Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA)

 - Class of 1946

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Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 100 of the 1946 volume:

Faimouth Public Libran Falmouth, Mass. 02b- THE LAWRENCIAN Published by THE SENIOR CLASS of Lawrence High School FALMOUTH, MASSACHUSETTS 1946 DEDICATION fzlmouth Pobtk taunouih, M SSS tthrz n WE, THE CLASS OF 1946, DEDICATE OUR YEARBOOK TO MISS JOSEPHINE KOCHANSKA IN GRATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF HER SINCERE INTEREST AND SPLENDID ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS COMMERCIAL TEACHER, LAWRENCIAN ADVERTISING ADVISER, AND WAR BOND SALES CHAIRMAN Page Four THE LAWRENCIAN — 1946 Lawrence High School Faculty MR. RUSSELL B. MARSHALL, B. S.; Ed. M. Principal Bridgewater Teachers’ College, Hyannis Teachers’ College, University o ' f Maine, Harvard Graduate School. MISS KATHLEEN D. ARENOVSKI, A. B. Senior English, Journalism, English Expression Wheaton College, Bates College, Hyannis Teachers’ College. MISS M. OLIVE CAHOON, B. S. Music Supervisor Lowell Teachers’ College. MISS EMILY F. CARPENTER, B. S. Physical Education Supervisor Posse School Physical Training, Hyannis Teachers’ College. F w I . | LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL MR. GAIL M. CAVANAUGH, B. S.; Ed. M. Trigonometry, Solid Geometry, Physics, Aeronautics, Algebra Boston College, Boston University. MR. ALAN D. CRAIG, B. S. United States History, World History, Chemistry Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Boston Univer- sity, Hyannis Teachers ' College, University of Arizona. MISS BARBARA T. FOLLANSBEE, A. B. Sophomore English Wheaton College, Harvard Graduate School. MR. ELMER E. FULLER Physical Education Supervisor, Athletics Posse Normal School, Tufts College, Springfield College, Y. M. C. A. Summer School. Page Five Page Six THE LA WRENCI AN — 1946 MR. ARTHUR L. HARPER, B. S. Printing, Mechanical Drawing Fitchburg State Teachers’ College. MISS MILDRED E. HEATH, B. S. Household Arts — Cooking Framingham Teachers’ College, Bay Path Insti- tute, Worcester Trade School. MISS JOSEPHINE T. KOCHANSKA, B. S. Consumer Education, Commercial Law, Bookkeeping, Typing, Junior Business Training Salem Teachers’ College, Harvard Graduate School MISS HELEN O. LATHROP, B. S. Geometry Salem Teachers’ College, Swain School of Design, North Adams Normal School, Harvard Graduate School, Vesper George, Hyannis Teachers’ College. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Seven MISS HELEN E. McKENZIE, A. B. Geometry, Biology, General Mathematics Seton Hill College, Marine Biological Laboratory. MISS G. LUCILLE OGDEN, B. S. S. Typing, Stenography, Office Practice Boston University, College of Practical Arts and Letters; University of Maine. MR. WILBUR M. MERRILL Manual Training Garden City Aeronautical School, Fitchburg Normal School. MRS. LAURA C. MOORE Algebra Trenton Normal School, Hyannis Teachers’ College. Page Eight THE LA WRENCI AN — 1946 MISS SALLY E. PALMER, B. S. Household Arts — Sewing Framingham Teachers’ College. MRS. MARY C. ROBB, A. B. Junior English, Latin Vassar College. MR. SYDNEY C. ROBERTS, B. S„ Ed. M. Problems of Democracy Boston University. MR. LEWIS B. ROBINSON, B. S. Agriculture New Hampshire College of Agriculture and Me- chanical Arts, Massachusetts State Agricultural College. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Nine MISS NELLIE C. SUZEDELL, B. S. Art Supervisor Salem Teachers’ College, Lowell Teachers’ Col- lege, Harvard University, Boston University, Marcus Lucius Quinn Conservatory. MISS HELEN G. ALLEN, A. B. Dean of Girls, French, German Boston University, Middlebury College, McGill University, Sorbonne. MISS CHARLOTTE HOLDEN, A. B., R. N. School Nurse Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts General Hospital. MR. HENRY FRANK, A. B. Assistant Football Coach Syracuse University. LIEUTENANT-COMMANDER ARLENE SHEEHAN, U. S. N. R. Former Commercial Instructor Boston University, B. S. MR. PAUL DILLINGHAM, A. M, Ed. M. Superintendent of Schools Tufts College, Hyannis Teachers’ College. Page Ten THE LA WRENCIAN — 1946 A Message To The Class Of 1946 RUSSELL B. MARSHALL, Principal I N this country the task of preparing for citizenship is the foremost problem faced by every educational institution. We have an ideal, the ideal of democracy. In practice we frequently fall below this ideal, but it serves its function nonetheless. Democracy’s ultimate safeguard is the enlightened conscience of the citizen. Being a government of the people, by the people, and for the people,” it must depend for perpetuation upon the moral integrity of the people. The schools have helped each of you to form the right basic habits, personal at- titudes, and emotional reactions required in good citizens. It is my earnest hope that through the years the graduates of L. H. S. will by their actions, interest, and cooper- ation hold precious the ideals of democracy. The young people of today have a great responsibility, the responsibility of carry- ing on the ideal of democracy and applying it to the many problems facing the world. The dignity of humanity, one of the essential concepts of democracy, requires that racial antagonisms be minimized. Your school life has contributed to you both un- derstanding and appreciation of the customs and habits of other peoples. Your faith and your belief in the future of democracy must contribute to the cause of peace. These are the ideals of democracy. Your adherence to them can be your great contri- bution to a better life. Page Twelve THE LA WRENCI AN — 1946 EUGENE H. ALLEN Hatchville Born April 29, 1928, Brookline, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : Vocational Agricultural. Destination-. Forest Ranger School. WILLIAM JOSEPH CANTWELL Falmouth Born April 30, 1924, Groton, Connecticut. Attended Browne Junior High School. Curriculum : General. Entered U. S. Navy on January 15, 1943, and served as Storekeeper 3 c until discharged on January 19, 1946. Destination : College. ;L ' A LEIGH BRUCE ALLEI Quissett Born October 16, Providence, Rhode Island. Mount Hermon School. CcirCiculum-. College. FootbalL rfo; Basketball Captain ' 46; Social Committee ' 46; Lau rencjav Advertising Stai ' 46. Destination : College. PHYLLIS MARY ANDREWS East Falmouth Born February 21, 1928, New Bedford, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: Commercial. Destination: Typist. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Thirteen JOHN R. AUGUSTA, JR. Teaticket Born October 19, 1927, Hyannis, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum ' . General. Football ’44, ’45, ’46; Baseball ' 44, ’46. Destination : Business. ) ' M c Xnois (rro.Urt MARGARET PATRICIA BACKUS Woods Hole Born August 22, 1927, Scarboro, England. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : Commercial. Destination-. Undecided. JEAN BAKER Teaticket Born February 7, 1928, West Newton, Mass. Attended Messick High School, Memphis, Tennessee. Curriculum : General. Chairman, Victory Loan Rally ’46; Laurencian Associate Feature Editor, ’46; Laurencian Art Staff, ’46. Destination : Art School. PHILIP WOODBURY BAKER Davisville Born March 17, 1929, Hyannis, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. General. Laurencian ’44, ' 45; Boys’ Sports Editor ’46; Enterprise School Reporter ' 46; Football ’46; Social Committee Chairman ' 46; Ways an d Means Committee ’46; Problems of Democracy Co-op ’45; Glee Club ’46. Destination: Navy. Page Fourteen THE LA WRENCI AN — 1946 - ADELINE BENTO HA ZJ y East Falmouth Born October 26, 1927, East Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : Commercial. Librarian ' 44; Head Librarian ' 45, ' 46; Home Room Trea- surer ' 45; Class Treasurer ' 45, ' 46; Pepsi-Cola Scholarship Con- test ' 46; Laurencian Senior Notes Editor ' 46; Class Gift Com- mittee ' 45; Caps and Gowns Committee’ 45; Glee Club ' 44; Chairman, Morning Exercises ' 46. Destination: Bryant College. -tyA-RL OVf CHARLOTTE LOUISE BOURNE West Falmouth Born July 30, 1928, West Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: Commercial. Usher at Graduation ' 45; Laurencian Advertising Staff ' 44, ' 46. Destination: Hairdresser. RICHARD CLIFTON BAKER West Falmouth Born April 24, 1928, West Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: General. Basketball ' 44, ' 45, ' 46; Class Vice-President ' 46; Class Marshal ' 45; Social Committee ' 44, ' 45; Magazine Campaign Captain ' 46, Highest Salesman in Eastern Massachusetts ' 46; Glee Club ' 46; Laurencian Room Representative ' 46; Baseball ’46. Destination: Undecided. NORMA BARROWS Falmouth Heights Born October 35, 1928, Brockton, Juass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: Collew Preparatory. Basketball ' 45, Captahj ' 46; Laurencian Advertising Sta: sociate Editor ' 45; Feature President ' 45; Social Com Committee ' 44, ' 45, ' 46 mittee ' 45, ' 46; Legi Oratorical Contest, Third Place ' 46; Enterprise Schyrfol Reporter ' 46 mittee ' 46; C. Committee. urencian Club ' 44, ' 45, ' 46; { Room Representative ' 45; As- ' 45; Co-Editor ' 46; Class Vice- ' 45, ' 46; Ways and Means .mittee ' 46; Dramatics Com- st. First Place ' 45; Legion ootball Ticket Committee airman. Class Day Corn- Chairman, Class Gift Destination : Bethany College. Page Fifteen LAWRENCE HIGH S.CHOOL PATRICIA ANN BOWMAN Born February 27, 1928, Boston, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : Commercial. Laurencian Advertising Staff ’44, ’45, Manager ’46; Dra- matics Committee ' 45; Class Banquet Chairman ’46; Class Gifts ’46. Destination: Medical Secretary, Fisher School. Yffr 5NBK. CLAIRE LOUISE BREI VOGEL Falmouth Heights Born January 18, 1928, Barnstable, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : General. Destination: Business School. JOAN ADELE BROWN ttVL-BuZT ' Woods Hole Born December 4, 1927, Boston, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: College. Assistant Librarian ’45. Destination : College. KATHERINE BROWN East Falmouth Born October 1, 1928, Worcester, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: Commercial. War Bond and Stamp Committee ' 45, Chairman ’46; Victory Bond Rally ’46; Chinese Auction Committee ’46; Laurencian Ad- vertising Staff ’45, ’46; Laurencian Ways and Means Committee Chairman ’46; Usher at Graduation ' 45. Destination : Secretary. Page Sixteen THE LA WRENCI AN — 1946 MARION ELOISE BUSCH Mashpee Born March 12, 1928, New York City. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. Commercial. Lawrencian Room Representative ’46. Destination-. Office Work A ARTHUR FRANKLIN C SON Falmouth Born April 6, 1928, Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. General. Basketball ’44, ’45, ’46; Class Treasurer ’44; Lawrencian Advertising Staff ’46; Social Committee ’44; Orchestra ’44, ’45; Baseball ’46. Destination: Navy. MILDRED LOUISE CARLSON Woods Hole Born April 28, 1928, Nevcburyport, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : College. Lawrencian Literary Staff ’44, ' 45; Assistant School Notes Editor ' 46, Alumni Editor ’46; Social Committee ' 44, ' 46; Prom Committee ’46; Librarian ’44, ’45; Usher at Graduation ’45; Football Ticket-Selling Committee ’46; Honor Student ’46. ELSIE G. CARLSON Woods Hole Born June 9, 1927, Dranqsered, Sweden. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: College. Lawrencian Staff ’44; Assistant Exchange Editor ’45; Ex- change Editor ’46; Student Council ’44; Social Committee ’44, ’46; Prom Committee ' 46; Usher at Graduation ’45; Football Ticket Selling Committee ' 46; Assistant Librarian ’44. Destination c College. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Seventeen zeiRA ANN EVELYN CUMMINGS Falmouth Heights Born November 1, 1927, Whitinsville, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. Commercial. Destination-. Undecided. JOSEPHINE BEULAH CHASE West Falmouth Born June 4, 1928, West Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. Commercial. War Bond and Stamp Committee ’45, ' 46; Victory Bond Rally Committee ’46; Laurencian Business Manager ’46; L w- renteen Club Governing Board ’46. Destination : Office Work. MURIEL FRANCES CHILDS Falmouth Born July 30, 1928, Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. General. Destination-. Undecided. ESTHER LOUISE CLARK Falmouth Born March 8, 1928, New Bedford, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. Commercial. Ways and Means Committee, ’45; War Bond and Stamp Committee ’46, Chairman ’45; D. A. R. Pilgrim ’46; Victory Bond Rally Committee ’46; Laurencian Business Manager ’46; Lawrer.teen Club Governing Board ’46; Class Gifts ’46. Page Eighteen THE LA WRENCIAN — 1946 Destination-. Engineering School. JANE DEAN (J, Falmouth _ Born July 27, 1928, Boston, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. College. Cheerleader ' 45; Head Cheerleader ’46; Social Committee Co-Chairman ' 44, ' 46; Social Committee ' 45; Dramatic Com- mittee ' 46; Basketball ' 46; Prom Committee ' 46; Laurencian Staff ' 45; Laurencian Photography Editor ' 46; Usher at Graduation ' 45; Ways and Means Committee ' 46; Librarian ' 45; Class Day Com- mittee ' 46. Destination : Aeronautical Engineer or Nurse. ROBERT LOVEWELL DAY North Falmouth Born February 27, 1928, Newton, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: General. Basketball ' 45. ELLEN BRUCE CUNNINGHAM Falmouth Born January 28, 1928, Woods Hole, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: General. l.awrencian Business Staff ' 46; Laurencian Art Staff ' 45 ' 46; Class Gift Committee ' 45; Home Nursing ' 45. Destination: Undecided. O ' 9 ' MINDIE CUTLER Falmouth Born March 12, 1929, New Haven, Conn. Attended New Haven High School. Curriculum: College. Laurencian School Notes Editor ' 45, ' 46; Laurencian Club ' 45, 46; Ring Committee ' 45; Lawrenteen Club Governing Board ' 46; Entertainment Committee Chairman ' 46; Enterprise Reporter 46; C.S.P.A. Convention ' 46. Destination : New Haven State Teachers ' College. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Nineteen OLIVE GLORIA DeSOUZA East Falmouth Born July 14, 1927, East Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum ' . Commercial. Laurencian Advertising Staff ’44, ' 45, ’46; Laurencian Room Representative ’44; Lunchroom Helper ’44, ' 45; Usher at Gradu- ation ’45; Victory Bond Rally Committee ‘46; Chinese Auction Committee ' 46; Diamond Ring Cooking Class ’46. Destination ' . Office Work. RICHARD H. DIMMOCK Hatchville Born August 15, 1928, Worcester, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum ' . General. School Orchestra ’44, ' 45; Basketball ’45. Destination ' . College. DOROTHY ANNE DONNELLY Falmouth Born February 4, 1928, Boston, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum ' . College. Ways and Means Committee ' 44, ’45, ' 46; Basketball ’45, ’46; Usher at Graduation ' 45; Laurencian Photography Staff ’46; Class Day Committee ' 46; Recreation Committee ’45; Washing- ton Committee ’46; Dramatic Committee ' 45, ’46; Librarian ' 44, ’45; Football Ticket Committee ’46; Social Committee ’46, Chair- man ’44, Co-Chairman ’45; Class Gift Committee ’46. Destination : College. ANN RITA DOYLE Ai-RfcRT Falmouth Born May 16, 1928, Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum ' . General. Laurencian Advertising Staff ’45, Manager ’46; Ways and Means Committee ' 45; Usher at Graduation ’45; Stamp Commit- tee Room Representative ’46; Washington Committee Chairman ’46. Destination ' . Undecided. Page Twenty THE LA WRENCIAN — 1946 JUDITH DESIRE ELDRED c oC PtK. Quissett Born March 20, 1928, Brockton, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : General. Laurencian Art Staff ’46; Laurencian Room Representative ’45; Laurencian Feature Editor ’46; Enterprise School Reporter ’46; Class Motto Committee ’44; Class Ode ’46. Destination : Boston University School of Art. LOUISE ERSKINE ?A y£ Born August 7, 1928, Quissett, Mass. Hall School. Curriculum-. Commercial. Quissett Attended Henry W. Librarian ' 44, ’45; Junior Red Cross ’44, ’45; War Bond Committee ’45. Destination : Undecided. ISABEL GOMES TAVflKGS Teaticket Born May 12, 1927, West Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : Vocational Household Arts. Fashion Club ’46. Destination-. Undecided. JOSEPH P. GRACE, JR. East Falmouth Born October 12, 1927, East Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. General. Football ’44, ’45, ’46. Destination : Undecided. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Twenty-one CHARLES L. HATZIKON Falmouth Born July 15, 1927, Hyannis, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. General. School Orchestra ’44, ’45. Destination-. U. S. Army. ARLINE HOLWAY HENRY Quissett Born February 18, 1928, Providence, R. I. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. Commercial. Librarian ’46. Destination : Bryant College. MURIEL JEANNE IRVING M Falmouth Born December 22, 1928. Norwood, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. General. Social Committee ’44, ’45, ’46; Dramatic Committee ’45, Chairman ' 46; Basketball ' 45, ’46; Chairman, Ways and Means Committee ' 45; Cheerleader ' 46; Laurencian Assistant Literary Editor ’45, Literary Editor ’46; Chairman, Lawrenteen Club Gov- rning Board ’46; Usher at Graduation ’45; Prom Committee ’46; Social Chairman, Laurencian Club ’46; Librarian ' 45, ’46; Enter- prise School Reporter ’46; Recreation Committee ’45; Class Day Committee ' 46; Washington Committee ' 46. Destination : College. GEORGE ARNOLD JENNING 0 North Falmouth Born December 6, 1928, Berkley, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : General. Basketball ’45; Music Festival ' 46; Glee Club ' 46; Base- ball ’46. Destination-. Undecided. Page Twenty-two THE LAWRENCIAN — 1946 RICHARDSON HARWOOD JONAS Mashpee Born April 4, 1927, New Bedford, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum ' . General. Basketball ’45, ’46; Football ’44. Destination-. U. S. Army. DOROTHY MAY KEELER Hatchville Born June 28, 1928, Concord, N. H. Attended Rundlett Junior High School. Curriculum-. Commercial. Winner of Hall School and High School Spelling Bee ’46. Destination : Secretary. CLAIRE ELVINA LaFOND ' -4 ' 4 ! IhMTg. Falmouth Born May 7, 1927, New Bedford, Mass. Attended New Bedford High School. Curriculum: General. Lau-rencian Advertising Staff ’44, ’45; Usher at Graduation ’45; Victory Bond Rally Committee ’46; Chinese Auction Com- mittee ’46. Destination: Undecided. ♦ afr ; ' T V ANN LOCKHART LANDERS West Falmouth Born December 26, 1927, Brockton, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: College. Class Secretary ’44, ’45, ’46; Social Committee ’44, ’45; Ways and Means Committee ’46; Orchestra ’44, ’45, ’46; Lau- rencian Room Representative ’44; Assistant Literary Editor ’44, Associate Editor ’45, Literary Editor ’45, Co-Editor ’46; Red Cross ’44, President ’46; Washington Franklin Medal in History ’45; Massachusetts Girls’ State Representative ’45; Legion Oratorical Contest, Second Place ’46; Enterprise School Reporter ’46; Glee Club ’46; President, Music Club ’46; C. S. P. A. Convention ’46; Class Day Committee ’46; Smythe Honor Roll ’46. