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Page 20 text:
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JOSEPH MOLES AND CHARLES MOSKAL leave the radio station and its problems to Mr. Giddings. TO ANYONE WHO HAS ALWAYS WANTED TO BE AN OFFICER, William Ander- son bequeaths his !ieutenant’s badge. LENNIE GRUNDSTROM wills to Mr. Kehoe the Girls’ Division and all his passes. He begs Mr. Kehoe to treat all offenders mercifully. CYNTHIA TOULSON bequeaths to Miss Mazzuchelli a box of common pins. TO MISS CARLISLE her seniors bequeath a bottle of aspirin although they hope that with their departure, her headaches will be over. JOE LANZILLO leaves his drum in the band room so that Don Martin can get a bang out of it. CARY KAPIDIAN donates his ‘51 Mercury to the first applicant for it. No money will be needed, just a pair of new sneakers. TO JACK BRUNTON of the Electrical Department, Tom Sullivan wills his flux recorder. MR. RAE'S SENIORS bequeath to him a can of 3 in 1 oil with the understanding that he must not use it to flavor his tea. HUBIE D'AMBROSIA wills his football cleats, his hockey skates, and his baseball spikes to his brother Vinnie. CARL TYBURSKI AND LARRY YENSEN leave their rackets to inexperieniced Donny Yensen. CHARLES JORDAN leaves his luck to any unfortunate but deserving junior who asks for it. Signed and sealed this seventeenth day of March in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fifty-eight. The Class of 1958 Leonard Grundstrom
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Page 19 text:
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Class Will THE WILL OF THE CLASS OF 1958 We, the senior class of 1958 and soon-to-be graduates of Trade High School, being of sound body and mind do hereby declare this to be our last will and testament: TO MISS MEZZACAPPA AND MR. BRESNAHAN, our advisiors, we should like to express our deepest appreciation and gratitude for the help and guid- ance they have given us and our sincere sympathy for the trouble they have faced in steering our class through successful junior and senior years. May they be blessed in their chosen profession. TO THE PRINCIPALS AND FACULTY OF TRADE HIGH SCHOOL, we leave our sincere thanks, for their patience and ‘understanding, their inspiration and encourage’ vent, and their kind efforts and help, all that we have needed to achieve our goal. TO THE CLASSES OF 1959, 1960, AND 1961 we leave our best wishes for their success and happiness during their years at Trade. THE NEEDLE TRADE SENIORS happily bequeath to their junior classmates the privilege of picking up pins in room 326. FRAN HUTCHEONS consoles Mr. Fitzgibbons with the assurance that he will be back at Trade some day TEACHING, TO ANY ONE WHO GETS HUNGRY and wants to eat his lunch early, Terrence Kappenman wills the dark room in the Print Shop. He recommends its seclusion.. MISS BAWN'’S SENIORS leave her fifty-five cents so that at least one of her dollars will have its full value. They trust that she will use the sum wisely —possibly for telephone calls to her stock broker. ELEANOR GALLERANI bequeaths to the secretary of the class of '59 her note- book and a supply of pencils. TO MR. MANITSAS his students leave a fund to be exclusively for the purchase of yoyos. To keep alive his memories of his ‘class of ‘59 there will be delivered to him herewith one yoyo autographed by members of the 12-2 division. FOR MRS. TRIGGS AND MR. FITZGIBBONS, advisiors of the class of '59, we have purchased 360 tranquilizer pills. We recommend that they each take one every school day next year. GERALD CRAPSER leaves his '49 Ford to Trade High School with one stipulation: it must be used for training purposes.
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