Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA)

 - Class of 1945

Page 1 of 74

 

Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collectionPage 7, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection
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Page 10, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collectionPage 11, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection
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Page 14, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collectionPage 15, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection
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Page 8, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collectionPage 9, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection
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Page 12, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collectionPage 13, 1945 Edition, Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 74 of the 1945 volume:

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W f- ,,w' r mmac,.,,,:',Wm-1 '15 w-1 'w:1::.w.mu'wu-nwxwmwmmmmmnwr1wf.w:mwww,w1',, ,mmwmwwnmmasm 5 3 5 l I ! 5 5 . 2 Z 3 5 i I f x 5 1 5 xn::wns'nal'A.1ii2ss4mwna..::.zrse,a9sf , YEARBOOK CLASS of 1945 X Qs-'ANI ED ly 6 X8 PS, Z lg 15 , A 3 2 Q ff' qfbrnn XQRQXXQ 80R0U9 MEMORIAL HIGH SCHOOL MIDDLEBORO, MASSACHUSETTS I To JOSEPH TEELING ln acknowledginent of a deht of gratitude to a man whose high ideals and great character have given him an exalted place in our minds. and whose diligenee. unselhshness. and geniaiity have proved him worthy of our faith and respect. we gratefully dedicate this yearhook to our friend. S',Ioe 'IX-eling. W .Q 'Wx Qs x A , :,-, .,,, - . .::,.1hk -, 9' by Q W ii Tk :Nw A 1 T' 1 AK! ap 'ff L X3 X N ,K x xg H A X N + - Q, , 1 J' E s f v fx giwirsffffivfs Q- X' mei AX .M Sli ski R93 5 ,,wq W W' I ' X 5 5' 5, + g5g l 3. N x il Q Q ik 0335 YKXD , 'Wi ' X Q isa .Q 3:4 ui is' - ' .YNY Q X . fggi .:v::,j.. Q W. SL QxHix M i,,X .... w S ,.5 :QP gg , 5 ?wN ' 152153, - : Z5 , N ,Q y L. Memorial High School Class of Forty Flve MURRAY ALRERTS Classical Course :Ill rvnrk and im play makcs .lark tl dull lmy! Su :elm rcunts fn lu' zlnll? Aetixities: Hand lg Saclieni 4: Newswriters -lg Pro Kleritug Sen- ior Play: Gracluatiun lissay GICORGINA ALGER Classical Course .l ltcrfvrl wouzulz, zmlrly jvluumwl ln feuru. fu cumfurl, and cmnmulzd. Activities: Class Treasurer l : Glee Club l, 2. 3, -lg Saebem l, 2, As- sistant liclitur 35 lfclitor-in-Chief -lg Basketball l, IM. 33, Co-Cap- tain -lil: Hockey l, ZW, 3:5 -lglg Nexrsxrriters 2, 3, -lg Luncli Room Assistant 3: Girls' League 3, -lg Traffic Squad 3, -lg Cabut Club -lg Seniur Playg Pro Kleritog As- sistant liclitur Yearboukg IJ. A. R. Representativeg Salutaturiau MARION ANGIQRS Classical Course .llrr1'1Aly, llzrrrily .vlmll l lifc. Activities: Hockey lg Glee Club 1. l, 3, 4: Newswriters 3, -lg Girls' League 3. -lg Saclieni -l GLORL-X ANTERNOITS llnsiness Cuurse ffrculcr' lmv lmllz 1111 'Zt'UllllllI. Activities: Glee Club l, 2. 3, -lg Lunrli Room Assistant Z, 3. -lg lle- fense Stamps Salesman 3. -lg Girls' l.eague 3, -l XYATSUN l'3AlilfR Classical Cuurse l.cl mc Nay ilu' frmlg 'zvlllz lIlll'll1 mul ltlllfllllfl' lcl ulll rcruzlslcv fmllu. Aetivities: Red Cross Cullectur lg Orchestra 1, 2, 31 Baseball 1, 2. 3g Band l, Z, 3, -lg Football 3g Pm Meritug Class Gifts l l gkliirst Team Letter VVILLIAM REAL General Course Tlic S'l1y llllllllffllf JA N Ii BECK ER General Course . , . l .wlzlcflzlzcs lmtv' llmzrglzl Ill my lnrzcly lmurx- Activities: Baud 1, Z, 3, -lg Glee Club 1. 2. 3, -lg Hockey Manager Z3 Saeliexu 3g Prom Committee 3: Girls' League 3. -lg Class Mar- slialg Class Gifts ANNE HliGLliY Business Course lltI.fl1flll7lt'.YN ix tm t7l'llllllIA'lIl fn ytllllll. Activities: Hockey Manager lg Glee Club l. l, 3, -ll Basketball Z: Saclieni 3g Girls' League 3, -l. ICLLIAXOR IZELL General Course 'l'l1r r'l't' klc.v.w1c.r.v of ynutlz Activities: Glee Club l. 2, 3. -lg Basketball l, JM, 342 -llc, Hockey l, Ill 396, -lxg Girls' League 3, -lg llunie Rmnu l'resiclent 3g Year- lmuuk UCAN BlSSUNNli'l l'li Classical Course .-I llljllltllllllllt' ivuuuzrz Activities: liancl 1. 2. 3, -lg Or- cliestra l, Z. 3, -lg Glee Club 1, 2. 3. -lg Sacbexu 2, 33 liclitur -lg Prcnn Cunuuittee 3g Home Room Treas- urer 3g. Girls' League 3, -lg Cheer- learler 3. vll Student Council As- sistant Secretary 3. Secretary -lg Yearbuukg Seniur Play Memorial High School f Class of Forty - Five I L'CIl.l.l2 BR.-XLICY MYILX C.-XSICY Sk'l'l'ClHl'lZll Course Sk'lL'l1tll:IC Llmirsc fv11lu11.v, yr! 111m1'1'.i'f HI' L'1111'zw ynu lqv your f'y1'.v. .-Xclivitics: Glue Club 1, 2, 3, -ll .Xctivitin-sz Girls' l.CI1,L2llQ 3, -lg Girls' League 3, -lg l.u11cli Rumix I.1iiicli llumii .Xssistzuil -lg l'lz1y .'XSSiStZ1llt 3, -l1 l'ru Klcritog Lilziss Cuiiiiiiittcu -lg Girls' lklllilllk' Gmi- Sung lliittcc -l. moms iaieiaivocslci. 'VON Hllmxl Gcnrrznl Llllllfbk' llcmlml liullllsc 11115111 I 11111 11l:v11,i'.f in lzuxlv, I Him li HW will H-'l'A 'l-ll 'lf llmi' l'l '.l lXc'tivitics: liusclmzill l, -lzlig llzlskvt- Xctivitics: Hmmm Ronin Prusiflciil lfillltlv' L'-1114413 il' 'Oz l, liaskm-tlmll 1, Z3 Glcc Cluli l, ','U 1 .' J' ', :tux ' ul ' , -. . . -, 3, 43 lwmtlizlll l, -. 3 ,-l 3 lluiiiu 44, Quinn Yin- Prcsizlciit 2: Class Vice l'rcsiflc1it 23 Scninr l'lzly lc cy Bl.XRll.XN C,l.RRll'.lQ ICRNIQST l3L7'l'l.liR Sccrctzirizil Culirsu General Cuursc If ,ff' 11,-l hi iiiyl 1-,fplf lyfif I lip 1 fli- 1-ry, 11.1 fu11ls,a11d j'UH'l't' Ollff ,Xctivitin-s: Glcv Clulw l, 2, 3, -lg . ,, Szlfliuii 3, -lg Girls' l.u:1guu 3, 4: fxftlvltws' BH5kCtl'all 3' i 'lib Pm Mcritu Scciwtziryg llcfciisv Stunip Szilcsinzui -ll l.uiicl1 Ruuni .Xssistzuit -l IDOROTIIY IXXYIS f ' ffl I ll LOIXIXNP L X loox Clzissivzil Llnirsm- Suutdlldl Cuulbt ,I ki1111'lv 'Ix'tl7'Il' tllllll ll lsiiifllv 11'1'1'1l 1 wk slfnmu will mul I .Xvliviticsz Gln-c Club l. -lg l.llllL'll Rumii .Xssistziiit J. 43 Rcxl Cruss AM-tiyilil-gg Glu- Qluly 1, 1' 3, 43 Cnllcvtm' 3, 4: Sziclu-rn -lg Girls' ' . 'rim lmagilc -l: llaslxctlizill Nlzuiuger -lt wkcv xlilllllglyl' -lg Pro Kluritug Gizullizitum lzssziy C',XROl.lNli CANNON GORDON lJICfXIl'SliY lhlsiiicss Cuursc Sviclititif Cmirsc an al lfll lulk x!11' is ll .ff1'111f1!11'iff. lf'l111l 1111111 1f111'1'. I U'111'1', nm Activities: Glec Club l, 2, 3, -lg .Xvtiviticsz Hasclmll l, 2, 3, Vg lirls' Lgaguc S, -lg Stmlgul Ili- filCL' fllllb 3, -ll rlirillliix' Sillliitl 3, lirzirian -l -l: llziskctlizill -lf' I ' ,41 Zlilfirst 'liC2llll l.L-tu-1' Scn'111i1l 'll-:mi Ill-tl-1 Memorial High School Class of Forty five MARY DORES Commercial Course .-lr! is my ull. Activities: Basketball 1. 2, 3 '5 g Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Hockey 1, 2, 3 ', -ll: Girls' League 3, -l RICHARD DRA li E Classical Course Circa! Illlllllj hum' flI't'tIf ulfllwifitflix. Activities: Band 1, 2. 3, -lg Gr- chestra l, Z, 3, -l: Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4g Basketball l, Z, 3, -ll Prom Committee 3g Sachem 3, -lg Traf- tic Squad Deputy Chief 3, Chief 7 -l: Pro Merito President: Xear- book Editor-in-Chief: Senior Play, Valedictorian. NORMAN DUPHI LY Business Course .I fllt't'I'fIIl fumzlcrzuncc ix tl Pritc- lrxrs ussvl. Activities: Glee Club Z, 3, -l: Bas- ketball 3: Baseball 3 CLA RRA FERNA NDES Secretarial Course .I youd 1H'lI7'f is marc prrcinlrs Hum gold. Activities: Glee Club 1g Yearbook LOIS FERRY Classical Course 1.lfK'I'lIflll't' - un IITTIIIH' to glory Activities: Yearbook li Home Room Secretary lg Orchestra 1, Z: Editor 3: Sachem -lg News- writers -lg Girls' League -lg Senior Playg Class History: Cl, 2, 3 in San Antonio High School, Texasj JANET FICKERT Classical Course Those who labor diligently zicvd zzcwr dc.vftu1'r. Activities: Home Room President ll Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Hockey 2: Basketball lg Newswriters 2, 3, -l: Sachem 2, 3. Editor 4: Girls' League 3, Secretary -lg Pro Rlerito JUNE FICKERT Classical Course Ihwfv in flu' park uffcr dark, Activities: Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 41 Girls' League 3, -lg Lunch Orders 3, -l. JEANNETTE FREEMAN Secretarial Course .Al zvmltlz of Slllljlllillt' in hm' smile Activities: Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Girls' League 3, -lg Yearbook LAXYRENCE FREEMAN Business Course Silrut IIINI tm' Offfll cviscst. Nt wxx' in U. S. Coast Guard LORETTA FRIZZELL Secretarial Course lI'lmt .rzecvt delight tl quiet life ll-0.171711 .r .' Activities: Glee Club 1, Z, 3, -lg Basketball Zg Girls' League 3, -lg Sachem -lg Lunch Room Assistant 4 Memorial High School Class of Forty Five GEORGE GA MACHE Agricultural Course 'l'ln'rt' ore no Irichs in plain :mtl silrlfilr faith. l Activities: Future Farmers ul Alllk'I'lt'Zl 3, -l 1.120 GA MACH 12 General Course 'l'ln're. omirl the zllu, oft rlreclls li quiel soul. ' Activities: Basketball 1. 2: Base- ball 1, .2: Glee Club -l NICHOI .A S GA RA FALO Business Course For his heart is lihc the sm, fwfr 017611, 1'7'c'I' ffff. Activities: Football Manager 2' Defense Stamp Salesman 3, 4: Red Cross Collector 3, President 43 Yearbook: Class Prophecy FRANCIS GILL General Course Ifor tee thot life to please nmsl please Io life. Activities: Orebestra 1: Baseball l. -lil: Band 1, .2, 3, -l: Glee Club l. .2, 3, 43 Basketball 1, 2, 3 ':f, -lim: Prom Committee 3: Traffic Squad 3, -lg Senior Play ARTHUR GOMES General Course llis armor is his lzorzrst l,l0ll!1l!l, ond silnple truth his utmost skill. Activities: Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Baseball 3, -U: Home Room See- retary -lg Traffic Squad -l: Foot- ball 4' 'First 'Feam Letter VIRGINIA GRANT General Course l'11c rlrl. v ri ffiz. s lmmor Activities: Basketball 1, .23 Hoc- key 1, Z3 Softball 1, .23 Glee Club l, 2, 3, -li Girls' League 3, -lg Pro Merito: Home Room President 4 1'1:IYl.1.lS GREEN General Course Gaiclyv feithozzl erlifsr' Activities: Hockey 1: Basketball lv, .2: Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -1: Defense Salesman .23 Home Room Secre- tary 2: Newswriters .2, 3, 4: Prom Committee 3: Girls' League 3, 4: Girls' League Committee -lg Sen- ior Play: Class Prophecy 1'2VE1.YN GRIFFITH General Course .S'ficfrl1 is silwr: sil t'r1 rv is golden Activities: Glee Club l, 2, 3, 4 DONALD GUIDIBONI General Course .tlngfcr is soon ocrcouzt' lvy ti warm lzmrf. Activities: Glee Club 1, .2, 3: Pro Merito -l: Red Cross Collector 4: Banquet Speaker MARJORIIC HOLMES General Course llfr smile is smlzefliiug 10 find your way with lu the dork. Activities: Glee Club l, 2, 3, -lg Girls' League 3, 4. Memorial Hugh School Class of Forty Five ITIXY HOLIXIGREN Secretarial Course l'1'r1111' lies I'H 1111111'1'1'11l1o11. Kctivities: Glee Club l, 2, 3, -1: Basketball Z3 Girls' I.eag'uc 3, -15 Defense Stamp Salesman -lg I.uncl1 Ilooiu .Xssistzuit -I: 5210110111 -I: Yearbook S'I'1iXY.'XR'I' HOXYARIJ Scientiiic Course T111' lIf71?1L'.Y1' 11111111 1111' 111's1 1'n1111'111- 1111'111 11115. Activities: Glee Club lg Baseball Manager l IEICRTH.-X HLINTLICY Business Course , l111'1 1111s111'1111z'i11'. .-Xctivities: Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -I: Basketball Z: Defense Stzunp Sales- man 33 Girls' League 3, -1 .AXI.RIiR'I' l.'XKII'I1i'I'RO COl'I1l1lCl'CI2l1 Course I f1lA'1' life -111.11 115 1 fi1111 11. .XctivitiesijBaskcgtball 13 Ilaseball 1 1 Home Ixooin I 1'CSli1k'11t 23 Foot- ball Z, 31, -113 Prom Committee 3: Defense Stamp Salesman 43 Year- book Nou' i11 C. S. Navy ICIJXY.-X 1113 .1 A C0135 Scientific Course 111' 11'z'1'.r 111 11111111, 11111 111111.11 11 11011- 1'I'1I!1.f 1'111t1'. Activities: 1'lay COIIIIIIIUCC 4 JANE IQIQITH General Course .-l1r1'11y.r rvildy 'Zi'1f1Z fl 1111141111 ,Xctivitiesz Orchestra lg Basket- ball lg Hockey lg Sachem 1, 2, 3, -1: Glee Club 1, Z, -11 Bancl 1, Z. 3, -1: Iiecl Cross Collector 2, -I: Girls' League 3, -I, Girls' League lloniuiittee -1: Senior Play NANCY KEND.-XI.I. Classical Course Cf1'1'111 11111sf1'rs are 11111sIc1's of tI11' 5111111111111 Activities: Home Room President l: Hockey l, Z: Basketball 23 Rerl Cross Collector 1, Secretary 2, 31 Hancl l. Z, 3. 43 Glee Club I, 2, 3, 43 Newswriters Z, .Xssistant Editor 3, Iiclitor 43 Girls' League 3 -lg Class Secretary 1, 3, -1, Treasurer 2: Assistant Secretary Student Council 3, Prom Commit- tee 31 Cabot Club -lg Pro Merito: Yearbook: Senior Play: Yaleclic- torian. IS.XI3I2I,I.1i IQIQNNEDY General Course 1.11-fm' is lo-z'1 s 111111 1'1 z1'111'd. .-Xctivities: Glee Club 1, 2, 3. 41 Basketball lg Hockey 1: Saebeni Z, 3, -I: Neu'su'riters 3. -43 Girls' I.e:1g'ue 3, -I ICNIC IQITCHICLI. General Course ,lly f1'1'.vs1'.v 111'1' my 11'111i1'1 1111 rk. Activities: Glee Club 1, 2, 3. 41 Girls' League 3, -I3 I.ll1lC11 Rooiu ,Xssistant -1 1C1,IZ.fXI3I2'1' H LA NG Secretarial Course II'111'1r, ye! 1lL1T't' fllfl. .Xctivitiesz Basketball lg I'Ion1e Rooin Secretary 2, Glee Club 1, Z, 3. 43 I.LlllC11 Room Assistant 3, 43 Girls' League 3, 4: Sacliein -13 Pro Meritog Yearbook Memorial High School Class of Forty Flve l 1 XYll,l.l.'XM A11-x1111A Sl'lL'llllflk' Course .vt1'111'. ll:1111l 3, -l Nou' ill Lf. S. Army l l lil,lCN MARTIN S011-11!iF11' Course 11,1111 l'f'1'1' 1117111 111111 10'Z'1'11 11111 111 first .viylzff .'XL'liX'ltll'SI Basketball lg Glcc Club l, .Z, 3. -lg Girls' League 3, -lg l,l'l1I1l C11111111itt1-eg Home R1111111 Vll!'C'2iSllI'CI' 3g St111l1'11t C111111- cil 'l'1'c:1s11rcr -lg Pro Mcritu 'l'1'c:1s- lll'l'l'Q 132111111101 Speaker l'li'l'liR M.