Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA)

 - Class of 1942

Page 1 of 100

 

Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 100 of the 1942 volume:

Quincy High School Bradford Library Property of ft i V U. S. S. QUINCY GOLDEN ROD ANNUAL ☆ ☆ QUINCY HIGH SCHOOL QUINCY, MASSACHUSETTS 2 dication To these and all other former Quincy High School students, the physical evidence of our challenge, we sincerely dedicate our GOLDEN ROD ANNUAL. Army Richard Walsh, ’41 George H. Peachey, '39 Edward Kroesser, ’39 Roy Hutchins, 39 Eddie Dunn, ’36 Charles Roberts, '39 Richard DeBruyn, ’38 Navy Robert Breen, ‘41 Harold Walton, ‘41 Louis White, ‘41 Robert Gumpright, ‘41 Ellsworth Trowsdale, ‘40 Marshall Wilbur, ‘38 Walter Vincent, ‘38 (Annapolis graduate) Charles Winslow, '39 Robert Dobbyn, ‘38 Marinos George White, ‘41 Alexander Nicholson, ‘40 George Page, '39 Air Corps Richard Fleisher, ‘37 (Kelly Field) John Rigby, ‘37 (Ponsacola) Steve Freel, ‘36 (R. C. A. F.) Roy Hutchins, ‘39 John Bates, ‘38 Albert Shannon, ‘38 Richard Fee, ‘37 William Butt, ‘37 Coast Guard John Duggan, ‘37 a une, 1942 Editor-in-Chiel..................................................GEORGE MacDONALD Literary............................MAY STEVENS. GEORGE MOULTON Features.........SHIRLEY BOTKIN. GEORGE SCRIMSHAW. GEORGE WEST Activities SELMA BRICK. ETHEL TOLCHINSKY, ROBERT TONG Girls' Sports........................................MARJORIE VINCENT Boys' Sports........................DANIEL MacLEOD. WAYNE MARTIN Alumni.....................................PHYLLIS MUIR, GLORIA PEACHEY Art...................................FRANCES BURNS, RONALD CHRISTENSEN Senior Pictures.........................HILMA KARHU, FLORENCE LIBERTINE Secretaries..................................ALICE KELLY, BLANCHE TOBEY Business Manager...........................................JAMES PAPILE Assistant...............................................ROBERT NANKIN Advertising Manager................................................JOHN PANEPINTO Assistants...............................BERNARD MATTSON, DONALD SPARGO Circulation Manager........................................JOHN ORTIZ ( PETER BARONE. WALTER McKINNON, Assistants..................... [ JOSEPH PALUMBO. ROY TANGERLINI Publicity Manager....................................CHARLES PETERSON Assistants................................PETER CONDOS. WILLIAM MARIANO FACULTY ADVISERS MARIE E. POLAND BERTHA E. NEAD RUTH M. GILES CATHERINE L WALSH JOY L. NEVENS LESLIE C. MILLARD Then — conquer we must. When our cause it is just. And this be our motto: 'In God is our trust'!” Slar-S pan g ed Han iter, Francis Scott Key. FRT SIDENT o ECRETARY TREASURER SINFOROSA ACEBO 34 Grossman Street Archery. I. 2: Thalia Club, 2. 3: Ncwswriters. I, 2: Golf. 2. 3: Lit- erary Club. 3: Tennis. I. 2, 3: Page and Stage Club. 3: Secre- tary. 3. JEAN AHEARN 146 Stoughton Street Glee Club, I; Girls' Club. 2: Tennis. 2. SOOREN ALEMIAN 98 Willard Street Wrestling, 3, FRED ALEXANDER 26 Lawronco Street Indoor Track. I: Wrestling, I. 2. 3: Homeroom Representative, 3. ALVAR ANDERSON 91 Dysart Street Homeroom Representative. I: Golden Rod Business Staff. 3: Golden Rod Home Room Agent. 3. PETER ANTONELLIS 49 Hayden Street SALLY ARTHUR 93 Cedar Street Archery. I: Tennis. I. 2. 3: Riding. I: Sailing. 2: Traffic. 3; Girls' Club. 3: Golf. 2. 3: Thalia Club. 3: Lit- orary Club. 3: Golden Rod Agent. 2. 3: Page and Stage Club. 3. WILRENE ASH 57 Rugglcs Stroot Tenn s. I. 2, 3: Badminton. I, 2. 3: Basketball. I. 2. 3: Bowling. 3: Archery. I. 2: Ping Pong. I, ?: Rifle 3: Choral Spooking, I, ?: Page and Stoge. 2. 3: Thalia Club. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Debating Club. I, 3: Secretary. 2. WILLIAM AUSTIN 220 Kendrick Avenue Intramural Basketball. RAYMOND BABCOCK 22 Glynn Terrace JOYCE BAILEY 40 Franklin Street Basketball. I; Bowling. 3: Archory, I; Girls' Club. 2. 3; Nominating Committee. I: Page and Stage. 3. SALLY BAKER 83 Rockland Street Girls’ Club. 2; Swimming, 3; Bowl- ing. 3. FRANCES BALDI 14 Sixth Avenue Archory. !; Girls' Club. 2. PETER BARONE 70 Trafford Streot Golden Rod Staff. 3. RAYMOND L. BARRIE 15 Greenview Street Rifle Club. I. 2; Traffic, 3. JENNIE BARSELLA 215 Centre Street Swimming. 3; Archery, 2, 3: Bas- ketball, I. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3; Bowling, 3. FRANCIS BAVIN 592 South Street Hockey. I. 2. 3: Soccer, I; Base- ball. I. 3: Wrestling. I. CLAIRE BEEMAN 114 Greene Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tennis. 3: Basket- ball. 2. 3: Bowling, 2. 3: Thalio Club. 2- P ng Pong. 3. EVELYN BENEDETTI 187 Liberty Street Basketball. 3: Girls' Club. 2. GENA J. BENEDINI 72 Hughes Street Girls' Club, 2. 3: Bowling. 3: Homeroom Representative, 2: Traffic. 3. CHRISTINE BERARDINELLI 85 Garfield Street VIRGINIA BERGERON 7 Marsh Street Archery. I; Girls' Ciub. 3. JFAN BERGREN 235 Whitwell Street Basketball. I. 2: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tennis, 2. 3: Archory. I. ETHEL BERNSTEIN 20 James Street Debating Club. I: G rls Club. 2. 3: Writing Club. 2: Thalia. 2. 3: Tennis. 3: Newswriters' Club, I. 2. IDA BERTOCCHI 15 Amos Street Basketball. I. 2. 3: Tennis, 2. 3: Ping Pong. I: Badminton. I: Girls' Club. 2: Traffic. 3; Thal a, 3; Bowl- ing. 3: Class Day Committoo, 3: Golden Rod. 3: Nominating Com- mittee. 2. CHARLOTTE BICKFORD 71 Cranch Street Tennis. 3. LENA BINI 116 Intervale Street Girls' Club. 2. WALTER BIRD 61 Warren Avenue Golden Rod Agent. 2: Tennis. 2. 3: Hi-Y. 3. NATALIE BIZZOZERO 61 Brook Road Extension Tonnis. 2. LEONA BONOME 58 Kent Street Basketball, I, 2. 3: Pin9 Pong. I: Badminton. I; Tenn's. 2: Bowling, 3: Drum Majorette. 3: Golden Rod. 3: Class Day. 3. MARGARET BONOME 58 Kent Street Tonnis, 2. HENRY BOSWORTH 91 Chubb'ick Street Nominj.ing Committee. I : Q-Hi News, •: Sports Editor. 2: Home- room Reprosontaiive, 2. SHIRLEY BOTKIN 284 Water Street Newswriters' Club. I: Tonnis. I: Archery. I. 2: Ping Pong. I; Bad- minton. I; Gris' Club. 2. 3: Thalia Club. 2: Treasurer, 3: Bowling. 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3. BRENDA BOWEN 10 Beebe Road Girls' Club. 2: Archery. 2: Ton- nis. 2. 3: Bowling. 2. 3: Q-Hi News Editorial Staff, 3. NAN BRADBURY 58 Shodd Streot Girls' Club. 2: Traffic, 3: Nominat- ing Committee. 2; Ping Pong. 3: Christmas Program. 2: Galla Spring Concort, 2: Thalia Club, program committee. 3: Tennis. 3. MIRIAM BRAGGE 60 Winter Street Girls' Club. 2: Basketball. 3: Traffic. 3: Badminton, 3. SELMA BRICK 124 Chubbuck Street Debating. I. 2. 3: Vice-President. I; President. 2: Thalia. 2, 3: Vice- Prosidont. 2: President. 3: Pago and Stage. 2. 3: Vorso-Speaking Choir. I. 2: Glee Club. I: Q-Hi News. 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3: Girls Club. 2: Basketball. I. 2. 3: Png Pong. I: Badminton. I, 2: Holy City. I: Mass, and N. E. Music Festivals. I: Home Room Representative. 2. MARGARET BRIDGES 125 Lincoln Avonue Science Club, I. 2. 3: Archery I 2. 3: Bowling. 2. 3: Rifle Club. 2. 3: Girls' Club, 3: Tennis. 3. MARTIN BRIDS 55 Broadway KENNETH BROWN 5 Ford Street Basoball. I. 2: Hi-Y. 3. WILDA BROWN 3 Rugglc Stroct Girls' Club. 2. 3: Rifle Club. Bowling Club: Basketball. I: Arch- ery. I. 2. IAN BUCHANAN 89 Goddard Street Track. I. 2. 3: Football. 2: Basket- ball. I, 3: Hi-Y. 3: Traffic Squad. 3. VINCENT A. BUCKLEY 64 Buckley Street ELEANOR BULLOCK 12 Summit Avenue Archory. I; Science Club. 2: Ten- nis. 2: Spring Concert. 2: Rifle Club. 3. HELEN BURFITT 30 Brooks Avenue CLAIRE BURKE 31 Berkeley Street Bowling. I; Girls' Club. 2: Homo Room Rcprcscntalivc. I; Baskot- ball. I: Tennis. I: Nominating Committee. I. MARIE BURKE 85 Edison Park WILLIAM BURNHAM 226 Evcrott Street Baseball. I. 2, 3. FRANCES BURNS 98 South Street Basketball. I; Cheerleader. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Riding Club. I. 3: Traffic Squad, 3: Tri-Hi Y. 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3: Bowling. I. 2. 3: Committee Chairman. 3. JANE BUSSELL 44 Ridgeway Street Basketball. I: Girls' Club. 2. 3; Tri-Hi-Y. 3: Q-Hi News. 2. 3: Stu- dent Council. 2: Traffic. 3: Business Staff Hi-News. 2: Business Staff Golden Rod. 2. JEAN BUSSELL 44 Ridgeway Street Basketball. I: Girls’ Club. 2. 3: Tri-Hi-Y. 3: Student Council. 2; Business Staff Hi-News. 2: Golden Rod Agent. 2: Traffic. 3. BARBARA BYRNE 255 Copeland Street Girls’ Club. 2. 3: Tennis. 3: Swim- ming. 3. MILDRED CAMPBELL 21 Overlook Road Bowling. I; Girls' Club, 3. IDA CAMPITELLI 143 Quincy Street Basketball. I: Library Staff. 2; Archery. 2. MARGARET CANTELLI 45 Hall Place Archery. I: G'rls’ Club. 2. MARGARET CAPIFERRI 329 Southern Artery Girls' Club. 3: Science Club. 2. 3 VERA CAPOBIANCHI 109 Springfield Street Girls' Club. 3. LILLIAN CAPOBIANCO 11 Branch Street Archerv. 1.3: Swimminq. 3: News- writers'. ?: Librory Staff. 2: Girls' Club. 2. 3. JOSEPHINE CARELLA 353 Franklin Street Archery I. ELEANORA CARIGLIO 347 Centre Street Glee Club. I. 2, 3: Swimming. 3; Girls' Club. 2: Christmas Concerts, I, 2. 3: Stato and N. E. Festival. I. 2. GLORIA CHIAVAROLI 32 Barry Street Tri-Hi-Y. 3: Orchestra I: Q-Hi- Hesh. I: Panorama of Q. 2: Ten- nis, I; Bowling. I. 2. WILLIAM CHILDS 102 Narragansctt Road Baseball. 1.2: Hi-Y. 2. 3: Traffic . : Rifle Club. I. RONALD CHRISTENSEN 87 Lenox Street Q-Hi Nows. I. 2. 3: Tennis. I 2: Goldon Rod Staff. 3. EDWARD CHRISTIE 1419 Quincy Shore Boulevard DORA CEDRONE 54 Rodman Street Girls’ Club. 2. DANIEL CERRO 16 Kidder Street Pago and Stage Club. 3. EDNA CLARK 16? Marlboro Street Archery. 2: Bowling. 3: Traffic, 3; Girls' Club. 2. 3: Q Hi News. I. 2: Tri-Hi-Y. 2. 3: Pago and Stogc. 3: Home Room Representative. 2- Golden Rod Agent, I: Spring Concert. 2: Tennis. 3. MARY ELIZABETH CLARK 32 Grccnleaf Street Archery. I; Traffic. 3: Girls' Club. 3: Tennis. 3: Verso Choir. I, 2: Assistant Editor of Q-Hi News. 3: Page and Stage. 2: V ce-Prosidcnt 3: President; Tholia Club, 3: Or- chestra. I. 2. 3: Ensemble. I, 2. RICHARD K. CLARKE M Noanot Street Football. I: Homo Room Roprc sontative. 3. ARTHUR CLEMENS 45 Samoset Avcnuo Rifle Club. I. 2. FRANK A. CLERICUZIO 30 Pearl Street Traffic. 2. 3. EVELYN CMELIK 60 Robertson Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tennis. I; Swim- ming. ?: Archery. 3: Traffic. 3. JOSEPHINE COLETTI 190 Foderal Avonue Nominating Committee 2; Girls' Club. 2. BEATRICE COLLETTI 190 Federal Avenue Basketball. 3; Bowling. 3. NORMAN COLLIER 10 Douse Road Sailing Club. 2: Wrestling. 3. MARY COLLIGAN 418 Sea Street Boskotball. I: Field Hockey. I. NATALIE COMINS 439 Newport Avenue Tri-Hi-Y. 2. 3: Girls' Club. I. 2. 3: Archery. I. 2. 3: Tennis. I, 2, 3: Riding Club. 3: Home Room Rep- resentative, I. MARGERY E. COMIS 10 Ernest Avenue Glee Club. 2: Golden Rod Agent. 2: Q-Hi News Agent. 3: Band Leader. 3: Girls' Club. 3: Chapel Choir. 3: State Mus’c Festival. 2. 3: Spring Concert. 2: Christmas Concert. 2: Newswritors' 2. PETER CONDOS 59 Merrymount Road Hockey. I. 2, 3: Traffic, 3: Golden Rod Business Staff. 3: Intramural Basketball. 3. GRACE CONNOLLY 38 Pilgrim Road Tennis. I: Archery. I. 2. 3: Basket- ball I: Swimming 2. 3: Bowling. 2. 3. VIRGINIA CONNELLY 664 Adams Street Basketball. I: Archory. 2; Field Hockey. I. ANTHONY CORDONE 32 Newcomb Street Moving Picture Operator. I, 2. ANDREW COSTA 162 Federal Avenuo Baseball, I. 2. 3: Student Coun- c I. I: Basketball Managor, I: Band. I. 2. DOROTHY COSTA 26 Pearl Street Swimming. I: Bowling. 3: 8askot- bell. 2; Archcry. 3. JEAN COTTER 32 Hilda Street Tenn's. 2: Rifle Club. 2: Traffic. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Bowling. 3. CHARLES C. CREEDON 66 Broadway Orchestra. I, 2. 3: Chapel Choir. I. 2. 3: State Music Festival. 2. 3: Spring Concerts. 2. 3. RUTHE H. CRICHTON 330 Belmont Streot Tennis. I. 2, 3: Archery. 2. 3: Sc:ence Club. 2: Bowling. 3. RUTH ANN CRONIN 138 Madison Avenue Girls' Club. 2. NORMA CROOKER 55 Grafton Street Basketball. 3. MARY CROWLEY 239 Whitwell Street Tennis. I; Girls' Club. 2: Swim- ming. 3. GEORGE CURRY 1385 Quincy Shore Boulevard Rifle Team. 2, 3: Sailing Team. 2: Sailing Club. 2: Glee Club. 3; Christmas Concert, 3: Spring Con- cert, 3. DONALD L. CUTLER 75 Glendale Road Hi-Y. 2. 3: Page and Stage, 2 3: Cheerleader. 2. 3; Panorama of Q. 2: Q-Hi Hash. I: Intramural Bas- ketball. 3: Spring Concert. 2: Newswriters. I. RICHARD E. CUTLER 75 Glendale Road Page and Stage. 2. 3: Wr ting Club. 2: Glee Club. I: Assistant Editor Q-Hi News. 3: Q-Hi News Agent. I; Intramural Basketball. 3: Spring Concert. 2: Newswriters. I. SIDNEY CUTLER 15 Roberts Street Nowswriters. I: Scionco Club. 2: Hi-Y Club. 3: Q-Hi News District Manager. 3: Intramural Basket- ball. 3. BARBARA DAIGLE 43 Waban Road Nominating Comm'ttee. I. 2: Archery I, 2. 3: Treasurer. 3: Ton nis. I. 2: Tri-Hi-Y. 2. 3: Girls' Club 2, 3: Committee Chairman, 3: Q-Hi News Staff. 2: Thalia Club 3: Traffic. 3. MARTIN DALEY 17 Kidder Street Traffic. 3: Baseball. I. 2. 3. JEAN DAVEY 273 Water Street Basketball. I. 2: Tennis, I: Traffic 3: Girls' Club, 2. 3: Ping Pong. I. 2. MARGARET DAVIDSON 47 Grafton Street Basketball, 3: Bowl ng, 3. JOSEPHINE DAVIS 1138 Sea Street Orchestra, I. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: N. E. Music Festival. I: Spring Concert. I. 2: Christmas Program. 3: Knitting Club. 3. ANNETTE DIBONA 46 Hughes Street Basketball. I: Badminton. 2: Science Club. I; Girls' Club. 3: Archery 2. ELIA DIBONA 80 Trafford Street Tennis. 2. 3: Archory, 2. BIAGIO DEMAGGIO 72 Dayton Street MARION DEMPSEY 49 Winthrop Street Girls' Club. 3: Archery. 3: Bad- minton. 2. NORMA DEVEAU 43 Baxter Avenue Bowling. 3: Girls' Club. 3: Home Room Representative. 3: Traffic. 3. PAT DEWITT 105 Greene Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Traffic. 3: News- writers. 2. FRANCES DIANTONIO 25 Morley Road Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tennis. I. 3: Bad- minton. 3: Archery. 3: Ping Pong. 3. ANNE DIGIACOMO 110 Lancaster Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Badminton. 3. VIRGINIA DIGIULIO 67 Edwards Street Girls' Club. 3: Tennis. 2: 8admin. ton. 3. NEAL DI GRAVIO 26 Broadway Band. I: Orchestra. I: N. E. Music Fest'val. I; State Music Festival. I: Traffic. 3: Q-Hi News. 2: Golden Rod Agent, 2. 3: Ncwswriters. 2. MARGUERITE Dl LORETO 60 Baxter Avcnuo Girls' Club. 2. 3: Golden Rod Agent. 2. 3: Badminton, 3. OLGA DISALVIO 79 Edwards Street n ANTHONY DI TULLIO 19 Grafton Street Traffic, 2: Golden Rod. 3. MARIE DI TULLIO 42 Newcomb Streot Choral Voice Choir. I: Home Room Representative. 2. 3: Bowl ing. I; Archery. I: Girls' Club. 3: Golden Rod Agent. 3: Q-Hi-Ncws Agent, I: Nom'nating Com- mittee. I. NELLIO DI TULLIO 104 Lancaster Street Golden Rod Agent Substitute. HUGO DIUSSA 31 Nelson Street PHYLLIS DONNELL 37 Verchild Streot Girls' Club. 2. 3: Traffic. 3: Golden Rod Agent. 2. JAMES DORLEY 909 Southern Artery Q-Hi Agent. I; Golden Rod Agent. I; Traffic. 3: Class Day Committee. 3. BETTY DOWNTON 19 Richard Street HELEN DRACOULES 14 Grafton Street W. BETTY DUFFEY 171 School Streot Girls' Club. 2. 3: Archery. 3: Bowling. 3: Knitting Club. '■ : Spring Concert. 2. ELEANOR M. DWYER 423 Sea Street Basketball. I. 2: Archery. I: Field Hockey. I. DOROTHY EKBLOM 2 Euclid Avenue Girls' Club. 3: Tennis. 3. RUTH ENG 71 Dysart Street Tri-Hi Y. 3: Bowling. I. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Traffic, 3: Home Room Representative. I. Class Secre- tary. I. 2. 3. CAROL ENGLAND 28 River Streot Girls' Club, 2. 3: Cowling. 3: Archery, I. 2. 3: Tonnis. 3: Bad- minton, 3. EVELYN ERICKSON 95 Franklin Avenue Gir's' Club. 2. 3: Traffic, 3: Home Room Representative. 2: Q-Hi News Agent, 2. NORMA ERICKSON 109 Stoughton Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Swimming, 3. RUTH ERICKSON 119 Utice Street Traffic Squad. 3: Q-Hi Nows Agent. 3. GRACE FAIR 164 Sea Street Tennis I: Arcncrv. I: Girls' Club, 2. 3: Tri-Hi-Y. 3. MARION FANARA 29 Payne Street Girls’ Club. 2. GEORGE FANDEL 85 Wallaco Road Glee Club. 2. 3: Rifle Team. 2. 3: Chapel Choir. 2. 3: Baseball. I: Christmas Concert. 2. 3: Traffic Squad. 3: Spring Concert. 2. 3: Class Day Committee. 3. JOHN FANTUCCHIO 17 Watson Terrace WILLIAM FARRELL 57 Curtis Avonue JASON FELDMAN 29 Ridgeway Drive GEMMA FERTILE 90 South Walnut Stroet Library Staff. I, 2. 3: President. 3: Vice-President. 2: Traffic. 3: Girls’ Club. 3: Home Room Rep- resentative. 3. JAMES FERRIS 534 Washington Street Debating Club. I. SALVY FILACCIO 48 Rogors Street ELEANOR FISCHER 512 Blue Hill Avenue Girls' Club. 3. FRANCES FITZGERALD I Beacon Way Girls' Club, 3: Bowling. I. JOSEPH FITZGERALD 20 Wilrid Street RUTH FITZGERALD 12 Narragansctt Road Girls' Club. 2: First Aid Course. 3. HELEN JANE FRETZ 27 Park Street ROBERT FITZPATRICK 38 Revere Road Baseball. I. 2: Wrestling. I, 2, 3: Hockey. 3. GLENN FLEISCHER 975 Hancock Street Football. I. 2. 3: 8askotball. I. 2. 3; Baseball. 2. 3. MILDRED FLOREN 5 Copeland Street Girls' Club. I. 2: Basketball. I: Archory. I. 3. THELMA FORBUSH 191 Palmer Street Badminton. I. 2: Tennis. I. 2. 3: Writing Club. 2; Archery, 2: Bowl ing, 3: Girls' Club. 3. DONALD FOSTER 21 Westford Street Football. I. 2: Track, I. 2. 3: Cross-Country. 3. SYDNEY FOX 26 Bradford Street Camera Club. 2: Pago and Stage. 2. 3: Projector Operator, I: Home Room Representative. 2. 3: Ticket Manager, 2. 3: Hi-Y, 2. 3: Vice- President. 3: Traffic. 3. Verse Speaking Choir. I. 2: Page and Stage. 3: Girls' Club. 3: Ten nis. I. 3; Archery. I; Youth Symphony Concerts. 3; First Aid Course. 3. CAROL FURLONG 67 Cedar Street Orchestra. I. 2. 3: N. E. Music Festiva:. I. 2. 3: State Mus'c Fes- tival. I. 2. 3: Pago and Stage Club. 3: Tennis. I: First Aid Courso. 3: Traffic. 3: The Holy City. I; Gallia. 2: Christmas Concert. I. 2, 3. JAMES FUSCO 98 Franklin Street WALLACENA GALBRAITH 167 East Elm Avenue Orchestra. I. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Archery. I. 2: N. E. Music Festival. I. 3: State Music Festi- val. I, 2. 3. MARIE GALLAGHER 33 Connell Street Table Tenn's, I. 2: Girls' Club. 2 3: Bowling. 3: Science Club. 3: Swimming Club. 3: Golden Rod Agent. 2: Archery. 2. 3: Youth Symphony. 3: Traffic. 3: Q-Hi News Agent. 3. NORMAN GAUDREAU 891 Sea Street RICHARD GENTRY 14 White Street CHARLES GIBBONS 41 Theresa Road WILLIAM GORMLEY 4 Mcrrymount Avenue Traci, I, 2. ESTHER GILBODY 38 Independence Avenu© Bowling. 2. 3: Swimming. 3: Bas- ketball. I. 2. 3: Girls' Club, 2. 3: Archery Club. 3: President. 3: Badminton. 2. 3: Tonnis. 3: Field Hockey. 2. 3; Soft Ball. 2. CATHERINE GILLIS 131 Copeland Street Basketball. I. 2. CHRISTINE GLADNEY 79 Cliff Street Orchostra. 2. 3: Glee Club. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 3: Music Festival. 2. 3: Traffic. 3: Gallia. 2: Christmas Concert. 2. 3. HENRY GOODHUE 1487 Furnace Brook Parkway 6asebail. 2. 3: Hockey. I. JOSEPH GOODHUE 1487 Furnace Brook Parkway Football, student manager. 3: Hockey. I. 2. 3: Baseball. I. 2. 3: Golden Rod. 3. VIRGINIA GRAY 690 Adams Street Bowling. 2. 3: Basketball. 2. 3: Badminton. 2: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tennis. 3: Field Hockey. 2: Soft Ball. 2: Swimming. 3. RHODA GREEN 20 Ring Avenue GERTRUDE GREGORY 96 Quincy Street Bowling. 2; Science Club. 3. RICHARD GRIGG 99 Butler Road Troffic. 3: Literary Club, 3. FRED GRONVALL 32 Bennington Street Nominating Committee. 2: Hi-Y. 2. 3: Secretary. 3: Traffic. 2. 3. JESSIE GUDAS 29 Taber Street Basketball. I. GORDON GUEST 89 Arnold Street HJORDIS GUSTAFSON 142 Hall Place Girls’ Club. 2. 3: Tri-H- Y. 2. 3. SIDNEY HAJJAR 132 East Howard Street HERBERT H. HARTFORD 256 Southern Artery Page ond Stage. 2. 3: Cheer- leader, 2. 3: Hi-Y. 2. 3: Secretary. 3; Traffic. 2. 3. CATHERINE HARVEY 22 Baxter Avenue Bowling. 3: Girls’ Club. 2: Arch- ery. 2: Basketball. 2. 3: Swimming. 3: Badminton, I; Field Hockey. I: Soft Ball. I. BEVERLY HASTINGS 107 Forbos Hill Road Bowling, 3: Golf. 2. 3; Girls' Club. 2. 3: Girls' Club Board. 3: Tri- Hi-Y. 2. 3; Archery. 3: Traffic. 3. MARJORIE HAYNES 109 Gridley Street Library Staff. I; Thalia Club. 2: Gloo Club. 3: Girls’ Club. 3: Music Festival. 3; Christmas Con- cert. 3. DAVID HEALEY 71 Willow Avenue Track. I. 2. 3: Sailing Club. I: Holy City, I. CLAIRE HEBERT 36 West Street Girls' Club. 3. WILLIAM HEBERT 36 West Street Football. 3: Band. I; Hi-Y, 3: Track. 2. RUTH HEDMAN 22 Dysart Street Basketball. I. 2: Archery. I; Bowl- ing. I. 2. 3: Glee Club. I: State Muse Fostival. I: N. E. Music Fes tival. I: Christmas Concert. I; Holy City. I- GaMia. 2; Chapel Choir. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 3: Traffic. 3: Golden Rod Agent. 2: News writers’ Club. 3. JULIA HENDRICKSON 34 Payne Street BARBARA HESELTON 40 Butler Road Bowling. 2. 3: Golf. 2. 3: Girls’ Club, 2. 3: Secretary. 3: Tri-Hi-Y, 2. 3: Archery. 3: Christmas Pageant. 3. ARLENE HEYWOOD 20 Edgewood Circle RICHARD HOLBROOK 64 Revere Road Football, 3: Baseball. 2. 3: Gloo Club. I: Christmas Concert, I; Spring Concert, I, 2: Rifle Club. 2: Chapel Choir, 3. ROBERT HOWELL 75 Lincoln Avenue Hockey. 3: Hi-Y, 3: Traffic, 3. LOUISE HOWLAND 71 Lenox Street Girls' Club. 3. VIRGINIA IGO 20 Thompson Street Girls' Club. 2: Newswriters. 3. DORIS JACOBSON 26 Richie Road Glee Club. I. 2: Chapel Choir. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Spring Con- cert. 2: Christmas Concort. I. 2: N. E. Music Festival. I. 2: Holy City. I: State Music Festival. I. 2: L'brary Staff, I. MARIE JAGER 11 Beebe Road Girls' Club. 2, 3: Newswriters. 3: Basketball. I. CLARA JOHNSEN 52 South Walnut Street Girls' Club. 2, 3: Basketball. 2. 3: Archery. 2; Tennis. 2: Bowling. 2. BARBARA JOHNSON 35 Morley Road Golf. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Presi- dent. 3: Q-Hi News Business Stoff. 2: Pago and Stage. 2. 3: Tri-Hi-Y, 3: Homo Room Representative. 2; Pin and Ring Committee. 3: Verse Speaking Choir. 2. BEVERLY JOHNSON 23 Bailey Street Bowling. 2, 3: Archery. 2, 3: Swimming Club President. 3. ELEANOR JOHNSON 12 Nicholl Street Glee Club. I: Orchestra. I: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tri-HI-Y. 3: Thalia Club, 2. 3: Treasurer. 3: Golf. 2. 3: N. E. Music Festival. I: Holy City. I; Spring Concert, I; Christmas Con- cert. I; Traffic. 3: Tennis, 3. EVA JOHNSON 284 Granite Street Girls' Club. 2. 3; Bowling. 3: Tennis. 3. ROBERT JOHNSON 15 High Street RUTH HELEN JOHNSON 167 Kendrick Avenue Basketball. I: Girls' Club. 2. 3; Tri-Hi-Y. 2. 3: Q-Hi News. 3. SYDNEY JOHNSON 43 Arthur Street Scienco Club. 2: Bank. 2, 3: Masv achusetts State Festival. 2. 3: Traffic. 3. I WALTER JOHNSON 12 Harrison Street Golden Rod Business Staff. 3. LILLIAN C. JOHNSTONE 29 Eddie Street Glco Club. I. 2. 3: Holy City. i: Spring Concert. 2. 3: N. E. Music Fostivai. I: Mass. Music Festival. I, 2. 3; Writing Club. 2: News- writers. 3: Entertainment Com- mittee. 2. 3. MARY JUDGE 377 Manet Avenue Girls’ Club. 2. 3; Tri-Hi-Y. 2. 3: Archery. 2: Tennis. 2: Bowling. 2; Riding Club. 3: Newswriters. 2. PETER KANAVOS 2 Alleyne Terrace Student Council. 2. 3: President 3: Debating Club. I. 2. 3: Presi dent. I. 3: Page and Stage. 2. 3 Treasurer. 2; Hi-Y. 2. 3; Nominat ing Committee. I: Soccer. I. 2 School Representation for Orator ical Contest on the Constitution. 3 HILMA KARHU 445 Granite Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Basketball. 2; Golden Rod Agent. 2: Nominating Comm ttee, 2: Q-Hi News Agent. 3: Swimming. 3: Bowling. 3: Nows- writers. 3: Golden Rod Staff, 3: Traffic. 3: Tennis. 3. KATHERINE KEATING 52 Rogers Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Health Service. 2: Tennis, 3. ALICE KELLY 32 Alton Road Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tri-Hi-Y, 3: Goldon Rod Agent. I; Nominating Committee. I: Athletic Council. I: Q-Hi News Agent. 2: Home Room Representative. 2; News- writers' Club. 3: Tonnis. 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3. ANASTACIA KELLY 26 Shirley Street Traffic, 3; Girls' Club. 2. 3: Home Room Representative. 3: News writers. 3: Sc enco Club. 3: Ping Pong. I; Tennis. I: Basketball. I. TERESA KELLY 37 Pontiac Road Girls' Club. 2: Bowling, 3; Swim- ming. 3: Ping Pong. I, 2: News- writers. 3: Tennis, 3. JACQUELINE KENNEDY 40 Rustic Place Archery. I: Girls' Club. 3: Bad- minton. I. 3: Basketball. I: Tonnis. 3. DORIS KERMODE 213 Kendrick Avenue Library Staff. I: Gloc Club. I. 2. 3: Chapel Choir. 2. 3: Holy City. I: Spring Concert. 2, 3: N. E. Fes- tival. I. 2. 3: State Festival. I. 2. 3: Christmos Concert. I. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Girls' Club Board. 3: Tennis. 3. ELEANOR KILBRIDE 25 Cliff Street Traffic. 3: Christmas Concert, I. 2. 3: Gloo Club. I. 2. 3: Spring Con- cert. 2. 3: Chapel Choir. 2. 3: N. E. Festival. I. 2. 3: Girls' Club, 3: Holy City. I: Class Day Com- mittee. 3: Entertainment Com- mittee. 2. 3: Tennis. 3: State Music Festival. I. 2. 3: Newswriters. 3. HAROLD KREITMAN 18 Wittich Placo Baseball. 2. 3. JOHN LAMB 81 Curtis Avenuo Intramural Basketball. 3. CATHERINE LANDRY 48 Brook Road Girls' Club. 2. 3. ANN LANE 6 Main Street FRANCES LANGE 114 Liberty Street MARY LA PLUME 625 Sea Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Golden Rod Business Stoff. 3. HELEN LARSEN 18 Roselin Avenue Archery. I; Glee Club. 2. 3: Chapel Choir. I; Swimming. 2: Bowling. I. 2; Girls' Club. 2. 3. RAYMOND LARUE 63 Crosby Street Baseball. 2: Wrestling. 3: Intra- mural Basketball. 3. RICHARD LEARY 305 Sea Street Student Council. 3: Traffic. 3- Hi-Y. 3: District Manager. Q-Hi News. 3: R fie Club. 3: Rifle Team. 3. CAROL LECHTHALER 256 South Central Avenue Verse Speaking Choir. I. 2: Riding Club. I. 2: Nominating Com- mittee. I; Tennis. 2. 3: Golden Rod Agent, I; Girls' Club. 3. LOIS LEIF 332 Copeland Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Golden Rod Business Staff. 3: Traffic, 3. VIRGINIA R. LEONARD 35 Main Street Science Club, I. 2. 3. VELIA LETTERI 118 Verchild Street Archery 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Science Club. 2: Bowling. 3. HAROLD LEVINE 16 Harrington Avenue Football. I. ESTELLE LIBERMAN 399 Washington Street Debating Club. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3:: Bowling. 2: Thalia Club, 3: Traffic. 