USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Weymouth > Town annual report of Weymouth 1932 > Part 18
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Miss Ray, Miss Nietzold and I all wish to thank the teachers for their interest and co-operation in their planning and execution of the outlines for art work in the grades.
226
MANUAL TRAINING
(Report of Miss Alice L. Tucker, Supervisor of Manual Training)
In the manual training classes this year we have 193 boys in the seventh and 186 in the eighth grades. As we have this sub- ject in only these two grades and the lesson is limited to from sixty to ninety minutes a week, it is not possible to accomplish what we should like, but we aim at accuracy rather than speed.
The boy first draws a plan from which he afterwards works. Then he measures his wood in the rough. When the article is. finished, he checks up with his standard dimensions to see how accurate he has been.
The seventh grade boys make articles containing the simple exercises : sawing, planing, gauging, boring, nailing, screwing, spokeshaving, etc. These boys are, of course, held together rather closely, although any child showing skill is allowed to make extra things involving the same exercises as those contained in the problem on which the class is working.
The eighth grade boys are taught elementary joinery and are allowed a wide choice of articles.
While the regular weekly period is not nearly long enough, the interest of the children is good, many of them working hours out- side of school time, and thus enabling us to accomplish more than we otherwise could.
The main object of manual training in the grades is not to turn out carpenters, but to teach the child to think, to be ac- curate, careful, neat and persistent, and to have some sense of responsibility ; in fact, to make him a better and more useful mem- ber of his community.
MUSIC
(Report of Mr. Vance W. Monroe, Supervisor of Music)
Musical activities in the High School for the past year followed the usual routine. The band and the orchestra played at various local and school functions. The vocal work included choruses, voice training classes, and a boys' and a girls' glee club. The or- chestra and the pupils who were trained in the voice classes were combined in the presentation of last year's operetta, "The Gypsy Rover." Work has been started on this year's operetta, "Christina of Greenland." The weekly singing period in the Vocational
227
School culminated in a concert which was given in the spring. The genuine enthusiasm shown by the boys made this project a cultural achievement.
Music played an extremely active part in the grades during the past year. The grade work in sight singing, tone and interpre- tation is building an excellent foundation for good singing. Music appreciation was introduced in the lower grades. Since the standard of performance cannot be higher than that of the listener, this; work cannot be too highly stressed.
The musical talent of the schools is available at all times for local entertainment.
Each school observed the Washington Anniversary in some way. The Athens School gave two performances : "From the Days . of Washington," a pageant which was directed by Miss Beatrice White, and "George Washington," a cantata developed by the teachers. The Bicknell School presented "Another Washington," a pageant developed by Miss Alma Roche and Miss Ruth Mayo. The teachers of the Jefferson School directed the pageant, "The Making of the Flag." The pageant, "History of America," was developed by the teachers of the Pond School. The Pratt School gave "Songs of Washington's Day." Miss Dorothy Murphy coached the quartet and double quartet which sang these songs. As in other years, Miss Murphy's work with quartets was very successful.
PENMANSHIP
(Report of Miss Katherine C. Fogarty, Supervisor of Penmanship)
The work in penmanship during the past year has been much the same as during the previous year.
The grades are supervised once in two weeks for a twenty- minute period, and although it is not so easy to vary the work in penmanship as the work in some of the other supervised subjects, the interest felt by most of the pupils and the amount of work done by them have been very satisfactory.
The first four months of the school year are spent usually in the detailed study and practice of the drills in the penmanship book, after which papers are sent to the Palmer Office in New York for correction.
Since January, 1932, the awards received for this work consist of the following :
228
Palmer Method Buttons 620
Merit Buttons .405
Progress Pins. .480
Students' Diplomas. 307
Advanced Diplomas. IO
This year many of the eighth-grade pupils wish to obtain the High School Diploma. This extra practice will no doubt increase the excellence of their work and be helpful especially to those who will choose the Business Course in High School.
SCHOOL GARDENS
(Report of Miss Sarah E. Brassill, Supervisor of School Gardens and Clubs)
There is usually no radical change in the garden work in any one year. The idea of learning something worth learning while doing something worth doing runs through each year's program. There is, however, some outstanding feature or characteristic that marks each year and connects it with the trend or the need of the times.
