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Page 24 text:
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of the Jlaiaell Jetctile Ontiitute OFFICERS Harold W. Leitch, Chairman Samuel Pinanski, Vice-Chairman Kenneth R. Fox, Clerk TRUSTEES On the Part of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts John J. Desmond Jr., Commissioner of Education On the Part of the City of Lowell y Hon. Leo A. Roy, Mayor of Lowell PRESENT INCUMBENTS, TERM ENDING JUNE 30, 1947 Myron S. Freeman, Worcester, President, The Bell Company Harold W. Leitch, Lawrence, General Superintendent in Charge of Research, Pacific Mills Francis P. Madden, Boston, Selling Agent, Textiles, 201 Devonshire Street John J. Molloy, 76 Nineteenth Street, Lowell Melville Weston, Lowell, Treasurer, Newmarket Manufacturing Company PRESENT INCUMBENTS, TERM ENDING JUNE 30, 1948 Frank W. Gainey, Boston, National Aniline Division, Allied Chemical Dye Corporation Stephen R. Gleason, Lowell, Superintendent, Walter L. Parker Bobbin Spool Company Samuel Pinanski, Boston, President and Director, M. P. Theatres Corporation Philip L. Scannell, Lowell, Scannell Boiler Works Alfred E. Traverse, Chelmsford, Vice-President, Hub Hosiery PRESENT INCUMBENTS, TERM ENDING JUNE 30, 1949 John A. Calnin, Lowell, Superintendent Weaving Division, U.S. Bunting Company William A. Donovan, Lowell, Sub-master, Lowell High School George H. Dozois, Lowell, Merchant, H. C. Girard Company Barnett D. Gordon, Boston, Manufacturer, M.K.M. Hosiery Mills E. Perkins McGuire, Boston, President, R. H. White Company I Back Row: George H. Dozois, Stephen R. Gleason, J. Emile Lemire, William A. Donovan, Philip L. Scannell, Frank W. Gainey Front Row (seated) : John A. Calnin, Kenneth R. Fox, Harold W. Leitch, Chairman; John J . Desmond Jr., Commissioner of Education; Barnett D. Gordon, Francis P. Madden, E. Perkins McGuire, Melville Weston [20]
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Page 23 text:
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fytitUUinxj, Prof. Cornelius L. Glenn, Prof. W. S. Nowell O ia Back Row: Miss Kennedy, Miss Wiencek, Mr. Wallace C. Butterfield, Bursar, Miss Preble, Mrs. Dolge Front Row: Miss Lancey, Miss Ruth Foote, Registrar, Miss Leblanc, Mrs. MacKenzie, Miss Flack [I9l
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Page 25 text:
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9h the 9ntebim December 7, 1941 is a day that will be long remembered in the history of America and the World, for on that day we changed from a nation at peace to a nation at war. At L.T.I., classes were forgotten as all hurried to the nearest radio to hear the President ask for a declaration of war on Japan. That fall Textile had an enrollment of 280 students. The school year had started in the normal manner with the freshmen being welcomed in with a jubilant hazing by the well organized sophomores, a hazing which ended when the sophomores lost the freshman-sophomore football game. But all this was forgotten with the realization that we were at war; and yet, I wonder how many students actually realized what it would mean to them. For the realization of war was a thing that was to come slowly and painfully. On the surface everything appeared to go along as usual. The basketball season continued in full swing, followed in the spring by a heavy schedule of baseball games. But, by April 15, 34 men were in. On May 18, 1942, President Eames re- ceived a letter from the Adjutant General inviting the school to participate in the program of pre-induction training for students. Previous to this, the Air Corps had already had such a program; but it was later coordinated as a program of all the Armed Forces in which men would enlist in the Army or Navy Reserves and would continue on with their schooling as before. Professor Russell Brown was put in charge and spent a busy summer plowing through the Army and Navy Department correspondence. By the fall of ' 42, the program was in full swing and enlistments begun to pour in. Apparently there was supposed to be a quota for each class; but quotas were disregarded if the man was able, willing and alive. A further impetus to enlisting was the lowering of the draft age to 18. On October 27, an assembly of the en- tire school was held for the purpose of [21]
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