Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY)

 - Class of 1943

Page 1 of 64

 

Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection, 1943 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collectionPage 17, 1943 Edition, Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 64 of the 1943 volume:

FACULTY MR. GRANT MR. ROSE K 'AN do! I, l 1 'f 1 . ' f . 12? MRS. MELDRLM MRS. BROWN MR. CHALLIS MRS- AVE5 MISS SEWARD MISS REILLY MR. SMITH MISS STOWE Miss oouf: rm. Pomo mass aAn.ev MR. sAsocx.+ I, 1 1 34 I MISS BANYAR MR. LYON MISS MCCALLION MR, CAMPNEY -f V- , , , 'M ' .. 7 f jg' ,BIT 1 ' ms. ososn mn. srour ms. Roaemson wa. VAUGHN -1- WA, MISS REIVER MI SS STREETER MISS KIPP MRS. PATTESON A 'Mnss HORTON 3315+ -My CLASS OF l943 HILTON, ARLEIGH FREDERIKSEN, ALBERT SHY, READY SMILE, PLEASING BLOND AND PLEASANT: VICE DlSPOSlTIONg PRESIDENT OF SENIOR PRESIDENT OF SENIOR CLASS, CLASS, STUINT COUNCIL, PHOTOG- INTRANURAL. SPORTS, COMMNDO RAPHY CLUB. CLUB. ARLEIGH HOPES TO JOIN TI-E NAVY. McLAUGHLIN, ROSE MARIE LAMPHERE, MARION TALL, STATELY AND DIGNIFlEDg WURTEOJS AID PLEASANT g SECRETARY OF SENIOR CLASS, CO- TREASURER OF' SENIOR Q.ASS, CHAIRMAN OF VICTORY CORPS, TRI- VIOLINIST IN ORCHESTRA, Y, CAST OF SENIOR PLAY. BOWLING. CIWMITTEES FOR SCHOOL ACTIVITIES. ROSE IMRlE'S AMBITION IS TO BE A PRIVATE SECRETARY. MARION WANTS T0 BE A LAB- ORATORY TEGINI CI AN. ,fx Mass STREETER, MRS. Amis, Mass srowe, ANU wa. cruuus - X L ADAMS, ELEANOR 'ELL I E ' FRIENDLY, PROMINENT IN LEADER- SHIPg SPORTS, CLUBS, DANI CCM- IIIITTEES, YAN4EE OO-EDITOR, TRI-Y MEMBER. ELLIE WANTS TO BECOME A NJRSE. JJ ALLEN. DOROTHY 'DOT' RED-HEADED, PETITE, SMARTLY DRESSED3 LEADERSHIP, BASKETBALL TRI -Y NEMBER, JUNIOR PLAY. DOTTIE LIKES TO DANCE. SHE WOULD LIKE TO BE A TEACH- ER. KLUOKY STUDENTSU ANDERSON , AU DREY GAY, CHEERFUL, WITH WINNING SIAILES FOR JERRY KNAPTONg IURSING CLUB, PERSONAL MORALE CLUB, PRODUCTION STAFF OF YANKEE . AUDREY IS LOOKING FORWARD TO A WAR JOB. BAILEY , DORIS WGARBO' STUDIOUS, QJIET, FRIENDLYg CHARACTER ROLE IN SENIOR PLAY, SPORTS, HOME NURSING CLUBg ENJOYS SKIING AND HIKING. DORIS WOULD LIKE TO BECOME A NURSE. BARRUS , ELLEN 'ELLI E' mospemoem, ours, wnm A HTWINKLING eval, excanncs sol- roa or WYANKEEN, GLEE cLus, swonrs, LEADERSHIP ELLIE WANTS TO BE A BEAUTICIAN. ALEXANDER , AMY WITTY, HJMOROUSg SPORTS, STENOGRAPHY CI.UB, MEMBER OF PRODUCTION STAFF OF YANKEE . AMY PLANS TO ATTEND R. B. I ALLEN, LENIS LOUIE CHEERFUL, COOPERATIVEQ ACTIVE IN RIFLE, TENNIS, mono Amo AERONAUTICS owes, 'VI INTRAMURAL SPORTS. LOUIE IS IN THE ARMY NON. ANDERSEN , JUNE BLOND, DEPENDABLE, QUIET, AMBITIOUSg NURSING CLUB, STENOGRAPHY CLUB , PRODUCTI ON STAFF OF THE YANKEE , BOYS' WOODWORKING FOR ONE YEAR. JUNE LIKES FARM WORK. BARDEN, GERALD 'JERRY' sooo-Looxmc, BASHFUL, coRNz-:rnsr IN emo AND oacwes- TRA. Mzmaan or F. F. or-' A., HI-v, Pnorosrwnv cI.ua. 'JERRY' WOULD LIKE TO ATTEND CORNELL. BETTS , DONALD DON QUIET AND SUNNYg BAND, AUDUBON CLUBg HOBBY: WOOD- WORKING. DON WOULD LIKE TO E A MECHANIC. 'M Q' Xxxx EQWQWEQ BORST, GORDON WGORDYW GENTLEMANLY AND SCHOLARLY3 FOOTBALL, RADIO AND AERONAU- TICS CLUBS, INTRAMURAL SPORTSg HOBBY: KEUKA COLLEGE UGORDYU IS JOINING IN THE FIGHT FOR HIS UNCLE SAM. sRowN, RICHARD WBROWNIEU MERRY AND NUSICALg BAND, ORCHESTRA, PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB, TRACK, FOOTBALL. NDICKW IS IN THE U. S. AIR CORPS AS A RADIO OEERATOR. CAMPBELL, SHIRLEY UPOKEW JOLLY AND FRIENDLYg GLEE CLUB, SWHMAING, SKATING, DANClNGg SPARE TIME IS SPENT IN CORRES- PONDING WITH THE ARMED FORCES. SHIRLEY WOULD LIKE TO ATTEND SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY. f CAVAGNARO, CHARLES WCHARLIEW TALL AND HANDSOMEg H1-v, AERoNAurncs cLue, RADIO CLUB, INTRAMURAL SPORTS, FOOTBALL. WCHARLIEU PLANS TO JOIN THE NAVY. OOLLINS, ELLEN QUIET, STUDIOUS, RESOURCE- FUL, CONSTRUCTIVEQ TRI-Y, LEADERSHIP. BASKETBALL, VOL- LEY BALL AND BOWLING. ELLEN PLANS TO BEC NE A NURSE. BRAMAN, LEWIS NLOUIE' HANDSOME AND LIKEABLEg ALL ROUND ATHLETE, MEM ER OF MANY CLUBS. WLOUIEW JOINED THE ARMY ON MARCH M, l9u3. BUCKLEY, JANE ATTRACTIVELY DRESSED, PLEASANT, SWILINGg INTERES- TED IN ALL SPORTS, TRI-Y MENP BER, STUDENT COUNCILg SHE ENJOYS DANCES AND GOOD TIMES JANE IS PLANNING ON A NURSING CAREER. CARL, ORLINE nMRS.n QUIET, FRIENDLY, DEPENDL ABLE: GLEE CLUB, PERSONAL MORALE CLUBg SHE LIKES TO READ, SEW, PLAY THE PIANO AND DANCE. HER FUTURE INCLUDES BEING A HOUSEWIFE. CHALLIS, WILLIAM WBILLW A REGULAR GUY BUT VERY SHYg BAND, TENNIS, AERO- NAUTICS AND CA ERA CLUBS, HI-Y, LETTERMAN IN BASKET- BALL. FOOTBALL AND TRACK. HBILL WAITS A NAVY CALL. I N ,SDA 'cx, serrv ' DEPENDABLE , WELL-L I KEO , wlrrv LEADERSHIP BOWLING In E I 1 OLLEYBALLg ONE OF UTHEN STUDENTS. BETTY IS PLANNING A NURS- ING CAREER. NOK, GERTRUDE IIGERTI' BLOND, HUI-IOROUS, WITTY, GOOD SPORTg STENOGRAPHY CLUB, YAN- KEE REPRESENTATIVE AND TYPIST, ROLE IN SOPHCMORE PLAY. GERTRUDE WOULD LIKE TO BE- COME A STENOGRAPHER. UJRTISS, DAVID QUIET ISOMETIMESJ AND STUD- IC'USg YANKEE , PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB, AERONAUTICS Q.ASSg HOBBY: MAIUAAN FOR EDITH HANDLEMAN. DALE , RI CHARD BASHFUL AND BLUSHINGg INTRA- NURAL SPORTS, RADIO, RIFLE, AERONAUTIC CLUBS. nwfff' DAVIS, JEAN QUIET AND LIKEABLE, STUDIOUSg PERSONAL MORAI.E CLUB, SPORTS, TRI-Y, PARTICIPATED IN PATRIOTIC ASSEMBLY. JEAN WOULD LIKE TO BECOME A DIETICIAN. DENNI STON. WILMA FRIENDLY AND DEPENDABLEg STENOGRAPHY CLUB, PRODUCTION STAFF OF UYANKEEU, BOWLING ANo BASKETBALLg HOBBIES ARE ace SKATING AND WRITING LETTERS T0 ALL HER MEN. WILMA IS PLANNING A BUSINESS CAREER. CRANE, JUNE FRIENDLY, RAFFV-so-Lucxv. sruouous, WYANKEE' PRODUC- TION STAFF, MEMBER OF STEN- OGRAPHY CLUB: EXCELLENT AT GIVING IMITATIONS. JUPE PLANS TO BE A STEN- OGRAPHER. DAGGETT , DONALD GUN BOAT' A GAY AND VERY ACTIVE PERSONALITYg BASKETBALL, FOOTBALL, BASEBALL, SUCCESS IN CLASS PLAYS. 'DONII PLANS TO STUDY EN- GINEERING IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN. DART, FLORENCE REU-HAIRED AND LIVELYg PERSONAL MORALE CLUB, TRI-Y, INTERESTED IN BASKETBALL AND voLLEY BALL: LTKES TO DATE AND HAVE FUN. FLD IS PLANNING ON A NURSING CAREER. DECKER , CHARLES QUIET, SEDATET INTRANURAL SPORTS. F. F. OF A. AND RIFLE CLUBg A VERY WILLING WORKER. Mjw EARLE, RICHARD TAUQATIVE, 'HAPPY-GO-LUCKY BAND, ORCHESTRA, ACTIVE ON CCMAITTEE5. DICK IS NOW SERVING OUR COUNTRY IN THE AIR CORPS. ELLING, DORIS STUDIOUS, FRIENDLYg STENOG- RAPHY CLUB, SPORTS, WYANKEEH TYPISTg LIKES BICYCLING AND HIKING. DORIS PLANS TO ATTEND R. B. FETTERMAN , RUTH VITALITY, VIVACIOUS, ALWAYS READY WITH A CONEBACKg STENOG- PAF-HY cLus, YANKEE TYPIST, BASKETBALL, orwmracs. CAREER: PRIVATE SECRETARY. FITZWATER, LESLIE ULESU QUIET, UT FRIENDLY, AT- TRACTIVE SMILEg RIFLE CLUB, MILITARY DRILL, VARSITY BASEBALL. WLESW PLANS TO JOIN THE AIR CORPS. FLYNN, VIRGINIA USHORT AND SWEETng PERSONAL MORALE CLUB, NURSING CLUB, ARCHERY, OWLING, VOLLEYBALL. VIRGINIA WOULD LIKE TO BE- COME A BEAUTICIAN. FRIED, BETTY BIG TOWN GIRL FROM ROCHES- TER: PERSONAL MORALE CLUB, GLEE CLUB, BOWLlNGg ENJOYS NUSIC. FUTURE: WORK IN A DEFENSE FACTORY. ELLIFE, FLORENCE USMILINGW, THOUGHTFUL AND wx SE, BASKETBALL , comma TTEE WORK. FLORENCE PLANS TO TAKE A NEDICAL SECRETARIAL COURSE AT ROCHESTER SCHOOL OF CGWWERCE. FINGAR, DONALD TALKATIVEg mJscuALR HE MAN g LETTER MAN IN FOOTBALL BASEBALL, BASKETBALL A TRACK. COMMANDO CLUB- K A Hoaav Ljvfms AIA YATNQIZJOAII Y N -I IV V ATTRACTIVE, HU onousg CHERRMASTER, SENIOR WYANKEEW EDITOR, LEADERSHIP, VICE PRESIDENT OF STUDENT COUNCIL WFLYNNIEW IS A TYPICAL SENIOR. FREDERIKSEN, ALVIN MEEK BUT CHEERFULg INTRA- MURAL SPORTS, RADIO AND AERONAUTICS CLU8g ALWAYS WILLING TO COOPERATE. FREY, YVONNE WBONNIEU DEPENDABLE, SWEET sur NOT 199. swear, GLEE cLua. TRI-Y, HYANKEEH. LEADER IN SPORTS. WBONNIEW IS LIKED BY EVERYONE. FULLAGAR , DORI S LIGHT-HEARTED AND GAY, ALWAYS ACTIVEg STENOGRAPHY CLUB, NURS- ING CLUB, 'YANKEE' TYPIST, PARTICIPATED IN MANY SPORTS. FUTURE: STENOGRAPI-ER OR TEACHER. GRAY , EVELYN SHY , PLEASANT, WELL-GROOMEDg STENOGRAPHY CLUB, VOLLEYBALL, ACTIVE ON COIMITTEES. HOBBIES: SKATING AND READING. EVELYN WOULD LIKE TO BE A STENOGRAPHER. HANDLEMAN , EDI TH ORIGINAL AND INDEPENENT, A BRAlNSTORM'g HONOR SOCIETY, ORCHESTRA, GLEE CLUB, 'YANKEE' CO-EDITOR, BASKETBALL. BAND. FUTURE: EXPECTS TO GO T0 COLLEGE. HOLLISTER, ELONZO 'LONNIE' DEPENDABLE AND QJIET, 'EVERY- BODYIS FRIEND'g WRESTLING QUE, MILITARY DRILL. 'LONNIE' EXPECTS TO JOIN THE ARMY. HYLAND, RIGIARD 'DICK' TALKATIVE. EFFERVESENT, WCWIAN-HATER FOR ELEVEN YEARSg MILITARY DRILL. CAMERA CLUB, AERONAUTICS. GI LLIVOR , JEANNE ENTERTAI NI NG NEWCOMER FROM GENEVAg SKATING, BASKET- BALLg HOBBIES: DANCING, Music AND READING. HABBERFIELD, RICHARD 'DICK' Quner, wnr1v, evERrLsAsuNc SMILEg HI-v, AERONAUTICS, RADIO AND CAMERA cLuas. HOBBYg KEUKA coLLEce. 'DICK' EXPECTS TO JOIN TI-E ARIED FORCES. ' HENRICKS, SUSAN 'SUE' WITTY AND HUMOROUS, WILL- ING I'ELPERg SPORTS, TRI-Y, PERSONAL MORALE G.UB. 'SUE' WOULD LIKE TO BE A SOCIAL WORKER. HOPKINS, ELSIE COOPERATIVE AND 'EASY- GOING'g BICYCLING, SWIMMING, SKATING AND RIDINGg HOBBIES! READING AND DANCING. ELSIE IS A TYPICAL OUTDOOR GIRL. I IGRAM, LLOYD GENTLEMANLY. CI-EERFUL AND 'HAPPY-GO-LUCXY'g CGMANDO CLUB, HI-Y, DANG AND PLAY CUNMITTEESg HOBBYg SKATING. FUTURE: GENTLBIIAN FARIER. L I NGRAHAM, MARGUERI TE QUIET AND STUDIC1JSg PERSONAL MORALE CLUB, HJWLING, ACTIVE ON CONMITTEES. MARGUERITE IS PLANNIM5 A NURSING CAREER. JAYNE . ELOI SE QUIET AND LlKEABLEg CHAMPIO BASKETBALL PLAYER. SHE LIKES READING, DRAWING AND SPORTS. ELOISE WANTS TO BEWNE A SECRETARY. JOHNSON, WI NI FRED 'IWI NNIEI' FRIENDLY , STUDI OUSg PERSONAL MORALE QUB, GLEE CLUB, 'YAN- KEE . HOBBIES: READING AND COLLECTING CXJSTUNES. WINNIE EXPECTS TO BECUIE A STATISTICIAN. LORD, RICHARD DICK A FIRST-G.ASS JITTERHJG AND - SINGERg INTERESTED IN RADIO, AVIATION AND RED-HEADSg GM- MITTEE FOR JUNIOR PROM, CAST IN JUNIOR PLAY, BAND, ORCHESTRA, RADIO CLUB. DICK WANTS TO JOIN THE AIR CORPS. MATTESON, MARI LVN AFFABLE AND FRIENILY, ALWAYS SMI LI NGg SPORTS, COMIII TTEES FOR ACTIVITIES IN SCHOOL. HOB- BIES: SQJARE DANCING-AND SKAT- ING. MARILYN WANTS TO BE A CD-ED. JAMES, GENEVI EVE HAPPY-GO-LUCKY AND FRIENDLYg GEIEVIEVE ENJOYS SWIMMING, DANCING, AND HIKING. HJTURE: TYPI ST JOHNSON, CAFMAN DEPENDABLE, FRIENDLY, AND HARD WORKINGg BAND, CCWMANDC CLUB, FOOTBALL, INTRAMURAL SPORTS. CAIWAN IS NOW SERVING UNCI.E SAM. KINNE, NANCY 'BABE' ATTRACTIVE, REFINED AND F'RIENDLYg GLEE CLUB, COM- MITTEE FOR JUNIOR PROM HOBBY: HORSEBACK RIDING. AMBITION: TO TEACH EQUITA- TION TO DICK CARROLL. MARTIN, LOIS ENTPUSIASTIC AND FULL OF FUNg SPORTS AND CCMIAITTES FOR CLASS AC'I'IVITIESg LIKES SQUARE DANCING AND THE AIR CORPS. LOIS PLANS TO HAVE SECRE- TARIAL TRAINING. T N, IA Musacm. Amo wmv, soPHo- Mone. .numoa AND ssmoa Puvs, cweeanzmang Hos- aues, wen mo smcmc. HERMIA'S PNIBITION IS TO BE A LABORATORY TECHNICIAN. MCFETRI WE, ELSI E JOLLY AND AGREEABLEg KNIT- rnNc cLua, ENJOYS ICE SKATING, READING, AND Movies. ELSIE PLANS TO BE A NURSE. MILLER, MARY JANE GENEROJS AND SINCEREg LEADER- sHlP, SPORTS, COMMITTEES FOR SCHOOL ACTIVITIESg LIKES Music AND SPORTS. E ,Aff' TETARIAL WORK. MORI CH, LORRAIIE SWEET, PRECISE AND MJSICALg GLEE G.UBg FAVORITE SPORTSg HIKING, SAILING AND SNIMIAING. LORRAINE PLANS TO TAKE UP HOMEMAKING. NEWSY , NORMA QUIET AS A NKJUSEg HJWLING, BASKETBALL AID VOLLEYBALLg EN-JOYS ICE SKATIIB, DANCING AND SNINMING. NORAA'S AMBITION IS TO BE A SECRETARY, NORTHRUP, MARY A READINESS FOR FUN, GENEROUS AND KINEg GLEE CLUB, STENOGRAPHY CI.U8, BASKETBALL. VOLLEYBALL. MARY WANTS TO BE A SECRETARY. McGRAW, OLIVER 'OLLI E' POPULAR Am DAZZLINGg STUDENT CXJUNCIL, CAST OF SOPHOLIORE AID JUNIOR PLAYS. CGMITTEES FDR SENIOR PLAY AND SENIOR BALL, MANAGER OF FOOTABLL, COVMANDO CLUB, INTRAMURAL SPORTS. FUTURE: THE MARINES MILLS, JEANIIE 'MILLSEY' TWITTERPATED, QJTE AND VIVACIClJSg TRI-Y, STUENT COUNCIL, GLEE CLUB, SPORTS, 'YANKEE , CFEERLEAXR, AND SENIOR PLAY. 0 XIV 2 Pmsa cm. EDUCATION TEAC . MORSE, MARGARET 'MARGI E' STUDIOUS AND COlv1POSEDg MUSIC IN P.Y.A. BAND AND OR- CHESTRA, CONPOSER OF SENIOR CLASS SONGg HOBBIESg LETTERS TO SERVIG NEN AND MJSIC. HER FUTURE IS UNDECIID. I 4, WLAND, JEAN 'JEANNI E' CUTE, CHAHMING, BLONO wnrn A SPONTANEOUS SMILE: EDITOR- IN-CHIEF or PENN YAN KEY, rn:-v, STUDENT osascroe or JUNIOR PLAv, CHAIRMAN or JUNIOR Enom. Hoeav: LETTERS TO SPENCEg us INTERESTED IN AvnAruoN. OGDEN, DAVI D 'DAVE' BRAINY, FRIENDLY AND CHEER- FULg HI-Y, FOOTBALL, INTRA- MURALS, TRACK, BJSINESS MANAGER OF THE YEAR BOOK. 