For some years past the growing tendency toward a home beautiful and a town beautiful has turned people's minds to the ornamental side of gardening. We have been altering our work enough to make it tie up with the trend of the times. A pupil can learn as much of the principles and the practice of gardening from a flower bed as he can from a vegetable patch. If he can know at the same time that he is sharing in the community life, there is an added zest to his activity.
Early in 1932 a desire to grow more food made itself felt; therefore, during this year we have stressed the economic as well as the educational side of the work. We have had more and better gardens than in any previous year; more vegetables grown for home and summer consumption ; more for canning ; and a few more to store for the winter. With this has gone a consciousness of doing something worth while and a desire to carry on, shown by an increased registration for next year. The gardens have varied in size from a tiny plot to half an acre or more. They have varied, too, in quality. Some gardeners have learned through failure what not to do next year. That is for them a step forward.
A pleasant accompaniment of the garden work for both pupil and supervisor has been the passing on of what is learned to friends and neighbors. Questions have come to and through the pupils in regard to seeds and culture, and treatment of garden pests.
229
During visits to pupils' gardens adults have come asking for help and inviting inspection of their own planting. This has been a welcome opportunity. It has helped the young people to be of use in the community and has led them to see that gardening is some- thing they are growing up to, not outgrowing. If and when more leisure and increased ownership of homes come about, the need to know how to use that leisure and to make the most of the home will grow rapidly. A knowledge of growing things will be an asset.
The lessons in gardening are required. Owning a garden is optional. Therefore in this, as in all forms of club work, we are able to find and work with pupils along the lines of their greatest interest. We have now eighteen garden clubs, eleven food clubs, one canning club, two clothing clubs, two poultry clubs, one forestry club, one rabbit club and one book club; forty-two in all, working out of school hours under a voluntary adult leader, who is either a teacher, a graduate club member or an upper-grade student. Teachers who are not leaders have been most helpful and co-operative. It is only through such splendid help and co- operation that so much work is possible.
This year, through the courtesy of the Weymouth Agricultural and Industrial Society, we were able to hold our exhibit at the fair grounds. We are indebted to many of our business men from all parts of the town for valuable and appropriate gifts to be offered as prizes at this exhibit. We are indebted also to the Wey- mouth Garden Club for six honorary memberships, one for each school district, given to the outstanding junior gardener in each district. Our best response to these favors will be through in- creased effort to fit ourselves for service in the community.
SCHOOL NURSE (Report of Miss Anna A. MacDavitt, R. N., School Nurse)
There is little new in the field of school nursing from year to year, but there is always enough variation in the daily routine to hold the interest of those whose duty it is to care for the health of our boys and girls.
Our greatest problem this year has been in helping our less fortunate children who have been in need of suitable clothing, shoes, rubbers, and in several instances, in need of proper food and medical attention. By means of a fund created by the school personnel, we have been able to care for every worthy child who has been brought to our attention. The principals and teachers have been untiring in their efforts to assist in this cause.
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The Sale of Christmas Seals Fund provided milk for 82 children during the year, and also sent one child to the Norfolk Health Camp for two months.
Sixteen children submitted to free tonsilectomies through the kindness of friends interested in this work.
There are several children in our schools who should have glasses, but owing to home conditions it has been impossible for parents to provide them. We should have a fund which would take care of these cases, to be used in the High School and the grades.
The Chadwick Clinic made its first annual check-up in Novem- ber. One hundred forty-six children were again X-rayed and examined. All but one of this number were found in better physi- cal condition than at this time last year.
