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Show Florence Southwick,Lucille Spencer, Naoma Stephens, Rhoberta Stevens, Audrey E. Striffler, Erma Summerill, Harry Frederick Suniville. Edwin Tanner, Lavon Thorpe, Elizabeth Tomlinson, Beth Tonks, Helen Torsak, Mae Marie Trousdale. Thosi Ujiye. Gertrude Wadley, Doris Wangsgard, Wanda Weable, Lila Maxine Wheelwright, Martha Alice Whitaker, Ruth White, William Wilson, James Wilson, Belva Woodruff. ENGLISH COURSE Finishing the English course are: Ruth Ames, Marian Anderson, Porter Lee Anderson, Lowell Anderson LaPriel Baird, George Leon Ballinger, Annabelle Barker, Odessa Fae Barrett, Harold M. Bell, Norma Bingham, Virginia Bingham, Elda Lucile Blackburn, Avis Lorraine Boyd, Eloise Brewer, Beatrice Brownson, Florence Browning, Betty Norine Bruestle, Andrew Brunetti, Margaret Burdett, Janell Burton, Myrtle Helena Burton, Walton R. Burton. Julia Cain, Winona Cardon, Beth Carr, Florence Cave, Helen Chugg, Audrey Clayton, Rowland Parry Corry, Dorothy Eleanor Crawford. Barnard E. Daley, Mildred Drake, William DeHart. Marian Ensign, Lorna Evans, Myrtice Evans. Geneva Farr, Adele McLean Fleming, Joseph C. Foley, Francis P. Foley. Florence Gay, Ruth Gibbons, Irene Gilmore, Marian Gimlin, Ruth Elizabeth Greaves, Howard Greenwell. Dora Ann Handy, Elizabeth Hawkes, Dorothea Madeline Healy, Lolita K. Hendrickson, Eva Herscovitz, Ruth Nevada Holliday, Joyce Pansy Holton, Virginia Caine Hyde. Virginia James, Alberta B. Jensen, Paul W. Jensen. Jane Kellogg, Robert Wayne Kimball. Fred Lavin, Nathalie Layton, Alexandria Nancy Liddell, Ruth Iretta Landsay, Marian B. Lindstrom, Alice Longstroth, Stanley Houghton (Michelstetter) Lower Beth Lusty. Cornelius Maathius, Katherine McFarlane, Helen Elizabeth Madsen, Wilma Manning, Mildred Lucille Maynard, Marian Elizabeth Maynard, Eugene Moshier. Dorothy nelson, Avon Neuteboom, Margaret Elsie Nylander. Russell Frederick Parmley, Virginia Parsons, Yvonne Peirce, Mariam Peterson, Mildred Isabella Peterson, Vella Phillips, Laura Phillips, Ed. S. Pratt. Doris Reardon, James Hinchcliff Riley, Abe Rubin. Dorothy May Sampson, Oleo Sandell, Virginia Sanders, Audrey Sandman, John H. Sanford, Hazel A. Schenck, Dorothy Ann Schreven, Margaret Scoville, Lottie Seegmiller, Earl Donald Sharar, Bernice Shreeve, Ila Smith, Lafe Snyder,, Florence Steckel, Irene Leah Stephens, Zola Del Stevenson, Ellis Allan Stoker, Mildred Stromberg. Marian Terry, George Wilson Thatcher, Evelyn Theurer, Lydia LaVerne Thurston, Frank C. Todd, Inez Virginia True. Helen VanBuren, Dorothea B. Varney, Echo Vaughn. William Earle Wagstaff, Melba Louise Wallwork, Laura Blance Wangsgard, Bernadette Wedell, Philip Vaille Weeks, Marguerite Ellen Wheelock, Irene Wheelock, Dorothy Elaine Wilcox, Sheldon Winchester Winkler, Dorothy S. Wintle, Jennes Wright, Alan Wright. Maurine Yarbrough. Edwin True Zimmerman. ENGINEERING COURSE Engineering course graduates are: Helmer A. Anderson, Read Pres¬ton Badger, Randall Manning Bar¬ker, Emmett Barton, Lloyd Baxter, Lloyd H. Beus, Calvert W. Bowman, Boyd E. Budge. Arthur Campbell, Frank Maxwell Clark, Vaughn N. Clayton, Clarence J. Dinsdale, Walter Fowler, John Marvin Gealta, Virgil Albert James, Ward Alfred Jessop, Henry Ketchie, Preston Herbert Mulcahy, Jack M. Olish, Louis S. Peery, Robert Gladding Prout, Boyd A. Read, Raymond Roberts, Charles Albert Salt, James Edward Saunders, Warren Dee Shepherd, Frank William Soderberg, Robert Edward Simpson, Warren Stone, Herbert Walter Tarran, Gilbert Charles Tolhurst, Edward