Livermore Falls High School - Banner Yearbook (Livermore Falls, ME)
- Class of 1948
Page 1 of 152
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 152 of the 1948 volume:
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C pl'ments of L. P. BRQWN FUNERAL SERVICE 15 Church Street Livermore Falls Maine 7 1 i I z Compliments of Tm MILL CHAPTER THE BANNER Success awaits at Lab0r,s HONOR STUDENTS GRACE DIAMOND, Valedictorian BEVERLY IUTT, Salutatorian THERIQSA DUBE NANCY HOAG THLRI5sA RICHARDS IUNE MURRAY MARILYN WYMAN LoUIsI2 TACLIIQNTI RUSSELL WAGNER VELMA PUTNAM IAMIQS RICHMUND WALTER CLARK ILLANNINL DESIARDINS ALVIN LIRRY URIE WliI.II.MAN EVA SMITII CLIFFORD PUTNAM RICHARD CLCUTILR TIIIQRLSA RRNEDLTTD MARGARET CRAM gate THE BANNER LIVERMORE FALLS HIGH SCHOOL VOL. XLVIII LIVERMORE FALLS, MAINE Price One Dollar Table of Contents Page Honor Students .... Table of Contents . Gardiner A. French .,,. School Committee ,, .. ., llanner lloard tand illustrationl .. Faculty Activities Qand illustration, . School Directory . , . .... ,. , School Calendar, I947-l9-48 , .. Colden Iubilee for l.. F. H. S. .. Seniors- Portraits and Activities The lunior Class Qillustrationsj .,...,...,... ...... The Sophomore Class Qillustrationsl . ......... . The Freshman Class fillustrationsl Student Honor Rolls. First Semester fillus- trationsl .. ... , . ,.... .. We Co to Class ii fwith illustrationsl ,..... We Co to the Fire Qwith illustrationsj .. S-Day at l-. l'. H. S. ,,... ,..,........... . Activities Commencement, l9-i7 Qwith illustrationsl lunior Night, l9-l7 Qwith illustrationsj .... 2 3 4 4 5 6 7 S 9 l0 16 I7 l8 19 20 35 41 42 45 Freshman Social, I9-l7 Qwith illustrationsj 45 The Hand Cwith illustrationl .. .. ..,...,... The Orchestra twith illustrationl 46 47 Page Glee Club and Chorus Groups Qwith ' ' 48 illustrationsl . ,,,.. ....... ..,. .,.. ..,....,.., .,,.. . School Play, 1947 fwith illustrationsl 50 Ticket Committee fillustrationj ...,.,,.,...,.. 52 ' ' S2 FFA flllllSll'1llIlOl'll ...,.,...,..,...,......,. ,....... FHA Cwith illustrationj .. .. ,......... 53 Commercial Club fwith illustrationl ,...... 54 Andies' Bulletin fwith illustration, ....... ., 55 Cheerleaders Qillustrationl ......,...,... ..,...,. 5 6 Office Girls fillustrationj ..,,., .. ..,, 56 School Notes Our Alumni Teachers 57 A New Teachers ......., .. ..,..... 59 Honors ...,....,...,......,,,..... ,......, 5 9 Graduates at School ...,.., ,..,,... C Q2 Clubs ..., ........... ............ ........ 6 4 Film Projector .,.., ..,..... 6 5 llanner Stafi' l948 .....,.,...,.. ..,... ......,. 6 I 1 IRC Organized at L. F. H. S. ..,....,........,... 66 Our Graduates in Service 1938-1942 Q4 pages of illustrations with personal rccordsj ..., 67 Literature ........... ...,.. .,...,,..,..,,,,... .,.....,..,..,,..... 8 7 Athletics Qwith illustrationsl . ...,. ........ 9 0 Advertisements ...,, .,.. ,.,,..,, .... . ,.., . , l 05 4 THE BANNER GARDINER A. FRENCH School ofiicials, teachers, and students were saddened last summer by the news of the death of Gardiner A. French, who had served over eleven years as a member of the Superintend- ing School Committee. He was first elected to the board in March, 1936. At the time of his death he was chairman of the Committee. Particularly suited to the work of this board by temperament and personality, Mr. French was a valuable oiiicial from the viewpoints of both town and school. His long membership on the Committee gave him background and perspective, so that especially in the later years he was an authority on what had been done for the schools in the past, and what could and should be done in the future. His interest in sports, in the academic standing of the schools, and in the students as human beings, marked him as the type of man whose broad sympathies are of inestimable worth to any school system. SCHOOL 1 COMMITTEE On August 13 the Livermore Falls Superin- tending School Committee elected Dr. Charles W. Eastman as a member for the remainder of the year to fill the vacancy caused by Mr. French's death. Dr. Eastman was re-elected at the town meeting in March, 1948. He is par- ticularly interested in the position because of the attendance of his children at the grade schools of our town, and his own previous membership on the school committee of Can- ton. We are very fortunate in having this young, intelligent, experienced man as a mem- ber of the policy-making board of our school system. Other members of the board are Mr. Henry Fournier, re-elected in March for a three-year term, and Mr. Wesley Stevens who is serving his second year on the Superintending School Committee. '-R? nm if wt, ':-25 so U' , ..l' is ?'? it til-Qv-swf . FJ! itll Alix' 'Q fit 'M BANNER BOARD ont Row tlt-ft to 1-ightb: lillvirtt Morse, 'l'lioi't-sn Bt-nt-alt-tto, Graco Diznnontl. Nancy Hong, Robot oivon i ss 1 tAmlvisoi'l, llovt-rly lott, Vt-lnin l'utn:nn, 'l'lit-i't-sn llulw, Louisv Tuglienti. cond Row: liit-liurtl Rot-tl, .lunv Bluwny, 'lllicrvsn Richards, Donna Wztgnt-i', Gloria Moulton, Munn t -Xnct t llttirlit-s, lllnlvolni l'uniniing,:s. wk Row: Dwight liznnh, Nornizin l.ittlt-lizilu, Burnt-ll Dow, Thomas Berry, Loo Paul Marquis, lluioltl Po Russt Wugnor, tit-orgro liuwlaty, Orit- Wcllman. litlitor Business hlziiizigers Advertising Assistants lnnior Assistants Senior Activities Activities and School l,it4:i'ary liditors WC Go to thc Fire Athletic liditors Bniiiici' Accountant Ad Copy liditoi' Typists lfucnlty Adviser BANNER BOARD Notes llolicrl lioiron Uric Xllcllingin, llit.i Vlhirtlxxt tlloriqi Xlotilton, lnnc Xlnrrgiy, lXl.llt'Olll1 tfnninnn s Ngnicy llong. .Xngvlii llnghcs. Clcorgc ll4n't'l.ix Nlgixinc lnikc, lliiroltl llortcr. linsst-ll hvllglltl l ,cn l'qinl Nlznxiiiis Ann Nlitchcll, Xoi'ni.in l.iltlc'li4ilt', llwigln l,4nnlw, li 'llhonizis llt'I'I'y. gill l-W llonnn Ylhiggiicr, linsst-ll Vlhigiiti Cirgicc l5nnnontl, Xclniai llntntnn lx lotl Sill Cox llcxcr ' v f llnrncll llow :intl Coiistgiiict' llhotlcnizcr 'WH Uric VVt'llni Rita Xlhirtlw 'lillL'l't'S1l liunt-tlt-tio. ,l'llL'l'CSLl llnlic, 'l'lit-rcsqi liicliiiixls . , . , v . , l.onist' lziglicnti, Nlnrilyn hxylllilll Miss l l ill lit-vt-fly lotl, Sully Cox THE l At'I7l,'l'Y I xont Ron tlxft to riglxtl: Mrs. l'oxnt-roy, Mr. Vrousv. Miss Mzxlxvr, Mr. .-Xllrn. Miss llzxll, Miss Sliox-m:xkx-r. Miss V Q - i , s. lurmxr, Mr. lllyt-rs, Mr. Rlioclvxxizm-r. Mr. ilxzxmllvr. Mrs. larown. Mrs. Aniln-ost-. l M1UI,'l'Y Al I'l'l V l'l'l ICS Mr. .-Xllcnz Ollicv llutics zxml Rucorxlsg Supa-rvisor of zxll School .M'tivitivs3 .Mlvisxxr to Atlilx-tic Associzxtiong lfiixzixicizil Advisor to Bzxiim-rg .Mlvise-r to Clrzxxluzxtion l':irts3 Junior Night lixhibitg Dircctor of Guitlzxrivo. Mrs. Ainlxrost-: Supvrvisor of Rt-fimxshixivrits for Socizxlsg lfuturt- lfzxrim-rs' Rzxmnxx-tg l . ll. A. Axlvist-lg Girls' Hziskvthzxll, Axlvisingg l zxt'ulty Momhx-r. Mrs. llrown: Sophomorv Class Aflvisvrg Booliluxt-pixng' for floixvraxl School lfuml :xml ,-Xtlilvtit' Association lfumlg Room Exhibit for Junior Niuhtg Sponsor of i'onxnu-rs vial Vluhg Aclvisvr to l'li0ul'l0zxrl0i's. Mr. t'hzxmllx-ri Room lflxhibit for Junior Night. Mr. Vroxxstx: Advisor of l uturo l zxrim-rs of .-Xnxori4'zx. Miss llzxll: Junior Vlziss Atlviscrg lfzxculty Munilwr for lizxnm-rg Room lCxhihit for .lunior Night, National lCxluc-ation VVQQIQQ .-Xnnuzxl Clwt-la of Lilxrzxry Roolqs. Miss llunt: Advisor to Senior Volumn for Raxnncrg Axlvisvr to Flzxss llzxy Vzxrts. Miss Mzihvr: Svnior Atlvisvrg Cozxuli of lJranizxtic'sg Grzuluation lixx-i'c'isx-sg Room lix- hihit. for Junior Nigfht, :xml Nigrht, Schoolg Atlvisor to l.lU'l'2llUl'L' :xml Wt- tio to thv lfirv Volumns of tht- Bunm-rg Sponsor of Music Vlulx ziml llrzxmzxtics Club. Mr. Myors: lizxml lxvzxxlvr :xml Instrut't,or. Mrs. l'onxt-roy: l,t-:xclt-1' of 0i'vlivst1'zx :xml Glu- Vluhg lnstruxm-ntzxl Vlzxssx-sg Musix- for Srhool Play, Junior Night, Class Dzxyg Chorus: We-stt-rn Maxim' Music lfvstivzxl. Mr. Rlioclt-nizt-r: Vozxcli of lfoothzxll, Hzxskotlxzxll. Rust-lxzxll. 'l'r:x4'lQ, :xml Winton' Sportsg ,-Xxlvist-r to lizxnnvr Atlxlt-tic Notvs. Mrs. 'l'urm'x': Sponsor of .lunior Re-fl Vross. Miss Shot-nizxlwr: C'lirist,xn:xs :xml Wzxslxing:ton's liirtlixlzxy l,l'Hg'l'2llllSQ l'll'l'SllIll2lll l'l:xss Axlvist-rg Junior Night Program :xml Class llziy Cozxcli. Mr. Whitm-yi Sxxlnnzxstt-x'g 'l'ix'lix-t Szxlt-sg Roonx lixlxilxit on Junior Night. Principal- Mr Mrs. Ambrose Mrs. Brown Mr. Chandler T H E B A N N E. R 7 SCHOOL DIRECTORY Allen Guidance, Review Mathematics, English, Economics Home Economics Stcnography l-Il, Typewriting I-Il Manual Training Mr. Crouse Agriculture Miss Hall History, Economics Miss Hunt French, Latin, English Miss Maher English, Coach of Dramatics Mr. Myers Band Mrs. Pomeroy Music Supervisor Mr. Rhodenizer General Science, General Mathematics, Problems of Democracy, English ll, Coach of Football, Basket- ball, Baseball, Track, and Winter Sports Miss Shoemaker Biology, Civics, College Mrs. Turner Mr. Whitney English I English, History, Mathematics Aeronautics, Science, Mathematics SENIOR CLASS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Russell Wagner Malcolm Cummings Louise Taglienti Angela Hughes IUNIOR CLASS Paul Holt, Ir. Norman Bilodeau Ann Mitchell Dwight Lamb, lr. SOPHOMORE CLASS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Russell Lovaas Cecil Ryder Barbara Babbie Marlene Henderson FRESHMAN CLASS President Robert Butterazzi Vice-President Doris Ferland Secretary Roberta Berryman Treasurer Ioyce Steward FOOTBALL Captain Burnell Dow '48 Managers Malcolm Cummings '48 George Hebert '51 Patrick Hebert '51 Gilbert Richards '51 BASKETBALL Captain Richard LaPointe '50 Managers Burnell Dow '48 Iohn McKenny '49 Richard Bean '50 BASEBALL - 1947 Captain Iames Reynolds '47 Manager Norman Bilodeau '49 GIRLS' BASKETBALL Captain Louise Taglienti '48 Asst. Manager Katherine Riley '50 Manager leannette Clouticr '49 COMMERCIAL CLUB President Rita Wardwell Vice-President Paul Holt, Ir. Secretary Donna Wagner Treasurer Margaret Riggs Chairman, Work Committee Theresa Richards SCHOOL TREASURER Faculty Mrs. Brown Assistant Grace Diamond '48 FUTURE HOMEMAKERS OF AMERICA President Madeline Chicoine '49 Vice-President Elvira Morse '48 Secretary Valeria Walton '49 Treasurer Mary Richards '51 8 THE BANNER FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA President Norman Lake '48 Vice-President Ronald Burhoe '48 Treasurer Arthur Nichols '49 Secretary Dwight Lamb, Ir. '49 Reporter Norman Littlehale '49 Adviser Mr. Crouse MUSIC CLUB President Russell Lovaas Vice-President Bernard Deshaies Secretary Carlene Foss Treasurer Donald Lavoie DRAMATIC CLUB President Nancy Hoag Vice-President Patricia Enstedt Secretary Sc Treasurer Iune Murray GUIDANCE CLUB Chairman Clydelle Mann Past Chairmen Gladys Webster Charlotte Norton Wilda Merrow School Calendar, 1947-48 Sept. 8-School opened. A total final enroll- ment of 318 students was registered, includ- ing about ll ex-G.l.'s. Sept. 13-Football season began with the Mexico game. Oct. 21-Magazine sales started at an assem- bly in a drive for school funds. Oct. 22-No school due to forest fires. Nov. 10 - Night School. Nov. 13-14 -Teachers' Convention. Nov. 24-Vantine Studio from Boston took Senior graduation pictures in high school auditorium. Nov. 27-28 - Thanksgiving Vacation. Dec. 3-Basketball season opened with the Rangeley game. Dec. I2 -School Play. Dec. 16-lce Storing no school. Dec. 22-Ian. 5-Christmas Vacation ftwo weeksj. Ian. I3-Vantine Studio from Boston took group pictures for L' The Banner Ian. 28-Z9-Band and Glee Club Concert. Feb. 23-27-Vacationg one week. Mar. 3-Iunior Red Cross Drive began. THE BANNER 9 Golden Jubilee for L. F. H. S. lt seems litting in this issue of the Banner to celebrate, in an appreciative column, the Fiftieth anniversary of Commencement as an important occasion at L. F. H. S. Fifty years ago this year Arthur Ham graduated from the local high school, he was the first student to re- ceive a diploma and to be graduated with com- mencement exercises. ln the fifty years intervening since that early commencement it may be pointed out that many changes have occurred at L. F. H. S. The high school has outgrown building after building, progressing from the present Primary School to the present Grammar School, and thence to the building situated on the hill in the Shuy neighborhood. Courses of study, subject matter, methods of teaching, and school organi- zation have undergone great changes since 1898 but it seems suitable to point out that, from its earliest day, L. F. H. S. was turning out gradu- ates of high caliber, that our first graduate has been a fine example of brilliant accomplish- ment. Arthur Ham, '98, is a Bowdoin College graduate. He has been connected with the Rus- sell Sage Foundation, New York. He served that philanthropic organization as a director and vice-president for years. His work was partly in research, and his services in the curbing of loan-shark firms in the State of New York were so outstanding that a series of articles was published in N. Y. C. newspapers, attributing the regulation of personal loan concerns to Mr. Ham's efforts in fact-finding and in directing the crusade against the malefactors. Mr. Ham was for years associated with the Provident Loan Association as director. He is retired at present, but is still listed as a director of the Russell Sage Foundation, and serves in an ad- visory capacity to Provident Loan Association. C Q L9 9 a ' . g is ,oo GK, GEORGE BARCLAY Colle-gp Radio Club 1: Football CS, 4: Hockey 3: Banner Board 4: Adjective: Happy-go-lucky: l'et Dislike: Being ordered around: Pet Like: Good books: Am- 0 bition: Lawyer: Nickname: Bill. 1948 LOUIS BEAULIEU General Orchestra 2, 3, 4: Band 4: Intramural Sports 3: Radio Club 2: Veteran: Adjective: Amicahle: Hobby: Music: Pet Dislike: Extremes: Pet Like: Reading: l'astime: Letter-writing. THERESA BENEDETTO Commercia Honor Student: Glee Club I, 2: Chorus 1, 2, Z4 Commercial Club 1, 2: Home Ee. Club 3: Bannel Board 4: Andies' Bulletin 4: Adjective: Cheerful Pet. Dislike: History: Ambition: Otiice work: l'e: Like: Typing: Hobby: Postcards: Nickname: Titi NORMAN BERGERON General Hockey 3: Radio Club 1, 2: Adjective: Regular guy: Pet Dislike: Flat tires: Hobby: Woodwork- ing: Pastime: Movies: Pet Like: Winter sports: Ambition: Carpenter: Nickname: Banjo. THERESA BERGERON Commercial Glee Club 1: Chorus 2, 3: Home Ee. Club 3, 4: Of- fice Girl 4: Style Show 1: Adjective: Light- hearted: Pet Dislike: Walking: Ambition: Typist: Pet Like: Dancing: Nickname: Cuddi. I RONALD BURIIOE Agriculture Future Farmers of America 1, 2, 8, 4: Adjective: Bright: Pet Dislike: Car trouble: Pastime: Read- ing: Pet Like: Girls: Hobby: Woodworking: Am- bition: Mechanic: Nickname: Ronnie. ARMAND CAOUETTE General Radio Club 2: Football 1: Intramural Sports 3: Descriptive Adjective: Flirtatious: Hobby: Fish- ing: Ambition: College: Pet Like: Girls: Pet Dis- like: Work: Nickname: Blackie. MADELYN CHAPPELLE General Commercial Club 3, 4: Home Ee. Club 1, 2: Pet Dislike: Gossip: Adjective: Cute: Hobby: House- keeping: Pet Like: Billy : Ambition: Marriage: Nickname: Lizzie. MARGARET CRAM General Honor Student: Glee Club 1, 2, 4: Cabaret 3: Win- ter Carnival 3: Style Show I: Commercial Club 3, 4: Home Ee. Club 1, 2: Adjective: Thoughtful: Pet Dislike: Shorthand: Pastime: Being RICH , Hobby: Cooking: Ambition: To live on Reynolds Ave.: Nickname: Maggie. DAVID CLARK General Radio Club 2: School Play I, 32, 4: Cooking Club 3: Kdjective: Girlcrazy: Pet Dislike: French: Hobby: Photography: Pct Like: Velvets: Pastime: Her- iie's : Ambition: Photographer: Nickname: Dave. RICHARD CLOIITIICR General I llonor Student: Adjective: Quiet: Hobby: Music: l'et Dislike: lllatliematics: l'et Like: Quiet: Pas- time: Reading: Ambition: Fashion designer: Nick- name: Dick. SALLY COX College Chorus I, 2: Dramatics Club -L: School Play 3, 4: Banner Board 4: Usher, Graduation Il: Cheerleader I S: Adjcctive: Ioised: Hobby: Pen pals: Pet Dis- ike: llnfriL'ndly people: Pet Like: Plays: Pas- time: Reading: Ambition: Actress. MALCOLM CIIMMINGS College Orchestra l, 2, 3, 4: Football Manager 4: Baseball Manager Il: School Play 2: Junior Night Play 3: Cheerleader 2: Glee Club I: Banner Board 4: Ad- jective: Capable: Hobby: Buying clothes: Pet Dis- like: Taking orders: Pet Like: Girls: Pastime: Dancing: Ambition: Success: Nickname: Mac. EVANGELINE DAVIS General Glee Club I, 2, Il: Commercial Club 33: Otiice Girl 3, 4: Junior Prom Committee 3: Winter Carnival 3: Home lic. Club I, 2, 3: Social Committee 3: Adjec- tive: Happy-go-lucky: Hobby: Pennies: I'et Dis- like: Cheese: Pet Like: Dancing: Pastime: Hous-e- work: Ambition: Teacher: Nickname: Vangie. JEANNINE DESJARDINS Commercial Honor Student: Glee Club, 1, 2: Chorus I, 2, Il: Home Ee. Club I, 2, 3: Commercial Club Il, 4: Usher, Junior Night, School Play 4: Carnival Queen Candidate 3: Adjective: Cute: Hobby: Typ- ing: Pet Like: Popular music: Pastime: Playing piano: Ambition: Secretary: Nickname: Jeanne. GRACE DIAMOND Commercial Valedictorian: Glee Club I, 2, Zi: Chorus I: Choir I: Home Ee. Club 1: Style Show 1: Banner Board 3, 4: Commercial Club 3, 4: Home Room Secretary 3: Andies' Bulletin 4: Cheerleader 4: Junior Night Ex. 3: Junior Prom Committee 33: Oflice Girl 3, 4: Librarian 2: School and Athletic Treasurer Zi, 4: Adjective: Likeable: Pet Dislike: Arguments: Pet Like: East Livermore: Ambition: Business Col- lege: Pastime: Talking to Babe on the phone: Nickname: Gracie. ROBERT DOIRON Radio Club I: Ticket Salesman 4: Junior Night, Decorating Committee Il: Junior Prom Committee 3: Editor-in-Chief of Banner 4: Intramural Sports 3: Laboratory Ass't 4: Football 3, 4: Basketball 25, 4: Hockey 3: Adjective: Aggressive: Hobby: Hunting: l'et Dislike: Work: I'et Like: Reading: Ambition: Psychologist: Nickname: Bob. BURNELL DOW College Basketball 1, 2, 3: Baseball 1, 2: Track 3, 4: Foot- ball 2, 3, 4: Football Captain 4: Hockey 3: Banner Board 4: Basketball Manager 4: Adjective: Brainy: Pet Dislike: Onions: Ambition: Radar engineer: Pet Like: Mathematics: Nickname: Bunny. THERESA DUBE Commercial Honor Student: Home Ee. Club 1: Chorus 1, 2: Glee Club 1, 2, 3: Usher, School Play 3, 4: .lunior Night Committee 3: Junior Prom Committee fl: Ticket Salesman 3: Commercial Club Il, 4: Stvle General Show 1: Cabaret 3: Andies' Bulletin 4: Banner Board 4: Oflice Girl 4: Adjective: Ambitious: Nickname: Terry: l'et Dislike: Giggling: Hobby: Typing: Ambition: Secretary: I'et Like: lee PATRICIA ENSTEDT College Social Committees 1, 33: Night, School Exhibit Zi: S S Red Cross Drive 1: Class Treasurer 2: Usher, .lun- ior Night, Graduation 2: Property Mistress, School Play and One-act Play 3, 4: Study llall Supervisor 3: School Scrap Book Sl, 4: Junior Night Play 3: 0 Home Room Program 1: Andies' Bulletin 4: Vice- president, Dramatics Club 4: Adjective: Flirtatious: Hobby: Drawing: Pastlme: Eating: Ambition: Laboratory technician: Nickname: Patty. 1948 LYLE FLAGG General F. F. A.: F. F. A. Reporter: Cooking Club: Adjec- tive: Ambitious: Pet Like: Travel: Pet llislike: Italian sandwiches: Hobby: Wood-working: Pas- tlme: Reading: Ambition: Barber. RUTH FLAGG Gam-rn Basketball 55, 4: Oflice Girl 32: .lunior Night Com mittee 3: Senior Social Committee 4: Adjective Flirtatious: Pet llislike: Studying: Ambition Nurse: Pastime: Talking to Clitl' on phone: l'e Like: Dancing: Hobby: Sports: Nickname: Ruthie FRANCIS HEBERT General Football 1, 2, Il, 4: Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4: Baseball Captain 1: Basketball 1, 2, 3: Hockey 3: Winter Carnival Committee 3: Coach of Intramural Basket- ball Team 3: Adjective: Reckless: Hobby: Draw- ing: Pet, Dislike: Girls: Pet Like: Swimming: Pastime: Sports: Ambition: Coach: Nickname: Frannie. NANCY HOAG Commercial Honor Student: Social Committees 1, 2: Junior Prom Committee 3: Commercial Club 3, 4: Dra- matics Club 4: Cheerleader 3, 4: Glee Club 1, 2, 3: Chorus 1, 2, 3: Choir 1: Banner Board 4: Andies' Bulletin 4: Winter Carnival Committee 3: Intra- mural Basketball 3: Junior Night Play 3: Christ- mas Ex. 2: School Play 4: Usher, Graduation 3: Class Ode 4: Welfare Drive 4: Adjective: Argu- mentative: Hobby: Photography: Pet Like: Clothes: l'astime: Driving a red convertible: Nick- name: Nan. ANGELA HUGHES College Transferred from Central Technical School, Toronto, Canada: Banner Board 4: Andies' Bulletin 4: Sen- ior Social Committee 4: School Play, Decorating 4: Class Ode 4: Class Treasurer 4: Band Concert Program 4: Adjective: Friendly: Pet Ilislike: Walking: Ambition: Housewife: Pastime: Baby- sitting: Pet Like: The House on the Hill: Nick- name: Annie. BEVERLY IOTT College Salutatorian: Glee Club 1: Night School Program 1, 2: Office Girl 3, 4: Banner Board 3: School Play 4: Junior Night Play Sl: Commercial Club 4: An- dies' Bulletin 4: Adjective: Studious: Hobby: Playing piano: Pet Dislike: Getting up early: Pet . Like: Typing: Pastime: Eating: Nickname: Bev. I MAXINE LAKE Commercial Chorus 1: Ollice Girl 2: Librarian 2: Commercial Club 14, 4: Home Ee. Club l, 2: Banner Board 4: Andies' Bulletin 4: Adjective: Witty: Pet Dislike: Homework: Pastime: Elmer: Nickname: Sally: Ambition : Beautician. I NORMAN LAKE Agriculture F. F. A. 1, 2, 3, 4: Band 3, 4: Cooking Club 3: Pres- ident F. F. A. 4: Vice-President F. F. A. 3: Adjec- tive: Lengthy: Hobby: Fishing: Pastime: Girls: Pet Like: Money: Ambition: Farmer: Nickname: Skip. ALVIN LIBBY Agriculture llonor Student: transferred from Leavitt Institute: F. F. A. 4: Adjective: Studious: Pet Dislike: Speeches: Ambition: Mechanic: l'astime: Hunt- ing: Pet Like: Traveling: Nickname: Libby. OLINDO LUCARELLI, JR. General Baseball 2, 3, 4: Football 3, 4: Basketball 3, 4: Ski Club 4: Adjective: Easy-going: Hobby: Hunting: Pet. llislike: Referees: Pet Like: Girls: Pastime: Athletics: Ambition: Coach: Nickname: Luc. LlaO IAUL MARQUIS General Glee Club I: Chorus l: Choir 1: Commercial Club 3: Radio Club I: Football 4: Social Committee 3: Banner Board 4: Time Clock Operator 4: Adjec- tive: Whole-hearticd: Hobby: Cards: Pet Dislike: School: Ambition: Small business: Pastime: Sports. WILLIAM MITCHELL General Baskt-tball.1, 2: Hockey 3: Ski Club 4: Baseball 4: Adjective: Reckless: Hobby: Archery: Pas- time: Skiing: Pet Like: Swimming: Pet Dislike: Girls: Nickname: Bill. ELVIRA MORSE General Chorus 1, 2: Commercial Club 3, 4: Home Ec. Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Social Committees 1, 2, 3, 4: Style Show 1: Banner Board 4: Adjective: Friendly: l'et Dis- like: None: Ambition: Designer: Pastime: Danc- ing: Pet Like: Sewing: Nickname: UE . JUNE MURRAY College Honor Student: Library Club 2: School Play 2, 3: Junior Night Play 3: Cabaret 3: Band Concert 4: Class Secretary 2, 3: Banner Board 4: Dramatics Club 4: Night School Program I, 2: Adjective: Likeable: Pet Dislike: Working: Pet Like: Clothes: Ambition: Nurse: Pastimes Cruising around: Nickname: June. GLORIA MOULTON College Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Winter Carnival 3: Cheerleader 3, 4: Class Marshal 3, 4: Junior Night Play 3: Banner Board 4: Social Committees 2, 3, 4: School P.ay 4: Band Concert 4: Cabaret 3: Night School Program 3: Usher Junior Night, Graduation 2, 3: Intramu1'al Basketball 3: Junior Night Committee 3: Junior Prom Committee 3: Adjective: Easy- going: Hobby: Postcards: Pet Like: Food: Ambi- tion: Nurse: Nickname: Horsey. LESLIE MYERS Agriculture F. F. A. 1, 2, 3, 4: Band 3, 4: Chorus 1, 2: Class Marshal 3, 4: Adjective: Studious: Pet Dislike: Draft-horses: Hobby: Photography: Ambition: College: Pastime: Reading: Pet Like: Adventure: Nickname: Les. MARTIN PINEAU College Football 3, 4: Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4: Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4: President of Ski Club 4: School Play 4: Referee for Intramural Basketball 3: Adjective: Athletic: Hobby: Dancing: Pet Dislike: Cheerleaders: Am- bition: Coaching: Pastime: Athletics: Nickname: Marty. i HAROLD PORTER General Glee Club 1, 2, 3: Chorus 1, 2: Junior Night Play 3: Band 3, 4: School Play 4: One-Act Play 3: Banner Board 4: Commercial Club 3: Intramural Basket- ball 3: Junior P1'om Committee 3: Social Commit- tees 1. 2: Radio Club 1: Adjective: Responsible: Pet Dislike: Poise: Hobby: Golf: Pet Like: De- bates on up-to-date events: Ambition: Business man: Nickname: Harry. CLASS LIICILLE POULIN Commercial Glee Cub l, 2: Home Ee. Club I: Style Show l: Commercial Club Il, -1: Oflice Girl 4: Anmlies' liulle- tin 4: Cheerleader 4: Social Committee 2: Adjec- tive: Impish: Hobby: Napkins: l'et Dislike: Reading: Pet Like: Traveling: Ambition: Tele- 0 phone operator: Pastime: Letter writing: Nick- name: Lu. CLII I ORD PUTNAM General Honor Student: Football 4: Basketball Zi, 4: Ad- jective: Laughing-machine: Hobby: Skiing: Pet Dislike: Assemblies: Pet Like: Dancing: Ambi- tion: Aeronautical engineer: Nickname: Kippy. VICLMA PUTNAM General Honor Student: Commercial Club 23, -1: Glee Club 1, 2: Office Girl 1, 4: Chorus 1: Adjective: Slick- chick: Pet Dislike: Housekeeping: Hobby: Typ- ing: Ambition: Secreta1'y: Pastime: Reading: l'ct Like: Cooking: Nickname: Polly. te?-' NATHALIIC RICHARDS Commercial Glee Club t, 2: Chorus 1, 2: Orchestra 4: Band 3, 4: Commercial Club 3, 4: Home Ec. Club 1, 2, 3: Andies' Bulletin 4: Otiice Girl Z: Librarian 2: Style Show I: Social Committee 1, 2, 3: Adjective: Care- free: l'et Dislike: Studying: Hobby: Stamps: Am- bition: Telephone operator: Pastime: Whispering: I'ct Like: Typing: Nickname: Natty. THI'lRI'ISA RICHARDS Commercial llonor Student: Glee Club 1: Chorus 1: Home Room I'rog'ram 1: Home Ee. Club 1, 2: Usher, School Play 3, 4: Junior Night Committee 3: Band Concert 4: Night School Program 4: Style Show 1: Ticket Salesman 33: Commercial Club Cl, 4: Andies' Bulletin 4: Banner Board 4: Office Girl 4: Nick- name: Genius: Pet Dislike: Gloom: Hobby: Gum: Ambition: Secretary: Pastime: Movies: Pet Like: School Street. .IAMI-IS RICHMOND General Honor Student: Class Treasurer 35: Radio Club l: Adjective: Comedian: Hobby: Talking in class: Pet Dislike: Boat rides: l'ct Like: Excitement: Pastime: Telling stories: Ambition: Truck driver: Nickname: Jimmy. PIVICLYN RIDIGOUT General Glee Club l: Style Show 1: Home Ee. Club 1: So- cial Committee 2: Home Room Program 1: Adjec- tive: Boyish: Pet Dislike: Compositions: Hobby: Moths and butterflies: Pastimc: Outdoor Sports: Pet Like: Bicycling: Nickname: Slim. l RANCl'IS SLATICR General Glee Club 2, Cl: Class Reporter 3: Refreshment Committee il: Adjective: Blonde bombshell: I'et Dislikes Fingers scratched on blackboard: Hobby: Writing letters: Ambition: Hair-dresser: Pastime: liating: l'et Like: Skating: Nickname: Blondie. EVA SMITH General Honor Student: Glee Club l, 2, 3: Home lic. Club 2: Band Concert 4: Ticket Salesman 4: Cabaret 3: Winter Carnival Committee 3: Adjective: Dizzy: Hobby: Photography: Pet Dislike: Dull people: Pet Like: Wilton: Ambition: Beautician: Pastime: Writing letters. l3l'I'l I'Y S'l'ORlCR Commercial tominercial Club 2, 3, 45 Glee Club 15 Chorus 1, 35 Otlice Girl 115 Adjective: Bashful5 Pet llislikez Studying: llobby: Snapshots: Ambition: Teacher: astime: Piano: l'et Like: Onions: Nickname: Bess. LOIIISIC 'l'AGLlI'IN'l'I Commercial llonor Student: Chorus I5 Social Committees 3, 45 Glee Club 2, 3: Band 3, 45 Orchestra 45 azine Campaign Manager 2, 3, 45 Junior Night Ex erclses 35 lflditor-in-Chief, Andies' Bulletin 45 Class Secretary 45 Carnival Queen Candidate 35 Usher 35 Basketball 3, 45 Oflice Girl 3, 45 Banner Board Ii, 4: Commercial Club 3, 45 Cabaret 35 Captain, Basketball 45 Adjective: Sporty5 Ambition: Busi- ness school: l'et Like: Otlice work: l'astime: Talk- ing to Arnold on the phone: Nickname: WeeWee. I OllISl'1 'l'ORRl'lY General Glee Club I, ZZ: llome Iilc. Club I, 25 Commercial tlub 3, 45 Social Committee 35 Adjective: Care- ree5. l'et llislike: Ilull evenings: Hobby: Eating: lllhllltllll ltflarriage: l'astime: Wishful thinking: Pet Like: Singmg5 Nickname: WeeWee. HAROLD VIRGIN Agriculture I . F. A. l, 13, 45 F. F. A. Treasurer 25 Adjec tive. I'lIll'll.l'SlQ l'et llislike: English: Hobby: Traveling: klllllllltlli -M i ition muh init Pastime ,V : . 'Q' -'z ': .' : Visiting at Shuy: I'et Like: Flagtgls5 Nickname: Bud. DONNA WAGNICR General Glee Club 1, 35 Class Secretary 25 Commercial Club 3, 45 Dramatics Club 45 Junior Night Play 35 Office Girl 35 Social Committees 1, 2, 3, 45 Banner Board 45 Andies' Bulletin 45 Junior Prom Commit- tee 35 Band Concert 45 Usher Graduation 35 Usher Junior Night 25 Cabaret 25 Adjective: Contented5 Hobby: Cooking: Pet Like: Riding: Pet Dislike: Home work: Pastime: Talking: Ambition: Chil- dren's nurse. RUSSELL WAGNER College Honor Student: Class President l, 2, 3, 45 Band 3, 45 Junior Night Chairman 3: Cheerleader 2, 35 Junior Prom Committee 35 Social Committees l, 2, 3, 45 Glee Club 1, 2: Chorus 1, 2: Dramatics Club 45 Banner Board 45 School Play 2, 3, 45 One-Act Play 3: Intramural Basketball 35 Winter Carnival 35 Cabaret 35 Radio Club I5 Adjective: Succg-sstul5 l'et Like: Life: l'et llislike: Work: Pastime: De- bating: Ambition: Pharmacist: Nickname: Russ. RITA WARDWI-ILL Commercial Ilome Plc. Club I, 25 Glee Club I, 2, 35 Cheerleader I, 25 Of'Hce Girl 125 Librarian 25 Commercial Club 2, 3, 45 Pr-esident, Commercial Club 45 Banner Board 3. 45 Style Show I. Adjective: Pre-occupied: l'et Dislike: Shorthand: Hobby: Skiing: Ambition: Designer5 l'astime: Dancing: Pet Like: Riding in a black F ' - 1' ' ' ' old coupe, Nickname. Rlt. ORIE WELLMAN, JR. Honor Student: Football 3 4' Orchestra 1 College -P -1 4- Band 35 School Play 25 Junior Prom Committee 35 Junior Night Play 35 Banner Board 3, 45 Class Treasurer 1: Class Vice-President 12: Adjective: Maestro: Hobby: Music-5 I'et Ilislike: Too much studying: Ambition: Businessman: Nickname: Gus. GLORIA WINTON General Glec Club I, Z: Chorus 15 Junior Prom Committee 35 Social Committee 25 Usher, Junior Night, Grad- uation 2, 35 Home lic. Club 3: Intramural Basket- ball 35 Junior Night Plav 35 Adjective: Flirta- tions: Hobby: Dancing':'I'et Dislike: Walking5 Pet Like: Whispering: l'astime: Talking: Nick- name: Goody. MARILYN WYMAN Commercial Honor Student: Chorus I5 F. H. A. 2, 3, 45 Com- mercial Club 3, 45 Office Girl 35 Banner Board 4' r Andies' Bulletin 45 Junior Prom Committee 3: Ad- jective: Quiet: Pet Ilislike: Boys: Pet Like: Onions5 Ambition: Stenography: Pastime: Gig gl1ng5 Nickname: Twinkie. .Q N' 5 6 5 'Q QS gf , E A ii? Q E1 5.4 A fi in ' by - ,gf-?S ? 39E5 W? s ,.-fY Y' 9 Y: gi Q., 3 ' 9 it uQflQLsffffW,'f g .jf 4. I sw i. ,W I, 41535 N, M K x X X if ,W age ,fy 2 9 yr' 35 3 -fi e' 4 Q fi! X sig' 'a ., , . W g mtv, . lm W, Y +4 . - 0 9 . -4' j- 'H , U k M 4 ' 6 3, wg' is aw, , ? 4 . X6 . - XL E '. X N x fx A s W fs X Q S45 g m. .XI K S X X 1 K. Q ,Q wx- 5 - - , 'PW ' f' ., 2 Fx , ,SQ Mk H 5' 1, ,M d 55, Nl ',.':5 . 5,3513 M- ix: we W ., ' A A -x +2 K G1 ws + 5 e gm K X . ix , sgww N - ,. Q vw was F, ,Q alta Y A i N' f C1 Q k Q- 'Ev 'Q A Q X X A ff A R 'fi W -k fb- ' if 1' if 4 x 5 Q Y 'W , T'Y Q 'Q A Xi' Y ' ' 3 qt 1.5 . L . - R f N..,J M U k gr 3 . A, 5 ft, 9 9 ' Q, U I yg ,V my K -Q Q Q v N, 'Q we E , ,G ' -an-6 5, H fu 1 sffgf wx 'aixgx' ,B K ln, 'a 'UQ Vx Q i 8 ggi! xg 'id 3' , 1' ' X ss- Q ' Hx F N Q If if if i Qi s A f S E , SY gfxwi? gs wif 4 Q 'f 5 ,sf Q ur 1' Q 3 ' 12, nr V P J if in I s ,X Qlff My 521 3101+ SOI'llOMORlC HONOR ROl.l, lrmml Row llvfl lu riglltlt Nlwlnrzl Rn-ton ZZ, l'Il:lim- Nlvl':1ll'vl'y 2-31. Nlurivl xlill'i'Ull 3, 1':u'Ivm' lfnss I-2-SS, Smliv llysurt l-2-Ii, .lvam Slruul l-il-Ii. Sw-nrnl Row: .luyvv l.ilwr'Iy l, Kzltlmlm-vu Niclmls 2153, llUllNlZlIll'l' lilwllvllizvl' l-2-55. liJllllt'l'lll1' R111-y I-I-CI, lll-lvu ll0LlLfl1lOIl l-2-JS R:u'lu:u':l linlulm' l-2423, Rrumlzx .la-llnlmys. l nvll lluwi lim-rxuzml lh-sllzlivs l-Z-Ci, .-Xngvlzl Nl. l,1l1':1l'1'lli l-2, Nl:11'im1 l.cfm'lwx'l'v l-2, lrvm' H:u'lin LI-Il, l.m'1-ttv lfiltvaxu 25, NOVINZI lmwis l, llxmivl lkmiwsmn 2. .-Xnfgvlax ,Nun l,uvzn'vlli I 1, l1lllSl'llll ll'1l!lSl'1'l'l'l'll lo lmwislmm lliglx Scluwl 1ll'll'l' ilu' sm-vmul l1llll'lilI1K pvriml, .lnggvlax 1'm'm'iv1-ll all l,.ll.S. all ranks zllmvv ENV' eluring' llmilwl l'2llllilllL1' pcriml. zmll was om- ul' 1-i-glut swplml1m1'1-s tu Wm llrst llOIlOI'S. l RlCSllNl,XN HONOR I:ul.l. ll nt Rnw Qlvlt lu l'lQ'llllI lil-llv .Mm llO2lll'S 31, l'llisv Nlmm if, f'Ill'Olj'll XY0l'll1ll1Q l-2-35, Klynlvlll- Xlxum lj-CL Xll'!'lI1lZl Vuuli l-2-If Rmvln-l'l:x llvwynlzm ii. 4-mul lluw: Nliulmol lloulillzm 243. Kllurizn .l:u'm1m-s lj-55. lllzulys XVt'llSl1'l' 2-Il, .llllizx Vmmxlrxl IZ, llurh l m'l:1ml l-2-Ji. .luyw Stow' :mul 32, 'llllk'l'k'S2l .lumlll I-il, l,a1w1'c11n'v l.:1A l'ui11l1- l. llu-ll Row: Rnlwrt l:lllll'l'llZZl I-2-31. :xflllllllll ,4 ., , l . I-llmlmnu vu. l-1-r'111w 1111111111 l-2, Rvrlrzmwl llulw lil. .Xlusa-nli Normzm lfulll-r Il. ' u Honor Rolls .' ' ' - Ast Sl'l1lt'Sll'I' Rzmlampg ltIlOllN I lxlul fm ilu l ll SENIOR llONOR ROl.l, l r'm1l Row llvfl to rigllllz livzl Smith I-11-Il, 'Xl ll ilxn ' . 1 V5 ylllilll L-33. lll'2lL'l' lllilllltlllll l-2-32, , . -l lmuisv 'l':1flil-nli I-24, Yvlnm Vulnzxm I-2-JS, Nl ll xx l ' l .lunv . u .. .u 4 ---1 . Slwoml Ruw: l:l'Ol',LI'l' l:2ll'k'l2ly l, -ll'2lIHllllt' llvs- Ill4llI1N 3 'l'l1 ,. 