Altoona High School - Horseshoe Yearbook (Altoona, PA)
- Class of 1932
Page 1 of 182
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 182 of the 1932 volume:
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Gjhe 1932
F N N X1 N N Q
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The Testament
of Beauty
WAS late in my long journey,
when I had clomb to where the
path was narrowing and the
company few, a glow of childlike
wonder enthral'd me, as if my sense
had come to a new birth purified, my
mind enrapt re-awakening to a fresh
initiation of life, with like suprise of
joy as any man may know who ram-
bling wide hath turn'd, resting on some
hill-top to View the plain he has left,
and see'th it now out-spread mappfd
at hisfeet, a landscape so by beauty
estranged he scarce wil ken familiar
haunts, nor his own home, maybe,
where far it lieth, small as a faded
thought.
Robert Bridges.
TO BEAUTY
HAT is beauty? saith my suffer-
ings then.-l answer the lover
and poet in my loose alexan-
clrines: Beauty is the highest of all these
occult influences, the quality of appear-
ances that through the sense wakeneth
spiritual emotion in the mincl of man:
Ancl Art, as it createth new forms of
beauty, awakeneth new ideas that ad-
vance the spirit in the life of Reason to
the wisdom of Gocl. But highest Art
must be rare as nativ faculty is, and her
surprise of magic winneth the favor of
men more than her inspiration: most are
led away by fairseeming pretences, which
being wrought for gain pursue the
ephemeral fashion that assureth it, ....
R. B.
FOREWURD
HEN the mystic haze of
years recalls the activities
of school days as golden
memories ofthe past, every memento
of those pleasures will become a
priceless treasure in the possession
of those who enjoyed them.
With this in mincl, we present this
book to you as a history of the past
year, and hope that in years to come
this, THE l932 HORSESHUE, will
give you an opportunity to relive
the days you spent in clear old
A. H. S.
The Annual Staff.
CUNTJENTS
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The regal beauty of your brownstone front,
The pillars with their lofty heads held high
Diffuse a quiet dignity and peace
Found in the vast realm of an evening shy.
Amid the glorious scenery of the land,
The Horseshoe Curve in stately splendor lies
And as a monument through time will stand,
To perseverance and enterprise.
Alma Mater
Blow, oh gentle mountain breezes,
From the golden westg
Breathe thy peaceful evening tidings
To the A. H. S.
Whisper to us words of pleasure,
As the dim twilight
Softly gathers round our colors,
Dear Maroon and White.
Now the shades of night grow darkerg
Birds have gone to restg
But our colors shine the brighter
Of the A. H. S.
Sinking sun behind the hilltops
Sighs a soft ugood night"
To the colors waving o'er us,
Dear Maroon and Vlfhite.
Night has slowly crept around us,
Stars are shining bright,
Waving, oh so calm and peacef ul,
Dear Maroon and White.
We shall always sing thy praises,
Work for thy successg
Hail to noble ALMA MATERl
Hail to A. H. S.!
1 .man's dou,bl.e niature, with lion body?
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THE TESTAMENT OF BEAUTY
to thatt S phtnx grand salutary symbo
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ADMINISTRATION
Mr. McKerihan, Mr. Decker
Mr. Barclay, Mr. Elder, Mr. Laramy, Mr. Sell, Mr. McKibben,
Mr. Thompson, Mr. Dillen, Mr. Meek, Mr. Sellers, Mr. Getz.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
William E. Barclay Joseph C. McKerihan John H. Dillen
Robert -D. Elder Robert McKibben Daniel M. Sell
David B. Getz ,I. Foster Meck William F. Sellers
OFFICERS
President ................ ............................ ........... J . Foster Meek
Vice President .......... ....... W illiam F. Sellers
Secretary ....................... ................ W . N. Decker
Assistant Secretary .......... ........ R obert L. Thompson
Treasurer ...................... ................. R . C. Wilson
Solicitor ....... ........... ......... M . M. Morrow
SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS
Robert E. Laramjf
ATTENDANCE DIRECTORS
L. C. Smith H. W. Shiplelt B. N. Lukens
Q Page Ten
0ur Superintendent
ROBERT EDWARD LARAMY
1890--Graduated from the Bethlehem High School.
1892-Graduated from Lehigh Preparatory School.
1392-1896-Attended Lehigh University.
B. A. 1896. M. A. 1899.
Sigma Chi Fraternity
Phi Beta Kappa Society
Class President 1896--.
1 896-1903-
1903-1905
1905-1913
1913-1922
Instructor, Moravian Preparatory School.
-Principal, Bethlehem High School.
Superintendent, Phoenixville Public Schools.
-Superintendent, Easton Public Schools.
1922-Superintendent, Altoona Public Schools.
Life member, Pennsylvania State Education Association.
Life member, National Education Association.
American Association for the Advancement of Science 1902-
Fellow, American Geographical Society 1930--
Rotary International 1916-1
Page Eleven
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Now
1917
Our Principal
LEVI GILBERT
-Graduated from Shippensburg Normal School.
faj Valedictorian.
fbj Played football, basketball and baseball.
1920-Entered Franklin and Marshall College.
Kal Captain of football team.
fbj Played basketball and baseball.
1922-Graduated from Franklin and Marshall.
1925-
fal Valedictorian.
Earned M. A. degree at University of Pennsylvania
1922-26-Dean of men at Shippensburg.
tal Assistant in Science.
1927-Became Principal of Lansdowne High School.
1930-Became Principal of Altoona High School.
working for Ph. D. degree at University of Southern California
Page Twelve
Our Assistant Principal
JOSEPH N. MADDOCKS
1917-Graduated from Altoona High School.
1918-Entered Juniata College.
1919-Entered Penn State College.
1921-Graduated from Penn State.
Kal Circulation manager of Penn State Engineer.
fbl Member of Scarab Fraternity.
1921-Began teaching mathematics in Altoona High School. J
1925-Received M. A. degree from Columbia University.
1927-29-Director of School District Evening School.
1929-Became assistant principal of Altoona High School.
Page Thirteen
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The Altoona High School Faculty
Miss Eyre, Miss Stockton, Mr. Wimmer, Miss Lentz, Miss Wertz, Miss Campbell, Mr. Sadler,
Mr. Gilbert, Mr. Maddocks, Mr. Laramy, Mr. Hoover, Mr. Wolfe, Mr. Zetler, Mr. Grimminger,
Mr. Williams.
Superintendent ..........
Principal ......................
Assistant Principal .........
Attendance Director .....................
Assistant Attendance Director .......
General Assistant .... ...... .......... .....
.......Robert E. Laramy, M. A.
..................Levi Gilbert, M. A.
.......Joseph N. Maddocks, M. A.
.............Paul A. Zetler, B. S.
..........Bena Lauver, M. A.
.......Edward C. Hare, M. A.
DEPARTMENT HEADS
English .........
History ............
Mathematics ..........
Modern Language ....... ......
Science ...................
Latin ................
Commercial ........
Vocational .... I ........
Home Economicsu...
Music ..........,..........
Art .......................................
Physical Director, Boys ........
........Annie C. Campbell, M. A.
Marie Lentz, M. A.
............George B. Will'iams, Ph. B.
.Charles M. Grimminger, M. A.
..........Harold C. Wimmer, M. S.
.......Minnie F. Stockton, B. A.
.........John L. Hoover, B. A.
..............Charles C. Sadler
...............Zitella B. Wertz, M. S.
.........Howard W. Lindaman, B. A.
A. Tressler
.........Robert H. Wolfe, B. S. P. E.
Physical Director, Girls ....... ......... E lizaheth K. Eyre, B. S. P. E.
Page Fourteen
Our Faculty
First Row: Mr. Wimmer, Science Department Head, Miss Campbell, English Department
Head, Miss Eyre, Girls' Physical Director, Mr. Williams, Mathematics Department Head,
Mr. Maddocks, Assistant Principal, Mr. Gilbert, Principal, Mr. Zetler, Attendance Direc-
tor, Mr. Hoover, Commercial Department Head, Mr. Hare, General Assistant, Miss Lentz,
History Department Head, Mr. Sadler, Vocational Department Head.
Second Rc-w: Miss Kauffman, Modern Language, Miss Rollins, English, Miss Roloerts, Eng-
lish, Miss Stevens, History, Miss Swartz, Mathematics, Mr. Caveny, Vocational, Miss
Morrison, English, Mr. wPegg, History, Miss Rodkey, Dramatics, Miss M. Lauver, History.
Third Row: Miss Ritts, Modern Language, Miss Lowther, Home Economics, Miss Fleck,
Modern Language, Miss Bancroft, English, Miss Unverzagt, History, Mr. Plummer,
Vocational, Miss Saucerman, Mathematics, Miss Decker, Science, Miss Harner, Mathe-
matics, Miss McGee, English, Miss Porter, English, Miss Thurston, Commercial, Miss
Hedden, Commercial.
Fourth Row: Miss Dunbar, Modern Language, Miss McCauley, English, Miss Fredericks,
English, Miss Woomer, English, Miss Waite, Mathematics, Mr. Bashore, Phys. Ed.,
Miss Wray, English, Miss Horner, Extra, Miss Sell, Commercial, Miss McClure, Eng-
lish.
Fifth Row: Miss Young, Home Economics, Miss Gray, Home Economics, Miss' Henry, His-
to-ry, Miss Taylor, Mathematics, Miss Cherry, Science, Mr. Morse, Phys. Ed., Mr. Ling-
enfelter, Extra, Mr. Graf, Commercial, Mr. Hoffman, Science, Miss Turner, English,
Miss Weisman, Science, Miss Duncan, Commercial.
Sixth Row: Miss Gorsuch, Home Economics, Miss McGinnis, Phys. Ed., Miss Gould, Home
Economics, Miss Paul, School Nurse, Miss McCartney, Science, Miss Lauver, English,
Miss Heller, English, Miss Given, Commercial, Mr. Krivsky, Music, Mr. Bloomfield, Voca-
tional, Mr. Elder, Vocational, Mr. Harbaugh, Science.
Seventh Row: Miss H. Faust, Extra, Miss McKerihian, Extra, Miss Krick, English, Miss
Bottorf, Art, Mr. J. Miller, Vocational, Mr. Dickey, History, Mr. Hite, Vocational, Mr.
S. Hoover, Vocational, Mr. McCreight, Histo-ry.
Eighth Row: Mr. Romig, Vocational, Mr. Sheetz, History, Mr. Lundegren, Vocational, Mr.
Patrick, History, Mr. Grove, Vocational, Mr. A. Snyder, Modern Language, Mr. Pohle,
Commercial.
Ninth Row: Mr. Fickes, Vocational, Mr. Smith, Vocational, Mr. Heiler, Vocational, Mr.
Shaeffer, Science, Mr. Hauser, Vocational, Mr. C. Snyder, Vocational, Mr. Joe Miller,
Vocational, Mr. Ross, Vocational, Mr. Lindaman, Music Department Head, Mr. McAfee,
English.
Page Fifteen
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ART DEPARTMENT
Head, Mary A. Tressler Edna Bottorf
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
Head, J. L. Hoover, B. A.
Sarah E. Duncan, B. S. Marion E. Hedden, B. S.
Nellie Given, B. A. Addison E. Pohle, B. S.
Carl E. Graf, B. S. Corinda M. Sell, B. S.
Eleanor C. Hare, B. A. Naomi M. Thurston
ADVISERS
uHorseshoe" ........... .......................... ........ M a rion E. Hedden
uHi-Y Club" ......................... ......... A ddison E. Pohle
4'Senior Class Sponsor" .............. ........ M arion E. Hedden
"Director of Secretarial Service' ....... Sarah E. Duncan
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
Head, Annie C. Campbell, M. A.
Marion R. Bancroft, B.
A.
Edith G. Frederick, B. A.
Mildred E. Heller, B. A.
Elizabeth V. Holley, B.
Anne E. Krick, B. A.
Rena Lauver, M. A.
.lohn McAfee, B. A.
Margaret J. McCauley, B.
Winifred McClure, B. A.
Fannie E. McGee, B. A.
A.
A.
Beatrice D. Morrison, B. A
Hilda M. Orr, B. A.
Sara Porter, B. A.
Gertrude Roberts, B. A.
Hilda A. Rodkey, B. S.
M. Florence Rollins, M.
Norma G. Swayne, B. A
Mary V. Turner, B. A.
Ida Woomer, B. S.
Gertrude Wray, B. A. ,
ADVISERS
uMountain Echo" ...... .......................... .............. G e rtrude Wray
'4Horseshoe" ............ ........... N orma G. Swayne
uDebating Coachv ......... ......... M argaret J. McCauley
"Chapel Programsl' ...... .............. H ilda A. Rodkey
Page Sixteen
HISTORY DEPARTMENT
Head, E. Marie Lentz, M. A.
Richard H. Bartholomew, B. A. Marie N. Lauver, B. A.
Sarah E. Bell, B. A. William I... McCreight, B. S
Earl W. Dickey, B. S. Nelda Miller, M. A.
H. Marjorie Downes, B. S. Robert Patrick, B. S.
Emma C. Eberle, B. A. Harold J. Pegg, M. A.
Irvin S. Gress, B. A. Herbert S. Sheetz, M. A.
Ethel M. Henry, M. A. Jeannette Stevens, M. A.
A. Angella Unverzagt, B. A.
ADVISERS
'4Cirls Leaguew .........
'4Boys Federation" ..... .
"Senate', .......................
Ci
..
64
66
Junior Class Sponsor"
Handbookn ........................
,Iunior Varsity Coachv
Track Coachn ...............
Marie Lentz
................Irvin S. Gress
.................Harold J. Pegg
Angella Unverzagt
.............Jeannette Stevens
..............William McCreight
Richard H. Bartholomew
HOME ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT
Head, Zitella B. Wertz, M. S.
Myrtle Gould, B. S.
Kathryn Gorsuch, B. S.
Florence E. Gray, B. S.
Alberta Johns, B. S.
Mary E. Lowther, B. S.
Anna M. Young
LATIN DEPARTMENT
Head, Minnie F. Stockton, B. A.
Una E. Small, B. A.
Page Seventeen
S. Edith White, B. A.
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MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT
Head, George B. Williams, Ph. B.
Grace E. Allen, B. A. Bertha A. Swartz, M. E.
Edward F. Emanuel, B. S. Elizabeth E. Taylor, M.
Perilla R. Harner, M. A. Nell J. Thomas, M. A.
Irene J. Saucerman, B. A.
Carrie F. Waite,
Paul A. Zetler, B. S.
MODERN LANGUAGE DEPARTMENT
Head, Charles M. Grimminger, M. A.
Mary E. Dunbar, B. S.
Janice Kauffman, B. A.
Edith R. Fleck, B. A. M. Marie Ritts, B. A.
Albert Snyder, B. S.
MUSIC DEPARTMENT
Head, Howard W. Lindaman, B. A.
Alma M. Eberle, B. A.
Frank Krivsky, B. S.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
Director, Boys, Robert H. Wolfe, B. S. P. E.
Director, Girls, Elizabeth K. Eyre, B. S. P. E.
Kenneth Bashore, B. S. Frances E. McGinnis, B. S. P. E
Paul E.. Morse, B. S. P. E. Jean E. Kantner, B. S. P. E.
SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
Head, Harold C. Wimmer, M. S.
Helen Cherry, B. S.
Leah S. Decker, B. S.
Verna Faust, B. A.
H. Edwin Harbaugh, B. A.
Lena Weisman, B.
Page Eighteen
W. H. Hoffman, B. S.
S.
Helen K. McCartney, B. A.
R. J. Shaeffer, B. S.
Harold E. Stong, B. S.
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VOCATIONAL DEPARTMENT
Head, Charles C. Sadler
Thomas C. Bloomfield
Charles C. Caveny, B. S.
William A. Fickes
Walter H. Grove
Carl G. Hauser
William Heiler
Fred D. Hite
Stephen W. Hoover
Carl 0. Lundegren
Jacob C. Miller
Joe Miller
Charles G. Plummer
Ceylon S. Romig
James C. Ross
Henry F. Selwitz
Samuel B. Smith
Clyde N. Snyder
Paul D. Wright
ADVISERS
'5Horseshoe" .............................................. ......... C eylon S. Romig
nAutomobile Safety Club" ....... ........... W alter H. Grove
'6Aviation Club" .................... ................ F red D. Hite
"Stage Craft Club" ........ .................... C arl G. Hauser
"Ushering Club" ........ .......... C harles G. Plummer
EXTRA TEACHERS
Helen J. Faust, B. A. .Jean McKerihan, B. A.
Margaret N. Horner, B. A. William D. Lingenfelier, B. A.
Virginia F. Pfeiffer, B. A.
LIBRARIAN
Maud Minster
SCHOOL NURSE
Elsa M. Paul
Page Nineteen
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SPECIAL INFORMATION
Total Enrollment ........................................ 3,114-
Senior Enrollment ...... ....... 8 57
Junior Enrollment ............. ....... 9 07
Sophomore Enrollment ........ ....... l ,350
STUDENT TEACHERS FROM PENN STATE COLLEGE
WHO TAUGHT IN A. H. S. THIS TERM
Name
Elizabeth Bell
Richard Berkheiser
Audrey Blake
George H. K. Bolich
Vincent Brcsnowitz
James A. Brown
Albert Buono
Clarence Christian
Basil Clare
Louise Darlington
W. Robert Deppen
George Detwiller
Edward Dumm
Irma Holton
Marian James
William Jefferson
Catherine Little
Ethel Lux
Nell McNaul
James Malone
Margaret R. Palmer
Joseph Ruddy
Mabel Seville
Harold P. Smith
John Wahl
Paul Waltz
Milton Wein
Eugene Welliver
Edith Zinn
Home
Cochranton, Pa.
Shamokin, Pa.
Altoona, Pa.
Shenandoah, Pa.
Garfield, N. J.
Renova, Pa.
Chester, Pa.
Trenton, N. J.
Chester, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Trevorton, Pa.
Bellefonte, Pa.
Mackeyville, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Picture Rocks, Pa.
Shenandoah, Pa.
Erie, Pa.
Camp Hill, Pa.
Altoona, Pa.
Wingate, Pa.
Monessen, Pa.
Scranton, Pa.
