Clymer Central High School - Spotlight Yearbook (Clymer, NY)
- Class of 1941
Page 1 of 180
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 180 of the 1941 volume:
“
V 25.1 . if y v ai ff as , A, - -Z' iiS :f.f :5.'.'1'?? Ez ?3g'75,! ai , is , ,,Y . 5 - i igilfii .2::.5,wy -5- 'N . , . K' . ,M ' 4 ,,.g V, 1 .l ,, A , 1 -I- F.. I I9 I EUGENE CLYDE SNYDER ll 8858 Wes! Maln Street Post Office Box 400 Clymer, New York 14724-0400 716 355-2265 Please leave answer machine message l L -i I , ,ups-uhm 'pl pglqqel E ' ,,,,. --- ....f ' ..-' .ff-'I 'ixg-Q'--.x ----....,...-...,, .. -,,,.4--' -,-...- 11, -.X-.K '--.,- ,, - ' ,.f- j.- '..- ,I 1,'x,' 'nn' --.Qt ......... . .- I: .f 3 -. .N --,' ..........A - ,.- f ,.-'I ,. .J 1 ks- N. X'-., '.,.- 5 , ,A -.Ax -., ,. lf ,.-' X N.. -V -., ..f E -. N, hr.. f If -.X .Ks -.M- , - . .kv -.,,. , , -. ., '-.N ' ' xx x, -- 5. .88 1 '-,h X., -.....,,,. '--..,. ra -.KX 'I N., Ihl. . .ff . I - v. X-Rs x'x -. R -. .-If' I Y.. '-.Xi '-...X ',.- If- S! 1: X XR N...- :X 1, ., x'---.X P :i ni. '-.X X an ff 1 4 '- 'M .ff 1 I-ri. ' 'I N J J 2X jxxx uv .ml . - 5 :f T E'-. X 1' ' H X THE ' R 1941 .R- J . J . -. v lc:-- 'fl-IEME, SCHOGL v AND COMMUNJ T I xv 5 .. X Rx fr WS' y U08 N DORRI S KOLSTT -if ': Fd 519' 'A , 1 V 5. r M 1 A 1.451-M t- .-,.1, W Z ui L- 'fl V ., p . 1 ,Qt 1. -1 , '- , 4,4,.- -, -E, - : V i f, 1 5 1- mfI,5:f2 , , - , . 5 , 455-I i3q:g+lpi1 ,. M.,, . E.. . F: Y , 4- .l ,1'.:- , w.. V.-vw'-rj ..,i,. 1gg.q-., - ,W ,. 13. ,J - ,. Q , .. . .. 31, .. ,,. ,5- M 1 .-.gi4igi3'af 9' 2, : 1- 1 V ' , , ,, s 45,1-:ii-',fv,,..:3::i.,Z5g.f.'.g, f :.l:gg v',,-Q 1' Ei ,..1j ia-,rf 1-1- ' V EL' .. .L ' f'3'1f5Tf5 ' A El f .1-C I v ff 329' -' .- -:r'5fi:LEf 'I ., ' ' 'ful 45521-' . 1 3.31 .Y Y .-f'..9u'T,f1 fm 1 . 1-'f?:'i21 , -5,1-3,4-,V U-,-.,-,.. ' riff? A. 5, .-,Li ' . .--N Q25 I -, y'5,1..5-. ...J?5 Y . 'fif- : nm' 5 5 -L '5. iv5- f -,. Q Y' ' F fsifiqaiff-.'5 Y.L.i7g:'-:- Q -, -- -'35-l , -' '. -.- '-'wr E,-., ,, ' ' - - f-- .-sz, ' v ,,,- ,, NAV, x. ,,,: , 'FL-'jx ,, A L, - .' -1-,,, ,Ti :.t1,'S.' ' Ji 4 if ,M A , . -f . . : 1- -T ,, :il ,'if,:-' ' A ' ' ',A LES- fd f .,r. :EF 1 7f. ,41-:gf , QQ, 51114 ,Y ' g -x 1.2 iF1'3. C. ' ' bi:-Qft 3 - .r 'r' -1513595 x- L fl- 7' .i-32? K 3' fi- '?.:?t -3, . P ' -RESET-?i ' -.- gf .az 1?i 4 ' g1ft-:5gr-L-'- . .. Y -5:2 1-ig' A, ..- ' If 7-'fjil'-Q .cf . lu ,F -,f--1 ,. .4 -. .. . f ,-i' ffl ' ' V 4-' 2.15215 121' K ,Q ,.L,75..t . , . .5 ' ' 1'-925 ii -, v., ' fqgsf- -'14 4 - V - ' 5 5 5.5. , . Eff I Q .2 , Y ,-lrflyr - , r ,J V .-4.45 -1 , 25: I F f-,I.:1,4,. , RA F-?7I3V,t. V. , A V' fl 1. 51-yi ,qi :FJ '- 1: ,. . , ,, Yr, fn-:C - jimi: if - Y, 2-4511- 'T-1?i':f:' ' Q5 ., . ,- , I, ,,., . ,. -1 '- E, , Q.: 1 Lu'g14:': , . vjjg-agile Y 1 A! ' f3I1fFQ: ,-fb.. 'Y-1 :q1-i'L .',f ' 1-XL .13 ' -1-171 'L ,..- Q- .dfgl .L ':.'E',. r 2 Q 9152121 - .- ,. r '7 i'2f?i', 7 - 4. I 'Q . 1' 'r 1 .Q - , H - ., ' :1r??n'fi4 ' -' -7325, 1 F? V, 'g35f1 .:. , lg:-f1 f,5Q -if.. 5Q,:5,..if:l.. ::.f- .5 fig E i I NORTH CLYMER BEAVER MEADOW hw P Q E11 E' -5 mf' ,wh J 1 , '- - : . J-:Aff T-,mf .w , . H K f M- f, vm CUTTING THE COMMUNITY THE BUSINESS MEN-BASKETBALL TEAM BOARD OF EDUCATION Deloss Rouse. Clarence Legters. R. A. Thompson. Samuel Dunnewold, Lewis Duink DEDICATION The Senior Class dedicates the 1941 SPOT- LIGHT to the Board of Education of the Central School District. These men, as representatives of the community, have made it possible for us to enjoy an educational program of the highest quality. We appreciate their personal efforts in providing us with Well-qualified in- structors and the best in school facilities. WE, THE MEMBERS or THE STAFF, HAVE FOREWORD TRIED TO WILL NOT OUR HIGH BUT WILL TIONSHIP GIVE T0 YOU.Av BOOK WHICH ONLY SERVE AS A REVIEW OF SCHOOL LIFE AND ACTIVITY ALSO SHOW THE CLOSE RELA- BETWEEN OUR SCHOOL AND THE COMMUNlTYa IF we HAVE succszozo, wg seek N0 PRAISE, we ossvne NO coMMsNoATnoN-- we HAVE ONLY ACCOMPLISHED THAT WHICH we ser our TO oo. We ALso wlsH TO THANK Evsnvows wHo HAS IN ANY wmv MADE THIS Boon Pos- SIBLE. PART:cuLARLv oo we WISH T0 sxpnass ouR ennraruoe TO MR. Bov- LAN, Mass Monoorr, AND Mass Swlrr, TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE FOR GROWTH IN THE CONMJNITY SENIORSN.- ....... ,..... - .... -..L ..... --.M E ........ -.. L... .... I OTHER CLASSES ..,......T......... - .... ,-...-. .- .... I5 FG? COIWWJNITY LEADERSHIP FACULTY ,.............. - ..A.. L- ...........,............ L. .... L ....... 25 ENGLISH DEPARTMENT ..... - ........... .,.... - ..- ...... - ..... -.-...- ........ 26 STUDENT COUNCIL ........ -...-.-.- -...- .... L... .... - - ,...... 28 UMAROIGOLD RAYSII ....... ..-M .4..... - .............. -. 29 GIRL ScouTs ..........,.......... -. - ,... W ..... - ,......,..,... -L 29 ll-H CLUBS ..A.A. - ............. - .... -L ........ ,....-,N 30 FOR A RICH COIviviUNI1'Y LIFE FOREIGN I.-ANGUAGES..- ................ - ........ ...,......, - L .... .....-.- ..... .-... 32 ART .....4. ,............. - T...4.. - ..................,.. - ......... ...... - .- ....... ,- ......... L ............4.. -. ....,--..-... 33 Nuuszc .... - .......,........,....,.,. - .......... -.. W- ..... L.- ....- ....... -L ...... .. 35 LIBRARV CLUB ........ -- ........... -- .......,.........,....... - ...............,.... , ......... -.- ...................... --...- ..... 35 FOR A SATISFACTORY ECONOMIC LIFE IN THE CONMUNITY SCIENCE ....I,.,.. - .,.,.., ...,, - .,................,.................... .........,........ ...... -..L ..... - ,... , ............ 35 COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT .......4. - ,.,.,.......... - .......... --.- ..... L.- ........ -. .--.-... 39 MATHEMATICS ,..,.,.... - .,......,.......... ,L .........,.., - .M ..... - ..... ........ 33 HOMEMAKING DEPARTMENT., ,.,,.,,, M ,,,.4 ,4,, M ,,,,,, CRAFT CLUB.-- .......... ........ .,.. ..... - ..... . LII AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT ,...,. - ............ ............ -. ,. ..... ..... L .... -. I-I2 FUTURE FARMERS or AMERICA .,.. - ....... L ............... ,. - ........ 147+ PART-TIME GROUP ,.,,...,.... - .......... L .... - ...,... L.-. W4 FOR A DEMOCRATIC COMVIUNITY LIFE SOCIAL STuolEs,- ....... - ........ ...... - ..... ,- .... -..- ..... L ........... I-I6 THE Scnooz. AS A COMMUNITY CENTER..- ..... ......... . I-I7 FOR HEALTH AND RECREATION IN THE COMMJNITY PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT ,...... .... - .......... -- ..... ...... L .... U9 BASKETBALL ,...... ...L ............. - ..................... ............... ............ -, .... - .... , ...,. .. ....... -- ...... 5' INTRAMURALS .,... - ..... ......, L.. 53 SPoTLneH'r Bros Aolzu ............... ........... - 55 FOR Q5eoW'f5-1 IN me COMMUNITY EDUCATION as A onowru Pnocsss. STUDENTS LEARN snomh LV OVER A PERIOD or !EQRSu Evenv YEAR AS STUDENTS Move Enom GRADE T0 GRADE THERE as enowru. TNE MIND MATURES: THE soov DEVELOPS As THE STUDENT Moves THnoueH THE VARIOUS LEVELS IN THE scHooL. WHEN THE STUDENT GRADUATES, THE SCHOOL waon HAVE Pnovaoso THE 'oppon- TUNITY ron cnowwn THAT wILL MAKE Pos- slaLE THE GRADUATE'S IMMEDIATELY TAKING AN ACT! VE PART IN COMMUN I TV Ll FE ' nn: , 1 I B iq H H ,J i s w . 4, .4 , 5' W ll X . , K , , C i ASSESR SENIOR JUNIOR SOPHOMORE FRESHMAN f' 3 9 , O X5 N -1 My O QQ - , Aif .O EIGHT!-I SEVENTH ,Lf 4, A A ' l . 'Az ' wp A if ' '11' 51' N 1 L9 I' I E J. Y , EESSIE VAN EARDEN -yur A X w THE HISTORY OF THE SENICR CLASS Snx OF DDR TWENTY-THREE GRADUATES STARTED scHDDL TOGETHER ON SEPTEMBER 3, I929. THE ORIGINAL sax ARE WILLIAM CAFLlSCH, LVLE FARDINK, EMOGENE GROTERS, MORRIS LEGTERS, GORDON NEw- HousE AND VIDLA TEWINHLE. IN SEPTEMBER l937, WE WERE THIRTV- TWO, EAGER-EYED STUDENTS, FULL OF AMEITIDN TO BEGIN DUR HIGH SCHOOL CAREER. LILLIAN BRIDGES WAS A NEW MEMBER, COMING TO us FROM MADEDDN. SHE HAS SERVED Us WELL wITH HER ARTISTIG WORK IN THESE FOUR vEARs. AT THE END OF THE FREEHMAN YEAR, BARBARA POTTER LEFT us T0 MAKE HER HOME IN WESTFIELD, JDE MARKELLO LEFT IN THE SDRHDMDRE vEAR T0 FINISH HIS HxDH SCHOOL WORK IN NDRTH COLLINS. 'BIND' CAFLISCH RETURNED, AFTER AN AEsENcE OF SIX YEARS, FROM FREDONIA, AND THE FIRST BASKETBALL TEAM HAS EENEFTTED BY Hls GOOD WDRKI As JUNIDRS WE TREATED THE SENIORS OF 1930 ON MAY DAY. AFTER THE EXERCISES, WE RUSHED OUT TO THE WAUTING aus. WE PACKED OURSELVES IN wITH THE SENIORS AND OUR LUNCH. WHEN WE FINAL- LY READHED CANADOHTA LAKE, EACH STUDENT WAS HANDED A QUARTER T0 SPEND FDR AMUSEMENT. SOME OF Us RENTED BICYCLES, wHILE OTHERS WENT SKATING AND STILL OTHERS WENT BOATINGQ Aaour THE TIME WE EEDAN TO EET sooo AND HUNDRV, WE WERE CALLED TD SUPPER. EVERYONE ATE HIS FILL OF SALAD, SANDWICHES, JELLO, LEMONADE, CAKE, AND ICE DREAM. THE IDE CREAM HAD BEEN WELL PACKED IN DRY IDE AND, DH, WHAT A TIME WE HAD SERVING lT! WE WERE ALL so FULL BY THE TIME THE IDE CREAM wAs SOFT ENOUGH T0 SERVE NICELY, THAT WE HAD TO GIVE AwAv ABOUT A QUART OF IT TO A POOR wDRKMAN WHO DAME AROUND TO CLEAN UP. HE LDDKED HAPPY ABOUT IT, so WE COULDN'T REGRET IT MUCH. THEN WE FILED INTO THE aus AGAIN AND WERE OFF FDR CDRRY AND THE sHow. As SENIORS WE PUT ON THE PLAY UALMOST EIDHTEENU IN NOVEMBER. WE ALSO MADE A LITTLE MONEY ONE NIGHT SY SELLING HOTHDOGS AND COFFEE. vw! SPOTLIGHT STAFF STARS OF ALMOST EIGHTEENH ALMOST EIGHTEEN' THE SENIGR PLAY uALMOST EIGHTEENR av DANA THoMAs EWWEMMEEEEEMWEEEMR. DoRRIs KOLSTEE ........,. - nBINGu CAFLISCH CAST EMOGENE GRDTERS .....4...... GORDON NEWHOUSE ,.... ,E BARRY MRS. BARRY BEATRICE BARRY BARRY LE .... LEDDIE DORIS RAvMoND A............. I ....... , ...., MABEL WARREN NINA CAMEL .......... - ........... E. , ........ GMRS. GRANVILLE SAM GROTERSMWWWL .4........ ..... - ...,..... GEORGE BARRY VIOLA TEWINKLE ,,..,.,,, mm. .,,,,,,,,A,,.,,., ,M .A., ,,hANN ,,,, SHERMAN IVAN HESLINK ,,,,,,,,.,.,, .,A..A M TOMMY GRANVILLE CAROL WALLACE ..... Eu L ........ E-W. ............ -I ........ SALLY MORRIS LEGTERS ..... - ........ - ............... - .... EMR. MERRITT BESSIE VANEARDEN ,..,.. - ,............. EE ..... -MISS DALRVMPLE THE CAST, WITH MIss MORDOFF AS DIRECTOR AND IRMA TEWINKLE AS PROMPTER, woRHED MANY NIGHTS UNTIL LATE HOURS, ALTOGETHER WE HAD EIGHTEEN REHEARSALS- THE FIRST ONE wAs OCTOBER 9, AND THE PLAY WAS GIVEN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 85, l91lO. AT EVERY PRACTICE MISS MORDOFF PUT Us THROUGH THE sTEPs: IN OTHER woRDs, sHE TAUGHT Us HOW T0 WALK ON THE STAGE. AT THE END or EACH REHEARsAL oUR DIRECTOR HANDED EACH or us A LITTLE NOTE SHE HAD WRITTEN TO US, WHICH GAVE US HINTS FOR IMPROVE- MENT AND COMPLIMENTS ON oUR Gooo WORK, BEsIDEs ACTUAL ACT- ING, SCENERY HAD T0 BE BUILT AND PAINTED. MR. BRIDGES, LIL- LIAN BRIDGES, BESSIE VANEARDEN, AND Mrss MORDOFF CAME SATUR- DAYS TO WDRK. OTHERS HELPEO OCCASIONALLYQ THE DREss RE- HEARSALS WERE A LITTLE DIFFERENT WITH COSTUMES AND FILES OF MAKE-UP. THE FINAL DRESS REHEARSAL WAS TERRIBLE, BUT OUR SPIRITS SOARED TO GREAT HEIGHTS AFTER THE PLAY ITSELF wENT OFF wITH succsss. WE WORKED HARD AND HAD MANY HEADACHES ovER IT, BUT ws HAD LOADS or FUN BESIDESI AFTER THE PLAY WAS ALL OVER, WE HAD A LITTLE PARTY IN THE CAFETERIA. THERE WERE ICE CREAM, COOKIES, AND COCOA TO EAT AND DRINK, AND PLENTY OF FRIENDS WITH WHOM TO CHAT. ! Q S 8 t K 1 I THE HOT-DOG STAND ONE CRUELLY COLD NIGHT IN EARLY NOVEMBER, THE AMsITIoUs SEN- IOR CLASS or 'HI sET BUSILY TO WORK IN A LITTLE TENT SET up BETWEEN SPlTZER'S sToRE AND THE TowN LIBRARY. AN OILSTOVE HAD BEEN MOVED INTO THE TENT DURING THE AFTERNOON, AND FIVE or THE GIRLS LAUGHINGLY HEATED wATER, BOILED wEINERs, MADE GDFEEE, AND TRIED HARD TO SELL THEIR WARESA -3- F F9-' F' 'K E-E F F Q E frg ig' '- is -. 3 ', 5, .A- .f-A 77- -Q., -Q V .. ,.f-fn? cf 54' '-V , -, 75, Q. , .. x ., in 1- . 'u..1.gN 'f 1' Y D Q, f A w'-f'-9:5 , , 2554 '- lf: , -A ' -N.: - -.' - '-gA1:,.' 1' . V g .47 --,-. 5, ,rx , -,W ,,. 4: . f I , -f . ,gg-1fg.L:t.11,1 433: :V -47:7 is. -vp r: - EI- - asf- - - .1-3. 1 fa . ' 1fN---1- --Af -,Q ' .. + ' L..g1.- . , W .-. ,, - , 5 ,5 KJ... ff Q-ws . Q,-N. .. Sa , -,.., , -44 ,,...., ,Q Lang ,L .-af. -,. FOUR OF THE BOYS WENT ABOUT AMONGST THE CROWD, WHICH HAD COLLECTED FOR THE DRAWING, WITH TRAYS OF COFFEE AND HOT- DOGS. AT THE END DF ABOUT TEN LONG MINUTES THEY RETURNED WITH A FULL TRAY ONTO WHICH THE COFFEE HAD SLOPPED AND HOT- DOGS SWAN LAZILY IN THE LUKEWARM LIQUID. WE WERE NEARLY DE- SPAIRING WHEN THE CRO D FINALLY BROKE UP AT THE END OF THE DRAWING AND SWARMED IN UPON US. THE BOYS FAITHFULLY YELLED THINGS IN OUR HURRY, WAS OVER AND THE LIT- DISCOVERED THAT WE UNTIL ws WERE REALLY susv. WE SPILLED BUT NOTHING DAUNTED us. W EN THE nusn TLE TOWN DALMED DOWN EDR THE NIGHT, we HAD MADE 56.00, AND WHATIS MORE we HAD HAD A BUNDLE or FUN D DOING IT. THAT WAS JUST A SKETCH OF U RAMA BEHIND THE NEWSn Q 1 4 i 1 i 8 W 1 SPOTLIGHT STAFF ONE OF THE UNDERTAKINGS OF THE SENIORS WAS PRODUCING THIS SCHOOL ANNUALE EVERYONE HAD SOME PART TO FULFILL, AND WITH- OUT THE COOPERATION AND HELP OF EACH ONE, WE WOULD NOT HAVE SUCCEEDED. ALTHOUGH OUR WORK MAY HAVE BEEN DIFFICULT AT TIMES, WE KNOW IT HAS BEEN GOOD EXPERIENCE FOR ALL OF US, A D WE HAVE ENJOYED WORKING TOGETHER, OUR GREAT HOPE IS THAT WE MAY BE GIVING YOU A BOOK WHICH WILL SERVE AS A RE- MEMBRANCE OF THOSE DAYS SPENT IN CLYMER CENTRAL, THE SPOTLIGHT STAFF IS AS PoLLows: EDITDR-TN-DHTEE ,A,,,,4 W VaoLA TEWINKLE ASSISTANT DDITOR ....... , ...,............,... - EWMEMOGENE GROTERS Busln ss MANAGEREMM -- .......... - ...,.... NE- .................., GORDON NEwHousE SENIOR EDTTOR .,..,........................ .,........ E .......... W .... -M DORIS RAYMOND ACTIVITIES EDITORS ,,A,.,.,.A,,,, , ,,,,.,,,. M, ,,..,, H UUA.. Dennis KOLSTEE IRMA TEWTNKLE FEATURE EDITDR, A.,.... - ......... EE ......... - .......... -ME ...... ,MBESSIE VANEARDEN ATHLETIC EDITORM ..... EW, ...... ..... DMEM-- .... ....... EJUNIOR GABRIEL PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR ,4....,, MMM .,,..,, ,MMNMORRIS LEGTERS DEPARTMENT EDITOR ............ ........... .E ADVERTISING EDITOR CIRCULATION EDITOR .-ll.. E,m,lvAN .... HESLINK Bums CAFLISCH IVAN LEGTERS .L+-.31 ' W ,ftifi ,513-1-we , -ag T ,, 5,5-f . -, .QW . gg-Y, ,Q.1,a.' 175' ' '-:.f',.Q-Q.:f1f:aQ,,-..,-, . 3. 