The following statistics may be of interest :
General Inspections
4092
Examinations in School
2520
Weighed and Measured
385
Dressings in School
282
Assisted Doctors with Examinations
840
Home Visits
435
Children Taken Home
92
Children Sent to Doctors
75
Excluded for :
Impetigo
65
Scabies
59
Pediculosis
47
Colds and Sore Throats
88
Scarlet Fever
9
Chicken Pox
5
Measles
2
Ringworm
2
SCHOOL SAVINGS
Transfers to
School
Deposits
Withdrawals
Bank Books
Adams
$ 147.71
$ 11.04
$ 134.41
Athens
267.81
22.II
251.00
Bicknell
518.70
128.09
476.11
James Humphrey
381.82
91.84
365.11
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Jefferson
382.51
15.96
374.37
Junior Annex
164.54
14.22
159.09
Washington
216.09
30.03
190.00
Center Portable
52.26
7.64
31.00
Pratt
201.98
35.66
170.11
Shaw
160.46
14.42
145.00
Edward B. Nevin
488.87
43.78
454.58
Hunt
789.06
78.49
737.71
Pond
392.17
31.56
372.16
High
13.51
43.74
$4,163.98
$ 538.35
$3,904.39
In view of the fact that no special efforts have been made during the school year to foster thrift among the school children because of the financial condition of so many parents, the above report for the year is satisfactory. The decrease in amount of deposits is much smaller than had been anticipated, and there has been practically no increase in the withdrawals.
CONCLUSION
To the community at large, to supervisors, principals, and teachers, and to the School Committee, I extend my sincere thanks and hearty appreciation for support and co-operation.
Respectfully submitted,
PARKER T. PEARSON, Superintendent of Schools.
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APPENDIX ROLL OF HONOR Names of Students not Absent during the School Year 1931-1932 * Neither Absent nor Tardy HIGH SCHOOL
*Elizabeth Belcastro
*Lloyd Manuel
*Marjorie Bentley
*Elsie Marshman
*Harriet Berry
*Charles Martin
*Alice Blanchard
Florence McKenna
*Fostine Blanchard
Anna Morton
*Eileen Browne Hazel Burns Christine Carpenter
*Ruth Nesbit
*Barbara Caswell
*Vieno Nissila
*Ellen Olander
* John Chipman
*William Packer
*Agnes Colarusso Albert Colarusso
*Edna Parsons
*Pauline Colarusso
*Mildred Peterson
*Lucy Petze
*Mary Connell
*Burton Poole
*Virginia Pratt
*Catherine Desmond
*Helen Doble Rita Donovan
*Natalie Doucette
#Harry Elms
*Vernon Fahey
*Josephine Fasci
*Dorothy Fisher
*Dorothy Flynn
*Edna Foster
*Elizabeth Freeth
*George Gannon Barbara Gardner
*Wilton Smith
*William Gray
*Irene Smith Ralph Stewart
* John Hall
*Marjorie Hayward
*Theodore Stewart
*Warren Hilton
*Frank Szehner
*Arnold Hirt
*Bernard Thibodeau
*George Hochstrasser
*Florida Trudell
*Ruth Holbrook
*Esther Tuthill
*Arthur Vanesse
*Agnes Inglis Robert Inglis
*Emilie Vanesse
*Mary Villanova
*Roger Walsh
*Albert Wheeler
*Warren Wilder
*Elliot Wilson
*Jennie Lilla
*Madelyn Wilson
*Thelma Worden
*Josephine Lindsay Helena Logan
*Merrick Price Phyllis Quimby
*Florence Reidy Mary Reidy
*Mary F. Reidy Alfred Rennie
*Margaret Rennie
*Catherine Richter Bernard Ruscetta
*Bruce Saunders
*Louella Hunt
*Doris Lantz
*Rita Leonard
*Rose Leonard
*Antoinetta Lilla
Dorothy Murray
*Elmer Newcomb
*William Chance
*Carl Parsons
*Madelyn Connell
*Edward Connor
Virginia Pray
*Arline Price
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JUNIOR ANNEX
*Nicodemo Belcastro Sumner T. Bickford Frances Bicknell
*Robert Cote Helen Doherty
*Elsie Elmgren
*Patricia Holbrook
*Emma Hyland
*William Kearns Mary Keblis
*Laura Kelly Margaret A. Kendrick
Rose F. LaRocco
*Vincent Lilla
*Dorothy Little
*Alice McMorrow
*Ruth J. Niles Jerry Nocera Catherine Nolan
*Robert N. Olander
*Frances Our
*Leo H. Petze
*Angelina Pileggi
*Frances S. Quinn Norman Smith
*Irene Thorp
*Mary E. Vanasse
*Agatha Veerling
*Arlene L. Whitmarsh
OPPORTUNITY CLASS
Paul Collier
ADAMS SCHOOL
*Barbara A. Batchelder Arnold G. Brown Joseph J. Ouellet Grace J. Patenaude
Louise M. Proffit *Ralph P. Staples
*Hendrick Wynands
ATHENS SCHOOL
*Raymond W. Barrett
*Jean A. Hickey
*Henry U. Kahler
*Theresa Kahler
*Anna M. Connors
*Margaret Lesenechal
*Ruth A. Mathewson
*Henry F. Delano
*Warren Mckinnon
*Wilfred R. DeYoung
*Warren B. Metcalf Delia F. Parker
*James F. Dwyer
*Ruth M. Dwyer *Betty E. Hanson
*Eric Hanson
*John Hanson
*Herbert L. Hanson
BICKNELL SCHOOL
*Barbara M. Blackwell
*Marjorie L. Boudreau *Alfred W. Cadman
*James Collier
*Violet C. Crowder
*Jeanette F. Currier *Marion P. Currier
*Ruth H. Kai
Warren Duffy
*Wayne B. Garfield
*Eugene W. Garrity
*Charles A. Johnson, Jr.
