Newburyport High School - Enaitchess Yearbook (Newburyport, MA)

 - Class of 1942

Page 9 of 64

 

Newburyport High School - Enaitchess Yearbook (Newburyport, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 9 of 64
Page 9 of 64



Newburyport High School - Enaitchess Yearbook (Newburyport, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 8
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Newburyport High School - Enaitchess Yearbook (Newburyport, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 10
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Page 9 text:

NEWBURYPORT HIGH RECORD Kmiec, Alexander Kmiec, Thaddeus Knight, Alfred C. Knight, Donald , Knight, Edmund C. Knight, Oscar C. Jr. Knowles, Samuel F. Kray, Herbert Leary, Dennis L. Leary, Timothy Leonard, James R. Liberatore, John C. Little, Irving C. Little, Justin Littlefield, George Lovering, Arthur Lucey, Fred Lucey, Vincent Lucy, Cornelius F. Lucy, Fred Lyons, Joseph Lyons, Gerald Lynch, Robert MacFarlane, Milton Mackie, Clifford Mantarian, George Mantarian, Leo Marciska, Joseph Marshall, Dudley H. Marston, Arthur McGlew, David McGlew, Robert Melonopoulos, Arthur Miller, Robert Morrill, David Murphy, Arthur Murphy, Donald Murphy, Joseph Murphy, William Murphy, William E. Murray, Cornelius Nealand, Lloyd G. Newhall, Joshua LaPlante, Theresa N ichipor, John Norton, Harry B. Norton, Howard H. Noyes, Leslie Noyes, Richard Nutting, Ernest D. Orfant, Joseph Packer, Howard Holden Packer, Ralph Page, David Parsons, Raymond Patterson, Richard Pelletier, William Perkins, John Perley, Samuel Perry, Donald Piecewicz, Frank Piecuch, Michael Pingree, Philip Plante, William Plouff, Francis Porter, James Quill, Albert Quill, Gerald Raymond, Fred Reilly, Joseph Reslewic, Joseph Richardson, Myron Riley, Harold Rosina, Stanley Rowe, Merrill True Russell, Burton B. Jr. Russell, Donald Ryan, James J. Jr. Sargent, Ralph Sauvan, Carl Sewacki, Stanley Vincent Shea, Roderick Sielicki, Leo R. Silvia, Arthur Sostak, Bernard Sotiropoulos, Angelo Spaulding, Franklin Sprich, Carl Stanton, Donald Stanton, Joseph R. Stevens, Douglas Strangman, Harold Sullivan, Arthur Sullivan, Cornelius J. Sullivan, Francis Jeremiah Sullivan, George Tait, Frank Teague, Francis Tedford, Charles Tedford, Edward Teel, Robert Thurlo, George Albert Tikotsky, Stanley Tobias, Edwin R. Traister, Oscar Trebach, Stanley Tropilo, Alex Tuck, Donald Twomey, George Vovos, George Walker, Henry Walton, Curtis R. Walton, Keith Walton, Leland Weatherby, Albert Weintraub, Edward Wheaton, Frederick Whitten, Charles Henry Witcomb, Charles Woodworth, Douglas York, Arthur A. Ziemien, Matthew Ziemien, Walter Smolski, Stephen 'Killed at Pearl Harbor NURSES IN WAR SERVICE Nolan, Madeline Midgely, Beryl Page, Helen PAGE SEVEN

Page 8 text:

NEWBURYPORT HIGH RECORD OUR HONOR ROLL Almost every day sees another boy who has attended N. H. S. become a member of our nation s armed services. The members of the Record Board, in presenting the following names, realize the list must be far from complete. They will welcome any additions which may be brought to their attention, and will include them in succeeding issues of the Record. PAGE SIX MEN IN SERVICE WHO ATTENDED N. H. S. Abbot, Forrest Wilbur Adams, Roland C. Allen, Clifford Allen, Hugh Angelo, Andrew Vincent Atkinson, Ed-ward Auger, Raymond Babson, John Barrett, Ralph Bartlett, Edward Bashaw, Charles Bateman, Charles Bell, William C. Bennett, Brian Berard, Theodore Boutin, Roland Bowman, Robert Bradford, Frank Brocklebank, Edward Brooks, John Brown, Allen Hunt Brown, Elmer Howard Brown, Henry Jr. Broyer, Louis Cahill, Robert Caron, George Carpenter, James Carter, Henry Chester Casey, John Charles, Clinton Chatigny, Maurice Chesley, Myron Chisholm, Daniel C. Christuk, Constant Cloutier, Roger Coffey, Ernest Coffey, Robert Cohen, Abraham Colby, William H. Collins, Daniel J. Collins, David Condon, Freeman J. Connelly, James Connor, John Cortes, Chris John Costello, Charles Francis Creeden, John Cronin, Frederick Cronin, William J. Currier, Harold Currier, Joseph G. Currier, Rowland Danilecki, Frank Darling, Charles E. Dickie, William Robert Donahue, Henry Donahue, Raymond Donoghue, John W. Doyle, Norman Doyle, Raymond Duffy, George Duggan, Clement Dupuis, George Eaton, George K. Economos, George Emerson, John Erskine, Robert Fairbanks, Earl F ellman, Malcolm F ellman, Sumner F o gg, Philip Ford, William Foster, Wilbur Fotos, John Fowler, Albert Fowler, Arthur Fram, Irving Fuller, Robert Gallagher, John Garii, Joseph Garrett, Donald F. Giard, Leland Giles, James E. Jr. Gingrande, Arthur Goldsmith, Donald Goldsmith, John Grant, David Grant, Edward Graves, Henry Hall, Donald Hamel, Alfred Hammett, Henry Hann, Howard Harlow, Charles Harlow, Ellsworth Harlow, Robert Harris, Donald Healey, Daniel Healey, Donald Hersey, William Headley, Milton Heywood, Stuart Hopkinson, Charles Hughes, William Hunter, Joseph Johnson, Alexander Johnson, Ralph Johnson, Richard Jones, Robert Jones, Robert M. Kalashian, Sarkis Kelleher, Hugh R. Kelleher, John J. Kelley, John E. Kelley, John F. Kent, Clifford Kimball, Whitfield



Page 10 text:

NEWBURYPORT HIGH RECORD CLIPPER CLIPPINGS N. H. S. AND THE WAR For the past four months our country has been at war. The students of N. H. S., both past and present, have made a commendable effort to do their part for ultimate victory. There are approximately two hundred former students now serving in America's armed forces. N. H. S. is proud of them. We hope N. H. S. is also proud of the part being played by the students of today. Their part has thus far consisted of the sale of defense bonds and stamps in school, the organization of service knitters and of a model airplane club, the collection and sale of old newspapers and magazines, and the enlistment of five senior boys in the U. S. Navy. Although these accomplishments are not spectacu- lar, they reflect at least an effort to do our part for Uncle Sam. They express our determination to answer the call of duty. When and if that call is made, we hope our answer will be one of which we will ever have occasion to be proud. THE BENEFITS OF TRAVEL I think that most of the world's troubles would be ended if more people would travel, and they would if travel were made more accessible to the people. In America we are told that Germans are barbarians, Italians are cowards, and Spaniards are ignorant. PAGE EIGHT Over there they think we are a nation of playboys and the English are money-grabbers. Now if more Americans visited Europe and leamed to know the people over there, they would realize that Germans are not ferocious, but rather a peaceful people who have produced great works of music, literature, and art, and have done much in the field of science. They would soon realize that the Italians, the least warlike of people, are simple, kind, and courageous when they believe' that they are right. They would learn that Spaniards, on the whole, are an intelligent, freedom loving race and far from ignorant. On the other hand, a German, Italian, or Spaniard visiting America and England would find that the common Englishman is not a money-grabber but an open minded person standing for what he believes is right. He would find that Americans are a wise- cracking, sport minded, tolerant, and brave people, who hold no grudge against the ordinary European. People of one nation who have become acquainted with another country are not so likely to believe the warlike accusations of their leaders. The scenery of a country is also a heart warming feature. Foreign- ers visiting Switzerland love that little country not solely because of her inhabitants but also because of her beautiful lakes and mountains. They can under- stand why the Swiss are so patriotic. Americans and English visiting Germanyls cities, forests, lakes, and peaks can say with the Germans, Lieb Vaterlandf' Germans traveling through the peaceful country towns of Britain or watching the heavily laden fishing boats dock cannot believe Der Fuhrer when he condemns England. When they ride in taxis through New York, Chicago, Boston, and Los Angeles, or climb the peaks of the Rockies, they can realize why Americans will not give them up, and why America will always remain America. Francis Bresnalzan '43 BETTER N EIGHBORS La Conga is sweeping the country like wildfire. Look in any number of Home magazines and you will find many of the more attractive rooms decorated in the Latin manner. Not a few novelty shops have gone all out South American. You know this, but did you ever reason why? Our govemment is en- dorsing a policy of hemisphere solidarity. It would like to see all the governments of North, Central,

Suggestions in the Newburyport High School - Enaitchess Yearbook (Newburyport, MA) collection:

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Newburyport High School - Enaitchess Yearbook (Newburyport, MA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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Newburyport High School - Enaitchess Yearbook (Newburyport, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Newburyport High School - Enaitchess Yearbook (Newburyport, MA) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

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Newburyport High School - Enaitchess Yearbook (Newburyport, MA) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

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