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1939: That class had class

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  • 1939: That class had class

    1939: That class had class
    By Bob Kaprielian/ Guest Commentary

    Watertown TAB & Press, MA
    Nov 12 2004

    A few months ago my daughters, Rachel and Myra, were strolling my
    grandson, Will, down Marion Road, where they came upon a discarded
    Watertown High School yearbook from 1939. Knowing of my inventory of
    WHS athletic histories, they thought it might be useful to add to my
    collection.

    Upon receipt, I immediately went to the section of arguably the
    best baseball team ever to play at Watertown High. This 1939 team,
    coached by Dan Sullivan and captained by Oscar Khederian, went on to
    be inducted into the Watertown High School Athletic Hall of Fame.
    This truly great team had five Hall of Famers: Mike Calden, Bill
    Shannon, George Yankowski, Bill Kearns and Khederian.

    Reflecting upon this discarded annual, I wondered about the
    owner. The book was in pristine condition after 65 years, but
    contained no indication as to who the owner was. My speculation is
    that the owner was deceased, with no progeny to treasure this legacy.
    My curiosity made me read this book of memories from cover to cover,
    and to think about the teenagers pictured therein in the flower of
    their youth.

    Little did that generation realize that in mere months, Europe
    would be at war and America would enter World War II in a year and a
    half. This group of graduates had just lived through the Great
    Depression which was beginning to abate. Roosevelt's New Deal was
    showing success with programs such as the Works Progress
    Administration. The Daughters of the American Revolution refused to
    allow singer Marian Anderson to perform at Constitution Hall in
    Washington. First lady Eleanor Roosevelt arranged for the 37-year-old
    Anderson to sing at the Lincoln Memorial. Dying Lou Gehrig gave his
    "luckiest man alive" speech at Yankee Stadium. The World's Fair
    opened in New York. "Gone With the Wind" and "The Wizard of Oz" were
    released that year.

    The 1939 graduates would be now celebrating their 83rd or 84th
    birthdays this year. There were about 400 Watertown High graduates in
    1939. The principal was Herbert Archibald.

    The aspirations for many of the female graduates typically
    seemed to be for entering the business world, like Helen Avtgis of
    Pleasant Street, who wanted to be a buyer. Dora Palladino, also of
    Pleasant Street, wanted to go to business school. Phyllis Danner of
    Common Street had her sights set on Wheaton College, and Betty Davis
    of Oliver Street wanted to go to Lasell Junior College.

    Stuart Newell, president of the class, was interested in going
    to college. Varoujian "Juicy" Samuelian of Dexter Avenue went to
    Harvard and later became the longtime editor of the Armenian Mirror
    Spectator.

    The Glee Club had 76 members. The band and the orchestra had
    approximately 60 members each. Another sizable club was the Knitting
    Club, advised by Miss Sweet. Each member was expected to complete two
    sweaters or the equivalent during the year.

    The girls basketball team was undefeated in its five-game
    schedule, beating Winchester, 50-12, and Newton, 27-6. Their coach,
    Sally Biggane, looked the same when I saw her 15 years after her
    yearbook photo.

    All these lives would change after Dec. 7, 1941, with America's
    entry into World War II. Bill Kearns would find himself in the Navy
    through the war, and was present at the Japanese surrender in Tokyo
    Bay in 1945. George Yankowski would be in the U.S. Army infantry, and
    he fought in the Battle of the Bulge, where he was a sniper. Bill
    Shannon was a Marine who fought at Iwo Jima, where he would receive
    the highest decoration a Marine can receive, the Navy Cross.

    These 1939 graduates faced the greatest of challenges in the
    20th century: living through the Depression; fighting and winning in
    the largest conflict in world history; and building America into the
    greatest country in the world into the 21st century. These are the
    reasons that these graduates are part of what is called "the Greatest
    Generation." Their deeds and accomplishments are truly remarkable. I
    believe recent and current graduating classes can look to the 1939
    graduates with admiration and resolve to follow their legacy of honor
    and excellence.

    Bob Kaprielian is the director of the Watertown High School
    Athletic Hall of Fame and a local cable television host, among other
    things. He lives on Mount Auburn Street.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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