St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA)

 - Class of 1945

Page 37 of 64

 

St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 37 of 64
Page 37 of 64



St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 36
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St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 38
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Page 37 text:

Finding the spacious ballroom of the yacht too crowded, Peggy Costello, Honey Flanagan and Kay OlNeill look for a calmer spot to talk over old times. They are seen headed for the Powder Room. What happened after that is a deep, dark mystery,ebut immediately a terrific ex- plosion racked the ship from stem to stem. John, ever the capable captain, rushes out immediately to wire an 8.0.5. iiMan the life-boatslll llAll hands on deckll, lehere are the life preserverSPl, These are the cries heard simultaneously all over the yacht. When nearly all are placed in life-boats, the rescue plane ar- rives, piloted by Hap Hiatt with Jo Dob- bratz as coepilot. Anne Donovan, as Air rStewardess, completes the well-known llHedge Hopping Trio? Hap expertly sits the plane on the ocean, littered with floating wreckage, crowded life-boats and a few unfortunates clinging to Heating spars. First to appear at the exit of the plane is Father Joe Mc- Mahon, just back from his foreign mission in China. Included in the party are Doc- tor Claire Short, Dorothy Curley, regis- tered nurse, Helen Burns, news reporter for the New York Times, and Willie Wright, Super Duper Salesman of Insur- ance who had the happy inspiration to come on'ajust in case. At this moment Kay, Honey and Peg- gy, perpetrators of this catastrophe, float by, helplessly and frantically clutching a piece of wreckage. They are immediately 1.955. pulled out of the ocean. The remaining survivors are also picked up and first-aid is administered by our efhcient doctor and nurse. Unfortunately our pilot discovers that the plane is too overloaded to be flown. Father McMahon now calls for volunteers to remain behind until further help is procured. At this crisis, the buzz and whirr of an approaching plane is heard and sighting it, we perceive that it is coming in for a landing. After a safe landing we ate sur- prised to see a familiar form in the pilotls seat. It is none other than Mary Little- .field, vivacious globe-trotting congress- woman. She magnanimously offered her private seaplane for use in relieving Hapis over-crowded sea-buggy, Without too much effort the planes take off and head into the Clear, blue horizon. Suddenly a deafening Clap of thunder and a blinding flash of lightning obscure the planes from our sight. All is blackness for a moment. We open our eyes to hnd ourselves once again within the protecting walls of old Columbkille High. We are now called back from the realm of imagi- nation to the land of reality. We find our- selves seated around the banquet table. As at the beginning, again we musee WVhat does the future hold for us? - Only Time will tell? REGINA CRAFFEY lVIARY KENNEY MARY LITTLEFIELD

Page 36 text:

Time On that memorable night of June 1945, we had all gathered together for 1our Graduation Banquet. Perhaps for the last time all the l45ers would be together. A flash of lightning! A clap of thunder! I Suddenly the lights dimmed ! ! ! Then pitch blackness ! l l ! As we sat in the dark we attempted to look into the years to comeibut with very little success. Ah! we have it! I Let us borrow Alad- din,s Lamp and pierce the future! ! ! Surprisingly, we find ourselves on the sea for our tenth annual reunion, in a yacht of the most modern design, owned by John Houlihan, editor of the ciColumb- kille SpeciaP. Our gracious hostess, very stunning in a flowing peach gown, is none other than Elenor Wright. On the raised platform directing the music is Francis Yurt, the tlDorsey of his dayil, with demure Dotty Gaughan as vo- calist. The Erst couple on'the floor is Claire Williams and her usual escort. The music changes to the vibrant haunting rhythm of the KtSarnbaU, and the whisper of the carachas held by Jo Cusiek, who first learned the art waxing the floor for the Senior Prom. The music stops. The crowd gathers around Mary Sigsworth, an eminent artist of wag and prominent law- yer. Included in the group are Anne Scanlon, tTthe blonde bombshell of her dayKeClaire Twomey who has eliminat- ed the antique 20th Century Business World and invented the new tTBalanee or Else Systemiea commercial artist Re- gina Craffey, and Joan Cunningham, fam- .ous horsewoman expressing regret that she could not bring her horse, Prince, along for the voyage. IThe conversation is interrupted by the entrance of Irene Malia, author of the current best seller, TtBetter Late Than Neverb with her tall, dark and handsome escort, William O,Leary, a Park Avenue Playboy. Following close behind is Bar- bara Calnan, chief technician in the t;Presto ChemiCofaeaecompanied by her assistant in the lab, Barbara Melia, the only rival of Madame Curie,iand Joseph Hughes, supervisor of the experimental division. Dressed in a sleek, black gown of her own famous creation, Nora Fitz- gibbon makes a startling appearance, flanked by her mannequinsiNorma Tul- ly, Mary Walsh, Mary Healey and Doro- thy Murray. A piano is heard from the corner where Agnes Sheehan taps out the latest in a Boogie, Woogie, Beat. Barbara Welch is now seen on the far side of the salon displaying her new lianti lock or drop,, pocketbook to Mary Dris- coll and Mary Stamatis, avid followers of the most-up-to-date fashions. Then our gaze is attracted toward Mary M. Slattery, the only feminine Wall Street broker, in company with Mary E. Slattery, Chief . ferry-pilot between Boston and Nantasket. As during their high school years, their almost identical names are still the cause of much confusion. Next in line of Vision is a threesomea composed of Claver Darwin, who sur- prised everyone by establishing a very se- lect school which specializes in French PhonetiesHIrene Burdge, Claver,s assis- tant in another department of the school, which has for its motto ltWe tame your tomboy daughtersieand Mary Wright, who after spreading so much joy in school years, has sponsored her own radio pro- gram entitled, ttDry humor for wet drips? Mary Kenney makes a studied entrance, true to her appellation of John Powers, thost Petite Model? After a long en- gagement at the Palace Theatre in New York, Margaret Halleran of the clHappy Hollerin Halleranls Vaudeville TroupeH arives and breaks into her spirited song and dance routine. Then Teresa Span- bauer and Jeanne Callahan, champion ten- nis doubles, better known at home and , abroad in tennis circles as iiDouble Trou- bleb, enter laden with equipment, pre- pared to put on a stupendous exhibition.



Page 38 text:

Religion and Citizenship Winner of First Prize in Diocesan Oratorical Contest held at Emmanuel College, March 25, 1945 Fortunately for the future of our nation, our United States has had a past which is more than a prologue, a history which is more than an epic of glory, for entwined in its life has been a faith in God, which is our Salutary hope for these our troubled times. From its illustrious past gleam names which are still beacons on hills, Hashing to guide an anxious people away from the quagmires of doubt into the rock-ribbed areas of safety. Inspired by the Cross, valiant explorers and missionaries have ever dared to extend the frontiers of the Kingdom of Christ across the wide expanses of this land of Mary Immaculateh To the everlasting glory of our Founding Fathers their religious faith played alprominent part in their lives. The religious heritage of America has been chiseled on the cornerstone of our nation. If this cornerstone be tampered with, the whole edifice will collapse, for without religionls honor to God there can be no basis for the honor citizens give to the land of their birth. When our country began, our Founding Fathers were most anxious to find some basis for human rights, some foundation for human liberties, some guarantee of human personality which would be above the encroachment of tyranny and abuse. They sought these foundations in something so sacred and s0 inalienable that no state, no parliament, no dictator, no human power could ever take them awake and so they rooted them in God, Hence our Declaration of Independence reads, llW'e hold these truths to be self evident . . . all men are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, and to guarantee these rights governments are instituted among men?, In this passage we find our philosophy of government. we are children of God, created by Him and endowed with certain natural rights, which are given to us as so many means of returning to Him. We are brought face to face with two basic co-related truths, our own human dignity as citizens of America, and our divine destiny as heirs of heaven. The rights of citizens to attain this

Suggestions in the St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) collection:

St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 29

1945, pg 29

St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 28

1945, pg 28

St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 48

1945, pg 48

St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 16

1945, pg 16

St Columbkille High School - Columb Yearbook (Brighton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 64

1945, pg 64


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