Union Endicott High School - Thesaurus Yearbook (Endicott, NY)
- Class of 1951
Page 1 of 144
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 144 of the 1951 volume:
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REACHING FOR TOE II Iltitiiu R .0. Issued June, 1951 by the THESAURUS STAFF OF THE UNION-ENDICOTT HIGH SCHOOL Endicott, New York TABLE OF CONTENTS TITLE PAGE............................. 1 LIFE IS A BOOK......................... 3 THESAURUS STAFFS....................... 4 FACULTY ............................... 5 1951 GRADUATING CLASSES............... 15 JANUARY CLASS ................... 16 JUNE CLASS ...................... 20 UNDERCLASSMEN JUNIORS ......................... 48 SOPHOMORES ...................... 49 FRESHMEN ........................ 50 ORGANIZATIONS ........................ 51 MUSIC ................................ 63 ATHLETICS ............................ 75 BOYS' ........................... 76 GIRLS' .......................... 84 ENTERTAINMENT ........................ 89 MISCELLANEOUS ........................ 95 SNAPSHOTS ........................... 107 ADVERTISING STAFF ................... 113 FAREWELL ............................ 114 ADVERTISEMENTS ...................... 115 2 One never really stops to think that life is a book. It has more romance and excitement, joy and sorrow, exultation and despair, laughter and tears, than any book ever written. For, in reality, books are the enlarged reproductions of thumbnail sketches of life. We, The Class of '51, have just completed four chapters in our Life Book. Our high school years have been the Best Years of Our Lives and although we may not fully realize it now, someday these chapters will be most vivid and memorable. These have been the days of laughter; these have been the days of World Enough and Time. On the following pages you will find a record of the year — our senior year. Each leaf is a book within a book, each word tells a thrilling story. Therefore, each divider and many pictures are captioned with the title of a book. Come with us now through the pages of our youth. Laugh a little, frown a little, for these are the trials of a child. Now in June of '51 we are no longer children. We are adults — faced with the problems of the future. 3 . YEARBOOK ADVISERS Y I General Adviser .......Mrs. Wallace Finch Advertising Miss Frederica Hollister Photography Mr. Thomas Poolucci Art .Mrs. Theodore Lainhart Senior Class Miss Betty Wyke Junior Class Miss Anna Marie Kozlowski Sophomore Class Mrs. Mack Ryon Freshman Class Mrs. John J. Solemme The circulation staff this year was made up of the members of The House of Representatives, under the leadership of the Speaker of the House, Connie Williams. THESAURUS GENERAL STAFF Associate Senior Editors: Eugene Al- derman, Alex Brown, David Hilde- brant, Ida Hughes, Virginia Jopson, Marilyn McCormick, Joyce Mihalcho, Charles Morgan, Jane Puchalek, Jo- seph Schwartz. Editor-in-Chief.......Patricia Sowicki Associate Junior Editors: Irene Las- zewski, Elizabeth Motola, Gerald Mc- Lain, Sheila Mobley, Beverly Occhiato, Lois Poscoe, John Sponoble. Associate Sophomore Editors: Bruno Colapietro, Hughlafae Conklin, Victor Decker, Camille Maggiore. Associate Freshmen Editors: Carolyn Bierly, Robert Hultslander. ART STAFF Shirley Camp, Paul Cerasaro, Law- rence Ciotoli, Dolores Dohon, Lillian Hricigo, Ralph Landsiedel, George Mann. (Absent from picture: Alberta Barr and John Regan.) TYPISTS Dorothy Allen, Wilma Green, Ruth Pyluck, Rose Salamida, Phyllis Scott, Borbora Horbst (absent from picture). 4 FACULTY LEADERS” B. Northling-Swemmer The road is narrow, hard and long, But ever present at our side Are the ”Leaders”, our true guides, To help keep us from going wrong. 5 MR. WILLIAM J. KRUM, JR. Superintendent of Schools Many things may be said for Mr. Krum, but they have all, at one time or another, been spoken. Thus we can only point out that he maintains Lowell's principle and, in so doing, has become a definite leader in the field of progressive education. But it wos in making education not only common to oil, but in some sense compulsory on all, that the destiny of the free republics of America was practically settled. —Lowell MISS MARY L. PITKIN Principal A teacher offects eternity; he con never tell where his influence stops. —Henry Adams Miss Pitkin, too, is an ad- vocate and leader of high scholastic standards. She in- fluences all who come in con- tact with her because she is a teacher of the highest dig- nity. Under her guidance we are gaining the knowledge so necessary for the future. MR. DEWITT S. WOODARD Associate Principal The direction in which Education starts a man will determine his future. —Ploto To Mr. Woodard falls the job of keeping us on the path of Education. A hard task, in- deed. We shall not forget his words of advice, for they are sure to help us, no matter upon what career we embark. 6 FACULTY IN MEMORIAM ELIZABETH J. SMITH Elizabeth J. Smith began her teaching at Union Endicott High School in 1922. She taught constantly during this time with only one year's leave of absence. Miss Smith had not only great teaching ability in mathematics, which she taught at the time of her death, but she possessed an appreciation of music, art, and literature and excelled in these fields as well as numerous others. A very fitting tribute to Miss Smith is found in the words spoken on October 28, 1950, by William J. Krum, Jr., Superintendent of Schools. In the presence of the people assembled to see the U-E vs. Olean football game, he said: ... As a person, she was the embodiment of absolute integrity in her everyday life. She was honest; she was loyal; she was thoughtful. She was a real Christian and she truly loved her neighbor as herself. As a teacher, she was a professional person of the highest calibre. No job was too difficult; the hours were never too long. She loved not only the subjects which she was teaching but also the young men and women whom she was teaching. . . . The example of Miss Smith's life will long remain in the minds and hearts of those persons privileged to come in contact with her. Clothing and Home Decoration. F.H.A. Club Adviser. A stitch in time saves nine. —H. G. Bohn Room 14. MISS JOAN ABRAHAM ir Home Room 9. English III. Work on diplomas at Com- mencement. More things are wrought by MISS ALENE ALDERSON Young man, my advice to you is that you cultivate on ac- quaintance with and a firm belief in the Holy Scriptures. MR. DANIEL ANDERSEN Home Room 102. Intermediate Algebra, Solid Geometry. MR. CLARENCE J. BECKER Shop 24. Industrial Arts Machine Shop. ' Hold yourself responsible for the job you ore working on. on ac- —Anonymous —Benjomin Franklin 7 FACULTY MR. CLARENCE BERRY Home Room 211. Consumer's Moth, Elementory Algebro. Haste moketh waste. —John Heywood MISS MILDRED BILIK Physical Education for Junior- Senior girls. In charge of Junior-Senior af- ter-school activities. A word to the wise is sufficient. —R. H. Barham MR. PAUL BRADT Director of Guidonce and Adult Education. Great works are performed, not by strength, but by per- severance. —Samuel Johnson MISS ELIZABETH BROOKINS Home Room 217. World History. This above all: to thine own self be true, And it must follow, os the night the day, Thou const not then be false to any man. —Shakespeare MISS MADELINE BURNS Girls' Physical Education. In charge of Freshman-Soph- omore ofter-school activities. Man shall not live by bread alone. —New Testament MRS. MILDRED A. CALLAHAN Home Room 220. Comprehensive Music, Vocol Music in George W. Johnson School. The man who trusts other men will moke fewer mistakes than he who distrusts them. —Di Cavour MRS. MYRA D. CARMAN Home Room 202. Lotin I, II, and English II. Dare to be true: Nothing can need a lie; A fault which needs it most, grows two thereby. —George Herbert MR. HAROLD COBB Director of Health and Physical Education of the Public Schools of Endicott. Head Cooch of Football and Baseball. It's not so much if you won or lost But how did you ploy the game! —Edgar Guest MISS M. CLARA COVENEY Head of Homemaking Depart- ment. Beginning Foods, Advanced Foods, Home Management. The greoter the man, the greater the courtesy. —Emerson MRS. LEAH A. CROSSMAN Home Room 8. Shorthand I, Secretarial Practice. In charge of typing for the Creative Writing Contests and Thesaurus. Be to her virtues very kind; Be to her faults a little blind. —Mathew Prior 8 FACULTY MRS. RUTH M. EDSON Director of U-E Choir ond Girls' Glee Club. Ill fortune is like muddy water. Be patient, don't stir it, ond it will clear. —Anonymous MISS RUTH ESTV Home Room 109. English II ond III. Work on diplomas ot com- mencement. I core more for that long oge I shall not see than for the little that I hold of time. —Cicero MRS. EDNA FINCH Head of the English Department. English IV, Debate, Public Speaking. General Adviser for the Yearbook. Creative Writing Club Sponsor. The world stands out on either side No wider than the heart is wide. —Edna St. Vincent Millay MR. GEORGE A. FORBES Room 203. Chemistry, Hygiene. Foculty Member of Athletic Council, Cooch of Cheerleaders. You can measure the degree of civilization by the amount of sulfuric acid that is con- sumed. —Anonymous MRS. ISABELLE K. FRIDERICH Home Room 216. Plane Geometry. Nobody will use other peo- ple's experience nor have any of his own till it is too late to use it. —Nathaniel Hawthorne MR. ROLAND C. FRIDERICH Physical Education, Cooch of Bosketboll and Football. Intramural Basketball. A fool is happier in thinking well of himself than a wise mon in others thinking well of him. —Thomas Fuller MR. FRANCIS L. GOSS Home Room 119. English II ond III. It is in general more profit- able to reckon up our defects thon to boast of our attain- ments. —Carlyle MRS. HAROLD J. HESS Room 2. Regents Typewriting, Personal Typewriting, Public Relations Director. In charge of Honor Assembly. He thot hath ears to hear, let him hear. —Mark IV-9 MR. J. KENNETH HILL Driver Education ond Training. Let no oct be done hap- hazard, nor otherwise than ac- cording to the finished rules that govern its kind. —Marcus Aurelius MISS FREDERICA HOLLISTER Home Room 212. Latin II, III, IV. Adviser to Advertising Staff of the Thesaurus. m r How dull it is to pause, to make an end. To rust unburnish'd, not to jk shine in use! —Tennyson 49 9 FACULTY MISS CAROL KAHLER Curriculum and Teaching Aids Consultant—Grades 7-12. No man is on island, entire of itself; Every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main . . . And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee. —John Donne MR. RICHARD Z. KLETT Room I. Machine Design, Strength of Materials. Supervisor of Technical De- portment. Adviser of House of Repre- sentatives of the Student Council. Adviser of Technical Club. I slept and dreamed that life was beauty. I woke—and found that life was duty; Was my dream, then, a shadowy lie? Toil on, sad heart, cour- ageously. And thou sholt find thy dream shall be A noon day light and truth to thee. —Ellen Sturges Hooper MRS. ESTHER L. LAINHART Room 104. General Art, Basic Art, Adver- tising Design, Drawing and Painting. Art Adviser for Yearbook. Art Adviser for posters for school use. An artist should have more than two eyes. —Lamartine MISS ANNE MARIE KOZLOWSKI Home Room 11. English III. Cap and Gown Adviser. Junior Page Adviser for Year- book. A little learning is a danger- ous thing. —Alexander Pope MISS RUTH I. KNISKERN Home Room 219. Bookkeeping I and II. Commercial Club. Insist on yourself; never imitate. —Emerson MR. OSWALD M. KEMP Room 17. Technical Drawing, Aviation. This above all: To thine own self be true. And it must follow, os the night the day, Thou const not then be false to any man. —Shakespeore MISS RUTH LAWRENCE Home Room 210. American Literature, Business English, General English, Eng- lish III. Act well your part; there all the honor lies. —Alexander Pope MR. JAMES N. LONGWELL Shop 21. Technical Machine Shop I. Technical Machine Shop II. Assistant Technical Club Adviser. There are two kinds of per- sons who will never amount to much; those who cannot follow directions and those who con only follow directions. —Anonymous MR. PAUL McCORMACK Home Room 13. English I, II, Social Studies I. Boys' Bowling Adviser. I'll get olong as long os a song is strong in my soul. —Williom Rose and Edward Eliscu MISS MARGARET McDOUGALL Home Room 11 3. Business Arithmetic, Elementary Alegebra, Plane Geometry. Of a' the ills that flesh con fear. The loss o' fren's, the lock of gear, A lassie's nonsense— There's just ae thing I cannoe bear. An' thot's my conscience. —Stevenson 10 FACULTY MISS ALTA M. McLEAN Home Room 204. World History. Life is not so short but thot there is always time enough for courtesy. —Emerson MISS JANET MEALY Room 205. French I, II, III, Spanish I. French Club. Assistant Adviser to Spanish Club. For what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul. —Bible MISS GLADYS L. MERSEREAU Girls' Counselor. Faculty Adviser for the Tri-Hi Club. I shall pass through this world but once. If, therefore, there be any kindness I can show, or any good thing I can do, let me do it now. —De Mobillier MR. EDGAR S. MULHOLLEN Home Room 214. World History, Local Problems. Student Government Adviser. June Senior Prom Adviser. Be Prepared. —Boy Scout Motto MR. RUSSELL E. NORRIS Shop 22. Head of Industrial Arts Department. Industrial Arts Cabinetmaking. He that cleaveth wood shall be endangered thereby. If the iron be blunt, and he do not whet the edge. Then must be put to more strength. —Ecclesiastes 10:9-10 MRS. MARJORIE L. O'HORA Home Room 4. Regents Typewriting. Personal Typewriting. Everyone is the son of his own works. —Miguel de Cervantes MR. ACTON E. OSTLING Director of Music for the Public Schools of Endicott. Concert Band, Drum Corps, In- strumental Classes. Play always as if a master were listening. —Schumann MR. THOMAS D. PAOLUCCI Room 7. Industrial Mechanical Drawing. Yearbook Pictures, Treasurer of Endicott Teachers Association. The direction in which educa- tion starts a man will deter- mine his future life. —Plato (427-347 B. C.) MR. BURDETTE C. PARKHURST Physical Education Instructor. Coach of Track and Football. From the hour of the inven- tion of printing, books, and not kings, were to rule the world. Weapons forged in the mind, keen-edged, and brighter thon a sunbeam, were to supplant the sword and battle-axe. —Edwin P. Whipple MR. VITO N. POPELKA Teacher in charge of library study. Assistant Coach for Football and Basketball. Education makes a people easy to lead, but difficult to drive; easy to govern, but im- possible to enslave. —Lord Brougham 11 FACULTY MISS ELIZABETH RASMUSSEN Home Room 115. English I and II. To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. —Tennyson's Ulysses MR. JEFFERS D. RICHARDSON Home Room 206. Business Law. Business Man- agement, Salesmanship. In charge of senior play ticket soles. The measure of a man's inner civilization is his ability to loaf creotively. —Curtis Bok MR. JOSEPH F. ROSSIE Shop 22A. General Shop, Radio, Television. A wise man changes his mind often—; A fool, never. —G. B. Shaw m MISS BARBARA A. ROWE Home Room 116. American History. Adviser for Banquet and Prom —January '51. We live in deeds, not years; in thoughts, net breaths; In feelings, not figures on a dial. —Philips Boily MR. MACK J. RYAN Home Room 1 14. American and World History. Docendo aiscimus —We leam by teaching others. —Oldisworth v MRS. SARAH JANE RYAN Home Room 213. English II. Sophomore Adviser to Thesaurus. Facere quam dicere —To act rather than to talk. —Sallust MRS. MARTHA B. SALEMME Home Room 115. English I and II. Keep true to the dreams of thy youth. —Schiller MISS ADONA R. SICK Librarian. Adviser to Library Club. No man con be called friend- less, who has God ond the companionship of good books. —Elizabeth Barrett Browning MR. R. CRAWFORD STAHL Instrumental Music Classes. Orchestra, Marching Bond, B Band. If you wont to understand the invisible, look carefully ot the visible. —from the Tolmud MISS VIVIAN STEELE Home Room 215 Shorthand I, Introduction to Business, Business Arithmetic. Be silent or let thy words be worth more than silence. —Pythagoras 12 FACULTY MISS MARCIA L. STONE Home Room 108. Plone Geometry, Intermediote Algebro, Trigonometry. Corpe diem. —Virgil MISS RUTH STONE Supervisor of Home Economics for the Endicott system. Nothing greet was ever achieved without enthusiasm. —Emerson MISS MABEL STONHAM Home Room 209. General Science, Hygiene I, II. There will be love, tho sorrow grows too deep There will be hope, whatever path be trod. And faith, o lamp to carry on our way And always, and forever there is God. —Anonymous MISS BARBARA THAYER Room 120. Public Speaking, Drama. Director of Senior plays ond Christmas plays. What's done cannot be un- done. —Shakespeare MR. EGBERT THURBER Home Room 101. Americon History, World History. Key Clut Adviser. Capitalism is an unequol dis- tribution of advantages, but Communism is an equal dis- tribution of miseries. —Winston Churchill MISS ANNA TRAINOR Room 10. Shorthand II ond Transcription. A soft answer turneth away wrath. —Proverb XV. 1 MR. CHARLES H. TURVER Room 201. General Biology, Boys' Hygiene. Whatever is worth doing at all, is worth doing well. —4.ora Chesterfield MRS. MAUDE C. VARTULI Room 12. Homemaking—boys' and girls'. Advanced Sewing — boys' and girls'. Child Care. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. —T. C. Haliburton MISS MAE E. VAUGHN Room 207. Physics, Hygiene. Silence is Golden. —Walter White MISS ELEANOR A. VOGELSANG Home Room 111. World Literature, Journolism, General English, English III, Public Speaking. Adviser of The Zephyr, Ad- viser of student page, Bing- homton Sunday Press, Adviser of Class Day, January '51 closs. It is better to keep your mouth shut and let others think you a fool, than to open it and remove all doubts. —Abraham Lincoln 13 FACULTY MISS MARGRIERITE J. WALTERS Home Room 208. Social Studies, Americon His- tory, Problems of Democracy. Senior Ring Adviser. Every man must educate him- self. His books and teacher are but a help; the work is his. —Webster MR. HENRY C. WHITE Home Room 26. Agriculture I, III, IV. Coach of Cross Country, Ad- viser to Future Formers of America. O wod some power the giftie give us To see oursels os ithers see us. —Burns MISS BETTY E. WYKE Home Room 1 10. College Preparatory English, General English. Thesaurus Adviser in charge of securing and orronging data with pictures for graduates. We must be free or die who speak the tongue that Shake- speare spoke. —William Wordsworth MR. CARL ZONIO Home Room 112. Italian and Sponish. Adviser to Spanish and Italian Clubs. The weak lives according to the will of the others; The strong according to his own will. —Giocomo Leopardi BOARD OF EDUCATION Dr. Stanley Podykula, Mr. George Nichols, Mr. Maxwell Clouse, Mr. Carroll Wotermon, Mrs. John Eggleston. 