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Page 27 text:
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THE END OF -X PFPFECT D-XY Now the sun s sett1n0 -Xnd the dar IS drawrn n10h The swrft LION b11d of dukness Spreads her wrnfs acros the sky Th1s fflorrous dax has ended but another takes 1ts place In the dawn of new tomorrow but to fill the vacant place between the dawn and new tomorrow Is the srlence of the nrvht And we remarn w rthrn rt T1ll the first frrex streaks of lrght -Xfter everx perfect dar There has to come that space W here xesterdax has Gone forever -Xnd tomorrow takes 1tS place Vt AP It seems theres no solutron For mans Wrse and able men Have trred 1ts evolutron And strll rt goes on every day In one way or another In every place rn every land Men fight and k1ll each other War does not exrst alone Between two vvarrrnof natrons For even rn communrtres There are the same transoressrons And yet nobodx seems to know What he IS fl ht1n0' for So xou can see how th1s fiend works Th1s fiend we all call war' Pex Scott senror ON HEP BLANDNESS On havlnfr reached the ave srxteen I stop and th1nk how trme does fly I w hose lrfe has been one futrle try To become a poet But my poems are overseen Br the heartless edrtors of magamnes Over countless rejectrons of poems I srgh Not a one w1ll they prrnt or bus F01 the lrfe of a poet Im verv keen But mx poems I fear w1ll never be harled As the chefs doeuvre of the rear It rsn t my destrm to be a second Tennyson Im sorry to say, as a poet I have farled I th1nk I'll try some other career And just w rrte poetry for fun Helen Ostertag, Junror WINTER FUIN One cold dax from the clouds there crme -X lreavx drrzzlx sort of 1a1n It soon turned lIItO snowflakes whrte -Xnd kept snowrnff all throuffh the Illflllt -Xnd rn the mornrnfr all around -X blanket of snow had covered the ffrounrl The chrldren from the11 houses came -Xnd 1n the snow played manx a frame Thex made a snowman fat and round -Xnd placed h1m on a snow whrte mound NK 1th prpe 1n mouth h1s arms stretched wrde He drew the CLIIIOLIS to h1s s1de INe1ct dar the sun shone early and late And snow man met an early fate The ch1ld1en hated to see h1m o Put the sun had melted the befrutrful snow Betty McKelvy sophomore IF I WERF A CLOUD If I were a cloud Just a lrttle whrte cloud Way up there rn the sky By the heavenly gate I would To greet the ones that go by To stay by hrs lovable s1de If I were a cloud A bw black cloud Real low rn the skx I would fly To Urve off water I 010 X Srnce I am no cloud And can not fly I w1ll lrve below And watch the clouds pass by Lewrs E Frrtts sophomore THE UNION STATION I walked up the grrmy starrs That thousands had trod before It seemed that 1tS past present and future VVere wrrtten on every stone How many have met parted never to meet agarn In th1s meetlng place of destlny I can not, nor can any other Now or ever hope to know rts many secrets. Rex Scott, Junror Twenty five 1 T ' A A A L A ,' . I ' . , - - 1 A - Cv . C A . ' ' Sl 4- , A . . - 1 I '. rw 4 v vw w' vo . 1 v. I I ' rv -9 . r A o o o ' O -v Y r . . Y 1 ' ' . ' . . 1 C, . . 1 6 . r ' . . ' . C 9 r Y . . . ' v v v A x L t of - CJ 7 y 1 . . , lv , , . Y , ' v uv n v Y. . . . ' ' ' . . 3 ' 7 . 2 . , U Y v v u v n . - O . , - V - A . a . 9 - L. v 'tv c . . C L gl. , 7 V' , ' ' N L J C Q . 1 u ' u 1 Y, sc Th1s IS a thrng, hard to explarn , , . , 7 . J . . T Y I , . . , ! V 7 Q Q v ! U Y 7' - ., Y , V Hy 7 11. . ,, - , 4 u wg n - 1' I 1 .C r. . - bl 7 , ' ,. 1, 7 . 0, . H i . b Cx 7 V Y . C 3 As D bj. . . .. , , . 9 ,Y v' ' A L , ,- a c, r v' ' - , - . ' 7 A . . . 9 Y v . 1 V. L c . 1. A I u I ' . u ! ! T Y. . . . 4 u ' . , x v 0 9 e 7 3 , - 7' . ' ' ' 1 L ! Y 7 7 - I u v 1 u vu. ' I v ' v - v ' 1 ' 1. 1 ' .1 9 7 , v In ' ' . . v nf ' V'
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Page 26 text:
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CAFETERIA SNAPSHOTS A moment of silence then the bell The doors of 1ooms burst open and down the halls they run pell mell It s lunch per1od t1me to eat You can tell that by the sound of hurry1ng feet The l1ne IS endless but there you see One of the guys you eat w1th and holle1 Hey Bob save a place for me And up the l1ne you sneak real qu1et Cause 1f a teacher sees you sneak1ng up To crowd 1nto the l1ne ahead of someone else there ll be a r1ot A 1ule IS to take only one glass of water on a trav Ill take some more glasses of water for the other k1dS at my table cause they usuallv forget them you say And so laden heavy and balanced p6C2.llOl1S1y on one hand cause your books are under your arm vou tr1p between the tables and CRASH I I Y V The tray has unbalanced and made a great splash Here comes one of the ladles w1th a stern look on her face And says Seven cents a glass SIX glasses that w1ll be forty two cents that puts you 1n your place Then there s the gnl who walks up the ISIS look1ng at her feet and suddenlv BUMP a splatter and guess Why she s only spllled Chlll all over he1 dress But what could be a speck blt worse Than to get to the cash leglster w1th XOUI tlay full and d1SCOVe1 you ve gone off and fo1got ten your pm se Evelyn Me11latt senlor IT MAY BE TRUE Parks St1CkS to h1s geomet1y And Harrell to h1s dramat1cs Whlle Pearson loves her shorthand And Guv h1s autochamcs Swanson neve1 takes h1s Enghsh Stlalght Wxthout a fancy dress But students have no cholce at all They take the whole dang mess Garnett Dwyer yunxor Twenty four YOU These inner thoughts my deal Have come to v1ew In memory of the hours That passed Wlth you When Im alone And others are not near My 1nne1 thoughts Are only of you dear They are so prec1ous That I call them Jewels Yet when I thlnk of some They seem so cruel For you have gone And left my thoughts to me My angu1sh You or no one else can see You seek th1ngs new And have the old comb1ned Wh1le I must carry on And only find Solace ln the rever1e Of my thoughts It has become a haven To be sought Some wondel why I hold these thoughts so deal I want you so And w1sh that you WSIB he1e Marvel Slmpson Jumor WYANDOTTE Youth entexs the modern pO1taIS Of moltar and wood and stone Wlth absorbed mlnds and ca1ef1ee ga1t They t1ead the11 coulse alone Th1ough thlS laby11nth of knowledge Goes the steady stleam of youth And thelr eldels hele 1mpress them Wlth the value of the tluth FOI the ch1ld1en of our yesterdays Have bequeathed to us today The advantages of learn1ng Along Wlth organlzed play And after our t1a1n1ng IS finlshed And after our laurels are won We step to the thl9ShOId of l1fe And take up the tasks to be done From the efforts of our elders We may shale IH dreams Subllme And out 'rom Wyandottes portals May enter the The March of Tune Marvel Sxmpson Jun1o1 . 1 1 L 1 1 1 y . ' 1 , . . . .- , , Y I , . 1 7 . . , - . 1 . 1 Y Y 7 ' an 11 ' 1 1 ' Y L4 , 9 . . ' V 1 Y . . , , 1 1 .1 uv - . 1 . 11 ' , . 7 1 1 l , a nu 1 L . . 'W ' Y an ' -- 1 1 1 Y ,' -1 11 V ' , 1 ' 1 I I . ' 1 , .Q . . t 1 , . .. t , . 1 ' Q ' y' v e . ' . ' it-47 , s - Y I .. . t 1 1 1 - 1 . u Q .' 1 '1 v , . V . . 9 . . 1 1 ' 1 1 y t . 4 . 1 1 - .V 1 .. . . . . . Y Y 1 1 Q ' v ' c Y . . . -. , , . ' . 1 , 1 1 1 f 1 U ' ' L . . , , , - 7 ...-' Q . 1 , 1-
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Page 28 text:
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lHl NlWS HHH IH PHESS W1th a rush of last mlnute news the bustle of ed1t1ng and the count mg of headllnes The Panto raph has met 1ts deadllne on Tuesday evenmgs for the publlcatlon on F11 day for twenty yeals Dur1ng th1s twentleth yea1 some unusual ISSUQS have been prlnted and plesented to the student body The publlcatlon of the week of the state teache1s convent1on Nov 3 was the first SIX pa e paper of th1S year and was vyr1tten ed1ted proof 1ead made up pr1nted and d1str1b uted 1n the sholtened 4 day per1od The H1 Y conventlon Dec 9 10 11 also proved a b1 story and the conclave