Clymer Central High School - Spotlight Yearbook (Clymer, NY)
- Class of 1942
Page 1 of 186
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 186 of the 1942 volume:
“
5 9' sl E E E K -E I ff 5 4 s- ?a E 5 E P' f na i 5 U Qi ff ik 5 'E Fi if as 52 S: Q Q hz ?f V, 72 5 ii 5 3 2 2 5 '-.'r,f ef': ' , mm.:'wecLl1 X' - v lnW'Cp.kiw : ' ' A ' ., V .- ' VVwr, H ' ib!P?iCKW!Ti'f5eE'!4'.HiiiiSE,1f!l ' ' gaifiif' v Il wav xm i SE 4 a 5 DEDICATION y To Mr. Laurence C. Boylan for his friendly spirit of cooperation, for the continual example of good citizenship which he maintains, and tor his encouragement of better living, we, the Senior Class of 1942, gratetully dedicate this yearbook. We hope that Mr. Boylan may be able to return to us next year, but if his country calls him, we should like him to know that our best wishes go with him. X FOREWARD THE STAFF or THIS YEARBOOK HOPES T0 sHow THE READERS THAT AM- ERICAN YOUTH IS PREPARED, WITH ALL THE WORLD APPARENTLY CAUGHT DEE GUARD, IT IS GRATIEVING TO KNOW THAT YOUTH IS PREPARED T0 MEET WHATEVER comes, WE HAvE NOT BEEN TRAINED IN MILITARY CAMPS, BUT wE D0 KNow WHAT WE AEE FIGHTING Pon IN THIS WAR, WHERE HAvE WE LEARNED THIS? IN oun SCHOOLS, IN OUR HOMES, AND IN OUR coMMuNITv, To SUMMARIZE, JUST LIV- ING IN THE UNITED STATES HAS FILLED AMERICANS WITH SUCH SPIRIT THAT WE WILL WIN, IN THIs nook You WILL SEE How THE YOUTH or oun NATION, AS EXEM- PL'FlED av THE PUPILS or CLYMER, ARE ,PREPARED ron CITIZENSHIP, HEALTH, SOCIAL PARTICIPATION, use- FUL LIVING, UEFENSE, AND BUILDING AND MAlNTAlNlNG-MORALE, SPUTLIGHT 1942 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS WHO IS PREPARED? GRADES SEVEN ANU EIGHT FRESHMAN ANG SOPHOMORE CLASSES JUNIOR CLASS SENIOR CLASS WHO PREPARED US? ADMINISTRATION FOR WHAT ARE UE PREPARED? CITIZENSHIP STUDENT COUNCUL GIRL ScouTs Bov ScoUTs SOCIAL STuouEs DEPARTMENT HEALTHFUL LIVING BASKETBALL BASEBALL HVGIENE TNTRAMURALS SOCIAL PARTICIPATION ENGLISH DEPARTMENT FOREIGN LANGUAGE DEPARTMENT LIBRARY CLUB PARENT-TEACHER ASSOCIATION AMERICAN LEGION Busmzss MEN' s CLUB DAlRvMEN's LEAGUE USEFUL LIVING COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT HOME ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT 7+-H Cuues MARO'GOLD RAvs CAMERA 5LUa PAGE 2 1+ 6 s as ao 20 an an 25 27 29 29 32 3 ,E 31+ 314 35 35 37 38 32 lu SPIITLIGHT 1942 5 S DEFENSE ' AsRncuLTuRAL ANo lNousTRaAL ARTS DEPARTMENT FUTURE FARMERS or AMERICA OUT-OF-SCHOOL YOUTH MATHMATICS DEPARTMENT SCIENCE DEPARTMENT SALE or DEFENSE STAMPS CRAFT CLUB GuN CLUB BUILDING ANo MAINTAINING NORALE BAND CHORUS ART DEPARTMENT OPERETTA SPOTLIGHT STAFF DRAMATIC CLUB CHEERLEADERS THE TOWER ROOM MYSTERY OuR BuocET lNDEX TO ADVERTISEMENTS I SDUTLIGHT 1942 5 ILLUSTRATIONS SEVENTH GRADE Elenvn GRAOE FRESHMAN GLASS SQPHOMORE CLASS Juunon CLASS HuLLssLLv Tnao SENIORS SNAPSHOTS or SCHOOL LIFE ADMINISTRATORS FACULTY Svuoanr COUNCIL GIRL ScouTs Bov Scouts BASKETBALL GAMES BASKETBALL TEAM BASEBALL TEAM LoenAnv CLue PARENT-TEACHER ASSOCIATIO BUSINESSMENIS CLUB MARO'GOLD RAYS STAFF HIF ELUBS CAMERA CLUB FUTURE FARMERS or AMERICA OUT-OF-SCHOOL Yourn CRAE1 CLUB Gun CLua BAND Cuonus SPOTLIGHT STAFF GHEERLEADERS DRAMATIC CLUB OPERETTA 'THE Town-:n RooM MYSTERYU N Orrncens PAGE I I 3 3 5 5 7 za :S I 9 I 9 sa 2?-I 5: 3I 32 36 2 M2 M2 I-L2 48 hs 33 N9 U9 N9 SPIITLIGHT 1942 9 I 5 3 ge it Q z -51? ,jllll L1 Rl E--Af C fwyzzf EVERY DAv STUDENTS ARE LEARNING T0 PREPARE FOR WHATEVER comEs IN LTEE, WHO Kwows WHAT WE MUST BE READY TO MEET? EVERY ToMoRRow BRINGS SOME- THING New INTO ouR INDIVIDUAL LIVES, AND WE Musv BE PREPARED. ON THE FIRST DAY or SCHOOL ouR PREPARATION BEGINS, THE PUPILS or CLYMER CEN- TRAL LEARN T0 PREPARE FOR sooo CIT- uzENsHuR, FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE IN WAR, AND EDR usEEuL LIVES IN PEACE TIMES, You wnLL SEE How YOUTH as PREPARED EVERY YEAR THROUGH cuuas, SOCIAL GATHERINGS soon wuLL PRESENT SPECIFIC AcTuva- 191-HJ-L2, AND IT DAILY CLASSES, AND IN PARTICULAR THIS THE HIGHLIGHTS or TlES or THE YEAR wlLL INDDCATE wHo's wHo IN THE VAR' nous CLASSES, O RSEVENTH 'E I G HTH RFRESHMAN 0SOPl-IOMORES 'J UNIORS GSENIGRS ? SEVENTH GRADE First Row. Lei! to Right: Charlotte Starkweather, Ardys Green, Clara Yaiko, Miss Whitney, Flora Maleski, Phyllis Brown, loanne Wate, Second How: Kathryn Groters, lanet Emory, Myrtle Cady, Betty White, Dorothy Zojonc, Leora Fry, Audrey Bensink, Sophie Grrlen, Norma Newhouse, Betty Hurlburt. Third Row: Helen Holton, Burton Emory, Albert Beckerink, George Maleski, Clifford Skinner, Alfred Lamparelli, Robert VanEearden, Dewayne lohnson, Ralph Roush, Merle Thompson, loyce Werren. Top Row: Everett Boland, Richard LaRose, Robert Edwards, Howard Turck, William Cole, Robert Kickbush, Gordon White, Gilbert TeWinkle, Lyle Warnshuis, Iames Thompson, Slaney Wolford. EIGHTH GRADE First How. Left to Right: Carol Hewes, Marilyn Davis,Betty Bayne, Mrs, Wassink, Norma Newhouse, Doris Far- dink, Iacquelyn Ott. Second Row: Helen Wright, Carol Newhouse, lean Knowles Margaret Walford, Io ce R - . y ouse. Lorraine Smith, Roberta Bannister, loyce Scarem, Helen Starkweather, Ava King. Third Row: Clayton Duink Philip liluslink, Mark Ives, Freda Garfield, Buena Dewey, Evelyn Groters, Carol Ton, loan Kooman, Merle Holthouse, Rus- sell Bemis, Leslie Weeks, Top Row: Eugene Green, Walter Chamberlin, Wilb Stahlman, Frank Maleski, Wilbur Stahlman, Allen Rhebergen, Merton Querreveld, Paul TenHuisen, Donald llaRose. ur Lookenhouse, Iohn Kolstee Donald I gi iii ? ,iii JE f Y rf Q 4 E if 5 GRADE SEVEN Bl-WEEKLY VISITS T0 THE TOWN LIBRARY AND RREQDENT VISITS TO THE SCHOOL LIBRARY TNDICATE A GROWING SNTEREST or THE SEVENTH GRADE IN READING, Miss WHlTNEV'S PUPILS EELDNE T0 THE BAND, THE CHORUS, THE M-H CLUB, THE Bov ScDDTs, AND THE CRAFT CLUB. Bv JOINING THE AMERICAN JUNIOR RED CROSS, THE SEVENTH GRADERS SHOWEO THEIR HELPFUL SPIRIT, THEIR PARTICIPATION IN THE THANxsG1vaNc AND EASTER PROGENWS, AS WELL AS IN THE OPERETTA, SHOWS THAT THE SEVENTH GRADE as FULL or wELL-DnREcTED ENERcv. GRADE EIGHT WELMERW, A ONE-ACT PLAY, wAs THE HEPTURE or THE EIGHTH GRADE, WHEN, ON JANUARY 20, IT PRESENTED H HBERT POPPLETON OF LAKE- wooo, NEW YORK, WITH HDS MTRTH, MAG c, AND Music. WILBUR LOOKENHOUSE WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT or THE ETQHTH GRADE, IN THE DNPREDENDENTED ELECTION, OTHER OFFICERS wERE AS FOL- LOWS! VIDE PRESIDENT, LEsL:E WEEKS: SECRETARY, MARK IVESQ AND TREASDRER, JEAN KNOWLES, THE RED ROSE us THE CLASS FLOW- ER: AND RED, WHTTE, AND BLUE ARE THE EIGHTH GRADE coLoRs. IN JANUARY, JDAN KOOMAN BECAME SERIOUSLY ILL, REQUIRING AN OPERATION AT THE CLEVELAND CLINIC HOSPITAL, A MRS, WASSlNK'S cLAss CONTRIBUTED GENEROUSLY T0 THE JUNIOR RED CROSS AND WAS AMONG THE LEADING CLASSES IN THE PURCHASE OF DEFENSE. STAMPS, D0 YOU REMEMBER WHEN -- WE, IN HISTORY C, nGOT THE POINTUT MR, MANUEL USED T0 INTERRDPT THE CHORUS HEMEERST MERLE WRIGHT AND JACKIE NUTTALL wERE LOVERS! ART HAIR AND MARINE LEGTERS wERE NGOING STEADYnT JIM IFINN wAs GIVEN A BLACK DAT IN ASSEMBLY? THE THIRD GRADE uJUNlORSn GAVE THEIR AssEMaLv7 SENIORS WORKED so HARD ON THE SENIOR PLAY! JUNE wAs GRANDMA AND Jam wAs GRANDPA FINNT SPUTLIGHT 1942 2 li 3 5 FRESHMAN CLASS First Row. Lett tu Hight: Evelyn Fry, Velma TeW1nkle, Arlene Adams, Miss Mordoff, Gertrude Williams, Barbara Meerdink, Florence Kickbush. Second Row: Walter Smith, Fred Porter, Evelyn Sphon, Iacquelyn Nuttall, Ruth Grover, Phvllis Pitt, Eva Bacher, Lorena Groters, Vera Meyerink, Ruth Titus, Martin Willover, Gordon Holthouse, Third Row: lolin Neckers, Louis Rea, Horner Avery, lohn Wiggers, Iames Babcock, Paul Meyerinlc, Harold Thompson, Charles Kolstee, Robert Davis, lrwin Bensink, Iohn Bridges, Top Row: Richard Cole, Robert Williams, Andrew Roush, Bryce Hair, Norman Coe, Clyde McCrory, Glenn Maleski, Leonard Eliason, Robert Hulett, Iohn Gibbons, Wilford Damcott, Carl Caflisch. SOPHOMORE CLASS First Row. Left to Right: Evelyn Sweet, Shirley Storer, Vivian King, Betty Neckers, Winifred Rhebergen, Pauline Bennink, Helen Sweet. Second Row: Ruth Schurman, Dorothy Beckerink, Mary Zojonc, Betty Peterson, Lois Rheber- gen, Arylis Green, Betty Scarem, Dorothy Pfeiffer, Audrey Roush, Third Row: Robert Wassink, Robert Knowles, Carol McCann, Geneva 'l'eWinkle, Mariorie Evans, Hazel Foster, Mary Alice Humphrey, William Wiggers, Gail Thompson. Fourth Row: Edward Werren, Wayde Querreveld, Ernest Kachel, LaMont Goring, lames Hudson, Mr. Boylan, Everett TeWinkle, Edward Pfeiffer, lack Edwards, Glenn Warnshuis. 3 is z 3 H FRESHMAN CLASS NORMAN CDE wAS ELECTED PRESIDENT or THE PRESHMAN CLASS: WITH vIcE-PRESIDENT, LEONARD ELIASON: SECRETARY, JACQUELVN NUTTALL TREASURER, JOHN WIGGERSQ AND HDMERDDM ADVISER, MISS MDRDDFF. THE ENTHUSIASTIC PRESHMEN MADE RED, WHITE, AND BLUE CHRISTMAS DESDRATIDNS PDR THEIR HDMERDDM, To MAKE A MORE ATTRAcTIvE ROOM, SOME OF THE CLASS ARRANGED BULLETIN BOARDS AND STRUNG soon JACKETS ALONG THE BLACKBOARD, A NUMBER or PUPILS BROUGHT PLANTS AND HELPED CARE PDR THEMT THROUGHOUT THE YEAR, IN APRIL THE FRESHMEN PRESENTED THEIR CLASS ASSEMBLY, SCDPHGMCDRES THE SOPHOMORE CLASS HELD HALLOWE'EN AND MAPLE SUGAR PARTIES THIS vEAR, IN SEPTEMBER THEY SOLD P.T.A. MEMBERSHIP CARDS. THEY PRESENTED AN ASSEMBLY PROGRAM IN FEBRUARY, BOTH THE aovs AND THE GIRLS or THE DLASS HAVE TAKEN ACTIVE PART IN IN- TERCLASS BASKETBALL, FOR THE THIRD vEAR IN SUCCESSION, THE SOPHOMORE GIRLS' TEAM woN THE BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP, SEv- ERAL MEMBERS HAvE SOLD DEFENSE STAMPS, CAROL MDCANN, PRESI- DENT or THE SOPHOMORES, IS THE ONLY GIRL TO BE A CLASS PRESI- DENT THIS vEAR, OTHER OFFICERS ARE VIVIAN KING, SECRETARY, AND Lois RHEEERGEN, TREASURER, SENIORS' NAMES ARE HIDDEN UNDER THESE LETTERS CAN YOU SEE WHC THEY ARE? REMLAP DLANDD ,,,T,IS,.,, ..,..,.,,.,, SGREGIW NAILLIL AMLEv GINR ....T,,,I.T..,....,,T .I., I ,.T... ,.,I., THGIRW ELREM NDSPMDHT REGOR. .........T .....T. .NETNESIUH AMRDN SEMAJ NNIF I.T.............., .....,. .T..T,...,......T. ECUL YTTEB RIAH RUHTRA ...,....S,,....,.T I ,.,...,, TREBOR YERHPMUH KCRUT DNOMYAR .........T, E S ......,...., ,SMADA MAIRAN LLEwoL RENGAN ......,,. , ...,,....,.T.II.,,T HCSILFAC ENJU SKEEW NHDJ ,.,.....T.T.., ....,,,, SKNIREYEM TREBLIG SPUTLIGHT 1942 M 3 ii 5 E5 L, IUNIOR CLASS First Row. Left to Right: Pauline Smith, Rosemary Williams, Miss Davis, Lois Eshleman, Frances Emory. Second Row: Virginia Vruink, Mary Vrooman, Deleo Gravink, Audrey Duink, Lucille Meyerink, Nyla Wallace. Third Row: George Kinney, Winifred Pitt, Dorothy Yaiko, Lucy Schruers, Doyle Shields. Top Row: Gilbert Willink, lack Newhouse, Claud Roush, Walter Hill, Leland Swarm, George Christensen, Earl Duink. HILLBILLY TRIO Claud Roush, Leland Swarm, Doyle Shields 5 . , , x M l 5 JUNIOR CLASS IN DECEMBER, THE JUNIORS TOGETHER WITH THE REBECCA'S SPONSOR- ED THE MISSOURI Fox HUNTERS. A STYLE SHOW, A SERIES or MUSICAL NUMBERS, AND A SHORT PLAV WERE PRESENTED IN THE JUNIOR ASSEMBLY, THE JUNIORS ENTERTAINED THE SENIORS AT THE ANNUAL JUNIOR- SENIOR PARTY AND HELD SEVERAL PARTIES FOR THEMSELVES, AT AN ELECTION IN OCTOBER, GEORGE CHRISTENSEN wAS ELECTED PRESIDENT: DovLE SHIELDS, VICE-PRESIDENT, DELEO GRAVINK, SEC- RETARY: ROSEMARY WILLIAMS, TREASURER: AND NYLA WALLACE, HE- PORTER, ON MARCH 27,AT THE CLYMER CENTRAL ScHooL AUDITORIUM, THE JUN- Ion CLASS or l9M2 PRESENTED A VARIETY SHOW MADE up or MUSICAL NUMBERS ev THE BRASS SEXTET IN wHIcH WALTER HILL, JACK NEwH House, DOYLE SHIELDS, WINIFRED PITT, VIRGINIA VRUINK, AND LELAND SwAaM TOOK PART, OTHER MUSICAL NUMBERS wERE GIVEN av THE HILLBILLY TRIO - CLAUD ROUSH, LELAND SWAHM, AND DovLE SHIELDS, JACK NEwHousE PLAYED TWO POANO SOLOS, WINIERED PITT SANG TWO ALTO SOLOS FOLLOWED ev GILBERT WlLLlNK'S MONO- LosuE, 'WHEN HE COULD RUN HIM IN. THIS wAs FOLLOWED av THE MAIN FEATURE or THE EVENING -- A ONE ACT comzov, 'Or ALL THlNG5,u DIRECTED av MISS HELEN DAVIS AND MISS HELEN HEMSTER, THE ENTIRE ACTION or THE PLAY TOOK PLACE IN THE LIVING Room or THE SCHUMAKER HOME IN A SMALL MID' WESTERN cITv. THE CAST or CHARACTERS WAS AS FOLLOWS! ' EVAN SCHUMAKER, THE FATHER ...,... ..,.......,.,............,I,,.I ,, ..,,.,..., WALTER HILL Amv SCHUMAKER, THE MOTHER .,.,..I,,.. .........,. RDSEMAHV WILLIAMS JASON SCHUMAKER. THE soN ...,..,,...,I.,.....,..... .....,... LGILBERT WILLINK HOPE SCHUMAKER, THE DAUGHTERM I,L.I,.. ....,. .,,...,., NYLA WALLACE . VIVIAN HAMPTON, THE AUNT .......,L L..,......I,I.I IW.AuonEv DUINK KASPER Fox, A BUSDNESS MAN ......,..I L, .,...I LELAND SWARM GLEN WINSTON, A NEIGHBORL ,..,...L.. .,.. MHLCLAUD RouSH NORA, THE SCHUMAKER'S MAIOU I.T... ,..I..,., ......,.. IWINIEHED PITT GEORGE CHRISTENSEN, PRESIDENT or THE JUNIOR CLASS, AcTED AS ANNOUNCER, 8 SPUTLIGHT 1942 - 6 'H 3 ii is X N il v 5 IOHN WEEKS BETTY LUCE Prcsillml Vin' Prcxiflcnl IM- S: Q LG I X K M55 ,..,,, MARIAN ADAMS JUNE CAFLISCH GILBERT MEYERINK DONALD PALMER v- 5 A I I I ' f Q -,,,, f . -af RAYMOND runcx Lowm. wmum VELMA KING IAMES I-'INN Swfrclu ry Trcaxu rn ARTHUR HAIR ROBERT HUMPHREY G. 1 NORMA TEN HUISEN ROGER THOMPSON LILLIAN WIGGERS MERLE WRIGHT E SENIOR ACTIVITIES NARIAN ADAMS M MAJOR -- HQMEMARINC , KQYHOLE KLUB 2 nTHE TowER Room MVSTERVU WSPCTLICHTU STAFF M uMARO'GOLD RAvS 2, JUNE CAFLISCH MAJOR -- HCMEMAKINC GIRLS' GLEE CLUB I LIBRARY CLUB CHORUS 2, 3, SEC, 3 uTHE TowER Room MVSTERYM BAND 2, 3 nSPOTLlGHTn STAFF CHEERLEADER 3, U nMARO'GOLD RAYSH JAMES FINN MAJOR -- HISTORY CLASS PRESIDENT 3 GUN CLUB, TREASURER BAND I, 2 BASEBALL I, 2, 3, CLASS TREASURER U TCUCH FOOTBALL nSPOTLlGHTu STAFF U nTHE TowER Room MYSTERYn ARTHUR HAIR WMJOR -- MATHEMATICS, FRENCH GUN CLUB M uORACLE YEARBOOKn HSPOTLIGHTH STAFF N SAFETY PATROL uMARO'GOLD RAYSU N BAND I, DEBATE I, 2 CHORUS I, ROBERT HUMPHREY MAJOR -- AGRICULTURE F.F.A. I, 2 SEC. 3, PRES, U GUN CLUB UTOWER Room MYSTERYn BASEBALL 2, 3, uSPOTLIGHTu STAFF TCUCH FOOTBALL 2, 3, U-H CLUB 2, 3 BASKETBALL I, 2, 3, M CLASS TREASURER E STUDENT COUNCIL M 3 M M M M M M M M 2 U 2 3 M M M M M SPIITLIGHT 1942 8 fd E 3 5 3 . 