2221-f ii: f4i'iS'?Z5'f1ifi:raL3:Li1':1l ffffilfi -1 x 1 '1 EDWARD GABRIEL. IR- ! President l i EMOGENE GROTERS Vice President 1 4 1 W GORDON NEWHOUSE . Treasurer VIOLA 'l'EWDl'KLE Secretary YAIKO PAUL EDWARDS NINACAMP IVAN HFSLINK WOZOWICZ I 1 1 P L 3 CAROL WALLACE IVAN LEGTERS IRMATEWINKLE Q N WILLIAM CBFLISCH 5 X BESSIE VANEARDEN LYLE FARDINI DORIS RAYMOND N6RMA macxans VVAYNE 1-1o1.'rHoUsE LILLIAN BRIDGES W'lI.BU'R MERDINK smvrum. GROTERS. HL' Domus xo1.s'rar-: MORRIS LEGTERS I 7 OUR FOUR YEARS LILLIAN BRIDGES NMJOR--HISTORY BAND 2, 3 uMARO'GOLD RAVEN STAFF CHORUS 3 LIBRARY CLUB CAULDRoN STAFF 2, 3 GIRL SCOUT5 I WILLIAM CAFLISCH MAJOR-H SCIENCE, MATHEMATICS STUDENT COUNCIL N CHORUS I, FOOTBALL I, 3 nSPOTLlGHTn STAFF TOUCH-FOOTBALL N nMARO'GOLD RAvsn STAFF BASKETBALL 3, U UALMOST ElGHTEENn BASEBALL 3, U BETA HI-Y 2, NINA CAN? , . MAJ OR -- HDMEMAKI NG , CHORUS 2, 3 LISRARV CLUB HBELLE OF BAGDADu 2 f , U-H CLUB UMAROIGOLD RAYSH STAFF N GIRL ScoUTS 2, 3, nALMOST ElGHTEENn U MARIONETTE CLUB KEVI-IDLD KLUS 3 PAUL EDWARDS MAJ DR--AGRI CULTURE MONITOR 2 BASEBALL TOUCH-FOOTBALL 2, 3, U WGAULDRONN STAFF BASKETBALL 2, 3, N F.F.A.: REPORTER 3: PRES. LYLE FARDINK MAJ OR--LANGUAGE, MATI-IEMAT I cs BASKETBALL: ASSIT, MANAGER I, 2, 3: MANAGER M RIFLE CLUB UCAULDRONU STAFF 3 EDWARD GABRIEL, JR. MAJOR----LANGUAGE, SCIENCE, MATHEMATICS CLASS PRESIDENT N BASEBALL I, 2, 3, CLASS VICE-PRESIDENT 3 BAND I, 2, 3, STUDENT COUNCIL I 2 HSPOTLIGHTU STAFF SAFETY PATROL 2, 3 ' 3 UCAULDRONU STAFF I, 2, TOUCH-FOOTBALL 2, 3, 7-I ALMOST EISI-ITEEN 3 Bus. MAN. BASKETBALL I, 2, 3, U ORATORICAL CONTEST -7E M M 3 Z M M 3 N 5 2 3 I3 I H M M E I .V A ,. -Le' 14,-- asa:-,i EMOGENE GROTERS MAJOR-MATHEMATICS CLASS VICE-PRESIDENT U USPOTLIGHT5 S:AFF::AsSssT. ED. MONITOR I nCAULDRONu STAFF SAFETY PATROL 2 'SwlLuN THnOucH'g PROMPTER CHORUS 2, 3 WALMOST EIOHTSENU NBELLE OF BAGDAD' 2 LIBRARY CLUB: VICE-PRESUDENT SAM GROTFRS, JR. MAJORhvMATHEMATlCS MONTTOR 2, 3' CHORUS I, 2, 3, Bus PATROL 2, 3, U ORCHESTRA Gvm CLUB 2 A CAPELLA BAND I, 2, 3, U, nBELLE OP BAGDADR BRASS SEXTET 2, 3 aALMOST EIGHTEENN F,F, A, 2, 3. A IVAN HESLINK MAJORQ-AGRICULTURE MONITOR 2 NBELLE OF BAGDAOn Bus PATROL I, 2, U USPOTLIGHTR STAFF BAND 2, 3, U WALMOST EIGHTEENU BRASS SExTaT 3 ORATORIOAL CONTEST CHORUS 2, 3 F.F.A. I, 2, 3, U: Sac. 33 Vlcs-PRES. WAYNE HOLTHOUSE MAJ on -- COMMERCIAL MONITOR 3 HARMONICA CLUB I DORRIS KOLSTEE MAJOR--LATIN GLASS PRESIDENT 3 'CAuLoRONn'STAFF STUDENT COUNCILQ Vrcz-Pass, 3: PRES. U 'ALMOST EIGHTEENN BAND 3, U KAMERA KLUB: SEC.-TREAS, RSPOTLIGHTW STAFF H MARzoNETTs CLUB: PRES. IVAN LEGTERS MAJOR-AOnlcuLTuRs STUDENT COUNCIL I, 2 uBELLE OF BAGDADn Bus PATROL 2 USPOTLIGHTN STAFF nCAULDRONu STAFF 'MARO'GOLD RAYSn STAFF Sec. 2: TREAS. 3: REP. BASKETBALL 3, N BAND 2, 3 CHORUS 2, 3, U F+F.A. I, 2, 3, Mg Q8- M 3 Z M M I I I M 2 M M 2 M E 2 M I M M ,. .14 41.1 ii-'iii ff f .ff . ' f 1 -.. . - - ' ' 'Af f' - agp,-y -1. - v. is, I. MV, A '47, , 1 ,U . - , U., Vx 'L -2' - if, ff1:, f,-' 7 . '-, - 1-: I i'--'-. ' ff ' f 3i 2'-Es Y' f JPL ,TL gf, Q',fl-',,'i2.-2 . -' - - --- f - - 5 .f-.f -V. - -kf -, I., -.a....-.-L,-ni ..,.-5.5.4 .L g,..- '-1 aff, - MORRIS LEGTERS MAJ OR--HI STORY CLASS SEcRETARv-TREASURER 2 Gvm CLUB STUDENT COUNCIL 2 BAND I. 2. 3. MONITOR 3 CHORUS 3. TOUCH-FOOTBALL 3, R nSPOTLIGHTn STAFF BCAULDRONU STAFF ALMOST El GI-a1'EEN BASKETBALL I, 2, 3, U BASEBALL 2, 3, U WILBUR MEERDINK MAJOR'--' CDMMERQI AL CLASS SECRETARY 3 ' BAND 2, 3, N LIBRARY CLUB KAMERA KLU8 NORMA NECKERS MAJOR--LATIN, HISTORY LIBRARY CLUB U GIRL SCOUTS SENIOR GIRL ScouTs 3 GORDON NEWHOUSE NIAJDR--MATHEMATICS, HISTORY, LANGUAGE, SCIENCE CLASS PRESIDENT 2 BAND I, 2, 3, Hg PRES. CLASS TREASURER U CHORUS I, 2, 3, STUDENT COUNCIL I, 2 HBELLE OF BAGDADW TOUCHQFOOTBALL 2, 3, N NSPOTLIGHTH STAFF BASKETBALL I, 2, 3, U UCAULDRONH STAFF BASEBALL I, 2, 3, M A nMARO'GOLD RAYSN STAFF UALMOST EIGHTEENN M DCR IS RAYMOND MAJ OR --- HDMEMARI NG CLASS TREASURER 3 CAULDRONn STAFF BAND I, 2, 3, U: LIERARIAN N I nMARO'GOLD RAYSn STAFF CHORUS 2, 3 ALMosT ElGHTEENn BELLE OF BAGDADn 2 KAMERA KLUB nSPOTLlGHTn STAFF N KEYHOLE KLUB I RMA TE WINKLE MAJ OR?--HOMEMAKI NG UBELLE OF BAGDADu 2 A GIRL Scours nALMOST ElGHTEENnQ PROMPTER M KEYHDLE KLUB -9- 2 M U M 3 M Z 2 M M 2 U E E M I 3 I 3 VIOLA TEWINKLE MAJ on --.LANGUAGE CLASS SECRETARY N EBELLE OF BAGDADH 2 Mouxron l n5POTLlGHTn STAFF: Eooron U CHEERLEADER 3 nCAULDRONn STAFF: Assf. Eo. 2: Eolron CHORUS 2, 3 WALMOST EIGHTEENN LIBRARY CLUB: PRESIDENT U BESS IE VAN EARDEN MAJOR-ART, CO MERCIAL CHORUS I, 2 CAuLoRoN STAFF BELLE oF BAGDADn 2 nMARO'GOLD RAYSU STAFF nSPOTLlGHTu-STAFF U nALMOST EUGHTEENN U MAH1 ONETTE CLUB CAROL WALLACE 2 MAJOR -- HOMEMAKI NG nMARO'GOLD RAYSn STAFF M GsRL Scouts: COLOR BEARER I, 2 ALMos1' EIGHTEENR 74 MARIONETTEZ CLUB 2 LIBRARY CLUB U KEYHOLE KLUE 3 ll-H CLUB 3 SENIOR G1RL Soours 3, Mg VICE-PRES. 3 BLAZEN WOZOWICZ MAJOR-HISTORY, Comm ERCIAL GVM CLUB I ' F.F.A. 2 NBELLE OF BAGDAOU WELL! ..,... E ...,....... M HAWK! ..... , ..... L .... L ..,.. Ha! ......... E-.- ..... -..L HLQMPHE .... , ..... W.- FmE!..,.- ...... Fl DDLE! ,,,, Hunaaus! .... GlMMINV1,..-...-- RA'rsl.., ........ BEANSI- ,... ... .......... OUCH! .... --.. Poorlt.. ........,.. . BRIDGET YAIKO MAJ on--DoMMERca AL 2 LIBRARY CLUB U ll ll i 1 1 Ik ik ll W X-CLAIM..ATIONS A HOLE HUNGRY CUT OF IN THE GROU D. DOG AT THE DOOR. REACH. NCAMEL' s EAcK. ,Um-:MpLov4 Mn. MANuEL AND HIS VIOLIN ..-.,......SOMETHING LIKE A HOTDOGA .OUTLET Fon SMOKE. .Gnoww-up MICE. HIDE 'EM IN A HILL AND Pl BAD COUGH, Top covsnme OF A HOUSE. HEv!.,-., .......... - ....... .WHAT A HORSE rs MADE oF. -IO- I cn 'EM oFF THE eusHEs. 4.1 :JL -if R L SPOTLIGHT ASSEMBLY PROGRAM LILLIAN BRIDGESM- .... - ....... E OUR SENIORS AN ARTISTIC MISS wHo MAY so RAR- WE CAN'T RREDIDT IN wHAT SHE'LL sTAR. WILLIAM CAPL1SHW. ........ ........... STURDY, PEPPY, BUSlNESS-LlKE- HARD T0 ANGER, HARD TO FIGHT. NINA CAME ............. E ......... ,HER WISH T0 NURSE AND HELP THE INSANE THEIR NATURAL, HAPPY MINDS REGAIN. PAUL EDwARDs .,., , .A.. - ..... L ..L............ ALWAYS JOLLY AND FULL OF FUN. ALWAYS SMILING--LIKE THE SUN. ' LYLE FARDINK .... , ....... - ......... E ..... EA HUNTER--HE MAY TAKE HIS GUN EDWARD GABRIEL, EMOGENE GROTERS SAMUEL GROTERS, lvAN HESLINK L..... .... Em ...... E ....... - WAYNE HoLTHousEm DORRIS KOLSTEEW 'VAN LEsTERsWm, ,,,, MORRIS LEGTERSE ....... - .... E-m A WILEUR MEERDUNKW- ,,,..,, aww NDRMA NECKER5 ..-.,..- GORDON NEWHOUSE ...... -EMMA DORIS RAvMoNDmmE.EEEm To THE LAND OF THE NORTHERN MIDNIGHT SUN. JR.m .... A GENTLEMEN wHo THRlVES ON FUN, RESPECTS HIS FRIENDS AND JUDGES NONE, WITH A SMILE THAT'S ALWAYS BRIGHT AND GAY SHE'S A DHARMING, CHEERFUL, WINNING wmv, JR,. ....... THE TENDR VOICE or nSWEET SINGING SAMN MAY MAKE HIM A FAMOUS RADIO MAN, A MlLLIONAlRE HE wELL MAY BE lr wIsDoM BRINGS PROSPERITYQ HE LOOKS ABOUT, AND, WITH A GRIN, SEE5 WORK TO DO AND PITCHES IN! HER SMILE IS LIKE THE MORNING DEWH- ITS SPARKLE wARMLY WELCOMES You. lT's HIS DEEIRE, so THEY SAY, To FARM THE SCIENTIFIC WAY. RERINED, RESERVED, AND NEATLV TR8M, ATHLETIC, SWIFT, AND FULL or VIM. SOME DAY THIs FELLOW MAY BECOME A BUSINESS MAN IN WASHINDTQN. ' To BE A NURSE Is HER AMBITION AND MAYBE WED A GREAT PHYSICIAN. HANDSOME, DHEERY, DEBONAlR-- OUR PRIZE ATHLETE'S A coMRADE RARE. A CHARACTER so PURE AND FINE-- HEART or-' TENDEREST EEELINGS, THINE. IRMA TEWINKLE ,...... .m. Us ,.... FROM THE GARDEN or HER HEART FRIENDSHIP NEVER wILL DEPART- VIOLA TEWINKLE, ...,.., - ,..... .WMUNDERsTANoINe, HAPPY, CUTE- LIKABLE BEYOND DISPUTE, BESSIE VANEARDEN ,.,.. NMMMFOND or FRIENDS T0 Love AND TEASE: CAROL WALLACE ..... L .... EMMA BLAzEN WOZOWICZ ,,4,,.,, wmv ,.,, BRIDGET YAIKO ..,,.,,. MAY SHE HAVE A LDT or THESE. RESERVKD IS CAROL--QUIET Too, AMBITIOUS wHEN THERE'S WORK TO Do, ,HE RISES GRINNING AT DEFEAT, RESOLVED ALL oasTAcLEs TO BEATQ IN ANY SPORT SHE'S QUICK AS LIGHT: SHE'LL FIGHT 'TIL VlCTORV'S IN SIGHT. ...l2... fi,--s 1-,,.m ,,, '-1 Lab- L, . ' ' '+..,k ,qv-,, 1' . 9-4, ': ,f K V A V. -,:,':-K.-, ,, ' , N ' : 144, , - 4 1 . ': ,, .1: ',g,-.-4. -I-'Wk Fa Q If ' ' U , rj 7 r ,ln A Q50 J 1 ABSTRAC A pm Pawn NGA - f ' ' PAUL SNAGGS A PASS A , f r- 2 'I IKE' . A Hrzsuux Q.. A SAM Glv s wl aun A f sHAvE AND A HAmcu1' Q7 I A s E N so R 5 A lo Y E ARS HENCE uoms R. 1 A POTENTIAL A GLOBE ' morrrsa lx n 'W A gg Hn.n.su.Lv IRNA, ' Q' A RED Nzrwoak A Q .l ' J PRESENTATION. I I , EMOGENE ffv IN X NORMA N. A Domus K. Hou.vwooo 9 nv 1 X Ill I N DIDPFC CD' vf-1-L. f,..,' . .s. ., .-T3 ', ' gin Z - ,' ,JL Y, - grf, -W-. .X ..fr:.1-eg: - ., -ff. ,-.-5:..vg X xflwiff -?',1:-' , fiiliri' 7 2-P11 , ,vi : Z , -' 1 '3 T. ' If '- , , 1- 5' . -,gy 5' 'va Lpliza, .- 4:1241 sff.- zz- K - 4 iii-'i'? Qvrfiifk 542 fi: aff g 1 K ' . 4-,,.1 dr 'za FVAN ,.-fm Lecrsas i I av UQ mm, X97 vxggfxwss 7 ' 1 vcoabvv NEWHOUSE GTERS BRIDGET YAIKO SEN IORS xg 5? J. wAu.Ace D F Q U X Q . NWA L Q , Lvu-: I . FARD?i'3: :.,b -ri 1. 5 I A h Qneii x,, ig' Wil' 1? ii g5x gc:,359Qi 'fr I V - N :s E! CAFLISH MY7' 'iff V. v 0 ll.sxS-f SB - 5 sg 5 3 Q 7' BY BESSIE VAN EARDAN ...i -S f LQ 5 2 vm- ,L .,-., .. i 339 'II' .- , if -ef, E,-I 1- qw. J' Q, .,.,- ., fig- 5-vig L -4 fb i 2-I A 2415, S v A 5 s Q 'J -a fifi-1 L fbi if B51 73. Qin 15 'i. ,M .,4.A'fB Zi, ' ' X ,... , -Q . - - -,, .3-.Y -N if Q.- . 'gg Y , -V E ' ,,,:. Y-M:-en V ':'ffp:- , :N-a , nav'-' 1, v,l.v1:L ' 1 Ll? S1535 -.-if Juv f.:,g55A5 4 54. 492 ' . fi. -, , , E91 - Tia: . -, . Miz, . 'FZ A' ,age -K :-Q. 4. -a ig,1 1 - l .. :Q -1' A ' rig. I .15 A. ..-,ZPL 7 1 - Q-,wg Eb? ,I ,..,.1, 1 Vfliiif:--Q . if fl f 1 f ,J Ti - V 15- 21 Tiff N.-wi, , f V bl? ' 3117 '1 ' -,.:,-:x ., -f-25,43 1:1 2' rl! ' F'-if 7.--255. ,,,:: , 45.1 14 . 562,- .. H415 S1 fa-.: ,Z J- As , EJ . .- '.1l':,- af-ggi' ,z , ,:-'.fx - A 'if r:...z-Sf , , 5 -Mr- 3 -Pi-K M' . ,....5. .' Aj , NPC, mi: IUNIOR CLASS SOPHOMORE CLASS JUIXHOR CLASS Top Row, L. T0 R: ROBERT HUMPHREY, GILBERT MEYERINK, ROGER THOMPSON, RAvMoNo TURCK, JOHN WEERS. SECOND Row: MERLE WRIGHT, MARIAN ADAMS, ELINOR Cnoscurr, BUTH BEMISQ EYELYN PETTENGILL, MAX BEMlSn FRONT Row-1 BETTV Luce, VELMA Kms, JUNE CAFLFSCH, Mugs NES- SLER, MAXINE LEGTERS, LlLL1AN WIGGERS, NQRMA TENHUJSEN. SCPHOMORE CLAS S Top Row, L. T0 R: GERALD TuRcK, CLAUDE RousH, EARL DUINK, MAYNARD DAMcoTT, LELAND SWARM, WALTER HILL, ARNOLD APPLEBEE, GEORGE CHRISTENSEN, JACK NEWHOUSE. SECOND Row: GEORGE KINNY, JESSIE GOODWILL, Lucv SCHRUER5, Jov EDWARDS, LUCDLLE MEVERINK, WINIFRED Parr, FRANCES EMORY, RosEMARv W:LLlAMs, GILBERT WILLINK. FRONT Rowr NVLA WALLACE, AUDREZY Dumx, DoRo1'Hv YAIKO, VIR- GINIA VRUINK, Mass HEMSTER, DELEO GRAVJNK, MARY VROOMAN, PAULINE SMrTH, Loss ESHELMAN. -16- JUNIOR CLASS THE JUNIOR CLASS or 'UI CONTAINS SEVENTEEN RuRILs: EIGHT sovs AND NINE GIRLS. LAST DECEMBER WE DECREASED av ONE WHEN DONALD PALMER MOVED TO SINCLAIRVILLEQ THE GEFIGERS or THE GLASS ARE: PRESIDENT, ........................... , ................. L .........,.. E. .,....A. JOHN WEEKS VICE PRESIDENT .......... A - .,....... BETTv LUCE SECRETARY ......... - ......... .......,...........,.......... VELMA KING TREASURERI ..... ..... .......,,, ROBERT HUMPHREY THE BAND CLAIMS FIVE or OUR MEMBERS IN VELMA KING, JUNE CAE- LISCH, BETTv LUCE, JOHN WEEKS, ANo RAYMOND TURCK. A FEW MORE GELONG T0 THE CHORUS. . NoRMA TENHUISEN WAS THE HIGH scoRER DURING COURTESY WEEK, W1TH A TOTAL or 220 voTES. COMING SECOND wERE EVELYN PET- TINGILL AND ELINOR CROSCUTT, EACH RECEIVING IO5 VOTES. THE JUNIORS ARE VERY PROUD T0 SAY THAT ALL OF THE BOYS BE'- LONG TO ONE OF' THE BASKETBALL TEAMS. BOB HUMPHREY US ON THE Fl RST TEAM- B THE JUNIOR cLAss ALso HAS THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF or nMARO'GOLD RAYSN, MAXINE LEGTERS, AS WELL AS OTHER ABLE MEMBERS or THE STAFF: VELMA KING, NORMA TENHUISEN, JOHN WEEKS, .JUNE CAF- LISCH, ANG MARIAN ADAMS. IN THE CLUBS ABOUT SCHOOL, JOHN WEEKS, RAYMOND TURGK, AND RUTH BEMIS GELGNG T0 THE N-H CLUB. THE F.F.A. HAS GILBERT MEYERINK AND ROGER THOMPSON FOR MEMBERS. THE LIBRARY CLUB HAS LILLIAN WIGGERS, VELMA KING, RUTH BEMIS, AND ELINOR CROSCUTT AS MEMBERS FROM THE JUNIOR CLASS. MoST or THE GIRLS IN THE JUNIOR CLASS TAKE HOMEMAKING. THE AGRICULTURE aovs IN THE JUNIOR GLASS HAVE ALso GAINED FAME AS GOOD COOKS. JUST ASK Boa HUMPHREY How TO MAKE A BANANA- CREAM PIE! IN Nmv, WE GAVE A PLAY FOR THE ENTIRE scHooL AT AN ASSEMBLY PROGRAM. IN JUNE, WE ARE ENTERTAINING THE SENIORS AT THE ANNUAL JUNl0RvSENl0R PARTY. AS A GENERAL STATEMENT, ONE MIGHT SAY THAT WE ALL HOPE TO GRADUATE AND GET EITHER A Gooo Joe OR A GOOD MAN, ...I7.. SOPHOMGRE CLASS WHAT CLASS HAs SEVEN MEMBERS IN EACH or THREE SCHOOL ORGANI- ZATIONST THE sopHoMoREsi WHAT CLASS HAS REPRESENTATTVES IN FIVE OTHER ExTRA-cuRRIcuLAR SCHOOL ACTIVITIES? YOU'RE RIGHT ----IT IS THE SDPHDMDRE CLASS. , THE sopHoMoREs BEGAN THE 'UO-U-H YEAR WITH SEVENTEEN GIRLS AND TwELvE Bovs UNDER THE CHARGE or MISS HEMSTER. HOWEVER, DURING THE COURSE or THE FIRST SEMESTER, VIRGINIA FROMKNECHT AND LOUISE PALMER LEFT SCHOOL. THE BAND CLAIMS FIVE or THE SOPHOMORES IN EARL DUINK, JACK NEWHOUSE, WINZFRED PITT, LELAND SWARM5 AND NVLA WALLACE. THE cHoRus CLAIMS SEVEN soRHoMoREs: GEORGE CHRISTENSEN, FRANCES EMoRv, DELEO GRAvINK, LOIS ESHELMAN, JACK NEWHOUSE, LELAND SWARM, VIRGINIA VRUINK, AND NYLA WALLACE, THE U-H CLUBS HAvE SEVEN MEMBERS or THE SOPHOMORE CLASS IN ARNOLD APPLEBEE, JESSIE GOODWILLQ WALTER HILL, WINIFRED PITT, CLAUD RousH, GERALD TURGK, AND ROSEMARY WILLIAMS. THE F.F.A ALSO CLAIMS SEVEN MEMBERS! MAvNARD DAMCOTT, GEORGE KINNEY, CLAUD RousH, WALTER HILL, LELAND SWARM, GERALD TURCK AND JOHN ZOJONC. THE SOPHOMORE REPRESENTATIVE T0 THE STUDENT COUNCIL I5 GEORGE CHRlSTENSEN. NYLA WALLACE IS AN ASSISTANT EDITOR FOR THE SCHOOL PAPER, AND LOIS ESHELMAN IS ANOTHER CAPABLE MEM- BER or THE STAFF, THE soRHoMoREs HAVE Two CHEER-LEADERS SN THEIR cLAss-VIR- GINIA VRUINK AND NYLA WKLLAUE. THEv ALSO HAVE FOUR Bovs wHD PLAYED ON THE RESERVE TEAM IN BASKETBALL, GEORGE CHRISTEN- SEN IS MANAGER or THE BASKETBALL TEAM. THE SOPHOMORES WORKED HARD ON THEIR CHAPEL PROGRAM WHICH wAs GIVEN IN MARCH. THEIR PROGRAM TOOK THE FORM or A Mock WED- DING ENTITLED, WO PROMISE MEW. FRESHMAN CLASS THE ERESHMAN cLAss BOASTS or HAVING THE LARGEST CLASS lN THE HIGH soHooL-THIRTv-Two MEMBERS. THEv HAVE SHOWN AMAZING GRowTH NOT ONLY IN NUMBER BUT IN SIZE AS wELL. SINCE SEB- TEMBER ws HAVE GAINED A TOTAL or NEARLY ONE HUNDRED SIXTY- THREE POUNDS IN wEIGHT AND RISEN ABOUT FIFTV-TWO INCHES IN HEIGHT! -l8- EARLY IN THE vEAR EVELYN AND HARRY FRY DAME TO us FROM ERIE, PENNSYLVANIA--THE LATER PROVING TO BE A BIG HELP ON THE BAS- KETBALL TEAM. FROM SHERMAN SCHOOL cAME BETTY NECKERS-LITTLE BUT, 0 Mv3 SHE PROVED T0 BE A GREAT HELP EDR THE ALTOS IN THE CHORUS. FRESHMAN NAMES HAVE BEEN FOUND ON THE HONOR ROLL FIFTY-TWO TIMES THIS YEAR AND ON HIGH HONOR NINE TIMESI THIS SHOWS THEIR SCHOLASTIC STANDING TO BE ABOUT AVERAGE' EIGHT or ouR MEMBERS ARE IN THE BAND, AND SIxTEEN ARE IN THE CHORUS. DURING COURTESY WEEK THE CLASS EARNED A TOTAL or 815 POINTS, THE SUBSCRIPTION TOTALS FOR THE MAGAZINE CON- TEST wERE THIRTY POINTS. IN SPORTS, TOO, THE ERESHMEN TOOK PART. THERE IS SOME PROMISING MATERIAL FOR THE FUTURE BAS- KETBALL TEAMS'-HARRY FRY, EDDIE PFEIFFER, ERNEST KACHEL, AND OTHERS. THREE or THE ASSISTANT MANAGERS or THE BASKETBALL TEAM ARE FRESHMEN. WINIFRED RHEBERGEN IS A CHEERLEADER, AND, wITH GAIL THDMPSDN, SHE REPRESENTS THE GLASS ON THE STUDENT COUNCIL. VIVIAN KING AND WAYDE QUEEREVELD ARE ON THE STAFF or THE scHooL PAPER. ON APRIL TENTH, THE FRESHMEN, LED Sv WINIFRED RHEEERGEN, HAD CHARGE or THE ASSEMBLY PROGRAM, ALL IN ALL, THE FRESHMEN FEEL THAT THEY HAVE GROWN CONSIDER- ABLY IN MANY MMYS DURING THE PAST YEAR, AND WE LOOK FORWARD TO THREE MORE YEARS OF GROWTH. THREE-QUARTER ACADEMIC SEvEN STRONG AT THE START or THE YEAR, THREE or ouR GROUP PASSED THEIR PRELIMINARY ExAMINATIoNs AND EEGAME ERESHMEN IN JANUARY, THouGH SMALL IN NUMBER' WE ARE ACTIVE IN THE LIFE or THE SCHOOL. MARY HUMPHREY IS A MEMBER or THE cHoRus: JOHN WIGGERS AND GLENN MALESKI PLAYED ON THE RESERVE BAS- KETBALL TEAM, OuR RECORD or sEvENTv-FIVE PER CENT IN ACTIV- ITIES SPEARS wELL FOR ITSELF, EIGHT!