OCR Text |
Show May 20, 1953 YM Cat Page 3 D A S H I N FASHION by Mary Ann Godfrey Many tears will be shed at tonights Senior high graduation exercise. Some of them will be because of all the friends that will never be seen again, others will be because they finally got out of high school. All of the seniors will be sporting new clothes and trying to look happy till at least after the program is over. Jaque Brandley will be seen wearing beige lace and taffeta chantung. Pink lace is Nancy Briggs choice for the closing of tne year. Helen Bauer will be neat an trim in her pink silk taffetized chantung dress. In white for graduation is Doris Hawker wearing a poodle cloth suit. Pretty as a picture is Valene Hansen wearing white embroidered organdy over pink taffeta slip. Light hearted and gay is Gertrude Haws in aqua nylon. Janice Bickmore could win Hollywood honors in her blue file suit. Exclusive is Marjorie Killpack in a cute lace dress. Mary Lee Winkler is captivating in her pink lace. Very pleasing to the eye is Lynne Eggertsen in blue wool suit. Barbara Stump and Carol Moyle both chose white embroidered organdy to graduate in. Ruth Brimhall will be very sophisticated when she wears her lavender eyelet dress. , 1 K.luLi fCosutei CHORUS New officers are going to be announced m the near future. LETTERMENS CLUB It was announced today by the president that they are going to elect new officers in the near future. THESPIANS CLUB Members of the Thespians club presented the play Many Moons. It was put on for the children of Provo City and it will also be at the Leadership presented Week. They are also planning a pot luck party for the future. QUILL AND SCROLL Quill and Scroll have a new member, Nancy Rawsoh. They are also planning a party in the near future. Row 1: Kay Johnson, Stan Knight, Philip De- Friez, Marilyn Swenson, Dean Madsen; row 2: Margee Massey, Pat Harwood, Louise Cox, Joyce Muhlestein, Rodney Despain, Mark Oldroyd, Gerald Hayward; row 3: Joan Taylor, Lynn Tanner, Robert Allen, Paul Ririe, Ken Briggs, Bert East-monStan Allen, Gerrie Jacobs; row 4: Carol Summer School Registration To Be June 75 Registrations for the 1953 summer school will be held on June 15, at 9 a m. The session will end July 17. Classes are being offered in remedial English, grammar, algebra, geometry, Type I and II world history, American history, English literature, and remedial math A half unit of credit is suggested for each class entered ed. The first summer institute for high school students will feature two broad speech areas, which are Debate, Forensics, and Dra matic production. These will op erate on a full day, five week basis. Students will be selected by application Approximately fif ty students will be selected for each of these areas The institute is under guidance and direction of George L. Lewis Forms of public speaking such as Oratory, Extemporaneous speaking, and Radio speech will be stressed. A summer music clinic will be held July 27 through August 8. Qualified high school musicians are invited to join the symphony orchestra. The guest conductor wil be Henry J. Van der Heide There will also be a band for high school students. Halliday, Alberta Jacobson, Warren Daidson, Philip Ruler, Sylvia Denys, Charles Haekley, Jaoque Meiling, Wally Mangum; row 5: Micliael Wiscomb, Preston BisseH, David Meldrum, Hugh Taj lor, Greg Andrus, John Elliott, Hal Mangle-son- , Hart Bullock. Jr. High Graduation Set For Thursday The Hour Before, is the theme of the Junior High School Graduation. The exercises will be held on May 21, at 10 oclock in College Hall. The class, as a whole has been working on the script of the play. The entire class will appear on the program, according to Carol Halliday, chairman of the graduation exercises The setting of the skit, The Hour Before, will be the lower hall of the Education Building. The play is based around a time machine. The audience will be taken back into the past to view some of the students who have gone before and then they will be given a view into the future as the graduating class sees. it. It is a tradition here at the Y, for the eighth grade class to furnish the flowers for the decoration of the stage. This year there are thirty-seve- n graduates. The program is as follows: Organ Prelude Gerrie Jacobsen, Carol Halliday, Kay Prayer Perfect Johnson, Sylvia Denys, Alberta Jacobs, and Marilyn Swensen Devotional Piano Solo Kay Johnson Welcome by class President Mark Oldroyd The Hour Before Play written and directed by 9th Grade class Graduation March Senior High Welcome Bob Oaks Presentation of Diplomas . Prayer Wally Mangum Recessional Organ Postlude i |