-XSSA Cl1'11c1g:1l fuursc 01111111 .r1111'.v1111111.v111f1 1.1 11 i'11'1111' gX1'tivili1's: Kiln-c Club l, .Zg 11:150- l1.1ll -l I-Q.X'l'lll.1flCN McC:XR'l'llY S111-11tifi1' L'11111's1: 111111 1111' 11'ix11 111f'1' 171 111111111l1'1' .Xctiviticsiv ll11cl111y lg ll:1sl1c1l1z1ll l, 2, -lg X1'u'sw1'1tc1's 3, -li f111'ls 1.1-:1g11c 3. -l NELSON M1'IN'l'lRli 111-111-1':1l l,11111'sc ,1 11111111 11'i1'1111 1.1 11'111'111 1111111-1' 111l,91' 17lI1'.V .lctiviticsz l51111tl1z1ll l Nou' iu Lf S. 1-X1'111y illfirsl 'll-21111 lxttvr l l1'11111'.r! 11.1 11 111111 111111 1'111111'.r.r .'Xl.HliR'I' M1'M.'XNL'S 011111111-1'1'iz1l Cuursc 1111111 11111' 111 1111' 111111111 11'111111'11 11.1 1,1 I111'y Tk'l'1'1' 11111111 111111 :1'1'111'. :X1'tivitiQs: l51111tl1z1ll lg Glu' flulm l 7 3 -l .---1 1.-x11 ICS M1'Ql,'.-X lbli Clz1ssi1':1l Course .11 711111 111111151121 1115 fur, 11111 11111 111.1 1111111t.r. .-Xctiviticsg fJl'C'lICSlI'2l lg l3:1111l I 2, 3, -lg Glcc Clulw l, 2. 3g 'l'1':1ffi1' Squad 2, Deputy Q'l1i1-1 3, Chief -lg S1lCl1L'I11 1, 2. 3, -lg I'1'11111 C11111- mittcc 3g YCZiI'l1l1Uli1 SlLlill'llt C111111- 1'il Vice l,l'CSlllCl1t -lg l3:11111111't Spcalccr RON.-XLID lX1Il.l.S S1'ic11tif11' Cuiirsc 1LlI1, 111'1111', 111111 111' 1111'1'1'-11. .'xl'tlVltll'Sf Glu' Clulm l, 2g Trzif- 111' Squful l, 2, 33 flzlss Yivc llrcai- 1l1-ut lg 3, l,I'CSllll'Ilt -lg llzulwtlmall lg F1111tl1:1ll l, Z, 312 -11, C11-L-ZXIP 1:1111 -lg 1l11111c R1111111 Prcsicloiit lg l'r11m C11111111ittec 3 .-Xl!'l'HUR MlTL'lllil.l. G1-111'1'z1l Coursv 'l'111'111' T111 11111r1', 11111. 1.1lIljl1I 111111 171' 1lI1'1'l'j'. . 21. 1- . 2 I :ls- .-Xciiviticsg 1111-ol'l11l1 1, 2g l71111tl111ll I 3' Q1 Cllllllll -ll li lfctlmzill 1, 2:11 31, L-Zllllillll 41:3 Busc- l1:1ll l, 2, 3, Capt. -Pkg ll111111' Rlllllll Scvrctzlry l, Yivc l'1'cai1l1:11t 3, l'r1-si1l1-11t -lg floss Yicc l'1'1's11l1111t 4: Ycz1rl11111kg 11111111111-t SI1CZlliL'l' ,ll,'Nli MOlflflC'l l' C11-110r:1l QQUIIYSL' .1 11111 1111111 1111.1 .111 1111111y 111111111 1 11'11y.v. .'N1'tix'itics: filcc Clulu 2, 3, -lg llzls- lcctlmall .Zg S2ll'l1C!ll 3, li1lit11r -lg Girls' l.cz1,Q'u1- 3, -lg l.u111'l1 R1111111 .-Xssifta11t 3, -lg S1-11i11r 1'l:1yg Pro M1-ri111 Memorial High School Class of Forty Flve IXIARJORIIC KIOODY General Course 1.11-211' -zu1'11f1x 11111 111111111 111'1' 11 soft 111'11y 1111.v1. .1Xctivities: GI1-e Club I. J, 3, -I3 'l'u'irler l. 2, 3. -I3 Girls' lxagfue 3. 4, Girls' League Conunittee 4: llroni Connnittee 31 Luneli Room .Xssistant -lg 'lil'CZlSlll'L'l' ,Xrt lie- ll2ll'llllClll 4 GEORGE MORRIS General Course lJ1l11'A' ix 11 11111111 1111f'11111'1'1'. Activities: lfootball Manager 1, 2, 3 JOHN MORRISON llusiness Course 'l'111' 111'11111 15 tl 11'1111111'1'f111 111'z'1'11111111. DON.-X I .IJ PEA RSO N General Course .ll111'k 1111' f11'1'f1'1'I 1111111 111111 1101111111 1111' 11f1r11111l. l.unel1 Room .Xssistant -I VIRGINIA PERKINS Secretarial Course .Sl1111IlL'.Y.f of 111'1'.v1111 ix 11 511111111 llltlfk of 11111111 111'1'1'1111111, Activities: Basketball lg Glee Club l, Z, 3, 4: Girls' Lezigue 3, -li Re1l Cross Collector -I iklfirst VICCZIIII l,etter ITRIQDICRIC PERRY Classical Course .I f1r11f11'1' 1111111 115 111131111111 Illtlj' ser: 111111 It'1I1'II 11 11111y's 111 1l11' 1'11s1', 311111 1111111111 1111 111I11'r 111111115 y17'1' 11111612 Xctivities: Basketball lg Rauml l, 2, 3, -I: Orcliestra l. 2. 3, 4: Glee Club I. 2. 3, -ll Sacbem 1, Z, 3, Iirlitor -lg Piano Staff 1, 2, 3, -lg Proin Comniittee 3: Assenlbly Colnniittee 3: Yearbookg Pro Mer- ito Yice President: Senior Play: Gracluation Soloist: Class Day JOHN PIGNAT.-XRRO Classical Course .-ly, 1 :'1'1'-V 11Il'1Z 11 11111511 j1ctivities: Glee Club -Ig Football JACK l'IMIiN'I'AI. General Course 1.111'111' 1x 111.1 171lIl1I1j', 111111 111.1 511111 .v1111'1'1'1'. ICIJXY.-X RID I'O'I I'IiR Scientific Course They 111'1' 111'I'1'r 111111111 111111 111'1' 115- 1'11111j1111111'1z' 1131 11111116 111111111111.r. .-Xctivities: Glee Club l, 2, 31 Baseball 3 RI'I'.fX QUAGAN Secretarial Course .1 11111111111 l11'11rt 11r11111.v s111'1'1'ss. Activities: Glee Club 13 Home Room Secretary 4 Memorial High School Class of Forty I'1ve RlL'll.XRlJ RliBlfI.l. .Kg iqultural Course ,lcliritius 1 A Glce Club 1: Futura Iil.liANOR ROGERS Secretarial Course lu'Iruy.s' -vnu. Xctivities: Band 1: Basketball lg lluckcy 13 Glue Club l, 2, 3, 4, Girls' League 3, 4: l.uncli Rmnu Assistant 4 .XGX IES ROS li Classical Course lf'.v Hin' In lu' mifnml 'zvlrwrz j'HH'I'l' milnrully nirr. Glcc Club l, 2, 3, 43 Girls' l.eaguu 3, 4 Xl'll.l.l.XXl ROSE Scicntilic Course Ili' li':'i'.r Ivy flu' lflrwd frnuz his jurnlur ':'f'in. .-Xctivitics: Orchestra l. 2: Glue Club l ,2. 3, 43 Traffic Squad l, 2. 3. 4: SIlCllCll'I l, 2. 3, 4: liIlllll 2, 3. -l: Basketball 2, 3, -ll , Prmn llniiiiiiltcc 33 Class Day XYICSTON S.-XNITORD Scii-uti 'c Course lffflwr Ili 311113 for Iwftvr ll'I'llI.fl thru C 'l1i'l11i.rlry .Xv'ivitics2 Orchestra l, 2, 3, -lg G'ec Club l, 2. 3. -lg Sacliciu 1, 2. 3, 41 Prrnn Cnnunittee 33 Defense Si:-nun Salesman -l: Recl Cross Cul- I --'- mr, Yice Presillent 41 Class llay Skit lln' .wil Xll.YflIlIIX ilu' frufvli' tuull. l':1rn1crs ul .-Xnieriea lrcasurcr 3, 4 lw .vlmll und .mfrg .vzlwzrw izcfw' ,lO5liI'llINlC S.XY.XlllJ Sccrctarial Course 'flu' jvli'u.v11ri .v in flu' ffumi' f-:lin in In ' r.'1'. .lctiviticsi llaskctball l, 2. 32 llnc- kcy l. 2. 3. 4, Glcc Club l. 2. 3, 4 5 llunie Ronin Secrctary-'l'runs- urcr 3: Girls' League 3, 4 .Xl.lClC Sli.-UN Scientific Course Good lzmlmr is mu' nf Hn' lwxl artirlm' of rlrvxs. Activities: Orchestra 1, 2, 3. -l, Glce Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Hand Man- ager 3, Refi Cross Collector 3: Girls' League 3. 4: Basketball Manager 3, 43 Lunch Rumn Assist- ant 3, 4: Yearbuok Il.XRl3.'XIQA SHAW' Secretarial Course C't7ll'Z'l'l'.YllflIlII is my lmlllfy. .-Xctivities: Basketball 1 3 Glec Club l. 2, 3, -lg Girls' l.L'1l,LlllC 3, 4 Xl.XNUlil. Sll.Yl.-X Business Cnurse ilillllflllflflll ull, .vu gfuflflm' .lctivitiesz l.uncl1 Rmnu Assistant l. 2: Basketball l, 2, Glcc Club l, 2, 3, 4: lfuntball l, 2, 31. 4' Nun' in U. S. :Xrniy Cl LX Rl.O'l l'li SNOW Classical Cnurse l::'i'ry lIl14'XfItU1 has :fx mls'zu'r. Activities: Home Rumn 'l'rr-asurer 1: Bancl l, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra l. 2, 3, -lg Glee Club l, 2, 3, 4, l.uucli Rumn Assistant 2, 3, 4, Saclicni 2, 3, Business Manager 4: Girls' League 3, -lg llaskctball 4: llnc- kcy Manager 4: Cabot Club -ll l'ru Meritn: Senior Play: Grail- uatiun lissay noi 4' :klfirst Ti-:un l.c ' Memorlal Hlglx School f Class of Forty Flve MARY SOCZA Secretarial Course pill mirth and 1111 111t11i111'ss, Activities: Nexvswriters 1, 2, Red Cross Collector 1, 23 Hockey 1, lg Basketball l, Z, 3g Glee Club l, Z. 3, -lg Girls' League 3, -lg De- fense Stamp Salesman 3, -lg Pro Rlerito GREGORY SOVVYRDA Scientific Course I just do11't l'tll'1'. Activities: Glee Club lg Orchestra 2, 3, -l: Home Room President -lg Class Gifts RALPH SPCRRIER Scientitic Course 1-I 'It'1'lIA' is it'111ffI1 tl Ivord of 'zci.rd11111. Activities: Glee Club l, l, 3. -li Basketball 1, Z, 313, -l 'g Football 1, 3, -lzkg Prom Committee 3g Stu- dent Council President -lg Class Prophecy ETHICL SULLIVAN Classical Course l'1111'1'1' Irislzi tlllti y1111'1'c 111'1111lif11l, Activities: Home Room Secretary l, lg Orchestra 1, 2, 3g Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Sachcm 1, 2. 3, -lg Has- kctball '1, JM, 3211 -li: Hockey 1, ZH, 33 , -lxg Class Secretary lg Cheerleader 2, 3, Head Cheer- leader -lg Hand Manager 3, -lg Girls' League Vice President 3. l'resitlent -lg Cabot Club -lg Pro Klerito: Senior l'layg Class XYil1 HICLICN TARR General Course l.117'i11g1 Nu' fltllllf' i1cy1111d fin' prize Activities: Band 1, 2, 3. -lg Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Basketball l, ZW, 3 , -l Kg Hockey 1, ZW, 311, -llg Prom Committee 3g Girls' League 3, -lg Defense Stamp Salesman 3. -lg Red Cross Collector -l MIRIAM THOMPSON Classical Course ll'it11 mirth and Iizirglifvr Activities: Red Cross Collector 1: Hockey 1, lg Twirler 1, 2, 3, Drum Major -lg Glee Club 1, Z. 3, 4g Sacliem 1, Z, 3, -lg Basket- ball 1, Z, 3421, -l g Cheerleader 2, 3, -lg Prom Committee 3: News- writers 3g Girls' League 3, -lg Girls' League Committee -lg Traf- fic Squad 3. 4g Senior Playg As- sistant Editor Yearbookg Class Gifts MARIAN TRAVIS Secretarial Course U111' twist, s11I1st1111ti11I smile Activities: Glee Club 1. 2, 3g Girls' League 3, -lg Senior Play SI'l1RI.liY YAUGHN General Course 'flu' 111111!'1's! ZU11111111 has t Z't'l'j'i1ll1lj1 111 fltllll. Activities: Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Girls' League 3, -l liliXNli'l'H XYILHCR Classical Course .ll1'11 nf iCtll'Ht'tiliiSL'Ul1I'.S'L' ure 11111dc, 1111! i1111'11. Activities: Rand 1, 2, 3, -ll Glce Club 1, 1. -lg Senior Playg Class Day ALFRIZIJ XYILMONT General Course Tilt' i'11iL'1'.' Activities: Band 1, 2, 3, -lg Glee Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Cheerleader -lg Yearbookg Senior Play: Class Marshal 1 Memorial High School if Class of Forty -kiifve VVINTHROP VVINBERG Classical Course VICTOR ZAKARIAN Curls and smilcs and ruimiing wilvs General COUVSC Activities: Baseball 1.2, 44:5 Band Size has nothing to do with flu' 1. Z, 3, 43 Orchestra 1. 2, 3. 4: Glee contents. Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball 1, ZW, 342 4 g Traffic Squad 2, 3. 43 Activities: Football Manager 1, Football 2, 3 ', 4 'g Home Room 2, 4 , President 33 Class Prophecy Class Poll .llosi lfofwular-Ethel Sullivan. Arthur Mitchell IfIflIlll'l'S-llf7-lilC8.l10I' Bell, Ronald Mills liar! Looking-Helen Martin, lliinthrop NVinherg Most Likely fo Szafrecd- Georgina Alger, Richard Drake I?un11er-uf:-Nancy Kendall Ciluss Ofvfizfzists-Pliyllis Green, Ronald Mills Rzuzzzcrs-up-Dorotliy Davis, XVats0n Baker, Francis Gill Iivst Dressed-Jean Bissonnette, James McQuade Rmzuvr-uf?-June Moffett Class-lififs-Eleanor Bell, VVatson Baker RlHIHt'1'.S'-Ilf-LOiS Ferry, Ronald Mills Most Studious--Georgina Alger. Richard Drake Did' Jllosf for the Class-Nancy Kendall, Ronald Mills Rznzzzers-ufv-Georgina Alger, Nicholas Garafalo Most Friendly-Helen Martin, Nicholas Garafalo Host Athletes-Eleanor Bell, Arthur Mitchell Best Dancers--1XIarilyn Currier, Alfred XVilmont Rzuzmfrs-up-Doris Breivogel .lrazlciny Award-Lois Ferry, Richard Drake J! .49 19 Q-'vm N -wah .ff wxmpf xx-wx fxfsm ww amz. xx 1 lv' an ,lv I' 41' .2 .1 in .3 NZ. . x Q ,i . :mv sax: :x QS 'Sw mes: my wig in .M 51 s,,V .,-'gg sm ' ,fy ' M W , YSMERRE WEEK vm fx f fp Lf Ae ' A Y ak -I Ji 'Q A-S1 I 'C gf wx R93 R EST -.V h ,wiki .W W,-,M baby. .Ui V- ' EE wi? ' as Ik, .xx X5 Q51 +R My .SQ W wfw sw Xi li' X 1 em. .A Q QMS' N K Q , in ., - 2 , .K ty 'xi gf 1 Z'Z-5.21.3 .I 'X-'EN my .X K X s M ' R' btkwvf yy. - was 'W 'A -,aff NX grim-. QQ 15,9 imfx f QQ X f iff wig f X bg 2 '-1 Q '1 f' 'f Q f 133' -Q X ' ' 'E ff, ' -I 1 in L 'Ole E' .1.,:.,. 4 P ,SPN 1 ' 'ii' M' 3:35 si jf 155 , A .. .-as - t Q .S V- 3 aw W Y , I1 5 :.,:.. -I f f F 3 M KLM .2 x ff? R. j--h. - A L 4 3 P4 -s. -Q is E.:- bfi ? 42.3 ,,, -Aly I h.-., ix' v. Mx- L 39 5 hp' 2 fix, ' s 3 2:21 2 2 , ::?'ii- PM--zffw '-'Mi 3 Q T.: A i l lv , A.x 1 I wml ,.- Q., A f , im, if r- M K , ..,,,. 2, Oi W., W i-Q 1 :, 1 fi? 1 i' 1 ' an 1' ' s fs X 3 , BY, ff? ngpqu W- 2 - 1 R 2 'S-NN UF' -'P-+ N Jr ss N vii' 37 -'Hx QKF i Eau. N. 35 rg' R as 4,9-or ,.,.... syvfmrn s Memorial Higlx School f Class of Forty - Five History of the Class of 1945 LOIS FERRY For its freshman year the Class of '45 got under way with Bob Maranville and Ronald Mills president and vice president respectively. Nan Kendall started her long career as class secretary, and Georgina Al- ger was elected treasurer. VVith sports, socials, and school work the class soon be- gan to win its place in the sun. During the sophomore year Murray Al- berts left to attend Qld Lyme Academy. VVhen he returned to M. H. S., the Acad- emy promptly closed. NVhether Murray had weakened the structure of the school or had been supporting it would be hard to say. Rita Quagan, class of '41, was wel- comed into our class in the fall of '42. She had been held back by ill health and de- serves a medal for her courageous come- back. -lohn Pignatarro of Carver had been attending Plymouth High, but in his second year he saw the error of his ways and switched to Memorial High. Perhaps Gor- don Dempsey's example pointed the way, be- cause Gordon transferred in his freshman year. .lean Bissonnette. Ethel Sullivan, Georgina Alger, El-eanor Bell, and Helen Tarr started Varsity basketball and hockey. The officers who served for the sophomore year were john Brooks, president: Leon Corsini. vice president: Georgina Alger, secretary: and Nan Kendall, treasurer. Bob Maranville was re-elected president of the junior class, with Ronald Mills serv- ing again as vice president, and Nan Ken- dall as secretary. Helen Martin was treas- urer. lVilliam Marra entered the Navy at the end of his junior year. Bill will re- ceive his diploma in june because of extra credits he had piled up in school, and credit for Govermnent Service. Edward Powell, who also entered the Navy, is working for his diploma, which he will get soon. September, '44, the month of the Big VVind, saw us slightly in the dark. Every senior seriously impaired his eyesight doing homework by oil lamp. The Traffic Squad patrolled the dark corridors, candle in hand, escorting little Wanderers back to their home- rooms. Our senior members of the Squad