*Eleanor E. Johnson
*Robert E. Johnson
*Betty L. Kai
*Mary M. Sarno .
*Walter Bouchie Russell E. Cheney
*Velma L. Collyer
*Arthur C. Parnaby
*F. Eileen Pitts
*Bernard L. Ruggles Irene Wysocki
234
Gertrude L. Kalaghan
*Nellie Karpinskas
*Margaret MacDonnell
*Dorothy A. Milner
*Ruth A. Murray
*Perley H. Nesbitt Virginia Deloria
*Eleanor G. Durant
*William J. Sjehner
*Grace E. Stevens
*James O. Stevens
*Walter E. Stevens
*Edward J. Walsh
*William W. Walsh
*Harper W. White
JAMES HUMPHREY SCHOOL
*Edwin Amoroso
*Louise Amoroso Frederick A. Bicknell
* Joseph Caruso Ralph Cipullo
*Edward F. Colombi
*Anna F. Connell James Consentino
*Bina Danubio
*Mary J. DeLucca Edwin Donadio
*Marguerite E. Durgin
*Louise A. Gardner
*Alba Gatto
*John Gillis
*Richard King
*Oiva Kuusela
*Betty L. Langhorst
*Catherine Latteo
Celestine Latteo
*Peter Lilla
*Barbara Miles
*Sylvia Merluzzo Joseph Molisse
*Concetta Passero
*Laura Passero
*Betty Petze
*Lucy Rivelle Alphonse Russo
*Antoinette Salemme
*Lloyd V. Smith
*Gelia Sparda
*Calvin St. Peter
*Marguerite Villanova
*Michael Villanova
*Priscilla Wardlaw
*Evelyn Wright
*Gladys Zeoli
JEFFERSON SCHOOL
*Betty Abbruzzese
*John Belcastro
*Richard Bettencourt
*Constance Burke
*Rita Daley
*Eugene Duncan Peter Duncan
*Lucy Eacobacci Margaret Eacobacci
*Helen Fortier
*Mildred Frimanson
*Dennis Herlihy
*Rita Lynch
Wilfred Macleod
*Eugenia Morgan
*Eleanor Nocera
*Dorothy Page
*Robert Page Rose Pizzi
*Louis Rubbo
*Sebastion Rubbo
*Raymond Sydenstricker
Rosalie Tucci
*James Wooten
*Mary Wooten
*Frank Zeoli
WASHINGTON SCHOOL
*Russell Beard
*Theresa Cassese *John E. DeCoste Patricia DeCoste
*Charles Farrar
*Lorraine Farrar
*Robert Gay
*Alice Levangia
*Norma H. MacDonald
*Paul Quinlan
*Francis H. Pecoraro
*Pauline Roberts William Scarpelli George Wright Francis L. Wyman
235
HUNT SCHOOL
*Dorothy L. Ahlstedt Florence A. Bates
*Mary E. Berry
*Barbara M. Blake
*Leon Cameron Maynard A. Carter
*Stacia Casperowski Lillian C. Cherry
*James S. Clawson
*Robert E. Cote
*Dorothy S. Counter
*Ruth F. Cowles
*William F. Desmond
*Louise V. Doane
*Robert A. Finch
*Raymond N. Geever
*Evelyn Gorman
*Marion D. Greene
*Elizabeth P. Hewitt George J. Hodgdon
*Mae F. Howsberger
*Nellie Howsberger
*David Inglis
*Doris F. Kincade
*Marie H. Kincade