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Twenty-three GILBERT LEWIS Teaticket Born December 5, 1926, Teaticket, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum ' . General. Destination-. U. S. Army. TRANCES ROSA LOPES East Falmouth Born January 4, 1927, Waquoit, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. General. Destination: Undecided. WALTER F. LORD, JR. Falmouth Born June 19. 1928, Lawrence, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: General. Football Manager ’44, ’45, ’46; Laurencian Advertising Staff ’46. Destination: Navy. DORIS MARILYN LUMBERT Born October 24, 1927, Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: College. Social Committee ’44, ’45; Basketball ’45; Ways and Means Committee ’46; Laurencian Advertising Staff ’44, ’45, ’46; Dra- matics Committee ’45. Destination: Dean Junior College. Page Twenty-four THE LAWRENCIAN — 1946 A L3 ARLENE EUNICE MacDOUGALL Falmouth Heights Born February 8, 1929, New Bedford, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum ' . College. Chairman, Social Committee ’44, Social Committee ’45; Ways and Means Committee ’45, Chairman ' 44, ’46; Recreation Committee ’45; Dramatic Committee ’45, ’46; lawrencian Girls’ Sports Editor ’46; Class Day Committee ’46. Destination: Undecided. %£) SARAH HELEN MALZAN M AfZir l A f A Falmouth Born May 11, 1927, Meriden, Conn. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : General. Destination : Undecided. GILBERT ANTHONY MELLO Waquoit Born March 6, 1928, Waquoit, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: College. Football ' 45; Candidate for Boys’ State ' 45; Class President ’45, ' 46; All-Cape Football Team ’45; Student Council ' 45; Pepsi- Cola Scholarship Contest ' 46; Smythe Honor Roll ’46. Destination: Tufts College. EARL HERBERT MILLS Mashpee Born March 30, 1929, Hyannis, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: General. Basketball ' 46; Baseball ' 44, ' 45, ' 46; Football ’45. ' 46; Glee Club ’46. Destination: Electrical Engineer. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Twenty-five WILLIAM LAFAYETTE OLIVER West Falmouth Born July 8, 1927, Fort Totton, N. Y. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : Manual Arts. Football ’44, ' 45, ' 46; Baseball ' 44, ' 45, ' 46. Destination-. U. S. Army. Born September 17, 1927, West Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. Commercial. Destination-. Undecided. BARBARA ANN MONTEIRO West Falmouth Born March 26, 1927, Boston, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. Vocational Household Arts. Fashion Club ' 46. GERALDINE LOUISE MONTEIRO Destination-. Undecided. Teaticket EMMA ELIZABETH PANTON Ri Cfj Falmouth Born August 17, 1928, Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. College. Lawrencian Co-Art Editor ' 45, Laurencicn Art Editor ' 46;. Roving Reporter ' 46; Junior Red Cross Treasurer ' 45; Librarian ' 46; Enterprise School Reporter ' 46; C.S.P.A. Convention ' 46; En- tertainment Committee, Lau-rencian Club ' 46; Red Cross Repre- sentative ' 46. Destination : Art School. Page Twenty-six THE LA WRENCIAN — 1946 ELEANOR MAY PETERS Mashpee Born January 5, 1929, Mashpee, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : Vocational Household Arts. Fashion Club ' 46. Destination: Undecided. RUSSELL MILES PETERS Mashpee Born January 5, 1929, Hyannis, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: General. Football ' 44, ' 45; Basketball ' 45; Baseball ’45, ’46. Destination: Engineering School. JANET PETERSON jT Falmouth Born October 4, 1928, Newton, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: College. Social Committee ' 44, ’45; Ways and A eih Committee ' 45; Dramatics Committee ’45, ’46; Cheer Leadtpl ' 46; Ring Com- mittee ' 46; Basketball ' 45; Usher at Graduation ' 45; Class Gift Committee ’46. Destination: Undecided. LOUISE PIMENTAL Born October 28, 1927, East Falmouth, Mass. Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: Commercial. War Bond Rally Committee ’45. Destination: Undecided. East Falmouth Anended LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Twenty-seven Falmouth Heights Attended WILLIAM ROBERTS, JR. Born February 25, 1928, New Bedford, Mass. Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. General. Basketball ' 44, ' 45, ' 46; Baseball ' 44, ' 45, ' 46; Football ' 44, ' 45; Social Committee ' 44, ' 45, ' 46; Lau rencian Staff ' 46. Destination : College Preparatory School. CAROL ADEN ROBERTSON Falmouth Born January 171928, Bradford, Vermont. Attended Henry W. Hall School. (Curriculum : General. ' 4 JEAN BICKNELL PITTSLEY Falmouth Born August 16, 1928, Shawsheen, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. College. Social Committee ’44, ' 45; Cheer Leader ' 46; Usher at Gradu- ation ' 45. Destination-. Nursing. FRANCES ' REZENDES Teaticket Born October 25, 1 927, Wareham, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: Commercial. Destination: Undecided. Home Nursmg ' 45; Class Gift Committee, Chairman ' 45. Destination: Marriage. Pnge Twenty-eight THE LAWRENCIAN — 1946 MARILYN JEAN ROCKWELL yectJfr Qu,ssetI Born March 18, 1929, Quincy, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. College. Social Committee ’44, ’45; Basketball ’45, 46; Recreation Committee ’45; Chairman of Ticket Committee ’46; Librarian ’46; Ways and Means Committee ’46; Laurencian Club ’46. Destination: Nursing School. PAULINO P. RODERICK East Falmouth Born January 24, 1928, East Falmouth, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum : General. Football ’44, ’45, ’46, Captain ’46; Basketball ’45, ’46; Base- ball ’46. Destination: U. S. Navy. AUDREY LUCILLE SANTOS Teaticket Born November 24, 1928, Osterville, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: Commercial. Destination: Undecided. ELEANOR TORRES Waquoit Born May 14, 1928, Waquoit, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum: Commercial. Victory Bond Rally Committee ’45. Destination: Beauty School. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Twenty-nine MARCIA WRIGHT Falmouth Born May 15, 1928, Brockton, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. General. Destination : Undecided. ELLIOT RAYMOND YOUNG Falmouth Heights Born June 20, 1927, Hyannis, Mass. Attended Henry W. Hall School. Curriculum-. Commercial. Class President ' 43; Student Council ’44; Laurencian Club ’45; Circulation Manager ’45, ' 46; Class Day Committee Co- Chairman ' 46; Basketball Manager ' 46; Ways and Means Com- mittee ’46; Laurencian Club President ’46. Destination : Bentley School of Accounting. Commeincement Awards $100 Lawrence High School Scholarship Association Awards: Elsie Carlson and Mildred Carlson Adeline Bento Gilbert Mello Emma Panton $50 Lawrence High School Scholarship Association Awards: Muriel Irving Arlene MacDougall $100 Outlook Club- Scholarship Award: Ann Landers $100 James Richard Jewett Award: Jane Dean $25 Henry H. Smythe Improve- ment Award: Patricia Bowman $25 Lawrencian Improvement in Writing Award: Norma Barrows D. A. R. Good Citizenship Medal: Esther Clark Becker College Key: Josephine Chase Washington and Franklin Certificate: Marilyn Merrill Bausch and Lomb Honorary Science Certificate and Medal: Mildred Carlson Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Key: Mildred Carlson $10 Kiwanis Shop Award: Alan Lunn, ’47 $5 Outlook Club Award for Proficiency in Cooking: Geraldine Monteiro $5 Outlook Club Award for Proficiency in Sewing: Isabel Gomes $5 Falmouth Grange Award in Agriculture: William Lopez, ”48 Page Thirty THE LAWRENCIAN — 1946 Former Classmates In The Service WILLIAM BENTO William Bento entered the Navy in Febru- ary, 1944. He trained at Sampson, N. Y., and then was transferred to South America and Cuba. After this he was sent to Pearl Harbor, Okinawa, the Philippines, Luzon Islands, and then Yokohama, and Tokyo, Japan. After leaving for the United States, William stopped at Brazil and Panama. Before his honorable discharge on May 2, 1946, he was stationed in Brooklyn, N. Y. ★ ★ ★ DAVID F. CASILES David F. Casiles left Lawrence High late in his sophomore year and reported for duty in the U. S. Merchant Marines on May 25, 1944. He received his boot training at Sheepshead Bay, New York. David has done quite a lot of traveling. Some of the places in which he has been are: Eng- land, France, Wales, Italy, Spain, Casablanca, and Iceland. He received his discharge from the service in May, 1946. ★ ★ ★ GEORGE HARVEY HOLDEN Harvey Holden, a popular member of our class, enlisted in the U. S. Na vy, June, 1945. After having completed his boot training at Sampson, New York, he left for the Pacific and is now stationed on Guam. Harvey has a rating of S 1 c. ★ ★ ★ WILLIAM LOPES William Lopes, who joined the U. S. Army in 1944, was a Private first class before his discharge at Fort Devens on January 6, 1946. After receiving his basic Army training at Camp Croft, S. C., he went overseas where he spent 22 months of active duty in Italy. While he was in Italy, he participated in three major battles. He has a Bronze Star with a Presiden- tial Citation, the European Theater Ribbon, the Good Conduct Medal, and the Victory Medal. He plans to enter Bryant College in Providence, R. I., this fall. ★ ★ ★ GEORGE ROY STRATTON George Roy Stratton, S 1 c, entered the U. S. Navy October 28, 1944, early in his sophomore year. He received boot training at Sampson, New York, and was then transferred to Mary- land. where he attended radio school. After completing this training he was sent to Honolulu and from there to Guam, where he is stationed at the present time. PAUL SERVIS Paul Servis joined the Navy in February, 1944. He is a carpenter’s mate 3rd class. He received his training at Sampson, N. Y., and was afterward stationed in Rhode Island. For the past 10 months, Paul has been stationed in Okinawa and Guam. He will be home on leave sometime this spring. ★ ★ ★ LESTER SILVA Lester Silva reported to Sampson, N. Y., for boot training in the U. S. Navy, in February, 1945. He received further naval training in Rhode Island. After completing his courses, he was made a Machinist’s Mate 3rd Class and was sent to the Pacific. He served in Hawaii and Guam, then returning to this country. Lester has the Asiatic Pacific ribbon, the Amer- ican Theater Ribbon, and the Victory Medal. He was discharged at the Fargo Building, Bos- ton, on April 15, 1946. ★ ★ ★ WILLIAM TURNER William Turner entered the U. S. Army in October, 1943. He went overseas with the rating of Corporal and took part in the in- vasion of France and Germany. He was wounded while going into Germany and he received the Purple Heart. William served on guard duty at St. Lo and was a machine gun- ner in the 45th Armored Infantry Division of the 7th Army. The three main battles in which William participated are the Rhine, Aachen, and St. Lo. Besides the Purple Heart, William has the Combat Infantry Badge, the European Theater ribbon, the Victory medal, and the Good Conduct medal. He was discharged at Fort Devens on May 14, 1946. William’s father, John A. Turner, is in the Navy. ★ ★ ★ WILLIAM WEEKS William Weeks entered the Navy on No- vember 16, 1945. He took his training at Bainbridge, Maryland. After this he spent eight weeks at the Service School Command at the Great Lakes. On May 2, 1946, he left for Newport, R. I., to be given further orders. ★ ★ ★ GORDON WRIGHT Gordon Wright entered the Army in Sep- tember, 1945. He received his training at Fort Knox. Kentucky. After being home on leave last January, Gordon was transferred to Camp Kilmer, N. J., a port of embarkation, and from here was shipped to Austria where he is now stationed. SENIOR CLASS 1946 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS President Gilbert Mello Vice-President Richard Baker Secretary Ann Landers Treasurer Adeline Bento Marshal Bertrand LaForest, ' 47 Class Motto Today Decides Tomorrow” Colors Class Ode Flower Red and White Judith Eldred Red Carnation Standing ' . Ann Landers, Richard Baker. Seated : Gilbert Mello, Adeline Bento. Page Thirty -two THE L A WRENCI AN — 1946 Henry H. Smythe Roll Of Honor ' T ( HESE graduates of Lawrence High School have best exemplified in their school ■ - the ideals of Loyalty, Honor and Service” are the words cast in bronze on the Roll of Honor, which for seventeen years has graced the wall at the front of the Main Room, an ever-mindful present to L. H. S. from its generous friend, the late Rev. Henry H. Smythe. From the Class of 1946 Ann L. Landers — class secretary, representative to Massa- chusetts Girls’ State, and Co-Editor of the Lawrencian — and Gilbert A. Mello — class president and representative to Massachusetts Boys ' State— -have been chosen by their fellow students to have their names cast in bronze and placed on the tablet. Ann L, Landers Gilbert A. Mello Ann, class secretary and co-editor of the Lawrencian, was the L. H. S. delegate to the first Massachusetts Girls ' State. She plays in the school orchestra and as a member of the Glee Club and president of the Music Club, takes an active part in the musical life of the school. She participated in the American Legion Oratorical Contest, was awarded the Washington and Franklin medal for excellence in American History, and will enter either Wheaton College or Jackson College in the fall. Gilbert, president of his class for the past two years, was a delegate to the Massachusetts Boys’ State last year. He is interested in athle- tics and was on the L. H. S. Varsity and the All-Cape Football teams. He is active in Scout work and is an Eagle Scout with a Gold Palm. He entered the Pepsi-Cola Scholarship Contest early this fall. Gibbie takes the college pre- paratory course and plans to enter Tufts Col- lege in the autumn. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Thirty-three Graduation Program JUNE 11, 1946 Triumphal March” from Aida School Orchestra Invocation Welcome Hymn of Loyalty Class of 1946 Verdi The Rev. Ralph H. Long Gilbert Anthony Mello Davis-Walch Commencement Address THE CHANCE OF A LIFETIME” Conquest of the Air” Class of 1946 Announcement of Commencement Awards Presentation of Diplomas Class Ode Class of 1946 Class Farewell Benediction Loyalty Honor Dr. J. Edgar Park Tschaikowsky Principal Russell B. Marshall Superintendent Paul Dillingham Judith D. Eldred Mildred Louise Carlson The Rev. Philip A. Ahern Service Class Ode Judith Eldred ( Tune — Fair Hills and Valleys) Oh Iawrence High School, though we’re leaving thee, Thy memory in our hearts shall ever be. We won’t forget the happy days we ' ve spent, Nor what these three years here with thee have meant. Though we may tread the long, rough ways and high, We still shall keep thy teachings ever nigb, Upholding all thy wavs of truth and right That lead us up and onward to the light. And now the time has come; we’re on our way. It saddens us to say goodbye today. Thy sp irit will be ever at our side And through the years ahead will be our guide. Before we go, we leave with thee today Our heart-felt thanks for making clear the way, For guiding us through doubtfulness and strife, For teaching us to live a better life. Our farewell message now to thee we sing; And to thy door our loyal praises bring. We will remember thee in faithfulness. All through the years ahead, dear L. H. S. CLASS ALBUM Top row. William Oliver, Phyllis Andrews, John Augusta, Jean Baker. Philip Baker, Richard Baker, Norma Barrows. Second rou : Adeline Bento, Charlotte Bourne, Patricia Bowman, Arthur Carlson, Josephine Chase, Muriel Childs. Third row. Mindie Cutler, Esther Clark, Jane Dean, Olive DeSouza, Richard Dimmock, Dorothy Donnelly, Ann Doyle. Fourth row. Judith Eldred, Louise Erskine, Joseph Grace, Muriel Irving, George Jennings, Ann Landers. Fifth rou : Dorothy Keeler, Doris Lumbert, Arlene MacDougall, Sally Malzan, Gilbert Mello, Emma Panton, Janet Peter- son. Sixth row. Louise Pimental, Marilyn Rockwell, Paul Roderick, Audrey Santos, Eleanor Torres, Marcia Wright. Bottom row , upper: Marian Busch; lower: Leighton Allenby, Isabel Gomes, Frances Rezendes, Pat Buckus, Joan Brown, Elliot Young. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Thirty- five Class Day Program JUNE 10, 1946 Triumphal March’’ from Aida School Orchestra Welcome ' Viva la Senior Class” Class Gifts Junior Gift to Class of ’46 Sophomcre Gift to Class of ' 46 Presentation of Class Gift to School Dark Water” Play — Now It Can Dl Told Tree Planting Hymn of Loyalty Verdi Gilbert Mello Class of ’46 Patricia Bowman, Esther Clark Everett Lumbert Harold Croft Gilbert Mello Mixed Glee Club Members of the Class of ’46 Class of ’46 Class of ’46 CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Elliot Young, Norma Barrows, Co-Chairmen Jane Dean Dorothy Donnelly Muriel Irving Doris Lumbert Marilyn Rockwell Janet Peterson Ann Landers Arlene MacDougall Louise Erskine ★ ★ ★ “Now It Cae Be Told” A Burlesque written by the Class Day Committee CAST OF CHARACTERS At Piano Narrator Parson Junior Mourners Ann Landers Norma Barrows Elliot Young Paulina Goss, Peggy McAdams, June Miller, Patricia Sylvia, Robert Donnelly, Donald Francis Father Time William Cantwell Grave Diggers Philip Peterson, Everett Lumbert Trumpeter Richard Dimmock Kleenex Peddlers Jane Dean, Doris Lumbert Lawyer Muriel Irving Janet Peterson — Marion Busch, Charlotte Bourne — William Roberts — Doris Lumbert, Muriel Irving, Marilyn Rockwell — William Cantwell, Ann Doyle, Jean Pittsley — Joseph Grace, Louise Erskine — Walter Lord, Elliot Young, Eugene Allen, Arthur Carlson — Gilbert Mello, Eleanor Torres — Adeline Bento — - Esther Clark SYNOPSIS OF SCENES Scene : 2046 A.D. A small graveyard Scene IT. on the present site of Lawrence High School Scene I IT. Same year; several days later. Law offices of Hawk and Dunbar Ten years later; The Hereafter STAGE MANAGERS Properties Dorothy Donnelly Curtain Walter Lord, Philip Peterson Lights Jane Dean Microphone Arthur Carlson, Eugene Allen Page Thirty -six THE LA WRENCI AN — 1946 SCENE I In a Graveyard ( Funeral music faint in background ) Narrator — It is the year 2046, and the scene is a small, bleak graveyard located where once the Lawrence High School stood proudly against the sky. A tiny group of mourners stand huddled around a freshly dug grave while the wailing voice of a local parson pronounces the eulogy. The curtain rises as the mournful music reaches a climax. The music declines and the narrator continues. Narrator — Yes, the illustrious class of 1946 has passed away and its soul departed unto the hereafter. Organ breaks into Dearly Beloved ' ’ but briefly ... The music stops and the parson be- gins. ( T wo senior girls will peddle kleenex in the audience during this part ) Parson — Dearly beloved, we are gathered together in the presence of this company to pay our last and humble respects to that noble and bifurcated class, who for three years faced unflinchingly the untold horrors of L. H. S. Up the creaking back stairs, through the sagging, moss-covered portals, innocent and un- spoiled they were herded into L. H. S. Ignor- ant and unversed but dauntless in spirit they withstood a battery of welcomes. They gazed with rapt attention as the speakers forewarned them of L. H. S.’s pitfalls, ( watch out for that weak place on the stairs, and so on far into the night.) Yes, that was a red letter day, one not soon to be forgotten in the minds of those 93. And so went the Summer of 1943. (Father Time walks through to indicate the passage of the summer.) The gong of the school bell brought them rushing madly back the next fall, and so they launched their careers at L. H. S. Elliot Young was elected president; Harvey Holden, vice- president; Ann Landers, secretary; and Arthur Carlson, treasurer. Homesick and nursing certain mercenary tendencies, the Class of 1946 could not for long forsake their former alma mater, and so with burning zeal they began a series of pilgrimages to the shrine for their $17.83. After a pathetic struggle, they emerged triumphantly and car- ried back with them their S 17.83 in pennies, nickles and dimes. Again they swelled their class treasury by selling coke during the noon hours. Display- ing an occasional glimmer of genius they pro- duced the Hick-Hop”, which proved a great success. As sophomores, they went into action promptly and ordered class rings before the ’44 deadline. Betraying, for a moment, their al- truistic attitude, they backed the attack” dur- ing the fourth war bond drive by purchasing a $25 bond for the school. Already many of the students were distin- guishing themselves: Ann Landers, Mildred Carlson, Doris Lumbert, Patricia Bowman, Elsie Carlson, Philip Baker, and Norma Barrows held positions on the Lawrencian Staff. John Au- gusta, Joe Grace, Paul Roderick, Bill Roberts, James Cash, Arthur Carlson, Bill Oliver, Sam Vincent, Walter Lord, Earl Mills, Russell Peters, and Louis Marshall were making their way in the field of sports. At a final meeting the class elected their of- ficers for the junior year; Gilbert Mello, Pres- ident; Norma Barrows, Vice-president; Ann Landers, Secretary; and Adeline Bento, Trea- surer. It had been a busy year, one of exchanging new ways for the old. and many of the class did not know whether they would welcome the coming fall. But. so passed the Summer of ’44. (Father Time walks through ) Again the gong of the school bell brought the Class of 1946 tearing back, and again they startled mankind by staging a riotous saturnalia in the form of a Sadie Hawkins Drag-In”. A good time was had by all including the Drag- Ins”. Becoming true warriors, they fought a valiant battle in the selling of war bonds and stamos, and chiefly through the efforts of Esther Clark, Louise Erskine, Josephine Chase. Katherine Brown, and under the direction of Miss Ko- chanska. Commercial Instructor, the school was awarded the Minute Man Flag. By this time the Class of 1946 had an im- pressive honor roll of boys in the service, for Roy Stratton, William Bento. Lester Silva, David Casiles, and Paul Servis had joined the colors. Girls’ basketball was revived, but it produced few heroines in the class of ’46. Paul Roder- ick, Sam Vincent, Joe Grace, and John Augusta received football letters while Arthur Carlson, Bill Roberts, and Dick Baker won their laurels in basketball. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Thirty -seven These glorious accomplishments were crowned with the sale of groovy, exotic, spec- tacular beanies. The palatial halls of L. H. S. literally seethed for weeks with bobbing bean- ies. But, the big moment was yet to come. It stole up on them one warm spring morning when their class treasurer announced that ever) ' junior had paid his class dues. . . ! So passed the Summer of ’45. (Father Time walks through) Their senior year started with another boost from Blood and Guts Patton” Bento sharply reminding them of their financial obligations. Each class meeting brought to light new names inscribed on General Bento’s Roll of Dishonor. After December 1, the remaining five mem- bers were vanquished by a revolutionary install- ment plan introduced by General Bento, (five cents down and two cents a week for life.) She was proud of them. However, she for- bade any form of recreation which required the expenditure of funds, even as much as five cents. The treasury was defended with crossed swords. The senior service honor roll was lengthened considerably, for Harvey Holden, William Tur- ner, Gordon Wright, William Lopes, and Will- iam Weeks had joined. The War Bond Committee with Katherine Brown, chairman, carried on its splendid work and the school met its quota of $3000 after holding a bond rally sponsored by the Com- mercial Law Class. Richard Baker, who established a new high record for Eastern Massachusetts with a total of $167.75 in magazine subscriptions for Curtis Publishing Company, was awarded a $25.00 victory bond and a certificate of achievement. The football heroes were not altogether idle; their Thanksgiving Day victory over Barnstable is celebrated to this day. The entire team and the cheer leaders were guests of honor at a banquet given by the Rotary Club. Captain Allenby led his team in a victorious basketball season that was climaxed by a win- ning shot at the Brockton tournament. The girls ' basketball team was active again, win- ning one more game than the preceding year. Esther Clark was chosen by her classmates as the D. A. R. Pilgrim; and Ann Landers and Gilbert Mello were elected to have their names cast in bronze on the Henry Herbert Smythe Honor Roll for having best exemplified Loyalty, Honor, and Service. The sale of candy by the Ways and Means Committee provided little more than refresh- ment for their four-footed friends in the closet and the addition of 30c to the class treasury. April was an earth-shaking month in these young lives. It indicated clearly that only two honor students, Mildred Carlson and Ann Lan- ders, would emerge in June, and it brought to light Dorothy Keeler, a spelling genius, who had been walking quietly in their midst for two years. Prom plans were made in the light of the treasurer’s demand that such expenditures not exceed $5.75 The culmination of the three years’ events came, however, when, in April, approximately forty seniors set Washington D. C., back three years. Yes, I could go on at great length about this illustrious class, maybe keep you till after dark, but what can I say, for . . . We cannot dedi- cate; we cannot consecrate; we cannot hallow this ground. The brave students, living and dead, who struggled here have consecrated, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world” had better note and long remember what we say here, but it can forget what they did here Are there any corrections or omissions to be made to this report before it is forever recorded in the annals of history?” Answer From Audience — Yeah, what about our flag pole? ( When the parson has ended his eulogy, he exits slowly. The weeping mourners strag gle off the stage using both exits. The stage is empty. Taps are sounded briefly from the balcony. ) ( Two grave diggers enter with picks and shovels and proceed to fill in the grave. They appear unusually gay. ) Narrator — The audience will now bow their heads in five minutes of silent prayer in respect for the departed . . . and while our prop boys go to work. (The narrator produces an alarm clock and proceeds to time the procedure.) Senior Class Day Committee LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Thirty -nine SCENE II LAWYER ' S OFFICE The Reading of the Will of the Class of ’46, L. H. S. Stage is set with desk and chairs for the heirs. Lawyer enters in wig and robe and sits at desk. (The next of kin show the proper mourning ) Lawyer .... We, the Class of 1946, of the town of Fal- mouth, of the county of Barnstable, and state of Massachusetts, being of sound mind and memory, do publish and declare this to be our last will and testament, hereby revoking any and all wills by us heretofore made We do direct that our executor present to Mr. Russell B. Marshall, on the 10th day of June in the year of our Lord 2046, for his loyal and untiring efforts as arbitrator in behalf of the Cast-outs,” a Girls’ basketball letter .... To Hawk and Dunbar, Philip Baker leaves his stock phrase, That you, Hawk?” We hope we never have to hear it again! Dorothy Donnelly does bequeath to Passion- ate Peterson each and every one of her trigo- nometric theories. He may need them next year, too. Earl Mills relinquishes his bow and arrow to James Cash and Philip Almeida, who are expected to use them with equal success. Mindie Cutler leaves her never-ending travel talks of New Haven to anyone who will listen. Mary Butler is to receive from Janet Peter- son her confidential booklet on the methods of mad pursuit. We realize that it’s rather frayed at the edges, but we know you’ll find some use for it ... . Pepless Pittsley leaves her latest novel, Off to the Switchboard or Life Begins at 11:30, to Barbara Hazelton — of equal fame. Next year’s Canal Hoppers have been named the recipients of Dick Baker’s Buzzards Bay Blue Book. He just couldn’t take it with him. Norma Barrows surrenders her scintillating shoe shines and her superiority complex to Barbara Brown — Oh, you lucky, lucky girl! Walter Lord, well, uh, we just leave Walter. Adeline Bento entrusts her easy, down pay- ment installment plan to the next senior class treasurer. Say, and maybe you should have t h “ club that goes with it. From the personal effects of Muriel Childs, Paulina Goss is to receive one bottle of Drene Shampoo”, the kind guaranteed to keep the brunette blond. Gramp Allen leaves to his successor his prerogative of running the movie projector on one condition — He must get the pictures on the screen. Pat Bowman parts with her ample supply of safety pins and sneakers only to bestow them on Barbara Hilton. The next basketball manager is hereby named heir to an extensive chewing gum plantation situated behind the Hall School Gym where it was started many years ago by Elliot Young. The college English class will leave, with a little persuasion and a slight charge, their para- phrasings of Macbeth to any future seniors who might care to meet them immediately af- ter the program. No pushing, please! Arthur Carlson commits to the loving care of Arthur Kirts, his truck driver’s Stetson. The care must be loving, however, and it must be placed under glass every evening when not in use. Jane Dean leaves her most effective threat, Off the squad!”, to next year’s cheering czar- ina, June Miller. Look tough when you say it, June, and make with the dirty looks. Louise Erskine and Ann Doyle leave ‘ the office to Mrs. Harper, who may now tall it her own, and their graciousness about writing out late slips they remit to their successor . 1 L The Ways and Means Committee most gen- erously directs that their entire surplus of stale peanuts and cough drops be turned over to the mice in the main room closet that they may be nourished till t he end of their natural lives. All the rest and residue of our estate we do give and bequeath to the Falmouth Chapter of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Teachers, and we do direct that this money be set aside in a sinking fund to pay off the mortgage on the Chapter-owned Rest Home. In witness whereof, we have set our hand and seal to this our last will and testament at this tenth day of June, in the year of our Lord, 1946. The Class of 1946 ( The above named signed the foregoing in- strument in our presence and. we thereupon at their request, and in their presence and in the presence of each other, hereunto subscribed our names as witnesses.) Signed, Hawk”, Dunbar”, The Brow” Page Forty THE LA WRENCI AN — 1946 SCENE III The Hereafter Narrator — Ten years have elapsed since the will of the Class of 1946 was read and re- corded. When the will was contested a year later by dissatisfied heirs, there followed a lengthy investigation, which continues to this day. As we are privileged to peer into the findings this afternoon, we discover the mem- bers of this worthy class still engaged in the same work which they so faithfully discharged in this world. No, it can’t be! But it is — Janet Peterson, with both wings spread widely, still dashing to church. That heavenly choir just can’t do with- out her! Ah, now we glance upwards and see Jean Baker weighted to the ground with an over- sized halo. And yes, she’s still representing the Dubarrv Success School. In her employ we see Charlotte Bourne and Marion Busch. We hear a slight flutter of wings — there is Ellen Cunningham on her way to church where she teaches Sunday School and operates a hat checking concession. It’s a wonderful system; the fathers just leave their hats and their chil- dren with Ellen. She hangs up both for a slieht charge. In a darker corner we look down to find the Devil and Muriel Childs arguing over who can write the better horror story. The great dance team of Phyllis Andrews and Paul Roderick, which created such a tre- mendous sensation in life, has just added a new member, Earl Mills, who plays the accompani- ment on his harp. The last we heard they held a contract to plav at the Pearly Gates Club. We watched him grow from a boisterous boy into the prime of manhood, we saw him decline into the twilight years of life, we mourned as death overtook him but this after- noon we discover Air. William Roberts still studying feverishly to pass his senior year. Is that a Daily Record ? ? ? On a little patch of earth where the sun shines occasionally, we catch a glimpse of two prosperous truck farmers, Frances Lopes and Isabel Gomes, harvesting their crop of potatoes. Our pianist, Ann Landers, who just recently recaptured the lost chord, now rests in perfect peace and would give us no information. In the realm of diplomacy we behold Mildred Carlson and Dorothy Keeler who saved the UNO. in its darkest hour. The delegates from Woods Hole and Hatchville respectively were presented the Order of the Swooping Seagull for their meritous service to mankind. How fortunate — those renowned stars of the stage, screen, radio, and television — Doris Lum- bert, Marilyn Rockwell, and Muriel Irving — are just starting their broadcast. On the floor of the Falmouth Heights Sen- ate we recognize Ann Cummings conducting a filabuster. We couldn’t find out why, but some say that she just couldn’t keep quiet any longer. When sudden death forced Fred Allen to discontinue his radio show back some 40 years ago, Charles Hatzikon and Gilbert Lewis dashed in and got the job. With their sponsor’s con- sent, however, they changed the program’s theme slightly. They wanted to read fairy tales. In a dimly lit school room we can just barely make out Mindie Cutler struggling with a brok- en wing. She seems to be teaching a class, and the subject sounds like the history of New Haven, past, present, and future. Sniff — there’s a whiff of formaldhyde in the air as we sneak in to observe one of Arrow- smith Allenby’s operations. Yes, that’s he and his she-nurse, Jean Pittsley, and the patient? Why that’s Ann Doyle, having her appendix removed for the fifth time. The scene is Ebbitt’s field — listen to the crowd shout. The bases are loaded; Russell Peters is tearing for home; Bill Oliver ' s round- ing second, and George Jennings is tagging the bases for his thirteenth homerun of the season. But too bad — Teaticket wins again. Down there — that’s Pat Backus, for years the local turnkey. But she went far — from Barn- stable to Charlestown and then back to Barn- stable where she played cribbage every evening with Carohn Robertson, a trusty, doing 30 days on a speeding charge. Believe me when I say the class did turn out a few honorable businessmen — take Joan Brown and Arline Henry for example. They ran the Woods Hole Hand Laundry for years, washed literally millions of sheets, and never kept any of the buttons. Let’s not leave the business world right away, because there’s Joe Grace, a successful executive in more than one wav. At the tender age of thirty, he was president of an International chain of filling stations with branch offices everywhere you see the Coco-Cola sign — and successful — get a look at that secretary, Miss Erskinel You remember Frances Rezendes, don’t you? Well, she spent her last years confined to a hospital bed. Twenty-three pepsi bottles the LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Forty-one doctors removed from her brain, but Frances would never be right again. Her dying words were an oath that she would never umpire an- other baseball game, and