were Richard Drake, james McQuade, Ralph Spurrier, VVinthrop XVinberg, Fran- cis Gill, Miriam Thompson, Arthur Mit- chell, Gordon Dempsey, Arthur Gomes, and Georgina Alger. Ronald Mills opened the first class meeting as the new senior presi- dent. Vice President Art Mitchell added much to the meetings by his alert efficiency and bright-eyed attention to detail. Nan resumed her secretarial duties. and Helen Martin was again elected treasurer. Ralph Spurrier, james McQuade, jean Bissonnette. and Helen Martin served as president. vice- president, s-ecretary. and treasurer of the Student Council. Football was the brightest part of school during our sunny autumn weeks. Ably captained by Bulldozer Mills and Flash Mitchell. our snappy team converted many a near defeat into victory. Ralph Spurrier, already a celebrity in politics, played for the first time. Other letter men are Leon Corsini, Manuel Silvia, Arthur Gomes, Ron- nie Mills. Art Mitchell, ,and XVinnie XVin- berg, Al Iampietro. who played half-back, is now with the U. S. Navy, helping defeat Japan. Cheers for the cheering squad are also in order. Led by Ethel Sullivan, these girls loyally cheered our team in victory and defeat. At the football social Sully was elected Football Queen. The seniors, Mimi Thompson and jean Bissonnette, were also members of the squad. lVith the help of Thanksgiving, Friday night socials, and weekends we somehow lasted until Christmas. At this time the Red Cross collected materials to go over- seas for children in bombed cities. Dorothy Davis and VVeston Sanford assisted Chair- man Nickie Garafalo in collecting pencils, crayons, pens, erasers. and other equipment. At the Christmas assembly a group of Glee Club in-embers, including Richard Drake. Fred Perry, Ethel Sullivan. and Miriam Thompson, sang some special L'hristmas music. The music provided a background for Lois F erry's and Kenneth VVilber's read- ing of the Christmas story. Sully led the carol singing, which closed the program. Shortly after the New Year, rehearsals began for the senior play. Pride' and Pre- Memorial High School 4 Class of Forty - Five jzuiirr. Miss Barbara Stanhope directed the play, assisted by Nan Kendall. Members of the cast were Richard Drake, Leon Corsini. .lean Bissonnette, Mimi Thompson, Char- lotte Snow, Georgina Alger. Murray :Xl- berts. Kenneth XYilbur. Alfred XYilniont. june Moffett, Fred Perry. lithel Sullivan. l'byllis Green. .lane Keith. Marion Travis, and l.ois Ferry. Costumes worn at re- hearsals rivaled the performance costumes in originality: old evening gowns. house- eoats, bedroom slippers and bare feet all contributed to an unusual bizarre effect. On the Big Night the cast played to a full house and an appreciative audience. Or- chids go to the unsung heroes behind the curtains who supplied props. prompted, helped in the dressing rooms, and applied makeup. Gloria Anternoits, Marion An- gers, june Kitchell, Marjorie Moody, and Isabelle Kennedy were everywhere at once. doing whatever was needed. XVeston San- ford was in charge of lights and pulled the curtain. Dot Davis not only worried about all personal props but was responsible for getting everyone on stage at the proper time. Nan Kendall and janet Fickert helped us over some rough spots with their quick prompting. Wihile the SCll',lt'llI was Georgina .AXlger's problem. the yearbook was Dick Drake's. These important honors could not have been voted to more capable seniors. The class will long remember the special yearbook assembly program with Ronald Mills leading his chorus girls through an unusual routine. Nan Kendall and Dick Drake share valedic- torian honors, while Georgina Alger is salu- tatorian. Dorothy Davis, Murray Alberts and Charlotte Snow have honor essays. Toward the end of our senior year a greater victory was won in Germany. Many of our boys are already helping to defeat our other enemy, and we know that we are all at war until we are all at peace. To the boys of M. H. S. who are already serving on land, and sea and in the air we wish a speedy and victorious return. To those who will go soon we say, Good luck, and God bless you! Memorial High School 4 Class of Forty - Five Prophecy of the Class of 1945 NICHOLAS GARAFALO RALPH SPURRIER Barbara Shaw has acquired fame by go- ing to Hollywood and becoming an actress. She is featured in the Dimples series. Arthur Gomes looks impressive in his uniform and his lieutenant's bars. These are ample evidence of his diligence, ex- hibited in his last year at M. H. S., wh-en he made the first team without previous ex- perience. John Morrison and June Kitchell own the world-famous Giberti's Apothecary. They took it over when Mr. Giberti retired in 1965. The last we heard, business was buzzing. Mitch and Sully have found success and are happily married. They are making their home in Dublin, Ireland, where Art is a U, S, consul. Greg Sowyrda is the own-er of a chain of push carts in New York City. It seems that his afternoon job at high school did much for his future success. During his four years of high school, Eddy Jacobs worked all hours of the day. He claims it paid, for he has recently retired for life. Charlotte Snow is playing in the All- Girl Orchestra , heard every Sunday evening at '10 P. M. She is the Golden-Toned Flutistf' the leading lady of the group. Peter Massa has signed up with the Bos- ton Red Sox as their first baseman. VVe hear he got his practice playing for the C. Y. O. George Morris, Popeye,,' as he is always called, has taken over a spinach factory, and business is booming. It is A1nerica's turn to produce the t'Supermen. VVatson Baker's past experiences at VV il- liam Eggers and his ability to solve many of their problems have come in handy in VVatty's ' life. Watson has graduated from Dartmouth, and latest reports say that he is teaching Mathematics in Pleasantville, Connecticut. ln a small community in New Hampshire, amid the hum of buzzing saws, we see John Pignatarro. He has his own lumber camp PHYLLIS GREEN VVINTHROP XVINBERG and is putting his famous Pignatarro strength C equivalent to the strength of three menj to good use in answer to the acute man short- age. lf any of you happen to be passing through Sleepyville, Ohio, be sure to take the local busg for there you will behold Murray Alberts, excelling in his favorite sport, driving. VVe hope that he has learned by now. Thomas Weston Edison Sanford has smashed the atom, invented a revolutionary electricity-saving bulb and developed rock- et power to its last-word stage. XVe hope he will be a notable chemist some day. There is a fairly profitable goat farm in northern Massachusettsg Ralph Spurrier, proprietor. Good luck to you. Ralph, and don't drink too much goat milk. lf you could catch a glimpse of the main attraction at the Stork Club in New York, you would find Victor Zakarian, 'fthe Mighty Midget, engrossed in a heated game of Moda, Look! Up in the sky - it's a bird - it's a plane! Yes, with Captain Gordon Demp- sey at the controls, doing a chandelle. His nation-wide fame has brought him many a fat fee, plus some broken bon-es from a few unplanned crashes. Kenneth Wilbur's printing business is a money-making concern. Ken still remem- bers Miss Erickson's earnest pleas to pay attention in class, and is striving energeti- cally to prove his worth. Forest-Ranger Donald Pearson is in Min- nesota, enjoying the experiences he is en- countering in fulfilling his life-long ambi- tion. VV e hope he finds th-e chipmunks good company. There is a well-known proprietor of an equally well-known night club -- this isn't Millsie. There is a well-to-do grocery man- ager down at the local A 81 P - this isn't Millsie. Now there is a famous lawyer in New York who hasn't lost a case. He is famed for his renowned wit and wisdom -- Memorial High Sclnool ft Class of Forty - Five this is Millsie. Yes, Ronald is exercising his natural capabilities to their utmost. Lucille Braley was once a soda jerk at Buck's Drug Store, but we find her at pres- ent managing her own shop. It's called the Neftel Sweet Shop after that old sweetheart of hers. Anne Begley is now a career woman. Her training at business school has helped her considerably. You who wish to follow in her footsteps, be, like Anne, sincere. Corinne Cahoon's sweetie is back from the war. We find her bustling around her little vine-covered cottage, preparing a good meal for Charlie. Caroline Cannon and Corinne always chummed together in high school days. Now Caroline is doing much the same as Cor- inne. The only difference is that Caroline's hearthrob is Ray, Myra Casey and Alice Shaw always talked about what would happen when they be- came nurses. Myra is a private nurse to Dr. Bazinette, while Alice keeps herself busy as head nurse at the Deaconess Hospital in Boston, Mary Dores always went in for glamorous clothes. She now has opened a shop of her own. On her frock labels we find Owen Downey Specialties. Clarra Fernandes was a whiz at shorthand and typing. Last week the National Award for skill and accuracy was presented her. She will soon be taking a new position in VVashington. Winnie Winberg is now Chief Engineer rebuilding the road to Taunton which he wore out going to baseball games. VVas Casey at the bat XVinnie? Donald Guidaboni, the kid who was Pro Merito, was hit pretty bad when the enlist- ments to the Air Corps were closed. But now, instead of having to fly for the Army Air Corps, he has his own plane. Francis Gill is now with his trapping ex- pedition in the Dominion of Canada. VVe hope he is using the same ideas he used on the good old Nemasket River. George Gamache, one of the fellers from the agricultural course, has a prosperous farm in North Middleboro. Because of her ability and training in high school, Lois Ferry has become a prom- inent Broadway actress. janet Fickert has the most important job of all, that of a housewife. She makes a good one, too. VVe can't say who the lucky fellow is - we aren't that psychicg but we can say that she has not forgotten her high school days. .lane Becker still drives around like a whirl-wind, but she now has good reason to do so, with a job as superintendent of a board of -education on her hands. Be len- ient with the kids, Jane. Remember your corn-raising days. As you all know, Ernest Butler has put his books away and is now sailing the Seven Seas with Uncle Sam's Navy. Richard Drake, the brain of our class, has received his Ph, D. and is putting it to good use. Nick Garafalo was always a timid fellow until his senior year in school. That last year did so much for him that we find he has become chorus-girl promoter in Holly- wood. Although Edward Potter never cared too much for Solid or Trig, he has conquered his distaste for these and is teaching them in the high school of a neighboring town. Another strong man from the agricultural course is Richard Rebell. He is still in good old M. H. S., not as a pupil but as the agricultural teacher. Jack Pimental was always building model airplanes while in school, and has continued his hobhyg only, he is now building real planes. Helen Tarr' is playing professional bas- ketball. It is rumored that she is planning to take up coaching when her present con- tract runs out, Josephine Savarcl, private secretary to a law firm, has had her eye on her boss for a long time. This, however, does not in- jure the fine calibre of her work. Is your coal bin low? Phone the Cramache Coal Company and have it filled. Leo Gamache has worked up from truck driver to owner of this profitable company. Re- member, Leo, keep the class of '45 warm first. Memorial High School 4 Class of Forty - Five Phyllis Green attended Leland Powers School of Radio after she left school. She is now the leading female announcer on the Yankee Network. Remember how, back at the basketball and football games, Al W'ilmot was always able to cheer? Well, we have just received word that he is now a sergeant in the army. Just between you and me, they put ear plugs in the privates' -ears. When james McQuade was in high school, he had quite a time kidding the girls. Now that Mac is sole owner of his father's busi- ness, the Tripp Candy Store, heis not in an entirely new profession. Georgie Alger was salutatorian of her class and as a senior won an honor for outstanding citizenship in a State compe- tition, She is at present professor of Math at jackson. Do you remember Bill Rose, playing his drums for Jimmy Kenyon's orchestra? VVell, like all other kids in the class of '45, he has become well known, for he is play- ing drummer boy in one of New York's swankiest night clubs. There is one girl who cannot be forgotten because of her radiant good nature and fun- loving disposition. Jane Keith loves her job as head nurse at the City Hospital, and wouldn't trade it for anything - no, not even for a man. lXl'lady June Moffett is putting the pro- verbial Moffett charm into effective opera- tion as a famous artist, dress designer, and fashionable hostess in New York. XVhile in high school, Elizabeth Lang worked in Cleverly's Market. She now man- ages a string of meat markets of her own. Nice person to get acquainted with, isn't she? Fay Holmgren has become secretary at the Five and Ten. Her next position will be manager. NVe always knew she could do it. Marjorie Holmes is secretary at Wlin- throp and Atkins. She and johnny are still going tog-ether, but wedding bells should be ringing soon, Izzy Kennedy has changed her name to Sherman. Allan, a war hero, is