was featured on page one These we1e two of the best lssues accord1n to Mr R A Heady The Pantograph advlser The greatest changes 1n The Pantograph th1S year were the headllne styles and the changes on the ed1tor1al page The old style used a no count system but Ed1tor John Arnold revamped the heads A 3 l1ne dropl1ne followed by a 4 l1ne 1nverted pyram1d 1S the style of the number one head the numbe1 two has two l1nes of dropl1ne and three of pyramld In th1s system careful countlng IS most essent1al for un1fo1m1ty and beauty On the second page Cnewspaper term IS ed1tor1al pagel a new tvpe of standlng head was or1g1nated F1ed Cooper Wlth su gestlons from the rest of the staff d1ew the deslgns for the heads The 6 polnt ty pe at the bottom l1ne of the box was an added attractlon and 16 qulred much thought P11nts Chest Qheet On Monday Nov 14 the staff vyent doyyn tovsn to the Chambe1 of Commerce to yy 01k on the Commun lty Chests m1meo0f1aph Campalgh sheet The mormng yyas spent 1n gathe11ng and wr1t1ng the news and the afternoon 1n ed1t1n0' and typlng Afte1 the completlon of Twenty smx Standmg Ahce DeVault Fred Cooper Jack Smlth Bob Durkee Bob Shlndler hrglma Summers Dorothy Stannard and John Arnold beated Nathalxe Schrenber Dorohty Wallnow Naomn Balkm Fdxth Masch Gladys HaWklnS Wlmfred Wooton Helen Horosko and Helen Budelovlch th1s work Mr Heady emphatlcallv stated that he had much more re spect for mlmeographed sheets The Ch11stmas xssue of Dec 21 vyas probably the most unlque 1n head l1nes The spread as It IS called 1n newspaper hngo O1 the head on the Chrlstmas stor1es IS V813 unusual for hlgh school pa pers The custom of pr1nt1n0f the before Yule paper IH green 1nk yyas establ1shed th1s year Every yyeek 2500 Pantofnaphs a1e p11nted and d1str1buted by the 17 members of the staff to 99 per cent of the student body The Jobs fO1 the staff a1e many and va11ed and John Alnold holds the pos1t1on of taskmaste1 and makel Hls yy o1k 1S mostly ed1t1n f1ont pa e make up and ed1to11al yy11t1n0f but h1s IS the most lespon slble pos1t1on on the staff The ass1st1ng ed1to1s a1e Allce DeVault Ol1ve Hamllton Gladys Havyklns and Dorothy Stannard As thelr t1tle 1nd1cates the11 yyolk IS D11 to 3SS1St w1th the edltlng yy11te the news and heads Sports Wrlters boys sports ed1tor Jack and the 1rls ed1tor V1r marlly and to The Smlth g1n1a Summers handle all the foulth page mater1al Cartoonists Bob Shlndler and Bob Durkee draw all 1ubbe1 cuts appearlng through out the y ear Sometlmes W1n1fred Wooten takes a hand and makes a Guess Who F11day IS c11culat1on day and Bob Sh1ndle1 vyho IS the manager sees that the paper IS counted and d1s t11buted by the staff The buslness managel Nathahe SCh1elbE1 types the ads and takes C319 of the monthly statements D01Otl1X WRIIHOW IS the adve1t1s 1ng manager and she acts as as slstant to Nathalle The long yyo1k1ng over bu1 dened 1epo1 ters are Naoml Balkm Helen Budelovlch Helen Horosko Edlth Masch Dorothy Walmow F1ed Cooper and Wmnle Wooton 9 P lv 1 ' ' 1 . , - 1 , . . 2 0. . 9 Q f 9 s . . . 1. D , '-'- -I fi - 915 . . . l fi . . x . , 7, 1 7 ' 9 - 9 . - 0' . 0 Y . . - 9 9 1 - . . . - 1 9 ' ' 9 9 .U . 9 o 9 ' 0' , D . . . 9 ' , . . . . . ' Y. 'I I ' 9 9 9 9 ! I , . . ' y . Q w Q s . 1 a ' s . s ' 9 9 v J D A 9 7 9 9 ' . . 7 . . V . . . . - , 9 - 9 , . . . , . . , , 1 , . - . , , - 1 v ' . . , . . 9 0' - ' . . x 5 9 . . . , , ' ' , . . n , I ' . ' 1 ' - . . ' - - cn L' . n n s ' ' Y ' ' ' ' ' 64 ra . . . A - 0, v Y 1 I. 7 . . 1 . Y O . 9 1: . . 1' ' ' v ' 1 v ' Y . 9 y ' Q - - ' , .1 , u . 1 -' 7 . A . n l y l 1. 1 I I I v 9 ,' 1' ' , . ' u ' J . , . f . ' v 1 v ' , ' ' 0- ' v ' ' , ' -D , . , - t 67 . V r ' ' ' 0' - ' ' - 4: r v ' - v ', . . . 1 - . , . or - ' 1 ' . ' .' ' ' U Y - v' . 7 D 1 . , ' ' . , . . . - . ,, . . , . . . . . x , 1. . . . - , Y Y - . 9 1 . 7 9 7 . . . Y ' - W , - C, . - 9 9 . ' . . . . - , Y . . 3- . . . . , .
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