1951-52 Owen High School
Cloverleaf Year Book Index
Yearbook property of: Anita (Lipprandt) Kriplean McKenna
Transcribed by Robert Lipprandt
Owen High School Senior Class Write-ups
(Pages 8 – 13)
Note: Page eight (first page of senior photographs, write-ups and four year information) is missing from my work copy. They will be designated with red type.
If anyone has this page in their Cloverleaf Annual, please contact the administrator of the American Local History Network-Clark County so this information can be added.
http://www.wiclarkcountyhistory.org/
Thank you.
Alexander, Jean
Allen, Beverly
Arola, Beverly
Awe, Arnold
Churkey, Mae
Ciokewicz, Irene
Creg, Glen
Czishinski, Ted
Fischer, Glen: “I’m not afraid of work, I can lie down beside it and go to sleep.”
Gay, Thaddeas: “Ted” “I thought I saw him studying, but lo! It was a dream!”
Grube, Elden: “Never do today what you can put off ‘till tomorrow.”
Gustafson, Mannon: “Play and I’ll play with you, work and you’ll work alone.”
Hacker, Corrine: “Corrie” “Silence is golden but we’re off the gold standard.”
Heibsch, Lois: “Her heart is like the moon, there is a man in it.”
Horn, Nadine: “When you have noting to say, say nothing.”
Johnson, Jack: “Hot rod” “Greater men than I have lived, but I doubt it.”
Krarup, Pearl: “You can tell her by the noise she doesn’t make.”
Konik, Marjorie: “Marg” “I love to work and anything I love I can’t abuse.”
Lange, Duane: “Lead me not into temptation, just show me where it is.”
Larsen, John: “Jack” “Bashful frosh, soph and junior; all seniors change.”
Lindgren, Bernard: “Ben” “Now and then with in my mind, I think a thought.”
Mathewson, Mardelle: “Marty” “I never trouble trouble ‘till trouble troubles me.”
Meinhardt, Franklin: “I never let my studies interfere with my education.”
Mills, Donald: “P.P.” “If fame comes after death, I am in no hurry for it.”
Nason, Nancy: “Nance” “She who frowns at men must die a maid, so why frown.”
Peterson, Ida: “She’s little, but so’s a stick of dynamite.”
Purgett, Janet: “Tis better to sleep in class than to waste a perfectly good night.”
Pyatt, Darlene: “Deene” “Mighty sweet and might wise, the fun just twinkles in her eyes.”
Roberson, Bill: “Skid Row” “I woke one morning and found myself famous.”
Ross, Sylvester: “Silver” “And now I am willing to admit that I am right and you are wrong.”
Rossman, Annette: “In school she is quite demure; out side of school we ae not so sure.”
Schigley, Arlene: “She studies but she’s normal.”
Southworth, Bernice: “The unspoken word causes no trouble.”
Southworth, Charlotte: “Being seen and not heard is old fashioned for me.”
Stasek, Gaymond: “Gay” “Large enough to accommodate, small enough to appreciate.”
Stasek, Shirley: “I put my troubles in a box and then sit on the lid.”
Strohkrich, Kenneth: “Ken” “Words are women; Deeds are men.”
Thorson, Loretta: “Lolly” “It’s better to be little and shine than to be big and case a shadow.”
Weddig, Lea: “When I have nothing else to do evenings, I study.”
Wilksman, Shirley: “When she grins, we grin, when she works, we wonder.”
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