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Page 31 text:
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' lan, p 1 4 . University of New Hampshire: Judith Abbott, Richard Bradt, Pris- cilla Flagg, Harvey Fox, Jacqueline Rumazza, Barbara Vayo, Gerald Wentworth, Gordon Wiggin, Charles Pieroni, Roger Griffin, Eleanoranne Nulsen. Westbrook Junior College: Lor- raine Barcomb, Anastasia Raizes. Massachusetts College of Phar- macy: Robert Wingate. McIntosh Business College: Irene Wilkins, Sylvia Cossette, Betty Dav- enport, Marlene Beaudoin, Robert Twombly. St. Anselm: Wilfred Roy, George Mucher. Worcester Academy: Paul Rosen- berg. New Hampton Prep: James Don- lon, Richard Welch. Sears Roebuck and Company: Gay Avery. Newberry's: Eleanor Cole, Louise Pike. N Woolworth's: Alice Beriault, Jan- ice Sirois. Fishman's: Bertha Geary, Shirley Moody. Willard March, Contractor: War- ren Wheeler. General Electric: Robert Schafer, Gerard Casey. Bliven Heating Service: Richard Dame. Courier Office: Thomas Blake. City Cab: Leon Pouliot. Paul's Texaco Station: David Gib- erson. 0117 A. Sz P.: Robert Rogers, Richard Grenier. Champlin's: Ronald Dorr, Regi- nald Grenier. Bus Depot: Ruthe Rouleau. Those working for their fathers: Dwight Horne, Joseph Sanborn, Don- ald Seavey, Norman Beaudoin, Ar- thur J enness. Wacs: Audrey Smart. United States Air Force: Edward Drapeau, Ellis Lowry, Chester Ward- en, Gordon Hartford, Charles Walk- er. United States Navy: Noel Snyder, Paul Walsh, Roger Morin. Women's Air Corps: Patricia Theriault, Virginia Boudreau. Maybury Shoe Company: Shirley Charles, Barbara Gilmore, Marilyn Grenier, Barbara Sullivan. Hubbard Shoe Company: Paul Ba- ker, Rachel Vanesse, Kenneth Horn, Marjorie White. Kendall Insurance Company: Eli- nor Arlin, Jean Gowen. Varney's Insurance Company: Mary Pierce, Marion Witham. . Telephone Operators: Agnes Gras- sie, Shirley Horne. Young's Dairy: Kenneth Hussey. Gonic Garage: Donald Spurling. Boston University: Bruce Hescock. Bentley School of Accounting: Arnold Notkin. Margaret Pillsbury Hospital: Jan- et Griffin. Notre Dame Hospital: Patricia Hamel.
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Page 30 text:
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28 THE RED AND WHITE in a rough tough game marked by four fifteen-yard penalties against the Bay State eleven. All the scoring came in the first half. Newburyport tallied first by recovering a fumble deep in Spauld- ing territory. The try for the con- version failed. After receiving the ensuing kickoff, Spaulding was held for downs, and forced to punt. Rund- lett received the punt for the Bay Staters, and with good interference, ran 70 yards for their final touch- down. Late in the second quarter, Spauld- ing capitalized on a break and with Huppe and Dodge alternating the ball-carrying duties, the Raiders hit pay dirt, with Dodge going over from the two-yard line. The placement was not good. This made the score 12-6, which turned out to be the final score. The second half was mainly a strong defensive game, with each team stiffening the defense in the crucial moments. John N ewhall was hurt on the first play of the game, and will be missing from the line-up for the rest of the season. Spaulding 0 6 0 0- 6 Newburyport 6 6 0 0-12 SPAULDING 21-CONCORD 6 Spaulding racked up its third win of the season against Concord on our field. The first score was set up by a 76- yard punt by Jim Smith. On the second play John Phillips of Concord fumbled, and Sam Theriault recov- ered on the 25-yard line. Smith lost trying to pass. Bucky Leonardi went for four and Smith threw a pass to Bob Scagliotti on the 27. Smith passed again, this time to Marcel Huppe who scored. The try for the point was not good. The Raiders led 6-0. ' Three plays after the kickoff Smith intercepted Ossie McLeod's pass on the Raider 10 and raced it back to the 30. The half ended with Smith passing to Jim Scott on the Concord Concord fumbled on the second play of the third period. Smith re- covered on the Concord 18-yard line. Huppe went a yard and Leonardi raced 17 yards to score. Carrigan booted 'the extra point. The score stood 13-0. Concord came back only to lose the ball on the Spaulding 34. Unable to move the ball Smith punted to the Concord, 21. The quarter ended with Phillips going to the 31. Con- cord lost the ball again this time on its 32. Spaulding was forced to punt. McLeod brought it out to the eight. Concord had to kick but Larry Braley was caught in the end zone. Fifteen-to nothing the score. Concord got its first touchdown when McLeod scored from the 18. Spauld- ing's last tally came on Smith's run from the three. THE DAY EARTH WAS SAVED fContinued from Page 221 mean that this war is the war to end our generation ? It might be, said the Professor. Just then there was a call for the Professor from the observatory. Ve- nus had just launched a huge bomb. The Professor and Joe got in a car and drove to the observatory. When they arrived Professor Wil- liams studied the bomb through the huge telescope and said it was a gas bomb set to explode when it reached the Earth's atmosphere and then the gas would poison the air, killing everything that lived on Earth. The bomb would take at least twenty-four hours to reach here, the Professor said. Within the next hour they had every weapon known launched to in- tercept the bomb, but they all failed. Now everyone on Earth waited for certain death. The bomb had just an hour to go before it would reach Earth. Suddenly they saw a rocket ship coming toward the bomb and be- fore long the bomb was blown up by the rocket ship. Then they swung their telescope toward Venus which was now being attacked by Martian space ships. It had been a Martian space ship that had saved Earth!