1 VELMA KING MAJOR -- SCIENCE, LANGUAGE, MATHEMATICS BAND 3, SEC, U NSPOTLIGHT STAFFu CHORUS I, 2, LIBRARIAN 3 LIBRARY CLUB NBELLE OF BAGDADn 2 M-H CLUB HTOWER Room MYSTERYU H CLASS SEC, 3, ORATORICAL CONTEST I HCAULDRONH uMARO'GOLD RAYSu 3, EDITOR N BETTY LUCE MAJOR -- SCIENCE, HISTORY GIRLS GLEE CLUB I BAND 3, LIBRARIAN CHoRUs 2, 3 ' WTHE TOWER Room MYSTERYH uMARO'GOLD RAYSH 3, M HSPOTLIGHTH STAFF En, STUDENT COUNCIL VICE PRES, 3, M CLASS PRES, 3, GILBERT MEYERINK MAJOR -- AGRICULTURE N M I M I M M M M F.F.A. I, 2, 3, U USPOTLIGHTU STAFF U NTHE TowER Room MYSTERYN H DONALD PALMER MAJOR -- MATHEMATICS nSPOTLIGHTu STAFF H VOLLEYBALL 2, 3, M nTHE TowER Room MYSTERYN U GUN CLUB U BASKETBALL 2, 3, U uMARO'GOLD RAYSn 3, N BASEBALL 2, 3, U FOOTBALL 2, 3, H NORMA TENHUISEN MAJOR -- HOMEMAKING uMARO'GOLD RAvsn STAFF 3, U CHoRUs I uTHE TowER Room MYSTERYu U USPOTLIGHTH STAFF H ROGER THO PSON MAJOR -- AGRICULTURE F.F.A. I, 2, 3, U GUN CLUB I, N BASKETBALL 3, N NSPOTLIGHTH STAFF U FOOTBALL 3, H WTHE TowER Room MYSTERYN U BAsEBALL 2, 3, N I VOLLEYBALL H SPUTLIGHT 1942 I 9 Q ff is S 3 f ' RAYMCND TURCK NAJOR -- AGRICULTURE BAND I, 2, 3, U N-H CLUB I, 2 SEC, AND TREAS, 3 Uwonos AND Museo' N LOCAL LEADER CHoRUs U CoUNTv N-H COUNCIL 3, H BASKETBALL 3, U F.F.A. I, 2, DAIRY JUDGING TEAM 3,U CAMERA CLUB U NSPOTLIGHTN STAFF U LOWELL WAGNER MAJOR -- HISTORY LANGUAGE I BAND 2, U USPOTLIGHTN STAFF U CHORUS 2. N nTOWER Room MYSTERYn N GUN CLUB U NWORDS AND musncnh F,F,A, U TRACK I JOHN WEEKS ' MAJDR -- MATHEMATICS, SCIENCE, LANGUAGE, HISTORY CHORUS 2, 3, N . N-H CLUB I, PRES, 2, 3 V. PRES, H BAND I, 2, 3, PRES. N VOLLEYBALL M RTOWER Room MVSTERVN N BRASS SExTET 2, 3, H NWORDS AND musucn H SAFETY PATRoLmAN I, 2, 3, U GUN CLUB V. PRES. N nSPOTLlGHTn STAFF M LaaRARv CLUB U WMARDIGDLD RAVSu STAFF 3, H STUDENT COUNCIL 2, SEG, 3 UCAULDRDNW STAFF I, 2 BASKETBALL 3 N Gvm CLUB V. PRES, I BASEBALL 3, L FOOTBALL U LILLIAN WIGGERS MAJOR - HOMEMAKING nNARO'GOLD RAYSn STAFF M KEYHOLD KLua 2 NTOWER Room NYSTERYu N LIBRARY CLUB SED, 3, PRES, U nBELLE OF BAGDAOQ I RSPDTLIGHTU STAFF U CHORUS I, SEC, 3 U-H CLUB SED, I, 2 NERLE WRIGHT MAJOR -- SCIENCE, HISTORY, MATHEMATICS BASKETBALL I, 2, 3 U STUDENT COUNCIL I, 2 BASEBALL I, 2, 3, L Bus PATROL 2, 3 FOOTBALL I, H SPUTLIGHT 1942 IO A . e 1 , k fr A M ' mf x, : , -J DI gf X' L. 41 x 1 3 1 .43 Tgf, I .- af.: ,, 1 W 'W .,' f '5' L. 21, - .- 1.5 . ..,, W, '-51221 vu ,,m,:,! JL: amd . . , ' '!m3f'.'Jf1 73 Q21 W' V X- , . 2 , rf. 1 lv R fs 'rv v .. K 9' 'nil' 1:57 f . av- ,n .LW-,,., , :f , fr. 5 3 1, mf X1 ,. , 4, :wg nh, ,, f., L 1' 4 y ' wijew , 4 ,n 2 M , -' ' 1. -U 4 W K h 'fin ie 6 x : 1 I 4. f :M--A ,Q . '- 4 , ., . ,.b,5,-rw. 7 K. ,N 1 Y ' g 2' 'Q-1, A HISTCDRY OF THE CLASS OF '4Q IN i938-39, THERE wERE TWENTY-SIX ERESHMEN, ELEVEN or THESE TWENTY-SIX HAVE NOW REACHED THE AIM or MOST ERESHMEN -- T0 BECOME SENIDRS. THESE FEW NHARDY SOULSN ARE MARIAN ADAMS, RDBERT HUMPHREY, VELMA KlNG, GTLEERT MEYERINK, DONALD PALMER, NDRMA TENHUISEN, ROGER THOMPSON, RAYMOND Tuncx, JOHN WEEKS, LlLLoAN WIGGERS, AND MERLE WRIGHT, MR, MILLER wAS CLASS AU- VISER, WHEN WE BECAME SOPHOMORES, MR, MILLER wAS AGAIN ouR CLASS AD- vssER, THIS YEAR, l959-UO, MAC WRIGHT LEFT oun GLASS T0 move T0 CALIFORNIA AFTER BETTY LUCE cAmE rRom FALCONER AND RuTH Bemis FROM CDRRV. IN JANUARV, l9UO, JUNE CAFLISCH, AROUSING mAScuLlNE INTEREST, ENTERED CLVMER CENTRAL FROM FRE' DONIA, AT THE END or THE vEAR, CARLTON Emonv AND MAuRrcE TURNER LEFT, OuR JUNIOR YEAR EEGAN WITH SEVENTEEN STRONG LED BY JOHN WEEKS PRESIDENT: BETTY LucE, VICE-PRESIDENYQ VELMA KUNG, SECRETARYQ ROBERT HUMPHREY TREASuRERg AND MR. MTLLER, Dun cLAsS ADVISER, To RAISE MONEY ron TREATUNG THE SENIOR CLASS TO A RlcNlc AND SRATlNG PARTY AT MsDwAv PARK, WE JUNIORS wERE co-sRoNsoRs ,or A CONCERT, lr WE DO SAv so OURSELVES, WE THINK WE GAVE THE SENIOR CLASS A PRETTY sooo TIME, IN THE YEAR l91H-U2, FIHDLEY LAKE STUDENTS ARRwED To AUGMENT ouR scHooL. Jam FTNN, ART HAQR, AND LOWELL WAGNER WERE THREE NEW SENIORS ADDED TO ouR NUMBER, DONALD PALMER, wHD LEET us IN oun JUNIOR YEAR, RETURNED Enom CASSADAGA, EVELYN PETTEN- clLL AND ELSNOR CRoscuTT WERE MARRIED AND ARE MAKING use or THETR HOMEMAKING EXPERIENCE, MAXINE LEGTERS, RUTH BEmos, AND MAx BEMIS ALso DROPPED FROM ouR CLASS, LEAVING SoxTEEN SEN- IORS, As A cLAss we WERE LITTLE, auT DH, MV! WITH Miss MOROOFF'S ENERsv AND TIME we PRESENTED NTHE TowER Room Mws- TERVU, IT WAS LOTS or EuN, BUT NERVE-WRACKING, Too, AT THE TIME, IT wAs, WE BELIEVE, A SUCCESS, EvERvoNE wHo HAD woRx- ED ON THE PLAV wAS LNVOTED T0 A PARTY WHICH wAs HELD I MED- IATELV ArTERwARDs. THEN EEQAN WORK ON THE SENIOR ANNUAL, To ADvERTasE THE YEARBOOK, vou wlLL REMEMBER, AN ASSEMBLY PRD- GRAM AND SEVERAL MUSICAL SELEDTTDNS WERE PRESENTED FOR THE CLYMER STUDENTS, SPUTLIGHT 1942 Q ,- 'J 5 Q ii 5 G x is if 2 Q a PICKERS' LEAGUE, CLASS IN 1967 THE SENIOR CLASS or l9M2 pRovEo T0 BE vERv SUCCESSFUL ALUMNI or CLYMER CENTRAL SCHOOL, Boa HuMRHREv, STAR PITCHER or THE BASEBALL TEAM, WAS Raoxso up sv A scour or THE CLEVELAND IN- DIANS AT THE SHERMAN GAME, LAST YEAR HE LED THE LEAGuE IN STRIKE-OUTS, DoN PALMER, wHo CAUGHT RoR Boa, as NOW MANAGER or HIS owN TEAM,THE DUNKIRK WaNE DISTOLLERS or THE GRAPE- RoGER THOMPSON ns TRYING TO PERFECT HIS NEW ARMSTRONG MILKING AND BOTTLE wAsHER WHEN JIM FINN wAs NOW EXERCISES HIS MACHINE, RAYMOND TURCK IS THE CHIEF cook ON THE GREAT LAKES STEAMER, WAVE CLIMBER, GRADUATED, HE FINALLY EEDAME A DOCTOR AND CHARM ON THE LADIES AT MIAMI BEACH, FLORDDA ART HAnR ns PRETTY SUCCESSFUL, HE HAS A rerTv-THREE PIECE BAND WHlCH as NOW PLAYING AT THE MIAMI BTLTMDRE. HE HAS ARREARED lN SEVERAL MOVIES wHERE HE CO-STARRED WITH SHIRLEY TEMPLE, NERLE WRIGHT wAs GRADUATED FROM ANNAPOLIS AND as NOW IN COMMAND or THE JAPANESE UNIT or ouR FLEET wHncH THE UNITED STATES AoQulREo IN THE TRIUMPH ovER THE JAP5. GILBERT MEYER- INK HAS JUST EEEN ELECTED PRESIDENT or THE DAlRVMEN'S LEAGUE or CLVMER, EVERY YEAR HIS PDREERED HOLSTEINS WIN HIM MEDALS AT THE NATIONAL LIVESTOCK EXPOSITION, OuR CLASS PRESIDENT, JOHN WEEKS, FINALLY WENT T0 COLLEGE AND IS NOW HAPRILV MARRTED, TTLLIE AND GLENN NECKERS RUN A LARGE POULTRY HATCHERY IN CACKLETOWN, lDAHO, WARIAN ADAMS as CER- TAINLY MAKING use or HER HQMEMAKTNG KNowLEoGE, SHE MARRIED CARM BRTGHTMAN, AND WITH THEIR THIRTEEN nKlDSn, THEY HAVE INCREASED THE POPULATION or NORTH CLVMER. VELMA KnNG aEcAME A DIETICIAN IN A als BUFFALO HOSPITAL, SHE as THINKING sER- nousuv or TAKING ovER THE EDaToRsHlR or THE BUFFALO EVENING NEws. BETTY LUCE, CLASS VICE-PRESIDENT AND EDITOR or THE SPOTLIGHT, TEAcHEs ENGLISH AT CORNELL UNavERsvTv. NORMA TEN HUISEN MARRIED EvERETT CADv THE DAY AFTER SHE WAS GRADUATED, AND NOW LIVES IN CLVMER, JUNE CAFLISCH as MARRIED T0 THE LEADER or A CERTAIN SWING BAND, LOWELL WAGNER MARROED A GIRL ERDM SHERMAN. HE FOLLOWED IN HUS FATHER'S FOOTSTEPS, AND NOW IS A MINISTER IN THE FINDLEY LAKE U.B. CHuRcH, SPUTLIGHT 1942 I2 5. 3 5 wx 5 G5 3 3 SENIORS TEN YEARS FROM NOW WPQQNSQUQT 39 Sp U 0 A .: . .93 L7 o Q f?gg5N--. N.fH t I June C Kg -5,15 MARIAH A, :?d:: ' Da, Jnmss F x l X f 3 ' my X- V War ll AR-rl' H . RQ4 Boa H fffiigiieif X41 ' - f X -T F GI L S LQ I Kxifij' GA use f 5 K' my IJ U VSLMA K, Bsrrv L, 5 ' l I GILBERT M. SPIJTLIGHT 1942 H+ A f , . , . ,. Q , -L - + A 1. - , N ' 4 I 4' J cfx, .f , JM. M.-y , a w 'w .- Q W' ,-..,, 1 W - ..Hf,,.. i m' ' 'gy-w,,, .H N4 Rafi' vw ,ww Y ul' f' Q, a 'ad ,iii A ev-nm M 32 1 we 3' ' '+ . ',.f H -r X- .AI,,. .. -up M aff - f ' -4., 4-M. V' .-.M En 1 , , ,wif ,um f ' liz, f , bmi 4 - ,M N H - Aj: rp ,R ., AA . X if ., - Ag 13, .. rw, 4,4 N - . 2r'XmQ'1 . , , 5, . -ff ww --b 1+ A 5 M -2169 l-Iii 'HJ-.' 74' , . -, ,H fm: 1 ' ,. .-Ly ,M X, ,.. ,, ..-1.-,M .1 M., L, ,x sf lv ,M 4,1 ei! r ' . 1 1- 4. av - ' r ' , - N, s' 1 'i , fm 4-1-:4-N, V '-'...,-,rh-f, 'V 4 5' mtv ' .V 1- -'A'-il' 'I ' 2 ' :4 F ' Q '. ' ' Y il , :J-, . hz T.. ff,-.a uf il A .I ,.,- 5 41' ,il-, ,Hx-.,'53,' ,. , . w : A 1' . ,fm f , -p, -rpg 1 --1 ,' 2 -' ' ' - .: ',. if r' fp wig, f , , . , ,C-. K, . ' .-bi I V . -A V7 , 1 fi - ' .V jx ' V 'Q f v ff, A ' -. r .I ' k , Q , ' y YQ -'-'QQ , iflkgfl QQ? ftp' L ' f. '-.1.:,..'g,-.pH rl-ff' 'f' 2331+ ' ' f- fm- : - 'ivli-an ,rj 413 ' 5,wqf t'f:fTT'w, ., va, :'f?g,g,'5 gf ' . ' , ,ELL an 3 V g 1' , f pa f'Hk' -1 'ffl .- ' - 556- 'T TT A i- Qi:-w,JA: 'L, ' ,.z' ,,'7'9'4'Jf ' ' ' Na' 2. W ' ' - ' M H? 'R 4' . ,.. 4. L1 I N m , P f,f,?5h 1 'Q V. 4 ' fr P fi ff- .f , L-f Wt, 'K , .july . . 4 , . 2. f A ,, ,C Q ,t . 1 , ,.f - 2- V , -, , w ,T . ,H -fx X ,gms .W E .V .I A. ,. 1. . J , X 1 ,, X-, 3 JE.-L in 1. .1 - b ' L , K , , .l, 1, . ,N,g,-..y - fu. .' L ,fs Q, - A , He 3, '. 524, , aff ,af ' - wb 1 M ,- . N 4 yn, ,..ML-if A 'A In-1 , - x 4 I M , , L, V 5 ' fi - . : K M, . J f . . f . ,..L ,M LLM 5 V , , Q f . , ' ' 3 15. 2 'rfhg ,' ff 'r 'H . l ' ab' , y hz. ' Q, ',f1S5fQ,? .' Q41 17 ,, . va- ffiffQ 5 0 -. ,. wa. , V v si Q A 11-Q, V, ,- , , 'H , .525 -12,1 - ' - :,- 5 Q . f.-. ffgw ' L . 4 .. y. L- yf .. Q '. + ,, ' Q. I .4 ' 1. ' ' 1 . 1' ' -5 -' ' '31 W . A 1 A if L V V52 ' A i , W. W C mmf I W J ' 33, L x 4 M hir? H ' 1 , ' ,x - - . , . H: 1 ,,- . ,Q ,V A , ,Li . -w Q: wa- if .,- 'x:a 1- W. 'KSA' '. e S SR Q X4 ' 1 . ' , x : . 4 I W M. - X xx .f v- I fe' 1, nl' 9771 W , ,, ,-rn-' 1 ,,. ' ,',-:lit ? f- 'Q , .1 fw .Nik 4 .ff w, .A 1-'X . v , 3:4 '- f. m ' , , ., ,-1,6 ...M , .aff ijm: -M :,. 1,6 A ff flu, 4 f . . iff '.. ff.: z,.- V , V A. A A 1112 , .Q,L,:.f'y, ' ff , . Q , , , ' A, L., . by-. .,.F ,- , J, ,,,--' .X ,gm ,a W, ', b , L. .-f 'f'ff1J5 'h V, ,,- f' N-'uw 1rfWf:E:s,,zwE1fJ ' . ' .-1 f'.L2f fi:w' - Lg., I 1. ' . 'fit -.r7 1'fj'? ,Ji 45-ffl. ,,,'f- r. :ni-1.-.fx ' zWx.3,'w 1, lk V , L ff. . .jing A.. 4 4 , H3- , A :faq f ' ' J:-2 - A. .1 a . 1 M, ' 'i 'jig 'ah .A' :xii 5 W , f v , SENIORS TEN YEARS FROM NOW -- Q S E X 1 I ny A 11: IW J DONALD P. NQRMA T, Rosen T, Q., qgg1g!g!!sQD RAVMONO T, Rev, Lowsu. W, i . ,Q . 8 x -Q rf x xt? www i paesnoswr K I JOHN W, WTaLLas' W, MERLE W, SPUTLIGHT 1942 95 im 3 n rr 'TCT o Q T ., .J 6 V- . ffriy - 1WE A s 7 jk BXfX THE BGARD EDUCATION THE FACULTY WE HAVE SHOWN vou WHO WE ARE wHo ARE PREPARED. Now LET us Tuanx or THE oNEs wHo PRE- PARE us, THE BOARD or EDUCA- TION AND THE FACULTY. THE BOARD or EDUCATION ss OOMPOSED or rnve AMERICAN ClTlZENS, REPRESENTATIVES or EACH SCHOOL onsrnacv sEEoNc- ING TO oun CENTRAL SCHOOL, THESE MEN HAVE MADE IT Possu- BLE ron us TO BE EDUCATED IN A BEAUTIFUL SCHOOL BUILDING, THEY MAKE IT POSSIBLE Fon us T0 REAo THE aEsT TEXT aoons. MORE THAN THAT, THEY HIRE THE MOST CAPABLE TEACHERS TO SERVE ON THE STAFF THE FACULTY ARE MEN AND WOMEN CONSIDERED PROPER CITIZENS T0 INSTRUCT us Pupngs. THEV MusT HAVE sooo HABITS ANU HIGH MORALS, SINCE THE TEACHERS ARE T0 INFLUENCE THE THINKING AND BEHAVIOR or THE sTuoENTs PERHAPS EVEN MORE THAN THE PARENTS, IT us ONLY RIGHT THAT oun FACULTY SHOULD BE cARE- ruLLv cHosEN. 4WE STUDENTS FEEL THAT OUR INSTRUCTORS FULFILL THE REQUIREMENTS WELL, OUR TEACHERS HAVE TAUGHT US THE PRINCIPLES OF DEMOCRACY, BESIDES THE REGULAR COURSES SO THAT WE, AS AMERICAN YOUTH ON THE THRESHOLD OF A LARGER WORLD, FEEL PREPARED T0 MEET WHATEVER COMES, ,Q if 5 'T L4 1 3 :s H 55 fa E 5 2 51 bi si 'li ? w H 5 f. 4 1, 'E 1 3, w 9? me 2 51 L3 '24 if 9 3 is TS Il 'Q 'G fs -9 f 17' . M R r: 'Q E lihll ' ' u, I - ' 1 L, 105212. 5.1 ,I ' U1 'UAL-,1 V ,VJ , W . 1 - w ' -'JL - ' 1, 1,-I. - f,,?' 'Jil J T 'P' 4 1155 'TFT' E5Tb Tt'2fF 1 'fJ ?VIl5+'W ' 1JYIIE?l.2iff3fLf'Z's15'.iFI.,HW fllllf' HQ? 52:3 . ,, .. ,,,UUZ1.LJ1SfJ. fE'?Z75'f'1 ,'1'f'J'a- A M Nw A ' K gg. ' Z if Sf ...f As ' X A: ' -',:,, ' S' Q' 1 Fai O JARMSRY: : . Elgin O MH. WESLEY G- MILLER MRS. DOROTHY B. CONNELLY p,j,,,-iI,uf Dixlrigl Sllf7!'fiIlf4'lItlA'llf BOARD OF EDUCATION - Left lo Right: Mr. Deloss Rouse, Mr. Clarence Legters, Mr. H. A. Thompson, Mr. Som- uel Dunnewold, Mr. Lewis Duink. 16 -u Q' 'X 1 Q? ,r , ,. . ,- ' W . ,Ms-.face FACULTY First Row, Left to Right: Miss Acquard, Homernaking Department, 4-H Club, Miss M - ' f ' ton, Gracie Four, Miss Mancuso, Miss Hemster, Language Department, Library Club. ggi:-nneei'Rc2:nZdl?4i9rl?li1leIrssPIrlS::?nc3- Mathematics, Camera Club, Miss Fardink, Grade Five, Mrs. Wassink, Grade Eight, Miss Mordoli English Dle artmlent' Maro'gold Rays, Senior Play, Spotlight: Miss Gleason, Grade Six, Miss Ton, Grade Two, Miss Legters Grade Tl?ree To I Row: Mr. Boylan, Social Studies Department, Gun Club: Mr. Manuel, Music Department, Band Chorus- Miss Whitne P Grade Seven, Mr. Bridges, Agriculture Department, F. F. A.: Miss Davis, Art Department, Maro'gold Rays, S otli ht 4-K-f , . P Q l Vice Principal, Commercial Department, Senior Class Advisor, Spotlight, Mr. Thayer, Science Depart- 17 BOARD OF EDUCATION To PREPARE THE YOUTH or CLYMER CENTRAL SCHOOL FOR BETTER LIV- ING. THE BOARD or EDUCATION sELEcTS WELL-TRAINED TEACHERS WHO ARE sooo CITIZENS. THIS YEAR, THE BOARD HAS RENDERED EXTRA SERVICE AND UNDERTAK- EN ADDITIONAL RESPONSIBILITY BEYOND ITS REGULAR DUTIES. Pnov- ING THEIR ALERTNESS TO OUR NEEDS AND THEIR READTNESS T0 FACE oun PROBLEMS AS THEY ARISE, THE FIVE MEN wHo MAKE up THE BOARD EFREDTED THE ADDITION To OUR BUILDING, OF A NEw SHOP AND A NEw Mussc RooM, THE ROOM USED roRMERLv FOR INDUSTRIAL ARTS AND AGRICULTURE wAs REMDDELED T0 FORM A MUCH NEEDED OLASSROOM, THE BOARD, WE REALIZE, us THE MOTIVATING POWER IMMEDIATELY BEHIND oDR SCHOOL. IT :S THE GUIOING FORCE WHICH DETERMTNES MATTERS or ScHooL POLICY, INCLUDING THE COMPLICATEO PROBLEM or FTNANDE, HEADED ev MR, CLARENCE LEGTERS, PRESIDENT, AND av MR, RALPH A, THOMPSON, CLERK: MR, LEWIS DUINK, MR, SAMUEL DUNNEWOLD, AND MR, DELDSS ROUSE ARE THE MEMBERS or THE BOARD, FACULTY CLUB FDR sEvERAL vEARS, ouR TEACHERS HAVE CONDUCTED A FACULTY cLua wHucH MEETS AT LEAST ONCE A MONTH, FOUR MEETINGS A YEAR ARE RuRELv SOCIAL: THE OTHERS HAVE SOME SERIOUS PURPOSE, Mass IRENE TON as PRESIDENT or THE ORGANIZATION AND Mass HELEN NOROOFF as SECRETARY-TREASURER, IN FEBRUARY, THE CLUB PRESENTED FOR THE INTEREST or THE coM. MUNITY A LECTURE av S,'MILES BOUTON, FORMER GERMAN CORRESPON' DENT, wHo SPOKE ON nTHE HISTORY AND BADRGRDDND or THE WARu, IN MARCH, THE TEADHERS ENTERTATNED THE BOARD or EDUCATION AND THEIR WIVES, THE DISTRICT SUPERINTENDENT, AND THE JANI- TORS AND THEIR waves AT A DINNER, FACULTY MEETINGS AND VARIOUS FACULTY COMMITTEE MEETINGS ARE HELD VIHENEVER OCCASION ARISES TO STUDY AND SOLVE SCHOOL. PROB- LEMS, SPUTLIGHT 1942 I8 ' 'w2m1'4i,321, .Ll f, .n 4M1Z.E':...:NvaP3'iL,-L.'c511i2:E'f:'14'5-rf.LAl,Ea.Ti6.: Sign Jiigiidla 4 1- . N.f M511 IN If QRIIIIIIJ f- 'X ii SQ WE HAVE SAID THAT wE ARE PREPARED? BUT CQZI EE FDR WHAT? PSE QQPN- . CITIZENSHIP HE A LTHEUL LIVING SOCIAL PAR- TICIPATION USEFUL LIVING DEFENSE BUILDING AND MAINTAINING MORALE FIRST, WE ARE PREPARED FDR sooo cITIzENsHIP. WE HAVE BEEN TAUGHT DURING OUR YEARS IN HIGH SCHOOL T0 BE BETTER CITIZENS, IN SOCIAL STuDIEs DLASSES wE LEARN THE PRINCIPLES uPoN WHICH OUR GOVERNMENT IS AS BASED, WE ARE TAUGHT THE PRIVILEGES AND RIGHTS, WELL AS RESTRICTIONS UNDER A DEMOCRACY, AND WE LEARN TO HONOR THEM, SECOND, WE ARE PREPARED FOR HEALTHFUL LIvINc. WE SHALL BE ABLE TO MAINTAIN A STRONG NATION av THE PHYSICAL EDUCATION PROGRAM DEVELOPED THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY IN SCHOOLS SUCH AS OURS. THIRD, wE ARE-PREPARED FOR SOCIAL PARTICIPATION Sv ouR CONTACT wITH FELLOW-STUDENTS AND TEACHERS, Bv ouR EXTRA-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES, FOREIGN LANGUAGES, ART CLASSES AND MUSICAL ORGANIIATIONS, WE ACQUIRE A wELL-RouNDED EDUCATION THAT ENABLES us T0 FEEL AT HOME IN ANY SURROUNDINGS, FOURTH, WE MUST BE PREPARED FDR USEFUL LIVING, WE SHALL so ouT INTO THE WORLD READY T0 MAKE ouR OWN OUR COUNTRY AT THE SAME TIME, IN ouR ARE VARIOUS DEPARTMENTS TO EDucATE DIFFERENT FIELDS OF EMPLOYMENT, WAY AND SERVE SCHOOL, THERE PUPILS IN THE FIFTH, WE ARE FIGHTING A WAR IN WHICH EVERY CITIZEN MUST D0 HIS SHARE, IN CLYMER CENTRAL WE ARE PARTICULARLY PRE- PARED To HELP IN THE DEFENSE PROGRAM av THE SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENTS AND ALSO ev THE SALE OF DEFENSE STAMPS, PREPARED FOR DEFENSE, QUR COUNTRY IS SIXTH, WE ARE PREPARED TO BUILD AND MAINTAIN MOR- ALE, THE MORALE OF THE ARMY AND THE COUNTRY AS WELL MUST BE KEPT HIGH, IN THE CLYMER CENTRAL SCHOOL, MORALE IS SDLSTERED av MUSICAL GROUPS, CHEERLEADERS, THE ART DEPARTMENT, AND THE DRAMATIC CLUB. 0 9 . Q . o E .A 3 JHZIIEB f . KKIN url:-vn ll T4 -r' ff' r'- T- Glu? ' 'ADO 'T .J uiiissi? ES A AHZEL 1,1 TNS I X T STUDENT CCDUNCII. GTRL SCOUTS BOY SCOUTS SOCIAL STUDIES OUR COMMUNITY AND NATION VALUE sooo CITIZENS. A sooo AMERICAN CITIZEN waLL ARRREcaATE THE VALUE or A DEM- OCRACY AND IN wAR TIME wnLL UPHOLD THE-RRnNclpLEs FOR wHocH ouR NATION STANDS, WHERE Does ONE LEARN T0 BE A TRUE CITIZEN ar NoT IN scHooL? IN THIS SECTION or THE IQUE SPOTLIGHT WE HOPE TO sHow You How THE YOUTH IN THIS scuoon ARE PREPARED FDR sooo CITIZENSHIP, WE LEARN IN ouR SOCIAL STUDIES THAT EVERY cooo COTIZEN wsu. MAKE use or Rus PRIVOLEGE or HELPING TO RuN THE POLITICAL AFFAIRS or ouR NATION. IN ouR STUDENT COUNCIL, Bov Scours, GIRL Scours, AND SOCIAL STUDIES CLASSES WE LEARN THE QUALI- TIES or sooo CITIZENS, THROUGH PAR- TICIPATION IN ouR cLues, AND PARTIC- ULARLY IN THOSE MENTTDNED IN THIS SECTION, WE ACTUALLY PRACTOCE THE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES upon wuacu ouR GOVERNMENT REsTs. 