'DAVE' WOULD LIKE TO GO T0 UNION COLLEGE. ii r -f I. ..I. J . l'! .Q .. .- 42 x, ' I -ny .U. . --I. 1 . V1r,. . .- - -w- nIV .. f .. A ..1-. A -..v-,'.?m'.x -- -I. - . -.-u .I . . V 51.. . .xi -' Y 1.4 .pI.I' IIV' li.. 'MFE J h . .. gg.. '.,-I 3'- .. I I4 L. - 4 V 7 '-'fnyk 'F 'Qf1,:l- F . ' 11- ff,-HV ' 1' '. - ll. . I' ,' SEV' r ..' r. 5' r..V1fsj5.f ' . - -,W -I .I Inf. I I I. I .IIIIII ,I . IIEQII.. , I c 95, A I I I !:I!xf4'ff 21 'EI I I- ,JV . '.III 'J rg' LJ' . .2 I w.II-. ,II I .V V ji-'LIIH :LJ fu A- ll -ml V' A . K' .57 rift- ' 13 5 'I ' 5 4- ' 1 fw ' ' -vf' .' V f '- 'rf7'g.'.' UJ' 2. .f .. ' .f--s...g n el. . '. . -r FI I r -L . ,I ' il-L' . .- J . 1 V: 4., V,. V F 552 A '- .... 2I..i- .. I ..V V. f ' -4 . . if ...n mai. ..- 3 . I ' ' ..l Q.. I ...I .. II I g. :IIII I .I IIII 7,..'.,f. .g 5.,-I' I - I - 1 '- f ' qi' ' f'-I1-I -.V JE' .Ili ' I I ,'1'.' ' .,l',gI-.' rij .'fF V- 1' . .. , vy '. -su .H . -.. wq ,l . IL.. l.g5I-- I.H . II' I I., .- ,- ' E .I I5'I1uw1.,... ...11 '.- i.:Ifl.IL-QJQAJ' v3.I. .rf!- Ni. .Ia 'N '15 l-, H I .V.,,' 5, . . . I.I 1.7 . .9 .4 ' . ':. I :-it IPII 15 . I .Irv II - Sn: Ii,-I'.-,M wif. -.. - I 5 I Wi: W -. ver- JN ' 'JF VV' - T3.'fJ. ...'--wal'-73 n5.l-il' I-fTF.!.1 .I IQIIIIII . I IIIII f-I, .-II,-.ar I Jr! .. I II .,j W5 III, ,-I :Ik , I nl - IF..-1 II, I ,N J' A '-I, ..-.r'I..., ,.-Ip., -IJ. , .I.:. ,..I -5-. Iqr In!-J . 1. ...i-., ' I, -. Y '-f .a.1'V'. 1- A A ,J 11 . . T2 .- H Q, .. . .- V. V . I . ,V .V . f., ,V I .. 1 Vw .-j::2'..V-.ff-. I 5 r. I--'IJ ,II-. . -1.-gg ' . .Y I-I I, I -In ,II -V - . II.IIIfYI,I - JV.: . -1 .L-1.I . .- 1.4,-A I I I I I,.-Q. I- IJ 4, f ll - , QI Jr' -.f. oi- . -Q' I: L I 9- - . .1 J... V .H I .vVI-4. V. -...I-1.1 IJ-I' z.. .I I II-I., .' ffI.I u I. I Ig I-I I -I . . . .III 'lQ'f'g5I r I. I za, Iv' V 1 I' I ,E ' ' ' . ..- -' .- Q fr-'..-I.5,I, V5.5 yg- .- VLA ' Viz' .Ei J ' .L ..:'-' ' 5 . n,.yg,. II .. . I,.IIV.,,III . Y in . ': r .II.'.I.I I, I mf, G -'??q11 .!3. ..:.fc-1. . ., . . . .-511.-..':' '..- H W' him? .4W'm ' '- '- . . 1.-Jr? , sg V-1. , --- f' ff... 1 .- . .- ,. . . . .I I.I I AI .'f'LII '-P-Lf A I I,I I Vg' .I f .I ..- Igjma-L'jIVI I . - .QE-Il.'q: !f-I'. -. ..- .51 - - -.mf .wr , 'e.- 'I hrs. .- NM .. ...Sf gl..--L: . ' - ' fm ' 'J ' I' 4 .5 L.. J- ..' . fm' - H.. n ' 'I . r-.-.. -v.-.' -,-.1 -. 3, 'I fp: -:.- ' 1 FI.. ..q '-IM' 'V - 731. .I 7 . . ..RI5.,IIl . 'Ii u- W- ll 1' . ..1 ' ' '.,Iuln I. K, L71 ' -41- 'C JI' V1 ' ' T . 'I I-N ' r-ff 4 3.VJZf:g'I'9fi . Sf f' .51-' ' . - Vf ' - Hy '-rikfgiir-T:A rr Q I I I-Exif.-..u.-.f5..'-'!.I '-'41 2:-.II-. ref 'QSIQT ...U . fi. I ?l1'II5IIJII.j-, Ll- I 'ng-I g... f ' 4415? :L ff .V.'. 'J U' .- 's.V .W jr- ' ..'. !.fr. irg if '. V -Q 1 -if.-1 -. f f- .ar I-V.I.g.?I-I ,I -III-Ij.II I if .V I. u .. ' -. . lg 1' ' ' 1 ' -...V Aliens .'.'L -:1 - n r ufif' ,, 1 v I ...' . ,1:C..f'8',,h vt, -. 5, F -J 'Q' K W ,I 'f ':1.- -.-fi1..I,I..'g1,! I 1 ..I .. ,I g. 1.-ily.. U. IIgi- ff ff- - -...'-QL.: F.-'EW . 'lx X I 1 1' T' xi I ' ha! ima- r fi., - '.f.. ' v Jw 3 ' :4'!,?fII. . '. - 1 4' f fLV- it LN '- T V . -' .. -' - 'T' ' ' f -L . . I' I' 'L' f'f 1' .j xgI. I -'MII' F. -iff 4 ' - . - . I I I .IIE IgIa'.3?IIjl. gr . ' ...iz I ' 1 ' ...-.'3's,w?- Aialghii. VV II -L1y.',LI'bFVH - I '..-qu. IIE. 1' 5. 22:92.-:.'-gig Q. -1. .Nm ' -2 . ' . .'.':3',r--f'., If., 5... WIII' ' IIIIQL-.L if Q-'f'-,'l: -I F -: ..4-'3143 V !1i.1J ' 55 II. ' vin- . 5.-.I ,L. I. II. . It .I -V :..V!. I1 '1.- - .-.. V' .fi-. .rf-V . ' -.r.. yu f.-E+.. V Ii g:V.-' . .HH -, . lf . .. - 51 ff .Q-iw . ...l Q... g MV '- Iphq. - II, .11 sp' .Im-,'H.' x.V A -IJI. -I ,II If - V'.r'24.V .- vt Q u Inf? L II.. I V .-gill.. Ev., . W .fr-SIT' :Av lu' OGDEN . LUCI LLE LUCY SI NDERE AND TRUSTNDRTI-IY, I.oYAI. AND ACTIVE SUPPORTER IN P. Y. A. ACTlVITIESg GLEE CLUB, STUDENT COUNCIL, TRI-Y, 'YAN- KEEH SPORTS. 'LUCY' PLANS TO BECOME A NURSE. ORSLEY , MARY KEEN WIT AND POINTED REMARKS: 00-EDITOR OF YANKEE, VOLLEY- BALL AND BASKETBALL, STENOGRAPHY CLUB, GLEE CLUB, HONOR SOCIETY, CHAIRMAN OF WAR STAMP SALES. MARY'S CAREER WILL BE AS A NURSE OR ROGER KNAPTON'S WIFE. OVENS, DORIS QUIET AND MEEK3 IIYANKEEI' TYPIST, VOLLEYBALL AND BASKET- BALL, STENGZRAPHY CLUB. SHE LIKES TO DANCE AND SKATE. DORIS INTENDS TO ECOIE A TYPIST. RI BBLE, KATHRYN PLEASANT AND JOLLYg LEADER- SHIP, VOLLEYBALL, IDE SKATING, ART STAFF or HYANQEEII, com- IIITTI-:Es Pon SCHOOL ACTIVITIES. KATHRYN WANTS T0 BE AN ACCOUNTANT . RUGG, MARJORI E WMARGIE' GENUIIKELY SINCERE AND EASY ON THE EYESUS' LEADERSHIP, BASKETBALL AND voI..I.EYDAI.I., LIKES DANCING AND PARTIES. MARGIE PLANS TO ATTEND ARNOT-OGDEN NURSING SCHOOL. OLSEN , ESTHER A SERIOUS PURPOSE IN LIE WITH A TWINKLE IN I-ER EYEg C0-ART EDITOR OF VYANKEEI' SPORTS, COYMITTEES FOR JUNIOR AND SENIOR PLAYS. ESTIER IS INTERESTED IN INTERIOR DECXDRATION. ORSI NO, MARGARET A PEARTY LAUGH FIR GOOD HUMORg GLEE CLUB, STENOG- RAPHY CLUB, LEADERSHIP AND BOWLINGg HOBBYg DANCING. MARGIE EXPECTS TO WORK IN THE WESTERN UNION OFFICE AFTER GRADUATION. PETERSEN, BETTY 'PETE' INQJST AND HJMOROUSg BOWLI VOLLEYBALL, GLEE , ITTEES FDR SOPHD- RE AND JUNIOR PLAYS: Hoa- DIE 3 PAINTING AND READING. 'PETE' HAS DECIDED TO BECOME A NURSE. ROBI NSON, ERWI N sI-IY BUT KINOLYg RIFLE CLUB, INTRANURAL SPORTS, I-'.F.A.. OCNMITTEE FOR JUNIOR PLAY: HOBBY: STANP COLLECTING. ERWIN WANTS TO JOIN THE COAST GUARD. RUSSELL , JEAN COOL, CALM, EFFI CI ENT AND 'NEAT AS A PINII, 'YANKEE' oo-ART EDITOR, YEARBOOK As- sIsTANT ART EDITOR3 PASS- TINE: PLAYING POPULAR soNss. JEAN IS GIFTED IN DRESS DESIGNING AND ART. I I 6 , fa' PERFECTION IN HER INDIVIIIJAL MANNER WITH AN ATTRACTIVE SvIILEg NURSING CLUB, SPORTS, YANKEE TYPIST5 HOBBIES: HORSEBACK RIDING AND DATING, MARY JANE WANTS TO WORK IN EASTMAN KODAK AFTER GRAWATION. SE IE, MARIE 'GJTIE' A SINCERE, VERY LIKEABLE PERSONg LEADERSHIP, CHEER- LEADER, SPORTS, PRODUCTION EDITOR OF YANKEE , STUDENT DIRECTOR OF SENICR PLAYg HOBBIES: SWIM- MING, READING, AND SPORTS. MARIE HAS A BJSINESS CAREER IN SIGHT. sIssoN, MAE I wmv AND FRIENDLYg sPoRTs, cowmmsss F? sos-Iooe. PLAYS AND Paws, ENJOY SQUARE DANCING AND DATES. MAE DESI RES TO BE A TRUCXERIS WIFE, MM SPENGR , GEORGE 'SPENCE' ALL-RCIJND MAN WITH VIM AND VIGORg FOOTBALL, TRACX AND INTRANURAI. SPORTS, DOVMITTEES FOR SCHOOL DANOES, CAST FOR SOPHO- MORE AND JUNIOR PLAYS, HI-Y, AND CONMANDO CLUB3 HOBBIESg SPORTS AND JEANIE NEWLAND. 'SPENCE' ENTERED THE AMN IN JANUARY, I9 3. SWANN, ROBERT 8OB' SINCERE IN MANNER, SIMPLICITY IN SPEECHg COIMITTEES FOR JUNIOR PLAY, SENIOR BALL AND FRESI'-MAN FROLIC. 'BOB' WILL ENTER TI-E AMY IN JUNE. O SCUTT , GLENN STURDY, Amamous AND VIR- TUOUSQ INTRANURAL SPORTS, PHOTOGRAPHY CI.UB, COMMITTEE FOR SENIOR BALL: LIKES TO HUNT AND FISH. GLENN HOPES TO JOIN TI'E MARINES. SHERIDAN. JOHN 'JOHNNY' 'TYPICAL IRISHMAN , LOYAL, WITTY AND AMIABLEg 0O-CI-IAIR- MAN OF VICTORY CORPS, PRESI- DENT STUDENT COUNCIL, HI-Y, CLASS PRESIDENT DURING SOPHO- MORE AND JUNIOR YEARS, PHOTOG- RAPHY CI.UB, ASSISTANT EDITOR OF YEAR BOOK, FOOTABLL. 'JOHNNY' WILL ENTER TI-E AMY AFTER GRADUATION. C, sMITHoovER, G.E0 CLEO TI-E CAT' FRIENDLI FUNg LEADER IP, DRAMATIC CLUB, PERSO L MoRAI.E CLUB, ASSISTANT ASSEABLY G-IAIRMAN. S AND A LOVE OF CLEO WANTS TO BECCNE A MOEI.. STAPE , DONALD 'DON' AMIABLE QJALITIES WITH A QUIET MODESTYg DONMANDO CLUB CGVMITTEE FOR SENIOR BALLg HOBBY: FISHING. DON' WILL JOIN TI-E ARMY. SWANSON, JAMES 'JIMVIY' THE MAN or MANY wHIMs ANo FANCIESg BAND, VARSITY TEN- Nus. ccmmsss ron DANCES AND PLAYS, RAmo ooof-: CLUBg HOBBIESg srANP AND MATCH coLLEcrnoN, TRIPS TO WASH- INGTON. num- WANTS T0 .Jom TIE AIR conrs. TONES, BURTON BURT . TALL, DARK AND HANDSOIIfEg INTRAMJRAL BASKETBALL, RADIO CLUB, ooNIIII1'TEE FoR JUNIOR PLAY. BURT WILL ENTER THE ARMY AFTER GRADUATION. WAGAR . LORETTA THOUGHT FUL, GENEROUS AND A FRIENDLY SMlLEg TRI-Y, VIYANKEEU, SPORTS, LEADERSHIP, II-H COUNCIL MEMBERg ENJOYS OUTDOOR SPORTS. LORETTA INTENDS T0 BECOIYE A BOOKKEEPER. WATERS, MARGUERITE FULL OF HIDIIN RESOURIQ MEMBER OF II-H CLUB, SPORTS? LIKES TO COLLECT STANIPS AS A HOBBY. MARGUERITE PLANS TO BECOME A STENOGRAPHER. WINEGARD, CAROL 'BRENDA' DEWRATIVE AND LIKEABLE GAL: GLEE G..UB, SPORTS AND LEUR- SHIP, JUNIOR PLAYg PASTINES! READING AND DANCING. JUNIOR PROM QUEEN. BRENDA'S AMBITION IS TO FURTI-ER HER EDJCATION. WOODARD , JAMES 'BOB' A GOOD SPORT IN EIERYTHINGg COMVIANDO CLUB, HI-Y, INTRIWURAL SPORTS, TRACK, COYNITTEES FOR JUNIOR PROM AND SENIOR BALLS HOBBY: TINKERING WITH CARS. BOBBY IS GOING TO JOIN TIE SIGNAL CORPS. VANDUSEN , MARVA JOLLY, PLEASI NG, AND DE- VOTED TO HER FRIENDSg GLEE CLUB, YANKEE ART STAFF, BOWLING, TENNIS AND PING- PONG. MARVA WANTS TO BE A DIETI- CIAN. WASHBURN, JEAN fywf TALL AND FAIR, QUIET, PLEAS- ING PERSONALITYg GLEE CLUB, BASKETBALL, BAND, COMMITTEES FOR JUNIOR AND SENIOR PLAYS. HOBBY: 'NB' NI ELSEN. WILBUR, RICHARD DICK A WINNING SMILE AND PLEAS- ANT MANNERg DICK SPENT I-IIS FIRST Two YEARS AT aoRI-IAM HIGH, sur ENTERED INTO BASKET- BALL, BASEBALL, SENIOR PLAY, BAND, HI-Y, AN: PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB DURING HIS JUNIOR AND SENIOR YEARS WITH us. I-E WILL ENTER THE AIR CORPS. I WOOD, BARBARA 'BARS' 64 ACHIEVEMENTS THAT BELIE HER MODESTYg 'PENN YAN KEY' ART EDITOR, CLASS SECRETARY IN JUNIOR YEAR, CCNNIITTEE FOR JUNIOR PLAY AND PROM, SENIOR PLAY CASTg ENJDYS NUSIC AND ART. MAAHARBW PLANS TO BE A SCHOOL WALL, WILLIAM 'BILL' SILENT AND STUDIOUSg RIFLE CLUB, MILITARY DRILL, CABIIET MAKING, NETAL. BILL EXPECTS TO GO INTO SERVICE. SONG I 4 O I 4 M1335 big 11 Q IE 533 ii ng TI-REE SHUT YEARS ARE OVER AND OUR SCHOOL DAYS DONE, DAYS OF WORK AND FRIENDSHIP TRIAL AND GLORIOUS FUN. WEIVE TRIED FOR A PURPOSE EACH AND EVERY DAY PROUD TO BEAR THE STANDARD T Iii W RAW EI T34 I TIE ARAY AND TIE NAVY EACH HAS SUIT ITS CALL CFERISHED FRIENDS HAVE LEFT TI-ROUGH THE MONTHS, BJT ALL PLEDGED TO HCME AND CDUNTRY TFEY WILL DO TI-EIR DEEDSg FOR ALL OF US ARE VITAL TO NEEDS. FOR OUR P. Y. A. NOW THE TlIE'OF PARTING CALLS EAG4 ONE TO YIELD HIS UTMOST IN SERVIE IN T0 EVERY FIELD. TO THE SCHOOUS TRADITIONS MAY WE LOYAL BE. HAPPY IN THE MEMORIES BROUGHT BY 'I-I3. US OUR WUNT RY' S I9 POEM ONWARD THERE'S A TREE-BORIIRED WALK, UP TO THE DOCR OF A BUILDING, TRADITIONS OLD. LOCK LLOSELY AND WE FIND IT'S OUR P. Y. A. WITH STRUCTURE S0 STRONG AND BOLD. 