High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 13 text:
“
in the game. It was good to hear him go around the house whistling. As I entered the field my heart beat faster. What if he was hurt and carried off the field? What would I do? Oh, heavens, this was making a nervous wreck of me. As I crossed the field, I noticed the op- posing team trying out. Then all at once I saw a boy who must have weighed at least three hundred pounds. Good Lord, if he ever hit my boy, he would surely make a mess of him easy. This was going to be awful. There goes the kick off and our team has the ball. My poor boy is going to get his uniform dirty. The team is running down the field now. For heavens sake, the boys don’t even know how to stand up. Why, they are falling all over one another! I simply can’t keep my eye on the ball. Then here I am with my eye on the one boy running down the field with his arms folded, and all the while the real ball is being carried over for a touch down by an- other boy. I just can’t make heads or tails out of the game. The final blow came when my son, mind you, got the ball. There he was in clear field running faster lhan anyone had I’d ever seen. Why was everyone screaming? He must be doing exceptionally well! I was so proud of him. But little did I know that he had become so scared when he got the ball that he had run the wrong way and had crossed the wrong goal line. There isn’t much more to say except now he’s trying out for cooking classes. At least if he mixes the wrong ingredients, he has only himself to make suffer. Betty Hatch, ’50 Goodbye Wearing a black suit, and a rather forlorn smile, the little man moved quietly out of the house. People were sitting and talking on the front steps. Trying hard not to appear sad and troubled, the little man made his way through the crowd to the sidewalk. While the row of long, black cars was forming, he glanced sorrowfully at the leading limousine and sighed heavily. Finally the line of automobiles started, looking somewhat like a winding snake creeping up on its prey. The procession stopped at an ivy-covered church, and the little man stepped out of his car. Are all the, er, details taken care of?’’ he quietly asked a tall, thin individual at the head of the stairs. Quite, sir,” answered the long blue suit. People were beginning to arrive, looking under- standingly in the direction of the little man. From the choir loft, the soft strains of the organ could be heard faintly from where he was standing. Taking a deep breath, the little man entered the door. He could see the faces of his friends turn ex- pectantly toward him, as he led his only child, a beautiful daughter, down the aisle to her future hus- band. Marjorie O’Connell, ' 50 He Fell For Me Janie and I were unusually boy-crazy. This was all right except for one thing. No boy would take a second look at either of us. One Saturday after- noon we decided to drown our sorrows by taking in our favorite pastime, horseback riding. When we got to the stables, we saw a boy whom we knew, on one of the horses. But, as usual, when he saw us he started riding off, without even speaking. Janie and I yelled to him, but he didn ' t even turn around; he just started riding all the faster. Quite disillusioned, Janie and I saddled our horses and started off. What is the matter with us?” we asked each other. Did we use the wrong tooth paste? Did we wear the wrong kind of clothes? We just couldn’t figure it out. As we were riding along we saw a horse prancing up to us. It looked like Jim Baker’s horse. Yes, now I was sure it was. But where was Jim? Was he hurt? The whinnying horse and our com- mon sense told us that something had happened. We followed Jim’s horse until we came to a secluded spot where Jim was lying unconscious. It looked as if he had been thrown, and he was in serious condition. Noticing his injured leg, I said, Gee, Janie, I think his left leg is broken, and look, he’s got a big scratch on his head.” Yes,” said Janie, we’d better get him to a doc- tor.” But by the time a doctor gets to him he may be dead,” I reasoned. You ride up to the stable and call an ambulance. In the meantime I’ll administer first aid.” I ripped my sleeve into strips and then bandaged and splintered Jim. After what seemed an eternity, the ambulance arrived. Jim was taken to the hospital and was said to be in critical condition. In a few days he was getting better, and, to my sur- prise, asked to see me. One day while I was visiting him, the head nurse complimented me on my quick
”
Page 12 text:
“
Neighborly Rivals Central Falls was having its annual church fair and all the ladies of the parish were eagerly awaiting the event. This was one occasion where they all had an opportunity to show off their pies, cakes, and needle- work. It is at this point that my story begins. Mrs. Cullen was considered an expert cake maker, and so was Mrs. North, her next door neighbor. These two women had battled over almost everything as far back as the neighbor could remember. It was arguments over their respective spouses and their jobs. Their children’s silly quarrels were magnified and fought over. Mrs. Cullen’s chickens crossed over to Mrs. North’s yard, and Mrs. North’s dog would chase Mrs. Cullen’s chickens all over the neighborhood. Oh yes, there was never a dull moment on Brackett Street. You could always depend on these two ladies to stir up’’ something exciting. It was the day before the fair and Mrs. Cullen and Mrs. North were in their back yards hanging out the family wash. Mrs. North piped out, I suppose, Molly, you’re all set to enter your angel cake at the fair tomorrow?” Mrs. Cullen was quick to reply, Oh no, Jenny, I think I will try something different this year. What are you making? The tutti-frutti” cake you entered last year?” Mrs. North thought for a moment and said. I have a new cake I have made several times and my family think there is nothing like it. It is something I have experimented with myself and I wouldn’t know what to give it for a name. Mr. North refers to it as the mystery cake.” By this time the ladies had finished hanging their clothes and disappeared into their houses with an air of triumph. That night lights were seen glowing from both houses. A mighty secret mission was going on in both the North and Cullen kitchens. If ever two women tried their utmost in the art of cake making, the credit had to be bestowed upon the ladies North and Cullen. The morning of the fair turned out bright and sunny. Mrs. North and Mrs. Cullen were seen leav- ing their homes dressed in their Sunday best, each carrying a large cake box under her arm. This was a sign for the rest of the ladies of the street to leave for the eventful fair. Late in the afternoon the judges came to the