9 3 L? E 3 5 P vs ,, Q? GIRL SCOUTS ' First How. Lei! to Right: Shirley Schreurs, Carol Howles, Marilyn Gra- vink, Marilyn Turck, Evelyn Bensirik, Martha Iohnson. Second Row: Sylvia Pitt, Elaine Casler, Donna Ton, Caro- lyn TeCulver, Barbara Meerdink, Nor- ma Newhouse, lacquelyn Ott. Top Bow: Iacquelyn Nuttall, Ruth Grover, Geneva TeWinkle, Phyllis Pitt, Betty Peterson, Ioyce Scarem, Velma Te- Winkle, Mary Wallord. ' STUDENT COUNCIL First Row, Lei! to Right: Iames Thompson, Leslie Weeks, Barbara Meerdink, Helen Sweet, Gordon Holt- house. Buck Row: Robert Humphrey, George Christensen, Shirley Bradley, Deleo Gravink, Betty Luce, Doyle Shields, Mr. Boylan. BOY SCOUTS First Row. Left to Right: Gilbert TeWinkle, Thomas Bridges, Clayton Duink. Back Row: lohri Bridges, ' Robert Wassink, Allred Lamparelli, lohn Neckers, 2 m 3 STUDENT CGUNCIL UNDER THE cu:DANcE or MR, BOYLAN, THE NEW SPONSOR or THE STD- DENT COUNCIL, THE ORGANIZATION CONTINUED THIS YEAR TO ASSIST EARNESTLY IN THE SoLvnNs or SCHOOL PRDELEMS, GEORGE CHRaSTENSEN WAS ELECTED PRESODENTQ BETTV Luce, VICE- PRESlDENTg WINIFRED RHEBERGEN, SECRETARY: AND DOYLE SHIELOS, TREASURER. A STUDENT PATROL wAs ORGANIZED WITH ROBERT HUMPH- REv AT UTS HEAD. IN A SALE OF PENCILS TO AUGMENT THE TREAS- URY, HELEN SwEET wAs BUSINESS MANAGER, As A SERVICE T0 THE SCHOOL, THE COUNCOL MEMBERS SOLD BASKETEALL SEASON TICKETS IN BEHALF or THE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION. IN Two ASSEMBLY PROGRAMS SPONSORED av THE STUDENT COUNCIL, THE BTLL or RTDHTS wAS COMMEMORATED, To PROMOTE BETTER SCHOOL CITIZENSHIP, THE STUDENT COUNCIL CARRIED ON A CouRTESv WEEK PROGRAM IN ACCORDANCE wnTH THE PLAN aNSTuTuTED LAST vEAR, GIRL SCOUTS UA LEISURE-TIME, cHARAcTER-auaLDnNc PROGRAM EMPHASIZING DEMD- CRATIC SELF-GOVERNMENTR as THE APT PHRASE DEscRnaaND THE GURL SCOUTS or AMERICA, IN CLYMER, TROOP 33, UNDER THE DnREcTaoN or HRS, DONALD CADY AND MRS. ROBERT PITT, HAS FDR ITS OFFICERS BARBARA NEERDINK, PATROL LEADER: AVA KING, scRneE AND NEWS REPORTERQ AND CARD- LVN TECULVER, SHIRLEY SCHRUERS, AND MARILYN GRAVINK, COLOR SEARERS. HEALTH, SAFETY AND CITIZENSHIP WERE BRANCHES or STUDY FOR THE GROUP THIS YEAR, ON JANUARY 26, THE ANNUAL COURT or AWARDS wAs HELD AT A P.T.A. MEETING IN THE SCHOOL, THE GIRLS LDDKED FoRwARD T0 THE GIRL SCOUT RALLV IN MAY, AND CAMPING ON LAKE CHAUTAUQUA DURING THE SUMMER, SPUTLIGHT 1942 20 B 2 E X .1 '-4 BOY SCOUTS nTo TRAIN ouRsELvEs RoR CITIZENSHIP THROUGH THE Bov Scour METHODn as THE PURPOSE or THE CLYMER' TRooP IO, Bov ScouTs. THESE aovs HAVE AS THEIR SCOUT MASTER, JOHN SKEPS, OTHER cLue oEracERs ARE: ROBERT WASSINK, SENDOR PATROL LEADER: MERTON QUERREVELO, PATROL LEAOERg AND JOHN BRTDGES, scRaeE. WITH JOHN BRIDGES AS EDlTOR-lN-CHIEF, THE TROOP PUBLISHED A NEWSPAPER, HTHE TRUMPETEERW, So THAT THEY COULD RAISE MONEY T0 suv uNaroRMs, THE SCOUTS COLLECTED PAPER AND soLo IT, THEv RECEIVED TRAINING an FIRST Ano FOR EMERGENCY AND IN OPERATING TELEGRAPH LINES BETWEEN THEIR HoMEs. IM THE SUMMER, THE scouTs PLAN T0 so CAMPING. SOCIAL STUDIES DEPARTMENT Nl-ILJTH- vEAR SOCIAL swonig THE CANDY SALE roR ruuos FOR THE CHRISTMAS OECORATIONS Con- TEST WAS A FEATURE or HR, BOYLANTS NINTH-YEAR SOCIAL STUDIES CLASS, GERTRuoE WILLIAMS HEADED THE CLASS ev SELLUNG NINETY- ravE BARS, MRS, LESLIE CArLascH wAs AwARoEo FIRST PRIZE IN THE CONTESTQ MR, CLYDE HOWLES, SEQONDQ MR, WALTER BENNINK, THIRD, AND MRS, MAUDE COE, FOURTH, To MAKE THE TRIAL av Junv MORE REALasTnc TO THE cLAss MEMBERS A TRIAL ron NEGLIGENCE! BACHER vs. WILLIAMS, WAS CONDUCTED IN CLASS, IN NOVEMBER, A VISIT T0 THE POLLS sHowEo THE pup- ILS How TO VOTE, INDIVIDUAL PROJECTS CONCERNING FUTURE OPEN- Iwcs an INDUSTRY cAvE THE PEOPLE A GLANCE INTO THE ruTuRE, SPUTLIGHT 1942 El Yfhivilfkiski '-,..' L ,- K. ,, . ,, , --Q 'wg A, , , , 4 , Q 1.1-fu' W ' Hilti.-tn3fAzdau' W ...Q Q - QS' . w ww .V- 'V ,,vs,,':, ' 'Hg HISTORY A A TRIP T0 PANAMA Rocks sHowED THE HISTORY A CLASS THE wonx or THE GREAT GLACIER, HISTORY A STUDENTS HAVE READ AND DIS- CUSSED CURRENT EVENTS AND THE PRESENT WAR, THEv STUDIED MAN'S PROGRESS THROUGH THE AGES AND LEARNED T0 APPHEDTATE THE FINE ARTS, LEARNING THE SOURCES or SOME or THE FACTS IN Dun CONSTITUTION, THE PUPILS REALIZEO THE CONTRIBUTIONS or EARL:- ER CIVILIZATION TO OUR roam or GOVERNMENT, HISTORY B MR, BOYLAN'S AMAZING HISTORY B CLASS ENGAGED IN ACTIVE DIS- cussnoNS THROUGHOUT THE vEAn, THROUGH THE EFFORTS or THEIR TEACHER, HISTORY STUDENTS WERE AELE PARTQALLY TO DDMPREHEND DARWlN'S THEORY or EVOLUTION, nBETTER THINKING DAN BE CREATED IF A PERSON BASES Has THOUGHTS ON FACTS.n THIS as THE SCIEN- TIFIC ATTTTDDE OF MIND AS HISTORY B sTuDENTs FOUND IT. nlsmsn wEnE ANOTHER BRANCH or STUDY ron THE CLASS. Bv STuDvTNc THE CAUSES AND EFFECTS or WARS, THE pupugs EEARNED THE EXTREME FUTILITY or wAR AND THE DTTEH DFSTRUCTION AND DAMAGE IT BRI NGS ABOUT , HISTORY' c THE Hssvonv C CLASS HAS STDDTED CURRENT EVENTS Enom THE WEEK- LY NEws REVIEW, AS wELL AS THE HISTORY or THE UNITED STATES, DDVERTNE PROBLEMS or lMPERlALlSM AND ECONOMICS or THE WORLD, To GET A ERDADER VIEW or WORLD AFFAIRS' THE STDDENTS HAVE READ VARIOUS NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES, SPUTLIGHT 1942 22 Q 'E 5 W: ,, F1 U: A 0 TL, QLULLD3 BASKETBALL TEAM BASEBALL TEAM HYGIEN E INTRAMURALS IT as ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL, TODAY Mons THAN Even, Fon evsnv CITIZEN TO as AS HEALTHY AS possusps, THROUGH- ouT THE NATION PROGRAMS Fon aucnonne up THE HEALTH or THE POPULATION ARE IN EFFECT. TN Cgvmzn, HEALTHFUL Lnvans as TAUGHT WITH THE REGULAR cunRfcuLuM so THAT IT us THOUGHT or MERELV AS ANOTHER CLASS. Hvcusns CLASSES, once A wean, TEACH STUDENTS THE pnnucapnes or PERSONAL AND co MuNnTv Hvsnsna, PHYSICAL Eo- UCATION CLASSES ENABLE us sovs AND GURLS To oEvELoP STRONGER BODIES, THE BASKETBALL AND BASEBALL TEAMS PROVIDE BODY DEVELOPMENT FOR BOYS, WHILE INTRAMURALS FURNI SH AN IM- PROVEMENT PROGRAM FOR BOTH GIRLS AND BOYS. THE zxpenaemcz ou TEAMS AND an com- Psravuon BETWEEN TEAMS ALSO auaLos A spunav or sooo SPORTSMANSHIP. 3' 3 gi 5 2 ., . E Ji 5 . I i s 4 P QI E 3 5 2 2 5 Q E 5 L4 31' E 5 5 s 5 E 4 ..,.ssg BASKETBALL TEAM Front Row, Left to Right: Mr. Colburn, Robert Humphrey, Iohn Wiggers, lohri Weeks, Donald Palmer. Buck Row: lames Babcock, Roger Thompson, Victor Lofgren, George Christensen, Wilfred DGITICOU. Merle Wright. ' -f.. L ' r',L X an W Q ' ,.. we l , e A-- , 1 .' , A ,H r, i :r,,. it .FJ lst' . K, -YUF' V BASEBALL TEAM C1940-419 First Row. Left to Right: G e Warnshuis, Robert Wassink, lack Newhouse, Gordon Newhouse, Morris Legters lohn Wiggers, Iohn Weeks Standing: Mr. Colburn, Paul Edwards, Edward Gabriel, Glenn Maleski, Roger Thompf son, Merle Wright, William Callisch, Wayde Querreveld. 24 hi BASKETBALL IN THE FIRST GAME OF THE SEASON, GLYMER wAs UPSET av PANAMA ON THE HARDWOOD AT PANAMA av A SCORE or 25-I9, WIGGERS waTH 6 AND HUMPHREY WITH 7 WERE HIGH scoRERs, Due T0 THE FooR FOUL-SHOOTING, WE LOST. OuR SECOND GAME wAs PLAYED AT GHAUTAUQUA, wHERE WE WERE ovER- POWERED, 26-I5, BABCOCK WITH N AND HUMPHREY WOTH H TOOK SCORING HONORS. THE THIRD GAME wAs A NDN-LEAGDE GAME PLAYED WITH SPARTANSBURG AGAIN, THE TEAM wAs OUTSCORED av 22-IS, THE CLYMERITES WERE HELD scoRELEss THE FIRST HALF BUT OUTSCORED THE PENNSYLVANIA TEAM IN THE SECOND HALF av 6 POINTS, SCORING HoNoRs WENT TO Bos HUMPHREY, wHo HAD 5 POINTS, CLVMER JOURNEVEO T0 CELORON TO LOSE av IO POINTS, 23-I3. THE opposauc TEAM WAS Too TOUGH FOR THE SCRAPPY CLYMER LAD5, HDM- PHREY AGAIN WAS HIGH scDRER WITH U POINTS, FREWSBURG OUTPOINTED CLYMER av A NARROW MARGIN ON CLYMER'S FLOOR FDR DDR FIFTH LOSS, 28-26, AGAIN WE LOST BECAUSE or DDR FOUL SHOOTING. uSPEEDu WTGDERS CUT LOOSE FDR HIGH SCORE WITH 9, FOLLOWED ev HUMPHREY'S 7, THE WORST BEATING CLvMER TOOK THIS SEASON, WAS ON OUR own FLOOR AGAINST LAKEWOOD, THE SCORE AT THE FINAL wHssTLE WAS 30-I6. duces DAMcoTT wAs ON TOP, waTH 8 POINTS FDR THE LOSERS, THE sEvENTH GAME wAs wnTH THE RQVAL TEAM AT SHERMAN, CLVMER STILL COULDN'T GET THE WINNING SPIRIT OR SOMETHING -- AND wAs DowNED 32-QU. JOHN WIGGERS OPENED up AGAIN AS HE SCOREO 8 POINTS FOLLOWED sv HUMPHREY'S 7, CLVMER HAD ITS are NIGHT WHEN IT PLAYED MAvvnLLE HERE AND swAMFED THE OPPOSING QulNT FOR DDR FIRST vucToRv, 35.Il, IT WAS THE oNLv GAME WE woN lN'HE FIRST HALF OF THE SEASON, BABCOCK AND HuMpHREv WERE TTED WITH I3 POINTS EACH. SPUTLIGHT 1942 25 E 5 s 2 5 4 Q 72 3 5 x 5 Ei B 4 5 5 W kfBHii'iJiQTS ' 1 ' THE SECOND HALF STARTED orr WITH A VICTORV WHEN THE CONFIDENT PANAMA TEAM WAS POLOSHEO OFF AT CLVMER 3k-32, JIGGS DAMGDTT SANK THE SPEGTAGULAR SHOT THAT woN THE GAME IN THE LAST rEw SECONDS or PLAY, NSPEEDN WIGGERS wAs HIGH MAN WITH ll POINTS, CLVMER LOST A HEART-BREAKER WHEN CHAUTAUQUA JOURNEYED T0 OUR rLoon, AFTER THE GAME wAS OVER, BEAZELL SANK A FOUL SHOT TO WIN THE GAME. I5-IU, THE SCORE wAs EvENLv DISTRIBUTED AMONG THE CLYMER pLAvERS, CLVMER LED, 7-3, AT THE HALF, THTS GAME ALSO wAs LosT ON FOUL SHOOTING, THE LEAGUE CHA PS or CELORON OVERPOWERED CLvMEn Fon THE SEC- ON0 TIME. 3h-21, CLvMER OUT SCDRED THEM DURING THE THIRD QUARTER av rave POINTS, euT COULDN'T QUITE MAKE THE GRADE, THE SCORE wAs EVENLY DUSTRIEUTEO, ' IN ITS TWELFTH GNWE or THE SEASON, CLYMER DOWNED FREWSBURG DN THEIR COURT I9-48. WIGGERS GLlMaEo THE LADDER or HONOR wlTH ll POINTS. CLvMER wAs NEVER DEHTND, BUT HAD TO SET up A TIGHT DEFENSE TO HOLD THE oNE-ponNT LEAD DURING THE LAST EEw SECONDS or pLAv. IT MUST HAVE BEEN DETE MTNATIDN TO SETTLE THE SCORE wlTH LAKEWOOD THAT CAUSED THE CLVMER aovs, IN THE GAME or THE SEASON, TO DOWN THEM 28-23, ON THE LAKEWOOD FLOOR. DAMCOTT'S LONG SHOTS wEnE QUTSTANDTNG AND GAVE Hum A TOTAL or I2 POINTS Fon HIGH sconce, LACK or MANING FOUL SHOTS AGAIN CAUSED cLYMER'S DEFEAT FROM SHERMAN. CLVMER FANS sAw A SGRAPPY GAME WITH OUR RIVALS, BUT IN THE LAST QUARTER we LOST WIGGERS AND cum LUCK TURNED. THE FINAL SGDRE wAs 29-28, AGATN HSPEEDN WIGGERS wAs HIGH sconzn WITH IO POINTS, THE LAST GAME or THE SEASON WAS PLAYED AT MAYVILLE, THE CLv- MER SQUAD HANG up A SCORE or 31-IS, JIM BABCOCK ROLLED up I5 POINTS To az THE HIGHEST SGDRER IN A SINGLE GAME FOR CLVMER THIS SEASDN. WIGGERS WAS NOT FAR BEHIND wuTH 9, SPIJTLIGHT 1942 26A E .my r ' x L -in ,f fu- .- 4. -154 A 4 1 ,,:,,,1gq1 .gmc .1 1:,,:.xr.Q .W F 'w:.x . A , A , -.,.,,.W,m.q, 54 , 's 1 if- ww. f, :JN 5 r -fx: , X .V ,wp . ., ,., - ,W W, ', . 0: - t y V2-4-11 K K2 P I -.1 ' Biff, , ' - . F ' -'93 , x ' - v'- ww. f ' W 1 s 1 A 4 'K u ' 4 A ,, ., , 5 W .I film ,. . 1 -r '1.,. ' w 'A A M v - - .1 A Z a 1 I ,, W J z 'f,,T' , , , i i I I My .. , ,, E . -V. Tk' '-1 1 , 4. . vi . ' ' f BASEBALL THE I9Ml SEASON wAs PROBABEY THE MOST SUCCESSFUL BASEBALL SEASON THAT CLvMER HAS EVER ENJOYED, COACH COLBURN'S CHARGES WON THE COUNTY CLASS B CHAMPlONSHlP roR THE FIRST TIME IN THE HISTORY or THE SCHOOL, THEY CAME WITHIN AN INCH or wnNNuNG THE COUNTY A DIADEW FROM THE SILVER CREEK NINE AND MIGHT HAVE WON, HAD THE GAME GONE THE SCHEDULED NINE INNINGS, CLYMER woN EVERY GAME ERDM oUR LEAGUE MEMBERS! RIPLEY' FIND- LEv LAKE, PANAMA AND SHERMAN. Bv soME STRANGE TWIST or FATE EVERY GAME wAs CLOSE, MOST or DUR LEAGUE GAMES BEING WON ev EQTHER ONE OR Two RUNS, THIS, HOWEVER, MERELY AccENTUATEs THE FACT THAT DUR TEAM wAs or REAL CHAMPIONSHIP CALIBRE, EVERY TEAM MEMBER wAs A POTENTIAL THREAT AT BAT, AND IT wAs THE UNCANNY ABILITY or EACH ONE To nHIT IN THE CLUTCHN THAT WON THE LEAGUE ll CHAMPIONSHIP, AOD TO THAT, THE EAGT THAT WE HAD EXCEPT HAD IN IN THE ONE or AND AN NO BASEBALL DIAMOND AND HAD TO PLAY ALL OUR HOME GAMES ONE, AWAY FROM HOME AND YOU CAN SEE CAUSE FOR PRIDE WE OUR TEAM, COUNTY B PLAYOFFS WE PLAYED NMVVILLE FIRST, IT WAS THE BEST TEAMS wE PLAYED, AS IT HAS A STRONG DEFENSE EXCELLENT PlTCHER,.CROSS, UT LOOKEO LIKE MAYVlLLE'S BALL'GAME WtTH THE SCORE U-I IN THE FIRST HALF or THE LAST INNTNG, HOWEVER, THE WIGGERS SMASHEO A STNGLE, FLUSTERING THE PITCHER' wHo WALKED LALESKI. JACK NEWHOUSE ROLLED ONE T0 THE PITCHER wHo BOBBLED TT. WTTH THREE MEN ON BASE PAUL ED- WARDS BANGED OUT A SINGLE TO SCORE WIGGERS AND BRING THE scoRE TO A M-2 GDUNT, nLEFTYu LEGTERS, woTH THE OUTCOME or THE GAME RESTTNG ON HIS SHOULOERS, SMASHED A LINE'DRlVE HOMER ovER THE CENTERFlELDER'S.HEAD T0 WIN THE BALL GNWE. IN THE FINAL GAME WITH SQUTH DAYTON, THE WQNNER OVER BEMUS POINT, THE GAME WAS LESS SPEGTAGULAR, 'GQRDY' NEWHOUSE AL- LowED ONLY sux WELL-SCATTERED HITS AND HE HTMSELE MADE Two SOLID HITS TO STEAL THE SPOTLIGHT AND WIN, 5-N. THE CLASS A COUNTY CHAMPl0NSH1P GAME WAS PLAYED AT THE FALCON STADIUM IN JAMESTOWN WITH THE SILVER CREEK TEAM EURNISHTNG THE opposnTnoN. 'SlLVER'CREEK HAD UTS OWN WAY EGR THE FIRST SPUTLIGHT 1942 21 u wfevf.N. ,4. ,H ,wg 3-f M 4-Q ., -' '-M' 1 AP- , f 5' 'L . 'iw'-ve 4, ' - 3 aux., ' 1 Q . Q 1 . 4 , X, ,,,.,, h w? h sry, J. , W,6g:f.Y,, 0 :S A ,V wh . Yg A, 3 A Qi, . Vg --A-' ff' L fyikv M !'IfE3'?5ir - 7 J' -. 513 fi K 9 ',z ,f7fYs5f-T, iii' .Vi c ' .Q ,, , . .. U N 2 1:.,r'w 1' my U . in 4 1 K I Si I 'XM 14 ?'rQ fi-, . M hgwf? 1 ' , 1 F whim-1 -1 f 'ff r'-Y ' M . A ww u BX ,NN W3 if A Y ' Vg 1-4:-W 'I w 11 , ,, W V ,,,,-fiigwf' '.u,,',1 y 4 . 1 ,.. 1 ,, N. , .., . , - .,A'A3,f ,X- , -:gi A S . ., - x x ,A Nw. . k , V- -X, k . v ,2 u 7 la N A x - ' f, Q -M v v O A Q ' ' 1 V 1 J ' .A Ld' .g,i . x v,,,., , , ,. - f , , ,,. ,x v.. 7,55 , W ' x Q ' s J , , ' ,F 3 ' 5 3 ,V Ai. : .,,,, ...L- . Y V -1-my v.. 42. ' Cah.xni..a.'i1 QEYS LIHSAJEMRQ EEw INNINGS, WITH THE SPECTACULAR COLBURG HANDCUFFING oun aovs WITH Hus FAST EALL. HOWEVER, nGonovn NEWHOUSE wAs DOING uns usuAL sooo Jos IN A Less SPECTACULAR auT EquALLv EEEED- TIVE WAY, ALLOWING ONLY FIVE SCATTERED HITS DURING THE ENTIRE GAME, Snuvsn CREEK WENT AHEAD IN THE FIRST Foun INNINGS. 