at home, and they have a little Fair Haven all their ONVI1. Kathleen McCarthy has opened a School of Charm and Personality. At present she has her eyes open for a little real estate, even a few Mills will do. But maybe she hasn't enough Yiger. June Fickert is doing well in the com- mercial Held. She is up at work early every Donn, and if she keeps it up, she will be a great success. jeanette Freeman has become an authority on cosmetics. She and Charles of the Ritz are working side by side. She always was good at applying her own make-up in high school days. Loretta Frizzell, who always enjoyed spending her summers at the beach. is now sole owner of a summer resort. Next door, we End, one of her old admirers has opened a lunch wagon. Sometimes while visiting her, drop in at Millette's. Miriam Thompson's part in the senior play has helped her win fame. Her charm and beauty have aided her in becoming one of the leading stars of today. She is now being featured by Albie at the Fleet Theatre on Broadway. Marion Angers' work in XV. T. Grant's during high school days certainly helped her gain experience. She is now manager of the Honlihan Company. Bertha l-luntley's faithful work in the llliddleboro Trust Company, while she was in high school, has been well rewarded. She is now president of the Holmes National Bank. Doris Breivogel, who worked so hard, trying to get to school before the last bell, has been for the last ten years recuperating in Sunny Florida, Ginny Grant is the head telephone opera- tor for the Chenard Telephon-e Company. She and her boss seem to be getting along all right. Marilyn Currier is the secretary-wife of the head of the Bartlett Oil Company. She seemed pretty happy the last time we saw her. Dorothy Davis has become a professor of history at Radcliffe College. VVe all knew that her ability would get her somewhere. Memorial High School 4 Class of Forty - Five Al I ampietro. Manny Silvia. VVilliam Mar- ra, and Nelson Mclntire are four boys in the class of '45 who left to go into the Service. Now, after twenty years, we often see Ad- miral Iampietro and Generals Silvia, Mar- ra, and Mclntire talking over old times at IXI. H. S. Norman Duphily, who was always a quiet kid in school. has become quite a Casanova. He owns the famous Maryanna Night Club, Soon after graduation Nancy Kendall went to Allison, Georgia. It was only for the summer, but she hasn't returned yet: and from what we hear, she is quite the South- ern ibelle. .Xfter the war Helen Martin d-ecided she would like to go to sea. She is now a part- ner in the Murdoch Submarine Company. Al McManus is the general manager of the F. XV. XVoolworth Company. We all remember when he was just a stock boy during his school days at M. H. S. Lefty Anternoits was one of the girls who were engaged while at M. H. S. Now she is married, and the last reports are that she and Al are getting along just daddy. As soon as school was over, Beanie Bell enlisted in the NVAVES. She has become a full-fledged admiral, serving aboard the U. S. S. Norman, livelyn Griffith has opened her own beauty parlor. Try it, ladies. Cold waves are her specialty. Fred Perry, the Casanova of his class, hasnt settled down yet. He is still patron- izing Tripp's Candy Store and Leland's Flower Shop. You would better hurry up, Fred. liven doctors get married. We find that Marion Travis hasn't chang- ed a bit. She still has her pleasant smile and pleasing disposition. She and Bob are getting along wonderfully in married life. Mary Sousa, who always had so many dates that she dicln't know what to do with th-em. has started a date bureau and is help- ing the other girls along. Rita Quagan has become a secretary to one of the local merchants. She is doing wonders in her work. VVho knows? She may become manager soon. Eleanor Rogers really looked prim in her Cadet uniform. She has come a long way since then, though, and is now head nurse at St. Luke's Hospital. Virginia Perkins has a Civil Service job and is getting promoted rapidly. Maybe she will be secretary to the President one of these days. Marjorie Moody always wanted to become a hairdresser, but Charlie has changed her plans. He is at home from the war, and she has become a little housewife. After finally deciding that two can live happier than one, Leon and Bissy were married in The Little Church Around the Corner in New York. After four years of hard work, Stewart Howard graduated from Northeastern with high honors. He is now chief engineer re- building the Panama Canal. VVe find Shirley Vaughn is designing in New York. Her ability in art and her love for clothes have helped her to win fame. Williaiii Beal is the manager of the Beal Hardware Company. His experience in Saunders' during high school days has help- ed him to get ahead. 'Lawrence Freeman has made his career in the toast Guard. After twenty years we find he is captain of his own ship, the U. S. S. Nellie Lee. I l ll in wnll. sql l U. ---my -ll - 017 YI! ,, Af. Q fi F1 Mm! Last Will and Testament of the Class of 1945 ETHEL SULLIVAN VVe, the illustrious Class of 1945, ration- al to the nfth degree, do ratify and decree this immortal proclamation as the sublime will of our unsurpassable class. VVe do here and now name Joseph C. Kunces, a future United States President, as our honored executor, realizing that he, only he, can assume the responsibility of fulfilling the judicious demands of this un- crring class. Upon the aforesaid we place the sole re- sponsibility of being accountable for the fol- lowing bequests: Unto Creamo Caminati we bestow Mur- ray Alberts' way with the women. Unto all lackadaisical under-classmen we leave Al XVilmont's superfluous energy. To the artistic Mr. E. Thomas we leave Jeanette Freeman's legible penmanship. Unto john fTake-a-dared Cayton we be- queath XVinnie VVinberg's golden locks. To Bev Vigers we leave all senior claims on Van johnson. Unto the unruly freshmen we leave Fred I'erry's poise. For demure Mal Leary, Beanie Bell leaves her ability to meet any situation with a bang. Lindy Zakarian leaves his gift of always being down to -earth to lanky Jim Mahoney. Not forgetting the restless students, G. l-larry Sowyrda leaves them the tempting fishing days of spring. To those who are in search of a fruit- ful future we leave Nan Kendall's and Dick Drake's well-paved road to success. Upon VVinona Tessier we bestow the right to carry on the style where Jean Bissonnette left off. To all who are compelled to remain be- hind we leave the lasting influence of Nick Garafalo's smooth personality. Sharp-shooting Helen Tarr passes on her ability to Betty Skahill, though we know Betty is very capable herself, Upon the solitude of the study halls we bestow Ginny Grant's giggles. Brenda Cahoon and Cobina Cannon leave their garrulous habit for the benefit of school notes. From shy Mr. Spurrier, Eugene Ken- nedy is willed Ralph's frequent blushes with the hope that he will hide in shame with some of those ties. Leon Corsini leaves his hardy appetite to Andrew Pawlak with hopes that he will grow up. To next year's football captain, Art Mit- chell and Ronnie Mills leave the best of luck for a successful season. june Moffett definitely has set the pace for hair-dosg so we extend the right to any girl to try to out-do her. Kenny Wilber leaves Robert Dyke and the other junior the use of the Lab. so that they may try their experiments there rather than in Room 27. Georgie Alger extends to reliable Roger Tillson the duty of publishing as good a Sachem as the present one. Mal Demers and Pam Jones are expected to step into the dancing shoes of Mary Sousa and Marilyn Currier. 1. To all girls who have the blues Mimi Thompson and Gloria Anternoits leave their Navy technique. Alice Shaw and XVeston Sanford leave their fiddling abilities to the orchestra, know- ing full well they will be missed. To the unsuspecting under-classmen James McQuade leaves his smile, to pull them through some of the dark days ahead. Barbara Shaw leaves her attraction for the under-classmen to Joseph Byrnes. Last, but not least, the members of the Class of 1945 who have joined the Service leave their best wishes to all who may fol- low in their footsteps. Approved and notarized on this june the 12th, nineteen-hundred and forty-five, in the presence of the following witnesses: Q Sitfcfff .M i A S 077 Co-Captains 3 Notary Publicg 0 . lfn iff Ol wh 7 C - ' Class Mascot Memorial High School f Class of Forty - Five LONG AGO AND FAR AWAY l-Nancy Kendall-I Dream of You 2--Albert McManus, jr.-XVayside XVaif 3-VVilliam Rose-just Plain Bill 4-Bertha Huntley-Going My VVay 5-Frederic Perry-Bang! Bang! 6-Ronald Mills-Oh Yeah! 7-Nelson Mclntire-Determination 8'-Marjorie Holmes-Pals 9-Ralph Spurrier-Unrationed 10-Edward Jacobs-just Learning ll-jean Bissonnettse-Cutie 12-Jack Pimental-Sun Bath 13-Kathleen NlcCarthy-You and Your Old Man! 14-Donald Pearson-Giddap! 15--Lois Ferry-So slim, So delicate 16-Lucille Braley-H'Ya, Buddy! 17-Phyllis Green-Meow! 18-Jane Becker-Toughy 19--Dorothy Davis-VVhat's the matter now? 20-john Pignataro-There are such Things 21-Leon Corsini-Don't touch that dial 22-Leo Gamache-The lion's roar 23-janet Fickert-just XVading 24-Norman Duphily-Age of Innocence 25--Victor Zakarian-Grin and Bear It 26-Winthrop XVinberg-So he does put his hair up! 27-Arthur Gomes-Art for Art's Sake 29--Gregory Sowyrda-I use lpana 29-Edward Potter-Life Can Be Beautiful 30-Eleanor Rogers-I wanna go home. 31-Josephine Savard-Let's Play House S2-Helen Tarr-Nov Shmov Ka Pop 35-Richard Drake-Lucky Teter 34-Barbara Shaw-Bathing Beauty 35-Shirley Vaughn-She Shirley is Cute 36wFrancis Gill-The Gill Pickle 37-Jeannette Freeman-l.ooking for a Free Man? 38-Caroline Cannon-Fuzzy XN'uzzy 39-Marion Angers-Nothing angers An- gers 40-fAlice Shaw-The service is terrible 41-Fay Holmgren-Don't point 42-H.-Xnne Begley'-Cheese Cake 43flfleanor Bell-VVhat! Playing with dolls? 44--Gloria Anternoits-Henry VIII 45-Marjorie Moody-Nuts to you! 46wVirginia Grant-Ho, hum 47-June Moifett-Little Miss Moffett 48--Wfatson Baker Qon the left!-The Lion Tamer 49-Helen Martin-Pretty Baby 50-Ethel Sullivan-Sully with the fringe on top. 51-Evelyn Griffith-Miss America 52-George Morris-Bell Bottom Trousers 53-Isabelle Kennedy-Keep that guard up. 54-jane Keith-The Dutchman 55-Albert lampietro-Spaghetti Bender 56-Corinne Cahoon-Struttin' my stuff ! 57-Virginia Perkins-Now can I go and play? 58--Richard Rebellw-Kill the umpire! 59-Nicholas Garafaloflsadies' Man 60-Georgina Alger-You don't say! 61-George Gamache-Ray of sunshine 62 4Marilyn Currier-After the mist clears 63-Loretta F rizzell-just barely 10 pounds 64-Peter Massa-For Pete's sake! 65-Miriam Thompson-You're Losing 'em 66-Manuel Silvia-Those beautiful eyesf 67-james McQuade-Squatter's rights 68-Gordon Dempsey-I'm bashful. 69-Elizabeth Lang-NVanna make sumpin of it? 70dCharlote Snow-I am nat sulking! 71-June Fickert-Easy does it. 72-Myra Casey-Hey kids! Look at me. . dggy , H .. QS? x . ae '12- ' t g.-: sz iii V 'ix .E ,Y- ,X , 1 x 1 x . 7551 N Cf? x me 5 i: Q, 5 , 'I 1. .ax K 6 ,egg J. K 7' ,Eiff fi ! ! . . .Ag ' 4' . ftl 1 . '. 1 , J 1 9 1 K' x v .Q . gf . ,, M I W A I u F , irc.. Noffstt '59 0 E v ggxgg 151538 N1 6 QL Q I if Q f mr 3 th i- vk E ' 9. X ' L fx.. ' W . K 5 X, . .1 I ., M- A ' , Q ,E e A 5 X 1 E !Lfm 1 , . , xwlfi ' ,V , WA: 5 - ,Q1 2 A1 f Q,A' N Q4 Q WfY fi f'N MQ A ' , was ' glilsi ,, gigs? QW '?:m ' 'gwQ ?i'BE g f E Wx Ewa' W P f A W . 3 2 A N X A a A 5? A , . 