IOCKPOHT, N. Y., UNION-SUN A JOURNAL, Friday, June 0, 1962 «-A
CLASS OF '62 AT NEWFANE—Front row, left to right: Judith Brandt, Kathleeen Gifford, Patricia Hill, secretary; Bernard Ray-sor, vice president; Rita Stephanski, president; Ronald Neva, treasurer; Roberta Jesson, Karen Marston, Betsy Smith. Second row: Darlene Withrow, Sandra Mittelstadt, Arlene Farrington, Joanne Bower, Carolyn Baer, Grace Hartz, Beverly Phillips, Sharon TothilL Third row: Gerald Murphy, Allen Murray, Craig
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MORE NEWFANE GRADUATES—Front row, left to right: Judith Bebee, Bonnie Reed, Rhena Dan-ell, Sharon Gaskill, Cheryl Moon, Barbara Hawkins, Marilyn Yost, Kazuko Koyama, Sue-anne Kuhns, Sandra Weaver. Second row: Dorothy Malloy, Georgia Gregg, Bonnie Reid, Frances Martin, Arlene Jones, Carolyn Lutz, Judith Ramming, Janis Thompson, Heidi Troelzech. Third row: John Eberhart, Joanne Hall, Patricia Leddy, Judith Pusate-
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ORAliFATES AT STARPOINT—Front row, left to right: Carl-ten Andrews, Vernetta Hulls, Allan Krull, president; Nancy Forney, vice president; Marilee Dutton, treasurer; Jane Bratek, Catherine Fox. Second row: Beatrice Rupert, Cheryl Faery, Patrick Baker, Margaret Graham, Hary Lou Weinheimer, Dorene Scoville, Mary Chontos, Mary Adams. Third row: Robert Berry.
Newfane Class To Hear Official Of Red Cross
Taylor, Frederick Stolzenberg, Brian Smith, David Harrington, Jeffrey Steadman, Arthur Roberson, Kenneth McGrath. Fourth row: George Croft, Gary Edminster, Gary Hayes, David Payne* William Cooper, Richard Miller, James Payne, Richard Piatt. Fifth row: Roger Baker, Robert Nagy, Robert Fox, David Brandt, Francis Taylor, Russell Kneiser, Robert McGraw, Michael McKerman.
ri, Mary LaForest, Judith Lloyd, Nicki Rollinger, Walter Mularz. Fourth row. Larry Brown, Charles Smith, Donald Pomeroy, James Gray, Gary Pettit, Norman Freer, William Powley, David Barron. Fifth row: Robert McGuire, James Hamelink, Frederick Leigh, William Lanighan, James Knott, Philip Rowland, Martin Schultz, James Tompkins, Gerald Altbach.
Margaret Vogt, Judith Stewart, Barbara Seefeldt, Ruth Munk, Irene WestfaU, Michael Walek. Fourth row: Howard Dean, William Pittler, Kenneth Miller, Gerald Farnham, Fred Herman, Lester Burch. Ftfth row: Marvin Waslk, Robert Trembfey, Ronald Dussault, Franklin Meisenburg, John Stuermer, William Granish, Douglas Querdat, David Schwindier.
NEWFANE - Dr. Robert G. Gordon, director of the office of educational relations, American Red Cross, will be the speaker at Newfane Central School commencement exercises June 25.
The exercises will start at 8 p.m. in the school auditorium.
Dr. Gordon has guided the Junior Red Cross programs and pro
grams for high school and college youth in Red Cross since joining the organization in 1959.
He served for four years at the University of Southern California as dean of men, associate dean of students and dean of students. He has also been associated with the University of Texas, the Uni
versity of Redlands (Calif.) and Bucknell University.
Dr. Gordon was a member of the National Goals in Education Committee, an advisory group to the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. He also served as consultant to the National Defense Education Act appraisal
American Teen-Agers S T ^ T S S E Seeking Summer Jobs
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS America's teen-agers apparently
do not believe that the best things in life are free.
Not many of them, as they pour out of the nation's high schools and colleges for summer vacations, are dreaming of a shady river bank and a fishing pole.