'Q , vrvsu llulw l-2-55, lhlu-l'ly loil I-2-K, lllvrvszn Rlk'l1Zll'llS 2-35, .-Xngs-lu llujrlu-s l-2, lll'lL' Wvllmznn 2-35. lim-k Ruw: Rurm-ll llow l-2, .Xlvin Lilmlmy Ii, Russell XYZIQIIIUI' I-2-fl. .-Xlmsunt: Nornmzm Vcwzllvx 2-Ji, Wultvr Vlzxrli .-n, I-1 V-, .xml .lzmu-s Riclmwml 2 IL IUNIOR HONOR ROl,l, l'rm1t Row lll-ft to 1'i l1tl: .luzuwllv Rnlminxon -x f-N I-3-J, illorlzx lzxrmllll' l, lxl2ll'jL'2ll'l'l Rlyfgfs I-2- lexh llxgg, 'R lmxum Rl l .n, 1 'Z 'ls L-I, , 1 A - '4' lzlrmls 2, .-Xrll-m- Stzxplvs 245. Sm-nml Row: K'z1l'nlyn livzm I-2-33, Yzxlurin VV:1llm1 l-fl, Clvlnw l':1rmlis 53, licvm-rly .lum-s l-3, Jam- Murray l-ZZ, Nancy Clay l. lizwk Row: tlvlmlc Il. l,2lLIl'l'lll .lzwqllvs 11-35, Nurmzm l,il4 GUIDANCE We Go To Class mund the Table lleft to rightl: Armand Bilodeau, Robert Hutterazzi, Laurence I.aPointe, Gladys Webster, Charlotte Norton, lNla1'joi'ie Hinkley, Wilda lVlei'i'ow, Mr. Allen tln- sti'uetoi'l, Annie Thompson, Carolyn Worthing. Joyce Stew- art, Robert Pike, Alan Poland, Leon Olds, Ileiiry l3i'if,5g's, George St,o1'e1', Roirer Ouellette. QTHE BIGGEST NEWS IN SCHOOL The reasons which liayor the type ol' school photography presented in this column are co' gently expressed hy Proli. Ioseph C. Carter, once on the Syracuse University School ol lournalism teaching stall, now an assistant professor ol journalism at 'l'emple L'niversity tand a neu' advisory editor with the National Scholastic Press .'Xssociationl. Proli. Carter says, loo long have school newspapers and other student pulmlications ignored aims and achievements ol' the regular classes ol' the school. l'.Xlert and progressive educators know that taxpayers expect, lirst ol' all, that the schools they support will provide lwoys and girls who attend them the hest availahle instruction in the regular curriculum. Only secondly do they ac- cept .uid encourage the 'extra' part ol' the school program lcnown as co-curricular or extra- curricular ollerings: athletics. cluhs, societies, puhlications and other social or special talent gflllllw. ttioutinued to Page HJ :fi - EQ? X X L X x fl., ri 1 .R ,. .Q -ajf- 58 ii X j 5' - , i 3 . N. I .-Q- J Q. 1 SN QM 5 1 k I Ns A f QM , if . mggf is x-Mgexlm x vim S- f X we , T , f gi 'W ,x R ,MG Sw Q z we ' ,, Q F D nu - ' ' 2.-5 ,N w- A V , x . sq Q N K -1 1-'Qfs , . . S-K F - if Q5 an .NX +92 gg: S Y 1 ,,. QM, Gm ' bv Wm Q Q ' gk Q 1 . J 15 jf' E, 3 F. K? Q ,. i:: wxd 'N - Mar 1 I wwf If ' X fi! x g f qsizffiaii, Q swf , 'E Q. :sf 11,4 ,fx 75. KS X, KM' ri 4 ig Qs ' , ,S 'M sw X Nix, .. x N, VZSNQQ Nwfsglg gm. x .M 5- K ' s- . f, i :A 1 ,- Q -wxswwx Q d'L, Q 'Pun x e Q ' as , .SX 8 'xx . 'E . ' x m m wx, Q 3 Q ffwlqes- if W X g i l ik 33,515 35-,I ,WF x RX 'D Us -X vxlhk A -Q5 NX wigs? its - N95 , N. . H X ' W Xi X VW fu .M ik! ggiwg H QQ 'Q 'll ,. 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II IIIUIIIIIUIIIIC IIIIIII IIII, IIIIIII t'xL'I1ll1g xxxls NlTL'llI NlN'lLlllx xx'i1lx nuxxuw xluxxxn Our lluznlx Xxvlr Nmnxg .xml thx . in xxlxulx lxx Nlxfll Xx'ql3g1u'1' .llul I'L'U7I'1l5 xx'n'I'c' K'l1ll'M'll- Nlll' ll- l l'l lUl 'lu' l'-'ll Ul l'l 'l'll-1 HHS Slxlll Rk'll't'NllI1lL'llI5 xxcra' wrxul lxx Ilu' lursl. llum' V Wlllll l l 'I' SA l 'N 'U' 'lu' l 'l 'M' lxrvsclll xxcrc: Sglllx Cox. llLlI'l1LlI'1l ll.1lxlxu', lh-x I'2i'1'll'll'l '1lIvrxllg I.. I . ll. S. Xliw lfux lms lu-cn ll ' l 'lll'll xllmli' lim' x A 'Um' lxwlxlx llxlvlxwlxxl 1:1 xll.lI11.lllx'x. Slu' xxxlx Al Nlm '-'V Nllllfl' ll 4'!- lull-' 5lf'l1ll '1- cllulll 11u'l11lu-1 ul llll' Lum ul 'fx Klmlxlxwllclll YLlIllik'C 'l'1mliil'. l'.llI'lCl.l l .lI5lL'lll. .xllgclgl llugluw. -ll lim! -xlllllllk l 'lll'l lll llll llllllm' xwlf' 'lull lfcxllgllml l,.lxolC. llglrulnl l'uI'lL'I'. llqlxlnl Ulglfli. l1.1l mu- ul llux lxxw um xml rules :lx llu' sl-luuxl I , , , , , Il I , l l l ljtllllhl XXQIQIICIA. Xllss X.uwml Xl.xlu'r, Klux Sxl l1.Ix uw wnuu XK'.lI. Klux Klux l5l.lllx In lugm lu-1 xlxuluw .ll llu' ll llmllx' MH' Mlm Xllgml' M lm' 'l'N llnxluxlw lu- Sxluu-I l1x'Xl I.ull, l.luxml Xx'.IgIlC'I' .llul llu- luxsl, lxuswll XX'g.x1u'r. Q f 4 Q, Q W H ,nf . . :+',::..t ,Q A.: ,M 6 5 1 T' kg .1.s'wh' Q V ,a 'f 'fre 1' '52 i At u-if-S' Q K wr' 1' x Q V A fl, ' ' , UW :IQ 2 ar wk ,Jr iii? E 8 ,M 3.9 K ,, 'Vw yy Ny, Saw fi, 1 , im? Kai- -. Q ' X 5 1,M . 9 K - N 1' ' I s Q v Q al 4 M. 141 'ibn N-.. Q. 4' 5 gunna--,-gg 4 1 V. L x ff-, 'X ,QIJQ L, 3' R 1? ix Q it ' Q Q Q fx A gf :fe X1-: 2 : sei? . ,gi ' if? if 5 .L I xx 95 R Win 5 62 S. Y m 3 4 . , .M X X 4 ,Sim as 1 Q X M Q53 v n u ' ,rf S bf gi f bf 5 ,fr I fgn FARM MECHANICS IN AGRICULTURE - FRESHMAN CLASS SPLICING ROPE l t Row tleft to riehtl: Fred Hewett, Richard Hood, Glen Morrow, Rene Castonguay, Norwood lVIeDan1tl Al lmtit St. I'it-rre, Wesley Whiteomb. Rodney Farrington, Dale Glidden, Norman Fuller, Charlie Barktr M tiouse, Instructor, is standing. Agriculture DISTRICT FIELD DAY The Livermore Falls F. F. A. lioys won ex- ceptionally high honors at the District Field Day at NValdolioro, Nlay 14th, '47. They not only won the Grand Championship plaque lor total points earned. hut also won lirst place as a team in Raliter Cutting, Rope Splic- ing and Poultry ludging and second place in Cattle ludging and Fulilic Speaking. They won a large proportion ol' individual honors. including lirst and second places in Rope Splicing, second place in llulilic Speaking and fourth place in Cattle ludging. Charlie Dysart '47 and Ronald liurhoe '48 ctll rafters, winning lirst and second places re- spectively. Ronald Iones '49 and Norman Lit- tlelicld '49 spliced rope. again winning lirst and second places respectively. llarold Virgin '48 and Norman l.alxe '48 judged dairy cattle. Virgin winning fourth place as an individual. Arthur Nichols '49 and Dwight l.amlw '49, iudged poultry. Arthur Chase '47 placed second in the speaking contest. l lis speech was entitled. l.et's Save Our Amer- ican Soils. liight schools from the Southern District par- ticipated in these contests and events. The entire F. F. A. group ol' twenty-live hoys and Fred Crouse, Agricultural Instructor and F. F. A. Advisor, attended this Field Day. L. F. H. S. PLACES SECOND IN STATE F. F. A. IUDGING CONTEST VVilton Academy and Livermore Falls High School won first and third places respectively at the Future Farmers' Iudging Contest held lune 23rd at the University ol' Maine. Thirty- live schools from all over the state competed. The Livermore Falls team included Norman Lake, Dwight Lamlw. Norman Littlehale, Ar- thur Nichols and Arthur Chase. Arthur Chase '47 won the llillllll second prize in the speaking contest. He was also awarded the State Farmer Degree and ap- pointed Treasurer ol' the Maine Association ol F. F. A. for l947-48. Glen Partridge '47 received a S5100 prize tor winning the Farm Mechanics Award. For a second season a representative ol' l.. F. li. S. has won this honor as liarl Flagg won a similar award in IU-lo. Norman Littlehalc '49 placed second in the Farm Mechanics Contest with a total of 193 points. The winner ol' this contest had a total ol' 194 points. FARM MECHANICS IN AGRICULTURE-JUNIORS AND SENIORS BUILDING A TRUCK BODY ln l ot't-frountl llcft to rigrhtlz Dwight Lamb Jr., Mr. Crouse tlnstructorl. L t-concl Row: Ulinton Bryant, Phillip Lyman, Norman Littlehalu, Norman Lako, Linwootl Horst-, llaroltl Vit Arthur Nichols. LAMB AND LITTLEHALE, L. F. H. S. SOUTHERN DISTRICT F. F. A. MliIi'l'ING FUTURE FARMERS, WIN BEEF At thc annual niccting ol' thc Sontlicrn Dis- IUDGING CONTEST trict Association ot' lf. lf. A.. hcltl in 'l'tn'ncr. Dwiglit l,atnlw, jr.. antl Norman l.ittlchalc. lantlary lf, W-l8, Norman l.akc was clcctctl won thc llccli lttclging Contcst hcltl at lfryc- prcsitlcnt ol' that organization lor thc comming lsnrg lfair tlctolwcr lst. 'lihcy lltlt only won year. tcatn honors, lnit l.illIl1l1 also won sccontl placc Twcnty-two incinlicrs ol' thc Port Royal in iinliyitltial honors. Chaptcr anal thcir atlyisor, Alr. Crotisc, attcntlctl lflcycn schools in thc Sotithcrn clistrict par- the tnccting, togcthcr with incinlwcrs .intl atl ticipatctl in thcsc contcsts, which inclutlctl lioth yisors lirotn ciglit othcr schools in thc tlistrict. tlairy ititlging anal liccl' itltlging. Norman -wi l.al4c antl llaroltl Virgin rcprcscntccl thc school GREENHAND DEGREE in thc tlairy ititlging contcst, which was won hy CONFERRED BY F. If. A. lfwlvilt lmllllllf- liarly in thc ycar thc initiation ol' thc ncw T4l l7. lf. A. Alctnlicrs was coinplctctl in liorinal antl F-F-A- IN NORLAND llllillflllill ccrctnonics. l il'tct'n ncw tnctnlwcrs, GRANGE FAIR PROGRAM all lircslnncn, wcrc initiatccl. Un Oct. I8 tncinlicrs ol' the llort Royal Chap- ICI' ol lf. lf. A. ttnclcr tht- tlircction ol' l7rCtl L. F. H. S. FUTURE FARMER Cirousc. Agricultural lnstrtictor. olicrctl scycral PLAYED IN NATIONAL BAND tlcinonstrations at tht- Norlantl Cirangc lfair. OCTOBER I9 to ZZ, I947 liwiglit l.atnlw, lr.. :intl Norman l.alic clcni- Cilcn Partritlgc '47 was sclcctctl to play horn onstratctl thc llalwcoclx tcst lor tlctcrinining thc in tht- National lf. lf. A. llancl at thc organixaf lwnttcrliat contcnt ol inilli. tionis Conycntion at Kansas City. Nlo. llc was Rope work incltitling tying knots, inaliing choscn lor thc liantl assigntncnt hy Dr. llcnry cntl. cyc anal long spliccs antl making atlinstahlc lirunncr ol' llcnnsylyania Statc Collcgc who tli, ropc haltcrs was tlctnonstratctl lwy lionaltl loncs rcctctl thc lwantl. Dr. lirunncr worlictl through antl Norman l.ittlclialc. llonaltl linrhoc anal national, statc. tlistrict antl local lf. lf. A. lcatl- Artlnir Nichols tlctnonstratctl thc- cutting ol' crs to inalic linal sclcctions ol' nnisicians so that raltcrs lor a galilc rooli. thc llll-piccc liantl wonltl contain a lialancctl THE BANNER 31 froum of wood winds, brasses and ercussions. 2, 1 g P Partridge was the only Maine student selected for this national honor. AGRICULTURAL TRADE SHOW On Wednesday, january 21, 1948, thirty-four agricultural students and their instructor, Mr. Crouse, attended the Agricultural Trade Show at Lewiston. The boys had a profitable day observing the many and varied exhibits of farm machinery and agricultural products, as well as listening to interesting speakers on several agri- cultural subjects. POULTRY MEETING Thirty-two agriculture students and their in- structor, Mr. Crouse, attended a poultry meet- ing held at the Livermore Falls Court Room, February 22, 1948, at 1:30 p. m. The subject they discussed was Saving Grain in 1948. The speakers were, Frank D. Reed, Extension Poultry Specialist, and Charles Eastman, County Agent. PARENT AND SON BANQUET HELD BY FUTURE FARMERS A line Parent and Son Banquet and meeting of Port Royal Chapter, F. F. A., of Livermore Falls High School was held this year at Nor- land Grange Hall. The events of the evening started at seven o'clock when a sumptuous chicken dinner was served by the Future Home Workers under the supervision of Mrs. Phyllis Ambrose. Over one hundred members, par- ents and guests were served by an efiicient corps of workers. Rev. lesse Kenderdine, pastor of Eaton Me- morial Methodist Church of this town, gave the invocation. The following program was carried out: Opening ceremony, Chapter officers, address of welcome, Leslie Myers, response of welcome, lesse Myers, Creed, Dwight Lamb, Ir., award- ing of Honorary Membership to Principal Frederick C. Allen and Rockwood N. Berry by the Chapter officers, Trip to Kansas City, Glen Partridge, speaker, NV. Robert Dineen, Farm Forester, moving picture, The Green I-land, which was projected by the new sound movie projector. F. F. A. honorary members are: E. Carroll Bean, Omar Gibbs, Marshall Morse, Nelson Fuller, Dwight Lamb, Sr., Harold Souther, Ernest Souther, Lewis Berry, Stephen Griffin, Walter Rideout fdeceasedjq new honorary members. Rockwood Berry, Frederick C. Al- len, Sr. TWIN COUNTY 4-H ANNUAL EXHIBI- . TION AWARDS EARNED BY L. F. H. S. STUDENTS The 4-I-I Dairy award by Wirthmore Feeds was given this year to high ranking junior, Norman Fuller '5l. Fuller was also a Blue Ribbon winner in the Baby Beef Section. Melvin Fuller ,49 won the Blue Ribbon fsen- iorj in Potato Contest. Howard Bamford, lr., '44 was a Blue Ribbon winner CYoung Farmerj in the Dairy Depart- ment. 5-Yflssonlwb Livermore Falls High School is enrolled as a member of the National Scholastic Press Association .1 witle xtirietx' ol l-lllltlllllltlllll nulnstri 1l ex l tlitumiis in our MACHINE SHOP--I,A'I'lIE WORK Itft tcm right: Paul Ililmeau '50, V. A. Chilllllllll' llnst1'uetcm1'1, Vztnee Bryaiit '-lll. Rtiialtl Hlll'llU0 '-IN lnllllglrial 'tts l11ilCl1ilK'fy skills. Mechanical drawing. xlCt'll1lI1la'.ll tlixtwiiitg is Iyifpartlllellt nsetl i11 etmiiitiiutioii with our slump wtmrlx. llllu' eonrse nu-ltules lree hatiul Sliidkilllllg ol snnple 'l'hL. lmilmrhi rms dCp.mIm.m all lb If- ll. articles znul eontinties to 11umre eliilmorttte 111.1 g mlmxu Ot ,I .,k.m.r,l1 Shop 'Vhig ww. 01' el1i11etlrg1n'i11gs. .X eonrse i11 l11L'Cl1Qllliti.ll tlr.1wf slump is nsetl in 111111111 sinttll schools. The atc- lllll ll 2-fllfll ll' lll'2lllllll'lf lllllt llllllllll llllll lllll' mmw imimlul im. nm whullv Q1..lL.rlmm.d lw tinnetl through Senior llitigh. I 1 Blueprint reading a11d developing. Sllltlk'lllS ltlklll iiultistry, therefore the sttulent is taught . 1 ' b 'Q learn how to retul lmltle mr1i11s. lhey ll'1ll'lI 111 . , ai. ll whole' tlrtiw. 1r1u'e gnul inls 1heir proieetsg then they l7l'l'lllllLk'S KUINIIIUII to llll' LOUIIUW IS line 111 tlu' ltieli ol' rotmin gintl to erowtlctl con- 'll 'lx 1 At- Ll lmltieprint. using the l1l11epr1nt lll.lt'l1llll', .. 4 . 31,10 U, 'lille school is etpiippetl with Ll sottntl numxiitg s111g1ll slump. nt trt 1101 516115. QVC picture l1'IAlCl1lllK' mvliieh we tise tltiring ont' proxule iiistrtietion 111 inttnv tvpes ol tltm hgtxe .1 well-lmttlgtiuetl progrntni to give to our ' courses. 'llhese piettires h.11e lmeen nsetl this Year: I low to Rini ll l,g11l1e .l'l'l11i11 'l'11i'11i11 til. I 4 s- , 4 . -1 s . L-- llllu- l1l'Ulll'AlI11 provitles instruction in lmeneh uNlll'll'lll'fll'l - ullll' Slffl llllll' - H l ll' Sllll-lll' 1 .11ul 111.1t'l1i11e wootlworli. lmeneli atiul l11LlCl1ilR' Ulf- ililll' lllllla llllllilfll' lllllllllllllfl' llll' lll'Hllllll'll lllL'l1ll 11'1m1'l4, lI1i't'llAllllL'All tlrziwiiig, lmlneprint Wllll llll' 'l4l'lll'5 'll lllllllllt llllllll ll'l'lN -lllll Wkuhng :mil tlmrlupingl power tools. their purpose gtiul opergttioii. Bench and machine woodwork. This pro- Q 'lllll' Sllllll .la ll llllsl' lllllfl' lll llll' Wlllllil il-lll' Qllllll eotisists ol' lueneh work, developing the lllllll Slflls 'll lllli lllllllllx-llll' alllllllllll llll' llll' skill ol 1l1e sttulent in tis mg hand mop and sttulents tire ginxiotis to l1111sl1 1l1e1r lH't1lL'a'IN lu' 11'.1111ii1g i11 hon' to ettre lor the tools. lllfl' llll' Vllll 'll llll' 'Will- Mnchine Woodwork. SUMIUHS hum tht. lm. .X lexm' pictures ol tmtir shop gnul prtmietts .ire 3 . 2' . U, DPU, shown in these pages. gixintg retulers .111 itle.1 tml 1l1e power IlllltilllllL'5. atiul irt trtnutl ,Lu ol the 11141111' line projects 1l111t our stiulents Ill.lX .ite enu'l1 111g1el1i11e. Cure is I1lliCll to stress sat' ' 1' I'lllL'S gitul PTCL'1lllllUl1S i11 our slump. instruction llllllfl' lll Sflllllll- is gixen to sttulents in projeets raiiigiiig llroin l l'l'fY xllll' llll lllllllll Xlffllllf llll' lll'l'lll'l'lll'lll KHWWIHH, to mlmwl nmking' hats at tlispltty ol till projects intult' lmy tlu' stti Bench' and machine metal work. XVC imw. ll dents ol' l.. lf. ll. S. The pttlmlie is etm1'1l1.1llm' i11 nell-ekltillvltetl 11141t'l1i1u' slutll- Slllllll lvroitets lllcll ll' l'l5ll llllll lll5lll'l'l llllel' l'fl'll'l'lS- .tie llhlklk' to lu-lp the sttulent i11 lextrning lmttsie l11stt'1u'toi', lf, ,X, tlll.lIILllL4I', wx 'fix K+ fs' 3 ' 51:5 K s X Q fx M 4 'TFQF5 .. 5.2, . 1 QR si X. Ny- :bw xi 6 Q., :Hilti NN' X xxx x n Q P f ' X 4- -ikxxk is Q St WOUIDWORK-M 7-1 Division lrnnt Row tlt-ft tw riflitl: Ralph l,uPlzxntc, .lost-ph Szmfoiwl, llulwrt lfostvig f'lmt'lit' Allvn 'cuntl Rout Nornizln Nvini, Robvrt Gagnon, Keith Aii4l0l'stm. lliirtl Row: Rulmc-rt Riclizilwls, Rogm' .lac'c1ues, Fiorinrlu Bvnvrlvtto. nnrtli Row: William Rztnflzlll, l3c1'nz1t'rl .l2ll'Kll1l'S, .lohn Bakr-r. :wk Row: linlmt-rt Strout, l42ll1l'0llCQ Nichols, Byron Bonn. Tllli BIGGEST NICVVS IN SCHOOL 'lllit' girgtinivnt turns un tht- iniittvr' ul' lmlimtt Mimmlmul tl-Om lvnm. Ziyi cniplialsis gintl trcxitincnt ol nuts ul' ilu-Sr gint lvl tlimt' wlm lrlw olaxcrvctl or lv'1rtit'tP-itccl 'll thc Scllmll l'4'l ' wlllfll' ll 'mm 'ml llc lm ILTSS til lll0tlCI'll SL'LiUIltllll'y Cklllfllllllll ' ' V' ' V ' ' in tlit' pn U HC lm In mln NWN Im- umm whcn it wcms lull tnrritnltnn ol 1nstrt1tt1un.1l ullcrings wlntli I D ' 'xi' l'l--4 l' -'- -' 4- ix tlwngli prvss ncws ol thc gicttvltics ol tht' ucv Nl 'ml M 'lm U Flu mm' 'lmml' .I lllm Uumulum l,,lrm.ul,lrlv Wim, thou. ig mm. M- intcrcst iintl cncrgy ot its pt-mmncl. gnlmnnstrn ttinpt .tt linntntion, ontslnnt's pnlilit' liiiowlctlgc UW 0lll 4'l5 ilml lmill fll'7fll5' ul tlit- kll'l1LlI'lIl1l'Ill1ll wttrscs ul lIlSllALlCllOll4 'lilw l'i-Hi llnnncr Stull lms lwcn l-Olllllllllt' in lllf lllllllwl 'NWS 'll Sflwffl' pmctiriiig so nanny i-lllSll'lltilltlI1Lllu st't'iu's. Nu tint- tlt-tw-it-S tlic intrinsic xnlncs tlic stu, xlllllllk' Stntlm plwtogrgiplicr spcnt :in vntnt mm Lhrlws from MNH. PM-m-ipgiticmti in sports, clan' an l.. lf. ll. S. in lgnnigiry tluing grmilw gnnl lnilwlitgilimis. apt-t-ml intt-rrst or mt-itil groups. class muin pliutogriipliy. - fvuttun is ptllwlislitwl tn I st-lwul l1'lXlll.Q 'ilw i We To Ar .N-,ang ht' ,ff ig, A H at Q I v .11 M .i v 5 K, .s l ItilI'l'1NG THIC l I..fXNllNG FOREST SMOKE GETS IN YOUR EYES 'lihis eomposition is written ahout what l my group trietl to keep the houses from hurn- ing anal get everything out ol' them. VVe saw in tour tlars .intl three nights at the lfast helpetl to talie things out ol' three homes. One l,itet'more lfire. 'lihe tire startetl 'latestlay antl hotne hurnetl which we hail trieal to save with the sehool hors were ealletl to help at ahout ottr hare hancls. lzlll p. nt. XYe were all in sqhool at the time .Xliterwartl we got sotne tire-lighting equip- antl most ot' the hors answeretl the eall tor help. ment. l got an lntlian pump and usetl it steatl- Un the way tlown to the tire we were tryf ily until live o'eloek the next morning. l went mg to ligure Uttl wh.tt was hurnmg. lt was a hotne at live anal slept until seven. then went lweautilul tlay ff warm .intl tlry. 'l'here was hack to the tire antl another harcl clay. l went hartlly a eloutl wisihle. httt oll in the south we hotne ahottt nine that night just ahottt able to eoultl see a last growing mass ol' smolie rising walls, anal hatl fourteen hours sleep, which l into the slat: 'l'here was no iolting ahout it: hatlly neecletl. mant' ol us hatl seen tire too close to home to l was two tlays anal two nights clown there thinla it Iiunny. on patrol, too, as well as spentling part of a XVhen we reaehetl the tire area, there was no night helping at the fire at Riehmoncl. .Ns liar equipment to light tire. llut there were homes as the work went, the patrol was the worst he- in the area in grate tlanger ot hurning. So cause time goes so slowly antl it is so lonely. he F ire MILK FOR MEN I IGII'I'ING FIRIC Loft. to right: Iflvvlyn But-klin, B1-vorly .Iam-s, Sully Cox. .Xs Ior XVIILII I IIlIlIIif0I course I h11tctI it. I1111 it sI111wctI things 1111 111 people. XYIIOIII I IIIUIIIQIII I know wcII-tI1i11gs I 1IitI11't Iaiimv wcrc thcrc. I I111111- Ior thc 11I1Icr Iolks' saikc il thing Iikc 1I1.1t tlm-5111 I1:111111-11 llglllll. Ucorgc II2lft'I1Iy' WH. FOOD FOR FIRE FIGHTERS 'I'111-stlgiy, Utxttmlwr ll, 1vI1c11 thc stutlcnts UI I.i1'1'r11111rc I 11IIs High ScI11111I wcrc i11 LISSCIIIIVIF' Ior ll IIIAIQAIZIIIL' L'AlII1II2lIgll. Nlr. .XIIc11, our priu- t'111.1I. 11111-rr1111tuI it with illl 111111111111t1'111c11t, Ntlyillg, YoI1111t1'cr hoys nrt' 111-ctIccI to In-Ip Iight Iirc .1t Ifgist I.i1cr111t1rc. Most UI thc Imys IQII thc I111II All 111111-. AIIIII thc JISSCIIIIWID' c1111ti1111ctI. Ifiw IIIIIIIIICS Iaitcr Mr. ,XIIQ11 i11tcrr11ptc1I 11g11i11, x.1yi11g, 'IiI11- Iirt- 111 I .11st I.IXCI'IIItlfL' is xtiII s111'c11tIi113g QIIIII 1111111 st11tI1'11ts arc lIL'L'kIL'iI.u XI.111y ul IIS h11yi11-1 I111111cs thcrc or IICLIFIJY . F' . x1'1'1'1' wry llIIk'AISy 1111tI wont hc1111c tit once. XVIICII I .1rri11'1I :it If.1st I.IYL'l'lI10I'L'. I I1cIpc1I ll I-I'IL'lIII 11111111 hcr IllI'IIIIllfL' into ll truck, which was I1.lx'IiL'lI 1111 to hcr tI11t1r. .XItcr I h11tI I1cI11L'tI thvrc. I yy1'11t 111 uthci' 11I11ccs I11.'II1111g pt'1111Ic. .Xt Iiyt-tI1i1'1y I t11u1'I1t'411'tI 111011 t11IIii11g. Um' 1111111 N.1i1I, 'I'I11' Iirt' is going t111x'g1r1Is XV111'rL'11 XVAI- IUIIIN 111 XV11y11t'. Thih ht-11151 llly' IIIICICIS Iqirgc Iilflll. I wits wry 4111xi1111s to go thcru. XVI' SI.ll'IC'lI All I11II spot-tl, 11rri1'i11g :1I1t111t IIII'Ci'-KlllLlI'- ters t1I Llll I111111' I1IIk'I'. I It11111tI 111y 1111111 I1LlI'lIy' 1111cIu'tI. Iistt'11i11g to tht- r411Ii11 111'ws k'OlIL'CFlIIIIg Ioiwst Iircs. My 111111t, 11111 11c1'tIi11g Lllly' insist- imcc. t11ItI thc girIs AIIILI huys 111 tht' tr11t'Ix 111 3,111 xyhcrc they wcrc 11cctIc'tI. I stiiyctl thcrv to 111-Ip lI1y c1111s111 1I41 thc t'I1c1rL's. 11111I I141tI my s1111111'1A. I.z1tcr i11 the cu-11i11g. I 11'1'11t with 5111111- I-I'IL'IILIS to II Iairgt' I1iII 111'11r IIILICIQQN .111tI sim' thi' t. , ,. . irc Llgkllll. It 11'.1s LI I11'z111t1I11I Siglii. :is ILII' :iw .1 IVCRIIIIIIQLII PICIIII1' goes: hut wt' Ixiww thiit it 11'.1x tlcstruyiiig IIIOLISAIIIRIS ot c11r1Is 11I wtmtl .m1I I111r11i11g 1111i11111Is to tIc11tI1. .Xrriying I1111111' th11t night All 1'Ic'x1'11 I was FCLIKIB' Ior lwctl. I 11cctIc'tI sIcc11 III 11r1Icr 111 ht-I11 the 11cxt tI11v. XVCIIIICSIIAIQ' I 1yc11t I11 s.'I11111I ITIII 11'.1y tht 111iSsccI 1'41rIy to t1'1111s11t1rt It1t1tI 111 1i1111.I11'i11's. I IIILIKIL' Iiyc trips I1ct11'1'1'11 Cm11tIxx'111 x .111.I 51'I1t1t1I that tIz1y. .Xrriying htick All Ci11t1tIwi11's .lI1tlllI sight thirty 11. 111., I, tt1g1'tI11'r with .1 Icxx 11tI1c1' tgi1'Is, I1cIpctI scryt' Iit111tI II11'1'u .1111I txirrictl w111t' i11111 thc woo1Is to ilu- huiiygry IIIUII .111tI Imyx, XXX' gut IIIYKIIIQLII git txyvlyt'-tI1irty' 41111I wont I1111111: IIQIIIITSLILIB' 111or11i11g. with thc Iirc- still iuiging I rcportctl Imtrk to xt'I1o11I. .Xg41i11 I xygix :1SIiL'tI to IAIIQL' ll It1111I c1I It1o1I to Ci1111tIy1'i11's. 'III11'1't' uthcr scI111c1I 3girIs 1111tI Nliss XIiI1Irc1I Ncx1'I1t'rg, 11cti11g 11s 1111r 5111i1It'. wt-111 with IIN. lit-ing ilu- 1111Iy gi1'I with LI truck I was 41sI41'tI 111 3111 tti tht- SUIIIII rt1.:1I 111 Iuiycttc LIIILI wc' tI1.1t .1ll IIlL'II .mtl hoys wcrc IL-tl. .Xt IIQIIIIIAIJYLII Curiicr two 1111 Iit'1'111c11 wczc xtoppiiig txirs. 'I'h1'y I.Ill3,QIIL'II wI1c11 thcy saw tis PIIYIS. ITLII xycrc wry IIIIICII pI1:41sccI wI1c11 thcy I1c'11rcI wc I111tI It1t1tI. .XIIL'I' thcy h11tI c41Ic11 thcy ltft IIS tI1r1111gI1. IIAIICIK' wurt' xxxl xlxx xml Ixxxxx GIRLS BRING RI-II RIxISIIMI'IN'I'S TO SMOKE WEARY, 'FHIRSTY SCHOOL M.-VI'I'I Ixx-fx to x'xx:Ixt: I,xxx'x'xxixxxx Rix'Ixxxx'xIs, Ixx'o Paul Mzxxxxuis, I,aux'x'ttx- Ixavx-xxlixxrxx. xxxIxx'x' xxxxx xxlxxxxg xlxx' xxxxxxl xx'xxIx Ixxxxxl, xxx wc xlx' lxxx'. x'xI xxx xgxx xIxxxx'xx xxx xlxx' xx'xxxxxIx xxx'xxr xlxx' Ixxg IVV xx'x'x'x' lxxlxl xxx Ixxllxxxx' xx xxxxx'-xxxxxlx xvlxixlx 'xxx xxlxxxxxx xxm' xxxxlx' xxxxxx xlxx' xxxxxxxlx. I'xxrx xx'xxx XVII XYL' IIIVI IUIII' Ixxxxx OII IIICII' XYLIY UIII IO ' J xlcxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxx xx'xxxx'x'. IIxx'x' xIxx'x'x'xxxI xxx xxx xxxxr x' Ixxxxxxxl xxxxxxxx' Ixxxxx xxxxxl xx lcxx' xxxx'xx xx'Ixxx xxxlxl xxx xxx xxxxx' lxxx' Iuxxxx xxxxxxx I.x'xxxxxx Ixxxxxxxxxx' wlxxx 'xx' xx'x'x' Ixxxxxxgrx xxml xIxxx'xxx'. Wx. xxxxx, xvcrx' xlxxxxxx' Ixxxxxx xlxx' lx xxx' Ixx!-.x', Ixxxx xx'x'xxx xx'xxIxxxxxx . F xx xxx' Ixxxx'xx' xlxx'x'x' xxxxx Ixxxx'xIIx' vxxxxxxxglx xxx g xxxxxxml. . x x XXI' .xx'x'xxx'xI Ixxxrlx .,x xixxxxxlxxxxxqx xxll x'x'x'x' xi ' xgrx. I xx'x'xxx Ixxxxxxx' Ixxr xx Ixxxx sxxxxx 0 rx xl xx'r xxxxl xx'xxx'xxxx'x' xlxxxlxxxxg. IIxx'xx xxxx' Ixx'xxxIxx'x' xxxxxl I xlx xlxx' xxxxxlx xx'.xIx xx Ixxxxxl xxx xx'xxxx'r xxml x x'rx xxll xxx xx'xxx'Ix xxll xxxglxx. XXX' gxxx xxx xlxx' Ixrx' xxlxxxxxx xxx lIxxx'xx'. Um' xxx xlxx' gxxlx xlxxxx Ixxxxl Ixx'x'xx xx'xxIx xxxx' xxll xlxxx' xx'.xx xxxxxxxxxg Ixxx' xxxx' x'x'xxxrxx. Ix xvxxx xxxx xxxlxl. .xml xlxx xxxxxxl xx'.xx Ixlxxxxxxxg Ixxxrxl. NVQ xxxxxx'xI xxx xxyxllx xxxxxxxxxl xlxx' xxxxxxlx x'xxxxxI xx'xxIx xx Ixxxlxx'x xxx x.xmIxxxx'Ixx'x xxxxm' xlxxxxglxxxxxxx. xxxxxl xx x xxx xxl Ixxxx xxxlIx'x'. xxcxxxxxg xxxlcx xxx xx'x'x'x'xxI xxxrx, xxx' x'x'xxx'Ixx'xI xxxxx xIx'xxxxx.xxxxxxx. .XIxx'x' xxxxx' lxxxxxl xx xx xIxxxx'xIxxxxx'xI xx'x' xxxxx'xx'xI Ixxxxlx .xml gxxx xx rxxlx' xxxxlx xx xxxxxx' xrxxxxx'x'x'. .Xxxxxxxxg xxx CixxxxxIxx'xxx's xl xxlxxxxxx xx'xx xlxxrxx' xxx' xxxxx'x'xI xIxx'rx' xxml xx'rx'x'xI xxxxxxl xxxxxxl xxx'x'Ixx'-xlxxrxx. I'x'xxIxxx' xlxx' lxxx' xx'.xx xxlxxxxxxx xxxxxIx'x' x' I xxxxx'xxxIx'xI xxll xxxx' clxxxx xIxx'x'xxxxxxxx I xx'x'xxx Ixxxx OIIIFOI, S0 x'x xxx xIxx' xxxxxrxxxxxg. Ilxxxx lx xxx I'xxxx I.xx'x'rxxxxxrx' xxml xlxxl xxlxxxxxx xlxx' xxxxxxx' xxx xlxx xxx ' x Axcxlxxxg xlxxyx, gx' 1, xxxxg Ixxxxxxx' xxx xxxxx' xx'x'Ixxx'I4 Sxxxxxrxlxxy xxxxxrxxxxxg. fxgxxxxx Sxxxxxrxlxxx' I xx'xxrIxx'xI xxll xlxxx' xxxxxl Ixxxx' ixxxxx xlxx' cxxxxxxxg. Sxxmlxxx' xxlxcrxxxxxxxx xxxx' IxrxxxIxx'r xxxxxl I xIx'Ixx'x'rx'xI xx Ixxxxxl xxl xx'xxxx'r xxxxxl Ixx'Ixxx'xI xx xx'IxxIx'. Uxx rx'- xxxrxxxxxg Ixxxxxxx' xxx' xIxxI xx'Ixxx1 xxxxxlyxxxg xxx' x'xxxxIxI. Xlxxxxxlxxx' I xx'x'xxx xxx xclxxxxxl lxxlxxxg xx Ixxxlx' Ixx'x- xx'x'. xlxxxxlixxxg xlxx' Ixxx' xxxxx xxmIx'r cxxxxxrxxl, Iixxx II VVQIS IIUI xxxlx' 1IIII'XI'IIL'I'L' IIIIIII XYL' gill I IIII .XIxx'x' xlxix x'xxxx'rxx'xxx'x' xxll xxll xxx xlxxxxxlxl xlxxxxxlx C-xxxl Ixxx' xx rxxxxxx' xlxxy. Ixlx xx'xx Xlxxrxx' I-IH. THE FIRE AS SEEN FROM THE OFFICE lx xxll Itxgxxxx xlxxxxxxg xxxx xxxxx'xxxIxIx' xxx xx'Ixxx'Ix Xlr. If. If. IIxxx'xx xx'xxx xxxxcxxxxxxxxxg xxx xxrxxxxxxxxx' x'xxxIxxx- xxxxxxxx Ixxx' xlxx' xxxxxgxxzxxxx' xxxxxxpxxxgxx. .XrxIxxxx' Nxxlxxxlx rxxxIxx'xI xxxxxx xlxx- xxxxcxxxlxlx' Ixxxll xxxlxxxxg Ixxx' xxxxxrx' Ixxxxx xxx Ixx'Ixx lxglxx llxx' lxrx' xxx Ifxxxx I.xxx'rxxxxxx'x'. Ilxxx xx'xxx xlxx' lxrxx xlxxxx I Ixxxxl Ixx'xxx'xI xxl xlxx' lxrx: Ifxxxxxx xlxxxx xxxxxxxxxx' xxxx, xIxx'rx' xx'xxx xx Ixxxrxx xxxxrrx' x'xx'rx'xx'Ixx'x'x'. .Xx I Ixxxxlx Ixxxulx xxxx'x' xlxx' xx'x'x'Ix, xl xIxxx'x xxxxl xx'x'xxx xxx xl I xIxxI xx'x'x' xxxxxflx xxx lxclxxxxxxg xxx xxxxx xlxx- lxrx' xxxxx. IIxxxx'x'xx'x', xlxx' xxlxxxxxl xxxlxux' Ixx'f x'xxxxxx' xx xxxxxxxg cxxxxlxxxxxxg xxlxxxx' xxx xx'xxrI4 xxx. NVIxxIc I xx'xxx Ixclxxxxxg xxx gtl rxxxxlx x'xxrxIx x'x'xxxIx', xlxx' xx'Ix'pIxxxxxx' rxxxxg xx'ixIxxxxxx xxuxxxxxg. Nlxxxxx' xxxcxxxxgcx Ixxxxl xxx Ixx' xIx'Ixxx'rx'xI, xxml xxx' xx'x'rx' x'xxxx I'x'xxxxxx'xI xx'ixIx xxxxxxxxxxcrxxlxlx' xxxIxx'r xxxxlxx x'xxxxxxx'x'xx'xI xx'xxIx xlxx' Ixrx: Ixx xlxx' clxxxxxxxxxxxx, xlxx' xxlxxxxxxpIxx'x'x' xvxxx cxxxxxxlly xlxxxxxrlxxxxg, Ixx xxxxx'x' xIx'I'x'xxx xxx xxxxxx'x. xx'xxx'Ixx'x'x Ili Nlll,K AND IWRINKING WA'l'l1IR GO FROM SVHOOI, 'l'O S1'lCNl1I Ulf l lRl'I .lu11i111' Girls 1 1111 1111 I1f1 111 1'i1gl11: 1'1-li111- llz11'111Iis, 11nl1n1111'n 1i1'111l1rl11111', l1l'll2l fll'ZlIll', Villl'l'l1l XV1lll0ll. I,1-11 l':111l Nl:11'11111s. .1111l 1111111l1 11l1l1.1' 11.111 1111 11111111 111 Cilllllllllk' l1111'. 11l111' l3llllt'l' Llllkl L'lll'l'NL' .1111l 11r111'1'1'1l1'1l 111 1l.111 1'1'1'11111111111 .11 111 11111111 1l111l1'1111 11'1'r1' 1'.1ll1'1l Sl4lI'I 141111l1111'lu'1 11ll 1111-1 .lLL.llI1. 11111. N.11u1' ll11.11g 71511. l'.X1'I'1' l111'.1l 11111.11117,11l11111 1'1111111'r4111'1l 111 Al lu- --- 1- --W- 11111' 11.11. l llllllli, 111 .1 lllXX'll. 111' 1lu111l1l l11' W7I.1WERI.l NE!xRI4X' RURNIQD OUT 111'11111l 111 Ilu' 11111 111 11'l111'l1 llu' 1'111x1'111 XUllll1f My hrs! Cmmmm WM In 111, Hum, WMUU1 11'1'1'1'1l 111 111-111. 'lllu' 111111u'11 1l11l 11111' XYUl'li in N11 ' - ' 1'l1 l lu'z1r1l Ilu' ll1'1' 11.11 llllllllllil 11111'.11'1l l':11 'l' 1 l 1 ' ll ' 1' ' '-1' l1 Tr 'li - A ' - ' l1'f'll1 Ulu IUU1 ll ll 'li lglillsl I 111 1'111', l11'1'411111' l l11'1' 11111 1111111' Ll 1111l1' lllllll 1l11' A 1' ' ' 11' ' ' ' ' 1' 11 1 - - - 1 H'N N11 1 '1'YF NIMH? HTKIXN M 11111 f,AlII1111lI'1llll1llS. l 11111 .1 l'lllL' 111 11111' l11lllN1'. ll11' 1l'1l 1 All lmqllu nl K ,N lullllmk ll Sllllllikl 11111 1l111'l1 l1111 l 1.111 1l11' 1,111 l1111111' l1lllIl l'lll' 1l1111'11'1. 5111111' Llll'lN 1111111 l.. l'. ll. 8. - U - 111 . 1l111111'1l 1'1'111411'l141l1l1' l1l'QlXL'IA1' 111 1'1111'1'111g llu' 1111- li- 1 V A, llu lllt l111l 11111 11l llllllllll 1l11'l11ll .lllll 11.11 . . . l 1 l 1 1 1 'mllmll lm 'H' K 'llllllll Wllllllx U lu H1 l1111'l1 111 11111 1111111l1 l11 lll11l1ll.lll. .111 .1111'1'11111111 1' ,. , , , ' 11gl111111lu11111l111. 1111 klmhu m Q 111' 111u'1' ' ', . 1l X.llll.llTl1'5. XK1' gn! ll1'11'1'l1' I1111 -W. - f L'Ill1Tly 1gr41111l1.11g1 q1111l 11111 11111' l11111l11 Ill ll1L'lll. V' ' ' 1 ,llllL'l'1' 111'1'1' 111.1111 111'1111l1' .1r1111111l l11'l111111g .lllkl IN 11112 KIICHl N XY.ll1kl1llI:,L. 'llllL'll' 11.11 .1 111111111 .11 .1 l11'1111l1 l11'l1111 l .INl1L'll Nl1'1. .Xllll3l'l15L' 11 1l11'1'1' 11111 1lllX'll1lllLL 11111' l1111111' 41111l l11111' 11.11 l4111l .11'1111111l 11111 l1111111' l 11111l1l 1l11 g1111l 1lu' 14111l lllllfk' girls 11'1'r1' 1u'1'1l1'1l Alllll l11'l1i111l 1lu' l1.lfIl. Xl1 11111'l1' 111.11l1' Ll 1l111'l1 111111.1l11'141n1l1111lu'1. 'lll1I'L'L' 1,g11'l1 111'1'1' llllllilllg 111'1111111l 1l11' lulllkllllgk 1111l1 .1 l111ll1l1171'1'. xl1'll 1.1111l11'11l1 11ll1111g1 41111l 111111' llhllilllg SAlll1lXYlL'llL'S. 11111 11'111c1' 1111 tlu' l1111111' .lllkl l1.11'11 111, 11 1l11' llll' .111 lllL'NL' 111111l1111'l11'1 l1111l 111 l11' 11'I'Ll131WL'Ll in 11111 111r1'111l 111 1lu' l1llll1llI1QN. 1W.l1ll'I'.lll1l .11 l l1111l l1.11l 1'1111'1'11'111'1' 111 1l111 11'111'l1. 111 111111'l1l1, Pllllgll niglu l 11111l1 llX1'I'. .Xll1'I' 11111'l41111g Lll5lJlll 11111' lllllllf l1l11l111ig 111 11111' 1111111l1. 1.1111l 1.1111l1111l11'1. Illy l111111l1 111'1'1111111111'1l 1l11'111- llfllllk' 1'q1rl1' 1111111 1111rl1 11-l11-1 111 XYll.ll 1l11'1' 111'1'1' 1l11111g Lllltl 1X'FLl111Ulll4Lf 11111 1l1111'n lll llu' 11'11111l1 1.1111l11'11'lu'1 1111111 l11'1'4111u' 1111l11111.1111'. l'1n.1ll1' l1llllL'l' 11111 11111 q1l1111111 41l lll1'1' 11'1111l1l lltll l1111'11 111' 11111l1l 11'1' Ilu' lll'1' Xl1 l-Jlllkll' ll.l1l 1111111 41111l 11'11l1 111l11'1' 1111'11. llgllllllg Ilu' lll'L'. Nl1 l lllglll. XI1 llIUIll1'I' llll'lA1' 11.11 1111 l11'1'111l. lllllll1-QS, 11r 1'111l1'1'. 111 111' SI411'1'1l 1111 11111 1111 l3I'l1llli'l' 11111l l Nl1'11l 11'11l1 11111 N1'Ill 11111 1111' 1l1111l1l1' 4111111111111 111 l'X'L'I'1'lllll11,:. NV1' 1'l111l11'1 1111. I111111r1l11'1'1 1111u'1 1l1.11 III1-Qlll l 11111 11111 11111' l111111l1'1'1l l11g111'1 111 l11'1'111l. 211 111111 111 1111 111 111' 11' L'X'L'I'1lllll11,1 11111 11ll Flglll. 'l'lu' 1111' S11QlIl1, Ill 111111111l1 111 11111l1'1'. 1'11111u'1l lllllli, 111'11- l1111l 1111'1'111l 11111111 1lu' 11u'.11l11111 11111l 11.11 l1lllAl1 11111, ll 1l117,111 1'gg1, 1YL'4lIllll l1llIl1'l'. lllLlfNl1l11gll- 1113.1 4111111 1111111 11111' l1111111' 11111'.11'1l XX',11111-, I I' II. S. GIRLS WIIO I1'UI'1IH'I' BLAKE AT EAST LIVICRINIORIC WI'I'II SIIOVICLS ANI? H1101 I i1's1 R1111' 1I1'f1 111 1'i1,rI1tI: Sadie I7ysz11'1, .I1-1111111111 Ii11I1i11s1111. S111'11111I I21111': SUZZIIIIIL' I'I0UI'IIIl'I', N111'111a I,1111'is, I,111'1'z1i111- I'iI11-. XI111I11'1' 111411113 I11'1'.1I4141a1 1111' 1I11' 1111'11 IIEIIIIIIX 11411 Ij1lIAl1II13-I 111-1-11 I11-111'411I1 1I11' s111'l'111'1'. 1111' LIIIKI 1I11'1' 11'1'1'1' .II'llIIII1I 41II 1I.11'. fXI1'11 I1411I 1, , 1- - . 5, . 11'11111' 1111141111 WI. 11111'I1s 151ll'Ix1'1I III II11' 1'41r1I 511 IIILII 11 1I11- I1r1' I1c- ' WI- 'Xl 'II' XII- 'II 1'.11111' 114111511 11411 1'1111I1I 11111111 11111. If1'1'ry1I11111' I IN I 4111 1I11'11' I I11111111'1I 41I111411'1I .1 I11'1' Z-I , 11411 11.11'I11'1I. XY1' 1l11I 11111 11111113 lI111111,gI1. LIIILI 'xii STM I I I I lx' 1 1I11 1111 1I111I 1I111111 111111111II1 XIX I'11I111 1 IS HIM V tml Wh 2111111 Immm Im mg MII lmlm' ' ' ' I '. 1 'L Xl - -- - f XX'I ':,4 4' 'III III III1' 11'11111Is IIL1IIIlIIg II11' III1' 1111 1I1r1'1' or I ur L mlm! Shmdx' hmlmx' tml I umph mlm , ' U 1 ' ' - - - ILIIIIQS. XXI11111 11411 11111 I1411'I1 I gut 1111 II I411' 1111' 1I111's. II1' 11111 1111I1 41I111111 1111' I111111s 111 1'1's1 Ill Hum mu 1 ul X11 1 U1 1111 mm 111 IIl1x II1111 11111111 IIIN 11111 1lISI IIIKII, 111 XXL ' V ' Ill '?. . ICI ' ' ' XYLIS . ' H - '41'I' I'1I-. . 4 1 II11' 1111l1' 11111- III IIIN 1'1II'I 111 1I11' 11'11111Is. II11' IlI'L' II I L ull UI um HMM II 'N I 'Hun' Nl 'WMU' - 1 111 1-1'1'r1' 11'I1' 1I111111' 11111. XX I11'11 1I11' 1111- s1411'11'1I II.llI I1111111'1I 1111 1I11' g1'1111111I 1111 111 11'11I1111 IIIU - I Q I V' ' 111118 ,mm 1111 1m1111mD I 11111I' 'III I111I1'111 111111111 '1111I 11'1'111 111111 1I11' x. 1 1 '.'