'g,,gi?gw:f, . . W L- .M X I 2' wwf x X Q M1-.ig 9 ,g v W K Q x Q UKQYIQQ- ,5!g f ..f f- 54 5 :fi g Q! Faculty LINDSAY J. MARCH, Principal First row: Mary Brier, Margaret H. Ryder, Ernest E. Thomas, Lindsay J. March, Henry E. Bat- tis, Margaret E, Dick, Ruth Armitage. Second row: Joseph Teeling, Barbara Stanhope, Evelyn Whitty, Dorothy Wetherell, Madelyn Sturtevant, Anna C. Erickson, Lillian M. O'Neil, ERNEST E. THOMAS, Assistant Principal Phillip G. Johnson. Third row: .lack Stnrtewnt, Sylvia G. Matheson, Arline Merrill, lfhyillllllll J. llIacDongall, Ed- ward Whitmore, Catherine Thompson, Herbert L. llflllllff, lfl aller G. Hicks. Senior Yearbook ANNA C. ERICKSON, Staff Adviser VVALTER G. I-IICKS, Business Adviser DOROTHY NVETHERELL, Literary Adviser RICHARD DRAKE, Editor-in-Chief Georgina Alger, Miriam Thompson, Assistant Ed- man, Fay Holmgren, Elizabeth Lang, Alice itors. Nicholas Garafalo, Business Manager. James McQuade, Albert Iampietro, Wiliam Rose, Assistant Business Managers. Nancy Kendall, June Moffett, Art Editors Frederic Perry, Alfred Wilmont, Photography Editors. Eleanor Bell, Arthur Mitchell, Sports Editors jean Bissonnette, Clarra Fernandes, Jeanette Free- Shaw, Typists. First row: Alice Shaw, Jean Bissonnette, Georgina Alger, Richard Drake, Miriam Thompson, Jean- ette Freeman, Elisabeth Lang. Second row: June Moffett, Nicholas Garafalo, Miss Erickson, Nancy Kendall, Arthur Mit- chell, Mr, Hicks, Eleanor Bell, James McQnade, ll'illiam Rose, Frederic Perry, Alfred Wilmont, Fay I-lolmgren, Absentees: Miss W etherell, Clarra Fernandes. Walter Sampson Chapter of Pro Merito Society LILLIAN M. O'NEIL, Faculty Adviser FREDERIC PERRY, Vice President The Pro Merito Society is the scholastic honor group of the senior class. Membership is attained by an average of eighty-live per cent in scholastic achievement for four years. First row: Georgina Alger, Miss O'Neil, Frederic Perry, Richard Drake, Marilyn Currier, Elis- abeth Long. RICHARD DRAKE, President MARILYN CURRIER, Secretary-Treasurer Second row: Ronald Mills, Nancy Kendall, Ethel Snllitfan, Janet Ficleerl, Corinne Calzoon, Mur- ray Alberts, Donald Gnidaboni. Third row: Mary Sansa, Charlotte Snow. Lucille Braley, Watson Baker, Dorothy Davis, Virginia Grant, June Moffett. W' 5 3 it 5 x gf swim? , 9 Em ,ln- ax' if ww Ll Senior Play BARBARA STANHOPE, Dramatic Coach NANCY KENDALL, Student Director JANET FICKERT, Prompter A Pride and Prejudice, an adaptation of Jane Austen's novel, was played before an enthusiastic audience on March 23 in the town hall. Success was due to the untiring efforts of the director, Miss Barbara Stanhope, and the surprising talent of the youthful cast. Left to right: Richard Dralie, Lois Ferry, June Mallet, Alfred Wilniont, Miriam Thompson, Leon Corsini, Marion Travis, Frederic Perry, Jane Keith, Charlotte Snow, Kenneth W'ilbur, Phyllis Green, Jean Bissonnette, Ethel Sullivan, Georgina Alger, Murray Alberts. Student Council ARLINE MERRILL, Adviser JAMES MCQUADE, Vice President RALPH SPURRIER, President JEAN BISSONNETTE, Secretary HELEN MARTIN, Treasurer This year the Student Council has continued cer- tain committees of last year's council, including the Victory Corps committee. It has sponsored Junior High and freshman socials and managed all the school elections. It has also formed a com- mitte which is planning a memorial in honor of high school pupils in the Service of our country. First row: Miss Brier, Virginia Grant, Jean Bis- Class In order, left to right: Class treasurer, vice presi- dent, president, secretary, adviser. First row: Freshmen, George Dean, Edward Clark, Donald Mitchell, Gwendolyn Cahaan, Miss W hitty. Second row: Seniors, Helen Martin, Arthur Mit- sonnette, James MeQuade, Ralph Spnrrier, Helen Martin, Arthur Mitchell, Arthur Gomes, Miss Merrill. Second row: Elisabeth Skahill, Phyllis Holt, John Rice, Francis Borsari, George Wood, James Ken- yon, James Quigley, Jiwhn Cayton, Alfred Gau- thier, James O'Bien, Elaine Doucette, Barbara Jones, William Snkeforth. Officers clzell, Ronald Mills, Nancy Kendall, Mr, Thom- as. Third row: Juniors, Patricia Waite, fairies Ken- yon, John R-ice, Betty Jane Skahill, Miss O'Neil. Fourth row: Sophonzores, Daniel Anaeki, William Washburn, Alfred Gauthier, Patricia Char- lmnnean, Miss Kelly. I. ff 2,21 Q, ? Eze, Q , S, JA KA .N X ,XAT Az, N E' Egfiifp JZ, fi QQ gg 9 if we Mfr W H 3 iff J. 1 f W Q fe . Q . ,, f Q 'a E 5. ,., 'AQJ , 'Q f ',.. Q , Q sk Q xg Q , 6 ' A Q., -5 3+ me F fl WW X H '5 ' Q 1 y, W 5, Q 5265? 1 J Q, D , zzb :Z q. i f Y 5 M M, ,, Sf if .E f ALZE Q , M L Band LUTHER CHURCHILL, Director MIRIAM THOM PSON, Directed by Mr. Churchill, the band played on Armistice and Memorial Day. The main accom- plishment this year was the successful presen- tation of the Band Concert on May 4. First row: Pamelia Jones, Barbara Jones, Ida Furlan, Theresa Guertin, Meredith Caswell, Marjorie Moody. Second row: Mr. Wilber, Miriam Thompson, Al- , fred Wilmont, Jean Bissonette, Charlotte Snow, Nancy Kendall, Claire Devlin, Richard Chap- lin, Stanley Pilshaw, Richard Drake, Evelyn Snow, Annette Perkins, Shirley Wright, Jean Anderson, Mae McBane, Phyllis Holt, Grace Burgess, Donald lVood, Ethel Sullivan, Mr. Churchill. i. Third row: Robert Shaw, Roger Nelson, Herbert ETHEL SULLIVAN, Mimager Drum Majorette Thompson, George Stetson, Edward Clark, lVil- liam Washburn, James McQuade, Robert Dyke, Walter Dunbar, Richard Houghton, Watson Baker, Jane Becker, Margaret Burnett, Mildred- Claire Riley, Leon Corsini. Fourth row: Jane Keith, William McBane, Jerome Tripp, Donald Pierce, John Rice, Geor'ge Wood, Francis Gill, William Rose, David Fish, Helen Tarr, Jean Hornby, Kenneth Crowell. Jean De- Moranzfille, Elisabeth Waite, Weston Kelley. Fifth row: Kenneth Wilbur, Donald Mello, Eugene McKay, Jackson March, Betty Lou Tessier, James illahoney, Frederic Perry, lVinthrop Winberg, George Deane, Mansfield Whitney, Frederick Sousa, Patricia Waite, Florence Haire, Donald Rosen. Orchestra LUTHER CHURCHILL, Director Under the direction of Mr. Churchill the or- chestra has done great work during the past school year. It has been especially enjoyed at many annual social functions. First row: Ann O'Neil, Joan Card, Elaine Casey, Charlotte Swift, Gregory Sowyrda, Donald Mc- Craig, Weston Sanford, Richard Drake, Stanley Pilshaztt, Evelyn Snow, Patricia Charbonneau, Phyllis Holt, Shirley lVright, hlae lllcBane. Second row: Weston Kelley, Jackson March, Bet- ty Lon Tessier, Frederic Perry, Jean Bisson- nette, Charlotte Snow, Claire Devlin, Jean An- derson, Marian Hanson, Jean DeMoran'ville, .lean Hornby, William McBane, Mr. Churchill, Alan Dodge, Third row: hlildred-Claire Riley, :Uargaret Bur- nett, James McQuade, Herbert Thompson, Don- ald Mello, Edward Clark, Leon Corsini, Win- throp Winberg, George Deane, Frederick Sousa, Patricia Waite, Florence Haire. Absentee: Alice Shaw. Sachem MARGARET H. RYDER, LILLIAN M. O'NIEIL, Faculty Advisers The Sachem, in its second year as a self-sup- porting organization, topped its record of last year by increasing its staff, increasing its num- ber of subscribers, sponsoring a party for sub- scribers, running a prose and poetry contest, and netting a neat balance for the treasury. First row: Jean Maddigan, Miss O'Neil, Margaret Burnett, Janet Fickert, Mildred-Claire Riley, Charlotte Snow, Roger Tillson, Georgina Alger, Elisabeth Skahill, Marilyn Currier, Jane Keith, Jean Bissonnette, June Mofett, Walter Dunbar, Frederic Perry, Miss Ryder. Second row: Stanley Mills, Miriam Thompson, Nancy Kendall, Ethel Sullivan, Joyce Hegarty, Elaine Wilbur, Patricia Waite, Alma Canozfa, Gwendolyn Cahoon, Dorothy Murphy, Ruth Gomes, Pamelia Jones, Claire O'Melia, Claire Rice, Shirley Wright, Phyllis Holt, Patricia Charbonneau, Dorothy Davis, Altiina Joncas, Elisabeth Thompson. Third row: Donald Pierce, Isabelle Kennedy, Kathleen McCarthy, Marian Angers, Constance Sparrow, Annette Perkins, Winona Tessier, Claire Begley, Elisabeth Lang, Barbara Shaw, Fay Holmgren, Ann O'Neil, Evelyn Snow, Jean Hornby, Barbara Martin, Lois Ferry, Beryl Thomas, Loretta Frissell, Raymond Baker, Wil- liam Sukeforth. ' Fourth row.: William Washburn, Stanley Pilshaw, Weston Kelley, Robert Wood, James Mahoney, Donald Mello, Herbert Thompson, llfilliam Rose, Richard- Drake, lflfeston Sanford, James Kenyon, Alliln 'Dodge, hlurray Alberts, John Rice, Edgar Gay, Alfred Gauthier. Aim' mmf Nw -- 534 A 1 . X- -NX fix WSW X ki mwimi nl A was 5 - ,.., S N, i ...l:,1 . M--5 'nu aq- siu ,b -..a-4- .un ,i: ' K... -qi-K.-Q.. ,M :ga ,Q 24? if Q S. if . 4 HS .mg Ni. :mga 2 1 7 3 E E 1 3 x -a 0 N X ., Q . X N xg! E ' lA,- 3 . ' ' H M A Y 5 g 3y -'. 1 A M A 6. 5 v f - ! EwQf,in??W,i ,,A' XX ' x f A fl-ww ex K 2 Q' 55' - a V X I if-if L Q fi , A x 1 V - ' 1 f za - f A ' ' wg W 25 Q 1 .i x ,V gi .Wg gm: 1. Q , W s s 3 V 3 e . 435 WW x A M, .M ML wx ., ., 'vrwmfnwv-Mwx Q, ,M 4 Q V Q 'P' if wwwlsifwi F Q W 0 Lg, M . 'S f v ' I iff? sz. is :X Fx Z M Q fl W iii? A Yi ' H QQ X e x X i wx N W vm Y NNY 5-Wwk X 5 . X X- 'WI S N w ' .K X ,ii fi X, Nw f NX S' F r al t S XX S I 5 fd 1 U - 4 Q 4 if 13 , xg N 'X x'.i? K' sim E 5 3 ' X R i Q x 5? e 5 A if Wi x.,Mm , X U . , 8 .Nw vi i... X. Q! HU 1' w Q: fb- .. :' 5 K N i ' 2 5'a if ix Traffic Squad EDWARD WHITMORE, Faculty Adviser RICHARD DRAKE, JAMES McQUADE, Chiefs JOHN RICE, ROGER TILLSON, Deputies The Traffic Squad is the organization designed to make the traffic in the corridors pass more smoothly. Besides carrying out this primary duty, the Traffic Squad has co-operated fully in solving many other problems which have arisen in the school. First row: Miriam Thompson, Georgina Alger, John Rice, James McQuade, Richard Drake, Roger Tillson, Marian Hanson, Mildred-Claire Riley. Second row: Francis Gill, Herbert Thompson, Frederick Sousa, Alfred Gauthier, Donald Mit- chell, William Johnson, W'illia1n Sukeforth . Third row: William Washburn, Charles Jurge- lewies, Arthur Gomes, William Rose, Win- throp Winberg, James Mahoney, James Kenyon, Donald Shaw, Mr. Whitmore. Fourth row: Peter Massa, Gordon Dempsey, Ed- gar Gay, Richard Chaplain, Ralph Spurrier, Arthur Mitchell, George Wood, Lee Norton. Newswriters LILLIAN O'NEIL, Faculty Adviser NANCY KENDALL, Editor The Newswriters' Club is a group of young people who write and edit the column of M. H. S. news which appears each week in the Middle- boro Gazette. It is the purpose of this organiza- tion, which is made up of students interested in journalism, to present a picture of high school life to the reading public. First row: Janet Fickert, Dorothy Murphy, Ed- gar Gay, Nancy Kendall, Elisabeth Skahill, Jean Graham. Second row: Alma Canoga, Miss Wetherell, Mar- ian Angers, Kathleen McCarthy, Lois Ferry, Jean Maddigan, Georgina Alger, Miss O'Neil, Ruth G omes. Third row: Eugene Kennedy, Isabelle Kennedy, Phyllis Green, Murray Alberts, John Casey, Walter Dunbar, Roger Tillson, Claire Begley, Agnes Alger. ' Lunch Room CARRIE LUIPPOLD, Dietitian GLADYS SNOW, Assistant Dietitian Despite the shortage of .meat and other foods, the lunchroom of M. H. S. has nobly carried on. The dietitians have served wholesome dinners to approximately 100 students a day, and also have kept sandwiches, ice cream, white and chocolate milk, cup cakes, and several kinds of crackers on sale for those students who do not buy the 10 cent lunch. First row: Fay Holmgren, Evelyn Snow, Jean Bissonnettc, Ruth Gates, Elisabeth Lang, Myra Casey, Mildred-Claire Riley, Margaret Burnett, June Moffett. DORIS I. WEEMAN, Assistant Dietitian ERNEST THOMAS, Administrator Second row: June Kitchel, Mrs. Snow, Gloria An- ternoits, Marjorie Moody, Miss Luippold, Lu- cille Braley, Shirley Gaskins, Mrs. Weeman, Claire Devlin. Third row: Eleanor Rogers, Beverly Vigers, June Fiekert, Joan St. Amand, Patricia Waite, Char- lotte Snow, Elaine Wilbur, Loretta Fr-iszell, Marilyn Currier, Alice Shaw, Dorothy Davis, Fourth row: Kenneth Hopkins, Arthur Craig, Robert Lammi, Edward Jacobs, Herbert Gibbs, Mr. Thomas. ' - Absentee: Donald Pearson., 4 NN fx ,ESM 157k 955 ax v iQ mf pei .SM N, k,ix QIEWT' 3 4 ,..:: 3 ,V-5:3 Sag!! x Mg,3' L 'M-o....v.. ...sun-,i ' Y :HHS N. , :IH 4 ? ,wi-dW5iQ3g,fX ' . L ss Xl I I 2 YG .wi Aus J J K ' .V M, . . A, Af' 'E' 'ff , hw. x I-143' .w.4.- ..- 5 ---rv-- www v 'T 'papa'-N 'win-N,.,. Junior Red Cross MADELYN STURTEVANT, Faculty Adviser NICHOLAS GARAFALOQ President CHARLES JURGELEWICZ, Secretary u The Junior Red Cross has done excellent work in helping the local and national organizations. Besides aiding financially, it has collected and sent twenty-six Christmas boxes to children in war-I torn Europe. Another project, started in March, is the collection of pictures for Christmas posters, to be sent to the soldiers in distant lands next ycar. First row: Dorothy Davis, Charles Jnrgelewics. Weston Sanford, Nicholas Garafalo, Margaret VVESTON SANFORD, Vice President MARGARET BURNETT, Treasurer Burnett, Gertrude Fearing, .Mrs. Sturtevant. Second row: Leslie Gill, Mildred-Claire Riley, Norman Dulrhily, Jane Keith, Donald Shaw, Donald Rell, Elisabeth Colvin, Cleveland Burn- ham, James O'Brien. Third row: Frances Murdoch, Betty Jean Caswell, Marita Dame, Helen Tarr, George Stetson, Russell Snowden, Joan St. Aniand, Willialm Col- vin, Alice Sousa. Stamps and Bonds PHILLIP JOHNSON. MADELYN STURTEVANT, Faculty Advisers The Stamps and Bonds committee has done well in keeping the Minute Man flag flying. It has also conducted drives to equip several G. I. Joes and to purchase a Field ambulance in the name of the school. First row: Mrs. Stnrtevant, Annette Perkins, Hel- en 'l'arr, lVeston Sanford, Fay Holmgren, Gloria .-lnternoits, Nicholas Garafalo, Mr. John- SON. Second row: Barbara Wall, Elisabeth Moranville, Geneva Garafalo, Nancy Corsini, Dorothy Ga- niache. Carinelina Galanla, Elaine lfVilbur, Rose Marie Quigley, Betty Perkins. Third row: Leslie Gill, George Low, Lee Norton, Daniel Anacki, Francis Tees, Frank Scholz, tx Russell Seaver Girls' League I ARLINE MERRILL, Faculty Adviser ETHEL SULLIVAN, President JANET FICKERT, Secretary Under the guidance of Miss Merrill the Girls' League has had a successful second year. In- cluded in the activities were the sponsoring of different speakers, a formal St. Patrick's Day dance. a spring fashion show, and the making of surgical dressings. MARGARET BURNETT, Vice President MAE SHING, Treasurer First row: Miss Merrill, Margaret Burnett, Ethel Sullivan, Janet Fickert, Mae Shing. Second row: Phyllis Green, Marjorie Moody, Mir- iam Thompson, Jane Keith, Myra C'asey,'Char- lotte Snow. Future Farmers of America , JACK STURTEVANT, Faculty Adviser DELVVIN COLE, Vice President VVALTER MOQUIN, Treasurer This year the boys of the Agricultural Depart- ment established the first chapter in Plymouth County of the Future Farmers of America, com- monly called the F. F. A. The F. F. A. is the largest secondary-school organization in America, with chapters in all forty-eight states, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico. The foundation upon which the organization is built includes leadership, sports- manship, co-operation, citizenship, and service. J joHN SANTINE, President JOSEPH TRAVIS, Secretary RAPHAEL MELLO, Reporter First row: Eugene McManus, Walter Moquin, George Gainache, Richard Rebell, Joseph Travis, Melbourne Cowan, Francis Sellenius. Second row: Allan Lewis, Raymond Bohning, Ar- thur Flood, Delzoin Cole, John Santine, Jr., Don- ald Thayer, Mr. Sturtevant. Third row: Richard Hicks, Richard Itlillettc, Einar Edlund, John Bianchini, George Willis, Raphael Mello. ' Y is v-'-- J.,-f Xh lm.. rvwmv- Football HENRY E. BATTIS, Head Coach JOSEPH TEELING, Assistant Coach ARTHUR MITCHELL, RONALD MILLS, Co-Captains Memorial High School's football team enjoyed a highly successful season, scoring against all op- ponents with 6 wins, 2 ties, and 2 losses. High- lights were its records of being the first team to defeat Plymouth since 1937 and beating Bridge- water for the fourth successive year. First row: Arthur Gomes, Kenneth Baker, Manuel Sylvia, Winthrop Winberg, Ronald Mills, Ar- thur Mitchell, David Smarsh, Albert Iampietro, Francis Tees, Leon Corsini, Leo Gerrior. Second row: Richard McDonald, Walter Camp- lwell, John Pignataro, Alfred Gauthier, John Rice. Richard Chaplafn, James Mahoney. Ralph Spnrrier, lVilliam Washburn, Walter Dunbar, Gilbert Campbell. Third row: Coach Battis, John Nichols, Donald Mitchell, Arnold Thomas, Lee Norton, Walter Moquin, Charles Griswold, Frederic Johnson, Richard Turner, George Wood, Coach Teeling, Fourth row: Richard Brackett, Joseph Silvia, Rus- sell Snowdon, Donald Rosen, Richard Westgate, Donald McCaig, Victor Zakarian. Boys' Basketball JOSEPH TEELING, Head Coach HENRY E. BATTIS, Assistant Coach ARTHUR MITCHELL, WINTHROP WVINBERG, Co-Captains The hardwood representatives of Memorial High School had a very good season, winning 11 games and losing 8. Middleboro fans can be justly proud of the fighting spirit displayed by the high- scoring quintette. First row: Francis Corsini, John Rice, Donald Mitchell, James Cadorette, Alfred Gauthier, Jack- Girls EVELYN WHITTY, Coach son March, Orfell Bennett, Gordon Dempsey. Second row : Ernest Butler, George Wood, Edmund Caminatti, Arthur Mitchell ,Winthrop Winberg, .lohn Cayton, Richard McDonald, Ralph Spurrier T hird row: Mr. Battis, Lee Norton, Alvin Brooks, Edgar Gay, Daniel .