They are more likely to be dreaming of hustling boxes in a warehouse, sitting behind a desk in an office, running a tractor, or any of a hundred other occupations.
When school's out, they want the money coming in.
Selected Group At N-W School Reads Classics
WHEATFIELD - A program designed to take selected students beyond the range of normal training has been enjoying much success at Niagara - Wheatfield Central School.
The course is entitled Advanced Literature and provides selected juniors or seniors with a half-credit.
The 34 students enrolled In the first such course at Niagara-Wheatfield are under the guidance of English and speech instructor Charles Pelcin.
Mr. Pelcin is a firm believer in opening the "better works" to students. The works studied are
i above average in content, the students reading them offering oral and written reports on their reactions.
Works studied include major Greek plays of such names as Socrates, Aescylus and Euripides; 20 of the greatest Chinese short stories featuring works of Lin Yutang; studies of Russian novelists including Tolstoy, Chec-kov and Turgenev; modern philosophies from David Hume to Bert rand Russell; and modern plays of Ibsen, Checkov, O'Cas-ey, Shaw and Americans Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams.
It is interesting to note that these works are studied in college circles, only under a series of courses. This program at Niagara - Wheatfield is more or less a stepping stone in this direction.
The students' observations and reports, according to Mr. Pelcin are compared with critics' interpretations in the final analysis.
Area Burned In 1812 May Be Restored
NIAGARA - ON - THE - LAKE, Ont. (iB — Several groups in this town at the mouth of the Niagara River on Lake Ontario want to restore certain areas to their 18th and 19th Century appearance.
The town, burned by Americans during the War of 1812, was rebuilt. Many of its existing structures date from the early 19th Century and others pre - date the 1813 attack.
All buildings in town are being surveyed and details of their history are being gathered. Niagara-on-the-Lake Is considered to have some of the finest colonial architecture to be seen in Canada.
A Connecticut employment official disagrees. It's not lack of something to do, he says, but simply money that sends the boys and girls out to hunt jobs.
College expenses are going up every year, he says, and youngsters now feel they must have things once considered luxuries-television sets, radios, cars.
'Dr. Lawrence Shepoiser, public school superintendent at Wichita, Kan., thinks the teen-agers get "fed up with working just with their heads, with abstract, academic courses.
"They need and want laboratory experience, working with their hands—and they have an impelling desire to earn their own money and to be independent," he said.
Practically all the experts point out that, in addition to the other reasons cited, there's a simple statistical reason for so many youthful job-hunters—the fact that there was a baby boom at the end of World War II. The same population explosion that jams the schools the rest of the year is jamming the employment offices now.
And the sad fact is that in practically all areas of the country, only a fraction of those seeking full-time jobs will find them.
The Texas Unemployment Commission has put a new group of youth coordinators on the job after its experience last year, when it was able to find 3,170 permanent jobs and 1,838 summer jobs for young people—but had 16,000 applicants.
Florida's State Employment Service estimates that only one out of three teen-aged job seekers found work last summer, and this summer will be about the same. . A New York state employment official, Alex Aftheim, says that despite an extensive program of farm work for city boys, and various types of "made" summer work, "we couldn't possibly cope with the demand even if our entire staff was working only on summer jobs and not taking care of others at all."
Russell Hand, manager of the Omaha office of the Nebraska State Employment Service, makes a similar prediction—only about one-third of the expected 3,500 applicants will find jobs.
One big reason why It will be tough for the teen-agers to find jobs is that it is tough for many of their elders. In sections where adult unemployment is too high, employers who must pay minimum wages are more inclined to hire adults, even for seasonal work.
Mechanization on the farm has eliminated countless jobs, like the bean picking in Wisconsin that used to attract many youths, but is now done by machine.
ATLANTA UB — Mrs. Dorothy M. Van Schleven is a seventh grade science teacher who wants her pupils to understand the relationship between the sciences and the arts. She asked her class to create something using common objects around their homes.
Bobby Wood took his material from a biology laboratory and his technique from the avant garde. This is how he came up with a nonrepresentation painting:
"I took some plain old fishing worms and dipr*d them in paint. Then I took them out with tweezers and let them wriggle across a piece of plywood that I painted white. Then I dipped the tweezers in the paint and flung the paint across the board."