3: Knitting Club. 3. FLORENCE LIBERTINE 374 Adams Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Riding Club. I. 2: Golf. 2. 3: Tri-Hi-Y. 2. 3; Knit- ting Club. 3: Q-Hi News. I. 2. 3: Q-Hi News District Managor, 3: Golden Rod Business Staff. 3: Newswriting. 3: Home Room Rep- resentative. I, 2. 3. CHARLES LINDSAY 62 Pleasant Street Gleo Club. I. PEARL LIPSKY 21 Phipps Street Q-Hi News District Manager, 2: Traffic. 2: Newswriting. 3: Girls Club. 3: Knitting Club. 3: Bowl- ing, 2. JENNIE LOPRESTI 32 Pearl Street District Manager Q-Hi News. I: Asst. Circulation Manager Q-Hi Nows. 2: Circulation Manager Q-Hi News. 3: Girls’ Club. 2: Thalia Club. 2. 3: Newswriters, 2: Golden Rod Business Staff. 2. 3: Knitting Club. 3. JOSEPH LOUIRIO 81 Edwards Street Football. I: Wrestling. I. 2. 3; Intramural Basketball. 3. ESTHER LUBARSKY 21 Roberts Street Ping Pong. I: Archery. I: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Bowling. 2. 3: Pago and Stage. 2, 3: Basketball. I: Newswriters. 3: Golden Rod. 3. CAROLYN LUONGO 19 High Street Girls’ Club, 2. 3: Bowling, 2. 3: Basketball. 2. GLADYS LURA 10 Cottage Street Swimming Club. 3. LOUISE LYNCH 16 Carruth Street Bowling, I. MARY LYNCH 80 White Street Archery. 2. 3: Bowling. 2. 3: Bas- ketball. 3: Badminton. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3. BARBARA McALLISTER 338 Manet Avenue Orchestra. I. 2, 3: State Music Festival. I. 2. 3: N. E. Music Fes- tival. I. 3: Holy City. I: Gal- lia. 2: Spring Concert. 3: News- writers. 3: Thalia Club. 3: Girls’ Club. 3: Kn tting Club. 3: Traffic. 3. ROBERT MacANDREW 188 Quincy Avenue Hockey. I. 2. 3: Intramural Bas- ketball. 3. RUTH MacBETH 20 Lurton Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tri-Hi-Y. I. 2: Pres dent. 3: Bowling. 2: Glee Club, 7- Knitting Club, 3: Christ mas Concert. 2. KATHERINE McCAIG 69 Darrow Street Girls’ Club. 2. 3; Glee Club. 3 Peqe and Staqe. 3: Swimming. 3 Tri-Hi-Y. 3: Christmas Concert, 3 Archery, I. lillian McCarthy 84 Nightingale Avenue Bowling, I; Swimming. 3: Girls’ Club. 3: Knitting Club, 3. GERTRUDE McCLUSKEY 108 Graham Street Library, I. FLORENCE MeDONALD 73 Plymouth Street Girls’ Club, 2: Page and Stage, 2. GEORGE MACDONALD 373 Newport Avenue Page and Stage. 3: Literary Club, 3: Deboting Club. 3; Golden Rod Staff, 3. KENNETH MACDONALD 207 Upland Road DANIEL McGRATH 62 Ballou Street Golden Rod Bus'ness Staff. 3: Rifle Club, 3. WILLIAM McGRATH 24 Standith Avenue PAUL F. MclNNES 29 Connell Street Basketball, I. 2. 3; Track. I. 2. 3: Football, 3: Hi-Y, 3. THOMAS McKEAGNEY 55 Common Street Football. I. 2, 3: Wrestling, I, 2. 3: Golf. I. 2. 3. BARBARA A. McKENZIE 152 Crescent Street Archery. 3: Rifle Club, 3: Girls' Club. 3. Walter McKinnon 23 Gordon Street Nominating Committee. 1.2: Base- ball. 2. 3: Basketball Manager. 3; Golden Rod Business Stoff. 3. CUYLER T. MACLEOD 102 Upland Road Glee Club. I. 2; Chapel Choir. 2; Christmas Concert. I. 2: Holy City Cantata. I: Home Room Ropro- sontative. I. 3: Hi-Y Club. 2. 3; Treasurer. 3. DANIEL MACLEOD 164 Madison Avenue Page and Stage. 3: Debating Club. 2. 3: Litorary Club. 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3. MARJORIE MACLEOD 156 Independence Avenue Girls’ Club. 3. ELSIE McPHEE 54 Connell Street Girls’ Club. 3: Basketball. I. 2. 3: Badminton. I. 2; Tennis. 3: News- writers. 3. GLORIA McPHEE 468 Sea Street Basketball. I. 2: Thalia Club. 2. 3; Library Staff. I. 3: Science Club. I; Sailing Club. I. 2: Badminton. I. 2: R fie Club. 2: Newswriters' Club. 2. 3. JEAN MacPHERSON 422 Granite Stroot Girls' Club. 2. 3: Basketball. 2: Bowling. 3. GLORIA MACK 40 Fenno Street Girls' Club. 3: Bowling. 3: Swim ming. 3: Tennis. 2. 3: Archery, 3; Newswriters’ Club. 3. LOUISE MACKEY 24 Brook Road Basketball, I. 2. 3: Archery. 2. 3: Tennis. 2; Swimming. 3: Badmin ton. I; Girls' Club. 2. 3: Bowlinq I Ping Pong. I. JAMES MACKIN 9 Rock Island Road Football. I. 2. BESSIE MAIDA 5 Pearl Street Girls’ Club. 3: Traffic. 3. EDWARD MALLOY 6 Florence Street Hockey. I. 2; Football. I. RENEE MANKIN 15 Virginia Road Girls' Club. 2. 3: Archery. 3 ANDREW MARELLA IS Mill Street JENNIE MARIANO 99 Mill Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Bowling. I; Basketball. 2. 3: Tennis. 2. 3. LOUISE MARIANO 97 Mill Street Girls’ Club, 2. 3: Bowling. I: Basketball. 2. 3. WILLIAM MARIANO 12 Main Street Baseball Manager. 2, 3: Golden Rod Business Staff. 3. CELIA MARINI 13 Brooks Avenue Archery. I; Swimming. 3: R fie Club. 3. LOUISE MARINI 194 West Street Girls' Club. I: Archery. 2. VIOLA MARINI 252 West Streot Archory. I: Girls’ Club. 3. ANNA MARTELL 333 Granite Street Glee Club. I. 2: Basketball. 3 Holy City. I: State Festival. I Chapel Choir. 3: Newswriting. 3 Archery. 3; American Odo. 2. WAYNE MARTIN 30 South Central Avenue Science Club, I. 2. 3: Traffic. 3: Tennis. 2. 3: Camera Club. 2: Golden Rod Staff. 3. JOHN MATTEI 37 Winthrop Park Football. I. 2. 3. DOROTHY MATTES 76 Rodman Street Bowling. I; Girls’ Club. 3: Knit- ting. 3. BERNARD MATTSON 105 Madison Avenue Golden Rod Staff. 3. CATHERINE MERRILL 2 Bradford Street Gi:u' Club. 2, 3: Basketball. 2. NADINE MILLIKEN 103 Elm Street Tri-Hi-Y. 3: Girls’ Club. 3. RUTH MILLIKEN 126 Palmer Street First Orchestra. I. 2. 3: Second Orchestra. I. 2. 3: Tennis. I. 2: Badminton 3- Writers' Club. 2: State Music Fest val. 2. 3: News- writers' Club. 3: Traffic. 3; Instru- mental Concert. I. 2. 3. BARBARA MITCHELL 44 Upton Street Girls' Club. 3: Tri-Hi-Y. 3: Scienco Club. 3: Horseback Riding. 3: Swimming, 3: Basketball. 3. AUGUSTA MOCHEN 11 Albertina Street Archery. I: Library Staff. 3: Treas- urer. Girls' Club 2: Newswriters. 3. HELMI MOILANEN 27 Albertina Street Home Room Representative. I. 2; Nominating Committee. I. ALBERT T. MONACO 8 Cyril Street Football. I. 2. 3: Track. I. 2: Page and Steoe Club. 2. 3: Home Room Representative. 2: Student Council, 3: Band. I. 3: N. E. and State Fes- tivals. I. 3: Glee Club, 2. 3: Chapel Choir. 3: Hi-Y. 3: Traffic. 3: Soring Concert. 3. VENETA MONTE 42 Alton Road R flc Club. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3. BETTE MOORE 76 Myopia Road Basketball. I. 2: Girls' Club, 2. 3: Girls’ Club Board. 3: Science Club. 3: Tennis. I. 2: Tri-Hi-Y, 3: Traffic. 3. FRED MOORHOUSE 286 Water Street Home Room Representative. I: Track. ?■ Basketball Manager. I. 2: Head Manager; Traffic. 3: Class Dev Committee. 3; Class President. 3. MARY MORO 36 Lawn Avenue Archery. I; Spring Concert, 2: Holy City. I; Girls' Club. 2. 3: Swimming Club, 3. JEAN MORRISSEY 14 Atherton Street Tennis. I; Girls' Club. 2: Badmin- ton. I; Traffic. 3. GEORGE MOULTON 411 Highland Avenue Holy City. |: Glee Club. I; Band. 3: State Music Festival. 3: N. E. Music Festival, 3- Traffic. 3. MARION MUIR 46 Curtis Avenue PHYLLIS MUIR 28 Berkeley Street Bowling I. 2, 3: Cheerleader. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3; Tri-Hi-Y. 3; Traffic, 3; Tennis. 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3: First Aid. 3: Swimming. 3: Basketball. I; Girls’ Club Board, 3; Newswriters. 3. MARION MUISE 28 Watson Terrace ELEANOR MULLANEY 72 Bigelow Street Basketball. I: Tri-Hi-Y. 2. 3: Girls Club, 2. 3: Tennis. 3; Archery. 3: First Ad. 3; Bowling. 3; News writers. 3. PEARL MULLANEY 27 Riverside Avenue Archcry. 2. 3: Riding Club. 3; Tennis. 3: Swimming. 3: Girls’ Club. 2. RUTH MULLANEY 54 Cleverly Court Bowling. I; Basketball. I; Girls' Club. 3. ALBERT MULLEN 4 George Road Band. I. 2. 3: State Festival. I. 2 3; N. E. Festival. I. 3: Debat eg Club. 3: Literary Club. 3. HELEN MULLIGAN 64 Shawmut Street Archery. I. 2. 3: ViceProsident. 3; Girl ' Club. 2. 3. ELINOR MULQUEENY 11 Nilsen Avenue Home Room Representative. I: Sailing Club 2: Tonris. 2. 3; Girls’ Club. 2: Traffic. 2. 3; Page and Stage. 3: Literary Club. 3. GERTRUDE MURPHY 81 8allow Street Girls’ Club. 2. 3: Tr Hi-Y. 2. 3: Homo Room Golden Rod Agont. I. 2. 3: Traffic. 3; Ncwswri ers‘ Club. 2: Baskotball, I. JAMES W. MURPHY 49 Saint Germain Street ELSIE MYLLMAKI 463 Willard Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Traffic. 3: Bowl- ing. 3: Basketball. I. 2. JOSEPH NADER 19 Edison Park ROBERT NANKIN 273 Washington Street Basketball. I. 2. 3: Golden Rod Business Staff. 3: Intramural Bas- ketball. 3. ALBERT NARDONE 5 Copeland Street Riflo Club. 2. VIRGINIA NASON 13 Central Avenue WILLIAM NIEMI 43 Quarry Street Business Staff. Golden Rod. 3. FRANK NORTON 79 Campbell Street Ncwswriters’ Club. 2. 3: Assistant Hockey Manager. I. 2. CHRISTOPHER NOURSE 66 Graham Street Rifle Club. I; Traffic. 3. JOHN OBRIEN 71 Virginia Road Basketball. 2: Spring Concert. 2: Intramural Basketball. 3. ELSA OLSSON 80 Bay View Avenue Traffic. 3. HAROLD OPENSHAW 1064 Furnace Brook Parkway Track, 2, 3: Newswriters' Club. 2. HOWARD OPENSHAW 1064 Furnace Brook Parkway Track, 3: Newswriters’ Club. 2. JOHN ORTIZ 19 Roberts Street Troffic. 3: Rifle Club, 3: Golden Rod Business Staff, 3. JOSEPHINE OSTROWSKI 23 Main Street Q-Hi Nows, 2. LILLIAN OVASKA 24 Prout Street RAYMOND O’TOOLE 100 Dayton Street Wrestling. 2. 3: Golf I. 2. Home Room Representative. 3 Intramural Basketball. 3. H. BARBARA PACE 94 Forbes Hill Road Orchestra. I. 2. 3: Traffic. 3: Girls Club. 2. 3: Vice-President. 3: Tri- Hi-Y. 2. 3: Golf. 2. 3. GLORIA PACETTI 71 Rodman Street Traffic. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 3: Red Cross. 3. JOSEPH PALUMBO 189 Kendrick Avenue Soccer. I. 2: Golden Rod 8usines Staff. 3: Intramural Basketball. 3 JOHN PANEPINTO 91 Main Streot Nominating Committee. 2: Rifle Club. 2: Golden Rod Business Staff. 3. ALBERT PAOLUCCI 164 Sumner Street Football. I. 2. 3: Wrestling. I, 2 3: Track. I. 2: Leaders' Club, I. 2. JAMES PAPILE 19 Canal Street Football. I. 2. 3: Student Council. I. 2. 3: Ass'stant Business Manager Q-Hi Nows, 2: Goncral Manager Golden Rod. 3: President Studont Representatives. 3: Intramural Bas ietball. 3. LEO PAPILE 10 Hawkins Street Football. I. 2. 3: Basketball. 12: Track. I; Intramural Basketball. 3 RICHARD PARADISE 1333 Quincy Shore Boulevard Band. I. 2: Orchestra. I. 2: N. F. Music Festival. I. 2: Siaio Music Festival, I. 2: Home Room Reore sentative. 2; Traffic, 3: Q-Hi Hash. 2. ANNA PARZIALE 72 Edison Park lenn's, I: Basketball. I. 2. 3: Arch- ory. I. 2. 3: Newswritors. I: Tri- Hi-Y. 2: Vice-President. 3: Bowl ing, 2. 3: Bodminton. 3: Girls’ Club. 2. 3: Swimming. 3. ANNA PATRIARCA 248 Copeland Street Archcry Club, I. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tennis, I 3: Golden Rod Agent. 2. 3: Q-H -News. 3: Bad minton, I; Tablo Tennis. I. 2: Bas- ketball. I. VIRGINIA C. PATTS 49 Island Avenue Archery. I. 2: Newswriters. I: Girls' Club. 2: Bowling. 2: Spring Concert, 2: Q-Hi-Ncws. 3: Swim ming. 3: Tennis. 3. MARJORIE RUTH PAWSEY 15 Pawsey Street EILEEN PEACHEY 545 Newport Avenue Archery. I. 3: Tennis. I. 3: Bad- minton. I. 3. GLORIA PEACHEY 545 Newport Avenue Glee Club. I. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Thalia Club. 3: Page and Stage 3: Chapel Cho'r. 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3: Nominating Committee. 2: Verso Speaking Choir. I, 2: Gallia. 2; Christmas Concert. I 2. 3: Holy City. I: Traffic. 3: Home Room Representative. I: Tennis. I. 3: Badminton. I: Basket- ball. I: State Fostivol. I. 2. 3: N. E. Festival. I. WALTER PEECE 69 Brackott Street Football. I. 2. 3: Wresting. I. 2. 3: Track. I: Intramural Basketball. 3: Co-Captain Football. 3: Cap- tain Wrestling, 3. BARBARA PEHRSON 64 Cranch Street Tennis. 2. 3: Archery, 2: Girls' Club. 2: Q Hi News. 3: News- writers. 2: Traffic. 3: Thalia Club. 3. HAROLD PERROW 39 Stewart Street Baseball. I. 2: Soccer, I. 2. CHARLES PETERSON 138 South Street Basketball. I. 2- Football. 3: Home Room Representative. 3: Bank. 3: Nominating Committee. 2: Busi ness Staff Golden Rod. 3: Chapel Choir, 2. 3: HI-Y. 3: Intramural Basketball. 3: Glee Club. 3. JOYCE PETERSON 22 Baker Avenue Christmas Concert. 2: Spring Fes- tival. 2: Chapel Choir. 3: Swim- ming Club. 3: Glee Club, 2. BARBARA PINKHAM 161 Warren Avenue Archery. 2: Basketball. 3: Girls' Club. 3: Tri-Hi-Y, 2. 3: Science Club. 2: Traffic. 3: Class Vice- President. 2. 3: Swimm'ng. 3: Q- Hi News Agent. 3. FREDRICK PITMAN 378 Belmont Street Hockoy. I. JOHN POWERS 5 Douse Road VIRGINIA PURCELL C5 Callou Street Baskotball. I: Bowling, 3. DOROTHY PUTNAM 815 Sea Street DOROTHY RAMSAY 25 Riverbank Road WILLIAM RAMSAY 57 Germain Avenue Wrestling, I. 2. 3: Football. 3; Intramural Basketball, 3. RUTH N. RANDAZZO 71 Verchild Street DORIS READ 88 Whiton Avenue Ncwswritors, 3. JACQUELINE REICHERT 7 Hood Street BETTE RESTELLI 21 Common Streot Home Room Representative. I. 2: Glee Club. I: N. E. Fest vol, I: State Music Festival. I: Nominat ing Committee. 2: District Mana gor of Q-Hi News. 3: Archery. I: Q-Hi Hash. ?: Traffic. 3: Christmas Concert. I: Basketball. I: Hoi City 3: Gallia. 2: Panorama ox Q. I. MARIE RICCUITI 150 Cross Street Home Room Representative. I Ncwswritors. 2: Q-H News Agent 2: Page and Staae. 3: Girls' Club 3: Golden Rod Agent. 2: Bowl- ing. 2. LILLIAN RILEY 75 Cleverly Court Cheerleader, 2. 3. TONY RIZZO 87 Sumner Street Intramural Basketball. 3. GEORGE ROBICHAU 77 Sea Avenue Rifle. I. 2. 