-lnaeki, William Rose, Francis Gill, John Nichols, Mr. Teeling. Hockey CATHERINE THOMPSON, Assistant Coach ETHEL SULLIVAN, HELEN TARR, Co-Captains -- After the return of the coach, Miss Whitty, from her duties in Washington, the girls started their 1944 hockey season with six games scheduled. They hnished with a record of two ties, two wins, and two losses. First row: Elisabetlz Skahill, Mary Dores, Eleanor liell, Ethel Sullivan, Helen Tarr, Jean Bisson- Girls, EVELYN 'VVHITTY, Coach GEORGINA ALGER, Because of the fine spirit and leadership of Miss Whitty and her assistant, Miss Thompson, the girls' basketball team went ahead this year with tive wins and only three defeats, losing two games to West Bridgewater and splitting even with Plymouth. On account of the epidemic of scarlet fever the season was delayed, but by excellent co- operation the girls soon made up for lost time. First row: Charlotte Snow, Miriam Thompson, nette, Georgina Alger. Second row: Claire 0'Melia, Rose Marie Quigley, Clare Begley, Doris Brievogal, Phyllis Austin, Miss Whitty, Beatrice Austin, Mae McBane, Marilyn Den1ers, Painelia Jones, Elaine Dou- cette, Claire Rice, Dorothy Davis. Baseball CATHERINE THOMPSON, Assistant Coach HELEN TA RR, Co-Captains Eleanor Hell, Georgina .-llgcr, Helen Tarr, Ethel Sullivan, Florence Varney, Agnes Alger, Phyllis Austin. Second row: Dorothy Davis, Miss Thompson, Rose Marie Quigley, Claire Begley, Betty Jane Skahill, Miss Whitty, Claire 0'Melia, Marilyn Demers, Pamela Jones, Claire Rice, Elaine Dou- cette, Beatrice Austin. Absentee : A lice Shaw. X W w wf D I-' H' Us Od . , War, dwwwbzzme Pa-wall 011462. 6'2M 770.1!,weefgwQ w www we aw? QwXfQJQ,fQl so CZMA M 'W mam wg, iff gym ,jf 'U Aim-f.fZM. -If rigid UWM bmw mwfm Qfgyfwfi M ,L W ww? ffl! Jia W wZw Wi'JffEZfWff1f !L Q6f2w. C0-C 75.51. ff-42-My ,TVWWW Wu .wm,.J,.,,gj.?n44g0, 8wJ,,T?u,,?. img Mfforzzkyyfp. mZQ,z4M,U g- VJZWD Njwwfjf ,QJXJQMJJ j U 'f Wfflwf h74,4Q,.7Az4, MW, a.WZf'19Mm? WWJPNM fnwwxmw. l V r i N W I A xi 3 1 2 N f 1 ' 1 , 4 K' W . 3256 i . q 14 J 1 X , E Memorial High School f Class of Forty - F ive Salutatory and Essay oEoRo1NA Atom School Officials, Parents. and Friends: Now that tonight. the night for which we have been planning for so long, the night which we sometimes thought would never come, is actually here. we find ourselves Filled with a mixture of emotions. VVe are proud. VVe are happy. VVe're not quite as jubilant as we expected to be. Some of us find that our eyes are a little dewy and our knees a little shaky. There is one emo- tion that we are all experiencing and that is a feeling of gladness that you, the people who are most interested in us. are able to be with us this evening. It is with very great pleasure that I welcome you, on behalf of the Class of 1945. to these our graduation exercises. ERNIE PYLE. A GREAT LITTLE I GUY There are really two wars, john Stein- beck once said, and they haven't much to do with each other. There's the war of maps and logistics, of campaigns, of armies. divisions, and regiments - and that is Gen- eral Marshall's war. Then there's the war of homesick, weary, common men who wash their socks in their helmets, complain about the food. whistle at the girls, lug themselves through as dirty a business as the world has even seen, and do it with humor and dignity and courage-and that is Ernie Pyle's war. Ernie Pyle, the thin, grayhaired corres- pondent who traveled from Africa to Okin- awa reporting the wars and the stories of the doughboys who fought in them, has prob- ably done more for the morale of the people in this war - both at home and abroad - than any other man. An ordinary sort of person with an exceptional love and under- standing of people, he walked among the soldiers, sharing with th-em the hardships, the dangers, and the fears of war and match- ing their humor and their language with his own wit and his own picturesque vocabu- lary. They recognized him then as a friend, and everywhere he went he was greeted with H'ya, Ernie ! Later, when they began to receive clip- pings of his column, they began to think of him as their laureate. Here was a man who understood them as no other journalist had ever been able to understand them, here was a man capable of putting into words their own thoughts and feelings - the things they had tried but failed to say in the letters they sent home. At home the people who had previously read his stories about obscure woodsmen, penniless farmers, and unfortun- ate lepers continued to read his column. The column was written in the same simple style, a style which resembled that of a per- sonal letter rather than that of a professional columnist. The subjects were still the same average peopleg yet there was something different. Almost over night the war had made these insignificant little people the most important people in the world. Almost over night the number of Pyle's followers in- creased, doubled, tripled. and went on grow- ing until it amounted to millions. Ernie's column was the thing families and friends had been searching for - a link between them and their loved ones. They read the column with unvarying regularity. They added the author's name to their prayers and prayed for his safety along with that of their sons and brothers, VVar had done a stronge thing. It had given fame to a little man who hated it with every ounce of his being. It made Er- nest Pyle the foremost correspondent in America. VVhen anyone thinks of people like Mr. Pyle, people who have risen to great heights in their fields of work, he usually thinks of them as having reached their goal as a result of long, careful planning and striving toward it. This is not always true. Cer- tainly it is not true in this particular case. XVhen Ernie was a small boy living on a farm in Dana, Indiana, no one doubted that he would become a farmer and spend his life there as his parents and their parents had done before him. All through his school life he was shy and retiring and showed none of the ambitions to do great things that one might have expected to find in his boy- hood. Someone, thinking of Abraham Lin- coln no doubt, once asked him about his humble birth. Ernie just smiled and said, Oh, I wasn't born in a log cabin, but I did start driving a team in the field when I was nine years old, if that will help. By the time he was graduated from high school and went to Indiana University, he was sure of only one thing - he didn't want to be a farmer. VVandering around the campus on registration day in 1919, he happened to meet Paige Cavanaugh. who informed him that journalism was supposed Memorial High School if lb Class of Forty - Five to be a breeze. Together the new friends walked to the enrollment office, and Pyle with his tongue in his cheek said. VVe as- pire to be journalists. It was as simple as that, the beginning of Ernie Pyle's career. Pyle struggled through three years of college, doing no more work than was abso- lutely necessary: and then, despite warnings from his friends that he wouldn't amount to anything, he left college to work on an In- diana newspaper. After a few months of this work he went on to a desk job on the Wash- ington News in Washington, D. C. Still working without any particular goal, Pyle once said that his only inspiration in this period came when he read Kirk Simp- son's account of the burial of the Unknown Soldier. I cried over that, he said, and I can quote the lead and almost any part of the piece. The years that followed were his appren- ticeship. In them he worked and gained the experience that was later to hold him in good stead. For several years he was copy editor of the Washington News, then man- aging editor. Finally in 1935 he became a roving reporter and traveling with his wife, known to us in his column as that girl, he began to write stories about Main Street and Back Street, and Your Street. People loved his simple, direct style, and critics compared it to that of Mark Twain. At this point in his career Pyle was un- doubtedly good, but at the same time he was a long, long way from being great. In the fall of 1940, a voice came in the night and said, 'Go', Ernie explained. So the peacetime reporter, the man who ab- horred war, journeyed to war-town Lon- don and wrote powerful, stirring articles about the bombings. Later when he went to Ireland and lived with the Yank troops there, the dispatches he sent home describ- ing the daily round of the men won him a new audience. By the time he reached Africa, the Pyle legend was a reality. The correspondent himself describes what he was covering there as the Ubackwash of the war. It is almost impossible to de- scribe the work he did there. One can only repeat that he wasn't interested in the bigwigs, the generals and the heroes. He was still interested in the little people, and by writing about them and by becoming the patron saint of the doughfoots he brought home to America a side of the war that she had never been able to see before. Someone once described his column at this time as the perfect supplement to the soldiers' own letters. Perhaps there is no better way of describing it, for he pictured the soldiers' existence as he lived it, and wrote about the soldiers' emotions as he experienced them. The column was his letter home to America. Pyl-e wrote about Italy and France, and the legend continued to grow: but in 1944, when he had seen all the horror and agony that he could bear, he started home, a sad- dened, war-weary man. At this point one might have thought that he had done his part, had -earned the right to live a quiet life at home. One might have thought this, but Ernie didn't. He wasn't fooled by reports and rumors. He knew the war wasn't over or anywhere near overg and as long as there was fighting - any- where, he felt a responsibility, a sense of duty toward the soldiers. And so, after a short and questionable rest at home - fall the time he was at home he was sought after to make speeches and tours and was con- tinually being showered with visitors and giftsi - he with many misgivings set off for war again, this time to the Pacific. On the eighteenth of April Ernie Pyle, still among the footsoldiers for whom he had so much admiration, was killed. On the eighteenth of April GI Joe lost a friend and a champion, a bond between the millions of readers here on the homefront and their fighting soldiers overseas was broken. Ernie Pyle, one of those great little guys, is dead. He is dead, and yet in one respect he can never die, for just as he immortal- ized so many soldiers in his column, he has become immortalized in the hearts and minds of his readers and GI friends. Long after the fighting is done and peace again en- folds the world, people will remember him and be grateful for the work he has done. Even after the names of the battles and the towns have been forgotten, the words print- ed on a wooden plaque on a tiny island in the Paciiic will remain indelible in the minds of his friends- AT THIS SPOT THE 77th INFANTRY DIVISION LOST A BUDDY- ERNIE PYLE. Memorial High School f Class of Flirty 'grive Essay and Valedietory RICHARD DRAKE S'l'lil'HliN YINCIZNT BICNET, POICTUFARlliRlCA Stephen Yincent Benet has been called the poet of America: certainly he was as nearly the national poet as anyone has been since XVhitman. Three generations of light- ing ancestors may well be proud of the con- tribution which Stephen Henet made when his country needed him. lmbued with a deep love for his native America. he always sought to interpret the nation to itself through his writings. A great lover of Ameri- can history, he strove to put into verse