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DR. ROBERT O. GORDON
NO HOT DOG
MIAMI, Fla. W — Each afternoon during Miami's hot summer days, a beagle arrives at a downtown theater, walks inside at the heels of eaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa heels of n entering patron and seeks out his favorite napping spot
The dog curls up beneath the duct of an air conditioner.
committee. The author of numerous articles
in professional journals, Dr. Gordon received his A.B. degree from Denison University and his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Columbia University. He served as
had a I' e u t e n a n t commander in the U. S. Navy during World War 2.
Mrs. Thomas Goodwin and Richard Dunford are serving as commencement advisers.
Senior class officers are Rita Stephanski, president; Barnard Raysor, vice president; Patricia Hill, secretary; and Ronald Neva, treasurer.
New York State Regents Scholarship winners at Newfane are James Payne, Kenneth McGrath, Betsy Smith, Sandra Weaver, Patricia Leddy and Barbara Hawkins.
OTHER STARPOINT GRADUATES—Front row, left to right: Patricia Pfeifer, Linda Eldredge, Carol Stump, Sheri McNama-ra, Carol Moyer, Brigitte Lein, Beverly Kunes. Second row: Frances Stowell, Nancy Breitenbach, Marsha Ford, Karen Kasprzak, Marjorle Spoor, Patrice Smith, Marda Meyeri, Carol Selfert Third row: John Healy, Ralph Jeffords, Don Krebs, Terry Fronc-
zak, Edward Moshier, Brian Bors. Fourth row: James Smith, Tom Andrix, James O'Malley, John Kerns, Dan Rogala, Duane WItkop. Fifth row: Dennis Page, Michael Pidanick, Charles Hards, William Miller, Walter Fronczak, Robert Bergthold, Stephen Boka.
Congratulations ON YOUR
Graduation
HAVE THIS DAY OF DAYS PHOTOGRAPHED IN A PORTRAIT IN LIVING COLOR OR SILVER-TONE AT THE
JALIE STUDIO 327 Bewl.y Bldq,
PHONS HP 3-3221 FOR AN
APPOINTMENT NOW
PAGE GEORGE APLEY
OSTON m - Not all parties in Boston's once-staid Back Bay are dull, formal affairs.
Police inntervened inn one in which a 42-year-old guest said be was socked on the head with a bar stool. Another guest, 47, was found wounded with a two-and-a-half foot Japanese war sword.
TO THE
1962 GRADUATES
FOR THE GRADUATE . . .
We Have A Nice Section
Of Plush Animals
Autograph Animals
ALL PRICES
(PtbHMcg 1 M MAIN STRf FT
DIAL HF 3-2395
122 MAIN ST. LOCKPORT
WILSON GRADUATES—Front row, left to right: Penelope Chesterfield, Alice Lederhouse, Rosemary Brawn, Muriel Faery, Martha Morton, Andrea Galbraith, Sally Kopp, Elma Perry, Gloria Buttery. Second row: Frances Tremblay, Katherine Bul-mer, Mary Ellen Laderoute, Lynne Rockwood, Patricia Carew, Barbara BuB, Linda Farley, Rebekah Baehr. Third row: Daniel Farquharson, John Harold, Sylvia Thomas, Katherine Yotter,
Linda Schmidt, Sharon Halstead, Grace Bromage, Douglas Neadow. Fourth row: Jon Ritchings, Terry Ganshaw, Thomas Upton, Frank Baker, Robert Pease, Lawrence Motchenbaugh, Wayne Young. Fifth row: Whitney Barnum, George Brooks, Thomas Seyler, Robert Caldwell, Charles Hurtgam, Allen Schultz, Dan King, Donald Hunt. Sixth row; Lawrence Halstead, Rex Curtiss.