McConnellsburg, Pa.
Cochranton, Pa.
Beaver Falls, Pa.
Williamsport, Pa.
Clarion, Pa.
Hazelton, Pa.
Altoona, Pa.
Page Twenty
Subject Major
English
French
French
History
Mathematics
Mathematics
English
History
English
Latin
Commercial
French
English
French
English
Biology
Science
Latin
Latin
History
Mathematics
Latin
English
Latin
History
Mathematics
History
History
Art
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SENIORS A
"THE TESTAMENT OF BEAUTY"
-whether ,twer lark or lion, or some high
antlereal stag in startled pose of his fan-
tastic majesty gazing down the glade-
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Senior Class Officers
Top Row: Yeatts, Walters, Davis, Hofmann, Burket.
Bottom Row: Mattas, Monahan, Rittenhouse, Brubaker. ,
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President ............... ............................................ I ames Monahan A
Vice President ...... ...... I rma Rittenhouse
Secretary ............. ....... D elores Mattas
Treasurer .................... ...... J ane Brubaker IV,
General Chairman ...................................,............ William Davis ' I '
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
William Yeatts Betty Hofmann Betty Davis V
Harvey Shaeffer Pearl Walters V ' 1
SOCIAL COMMITTEES
Refreshment Reception Decoration
Mae Meese, Chairman Kenneth I-Ieaps, Chairman Sara Louise Levan, Chairman
Marjory Stephenson Mary McKinney Rosemary Stewart bf ,j
Margaret Anderson Dorothy Burd Rose Groban 'I 1
Ann Rollason Billy Rothert Gladys Gibson ,','
Betty Hull Martha Shaw Dorothy Fowler lfgfgw
Glenn Hoss Howard Brett Anna Caum hifi
Hugh Norris Donald Fritz Semler Heinsling ef
Drexel McTavish
Ted Gates
George Klepser
Fred Barry ,
Bill Geesey
James Saleme
Burt Myers
Dorothy Jones
Jane Hauser
Louise Lee
Doris Beattie
Charles Botright
Viola Gladfelter
Bud Neuwahl
Harry Taylor
Donald Kraft
Walter Oswalt
Finance
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Kenneth Winters i gl
Fay Montgomery 5. -
Harold Dunlap
Bob Kimmel .:' 3
Freda Klein .21-
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Doris Bollinger -,
Catherine Maricque
Luella Hess
Lynn Hildabrand
Paul Gieg
Sara Jane Moses
J oihn Ramsey ff
W,...e
Jane Brubaker, Chairman -
SPONSORS
Miss Decker, Chairman
Miss Morrison
Page Twenty-two
Dwight Fickes
Fred Datres if
Anne Hengstler .--on
F?
Miss Hedden 5
Mr. Patrick
Senior Class History r
S we, who are so soon to leave these halls of learning, look back over
the past three years, we feel a soft satisfaction mingled with regret-
ful pain. We are satisfied because we know that we, as a class,
have done our best to live up to the traditions of our Alma Mater, and we are
regretful that it is over, because never again will we enter the Altoona High
School as a part of it, shaping its character as it shaped ours. As we say
farewell, we take a last lingering look over the past.
I
On September 4, 1929, we entered the imposing entrance of A. H. S.
in pursuit of wisdom. We tried our best to look sophisticated, but we actual-
ly managed to look like a group of prisoners awaiting their sentences. How-
ever, after the first confusion of finding rooms, getting schedules arranged
correctly, etc., we got along fairly well. Although the upperclassmen razzed
us a little, they treated us kindly, and the teachers were always ready to lend
a helping hand.
By the time we had learned our way around and were getting down to
normal routine, football season started. Our Wounded vanity was restored
by the excellent sophomore material on the varsity. On November 9th-
unforgetable date-we beat Johnstown, and on the following Monday we
had the memorable walk-out. Perhaps it was illegal, unruly, and against
ball rules and regulations, but it will live in our memory long after Latin
verbs and geometry rules have passed into oblivion.
Early in December we had our famous bonfire in celebration of our
victory over Billtowng and what a business the shoe stores had the next day!
Doing snake dances in mud up to one's knees is not particularly good for
either shoes or feet. After all this festivity, our spirits were brought down
again by the mid-year exams.
With football season, vacation, and mid-year tests over, life was just
threatening to become normal when along came the Annual Show. It was a
huge success, in which many members of our class took part. After this
event, the school days passed quickly until, before we knew it, the final tests
were upon us-the finishing touch to the most exciting year we had ever
spent.
Page Twenty-three
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After a happy and fperhapsj a restful vacation, we returned to resume
our studies as uJovial Juniors." Being accustomed to the building now, we
had little trouble in following our routines, and we settled down to work and
to wait anxiously for football season. We had a successful season although
we lost the conference championship to our old enemy-Johnstown. How-
ever, we had little time to be depressed. The senior class was organizing,
and so We too began to think of class organization. Early in February, we
elected for our junior class officers, Harry Taylor, president, Delores Mattas,
vice president, Irma Rittenhouse, secretary, and Donald Kraft, treasurer.
These capable people led us through a very successful year. We had sev-
eral successful socials, and a Junior picnic which will be remembered for
years. Among, and between these diversions came the annual show in which
many members of our class took part. Towards the end of the year the Eng-
lish play, uThe Youngest," was produced under the direction of Miss Rod-
key, and our vanity swelled to enormous proportions when we discovered that
the leading roles were taken by members of our class. After this triumph, we
were promptly subdued by the imminence of final exams. With this ordeal
over and vacation before us, we again said Mau revoir" to our high school
until the fall should again bring us to our halls of learning.
A III
In the fall of 1931 we entered our Alma Mater as seniors. Soon after
school opened, football season began and our Maroon and White warriors
captured the championship of Western Pennsylvania.
A short time after this victory, our class organized, selecting for its
officers, James Monahan, president, Irma Rittenhouse, vice president, Delores
Mattas, secretary, and Jane Brubaker, treasurer. Along with our socials we
had the annual show, a rollicking laugh-fest from beginning to end, the Eng-
lish play, which was as excellent and entertaining as before.
With all these diversions the year went all too quickly until final tests
were upon us-the beginning of the end. There followed in quick succession
Commencement exercises, the banquet, the picnic-a mixture of tears and
smiles and laughs and sighs. At last we said good-bye for the last time to the
halls we loved and to the building which meant to us not stone and brick, nor
any material thing. To us it meant three happy years of work and play
among our friends-years which can never come again.
Page Twenty-four
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Senior Class Prophecy
M LL right, gang, we have some red hot newsy news today, so get busyf'
This comes from the editor, Sparrow Mannion, of the Daily Aston-
isher, as he gallantly cheers his staff on to getting the evening issue
ready for print.
Hliekalos, tell Datres to send a hundred copies to Miss Betty Hoge-
meyerg her picture is in tonight. She's addressing the Mary Merry Maidens
Society on 6'How to Hold Your Husband."
HThe editorial page isnlt full. Get Miss Burkhart to review William
Van Davis' book My Stage and Screen Success. Say, hels playing opposite
Martha Line now in his own play Dilemma. She can get that book at Neu-
wahlls publishing house or at Taylor and Scholl's stationery storef'
HFiX this headline. Yes, you Bill Burns. CSENATOR MCNAUGHTON
CBEATES SENSATION IN SENATE.' It sounds like a series of sibilant
sounds, and while you're at it, separate the article about President Monahan
of the Greasy Oil Corporation and George Kalb, Famous Violinistg they don,t
go together."
'cHey, here's a snappy article, GDOLORES MATTAS FAMOUS
DANCER KIDNAPPED FROM STAGE. The audience thinking this act
was part of the show drowned her screams in applause. Detectives Dwight
Fickes and S. J. Moses are hot on the trail., Stick this on the front page."
HThe front page is full, Chief."
'4Well, take out the squib about M. Patricia Walter of the Shaner News
Syndicate who ran down Walter Oswalt while touring California on a
bicyclef,
UNO, we'd better not cancel that for she was in her Damlier on her way
to interview Miss Dorothy Fowler in connection with her latest production,
Precious, in which she is co-starring with Tommy Orrf'
HAH right, here comes Gieg with the material from the telotypewriter.
Bead it over, Walters."
HO. K.!"
4Mr. Howard ,lastin Brett, Ambassador to Italy, spoke yesterday over
an international hookup on MHOW to Masticate Spaghetti?
4Rose Groban, budding young artist, was awarded first prize in the
National Art Exhibition for her painting, Cat Eyes. The second place, how-
ever, was to go to Sara Haines' Violets or Leroy Hobson's Consolidated
Hotclogsf
cMr. William Asterbilt Yeatts starts search for his personal butler miss-
ing since Thursday. He is said to have run away with Miss Gene Rein-
heimer, a mannequin at Macy's.'
Page Twenty-five
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6Rabbi Samuel Sealfon, formerly of Altoona, but now of Podunk, will
speak here. He will be met at the train by a band of Ladies Aiders, headed
by Miss Marjory Stephenson and Miss Margaret Andersonf
4F red Lafferty took first place and HSis', Dinges a close second in the
Annual Swiss Alp Climbing Racef
'Donald P. Kraft, bachelor millionaire, bestowed half of his amassed
fortune on Miss Dorothy Burd, the brave motherly instigator of the home for
homeless cats, for use in her important work.'
clean Seads threatened Judge James White with a revolver for supress-
ing her book The Love Life of Pompey.,
'President of the United States, Carl Etter, presented Congressional
Medal to Irma Rittenhouse for flying around the North Pole five hundred
times in her auto-gyro without getting dizzyf
6Famous basketball star, Randall Keller, jumped twenty-five stories
from a flaming building into a net held by firemen Andy Muir, Harry
Neugebauer, John Blackburn, and Bill Dillon. First aid was rendered by
Dr. Kenneth Heapsf
"There's the phone. That's Miss Gluntz with her report of the typing
marathon. Hello! Who? You say Edith Santella wins? Collapses after
three weeks without stopping? Martha Brumbaugh came in second? O. K.
Now dash over and get some dope on this crash over the Darchof theory be-
tween Prof. Carl McVicker, head of the Einstinogical department at Oxford,
and Dr. Burt Meyers, professor of analytic geometry at Penn Statef,
'This article ought to be a feature-
flnventor Curtis Beerman innocently started a panic when he walked
up the aisle of a lecture room carrying a powerful Guy Anderson magnet
with which he intended to demonstrate an experiment to a group of society
women interested in physics. When he reached the platform where he was
greeted by President Anne Grimshaw, he found his magnet covered with
ladies hairpins, and turning to the audience, he was confronted by a group
of angry women, hair streaming down their backs. Among the most violent
were Misses Marion Hirst, Bertha Boldt, Kathryn Terwilliger, and M. M.
Meesef "
HSomebody write an explanation under this picture The F irst Lady
presenting the prize in the Easter-egg rolling contestf'
MAH right, what was her name before she was married?"
"Doris Bollingerf,
Page Twenty-six
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5'Miss Bathgate, read me the last column of the back pagef,
She reads:
'Mr. John W. Welker disappeared p suddenly last night. lf he does
not return soon, his position as overseer of the Mc'l'avish Electro-Magnet fac-
tories will be given to Mr. Sheldon Clapper. It is rumoured that he joined
the Navy, but others believe he eloped with a certain young lady named
Schlayer, or Slayerf
4Suffering from laryngitis, Miss Mary McKinney, local soprano radio
star has temporarily Withdrawn from the air until she recuperates. Miss
Sara Louise Levan is taking her placef
aAdvertisement-Wanted, a wife. I am a middle aged widower with
1'ive children, heavy set, black hair tinged with gray, large black eyes. Am
Well educated and hold the position of President of the Hoss and Buggy air-
port. Solicit correspondence with view to matrimony. Charles T. Bot-
Wright.,
'Misses Geraldine Adams, and Catherine Gallager, French teachers in
A. H. S., returned from a trip to Paris where they visited the setting of Victor
Hugois Les Miserables. Monsieur Lynn Hildabrand proved to be their in-
teresting guidef
4There Will be a reunion of the class of 1932 of Altoona High School
on next Saturday in the school study hall. The class officers and members of
class committee who are residing in this city have complete charge of ar-
rangements. After a business meeting and speeches, a social will ensue. En-
tertainment Will consist of checkers, flinch, chess, and Peter Coddles, trip to
New Yorkf
uAll right, send the paper to press."
Page Twenty-seven
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A. FRANK ACKER
66Benjy95
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 1, Track Club 2, 33
Vice President Home Room
1, 23 Track Team 1, 2, 3.
December 11
HERBERT N. ADAMS
"Hummie,'
GENERAL
Ushering 2 5 President
Sports Club 25 President
Home Room 33 Varsity
Football Squad 1, 2, 3.
January 17
DANIEL ALAMPRESE
66Danny9S
VOCATIONAL
President Home Room 3.
September 16
JOHN E. ALLISON
c'Shorty"
GENERAL
Aviation Club 33 Vice
President Home Room 1, 2.
February 22
BETTY L. AMMERMAN
C6Bet93
COMMERCIAL
Entertainment Club 29
Vice President Entertain-
ment Club 3g Athletic Club
1 .
December 17
MARGARET ANDERSON
Sipegw
GENERAL
Decorating Committee 25
Refreshment Committee 35
Mountain Echo Staff 3,
President Home Room 35
Glee Club 2, 33 Octette 2 33
National Honor Society
March 31
Page Twenty-eight
GERALDINE A. ADAMS
6 cslerryss
GENERAL
Dramatic Club lg Glee
Club 1, 2, 3, Mixed Chorus
1, 2, 3.
August 5
EUGENE C. AKE
CGGeme9!
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 25 For-
estry and Outdoor Club 3:
Chemistry Club 1.
December 26
WALTER F. ALLEN
"Walt"
PRE-PROFESSIONAL
President Home Room 2,
3: Band 1, 2, 35 Orchestra
1, 2, 3g Glee Club 35 Dance
Orchestra 1.
July 12
WILLIAM AMERINE
"Billy
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 2.
March 19
GUY J. ANDERSON
CGAndy9,
GENERAL
German Folk Song Club
3 5 Program Committee,
Boys Federation 3.
January 7
RICHARD ANSPACH
6GLanky9!
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 1.
March 7
EARL ANTES
5'BucZ"
GENERAL
Aviation Club 3.
March 15
BERTHA ARMSTRONG
"Benn I H
COMMERCIAL
Library Club 1.
February 18
MARTHA AULTMAN
66Marty99
. GENERAL
Social Service Club 35 En-
tertainment Club 1, 2.
March 9
MELVIN AUSTIN
6CMel97
VOCATIONAL
October 20
RUTH H. BALTHASER
"Ruthie',
GENERAL
President Social Service
Club 15 Zoology Club, 35
Secretary Home Room 1,j2.
November 18
KATHRYN E. BARR
GGKGICU
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 35
Hiking Club 1. X
January 25
PERRY APPLETON '
G6Per93
ENGINEERING
Chemistry Club 15 Debat-
ing Club 2.
June 21
DALE C. ASKEY
CGPeSt!3
GENERAL
Track Club 35 Sports Club
15 Secretary Home Room 1.
December 9
ELDEN AUMAN
"Ellie5'
GENERAL
President Home Room 15
Vice President Home Room
25 Jay-Vee Football 35 As-
sistant Manager Football
Team 1, 25 Assistant Man.
ager Basketball Team 2.
May 12
ANNA C. BALLIET
"Happy Anne"
GENERAL
Social Service Club 15
Entertainment Club 35 Ath-
letic Club 15 Vice President
Home Room 25 Glee Club 35
Mixed Chorus 3.
May 3
VIRGINIA BARNHART
"Ginnie',
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Echo
Staff Member 1, 35 Glee
Club 35 Mixed Chorus 1, 2,
35 Chapel Choir 35 Annual
Show 2, 3.
April 25
FRED J. BARRY
HB0037
GENERAL
Sports Club 25 Refresh-
ment Committee 3.
March 9
Page Twenty-nine
MARJORIE E. BARRY
G6Marge!5
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 13
Newswriting Club 25 Mod-
ern Language Club 3, Echo
Staff Member 2, Hall Patrol
2, 3.
September 23
GLADYS V. BATHGATE
GCCaSey39
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Glee
Club 35 Mixed Chorus 2, 35
Hall Patrol 1, 2, 3.
August 11
ALBERT L. BAUMGARTNER
6iD00gg99
VOCATIONAL
Band 2, 3.
August 17
MILDRED L. BEAHM
G6Mid37
GENERAL
Mixed Chorus 29 Chapel
Choir 3, Annual Show 2, 3.
September 18
DORIS P. BEATTIE
"Dada"
GENERAL
Refreshment Committee
3: Vice President Home
Room 15 President Home
Room 35 Glee Club 2, 33
Mixed Chorus 2, 39 Hiking
Club 15 Annual Show 2, 3.
March 3
HARVEY G. BENNETT
"Shadow"
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 23 Presi-
dent Aviation Club 3.
August 30
Page Thirty
DoLoREs I. BARTHOLOMEW
66 19
Dee
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1g Secretary
Home Room 13 Glee Club 2,
35 Mixed Chorus 2, 3, An-
nual Show 2, 3.
January 7
HERBERT L. BATHURST
C6Herb99
. A f
GENERAL
March 29
JACK BEAHM
"Bean,iev
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2.
August 9
FRANKLIN G. BEARD
lCRed99
. -GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 2, As-
sistant Manager Varsity
Football Team 2.
January 17
CURTIS A. BEERMAN
"Curtis"
GENERAL
Ushering Club 39 Sports
Club lg Member Tennis
Team 2.
April 14
MARGARET M. BENTON
Gipcggyli
GENERAL
Forum Club 15 Athletic
Club 1, 23 Orchestra 1, 2, 33
Mixed Chorus 2, 33 Chapel
Choir 2, 3.
December 2
VERNA A. BERING
EC-Fat!!
GENERAL
Social Service Club 3.
June 21
ROBERT W. BEST
66-B0b77
GENERAL
Aviation Club 15 Track
Club 25 Sports Club 25 Band
1, 25 Mixed Chorus 2.1,
February 8
LOUISE BLACKBURN
G6LQuis57
.GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Athletic
Club' 1, 25 Mixed Chorus 1,
2, 3.-.