.' ' '.. ' 11 - 4- - - 11'11111Is. I 11'41s 111 '141'I' 111 1I1' 11 1 11 1 II IIILII 11111 11'.1s QI 11'rr111'111g 1'1111'1'11'111'1- LIIILI I ' I X I IL In I H-L UI 111116 1 NWN. WL. ,1m,11N.r' I II11' s111g1II 1111's 41II LlI'1lIlII1I IIIL'. IIIII1' 11'1111I 11'41s 1111111115 XVAMU- -31. I1I1111'111g IIQIIAKI LIIILI I111111'I11111g 1I1111'11 11.11'1I1'- 1 W V-' I1lll'IIL'1I 111141. I I1411I 111 I1II 1111 1I11- 1411111 1111114 111' ,xg QEIFN BY THF FIRFFIGHTFRQ IIYL' 111111's. VVI11'11 II11' 1111' I1.11I 1141sm1'1I 1111.11 A A I . 1 I ' E '4 4 ' M ' 1 ' III1'S1I.I1' 1lIIL'I'II1l1III .1 k'.lII 1'411111' III 111 II11' IIIKLIII lmgu lm'l,ll II ls mmm! 3 P' m' 'M I I 'II'I' 1.I11111I LlSIxIIlg 1111 II1'I1T, I11'144111s1' lI11'r1' 11'41s ll I1111 LH 'lm lmmxl' I um WU' lmllguu' 'I mfh' In 'MMI hu. VH IIN' VN I iwrnmw Vvmm Vmuml Ll lIIlIII13 11'111'I1 111 11'I11'1'11 11'111111'11 41111I g11'Is 1I1sI11'1I . 1 1 4 11 I . ' - - . 1 m-S 11111 II111 I11111I. I I1411I Ll s41111I11'11'I11 1I11'11 I 111-111 I 1'111I1' 111111' III 1I11' I1411'I4 111 Ii111I111'1' I'41rr1111g11 Q I I I I I I I N lm,1xHP' 11111011 1 gm l1WN' it was rm11y hum- 1111111.. 1411 1.11 1111111g1 111 i1111's1 1111's 1111 LI - - I1111g 111111: 11111 11111I II11' 11'1111I 11'41s I1I1111'111g I141r1I. .X 111111111 1 ' 111 IIS I11111 s1.11'11'1I 111111 II11' 11'11111Is 11'11I1 17IIIL' IM-l 'l'I'l Hulk' Il' I:1111gI11 111 I11'411 11111 1I11' 1111: I' 'I' I I 11111gl11 111111I I1I1,1III. 1I11-11 r111I1' I1111111' 11'11I1 111y II1gI1 S1'I11111I 1111111Is XYk'I'L' 1-x1'11s1'1I 111 I1.111I1' 111111. 'III11' I111' I7III'IIl'lI 41II 1I1411 1111'I11. VV1'1Il11's- II11' I11'1' 11'I111'I1 I3lII'IIL'lI 1111' 41I111111 111111' 1I.11's, r- , . . . ,- 1I.11' I 11'1'111 1111-1' .1g.1111 LIIILI t111111I11 41II 1I41y. I IL'LlI'IIIg 1I1111'11 11 1'411111's. QIIILI .1 141I11-1-11111-Ip 111111 111' LI I11l IIIAII 1I411'. QIIIKI 1I1'4111I1 11111r1' IIILIII I 1'1'c1' IIILIII1' 41111-5 111 I'11r1's1 ILlI1lI .15 11'1'II 41s 1I11'1'1' I-1II'III I14111' I11'I111'1'. XVI1111 I 1141s I1gI11i1111 111 VV1'I1s11'r's I1111111's 411111 1I11'ir 111r11isI111111s. 1111sl111'1- I I1.11I 111 1'11II 1111 1111' 1141111 Icgs 111 1I11' II11' IlI'SI 1I411 I 11'.1s 111I1I 111 I1-1I11 II11' III'1' III . 1 Y F I1111'1'1 I11'1'.111s1- II11' g1'1111111I 11'41s 511 I1111. 'I'I1c 1111' II11' 11'11111I1 III I1.11'I4 111 IIN' I1l1'11111w I11111111. 11I11'1'1' I.. F. Il. S. S'l'llDENTS AND FORMER STUDENTS LUNCH AT GOOlJWlN'S ck Row lstztnilingl. loft to right: Pat Ryder, Michael Houlihan, Bt-rnie Conant, Norntztn .lzttniuvs lull '5ll. tht- lm- wits controllctl httt still rcittly to tcitr ttnic ol tht- ycitr it is ritrcly hot itntl tlry, lint tlown itnything stitntling in its wity. .Xltcr this ycitr it wits tntttsttitlly tlry. cspwiitlly in conting hotnc itt 6:50 p. ni. l witshctl itntl wcnt Ncw lfnglitttcl, Thr pcoplc ol' this slitlt' ltittl to hull citrly to hc rcittly lor itnothcr tlity's work. hccn itskctl hy Clotcrnor lliltlrcth to try to pro 'l'ht' st-cottil tlity l wits toltl thitt thcrc wits no tcnt lirc' from sprcitllittg in ottr coitttttttititivs. school, hccitttsc thc lirc ltitil rtin Utlt ol' control lint, its in itll coitttttnttitit-si thcrt' itrt' utrclcss itt liitst l.it'crntorc. .Ngitin l wcnt itntl when tit-oplc. lt is ht-lit-tit-tl tltitt sonic txtrt-lt-ss pcrson itrriting thcrc, l wits tolcl to light lirc ttpon ilroppccl it cigitrcttc ottt ol' it citr ttcitr tht- tlttttp lit-itclt llill. lhcrc. l wits given ittt lncliitn lirc gronntls in liitst l.it'crntort'. ltttntlt, which l citrrictl itntl tlsctl itll tlity. 'lhc stttclcnts itntl tcitcltcrs ol liiwrtttort' l'l.llls lt wits ttot till thru' olclofls that all'lCrl100I1 lligh School wcrt' itttctttliitg itn itssctttltlt' whcn tlt.tt l got sontcthiitg to citt. so l wits wry hun- Mr. .Xllcn. ottr prittcipitl, ititttottttcctl thitt .tll grip lilwirit Morst- itncl it hunch ol other girls hoys wottltl hc tlistttissctl to ht-lp light it liri- tittttt' tlown to gin' tts sitntlwicltcs, collcc. itntl ritging in liitst l.it't-i'tttorc. l lt-lt itt ontm- .intl tlottgltittits, .Xltcr t-itting, I rctttrnctl to tht- lirc. got it ritlc to tht- lirc thitt wits tltcn ltttrnintg in lt wits ltol till 8:30 It. nt. thitt l itrrivctl hoinc. hitck ol the Xllillrcil litcqttrs' litrttt. l horrowrtl wrt' tirctl itnil witlt tny lungs lttll ol sntolsc it rhotcl lront it ntittt itcitrlw .ttttl lit-lyt-tl tlig it which ntittlt' nic' It-cl sick itnil cxltittlstctl. ilitt-lt to stop thc' lift' lrotti sprcittlittg. .Xltvr 'Iltti thirtl tlity l wits citllctl itgitin, hut tltis thc rift' wits ttntlcr control thcrc. I witllacil lintc the lirc wits itltttost itll ttnilcr control. VVC ovcr to whcrc tht- httililiitgs ol tltt- lfittttp tonight itll ility itntl hittl plcnty ol gootl lootl to grottntls hittl oncc stootl1 httt, ht' thc tintt- citl. thitt tht' lit-tl Cross, liclicliitltls. liivcrntorc l got thcrc, littlt- ol the Cittttptgrotttttls ltttiltlittgs lfitlls lligh School. :intl othcr 0l'g2llllZ1lll0llS ltittl wcrt' to hc sccn. llccitttsc ol' l.tck ol tintt' .intl ntittlv. l got hontt' itt Stall thitt tlity. not so tirctl cqttilrtttcttt tht- lirc tlcpitrttttcttt hittl hi-t-it nnitltlt' .ts the tlitt lwlorc hnt still with sntolic in nty to sittt' tltt- httililings. The ownt-rs ol' tht' hotttus lttttgs, 1 ncitrhy hittl loitclctl thcir lttrnitttrc on trtttlts itntl l hoitt' l shitll ttttwr soc it lirc lilac thitt itgitin. were rcitily to ntotx' itt itny titttc. 'lltitt night l .Xrntitntl liiloilcittt '5l. wittchcil thu glow ol thc lirt' in tht- slq. lt se as at as at loolactl lilac it lwittttilttl rctl horizon. lt wits it hot 'llttvstlity in Uctohcr whctt the The ncxt tlity tttost ol the hots wcrt' tolil tht' lirt' tlisitstcr strttck lfitst liivcrinorc. .Xt thitt lirt- wits still sprcitilitttg litst. ltcuitttst- .t ltrislt :ttvli :tt 'l'ithlt-: Gilbert Richards, llonztlcl Kelley, Robert Pike, 0 Brien Riorllitn. Gloriit .lat-cnt:-s, Doris l t-rlztttll lztll '5ll, Mt-tlot'it Bri-ton '50, Marilyn Conant, William Hinos .lt'., Rityntoncl Gould, Phyllis Whitt-, Mitry King THE BANNER 41 wind was fanning it. We were told that help was needed, so all the equipment that could be found was loaded into cars and trucks and we hurried to the fire. Most of the boys went to the south road in Fayette to patrol along the sides of the road. I stayed there most of the morning. In the afternoon I did the same work near the Campgrounds. The next day the fire still burned fast and recklessly. There was very much damage done. The total was: two homes, many cottages in the Campgrounds, acres of woodland ruined and many animals burned to death. This destructive fire ought to be a lesson to careless people! O'Brien Riordan '5l. ' S-DAY AT Livermore Falls I-Iigh School was anxiously awaiting S day, namely Students' Day . Mr. Allen, our principal, had decided to let the Sen- ior Class take over the running of the school! Election day for offices came two days before the ofiicial day. just to keep you straight on who were to be responsible for the schooI's well-being or downfall, I will give you a brief summary of the officers. Russell Wagner was elected on the Clean-Up Committee. Seems Rus had had the respon- sibility of the Senior Class too long to act as principal. However, Malcolm Cummings gladly consented. Donna Wagner and Beverly Iott were going to be the secretaries to the prin- cipal. Donna was to take down the shorthand notes and Beverly to transcribe on the type- writer. Iune Murray and Evangeline Davis were to be in charge of conduct and detention, with lames Richmond and Francis Hebert as helpers. The big day had come and everyone was afiutter. School began at the usual time, but for the late sleepers an hour extension was given. As I entered the school, a smell of hot coffee and doughnuts penetrated my better sense. Following the trail, I soon found that these comestibles were being served to the people that had skipped breakfast. In the library, the freshmen were selling coke and potato chips, for class-room training. Repre- sentatives from Herbie's were making sun- daes to take into the class-rooms. A large at- tendance was in English Class, so I hurried over. The teacher, Dido Lucarelli, was of Mickey Mouse and Donald to students that there still was life. After the movies I went room to buy some double bub- journeyed upstairs to Burnell showing movies Duck, to prove a better side to into the typing ble gum, then Dowis geometry class, where they were study- L. F. H. S. ing the lines of the New Looku. After any- one grew tired of one class, he would go into another. Everyone seemed to prefer the Home Economics class, as they were handing out rasp- berry turnovers. Over in the Manual Training Shop, Leo Paul Marquis and Billy Mitchell were starting on new booths for Herbie's place. George Hebert, George Dube, and Gibby Rich- ards were their assistants. At 11:99 everyone was given a test in what- ever room he was. I got stuck in Problems' class, where Eva Smith and Marilyn Wyman were giving a test on Problem 2, How to Get Rid of Class-room Pests . Anyone passing the test with marks of 95 or over, could go home. Those under that rank had to stay in the assem- bly hall, drink cokes, and dance for a full hour. Noon hour came around and we all went to the Riverside Hotel on the school's lunch pro- gram. I don't know about the rest, but I had a big, juicy, sirloin steak. Then we went back to school about two o'clock. If you didn't have any classes, you could go home, or to the movies. The rest of us had to stay and listen to Annie Hughes, the musical instructor, give talks and demonstrate the techniques of Doro- thy Shay. Each period was a half hour long. If you passed with good honors for the day, that mark was put down on your rank card and the other lower marks were discarded. Oh! yes, Mac, that's our principal, said that fifty was passing. After school had closed, everyone agreed it had been a very successful day. We had learned lots of things, mostly the things that weren't going to further our education much, but it was fun while it lasted. Mr. Allen came in once during the day, turned around, went home to bed, and will rest for two weeks before even attempting to get the school back on its feet. Nancy Hoag '48. ACTIVITIE ' ass of 47 Upper picture: GRADUATION SPEAKERS PREPARING THE DIS- CUSSION . . Theme: Maine in Modern Literature. Front Row ileft to rightl: Mary Hoag, Arnold Sturte- vant, Vivian Wilkins, Thomas McKenney, Merriman Foster, Kenneth Holt, William Thompson, Ernestine Whitcomb, Philip Bailey, Etna Bamford, James Reynolds. Lower picture: GRADUATION DAY AT MURRAY HALL Commencement Exercises PROGRAM Selection- Vnlsc liluetteu Riehnril llrigo llroeessiongil '4IVI1lI'Cl1 N Ulfls Ulm Club Im.0C,ui0n nlntermezzo llizet Overture- Russian Sailors Dance lsane Y I O fll'35U'il I I Orchestra I zlletlietory VVillmm Thompson Snlntatory Kenneth Holt Prcscmimon Ol 'XWHNIS l,iSCLlSSIOlI--ulNlllilIC in Modern Literutureil ' l V Prm' Iifulcflfk C- Allfn Presentation ol Diplomas Kenneth Holt, Merriman Foster, Viviun H - Supt. Stephen A. Grillin Vililkins, lirnestine Whitccmiiila, Iirnii liam- N furil, Mary llozig, VVillit1m Thompson, class Ode Philip Hailey, Arnold Stnrtevant. Izimes Rcccssloml-March U MLlfSh1llS'ILllIlIlC Dutnans. lionnltl i,LlfliL'I' . , Q. Lk. .V . , N A . - N Rillmldsf Tllomls ML Mnmy Llziss Ugly ltxerclses. I9-if: f,l2lSS Prophecy. Ymilll SUl0 uMY Hmm in Thy Swcct VOICCN liertruntl Dutnaisz Glass VVill. lginine Dtnnziis: -Sllllll 5110115 lolm H0Ugl'1l011 Gifts Cluoysl, Betty .Xnn liinch: Gifts tgirlsj, Youll '1'ri0.. 'I'hcSw5m Saint Simms Iustin Hnrtliorii. Nliss Shoeinnker :incl Miss maint Mmm. Dorothy Han, Priscilla Sturm- hlunt 1lLlYlSCQl in the writing ol thc parts. Miss 5llUCll1llliL'l' eozichetl the speakers. vzlnt , . . , H H Y - H r - lmcezilittlrezile lixereises were at the Univer- lmmlml Duct' only 1' Slmlc Lmnccnlk snlist Church All 7:50, lune 8, IU47. Rev. Shel- Hnrolal Newcomb, Glen Partridge tion Christian gave the zulilress. Upper picture: JUNIOR NIGHT PLAY, THE TEETH OF THE GIFT HORSE Left to right: Grace Diamond, Patricia Enstedt, Malcolm Cuininings, Donna Wagner, Gloria Winton. Lower picture: CLASS OF '48 ENTERING HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM FOR JUNIOR NIGHT EXERCISES MAY Z. I9-17 PROGRAM Professional - l lere They Come Weidt Chairman l nvoral ion Russell Wagner Rev. F. Stewart Kinley Overture - Kiss of Spring Play -- Time 'lieet Ricliard llutler lilorence llutler Marietta Williams Anne Fisher Devlin lllalie Katie Orchestra N The Gift Horse David Clark Donna VVagner Grace Diamond Patricia linstedt Rolfe lane jones Kitty Clinton Mrs. Ioncs Mrs. Clinton Zelda Farwell Mr. Martin Trombone Solo- The World is Waiting, or Malcolm Gummings llie Sunrise Piano Solo- To a Wild Rosen MatDoxw.ll l.ouise Taglienti Play- Miss Sydney Carton Nancy Hoag Iune Murray Gloria Moulton Beverly lott Louise Taglienti Harold Porter Gloria VVinton Malcolm Cummings junior Nl0'Ilt Class of 1948 JUNIOR NIGHT SCENES, 1947 llpper Pieture ileft to rightlz Rita Wardwell, Sally Cox, Marilyn Wyman, Lucille Poulin, Theresa Bergeron, Vehna Putnam, Dorothy King, Eva Smith, Louise Torrey Middle Picture: Robert Berry, Robert Doiron, Clifford Putnam, Olindo Luearelli, Norman Bergeron Lower Picture: Class President, Russell Wagner, dis- tributes the carnations Vocal Duet- The Uld Refrain Beverly Iott, Donna Wagner Recessional - Here They Come We Marshals-Gloria Moulton, Leslie Myers Program Director- Miss Shoemaker IUNIOR NIGHT AND IUNIOR PROM The Class of l9-18 did very hard work both its major events ol' last year. Commit members were extremely ethcient in handli details connected with both nights. Class Pr ident Russell Wagner served ex otlicio on committees keeping procedures usynchronize' The lunior Night Committee members we Chairman: Russell Wagner. Program: Rita Wardwell. Harold Porter. Motto: Louise Taglienti, Donna Wagner Music: Nancy Hoag. Martin Pineau. Tickets: Malcolm Cummings. Decorations: Orie XVellman, Gloria Moulti William Mitchell, Louise Taglienti, Don VVagner, Grace Diamond. Theresa Dube, Ri Flagg, Maxine Lake. Robert Doiron. The lunior Prom Committees were: Chairman. Russell Wagner. Music: Grace Diamond, Malcolm Cummin Program: Nancy Hoag, Martin llineau. Refreshment: Elvira Morse. lletty Stoi Marilyn VVyman. Theresa llenedetto, lune M ray, Sally Cox. The same decoration and motto connnitt acted for both events. decorating the hi school auditorium for Iunior Night and M ray Hall for the Prom. lloth events were s cessful. The Iunior Night guests saw a gr variety of class room and shop work display before and alter the performance. The Pri was well attended and, although an expens orchestra had been hired, the class was for nate enough Qby means of hard workj to avi a treasury deficit. General faculty adviser to both events v Miss Hall and Mr. Allen advised on the lin cial details. SENIOR SOCIAL SCENES AS FRESHMEN CARRY OUT SENIOR DIRECTIVES FRESHMAN RECEPTION Friday evening. Sept. 26, the class of ,48 sponsored a reception for the freshmen. Eighty freshmen were initiated into I.. F. H. S. in the presence of approximately three hundred guests. Among the events of the evening were a mock wedding, stunts, a waltzing contest and many other amusing diversions. At intermission, sweet cider and doughnuts were served to the faculty and seniors by a group of freshmen. The faculty members who attended were Mr. and Mrs. I . C. Allen, Miss Naomi Maher, Miss Sylvia Shoemaker. Mrs. Margie Brown, Mrs. Roy Turner, Miss Mabelle Hunt. Miss Mary Hall, Frederick Crouse, Alvin Chandler and Sprague Whitney. Supt. and Mrs. S. A. Grif- fin were also present. lt was a pleasure to have so many members of the alumni present for this occasion. Malcolm Cummings was General Chairman of the eventg lilvira Morse was chairman of the refreshment committee. Donna Wfagner. Martin Pineau. Clifford Putnam. Louise Tagli- enti, Russell Wagner. and Nancy Hoag made up the entertainment committee. Two artistic seniors, Angela Hughes and Robert Doiron, were on the decoration committee, assisted by Sally Cox, Ruth Flagg, and Gloria Moulton. OTHER SOCIALS Iunior Class, October 10 Refreshment Committee Margaret Riggs Entertainment Committee Meredith Monk Tickets Beverly lones Sophomore Class, November 7 Refreshment Committee Constance Rhodenizer Entertainment Committee Lorraine Pike Freshman Class, November 21 Refreshment Committee Elnora Safford lfntertainment Committee Elise Mann Tickets Alan Poland, Bernie Conant THE BAND 'ont Ilmv llvfi In 1'i1gI1II: III-1'11:11'1I IJvsI1z1i0s, Russvll WEl2.flIl'l', I'z1uI Hzxiluy, .XIZIII I'wIz1111I, Iiz1IpI1 III-11v1I1II11 N 1 xvv11 II:1II. I-11111I Iimv: Nlurim-I NI:11'vo11, I,111'1'z1im- Pikv, Louise IIIZIQIIKIIIII, .Ioycc Stvwzxrrl, Kay Rilvy. I'IX'4'Ij'II IILIVIQIIII IIINIII Is1':11-Isu11, N111'111:1 I,4-wis, Nzxthzxliv RicI1z1l'rIs, Leon Olds. 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BAND CONCICRT U11 I111111.1rx' 1fIIII 11111I .IIIIII IIN' I,lIIII.N 4xI11l1 SI,5OlI5UI'L'1I ll vc111u'1'I wI111I1 1x.1x lIIK'NL'IIIl'lI In KIM' II11gI1 5rI1u11I II.llIlI 11111I1'1' IIIK' 1I111'1l1c111 ul NIV. NIy1'1'w g111sI NIH. I'11111c'1'1. IIIL' cu11un'1'I L'lIlINiSIL'II 11I 1.1111111x 111.111I1w .IIIII xx'a1II7.0s, I1I411uI Ivy .1 'III-IIIKXKI II.llltI. NUIIQN In IIIL l1II'111n'111I1c1' CIIW QIIIIII. .1 QUYIICI kIIl.lI'IVI. II.11111v1 c11sc111I1I1', x111I111 wIm. 1111-.II wI11x .IIIII IIIIVIN 11111I ll 111111c'1Iy sIwI1'I1 1I11'ul1'1I Ivy Xlisx XI.1I111 IIIIN k'UIIL'L'I'I XXHIN .I NIILYLNN, IIVIIIIIIIQ In Q.IlII IIN' IlIII'IN IIk'k'k'NN.ll'X IMI' UIIIA IMIIIKI IIIIIIUIIIIN. Xl. XI.1111m11 141. PEP BAND MADE FIRST APPIiARANCli AT I.. lf. Il. S XI.111x' Im'11I IIILQII nI11111I I.lIIN XXL'I'L' 11Ic.1x.111lI1 NlIIAIH'I5L'lI I11' IIN' .111I1c.1r.111u' III .1 scI11111I IH-I1 II.111cI nl lI1c' Iicnlx lI1II g.lllIl' IIIIN I't'.lI. II1n' I1.1111I cu11s1sIuI uI .IINIIII IIIIVCII x1111I1-111s pI:1yc1I I1xcI1' llILII'L'IIt'N, .111cI I11'1111gI1I II11' I11I.1I ILIIIS In IIICII' ILTI XXIIVII II .Ik'LLlllIl7.lIIIL'LI IIN cI1c'c1'Iv1'1Iu1's 111 1I11'u'I111g IIIK' xII1m1I sung. .Xs ll rx 111111ms1I1IL' Im' c'w1'1 IIILIIIIIIUI' UI IIIL I11II I.. In Il, 5. I1.1l11I 111 Iwo l1lQ'NL'IlI .ll c'.1I'I1 '1'llIC ORCIIESTRA Il'OllI.'IIUXV Ill-ft to riglltb: Iivl-lyll Cullllllillgs, Brenda JUIIIIIIIQS. Zara I'ILllIl'l', Muril-l II'IZlI'L'OI.1, fI2ll'll'lIl' Fuss Iiillv IXlIll'lI, Rlllllll Ill-lllllll-itll, NOVIIIII l.l-wis, Iivl-lyll Buclilin. I i ll I' Nll l'lllll 'l'0ll ww: . 's. l-roy IIllSll'lll'i0l'l, .IOYCO St0W'2ll'II, Kay Riley, l'llll:stzllll'l' Iillllllllllixlw, I.m'l':lilll' I'ilw, I,ouisl IilLl'llUIIIl, lzllzzlllclll I'!lll'lil'l', Nzltlilllil' Rivllzllxls, Ol'i0 IVUIIIIHIII, Rohm-rt 'l'cssilll'. ill'li Row: Rlwlwrt l'ilw. Ml-l'wyll IIzlll, Russell Il0V2i2lS, Alan IIOIZIINI, I.0OII Ollls, Louis Jonos, Mzllvllllll IILIIIIIIIIIIIIS IAIIIIS l3ll:llllll-ll. Ill Al-tivltills wl- 2ll'0 sllowillg' alll of Mrs. I'ollll-l'lly's lllllsil- 3.1'l'4lllIlS. Music IS fvzltlllx-ll ill lllx ' 'I I lu Ullllllllll :ls S4'lL'lIl'1' lllltl AI2lIlIl'lII2lIIL'S wvrll ill ' W0 til! to Class. llllllll' glllllll lllQll'lll'llllA Issac' Xlycrs sclcclcll lwll llvllls l'CPI'CSCIIIL'll llll- sclllml ill Al wry COIII- lll' llllcl- ll1t'IIIlX'I'S lrlllll cglcll scftioll ol' Illc llllll lllcmlgllulc wily. ll-'ml 'U lllill' All lllf' !4l'm'5' ilu' Slmlcms sc' IIIYQIIISIDOYILIIIOII was IVIIYIIISIICII lw sulllml lwlls. .. . ,... . ' V . Y ., . 5 1. . . . , , Y ' A lultfl Hull kllllllu' lx' l'lfl 'l5,' IXQ lmqllulflm' Wllll Nllss Sllucllllllicr :ls CllLlI,1L'l'0l1C. QIIILI lay III'I l'lf m'lf- lx- Il -'l1 C'- Y l lilifllcmlj lx' fflllll- YLIIC fzlrs lll'loll3,gill3g lu Xlrs. I,OlIIK'I'Oy, Nlrs. Ihllll IIIIIIQSQ Nlxlllalllllllw. l. SICXYAIYI. lx. Rllcyg Irom- Hqll Hrs Hclrn uw Amd Phili, Hllilu, . . , . l . lmlll-s, Xl. Llllllllllllgs, ll, 5Illl'lL'YLlllI1 IIQISS, R. , , I lh.5l1-my lxlmmm.. D. l'M,0iL,: Drums' R. Illc' CYCIIIIIKLI l'ollccl'l XYIIICII wlls l1Clll LII llll' l:Um.Im.I. I HMM. R l,u.qm.g. Q-Ymlnlg ID .XFIIIOFY collslslcll lull :Ill clalllorllll' pflbgflllll lul- ISI.,N,'wn ' lllrillg IULIIILIS, OI'kilIk'SII'1lS, cllscllllvlcs. llllvls glllll solos. Miss lflllillc NIAIIIII sung Iwo lllllIIl1k'I'S. I.. If. II. S. lNIIiMBIiRS TOOK PART IN Lf' - MUSIC FIiSTIVAL MAY I7, I947 ,Xl lllls xl-rx' slllxrssllll licstimll lor gllllliliolls . .' . . RATING AT MUSIC FESTIVAL l.lxl'l'llllll'l- lxllla lllgll Sfllolll wlls l'L'lIfL'SCIIICll H Q I I I U I L. F. H. S. GETS SUPERIOR l IW my Uwlwm.-I' gulls dw club. Immpm Cn- lllk OlIIkl.Il IIIQIAQLS Ill llln nlrlollm lllllls lll . A I l-w-f-- xy -x Q- -. xl-llllllc Llllll lllrcl' slllulxls, IIIILICI' SIIPLTYISIOII ol In Null llllll IUW lmlll ll full 'mlm WIN l,mmhmY sllccts Ill Nlrs. ISIIZLIIICIII IIOIIILTOT IYIIII IK'l1OI'IS I'.1lLll c'llll'.llll upls l'L'klIlll'k'll Ill QIXL' lwll lllllll- lor 1 In lull ' lglullrlx mlm lun' ll'lrl'l'll'l'll5 ITVIS. lull' lllllll llll' Xlllllllllll l.lsl. :lllll om' nl In M lwlll I ' ll NL I ll lx llllll In l Ulmml' . A - X: ' IIIN lllvll ullllllx' lll IIllll1I1L'l' ul Slllllllll' lypcl. Ill lllh' Solos llllll lu llc lllclllllrilcll. IIOIIOXYIIIKLQ llrc llll' ltllillgs I'K'kiL'IXL'llI I'i.lIIlIIL' Xll-lwvlll llqlll, lllllalwy llcallqllcs llllll l'l,l1lllIC XILIIIII, volxll, sllpclilmrg lllllllmy licsllalics. Iflllll' XILIIIII lvl-lx' sllllllslx. pct solo. SIIIHCFIOVI II'lllIIIlL'l trio, XICFXVIII llllll, 'l4lll'l'l' XN'L'I'l' lilly I.. li. ll. 5. pupils pllrtici- llllssvll l,llx'll1ls. lilllwlw llcsllzlics, sllpcrillri girls. Ihlllllg. .Xll l'l'plll'll'll .l xx'lllllll'l'llll IIIIIC. lll llll- glcc clllln, lilvrli voiccs, sllpcrilm llrullcslrll, lllllllll lll lgllllillg X.llll.llYlL' cxlll'llil'lll'c. lllc SILIA IWCIIIyfll1I'L'L' lllclllllclm, L'XkiL'IlK'III. 0 44 3 - ,gif Q v y , ..,:, . . W Q A . -, A If 1' ,Qi YQ 55 Q 'V if 112.3 , :wg--' E. Qi . ENN :tl WK 9 53 M f 4 Q fa QU' 'Wit mr k W s 'Q I D . SEVI+IN'I'II PERIOD CHORUS lrunt Rnw 'llvft to riulitl: Vlinnit- lossvte, Ntmrinzni I'ull01', Lara I'ullci', Ropfeil Uuvllettv, l'l1ai'luttv Norton, Sum IR-ttiiiifill, Iiovcrly Mullziiiiol, 111-no tmutliivr, fic-01150 Stoi'm', Czirolyii Wortliing, Clvilcllo Munn. I -voiiil Row: Mrs. I'oiiii-my 1Iiisti'uc'toi'l, Iat,l'it'li Ilcbvrt, lllzicluliiiv I'liic0in0, Glzulys Wolmstm-i', Rulic-rt IIIIIIOVIIZZI Rnynioiiil Sinioiii-xiii, Ili-i'ti'zniil 'I'ui'int-I, Dah- Glidden, Rita Mziilli-I, Arla-iiv Roi-il. Rita I.t-toui'iwziu, Rolwrtzi Ilvi'i'yiii:iii. iiiwl Row: Wt-slvy Wliitcoinli, Mit-lieu-I Iluulilian, Robert I'ilu-, Joyce Stn-waril, Most-llv lloiivlii-i', Kzillilm-ii Nil-liols, I iliii I 9 ii ' ' i ' ' f .lirycs . -ity, .vziiicttv . I wut, Izitrick Ryilur, Iflilitli Izirlu-i', tit-orggo Ili-Imvrt. I it-la Row: Ilunailil Ki-llvy, llvoiui- Ilulw, Roilnvy I ai'i'iiigrtcni, Alain I'11lzniil, IVI:n'joi'io Ilinkloy, Ilorif: l i-i'l:niiI, Im Ulils, Ilivlisiiil Ilnoml, I.ziwi'i-Iwo I,:iI'ointv. CHORUS VVORK lit Ibcliimiz iii.inir. I'firli'ii lliitlxliii .intl lixin .Xl I., I . II. S. iliciv .irc tlircc nrliciliilctl pc- Slmlll- iimlx lui' singiiiig groups on Ifritlgiy. During i .Xriixiiy IR-i-mil 54 piiliilb im- I-nmllcil: in ilic XX7lQS'I'IQRN MAINI1: IHUSIQ Ni-it-iiili pt-i-intl 511 pupils im- rt-gist:-rt-ilg wliilc F11:S'I'IVAL. 1943 lip-' l'.'l -'l'l ., . l Hi In In MXN PUNK k mml .Xl pi't'st'iit, unc lninilrcil llllllllfx Irwin I.. I'. Il. vv-W--A- S. plgin to p4ii'Iicip4iiC in Ilic XVcslt'rii XI.iini' Xliisit' Ifcsiixiil wliirli is In lit' liclil in Ilrnns THF ORCI-IIiS'I'RA . wit-k. Xian' Slli, Ill-IH. 'Illia' llI't'lit'SII'.l li.is Ili int'inlx'i's-violins. UI-Qhcgfrl Vlml mil VIH Club whml IH' , , x t.:,i1 A v , .. ,x..i Kfoiiiiic lllimlcliizcr. llrt-nil.i Icnnings, Liirlciit' b Q , . 4 Q I I, N I , I , I I, I I T sinqill ciixciiilwlrn will lit- rqiicsciiitwl ilicic' in ww. . urinqi xwix. .cwin mics, xincr cs- . . xit-rg i'lgii'iiicIs. lmiiisc 'I'.iglicnti, Nlnricl Nlgir- rwww Hump' mn, Ifwlyii tfnininingn, l.ori'iiim' I'il4i-, llilly Lim-B-A liintli, lflivgilwlli ll.ii'Iu'r. Zim Ifnllcr: Iruinp- ASSEMBLY SINGS cis, Urn- Xllcllingin, Xlcrwin Iliill, Iliisscll l.n' illlivrt' ligixc lwcn ai turn' gisscinlily sings lliis mas, llzilpli Iic'I1a'tlL'IIU. I.t-on Oltls. Nziliilic yciir. willi Ilia' proiiiist' ul' scwriil iiiorc. Un liit'li.ii'ilsg lliiiv, .Xllcn l'ol.intl1 sgixnplmiic, ligiy Xliimliiy. Nlzircli Pltli, llit' scnior class ligiil ii sing Ililry. Iuyct- Slcnpiril, Iiulvcri Pikt-1 ft-llii, Illiyl- :intl Iriml out llicir clgisx mic Im' ilu- Iirsl linic. Ull SVHOUI. l'I,.fXX' OUR HE.iXR'l'S VVICRIC YOUNG ANI? ll.-XX ' 'wut Huw tlvft in Vifiitli David Vlzirk, lluimlml l.z1vniv, Sully Vox, Miss Mziiwi' tplziy vmiuiih, Nun Russn-ll XN2l1,1'lN'l', .Izumi iXillI'l'21y. 4-mimi Row: iXil'l'l'fiiii1 Monk, i'zli'oiyl1 llvzui, iil'1'Illi1l ,Im-iiliirigs, Gloria Nlmilimi, i!m'vriy lull. Xiilllill Tun Vwk Row: llzirwlil l'm'11-V, 'l'hmn:xs Iil'l'l'X', M4-lvin I ull1-V, ivillmill l'im':1u. r w , . lhc- I Luv Ol'R lil'ifXR'l'S VVliRl'i YOUNG .Xil ill AND GAY Swim' I: .X slimli liulri in I'.1i1x. ixuw xwviw iqilcr. A Cunivdy hy Cornclia Otis Skinner and limily Kimbrough llimmitizccl by lean Kerr Iiiivilm Miss Ngunni Xiniiri' Xwl. i7iI'l'LIUl' iiL'Xl'I'iX' lum-5 iyIUI1ilVlt'l' iillfillfll llgilulaiv i'ILllK'l'IX' XIINIICNS i,AllI'ifi.l i'i.l15I4'nil Xml. l'iulwc'i'li' xilNII'CSN .Xllgfill iiliigli1CN Shigv xiLlIl.lgl'I' Xii1.lI'iL'S i..liiI'i'L'k!llC In Clmrgc of 'fickcts XillHNi.IllL'l' fiil.lllliil'I'. NLIIIIX' fi.lX' iiui1L'l'I ilnilksli Xl.iiwl I1 mimic' iii' uxi1i'lL'xi' ul itxcitliix iiL'LllllX i5QIilbIl SX'X'rJliSlS iXn'l. I X mimi, .ulwmiml Niilli. SlllllIllk'I'. 'liiir XLHIIA. IWW, .Xxl ll Swiic I: 'lilw minus. .Xlmul ICI! 1i.xix ignrr. i..lIl' L'XL'l1lIl4LQ, Swim' ll: iliiu- anim: i'i,Lll'iX' iivxt morning. Swim' ll: 'lin' N.lIllL'. l'Ii-xi-11 ullmix, thc' nvxl I1l0I'liIIlg. Souix' lil: rliiiu mimic: .Xluml .1 llltvlllil i.ll1'l. ii XVI' Ui' iii i Xll Xliiiiifiig Sll'XX'.ll'li ii.m-iii l'min'l Xin. Sixil1lll'l' l.im' XillII.lX Xi0I'lll'ii.l Otis Sixllillfl' Silix .Xim Cfwx ifmiiy liiiiiimniggii Yann Ilimg this Skiimvr lhxiil i'l.uix l'um'r Xin-lxm lfiiiiri Sluwqirniiicw ik-xi-:ix lull Dirk Xxvil1iL'l'N liiixwil XX'.1ig1u-1 .Xilmirgil Vi-i1UIlX.lN Ilviix llqirrivt Sl. luiiii K'.umlxn llaxm XViI1iiI'k'li liixiiigii iiI'lXlMi.l ibllillligx lin Xirifxzvy i71rl1.ii4i iulxwic' il1xlWl'L'ltH' filnrm Xlmiiimi 'liiiwvsc' Xivxcwillii xifillix Xlmisiuiii' IM' i..l linux Xi.llliI1 l'1iiv.11i XX'imimx ciiL'.lIiR'I' iiiiwixim livrix xilllilllill' lfiisr Xiil7I'i.l illmiiii 'I'lIlL BANNER 51 Musical Program by l.. li. ll. S. Orchestra March-Un the Dot Cobb Overture- lntermezzo Russe Flanke Following Act I Vocal Solo--Ramona livelyn llueklin Following Act II Clarinet linsemble: Cross and Crown Carlton Colby Calway Piper lrish Air Director - Mrs. Elizabeth Pomeroy PLAY RESUME The school play, Cornelia Skinner and limily liimbrough's Our Hearts Were Young and Cay , was presented Dee. ll. The comedy was very well received by the audience. The time setting for the play was 1923. Cos- tumes from that period added to the humor of the play. The story centered around Cornelia Skinner fSally Coxj and limily Kimbrough fNancy Hoagj, who went to Paris on their vacation from school. The girls were seen safely settled on shipboard by Cornelia's father and mother fDavid Clark and lane Murrayj. The girls soon became acquainted with two llarvard medical students, Dick Winters fllus- sell VVagnerj and Leo McEvoy fDonald Lia- voiel. lfxcitement commenced when Cornelia and two young linglish ladies. Harriet St. Iohn lCarolyn lleanj and VVinifred lllaugh Qlirenda lenningsl, were interrupted by the shout, Man overboard. Cornelia at once thought of Emily who had gone on deck and was very much re- lieved when limily returned. limily was con! vinced that she had killed the man overboard hy hitting him with a deck chair: however, as it turned out, she had helped to catch a stowa- way. When the hoat docked in France, Cornelia had the measles. Dick, Leo, and limily man- aged to get her by the Health lnspector QCloria Moultonl hy covering the spots with powder. Settled in Paris. Cornelia was anxious to have Monsieur De l.a Croix, a conceited French actor fplayed by Martin Pineaul give her act- ing lessons. Hopeful of meeting Cornelia's father. a famous American actor, Monsieur De La Croix agreed. llowever, he found an ex- cuse for not giving the lessons until the last day of the girls' vacation in France. Once Cornelia and limily imagined the hath- room of their hotel room had exploded, but Madame Elise Qflloria Tardiflj and her daugh- ' ter, Therese QMeredith Monkj, cleared up the misunderstanding by explaining that the noise was in honor of llastille Day. At the end of the play a gift of pearls was presented to the play director, Miss Naomi Maher. Beverly jones, Assistant Director. Two seenes from Our Hearts Were Young and Gay showing the Paris Pension and the riotous costumes of the Twentiesf' Upper: David Clark, Jane Murray, Sally Cox, Donald Lavoie, Russell Wagner, Nancy Hoag. Lower: Nancy Hoag, Sally Cox, Martin Pineau. til! 1 2 l l .J gr Y Qs 3 2 fi .Y t A xv 5- ' x ,A N , Af 'Q W if . ww '- 1-:J Y g O U ' 'A'kswqx N W Q Q XG' MQ ka J an A W iv E' ,Q 0 I. . ,K - U- 4 i N l . , ,f . , X o Q fp Q i. 5 E 3.35535 iQ 2 2 3' NVQ :M J 6 PORT ROYAL . Q Q E ,. 3 xg ' l Q i K . f - - I QI 4:,x .tj Au iii W W fjlz A '24 .-,,i v I .av Q Tx: EMI M i 5 Qigl Mff,EQE7mm 'v Abv? Qwf 'N .Q 6f4N t Egg FYRWEQQQ I ig' ANWai3E wwww , A .. ' A i ,. ' . -W wi 3 .MU we rw mi fini? 4 . 1 -v , M, f -L ,jx A QA A CHAPTER S b 4 ' ' l UTllRE HOMEMAKERS OF AMERICA lfronl Row llefl to riglitl: June llarlow, Patricia Chicoine, Beverly Mellaniel. Claire Wilkins, Elvira Morse, Mzuleline Cliieoine, Valeria Walton, Mary Richards, Jeanette Robinson, Rita Mareeau, Rita Casev. Seeonil Row: Mrs. Ambrose llnstruetorl, Agnes Drysdale, Colleen Harrington, E nora S2lff0l'll. Rita Maillet, nor Marlin, Sue llellingill, Margaret Riggs, Roberta Berryman, Virginia Cook, Zara Fuller, Arlene Willla ltlerrow, Irene Martin. Sark Row: Mayvella Cox, Rita Doiron, Jeanette Strout, Connie Fortier, Gloria Andreii, Tlieresa Jullcl, Gromliu, Aliee Gosselin, Beatriee LaPlante, Gloria Jacques, Nancy Collins, Idis Coombs, Leah Flagix, l,2lBl't'k'l1l,lL'. THE F. H. A. relopuienl ol' leziclersliip in group gAllllCl'lllg5. 'lilie l iuure llouieuigikers ot' .Xineriea is xi Tlll' NNW' Ol ilu' l'- ll. -l-- MIQUWUVKI New uiilioii.il UI'g.llll7,LlllUll ol pupils Slllllylllg liouie- ll0V'fU'l5 - Vxllfcswg thi' llllrllmf el ilu' Ufillml' iiigikiug in iuuior Quill senior liigli seliools. .Xs fillloll-lC4'ml'll-T U' llll' lmlill' 'll efflff lllill :ui iiilegrzil pgirl ol llie program of homo U-0. llie lives ol' our lauiiilies may lie lveller lomor- iiouiies in llie liigli sl-liool, llie lf. ll. .-X. ollers WW- lillf' lf- ll- ll. S- fllillllff was lmlllul Vllrll' ,,m,m.m,m,. fm. ilu. Iunlwr ,lCWi0P,m.m Ui' ui ilie lall. ll is sitliliqileal willi llie slate Quill pupil iuiliquire in planning Quill eiirryiiig oul uailioniil organizgilion. gielirilies reliilell lo liouieiiiiiking. . A . Q I - - U .X ngilionail program ol work is clerelopell llus orggiiuznilioii lirings lOQL'IllCI' slate v . . . . , , A - 1ll1Illl1lllY :ll llie Nuliongil i,oiirenlion. Slzile groups iulereslell in Quill working loirairll lmel- N ' , , I I V A A Llia il'rq ii ' 1 la BI lx yi 'xl ' x ' ' ler lioine luiil Iluiiily living Quill sponsors group l K 8 'll l li l 'N tlF31U 'm m lull dull proieels, loegil, sliile. Quill uiilioiigil in scope. 'lllic 'Null HHS was Ill' Will' 'll Wlllfll our llmilmlll lf. ll. .X. iueregises Ullll0fIlllllIlL'S for llie lle- ol' work ill l.. lf. ll. S. was liorincnl ll1l5 Will' l'llea - Rvexl, Irene Ruth il 'Illli H,XNNlmR OFFICERS -- COMMERCIAL CLUB Front Row tleft to rigrhtl: Paul Holt. Rita Wartlwell, Donna Wagner. St-eontl Row: lVlari:a1'et Riggs, Theresa Richards. THE COMMERCIAL CLUB During the Christmas season Christmas The lirst meeting ol' the Commercial Clulw cards were sold hy all memlwers ol' the cluh. lor I9-l7-48 was held Septemher ll. W47. Mrs. l7ive-hundred pencils were ordered and sold Margie lirown acted as supervisor. Utlicers to students ol the school. These pencils were were elected: President. Rita VVardwell1 Vice- green with the words Livermore lfalls lligh l'resideut. Paul Holt, lr.: Secretary. llonna School , inscrihed in white on them. XVaguer: and Treasurer. Margaret Riggs. A Throughout the school year candy liars and working committee was elected: Theresa potato chips were sold at noon. Richards. chairman: helpers. Norman l.aver- --- diere. Norman Paradis, Lawrence Letourneau. ANDIES' BULLETIN Theresa lluhe. l.aurette l.averdiere. l.ucille .Xlter an ahsence ol' one year the pulilication l'ouliu. Celine l'aradis. Theresa Cioupil. lean- ol' a mimeographed school paper was resumed. nine llesiardins. Margaret Riggs. Nlatlelyn The original title. 