D. Tracy, Fred Van Woerkom, John Alva West, Frank Benjamin Woolley. Fera Lockhead Young, Jr. GENERAL COURSE Those completing the general course are: Gerald Buehler, Alice Caldwell, Joseph L. Call, Norman Joseph Devereaux, Ed. Dermody, Ashton Harris, Emile E. Henderson, Ray Edward Jensen, Glen Herschel Judd, Thomas Stephens Merrill, Jack Moore, Fred Morris, Blaine Mortensen, Nina Pence, Robert Perry, John M. Purdy, David James Purdy, Ralph Richardson, Harry E. Sackett, Ronald Sanders, Lee P. Shifflet, Hugh Stewart Sloan, Seiichi Tamaki, Joseph Harold Taylor, Robert E. VanDyke, Augustus B. Vaughn, Walter Spencer Weaver, Kenneth Whittier, Fred G. Wilson. HOME ECONOMICS Home economics course graduates are: Delores Anderson, Neta Shirley, Bingham, Jane Marian Dunstan, Gertrude Grange, Viola Harlin, Lois Jensen, Doris Leavitt, Flora McFarland. Alice Malan. IN LANGUAGES Latin and modern language course graduates are: Oertel Aadnesen, Garnet Margaret Bradshaw, John Cawley, Adair Clay, John Ellis Cragun, Duane George Darling, O. Doyle Jensen, Elizabeth F. Komatsu, Imogene Locke, Lorna Compton Malan, Donald Douglas Miller, David McKay Morrell, Melba Maxine McDonald, Helen McKay, Afton McNeil, Percy Osamu Oda, Marjorie Pitt, Frank R. Rounds Naomi Belle Wall, Charles Webster Wonder. IN MECHANICS Mechanics art course graduates are: Earl Bragonje, Alfred Mark Brim, Joseph Lynn Chappie, Royal H. Chappie, Henry Charles Code, Dan Code, Phil H. Crosbie, Wayne H. Harbertson, Jack Hilton, Alvard Hoggan, Frank R. Johnson, Leland Mortensen, Grant William Peterson. Ralph Walter Philpott, Francis Sangberg, Frank E. Terry, Schiro Ujiiye. IN SCIENCE Graduates of the scientific course are: Rudolph Farady Anderson, Austin Barker, Leroy Behling, Lila Burgi, Orlo Child, Earl C. Christensen, Thomas Condie, Junior Stephen Donoviel, Paul Eugene Edson, Grant Rollins Fernelius, June Macfarlane Forsha, Dorotny Franzon Griffin, Herman Earl Hart, Clyde Stewart Hunter, Eldon Gordon Lowham, Harold John Malan, Margaret Miln, Floyd Pell, Clavin J. Pitt, Allan R. Scoville, Ernest O. Steimle, Paul —Jack Sugar, Spencer L. Wangsgard, Doris Merle Whittemore. Ogden High School Notes May 12, 1931 RUTH GREAVES, Editor 0 Exhibit day is on May 29. Just a hint, students, get your projects done early. Don't leave them un¬til the last minute and then hand uhem In half done. "U" DAY WINNERS We were very pleased with the Noma of our contestants at the university last Friday. We feel that we have a music department de¬serving of much commendation. Mr. Hansen has worked unceasingly dur-ing the year in the various depart¬ments of music and should feel well satisfied with the outcome. Our boys' flee club walked away with first place in Utah and Idaho. Good work, tallows. The girls' glee club won aieond place, being defeated by one point by East high. Walker Low took lirst place for the best barttone voice; Fae Saeger, first IHplaee. cornet; Marian Terry, third I place, contralto; Lee Richards, second place. French horn; William Allen. second place, clarinet; boys' quartet. second place; Drew Peterson, honorable mention, saxophone. Haven't we reason to be proud of fcniu ic department? Congratulations, Mr. Hansen. CHATTER AND CHAFF They call Paul Edson, Maple Syrup—'cause he's such a refined sap. The most famous words—"I have to go to eighth period." A gossip around school is some¬one who tells something before we: can tell it ourselves. So many two lips are the sign of spring fever. Rowland Corry says his girl has double-crossed him. He received a