'TIS I-ERE FOR AN ERA OF THREE SHORT YEARS WE'VE STUDIED AND PLAYED AND TOILED TO KEEP OUR CODE FOREVER HIGH, OUR HONOR CLEAN, UNSPOILED. IMPORTANT MEN OF THE WORLD TODAY WERE TAUGHT WITHIN ITS WALLSg AND WE OF FORTY-TIREE NON PASS T0 FILL OUR WORLDLY CALL. T0 TEACFERS ALL, AND STUDENTS TOO. WE REGRETFULLY SAY GOODBYE: BUT FOR EACH ONE THE WORLD NOW CALLS T0 UNE, TO ID, TO DIE. SO NOW WE TURN ANOTHER PAGE, OF THE THRILLING BOOK OF LlFEg WITH HEADS HELD HIGH AND WILLS MADE FINA, x WE FACE THIS WORLD OF STRIFE. ' CMRLES CAVAGNARO ,H I TZ, A f J. ff ffm -H Q - ,V ,,, f WILL WE, THE CLASS OF I9I-I3, OF PENN YAN ACADEMY, VILLAGE OF PENN YAN, TOWN OF MILO, COUNTY OF YATES, STATE OF NEW YORK, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, OONTINENT OF NORTH AMERICA, IN THE WESTERN HEYIISPI-ERE, BEING OF SUPPOSEDLY SOUND MIND AND GOOD BODY, DO HEREBY MAKE AND PUBLISH THIS, CXJR LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT IN THE MANNER FOLLOWING: TO THE CLASS OF I9I41I-, WE LEAVE HILL ACESS TO THE SEATS IN ll-I9. TO THE CLASS OF I9I-I-5, WE LEAVE OUR GOOD STANDING WITH THE TEACHERS--AI-HA! TO THE FACULTY, WE NOT ONLY LEAVE, BUT WE TAKE OUR PROBLEMS WITH US TO ENABLE A NEW CI.ASS TO CONE IN WITH THEIRS. TO THE JANITORS, WE LEAVE SENIOR HCIIEROOM AS PAPER-SCATTERED AS EVER. AND SI NGLY2 ELEANDR ADAMS LEAVES HER NUMBER ONE SEAT IN sENIoR HDME RDDM TO THE UNFORTUNATE JUNIOR GIRL WITH A LAST NANE BEGINNING WITH IIAII. JANE BUCKLEY, HER ABILITY TO GET THROUGH SUDGESSFULLY ALL COURSES IN SCIENCE T0 ANYONE wHo IS READY FOR A REAL FIGHT. ROSE MARIE MGLAUGHLIN, HER DozEN DREAMPDDLDRED PORTFOLIOS TO SONEONE wHo WANTS IISDME' JOB. GRANT CHRISTENSI'-JI, THINKING OF IITILLIEII A5 HE GDES ON WITH HIS IYDRK. DONALD BETTS, HIS LDUD TONES TO BOB OLSEN. EDITH HANDLEMAN, HER ABILITY T0 ARGUE WITH THE TEACHERS T0-RUTH CLBIENT. LESLIE FITZWATER, HIS GHEVRDLETS AND FORDS TO THE FORTUNATE JUNIOR wHo CAN GET TI-EM. DORIS FULLAGAR, I-ER FIGURE TO THE ATLAS DDNPANY. JEANNE GILLMDR, HER IIBEAUII DOING HIS DUTY ON HIS SHIP WHILE SHE KEEPS 'THE HGYIE FIRES BURNINGII. EvELYN GRAY, FOR A SCHOOL OF HER OWN-MATRIMONY. OLIVER McGRAw, HIS WITTY REMARKS T0 MR. DHALLIS. SUSAN I-ENRIDKS, STILL SYIEARING HER HRENCI-I wAS RIGHT. GERALD BARDEN, HIS SHYNESS TO BUD IIMDRTH PAYIE. ELSIE HDRKINS. HER ABILITY TO GET ALONG WITH PEOPLE TO ONE OF THE FEW WHO CAN D0 IT. RICHARD LORD, .IITTERBUGGING TO DWIGHT PUTNEY. MARGJERITE INGRAHAM, I-ER TECHNIQUE TO SKIP GYM CLASSES T0 SOME JUNIOR wHo DISLIKES GYM TOO. BJRTON TDNES. HIS MOTOR SCOOTER T0 BDB REYNOLDS. DAVID CURTISS, ISHCOOLXTO DRIVE A TEN TON GOAL TRUCK. GENEvIEvE JAMES, HER TROUBLE TO KNON HER HISTORY TO ANY JUNIOR wHo LI KES T0 WORK. ELONZO HDLLISTER, HIS DDD JOBS T0 BILL DLEAVELAND. ELOISE JAYNE, HER WORK ARDUND THE FARM TO PI-IYLLIS RECTOR. cALvIN CROSBY, HIS LETTER WRITING TO JIMVIY REILLY. NANCY, HER HORSES, WELL TRAINED, FOR MORE NEW MATERIAL AT EQUESTRIAN SCHOOL. MARION LAMPHERE, HER TREASURY BDDKS FOR THE SENIOR DI.ASS TO MISS REIER. GERALD LYNN, HIS BOOKS 4-27 IN Il-l9. WINIFRED JOHNSON, I-ER BEAUTIFUL SINGING VOICE TO 'GIF' CMDNDTDNEI KUDLI. SHIRLEY CAMPBELL, I-ER CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE 'AFWIED' FORES T0 BARBARA DAINES. .IEANNE NEwLAND, IMPATIENTLY WAITING FOR GEORGE T0 FINISH THIS WAR UP. ORLINE DARL, I-ER RING ON THE THIRD FINGER, LEFT MND, STILL THERE. MARY NDRTHRUP. HER SHDRTHAND TO ANYOIIE WITH A GOOD IMAGINATIDN. LUDILLE OGDEN, I-ER ABILITY T0 BE A SECRETARY AT ANY MEETING TO EARLENE ROSE. VIRGINIA FLYNN, HER HEIGHT AND RED BOOTS TO HER SISTER. LEWIS ALLEN, HIS QUESTIONS IN TRIG. TO MILDRED SHDRT. ESTHER OLSEN, HER FIGURE TO FRANCES TURNER. GERTRUDE DDDK. I-ER 'MALE' GALL IN GDRHAM TO DORIS STYLES. DORIS ovENS, I-ER INTEREST IN DUNDEE TO MARY LCIJISE TEARS--wITH BDUQUETS. GORDON BDRST, SCHINES' THEATER UNIFDRM FOR A UNITED STATES TI-EATER OF WAR UNIFDRM. BETTY DDMSTDQQ, HER RED HAIR AND THE BLUSI-I THAT GOES WITH IT TO DDLLEEN wooo. MARGARET ORSINO, SCHOOL FOREVER-GLAD THAT ITIS ovER. u-:ms BRAMAN, WITH THE DRAFT AND TI-E WONEN STILL TRYING TO KEEP UP WITH HIM. JUNE CRATE, I-ER IMITATIONS TO ANYONE wHo DAN Do TI-EM. MARY DRSLEY. THE wAR STAMB SALES IN SENIOR HCWEROOM STILL AT Hal. D'IcK BRDNN, HIS DDRNET IN THE BAND RDDM. CHARLES DAVAGNARD, HIS NIDKNAME 'CABBAGE' T0 TI-E D. P. A. BILL CHALLIS, HIS SHOTS IN BASKETBALL T0 BILL MDRAYED. FLORUIICE DART, PER ABILITY T0 DO MATH TO RUTH PINIEO. BETTY PETERSDN. SCHOOL FDR LEE LAIYPSON. KATI-ERIIE RIBBLE, TER SEAT UI TI-E MILD BUS +6 TO ANYONE wHo CAN TAKE IT FOR FOUR YEARS. MARGIE RUGG, 'ITH PERIOD HISTORY G.ASS TO MISS COLE wITH REGARDS. DICK DALE, HIS LATIN ASSIGNIVENTS TO MRS. BRowN IAS USUALJ. DHARLES DECKER, HIS DAR IN THE GARAGE TOR A JEEP. JEAN DAVIS. HER ABSOLUTELY CHAINING MANNER T0 ANYONE wHo CAN EQJAL IT. DON FI NGAR, HIS TRI-DDUNTRY GROOVE TO CARTY SYIARTHDUT. 2I' DON DAGGETT, ELSIE TO SOME OTHER LOYAL ADMIRER. WILMA DENNISTON. HER FINGERNAILS TO THE CUTEX NAIL POLISH CDMPANY. DORIS ELLING, STILL BETWEEN SEATS FIFTY-THREE AND FII'-TY, OCCUPIED BY M. J. MORSE AND M. J. MILLER. ALBERT FREDERIKSEN, TRIG. TO HIS BROTHER JACXJB. ALVIN FREDERIKSEN, ONLY FOR A SHORT TIME, AND THEN ON TO A LARGER SCHOOL. JOAN FLYNN. HER ABILITY TO KEEP HER STEADIES STRAIGHT TO BETS RIBBLE. DIGQ HABBERFIELD, HIS CAR PARKED AT KEUKA COLLEGE. JEAN RUSSELL, HER DRESS DESIGNS TO DIXIE DUGAN . MARY JANE RUSSELL, WITH DAVID CURTISS. LLOYD INGRAM, HIS PLYMOUTH FOR A B I9. LOIS MARTIN, I-ER LOVE FOR BARN DANCES TO MR. GRANT. HERMIA MATTESON, HER WOLF CALL' TO PROFESSOR I. S. SI1IITH'S DOG. DAVE OGDEN, TUT TO NETZ COMSTOCK. ERWIN ROBINSON, A CAN OF WATER T0 THE FELLOW WITH A SQUIRT GUN. MARIE SEREFINE, THE MIMEOGRAPH IN THE CONNERCIAL ROW FOR A STEIXDGRAPI-ER'S OFFICE. MARILYN MATTESON. BUZZY WAITING FOR HIS EIGHTEENTH BIRTHDAY AND THE DRAFT TO CATCH UP WITH HIM. GLEN SOUTT, HIS BASKETBALL SHORTS TO THE SCHOOL. ELSIE McFETRIDGE, I'ER LUST FOR MEN TO EVA BLODGETT. MAE SISSON, HER MEN STILL IN TI-IE DARK ABOUT EACH OTHER. MARYI JANE MILLER, HER EXCELLENT LEADERSHIP IN THE GYM TO MARGUERITE BAILEY. JOHN SHERIDAN, HIS FOURTH TERM AS PRESIDENT OF SOMETHING TO F. D. R CI.EO SMITHOOVER, HER INTERMEDIATE ALGEBRA BOOK TO SOVIEOIE WHO KNONS.TI-EY CAN PASS IT IN ONE-HALF YEAR. JEANNE MILLS, STILL TRYING TO GET MONEY FOR THIS OR THAT OUT OF THE SENIOR CLASS. GEORGE SPENCER, TO FIGHT FOR A DUO CAUSE, JEANNE AND HIS OOUNTRY. MARGARET STRATTON, PIOKLESW STILL CLEANING CHICKENS IN THE NAVY. LORRAINE MORICH, STILL PLAYING MENTAL DUETS WITH BILL WATSON, ' MARVA VANDUSEN, I-ER DRESSES AND THE WAY SHE WEARS THEM SO SVIARTLY TO VOGUE MAGAZIIAE. LORETTA WAGAR, PER II- H WORK TO NR. SMITH, TIf COUNTY AGENT. JIMMY SWANSON, FOR WASHINGTON AND HIS FIANCEE. MARGARET MORSE, HER SEAT AT THE PIANO IN SENIOR HGWEROUIII TO SOME UP AND COMING JUNIOR. MARGUERITE WATERS, PER INTEREST IN BOYS TO BETTY SKIISKLE. JEAN WASHBURN, FAITHI'-'UL TO BOB ONLY. CAROL WINEGARD, I-ER CLEVERNESS TO ALWAYS 'GET HER MAN TO SHIRLEY OGOEN. DONALD STAPE HIS COUPE TO GORDON WILSON. ROBERT SWANN, HIS SNEAKS TO ANYONE WHO WILL CONSISTENTLY WEAR TI-EM. BARBARA WOOD, HER POPULAR MUSIC TO BJSH'S MUSIC STORE. DOROTHY ALLEN, KENNY SAFELY IN THE AIR CXBRPS. AMY ALEXANDER, I-ER QUIET VOICE AND DAINTYIWAYS TO JANICE RECTOR. AUDREY ANDERSON, SCHOOL FOR JERRY AND A HOME IN THE MILO HILLS. WILLIAM WALL, TI-E STUDY OF MAPS TO THE MAKING OF THEM. ELLEN COLLINS, I-ER DEPENDABILITY TO ANYONE WHO CANISTAND TIE STRAIN. JUNE ANDERSEN, I-ER ABILITY TO KEEP SECRETS TO BETTY RACE. DICK WILBUR, A FEAVY CUE TO RALPH DAVIS. . DORIS BAILEY, HER BEAU IN HINIROD STILL A SECRET TO ALMOST EVERYONE IN P. Y. A. WILLIE WOODARD, HIS .22 FOR A GARAND. ' ELLEN BARRUS, HER I-EIGHT TO JINMY 'VLISCLES' SMITHOOVER. NORMA NEWBY, HER QUIET WAY TO MARILYN BASSAGE. RUTH FETTERMAN, HER CHOICE HJMOR AND HOVIEWARD WALK TO ELSIE BRIDGMAN. CARMAN JOHNSON, THE ORANGE AND BLUE OF P. Y. A.'S COLORS FOR THE RED, WHITE, AND BLUE OF THE U. S. A.'S ooI.oRs. . DICK HYLAHD. THE wEARv ROAD T0 KEUKA AND MILO ALTERNATELY WELL TRAVERSEDQ Errv FRIED, HERJODPHURSTO BARBARA BEAUMONT. ,g ' vvoNHa Fnav, HER FRENCH aoox TO Hass srows. AHLEIGH HILTON, HIS HEIGHT TO LAVERNE Less. FLoRaNce ELLING, HER seAr IN NI9 fo HER snsrsn. IN WITNESS HEREOF, WE DO SET OUR HANDS AND SEAL THIS FOURTEENTH DAY OF MARCH IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD NINE TEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-THREE, IN THE PRESENCE OF THE FOLLOWING WITNESSES2 GENERAL'DOUGLAS MAcARTHUR Resnomc SOMEWHERE IN THE SOUTH PAclFlc GENERAL oewm EISENHWER Rzslomc SONEWHERE IN NORTH AFRICA 22 JEANNE MILLS DONALD DAGGETT P R OPMIZI ECY WITHIN THE BRILLIANTLY LIGHTED WHITE HOUSE MISS MARVA VANHISEN, THE HOUSEKEEPER, REFLECTIVELY TORE A PAGE FRN THE CALENDAR WHICH I-UNG IN THE BUTLERIS PANT RY. TOIYDRRCIW WOULD BE THE FIRST DAY OF I910, AND TONIGHT THE NEWLY- ELEOTED PRESIDENT WAS HOLDING A NEW YEARIS PARTY FOR A GROUP OF OLD FRIENDS. MARVA HJRRIED TO SEE TO ETAILS, FOR ALREADY TIE COW BELL WHICH I'lJNG AT THE FRONT DOOR HAD SOUNDED. , TIE BUTLER, BOB VOAK, RESPLENINT IN WHITE TIE AND TAILS, OPEIED THE DOOR TO,A GROUP OF OISTINGUISIED GUESTS. 'MI-IS. GERALD KNAPTON AND NRS. ROGER KNAPTON', IE ANIDUNOED. THESE TWO MATRONS, NEE AUDREY ANIRSON AND MARY ORSLEY, HAD LEFT TIEIR I-ICMES IN LONG ISI.AND TO ATTEND TIE PRESIDENTIS REEPTION. TIEY HAD SCARELY ENTERED WHEN THEY WERE SWEPT ASIDE BY PETERSON AND ALLEN, WHOSE OOLLMN, 'TIE WASHIIGTON FERRIS-WIEEL', WOULD NEXT DAY REPORT TIE PARTY. WHILE ETTY PETERSON VENT TO PER INTO THE PANTRY, LEWIS ALLEN STARTED INTERVIEWING TIE NEXT ARRIVALS, TIE VICE- PRESIDENT, DONALD DAGGETT, AND WANTED TO BE---A VERY PERSONAL SUDDENLY ALLEN LEFT TI-IEW, AS TI-IE MAN WHO PUT PENN VAN ON MOVED ON TO TIE NEXT ARRIVALS, HIS SECRETARY, RUTH FETTERMAN. SAID MISS FETTERMAN, 'AT LAST--WHAT IIVE ALWAYS SECRETARY'. FOR THROUGH THE DOOR HAD JUST CWE TI-IE EMINENT CARTOGRAPHER, DICK DALE, BETTER KNOWN THE MAP'. AS MR. DALE REFUSED TO DISCLOSE TIE SJBJECT OF HIS LATEST MAP, ALLEN OONGRESSWGJIEN JEAN DAVIS AND MARJORIE RJGG, M-IO AUWITTED THAT THEY WERE PLANNING TO BRING INTO THE IEXT SESSION OF CONGRESS A BILL ADVOCATING A FIFTY-THOUSAND WLLAR APPROPRIATION FOR A SCHOOL CALLED PENN YAN ACADEMY. 