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Page 32 text:
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30: THE RED AND WHITE Wellesley Children's Hospital: Beverly Sunderland, Pauline Kond- rup. Wyandotte Worsted Mill: Charles Varney. Post Graduates: Colette Morgan, Kenneth Beach. Elliot Hospital: Priscilla Drew, Betty Roy. Burdett Business College: Muriel Zinck. Taking care of children: Shirley Tebbetts. Marriages: Louise Dufault, '51 to Philip Sawyer, '-51: Beverly Camp- bell, '51 to Frank Knights, '51: Nan- cy Churchill, '51 to Edward'Lyons: Marilyn Drown, '51 to Stanward Leeman: Virginia Ratcliffe, '51 to Thomas Powers: Barbara Gould, '51 to George Lemay: June Kelley, '51 to Richard Burke. Left School: Lawrence Corson, Sally McDuifee, Vera Lowry, Cath- erine Corpening, Donald Whitney. Wentworth Institute: Donald Du- chano. Tufts College: Richard Krueger. Plymouth Teachers' College: Ar- lene Parent. Wilfred Academy: Barbara Creas- er. New England School of Art: Rob- ert Constantino. Nichols' Junior College: Edward Morse. Working ,Out of Town: Carolyn Smith, Newmarket: Thomas Printy, Dover: Richard Auclair, Connecti- cut: Louise Dufault, Dover: Leroy Edmunds, Foxboro, Mass.: George Hervey, Detroit, Michigan: Patricia Lessard, Joliet, Illinois: Richard Gagne, Dover: Marilyn Forbes, Con- cord: Philip Sawyer, Farmington. Unemployed: Norma Jane Coran, Roger Doyon, Lorraine Brooks, Roxi- anna York, Constance Shaw, Nancy Hutchins, Dorothy Beaupre, Evelene Stevens, Dot Barter, Natalie Prime, Susan Stearns. Lumbering: Charles Gerrish. School of Attendant Nursing CBostonJ : Eleanor Hersom. Last Rochester High' School Class Has First Reunion Approximately forty members of the class of 1939 of Rochester High School, the last class to be graduated before the opening of the new Spaulding High School, held their first reunion at the Rochester Coun- try Club recently. Wives and mem- bers of their families brought the attendance to about seventy people. Robert Emerson, class president, was the toastmaster. Letters were read from Betty Woodman, Vallejo, California: Donald Dixon, Pope Air Force Base, N. C.: Fredrick Kidder, Pearl Harbor, T. H.: Hazel Dickerson Demerritt, Dallas, Texas: Captain Leo Dupont, Tokyo, Japan: Wallace Kimball, Fielding Hill, Mass.: and Cliff Semonds, Lakeland, Fla., all members of the class. Dancing fol- lowed the dinner. At the head table were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Emerson: Dorothy Dow Callaghan, secretary, and husband: Mr. and Mrs. Starvo George, treas- urer: Mrs. Rita Boivin Lagasse, vice president: Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Boucher fEdna Rosenl, Valedictori- an: and Mrs. Prudence Manchester Tuttle. SPIRIT OF THE AMERICAN FILAG fContinued from Page 41 free country existing for liberty and the maintenance of rights of all citi- zens. VVl1ile they fought, struggled, and died our forefathers thought not of their lives but of the spirit and hopes centered in our great flag. Thereafter, the 1'irst settlers formed a government that would meet the needs of the people and at the same time convey the real spirit of Americanism and the American Hag. However, the result was at- tained only after many conventions and the formation of an inept cen- tral government under The Articles of Confederation. The grand climax was the Constitution, the supreme law of the land, which also reflects
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