3: Secretary. 3: Soil ing Club. I, 2: Traffic. 3. HERBERT ROSENTHAL 44 Chestnut Stroct 0-1 !i News District Manager, 2: Golden Rod Agent. 2: Traffic. 3. JOHN ROUILLARD 107 Darrow Street Baseball. I. 2. 3: Football. I, 2; Basketball. I. 2. MARIAN ROUILLARD 338 Quarry Street Newswriter. 1.2; Traffic. 3. R08ERT RUNIUS 62 Ruggles Stroot Orchestra and Band, I. 2; Hi-Y Club. 2. 3: Hockey. 3: Class Treas- urer. I. 2. 3: Reception Com- mittee. 3: Home Room Represcn tativo. I; Traffic. 3: Nom rating CommiMee. I. MARCELLA RUSCONI 57 Penn Street Bowling. 3. WILSON RUSSELL 95 Merrymount Road Football, I. 2. 3; Intramural Bas- ketball. 3. MARY RYAN 63 Lenox Street FRANK SALDI 147 South Walnut Street Football. I. 2; Basketball. I. 2. 3. GLORIA SALVATORE 21 Stevens Street Q-Hi News Staff. 3. ALMA SALVUCCI 109 Roberts Street Archery. I. MARY SALVUCCI 120 Brooks Avenue Archory, I. ROMOLO SALVUCCI 171 West Street Football. I. 2. 3: Baseball. I. 2. 3. ANTHONY SANDONATO 10 Oak Street Basketball. I; Baseball; Intramural Basketball. DOROTHY SANSOM 6 Hilda Street Archery, I; Girls' Club. 2. 3: Bowl ing, 3: Rifle. 2; Traffic. 3. ANGELO SASSI 266 Granite Street PAULINE SAULNIER 26 Oakwood Road Swimming Club. 3: Scionce Club. Vice-Prcsidont. I. 2. 3. VIRGINIA SAVAGE 23 Shawmut Street Tennis. I: Glee Club. 2: State Music Festival. 2: Girls' Club. 3: Archery. 3. DOROTHY SCHAEFER !6 Hobomack Road Traffic. 3: Swimming. 3: Home Room Representative. 3. ROBERT SCHAUER 357 Sea Street AUDREY SCHNEIDER 156 West Street Bowling, 3: Swimming. 3: Girls' Club. 3. ADELINE SCOLARO 12 Sixth Avenue Girls' Club. 3; Bowling. 3. GEORGE SCRIMSHAW 45 Cherry Stroet Page and Stago. 2. 3: Rifle Club. I. 2. 3: Golden Rod Staff, 3: Ten- nis. I, 2. 3: Golf. 3: Class Day Committee. 3. EDYTHE SEITZ 40 Grand View Avenue Archery. I; Basketball. I; Girls’ Club. 2. PHOEBE SEYMORE 251 Common Street MIRIAM SHERAD 13 Lowe Street Orchestra, I. 2. 3: N. E. Music Fes- tival. I. 3: Mass. Music Festival, I, 2. 3: Girls' Club, I. 2, 3: Thalia Club. 3: Writing Club. 2: Tennis, I: Ping Pong. I; Archory, 2. LOUISE SHERRIFF 110 Greene Street Homo Room Representat ve. I: Q- Hi News Staff. I; Q'Hi News Agont. I; Basketball, I: Ping Pong. I: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Girls' Club Board. 3: Tri-Hi-Y. 3: Pin and Ring Committee. 3: Library Club. I. MILDRED SHU8ERT 30 Arnold Street Bowling. 3. NATHAN SILVER 99 Summer Street Soccer. I; Indoor Track. I; Base- ball. I. 3: Basketball. 3; Intramural Basketball. 3. BERGER SJOSTROM 70 Kent Street Football. I: Basketball, I, 2. 3: Hi-Y. 3: Homo Room Represen- tative. 2. VIRGINIA SKOGLUND 99 Cranch Street Archery. I: Girls' Club. 2, 3; Q- Hi Nows Staff. 3. DOROTHY SMITH 141 Upland Road Archery, I. 2. 3; Girls' Club. 2. 3: Bowling. 2. 3. LAWRENCE SMITH 33 Elm Street MARY SMITH 11 Utica Street Girls' Club, 2: Archery, I. 2: Q-Hi News. 3: Swimming. 3: Bowl ng, 2; Badminton, 2. MARTHA SODERBACK 68 Quarry Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Traffic. 3: Bas- ketball. 3: Archery. 3. DEANE SOMERVILLE 107 Shore Avenue Tennis. I; Glee Club. I: Chapel Choir. I. 2. 3: Hi-Y, 3: Sailing Club. I: Christmas Concert. I. DONALD SPARGO 98 Standish Avenue Golden Rod Business Staff. 3. ALFRED STAPLES 62 Bennington Street Hockoy. I. 2. 3: Hi-Y. 3: Q-Hi News Agent. 2; Troffic. 3. GERALD STARRATT 25 Boll Street MAY STEVENS 57 Lawn Avenue Page and Stage. 2. 3; Verse Speak- ing. I. 2: Golden Rod Agont. 2: Girls' Club. 3: Bowling, 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3. BERNARD STEWART 50 Endicott Street Glee Club. I: Holy City. I; Christmas Concert. 1.3; Football. 2: Hockey Manager. 3: Traffic. 3. MALCOLM STEWART 821 Southern Artery Wrestling. I. 2. 3. JUNE STURROCK 21 Atherton Street Q-Hi News. 3: G’rls' Club. 2. BARBARA SULLIVAN 176 Whitwell Street Archery. I; Basketball, I, 3; Bowl- ing. I; Swimming. 3. ELEANOR SULLIVAN 33 Upton Street Girls' Club. 3. MARY E. SULLIVAN 130 South Street Girls' Club. I, 2; Newswriters. I. 2; Tennis. I. ANGELINA SULMONTE 35 Penn Street Girls’ Club. 2. 3; Tennis. I. 2: Bad- minton. 2; Ping Pong. I, 2: Bowl- ing. I, 2; Basketball, I; Archery. 2. RITA SURETTE 39 Gannett Road Bowling. I; Science Club. I. 2; Badminton. 2. 3: Archery. 2. 3. CATHERINE SWANSON 16 North Payne Street Girls’ Club. 3: Nominating Com- mittee. I: Tri-Hi-Y, 3. ROBERT SWEENEY 23 Sumner Street Glee Club. I; Chapel Choir. I, 2. 3: Homo Room Representative. I; Christmas Concert. I. WILLIAM SZATHMARY 16 Miller Stile Road Page and Stage. 2. 3: Golden Rod Agent. I. 2; Panorama of Q. 2; Holy City, 2: Newswritor. 2: Q-Hi News. 2: Rifle Club. I. LORRAINE TANGHERLINI 4 Nicholl Street ir'-Hi-Y. 2. 3: Girls’ Club. 2. 3: Bowling, I; Basketball. I. ROY TANGHERLINI 55 Bunker Hill Lane Hockey. I. 2: Business Staff of Golden Rod. 3. ANGELINA TANTILLO 95 Water Street WILLIAM TAYLOR 17 Atherton Street Football. I. 2; Track, 2. 3. JACQUELINE THIESFELDT 195 Upland Road Sailing Club. I. DORIS THOMPSON 65 Granite Street Archery. I : G rls' Club. 2. 3: Bowl- ing. 2. 3: Badminton. 2. MARY E. THOMPSON 35 Putnam Street Girls’ Club. 2. 3: Archery. I. THELMA TIBBETTS 350 Washington Street Girls' Club. 3. BLANCHE TOBEY 46 Winter Street Vice-President of Class. I; Bowl- ing. I. 2. 3: Choorloeder. I. 2, 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3; Treasurer. 3: Student Council. I. 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3: Tri-Hi-Y, 2. 3: Treasurer. 3. RITA TOBIN 47 Rock Island Road Bowling, 3. ALFRED TOCCI 84 West Street Hockoy. I. 2: Hi-Y. 3. ANGELINA TOCCI 84 West Street ETHEL TOLCHINSKY 18 Lowe Street Orchestra. I. 2. 3: Stote Music Festival. I. 2. 3: N. E. Festival. I: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Thalia Club. 2. 3: Golden Rod Staff. 3: Traffic. 3: Tennis. I. 2: Ping Pong. I, 2. MARY TOMA 16 Marsh Street ROBERT TONG 102 Pontiac Road Sailing Club. I: Q-Hi News. I. 2. 3: Home Room Representative. 2. 3: Page and Stage. 2. 3: Pin and Ring Committee. 3: Traffic. 3: Hi-Y, 3: Golden Rod. 3. JENNIE TROWSDALE 17 Caledonia Avenue Thalia Club. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3; Bowling. 3: Basketball. I, 2: Traffic. 3. GEORGE TRUBIANO 35 Lancaster Street Footbail, I; Baseball. 3. HOWARD TUFTS 21 Nut Island Avenue Band. 2: Riflo Club. I. 2. 3: Rifle Team. I. 2, 3: Vice-President. 3: Wrestling. I; Hi-Y. 3; Traffic. 3: Sailing, I. 2; Stato Music Festi- val. 2. VIOLET UBERTINE 58 Federal Avenue Girls' Club. 2; Bowling, I. CARMELA URSINI 16 West Street Basketball. I. 2. JAMES VAN PYEWAAD 51 Bedford Strcot ANTOINETTE VERMETTE 18 South Central Avenue Bowling. 3. MARJORIE VINCENT 63 Arnold Street Baskotball. I. 2. 3: Thalia Club. 2. 3: Secretary. 3: Badminton, I. 2. 3: Tennis. 2: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Bowlinq. 3: Traffic. 3: Rifle Club. 3: Golden Rod. 3: Ping Pong. I. 2. v :lliam volpe 61 Canal Street Q-Hi News Agent. 3: Golden Rod Agent. 3. ELIZABETH WALSH 33 Armory Street Sailing Club. 2: Bowl ng. 2. 3: Golden Rod Agent. 2: Spring Concert. 2. ROSAMOND WALSH 255 Newport Avenue Basketball. I. 2: Badminton. I, 2: Thalia Club. 2; Girls’ Club. 2. 3: Bowling. 2. 3. VIRGINIA WALSH 930 Sea Street Archery. I. 2. 3: Tennis. 2. 3: Bad minton. 2. 3: Bowling. 2. 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Traffic. 3: Spring Con- cert. 2: Tri-Hi-Y, 3. ADELBERT WARD 55A Adams Street Debating Club. 3: Red Cross. 3. MARY WARD 419 Furnace Brook Parkway Q-Hi News Staff. I: Bowling. I; Basketball. I: Tennis. I: Girls' Club. 2: Sailing Club. I. WINIFRED WEBSTER 37 Homer Road Goldon Rod Agent. 2: Homo Room Representative. 3; Girls’ Club. 2. 3. LAWRENCE E. WEEDEN 39 Broady Avenue Traffic. 2. 3: Rifle Club. 3. KATHRYN WELCH 49 Hudson Street ROBERT F. WELCH 59 Campbell Street Traffic. 3: Rifle Club, 3. GERALDINE WENTWORTH 33 Beechwood Street Girls’ Club. 3; Bowling, 2, 3. RUTH WERME 67 Station Street Tennis. I: Girls' Club, 2, 3: Bowl- ing. 2. 3: Swimming, 3. GEORGE E. WEST 89 Utica Street Student Representative. I. 2; Stu- dent Council. 3: President of Class. I: Traffic. 3: Hi-Y, 2. 3 Hi-Y President. 3: Track. I; Foot ball. 3: Sailing Club. I: Golden Rod Staff. 3. GEORGE WHALEN 144 Spring Street MIRIAM E. WILLIAMS 10 Salem Street DONALD A. WHITTAKER 933 Sea Street FRANCIS WILDES 10 Oakland Avenue IRMA WILDING 261 Washington Street Bowling. I. 2. 3: Tonnis. I; Girls' Club. 3; Cheerleader. 2. 3: Tri- Hi-Y, 2. 3: Tri-Hi-Y Secretary 3; Traffic. 3. JAMES WILL 18 Newcomb Street ELIZABETH M. WILLIAMS 91 Hall Place Archery. 3: Basketball. 2; Girls Club. 3. INA WILSON 14 Richard Street Archery, I. 2. 3: Girls’ Club. 2. 3: Bowling, 2. 3: Traffic. 3: Tennis. 3. MAURICE P. WILSON 79 Coddington Street Cross-Country. 3: Track. 3: Holy City. I. ARTHUR WRIGHT 17 Harrison Street FRANK YOUDIS 72 Hall Place Track. I; Wrestling. I; Football. I. 2. 3: Baseball. 2. 3. DOROTHY ZAVERSON 185 South Street Archory. I. 2. 3; Bowling. 2. 3: Tennis, 3: Girls' Club. 2. 3: Tri- Hi-Y. 3. JANIS BIRCH 39 Greenview Street Girls' Club. 2. 3: Traffic. 2. ANGELINA BRUCE 44 Germaine Avenue BELLA BURAK 76 Lancaster Street GERTRUDE BURR I Pelican Road Bowling. I; Archery. I, 2: Tennis. I. 2. LEO CAREY 28 Bridge Street Track. 2. 3: Hockey. 2. 3: Hi-Y. 2. 3: Baseball. 3. JAMES CARMODY 26 Cherry Street FRANCIS CLUFF 17 Lowe Street Hockey. 3. RALPH CLUFF 17 Lowe Street Hockey. 3. JOHN COLETTI 38 Nelson Street Track, 2: Football, 2. ELEANOR D ANGELO 31 North Payne Street Girls' Club. 3: Basketball. I. FRANCIS DECOSTE 6 Mechanic Street Wrestling, 2. 3: Baseball, 3: Track, 3: Intramural Basketball, 3. RITA DEVEAU 605 Washington Street LILLIAN DEYOUNG 191 Quincy Avenue ROBERT DONAVAN 4 Ellerton Road Hockey. I, 2. 3; Science Club, I; Football. I. 2. 3: Baseball. I; Track. 2. 3. ROBERT FARQUHAR 11 Sachem Street Band. I. 2: Orchestra. 1.2; Hi-Y. 3. THOMAS GERRIOR 1032 Sea Street Debating Club. I: Science Club. I. 2, 3: Literary. 3: Newswriting, 2. KATHERINE HASSAN 64 Winter Street DOROTHY HETHERINGTON I 16 Greene Street Sailing Club. I; Newswritors Club. 2; Basketball. 3. ROBERT HOITT 112 Sagamore Street Track, 3. RUTH L. JOHNSEN 61 Burns Avenue Ping Pong, I; Basketball, I. EDWARD JORDAN 102 Putnam Street Hi-Y. 3. CAROLYN KRANEFUSS 81 Narragansett Road 8owling. I. 2: Swimming. 3; Arch ery. I; lennis, I. ELSIE KUJANPAA 70 Albertina Street Girls' Club. 2. LEO LADAS 80 Rock Island Road Baseball. 2; Intramural Basket- ball. 3. LEON LANDAY 11 Hobomack Road FRANK LIBERTINE 46 Charlsmount Avenue Baseball. 2. 3: Hockey. 2. 3: In- tramural Basketball, 3. MATTHEW McKENNA 35 Hunt Street Baseball. I. 2. 3: Hockey. I. 2. 3; Intramuial Basketball. 3. DONALD McLEOD 103 Shore Avenue Writing Club, 2. JOSEPH MACLEOD 26 Gay Street Golf Team, 2. MARGARET MARTIN 38 Madison Avenue Basketball, I. 2: Soft ball I, 2; Badminton, 2. CHARLES NANGLE 27 Island Avenue RITA NIMESKERN 23 Willard Street Archery, I; Library Staff, I, 2: R fie Club. 3. PATRICIA O LEARY 21 Marsh Street Girls' Club. 3: Homeroom Repre- sentative. I: Nominating Com- mittee. I; Bowling, 2; Basketball, I. 2. LETT IE PARKER 203 Rhoda Street LEANARD PEARLIN 81 Bigelow Street JOSEPH PIPER 28 Silver Street Wrestling, 2. 3. MARGARET RAND 3 Rowley Street ARTHUR J. RICCI 120 Sumner Street Wrestling. I; Intramural Basket- ball. 3. KENNETH ROBBIE I 10 Putnam Street KATHRYN ROBERTS 22 Moffat Road Archery. I. 2. IDA SEGAL 160 Main Street LOUISE SHAHEEN 537 Washington Street Basketball. 2. 3: Bowling, 3: Ping Pong, 3; Badminton. 3. JACK SIDELINGER 215 South Central Avenue STUART SMITH 5 Rogers Street Nominating Committee. I. 2: Newswriting Club, I: Soiling Club. I. 2: Rifle Club. 2. 3: Wrestling, I. GERTRUDE SULLIVAN 72 Germaine Avenue Swimming. 3: Sailing Club. 2; Basketball, I. DORA TOCCI 211 Upland Road Drum Majorette. 