'IT HAS LONG BEEN A PET PROJECT OF WRS', TIEY DISCLOSED. A MAN LOUNGING IN A CORNER LOOKED UP AND MAE A NOTE OF THEIR WORDS IN HIS LITTLE BLACK MJTEBOOK. IT WAS CHARLES OAVAGNARO, A PLAIN'lOTI-ES MAN, SENT BY TIE IEAD OF TIE F. B. I., ROBERT SWANN, TO GUARD TIE GUESTS. HIS WRITING, HOWEVER, WAS INTERRUPTED BY TIE ENTRANCE OF GEYERAL EORGE SPENCER AND JEANIE EWLAND SPENCER, TIE EDITOR OF TIE 'LADIES' HONE,JOURNAL'. GENEML SPENCER SOON FELL INTO WNVERSATION WITH OONMANDER NANCY KINNE OF TIE WAACIS, WHILE JEANIE VENT TO SPEAK WITH TI-IE GLEBRATED CARTOONIST, ORSINO, WHO DID MOST OF THE DRAWIMIS IN TIE 'JOURNAL ' . LED BY PRESIDENT GORDON BORST OF KEUKA MLLEGE, TIE FAGJLTY OF KEUKA ENT ERED. LOVELY FLORENCE DART, TIE ONLY RED-HAIRED MATH TEACHER IN CAPTIVITY, WAS ESCORTED BY DAVID OGDEN, WHO, SAID PRESIDENT BORST, HAD JUST BEEN ADDED TO THE FAOJLTY TO GIVE TIE GIRLS SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT. ELEANOR ADAMS, WHO OFTEN SAID SIE OWED I-ER SUCGSS AS IEAD OF KEUKAIS CCNMERCIAL DEPARTMENT TO THE WON! SIE HAD ONCE DONE FOR THE 'YANKEE', WAS WITH JOHN SIERIDAN, JANITOR OF KEUKA. RICHARD HABBERFIELD, FMWOUS AS THE MAN WHO, SINGLEHANIID, C-IANGED KEUKA INTO A W-EIIJCATIONAL SG-IOOL, CAME WITH MARIE SEREFI NE, 'MISS AMERICA OF l95ol. suooENLv EVERYONE SNAPPED TO ATTENTION. Rose MARIE MoI.AUGILIN, ws-nom TIE PRESIDENT mo Jusr APPOINTEO AMBASSAQ non TO Moscow BECAUSE or HER KIDWLEDGE or Russnm. WHISPERED TO THE SECRETARY OF uneon, olcx EARLE, ll ALwAvs KNEW WEID HAVE A womm PRESIDENT'. FOR AT THAT MCNENT, AS SECRETARY OF TIE NAVY JEANNE MILLS SHOUTED, SHALL WE ALL SALUTE THE FLAG'I', THE PRESI- DENT ENTERED, BOWIN3 AND SAILING--G.EO SWITHOOVER. FOR A WHILE THE BRILLIANT GATHERING WAS ENGAGED IN GENERAL CXJNVERSATION, 'INTERRLPTED ONLY BY THE ARRIVAL OF MORE GUESTS. NOTABI.E AMONG THESE WERE SUSAN HENRICKS, MOTHER OF TIE FAMED SDKTUPLETS, WHOSE HJSBAND, G-IIEF LEAPING LIIZARD, WAS 'UNABLE TO ATTEND, AND JEAN GILLMOR, GOVERNOR OF NEW YORK STATE. SJDDENLY THE OJESTS RUSIED TO THE WIN- DOWS TO SEE SONE OF TIE NEW PRIVATE IELIOOPTERS, DEVELOPED BY TIE INVENTOR,DAVID OJRTISS, DROP TO TIE LAWN. THEY WERE TIE FAMOUS PYA I-II9'l. AS THEY LANOED,THE TALENTED WATSON FAMILY GOT OUT--LORRAINE NORICH WATSON, LIEUTENANT WATSON, AND THE SEVEN LITTLE WATSONS. HEADING STRAIGHT FOR THE GRAND PIANOS, TIEY STARTED PLAYING, 'OFF WE GO, INTO THE WILD BLUE YONDER', WHILE COLOIIEL CAHAEN JOI-NSON TRIED TO DROWN THEM OUT BY PLAYING, 'YOUIRE IN TIE ARMY NOW' W HIS FRENCH HORN, ASSISTED BY MAJOR RICHARD BROWN, WHO PIOKED UP A TRJMPET WHICH WAS IMNDY. THIS NUSICAL MAYIEM WAS TOO MUCH FOR Tl-E PRESIENT, WHO QJIQQLY MOTIONED TO ELSIE HOPKINS TO BRING IN TIE EN- TERTAIIERS WHO HAD GJNSENTED TO PLAY THAT EVENING. MISS HOPKINS, ONE OF THE BEST KNOWN TIEATRICAL AGENTS, HAD OB- TAI PED FOR THE EVENING TIE NOTED SQUARE DANCE BAND, CI NSI STI NG OF ELSIE MoFETRIDGE AND MARILYN MATTESON ON TIE FLEUGELHORNS, LOIS MARTIN ON TIE CLAVICHORD, GRANT CHRISTENSEN ON THE FLUTE, AND GERALD LYNN ON TI-E MOUTH ORGAN. THEIR VOCALISTS WERE WRIS FULLAGAR, WHO MADE FAMOUS TIE 'BRANCHPORT BLUES', AND EVELYN GRAY, THE 'SONGBIRD OF CRYSTAL VALLEY'. AS TIEY PREPARED TO PERFORM, A STIR WAS CREATED BY THE ENTRANCE OF THE SEWNO GRETA GARBO, DORIS BAILEY, ACGMPANIED BY PRODUCER LAWRENE VAUGHN, AND JIIMY SWANSON, LEADING MAN IN THE PICTURE, 'A DAY IN WAI.L STREET', OR 'OHI FOR THE LIFE OF A HILTON', BASED, OF CXJURSE, ON TIE CAREER OF TIE DWINENT FINANCIER, ARLEIGH HILTON IT WAS WHILE TIE MUSIC WAS GOING ON THAT THE NOTED GLAMOUR GIRL, DOROTHY SIITH, FIRST NOTICED TIE PRESIENTIS STRANGE BIPRESSION. SPEAKING TO JEAN RISSELL, THE DRESS DESIGNER WHOSE FIFTH AVENUE STORE IS KNOWN FAR AND WII AS 'CHEZ JEANNE', SHE GASPED, 'DOESNIT CI.EO LOOK A BIT STRANGE TO YWI' YES', INTERRIPTED 'GENTLBAAN BILL' CHALLIS, MIDDLEWEIGHT CI-IAIPI ON OF TIE WORLD. AT HIS WORDS, 'CWPER' CAVAGNARO SPRANG INTO ACTION. MOTIWIIG TO HIS ASSISTANT, 'FLATFIXJT' FITZWATER, WHO HAD BEN HIDMN NEAR TIE DOORWAY, IE SHOUTED, 'EVERYONE STAY WHERE IE IS. TIEREIS BEEN A MJRER CX!vMITTED'. TIE GUESTS WERE THROWN INTO GJNSTERNATION. IT WAS LGRETTA WAMR, SECRETARY OF AGRIOJLTURE, WHO VOICED TIE GENERAL QUESTION. 'WHOIS BEEN MURDERED, ANVIDW1' 23 GENERAL QUESTION. 'WI'D'S BEEN MJRDERED, ANYHONT' BEFORE ANYOIE HAD HAD THE TINE TO ANSWER, BETTY CCMSTOGC, NATIONAL I'EAD OF THE RED CROSS IURSES, RJSHED ACROSS TI-E ROW. HER PROFESSIONAL EYE HAD NOTICED SIGNS WHICH THE OTHERS HAD FAILED TO SEE--BLOOD ON THE PRESlIINT'S SHOULDER, FOR INSTANCE. 'SrE'S NOT BREATHINGV, SHE SAID. TIEN, AS TI-E WOWD WAITED BREATHLESS, FOR PER JUDQAENT, SHE SAID, IS TI-ERE A DOCTOR IN TI-E HOUSEII' EVERYOIE MADE WAY FOR OR. RICHARD LORD, KNOWN AS IEW YORKIS BEST HEART SPECIALIST. 'I AGREE , HE SAID. 'SHE IS DEAD . CHAPTER I I RAIN WAS FALLING AS THE PROCESSION LEFT TI-E WHITE HOUSE. NEWSPAPERMEN WERE INTERVIEWING THE DISTRICT OF CC- LUMBIA CORONER, MARIAN LAMPHERE, WHO ANNOUNCED THAT HER AUTOPSY HAD PROVED GINCLUSIVELY THAT THE PRESIINT WAS DEAD. MISS LPMPHERE, KNOWN AS ONE OF OUR BEST 'QJT-UPS , THEN FLUFFED OUT HER HAIR AND POSED FOR THE PRESS PFDTOGRAPHERS, WILLIAM WALL AND AMY ALEXANDER. MEANWHILE THE NATIONIS MOST SUCCESSFUL PRIVATE DETECTIVE, 'SHERLOG4' MCGRAW, HAD STARTED AN INTENSIVE HUNT FOR TI-E NURDERER. AIDED BY HIS ASSISTANTS, JEAN 'WATSON' WASHBURN AND GENEVIEVE J. EDGAR' JAMES, HE WAS INTERVIEWING WITNESSES AT THE FUNERAL ITSELF. ABOVE THE VOICE OF TIE REVERAND EDNALD STAPE INTONING THE PRAYERS, SHONGIRL YVONNE FREY, WHO WON NATIONAL FAME WITH PER BEAT NEWARK SNAKE DANCER, WAS HEARD PROTESTING, I KNOW NOTHING ABOUT IT . TAKING BUBBLES' FREY'S WORD FOR IT, THE INVESTIGATOR PROCEEDED TO THE NEXT WITNESS TO THE SHOOTING, BETTY FRIED, VOCALIST FOR 'YOUR HIT PARADE . 'WHEN DID YOU FIRST NOTICE TI-E DECEASED WAS DECEASED? , HE ASKED. 'WI-EN THE FUNERAL STARTEDU, CAME THE LOGICAL REPLY. SUDDENLY TI-E VOICE OF MARY JAIE MILLER, THE ORIGINAL 'AUNT MARY OF RADIO, BROKE IN, SOBBING. IMNEDIATELY TI-E PEAD OF THE COLLINS' LITTLE LLMBAGO PILLS CORP., ELLEN COLLINS, RUSHED OIER OFFERING MARY A PILL. MARGUERITE D: WATERS, ENERGETIC VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE SANE CORPORATION, WAS HASTENING TO THE SCENE WHEN DETECTIVE WASHBURN STEPPED IN. 'WHAT DO YW KNOW ABOUT TI-E HISINESS? , SHE ASKED THE UNFORTUNATE MISS MILLER, WHO BURST INTO A FRESH SOB, AC- CEPTING THE HANUKERCHIEF SILENTLY HELD OUT TO PER BY SENATOR WILMA DENNISTON. SUMNIONING TWO NEARBY POLICEIVEN, ALBERT AND ALVIN FREDERIKSEN, THE DETECTIVES RUSHED MISS MILLER TO TI-E COURTHOJSE FOR A QUIZ. THROUGH IT ALL MARGARET MORSE KEPT PLAYING THE FUNERAL NUSIC, WHICH WAS ONE OF THOSE WEST TUNES OF ALL' WHICH HAD JUST MADE SUCH A HIT AT MISS MORSEIS CARNEGIE HALL RECITAL. IT WAS, IN FACT, TI-E 'CAMP CORY CONCERTOU, BY IERMIA MATTESON AND CAROL WINEGARD. TI-E FUNERAL WAS A GREAT SUCGSS, REPORTED ELLEN BARRUS AND ELOI SE JAYNE, WHO HAD TI'E HOT DOG CONCESSION. CHAPTER I I I IT WAS NIGHT AT THE COURT HOUSE. THE POLICE HAD JUST FINISHED QUIZZING TFE LAST WITNESS, MARGUERITE INGRAHAM, FAMED AS THE FIRST WOMAN TO SWIM THE ATLANTIC DEAN. GLENN COUTT, THE FINGERPRINT EXPERT, HAD JUST TURNED IN HIS REPORT. THE DETECTIVES, BAFFLED, INSISTED THAT THE ENTIRE PARTY RETURN TO THE WHITE FDUSE FOR A REENACTMENT OF TIE CRIIIE. LED 'BY THE SECRETARY OF STATE, JAMES WOODARD, AND HIS UNDERSECRETARI-ES, MAE SISSON AND NORMA NEWBY, THEY TROOPED BACK UP PENNSYLVANIA. AVENUE. AS JUNE ANDERSON, I-EAD OF THE NAVYIS SUBMARINE CONMAND, REMARKED TO HARRIET BROWN, HEAD OF THE WEPT's KWOMENIS EXTRA PARATROOPERSJ, 'ITIS A TERRIBLE WASTE OF TINE. ARRIVING AT TI-E WHITE HOUSE, THEY DISWVERED GENERAL ELECTRICIS STAR SCIENTISTS, WINIFRED JOHNSON AND JANE BUCK- LEY, WHO HAD BEEN SO ENGROSSED IN THEIR DISCJSSION OF MAE FINNUVORE'S NEW THEORY OF RELATIVITY THAT TI-EY HADNIT EVEN NOTIED THE NURDER OR THE PASSING OF TINE. LET'S BEGIN AT THE BEGINNINGW, SUGGESTED JOAN FLYNN, FOUNIR OF THE FLYNN DATE BUREAU, USING SCME OF TI-E UN- SI-IAKABLE LOGIC SHE HAD ACQUIRED IN MR. CHALLISIS CI.ASSES. ATTORNEY-GENERAL WILBUR, WHO WSIS TAKING OVER TI-E CASE PERSONALLY, GLARED STERNLY AT BARBARA WOOD AND DOROTHY ALLEN, STARS OF THE PICTURE 'DOUBLE STRAWBERRY B.OND , WHO WERE WHISPERING IN A WRNER. AS HE STARTED TO SPEAK. I-E WAS AGAIN INTERRUPTED, THIS TIIVE BY A WOLVERINE HONL. SEEING THAT IT WAS ON.Y JUNE CRANE, THE FAMOUS ANIMAL IMITAP TOR, HE CONTIMJED HIS SPEECH. 'SOME OF YOU HAVE PROFITED BY THIS MURDER. FOR INSTANOE, THE ARTIST, ESTHER OLSEN, IS ALREADY PLANNING A MJRAL ON 'THE DEATH OF A PRESIDENTN. THIS NURDER WILL ADD TO HER FAIVE. EVERYONE KNOWS THAT MARY NORTHRUP IS ALREADY RE- CEIVING MONEY FOR PER STORY IN IIATH MAGAZINE, CALLED 'I SAW CLEO FALL . LEWIS BRAMEN AND CHARLES DECKER HAVE WRIT- TEN TI-E TOP HIT TUIE OF TODAY, MURDER , AND IT ONES ITS SUCCESS TO THIS CRIME. DID YOU DO ITT , HE SHOUTED, SUDDENLY OONFRONTING SUPRBIE COURT CHIEF JUSTICE, DON FINGAR, WHO HAD JUST EN- TERED THE ROOM, ACMWPANIED BY ASSOCIATE JUSTICES DICK HYLAND, MARGARET STRATTON, VIRGINIA FLYNN AND ORLIIE CARL. NO , SNAPPED BACK JUSTICE FINGAR, COURAGEOUSLY. 'DID YOUT' JUST TI-EN DORIS AND FLORENCE ELLING, THOSE TWO QUEENS OF TI-E RADIO, ANNOUNCED THEIR OWN IDEA FOR SOLVI NG THE NURER MYSTERY. TIEY STARTED SINGING THEIR THENE SONG, ERWIN ROBINSONIS WHILEMINA, THE WELDERII, AND SAID TMT TI-EY WOULDN'T STOP SINGING UNTIL SOMEONE OONFESSED. IT WAS SHIRLEY CAMPBELL, CPEF OF THE RITZ IN NEW YORK, WHO BROUGHT THEM FOOD AS THE HOURS DRAGGED ON WITHOUT A CONFESSION. IT WAS LLOYD INGRAM, PRESIDENT OF THE INGRAM 'IYOU MAKEHD4' FURNITURE COMPANY, WHO BROUGHT THE TIRED SINGERS CHAIRS AS THEY SANG FAR INTO THE MORNING. EVERYONE KNEW IT COULDNIT GO ON MUCH LONGER. SUDDENLY A PEAL OF MAD LAUGHT ER SOUNDED FROM TI-E END OF THE ROCWI. GERALD MAoBETH BARDEN, TORTURED TO TIE BREAKING POINT BY HIS CXJNSCIENE, LEAPED TO HIS FEET. l DID IT , HE SHOUTED. TI-E IITECTIVES NODDED. TI'IEY SHOULD HAVE KNOWN IT WOULD BE THE 'GREAT WOMAN HATER' WHO WQJLD DO TI-E WED- 21+ GRUDGING TO WOMANKIND THIS HIGIEST POSITION IN THE LAND. SAl1Y, SLOWLY, SOLEMNLY, THEY LED 'BACHELOR' BARIN UJT. IT WAS AT THIS MGENT THAT THE GOVERNOR OF IDRTH CAROLINA, KATHERINE RIBBLE, ASKED THE GOVERNOR OF SOUTH CARO- LINA, MARY JANE RUSSELL, 'ALL OUR SOHOG. MATES SEEM TO BE HERE BUT EDITH HANDLEMAN. WHATEVER HAPPENED T0 HERI' OH, DIDN'T YOU KNOWN, ANSWERED THE OTIER. 