stage to announce the cake making contest. Mrs. Cullen ( 8 was on one side of the hall and Mrs. North on the other. Both ladies were glaring at one another. The long awaited for moment at last arrived and one of the judges was heard to say, Ladies, we have never tasted such wonderful cakes and it has been a very hard decision to announce the winner. We found two chocolate cakes, so exactly alike, even to the green frosting, that we have awarded two first prizes. Mrs. Cullen and Mrs. North, will you please come up to the stage and accept your prize money?” Ann Weckstrom, At) First Love She stood under the mistletoe just because some- one told her to. She looked so cute all dressed up in her new pink dress. Her soft golden hair just reached her shoulders. She stood all alone under the mistle- toe in the midst of a lot of people. Everyone was sitting near the fire singing Christmas carols, and no one paid any attention to her. But, unknown to her, one pair of eyes was upon her. They belonged to a boy. Perhaps she looked to him like a dream come true. As he walked toward her, she turned and met his eyes. They were full of love and admiration. He bent down to kiss her, and it seemed as if at that moment, everyone had a sudden desire to look in that direction. No one said anything because, after all, they were underneath the mistletoe. They looked like the perfect couple standing there. He held her so tenderly in his arms, and it seemed as if no one else in the whole world mattered. They spent the rest of the day together, trying only to see that the other was happy and contented. And when night time came, about 7:30 P. M., both little two-year-olds were tucked into bed. Barbara Mitzcavitch, ’52 Her First Game The afternoon was warm and clear as I hurried about the house putting the last few things in order. The game began 2:30 p. m., the first game I was going to see my son play in. He had gone faith- fully to practice every afternoon, only to be left sitting on the bench watching the others play for their school. At the end of every game he would come back home with a smile on his face, but tears in his heart. He had had to sit out again. But at last his chance had come. The coach was putting him )
”
Page 14 text:
“
thinking, and gave me a certificate for fine First Aid work. When we were alone, Jim gave me a lecture and said that he had always shunned me be- cause I had chased him and all the other boys so. He also asked me for a dance date the day he was to be discharged from the hospital which incidentally was the day of the Sweet Heart Hop which is strictly for sweethearts, so he said. Janic.f Morgan, ' 52 You Just Can ' t Win One day in the not too distant past, I took it upon myself to be absent from school without the proper authority, playing hookey, you know. But some lovely litle bird, heh, heh, put the buzz in Mom’s ear. Result? No Friday night dance for me. Now what could be more gruesome than that? But leave it to me. After fifteen years, four months and twenty-five days of existence, I ought to know how to go about rearranging my Mom’s thoughts. To make a long story short, I had a fiendish plot in mind. Friday morn found me prancing out of bed bright and early. After five lovely hours of school 1 dashed home to commence with the commencement. With my dungarees on and my hair tied back with a ker- chief I was ready to start working. I started with Mom s bedroom. The bed was made perfect, square corners and all. Then I dry mopped every nook and corner I could find, and repeated this performance for good measure. Then came the dusting and polishing of the furniture. Whoops! There goes Mom’s face powder on the floor. Oh, what a mess. I figured Fd better start on some other room and come back to this later. Next on the agenda was the parlor. After the pre- liminaries were done, such as vacuuming and dust- ing, I took down the Venetian blinds and did a beautiful job of cleaning them. There was only one slight slip-up there. I couldn’t get them back up. One of the nails slipped and we were then minus a pane of glass. But I figured on coming back to that later. First I wanted to get the kitchen floor washed and waxed. That was one job that came out perfect. Almost, that is. For some reason or another that wax was awfully sticky and wouldn’t dry. Oh, well, I didn’t have time to worry about such incidentals! It was five minutes of five and Mom came home at five o’clock. So, I dashed down the hall, knocked over a vase and broke it, then back up the stairs to ( wait till Mom came home to see what a beautiful job I had done — except for those few minor accidents. But Mom wasn’t as pleased as I had expected. When she walked in the door the first thing she cried out was, Who broke my new vase?” Were those my knees I heard knocking? With my courage slowly disintegrating I came down the stairs only to find Mom standing with her hands on her hips, surveying the condition of the parlor. From there she marched out to the kitchen. It was then I discovered why my floor wax had been so sticky. In my haste I had grabbed the furniture wax I still don’t see why it wasn’t as good. Slowly but surely Mom searched the house for further damage, turning a bit redder upon each new discovery. But why go all through this. Friday night I ended up in my room, thinking of what a wonderful time I could have been having if I had just left well enough alone. Gee, you just can’t win! Barbara Thijmith, ’52 Life ' s Little Problems You enter the house, a little apprehensively, and are met by the lady of the house who is more than a little excited and flustered. As she flies about, getting her hat, coat, and her husband ready, you gaze upon three small, upturned angelic faces which gaze back at you just as intently. Their mother kisses each in turn, and with a few parting words, leaves for a gala celebration of her wedding anniversary. The door shuts behind her, steps fade away down the walk, and instantly bedlam breaks loose. Uh-oh!” you think. I should have known.’’ Now listen, kids,” you bark at them, deciding to be firm, that’s quite enough!” You should have saved your energy; no one heard you. As one noisy cherub darts by, you seize him and hold on tight. All right, young fella’. To bed with you, and I mean now!” Whereupon amid a series of protests and a doubled amount of confusion, you drag him up to his room, deposit him on the bed, slam the door, and start upon your quest for the other two remaining dears.” Aha! There’s one, peeking from behind the kit- chen door! After him! Don’t let him get away! And after a mad pell-mell chase, (you really should go out for track, at this rate) another little warrior is captured. Off to bed he goes, too! JO )
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.