2, 3: State Music Festival, 2. CAROLYNE WILLIAMS 25 Braintree Avenue Sailing Club. I. 2: Archery I. 2; Girls' Club. 3. Auto Mechanic Department William Doherty Herbort Erskne Frank Holl Adrien Lomicux Joseph McKenzie Richard Stephansky William Williams Electrical Department Grant Baxter E. Carlton 8rown William Burke Richard Cumming Walter DoBoaumont Edward Doherty Edwin Elstob Theodore Lloy William O'Connell Machine Department Stewart Forbes Fausto Grippi Frederick Kleimola Rolph Naclerio John Pendleton Raymond Rouleau James Sheohan Plumbing Department Vincent Andorson Robert Carella Angelo DelGreco Edward DiBona Frank Grilli Lindo Infascelli Crawford Mir ck Goorgc McAdam Robert Scanncll Edgar Wators Sheet Metal Department Frederick Gabriel William Goodwin Gerard Keefe William Kleimola Peter Panarelli Josoph Rigo Cabinet Making Department Donald Hughes Pattern Making Department James Diamantople Edward Roberts Guy Stadig Did you enjoy the “Harvest Hop” and the April Sport Dance, “Spring Splash”? Sophomores — didn't the Handbook greatly help you to become acquainted with your school? Weren't you glad your school could do its bit for Uncle Sam by sponsoring a U. S. O. Dance and a Liberty Book Drive? The group responsible for all these activities was the Student Council, with presi- dent Peter Kanavos, vice-president lames Papile, and secretary-treasurer Edith Moberg, with faculty advisor Miss Martha Tikkanen at the helm. ☆ In a democracy We, the people” have a right to be represented; that's the aim of the Home Room Representative group, which has a chance to carry the opinions of individuals and small groups to the Student Council meetings, where they receive immediate attention. As yet, the more timid students haven't ventured many opinions through their representatives and have thus given up chances to help their school and themselves. However, this organ- ization shows great promise for the future! JJome ! oom f epmsen ta tii ed page forty-six The efficiency squad keeps 'em rollin' at the Fore River yard, but at Quincy High the traffic squad keeps 'em walking — quietly, orderly, and without confusion. Hats off to these little-publicized custodians of the cor- ridor, to their squad leaders, Fred Moorehouse ground floor, Ruth Eng — first floor, Barbara Pinkham — second floor, Robert Runius third1 floor, and to Mr. Deane, director and organizer. Quincy High School ☆ Bradford Library These are our school librarians! Under Miss Coulman's supervision they train a year, gradually assuming library duties, and are then formally initiated onto the staff at a banquet. After their training they can handle expertly many phases of library work, aiding both teachers and pupils. Their social activities included a get-acquainted party, a Christmas reunion party with alumnae, and a party with the North High staff. page lorty-sevcn U 'll (Golden Rod Annual) Laurels to our Business Staff! Through your efforts the literary portion of the Golden Rod has been a great success. Much praise is due you for your loyal support in the circulation, the publicity, the soliciting, and all financial matters pertaining to this yearbook, which you have very success- fully carried out under the supervision of Mr. Millard. ☆ Do you wish to v rite the great American novel or the great American play? This year the members of the Literary Club gained much useful knowl- edge about the writing of poetry, essays, drama, and the short story. They analyzed the works of great masters under the direction of Miss Marr. The meetings were highlighted by the criticism of original manuscripts of fellow members. page iorty-eight The Newswriters' job is to obtain accurate facts of school events and prepare them for weekly publication. There are four groups chosen from English classes of Miss Browne, Miss Call. Miss Turner, and Mr. McKeown, working in rotation. They work under pressure, since they must, in a short time, get facts accurately, write up their information correctly, and have this ready to appear in print. ☆ The Q-Hi News, with Richard Cutler as editor-in-chief Mary Elizabeth Clark and Barbara Olsen as assistant editors, made its exit last January, much to the sorrow of the student body. Every Wednesday afternoon the staff locked itself up in a room to work on the weekly newspaper, and on Friday it was delivered to the waiting students. The staff is to be highly praised for its excellent work. All of Quincy High's dramatic ability in one group, under president Mary- Elizabeth Clark, vice-president Leon Raiche, secretary Sinforosa Acebo, and treasurer Walter Milliken — that's The Page and Stage Club of 1942. This organization has given its members a well rounded program for the past year, starting with a presentation of Radio Drama and comedy in the Assembly to introduce the group to the school, and including, in addition, one-act plays, voice and speech work, pantomimes, and guest speakers. ☆ The Debating Society has had a brilliant season. The debating team won, the second consecutive time, the district meet of the National Forensic League. This year's debaters were as follows: on the affirmative, Robert Craig and Robert Baker; on the negative, Jeanne Melville and Burton Steir. Albert Mullen won first in the Extemporaneous Speaking and Peter Kanavas third in Original Oratory There were also interscholastic debates with Concord and Revere. Generous credit goes to Mr. Lee, the club's able advisor. The Thalia Club of Quincy High started the year with an uproarious initiation for the new pledges. Meetings were given over to relief work, quiz, and variety programs. The school is especially grateful to Thalia for securing the services of Lydia Dan, a Chinese student at Radcliffe, who spoke to the school on Education in China. The officers of the club are president, Selma Brick, vice-president, Eleanor DiTullio, secretary, Marjorie Vincent, and treasurer, Eleanor Johnson. The Girls' Club program this year displayed remarkable versatility. In step with the times meetings were devoted to the Red Cross in addition to the community service rendered by the Thanksgiving and Christmas parties. I Haven't a Thing to Wear, was the title of the informative lecture the club sponsored. Our group entertained the North girls at a get-acquainted party. The annual weenie roast and style show were fun. Much credit is due the efficient Girls' Club board. t Initiation week in September started the successful season of this club. The event most eagerly anticipated by the Tri-Hi-Y girls was the State con- vention in West Springfield. A Mothers' Party and several events in collabor- ation with the Hi-Y boys highlighted the year's program. Officers of the 1941-42 season included Ruth MacBeth, president; Anna Parzialle, vice-president; Blanche Tobey, treasurer; and Irma Wilding, secretary. Sharing honors with Girls' Club for the most popular club” award is the 1942 Hi-Y group. President George West, vice-president Sydney Fox, sec- retary Fred Gronval, and treasurer Cuyler McLeod, with the co-operation and help of the members, have completed a banner year, the program of which has included talks on guidance, hobbies, hygiene, and safety, by well known exponents of each, a joint meeting with the North Tri-Hi-Y and the Quincy Tri-Hi-Y, a banquet, and an outing. page fifty-two An important and colorful addition to the school, as always, is the band. Whether cheering the football games or marching in Quincy's parades, the blue and gold ranks are a familiar and welcome sight Although the State Festivals were postponed this year, due to war conditions, the band aladly assisted North in its excellent performance. These musical people, with Miss Howes and Miss Tuthill as directors, rehearse enthuisastically every Thursday afternoon for the purpose of bringing pleasure to others as well as to themselves. This year the long-awaitecf State Festival, in which the orchestra usually participates as a Class A orchestra (class determined by school enrollment), was postponed because of war conditions. The orchestra played in the Parents' Night program, the Christmas concert, and the spring instrumental concert. (Chapel Choir The Chapel Choir's rendition of the “Lord's Prayer ' a part of the assembly each week, will long remain in the memories of those who attend Quincy High School. The solemn weekly performance of the choir offers the school a chance to hear beautiful hymns sung in a religious style. This year, for the first time, the Chapel Choir has been permitted school time for rehearsals. ☆ Another year of achievement for the Glee Club! Their beautiful Christmas program took the form of a church service. In the spring the combined glee clubs of junior and senior schools in Quincy presented a program featuring the choral fantasia from Faust” by Gounod and Walt Whitman's ‘T Hear America Singing” with music by Gaul. The assisting artists were alumni of our schools. Members of the Glee Club have gained invaluable appreciation of fine music through their year's work. 2)mm alorettes One of the most impressive sights of the football season was that of the drum majorettes, led by Margery Comis, marching across the field in tune to the music of the band. Attired in smart blue and white uniforms, Dora Tocci, Lois Kintigh, Marjorie Concannon, Alene Costello, Dorothy Pedretti, Leona Bonome, and Shirley Johnson attracted much attention. In February a group of girls, under the direction of Miss Johnson, re- sponded to the call of the Red Cross Organizations. Composed largely of girls from Miss Johnson's own home room, they set to work to make afghans and other knitted materials which are needed today. This ambitious group has already completed an afghan of mulberry and tapestry rose which rep- resents six weeks of work, and, their spirits undaunted, has done advanced work on still another one. page fifty-five Now Be Good Sports! It's All in Fun! The Great Gypsy Rose Pete Welcome Back! Just Comparing? Nervous! Q-Hi Chorus Concentration? Cheerleading is as essential to sports as national morale is to winning this war, that's the way a war analyst would say it. The way any Quincy High School student would say it is that Frances Burns, Donald Cutler, Her- bert Hartford, Phyllis Muir, Lillian Riley, Blanche Tobey, and Irma Wilding have certainly helped keep up the spirits and, incidentally, the scores of Quincy players. And look at that squad of juniors for next year! ☆ The football team this season will long be remembered as going all out •for Victory. They went “over the top in every major game of the year, be- ginning with the sensational win over Brockton, including a well-fought tie game with Weymouth, and ending with the amazing score of 34-0 over North. Coaches MacLean and Sullivan did a splendid job, and the team gave its fol- lowers a great show during the whole season, led by co-captains Pecce and Fleischer. Our powerful wrestling team has completed one of the most successful and exciting seasons in the history of the school. Coach Leland Anderson's wrestlers have not only won the Old Colony League championship, but also have produced eleven state champions, four in class A, and seven in class B. As nine of the champions are juniors and sophomores, the hopes for next year's victories are shining brightly. When the first warm rays of spring appeared. Coach Sullivan's enthu- siastic baseball team emerged from practice in the gym to the open field, ready for work. With the return of veterans Art LaRue, foe Goodhue, Shorty Fleischer, and Marty Daly, and the appearance of many newcomers, the team started off with hopes for success. This energetic group should have no trouble in building up a high score for the season. page fifty-nine i- asLel(all The stars of the Quincy Basketball team, led by co-captains Glenn Fleischer and Frank Saldi, won many games, including those with Weymouth, North, Medford, Revere, and Arlington. The team included Paul Mclnnes, Anthony DiTullio, Robert Nankin, Guido Pettinelli, and John Mathieson, who will return to the team next year to continue winning games. Coach Mac- Lean is to be congratulated for creating such a reliable team. This season's skaters have left behind them a record of two victories, four ties, and four defeats. With the persistent coaching of Mr. Warren Findlay the team has shown its ability by the triumphs over Wellesley and B. C. High. For his outstanding performance Robert Hov ell has been placed on the first team of the Bay State All Stars, while Pete Condas and Frank Libertine have been placed on the second team. The season of 1942 promises plenty of action for tennis enthusiasts. Veterans of last year, including Dick Maloney, Bill Fitzgerald, Irving Risi, James Moran, and Wayne Martin, are on hand to help make a team worthy of any opponent. Matches have been arranged with the teams of Milton, Winchester, Thayer Academy, Boston Latin, and Dorchester High. To coach Deane goes the credit for moulding the new players into promising team material. ☆ The Quincy rifle team enjoyed a successful season, during which it won five of the seven matches and competed in the national Hearst Contest. All this required continual practice on the range. The team was coached by Mr. Briggs, assisted by Robert House, president; Howard Tufts, vice-president; Stuart Smith, treasurer, and George Robicheau, secretary. The sophomores and juniors strengthened the team much this year. Basketball — just a boy's sport? — not at all, as shown by the large group of enthusiastic sophomores, juniors, and seniors who appeared for practice in the gym every Monday and Wednesday afternoon during the winter. Good-natured rivalry sprang up among the teams and resulted in keen competition in the games refereed by the students themselves. ☆ Did you know — that there is more than one Alice Marble in our school? that there are many more in the making? Visit the gym on Monday night, where beginners are learning the funda- mentals of the game. See these tennis experts on the court. Do not miss the final singles and doubles tournament which ends the season. Jennis page sixty-two ’'I've hit gold!!! Gold! do you hear? Don't get excited — it's not a second gold rush. It's just the victorious cry of an archery member. With the best equipment and supervision all the girls are becoming experts with the bow and arrow. Esther Gilbody is presi- dent of this merry band, with