3-O, ON DNEARNED RUNS, CLVMER suasv urs SHACKLES IN THE sEv- ENTH TNNTNG WHEN UBTNGW CAFLISCH Hur A SINGLE PAST THE SHORT- STOP, AND nBos' Humpunev, oun LONGTDISTANCE HITTER. SEAMMED A wHasTLEn DOWN THE THTRD BASE LINE ron A Home RUN, THE GAME wAs CALLED IN THE EIGHTH INNING BECAUSE or ANOTHER SCHEDULED GAME, AND THE FINAL ENDED 3-2. Tuns YEAR'S TEAM LADKED THE !9Nl SENIORS, 'Gonov' NEWHOUSE, nLEFTYn LEGERS, UJDNQEW GABRIEL, NBINGR CAFLISCH, AND PADL EDWARDS. VETERANS Enom LAST YEAR WERE NSPEEDV. Wescens, NBDEW Humpuncv, GLENN NALESKI, JACK NEwHousE, AND 'Bos' WAss- sNx, Fnom FINDLEY LAKE's FINE TEAM, WE WERE BOLSTERED ev sucu STARS AS FINN AND COE AS wELL AS OTHER POTENTIAL BALL PLAVERS. T E SCORES FOR THE GAMES FOLLOW CLvMER 8 Rupgev 5 CLVMER 5 FINDLEY LAKE 2 CLYMER 8 RIPLEY 7 CLVMER 1 PANAMA 3 CEVMER 9 SHERMAN 8 CLYMER 9 SHERMAN 1 CLvMEn 8 FINDLEY LAKE 6 CLASS B SEml-FINAL COUNTY PLAYOFFS CLvMER 5 NAVVILLE U CLASS B FINAL COUNTY PLAYOFF CLYMBER 5 SOUTH DAYTON U CLASS A COUNTY CHAMPIONSHIP G CLYMER 2 SILVER CREEK 3 SPUTLIGHT 1942 28 E 5 2 .f i f ' ' HYGIENE CLASSES THE HYGIENE CLASSES STUDIED COMMUNITY HYGIENE, SAFETY EoucA. TION, AND FDRST AFD THIS YEAR UNDER MR, COLBURN'S GUIDANCE, IN coNJuNcTaoN wnTH.THEuR STUDY or FIRST AIO. THE STUDENTS PRACTICED BANDAGING AND LEARNED HOW TO ADMINISTER ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION, TNEv ALSO DQMRLETED TERM PROJECTS HAvuNc TQ D0 WITH COMWUNlTY HYGIENE, INTRAMURALS CLVMER CENTRAL HAS A SYSTEM THAT ENASLES ALL aovs AND GIRLS TO PARTICIPATE IN SPORTS DURING NOON HOURS. THROUGH THIS PLAN, ALL pupaLs INTERESTED IN SPORTS HAvE THE oppoRTuNnTv TO DEVELOP THETR ENTHUSDASM, ONLY Env: aovs FROM SCHOOL HAVE THE PROVILEGE or PLAYING ON THE VARSITY TEAM, THEREFORE, THE NooN HouR ATHLETICS HELP T0 BUILD up THE INDIVIDUAL so THAT HE cAN TARE ACTIVE PART LATER, PROVIDING HE HAS IMPROVED Sur- PncaENTLv, BASKETBALL, SOFT BALL, VOLLEY BALL, AND TOUCH FOOTBALL ARE PLAYED MOST OFTEN DURING THE vEAR, BOYS' INTRAAURALS DURING THE PouRTH PERIOD, THE SEVENTH AND ETGHTH GRADES occu- PQED THE svMNAsaum, EAGER TO TRv THEIR LUCK AT TOUCH FOOT- BALL, THE eovs oRoANozED roua TEAMS, THE TTGERS, CAPTAINED ev BILL COLE. wERE vucToRlous ovER THE HILLBILLIES, THE GIANTS, AND THE INDIANS, WTLEDR LDDKENHDDSE wAs CAPTAIN or THE HILLBILLIESQ FRANK NARESKT, THE GIANTSQ AND CARL CAFLISCH THE fNDlANS, THE FIFTH PERIOD aovs ORGANIZED THREE TEAMS TO PLAY YOUCH FOOTBALk, CAPTATNED ev JACK NEWHOUSE, THE BEES KTDKED THEIR wAv T0 VICTORY OVER THE NOSQUITOES, CAPTAINED av Boa HUMPHREY AND THE SPIDERS. WITH DONALD PALMER, AS cAnTAsN. AT THE BEGINNING or THE BASKETBALL SEASON, THE FIFTH PERIOD aovs SUDDENLY SESAME COLLEGIATE-MINDED AND oReANnzED THE HAR- VARDS, UNDER Boa WASSINKQ THE YALES, UNDER GEORGE KINNEV. AND THE BROWNS, UNDER GLENN WARNSHUIS, THE YALES DEFEATED THE OTHER TEAMS BV WINNING Sox GAMES OF THE EIGHT PLAYED, SPUTLIGHT 1942 29 L! ga 5 Fi ' ' ' ' 'L ' 'T ',4k.luu1lH1kIQididPK ' FIFTH PERIOD aovs PLAYED VOLLEYBALL DURING THE LATE WINTER MONTHS, JIM FINN CAPTAINED THE WEASELS, DONALD PALMER, THE SKUNKS, AND Rossa THOMPSON, THE poLEcATs. THE SIXTH PERIOD lNTnAMuHALs ron aovs FEATURED ToucH FOOTBALL DURING THE FIRST FEW MONTHS or SCHOOL, THE DAPTATNS or THE TEAMS WERE RICHARD COLE, or THE Rosssg JACK EDWAHDS, or THE DAlSlES: AND HOMER AVERY or THE PANSTES. THE PANSIES, DES- PITE THETH NAME, WON THE SERIES. THE HUMPS DAPTATNED ev BDE HUMPHREY, THE CAMELS LED ev JOHNNY GIBBONS, AND THE NULES wuTH Vac LDEEREN AS CAPTAIN WERE THE THREE BASKETBALL TEAMS wHucH cDMpETED ron HONOR DURING THE WINTER MONTHS IN THE SIXTH PERIOD NOON HOUR, GIRLS' INTRAMURALS DDHTND THE FOURTH PERIOD, THE sEvENTH AND ElGHTH GRADE GIRLS PLAYED NEwcoMEE DURING THE FALL AND PART or THE WTNTER. CARDL HEWES LED THE RED Sox, CLARA YAIKO, THE FLYAWAYS, AND BETTY WHITE, THE YANKEES, THE FLYAWAYS FLEW OFF. WINNING EIGHT or THE TEN GAMES PLAYED, BASKETBALL TEAMS or THE FOURTH PERIOD GTHLS wEHE THE WINNERS LED ev EVELVN GROTERS. THE TIGERS LED av JACQUELYN OTT, AND THE BASHETEEHS CAPTATNED av FLORA NALESKI. THE SIXTH PERTDD GIRLS PLAYED VOLLEYBALL THIS FALL, THEv WERE DIVIDED INTO TEAMS CALLED THE FIGHTERS, THE SISSIES, AND THE TOUGHIES, CADTATNS or THE TEAMS wEHE WINIFRED PTTT, LEADING THE FIGHTERSQ DOROTHY PFEIFFER, THE TOUGHUESQ AND PAULINE SMITH, THE Snssnss. THE TOUGHIES ouTsHoNE THE OTHER Two TEAMS, DDRTND THE WINTER THE SIXTH PERIOD GIRLS PLAYED BASKETBALL wlTH EVELVN SWEET, CAPTAIN or THE ADES, Loss ESHELMAN CAP- TATN or THE BASKETEERS, AND Loss RHEBERGEN, CAPTAIN or THE ACES, THE ACES WON,THE SERIES, IN A SECOND INTRAMURAL THE GTRLS AGAIN CHOSE To PLAY EASKETEALL. DOROTHY PFEIFFER, CAP- TAINED THE BOMBERS, AND DCROTHY YAIKO DAPTATNED THE ROCKETSQ w:TH JADHTE NUTTALL AS CAPTAIN or THE DIVERS, SPIITLIGHT 1942 30 v 5 s E . fi X75 IIIIE HIL :N X :B ENGLISH EO R E I G N LANGUAGES LI BRARY CLUB COMIVIU N IT Y ACTIV TIES IN SCI-IGOL OUR SCHOOL PREPARES ITS YOUTH ron So- CIAL PARTICIPATION ev Paovaounc AN ACTIVITY PERIOD EACH oAv. CLuas WHICH HOLD SOCIAL MEETINGS HAVE BEEN ORGANIZED. THROUGH THESE cnuas, AS WELL AS THROUGH ouR KNOWLEDGE or ENG- LISH AND FOREIGN LANGUAGES, THE vouTH or oun SCHOOL ARE PREPARED ron A wELL-Rounoso LIFE, Ev ENCOURAGING ITS MEMBERS To READ sooo LITERATURE, THE LIBRARY CLUB' IN PARTICULAR, PRE- PARES oun YOUTH ron SOCIAL PARTICIPA- TION, Ir ONE DOES NOT READ, HE cAN- NOT UNDERSTAND TOPICS WHICH ARISE Amoms HI s FELLOMVIEN, Bv OPENING ITS moons TO COMMUNITY Ac- TIVITIES, THE SCHOOL TIES CLOSELY oun RELATIONS WITH THE CQMMUNITY, THROUGH THE PARENT-TEACHER ASSQCIATIQN, TEACHERS Ano PARENTS BECOME BETTER ACQUAINTED, IN THIS DIVISION OF THE YEARBOOK, WE HOPE TO SHOW THAT THE SCHOOL IS PRE- PARING YOUTH FOR SOCIAL PARTICIPATION THROUGH CLUBS, THROUGH SOCIAL GATHER- INGS. AND THROUGH COOPERATION WITH THE COHMUNITY, nf 5 4 ai LIBRARY CLUB First Row. Le!! io Highi: Robert Wassink, Iohn Bridges, Iohri Neckers, Irwin Bensink, Wayde Quer- reveld. Second Row: Iohn Weeks, Betty Neclcers, Maxine Legters, Iurie Caflisch, Lillian Wiggers, Nyla Wallace, Merle Wright. Top Row: Miss Hemster, Ruth Schurman, Arlys Green, Hazel Foster, Dorothy Pfieller, Virginia Vruink, Deleo Gravink. P. T. A. OFFICERS Left fo Right: Miss Irene Tom, Mrs. Delbert King, Mr, Wesley G. Miller, Mrs. Ralph Thompson, BUSINESSMEN'S CLUB 31 4 vi fi 5 2 Q r ENGLISH DEPARTMENT ENGLISH I nIVANHOEn ev SIR WALTER SCOTT, wAs THE Mosr ExTENsIvE READING PROJECT or THE YEAR FOR Msss WbRDOFF'S ENGLISH I CLASS, wHo ALSO REAo MANY sHoRT STORIES, AFTER REAGING HIVANHOE., EACH STUDENT WORKED ON A SUMMARY PROJECT or THE NovEL. IN ADDI- TIoN TO oTHER READING, THE CLASS IMPROVED THEIR ABILITY IN GRAMMAR AND COMPCSITION. 'SCHOLAST1Cn. A WEEKLY MAGAZINE roR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS, ruRNIsHEo MUCH ENJovNENT, ENQLEISI-I II .SILAS MARNERU av GEORGE ELIOT, wAs THE NOVEL READ ev THE ENGLISH II cLAss THIS YEAR, THE SOPHOMORES THEN COMPILED A eoox or ORIGINAL SHORT sToRIEs. OTHER cLAss ACTIVITIES or THE GROUP WERE coNoucTING A Quaz ON nSArETv' AND PRESENTING RLAvs Enom THEIR PROSE.5QQ PoETRv sooxs, IN ADDITION, THE 'sOHOLASTlC'. A wEExLv SCHOOL MAGAZINE, wAs READ, DISCUSSED, AND ENJOVED av THE cLAss, ENGLISH III AMERICAN LITERATURE wAs THE SPECIAL EMPHASIS or THE ENGLISH III GLASS THIS YEAR: THE PUPILS STUQIED VARIOQS FORMS -- THE NOVEL, DRAMA, BIOGRAPHY, THE SHORT STORY, THE ESSAY, POETRY, ANo MAGAZINES - FROM THE EARLY DAYS UNTIL THE PRESENT, BE- SIDES MAKING ANTHoLoGIEs or THEIR FAVORITE POEMS ANo KEEPING NOTEBOOKS. THE cLAss ENGAGED IN A VARIETY or OTHER ACTIVITIES INCLUDING sruov or GRAMMAR, INFORMAL DISCUSSION, AND KEEPING up TO DATE wITH THE Bl-WEEKLY PAPER, HEVERYDAY READlNGn. ENGLISH IV nMACBETHn AND 'A TALE OF Two CITIESH wERE OUTSTANDING IN THIS vEAR's READING RRoGRAM IN ENGLISH IV, IN ADDUTION, THE cLAss READ sHoRT STORIES, Roems, AND ESSAYS: DID SOME ORIGINAL HRI- TING AND COMPLETED Two wonxaooxs IN GRAMMAR, THRGUGH THE HIGH SCHOOL Boon LEAGuE, THE cLAss PURCHASED A NUMBER or aooxs. SPIITLIGHT 1942 32 4 v S? w 4 A e A J 9 FOREIGN LANGUAGE DEPARTMENT LATIN I DID vou CHANCE To SEE ANY or THE LATIN I RDPILS RRESENTING PLAvsI MISS MEMSTERIS RURILS ENLIVENED THEIR STUDIES ev DRAMATIzING THEIR LATIN STORIES. To DEMONSTRATE ROMAN socIAL LIFE, CUSTOMS, AND LITERATURE, THE PUPILS MADE POSTERS AND SCROLLS, THEY ALSO READ ESSAYS ExPLAINING RDMAN LIFE AND CUSTOMS. LATIN II CAESAR'S LIFE, INCLUDING THE GALLIC WAR, AND THE ADvENTuREs JASON AND HERCULES MADE A COMPLETE YEAR or READING FOR THE LATIN II CLASS, UNDER THE GUIDANCE or MISS HEMSTER, EVERY MONTH THE MEMBERS READ 'REG GESTAEH A NEWSPAPER IN WHICH THE NEws or TODAY IS PRESENTED IN LATIN, FRENCH I Bv LEARNING T0 PRONOUNCE DIFFERENT VOWELS AND BY LEARNING THE FRENCH ALPHABET, THE FRENCH I STUDENTS NOW ARE ABLE TO SPEAK THE FOREIGN LANGUAGE THEY HAVE STUDIED, PROJECTS DURING THE YEAR WERE WRITING LETTERS IN FRENCH AND ALSO LISTING ARTICLES THAT THE STUDENTS WANTED FDR CHRISTMAS, FRENCH II AFTER LEARNING THE RUDIMENTS or FRENCH GRAMMAR, PUPILS IN Moss HEMSTER'S FRENCH ll cLAss EEGAN READING FRENCH NEWS- PAPERS AND NOVELS, EACH MEMBER or THE CLASS wRoTE T0 A RDRIL IN FRANCE. AND SEVERAL REPLIES DELIGHTED OUR PUPILS AND GAVE THEM AN INSIGHT INTO EUROPEAN LIFE, ' SPIITLIGHT 1942 33 E i ai E LIBRARY CLUB WISHING T0 BECOME BETTER ACQUAINTED wITH eooxs AND WITH THE LIBRARY, AEQDT TwENTv PEOPLE JOINED THE LIBRARY CLUB, LILLIAN WIGGERS WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT. OTHER OFFICERS or THE CLUB ARE DELED GRAVINK, VICE-PRESIDENT: NvLA WALLACE, SECRETARY: AND VIRGINIA VRUINK, TREASURER, AT THE OPENING OF THE BASKETBALL SEASON, THE CLUB MADE AND SOLD BASKETBALL LAPEL ORNAMENTSQ VARIOUS MEMBERS ENTERTAINED THE CLUB IN HOMES, THE MEMBERS HAVE LEARNED TO CHECK OUT BOOKS ANU TO PREPARE BOOKS FOR CIRCULATION, PARENT-TEACHER ASSOCIATION THE AIM or THE PARENT-TEACHER ASSOCIATION IS UTD PROMOTE 'THE WELFARE OF CHILDREN AND YOUTH IN HOME, SCHOOL, CHURCH AND COMMUNITYN, IN SEPTEMBER, THE GROUP SPONSORED A COMMUNITY WELCOME FOR THE TEACHERS. FINANCIALLY, THE P.T.A. HAS AIDED THE GIRL Scours, THE RED CRoss, AND A CHILD wHo wAs IN NEED or MEDICAL TREATMENT, THE VICTORY Boon CAMPAIGN T0 COLLECT aooxs EDR MEN IN SERVICE, wAs ANOTHER PROJECT OF THE ASSOCIATION, MRS, DELDERT KING HEADS THE ORGANIZATION WITH MR, WEsLEv MILLER, AS VICEQPRESI- DENT: MISS IRENE TON AS SECRETARY: AND MRS, R,A, THOMPSON AS TREASURER, AMERICAN LECIION THE DAMCOTT - JONES PosT OF THE AMERICAN LEGION SPONSORED THE MEMORIAL DAv sERvICEs AND THE DECORATION or GRAVES, THE LECIDN IS THE PARENT ORGANIZATION or THE Bov SCOUTS, MEMBERS or THE AMERICAN LECIDN HELD THEIR ANNUAL ARMISTICE DAv DINNER IN THE SCHOOL CAFETERIA, MR. GILBERT TON AS COMMANDER LEADS THE DAMCOTT - JONES PDsTg MR, CLARENCE SRITzER, MR. WILLIAM RHEBERGEN, AND MR, HERMEY BENNINK ARE VICE-COMMANDERS, MR, CLAYTON BRIDGES, CHAPLAINQ MR. LEON LEGTERS, QuARTERMAsTERg MR, CLAYTON BRIDGES, CHAIR. MAN or AMERICANISM: AND MR, CLARENCE RHEEERGEN, CHAIRMAN or THE Bov SCOUT COMMITTEE SPIITLIGHT 1942 3h if 5 E il BUSINESSMENS CLUB THE PURPOSE or THE BUSlNESSMEN'S CLUB IS TO ENcoURAcE COOPER- ATloN AMONG BUSINESSMEN AND T0 FOSTER PROJECTS FOR THE EENE- FIT OF THE CO MUNITY, DURING THE SUMMER MONTHS' THE BUSINESSMEN OF' CLYMER SPONSOR BAND CONCERTS BY THE HIGH SCHOOL BAND, THIS YEAR THE BUSI- NESSMEN BUILT AN ICE-SKATING RINK FOR LOCAL SKATERS, AN AN- NUAL BANQUET F-'OR THE BASKETBALL TEAM IS ANOTHER SERVICE OF' THE GROUP. MR, EARL BECKERINK, owNER or THE RED AND WHITE STORE, IS PRESIDENT or THE BusoNEssMEN's CLUB. MR. EDGAR TECULVER, owNER or THE Esso GAs STATION as VICE-PRESIDENTQ AND MR, MILTON DUINK, owNER or THE GULF GAs STATION, SECRETARY ANU TREASURER, DAIRYNEN'S LEAGUE 'To GET A LIVING PRICE RoR MlLKn IS THE AIM or THE DAlRYMEN'S LEAGUE, THROUGH EFFORTS or THE LEAGUE, MEMBERS HAVE PRocUREo FOR THEmsELvEs EQUAL SHARES or THE FLUID MARKET AND HAVE BEN- EETTED av THE ROGER-ALLEN LAw WHICH THEY EFFECTEO. THE LEA- GUE HAS AN ESTABLISHED BAReAeNnNs AGENCY, INCREASING DIRECT DELIVERY T0 THE CONS MER AND UNITING OTHER GROUPS TO coopERATE EoR THEIR AIM ARE OTHER ACTIVITQES or THE GROUP. BECAUSE THE DAIRYMEN'S LEAGUE MEETS REEULARLY IN THE CLYMER CENTRAL SCHOOL, WE FEEL ESPECIAL INTEREST IN THE ORGANIZATION THE CLOSE COOPERATION BETWEEN THE SCHOOL AND THE COMMUNITY MAY BE SEEN IN ITS RELATIONSHIP TO THE DAlRYMEN'S LEAGUE, Ik!!! D0 YOU REMEMBER.- WHEN JAMES FTNN GOT A BLACK CAT? WHEN GILBERT MEVERINK GOT A LITTLE CART WHEN CHESTER ORGAN GOT A BABY DOLLT . WHEN JUNE CAFLISCH USED HER scREAMs IN THE SENIOR PLAVT SPUTLIGHT 1942 35 E '1 3 105 eusnmess EDUCATION HGME ECONOMICS 4- H CLUBS MARCVGGLD RAYS CAMERA CLUB UNDER THE CRITICAL CONDITIONS or THE WORLD TODAY, USEFUL LIVES ARE ESSEN- TIAL, ANYONE wHo wANDERs ABOUT WITHOUT A GOAL as SURELY NOT LIVING A USEFUL LTEE, OUR SCHOOL AIMS T0 PREPARE YOUNG PEOPLE PDR USEFUL -LIVING IN THE COMMUNITY AND NATION, THE COMWERCIAL DEPARTMENT PREPARES STUDENTS PDR POSITIONS IN THE aus:- NEss woRLD, THE HOME ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT PRE' PARES GIRLS FOR ECONOMICAL HOME Lore. THE NATION HAS NEED or HOME ECONOMISTS, WHERE COULD THEY BE TRATNED BETTER THAN AT SCHOOL? THE U-H Cpuas, AS WELL AS OTHER DR- GANIZATOONS, SHOW MEMBERS THE vALuE or USEFUL LnvcNe, THE STAFF or THE MARO'GOLD RAYS as PREPARED FDR MORE USEFUL LIVING av LEARNING TO BE DEPENDABLE AND EFFI- COENT. IN THIS SECTOON, we HOPE TO SHOW vou HOW THE YOUTH OF OUR SCHOOL ARE PRE- PAREO FOR USEFUL LIVING, hu' N Y' E5 sp 5 Q Ei A 51 S 'S 4-H CLUBS Front Row: Pauline Warnshuis, So- phie Grden, loanne Wate, Doris Far- dink, Miss Acquard, Charlotte Stark- weather, Ava King, Carol Hewes, Gwendolyn Raymond. Second Row: lames Thompson, Winifred Pitt, Gen- eva TeWinkle, Mary Zojonc, Rosemary Williams, Pauline Smith, Ruth Schur- man, Lucille Meyerink, Buena Dewey, Ardys Green, Heien Starkweather, Gil- bert TeWinkle, Third Row: Leslie Weeks, Thomas Spacht, Albert Beck- erink, Charles Kolstee, lack Edwards, Everett TeWinkle, Walter Hill, Ray- mond Turck, Andrew Roush, Robert VanEarden, Howard Turck, Carlton King, Top Row: Walter Smith, lohn Goldberg, Cliltord Skinner, Glenn Warnshuis, Iohn Weeks, Cloud Roush, Carl Catlisch, Richard Goodwill, De- wayne lohnson, George Maleski, Lyle Warnshuis MARO'GOLD RAYS STAFF Front Row, Left to Right: Velma Tee winkle, Ruth Titus, Winitred Pitt, Velma King, George Christensen, Nyla Wallace, Vivian ing, lacquelyn Nut- tall, Pauline Bennink. Second How: Miss Davis, Evelyn Sweet, Helen Sweet, Arlys Green, Virginia Vruink, Betty Luce, Dorothy Pfeiffer, Lois Rhef bergen, lune Caflisch, Miss Mordoft. Third Row: Carol McCann, Lucy Schruers, Lois Eshelman, Rosemary Williams, Pauline Smith, Norma Ten Huisen, Lillian Wiggers, Maxine Leg- ters, Top Row: Gilbert Willink, Wayde Ouerreveld, Donald Palmer, Arthur Hair, Walter Hill, Claud Roush, Merle Wright, Bryce Hair, Iohn Weeks. CAMERA CLUB In Front: Leland Swarm: First Row. Lett to Right: lohn Bridges, Lucy Schruers, Nyla Wallace, De- leo Gravink, Gordon Holthouse, Second Row: Wayde Querreveld, Gail Thompson, Virginia Vruink, Ernest Kachel, Paul Meyerink, Iohn Neckers. 