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Page 27 text:
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MARY PAULA LALLY A simple nznirlcn in her flower, is worth II lzundrcd coats-of-arms. VVe've always known Ma- rie as a sweet girl, ready to smile, and truly f'riendly. When she asks us, Are-n't I pretty? we say Quite, quite, ol' deah! When she achieves her ambition, she'll find that kiddies in the kin- dergartens like pretty teach- ers. MICHAEL CHARLES LAZDOWSKY Silence is the virtue of the wise. Michael, a bashful young man, and a You Turk! fan, desires to be a profes- sional golfer. His years as a caddy have taught him all the rules and regulations, and he'll have to lower his score only a little in order to start winning open tour- naments. Keep your head down, Mike. MILDRED BERNICE ., LH PON With mystery before, And reticcnce behind. Milly's pet sentence is You n'l say? Oh, but w We say it won't be vc B long before she's able t do all the traveling her irt is set on. Furthermore, we say that if she'd only tell us where shels going, we'd love to meet her in Tim- tzucktoo, Omsk, or anywhere on earth. WILLIAM A. LEVANGIE None but imself can be his rallelf' If yo ear 'me one near yo 's , 'Wo-moling?'l you e q ite 'sure it's Bill. plan head for The 11 ' s of New Hamp- hi e is summer, and, 'as he s to be a gentleman farm ', we suppose New Hampshire is as good a place as any to begin. We mean, to begin being a gentleman farmer. He began being a gentleman a long time ago. 4Q'.' nh XYVILLIAM LIBBY, JR. All file 14-omen in the world would not mal-'c me lose an hour. Bill is one of the stranger boys of our class in that he spends his spare time behind the counter at Marshall's. Since serving ice-cream, Bill has certainly made a name for himself among the ladies of the school. Fine thing! he habitually exclaims, and indeed so amiable is his dis- position that most things are fine for him. May they continue that way. 'XALICI-3 M. LOGAN Action, is eloquence. You mean it ? is Alice's choice of expression. Yes, we mean it when we say Al- lie has plenty of pep, for she was one of our ablest cheer leaders. She wants to find a position and live high, wide, and handsome. She' the girl who can do it. X ALFRED CHARLES LONGDEN The birds can fly, why c'an'f I. Playing hockey wasn't fast enough for Al. Now he plans to go to the New Eng- land Aircraft Schfol and learn to fly. When the nine o'clock New York plane goes over Dedham four years hence, we expect to see Al wagging his rudder to sa- lute the high school. LOUIS S. LOVELY Hark! the empty hz'glzwa.y's crying. Pat, who was the captain of the basketball team, does not want to waste any more years in furthering his edu- cation. He wants to see the world, his favrrite expres- sion is Let's get rolling! Ol' Man River does nicely at this, Pat, there's no reason why you can't. xl J. ' 1 .ix X X 5' Rl ' 217 xg f 741 l938 YEAR Book P096 23
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Page 26 text:
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BARBARA ELIZABETH ' JOSEPH Stay as sweet as you. are. We feel that Babs, one of our quietest girls, will real- ize her ambition and become an air hostess. Do you mean it? she asks. Of course we mean it. In an airplane she'll get all the traveling she desires. Be- iore she starts, though, Babs is going to work in an oilice. el Q3-7 Q ALMA MARIE KAMPS Can we ever hare too mum of CL good thing? We hope we're not being referred to when Al says What a nut! , for we ad- mire the typing champion of ,'l 4I, and hope her ambition if to travel and be the world's X champion typist is realized. G To become even better on the stuttering fountain pen, she plans to attend Bryant P and Stratton Commercial School. ' RITA T. KENNEDY ' Xi Westwood, Hof' X5 X The nearest place to ' ea,ven, is Rita's comment X nf' her home town, West- ' X ,good So ably and enthusias- --. 