certain outstanding episodes which have helped to mould the American spirit. As today's crisis became inevitable, he turned with all his passion for his country from his own literary interests to the shaping of nat- ional opinion about the fundamental issues involved. It was while serving his country thus that he died in 1943, a martyr to the cause of the country he so dearly loved. Stephen Benet early showed signs of poetic promise, Born in Bethlehem, Pennsyl- vania in 1393, the son of an army ofhcer, he moved with his family around the United States and came to love its beauty and its traditions. He says of himself in one poem: This Hesh was seeded from no foreign grain Hut Pennsylvania and Kentucky wheat, And it has soaked in California rain And five years tempered in New England sleetf' In his youth he lost himself completely in the books of his father's library, and soon put his newly-formed ideas into verse which received many prizes. At the age of seven- teen, while a freshman at Yale, he published a book of poems, Five Men and Pompey, which Louis Untermeyer called little short of astounding. At Yale University his days were filled with literary activity. Dur- ing his student years he was class poet and managing editor of The Record. He was graduated in 1919 with a B. A. degree, re- ceiving his M. A. in the following year. From Yale he went directly to Paris to do grad- uate work at the Sorbonne, a part of the University of Paris. After his return to this country from France, he wrote his first two novels and several short stories. In 1926 a fellowship enabled him to take his family to Paris again, where he wrote his first successful book, john Brown's Body. This epic poem - perhaps his greatest single work - won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1929. His next success was the American classic The Devil and Daniel Vllebster, which won the O. Henry Blem- orial Award. ln 1938 Mr. Benet was elect- ed to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. XVhen the war struck in 1941. be abandoned his half-completed epic lVest- ern Star, which was to have been a narra- tive in the tradition of john Brown's Body, so that he could devote his full genius for expression to the cause of freedom. He wrote pamphlets. radio scripts, speeches, ar- ticles for the press, and otherwise gave of his talent for the war effort. His untimely death deprived the world of a great creative artist and a gallant tighter. One obvious object toward which he dir- ected his thoughts was war. He was of the generation that saw the First NVorld lllarg and in his epic john Hrown's l3ody,', a nar- rative of the American Civil VVar. he has given us a stirring interpretation of another great crisis. By describing the conflict from the viewpoint of several observers, men in both the Union and Confederate armies, he has achieved a picture of the Civil VVar in all its aspects. His patriotic fervor and sin- cerity of theme have made the epic live, and his lyrical presentation is enhanced by the quick changes and adaptations of the style to tit the different moods. VVhen he feels the need of a free and flexible style for the description of a battle or a person, he lapses into blank verse in a long, loose-jointed rhythm, and when he has a particular point to emphasize, he may use a lyrical style of evenly-measured, rhymed lines. A good example of this lyrical style is one of the songs in the First book of John Brown's Body. Thirteen sisters beside the sea. tHave a care, my s0n.l Builded a house called Liberty And locked the doors with a stately key. N one should enter it but the free. qHave a care, my son.l The walls are solid as Plymouth Rock. Memorial High School f C1888 of F01'fY' ' Five f Rock can crumble, my son.j The door of seasoned New England stock. Before it a Yankee fighting-cock Pecks redcoat kings away from the lock. tg Fighters can die, my son.j The epic is particularly rich in word por- traits, for Mr. Benet is more concerned with human beings and the effect that war has on them than he is with the historic events themselves. Chief among Benet's short stories is The Devil and Daniel VVebster. It aptly re- presents the reverence Mr. Benet felt for the heritage of America and the Americans who made America great. The light touch is kept, however, by the use of exaggeration, which accentuates the important issues with- out burlesquing them. One of the most familiar uses of this effective exaggeration to depict a character is the opening of The Devil and Daniel VVebster. , Yes, Dan'l VVebster's dead - or, at least, they buried him. But every time there's a thunderstorm around Marsh- field, they say you can hear his rolling voice in the hollows of the sky. And they say if you go to his grave and speak loud and clear, Dan't VVebster - Dan'l VV eb- ster! the ground'll begin to shiver and the trees begin to shake. And after a while you'll hear a deep voice saying, 'Neighbor, how stands the Union F' Then you better answer the Union stands as she stood. rock-bottomed and copper-sheathed, one and indivisible, or he's liable to rear right out of the ground. At least, that's what I was told when I was a youngster. These ballads and allegories of Stephen Benet have greatly enriched our American folklore, In XVestern Star, the epic he abandoned with the outbreak of the war, Benet has realistically depicted the frontiersmen as they moved from the old lands to the new, ever westward. The true spirit of America and our heritage is reflected in the recurring motif VV e don't know where we're going. but we're on our way. He has aptly shown the influence of many peoples in this melt- ing pot in the opening words of the prelude to Western Star. Americans are always moving on. e lt's an old Spanish custom gon-e astray, A sort of English fever, I believe, Or just a mere desire to take French leave, I conldn't say. I couldn't really say. But, when the whistle blows, they go away. Sometimes there never was a whistle blown, But they don't care, for they can blow their own. The narrative shows us, above all, that no matter how hard these oaken colonists tried to retain their British traditions, they be- came a new race unawaresf' Stephen Vincent Benet was not a great intellectual genius. He was a man of the people. who saw a vision - the vision of America - and interpreted this vision to the average man through the medium of inspired poetry. One recognizes the poet as a man of strength and of tenderness, a man who felt deeply and thought sincerely. He was a product of this century of materialism, but he realized that the America of today is the 'result of the spirit of yesterday, and no one has more ably depicted that spirit. VALEDICTORY And now, members of the Class of 1945, it is particularly fitting that we heark- en to the words of Stephen Vincent Benet's Prayer, read by the late President Roose- velt at the United Nations Day Ceremony in 1942. God of the Free, we pledge our hearts and lives today to the cause of all free mankind. Grant us victory over the tyrants who would enslave all free men and nations. Grant us faith and understanding to cherish all those who fight for freedom as if they were our brothers. Grant us brotherhood in hope and union, ' 'k ' if ' brotherhood not only for this day but for all our years - a brother- hood not of words but of acts and deeds. VVe are all of us children of earth - grant us that simple knowledge. If our brothers are oppressed, then we are oppressed. If they hunger, we hunger. If their freedom is taken away, our freedom is not secure. Grant us a common faith that man shall know bread and peace, that he shall know justice and righteousness, freedom and se- curity, an equal chance to do his best, not only in our own lands, but throughout the world. And in the faith let us march to- ward the clean world our hands can make. I Z' xx .Q Memorial High School f Class of Forty - Five Essay and Valedictory f NANCY KENDALL NORMAN ROCKVVELL-POPULAR AMERICAN ARTIST Norman Rockwell has made America laugh--and think. ln a small barn-like studio behind a substantial New England homestead in Arlington. V ermont. one may find this man, whom Rufus Jarman of the New Yorker describes as a stringy, boyish, only moderately craggy, fifty-one year old American with a long nose, an active Adam's apple, deep-set melancholy brown eyes and a good-natured air. This description fits the artist who has been ac- claimed the Dickens of the Paintbrushf' To the average American he is the man who pictures the common citizen on the covers of the weekly Saturday Ezfeuing Posl. The world- associates his name with the magni- ficent paintings depicting the Four Free- doms as set down in the Atlantic Charter. For, by creating American institutions on canvas, Norman Rockwell has himself be- come as symbolic of America as the paintings he produces. This artist grew up in New York, was a choir boy in one of its large cathedrals, went to art school at an early age, and be- cause of his earnest and serious nature be- came known as The Deacon. When a youngster, he had first impressed his family with his abilities by sketching his own con- ception of Scrooge after hearing his father read Dickens' Christmas Carol. His boy- ish ambition to study only the higher things in art changed when he found that he must live, thus, before he was twenty, he was an underpaid illustrator for the magazine I?oy's Life. The day that Norman Rockwell stepped into the oFFlce of the editor of the Saturday Ewrzing Post, proved to be the turning point in his life. A fellow artist had urged him to try the Post as a possible market for his work. The story is told that as twenty-one year old Rockwell sat in the waiting room with his drawings in a box which resembled a child's coffin, Irvin S. Cobb passed through and asked the frightened young man if he were carrying a corpse with him! No mat- ter how terrible that long wait, Rockwell's work immediately impressed the editor, and his Saturday Ewning Post covers now num- ber over two-hundred. In fact, he has today such high regard for his employers that he says, I'm really almost religions about the Post. Everyone is familiar with Rockwell's work, even if he is not familiar with his name. Among his most famous covers is his series on life in an army camp. Pvt. Willie Gillis came to be known all over America as he went through the experiences so well remembered by every UG. I. joe. Most people recall the scrawny private carry- ing a large package from home, for at his heels tramped a vicious gang of hungry, husky dough boys, the top kick being the hungriest and huskiest of them all. Again, at election time Rockwell caught the nublic's eye by creating a character known as .lunius P. Wimpole, who on the covers and between the pages of the Post went through the uncertainties which confront the average voter. No better cross section of American life can be found, than in Rockwell's painting of Am-erica at the polls - America as represented by the dithery club woman, the bobby-socked college girl. the lame grandmother, and the hen-peeked husband. People also remember Norman Rockwell for his April Fool covers, which in them- selves fooled millions of people, and for his drawing of a New England ration board, whose members, incidentally, threatened to take away his A card if he didn't make them look good. This man, whom Time rates as 'fprobably the best-loved U. S. artist alive, says of himself, I guess I am a story teller: and although this may not be the highest form of art, it is what I love to do. In his Four Freedoms, Norman Rockwell has, indeed, written a story - the story of America. At three o'clock on the morning of July 16, 1942, he woke his wife to tell her that he was going to show on canvas what the Four Freedoms meant to hi1n. Duly impressed, his wife went back to sleep, and the artist went to work on the posters which were to be one of the most widely acclaimed set of paintings ever produced. The popularity of the Four Freedoms was overwhelming. All America became Norman Rockwell con- scious. Memorial High School i' Class of Forty - Five ' 'To me the most beautiful of these paint- ings is that depicting Freedom of Religion. With the people of all races, creeds, and colors bowed in unified prayer there comes a feeling which is written on the heart of every American. Truly democratic is the painting of the young working man voicing his opinion in the New England town meet- ing, so symbolic of our Freedom of Speech. Rockwell chose a mother and a father say- ing good night to their two children as a fitting subject for Freedom from Fear. Typical of America in every way is the fourth of the series, Freedom from Want- a smiling family grouped around the steam- ing Thanksgiving turkey. Rockwell's models for the Four Freedoms, as well as for his other paintings, are his own neighbors. In fact, if a person in Ar- lington hasn't either posed or been a critic for Rockwell, he hasn't become a part of the town. Under' fluorescent lights in his neat studio, the artist paints these charac- ters by the hour,while his wife, Mary, reads to him. VVhen the Rockwells need advice, they call in Mead Schaeffer, a neighboring artist, or some other one of the small town Vermonters. Rockwell's pictures often in- clude the likeness of the village justice of the peace, an Arlington building contractor, the mail truck driver, a neighbor's child, or one of his own impish sons. This cover man may not be the greatest of American