MORE WILSON GRADUATES—Front row, left to right: 0&W* lis < 'ampholi. Beverly Martin, Seward Moot 3rd, president; Kettha Peet, vice president; Sharon Schultz, secretary; Ronald Campbell, treasurer* Cheryl Thaxter, Linda Whitman, flooood row: Diane Reppentine, Eileen Keaty, Anna Oille, Linda Strut-bel, Helen Herachel, Christine Jones, Donna Wade, Ruth Ann Rushton. Third row; Francis Flood, Beatrice Betts, Mary Ann O'Connor, Jean Spanton, Karen Wilkins, Mama Clement, Mart-
lOCKPORT, N. Y., UNION-SUN A JOURNAL, Friday, June • , I M S 7-A mmmmmmmm
Baccalaureate Set At Starpoint June 25
PENDLETON — The baccalaureate and commencement exercises at Starpoint Central School will be held on June 24 and June tt respectively.
The baccalaureate exercises will begin at S p.m. Sunday, the 24th, in the high school auditorium. The Rev. James F. Burdick, pastor of the Rapids Evangelical United Brethren Church, will offer the invocation and a devotional reading.
The Senior High Choir will offer two selections, "One God" and "The Lord Bless You and Keep You."
The baccalaureate address speaker was not determined at press time.
Graduation ceremonies, also scheduled for the high school auditorium, will start at 8 p.m. on June 25.
Walter Blackman, president of the Starpoint Board of Education, will present the diplomas following presentation of the 1962 senior class by Harold E. Keech, secondary principal.
Allan H. Krull, president of the senior class and salutatorian, will present the class gift, scheduled to be accepted by Wallace Erck,
vice president of the board of education.
Mr. Krull and Ruth H. Munk. valedictorian, will offer addresses at the outset of the exercises, Mr. Keech will award class prizes.
The Senior High band will provide an instrumental selection, the Senior Choir offering two choral selections, "No Man Is An Island" and 'The Halls of Ivy."
Serving as graduation marshals will be Sandra Stegner and James Stacy. Other members of the senior class official body are Nancy Forney, vice president; Lynn Greig, secretary; and Mar
ilee Dutton, treasurer. Gordon Bianchi and Steven Olick ire the class advisers.
Eleven Starpoint seniors have been announced as winners of New York State Regents College Scholarships. They a re Miss Munk, Mr. Krull, Dan E. Rogala. Carol A. Selfert, Brian J. Bors, Mary B. Chontos, Marcia C. Meyers, Dennis C. Page. James A. OMalley, Brigitte Lein and William C. Pittler.
Miss Meyers and Shirley Briggs were awarded regents scholarships for basic professional « | |» cation in nursing.
To Graduate Class Of 92 Seniors
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WILSON — Approximately 92 senior are expected to receive diplomas at Wilson Central School commencement exercises June 25.
State Sen. Earl W. Brydges will be the commencement speaker.
The exercises will start at 8:15 p.m.
W. H. Stevenson, president of
the board of education, will pre-lsional and recessional. sent the diplomas. L. Ernest Tarr, the district principal, is scheduled to present the honor society.
The senior high mixed chorus will render vocal selections under the direction of Mrs. Marjorie C. Hurlburt and the high school band, under the direction of Jack R. Maxfield, will play the proces-
Akron Graduation To Be On June 24
AKRON — John M. Bickel of Skaneateles, N.Y., a retired vice president and sales manager of the Carrier Corp. in Syracuse, will address senior class graduates at Akron Central School commence* ment exercises June 24.
The program, to be held in the school auditorium, will start at 4 p.m.
Mr. Bickel will speak on "Prepare Today for Tomorrow."
The speaker was born in Racine, Wis. and is a graduate of Wisconsin University. He has been engaged in sales, advertising and public relations throughout his career.
Before being with Carrier, Mr. Bickel held executive positions with Curtiss Airplane and Motor Corp., the Curtis Publishing Co. and the Schick Razor Co.
He has made frequent appearances before sales groups, service clubs, university, groups and secondary schools throughout the eastern United States.
CLASS OFFICERS The senior class officers include
Seward Moot 3rd, president; Keitha Peet, vice president; Sharon Schultz, secretary, and Ronald Campbell, treasurer.