Helen Mulligan, vice-president; Betty Seaman, secretary; and Barbara Daigle, treasurer. A tournament at the end of the season will decide the best Robin Hood band of all the teams. ☆ Eight at twelve!! Nine at ten!! Nip at ten!! Such are the exclamations heard amidst the firing of the rifles. Every Wednesday afternoon under the direction of Miss Colclough members of the Girls' Rifle Club practice on the rifle range to improve their standing in the National Rifle Association. Special awards for 1941 were given to Louise Goodale, Eleanor Gillis, Betty Pearce, Eleanor Bullock, and Peggy Bridges, crack shots. page sixty-three Not all the girls get strikes, but they're bowling every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon at the Y. M. C. A. Bowling three strings a week under the supervision of Miss Tikkanen, each girl is doing her best to improve both her own and her team's average. The hope of being the highest of the ten teams or having the highest single average at the end of the season is a great incentive to all. ☆ Splash! — the all-year-round swimmers are taking their weekly dip at the pool of the Y. M. C. A. These Quincy High aqua-lovers organized a club last fall under the direction of Miss Lois James. The leaders are Beverly John- son, president; Dorothy M. Smith, vice-president; Virginia Gray, secretary; and Constance Kanavos, treasurer. ☆ September, 1939 . . . Time dropped two bundles of squalling, question able joy upon the expectant, but unprepared, world. The concurrent blight and might of humanity were World War II and the Quincy High School Class of 1942. Leaving the routine of study as being understood, we find in a review of the extra-curricula activities a key to the class's aspirations, inspirations, recreations. Prosaic First Year! We were told that the Yuletide pageant presented in the sophomore year was an innovation. Though we lacked criterion for critical judgment, we were moved by the verve of its presentation, and our personal interpretations were not in the least impaired. It is not of frills and furbelows but of honest sentiment that Christmas is made. That, the music, with its superb, subdued lighting background gave to us. Afield, in the more masculine, muscular activities, Quincy found, after a passably fair season, the first item for cancellation with North. They won. Aside from this requiem nothing of note burst through our armor of erudi- tion. For the ease and dubious grace of our high school entrance and our social diversions throughout the year we had to thank, as had all preceding sophomores, the Student Council. From the novice ranks James Papile and Andrew Costa were chosen to represent the class of 1942. The sophomore class officers gave some indication of the senior officers when George West, president, Blanche Toby, vice-president, Ruth Eng, secre- tary, and Robert Runius, treasurer, were elected. At the termination of the sophomore year we were allowed to wander in a contrarily peaceful summer, to dream as youth is wont to dream on sum- mer eve by haunted stream. 1 ☆ Hence to a second, and for the most part, more heavily laden junior year. And still this Minervan task was our most serious problem in the vortex of a half-ravaged, raging world. A junior created a personal touch in interscholastic athletics. Glenn Fleischer became gradually a leading, plaudit-drawing football player. He was. also, high-scorer on a basketball team which was invited to the Tech Tournament, After a muddy battle inside North's ten-yard line, ending in naught but a scoreless tie, Quincy tabulated another point for retribution. The election of class officers, which is important for any class, occurred in March, 1941. The result was as follows: Fred Moorhouse, president; Barbara Pinkham, vice-president; Ruth Eng, secretary, Robert Runius, treasurer. The Pin and Ring committee included Barbara Johnson, Louise Sherriff, and Robert Tong. In sincere equity a good measure of the hope of the class for a suc- cessful senior year rests upon these students. 1 L'Allegro, John Milton. page sixty-six The Christmas pageant was re-staged, with the addition of an entering, candle-lit procession, reminiscent of Tannhauser, which heightened the solemnity, thought, and beauty. As we came to the middle way in our secondary careers, our representa tion in school affairs was broadened. The election to the Student Council of Jean and Jane Bussell, James Papile, and Peter Kanavos foreshadowed the final school assembly. There was inserted into the year a radio program, which tested Quincy's brain-trust'' and found it not on par with Malden. Despite defeat the novelty of listening to persons of our own acquaintance publicly err was to some extent gratifying. The summer lethargy was upon us once more, and the hand of Mars was clouding our horizon. We felt that a heavy summons lay like lead upon us,- but perverse fate allowed us to sleep. The beginning of the end — the senior year. Herr Schickelgruber was at our autumnal advent, completing his carbon copy of all-conquering Napoleon at the battered gates of Moscow. With the false security of Hitler's defeat dinning in our minds, we moved peacefully on in our high school orbit. One of the most striking aspects of Quincy's 1941-42 session was its athletic status. The school enjoyed a year fraught with luminous events. Under the tutelage of Coach MacLean and assistant coaches Sullivan and Raynor the football team derouted the pretentious Red-Raiders by the fabulous score of 34-0. This total, incidentally, exceeds the sum of all other scores, a true draught to the dregs of vindication. We have here to thank, for one, Glenn Fleischer, who exceeded our expectations and North’s fears. To the principii maximi must be added captain and center James Papile, who, apart from a center's stolid work, intercepted a pass and scored over sixty intervening yards. Though not fanfare recipients, the many other members of the team, it is realized, were indispensable. A fitting paean might well start, After the ball is over (so often), many a North Heart's sad. To highlight the remainder of the football year, Quincy downed Brockton, 7-0, for the first time in sixteen years and broke Weymouth's twenty-six game winning streak, 7-7. Since Quincy was the last team, three years ago, to defeat Weymouth, this year's tie game completed a job. In its own class Quincy failed against only New Bedford, the champions; Newton, class A, also won over Quincy. The wrestling team struggled through a transcendent season, culmin- ating in the winning of the state championship. Finally, previously the stigma of Quincy athletics, the hockey team, pulled itself from an habitual eighth place to an intermediate fifth. It achieved the unique distinction of playing four 1-1 ties, and until the final loss had a chance for first place in the Bay State League. A natural addition to the school education, in view of martial develop- ments, was the air raid drills, lectures, and instructions, all of which moved along smoothly. Of the several organizations for enhancing school life, the Student Coun- cil is the most efficacious. For the preservation of this, in the final year, the seniors of the august body are the following: president, Peter Kanavos, assistants, James Papile, Richard Leary, George West, Blanche Toby, and Albert Monaco. Thus our practical nonage passed in serenity in the midst of a world- wide holecaust, but the knowledge of the turbulent elements has tooled our sensibilities to a keener edge. page sixty-seven The concurrence of the war with our matriculation is perspicuous. The war in the beginning had behind it the fruits of twenty years' mistakes, while the class of 1942 must garner the last portions of high school education with which to arm itself. The final collapse of all European democracy, in sub- stance, except England, left only a hazy conception here of the reality of our own plight, evidently because our neutrality hadn't been thus expected. In 1940-41 the novelty of war had fallen away after the first quick blow of the Axis axe. Only the gossamer ghosts of most of Europe were there to plague us. and they didn't want to wet their feet in Oceanus. Finally, in 1941-42, the catacylsm of battle at home burst through our monastic belief in American immunity. Unharmed for over two years, then reeling after unguarded blows, America has come, and will increasingly come, to depend upon such as the class of 1942 to carry it through. Though the war has finally struck our own shores, this class looks, as has no other class for twelve years looked, into an America of individual financial prosperity and national monetary straits. The advantages in higher educa- tion are miraculously ubiquitous and for employment are increasingly appealing. Having acquired the potential material for over-throwing totalitarianism, we are urged not to forget the principles of integrity. There is brutal, stark tragedy before security; some will enjoy peace, but let none of us believe we can evade the mud and mire of its attainment. Perhaps the Goldenrod itself is emblematic of what we are in danger of totally losing, liberty, peace, universal amicability, which we have possessed spasmodically, but which we hope to secure eternally, culminating in inter national tranquility to ourselves and our posterity.''3 3 The Constitution of the United States. 1 an an d the 1 Jo oman ☆ Everyone hates war. There's no doubt about that. Yet every war brings forth not compensations, of course, but a great many new interests and ideas in all of the so-called fields of human endeavor, especially in the clothes line. In normal times most women (but, unfortunately, not all) are content to let the man of the house wear the pants.” But not in wartime. The ladies (bless 'em) have used the war as an excuse to take over not only men's jobs but also their clothes. And what woman doesn’t like a uniform — even on herself? Nowadays, when a soldier walks down the street with his girl, one has to look twice to be sure he isn't seeing just a couple of rookies on leave. However, if they are arm and arm and don't seem to be interested in the girls passing by. it is quite certain that the small one on the inside is just following the latest fad. Of course, since the outbreak of World War II, the established color spectrum has been long since abandoned to give way to all varieties of offshades, and I do mean off.” Nov , in keeping with the spirit of the times, milady wears red-feather red, victory blue, MacArthur blue, etc. No doubt the next variation v ill be black-out black. As the culmination of all these innovations the fair sex has adopted a feminine version of the whiffle. Of course it's not called that. It's the feather or baby bob that adorns the tresses of the ladies this season. How the hair even gets into that three-inch scalloped condition is not revealed, but it's our personal conviction that Junior, in a moment of madness, clipped mama's hair with the pinking shears. Hence the name baby bob. Despite the fact that they have helped themselves to nearly every article of masculine apparel, the women of 1942, just as the women of 1842, are still essentially feminine. They wear men's shirts, slacks, shoes, and socks. They sport swagger coats in mannish tweed. At a rakish angle atop their closely cropped heads perch little pointed hats, a flagrant steal from the United States Army. Yet, no matter how masculine the outfit, milady still wears her mouth bright red (with matching nails), her eyes hauntingly shadowed with blue, her skin fragrantly powdered, and perhaps just a dash of Chanel No. 5 behind each shell-pink ear. In these days of priorities (nothing, of course, should ever have precedence over beauty) the girls eagerly dispense with useless furbelows, such as pockets, hems, lapels, etc. Graciously they don costumes appropriate for home defense. But the subtle touches of true femininity must not be denied Miss America. She needs them to boost her morale. The young men of 1942 must still beware of the sweet young thing,” but this time in her father's new spring suit. - Macbeth, William Shakespeare. page sixty-nine 1. Most Popular Boy FRED MOORHOUSE 1G. Class Musician CHRISTINE GLADNEY 2. Most Popular Girl LOUISE SHERRIFF 17. Class Artist RONALD CHRISTENSEN 3. Prettiest Girl RUTH MacBETH 18. Class Athlete GLENN FLEISCHER 4. Class ‘‘Adonis” IAN BUCHANAN 19. Class Style Setter IAN BUCHANAN 5. Most Versatile Girl LOUISE SHERRIFF 20. Most Dependable RUTH ENG 6. Most Versatile Boy GLENN FLEISCHER 21. Most Sophisticated MARY ELIZABETH CLARK 7. Class Sweethearts BARBARA HASELTON 22. Man About Town ROBERT SWEENEY ROBERT TONG 23. Class Man Hater 8. Class Politician MARGARET CAPAFERRI PETER KANAVOS 24. Class Woman Hater 9. Class Glamour Girl PAUL McINNES BETTE RESTELLl 25. Most Likely to Succeed 10. Class Genius GEORGE MacDONALD 26. PETER KANAVOS Class Heartbreaker (boy) 11. Class Flirt EDNA CLARK CUYLER McLEOD 12. Class Actor WILLIAM SZATHMARY 27. Class Heartbreaker (girl) BARBARA PINKHAM 