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Show Ardell Russell Vice-President Betty Smalley Secretary-Treasurer Informality is all right and all that, but when Neuteboom and his kitchen-cabinet began to hold Sophomore class meetings on the front steps of the Moench building the Gestapo hinted an investigation . . . Neuteboom managed to spread himself thin over every activity possible. Betty managed to fill many leaves of her dairy without turning a page, and Ardell charmed bald- headed businessmen into Signpost patronage . . President Dix- on affably eluded their oily plot to place him on canvas for future generations. This is the closest Neut ever got to original art. Blair Evans Keith Wilcox Earl Tanner Gladys Godfrey Among the thin and weary ranks of the sophomores, these stood forth, each a leader in his chosen field. All together they typify well-rounded collegiate careers. Although these, taken at random, represent but a few of those deserving praise, they symbolize the achievements of the entire graduating class ... If this had been written fifty years ago, each of these choices would have been followed with a Shakespearean quotation foretelling great success. This optimistic custom has been discarded with the advent of the much-maligned cynicism of modern youth. Today, knowing them as we do, we can merely hope for the best . . . Blair Evans, engineer in transit; Betty Lou Balch, finished speaker and actress; J. M. Demos, Provo's purged pride; Dorothy Lichfield, good deed Dotty; Reed Coray, match burning at both ends; Earl Tanner, scholastic sophisticate; Loyal Christenson, versatile vocalist; Gladys Godfrey, Hawaii calls; Keith Wilcox, versatile, volatile, and vulnerable; Bob Sneddon, all-around athlete; Kent Baggs, most dependable man on the campus; and Arlene Jenson, study-bug deluxe. Reed Coray Bob Sneddon J. M. Demos Kent Baggs Dorothy Lichfield Betty Lou Balch Arlene Jenson Loyal Christenson |