14 SENIORS AND UNDERCLASSMEN THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES” Robert E. Sherwood It’s over now, Yet we’re not glad. ”The Best Years Of Our Lives” are gone; Still, fond memories linger on. 15 JANUARY CLASS, 1951 SENIOR OFFICERS Seoted: Mary Ann Miller, secretary; Mary Hudcovich, president. Standing: James Sommon, treas- urer; Robert Battaglini, vice-president. son City High School and U-E had a joint prom F. Pavilion, January 30, to the music of Hal Pc Class colors were maroon and white; the class flower, the carnation. On Jan- uary 27, the Senior Banquet was held at Harris' Rumpus Room, while, for the first time in the school's history, John- The gala affair took place at the George ell and his orchestra. The January Seniors of 1951 close their school books only to open the book of life. Their numbers are few, but their aims are high, and on their way they plan to help write a new chapter in the history of the world. Each one of them will have his chance to inscribe in the book of life some small bit for posterity. They will gather fond recollections as they journey through life, for they already have a large volume of memories. The president of the Mid-year Class was Mary Hudcovich, and elected to as- sist her in the executive offices were Robert Battaglini, James Sammon, and Mary Ann Miller. The commencement itself was held January 29. Barbara Bennett, Mary Hudcovich, and Joseph Schwarz, the honor students, presented their senior essays. PRIZES FOR JANUARY 1951 SENIOR CLASS—UNION-ENDICOTT HIGH SCHOOL Woman's Club prize—highest in English —Joseph Schwarz (92) Alumni prize — highest in all subjects (92.4)—Barbara Bennett Commercial Club prize — highest in Business subjects—Barbara Bennett Mathematics prize — highest in math (Col. requirements)—Joseph Schwarz American History prize — highest in American History — Mary Hudcovich Bausch Lomb, honorary science award- scholastic achievement, qualities of leadership and extra-curricular ac- tivities—Mary Hudcovich Rensselaer Alumni Association Medal (Science and Math) —Joseph Schwarz AWARD WINNERS Mory Hudcovich, Barbara Bennett, Joseph Swortz. 16 ROBERT DANIEL BATTAGLINI Bott Commercial Course. Student Con- gress 3; Intramural Football 2; Senior Class Vice President; Senior Prom and Class Day Committees; Homeroom Representative 2, 3; Lt. Victor O'Leary in John Loves Mary. Hobbies: Sports, Dancing, Hunting. U. S. Armed Forces. BARBARA ANN BENNETT Barb Commercial Course. Commercial Club 3; Glee Club 2. 3; Homeroom Presi- dent 2; Valedictorion. Hobbies, Sports, Sewing. Secretarial Work. JOYCE HELENE BLOCK Jo Secretarial Course. Tri-Hi Club 4; Senior Prom and Banquet Commit- tees; Mrs. Benton in Light Com- petition. Hobbies: Stamp Collect- ing. College. SHIRLEY RAE BOYD Corky Academic Course. Junior Red Cross 2; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3; Intramural Basketball 2. 3; Field Hockey 2, 3; Softball 2, 3; Tri-Hi Swimming 2; Volleyball 2, 3; Glee Club 2, 3, 4; U-E Choir 4. Hobbies: Sports. ELLEN JANE CALVERT Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3. Hobbies: Reading, Sewing, Danc- ing. Secretarial Worlc. RAYMOND KENNETH CAMP Roy Industrial Arts Course. Senior Cap and Gown Committee. Hobbies: Cars. Industry. GEORGE COCHRANE General Course. U. S. Navy. ROBERT WILLIAM CORBETT Corbey Technical Course. Technical Club 3; Baseball 2; Junior Varsity Football 2, 3; Varsity Football 4; Oscar Du- gan in John Loves Mary. Hobbies; Radio, Sports, Roller-Skating. U. S. Navy. JANICE YVONNE CORSON Red Homemaking Course. Future Home- makers of America 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2; Senior Bonquet Committee. Hob- bies: Sports, Reading. Airline Hostess. WILLIAM BENJAMIN DANTON Buck Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Swimming, Ice Skating, Horseback Riding. U. S. Armed Forces. JUNE ROSE DEGUES Junie Commercial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4; Library Club 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2; Library Club Secretary 2; Library Club Vice-President 4; Library Club Letter Award 3. Hobbies: Reading, Typing. Secretarial Work and Har- pur College. JAMES GILBERT DOYLE Jim Commercial Course. Hobbies: Hunt- ing, Fishing, Sports, Travel. I B M. 17 JANET ELAINE DRISCOLL Sunshine Acodemic Course. Creative Writing Club 3; Student Congress I, 2; Choirman: Senior Class Colors, Motto, and Announcements Com- mittees; Glee Club; U-E Choir; The- saurus Advertising, Literary, and Editorial Stoffs I, 1, 3; Essay Award, I Speak for Democracy ; Student Congress Secretary 2; Editor of first Student News I. Hobbies: Music, Photography, Amateur Radio. Gen- eral Electric. GENEVIEVE LOUISE FIDIAM Gene Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4; Creative Writing Club 3, 4; Softball 2; Senior Colors, Motto, and Announcements Committees. Hob- bies: Reading, Hiking, Music. Hor- pur College. MARY LOU FITCH Commercial Course. Student Ad- visory Council 3; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Senior Class Day and Ring Com- mittees; Glee Club 2; Phyllis Mc- Kinley in John Loves Mary. Hob- bies: Sports. Secretarial Work. PAUL LAWRENCE HERBAUGH Industrial Arts Course. Junior Varsity Football 2; Track 2; Volleyball 2. College. MARY JENNY HUDCOVICH Huck College Entrance Course. French Club 3; Italian Club 4; Student Ad- visory Council 2, 3; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3. 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Swimming 3; Track 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3 4; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 3, 4: thesaurus Circulation Staff 3 Senior Class President; Senior Class Day Committee U-E Sweater and Letters 4; U-E Athletic Medal 4. Hobbies: tennis. Swim- ming, Ice Skating. College. NANCY JEAN LARNERD Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 2, 3; Future Homemakers of America 3, 4; Football Bond 2; F.H.A. Club Secretary 4. Hobbies: Swimming, Horseback Riding, Dancing. Secre- tarial Work. Secretarial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2; Baseball 2; Glee Club 2, 3; Senior Class Day and Ring Committees; Homeroom Representative 4. Hob- bies: Ice and Roller Skoting. Secre- tarial Work. MARYANN JANE MILLER Sparky Transfer from Binghamton Central High School. Commercial Course. Junior Red Cross 3; Intramural Basketball 2; Glee Club 4; Senior Class Secretary; Senior Prom and Closs Day Committees; Candidate for Apple Blossom Princess 4; Can- didate for U-E Queen; G. O. Repre- sentative 2. Hobbies: Dancing, Swim- ming, Sewing. Secretarial Work. BEVERLY JANE MINER Bev Homemaking Course. Future Home- mokers of America 4; F. H. A. Club Vice-President 4. Hobbies: Dancing, Roller Skating, Swimming. I.B.M. ARDALEEN RAMONA MOSHER Half-Pint Homemaking Course. Tri-Hi Club 2; Glee Club f, 2, 3. Hobbies: Band, Light Opera, Music, Reading. MARION JOYCE NYSTROM Red Academic Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Senior Banquet Committee. Hob- bies: Bowling, Tennis, Ice-Skating. School of Nursing. GASPER GEORGE PALMER I Go Go Industrial Arts Course. Glee Club 3; U-E Choir 4. Hobbies: Sports, Model Building, Music. I.B.M. 18 PAULINE MARIA PUTRINO Paulo General Course. Hobbies: Reading, Swimming. VITA CHRISTINE RANDO Vicki General Course. Tri-Hi Bowling 4; Chairman Senior Banquet Com- mittee. Hobbies: Drawing cartoons, Ice Skating, Writing. WILLIAM FRANCIS REARDON Bill Industrial Arts Course. Student Ad- visory Council 2; Intramural Basket- ball 2, 3; Chairman, Senior Class Day Committee; Homeroom Repre- sentative 2; Bovs' Glee Club 3. Hob- bies: Drawing, Music. Industry. JAMES ANTHONY SAMMON College Entrance Course. Key Club 3; Student Congress 3; Junior varsity Football 2, 3; Senior Prom and Class Day Committees. Hobbies: Sports. U. S. Armed Forces. JOSEPH KENNETH SCHWARZ Joe College Entrance Course. French Club 2; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 1, 2, 3; Thesaurus Editorial Staff 1, 2, 3, 4; Salutatorian. Hobbies: Read- ing, Music. College. ANTHONY MICHAEL SELLE Tony General Course. Italian Club 2; Varsity Bowling 4. Hobbies: Sports. U. S. Armed Forces. ft rV • r m V s m a fS LiO S3 •4 j P 1 £ j IHllii t MARY ROSE SOROCHINSKY Farmer Commercial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4- Tri-Hi Club 2f 3, 4; Orchestra 2. Hobbies: Swimming, Ice Skating, Hiking. Advanced Schooling. BARBARA JEAN STARR Barb Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 2, 3‘Future Homemakers of America 4; Tri-Hi Club 2; Chairman, Senior Prom Committee; Glee Club 1; The- saurus Circulation Staff 3. Hobbies: Ice Skating, Music, Tennis. Secre- tarial Work. EUNICE BLANCHE SWANK Swankie College Entrance Course. Junior Red Cross 2; Library Club 4; Tri-Hi Club 2. 3: Intramural Basketball 2 Tri- Hi Swimming 2' Chairman, Senior Cap and Gown Committee. Hobbies: Scrapbooks, Sports. Penn State Col- lege. BETTY DORLENE WESTOVER Bet Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3; Senior Cap and Gown Committee; Conservation Essay Award 3. Hob- bies: Piano. I.B.M. WALTER CHESTER ZARESKI Moe Industrial Arts Course. Cross Coun- try 2. Hobbies: Swimming, Basket- ball, Football. Skilled Carpentry. ALSO IN JANUARY GRADUATING CLASS Gregor Audrey Burton Billings Raymond Gosbarra William Gray Stephen Hombelek 19 JUNE CLASS, 1951 Seated: Angela Kavanagh, secretary; Cornells deVente, president. Standing: Lawrence Bursch, treas- urer; Earl Bloom, vice-president. Through the doors of U-E this year will pass 320 students, talented leaders for the future. The class officers were Cornelis deVente, president; Earl Bloom, vice-president; Angela Kavanagh, secretary; and Larry Bursch, treasurer. A finer choice couldn't have been made. Student Government became a rapidly improving and smoothly working unit under the leadership of William Carmine, school President. Our Athletic Advisory Council members were Rose LaSorte and Michael Wesko. The honor of representing U-E at the Syracuse Citizenship Conference went to Cornelis deVente, William Carmine, Dorothy Allen and Olga Komanowski. Tri-Hi had a prosperous year under the guidance of Carol Cornell, while F. F. A. under Rolland Vallese, and F.H.A., under Joanne Kocak, reached new heights. The list of honor students was outstanding and surely each pupil on that list deserved the praise he received. There are too many more activities and accomplishments of the June Seniors to mention, but the class members have demonstrated definite abilities. We believe they will go forward, for theirs is the challenge of this life, theirs is 'A World To Win'. 20 HIGH HONOR STUDENTS, JUNE 1951 SECOND Patricia Sawicki THIRD Williom Carmine FIRST Dorothy Allen FOURTH Dovid Calleo FIFTH Nancy Ashman HONOR STUDENTS, JUNE 1951 Front Row: Rose Salomida, May Giannuzzi, Lucille Conti, Joan Wade, Patricia Sawicki, Nancy Ashman, Marie Sbarra, Olga Komanowski. Phyllis LaShier, Rachel Sbarra, Vivian Cattarulla, Lillian Hriciga, Alice Mae Reeve, Mildred Valento. Second Row: Marylou Korcykoski, Joanne Kocok, Lorain Ripic, Elease Warters, Laura Maroglio, Irene Villata, Ruth Kraus, Elizabeth Fowcett, Angelo Kavanagh, Dolores Dobon. Third Row: Marietta Dayton, Patricia Boyles, Marilyn Pollard, Dorothy Allen, Rose LaSorte, Jane Bricker, Faith Signor, Jeanette Richards, Anna Matusica, Barbara Patch. Back Row: William Cormine, Nicholas Cicchini, Arthur lllg, William Barno, Earl Bloom, David Calleo, Joseph Romo, Francis Kosalek, Lawrence Bursch. 21 NANCY RUTH ADAMS Nonce Commercial Course. Commercial Club 2, 3. 4; Tri-Hi Club 2. 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3; Softball 2; Glee Club 2; Thesaurus Circula- tion Staff 3. Hobbies: Reading, Music. Secretarial Work. ROBERT WILLJAM ADAMS Red RadWx Course. Track 2, 3; Concert Band 2« 3; Football Band 2, 3; Or- chestra 2, 3. Hobbies: Radio, Music, Sports. New York State Institute of Applied Arts and Sciences. GENE HALSEY ALDERMAN Geener College Entrance Course. Key Club 2, 3, 4 Student Congress 4; Intra- mural Basketball 2; Intramural Foot- ball 1; Jr. Varsity Football 3; Var- sity Football 4; Track 2; Volleyball 3, 4: Concert Bond 2, 3; Football Band 1, 2; U-E Choir 4; Clarence in Life with Father ; Bob Benton in Light Competition ; Thesaurus Cir- culation Stoff 4; Thesaurus Editoral Staff 4; Football Letters 3; Student Mayor 4; Key Club Vice President 4; Volleyball Captain 4. Hobbies: Foot- ball, Basketball, Volleyball. College of Business Administration. GORDON DARRELL ALDERMAN Gordie Commercial Course. Hobbies: Cars, Sports. Business. STELLA ELIZABETH ALESSI College Entrance Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 4; Baseball 2; Tri-Hi Swimming 4; Glee Club 2; Italian Club Secretary 4; Library Club Treasurer 3. Hob- bies: Sports, Music. Cortland State Teachers College. DOROTHY ALICE ALLEN Dottie Commercial Course. Student Con- gress 3, 4; Student Advisory Council 2; Tri-Hi Club 2; Senior Ring Com- mittee; Student Congress Reporter 3; Student Congress Vice-President 4; Candidate for May Queen 3; U-E Football Queen 4; Candidate for Syracuse University Citizenship Award, 4. Hobbies: Singing, Read- ing. Secretarial Work. RODNEY SH Rod Intramural U-E Choir Basketball, ✓ RICHARD FRANCIS |( ANGELINE 'Rick College Entrance Course. Student Advisory Council 2; Intramural Bas- ketball 2, 3, 4; Jr. Varsity Football 2; Varsity Football 3, 4; Tennis 2, 3. 4; Track 3; Concert Band 2; Or- chestra 2; Homeroom President 2; Herman in Light Competition ; Jr. Varsity Football Letters 2; Tennis Letters 2, 3; Varsity Football Let- ters 4. Hobbies: Sports, Travel. College. ANTOINETTE CARMELLA ARGENTO Tonie Commercial Course. Commercial Club 2, 3, 4; Future Homemakers of America 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3; Glee Club 2, 3, 4. Secretarial Work. ERVIN CLARENCE BABCOCK ERV Technical Course. Technical Club 2, 3. 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Guns. In- dustry. NANCY JANE ASHMAN College Entrance Course. French Club 2, 3, 4; Junior Red Cross 2; Spanish Club 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2; Homeroom Reporter 4; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 4; Thesourus Circulation Staff 3; French Club President 4. Hobbies: Reading, Baseball. New York State College for Teachers at Albany. RONALD ABRAHAM BACHYNSKI Ron Art Course. Baseball 3, 4; Intra- mural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Jr. Varsity Bowling 3; Intramural Football 2, 3; Jr. Varsity Footboll 4. Hobbies: Sports. U. S. Marines. 22 . Ik Ti JOtyyon- V l( 9 DAVID KIRK BAGG Da e ' Aviation Course. Intramural Basket- ball 4. Hobbies: Gun Collection. U.S. Air Force. JACK WILLIAM BALDWIN Jaxon Commercial. Homeroom Vice-Presi- dent 4; Cheerleader 2, 3. Hobbies: Billiards, Music. Harpur College. MARGARET AGNES BALL Maggie Academic. Junior Red Cross 1; Tri- Hi Club 1, 2: Volleyboll 1; Football Band 2. Hobbies: Baton Twirling, Horsebock Riding, Skating. Mount Siani Hospital, New York City. rs t ■I JEAN LOUISE BARTON Jeanne Generol Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3. 4; Concert Bond 2; Footboll Band 1. MARY REGINA BEIRNE College Entrance Course. Tri-Hi Club 3, 4; Latin Club 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 4; Softball 3, 4; Field Hockey 3, 4; Tri-Hi Swimming 4; Volleyball 3, 4; Homeroom Reporter 4; Candidate for U-E Queen; Homeroom President 3. Hobbies: Swimming, Dancing, Read- ing. St. Joseph's School of Nursing, Elmira. PATRICIA BARBARA BALLES Pat Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3; Tri-Hi Club 2; Intramural Basket- ball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Sports, Art, Photography. I.B.M. WILLIAM CHARLES BARNO Bill Technical Course. Technical Club 2, 3, 4; Track 2. Dr. Humphreys in Life with Father. Hobbies: Read- ing, Ship and Plane Models. I.B.M. ALBERTA ROSE BARR Bert Commercial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2. Hobbies: Art, Music, Dancing. Advanced Business School. JOSEPH PATRICK BEIRNE Joe College Entrance Course. Key Club 4; Student Congress 4; Track 3; Homeroom Representative 4; Vice- Speaker of House of Representatives 4. Hobbies: Sports, Reading, Photog- raphy. College. THERESA BENDERT College Entrance Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 4; Latin Club 4; Intramural Basketball 2. 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 2, 3, 4; Scholastic Literary Award 2. Hobbies: Sports. Cortland State Teachers College. JAMES LAVERNE BENSON Ben Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Mechanics, Sports, Nature. Industry. 23 JOHN ANDREW BIKOS Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Sports. I.B.M. RICHARD WALLACE BILLINGS Dick Commercial Course. Hobbies: Photography. U. Si JOAN ROSE BISEO Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3; Tri-Hi Club 1, 2. College. RUSSELL CHARLES BISHOP Russ College Entrance Course. Key Club 4; Track 2, 3; Homeroom President 4. Hobbies: Sports, Skating. Harpur College. •- — - EARL MILTON BLOOM Moose Technical Course. Key Club 2, 3, 4; Student Advisory Council 3; Tech- nical Club 4; Baseball 2; Junior Varsity Basketball 2, 3; Varsity Bosketball 4; Intramural Football I; Tennis 2; Track 2, 3, 4; Homeroom Representative 3; Empire Boys' State 3; Junior Varsity Basketball Letter- man 2, 3‘ Junior Varsity Basketball Captain 3; Varsity Basketball Let- terman 4; Vorsity Track Letterman 3, 4; Junior Rotarian 3, 4; Technical Club President 4; Senior Class Vice- President. Hobbies: Sports, Reading, Collecting Pictures of Cars. College. JENNIE JULIA BORAVSKI Jen General Course. Commercial Club 3; Future Homemakers of America 3; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3; Field Hockey 2, 3; Volleyball 2, 3; Glee Club 2- Home- room Secretary 4. Hobbies: Dancing. I.B.M. W DOUGLAS ALLAN BOWEN Crutches Industrial Arts Course. Future Farm- ers of America 2, 3; Intramurol Basketball 2; Future Formers Basket- boll 2, 3; Intramural Football 1, 2; Varsity Football 3, 4; Track 2, 3; 1st Place Pole Vaulting Tri-Cities Track Meet 3. Hobbies: Horses. In- dust IA MAE BOYLES Pat Secretarial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2; Concert Band 2, 3, 4; Footboll Band 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 2, 3, 4; Three Year Band Award. Hobbies: Music, Sports. I.B.M. THOMAS JAMES BLAZEY Tom Rodio Course. Track 2, 3; John Rey- nolds in Light Competition. U. S. Novy. WALLACE STEVEN BLAZICEK Wally College Entrance Course. Baseball 3; Intromurol Bosketball 4; Junior Varsity Bowling 4; Mr. Benton in Light Competition. Hobbies: Sports, Dancing. College. WILLIAM JOSEPH BRANCA Bill Commercial Course. Baseball 2, 3, 4; Junior Varsity Bosketball 2, 3; Varsity Boskctboll 4; Intromurol Football 2; Junior Varsity Bosketball Letters 2, 3; Varsity Baseball Letters 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Basketball, Base- ball. Professional Baseball. 24 CAROL ANN BROWN Vocotionol Homemaking Course. Fu- ture Homemokers of Americo 2, 3; Junior Red Cross 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3; Softball 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 2, 3; Tri-Hi Swimming 2, 3; Volley- ball 2; Glee Club 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Basketball Bowling, Swimming. On- eonta State Teachers College. THOMAS JOSEPH BUCINELL Tom Technical Course. Technical Club I. 2; Track 3. U. S. Marines. BEVERLY JUNE BULMAN Bev Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2; Tri-Hi Swimming 2; Homeroom President 4; Student Ad- visory Council 2; Mary in John Loves Mary ; Commercial Club Vice-President 3; Commercial Club President 4. Hobbies: Reading, Sports. College. ELFREDA DELORES BUNGER Elkie Secretarial Course. Softball 3. Hob- bies: Dancing, Sports. Secretarial Work. KENNETH EDWARD BURBANK Killer Technical Course. Technical Club 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing, Trapping. I.8.M. V JOHN WILLIAM BURIN Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. LAWRENCE ALVIN BURSCH Lorry College Entrance Course. Key Club 4, Senior Closs Treasurer; Home- room President 4; Empire Boys' State 3; Junior Rotarian 4. Hobbies: Collecting Stamps and Coins, Sports. College. MYRA JANE CALAMUN College Entrance Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4, Tri-Hi Bowling 2, 3; Field Hockey 2. 