March 7
CLARKE T. BLOOMFIELD
"Bloomy,'
GENERAL
Track Club 35 Debating
Club 25 Chemistry Club 1.
January 2
HAZEL E. BOHN
6CB0nny97
COMMERCIAL
Dra-matic Club 15 Art Club
15 Commercial Club 35 Mix-
ed Chorus 2, 3.
October 7
CHRIST G. BOLISKI
"Grecian
GENERAL
Aviation Club 35 Glider
Club 1, 25 Assistant Man-
ager Baseball Team 2.
November 14
LAMAR S. BERRY
"Warh0rse,,
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 25 Avia.-
tion Club 35 President
Home Room 35 Baseball
Team 2.
October 31
JOHN W. BLACKBURN
"Blackie,'
GENERAL
Hi-Y Club 1, 2, 35 Student
Council Representative 15
VicemPresident Home Room
25 President Home Room 35
Cheerleader 25 Hi-Y Basket-
ball Team 2, 3.
September 14
ELWOOD BLAKE
GSBILZSQ
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 1, 2.
November 11
EVELYN D. BOCK
G6B0Cky99
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 15
Gregg Writer Club 35 Com-
mercial Club 3.
J une 30
BERTIIA L. BOLDT
G'Bertie',
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1, 2, 3.
October 19
DORIS LOUISE BOLLINGER
66-D025
GENERAL
Social Service Club 15
Athletic Club 15 Vice Presi-
dent Ho-me Room 15 Glee
Club 1, 2, 35 Mixed Chorus
1, 2, 35 Chapel Choir 1, 2,
35 Annual Show 1, 2, 35
Decorating Committee 3.
January 15
Page Thirty-one
ELIZABETH G. BOLLINGER
CCBetty77
GENERAL
May 29
MELVIN BOOKS
C6Meb99
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 23 For-
estry and Outdoor Club 3.
December 17
CHARLES F. BOTWRICHT
aBOIfi6,,
PRE-ENGINEERING
Hi-Y Club 2, 39 Glee Club
35 Mixed Chorus 33 Hiking
Club 15 Chapel Choir 3.
February 25
CLYDE L. BOWERS
"Amos"
GENERAL
Aviation Club 3: Ushering
Club 2. .
November 10
EDWARD R. BOWMAN
"Eddie"
GENERAL
August 6
MILDRED L, BOWMAN
"Mua'gief,
, GENERAL
Commercial Club 23 Vice
President Home Room 13
President Home Room 2, 33
Entertainment Club 1.
January 13
Page Thirty-two
DOROTHY I. BOOKS
CGD0t97
GENERAL
February 25
THELMA M. BORDER
GETeddy9!
GENERAL
Entertainment Club lg
Modern Language Club 35
Embroidery Club 15 German
Folk Song Club 3.
October 21
S. LIPTON BOWEN
acLip9:
YGENERAL
Ushering Club 1, 2, 3.'
' ' June 3
MADELINE L. BOWERS
6GMadge97
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 13 Vice
President Home Room 2.
September 24
JAMES M. BOWMAN
"Mechanical lim"
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 3.
September 18
EVELYN FAYE BOYLES
GSE,-iC95
COMMERCIAL I
. Social Service Club 3.
April 7
EVELYN M. BRACKEN
C6Evy99
GENERAL
Social Service Club 35 Art
Club 1.
April 13
HOWARD J. BRETT
"Snitz"
PRE-PROFESSIONAL
Marionette Club 25 Chem-
istry Club 35 Reception
Committee 35 'ECHO Staff
Member 15 Track Team 1.
December 13
DOROTHY H. BROWN
66-Dot!!
GENERAL
Social Service Club 1, 35
Secretary Home Room 2.
- February 26
EUGENE M. BRUBAKER
"Gene"
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 25 Avia-
tion Club 35 Hiking Club 1.
June 19
WENDELL BRUBAKER
6CWindy93
GENERAL
Glider Club 2, 35 Sports
Club 1.
December 4
FRED C. BUCHANAN
"Freddie'7
GENERAL
Ushering Club 3.
August 12
DOROTHE M. BREDE
66D0t,9
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Gregg
Writer Club 35 Commercial
Club 35 President Home
Room 25 Mixed Chorus 2, 35
Chapel Choir 33 Annual
Show 3.
October 21
SAMUEL BRIGGS
':C0Okie,'
GENERAL
Concessions Club 25 Avia-
tion Club 15 Forestry and
Outdoor Club 35 Glider
Club 1.
March 8
D. OWEN BRUBAKER
"Brubie,'
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Stage Craft Club 25 Stamp
Club 15 Glee Club 2, 35
Chapel Choir 35 Mixed Cho-
rus 3.
January 5
O
G. JANE BRUBAKER
Gilanieii
GENERAL
Executive Committee 25
Vice President Home Room
1, 25 Secretary Home Room
35 Treasurer Class 35 Mixed
Chorus 1, 2, 3.
March 2
MARTH.A BRUMBAUGH
"Martiev
COMMERCIAL
First Aid Club 25 Presi-
dent Commercial Club 33
Library Club 15 Echo Stair
Member 35 Secretary Home
Room 35 National Honor
Society 35 Gregg Writer
Club 3.
February 24
LEONA M. BUCHANAN
g'Nonie',
GENERAL
Vice President Social
Service Club 15 Mixed Cho'
rus 2, 3.
June 26
Page Thirty-three
WILLIAM H. BUCKEL
'cBilV,
VOCATIONAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 3g Nominating Com-
mittee 3.
October 4
DOROTHY BURD
C5 ' 99
Dzp
GENERAL
Decorating Committee 25
Reception Committee 3:
Horseshoe Staff 1, 25 Lit-
erary Editor Horseshoe 3g
Vice President Honor SO-
ciety 35 President Home
Room 2g Mixed Chorus 1, 2,
35 Vice President Quill and
Scroll 2, 3.
June 27
ELMER B. BURK
GCRBLZHQ
GENERAL
Sports Club 13 Secretary
Rome Room 13 Baseball
Team 2.
May 8
4ESTHER E. BURKET
CCTeddy39
GENERAL
Modern Novel Club 35
Glee Club 1.
March 31
OLIVER G. BURKET
'cBurkey"
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 35 Hi-Y
Club lg Newswriting Club
25 Executive Commit-tee 35
Echo Staff Member 25 Mem-
ber of Senate 1.
April 3
KATIIRYN L. BURKIIOLDER
66Kitty9!
COMMERCIAL
Secretary-Treasurer Com-
mercial Club 3.
August 9
Page Thirty-four
JOHN H. BULLOCK
ufackv
GENERAL
Stamp Club 1.
November 3
.JAMES J. BURGOON
Gijirnl?
GENERAL
September 29 '
MARGARET Lg BURKE 3
:fPeggie'?Q fl B
GENERALA W f
Entertainment reir C lub I 1 25 ,
First Aid Club .19 imirxeal
Chorus 2. -
May 17
IJOIS R. BURKET
gccL099
GENERAL
Social Service Club 2, 33
Entertainment Club 13 First
Aid Club 2. .
February 2
DOROTHY S. BURKHART
GENERAL A . .
Social 'Service Cltib"'fI7f
Home Nursing Club lj' Echo.
Staff Exchange Editor
June 11
WILLIAM F. BURNS
g'BiZl"
GENERAL
Jay Vee Football Team 23
German Folk Song Club 35
Student Council 1.
May 19
xt
.,,,.-.f--..-.-
1 t .,, ,, ...Vim
I
Wa
't
UQ
., E E
1. f is
EE:
. N:
I l
I
5?
MELW'IN R. BURNSHIRE
BESSIE M. BUTTERBAUGH
A "Bw" "Twin"
VOCATIONAL COMMERCIAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 3. August 23
April '1
TRESSIE F. BUTTERBAUGH HOWARD C. CALDERWOOD
6ETwin99 Cicaldyii
COMMERCIAL GENERAL
Intramural Sports Com-
August 23 mittee of Boys Federation
ig Sports Club 2, 34 Presi-
dent of Home Room 1, 2,
33 Varsity Football 1, 2, 35
Track Team 1, 2, 35 Jay
Vee Basketball 1, 2.
October 27
BETTY CAMPBELL
ngenyv MARJZIEE CAMPBELL
GENERAL Wgw
Entertainment Club' 15 COMMERCIAL
Secretary Home Room '25
Mixed Chorus 2, 33 Chapel
Choir 2, 3 5 Annual Show 3.
. January 11
NICK L. CAPARUSIO
6CSpeed32
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety ciub 2, 3.
January 14
THELMA CARLES
CGThel75
GENERAL
June 23 '
EDNA MAY CARR
"Eddie',
COMMERCIAL
Commercial Club 3, Ath-
letic Club 1, 2.
November 5
I Entertainment Club lg
Art Club 1.
October 2
MARY CAPUTO
CEPut073
GENERAL
Secretary Home Room 15
Vice President Horne Room
25 President Home Room 3.
July 18
WILBUR CARPENTER
G6CarpS7
GENERAL
Secretary Stamp Club 1.
May 3
JULIA CASSELL
ufutesa'
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1, 35 Presi-
dent Home Room 2, 33
Hockey Team 35 Annual
Show 1, 2, Chapel Choir 1,
2, 35 Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3.
January 7
Page Thirty-five
ANNA CAUM
nffllllldlv
HOME ECONOMICS
Rifle Team 35 Decorating
Committee 3.
February 8
HARRY F. CLAPPER
CGHarry9!
GENERAL
Secretary Home Room 15
Band 1, 2, 35 Orchestra 3.
December 7
SHELDON CLAPPER
"Shelly"
PRE-ENGINEERING
Glider Club 25 Hi-Y Club
15 Sports Club 35 Jay Vee
Football 1, 25 Varsity Foot-
ball 3.
September 24
HAZEL COCHRAN
"Shorty,'
COMMERCIAL
Treasurer Entertainment
Club 35 Hiking Club 1, 2.
October 4
EVELYN COGLEY
'6DimpLes"
COMMERCIAL
President of Home Room
1, 25 Mixed Chorus 3.
November 16
ALBERT COLELLO
CCA Z!!
GENERAL
Auto Safety Club 25 Avia-
tion Club 35 Sports Club 1,
35 Program Committee 25
Jay Vee Football 15 Cap-
tain of Jay Vee Football 25
Varsity Football 35 Track
Team 3.
October 3
Page Thirty-six
MARY I. CHARLESWORTH
CCMidge79
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 1, 25 Mixed
Chorus 2, 35 Annual Show
35 Chapel Choir 3.
April 11
PAULINE CLAPPER
nP0line"
GENERAL W
Dramatic3Club 35 Hiking
Club 1, 25 Secretary Home
Room 1.
August 11
CELESTINE CLARK
Cfsidi!
GENERAL
Social Service Club 15
Athletic Club 2, 3 5 Hockey
Team 35 Squad Leaders'
Club 3.
February 4
HELEN COCHRANE
"Gert',
GENERAL
Secretary Botany Club 3.
March 21
JOHN CoHo
6:10 hnnyea
GENERAL
Aviation Club 35 Parlia-
mentary Law Club 2.
October 12
RAYMOND CONLON
'cRamie"
GENERAL
September 3
ALVIN CONRAD
"Coonie"
GENERAL
Ushering Club 35 Glider
Club lg Modern Novel Club
25 Secretary Physics and
Radio Club 15 Physics and
Radio Club 25 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 15 Check-
ci' Club 2, 3.
February 23
EDWARD S. CONRAD
"Eddie,'
GENERAL
Track Club 15 Sports Club
2, 35 Jay Vee Football 2g
Varsity Football 35' Track
Team 1, 2, 35 Cross Country
Team 1.
August 10
J AMES CONTAKOS
66Jimmy97
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 25 For-
estry and Outdoor Club 35
Vice President Chemistry
Club. .15 Vice President
Home Room Club 15 Senate
1.
W March 25
ROBERT CORBETT
6630693
GE NE RAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 15 Aviation Club 35
President Glider Club 25
President Home Room 1.
February 28
DOROTHY CRAWFORD
"Damien
COMMERCIAL
Entertainment Club 15
Vice President Home Room
1, 25 President Home Room
35 Glee Club 25 Mixed Cho-
rus 1, 2, 35 Annual Play 1,
2, 3.
November 18
RUTH CREIGHTON
"Ruthie',
GENERAL
Dramatic Club lj Enter-
tainment Club 3.
August S
BERNARD C. CONRAD
-"Connie"
VOCATIONAL
Physics and Radio Club 1.
September 18
PAUL E. CONRAD
G 5Kuny5 9
VOCATIONAL
August 4
J. PAUL COOPER
CC-Rosey-95
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2: Sec-
retary Auto Safety Club 35
Secretary Home Room 25
Jay Vee Football 1.
August 14
ROSE CORNELL
"Rosie"
GENERAL
Athletic Club 15 Vice
President Home Room lg
Secretary Home Room 2.
November 11
FRANK M. CREIGHTON
'gCreighton"
VOCATIO NAL
Chess Club 25 Baseball
Team 15 Tennis Team 2.
September 19
GEORGE C. CROMER
CCClay97
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 1, 2, 3.
April 14
Page Thirty-seven
ANN CRONIN
CCAnn!7
COMMERCIAL
J une 10
ELMER CRUM
MEIHLCFH
VOCATIO NAL '
Auto Safety Club 25 Ush-
ering Club 3.
October 4
KETURAH CULBERTSON
G CKitty99
GENERAL
Social Service Club 1g
Hiking Club 1, 25 Chapel
Choir 3.
May 31
GLADYS CUMMINS
"Gladdie"
GENERAL
Vice President Zoology
Club 3.
March 9
FRED DATRES
"Fritz"
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 33 Business
Manager Echo Staff 33
President Home Room 3.
December 31
JOHN E. DAVIS
Ruled!!
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2g Ush-
ering Club 2, 3.
February 4
Page Thirty-eight
ROY CROYLE
"Duke',
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 15 Avia.-
tion Club 33 Glider Club 2.
November 29
WILBUR CHUM
6CWeb97
VOCATIONAL
Glider Club 2.
April 29
LUCY CUMMING
CG-Lu!!
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 15
Athletic Club lg Glee Club
33 Mixed Chorus 2, 35
Chapel Choir 23 Annual
Show 2.
June 7
WILLIAM F. CURTIS
"Bill',
GENERAL
Concessions Club 23 For-
estry and Outdoor Club 15
Aviation Club 39 Secretary
Home Room 13 President
Home Room 2 5 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 3.
August 26
1 ELIZABETH DAVIS
- C6Betiy35 '
A GENERAL
Athletic Club 25 Execu-
tive Committee 3: Secretary
Home Room 15 President
Home Room 35 Mixed Cho-
rus 1, 2, 33 Chapel Choir 1,
2, 33 Girls League Play 33
Student Council 15 Annual
Show 2.
June 30
JOHN M. DAVIS
'cSh0rty"
GENERAL
March 6
REBECCA DAVIS
Cfgeckyfi
STENOGEAPHIC
Gregg Writer Club 33
Commercial Club 3.
September 19
WILLIAM F. DAVIS
"Bill"
GENERAL
Program Committee 23
Mountain Echo Staff 2, 33
Vice President Home Room
23 Glee Club 33 President
Quill and Scroll 33 Girls
League Play 33 Honor So-
ciety 33 English Department
.Play 2, 3-
E ' September 24
MAURICE 'DE CASPIRS
" G6T0m37
. VOCATIONAL
A1lt0 Safety Club 2, 3.
I October 9
Q
TELESPIIORE DE FRAENE
C6Telly97
GENERAL
Sports Club 33 President
Home Room 33 Jay Vee
Football 1, 23 Varsity Foot-
ball Squad 33 Baseball Team
2, 3.
August 25
ALMA DELANEY
GCA Z!!
COMMERCIAL
Gregg Writer Club 33
Commercial Club 3.
August 23
JAMES DETRICH
CC ' S!
fun
VOCATIONAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 13 Physics and Radio
Club 3.
January 2
VIRGINIA E. DAVIS
"Ginnie"
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 13
Modern Language Club 33
Secretary Home Room 2.
October 10
DOROTHY DE BARBER
ccD0L!7
COMMERCIAL
Gregg Writer Club 33 Glee
Club 1'fMixed Chorus 2.
March 23
ETHEL DEFIBAUGH
. E6Def-ge!!
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 1 3
Modern Language Club 33
German Folk Song Club 3.
May 1
JACK DEGENHARDT
ccD,eggy97
COMMERCIAL
Aviation Club 33 Chem-
istry Club 13 Baseball Team
33 Glee Club 1, 23 Octette 3.
August 9
DONALD' DELOZIER
CCDOILJ,
GENERAL
Track Club 23 Hi-Y Club
13 Secretary Hi-Y Club 23
Vice President Home Room
13 President Home Room 33
Athletic Club 13 Civic Wel-
fare Club 3.
November 7
ERMA DETWILER
caHunr9
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 13
Glee Club 23 Octette 2.
March 26
Page Thirty-nine
AMERICO DE VINCENS
CGPinky97
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 2, 33 I-Ii-Y
Club 13 Mountain Echo
Staff 3.
June 1
WILLIAM DICKEY
GGBill!9
GENERAL
Vice President Forestry
and Outdoor Club 35 Stage
Craft Club 23 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 25 Assist-
ant Manager of Basketball
25 Manager of Basketball 3.
August 7
HARRY DINGES
C CSi-S59
GENERAL
Secretary-Treasurer Sports
Club 25 Sports Club 39 Var-
sity Football Squad 1, 2, 39
Track Team 2, 3.
September 6
HELEN DIVELY
:CDi-xlgeei
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 2, 3,
Entertainment Club 15 Sec-
retary Home Room 1.
June 22
JAMES DONALDSON, JR.
ccjimmyss
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 33
Program Committee 3.
February 3
MILDRED DORE
66Red77
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 3:
Embroidery Club 1.
January 6
Page Forty
ROSE EVELYN DEY
'6Kitten"
GENERAL
President Home Room 33
Glee Club 1, 2, 33 Octette 33
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3:
Chapel Choir 2, 3.
March 8
CURTIS DIETZE
GCCurty5,
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 3.
