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
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 46 text:
“
a day go by without copying SOG you fum . . . the band marching in step? hear an argument in law class? See See See the girls' basketball team Win a game? a photographer in class? see the seniors' silly Christmas presents? see the fellows get sick on jelly beans? smell the senior chemistry experiments? see the rush in the library before book reports? homework? see the boys' gym class play grab-ball? see a senior pay his class dues on time? see seniors selling refreshments at games? see the secretarial girls transcribe short- hand notes? buy one of Katie's electrocuted Hot Dogs at a basketball game? taste the punch at our Iunior Prom? See See S66 See See the seniors acquiring Christmas trees Cthanks to the donorsl? i the seniors decorating for dances? the cafeteria rush at lunch time? the senior girls dissect frogs? the senior girls try to start a fad? the senior fellows in their engineer S66 S66 See See See See a senior do a two-week trig problem? the Ag boys going back and forth to the Bridge Street School? the yearbook staff at work? us run when the noon bell rings? teachers locked in the office? an Industrial Arts boy hit his finger with a hammer? smell frogs pickled in formaldehyde? see the senior girls working in the office? hear the orchestra tuning up? see us march into assembly Cwe hope notl? See See us have our books read in time for book reports? caps? hear hot debates in history class? see the lockers before inspection time? attend play practice? see unknown bills come into the senior class? paint the town white the night before Thanksgiving? watch the knocking knees ofthe football players at a pep rally? hear seniors discussing roommates for the Washington trip? hear the band bus going to a game? see Royersford after the Thanksgiving Day game? see the band in a victory parade? hear the shop boys' juke box? come to the Key Club dances? feel the heat in a classroom on a Monday morning? find a mouse in your locker? find your lunch in a wastebasket? hunt for a boot at 3:l5? take a library book back on time? Watch television to get out of class? see the football players pass the hat before the game? see the milk bottles in boys' lockers? hear coaches between halves? see girls with curly hair on rainy days? knit during music class? see pin-up girls in the boys' lockers? keep an impersonal diary for English class? MQZL Us Q' ! Forty-two
”
Page 45 text:
“
JM fDff.2fsf- ' in the Moon. Bernice Grubb owned a large, modern beauty shop where Iean Schaeffer was her manicurist. Anne Neborak was English teacher and librarian in the local high school where she was acquiring the reputation of a stern teacher who took radar slingshots from her pupils. Ma and Pa Time were pleased with the Saturn residents. The Saturnia Business School was run by Marilyn Hyden for those who were interested in learning to write shorthand the Saturn way. Caroline Kern and Gloria Harris were teachers at the school. In the office Nancy Long was foundg she was busily looking out the window at Verna Platt's Asteroid Beauty Salon. The building was rapidly being completed by contractor Bill Christman. Edee Young was the attractive interior decorator employed. Patrons, while their hair was drying, would be entertained by Richard Lightcap's latest arrangement of Saturnia Blues on the Cornet. Iack Cullum toted milk bottles for a dairy on Milky Way Lane. Mary Rohr- bach was employed there washing the star- dust off the equipment. The occupants of Uranus, the next stop, seemed to have an eye for business. ,Vir- ginia Root and Elaine Saylor worked here for the Inter-Planetry Telephone Company, communication center for the solar system. Pat O'Conner was hostess for the Uranius Comet Line, flying from Earth to Pluto to Uranus. Ronald Elliott baked and sold equi- librium cream puffs for the Starlight Bakery. Emily Henry worked as a make-up artist in a charm school. Bob Miller's contracting firm had just completed the Meteor Mer- chants' Mart. Engineer Charles Finkbiner spent his spare moments on his beautiful farm where he raised thoroughbred horses and Great Danes. The head of the Heavenly Business School was Dolly Tyson. Allen Mc- Intyre had built up a solar system-wide cli- entele for his flourishing insurance business. On the seventh planet, Neptune, the Times were drowsily welcomed by Iohn Sypherd who wrote a newspaper column, Advice to the Sleepless. Phyllis Rosen and Edna Mae Lustig were script girls for the local radio- television station, doing special broadcasts to the recently discovered second moon of the Earth. Dick Mull had pitched a streak of six no-hit games for the Neptunites' Ball Club, which had just won the Solar Series. Also in the field of sports was lim Rentschler who managed and played with a profession- al basketball team. Iim Dell was head coach at Neptune Planet College, he was very proud of his winning teams. Also on the fac- ulty was Nancy Witt, who taught music and directed the college band, orchestra, and glee clubs. Clarence Smith operated a ga- rage and rocket repair shop, he intended to enlarge his business to include space ships. The last visit was to Pluto where Barbara Witt was employed as a laboratory techni- cian, in her spare time she wrote stories and cared for a family of fourteen children. Rob- ert Stierly, a successful farmer, supplied most of the food for Red Heart, the capital city of Pluto, where Raymond Szymkiewicz taught agriculture in the Red Heart Senior High School. Mary and Pat Sellers owned and operated Pluto's leading radio and tele- vision station. Mary handled all literary workg Pat was dramatic director. Herbert Mosteller owned a Sea Food Market and flew to Earth once a month for lobsters and crabs. Marion Webster taught commercial subjects in Red Heart Senior High School. Here james Reinmuth served as Secretary of War, appointed by the president of Pluto. Vaughn Parfitt was the leading engineer for the project, Pluto-to-Earth by Tight Rope. So Ma and Pa, highly pleased with the results of their trip, catapulted to Earth and stepped on the bare, lonely ruins of Spring City High School and a deserted Earth. -Barbara and Nancy Witt Forty -one
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.