letter from her with two X's at the bottom. Preston Mulcahy and Louis Peery enjoyed themselves quite thoroughly at the Chi Omega sorority house on "U" day. WHERE FOUND TITLES A Far Country, by Winston, Churchill. "The younger son gathered all together, and took his jour¬ney into a far country, and there wasted his substance With riotous living." The Foolish Virgin, by Kathleen Norris. "Ten virgins, who took their lamps and went forth to meet the bridegroom. And five of them were wise and five of them were foolish." The Way of a Man, by Emerson Hough. "There be three things which be too wonderful lor me. Yes, four which I know not: The way of an eagle in the air; the way of a ser-pent upon a rock; the way of a ship in the midst of the sea; and the way of a man with a maid." Quo Vadis, by Henryk Pienkiewecz. "Quo Vadis?" "Whither goest thou?" "Domine, Quo Vadis?" (St. Peter's question.) Giants in the earth, by O. E. Rolvoag. "There were giants in the earth in those days." Genesis 6:4. BASEBALL—NOW Once more we hear from our gym girls; this time they're making tracks around a diamond. A tourn-ament is on. The Snakes—Hermese Broadbent. captain, and the Wolves. Harriet Robison, captain, tied with the Hawks, Kioyoko Oda and Big Ti¬gers, Kate Heiner; We 13, Anita Van Dyke, lost to Green Dragons, Ruth Child, 4 to 14; Gorillas, Alice Longstroth, defeated Hyenas, Ger-trude Wadley, 8 to 5; T. N. T.'s, Ruth Gibbons, lost to Dirty Dozen, iElpha Morse, 11 to 2; Lucky 13's, Margaret Thomas, won over Orange Streaks, Ruth White, 10 to 9; Helen Hansen's team defeated Natholie Lay ton's 4 to 2; Vera Drabble's team won over Mary Ethel Jones', 21 to 0. We'll hear more later. OWL. SAM PEPY'S REINCARNATION Up betimes and to mine sur¬prise and chagrin I do discover that I must, perforce, prepare mine own I morning meal because mine good aunt is away and 'tis with great mis¬givings that I set about it. Anon, I do get it made and eaten though I will say that it was much bet¬ter of the making than of the eat¬ing. Thence I discover that an good button of mine suspendor hath took its leave from mine trousers which causeth me great trouble. I didst stick mine finger until the good blood runneth out of it like a syve, but presently the button is stuck on though for how long I cannot tell. To school to find to mine great happiness that there is no drill this morning. Mine only sorrow being that I did think that I was commit¬ting an great crime, by staying away and did get quite an thrill out of it only to find that I had done nothing wrong. Presently, vote upon who shall be our good president and vice presi¬ dent and secretary next year. Whereupon I do start to put down mine own choice and I do find three people upon mine neck, each telling me to put down an different per¬son. I was troubled mightily in that I then forgot who I did want in the firt place and before I did know it I had put down three people who I knoweth not and I knoweth not yet how their names got there. CHARLES WOOD. D. A. C. The D. A. C. club is still going plenty strong but its reporter has been taking a rest cure. D. A. C. has been enjoying real drama in the last two months. Each week a professional reader has been on the program. Last week we heard our talented advisor, Miss Wooley, read "Thirst." There is an undercurrent rapidly sweeping us toward success. We have many delightful surprises for you, one this week and one— M. D. NEW EDITOR For the last two days of last week and last night the Notes were han¬dled entirely by juniors. They will also be