December 23
ALFRED DISABATO
66-All!
GENERAL
Chemistry Club 1, 3.
November 10
HOWARD DODSON
"Howl"
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 3.
f July 20
EUGENE DONNELLY
'gGene"
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 1, 35 Orchestra 1, 2, 35
Assistant Manager Baseball
1, 25 Assistant Manager
Football 25 Manager Base-
ball 3.
May 29
CECIL DORMAN
CGBOBSB
GENERAL
October 1
MILDRED DOUGHERTY
"Mickey,
GENERAL
World Friendship Club 3
Commercial Club 1.
July 5
JOHN DOUGLAS
66Red59
PRE-PROFESSIONAL
Art Club 15 Band 1, 2, 3
Orchestra 35 Assistant Man-
ager oi Baseball 2.
April 1
HILDA DULL
CCHid77
COMMERCIAL
November 30
HELYN DUNN
"Hinkie',
COMMERCIAL
March 1
JOSEPHINE E. EASTEP
661099
GENERAL
Hiking Club 1.
September 14
CHARLES E. ECKELS
"Duckie"
GENERAL
President Home Room 3.
July 12
ALISON DOUGLAS A
CSRed79
GENERAL
Social Service Club 25
Vice President Social Club
35 Athletic Club 15 Hockey
Team 35 Band 15 Orchestra
2, 35 First Aid Club 2.
April 30
ADA DUFFAN
CCA dv
COMMERCIAL
Athletic Club 3.
October 24
HAROLD DUNLAP
GGPete92
GENERAL
Vice President Forestry
and Outdoor Club 15 Band
35 Vice President Civic-
Welfare Club 2.
May 23
MARGARET E. EAMIGH
dipegv
COMMERCIAL
Vice President Q Home
Room 25 Gregg Writer Club
35 Commercial Club 35 Hik-
ing Club 1.
April 5
MINNA MAY EBELING
"Minnie"
GENERAL
Social Service Club 25
Mixed Chorus 3.
May 30
JOHN W. EDELBLUTE
fCJay77
GENERAL
Secretary Home Room 15
Radio Club 15 Aviation
Club 3.
November 26
Page Forty-one
JACKSON R. EDELMAN
"Scan"
GENERAL
Track Club 2, 3, Art Club
15 Jay Vee Football Team
1, Track Team 3.
May 15
MARY LOUISE EGAN
"Mary Louv
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Vice
President Home Room 13
Orchestra 2, 35 Mixed Cho-
rus 2, 3, Annual Show 2, 3.
October 7
PAULINE A. ELDER
5CP0lly79
GENERAL
Vice President Home
Room 3.
September 17
S. MAYRELLE E.LLIS
G6Sally93
COMMERCIAL
Chemistry Club 1: Gregg
Writer Club 3, Commercial
Club 35 Marionette Club 2.
October 19
GERALDINE R. EMERICK
GCGerry9,
GENERAL
Dramatic Club lg Enter-
tainment Club 3g Senate 3,
Vice President Girls League
3.
August 22
RICHARD H. ENGLISH
c:Dick::
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 25 Track
Club 1, 3.
May 30
Page Forty-two
MAXIE L. EDWARDS
'Tddiev
GENERAL
May 22
CHARLES EIFLER
"Buck"
PRE-ENGINEERING
Stage Craft Club 23 Pres-
ident Stage Craft Club 35
Secretary Home Room 1.
December 1
HAZEL I. ELLENBERGER
"Georgie,'
GENERAL
Library Club 13 Mixed
Chorus 2, 35 Squad Leaders
Club 3, Annual Show 2, 3,
Chapel Choir 2, 3.
September 16
LILLIAN M. ELLSTROM
"Shorty"
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Athletic Club 1, Vice
President Home Room 1, 29
President Home Room 33
Mixed Chorus 2, 3 5 Student
Council 17 Vice President
Senate 2, 3.
March 12
ANNE I. ENGLES
C5Bunny,,
COMMERCIAL
Dramatic Club 15 Com-
mercial Club 1g Mixed Cho-
rus 3g Annual Show 3.
September 10
HERBERT C. ERNEST
"Herbie"
GENERAL
Sports Club 15 Mixed Cho-
rus 3.
September 26
CARL D. ETTER
HFTUZH
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Dramatic Club 2, 3 5
Marionette Club 15 Quill and
Scroll 35 Assistant Editor
Mountain Echo 2, 35 Girls
League Play 35 Annual
Show 35 National Honor
Society 3.
November 9
RAYMOND E. EVANS
A 66Ray29
CLASSICAL
Debating Club 25 Forestry
and Outdoor Club 15 Treas-
urer Forestry and Outdoor
Club 35 Newswriting Club
25 Nominating Committee 25
Vice President Home Room
15 Glee Club 1.
May 4
RALPH N. FAHI:
"H0rseyv
GENERAL
Usliering Club 2, 35 Fire
Squad 3.
' January 26
PAUL T. FEATHERS
Hchubii
VOCATIONAL
April is I
M. LOUISE FELTON
GCLOUD7
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 News-
Writing Club 15 Mixed Cho-
rus 25 Chapel Choir 35 Hall
Patrol 1, 2, 35 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 1.
July 3
IVAN D. FICKES
V "Ivan the Terrible"
GENERAL
Secretary, Engineering and
Slide Rule Club 15 Refresh-
ment Committee 25 Secre-
tary Home Room 1, 25
President Home Room 35
Senate 35 Glee Club 35
Mixed Chorus 35 Hall Patrol
35 Finance Committee 3.
January 1
ERDINE L. EVANS
G6Deney93
GENERAL'
Social Service Club 2, 35
Dramatic Club 15 Hiking
Club 15 Secretary First Aid
Club 2.
July 23
JOHN H. EXLINE
Cilackib
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 15 Dra-
matic Club 35 Vice- Presi-
dent Forestry and Outdoor
Club 25 Glee Club 2.
November 29
LOUISE D. FAY
"Weassie',
- - GENERAL
Social 'Service Club 35
Dramatic Club 15 Athletic
Club 2. .
December 7
HERMAN R. FEDELI
"Count of Monte Criston
5 GENERAL
Chemistry Club 3.
March 21
ALICE I. FICKES
c'Babe',
COMMERCIAL
Vice President Home Room
15 Mixed Chorus 2, 3.
September 20
GERTRUDE R. FIELDS
"Genie"
GENERAL
Social Service Club 25
Entertainment Club 35 Ath-
letic Club 15 Mixed Chorus
1, 2.
October 21
Page Forty-three
FRANK P. FIORE
"Frankie"
GENERAL
Hi-Y Club 3.
September 3
GERALDINE M. FLANAGAN
c'Ge1-ry"
COMMERCIAL
Entertainment Club 35
Glee Club 35 Mixed Chorus
3.
September 7
J. LOUISE FOLCARELLI
66Peg!S
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 35 Marion-
ette Club 2 5 Glee Club 3.
October 28
G. GENEVIEVE FORNEY
66Gen9,
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 1.
December 18
DOROTHY E. F ORSHT
66Dink,7
GENERAL
Social Service Club 15
Glee Club 15 Mixed Chorus
35 Annual Show 35 Hand-
book Staff 2.
April 6
PEARL E. F oUsT
'gPearl',
COMMERCIAL
Gregg Writer Club 25
Newswriting Club 35 Moun-
tain Echo Staff 35 Glee Club
2.
June 6
Page Forty-four
MARY FRANCES FIORE
Cislcippyii
GENERAL
Social Service Club 1, 25
Commercial Club 15 Secre-
tary-Treasurer Modern Lan-
guage Club 35 Biology Club
1, 2.
October 19
MARGARET A. FLUKE
CGMargie79
GENERAL
Social Service Club 1, 3.
May 5
WILLIAM P. F ONNER
"Bill"
VOCATIONAL
January 20
FRANCES E. FORNWALI'
"Fran"
GENERAL
Social Service Club 1, 25
Mixed Chorus 35 Annual
Show 35 First Aid Club 2.
January 16
GERALD E. FORSYTIIE
cclerryv
GENERAL
Vice President Home Room
15 Orchestra 25 Glee Club 1.
March 22
PAUL L. FOWKES
C6Zip77
GENERAL
Sports Club 2, 35 Vice
President Home Room 25
President Home Room 35
Jay Vee Football Team 25
Varsity Football Squad 35
Track Team 25 Jay Vee
Basketball 1.
March 6
DOROTHY M. FOWLER
GCD0t77
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Library Club 25 President
Dramatic Club 35 Decorat-
ing Committee 35 Annual
Show 25 Girls League Play
35 Handbook Staff 2, 35
Orchestra 2, 3.
January 16
ROY C. FRANTZ
CCPansy79
GENERAL
Orchestra 1, 2, 3: Glee
Club 35 Dance Orchestra 35
Chapel Orchestra 2, 35 An-
nual Show 3.
August 16
DONALD P. FRITZ
C6D0n97
GENERAL
Concessions Club 2, 35
Camp Cookery Club 15 Re-
ception Committee 3.
.Juiy so
f
EARL L. FUoss
"Fu0s.sie"
GENERAL
Track Club 35 Sports Club
25 Vice President, Home
Room 25 Varsity Football
Squad 1, 2, 35 Captain Var-
sity Football Team 25 Track
Team 35 Jay Vee Basket-
ball 25 President Varsity
"A" Club 2.
January 6
FRED GAINES
'Treddrlev
GENERAL
Slide Rule Club 15 Hiking
Club 2.
March 4
MARGARET GALLOWAY
CCPeg97
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Modern
Novel Club 2, 35 President
Home Room 1, 2, 3.
September 3
EVELYN G. Fox
"F0xie,,
GENERAL
Vice President Home
Room 1.
September 2
ROBERT W. FREDERICK
G6B0b33
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 3.
October 16
DOROTHY M. FUNK
6CD0t75
GENERAL
Glee Club 35 Mixed Cho-
rus 3: Rifle Team 3.
December 1
RALPH A. Fuoss
G6Bud7:
,GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 15 Sports Club 2, 35
Jay Vee Football Team 1,
25 Varsity Football Team 35
Track Team 2, 3. A
June 11
KATHERINE GALLAGH ER
66Kitty9!
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 15
Art Club 25 Glee Club 1, 2,
3.
April 17
MARJ oR1E GAMMILL
CCMarjke95
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Glee Club 15 Mixed Cho-
rus 1, 25 Chapel Choir 2, 35
Annual Show 1, 2, 3.
August 6
Page Forty-five
MARY GARBER
C6Ginny97
GENERAL
Social Service Club 15 En-
tertainment Club 35 Orches-
tra. 2.
July 17
CHALMER GARMAN
"Chal,'
VOCATIONAL
August 20
JAMES GARTHOFF
G5Jim39
GENERAL
President Forestry Club
15 Ushering Club 2, 35 Jay
Vee Football 1.
January 3
MARTHA GATES
GCMarty77
GENERAL
President First Aid Club
33 Vice President Social
Service Club 15 Social Serv-
ice Club 2, 35 President
Home Room 25 Biology Club
1.
June 28
IRLENE GAUNTNER
"A rl ie"
GENERAL
Program Committee 25
Glee Club 1, 25 Mixed Cho-
rus 1, 2, 35 Annual Show 1,
2, 3.
February 4
WILLIAM GEESEY
"Bill"
GENERAL
April 27
Page Forty-six
MARY GARGONE
CGMary9!
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 1, 25
Gregg Writer Club 35 Com-
mercial Club 35 First Aid
Club 2.
April 28
MILDRED GARMAN
"Millie"
COMMERCIAL
World Friendship Club 35
Vice President Home Room
25 Glee Club 15 Mixed Cho-
rus 3.
December 3
EDWARD GATES
GGTed?,
GENERAL
Track Team 15 Tennis
Team 35 Glee Club 1, 2, 35
Octette 2, 3 5 Mixed Chorus
1, 2, 3: Chapel Choir 1, 2, 35
Corridor Patrol 35 Annual
Show 2, 3.
April 19
VICTOR GATES
aDick,,
VOCATIONAL
Glider Club 25 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 25 Senate
2.
January 24
ROBERT GEESEY
GGB0 bi,
SCIENTIFIC
Art Club 1, 35 Band 1.
April 24
AARON GENDEL
ccArt9a
GENERAL
Chemistry Club 25 Presi-
dent Home Room 35 Civic
Welfare Club 2.
August 22
E' ...,
3
1
1-,
lv. .
5
it
A
4
QW..-....,..,,...,
X
g,,n,.,..,,,..f
,.
A DONALD GENTILE
CC-Don!!
GENERAL
Ushering Club 3.
March 5
JAMES ,GEORGE
"1 immyn
GENERALX
Secretary Forestry. and
Outdoor Club 15 Forestry
and Outdoor Club -33 Art
Club 2g Vice President
Home Room 2. V
April 24
GLADYS GIBSON
CGGibby77
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 8, Secre-
tary- Entertainment Club 1:
Decorating Committee 2, 33
I-Ioripr Society 23 Secretary
Honor Society 33 Secretary
Home Room 23 President
Home Room 3, Glee Club 35
Biology Club 2 3 Girls League
I-Iogilor Roll 1, 2.
'75 August 26
SHERMAN GILL
"Sherm,'
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 23 Vice
President Physics and Radio
Club 39 Orchestra 29 Dance
Orchestra 25 Annual Show
3.
, I October 21
ALBERT GIOIOSA
56-Al!!
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2.
August 9
VIOLA GLADFELTER
66Vee9B
GENERAL
Senate 13 Glee Club 1, 2,
39 Octette 2, 33 Mixed Cho-
rus 1, 2, 33 Annual Show 1,
2, 33 Chapel Choir 1, 2, 3.
April 25
PATSY GENTILE
C5Pat97
VOCAEIONAL
Ushering Club 19 Vice
President Home Room 13
President Home Room 33
Band 23 Orchestra 2.
June 19
JAY GERLACH
ccjayu
GENERAL
Secretary Home Room 1,
President Marionette Club
2.
July 12
PAUL GIEG
Cdpaulii
GENERAL
President Home Room 3,
Squad Leaders' Club 1g
President Forestry and Out-
door Club 3g Decorating
Committee 2, 35 Horseshoe
Staff 33 Vice.President Par-
liamentary Law Club 23
Winner, Spelling Contest 3.
September 10
WILLIAM GILL
CCBIZUBS
GE NERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 35 Riiie Squad 3.
December 1
JOSEPH GIOIOSA
CGRitzy-77
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 39
Mountain Echo Staff 3, Jay
Vee Football 1, 2.
April 30
ALMA GLUNTZ
"A lma M alnmyn
GENERAL
Library Club 3, Enter-
tainment Club lg Modern
Novel Club 25 Decorating
Committee 25 Horseshoe
Staff 35 Glee Club 35 Girls
League Honor Roll 1, 2.
August 13
Page Forty-seven
Lols GONTER
HL097
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 13 Com-
mercial Club 1, 23 President
Home Room 1, 25 Glee Club
2, 35 Mixed Chorus 2, 35
Chapel Choir 2, 35 Annual
Show 2, 3.
March 8
DEAN Goss
CCRHSSBS
GENERAL
Vice President Home
Room 2.
November 25
MYRTLE GOTTSHALL
"Blondy',
GENERAL
Mixed Chorus 3.
January 4
F REDA GREEN
"Frizz"
GENERAL
Social Service Club 15
Newswriting Club 1, 25
Echo Staff 2.
May 21
BOYD GRIEFITH
"Buck"
GENERAL
September 25
C. RICHARD GRIFFITH
"Heinie,'
VOCATIONAL
Vice President Aviation
Club 3.
October 9
Page Forty-eight
ARDEN GOODMAN
Mfr'
GENERAL
Aviation Club 3.
June 16
LOUISE GOTTSHALL
"Louise', -
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 15
Rifle Squad 3.
January 5
LOVINA GRACE
GGViny55
GENERAL
Secretary Home Room 23
Rifle Squad 3.
January 29
LOUISE GREGC
G6Curly99
GENERAL
May 29
PAULINE GRIFFITH
Cipollyii
COMMERCIAL
J une 5
ROBERT GEIFEITH
C6B0b37
VOCATIONAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 3.
April 20
'R
JOSEPH GRILLO
5510635
VOCATIONAL
President Home Room 3.
September 21
ROSE GROBAN
66R0se99
GENERAL .
Art Club 13 President Art
Club 33 Horseshoe Staff 2,
3,3 Mountain Echo Sfafffly-f --
President Home Room 33
Glee Club 2, 33 Octette 33
Decorating Committee 33
Nominating Committee 33
Secretary National Honor
Society 3.
March 28
RHETTA GROVE
"Riza,'
GENERAL
August 19
CARL GRUBER
"Dutch"
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 33 Commercial Club 13
President Home Room 13
Secretary Home Room 2.
October 9
WILLIAM HALL'
CGBZJZIB
GENERAL V
August 27
CHARLES HAMILTON
"Charlie"
GENERAL
President Forestry and
Outdoor Club 33 Chemistry
Club 13 Vice President of
Home Room 2.
March 10
ANNE GRIMSHAW
C5Anne99
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 13 Athletic
Club 13 President Girls
League 33 President Home
Room 23 Secretary Senate
23 Mixed Chorus 23 Chapel
Choir 33 House of Repre-
sentatives 2.
September 3
DOROTHY GROVE
CCD0t99
GENERAL
Eebruary 27
LOUISE GROvEs
GGLOILS7
GENERAL
Athletic Club 13 Vice
President Home Room 13
Mixed Chorus 2, 33 Annual
Show 2, 33 Chapel Choir 3.
January 5
SARA HAINES
Cisally-73
GENERAL
Social Service Club 23 Art
Club 13 Modern Novel Club
13 Chapel Choir 3.
July 8 '
BEATRICE HALLER
c6Bee99
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 2, 33
Library Club 13 Mixed Cho-
rus 3.
June 6
MARY KATHRYN HAMILTON
"Cathie,'
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 2, 33
Dramatic Club 13 Secretary
Home Room 23 Mixed Cho-
rus 33 Home Nursing Club
1.
November 20
Page Forty-nine
G. RAY HAMMOND
CCPal93
GENERAL
Track Club 2, 35 President
Home Room 35 Jay Vee
Football 1, 25 .Tay Vee Bas-
ketball 15 Assistant Track
Manager 1.