*Eisie C. Langford
*Beatrice L. Libby
*Howard W. Libby
*Warren S. Loud
*Rita M. Litchfield
*Robert H. MacFee
*Francis L. Mahoney
*Theodore C. McKenna
*Walter F. McKenna
*Walter J. McQuade
*Theodore O. Mills
*Helen D. Morrell
*Frances E. Niles
*Harold A. Peabody Katherine E. Pratt
*Norman W. Scott
*Rita Sheridan William O. Simpson
*Clarence Smith
*Thomas O. Smith
*Richard E. Thistle
*Dorothy Vanasse
*Edith I. Vanasse
*Ruth F. Vickery
#Robert B. Waddell
*Mary V. Wallace
CENTER PORTABLE
*Willis R. Marshman
William L. Martin
PRATT SCHOOL
*Frank N. Bosche
*Richard E. Bosche Frances Cobb
*Winnifred M. Corbett
*Marjorie L. Doble
*Muriel E. Doble Eva M. Doyle
*Nancy Flathers
*Judith Griffith
*Robert Griffith
*Dorothy Holbrook
*Lois H. Holbrook
*Olive Holbrook *Ellen I. Jerpi Marguerite Langille
*Eleanore F. Maynard
*June A. Newcomb
*Marjorie F. Newcomb Phyllis Newcomb
*Louise Payne
*Hilda S. Ross
*Adeline Rubolino
*Marjorie M. Wheeler
SHAW SCHOOL
*Kathleen Bell *Muriel A. Bell
*Thomas Bell
*Lester Bishop Nellie Corey Ralph C. DeYoung
*Warren Heffernan
*Mary E. Joyce Mary Melville
*Barbara Merrick
*Pearl Lipski John M. Shea
236
EDWARD B. NEVIN SCHOOL
*Edwin Banks
Frederick Blanchard
Randall T. Boyd, Jr. Robert W. Burns Leo H. Carl
*Charles H. Desmond
*Irene Fasci Philip Flynn
*Lou A. Gibson Margaret O. Hodgdon
*John Kenney Annie E. Lindsay
*Benjamin Lyons
*Douglas MacDonald.
*Miriam B. Nash
*Emily N. Norkus
*Joseph E. Norkus
*Ann M. O'Neil
*Constance O'Neil Bernard A. Reilly
*Walter Reilly
*Harold M. Rogers
*George F. Ronan
*Jack W. Smith
*Gustave H. Spurr
*Margaret J. Sullivan Paul Tompkins
POND SCHOOL
*Phyllis E. Dodge Charles Leahy
*Robert Manson
*Ingrid H. Monk *Alfred Thompson
LIST OF PUPILS WHO RECEIVED A GRAMMAR SCHOOL DIPLOMA
BICKNELL SCHOOL
Oscar R. Bedford
Phyllis L. Bennett
Ivan Nathaniel Keith
Edna Pauline Bezanson
Elizabeth Lesenechal
Barbara Mae Blackwell
Thomas Richard Lewis, Jr.
Arthur Tupper Bleakney
John M. Logan
Leonard Thomas MacDonnell
Elizabeth MacGregory
William McBride
Elizabeth P. McIntire
Kenneth Edward McNamara
Bernard Cheverie
Catherine Rita Cody
Emerson Coldwell, Jr.
Jeanette Elizabeth Cronin
Winifred Morrow
Phyllis Frances Panora
Evelyn Ingaborg Petersen
Robert E. Pitts
Gerald B. Procter, Jr.