'Pl ically does she describe its ix advantages that, should she l over decide to sell house lots there, we're sure she'd make sy' al fortune. Her ambition is to tour the world to see what XNL London, Paris, and Vienna '- . l .ive that Westwood hasn't. Notxreally?'l she will say, when foreigners boost their home towns. X t LESTER FRANCIS KERN HISYJIIIIDGIIGKI tliesf' skipping 'Urns to trust their lzvelsf' Someday when you see the sign on the five-and-ten changed from F. W. Wool- worth to Kern and ll'ool- worth, j.'ou'll know that Fin- gers has got what he's after and is now a partner in the firm. We hope ht-'ll get the dimes and leave only the nickels for Barbara Hutton. After that it will be time for Les to start earning fame as 1' pianist. G-3 S S CARLTON RRANDQ KIEBER A sweep of the pen and a perfect figure. Now, don't get nervous about Carl. 1-le's all set to go out to California and become a rival of Walt Dis- ney. In his version of Snow White he's going to have fourteen dwarfs, so you can see he's headed for a. for- Lune. SHIRLEY JOHNSTON KINGSFORD I do but sing because I must. Mimimimimi! That's Shir- ley tuning up. She's deter- mined to be an opera star. Next year to the Chandler Secretarial Schoolg get a jobg job pays vocal lessonsg vocal lessons develop voiceg voice impresses impressar- iosg impressarios c 0 n f e r with directorsg directors say, Sin on the dotted line, Madam Kingsford g another opera star is born. Sort of a House that Song Built. What? Xf JOSEPH EDWARD KIVLIN A lion among the ladies. After being the managing editor of the Mirror, the manager of the hockey team, and a star in the senior play, Joe should find the work of a certified public ac- countant comparatively easy. He is of course refer- ring to trial balances and things like that when he tells us his favorite expres- sion is Oh Boy! Is she nice! ANTOINETTE KOWALSKI Oh goodness! Tenny, we expect your life will have nothing but goodness in it. 'Twill be g od to travel and 'twill be good to be a secre- tary. When all's said and done, there-'ll be very little that you will ever have to complain of. page 22 DEDHAM HIGH SCHOOL
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Page 28 text:
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24 ELIZABETH FLORA LOWE For who does things with a better grace? In most of her spare time, you can see Betty pleasantly handing out books at the li- brary. VVe think that she vould make a good libra- rian, but, That's what you think, says Betty. She'd rather be a stenographer and hopes some day to trav- el through Scotland, Eng- land, and Switzerland. KENNETH A. LUCE I am in danger, I see, of being included among the whimsical fellows. Do you mean it, Ken? Is your favorite hobby really collecting bobby pins? Well, with the price of scrap metal what it is today, a ton or so of bobby pins might give you a good start toward that high-salaried job you want. Try using a magnet and we think your fortune will be made. DORIS ELIZABETH MacLAREN There's no dependence that can be sure but a depend- ence upon. one's self. Doris has funds of knowl- edge hidden under her shy manner and if our guess proves correct, she will be president of the business in- stead of a fifty-dollar-a-week secretary. Well, I'll be! she'll then exclaim modest- ly. LEWIS CARL MACQUAR- RIE He lilnslicsg all is safe. Lewis is looking forward to a very prosperous future. He wants a job which pays one hundred dollars a week. We hope he won't allow his favorite expression, Forget it! to keep him from striv- ing after this goal, which is well within his possibilities. Page 24 , 'x, S ! L. 'S- qu . ,i Q i G' nlh MANNA I I ANTHONY T oMAs Mm 570, I I Pre taken my fun where I've found it. , I I If you are greeted with v., j Hi, Butch! you can be al- most certain it's Tony. His ambition is to sleep for a week and he is eagerly look- ing forward to being mar- ried in the near future. 'Tis a very laudable aim. FREDERICK WILLIAM MARIANA Wit and wisdom are born with a man. Frisky hopes to become a capitalist and ride around in 16-cylinder Cadillacs and smoke ten-cent cigars. For the present he is quite con- tent to live a few more m.nths in Dedham, crying, Hey cutey! before he em- barks on his stormy con- quest of Wall Street. Bon voyage, Frisky. X ROBERT MARTIN It's better to have one friend of value than many friends worth nothing. Haven't done my home- work, was Bob's war-cry in high school. In spite of that and in spite of his success on the track team, he didn't do so badly in his studies. We hope he'll keep up the good work next year, when he goes to prep school as his first step in becoming a Diesel engineer. THEODORE ALBERT ' MARZINZIK If In all thy humors, whether grave or mellow, Tlrozfrt snrlz a. pleasant fel- ow. x, Ted is a erooner. Some! l day he's going to co-star with Deanna Durbin in Hol- lywood, but that's in the fu- ture. For the present, he is going to a business college, and sing with his own o - chestra at night. After col- lege-it's Sweden and Con- sumers' Cooperatives. The boy has PLANS, and how!! II I 'iff' fm ' ADEDHAM HIGH SCHOOL I 1 I I I ' I IXI I I I r I I -'S 1 . I 0 I 3- - S I 5 I if I ' I fs .i I I . Ihr - . XX
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