'TI-EY TOOK HER AWAY TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS AGO......JUST AFTER SHE FINISHED OUR CI.ASS PROPIEGYH HISTORY AS WE, THE CLASS OF 'I-lj, LEAVE PENN YAN ACAEMY FOR TIE LAST TIME, WE ARE EEPLY MOVED BY TIE THOUGHT OF PART- ING FROM UJR TEACI-ERS AND CLASSIIATES. BECAUSE OF TIE GREAT HISTORY THAT TIE IBABERS OF THIS NOTED CLASS HAVE MAE WE IPART WITH THE FOLLOWING RECORD OF ILLUSTRIOUS IEEDS. IN TI-E FALL OF I9I-IO, WE STARTED ON OUR ACAEIY CAREER WITH I58 IDABERS. AS OFFICERS WE ELECTED TO GJIE US IN THAT YEAR JOIN SI-ERIDAN, PRESIENT3 JOAN FLYNN, VI E-PRESIDENTg JAIE BJGCLEY, SECRETARYg AND DONALD DAGGETT, TREASURER. IN OCTOBER OF THAT YEAR, WE HELD OUR SOPHGJIORE IK? WHICH WAS THE FIRST OIE IN SONE YEARS THAT CXJULD BE CALLED A I-DP INSTEAD OF A FLOP. IN TI-E SPRING OF IQIII, WE GAVE OUR SOPHGJIORE PLAY, 'I-ER FIRST PARTY mESS', WHICH PROVED TO BE A GREAT SJCESS. TIE NEXT YEAR, WE PROCEEDED UPSTAI RS AND ELECTED JOIN SHERIDAN, PRESIENT3 JANE BJCKLEY, VI G-PRESIENTg BAR- BARA WOOD, SECRETARYg APD JOAN FLYNN, TREASURER. IN THE EARLY SPRING OF I91I2, TIE G.ASS PRESENTED TI-E JUNIW PLAYS. 'GLORIA NUNDI , 'ANTIC SPRING', AND 'HIS FIRST SHAVE' WERE HIGHLY ACCAAILED BY TIE APPRECIATIVE AUDIENCE. LATER, WE WERE SORELY OVERGIME BY THE SENIORS AT TIE ANNUAL PLAY-DAY. AFTER THEIR GRAWATION, WE GAVE TI-E JUNIOR PROJ IN HONOR OF TI-E CLASS OF 'I-I2. DIE HJNDRED AND TWO OF US, AWED AT THE THOUGHT OF ENTERING II-I9v IAT LASTIII ELECTED ARLEIGH HILTON, PRESIENTg ALBERT FREERIKSEN, VI E-PRESIDENTg ROSE MARIE MQLAUGILIN, SECRETARY, AND MARIAN LANPI-ERE, TREASJRER. WE WERE UNEER THE SUPERVISION OF MR. G4ALLIS TO WHGII WE ARE ALL GRATEFUL FOR HIS GUIDANE. IN TIE FALL, TIE G.ASS PRE- SENTED THE SENIOR PLAY, 'TIE STREET OF DREAMS', WHICH PROVED TO BE A SAASH-HIT. UJR ABLE CI.ASS ADVISORS DURING Tt-E YEAR WERE MR. OHALLIS, MISS STOWE, MISS STREETER, AND MRS. AMES. RAPIDLY SUCH EVENTS AS THE SENIOR BALL, SENIOR BANQJET, PLAY-DAY, AND REGENTS CAME ALONG, AND, AT LAST, TIE FITTING OLIMAX--BAOCALAUREATE AND GJNNENEENT. WE DO NDT FEEL THAT WE CAN END THIS RECXJRD OF THE CLASS OF 'II3 WITHWT IENTIONING THOSE IBIBERS OF OUR CLASS WHO, LNDAUNTED AND READY, HAVE LEFT TO FIGHT FOR OUR FREEDGA AND SAFETY. TIESE BOYS ARE GEORGE SPENCER, CAHEN JO!-NSON, LEWIS BRMAAN, LEWIS ALLEN AND RICHARD BROWN. TIEY HAVE PROVED THAT THEY ARE WILLING TO TRAIN AND TO FIGHT TO PRESERVE EAOCRACY IN Tl-E WORLD' THJS ENDS THE HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF '33, WHO LEAVES PENN YAN ACADBJIY WITH GLAD AND HAPPY LEMORI ES OF TIE PAST AND I-DPEFUL WTLOOKS FOR THE FUTURE. MARGARET mass 25 CLASS OF I944 ROW: II Row 5 ROW U: Row 3: ROW 2.2 ROW I LLovo EMERSON, PRESIDENT PHYLLISOFOLTS, vlcs PRESIDENT ELSIE CARLSON. SECRETARY DONALD GILLETTE, TREASURER . NIELSON, H. SEAGER, R. SISSON, T. WETIVORE, WILSON, G. LARNEY, H. JORGENSEN, G. MUBLI, . SMITHOOVER, B. PAYNE, R. REILLY, E. LERCH, . REILLY. R. OATMAN. K. OWEN, D. RHODES, R. VOAK, L. VAUGHN, R. NIELSON, D. PUTNEY, C. TRAVIS, L. REINERS, H. MORICH, E. WORLD. J. RECTOR, H. L. SWANSON, B. RACE, P. RECTOR, LEE, L. WAGAR, V. MONNIN, B. TRENOHARD, STRONG, J. MASHEWSKE, B. C. RIBBLE, M. ROE. G G. J J T. B. MGDURFEE, , J. SMITH, J. SIMONSEN, S. OGDEN. J. WENTWORTH, J. ROESE, J. WI-EELER, W. MORAVED. C. JORGENSEN, L. TUBBS, B. MORTENSEN, R. TUT- TLE, P. WHITAKER, M. BASSAGE, M. STRATTON, B. WETMORE, M. SHORT, A. HOOSE. g. ,vI. , ?' 540, f yfwh ii., W, Q.. i IN THE FALL OF I942, WE BEGAN TO WALK UP TIE STAIRS TO OUR HOME ROOMS. WE WERE JUNIORS. OUR FIRST PROBLEM WAS THE ORGANIZATION OF OUR CLASS WHICH lNCI.UDED ELECTION OF CLASS OFFIERS WE POPULARLY ELECTED LLOYD EMERSON, PRESlENTg PHYLLIS FOLTS, VICE PRESIDENTg ELSIE CARLSON, SECRETARYg DONALD GILLETTE, TREASURER. TIE CLASS OF 'I-II-I PRODUCED THEIR JUNIOR PLAY, PLAIE CRAZYI' BY DOROTHY ROOD STEWART, ON MARCH I9. WITH THE ABLE DIRECTION OF MRS. MELDRJM, STUDENT DIRECTORS, PHYLLIS RECTOR, ROSENIARY TUTTLE, AND LUCILLE WAGAR, AND Tl'E CAREHJL PLANNING AND FAITHFUL COOPERATION OF THE CXJMMITTEES,THE PLAY WAS A CWPLETE SUCGSS. THEN, NATURALLY, OUR THOUGHTS TURNED TOWARD THE JUNIOR PROM TO HONOR THE SENIORS. ! . ?? !?YY' Y' 26 TI-E APPLICATIONS OF TIE ABILITIES OF THE JUNKORS MADE THIS A PROM NOT TO BE FORGOTTEN SOON. WE NOW WALK mom OUR RESPECTIVE HOME ROWS TO OGJIE BACK NEXT FALL T0 ENTER 1419. AS sENloRs, UNDER THE GUIDANCE or-' NEW c1.Ass ADVISORS, WE HAVE A BIGGER Jos T0 oo. so come BACK T0 P. Y. A. NEXT YEAR READV T0 woRK, JUNIORS ..... NOW wE THE CLASS or 'hu ARE SENIORS. JANIE RECTOR IRS. BROIIN LR. SMITH IRS. NELURUA RUN In RUN 3: ROW 2: ROW I: R. HANSEN, R. HAMILTON, D. FRAREY, J. AMIDON, H. HUNT, C. CHALKER, G. DECKER, M. CQASTOCK, R. GRIFFITHS, R. HANSEN, D. GILLETTE. . JOHNSON, M. CHRISTENSEN R. CARPENTER, 8. M BEALMONT, A. BENTLEY, B. J: LINKOUS, J. DEN- NISON, E. DUNHAM, L. ERERSON. B. McDERNIOTT, J. BAFNES, E. ANDERSEN, L. ALEX- ANER, D. CREVELLING, E. BRIDGEMAN, P. FOLTS, M. UJNNING, A. BLISS, D. BJGCLE. M. BAILEY, L. CHURCH, M. FINNEMORE, V. COREY, B. MAGEE, F. ELLING, 8. FANCETT, B. DAINES, P. HYNA, E. HOOE, E. JENSEN. inns-lv 27 RUN 5: RW ui Ln H RUN 3: J. ROW 2: OW I3 CLASS OF l945 DONALD STORK , PRESI DENT DICK MORROW, VICE PRESIDENT EARLENE ROSE, SECRETARY HERMAN SISSON, TREASURER J. HOBAN, R. ANDERSEN, F. BONER, J. HRAINARD, R. CRANE, L. GRACEY, D. DISBRON, D. WNHAM, K. CHRISTENSEN, A. JOHNSON, R. DAVIS, W. LEONARD, F. KENNEDY. KNAPTON, E. J. BLODGETT, L. CHIRSTENSEN, . DINEHART, E. BENSON, R. CLENENT, I. J. COLE, N. CARROLL, J. HARTLEY, D. EGHJRTSON, F. LEGG, D. FERNANDEZ. KELLEN, B. MARTIN, A. BULLOOK, A. DEOKER, B. TUTTLE, M. DILLEN, M. CHJRTISS, M. BAILEY, R. ENOS, G. NEWSTER. J. McKAY, M. L. LINOOLN, C. HYATT, G. LASHURE, P. MGGRAW, E. GOTTSHALL. B. FULLAGAR, G. JENSEN, M. LILYEA, M. MAQKERCHAR, L. LIZZIE. G. LARSEN, B. MARTIN, A. JAYNE, M. WDIIYE, S. HAYES, J. GOODENOW, E. JORGENSEN, J. JENSEN, J. NELSON, R. LAWS, R. EYECKENRIOGE, cgi., . AFTER SPENDING A GLORIOUS VACATION IN THE SLM- MER OF I9I-I2, THE SOPHOMORE CLASS CAUTIOUSLY MADE ITS WAY TO THE FIRST FLOOR OF THE ACADEMY. BUT AFTER A FEW DAYS, THE CAUTION OEASED, AND SOME OF TI-E BRAV- EST EVEN WALKED THROUGH III9 WITHOJT LOOKING AT THEIR SHOES. ous TO SINGLE SESSION, cuss suzcrnoms wana Nor HELD UNTIL Tm: moms or sepremam-:R. T1-E Resuus wane PRESIDENT. DON STORKg vice PRESIDENT, oncx Mormon, snssow. SECRETARY, EARLENE ROSEg TREASIRER, I-ERMAN DURING SINGLE SESSION, MANY OF THE SOPHCNORES WORKED ON FARMS AIDING IN THE HARVESTING OF CROPS. TI-E np-Lopn IEXT BIG EVENT WAS THE ANIMAL SOPHCMORE WHICH WAS HELD ON FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20,FROM 8 UNTIL II O'CLOCX. THE CONMITTEES, HEADED SUC- CESSFULLY BY THE FOLLOWING PEOPLE,WERE DECORATIONS, MABE MAOKERCHAR: REFRESI-MENTS, DORIS NEILSEN:' asm SOCIAL ACTIVITIES, CARTY SWARTHOUTg NUSIC, BOYD VANDYKEg PUBLICITY, GERRY LARSENg TICKETS, HERMAN SISSON AND BUD TRENCHARDg HOST, DON STORKg HOSTESS, EARLENE ROSE. EVERYONE HAD A GOOD TIME. OUR FAOJLTY ADVISORS, MISS REILLY, MISS REWER, AND MR. LYON GAVE US INVALUABLE AID IN THE SUCCESS OF THE AFFAIR. ALSO, IN NOVEMBER, EIGHT SOPHOMORE GIRLS WERE INITIATEO INTO TRI-Y AND IN FEBRUARY, SEVEN BOYS INTO HI-Y. MANY OF THE SOPHOMORES PARTICIPATED IN SENIOR BAN, GLEE CLUB, ORCHESTRA, AND INTRAMJRAL SPORTS. SONE OF THE BOYS WTSTANDING IN SPORTS, WHO LOOK LIKE PROMISING ATHLETES ARE DON STORK, GEORGE MORSE, BILL LEONARD, AND MIKE TERPOLILLI. WITH SO MANY ASSETS THE CLASS OF II-I5 FEELS IT IS BOUND TO SUCCEED. MISS REILLY IR. LYUU MISS RDER RUN 5: L. SORENSEN, c. SWARTHOUT, R. OLESEN. R. NORROW, B. TRENCHARD. CARL. SNARTHOUT, 0. sTRA1 roN. K. NIELSEN. R. REED, P. woRL0. N. VAUGHN. H. SISSON, R. wlLsoN. Row I+: G. REINERS, I. SCHROEDER, M. TERPOLILLI, R. ORR, J. RICI-MONO, C. WENTWORTH, R. SUTHERLAND, E. os- TROWSKI, B. VANDYKE, J. wr-HTAKER, G. MORS. Row 3: H. . . . . BL. WINEGARD, J. VENERON, K. WASHOURN, H. MILLIMAN. J. ROW 2: F. M. E. RUIVI: PARKER, D STYLES, M MUROOGC M ORR, E ORSLEY, TONGATE , J . SUTTON. TURNER. C. VISALLI, V. VESSA, I. PARKER, C. WOOD, UNOERWOOD, S. TRIMBLE, O. NIELSEN, J. SORENSN, SISSON H PORTER, B TONGATE, C TRAVIS, J. J. . . . rrmvls. J: zubms. e. summons. M. McMINN, e. NEWLAND, B. RIBBLE, E. ROSE, D. NORMAN, D. TRIPOLE. I I 29 POST QRAouATE5 DONALD LOVEJOY, MISS IDLE. RUTH AMIDON. HELEN I'DBANu PATSY IDWARD, I'E,LEN BULLOCX, ROBERT JENSEN W AT THE BEGINNING OF THE SCHOOL YEAR TI-ERE WERE EIGHT P. G.'S. TI-E FIRST SEIESTER THE CLASS ELECTED ROBERT JENSEN, PRESIDENT AND REPRESENTATIVE TO STUDENT OOUNCILg PATSY HOWARD WAS ELECTED VIE PRESIDENT. HIE TO A SLIGHT GIANGE IN BOERIWS SCI-EDULE, PATSY BECANE PRESIDENT WITH RUTH AMIDON AS VICE PRESIDENT. WRING THE SEOOND SUESTER STUDENT NUNCIL GAVE THE GLASS OF I9I-I2 O2.I-I5. THIS AMOUNT WAS ADDED TO TIE 335.015 LEFT BY THE CLASS. WITH TI-E ENTIRE SJM A O50 BOND WAS PURCHASED. AT MATURITY THIS BOND WILL GO TOWARD A LIBRARY FUND. HONOR SOCIETY EDITH HANI1EMAN, MARY ORSLEY, JANICE BARDEEN, AND MARGARET MORSE SINCE I9I-lj, THE ALPHA SIGMA ETA, SPONSORED BY STUDENT COUNCILN, HAS BEEN OPEN TO ANY PENN YAN ACAEIY STUDENT IEETIIB THE REQUIREMENTS. IEMBERSHIP IN HONOR SOCIETY IS INDEED AN HONOR, AS ELIGIBILITY IS BASED UPON SCHOLARSHIP AID PARTICIPATION IN EXTRA-QJRRIUJLAR ACTIVITIES. OUT OF ELEVEN NEMBERS IN I9I-I2 ONLY FUJR WERE PRESENT IN SCHOOL THIS YEAR, JANICE BARDEEN, MARGARET MORSE, EDITH HANDLEMAN, AND MARY ORSLEY, CHAIRMAN FOR I9I-lj. MISS BARBARA NLE ACTED AS TI'E FACULTY ADVISER. 30 Q S 25' E w' .5 f .J Tx W- Q: .1 2 1 f . LH .' xx. H .1 .. .w-- 4 . U D V v L N . l , Y H V ,,, .. , , ,, . .. .' .:.x1--K.. ' ' 21- ., ,fyff -. f .f 1 '. . f .. - f 4 . -v .- '. .A .. .'r'1 1---.p ,... , 4 - , . , - . ,. 1- , . ,,, . aw. .f,, .4 . v--Q,-mn. .H-.m,-f.'-f:,.-gg.. 1'-.,'..9f:.1:f-,.g '--'..!-1 1: 1' ,F .'-.,- .qv J-, ff.-. -1:11. '31-r-ur -,I-,. 'Q ,-,- I - A ..,.,.g.,,g, . ,:.. ..fQ4:.,. 5,2 ,,,,..:....f,.:,52,-4,325.,,.1,,.,..f,--W 5k . L.,-,.,...: ,. A ...x-,.1,..,.,-f ..., .' af.. QW... .VL-N g.l.5..-gf.: ..,fg,-Ng, -Ll., . Z, - W, - , . ,Xu .,11,,.,Y 5,5 A .,,, .- ma Lil:lc-5 31'4t9'43'S1'fff '-.1F'f'sff-Q-4zQ'r5'QfN11ff'-Yfi?'M'I'f2'ATP'fl?:lG4'f -fff'-5'iw- 1 jj? ' -.liiftfl Ifjrti- Qtx1.112fLgi'iF:g'frllg3',5?E'?L'.T 1-- - 10, .-Q-2-:5' -'- .tfvf f'ii.-f.:.- 'f 'A-' '. - , .-.1-.L-, nr. - 4g,f,1-1.1'.- ,- ,':: I' -AT1'. 1 :x .-fan--if,-' - 1 'Q 11,-. fu . .f' D- f 4' If L- .L-.,f'1'..-21-1,-,-C 'V-3. 41.-,:.f.::.n . ':-3, -:fg4.:3:.- 1-1-:-5 jen,-. 3,,j,:1-'--- '--M ,-,.,.g.--,,,f314g. , .Q h, V. 3-.',-fqs. -' V'-r ,1. , -.5 -, 5. -'ri-.J at-Q., 1 Hr., .A 1.34. L,-::f.yf,11 qv.-V. -, .- If -.'j,,.. ., 4 . -:thug Sei. -1?-N'f'E-:van , :J f ig.-,f,:1L',,':'fgf.:.f.L.-. x,,.1-11, wx--5.3 -L-,, ff, .,,-1-',.,.-L . g..k:. ,,.-avg.-..-,.,-. A, :.g5z1..,v .513-,.1..., 1 V m-, ,ci 1 -.. 1.-'rl'-- .q.X1v-,M-'Q' 1 ,'.'-.:.-P111 '-if 'sv'-'-3x13r2 L+ -. '.:-.:v- .-'fl ..4':L'.s.'-1'..f,:+ V. -,rg-:-s.f.-Q4 Yr'-2lrZ',Q:.'31 atfa.-.h-fi:I-fgs9:.ygsf,,5a.r1:gg--1:QE-HL-, .,,f..f.':-'-'ff -12 q'.2.-.11w. Iwi.. fri, 'HA-,rw-4.-g1'fAw.71f..f.'-1 f'-'Jiri- K fu ' ,.i:f+....