Richard James Reyenger Eileen Grace Rieker Adella Louise Rounds
Jessie Christine Saunders
Eleanor Lucille Sewell Arthur Francis Sheppard Betsy Radley Stearns James Oliver Stevens John Taylor
Margaret Ellen Forrester Wayne Baker Garfield Joseph M. Garrity Leland Louis Gladwin, Jr. Catherine Susan Graffam Barbara Helen Hart James Lewis Hicks Charles A. Johnson, Jr. Charley Karpinskas
Elsie May Moe
Edwin Thomas Moffit
Florence Edith Moore
Leo Aloysius DeLorey Grace Lucille DeYoung
Raymond Edward Ekbom
Kenneth Wathon Ford
Louis Gerard Keenan
Jeffrey Henry Bouchie
Rita Mary Boudreau William Benjamin Boudreau Joan Carol Buckley Dorothy Calnan
237
Richard Stevenson Taylor Esther Averil Thayer George Herbert Tomlin Charles William Warren
Louis Willis Washburn Leonard Joseph White John Paul Yaxter
JUNIOR ANNEX
Anna Mary Baulis Walter Taber Beard
Helen Pauline Lester
Marjorie Marion MacCallum
Frances Gwendolyn Bicknell
Elmer George MacDonald
Ruth Inga Borgen
Bruce Cavannaugh MacDougall Doris Bunker Marple
Alice Elizabeth Brown
Alfred Vernon McCaw Hilda Adelaide Merrill
Margaret Alice Budd
Robert Arthur Butler
Ruth Jeannette Miles
John Benjamin Clarey Albert Austin Cobb Theresa Pauline Costanza
Frank Richard Morlock
Robert Oliver Cote David Leo Coveney
Maurice Henry Daly
Joseph Edmund Danubio
Eleanor Mae Dogherty
Majlis Elvira Nordman Frederick Walter Ochs Robert Nils Olander Elizabeth Pierson Our Dominick Peter Pileggi
Elsie Mathilda Elmgren
Barbara Cecelia Pratt
Pearl Dorothea Farrar Gordon Harlowe Flett
Elizabeth Hancock Richardson
William Arthur Roberts
Geraldine Annabelle Frimanson
Margaret Louise Gaffney Vincenta Lucille Gailus
Guido Ruscetta Joseph Salemme
George Butler Shanahan
Lillian Mary Shepard
Roman Michael Skoizylas
Annie Elizabeth Smith
Isabel Stebbins
Archie Edward Theriault
Raymond Joseph Tierney
Mazie Elizabeth Tonges
William Thomas Tuttle
Pauline Martha Upton
Emma Louise Hyland
Ralph Henry Johsnon Laura Marie Kelly
Margaret Alice Kendrick
Ward Chadbourne Walker
Edward Arthur Watts
Charles Gordon White
Virginia Frances Willis
HUNT SCHOOL
Adele Elizabeth Allbee Leonard Barnes Barbara Mary Blake Charles Henry Burns
Margaret Lucille Waldron
Marjorie Evangeline Kraft
Rose Frances LaRocco Evelyn Marguerite Landry
Dorothy Hilma Nelson Jerry Edward Nocera Catherine Jane Nolan
Evelyn Leona Dutf Florence Abbie Ells
Leonard Joseph Reidy
Helen Maria Gardner
Kenneth Chambers Gardner
Lucille Agnes Gilbody Charlotte Frances Goforth Ruth Elizabeth Gould Eleanor LaVaughn Hall Mildred Thelma Hill Theodore Fiske Hoffman Patricia Holbrook Vieno Johannah Holmes
Mary Ellen Vanasse Agatha Veerling
Ella May Cameron Helen Dorothy Cannon Francis Victor Cote Thomas A. Coughlin
Francis Wallace Boutilier
Stephen Lewis Miles
238
Dorothy Shirley Counter Julia Louise Dodge Edward Joseph Duncan, Jr. James Stuart Ferguson Marjorie Frances Fogg Francis Gallant Charles Alvin Gillis Ethel Marion Glines
James Donald Gordon
Robert William Goss
Paul Albert Groezinger
Edwin Albion Hall
John Baptist Hart, Jr.