Eleanor Peters , who was held for the assault, was released posthum- ously, after serving six months. Now if you had been in Yarmouth about 30 years ago, you might have stopped in at the Arena to see Massacre Malzan defend her title against Pansy Pimental. The Pansy wilted in round two, and the Massacre kept her title. This you won’t believe, but she did — ! One of this illustrious class did get to the White House. Yes. Arlene MacDougall rose to the position of chief executive of the second-floor chamber maids. Amid the raging fires we find two more classmates, Emma Panton and Judith Eldred. For years they rotted and starved in a Green- wich-Village garret trying in vain to sell a canvas. Finally, in desperation, they took to painting tomato can labels and were immedi- ately hailed by the critics as the world ' s great- est painters of tomatoes. Before they died, they had toured every corner of the earth, and every conceivable variety of tomato had posed for them. If we look now for a moment into the do- main of Cerberus, the three-headed dog. we can soy on Walter Lord as he goes about his work. He is rather sensitive about his job with the street sanitation department, so we must pass on to the fire department, where we find El- liot Young , Gene Allen, and Arthur Carlson rrving to put out the blazing fires of Hell. Bill Roberts is absent. If he were only there with his brushbreaker! Maybe vou remember Kay Brown’s freak day outfit; well — the garb was so convincing that a talent scout signed her up with Barnum and Bailev — uh. the last we heard she was going steady with Gargantua. When the Falmouth National Bank went broke in 1980, nobody could figure it out until that enterprising local flatfoot. Olive DeSouza. discovered what Josephine Chase was burning for fuel. Incidentally, no one blamed the poor girl; John L. Lewis, Jr., had his coal miners on strike. And while on the subject of strikes, we have been told that Claire Breivogel died on the one hundred and third day of her hunger strike, but thev didn’t return her driver’s license, and the highways are safe again! The sign says Gilbert Mello, Doctor of Pain- less Dental Surgerv. Our ears tell us otherwise as we recognize Eleanor Torres screaming in pain while she has one measly tooth filled. Richardson Jonas turned out to be the only scientist of any great stature in the class, and his fame was chiefly accidental. It all hap- pened one fine June day while the professor was out to lunch. His assistants — Barbara Monteiro. Audrey Santos , and Geraldine Mon- teiro — amusing themselves with one of his atom-smashers when something definitely went wrong. A week later, when most of the smoke had cleared, the professor searched for his as- sistants. Finding none, he claimed the discov- ery as his own and three davs later went to offer his name for the Nobel Prize. The scene is a dingy room on the tenth floor of the Ebbitt Hotel in Washington, D. C., and the subject is Adeline Bento. The day after graduation Adeline packed her bag, armed her- self. and rushed back to Washington. She had unfinished business, she told her friends, but. as they bade her farewell that morning, they had no idea that her mission would take her «o Ion and they would never gaze unon her living form again. 48.949 long days and nights die watched for that chamber maid to bring back her doughnuts. Such a oathetic end, a blazing career before her in Grand Opera — Carnegie Hall — com- mand performances before royalty — but tragedy struck. Pat Bowman was tramoled to death in a nvlon line the day after graduation. And while we’re in this tear-ierking mood, perhaps we should mention another of the sad cases. Bob Day suffered thirty comDound frac- tures while rushing to Physics class the last day of school. You’ve probably guessed it; the class was in the lab. and he wanted to sit next to the sink so he could be near the turtle. No one was surorised when John Auausta joined the Navv to be nearer to the Ship’s Galley, but when PhiliO Baker rammed his bat- fleshin into the Lawrence High School to il- lu cfr ate an oral talk, it caused some comment. No Esther Clark could never tear herself awav from the Town Hall. Someone said she ' anted rhe nlare named for her, but the mmaur was later repudiated. As both the building and Esther approached the point of final deterioration, we all wondered which would crack first. The building was given the odds, but Esther lasted barely a dav longer. If you were to call Riverside 863, Richard Baker would answer and tell you that if you would care to hold your horses, he would call Marcia Wright, who might be able to help you if vou were anvone from the President un. Marcia would undoubtedly refer you to Elsie Page Forty-two THE LAWRENCIAN — 1946 Carlson , who would most likely inform you that Miss Claire Lafond is quite busy entertain- ing Mr. Richard Dimmock, the noted actor and could not possibly come to the phone. You don’t care to waste a precious nickel, so you tell the whole story to the operator who feels slightly sorry for you and refers you to the chief operator, Ja7ie Dean. Jane tells you that she could not think of returning the nickel without directly conferring with Mr. William Cantwell, the president of New England Tel. Tel. Since Mr. Cantwell is on vacation at the time and cannot be reached, the Vice- president, Dorothy Donnelly, is consulted; but she feels that the company cannot, under any circumstances, withstand the great loss, so to make a long story short, you don’t get your nickel back, and you go home as mad as — you know what. With this the investigation ends, and win- dows are opened, and we all file out for some fresh air! ! SCHOOL DAZE Arlene MacDougall W ITH OUR tomorrows fast becoming yes- terdays let’s capture a few of them before they get too far into the Forgotten Past . . . For instance, the first day at school . . . every- one wanted to go home, but with a little per- suasion we stayed . . . for twelve years . . . Re- member our pet alligators in the fourth grade? . . . They were cute, but it’s too bad they had no best friends to tell them . . . And then there was the day Louise Erskine sat in a pan of scalding water . . . Aren’t you tired standing, Louise? . . . Office duty was quite an experience . . . That’s where Elsie got her start in button-pushing . . . Speaking of getting starts some of our wolfo sapiens learned how to wink at Broadcaster parties . . . Arthur, school daze o please! . . . The game is Winkum not Blinkum! . . . We learned how to write our names in the Hall School so we could sign those petitions . . . But they didn’t work . . . We didn’t have a Fact-Finding Board . . . Music classes were always very interesting . . . and educational, too! . . . There isn’t anything we don’t know about Montana ( or is it Oregon? ) . . . And then our first day here at L.H.S. . . . They thought we couldn’t read or count so they didn’t number the doors . . . And every time we timidly asked directions we always got the same answer, I really don’t know. I ' ve only been here three years myself” . . . Every year has been Leap Year here, but don’t think the girls haven’t enjoyed it! . . . The boys took ad- vantage of the man shortage by appearing with those Alcatraz Specials ... Or were those to distinguish themselves from girls? . . . Mr. Cav- anaugh’s favorite song last year was Oh, Where, and Oh Where Has Mv Algebra .An- swer-Book Gone?” . . . (He’s still singing) . . . Our class took over the job of giving L.H.S. livestock a Merry Christmas ... It wasn’t even Be Kind to Animals week . . . Coming back to songs was it Philip Baker or Mr. Drew who sang Adeline, Sweet Adeline” all th° way to Washington and back? . . . And WHY doesn’t anyone ever know whether it’s Hawk” or Dunbar?” . . . Everyone knows what Mr. Drew looks like . . . (hubba hubba) . . . It’s a bird! . . . it’s a plane! . . . it’s Superm oh. pardon me, Gilbert — I thought you were someone else . . . Did I hear someone say he’s hungrv? . . . Well, pardonnez-moi, s’il vous plait, while I go out and rustle up some Shoo-Fly Pie — the ever-lovin’ kind . . . LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Forty-three A Farewell Note To The Seniors June Miller, ’47 T HE world is at peace. Man has once again laid down the arms of hatred, has once again picked up the cross of brotherhood, and is once more striving to bring unity and con- tentment to a divided and devastated world. Pardon, mes amis, but did I say peace”? How can anyone claim we have truly found peace when internally we are constantly in the midst of feuds and controversies between Labor and Management, when petty politicians and black markets have taken over our thriving cities and slowly, but most assuredly, are bleeding them to ruin? Externally our neighbors, our brothers in peace, our partners in reconstruction are bickering among themselves, acting like spoiled brats” not daring to meet each other half way for fear someone will take advantage of them. The fight for a better world has just begun. We have only started the struggle for the civ- ilization which people have lived and died, toiled and suffered to bring about. In the planning as in the fight, graduates, your path has been made clear to you. This is your chal- lenge. your mission, your purpose today and in the days to come. You must counsel others as others have counselled you to arrive real- istically at conclusions about things in general and about the present state of human affairs in particular. You must be realistic in social, economic, and domestic matters and realistic about the truth and the peace. These things will enable vou to help increase man ' s under- standing of his fellow men, for without it, we can never attain the goal of True Democracy and Lasting Peace. Gradiuatioe Ann Landers, Co-editor t _ T , ODAY decides tomorrow. How nobly this motto rings in our ears as we sit in our graduation robes today. Our commence- ment and class day — the climax of our twelve years of schooling — are here. Everything we have accomplished here with the assistance of our teachers decides what we shall do in the future. America is going through a crisis, that of helping to formulate a lasting peace. We, the youth, must endeavor to find our place in the world today so that tomorrow security will be ours. We, the youth, must bring forth men and women who will meet the challenge as leaders. America in its darkest hours has al- ways found leadership. In this crisis, however, the whole of the youth must bear the burden. We can see af- ter the recent world struggle that we have the ability to meet a conflict. We must therefore show tolerance, justice, and true cooperation to all the world. Fortified with our twelve years of school work, we, the Class of ' 46, face the future. Truly it will be no easy task; but we are strong; we are young; and we are brave. We are graduated today, or rather we enter today into new fields of interest in the world of men. Many Lawrence High School sons will be in the service of our country, but they will be building a world safe for democracy. Many Lawrence High School daughters will be- come nurses and teachers assisting in the preser- vation and education of humanity. All of us, however, will never forget our years at Law r - rence Hi h and our ever present motto — ”To- dav decides tomorrow.” We realize that we will accomplish our respective tasks in life through the help of our education acquired here in Lawrence High School. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Forty-five Senior Superlatives Most Industrious Most Talkative Most Popular Most Bashful Most Athletic Cleverest Best Looking Silliest Cutest Best Natured Most Musical Most Sophisticated Best Dressed Best Dancer Most High-Hat Pest Leader Most Likely-to-Succeed Be st- All- Around Biggest Flirt Smartest Y oungest Oldest Fattest Thinnest T allest Shortest Girls Adeline Bento Dorothy Donnelly Muriel Irving Ann Cummings Muriel Irving Norma Barrows Patricia Bowman Muriel Childs Doris Lumbert Doris Lumbert Patricia Bowman Jean Baker Esther Clark Claire Lafond Jean Baker Muriel Irving Mildred Carlson Muriel Irving Dorothy Donnelly Mildred Carlson Marilyn Rockwell Elsie Carlson Ann Landers Patricia Backus Jean Baker Louise Erskine Boys Gilbert Mello Walter Lord Richard Baker Gilbert Lewis Paul Roderick Gilbert Mello Leighton Allenby Philip Baker Philip Baker William Roberts Earl Mills Leighton Allenby Richard Baker William Roberts Leighton Allenby Gilbert Mello Gilbert Mello Richard Baker Walter Lord Gilbert Mello Earl Mills William Cantwell William Oliver Elliot Young Elliot Young Joseph Grace K.ey To Composite On Opposite Page Top row: Cleverest , Gilbert Mello, Norma Barrows; Best Looking, Leighton Allenby, Patricia Bowman; Most Industrious, Adeline Bento, Gilbert Mello. Middle row. Tallest Boy and Shortest Girl, Elliot Young, Louise Erskine; Tallest Girl and Shortest Boy, Jean Baker, Joseph Grace; Most Popular, Best-all-around, Muriel Irving, Richard Baker. Bottom row: Best Dressed, Richard Baker, Esther Clark; Smartest, Most Likely to Succeed, Gilbert Mello, Mildred Carlson; Biggest Flirt, Most Talkative, Dorothy Donnelly, Walter Lord. Page Forty-six THE L A WRENCI AN — 1946 Class ( Written by Class Day Committee — Read Phyllis Andrews — Knowing your fondness for cooking, Phyllis, we have a brand-new recipe just put on the market for Cape Cod Chicken Chow Mein. It’s guaranteed to beat every other recipe ever put out by the Good Housekeeping. PAT Backus — P at, even if you do have a drag in the police department, this is one speeding ticket you can’t get fixed.” Jean Baker — Believe it or not, Jean, tall girls can be beautiful. This book will prove the theory. Norma Barrows — Barrows, we give you these glasses for 7 strain. Adeline Bento — Addie, to help your mother and that tremendous washing she must have, we present you with this Rinse. Charlotte Bourne — Wherever you may roam, Charlotte, we know you’ll always re- tain fond memories of your youth on the farm, fust to make sure, we give you this, an egg) Pat Bowman — So vour mother threw away all your sneakers, did she, Pat? Here, take these with our compliments. Claire Breivogel — Father O’Breivogel, we realize that you left your office on the tenth floor of the Ebbitt Hotel. For possible fu- ture use, here’s a portable one. Joan Brown — Joan, to prevent your delicate hands from getting red and chafed from washing so many test tubes at the lab, trv this lotion guaranteed to keep the hands soft and lovely, The kind you love to touch.” Kay Brown — To complete that South Sea ensemble direct from the Pacific, Kay, we have these sunglasses direct from Bikini. Marion Busch — F rom the looks of things. Marion, you’ll be needing this ball of string to keep your little charge tied down. Elsie Carlson — Elsie, to us it seems very appropriate to present you with this com- pass to find your lieutenant, because we can ' t. Mildred Carlson — From what we ' ve seen, Millie, you really like gardenias. The other one must be quire wilted so we thought you might like a new one. Josephine Chase — Jo, old girl, that was a pretty cute sailor. Just so vou won ' t ever forget, we got this special for you. (sailor pin) Muriel Childs — Since you’re leaving Drene behind you, Muriel, you’ll probably find some use for this Halo. Esther Clark — Esther, just so you’ll look a little like the rest of us, we give you this handful of Cape Cod dirt. Louise Erskine — Here is a memo pad for your office work or grocery lists. by Patricia Boivman and Esther Clark) Ann Cummings — To add to that vast library of yours, we give you this latest copy of a great classic. ( funny book ) Ellen Cunningham — We understand that good paint brushes are hard to get, Ellen. To aid you in your future art work, we give you this one. ( A huge brush ) Mindie Cutler — Mindie, without further ado, we give you this — a one- way ticket on the New York, New Haven, Hartford Rail- road to New Haven. Need we say any more? Jane Dean — Knowing the price of fruit is continuously rising, Jane, and that you would appreciate something useful, we present you with this prune. Olive DeSouza — Olive, this lantern will no doubt be useful in finding your way through that dark store. Dot Donnelly — To go with that blanket outfit, Dot, we present you with this feather. Ann Doyle — Ann, knowing that maids scarcely earn enough to buy their meals, we think you should pay Adeline instead. Please accept this doughnut and tangerine. Judith Eldred — For practice draping those future creations. Judy, use this, (paper doll) Isabel Gomes — Isabel, we don’t ever want that tantalizing smile of yours to lose its gleam, so we have this large economy size tube of Ipana. If not the right brand, it may be exchanged. Arline Henry — This sonotone may come in handy when Louise decides to call. Muriel Irving — Susie, we all know how dark and dismal Jones Road is late at night. The town refused to put up another street light so maybe these matches will serve the pur- pose. Dorothy Keeler — Just so you won’t forget your date at the International Spelling Bee finals, Dot, we have this spelling book as a reminder. CLAIRE LaFond — Claire, we heard that you’re not buying a trousseau, so please accept this from us as a wedding gift. Ann LANDERS— To keep you company along that lonely stretch of road on the way to town, Ann, we thought this might be some help, (doll) Frances Lopes — For you, Fran, we have this jar of beans. Count them, there are literally thousands and thousands. Doris Lumbert — Dorie, here’s something that may be of use to you, a map of Massachu- setts showing the direct route to Orange. Arlene MacDougall — Arlene, to make you feel somewhat acquainted with your future destination — China, here are some chop- sticks. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Sally Malzan — Sally, we couldn ' t afford a first-aid kit, but we did manage to get this, (bandade ) Barbara Monteiro — Barbara, so that you’ll be able to make as much racket as the ave- rage person, we present you with this noise- maker. Geraldine Monteiro — Gerry, amidst the rubbish in Mr. Drew’s desk we found this discarded A. Would you like it? Emma Panton — Betty, we know the streets of New York must have been tough on your spikes so maybe these will replace the worn ones. Louise Pimental — After all those countless walks up and down hotel stairs, you must be worn to a frazzle. Could you use this vita- min pill? Jean Pittsley — We hunted high and low for a bear trap, Jean, but in vain. Will this serve the purpose? (mouse trap) Frances Rezendes — Despite the paper short- age, you can continue your Washington cor- respondence with this stationery. Carolyn Robertson— So you’re headed to- ward the altar, Carolyn. Please accept our best wishes and this little household item (rolling pin) for your marriage. Marilyn Rockwell — Rocky’’ knowing that your window shade is out of commission, we thought you could use another. Eleanor Torres — To complete that knock- cut nautical outfit, this hat might do the trick. Eleanor Peters — Digging clams is not ex- actly a pleasant job, but we did it willingly knowing the pleasure they would give you. Janet Peterson— Janet, knowing the attrac- tion church has for you and your haste to get there, we are loaning you this motor- cycle to speed you churchward. Audrey Santos— To ward off the shining glory you must go through when you’re with such a great celebrity as Paul, here’s some sun glasses. They may be useful. Marcia Wright — A little birdie told us of your plans for that little trip to Europe. If we re right, this German phrase book might come in handy. Eugene Allen — Gramp, to save wear and tear on Mr. Marshall’s car, we present you this one you may call your verry own. Leighton Allenby — Late, if you should ever decide to come out of your little nutshell, this book, How to Win Friends and Influ- ence People, may come in handy. John Augusta — John, we thought you might like some tobacco for your pipe. Hope you like the brand. Page Forty-seven Philip Baker — After witnessing your con- duct in Washington, Phil, we give you this Her Book.” Try not to forget any of them. Richard Baker — Dick, we tried hard to get a wing” but failed. We sincerely hope these feathers will serve the purpose. Arthur Carlson — To add to that vast col- lection of headgear, Art, here is one of the latest guaranteed never to go out of style. Robert Day — Without doubt, Bob, you’ll never forget those days with Hoods Milk Company. To make sure, take this, (milk bottle) Richard Dimmock — Dick, to remind you of those days when you used to get up at four in the morning, we give you this pitch fork. Joseph Grace — As we all know of your par- particular liking for catsup, Joe, we’d like you to have this to keep you supplied for next year, (red lead) Charles Hatzikon — Oh Charlie, we know how you’ll miss Gilbert. Here’s a snapshot as a fond remembrance. Treasure it always. George Jennings — Since you don’t have any study periods, George, take this one to help you out! Richardson Jonas — Just so you won’t get ahead of the rest of us, Richardson, try us- ing this anchor. Gilbert Lewis — Gilbert, we all know how badly you yearn for a uniform. They don’t make them any smaller than size 12. Eat this (a banana). Maybe it’ll help. Walter Lord— Walt, some day you may get tired of blond hair; keep this henna rinse handy. Gilbert Mello — Gibby, we can’t afford to give you any equipment for your practice, but perhaps this tooth brush will give you a good start. Earl Mills — Earl, just in case you should ever decide to change your mind and play the piano, here’s some sheet music. William Oliver — Without further ado, Bill, we give you these curlers. Russell Peters — Russie, from what we’ve heard your car is in need of piston rings, take these and make good use of them. William Roberts — Hey, Rabbitt! (pass him a carrot) Paul Roderick — Paul, this glass may not re- place the wood in your car window, but it’s a start. Elliot Young — Ichabod, alias Shanks, here’s a book to remind you of your position as assistant Librarian 4th Period. William Cantwell — After the Washington trip, Bill, we realize that you have quite a time with your feet. Take these corn plasters for relief. © r=4 © 5 ■a o cQ .J li Ll W °E§ £ jp Sv ' u o oo. 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LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Fifty-one Muriel Irving, 46 T HE long-awaited eve had arrived! The senior prom committee had secured the Cape Codder Hotel through the courtesy of John R. Peterson and the Senior Prom com- menced at 8:00 P. M. on May 10. Approx- imately 150 students and guests, dressed in tuxedos and colorful formal gowns, danced to music furnished by Jay Mando’s orchestra. Refreshments including punch, sandwiches, and cupcakes, were served at a snack bar by four eighth grade girls, Cynthia Swift, Ann Thobae, Rita Belanger, and Natalie MacDougall. Thomas Roberts, John Farrell, Keith Dean, and Loren Barrows acted as ushers. Highlight of the evening was the traditional grand march by the seniors and their guests. A boys’ sextet including Bill Roberts, Leighton Allenby, Elliot Young, Philip Baker, Walter Lord, and Dick Baker sang a few songs during intermission. Chaperones included Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Harper, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Drew, Mr. and Mrs. Russell B. Marshall, Miss Kathleen D. Arenovski, and Miss Lucille Ogden. The Senior Prom Committee: Philip Baker, chairman, Norma Barrows, Dorothy Donnelly, Jane Dean, Muriel Irving, Leighton Allenby, William Roberts, Mildred Carlson and Elsie Carlson arranged the colorful and decorative streamers of red and green ferns placed about at intervals. Light was provided by a blazing fireplace at one end of the dance hall. Between dances the students and their guests sat on sofas and plush chairs surrounding the dance floor. Little white dance cards with the school seal in red and red tassels will adorn many a page in scrapbooks as a souvenir of one of the most successful and enjoyable proms in the history of L. H. S. Top row : On the Dance Floor; Sitting One Out. Bottom row: Refreshments Being Served; Enjoying a Dance. SENIOR CLASSES Top row, left to right : Journalism Class; Diamond Ring Class. Second row. Printing Class; Household Arts Class. Bottom row: Shop Class; Art Class. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Fifty-three Scholastic Press Association Convention Ann Landers, Norma Barrows, 1VTEW York, Empire State Building, Colum- ” bia University, Chinatown, and Riverside Church — all will remain in our memories forever — . Wednesday — March 20 Left Lawrence High School at 11:30 with Miss Holden for Providence — ate lunch on way — took train to New York — arrived in the great metropolis at 6:30 — ate hasty but delic- ious meal in the Hotel Victoria’s famous Candlelight Room” — rushed to see Gilda” at Music Hall — finished off the thrilling day by walking down Broadway at midnight — then to bed. Thursday — March 21 After walking down the streets of New York at 12:30 A. M. and gaping at all its electrically lighted billboards and eye-catchers, we looked out our hotel room windows later in the day, at 6:00 A. M., to get an idea of what the big” city was like in broad daylight — unfortunately, however, our scope was obstructed by other wings of the Victoria Hotel — At about 8:15 we joined Miss Arenovski at the Candlelight room for breakfast and thereafter went window- shopping along Fifth Avenue — we spent too much time though in Scribner’s Book Store thumbing through the various books and so didn’t get to see more of the stores there — At 11:30 it was a hasty lunch for us and then off to Columbia University where we had choice seats in the first and second rows of the Mc- Millan Theatre — The subject of the first meet- ing, where 2 790 representatives from 26 states were assembled this first day of the Convention, was The School Press and the Post War World”. Dr. Nicholas McD. McKnight, as- sociate dean of Columbia College, welcomed us to the Convention and then introduced the first speaker, Mr. Edwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor. Foster Hailey, editorial writer of the New York Tirms, stressed the necessity of integrity in news writ- ing — Kate Smith, radio star, delivered a speech on tolerance, The American Way of Life”. — Following this opening session, students and advisors took part in some 58 sectional meetings — Ann a nd Norma were chairmen of discussion groups on Features Other Than Creative Writing” and The Magazine in the High School” respectively, while Miss Arenov- ski spoke on How to Get Good Magazine Copy” ... 5:30 P. M. we five prepared for dinner and then hurried to see The Song of Norway”. Mindie Cutler, Emma Panton Friday — March 22 We rose bright (?) and early this morning (with a little persuasion from our radiator) . . . After breakfast we made a mad dash to Columbia! There we heard Captain William Haskell, Colonel Hans C. Adamson, and Sammy Kaye . . . Then all three thousand delegates rushed to the library steps to be photographed ( imagine all those people in one photograph! ) . . . We lunched and then held a mass inter- view with Ruth Hussey . . . While Mindie and Norma attended a special lecture about atomic energy, the rest of us went to the Barnard Col- lege Tea . . . Then we paid a visit to the nearby Riverside Church . . . Back to the hotel, then we visited the Castleholm and ate Swedish Smorgasbord . . . When dinner was finished, we attended Pygmalion” starring Gertrude Lawrence and Raymond Massey. Backstage after the performance we interviewed Miss Lawrence . . . Finally, we went back to our hotel for some badly needed sleep. We cer- tainly retired early (but it was early in the morning? ) Saturday — March 23 The final day of the convention opened 9:30 Saturday morning with Macy’s Fashions for the Pepsi Crowd”. . . . Attended various mag- azine clinics before starting our mad dash to the Hotel Astor for the convention luncheon. Being among the first to arrive, we were priv- ileged to be at the head of the line and to be fairly crushed by the stampeding throng be- hind us. (Ask Emma) . . . School cheers rang from table to table during the meal, but our rather meager delegation consumed its chicken in hasty silence . . . This evening we met Mr. and Mrs. Schiff and went to Chinatown, leav- ing Mindie and Emma who could not tear themselves away from Broadway. Took the elevated through the Bowery, then a cross-town bus to Chinatown . . . Walked through the nar- row, winding streets to the Rathskeller where we had a family dinner — enough for several families, we thought . . . Back on Broadway again Miss Arenovski and the Schiffs saw Are You With It”, while we went to the broadcast of the Saturday Night Serenade . . . Ended the day’s activities with the rebroadcast of the Lucky Strike Hit Parade at 12 P. M. Sunday — March 24 Planned church but too tired — slept till 9:30 — oh, the bliss— ate dinner at Hotel Taft before rushing to Grand Central- — took Yankee Clipper from there at 1:00 — arrived in Provi- dence at 5 o’clock — delivered safely to our doors at 7:00 — end of a perfect trip. Washington Trip (Senior Candid Shots) i W- rmtM mha tm, LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Fifty -five Off To Washington Muriel Irving, ’46 Friday. April 12 Bright and early forty-one seniors anxious- ly paced the school sidewalk awaiting the moment of departure — new clothes were shown to undergraduates — Mr. and Mrs. Norman Drew, our chaperones, nervously ran about at- tending to last-minute details. The bus arrived — we crammed in — waited patiently while our suitcases and Jane’s trunk were packed in around us. The door was closed — hasty good- byes called out to parents on the sidelines — we were on our way. We finally arrived in Providence and forty-one strong raided the snack bar at the Greyhound bus station. Our energy and excitement ran out after waiting an hour and a half for our special bus. To Mindie’s delight we drove through New Haven — caught glimpses of students at Yale. Arrived in New York about 7:00 P. M. at the Hotel Taft. After being assigned rooms, we ate and met at the hotel lobby at 8:00 — tramped to the Center Theatre and saw Hats Off to Ice.” The rest of the evening was free — the majority took in some night life on Broadway. Back in the hotel complaints kept coming in of students yelling out their win- dows till the wee hours of morning. Saturday, April 13 We got our first experience with the phone ringing at 6:30 A. M. with a sugar-sweet voice informing us that it was time to rise and shine (?). Five busloads including Falmouth, Ware- ham, Sandwich. Orleans, Chatham, and Orange left the Hotel Taft at 8:15 A. M. for Pennsyl- vania. Our bus had a flat tire just outside Philadelphia. We lunched at the Hotel Wayne in Wayne. Ask any senior for complete de- tails. Stopped at Gettysburg for souvenirs and picked up our guide. — Traveled through the Gettysburg battlefield, which, we learned, con- tains 800 monuments and over 1600 markers. Visited the Washington Memorial Chapel in Valley Forge. Continued to York, Pennsyl- vania, where we were assigned rooms at the Yorktown Hotel. The evening was free for bowling, roller skating, movies and dancing. Sunday. April 14 Again we boarded the bus and headed for rhe Shenandoah Caverns in Virginia, stopping for lunch at rhe Thomas Jefferson Hotel in West Virginia. Arrived at the Shenandoah Caverns Inn where we were supposed to stay for the night. After a tour of the caverns, however, there was a slight mixup and the Falmouth group had to remain in a two-by- four” town called New Market at a hotel of the same size. . . . No locks on the doors and one bathroom at the end of the hall. Every- one in town lined the sidewalks and watched us unload. After supper, ( and Doris blowing a fuse! ), we rode back to the Inn and had a gala evening with the group from Orange. Returning to the hotel (?), we woke Bill Cantwell out of a sound sleep. Poor fellow! He was so-o-o tired. We pulled out our care- fully preserved fried chicken and had a little snack. Monday. April 13 Early again, but without the aid of a phone, we arose and prepared for the ride to Wash- ington, D. C., over the Blue Ridge Mountains. We sadly bid farewell to New Market, and. in a puff of dust, we sped off. Washington! There in the distance we could see the Wash- ington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial. We crowded the windows to catch a fleeting glimpse of the monuments. We got settled at the Ebbitt Hotel and started our tour — the Lincoln Memorial — Washington Monument — the beautiful Franciscan Monastary — That eve- ning was free for swimming at the Ambassador, the Glen Echo amusement park, movies, and stage shows. Tuesday , April 16 That phone at 6:30 A. M. again! Another day. Touring again — Jefferson Memorial — Masonic Memorial to George Washington — Arlington Cemetery and the Tomb of the Un- known Soldier — Mount Vernon. After lunch we visited the Smithsonian Institute. The eve- ning was spent freely after a short visit to the Congressional Library. Wednesday. April 17 Our last day in Washington, D. C.! We toured the Bureau of Printing and Engraving, rhe F. B. I., the Supreme Court building, and rhe Capitol where we sat in on sessions of the Senate and the House. Senator Leverett Salton- stall was there. Grout? pictures were taken af- rerwards on the Capitol lasvn. The afternoon was free — the majority slept. Thursday, A-bril 18 We rose once more, hastily packed, ate and boarded the bus and bid farewell to the na- tion’s Capitol. Luncheon was eaten in Phil- adelphia. — Then Independence Hall and Betsy Ross home. Then we headed for New York and an evening of trying to paint the town a ( Continued on Page 74) SENIORS AT WORK Top rou , left to right: Physics Class; Transcription Class. Second row: Business English Class; Chemistry Class. Bottom row: Consumer Education Class; Typing Class. Page Fifty-eight THE LAWRENCI AN — 1946 Class Of 1947 Barbara Brown , ’47 JUNIOR CLASS President V ice -President Secretary T reasurer OFFICERS June Miller Philip Peterson Marilyn Merrill Donald Francis ' T HE Juniors are The Class. That is the ooinion of the Junior Class, and does not constitute an endorsement of the product. The Juniors haven’t had an especially bubbl- ing, busy year, but they did have a dance which people went to. That is something amazing, too. Ask the seniors! In the fall, there was the football team. We did our part there, sending in such great stars as Passionate Peterson, Dick Cummings, and Arthur Kirts, who had a slight accident with his arm, which kept him out for the rest of the season, and many others — stars, that is. Would you like to know the others? They’ll want to see their names in print,, so I’ll include them — Tubby Mixer. Jim Cash, Red Francis, Tommy Oliver, Phil Peterson, Harry Peters, Donnie Gray, and Mr. Joseph Hanley. We won and lost various games and had a fairly good team. Nat-yur-ally, all L. H. S. students agree! After Thanksgiving the next season was bas- ketball. We really are pretty reet” when it comes to basketball. And we are good, with all The Juniors in there. Peterson, Peters, Peterson, Cummings, Kirts, Donnelly, Cash, Francis, Oliver, Gray, and Hanley . . . included. Pardon me, I must include the cheerleaders in on all these roses and wreaths being handed out. Tch! They’d kill me if I didn’t. Let s see, the cheerleaders from the Junior class in- clude Bubbles Goss and the slave driver, Mith Miller. Bubbles had some nice points about her cheering, and June wasn’t at all bad, even if the whistle had blown for the game to start and she was on her second F-A-L-M-O-U-T-H! As for dances, there were several attempts to have them, but what with Friday nights for basketball and Friday nights for other things, the dance situation was pretty wicked — until suddenly on March 1st came the magnifique, superb, stupendous, and also great Junior Dance. Ah yes — ' Girls Ask Boys” — but how else would it be a hit? And it was, with Stud- ley’s Orchestra, and punch that knocked you cold, almost. The Card Party, which was on November 8th, was good. It could have been better, but as it was it was good. Sometimes the Junior Class can be a little on the lazy side when it comes to supporting things, but once they are sur le bal”, they’re great. (Plug for the J. C. ) We had to think up