3. 4, Softball 2, 3; Track 2; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 4. Ad- vanced Schooling. r. - — JO ANNE CALLAHAN Judy Art Course. Spanish Club 3, 4; Tri- Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 3, 4; Homeroom President 4; Candidate for U-E Queen. Hobbies: DAVID PATRICK CALLEO Dave College Entrance Course. Itolian Club 3; Key Club 2, 3, 4; Student Advisory Council 4; House Par- liamentarian 4; Chairman Student Congress Election Committee 4; Latin Club 4; Orchestra 2, 3, 4; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 4; The- saurus Circulation Stoff 3; Empire Boys' State 3; State Senator, Latin Prize; Scholastic Literary Aword 3; Kev Club Lieutenant - Governor 4. Hobbies: Music, Sports, Reoding. College. DOLORES CATHERINE CAMARDA Dee wwwi wmiiici V IUI v IUU 3. 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3. 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Sports, Traveling, Music. Advanced School- ing. 25 JERROLD LEE CARGILL Jerry Industriol Arts Course. Intromurol Bosketboll 3. Hobbies: Sports. In- dustry. College Club Bosketl OUISE ANNErcACufARE e atq yol CoUrsev Italian Q H-wt ylubi ; 4; Intpomurol B all 2J3;-field Mckey 2: St . 3rtK V2; Volleyball 2, f lub 2f U-C Choir 3. 4. Ho ROBERT TRACY CARMAN Cearm College Entrance Course. Key Club 3, 4; Student Congress 4; Student Advisory Council 1; Intramural Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Volleyboll 3, 4; Concert Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Dance Bond 3; Fife Or Drum Corps 1, 2; Football Band 3, 4j U-E Choir 4; Student Congress Treasurer 4; 16 Twirling Medals and Trophy State Awards; 2 Year Band Award; 4 Year Drum Corps Award. Hobbies: Twirling. Ithaca College. College Club 2 Student tron kef jrse. 'Club 1, 3, 4 4; Intro lior Class Tornrrntt y; Orchestra 2, 3, Choir Z. £ .4; French Club President Congress and High School e raent; Candidate, Syrac fsity Citizenship Awasd .4. Hob- Tbies: Sporf , Music. Cojlfge of En- gineering. JOAN MARGARET CARRIGG Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 2, 3. Hobbies: Sports, Music. I.B.M. JOAN MILDRED CASSIDY Cass Homemokina Course. Tri-Hi Club 2 Intramural basketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; Track 2. 3, 4; Volleyball 2 3, 4; Thesaurus Circulation Staff 3. Hob- bies: Sports, Music, Swimming. Business School. Commercial Course. Commerci T 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; InWa Basketball 2; Field Hocke V, Hi Swimming 2; Volleyban 2j Glee Club 2, 3. 4; Commercial Club Treasurer 3, 4. Hobbies: Music. Secretarial Work. JAMES ANTHONY CHEER Cheer Commercial Course. Italian Club 2; Intramural Bosketboll 2, 3, 4; Intra- mural Football 2; Junior Varsity Footboll 3; Varsity Football 4; Track 3; Homeroom Reporter 4; Beechwood in ''John Loves Mary ; Trock Letters 3; Junior Varsity Football Letters 3; Track Manager 2. Hobbies: Music, Sports. Business School. JAMES DALE CHRYSLER College Entrance Course. Football Band 3, 4; Orchestra 3, 4; Clergy- man in Life with Pother”; 2 Year Bond Award 4. Hobbies: Swimming, Fishing, Photography. Harpur Col- lege. Jim DELANO ANTHONY CIMINO Rocky Entrance Course. Italion Key Club 4. Hobbies: II. Baseball. U. S. Aar Force. NICHOLAS ANTHONY CICCHINI Nick' College Entrance Course. Lotin Club 4; Football Band 2. Hobbies: Radio, Reading, Science, Mechanics. Col- lege. Sports. Business School. 26 DAVID LEWIS CLARK Dave Technical Course. Technical Club 2, 3, 4; Concert Bond 2, 3, 4; Football Band 2, 3, 4; 3 Year Band Award 4. Hobbies: Music, Sports. College. MARILYN LOU CLARK Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3; Tri-Hi Bowling 2; Glee Club 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Sports, Music, Read- ing. Advanced Schooling. REGINA ANN CLARK Jean College Entrance Course. Tri-H Club 2, 3; Tri-Hi Bowling 2, 3; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 3, 4; Thesaurus Circu- lation Staff 3. Hobbies: Music, Reading. College. SALVATORE CLEMENTE Doc College Entrance Course. Senior Ring Committee; Fife Cr Drum Corps 2, 3, 4; Two Year Drum Corps Award 3; First Division Medal 3. Hobbies: Sports. Harpur College. ROBERT FRANK COCCI Coach Commercial Course. Concert Band 1, 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Cars. Business. THOMAS STEPHEN CONFER Red' Aviation Course. Fife Drum Corps 2. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing, Sports' U. S. Navy. r% LUCILLE ANNE CONTI Red College Entrance Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 3; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 3. 4; Cheerleader 2, 3, 4; Candidate for U-E Queen; Can- didate for May Queen, 2, 3. Scholas- tic Literary Award 3; Lions Club Literary Award 2. Hobbies Reading, Sports, Music. College. RICHARD JOHN CONTI College Entrance Course. Baseball 3, 4; Intramural Bosketboll 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 4; Homeroom Treasurer 4; Varsity Baseball Letters 3, 4. College of Labor Relations, Cornell. RICHARD WAYNE COOPER V . Dick Aviation. Varsity Bowling 2, 3, 4. U. S. Air Forces. CHARLES FERDINAND COPP Chas General Course. Hobbies: Boxing, Auto Auction. U. S. Navy. CAROL ANNE CORBETT College Entrance Course. Spanish Club 2, 3; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Tri- Hi Bowling 2, 3; Field Hockey 2, 3; Softball 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 3. Hobbies: Sports, Col- lecting Snapshots, Dancing. College. CAROL LEE CORNELL College Entrance Course. Student Congress 3; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; In- tramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling and Swimming 4; Field Hockey 3, 4; Volleyball 3, 4; Senior Closs Ring Committee; Candidate for U-E Queen; Tri-Hi President. Hobbies: Sports, Reading. College. LLOYD EDWARD CORNELL Killer Industrial Arts Course. Future Farm- ers of America 2; Future Formers Basketball 2. Hobbies: Sports, Cars. U. S. Air Force. LARRY CORNICHUK Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. U. S. Navy. TERRY CAIN COUGHLIN Irish General Course. Intramural Basket- ball 2, 3; Homeroom Vice-President 4; Fred in “John Loves Mary ; Stu- dent Trustee in “Mayor for a Day 4; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. U. S. Navy. JOHN FRANCIS CUNNINGHAM College Entrance Course. Key Club 2, 3, 4; Intramurol Basketball 3. Lafayette College. RITA CATHERINE CUNNINGHAM Reet Academic Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Homeroom Vice - President 4. Hobbies: Swimming, Music, Reading. Secretarial School. J t DONALD WILLIAM COX Don College Entrance Course. Key Club 4, Spanish Club 2; Baseball 2, 3, 4; Intramural Football 2, 3; Orchestra 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Sports, Reading. College. RICHARD JAMES CROOKS Dick Industrial Arts Course. Intramural Basketball 2, 3. 4; Baseball 2; Golf 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; U-E Choi 2, 3, 4; Baseball Manager 4. Hob bies: Music, Sports. U. S. Navy. BARBARA JEAN CRESTON Bobbie Secretarial Course. Future Home- makers of America 4- Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intromural Basketball 2; Field Hockey 2; Softball 2; Volley- ball 2; Glee Club 2. Hobbies: Danc- ing, Reoding, Sports. Business School. GEORGE WILLIAM DALY Bill College Entrance Course. Key Club 4; Junior Rotarian 4; Key Club Pro- qram Chairmon. Hobbies: Sports, Taking Movies, Collecting Souvenirs. Cornell University. GEORGE THOMAS DARPINO Warp College Entrance Course. Italian Club 2, 3; Varsity Bowling 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Driving, Sports, Music. College. CAROL ANN DAVIDSON Secretarial Course. Tri-Hi Club 3; Softball 2. Hobbies: Roller Skating, Ice Skating, Reading. College. J 8 BEVERLY JEAN DAVIS Bev Commerciol Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3; Glee Club 2. Hobbies: Sports, Doncing. I.B.M. MARIETTA JANE DAYTON Janie College Entrance Course. French Club 2, 3, 4; Student Advisory Council 1; Tri-Hi Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2; Concert Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Football Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; The- saurus Advertising Staff 4; Four Year Band Award. Bowling Green State University, Ohio. College Entrance Course. Key Club 4; Spanish Club 2; Trock 2; Concert Band 3, 4; Football Band 2, 3; Two Year Band Award. Hobbies: Sports, Music. U. S. Navy. JOYCE AVER IL DE VAUDREUIL Jo Homemaking Course. Hobbies: Danc- ing, Movies, Sewing. CORNEUS DEVENTE, JR. Kees College Entrance Course. French Club 2; Key Club 2, 3, 4; Student Advisory Council 2; Tennis 3; Con- cert Bond I, 2, 3, 4; Football Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 3, 4; Senior Class President; Empire Boys' State 3; Four Yeor Band Award; Key Club Secretary 3; Key Club President 4 Village clerk in Student Election; Manager Foot- ball Band 1; Junior Rotarian 3; Candidate Syracuse University Citi- zenship Award 4. Hobbies: Automo- biles, Sports, Music. College of En- gineering. JANICE IRENE D1EFFENBACH Jan Academic Course. Library Club 2; Tri-Hi Club 3, 4; Intramural Bosket- boll 2; Softball 2; Volleyball 2; Con- cert Band 2, 3, 4; Football Band 2, 3; Two Year Bond Award. Hobbies: Bowling, Swimming. Dancing. Wilson Memorial School of Nursing. RUDOLPH MARTIN DINGA Rudy Art Course. Intramural Basketball 3; Junior Vorsity Football 2; Varsity Footboll 3. 4; Golf 2, 3, 4; Thesaurus Art Staff 3. Hobbies: Painting, Carving. Art Work. DOLORES MARIE DOBON Dee Academic Course. French Club 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3. 4; Triple Cities Art Calendar 3. Hobbies: Sketching, Sewing, Piano. School of Art. DAWN DELIA DOWNEY Deal College Entrance Course. Margaret, the Cook in Life with Father. Hobbies: Poetry, Music. School of Nursing. VERONICA ANN DRIBNOCK Dribie Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 2, 3; Softball 2; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4; Homeroom Re- porter 2; Tri-Hi Bowling Award 2, 3. Hobbies: Sports, Music, Dancing. Secretarial Work. FRANKLYN E. DUNHAM Pinky College Entrance Course. Spanish Club 2, 3; Intramural Basketball 4; Intromural Footboll 2; Junior Varsity 3; Varsity Football 4; Track 2, 3. 4; Volleyball 4; Homeroom President 4: Junior Varsity Football Letters 3; Varsity Football Letters 4. Hobbies: Sports, Travel. College. 29 BARBARA IRENE DUNN Bobby General Course. Volleyball 2. Hob- bies: Roller Skating, Hiking. EVELYN LOUISE EDMUNDS Bunny College Entronce Course. French Club 2, 3; Tri-Hi Club 3, 4; Soft- ball 2 Glee Club 2; Orchestra 2, 3. 4; Prompter Life with Father. Hobbies: Photography, Books. Keuka College. BETTY LOU FARWELL Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 4; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Dancing, Singing, Sports. I.B.M. ELIZABETH MAE FAWCETT Betty Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3. Hobbies: Cooking Sewing, Read- ing. Secretarial Work. , 0 jU JAMES DONALD EDWARDS Jim Academic Course. Technical Club 2; Intramural Basketball 2, 3; Intra- mural Football 2: Junior Vorsity Football 3; Track 2. Hobbies: Swim- ming, Football. U. S. Navy. MARJORIE ANN ELSTON Marge College Entronce Course. Library Club 2; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4, Con- cert Band 4; Football Band 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 3. 4; Three Year Band Award: 1st Ploce Snare Drum Award 3. Hobbies: Music, Dancing, Golf. New York State Institute of Applied Arts ond Sciences. ANTOINETTE MARIE FARGNOLI Toni College Entrance Course. Italian Club 4; Spanish Club 3, 4. Hobbies: Horseback Riding, Square Dancing, Rodeo. Stock Raising. WILLIAM CHARLES FEDASKO Bill College Entrance Course. Spanish Club 2, 3; Intramural Basketball 2, 3; Junior Varsity Football 2, 3; Track 2, 3, 4; Fife Cr Drum Corps 2; Junior Varsity Football Letters 2, 3. Hobbies: Sports, Reading. U. S. Navy. (H ALEXANDER FEDONIS Alex Commercial Course. Commercial Club 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 4; Field Hockey 2; Softball 4. Hobbies. Reading. Secre- tarial Work. CHRISTINE FERRARA Chris College Entronce Course. French Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2. Harpur College. 30 MARIO ANTHONY FIORINI Mutt Industrial Arts Course. Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Intramural Foot- ball 2; Junior Varsity Football 2, 3; Homeroom President 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing, Sports. Air Force. MARY ANN FOLTIN Pepi Homemaking Course. Future Home- makers of America 4; Tri-Hi Club 2; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 3, 4; Mary in Light Competition. Hob- bies: Music, Basketball. MAE LOUISE FOSBURY Louise Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 4. Hobbies: Sports. Secretarial Work. MARION DOROTHY FRANTA Mick Academic Course. Italian Club 4; Intramural Basketball 2; Track 2; Volleyball 2; U-E Choir 3, 4; Italian Club President 4. Hobbies: Music, Reading, Sports. Wilson Memorial School of Nursing. ALMA JOYCE GETMAN Secretarial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2; Softball 2, 3. 4; Track 2; Volleyball 2, 3; Glee Club 2; The- sourus Circulation Staff 3. Hobbies: Sports, Music. Secretarial Work. MAY FRANCES GIANNUZZI Doc College Entrance Course. Creotive Writing Club 3; Science Club 2; Latin Club 3; Intramural Basketball 3; Softball 2, 3; Volleyball 3; Glee Club 3; U-E Choir 3; National Com- mendation Scholastic Literary Award 1; Scholastic Literary Award I Stand for Democracy 2. Hobbies: Reodina, Cartooning, Writing. Col- lege of Medicine. JAMES COPELAND GIBBS Jim Industrial Arts Course. Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Cross Country 3, 4, Track 2. 3, 4; Volleyball 3, 4. Hobbies: Fishing, Hunting, Sports. Automobile Mechanics. LAWRENCE MUIR GIBBS Larry College Entrance Course. Key Club 4; Student Congress 4; Intramural Basketball 3, 4; Cross Country 4; Intramural Football 2, 3; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 4; Homeroom Representative 4; Cross Country Letters 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Fish- ing, Typing. College. JOHN A. GANCE Commercial Course. Intromural Foot- ball 2. Hobbies: Reading. College. JOANNE ELIZABETH GAREAU Jo Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2; Concert Band 2, 3, 4; Football Band 2, 3, 4; Three Year Band Aword; Noro, the Maid in Life with Father. Hobbies: Music, Sports. IBM. DONALD HOMER GONZALES Poncho Industrial Arts Course. Concert Band 2, 3, 4; Dance Bond 4; Foot- ball Bond 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 3, 4; Two Year Band Award; 1st Rating Clarinet Award 3. Hobbies: Music Award. Advanced Schooling. DONALD H. GREEN Don Commercial Course. Track 2 3; Fife Gr Drum Corps 1, 2, 3, 4; Drum Major 3, 4. Hobbies: Hot Rods, Sports. Business. 31 WILMA MAE GREEN Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4. Hobbies: Dancing, Bowling, Movies. Secretarial Work. HELEN LOUISE GRITMAN Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3; Future Homemakers of America 4 Hobbies: Photography, Movies. Secretarial Work. BARBARA JOYCE GROW Barb Homemaking Course. Hobbies: Ice Skating, Movies, Sewing. I.B.M. JOHNfYVARD GUILFOYLE Tiger' CommerVial Course. Creative Writing Club 2, 3' Itolion Club 3; Intramural Football 2, 4; Thesaurus Circulation Staff 2. Hobbies: Billiards, Hot Rods. Business School. WILLIAM HOWARD GUTGESELL Bill College Entrance Course. Intramural Bosketball 3. Hobbies: Sports. Col- lege. BARBARA JANE HARBST Barb Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4; Student Congress 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intromural Basketball 2; Softball 2; Tri-Hi Swimming 2. Hobbies: Classical Records, Dogs, Sports. Hartwick College. MARY PATRICIA HARTIGAN Pat Secretarial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3; Glee Club 2. Hobbies: Flying, Hik- ing. Post-Graduate Work. JO ANNE HARTMAN Academic Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Bosketball 2, 3; Soft- ball 2. 3; Volleyball 2; Orchestra 2, 3. Hobbies: Dancing. Industry. CHARLES C. HARVEY Chuck Industrial Arts Course. Intramural Basketball 2; Junior Varsity Foot- ball 2, 3; Varsity Football 4; Track 2; Junior Varsity Football Letters 2, 3; Varsity Football Letters 4. Hob- bies: Hunting, Fishing. U. S. Army. ROGER IRVING HENDRICK Rog Radio Course. Fife Cr Drum Corps 2, 3. Hobbies: Sports, Boating, Fishing. Radio Mechanics. BERNARD FRANCIS HERCEG Bernie Technical Course. Hi-Club 2, 3, 4; Junior Red Cross 2, 3; Technical Club 2, 3; Intramural Basketball 3, 4; Cross Country 2; Track 3, 4; Fife Drum Corps 2, 3; U-E Choir 3, 4. Hobbies: Sports. U. S. Navy. IRENE MARY HICKEY College Entrance Course. Tri-HI Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3; Tri-Hi Swimming 3, 4; Track 3; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2, 3; U-E Choir; Homeroom President 2. Hobbies: Sports, Singing, Movies. School of Nursing. 32 KENNETH DAVID HILDEBRANT Hilde College Entrance Course. French Club 2; Dance Band 4; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4; Thesaurus Editorial Staff 3, 4; “Zephyr Art Editor 4. Hobbies: Swimming, Art. College. MARLEA MAY HOMA Mac College Entronce Course. Spanish Club 2, 3; Student Advisory Council 2, 3; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intra- mural Bosketboll 2, 3; Field Hockey 2. 3, 4; Softball 2, 3; Tri-Hi Swim- ming 2, 3; Trock 2; Volleyball 2, 3; Assistant Manager Girls Sports 3; Tri-Hi Vice President 3; Thesaurus Editorial Staff 4. Hobbies: Sports. College. BLAIR WARD HILLS Easy Transfer from Greene Central School. College Entrance Course. Junior Varsity Basketball 1, 2; Varsity Basketball 3, 4; Varsity Football 3; Volleyball 2, 3. Hobbies: Sports. U. S. Air Force FLORENCE ANN HILLS Commercial Course. Commercial Club 4. Hobbies: Music, Sports. Post- Graduate. RICHARD DONALD HOGAN Dick BARBARA JANE HOPKO Barb Academic Course. Spanish Club 3; Student Congress 3, 4: Student Ad- visory Council 3; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3. 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 3, 4; Homeroom President 2; Homeroom Secretary 3; Candi- date for U-E Queen; Candidate for May Queen 3; Candidate for Student Village Trustee 4; Spanish Club Vice President 3; Spanish Club President 4. Hobbies: Sports. Singing. Wilson Memorial School of Nursing. JACK E. HOPPES 'Hairy Commercial Course. Technical Club 2, 3; Baseball 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 3, 4; Varsity Bowling 3; Volleyball 4; Homeroom Vice Presi- dent 4. Hobbies: Baseball. College. Aviation Course. Introrpur ball 2; U-E Choir Gondoliers. H ation. Radio., Hafptft f.p leg lVEN HOSAY 'Bob College Entrance Course. Intramural Bosketball 2, 3; Intramural Football 2; Junior Varsity Football 3; Soft- ball 2; Track 2; Homeroom Secre- tary-Treasurer 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. U. S. Navy. RAY FRANKLIN HOLDEN Mick Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Mechanics. Industry. ILLIAN MARIE HRICIGA Lil College Entrance Course. French Club 2, 3. 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 3, 4; Tri-Hi Swimming 3; Track 2. 3, 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2, 3; Vocational Essay Award 2. Hobbies: Swimming, Art, Sports. College. NAN RAE HOLLENBACK College Entrance Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2; Tri-Hi Bowling 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2; Tri-Hi Swimming 2: Volleyboll 2. 