artists, but certainly he stands at the top for his authentic and detailed re- productions. A commentator has said, Rockwell's men are not Hollywood heroes, his girls .are not Powers models, and his boys are not flaxen-haired angels -- they are real people, faithfully rendered to the last wrinkle, collar, crow's foot, shoulder stoop, and irregular nose line. One rea- son for the striking effects of his covers is that he paints from life - he paints people as they are, with dirty aprons and torn overalls. In fact, he collects costumes from everywhere. At one time when he visited Hannibal, Missouri, upon seeing a farmer in his weather-beaten pants, he bought the old man's breeches, leaving his own in ex-' change. On another occasion he fell in love with a battered hat worn by a guide in Death Valley, and so he purchased it for two dol- lars. To date that hat has appeared on four covers. While most cover men would sketch from a photograph, Rockwell once sent to Florida for a special kind of garter snake, which arrived somewhat limp but still alive. To quote Mr. Rockwell, I say that if you can tell a story in a picture and if a reasonable number of people like your work, it is art. A fellow artist has said of him, He has an excellent technique, great strength, and a clearness of touch that the old masters had. His things are so universal that he would be appreciated anywhere. Yet no artist can pay a bigger tribute to Norman Rockwell than is paid by the millions of Americans who say, He understands us. V ALEDICTORY Class of 1945: For four years, while the world has been overshadowed by war, we have been striving toward a goal. T0- night we have reached that goal. Although every one of us has felt the influence of the chaos and conflict among the nations, the wartime educational program has not de- prived us of school friendships, good times together, and scholastic accomplishments. Our future is not certain. Some of us go on to further study, some to war work, and many others to the armed service of the United States. Yet, remembering the guid- ance which we have had, it is with confidence that each of us goes forth, ready and eager to take his place in the peaceful world of tomorrow. -0 ffggs A , N-,Iv . 5-, , Z--'- jyg'.y:A fig .1 A YAY X xg ! , MEMORIAL HIGH SCHOOL LLDQ5 bUNC11 VVordS Exrxcl MUSIC Lucille BPAIQH 15131 J JU fi'f3Mf'fn: Q . 0 P n The u-ture c 113 tho h s.cqms to leave our care' fr The warmth at' friends the laughs the fun the sec-vets shared fha 5-B 89 war to 1' ht the vict're near A new and stron- r .LJ JJ. J 1.1 n 9 rg l-ffl! VF F1 ana 2. ' hh ' 'LAJJJJJQ-'Jr J T' 1'V'fT rp fffg iibfafsffmf? I pranks we led. 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PHOTOGRAPHERS 32 Ox. .:. 160 Boylston Street Boston, Mass. 0,0 X Q80 .x. :ff x rg: OXO MEL-O-DEE COFFEE SHOP 0:0 'gf 121 Centre Street If 31 'if Lobster and Chicken Dinners 1:1 32 Home Made Pastries ISI :iz Ox. Ox. Mrs. Lois Mello, Prop. ,X .sz 0:0 sto sto 9,0 oss 0x0 OXO 0:0 axe oxo O20 12: rf: INSURE WITH SAFETY AND SAVINGS J. ADRIEN BISSONNETTE The Mutual Agent Tel. 89 z If 152 Peirce Street Middleboro, Mass. If: OO 4. .z. 31 axe .:. fx. 32 :iz 0:0 on 0:0 31 X If 31 ll W TP HARRY M. CO0K Compliments of Watch repairing of all makes Jewelry repairing MIDDLEBORO TRUST COMPANY E . ngravmg 4, Tel. 1047 23 So. Main St. If .x. o'u'oo'oo'oo'ciao'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'ofa'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo'oo' :xo oooooooooooooonooooooooooooooooooooaoooooooooooooooooooooslk' ooo0aoQQa-aQ0Q44S0Q.QSSQ0-oQQ0Q0Q....SQA-4+--nqaaaoaooooo ,oo.oo,oo,oo,u,n,oo,oo'oo,oo.n.oo'oo,oo,oo,wsooo.oo.n,n.n.n.oo.oo.n,n,oo,oo.oo.oo'oo.n,oo.oo.oo,goo.oo.oo,oo,u.nfovoo,oo.oo.n.n,oo,oo.n.n.n,oo,oo,e 5556 T. M. RYDER 81 CO. QRalph W. Maddiganj ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE EStabliShed 1877 Main Office: R0omS l6-l8 Glidden Building lVliddlel1oro flll-W Point Independence 782 CLI, FOR CLOTHES OF QUALITY STUDENTS - YOUNG MEN SPORT CLOTHES MCQ ADE'S CLOTHE SHOP CLOTHES RENTAL SPECIALISTS FORMAL CLOTHES CAPS AND GOWNS it L :zz OXO 0:0 0:0 oss .:. .x. 12: .:. .:. .,. .!. rf: 2 .z. :sz ext .Q .:. .. Cx! 6:0 .Q .x. 920 3. .. .:. .:. 2:1 .:. .x. 3. .,. .x. .,. .,. zz: 0,0 .Q .. Oz! .f. O'O use OXO O!! Ox! .:. .zz .:. .,. .x. .,. .t. .t. .z. .,. .:. :fc .Q .,. .. .Q .,. .:. .!. . . .:. .z. .. oxo 6x0 Oxb oxo .Q .zz rf. oxo oxo ext Ox! Ox! ago bib Ox? ............................,............,..............-X ..,.,..,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,.,.. N ..,..,.,..,..,..,.. M 0 .. N N M N ..,.,..,.,.,..,.,.. .. N .Q .Q ..,..,.,.,..,..,.,.,..,..,..,..,.,f,..,.,.5 0, ooooooooooonoooneooo:QooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooQ sq.44.na.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oa.oo,oo.oo.n.votes.oo34.u.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo4oo,oo,oo,oo.oo.oo.oo oo os no oo oo,oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo oo.oo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo.o at use Compliments of PORTER'S LUNCH Compliments of GEORGE THE BARBER MIDDLEBORO FRUIT CO. l ruit -- Vegetables - Candy Cigars SAWICKI DRY oooos STORE Compliments of DUPONT'S For best in womens wear CHARLTON'S COATS AND DRESSES Millinery and Sports Wear 21 Center St. Compliments of WHITE'S SHOE STORE 374 Centre St. lElAND'S FLOWER SHOP Flower and Greeting Cards f For All Occasions 9 So. Main St. Middleboro o ooooooooooooooooooonsonoonnaoooooaoooo 40:00:00:oo:oo:oo:oo:oo:oo:ooIoozoo:oo:oo:oo:oo:oo,oo:oo.oo.oo,oo.oo,oo,oo.u.oo.oo.u.oo,oo,oo,oo,oo.oo.o4.n.oe.oo.oo0oo.oo.oo.oo.nga.oo.oo.oo.oo.n'oo.oo,oo.oo.n,14.9 0 o oss SUKEFORTH If! 121 C!! Service Station gig :iz 0,0 lt? . -ts Compliments of :Ez KAY cui RATE gtg 'sf Paul L. Dunn, Mgr. -if 2:2 exe Oz' Compliments of -if M. L. HINCKLEY rf: J. Jeweler and Optometrist sis v. Mononf 449 Center St., Middleboro, Mass. Expert shee Repairing A E25 .L 1. SULLIVAN Newsdealer - Cigars - Cigarettes Tobacco fif 1. E. Rosmsou 252 Registered Optometrist l23 Centre St. 525 C tiiii plimenzs of DR. LEO N. GIBBONS If! Optometrist ISI 31 Ox? Q. RALPH Bissm gtg OXO Electrician .:. 17 South Main St. fi: 31 2 o'o 0:0 o o ate oxo ox: ox. :xo use .Q o o .Q o o axe oxo oxo ox: ox: exe axe uso exe oxo exe ox: :xo use exe sto oto ot: ox: ox: oz: ot: ox: oz: ox: .xo ox: oz: exe oxo ot: can ex. .:. Q o .g. o o ata ox. .:. o Q .xo ox: ox: ox: ot: exe sto ego etc :xo so 0:4 ox. .xo oz. axe ego 34 axe use exe oss oxo axe exe use .:. o 0 ox. sto exe ox: oss axe ago .zo os: ox: oxo ot: Q. axe ooooooovoovooooaooooQonoeaaooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo v,oo.oo.oo.oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo.oo.oo,oo,u,oo,u.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo,oo,n,oogoo,oo,oo,oo,oo,n,og04.0430,ognys,oo,oo,oo,oo,oofo,00.00.04,oo,oo.oo,oo.oo,oo,oo.oo,n,o BOB'S DINER 66011 the Squarev Q A Q FREDERICK S. WESTON, C. E. INSURANCE - SURVEYING Don't lose what you have - Insure it Now Dividends on My Non-Assessable Policies Will Help You Buy War Bonds Tel. 36 Compliments of WINTHROP-ATKINS CO. 3 L Our Best Wishes to the Class of 1945 W. T. GRANT C0. MIDDLEBORO 0 o 3, Ei? :iz to rx. Ox! :ir X rf: Ox! Iii ozo :iz 2 :fc O20 Oth :iz xo rf. .:. :zz :iz 0:0 oxo ozo OSD Ox! ego Ox! Ox! 0,0 :iz 0:0 0:0 :iz Oz! :iz oss Iii 0:0 :iz :fr exe oxo Ox! O80 :iz exe ri: xo rf. csc O80 0,0 Ot! rf: rf: .:. za: Ox! Gal sto 0:9 o o sto ego oxo ot: atc ox: use can axe can can 0:0 ego .f. oooooooaooooooosooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooouoooooqofoo o.oo,oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.n.n.ooOoo.oo.os.oo.oo30,00,ago,oo,oo,oo.oo,oo,oo0oo.oo.oo,oo.oo,oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.N,oo.oo,so,oo.oo,oo,no.n.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oof LLOYD PERKINS AND SON CHESTER M. SYLVESTER Plumbing and Heating - Metal Work and Furnaces Water Systems and Oil Burners Telephone 326 Established 1884 57 Wareham Street - Middleboro, Mass. Compliments of MAXIM MOTOR CO. Dodge and Plymouth Sales and Service Compliments of C. A. BOURNE'S Furniture Store 21 North Street Wareham gt, Middleboro Telephone 538 Middleboro, Mass. MODERN CEEATISERS AND DYERS THE 1 1 No. Main St. Middleboro Compliments of C0 'Pli 'e'U-9 of MIDDEEBORO GAZETTE Established 1852 Telephone 750 'T t T, vzoozoozoo GIBERTPS APOTHECARY Corner Centre and High Streets MIDDLEBORO, MASS. ooooooooooooovoooooQovoooooovaooooovooooooooooooooooooo . O . O , , O '00, oooo00.0000,0000oo00.0000,00oooo,ooMoo.oo,oo,Noo.ooosoo,oooo.oo0o ,oofooooooc 0 , 0 o o o no 0 Q o 0 o 0 o o 0 o o o o o o o Q' 9 o 0 o o o o o o o 4. 3. . . oxo 0:0 oxo OXO Q. 31 OXO Ox! O30 Ox? 0,0 Ox' oxo Q80 OXO ozo Ox! O20 OXO axe O20 exe 0,0 020 O20 Ox! exe Ox! O34 exe exe Qxb .f. 252 ISO Ox! oxo 0:0 axe O80 O20 Ox! 2 .31 Q. .x. . . Ox! 1:0 4:0 .Q . . Ox! 020 .!. .x. .x. . . Q24 026 axe QSO Q80 Q!! . . O36 . . 620 080 use 480 Ox! Q30 axe Ox! O20 oxo 4:0 9:0 31 txt ISI oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooofoonooooonnovvoeofoeoooooo 504.oo.oo.0039.04.05oo.oo.oo.oo.Qo.oo.oo.oo30.00.40.04.00.oo.vo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.ov.oo.oo.o43304.04.01 .oefo oo.oo.n.oo.oo.o4.o4.n.u.oo.oo.n.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo Compliments of NEMASKET TRANSPORTATION CO. AQQ Camplinzenls of GENERAL MILLS INCORPORATED Il 'A' it Cornplillzenls of C. P. WASHBURN CO. Wholesale Distributors of Plumbing - Heating and Builders, Specialties FAIETTI FASHION SHOPPE 2 South Main St. Tel. 897-M Middleboro Coats - Dresses - Accessories Complim ents of MIDDLEBORO RECREATION CENTER SAUNDERS' HARDWARE Yale Locks House and Auto Keys Made 25 Center Street Telephone 47 oo NEW ENGLAND CRANBERRY SALES COMPANY Distributors of EATM OR CRANBERRIES Headquarters at 9 Station St. Micldleboro ooaoooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooqnooevoonenoooaoooyv o,oo,oo,oo,oo.oo.u,n,oo.u.oofo.aio.oo.oo,oo,oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.u.n.u,u.oo.oo.n,u.oo,oo,u.u.n.u.u.u.n.n.u.oo,n.u.oo.n.u.oo,oo,oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo,ann OooooQoooooooooooooooaoooeouooooooooooobsoooooo oo oooueooo, A. R. GLIDDEN a sou Dry Goods ff: Tel. 281-W Micldleboro fif Oz. 0:0 gg Jsssf F. MORSE oxo 0:0 IE: The Cut Rate Drug Store fif ozo sto Eff LoNo's mxmo sHoP x O U .Q ft: Popular Records Ox! 3. 0:0 U80 'xl ft. 0:0 T55 F. M. Guess, Florist ISI gig 26 South Main st. sto Zi: Compliments of to If. ,x gif 1. L. IENNEY colt co. QSO Oxi gig com. A- COKE - on. 0:6 31 If: Telephone 238 0:6 :zz , gig 1 'A' It uso O20 0:0 Oxb 0:0 X :gr rf: THIBAULT STUDIO :fr 2 .Q 48 North Mam St. .tt rf. oxo :iz :iz 2 Micldleboro, Mass. .. TU OXO 4. 31 . o 05QQ.go.a.oo.n.n.n.n.n.oo,oo,oo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo,oo,vo,oo,oo.oo,oo.oo,oo,oo.no.oo.ooOoo.oo,oo,ooOno0ooOoo,oo.oo,oo.oo.oh34,00.oo,oo,oo:bo.n,oo:n,n.oo,oo,oo, 0 Compliments of MIDDLEBORO CLOTHING C0. Clean Wholesome Entertainment For the Entire Family MIDDLEBORO THEATRE THE CEDAR KITCHEN 378 Center St. STURGIS HARDWARE 64 Center St. Middleboro, Mass. GEDRGE A. SHURTLEFE 8. SON Lumber and Hardware T3ird's Roofmgs lI'kID H. L. THATCHER 8. CO. Printers -lr Xoooosooouoouuoooovvvo ousvovvvvooooovooovvoouoouvoeoov Q,o.oo.oo.oo.n.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo.oo.oo,oo oo.vo,oo,oo,oo,oo.oo,oo,oo,oo,oo.n.oo.u.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo,u,uo,oo,oo,oo,oo.oo,oo,u.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo. no no o Compliments of BROWN'S DAISY DONUT SHOP AND RESTAURANT Strictly Home Cooking 113 Centre St. asooooooooooooooooooooooo4oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooe 44.04.04.n.oo.u.oo.oo,oo.oo,oo.oo,oo.oo,oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.44.40.agopo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo,oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo,oo,oo.oo.a R. D. KELLEY COAL CO. COAL A COKE - OIL Tel. 67-M Es..- Compliments of THE BOSTON STORE N 'A' TD C. Z. BISSONNETTE MILK CREAM Middleboro, Tel. 941 NAT! Compliments of THE FRUIT 8. VEGETABLE OUTLET I Centre St. Middleboro ANDREWS SHOE STORE Telephone 895 it I' lf lr Crows - We Have If, CARROLL CUT RATE 60 Center Street Middleboro, Mass. Drugs -- Cosmetics - Perfumes Home Remedies - Tobaccos Gifts oooooooaooooooooeoooooooooa 0504.04.00.oo.n.u.oo.oo.u.oo.oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,n'oo.oo.oo.u.oo.oo.n.n.oo.oo.n A. F. RYDER 8. CO. DEPT. STORE Headquarters for All Kinds Of Gifts - Free Gift Wrapping oooooooooov.qaan...o4oooonoo4 .oo,oo,oo.oo.u.oo.oo.uQ.nfs.ooQu.oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,oo,u.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo.o o -1. Q WK X -an in ,PF ,gf D-1 f-pf .ff ..- -4- 1 .-,f Mfkha ,, f .fm -:pw 5uv S A935 , HS, Av r , ,, ,. , ,R ww-S.. 4'-o' wa -X .M 1-'Y NFJJ- 2 5-QE' ,, My-f' N4 fi ... 3 QM if 'qwv 21 My wwf 44' -41,9 vm flier 3344i-1.1 Q M , .,.,,.fw,,,..s., f,-,.vfg,f4f -1' if-if ,Q A W ,fbi .,4?i'-ww' Qs 'D QM' 1-vf-T: .-rf WEE A 'em-19 YZ, ,N ,wvps-339 M' ,- 'Qkwefi' 5 - Qu. 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Suggestions in the Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) collection:

Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Middleborough High School - Timaron Yearbook (Middleborough, MA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948


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