'l'ell-.'X-Tale . was changed Chappell. Margaret Cram. lilvira Morse. liar- to .Xndies' liulletinf' The commercial depart, lwara Dewar. Theresa Benedetto, and Marilyn ment has puhlished live issues ol' the paper and Vllyman. it has heen well received each month. many copies having heen sold. Commercial Club Funds Increasing Linder the supervision ol' Theresa Richards. Electric Mimeograph Machine Purchased the Commercial Cluh made a success ol selling Through the ellorts ot' the Commercial De- hotsdogs. potato chips. candy. cakes. and hot partinent. the school was alile to ohtain a new collee .tt lioothall games. electric mimeograph machine which has lseen 11111'11'1111w:A 111.1-1'1's:1 111-111-11111111, 1.1'111'1- 1J1z1111111111. 111111111 1,211'1it'l', 1'z111'i1'1z1 1'I11s11-111, N1z1xi11v 1.:1111'. 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N111- K'1111'1, 1.11111x1' '1'.1g111'1111: .Xss'1. 1'f11i11111-111-1fI111'1. 111111 NY11111111, Y1'111111 1lll1l1A1ll1. '14111'1'1's41 1711111'. 11411111111 111'.1111 1 .x1'11.111g1' 1'1.1111111', N41111'y 1111113111 ,1'111'1'1'sg1 1l11'11411'11N. '1411CYL'S1l 111'11C11cII11, 411111 1101, 1111s1111'ss x1.l11.l1,1L'l'. N1.11Ag111'1'1 lilggs. .Xss'1. 111lS1- 1'1'1y 11111. 11058 N1.111.1g1'1'. c11'1lL'k' 1J1.1111111111g 111111111111' Nlilll 1111111141 NV11g111'1' 5111. l I i'1'1'.-X1 1 f ANIJIICS' 1l111.1.1'I'1'1N 1 1'11111 111lXY 111111 111 l'l'L'1111I 1lL'111l'l1 l'L11'111y11 131-1111, 1,11uis11 '1'z1u'1i1111i, Nzmcy 111::1Q, T111-1'1-sax R11-11111'11s. 1'111111 1i111v: Mrs. 1S1'11w11 11I1S11'Lll'111l'1. N111'111z111 1,z1v1-1'11i1'1'1-, 1111111111 Wz1u'111-1', 11111111 1'11u1i11 Y2l1t'I'121 W1111111 1 111 1'11111- 1,111'1-1'11i111'11, N1z11'g':11'111 liiggs, 1.111111 1'111lQ1.l', 11ov111'1y 11111 1stz11111i11g' 111 1111- 111i1111'11g'1'11p11 111z11'11i111'1, .11-1111 RUl11r1S11I1. YN111'111z111 1':11'z1111s. 11. 1'Z1l11 111111 .I1z, 1'l11i1'1- Wilkins. 4 , .1 , . . IN:1111:1I11- 1i11'11:11'11s, .'X11g'1-1:1 11L1gL'111'S, X1-111111 1'u111:1111, 1112l.l'11j'l1 Wy1111111. '1'11111'1-an 17u1111. Q 1111 UU 3i, ,.i,G f I Y ..,:,. ina? x N .:E1 , 12 QQ 4 Q' QQ Xe Q G .wwf B .X :E1 Wx: -.:,fgp:,, :run-5: 1 Q 5 , Q 'Ni' an SCHODL OTES ADDITIONAL EX-VETS WILL GRADUATE IN '48 Robert Boucher Norman Coates Walter Clark VVinston Coombs OUR ALUMNI TEACHERS L. F. I-I. S. Graduates Who Teach Exceed the Number of Teachers Employed by the Town of Livermore Falls A prominent high school principal in a Cen- tral Maine city nearby said recently that, dur- ing his ten-year principalship in that city, he had graduated about 2000 students, of this number only two had professed an interest in teaching during their high school days and those two students had finally chosen other professions. Since Education rates as a primary public service, probably second to none in importance, l.. F. 1-1. S. can be very proud of its long roster of graduates who have entered the held of pub- lic school work, or who teach in institutions of higher learning. This list includes only alumni who have taught in the past year Q1947-81. Any omis- sions are unintentional. A fairly careful check was made of Alumni records at the school, so it is believed the list is moderately accurate. The column was prepared with the assistance of Miss Naomi Maher, Mrs. Elizabeth Gritiin, Miss Edith C. Chaney ta former instructor at l.. F. H. SJ, and other townspeople. i If ll 3 Dr. loseph Chandler, '05, has taught about twenty years at Hahneman College, Philadel- phia, Pa. A Phi lleta Kappa from Colby in 1909, he entered Iohns Hopkins University for further study, receiving his doctorate in 1912 when twenty-three years old. Dr. Chandler's Field is chemistry. He teaches and is engaged in research. Florence Hinds, '06, teaches the third grade in Washington School, Beverly, Mass. Daisy Keene, '06, teaches sub-primary grade in Norwalk, Conn. Dr. Leland Wyman, '14, teaches at Boston University Medical School. He has been en- gaged in medical research work at the same institution since his graduation from Harvard Medical School. He is the author of several authoritative books on tribes of western lndi- ans and is listed in Who's Who. Ransom Garrett, '16, is head of the Hartford QConn.l High School Science Department. Arthur Clark, '11, is Head of the Science Department at Commercial High School, New Haven, Conn. Prof. Fred Loring, '12, is assistant to the Dean of the College of Agriculture, University of Maine. He is Director of the Short Courses and teaches some of the agricultural short courses. Vera fDrisco11j Varney, '17, teaches in the Commercial Department, Cony High School, Augusta, Maine. Professor H. Vassar Iones, '17, is Head of the Department of Education, Teachers' Col- lege, New Haven, Conn. Ella Morrison, '17, is a primary school teacher at Livermore Falls. Urban Chase, '18, is principal of Weehawken High School, Weehawken, N. I. He has been for some time a member of the State Certifica- tion Board of New Iersey. This board includes a college president, a teacher's college presi- dent, a school superintendent, Z1 high school, a grammar school and a primary school princi- pal. Mr. Chase is the chosen representative of the high school group. Mr. Chase's mother, Mrs. Gertrude Chase, was for years the very able grammar school principal at Livermore Falls. Norman Kelley, '18, a graduate of the Uni- versity of Maine, is Head of the Science De- partment at Waterville High School. Mrs. Sally fHindsj Knowlen, '20, substitutes at Mechanic Falls High School where her hus- band is principal. lsabel Israelson, '20, is a physiotherapist in N. Y. C. public schools. Clyde Manny '20, is principal at Dixfield High School. Fay Gordon, '22, teaches in Brunswick tMainej High School. 58 THE BANNER Waitie Gordon, '22, teaches music in the Chicago schools. Kathleen Poland, '22, is teaching at Stephens High School, Rumford, Maine. Dr. Weston Sewall, '23, is in charge of ob- stetrics at Boston Lying-In Hospital. In this position he trains many young internes who study at the hospital. He is an Instructor in Obstetrics at Harvard Medical School. Mrs. Hazel fEmersonj Hall and Mrs. Althea fMoultonj Kinch fboth '25j teach in the Iewell St. Grammar School, Chisholm, Maine. Vincent Connors teaches manual training at Lewiston High School. Mrs. Margie QPettingillj Chase, '26, teaches in the Livermore Falls Primary School. Geraldine Allen, '26, teaches a primary grade at South Portland, Maine. Elizabeth Rand, '26, is principal of the Nursery Department of the Park Street School QPrivateQ, Brookline, Mass. The school has nursery, primary and grammar departments. Miss Rand has a corps of assistants and teach- ers. Practice teachers are sent to this school from Wellesley College. Dr. Donald E. Strout, '26, is Associate Pro- fessor of Library Education at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. Dr. Strout earned his Ph. D. some years ago. Willard Perry, '27, teaches Manual Training in Manchester fConn.Q Trade School. Dannie Alvino, '28, is teacher-coach at San- ford High School, Sanford, Maine. Stephen Drottar, '28, is principal at Fort Kent High School, Fort Kent, Maine. Louise Marr, '28, teaches at the Industrial School for Crippled Children, Boston, Mass. Cecil Carter, '29, is Music Supervisor at Portsmouth, N. H. Alma fHindsj Chase, '29, is employed as a primary teacher at Cape Elizabeth, Maine. Mrs. Gwendolyn fMannj Littlehale, '29, teaches in the Riverside Grammar School, Liv- ermore, Maine. Mrs. Mary QMaxwellj Bate, '29, is a substitute teacher in the grades at Livermore Falls. She tutors grade students of Livermore and Liver- more Falls. Monroe Bean, '30, is Manual Training In- structor at Wells High School, Wells, Maine. Robert Butler, '30, teaches Latin at Newark Academy, Newark, N. I. Anna Derby, '30, is employed in the sub- primary grade, Livermore Falls. Mrs. Doris QMarrj McSorley, '30, is in junior H. S., Southington, Conn. During the war she replaced her husband as head of the Man- ual Training Department at this school and was once offered the position of principal of her school. Alice Perry, '30, teaches at Hickox Secreta- rial School, Boston, Mass. Margaret Kinley, '33, teaches English at Lex- ington High School, Mass. Frank Record, '34, while studying for his Doctor of Science Degree at Mass. Institute of Technology, is an instructor in Meteorology there. The subject of his thesis is Meteorology. Elwood Allen, '37, is principal at Rangeley H. S. g Fred Bean, '37, teaches Manual Training at Brewer High School, this year having moved into a completely new and modern shop. Cloyd Brown, '37, is enrolled at Brown Uni- versity, gives private vocal lessons in Provi- dence, R. I. Maynard French, '38, is a part-time In- structor in Drama at Cleveland College, Ohio. His father, the late Gardiner A. French, served Livermore Falls as school committeeman for eleven years. His grandmother, the late Mrs. Georgiana French, was an extremely able teacher at L. F. H. S. Harold Rhodenizer, '38, is a teacher-coach at L. F. H. S. Ronald Corkum, '39, is athletic coach at Stratton High School. He teaches in gram- mar school there. Next year he plans to get his Master's Degree at Springfield College, Mass. Mrs. Avis fHalll Barron, '39, teaches at the Haines Corner School. lean Gilbert, '40, teaches English in the high school at Whitman, Mass.. Martha Lufkin, '40, teaches history at the L. F. Grammar School. Clifford Tinkham. '40, teaches history at Bridgton High School. Iean Rhodenizer, '42, is English instructor at Cape Elizabeth High School. THE BANNER 59 Lorraine Webster, '42, is teaching at Fayette Corner. Patricia Brown and Iacqueleen ,QMitchellj Luciano Qboth '-15D teach at Fayette Mills and Campground Schools, respectively. Donald Parker, '47, attended summer school at F. S. T. C. He is teaching this year at-Whit- tier School, Skowhegan, Maine. NEW TEACHERS Harold Rhodenizer, coach of last year's State Championship prep-school basketball team Qrepresenting Coburn Classical Institutej, was elected teacher-coach at Livermore Falls High School to replace Mr. Sullivan. Besides coach- ing the championship basketball team, Rhoden- izer assisted in coaching baseball and football at Coburn. During the war he coached bas- ketball while in the Canadian Air Force. At Colby, Rhodenizer was a football letter-man with four years of college gridiron experience. He won his letter consistently at L. F. H. S. in the three major sports. Salutatorian of his class at the local high school, Rhodenizer was grad- uated from Colby in 1942 as one of the high- ranking students, a Phi Beta Kappa man. Mrs. Phyllis Smith Ambrose, a graduate of the University of Maine in the class of 1946, replaced Miss Given as Home Economics teacher at Livermore Falls High School this year. ln 1947 Mrs. Ambrose had completed a successful year of teaching Vocational Home Economics at Rockland High School previous to her coming to Livermore Falls High School. Honors 2 MAYNARD FRENCH, '38, STARTS SUCCESSFUL CAREER IN DRAMA Maynard French, '38, earned his M.A. at Western Reserve University in Iune '47. A graduate of U. of M. he had been awarded a scholarship for graduate study at W. R. U. in the spring of his senior year at Maine in 1942. The army delayed continued study, but did not wholly curtail dramatic work as he acted and directed at Rollins College in Winter Park fad- joining Orlando where he was stationedjg he also did theatrical work from time to time with various Army groups. Mr. French enrolled in graduate work at W. R. U. after army discharge in the fall ol' 1946. During the year he worked on all six of the regular productions at the University in some capacity or other with the usual amount of graduate class work. ln the summer of 1947 he joined the newly formed Camden Hills Theatre for the season. This group produced one play each week. Throughout the summer three shows were in rehearsal at the same time. Mr. French played the lead roles in The- Man Who Came to Dinner and in The Importance of Being Earnest. He acted as assistant di- rector for Hamlet. He had earned in 1947 a continuing scholar- ship at W. R. U. and returned there in Sep- tember for more graduate work. Mr. French signed a contract to teach Cpart-timej at Cleve- land College fa subsidiary of Western Reservej. He. teaches a course in Stagecraft and is De- signer-Technical Director for the Drama De- partment. At Reserve last fall f1947j he did the lead in Gogol's The Inspector General and is at present assistant director for a production of Shaw's The Devil's Disciple. To complete the season he will direct a production of Sher- wood's The Petrified Forest at Cleveland Col- lege. The work of the Camden players during the 1947 season was featured in the August 16th Ql947j issue of the Saturday Evening Iournal. l1 ELIZABETH IONES, '30, IN SOMERVILLE LAW FIRM Announcements have been received of the formation of a new legal Firm, Kingston, Coffin, and Iones, at Somerville, Mass. The third member is Miss Elizabeth M. Iones, daughter of Mrs. Harry Hurd. She is a grad- uate from Livermore Falls High School in 1930, Bliss Business College, Lewiston, 1935, Portia Law School, Boston, 1938, with an LL.D. Miss Iones was admitted to Massachusetts State Bar in 1940. LOUISE FOURNIER, '44, DESIGNER AND BOOK ILLUSTRATOR Louise F. Fournier, '44, studied in Boston at the Modern School of Fashion and Design. She has done various types of designing and commercial art work, and is now doing fashion drawing and copy-writing. She is in charge ol' advertising with the Barbelle Company, a 00 THE BANNER fashionable Boston Shop. Louise has just com- pleted illustrating a teen-age book, which came off the press in early 1948. The book, Tips For Tens , is written by Eleanor Williams, regular daily columnist for the Boston Herald. The book may be purchased at department store book stalls and at book stores in Boston. It was prominently advertised by R. H. White Co. in Boston newspapers recently. DAVID LAURENT David Laurent fCloyd Brown, '37j sings with the Brown University Glee Club as its featured soloist. On March 20, 1948, the Brown and Pembroke Glee Clubs gave their first Boston Concert at Iordan Hall, a concert auditorium available only to musical perform- ance of the highest type. The Boston Herald Music critic wrote, The concert audience was understandably enthusiastic. VERNON IORDAN ACCEPTS PASTORATE AT NORTH WALDO- BORO NAZARENE CHURCH Vernon lordan, '39, who was awarded his Master's Degree with Dean's List honors at Harvard last Iune has recently accepted a parish assignment to North Waldoboro, Maine. IK it ll Robert Dow, '27, was appointed this year Assistant Commissioner of the State Sea Bt Shore Fisheries. 1 K ll Dr. Philip Pratt, '37, is on the staff of the Trudeau Sanitarium, N. Y. As Resident Pathologist he is engaged in research at the institution. X ll' If Arthur Parker, '27, is president of the Park- ley Coating Company in Chelmsford, Mass. Ill 'lt IF lohn Anderson, '38, has recently been pro- moted to Assistant Project Engineer at Wright- Aeronautical, NVoodbridge, N. I. U. OF M. HONORS PHI BETA KAPPA KEY AWARDED VAUGHN STURTEVANT ln Iune '47 Vaughn Sturtevant graduated with distinction from the College of Arts and Sciences. He received a B.A. Degree in Psy- chology. A Phi Beta Kappa recipient, Sturte- vant will enter Harvard Medical School soon. U. OF M. DEAN'S LIST SPRING SEMESTER AND SUMMER SEASON- 1947 Recipients of high rank honors in 1947 were Oscar Anderson, '45, Francis Bailey, '43, Rich- ard Bate, '38, Vaughn Sturtevant, '40. DEAN'S LIST-1948 William Thompson, L. F. H. S. Valedicto- rian in 1947, won Dean's List Honors at the Brunswick annex of the U. of M. the first semester of his freshman year. On the Orono campus the following students were granted Dean's List ratings for the spring semester: Oscar Anderson, '45, Francis Bailey, '43, Rich- ard Bate, '38, William Brown, '40, Paul Dobosz, '45, Shirley Dobosz, '43, Robert Four- nier, '46, and Vaughn Sturtevant, '40. ERNA BAMFORD, '47, WINS U. OF M. SCHOLARSHIP Erna Bamford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bamford, Livermore Falls, was one of the four students in the College of Agricul- ture, University of Maine, who were awarded scholarships of 15100 each made available by Radio Station WGUY, Bangor. These scholarships are awarded annually to 4-H club members or former members on the basis of character, scholarship and qualities of leadership. Miss Bamford was a member of the Tanta- ma-heag 4-H club for six years and completed 16 standard club projects. She was county champion in the canning projects four years. She was a delegate to the Eastern States 4-H Club at Camp Vail, Springfield, Mass., Sept. 1947, and was also a delegate from Maine to the National 4-H Club Congress in Chicago last December. She is majoring in home economics which is the subject she intends to teach. She belongs to the Home Economics Club and Square Dance Club at the University. RICHARD LOVAAS, '45 IN MAINE MASQUE PLAY The Maine Masque Theater presented An- gel Street in December of last year with THE BANNER 61 Richard Lovaas, '45. as co-star. Lovaas is also treasurer of the U. of M. Chapter of Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity. PAUL DOBOSZ, '45, IN U. OF M. PHOTO EXHIBIT The art gallery of the University of Maine showed during February an exhibition of 60 photographs taken by members of the Univer- sity of Maine Photo Club, of which Dr. Ken- neth Miles is president. This is an annual ex- hibition of the club, whose members are in- creasing each year. Among those exhibiting was Paul I. Dobosz, Livermore Falls. COLBY COLLEGE SEMESTER HONORS - 1948 Our entire Colby College contingent of 1947 was awarded place on the Dean's list in the '48 season. The students are: Philip Bailey, Iames Reynolds and Arnold Sturtevant. Reynolds won the Bausch and Lomb Hon- orary Science Award Medal at L. F. H. S. Commencement for achieving the highest scholastic record in science subjects during his high school course. The Colby Freshman Class has a total of 33 students with Dean's List honors. lt is inter- esting .to note that the three L. F. H. S. stu- dents furnished one eleventh of the total, i.e. slightly over 995 of the honors reside in one town, Livermore Falls. PHILIP BAILEY WINS WADSWORTH SCHOLARSHIP Philip Bailey, '47, enrolled at Colby College, was awarded the Wadsworth Scholarship for the current year. The scholarship, available to a student from the Winthrop, or Livermore Falls area, was established by the late Herbert E. Wadsworth, a native of Moose Hill, who was an outstanding figure in Maine industrial and financial circles and a long time Trustee of Colby College that benelitted substantially by the terms of his will. COLBY BAND Playing in the Colby College Band of 35 members directed by Dr. Ermanno Comparetti are Beverly Bailey, L. F. H. S. '44, and Arnold Sturtevant, '47. This is the best balanced group I have ever had, stated Dr. Comparetti to a campus editor. Both Miss Bailey and Mr. Sturtevant are former L. F. H. S. Orchestra members and Sturtevant was a member of the L. F. H. S. Band last year. HENRY FOURNIER, '43, ON DEAN'S LIST AT M.I.T. Since his transfer from U. of M. to M.1.T. QCollege of Architecturej, Henry Fournier has been consistently enrolled on the Dean's List Q three semestersj. KENNETH HOLT, '47, WINS BATES SCHOLARSHIP Bates College has awarded to Kenneth Holt, L. F. H. S. Salutatorian of the Class of '47, a College Scholarship which is granted on the basis of scholarship and character. GLEN PARTRIDGE MEMBER OF FIRST NATIONAL FFA BAND Selected as the only representative from Maine, Glen Partridge, '47, played in the First National F.F.A. Band ever to be assembled. This band was made up of 115 players from the United States, as well as Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Partridge was the only repre- sentative from Maine and received a free trip to the National F.F.A. convention in Kansas City, Mo. The convention was held in Octo- ber, 1947, and the band played for many of its functions. Mrs. Elizabeth Pomeroy received from Henry S. Brunner, director of the National F.F.A. Band, the following letter: By this time you have probably had a report on the work and the activities of the National F.F.A. Band at Kansas City. lf we may judge from the many favorable comments received at Kan- sas City and by mail since that time, the band was successful. My own judgment of the suc- cess or value of the project, however, would always depend largely upon the expressions and the reactions of the boys themselves. 1 am writing this note to thank you for your help in selecting and preparing the boys. Whether the preparation was specihcally for the occasion or not, the credit for the fact that 115 boys could come together and work together 02 THE BANNER satisfactorily belongs to you-their teachers in the 115 schools. No one knows that better than I, and on behalf of the national organiza- tion of Future Farmers of America, I thank you. Glen was a former pupil of Mrs. Pomeroy and was recommended by her. MISS ELAINE MANN, '47, ON B. U. GLEE CLUB TOUR Miss Elaine Mann, Boston University, is one of those who was selected to go on the Univer- sity Glee Club Tour. The tour started March 19, at Williamstown, Mass., and went from there to Winchester, N. H., Brattleboro, Vt., Springfield, Vt., Claremont, N. H., St. Iohns- bury, Vt., Newport Maine, and ending at Bangor, Maine, March 24. Miss Mann is taking the course in Music Education at the University. She is a member of the Boston University Chorus, the Girls' Glee Club, and the B. U. Light Opera Asso- ciation. While in high school she was often heard as a Qloist as well as the private pupil of Mrs. Elizabeth Pomeroy in voice and piano. She received a gold school music pin for four years of active service as a violinist in the high school orchestra. TWIN COUNTY 4-H ANNUAL EXHIBITION AWARDS EARNED BY ERNA BAMFORD L. F. H. S. '47 The canning award given by the Hazel At- las Company was bestowed upon Erna Bamford in the 1947 County Contest. Erna was the sen- ior blue ribbon winner. She received senior blue ribbon awards in canning and sewing, and was also senior division winner of the 1947 style dress revue for 4-H Club girls. There were nine contestants, each required to make and model a slip and a dress. LIVERMORE FALLS GIRL HAS ENVIABLE 4-H RECORD Qltem from Lewiston Sunj Erna Bamford, president of the 4-H Club, of Livermore Falls has won many honors in 4-H work since she started five years ago, complet- ing 16 projects. Miss Bamford was county winner in the 4-H Style Dress Revue in Twin Counties April 26, 1947, competing against 38 other girls in the counties. Having won this honor she will com- pete at the University of Maine, Iune 26, in the State Contest. She was formerly assistant leader of the Tanta-ma-heag girls' 4-H club until it was merged with the boys' club and then became president of that organization. Miss Bamford was high scoring senior in Twin Counties in canning in 1944, 1945, and 1946. She won red ribbons in 1944 and 1945 and a blue ribbon in 1946 in Style Dress Re- vues. She qualified for the Dairy Foods Tourna- ment at Orono in 1945 and 1946, and gave demonstrations on Ice Cream for Health and Sandwich Lunch Loaf , winning blue ribbons both years. Miss Bamford was high scoring senior in room improvements in Twin Counties in 1946, and won county awards in canning and cook- ing and housekeeping in 1947. Projects which she has completed include Beans, Garden, Canning, Sewing, Cooking and Housekeeping, and Room Improvement. STATE HONORS AT ORONO 4-H CONTEST Erna Bamford was one of the state's dele- gates to the 1947 Club Congress as a reward for having the highest rating state record in the National 4-H Canning activity during the year. Her trip award is provided by the Kerr Glass Corp. During six years in club work she canned 2,270 jars of vegetables, meats, fruits, jams and jellies. She won many placings on her canning exhibits, including the county championship in individual canning for the last three years. Erna has completed 18 4-H pro- jects. LIVERMORE FALLS HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES CONTINUE EDUCATION From the Class of 1947 Philip Bailey, Iames Reynolds and Arnold Sturtevant entered Colby College in the fall of 1947. Erna Bamford, Arthur Chase, Priscilla Sturtevant, and William 'l' ll li l is at -we .qs . vf'N'v . ZANNIL R 03 Thompson are in attendance at the University of Maine. Kenneth Holt is at Bates College: lidward Cloutier and Elaine Mann at Boston University: Thomas Mclienney at Tufts Col- lege. The following entered Farmington State Teachers College: Bertrand Dumais, Norman Flagg, Merriman Foster, Harold Newcomb. lrma Bean and Mary Hoag are training at the C.M.G. Hospital. Arlene Botka is at the Auburn Maine School of Com- merce: Robert Chandler at Gorham Teachers College: Betty Ann Kinch at Washington State Normal School. Dorothy Hall, Doris Rich, and Anita NVhite have been at liastcrn Nazarene College. Dorothy Hall transferred to the C.M.G. Training School at mid-year. Maurice Fournier is in attendance at Worces- ter Academyg Harry Holt at Bentley School of Accounting: Paul Letourneau at Maine Maritime Academy. Margaret Scarci is at the Fisher Secretarial School in Boston. at as fu- From earlier classes Stuart Bailcy, '45, is con- tinuing his sttldies at Wentworth lnstitute, Robert Beaulieu, '43, is at the Milwaukee School of lingincering: Beverly Bailey, '44, is completing her senior year at Colby College: Iames Riordan, '41, and VVoodrow Rose, '27, are at Boston University. The following are at the University of Maine: Richard Bate, '42, l.eslie Botlta, '33, Theodore Constantine, '38, Phillip Mollicone, '42, Vaughn Sturtcvant, '40, Harold Gilbert, '4l, Shelton White, '43, Orren Hurd, '33, Oscar Anderson, '45, Donald Ander- son, '46, Donald Kennedy, '46, Robert Four- nier, '46, Richard' Packard, '45, Paul Dohosz. '45, Shirley Dobosz, '43, David Gritiin, '43, Richard Tardy, '44, Paul Lees, '43, Howard Bamford, '44, Richard Lovaas, '45, Francis Bailey. '43, lohn Taglienti, lr., '43, William Brown, '40, and VVillie lacques, '42, lfdward MINIATURE HOUSE As a part of the Home Improvement and Home Furnishing unit of Home Economics, a miniature house that can be taken apart is used to give the girls practical experience in interior decorating and furniture arrange- ment. By the use of this house the girls can see how different color schemes harmonize and how furniture can be arranged to best advan- tage for convenience and comfort. The illustration shows the house when assembled and when separated into the iirst and second floors. 114 Tllli BANNER l F. F. A. CAMPING TRIP AT MT. KINEO CAMPS, MOOSEHEAD LAKE Boys preparing a meal: Arthur Nichols, Ronald Burhoe, Ronald Jacques. Lower Picture: INTERIOR VIEW OF BINGHAM DAM Mr. Crouse talking to Philip Lyman. Botka, '42, Kenneth Dumais, '44, and Linwood White, '46, are at Gorham Teachers College. Wallace Whittemore, '41, is at DeForest's Training School, Chicago. I-lannorah Dysart, '45, is at Farmington State Teachers College. Henry Fournier, '43, and Frank Record, '34, are at Massachusetts lnstitute of Technology. Norman lordan, '37, is at Bates Collegeg Nor- man Tessier, '41, is at the Bentley School of Accounting. Elbert Pratt, '35, is working for his Master's Degree at Columbia University. Cloyd Brown, '37, is at Brown University. Francis Pakulski, '44, is attending the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania. Patricia Packard, '45, CR.N.l is a junior at Washburn University, Topeka, Kansas. MUSIC CLUB The Sophomore College English Class formed a Music Club early last fall. The pur- pose of the club is to develop listening, to learn proper ballroom manners, and to try to under- stand the background of operas and their music. The OHSICCTS were elected as follows: President ..,,.,..., ..., , ,.,, , Russell Lovaas Vice President ,. Bernard Deshaies Secretary ..,.,.... . Carlene Foss Treasurer , . ,. .. , , . Donald l.avoie Faculty Adviser . ,. . .. , Miss Maher Regular weekly meetings are held on Thurs- day after school. in Miss Maher's room. MUSIC CLUB ASSEMBLY Friday afternoon, March l9th. the Music Club, composed of a group of Sophomores in Miss Maher's English class, conducted an assem- bly program in which students in other classes ioined. Donald l.avoie, '50, was chairman. THE BANNER 65 Sally Ann Cox spoke of her experiences at the Bishop-Lee Scholarship contest. Grace Diamond and Louise Taglienti spoke on the subject The Debt of the Modern World to Ancient Greece. These speakers were origi- nally prepared for the speaking contest of the Knights of Pythias. Then followed a musical quiz number, the purpose being to find out whether the teachers or the students at L. F. I-I. S. are more familiar with music frequently heard on the radio and elsewhere. Parts of records were played by jean Strout Qbackstagej and the chairman asked the eight contestants to identify the rec- ords. The contestants were: Patrick Ryder, representing the freshmen, Phyllis DeBow, the sophomores, jane Murray, the juniors, and Malcolm Cummings, the seniors. The repre- sentatives of the faculty were Miss Shoemaker, Coach Rhodenizer, Mr. Crouse, and Mr. Whit- ney. The students won I3-11. Following this quiz was an original one-act play, Homework U, written by Kay Riley, '50. The characters were jean Strout, '50, Donald Lavoie, '50, and Norman jacques, '51. Russell Wagner, '48, announced the plans for a Spring Festival , to be held the latter part of this spring. Mr. Allen closed the assembly with the an- nouncement of the ranks of senior honor stu- dents throughout the four years. CLARINET ENSEMBLE The Clarinet Ensemble was organized in the fall term, holding two rehearsals on each Thursday in order to serve the eight students engaged. The ensemble members were regular orchestra students and had received much in- dividual instruction from Mrs. Pomeroy before the ensemble was formed. This group of musicians furnished two num- bers at Murray Hall on the school play pro- gram. STRING ENSEMBLE At the beginning of the year 1948 the clarinet ensemble was discontinued and a string ensem- ble started, rehearsals occur on the same day and during the same periods as for the former group. if The following students are enrolled for this special training: Connie Rhodenizer, Brenda jennings, Carlene Foss, Norma Lewis, Louis jones, Robert Tessier Qall of whom play vio- linsj and Patricia DeBow who plays the cello. Two eighth grade violinists have been invited to participate in the group and play regularly. joan Sturtevant and Anta Cummings are cap- able performers in the ensemble. IUNIOR RED CROSS ASSEMBLY AND FUND ESTABLISHED A special assembly was held on March 3rd at which Mrs. Stella Dakin, the head of the junior Red Cross for Maine, New Hampshire, and Connecticut, spoke of junior Red Cross activities. Mrs. Dakin showed an interesting film about the junior Red Cross and a film strip portraying some of the needy European children who receive gifts from the U. S. A. Nearly thirty dollars was raised in the next few days for the organization and most students enrolled as members of the junior Red Cross in their home rooms. Mrs. Althea Turner sponsored this program and is adviser to the school junior Red Cross unit. DRAMATIC CLUB FORMED The first meeting of the newly formed Dra- matic Club was held Wednesday, March 10, in Miss Maher's room. The club is comprised of students who have had a part in the school play or a publicly pre- sented one-act play. The following students are charter members: Beverly jones, Beverly Iott, Thomas Berry, Nancy Hoag, june Murray, jane Murray, Donna Wagner, Gloria Moulton, Russell Wagner, Sally Cox, David Clark, An- gela Hughes, Harold Porter, Patricia Enstedt, Barbara Babbie, Brenda jennings, Gloria Tar- dif, Meredith Monk, Melvin Fuller, and Charles Labrecque. The club held its second meeting activity period, Monday morning, March 15. Sally Cox, '48, gave an enjoyable talk on her trip to Boston where she won a competitive scholar- ship to the Bishop-Lee School of the Theatre. The speaker described the school and gave an account of the contest and the participants. NEW PROIECTOR AT L. F. I-I. S. SHOWS EDUCATIONAL PICTURES The Bell Sz Howell 16 millimeter Filmo- sound projector, ordered in june, 1947, arrived in September. The cost of the projector, just 06 TI-IE BANNER under six hundred dollars, was paid from the School Fund. Movies have been a part of assembly programs, as well as of class instruc- tion. Both educational and entertaining films have been purchased from the School Fund for between two hundred and three hundred dollars this year. Some films we have seen are Aida , The Care of New Born Baby N, The Child Grows Up , O'er the Ramparts We Watch , Football Parade , Take a Letter , Basic Typing , Essential Wood Turning , lose lturbi . BANNER STAFF 1948 The first week in Ianuary Banner Board eler- tions were held. Work on advertising started at once. The corps of advertising assistants from the Iunior and Senior Classes started im- mediately to cover the business streets of the village. This work was done almost wholly outside school hours and was nearly completed in two weeks. As the yearbook plans seemed to involve greater expense than usual, more advertising revenue was sought in surrounding towns. Three students covered Wilton in a day, five students spent a day in Farmington, seven stu- dents went to Lewiston-Auburn, Only four students spent more than a day out of school in advertising work, two because they were drivers of the only available cars. ln February a car was sent to Winthrop and Augusta, to pave the way for larger future advertising. These students all reported pleasant contacts with the public. In Ianuary the group pictures were com- pleted. A representative of the Warren K. Van- tine Studio, Boston, spent an entire day and part of an afternoon at L. F. H. S. doing all the organized groups fin formal settingj, and a series of class room candids that had been suggested by the teachers. The photography was carefully organized so the photographer could work with speed. The scheduled groups were kept Howing into the auditorium and class rooms when needed, with a minimum of confusion and disruption of the regular sched- ule of classes. The Senior Class President, the Editor and Business Managers were in charge of the picture schedule and the staff of student monitors and messengers. The column editors worked under the several faculty advisers, and the text material was typed, corrected, and retyped by the appointed typists. Picture text was written in one day by editors and students. It was typed on the second day and reached the printer the third day after en- graver's copy was received at the high school. Sales will be handled through home-room organization, the editor and business managers being responsible for distributing and tabulat- ing the sales. The advertising assistants will distribute the trade copies. Each business man- ager has had an allotted work, Orie Wellman serving as Banner accountant, Rita Wardwell being in charge of copy lay-out and assignments to the advertising assistants. The staff proved its efficiency in many ways. Over eleven hundred dollars was obtained from advertisers. The Banner Board wishes to ex- press appreciation for the support it has received locally and from outlying areas. IRC ORGANIZED AT L. F. H. S. On April 12, students of L. F. H. S. met to organize a Iunior Red Cross. The following officers were elected: President, Carolyn Beang Vice President, Kay Riley, Secretary, leanette Robinson, Treasurer, VVinnie Cossetteg Re- porter, Iill Houghton. The following officers representing school activities were elected to constitute the Council: Music, Norma Lewis, Physical Education, Connie Rhodenizerg Com- mercial, Barbara Dewar, Home Economics, El- vira Morseg English, Sadie Dysartg Social Studies, Gloria Winton, Art-Guidance Club, Marjorie Hinkley, Foreign Languages, Iean Stroutg Agriculture, Charles Barker. The lun- ior Red Cross hopes to carry out varied projects, such as exchange educational material among high schools in the countryg set up a toy lihraryg and participate in a home and farm accident- prevention program-all in line with the IRC pledge, We believe in service for others. Tllli BANNER 67 Our Graduates in ln this column, third of the series dealing with L. F. H. S. Alumni in service in World War ll, we are presenting 84 pictures and per- sonal records. Four graduates of these years died in service. The military careers of these four men were commented on in the 1946 Ban- ner and their pictures were included in the sin- gle plate page accompanying the column, They Gave Their Lives. The men are: 1'.F.C. Theodore Maillet. '38, killed in action in Germany, April 7, 1945. P.F.C. Albert Robertson, '38, killed in acci- dent at Mitchell Field, New York, December 25, 1942. Pvt. Robert Gould, '40, a Bataan prisoner, died in Cabanatuan Prison Camp, November 10, 1942. P.F.C. Armand limond, '42, killed in action at Hellenthal, Germany, November 12, 1944. CLASS OF 1933 1. T14 Louis Quaglieri was in the army nine months, remaining in this country throughout his training and service. CLASS OF 1938 IA. Chief Ycoman Richard Bate enlisted in the navy at Portland, Maine, in August, 1941. He was immediately transferred to the U. S. Naval Section Base, Portland. With the out- break of war additional men were needed for Navy Recruiting Service. Bate was transferred to the Recruiting Station in Portland for four months of this work. He was later transferred to the enlisted staff of the Commandant, First Naval District, Boston, Mass., and then trans- ferred to the U.S.S. Martin H. Ray fD.E.