February 22
EDWIN HART
CCBMSSEP
VOCATIO NAL
Auto Safety Club 25 Sec-
retary Home Room 15 Presi-
dent Home Room 3.
July 29
LESTER HARTSWICK
c:Let95
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor Club
35 Stage Craft Club 2.
November 24
JANE HAUSER
ufaniev
GENERAL
Secretary Dramatic Club
15 Dramatic Club 35 Presi-
dent Home Room 35 Rifle
Team 3.
April 11
GENE HAVLIN
uGen,e"
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 3.
September 30
E. KENNETH HEAPS
C6Kenny97
GENERAL
Vice President Parlia-
mentary Law Club 25
Treasurer . Hi-Y Club 35
Program :Committee 25 Re-
ception Committee 35 Presi-
dent Honor Society 35 Presi-
dent Home Room 1, 35 Vice
President Home Room 25
Senate 2.
December 30
Page Fifty
WILLIAM R. HARRISON
"Bill"
GENERAL
President Home Room 15
Glee Club 1, 35 Mixed Cho-
rus 35 Chapel Choir 35
Sports Club 1.
February 21
F ERN HART
HFern"
GENERAL
German Folk Song Club 3.
May 26
RAYMER HAULMAN
CCRay33
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 1, 25 Newswriting Club
25 Distribution Manager,
Mountain Echo 3.
November 26
RUTH HAUSER
t'Ru1:h,'
COMMERCIAL
Dramatic Club 15 Art
Club 15 Mixed Chorus 2, 35
Annual Show 2, 35 Chapel
Choir 3.
November 6
ROBERT HAYES
"Chestyv
VOCATIONAL
Aviation Club 35 Vice
President Home Room 1.
January 18
DORQTHY HEESS
'iDonie',
GENERAL
Treasurer Home Room 15
Secretary Home Room 25
President Home Room 35
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 35 An-
nual Shovv 1, 2, 35 Chapel
Choir 1, 2, 3.
February 24
MARGUERITE HEISLER
c:MaI-ge: '
HOME ECONOMICS
Social Service Club 1, 25
World Friendship Club 3:
Glee Club 1.
' RENETTA HEISS
"Nenie',
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 13
Modern Novel Club 25
Newswriting Club 33 Moun-
tain Echo Staff 34 Secretary
Home Room 15 Vice Presi-
March 8 dent Home Room 2g In-
terior Decorating Club 15
German Folk Song Club 3.
August 8
WILFORD HELSEL CLYDE HENDERSON
C6Will77 6CRed73
GENERAL GENERAL
Chemistry Club 23 Out- Secretary Home Room 1.
door Club 1. "N W' ' June 16
August 6
DAVID HENDERSON ANNE HENGSTLER
"Dibbie,, h "Annex
GENERAL GENERAL
Glider Club 25 Decorating
Committee 33 Secretary
Home Room 1, Assistant
Manager Varsity Football
25 Manager Varsity Foot-
ball 3.
October 16
ALICE HEPNER
"Alice,,
GENERAL
Vice President Social
Service Club 13 Newswrit-
ing Club 2 5 Vice President
Modern Language Club 3:
Sociatas Latina. 15 Moun-
tain Echo 2, 3.
February 3
VICTOR HERSHEY
GCVic!7
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 2, 3.
March 18 .
LUELLA HESS
"Walid,
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 3g Enter-
tainment Club 1g Decorat-
Entertainment Club lg
Finance Committee 35 Glee
Club lg Mixed Chorus 23
Dramatic Club 25 Chapel
Choir 37 Nominating Com-
mittee 2.
September 20
CLEMENT E. HERSHEY
uclelfbv
GENERAL
Botany Club 1, Hi-Y Club
2, 39 Radio Announcer,
Boys Federation 3, Glee
Club 2, 3 5 Mixed Chorus 1,
2, 3.
October 8
KENNETH HESS
"Spanish,,
' VOCATIONAL
Vice President Home
Room 23 President Home
Room 3.
May 1
J. FRANK HILDABRAND
"Birdie"
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 13 Sports Club 3.
ing Committee 35 Secretary July 24
Home Room 25 Glee Club 15
Mixed Chorus 2.
August 10
Page Fifty-one
LYNN' HILDEBRAND
"Wink,'
GENERAL
Ushering Club 25 Sports
Club 15 Decorating Com-
mittee 3 5 President Home
Room 15 Debating Team 3.
- April 11
HARRIETT HINER
'6Harrie"
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Modern
Novel Club 15 Mixed Cho-
rus 1, 25 Chapel Choir 35
Annual Show 2, 3.
.Tune 12
GRAYCE HIRST
:aG rdyas
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1, 2.
February 22
.
ARTHUR HITE
SGA rt75
VOCATIONAL
Stage Craft Club 25 Vice
President Home Room 15
Treasurer Home Room 2.
November 30
HENRY HOFFMAN
66Henny97
GENERAL
Aviation Club 35 Biology
Club 15 Glider Club 25 Band
1, 2, 3.
January 27
BETTY HOFMANN
"Betts"
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Chemistry Club 15 Execu-
tive Committee 2, 35 Honor
Society 2, 35 Treasurer
Home Room 15 Chapel
Choir 2, 35 Annual Show 2,
35 Girls League Honor Roll
1, 25 D. A. R. History Award
2.
December 2
Page Fifty-two
JAMES HILEMAN
66 ' 37
fun
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 25 Avia-
tion Club 35 Modern Novel
Club 1.
May 6
CLAYTON HIPPO
6CKeggy97
GENERAL
Vice President Dramatic
Club 25 Hi-Y Club 15 Presi-
dent Home Room 1, 2, 33
Jay Vee Football 15 Base-
ball Team 15 Band 2, 3.
February 11
MARIAN HIRST
"Hirstie"
GENERAL
'Dramatic Club 15 Athletic
Club 15 Treasurer Athletic
Club 2, 35 Treasurer Girls
League 35 Hockey Team 2,
35 Basketball Team 2, 35
Baseball Team 1, 2, 35
Squad Leaders Club 3.
April 7
LEROY HOBSON
G6Ditty39
5 GENERAL
Modern Novel Club 15
Secretary Home Room 1, 25
President Home Room 3:
Glce Club 35 Mixed Chorus
35 Chapel Choir 3.
January 9
FRANCES HOFFNER
'Tritzyv
GENERAL
Library Club 1.
March 13
ELIZABETH HOGEMYER
Gfgettyjb
GENERAL
Modern Novel Club 15
Glee Club 1, 2, 35 Mixed
Chorus 1, 2, 35 Octette 2.
September 30
MARGARET Hocc
CGMarg9!
GENERAL
Refreshment Committee 25
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 35 Chapel
Choir 2, 35 Annual Show 1,
2, 35 Girls League Honor
R011 1, 2.
May 15
KENNETH HOOVER
CCKUL37
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 35
Aviation Club 35 Treasurer
Home Room lfiywvee
Football 1.
July 18
GLENN A. Hoss, JR.
GCP0ny7!
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 25 Stamp
Club 15 Physics and Radio
Club 34 Rifle Club 35 Jay
Vee Football 2, 35 Band
2, 3. ,
J une 1
PAUL HOULDSWORTH
CCH0lly75
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 2.
July 2
ETHEL HOWELL
"Essiev
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1, 35 Secre-
tary Athletic Club 25 Treas-
urer Home Room 35 Track
Team 1, 2, 35 Baseball Team
1, 2, 35 Hockey Team 2, 3.
December 12
DoRIs HUFFORD
"Dorsey"
GENERAL
Athletic Club 15 Secretary
Home Room 15 Vice Presi-
dent I-Iome Room 25 Mixed
Chorus 35 Chapel Choir 35
Annual Show 3.
August 2
HARRY HOOPER
G6H0ug79
VOCATIONAL
Glider Club 1, 2.
March 23
EDWARD HORTON
"Eddie,'
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor Club
15 Physics and Radio Club
15 Vice President Hom-e
Room 2.
November 1
WARREN HOSTLER
ffspikev
GENERAL
May is
WILLIAM HOUSLEY
5CBill53
GENERAL
President Dramatic Club
35 Secretary Marionette Club
15 German 'Folk Song Club
35 Refreshment Committee
25 President Home Room 1,
35 Vice President Home
Room 25 Senate 35 Band 1,
2, 35 Orchestra 1, 3.
August 29
Lois HUEBNER
uTi7TLl7l.y,,
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1, 25 Bas-
ketball Team 1.
September 14
DOROTHY HUGHES
HDD!!!
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club
November 10
Page Fifty-three
l
l 1
BETTY HULL'
Haezs'
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Refresh-
ment Committee 35 Moun-
tain Echo 15 Secretary Home
Room 15 Mixed Chorus 25
Chapel Choir 35 Annual
Show 2, 35 Girls League
Honor Roll 1, 25 Handbook
Staff 1.
July 11
HELEN HUMM
MTILCIECTU
GENERAL
Social Service Club 35 Ath-
letic Club 15 Hiking Club 2.
December 31
ROBERT HUNTER
6CB0b93
'VOCATIONAL
Dramatic Club 25 Aviation
Club 3.
October 27
ANN IANERI
"Nina"
GENERAL
Modern Language Club 3.
December 28
HAZEL E. IMLER
g'T0mmy7'
'GE NERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Biology
Club 15 Zoology Club 35
Marionette Club 2.
September 2
EARL IRWIN
65Lefty93 ,
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor Club
1, 2, 35 Squad Leaders Club
2, 35 President Home Room
15 Vice President Home
Room 2.
April 28
Page Fifty-four
CHESTER HUMBERT, I R.
Gfchef
GENERAL
Ushering Club 25 News-
writing Club 15 Mountain
Echo 1.
March 28
LAURA JEAN HUMM
"Frenchy',
GENERAL'
Dramatic Club 35 Athletic
Club 15 Hiking Club 1, 2.
October 25
EUNICE HYLE
fipollyn
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 25
Gregg Writer Club 35 Com-
mercial Club 35 President
Home Room 3.
October 25
DONALD ICKES
66D0n59
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 35 Forestry
and Outdoor Club 25 Phys-
ics and Radio Club 1.
January 5
NORMAN 0. IMLER
C A k'Norm',
GENERAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 35
Forestry and Outdoor Club
1.
May 1
R. JANE ISENBERG
cclaniess
COMMERCIAL
Library Club 15 Vocation-
al Club 25 Modern Novel
Club 2.
August 12
AZALIA JACKSON
"1 ackiev
GENERAL
Botany Club 2, Entertain-
ment Club 3.
October 16
DOROTHY JOHNSON
c:D0t99
GENERAL
Hiking Club 1, 2.
November 7 Y
MARION JOHNSTON
ccjohnnyas
COMMERCIAL
Vice President Home
Room j1',-T25 Mixed Chorus
2, 3. f'
February 24
DOROTHY JONES .
CCDOIQ7
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Glee Club 1, 2, 3, Mixed
Chorus 1, 2, 39 Refreshment
Committee 3, Annual Show
1, 2, 3.
June 28
IRVIN L. KACHELRIES
"'Kack',
VOCATIONAL
Secretary Home Room 1.
October 12
' GEORGE H. KALB
66Herby79
PRE-ENGINEERING
Vice President Home
Room 1, 25 Art Club 13
Physics and Radio Club 35
Orchestra 1, 3.
August 1
LENA J AGDHUBER
56Le 99
COMMERCIAL
Entertainment Club 2, 35
Mixed Chorus 23 Annual
Show 2.
May 30
q HARRY JOHNSTON
Sdlladv
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 2, Avia-
tion Club Sg Botany Club 1,
December 14
CHARLES JONES
cclonesyaz
GENERAL
Track Club 1, Newswrit-
ing Club 13 President Home
Room 19 Track Team 25
Band 1, 33 Orchestra 3.
February 1
ELLSWORTH JONES
GGElZy77
GENERAL '
Hi-Y Club 1, Tumbling
Club 1, 3. '
July 20
R. WILSON KAGARISE
C GK,eggy95
VOCATIONAL
October 9
ROBERT H. KARALFA
664801957
VOCATIONAL
Vice President Home
Room 1, Hi-Y Club 1, 2,
Glee Club 1, 2, 35 Mixed
Chorus 1, 2, 35 Photography
Club 1, 2, Pep Club 1, 2, 3.
July 10
Page Fifty-five
VERNON E. KARLSON
66Bud53
VOCATIONAL
Aviation Club 35 Nominat-
ing Committee 2.
July 13
EDNA Y. KARPE
CEKarpe99
GENERAL
Social Service Club 25
Mixed Chorus 35 Newswrit-
ing Club 25 First Aid Club
35 Nursing Club 2.
May 10
JOHN A. KEKALOS
C 6Kiki,3
CLASSICAL
Modern Language Club 35
Horseshoe Sta.H 3.
May 1
MAXWELL M. KELLER
GEMM!!
VOCATIONAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 35 Rifle Squad 3.
November 17
EFFIE M. KELLY
CCE'gie9!
COMMERCIAL
Vice President, Home
Room 15 Newswriting Club
15 Dramatic Club 1, 35
Mixed Chorus 25 Chapel
Choir 2, 3.
January 7
ELEANOR E. KENNEDY
GGKay99
COMMERCIAL
Dramatic Club 35 Marion-
ette Club 1, 25 President,
Marionette Club 15 Vice
President, Marionette Club 2.
December 5
Page Fifty-six
ORA I. KARNS
Ciolciex
GENERAL
Athletic Club 15 Track
Team 15 Glee Club 35 Mixed
Chorus 25 Annual Show 2.
November 27
ANNETTE M. KEARNS
CCB 77
00py
GENERAL
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 35
Chapel Choir 1, 2, 35 Annual
Show 1, 2, 3.
June 20
ALWILDA E. KELLER
"Billie,'
SECRETARIAL
President, Home Room 1,
2, 35 Dramatic Club 35
Gregg Writer Club 35 Mixed
Chorus 3.
August 3
RANDALL C. KELLER
IGRan37
GENERAL
President, Home
Room 25 President, Home
Room 35 Hi-Y Club 2, 35
Track Team 3.
January 12
Vice
MARY H. KEMP
"Chookie,'
GENERAL
Athletic Club 15 Mixed
Chorus 3.
March 8
DoRo'rHY J. KENSINGER
' cc D atv
GENERAL
Social Service Club 1, 2.
June 2
FRANK R. KEPLER
MFrankie',
GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room 1.
June 27
MARY HELEN KIEWICZ
"PeachyH
GENERAL
Library Club 1 3 Modern
Language Club 3 3 Mixed
Chorus 13 Chapel'Cho'H 1.
August 22
GRACE KLEFFEL
"Gracie,,
GENERAL
fMillheim High School!
Glee Club 1, 23 Program
Committee 13 Science Club
13 History and Travel Club
23 Orchestra 2.
'December 15
CARL A. KLINE
caArt:7
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 13 Glee Club 1, 2, 33
Mixed Chorus 2, 33 Chapel
Choir 2, 3.
February 15
FRIEDA H. KLINE
GCHOney53
GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room 23 Decorating Com-
mittee 2, 33 Social Serv-
ice Club 33 Dramatic Club
1, 25 Athletic Club 13 Na-
tional Honor Society 33 An-
nual Show 3.
May 11
FRANCES E. KNIPPLE
'Trenclf'
GENERAL
September 12
RAYMOND J. KIESEWETTER
G6Ray?!
VOCATIONAL
Physics and Radio Club
2, 3.
February 2
ROBERT J. KIMMEL
CCB0b79
GENERAL
Track Club 33 Art Club 23
Decorating Committee 3.
May 21
SYLVIA KLEIN
CGSIYZAQB
GENERAL
Modern Novel Club 1g
Mixed Chorus 23 Chapel
Choir 3.
January 19
M. DALE KLINE
aloe E79 '
GENERAL
Track Team 2.
April 28
VERA M. KNEPPER
"Vera"
COMMERCIAL
Entertainment Club 13
Echo Staff 33 Glee Club 25
Chapel Choir 3.
J une 19
J 01-IN W. KNISELY
"Hayseed"
PRE-ENGINEERING
Secretary, Boys Federa-
tion 33 Track Team 33 Con-
cessions Club 33 Forestry
and Outdoor Club 1, 2, 3.
December 11
Page Fifty-seven
,IQ
.EQ ae... 'fi J
DONALD P. KRAFT
6iD0n!9
GENERAL
Treasurer, Honor Society
35 Treasurer Junior Class5
Echo Staff 25 Chairman,
Refreshment Committee 25
Ushering Club 25 Botany
Club 15 Hi-Y Club 2, 35 Glee
Club 35 Mixed Chorus 35
Dramatic Club 2.
August 24
FRED LAFFERTY
'clfritza'
GENERAL
Hi-Y Club 1, 35 Secretary
Sports Club 35 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 25 Jay
Vee Football 15 Varsity
Football 2, 35 Baseball
Team 2, 35 Orchestra 2, 3.
March 12
BEATRICE LAMBOUR
66Bea53
GENERAL
Newswriting Club 15 Dra-
matic Club 1, 25 Handbook
Staff 25 Chapel Choir 2, 35
Orchestra 35 Glee Club 35
gctette 35 Mixed Chorus 2,
March 2
RUSSELL LANDIS
ccludgesa
VOCATIONAL
Track Team 35 Varsity
Basketball 35 Jay Vee Bas-
ketball 1.
January 14
HAROLD LAUVER
GCPinky33
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 35 Stage Craft Club 25
Jay Vee Basketball 2.
November 7
GRACE LAWS
"Shorzy,'
GENERAL
Social Service Club 3.
August 29
Page Fifty-eight
MARGARET C. KUTz
CCPeg97
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 15
Chapel Choir 35 Mixed Cho-
rus 2, 3.
September 5
PAUL LAMADE
CCDOCSQ
GENERAL'
Newswriting Club 2, 35
Echo Staf 2, 35 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 15 Assist-
ant Manager Baseball Team
1.
April 25
RUTH LAMP
cgPOSt,,
GENERAL
Athletic Club 15 Mixed
Chorus 1, 2, 35 Annual Show
2, 35 Chapel Choir 1, 2, 3.