13. Class Actress BARBARA JOHNSON 28. Class Wit WILLIAM SZATHMARY 14. Best Dancer (girl) MARY WARD 29. Most Original Boy ROBERT SWEENEY 15. Best Dancer (boy) JAMES PAPII £ 30 Most Original Girl NATALIE COMINS page seventy Lieutenant-Colonel Cuthbert Fyer-Sales makes the following awards: one D. S. C. (not to be confused with the Department of Street Cleaning) to these lucky people: GEORGE J. MacDONALD, for being (quote) a supervisor of canine peregrinations' (unquote), and for having a prodigious vocabulary HUGO DIUSSA, for his staunch defense of Vermont, Republicanism, and farming, and for his varied interests (farming, ground culture, agriculture, soil cul- tivation, etc.) BARBARA JOHNSON, for her really excellent work as a comedienne CHRISTINE GLADNEY, for her spectacularly outstanding and infectious laughter BILL SZATHMARY, for his deformed and demented Samuel Johnson act (ask for a demonstration) THOM GERRIOR, for his vain and aimless interrogational wandering SALLY ARTHUR, for her provocatively drooping lashes RICHARD PARADISE, for being the star performer of Mr. Cutler's ten-minute feature show (starting at 2:30) SPECIAL AWARDS BY MAJOR BOYLES-RYCE One white-walled tire (49.3% rubber) engraved to one of the ofcsoXXot,’ ’ to Peter Kanavos for his Greek Our whole-hearted approval to Barbara Pehrson (a blonde) One cube of sugar apiece to the Golden Rod Georges George Scrimshaw (George I) George West . . (George II) George Moulton (George III) George MacDonald (also ran) Dog-walker to you. page seventy-one Afield Jteadquarlers - Quincy Jticfk Oflumnl ☆ OFFICIAL COMMUNIQUE, NUMBER 1942, REPORTING THE ACTIVITIES OF THE ALUMNI OF QUINCY HIGH SCHOOL June, 1942 The correspondent Irom the field of education is now able to report some information concerning the activities of Quincy High School graduates. Pursuing scientific data at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are Joseph Christopher, president of the class of 1941, and George A. Wilson, '41. Harvard College claims, for the next four years, Harold La Croix, vice- president of the class of '41, and lames Robinson, orator. Princeton has added the name of George Bonsall, '41, to its list of students. Studying at the University of Southern California is Gordon Stuart. '41. Northeastern's sons from our class of '41 are Domenic Baccari, Kenneth Close, Olavi Huhtala, John Loria, John Luongo, George Pahud, Leigh Pinel, and Robert Thomson. Improving their secretarial technique at Katherine Gibbs are June Walker, Margaret Wight, Gloria Wotten, Janet Wilson, and Mary Wheble, all from the class of '41. Fisher Secretarial School is training Eileen Evans. 41, Helen Fyfe, '41, Margaret Kay, '41, and Sophia Koury, '41. Enrolled at Boston College are Walter Avery, '41, Joseph Curtin, '41, Thomas Keating, '41, Thomas Maloney, '41, and Vincent Pattavina, '41. Boston University has called to her colors some of the finest members of the class of '41. Among them are Claire Braver man, Bernard Kramer, Abraham Levine, Arthur Mazzola, Phyllis Paulsen, David Purcell, Walter Spencer, and Hope Whiting. At Bridgewater State Normal School are Fred Lind, president of the band in '41. and Shirley Easton, prominent member of the Glee Club. Simmons College is fortunate to enlist two fine students from the class of '41. Jean Greenhalgh and Yolanda Romanelli. Uncle Sam reports that he has claimed for his armed forces the following alumni of Quincy High School: Army — Richard Walsh, '41; George H. Peachey, 3rd, '39, Eddie Kroesser, '39; Roy Hutchins, '39; and Eddie Dunn, '36; Navy — Robert Breen, '41; Harold Walton, '41, Louis White, '41; Robert Gump- right, '41, Ellsworth Trowsdale, '40; Marshall Wilbur, '38; and Walter Vincent, Annapolis graduate, '38, Marines — George White, '41; Alexander Nicholson, '40; and Georqe Page, '39, Air Corps — Richard Fleisher, '37, Kelley Field, John Rigby, '37, Pensacola; and Steve Freel, '36, RCAF. Our industrial reporter announces that the following members of the class of '41 are working for the defense of our country at the Bethlehem Steel Corporation: Ernest Caddy, John Carlino, Michael Della Barba, Frank Doyle, John Glynn, George Lindeen, Walter Mayo, James Milne, Charles Mullaney, William Neil, Chester Roher, William Tarr, Clarence Taylor, and Charles Wallace. He has also discovered that Lois Almquist, Corrinne Andrews, Jean Smith, Dixon Matthews, and William McClelland are employed at the Granite Trust Company. Field Secretary. page seventy-two ☆ As the seniors break ranks to go forth to new and greater conquests, the junior and sophomore corps are advanced to divisions of more consequent responsibility. Now seasoned veterans, they are taking active part in the many organized campaigns of the school. To direct their maneuvers for their final year, the juniors have honored Henry Conroy as president, supported by a most capable staff: Jeanne Melville, vice-president; Eleanor DiTullio, secretary, and Edward Lynch, treasurer Honorary citations are v ell deserved by juniors Rita Roach, Edith Moberg, Leon Raiche, and Peter Gacicia, for their able work in helping to solve the complex problems at General Headquarters, the Student Council. Appointments to the Pin and Ring Committee were received by Mary Lawrence, Walter Johnson, and Ray Daigle, by popular demand of the junior ranks. Junior participants have aided in throwing many of the sports campaigns onto successful offensives. Henry Conroy, Craig Cappaccioli, and Dick Maloney contributed much of the fighting power that reaped a victorious football season. On other fields of battle vital forays were executed by Augustine Pena and Guido Pettenelli in basketball, George Diamond and Irving Potter in hockey, and A1 Costley in wrestling. Sophomores elected Arthur Craig as their chief-of-staff, assisted by other promising officers: Norma DiTullio, vice-president, Barbara Caseley, secre- tary; and Stoddard Hayden, treasurer. The Student Council received two prominent end satisfying majors: Betty Pearce and Robert Reardon. Capable command was given to Virginia Deacon, Joanne Clark, and Bill Denneen on the Pin and Ring Committee. On the sophomore Athletic Roll of Honor versatile Art Craig carried the Blue and White banner for football, Walter Kemp for hockey, and Alfred Monaco for wrestling. Still there are many others from both classes who have received deserved promotion from the ranks by their own efforts and who insure the success of the juniors and seniors of tomorrow. The class of '42 gives a toast to the future victories of 1943 and 1944. page seventy-three ivi.- f I , f t ;.•■; ' ' Wxi m SSI M ACCOUNTING The Bentley School of Accounting and Finance offers both day and evening courses for young men and young women who desire to prepare for a career in business, public accounting, or government, through specializa- tion in accounting and finance. The Massachusetts Society of Certified Public Accountants awards each year a gold medal to the examinee who receives the highest marks in the C. P. A. examination given in November of each year by the Massachusetts Board of Registration of Certified Public Accountants, and a silver medal to the one who receives the next highest grades. The outstanding success of Bentley graduates in passing the C. P. A. examination, in competition with graduates of university schools of business administration, is evidenced by the fact that Bentley-trained men have been awarded the gold medal for the last three successive years and the silver medal in 1940 and 1941. No other school in New England has as many graduates who have passed the C. P. A. examination as has The Bentiey School. Send for catalog and specify whether interested in day or evening courses. The Bentley School of Accounting and Finance 921 BOYLSTON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. OPEN: IRub sell Jffmteral Home WEDNESDAYS and FRIDAYS — 2 to 11 SATURDAYS — 10 A.M. to 12 Midnight SUNDAYS — 8 A.M. to 12 Noon Two Funeral Homes: 644 HANCOCK ST., WOLLASTON 21 FRANKLIN ST., SO. QUINCY Copeland Street Baths HERMAN KYLLONEN, Prop 81 COPELAND STREET Granite 7423 WEST QUINCY. MASS. Service that Serves and Saves Telephone President 5876 .. , . fc May we congratulate the members of the Senior Class and wish them the best of success and good health in the future THE REMICK CO. HERMAN D. KEAY School Representative Full Secretarial Course 7 to 10 Months Individual Progress—Begin any Monday Open all year SEC TAR' ''1' Short Courses for College Graduates and Students 12 Huntington Avenue Copley Square ('omplitnents of Massachusetts Machine Shop, Inc. 8)7 ALBANY STREET )1 BOSTON. MASS. I a ‘ l’ I’m joining the army behind the Army!” Giri s may not qualify as bomber pilots, but they can learn to make their fingers fly over their typewriters. Being a good secretary is a worthy contribution to victory. Katharine Gibbs training is the choice of ambitious young women planning for a business career or for a war emergency job. Employers last year asked us for 5350 Gibbs secretaries. • TWO YEAR COURSE—combining college subjects and secretarial training (starts September 22). • ONE YEAR COURSE — intensive technical training (starts July 6 and September 22). Placement service without charge. Residences in Boston and New York. For illustrated catalog address Entrance Committee. ’£ SCHOOL 90 MARLBOROUGH STREET, BOSTON I II ! 1 a i 1 I ft II READ WHITE 0 Cl MEN'S and WOMEN'S FORMAL CLOTHES RENTED FOR ALL OCCASIONS QUALITY ALWAYS 111 SUMMER STREET BOSTON, MASS. Woolworth Bldg., Providence, R. I. READ 6 WHITE HIGGINS Commercial Machine School I) Courses on Electric Comptometers, Mon- roes, Sundst rands, Electric Elliott-Fish- ers, Kdiphonc. Dic- taphones, Electric I. B. M. Typewriting and Kcv Punch Ma- 1 chines, Moon Hopkins and Burroughs Elec- tric Calculators; tuition payable in six months or when working. Day anil Eve. 30th year. Free placement service. Em- ployment calls for operators exceed the supply. Open all year. K EX more 7 ! 234 Boylston St., Boston, Mass. ij asTSCses ANNUAL CRAFTSMEN for ww=nr l muuat IJearboo cs The building of a superior year-book requires the closest cooperation on the part of the staff, the Photographer, the Engraver and the Printer. Our contacts and years of experience enable us to render a complete service. As you want to produce an outstanding year-book let us help you. Our expert service will minimize many of your publication problems. FRANKLIN PRINTING SERVICE 163 ROBERTSON STREET QUINCY, MASS. Telephone President 7171 I Congratulations to the Class of 1942 Quincy's Pioneer Silent Clow Oil Burner Dealer -Silent Glovvl C Oil burner i Grade “A” Range and Fuel Oils Coal — New England Coke CHIMINIELLO COAL OIL CO. RALPH CHIMINIELLO. MGR. 121 WATER ST.. QUINCY. MASS. Telephone Granite 1361 -0137 JOHN HALL Humeral Monte A1 CHARLES H. STONE Manager — MIDDLESEX — UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. A.B. and B.S. degrees SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, M.D. degree SCHOOL OF VETERINARY MEDICINE, D.V.M. degree • Qualified high school graduates may enter the College on July 1st or on September 24th. Accelerated wartime program of preprofessional study prepares candidates for admission to the Veterinary School in twelve months, and for a B.S. or A.B. degree and admission to the Medical School in 36 months. • Middlesex University participates in the federal student work pro- gram of the National Youth Administration. Coeducational. Modern, newly erected buildings. 100-acre campus. Comfortable new dormitories. Well-equipped laboratories. Faculty of specialists for each school. CATALOG WILL BE SENT ON REQUEST MIDDLESEX UNIVERSITY • WALTHAM, MASSACHUSETTS Congratulations. Class of 42 Superior ADAMS Cleansers and Dyers CLEANSERS 144 FRANKLIN STREET 36 INDEPENDENCE AVENUE QUINCY, MASS. QUINCY. MASS. Granite 0929 President 0929 —— g i g g I. fl i g i. r i. r B i g g g g B i. I g r. w Congratulations to the CLASS OF 1942 iteUciaHb QUINCY'S FASHION CENTER Quincy's Fashion Center Oeliftltinj to Suite) With SHIP'S HAVEN RESTAURANT • and i FOOD SHOP ] L. GROSSMAN 9 Home Cooked Luncheon and Dinners j served daily in our Restaurant. 1 In our Food Shop you will find ] delicious bread and cakes for your p parties. 1 Sk sons 2 BIG, BUSY QUINCY BRANCHES Private Dining Room available for H Special Dinners. jj £as j Gieclit Chlancjed 1237 Hancock Street j Quincy, Mass. i «3=35=5?