5 v COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT INTRODUCTION T0 BUSINESS COMMUNICATION, FINANCE AND BANKING, SAVINGS, PURCHASING AND ORDERING, AND sooo MANAGEMENT HAVE BEEN THE UNITS STUDIED av MR, BROWNIS INTRODUCTION TO BusINEss CLASS, BOOKKEEPING CLASS BOOKKEEPING FOR PERSONAL AND VQCATIONAL USE IS THE AIM OF THE BQOKKEEPING COURSE, NEW TAX LEGISLATION REQUIRES MORE BOOK- KEEPING AND BOOKKEEPERS. BUSINESS ARITHNETIC THE COURSE IN BUSINESS ARITHMETIC sTRENcTHENs THE roun FUNDA- MENTAL PROCESSES or ARITHMETIC, INCREASES KNOWLEDGE or BUSI- NESS ORGANIZATION wITH SPECIAL PROBLEMS PERTINENT TO EACH TYPE, AND ENcouRAcEs STUDENTS T0 APPLY THEIR KNOWLEDGE or ARITHMETIC T0 EvERvDAv BUSINESS PROBLEMS, THIS YEAR STATE AND FEDERAL INCOME TAX PROBLEMS RECEIVED MORE EMPHASIS AS MoRE PEOPLE ARE REACHED DUE TO THE LOWEREO EXEMPTIONS, TYPING TYPING EDR THE I9U2 NSPDTLIEHTW AND FDR THE NNMROIGOLD RAYSN AND TYPING POETRY ANTHOLOGIES AND LETTERS, BOTH BUSINESS AND SOCIAL, WERE PRACTICAL TASKS or THIS YEARIS TVPINE CLASS, IN ADDITION, THE TYPISTS LEARNED T0 PREPARE TABULATIONS, MANU- SCRIPTS AND LEGAL DOCUMENTS, THE I9NO-UI cLAss RATED THIRD IN THE COMMERCIAL CONTEST AT SILVER CREEK. JUNE CAFLISCH, PADLINE SMITH, VIRGINIA VRUINK, GILBERT WILLINK, AND ELINOR CRoscuTT BECKERINK ARE THE PEOPLE wHo MADE THIS TEAM succEssruL. SPIITLIGHT 1942 37 'M .fs , : A ' 1 'f -. v .S M. 'A Q ,M . Q rm X . ,,.,, Hu ax N- fd .,f 13 Lju J gf, fi-1 'gf 1 , ,, ,.,.V.1V.,.,w wx, f .qagy W' Limp , ,ng ,-,- gl., v ,A if w t- 5.3 5:5 az MW 'wr X '-',',.: ' !,.,, ' ' . ,?E,,f+:4..w ,'f w. 'Q 4 Q , 'N W , B , , . ' Vg Kr' L , , ' , 21, ' Q :' af, , . . 4 ., . ,, 1 fre Q-1 , x HOME ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT HOME ECONOMICS I I THE FUNDAMENTALS or HOME ECONOMICS, INCLUDING COOKING, SEWING AND HDME MANAGEMENT, ARE STUDIED ev THE HoME ECONOMICS I CLASS, IN CONNECTION WITH SEWING, THE GIRLS MADE DRESSES FOR THEMSELVES, THEv ALSo LEARNED TO CAN ERDITS AND VEGETABLES AS wELL AS TO PREPARE MEALS, OTHER FIELDS or STUDY WERE CHILD CARE AND CARE or THE HoME. HOMEMAKING A RED AND BLUE PINAFORE APRONS ARE ONE OF THE .Av AND PRACTICAL RESULTS or MISS AcQuARD'S HOMEMAKING A CLASS, THE GIRLS, IN Two TEAMS, MADE APRONS TO MATCH EACH or THE TWO KITDHENS IN THE HOMEMAKING ROOM, THE ELEVEN GIRLS LEARNED Eooo PREPARA- TION, INCLUDING How TO MAKE A GARDEN, How TO CAN Eooos, AND How TO coox MEALS, THEY STDDIED Fooo NEEDS AND How T0 MEET THEM ECONOMICALLY, AT CHRISTMAS TIME, THEY MADE CHRISTMAS TREE DECORATIONS AND GIFTS. HOMEMAKING D CLASS FIRST AID AND HOME NURSING MADE up ONE MAIN FIELDOF STUDY FOR MISS AcQuARo'S HOMEMAKING D CLASS, ALONG WITH THEIR WORK IN CHILD CARE, THE GIRLS MADE CLOTHING EoR CHILDREN AS wELL AS SEWING ON RED CRoSS PROJECTS, IN ADDITION, THE CLASS STUDIEO wAvS FOR IMPRDVING FAMILY LIFE AND WAYS EDR SAVING TIME AND ENERGV. FUNNY PAPER CHARACTERS WASH Tuass ,............ ......,....I.,......., HOMER AVERY TILLIE ...,,........,.......,..............,...,..,... .I.. ...... LILLIAN WIGGERS NDON MULLINS ...I......, - .......... .........I.,.I DOYLE SHlELDS DAGwooD .I,.........,..,.,..,,,... , ......S...........,........ ...............I..,... JOHNNY WEEKS FRECKLES ,...,.....,I.... - ...,...I.............,............I,.,,.... .....,......... JOHNNY BRIDGES BooTS AND HER BDDDIES .,........ ........,...,. JUNE CAELISDH BLONDIE ............I...........,.............,.......,.....,.. ........ -SHIRLEY BRADLEV PDREVE ,,.....,,I. ............. RDGER THOMPSON SPIITLIGHT 1942 38 ,J5F9f' 'nf--V a,u:'f'S:,'1,y : if fr fled- . I4 nf W. ' 1 ww a , . ie, A ..- ., ., 4, ,L .vi . fx, , .I g :M , Q . 'le v Y, Q V., sz.-' HQ, eifg jg .. ,Q L 1'- ,, 1 1 N.: , . y .nv . g 4 , , A A .F X.. 4 X CLYMER 4-H CLUBS 'To PREPARE OURSELVES T0 MAKE A BETTER, MORE USEFUL LlVlNGn IS THE AIM or THE Two CLYMER U-H CLUBS -- THE LIGHTNING Bucs AND THE JUNIOR AMERICANS, wHosE ADVISERS ARE Mass DAVIS AND MR, THAYER, REsREcTnvELv, WINIFRED PITT as PRESIDENT or THE LIGHTNING Bussg WALTER HILL VICE PRESIDENT: JACK EDWARDS, SECRETARY: AND GENEVA TEWINKLE, REPOR7ER, Jommv THOMPSON wAs ELECTED PRESIDENT or THE JUNIOR AMERICANS: OTHER OFFICERS ARE SLANEV WALFORD, VICE-PRESIDENTQ SOPHIE GRDEN, SECRETARY: KATHRYN GROTERS, TREASURERQ CAROL HEWES, REPORYERQ AND CAROL HEWES AND 5PLYS GREEN, CHEERLEAD- ERS. Bv PLANNING VICTORV GARDENS, THE CLUBS HAVE AaDED THE DEFENSE PRDDRAM. WHEN SEVERAL MEMBERS or THE LIGHTNING Bucs DISCOV- ERED A COMMON INTEREST IN Musee, THEY oRsANnzED A U-H BAND, BOTH CLUBS HAVE HELD SOCOAL PARTIES AND MEETINGS WUIH OTHER U-H CLUBS, MANY MEMBERS ATTENDED THE ACHIEVEMENT NIGHT AT SHERMAN, N NORTH CLYMER 4-H CLUBS THE PURPOSE or THE TWO NORTH CLYMER N-H CLUBS ns To LEARN T0 HELP ouRsELvEs AND OTHERS THROUGH ouR H-H CLUB WORK, THE Two ORGANIZATIONS, uTHE SPARK PLUGSn EDR Dovs AND nTHE BRIGHT STAR CLUBN EDR GIRLS, HAVE DONE MuoH TOWARD A MORE USEFUL LurE. LESLIE WEEKS as PRESIDENT OF THE nSPARK PLUGSHQ JOHN WEEKS, VICE-PRESIDENT: AND GERALD TURDK, SECRETARY AND TREASURER, MR, A, E, WEEKS, AND RAYMOND TURCK ARE THE CLUB ADVISERS, OE THE WBRIGHT STARSn ARLENE ADAMS os PRESIDENT: HELEN STARK- wEATHER, SECRETARY AND TREASDRER, AND Mass ALICE ACQUARD AND MRS, MARGARET HEMINK, AOVISERS or THE CLUB, BUENA DEWEY AND CHARLOTTE STARRWEATHER ARE THE TWO CHEERLEADERS, WHILE HELEN STARRwEATHER as THE SONG LEADER, SPUTLIGHT 1942 39 4-. , In A :w71.,f ' V ' ' wi' ', ,- -p W, 0 , ,J i. xv , .y. . s m .' ff .1 : U-4, , - , , , , ,yn ,ys ' , YW.. V ' . - ? '1 ' A-W. . ' -if ' V-,' , '1 r-9, '-2 W- H f -2 , - f'fff!'pif,.,:'m2fi?3f1' v ' J - gf , . V f , , -fs, H , .11 1 ,- K Hfxiy- 3 -f 'l 1-' ' 'Q1 . . --v ' ' .'f 1:'+,v 5 . X A N ' A x 1 , ' .LV V V, ' If a' '.. 3, X ., ,I 4 -.. .'.:,-,-gllg 'f 4' I ,,. ll . Q ' , , pr - Q, ' ' 1' :A 'Q' ' V ff - 1 -I fi, .N -:Y - - ,-,gf--, ,, . , . -- V . . J , ' x , . .. ,W .N - -f 1 .1 , , A, .- vr k,..1 , '1 . . ' x,' W' , . 3'-.31,ff ,,,.5,, av .f ,ma 1.316 1 r 9 5 -1 -x, .fin N L , 'DQ' Iwi? 4. fifvf-ggi: . gy' 'I . ,jf , L MAROGOL D ' RAY S THE nMARO'GOLD RAYSn HAS A THREEFDLD PURPOSE! To GIVE SER- VICE TO THE SCHOOL, To STIMULATE INTEREST IN JOURNALISM, AND TO TRAIN PEOPLE EDR LEADERSHIP THROUGH THE DEVELOPMENT or DERENDAGILITV AND THE ABILITY TO EXPRESS IDEAS. TEN ISSUES or nMARO'GOLO RAVSU HAVE ARPEARED UNDER THE DIREGTIDN or EDlTOR'VELMA KING, IN DECEMBER, WORKERS ON SCHOOL PUBLICA- TIDNS RDDE ON A SCHOOL SUS To BUFFALO TO THE MEETING OF THE WESTERN NEw YORK INTERSCHOLASTIC PRESS ASSOCIATION, STAFF EDITDR E........... - .........T...........E...,,......... ........................ ,....,........E,.......,..,..T,...............T,.....,...., VELMA KING ASSISTANT EDITOR ,T,......... ,...................T...........,., NYLA JUNE WALLACE SPORTS WRITERS T....T.....T..,. ....T....... JOHN WEEKS, MERLE WRIGHT LITERARY EDITORS ,,..,...,.T......... - ,..S.....,T..,........,.......S ..,...........T........,...,., EVELVN AND HELEN SWEET REPORTERS ......T.......,,.....,....,..T..................,.,....,A......,.................,....,.,.,...... EVA BACHER, PAULINE BENNINK CARL CAELISGH, NORMAN CDE, ARTHUR HAIR, BRYCE HAIR, WALTER HILL VDVIAN KING, NAXINE LEGETERS, BETTY LUCE, CARDL MDCANN, PAUL MEYERINK, JACQUELYN NUT- TALL, LELAND SWARM, NORMA TENHUISEN, VELMA TEWINKLE JOHN WEEKS, LILLIAN WIGGERS, GERTRUOE WILLIAMS, ROSEMARY WILLIAMS. TYPISTS .,..........,.................,,, ,.,..,...T....,..........,,....,..,,,...,.,,.,....,......,.. ..... JUNE CAFLISCH, Loss ESHELMAN ARLYS GREEN, DONALD PALMER, DOROTHY PFEIFFER, WINI- FRED PITT, LOIS RHEBERGEN, Lucv SDHRUERS, DOYLE SHIELDS, PAULINE SMITH, EVELYN SwEET, HELEN SwEET, VIRGINIA VRUINK, LILLIAN WIGGERS, ROSEMARY WILLIAMS GILBERT WILLINK, SECRETARY, .S..,..,.,,..............,....,....,,. . .I ,,,...,....S . T.......,,......,..,............,..,,.,..,...,E,..,., RUTH TITUS BUSINESS MANAGER ,,...,...,...... .,.......I.,....,...........,..,...,.,..,,..,,. GEORGE CHRISTENSEN ASSISTANT MANAGERS .......,.,...,. .,,........ NAYDE QUERREVELD, BRvcE HAIR ART ADVISER ,,,,...E.,......,..,,.....,.,....... ..,....,.,I.....,.,....,...E..........I...........,..,.,..I...,.,..,....,,.. MISS DAVIS LITERARY AOVISER ,I,..,... i ,..,.....,...,..., ..,............,...........,......I...,..,...,..,.,.,...,E..,.....,..., ....,...... MISS MORDOFF FUNNY PAPER CHARACTERS LITTLE LULA ,,.,...,..,,, ...,.,..,...,...,......,.,.,...,........,.,,.,.,...,,.,...............,,......,,.E,.. .........,...........,..,...,..S AUDREY DUINK TIM TYLER ..,.........,,... ....... .....,.,..........,. .,.,....,,.,.,.,..,.... ........................,... wMELvIN CASLER HANS AND FRITZ ,,..,,.. .,......... JIM BABCOCK AND SPEEDY WIGGERS SUPERMAN ..........,,.I..,..., ..,..,...,..,......,.. ......,.,.,. ....,. I ,..............,........I,,.,..S.........,,.,,..,....I Boa HUMPHREY SKEEzIx AND NINA ,,.,....,.... ...,. ..,,,..,,,,,I VIRGINIA AND FREDDIE DIXIE DUGAN ..,.....,,........,......E., ..,..,..,......,.,I...II..I.......,,,I......,..,.,.,...,...,.. I............,....,.,.,..,.... EvA BACHER MAGGIE AND JIGGS ........ H. .,.....,,, BARBARA MEERDINK, JIGGS DAMCOTT SPUTLIGHT 1942 no 1 ,, 1.4-. ,. ' -, f iv .tu ' '. ! n Y 1,15 35 -'rg W -f ,. 'Jig Egg! c , ,A , ., ' jf - 1 . , '- 15+-T n 1. 4. :gfi-1 ' rf 2 .- : :iA.5x:fb A ,341 . ffgl' ., ' ' W. 1 iflfgw , , , H ' - : .'-.-Ja,-V' ' , , b 1 my 1. ' L . fi 1 4-gh, Qs if. , f , :Q aa -x 9155155 ,L .-M t P ,f . W f. ,QA -K l - . w f' H M41 9 L ,fri .F , W-.Evite m 4i,,.'jr41.L .4 ' .4 .-ww,f!J -ww' H. . . 1 lf - L K n ' ' 3 2' Q' Q , ,fQ ,, 4 -: '- if ', 71, K, 'fy ' Q I . ' f4gl?zfg,, . -H f ' ' 5' 1 Q , 'fr -wif, ,, ' ' ' . -W ,f 12 4 -:iff 1 M' f FV- Gisitf. + ' - 34. L- f-' 'ME ' , A ' , 1 1.35 naituff . rj !,.54w7 's .f ,,. , Q. M yr ,,,g,,' -' -. Y k,,,.iyw 55- f,,.' f ' 1 , , '28 a fm'-, , ,-',-e.4,,'.. '-fy , A ., - - , V-VN, -5,1 ' H P gli'-' 1 ' - '4' 'fl I, 4 3--L-1 fv A .TWT-' , 'R - ML ' ' . . 3 'kmwla-. ,,'L, Wie' 4 f f f- I, f, , i 1 , .jf , 1 V , 1 U .yn :VU K , p 4 ,FP fif.K5. - ,f .f , V' if f A - , 1 - M1 12? gag ' ' x. - 4 . P' w'Z'.f c,I 43 W ' K if . , '-,ir.i'f .1'11t'a ,, 4, 21,172 j 1-4wfa?'f- ,W 'Q Q L X. ,V V ,Q ,Q : . ,,4'f X f' ' ' ,, 3 ,gwig , n A ,. . Y, 75 ' Y , ,ar , 4 f- ,, ly-:,? j ' A, . a Y' 'wi '131fv'iaff'i f'f 7 'T , J' ' 4 f f f WL f' 1 A 1 , . , f , main 1? A , -4. .:. ' .. 'e,i1f?,'-:afif+3l':,. ., :F , ,, . , 1 ,' -J-fn Y '- .wx ' 'H-4,-5 ' , Q 1 A ' Q Q 3, V '11-f i315 , 2 ' Q , - ,I '.' A Hfgjgrg., ' . - A .. ,,., - 'ffgw Q . r Aw' -,ffl 42 ,C A- f M- ' , 'fgr-'zwfivsa' ' ' , W WHY: , - - 0:15 -- Q- 1 . - 1. ' :.L1:?ef35 vim :,. 1. f Q, 1.14 J' liaaff , .1 L -A fn. . V -F .L X ,X , ,,- ,.,..., .P ' 'K -, -gg-,fl f ,, 3QVw.2f K ' 1 , V- 2 4624 'refpf ' ff- T1 Q' -hr: K Z aa- , iv mgwdl . -. 2,-L ' 3150422 ,, 'W-41, ffj ' FH' , L-A Mk A- ' ' A ' 7 ' . A , , - fr f 7 v' 'T i . ,L L, fn'- -. 1 5 f 2 . rl X M. , n x ,'- 1 ,,,,-.A CAMERA CLUB THIS YEAR THE CAMERA CLUB WAS ORGANIZED WITH MR, MILLER AS THE ADVISERQ LELAND SwARM, PRESIDENT: ERNEST KACHEL, VICE- PRESIDENT: !NYLA WALLACE, SECRETARY: AND Lucv ScHRuERs, TREASURER, 'To STUDY ABOUT CAMERAS AND PICTURESn IS THE PURPOSE or THE cLua, CAMERAMEN IN THIS ORGANIZATION HAvE LEARNED TO OPER- ATE PROPERLY A CAMERA, T0 DEVELOP FILMS AND PRINT PICTURES, AND T0 TINT AND ENLARGE PICTURES, THE ART or PICTURE TAKING WITH REFERENCE TO COMPOSITION wAs A MAIN TOPIC or THE VEAR'S ACTIVITIES, THE nSPOTLIGHTn STAFF IS INDEBTED T0 THE CAMERA CLUB FOR THEIR HELPFUL WORK OF TAKING PICTURES FOR THE BOOK. OF THE JUNIOR CLASS -E AuDREv DUINK ...,.....,...............,.........T.....................A............................, GIGGLES THE MOST CHESTER ORGAN .......,...,. .,,....., LAUGHS THE MOST DOVLE SHIELDS T.....,.....I..,....T... ...,......T. JOKES THE MOST ARNOLD APPLEBEE ,..,...... ,.......... ........., WORRIES THE MOST GEORGE CHRISTENSEN ...,.,..T..... ............................................. STUDIES THE MOST EARL DUINK, ...T,................... , ..,......,,... ,....,., soTHERs THE GIRLS THE MOST FRANCES EMDR! ,.,,,,................... .....,.,....,...........,....TT....,..,...,.....T.... DRAWS THE MOST Loss ESHELMAN ...........,. ..,....... msEEs THE Mosr SHOWS DELEO GRAVINK .....,........ ,,.............,.......T THINKS THE MOST WALTER HILL ...,...T,..T.T,. ....... Luwonxs THE MOST GEORGE KINNEY ,,.,,,. ,,,,,,,,.., ...A....,....,...,....... mls NEATEST LucuLLE MEvERuNR ..,..,.,T., ..............T.. READS THE Mosv JACK NEWHOUSE ,...,.,..,..T .T...,.,........,.............. FDR GETS THE MOST .WINIFRED PITT ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ..,.,,,,,,. HAS THE sEsT ALTO VOICE CLAUD RousH ,..,T..,......,.. .......,...T...,..., T......,..,,.T....,,... snmcs THE MOST Lucv SCHRUERS ....,.....,... ..........,. cooxs THE MOST PAULINE SMITH ,,,,..,....,. ..,..,..,.T HOPES THE MOST LEEAND SWARM ..,,,,,..... ..T,...,........T............,........,....,........... ACTS THE MOST GERALD TURCK TT,..,...... .... READS comic aooxs THE MOST MARY VRDDMAH .....L...,..L.... ...,..,..,..,.L.L.......... : ...,.. THE MOST QUIET GIRL VIRGINIA VRDINK T,........ ........,..T..,... ,.,, PLANS THE MOST NvLA WALLACE T,,..,.,,............,..,......T ..,.......... FLIRTS THE MOST ROSEMARY WILLIAMS .,........,.. ,.........T.......T.,.,, THE BEST SPORT GILBERT WILLINK ...,,,..... ..........,...,.L.......,.T........,...,., THE MOST TALKATIVE DOROTHY YAIKQ ,,,, ,,,,.,,,, ,,,4,4, THE BEST BASKET BALL PLAYER Nmxuws LEDTERE ..T..,... MWWWWWWWWMMWWISHES THE MOST SPUTLIGHT 1942 Nl E fi 3 A -: F I VICTORY Q I Y UNITED BONDS I STAMPS v D Tm. wu SP6 S AGRICULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL ARTS FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA OUT-OF-SCHOOL YOUTH MATHEMATICS SCIENCE SALE GF DEFENSE STAMPS CRAFT CLUB GUN CLUB IN WAR TIME ALL THE CITIZENS or A COUNTRY MUST wonn TOGETHER FOR DE- FENSE. WE IN CLYMER BELIEVE THAT WE ARE BEING PREPARED EDR DET-ENDING TI-IE UNITED STATES. Bovs IN OUR AGRICULTURE CLASSES LEARN TO GROW BIGGER, BETTER cRoRs wHIcH ARE ESSENTIAL IN THE DEFENSE PROGRAM, DEFENSE BEGINS NDT ONLY ON FARMS, DDT IN OTHER HOMES AS wELL. THE CRAFT CLUB OFFERS AN OPPORTUNITV EDR LEARNING BETTER HOME MANAGEMENT AND FOR LEARNING TO UTILIZE EVERY' THING IN THE HOME, BESIDES DEFENSE THROUGH HOME ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE THROUGH FACTORIES AND THE us: or MA- cHINEs I5 IMPORTANT, THE MATHEMA- TICS AND SCIENCE DEPARTMENTS GIVE sTuDENTs THE ELEMENTARY EDUCATION NEEDED IN MANv DEFENSE EAcToRIEs, Bovs ARE GIVEN THE OPPORTUNITY T0 LEARN TO REPAIR AND TQ DRERATE MACH- INERv ON ACCORDANCE WITH THE GROWING NEED FOR OPERATORS, IN THE CLASS ORGANIZED IN CLVMER FOR Our-or- SCHOOL YouTH, YOUNG MEN LEARN TO RUN MACHINES, THUS HELPING IN THE IDE- rENsE PROGRAM, THRoucH auvINc DEFENSE srmnps soLD IN SCHOOL ev THE BOOKKEEPING CLASS, STUDENTS ARE MADE CONSCIOUS or THE EMERGENCY AND ARE ABLE T0 CONTRIBUTE TO THE DEFENSE or AMERIDA. +5 fr a ,B 2 F 3 if lf 1: w J 2i !mlf1HQu E ' O. S. Y. . Sherman Titus, Russell Heimelein. GUN CLUB Front How. Left to Right: Iames Finn, Roger Thompson, Mr. Boylan, Arthur Hair, Donald Palmer, lohn Weeks, Second Row: Clyde McCrory, Edward Pfeiffer, Glenn Maleski, Iames Hudson, Iames Bab- cock, Robert Knowles. Top How: George Kinney, Glenn Warnshuis, Robert Humphrey, Bryce Hair, Iohn Gibbons, Edward Werren. F. F. A. First How, Left to Right: Robert Humphrey, Claud Roush, Glenn Maleski, lvfr. Bridges, Ed- ward Pfeiffer, Gilbert Meyerink, Walter Hill. Second Row: Irwin Bensinlc, Harold Thompson, Fred Porter, Louis Rea, lohn Gibbons, George Kinney, Martin Willover, Walter Smith. Third Row: Glen Warnshuis, Robert Williams, lohn Wiggers, William Wiggers, Richard Cole, Lowell Wagner, lack Edwards, Andrew Roush, Homer Avery. Top Row: Wilfred Damcott, Robert Hulett, James Babcock, Everett TeWinkle, Leland Swarm, Roger Thompson, James Hudson, Raymond Turck, Leonard Eliason. CRAFT CLUB Front Row, Left to Right: Ianet Emory, Ardys Green, Clara Yaiko, loyce Scarem, Iacquelyn Ott, Helen Holten. Second Row: Miss Acquard, Ioan Kooman, Flora Maleslci, Evelyn Groters, Freda Garfield, Betty Bannister, Norma New- house. Top How: Leora Fry, Carol Hewes, Ioanne Wate, Carol Ton, Ava King, Norma Newhouse, Doris Fardink. 