-338j. liate served in both the Atlantic and Pacific Theatres. From the D.E.-338 he reported to the Staff of the Commander, Sixteenth Fleet, for duty. He was discharged from the navy in February, 1946, and was authorized to wear the following ribbons: Asiatic-Pacific, European- Middle Eastern. American Theatre, Good Con- duct, American Defense, and Victory. Since his discharge Bate has been enrolled at U. of M., where he has attained Dean's List honors consistently. Service 1938 - 1943 2. Sgt. Iohn Benedetto joined the Army in February, 1941, and served until November, 1945. He was assigned the 43d Division of the 7th Army. For some time he was stationed with the camp band at Camp Gruber, Okla- homa. He served in France, Germany and Austria, and was assigned to the 42nd Rainbow Division in Germany. He played trombone in the 103rd lnfantry. Band duty was assigned for morale purposes. At one time Sgt. Bene- detto played only two miles behind the front. After V-E Day the band travelled in buses con- fiscated from the Germans and performed for occupation forces. The band members were quartered in German homes, at one time living in a castle. The band in which Sgt. Benedetto played was considered the best in the E.T.O. 3. Cpl. Norman Bernard enlisted in the Ma- rine Corps at Springfield, Mass., May 18, 1942. He received training at Parris Island, S. C., Quantico, Va., Camp Leieune, N. C., and Linda Vista, Calif. He was sent overseas Dec. 3, 1943, landing at New Caledonia, Dec. 20, then was sent to Guadalcanal to join the First Marine Amphibian Corps and was -attached to the 3rd Marine Division for assault on the Mariannas. The ensuing 59 days at sea were highlighted by a 9-day cruise around and around the lsland of Saipan during its invasion and during the famed Mariannas' Turkey Shoot. A month later Cpl. Bernard landed on Guam where he remained 14 months, later being sent on occupation duty to lapan. He landed on what was to have been D-Day at Kyushu. He returned to the States Ian. 1, 1946, disembark- ing at San Diego at the same dock from which he departed 26 months earlier. A Clark Uni- versity graduate, Bernard is now Safety Super- visor at the Otis Mill. 4. Philip Bilodeau B. M. ale U. S. N. entered service March 6, 1942. He was sent to HF.- C.P. Signal Station, Fort Williams, Portland, Maine, later transferred to Peaks Island Signal Station. and then aboard the U.S.S. Boston Col- lege for Submarine Patrol. He was also aboard the U.S.S. Blue Dolphin for the same duty patroling the North Atlantic sea lanes. Later he was transferred to Lido Beach, L. I., W 'Sf Qin- M lyfa ,Z ...ff f in I I.. 1.94, 'X Uh.. m-F' THE BANNER 69 N. Y., then to Philadelphia, Pa., and to Nor- folk, Va. On board the U.S.S. Savannah QCL 421 he served in the European Theatre and in convoy for the Yalta Conference. He received the ETO Ribbon, Victory Medal, Good Con- duct and American Area Ribbons. He was dis- charged Nov. 8, 1945. S. William Botka S llc entered service lune 6, 1944, and was sent to Sampson, New York, for three months basic training, later leaving for Williamsburg, Virginia, where he was given three weeks training in stevedore and rig- ging before being sent to Seattle, Washington, for more advanced training in the same course. ln November, 1944, he was assigned to the U.S.S. Marathon, A. P. A. 200 which was be- ing commissioned at Astoria. Oregon. He spent several months in San Pedro, California, making trial runs before sailing to the South- west Pacific. Stopping at Pearl Harbor, the ship picked up troops and supplies, and joined the task force for the invasion of Okinawa. In May of 1945 he returned to San Francisco for eleven days for ship repairs, also more supplies and troops. While on the second trip across he was transferred to the States for re-assign- ment to the seaplane tender, U.S.S. Salisbury Sound A-V-13, which was being commissioned at San Pedro, California. On Ianuary 18, 1946, he received his honorable discharge at San Pedro. California. He earned the Asiatic Pa- cific, American Theatre, Victory Medal fWorld War 111 and one battle star. 6. Robert Brown, Chief Radioman, U S N R, was a iQmber of the local Naval Communica- tions Reserve Unit, and was called to active duty November 1, 1940. He was sent to Naval Reserve Radio School. Noroton Heights, Conn., and graduated as a Radioman Third Class in March, 1941. He was assigned to duty aboard U.S.S. Wichita, a heavy cruiser. His ship then was assigned duty with the British Home Fleet, taking convoys to Murmansk. He was Bridge Radioman at battle quarters from the outbreak of war till assignment to another ship, during which time his ship was a maior unit in the Battle of Casa Blanca and the securing of the Aleutians. He was assigned to Escort Carrier in 1943, but upon arrival at pre-commissioning school, he was reassigned as instructor in Ad- vanced Communications, CVE Pre-commission- ing School, Puget Sound Navy Yard, CRM Bremerton, Vffashington, remaining there until his discharge in 1945. Brown wears the Vic- tory Medal, Good Conduct Medal, American Defense Ribbon with Bronze A , European- North African Area Ribbon with two stars, American Area Ribbon with one star, Pacific Area Ribbon with three stars. 7. TlSgt. Ralph Bunten enlisted for foreign service with a Signal Aviation Company in August, 1940, and during the next five years had duty assignments in three theaters of war during which time he spent six months in the United States, being stationed in California. His overseas assignments included 32 months in Puerto Rico and Panama. In early 1943 his company was returned to the United States to prepare for service in the China Theater. After this preparation, Oct. 1943 saw the outfit em- barked for China via North Africa where a transfer to a British transport was effected for the trip to India in convoy. This convoy was attacked twice hy German bombers in great strength and one raid culminated in the sinking of the Rhona by a jet-propelled flying bomb, the forerunner of the V-1, or buzz bomb which terrorized England the following year. The Rhona went down with a loss of about two-thirds its personnel. The company crossed India by train and flew the Hump from Assam Province, landing in Kunming, China, where it was attached to General Chen- nault's 14th A. F., the nucleus of which was the famed Flying Tigers. TlSgt. Bunten re- turned to the United States by plane from Sian in Shensi Province, China, arriving in Miami, Florida, in oct. 1945. 8. Sgt. Harold Coates was in service five years. He was a platoon sergeant of the 103 Inf., 43rd Div. He served in the Pacific area, Guadal- canal, Solomon Islands, New Guinea, Georgia Islands, New Caledonia and VVake, and was wounded at Munda and hospitalized in New Zealand. Returning home, he was stationed in Washington, D. C. He attended the Army War College and was assigned to the Officers' Commissary Department. He received Good Conduct Medal, Combat Infantry Badge, the usual area ribbons with four battle stars. 9. First Lieut. Theodore Constantine enlisted in the army December 29, 1941. After a month 711 THE BANNER ' of basic training at jefferson Barracks, Missouri, he was sent to Aircraft Armorers' School at Denver, Col. Completing his course, he attended pilot training schools in Texas, receiving wings and commission in Feb- ruary, I943. He then flew with Northeast Air- lines for six months into the Arctic regions and to Scotland. ln February of 1944, he flew a C-46 transport to China and remained in the C. B. 1. Theater until the war's end. He flew the Hump from India to China and participated in the invasion of Burma. He was an in- structor pilot much of this time, teaching new pilots the techniques needed for flying in that region. WVhile in India, he visited nearly every city and met many important people, including the late Gandhi. He returned to this country in September of 1945 and was separated from the service on December 28, 1945. Constantine is at present a junior in Mechanical Engineer- ing at the University of Maine. 10. MlSgt. Marland Cloutier enlisted in the Army Air Forces, December 29, 1941. He re- ceived basic training at Iefferson Barracks, Mo., and Davis-Monthan Fld., Tucson, Ariz. He was assigned to the Second Air Force and sent to Topeka Army Air Fld., Topeka, Kansas, where he worked in Food Service Supervisor's Office as a Base Mess Sergeant. Later he was called to Washington, D. C., and assigned to Continental Air Forces, Food Service Division, as a trouble shooter for Continental Air Forces. This included all Air Forces in the continental limits of the United States. The work included the cleaning up of emergencies, inspecting shipments of food supplies and in- vestigating stations that received a poor grade from an inspecting officer. Sgt. Cloutier was honorably discharged at Andrews Field, Wash- ington, D. C., November 30, 1945. 11. Lawrence Crosson fPetty Officer Special Artificer Optical Third Class, entered the navy March 31, 1944, and was sent to Boot Camp at Sampson, N. Y. He went to Dearborn, Mich- igan, to attend Machinist Mates' School run by Henry Ford in conjunction with the Navy. In this school he was taught the rudiments of machine-shop work and repair. The course lasted for four and one-half months and the class for companyj consisted of 93 enlisted men. Five of thc top ranking men QCrosson stood third in rankj were sent to Optical School at Boston Navy Yard. Optical School was an exacting instruction in the behavior of light through optical glass. The work required an air-conditioned room with controlled humidity because the instruments were so sensitive. The temperature and moisture content were of un- believable importance. After a four-month training here Crosson graduated at the head of his class and was sent to Norfolk Navy Yard to a more advanced school in optics. Here he was introduced to a mechanical computing gun- sight of complicated design and structure and was taught its fundamentals and repair. Even- tually the company was sent to Tacoma, em- barking for Cavite across the bay from Manila. From there an LCI took the men to Subic Bay, and to their final overseas' destination at the Olongapo Navy Repair Base, where the work was on optical instruments and navigation gear. Petty Officer Crosson returned home for dis- charge which he received March 19, 1946. He received the following ribbons: American Area Ribbon, Asiatic-Pacific Ribbon, World War 11 Victory Medal. 12. Cpl. Rainsford Driscoll was in service three years and three months. He was over- seas nearly three years in ETO. He served with the 1054th Military Police Company fAvi- ationj which was awarded the Meritorious Service Unit Plaque for superior performance of duty and the accomplishment of exception- ally difficult tasks in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations. Driscoll entered the service in Iuly, 1942. The first assignment of the l054th was in the Middle East, where the group was responsible for guarding the vital Benghazi air- fields during the Libyan campaign. The men patrolled the dark winding streets of Cairo, Egypt, and served throughout the Italian cam- paign with the 12th Air Force. Cpl. Driscoll was awarded the Driver's and Mechanic's Badges, the Good Conduct Medal and three combat campaign stars with his area ribbons. 12A. Sgt. Richard Edwards was drafted in 1941 and sent to Camp Lee, Va., for basic training. He was at Keesler Field, Miss., for seven months and then was transferred to At- lantic City, N. I. After his U. S. specialized training, Edwards was sent to India by way of North Africa and Ceylon, arriving in 1943. '1'lIE BANNER 71 llc did sanitation and medical work in dis- pensarics for thirty months, returning to the U. S. in the autumn of '45 for discharge. Edwards re-enlisted and, after a 30-day furlough spent in Maine and Florida, he reported to Fort Sam Houston, Texas, being later transferred to Val- ley Forge General Hospital. where he is now stationed. Sgt. Edwards intends to make a career of the army. He is married and has a child nearly two years old. 1.5. TI5 lames Emmons was inducted into service Feb. 26, 1942. Receiving basic training at Camp Croft, S. C., he joined the Famous Fourth Division at Camp Gordon, Augusta, Ga., and was assigned to Company M, 22nd lnfantry Regiment, where he served his dura- tion of active service. Cpl. Emmons received training also at Fort Dix, N. I., Camp Gordon lohnston, Fla., and Fort lackson, N. C. He went overseas lan. 18, 1944, receiving amphibi- ous training at Brent. England. On D-Day flune 6, '44J he landed on Utah Beach, Nor- mandy, France, experiencing ten days of solid lighting without relief. During thc break through at Luxemburg in the Battle of the Bulge and at Hertzen Forest, Emmons worked on heavy mortars in addition to his regular duties as assistant cook and truck driver. He went through the Battles of Normandy, North- ern France, Ardennes, the Rhineland and was wounded in Prum, Germany, Feb. 15, 1945. He returned from a Paris Hospital to the States by plane, was hospitalized at the Walter Reed Hospital until discharged Sept. 13, 1945. Cpl. Emmons is entitled to wear the following medals: Purple Heart, Distinguished Unit lladge with Oak Leaf Cluster, Good Conduct Medal, Combat lnfantry Badge, European- African-Middle Eastern Theater Medal with four campaign stars and the Arrow Head. 14. Lucien Forticr SF3lC entered the U. S. Naval Reserve March 1, 1944, and was sent to the U. S. Naval Training Center at Sampson, New York, for boot training . From there he was transferred to the naval training center in Newport, R. I.. and to the Brooklyn Navy Yard for further training. He was later trans- ferred aboard the battleship U.S.S. Missouri. He served in the lwo lima, and Okinawa naval campaigns, and also in the bombardment of the Iapanese coast by naval warships. He served continuously aboard the battleship U.S.S. Missouri until he was discharged, Dec. 16, 1945. He wears the ribbons and battle stars for the areas in which he fought. 15. Sgt. Maynard French began his army career at Fort Devens in September, 1942. He was assigned to basic training center, Atlanta City. In October he was placed definitely in the Air Corps and sent to Chanute Field in Illinois fthen one of the big Air Corps Tech- nical Training Commands, where he studied the operation of the Link Trainer: then he went into the more advanced work of Celestial Navigation, learning not only navigation itself but the use of the synthetic training device which was used in the teaching of navigation. At Christmas he was dispatched to Orlando, Florida, where there was virtually nothing in the way of an Air Corps .base. The men lived for the first few months in temporary build- ings. Sgt. French was in the squadron which was the first to move from that location to the new base that was being built in an outlying district of the city. From a completely unde- veloped tract of land he saw developed what was to become the topmost tactical training school of the Air Forces. Training devices were shipped in after the men arrived, so his outfit had the problem of assembling them in the buildings which had been newly con- structed. He was assigned to Navigation at Orlando as a student, then as an instructor, from that December f1942j until Iuly, 1945, when he left Navigation for another section of the school flocated on the same basej in which he taught the general use of all synthetic train- ing devices. The purpose there was to teach classes of training oliicers from all over the country the latest types of equipment fand use thereofj so that they could institute the latest training at their own bases when they returned to them. Sgt. French was discharged Decem- ber 22, 1945. 16. P.F.C. Richard Hardy USA received basic training at Camp Wheeler, Georgia, and joined the 66th Division at Camp Rucker, Alabama, in September, 1944. The Division went to Camp Shanks, N. Y. in November and reached England on November 28. In transit to France on Christmas Eve his boat was sunk. Hardy served in France and Germany. His last six THE BANNER 73 months of service were spent in France, sta- tioned around Marseille, France. He returned to the States on New Year's Day '46, and was discharged january 6. An automatic rifleman he may wear the Combat Infantryman Badge, Good Conduct Medal, Victory Medal, Ameri- can Theater and European-African-Middle- Eastern Campaign Ribbons and the Purple Heart. 17. Capt. Paul Heath entered service lan. 14, 1940, and trained at various places in the South. He was assigned to the 26th Inf., 1st U. S. Inf. Division, sailing for Scotland where he had further training. He also trained in England. He participated in the African and Sicilian invasions where he saw heavy fighting and later, sailed for England and further training. He then participated in the D-Day landings at Omaha Beach, and fought through to the end of the war in Germany. He entered H. Co. 26th Inf. as a private in 1940 and at the end of the war he was the Company Commander with the rank of Captain. He wears the Silver Star and Cluster, the Bronze Star and Cluster, the Purple Heart, East-African-Middle-Eastern Medal, E.T.O. Ribbon with 5 campaign stars, Combat Infantry Badge, American Theater and American Defense Ribbons. His citations read: QSilver Starj for gallantry in action in the vicinity of Batoum-el-Kram, Tunisia, 23 April 1943. Although subjected to heavy enemy Machine-gun fire, Sgt. Heath pro- ceeded several times over open terrain and ren- dered aid to the wounded and evacuated them to a place of safety ...... fBronze Starj For heroic achievement in connection with Military operations against the enemy in the vicinity of Troina, Sicily, 6 August, 1943. When assault troops suffered heavy casualties andhecame dis- organized during an attack upon enemy strong points, Lieut. Heath repeatedly risked his life to rally his men, direct effective Fire upon the foe and, after the objective was taken, to treat and evacuate numerous casualties. Lieut. Heathis aggressive leadership and heroic disre- gard for personal safety reflect great credit upon the Service ...... QOak Leaf Cluster to Silver Starj For gallantry of action in the vicinity of Schevenhutte, Germany, 19 November 1944. When a numerically stronger force attacked his battalion under cover of intense enemy ar- tillery and mortar fire, Lieut. Heath fearlessly moved about exposed terrain, reorganized and encouraged the men to remain steadfast, and directed a mortar barrage upon the foe. Con- tinuing his brave actions, he procured several half-tracks and skillfully assisted in evacuation of casualties. Lieut. Heath's gallantry and superior leadership exemplify the finest tradi- tions of the Service. He married a Scottish girl whom he met in Scotland. Mrs. Heath was then serving as a Corporal in the Women's Army. They are now living in Portland, Maine, and have a young son. 18. Cpl. Bruce Kennedy was inducted into thc army April '42, at Fort Devens. He was sent to Camp Croft 137th Inf. Batt.j, South Caro- lina, then to Oswego, N. Y. fwith Military Policej, Albany, N. Y. C., Elizabeth, N. I., Fort Dix, Charlestown, S. C. fwith 454th Am- phib. Batt.j. From South Carolina Kennedy went to Vancouver, Washington, embarking for New Caledonia in the early fall of '43, thence to Guadalcanal to the First Marine Div. to prepare for the invasion of Pelelieu. Cpl. Kennedy was wounded in the invasion of Pelelieu, Sept. 15, 1944, and was sent to the Russell Islands to convalesce. He rejoined the First Marine Division for the Okinawa inva- sion, April 1, '45, and remained at Okinawa until peace was declared, returning to home base in Portland, Oregon, Dec. '45 for his dis- charge. Cpl. Kennedy may wear the Purple Heart, and Bronze Arrow Head besides ribbons and battle stars for the several campaigns in which he engaged. 19. slsgr. Gilbert Kimball served twenty months in England. He was with the Army Air Forces in Wing A. Group 4. Sec. C. BtD fPROVj He trained in Rome, N. Y., and Atlantic City, N. I. ' 20. Sgt. Fred Pettingill joined the Army Feb. 27, 1941. He was stationed at Fort Banks, Winthrop, Mass., fourteen months, then was sent to Walter Reed Hospital as a medical tech- nician. ln 1942 he was sent to Melbourne, Australia. He served in the Medical Corps in Dutch New Guinea and Leyte. Returning home in March, 1945, he enjoyed a recupera- tion period at Lake Placid, N. Y., and was dis- charged August, 1945. He wore the American 74 THE BANNER . Defense, Asiatic Pacific, Philippine Liberation Ribbons with two battle stars and two Arrow Heads. He has the Good Conduct and Victory Medals. 21. Cpl. Harold Rhodenizer served three and a half years in the R.C.A.F. He graduated second in his class at Mount View, Ontario, receiving a rating of Airman First Class He was a bombing technician instructor and was stationed at Prince Edward Island, at one time serving in No. 2 Air Navigation School, Char- lottetown, P.E.I. After his discharge he was teacher-coach at Coburn Classical Institute. Coming to L. F. H. S. last September he is serving in the same capacity here. 22. sysgt. Gerard Simoneau was inducted March 19, 1941, receiving basic training at Camp Wheeler, Georgia. He was transferred to Camp Blanding, Florida, and placed in the 45rd Infantry Division. He was also stationed at Camp Shelby, Miss., and Fort Ord, Califor- nia, before going overseas October 1, 1942. He went to Auckland, New Zealand, then to New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, Russell Islands, New Georgia Islands, New Guinea, and Luzon, Philippine Islands. Wounded on Luzon, he was hospitalized at Leyte and Biak. He was in four major campaigns: Guadalcanal, North- ern Solomons, New Guinea and Luzon. He was discharged under the point system from Camp Devens, Mass., on August 24, 1945, after serving overseas 35 months. slsgr. Simoneau is authorized to wear the Good Conduct, Pur- ple Heart, American Defense Service, Asiatic- Pacific Theater Campaign with four battle stars, Philippine Liberation Ribbon with bronze star medals and Combat Infantryman's Badge. 23. P.F.C. George Warren was inducted Iune 6, 1942. He was assigned to the Air Force at Miami Beach, Florida, then transferred to Har- ding Field, Louisiana, where he was assigned to the military police. He served in the Pacific area. He is authorized to wear: Good Con- duct Medal and Asiatic Pacific Ribbon. He was honorably discharged December 28, 1945, at Camp Devens, Massachusetts. CLASS OF 1939 24. Cpl. Phillip Blanchard entered the Marine Corps in june, 1944. He was sent to the Paci- fic area in November, 1944, and to Saipan in December. He participated in the invasion of Okinawa. After the surrender of Iapan he spent five months with the occupation troops at Nagasaki and Sesebo, Iapan. He arrived home in May, 1946. 25. Sgt. Andrew Botka enteredtthe U. S. Army in August, 1942, stayed briefly at Fort Devens, Mass., then went to Morrison Field, West Palm Beach, Fla., where he was stationed with the Air Force. In the spring of '43, he was transferred to Romulus A. A. Field, Michi- gan ffifteen miles out of Detroitb where he served as an instructor in Aircraft Weapons and attended schools under Army supervision. He took a three-months course at Oldsmobile Ordnance School, Lansing, Michigan, and a two-months course in Air Force Administration at University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in 1943. During the German breakthrough Qin 19441, 90,000 Air Force lads, including Sgt. Botka, were transferred to the infantry in Northern Texas. After a hasty three weeks' infantry training course they moved overseas, joining the 7th Army there. Later he transfered to the O.C.S. School at Fontainebleau, France, then to Chateau-Thierry, France, and finally reached Marburg, Germany. With war's end, he en- joyed leaves to Paris, Brussells, Switzerland, England, and Scotland. He claims his happi- est moment overseas was when, after a three months' search, he located his brother Edward whom he had not seen in over three years. His dullest moment: seventeen days in a convoy going overseas, seasick sixteen days. He was discharged April 1, 1946. 26. Master Sgt. Francis L. Coombs enlisted in the regular army in Sept., 1940, after nearly two years in the C.C.C. He received training at Fort Strong, Mass., and was twice sent to school in Fort Monroe, Va. H.e returned to Fort Strong as Case Mate Electrician and was later sent to Greater Brewster, Mass. Sgt. Coombs was discharged from Camp Edwards, Mass., in the fall of 1945. 27. Cpl. fTech.Q Kenneth E. Coombs was in- ducted Iune 17, 1942, and received his basic training at Fort Knox, Kentucky. He was then sent to Armored Force School and was awarded a diploma as a qualified automotive mechanic Tllli BANNER 75 by the Armored Force School Vehicle Depart- ment. Later he was transferred to Camp Camp- bell, Kentucky, as a mechanic. He arrived at Camp Miles Standish in Feb., 1945, and left for overseas duties. He landed in Le Havre, France, and moved across France into Munich and into Austria. He returned to the states in August and was discharged Nov. 19, 1945, from Camp Cooke, Calif. He wears the ETO Rib- bon with two battle stars and the Good Conduct Medal. 28. Sgt. Ronald L. Corkum enlisted in the A.'A.F. Sepft. 22, 1942. He received his basic training at Atlantic City, N. Y., attended radio school at Madison, Wis., and Radar School at Boca Raton, Fla. He served overseas with the 529th Bombardment group thirty months. His battles and campaigns: New Guinea, Northern Solomons, Bismarck Archipelago, Western Pa- cific, Southern Philippines, Luzon. Decora- tions: Victory Medal, Good Conduct Medal, Asiatic Pacific Theater Campaign Ribbon, Phil- ippine Liberation Ribbon with one bronze star. Sgt. Corkum is a graduate of F. S. T. C., is now teaching the 8th grade and serving as athletic coach at Stratton High School. t 29. Otho R. Cressey Mllc, enlisted in the U. S. Navy in September, 1942. He received his boot training at Newport, R. I. He then at- tended school in Houston, Texas, graduating as 3fc Metalsmith, was then transferred to New Orleans, La. In September 1947, he was grad- uated from a deep sea diver's school in Wash- ington, D. C., and is now serving aboard the U.S.S. Coucal in the Pacific as a diver. 30. Sgt. Donald Gould enlisted in March '41 in the Air Force and was first stationed at Savannah, Ga., with the 22nd Air Base Group. He attended Airplane Mechanics School at Philadelphia, Pa., for 22 weeks, then going to Daniel Field, Augusta, Georgia, and to San Francisco for duty overseas. He sailed for Bris- bane, Australia, Feb. 12, 1942, then went to New Guinea as a member of the 455th Service Squadron of the 8th Service Group. He re- turned to the States in October, 1944. He re- enlisted in 1945 for European duty and has been serving in Salzburg, Austria, and in Mu- nich and Bremershaven, Germany, attached to the Railway Security Branch of the Military Police. He has been a Train Guard Com- mander in charge of a crew to guard supply trains of surplus government property being shipped from Leghorn, Italy, through the Bren- ner Pass. At present he is living away from army post with his wife and serving in Brem- ershaven as train checker in one of the railroad yards. Sgt. Gould plans to reenlist as the op- portunity for advancement in grade and station is so great under the New Career Plan Sgt. Gould may wear the American Defense Ribbon, Distinguished Unit Citation, Good Conduct Ribbon, and Pacific Theater Ribbon with one bronze star. 31. Cpl. Lewis Harmon entered service Au- gust 31, 1942. He took basic training at Camp Pickett, Va. He was then transferred to Fort Bragg, N. C., to the medical department. While there he was promoted to Corporal and went overseas in Sept., 1943. He was stationed in England for the remainder of his time in service, being discharged Dec. 25, 1945. 32. Cpl. Alfred Hessmer entered the Army in Oct. 1941. He spent three months basic train- ing at Camp McQuade, California, was sta- tioned in South Carolina, and was sent to Fort Hancock, N. I., where his regiment was en- gaged in Harvard Defenses of N. Y. Eleven months later he was shipped to Seattle, Wash- ington fPort of Embarkationj. His destina- tion was Kodiak, Alaska. After spending a short time on this island, he moved westward on the Aleutian Chain until he arrived on the Island of Shamya where he spent the remainder of his 2M years of overseas service. Dec. 26, 1945, he left Alaska for the U. S., arriving at Seattle, Washington, Ian. 3, 1946. He received his discharge on Ian. 19, 1946. 33. George Lesko Moulder 2lC served in vari- ous camps, and training stations in the U. S. For some time he was stationed in Washington State. He entered the service Sept. 9, 1943, at Newport, R. I., and was discharged in Boston, Mass., Dec. 22, 1945. 