= Telephone Granite 3698 fl What can do to help? 1 9 5 a ★ ★ ★ Thumb-twiddling is out, l ut definitely! And you ran sock-knit and U.S.O. in ★ ★ ★ your spare time. But if you arc really keen to help keep things rolling . . . prepare yourself for a job. That’s truly stars-and-stripes! Uncle Sam and the Busy B's (Big Business will need trained minds and hands for quite a while to come. And smart girls, “making haste slowly,” are taking time to obtain the best business training they can find. Many 1942 graduates are choosing Fisher School for their career-preparation. This thorough secretarial training, built around individual abilities and inter- ests, gives you what it takes to get and hold a permanent, well-paid position. One-Year Intensive ami Two-Year Comprehensive courses emphasize hack- ground-building as well as mastery of technical skills. More than 1500 calls for Fisher graduates last year! Call or write for catalog. Two convenient locations: BOSTON, 118 Beacon St.; SOMERVILLE, 374 Broadway THE FISHER SCHOOLS ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ g .1 3 H J .7 3 a a 3 i i :i 3 3 a a s 1 .1 } 1 3 t 5 a 3 u s hanlon corset shop Josephine Hanlon Sullivan, Proprietor Style and Surgical Fittings GUIDO MANN 1363 HANCOCK STREET QUINCY. MASS. 61 FRANKLIN STREET Telephone Granite 0893 QUINCY. MASS. I PLATK MAKERS FOR OVER ONE HUNDRED YEARS H B C. J. PETERS STANDARD ENGRAVING CO. PHO 7 0 ENGRA VE PS ARTISTS AND DESIGNERS DIRECT AND FOUR COLOR PROCESS ENGRAVINGS HALF TONE AND LINK HANCOCK 5. X II KNEELAND STREET BOSTON, MASS. EDUCATION AND DEFENCE - UNITED FOR VICTORY SIJffCLr INIVECSITy Gives ambitious men and women college and professional training while employed in Defense. Do your bit for Uncle Sam every day in office or factory. BUT why not use your free time to better prepare yourself to serve your country in the days of victory ahead? Day and Evening Sessions - Part-time program if desired. COLLEGES: Liberal Arts — Journalism — Business Administration Day or Evening courses for A.B.; B.S. in J.; or B.S. in B.A deqree Special Pre-legal course meeting requirements for entrance to Law School, entitling one to Associate in Arts certificate. Entrance requirement: 15 acceptable units or equivalent. LAW SCHOOL: Day or Evening courses for LL.B. degree. Entrance requirement: 60 semester hours of academic work. GRADUATE SCHOOL OF LAW: 2-year Evening course for LL.M. degree. For LL.B. graduates only. SUMMER SESSION —July 6 - Auqust 14. 1942 FALL SEMESTER IN ALL DEPARTMENTS BEGINS Sept. 21, 1942 Call, write or phone CAP. 0555 for catalog SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY REGISTRAR Derne Street Beacon Hill Boston, Mass. i! UNITED CORP. SOCIETY % 32 COPELAND STREET QUINCY, MASS. 0 0 1 I I ft ft 1 .1 I ft I ft ft I ft .1 ft I I WM. WESTLAND . CO. Sporting Goods Equipment for every sport 1555 Hancock Street Quincy JOHN J. DUANE All Kinds New and Salvaged Building Material For Sale BUILDING WRECKING Licensed—Bonded—Insur'd LOO Southern Artery, Quincy, Mass Telephone PREsident 6029-6030- 031 The ANSWER” To Complete Food Protection Is The New Air Conditioned Ice Refrigerator .... SOLD BY GRANITE CITY ICE CO., INC. 550 Adams St., Quincy, Mass. Telephone President 2400 [j J. E. PURDY CO., I nc. i n i. i Photographers and Limners JE« l6o Tremont Street E Boston, Mass' Con gra tula tion s CLASS OF 1941 THE Ofrl STUDIO Personality Portraits 17 School Street Quincy, Mass. Telephone GRAnite 4670 DONAHER'S INCORPORATED 1559 Hancock Street Quincy, Mass. Patterson’s Flower Shop Elsie M. Patterson, Proprietor 1283 HANCOCK STREET QUINCY, MASS. Telephones Granite 0392, President 2054 PETTENGILUS INC. 7-11 Cottage Avenue, Quincy, Mass. JEWELERS FOR 65 YEARS Graduation Watches. Rings, Novelty jewelry Karl’s Auto Body Repair Go., Inc. SPECIALISTS IN Rembrandt Studios Repairing Wrecked Bodies and Fenders Straightening Frames and Axles Complete Bear Equipment : Complete Woodwork. Upholstery. Radiator and Glass Departments : Complete Refinishing Department Authorized Duco Station 23 Greenwood Avenue ] 1458 HANCOCK STREET Wollaston GRAnite 8100-8101 QUINCY. MASS. Delicious Food Excellent Service YE DO NUT SHOPPE HOWE 6- CRAMOND MARI - AL SHOPPE (LTq 1460 and 1472 Hancock Street Quincy. Mass. 1157 HANCOCK STREET HAND CUT DOUGHNUTS QUINCY. MASS. THOMAS S. BURGIN Incorporated Talbot-Quincy Company Insurance iu 1364 Hancock Street 1 387 HANCOCK STREET Quincy, Mass. QUINCY. MASS. H. P. HOOD S- SONS THE SWEATER SHOP (L g) j 75 ADAMS STREET 1 504 HANCOCK STREET QUINCY. MASS. QUINCY. MASS. t Crout's Bike Shop BICYCLES — REPAIRING Rent A Beautiful Bike 13 Cottage Avenue, Quincy President 9374 HURLEY DRUG CO. F. A. Hurley, Reg. Pharm. 385 WASHINGTON STREET QUINCY. MASS. Telephone President 1823 Congratulations to the Senior Class LEE SHOPS 1420 HANCOCK STREET QUINCY. MASS. MAXINE’S BEAUTY SALON The South Shore's Leading Beauty Salon 1218 Hancock Street Quincy, Mass. 1-lks’ Bldg. Pres. 5762 LODGEN MARKET, INC. QUALITY MEAT 1474 Hancock Street Quincy. Mass. THE HOLLOW ★ 516 ADAMS STREET QUINCY. MASS. NOGLER Sk BLACK CO. Makers of Nan’s Mayonnaise Dressing Distributors of Mrs. Turner’s Potato Chips 231 HOLBROOK ROAD QUINCY. MASS. Tel. Granite 9712 JOHN OJALA (JPWS) 49 CENTRE STREET QUINCY. MASS. THE ALHAMBRA TEA ROOM 1371 Hancock Street Homemade Ice Cream and Tasty Sandwiches Compliments of CUMMINGS CO. COATS, SPORTSWEAR, DRESSES 1465 Hancock Street Quincy Telephone President 1313 ROBERT A. BLAKE 501 Beale Street Quincy. Mass. WALL’S TAILORING SHOP 27 Copeland Street West Quincy. Mass. Compliments of SHEPPARD COAL OIL CO. 27 Granite Street Quincy President 7200 Compliments of QUINCY SQUARE BARBER SHOP Alfonse Pepe ROY’S FLOWERS LeROY L. ROUNSEVILLE, Prop. CARROLL CUT RATE PERFUMER FRE-DEL DEALER 1419 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass. Telephone Granite 0939 CLAIRE JEAN BEAUTY SALON 303 Newport Avenue Wollaston. Mass. MacKENZIE’S STATIONERY STORE Temple Place Quincy. Mass. PATRIARCA’S GROCERS — MARKETMEN “It Pleases Us to Please You” GraniU 7400 QUINCY MUSIC SHOP “Everything in Music” MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS NEW — USED Complete Line of Records 8 Granite Street Granite 6610 WOODSTOCK TYPEWRITER CO. 80 Federal Street Boston. Mass. T. J. HONKONEN Maats - Groceries - Provisions 107 Garfield Street. Quincy. Mass, j Telephone Granite 8599 FORE RIVER DRUG COMPANY The Rexali Store 578 Washington Street Quincy. Mass. FIELD HOUSE (MRS. HELEN GUSTAVSON) 163 Franklin Street Quincy. Mass. President 1035 CHARLES P. MILLER Watchmaker and jeweler 6 Chestnut Street. Quincy. Mass. (Next to Strand Theatre) Telephone Granite 7373 TECLA’S BEAUTY SHOPPE PERMANENT WAVING Machine and Machineless 246 Copeland Street. Quincy. Mass Granite 5907 BREWER’S CORNER PHARMACY 1 Copeland Street Quincy. Mass. WOODWARD’S SPRING SHOP Spring and Brake Service Wheels Aligned 63 Canal Street Quincy. Mass. President 1200- 1201 STEWART’S INCORPORATED 67 Beale Street Wollaston. Mass. KAY’S BEAUTY SHOP 593 Washington Street Quincy. Mass. Compliments of A FRIEND GEORGE A. GOODHUE GO. INSURANCE George A. Goodhue (Next Door to Registry of Motor Vehicles) 1095 HANCOCK STREET QUINCY. MASS. President 1211 President 1212 Compliments of ANDREW DRISCOLL 30 High School Avenue Quincy at THE CONTINENTAL Exclusive Boston Headquarters Hart Schaffner tr Marx Fine Clothes Boylston at Washington Sts.. Boston wc=tcas=ifi3i=ce=K=iE=sea!cX5=SE a cs ra«cscsciw Mrric3ci!ri rs «r-.« r=t«r r r r-.c-irr [ Compliments of ACCOUNTING CLASS OF '42 F. Moorhouse Helen Mulligan R. Nankin V . Niemi J. Ortiz J. Palumbo J. Panepinto J. Papile C. Peterson G. Robichau L. Smith D. Spargo G- Starratt L. Weeden R. Welch R. Tangherlini A. Anderson P. Barone Ida Campitelli F Clericuzio P Condos A. DiTullio I. Dorley J. Goodhue W. Johnson Mary LaPlume Lois Leif W. Mariano B. Mattson D. McGrath W. McGrath W. McKinnon Career girls ! Girls who want to work! You are invited to investigate our facilities for preparing you for your chosen occupation in governmental or private employ- ment. Choose long or shorter courses including Medical, Legal, Ex- ecutive, and Intensive Courses. Visit the buildings and inspect the equipment. Social and Sports Program. Dormitory. Day and Kvening Division. STRATFORD SCHOOL 128 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, Massachusetts Under-Grads know kennedv’s They know that we know their likes and dislikes They know that here at Kennedy's we pride ourselves on being New England headquarters for campus-styled clothes. And here's a tip - Mother and Dad will be pleased, because we provide for their interests, too. KENNEDY’S FAMOUS UNDER-GRAD SHOPS r—T t($ (yummeSi Plan to get a training that will help you in business or in college, or qualify you for Civil Service, to be a yeo- man, or for work in the Quartermaster’s, Finance or Procurement Division of the service. Our intensive Summer Session, hours 9:00 to 1:00, for ten weeks, starting June 22nd, should he part of every High School graduate’s program. Plan your future by getting more information from -BRYANT $ STRATTON SCHOOL— 334 BOYLSTON STREET, BOSTON KENmore 6789 LEARN BEAUTY CULTURE at WILFRED ACADEMY IVf train you in a short time at low cost Ideal positions, good pay and advancement await you in either war or peace time. There is a shortage of exper- ienced operators. Day and Evening Classes be- gin each week. Visit our classes in session and see our employment records. Write for 1942 Catalog H WILFRED ACADEMY 492 Boy Isto Street Boston, Mass. KEN. 0880 BEST WISHES from A FRIEND B 2 OUR APPRECIATION We wish to thank all who have so kindly helped us in the publication of the Golden Rod Annual, and also the business firms who have advertised in this issue and we hope that they may be generously patronized.. The Staff Ofutoqraphs i NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY College of Liberal Arts Offers for young: men a broad program of college subjects serving as a foundation for the understanding of modern culture, social relations, and technical achievement. Students may concentrate in any of the following fields: Biology. Chemistry. Economics. Sociology. Psychology. Math- ematics. Physics, and English (including an option in Journalism) Pre-Medical. Pre-Dental and Pre-Legal courses are offered. Varied opportunities available for vocational specialization. Degree: Bach- elor of Science or Bachelor of Arts. College of Engineering Offers for young men curricula in Civil. Mechanical (with Air-Conditioning, and Aeronautical options), Electrical. Chem- ical. and Industrial Engineering. Class- room study is supplemented by experiment and research in well-equipped lnliorator- ies. Degree: Bachelor of Science in the professional field of specialization. School of Law offers three-year day and four-year eve- ning undergraduate programs leading to the degree of Bachelor of Laws. A min- imum of one-half of the work accepted for a bachelor’s degree in an approved college or Its full equivalent required for admission to undergraduate programs. Case method of instruction. The School also offers a two-v ar even- ing program ope nto graduates of ap- proved law schools and leading to the degree of Master of Laws. Undergraduate and graduate programs admit men and women. □ □ B School of Law Evening School of Business Day Pre-Legal Program Day and Evening Pre-Legal Programs 1 | College of Business Administration Offers for young men the following curricula: Accounting. Marketing and Advertising, and Industrial Administration. Eaeh curriculum provides a sound training in the funda- mentals of business practice and culminates in special courses devoted to the various professional fields Degree: Bachelor of Science in Business Administration. School of Business Offers curricula through evening classes in Accounting, Industrial Management, Distributive Management, and Engineer- ing and Business, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Business Administration in specified fields. Preparation for C. P. A. Examinations. A special four-year curriculum in Law and Business Man- agement leading to the Bachelor of Com- mercial Science degree with appropriate specification is also offered. Shorter programs may be arranged. Co-educa- tional. Evening Courses of the College of Liberal Arts Certain courses of the College of Liberal Arts are offered during evening hours affording concentration in Economics, English, History and Government or Social Science. A special program preparing for admission to the School of Law is also available. The program is equivalent in hours to one-half the requirement for the A.B. or S.B. degree. Associate in Arts title conferred. Co-educational. Co-operative Plan The Colleges of Liberal Arts, Engineering and Business Administration offer day pro- grams for men only, and are conducted on the co-operative plan. After the freshman year, students may alternate their periods of study with periods of work in the employ of business or industrial concerns at ten-week intervals. Under this plan they gain valuable experience and earn a large part of their college expenses. FOR CATALOG —MAIL THIS COUPON AT ONCE NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY Director of Admissions Boston, Massachusetts Please send me a catalog of the □ College of Liberal Arts □ College of Engineering □ College of Business Administration Name ................................ Address C-120 Quincy Hign School Bradford Library . • , .


Suggestions in the Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) collection:

Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945


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