3; Bowling Award 3. College of Dental Hygiene, Buffalo. W. %r . Jr v 0 JfKluWr 1 STARK HUFFORD Doug fts Course. Hobbies: 33 I IDA MAE HUGHES Academic Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Softball 3; Orchestra 2, 3. 4; The- saurus Editorial Staff 4; Prompter in John Loves Mary ; Delia, the Maid in Life with Father. Hob- bies: Baseball, Dancing. School of Nursing. ZcvT s - ARTHUR HOWARD ILLG Art (,__y Commercial Course. Glee Club 3; U-E Choir 4. Hobbies: Photography, Boat and Plane Models, Accordion. Business. MARY CATHERINE INCITTI Mar Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 2; Italian Club 2; Tri-Hi Club 2, Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, Softboll 2, 3, 4- Track 2; Volleyball 2; Thesaurus Circulation Staff 2. Hobbies: Dancing, Sports, Music. I.B.M. SYL Art Course. Italian Club 2; Glee Club 2, 3, 4- Scholastic Art Award 3. Hobbies: Painting, Dancing. Ad- vanced School i College Entrance Course. Science Club 2; Intramural Football 2; Con- cert Band I, 2, 3, 4; Dance Band 4; Football Band 2, 3; U-E Choir 4; Two Year Band Award. Hobbies: Sports, Reading, Music. The Citadel, South Carolina. VIRGINIA MARLENE JOPSON Ginny College Entronce Course. Creative Writing Club 4; Science Club 3, 4; U-E Choir 4; Senior Class Colors and Motto Committee; Thesourus Edi- torial Staff 4. Hobbies: Piano, Poetry. Business School. ANNA JURACEK Annie' College Entronce Course. Future Homemakers of America 3, 4, Vol- leyball 2. Hobbies: Photography. ANNA KATSARES Tessie General Course. Softball 2; Track 3; Volleyball 2, 3; Glee Club 2; Home- room President 2. Hobbies: Drawing, Sports. Trovel. Secretarial Work. ANGELA KAVANAGH 'Angie ELIZABETH ELEANOR KELM Betty College Entronce Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3. 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4, Field Hockey 2, 3, 4, Softball 2, 3. 4; Track 2; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 4; Candidate for U-E Queen; Homeroom Secretary- Treasurer 4. Hobbies: Sports, Music. College. WAYNE HERMAN KEMP Loddie College Entrance Course. Senior Colors and Motto Committee. Hob- bies: Bosketboll, Piano, Church Work. College. JOANNE GLORIA KOCAK Art Course. Future Homemakers of America 3, 4; Tri-H Club 2; Presi- dent FjjJ re Homemakers of Amcrico _ies: Souvenir ond Picture tions. I B M. OLGA KOMANOw SKI College Entrance Course. Spanish Club 3; Student Senate 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 4; Field Hockey 2; Softball 2. 3. 4; Track 2, 3, 4; Vol- leyball 2. 3. 4; U-E Choir 2. 3, 4; Thesaurus Circulation Stiff 2; El- mira College Key Award 3; Candi- date for U-E Oueen; Cheerleader 3, 4; Candidate for Mayo for a Day 4; Spanish Club President 3; Student Senate Reporter 4l Candidate Syra- cuse University Ci Kzenship Award 4. Hobbies: Sewina feports. New York State College fj£r|Teochers Coll at Albany. JOAN DOROTHY KONIKOWSKI Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 2, 3; Tri-Hi Club 2. 3; Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Prompter, Life with Father. Hobbies: Sports, Music. Secretarial Work. MARYLOU KORCYKOSKI College Entrance Course. Creative Writing Club 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 4; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 4; Thesourus Advertising Staff 2; Cora in Life with Father ; 1st Prize I Speak for Democracy 2; Key Club Award Current Affairs Report 2; Creative Writing Club President 4. Hobbies: Accordion Dancing. American Academy of Dramatic Arts, New York City. FRANCIS RUDOLPH KOSALEK Fran Agricultural Course. Future Farmers of America 2, 3, 4. Hobbies : Animol husbandry, Construction Work, Sports. Advanced Schooling. CARL MICHAEL KOTASEK Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. U. S. Air Force. RUTH EMMA KRAUS Ruthie Secretorial Course. Commercial Club 3; Tri-Hi Club 4; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Music, Sports. Secretarial Work. IRENE JEAN KREMITSKE Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2. Hobbies: Doncing, Reoding, Sports. Business School. RONALD JACK KRIGER Eagor Industrial Arts Course. Student Con- gress 3; Homeroom President 3. Hobbies: Art, Swimming, Hunting. U. S. Navy. VICTORIA ANTONETTE KVASNAK Tory College Entrance Course. Concert Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Football Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Band Awards 2, 3; Rating I Trombone Trio 4; Four Years Band Award. Hobbies: Trombone, Organ. School of Nursing. ELIZABETH ANN KVASNY Betty Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3 Glee Club 3; Orchestra 2, 3; U-E Choir 4. Hobbies: Music, Sports, Dancing. I.B.M. NORMAN RICHARD KYLE Poochie Radio Course. Student Advisory Council 2; Concert Bond 3, 4, Foot- ball 2, 3, 4; Three Year Band Award. Hobbies: Airplane Building, Model Railroods. The Citadel, South Carolina. PAUL WESLEY LANE Zeke College Entrance Course. Hobbies: Sports, Reoding. College. 35 Music and Commercial Courses. Baseball 2, 3; Volleyball 2; U-E Choir 2. 3, 4; No. 2 rating Solo Award Oneonta tate Music Festival 3. Hobbies: Myiic, Reading, Sports. stmarySc oOl of Music, Rochester. LA SORTE Rosie Jrance Course. Athletic jncil 3; French Club 2; 3, 4; Intramural Basket- Field Hockey 2, 3; Soft- 4., -r. Track 2. 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3. 4; Orchestro 2, 3, 4: U-E Choir 2, 3, 4; Girls' State 3; Athletic Medal 3; U-E Sweater 3, Secretory Athletic Advisory Council 4; French Club Secretary 3, 4. Hobbies: Sports. College. WILLIAM EDWARD LITTLE Bill College Entrance Course. Intramural Football 2, 3; Junior Varsity Football 4; Track 2, 3, 4: Football Band 1, 2; U-E Choir 4. Hobbies: Sports. Harpur College. DORLA MAE LOCKERBY College Entronce Course. Tri-Hi Club 2; Tri-Hi Bowling 2; Glee Club 2, 3; Orchestro 2, 3, 4; U-E Choir 4. Hobbies: Music, Swimming, Reading. College. DALE LAWRENCE Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Bil- liards, Sports, Hunting. U. S. Novy. ROLAND ANDREW LAWTON Sniffer College Entrance Course. Track 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Sports, Reading, Scouts. Harpur College. JO ANNE LE BARON Josie Academic Course. French Club 4: Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Swim- ming 4; Track 2; Volleyball 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Sports, Reading. New York Institute of Applied Arts and Sci- ences. JEAN RUTH LILLIE Jeanie Commercial Course. Commercial Club 3. 4; Softball 3. Hobbies: Popular Music, Sewing, Dancing. Secretarial Work. Jr JOYCE ANNE LUDINGTON Toot College Entrance Course. Intromural Basketball 3; Track 2; Glee Club 2, 3. 4. Hobbies: Sports, Horses. New York State Institute of Applied Arfs , and Sciences. f' ' If' 3B TOE HOWARD MANN Xrt Course. Track 2, 3, 4; Football 3and 2, 3; Glee Club 2, 3; Thesaurus ’T Art Staff 4; Scholastic Art Award 3. Hlr . I Hobbies: Boating, Drawing. U. S. 4r Jr . Novv- Sportk, Art. Art MARINELLO Tomi rse. Intramural Basketball Volleyball 1. Hobbies: bchool. LAURA MARY MAROGLIO Secretarial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2; Intramural Basketboll 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Sports, Photography. I B M. FLOR IAN JOSEPH MARTINAK ''Flab College Entrance Course. Spanish Club 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2; Junior Varsity Football 2, 3' U-E Choir 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club Treas- urer 3. Hobbies: Sports. U. S. Armed Forces. JOYCE ANN MASTERS Little Red College Entrance Course. Future Homemakers of America 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Track 2; Glee Club 3, 4. Hobbies: Doncing, Horses. New York State Institute of Applied Arts and Sciences. MARIO LOUIS MASTROGIACOMO Industrial Arts Course. Airplones, Auto Mechanics. Industry. HAROLD LEE MATOLKA Aviation Course. Baseball 2’ Intra- mural Basketball 4; Concert Band 3; Football Band 2, 3; Two Year Foot- ball Band Award. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. U. S. Armed Forces. ANNA MATUSICA Annie Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 2; Field Hockey 3; Softball 2, 3; Trock 2; Volleyball 2, 4; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 3, 4; Basketball 2, 3. Hobbies: Reading, Sports. Advanced Schooling. MARILYN MARIE McCORMICK College Entrance Course. Creative Writing Club 4; French Club 2, 3, 4; Library Club 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 4; Senior Rina Committee; Thesaurus Editorial Staff 4; Prompter, Life with Father. Hobbies: Swimming, Sail- ing, Books. College. JOSEPH WALTER McLARK Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Coin Collection. U. S. Navy. IRENE MARIE MIHOK Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 4; Field Hockey 2; Softball 2: Vol- leyball 2. Hobbies: Reading, Sports, Music. Secretarial Work. RICHARD LEWIS MIKELS Mike Agriculture Course. Future Farmers of America 2, 3, 4; Secretary, Fu- ture Farmers of America 4. Hobbies: Sports, Fishing and Hunting. Chicken Forming. DYCE AGNES MIHALCHO 'Jo' Col- MICHAEL MIKLOS Mike Industrial Arts Course, U-E Choir 2. 3, 4 Hobbies: Sports. U. S. Postol Service. GERALD WILLIAM MILLER Jerry Industrial Arts Course. Intramural Football 3; Track 3. Hobbies: Hunt- ing, Fishing. U. S. Armed Forces. 37 BARBARA JEAN MITCHELL Bobs General Course. Hobbies: Reading ' Dancing. Business. CAROL YVONNE MITCHELL Secretarial Course. Hobbies: Read- ing, Decorating. Secretarial Work. JAMES MOODY Jim College Entrance Course. Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Basket- ball, Church, Reading. College. CHARLES LEONARD MORGAN Chas College Entrance Course. Student Congress 3; Junior Varsity Football 3; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4; Thesaurus Edi- torial Staff 2, 3, 4; John in John Loves Mary. Hobbies: Sports, Read- ing. Horpur College. DONALD J. MORGAN Don Agricultural Course. Future Farmers of America 1. 2, 3, 4; Future Farm- ers Basketball 2, 3, 4; Intramural Football 3; 1st Prize Kiwanis Essay Contest 3; 1st Prize Virgil Potato Judging Contest 4; Future Farmers of America Treasurer 2, Reporter 3; Senior Colors and Motto Committees; Future Farmers of Americo Tri- County President 4. Hobbies: Sports, Travel. Cornell University. THEODORE MERRILL MORTER Ted Technical Course. Technical Club 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Football, Basketball, Track. Baptist Bible Seminary. Dody making Course. Fu- rjakers of America 4; Tri- 4; Intramural Basket- _ . ,,'Softball 2, 3, 4- Track 2, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Football Band 2, 3. 4; Three Year Band Award. Hobbies: Sports, Doncing. I.B.M. RICHARD DOMINICK MUSA Bunzo Technical Course. Golf 2. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. U. S. Army. LOUIS JOSEPH NICHOLS Lou College Entrance Course. Latin Club 4; Intramural Football 2. Hobbies: Sports. College. NAOMI MARIE NOVAK Academic Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3; Softball 2, 3, 4; Vol- leyball 2, 3, 4. Wilson Memorial School of Nursing. JUANITA EVONNE NOVELLO Nita Acodemic Course. Tri-Hi Club 4; U-E Choir 2, 3. 4; Annie in Life With Father. Hobbies: Bollet, Act- ing. Ithaca College of Drama. 38 ROSEMARY OCILKA Ro Academic Course. Tri-Hi Bowling 3, 4; Field Hockey 4; Tri-Hi Swimming 3; Homeroom Secretory 2, 4. Wilson Memorial School of Nursing. VINCY ANN OLMETTI Vinny General Course. Italian Club 2; Tri- Hi Club 2, 4; Intramural Bosketball 2, 3; Field Hockey 2; Softball 2, 3; Track 2; Volleyball 2, 3; Glee (flub 2. Hobbies: Swimming, Sports. I.B.M. JOHN DILLON O'LOUGHLIN College Entrance Course. Key Club 4. Hobbies: Sports, Model Railroad. College. EUNICE LUCILLE OLVER Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Reading, Music. College. JEROME ORSLEY Pork College Entrance Course. Intramural Bosketball 2; Intramural Football 2, 3; Junior Varsity Football 4. Hob- bies: Sports. College. BEVERLY JOYCE ORTH Bev College Entrance Course. Junior Red Cross 2; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intra- mural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 4- Softball 2; Volleyball 4. Hobbies: Sports Riding, Music. Wil- son Memorial School of Nursing. BARBARA ANN PATCH Commercial Course. Commercial Club 1; French Club 2; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Swimming 2; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 1; Thesaurus Cir- culation Staff 1. Hobbies: Tennis, Ice Skating. Centenary Junior Col- lege, New Jersey. JEANINE MAE PATRICK Patty Commercial bourse. Future Home- makers of America 3, 4; Glee Club 2. Hobbies: Dancing, Bowling. Sec- retarial Work. f RONALD STEWART PATTON Pat College Entrance Course. Junior Red Cross 2; Key Club 3, 4; Track 2, 3; Thesaurus Advertising and Editorial Staffs 4. Hobbies: Conservation, Stamp Collecting, Fishing. College of Engineering. lO JOYCE RUTH PAYNE General Course. Future Homemakers of America 4. Hobbies: Shooting, Swimming, Skating. I.B.M. J f- ANLEY LAVERN PAYNE Boner Industrial Arts Course. Intromural Football 2. Hobbies: Motorcycles, Hunting, Fishing. U. S. Navy. FAYE PEARL PERRY Spud College Entrance Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2; Tri-Hi Bowling 3. Hobbies: Sports, Reading. Wilson Memorial School of Nursing. 39 Y jP v A A JOYCE ELAINE PETROVSKY Cbmm fciol Course. Spanish Club 3; Tr.-Hv Club 2, “ Basketball 2, 3, A Softball 2. 3 ' Concert 4; Oi j Hobbies r Work. A, 4; Intramural . ;,nri-Hi Bowling 4; GERALD Agriculture America L Horses, NeV Applied HELEN PINKEY Secretarial Course. JB 4; Tri-Hi Club 2rJ3 Basketboll 2; Tr Field Hockey 2; Wftball boll 2; U-E Choir2, 3, President 2; HomeropW R. otive 4; Tf 2, 3, 4; C som Princ ?n-Hi' Report, sentatives Sc Singing, Dane Work. MARILYN DELORES POLLARD Commercial Course. Intramural Bas- ketboll 2. 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3; Softball 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Soccer 4. Hobbies: Sports, Movies. Secretarial Work. ERNEST ELMER PRATT Agricultural Course. Future Farmers of America 1, 2, 3, 4. Forming. CfcHmer I AL K S7 Janie ommercial Club Intramural ockey 2; Soft- cer 2, Home- Prompter, ; Maggie in Life ( in Light Com- is Editorial Staff Hobbies: Sports, Scrapbook. Secretarial Work. WILLIAM FRANK PULSE Bill'' College Entronce Course. Homeroom Reporter 3; Homeroom President 4; Father in Life with Father. Hob- bies: Sports, Movies. College. ALLYN JONES PUTERBAUGH Technical Course. Baseball 3, 4 Junior Varsity Basketboll 2, 3 Varsity Basketball 4. Hobbies Sports. RUTH PYLUCK Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 4; Tri-Hi Club 2; Softball 2, 3; Glee Club 2; Thesaurus Typing Staff 4. Hobbies: Music, Sports. Advanced Schooling. 'Archie' Ruthie' ALBERT JOSEPH RANDESI Ba Bo Commercial Course. Vorsity Bowling 4; Fife Drum Corps 3, 4; Football Band 2; Three Yeor Drum Corps Aword; 1st Division Medal Drum Solo 3; Bowling Letters 4. Hobbies: Sports, Travel. U.S. Navy. N REAVES Bev Commercial bourse. Commercial Club 3, 4; Junior Red Cross 2; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3; Glee Club 2, 3. Hobbies: Bowling, Music. Scrapbook. Business School. EDOLPHY Tri-Hi Club 2, Basketball 2, 3; tes: Movies, Sports, ial Work. SALLY LOU REED Commercial Course. Commercial Club 2, 3, 4; Junior Red Cross 2; Tri-Hi Club 2 3, 4; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 3, 4; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 2; Thesourus Circulation Staff 3. Hob- bies: Music, Sports. College. ALICE MAE REEVE Aly Mae College Entrance Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Softball 2; Volleyball 3; Football Bond 4; Glee Club 2; Or- chestra 2, 3, 4; Thesourus Adver- tising and Editorial Staffs 4. Hob- bies: Crocheting, Bowling, Music. School of Nursing. DOROTHY ELIZABETH RETMAN Dottie Commercial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4; Library Club 3, 4; Library Club Treasurer 4. Hobbies: Reading, Mu- sic, Cooking. Secretarial Work. JEANETTE JOY1 RICHARDS •liege Club 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2; Spanish 4. Hobbies: Sports, LORAIN HELEN RIPIC Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3. 4; Intramural Basketball 2; Field Hockey 3; Tri-Hi Swimming 4; Vol- leyball 2. 3. Hobbies: Sports, Scrap- book. I.B.M. JOAN ANNE NORINNE ROBINSON No College Entrance Course. French Club 2; Spanish Club 3, Baseball 2; In- tramural Basketball 2, 3; Volleyball ' 2, 3; Senior Class Day Committee; Glee Club 2; Homeroom Treasurer 2; Lily Herbish in John Loves Mary ; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 2, Edi- torial Staff 4. Hobbies: Swimming, Dancing, Scrapbooks. Cortland Stote College for Physical Education. JOSEPH STEPHEN ROMA Joe Technical Course. Technical Club 4; • Technical Club Secretary 4. Hob- bies: Sports, Fishing. College. JOSEPH ANTHONY ROSSI Art Course. Intramural Basketball 3; Cross Country 2, 4; Trock 2, 3; Scholastic Art Award 2. Hobbies: Swimming, Reading. School of Art. ROBERT HAROLD RUSSELL Bob College Entrance Course. Fife Cr Drum Corps 2, 3; Homeroom Rep- resentative 4; Drum Corps Award. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. U. S. Navy. MARY SALAMI DA P Rosie Secgfborial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, Glee Club 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Music, Reodmg. Secretarial Work. CAROL MAE MARIE SAMMON Chick Art Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3; Glee Club 2, 3, 4, Work in Child Core; Prompter, Life with Father. Hob- bies: Sports, Children, Collecting Carnival Items. 41 LELAND FAY SANFORD Sandy Technical Course. Technical Club 2, 3, 4; Track 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. I.B.M. FRANK SARACENO Commercial Course. Thesaurus Ad- vertising and Editorial Staffs 4. Hobbies: Stamp Collection, Baseball. Business School. r AMELIA PATRICIA SAWICKI Pot College Entrance Course. Creative Writing Club 2, 3, 4; Junior Red Cross 2; Spanish Club 2, 3; Tri-Hi Club 2. 3, 4, Intramural Basketball 2, 3’ Tri-Hi Bowling 2, 3; Softball 2; Chairman. Senior Class Colors Committee; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4; The- saurus Editor-in-Chief; Essay Awards What Makes Democracy Work? 2, What Americonism Means to Me ross. Hob- College. MARIE EDITH SBARRA College Entrance Course. Italian Club 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 2, 3, 4; 1st Place Viola Award 3; Italian Club Secretory 3. Hobbies: Reading. Lowell's Business School. President Junior Red bies: Rep fcpg, Traveling. v- RACHEL JULIA SBARRA Rae College Entrance Course. Italian Club 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2; Glee Club 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Music. Cortland State Teachers College. EDWARD ROBERT SCALZO Hot Pie General Course. Science Club 2; Fife Cr Drum Corps 2, 3; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4, Thesaurus Advertising and Circu- lation Staffs 3; First Place Bass Drum Solo, Oneont -Stbte Festival. Hobbies: Fishing, pair. Roller Wroting, Hunting, Radig-.Gnd Television Re- ANTOINETTE ANN SCHIAPPA Neddy Art Course. Italian Club 2; Tri-Hi Club 2, 4; Softball 2, 3; Volleyball 2, 3; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 4. Hobbies: Clothes, Sports and Music. I.B.M. PATRICIA ANN SCHOFIELD Pat Academic Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 2; Glee Club 2. Hob- bies: Music, Reading, Dancing. Col- lege. OTTO WILBUR SCOTT Scotty Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Fishing. U. S. Air Force. PHYLLIS ROSALIE SCOTT Scotty Secretarial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2. Intromural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2; Softball 2, 3, 4; Track 2; Volleyball 2, 3; Glee Club 2; The- saurus Circulation Staff 3; Senior Ring Committee. Hobbies: Sports, Music. Secretarial Work. JOHN THOMAS SEDLOCK Gismo Industrial Arts Course. Intramural Basketball 4; Volleyball 4; Assistant Football Manager 3; Assistant Bas- ketball Monager 3; Basketball Man- ager 4. Hobbies: Electricity, Radios. U. S. Armed Forces. PEGGY ANN SHATZ Peg Academic Course. Future Home- makers of America 3; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 2, 4; Glee Club 2. Hobbies: Snapshots, Bowling, Sports. School of Nursing. 