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Page 26 text:
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Senand444Pup4eeg. f'Doing window displays for Maey's with some free lance interior decoration thrown in is keeping Bonnie busy. She said Jackie Dyke is in Europe studying for her Ph. D. degree in music as part of a post-graduate course at Potsdam. Mary Ellen has come a long way since high school, too. She is a head nurse at Bellevue Hospital. It was wonderful to talk to the career girls of our class. l told them about my 'career' as a homemaker, showed them pictures of my four children and our home on the Hudson, which Dick and I finally finished building. Ambling on, l noticed Laura Gaylord and a man whom she introduced as her husband, inspecting the latest model Jaguars. CSO Laura finally got her mantb They live in Buffalo and are in New York for a vacation. She said Helen Graves is in Buffalo, too, working for big insurance agency there. Once more I went wandering and the last of my classmates I saw was Agnes Finewood. She looked bright and happy. I found out the reason was that she and her husband had just bought a lovely new home on Long Island. Lucky girltt' Have you seen any of our old gang, John? I surely have, Nellie! I saw Don Burnett, who is chief bookkeeper for Cain Motors. He was making the final arrangements for taking delivery on a new Mer- cades gas turbine, being exhibited for the first time in this country at our show. I also saw John Buisch, who is playing the background nmsic for the displays. l understand he is now making a run at the Copa-Cabanag and Paul DeRuyter, who is running the refreshment stand for the show. He now runs Phelps's largest restaurant. All the art work in the booths was done under the exclusive direction of the Jane lidington Art Studios of Boulder City, Colorado. Then I saw Roger Goodman, who was looking over the MGS. He's thinking of trading his old one in on one of the late Super Deluxe models. He is teaching industrial arts in the Binghamton Central School. On his way to the show he stopped in Newburgh and purchased some books in Bill French's self-service Book Store. He also said he has gotten the oil changed in his MG at Richmond and Howard's Deluxe Ford Garage just outside of New York. As I started on down the aisle, I spotted a man in hip boots with a fishing rod in one hand, a rifle in the other, and a movie camera siting over one shoulder. This turned out to be that noted lecturer on hunting and fishing, Paul Hulster. He was with his partner, Paul Perkins. They said that they had taken hunting trips to Africa and the jungles of India, and fishing trips to Alaska and Canada. They are giving lectures and showing colored moving pictures on their trips to audiences all over the world. At the next booth I met Janet Hildreth and her husband -- guess who! They were looking at the Allord three-passenger models. They said that they were go- ing to trade their two-passenger Jaguar in on one as soon as they returned from a trip to Europe. I over-heard Janet say her dad had contacted Bob Webb on his radio. Bob owns his own radio and television shop in California. I guess Bob finally got his ham license. He was working on it while we were in high school. Continued on page 74 24
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Page 25 text:
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? Scanning through the newspaper yesterday, June 10, 1964, my eye was drawn to this blaring advertisement: International Sports Car Show -- Grand Opening June 11 at the Empire Theater, Broadway, New York City. And farther down was this notation: Sponsored by Cain Motors . So John Cain's dream finally came true -- an auto show of his own and at the world renowned Empire Sports Car Theater, no less! This was something I couldn't miss, so the next day I hopped onto one of Ameriea's most up-to-date buses and took the short trip fro1n my home on the Hudson, along the Thruway to the big city. At one of the toll gates where we stopped, I glanced out the window and saw Jim Driscoll collecting the tolls. He had rigged up a special chair so that he never had to stand up. Arriving at the entrance of the theater, I was greeted by John, who seemed surprised to see me and commented that many of our old classmates were there. We talked for a while, and I told him about riding from the station in a taxi driven by Sylvia Roberts. Syl told me that Anne Steadman had a taxi company too, called Hot Rods, Inc. She told me that Emily Calhoon and Edith Edington had both married and were living on big farms in the Midwest. We were in such deep conversation that Syl forgot about her driving and scraped the fender of one of the Maslyn Transport Company's largest vans, driven by the boss himself, Frannie Maslyn. He was pretty mad till he saw who it wasg then he understood! We asked him ab-out his buddy, Bob Lutz, and he informed us that Bob had bought a farm in Canada. The fender scraping incident was investigated by a motorcycle cop, none other than Gerry Yancey. John laughed and said he had had several run-ins with Gerry while in New York. There was so little time and so Inany people to see that we decided to split up and meet back in the lobby at 5:00. It's about 5:00 now and here comes John. Well, John, when I started down the right aisle, I soon saw several women huddled together and talking a mile a minute. They sounded familiar and, sure enough, there stood Carol Tiffany, Jackie Banwell, Bonnie Hatch, and Mary Ellen Travis. Carol is head matron at a large orphanage in New York. Still writing poetry in her spare time, she has already published one book and is working on another. She said that Sue Tyman is happily married and working in the Treas- ury Department in Washington, D. C. Jackie owns a dance studio in the heart of the big city. She has been back home in Phelps recently and found the land- scape considerably ehanged. Five Points no longer has only the Coffee Shoppe. Joan Brinkerhoff has enlarged it into a modern drive-in restaurant, and right a- cross from it Marcia Grube has a tourist home. One of the most beautiful of the new homes for which Phelps has become noted belongs to Evelyn Hand, now Mrs. Chuck Hefferon. It is an ultra-modern deal which Evie's mother gave them on their 5th wedding anniversary. 23
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Page 27 text:
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