71 3 I2 E Vi as AGRICULTURAL AND INDU ST R I AI. ARTS DEPART M E N TS IN THE AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT, THE CLASS ACTIVITIES ARE CLOSELV TIED UP wITH THE F.F.A. STUDENTS FROM THESE GLASSES woN FOR C.C.S. A TRDPHY IN POUL- TRv JDDGING. CLADD RDDSH, LELAND SWARM, AND EVERETT TEWINK- LE COMPOSEO THE JDDGING TEAM, To AID DEFENSE ON THE HOME FRONT, THE AG, Ill CLASSES LEARN- ED To REPAIR FARM MACHINERY, A NECESSITY IN THE PRESENT WAR, A TRIP To KANSAS CITY wAs THE REwARD OF GILBERT MEYERINK FOR HIS CONSCIENTIOUS INTEREST IN THE F.F.A. HE wAS ONE OF TWO F.F.A. DELEGATES CHOSEN FROM CHAuTAuQuA COUNTY TO ATTEND THE NATIONAL LIvEsTocR SHOW LAST FALL, C.C.S. IS pnoug QP GIL- BERT, FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA IN ITS ORIGINAL CONSTITUTION, THE F.F,A. HAS TWELVE PUR- POSES, CHIEF AMONG THEM.ARE VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE, LEADERSHIP TRAINING, CHARACTER BUILDING, PROMOTION OF DEMOCRACY, AND LOVE OF COUNTRY LIFE, As PART OF THEIR DEFENSE PROGRAM, THE MEMBERS HAVE REPAIRED FARM MAcHINERv. LAST FALL, CLADD RouSH, LELAND SWARM, AND EvERETT TEWINKLE MEMBERS OF THE F.F.A. JDDGING TEAM, woN THE POULTRY JDDGING CONTEST AT THE OUNKIRK FAIR, THE OLDER MEM- EERS ALSO HELD AN INITIATION FDR THE NGREENHANDSU, PASSING THEM TO THE FUTURE FARMER DEGREE, THE AGRIGDLTDRE I GLASSES ARE PLANNING GARDENS FDR THIS SUMMER, ROBERT HUMPHREY IS PRESIDENT OF THE F,F,A,g EDWARD PFEIFFER. VICE-PRESIDENT: GILBERT MEYERINK, SECRETARV: AND CLADD ROUSH, TREASURER. THE CLUB REPORTER IS WALTER HILL, AND THE WATCHDOG IS GLENN MALESKI. SPUTLIGHT 1942 R3 4 1. wg- X - up f ,va 4 f Fw Ygifnfixifl 'SF ,...Jy . r -0 XM., ., - , . ...- .Q- fw ,V 9. ,... A ki' ,- ra. 0-1 xl, LA . rw 1 W ' 'K ' ,.v, J. , vw-, X 'N 4 N U , Ns M '1- J ?'Va 4 , f I 4 A fy V n , -H v .f W 14 N 'lim ,P+ L n S ' E A iff-f' 1 ','1'w2s.r2',-,-gg-ur 's , Fe? ' -1 v,w '3f 13 iq ,K .,-Mimi.. . y 1, N. .' ,x m 1 W if -.5 5, V , 'Y Wy x, ,g L 2 i nm fr , , ,Q Y . ,. U 3' . ex: ' V-n A . ' ' 3 , . . . ' .i , 4' , I .W ,, f 1 - . As ,Y 'a I .. 1,3 f sw ' - f , .W ,,1,,,:,K w 'f,. 'fy J I 4 V J., ,. Q., ' A. .K '-, f - ..1. . .. W' .f Y' Kew an ,vu Q15 f59'?'F1 's' 4- Q.-3' V vi-QT 1, O U T-OF-SCH GO L YOUTH ON NOVEMBER 3, TWENTV-FOUR our-or-scHooL YOUTHS rRoM FlNDLEY LAKE AND CLYMER ENROLLED IN THE METAL-WORK CLASS or THE 0.S.Y. ORGANIZED av Mn, CLAYTON BRIDGES AND Mn, BLAlNE WALL- AcE. THIS CLASS LAsTEo TEN wEExs. A SECOND CLASS, IN AUTO-MECHANICS, STARTED on JA UARY l9, WITH AN ENROLLMENT or TWENTV-TWO, MR. WALLACE INSTRUCTED THE cLAss, wHIcH MET FIVE NIGHTS A wEEK, EAGER T0 TRAIN THEMsELvEs TO BE BETTER FARM OPERATORS THROUGH THE KNOWLEDGE or MECHANICS, THE sovs wIsH ALso T0 as READY T0 wonx IN vITAL INDUSTRIES, SHOULD THE 'NEED ARISE, ACCORDINGLV, THEY HAVE LEARNEQ T0 WELD AND SOLDER, T0 wonx WITH A METAL LATHE, Ano T0 REPAIR FARM MACHINERY AND Auro- MOBILES, ' To AID IN DEFENSE or ous couurnv, THE O.S.Y. WILL CONTINUE ITS wonx NEXT YEAR, WHATS IN A NAME? '- THAvER THAVER LITTLE aov. You AREN'T so ACQUARO Auv MAN- ' -I-Q-as-1' in-ll' UEL SEE KNOWLES THAT HILL FALL DOWN IF HULETT HlM RUN T00 'FAST,' 'IT's A CoLE NIGHT ouvn, SAID THE MILLER, RKINNEY BRING A Tom or COLE Fon THE NEwHousE? Or COURSE COLBURNfS2.n 'THAT's WRIGHT EVEN A KING KNOWLES THAT, Anouno THE ORGAN SN THE STORER snew A SWARM or SQEET ylLL- IAMS. IT TOOK WEEKS Fon THEM TO snow Avenv oAv AwPORTER WA- TEREo THEM, AND EACH REA or SUNSHINE FOSTER ED THE FLOWERS, GIVE THAT rooo THIEME, DID vou Fav IT, on wAs IT BOYLANT I LIKE Mv FINN AND HADDIE Bnoww, auT THESE APPLES ARE GREEN, HAIR vou GOING OVER THE BRIDGES? No, BUT THE BAEHER WILL- OVER THEM. SPUTLIGHT 1942 lIlI , .,,,, -, fu..-:H F ... .,. ,.....u ., V , 2 1 1 J, 5...Q.'i,, 'W 5 Y J: .,. ., f., ,,,. .,-, 1 . Hg, .,, --e v f, r 1- - ,,4 M ,,, , 1 f.1 5 . . ,f' -if - L, .. ' ' , -e lb' . N fQ..f, , 1- .,. rs k,.x . + x .e w A MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT ELEMENTARY ALGEBRA THE ELEMENTARY ALGEBRA CLASS HAS REACHED ITS ULTIMATE AIM, THE SOLUTION OF PROBLEMS, EV LEARNING THE FUNDAMENTAL ALGE- BRAIC OPERATIONS AND SY USING NEW KINDS OF NUMBERS, POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE, THE STUDENTS ALSO LEARNED HOW T0 MAKE AND READ GRAPHS, WHICH ARE IMPORTANT IN THE DEFENSE INDUSTRIES, GEOMETRY THE CHIEF AIM OF GEOMETRY IS To TEACH THE NATURE OF PROOF, THE STUDENTS LEARNED GEGWETRIC CONSTRUCTIONS, LEARNED TO SOLVE ORIGINAL PROBLEMS, LEARNED THE RELATIONSHIP OF GEOMET- RV TO OTHER BRANCHES OF MATHEMATICS AND LEARNED THE PRACTI- CAL APPLICATIONS OF THIS COURSE OF EVERY DAY LIVING, TRIGONOHETRY AFTER AN INTENSIVE svuov or LINES' ANGLES. AND FUNCTIONS or ANQLES, MR. NILLERIS TRIGONOMETRY cLAss UNOERTOOK THE FOL- LOWING ACTIVITIES! KID A STUDY or THE BASIC PRINCIPLES or A RANGE FINDER, A ssnvncs usEo av ALL BRANCHES or oun FIGHTING ronces TO oe- TEHWINE THE DISTANCE Enom THE FIRING LINE T0 THE TARGET wHTcH MIGHT as AN ENEMY snap, TANK on eomsan. 42, THE SOLUTION OF ACTUAL PROBLEMS WHICH ILLUSTRATED THE MATHEMATICS ESSENTIAL FOR A COASTAL DEFENSE GUN CREW TO KNOW IN ORDER TO AIM ONE OF THEIR HUGE GUNS AT AN ENEMY SHIP TRAVELING TEN TO FIFTEEN MILES OFF SHORE, Q31 THE SOLUTION or GTI-IEA PROBLEMS or DEFENSE, INCLUDING STUDIES OF THE SEXTET AND CHRONOMETER AND MATHEMATICS OF SURVEYING, SPUTLIGHT 1942 45 f LA is ? E 5 L 6 ,Z gx H SCIENCE DEPARTMENT GENERAL SCIENCE Movses, AS WELL AS cLAss expennmewrs AND THE STUDY or TEXT- aooxs, HAve pnovnoeo THE BASIS or LEARNING ron Mn, THAVER'S GENERAL scseuce CLASSES, THE DUNKIRK PATH STIMULATED THE CLASSES T0 PREPARE EXHIBITS, To ENLARGE upon HIS KNOWLEDGE EACH STUDENT CARRIED on A enT or PRIVATE neseAncH. CHEMISTRY WEEKLY LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS wen: run FOR THE CHEMISTRY sTuoENTs THIS YEAR umoen Mn,THAveR's INSTRUCTION, As SEV- ERAL TEST TUBES AND RETORTS wene BROKEN, some STUDENTS ARE AWAITING LARGE BILLS T0 PAY, NEVERTHELESS, EVERYONE ENJOYED THESE ExPERaMENTs, AT LEAST, evenvone IN THAT PARTICULAR CLASS ENJOYED IT, THOUGH IT as RUMORED THAT PUPILS IN SCHOOL oeJecTeo SOMEWHAT T0 THE SMELLS lssulNG FORTH Enom THE LAB, WHEN ow one OCCASION, THE FUTURE scaENTlsTs MAUE HvoRoGEn- SULFIDE, BESIDES THESE EXPERIMENTS, THE CLASS STUDIED METALS AND NON- METALS, MINERALS, AND SOME ORGANIC CHDAISTRY, THE STUDENTS LEARNED THE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY AND DLSO HOW T0 APPLY THEM TO DAILY LIFE. SALE OF DEFENSE STAMPS So THAT CLYMER STUDENTS MIGHT oo THEIR PART TOWARD WINNING THIS WAR, THE Booxxeeplmc I CLASS uwosn Ma, Bnoww STARTED SELLING DEFENSE STAMPS on JANUARY I2, THE SALE IS HELPFUL 70 THE SYUDENTS eecAuse IT TEACHES THEM T0 sAve Monev AND BECAUSE IT onovaoes A wAv T0 HELP an THE wAn errant. ON QARCH 23 SALES REAGHEO THE HIGHEST so FAR, AMGUNTING To lO2.35. SPUTLIGHT 1942 us E 2 fi E 5 Q :Z 75 CRAFT CLUB To LEARN HANDICRAFT, TO HAVE A sooo TaME, AND TO AnD DEFENSE ARE PHASES or THE THREE FOLD AIM or THE CRAFT CLue. CHIEF ACTIVITIES OF' THE YEAR HAVE BEEN MAKUNG WOQDEN LAPEI. PINS, LEARNING T0 xNuT, LEARNING T0 CROCHET, MAKING CHRIST- MAS carts, AND KNITTING SQDARES ron THE RED Cnoss. GUN CLUB THE Punposs or THE GUN GLUE ls, UTD ACQUAINT aovs IN THE USE AND CONSTRUCTION MANSHlP,q ROGER JOHN WEEKS, VICE or FIREARMS AND TO ENCOURAQE GOOD SPORTS- THOMPSON wAs ELECTED PRESIDENT ev THE eovs: PRESIDENT: DONALD PALMER, SECRETARY: JAMES FINN, TREASURER: AND Ang HATE, REPGRTER, SEVERAL DISCUSSIONS WERE HELD IN CLUB MEETpNes THROUGHOUT THE YEAR, THESE DEALT wnTH THE usE or COMPASSES, CONSTRUC- TION or RUFLE SHELLS, AND INCENDIARV aoMe sArETv, AMONG THE VEAR'S AcTnvoTuEs, THE cnoup ENJOYED A TRIP TO FINDLEY LAKE, WHERE THEY sAw THE GUN COLLECTION OWNED ev LESLIE HURLBURT, Ma. JOHN ZENT2, THE COUNTY GAME WARDEN, SPOKE AT ONE or THE CLUB MEETINGS ON sooo SPORTSMANSHIP, MR, BOVLAN, or THE HISTORY DEPARTMENT, wAs THE ADv1sER or THE Gum CLUB, CHARACTERISILQ GIRL QQ! TALLEST ..,.....,,.T..., ..,..,. ..,..,,T...T, ,HL.HAzEL FQETER ,....T ...TTT ........,,.... GLENN MALESKI SHDRTEST ,T,,,,.,....,,.,....,....TT., .,..,.,...., NYLA WALLACE ,,,.,,,...,.., ...,.....T. WALTER SMITH NISCHIEVOUS ..T,., ......,... .....,...., PAULINE SMITHH .....,.. ..,...,.,.,,T Bos HUMPHREY MOST FRIENDLY ,.....,,., .... .,....,... ,TILLTE WIGGERS .,,.....TT. ....,,,.,....,...,. .,...,,.T..... JIM FoNN BEST SPORT ......,..T..,T,,,.... ,..,,,.... Loss RHEBERGEN ,,.,.. ,Janes DAMCOTT HANDSOMEST T... ....,,.,..,..,. .,T. A SHIRLEY BRADLEY. ..,........,,..,,,,. .SPEEDY WIGGERS BEST ATHLETE .,.,.,,....,. .,..LT..,.. WINNIE RHEBERGEN ..,...,.,......., .,..,.......,T,. ..,. NTONY CDE BEST SaNDERm .....,..,...,..., ....,,.,,,. ,LDHENA GROTERS ....T...,., ,..,,. ....,.L, JACK NEwHousE NDST AMEaTaous ....,,,,.,..... . .......T,. ,VELMA KING ..,............ ,..,.T.,... .................. ,JOHN WEEKS MOST TALKATIVE ,...... ,....., ........,.T NDRMA TENHUISEN TT,...,.,...T.,.,... ,...T. DOVLE SHEILDS BEST DnEssED .......,..... .H ..,.,.,, JACKIE NUTTALL ..,.., ,...., ....,...........,.,...., ART HATS SPUTLIGHT 1942 U7 3 5 W i .9 x. 9 133 A JL- ,lv Y v lk-'lf A:f4 VAA, ,,, A. f4,. '1V i T M 'E IN EVERY COMBAT THERE as A FEELING or DEJEcTEDNEss, THus, IN WDRLD WAR ll, oun SOLDIERS AND CITTZENS ALIKE TEND TO FEEL DERRESSED AT TIMES, IT as THE DUTY or MUSICAL GROUPS, THE ART DEPARTMENT, THE CHEERLEADERS AND THE DRAMATTD CLUB T0 cHEER pso- PLE, THE anno AND CHORUS WITH THEIR ETNE Musac AND SINGING RESTORE 0NE'S spsnnrs, THE ART DEPARTMENT MAKES PICTURES AND OTHER oaaecrs or BEAUTY T0 STOR A PERSON'S INNERMOST LOVE or THE BEAUTIFUL THINGS IN Lure. THE DRAMATIC CLUB PRESENTS PLAYS DE- SIGNED T0 TAKE A PER50N'S MIND orr HTS owN SMALL CARES, THE CHEERLEAD- ERs ARE REAL MDRALE-auuLDERs AT eAs- KETEALL GAMES, To DEVELOP PEP vs THEIR Joe. ALL THE PEOPLE IN THE FOREGOING oR- GANIZATIONS FIND THEOR owN spuners LTFTED av THEIR ACTIVITIES, r , l-1 , 1, ' BAND-CHO R US ART CDP E RET TA SPOTLIGHT STAFF DRAMATIC CLUB CHEERLEADERS THE TDWER RDDM Mvsmzvu 1 g rx E 74 5? H 5 1: if il m QF 3 .A Q5 2 . . Aa X sim-rw BAND Front Row. Lett to Right: Gwendolyn Raymond, Roger Beckerink, Allred Lamparelli, Geneva TeWinkle, Paul Meyerink, lohn Weeks, Barbara Meerdink, loyce Scarem, Donald LaRose, Everett Warnshuls. Second How: Nvla Wallace, Iohn Neckers, Carol Ton, Betty Luce, Walter Hill, Virginia Vruink, Lorena Groters, Robert Was- sink, Clayton Duink, Leslie Weeks, Fern Brown, Norma Newhouse. Third Row: Shirley Schruers, Buena Dewey, Carolyn TeCulver, Betty Scarem, LaMont Goring, Earl Duink, VVinilred Rhebergen, Pauline Bermink, Luella Lictus, Mr. Manuel. Fourth Row: lohn Bridges, Allen Rlieberqen, lohn Kolstee, Winilred Pitt, Homer Avery, Robert Williams, Carol McCann, Phyllis Pitt, Velma TeWinkle, Carlton King, lohn Goldberg. Top Row: Mary Lou McCann, Betty Neckers, Velma King, Merton Querreveld, loan Kooman, Harry Mandaville, Leland Swarm, Raymond Turck, lack Newhouse, Philip Ruslink, Charles Kolstee. 1 l 1 CHORUS First Row. Lett to Right: Mr. Manuel, Harry Mandaville, Raymond Turclc, Leland Swarm, Walter Hill, Frank Maleski, lames Hudson, Doyle Shields, Gordon Holthouse. Second Row: lohn Bridges, Edward Werren, Iohn Weeks, LaMont Goring, Bryce Hair, Paul Meyerink, Irwin Bensink, Mary lves. Third Row: Donald LaRose, Wilbur Lookenhouse, Allen Rhebergen, lack Newhouse, lack Edwards, Lowell Wagner, Robert Williams, Homer Avery, Iohn Neckers, Leslie Weeks. Fourth Row: Maxine Legters, Buena Dewey, Lorraine Smith, Helen Wright, Winitred Rhebergen, Carol Ton, Carol McCann, Phyllis Pitt, Ruth Grover, Shirley Bradley, lacquelyn Nuttall. Fifth Rowi Florence Kickbush, Vivian King, Evelyn Sweet, Helen Sweet, Ruth Schurman, Krena Renskers, Betty Scarem, Eva Bacher, Ruth Titus, Barbara Meerdink, Norma Newhouse, lacquelyn Ott. Top Row: Betty Neckers, Pauline Bennink, Velma TeWinkle, Lois Eshleman, Lois Rhebergen, Deleo Gravink, Virginia Vruink, Barbara Gorski, Lorena Groters, Ioyce Scarem, Evelyn Fry, Doris Fardink. 48 J CHEERLEADERS Left to Right: Nyla Wal lace, Winiired Rhebergen, Virginia Vruink, June Cai lisch, Maxine Legters. THE TOWER ROOM MYSTERY Sitting, Left to Right: Lillian Wiggers, Arthur Hair, Miss Mordoii, lune Catlisch, Iohn Weeks, Standing: Betty Luce, Robert Humphrey, Marian Adams, Roger Thompson, Shirley Bradley, Donald Plamer, Velma Kina, Norma TenHuisen. . fi. SPOTLIGHT STAFF First Row, Leit to Right: Robert Humphrey, Donald Palmer, Raymond Turck, Iohn Weeks Second Row: Lowell Wagner, Roger Thompson, Merle Wright, Iames Finn, Art Hair. Standing: Mr. Brown, Velma King, Norma Ten Huisen, Betty Luce, Lillian Wigqers, lune Cailisch, Marian Adams, Miss Mordofi. v- Le HKLL DRAMATICS CLUB First Row, Lelt to Right: Edward Werren, Homer Avery. Second Row: lack Edwards, Gertrude Wil- liams, Rosemary Williams, lacquelyn Nuttall, Wayde Ouerreveld. Buck Row: Miss Mordoit, Leland Swarm, Pauline Smith, Shirley Bradley, Eva Bacher, LaMont Goring, OPERETTA Lett to Right: Le-land Swarm, Bryce Hair, Virginia Vruink, Homer Avery, lack Newhouse, Carol McCann. ' 49 3 E 3 3 P7 E H 2 5 MUSIC DEPARTMENT BAND nTo cave THE MOST PLEASURE TO THE GREATEST NUMBER or sTu- DENTSW, ns THE STATED PURPOSE or THE EAND. THIS YEAR MR, MANUEL AND THE BAND HAVE DEVELOPED CAPABLE Mu- SICIANSQ PREPARED PATRIOTIC AND woRTHwHsLE Musac FOR AssEM- aLv PROGRAMS: PROVIDED AN OUTLET FOR TALENTED STUDENTS :N- TERESTED IN Musucg AND MADE USEFUL CONTRIBUTIONS TO C MMUN- PTY AS WELL AS scHooL CuLTuRE, THE OFFICERS or THE BAND ARE JOHN WEEKS, PRESIDENT: VELMA KING, SECRETARY: VIRGINIA VRDTNK AND BETTY LucE, LIBRARIANSQ AND WALTER HILL' LAMONT GORING, AND LELAND SWARM, STAGE com- MITTEE. . CHORUS ENJOYMENT or LlPE'THROUGH muslc AND A KNOWLEDGE or THE run- DAMENTALS or SINGING ARE GOALS or THE CHoRus. ' UNDER THE LEADERSHIP or MR, MANUEL, u0UR GENIAL MAESTRO. -- THE CHORUS PRESENTED uWORDS AND Musucn, A HUMOROUS OPERETTA. AT CHRISTMAS TIME, THE Mussc AND ART DEPARTMENTS JOINED FORCES TO PRESENT A TABLEAU, 'THE OLD, OLD STORYU THE Mosr ELAEDRATE CHRISTMAS PROGRAM WE HAVE EVER HAD IN CLVMER CEN- TRAL. AT THE ANNUAL FREDON1A Music FESTIVAL oun suNeERs MADE A sooo SHOWING, THROUGHOUT THE YEAR THE CHoRus PRESENTED ITS MEMBERS IN VARIOUS ASSEMBLY PROGRAMS, BETTY NEDRERS os THE BUSINESS-MANAGER or THE CHORUS, AND THE OTHER OFFICERS ARE AS FOLLOWS! SECRETARY, WINIFRED RHEBERGEN LIBRARIANS, SHIRLEY BRADLEY AND DOYLE SHIELDSQ AND ADDDMPAN- lsr, BETTY SDAREM, SPUTLIGHT 1942 50 . 