-I GRADE LAST FALL WE CAME, TWENTY-SEVEN STRONG2 Two HAVE LEFT us, BUT WE STILL GO ALONG, WE'vE HAD MucH FUN' AND wE'VE WORKED HARD, TOO, 'TIS ouR WISH TO JOIN THE HIGH SCHOOL CREW. ..I9.. THE BAND HAS SEVEN MEMBERS or THE EIGHTH GRADE IN IT: IRA WIN BENSINK, JOHN NEOKERS, JOHN BRIDGES, BARBARA MEERDINK, PHVLLIS PITT, VELMA TEWINKLE, AND LORENA-GROTERS. THE CHO- RUS'HAS TEN MEMBERS or THE EIGHTH GRADE: GERTRUDE WILLIAMS, LORENA GROTERS, DoRoTHv CHAMBERLIN, VELMA TEWINKLE, BARBARA MEERDJNK, PHYLLIS PITT, JOHN BRIDGES, JOHN NEDKERS, IRwIN BENSINK, AN GORDON HOLTHOUSE. THREE MEMBERS BELDNG TO THE CRAFT CLUB! ARLENE ADAMS, VELMA TEWINKLE, AND BARBARA MEERDINK. THE U-H CLUBS CLAIM GER- TRUDE WILLIAMS, ANDREW RDUSH, AND WALTER SMITH, THE Bov ScouTs CLAIM THREE MEMBERS IN GORDON HDLTHDUSE, JOHN BRIDGES AND JOHN NEGKERS. THE GIRL ScouTs GLAIM BARBARA MEERDINK AND VELMA TEWINKLE. PHvLLIS PITT IS THE EIGHTH GRADE REPRE- SENTATIVE FOR THE SCHOOL PAPER. THIRTEEN MEMBERS or THE EIGHTH GRADE PURCHASED RINGS THROUGH MR. G. H. TENRAS. WE FEEL vERv ENTHUSIASTIC5 ACTIVE, AND ENEREETIG: AND WE Look FORWARD TO BEING THE FRESHMAN CLASS OF ' 2. SEVENTH GRADE IN SEPTEMBER, NINETEEN BOYS AND SIXTEEN GIRLS REGISTERED AS SEVENTH GRADERS. HELEN STARKWEATHER CAME HERE FROM BEMUS POINT AND RAISED OUR ENROLLMENT TO THlRTY'SIX. IT IS OF IN- TEREST TO MANY THAT OF THIS GRADE, ONLY FIVE DO NOT COME TO SCHOOL BY BUS, OUR GIRLS SHOULD MAKE WONDERFUL HOUSEKEEPERS AND COOKS, FOR THEY HAVE ALREADY DEMONSTRATED THEIR ABILITIES. THE BOYS, TOO, SHARE EQUALLY IN THE WORK FACT, IT WAS ALAN RHEBERGEN wHo or THE SEVENTH GRADE. IN LED THE SDHDDL IN THE UCOUR- TESY WEEKU CONTEST. WE CONTRIBUTE TO THE TIONS. SEVEN ARE IN SCOUTS, AND EIGHT IN WITH LESLIE WEEKS AS DIL THIS YEAR, IQUO-Nl, MEMBERSHIP or MANY CLUBS AND ORGANIZA- BAND, EIGHT IN U-H, SEVEN IN GIRL THE CRAFT CLUB. REPRESENTATIVE IN THE STUDENT COUN- HAS BEEN ONE or MANY EXPERIENCES. OUR WE Loox EoRwARD TO FIVE MDRE YEARS IN THIS SCHOOL, wITH ouR THIRTYQSIX MEMBERS IN THE CLASS OF !9U6. -20- FRESHMAN AND THREE-FOURTH ACADEMIC EIGHT!-I GRADE . HQESHMAN CLASS AND Tu-REE-FQURTH AQADEMK Top Row, L. TO R.: WAYDE QUERREVELD, LAMONT GORING, LEONARD WROBLEWSKI, EVERETT TEW1NKLE, GLENN MALESKI, EDWARD PFEnE- FER, JAMES HUDSON, ERNEST KAGHEL, GAxL THoMPSoN, HoMER AvERv SECOND Row: GLENN WARNSHUIS, ROBERT WASSINK, WILLIAM Wxs- GERS, PAuLaNE BENNiNK, CAROL MCCANN, BETTY NEQKERS, JACK EDWARDS, HARRy FRV, EDWARD WERREN, THIRD Row: EVELYN FRY, MARY ZOJONC, ARLYS GREEN, DOROTHY PrExEEER, Rurn SCHURMAN, MARJOR1E EVANS, DoRo1Hv BECKERlNK, AuoREv ROUSE, VIVIAN Kane. FRONT Row: MR. BRowN, GENEVA TEWnNKLE, Loss RHEBERGEN, HAZEL FOSTER, HELEN SWEET, EvELvN SWEET, MARILYN GAERxEL, WINIFRED RHEBERSEN, MARY HUMPHREY, Mass MORDOFF. EIGHTH GRADE Top Row, L. T0 R.: HAROLD THOMPSON, JOHN GIBBONS, WILFRED DAMCOTT, JAMES BAacocK, RICHARD CQLE, ANDREW Rousn, CHARLES KOLSTEE, ROBERT DAvxs. SEcoNo Row: GORDON HOLTHOUSE, WALTER SMITH, MARTIN WILLOVER, EVELYN SPOON, GERrRuoE WILLIAMS, CARL CAFLISCH, IRwlN BEN- SINK, JOHN BRIDGES, FRONT ROWS ARLENE ADAMS, LORENA GRQTERS, VERA MEYERINK, MRS. WASSINK, PHvLL1S Plrr, DOROTHY CHAMEERLxN, VELMA TEWINKLES SEVENTH GRADE Top Row, L. T0 R: LESLIE WEEKS, WILLIAM CoLE, CLAYTON DUINK, WALTER CHAMBERLIN, EUGENE GREEN, PAUL TENHUISEN, PHILIP Rus- LINK, ROBERT EowARDS. SECOND Row: MERLE HOLTHOUSE, MERToN QUERREVELD, ALLAN RHE- BERGEN, WILBUR STAHLMAN, FRANK MALESKl, RAYMOND SCHURMAN, EvERETT LOOKENHOUSE, JOHN KOLSTEE, WILBUR LOOKENHOUSES THIRD Row: HELEN WRIGHT, MARIAN BLISS, MYRTLE GIBBONS, KRE4 NA RENSKERS, JovcE ROUSE, HELEN STARKWEATHER, AVA KING, DORIS FARDINK. FRONT Row: MARILYN DAVIS, 'NORMA NEwHouSE, JOAN KOOMAN, EVELVN GROTERS, MISS WHlTNEY, FLORA MALESKI, CAROL JANE ToN, BEUNA DEwEv, CAROL HEWES. Ea-P L-.., SEVENTH GRADE MR. THOMPSON. IVIR. WIGGERS. MR. GREEN MR, BULL MR. SCHRUERS LUCY WIGGERS MR. FARDINK GENEVA QUERREVELD THE P G.'S THE POSTGRADUATE DLASS or IQNO-UI MAKES up DNE or THE LAR- GEST DLASSES KTWO MEMBERSD. THE POST GRADUATES BOAST or HAVING THEIR NAMES ON THE HONOR ROLL EVERY MONTHS ONE MONTH ALVIN WILLINK READHED THE PEAK or SDHDLARSHIR--1005. NAT- URALLY, HOWEVER, THEY HAVE THEIR ups AND DOWNS. THE POSTGRADUATES ORGANIZED EARLY IN THE YEAR wITH Two vERv EFFECTIVE AND CAPABLE LEADERS: Q PRESIDENT ..... HAROLD TENHUISEN VICE PRESlDENT...ALVlN WILLINR Now FOR PARTICULAR ABILITIES: HAROLD TENHUISENI 1. HAS SDME KNOWLEDGE or DRIBBLING A BASKETBALL. 2. HAS wHAT IS CALLED A NDEAD SHOTU lN BASKETBALL. 3. ls A woMAN HATERn ALVIN WILLINK: I. CAN MAKE SOME KIND or SQUEAK ON A CLARINET, 2. HAS THE VOICE OF A SINGING ARTIST. 3. ls A PIANO VIRTUOSOQ THus WE LEAVE DDR DMNIPDTENT AND HUGE P. G. CLASS. H llatllr Ik ll W Q 'P HAIFLRAISILNG EXPERIEIIDES LILLIAN BRIDGES ...............I..,,..,..... - .,,..., Q ....... Qg ..... EQ QQ ...,....... QS I.... HEARING A GHOST SroRv WILLIAM CAELISH QBINGQ ,.,., Q qvhwuhh- W ,,,LA,..,,.,,,AA ,..,,. PLAYING SANTA CLAUS NINA CAMP fN3NTAl ............................,..... - ......., ....,................,. ,LWBIDING .T... IN A RUMBLE SEAT PAUL EDwARDS I.,.,..,...................... , ............ , ..T................, BEING TIED T0 A CLOTHES LINE LvLE FARDINK CCUTIEI ,.,,.A.,,.,.4.,,, ,I,q,., NHUNTING wILD BUFFALO IN NEBRASKA JUNIOR GABRIEL CGADEIL T............. .....,............,,.......................................... - T,..,., IN HISTORY CLASS JUNIOR GRDTERS CSAMI .,,, WQZWWW EMOGENE GROTERS CJEANJE IVAN HESLINK CIKEI .,L......... S. ....... ,T WAYNE HOLTHOUSE CPEWEEI ,,,,,..,4,, DORRIS KOLSTEE QDORRIEI lvAN LESTERS CIKEI ....... .,.... .W .,,. E ...... A MORRIS LEGTERS cLEFTYJ ,...4.,.,,,,,,,,,,,.. WILEUR MEERDINK CBILLI ,,..,,,.,.,,,.,,,,,, NORMA NEGKERS .....,. - ......................,... T GORDON NEwHouSE CGORDYI DORIS RAYMOND cDoTTlEJ lil ..... - .............,............. . IRMA TEWINKLE, .,.,.,,.,,......,.........T..................... VDOLA TEWUNKLE CVIKIEI A.,. BESSIE VANEARDEN KBESs1iil CAROL WALLACE fCA0l ,.,.,.,,...,,..,,,,,.,,,A, BRIDGETAVAIKO CBRIDGIE1 VIIAIUAQQ WMTAKING A FINDLEY LAKE BOAT RIDE MMMWTEACHING THE SENIORS T0 SING UWMWSLIDING DOWN A FISH DRAIN HMMMMWRECEIVING A WEEK'S PAV .EAMES WWWLMMMMCHASING A MOUSE W E ....,. . .... ............. .L .,..,......T..... , ......, DRIVING ON IcE MmLMMMmwLLG0iNG T0 MY OWN FUNERAL DDDSING CHALK IN ARITHMETID CLASS WWWLmmW,MMMLLWMRlDlNG UHOKA-POKAW BEING SIDE-SWIPED av A GAR mm ..,.,,,,, RIDING ON A FLORIDA MDDNSEAM ,,W,RIDINe ON A ROLLER COASTER M ,,,,.4,,, HOLDING HANDS IN A DREAM ,MWWRIDING ON A FERRIS WHEEL uMWMLLEWLLLHAV1NG MEASLES N ,,-..,.,,4 HUGEINS A HDT STOVE -2h. EQQQJBEE FOR ENSE SS4 COMMUNWY SWEDEN? QDUNC S I I F' ,X-DF T-iq MRRUQQED QAWS -J T f -'J 'JV m swans 4215! SNES W ?fwAr.q COMMUNlTlES WILL Russ on FALL ACCORDING 2 QR3 f T0 THE QUALITY or THEIR LEADERSHIP. G PERHAPS ONE or THE MOST WPHASIZED oe- L k aEcTnvEs or oun SCHOOL TODAY gs LEADER-0 3 ' SHIP. IT ss THE DESIRE or MOST PEOPLE Nh TO LIVE AN ACTlVE COMMUNITY LIFE, AND lN E,1.Af ORDER THAT THEY MAY oo so, THEY MUST BE ABLE T0 LEAD THEIR cnoups. IT IS TRULY ?Qg?ils A DIFFICULT TASK. ONE MUST BE ABLE T0 ii Il TALK wELL BEFORE AN AunlENcE, COOPERATE as QL. WITH OTHERS, TAKE AN lNTEREsT IN OTHERS' AFFAIRS, Ano HAVE AMBITION AND INITIA' TIVE. Oun SCHOOL Tnnss T0 INSTILL IN THE PUPIL THE QUALITIES or A sooo LEADER Ano ALSO TD GIVE HIM AN OPPORTUNITY T0 DISPLAY HIS ABILITY. Fon EXAMPLE, THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT eaves TRAINING Fon PUBLIC SPEAKING. THE success or wonx DONE an THE ussc DEPARTMENT DEPEN05 upon HOW WELL STUDENTS wonn TOGETHER on COOPERATE. IN ORDER T0 pnoouce SUCCESSFUL PLAYS Ano MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENTS, THE STUDENTS MUST HAvE AMBITION AND INITIATIVE. THE scHooL sn MANY'MMYS DEVELOPS LEADERSHIP ron THE COMMUNUTVQ C u+H- Q QQ5 'T :El .. T IxxC'f ai E Q4 EEN Tiki E ifiigiif' 3 A ' i '1 ' w WAX' N 0 WAYNE HOLTHOUSE FACULTY Top Row. left to right: Albert G. Manuel. Music: L. Irene Ton. Second Grade: Laurence C. Boylan. Social Studies: Viola A. Fardinlr. Filth Grade: Walter I. Colburn. Physical Education. Second Row: Gladys E. Legters, Third Grade: Ethel B. Wassink. Eighth Grade: Hubert W. Brown. Commercial: Alice V. Whitney. Seventh Grade: Clayton 'l'. Bridges. Agriculture: Ellen C. Gleason. Sixth Grade: Edith E. Maclaner. First Grade. Front Row: Helen M. Hemster. Language and Librarian: Helen L. Mordofi. English: Shirley L. Swiit. Art: Wesley G. Miller. Principal: Mary L Straight. Home Economics: Miriam B. Wassink. Fourth Grade: Ruth M. Nessler. Science and Mathematics. THE FACULTY OUR FACULTY ARE HERE TO LEAD us AND TO PREPARE Us EDR LLEAD- ERSHIP WHEN IT IS ouR TURN. Bv THEIR owN EXAMPLE, ouR TEACHERS HAVE SHOWN us How TO G0 OUT INTO THE Do MuNITv AS LEADERS, FOR THEY HAVE PARTIDIPATED AoTIVELv IN vARIouS OR- GANIzATIoNS AND FUNCTIONS OF THE TowN. ,BV HELPING us TO DE- VELDP OUR owN KATENT ABILITIES, OUR TEACHERS ARE MAKING us READY FOR LEADERSHIP. IN A DEMOCRACY IT IS THE ROLE or EVERYONE SOMETIMES T0 FOLLOW AND SOMETIMES TO LEAD. IT IS THE TASK OF EACH or us T0 LEARN T0 BE A sooo FOLLOWER MOST or THE TIME, sur ALSO T0 REDoGNIzE THE DUTY or LEADERSHIP wHIcH WE SHALL OCCASIONALLY HAVE. OUR TEADHERS ARE TRYING T0 HELP us T0 GROW IN MANY wAvs, SD THAT wE MAV BE DAPASLE NDT ONLY or RECOGNIZING OUR RESPONSIBILITIES, BUT ALSO OF ASSDMING AND EDLEILLING THEM EFFICIENTLY. ENGLISH DEPARTMENT UREADING MAKETH A FULL MAN: CONFERENCE A READY MAN? AND wRITING AN EXACT MANU-'SO wRoTE SIR FRANCIS BACON IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY, TODAY, IN THE TwENTIETH CENTURY, WE NEED LEADERS wHo HAVE IDEAS, wHo ARE QUICK-WITTED, AND WHO ARE DAREPDL AND EXACT, RATHER THAN CARELESS AND SLIPSHOD, IN THEIR THINKING AND ACTING. READING, UOONFERENCEH OR SPEAKING, AND WRITING ARE ALL, THEREFORE, IMPORTANT ELEMENTS or ouR PRESENT-DAY cuR- RICULUM, IN THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT, UNDER THE DIRECTION OF MISS MOROOFF, WE TRV PRIMARILV TO DEVELOP THE ABILITY AND HABIT or EFFICIENT, WORTHWHILE, AND ENJOYABLE READING: To DEVELOP THE ART or SPEAKING EFFECTIVELV AND PLEASANTLYI AND TO DEVELOP CLEAR, FORCEFUL, AND PLEASING QDALITIES or wRIT- ING, To HAVE IDEAS, AND TO SPEAK AND TO WRITE AS EFFECTIVE- LV AS POSSIBLE--ARE NDT THESE REQUISITES or A SUCCESSFUL LEADER? ' IN ADDITION TO THE MORE TANGIBLE ABILITIES ALREADY MENTION- ED, A SUCCESSFUL LEADER MUST HAVE A WINNING PERSONALITY-AN INTANGIBLE, YET AN INVALUABLE, QUALITY, ALTHOUGH THE DEVELH OPMENT OF PERSONALITY IS PART OF THE WHOLE PROCESS OF GROWTH AND GOES ON THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE SCHOOL PROGRAM, NOWHERE IS IT MORE IMPORTANT THAN IN ENGLISH, WHERE, THROUGH READING WE LEARN TO UNDERSTAND OTHERS AND OURSELVES, AND THROUGH WRITING AND SPEAKING WE CRYSTALLIZE AND DEVELOP OUR THOUGHTS AND ATTITUDES. K H26- STUDENT COUNCIL MARO'GOLD RAYS STAFF STUDENT PATROL 4-H CLUBS STUDENT COUNCIL LEADERSHIP IS A QUALITY THAT THE FACULTY OF THE CLVMER CEN- TRAL SCHOOL ATTEWPTS TO DEVELOP IN MANY WAYS. THE STUDENT COUNCIL PROVIDES A GOOD OPPORTUNITY TO DEVELOP LEADERSHIP. THE STUDENTS PARTICIPATE AOTIVELY IN SCHOOL AFFAIRS. THEY LEARN THE VALUE OF COOPERATION, THEY KNOW How TO TAKE RE- SPONSIBILITY, STUDENTS BECOME AWARE THAT RIGHTS AND FREE- DOMS HAVE ATTENDANT OBLIGATIONS. FROM EXPERIENCE wITH THEIR VARIOUS PROJECTS THEY CAN SEE THE VALUE OF PROPER DIRECTION, THEY KNOW THAT SOM ONE HAS TO LEAD AND THE OTHERS HAVE TO FOLLOW. THUS, THE STUDENT COUNCIL PROVIDES TRAINING IN PAR- TICIPATION, COOPERATION, RESPONSIBILITY, AND LEADERSHIP, THE MAIN ELEMENTS OF GOOD COMMUNITY CITIZENSHIPS OUR STUDENT COUNCIL WAS ORGANIZED IN I936 TO GIVE THE STU- DENTS AN OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE MORE CONTROL OvER THEIR ACTIV- ITIES. THE COUNCIL IS A REPRESENTATIVE BODY, IT IS FOU DED ON DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES, EACH HOME ROOM ELECTS TWO MEM' EERS, wITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADES, WHICH ELECT ONE MEMBER, THE FACULTY ELEOTS A FACULTY REPRE- SENTATIVE, MEETINGS ARE HELD AT REGULAR INTERVALSA IDEAS ARE CONSIDER- ED THAT RELATE T0 SCHOOL AFFAIRS, IE THE IDEA IS SOUND, PLANS ARE WORKED OUT TO PUT THE PROJECT INTO OPERATION. WHEN THE PLANS ARE COMPLETED, THEY ARE SUBMITTED T0 THE PRINCIPAL AND T0 THE ADVISOR. IP THE COUNCIL GAINS APPROV- AL, IT STARTS THE PROJECT. THE COUNCIL HAS STARTED A NUMBER OF SCHOOL AOTIYITIES AND ORGANIZATIONS. THE SCHOOL PAPER, NOW CALLED MAROIGOLD RAYS, WAS STARTED BY THE COUNCIL. THE PAPER HAS DEVELOPED EACH YEAR SINCE ITS INCEPTION, UNTIL IT NOW HAS ITS OWN ORGANIZA- TION, THE SAFETY PATROL IS STILL SPONSORED BY THE COUNCIL. IT IS PROUD OF THE RECORD OF THE PATROL. IN ITS SUPERVISION or CONDUCT ON THE BUSSES, LOADING AND DISOHARGING THE STU4 DENTS FROM BUSSES, AND CROSSING IN FRONT OF THE SCHOOL, THERE HAS NEVER BEEN AN AOOIDENT. UCOURTESY WEEK' wAS THE MOST SUCCESSFUL PROJECT CARRIED OuT THIS YEAR. STUDENTS AND FACULTY CONSIDERED IT A GREAT HELP IN LEARNING ABOUT VARIOUS MODES or CONDUCT, LEADERSHIP QUALITIES DEVELOPED IN SCHOOL THROUGH THE STUDENT COUNCIL WILL CONTRIBUTE TO A BETTER COMMUNITY LIFEO -28+ I L...DI MR. BROWN IS THE FACULTY ADVISOR, AND THE OFFICERS ARE AS FOLLOWS! PRESIDENT .................... mm ,,......,.. .DO RIS KOLSTEE VICE PRESIDENT ...,......., bw- .Q.A... ...4....,.....AA., BETTY LUCE SECRETARY ............A.......,A SL ...... E, ..... E A............ ,JOHN WEEKS TREASURER ...A........ .........,. WINIFRED RHEBERGEN MfRRG'GOLD RAYSH THE A B C's OF GOOD NEws WRITING ARE ACCURACY, BREVITY, AND CLEARNESS. MEMBERS or THE MARO'GOLD RAYS STAFF MUST, THERE- FORE, STRIVE FOR THESE POINTS. IN so DOING, THEY ARE ALSO FITTING THEMSELVES FOR LEADERSHIP, BECAUSE A LEADER MUST BE ABLE TO EXPRESS IDEAS ACCURATELY, BRIEFLY AND CLEARLY. INITIATIVE, A QUALITY HIGHLY ESSENTIAL T0 LEADERSHIP, IS DE- VELOPED THROUGH WORK ON ANv PUBLICATION, FOR ANY NEWS RE- PORTER MUST DEVELOP A nNOSE FOR NEWSU. WHEN A NEwSPAPER MAN EAILS T0 RECOGNIZE WNEWSW, HIS PAPER SUFFERSQ DEPENDABILITv IS ANOTHER QUALITY NECESSARY BOTH PDR A LEADER AND PDR A NEWSPAPER woRxER. ALONG WITH THIS GOES A SENSE or RESPONSIBILITY, THE NEWSPAPER WORKER'S Jos MUST BE DONE, DONE ON TIME, AND DONE AS WELL AS THE JOURNALIST IS ABLE TO DO IT, IE THIS IS NDT SUFFICIENTLY sooo, SOMEONE ELSE WlLL TAKE HIS PLACE. ALTHOUGH THE MARO'GOLD RAvS EDITOR IS NOT So CRITICAL AS THE EDITOR or A LARGE CITY DAILY, NEVERTHE- LESS, MEMBERS OF OUR STAFF MUST BE AS DEPENDABLE AS POSSI- BLE, CREATIVE ABILITY lS LIKEWISE ENEENDERED THROUGH woRx ON A scHooL PAPER, ART WORK, AS wELL AS LITERARY WORK IN BOTH PROSE AND POETRY, IS IMPORTANT TO US. IT WILL BE SEEN, THEN, THAT THE STAFF or THE SCHOOL PAPER TRAINS PEOPLE FOR LEADERSHIP IN FIVE wAvS: ABIL1TY T0 EX- PRESS IDEAS, lNlTlATlVE, DEPENDABlLlTV,'A SENSE or RESPONSI- BILITY, AND CREATIVE ABILITV. WE PEEL THAT ALL ARE IMPDR- TANT, GERL SCOUTS EVERY COMMUNITY NEEDS LEADERS, AND LEADERS NEED TRAINING, SUCH TRAINING CAN BE GIVEN T0 YOUNG PEOPLE THROUGH CLUBS, AMONG THE DLUBS IN GLYMER CENTRAL SCHOOL ARE THE GIRL SCOUT ORGANIZATIONS, WE HAVE Two TROOPS, THE INTERMEDIATE TRooP 33 AND THE SENIOR TROOP 59. I -29- . I I W 1 Q , , I ' 1 W T 1 I , 1 I T i J AMONG THE AcTIvITIES CARRIED ON THIS YEAR HAVE SEEN DECORA- TING THE PUBLIC LIBRARY WINDOWS, GIVING CHRISTMAS PRESENTS TO POOR CHILDREN, CAMPING AND HIKING, TAKING EDUCATIONAL TRIPS, AND EARNING SCOUT EADGES IN SRDRTS, ARTS AND CRAFTS, HOMEMAKING, AND WORLD FRIENDSHIPd THESE TROOPS ARE SPONSORED av A PARENT-TEADHERS ASSOCIATION COMMITTEE. THE ADULT LEADERS ARE MISS WHITNEY, MISS TDN, AND MISS GLEASOND 4-IH CDELUJEBS CLYMER FIREFLIES LEADERSHIP IS ONE or THE GREATEST NEEDS or THE RURAL DDMMU- NITY. THE COMPLAINT IS MADE THAT THE BEST LEADERS MOVE TO URBAN AREAS, AND THE U-H CLUB PROGRAM IS ATTEMPTING TO MEET THIS RURAL NEED. Bovs AND GIRLS THROUGH THE N-H PROGRAM ARE BROUGHT INTO INTIMATE CONTACT WITH PROBLEMS or HOME AND com- MUNITY LIFE. THROUGH THE VARIOUS WORTHWHILE N-H CLUB ACTIVITIES, AN EF- FORT IS MADE T0 BRING TO EACH MEMBER THE FINE THINGS IN RU- RAL LIFE AND T0 DEVELOP IN THE YOUNG PEOPLE THOSE ATTITUDES AND IDEALS THAT WILL RESULT IN STRONG ADULT CHARACTERS. THIS IN TURN WILL MAKE FOR SPIRITUAL, AS WELL AS PROGRESSIVE RURAL LEADERSHIP, THE EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVE or THESE CLUBS IS TO BRING T0 THE MEMBERS PRACTICAL INFORMATION ON SUBJECTS RELATING TO AGRI- CULTURE AND HOME ECONOMICS, AND T0 ENCOURAGE THE APPLICATION or SUCH KNOWLEDGE' MEETINGS ARE HELD THREE TIMES A MONTH, Two MEETINGS ARE HELD DURI NG THE ACTIVITY PERIOD IN SCHOOL. 'THE OTHER MEET- ING IS DEVOTED TO SOCIAL ACTIVITIES AND IS HELD AT THE HOUSE OF SOME CLUB MEMBER, MISS SWIFT IS THE LOCAL LEADER or THE CLvMER FIREFLIES, A GROUP wHIcH I5 DIREDTLV UNDER KENNETH COOMBS, THE CHAUTAUQUA COUNTY CLUB AGENT, THE HDMEMARING LEADER IS CAROLYN KING, AND THE AGRICULTURAL LEADER I5 RALPH WILLIAMS. THESE PEOPLE ARE WELL VERSEO IN M-H WORK AND HAVE MADE A LARGE CONTRIBU- TION TO THE SuccESS or THE GLUE THIS YEAR, ..30.. 3... sz- X -nu, 1 .N -f- . , L figigggu-.31,5f-gf ggg' . fgx Lai--' J--rv- :f-'i '55 ' ' LtEi2:,fg. THE FIREELIES HAVE TWENTY'0NE AGRICULTURE MEMBERS AND Eve HOMEMAKING MEMBERS. OFFICERS FOR IQUO-HI ARE: PRESIOENIMI .,..,,.,.,, l .,,.-, N ,,.,,,, H ,..',,. WKYDE QUERREVELD VIcE PRESIDENT. ...... S SWWMQESSIE GOODWILL SECRETARYK ,..,A. S .......,. - ..... E, ......... mm ......... AVA KING TREASURER ......,. , ...... W. WW- .... -EMMJIMMV THOMPSON NEwS REPORTER .A......, , .......,. E-I ,... ..... EROSEMARY WILLIAMS NO. CLYMER SPARK PLUGS MISS STRAIGHT AND A. E. WEEKS ARE THE LOCAL LEADERS or THE NORTH CLVMER SPARK PLUGS. THIS U-H CLUB IS COMPOSED or sax HGMEMAKING MEMBERS AND TWELVE AGRICULTURE MEMBERS. AMGNG THE PROJECTS WHICH THE MEMBERS ARE CARRYING ON ARE DAIRVING, FORESTRY, GARDENING, COOKING AND HANDICRAFTS. OFEIDERS FOR ISUO-Nl ARE: PRESIDENXE ....... , ............ ..... A ........ JOHN WEEKS VICE PRESIDENT ............. - ........... ................ DUANE JOHNSON SEGRETARV-TREASURER ,,,.,,,.,, , ,,,,,.,, M ,,,,...,,,, RAYMOND TuRcK CHEERLEADERS ....,,............... , ....,. ........... GERAEDINE SKINNER MARILYN MUNSON ROMAINE MUNSON ADVISORS ....... S .,..............,........ - .......A.... , ......... - ............, MISS STRAIGHT A, E. WEEKS ' A a a m a 4 s 1 1 .rfiAvoR I TE AQTI v I T I ES, OF. Ioun STUDENTS LEARNING TO SKATE LIKE SONJA HENIEM ......, .....,........, MARILYN GABRIEL PLAYING A HARMONICA ...,,......,.......,.......,.,, - ........................... S ............ WAYNE HOLTHOUSE DDDGING EENEATH A I.ucKv STAR .............. ..T...,...........,., P AUL EDWARDS TRYING TO MAINTAIN ORDER ,............... W ..,........... ..........,................,.. .....,.............. - .....,....,. wNlNA CAMP TRvING T0 BE ANOTHER FLOYD McCov ........ M .... I .............,........, - ...... SAM GROTERS, JR. PLAYING A GUITAR 'NEATH THE SILvERv MooN .,,,,.,,,.,, , ,.,,. , ,,,,.,,, ,RMA TEWINKLE BEING A LAOUES' MAN G....T IW .,...,.......... - ....,....,,,...,....... , ......,........... I ..,....... ..., EDWARD GA9RlEL, JR. WALKING IN Mv SLEER ,,,,.. ,..,.,,,. .,..,,,-,,,,,,,,,,,,, WVIRGINIA VRUINK PLAYING 'POSSUMM ,.............. I .... E ........,.... I, ,........ ,WILSUR MEERDINK EA?'NG A LOLLIPOE ..,..........,, - .,............,........,.....,. .ME ..... ..T. ,.EARL DUINK RIDING A ROLLER COASTERmm ,,,, , .,,,,.,,,.,.., , ,,,,,,,,,,.,, NoRMA NEGKERS KEEPING Mv COMPLEXION PERFECT ,,,,,,,,,, ..,,.,.,4,,,. lvAN HESLINK -31 ---u-1 it-Q. W' I ' T fox A MCH COMMUNITY LIFE. A RICH LIFE MEANS A wELL-JRUUNUEU LIFE. PEOPLE TEND TO PLACE Too MUCH EMRHASIS ON ONE SIDE or LIFE. FUR EXAMPLE, MANY PEOPLE PLACE Too MUCH Uw- RHASIS ON THE MATERIAL THINGS. WE SHOULD LEARN T0 ENJOY THE FINER THINGS or LIFE, FIRST or ALL, UNE MUST REALIZE WHAT THINGS CONSTITUTE A RICH LIFE. THE APPRECIATION or ANU INTEREST IN ALL TYPES or MUSIC, wURKS QF SCULPTURE ANU ART, FINE LITERATURE ANU WELLiCONSTRUCTED BUILDINGS SHOW THAT ONE 85 CULTURED. THE COMMUNITY NEEDS UULTUREU PEOPLE, ANU CERTAIN DEPARTMENTS wITHIN THE SCHOOL sTRIvE T0 MEET THIS DEMAND. THIS YEAR, WITH A SPECIAL ART INSTRUCTOR, WE HAVE DONE MORE THAN EVER BEFORE WITH ART APPRECIATION, OUR STUDENTS ARE GIVEN AN EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY T0 DEVELOP THEIR MUSICAL TALENT. WE HAVE LITERATURE IN BOTH TOWN AND SCHOOL LIBRARIES T0 PROVIDE PEOPLE or THIS UUMMUN- ITV wITH READING MATERIAL FOR LEISURE MOMENTS. FUTURE ClTlZENS or OUR COMMUNITY SHOULD KNOW THE ELEMENTS or A CULTURED AND RUCH LIFE. THIS ,KNOW- LEDGE SHOULD MAKE POSSIBLE wELL-RUUNUEU LIVES ANU A RICHER LIFE. -1-----1--Q-1. -v f 1 LIBRARY I-Z I ' H 5 TT MUSIC H H if I 1 CLUB AH , T '11-A, ig: I1 LANGU 'XG E5 ART WT iffy , Yr 5 K by C f at V A FOREIGN 3 I, I Q F S TUFF! I f L.........' .lj T .2-2 DORRI S KOLSTEE IWIEEHEEHE x ,- FOREIGN LANGUAGES A RICH LIFE IN THE COMMUNITY CONNOTES NOT ONLY A PERSONAL LIFE LIVED AS INTENSELY AND AS FULLY AS POSSIBLE, BUT ALSO ACTIVE PARTICIPATION OF THE INDIVIDUAL IN ALL PHASES A D PROBLEMS OF LIVING TOGETHER. To ACHIEVE SUCH A BALANCED AND FRUITFUL LIFE, OUR PROSPECTIVE CITIZEN OF THE WORLD MUST BE EQUIPPED WITH AN ALERT MIND, A MASTERY OF ENGLISH, A BROAD POINT OF VIEW WHICH INCLUDES TOLERANCE AND SUSPENDED JUDG- MENT, AND THE ABILITY TO USE LEISURE CREATIVELY, IN STUDYING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE, THE STUDENT FACES A SUBJECT WHICH IS INHERENTLY CHALLENGING TO ALL HIS MENTAL FACULTIES. IN PROPORTION TO THE AMOUNT OF EFFORT AND CONCENTRATION HE EXPENDS ON IT, THE APPARENT DIFFICULTIES OF THE LANGUAGE DISSOLVE. As THE STUDENT SOLVES THE VARIOUS GRAMMATICAL PUZZLES, WITH THE HELP OF MISS HEWSTER, HIS APPETITE FOR NEW FIELDS TO CONQUER IS WHETTED, AND HE OFTEN PLUNGE5 INTO A STUDY OF LATIN OR FRENCH LITERATURE WITH KEEN ENJOYMENTo THE STUDY OF A FOREIGN LANGUAGE, THEN, BOTH SHARPENS THE WITS AND ENGENDERS GOOD HABITS OF WORK, WHILE OFFERING IN- VALUABLE TRAINING IN OBSERVATION, COMPARISON, AND GENERALI- ZATION, IN SHORT, TRAINING IN THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD, AND ONCE THIS TRAINING IS FIRMLY ESTABLISHED, IT IS NOT EASILY FORGOTTEN. To THE STUDENTIS owN AMAzEMENT, HE GRAouALLv BEGINS T0 AP- PREGIATE THE GoLoRFuL BACKGROUND or Has MOTHER TONGUEG FRGM A STUDY OF RING IDEAS ASPERATION TURING THE TRANSLATION AND FROM LONG PRACTICE IN TRANSFER- FROM ONE LANGUAGE TO ANOT ER, COME, FIRST, AN EX- AT THE FREQUENT INADEQUACIES OF ENGLISH IN RECAP- FULL FLAVOR OF THE FOREIGN LANGUAGE, AND, SECOND, A CONSCIOUS EFFORT TOWARD cLARaTv AND ACCURACY or EXPRESSION IN ENGL1sH. WAS IT Nor KIPLING wHo SAID! UWHAT Knows HE or ENGLISH, wHo ONLY ENGLISH KNOWSTRT , THERE is ALSO THE sTRlcTLv VOCATIONAL ASPEGT or sTuovlNG A FOREIGN LANGUAGE. ONE NEEDS LATIN IF ONE WISHES TO BECOME A DOCTOR, LAWYER, NURSE, MINISTER, ARCHITECT, EDITOR, WRITER, on PROFESSOR-WE ALL KNOW THAT. BUT, WHETHER oNE STUDIES A FOREIGN LANGUAGE FOR THREE YEARS on JUST Fon ONE, HE WILL FIND THAT HIS COURSE HAS HELPED HIM IN oNE wAv on ANOTHER TO FIND HIS PLACE IN oun COMPLICATED WORLD- -32. 3-31 me 5 .J-'Q Q. sz- 14' :'-T, ,.,g. iii -1.11-:,.: Y,-:af , -.,,,.,,,-...-....,:mQJ.g.'-Qu :ffi5i:bLig ' A fgg.i2gg1-5 -,.. ,-,.,.fv4 f. YA- 1- f 3- .,- ART THE WHOLE TREND OF THINKING IN MODERN EDUDATIDN TENDS TO THE DELIEF THAT THE SDHDDL IS AN INTEGRAL PART OF THE COMMUNITY- IT IS NOT JUST AN INSTITUTION FDR ITSELF, NOR IS IT TO BE CONSIDERED JN ANY wAv ARART FRDM THE COMMUNITY. ART MAKES A LARGE DDNTRIGUTIDN T0 THE RICHNESS OF COMMUNITY LIFE. ONE OF THE GREATEST FUNCTIONS OF THE ART PROGRAM IS T0 CREATE THE DEMAND FDR SIMPLE BEAUTY IN DAILv LIFE. To D0 THIS WE MUST LEARN T0 SEE BEAUTY IN EVERYDAY THINGS, SUCH AS, FLOWERS, TREE COLOR, FURNITURE, A WELL DESIGNED BUILD- ING, OR AN AUTOMOBILE, ART IS THE woRLD'S UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE.. STUDENTS LEARN T0 CONVEY MESSAGES OTHER THAN THE wRITTEN WORK av MAKING CAR- TOONS, POSTERS, DISPLAvS, EXHlBlTS, AND MURALS. HABITS OF NEATNESS, PRECISION, AND APPRECIATION ARE DEVELOPED ev THIS WORK. THESE HABITS ARE CARRIED OVER INTO COMMUNITY LIFE. FOR THREE REASONS, THE ART PROGRAM DS NOT PLANNED TO MAKE ARTISTS OF THE STUDENTS. FIRST, THERE IS NDT TIME. SECOND, ONLY A FEw STUDENTS COULD PARTICIPATE IN TIvE PROGRAM, THIRD, AND LAST, IT wDuLD ART AS AN INTEREST THAT MOST PERSONS CAN THE PRESENT WHICH SHALL THE PEOPLE, TUDE IN ART URGENT NEED IS FOR A PROGRAM PROVIDE FOR THE NEEDS OF ALL A GENUINELY CREA- TEND TO SET APART NEGLECT. OF ART EDUCATION THE CHILDREN OF ALL SNCLUDING THOSE wITH LITTLE OR NO SPECIAL ARTI- AS wELL AS THOSE MOST GIFTEDS THAT IS wHAT OUR ART DEPARTMENT UNDER THE DIRECTION OF MISS SwIFT 15 TRYING T0 DO IN CLVMER. OUR ART DDURSE IS CONCERNED QUITE LARGELY WITH THE CONCRETE EXPRESSION OF INDIVIDUAL THOUGHTS AND FEELINGS TO THE END THAT LIFE ITSELF SHALL BE RIGHER AND MORE BEAUTIFUL! FOR THROUGH TRYING TO ACHIEVE BEAUTY av HIS OWN EFFORTS, THE STUDENT LEARNS TO APPRECIATE THE GENIUS OF THE MASTERS. IF ONE DEVELOPS A LOVE OF BEAUTY, HE IS INDIRECTLY CREATING DEEP AND ABIDING SPIRUTUAL VALUES AND BUILDING CHARACTER. HE wHo UNDERSTANDS ART AND WHO USES THIS KNOWLEDGE GETS A GREAT DEAL MORE OUT OF LIFE AND IN THE MEANTIME IS ADDING MORE TO THE GROWTH OF HIS COMMUNITY THAN DOES THE PERSON WHO HAS NOT SUCH A BACKGROUND. u'BEAUTY IS TRUTH, TRUTH BEAUTY,'-THAT IS ALL YE KNDw ON EARTH, AND ALL YE NEED TO KNOW. -KEATS -33- BAND CHORUS MUSIC When sruosnrs wwe HAVE svuoozo nuslc LEAVE scnoou, rnsv woLL ALWAYS azmedasen ru-.:m A,ssocsArs ons on rue eAno on on-oonus, In Au. mera uves, no sangj.: lnrwince as LQKELI-V -210 . muon vnem Monsoozspnv THAN tue fXPERlENOE or Acvlvt PARTICOPATION an A LARQggHUSlGAL onoAnu3Avionb It is rne POLICY or fn: Aomannstkiions or tue scnoon Ano or MR,VMANUELQ TU cave THE svuoenvs-or runs oomnuncxv svtnv opponvuniii ro oevenop Ano snaov fnemn USICAL ABlLlYYo THAv 1ne'sruoenrs HAVE TAKEN ADVANTAGE or runs opponrunarv as evsoenv an ounm scuoog on- GANIZATIONS, Tue BANDt,QHORUS, BRASQ sexrev, rnumpsv vaio, Ano cLAn1N:T QUARTET NAv: vnovposo wonvnwusnc ENTERTAINMENT ron scndon ASSUWBLQES Ano communsrv cuues. Most for fuss: enouns toon AN ACTDVE PART in rug MUSIC FESTIVAL AT FREDONIA MARCH 26 AND 29. . Tue rounvu, rarru, snxrn, Ano szvenrn GRADE svuoenvs pn:- ssnfeo AN AoPzns1'rA, 'Rap VAn Winans' 'rms vena, Ano at IS ex- peqico THAT Ines: vounc Puwnns wlLL soon cReo1vAaLv newne- scnr THEIR scuoou an VARIOUS MUSICAL onoups. Tnzse vouns sanezns ARE INDEBTEQ to vusln GRADE TEACHERS ron Much CARE- ruu HELP ANU DIRECTION, In rs-sean armor: soncnns me vouncen IEMBERS or oun sch-noon. n-:Ave aecun- AN APPRQDIAATIAON Ano enaovmenr or Music. HIGH 'SCHOOL 'STUDENTS HAVE -MORE ACT! VELV CARROED ON A MUSUCAL EDU' onion runoucnout-'mem wxmeo PROGRAM, As me vwtc as sent, so as THE TREB4lNCLINED.F, I1 IS ous Hops THAT Music MAN MAR: A LARGE convnsaurgon ron vue nlcnsn Lire or oun stu- oenrs when vnev so ronrn into THE'COMMUNlTV,' LIBRARY CLUB In AlNMNG ron A nlcu Lars an THE COMMUNITY, A Knownsoas or How TO use ons's Lzusune TIMQ cneAtsvELv IS Most S PORTANT, Nbcn or runs Lzusunz TIME woLL no nous? as spent sn READING, Ano so, THE EARLIER THE READONG HABIT as fMPLANTED, THE egr- TER ABLE THE INDIVIDUAL wang as vo znaov Tnese Moments OF RzLAxATnoN PROFITABLY. ' V , THE Lnarmnv CLUB ns PRIMARILV A cnoup or aoox Lovans. MEM-4 sans:-up HAS sean unurso TO JUNIORS Ano sznsons snows: rr 15 ran THAT 'ra-lr-:v HAVE .A Mom: Mmune Pomf or vasw, AND Ana mom: ALERT 'nn-.-unorzn1Axlne Responsnaluflss. A , - -35- Sf .4 .Q '-7' , , -' . -fvjiif U - ' V I ,jr , ,A f... 4 ' ' -1 5 wB 'f '3,':' ' - W KLM X ' 'A ' ' Q ' 'i' ' H ' L 1,4 Er ' rn. rg .. '. Q2 N 1. U :rr-1 :gg.,,:Q.-4 gidiQQ5-,'2:.LLif:-3:1435-'5fi3i53'gg,'irf-.sE:L S iii, -, m,:f .. Qfexiwlf Fiif,-L.Q-., 3,3222 ,Lff,:-551-I Q .