written by juniors tomorrow night and the next. Keep your eyes open for the Notes you enjoy mostly in these tryouts. It won't be long until next year's editor and staff will be selected. TRACK Porky Greenwell, second in the one hundred dash, fourth in the two twenty, "Scotty" Sneddon, third in the pole vault, and Ogden's relay team, second in the 880, was the rec¬ord that our Tigers hung up in the state track meet last Saturday. Og¬den garnered in thirteen points in the affair and tied with several other teams for fourth place. Con¬sidering the stiff competition, these marks are very commendable. We congratulate the victors for their fine showings. The state meet con¬cludes track for this year and Coach Kapple has issued a call for all suits to come in. The record this year established by our tracksters was all that could be asked for and surely they were fitting represen¬tatives for our school. We join in congratulating the entire team and the two coaches, Mr. Kapple and Mr. Simkins. TRACKSTERS TO VIE SATURDAY AT SALT LAKE Greenwell of Ogden Is Threat In Sprints At Scholastic Final Tracksters of the Ogden and the Weber High schools who qualified at the regional meet at Logan last Friday, will perform in the state finals at Salt Lake City Satur- Nine local artsts will bid foi places in the Utah yf scholastic hall oi Ogden will hav six men in the fianls and Weber three. Of the entiri of perform' Howard Greenwell of Ogden stands out ai the serious threat for recognition Greenwell is a sprinter of abilit; and will perform in both sprint and will run as anchor man in th relay for the Tigers. Vaughn and Sneddon will per form in the pole vault for the Dick Kapple athletes. These men, to gether with Darling, Simpson and Harbertson, will don the Orange and Black outfits Saturday. The las three named and Greenwell wi cavort in the 880 yard relay. Weber High is counting on Bo Stratford to do things in the 44 yard dash. He Is also a broa jumper of ability. Chandler and Dabb are the othe Weber High candidates. UTAH CONTEST AWARDS MADE Two Ogden Pupils Get First Places At University Walker Low and Fay Seager, both of Ogden High school, were the only two individuals from Weber county to win firsts Friday at the Univer¬sity of Utah annual high school con¬tests in Salt Lake City. Northern Utah winners follow: Extemporaneous speaking—Wood¬ruff J. Deem, Weber High, third. Dramatic (one-act play)—Morgan High, third. Poster—Virginia Parsons, Ogden High, third honorable mention and $5 prize. Girls' glee culb—Ogden High, first in class A; North Summit High school, Coalville, first in class C. No contest. Boys' glee club—Ogden High, first in class A, cup and scholarship; North Summit, Coalville, first in class C. No contest. Mixed chorus—Box Elder High, Brigham City, second. Boys' quartet—Ogden High, sec¬ond. Girls' solo voice—Soprano, Mary Clark, Box Elder High, third; alto, Marian Terry, Ogden High. Boys' small vocal groups—Box Elder High, first. No contest. Boys' solo voice—Tenor, Robert Reese, Jr., Box Elder High, firts; baritone, Walker Low, Ogden High, first. Flute—Jay Anderson, Box Elder High, second. Cornet—Fay Seager, Ogden High, first. Saxophone—Homer Rich, Box Elder High, second. Clarinet—William Allen, Ogden High, second. French horn—Lee Richards, Og¬den High, second; Naomi Zumbrunnen, North Summit, Coalville, third. Bassoon—Ella Pace, North Sum¬mit, Coalville, second. Band—Class C, North Summit, Coalville, second; Morgan High school, third. Orchestra—Class C, North Sum¬mit, first; Morgan, second. |