42 JOHN PAUL SHELTON Technical Course 3. 4: Cross Country Hobbies: Sports se. Technical Club 2,v t ntry 2; Trock 2. 3, 4. y f i, Reading. I.B.M. y « L :♦ a LEON ALLEN SMITH Smitty Technicol Course. Key Club 2, 3, 4; Technical Club 2, 3; Homeroom President 4; John in Life with Father ; Key Club Treasurer 4. Hob- bies: Sports. U. S. Armed Forces. HOWARD RAY SHOOP Howie Industrial Arts Course. Football Band 2, 3. U. S. Navy. BARBARA LOUISE SPENCER Barb College Entronce Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2; Orchestra 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Miniatures, Painting, Figurines. Advanced Schooling. ROGER HARDING SHULTS Technical Course. Intramural Foot- ball 2; Varsity Football 3, 4; Track 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 4. Hobbies: Sports. FAITH MARILYN SIGNOR Cookie College Entrance Course. Italian Club 4; Junior Red Cross 2; Glee Club 2: U-E Choir Accompanist 2 3, 4; State Chorus 4; Fiametta in - The Gondoliers. Hobbies: Music, Dancing, Skating. Business School. u 9 f GLENN ALLEN SILVERNAIL Industrial Arts Course. Intramural Football 3, 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing, Photography. Bible School. ANN STANKO College Entrance Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4- Intramural Basketball 2; Tri-Hi Swimming 4; Volleyball 2. Hobbies: Books. College. 'jkjji ERLING Dave' once Course.. Key Club, Technical Club 2, 3; Tfock. iomeroom Vice-President 4. Hob- bies: Nature. College. v JOAN ELIZABETH STEVENS Joanie College Entrance Course. Junior Red Cross 2; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intra- mural Basketball 2, 3; Glee Club 2; Homeroom Treasurer 2. Hobbies: Sports, Books. College. JERRY JOHN JOSEPH SKRIVAN Jerr Technical Course. Technical Club 2, 3; Varsity Bowlina 2, 3; Fife Drum Corps 2, 3. Hobbies: Sports. Mt. Pleasant Meat School, New York City. STROM Schube Hobbies: Sports. 43 LOUISE MARIE STURZENEGGER 'Louie College Entronce Course. French Club 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Bosket- ball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 4; Softball 2, 3, 4; Track 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Senior Ring Committee; Home- room Vice-President 3, 4; Football Bond 2, 3; Orchestra 2, 3; U-E Sweater and Letters 4; Band Aword 3; French Club Vice President 4. Hobbies: Sports, Music. Cortland State Teachers College o Physical Education. JOHN HENRY SYKES ( Quine ' Industrial Arts Course. Hobbies: Wood Working, Hunting. Carpentry. JAMES ALEXANDER TAIT College Entrance Course. Key Club 3, 4; Intromural Basketball 4; Vol- leyball 4- Concert Band 2, 3, 4; Football Bond 2, 3; Orchestra 2, 3, 4; Empire Boys' State 3. Hobbies: Sports, Music, Guns. College of En- gineering. NADEANE ANN TAT College _ ______ ___ Club 3$Tri rtlub 2, 3, Bowlin«J2Lo, 4; Field Softboi T3, 4; ' ball 4; G ef£JOO 2. _ Sports, Music. '-College of Dental Hygiene. p r bourse. 'Not 2,33HobbSKV NALD MAF )lN TAYLOR Crooner Transfer from Vestal Central School Commercial Course. Photography Club 1; Intramural Basketball 1, 2; Cross Country 2; Track 2; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Scholastic Literary Award i; Guiseppe in The t Gondoliers ; Choir Soloist 3, 4. Hob j bies: Music, Sports, Scropbook. Sing- Q mg. JAMES THOMAS TAYLOR Jim Technical Course. Technical Club 2, 3, 4. Hobbies: Hunting, Music. In- dustry. CLYDE RAY TERRY Agriculture Course. Future Farmers of America 1, 2, 3, 4; Poultry Judg- ing Aword 3j F.F.A. Reporter 2, 4. Hobbies: Com Collecting. Cornell University. PATRICIA ANN TESTANI Pot College Entronce Course. Intromurol Basketball 2; Concert Band 2, 3, 4; Football Band 2, 3; Orchestra 2; Two Year Band Award. Hobbies: Reading, Popular Records, Sports. Ridley's Business School. Tewks Course. Fife Cr Drum Whitney in Life with Year Drum Corps Hobbies: Cars. Advanced f a Q------ :AROL LEE THOMPSON Carol Commercial Course. French Club 2; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 2; Tri-Hi Bowling 3; Field Hockey 2; Softball 2; Volleyball 2; Homeroom Secretary 2; Freshman Initiation Committee 4. Hobbies: Sports, Music, Books. I.B.M. JOSEPH WILLARD THORNTON 'Joe' College Entrance Course. Key Club 3, 4; Student Congress 3; U-E Choir 3. Hobbies: Sports, Cards. College. DONNA LOU TILTON SHortie College Entrance Course. Italian Club 3, 4; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4; Thesaurus Advertising Staff 4; Gianetta in The Gondoliers ; Gretel in Hansel and Gretel ; Prompter in John Loves Mary ; Aunt Margaret in Light Competition ; Vinnie in Life with Father ; Candidate for Queen of Hearts Dance. Hobbies: Singing, Piano, Organ. Curtis Institute of Music, Philadelphia. 44 EARL ROBERT TRIPP Bob Agriculture. Future Farmers of America I, 2, 3; Future Farmers Basketball 1, 2; Cross Country 2; Intramural Football 1; 1st Place Fu- ture Farmers Spring Roily in 880; F.F.A. Vice-President 2, 3. Hobbies: Hunting, Golfing, Trap Shooting. I.B.M. Gm M GERALD ANTHONY TURECEK Jay Technical Course. Homeroom Vice- J President 4; Golf 2, 3, 4. U. S. Armed (J V Forces. i BERNARD WILLIAM TURNER Bunny College Entrance Course. Baseball 3; Intramural Football 2; Volleyball 4. Government Work. JOAN ELIZABETH WADE College Entrance Course. Orchestra 2, 3, 4; Concertmoster 2, 4; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4; Accompanist 2, 3, 4; State Music Contests 2. 3; 3 Rating I Violin Medals; Saratoga Springs State Orchestra 3. Hobbies: Garden- ing, Music. Syracuse University. MARY SHEILA WALTERS College Entronce Course. Spanish Club 3; Glee Club 2. Hobbies: Read- ing, Letter Writing. College. BURR EUGENE TWINING Burt Rodio Course. Radio Mechanics. Hobbies: Model Airplanes, Radio, Mechanics. MILDRED ANTOINETTE VALENTA Millie Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 4; Student Advisory Council 2: Tri- Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Senior Class Colors and Motto Committee; Homeroom Secretary-Treasurer 4; Glee Club 2, 3. Hobbies: Sports, Travel. Business School. eCease rae warters I ' Roe Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 3, 4. Hob- bies: Piano, Swimming. Tennis. Bar- bizon School of Modeling, New York City. ELIZABETH CHRISTINE VAVRA Liz Secretarial Course. Tri-Hi Club 4; Intromural Basketboll 2, 3, 4; Tri-Hi Bowling 4; Field Hockey 2. 3, 4; Softball 2. 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Athletic Aword 3; U-E Sweater 4. Hobbies: Sports, Art Sketching. I.B.M. RUTH AMY WEINGARTNER Pot Commercial Course. Intromural Bas- ketball 2, 3, 4; Field Hockey 2, 3; Softball 2. 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Soccer 4. Hobbies: Sports. Secretarial Work. DONALD EUGENE WENZEL Don Industrial Arts Course. Intromural Basketball 3. U. S. Armed Services. 45 MICHAEL WESKO Scheeber College Entrance Course. Athletic Advisory Council 3, 4; Junior Varsity Basketboll 2, 3; Varsity Basketball 4; Junior Varsity Football 2; Varsity Football 3, 4; Golf 2, 3, 4; Junior Varsity Football Letters 2; Junior Varsity Basketball Letters 2, 3; Varsity Football and Basketball Letters 4; Golf Letters 2, 3, 4. Hob- bies: Sports, Reading. College. JANET MAE WESTON Jan College Entrance Course. Junior Red Cross 2: Tri-Hi Club 2, 4; Field Hockey 2; Volleyball 2; Glee Club 2; U-E Choir 2, 3, 4; Thesaurus Adver- tising Stoff 3, 4; Thesaurus Circula- tion Staff 2, 3. Hobbies: Music, Dancing, Sports. Arnot-Ogden Me- morial School of Nursing, Elmira, New York. WALTER DELANO WILCE Walt Industrial Arts Course. Intramural Basketball 4; Junior Varsity Basket- ball 2; Intramural Football 2; Junior Varsity Football 3; Varsity Football 4; Track 2, 3. 4; Volleyball 4; Dr. Somers in Life with Father Junior Vorsity Football Letters 3; Varsity Football Letters 4. Hobbies: Sports. College. ELIZABETH JOYCE WILCOX Betty Secretarial Course. Commercial Club 3, 4; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Intramural Basketboll 2; Softball 2; Glee Club 2, 3. Hobbies: Organ, Dancing, Sports. I.B.M. CONSTANCE ANN WILLIAMS Connie General Course. Tri-Hi Club 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 3; Student Advisory Council; Baseball 2; Intramural Bas- ketball 2, 3; Glee Club 2; Thesaurus Circulation Staff 4; Candidate for U-E Queen; Cheerleader 3, 4; Cheer- leader Captain 4; Candidate Village Trustee 4; House of Representatives 3, 4; Secretary of the House 3; Speaker of the House 4. Hobbies: _tv Intramural Basketball 3, 4; Fife Or Drum Corps 3, 4; Two Year Band • Award. Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing, Basketball. College. MARGARET ANN WINTENBERG Annie Commercial Course. Tri-Hi Club 2. Hobbies: Photography. Secretarial . -. v. OLGA LOUISE WOLFE O College Entrance Course. Creative Writing Club 4; French Club 3; Stu- dent Congress 3; Tri-Hi Club 3, 4; Homeroom Representative 3; Home- room Secretory 4; Mary in Life with Father ; First Place American Legion County Orotorical Contest 4; Cre- ative Writing Club Secretary 4. Hob- bies: Reading, Drama, Music. School of Speech ond Rodio Arts. JERRY MARTIN WRIGHT Lefty Technical Course. Technical Club 2, 3, 4; Technical Club Vice President and Treasurer 3, 4. Hobbies: Model Airplane. College. 46 ■ ROBERT JAMES YANKOVICH Yank Industrial Arts Course. Student Con- gress 4; Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4; Intramural Football 2, 3; Junior Varsity Football 3; Track 2 3; Homeroom Representative 4; Hob- bies: Sports. U. S. Armed Forces. ROSE MARIE Z ICAR I Pee Wee Commercial Course, Commercial Club; Tri-Hi Club 2, 3; Basketball 2, 3; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Softball 2, 3; Trock 2, 3, 4: VolleyDoll 2, 3, 4; Harlan in Life with Father. Hobbies: Sports, Movies. Civil Service Work. ALSO IN JUNE GRADUATING CLASS Ammerman, Samuel Ackerman, Cora Brown, Leo Burns, Betty Johnston, Arthur Kaczynski, Henry Pero, Philip Phillips, John Polisensky, Rudy Redpath, Richord Scimone, Philip Stanko, Edward Vollese, Rolland Walicke, Louis 47 JUNIORS “THE TREMBLING YEAR' We, prospective Seniors, bid our Junior year farewell. It was a Trembling Year of looking forward and hoping all the joys of a Senior would soon be ours. Now the goal is in sight and suddenly we realize what pleasures we have had this year. We selected our representatives to the Athletic Advisory Council, helped nomi- nate the U-E Queen and distributed cops and gowns to the graduating Seniors. Tri-Hi, Key Club and other organiza- tions saw our smiling faces at their meet- ings. Thanksgiving night each Junior girl dreamed that next year she might be Queen. Each Junior boy dreamed of that coveted position on the Varsity. We have finished the chapter which precedes the climax of our high school career. Now we must look to the future — finished is The Trembling Year. 48 SOPHOMORES THE COMEDY OF ERRORS You oren't Mrs. Roberts, ore you? Our Sophomore year is over. As we look back, we realize that we made many mistakes, but that is only human. We became active members of the various clubs. We worked hard and some of us even held offices. Our representatives in Student Govern- ment did a fine job in keeping us informed. When we attended the dances and games, we thought how wonderful it was to be part of this gay crowd. Our classes were new and interesting and if we didn't do as well as ex- pected, it was only because of our shyness. Next year we're going to do better. Yes, we're going to do better in everything. We know our way around now. No more errors for us! From here on in it's Smooth Sailing. Are you sure this is the library? 49 FRESHMEN “YOU CAN ALWAYS TELL A FRESHMAN” We don't know what it is, but people can always pick out a Freshman. Is it the fact that we didn't know whether to turn right or left that gave us away? Or perhaps it was our frightened looks. No matter the cause, we were labeled Freshmen. A year has passed —a year of fun and excitement. We participated in the school events, took part in the school government and made ever so many new friends. Now we are ready to become Sophomores. We are no longer the tell-tale Freshmen. WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE? Theodore Kucera, Shirley Moyle Judith Slote, Joseph Rondo, Carolyn Bierly. OLD MAC DONALD HAD A FARM Front Row: James Visingard, Glenn Simpson, Charles Babbitt, Mrs. So- lemme, Joseph Tedeschi, Clarence McLain. Bock Row: Carlson Jones, Richard Dovis, Fronk Tovornik, Donald Hoight, Clayton Lowe, Robert Hultslonder, Albert Borr. THE WATER BABIES Anno Shulor, Joseph Pirri, Cloro Hills, James Thompson. 50 ORGANIZATIONS HAMLET” William Shakespeare There are organizations a hundred-fold, And we find ourselves like the Hamlet” of old. The timeless question, it seems to me, Is To be or not to be?” 51 STUDENT CONGRESS 1 Dorothy Allen Vice-President 2 Beverly Occhioto Secretary 3. Robert Carman Treasurer 4. Olga Komanowski Reporter 5. Barbara Hopko 6. Lewis Morrow 7. Nancy Strusz 8. Elliot Cohen 9. Nancy Barnes 1 0. Harriet Bierly 1 1. Edward Bilek 1 2. Dolores Minni 1 3. Edward Battaglini 1 4. Dolores Swagler 1— - r r Shirley Chura John Phillips Jk a ivT Charles Rainboth Katherine Clune William Dayton Paula Backnak Victor Decker es tfSk 151 , 1 $ s c Patricia Wilson Bruno Colapietro Charlotte Main Robert Russell Lois Pascoe o L '1' Jerome Beck Adriana Battaglini Bill Carmine P i Do ro] Lfi y Allen Lonce V i Diams p 1 Con5 5 lr r t p 52 STUDENT CONGRESS lulio Motolko James Button Joan Walker Edward Decker Ll Mr. Klett Advisor House f S SL o : ® jl Dolores Copp David Calleo Barbaro Harbst John Regan SL JL § Bernadine Kucko Joseph Beirne Joanne Hronis 0 O 0 Vi._________«■ _. William McManus Irene Laszewski Robert Yankovich Student government at U-E is patterned after the Federal Government of the United States. It has a constitution which provides for a Senate, House of Representatives, Stu- dent Court and an Awards Committee. The Senate is composed of fourteen members elected in the following man- ner: two from the freshman class, four each from the sophomore, junior and senior classes. The House is composed of representatives from each homeroom. The President, who has charge of the Senate and is chairman of the joint sessions of the Senate and House, is elected by the entire student body. Under the leadership of William Car- mine, this year's president, many projects were undertaken. These include the fresh- men initiation, talent shows, the Miss Smith Memorial Assembly, exchange as- semblies, dances, elections, concession stands at the games and the Christmas Party. The organization also established the Elizabeth J. Smith Loan Fund. The Student Government takes part in the activities of U-E, especially those pro- moting a closer relationship between stu- dents and faculty and inspiring better citizenship. denr ’idenf nker Harold Shoner of Sclnoo) of Sencrfe House of e, Williom Carmine Dorothy Allen------ Constance Willioms Caeap 53 FRENCH CLUB First Row: Rose LaSorte, Sandra Newing, Miss Mealy, Nancy Ashman, Louise Sturzenegger. Second Row: Christine Ferrora, Shirley Havrilka, Delores Dobon, Cor- rine Konchar, Donna Burt. Third Row: Marie Ferrante, John Hardman, William Carmine, JoAnne LeBoron. Early in the fall the French Club elected its officers for the school year. They are: president, Nancy Ashman; vice-presi- dent, Louise Sturzenegger; secretary-treasurer, Jack Hard- man; and social chairman, Sandra Newing. Activities this year have been plentiful and considerable participation has been received from the members. Club meet- ings are usually held in 206 during the 5th period every other Tuesday under the supervision of Miss Janet Mealy, adviser. A play was presented in French by the members at a meeting and directed by Rose La Sorte. In December, a successful dance called La Piroutte Noel was held in the boys' gym. February was a busy month, as a dinner consisting of French foods was served at the home of Corinne Konchar. The food was prepared by a committee of the members from a menu compiled by Louise Sturzenegger. During another meeting. Monsieur Rose, a native of France and owner of Rose May Dress Shop, spoke to the members. In June, a picnic will be held to complete the year's activities. SPANISH CLUB Established fact has it that this year's Spanish Club is bigger and better than ever. Under the supervision of Carl Zonio, faculty adviser, the club had a well-planned season of activities. Pins were bought for all the members and a fiesta was given. This year's hard-working officers were: president; Barbara Hopko; vice-president, Jeanette Richards; secretary, Beneth Brigham; and treasurer, Judy Callahan. According to custom, the finale for '51 was the June Picnic for members and guests. First Row: Judy Callahan, Barbara Boltzel, Borbora Becker, Barbara Hopko, Lulo Karedes, Marlene Pugh. Second Row: Beverly Occhiato, Con- stance Hronis, Elizabeth Matola, Sheila Mobley, Harriet Bierly. Third Row: Marilyn Frey, Virginia Waterman, Ann Hennemon, Janet Bradbury. Fourth Row: Mary Ann Shonosky, Kathleen Cahill, Beneth Brigham. ITALIAN CLUB Around Desk: Beverly Occhioto, Mena Torricone, Marian Franta (seated), Stella Alessi, Rachel Sbarro. Back Row: Mary Hudcovich, Morie Sbarro, Faith Signor, Filomena Grassi, Donna Lou Tilton. The Italian Club under the direction of Mr. Carl Zonio strives to promote understanding and appreciation of Italian culture. To further this end, prizes are awarded at the end of the year to the Senior with the highest marks in Italian I and II. Although the club was small, guided by their hard-working officers, Marian Franta, president; Mene Tarricone, vice- president; and Stella Alessi, secretary-treasurer, they par- ticipated in several dances and a picnic. LATIN CLUB fe;i 5? •. ..r ■•lb .V Jtfl .s ■■■■ ... U • • • ¥ First Row: Virginia Waterman, Mary Bouton, Theresa Bendert, Mory Beirne, Maido Russell, Teresa Beirne, Donna Brigham. Second Row: Jack Hardman, Louis Nichols, Beneth Brigham, Francis An- geline, Leon Eiswerth. Third Row: Janet Goodwin, May Giannuzzi, Patricia Sowicki, Joseph Nestor, Borbara Cox, Lucille Conti, Mary Walters. The Latin Club of Union-Endicott High School was officially established under the supervision of Miss Frederica Hollister, faculty adviser, on February 5. 1951. The purpose of this organization as stated in its constitution is the furtherance of cultural language appreciation. Distinguishing it from other organizations of U-E is the provision for office-holding by which each member has the opportunity of holding a club position because of frequent elec- tions. The Consul is the head of the club. Two tribunes, representing the plebians (Latin III members), have the privilege of attending meetings of the Senate (Latin IV members) while two aediles work with the consul in planning the program. The initial officers were: Consul—David Calleo Tribunes—Teresa Bierne and Francis Angeline Aediles— Donna Brighamand Joseph Nestor Scribe—May Giannuzzi Membership in the club has as a prerequisite the attainment of a 90 per cent average in Latin. All students maintaining this average are eligible for election in their third year of study of the language. 