Class advisors are Mrs. Helen S. French, Mrs. Mae E. Donovan, Mrs. Ruby Malin, James F. Galer and Jack Hanley.
Regents college scholarships have been awarded to Tex Curtiss, Daniel Farquharson, Frances Flood, Patricia Gabbey, Terry Ganshaw, Michael Grace, John Harold, Daniel King, Mary Ellen Laderoute, Martha Morton, Mary Ann O'Connor, Robert Pease, Pamela Pelton, Jon Ritchings, Thomas Seyler, Darwin Tudor, Thomas Upton, Mary Margaret Weiler and Helen Wilson.
A New York State regents college scholarship for the child of a deceased or disabled veteran was awarded to Christine Jones along with a basic professional education in nursing scholarship.
Other scholarships: Frances Flood, two-year full tuition scholarship to Syracuse University; Pamela Pelton, four-year scholarship to Baldwin • Wallace; Patricia Gabbey, a scholarship to the University of Rochester plus student loan scholarship to Hope College, honorable mention for Gen-
JOHNM. BICKEL
Yellowstone Bears Are Litterbugs
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. W - What Yellowstone National Park needs is not a good 5-cent cigar — but a bear-proof garbage can.^
The brown bears which abound in Yellowstone Park may amuse the tourists with their antics, but to park rangers they are Htter-bugs and nuisances.
§o far, man hasn't been successful in coming up with a garbage can that man can open to deposit garbage — but bears can't open to spread tt around.
Park officials are trying several new types of garbage cans this summer to test the Ingenuity of the cagy bruins. So far, the bears have won on all counts.
One of the experimental models Is designed like a mail box. But it didn't take the smart bears kmg to figure that one out.
Another model hangs'from a T-frame. but Park Superintendent Lemuel A. Garrison says it isn't working too well, either.
"The bears knock it around like a punching bag," he said, "and it makes a big racket."
Bilingual Children Undergo Testing
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. » -What relation, if any, does the knowledge of more than one language have to intelligence?
Two McGUl University psychologists say they are pondering this question after studies In which bilingual children scored significantly higher in both verbal and nonverbal intelligence testa than children knowing only one language.
The tests were given to Montreal school children of the same age and socio . economic level. Elizabeth Peal and Wallace E. Lambert reported at a convention of psychologists here.
BI EXAGGERATION
MIAMI, Fla. f* — Fishermen don't exaggerate when they tell Theo Carter about their prize catches.
Theo operates a fish mounting firm and at $21 a foot she says her customers speak only the truth when tbey bring in specimens for taxidermy work.
SEN. EARL W. BRYDGES
eral Motors scholarship at Hope College, accepted at Northeastern University National Science Foundation summer science institute, also an alternate <o Roswell Park Memorial Institute summer science program.
MORE AWARDS Terry Ganshaw, scholarship to
University of Rochester plus student loan scholarship to Harpur College; Mary Margaret Weiler, awarded a Matthew Vasaar scholarship (honorary - no stipend) distinction and personal qualifications; Thomas Seyler, awarded a reduction in tuition at Houghton College; Sally Kopp, scholarship to Rochester Business Institute; and Jon Rltching. alumni scholarship to St* Lawrence University.
The Thomas Marks scholarship will be awarded at the commencement exercises.
Gasoline Thefts Traced By Perfume
KEY WEST, Fla. (ft — The Navy Is using perfume to sniff out gasoline pilferers.
Several thousand gallons of gasoline disappeared from filling stations on the U.S. Naval Base here over a period of months.
So perfume was added to the Navy gas supplies. Gate sentries stop drivers of private cars for questioning If the automobiles smell too sweet as they leave the base.
an Yotter, Karen Martin. Fourth nm Winston Julias, Charles Kreutz, Helen Wilson, Mary Welter, Patricia Gabbey, Eugene Thomas, Neil Neumann. Fifth row: Albert Schmidt, Terry Peters, Charles Smith, James Durow, Roy Brooks, filrl Gross, David Neumann. Sixth rows Bennett Vive-rite, Robert BurtwtJI, Darwin Tudor, DavW Schendel, Chartes Moot, Michael Grace.
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