-,W , ,. NEW BOOKS ALWAYS CREATE A LIVELY STIR OF INTEREST, AND SO, THIS YEAR, AS IN YEARS PAST, THE LIBRARY .CLUB LAUNCHEO A PROJECT TO RAISE MONEY FOR THE PURCHASE OF SIX OUTSTANDING NEW BOOKS. IN PLANNING, ARRANGING, PREPARING, AND SELLING SCORE BOOKS FOR THE BASKETBALL GAMES, MANY GOOD TRAITS OF CHARACTER, LIKE INITIATIVE AND COOPERATION, WERE CALLED INTO PLAY. As A BY-PRODUCT oe THEIR LOVE or BDDKB, AND TO TEST THEIR OWN AS WELL AS OTHERS' KNOWLEDGE or POPULAR BOOKS IN oUR LIBRARY, MEMBERS OF THE LIBRARY CLUB SPONSORED A CHAPEL PRD- GRAM NOVEMBER 8,.IN HONOR or NATIONAL BDDK WEEK. THE PRO- GRAM WAS CALLED WINFORMATION, PLEASEU. IN ADDITION TO RDBTERING A LOVE OF BOOKS, THE LIBRARY CLUB OFFERS ITS MEMBERS AN DPRDRTUNITV TO PARTICIPATE IN THE VAR- Ious ACTIVITIES wHIcH KEEP OUR LIBRARY RUNNING SMOOTHLY, As THE LIBRARY CLUB THIS YEAR coNsIsTs OF TweLVE MEMBERS, A GROUP or sax TOOK CHARGE or THE ELEMENTARY LIBRARY ONE SEM- ESTER, AND THE OTHER sax DURING THE SECOND, EACH MEMBER HAS CHARGE or THE ROUTINE DUTIES INCIDENT T0 CHARGING AND BLIPRINB BOOKS AND HELPING THE YOUNGER STUDENTS wITH THEIR SELECTIONS, SUCH ACTIVITIES AS THESE ENGENDER GOOD HABITS or EEFICIENT woRK, DEVELOP A SENSE OF RESPONSIBILITY AND RE- SOURCEFULNESS, AND AT THE SAME TIME GIVE THE PARTICIPANT AN OPPORTUNITY or HELPING THE YDUNGER MEMBERS OF THE SCHOOL COMMUNITY: LIBRARY CLUB MEMBERS ALSO TAKE TURNS IN SERVING ON THE WCDM- MITTEE FOR THE BEAUTIFIDATIDN or THE LIBRARVW. IN THIS CAP- ACITY THEY ARE REsRDNsIBLe FOR KEEPING OUR MAIN LIBRARY IN PERFECT RUNNING ORDER, SUCH AN IMPORTANT DUTY DEVELDRS PRIDE IN oNE's SCHOOL AND HABITs OF sooo CITIZENSHIPB THE VOCATIONAL ASPECT or ALL THESE ACTIVITIES MUsT NDT BE OVERLOOKED, FOR VERY OFTEN THEY WILL OFFER A WELCOME soLu- TIDN TO THAT EVER pREssINB PROBLEM or 'WHAT SHALL I BETH. AND EVEN IF THE LIBRARY CLUB MEMBER MAv NOT CHOOSE LIBRAR- IANBHIR AS A CAREER, SHE WILL AT LEAST HAVE HAD SOME PRAC- TICE IN A FIELD WHICH MAY BE OF GREAT ASSISTANCE TO HER FINANCIALLV IP SHE LATER GOES ON TO COLLEGE. BUT NOT ALL IS WORK. THE LIBRARY CLUB HOLDS A BUSINESS MEETING TWICE A MONTH IN scHooL, AND EATHERB ONE EVENING EACH MDNTH IN THE HOME OF ONE or ITS MEMBERS EDR A SOCIAL TIME. THIS PROCEDURE MAT BE VARIED BY AN OCCASIONAL TRIP To THE Movxes. So EAR, we HAVE ENJOYED A HALLOWEEN AND A MID-wINTER PARTY, A BOOK TALK EVENINB, AND HAVE some TO- GETHER TO see THE MOVIE ESCAPE. -36- GOOD BOOKS ARE GOOD FRIENDS, AND GOOD BOOKS MAKE US GOOD FRIENDS. IN THIS SPIRIT OF CONGENIALITY, WE HAVE EMBARKED ON MANY ACTIVITIES HICH WE HOPE TO CONTINUE LATER IN OUR COMMUNITY LIFE. THE FOLLOWING ARE OFFICERS OF THE LIBRARY CLUB! PRESIDENT ...,..... SE ..,............ -- -E .......... . ..... LMIOLA TEWINKLE VIcE-PRESIDENT .......... ,I ...4 - ..... EMOOENE GROTERS SECRETARY ...,....... LS ..,...... E ............... ........... LILLIAN WIOOERS TREASURER ......I................. CLUB REPORTER ,........ M HWMELINOR CROSODTT S I............. ..,. VELMA KING A PUBLICITY COMMITTEE, OONSISTING OF LILLIAN BRIDGES, VELMA KING, AND NINA CAMP, HAS PREPARED THREE BULLETIN BOARD DIS' PLAYS FOR THE LIBRARY! ONE FOR HALLOwE'EN, ANOTHER FOR CHRISTMAS, AND A THIRD FOR GEORGE WASHINGTONIS BIRTHDAY. THE COMMITTEE IN THIS wAv HAS BROUGHT ITS COLLECTIVE ARTISTIC ABILITIES INTO PRACTICAL USE. O. c. s . LITERARY LIKENESSES QGENTLEMAN FROM INDIANAU A,,,,,.,. ,,.,.,,,,, , ,,.,.,, LvLE FAROINK DA0Dv LONGLEGSEE E..,.. , .............................,..,. .............. A I-v,IN WILI-INK WTHE VICAR OF WAKEFIELD! .,...... . ............. LELAND SWARM WTHE MORNING GLORY! ...I............I... .... ......... ,......... ......... MJOHNNY WEEKS HAGAINST IDLENESS9 ......... .......................................,..I.........,..................................,....... BETTY LUCE HTHESE TwAINU ...............I............. EMUGENE GROTERS, VIOLA TEWINKLE nTHE DARK FLOWERH- ............... ............ L ......,..........,..,............... - ................,......... DORIS RAYMOND WTHE PERFECT GUEST! ............... ............. , ....,.....,...............,,....... UORRIS KGLSTEE HTHE FIVE VARIETIESH ........... LE- ...................I,, MR. BRowN, MISS SwIrT MISS WHITNEY, MR. BRIDGES, GENEVA QUERREVELD NSIR ROGER IN CHURCH! ..,.,....... ......,........I....,....... IVAN LEGTERS 'THE LAST DOOHESSU ,..,. S ........... ..........I...... .............I, BRIDGET VAIKO WTHE GREAT LOVERU ......,....I..,......I.................. ,.......,..................... .....I............. - .....,,.... ....,.. - ....I MORRIS LEGTERS HTHE SLEEPER OF THE VALLEY? ......................,.....I..........,,.........,.....,.. EI .... .... ROBERT HUMPHRSV UTHE LISTENERSW ,,,I,,.,,,.,,,,4 ,,.,,,,,,,...,4,,,,,A.A.,,,,,..,.,,,,,,,. BESSIE VANEARDEN, CAROL WALLACE NN BROTHER HENRY ............,.,........,....,.... ,......,.,.....................,........ S ..........,............I.........,....,...... R USER THOMPSON 'THE DEFINITION OF A GENTLEMANQ ....I......,..... ..,...... ............ BLAZEN WOZOWIO2 UCOMPOSED UPON WESTMINSTER BRIDGE? ,,,,.,,., ,--,.. LILLIAN BRIDGES 37- FOR A SA YIJFACYORY ECONOMIC LIFE IN THE COMMUNITY A sATlsFAcToRv LYFE HAs T0 HAVE A SOLID ECONOMIC FOUNDATION. Evenv PERSON PHYSlCALLY ABLE HAS T0 wonx. A STEADY INCOME IS BASQC TO HAPPY FAMILY LIFE, WORK MAKES pnoonzss. lr THE TIME EVER COMES wHEN PEOPLE LOSE FAITH IN woaxf-FAMlLv LIFE. COMMUNITY LIFE, AND YHE NATION wlLL FALL APART, THE DESIRE TO EARN A LIVING IS THE KEYSTONE of BQTH INDTVIDUAL AND com- MUNITY PROGRESS. , THE SCHOOL as ASSUMING MORE AND Mons RESPONSIBILITY Fon A sATlsFAcToRv ECONOMIC LIFE IN THE coMMuNlTv. VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE rs GIVEN IN MANV wAvs. Sucsssrlous ARE MADE T0 GUIDE THE PUPIL TN A wus: CHOICE OF VOCATION. LIFE IN THIS RURAL COMMUNITY WILL BE ON A SOUNDER ECONOMIC FOUNDATION AS A RESULT or THE wonx or ALL DEPARTMENTS IN THE SCHOOL. W K ,S 8 A gf- r um, Q :irg l , 6 X A T. rf X -P gp! X 0 ,- .. is 41 71 QCEUENGIEE E MMUMMABUUCES UTCDMEEDGALUQURICIB -2- cnnzmu mums Amsuaumuuumuzff H :moan Ummm csuzcnwuv l IIFOEFQABO 2 CECIDDMGEEUQCIIDRXU- NORMA NECKERS SCIENCE ALL YOUNG PEOPLE LOOK FORWARD TO THE TIME WHEN THEY WILL BE EARNING THEIR OWN LIVING. M051 SENIORS GRADUATING FROM HIGH SCHOOL ARE IMMEDIATELY CONFRONTED WITH THE PROBLEM OF SECUR- ING A JOB IN ORDER TO REALIZE THIS DESIRE OF OBTAINING ,ECO- NOMIC INDEPENDENCE, TODAY THE WORLD FROM WHICH THESE PEOPLE SEEK TO WREST A LIVING IS A SCIENTIFIC WORLD. SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT AND ACHIEVEMENT HAS PLACED AT THEIR DISPOSAL THOUS- ANDS OF USEFUL APPLICATIONS. IF THEY wlsH TO CONTINUE TO USE THESE PRODUCTS WISELY AND TO PRODUCE THEM ECONOMICALLY, THEY MUST BECOME ACQUAINTED WITH AND UNDERSTAND THE SCIEN- TIFIC METHODS AND PROCEDURES WHICH MADE THEM POSSIBLE. THE PRODUCTION OF AUTOMOBILES, AIRPLANES, TYPEWRITERS, FARM MACHINERY, TELEPHONES, RADIOS, REFRIGERATORS, TOASTERS, WASHERS, AND THOUSANDS or OTHER USEFUL COMMODITIES as IN ITP SELF A MOMENTOUS TASK REQUIRING SPECIALIZED SKILL AND KNow- LEDGE. THE MANUFACTURE or sucH eooos UTILIZES MILLIONS or PEOPLE IN THE UNITED STATES. YOUNG PEOPLE wHo HOPE T0 EARN THEIR LIVING av PRODUCING THESE APPLICATIONS or SCIENCE wnLL BE FAR MORE SUCCESSFUL IN THEIR QUEST IF THEY HAVE HAD SCI- ENTIFIC TRAINING IN HIGH scHooL. THE PROPER USE AND CARE OF THESE PRODUCTS OF SCIENCE ARE CONNECTED ALSO WITH HIGH SCHOOL TRAINING IN SCIENCE. As CONSUMERS, YOUNG PEOPLE MUST LEARN TO GET THE MOST OUT OF TOOLS, MACHINES, AND HOUSEHOLD NECESSITIES WITHOUT -IN- VOLVING THEMSELVES IN WASTEFUL EXPENDITURES FOR UPKEEP AND REPAIRS, IN HIGH SCHOOL SCIENCE, THE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF THESE APPLICATIONS ARE STUDIED, S0 THAT, AS CONSUMERS, YOUNG PEOPLE WILL UTILIZE THEM IN THE BEST POSSIBLE MANNER. A SCIENTIFIC ATTITUDE ON THE PART OF EVERY INDIVIDUAL TOWARD HEALTH AND HYGIENE PRACTICES IS A DECIDED BENEFIT TO ANY COMMUNITY, PHASESOF'HEALTH AND HYGIENE SUCH AS MAINTENANCE OF A PURE WATER SUPPLY, PROPER SEWAGE DISPOSAL, IMPORTANCE OF BACTERIA IN CAUSING AND SPREADING DISEASE, PERSONAL CLEANLINESS, AND THE IMPORTANCE OF PROPER FOOD ARE STUDIED EXTENSIVELY IN SCIENCE COURSES OFFERED BY OUR HIGH SCHOOL. STRICT ADHERENCE TO THESE RECOGNIZED PRINCIPLES OF HEALTH IS BENEFICIAL T0 THE COMMUNITY IN THAT FEW OR NO EPIDEMICS RE' SULT, AND THE LOSS OF PRODUCTION AND BUSINESS DUE TO ILLNESS IS REDUCED TO A MINIMUM. FOR THE INDIVIDUAL IT RESULTS IN BETTER HEALTH, FEWER DENTIST, DOCTOR, AND HOSPITAL BILLS, AND LITTLE OR NO LOSS OF WAGES DUE TO ILLNESS. THIS PHASE OF SCIENTIFIC TRAINING IS, INDEED, AN ECONOMIC ASSET TO THE COMMUNITY. I - Egg. CDMMERQIAI, DEPARTMENT THE COMMERCLAL DEPARTMENT, UNDER THE DIRECTION OF MR. BRD N, ENDEAVDRS TO MAKE EACH PUPIL A LITTLE MORE SELF-SUFFICIENT IN HIS PARTICULAR NICHE IN ouR BUSINESS LIFE. A BROAD, GEN- ERAL VIEW OF OUR ECONOMIC LIFE IS STUDIED IN THE FIELDS OF COMMUNIOATION, TRANSPORTATION, BANKING, AND DIETRIEUTIDN, WHICH SERVE THE COMMUNITY. THE PUPIL IS ACQUAINTED wITH vARIous AGENCIES wHIcH ARE AVAILABLE FDR USE, THEIR CLASSES OF SERVICE, RATES, UNDER WHAT cIRcuMsTANcEs TO USE THEM, AND THE BUSINESS PAPERS CONNECTED WITH THEM. WHEN THE FOUNDATION HAS BEEN LAID, THE PUPIL PROCEEDS TO A MORE DETAILED STUDY OF BUSINESS TO ACQUIRE A BASIC, USABLE SKILL. IN BUSINESS ARITHMETIC THE PUPILS LEARN HOW TO MAKE THE COMPUTATIONS INVOLVED IN EVERYDAY BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS- THE RECORDING OF THE RESULTS IS TAUGHT IN BOOKKEEPINGD WITH BOOKKEEPING TRAINING PUPILS ACQUIRE AN INTIMATE KNOWLEDGE OF THE BUSINESS PAPERS, BUSINESS ORGANIZATION,I AND THE LEGAL RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS ENTAILED. How MANY ADULTS HAVE NOT WISHED AT SOME TIME OR OTHER THAT THEY HAD SAVED A CERTAIN RECEIPT OR HAD NOT ENDORSED A NOTE THEY LATER HAD TO PAY? INSTRUCTION IN TYPEWRITING AND SHORTHAND is AVAILABLE FOR THOSE WHO DESIRE STENOGRAPHIC TRAINING. A KNOWLEDGE OF TVPEWRITING IS VALUABLE TO ALL PUPILS FOR ITS PERSONAL USE MERITS. THE STUDY OF THIS SUBJECT INCREASES A PUPILIS KNOW- LEDGE OF BUSINESS LETTER WRITING AND DRAWING UP BUSINESS AND LEGAL DOCUMENTS, A THoRouGH STUDY OF BUSINESS SUBJECTS sHouLD ENABLE aovs AND GIRLS TO AVOID MANY ENTANGLEMENTS WHICH MIGHT EESET ,THEM wHEN THEY LEAVE SCHOOL TO TAKE THEIR PLACE IN THE BUSINESS LIFE OF THE COMMUNITY. MATHEMATICS As LITTLE CHILDREN, WE LEARNED T0 COUNT. As WE GREw OLDER, WE LEARNED TO D0 INCREASINGLY DIFFICULT PROBLEMS OF ARITHME- TIC. Bv THE TIME WE ENTERED HIGH SCHOOL, WE COULD Do, MORE DR LESS ACCURATELY, MOST OF THE VARIOUS PROBLEMS INVOLVING FIGURES, WHICH CONFRONTED us FROM TIME T0 TIME. WHENEVER wE MET A PROBLEM INVOLVING AN uNKNowN QUANTITY, HOWEVER, OR WHENEVER WE WERE FACED WITH GEOMETRIC FIGURES OR wITH THE MORE coMpLIcATED ANGLES OF TRIGONOMETRY, WE REALIZEO THAT THERE I5 MORE TO MATHEMATICS THAN JUST ARITHMETIC, '39- n 1 3 ri 3 1 5 Q 3 Q 3 i Q 3 3 5 3 5 -5 . S i 51 si as 'Y Z L4 i I 2 Ti : A e E 5 l :f E i if E E F p. FI f ,nf 1 IN OUR HIGH SCHOOL, UNDER THE DIRECTION or MR. ALDAV, MR. MILLER, AND MISS NESSLER, C.C.S. STUDENTS HAVE THE PRIVILEGE or sTuDvINe ELEMENTARY ALGEBRA, INTERMEDIATE ALGEBRA, PLANE GEOMETRY, AND TRIGONOMETRY. ALL FOUR or THESE SUBJECTS AS- sIsT ONE TO DEVELOP HAaITs or CLEAR, ACCURATE, AND LOGICAL THINKING. No MATTER WHAT WE ARE T0 DO IN LATER LIFE, sooo THINKING HABITS wILL BE ESSENTIAL RoR ouR ECONOMIC SUCCESS, MOREOVER, NEARLY EVERYONE WILL OCCASIONALLY RUN INTO PROB- LEMS WHICH CAN BE soLvED ONLY, OR AT LEAST MOST EASILY, av SOME FORM or HIGHER MATHEMATICS SUCH AS ALGEBRA. CLERKS, ACCOUNTANTS, AND STATISTICIANS WILL MAKE A MORE DEF' INITE USE OF THEIR MATHEMATICS. SURVEYORS, ENGINEERS OF ALL KINDS, AND THOSE WHO DO SHOP WORK NEED ESPECIALLY TO UNDER- STAND TRIGONOMETRY AND PLANE GEOMETRY, THESE ARE ONLY A FEW EXAMPLES OF THE PEOPLE IN NUMEROUS VOCATIONS WHO REQUIRE AN INTIMATE KNOWLEDGE OF MATHEMATICS, ALL IN ALL, MATHEMATICS IS A CHALLENGING FIELD, AS WELL AS ONE WHICH DAILY GROWS MORE AND MORE IMPORTANT AS SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY EXPAND, HOMEMAKING DEPARTMENT ONE OF THE MAJOR OBJECTIVES OF ALL SOUND EDUCATION IS THAT OF TRAINING FOR HOME AND FAMILY LIFE, WHILE HOME ECONOMICS EDUCATION IS LARGELY CONCERNED WITH THIS OBJECTIVE, IT ALSO OONTRIBUTES TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF GOOD HEALTH, CHARACTER, CITIZENSHIP5 AND THE WISE USE OF LEISURE TIME- IT HAS MUCH TO OFFER IN TRAINING THE GIRL OR BOY TO LIVE A SATISFYING AND ENRICHING LIFE, THE STATE BUREAU or HOME ECONOMICS EDucATIoN STATES THAT THE PURPOSE or THE VOCATIONAL HOMEMAKING PROGRAM IS TO PREPARE YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULTS EDR THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF HOME- MAKING. THESE RESPONSIBILITIES INCLUDE: I, PROVISION or Eooo FOR THE FAMILY. 2. SELECTION, CARE, AND CONSTRUCTION or CLOTHING. . CARE AND GUIDANCE or CHILDREN. . SELECTION, EDRNIEHING, AND CARE or THE HOME. 5. SELECTION AND usa or HOME EQUIPMENT. 6. MAINTENANCE or FAMILY HEALTH. T. HDME CARE or THE sicx. 8. MAINTENANCE or SATISFACTORY FAMILY RELATIONS, -MO- THE HOMEMAKING COURSES A, B, AND D, WHICH ARE UNDER THE DI- RECTION OF MISS STRAIGHT, ARE oRGANIzED IN A PRACTICAL MAN- NER AROUND THESE EIGHT GROUPINGS. THEY ARE PLANNED FOR THE MAJORITY or YOUNG PEOPLE wHo D0 NoT G0 T0 COLLEGE, BUT wHo WILL BE THE PARENTS OF THE NEXT FEW YEARS. WITH THIS TRAIN- ING, HOME LIFE SHOULD BE MORE SATISEVING TO THEM. THE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL WORK IS TAUGHT FOR THE PURPOSE OF HELPING THE PUPIL PERFORM WITH INTEREST, PLEASURE, AND IN- TELLIGENCE HER SHARE OF THE HOME ACTIVITIES. THIS WORK IS ORGANIZED ON A THREE-YEAR BASIS FOR THE SEVENTH, EIGHTH, AND NINTH GRADES. DURING THE THREE YEARS A STUDENT WILL STUDY UNITS IN ALL PHASES OF HOMEMAKING, AFTER A GIRL HAS TAKEN HOMEMAKING, SHE SHOULD BE ABLE TO MANAGE HER HOME EFFICIENTLY AND FOR THE PLEASURE OF HER FAM- ILY, BY SUCCESSFULLY MAINTAINING A HAPPY HOME, SHE WILL BE DOING HER PART T0 CONTRIBUTE TO A SATISFACTORY COMMUNITY LIFE. CRAFT CLUB THE CRAFT CLUB IS COMPOSEO or GIRLS wHo ARE IN THE SIXTH, SEVENTH, AN EIGHTH GRADES. THEY HOLD THEIR MEETINGS DURING THE NINTH PERIOD ON WEDNESDAYS IN THE HDMEMAKING ROOM. THE GIRLS ELECT THEIR owN OFFICERS, MAKE RULES FOR THE Gooo or THE CLUB, AND CONDUCT THEIR owN BUSINESS MEETINGS' THE OFFICERS or THE CLUB ARE: PRESIDENTLW ........................ -E .... EE, ............. .WEMJOAN KOOMAN VIGE-PRESIDENT. .,......... E ...... - .... E ...... EEEGARDL JANE ToN SEGRETARV-TREASURER ............ E.- ........ ,..-,,.--...,..AVA KING REPORTER .......... E- .......... WEEE .... ELEM ....., EWWMHELEN HOLTEN LIERARIAN ............. , .......... E .......... .. ....... EE. ...... CORA BELL ADAMS . FACULTY ADVISORY ......,.. -EE .... E ..... - .... -.MISS ..... STRAIGHT AMDNG THE CRAFTS WHICH THE GIRLS HAVE FOLLOWED THIS YEAR ARE KNITTING, CROCHETING, EMBROIDERY, WEAVING, AND SEWINGQ A- PRONS, LuNcHEoN SETS, DOILIES, Por HOLDERS, CLOTHES PIN BAGS AND OTHER USEFUL ARTICLES ARE MADE FROM SORAPS or MATERIALS. THE GIRLS ARE URGEO T0 MAKE usE or INEXPENSIVE MATERIALS OR BITS or MATERIAL THEY MAY HAVE AT HOME, MEMBERS or THE CLUB GAIN ADDITIONAL EXPERIENCE THROUGH THEIR WORK ON com- MITTEES IN CONNECTION WITH THE PARTIES WHICH THE CRAFT CLUB HAS DURING THE YEAR, HIGHLIGHTS or THE YEAR WERE OUR HAL- LOWEIEN, CHRISTMAS, AND VALENTINE PARTIES. -MI- 'L 2?