millions of ways to raise money. I still haven’t found out why we had to raise it, but money is money, hmmm? ? ? So there were, three little campaigns put on. First came the selling of Coke at the basketball games. That netted us a substantial amount; enough to warrant our holding up our heads. Secondly came Wussel”. Darling little Wus- sel”, the L. H. S. mascot. Don’t let anyone kid you, dear reader, the Juniors are clever. Yak! Yak! Thirdly, there was the food sale. Yes, everything J:he Juniors attempt goes over in a big way. Sounds good in print, doesn’t it? Then came our individual and outstanding members who contributed to the success of the Class. Ev Lumbert, our class poet and all- around happy boy, got as far as the District finals in the Constitution Contest. Medals galore to him. Marilyn Merrill and Janet Carl were chosen our class honor students to represent our school ( Continued on Page 60) LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Fifty-nine Class Of 1948 Bette MacDougall. ' 48; Robert Kendall, ’48 A T our first class meeting we elected Harold Croft president, Jean Marshall vice-presi- dent, Octavia Bento secretary, and for the fourth consecutive year our treasurer William Viega. A popular social chairman was found in Kenneth Smith, and a social committee was appointed, consisting of Janet Fenstermaker, Gwendolyn Lee, Elizabeth Tsiknas, Gussie Tol- lios, and Albert Malzan. Our class has shown a genuine enthusiasm for all phases of music this year. The school orchestra elected all Sophomore officers; Robert l 4 endall, president; Gussie Tcllios, vice-presi- dent; and Charlotte Martin, secretary-treasurer. Other So homore members of the orchestra in- cluded Mary Tsiknas, Kaleroy Hatzikon, Ann Dexter, Bette MacDougall, Philip Stewart, and Robert Kendall. The Sophomores are a definite majority in the Girls’ and Boys’ Glee Clubs too. The Music club, consisting of combined Glee Clubs and the orchestra, elected, as the only Sopho- more officer, Gussie Tollios, vice-president. SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary T reasurer Harold Croft Joan Marshall Octavia Bento William Veiga A large group represented us at the New England Music Festival in New Britain, Conn., and at Eastern Massachusetts Music Festival in Needham, Mass. The choral group included Charlotte Martin, Joan Marshall, Bette Mac- Dougall, Pat Graham Mary Tsiknas, Elizabeth Tsiknas, Kaleroy Hatzikon, Phyllis Fisher, Robert Sisson, Robert Kendall, John Hadley, George Souza, and Philip Stewart. In the or- chestra were Ann Dexter, first violin, and Gussie Tollios, first cello. A preliminary spelling bee was held in an assembly to determine the contestants of the High School Spelling Bee held the night of April 24th. We were represented in the pre- liminary bee by Cynthia Eldred, Marilyn In- gram, Janet Fenstermaker, Bette MacDougall, and Galen Powers. Bette MacDougall topped the sophomores. Marilyn Ingram. Janet Fen- stermaker, and Bette MacDougall, representing our class in the final bee, were spelled down. Marilvn Ingram was runner-up to senior Dor- othy Keeler. Ann Dexter, the Sophomore’s outstanding chairman during the magazine sales drive, brought in the most sales subscriptions, merit- ing a certificate of leadership and salesmanship from Curtis Publishing Co. Phyllis Fisher and Gussie Tollios captained the teams of Lawrence students to the close of the 100% Lawrencian subscription campaign. A three dollar prize was awarded to Marilyn Ingram for selling the greatest number of ads for the Lawrencian. Olinda Rose ' s talent in the field of art merited her a three-dollar prize and Ann Dexter received a prize of one dollar for composing the best poem. When appointed positions on the Literary, Art, and Business Staffs of the Lawrencian, many of our classmates did excellent work. Marilyn Ingram and Philip Stewart were as- sistants and Laura Erskine, Kenneth Smith, and Robert Kendall were Home Room Repre- sentatives. On the Literary Staff Robert Sisson fulfilled the roles of associate editor and Soph- omore News Reporter along with Marjorie Myers and Robert Kendall. On the Art Staff Marion Marshall, Olinda Rose, and Cecilia Simons were associate editors. Gussie Tollios was an associate photography editor. ( Continued on Page 60) Page Sixty THE LA WRENCI AN — 1946 Class of 1948 ( Continued from Page 38) In sports the football season began our year. Many Sophomore boys received thorough train- ing on the gridiron. The boys who played on the team were Frank DeSouza, first string tackle; Kenneth Smith, halfback; Albert Mal- zan, end; Galen Powers, end; Gussie Tollios, halfback; Phil Stewart, halfback; and Robert Kendall, fullback. With the passing of Thanksgiving Day and football season, Sophomore boys and girls turned to the basketball court. Joan Marshall, Mary and Elizabeth Tsiknas, Ann Dexter, Pat Grabam, and Kaleroy Hatzikon played on the L. H. S. hoop sextet. On the boy’s aggrega- tion, playing first and second string in Cape competition, were Kenneth Smith, Albert Mal- zan, and Richard Perry, all forwards. The Sophomore girls won their game of the year and the boys, in interclass competition, went down before the seniors but defeated the fresh- men by a good margin. On the diamond Kenneth Smith, Harold Croft, and Jerry DeMello made the school team as utility infielder, outfielder, and pitcher- infielder respectively. The students who upheld our scholastic rec- ord by maintaining certificate grades through- out the year are: Janet Fenstermaker, Ann Dex- ter, Phyllis Fisher, Bette MacDougall, Louise Myers, and Robert Kendall. As our Sophomore year draws to an in- evitable end, we look forward to equally suc- cessful Junior and Senior years. Heart-felt thanks are gratefully extended to our patient and understanding teachers and to our Prin- cipal, Mr. Russell B. Marshall, for his expert guidance. THQ5E WHIZ KIDJ5 r— ====== Incoming Senior Class Officers President Everett Lumbert Vice-President June Miller Secretary Marilyn Merrill Treasurer Philip Peterson Social Committee Patricia Sylvia, chairman Ways and Means Committee Barbara Brown, chairman Junior Class (Continued from Page 38) and Class in Girls’ State. Myron Medeiros, Phil Peterson, Red Francis, Harry Peters, and Bob Donnelly will go also to Boys’ State Conference. Another slew of medals. Joan, June, Marilyn, and Bert, also Froso, represented the Class in the New Britain Music Fest. We certainly heard enough about that to last us for years. And their theme song. The Lord is calling and I gotta go — ”, or was it June’s theme song? So on and on into the night, the feats of the Junior Class are written in the annals of time so that it and Posterity can look them over. ( Good sentence. ) Ah, the Junior Class is a great Class, bu ' think what will happen when the Juniors will be seniors! Page Sixty-two THE LAWRENCIAN — 1946 Standing, left to right-. Phyllis, Fisher, Gussie Tollio, Philip Peterson, Richard Baker, Robert Kendall, Kenneth Smith, Marion Busch. Seated, left to right. Elliot Young, Josephine Chase, Esther Clark, Ann Doyle, June Miller. Lawrencian Business Staff Advertising Managers Patricia Bowman, ’46 Ann Doyle, ’46 Esther Clark, ' 46 Josephine Chase, ’46 Assistants Katherine Brown, ’46 Olive DeSouza, ' 46 Ellen Cunningham, ' 46 Charlotte Bourne, ’46 Arthur Carlson, ’46 Doris Lumbert, ’46 Paulina Goss, ’47 Sheila White, ' 47 Dorothy White, ' 47 Ruth Rose, ’47 Barbara Hazelton, ’47 Leola Erskine, ’47 Virginia Bowman, ’47 Barbara Hersey, ’47 Virginia Crocker. ’47 Marilyn Ingram, ’43 Philip Stewart, ' 4.3 Circulation Managers Elliot Young, ’46 Philip Peterson, ’47 June Miller, ’47 Home Room Representatives Marion Busch, ’46 Richard Baker, 46 Donald Holmes, ’47 Gw ' en Clough, ’47 June Miller, ’47 Philip Peterson, ' 47 Kenneth Smith, ’48 Robert Kendall, ' 48 Laura Erskine, ’48 Business Adviser Miss Josephine Kochanska LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Sixty-three Standing , left to right : Adeline Bento, Joanne Tassinari, Marjorie Myers, Robert Kendall, Robert Sisson, Arthur Kirts, Philip Baker, Elsie Carlson, Janet Carl, Arlene MacDougall. Seated , left to right-. Mindie Cutler, Mildred Carlson, Emma Panton, Norma Barrows, Ann Landers, Marilyn Merrill, Judith Eldred, Muriel Irving. Senior Yearbook Staff Co-Editors Norma Barrows. Ann Landers, Assistant Editors Seniors ' . Muriel Irving, Judith Eldred, Mindie Cutler, Adeline Bento, Emma Panton, Arlene MacDougall, Philip Baker, Mildred Carlson, Elsie Carlson, Juniors: Marilyn Merrill, June Miller, Joan Tassinari, Bert LaForest, Barbara Brown, ' 46 Sophomores : Robert Kendall, ' 48 ' 46 Bette MacDougall, ' 48 Art Editor Emma Panton, ' 46 ' 46 Assistant Editors Olinda Rose, ' 48 ' 46 Cecelia Simons, ' 48 ' 46 Marion Marshall, ' 48 ' 46 Photography Editors: Jane Dean, ' 46 ' 46 Dorothy Donnelly, ' 46 ' 46 Typists: Adeline Bento, ' 46 Charlotte Bourne, ' 46 ' 46 Patricia Bowman, ' 46 ' 46 Marion Busch, ' 46 ' 46 Esther Clark, ' 46 ' 47 Dorothy Keeler, ' 46 ' 47 Literary Advisers Miss Kathleen Arenovski ' 47 Miss Barbara Follansbee ' 47 Mrs. Mary Robb ' 47 Art Adviser Miss Nellie Suzedell On The Sidelines LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Sixty-five Front rou : Thomas Oliver, Philip Almeida, Joseph Grace, Albert Malzan, Donald Gray, Law- rence DeMello. Second row. Kenneth Smith. Frank Souza, George Fish, Paul Roderick (captain), John Augusta, Leighton Allenby, Donald Francis. Third row. Gov” Fuller (coach), Walter Lord (manager), Russell Peters, Lawrence Costa, Carleton Mixer, Robert Kendall, Earl Miller, Gilbert Mello. Fourth row. William Oliver, Harry Peters, Arthur Kirts, Richard Cummings, Joseph Han- ley, Philip Peterson, Barksdale Macbeth, Richard Corey, Elliot Young (manager). 1945 L. HL S, Football Squad Individual Points Season’s Record L. H. S. 0 Middleboro 0 Roderick 4 T.D, 3 Pt. 27 L. H. S. 6 Barnstable 7 L. H. S. 20 Yarmouth 0 Cash 2 T.D, 2 Pt. 14 L. H. S. 0 Bourne 6 Allenby 2 T.D, 1 Pt. 13 L. H. S. 0 Wareham 6 Almeida 1 T.D. 6 L. H. S. 21 Yarmouth 6 L. H. S. 14 Barnstable 13 Peterson 1 Pt. 1 61 38 61 Page Sixty-six THE LA WRENCIAN — 1946 Front row , left to right: Elizabeth MacDougall, Kaleroy Hatzikon, Mary Tsiknas, Elizabeth Tsiknas. Second row: Marilyn Rockwell, Jane Dean, Patsy Sylvia, Norma Barrows, Captain; Muriel Irving, Dorothy Donnelly. Third row: Arlene MacDougall, Joan Marshall, Ann Dexter, June Miller, Patricia Graham, Alfreda Gaskill. (Photo by Edwin Gray) 1946 L. H. S, Girls ' Basketball Team HOS WHO in the basketball world this year includes Dorothy Donnelly, Lizzie Tsiknas, and Ann Dexter from the forward section; Susie Irving, Jane Dean, June Miller, guards. Although the season couldn ' t be considered successful so far as victories were concerned, basketball entertained a large and enthusiastic participation from both the Hall School and L. H. S. Thus we feel secure in predicting an all-around good season for 1947. First team — Norma Barrows, Jane Dean. Dorothv Donnelly. Muriel Irving. Arlene Mac- Dougall. June Miller, Pat Sylvia, Marilyn Rock- well, Charlotte Bourne, and Dorothy Keeler. Second team — Elizabeth Tsiknas, Mary Tsik- nas, Gloria Hatzikon, Ann Dexter, Joan Mar- shall, Pat Graham, Bette MacDougall Lillian Rose, Frances Irving, Alfreda Gaskill, and Frances Hilton. Season’s Record L. H. S. 5 Bourne 23 L. H. S. 3 Sandwich 2 L. H. S. 10 Vineyard Haven 39 L. H. S. 13 Bourne 38 L. H. S. 5 Sandwich 35 L. H. S. 4 Yarmouth 25 L. H. S. 9 Vineyard Haven 22 L. H. S. 3 Yarmouth 32 LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Sixty-seven Left to right-. Richard Baker, William Roberts, Richard Cummings, Leighton Allenby, Cap- tain; Eddie Peterson, Earl Mills, Arthur Carlson, and James Cash. 1946 L. H, S Boys’ Season’s Record L. H. S. 12 All-Stars 26 L. H. S. 24 . Harwich 31 L. H. S. 29 Bourne 37 L. H. S. 32 . Wareham 26 L. H. S. 42 .. Sandwich 34 L. H. S. 41 Yarmouth 21 L. H. S. 25 Giants 30 L. H. S. 26 Barnstable 35 L. H. S. 37 .. Bourne 41 L. H. S. 28 All-Stars 34 L. H. S. 59 Sandwich ... 24 L. H. S. 36 Barnstable 51 Basketball Team Individual Points Mills 113 Peterson 90 Cash 52 Baker 46 Allenby 28 Carlson 20 Roberts 16 Cummings 12 Almeida 11 Smith 3 391 390 Total 391 Page Sixty-eight THE LAWRENCI AN — 1946 Brockton Tourney F OR the first time in five years we sent our basketeers to the Brockton Tournament and we had our eye set on winning it. Bourne, a heavy favorite, who had defeated us twice in regular season games was our first opponent and with maclrne-like precision we hammered away at the Bourne defense. Dick Baker threw in a thriller less than a minute before the end to put us one point ahead of the Canalside ream and ahead for the first time in the game. Soon after Swede” Peterson threw in a foul shot, making the final tally 26-24 L. H. S. Jim Cash and Earl Mills led the aggressive at- tack with ten and six points respectively. We were given about an even chance against Orleans, the next group of cagers the Lawren- cians were to face, and we started off like champions sporting a large lead at the end of the first quarter and half. Then Orleans set- tled down and gradually closed the gap till at the end of the game found them three points ahead, score 30-33. Jim Cash and Swede” Peterson playing a steady and aggressive game, garnered eleven points apiece to lead us in the scoring department. Cheerleaders Awarded Letters N ASSEMBLY was held at the end of the football season to present the cheerleaders with letters. Those receiving the letters were: Jane Dean, head cheerleader; Jean Pittsley, Muriel Irving, Janet Peterson, Paulina Goss, Joan Marshall, Phyllis Fisher, and June Miller. At this time, the football players also re- ceived recognition for their fine work and for their last time on the football field. SECOND TEAM Lejt to right-. Philip Almeida, Thomas Oliver, Paul Roderick Aithur Kirts, Donald Francis, Robert Donnelly, Joseph Hanley. Second Team’s Record L. H S. 24 Harwich 30 L. H. S. 41 Bourne ... 26 L. H. S. 13 Wareham ... 4 L. H. S. 31 Yarmouth 17 L. H. S. 22 Giants 24 L. H. S. 23 Barnstable 27 L. H. S. 42 Bourne 33 L. H. S. 28 Barnstable 31 224 192 Individual Scores Smith 63 Donnelly 43 Hanley 42 Kirts 20 Francis 19 Roderick 12 Malzan 6 Sawyer 6 Almeida 6 Oliver 4 Perry 3 Total 224 CHEERLEADERS FIRST TEAM IN ACTION LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Sixty-nine Front row. Arthur Kirts, Tommy Oliver. Earl Mills, captain; James Cash, William Oliver, George Jennings, Phil Almeida. Back row. Harold Croft, Richard Baker, William Roberts, Jerome DeMello, Donald Francis, Ed Peterson, Coach Gov” Fuller. (Photo by Edwin Gray) 1946 L. H , S. Baseball Team Season’s Record May: 3— L. H. S. 21 Wareham 1 7— L. H. S. 9 Yarmouth 2 10— L. H. S. 13 Barnstable 7 14— L. H. S. 13 Harwich 7 17— L. H. S. 2 Bourne 1 24— L. H. S. 13 Yarmouth 3 31— L. H. S. 16 Wareham o June: 4— L. H. S. Bourne Individual Points Averages before Bourne game ab bh r b k ave. Baker 9 4 5 6 1 .444 T. Oliver 16 7 10 6 5 .437 Peterson 17 7 4 2 1 .411 Roderick 6 2 2 2 1 .3 ; 3 Kirts 16 5 8 5 2 -i 1 1 Mills 22 6 8 0 3 .272 Roberts 11 3 2 1 3 .272 W. Oliver 15 4 6 5 3 .266 Cash 16 4 4 0 1 .250 Almeida 10 1 5 6 0 .100 Jennings .... 4 0 0 0 4 .000 DeMello .... 4 0 2 1 1 .000 Croft .... 3 0 0 1 2 .000 Francis 1 0 1 1 0 .000 Who 9 s Who At L. H. S Top row, left to right ' . Spelling Bee Champion, Dorothy Keeler; Secretary, Mrs. Harper, and Assistant. Louise Erskine; American Legion Oratorical Winner, Everett Lumbert. Second rou : Head Librarian. Adeline Bento; Spelling Bee Contestants, seated left to right. Marilyn Ingram. Dorothy Keeler, Elizabeth MacDougall; standing, Myron Medeiros, Marilyn Mer- rill; High Salesman of Magazines in Eastern Massachusetts. Richard Baker with Mr. Marshall. Bottom rou : Girls ' State Representatives — Janet Carl. Marilyn Merrill; C. S. P. A. Delegates, left to right ' . Norma Barrows, Emma Panton. Miss Arenovski, Adviser; Ann Landers, Mindie Cut- ler; Co-Editors. Norma Barrows, Ann Landers. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Junior Wins Oratorical Contest E VERETT LUMBERT, a junior, won first place in the local and district contests of the American Legion Oratorical Contests on the Constitution of the United States. Everett came in third in the zone held in Brookline. Doris Letourneau won this zone final and went on to become the runner-up in the national contest after having won the State, Regional, and Sectional contests. He repre- sented Barnstable, Plymouth, Dukes, and Nan- tucket counties in this contest. Had he come in first or second, Everett would have qualified for the State finals in which he would have competed with two winners from the western pan of the State for four prizes and a chance to enter the national contest as the State ' s rep- resentative. A four-year college scholarship was the national prize. Everett’s topic was ' An American Citizen ' s Rights and Privileges Under the Constitution.” He was also required to give a four to six minute extemporaneous speech on one of the amendments. In a preliminary contest held in the Hall School, Everett’s competitors included Ann Lan- ders, a senior who placed second, Norma Bar- rows, another senior who took third place, June Miller, Elsie Carlson, Mildred Carlson, Emma Panton, Marilyn Merrill, Arlene Mac- Dougall, Mindie Curler, and Muriel Irving. Senior Spelling Champion TAOROTHY KEELER, a senior, proved to be the champion speller of Falmouth in the final High School Spelling Bee. Marilyn Ingram, a sophomore, was the runner-up in the battle of spellers. The preliminary srelling bee was held dur- ing a special assembly in the L.H.S. in April. After some struggle on the part of the contest- ants, Dorothy Keeler was the victor with Bette MacDougall, a sophomore, coming in second. Those who represented their classes in the final bee after Easter vacation were: seniors, Dorothy Keeler. Judith Eldred, and Ann Lan- ders; juniors, Mvron Medeiros, Marilyn Mer- rill, and Louise Martin; sophomores, Marilyn Ingram, Bette MacDougall. and Janet Fenster- maker; ninth graders, Fred Bowman, Priscilla Jennings, and Janice McLaughlin; eighth graders, Constance Craig, Geraldine DeMello, and Dorothv Van Tol; seventh graders. Rich- ard Holm, Barbara Pacheco, and Frank Rezen- des. Page Seventy-one Curtis Magazine Campaign | 0 EARN money to purchase card tables, chairs, and other furniture for use at school parties, L.H.S. students sponsored a two weeks’ magazine campaign last October. Mr. Ernest W. Schultz, Curtis Publications’ representative, at the assembly announced the opening of the drive, setting the goal at $200. To add a touch of interest, the school was divided into two competitive teams — the Blue with a Navy goat for its mascot and the Red with an Army mule. Ann Dexter, a sophomore, led the Red team and Richard Baker, a senior, led the Blue. Richard Baker was awarded a twenty-five dollar War Bond for bringing in the most subscriptions. He was also awarded a certifi- cate for being the champion salesman in the Eastern Mass. Ann Dexter also received a cer- tificate of recognition. The Curtis Magazine Subscription Campaign came to a successful close with a school profit of $155.21. School Library | HE school library, which has grown con- siderably since March, is grateful to army officials at Camp Edwards who donated a large number of station library books when the camp closed. To add to this, Senior English divisions A and B left Book of the Month and Literary Guild selections which they purchased during the year to the library at the close of school. Lawrenfeen Club Organized T HE long-sought high school recreation cen- ter was finally realized when the Lawren- teen Club made its debut Friday afternoon, February 15, at the U.S.O. The club, charging membership fees, fea- tured movies, ping-pons, cards, and other games. Members had access to the snack bar, juke box, hall, and lounge. A student governing board — consisting of Muriel Irving, Chairman; Mindie Cutler, Elliott Young, June Miller, Donald Francis, Joan Mar- shall, Gussie Tollios, Doris Fisher, and John Farrell — was in total charge of activities. With the close of the U.S.O. in latter March meetings were suspended till further notice. Students proved to the town they needed and wanted a recreation center by their regular attendance and enthusiasm. Page Seventy-two Vocational Guidance Assemblies V OCATIONAL guidance instructors who visited L. H. S. throughout the school year gave students a clearer conception of the vari- ous fields of work which they might enter and the requirements of each. Miss Betty Lundgren, assistant director of admissions, and Professor Earle Littleton of Tufts College, spoke on the courses and op- portunities offered by Tufts at an assembly of college divisions students in November. Miss Lundegren explained to the girls re- quirements needed for entrance, expenses, and scholarships at Jackson College, answering questions about campus life and activities. Professor Littleton, who is on the faculty of the School of Civil Engineering, described courses offered in engineering to a group of boys. Between Mr. Otto Glade, reporter for the Cape Cod Standard Times and Mrs. George A. Hough, assistant editor of the Enterprise , the journalism class learned by first-hand informa- tion the makeup of a newspaper, reporting, and even radio writing. School reporters, who were invited to the offices of both papers, visited the Enterprise in January and there actually saw a newspaper in the making. One of the most outstanding guest speakers of the year was Miss Lillian R. Fletcher, super- visor of Stewardesses for Northeastern Airlines. Miss Fletcher, aviation’s foremost woman am- bassador of good will, discussed New England’s aviation outlook, an aviation career, and the behind-the-scenes drama of air travel. Recruiting officer Capt. Mclnver named op- portunities offered by the army in a boys’ assembly. Several representatives from secretarial schools visited L. H. S. and interested many students in medical secretary, diplomatic, and finishing courses. They were Mrs. Muriam Darrow of the Cape Cod Secretarial School. Miss Katherine Dunbar from the Katherine Gibbs Secretarial School, and Miss Christine Coleman, Director of Dramatic Art and Per- sonality at Becker Junior College. All speakers repeatedly advised boys and girls to work hard in high school and earn good grades. They augured that marks would count this year more than ever before for students who desired to go on with their education in college since war veterans by the thousands would be challenging competitors. THE LAWRENCIAN — 1946 OFFICE PRACTICE Speaker Personalities At L.H.S. O THER interesting speakers heard at as- semblies were: Mr. Frederick L. Collins, personal friend of J. Edgar Hoover, head of the F. B. I. — who read excerpts from his book, The F. B. I. in Peace and War about infamous criminals and the work done by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in tracking them down; the Reverend Hubert A. Allenby, former Army Chaplain, who described his work and exper- iences with German prisoners of war at a pri- soner-of-war camp in New f Mexico; and Miss Mary J. Eckhardt, Chief Justice of the student council at Vassar, who gave pupils an account of her work and curriculum at college. LAWRENCIAN ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF First row ( left to right) : Jane Dean, Judith Eldred, Emma Panton. Second row ( left to right) : Gwen Clough, Cecelia Simons, Jean Baker, Dorothy Donnelly, Barbara Brosvn. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Sophomore Teacher To Wed M ISS Barbara T. Follansbee’s engagement to the Rev. Robert E. Luccock, son of Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Luccock of New Haven, Conn., was announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Everett M. Follansbee of Newburyport early in May. Miss Follansbee, a graduate of Wheaton Col- lege, has been teaching Sophomore English at Lawrence High School for the past eight years. Mr. Luccuck was graduated from Yale Univer- sity and Union Theological Seminary and is now minister of St. Paul’s Methodist Church, Northport, L. I. An August wedding is planned. Tawrenciao Wins High Honors T HIS year the Columbia Scholastic Press Association judges again voted the Lawren- cian first place in comparison with other maga- zines which come from high schools of 300 pupils or less. This was the first Lawrencian entered for two years. From 1939-1943 the Lawrencian has held a Medalist rating, highest possible rating in its class, three times and first place, twice. Also it has held all-Columbian honors twice — once for make-up and the other for art and editorials. In the Eastern Massachusetts Scholastic Press Association in 1942 and 1945, it has received a certificate of merit — second place for leader- ship in the field of secondary school magazine publications.” Another honor which the Lawrencian re- ceived this year was the All-American Honor Rating or superior” from the National Schol- astic Press Association at University of Minne- sota. Besides the Lawrencian , there was only one other magazine in its class to receive this honor. The Laierencian , an outgrowth of the Voice, was first published in pamphlet form in 1923. In 1939, however, when Miss Arenovski be- came its able advisor, it became a magazine published twice a year. The first pamphlet or magazine ever pub- lished at Lawrence High School was the Pioneer, appearing for the first time in 1902. Ever since then, with a few exceptions, L. H. S. has had a publication. Page Seventy-three Ave Atque Vale I Ann Landers, Co-Editor A S another school year draws to a close and we another class graduate, someone else is leaving dear L. H. S. — Miss Barbara Follans- bee. As teacher of sophomore English and a willing adviser on the Lawrencian, she has served us faithfully for eight years. We shall never forget her English class with its grammar, literature, orals, and yes . . . mid- year and finals. It was our first experience with such things; and if at first we disliked them, we later learned to realize their import- ance in preparation for college exams. When we sophomores had a crucial problem to be solved, she was always there to help us. Her interest in the success of all social events made us ever-willing to share with her the work and the excitement of the occasion. She was our ever constant guide in everything we did in our first year in Lawrence High School. And so to Miss Follansbee, we the graduates join with the whole school to wish her the best of luck and happiness in her new home as we sadly bid her adieu. ESTHER CLARK 1946 D.A.R. Pilgrim Page Seventy-four SENIORS AND JUNIORS SEWING Left to right : Angeline Figuerado, Eleanor Peters, Isabel Gomes, Geraldine Monteiro, Leatrice DeMello. Washington Trip ( Continued from Page 55 ) delicate Cape Cod pink. — The Statue of Lib- erty — Empire State Building — Staten Island — The Roxy and R. K. O. — Broadway. Friday , April 19 No phone ringing at 6:30 A. M. — No one commanding us to get up. — Sleeping till 11:00 A. M. Some of the stronger ( mostly feminine) shopped. 11:30 came. — The bus was ready to leave. — No Avis or Adeline! — A hasty search found them still in bed. By 12:30 we were on our way. — Arrived in Providence about 8:00 P. M. We learned about the forest fire on the Cape. — Rushed to every available phone and called home. We found Mr. Rego and his faithful bus waiting to take us the last few miles of our trip. We arrived home about 10:45 P. M. — loaded down with souvenirs and new clothes — tired — filled with culture (!!) and experience — with one thought in mind — to climb between two cool sheets and sleep to our heart’s content and eat a nice homecooked meal of anything but fried chicken! THE LAWRENCIAN — 1946 Fashion Clulb Organized B Y sponsoring fashion shows, a nylon raffle, and a cake sale, the Fashion Club, under supervision of Miss Sally C. Palmer, actually earned its way to Boston for a day, May 23, when members visited Filene’s to see a pro- fessional lashion show, went shopping, and strolled through Franklin Park. Officers of the club which held its meetings every Tuesday were Leatrice DeMello, presi- dent; Margaret Macbeth, vice-president; An- geline Figuerado, Secretary; and Donna Wright, treasurer. Other members of the club to go on the trip were: Arlene Baptiste, Mildred Baptiste, Julia Corey, Joyce Gloria, Irene Grace, Helen Lumbert, Dorothy Roderick, Mary Peterson, and Emily Lopes. Lawrencian Party Held A LAWRENCIAN Party with Muriel Irving and Katherine Brown in charge was held April 5 in the Henry Hall School Gymnasium. The approximate fifty people who attended enjoyed dancing, refreshments, and a scavenger hunt. Junior Red Cross S TUDENTS, who contributed 100% to the annual Junior Red Cross Drive for 1945- 1946, also made up boxes of useful goods which were sent to needy children in Europe. The Junior Red Cross Council for this year were: Ann Landers, Carolyn Solberg, Barbara Brown, Eugenia Malzan, Donald Holmes, Phyl- lis Fisher, Elizabeth Salthouse, and Ann Dexter. JUNIOR RED CROSS OFFICERS LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Bond Rally Held I N AN effort to bring up the sales in victory stamps and bonds to its $3000 quota, the senior Commercial Law Class, under the super- vision of Miss Josephine Kochanska, spon- sored a bond rally and Chinese auction in No- vember. Jean Baker acted as chairman. The rally featured an auction of useful things donated by the local merchants, refreshments, dancing, and other entertainment. The L.H.S. Cheerleaders highlighted the rally with the Bond Song.” Walter Lord, William Roberts, Elliot Young, and Leighton Allenby formed a quartet; Charles Sample and Gladys Gray tap danced; Muriel Irving, Norma Barrows, Doro- thy Donnelly, Marilyn Rockwell, Jane Deaa Janet Peterson, and Doris Lumbert harmonized in several cowboy songs; Paulina Goss and Peggy McAdams sang; Everett Lumbert pre- sented a monologue about Casey at the Bat;” Claire Lafond, Jeanne Lafond, Kenneth Smith, and June Miller also sang. Charles Sample and Gladys Gray performed an Indian dance while State Guardsmen, in- cluding seniors Elliot Young and Walter Lord, drilled before the audience. Mrs. Evangeline Lumbert, Mrs. Melvina Quinn, and Mrs. William Dufur, from the lo- cal post office, made out orders for bonds and took money for stamps. Everett Lumbert and Philip Peterson served as auctioneers. Esther Clark and Dorothy Keeler were on the program committee, while Marion Busch, Josephine Chase, Arlene Henry and Eleanor Torres served on the refreshment committee. The auction committee included: Claire La- fond, Katherine Brown, Olive DeSouza, El- liot Young, and Jean Baker. SENIORS AND JUNIORS COOKING Page Seventy-five BOND AND STAMP COMMITTEE Left to right : Katherine Brown, chairman; Esther Clark, Jean Baker, Josephine Chase. Hospital Sponsorship Panel Awarded T HE L.H.S. students and teachers have been very succe ssful this year in putting cam- paigns over the bubbling point.” A Sponsorship Panel, awarded by the War Finance Committee, was won by L.H.S. stu- dents and teachers and was placed on the bed of a wounded veteran at the General Hos- pital in Camp Edwards. The school produced $821.45 more than the required $3000 for the panel. The Infantile Paralysis Campaign also went over successfully this year. The student body was reminded that 50% of this money was kept in their own county, thus perhaps en- couraging them. (Cake Contest A CAKE contest featured by the Household Arts Class under the supervision of Miss Mildred Heath, judged Donna Wright ' s cake first place in appearance; Geraldine Monteiro’s, second; and Anna Pocknett ' s, third. For the best all-around cake, Isabel Gomes won first place; Irene Grace, second; and Eloiu r ' enreiro, third. Enterprise Reporters T HE Written Expression Class has this year been a part of the Enterprise staff, report- ing the news of Falmouth’s three center schook Senior reporters who wrote their news for the vear were Philip Baker, Norma Barrows. Mindie Cutler, Judith Eldred, Muriel Irving, Ann Landers, and Emma Panton. Miss Arenov- ski inaugurated this class at L.H.S. L.H.S, ACTIVITIES Top rou: Fashion Club; Lawrenteen Governing Board. Second rou : Girls ' Glee Club; Boys ' Glee Club. Third rou L.H.S. Boys in State Guard; School Orchestra. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL Page Seventy-seven 6€ Lost Week-end At The New England Mmsie Festival June Miller, Bert LaF orest, Joanne Tassinari Dear Reader, Before we divulge the facts of our fabulous trip, we would like to explain that it is pretty tough to record the actions of 21 rather eccentric musicians for four days. We do not mention everyone and what they did because we don’t know what they did. This article is merely the reaction of three people among many, and any resemblance of these facts to the true facts is purely coincidental. WT ' E can go now. Bert’s here.” ▼V With that classic remark, 21 of Miss Cahoon’s young proteges (that’s us) started for New Britain to give the festival chorus of 300 our moral support. The trip down was fairly uneventful and eventually, someone produced the inevitable, a pack of cards. That was fine only most of us had to borrow carfare for the next three days. And of course, when we haven’t any- thing else to do, we eat. Joanie Marshall graciously produced enough food for an army and dinner music was supplied by the chorus. ( In case you’re interested, selections were, Oiy. Oiy, Oiy”, A Cannibal King” and ' The Lord ' s Prayer” ) With that behind us, we arrived at the New Britain High School to be greeted by a pack of eager Fresh-Men, who helped to make us feel very much at home. (Boys will be boys). They led us to the registration room, which was busier than Room 14 after a Latin test, where we received instructions and they re- ceived our money. Later, after a lecture on behavior from Old Blood and Guts (Miss Willard, to you) we contacted our hosts and were taken home to wonderful dinners. June and Joanne were lucky enough to be at a butcher’s house where steaks could be sneezed at. (Too bad Joanne’s a vegetarian ) . But most of the people of New Britain seemed very hospitable and everyone was made comfortable. BERT: It was on Thursday that we settled down to business and established a schedule which we were to follow for three days. At the morning rehearsal we went about making friends with individuals from all parts of New England ( hubba - hubba ) . Here, Joanne was attracted by a hungry-looking baritone with whom she had an intellectual conversation. June was prospecting. We ate and when we were through we pro- ceeded to explore the town. Then we found the park, but we weren’t able to stay long the first day because of June’s sudden In the evening we had a short rehearsal ( about 2 hours ) before the dance which was given in our honor in the school gym. It was a wonderful affair (they tell me). Oh, I was there but most of my time was spent in getting acquainted with the school. ( Boy! what a library) . At this point, June was still searching in vain and soon the dance ended. The Tsiknas twins were escorted home by a couple of Don Juan’s in a ’46 Cadillac, leaving us to perambu- late by ourselves. Of course Joanne had to be put on every bus since her sense of direction is very poor. June made the sad mistake of relying on it a couple of times, and they went to rehearsal by way of Hartford. So — we put her on her bus, and, alas, that was the end of Thursday! JUNE: I’ve been directed by my eminent colleagues, Joanne and Bert, to gather together what little information I can about Friday. Thus, and because if I hadn’t, they wouldn ' t let me keep the formula for raspberry limes, I shall commence. Friday dawned bright and sunnv ( that in itself is a feat unheard of on Cape Cod! ) Two hours later Joanne and I dawned , neither of us particularly bright and neither of our dis- positions very sunny. We arrived for rehearsal late, as wa« our usual custom, drooled over the tall blond in the bass section ( this, too, was our usual custom) and soon found we were free again for a few hours. After eating lunch what do you think we did? Go to the movies? No! Go shopping like some people do? Don’t be silly! We. courageous souls that we are, proceeded to climb the two miles (at a 90 degree angle) to get to the park we so hastily left the day before. The park itself was like a page out of Ancient