55 TRI-HI CLUB I Mory Beirne Judy Callahan Dorothy Allen CANDIDATES FOR TRI-HI OFFICERS Elizabeth Kelm Olga Komonowski Barbara Hopko T Tri-Hi has reached a significant milestone with the coming of '51, for this year marks two decades of service to U-E. All twenty years have been under the able leadership of a friend and counselor, Miss Gladys Mersereau. The club membership now totals 230. All U-E Night on Thanksgiving, at which time the football queen is crowned, is one of the traditional dances sponsored by Tri-Hi. The Christmas and Spring Formals are also spon- sored by this Club. During the winter and spring months, some girls enjoy dips at the Y while others form bowling teams. TRI-HI BOWLING First Row: Dolores Minni, Marilyn Frey. Second Row: Verna Lou Banks, Patricia Wilson, Carol Cornell. Kneeling: Constance Hronis, Jean Hortmon, Martine Mitchell, Joonne Hronis, Louise Fosbury (girl holding balll. Standing: Helen Pinkey, Joan Ter- williger, Shirley Hovrilka, Joyce Pet- rovsky, Joan Hickey, Jacqueline De- Marco, Carol Cornell, Mary Beirne, Betty Lou Farwell, Kathleen Carrigg, Sandro Rondall. 56 Mory Ann Miller Helen Pinkey Constonce Willioms The College Loan Fund assists girls in fur- ther education by lending them money with- out interest until they have finished school. The Loan Fund this year is helping three girls through college. Money-raising projects for the Fund are the Carnival and various dances. Each year, at graduation, Tri-Hi also gives two or three awards to outstanding girl grad- uates. Our sincere wish is that the Club will move forward to ever-widening vistas in the coming yea rs. SWIMMING CROWNING OF THE U-E QUEEN Alex Rita and Mike La Sorte crown Dorothy Allen, U-E Queen. 57 THE KEY CLUB First Row: John O'Loughlin, Eugene Alderman, Cornelius deVente, Leon Smith, Lewis Morrow, Dovid Colleo. Second Row: James Toit, Lawrence Bursch, Robert Cormon, Morris Wheat, David Sterling. Third Row: John Cunningham, Joseph Nestor, Harlan Reynolds, Wil- liam Carmine. Fourth Row: Richard Eldredge, Wil- liam Daly, Delano Cimino, Donald Cox. Fifth Row: Ronald Patton, Joseph Beirne, Eorl Bloom. The Key Club is an international organization sponsored by the Kiwanis International. There are approximately eight hundred and fifty clubs with seventeen thousand two hundred and fifty members spread throughout the United States and Canada. Key Clubbers are boys of high school age who maintain a satisfactory scholastic average as well as possess qualities of leadership, character, and good citizenship. The purpose of Key Clubs is to be a service club for the school as the Kiwanis Club is to the community. The U-E Key Club holds its luncheon meetings Monday noons. They have had as their guests outstanding men in the community and several representatives from various colleges. Such services as ushenng for social events at school, helping in the March of Dimes campaign, raising money for the Underprivileged Children, and assisting in fire drills, have been rendered by the Key Club. With the help of the Kiwanis Club and Mr. Thurber, its faculty adviser, the Key Club has had another successful year. The officers for 1951 were: Cornel is deVente, president; Gene Alderman, vice-president; Lewis Morrow, secretary; Leon Smith, treasurer. David Calleo was Lieutenant Governor for New York State District 4. Seated: June DeGues, Mary Jane Corkran, Sallyanne Stevens. Standing (left to right): Susanne Porkhurst, Dorothy Retman, Marilyn McCormick, Eunice Swonk, Mory Jone Snow, Arlis Ellison. LIBRARY CLUB Since education involves personal growth and intellectual development, it is quite im- possible to make a quantitative measurement of the value of library club training. One of the most valuable assets of club membership is the constant contact with books, and through them, an intimate acquaintance with Pulitzer prize authors, the leading scientists, biog- raphers, poets, musicians, and fiction writers. Under the training and supervision of Miss Adona Sick, the school librarian and Club Adviser, the student librarians engage in many activities, such as book displays, inventory, filing, bulletin board arrangements, and library grooming. In addition, a special library interest activity is developed. Membership in the Library Club is a pre-vocational orientation course in librarianship. The club members become discriminating readers—not only knowing how to read, but what to read. 58 TECHNICAL CLUB First Row: Boris Sorochinsky, David Patch, Ervin Babcock, Jerry Wright, Eorl Bloom, Joseph Roma, Garfield Cooper, John McGorry. Second Row: R. Z. Klett, Willard McCarty, Robert Venner, Eugene Ar- nold, Irvin Blakeslee, William Borno, David Clork, Jomes Taylor, James Longwell. Third Row: William Dayton, Leon- ard Hovel, Tony Koukides, Peter Uhri- nec, Lelond Sanford, Benodetto Mug- geo, Vincent Picciano, Roger Hart, Poul Mann, Robert deVente. Inset: 1st prize given by The Americon Society of Tool Engineers to Bert Matolka. 2nd prize given by the Technical Club to Thomas North. The Technical Club, under the guidance of Mr. Richard Klett and Mr. James Longwell, proposes to instill into its members a higher knowledge of technical work. This is accom- plished by trips through various industries and colleges. In November, the members took a three-hour tour of International Business Machines Corporation. Trips to Morse Chain Works, Cornell University, Ithaca Gun Works, Links Aviation, General Electric, and New York State Institute of Applied Arts and Sciences at Binghamton were also taken. The annual Alumni Night Meeting was held in March. The officers are: president, Earl Bloom; vice-president, Jerry Wright; and secretary- treasurer, Joe Roma. Recreational programs, such as bowling, softball and basketball, are carried out during the course of the year. COMMERCIAL CLUB First Row: Mildred Volento, Jone Pucholek, Joan Walker, Beverly Bul- mon, Dorothy Brunick, Vivion Catta- rulla, Nancy Adams. Second Row: Dorothy Retmon, Ag- nes Felo, Marion Lemoncelli, Florence Hills, Antoinette Argento, Beverly Reaves. Third Row: Jeon Lillie, Ruth Py- luck, Solly Lou Reed, Alberta Barr, Dolores Camardo, Marilyn Avery. The purpose of the Commercial Club is to help its members become better acquainted with the business world in our community. During the past year, the club has had guest speakers from various Personnel Departments who have explained such fields of business as preparation for jobs, applications and interviews. The club has also taken trips through the I.B.M. offices, E-J Offices, the Post Office and the Radio Station. These tours were interesting as well as educational. This year's officers were Beverly Bulman, president; Joan Walker, vice-president; and Dorothy Brunick, secretary-treasurer. The final get-together which climaxed the year's activities was the annual June banquet for both club members and Alumni, who are still honorary members. 59 FASHION SHOW The State of the Union is in fine hands, one will say, after attending a meeting of the Future Homemakers of America. With the able supervision of Miss Joan Abraham, faculty adviser, this or- ganization has sponsored two Bake Sales and a Fashion Show. At Christmas time, a box was sent to teen-age girls at the Susquehanna Valley Home in Binghamton. Mrs. Walker, fashion adviser from McLean's, was a guest speaker at one meeting. During the summer, two girls chosen by the mem- bers are to be sent to summer camp. In October an Installation Tea was held at which time Miss Joan Kocak, president; Beverly Erickson, vice-president; Lucy Colapietro, secretary; and Gracy Swartwood, treasurer, took office. The FHA's chief aim is to provide training and experience needed for everyday life. INSTALLATION TEA Martho Solan, Carol Sammon, Judy Callahan, Lino Cole. Joanne Kocak, Beverly Miner, Nancy Larnerd, Wanda Smith. First Row (sitting! : Lucy Colopietro, Joanne Kocak, Sandra Clork, Elaine Cornell, Elizabeth Weller. Second Row: Angela Vultoggio (kneeling), Beverly Erickson, Barbora Miner, Anne Jurocek, Victoria Boreffi, Jane Todini, Doris Murray (kneeling). Third Row: Groce Swartwood, Louise Tillotson, Jeanine Patrick, Joyce Payne, Miss Abraham, Patricia Lynch, Dawn Snedeker, Dorothy Wilkins, Gail Walbridge. FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA Richard Eldredge T reasurer Richard Mikels Secretory Donald Morgan Sentinel C'OTOll Jomes Button Vice-President Rolland Vollese President The Endicott chap- ter of the Future Farmers of America is the oldest student club in U-E. It is likewise the oldest F. F. A. club among some 300 clubs in the State of New York. The F. F. A. is a group banded to- gether for teaching cooperation among future leaders of ag- riculture in this com- munity and state. The club sponsors a basketball team, holds parties, puts on pancake suppers, each spring. Monthly meetings are held and the members learn parliamentary procedure through action in conducting a meeting. Delegates are elected to attend the annual state meeting each year. The club sponsors judging teams at various ag school contests, such as at Delhi and Morrisville State Schools and State and County Fairs. and hires buses for trips to Farm and Home Week at Cornell Representatives also are eligible to spend a week at the New York State F.F.A. camp at Oswegatchie Lake in the Adirondacks for leadership training. The present officers are: president, Rolland Vallese; vice-president, James Button; secretary, Richard Mikels; treasurer, Richard Eldredge; sentinel, Donald Morgan; adviser, Henry White. First Row: Glenn Simpson, Richord Eldredge, Jomes Button, Richard Mi- kels, Mr. Henry C. White (adviserI, Rolland Vallese, Clyde Terry, Donald Morgan, Dale Berry. Second Row: William Corley, Roy Correll, Fred Decker, Carlson Jones, Frank Decker, Harold Weber, Joseph Kotek. Third Row: Robert Rooso, Dana Ross, Harold Benjamin, Clarence Mc- Lain, Charles Babbitt, Frank Tovornik, Alexander Zevan. 61 CREATIVE WRITING CLUB i 'Have you ever heard this slo- gan, Numbers don't count? Let's associate this quotation with the Creative Writing Club of '51. Although it has had the smallest membership in its his- tory, the activities this year have not been few. Officers elected this year were Marylou Korcykoski, president, and Olga Wolfe, secretary-treas- urer. Inspired by their liking for writing, the club motivated and wrote the following: Miss Smith's Memorial Assembly, part of the Exchange Assembly to Bing- hamton North High and our own Thesaurus Assembly. Poetry, short stories, essays, and radio scripts were also among the proj- ects of the club. The Creative Writing Club is one of U-E's honorary organiza- tions and the present members, as well as former ones, are proud of the many national and local hon- ors bestowed upon them. Again we say, we feel Num- bers don't count, but enthusi- asm and creative interest do. Olga Wolfe Secretory-T reosurer I Marylou Korcykoski President May Gionuzzi Virginio Jopson Marilyn McCormik t- ClOTOL ,4 0. OOOOH Noncy Olson Members preparing for the skit to be given ot the North High Exchange Assembly. Patricio Sowicki 62 MUSIC 'SONGS TO REMEMBER’ Walter Donaldson The music starts Its melody, sweet and tender; We stand in breathless awe, These are Songs to Remember’’. 63 CHOIR The U-E Choir, under the direction of Mrs. Ruth Edson, has completed another successful season of vocal music. The Choir with 142 members has presented selections at local civic affairs. Their first public appearance during the 1950-51 season was at the International Kiwanis meeting on October 12 in Johnson City. In place of the annual Spring Concert, the Choir presented an operetta by Gilbert and Sullivan called The Gondoliers. It was a humorous selection which received the same gratifying recognition that has been given to all Choir presentations. This season has been unique in every way and next year's holds the promise of lively music and deserving rewards for the Choir—the dream of the sophomore, the accomplish- ment of the senior. SOPRANOS Velma Battaglini Myrna Carr Regina Clark Dolores Copp Veronica Dribnock Beverly Ericson Betty Farwell Marie Ferante Sylvia Fiori Mary Ann Foltin Marilyn Frey Irene Hickey Joan Hickey Virginia Jopson Marylou Korcykoski Bernadine Kucko Phyllis LaShier Dora Lockerby Joyce Mandyck Juanita Novello Marlene Pugh Elease Warters Joan Walker Mary Rono Sally Lou Reed Mary Lou Rossie Faith Signor Donna Lou Tilton Shirley Titus ALTOS Harriet Bierly Judy Callahan Shirley Chura Louise Cicciarelli Lucille Conti Marie Ferrante Julia Fiacco Morion Franta Shirley Frailey Kay Hansel Ann Hennemon Barbara Hopko Mory Hudcovich May Gionnuzzi Louise Johnson Betty Kvasny Angelo Kovanagh Betty Kelm Olga Komonowski Ruth Kraus Dolores Luciana Camille Maggiore Anne Motusica Sandra Newing Margaret O'Loughlin Sue Parkhurst Lois Pascoe Dolores Palazzo Helen Pinkey Patricia Sawicki Mary Ann Shonosky ALTOS (Continued) Vivian Turrigiano Irene Villata Janet Weston TENOR Gene Alderman Rodney Andrews Francis Angeline Robert Carman William Carmine Jacqueline De Marco James Forbes Nick Halobusky David Hildebrant Richard Hogan Richard Johnson Jerry King Nick Komonowski William Little Rose LaSorte David Manchester Larry Mandyck Gerald McLain Benny Muggio Francis Nocci Donald Parke Vincent Picciano Philip Quartararo Philip Short Remo Theodore TENOR (Continued) James Van Auken Jack Weston BASS Edward Battaglini Paul Chaddock James Chrysler Daniel Chura Jerry Colonna John Cullen Victor Decker William Fish Bernie Herceg Arthur Illg Clark Jones John Kucera Dick Lucky Richard Lutke Florian Martinak Mike Miklos Chorles Morgan Gasper Palmeri Robert Scalzo John Sedlock Donald Taylor James Von Auken ACCOMPANISTS Irene Laszewski Joan Wade 64 U-E GLEE CLUB The girls in the Glee Club possess very fine voices and are as much a part of U-E's music groups as the Choir. Nearly all of the girls in the Glee Club aspire to belong to Choir and realize that they are now receiving the training necessary to good choirs of the future. The all-girl Glee Club of Union Endicott High School under Edson has 106 members to its credit. The Glee Club participated in the a concert, presented the Sunday before Christmas, and received very high praise 4 FIRST SOPRANOS Barbara Ash Paula Bochnak Janet Bradley Ruth Bradley Susie Bussa Agnes Campos Shirley Card Marion Clark Caryl Couch Shirley Crane Diane Deuel Sharon Dobrovolsky Shirley Havrilka Jean Holcomb Nancy Holland Martha Hunt Virginia Huyck Joanne Kadlecik Carol Lawton Jacqueline Lockwood Connie Mason Marigold Powell Marguerite Roach Carolyn Roberts Marie Rotondi Libra Rossi Carol Sommon Lila Senio Beverly Strusz Connie Weston June Yacunsky FIRST ALTOS Geraldine Biondi Vivian Cattorulla Beverly Fern Shirley Fuller Shirley Hogeboom Emily Kotasek Janice Lockwood Donna Loveless Joyce Ludington Arlene Marconi Dianne Martin Joyce Masters Florence Mastrogiacomo Kathleen McBride Vicki Milaski Ann Musa Betty Netherton Susonne Orris Lucy Putrino Morilyn Rodgers Janet Randesi Rachel Sbarra Shirley Spencer Betty Jean Yocos Josephine Hazen SECOND SOPRANOS Patricia Adams Dana Barton Hughlafoe Conkling Eva Dixson Janet Doolittle Joanne Foley Verna Glann SECOND SOPRANOS (Continued) Sylvia Irneli Shirley Jackson Roslyn Jaynes Mary Lee Karl Joan Kuenzli Marie LaFortezza Julana Lucas Regina Mangold Allene McCarty Mary Picciano Deborah Reynolds Sally Reynolds Martha Robinson Maido Russell Rose Salamida Helen Shady Betty Skokauckos Martha Solan Mena Tarricone Grace Wage Koy Ziemba SECOND ALTOS Marlene Crego Janet Goodwin Margaret Hudcovich Joan Konikowski Helen Sbarra Mary Ann Shima Mary Sementelli Jonet Woodbeck 65 CONCERT BAND PERCUSSION Listen to that band! Everyone, all year long, has extolled the praises of the eighty-five members in the Concert Band. Working as a smooth unit, under the ex- cellent direction of Mr. Acton E. Ostling the band was a dazzling success at their annual Spring Concert, May 18. River Jordan, a Negro Spiritual fantasy, and FLUTES Marietta Dayton Harlan Reynolds Mary Bouton Virginia Waterman Marjorie Seeley OBOE Peter Jones BASS CLARINET Joyce Petrovsky SAXOPHONES Ann Henneman Patricia Testoni Janet Goodwin Shirley Swortz George Morrow Jane Sandwick Annette Main Harold Roth John Anton CLARINETS William Fish Eugene Gonzales Robert Cocci Homer Gonzales Joseph Deroco Harriet Bierly John Sponable Delores Lucciano Sandra Newing David Clark Joan Rohrbach Joanne Gareou Theresa Moisio Joyce Kiser Sue Mersereau Janice Dieffenbach Joanne Bunker Sally Roe Ashley Edwin English Donold Alamo Donald DePugh BASSOONS Sara Jane Duffy Cloy ton Lowe 66 SECTION Tap Roots ' originally written for the movie, Lebanon Valley, were two selec- tions which brought forth the skill and ability of the Band at this Concert. Robert Carman played a baritone solo by Joseph De Luca. Then the band presented the American Salute by Gould — the per- fect ending to a perfect season. CORNETS Lewis Morrow John Black Neil Rowe Dominick Quercia Barbara Honnick William Dayton George Peabody George Gifford Horry Ellsworth Steve Kubica TRUMPETS Beverly Occhiato Jerry Gridley Clork Jones Jaqueline Lockwood HORNS Sandra Myers Janice Lockwood Patricia Boyles David Manchester Donna Brigham William McCarty Lola Bates TROMBONES Victoria Kvasnak David Humphreys Barbara Bowen Glenn Hurst Lucciano Rizzi Carolyn Bierly Camille Maggiore Potricia Wilson BARITONES Robert Carman James Toit Marvin Kline Garfield Cooper BASSES Emory Terwilliger Cornelis deVente Norman Kyle PERCUSSION John Mott Richard Scudder Truman Crawford Marjorie Elston Mike lannone 67 ORCHESTRA 1st VIOLINS Joan Wode Irene Villoto Leigh Allard Williom Carmine Neta Patterson Shirley Chura Laura Moroglio Kay Yeingst Richard Scudder Robert Chermak Jack Weston Shirley Havrilko Borbara Davis FLUTES Marietta Doyton Harlan Reynolds Marjorie Seeley 2nd VIOLINS Patricia Mohney Donald Cox Lucy Cederborg Joanne Kodlecik lone Romer Rita Cannavino Louise Johnson Arlis Ellison VIOLAS Marie Sbarra Alice Reeve John Sponable Corinne Konchar Lola Bates Donna Brigham CELLOS James Toit Barbara Spencer Evelyn Edmunds Ida Mae Hughes Doric Lockerby Theresa Bendert Marie Ferrante Jane Sandwick Annette Main BASSES David Calleo Rose LaSorte Maida Russell Beneth Brigham Dawn Snedaker Dorothy Wilkins PERCUSSION The orchestra was on hand, as in previous years, to provide music for as- semblies, the senior plays, and several special occa- sions, such as commence- ment. Marches were the fare for assemblies, while such numbers as Look for the Silver Lining were presented at the plays. At the annual Spring Con- cert, a Spanish dance, El Relicario, by Jose Pa- dilla; the modern Pa- !