April 18
ROSE LASSER
"Rosie"
GENERAL
Athletic Club 15 Basket-
ball Team 35 Orchestra 2.
March 21 V
ELIZABETH LAWS
"Slim,',
GENERAL
Social Service Club 3.
April 16
MARIAN LAWSON
G6Linky79
GENERAL
Social Service Club 15
Vice President Marionette
Club 15 Glee Club 1, 2, 35
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 35 Chapel
Choir 2, 35 Annual 2, 3.
January 21
IRENE LEADER '
"Renew
GENERAL
Social Service Club 15
Athletic Club 15 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 25 Presi-
dent Home Room 35 Mixed
Chorus 2.
April 9
JOSEPH LEFLER
6610897
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 35 Chem-
istry Club 15 Executive
Committee 25 Orchestra 2.
January 27
LEWIS LEHRER
KLOZIJGH
GENERAL
,Forestry and Outdoor
Club 35 LSecretary Botany
Club 15' Botany Club 25
Treasurer Home Room 15
Parliamentary Law Club 1,
2.
October 23
FRED LEIDY
"Fri1:z,'
GENERAL
Botany Club 15 Physics
and Radio Club 3.
February 25
SARAH LOUISE LEVAN
CCSally79
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Modern
Novel Club 25 Program
Committee 25 Chairman
Decorating Committee 35
President Home Room 15
Mixed Chorus 2, 35 Hand-
book Staff 35 Chapel Choir
2, 3.
December 9
WILBUR LINDBERG
"Wilbur',
SCIENTIFIC
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 25 Jay Vee Football 1.
June 21
LOUISE LEE
"Louise"
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Refresh-
ment Committee 2, 35 Hand-
book Staff 25 Mountain
Echo 15 Honor Society 2, 35
Senate 35 Glee Club 35
Mixed Chorus 2, 3.
March 31
JOHN LEHMAN
'glohnnef'
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 25 Ush-
ering Club 3.
April 30
HERMAN LEIDEL
"Che.sty',
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 33
Vice President Home Room
15 Jay Vee Football 3g
.Baseball 2, 3.
July 30
EDGAR LEIGHTY
GGEggS99
VOCATIONAL
Jay Vee Football 3.
May 30
ELIZABETH LEWIS
6CIttS99
GENERAL
Art Club 3.
January 8
DORIS LINDEMER
66Lindy77
GENERAL
January 26
Page Fifty-nine
MARTHA LINE
I "Maiden
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 13 Athletic
Club 1, Secretary Home
Room 19 Chapel Choir 2, 3,
Mixed Chorus 2, 3.
September 26
CHARLES LLEWELLYN
64Lu92
GENERAL
Glee Club 2, 3, Mixed
Chorus 2, 33 Chapel Choir
2, 33 Auto Safety Club 23
Botany Club 15 Octette 3.
August 27
CHARLES LOCKARD
i'Charlie',
GENERAL
Band 2, 33 Orchestra 2, 35
Dance Orchestra 2, 39 An-
nual Show 2, 3.
November 16
MADALENE LOGUE
66-Peg99
GENERAL
Chemistry Club 1.
May 9
FRANK LOUDON
"Dick,,
GENERAL
Hi-Y Club 25 Sports Club
35 Athletic Club 15 Civic
Welfare Club 3.
September 16
HELEN LOYER
"Helen,'
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 39
Chemistry Club 1.
October 17
Page Sixty
BESSIE LINGENFELTER
CCBetlyS9
GENERAL
Social Service Club 1
Secretary Home Room 2
Mixed Chorus 2, 3.
February 9
JAMES LLOYD
afimmiei'
GENERAL
Botany Club 1, 2, Presi-
dent Botany Club 33 Band 1
2, 39 Orchestra 1, 2, 3.
November 14
HAROLD LOCKARD
"Lockard,'
GENERAL
Hi-Y Club 1: Orchestra. 1,
23 Rifle Team 3.
June 3
HAZEL LONGENECKER
'iNeclcy"
GENERAL
Student Council 1.
April 20
LARUE LOWMASTER
6CRudy33
GENERAL
Dramatic Club lg Athletic
Club 1.
April 9
THADDEUS LOZINSKI
CCTad57
VOCATIONAL
August 9
PAUL LUCKNER
"Dutch,'
VOCATIONAL
Stage Craft Club 25 Avia-
tion Club 3.
January 28
HARRIET LYNCH
5CPinky7 7
GENERAL
Glee Club 15 German
Folk Song Club 3. W,
November 7
REBECCA LYoNs
'gBecky,'
COMMERCIAL
Dramatic Club 25 Athletic
Club 15 Vice President Home
Room 15 President Home
Room 25 Mixed Chorus 1, 35
Annual Show 1, 3.
December 9
H. RICHARD MCCAMANT
fGDiCk,,
GENERAL
Newswriting Club 1 5
Mountain Echo 15 Vice
President Home Room 25
Glee Club 1, 35 Mixed Cho-
rus 2, 35 Chapel Choir 2, 3.
January 5
CORA MCCLARREN
ccsisns
GENERAL
Chemistry Club 15 Treas-
urer Home Room 15 Chapel
Choir 1, 25 Annual Show 2,
3
February 1
CAROL MCCLURE
"Sc0ttie,'
GENERAL
Art Club 25 President
Modern Novel Club 35 Sec-
BEATRICE LUPFER
6CBee7,
COMMERCIAL
Glee Club 1, 35 Octette 35
Mixed Chorus 25 Chapel
Choir 35 Annual Show 2, 3.
January 19
MARIAN LYONS
'cMariannev
GENERAL
Secretary Modern Novel
Cgb 35 Nominating Com-
mittee 3g President Home
Room 35 Hiking Club 15
Handbook Staff 2.
May 17
ROBERT MCCACHRAN
GCB0b73
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 35 Stamp Club 1, 2.
September 30
MADOLYN MCCLAIN
CGMadg899
COMMERCIAL
Glee Club 15 Octette 25
Mixed Chorus 25 Chapel
Choir 35 Annual Show 2, 3.
October 14
ELLSW ORTH MCCLOSKEY
nlrislf'
VOCATIONAL
July 13
RUTH MCCOLLUM
"Ruthie"
GENERAL
Social Service Club 2, 35
Entertainment Club 15
Pet-ary Hflme R00111 2: Track Chemistry Club 15 President
Team 25 Mixed Chorus 35
Mountain Echo 2.
April 9
Home Room 1.
November 4
Page Sixty-one
IONA MCCONN1-:LL
"Muon
COMMERCIAL
Vice President Home
Room 15 Mixed Chorus 2, 3.
February 16
JOSEPH MCCORMICK
6510697
GENERAL
May 9
DUNCAN MCFARLANE
'gDunk',
GENERAL
Secretary Home Room 29
Band 2, 3.
May 1
DOROTHY MCGEARY
IEDM!!
GENERAL
Vice President Home
Room 2. .
July 20
JOHN MCKEE
CCSZLJSQ,
,GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 19 Secretary Home
Room 1.
August 25
GUY ,MCLAUCHLIN
ECMGCD
GENERAL
,Sports Club 3, Jay Vee
Football 2, 33 Basketball 3.
- October 13
Page Sixty-two
IRENE MCCORMICK
"Rena"
GENERAL
Library Club 13 Enter-
tainment Club 3g Secretary
Home Room 25 President
Home Room 35 German
Folk Song Club 3.
February 17
GILBERT MCCREA
i'Dubie',
GENERAL
Track Club 33 Track
Team 2, 35 Rifle Club 3.
October 4
HAZEL MCGARRY
6 6Kay97
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 1, Enter-
tainment Club 2g Secretary
Home Room 1.
August 11
THELMA MCGREGOR
"Dutch',
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 3 3
President Home Room 1 5
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3.
1 May 25
MARY MCKINNEY
G6Ree,5
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 19 Recep-
tion Committee 3, Glee Club
1, 2, 3g Octette 2, 35 Mixed
Chorus 1, 2, 3.
May 2
RUITA MCMAHON
Cildyn
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1, 25 Squad
Leaders' Club 3.
September 17
MARY ELLEN MCMINN
"Mickey, '
COMMERCIAL
Entertainment Club 15
Commercial Club 3.
April 9
ROBERT MCNAUGHTON
ffzwiclfeyi'
GENERAL
Nominating Committee 35
Echo Staff 1, 2, 35 President
Boys Federation 35 Glee
Club 2, 35 Mixed Chorus-2,
35 Debating Team 2, 35
Quill and Scroll Society 2, 35
Honor Society 3.,
September 3
CARL MCVICKER
'Vicki'
GENERAL
4 Stage Craft Club 35 News-
writing Club 25 Horseshoe
Staff Member 2, 35 Nomi-
nating Committee 3.
November 13
'Z CHARLES B. NIADARA
"Chick,'
VOCATIONAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 35 Ride Team 3.
October 10
FRANCES M. MAJSZAK
"Frame"
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 35
Chemistry Club 1.
November 22
SHELDON A. MALLORY
C6Red77
VOCATIONAL
Treasurer, Home Room 1
Auto Safety Club 2, 3 5 Avia.:
tion Club 3.
May 31
MYRTLE MCMONIGAL
"Mickey"
GENERAL
Modern Language Club 35
German Folk Song Club 3.
A October 31
DREXEL MCTAVISH
uSconyv
CLASSICAL
Dramatic Club 25 Chapel
Choir 35 Sports Club 15
Newswriting Club 25' Moun-
tain Echo 2, 35 Recording
Secretary Boys Federation
35 Jay Vee Football 25
Band 2, 3.
.Tune 7
ALICE M. NIACKEY
G6MaC77
GENERAL
November 26
GWIN L. IWADARA
'gGwin,,
Hi-Y Club 2, 35 Sports
Club 15 Tennis Team 2, 35
Squad Leaders Club 1, 2, 35
Tumbling Squad 35 Civic
Welfare Club 2, 3.
March 29
JOHN T. MAl,LIGAN
ufohnnyv
GENERAL
Physics and Radio Club 2.
- May 31
ABE MANDEL
GCA bei?
GENERAL
Sports Club 15 German
Folk So-ng Club 35 C-ivic
Welfare Club 2.
September 17
Page Sixty-three
CLAIR MANLEY
"Boots"
GENERAL
September 3
CATHERINE V. MARICQ
c:KUle,,
GENERAL
Social Service Club 3.
September 3
VIRGIL MARMIE
KiVi,-gi,
COMMERCIAL
March 31
PHYLLIS MARSDEN
5GPhe,7
GENERAL
Orchestra 1, 2, 35 Glee
Club 3.
February 21
HENRY R. MARSHALL
"Hennie"
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 3:
President Auto Safety Club
3.
November 8
V1oLA F. MARSHALL
' 6:Vi27
COMMERCIAL -
-August 27
Page Sixty-four
LESTER S. MARCH
CCLeS97
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 25 Mixed
Chorus 3: Biology Club 15
Chapel Choir 3.
October 25
WILLIAM S. MARKS
4'Bill"
GENERAL
Concessions Club 39 Stage
Craft Club 25 Botany Club
1.
May 17
HANNA A. MARSDEN
"Harman
GENERAL
Secretary, Home Room 17
Athletic Club 1.
January 25
W. EDWIN MARSHALL
"Eddie',
GENERAL
Hi-Y Club 13 Sports Club
3, Jay Vee Football Team
15 Varsity Football Squad 2,
35 Baseball Team 2, 35 Jay
Vee Basketball 1.
January 14
SOPH IA A. MARSHALL
aToots',
GENERAL
April 19
JOSEPH M. NIARTELLA
QGHGHIIRFTQ,
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 2, 3.
May 17
GERTRUBEAC.fiiViXiiri-Nfl
ECGEI-ky!! V,
,E ,
Social Service -Club lg
Mixed Chorus 2, 3g Dra-
matic Club lg Chapel Choir
2, 3. , ,,,i
July 4
ANN L. BKIATEER
"Ann" fi '
GENERAL-'S Y A
Social Service 3, Club 3,
Mixed Chorus 2,, 3,-:Dra.1-na-
tic Club 1, Glee,gClub 1.
April 17 y
DOLORES MATTAS
6GDee99
GENERAL
President Home Room 1,
39 Vice President Home
Room 23 Glee Club 1, 2, 3:
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 35 Echo
Staff 3, Vice President Jun-
ior Classg Secretary Senior
Class.
March 7
LEON W. MAURER
"Leann
GENERAL
Natural History Club 15
Glee Club 2, 35 Octette 2,
Mixed Chorus 3.
December 7 -
MARTHA JANE M. .Mimnsiz
, "Marnie"
, GENERAL
Library Club x2, 3.
December 5
M. MAENMEESE Vie, A
f 673
CLASSICAL
Honor Society 2, 33 Chair-
man, Decorating- Committee
2 3 Chairman, . ,Refreshment
Committee 35 Dramatic Club
1, Library Club 25 Enter-
tainment Club 3g Interior
Decorating Club 1. - '
March 17
DAN MARTINO
"Dutchi'
' VOCATIONAL
Aviation Club 3.
December 14
D. ALMEDA MATHIEU
GSAZJD
GEORGE REED
' Entertainment Club 3.
f October 6
ALBERTINA R. MATTERN
"Teenie"
GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room '15 President, Home
Room 3: Social Service Club
2.
May 27
DOROTHY M. NIEADER
MDOLQS
GENERAL .
Library Club 2, 35 Presi-
dent, Library Club 3 3 Ath-
letic Club 1.
November 21
DORIS E. NIEEK
i EDU677
- GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room 2, Athletic Club 19
Annual Show 2, 3, Mixed
Chorus 2.
December 8
MILDRED F. MEGAHAN
"Milken
GENERAL
Social Service Club 3:
Library Club 2.
September 15
Page Sixty-five
A. JEAN MELCIIER
"Blondie"
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Enter-
tainment Club 2, 35 Athletic
Club 15 Band 15 Orchestra 3.
, 1 December 24
"ii 'EVIOLET BL NIENSCII
. .- ..,N 5CValiB97
e GENERAL ,
Social Service Club 25 En-
tertainment Club 15 Secre-
tary, Home Room 25 Glee
Club 1, 2, 35 Mixed Chorus
1, 25 Chapel Choir 2, 3.
N 'A " "cl 5':7'00t0b9P '28 A
FLCfliENCE Mf?MeiERi.'EY
.
Social SeryicefA'Cfub 15
Mixed, Qlioriirgj, 2,
. Maman il 5 it '
BRITIAN L. MILLER
5 , 'fBrif' '
f . GENERAL
Secretary, Home Room 15,
Sociga1iService-Club A '
f . July 28' ,
'MEEQF954?i5ff5.5"i:fM1LLER
YZOCAHONALS 5
Atitoi Safety iciub 2, 35
Glidier Club ,fu "-, ' 1
3 March 5 Z
JoI1N"E. MILLER, JR.
i ccjohnnyv
I A GENERAL
Secretary, Home Room 15
Associate Editor, Mountain
,Echo L 25 Editor-in-Chief
:Mountain Echo 35 Quill and
.Sgro11,2, 35 Band 2, 3 5
O'rchestra.' 3. '
February 14
Page Sixty-six
2, 3. .
M. LORRAINE MELsoN
c'Dimples',
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 3.
" February 8
LILLIAN I. MENTZER
6!PilZ97
GENERAL I
Vice President, Home
Room 1, 25 President, Home
Room 35 Athletic Club 15
Dramatic Club 15 Mixed
Chorus 1, 25 Chapel Choir
September 1
ARLINE J. MILLER
I ccEney5s '
' COMMERCIAL,
'Commercial Club 15 Glee
'Club 35 Mixedi Chorus' 35
Social Service 'Club 1. I
, 4Aprilv 10
CLYDE- 0. MILLER f
"Peck"
. GENERAL
President, Botany Club 15
Glee Club 1, 2, 35 Octette 1,
2, 35 Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 35
Chapel Choir 2, 3.
A June 26 .
, HARRY J. MILLER
CCMOESJ
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 2, 3.
April 11
MARION K. MILLER
"Peany',
GENERAL
Vice President, A Home
Room 15 Aviation Club 2.
July 11 W
MARY HELEN MILLER
"Mary Helena
in CLASSTCAL
Vice President, Home
Room 23 Entertainment
Club 33 Newswriting Club
23 Mixed Chorus 3.
December 8
ROBERT N. MILLER, JR.
55B0b77
GENERAL
Vice President, Forestry
and Outdoor"Club 33 Track
Club 13 Jay Vee Football
Team 33 Track Team 2, 33
German Folk Song Club 3.
April 24
THOMAS E. MILLER
U 66T0m7!
. GENERAL .
Treasurer, Forestry and
Outdoor. Club V33 Chemistry
Club 23,3 Track Team 2, 3 3
Tennis 1vTeam 2, 33 Orches-
tra. 2, 33 German Folk Song
Club 3.3-
4. May 6
JOSEPHINE R. MILLS
65.1029
GENERAL
Sports Club lg Athletic
Club 23 Squad Leaders'
Club 3.
April 28
MARJ ORIE Ml'FCHELL
'iMizch,'
GENERAL
Art Club 23 Zoology Club
'13 Athletic Club 13 Glee
Club 23 Mixed Chorus 1, 2,
3. A
April 18
JAMES L. MONAHAN
Hfimmiev
GENERAL
President, Home Room 1,
2, 33 President, Senior Class
33 Senate 23 Baseball Team
23 President, Hi-Y Club 13
Decorating Committee 2.
September 15
PAULINE E. MILLER
Gipollyii
' ' ACADEMIC
Secretary, World Friend-
ship Club 3.
November 3
THELMA C. IVIILLERC '
CSTIWZ77 , I
GENERAL - ' A
Dramatic Club 33 Enter-
tainment Club I 23 Art Club
23 Athletic Club 1, 23 Glee
Club 13 Mixed Chorus 2.
June 6
W. WALLACE MILLER
A "Wally"
GENERAL
Auto Safety Club 3 3 Art
Club 1. '
July 17
IJ. EDWARD MILTON
"Eddie"
GENERAL i
Vice President, Home
Room 1, 2, 33 Track Club
1, 2, 3g Vice President,
Sports Club 3, Varsity Foot-
ball Squad 1, 2, 33 Track
Team 1, 2, 3. '
March 20
EUGENE MONAHAN '
GCM0ny57
GENERAL
Hi-Y Club 1.