- ff: fi e 1 L - X- V ik, 1 w , X . X v.hf 21--nam-1, and wi A. 455 L 51. Q1-fm AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT THE MAIN VOCATIONAL INTEREST IN THE CLYMER COM UNITY as DAIRY PARMIND: THEREEDRE, IT as ONLY NATURAL THAT vocATaoNAL EDUCATION IN THAT FIELD BE MAINTAINED IN CLVMER CENTRAL SCHOOL. IN ORDER T0 BE EFFECTIVE, A COURSE BUILT T0 MEET THE NEEDS or SUCH A vocATloN MusT INCLUDE ACTIVITIES LATD ON THE BASIS or THE ACTUAL PROBLEMS AND PRACTICES CARRIED ON IN THE Loc AL COMWUNI TY . SOME or ouR ACTIVITIES ARE DESIGNED TO TRAIN FOR A BETTER UNDERSTANDING or PRODUCTION AND MANAGEMENT PRDDLDHS. OTHER ACTIVITIES TRAIN IN LEADERSHIP AND THOSE THINGS THAT MAKE FOR A FULLER LIFE ON THE FARM. WE wlLL CITE A FEW THAT HAVE DEEN coNDucTED FURING THE PAST YEAR av ouR DEPARTMENT WITH THE HELP or MR. BRIDGES. THE AGRICULTURE IV cLAss HAS VISITED A NUMBER or FARMS WHICH THEY HAVE STUOIED rRoM THE BUSINESS AND MANAGEMENT ANGLE. THE AGRICULTURE I AND II GLASSES HAVE VISITED FARMS T0 LEARN How TO SELECT sooo POUL- Tnv AND LIVESTOCK, THE DEPARTMENT EPENT A DAY ON THE FARM OF MR. EDwARD OONK, ERADICATING THORN APPLE TREES. OTHER TRIPS wERE TAKEN T0 OBSERVE PRACTICES SUCH AS WEED DDNTRDL PROGRAMS AND PASTURE IMPROVEMENT PLoTs. ALL THESE .TRIPS MADE CONTACT WITH FARMERS IN THE AREA. GAS ENGINE ovERHAuL- :Ne AND FARM SHOP TAUGHT THE aovs SOME THINGS THEY WILL NEED T0 Rnow, AND IT ALso PERFORMED A SERVICE FOR A FEW FARMERS. A BOOTH WAS OONDUCTED AT THE COUNTY FAIR AND A NUMBER or THE aovs PARTTDTPATED IN THE JUDGING OONTESTSA THE MosT IMPORTANT AND EFFECTIVE PART or THE AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION PROGRAM as THE WORK or THE PART-TIME GROUP, THESE YOUNG PEOPLE ARE TAKING ADVANTAGE or THE FURTHER GUIDANCE, TRAINING, AND PLACEMENT WHICH WE TRY TO GIVE THEM. THEv ARE AT THE STAGE IN LIFE AND EDUCATION wHERE THEv CAN MARE SPE- UIFIC usE or sDcH SERVICES. THE ONUY REGRETTABLE PART ABOUT THIS PHASE IS THAT, our or l20 YOUNG PEOPLE, ONLY ABOUT TWENTY ARE MAKING USE or THIS sERvlcE. AN EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM CAN BE EFFECTIVE ONLY AS THE COMMUNI- TY MAKES USE OF IT. BUT AT THE SAME TIME, ARE WE EDUCATIINII ALI. IN THIS COMAUNITV T0 STAY HERE, DR ARE WE EDUCATING SO THAT SOME MAY FIND OPPORTUNITY IN OTHER FIELDS? How MANY OF OUR GRADUATING GLASS CAN BE ABSORBED IN THIS COMMUNITY? T ..u2. CRAFT CLUB PART-TIME GROUP FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA LIBRARY CLUB FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA' DEPARTMENT OFFICERS FOR I93-IO-IH ARE: PRES'0ENT...,..N..T.... ............,.... E..,.,..W-...,WPAUL EDWARDS VICE PRESIDENTME ....... E ..,.... -, EEWWJVAN HESLINK SEcRETARv,.-.-..-.. ..... .... ...... -..,.--..,.--.MAx BEMIS TREAEDRERLMLEWMWMLLLLML ..... GILBERT MEVERTNK REPoRTERWMmMWmWMmMMN,,Mwmu ,.,, MIVAN LEGTERS WATCHDoe.,mw--mELnEL,.LE.,MAvNARD DNWCOTT THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT HAS EEEN FUNCTIONING FOR FOUR YEARS AND ns NOW BEGINNING TO sHow MANY SIGNS or IMPROVE- MENT, UNDER THE LEADERSHIP or MR. BRIDGES. AGRICULTURE IN OUR SCHOOL TENDE TO DRAW THE SCHOOL AND THE RURAL AREAS or OUR TOWN CLOSER TOGETHER, THIS as PROBABLY BECAUSE CLvMER ns AN AGRICULTURAL TOWN AND ns THEREFORE INFLUENCED av THE AeR:ouLTuRE DEPARTMENT IN scHooL. STUDENTS STUDY MANY PRIN- CIPLES TODAY THAT WERE UNKNOWN A FEW DEcADEs AGO, AND THus ARE ABLE TO HELP soLvE MANY or THE FARMERIS PROBLEMS OF TO- DAY. IN THIS DEPARTMENT EACH STUDENT HAS AN OPPORTUNITY TO SHOW HIS ABILITY AND LEARNING AND PUT IT INTO PRACTICE. EVERY PUPIL HAS PROJECTS OF HIS OWN ON WHICH HE APPLIES HIS KNOW- LEDGE OF THE PRINCIPLES LEARNED IN THIS COURSE, THESE PRO- JECTS OR ENTERPRISES USUALLY CONSIST OF DAIRYING, POULTRY, FEED CROPS, AND CASH DROPS. THIS TENDS TO GET THE STUDENT STARTED ON HIS ROAD IN LIFE AND MAKES HIM A BETTER FARMER. ALTHOUGH WE DO MANY THINGS IN SCHOOL, WE ALSO HAVE MANY OTHER ACTIVITIES OUTSIDE or SCHOOL. WE ENDAGE IN JUDOING CONTESTSAT THE STATE AND COUNTY FAIRS. WE HAD A BOOTH .AT THE DUNKIRK FAIR. A FATHER AND soN DANQDET WAS ALSO ANOTHER BIG FEATURE OF THE YEAR- THIS OCCASION INVOLVED A GREAT DEAL or MANAGEMENT AND LEADERSHIP. THIS WORK WHICH wAs DONE ALMOST ENTnRELv ev THE STUDENT aoov or THE F.F.A., we FEEL WAS A BIG success AND wAs A STARTER FOR THE STUDENT ON THE ROAD TO SUCCESS AND sooo CITIZENSHIP. PART-TIME GROUP THE DEPARTMENTS OF HOMEMAKING AND AGRICULTURE TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO INTRODUCE TO YOU A RELATIVELV NEW SERVICE OF OUR SCHOOL, To THOSE OF YOU WHO FIND YOURSELVES LEAVING OUR HALLS OF LEARNING FOR ONE REASON OR ANOTHER, wE OFFER OUR CONTINUED SERVICE THROUGH OUR PART-TIME WORK. -lill- LAST YEAR THIS SERVICE WAS ORGANIZED, AND IT IS NOW FUNC- TIONING STILL BETTER. A CLUB IS THE NUCLEUS FOR THE WORK' ITS PRESENT OFFICERS ARE: PRESIDENT, RUSSELL DAMOOTT: VICE- PRESIDENT, IRENE HOITINKI SECRETARY-TREASURER, LUGV WIGGERSQ PROGRAM CHAIRMEN, JAMES KOLSTEE AND DONALD CADYQ FACULTY AD- VISORS, MISS STRAIGHT AND MR. BRIDGES. THE MEETINGS ARE HELD THE FIRST AND THIRD TUESDAVS OF EACH MONTH. USUALLY THE MEETINGS ARE DIVIDED INTO THREE PARTS, NAMELY: A BUSINESS MEETING, A DISCUSSION PERIOD, AND A SOCIAL HOUR. DURING THE DISCUSSION PERIOD, THE HOMEMAKING SECTION THIS YEAR HAS TAKEN UP HOLIDAY ENTERTAINING, KNITTING, WEIGHT CONTROL, DIET, CONSTRUCTION OF A DRESS, AND RUG MAKING. THE WORK WAS PLANNED T0 MEET THE NEEDS OF ALL THE GROUP. DURING THE DISCUSSION PERIOD, TOO, WE HAVE DONE MOST OF THE PLAN- NING OF PARTIES AND SOCIAL FUNCTIONS FOR THE ENTIRE GROUP. THE DISCUSSION PERIODS OF THE MEN OF THE GROUP HAVE CENTERED AROUND Two TOPICS! IMPROVING THE HERO BV A BETTER BREEDING PROGRAM, AND INCREASING THE DAIRYMANIS INCOME av BETTER FEEDING. SEVERAL MEMBERS HAVE MADE CHANGES. IN THEIR PRAG- TIOES T0 BE IN LINE wITH THEIR FINDINGS AFTER THE STUDV IN THE DISOUSSION PERIODS. SEVERAL ARE TAKING ADVANTAGE OF OUR INDIVIDUAL COUNSELING SERVIOE. SOME HAVE BEEN PLAOED IN CONTACT WITH EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS IN OTHER OCCUAPTIONS, THERE HAS ALWAYS BEEN A GROUP TO ATTEND THE GOUNTV-w1OE MEETING-ON nGETTING STARTED IN FARMINGU. THESE MEETINGS WERE HELD AT MAYVILLE AND WERE SPONSORED Sv THE TEACHERS OF AGRICULTURE AND THE COUNTY AGENTS OF CHAUTAUQUA COUNTV FOR THE VOUNG MEN OUT OF SCHOOL ON FARMS. OUR MAIN, OBJECTIVES ARE GUIDANCE, TRAINING, AND PLACEMENT, WHEN vou LEAVE SCHOOL, VOU ARE ELIGIBLE FOR MEMBERSHIP. JOIN US, AND WE WILL HELP BRIDGE THE GAP BETWEEN SCHOOL AND VOUR LIFEIS WORK OR QCCUPATION, GARDERNERI S LAMENTAT I ON SWEET WILLIAMWALKING THROUGH THE RYE SAW SUTTONIS PINK BEGIN TO CRY. HE SAID, WMV PETUNIA FRIEND,u AND ASTER IF HER HAND'SHE'D LEND- SHE SAID T0 HIM, uBEGONIA BRUTE BEFORE I HAVE A MIND TO SHUTE . THAT CARROT HAIR FROM OFF YOUR HEAD.u 'TIS SAO TO TELL, BUT NOW HEIS DEAD. -115- .Jr MDCK ATI CI COMMUNITY LIFE SCDGIUMU. SUEUEDUIIE S ,FOR - A Pr' A . A-1' A MAYOR H TowN CLERK , N,,, 4,,S, , fag,- . ' lf MMIII, uilih. ' G A, W '1 .,,- fA fdI:- J... J X, jg YIEREE comma Ns Uma cwmmwmunv curfiis 'ine 3 THE SCHOOLS or AMERICA N ARE MORE CDNDERNED WITH TEACHING DEMOCRACY TODAY THAN EVER BEFORE. DEMD- DRATID METHODS ARE BEING DHALLENEED THE WORLD ' I mx Y In ovEa. THE LIGHTS or DE- I I Sc., fa I MOCRACY HAVE GONE our IN N 2? wb MANY COUNTRIES, IN A FEW 1 , I SHORT YEARS THE wonx or X HUNDREDS or YEARS HAS Q' 5, BEEN BRUSHED ASIDE--'THE ' if T' woRK or NOBLE, PATRIOTIC, -V - IN, AND HDMANITARIAN MEN, I' ' WAR HAS MADE OTHER NA- I ' - .. A I. TIDNS SUSPEND DEMOCRATIC ' ' ' ' I RIGHTS. TODAY THE UNITED Q W A + STATES as THE LAST STRONG , 1 ' - HOLD or DEMOCRATIC sov- T ERNMENT AND DEMOCRATIC id 1 I LIVING, IN THE UNITED STATES EVERYONE SHOULD MAKE A STUDY or THE pam- .,. CIPLES of-' DEMOCRACY AND OV THE ELEVIENTS or A DEMD- cRATlc LIFE. OuR SCHOOL IS DOING ITS PART, IN I EVERY GRADE AND IN EVERY ' DEPARTMENT, TEACHING ron i I DEMOCRATIC COMMUNITY LIFE uNDERn.lES ALL womc. I 7+ VI OLA TE WI NKLE SOCIAL STUDIES THE SOCIAL STUDIES DEPARTMENT IN TEACHING FOR A DEMOCRATIC coMMuNITv LIFE HAS TwD MAIN OBJECTIVES. ONE OF THE OBJEC- TIvEs IS TO TEACH,THE ELEMENTS OF A DEMOCRATIC LIFE AND THE OTHER IS T0 TEACH THE REASONS WHY EVERYONE sHouLD PARTICI- PATE IN cIvIc AFFAIRS. ONE OF THE FIRST THINGS TAUGHT IN SOCIAL STUDIES woRK IS THE ELEMENTS OF A DEMOCRATIC LIFE. IT IS RDINTED DUT THAT DNLV UNDER THE DEMOCRATIC FORM OF GOVERNMENT IS IT POSSIBLE TO LIVE THE DEMOCRATIC WAY. PEOPLE wHD ARE NOT INTERESTED IN GOVERNMENT, BUT wHo ARE CONCERNED ABOUT RETAINING THEIR WAY OF LIFE, MIGHT THINK ABOUT THE LAST STATEMENT, A DICTATOR- IAL, SOCIALISTIC, OR COMMUNISTIC GOVERNMENT DOES NOT PERMIT THE DEMOCRATIC WAY OF LIFE. THE WAY OF LIFE OF A PEOPLE IS DIRECTLY DEPENDENT UPON THEIR GOVERNMENT. IF THE FORM OF GOVERNMENT IS CHANGED, EVERY PART OF THE LIFE OF A PEOPLE WILL BE AFFECTED, THE MAIN ELEMENTS OF THE LIFE WE ARE ABLE T0 HAVE IN THE UNITED STATES ARE AS FOLLOWS! I. FREEDDM IN THE SELECTION OF OCCUPATION, 2. AN UNRESTRICTED EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM. . THE RIGHT TO owN PROPERTY. , THE RIGHT OF TRIAL ev JURY. 5. THE RIGHT OF HAEEAS CORPUSD 6. THE RIGHT TO DIRECT FAMILY DESTINIESQ 1. THE RIGHT OF FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT WITHIN THE COUNTRY, 8. FREEDOM OF WORSHIP. 9. 'FREEDOM IN SOCIAL PARTICIPATION. I IO. FREEDOM OF SPEECH. II, FREEDOM OF PRESS. I I2, THE RIGHT TO DIRECT THE DESTINIES OF THE COUNTRY THROUGH ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES. I3. THE RIGHT TO BE REETRIDTED IN OUR READING ONLY av ouR ABILITY- IM. THE RIGHT TO BE ABLE TO LEARN THE FACTS, so THAT PEO- PLE CAN BE TOLERANT AND UNPREJUDICED, AND CAN BASE CONCLUSIONS ON FAcTs. I5. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCEMENT IN PUBLIC AND PRI- VATE AFFAIRS, PARTICIPATION IS ESSENTIAL IF DEMOCRACY IS T0 PROGRESS. THE MOST FUNDAMENTAL FACT ABOUT DEMOCRACY IS THAT ITS SUCCESS OR FAILURE DEPENDS UPON THE AMOUNT OF PARTICIPATION BY THE PEO- PLE IN CIVIC AFFAIRS. WHEN PEOPLE IN A DEMOCRACY CRITICIZE THE DEMOCRATIC PROCESS, THEY ARE CRITICIZING THEMSELVES.' IF -146- -k ,. ' DEMOCRACY I5 WEAK, THE FAULT as WITH THE PEOPLE, NOT wITH THE FORM or covERNMENT. THE AMOUNT or PARTYCTPATION sv THE PEOPLE GOVERNS THE sUccEss or DEMOCRACY. THE PURPOSE or THE COMMUNITY PROJECTS CARRIED ON sv MEMBERS or THE SOQIAL STUDIES CLASSES IS T0 GIVE THE STUDENTS DIRECT EXPERIENCE IN CIVIC AFFAIRS. IT DS HOPED THATKTHE STUDENTS, av PARTQCQPATION, WILL LEAFNAHOW TO TAKE PART IN vARIous Ao- IIVITIES, AND THAT UPON LEAVLNG SCHOOL THEY wxLL ENTER AC- TavELv INTO THE AFFAIRS or THE COMMUNITY. THE SCHOOL AS A COMMUNITY CENTER ONE br THE PURPOSES or THE CENTRAL SCHOOL IS TO PROVIDE coM- EQRTAELE ACCOMODATIONS FOR COMMUNITY ACTIVITTES. ANv PART OF THE SCHOOL TS AVAILABLE FOR USE BY THE COMMUNITY WHEN NOT IN USE FOR REGULAR INSTRUCTION. MANY or OUR COMMUNITY GROUPS MAKE USE or THE scHooL FACILI- TTES. SoME or THE CCMMUNITY snoups THAT HAVE usEo THE soHooL IN THE PAST FEW MONTHS ARE AS FOLLOWS! . I. THE DAIRYMENTS LEAGUE RoR ITS ANNUAL MEETING. 2. THE CLYMER BUSINESS MEN RoR THEIR MONTHLY MEETINGS . CLvMER STATE BANK FOR ITS ANNUAL MEETING. . CLYMER LIBRARY CLUB FOR ITS ANNUAL MEETUNGQ 5. AMERICAN LEGION RoR A DINNER 6. FARM MEETINGS UNDER THE AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT AcT 7. THE Town BASKETBALL TEAM RoR pRAcTncE AND GAMES, 8. GIRL ScoUTs ron vARIoUs AcTIvITIEs. 9. Bov ScouTs FOR VARIOUS ACTJVGTIESH IO. RED Cnoss CHAPTER FOR SEWING MEETINGS, THE CENTRAL ScHooL sERvEs AS A COMMUNITY CENTER, wHEN PEOPLE GATHER AT THE scHooL ron BASKETBALL GAMES, sENIoR PLAV, Mus- IcAL CONCERTS, P. T. A. MEETINGS, cvMNAsIUM DEMONSTRATIDNS, ASSEMBLY PROGRAMS, GRADUATION, AND VARIOUS ENTERTAINMENTSQ R I 0 4 U Q I 0 1 , , FIT DOES A HEAR Ao' sooo SOMETIMES, T0 ao A LITTLE sLow, To SAY A woRo o' COMFORT T0 TH' MAN THAT'S sTUaeEo HIS TOE,n - - JAMES WILLTAM FOLEY I -Iw- FOR HEALTH AND K ECKEATION IN THE COMMUNITY Gooo HEALTH GOVERNS ALL INDIVIDUAL ACTIVITY. A COIIMUNITY IN WHICH THE -'-'T' PEOPLE HAVE GOOD HEALTH IS LIKELY TO BE PROSPEROUSQ lT I5 IMPOSSIBLE TO HAVE INDIVIDUAL success wITHouT ...---..-A ,..- ,..-..1.... Gooo HEALTH. B 9 THE SCHOOL IS LIFTING THE HEALTH 2 I LEVEL or ouR coMMuNITv IN MANY K WAYS, CLASSES IN HYGIENE, SCIENCE, E -' AND I-IoME ECONOMUCS, AS wsu. AS GYM- T - NAsIuM woRK, ALL Ano IN BRINGUNG A- B BOUT ,MORE HEALTHFUL HAB1 TS or LIV- A ING AND THINKING. WHOLESOME REcRE-- L ATION IN PLAYING GAMES AND IN READ- L Y N ING GOOD aooxs FURTHER CONTRIBUTES I Q TO THE DEVELOPMENT or souNo MINDS A I, I IN HEALTHY Boones. x lk ' A51 REGULAR PLAY ANG RECREATION Rszmoos ,ff ARE SCHEDULED. EXERCISE IS ONE or - THE MAIN ESSENTIALS or GOOD HEALTH, THE wHoLE HEALTH PROGRAM MAKES Ros- SIBLE HAaITs THAT wa LL MEAN HAI:-PIER Q LIvEs IN THIS COMMUNITY, 0 f H XY 'H' N g V X QA I S Q n T I wg As E , I C , .. A M L A U A E R - ' - D A o u L -' X I A C S I I A CLASS I HAL T-I X S I I I - E - f ' f WILBUR MEERDINK ,sg BASKETBALL TEAM CHEER LEADERS PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT A PROGRAM or HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION SHOULD BE BASED UPON THE NEEDS or MAN IN A RECREATIONAL WAY AND UPON HIS EVIDENT NEEDS IN AMERICAN LPPE. OuR PROGRAM Is DEDICATED T0 THE HAPPYNESS, HEALTH, AND CHARACTER or THE AVERAGE AMERICAN COMMUNITY. AN OUTLINE or OUR PROGRAM IS AS FOLLOWS! I I. ADEQUATE HEALTH EXAMINATION AND AN ExTENsIvE FOLLOW- up, CONTROL or .COM UNICABLE DISEASES, HEALTHFDL SCHOOL ENVIRONMENT, AND HVGIENIC STANDARDS IN THE EN- TIRE CURRSCULAR AND EXTRA-CURRICULAR LIFE or THE SGHOOL- 2. ADEQUATE INDOOR AND OUTDOOR FACILITIES IN THE SCHOOL AND ADEQDATE TIME IN THE CURRICULUMG 3. COORDINATION or COMMUNITY EFFORT IN POLICIES, EI- NANCES, USE or FACILITIES PDR PROGRAMS or HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION, AND RECREATION, U. HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION INSTRUCTION BASED UPON SCIENTIFIC MATERIALS RRoGREssIvELv ARRANGED THRDUGH- ouT THE GRADES AND UPPER SCHOULS AND DIRECTED TowARD PERSONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT AND SOCIAL IDEALS. 5. PROFESSIONALLY TRAINED AND AGGREDITED suRERvIsoRs AND TEACHERS EDR ALL BRANCHES or THE HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION RRGGRAM INCLUDING THE COACHING or ATHLETIC LIVING. 6. PROMOTION or THE IDEA or PLAY AND RECREATION AS As- PECTS or THE FINEST LIVING. 7. THE ORGANIZATION AND ADMINISTRATION or HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION IN THE SCHOOLS AS A SINGLE EXECU- TIvE DEPARTMENT THoRouGHLv COQRDINATED WITH THE GEN- ERAL PURPOSES or EDUCATION. 8. EXTENSION or THE DESURABLE AND PRACTICAL MEASURES FOR THE PROMOTION or HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION AMONG aovs AND GIRLS IN SCHOOLS T0 ALL MEMBERS or THE com- MUNITY- oo ca oo I STUDY HARD BECAUSE-- I MIGHT GEGDNE PRESIDENT soME DAY .......,T. - .....T... E- .........,. LAMDNT GDRING I wANT T0 BE LIKE DANIEL BOONEN- ,....... E ................ W ........... LYLE FAROINK I I-IKE T0 Move M0uNTAINs .......... L .......... , ........ ........ , M..