34. Cpl. Francis Merkle enlisted in the Army Air Force. He trained at Maxwell Field, Ala., at Amarillo Army Air Field, Texas, and was stationed at VVilliams Field, Chandler, Arizona, as a finance clerk in the Air Corps. He entered 76 THE BANNER the service in October of 1943, and was dis- charged in March of 1946. He was trained as engineer-gunner at Fort Meyers, Florida, receiv- ing his wings at that place. 35. Lt. Iosephine fMolliconel Stradley is a '42 graduate of St. Mary's Hospital in Lewiston and did private duty before enlisting in the Army Nursing Corps in 1943. Nurse Stradley was attached six months to the Headquarters Air Service Command, 4100th A.A.F. Basic Unit Sec. E, Patterson Field, Fairfield, Ohio. She also served at the Northington General Hospital, Tuscaloosa, Alabama. While over- seas she was attached to the United States Army Medical Corps, 237 General Hospital, and to the 57th Field Hospital. She served in the E.T.O. in France and Germany, and was dis- charged in February '45. 36. Cpl. Laurier Simoneau served 30 months overseas. He sailed from Camp Stoneham, California, with stops at Wellington fNew Zealandl. Melbourne fAustraliaj, Bombay Un- dial, to his destination, Suez, Egypt. Cpl. Simoneau took part in the invasion campaigns of Sicily and Italy. He served with the 340th Bomb Group, was discharged Sept. 22, 1947, at Fort Devens. He was awarded the Distin- guished Service Badge as a member of the 300th Bomb Group which was cited for outstanding duty in sinking the Italian cruiser, Toronto, in La Spezia Harbor. Again this group was cited for outstanding close support missions Hown in Tunisia and Sicily in support of the British Eighth and American Fifth Armies. 37. P.F.C. loseph Toncer entered active service November Z, 1942. He received basic training at Medical Training Center, Camp Pickett, Vir- ginia, and later went to Camp Shelby, Missis- sippi, to serve with the 157th Station Hospital. He was then transferred to Camp Stoneman, California, where he received more training and finally left for oversea duty. P.F.C. Toncer served in New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, Green lsland, Solomon Islands and Philippine Islands. He received the Philippine Liberation Ribbon with bronze service stars, Asiatic Pacific Cam- paign Ribbon, American Theater Campaign Ribbon, Good Conduct and Victory Medals. He served twenty-seven months overseas and was discharged from service Ianuary 5, 1945. 38. Sgt. Stanley Violette trained in many army camps in the U. S. He was in the quar- termaster detachment, and toward the end of the war was stationed in Fairbanks, Alaska, which is only seventy-live miles from the Arc- tic circle. His experiences in Alaska were inter- estingly described in a letter in the 1946 Banner. After his return to the States, Sgt. Violette re- enlisted in the army. 39. Sgt. Sherwood White entered service on Ianuary 20, 1941, and was stationed at Fort Wil- liams until December of that year when he was transferred to Fort Hancock, N. I. In April, 1942, he went to Iceland where he remained for twenty months. After that he was stationed in England, Scotland, and Wales. He saw service in Belgium, Austria, and Germany and was in three major battles including the Bulge and the Ruhr. He was a member of the 80th Division under General George Patton. This division was highly praised by General Patton and cited for exemplary conduct in action in France. Sgt. White served three and one-half years overseas. S CLASS OF 1940 40. Sgt. Maurice Bilodeau went overseas the last part of August, 1944. He fought in Holland where he was made sergeant taking the place of his buddy who was killed. He later fought in Germany with the First Army under Gen. Terry Allen. He was wounded Nov. 25, 1944, when his division captured a town. He was dragged fby two comradesj to a German cellar where he stayed all day without medical aid, his only treatment consisting of sulfa drugs. Sgt. Bilodeau was hospitalized for a long time as a result of his injuries. 41. P.F.C. William F. Brown enlisted in the Marine Corps May, 1942. He trained at Paris Island, was transferred to Quantico, Va., where he attended school. He was transferred to the West Coast and assigned to H. 8: S. Co., 2nd Bn., 12 Marines, 3rd Marine Division. From the West Coast he went overseas, spending eighteen months in the Pacific area, doing serv- ice in New Zealand, Guadalcanal, Guam, and the British Solomons. He took part in the Bougainville campaign and was discharged from the Marine Corps, Ian. 20, 1945. Brown is now attending the University of Maine and is currently on the Dean's List there. Q TIIE BANNER 77 42. Cpl. Burleigh Edwards entered the service Dec. 10, 1942, training at Fort Sheridan, 111. He left for overseas Oct. 27, 1943, and was with the 476th Anti-aircraft Artillery Bn. He served in the army three years and one month, for two years and three months overseas. He saw duty in Australia, Dutch New Guinea, Netherlands East India and the Philippines. He wears the usual medals and ribbons and has a Presiden- tial Unit Citation. 43. Sgt. Maurice Fuller was in service fArmy Air Corpsj for three and one-half years. He had basic training at Atlantic City, N. I., attend- ing radio school at Madison, Wise., and taking advanced radio training at North Island, San Diego, California. He was stationed at several fields in the Central Flying Training Com- mand, setting up and operating instrument landing and blind flying equipment and was put in charge of this work at the Government field at Alternathy. Texas. Sgt. Fuller was dis- charged at Westover Field, Feb. 9, 1946. H. Sgt. Robert Hatch joined the Air Corps August 19, 1942. He was stationed at Amar- rilln. Texas. for five months attending Airplane Mechanics' School. He then went to Seattle, VVash., for specialized training on B-17's, and to an overseas training station in Missouri. In Iunc, 1943, he was shipped to Panama. In Panama. due to lack of the planes he was trained to work on, he requested and was granted a job as a draftsman in a large airplane depot at Albrook Field, Canal Zone. In six months' time he was Assistant Chief Draftsman with personnel of five civilians and two service- men. The work consisted of every type of drafting. After serving nearly two years he was transferred to the Headquarters Sq. fof the same Fieldl into the Statistical Ofiice where he was in charge of all pictorial statistics of the Sixth Air Force, photographing all his work to various sizes. Sgt. Hatch was honorably dis- charged November 27, 1945. 45. Howard Kimball G.M. llc, was in service from August 8, 1942, to December 16, 1946. Without the usual boot camp training, he went to sea at once. He served three years on the North Atlantic Patrol and, with weathermen from Washington, D. C., he saw plenty of action on the patrol. Operating out of Argen- 4 tia, Newfoundland, he was on every island in the Atlantic. He was in the Normandy Inva- sion which was too drastic to write aboutf' He attended gunnery schools in Boston, Rhode lsland, Washington and California. He was finally sent to the Pacihc as an instructor for the Army, Navy and Marines. He instructed the first wave of men to land in Okinawa, do- ing this teaching on I..S.T. ships in Subie Bay. Gunner's Mate Kimball served on three mine sweepers, and three L.S.T. craft. He may wear the European-African, American Theater, Asia- tic-Pacific Ribbons, Good Conduct Medal, Phil- ippine Liberation and Philippine Invasion Bar, with three battle stars. 46. KT. Sgt. Roger Lane served 38 months in the Signal Corps. Inducted in November 1942, he received basic training at Camp Edison, and attended Specialist Schools at Camp Wood and Fort Monmouth, N. I. Assigned to a fixed Radio Station, he was sent to the South Pacific. While in Australia he was assigned to HQ USAFFE, which was reorganized after evacua- tion from Corregidor. Here most of his work was of very secret nature. Assigned to S.I.S. when it was organized, he served as Chief Operator and Message Center Chief, helping to start and build up the Radio Teletype Section. Here he had the opportunity to meet and work with men and women of practically every branch of the United States, British, Australian, and New Zealand forces. As NCO in charge of a group of men, he was assigned to the Royal Canadian Forces in the Pacific to set up and instruct men in the operation of a distinct type Station. Upon completion of Radio Teletype of that assignment, he served at Moratai fwith the RAAFQ, Leyte, and then joined the parent organization at San Miguel, Luzon. He was on orders for duty in Iapan when returned to the U. S. for discharge under the point system in lanuary, 1946. For service from Iuly 1, '43 to Sept. 30, '45, Sgt. Lane received a letter signed by General Aiken, entitling him to the Army Commenda- tion Ribbon, which reads in part: As an out- standing member of Central Bureau, you have assisted inicarrying out a mission whose value has been recognized by the theater authorities as a distinct aid towards shortening the war. ln addition he wears the Asiatic Pacihc Ribbon with two bronze service stars, Good Conduct Medal, and Victory Medal. 1 3 I M ss-'bi Jw-PA ill' nl.i ull um mn HH lv lim E yf, .Mg ,Qi '-K am THE BANNER 79 Having enlisted in the E.R.C. upon dis- charge, Sgt. Lane was called to active duty in April, 1947, and upon completion of the tour of duty he enlisted in the Regular Army and is now stationed at Fort Williams, Maine, in the Military Personnel Section. 47. Arcade I. Lapointe, Aviation Boatswain's Mate 3lc fC.P.j, enlisted in the Navy, May 5, 1943. He trained at Aviation Machinists' Mate School in Memphis. Tenn., for 21 weeks, then went to Catapult Arresting Gear School in Philadelphia, Pa., for four weeks. He was then assigned to the U.S.S. Bennington, CV 20, a large Aircraft Carrier which was under con- struction at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. While waiting for this ship, he served on the U.S.S. Hancock, and upon returning to the States he embarked on the U.S.S. Bennington and sailed for ten months of Pacific duty funtil V-I Dayl. He participated in the invasions of Iwo lima and Okinawa, and in the bombardment of lapan. He served aboard the ship as Catapult Operator, firing the planes off the carrier deck. He was discharged Nov. 18, 1945. He is en- titled to wear World War II Victory Medal, Asiatic-Pacific Medal with four stars, American Theater Medal. 48. Robert Legere enlisted April 27, 1942. He received five months' basic training before leav- ing for overseas' duty. He served with the AEP in the Middle East and Mediterranean Theaters. He was with the Air Transport Command in the China-Burma-India and European Theaters. He was discharged Octo- ber 8, 1946. 49. Rita fliichardj Iillenberger enlisted in the Navy April 5, 1944, took her boot training at the Naval Training Station at Hunter College, Bronx, New York. After six weeks' training she was transferred to the Naval Air Station, Norfolk, Virginia, where she worked in the Engine Overhaul Division of the LP-20 Air- plane Assembly and Repair Department, until her discharge on April 20, 1945. She is entitled to wear the American Defense Ribbon. 50. Ensign Nathaniel Sewall was a naval avi- ator in the American Pacific Theater of Opera- tions. He served three years and three months, having three years of sea or overseas' duty to his credit. 51. TISgt. Vaughn Sturtevant enlisted in the Enlisted Reserve Corps in December, 1942, and was called to active duty in Iune, 1943. From then until August, 1944, he was in various train- ing centers in this country, including Camp Wheeler, Ga., Fort Knox, Ky., Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., Camp San Luis Obispo, Cal., and others. In Europe he fought in three cam- paigns with the First Infantry Division in a rifle platoon. He was awarded the Bronze Star Medal for valor in connection with a patrol he led behind enemy lines in the Bulge H. His citation reads: When his patrol was under heavy enemy machine gun and machine pistol barrage, Sgt. Sturtevant ordered his men to take cover and thenf with utter disregard for per- sonal safety, advanced through the hostile field of fire and completed his reconnaisance mis- sion. Sgt. Sturtevant's heroic actions and un- swerving devotion to duty exemplify the finest traditions of the service. In March, 1945, he was wounded in Germany, and subsequently flown back to the United States and hospital- ized for two years. 52. Sgt. Clifford Tenney entered the army December 17, 1942, and was discharged March 16, 1946, having a total of 39 months' service. He was sent to Ft, Sheridan, Illinois, for train- ing in an anti-aircraft artillery outfit and trained with this group in Texas, California, Missis- sippi and Georgia, where it was finally demo- bilized. He was then sent to Camp Livingston, La. for six weeks' infantry training and left for overseas as a replacement. He was assigned to Company A, 54th Armored Infantry, of the 10th Armored Division and joined his company as it took part in the capture of Trier, Germany. His division moved across south and central Germany, crossing the Rhine at Mannerheim. At the end of the war he was in Garmesch- Partenkirchen where the 1936 Winter Olympics were held. Soon after the war was over Sgt. Tenney was assigned to another outfit for occu- pational duty. He moved to several places in- cluding Oberammergau, where the Passion Play was presented, also to Dachau. On a fur- lough he visited Switzerland. He is entitled to wear Combat Infantry, Good Conduct, ETO Ribbon with two stars, Victory Medal, and American Theater Ribbon. 53. First Isieut. Clifford Tinkham enlisted in the Air Force in Nov. 1942. He was called to SU TIIE BANNER active service while attending school in Feb., 1943, as an Aviation Cadet. His fiight training was conducted at several fields: Maxwell Field, Ala., Decatur Field, Ala. ffor primary train- ingl, Courtland Army Air Base, Ala. Qfor basic trainingj, and Freeman Field, Indiana, for advanced training where he completed his pilot instruction and was commissioned a Sec- ond Lieutenant. At that time he was sent to Lockbourne Army Air Base at Columbus, Ohio, for B-17 pilot transition, and finally to Gulf- port, Miss., for combat training where his crew was formed. The crew was sent to the 306th Bomb. Group, Eighth Air Force, England, where Lieut. Tinkham completed 35 missions as first pilot of B-17 QFlying Fortressj. Some of his targets included Berlin ffive timesl, Cologne ftwicel, Bremen, Dresden, Munich, Nuremburg, and points in the Ruhr Valley. The only person from Livermore Falls whom he saw while overseas was Vaughn Sturtevant, a classmate at L. F. H. S., whom he visited in a hospital in England after Sturtevant was wounded so badly in Germany. Upon returning to the States, he was sent to Camp McCoy, Wisconsin, as Air Force Ofiicer, and was eventually separated from the Army at that point and placed on Reserve in December, 1945. Today, after graduating from University of Maine, he is living in Bridgton with his wife and young son, teaching history in the high school. 54. Sgt. Maurice Wagner '40 entered the U. S. Army in November, 1943, and received his training at Fort Eustis, Virginia, and at Camp Stewart, Georgia. He left the United States early the following year and landed in North Africa where he was Communications Chief with an anti-aircraft artillery battalion. From North Africa he was transferred to the island of Corsica and later his outfit was converted into an armored field artillery battalion and went to Italy. While in Italy he participated in the Rome-Arno, North Appenines and Po Valley Campaigns. After thirty-one months of overseas service he returned to the United States and received his discharge in November, 1945. 55. P.F.C. Leon White took his basic training at Camp Blanding, Fla. He spent four months in the States before being shipped overseas to France. He was with the 394th Infantry Batt., 99th Div., serving as a machine gunner. l'.F.C. White saw action in Belgium, Germany and Austria. The 394th Btl. crossed the Remagen Bridge across the Rhine River with the 9th Armored Division Troops. At the close of the war he was in the Austrian Alps. Then he was sent to the Army University at Biarritz, France, for six months. He was discharged lan. 7, 1946. P.F.C. White may wear the E.T.O. Rib- bon with four battle stars, Combat Infantry Badge, Victory, Good Conduct and Army Occu- pation of Germany Ribbons. CLASS OF 1941 56. Sgt. Vernon Baston entered service Dec. 22, 1943. Received training at Oberdeen Prov- ing Ground, Maryland, Camp Picket, Virginia, Camp Reynolds, Penn., and Camp Boni, Texas, before transfer overseas. He entered Germany with the 968th Ordnance Heavy Automotive Maintenance Company, through the Rhineland and Central Europe countries. He received further training at Camp Swift and Camp Hood, Texas, before' being dis- charged April 21, 1946. 57. George fHenryj Botka A.R.M. 31: trained in Florida. I-Ie was in service three years, Hy- ing with Navy patrol bombers on anti-subma- rine patrol from Florida to Cuba. 58. P.F.C. Eleanor Bowles enlisted in U. S. Marine Corps Women's Reserves, May, 1944. She went through boot camp at Camp Leiuene, N. C. From there she went to the U. S. Naval Air Station, Norman, Okla., for six months' training at Aviation Machinist's Mate School. Ianuary, 1945, she was transferred to U. S. M.C.A.S., El Loro, Calif., where she worked as an aircraft mechanic in Air Base Group Z. P.F.C. Bowles was discharged March, 1946, from El Loro, Calif. She is now married to TISgt. Clayton H. Ring and living at Cherry Point, N. C.- 59. TlSgt. Harold Gilbert served from Oct. 1, 1942, to Sept., 1945, he attended aerial gunnery school at Tyndall Field, Florida. from Novem- ber through December, 1942, and armament school at Lowry Field, Denver, Colorado, from Ianuary, 1943, until late February of that year. Then he spent six months of practical train- ing with a combat crew until sent overseas in August, 1943. While stationed in England, he TI-IIZ BANNER 81 participated in bombing missions over France and Germany. During combat he was credited with destroying two German fighter planes, a Folk-Wolff 190, and a Messerschmitt 109 over France. He completed his tour of operations in March, 1944, and served as a turret instructor until lune, 1944, when he returned to the States. In lanuary, 1945. he started aviation cadet training at San Antonio, Texas, and from there he went to Amarillo, Texas, for B-29 fiight engi- neering school. He was discharged from there September 24, 1945. He was awarded the Dis- tinguished Flying Cross and Air medal, with three oak clusters. 60. Pvt. Edmund Henry served in the U. S. Army in the infantry. He saw service in the European Theater of Operations, fighting in France and Germany. - 61. Sergeant Merle Hodgkins was inducted into the Army February 13, 1943, at Fort Dev- ens, Mass. He took basic training with the 4th Brigade of Amphibious Engineers at Fort Devens, Mass., Camp Edwards, Mass., and Camp Gordon lohnston, Florida fWalter Win- chell's Alcatraz of the Armyj. In May, 1944, the Brigade moved to Camp Stoneman, Califor- nia, preparatory to overseas' shipment. He lost the outfit there due to a physical disability and spent six weeks in hospital. He was then transferred to Camp Beale, California, where he remained on an unassigned basis until the fall of 1944, hence to Fort Lewis, Washington tan engineer training stationj, unassigned un- til December of the same year when he was transferred to an Infantry Training Center and six more weeks of Infantry Basic at Camp Maxie, Texas. In February 1945, he found himself on the way to England, France, Belgium, and finally to Schwerin, Germany, on V-E Day after three months of action with the 8th Infantry Division. Previous to Schwerin he was in Cologne for two weeks and saw the Cathedral which was Life Magazine. He Rhine Valley, where so highly publicized in spent some time in the many Wagnerian Operas were set. After V-E Day until his return to the U. S. A., he helped care for a German PW camp at Schwerin, where were located 30,000 PW's. Upon his return to the States, he reported for duty at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, and did duty there for three months as sergeant-maior with the 13th Infantry Regiment, 8th Infantry Division. He then went to Fort Logan, Colo- rado, in November, 1945, as a permanent party personnel for 1770 SCU, where he remained until discharged, Ianuary 26, 1946. s 62. Sgt. Richard B. Iacques was in the Marine Corps for four years. He did duty in the States, Hawaii, Midway, Kwajalien, Eniwetok Atoll, and Okinawa. He wears the ribbons and stars for these battles. 63. Ensign Forest E. Shorey Ir. enlisted in the U. S. Maritime Service in Boston May 4, 1942, and received his boot training at Hoffman Islands, New York Harbor. He was First sta- tioned at Fort Trumbull, New London, Conn., on the administrative staff. In Ianuary, 1943, he was shipped out of New York Harbor to South Pacific for a year. After returning to the U. S. he made trips to England, France, Bel- gium, Germany, Scotland, Ireland, Italy and Africa. He landed at the Normandy beach- head shortly after D-Day. He entered Officers' Candidate School at Fort Trumbull, New London, Conn., in Octo- ber, 1944, and was commissioned as an Ensign and received 3rd Assistant Engineer's license for steam and Diesel motors in Ianuary, 1945. He made several more trips across the Atlantic, one being aboard the S.S. Samuel Livermore. In December, 1945, he went to Ofiicers' Up- grading School in Boston and received Second Assistant Engineer's license for steam engines. He received release from the Shipping Admin- istration in March, 1946. He is authorized to wear the following ribbons: Mediterranean, At- lantic, Pacific, and Victory. 64. Paul H. Stevens FC2Ic U. S. N. R. enlisted luly 1, 1941, at the U. S. Naval Separation Cen- ter, Boston, Mass. He was 34 months overseas in the Pacific Theater. He trained four months in Naval Fire Control School, New- port, R. I., then transferred to the U.S.S. Philip fDD498j Dec. 10, 1942. He saw action in the 3rd, 5th, and 7th fieets from Guadalcanal to China, including the two battles of Kula Gulf, Bougainville, Admiralty Islands, Bismark Archipelago, New Guinea, Saipan, Tinian, Phil- ippines, Borneo fthree operations with Austra- lian ships and troopsj and Okinawa. He re- 1 ....4ULr. Gv THE BANNER 83 turned once to this country for repairs and re- habilitation leaves. He is entitled to wear Asiatic-Pacific Medal fsix starsj, the Philippine Liberation Medal fone starj, American Area Medal, and the Victory Medal. 65. Cpl. Hervey Tessier enlisted Ianuary 5, 1942 for four years. He was discharged Ianu- ary 4, 1946. He went overseas in April, 1942, having extensive training at Samoa. I-Ie was a veteran of Tulagi, Gavatu, Tanambaro. He in- vaded Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands, New Guinea, Cape Gloucester, New Ireland. Cpl. Tessier was a member of the famed First Ma- rine Division which received a presidential citation. After seven months of combat he re- turned to the States, then boarded the U.S.S. Dayton at Philadelphia, going to Hawaii and the Philippines where his outfit took quick runs at night to bombard the enemy. His last over- seas move was with the occupation forces to Iapan. 66. Lieut. Norman Tessier enlisted in the U. S. Naval Reserve as A. S.-V'6s on March 11, 1943. On Ianuary 6, 1945, after separation from the U. S. Naval Reserve, active duty, he was commissioned Ensign fSupply Corpsj U.S.M.S., and U.S.N.R. flnactivej. After re- ceiving his commission, he attended Hospital Corps school which was established as a re- quirement as duties required assistance with medical treatment, although regular duties in- cluded disbursing to ship's personnel. He served as chief clerk of all administrative func- tions aboard ship and in the processing of all personnel. Most of his service time is credited on board the Hospital Ships Shamrock N and St. Olaf , and the U.S.S. General R. E. Ca1lan fAPl39j, seeing duty in the Atlantic, Pacific, Caribbean, Mediterranean and North Sea. His most interesting tour of duty was visiting the Vatican City in Rome on Christmas Day, 1946, when he attended Midnight Mass. When transferred to inactive status, he was separated from the USAT Albert M. Boe , at New Orleans, La. He now attends Bentley Accounting School in Boston. 67. Sgt. Stanley NVellman was in the Air Force 39 months as Aerial Engineer. He was Crew Chief in maintenance of test planes. He received instruction and was stationed at Craig Field fSelma, Ala.j, Keesler Field fBeloxie, Miss.j, Smyrna Air Base fSmyrna, Tennj, Army Air Field fYuma, Ariz.Q, and McDill Field QTampa, Fla.j. entered active 68. Sgt. Wallace Whittemore service on Nov. 17, 1942. He was placed in 10th Armored the 51st. Infantry Bn. of the Division and received his basic inf. training at Fort Benning, Ga. After training, he went to the Armoured Force at Fort Knox, Ky., and graduated from school as a Radio Operator. Later, reporting back to his outfit in Tenn., he went on manoeuvres throughout Tenn., Ky., N. Carolina and Ga., for several months. After manoeuvres he reported to Camp Gordon, Ga., where he remained for eight months, finishing training and getting ready for overseas' duty. His Division fought the Germans in Luxem- bourg, Belgium, Germany, Austria, and France. The men followed the footsteps of the Roman legions into Trier, Napoleon's Grand Army into Ulm, and I-Iannibal's foot troops and elephants into the Alps. Some of the larger cities that they fought in were Metz, Bastogne, Trier, Crailsheim, Ulm, Oberammergau, and Garmisch-Partenkirchen. After the war was ofiicially declared over the Division established itself in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, a great sum- mer resort. One of the most affecting of Sgt. Whitte- more's experiences happened during the Battle of the Bulge. I-Ie met his younger brother, Willard fa combat engineerj, on Christmas Day of the year 1944. His decorations and citations included the Combat Infantrymen's Badge, Good Conduct Medal, Eur-Afr-Mid-Eastern Theater Campaign Ribbon, with three campaign stars, American Theater Campaign Ribbon, Victory Medal, Bronze Star and Purple Heart. Sgt. Whitte- more received his honorable discharge from the Army on December 5, 1945. After his discharge Sgt. Whittemore was surprised to read in Time Magazine an article concerning his Division. Near Kaiserlautern, the Sixth Armd. Div., crisscrossed the 10th Armd. Division during battle. Time Magazine wrote: Armoured Divisions sometimes per- form feats that would be text book nightmares. Two of Patton's armored divisions once crossed each other at a right angle road-junction in the 84 TIIE BANNER midst of combat, but only thc Germans were confused. - 69. Sgt. Earl D. Wilkins was awarded the Bronze Star Medal for Meritorious service in connection with military action against the enemy. While a member of a reconnaisance party, one of the vehicles struck a mine. T-5 Wilkins was dispatched to bring medical aid. Traveling over unknown terrain, he succeeded in this mission with the greatest of speed and aided in evacuating the wounded. His ability and devotion to duty reflect the highest credit upon Technician Fifth Grade Wilkins and the Armed Forces of the United States. Sgt. Wilkins was in the Army of Occupation, for a time was stationed at Bremen, Germany. He was discharged after 37 months of service, hav- ing been 14 months in ETO. The accompany- ing picture was taken while he was on leave in Denmark. CLASS OF 1942 70. Anthony Benedetto joined the Navy in February, 1943, had six weeks of boot training in Newport, R. 1., then was transferred to a navy freighter, the U.S.S. Polaris, and stayed on this freighter for 4 months, when he was transferred to the U.S.S. Blue Ridge, an am- phibious Hagship. He left New York for over- seas September, 1943, on the same ship. After being overseas for one year he was transferred to Rear Admiral Barbey's flag command. His job consisted of helping type and distribute top secret and secret orders. He was in the in- vasion of Lcyte after which he was transferred home for 30 days leave, and upon return he stayed in Boston until discharged Nov. 1, 1945. 71. Cpl. Edward Botka enlisted in the army Dec. 7, 1942. He received at Camp Lee, Va., his basic infantry training. After five days' leave his outht was sent to England and was dispersed to units already established. Next he was transferred to Cambridge, England. For many months he was in a headquarters company of a supply depot. Again he was transferred to a training company where, for four weeks, he took special infantry training. His next unit was company L, 15th Inf. Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division. He joined it in Southern France just before the Calmar Campaign. The unit moved up through France, and just before crossing to Germany Cpl. Botka received a shrapnel wound and was sent back to a hospital in central France. The injury put him out of the infantry and after nine months he was finally sent back to the U.S. and arrived at Devens Dec. 5, 1945. While he was in the in- fantry his company received quite a few cita- tions: The Presidential Unit Citation and later the oak leaf cluster for it, two French citations for action with the French army, The Croix de Guerre with Palme. Other decorations were the Purple Heart, the European campaign rib- bon with three major campaign stars. 72. Byron H. Brown ACRT served in the Navy from Iuly, 1942, to October, 1945. He wears the Presidential Unit Citation, the Navy Commendation Ribbon, the Pacific Ribbon with nine stars, the Phillipine Liberation Rib- bon with two stars. 73. Cpl. Benedict Haines entered service February 19, 1943. He was in the Chemical Composite Company. He trained at Camp Sibert, Alabama, and Camp Beal, California. He then was sent to the Pacific Area and was stationed at New Guinea, going to Guadal- canal where he remained for 18 months. He was discharged March 1, 1946. 74. Sgt. Willie Iacques entered service in 1942 flulyj and was assigned to the Air Corps. He attended Air Corps training schools at Miami Beach, Florida, Chanute Field. lllinois, and Akron, Ohio. He became an instructor in aircraft repairing and instructed at Rome, New York, Ogden, Utah, and Salt Lake City, Utah. He applied for flight crew training in 1943 and received the following pilot training: pre- Hight school at Kearns Field, Utah: College Training Detachment at Denver University, Coloradog pre-flight school at Santa Anna, California, Primary flying at Thunder Bird Auxiliary Field at Wickenberg, Arizona, Basic Hying at Minter Field, California, and Advanced flying at Pecos, Texas. Amarillo Engineering School came next and after graduation he was assigned to an experimental squadron at Lock- head Aircraft Factory, in Hollywood, Calif. ln the spring of 1945 he was assigned as a B-17 Flight Engineer and transferred to Maxwell Field, Alabama, where he was reassigned to THE BANNER 85 train four-cngined aircraft pilots QB-l7l. War in Europe ceased and he was then as- signed to Chanute Field, Illinois, as a B-29 electrical specialist and, when Iapan surrendered, he was transferred to Fort Logan, Colorado, and released from active duty in February, 1946. 75. H Pvt. Kenneth Kennedy was inducted Dec. 4, 1942. He trained at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., and Camp Kilmer, N. I. He sailed for North Africa. April 24, 1942, and saw action at Casablanca, Moroccog Oran, Algiers, Caserta and Anzio, Italy. At Anzio he joined the 36th Combat Engineers Qlnfj when they took the beachhead. He was wounded April 17, 1943. In 1944 he saw service in the region of Mon- talta, Marsiliana, Grossete, Puzzueli, Italy and had amphibious training for the So. France in- vasion, and later in the year assault boat train- ing for crossing the Rhine. He was in action constantly from Ian. 25, '44 QPuzzuelij until Feb. 9 at Raon L' Etape where he was in rest camp briefly. Then on March 2 his group moved swiftly through Southern Germany and into Austria. On V. E. Day he was in Heiter- wang, fighting near Hitler's home. Kennedy arrived in Newport, Virginia, Oct. 19, 1945, and was discharged Oct. 27, 1945. He may wear the European-African-Middle Eastern Service, Occupational and Victory Medals, the Purple Heart, Citation for the Anzio Beach- head fwhere he was woundedj, Presidential Unit Citation for the Invasion of Southern France, and Citation for fighting in Alsace- Lorraine. 76. Sgt. Phillip Mollicone entered service March 11, 1943. He was assigned to the Air Corps and was sent to Miami Beach, Fla., for basic training. He then went to Grand Rapids, Mich. for weather training. After completion of the course, he was transferred to Bakers- lield, Calif., and Stockton Field, Calif., for practical Held training. He was sent overseas in Iuly, 1944, and spent 18 months in the Pacific Theatre on Hawaii, Guam, Saipan, Iwo lima, and Tinian. While on Guam, he was attached to Weather Central Headquarters, 20th Air Force. It was the duty of Weather Central to forecast and transmit weather in- formation for all bombing missions to the japanese Empire. He was also a member of the original task force which set up .and oper- ated a weather station on Iwo lima. He arrived back in the States Ianuary, 1946, and was dis- charged Ianuary 22, 1946. He wears the Asiatic Pacific Theatre Ribbon and three battle stars. 