June 24
F AY R. MONTGOMERY
Kskipii
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 2, 33 FOI'-
estry and Outdoor Club 19
Decorating Committee 3. .
March 18
Page Sixty-seven
AMELIA M. MONT1
"Millie,'
GENERAL
Secretary, Home Room 2,
Social Service Club 3.
March 7
DOROTHY E. MOORE
MDD!!!
COMMERCIAL
Art Club 13 Botany Club 3.
May 8
MARY MORELLI
66Mary9!
GENERAL
Social Service Club 3:
First Aid Club 3.
October 9
ROBERT G. MOYER
6CB0b!5
GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room 15 Auto Safety Club
2g Ushering Club 13 Track
Team 13 Glee Club 1, 2, 33
Octette 33 Mixed Chorus 1,
2, 35 Annual Show 2, 3.
September 23
ANDREW MUIR
"Teak"
VOCATIONAL
Vice President, Home
Room 1, Track Club 2, 3:
Track Team 1, 2, 33 Varsity
Basketball Squad 33 Glee
Club 2, 35 Mixed Chorus 2,
3.
May 11
ARTHUR MUSTO
6CArt95
GENERAL
February 7
Page Sixty-eight
CLAUDIA F. MOORE
SCX!!
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 13 Mixed
Chorus 33 Chapel Choir 3,
Annual Show 3.
July 8
LOUISE F. LIORAN
"Wl1.eezyv
COMMERCIAL
Commercial Club 1, 2.
December 3
SARA JANE MOSES
HMO!!
GENERAL
President, Home Room 1:
Senate 39 Athletic Club 15
Executive- Committee 25
Hockey Team 2, Mixed
Chorus 2, 33 Annual Show
1, 2, 3: Corridor Patrol
Captain 3.
' April 19
VERVA J. MOYER
66Vee73
GENERAL
Vice, President, Home
Room 13 Latin Club 1.
August 24
ALICE BELLE MUSSER
"Belle"
GENERAL
Secretary, Home Room 1,
President Home Room 3,
Dramatic Club 1, Mixed
Chorus 2, 33 Chapel Choir
35 Annual Show 35 Hiking
Club 1.
October 25
BURTRAM F. MYERS
"Burt"
GENERAL
Modern Novel Club 23 Re-
freshment Committee 39
Echo Staff 35 German Folk
Song Club 3.
January 17
DOROTHY E. MYERS
CGDOZD7
COMMERCIAL
President, Home Room 1.
August 4
AMEENE NAMEY
"Squire:'
GENERAL
Auto Safety Club 2, Hi-Y
Club 39 Jay Vee Football 3.
October 7
LLOYD B. NELSON
"Swede"
VOCAT IONAL
Vice President, Home
Room 25 Auto Safety Club
25 Concessions Club 29
Aviation Club 3.
November 22
1-
VIVIAN E. NELSON
65 Viv!!
COMMERCIAL
Secretary, Home Room lg
Vice President, Home Room
25 Basketball 1, 23 Athletic
Club 1 23 Ushering Club 1,
25 House of Representatives
2.
October 19
LILLIAN NEUMAN
GGLZIZJQ
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 3.
September 12
JOHN NEVEDAL
"Johnny"
VOCATIONAL
November 23
JOHN E. MYERS
Cilollnnyii
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Vice President, Home
Room 13 Stage Craft Club
3, Hi-Y Club 1, Cross Coun-
try Club 1.
January 3
ENES NATALE
MES!
GENERAL
Social Service Club 2,
Chemistry Club 1, Presi-
dent Modern Language
Club 3.
March 14
LOUISE NELSON
c6W66di6,,
GENERAL
President, Home Room 33
Ushering Club 25 Athletic
Club 1, 25 Squad Leader
Club 3.
May 11
HARRY NEUGEBAUER
66Neugc!7
VOCATIONAL
Track Club 2, 3, Track
Team 2, 3.
May 7
MALCOLM N EUWAHL
663111177
GENERAL
President, Debating Club
23 Botany Club 1: Jay Vee
Football Team 3.
May 25
EDNA P. NICKOLA
5'Eddie"
GENERAL
Hiking Club 1, Chapel
Choir 3.
November 27
Page Sixty-nine
CHARLES S. NICODEMUS
CCHappy93
GENERAL
Hi-Y Club 1, 2, 35 Vice
President, Home Room 1.
December 30
ROBERT D. NOEL
CCABOHI
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 35
Physics and Radio Club 35
Hiking Club 2.
May 30
W. HUGH NORRIS
CCU79
GENERAL
Horseshoe StaE 2, 35 Bot-
any Club 3.
October 4
RALPH H. NOTHNAGLE
G5N0tty93
GENERAL
Vice President Home
Room 15 President Home
Room 23 Hi-Y Club 1, 2, 3.
December 22
ERMA W. NYCUM
66'Erm35
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Dramatic Club 13 Modern
Novel Club lg Athletic Club
2, 35 Echo Staff 33 Hockey
Team 2, 33 Mixed Chorus 15
Squad Leader 3.
December 12
RICHARD J. ORNER
66DiCk97
GENERAL
Ushering Club 2, 33 Chair-
man Athletic Committee 3.
October 15
Page Seventy
MARGARET M. NOEL
ccMa,.g::
GENERAL
January 28
MERRILL F. NOFFSKER
Gdjvolgieii
GENERAL
November 14
JAMES S. NORRIS
"Jimmie"
VOCATIONAL
Chairman Welfare Com-
mittee 3g Ushering Club 2,
35 President Ushering Club
3.
June 21
PAULINE G. NOWARK
Cipollyif
GENERAL
Social Service Club 13 In-
terior Decorating Club lg
Glee Club 39 Chapel Choir 3.
March 30
WANDA A. OLKOWSKA
'5Winnie" f
COMMERCIAL
April 11
THOMAS Cf ORR
C4T0mmy:5
GENERAL
Chemistry Club 23 Band
1, 2.
October 6
ROBERT D. OSMAN
330677
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 2, For-
estry and Outdoor Club 3.
September 18
JAMES A. OWENS
CC ' ' 39
fzmmze
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 23 Vice
President Dramatic Club 35
Hiking Club 1, 25 Vice
President Home Room 1, 2.
May 31
ROBERT PARSON
HB0 bi!
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 1
January 18
VIVIAN L. PATTERSON
E6-Patti?
GENERAL
Library Club 19 Vice
President. Home Room 13
Secretary Home Room 2,
President Home Room 33
Mixed Chorus 2, 3, Chapel
Choir 2, 3 3 Annual Show 2.
February 11
HARRY PENNY
Gfpennjril
' GENERAL
President Home Room 15
Ushering Club 3, Band 1, 2,
3, Orchestra 1.
August 10
RAYMOND F. PERRY
CG-Rajiv
GENERAL
Vice President Chemistry
Club 23 Secretary Home
Room 23 Tennis Team 2, 35
Band 2. -
May 6
WALTER L49 QSWALT he f v
- Giosceyii
GENERAL
Vice President, Ushering
Club 2, Vice President Bot-I
any Club 17 Hi-Y Club 35'
Entertainment Committee
29 Horseshoe Staff 2, 3?
Business Manager of Horse-
shoe 35 Hall Patrol 1, 2, 3:
Nominating Committee 2, 33
Finance Committee 3.
April 27 A , ,.
NATHAN PARISH
acNats.9, V
GENERAL
Ushering Club 2.
November 20
-f 1
HELEN '.L. PARSONS
CCLUHBJ
', A 'GENERAL' -
' Dramatic' Club 1, 2gAVice
President Home Room Q, 25
Mixed Chorus 2, 3, Refresh-
ment Committee 3. A,
April 27 '
1 0 - .
NAOMI R. PECK A
t c:Misa K I
COMMERCIAL A P '
Mixed Chorus 23 Chapel
Choir 33 Gregg Writer Club
3. 3
September 17 -
HELEN P. PERCHY
"P.erchief'
GENERAL
Vice President Home
Room 15 Glee Club 3, Mixed
Chorus 3.
October 22
GENEVIEVE H. PETERSON.
t CCPete79 t '
GENERAL , 1
Social Service Club 33
Mixed Chorus 3. ' .
June 7
Page Seventy-one
MARY E. PFEFFER
Cfsallyi,
GENERAL
Social Service Club 3, En-
tertainment Club 23 Glee
Club 13 Mixed Chorus 1, 3.
November 11
MELVIN E. PIPER
'5Frizz"
GENERAL
Ushering Club 2, 3, Presi-
dent Home Room 3g Senate
3.
August 19
ROSELLA R. PLUBELL
"Rosie,'
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 2 3 Zoology
Club 35 Glee Club 35 Hik-
ing Club 1.
November 16
EDITH A. PRIESTLY
"Edie',
GENERAL
Hiking Club 1.
August 12
HELEN M. PROUGH
66Hun35
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 15
Mixed Chorus 33 Hiking
Club 1.
July 23
BERNICE C. QUIRIN
"Billie"
COMMERCIAL
Commercial Club 39 Gregg-
Writer Club 3.
December 16
Page Seventy-two
JANE W. PI-IELAN
"Felix,'
GENERAL
Art Club 3.
March 21
CARMEL E. PIROZZOLA
"Carrie"
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 13
Commercial Club 33 Chapel
Choir 2.
April 18
W. MICHAEL POET
"Mike"
VOCATIONAL
Sports Club 2, 37 Presi-
dent Home Room 39 Basket-
ball 1.
February 9
ELDA M. PROUGH
6'Eddie"
GENERAL
Social Service Club 1,
Glee Club 2, 33 Octette 33
Mixed Chorus 25 Chapel
Choir 35 German Folk Song
Club 3.
August 31
LORRAINE A. PURCELL
CCLOTI-y!!
GENERAL
World Friendship Club 3:
Mixed Chorus 3.
June 9
HELEN R. QUIRIN
czjeanss
COMMERCIAL
Commercial Club 33 Gregg
Writer Club 3.
March 28
EDNA MAE RABUCK
"Eddie"
GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room 25 President, Home
Room 35 Mixed Chorus 35
Glee Club 2, 3.
November 6
JOHN W. RAMSEY
"f0nnie'7
GENERAL
Botany Club 2, 35 Deco-
rating Committee 3.
Y 'September 21
DOW P. REED
"Squire"
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 35 I-Ii-Y Club 15 Door
Patrol 35 Squad Leader 3.
November 27
DOROTHY V. REID
5CD0t97
COMMERCIAL
Vice President, Home
Room 25 Student Council 15
Athletic Club 1.
August 18
WILLIAM W. REILEY
CGBill7 7
GENERAL
President, Home Room 35
Decorating Committee 25
Forestry and Outdoor Club
1, 2, 35 Rifle Team 3.
June 17
D. GENE REINHEIMER
CKDee9!
GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room 25 Chapel Choir 2, 35
Modern Novel Club 15 Echo
Staff 35 Annual Show 2, 35
Student Council 1.
December 15
NELLIE E. RAEEEN-SPARCER
nfackien
COMMERCIAL
Mixed Chorus 2, 35 Mod-
ern Novel Club 1.
January 12
REBECCA M. RAMSEY
6CBeclC:y!'7
GENERAL
Glee Club 35 Mixed Cho-
rus 25 Entertainment Club
15 Interior Decorating Club
1.
August 27
JACK M. REFFNER
"Iackie"
GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room 35 Chemistry Club 25
Jay Vee Basketball 1.
May 5
DOROTHY J. REIFSNYDER
"Dottz2e',
GENERAL
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 35
Newswriting Club 35 Social
Service Club 15 Annual
Show 1, 2, 3.
May 23
DOROTHY V. REINHART
"Dome"
GENERAL
Library Club 15 Hiking
Club 2.
July 14
THOMAS C. RENNER
V :cT0ms:
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 3.
September 29
Page Seventy-three
HELENA J. RENNINGER
"Helen,,
GENERAL
Entertainment Committee
25 Entertainment Club 15
Modern Novel Club 35 Ath-
letic Club 1.
April 30
ADELIA E. RESSLER
"Deatsv
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Botany
Club 25 Athletic Club 15
Chapel Choir 35 Annual
Show 35 Rifle Club 3.
February 4
ELIZABETH C. RHOADES
'cBettie:,
GENERAL
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3.
March 14
PAULINE E. RHODES
CCP0llyD9
GENERAL
Mixed Chorus 2, 35 Ath-
letic Club 15 Dramatic Club
15 Chapel Choir 2.
January 25
ANNE LOUISE RIDDLE
, "Puzzles',
GENERAL
Baseball Team 25 Hockey
Team 2, 35 Squad Leader 35
Inter-class Basketball Team
25 Athletic Club 1, 2, 3.
December 20
HAZEL M. RILEY
'iHazel"
GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room 25 Social Service Club
1, 2, 35 Basketry Club 15
Welfare Club 3.
May 24
Page Seventy-four
F. VIRGINIA REPLOGLE
uskinnyg'
GENERAL
President, Home Room 35
Mixed Chorus 25 Annual
Show 2, 35 Chapel Choir 3.
May 6
MARGERY R. REYNOLDS
66Margie93
GENERAL '
Horseshoe Staff 1, 25
Mixed Chorus 2, 35 Dramatic
Club 1, 25 Hiking Club 15
Chapel Choir 2, 3.
February 9
W. KENNETH RHODES
CCDuSty,7
GENERAL
Track Team 1, 2, 35 For-
estry and Outdoor Club 15
Stage Craft Club 35 Track
Club 2, 3.
October 22
DOROTHY M. RICHARDS
GcD0t99
GENERAL
Horseshoe Staff 35 Base-
ball Team 1, 25 Hockey
Team 35 Basketball 1, 2, 35
Captain Basketball 35 Or-
chestra 1, 2, 35 Athletic
Club 1, 25 President, Ath-
letic Club 3.
January 24
ELIZABETH L. RIGG
56D0Zly57
GENERAL
Glee Club 1, 2, 35 Octette
2, 35 Mixed Chorus 2, 35 En-
tertainment Club 15 Chapel
Choir 2, 35 Annual Show 2,
3.
February 18
REMY D. RINES
'cRemy"
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 1, 2, 3.
July 28
' ALFRED RISPOLI
KAI!!
VOCATIONAL
April s
ESTHER ROBISON
56Tiny37
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 15
Hiking Club 25 Entertain-
ment Club 3.
June 24
DOROTHY P. RODGERS
GCDOFB
COMMERCIAL
Commercial Club 35 Hik-
ing Club 1. 1.
March 20 --..
C. RICHARD. ROGERS
5GDicl699
GENERAL
Vice President, Home
Room 25 Forestry and Out-
door Club 1, 35 Rifle' Team
35 Basketball Team 1.
December 14
MARY N. ROSENBERGER
6CR0sy7!
COMMERCIAL
September 28
MARJORIE F. Ross
'5Mart9-"7
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 1.
November 19
Secretary, Home Room 25
President, Home Room 35
IRMA E. RITTENHOUSE
6GMlCky99
SCIENTIFIC
President, Home Room 1,
25 Secretary, Junior Classg
Vice President, Senior
Class5 Hockey Team 25
Mixed Chorus 2, 35 Athletic
Club 1, 25 Dramatic Club
1, 2.
July 26
GLADYS S. ROCK
'iCladie,,
GENERAL
Secretary Home Room 15
Commercial Club 1.
July 17
SARAH M. RODGERS
GCSally99
GENERAL
Glee Club 2, 35 Mixed
Chorus 35 Dramatic Club 35
Library Club 15 Entertain-
ment Club 1, 2.
March 21
ANNA E. ROLLASON
ECAnne99
GENERAL
Refreshment Committee 2,
35 Echo Staff 35 Glee Club
35 Mixed Chorus 2, 33 Social
Service Club 25 President
Social Service Club 35 En-
tertainment Club 15 Annual
Show 2.
February 11
DOROTHY V. Ross
"DOF
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 World
Friendship Club 35 Athletic
Club 2, 35 Hiking Club 1.
January 12
WILLIAM Ross
GGBill97
GENERAL
Forestry and. ,Qutdoor
Club 1, 2, 3.1 Q
October 9
Page Seventy-five
WILLIAM T. ROTHERT
CCBill77
GENERAL
Reception Committee 3:
Chemistry Club 3.
December 29
CHARLOTTE G. ROWLES
CGGert!J
GEORGE REED
Social Service Club 1.
May 2
LESTER RUDASILL
"Pete',
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 3
Ushering Club 1.
May 23
EUGENE W. RUPP
c'Bill,'
VOCATIONAL
Stage Craft Club 33 Ush
ering Club 2.
June 27
OLGA RUSYNYK
l6RuSty9!
ACADEMIC
Home Nursing Club 1
Entertainment Club 3.
June 18
REHILDA A. RYAN
c:Rees9
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 39 Ath-
letic Club 1.
March 14
Page Seventy-six
SAMUEL ROUDEBUSH
E6Sam!9
VOCATIONAL
August 5
H. ELWOOD RUDACILLE
6CRudy,3
GENERAL
Orchestra 1, 2, 35 Band 2,
35 Dance Orchestra 39 Slide
Rule Club 1.
June 28
W. EDWARD RUDISILL
lGRudy3,
VOCATIONAL
President, Home
Room 23 President, Home
Room 33 Jay Vee Football
Team 35 Hi-Y Club 1, 3.
April 2
Vice
SYLVESTER RUSSELL
ECBMSSD
VOCATIONAL
Civic Welfare Club 25
Baseball Team 2.
September 17
EILEEN A. RYAN
"Nicki"
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 3g English
Play 2.
January 21
JAMES SALEME
Cijimil
GENERAL
March 27
RosE SALOMIE
CGR0Sy95
COMMERCIAL
Entertainment Club 3.
April 15
LEO SAMSON
4'Leola,,
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 25 Sports
Club 19 President, 'Home
Room 15 Band 1, 3.
September 1
MARGUERITE SANTA MARIA
CG-Marg!!
CLASSICAL
Social Service Club 2, 33
Athletic .Club 13 Horseshoe
Staff 1, 2, 35 Girls League
Honor Roll 1, 2.