- T.............. - T... -.lov EowARos Mv ROMANCE IS ON A DIET .......,...... ..., ........... L - .,........... ..,.... - .BING CAF!-ISCH Mv CONSCIENCE sAvs I MUSTN ,,,,,,, N ,.,,,,,,.,, MWWLDIS EEHELMAN l'M I-EARNINGVTO OBEY ..... - .,......... L .......... ......... ,..WAI.TER HILL IT S SUCH A HABIT..- ......... - .........., L.- ..... - ,..,......... I ............... ,..... - JACK NEWHOUSE AMBITIDN DEMANDS REsuLTsEmmEWME ..,... LM, ....... M ..............,....... - .....,...,.. MMERLE WRIGHT NN nHOPEn IS BOUND T0 CONQUERM ,.,, N .,,,, mm .,,,.,. Q ,.., WQDRDDN NEwHousE ..IIg., MAYVILLE BASKETBALL GAME BASKETBALL CLVMER EEGAN THEIR BASKETBALL SEASDN wITH A HEALTHY VICTORY OVER CELORON AT CLYMER av A SCORE OF 30-17, TENHUISEN TOOK HIGH SCORING HONORS WITH I2 PDINTS. NEWHGUSE AND LEGTERS WERE CLOSE BEHIND wITH 8 AND 7 RESPEcTIvELv. THE SEcoND GAME OF THE SEASON AT HOME wITH CHAUTAUQUA wAS vERv CLOSE INDEED. IN THE LAST HALF, THE CLYMER RAIDERS TOOK SCORING HONORS sur COULDN'T QUITE CATCH UP, FOR CHAD- TAUQUA HAD A IN-8 LEAD AT THE HALF. THE GAME ENDED. 20-IT wITH CAFLISGH AND TENHUISEN TIED Fon HIGH SCORE wITH 5 POI NTS EACH, - THE NEXT GAME wAs AT FREWSBDRG, WHERE CLYMER woN 20-8. NEITHER TEAM COULD SCORE UNTIL IN THE LAST QUARTER WHEN CLv- MER FORGED THROUGH WITH A VICTORY, THE DEFENSE5 OF BOTH TEAMS WERE AT THEIR EEST THAT NIGHT. TENHUISEN AND LEGTERS WERE HIGH WITH IO AND 7 RESPECTIVELYA AT LAKEWOOD, CLYMER woN THEIR THIRD GAME OF THE SEASON BY .A SCORE OF 21-I6. TENHUISEN WAS AGAIN TOPS WITH 9 POINTS. IT wAS A FIGHT T0 THE FINISH wITH CLYMER SCORING II POINTS IN THE LAST QUARTER T0 WIN THE CONTEST. CLYMER PLAYED PANAMA NEXT IN A NDN-LEAGUE GAME IN WHICH TEN- HUISEN WAS HIGH SCORER WITH 8 POINTS, WHILE LEGTERS AND GAB' f RIEL HAD D EACH. THE GAME ENDED EH-I6 IN FAVOR OF CLYMER- ON JANUARY I7, CLvMER MET THEIR TRADITIONAL RIVAL ON THEIR HDME COURT. BOTH TEAMS HAD AN ExcEpTIoNALLv Gooo NIGHT AND IT WAS A CLOSE GAME ALL THE wAv THROUGH. HowEvER, IN THE LAST HALF or THE GAME SHERMAN FELL DOWN UNDER CLVMER'S FLEET PASSING AND DEFENSIVE AeILITv, AND THE GAME ENDED 26-20 wITH CLVMER IN THE LEAD. EDWARDS wAs HIGH SDDRER WITH I0 POINTS, AND NEwHouSE, SECOND, WITH T. CLYMER PLAYED PANAMA AT HOME FDR A SECOND CONTEST AND woN 39 TO 2l, SCORING I9 P0lNTS IN THE LAST QUARTER. TENHUISEN WAS HIGH SGDRER wITH I3 POINTS. AT MAVVILLE, CLYMER MET A FAST AND ACCURATE TEAM. IT WAS A EAD NIGHT FOR THE aovs, AND THE BALL JUST WOULDN'T G0 THROUGH, EXCEPT Fon LEGTERS, wHo wAS 'HIGH SGDRER wITH IM POINTS, THE GAME DAME T0 A CLOSE wITH A SCORE OF 32-2U SN MAYVlLLE'S FAVOR. -5I- AT CHAUTAUQUA THE SECOND GAME WITH CELORON PROVED TO BE THE TOUGHEST LOSS OE THE WHOLE YEAR. 'T WAS A VERY CLOSE GAME ALL THE WAV' THROUGH,.WlTH SEVEN MINUTES POINT AGAINST AMONG ALL THE CELORON COMING OUT ON TOP, IN-I2. IN THE LAST OF PLAY NEITHER- TEAM COULD scoRE A SINGLE THE DTHER. THE POINTS WERE EvENLv DISTRIBUTED PLAYERS. ,.THE MAROON AND GOLD RATDERS DISPLAYED SOME DF THE MDsT'sFEcTAcuLAR PASSING OF THE YEAR: YET THEY COULDNfT MATCH THE VETERANS OF CHAUTAUQUA, AND LOST 35-26, NEWHOUSE AND LEGTERG WERE-HIGH scoRERs WITH 8 AND 9 RESPECTIVELY, PLAYING FREwsauRG AT HOME, CLYMER DAME EADK AFTER Two LossEs T0 THOROUGHLY BEA? THE SMKLL FREWSBURG TEAM ev 30-20, IT wAs A GAME OF FOULS, AND CLYMER WON av THEIR SUPERIOR FOUL SHOOTING. LAKEWOOD WAS ONCE MORE DEFEATED WHEN THEY JOURNEYED T0 Dun HOME COURT, BY A SCORE OF El-IU. TENHUISEN wAs HIGH SCORER wrTH S POINTS. THE FIRST HALF OF THE GAME WAS A cLosE RACE, BUT CLvMER GOT HOT AND SCORED I3 POINTS IN THE LAST HALF TO THEIR 0PPONENT'S 8. CLYMER LQST ITS MDsT IMPORTANT OF ALL GAMES T0 SHERMAN ON THE SHERMAN COURT,-FEBRUARY 25, av A SCURE OF' 28-26. THE GAME STARTED DFF WITH CLYMER TAKING A BIG LEAD 1N THE OPEN- TNG SESSION, BUT THEY WERE UNABLE T0 HOLD IT THROUGHOUT THE REMATNDER OF THE GAME, AND WE LOST T0 SHERMAN FDR THE FlR5T TTME IN EEVERAL YEARS. TENHUFSEN RAN OFF wlTH SCORING HON- ORS, ONCE MORE HAVTNG 9 POINTS T0 Hts DREDTT, FDR THE FINAL GAME OF THE vEAR CLYMER PLAYED MNYVILLE AT HOME AND WERE EEATEN av THE SUPERIOR LDNG SHOT ARTISTS OF THE INVADING QDTNTET. THE GAME ENDED 3U-26, WITH EDWARDS AS HIGH MAN, GATHERTNG 9 POINTS T0 HIS CREDIT. As WE ALL KNOW, THIS YEAR as THE LAST THAT THE aovs ON THIS YEAR'S TEAM WILL BE IN,SCHO0L, THEIR ABILITY AND TEAMwDRK WILL BE GREATLY MISSED NEXT YEAF, GORDY, A vETERAN OF Foun YEARS ANDEQNE OF THE SPARKPLUGS OF THE TEAM, wTLL BE PARTIC- ULARLV MISSED A5 DNE OF THE BEST FEEDERS AND PASSERS ON THE TEAM. EVEN THOU H LEFTY as SMALL IN STATURE, HE CERTAlNLY MADE up FDR IT av Has SPEEDL HE WAS ONE OF THE FASTEST aovs ON THE TEAM AND ONE OF THE DEADEST SHOTS. LEFTY wAs ELECTED CAPTAIN av THE FELLOWS, FRDVTNG wHAT THEY THEMSELVES THOUGHT OF HIS ABILITY. BlNG'S EXCEPTIONALLY FINE DEFENSE AslLTTv AND ALsD HIS FTNE pAsswoRx wxLL BE MISSED ON THE NEW TEAM. BTNG HAS BEEN NOTED FOR H15 AGGRESSIVE TYPE OF PLAY. WE SHALL ALL Mass PAUL'5 LONG SHOTS ALONG WQTH HIS Quncx, SURE PLAY, HE CERTAINLY DID SURPRISE EVERYONE WITH HIS, sTEADv -52. TYPE OF PLAY. JUNIOR, A NATURAL ATHLETE, ALTHOUGH HE HAD TOUGH LUCK AT THE BEGINNING or THE SEASON, ENDED AS DNE OF THE ouTsTANDxNG DEFENSIVE MEN IN THE CLUBE ADDED T0 HlS DE- FENSIVE ABILITY, HIS PASSWORK WILL ALSO BE MISSED. AND DER- TAINLY, LONG, LANKY WHEEZV'S HEIGHT WILL BE MISSED BOTH or- FENSIVELY AND DEFENSIVELY NEXT YEAR, WHEEZY, wHo DAME sAcK AS P.G., wAs HIGH scoRER AGAIN AS USUAL. ALL TN ALL, EACH AND EVERY ONE or THESE LAD5 WILL BE MISSED IMMENSELY IN THE COMING vEAR, CLYMER CELDRDN. CLYMER CHADTAUQUA CLYMER FREWSBURG CLYMER LAKEWOOD CLYMER PANAMA CLVMER SHERMAN CLYMER PANAMA CLYMER MAvvlLLE CLvMER CELORON CLYMER CHAUTAUQUA CLVMER FREWSBURG CLYMER LAKEWOOD CLYMER SHERMAN CLYMER MAYVILLE INTRAMURALS DUE TO THE FACT WE HAvE THREE NOON HOURS INSTEAD or ONE, NEARLY EVERYONE HAS A CHANCE T0 PARTICIPATE IN SOME OF' THE KEEN coMpETaTnoN SET up ev THE DIFFERENT TEAMS. IN THE FIRST PLACE, COACH COLBURN cHoosEs ENOUGH cApTA1Ns TO TAKE EvERvGoDv iN, so THAT ALL CAN PLAY. THEN THE CAPTAINS CHOOSE THEIR TEAMS, THREE GAMES ARE PLAYED GENERALLY EDR THE aovs- TOUCH-FOOTBALL, BASKETBALL, AND VOLLEYBALL. GIRLS PLAY RTGREALL AND NEWCOMB INSTEAD OF TOUCH-FOOTBALL, BOYS' INTRAMURALS TOUCH -FOOTBALL T E FIRST INTRAMURAL HELD THis FALL wAs TOUCH-FOOTBALL. THE FOURTH PERIOD ToucH-FDDTEALL TEAMS, cDMposED or SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADE Eovs, WERE THE TIGERS, JOHN GIBBONS--CAPTAIN: IRON Vucs, Dlcx COLE!-CAPTAQNQ LIONS, WILFRED DAMCOTT--CAP- TAINQ AND THE MTDGETG, JOHN NEGKERS-CAPTAIN, THE LIONS woN THE CHAMPIONSHIP AFTER SOME TOUGH BATTLES WITH THE IRON Vlcs. -53- THE FIFTH PERIOD TOUCHJFOOTBALL TEAMS WERE THE CORKSCREWS, JuN1oR GABRlEL--cARTAiNi HAS BEENS, PAUL EDWARDS-CAPTAIN: BADGERS, Bos LxoN--DARTATN. THE HAS BEENS CHARGED THROUGH THQ LINES, AND wHEN THE DUST GLEARED, THEY WERE ON Top. IN THE s1xTH PERIOD fOUCH-FOOTBALLVINTRAMURALS, THE LxoNS, WlTH ROBERT WASSTNK AS CAPTAiN, DEEEATED THE WILDCATS WITH JOHN WTGGERS AS CAPfAfN, AND THE TROJANS WITH JACK NEwHouSE AS CAPTAIN. BASKETBALL THE SEVENTH AND ETQHT GRADE Bovs AND A PEW HIGH SCHOOL BOYS MADE up THE TEAMS fOR THE FOURTH PERIOD. THTS YEARrS 'BAS- KETBALL TEAMS WERE THE PYGMIES, EVERETT LO0KENHOUSE--CAP- TAINQ GIANTS, RAYMOND SCHURMAN--CAPTAIN: ,LJTTLE REDS, GDR- DON HOLTHOUSE-QCAPTAINQ AND THE LAMEDDDKS, HAROLD THOMPSON-- CAPTAIN. THE EAMEDUCKS, CONSISTING or JUST SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADE Bois, TooK THE HONORS. IN THE FIFTH RERioD THERE wERE ONLY THREE TEAMSS-ALL HIGH SCHOOL BOYS. THE SKDNKS, WITH EDWARD PFEIFFER-CAPTATN, HAD A CLOSE BATTLE-QTTH THE WEASELS, JOHN .ZOJONC--CAPTAIN. OuT or 39 GAMES THEY BEAT av Two GAMESD THE FOXES, MERLE WRTGHT-cARTAiN5 TOOK THE.LroR1NG. AT THE CLOSE or THE CON- TEST THE BOYS TOOK A VOTE AND DECIDED TO PLAY BASKETBALL IN- STEAD or VOLLEYBALL. THE CARTATNS cHoSEN TO TAKE CHARGE or THE TEAMS FOR THE NEXT BATTLE FUR'VTCTORY ARE JOHN WEEKS, BULLDOGSQ 'VAN LESTERS, BDLLERDGSQ AND ROGER THOMPSON, BULL HEADS. THE BLACK HAwKs, WITH HOMER AVERY AS CAPTAIN WON THE BASKET- BALL CHAMPUONSHIP IN THE SIXTH PERIOD CONTEST, THEY DEFEAT- ED THE L.l.U., LED BE CLAUDE ROUSHQ AND THE RED WlNGS, CAP- TAINED BY JACK EDwARDs. GIRLS' INTRAMURALS K ICKBATLL THERE DOESN'T SEEM T0 BE SUCH AN INTEREST AMONG THE GIRLS IN THE NOON HouR PERl0DS.' LAST FALL THERE wms ONLY ONE 'lNTRA- MURAL, KICKBALL, PLAYED. THE SEVENTH AND ETGHTH GRADE GIRLS PLAYEDIDURING THE FOURTH PERIOD. THE TEAMS WERE THE BLUE- B1RDS, LDRRATNE GRAVINK--CAPTAIN: YANKEES, CAROL JANE TON- CAPTAIN: CARDINALS, PHYLLIS PITT--CAPTAIN. THE 'YANKEES KTDKED THEIR wAv TO v1cToRv. -5h- Fifi i I , V i I 1 1 1 BASKETBALL THE FOURTH PERIOD KETSALL.-THIS LAST MALESKI--GAPTAIN: WILD INDIANS, wHo NORMA NEwHousE. TOOK THE LEAGUE UNDER SEVENTH AND EIGHT!-I GRADE GIRLS PLAvEo SAS- wINTER, THE TEAMS wERE WINNERS, FLORA HGRNETS, PHYLLIS PITT-GAPTAIN: AND THE THE LEADERSHIP OF' TI-E HIGH scHooL GIRLS ALSO DECIDED TO PLAY BASKETBALL. THE YANKEES, WITH DoRoTI-Iv PEEIIEFER AS CAPTAIN SHowEo THEIR SKILL AT MAI-:ING BASKETS ev BEATING BOTH THE BASKETEERS, wITI-I Aun- REY ROUSE CAPTAIN: AND THE LIoNs wITH MARJQRIE EVANS AS CAP'- TAIN. MELODIC PERSONALITIES WI AM AN AMERICAN! ...... ...... .. ...,,.......,. E ..... ..... . ..... E.,-,..5lIvIAN KING WISE Om OwL?! .,....,....................T ..................,... - ..,................ - ........,........ - ........,....... GEORGE CHRISTENSEN MUSIC MAESTRO, PLEASE!! .......... I ..... - ........., -,- ......... -E.,..-.- ......... -..M ..... -,.,.---..,,fJ0l-IN WEEKS LITTLE CURLY HAIR IN THE HIGH CHAIR ........... - ..................... ,.--...Q...-EvEI.vN FRI: 'H MUST SEE ANNIE ToNIGHT'f..., .......... -E ......,....... - ..... .E..-...,..-.,E .... - ...... MJACK UNEWHOUSE WE THREEVSW.- .....,.............. ,....,.... - ............ .,... ...,.. - ...... - .... WE-, ....... -..NvLA, -JUNE, MAXIFIE Two LITTLE GIRLS IN BLUE3 ,,,,,,,,,,, ,.,,,,---,, WMM EvELvN AND HELEN SWEET THE DARING YOUNG MAY ON THE FLTING TRAPEZEU .... ........ JACK EDWARDS 'THE BUTCHER BovY! ...... ..........,.. I ...,.. ,.................... - ......,..... - ....... E.,-.-,..,W ......... -...,..I--., LEETv Two SLEEPV PEOPLE? ...,......,.............. ............ - ,.... ......... 7' TH-I-lEn AND MARILYN NN HEARTBELONGS T0 Dwovi ...,..,.., , .,......,.... ......... E ......... S ..,........ y IRGINIA VWUJNK USCATTERBRAINV ,.... - ..,.,.. - ,.....,. I ................ - ....... ........... ,........ .. ...... B 0B,HUMPHREY USLEEPV TowN GAL!! ..................... - .............. - .... ............ - ..... - ..- .,..... - ..,.......,... I ..... -,CARoL WALLACE LITTLE LAov MAKE BELIEVEQ .......,,I.,................,.... --.- ...... -E.S,.I,. ........ -S..,LuGv SCHRUERS nTHE LITTLE MAN WHO WASN'T THEREFLE..- ...,.. - , ............ - ..,....., L YLE FARDINK 'THAT SI-v OLD GENTLEMANYL ...... - .... - .......,... ..,.. ,M ..... ,...,CI-Avo Rwsl-I LITTLE GIRIJ! ...,.. - ..,....... - ......... - ...................,,............I.......... - .............. ....... , ........., - .- .,.. BETTY NEGKERS THE PESSIMISTIG CI-IARAGTERYF .............................I.......I..... - ..., E .... M ..... -..MAX BEMIS I HAVEN'T TINE T0 BE A MI LLIONAIREQ ............,....,. - .... -..-..2SPEEov WIGGERS UGIRL os' NN DREAMSQ- ....... - ,..I..,... - ...................... ..,.......... - ......... I ..... -...WlNII-'REU RFEBERGEN WMIGHW LIKE A Rosa! ....,...... ........., - ....... - -- ,....,. , ............................,.I... ,DOROTHY YAIK0 UPOLLY WOOLY DOODLEE ..,,.,.., , ...... - .........,..... - .............I,. I ...,.......,........ - ............. ...... , ....... .GAIL THOMPSON nl'VE GOT A POCKETFULL or DREAMS! ,.,,...,L,,.,,,,, W ,,,,,.,,.., m ,,,,,.,,,,,,. MAxINE LEGTERS MARGIE'! ...... - ..........................,,......... ............ - ........... - ..,................ I ...... -E ............ - ......I.... EMARJORIE EVANS UOLD FAITI-IFuI.'? ..... . .,...,.. - .....I,. E ...I.... E.- .......... .S .......... -...- .... VELMA KING USNIALL FRYM ........ , ....... ., .,... .. , .......,..... ...- .... -.,-N.,.....-,.....HARRV FRY Ross MARIE!! ....I..I.,..........,......,. E ..,........ ......... - ..... - ROSEMARY WILLIAMS nDANClNG ON A DIME! ....I.....,... ..,............. - ............. -..IELINOR CROSCUTT URAGTIME Cowaov JoE'F ................ , ........... E .... -- ...... ...... ,--.HOMER AVERY NPENNIES FROM HEAVEN!! ........,...... - ..., I..I....,...... I ...E .,..,.... - .......... - ........... , .,... I ..... -..LTHE FRESHMEN RSWEET LITTLE HEADAGI-IE!! ..... - ,.... ,..TI-IIS YI-:Aneoox--KTHE EIJITORSD -55- NW T 'T' 'SPOTLIGHT' BIDS ADIEU THIS Emos THE YEARBOOK'-'ull Ano IF YOU'VE READ IT THROUGH, TYou'vE SEEN wnTHnN THE THINGS WE'VE DONE AND vET EXPECT T0 oo. Youn PROFILE HAS SEEN PHOTOGRAPHED AND JOKES ABOUT vou PRINTED, THE CARTOONS HAVE IN soME RESPECTS AS T0 voun FUTURE HINTED, IN YEARS T0 COME, AGAIN vou'LL TAKE THTS YEARBOOK Enom THE SHELF, AND Pano IN IT THE MEMORIES So Pnzcaous To YOURSELF, As sTAuNcH we STAND T0 BRAVE THE woRLo, CoME FAILURE on success, LET'S Nov FORGET THAT FROM Aaovz COMES LASTING HAPPINESS. THATS ALL -A Poms fi Q V. TEW, -55- f,:w.1-3-L2 J ff' ' ' A ' J- -A , V.,., K. - - 3, .- Y xr . 'I -5 5 f 1' 1 725-'1-, -3--7 1 , ,, 5 , I L i ,l.i i .,, ,F .E.. ,, ,i , . - ,-L., -.f ,., - . - ,.,, : J J. 1 . .M I -Q x w ,-4 at I a I r-1 l ' iL,1'f'4d.'i,,a:f7fZ-2.4.'4.4,Y,-..L.-::V.V's.j.' ' --.fl :AZ f ,VA L, W 3, V 3 V ., ' -af-45. . W- ,,. , L, WA VA , .1 543' 1 - Tv f 2 1 , 7 riiibd ' A'---n::'2i:.v-Sf JM 1 LEE: 3 57:4'l?5'5if Yfdi, , L THE CHAUTAUQUA COUNTY PATRONS FIRE RELIEF ASSOCIATION ORGANlzsn IST? Home Orrncz, 25-26 BANK Or JAMESTOWN BusLozNs, JAMESTOWN, N.Y. FIRE AND LJGHTNING INSURANCE ON FARM PROPERTY INSURANCE IN Ponce JANUARY Isv, l9Ml Sl6,325,275.00 Loss AND EXPENSE Rzsenve JANUARY lsr, l9UI S 57,328.l3 ANNUAL ASSESSMENT RATE PER sx,ooo.oo AT Rusk Fon LAST Fave YEARS 83.50 REPRESENTED IN CLYMER, New Yonx av Leon FARDINK GRzs1aNs CAnos Fon Evsnv OCCASION We HAVE THE CARD vou wANT SOCIAL ENGRAVING ' WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AND INVITATIONS, I CALLlNG CARDS Y PLAIN AND PRINTED WRITING PAPERS G EER -DUNN CO. 'STATJONEERS JAMasTowN New Yonx ' in COMPLIMENTS or ADAMS CLEANING CO. l05 E. jan Sr. JAMESTOWN, N.Y WILLIAM A. LONG ROYAL TYPEWRITERS STANDARDS PORTABL ADDING MACHINES DUPLICATORS MARQHANT CALCULATORS Orrncs EQUIPMENT SERVICE-'SUPPLIES 319 Cuennv Sr. JAMESTOWN, N. TEL. U+O3U COMPLIMENTS or RAFFA' S BEAUTY SHOPPE SPECIALIZING IN MACHINELESS AND NMCHINE PERMANENT WAVING Con. ZRD Q MAIN JAMESTOWN, N. ES Y. Y. STROMBERG CARLSON FURNITURE AND AND RH: Leo RADIOS GROCERSE s 1 W AND H AND Nones REFRIGERATORS THE WITKOP 84 HOLMES CO, U-6 MARKET STREET JAMEsTowN, N.Y, WAEHERS - HEATERS - RANGES COMPL I MENT S OF THE CHAUTAUQUA TEACHERS AGENCY Y JAMESTOWN, N. Y. ' COMPLSMENTS or - THE PARISIAN 1 BEAUTY SALON AND BARBER SHOP Sort WATER SHNWPOOS 22 E. THrRo Sf. PHONE M-955 ' L.G. BALFOUR COMPANY ATTLEBOR0, MASSACHUSETTS N KNowN WHEREVER THERE ARE M ScHooLs AND COLLEGES A , REPRESENTED ev ROBERT TURNBULL 1 W. 15TH STREET JAMESTOWN, N. Y. . .... .... ........ . .... ..............,. .,..... ....... ..... ,..................... .... ..... .... .................,...........................4 A PEERLESS SAL-O- WELL GO. , INC. Y JANITORIAL SUPPLlES 307 GENESEE ST. XBUSFALO, N.Y. B A S S E T T ' S Wisu CoNTsNuEo Success T0 THE GRAouATEs E. F. BASSETT .JEWELER V 302 MAIN ST. JAMESTOWN, COMPLIMENTS or RAYMOND A. FREEBERG EARL SMlTH'S GROCERY GROCERUES, MEAT, ICE CREAM GASOLINE AND OIL FRENCH CREEK PHONE 3 N 2 GREATER VALUES AT CARNAHAN SHEARER JAMESTOWN' s LARGEST MEN'S AND sovvs sToRE SRoR'r1 Ns Gooos SHOES F 2 JAMESTOWN RETAIL MERCH ANTS WEEELCIICDDGEE YYCDUJ .lA!ViESTOWN, NX COMPL I MENTS ,OF BESH-GE-TOURS Musee H O U SE 8 E. Founru Svnsaf J N Y EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATIVES F KING, ouns, STINGE QANDI SELMER, PENZEL as WELLER ' ,r JAMESTOWN 'UNIT PARTS CO. , I NC. AUTO REPLACEMENT PARTS 2OSw2lO WE F S JA N Y ,ff- 1 :gt :. , G4-:QQL cllfsfigf' '-all .5- wbigapirgyg-,h,J-afy fg- , ,,. s , .- . -4. .A 4:1 4-Q51-5,3.. iifiza-L FRANK DQNATO WHDLE SALE FRUIT AND PRODUCE 6OI WEST STH STREET JAMESTOWN, N. Y. COMPL l MENT S OF' HAAS CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. JAMESTOWN, N. Y. .....4......... .... ........... ..... ..,....................,................. .................................. PERFECT Vision Is APPRECTATED FOREVER DR. W. L. COOK OPTOMETRIST IO9 W. BRD STREET JAMESTOWN, N. Y. L U C I E ' S FASHIONS or Drsvmcnou 213 THIRD STREET JAMEsTowN, N. Y. COMPLIMENTS or TINIG-IAM BROTHERS, INC. JAMESTOWN, N. Y. COMPLIMENTS or BIG TREE SHERMAN BAY ON CHAUTAUQUA LAKE HEELAS FLOWER SHOP THE BEST IN FLOWERS AT Au. TIMES PHONE 6-92h 21M CHERRY ST JAMESTOWN, N. Y. LADIES AND CHILDRENS READY TO WEAR AND NIILLINERY ZUC KERIYIAN5 COR. PINE 8a 2No ST. JAMESTOWN, N. Y. lil? ifiiffi' .111-....,-,.,,.f.,' ... v. --,- , .. . .... .-, - . A 4... . . V v-- :Y . a1-- - ' ' f-'Af' ..g:,g.-.,: c 4,-1.m..2.g....-,YQwg-45.-16:-.M-f.f:,s.-.fu-ag-1 -r4tffs5ib4-.f-z-f.fl:feg-a--,.-.Aaiqff.- '.-wwe-431-6 - - s-F5-.n--:iz - 1- q.,:. .,,, ' ' -:.L- ' ' -iALLgm.:.-g:gggf4,5Lg.,,LL, ,QQQ , fQQ, 554, RWCHMAN BROTHERS A FINE CLOTHES FOR WEN 322.50 PREP. Sulrs'R16.95 EXTRA PANTS 53.95 213 NoRiH MAIN STREET JAMESTOWN,.N. Y. COMPLIMENTS or ANDERSON CLEANING WORKS JAMESTOWN, N. Y. DELIVERY SERVlCE EVERY MDN. AND THURSn CONGRATULATl0NS A vLEED'S DDTRATE DRUG STORE TIM E. 2ND ST. JAMESTOWN, N.Y. COMPLIMENTS or JAMESTOWN CYCLE SHOP JAMESTOWN, N. Y. AGENCY FOR BICYCLES AND WHEEL Gooos JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES SALES AND SERVICE 123 E. END sr. PHONE 52-375 LYNN'S JEWELRY GIFT STORE QPECTAL ORDER WORK, FRAT. PINS AND Emenaws ALSO RERAARWDRK H. E, LYNN ll N. MAIN ST. JAMESTOWN, N.Y. DDMRLIMENTS or ENGSTROM'S MEN'S STORE 'CUSTOM TAlLoRlNs DRv CLEANING REAUY-T0-WEAR PRESSING AND MEN's FURNISHINGS RERAQRQNG IO? N. MAIN STREET JAmEsJ0wN.EN.Y.. -D , ,. JOSEPH'S PERMANENT WWVE SHOPPE QUALITY MAOHINELESS PERMANENTS 32.95 up 9 E, THSRD STREET PHONE M-9ll JAMESTOWN, N. Y. .EE CONGRATULATIONS TO CLASS Or 'UI LA NODE PERMANENT WAVE sHoP ROGER'S BLDG,5 BROOKLYN SQ. JAMESTOWN, N.Y. PHONE 5-SI3 NELSON aurrs. INC. ALWAYS A LARGE SELECTION TN FLOWERS 9 N. MAIN Sr. PHONE 6-S88 JAMESTOWN, N. Y. COMPL I MENTS OF THE MAKERS OF H 0 L S U M B R E A D JAMESTOWN BAKING CO., INC. OCEAN WAVE BEAUTY SHOP COMPLETE LLNE 'or BEAUTV CULTURE 230 E. SECOND ST, PHONE YTRSSI JAMESTOWN, N. Y. . A 1 .H-W.. . , . A- QUALITY wears:-IT . QE. AFQTX 4'wT -3.XbX: - . AND 0 va A C Q -'. , 4 5 PRICE rn 5 1 ' I , Z' F- :gl UR ,.s ON SALE AT N Y U ni tu n 'Nd H az' NECKERS co. STORE .. 1 : 'NONE-BETTER-' LUMBER CEMENT STAINED SHINGLES OAK FLOORING PLASTER nNsuLATlNG BOARD MouLDuNc-z ROOFING SASH DOORS A NELSON BROS. 31+ MARKET STREET JAMESTOWN, N.v. PHONE 6.-097 Q' Y i oPPos1Tz llG1T-'-3' CONPLIMENTS DF I-IEA'-il-Q P051 omcz i ' Q JAMesTowN, N.Y. 'I SOCONY-,VACUUM OIL co. SPOT OH 1 , g AXEL G. LQUIST A MQLQQ-35 STANDARD Du. OF N. Y. ................,.... .... ......... W ........ 1 D,V,S,oN 2 Tuss SPAce DONATED Bv A i JAMESTOWN New YORK S Q ' oLl.nu 1 1 s' P o R'r 1 I-nor D- ..D... JAMESTOWN, N. Y. COMPLIMENTS OF ! E CHAUTAUQUA COUNTY'S AUTHORITY E RITZ THEATER ON ATHLETIC GOODS SHERMAN! N0 Ya .... .... .........,................ - ......... A ...... A...-., .... ..-...,..- fww Home Or OUTSTANDING Plcurnes E IS GOOD BREAD A . . , . , - , . . .A ' hh-I . L A A ' 1' L-v-If , , , HAVE You TRIED THE NEw FORD RIDE? W. L. NUTTAL 6 SON SELLING FORDS SINCE l9I6 vu... .... ..-, . Q. , N , Y. T SAVAGE'S BARBER SHO BOWLING' BILLIARDS BELOW THE CAFE SHERMAN, N. Y. COMPLIMENTS OF FRED PL NEWELL HARDWARE SHERMAN, N. Y. COMPLIMENTS OF UTHE PANTRYU Gooo THINGS To EAT SHERMAN, N. Y. UPAXCIIEKAXERED APPEARANCE DISTINCTION PERFORMANCE UASK THE MAN WHO OwNs ONEn C. CHRISTENSEN MOTORS WHEN An SHERMAN Stop AT CAFE ESPANOL DANCING REFRESHMENTS HEY FOLKS! wERE OFF FoR UTUCKERS HOTELU SHERMAN, N. V. RUSSELL'S BOWLING HALL SHERMAN, N. Y. SPECIAL ATTENTION To BOWLING PARTIES COMPLIMENTS OF HUTZ'S MEAT MARKET WON THE AVENUEH CORRV COMPLIMENTS or LARSON'S POULTRY FARM PuLLETs BABY CHICKS CLASS or I9Ml WE WISH You Lucx THONPSON'S POULTRY FARMS Eees---AH! HORSES coMRLIMENTs OF A FRIEND OOMRLIMENTE or CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK THE BANK ON THE CORNER MEMBER OF' FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPERATION COMPL I MENTS OF THE NATIONAL BANK OF CORRY CURRY, PA. DEPOSITS INSURED Bv THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP4 I MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE Svsmw I BEST WISHES T0 THE CLASS OF 'UI I WHEN IN CORRY, MAKE THIS SERVICE STATION YOUR HEADQUARTERS EOR GASOLINE, MOTOR OILS, RADIOS AND ACCESSORIES. ALWAYS GLAD TO WELCOME vou ED. BORSTORFF, PROP. I BORSTORFF ATLANTIC STATION .A ........ ..... ............ I ROWE'S FLOWER SHOP CUT FLOWERS AND PLANTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS I IEI N. CENTER ST. CORRY, PA I I WMANSFIELDW SHOES-FOR-MEN BARNES 6 CARRIE 37 N. CENTER ST. CURRY, PA OOMRLIMENTS or MILLERS NEWS 8 SPORT STORE l25 CENTER ST. CURRY, PA SAY IT WITH FLOWERS THAT ARE I' JEWELLS THE JEWELL FLOWER SHOP THE GIFT SHOP I25 N. CENTER ST. CORRV, PA. COMPLIMENTS or J. L. SPIESMAN SHOES AND HosIERv ON TI-IE AvENUE CORRY, PENNAQ WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE LESTER R, LOPUS 7- OWNER 2I N. CENTER ST. CORAV, PA 35 N. MAIN ST. UNION CITY, PA EWLLWWMWMWELEBJEZYMEEQEMSQMMWELEEEWW J.A. LANSTON PAINT AND WALL PAPER CORRY, PA, . I-1-sv. COMPLIMENTS OF ARC!-IIE S. TURK REPRESENTING MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK JAMESTOWN, N. Y, STEEN'S DRv CLEANING AND LAUNDRY ll EAST WASHINGTON STREET CURRY, PA. COMPLIMENTS or THE FAIR STORE CLOTHING, SHOES, FURNISHINGS '68 ..... EI: .,.A.......... ....... I ....,..,......,. Q ERIE COUNTY MILK ASSOC. STATE ST., ERIE, PA. PHONE 22-255 SEALTEST APPROVED MILK, lcE CREAM THE NASTS CO. CoRRv' s GREATEST CLoTHa ERS FDR MEN AND WMMEN A. 0. SANDBURGQ FARM HARDWARE ETC. I09 E, MAIN ST. CoRRv, PA. SUPERIOR CLEANING CO. CoRRv, PA, PERRY MEAD CLARE L. CAPWELL 0. F. CURTIS JEWELER WATCHES, DIAMONDS, SILJERWARE 8 S, CENTER ST. CORRY C M K AUTO PARTS CORP DISTRIBUTORS OF PARTS, SUPPLIES, EQUIPMENT 303 LAFAYETTE STu JAMEsTowN, N.Y. PHONE 3-063 . . -,,-gn-pq . I23 CENTRAL AVE DUNKIRK, N. Y PHONE 2-O60 T 'ff COMPLIMENTS OF PAUIIS MEN'S WEAR EXCLUSIVE AeENcv or ADAM HATS ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW CORRV, PA. PAUL MEERDINK, PRQP. COMPLIMENTS OF FRANKQCHAPINS ff SONS LADIES' READY-TO-WEAR WE SPECIALIZE IN JUNIOR SIZES 9. lf. IS. 15 N. CENTER STREET EE ........... J ..,.... Mm COMPLIMENTS OF WIGGERS . 0LosMoanLE, CHEVROLET, PONTIAC GI MIC. A YOUNGSVlLLE, PA. CORRY, PA. N. CLvMER, N.Y. CONGRATULATIONS To THE CLASS or IQHI A WE SHALL ENJOY SERVING You wHEN You ARE IN NEED OF QUALITY FuRN- ITURE OR THE BETTER ELECTRICAL i T APPLIANCES. ROOTS FURNlTURE STORE A CoRRv, PA. CORRY, PA. COMPLIMENTS or O. E. SOANE HARDWARE 8 WEST MAIN STREET THE BROOKS STUDIO WHERE THE MOST Or THE CLYMER PICTURES ARE MADE l26 N. CENTER ST, OORRY, PA. e , 1 f f - N ,, hun, . COMPLIMENTS TO THE CLASS OF 'UI - QF - - , . ALwAvs BETTER CLOTHES 2 REX THEATER Connv, PA. COMPLIMENTS or CORRY BAKiNG CO. WE DELIVER BREAD, RoLLs, PxEs, Co CAKES AT Youn Doon DAILY 2 : 5 i X ,. ............. ... .................. ..,. ...... ..................... .... ..............,..., .. ..... .... ...... ... ..... .x ...... ............ AT B ERN STE IN BROTHERS ! T 5 i H7 N. CENTER ST. 1 E Connv, PA. 4 I E REXALL CUT RATE DRUG STORE E N3 N. CENTER ST. CORRV, PA oxlEs i THE STORE WITH THE LOWEST PRICES READ THE 'CLYMER WEEKLY PULBTSHED EvERv WEDNESDAY T TN THE CORRY EVENING JOURNAL . V. A nv, T ' 'ons J. FARDINK B?XRBER 'SHOP BILLARDS T CLYMER, N. Y, .....-...N.................................-................... .-.........--..............--.-......3 T'BEST Wlsucs To 2 T ' SENIOR CLASS OF ISUI 5 E 5 CROSCUTT 8s GALLUP JOHN DEERE' INPLIMENTS GENERAL ELECTRIC REERIGERATORS GENERAL ELECTRIC S1'ovEs GENERAL ELECTRIC WASHERS GENERAL ELECTRIC, WATER HEATERS GENERAL ELECTRSQ SWEEPERS FLORENCE OIL RANGES Q , N dd. L. CL-YMER, N. Yu PHONE .,... .... .. ..... L ...... g.--..,..- ..... ,M ........ ,.-.-.-..- ...... - .... L... ...... L-- .... ..... ..i..- ...... E-- ..... -., .......... L ....... -E ..... L- ....................... - .............. , ..... L ........... E ...... , ..... - ........ T BEST WISHES To COMPLIMENTS or CLASS OF IQUI I THE CLYNER DEPARTMENT STORE , ALBERT NEcKERs, JR. 8: SON T LEE DEUINK 5 ........ ..,.........A.. E ....E.................. , ......, WHERE PRICE. QUA'-'W 50 SERWCE MEET 5 DRV Gooos SUREFINE Fooos GOOD LUCK TO CLASS U-H W D ' E ELIVER ' MILT DEUINPUS GULF STATION P 5OF2 ,. C N Y 2 HoNE LYMER, . . 1 BEST WISHES 5 To THE T COMPLIMENTS or CLASS or IQUI 5 T QLYMER OOOP , G.L.F.' SERV, INC, 5 C L Y M E R CLYMER, N. Y. V 2 B A G c o rv: P AN Y 5 C FEEDS, SEEDS, FERTILTZERS E T as ' FARM SUPPLIES E T A I T Z T 2 I rj if - . . I I A COMPLIMENTS or G. H. TENPAS CONGRATULATIONS Fnom DR. LYLE S. CONPTON CLYMER, N. Y. coMPL1MENTs or I ESSO STATION EDGAR TECULVER I I I ........L...................... ,......................... BLAINE J. WALLACE, PROP. CLYMER GARAGE ELECTRIC, ACETYLENE FORGE WELUING AUTO REPAURINS I MACHINE worzx REUBEN SELFRIDGE ' PORTABLE TYPEWRUTERS, ADDING MACHINES, OFFICE Dzsxs. CCNSULT WITH SELFRIDGE BEFORE vou auv. I GLYMER, N. Y. To THE CLASS or 'Nl CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES I A LEGTERS' FEED MILL PROP. CONGRATULATIONS To CLASS OF 'uf L. T. CAFLISCH HARDWOOD LUMBER CLVMER, N.Y. UNloN CITY, PA BEST WIsHEs Enom TON !NSURANCE AGENCY CLY ER TELEPHONE CO., INC. MAGNETO 5 CONWDN BATTERY SERVICE Fon lNFoRMA1IoN AND RATES or I THE common BATTERY SERVICE Now AVAILABLE, CALL TEL. T7 DA!RYMEN'S LEAGUE Cuvmsn LOCAL Rscommenos ITS PRODUCTS Fon THElR HIGH QUALITY Buv lTg TAKE 11: EAT IT! WM VAN EARDEN, PRES. -3333 Q52 'G-.W x 'V - -fyasawqqg, ' ' Y -5-aqfiffiig-ngqafag-1-f.'-.V ' -' ,Y , Y . A -. .. A 5,4- 1g.L.n T i l T A , 7 A T T T CLYMER CENTRAL SCHOOL 1 1 T l K ' I A -5 ! -1- XY! V 1 T M. J. CORDIA T Fon Barren VALUES SALES, CHEVROLET, sanvlcs -IN Home Funnxsuauss- PHONE 53-FL3 Cuvmzn, N.Y. W C. E. .E,.... ...... .. ..... .. .....,.. .. ................................. ,. .................. ,. ..........., ...,......... .. ...... .. .................. .. ..,,,....... .., A CONGRATULATIONS To CLASS or IQ!-H Camera, N. Y. PHONE 62-F-2 CLYMER CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION - DRINK SOUTH-SIDE DAlRv MILK T T GOMPLEMENTS CHAS. A, LEGTERS i TQ, CLvMsR, N. Y. CLASS or 197-H NECKERS COMPANY EPHONE PANAMA A. E. WEEKS WHuTswAsHlNG COW'BARBER l98 RD 2 ,LW ,, NORTH CLVMER wp. , 4 A ,I il- -V1 i-4 TAILORED To TAsTe WETH compnsmeurs or Fuuxo Dnavs ERNEST L. CAFLISCH EST. - LUMBER oHRvsn.ER .. PLVMOUTH Cnvman, N.Y. GLENN NEWHOUSE . E - CONGRATULATI oNs AND SHERMAN,.NQ Ya 5 ass? wusues -ro P:-som: 82A Cuxss Or 'lil vmzfma SERVICE x SKINNER AND WALTON SHERMAN, N. Y. MULTIGRAPHING MIMEOGRAPHING THE LETTER SE-:GP I6 EAST SECOND STREET JAMss1owN, N. Y. DISTINCTITVE omscr mu. Aovsmflsms T T PRINTING ADDRESSING f 7.1-lf. . WEST DI SINFECT PNG CONPANY I Q LARGEST MANUFACTURERS AND D1-STRQBUTORS Or SANITARY Pnooucrs IN THE WoRl.o 72 MAIN STREET BUFFALO, NEw Yom: CAMERAS -- MOVIE FILM LAMPARELLI PHARMACY PRESCRIPTION Dnucc x ST ..............-............................................-.......,...,.,........................,...............,............................,+.......................................... W WINDOW SHADES Ra VENETIAN BLINDS W j ESTIMATES GIVEN , SELFRIOGE 8: WM-IITMNJ PHONE 63-311 JAMESTONN, N.Y. P. A. PAVER MEST CANDY Ecoun 'GE CREAM W CORRY, PA. COMPL I MENT S OF MC. GANDRON DRUG CO. CORRY, PA. W Dnuss, Soms, CANOIES Rx oun SPECIALTIES Pnompr SERVICE WE DELI VER FORMERLY CLYNER DRUG STORE VET Pnooucrs GIFTS CONGRATULATIONS ANU BEST WISHES To Ca.Ass OE 'Ml .nw s KEYSTONE sr-:RVQTECE DISTRIBUTOR r-'on K E Y S T O N E Gnsougve, KERQSENE, Fuss. On. E M B L E M Moron 011.5 GREASE CLYMER, N.V, 0' M. ,,.. .....- ... -- .9 I COMPL TMENT S T FLORENCE BEAUTY PHUNE UO-FL3 coMPLlMENTs T RED ANU mM1TE or SHDPPE CLYME R: or STORE I , I . GROCERIES 6 MEAT FROSTED Foo j E.N. BECKERI PHONE 67-FEE os NK CLVME T HINSDALE'S GENERAL STORE Rs WHERE PRICES ARE MQRE THAN REASONABLE- 3 N I T T CLVMER HILL, N. Y. CLYIYIER STATE BANK MEMBER OE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM- HND FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE Comp. FARMERS ATTENTION SEE Us Fon McCORMICK-DEERING FARM EQUIPMENT GENUINE I. H. C. REPAIRS 'ANYTHING IN LUMBERU CLYMER LUMBER CO. CLYMER, N.Y. SUCCESS IN THE YEARS To COME CLASS or I9Ul LET Us SERVE You EXCELLENT Fooo A1 PoPuLAR PRICES CLYMER RESTAURANT A.J, NEwHousE, PROP. LEGTERS BROS. MARK E T FRESH AND SMOKED MEAT5 .DEALERS IN LavE Svocx HIDEE, FuRs, AND WooL PHQNE: 39-F2 CLYMER, N.Y. ,Tv, 1--q1l, rf 1 .im , .-af, , ,xnml PENN YAN BUSES INC. ENGINEERS - DESIGNERS - BUILDERS MANUFACTURERS OF PENN YAN MOTOR COACH, CITY SERVICE AND SCHOOL BUS BODIES Pr-mms 50 t Penn YAN, N. Y. ECOMA SEALTEST 1 c E c R E A'M ERIE COUNTY MILK ASSOC. Emz, PA. . P9-vlan, J I-1-m lil, - O - .r-1-U--1 .21 .- ,, .. 'bbq 5 EA. -51' ,jffw , .w -, ' . Y r X ,, .41:.g3h,..+i1g,,g,,,:.. ' mg: ,, ,N .,.,.,. tsl 24.45-f Ln- -if 3-.LS Qi. 'tax Q-H ggiwf Y'-L Y - . --al, 'WFW
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.