Kiwani,Cwp
Harold Owdd,idgc Cecil Hwd,on
Rotary Cup
CITIZENSHIP, SCHOLARSHIP, AND SPORTSMANSt:�i> One cf the features of Senior Ass:m}ly which has always distinguished it from all others throu;;hout th:: year i,; the aw.iir:ls that a:e m.1dc at that time. These awards arc among the highest t:ibutcs that can be paid any student.
They signify that the students who receive
them h.1ve ucellcd in .1II phases of their high school life, and in so doing have won the respect of their fellow students. One req1.:irement to be met before a boy can receive this award is that those who h,1ve competed on the athletic field with him must, by secret votin:;, show they respected him for his sportsm;inship. good schol.1rship record.
He must also have maintained a
Th:: same holds true for the girls selected. Aware of these facts,
specul.ltion wu running high amon-3 the members of the student body as they filed into the auditorium for the last anembly of the ye.1r, the senion for their last at Claremont High. The reprcsenhtive of the Kiwanis Club stepped forward, and after having explaint:d what h,ning your name cngr.1ved on the cup signifies, announced that the name of Harold Duddri:lgc h.id been placed there after the year 1941. No one was really surprised.
No
one w,1s really surprised either when Cecile Hudson received the Rotary award, or when Jo Sawyer's fine citizenship record was recognixcd by the D.A.R. in making their award. They were receiving their just rewuds.