77. Earl Newcomb U.S.N.R., B.M.2-C, is a veteran of the Atlantic and Pacific Theatres. He saw service on all seas except the Arctic. His last duties were with the Magic Carpet Fleet aiding in occupation of Iapan. He was U.S.S. Hampton which docked at on the Aomori in northern Iapan, August, 1945. His consisted of about 25 ships 12000 convoy soldiers and 500 crew members to each shipl. Newcomb was in Chefoo, China, and Seaman Iinsen, Korea. 78. P. F. C. Iohn Oksa was inducted, into service Qarmyj through Fort Devens, Mass. on Feb. 15, 1943. He left there soon for training in the field artillery in Fort Bragg, N. C., where he took 12 weeks of rugged basic training. He journeyed west to Terminal Island near San Pedro, Calif., spending only a short time in the Barrage Balloon Battalion fa part of the intricate defenses of the west coastl. He went to the University of California for a short course in radio. Completing that he came hack to Los Angeles to the very nerve center of the whole Western Defense Command where, in downtown L. A., was located the famous plot- ting board pictured in some of the leading magazines. He was a mechanic there for a few months while waiting to be outfitted with a specially built power boat. Then P.F.C. Oksa moved to Santa Monica. He was second man on a specially equipped, very fast crash- boat, which patrolled the Pacific Coast alone. Its main purpose was to recover the very secret and confidential radio-controlled missiles which they tested. These small planes were just ex- perimental then and were an absolute secret. This unit was called the OQPQ Detachment. fDefining it: O for non man carrying, Q for radio control, P for personnel carrying, Q for radio control aircraft., Oksa spent nearly two years in this unit. He learned many very delicate skills: wood lamina- tion for wing spars, fabrication, engine repair, radio work, parachute packing, and remote control flying. He mastered all these forms of work and got to be a crew chief of one of the N0 'lilll' l3,XNNl'.R my two crews. lle could only hold an acting rating as all rates were frozen for non-combat crews then. He went with the crew to the Mojave Desert, just twenty miles from Death Valley and spent months at this work. When, at the close of hostilities, the unit was deacti- vated he went to San Francisco and was assigned to an ollice. His last two months of service were spent at Fort MacArthur, doing more re- search and computing data on the radio-con- trollcd planes. During his tour of duty at Mojave he went to Muroc Desert Test Grounds to take olhcial speed data on the P59 and P80 jet planes with radar and special speed indi- cators. lle was discharged at Port MacArthur on lfeb. ln, 1946. Completing three years and one day of service, he wears the Cood Conduct and Western Defense Ribbons. Iohn Writes. M My three years ol' service were very educational and a lot ol' lun. l only hope l was ol' a little value in making the peace that we all still pray is here to stay. l am now living in Santa Monica. l have a wonderful wife and two very lovely daughters. 79. ligidio Ventrella entered the service Mar. llth, 1943. lle was sent to Camp Polk, and was in the 8th Armored Division. then was transferred to the 8th Armored Division, and to the Sith lnfantry Division. He went over- seas early in '44, landing in Normandy in the early part of campaign. He was wounded at Metz, Sept. 20, '44, and was sent back to the States where he spent I3 months in several hospitals, being discharged Oct. 25, I945. 80. Cadet Nurse Lorraine Webster took the two and one-half year accelerated course with three months affiliation at Boston City Hospital Qlor communicable diseasesj. The last six months of the senior cadet period she worked at the C.M.C. as senior charge nurse. The last four months of this period were spent on the men's medical ward, Xl. Velma White S llC did her WAVIQ train, ing at Hunter College, Bronx, N. Y. She was assigned to Naval Communications in Wash- ington, D. C. After receiving her honorable discharge, she accepted a government position QContinued on Page H9j LITERATURE Barbara Babbie, '50, is among the high school student! throughout the United States whose work is represented in An Anthology of High School Poetry, published in California. The poem included in The Anthology is re- printed below. MAINE Perhaps you've been to foreign lands- To Paris in the spring- Perhaps you've gazed at desert sands -- Or strange birds on the wing. liut have you seen our state of Maine When dressed in winter snow, Or greener, brighter after rain, Or seen a pine tree grow? The ocean on the shores of Maine Has rhythm all its own And on the hill or lowly plain The farmer's fruit has grown. You have not seen the world at all Until you visit Maine, To see the leaves turn red in fall, And feel the April rain. The poem was one of many written as a part of a regular assignment in Miss Maher's sopho- more English class. CHILDHOOD Days that have gone, never to be lived again, can be summed up in the word childhood. I was brought up on a farm in Maine that had lands spreading some 200 acres. The farm itself was large, and self-sufficient. The house had nine large rooms, two long halls, and a staircase that consisted of eighteen steps. Be- side the large house there was a shed where the winter supply of wood, farm machinery, and such necessities were kept. The barnlheld fifty tons of hay, sixteen head of cattle, and two pigs. The days I spent on that farm were happy days. With about thirty other students I went to the country school a mile up the road. I would leave the house at seven o'clock in the morning and would not return home until four in the afternoon. I could never tell what would happen through the day. More than once at school I was made to stand in the cor- ner for quarreling with the other students, or perhaps, for trimming their hair with the scis- sors that we kept in our desks. On my journeys back and forth to school it wasn't anything for me to see a deer, moose, or fox. In the winter I rode back and forth with my father who drove some fourteen or fifteen miles to work. I especially remember how in the cold winter evenings, I would do the dishes after one of my mother's delicious meals and then carry in the wood for the next day, while my father did chores. Many cold evenings were spent around the Hre-place listening to the ra- dio. My father would rest and mother would knit. I would sew. This I did with skill, be- cause I had been taught as soon as I was con- sidered old enough to learn. After the long winter, I looked forward to the summer with exceeding joy. The leaves would again come out, Flowers would bloom, and the world, that was seemingly dead, would come to life. I especially liked the vegetable gardens and took great pleasure in planting, weeding, and watching the vegetables grow to their fullest extent. Then, of course, I took pride in the harvest. Life on the farm wasn't all work and no play. There were many times when aunts, un- cles, and cousins would meet at our house for the day. Mornings were spent doing last- minute work, such as getting in the last load of hay, or picking the last row of beans. At dinner we would gather and sit at a long table and feast on one of mother's hot meat-pies and warm rolls. For dessert there was apple pie and home-made ice cream. The afternoon was devoted to a sport of some kind, usually swimming. I distinctly re- member trying to teach my cousin how to swim. I was holding her up and she was paddling away when, unfortunately, I let go. She went under the water and there I stood exercising my lungs for, what seemed to me, minutes. There was the usual fuss. Then we all went back to our swimming. When the afternoon was over, we would return home feeling we were the happiest people in the world. 88 '1'IlE BANNER This is not a thorough description of my early life, but it is a brief outline of what I call the happiest days of my life. Donna Wagner '48. MY CHILDHOOD DAYS My father always had a saying, Spare the rod and spoil the child, but I'm afraid it was never enforced. At least I didn't think so. In all probability I had a full and exciting child- hood without a stern and demanding hand to limit my life, but instead an easy but guiding one. From this remark you probably gather I did pretty much what I pleased. So I thought. The life I so well remember was lived on Munsey Avenue.. We lived in a beautiful big white home with large rooms. There were many closets, good for hide-and-go-seek, and many doors for exit and entrance, whichever the situation called for. The house was situ- ated near the woods and in the summer we spent our time playing cowboys and Indians, picking flowers, and being explorers. In the winter it was skating on the frog-ponds, or breaking new trails up in the Arctic. Also every Sunday evening, at 8:00, the two neigh- boring children would come in to listen to In- ner Sanctum. Daddy would always turn the lights low and we'd all huddle around the ra- dio. If we thought we were frightened enough to scream, we knew that would be impossible as our mouths were crammed with hot buttered popcorn. After the program my sister and I used to stand on the porch while the neigh- bors went home, as the girl was afraid to walk past the garage and her brother would always run and leave her behind. The great day would always come when mother would say, Girls, Daddy is going to make fudge tonight, so be good little girls and help Rita, fthat was the hired girlj with the dishes. And how we would hustle around. Daddy never needed a cook book to make fudge, he just threw everything together and let nature take its course. We always fought to lick out the cooking pan while the fudge was hardening. The fudge was a deep, rich brown, with walnuts throughout. It was about one and a half inches thick and would melt in our mouths. This was one time we didn't want any of the neighbors around, because Daddy didn't get those fudge sprees often. I particularly liked the time of fall when the ground was covered with crisp-smelling leaves. You couldn't pay us kids to burn them. First, we had to get all the use we could out of them. All the gang would assemble at the neighbor's house to proceed to build houses of leaves. Old boxes, crates, and boards were used and when we had finished, we had room for the entire gang inside. We were always building on and making over. Our friends' parents kncw we would tire of this project and bum it up, so they never said anything about the mes: in the yard. We used to have plays, libraries, movies, doll- houses, sewing circles, and a general store up over our barn. We had it all fixed up and to us it was home. I particularly remember how we used to pick the neighbors' blackberries and sell them for l0c a box, when the owners went on their va- cation. We also had a trapeze. It used to be fun to hang from our ankles practically in mid-air. When we could master that, we were one of the gang. Also we were somebody special if in the winter we could jump over the ski-jump in the field. I never did this, but I hoped to some- day. Yes, my childhood life was full, full enough to write a book, if I ever had the urge. Nancy I-Ioag '48. THE FIRST TEN OR TWELVE YEARS My childhood, so as to speak, was spent in a small town settled within a valley which is typi- cal of our Pine Tree State. Fortunately or unfortunately as it may be, I was the youngest of our family, having three brothers and one sister each constantly consulting with my mother about my actions, but naturally for my own good. I, along with about forty other boys and girls, started school in nineteen thirty-five at the rc- quired age of five. Recalling that first day, I remember becoming very friendly with one of the boys until, that very noon, we had a little dispute in which I was hit in the eye. I pur- sued my newly acquired friend for a couple of blocks accompanied by one of my brothers who gave the required moral support. I did not catch my friend that day, however, and ever since then, strange' as it may seem, we have been friends even up until this day. 'I'lIE BANNER SU Our neighborhood was spirited-with any- where from fifteen to thirty wild-acting boys and girls constantly being told by a quick tem- pered grey-haired, Scottish woman of about sixty years of age, Will you bunch of hellions get out from under my feet so that I can get some work done? This remark was always accompanied by a swat which landed against the ear of the boy or girl within firing range. Even to this day, however, we know she would have cussed if we weren't under her feet so that she could Hy off the handle. Grammar school was one of the happier and more memorable periods of my childhood. I shall never forget it, any of it, from the after school session of detention to the season of bas- ketball in which I played and made a total, during the entire season, of two points. These years were years of just plain deviltry for most of the boys in our class, including myself. We always enjoyed giving oral compositions in our eighth year of grammar school but, un- fortunately, none of us could outdo one of our former classmates. Our friend arose from his seat one day, came forward to the front of the class, and prepared to give another one of his excellent compositions. He began, I had a calf, that's half. He concluded, I put it in a stall, that's all. He walked back to his seat and became seated. And so my childhood went from spring, when we sighed with relief from a hard long winter, to summer, when we roamed the woods near by playing cowboys and Indians, to the fall, when we raked leaves in huge piles and leaped into them, and, Hnally, to winter when we went to school and on holidays lived in the huge drifts of snow. The only reason or explanation for my ac- tions during my childhood is that I was merely of the present generation. ' Russell Wagner '48. QContinued from Page 84, in the Offices of Personnel and Patents. Later training in an advanced business course fitted her for the position she has been holding for seventeen months, secretary in a southern rail- road company whose offices are in Washington, D C 82. Sgt. E. Bernal VVilkins was inducted Oct. 29, 1945, and discharged Feb. 14, 1947. He received infantry training for four months at Fort Devens, Mass., and trained at Camp Rob- inson, Ark. He was assigned to the Air Corps and sent to O R D at Camp Kearns, Utah. He sailed from Seattle, Wash., March 4, 1946, for japan and served with the occupation forces as personnel clerk in the 41st Squadron of the 317th Troop Carrier Group, stationed 35 miles north of Tokyo, later he was attached to the Headquarters Detachment as finance clerk for 317th T. C. Grp. He performed duty by typ- ing and making pay vouchers for officers and enlisted men, also vouchers for traveling allow- ances. Sgt. Wilkins supervised the work of two enlisted men. He arrived at San Fran- cisco, Ian. 21, '47, from Yokahama, Iapan, and received his discharge papers at Fort Dix, New Iersey. 7. E. ...Lu PILE-UI' WITH KENTS HILL B A S E B A L L CLOSE-UP WITH N. LAVERDIERE RECEIVING J. HARTFORD TAGS HIM OUT AT FIRST BASE N. LAVERDIERE SET T0 MEET THE BALL C. LABRECQUE AND N. BLEACHER SCENE NEAR LAVERDIERIC R E P AIR THIRD BASE UUT-DOOR BASKE'l'IiALL 1Built by Apfgic Boysl BACKBUARD K 'A THE RIVAI.S MANUAL ARTS ACCUM .IAY vs. I.. I . H. S. IILISHIVIENTS. THIC ARCH ERS, left to right: G Dy sart '47, G. P1lI'tI'IlILL'l' '-17, IN Lakv 218. I,. I . II. S. GAINS TAI' AT WINTHROP. I.ucu1'v.-Ili No. 12, II2lV6I'iII6I'0 No. 3. A N III FI TT ICS OU TJ U M I' I3 A TTE R III' WINTHROI' LASSIICS NICW BI,I'IACIII'IRS FOR THE IIIGH SFHOOI.. QBuiIt by boys in AQ'l'Il'llItUI'l' UIIIIOI' elirvction of Mr. Crousmnj V 4 -..Q , Q TH E '47 FOOTBALLERS l mn1 Row tlvft to righll: C. Putnam, '48, N. Bilodeau, '49, B. Dow, '48 lCapt.l. O. Luvarolli, '48, G. liarvlay, '48 W. Vumnlms, '48, A. Richards, '49, R. Doiron, '48, S. Easton, '50, P. Hebert, '51 lAss't Mgrlxl. Sm-mul Row: G. lle-lx-rt, '51 lAss't Mgrlzl, F. Barclay, '49, R. Castongzuay, '51, l,. Marquis, '48, 'l'. Jumlrl, '50, R. llc fl 8 B m0 C nhl l 51 t 1 l ull. '4. , 0. Wellman, '48, F. Hebort, '4 , R. can, 'V , 2. Ri' arc s, '. lAss' N -'r. . S- l'l1ir1l Row: C'0ac'l1 ll. Rhmlonizvr, W. Parker, '50, A. Bilodcau, '51, I,. Lvtournvau, '49, ll. Kolluy, '31, M. l'inv: '-18. N. l,averclic-rv, '49, M. Hall, '50, M. f'umming's, '48 flVlgr.l. AA. -... .- THE '47 VARSITY GRIDMEN l runI Row lloft to rilfhtl: W. l'arks'r, '50, S. Baston, '50, B. Dow, '48 lC'apt.l, O. l.urarulli, '18, N. Iiilmlc '-19.12. Barclay, '48, C. Putnam, '48. 81-wml Row: N. l.avvr1liuro, '49, W. fl00ll1llS, '48, F. Hebert, '48, M. Pim-au, '48. IT'S PINEAU AROUND END AT COULD to right for I.. I . II. S.: No. 84 Bilodeau, No. 93 Pineau, No. SI Huston, No. E32 Coombs, No. 813 Baltlxy o 97 Dow, No. Stl I.lll'ill'L'III, No. 95 I.averdiei'e, No. 90 Parker. BASEBALL 1947 'l'lic IIHT haselmall season started early in May. l.ed hy Captain Reynolds the Andfes took the Iield in nine games. They won live games. Coach Snllix'an's teain consisted ol' seven vet- erans: I. Reynolds. lf. llehert. M. Iloster. I. llartlord. M. llinean, O. Lncarelli. and N. l.a- verdicre. Uther ineinhers ol' the team were II. lbnmais, lf. Ryder. IJ. Poisson, and Richard lloiron. 'l'he scores were: I.. I . I l. S. I4 lients I lill In I.. lf. I I. S. Ill lfarinington 7 l..li.ll.S. PI Iay 6 I.. li. I I. S. 2 lients I lill 5 I.. li. ll. S. 4 St. lloms. X I.. li. II. S. Ill Mexico 9 l..l .lI.S. ll Iay I l.. I . I l. S. I Ifarniington PI l.. lf. I I. S. I St. Doins. -I 'I'he following hoys received letters: I. Rey- ... A ... . --., nnlils, -lf. I. Ilartlord. -If. M. I'oster, -If, Ii. llninais, I7. II. lloiron. '-I7. M. ljinean. '48, U. laicaielli. '43, I . llehert. '43, N. Layerdiere, '-I9. Cf. Ryder, '30, ID. Poisson, '30, and M. Cum- inings, '-Ili. Mgr. CROSS COUNTRY 1947 This year's track team included only veterans: II. llow, '-IH, N, Laverdiere. '-W, Richard Bean. '50, and Rohert liean, '30, 'I'he one track ineet held was with lients IIiII at Livermore I alls. Although the Iients Ilill harriers won the con- test lo-13, II. llow ol' I.. I7. ll. S. set the pace lor the ill inile course in I2 minutes, ,ill sec- onds. Unfortunately, due to a conflicting loot- hall game, I.. Ii. II. S. could not he represented at the annual state traela ineet at the Univer- sity ol' Maine. FOOTBALL 1947 'I'his year loothall as a sport was highly snc- cessful morally. although the team won only three games. The lans were enthusiastic ahoul the hrand ol' Iootlxill turned out hy Coach llhodenizer and his players. An unusual at- tendance was maintained at all the hoine games. while hnsses accompanied the team on many trips. The starting line-np consisted of the vet- erans Capt. ll. liow. '-I8, Ii. llehert. '-IX, U. l.n- carclli. '-IX. CI. llarclay. '48, NI. Ilineau. '-IX, VV. Coomhs, '-IX, N. Laverdiere. '49, N. llilodcan, '-I9. and S. Ilaston. '30, New players were VV. Parker, '50, C. Putnam, '-Ill, and II. Castonf guay, '5l. Mexico Raps L. F. H. S. .Xfter two weeks ol' practice. the Andies met Mexico, at l.. I . It was a hattle hard fought on a dusty Held, hut the Pintos won I3-O. Gould Raps L. F. H. S. A high-spirited team opposed the liethel gridmen resolutely. Alter outplaying our oppo- THE BANNER LAVERDIERE 1955 SCORES AT GOULD Foreground: No. 90 Parker CHEERLEADERS IN ACTION AT HALF OF GOULD GAME FREE BALL AT GOULD lift to right for l.. I . ll. S.: No. Stl Luearelli, No. 93 M. Pineau, No. 92 Coombs, No. 83 Baston, No. 90 I ii tl m. E15 l.averiliei'e, No. 97 Dow, No. 86 Barclay, No. nents throughout the game, a tree ball recovered by Gould brought them a l-l-o victory. I.. Ffs lone touchdovvn was scored in the third period on a pass tirom llebert to l.averdiere. I.. F. H. S. Bowls Over Wilton .Xtiter tvvo defeats a determined Green and XVhile team met VVilton at Ilippach Field. Not much progress was shown bv either team in the tirst hall. a touchdown by Hebert being the only tally. ln the second halt' both teams played a much tiner game. .X touchdown by l,averdiere in the third quarter. and tvvo by XVillon tied the game. liut a touchdown by llebert in the tinal minutes gave l.. F. a 20-I3 victory. Points atittru vvere made by A. Rich- ards. I.. F. H. S. Drops Game to Winthrop .Xt NVinthrop the .Xndies met a much heavier club than they had encountered during the earl- ier games. JI touchdown was scored by l.aver- diere in the second period and an extra point by .X. Richards. .Xlthough l.. F. lost by a I3-7 score, they were rated by a prominent grid ot'- Iicial as one ot' the best-looking small school teams in Maine. ln the Portland Sunday Tele- gram under Central Nlaine Topics lien Toomey vvrote, llal Rhodenizefs Livermore Falls eleven has dropped a trio ot decisions. but the Falls earned ltenio Yerrengia's U. li. as one ot the best looking small school teams he has 81 Putnam. seen in Maine .... l.ivermore has two stellar ball carriers in Franny Hebert and l.averdiere, Hebert capable ol making any high school club, and tip lront. guards lflunny Dow and Norm llilodeau are I4-karat kids. L. F. H. S. Slaughters Kents Hill The Andies' gridiron ability was displayed in a hard-tiought contest. .X quick touchdown by lients Hill in the early minutes ol the game proved helpful to l.. F. H. S. Then the Green and White settled down. scoring three touchf downs to vvin the game I8-7. A touchdown by Fineau and two by Hebert accounted for the victory. St. Doms Nicks L. F. H. S. On October I8 the favored St. Uoms team met the Andies at Livermore Falls. Alter holding St. lloms to tour downs on the l.. F. two-yard line, we punted and recovered a tumble, but to no avail. The Doms completed a pass in the tinal seconds ol the game to vvin a 7-tl decision. Wilton Upsets L. F. H. S. .X touchdown, scored by N. l.averdiere in the second period. moved the Andies out in front obtl but proved disastrous to an over-confident l.. F. H. S. eleven. ln the third period the liagles scored on a pass. Then almost imme- diately scored another tally on a stolen ball to put the game on ice. U6 'l'llli BANNER Old Orchard Dcfeats L. F. H. S. L. F. H. S. traveled to Old Orchard on No- vember l to be defeated 13-7 by a more power- ful Gull eleven. Old Orchard displayed its power by gaining constantly throughout the game, using a wide variety of plays. The high spirit of our team was shown when F. Hebert in the third period scored after a splurge of gains. The L. F. line was weakened by the ab- sence of B. Dow. L. F. H. S. Smothers lay The final game for many team members was played with our traditional rival, lay, on No- vember 7. The Andies' early season favoritism over lay was diminished to a toss up after L. F. lost a trio of decisions. A smaller Andie team showed its determination to win by scoring in the first period, with F. Hebert carrying the ball across the goal line fanother touchdown being scored by M. Pineau in the second cantol. The early lead taken by L. F. H. S. allowed Coach Rhodenizer to experiment with next year's prospects. ln the third period the Green and White regulars got a third touchdown, He- bert again carrying the pigskin to pay dirt. The final score was 20-0. Another factor contributing to our morally successful season was the nomination of three of the team members to an all-state team. They were: Franny Hebert, quarterback, for the guard positions Bunny Dow, and Norman Bilodeau. Ben Toomey again wrote in the Portland Sunday Telegram, Several of the Class B backs outshone the Class A ball car- riers. Selecting the Big Four from the B's ball carrying brigade is a major problem. We'd nominate Ray Guerette, Winthrop, Frankie Bickford, Oakland, Franny Hebert, Livermore Falls, Ben Sheehan, Greenville. For guard duty and it's take your choice, there were such flashy performers as Bunny Dow and Norm Bilodeau of Livermore, Wally Shives, Oakland, etc. Record Sept. I3 L. F. H. S. 0 Mexico I3 Sept. 20 L. F. H. S. 6 Gould I4 Sept. 27 L. F. H. S. 20 VVilton 13 Oct. 4 L. F. H. S. 7 Winthrop 13 Oct. ll L. F. H. S. 18 Kents Hill 7 Oct. 18 ' L. F. H. S. 0 St. Doms 7 Oct. 25 L. F. H. S. 6 Wilton 13 Nov. l L. F. H. S. 7 Old Orchard I3 Nov. 7 L. F. H. S. 20 lay 0 Lcttcrmen Fred Barclay, '49, George Barclay, '48, Sher- wood Baston, '50, Norman Bilodeau, '49, Rene Castonguay, '51, Winston Coombs, '48, Mgr. Malcolm Cummings, '48, Robert Doiron, '48, Burnell Dow, '48, Francis Hebert, '48, Thomas ludd, '50, Norman Laverdiere, '49, Olindo Lu- carelli, '48, Leo Paul Marquis, '48, Willard Par- ker, '50, Martin Pineau, '48, Clifford Putnam. '48, Arthur Richards, '49, and Orie Wellman, '48. Letters were awarded also to Drs. Pratt, Rowe, Eastman, Rand, Patten, Berube and Ca- dieu in appreciation of their services to mem- bers of athletic teams. A letter was presented to Mrs. Lucille Hall for her help in obtaining a basketball scoreboard for the high school. To show its special appreciation of Dr. Ca- dieu's generosity in treating members of the football team at his office, and for his profes- sional services at all games, the squad at a special assembly presented him with a table model radio. BASKETBALL 1947-48 Rangelcy Beats L. F. H. S. 40-Z6 The Andies opened the '47 season with Rangeley. Both teams started very slowly, but Rangeley gained considerably in the third and. fourth periods to win 40-26. The locals were paced by Capt. Lapointe, who chipped in four field goals and four foul shots for a total of twelve points. Madison Edges L. F. H. S. 33-25 Madison's fast break proved disastrous to a shorter L. F. H. S. team. Although Livermore gained effectively in the fourth period, Madison maintained its lead to win 33-25. Lapointe and Laverdiere led the attack for the Green and White with ten and eight points respectively. Pineau played excellently by setting up plays for his team mates. Andies Nip Farmington 36-34 The Green and White opened the season at home with a 36-34 victory. The Andies main- tained a comfortable margin until the third period when the Greyhounds started to click, but, nevertheless, L. F. stayed in front. La- pointe was high man with 20 points. followed by Pineau, with eight. THE BANNER 97 Lewiston Slaps L. F. H. S. 52-28 Playing a much larger team at the Lewiston Armory seemed too great a task for the Andies. Despite these obstacles Livermore trailed by only ten points at the half, but in the third and fourth periods the Blue Devils went out in front to assure a comfortable victory of 52-28. Again, Lapointe led the attack with 13 points, Laverdiere shooting in six. Kents Hill Outscores L. F. H. S. 40-29 Again, the Green and White met a much taller team. The Hill Toppers gained a dc- cisivc lead in the first half. but despite this, the Andies fought back in the third and fourth periods to match Kents Hill in field goals. ln the forward court Pineau and Laverdiere tossed in 8 and 7 points respectively, while at center Lapointe held Philbrick to eight points, chipping in 11 points himself. L. F. H. S. Slaps Back at Winthrop 49-19 On a much smaller court, the L. F. H. S. speed proved effective over a slower Winthrop quintet. The Andies opened the game by gaining an eleven-point lead in the first quarter, and continuing the attack throughout the game to earn a -19-19 decision. The Andies were paced at 18 and ll points by Lapointe and Laverdiere. Andies Outplay Phillips 50-41 Un the home court again, the Andies showed their superiority over Phillips by rapping Phil- lips 50-41. After three periods of close score the Andies tossed in .10 points in the final canto, to gain victory. The scoring was more equally distributed with Laverdiere, Pineau, Lapointe, and Putnam sinking 17, 12, 8 and 7 points, re- spectively. L. F. H. S. Upsets Rangcley 41-33 Again playing on the home court, the Andies showed their stuff by winning over a previous victor. Both teams played equally good ball during the first three periods, but Livermore sent eleven points through the basket in the final period to come out on top 41-33. The lo- cals were led by forwards, Pineau and Laver- diere, with 17 and 13 points each. Andies Defeated By Iay 41-30 The heighth and experience of Iay proved too great a match for the Andies. Both teams scored slowly, at first, but the Tigers increased their lead continually, winning 41-30. Laver- diere and Lapointe tallied for L. F. H. ll and 8 points, respectively. A total of 44 fouls was compiled by the two teams. St. Doms Knock Andies 50-34 Again, the Andies met a much taller quin- tet at St. Peter's Hall. Effective passing and interception by St. Doms accounted for their 50-34 triumph. Lapointe led the home-town- ers with 19 points, while Laverdiere chipped in 8 points from his forward berth. Phillips Trips L. F. H. S. After a close, hard fought game, Phillips emerged a 37-33 victor. After a tie score in the first period, Phillips went out in front by four points and maintained the lead to win 37- 33. Both teams played a poor game, running up a total of forty-five fouls, six men being ejected from the game. L. F. H. S. Takes Wilton 37-30 After a slow start in the first half, the Andies bounced back to win 37-30 over Wilton. Both teams played heads up ball throughout the game to provide much excitement for the fans. After confining himself to a defensive game in the first half, Pineau came through in the sec- ond with 11 points, for a total of 13. Lapointe and Laverdiere scored 15 and 9 points for thc locals. L. F. H. S. Down Winthrop 52-37 Again on the home court, Livermore Falls showed its superiority over a determined Win- throp five. After an early lead taken by Liver- more, Winthrop fought back, in the third period, to within seven points of the victors. The Green and White was paced by Lapointe and Pineau with 21 and 16 points, respectively. Tigers Nick Andies 42-40 After suffering a previous defeat at the hands of lay, great determination was shown by our boys. The Andies had a lead of 12-9 at the first quarter but thenceforth the Tigers main- tained a slight edge over Livermore. From the forward court 13, 12, 10 points were scored by Lapointe, Pineau, and Laverdiere. Both Bilodeau and Putnam played a good defensive game, while chipping in 2 and 3 points. LAST MINUTE WARM-UI' BEFORE ST. DO CONTEST BLOCKING FOR L. I . II. S. II.-XK'KI IIC MAN ON END SWEEP. REFER FOLLOWS TIIE DUS C'AI'T. DOW WATCHES 'l'EAMMA'I' SIIOW TIIEIR STUFF' IN PRACTICE RUNNING BACK A PIII AGAINST WILTON 'III IC ANDIES 1 AGAIN S T TI EAGLES I . IIEBERT 12 and B. DOW if R E A D Y I I ACTION IIEADIN lII'- FIE WITH LI TLE II TERF E II ENCE ' I.IJ .E IA . PIRINI I f '- , SISSION YAIIII I,lNI'I HY WII.'l'ON II.'I'ON I'I,A YICIIS l'I.0SI'I NI UN I.. I . II. S. RUNNICII IIISICIVI' Sl'I'I' 'VO III'-XVI' -X LONG UNIC I . II. S. I'I..-XYICIIS NIXKIV 3 I'IUIx ICNID RUN W X Y II'IIZI ICRI'INl'I'I IVUII I.. I . II. S. IIALI. qw C.-Xlilillflli 3 ., Y U-'gi Q Y 4, ,i 4 R Lum ,, ,eng GH-S ,mis xi-H.S mms, 21' 31 3 3 , Q 23 ,,Q E 7 ' as 25 Mil l,?f k U I 1 V.: Q I N U lql :?,. 