1 1 E S 's ART DEPARTMENT u..4.BuT IF A MAN LABORS Fon LOVE, Pon THE Jov or CREATING SOMETHING: YF IT BE THE WORK AND NOT THE wAGE THAT SATISFIES HIS souL, THEN HE MAY RIGHTLV as CALLED AN AnTIsT.....' DESIGN I FEATURES or THE DESIGN I COURSE ARE THE sTuDv AND APPLICA- TION or DESIGN PRINCIPLES AND THE sruov or STRUCTURAL, Plc- TORIAL, AND DECORATIVE LETTERING, MEMBERS or THE CLASS HAVE RENDERED PLATES ron A PORTFOLIO, POSTERS, AND PLACE CARDS. DESIGN II IN DESIGN Il PUPILS oELvE DEEPER INTO THE MYSTERIES or PAT- TERN AND COLOR AND LEARN TO PIT A DESIGN APPROPRIATELV To THE roam IT DECORATES, THE CLASS MEMBERS MODELED, CAST, AND PAINTED PLASTER or PARIS BOOKENDS, REPRESENTATION I REPRESENTATION I EMBODIES THE DRAWING OF OBJECTS BOTH CUR- VILINEAR AND WITH STRAIGHT LINES IN PARALLEL AND ANGULAR PERSPECTIVE, STUDENTS LEARN T0 DRAW SIMPLE OBJECTS IN THE SCHOOL ROOM AS WELL AS HOUSES AND LANDSCAPES, RESPRESENTATION II THROUGH THE use or CHARCOAL AND PENCIL PAINTING, Mass DAVIS' REPRESENTATION II PUPILS DREW OBJECTS AND STUDIED THEIR LIGHT AND SHADE, A LARGE SCALE ACTIVITY or THE CLASS wAs THE DRAWING Ano PAINTING or THE SCENIC BACKDROP ron' THE Junnon PLAv, I OTHER ACTIVITIES or THE CLASS WERE ILLusTnATIvE wonx Pon uMARO'GOLD RAVSH, THE nSPoTLIGHTu, POSTERS ron THE GRANGE, THE SENIOR PLAY, THE P. T. A. THE CHRISTMAS PROGRAM, THE OPERETTA, Ano THE LIanARv, SPUTLIGHT 1942 Sl 'H 54 5 OPERETTA nW0RDS AND Museo' wAs THE Two-AcT DRERETTA PRESENTED sv THE CHoRus ON APRIL 23, LELAND SWARM PLAYED THE PART or FERNAN- D0 FUSSBUTTON, PRESIDENT or BARTON CDLLEGE. VIRGINIA VRulNK AcTED AS SAMANTHIA HIGHNOTE, DEAN or WOMEN, WHILE BRVCE HAIR wAs ANASTASIUS LONGWORO, DEAN or MEN, CAROL MCCANN wAs MARY ALLEN, DEAN HlGHNOTE'S SECRETARY wlTH JACK NEwHousE AS JOHN WARREN, DEAN LONGWORD'S sEcRETARv. HOMER AVERV, PLAYING wAsHsNcTDN, A COLORED HANDVMAN, ADDED AMUSEMENT, MEMBERS or THE FACULTY WERE WALTER HULL, RuTH SDHU MAN, VELMA TEWTNKLE, AND JOHN WEEKS. TRusTEEs WERE JACK EDWARDS, WAVDE QUERRE- VELD, ALAN RHEBERGEN, AND RAYMOND TuRcK. THE GIRLS' QUARTET CONSISTED or JANE, HELEN SwEETg JUNE, EvELvN SWEET: Jovce, LORENA GRQTERSQ AND JEAN, BETTY NEcKERs. JERRY, Boa WILL- IAMSQ JACK, LAMDNT GORINGQ AND dum, DOYLE SHIELDSQ COMPOSED THE sovs TRIO, JACQUELYN OTT wAs DANCE SOLOIST, BETTY SDAREN wAs ACCOMPANIST, AND JACQUELYN NUTTALL, PROMPTER, SPOTLIGHT STAFF THE SENIORS wHo WORKED ON THIS eooK WISH T0 THANK ESPECIALY Moss MDRDDFE, EDR HER HELP IN THE LITERARY DEPARTMENT: Muss DAVIS, FDR ARTISTIC AID: AND MR, BRowN, EDR HELPING us TAKE CARE or THE ETNANDTAL DEPARTMENT, OuR THANKS so ALSO TO THE ART CLASSES, T0 THE TVPISTS TO THE CAMERA CLUB ND T0 THOSE o 9 A wHo HELPED us GET ADVERTISEMENTS, THE SPOTLIGHT STAFF IS AS FOLLOWS: EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ..,......................,....,.L.........,,..,..,.........,.............,.......,......... ......, BETTY Luce ASSISTANT EDITOR ...,.... A .,.,,.. ,............... VELMA KING BUSINESS MANAGER ..........,.,,, ......,.......,,...,...,.......... JOHN WEEKS SENIOR EDITOR ,,,...,.........,.......... ,......,,...... LILLIAN WIGGERS ACTIVITIES EDITORS ,,.,....... .,..,,....A.,..,..............,,. ART HAIR DONALD PALMER FEATURE EDlTDR ,..,,,,,,,,, ,,A,,,,,,,,,L. JUNE CAFLISCH ATHLETTD EDITOR ..,...,......,..... .,,.,.....,.,, ROBERT HUMPHREY PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR ....,..,,... L. ,.,.........,. LOWELL WARNER DEPARTMENT EDTTDR .,,,T...,.. ....,.,,L, MERLE WRIGHT ADVERTISING EDTTDR ....,.....,. .............,...,,,,, JAMES FINN CIRCULATION EDITOR ...,,,...,.. ,.,,L......... ROGER THOMPSON SPIITLIGHT 1942 1' ,. is 4 . Q4 -.. DRAMATIC CLUB nLEARNlNG TO ACT AND LEARNING WHAT GOES ON BACK-STAGEn ARE AIMS OF THE DRAMATIO CLUB. ORGANIZED ONLY THIS YEAR, THE YOUNG THESPIANS WORKED ON THE SETTING FOR THE SENIOR PLAY, LEARNED TO APPLY STAGE MAKE-UP, PRESENTED AN ASSEMBLY PROGRAM or THE cEue's ACTIVITIES, PRE- sENTED PLAYS WITHIN THEIR owN cnoup, AND PREPARED A PLAY FOR THE MAv ASSEMBLY, THE PRESIDENT or THE cLus as LELAND SwARM THE VICE PRESIDENT, JACKIE NUTTALL, AND SECRETARY AND TREAS- URER, SHIRLEY BRADLEY, Mass MDRDDEE as THE AOVUSER or THE DRAMATIC CLUB, CHEERLEADERS 'BETTER SCHOOL SPIRIT THROUGH TEAMWORK, sooo SPORTSMANSHIP, AND PERRv LEADERSHIPN as THE AIM or THE rave CHEERLEADERS, WITH NvLA WALLACE, DAPTATN. THE GIRLS MADE EDR THE SCHOOL, aooRLETs CONTAINING CHEERS, SONGS, AND NAMES or THE TEAM, To INCREASE ENTHussAsM or BASKETBALL SPECTATORS, THE GIRLS wRoTE NEW SONGS AND cHEERs. So THAT THERE woupo BE NEw RECRUITS FRDM wHoM To CHOOSE NEXT YEAR, ouR CHEERLEADERS ORGANIZED A cLua or ENTHUSIASTIC YOUNGER GIRLS. BY FAITHFULLY ATTENDING THE GNWES, THE ATTRACTIVE FIVE BOOS- TED THE MORALE OF BOTH TEAM AND SPECTATORS, FAVORITES MARIAN ADAMS ........,T. .... E PINEAPPLE ..., . ....,. .H LAVENDER JUNE CAFLISCH .,.T ,...,,. ,.TT..T,,,, Swuss STEART .E,,T.....T.. RED JAMES FINN .,,.E...T., .,,....., .N ..TT,,.. APPLE5 .E..,.,.....,.,...E. ..., ,... BRowN ARTHUR HAVEN ,.T..T.T .E,... U MACARONI ........,,.... W BLDE Boa HUMPHREY ..4.,,,.,E.., A ...... BEEF STEAKE .,,...... GREEN VELMA KUNG ...T...............,...... T,TT,.,T,. CELERY, T...,..,..,..... YELLOW BETTY Lucam ,..E.,TT..,,......,T .,........ SPAGHETTI .,,4,......, . RED GILBERT MEvERuNx .....E..ET.. .MWESPINACHWMWE ORANGE SPUTLIGHT 1942 I 53 Q E n if I . THE TOWER ROGM MYSTERY VAMPIRES, UTHE Kass or DEATHW, SPIDERS AND coawsas, A SECRET PANEL, AND THE HTDDEN TREASURE PROVIDED AN EVENING or CHILLS AND THRuLLs WHEN, ON NOVEMBER TU, THE CLASS or 'NE PRESENTED RTHE TowER RooM WNSTERYU, ART HAIR PLAYED THE PART or JACK CHALTGE, wHo TNHERTTED AN OLD House THAT DATED BACK TO THE CIVIL WAR, MVRA VERNON, PLAYED av TlLLzE WIGGERS, wAs A GIRL or MvsTERv IN QUEST or HIDDEN GOLD WHICH wAs HERS av INHERITANCE, JDNE CAFLISCH ADTED AS KATE CHALICE, JACK'S SISTER, wHo cAME WITH JACK T0 EXPLORE THE HTOWER ROOMN, THE YOUNG WRITER, KENNEDY ELSWORTH, PLAVED av JOHN WEEKS. WAS A PRACTICAL JOKER, wH0 PROPOSED TO KATE, BETTY LucE PLAYED THE PART or MATSLDA, AN oLD SERVANT, wHo REPEATEDLV DEDLARED nl DON'T Know NOTHIN' 'BQUT NOTHlN'n, MARIAN ADAMS, ACTING AS EMILY, A YOUNG SERVANT, AND Bos HUMPHREY, AS ANDREW, AN OLD DEAF-MUTE, TOGETHER WITH MATOLDA, wERE THE SUPERSTITIOUS MouNTAnNEERs wHo TRTED TO SCARE THE OTHERS AWAY, MRS, BAR- RETT, PLAYED av SHIRLEY BRADLEY, WAS A MAD WOMAN wHo HAD ESCAPED ERDM A NEARBY ASYLUM, DONALD PALMER, AS MARTIN PICKENS, WAS KEEPER or THE ASYLUM, ROGER THOMPSON, AS THE MASTER CALLED THRGJGHOUT THE PLAY nTHE VAMPIRE,n VISITED THE TowER Room wuTH TWO or HIS PRETTY waves, BEATRICE, PLAYED ev NORMA TENHUISEN, AND ANTOlNETTE,BY VELMA KING, THIS QuEER COLLECTION or CHARACTERS WENT TO MAKE A CREEPV THRTLLER, KATE'5 PREQuENT SCREAMS, THE AIR or MYSTERY ABOUT THE MASTER, AND ANDREW'S CRAZY GESTURING, MADE coLD cHlLLs RUN uP AND DOWN THE SPTNE, LAUGHS wERE PROVIDED av MATILDA AND ANDREW, AFTER THE PLAY, AS IN PREVIOUS YEARS, THE ACTORS AND OTHER WORKERS ON THE PRODUCTION STAFF HAD A PARTY IN THE SCHOOL DAEETERTA. CAN YDU TMAGINE -- HAROLD AND WALT -- LETTING THE scHooL GET Messy? GAIL THOMPSON -- UNINTERESTED IN AIRPLANEST COACH COLBURN -- WITHOUT A SMILE AND A SONG? BETTY NECKERS -- SINGING SOPRANOT WUNNIE RHEBERGEN -- NDT LIKING SPORTS? MR, BOYLAN -- WITHOUT HIS PLEASANT DISPOSITIONT SPUTLIGHT 1942 5U E E 2 v 1 Q OUR BUDGET A DRESS ron MI ss MORDOFF ........,Q.A.,.4.4....A,.............,..,.4.AA.......,..AA.........A....,. 3 59.140 KVELMA AND BETTY sRoILEo ONE, SPARK PLUGS FQR Mgss MORDOFF'S cAR. ......4. A.A.Q,,,.... .50 cSHE WORE our soME FOR THE PLAY, TIRES FOR MR. BRowN ..A.......,4......,,.... ..,...............,xA.,.....,.....,..,..4..............A,....,,..,,, II 00.00 QOLD ONES WORN ev DRIVING FOR ADS, SHoEs REsoLEo EQR sENIoRs .........,.,,...x..,..,A.,,.,...Q,.....A..,,,...,.,.......A 2.l2 ASPIRINS ron YEARBOOK STAFF ..,.,.,...A... 3,I3 I sox or ANACIN ....... ................,....,.A..,.......,..,.... .I9 GUM RoR NoRMA TENHUISEN ,.,,.,,,,..... ..A., .25 YELLOW PAPER ron TYRISTS .....,.A,,...............A.,,.......A ..... ......,,,..A........Q.,..4.,......, I .TU PINK PEARL ERASEQ ron BETTY LUcE. ....4.,....,....AA...,.,,.,....,,......4.,....... .IO KSHE LIKEs ERASING, wITH coco ERASERS, FALSE TEETHEQR JERRY W. BROWN .........A... ....................A,............. ,......A....,. .25 Plcev BANK POR JIM FINN ....,................,....................4.. .I0 KHE's TREASURER, You KNOW, Fon VELMA KING, ROGET'S THEsAuRUs ..,.,..A..............,....,,.. 2,50 PENCIL FOR THE EDITOR ....,,,....,.............,....A......A,...............E....,......,.A.....,,A....,,...... 3.05 I PAIR or SOCKS QMATESJ roR LOWELL WAGNER .,..,...... .25 GET-wELL PILLS FOR MARIAN Aomwsm ,,......,...,.....,......,........, 20.I7 LISTERINE QARGLE FOR RAYMOND TuRcK .....................,. I6.27 CHE HAD n5TREPn THROAT, EVE onops AND JAW PACKS ron MERLE WRIGHT ...., .... I9.I9 CHE HAD MUMPS AND PINK-EVE, A WHISTLE ron ROGER THOMPSON ....... ..... ,,...., .II CTo WHISTLE T0 THE GIRLS, WATCH RoR GILBERT MEVERINK. ..............,.,...,...... I.98 KTo GET T0 SCHOOL ON TIME, EXTRA SENIOR RING ron Boa HUMPHREY .,,,,....... 9.89 KSU HE'LL HAVE ONE T0 WEAR, LARGER WASTE BASKET FOR TvRINe Room ..,,.......... 3,95 CITIS ALWAYS RUNNING OVER, BUICK CONVERTIBLE RoR ART HAIR ,........,... l5I0,97 A LARGER oEsK Fon JOHNNY WEEKS ....,..............,.,., ..................,. I0.98 lTo KEEP HIS JUNK IN, 5 GALLONS or PURE CIDER FOR JUNE CAFLISCHN ..,... . .50 EAR RINGS or ALL coLoRs roR TILLIE ...... .,,....,,.,.,...,....,..,..,.... 8.69 A BASKETBALL FOR DoNALo PALMERQ ,.,,.,.,......... 1 ........,..,.......,..........,.....,,,. IZ.5Q fTHAT ALWAYS onbfi THROUGH THE BUCKET, TOTAL YOU AOD IT! SPIITLIGHT 1942 55 'w S 5 2 M 4. m ,- INDEX DF ADVERT I SERS BALFOUR, L. G. Co. BASSETT'S BEsH-GE-TooRs BERNSTEIN BROTHERS THE BROOKS Sruono CAFE ESPANOL CAFLISCH, ERNEST L, ESTATE CAFLISCH, L. T. CARNAHAN SHEARER CHAUTAUQUA COUNTY PATRDNE CHAPIN, FRANK C, 5 SDNS THE CHAUTAUQUA TEACHERS AGENCY CHRISTENSEN, C, MOTORS CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK CLYMER BAG COMPANY CLVMER CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION CLVMER Coop. G.L.F. SERv. IND, THE CLVMER DEPARTMENT STORE CLVMER GARAGE CLVMER LUMBER Co. CLYMER RESTAURANT CLYMER STATE BANK CLYMER TELEPHONE Co. COLLINS SPQRT SHOP CoNEv ISLAND LuNcH CORDIA, M. J, CoRRv BAKlNG Co. CORRY EVENING JOURNAL CRoscuTT B GALLUR CURTIS, C. F. DAlRYMEN'S LEAGUE, CLYMER DE HAVEN TIRE SHOP DEUINK, NwLT's GULF STATION UEUINK, LEE DOANE' O. E. EARL SwnTH's GROCERV THE FACULTY CLVMER CENTRAL SCHOOL THE FAIR STDRE FIELD AND WRIGHT FLORENCE BEAUTY SHOPPE FELICE BEAuTv SHDR FREEEDRGH, RAYMOND A, GEER-DUNN Co. THE GIFT SHOP GRAND SHOPPE cMARGARET'S, GRETCHEN'S KITCHEN HELAS FLowER SHOP HlNSDALE'S GENERAL STORE .NGJALD LDDGE JAMESTOWN BAKING Co. 'NC JAMESTOWN CYCLE SHOP JAMESTOWN PosT JOURNAL JAMESTOWN UNIT PARTS Co. THE JEWELL FLOWER SHDR JlM's KEYSTONE SERVICE KnNNEv SHoEs KOOMAN, KENNETH LA MODE PERMANENT WAVE SHOPPE LAMPARELLI PHARMACY LANSTON, J. A. LEEDS CUTRATE DRUG STORE LEGTER'S BRos, MARKET LEGTER'S FEED MILL LETTER SHOP, THE LUNOQUIST HARDwARE LVNN'S JEwELRv GTFT SHOP MANSFIELD SHOES FOR MEN MDLAUGHLIN BEAUTY SHOP MEERDTNK, J. L. MTLLERE Nsws 6 SPORT SIORE THE NATIONAL BANK or CoRRv THE NASTS CD. NECKERS COMPANY NELSON BROTHERS NELSON 5 BUTTS, INC, ED'S BREAD NEWELL, FRED H, HARDWARE Esso STATION - EDGAR NUTTALL, W. L, 6 SDN TECuLvER PARISON BEAuTv SALDN AND FARDlNK'S BARBER SHOP BARBER SHOP SPUTLIGHT 1942 , v fn 'Mm- 4 vw I 4- F . Rf ef, v A. 3, IJ! 'Y . av., x Lax . . wt I -.lk AA . .- . .,.,Mv'f' X ' 4 . 3- A A - ' 1 1 A: 4 .h fwww. ,: 4-X. QM,-fy 1, ,V-Eqwzfaxc 9' Q-ij? -M: wf-YM JJ ... wiv-Q, H-'ff - -' Hx www ,:,,j.4w ,ir .5 - 1 M . , N' 7 . 's Q f ' , xx Hr ' ,, .n -. , 1, n- 5,5 , 'r'., 5 .. . in f '!1. I, ,W Q f, 'Lf ff N: ff 19 , 'i., .1f,.Qf.1M .. .,1 , f.-, X . M. ..- 'P 4 bl L L , M . .1 , . ,, .Mg W. ,- Wat -, Q- , .4y,, n , , 1-L VL., .1 .4 -:N . i Jw, x . Q. Q, - A M M, . , A , Q, 1, , N. :H as . ,fn l Q. ,1 ' -if L, gxg w PAUL'S MENS WEAR 58 SPINNING WHEEL 61 PAVER, P, A, 62 Spntzen, C, E, 62 PENN YAN Buses INC, 73 SteeNs 6h PEERLESS-SAL-O-WELL 73 Supenlon CLEANING Co. 55 PRATT, lNc, 58 Sunpuus 5 SALVAGE lNc, 63 Pncntz 67 SWANSON'S Dnuc Stone 66 RAFFA'S BEAUTY Snoppe 65 TINKHAM Bnotnens INC, 7I Ren 5 Wnnte Stone 62 IENPAS' G. H. 58 Rex THEATER 75 TEWINKLE, Louts 67 REXALL Cut RATE Dnuc Stone 64 Tucxens Hotee 62 RElCH'S 63 THOMPSONIS Pouetnv FARM 67 RICHMAN Bnotnens 70 Tunn, Ancuse S, 68 Rntz RESTAURANT 6l WESTERN Auto ASSOCIATE Rntz THEATER 69 Stone 63 Root's FURNITURE Stone 70 Weeks, A. E, 70 Roseeee BeAutv SHoP 75 WIGGERS, Oeos, Cnevnoeet, Rowe's Feowen SHOP 70 PONTIAC, G, M, C. 72 SANDBURG, A. 0. 