-fL 1i?T.ffy.41'-.li'frfwflvif,-'ffqfhienzw.e 2.'Sf,-.,-f- -:wi-'fit+?.'.aq,+',Q1M',:-aw?-f1f2w1f-aff-4fbi.-Ew1.f:fir.ef-Jff:-3'. fv:5e:-Ln. 11 f, 1 .1 14: ':'j1x.l' -'.fag-.H -g...:'-9-f g.. - Y 1- '-,J - A X. .5 -' M1 fafki-1.1.-aLL'.nLg, www-1 1A1 . ',.,i,-. .fi-A fglmr. -.7-QQIAM r, -.13 '42,-gf,-Af.-.5v',.--.a:g,J1f',j. .- :f .lsr '41, gi ' --gn.,-f..,.w-:',+ ,:fz',31,j-75,1 -p :fl , 5,..,j.z.- Y1: y':L-,-ffzj 'P ,:-...rf-V.-1--, 5 ,.5gLg.--fyg-s 5gf ,,4:.-4-v.:, ,3,r-zjigj:41.3...f,g.,1:-zfaifiz-572.323f- Lf.-z-4:?.,.,f-L-J.. Q3-5.1535.14217,441555-viF225.ff:.4-4'S:.gg7:2..fmav ,131-gw7,qa. ' 1-L23.Q-1-1g.l,.3,-.-ff, ' I ', 'fr .- Q5 . .q','11.,,.-':-2.4- v' :QL 'gf-'-wwf: .' 4.fpfv'.e,1,f,1-Q 5 .'f,'.z.:1r.-25? 'fs . :v,a7lx5:ii'2P,'g1:,:..2g1-pI:'--V,1 :J-f.1,:z :xf,:f:1'C-.14-f'1tf ESf12:3-:ciswwzzfi. nf.. -fungfgrzr g.'73.g, ,i , 2 ,-F-J? F,-J'f ifT1?'L' L' S ,vm 4,1 A.,-A '.4-' -,L ., V ',,.- .. 4 4 'v-fffr: V.-.K--11.4 S.. .M 4.1,-...-. . .5f.., ..-. .-.-V A - . .1 ,I -. ,..,- .1 ..f I-I.:-1 4. -2-,-'-mf-Q --- 'wh--.',A-.---.'-. rw,-A . -Y --Y.-v X --,fx-N . A..-1. , .-'-+f,-u.-.- .-. 34'--2 f ' '.r '1 ,?1'1 I f'fv,?fvJ.1 31.-3'54.'i-hiil 5.344528 -.5291-'?'?av'.'fF f 1:r:s '?755rf'iP4FY.1.' 1 ffl1?1xN.w'.1:-E -121211-z,1:::f:W3i3dSUf Emf:!JTf?.f2: SA-fAEfrm2:f1:4-i: W'-M1 fi .1 Q4 .ffzviz-iwiiQulifg-ff:7:5.gF:fzgQ4q:. 44.5 ef-.-x f:,. -11:----. 'za Aff..-ffmA.:-:T::i.-'xr2'i,: 'L.f'f.-4.516 24 -.51,5..rsQ:i.Q'amls-ilmrzifmnv..aw-,lux . Am.--if-11-'azgrf'-'t'11-meLQI3-af'-:gift--'4':-Tbiffll'-ff-.r5,1.F-L-:.q:kif'f ' -31-li:--31-S--321.f 1?f'-':2Z'5.f2f,1!'- J. 4.071 ' ,.'.' -,L1 4' , '.n.:r vi , '., .-.,',' . 5 ffllw fn' 1 ,r M, 141. f: xy.. nf - 'rn f.. :E .x. ':.'-, .-1 51.1 .2 - '.'A- . 4 , '1-' ' Q-.'.'-.1-.LV 1-23 .' ix' 1' - nvkfi '-'z.L..5g. i-341 -' rr-'A -'- - ' -, u'-', 5,-1 I.. ,-'gj-.jf ,'. yr- ff, T -' h f ,- .kr . -f - -.1-, V. .. - .Vg---.f ,'.:c..g1s,y -, ,, fir.. M gQ:,-,'g': .',4f-afav, N':'bf1:11f-.- 1 rw-1. xj:f':,:-- ,- an-gg qiw'--:Lg-.v,'ff.:1' .'-:gs--f-'.-.' - af- a wgxfu.. 5. .- W wt ,- 4,1-.',.',.-,-.v , ...V-,V-.-ff.: :f:1.1-47. -.-,Fixx-N'wil943.12:5'gf'-3,',,egr.,',1-ra fg45.'1r,g!ZLg!,-I 'QA 1.3-,,1,g.gg,z'.g y:g',?g.:'T?'.'3.: , .ww -.15-..,'.a,,v.ff.g,-ww.1,1-!..'f::' D-5 M-arf..---. -rf-'--no x-rf2SW .gv.-,ml1-ME.-:Z.f.:f:.1:wfA-'---'U' f , ----., - 'wary' 5-:f -Mem-rl: '1 - 2' ' ' v .. 4. , 7,7 i ww. ,, .fm M -, STUDENT COUNCIL ROW 3: L. ENERSON, 8. BEAUMONT, A. HILTON, 0. MOGRAW, D. STORK, R. McLAUGHLIN. ROW 2: MISS SEWARD, M. SHORT, E. CARROLL, J. FLYNN, M. MORSE, J. BARDEEN, NR. GRANT. ROW I: P. HOWARD, M. ORSLEY, -J. SHERIDAN, L. OGOEN, E' Fong' J' MILLS' omceas AND ADVISORS STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS AND REPRESENTATIWS WERE ELECTED IN THE FALL OF THE YEAR BY THE STUDENTS OF PENN YAN ACADEMY. TI-E ADVISORS, MISS SEWARD AND NR. GRANT. GAVE MUCH AID IN PROBLD-IS WHICH FACED THIS GOVERMENTAL BODY DURING THE YEAR. TI-E ACTIVITIES OF TIE GJUNCIL HAVE BEEN MANY THIS YEAR. TIE SALE OF WAR STANPS WAS BACKED BY THE COUNCIL A FAUJLTY-STUDENT FORUM WAS ORGANIZED. A SCRAP DRIVE WAS OONDUCTED BY TIE WUNQIL. AND BOYS FROM TIE ACAIMY HELPED IN THIS WLLECTION. THE REALLY BIG ACHIEVEMENT OF THE STUDENT COUNCIL WAS THE ORGANIZATION' OF THE VICTORY CORPS AND THE MAKING OF PLANS FOR ADVANEMENT IN TI-E SPECIAL DEVISIONS. AIR RAID WARDENS WERE CHOSEN. A SERVICE FLAG WAS PURCHASED WITH THE AID OF TRI-Y. A COLLECTION OF ONE CENT FROM EACH STUDENT IN THE ACADEMY FOR NEMBERSHIP IN TIIE RED CROSS WAS PROMOTED BY THE COUNCIL. AS IN PREVIOUS YEARS TIE HONOR SOCIETY WAS BACKED BY THE CXIJNCIL. I 32 I ANNUAL THIS YEAR'S ANNUAL STAFF WAS ELECTED DURING OUR JUNIOR YEAR, AND HAS NET MANY NEW DIFFICULTIES, IN- CLUDING THE DRAFT AND ENLISTMENTI' PROGLEII. THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, JEANNE NEWLAND, WAS AS- SISTED BY JOHN SHERIDAN, AND THE BUSINESS MANAGER, DAVID OGDEN, HAD BILL CHALLIS AS HIS IIRIGHT HAND MANW. THE ART STAFF, JEANIE RUSSELL AND BARBARA WOOD, HAVE DONE SUCH EXCELLENT WORK THAT THEY DE- SERVE TO BE CALLED CO-EDITORS INSTEAD OF EDITOR AND ASSISTANT. THIS YEAR MOST OF THE PHOTOGRAPHY WAS HANDLED BY A STUDENT ORGANIZATION, THE PHOTOG' RAPHY CLUB, UNDER THE TIRELESS AND PRAISNORTHY DIRECTION OF MR. LYON. WE OWE MUCH CREDIT AND THANKS TO OUR ADVISOR, MISS COLE, OUR ART ADVISOR, MISS BAILEY, AND OUR TYPIST, MISS RBAER. THE STAFF OF THE I9I-I5 KEY WISHES EVERY SUC- CESS TO HJTURE STAFFS. ROW ll: now 3: RON 28 ROW It J 1 'W X . r, ' ,.f' ' -' J. SNANSON, K. NIELSEN, D. OGDEN, C. CAVAGNARO, R. HYLAND, M. TERPOLILLI. E. HANDLEMAN, J. FLYNN, S. SHERIDAN, J. MILLS, R. DAVIS, E. OSTROWSKI, W. CHALLIS. D. ELLING, M. MORSE, M. MILLER, E. ADAMS, E. COLLINS, J. RECTOR, L. OGDEN, D. ALLEN. M. SHORT, F. DART, B. WOOD, J. RUSSELL, J. NEWLANO, M. ORSLEY, E. BARRUS, P. HOWARD, C. WINEGARD. Of' I 1 f . r I 33 YAN KEE THIS YEAR, ORGANIZED UNDER THE NAME OF PRESS CI.UB, TI-E MEMBERS OF THE YANKEE STAFF PUBLISI-'ED THEIR SCHOOL PAPER ON A WAR-TIME BASIS, AND MADE CONTRIBUTIONS TO PENN YAN NEWSPAPERS. WITH MISS STREETER AS FACULTY ADVISER, CO-EDITORS EDITH HANDLEMAN, MARY ORSLEY, AND ELEANOR ADAMS PLANNED THE WEEKLY NEETINGS, PROOF READ AND ASSEMBLED THE MATERIAL FOR THE PRO- DUCTION STAFF. MARIE SEREFINE WAS PRODUCTION MANAGER, AS- SISTING MISS REMER IN PRINTING THE YANKEE . JEAN RUSSELL AND ESTHER OLSEN HEADED TI-E ART DEPARTMENT WHICH PROVIED TIIELY CARTOONS AND OTHER EXCELLENT WORK. THEY WERE ABLY ASSISTED BY MISS BAILEY. TIE STAFF RECEIVED MANY HELPFUL IIAS FRGA THE WAR- TIME E. S. P. A. CONFERENCE IN SYRACUSE, AT WHICH MARY ORSLEY, EDITH HANDLEMAN AND MISS STREETER REPRESENTED TI-E YAN4EE . TWO NUMBERS OF TIE PRESS CLUB, ALICE BENTLEY AND ELSIE CARLSON, WERE REPORTERS FOR TI-E P.Y.A. REPORTERW WLLMN, PUBLISHED BY THE WYATES COUNTY CHRONIG.E EXPRESS' AND THE PENN YAN DEMOCRATW. THIS WAS TI-E FIRST YEAR THAT THE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL WAS REPRESENTED IN A SPECIAL PAGE IN THE YANKEE'. AN AVER- AGE OF THREE HUNDRED AND TWENTY MPIES OF EACH ISSUE WAS PRINTED. CALVIN CROSBY AND ROSS SNARTHOUT WERE CIRQJLATION MANAGERS, ELSIE BRIDGMAN AND RICHARD HYLAND WERE BJSINESS MANAGERS, AND BOB OATMAN REPRESENTED THE PRESS Q.UB IN STU- IENT COUNCIL. TI-E 'IIB STAFF SINERELY THANKS THE MISSES STREETER, REMER AND BAILEY FOR TIEIR FINE GUIDANCE AID WISH THE HJTURE STAFFS SJCCESS IN CARRYING ON TIE YANKEE'. ROW ROW ROW RON RCN oo-eouroasz MARY oRsu.av, :om-I HAN- oeuwm, AND 1-:LEANOR ADAMS 5: J. NEWLAIND, L. WAGAR, B. TRENCHARD, J. BAREN, DEEN, F. TURNER, J. WPEELER, C. CROSBY, J. REILLY, R. HYLAND, R. ORR, L. KNAPTON. II: J. FLYNN, 8. J. LINCOUS, M. BASSAGE, A. BENT- LEY, M. NURSE, S. TRIMBLE, S. OGDEN, P. REC- TOR, J, RECTOR, L. OGDEN, R. REILLY. 3: J. SORENSEN, J. MILLS, B. BEAUMONT, R. TUTTLE, 2 P. WHITAKER, B. SIMIIONS, K. RIBBLE, L. WAGAR, D. FULLAGAR, Y. FREY, P. FOLTS. 3 M. VANHJQN, E. ORSLEY, B. E. HOOSE, M. J. RUSSELL, D. P. HOWARD, D. NIELSEN. I: J. SIIVONSEN, E. OLSEN, J. M. ORSLEY, E. HANDLEMAN, COREY. WINEGARD, E. ROSE, OWENS, E. BARRUS, RUSSELL, E. ADAMS, E. BRIDGEMAN, V. Inj KI 4 il, Q 31+ VICTORY CORPS wa! ,gat :gm W1 ALTPDUGH THE VI CTORV NWS IS A NEW ORGANIZATION, IT HAS CONTRIBUTED WELL TO THE WAR EFFORT UNDER THE LEADER- SHIP OF CO-CONMANDERS ROSE MARIE MGLAUGHLIN AND JOHN SHERIDAN. THE FIRST ACTIVITY WAS THE COLLECTING OF BOOKS FOR IMEN IN THE SERVICE. PEOPLE WERE NOTIFIED AI-EAD OF TILE OF THE COLLECTION, AND ON AN APPOINTED DAY THE BOOKS WERE COLLECTED BY THE VICTORY CORPS MEMBERS. AT A LATER DATE THEY SIGNED UP VOLUNTEER BLOOD DONORS FOR Tl-E RED CROSS. TIE LATEST ACHIEVEMENT WAS THE CANVASSING OF PENN YAN FOR VICTORY GARDENS. TIE STUDENTS LEFT BLANKS AT EACH HCJVIE, WHICH WERE TO BE FILLED OUT AND RETURNED. mp. . 55 GIEL CLUB ROW 5: Row 14 Row 3 Rm 2 ROW I M. ORR, V. MONNIN, M. VANDUSEN, F. TURNER, B. WINEGARD, C. VI SALLI, M. DUNNING, 8. DAINES, B. PETERSON. B. RIBBLE, M. SHORT, P. FOLTS, J. BARDEEN, J. ROESE, R. CARPENTER, J. SISSON, 8. FRIED, E. BENSON. L. ALEXANDER, B. FANCETT, P. WHITAKER, M. ORSINO, J. RECTOR, R. CLENENT, I. J. COLE, M. STRATTON. 5. OGDEN, 8. J. LINKOUS, D. CREVELLING, E. PETERSON. J. MILLS, D. ALLEN, B. SKINCLE, M. MORSE, L. MORICH. J. WHEELER. M. oRsLEv, E. HANDLEMAN, c. wooo. M. BAILEY, Miss HORTON, cARoI. wma- GARD, P. Houma. o. CARL. MISS HORTON, DIRECTORg MARGARET MORSE, JANICE BARDEEN, PIANISTS. THIS YEAR THE GLEE CLUB OONSISTED OF FORTY- FOUR NEMBERS. ALTHOUGH THE CLUB WAS LIMITED, THEY WERE ABLE TO ACOOMPLISH MANY THINGS. SONE OF TI-E SONGS THEY SANG, DIRECTED BY MISS HORTON, WERE I HEAR AMERICA SINGING , WAIERICAN PRAYER , NIGHT FALL , UTI-E SHEPARDIS SONGU, AND 'LEAD KINDLY LIGHTW. TIE CLUB HAD TWO ACOOMPAN- ISTS, MARGARET MORSE AND JANICE BARDEEN. THE GLEE G.UB SANG FOR AN ASSEMBLY AND AT OOMENCENENT. 36 aow5 ROW I-I+: RUWS now 3: ROWI I C. LACLAIRE. E. ORSLEY, F. CHALKER, L. LEGG, L- VAUGHN. R. WILBUR, D. STORK, B. VANDYKE, 8. ALLISON. M. SHORT, E. ROSE, J. RICHARDSON, H. L. SWAN- SON, H. JORGENSEN, M. DOMSTOG4, L. GRACEY. T. GRESSINGER, P. RECTOR, B. RAE, E. OSTROWSKI, D. BETTS, J. BRAINARD, R. DAVIS, J. VENERON. E. HANDLEMAN, R. TUTTLE, J. BENSON, G. BARDEN, B. TRENCHARD, H. SISSON, D. LOOK. R. OCMSTOGK, F. TURNER, S. TRIMBLE, G. BASOUJI, W. DANIELS, B. ROSE, R. FINGER. ODCI-I LST DA THIS YEAR TI-E ORCI-ESTRA HAS NOT BEEN AS ACTIVE AS IT HAS IN PREVIOIJS YEARS. PDWEVER, IT PLAY.. FOR TIE JUNIOR AND SENIOR PLAYS AND FOR CGM MENCEIENT. TI'-E NEAERS PRACTIGD EVERY TUES- DAY AND THURSDAY IJJRING TIE FOURTH PERIOD. RUN 2: D. STORK, H. SISSON, B. VANDYKE, M. CXJM' STOCK, L. LEGG, R. OLESEN, G. BARDEN, B. TRENCH- ARD ROW I: B. MARTIN, M. UNDERWO00, S. TRIMBLE, E. ROSE, H. L. SWANSON, R. M. TUTTLE, C. HYATT, M. LANPIERE, J. MILLS, R. AMIDON, E. HANIXBIIAN BAN D THE PENN YAN ACADEMY BAND PLAYED FOR ONLY THE NEWARK FOOTBALL GAME AT PENN VAN THIS YEAR. IIJR- ING THE HALF THEY FORNED A V FOR VICTORY IN FRONT OF THE BLEACI-ERS. BECAUSE OF TI-E WAR AND GAS RATIONING,Ti'E BAND DID NOT GIVE ANY CONCERTS OR PARTICIPATE IN ANY CONTESTS THIS YEAR. THE ACADEMY BAND WILL LOSE TI-E FOLLONING IEA- BERS THIS YEAR: H. MATTESON, SAXOPHOfEg L. LEGG AND R. WILBUR, BARITOIEg G. BORST AND R. LORD, COR- FETg AND E. HANDLEMAN, CLARIIET. MR- BASCOM. DIRECTOR '37 SENIOR PLAY UNDER TI-IE ABLE DIRECTION OF MRS. AMES AND MARIE SEREFINE, TI'-E CI.ASS OF I9I-I3 PRESENTED 'STREET OF DREAMS' ON DEQMBER II, I9II2. THIS TI-REE ACT MJIEUY T004 PLACE IN THE PROSENIIM CLUB SCMEWI-ERE FEAR TIMES SQJARE, IEW YG!! MRS. STOCTON ISUE HENRIGCS, WAS THE PANAGER OF Tl-E QUB WHICH WAS STRICTLY FOR STAGE-STRUGK GIRLS. BONNIE GIRFFITH IRUTH FETTERVIAN,, JEAN WEAVER IELSIE BRIDGvIAN,, OLIVE DANIE.S CJEANNE MILLS, AND EVELYN JONES QJEAN RUSSELL, WERE AMONG THOSE WHO HAD HOPES OF GOING ON THE STAGE HIT WHO NEVER QUITE MADE IT. ANASTASIA GREGORSKI IROSE MARIE MoLAUGr-ILIN, WAS SJPPOSEDLY RUSSIAN, AND VIRGINIA SNOW IBARBARA WOOD, WAS A SWEET LITTLE SOUTHERN GIRL. GCILY WARE QHERMIA MATTESON, WAS AN OLD TINE ACTRESS WHO WAS ALWAYS GIVING ADVIG. TIE SIEDISH MAID, INGRID WAS PLAYED BY DORIS BAILEY. LINDA EASTMAN CJOAN FLYNN,, TIE ONLY GIRL WHO GOT ANY PLAG, WAS IN LOVE WITH TONY BARTON ILAVERNE LEGG,, A YOUNG PLAYWRIGHT. ROSOE MYERS IDONALD DAGGETT, AND GEORGE D. JUSTIN QRICHARD WILBUR,, WHO TURNED OUT BO BE A VERY RICH MAN, WERE FREQJENT VISITORS AT THE RUB. Tr-E ENTIRE CALSS WORKED HARD TO MAKE THIS PLAY A SUCCESS. TPE FOLLOWING WERE WIMITTEE HEADS: USIERS, MARY JANE MlLLERg TICKETS, ARLEIGHT HILTONg STAGE CREW, CARIVEN JOHNSONg LIGHTS, JAMES SWANSONg PROPERTIES, MARGARET MORSEg PROGRAMS, DORIS ELLINGg AND MAKE-UP, FLORENCE DART. THE PLAY NETTED TIE CLASS OF I9II3, ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-F IVE DOLLARS. 