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Page 29 text:
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($ur principal, Xule JUL JJfolben As a student body and especially the Senior Class, we wish to express in this manner our deepest appreciation of Mr. L. W. Holden, his aid and interest in our behalf during our four years of High School. Mr. Holden was graduated from Wellsville High School and received his secondary training from Valparaiso University and is at present completing graduate work at the University of Rochester summer school which was started at Penn State. His teaching experience has been wide and varied. After leaving Valparaiso, Mr. Holden taught in De-Veaux College at Niagara Falls as head of the English Department, leaving there to go to Oak B'uff at Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts. As supervising principle at Leggett High School in Edgecomb County, North Carolina, he met with great success before entering the Port Allegany High School as head of the English department. His election to the prin-cipalship of P. A. H. S. came as a reward gained in the more subordinate position. Mr. Holden has also been very much interested in dramatics and writing as an avocation to his English work. His efficient directorship of the pageant during the Port Allegany Centennial in 1916 was positive proof of his undoubted talent in this line. We, the students, have enjoyed our association with Mr. Holden and it is with regret coupled with every wish for his continued success in his broader field of activity, that we bid him farewell and Godspeed.
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Page 28 text:
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SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADES First Row, left to right—Richard Klein, David St.Clair, Menfred Tenglund, )ohn Carter, Ernest Edgreen, Robert L man, Harold Taylor, Donald Michel-itsch,, JaneColcord, Wilma Fessenden, Cecelia Babola, Bernice Causer, Madeline Razey, Dorothy Hopper, Elaine Kanally, Pauline Robbins, Francis Cutting, Mary Barnett, Mary Agnes Boudon, Dorothy Doll, Kenneth Tauscher, Wayne Johnson, Second Row—John Bryan, Genevieve Acker, Alvin Barber, Irma C a vford, Philip McDowell, Emory Johnson, Helen Chandler, Emogene Goding, Luella Nolan, Mary Alice Manning, Anthanetta Tronetti, Martha Long, Phyllis Holcomb, Alice Nelson, Margaret Meacham, Winifred Simpier. Betty Carlson, Mary Ann Teater, Myra Nystrom, Ruby Lincoln, Victor Wagner, Miss Fuller. Third Row —Miss Mullin, Marguerite Hardes, Bernice Claflin, Eola Meeker, Helen Kulp, Tearl Lumley, Mary Redington, Anna Mae Haskins, Ada Hardes, Marie Carlson, Alberta Anderson, Dons Fitzsimmons, Wanda Vanocker, Jessie Stewart, June Redington, Nancy Catlin, Patricia Eley, Gladys Manning, Stella Hodas, Loletta Nelson, Stella Zlobec, Lester Thomas, Mary Smith, Jane Crosby, Chester Scherer, John Gochee, Miss Fuller. Back Row—Chester Dolo-way, Gordon Perm, Theodore Butler, Jesse Hurd, Adrian Boudon, Charles Nunn, Zera Cox, Roland Sherwood, William Byon, Albert Weimer, Howard Lo-b »ugh, Max Hoffower, Rudolph Anderson, Guy Meacham, James Shevak, Ervin Summerson, Alvin Anderson, Lowell Hardes, John Bayline, Elwin Nordstrom, Douglas Goodrich, James Colegrove, Roy Johnson.
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Page 30 text:
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abr Siurr Cttij FOOTBALL TEAM First Row—Coach Schlosser, Thomas Morey, William Becker, George Keagle, James Georgetson Captain, Hugh Freer, Cecil Gamble, Clifford Doloway, Melvin Tenglund Mgr. Second Row—George Case, Ralph Ostrander, Henry Shevak, Donald Smith, Martin Painter, Victor Klein, Philip Teater. Third Row—Joseph Brown, William Linnan, Walter Edgreen, Maynard Painter, Philip Johnson, Maynard Barnett, Harry Redington. Fourth Row Kenneth Kearne, Robert Grimes, Jack Holden, Gail Goodrich, Joseph Connolly, Philip Carlson. ucressful jFmitball Port Allegany High School again this year thanks the business men for their efforts in making this season of '29. such a financial and athletic success. We know that without their support. Port’s reputation as a football town would be a myth of long ago, but as it is, Port’s reputation has increased each year. We find, that games which are played on a distant field are attended by Port fans which far outnumber the enthusiasts of other towns. Coach Leo T. Schlosser, started his second football season at Port High, by sending out the call for football candidates. About thirty-five responded for the opening of the season, but as the practices progressed, there were, by the end of the season, slightly more than two full teams. The first few days were devoted in learning the fundamentals, signals and plays of football. After this preliminary all new men were ready to try their best to fill in the positions left vacant by the team of 1928. The line, medium in weight, was composed of such men as: Painter, Brown, Freer. Keagle, Case, Smith. Becker. Doloway. Connolly, and Edgreen. The backfield was com-
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