70 Wlecox Gnocenv 62 SAVAGE'S BAnaen SHOP 6h WING wgeel StAn Stones 70 SHEAIS THEATER - 63 Watnop 6 Houmes Co, 6 SOCONY-VACUUM OIL Co, 70 zUCKERMAN'S 6 SPIESMAN. J. L. 6M Tn-le Semon CLASS vor l91+2 wus:-ues to expness tl-u-:ln AP- PRECIATION TO THE BUSINESS PEOPLE WHO HAVE USEDTHE SPOTLIGHT AS AN ADVERTISING MEDIUM, WE HOPE THAT ALL THEIR OLD FRIENDS IN OUR COMMUNITY WILL CONTINUE T0 PATRONIZE THEM IN THE FUTURE AS THEY HAVE IN THE PAST, WE BELIEVE THAT THEIR ADVERTISEMENTS IN OUR YEARBOOK WILL WIN SOME NEW FRIENDS FDR THEM, IN SPORTIVE MOOD Tue ROBIN aunet nts NEST IN AN nAPPLEBEEn, Wnuee tHe sov tnseo to PLAY tue WORGANW, Has FATHER ASKED, nWHAT ARE vou nDUINKnT He SAID HE wAs conuc to suv A nNEWHOU5Eu, We HAVE 'SnueLos' IN sonooe aut N0 swonos. We ARE uWILLINKu to Heep vou sHAnpeN voun KNIFE ON tHe nEMonvn, Hunnv! Let's 'RousHu AWAY aecAuse A USWARMH or sees ns AFTER us. JOHNNY ASKED Has Motuen, nKlNNEYn eo wltu me to tHe NHILLUT COMING DOWN tue ROAD wAs A WTuncnn DRIVEN av A VROOMAN,n SPUTLIGHT 1942 57 5 E ea L 4 ,Q 5 . f I :Q COMPL IMENTS OF PAU IIS MENS WEAR EXCLUSIVE AGENCY or ADAM HATS AND ARROW SHIRTS UALWAVS SOMETHING NEwW PAUL MEERDINK, PRoR. NELSON 5 BUTTS, INC. ALwAvs A LARGE SELECTION IN FLOWERS 9 N, MAIN Sr, PHONE 6-888 JAMESTOWN, N.Y. SUPER! U? CLEANING CO. 7 E,, WASHINGTON ST. CQRRY, PA. PERRV MEAD CLARE L. CAPWELL CONGRATULATIONS ro CLASS OF I9U2 CLVMER CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION COMPLIMENTS or THE NA IONAL BANK OF CORRY ,I'CoRRv, PA, BANK MONEY ORDERS FDR SALE Buv U. 5. DEFENSE BONDS HERE 35000 MAXIMUM INSURANCE FoR S5000 EACH DEPOSITOR MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 'IIN SURPRISED AT vou! Do vou KNOW WHAT THEY DO WITH Eovs wHo TELL LlES?n 0YEs, SIR, WHEN THEY GET OLD ENOUGH THE runw SENOS THEM our AS SALESMEN.n DDMPLIMENTS or G. H. TENPAS CDMPLIMENTS or FLORENCE BEAUTY SHOPPE COMPLIMENTS or L, T. CAFLISCH PHONE UO-F-3 CLYMER, N. Y. A COMPLETE srocx or suRrAcED HEM- DDMRLIMENTS or PRATT INSURANCE SHERMAN, N. Y. LOCK AND OTHER LUMBER ron YOUR BUlLDlNG NEEDS, Custom MlLLwoRK A SPECIALTY. CLYMER. N.Y, U S A .5 5 ummwmmnuuo WISH THE CLASS OF W2 BEST DF LUCK ERNEST L. CAFLISCI-I ESTATE VET P CLYMER, N. Y. SCHICK-REMINGTON RAND ELECTRIC SHAVERS Expenr REPAIR SERVICE RODUCTS CLYMER, N.Y. CLYIVIER STATE BANK MEMBER Or FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM AND FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. LEGTERS BROS MARKET FRESH AND SMOKED DEALERS IN LIVE Hanes, FURS, AND MEATS Srocx Wool.. PHONE! 39-F-2 CLYMER, N.Y 59 K F 51 ii ? E H COMPLIMENTS GF WK IGH T rl.c.LD Fon 31 YEARS SOUTHWESTERN NEw YORK'5 LARGEST Stone Fon FuRN:T IOO-IOS NORTH MAUN STREET URE, FLOOR COVERINGS APPLIANCES JAMESTOWNQ N. Y. 'WHERE Gooo FURNITURE Is Nor EXPENSIVEU COMPLIMENTS OF LGREETING CARDS FoR EVERY 0ccAsloN BE -G E WE HAVE CARD You WANT Mussc HOUSE g E. FOURTH STREET JAMESTOWN, N. Y. EXCLUSIVE REPRESENfATlVES U i O SOCiAL ENGRAVFNG Wsool NG ANNOUNCEMENTS Ano 'NVlTATlONS' 5 CALLING CARDS, OFFICE SUPPLIES A can FOR G EER - DUNN CO, KING, Onos, Srmee QANDJ STATIONEERS SELMER, PENzEu. 8: MUELLER Pn.Am AND PRINTED WRITING PAPERS JAMEsTowN NEW YORK Juv-1117, 6oE f Q X if ll COMPL I MEN TS OF J, A, LANSTON PAINT AND WALL PAPER CQRRV, PA, CONGRATULATIONS TO CLASS dr I9U2 GROW STRONG!!! , 1 'nr Y v waTH DAlRYMEN'S LEAGUE MILK nMANSFlELOn SHOES-FOR-MEN BARNES at CARME Wva. VAN EAROEN, PRES, C L 31 N, CENTER ST, CQRRV, PA, LVMER OCAL FARMERS ATTENTION RITZ RESTAURANT SEE Us FOR Fooo CANov PASTRV MCCORMlCK-DEERlNG FARM EQUIPMENT GENUINE I, H, C, REPAIRS nANYTHlNG IN Lumeanu CLYMER LUMBER CO. CLYMER, N.Y, CORRY, 5 UNION CITY, PA. coMpL1M:NTs or THE FAIR STORE CLOTHING, Snoes, FURNISHINGS l68 S, CENTER ST. CORRY, PA. THE SPINNING WHEEL EVERYTHING FoR THE NzEoLzwoMAN QOU E, 2ND ST, JAMESTOWN, N.Y LINENS INFANTS wsAR CUSTOMER IN DRUG STORE Cow SUNDAY MQRN ING! NPLEASE cave me CHANGE ron A DlME,u DRusensT: nHERE IT as, I HOPE vou'LL ENJOY THE SERMON,n HEELAS FLOWER SHOP TH: BEST IN FLOWERS AT ALL Tomas PHONE 6-92N 243 CHERRY ST JAMESTOWN. N. Y, - CONGRATULATIONS LEEO'S CUTRATE DRUG STORE ITU E, END ST. JAMESTOWN, N,Y. JAMESTOVVN UNIT PARTS CO. INC. AUTO REPLACEMENT PARTS 208-EIO WEST FouRTH STREET JAMESTOWN, N. Y. K, 'G -r ' ' , HEY FOLKS' WE'RE OFF FOR UTUCKERS HOTEL' SHERMAN, N. Y., an , ey W FOR YOUR HEALTH ls Gooo BREAD New AND Useo FORD PARTS Snow Fence ron TEMPORARY SILOS W. L. NUTTAL 6 SON GENUINE FoRo SERVICE SHE MAN, N. Y. JUST AS GOOD COUNTRY HOTEL WATTER: uYou WISHED voun corree wuTHouT CREAM, sun, l'M sonnvg WE HAVE N0 CREAM, WILL You HAvE IT wsTHouT MILK? Fon BETTER VALUES - IN Home FuRNesHlNcs - C. E. SPITZER CLYMER, N.Y. PHONE 62-F-2 Best WISHES To CLASS or l9U2 C. T. LEGTERS COMPLIMENTS or RED AND WHITE STORE Fnosreo Fooos Gaocenoes 5 MEAT E. N. BECKERINK PHGNE 57-F-2 CLYMER, N.Y. . P. A. PAVER Best CANDY ECOMA Ice CREAM Connv, PA, COMPLIMENTS OF DEHAVEN Tune SHOP Connv, PA. WILCOX GROCERY Senvnce Sauce i902 CURRY, PA, COMPLIMENTS OF. FRED H. NEWELL HARDWARE SHERMAN, N. Y, MAKE LUNDQUIST HARDWARE Youn HARDWARE Stone IN JAMESTOWN, N. Y, 62 5 5 af v f 54 H WHEN AT SHERMAN STOP AT CAFE ESPANOL SHEAIS THEATER SHows Fon THE ENTIRE FANIILV RAYMOND A, FREEBURG ' ARCHITECT JAMESTOWN,'N.Y. IIO5 W, THIRD ST, JAMESTOWN, N.Y. PHONE U5-MEI FREEBURG BLOG CLYMER TELEPHONE CO. FDR INFORMATION AND RATES CALL TEL. 17 CLYMER, NEw YORK SURPLUS 6 SALVAGE INC. NEW HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE OFFICE EQUIPMENT AND PLUMBING Gooos AT Low PRICES IO9-II N, MAIN ST, JAMESTOWN, N.Y R E I C H S COMPLETE SELECTION or LADIES SPRING SUITS AND HATS Now ON DISPLAY CDRRV, PA, nl SAY, wAITER, THE FLOWERS ON THIS TABLE ARE ARTIFICIAL, AREN'T THEYTn WYES, SIR, THAT'S THE WORST or RUN- NING A vEeETAnIAN RESTADRANT--Ir wE USE REAL FLOWERS, THE CUSTOMERS EAT THEM,I L WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATED STORE LESTERNR, Lopus -- OWNER 2l N, CENTER ST. Connv, PA PA 35 N, MAIN ST. UNIDN CITY, A COMPLIMENTS OF' THE CLYMER DEPARTMENT STORE ALBERT NECKERS, JR, 5 SDN WHERE PRICE, QUALITY AND SERVICE MEET Dev Gooos SUREFINE Fooos WE DELIVER PHDNE 50-F-2 f CLvMER, N.Y, COMPLIMENTS or JA ESTOWN CYCLE SHOP JAMESTOWN, N. Y, AGENCV FDR BICYCLES AND WHEEL Gooos JDHNSDN OUTBOARO MOTORS f HARLEv..DAvIDsoN MOTORCYCLES SALES AND SERVICE I23 E, 2ND ST, PHONE 52-375 5 F Q Q 7? f THE BROOKS STUDIO WHERE THE Mosr Or THE CLYMER SAVAGE'S BARBER SHOP BOWLING BILLIARDS BELOW THE CAFE SHERMAN, N. Y. L E PWTURES ARE MADE A A CURTIS .JEWELRY sToRE JEWELER WATCH REPAIRUNG l25 N, CENTER ST, CURRY, PA, A WATCHES' D:AMoNDs, 5'LvERwARE A S S. CENTER ST, CoRRv, PA REXALL CUT RATE DRUG STORE U3 N, CENTER ST, CORRV, V THE STORE WITH THE LOWEST PRICES P COMPLIMENTS or J. L. SPIESMAN SHOES AND HOSIERY ON THE AVENUE CURRY, PENNA coMRLlMENTs or A FRANK C. CHAPIN 6 SONS LADlES READY To WEAR GoRRv, PA, STEEN'S DRY CLEANING AND LAUNDRY ll EAST WASHINGTON STREET CURRY, PA, LWWSMMWYGWTSWM SRECTAL ORDER Wonx, FRAT. PINS A EMELHMS ALSO RERATRED H. E, LvNN ll N. MAIN ST. JAMESTOWN, N.Y. LADIES AND CHILDRENS READY TO WEAR AND MILLINERY ZUC KERM ANS COR. PINE 85 2ND ST. JAMESTOWN, N. Y. N le Lv 11 -K E v. s .2 BASSETT'S WISH CONTINUED Succass To THE GRADUATES E. F. BASSETT JEWELER 302 MAIN ST, JAMESTOWN, N.Y, coMpLImENTs or CONEY ISLAND LUNCH CURRY, PA, COMPLIMENTS OF RAFFA' S BEAUTY SHOPPE SPECIALIZING IN MACHINELESS AND MACHINE PERMANENT WAvING COR, BRD 5 MAIN JAMESTOWN, N.Y, CONGRATULATIONS ANo BEST WISHES To CLASS OF I9N2 .I IM! S KEYSTONE SERVICE DISTRIBUTOR FOR K E Y S T O N E GASOLINE, KgRoSENE, FUEL OIL E M B L E M MOTOR OILS GREASE CLVMER, N.Y, THIS SPACE DONATED Bv OLLINS S oR sHo JAMESTOWN, N. Y. CHAUTAUQUA COUNTY'S AUTHORITY ON ATHLETIC GOODS I ART H: nNow ON THIS RING I SHouLo LIKE vou To ENGRAVE! 'FoR Mv oARLINs MURlEL,u JEwELER: nWOULD IT NOT BE BETTER T0 HAvE SIMPLY: 'FOR mv DARLlNG?'n HINSDALE'S GENERAL STORE WHERE PRICES ARE MORE THAN REASONABLE CLYMER, N, Y. STROMBERG CARLSON FURNITURE AND AND PHILCO RADIOS GROCERIES W, AND H, AND NQRSE REFRIGERATOR THE wITKoP a. HOLMES co. U-6 MARKET STREET JAMESTOWN, N.Y, WASHERS - HEATERS - RANGES BEST WISHES T0 THE CLASS or 'UE KENNETH KOOMAN CLYMER, N.Y, 65 2 E 51, sf 1 5 5 A. -1 . b ua ,IL imcmmuem ALWAYS BETTER CLOTHES ff,i1ffff,f. BERNSTEIN BROTHERS WASK THE MAN WHO OwNs ONER C. CHRISTENSEN MOTORS Connv, PA. U1 N, CENTER ST, Coanv, PA, SAV IT WITH FLOWERS THAT ARE MR, BovLAN: uWHAT INSPIRED THE P EERE To SET FORTH IN THEIR covERE ION- D uJEwELLSlu WAGONSTH DovLE SH1ELos: UWELL, MAVEE THEY oso- THE JEWELL FLOWER SHOP N'T WANT To wAuT THuRTv YEARS ron A A Connv, PA, 7R5'N- M. . COMPLIMENTS or J CORDM GRAND sHoPPE GARAGE 6 REPA'R WORK MARGATET BARTHOLME MOORE s 'CE CREAM PHONE 53nF.3 CLYMER.VN. CANDY COELSARSA. MAGAZINES caoscuw as GALLOP JOHN DEERE IMPLEMENTS O SWANSON'S DRUG STORE GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES THIRD AT PINE PHONE 3-II3 HOOVER SWEEPERS Duo THURM FuEL OIL HEATERS PHoNE UO-F-2 CLYMER, N, Y. JAMEsTowN, N. Y. - ' hi' ' JAMESTOWN'S FINEST STORE Fon MEN Ano Bovs PRlNTZ'S 208 MAIN ST. COND'E MlLKlNe MACHINE SALES AND SERVICE Louis TEWINKLE CLYMER, N. Y PHONE MFE! coMPLnMENTs or ESSO STATION ESGAR TECULVER PROP. CLASS or i9U2 WE WISH You Luck THOMPSON'S POULTRY FARMS EGGS---AH! Honszsl THE oLo INDIAN wAs Sloane ALONG on Has Powv WHILE Hus HEAvnLv LADEN SQUAW POL LowEo on root, Jam F: USAY, REDSKIN, wav lSN'T voun wars RUDQNGTW QNDUAN: HUGH, SHE cor N0 PoNv.n BEST WISHES To CLASS OF I9l-L2 LEE DEUINK f COMPLIMENTS OF' C L Y M E R B A G C O M P A N Y BEST WISHES To THE CLASS or l9M2 CLYMER coop. G. L. F. SEBV. mc. CLYMER. N. Y. FEEDS, SEEDS, FERTILIZERS 6 FARM SUPPLIES E sur' A fs ? 53 4 THE CHAUTAUQUA COUNTY PATRONS FIRE RELIEF ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED I877 Home OFFICE, 25-26 BANK or JAMESTOWN BUILDING, JAMESTOWN, N.Y, I FIRE AND LIGHTNING INSURANCE ON FARM PROPERTY INSURANCE IN Fonoe JANUARY 'ST' I9l-I2 SI6,'lIO,7I6.67 Loss AND EXPENSE RESERVE JANUARY lsr, I93-I-2 S 77-I,'I3l,3O ANNUAL ASSESSMENT RATE PER 5I,OO0.00 AT RISK FOR LAST SIX YEARS 3 3.50 REPRESENTED IN CLYMER. New Yonx av LEDN FRADINN You wlLL TAKE INCREASING CQMPLIMENTS or PRIDE AND Jov wITH vouR 'MG R IE S TURK oven THE vEARs A C H . CLASS JEWELRY AND STATIONERY PRO UCTS, CUPS-MEDALS-TROPHIES JEWELER TO 1He SENIOR AND JUNIOR REPRESENTING CLASSES or CLVMER CENTRAL ScHooL SENIOR 'NVITATIONS ALso BALFOUR MADE, MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK LG. BALFOUR CO. REPRESENTED av Roar, TURNBULL 7 W, IBTH STREET JAMESTOWN, N. Y. JAMESTOWN, N. Y, 68 at 5 4 i E w ii wi 3 Q -NONE-BETTER- . ll! LUMBER CEMENT STAINED SHINGLES OAK FLOORING PLASTER INSULATING BOARD MOULOlNG ROOFING SASH DOORS NELSON BROS. 3M MARKET STREET JAMESTQWN, N. v. PHONE 6-097 Gooo Lucx To CLASS 'N2 COMPLlMENTS or UMILTN DEUINK'S GULF STATUON RITZ THEATER SHERMAN, N. Y, BEST WISHES To SEMOR CLASS OF 'guz Home or Ou1s'rANolNG PICTURES J. L. MEEROINK A r SUCCESS IN THE YEARS To COME CLASS or-' l91l2 COMPLIMENTS TO LET Us SERVE You ExcE1.n.r-:NT Fooo AT POPULAR PRICES CLASS or lgll-2 CLYMER RESTAURANT NECKERS COMPANY A, J, NEWHOUSE, PRoP. - coMPm.cMEN'rs or- BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS or 19112 THE PAR!SlAN BEAUTY SALON AND BARBER SHOP CLYMER GARAGE Sort WATER SHAMpoos BLAINE J, WALLACE, Pnop, 22 E, Tr-uno ST. PHONE 14-955 59 -1 5 1: E , ,qi THE NASTS CO. CORRY'S GREATEST CLOTHIERS FOR MEN AND WOMEN ROWEIS FLOWER SHOP CUT FLOWERS AND PLANTS FOR ALL GCCASIONS COMPLIMENTS OF' I THE cHAurAuQuA rEAcI-seas AGENCY ,2, N, CWER ST, cow, PA JAMESTOWN, N.Y. FOR MODERN HQWE FURN I SH I NG S A, O, SANDBURG CASH FARM HARDWARE Etc. OR IO9 E, MAIN ST, CREDIT CURRY, PA, R O O T I S F U R N I T U R E 5 T 0 R E IN DEFENSE WORK ron THE DURATION THANKS ron PAST PATRONAGE CURRY. PA, A, E, WEEKS WHITEWASHER CONGRATULATIONS To , COMPLIMENTS Or -'-ii! cuss or me socoNv-vAcuuM ou. co. LA MODE PERMANENT WAVE SHOP Mgwfs STANDARD OIL OF N, Y, ROGER'5 BLDG.. BROOKLYN SQ, DIvIsIoN JAMESTOWN, N. Y. PHONE 6 SI3 JAMESTOWN, NEw YoRK RICHMAN BROTHERS FINE CLOTHES FoR MEN 322.50 PREP. SUITS SI6.95 EXTRA PANTS S 3,95 2I3 NORTH MAIN STREET JAMESTOWN, N. Y. coMPLIMENrs or WING WILLI STAR STORES CORRY, PA, 10 E, W n if 5 OTIS J. FARDINK BARBER SHOP BILLARDS CLYMER, N.Y. MQLAUGHLIN BEAUTY SHOP CORRY, PA, READ THE UCLVMER WEEKLYU PUBLISHED EVERN WEDNESDAY IN THE CoRRv EVENING JOURNAL ACOMPLIMENTS or TINKHAM BROTHERS INC. PHILLUPS BLDE. WHOLESALE DRY Gooos 8s NOTIONS Wonx CLOTHING JAMESTOWN, N. Y. COMPLlMENTS'OF THE MAKERS Or HOLSUM BREAD JAMESTOWN BAKING CO., INC. WORLD-W' COMPL I MENTS OF NEws COVERAGE S CORRY BAK'NG Co' BY ' ASSOCIATED PRESS ' UNDTEO PRESS ' 'NTERNATIONAL NEws SERVICE IN THE JAMESTOWN POST-JOURNAL WE DELIVER BREAD ROLLS PaEs Cooxnss U D D CAKES AT YouR DOOR DAQLY WE APPRECIATE YouR PATRONAGE WE TRv To SELL THE BEST Come AND SEE Us OFTEN EARL R. SWlTH'S'GROCERY FRENCH CREEK, N.Y. THE GIFT SHOP l25 N, CENTER ST, CURRY, 1l 1 fi ff Y? 2 -T U, , ri L GREATER VALUES COMPLIMENTS or wncscraffms AT CARNAHAN SHEARER ULDSMOBILE, CHEVROLET, PONTIAC JAMESTOWN'S LARGEST Go Ml Ce MEN'S AND BOY'S STORE YOUNGSVILLE PA T - SPORTING Gooos CURRY, PA, NORTH CLVMER, N.Y. SHOES FELICE BEAUTY SHOP You CAN ALWAYS GET A COMPLIMENTS OF GOOD LASTING PERMANENT 205 N. MAIN ST, JAMESTOWN, N.Y UNDER ERIE VIADUCT A FRIEND V . BOB H! UT HAT NEw FARM HAND ns TER- . n JAMESTOWN, N. Y, . 'BLV DUMB' ROSEMARY Wg UH0w's THATTn BOB H: WHE FOUND some M1LK BOTTLES IN THE GRASS AND INSISTED HE HAD Y, FOUND A cow's NEST,n GRETCHEN'S KITCHEN COMPLIMENTS OF Eli WASHINGTON STREET JAMEsTowN, N.Y. PHQNE 6-827 INGJALD LODGE 165 INDEPENDENT ORDER or Vlxlnss FOUNTAIN AND TABLE SERVDCE ' ' JAMESTOWN, N. Y, MARY TEUDESMANN GRETCHEN ORTENDAHL . 72 w a 3 ff! 5 di' 1 L YOUR SCHOOL USES YOUR MOST VALUABLE COMMUNITY ASSET IN NATIONAL ENERGENCY IN CASE or EvAcuATloN or CIVILIAN POPULATION, vouR SCHOOL ausss ARE WELL EQuapPEo AND voun SCHOOL aus DRIVERS WELL QUALIFIED T0 oo THE Joe. THE SCHOOL eusEs IN DAILY USE, nr MOBILIZEO, wouLo BE CAPABLE or TRANSPORTING APPRQXTMATELV 2,790,000 TROOPS AT oNE TTME, A MODERN MILITARY MIRACLE THEREFORE, SCHOOL susss ARE ONE or THE NATlON'S GREATEST BULWARKS IN DEFENSE OF DEMOCRACY. THE SAFETY AND ENDURANCE OF PENN VAN BUILT BOD! ES HAVE BECOME TRAC! TUON, PENN YAN BUSESJNC. PENN YAN NY- 0LD.FASHlONED: 'WHAT as MEANT sv THE BUY YOUR THREE uR'5n7n JANlTOR'S SUPPLIES FLOOR FINISHES NEW FASHIONED: UTHE THREE NRISU RUN AND A'-L THROUGH '-'FE5 CLEANING MATERIAL AT 25, lT'S RoMANcE, FROM AT HS, ITIS RENT, I AND AT 65.'1I'f RHEUMAUSM PEERLESS SAL..0..WELL co., mc, E BUFFALO, NEw Yau: KINNEYIS coMpLaNENTs or THE VERV NEWEST SHOES IN TowN CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK JAMESTOWN, N. Y. THE BANK ON THE CORNER COMPLIMENTS or MEMBER Or' FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORWON MTLLERS News an SPORT sToRE TIES CENTER ST, CoRRv, PA, 73 Q MULTIGRAPHING MIMEOGRAPHING TI-IE LETTER SI-IGP 586 EAs'r Sscono STREET JAMEsTowN, New Yonx DISTINCTIVE DIRECT MAIL ADVERTISING PRINTING ADDRESSING OUR BEST WISHES GO WITH YOU, SENIOR CLASS OF FORTY-TWO, COMPLIMENTS OF TI-IE mum 7lI n. 4 5 E F a -a w if , J-It HEATERLEss PERMANENT WAVES Ef?3eX BEAUTY SI-IoP PH, 5JsI IU EAST THIRD sr. JAMESTOWN, N,v. COMPLIMENTS TO THE CLAss Or 'U2 . AA REX THEATER COMPL I MENTS OF' 0. E. OOANE HARDWARE 8 WEST MAIN STREET CURRY, PA, TEACHER MIss MAGKMER MISS ToN MIss LEGTERS MISS WASSINK MIss FARDINK MISS GLEASON MISS WHITNEY MRS, WASSONK MIss ACQUARD MISS DAVIS Mlss Monoorr MISS HEMSTER MR, MILLER MR, BRowN MR. BovLAN MR, COLBURN MR. MANUEL MR, THAVER MR, BRIDGES FAVORITE PASTIME DRIVING TAKING PICTURES SLIOING DOWN HILL BASKETBALL WALKING DOING SIMPLY NOTHING A Gooo TIME READING ROLLER SKATING SKIING I SWIMMING TENNIS TENNIS GQLF HUNTING ALL SPORTS FOOTBALL ALL SPORTS BUILDING scENERv FAVORITE FOOD ICE CREAM CHOCOLATE TUNA FISH SALAD CHocoLATE CAKE BANANA CREAM PIE LOLLIPOPS ALL SPORTS RASPBERRIES FRUITS PIE BEEF STEAK CANDY SPAGHETTT WTW BONE STEAK lcE CREAM ALL Fooos PIES PIEs TuNA FISH SANDWICHES 75 Q ?i . ,gh Hr? U E' '34 15 ,. 1.3 . .Av . uf Q '4 ,Lt 4 If f- 55 ,-8 -S51 v if 1 7- 3 E . 3 1 Sd .s S P E ig
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.