Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA)

 - Class of 1950

Page 55 of 84

 

Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 55 of 84
Page 55 of 84



Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 54
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Page 55 text:

Sandy Hanson wills her drums to someone with a deaf family. Ian Hibbs wills the crack between her two front teeth to anyone who loves the wide open spaces. Marie Leggiero leaves that look to a crooning torch singer. Patte Luther finally gives herself up to Superman, who for years has been hunting the notorious World criminal, Luther. Natalie MacPherson wills her athletic enthusiasm to a Iunior supplied with lots of vitamin pills. Marjorie Moore Wills the University of Maine to a gal with a fondness for football - captains. Iudy Parlove leaves her hair to a shaggy shaggy dog wishing to win a blue ribbon or so. Sylvia Schribman wills her vocabulary to Webster. Belle Gilmore and Shirley Friberg will future Sweetheart Balls to a gal with lots of money to make up deficits. Betty Grant leaves her early morning punctuality to Marilyn I-liscoe, who's usually late too. init fbi 2.1 -ij suv if 'W-9 Geraldine Dill wills her knowledge to any girl who can afford the annual Mickey Mouse Encyclopedia Brittanica, Ianet Cox and lane Frisbee will two double kicks to any- one who can execute the same. Isabelle Conway gives a passion for typing and one be- loved Royal back to the girl who willed them to her last year. Connie Conley gives Iohn Wayne back to Hollywood. Dolores Chestaro wills future variety shows to someone whose father owns an aspirin factory. Ioan Chambers wills her position on the Dell art staff to a lunior with patience and fortitude. Norma Boule and Terry Walsh will their gavels to any two girls who like to be bothered by Seniors. Evelyn Iefferson leaves the school to all those without husbands. Bev Beckman leaves her piano playing ability to any Marie Sullivan leaves her wardrobe to be divided equal ly among four or five Iuniors. Gloria Raynes and Marylynn Sullivan will their places in the Dell chorus line to Kathy Flannery and Ioan Diener Carolyn Pike gives Rochester, New Hampshire back to the lndians. Phyllis Moran wills her 200 words per minute diamond Gregg award to anyone collecting petty jewelry Ruth Moore wills the Dell orchestra to Mr. Siegel Barbara Peirce gives the Old Colony back to the New Haven Railroad, who really doesn't want it either. Dickie Tournas wills her first name of Aphrodite to anyone who can live up to it, as she does. Iani Austin and Ioanie Gillis will their boyfriends to any- one frequenting the Old Howard. Deawn Young wills her name at the end of the alphabet to anyone who enjoys the end of a long long line. And the' class of 1950 just leaves - at last. Ian. H. Q. 621 Q Sf' Stl if , 2 f A' Q fr o f fi 233 ,wzffijl 0 '. 0 Q 4 'lizfizfizk Pi 93 1 v . ., yozaua. 1' ax O6 M 'e. 4 girl with fourteen or fifteen fingers -51-

Page 54 text:

7, , ,f fi ll ? If fj 5,14 if l ff! XJ fj, 5 .1 'fl 4 . ,, -1 MZ Elaine MacWilliams wills those entrancing eyelashes to a needy broom of some sort. Dotty Iaferian wills Thomas Shorthand to anyone flunking Gregg. Nancy Gray gives Brown College back to its trustees. Marilyn Davis wills herself to the Royal Typewriter Com- pany as a speed demonstrationist. Edie D'Amato wills M.l.T. to an interested Iunior. Her interest graduates in Iune. Rita Fortin wills her pep to a lunior who can keep up with her. Rosemary Sheehy leaves her voice to a Beacon Hill socialite. i Florence Wagner gives her headgear to the Boston Park Department. Bunny Anderson wills her automobile to any girl with lots of courage and extra padding. Iune Talanian gives the Varsity Drag to a Iunior with pep, vitality, and a bottle of vitamin pills. Ioan Casey wills her rosy cheeks to any undernourished Baldwin apple. Troula Cupas begrudgingly wills her curly bangs to lody Femino. WW' 4 Bobbe Fitzgibbon leaves numerous dents in the Ford to her mother, who enjoys driving it once in a while when she gets the chance. , ffffffwy if ' f if Pat Tavourlaris wills the 7:59 from Lowell to Ginny Etzel. Q Dotty Robinson wills the Dellite to Mrs. Devlin with love, kisses, and relief. I Nancy Marks wills her jaunts to Nantucket to a lunior not subject to air sickness. Florence Terzano gives her diamond to any old maid in the Senior Class. WMWW Ann Garbarino wills her big, bright eyes to the May- belline Company. Carson Barnes leaves her journalistic ability to the Boston Traveler. , I llxyl ff , D Q X sera 4 Barbara Barrett and Nan Kelley will themselves to the Toni Company, in case they run out of twins. l ,,1,,,,,..,--Q 3 S -..-IIA.. --fa 'NBII' We will Aurelia Boyagis' disposition to a Iunior as sweet as she is, if there is another. Ginny Buckley gives her shorthand ability to four or five girls who can't get past sixty. Nancy Hakanson wills her glasses to future telescopic research. Beverly Holmes leaves her roommate. That's all. Elaine Mosier wills future turkey raffles to next year's yearbook staff. Kay Passias and Dotty Keats leave their passion for bridge to two girls without a passion for English. Lyn Walton wills her job as Business Manager of the yearbook to a girl with facilities for printing up S1500 lane Smith leaves her name to any Iunior with difficulty in pronouncing her own. Marie Savarese wills herself to Billy Rose as a super- tall showgirl. Phyllis Mullin wills her ringlets to a passing French poodle. DSU...



Page 56 text:

l 1:.. 5 IQ? 5 ' 1 1 .0 jf? 1' 1 The glittering signs cast a rosy hue over the bustling crowds in the theater district just before curtain time. Gay, exciting, opening night in Boston. People came to see and be seen, and from behind my post at the lobby pop corn stand l could see all. My first glimpse of what was to come was at the theater when l applied for this job. While the manager was pondering whether or not a Dell diploma qualified me as a corn popper, he suddenly remembered that his wife, the former Rose Marie Biagi, attended that mag- nanamous institution of learning. Remembering also that his former popper, Mary McCarthy had succeeded as such, l was hired, First past my stand this opening night was Dotty Keats, successor to Ely Culberson, and her partner, Kay Passias. joining them in their balcony seats were Barbara Steven- son, who is writing sequals to the poems of her great uncle Robert Lewis, and Florence Wagner, world famous coiffeur. Marilyn Davis, taking time off from her nightly stint at the Opera House, rushed by to her aisle seat next to loanie Gillis, wife of the famous Boston surgeon who only recently corrected the faulty vertabrae of Sally Keith. Now my corn was really selling. Helen Hatzis, U. S. ambassador to Greece, and Helen Malcolm, lady minister to Afganistan, said it was the best they'd had in years. The voice of usher Mim Flynn, paging Bobbe Ann Fitz- gibbon, broke the lobby serenity. lt seems that lady cop Ioan Simpson had a ticket for Bobbe, president of the U-Drive-lt Corporation, who had parked her Ford in front of a hydrant. Accompanying Bobbe was lane Smith, president of the Royal Typewriter Company, and Beverly qlrff l. We, o,,o o Wm l all If ja! GPI CK 1.999 Prodany, mother of seven. This case would, no doubt, be heard by Gloria Sawyer, Boston traffic judge, who during the housing shortage shared a swan boat with jerry Dill, Pickle magnet. Suddenly all eyes turned to the door. Preceeded by twelve ladies-in-waiting, 'dripping with jewels, and look- ing just as the wife of Indian Prince Kaly Ahn should look, Terry Walsh entered the lobby. ln startling contrast was Connie Conley, commercial artist, who had forgotten to take off her painter's smock. Covering the opening for her paper, Dottie Robinson was accompanied by her pho- tographer Sylvia Schribman, who picks up pin money on the side by riding her motorcycle across a tight rope in Boston Garden. Dolores Chestaro, producer of this opening play was spotted at the lobby water cooler and was promptly be-

Suggestions in the Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA) collection:

Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 7

1950, pg 7

Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 63

1950, pg 63

Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 9

1950, pg 9

Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 65

1950, pg 65

Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 74

1950, pg 74

Kathleen Dell School - Dell Yearbook (Brookline, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 65

1950, pg 65


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