38 JUNIOR PLAY RASS PRESENTED ITS PLAY, 'PLAINE CRAZY. THE REACTION OF THE AUDIENCE PROVED IT TO BE AN EN- TERTAINING PLAY. IT WAS, MOREOVER, A FINANCIAL SUCQSS. JIIIMY REILLY AND JINNY SMITI-IOOVER WERE CXJT- STANDING IN THE RU..ES OF 'IMJSQESW AND 'PUTRID' AND JANIE RECTOR AND BILL MORAVEC WERE EXGLLENT AS THE MOTHER AND FATHER. GIFFORD KUBLI CAME THROUGH WITH A FIDE PERFORMANCE AS JIMMY , WI-D WAS 'PLANE CRAZY . BETTY JO LINKUJS IS TO BE MNGRATULATED FDR I-ER PART AS SALLY, THE MAID. SHIRLEY OGDEN, POLLY WHITAKER, MILDRED SHORT, AND IN FACT, TI-E UITIRE CAST GJNTRIBUTED INDIVID- UALLY TO MAKE THIS PLAY A TOTAL SUCCESS. ROW 5: R. CARPENTER, D. ALLEN, F. DART, J. BARDEEN, R . MQLAUGHLIN, S. HENRICXS, P. FOLTS. ROW II: M. SHORT, J. NEWLAND, L. OGDEN, E. COLLINS, J. DAVIS. ROW jg BEAUMONT, M MAOKERG-IAR, J. BARIES, M. B. . ORSLEY, J. WHEELER, B. RIBBLE, D. NIELSEN. ROW 2: J, VENERON, B. RIBBLE, B. ORSLEY, R. TUTTLE, E. ADAMS, J. BUGCLEY, E. CARLSON. ROW I: C. WOOD, D. CREVELLING, B. WIIEGARD, J. REC- TOR, Y. FREY, E. ROSE, MRS. BROWN. I-lI- WITH NR. LYONS AS ADVISOR, HI-Y ELECTED OFFIERS IN OCTOBER AS FOLLOWS: PRESIDENT, BILL CHALLlSg VICE PRESIINT, LAWRENCE VAUGI-Ng SECRETARY, GEORE SPENCERg TREASURER, ROSS SNARTHOUTg CI-IAPLAIN, ALBERT TERPOLILLIg SERGEANT- AT-ARMS, HAROLD YOUNGS. TWELVE NEW MEMBERS WERE INITIATED IN BEB- RUARY AND AEW OFFIQRS WERE ELECTED: PRESIDENT, I CALVIN CROSBYg VIE PRESIDENT, ARLEIGH HILTON, SECRETARY, ROBERT HANSENg TREASURER, CHARLES CAVAGNAROg CHAPLAIN, PAUL BUCKLEYg SERGEANT- AT-ARMS, WILLIS WOODARD. AMONG THIS YEARIS ACTIVITIES WERE A PLAY, STAMP SALES, AND A STAND AT THE PENN YAN-NEWARK FOOTBALL GAME. THE ANNUAL DINNER DANCE COM- PLETED THIS YEAR'S SCHEDULE. ko TRI- IN NOVEVIBER, WITH MRS. BROWN AS ADVISOR, TRI-Y AUWITTED AND DID A VERY THOROUGH JOB OF INITIATING SEVENTEEN GIRLS, FOUR OF WHW WERE SENIORS, FIVE WERE JUNIORS, AND EIGHT WERE SOPHOMORES. JEANNE MIILLS WAS ELECTED PRESIDENTg JANICE RECT OR , VICE PRESIENTg EARLENE ROSE, SECRETARYg JOANIE BARNES, TREASURERg YVONNE FREY, CHAPLAINg BETTY C PROGRAM AT FOR THE TAPS ON RIBBLE, SERGEANT-AT-ARMSg AND PHYLLIS FOLTS .CHAIRMAN. CHRISTMAS TIME, THE GIRLS PACKED TWO BASKETS SALVATION ARMY. TIE TRI-Y PLAY, 'ITHREE A WALL , PROVED TO BE A BIG HIT AND TI-E PROGEEDS OF THIS PERFORMANCE WENT FOR TIE PURCHASE OF THE SCHOOL SERVICE FLAG. AT SOIVE OF THEIR MEETINGS, TI-E GIRLS SEWED FOR THE RED CROSS. AT OTI-ER MEETINGS, THE MEMBERS HAD SPEAKERS, HELD PAIEL DISCJSSIONS, WROTE LETTERS TO I-TLLONS IN TIE SERVICE, AND MADE PLANS FOR THEIR ACTIVITIES. THE HIGH LIGHT OF THE YEAR WAS THE DINNER DANCE HELD IN MAY. TRI-Y CLIMAXED THE YEAR WITH A BIKE HIKE. RON 3: R. HANSEN, G. BARDEN, L. INGRAM, D. OGEN, H. SISSON, N. VAUGHN, J. SHERIDAN, J. WOOD- ARD, C. CROSBY, C. PAYIE. now 2: Rncwxno Hmsem. R. sussou. c. cAvAcNARo. R. IILBUR, H. vouncs, R. 1-mseanrusw. M. com- lsrooq, D. sronx, B. msncnmo, c. mean. ROW I: ADVISER, STERN LYON, H. JORGENSON, R. SMART- WT, A. HILTON, W. CHALLIS, C. SNARTFDUT, C. WENTWMTH, J. REILLY, L. VAUGHN. STENOGIIAPHY MISS RQdER'S STENOGRAPYY CLUB WAS VERY ACTIVE THIS YEAR. THIS CI.UB PRINTED CIRCULARS FOR THE TIN CAN DRIVE, WROTE OVER EIGHT HUNDRED LETTERS TO THE BOYS IN THE ARNED SERVIES IFOR THE WAR SERVICE BOARDD, ADDRESSED ENVELOPS FOR THE BUBERQJLOSIS CHRISTMAS SEAL CANPAIGN, AND HELPED TO MAKE POSSIBLE OUR WELL KNOWN YANKEE , THE GIRLS CERTAINLY DESERVE A GREAT DEAL OF CREDIT. FIRST AID THE FIRST AID CLASS, WHICH WAS TAUGHT BY MISS ELSIE SEWARD, CONSISTED OF TWELVE ACTIVE MEMBERS. THEY STUDIED THE REGULAR JUNIOR RED CROSS COURSE. NOW THEIR COURSE IS FINISHED AND TI-E MEMBERS ARE READY AND WAITING TO HELP IIWRAP UP TI-E AXIS. '- PHOTOGRAPHY THE PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB, WHICH WAS UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF MR. LYONS, ELECTED AS TI-EIR OF- FICERS: PRESIDENT, JOHN SI-ERIDANg VICE PRESIENT WILLIAM C1-IALLISg SECRETARY, LLOYD UERSOM AND LAVERNE LEGG AS TREASURER. THE PURPOSE OF TIE CLUB WAS TO TEACH TI-E MEYIBERS THE USES AND ADVANTAGES OF GOOD PHOTOG- RAPHY ANO THE CARE OF TIE FILM AND THE OANERA. TI-E CLUB ESTABLISHED A DARK ROOM EQJIPPED WITH FIFTY DOLLARS' WORTH 0F MATERIAL. THE INFORMAL PICTURES IN THE YEARBOOK WERE TAKEN BY TI-E NEMBERS OF THIS CLUB. III NURSING MRS. OGDEN'S MJRSING CLUB ELECTED AS THEIR OFFICERS THE FOLLOWING: PRESIDENT, LORRAINE IIIORICHI VICE PRESIDENT, ANNA SIIIITHg SECRETARY, BETTY WETMOREg AND DORIS BAILEY AS TREASURER. THE CLUB CONSISTED OF SEVENTEEN EAGER GIRLS. THEIR STUDY CONSISTED MOSTLY OF BEDSIDE NURS- ING. THEY ALSO STUDIED GDM-IUNITY HEALTH AND HCME MANAGEMENT. PERSONAL NOIIAIE TI-IE PERSONAL MORALE CI..UB.UNDER THE EXCELLENT LEAIJERSHIP or mss sToIvE,wIi STUDIED THE FOLLOW- ING TOPICS: PERSONALITY. PE SONAL APPEARANCE, HAIR STYLES, DRESS STYLES. MANICURES. DIET. CARE or aoov mn HAIR, POPULARITY AND ITS PRIE. LET- TER WRITING AND ENTERTAINING. THIS G.UB ELECTED BARBARA WOOD AS PRESIDENTg BARBARA NEWLAND AS VIE PRESIDENTg .AND MARY MAG KERCHAR AS SECRETARY-TREASURER. ALL THE GIRLS FOUND THIS cI.uIa M091 INTER- ESTING mo PRoI-'I TABLE, AND ENTERED INTO ALL TI-E DISQJSSIONS WITH REAL ENTHUSIA94. I-I2 RIFLE THE ACTIVITIES OF TI-E RIFLE CLUB HAVE BEEN CONF I NED THIS YEAR TO POSTAL MATCHES. IN OIIE OF THESE CGJIPETITIVE MATCHES FOR TI-E I'EARST JUNIOR RIFLE TROPHY, THE FOLLOWING FIVE NEMERS WERE CHOSEN BECAUSE OF TPEIR HIGH SCORE ABILITY: LLOYD REINERS, COURTNEY SNARTHOUT, DWIGHT PUT- IEY, KENNETH CI-IRISTENSEN AND DONALD FRAREY. TIE THIRTY-FIVE MEMBERS, WITH MR. STANLEY STOUT AS ADVISOR, CHOSE DWIGHT PUTNEY AS PRESI- DENTg KENNETH CHRISTENSEN AS VICE PRESIDENTg HERMAN SISSON AS SECRETARYg AND DONALD STRATTON AS TREASURER. WITH THE IELP OF THESE EXECUTIVES AND WITH FINE INSTRUCTION FROM MR. STOUT TIE RIFLE CLUB SUCCEEID IN ITS AIM TO TRAIN TIE BOYS IN TIE HANDLING AND FIRING OF TI-E RIFLE. RADIO WORKING EARNESTLY ONCE A WEEK WITH THEIR FACULTY ADVISER, MR. GRANT. TIE RADIO CLUB MEM- BERS HAVE BEEN ABLE. TO SEND AND RECEIVE AP- PROXIMATELY FIVE WORDS A MIMJTE IN MORSE CXJDE. THE MAJORITY OF TIE CLUB ARE MEMBERS OF TIE AERONAUTICIS CLASS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN BECOMING PILOTS. CON IIAND05 THE CIWMANDO CLUB WAS A BRAND NEW CLUB THIS YEAR AND THE FELLONS ENTERED INTO THE ACTIVITIES WITH VIM AND VIGOR. DURING THE WINTER MONTHS TIE 25 NEMBERS WERE TAUGHT WRESTLING TECHNIQUES, AND IN TIE LATE SPRING TPEY TOOK TI-E SALE COURSE WHICH TIE BOYS IN THE AFNY RECEIVE IN THEIR TRAINING. TIE ENTIRE COURSE OF ONE HJNDRED' YARDS WAS MADE UP OF A TWO FOOT HURDLE, AN EIGHT FOOT WALL TO CLIM8 WITHOUT AID, AND AN EIGHT FOOT DITGI TO BROAD JUIP, AND MANY OTI-ER OBSTACLES. M. ,,,.,, 5 -2 ,, -...I fmi'aiQ.? I -ETF' KNITTING TIE KNITTING CLUB WHIG4 HAS EEN ACTIVE IN ITS WORK Fm MANY RELIEF CAUSES, HAS BEEN UNER THE DIRECTION OF TIE FOLLOWIMI 0FFICERSg PRESI- DENT, RUTH PIhNEOg VICE PRESIDENT, JEAN ROESg SECRETARY, DCROTHY CREVELLINGg TREASURER, JOYE GOOMNOM ADVISOR, MISS MARY REILLY. DURING TIE COURSE OF TIE YEAR, TIE GIRLS HAVE BEEN KNITTING FOR SEVERAL CGMNNITY ORCMNI- ZATIONS, TIE RED CROSS, SALVATION AFNY, AND TIE SERVICE MEN. THEY ALSO KNITTED FOR TIEIR OWN PERSONAL USE. THIS CLUB WAS OIE OF P.Y.A.'S MOST OUTSTAIDIIG IN ALL ITS UNDERTAKINGS. II3 ...Q BOYS' SPORTS BASKETBALL I THE PENN YAN BASKETBALL TEAM STARTED THE SEASON WITH A FULL SCHEDULE, BUT BECAUSE OF THE GAS SHORT- AGE, THE TEAM PLAYED ONLY SEVEN OF THE SCHEDULED GMES. TIE SEASON WAS VERY UNSATISFACTORY CCMPAREE WITH LAST YEARIS SHOWING, FOR THEY LOST ALL GAMES WHICH WERE AS FOLLOWS: TWO WITH HALMONDSPORT AND ONE EACH WITH WATERLOO, NEWARK, CANANDAIGUA, SENSCA FALLS AND GENEVA. M. TERPOLILLI, K. OWENS, C. CROSBY, D. WILBUR, L. BRAMAN, D. STORK, B. CHALLIS, D. FINGAR TENNIS ECAUSE OF GAS AND TIRE LIMITATIONS AND TI-E DEPLETION OF MATERIAL CAUSED BY THE WAR, TI-ERE WERE ONLY SIX LEAGUE MATCHES. THESE INCLUDED GAMES AND RETURN GAMES WITH GENEVA, CANANDAIGUA AND MANGIESTER. THE PLAYERS WERE CIO! HABBERFIELD, DICX LORD, JIM SWANSON, BILL CHALLIS, AND GORDON BORST. MR. CHALLIS WAS THE COACH. I BASEBALL Bk TIE BASEBALL TEAM THIS SEASON, OOMPOSED OF NINETEEN MEN, PLAYED TI-E FIRST GME OF TIE SEASON AT PI-ELPS. IN THIS OON-LEAGUE GANE, PENN YAN WAS VICTORIOUS BY A SCORE OF I1 - 3. SUCCEEDIIG GAMES AND RETURN GANES WERE PLAYED WITH WATERLOO, SEIECZ FALLS, GENEVA AND CANANDAIGUA. STANDING: G. DECXER, M. TERPOLILLI, G. MORSE, R. SISSON, L. LEGG, D. STORK, H. YOUNGS, J. SUTTON, R. REILLY SITTING: C. WENTWORTH, C. CROSBY, K. OVENS, D. DAGGETT, B. IDREVAC, D. FINGAR 'PUG' IS SITTING IN TIE ENTER. FOOT BALL I I , , L CAPTAI N, HAROLD YOUNGS THE PENN VAN FOOTAALL TEAM STARTED THE I97-I2 SEASON WITH A VICTORY OVER CANANDAIGUA, A NON-LEAGUE GIWE, WITH A SOORE OF 'I - 6. THIS CLOSE SCXJRE WAS WE PART- LY TO THE GREEN MATERIAL WITH WHICH THE CDACHES HAD TO WORK. THE NEXT NON-LEAGUE GAME WITH GENEVA WAS A CLOSELY FOUGHT CDNTEST UNTIL THE LAST FEW MINUTES, WHEN GEIEVA PUSHED ACROSS TI-E 'WINNING TOUCHDOWN, I- FEATING PENN VAN I2 - 6. AFTER THESE TWO GAMES, THE SQUAD DEVELOPED INTO A FIGHTING MACHINE, USING TRICKY PLAYS, PASSES AND LINE SMASHES, TO DEFEAT THE FOUR LEAGUE TEAMS AND ONE NON-LEAGUE TEAM ICISIVELY. TIE FINAL GAME WITH NEWARK FOUND TIE TEAM UN- BEATABLE. THEY PUSI'ED NEWARK ALL OVER THE FIELD AND SMRED FIVE TOUCHDOWNS TO NEWARK'S OBE. THIS WAS TI-E FIRST TIME THE PENN YAN FOOTBALL TEAM HAD WON TIE AMERICAN LEGION TRCPHY GIVEN BY THE TWO AMERICAN LEGION POSTS. TIROUGHOUT TIE SEASON. THE SCORING WAS EVENLY DISTRIEJTED AMONG TI-E BAIXF I ELD, CAPTAIN HAROLD YOUNSS, DON FINGAR AND AL TERPGJLLI . SHARING THESE HONORS. THE REGJLAR LINE-UP CONSISTED OF: OLEAVELAND, SHERI DAN, CAVAGNARO, MORAVEC, STORK, OGDEN AND BRAMAN, WITH YGJNGS, SPENCER, FIIBAR AND TERPOLILLI IN TI-E BACXFIELD. rx .,,., .i -. 