Ethel Mae Harvey
Arthur Joseph Hassett
Dorothy Mae Hearn
William Edward Hynes
Howard William Libby
Alma Annie Lynne
John Ralph Tedesco
Edward Gordon Vickery
Barbara Marion White Mary Elizabeth Wilder
PRATT SCHOOL
Marjorie Olga Abrahamsen Arthur Low Adams
Santa Mary Arena
Gladys Frances Bailey Frances Pauline Cobb
Edna Florence Corbett
Leonard Francis Ferguson
Leona Gregory
Bartlett Trefrey Hill
Dorothy Arline Holbrook Olive Berttina Holbrook
Florence Elizabeth Jesse Jeanne Alberta Langille Marguerite Langille Flora Elizabeth Lovell Barbara Lynn
Mary Elizabeth MacDonald
Virginia Marie Peters Anna Roderson
Arlene Elizabeth Rowe
Melba Irene Sample
SHAW SCHOOL
Mary Elizabeth Leary
Bernard Francis MacNeil Eileen Barbara Merrick
Harold Blanchard Nash
Frances Barbara Norton
Marie Theresa O'Donnell Ethel Marjorie Salt
EDWARD B. NEVIN SCHOOL
Virginia C. Anderson Barbara L. Ball Harold A. Baynes Elizabeth Olive Bell Frederick C. Blanchard Marjorie P. Blanchard Marjorie E. Bloxham Randall T. Boyd, Jr. Jean F. Brewer .. .. : John J. Christie
Harry B. Coleman
Nancy E. DeCourcy Russell S. Delano
Ruth Elizabeth Dodge Walter R. Dodge Barbara Nadine Donley Pauline Jane Dyment Marion A. Felker S. Iva Galliher Arthur Daniel Gerrior
Warren Bryant Elizabeth Calloway Laurice Corey Sam Corey Harland Aubrey Fay
Ruth Helen Golby Gertrude Joenpolvi
Christina Hannah McCulloch Walter Francis McKenna Evelyn Louise Murphy Betty Newton
Frances Evelyn Niles
Patrick Joseph O'Brien
Winifred Veneata Outram
Dorothy Picard
Florence Ethelyn Pike Rita Mary Poulin
John Holbert Rebholz
Pershing Haig Rennie
Margaret Louise Rich Charles Elton Setterland
Rita Madeline Slattery Marion Stone Spencer William Edward Sullivan Thomas Vincent Sweeney
Dorothy Frances Mason John Edward McCaffrey Alice Frances McCarthy
239
M. Naomi Hayden Margaret Olivene Hodgdon Edwin S. Holmes Virginia B. Howe Louise Jane Humphrey Winifred Hunt Robert W. Karnan
Pearl P. Pierce Elaine Procter Mary E. Quinn
Lucille Raymond
Harold M. Rogers
Donald B. Rogerson
Evelyn May Sargent
Anna May Seale
Henry Linn Kohler Jean T. Lindsay Mary G. Lockary
Jack W. Smith George J. Taylor
Thomas Bernard Macquinn
Ruth P. Thayer
Clifford J. Martin
Joseph Allen Thibeault
Alma McCormack
James F. McEachern
Terrence M. McGlynn
Evelyn McPhee
Charles A. Vinal, Jr.
William Gleason Walsh
Hazel F. Warren
Alan L. Wingate, Jr.
GRADUATION EXERCISES WEYMOUTH HIGH SCHOOL
Class Motto: "Lifting Better Up To Best" Class Colors: Blue and Gold
High School Building, Weymouth Center Thursday Afternoon, June 23, 1932, at 2:15 o'clock
CLASS OFFICERS
President, Henry Anderson
First Vice-President, Richard Zeoli
Second Vice-President, Robert Wadman
Secretary, Dorothy Branley
Treasurer, Marguerite Goodrich
CLASS MARSHAL Ralph Stewart
DANCE COMMITTEE Stanley Neptune, Chairman
William Linscott Eunice Warner John Sullivan
Edith Baker Margaret Mckenzie Ada Holt
Harry Reed
MOTTO COMMITTEE Roger Emerson, Chairman
Lorne Craig Florence Nelson
Olga Yetsook Jennie Hutchinson
Norman S. Morrisey Marie Murphy Minnie Peters *1931
Mary Tirrell Paul Tompkins Albert Vinal, Jr.
240
BANQUET COMMITTEE Francis O'Brien, Chairman
Mabel Sullivan Patricia Lyons Adelaide Olive Edwinia Conway
Mary Estelle Freeman Emma DePari Virginia Spinney Frances Wood
Lester Jones
PROGRAM
PROCESSIONAL
INVOCATION
Rev. Francis A. Poole
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