High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 24 text:
“
18 SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL RADIATOR EXCHANGE NOTES AS WE SEE OTHERS The Optimist, South Side High School, Newark, New Jersey.—You have a very well organized paper. Your cover design and your cuts are very clever. Recorder, Winchester High School, Win- chester, Mass.—Let us hear from you again. Are you at all interested in a literary depart- ment? Drury Academe, Drury Academy, North Adams, Mass.— You have an interesting paper, but why not have a few more jokes? The Trident, United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.—We like your paper. Come again! Dorchester High School Item, Dorchester High School, Mass.—There is small chance for improvement on your paper! Philomath, Framingham High School, Fram- ingham, Mass.—Your cuts are very original. Why not have more? The Sea Breeze, Thomaston High School, Thcmastcn, Maine.—A very good literary de- partment. We think a few more cuts would add to your paper. The Argus, Gardner, Mass.—A very unique paper and very interesting. Why not have a few more cuts?, A very good looking cover de- sign. The Tufts Weekly, Tufts College, Medford, Mass. A very interesting college paper! The Southern Bell, Southern Junior High School, Somerville, Mass.—A newsy paper. We like it very much. The Noreaster, Northeastern Junior High School, Somerville, Mass.—Your graduation number is very complete. Keep up the good work. The Unquity Echo, Milton High School.— Your “Locals” are very newsy. Where is your literary department? The Spotlight. South Hadley High School, South Hadley Falls, Mass.—You have a very well organized paper! We would like to be mentioned on your exchange list. Burdett Lion, Burdett College, Boston, Mass. —Roars from the Lion deserves mention. They are very interesting and amusing. The Assembler, Wrentham High School. Wrentham, Mass.—We like “The Assembler” and hope to hear from you again. The Abbis, Abington High School, Abing- ton, Mass.—Your paper is very interesting, par- ticularly “The Angel and the Luck.” The Jabberwock, Girls’ Latin School, Boston, Mass. Your paper is very original, but a few more cuts would improve it. The Western Star. Western Junior High School, Somerville, Mass.—A very amusing paper. “The White Rock” is particularly inter- esting. The Red and Black, Whitman High School, Whitman, Mass.- Your foreign department is very unusual. Come again! We like your paper. Your cover design is very extraordi- nary. The Punch Harder, Punchard High School, Andover, Mass.—Your magazine is well ar- ranged and interesting.
”
Page 23 text:
“
SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL RADIATOR 17 7NTOTES OF THE ALVMNI CATTRBELL-08 1917 Helen Mongrade was recently married to Cornelius Harrington. Sadie Lyle was married this summer to Don- ald Marshall, class of 1916. 1920 Anastasia Mannion recently married Nicho- las De Stefa no of New York. 1922 Marion Phillips is attending Katherine Gibbs school in Boston. Marjorie Robinson is going to Lowell Textile. Homer Rowe is completing his last year at Dartmouth. Sanford Fisher is attending Graceland Col- lege, Iowa, as a sophomore. 1923 Marguerite Freeze is giving music lessons, privately and in classes. Esther Fisher is a sophomore at Ames Agri- cultural College in Iowa. 1924 Greta Hedlund entered her second year at Radcliffe this fall. Dorothy Cragin is a sophomore at Jackson College this year. Constance Garrod returned to Wheaton Col- lege as a sophomore. Helen Moore has just graduated from For- syth Dental School. Inda Butler is at Middlebury College, Ver- mont. Priscilla Ripley is a sophomore at Simmons College. Hester Smith has transferred from the Uni- versity of Chicago to Boston University, Col- lege of Liberal Arts. Marion Grimes is attending Bryant and Stratton Business College. Atherton Fryer and Clifford Ells are sopho- mores at Boston University. Dwight Bellows has transferred from Bos- ton University, College of Liberal Arts, to Tufts College. Irving Spering, John Holmes, Basil Mills, Francis Collier and Roy Hanslick are sopho- mores at Tufts. 1925 Rita Mollet entered her first year at Boston University. Eleanor Harmon is a freshman at Radcliffe. Gretchen Bowers is attending the Forsyth Dental School, Boston. Hazelle Foster is at Skidmore College, New York. Bartlett Stoodley and Dean Swan are fresh- men at Dartmouth. Donald Belden is a freshman at Amherst. Robert Stetson is at Wilbraham. Clifton Campbell is attending Boston Uni- versity. Phyllis Applin is at Lasell in Auburndale. Frank X. Calendrella now attends the Bent- ley School of Accounting and Finance. John Donahue is at Boston College. Frank Veneri is taking a course at B. U. Night School. Richard Valenti is studying at the New Eng- land Conservatory of Music. Philip Rusden is attending Tufts Pre-medi- cal School. Tom Griffin, Leo Donovan and Charles Adams are at Boston College. Harry Burnett, Thomas Kennedy, and Tobias Levinson are at Harvard. George Mason and Frank Smith are at the Massachusetts Agricultural School.
”
Page 25 text:
“
SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL RADIATOR 19 SOMERVILLE SWAMPS WORCESTER Somerville took advantage of fumbles and beat Worcester Commerce, 14 to 0, Saturday, October 3. The game was played in a sea of mud, and it was almost impossible to hold the rain-soaked ball. Six of the fourteen points were scored in the first half. Wilson scored the touchdown by straight iine plunging. While McGovern scored the other touchdown by recovering one of the numerous fumbles, he ran through the whole Worcester team for the touchdown. Both goals were missed. The other two points were scored by a safety by Averka, of Worcester. It was almost impossible to distinguish the two teams, because after the first two plays both teams were caked with mud. Many times it was necessary to call time out to dry the ball. The team stood strong under this vigorous test. Charles Finn, Sporting Editor. HLET1CS and Bill Hooley carried the ball for many long gains. In the first period neither team was able to score, and a punting duel between Papp, of Saugus, and Wilson, of Somerville, was the main feature. The honors were about even. In the second period Wilson scored a touch- down, after many substantial gains by Mc- Carthy, Wilson and Scully. Wilson failed to kick the goal. In the final half of the game Somerville came into her own. Hatchet recovered a fumble on the Saugus forty-yard line, which paved the way for a touchdown by McCarthy. After that Somerville scored three more touchdowns. Wilson kicked two of the goals, and Hooley kicked the other. Coach Dickerman used many substitutes so that he could see what each of the men was worth. The team showed the benefit of good coaching. Charles Finn, Sporting Editor. TENNIS THE OPENING GAME Somerville won its opening football game Saturday, September 26, beating Saugus High 34 to 0. Captain Red Wilson, Bill McCarthy Tennis, though a minor sport in the Somer- ville High School, and despite the lack of facili- ties, has met with a great deal of enthusiasm. A good number of candidates reported for the team this year. Wilbur Irving was elected manager, and a tournament arranged to determine who should represent the team. Only two of last year’s team remain, Hong Wong and Joseph Corish. Four vacancies will be filled by the new men this year. Nourse, Townsend, Barrata, and Fisher seem to have the best possibilities of making the team. Matches are being arranged with other schools, and a schedule will be announced later. Charles J. Finn, ’26.
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.