Greek History and well worth the trouble, (we kept telling Bert every time he fell in a heap upon the ground.) It was indeed beautiful and too soon we had to depart. Mustering all our strength, which consisted of one vitamin pill among the three of us, we left our reestful haven and re- turned to the hall for the afternoon rehearsal. Page Seventy-eight The rest of the day would only bore you and since my contract states that I ' m only to put half the readers asleep, I think I ' ll sign off, while I still have an arm to sign off with. Carry on Joanne, old foot! ! ! ! ! JOANNE: Saturday, the day, finally ar- rived. The morning started, as usual, with a rehearsal and, after satisfactorily going through a few songs, they hung numbers on us and told us where to sit during the performance. Then they calmly announced that we would give a matinee and that we should eat raw eggs for the strength of ten men. (The boys have been eating them ever since.) A few hardy souls such as Pat, Joanie, and Bob Sisson and Kendall (and probably some more suckers) tried it, but nevertheless, the afternoon per- formance was pretty bad to put it mildly. Mr. Woodbury, our conductor, blamed it on the accoustics of the hall, but personally I think it was the eggs. After the show, we ate as usual and went home to prepare for the evening concert. We three never lacked food because we introduced all the Tsiknas ' s to some relatives they didn ' t know they had. These people owned a restau- rant and ever)’ time we went in, which was very often, Jimmie” would announce, These are Music at T O the ambitious and very capable new music supervisor, Miss Olive M. Cahoon. many of L. H. S. students now give their thanks for happy year-long memories of excit- ing expeditions to other cities and glee club practice. The first out-of-town trip, which was just the beginning of a succession of travels for musically-minded pupils, was to the Boston Opera House to see Gilbert and Sullivan ' s Mikado. Those who went enjoyed not only a good performance but also a pot roast at the Old France”. Undoubtedly, the most thrilling trip was made by twenty-one Falmouth music student representatives to the 1946 New England Music Festival at New Britain. Conn.. March 20. For three days aualified high school boys and girls who were sent from ever) ' New England state ro the annual Festival took part in the band, orchestra, or chorus, each of which had 200 members. For the L. H. S. troop that joined in it, it was an unforgettable experience. Not very long after this exploit. Miss Ca- hoon’s pupils were once more on the move; this time it was the Lawrence High School Music Club leaving for Needham, May 11. THE LA WRENCIAN — 1946 the people from Falmouth. ! !” to anyone who happened to be in there and proceed to give us anything, on the house. Well — that night at the concert, the chorus really did justice to Mr. Woodbury’s hard labors, eggs and all, and afterwards, we decided to go out and have fun. It was fun too — until Bob Kendall, Bette MacDougall, and I missed the last bus home which left at curfew time — 11:30. Luckily, most of the girls changed their formals but I hadn’t. Then, since we had missed the bus and I didn’t know the way home, we went to Charlotte ' s and Peggy Ann s quarters to call a cab. It turned out to be quite a party and by the time we got to our various abodes, it was an unmen- tionable hour. Therefore, I won’t mention it. This episode brought to an end our Lost Weekend.” We call it that because — Now you complete it in 25 words or less. The winner will review the formula for raspberry limes, (refer to June.) The only high point of our trip home was the Opera Impromptu” in which Marilyn gave her version of a dying rosebud, an extemporan- ous aria, while Bert conducted. ( If the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce sees this — I’m only kidding! ) L. H. S, There, in a great chorus of approximately 2,000 voices, students sang The Lost Chord, Hail Columbia, and the Thanksgiving Hymn. L. H. S. songsters received 80 points out of a possible 100 for their hard practised num- bers. At Gloucester they showed great im- provement. PIANO ACCOMPANISTS Charlotte Martin and Bert LaForest. Falmouth Summer Playground of the Nation ★ ★ ★ Advertisements Patronize Our Advertisers ★ ★ + | FALMOUTH AUTO SALES STORAGE and REPAIRING Tel. 190 Falmouth -St ★ -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -Sc ■SC -St -St -St -St -St -St ■St -St -St -SC -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St TO CHARTER ALL TOGETHER BUSSES and BOATS FALMOUTH BUS TAXI CO. Phone 333-W -Si -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St THE WARREN KAY VANTINE STUDIO INC. Official Photographer For the Class of 1945 -46 BOSTON MASS. -St -St -St -St -St ■St -St •St •St -St -St •St -St -St -St -St -St -St -St +★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★- If Patronize Our Advertisers SECRETARIAL DAY SCHOOL EVENING SCHOOL BOARDING SCHOOL TYPEWRITING : : SHORTHAND : : ACCOUNTING Cape Cod Secretarial School 242 Ocean Street, Hyannis, Massachusetts — Telephone 1372 ELIZABETH DAHILL PHARMACY R. P. Chamberlain, PhG. THEATRE W. W. Fenstermaker, Ph.C. Falmouth Prescription Specialists 148 Main St. Tel. Fal. 1390 BUTTNER ' S Dr. John H. Leonard A Full Line of DENTIST CLOTHING — DRY GOODS Over New York Restaurant Falmouth Main Street Falmouth New York Sandwich Shop Sad Sack’s Retreat New Yorker HOT DOGS — HOODS ICE CREAM Corner Gifford Street Main St. Falmouth Patronize Our Advertisers ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X ♦ ★ X -X -X -X -X -X -X -x -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X ■X -X ■X -X -X X X X X X x x X X X X -X X X x X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X Frederick V. Lawrence READY MIX CONCRETE Falmouth, Mass. THE WOOD LUMBER COMPANY Locust Street Falmouth Noah M. Cediman Attorney -at-Law Main Street Falmouth HARVEY ' S Hardware Store Telephone 481-W Main Street Falmouth (K MUSIC SHOP PHONOGRAPHS RADIOS SHEET MUSIC RECORDS ★ ★“ ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES RADIO SERVICE Patronize Our Advertisers Kendall Printing Co. Printers of THE LAWRENCIAN FORMERLY THE ENTERPRISE PRESS Telephone 70 FALMOUTH LAWRENCE BROS. (RTHMORE FEEDS HAY — GRAIN — DOG FEEDS F. T. Lawrence, Jr., Prop. Depot Avenue Tel. 241-W Falmouth J. J. Newberry Co. Underwood ' s Garage Harold Underwood, Proprietor Tel. 1139-W West Falmouth Kindergarten Nursery School Mrs. Russell B. Marshall 122 Shore Street Falmouth Young Motor Sales Authorized Sales and Service MERCURYS FORDS LINCOLN ZEPHYRS Falmouth Tel. 62 JOHN P. SYLVIA, JR. Attorney-at-Law Falmouth Mass. LANDSCAPE GARDENING CAPE COD NURSERIES THE FLOWER SHOP H. V. LAWRENCE, Inc. Falmouth Patronize Our Advertisers ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★♦★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★■a- z £ £ x- $ ; SAM CAHOON l £ £ £ WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN £ ? £ FISH AND LOBSTERS £ ■ x- Woods Hole Telephone Falmouth 660 J £ ? £ £ £ — . x- ★ ♦ ★ + ★ ■K ♦ ♦ f ★ + ¥ ★ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ George A. Hubbard PLUMBING and HEATING OIL BURNERS Telephone 202 257 Palmer Ave, Falmouth Hunky Dory SAFE RAW MILK The Dimmocks Hatchville Tel. 42- J DAILY LUNCH SERVICE Sandwiches Short Orders Complete Fountain Service 6:30 A M. to 6 P.M. McADAMS ' STORE - + + 145 Main St. Falmouth I X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- x- SHOE REPAIRS WALLETS LEATHER GOODS SHOES Men’s and Children’s Falmouth Construction Company ROOFS SIDEWALLS APPLICATORS JOHN R. AUGUSTA Main St. Falmouth Telephone 431-M3 DAVID QUINN Electrical Contractor Oil Burner Equipment Falmouth Mass. Patronize Our Advertisers + + + ♦ ♦ + + + ♦ + + ■X -X -X •x •X ■X + -X •X -X •X -X -X + •X -X •X + -X -X -X -X -X -X -X X X X ■X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X Falmouth X X X •¥ Miss J. L. Clidden Gift Shop CARDS STATIONERY GIFTS Andy’s Grille 360 Main Street Falmouth, Mass. H. E. Anderson, Owner Crystal Fuel Oil Co, : Telephone 464 Maple Lane Paul Peter ' s Agency Gifts distinctive — yet inexpensive Corner Store Canteen Corner Main and Walker Sts. Falmouth, Mass. Lane ' s Cut Rate TOILET ARTICLES PROPRIETARY MEDICINE Mass. Main St. Falmouth x x x x x x x Falmouth £ X ALFRED SOARES, Prop. X X x x x x X x X X X X X x x X x X x x x x x x x x x x x x x ♦ x X X X- Ralph W. Landers, Proprietor X X X COAL - FUEL OIL x x X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X MEATS ; X X PROVISIONS % X X X East Falmouth Tel. 143 x X X LANDERS ' GARAGE West Falmouth Tel. 37 STEVENS ' STORE A. C. Schroeder, Prop. GROCERIES Patronize Our Advertisers Maytag Washers G E Radios Wrn. C. Davis Coc DR. ROLAND O. PARRIS, M.D. ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ £ 18 Locust St. ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Fal. 870 Tel. Fal. 1095 Falmouth Auto Body All Kinds of Auto Body Repairs and Painting GLASS SETTING ROBERT F. BETTS Depot Ave. x- x- x- x- x- x- X- x- x- X- • x- x- x- x- x- x- x- x- x- x- x- x- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X X X X X X X- X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X ♦ X X X X x American Combination In war and peace, men, machines, material and money are the American combination that gets things done. It is the co-ordination of all four that forms the backbone of the American Way. Our bank’s contribution is to help supply the funds needed in our locality to keep produc- tion at its peak. See us about a loan for any sound purpose. The FALMOUTH NATIONAL BANK Patronize Our Advertisers + -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -x -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X X -X -X •X -X X ■X ■X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X James M. Pafford CONTRACTOR BUILDER Estimates Furnished 77 Siders Pond Road Falmouth Tel. 953 Savery Chevrolet Co v Inc 662 Main Street, Tel. Falmouth 444 Falmouth, Massachusetts Cape Cod Refrigeration Company J. R. KNIGHT and C. M. LAWRENCE AUTHORIZED KELVINATOR DEALERS AND ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Falmouth 13 or Wareham 696-R It’s Hood’s Ice Cream H. P. HOOD SONS MAIN AND NORTH STREETS HYANNIS 280 HYANNIS, MASS. x- x- x- x- x- x- x- x- X- x- x- X- x- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- x- X- X- x- x- x- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- $ X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- X- Patronize Our Advertisers The Francis GIFT SHOP GIFTS OF QUALITY Falmouth Massachusetts Ruth and Morton P. Francis Managers WRIGHT ' S TAXI 24-Hour Service Crescent Arms Hotel North Main Street Tel. Fal. 1520 Tel. 11 Falmouth TURNER BREIVOGEL GENERAL CONTRACTORS Crane, Shovel, and Bulldozer Work Falmouth Heights X X 4 x } x 4 4 x 4 ♦ x x 4 x x x 4 x x x X X X X 4 4 x x x x X X X X X 4 X t X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 4 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X I X X X X X X i X X . ♦ ¥ + ¥ + ♦ ♦ ♦ + ■¥■ ■¥■ ■ ■¥■ ♦ ★ -X ★ -X -X -X ♦ ★ ■X •X ■X •X •X -X •X -X ■X -X -X -X •X ■X -X •X -X ♦ ★ -X -X ■X •X ■X -X ♦ ★ -X -X Lawrence C. Antonellis 157 Locust Street Falmouth Brackett ' s Garage AUTO BODY Repairs — Painting Tel. Falmouth 704 SUMNER CROSBY Attorney -at -Law Main Street Falmouth STONE ' S BEAUTY SHOPPE Barber Shop Complete Beauty Service Opposite Public Library Phone 685 Falmouth, Mass. Patronize Our Advertisers Ciimmiiiils’ Taxi MAIN STREET Tel. Fal. 1103 MRS. WEEKS ' SHOPS ■k -x ■x •X -X ■X ■X -X •X -X -X -x -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -x -X -X -X ¥ -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X £ YARD GOODS -X -X -X -X X X X X X X X x x X X X X X X X X X X X X + X X Eastman Block x X | Tel. 232 x X X X X X HOSIERY LINENS COSMETICS 176 Main Street, Falmouth Dr. Karl A. Bohaker Dentist Falmouth The Best Place To Buy Your Fruit Falmouth Gardens East Main St. Headquarters for Variety Quality - Economy - Dependability Service Tel. 1424 x X x x x X x x x x x Falmouth £ x X x x x x x x x x x X X Lawrence High takes care of your Education — Iris Pharmacy Prescription Service takes care of your health. IRIS PHARMACY FALMOUTH Telephone 212 JAMES R DIACO Guaranteed Radio Service EAST FALMOUTH, MASS. i A Telephone Falmouth 177 Member National Radio Institute X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X Caps Off to The Lawrence High School ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ X X X ¥ + ■+ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ X ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ X X ¥ X ¥ ¥ X X ¥ ¥ ¥¥¥¥ X ¥ TRADE-MARK Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Cape Cod Sagamore, Mass., Tel. Sag. 1 Patronize Our Advertisers ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★■A- Falmouth Cleaners WE CALL AND DELIVER 4 DAY SERVICE Telephone - Falmouth 197 Beale ' s Shoe Store Weeks’ Block Main Street Falmouth J. ARTHUR POWERS Plumbing and Heating E. E. C. SWIFT CO. QUALITY MEATS and GROCERIES WOODWARD ' S Stationery Store Depot Avenue Falmouth Main Street Falmouth Esso Service Station Kathryn Swift Greene REAL ESTATE MULLEN ' S TAXI SERVICE 98 Main Street Falmouth, Mass. Tel. 373 Falmouth Near Village Green - Tel. Falmouth 17 ¥■¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ Patronize Our Advertisers JOSEPH P. GRACE Texaco Service East Main St. and Nye Rd. Falmouth Tel. 1205 SCHOOL LUNCH DEPARTMENT SHELL SERVICE STATION Lenn M. Davis, Prop. 420 Main Street Phone 254 If you believe in SAFETY FIRST You will buy INSURANCE FIRST George W. Jones Insurance Agency 88 Palmer Avenue Falmouth Telephone 71 FALMOUTH Walgreen Agency Drugs LESLIE N. BAKER, B.S. Registered Pharmacist Service with a Smile Sheehan s Cake Box ' BAKERS for THE HOME’’ Main Street Falmouth FALMOUTH CO-OPERATIVE BANK MAIN STREET FALMOUTH, MASSACHUSETTS Patronize Our Advertisers Jane H. Russell ' s DR. ARTHUR J. WAGNER Featuring INFANTS’ and CHILDRENS WEAR DENTIST Curtains - Linens - Yarns Main Street Falmouth Main Street Falmouth Tel. 555 Harry’s Orange Grove RUSSELL U. NORRIS FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES MASON CONTRACTOR Phone 760 Falmouth Mass. Main Street Falmouth Tel. 1217-W Shorty ’s Service Station Falmouth Company Open Evenings Until Ten’ MAKERS OF Tel. 1189 435 Palmer Ave. Falmouth WELSH GOGGLES” LAWRENCE Sandwich Depot The FALMOUTH COAL Falmouth Heights OPENING COMPANY Thursday, June 27 Telephone 200 ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥•¥• ¥¥¥ ¥ ¥¥ ¥ ¥¥ ¥ ¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥ AMHMMMHMHHMF MMMHMMMMMHHMJ- ¥¥¥¥¥ ¥ MMMf4 44¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ ■ -.V 4 ★★★★★★★★★★★★ 4 ★★★★★ 4 w ★★★★★★ ★★★★★ 4 ★★★ ■ ■★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★ TEN ACRE, INC. COMPLETE FOOD MARKET Fresh Meats and Fish Native Fruits and Vegetables S. S. Pierce Co. Groceries Delivery Service to all parts of Falmouth and Woods Hole Telephone 507 — 508 — 520 Falmouth Dr. C. H. GREENE DENTIST Main Street Falmouth New Bedford Bargain Store 370 Main St. Opp. Fire Station EASTMAN ' S HARDWARE ON CAPE COD LAURENCE WHITE LOCAL MILK and CREAM Patronize Our Advertisers 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ♦ 4 4 4 ♦ ♦ 4 4 ♦ 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 jf 4 4 4 4 249 Shore Street Falmouth Teaticket Hardware Co. Paints • Glass • Bicycle Repairing Accessories • Auto Tires-Tubes Teaticket Tel. 388 THE LEADING SPORTS STORE 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Rowe ' s Pharmacy Your Doctor ' s Partner in Health Service Patronize Our Advertisers Arnold I. Anderson Co. KEROSENE AND FUEL OIL WOOD PIANO AND FURNITURE MOVING TRUCKING Telephone — Falmouth 131 GOOD LUCK and SUCCESS The “Round Up” Victor M. D ' Aguida Snack Shop CONTRACTOR and BUILDER 24 Queens Buyway Falmouth Tel. 989-W East Falmouth PERRY ' S MARKET ISSOKSONS’ WALK-OVER SHOES” East Falmouth Opp. Elizabeth Theatre Falmouth Mass. Edwin Gray Photographer Falmouth 1343 Main Street ¥ ¥¥¥ ¥¥-¥ ¥ ¥ . +. .f .f . .: .. .. . . .. ' ++ + ¥ + : SmS NEW BEDFORD MASSACHUSETTS Patronize Our Advertisers ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Your Favorite DEPARTMENT STORE East Falmouth Crain Store GRAIN, COAL, FERTILIZER FUEL OIL and KEROSENE East Falmouth ¥ ¥ ¥ Tel. 15 : Daley Drug Store The REXALL Store George F. Daley Reg. Pharmacist, Prop. Woods Hole Mass. Kenyon ' s General Store WILLIAM D. BUCK, Prop. East Falmouth Falmouth Marine Railways F. W. WORMELLE, Jr. Falmouth irXXX X X X X X X X X X X X X x X X X X x x x x x X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X Fs ' .moufch PDfctte sjbrary -aimouth, Mass- 02640 ★★★★★★★★★★★★ + + + -X + ♦ -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X •X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X ■X -X -X -X -X •X -X -X •X -X •X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X ■X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X X •X -X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X ¥ L. C. BALFOUR COMPANY 10 Adams Street, North Attleboro, Mass. Patronize Our Advertisers ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★it X X x x x x x X X X X X Attleboro, Mass. x X Class Rings and Pins x Commencement Announcements J X X X Diplomas - Personal Cards x Medals - 1 rophies - Club Insignia x x Representative - Gene Manchester x X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X Cape Cod Marine Service, Inc. COMPLETE BOAT SERVICE W. G. MacDougall Falmouth Heights Malchman’s Telej hone 1 CC 6 Falmouth, Mass. Fay’s PYROFAX DISTRIBUTOR PLUMBING AND HEATING ELECTRIC AND GAS APPLIANCES ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥•¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥♦¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥•¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ FALMOUTH PUBLIC LIBRARY www.falmouthpubliclibrary.org FALMOUTH PUBLIC LIBRARY www.falmouthpubliclibrary.org FALMOUTH PUBLIC LIBRARY www.falmouthpubliclibrary.org FALMOUTH PUBLIC LIBRARY


Suggestions in the Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) collection:

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949


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