•’ «tofe- ORCHESTRA SECTION vanne by Morton Gould and Gluck's Iphigenia in Aulis, an old and famous overture, were played. Joan Wade was violin so- loist in Fritz Kriesler's Scilienne and Rigau- don. Sophisticated Lady, by the modern jazz pianist, Duke Elling- ton, and Georges Enesco's Rumanian Rhapsody, reminiscent of old - world melodies, completed a well-rounded program. OBOE Peter Jones CLARINETS William Fish Eugene Gonzales Homer Gonzales David Clark BASS CLARINET Joyce Petrovsky BASSOON Clayton Love SAXOPHONES Jonet Goodwin Harold Roth George Morrow HORNS Sandro Myers Janice Lockwood Patricio Boyles TRUMPETS Lewis Morrow Jack Block Neil Rowe William Doyton TROMBONES Victoria Kvosnok David Humphreys Luciano Rizzi Borbara Bowen Glenn Hurst TUBA Emory Terwilliger PERCUSSION Robert Thomos Sally Stevens Marjorie Elston James Chrysler TYMPANI William Polokovich 69 FIFE AND DRUM CORPS An echo from the days when the revolutionary armies marched into battle amid the clatter of drums, the tread of feet, and the shrill music of fifes has floated down through the years and appeared again here at our own Union-Endicott high. The same clatter of drums, the same tread of feet, and the same music of the fifes again can be heard here at U-E. When Mr. Acton E. Ostling came from Connecticut in 1936 to join the instrumental music department of our school system, he brought with him an idea for a Corps unique in this section of the country. Mr. Ostling, who is not only the director of this organization but also a nationally-known composer and arranger of band music, has again this year most ably directed the Corps in their fine displays of formation drill and precision marching. The twenty members of the outstanding organization with the aid of the drum sergeant, Richard Scudder, showed in their regular Tuesday afternoon rehearsals and everyday after school during the football season the spirit and desire for perfection which have made our high school so outstanding. FIFES John Lornerd Robert deVente Edward Misulich Donald Rozini Ronald Thomas Truman Crawford Peter Uhrinec Howard Riner SNARE DRUMS Richard Scudder John Mott Richard Blackwell Roger Ferris Mike lonnone Richard Fink Kenneth Moye BASS DRUMS Eugene Pettit Albert Randesi Paul Chaddock Louis Cioci DRUM SERGEANT Richard Scuder FOOTBALL BAND It seems that every year the Football Band im- proves— if that can be possible. This year thou- sands thrilled to the novel and complex formations staged by the band. The four seasonal sports of the year served as the theme for one show with forma- tions of a boat to the tune of Sailing, a shotgun to Peter and the Wolfe, a complete skating rink to The Skaters' Waltz, rt i I. 11! Jt! itiiu 'jLLUtrz I and a race track to Hi- Ho, Silver, Musique. Who dreams up these clever ideas? Mr. Stahl, the director, of course, with the aid of Mr. Ran- dall and Mr. Schmoll. Un- der their combined efforts and with the enthusiasm displayed by the students, it is no wonder that the band is acclaimed one of the best marching bands in the Triple Cities. 71 THERE’S MUSIC IN THE AIR Stonding, front row: Lois Poscoe, Helen Pinkey, Ann Hennemon, Mory Rono. Standing, bock row: Beverly Erickson, Richord Lutke, Donald Taylor, John Pier, David Manchester. Sitting: Joan Walker, Virginia Jopson. Williom Polakovich Standing: Clayton Lowe Beverly Bierly Seated: Robert Huttslonder Nancy Barnes Stonding: Marjorie Elston, Sallyonne Stevens, Williom Polakovich, Mr. Crowford Stahl, Robert Thomos. 72 THERE’S MUSIC IN THE AIR Standing: Robert Carman, Victoria Kvasnok, David Humphreys, Glenn Hurst. Standing: Mr. Acton Ostling Marjorie Elston Kay Hensell Norman Kyle Standing: Donna Lou Tilton, Richard Hogan, Angela Kavanagh, Donald Taylor. Sitting: Irene Loszewski. 73 DANCE BAND FIRST ALTO SAX Eugene Gonzolez THIRD ALTO SAX William Fish SECOND TENOR SAX Homer Gonzalez LEAD TRUMPET Gregor Audrey SECOND TRUMPET Clark Jones THIRD TRUMPET John Black THIRD TRUMPET Quercia Domenic DRUMS Truman Crowford BASS FIDDLE Peter Jones PIANO Dave Hildebrant FOURTH TENOR SAX George Morrow FIFTH BARITONE Horold Roth Every Monday evening these accomplished musicians meet to plan and to practice the lively music which they play at our school dances. Besides making a few dollars for their work, the members of this organization gain practical ex- perience which may be of use later in life. To this fine group with their wide and varied selection of popular music and tc their able director, Mr. Leonard Panaro, we, the students of U-E, address a heartfelt 'Thank you. i Mr. Glenn Daniels, President of Kiwanis, presents the Arion National Music Award to Mathias Burgher, Donald Stevens, and Anthony Dicrio. This is the first time this award has been presented at U-E. It was made possible through the efforts of the Local Kiwanis Club. NATIONAL AWARD WINNERS ATHLETICS THE ROAD TO GLORY” Frederick Britten Austin A hand goes out; A heart covets. 75 COACHES Kneeling: Coaches Popelka, Cobb, DiNunzio. Standing: Coaches Porkhurst, Conwicke, Friderich, Orris, and Hamilton. ATHLETIC ADVISORY COUNCIL James Forbes, Miss Pitkin, Michoel Wesko, Mr Krum, Mr. Forbes, Rose LoSorte, Mr Cobb, Beverly Occhiato. 76 VARSITY FOOTBALL Kneeling: Michael Wesko, Robert Corbett, Bernard Caciola, Robert Briggs, Joseph Laposky, Rudolph Dingo. Sitting: Lawrence Palombi, Wolter Wilce, Alex Rita, Mike LaSorte, Stanley Binkewicz, James Quonne, Richard Angeline, Donald Strope. Standing: William Schneider, Bruno Pagnani, Roger Shults, Gerald Paglia, Robert Ellis, Francis Angeline, Franklyn Dunham, Richord Bierly, Robert VanOrder, Ronald Haight, Charles Harvey, Francis DeBeneditto. The student body saw its historically famed football team end the season with a break- even. Union-Endicott's Tornado had a season's standing of four wins and four defeats. Everything for the future looked fine after our team, led by Co-captains Alex Rita and Mike La Sorte, gave a strong Hornell team a 27-20 setback in the season's opener. However, after a two weeks' vacation, our boys didn't look like the same team as they tasted their initial defeat at the hands of the Redmen from Binghamton North. The Indians took the Tigers' hide to the cleaners, 6-0. Gridders of the orange and black bounced right back again, though, the next week, handing the hosts of Elmira's Southside a 20 to 14 complimentary defeat. Unbeaten Johnson City's Kittens were next in line and grandstanders predicted if any- one could stop this powerhouse, it would have to be U-E. At the end of three, hard-fought quarters, the scoreboard in Johnson Field read 7-13 in the Kittens' favor. The prediction would have been almost true if the orange and black had held out to the end. Fate stepped in, however, and a few errors and breaks made for a disastrous fourth quarter. With wounded hearts, the sulky Tigers trod from the Cat's den, bearing scars of another loss: 27 to 7. The schedule gave the Cobbmen some recuperating time the following week. A winless Olean team come to Endicott and in a matter of hours were on their way back to Olean, still winless. The Endicott reserves saw plenty of action as the Tornado breezed over the upstate team at a gale of 44 to 21. Two weeks were spent in preparing for the invasion of Elmira Free Academy, but the Blue Devils placed a 13 to 21 wreath of sorrow around our heads. It took another game to put up another win. The Tiger roared and the quake struck the Ithaca team to the tune of 33 to 18. Coincidence took over on Turkey Day. The whole season was evenly divided; first a win, then a loss. The clash with our old rival, Central, happened to be the loss's turn. Naturally we couldn't let the jinx down. Those Central Bulldogs chewed the Orange and Black Tiger's ear almost off and then ran back to their kennels with a 26-6 win under their collars. All of this made for distasteful Turkey eating in Endicott. 77 JUNIOR VARSITY FOOTBALL First Row: Frank Totusko, Ernest (Ernie) Rommel, David Rooso, William (Red) Clegg, Francis McGee, Ronold (Ron) Bachynski, Albino (Al) Paparella, George Pastrikos. Second Row: John Parisi, Kevin (Ken) Conwicke, Eugene (Gene) Springer, John Dieffen- bach, Ray (Bucky) McNeil, Robert Pezzuti, Richard (Dick) Lutke, Arnaldo (Arnie) Colonna. Third Row: Richard Michelbach, Kurt English, Edward (Ed) Battaglini, Edward (Ed) Decker, William (Bill) Little, Doniel (Danny) Churo. Finished in third position this fall with a record of two wins and four losses. Binghamton North High won the championship with Johnson City second, U-E third, and Binghamton Central fourth. U-E had an entirely new team this year as most of last year's champions were graduated to the Varsity Squad. Tatusko, Parisi, Pezzutti, Battaglini, and Colonna play very well. U-E VS. HORNELL 1950 No. 95—Ronald Haight No. 86— Franklyn Dunhom 78 U-E VS. NORTH 1950 No. 81—Copt. Mike LaSorte No. 93—Francis Angeline VARSITY BASKETBALL ki After winning three straight, things didn't turn out so well for U-E's basketball squad this year. The breaks were against Coach Roland Friderich's charges, as they wound up the season with a record of five wins and eleven losses in conference play. One of these wins was a game to be remembered by Triple Cities basketball fans. It happened the night of December 1 3, 1950. The score was tied in the closing seconds when big Don Cantone let go a one-hander that decided the contest. Vestal's high- scoring ace, Dick Miller, followed up with a quick basket, but it was too late. The clock had stopped and U-E was the victor, 57 to 55. Although the total record was not in our favor, we did see many hard-fought and well-played contests with close scores. In the long run, it's not always the victory that counts; instead, it's the lesson well-learned and the beating well-taken that wins the game of life. SV Earl Bloom James (Jim) Forbes Michael (Mickey) Frey Michael (Mike) Wesko Donold (Tex) Cantone 1 John Kucora Allyn (Archie) Puterbough Richard (Bucky) Roach Melvin (Mel) Kline William (Bill) Branca Fronds (Fran) Frisk 79 J.V. BASKETBALL First Row: Augusto Aleri, Donald (Mac) McManus, Teofil Herbico, Nicholas Komonowski, Edward (Eddie) Dingo, John Escovar. Second Row: Gerald (Jerry) McCormack, Michael (Mike) Moxian, William (Prop) Popelka, Lou Koredes, Edward (Ed) Bilek, William (Bill) McMonus, Luigi Giordano, Harvey Cady. (Absent from picture, Ossie Willioms.) The Junior Varsity, by winning the Conference Championship, proved beyond doubt that they are champions. While winning 16 and losing only 2, they showed speed, skill, spirit, and also teamwork, the most important possession of a cham- pionship team. With these boys in mind, things look very good for a tough varsity squad in the coming year. TAKE MY ADVICE Coach Friderich gives advice to would-be players. 80 TRACK 1950 Back Row: Anthony lacovelli, Thomas Fink, Roger Shults, Norman Orris, Fronklyn Dunham, Robert Adorns, John Regan, Peter Jones, Thomas Blozey. Third Row: James Cheer, Joseph Burns, Kevin Conwicke, Jerry O'Donnell, Donald McMonus, George Mann, Williom Little, William Fedosko, Reginald Dellapenta, William Clegg, Joseph George, Eugene Monaco, Monager. Second Row: Earl Bloom, Edward Sochor, Vince Picciano, Robert Crone, Fronk Desko, Richard English, Robert Ellis, Lawrence Harris, Poul Ives, Edward Shattuck. Front Row: William McManus, Lowrence Gibbs, Jack Shultz, Robert Duffy, James Gibbs, James Bliss, Richard Swartz, Bernard Cociolo, Albino Paparella. U-E VS. VESTAL (DUAL MEET 1950) Capt. John Kotsubka's 1950 track team will go down in history as one of the fastest on U-E records. It pulled the upset of the year by winning the Triple Cities Sectional Meet. With this win behind them, John took his relay team to West Point to represent the Triple Cities in the all-state track meet. Richard Swartz (at extreme left) winning 220-yard dash, Bernard Caci- ola (extreme right) in second place, Larry Harris (in center) winning third place. CROSS COUNTRY Lawrence (Larry) Gibbs, Andrew (Andy) Herceg, Roosevelt Fiori, Myron Menichetti, Lawrence (Larry) Ciotoli, Rudolph (Rudy) Polisensky, Thom- as (Tom) Fink, Coach Mr. Henry White. U-E's hill and dalers, under the wing of Coach Henry White, and captained bv Myron Menichetti, had another top flight year. Their spirits were high as Tom Fink led the pack to second place in Triple Cities Competition and third in the Southern Tier Sectionals. Congratulations to a hard- working team with a will to win. 81 BASEBALL 1950 i rriw U ’. . . • ■- .■ «■ Bock Row: Donald Peabody, Manager; Michael Frey, Donald Atwood, Richard Conti, Andrew Hudonich, Joseph Frotino, Donald Contone, Donald Greene, Robert Picciano, Ronald Bashynski, Richard Crooks, Assistant Manager. Front Row: Williom Bronco, Richord Felter, Alex Rita, Ray McNeil, Stanley Binkewicz, Morio Cianciosi, Richard Rommel, Jock Hoppes, James Forbes, Lawrence Polombi. UE's 1950 baseball squad, although dropping the majority of its contests, played fast and fair and displayed the old fight tradition in every game. The long right arm of Don Atwood won him top honors in the pitching department, while Phil Pero had the best batting average. The most important fact, however, is that every player earned his letters, and well deserved the honor they signify. VOLLEY BALL Within the last few years, Volley Ball has become an im- portant sport at U-E. Spearheaded by their Captain Gene Alderman, the team chalked up an impressive record. The last game was played against the faculty. That was quite an event! 82 BOWLING Sitting: Walloce Blazicek, Donald Huffsmith, Paul Chaddock, James Schuttak, James Morlando, Nicholos Holobosky. Standing: Albert Randesi, Richard Cooper, Donald Williams, George Peabody, Richard Valent, Richard Wal- burger, Anthony Selle. Coach McCormack's Keglers, at the half-way mark, were in second place with eight wins and half as many losses. Five veterans have given the evidence that experience is the best teacher, as the win column steadily enlarges. Without a doubt, another successful year has been well-earned. CHEERLEADERS Left to right: Shirley Chura, Beneth Brigham, Olga Komanowski, Lucille Conti, Filomena Tarricone, Joan Hickey, Velma Battaglini, Constance Williams. 83 MISS BURNS MISS BILIK Line Up!!! . . . No suit, eh? Next Tues- day night after school for you. . . . You call those sneaks clean? Take 'em home again. ... Do you realize you've had four months to get your name on that suit? Next Thursday or else. ... So may- be there was frost this morning and it's raining a little bit now? So what? We're going out. . . . Cold in this gym? Only your imagination. Just bring your snow suits next time. . . . One-Two-Three-Four. Come on, bend those knees. Even if you won't be able to walk upstairs tomorrow, this is good for you. . . . For Pete's Sake TAKE THOSE SUITS HOME AND WASH THEM !! A year of Physical Education is com- pleted and with it a lot of groans and grumbles and gripes. But there were a lot of laughs, too, and a lot of good times. And now we share some wonderful mem- ories made possible by a wonderful bunch of girls. Hockey . . . Soccer. . . Volleyball . . . Basketball . . . Softball ... a year full of fun and good times for those who participated in girls' intramurals. The year started with a BANG with hockey and soccer. Hard-fought games were won by close scores. Cold weather came and activity was brought in- doors with volleyball. A nip-and-tuck battle raged as each team fought to gain possession of the title — Winning Intramural Team. Junior and Senior faces were very red offer the Sophomores won the play-off game. A game with the girls from Central and from Vestal . . . U-E unbeatable. A game with the women faculty members . . . and the girls still the victors! Basketball was a little late in getting started. Games were played during noon hour as well as after school. Keen competition . . . lots of fun . . . friendly rivalry was displayed as each team strove to win games. Spring . . . Softball . . . outdoors again in spite of muddy fields and cold weather. The cooperation of the girls made possible the success of Triple City Softball Sports Day held at U-E. I would say, an eventful year . . . one which will in years to come bring back happy thoughts and THEY'RE WORKING! Josie Hazen, Kay Downs, Angela Kavanagh ond Ann Hennemon, girls' sports manogers, check the locker room offer one of the intramural gomes. 84 HOCKEY and SOCCER YEA . . . YEA, TEAM! HEAVE — HO c Here's a rousing cheer for the winners from a team of good losers. Margaret Baber throws the ball to her eager teammate. HOORAY! WE WON! The winning team carries their captain, Josie LeBaron, victoriously from the field. DRIBBLE IT! ... READY . . . GO!! Angela Kavanagh uses o smart Rosemary Ocilka and Elizabeth dribble play to pass off to waiting Matola face each other in that tense teammate, Betty Kelm. moment before the bully. Watch it! 85 VOLLEYBALL ALL TOGETHER U-E's Girl All-Star Team practices be- fore the big game with Vestal High. Team work is their by-word. WATCH IT! Nancy Strusz, act- ing referee, watches closely for fouls dur- ing an exciting in- tramural play-off. THIS IS VOLLEY- BALL? Miss Burns of the Faculty Team serves the ball during the Faculty - Student Game—well, a rea- sonable facsimile to a game anyhow. SET IT UP ! Shirley Chura sets the ball up with the aid of Mary Rossi and Liz Vavra. Here is the essence of teamwork. 86 BASKETBALL 87 SWING YOUR PARTNER Sylvia Fiori pro- vides the music and the girls waste no time in putting it to good advantage. PADDLE Sara Jane Duffy and Sue Mersereau, the beaming winners of the ping - pong tournament. Nice going, girls! LAY IT DOWN ! Mena Tarricone and Jean Cheer plan a tricky pitch for un- suspecting Bev Oc- chiato. SWEATERS . . . AT LAST! The big night's here at last when U - E sweaters and letters are awarded to deserving girls. This is one of the proudest moments in a high school girl's life. For her it's a job well done, a pleasure to look back on. 88 ENTERTAINMENT ALL U-E NIGHT The Homemaking Department once again sponsors that fobulous Christmas Porty for the little ones. Even Sonto Claus came! 90 The most important event of the school year — the Thanksgiving Dance when the U-E Queen is crowned. Pictured are the Queen, her court and their attendants. CHILDREN'S CHRISTMAS PARTY BOOM1 BOOM! BOOM! The weird sounds that echoed through our halls for weeks were later discovered to be coused by the Drama Class practicing for its assembly. Vochel Lindsay's The Congo wos an admirable selection for choral speaking. YOURS TRULY ! INITIATION TIME AGAIN For a change, some of the hard- working Yearbook staff members re- ceive a little limelight. Gene Aider- man, Charles Morgan, Alex Brown, David Hildebrant and Irene Loszewski take part in on assembly to increose Thesaurus circulation. Under the stern eye of the Senior Judges, Bruno Colapietro leads the German Band in a rousing march. Of course, after such fine entertain- ment, how could we refuse to take the freshmen into our fold? LIGHT COMPETITION The ploy, Light Competition, wos presented at this year's Christmas Assembly. Gene Aldermon ond Jane Puchalek aptly hondled the lead roles. 