1, ' O , vw' , ,, 'Q - . RON Us J. BREOCENRIDGE, W. RANDALL, R. FOX, N. VAUGPN. R. LOOK, C. LANPHERE, W. MANN ROW 3: R. STRATTON, R. CAREY, R. HYLAND, R. SUTHER- LAND. W. CHALLIS. RON 23 COACH POND, J. SHERIDAN, G. IOKER, W. MORAVEC, G. MGYSE, G. KUBLI, R. HANEN, C. CAVAGNARO. ROW It W. CLEAVELAND, A. TERPOLILLI, G. SPENGR, H. YOUNGS, D. STORK, D. FINGAR, L. BRAMAN. TIE RESULTS OF THE GAMES PLAYED ARE AS FOLLOWS: GENEVA I2 - 6 WATERLOO 6 - as CANANOAIGUA Q - 1 OANSVILLE 5 - CLYDE o - 27 Nawmx 6 - 33 SENECA FALLS 6 - 21 5. ' Z M XO xx QM -A VL cr' 'l 'xg MNH Mxwluil I l Q N x xVM 'X X ln xv YN X Y X XX wxx l W C U , I GIRLS' SPORTS MRS. HOWELL AND MIL- DRED SHORT, CHAIRMAN OF GIRLS' ATHLETICS ALTHOUGH SOIIIEWHAT HINDERED AT THE BEGINNING OF TI-E YEAR BY THE SINGLE SESSIONS, GIRLS' SPORTS GOT OFF TO A YEAR OF GOOD ATTENDANCE, FAIR PLAY AND SPORTSMANSHIP. SPEEDBALL, BUNLING, BASKET- BALL, TENNIS, BASEBALL, AND TRACK WERE THE SPORTS WHICH KEPT THE GIRLS OF P. Y. A. PHYSICALLY FIT THIS YEAR. THE GIRLS' PHYSICAL FITIESS Q.U8 WAS A GREAT ADDITION TO THE SCHOOL. ALTHOUGH MANY ACHING MUSCLES WERE ACQUIRED, THE GIRLS REALLY BECAME MUCH MORE ABLE T0 'TAKE IT . MILDRED SHORT RUN 6: V. VESSA, B. CGASTOCK, F. TURIER, L. WAGER, J. BARIES, D. FULLAGAR, M. J. MILLER, L. WAGER, R. NIELSEN, A. JENSEN, B. STRONG, B. J. LINKOUS, E. ROSE, E. McFETRlDGE, W. JOHNSON. RUN 5: E. JAYIE, M. SHORT, V. MONNIN, M. CURTISS, J. SIMONSEN, K. RIBBLE, C. SVIITHOOVER, B. RIBBLE, R. CLEMENT, I. J. COLE, J. BARDEEN, J. HARTLEY, M. L. LINCOLN. RON I-I-: D. CREVELLING, J. MASFEWSKE, F. DART, S. TRIMBLE, J. RJCXLEY, D. NIELSEN, M. MACKERG-IER, B. ORSLEY, A. BENTLEY, N. NORTI-RUP, E. OLSEN, J. ANDERSEN. RON 3: B. FANOETT, L. ALEXINDER, P. WHITAKER, P. RECTOR, S. OGDEN, D. ELLING, B. TRENCHARD, B. RACE, J. FLYNN, J. MILLS, D. ALLEN, L. OGOEN, J. WENTWMTH, C. VISALLI. RON 23 A. OECXER, R. TUTTLE, J. RECTOR, M. BAILEY, B. WETMORE, M. BASSAGE, B. SINMONS, E. HOOSE, J. SMITH, A. HILLOCK, E. BARRUS, D. BAILEY. RON I: K. WASHBURN, E. HANDLEMAN, V. MREY, M. ORSLEY, C. WOOD. P. HUNARD, B. SKINKLE, D. STILES, J. CRANE, J. WFEELER, H. DINEHART, L. CHRISTENSEN, E. JORGENSEN. x I .f,x .., f CHEERLEADERS I JR.RED TIE JUNIOR 'RED CROSS G.UB. UNDER TIE SUPERVISION OF IRS. PATTESON, HAS NET EVERY EONESDAY DURING TIE FOURTH PERIOD. IT OONSISTS OF FIFTEEN GIRLS FRGA SENIOR HIGH. WHILE ATTENDING THE MEETINGS. TI-EY MAE AFGHANS, LAP ROSES, BEDROOM SLIPPERS, UTILITY BAGS AND MANY OTI-ER THINGS WHICH ARE DIS- TRIHJTED TO IDSPITALS THROUGHOUT TI-E UNITED STATES. FOR THE MEN. IN SERVICE. TO FILL THE QJOTA ASSIGNED, THE HONIEMAKING, SEWING AND WOODWORKING CLASSES HAVE SERVED ALONG WITH Tl-E REO CROSS. rms YEARIS succsssruu. eaoup or Flve arsen- LEADERS wAs oowoszo or .Jem FLYNN, wastes, .Jsmrc MILLS, smmsv ocosn, asrrv oRsLzv, mrsv Howmn, mo me Nncxsncaen. 11-Ev wane CHOSEN r-'Rom A cnouw or mem wHo mmlcao STEADILY ron Two wsexs. AT evsnv FOOTBALL AND aAsKereAu. cms mls sqm: Lao TI-E ononos IN CI-SING PENN VAN TO vncfonv. THEY wwe ooo: A sPl.sNo1o Joe, AND GRTAINLY cassava nc scnoous rcmrreu THANKS. W , CI-'EERMASTER JOAN FLYNN CROSS STANDING! A HJLLOCX, J. MASIEWSKE, 8. MUDERMOTT, S. CMPBELL, C. TRAVIS. M. IRR, B. FREID, J. ROESE G. JAIES, V. FLYNI SITTING: IRS. PATTESUI, C. JCRGENSEN, L. IDRIOH, E. LEE. N. NEWBY, M. WATERS, A. MeDERFE II7 QS . K' s I f 4 K ., ,- 33 3' ......,.,, 9 f. 2' V ' 5 Wig' 1 ii, X I . d ,J 5. Q-,Q Avy H ns Q, 1 e-V MFL' oL1','Q-!Br,.v'u Q I s ni If I xi alia if nifi- H3 i x , Q K- if n W f' r JW. M , I . nv jg Q- ' A M 'S ,yi 1 ' i O, .: ,V 13 5,31 4 i mf ,, , N 3 , 1, , av 7 if 4 ,, . . ,,,.-X ,,.w TW Mi' W, I. A ,hw gf Q 1 in V. wvibv 111.5544 -- 53? . a 3. v ' ! -5 W, N . v ' 7 fluff'-L Yi :Q Ks, at 9 as 5 4 V95 e7.e5 ' f -,. .,, -535 .,,f 9 2 I K Q gg , jr' Q T - 'Q 5. V C 1 Q3 5 i 'K z Q v -v Y all Rf 5-, ea I 'W SAW x ,fxw , V , ,gp in f Q Q f1 4' 13z: X. 'H 1 :ix e ' 6 . ,: , Q IAIVV N 21' is I , .gkav Q . f. ,il J.. I I ' -ff' .Y. f f,,f ,f 1-.I he QT mid' gin A 5, eV WJ' r 1 It H If 'f'f5'f?' ,v 9 - ..M.,f,, , Q54-.Mwvw ,awe ,v ii i I - ,iffiwf A ' , L 'fyyj'-re?'ff. A 1 , T! , L' si' Kyiv-xff. A IM. I ,3 Q. , 11 9, - , .Q f , 3, 1.- I 41 ,ffi.,5' 1 ' , wif-. -'I . w 2 3 1 i A E Mg 15 G wg 35,2 'w f .. .3152 Qi 4 il , 'jf ff' ' f 5 A an 2' '1 ' ia. W, 5 . , t J ,H W . 1 K ,gb 1. ,,- v If 'Lf w15'9Y2fi!Mf,y,v ,f I ' ,, 1 QW Alf' Z nam Tl-ll CLASS OF i943 APPRCCJATIZ5 Tl-IES! ADS co CGRAN Co N 5 LDELOIQQACQJ ANC b Nldf V MP Alllands f lv S' b ld 95 9 d 9 and of Perm Yan mf 'Qj,,.if RAPALEE DRUG C0 g, WM-KFRBN-T smbllsned Ln ' Umbff 'V' gEg?C?lNCS X., J Roof ng S d ng roam ARTICLES PHONE 200 PNNYANDIS BANK f df 'nl A of Penn Yan ESm '5hed .889 PLATMAN WALLACE 81 BOYD me BUY BONDS MEMS L STUDIO l3OP'l2LnSl 48 X f H School clay fr end ship A bound Closer by an exchange of phologroplws. R . 1 Why u c e rugs urnliure from i 0-HA, C' OYBS And mall U3 Ln A order houses when we 5 eria , -o' W5 sell oo ru 5 furn- ilure hem. . 5-fa CUT RATE gz-i533 M1 f 15,556 ' i0 E f P- - .. r Lllwork , f ' l87l 1 ' 7 .- ' E A 900 ce 0 SSO or as foofl and quick Servl e 'l . ,X -v Phone- I . .N K! . sf l In 6? f 9 1 0 , i O L web ers 5 re . A Qualsly M' 'a X low prLCE X 52 THE KEUKA coNPLmENTs RESTAURANT of YAN PENN 'Z '5 ZaiiJL'c. IW' DEN Tlsrs ' SPECIALTY ......--..-- Q, Q I HOTEL BIRKETT MILLS BEN HAM Lunches Dinners 216 Cam kincIS of 'ECQCI FREEMAN SHAY on co as Ii 5cHooL 525 Each 3 St Gum blcai' Ga ago Your Llfes Fuiurz aT II yo ff IWPQ R In 'I s ROCHESTER BUSINESS INSTITUTE ASSOCIBTC I1 mb Am as m C, II QC l7Z Cllnfon AVC So Rocheste NY KE U KA COLLEGE KEUNA PARK, NY 4lhJ Zyl-u' COUI'3l8 'I' dw, P FRED ROESE X, JEXVELER fhf Q Wfh NAC 5 Soda: 5 nclaas Cok 5 Prcpal-Ing women -for Service In Teach- . Ing, secrciarial I -. work, Chu-isiiarn , I If -- --- Ia,-acla,r-ship, Jirldics Good Scrvict, 5 U ,work Nsvam Phone. ' Bus' G Q -I QT U I Lu r n S r Service. an c - a I, l N5 Wh wi u do for Income afiu- peace 6'-Giffs a lang-RK COMICS? Ask any go-udunfc. T-Imy Know Lon .mt Grutn A he Successful careers, ever-growing UQ in ' a C 'GS SBIAI-'les and exccuiivz Icadeo--ai 0 'fo 'I'I'loSz WIWQ it-Q 115500158 Trained and capable. WI-i c fav- End' I on Business-Training courses. Lev 15' 5 u . . . . . U c er, rrcnn A ocaahon of Ju or o o. s :fx Q, ' ' ' r: ' 53 WELL WISH ERS TILTONIS BOOK SI-IOP 1 'IGood luck MVALTER L. I-IURRIN 5 Esso Servicenfer JOLLEY CI-IEVROLET INC. DECKERVIAN BROS. Z Books and siafionery BOOTES -YOUR FLORIST I vFloWers and service +I-me besfu JEWETT VIOTORS CONKLIN DRY CLEANERS COLE'S FURNITURE STORE LEO'S SANDWICI-I SI-IOI7 2 I-Icfrdogs and Iwamburyers BORDWELL DRUG STORE IIOLLOWQLL AND was I-IARDWARE smm: I-IC'BAN'S MARKET: IVIea+S and groceries J. E. IDENNEY CO. INC, 1 RH' pays +0 shop 5+ Pennefsu J- 5 5-I0-254 Slrore W.T. GRANT CO. PAIRPAS FLORAL SHOP: Flowers for every occas rr DONALDSON-I-IESS AND CO. ALLISON AND DANIELS TI-IE COIVIIVIODOREI RESTAURANT WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATION CHARLES I-I. BEAUIVIONT3 Insurance I-IAQQERI-IEI.D'5 VI ARKETr Elm S1reeT PICKETT'S GRO-CERY JOI-IN J. IVICGOVERN LOMVN DRY GOODS CO. INC. : For wearing apparel OLE DALLESEN ISI-IERIDAN AND I-IYLAND COOl7ER'S IVIARKET FIERO AND NONNIN 8 CompIG'I'G Ilna. of Infnyno. TI'-cada 511 WE LL WISI-I ERS con? I-IE I-IOhe5'I' made Shoes GRADY: Jewellers and opTome+riSI3 BASSAGE PRINT SI-IOP! Prirdinvg and engraving MALL ORY - GELDE R2 Insurance I-IENRY E. CAREY: COAT and mason'S Supplies ARIVISTRONG AUTO PARTS 1 All Kinds of SJIASS KEUKA DRY CLEANERS AND DYERS DAVID IYIILLER AGENCY: IOO years of inlsuvance service PENN YAN AUTO PARTS CompIama,n1s of PENN YAN ACADEMY .STUDENT A55'n J.D. IYIOOREI COAL CO. rmmos or Tu-In cuss om: I7ITZXVATER'5 I-IARDXVAPE CI-IARI.EY,5 TEXACO STATION COmpIImenT5-WESLEY RAPALEEIS AUTO PARTS LORD BROTHERS CLARENCE R. SIYIITI-I INC. I-lYATT'S DRESS Sl-IOP TUNNEY'S BEAUTY SI-IOP An. Jcmsm, DRY CLEANER SI-IADDOCK'5 SI-IOE STORE LANEIS DRUG STORE WAGNER I-IOTEL LEWIS A. GRAEEY I-IOVIER C. PELTON BUSI-I'S IVIUSIC STORE PENN YAN SI-IOPPING GUIDE RUTI-I IYIOTOR EXPRESS I-ILE. C I-I.IVI. WILKINS ST. BARBER SLIOP ELM GYEPCS IYIEAT IYIARKET LYNCH-ROBERTSON PENN YAN CREANERY CLE SUPPLY CI R ANNA'5 BEAUTY SHOP QE-R ART SLIOP EN'S BEAUTY SI-IOP NIL I-IEL TI-IE GIFT SLIOP MODERN SI-IOE REPAIR PALLAS SWEET SI-IOP PROUTY'5 DRUG STORE SEWARD5 CANDY SI-IOP I-I.P, I-IANSEN BAKER AND STARR EAIDICOTT AND JOI-INSON I-IERNEY'5 GARAGE 55 . -Y ' Winn .. QU . 4 , r ,M 1 , 1 T. 1, y v v .. . ,lux F, I . Y.-, if I . :x fu. . P ,L .,-. in'- .n 1' if E - 'JJJJP 4 ,- 1 ' 1 5 ,' I. j -1 ,1 1 MI A , ,. I ' fl' 1511 HE' . ' F, I - i 'f '5,:I3.J.FfQ , . . , 1 .- ' ' .'5f.lf ,il-V I, i I .. 1 ff: ,1,,i'J'!'.l. I 1:3 'ei . '? ' , .' -'N ' H n li.-if -in .T I . 4. I A. N .Qt-5,23-l',1..'.5x , --1 4 ' u 'P ?..4'f ', '. A M ,. ' I E , .. . - I W. , . - I ' , :fl . -fx 1 .I.- l 4-,, mi ' , I ,. .1 - -1 vi.. I X P -., - J ' W . . N. . W , T -qs , 'gf Qu-N A ' 1, ' X NJ ,,, I gi- if fy n '- L .er , . r ' TI 'C xi? ,Q ,Q -I-A :vb 57 .ri I S Qwwyfmfxwf I I' 'I A K ' I 1-.1 IH. ,n, L .. mls U4 af: V, n-1-. 1-1 w n 11A.- ' W . 1 1 H111 A , 1 . '.. V lfa ,F . -1. - ,AF J . v J r-u', 1 A .'E4'.'l-' ,A . V ' .' .-, FM, 1 , -.'o I i -, 1 1 -v.rl .A' L ,n fl ,I . - 'r, ,,-4 A X ' D' , I v .'z . v 3 I , rn 4 -5 qQ5 yn , ,: x ': '1 ,. sw' M 'vvg K n HE A my U. 2' 44 Qi I, .1 1. Hx.: , n! H I L, v. W' .g : - .f--.3'f.J1. 'Z Y 'A y fn,-fl-rv , - X , v I , I 4 mu' .ff ' L v xr , ff ff gffiz' J F 'S FH ,yi N .P V . arg 1 . :Fo ' n r-gif, Xiu: h5 Afi?fC f T ,- Y 'nl 5,-rfgllkfl YV e..., yf' L Jff,. A xi Q, 2311 Q Tn, -X , w-' at 1 v N- dlwqsg 'gym 'Ulf-L 'sLf?+'Q 4-,375 X' 1 'J 5' f-:QQ Aj,-,hiV'!2f , Q:-gifgbgp U' H w ' Y ly-E ' 5 ff Y XJUJ gf 5 A 4 yr 'S il' R ,J fx I-1 A1-' fm? ' . , , fn .,., ,i 1!Jv V: ,A L .44 ' MR M ' ' ,fs 9 .x ,g,4i,1,Ev4En-'fb . 1--'JT-t?1g 4'-:viva f ri: 'X Jjf, gr ,'j--,,wf'- .'., x 01, Hz? xumln qqgy X Q?-' Qifwfzf fafffz, 4-fflf. 7 W3 7' f ,J vf iz A if-3271414 :5-L'-33 '95 A K ,MF-2 -If V, Q?- , 323 ffm 2 5' my-,lf-b, A L. s za, i X? 1 xl L KS AJ JE! lg an -1' A 1 -5 ,xiii nf- fix? fa- . 'jf ,fl rfw I Al ' TW 1 91 Ev M5-' Q L w 1 1 yy ' f ji' F3 mf 2 , iii ffvv, L' fr. , 'QIA-,' f j Q1Hj 'fA, I,-'??s1 Kaya V .2 Y, , ' LIN . . ,, ,fz vi L N45 ,, xx X sl ',11,..,..T W JW. -AW ur g C A 15 IQ4 !Z ':':i P, .' .,' Lili -.e ' n a qi ,WL 'w -q-an ' 3 FDR EWORD ,.,.,,..,.f, - , ww W- MM-Q-w.v....,,..,........, -Q-Q. me semon cuss IN urs vzm aoox Pnssenrs THE mc:-I Llcms or me LIFE mo mfs or THE uuoeasmwnrss or-' Pam vm Acwemv IN rv-us vw 0Fl91l3. IT IS mf: smcens Hops or me surf THAT an vems T0 some urs mass wn.L same ww Mmonlss or sooo memos mo sooo onvs ro Au. wno wwe HAD A Pm an oun soma. um. i Oban-vi


Suggestions in the Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) collection:

Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Penn Yann Academy - Key Yearbook (Penn Yan, NY) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951


Searching for more yearbooks in New York?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online New York yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.