Bob and Colleen, and how “She Broke His Heart in Three Places” but she mended it anyway because they were married and no “heart trouble” was seen in any way. Little Colleen had several brothers and sisters in his old age, Dale couldn’t quite recall them but then he didn’t have time because “He was he Best Man” began to plan and immediately Margery began to chuckle. She was laughing over the way that Doris Dickinson had fitted with that song. Her freshman year she liked Bill Camic, her sophomore year Junior Bunyard. her junior year was Junior also, and her senior year she tried them all, and after calling out the men in Mattoon and all the neighboring towns, who should she pick out but a guy in the Army. None other than Don Buckalew. Yes, Marge thought, it sure looks like he was the best man ’cause he and Doris were married right after he got his education at Jacksonville. Such a lovely couple. Their thoughts were interrupted by “Bell Bottom Trousers.” It was Dale’s turn for reminiscing and his mind began to wander back to the time when Edith Bolin was going with Foster Buckley and Carlton Smith. Edith was a senior and Foster was in the Navy, and Carlton was in High School too, and now need I say more except that they are certainly a cute couple. Her hair is snowy white and his still crinkly curly and they run a store in Windsor. They are almost the perfect pair and Dale said aloud, “If you don’t believe me, you’ll have to admit they got the oldest couple at the Windsor Picnic” and Marge not knowing what caused the sudden outburst from her husband merely shrugged her shoulders and was set to thinking again by the familiar tune of “Let’s take the Long Way Home.” My, she thought, how typical of Jimmy Myers. He always seemed to want to take the longest, quietest way home and then when he got there — Wow! No doubt about it he had the best technique of any boy in high school. Oh, well, she thought, that’s “Life.” She smiled to herself and wondered how life was serving Jim now, that he was a life guard up at Michigan. She saw in the paper where he had saved some beautiful girls from drowning and then as if to finish that particular idea, she said very emphatically, “That’s Jimmy. Beautiful girls, a technique of A-l caliber, and a life guard’s job. What a life!” A beautiful song “Jealously” played next and Dale and Marge both seemed to say in the same breath, Charles Swinford. My, they thought, how that song did fit him. He had gone with Dorothy Dewar and everything had been real cozy, then she’d go with someone else and quite naturally, he’d go with someone too (it being Yvonne Hurley), and so thought the old couple, that’s where the “Jealousy” came in. Evidentally though, he’d found a way to overcome it because he had a grand job writing answers in the Love Lorn Column in a widely read New York Paper. “Jealously” was a beautiful song, they both agreed but even more beautiful was the song coming up, “The Missouri Waltz.”
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Page 26 text:
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JUNIORS JUNIOR OFFICERS—Joan Beldon, Kenneth Storm, Jeanette Morford, Jim Bunyard. JUNIOR PLAY CAST FRONT ROW—Bob Angell, Bill Steele, Yvonne Hurley, Lee Slater. SECOND ROW—Joycelyn Green, Miss Baker, Collen Jones, Joan Beldon. THIRD ROW—Kenneth Storm, Paul Juhnke, Gene Noffke, David Dunscomb. FOURTH ROW—Helen McQueen. Barbara Fugate, Sara Jane Warren, Betty Gaston. BACK ROW—Joyce Allen, Elizabeth Kays, Jeanette Morford, Elsie Carr, Dorothy Dewar. JUNIOR CLASS FRONT ROW—Joyce Allen, Barbara Fugate, Jeanette Morford, Marjorie Doehring, James Davis, Gene Noffke, Paul Juhnke, Mr. Davidson. SECOND ROW—Wanda Benson, Joycelyn Green, Ed Hunt, Jackie Gaddis, Kenneth Storm, Bob Angell, Joan Beldon, Yvonne Hurley. THIRD ROW—Betty Gaston, Collen Jones, Dorothy Dewar, Elsie Carr, Elizabeth Kays, Davadia Peadro, Sara Jane Warren, Helen McQueen. BACK ROW—Kenneth Quigley, Jim Bunyard, Lee Slater, Harold Smith, David Dunscomb, Charles Frandsen, Bill Steele, George Burrell. CHEMISTRY CLASS AT WORKTABLE FRONT ROW—Mr. Davidson, Bill Steele, Kenneth Storm, Jeanette Morford, Lee Slater, Helen McQueen, Elizabeth Kays, Paul Juhnke. BACK ROW—George Burrell, James Davis, Marjorie Doehring, David Dunscomb, Joycelyn Green, Collen Jones. V
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