91 FACULTY TEA This is one time the students serve the faculty. Betty Jane McFadden, Miss Coveney, Miss Steele, Betty Jo Scrufori, Mr. Richardson, Jonet Doo- little, Mrs. Cobb and Mrs. Vortuli seem to be enjoying themselves. SHADES OF FRED ASTAIRE THE FAMILY PORTRAIT Friendly relations among our school and others were promoted by a series of exchange assemblies. Tom Fink and Paul Shattuck help to spreod good will with their performance at North High. This looks like an old-fashioned cut! It might be, at that, for it's the cast of the June Senior play, Life With Father. GOOD MORNING, STUDENTS? Eva McManus ond Richard James ore two of the energetic students who rise early in the A.M. to bring the U-E news to you. These programs are presented twice weekly from radio station WENE. 92 '51 SENIOR PROM Another Jonuory graduoting class has left behind the glamour of its last dance. Need we say it was a wonderful evening? CANT WAIT TIL “DOES JOHN LOVE MARY? TONIGHT Many incidents had the audience worrying, but it was finally proved that John (Charlie Morgan) was in love with Mary (Beverly Bulman) Under the direction of Miss Thayer, the play, John Loves Mary, was a definite success. A prom is nothing without decora- tions. . . . Barbara Starr, Mary Ann Miller, Mary Hudcovich ond Joyce Block help prepare for the formal ot the Pavilion in Johnson City. THE JANUARY SENIOR BANQUET The '51 Graduates enjoying themselves at their get-together, the last for a long time to come. Good luck, guys and gals! 93 BASKETBALL DANCE VOTERS' JIG SADIE HAWKIN'S DANCE We oil thoroughly enjoy dancing and there wos no lock of entertoinment this year ot U-E. This page reflects five of our goy times. Yet it is not so much the picture, but the pleasure the picture re- calls that leads us unerr- ingly to this page. VALENTINE DANCE THE MAYOR'S BALL 94 MISCELLANEOUS ROOM FOR ONE MORE Anna Perrot Rose Push and pull, crowd and squeeze! There must be ''Room For One More.” But did you really stop to ponder How you'll ever close the door? 95 THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND JUSTICE The highlight of the school presidential campaign was this parade on Washington Avenue staged for Can- didate Bob Carman. Howard Winslow is briefed before he takes over his duties as Police Chief for o day. THE VOICE OF THE CITY OH CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN GUYS AND DOLLS Dick Angel ine at snappy at- tention while receiving his Chief's badge. Too bod it was only for o day. It's a square dance at the Victory Hop in honor of Mayor For a Day, Gene Aldermon. 96 MR. PRESIDENT THE STATE OF THE UNION Stanley Binkewicz congratu- lates Bill Carmine, U-E's new president, while runner-up, Rob- ert Carman, looks on. Cornelis deVente, Rose LaSorte, Dovid Calleo, James Toit, Earl Bloom, Arthur lllg and Larry Bursch, last year's representatives to Empire State. THOUSANDS CHEER Each girl wishes that that coveted position on the Cheering Squad will soon be personally hers. ADVENTURES IN APPRECIATION GENTLEMAN'S AGREEMENT Polly Mollico, Mrs. Popelka, Mrs. Friderich, Coach Friderich, Coach Popelka, and Mr. Cobb smilingly watch the dancers, after a basketball game. Republican Mayor Parkhurst ond Democrat Trustee Forbes shake hands. After oil, both teach at the same school. 97 THE CRISIS U-E students view octuol speed tests to help them realize the danger of speeding. FAREWELL TO ARMS NO PLACE TO HIDE Don't get excited. It's only Beverly Burke, Joanne Hronis and Edward Bilik in Biology Lab, finishing their report on Jo Jo, the mannikin. Rita Cunningham conducts a new chemistry experiment. Here's hoping! WE TOOK TO THE WOODS Hard work is the price of success, these boys declare, and they should know, for all are Industrial Art winners. THE AGE OF INNOCENCE Mr. Hill explains the mechanism to Mary Incitti, John Sedlock, Barbara Hopko and Jack Baldwin, who didn't realize it wos so-o-o complicated. 98 'THE GUIDING LIGHT THE GOOD EARTH Mr. Brondt and Miss Mersereau, Student Counselors, busy ot work as usuol. Eorl Rothbun, Rolland Vallese, Emil Stost- ney and Henry White meditate on the innate stubbornness of machinery. CRIME AND PUNISHMENT ABOVE SUSPICION Joan Williams, Dione Lloyd and Nancy Barnes smilingly insist they didn't do it. Vito Popelko corefully checks slips ot the Library entrance. Wonder no more why peace and tranquility reign there. OUR TOWN Community Problems Class ventures forth to look into another current problem. From the looks of things, they seem to hove solved the issue. 99 THE STORY OF G. I. JOE The Services, represented by Major Kennedy, Sergeant Dean, Sergeant Markovich and Chief Petty Officer Thompson, get together to advise the boys about the future chance of being drafted. THE DESIGNING WOMEN FRENZIED FINANCE Rosemary Ocilka, Elizabeth Vavra, Joan Stevens and Angela Vultaggio design that new spring dress. Miss Brainard sells tokens to Joyce Petrov- sky, Betty Farwell and Lorry Gibbs. That's where all your money goes! GONE WITH THE WIND Corol Sommon, Anna Juracek, Ronald Kriger, Ralph Marinello, Lola Bates, Patrick Luciani and Joan Hickey busy at work on a new issue of the school poper, the Zephyr. 100 BEHIND THE SCENES The stoge crew of John Loves Mory proves the old moxim thot the hordest work is done before the curtain rises. GREAT EXPECTATIONS Virginia Jopson, Patricio Sowicki, Morilyn McCormick, David Hildebrondt, Gene Aider- man ond Charles Morgan discuss tentative plans for the Yearbook. CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS Alex Rita, former U-E football captoin, congratulates newly elected captain, Francis Angeline. IDEALLY BRED They may be hungry, but manners are the keynote in the Cafeteria. 101 THE MICROBE HUNTERS TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS Nurse Lesko and Doc- tor Mallory relax after a hard day's work in the school clinic. Dave Calleo, Clork Jones, William Pulse, Dolores Dobon and Nancy Ashman put the finishing touches on the decorations which won for Room 110 the Christmas Decoroting Contest oword. PINK TEA Frank Valletta, Terry Coughlin, Anno Jurocek, Nancy Adorns, Mory Incitti and James Cheer enjoy themselves ot the Boys' Homemoking Tea. THE GREAT DEBATER LITTLE WOMEN Olga Wolfe, winner of the Essay Contest on the Constitu- tion, practices for the sectionol finals. This chorus line of dollies, James Sam- mon, William Dayton, Williom Reardon, Gospor Palmeri, James Doyle, Raymond Comp and Robert Corbett provided hilarious entertoinment for January Class Day. 102 THE RIVALS'' THE WOMAN IN WHITE Room 214 almost took the prize in the Christ- mas Contest with these original decorations. It was a close race! Janet Harris is congrat- ulated by Stanley Binke- wicz after winning the 1950 American Legion award for being the out- standing student of the year. BUSINESS LETTERS THAT CLICK U-E's Secretarial Staff — Seated: Miss Jessie Brainard, Miss Raymeta Chaffee. Standing: Mrs. Georgia Bolton, Miss Julia Petrak, Miss Elsie Nystrom, Mrs. Belle Barney and Mrs. Helen Cobb. It's small, but efficient. THE POSTMAN THE RUNNING THREAD ALWAYS RINGS TWICE Mrs. Vartuli instructs John Bikos, Thomos Soltis, Philip Allen and Douglas Bowen, avid students of the Boys' Sewing Class. Miss Rasmussen and Mr. Mc- Cormack get their moil at the office. 103 'THE MERCHANT OF VENICE Benodetto Muggeo sells condy to Sara Jane Duffy, Nancy Barnes, Diane Lloyd and Jean Williams at the Bas- ketboll Concession Stand. ADVENTURES IN FRIENDSHIP Coach Harvey Harmon of Rutgers University, fourth left, speaker at the U-E Block Dinner, and other honored guests. BETTY CROCKER COOKBOOK Mrs. Lindsey, Mrs. Soddlemire and Miss Hahn prepare the noon-day meal. The cookbook has given woy to experience, though. AS YOU LIKE IT OUR HEARTS WERE YOUNG AND GAY Mr. Spitalsky and Mr. Pana- The noon-hour crowd waits for the bell to ring suk busy ot work. Just for us? and hopes there's five minutes more. We do like it 104 LES MISERABLES “MONEY-GO-ROUND It was a mighty cold Thonksgiving Day but nothing stopped these hardy souls from selling programs ot the tra- ditional football gome. ALICE IN Mr. Thurber, well-known history teacher, puts aside his text to become salesman for the home basketboll games. WONDERLAND Miss Elmo Pratt, with the oid of Lila Senio, Sharon Hossinger, Marietta Dayton and Joyce Mihalcho, explains to art students the wonder and intricacy of international costumes. THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP THE GRIDIRON STORY Mrs. Roberts signs out books to Marguerite Roach, Agnes Bachynski and Jomes Marlin. At last! The first day of foot- ball practice arrived. Ed Shot- tuck and Coach Ty Cobb check equipment. 105 IF WINTER COMES, (WHO CARES?) LOOK TO THE MOUNTAIN Mr. Krum ond his lovely wife moke Nurse Lesko tests Joan Konikowski's a most attractive couple at the Janu- eyes. Vision proved quite occurote. ory Senior Prom. MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING Robert Scolzo gives his performance for the day in Dromo Class—where anything con happen and usually does. THE KEEPER OF THE WOLVES THIS HERO BUSINESS Miss Lawrence seems to be having a diffi- Tri-Hi girls, Camille Maggiore and Kay cult time keeping traffic moving. Yeingst, practice artificial respiration during their Life Saving Class ot the Y . 106 SNAPSHOTS 'TM A BUSYBODY” Carl Glick If you turn the page, you’ll find A record of those times, when 107 109 ADVERTISING STAFF Bock Row: Myra Colamun, Neddy Schiappa, Shirley Crane, Anna Musa, Sandra Newing, June Yocunsky, Janet Goodwin, Donna Lou Tilton. Second Row: Janet Woodbeck, Bessie Battaglini, John Pier, Roger McVonnon, David Colleo, Ronald Patton, Robert Henning, Cornelis deVente, Alice Mae Reeve, Sallyanne Stevens. Front Row: Marietta Dayton, Shirley Frailey, Faith Signor, Janet Becker, Nancy Ashman, Kathleen Gleeson, Teresa Beirne, Rosemary Bachynski, Marie Carosella. FACULTY AND SENIOR PICTURES: ALSO MONTAGES....................Gordon's Studio GENERAL PHOTOGRAPHERS........................Stacy Horrington, Jeanne Pennell PRINTERS............................................Frank A. West Co., Inc. JLt 113 FAREWELL The remaining pages are still to be written. Some of us have much more to experience; others have only to write, Lived happily ever after. But no matter whot is still to be set down, we hove spent the first Green Years well. We have had our ups and downs, but that is what makes life so interesting. Now we face the problems of the future in this unsettled world. What it holds for you and me, no one knows. We have reached this turning point, and, as we travel on, let us hold dear the memories of these days together. One more glance, one more word, one more sigh, but not farewell, for . . . Often parting paths may cross Though now we know not where or when. So let's not say good-bye at all Let's say until we meet again. 114 ADVERTISEMENTS CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN” Frank B. Gilbreth and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey Come one, come all, Everything's a-buzzin’l When it comes to buying, Things are Cheaper By the Dozen”. 115 Congratulations SAWICKI’S BAKE SHOP 123 Nanticoke Avenue, Union, New York and 57 Washington Avenue, Endicott, New York 116 WARNER BROS. AGENCY THE GIRLS' CENTER Insurance 119 West Main Street Endicott Trust Building, Endicott, N. Y. Phone 5-7964 Phone 5-3411 Dorr W. Warner—Ralph J. Warner Girls Like to Say IT CAME FROM 15 Washington Ave. Endicott, N. Y. ENDICOTT LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC. SALES SERVICE 3400 Main Street Endicott, N. Y. Telephone 5-9102 DIEGES CLUST NEW YORK CITY Manufacturers 1951 SENIOR CLASS RINGS r MERRELLS INCORPORATED CLARKSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA Commencement Announcements and Name Cards GARFIELD THOMAS Representative Southern Tier's Newest and Most Modern Department Store Completely air conditioned for your shopping comfort! ENDICOTT, NEW YORK ......... MICHAELS UNION WALL PAPER AND PAINT THE PROGRESSIVE STORE FOR 5c to $1.00 STORE MODERN HOME DECORATORS 3301 East Main Street 104 East Main Street (Next to Bank) Endicott, New York Endwell, N. Y. RICHARD E. LUDWIG, Prop. Phone 5-7931 Economy Shoe Repairing fir Luggage Store 1208 North Street Endicott, New York Engagements Announcements HARRINGTON'S STUDIO Phones 5-3355 5-8665 5-8623 WEDDINGS-PARTIES 911 E. Main Street Endicott, N. Y. LACHMAN'S Specialty Shop Dresses — Hosiery — Lingerie 46 Washington Avenue Phone 5-3581 ENDICOTT, NEW YORK SUPERIOR ELECTRIC CO. Quality Electrical Appliances SALES —SERVICE 125 West Main Street Union District Endicott, N. Y. ROUFF Furniture Company V GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES v 105-107 Washington Avenue Endicott, New York Dedicated to Better Homes 1 19 BEST WISHES AVENUE METZGER S APPAREL SHOP Confectionery and Restaurant ENDICOTT'S POPULAR 101 Washington Avenue READY-TO-WEAR STORE For the Stylish Miss Endicott, New York For the Particular Man PHONE 5-9673 LYONS PAINT AND APPLIANCE, INC. COMPLIMENTS 1904 East Main Street of GLIDDEN PAINTS SPRED SATIN BOTTLED GAS STRAND AND ELVIN THEATRES CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 1951 COMPLIMENTS LuSi , of ENDICOTT FLORIST 116 Washington Avenue Endicott, New York i PHONE 5-0221 6 WASHINGTON AVENUE L. F. HAMLIN, INC. BENNER WHOLESALE COMPANY . . . Pharmacist . . . 107 Duane Avenue 28-30 Washington Avc. Distributor for Page and Shaw Chocolates ENDICOTT, NEW YORK Phones 5-5190—5-7441 120 NORRIS H. DANN Your Insurance Man PHONE 5-9521 COMPLIMENTS of HOTEL FREDERICK 121 ENDICOTT NASH CORP. SALES AND SERVICE EXPERT COLLISION SERVICE COMPLETE CAR SERVICE FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS SEE THE FINEST FOR '51 IN NASH STATESMAN — AMBASSADOR — RAMBLER 2301 East Main Street Phone 5-5471 or 5-5951 VAUGHN’S 107-109 East Main Street SPORT COATS—SPORT SHIRTS SLACKS SWEATERS —SHOES Weyenberg Er Nunn Bush SUITS — HATS DRESS SHIRTS Hart, Schaffner £r Marx Botany 500 Stetson — Mallory ARROW—VAN HEUSEN VAUGHN'S COMPLIMENTS of Lamb’s Ice Cream 122 INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION ENDICOTT I | NEW YORK IBM 123 Endicott's Greatest Shopping Center DIRT'S The Complete Department Store In Every Department . . . We’re Ready to Serve the Entire Needs of Every Family USE BURT’S CONVENIENT LAY AWAY PLAN TO SAVE! An Endicott Newspaper . . Dedicated to Greater Service . . To Greater Endicott HENDRICK COACH LINE THE DAILY BULLETIN Chartered Buses . . Complete Coverage of All World Events and Sports . . All Local News RADIO STATION WENE . . ABC Network for all occasions PHONE 5-1711 . . Community Programs . . On Your Radio at 1430 . . 5,000 Watts E. M. Hendrick, Owner 124 CONGRATULATIONS To 1951 Graduates Evans Plumbing and Heating KENNETH SPENCER 423 Roosevelt Avenue ENDICOTT, NEW YORK ♦ Telephone Endicott 5-7631 COMPLIMENTS COMPLIMENTS of of BEN HANSON CHEVROLET, INC. 3 Grant Avenue Endicott, New York MODERN DRESS SHOP OFFSET LITHOGRAPHY PHOTOSTATS WHITE PRINTS a modern S complete reproduction plant or your best work WA L L STREET BINGHAMTON, N. y. IT COSTS LESS AT ELMER ANGEVINE AGENCY UNITED Incorporated ARMY STORE COMPLETE 1210 North Street Endicott, N. Y. Real Estate and Insurance SERVICE SPORTING GOODS WORK AND DRESS CLOTHES 145 Washington Avenue ENDICOTT, NEW YORK 126 fashion magazines . . . applaud our teen fashions . . . for sport, class and date wear Miss Teresa Beirne models a new Princess Junior de- sign in our Teen Fashion Center. F owler’s Binghamton, N. Y. Teen Center, Second Floor ---------FRED'S-------- NEW SANDWICH SHOP 1305 Monroe Street Phone 5-9666 W. E. EDWARDS GENERAL CONTRACTOR Commercial and Residential Building ENDICOTT, NEW YORK 127 MAGIC CITY ICE MILK CO., INC. 607 North Street Dial 5-3337 PASTEURIZED MILK and CREAM JERSEY PASTEURIZED MILK HOMOGENIZED VITAMIN D MILK BUTTERMI LK CHOCOLATE DRINK ORANGE DRINK COURTEOUS DELIVERY SERVICE AUTOMOTIVE TECHNOLOGY ONE OF 6 CURRICULA at STATE TECH Binghamton THE HARRIS DRIVE-IN CURB SERVICE TABLE SERVICE FOUNTAIN SERVICE RUMPUS ROOM AVAILABLE for Private Parties DINNERS AND SANDWICHES 2309 East Main Street 128 Compliments of CORNELL'S DAIRY PRODUCTS, INC. 25 Kentucky Avenue Endicott, New York PHONE 5-6031 BUILDING MATERIALS wmmmm I FM BEH YARDS QUALITY SERVICE DEPENDABILITY 3310 East Main Street ENDWELL, N. Y. YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER SINCE 1920 N E W I N G MOTOR COMPANY Main Street at Garfield THE CLASS OF 1951 We join with your many friends at this happy time in congratulating each one of you upon your graduation from High School. May your life in the future be as successful as in the past. ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY Endicott — Two Offices for Your Convenience — Vestal ENDICOTT NATIONAL BANK Union - Endicott Office MARINE MIDLAND TRUST COMPANY MEMBERS —FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION We Extend Our Congratulations and Best Wishes to the U.E. Graduates of 1951 ENDICOTT JOHNSON CORPORATION COMPL 1 MENTS W. S. Krotts E. L. HILKINS CO. of — Jewelers — E. E. Inderlied Our 35th Year 4 Washington Avenue 46 Washington Are., Endicott, N. Y. Endicott, N. Y. PHONE 5-0121 RUDY'S BARBER SHOP STATE THEATRE UNION DISTRICT 128 Nanticoke Avenue Managed by B. Worth Dittrich Co-Donor of Dittrich Bros. Work Prises AWARDED ANNUALLY TO U-E SENIORS UNION DISTRICT Who Have Worked Most Hours on Jobs, Kept Up Class Marks to Their Copocity, Upheld High Standards of School Citizenship SERVING U-E STUDENTS Get Your —STUDENTS' SUPPLIES AND GRADS —SPORTING GOODS For Over 25 Years —OFFICE EQUIPMENT Kline’s WALTER R. MILLER CO. Inc. ENDICOTT'S MEN'S AND BOYS' SHOP 170 Washington St. 121 State St. Binghamton, New York 132 GOOD LUCK AND CONGRATULATIONS from BEST WISHES AVERY'S VARIETY STORE 219 North Nonticoke Avenue, Union, N. Y. from STATE SANDWICH SHOP Specializing in SEALTEST ICE CREAM DAILY AND SUNDAY PAPERS MAGAZINES SCHOOL SUPPLIES GREETING CARDS ALDERMANS OF ENDICOTT, Compliments Incorporated of STUDEBAKER DEALER FAIR DEALING —COURTEOUS SERVICE 0 HONEST APPRAISALS MADE ON YOUR TRADE-IN Open Evenings — Phone 5-3381 COMPLIMENTS NOVELLO'S DRY CLEANERS of BEST WISHES KENNETH M. COLEMAN to the GLENN R. DANIELS GRADUATING CLASS OF 1951 WALLACE DRUG STORE 12 WASHINGTON AVENUE IN ENDICOTT Since 1923 133 COMPL I MENTS of LARKIN MUSICAL INSTRUMENT CO. 94 Chenango Street BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK COMPLIMENTS SHIRLEY'S of Sportswear EDDIE'S Auto Radiator Repairing 6 Washington Avenue 8 McKinley Avenue Endicott, New York ELKS COMPLIMENTS BAKE SHOP of QUALITY GOODS ONLY KEN'S RESTAURANT 118 Nanticoke Avenue 110 WASHINGTON AVENUE Phone 5-2051 Endicott Phone 5-1581 SACKETT'S OFFICE EQUIPMENT That WORKS ... for You SPORT SHOP THE CAY Fisherman's Paradise CO. 1 17 Nanticoke Avenue 9 Washington Avenue Phone 5-2721 Endicott, New York UNION, NEW YORK SMITH - CORONA PORTABLES I 34 WELLS- MESSEMER, me. DODGE SALES SERVICE PLYMOUTH DODGE JOB RATED TRUCKS LARGE STOCK OF FACTORY ENGINEERED PARTS COMPLETE CAR SERVICE BY FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS GUARANTEED USED CARS TRUCKS 1302 E. MAIN ST. TELEPHONE 5-3397 ENDICOTT, NEW YORK GOV’S QUALITY JEWELERS 122 Oak Hill Avenue Endicott, N. Y. We Carry a Complete Line of PINS and RINGS for Sororities — Fraternities Graduation Ronald Patton and John Hoppes, Jr., choosing Ties shown by Manager Buss Coniglio MEN'S SHOP 59 Washington Avenue Endicott, New York The Signature of Guaranteed Satisfaction BOSS CONIGLIO, Manager Phone 5-7111 135 rv , ■LlT r- ■ 4 ALEXANDER'S CONFECTIONERY Lunches Ice Cream Candy 103 West Moin Street ENDICOTT, HEW YORK COMPLIMENTS Honestly You Should of Be TOULSON WALLPAPER AND PAINT In Our Shoes STORE ENDICOTT SHOE COMPANY 105 West Main Street Union, N. Y. 25 Washington Avenue Shop Thrifty and Wise . DIAL 5-5891 113 LINCOLN AVE., ENDICOTT, N. Y. at FARM BUREAU INSURANCE CO. PENNY WISE ERWIN FRAILEY, Licensed Agent AUTO—LIFE —FIRE 14 Washington Avenue Workmen's Compensation General Liability Insurance COMPLIMENTS TITUS PLUMBING AND HEATING of CO., INC. RUSSELL CAB COMPANY 108 West Main Street 136 WES BUCKY ALEX Miller tjarvei) (La,™ u„„u„i„n I l V Formerly “The Eskuire COMPLIMENTS BRING YOUR PHOTO PROBLEMS TO ENDICOTT of BAKER'S DRESS SHOP CAMERA SHOP 11 5 West Main Street Union District 33 Washington Avenue STONE’S STATIONERY Your Headquarters for School Needs BOOKS GREETING CARDS OFFICE SUPPLIES 8 Washington Avenue Phone 5-6251 STATIONERY Endicott, New York 137 G t O R G E F. J o H LIBRARY MD.COTT JO.MO-u L nC
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