5. ,.,. X 5 xg , ,. gf - 1. . A6 1 f 6 1. l ' ,q gy si A E -A 16 as Q M' ma F 'v. 3 k .SM ix law' . Y JF? gig E 'Q if E 9 gs .5 4 ' .2A. 32 S A g ffl '4v UEK5 EHS ' 1 X4 1 , 5 U Q w -' X ,, N hi if 1 L ,FH Er if W , ,4. M ' fv f Q. Q S E gf gg ,,fYT.f if my 5? THE BANNER 101 Madison Edges L. F. H. S. 45-43 After leading Madison for three periods, the Green and White eased up in the fourth period to lose a 45-43 decision. The locals were led by Lapointe, with 22 points, followed by Pin- eau, with fourteen points. Again Putnam showed up well in his guard position. Farmington Trounces L. F. H. S. 62-32 The Andies held Farmington in the first quarter to a one-point lead, only to have the Greyhounds go ahead by fourteen points at the half. Scoring honors were split by Lapointe and Pineau with 9 points apiece. A total of 47 fouls was counted. L. F. H. S. Drops Heart-Breaker to Wilton 48-47 Again the Andies were defeated after leading their opponents for three periods. Despite play- ing on a small floor against a much taller team, the Andies were able to stay in front the first three periods and most of the fourth, just being outshot in the final seconds of the game. La- pointe, Pineau, and Laverdiere tossed in 16, 13, and 10 points for the Green and White. Andies Bound Back at Doms 38-29 lloth teams started slowly. the score being 13- ll in favor of Livermore at the half. At the end of the fourth period the Andies had tossed in a 38-29 score. The Green and White were paced by Pineau and Lapointe with 16 and 14 points. Kents Hill Stops L. F. H. S. 57-46 The final game of the season found lients Hill nosing out the Andies by a comfortable margin. The locals were paced by Lapointe with 23 points. The outstanding player of the evening was Norman Bilodeau, who played a great defensive game while tossing in four field goals, and one free throw for a total of nine points. Iunior Varsity The junior Varsity squad was composed of Holt, '49, Bean, '50, Andrei, '50, Ryder, '50, Reed, '50, Kinch, '50, Dube, '51, Richards, '51, Kelly, '51, Hebert, '51, and Lapointe, '51. Record l.. F. H. S. 21 Rangeley 20 L. F. H. S. 47 Farmington 30 L. F. H.S. 23 Lewiston 27 L. F. H. S. 27 Kents Hill 35 L. F. H. S. 28 Rangeley 19 L. F. H. S. 27 jay 48 L. F. H. S. 21 St. Doms 47 L. F. H. S. 25 lay 30 L. F. H. S. 46 Farmington 45 L. F. H. S. 45 St. Doms 34 - L. F. H.S. 42 Kents Hill 44 BASKETBALL 1947-'48 The Andiettes of 1947-48 had a successful season, making the record of five wins, three defeats, and two ties. The squad members were Capt. L.. Taglienti, '48, R. Flagg, '48, C. Chandler, '49, N. Gay, '49, C. Rhodenizer, '50, N. Lewis, '50, R, Letourneau, '50, I. Strout, '50, li. Babbie, '50, H. Houghton, -'50, P. Iacques, '49, D. Ferland, '51, I. Cloutier, '49, Mgr. and K. Riley, '50 QAss't Mgr.j. A summary of the games, made by Coach Wagner, shows that much of the success of the season was due to accurate foul shooting. Madison Nips L. F. H. S. 18-16 The L. F. H. S. girls started with a defeat. Madison led by six points in the third period after a 7-7 tie at the half. The Andiettes tossed in six points in the final canto only to lose to a more experienced Madison team 18-16. The high scorer for the Green and White was L. Taglienti with 10 points. GIRLS' L. F. H. S. Ties Winthrop 29-29 The Andiettes showed great improvement in their second game of the year by tieing a much taller, more experienced Winthrop sextette. At the half L. F. H. S. led by 2 points only to have Winthrop even the score in the third quarter. Each team tallied two points in the final period to complete a 29-29 score. The scoring Andiettes were paced by C. Rhodenizer with 23 points. Andiettes Down Phillips 19-16 On the home court for the first time this sea- son, the Andiettes displayed their basketball ability to good advantage by out-scoring Phil- lips 19-16. The Andiettes were led by C. Rho- denizer with 13 points. GIRLS' BASKETBALI, TEA M limit Row Qlt-ft tn riglitl: Rita l,t-touriin-au, Ruth lflagggr, Coiistaiit-u Rliotlutiim-r, Vuptztiii Imuist- 'l':tg'litntt lln lvtrzt llztlihit-, Nancy Gay, Pztulinc .Iztcqucx uw: Nlrs. .-Xiiilmmrw 4l at'ult,y Atlvisvrl, Katy Riley, llvlvti llougrhtoii, lluris l t-rlztiinl, Nornia l,t-iris utit-r lllzniztgt-rl, tlmtch Myra Wzty,riwr. L. F. H. S. and Iay Tie 35-35 Winthrop Defeats Anclicttes I6-15 .X1g.tin, tlic .Xiitlicttcs tlcinoiistrtttctl grcttl 'lilic VViiitlirop luissics gttiiictl it tlctisixc align' iwtmiliilitics lit' tiring tlicir tmltl ritxtl, Izty. in ti in thc gg-t-rmtl in-riotlg tlic rhitlicttcs Imiglit VN- lllllll 5 Url'lll ililmc- AVAICV lC4lRllI1fl lmck to lose gt licatrt-lircgtlacr lilli, l,. 'lliglif ll1I'Ull'ullOlll tlit' lirst tlirct' pcrimls, lily olitscorctl Qnli lg-tl tlw lututls with ll points. Un tht- ily tlic' .XllIlll'lll'Q lwy Iwo 'mints in Iltt' littzil pvriml. lACI15C, llotiglituii xxxix tlic' 0lllSl.lIltllll1-I lwlgiycr, tu cwii Ilia' score 55-5. 'lilic scoriiig lor tlic' .Xmlit-tics wax tltmc cntirrlx' lw if. Rliutlciiilci' .intl l,. klllltllifllll witli lliztiitl ll points, rv- lay Nwks I Ii' H' S' 22 Zl xlwkmcly. Xltcr lcgttliiig lqiy lor tlirrc pvriotlx. lily mit srurctl tltt' .XllLllCllL'S iii tlic lintirtli qtiqtrtvr Im' In F. H. S. Ousts phillips I6-H at 22-2l4x'ictory.. .Xntlicttr liigli sctmrrr nuts if, UH 'LIIHMH 24 my Axmlidlcs Imwlcd lu lllimlciiirt-rA witli ll points. tollmvctl lui' l.. Vliilliivs to t-.tru at lfw ll x'it'tory. llutli lCLlIlts Illgllmm null 8 Plums' xt-viiit-tl mt-wily tiigtlclictl tltiritig tlic lirst tlircc lit-rititls, lvtil in tlit- liiigtl Slallllzl tlit' .Xmlicttcs In lg' H. S' Upsets Madison 25,24 XXVIII .llitxtcl to win. l.illlfk'lS vo to lorwgirtls. l.. . . 'N .. . . ' . - llztvinr guilt-rt-tl qt vrcximis tlrlt-nt .tt tlic l.tglIL'I1Il .mtl t,. lilimlciiizcr, willi X ttml 7 . l , ' . , . . . , litmtls ul Nlqulistm, tht- .Xmlictttw lmiititlul lmtlt ptniits i'wpct'tix't'lx'. Lrctlit lor tliis xictorx' is . . ,- , . . ,. . ' . . ' to xicturv in it jf--4 tit-tfmtm. Ilit- .Xmlit-ttt-s tltiv tlit- gtittrtlx lm' tlicir utttstgtiitlitig work. ' . . ' ltwl att tlic lixill, wt-tit lit-limi! in ilu- tliirtl tltigtr tcr. lmtlt L'llI11t' luck gtgatin to win in tlit' lutirtlt I ll' H' S' Edgcs Wllloll 50-30 pt-riml wht-n l., ,l.llgllL'llll ttmt-tl iii tt liglwlxfl in -lllllll ll llll' lwllli' UNITY- Ill? -XI1lll4'llCS tlic liiigtl st-mml ol' tlitt q.itm'. l..,l'1lLlllL'llll1lllLl 5-l.tyt'tl .1 mticli licttvi' llfllllll ul lutll tlitm iii gf. lilmclfmft-V lg-,l ilu- M-4,r3,,Q with lj .HMI fr iltuir lWI'k'XlUll5 L'Il3,:1l3-QUIIICIII. .Xlitcr ggiiiiiiig Al Imimg rt-5iwQt-iiwly, ttimtmt.tlalt- mttrgin ul sown IWUIHIS. tlic .Xiitlif t'lIt's let tlicir lt-ntl tlct'i't'ttst' to lutir points in tlit- liitqtl pcriml. lligli scurcr lor l.. lf. ll. S. L- F- H- S- Glfl5 Iitix Vvilmll 30-26 wits ti. liliutlc'iiim'i' witli IU points iblltiwctl lit' lit tlit' linttl gqttm- ul Ilia' watmii. tlic .Xmlit-tit-N l,. 'ligtgliciiti witli lil lwiiits. t'tmiiqtict'ctl tltt- XYiltun girls lit' it stun' ul ill ltr. li A N N li R lllj NEW SCOREBOARD AT MURRAY HALL L. F. H. S. FANS DURING BASKETBALL GAME AT MURRAY HALL COACH RHODENIZER EYES HIS TEAM BEFORE FARM- INGTON GAME OPPOSING CHEERLEADERS IN ACTION AT HALF OF FARM- INGTON GAME IO4 TIIE BANNER Despite playing on a small court, both teams passed effectively to demonstrate good team work. C. Rhodenizer, L. Taglienti, and N. Lewis made 15, 10, and 5 points respectively. Much credit is due the guards, C. Chandler, R. Flagg, I. Houghton, and B. Babbie for their constant defensive work. LETTER AWARDS: L. Taglienti QCapt.I, R. Flagg, C. Chandler, C. Rhodenizer, I. Strout, R. Letourneau, B. Babbie, I. Houghton, I. Cloutier QMgr.I SKI TEAM 1948 Again this year some members of the student body had the opportunity to represent L. F. H. S. at various winter Carnivals. The team was organized in Ianuary with Martin Pineau, '48 as president, Arthur Richards, '49 and William Mitchell, '48 as his assistants. Other members of the team were R. Lovaas, '50, M. Hall, '50, R. Bean, '50, and C. Putnam, '48, The ski team was invited to the carnivals at Iay, Kents Hill and Wilton where they placed third, second, and fifth. The first competition the team mtl was at Iay. R. Lovaas showed up well in the dashes and cross country, and M. Pineau was out- standing in the downhill and slalom events, taking first in both. On the following Saturday, thc boys went to Kents Hill. 'There they faced stiff opposition, but did very well and earned second honors. This list of boys placed: Cross country, R. Lovaas, second, downhill, B. Mitchell, second, jumping, B. Mitchell, second, M. Pineau, third place. FHA SOCIAL' The Future Homemakers of America held a meeting Friday morning, March 22. It was voted to have each member bring twenty cents, in order to raise money for the National Con- vention. Two candidates were chosen to represent the chapter for state office. They were Margaret Riggs from the Iunior Class and Patricia Chi- coine from the Sophomore Class. A private box social was held on April 16 at the high school auditorium. All girls brought decorated boxes to be sold at intermission. The following committees were in charge: Enter- tainment, Elvira Morse, Mary Richards, Elnora Safford, Idis Coombs, Decoration, Ieanette Rob- inson, Claire Wilkins, Leah Flagg, Margaret Riggs, Nancy Collins, and Ruth LaBreque. The FHA and FFA from Wilton Academy and Leavitt Institute were invited guests. ASSEMBLIES The students of L. F. H. S. enjoyed a Pan- American Day assembly on Wednesday, April 14. Mr. Henry Fournier, a member of the school board, spoke to the student body about the interesting festivals and customs of the peo- ple of Mexico. Preceding Mr. Fournier's talk was a film on life and festivals in Mexico. The film showed very interesting scenes from the life of our Pan-American neighbors and pro- moted a better understanding of them. Having traveled extensively both in Mexico and South America, while engaged in engineering, the speaker was thoroughly familiar with his sub- ject. 1 II Q The L. F. H. S. Band held its concert Tues- day afternoon, April 13, in the assembly hall. The selections showed much variety. The band had had very little practice on the overture but played it well. It is to be played at the Music Festival in Brunswick. Featured for the first time were the majorettes. The numbers the band played were: Stars and Stripes Forever-Sousa, Over the Top- Brockton, On the Mall-Goldman, Triumph of Ishtar-Olivadoti, Iolly Tars-Liscombe, American Patrol - Mecham, Seventh Regi- ment Cwith majorettesI - Brockton, Coons' Holiday-Douglas, Old MacDonald's Farm- Yoder, Star Spangled Banner-F. S. Key. AMERICAN LEGION CONTEST A group of L. F. H. S. students who are in- terested in public speaking had the opportunity, through the kindness of Mr. A. L. Iohnson and Mr. A. Nemi, who provided transportation, to attend the State finals in The American Legion Contest at the State House, Augusta. The stu- dents who went were Sally Cox, Louise Tagli- enti, Beverly Iones, Barbara Babbie, Brenda Iennings, Melvin Fuller, Thomas Berry, Steve Nichols and Norman Iacques. Miss Shoc- maker represented the faculty. 'l'lll'Q BANNER lll OUR REWARD As Ollieial pll0l0Ql'llpllL'l' for lhe Class ol' Ill-18 is in knowing that lhe Liver- more Falls High Seliool has received lhe linesl in Pholograpliie service. IN YEARS TO COME VVe would enjoy working with lhe graduating elass and yearbook slall' as mueh as we have this year. NEXT YEAR Lel us assisl you. THE WARREN KAY VANTINE STUDIO, INC. 132 Boylston Street Boston, Mass. 'l'lI li Ii A N N In R BA1LEl?l'llilll59lHERs mlm 6 3 FORD 8 s,x1,1cs :md smwlczl-3 Compliments ul' YOUNG'S SANITARY BARBER SHOP Main Street - Tel. 2150 - Opposite Bank Compliments of BEN SILVERMAN BEN'S CLOTHING AND SHOE STORE Established 1911 DEAKIN'S SHOE STORE SHOES AND RUBBERS ELECTRIC SHOE REPAIR LADIES' AND MEN'S HOSIERY Compliments of WILSONIS DOLLAR STORE LIVERMORE FALLS AUBURN WINTHROI Compliments ul' LABRECQUES DAIRY u nl - i I l i 'l'llli BANNER ll! 1 Q 1 1 1 l 1 1 HW For Quality and Service Soc TAGLIENTPS MARKET GROCERS Members IGA Stores PROVISIONS THANK YOU CALL AGAIN G. F. KNIGHT LUMBER AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE PAINTS AND OIL mucx LIME CEMENT Complimcnls of DUMAIS' MARKET DIAL 2351 LlVliRMOlll'I FALLS Compliments of FOSS THE .IEWELER Authorized Dealer in KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS C. N. 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IIII IIANNICR Ill Complimcnls ol' STURTEVANT 81 HAM Compliments ol RUDY LANDRY WESTERN AUTO ASSUCIATE STORE I,IYCI'IIIOI'C Falls, Maint' Dial 2230 6' NARORHOOD GROCERY VICTOR A. LANGELIER, Prop. DIAL 450 JU MAIN S'I'RIiIi'I' LIVERMORIL FALLS, Mli. Complimcnls of LIVERMORE FALLS WATER DISTRICT MONICS VARIETY STORE I8 Iluvm' STREET - Bef: Line of PIPES in Town - I-lviauMmui FALi.s IUISACXXJS - CIC9ARIi'I'TIiS - CICIARS HOT LUNCHES TONICS - Illli CREAM CANDIES SP1 IRTING GOODS - KNICIQ IQNACKS A Little Ilit of Everything If You Don't See It, Just Ask For It MYRAL'S, INC. HARDWARE, PAINTS, AND ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES PYREX AND ENAMEL WARE 23 MAIN S'I'RIiIi'I' - LIVIQRMORE FALLS. MAINE THE BANNER , . . Compliments ol I f LIUt'yp710p-5' L Dlo Tc,lt.Ph0,N. Mfllim' Dial 2629 THE STUDIO OF FINE PORTRAITS J. C. HAM D R U G S STATIONERY and CIGARS Complinienls of CENTRAL MAINE POWER CO. Main Street - Dial 655 - Livermore Falls, Maine Compliments of HILDA'S DINER LUNCHES HOME COOKING MEALS NORTH TURNER im. -l-,Sl Compliments of TENNEY'S STORE NO. LIVERMORE - - MAINE Compliments ol' 6' OAT THE OLD AUTO GUY lIIIu BANNER SANITARY DAIRY PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM Roland Fournier KIIISIIOIM MAINE I f Compliments ol NICK'S BICYCLE SHOP Maple Sireel CHISHOLM - - MAINE O'DONNELL FUNERALHOME AMBULANCE SERVICE V6 MAIN S'I'RIiIi'I' LIVERMORE FALLS, MAINE Dial 456 Compliments of A FRIEND Compliments of PARK STREET FLOWER SHOP 145 Park Street - Livermore Falls, Maine JOE LIBBY'S ICE CREAM COLD DRINKS GROCERIES MEATS ROUTE mf, TEL. 2511 Stricklzlnds, Maine ' I Ilili BANNER 46 Hotpoint Appliances EMERSON ELECTRIC SERVICE GENERAL CONTRACTING 22 Depot Street - Dial 2155 Livermore Falls, Maine SUNNY DAIRY Pasteurizetl Milk and Cream Dial 2165 J. R. LaFRENIERE and SONS You're right wherever you go . . . in a DORIS DODSON. 'l'here's a New Look to fashion . . . and a New Look to you! So feminine, so flattering! Perfect setting for your very .I unior Figure. Exclusive at your Favorite Fashion Store POMEROY'S 6 Depot Street LIVERMORE FALLS - - MAINE BOWENS BODY SHOP Auto Painting Body and Fender Work EXPERT RADIATOR REPAIRING Phone 2210 LIVISRMORE FALLS I ' MAINE TIII' BANNER E. E. CLOUTIER Dcalcr in HARDWARE - WALL PAPER - PAINTS - OILS BRUSHES - CROCKERY - ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES 8 UNIUN STREET, 1.lvl-ZRMORIQ FALLS, MAINI-1 Clmnplimcnls of THE CORNER STORE LIVERMORE FALLS - - MAINE STAR SHOE STORE LADIES' NOVELTIES SUMMER SANDALS WITH WEDGE HEELS Electric Shoe Repairing 22 Malin Slrccl I,IYCl'lll0l'C Falls, Maine LIVERMORE FALLS BAKING CO. ISAIQERS OI French and Italian Bread Top Notch Bread THE BANNER . Compliments of LEONARD A. PAGE, O. D. OPTOMETRIST Dial 998 - 24 Church Street - Livermore Falls, Maine Compliments of LOUIS C. BROWN RADIO REPAIRS Bank Building - Livermore Falls, Maine Compliments of EVELETH'S BEAUTY SALON BANK BUILDING Telephone 2291 Livermore Falls, Maine GRUA INSURANCE AGENCY INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS DI xt 4 1 is MAIN STRlili'l Liverinorc Falls, Maine Compliments of DR. W. E. BERUBE 34 MAIN S'l'REE'l' Tlil.. 2225 Compliments of ARLENE'S BEAUTY SHOP Dial 477 - Main Street - Livermore Falls, Maine IIII: l,.XNNI',R ll Compliments of DR. CADIEU - Osteopath Dial 566 SMALL'S JEWELRY STORE WATCHES DIAMONDS JEWELRY Prop., S. .I. Miller MAIN sTRialiT - limi- 2021 - LIVliRMORli IfALl.s, MIC. CHARLES F. HULL Special Agent NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 72 CHURCI-I ST. - DIAL 2292 - LIVERMURE FALLS. Mli. EDMUND C. DAREY ATTORNEY AT LAW INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS All Losses Acljuslcd I'c1'sonalIy by This Ollicc DIAL 2044 Compliments of Lucien P0mer0y's Slaughter House REFRIGERATION I.IVCl'lll0l'0 Falls, Maine Dial 2265 POULIN'S SERVICE STATION DIAL 2001 l,lVl'1lIMOllIi FALLS, MAINE , 2,22 .MAH , ,,,, IHI1 BANNER Compliments of A. MAUROIS CHISHOLM - - MAINE FOR FINE FOOTWEAR AND ACCESSORIES LAMEY - WELLEHAN 110 Lisbon Street - - Lewiston, Maine Other Stores in Porilaml, Augusta and Runlford Compliments of DR. W. W. QPATTEN Compliments of J. J. NEWBERRY FARMINGTON - - MAINE PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK Farmington, Maine MFMBER FIZIDHRAI. RIiSIiRVI'. SYSTEM MIMIWR FIJIJFRAL DEPOSIT' IVSURANJLI .......i.Q..i.i..i STEWART'S LUNCH HOTDOGS HAMBURGERS FHFIIIIIIQIOII - Tel. 325 - Maine IIII. ILXNNICR ll BONNEY'S LUNCH REGULAR DINNERS HOME MADE PIES DONUTS - Open till ll P. M. - Compliments of FRANK W. and BENJAMIN BUTLER ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Farmington - Maine GEORGE McL. PRESSON, Opt. D. liolh Phones FARMINGTON, MAINE Compliments of LINDSAY G. TRASK .IEWELRY and GIFTS I lll'llIIlIgiOlI - - Maine IIARDY'S STUDIO' PORTRAIT AND COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY Duane A. Hardy - 24 Broadway - Tcl. N. li. 296 Farmington, Maine DR. FREDERICK C. LOVEJOY D E N T 1 S T 64 Main Slrcvl I 2ll'IllIlIQiOlI, Maim- IHI. BANNER Compliments of MITCHELUS SOCONY SERVICE Corner of Bridge and Main Streets LIVERMORE FALLS - - MAINE THE ADVERTISER CG. Bank Building PRINTERS - - PUBLISHERS IJIV0l'lll0l'6 Falls, Maine W. E. STEPHENS GROCERIES and GENERAL MERCHANDISE Headquarters for Eastern States Farmers Exchange FAST LIVERMORE DEPOT ' DIAL 906 Compliments of A. L. POMEROY HOUSE PAINTING and PAPER HANGING Z0 GREEN STREET DIAL 446 Compliments of PINEAU'S MARKET DIAL 2270 FREE DELIVERY PORT ROYAL CHAPTER, F. F. A. FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA lllli l5ANNliR ll AUBURN NOVELTY CO. CANDY - TOYS - DRUGS Wholesale Only Ms MAIN s'rRII I TEL. 4-asm - AUBURN, MAINE Compliments of LIVERMORE FALLS PRIVATE HOSPITAL RUTH G. SKILLINGS, Supt. Clmrell Streel Complimenls of BOYLE'S STORE 25 KNAPI' ST. LlVl'1RMORli FALLS, Mli. For the Man wilh a Plan SEE HENRY P. KOWALZYK THE METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE MAN WAITE'S NEWS AGENCY Everything to Read Magazines, Papers, and Lending Library 'l'0l5ACCO, CIGARS, and CIGARl'l'l l'liS Complete Line of Greeting Cards Candy, Stationery, Novelties Compliments of FRED and PAUL OUELLETTE OIL and ICE DIAL obo - PROMPT SERVICE - CHIsHoLM MAINE TI-Ili BANNER WIRTHMORE FEED CO. Quality Poultry - Dairy - Stock Feeds Hay - Flour Dial 441 LIVERMOIlli FALLS, MAINE to IT'S PONTIAC in 1948 'l More PONTIAC owners say their next cal' will he PONTIAC than any other make Resident Salesman - Marshall Morse at Charles Putnam's Garage - Livermore Falls MORTON MOTOR COMPANY FARMINGTON - - MAINE Compliments ol' COOIVIBS' RED AND WHITE STORE North Turner, Maine lIIIz ISKNNER K I N C C O L E POTATO CHIPS 81 STICKS KING COLE FOODS, INC. 174 CASH ST. SO. PORTLAND, Mli 2-2040 Telephone 2-6417 WILTON WOOLEN COMPANY Manufacturers of WOMEN'S WEAR and AUTOMOBILE UPHOLSTERY CLOTH Visit our Remnant Room Wll.'l'0N - - - MAINE WILTON HARDWARE CO. Willon, Maine HARDWARE HEATING SL PLUMBING SUPPLIES SPORTING GOODS HOME APPLIANCES Modern PAINT Service BUY IT IN WILTON . THE BANNER We Solicit Your Patronage IN RETURN WE AGREE TO GIVE YOU THE MOST YOUR MONEY VVILI. BUY Clothing Furnishings Dress Shoes Hats, Caps, and Luggage LIVERMORE FALLS CLOTHING CO. RAND and MOORE Domestic and Commercial Fuels Antliracite - Run of Mine - Coke - Screened Biluminous A SOCONY DISTRIBUTORS KEROSENE and MOBILHEAT Expert OIL BURNER Service H U D S O N SALES SERVICE Dial 413 Services to CANTON BRETTUNS NORTH TURNER LEEDS, WAYNE, LAST IIVERVIORI' LIVERMORE, RILFY and JAY MORRISON'S GARAGE DlXl lliI,lJ - Tcl. I04-3 RIDl.0NVll,I,li - Tcl. 1000 International Sales Sl Service USED CARS - TRUCKS 81 PARTS l l 1 I'I-IE. BANNER THE CORNER DRUG STORE ZENITH HEARING AID - OLD SPICE TOILETRIES 11 Main Street, IAIVCI'llI0l'C Falls, Maine Complimcnts of CHARLES W. CROCKER ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING AND SUPPLIES DIAL 23l7 LIVFRMORE FALLS, MAINE I I I I I CQ,Q,QgQI,ggQ,g ol' I I OOOOO W E . E . R U S S E L L VETERINARIAN FLIFIIIIIIQIOII - - Maine N Y K czomplimems ol Y Z M CHISHOLM TAXI DIAL 7200 LIVERMORIL FALLS, MAINE The Agency for Western Union STUDENT NAME CARDS Standard of Style and Quality THOMAS - ANDREW COMPANY SAYRL - - - PENNSYLVANIA Compliments of LIVERMORE FALLS FRUIT COMPANY CHISHULM, MAINE Wholesale FRUIT and PRODUCE DIAI 7 4 llll, l XNNLR l The FINEST in FLOWERS for all occasions ROAK the F LORIST S AUBURN 'l'llliA'l'RE BUILDING 6 2-15 CENTER ST., AUBURN Compliments of Hathaway - Richards Beauty Shop MACHINE - MACHINELESS PERMANENTS HELEN CURTIS COLD WAVE c:,x1.l. 12-2 FUR APPOINTMENTS ICE CREAM TOBACCO S T I N S O N ' S Wilton, Maine HOT DOGS FOUNTAIN SERVICE W. E. SAWYER and CO. Willon, Maim- Tlil.. 125 MEATS GROCERIES THE LOG CABIN SUNOCO AtoZ SERVICE Ynule S. 1'1'1S1f. IC'I'IO.V c:U.1R. 1ivT15li1J Pllonc Slfl-2 VVillon, Mainc Complimcnls ol' SPORTSMANS CAFE MAIN STREET - - WILTON, MAINE 'I HE BANNER STOCKFORIYS DRUG STORE WILTON, MAINE PERSONAL - FRIENDLY SERVICE Arthur L. Crossett, Prop. Compliments of IVIAILIVIAN'S Y. D. CAFE REGULAR MEALS LUNCHES BARCLIFF, INC. CAMERAS - RADIOS Supply - Service FOR BETTER PHOTOGRAPHY AT STUDIO OR HOME H Phone 157 Wilton. Maine THE KYES AGENCY INSURANCE 8z REAL ESTATE Howard Ii. Kycs Carlton F. Scott WILTON. MAINE The Red 81 White Semi-Super Market C. W. MOORE CO. Delivery Sewice Tclepllone Service Compliments ot' Willie Sz George Deshaies CHISHOLM - - - MAINE 'IHL BANNER BELLE'S RESTAURANT REGULAR DINNERS llUlllL'lllllllC Pics Open IInlil 11:30 P. M. Im XIAIN S'l'RliliT, IEIIISHOLM, MAINE Compliments of REED'S DRY GOODS STORE Complete Line of LADIES' GOODYEAR WELT 352.50 SPORT SHOES 83.50 CHILDRENS .l. P. S. SHOES M Im sIIzI:I1T . DIAL 2066 - CHISHOLM, MAINE O. E. ALEXANDER KI SONS REUPHOLSTERING - REPAIRING - REMODELING Main Slrcct - Cl1lSllOilll - Dial 2657 Compliments ol' EMELIA POMERLEAU Dial 2181 CHURCH STREET - CHISHOLM, MAINE Coinplimcnls ol' DUBORD'S MARKET CHISHOLM - MAINE Colnplimcnls ol' BILL'S TYDOL SERVICE DIAL 496 CHISHOLM, MAINE ,, . . , W-, f, --.. 1221 THE BANNER Compliments ol' R 81 E MOTOR EXPRESS I9 Knight Street Auburn, Maine Complete Home Furnishings Appliances Philgas Musical Merchandise ALXVAYS AT Ytlllll SI'IIiVICl'I BAILEY FURNITURE CO. Dial 2223 Bates Street Cigar and Confectionery Co. Wholesalers of Cigars, Tobacco, Cigarettes and Confectionery SCHRAFTS CHOCOLATES MURRAYS SYRUPS AND FRUITS, COCA-COLA 12-14 Bates Street Lewiston, Maine Tclcplmone 4-4081 DAVIS and ROLFE Phone 101-3 WILTON Timken Automatic Heating Timken Modern Home Appliances WE SELL l3li'I I'l'IR LIVING llll. HANNI-IR I .l. GUY COOLIDCE STORE Dry Goods - Garments Millinery Tel. 2152 l.lVl'1liMUIil'I IJALLS - MAINE Practical Business Training GEARED T0 THE TIMES 6-Week Slnnlner Session Starts .lune 21 AUBURN MAINE SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 53 Courl Slreel - Telepllone 2-2171 - Auburn, Maine HALL 81 KNIGHT HARDWARE COMPANY - DlS'l'RIl3lT'l'ORS - Hardware - Paints Plumbing - Heating 6' Sporting Goods Electrical Supplies Mill Supplies 20-24 Chapel Slreel Lewiston, Maine FARMINGTON DOWEL PRODUCTS CO. sUccEssoRs 'ro A. E. COBURN Nllllllli-2lCllll'Cl'S ol' SKEWERS DOWELS NOVELTIES DISCS P. 0. Box 551 Farmington, Maine 'l'll lx HA N N Ii R l 1 l 1 l GENUINE NEW ENGLAND BAKING gives 'em extra-good flavor! For baked beans at their delicious best. . . true, old-recipe, New Enga 'D 'X land Baked Beans . . . ask for B85 M l A Brick-Oven Baked Beans. They're baked slowly, all day long, with lots M 'f ' of spicy sauces, in brick ovens and in fqlahl M open bean pots . . .baked till each I Z1 - mealy, tender bean is a tasty treat 104069, in extra-good old-fashioned flavor. ' Burnham 81. Morrill Company, Port- land 2, Maine. Qfffflflj- X I U ' Genuine .New En land Brick-Uven BAKED BEANS Folks everywliere prelel' llie CXll'Zl-ilL'llClUllS, genuine New lingland goodness ol' B X Nl llriek-Oven llakecl llezlns. Beans lmkecl as generulions ol' New linglund housewives have baked 'eni. Beans aelnzllly liakecl lnol sleznnecll in lmriek ovens and open bean pols all clay long, wilh lols ol' pork and spicy szlueesl Ask your grocer for other Qualily New lingland Foods packed under llie ll X Nl label. BURNHAM 81 IORRILL C0 IPANY Porllancl, Mc. THE BANNER ll Maine's Uldesl and Most ,Q .. . Q ik Fully Equipped I.. . R I s. A BEAUTY sc1HooL e ie ' xfi J NliWliS'l' Mli'l'HODS A' 'i 'O 6? 'l'Ii.XCHliHS of 25 ye-are , liXPl'IRlliNCli I'or llli0l'lll2lil0ll wrllc lo: PELLETIER SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE 215 Lisbon Street Lewiston, Maine The Knowlton E99 McLeary Co. 77ri1zter.f, Bil76l!6I J' and Smtionery ON J Oi A N. fw Q- X we ff ' ,C -J KI fi mm :Q 5 ' gl! H FARMINGTON, MAINE I l THE BANNER COlllplllllCllIS of ROLL INN COIIIIJIIIIICIIIS ol' STEARNS FURNITURE CO. FARMINGTON, MAINE - TEL. 50 Furniture - Appliances - Linoleum - Upholstering Compliments of FRANKLIN COUNTY SAVINGS BANK FARMINGTON, MAINE Conlplinlenls oi' THE SELECTMEN of LIVERMORE FALLS, MAINE .IUIYS SPORT SHOP SPORTING Sz ATHLETIC GOODS - ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES RADIOS - CAMERAS - FISHING TACKLE, ETC. EVINRUDE 8x LAWSON OUTBOARD MOTORS GRUMMAN ALUMINUM CANOES - Tel. 803 Wilton, Maine Complimenls of DR. D. ROWELL ORR wII,'I'0N, MAINE 'l'Ill', BANINIQR I I l I BEISAW'S GARAGE DeSoto - Plymouth - G. M. C. Trucks - Sales and Service Parts 81 Accessories - Body 62 Fender Work - Painting North Jay WELDING 8x CUTTING - Maine Compliments Of George Bunten Post No. 10 ' The American Legion J. W. 81 W. D. BARKER MOTOR CARS AND ACCESSORIES FARMINGTON, MAINE N. li. 105-2 TAXI F2ll'llICl'S, 263 FORSTER Manufacturing Co., Inc. FARMINGTON, MAINE l'Izll1lsalSll'Ong - Phillips - NO. Anson - SO.I,Ol'll2llNI A GOOD PLACE TO WORK C. W. STEELE FUEL CO. 46 IWIZIIII Slrccl - Tclcpllonc 70-4 FARMINGTON, MAINE Complilucnls Of MAINE SKEWER XI DOWEL CORP. FARMINGTON, MAINE TI-IE BANNER Couiplimcnls ol' ESTHER'S BEAUTY SALON 68 MAIN STREET DIAL 2691 Compliments of L. F. H. S. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Compliments of LORING STUDIOS FINE PORTRAITS Phone 2-2601 - 118 Lisbon St. - Lewiston, Me. FARMINGTON MOTOR SALES KAISER and FRAZIER CARS Complete Bear Front Alignment GULL THEATRE Winthrop, Maine WHERE YOU CAN SEE A SHOW IN COMFORT The Best in Sight and Sound Compliments of FLOOD SHOE STORE in Farmington FOOTWEAR FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY THIZ BANNER .I O Y I N N AMERICAN AND CHINESE RESTAURANT Dancing Every Saturday Evening - Special Daily Dinners .-XI.I. KINIJS Ulf CHOP SLIEY 'ISO 'I'.'.KIi OUT Telcpllonc 4-4351 - 20 Lisbon Slreel - Lewiston, Maine Complinxenls ol' Lewiston Crushed Stone Co., Inc. READY MIXED CONCRETE OUIII AVIiNUIi - DIAL -I-6521 - I.IiWlS'I'ON. MXINII MAINE'S LEADING SPORTING GOODS STORE JAMES BAILEY CO., INC. Porllzuicl - - - Maine Complinlcnls of L. F. H. S. FACULTY Compliments ol' WARD BROS. I.IiWIS'l'ON - - MAINE Coniplimenls ol' THE WOMAN'S SHOP LEWISTON - 86 LISBON ST. TI-IE BANNER CANTER - WINNER SHOES 87 Lisbon Street Lewiston, Mainc X-RAY FITTING Compliments of DARIS REFRIGERATION CO. COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION and AIR CONDITION CONTRACTORS Auburn - Dial 3-O88l - Maine Colnplilncnts ot' UNIVERSITY CAP 81 GOWN CO. 33 OTIS STHIiE'l' BOSTON IO, MASS. Compliments of BOSTON SHOE STORE OO LISBON S'l'REE'l' LEWIS'l'ON, MAINE TheAI1I,1Ii-ni Lcwistmq iSui'gii:aI Itppliwance C0 Fitters of Trusses and Elastic Wear at ANDERSON Sz BRIGGS 24 Court St. - Prescription Druggist - Auburn, Me. THE PRINCESS SHOPS FEMININE FASHIONS or DISTINCTION 53 Lisbon Struct - - Lcwiston, Maine THE BANNER A Complete Banking Service We Sollcll your Busmcss LEWISTON TRUST COMPANY LEWISTON, MAINE Three l3l'ZlllCllCS lo serve you Lisbon Falls Mechanic Falls Freeport 'l'Alili Home OLD HOME BREAD JOHN J. NISSEN BAKING CO. Portland RIDLEY'S WALLPAPER - PAINTS - VARNISHES - ENAMELS Everything for Home Decoration Ul'liN S.Yl'URll.XYS l'N'l'll. 'I P. M. O'l'HliR DAYS X A. M. TO o l'. M. Telephone 4767 48 lialcs Sl., Lewiston, Maine Complimcnls ol' DREAMLAND THEATER RIVERSIDE GREENHOUSES FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS 'l'l-QI.. 325 Farminglon - - Maim- Z H2 I My ' qw Nix' 1' 79 LISBON STREET LEWISTON, MAINE THE BANNER BETTER BREAD AND PASTBY Harris Baking Company SOLD mf Your. 1N0LPLNm:N'1' Gnocrzu -wwf ?-4.Y? ,..V Y, YY, V WY, Y, VLA. Y, ., L. . ,,,, A ,WY , , BARNsT0NE . 050000 00. Jewelers Si Silversmiths 50 Lisbon Street Tel. 45241 Sinee 1859 ALL PLATED PATTERNS ALL STERLING PATTERNS LIiWIS'l'ON - - - MAINE Compliments of MILLS and MILLS SUMNER P. MILLS PETER MILLS Lawyers FAR M I NGTON - MAIN Ii 'IHL BXNNILR HAMEL'S JEWELRY STORE WATCH, CLOCK AND JEWELRY REPAIRING 229 Lisbon Struct, Lcwislon, Maine Diamonds Watches Dial 2-3422 WEDDING GIFTS Compliments ul' WILSON SCHOOL PHOTOGRAPHY 1955 Mass. Avo. CAMBRIDGE - MASS. Skilled Artisans, High Quality Workmanship, Have Proved MURPHY MONUMENTS The Outstanding Memorials Since 1881 .Iames P. Murphy Co., Inc. Mz'm0ri1ll MdflIlflIf'l!ll'l'l'.f for ozfw' 05 years 6-IO ISATICS S'I'RIili'I' LEWIS ON, MAINE 'I' VVritc for Catalog Dial 4-8546 BENOIT'S Outfitters to Young Men COR. .XSII X LISBON STS. LIiWIS'l'ON HU 'I'IIIi BANNER Compliments of REID 81 HUGHES Iistablislmcd 1899 FOGG'S LEATHER STORE QUALITY LUGGAGE and PERSONAL LEATHER GOODS HARNESS SADDLERY TURF GOODS 123 Main Street - Lewiston, Maine G. H. BASS 81 CO. Makers of Outdoor Footwear wuxrow, MAIN1-3 FARMINGTON OIL CO. Texaco Petroleum Products RANGE ou, and FUEL ou, slcuvlczr: Call ALFRED OUELLETTE Dial 2060 IIIL BANNLR !PO1'.rIonidl Eliil iidvfing i ,F- I PHOTO ENGRAVERS AL 5-5711 J I2 MONUMEN1' SQUARE ' PORTLAIJD 5. M A rw Engravers for the BANNER and over 70 other Schools and Colleges LEARN Radio Refrigeration - Plastics Oil Burners DAY OR EVENING CLASSES FALL TERM STARTS SEPT. 13, 1948 Limited l'ill1'0ll1llClll Iilliciclil l,lLlCCllll'l1l Service - Veterans Accepted under G.I. Bill Write for FRlil'I Descriptive Cll'l'lll2Il' NEW ENGLAND TECHNICAL INSTITUTE 486 BRoAD STREET, PROVIDENCE 7, R. 1. THE BANNER Compliments of CENTRAL INSULATION CO. Rock Wool Insulation 96 WIiSTliRN AV ENUIQ - AUGUSTA, MAINI Telephone 3-R - Complimcnls of Livermore Falls Lions Club L. G. Balfour Company Attlehoro, Massachusetts CLASS RINGS AND PINS COMMENCEMENT INVITATIONS A DIPLOMAS - PERSONAL CARDS CLUB INSIGNIA A MEMORIAL PLAQUES liliPRI'ISliN'l'A'I'IVli: ' MR. DONALD B. TUPPER 2 Ivic Road Cape Cottaffe - - Maine THE BANNER 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 - 1 1 1 Compliments of GLORIA MOULTON LOUISE TAGLIENTI JUNE MURRAY GRACE DIAMOND RITA WARDWELL LUCILLE POULIN DONNA WAGNER NATHALIE RICHARDS Conlplilnenis of RUSSELL WAGNER FRANNIE HEBERT JIMMIE RICHMOND LES MYERS HAROLD PORTER LEO PAUL MARQUIS PIT BILODEAU TOM BERRY Compliments of lVlcNAlVlARA'S WINTHROP - MAINE NORCROSS FLYING SERVICE Winthrop, Maine G.I. Flight Training Piper Sales 8: Service Charter - Airplanes for Hire Lobster Pound - Flown in Fresh Daily PM Compliments ol' KIRSCHNER MEAT MARKET ' 168 Water Streel - - Augusta, Maine Compliments of CUMMINGS, INC. CLEANERS - FURRIERS . Fred Lemay Tel. 305 Local Service Man Liverinorc Falls THE BANNER TURNER 81 RIDLEY Feed, Fertilizer, and Farm upplies DIAL 461 LIVIQRMORE FALLS, MAlNli WINTHROP - MAINE Printed Rugs - All Sizes - Also Yard Goods One-eighth inch inlaid in Yard Goods or Blocks - Asphalt Blocks - Congowall, Hall Runner, etc. Houusz 9 lx. M-12g is P. M.: 6-8130 P. M. Sundays 1-5 P. M, 12 HIGH STREET Compliments of Carolyn Bean Leroy Cronkhite Arlene Reed Frances Slater Pauline Simoneau Rita Welch Mary Richards Doris Ferland Laurence Lapointe Bertrand Dube George Dube Patrick Ryder Barbara Dewar Louise Strout James R. Paul Russell Lovaas Kathleen Nichols Pat Chicoine Michael Houlihan Annette Mailman Glen Merrow Richard Hood Etiie Forbes Camille Dumais Theresa Goupil Norman Jacques Madeline Chicoine Sue Pettengill Evelyn Rideout Carolyn Worthing Wilda Merrow Clydell-e Mann Marjorie Hinkley Robert Pike Floyd Putnam George Hebert Roger Ouellette Armand Bilodeau Catherine Nichols Norman Gagnon Connie Fortier Moselle Boucher Colleen Harrington Beverly Mclver Leon Olds Rene Castonguay Richard Dolloff Alice Gosselin Suzanne Fournier Beverly A. Jones Norman Littlehale Charlene Davis Richard Lapointe Ronald E. Jones Nancy Gay Henry DiSoto Lena Crane Madelyn Chappelle Gerard Richards Eleanor Martin Jane Levesque Irene Grondin Elise Mann Betty Coates Norman Bilodeau Harold Virgin Richard Dallessandro Louis Jones H. Paul Holt, Jr. Norman Laverdiere David Emmons Philip Q. DiSoto Carl Goding Margaret Riggs Laurette Laverdiere Zara Fuller Gloria Jacques Virginia Cook Louise Capen Elizabeth Barker Gloria Winton Jeannette Cloutier Mr. Frank Burbank Tl-IE BANNER DDGENERAL MILLS INC I I 4. 9 O Farm Service Division FARM EQUIPMENT SERVICE AND REPAIR DAIRY -- EARN -- MILR --I POULTRY SUPPLIES and FQUIPMI-lN'l' IfIiR'l'Il,lZliR AND SEIQDS AURURN - L,1RRo Farm SI-I-me FEEIIS - MAINE CAMERON OSGOOD ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Dial 2616 Livermore Falls, Maine MOTOR Rlil'AlRlNG, WIRING EOR LIGHTS OR POWER NEW AND USED MOTORS EOR SALE . ELECTRICAL SUPPl.ll:lS MAC E BUNNY c,0lI1plllI1CIIlS Oi Mr. Whitney's Brain Trust BILLY GUS Complilllcnls Ol' DERAN CONFECTIONERY COMPANY, INC. 134 CAMIIIIIDGE S'l'lIlili'l' Cambridge Mass. THE BANNER Compliments ol' EN DICOTT - .IOHNSON Where you can buy Footwear for every member of the family at reasonable prices backed by a square-deal policy llli LISBON S'I'lllil'I'I' - LliWIS'I'ON, MAINE I.AWlll'lNCli MASS. Complimcnls ol' ,Iay-Livermore Falls Booster Club R E E S E ' S l'l'hc Originull MILK CHOCOLATE PEANUT BUTTER CUP Made in Chocolate Town -- So they must be good H HRSHIQY, PA. AIR-CONDITIONING - HEATING SYSTEMS - PLUMBING WILLIAMS 0lLo-MATIC HEATING ' Free Survey by our Engineer Let us tell you what your Heating Needs are LOUIS P. BAIL 'l'cI. I-8221, I-15511 45 liivcrsidc Slrccl LI'IWIS'I'0N, MAINE Q l I I YV THE BANNER 1 I 1 For Economical Transportation WELLMAN CHEVROLET CO. DIAL 2367 66 MAIN STREET LIVERMORE FALLS Complimcnts of H. E. FOURNIER Hardware Heating and Plumbing DIAL I2 LIVERMORE FALLS - MAINE Ice Cream p Candy Come in and have a Sundae at: HERBIE'S CONFECTIONERY' p 21 MAIN ST - DIAL 2123 Tobaeeos Lunches C mpliments. of LEWIS C. BERRY HOWARD C. BERRY ROCKWOOD N. BERRX RONALD F. BERRY BERRY HILL ORCHARD CO. LIVERMORE FALLS, MAINE DIAL 2278 Apples Berry Hill Brand , L Apple Juice
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