' May 5
EDITH S. SANTELLA
CGSue7,
COMMERCIAL
Newswriting Club 23 Mod-
ern Language Club 25
Echo Staff 2, 33 Secretary
Home Room 23 President
Home Room 39 Mixed Cho-
rus 1, 2, 33 Annual Show 1,
2, 35 Girls League Honor
Roll 1, 23 National Honor
Society 3. '
August 18
HELEN SARACENA
g'H.elen"
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 1,
President Home Room 35
Chapel Choir 3, Annual
Show 2, 35 Mixed Chorus 1,
2, 3.
May 9
MARY CATHRINE SAVINE
G6May77
GENERAL
Social Service Club 2, 3,
Dramatic Club 13 Echo
Staff 3, Latin Club 1, Girls
League Honor Roll 1, 25
National Honor Society 3.
January 1
DAVID SAMMEL
':Kiv0ski"
VOCAT IONAL
Ushering Club 23 Art Club
1, 2, 3: Zoology Club 1,
Treasurer Home Room 13
Vice President Home Room
2.
April 4
EARL SANDRUS
Gisandyii
ACADEMIC
Track Club 1, Glider Club 2.
October 2
EDITH E. SANTELLA
"Ediev
GENERAL
Social Service Club lg
Botany Club 13 Athletic
Club 15 Basketball 13 Glee
Club 15 Mixed Chorus 1, 2,
3.
January 27
ELSIE SANTELLA
"Tiny"
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 3, Athletic
Club 2, Modern 'Language
Club 13 Secretary, Vice
President Home Room 1,
Mixed Chorus 1, 2.
April 4
DANIEL SAVINE
"Albert"
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 2, 3.
December 3
RUTH SAYLOR
'6Ruthie,'
GENERAL
First Aid Club 1.
September 22
Page Seventy-seven
CHARLES SCHANDELMEIER
PAUL SCHILL
"Chasing f' U
GENERAL
Ushering Club 2, 35 Jay
Warsl
VOCATIONAL
Vee Basketball 3- Aviation Club 3.
' July 10 Q June 26
MARY ELIZABETH SCHLAYER REGINA SCHOCIAI
"Mary Liz" ujeani'
GENERAL COMMERCIAL
I-'ibfary Club 13 Enter- Commercial Club 35 Mixed
tamment Club 2, 33 Horse- Chorus 3,9
shoe Staff 2, 35 Mountain
Echo 33 Debating Team 3.
April 1
L1 I
MARGARET QCHOLLV
g'Margert"
CLASSICAL
Dramatic Club,1g Athletic
Club 19 Secretary Home
Room 2, Mixed Chorus 2, 33
Chapel Choir 2, 3. ,
July 191
DOROTHY SCHRAF
C6D0ny?9
GENERAL f L
Social Service Club 13
Athletic Club 1, 2, 3g
Hockey Team 2 3 Mixed
Chorus 1, 2, 3.
June 28
BARBARA SCHROEDER
"Barbs"
GENERAL
Vice President Entertain-
ment Club lg Athletic Club
1, Orchestra 25 Mixed Cho-
rus 2.
December 8
MAX SCHULMAN
C5Max99
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 15 ,Commercial Club 35
Debating Club 2.
July 28
Page Seventy-eight
January 19
MILDRED SCHORNER
:dMidav
A .GENERAL
Entertainment .Club 1, '25
President Home Room 2, 3.3
Library Guard 3. , .A K
December 8
GERTRUDE SCI-IRENK
6'Gerlie',
COMMERCIAL '
Commercial Club' 37 Ath-
letic ..'Club lg Secretary
Home Room 23 Mixed Cho-
rus 3.
' 1
November 18
ELSIE SCHROEDER
"Essie"
COMMERCIAL
Commercial Club 35 Hik-
ing Club lg President Home
Room 3.
December 22
HILDA SCHULZ
' "Schulzy"
GENERAL
December 21
JEAN SEADS
afeanr'
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 15
Program Committee 25
Horseshoe Staff 25 National
Honor Society 2, 35 Presi-
dent Home Room 2, 35 Sen-
ate 35 Chapel Choir 2, 3.
Salutatorian.
October 29
JAMES SELL
ccjilnb:
, . ' VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 2, 35 Presi-
dent Home Room 3A
August 21
HARVEY SHAFER
56Hary93
GENERAL
. Track Club 35 Mixed Cho-
rus
December 24
Li"
E,
A
TJOSVEPH SHANER
glean!!
GENERAL
Secretary Hiking Club 15
Modern Novel Club 25
Newswriting' Club 2, 35
President Home Room 35
Echo Staff 2, 35 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 1.
November 18
KATHRYN SHAY '
C6Kate95
GENERAL
Social Service Club 25
Library Club 15 Vice Presi-
dent Modern Novel Club 3.
December 27
5 JAMES SHEEP
cc' - - av
fzmmle
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 35 Par-
liamentary Law Club 25
Newswriting Club 15 Echo
Staff 1.
September 4
,
SAMUEL SEALFON A
"Sammy",
Dramatic Club. 2,735 News-
writing Club 1, 2, 35 Echo
Staff 1, 2, 35 Treasurer Home
Room 15 Secretary Home
Room 25 Cheer Leader 1, Z
35 Tennis Team 1, 2. "
June 10
MARY LORRAINE SHAALI
'cClLubbfy'w
COMMERCIAL , I
Forum Club 25 Dramatic
Club 15 ,Commercial Club 35
Secretary Home Room 15
Chapel Choir 35 Mixed Cho-
rus 2.
J une 3 '
SAMUEL SHAHEEN
A"'FlaslL'i
GENERAL 5
Track Club 35 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 15 Presi-
dent Home -Room 2, 35
Track Team 3.
June 9 '
MARTHA SHAW
:cMaTLyaa
GENERAL I
Secretary Botany Club 15
President Botany Club 25
Secretary-Treasurer, Home
Room 1. A 1
March 7 I
ELWOOD SHEEDER' .
CCEZIYUB
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 25 Hi-Y Club 15 Sports
Club 3.
May 17
RUSSELL SHELLENBERGER
ccshellea
GENERAL
Concessions Club 25 For-
estry and Outdoor Club 35
Hi-Y Club 15 Squad Leader
3.
May 17 f' V
Page Seventy-nine
WILFRED SHINGLER
GiWil!J
GENERAL
Physics and Radio Club 15
Secretary-Treasurer Physics
and Radio Club 3.
April 8
DONALD SHOCK
66D0n:9
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 2g Hi-Y
Club 1, Sports Club 33
President Home Room 15
Track Team 35 Varsity
Football 2, 35 Varsity Bas-
ketball 3g Jay Vee Basket-
ball 1, 2.
July 24
ROBERT SHAOENFELT
"Peanut.s',
VOCATIONAL
Aviation Club 3.
January 4
LEONARD SHOPE
cc hopev
COMMERCIAL
February 27
LOUISE SHORE
"Shady"
COMMERCIAL
Girls League Usher 33
Squad Leader Club 35 Ath-
letic Club 35 Secretary Hik-
ing Club 15 Vice President
Home Room 2.
September 21
HAROLD SHUGARTS
Eishugii
GENERAL
November 11
Page Eighty
DENNIS SHIVELY
"Duchy
VOCATIONAL
Varsity "A" Club 15 Sports
Club 2, 33 Secretary Home
Room lg President Home
Room 2, 3, Varsity Football
1, 2, 33 Baseball Team 1, 2.
May 17
ESTHER SHOEMAKER
i'Eszher,,
COMMERCIAL
Hiking Club 1.
November 6
ERDENE SHOPE
66Deney!9
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 2g Enter-
tainment Club 1.
December 29
WINIFRED SHOPE
"Fritz,'
COMMERCIAL
Library Club 1.
April 17
ELIZABETH SHOWERS
"B.etty,:
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 1.
September 14
MORGAN SHUTE
'gPete,'
GENERAL
Sports Club 2, 39 Vice
President Home Room 23
President Home Room 33
Jay Vee Football lg Var-
sity Football 2, 35 Varsity
Basketball 2, 39 Varsity "A"
Club 2, 35 National Athletic
Scholarship Society 2, 3,
Squad Leaders' Club 1, 2, 3.
June 13
EUGENE SIPES
CCGCHBB7
GENERAL
Sports Club 2, 33 Presi-
dent Home Room 1, Secre-
tary Home Room 2, Varsity
Football Squad 1, 2, 3, Base-
ball Team 2, 3g Varsity "A"
Club 1, 2, 35 Squad Leaders'
Club 1, 2.
February 5
YOLANDA SISTO
"Y0laH
COMMERCIAL
Commercial Club 3.
February 13
ANN SLUTZKER
CCH0n6Jl9!
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 19 Glee
Club 15 German Club 3.
September 29
CHARLES SMITH
6CBud79
VOCATIONAL
Ushering Club 2, 3, Sec-
retary Home Room 1.
June 28
RICHARD SMITH
ccDiCks9
GENERAL
Band 1, 2, 33 Orchestra 1,
2, 39 Dance Orchestra 1, 2,
3.
November 22
HELEN SNIVELY
"Helen7'
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 1,
Athletic Club 1, 25 Hockey
Team 2, 3.
March 22
MARJORIE SIPES
4'Margie"
GENERAL
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3.
January 4
NELLIE SLICK
"Slick,
GENERAL
President Entertainment
Club 1, Athletic Club 1, 2,
Vice President Home Room
33 Track Team 23 Baseball
Team 1, 23 Hockey Team 23
Basketball 2, 3.
February 10
VINCENT SMELSER
Cicurlyi!
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 1, 2, 3g Vice President
Home Room 15 Football 1.
June 15
JEANNE SMITH
"Dodie,'
HOME ECONOMICS
Dramatic Club 15 Secre-
tary Home Room 2, Glee
Club 1.
May 3
VINCENT SMITH
"Smitty',
VOCATIONAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 25- Glee Club 3, Mixed
Chorus 3.
April 13
ALLEN SNOW, JR.
GCBud95
GENERAL
Glider Club 2, 33 News-
writing Club 23 Mountain
Echo 2, Rifle Team 33 Ger-
man Folk Song Club 3.
December 28
Page Eighty-one
CLARA SNYDEK
- 6GSi95
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 35
Library Club 1.
January 24
JOHN SOMERVILLE
'gSlim"
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 15 Civic-Welfare Club
2.
December 24
BEATRICE SOULT
G6Bea,,
COMMERCIAL
Athletic Club' 35 Vice
President Home Room 25
President Home Room 35
Hockey Team 2, 35 Hiking
Club 1.
May 2
VERNEDA SPONSELLER
"DeeDee',
A GENERAL
Entertainment Club 1, 2.
January 18 ,.
JOHN STAHL
Hijack!!
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 33 Art Club 1, 23
Horseshoe Staff 15 Secre-
tary Home Room 1.
May 3
LAURA STAMBAUGH
"Lfn2rie',
GENERAL
'T ' Library Club 1.
U, December 12
,M
Page Eighty-two
DOROTHY SNYDER
"Dutch"
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 15
Athletic Club 1, 23 Vice
President Athletic Club 39
Hockey Team 2, 39 Basket-
ball Team 2, 3g Baseball
Team 1, 2, 3.
June 23
ALBERT SOUDERS
KAI!!
VOCATIONAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 2.
August 11
J AMES SPAHN
Gispookh
GENERAL
October 13
DOROTHY MARIE SPOTTS
"Doz'?
GENERAL
January 25
ROBERT STAHL
GlBob3,
GENERAL
Band 2, 3: Orchestra 3:
Glee Club 1, 2, Octette 1, 25
Mixed Chorus 1, 2.
March 29
MARTHA STAMBAUGII
66Mart3r5!
GENERAL
Social Service Club 15
Entertainment Club 2, 35
Chemistry Club 13 Athletic
Club 27 Secretary Home
Room lg Squad Leaders'
Club 3.
August 17
RUTH STEEL
"Ruthie,'
COMMERCIAL
Vice President Home
Room 2.
April 2
MATHILDA STEIN
"Tillie"
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 35 Hiking
Club 1.
HELEN STEHLEY
6CH0ney99
GEORGEN REED
Forum Club 1g Stamp
Club 1, 2. -'
September 19'
HYMAN STEINBERG
CGHymie97
ACADEMIC
Modern Novel Club 1.
ivffebruary 13!i
" J anuaryi5 Y W'
CECELIA STEINBERGER
"Callie"
GENERAL
September 26
MARJORY STEPHENSON
"Stevie"
GENERAL
National Honor Society 33
Botany Club 27 Refreshment
Committee 39 Horseshoe
Staff 35 President Home
Room 1g Secretary Honie
Room 23 Annual Show 3:
Hall Patrol 2, 3: Girls
League Honor Roll 1, 2.
October 17
EDWARD STEWART
'gEddie"
GENERAL
Secretary Forestry and
Outdoor Club 3.
b May 16
ROSEMARY STEWART
HTILGTZM
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1, 25 Re-
freshment Committee 25
Decorating Committee 39
THOMAS STEPHENS
M A 'fTick"
VOCATIONAL
T Forestry and Outdoor
Club 2g Jay Vee Football
2, aw- A
' ' June 12
CHARLES STERLING
"Chas" 5 A
GENERAL
Secretary, Home Room 25
Vice President Home Room
3.
June 19
PAUL STEWART
Gipaulii
SCIENTIFIC
President Chemistry Club
35 Modern Novel Club 15
Secretary Home Room 1g
Vice President Home Room
2.
May 1
CLARENCE STITT
'iSzin:ie"
GENERAL
Vice President Home
Room 134 President Home
Room 2g Band 1, 2, 33 Or-
Vice President Home Room chestra 1, 2, 3.
1.
April 23
March 23 A, 1
Page Eighty-three
WILBUR STITT
I C6Bud9J
GENERAL
Track Club 35 Secretary
Home Room 15 Track Team
35 Baseball Team 15 Glee
Club 1, 2, 35 Octette 2, 35
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 35 Treas-
urer Rifle Club 1.
September 27
QUILLA STOUT
G6Patty3l
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 15
Modern Language Club 3.
August 28
BEATRICE STUBBS ,
'fsmbbyv
COMMERCIAL
Dramatic Club 15 Gregg
Writer 35 Assistant Secre-
tary-Treasurer Commercial
Club 35 Secretary Home
Room 25 Glee Club 15 Home
Nursing Club 1.
May 1
KENNETH SUMMERS
GdKen35
GENERAL
Treasurer Home Room 15
Vice President Home Room
15 President Home Room 35
Athletic Club 1.
March 23
JOHN SZUHAJ
6GShewy!9
GENERAL
Track Manager 35 Squad
Leaders' Club 2.
May 19
HARRY N. TAYLOR
C6Hi3!
GENERAL '
Hi-Y Club 2, 35 President,
Hi-Y Club 35 Sports Club 15
Finance Committee 35 Hon-
or Society 2, 35 President
Home Room 15 President,
Junior Classg' Glee Club 3'
Corridor Patrol 3.
January 9
1
1
Page Eighty-four
ROY STOM
Gistomif
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 2, 35
Modern Novel Club 15 Sec-
retary Home Room 2.
May 12
BEATRICE STRAWE
CGBee92
GENERAL
Forum Club 15 Newswrit-
ing Club 35 Horseshoe Staff
35 Mountain Echo 35 Glee
Club 15 Mixed Chorus 1, 25
Annual Show 2, 35 Chapel
Choir 2, 3.
June,20
RALPH STUBBS
CCSCOOPQS
GENERAL
February 1
THELMA SUTTER
"Dutch,'
GENERAL
Library Club 15 Botany
Club 25 Zoology Club 35
Mixed Chorus 3.
May 5
BERNICE M. TAYLOR
"Bernn.y', 5
COMMERCIAL
Entertainment Club 15
Commercial Club 35 Ath-
Ietic Club 15 Refreshment
Committee 2.
January 24
LOUISE K. TAYLOR
GLU!!
COMMERCIAL
Gregg Writer Club 35
Commercial Club 3.
June 12
RICHARD F. TAYLOR
"Dick',
GENERAL
Track Club 35 Safety Club
35 Program Committee 35
Track Team 3.
February 12
RUSSELL L. THOMAS
"Russ',
VOCATIONAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 2, 35 Modern Novel
Club 1 5 Vice President,
Home Room 15 Secretary,
Home Room 2.
June 25
MARGARET L. THOMPSON
6ST0mmy7!
GENERAL
Home Economics Club 15
Dramatic Club 35 Girls
League Representative for
Home Room 35 Athletic Club
25 Rifle Tea.m 35 Debating
Team 2, 35 Secretary, Home
Romn L T
'March 15
MARIE E. TOBIAS
GET0by79
GENERAL
Mixed Chorus 3.
March 20
RUBY M. TRAFICANTE
6CD0d077
GENERAL
December 8
GRACE E. TREXLER
"Skinny'7
GENERAL
Home Nursing Club 1.
December 29
S. KATHRYN TERWILLIGER
EEK 73
ay
GENERAL
Library Club 15 Athletic
Club 25 Honor Society 1, 2,
35 President, Home Room 35
Hockey Team 25 Girls' Re-
serve 15 Squad Leaders'
Club 35 Chapel Choir 3.
Valedictorian.
November 18
DOROTHY M. THOMPSON
6CD0t99
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1.
May 22
MARIE -G. TILSON
"Tillie"
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 3.
April 18
MARY E. TOBIAS
"Marie,,
COMMERCIAL
September 20
L. EDITH TREGO
C6BetZy77
GENERAL
Entertainment Club 25
World Friendship Club 35
Vice President Home Room
25 Glee Club 15 Mixed Cho-
rus 35 Handbook Staff 2.
January 24
ALICE E. TROUT
:6Rern99
GENERAL
Athletic Club 25 Program
Committee 25 Secretary,
Home Room 25 Senate 35
Orchestra 35 Mixed Chorus
2, 35 Chapel Choir 2.
November 16
Page Eighty-tive
OTHO H. UMBOWER
'f0die?? ' '
SCIENTIFIC
Track Club 2, 3, Botany
Club 15 Track Team 1, 3.
, September 26
JOHN F. VALLADE
ccfohnnysa
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 33 Orches-
tra 1, 2.
, January 3
GRACEP. VAUGHN
"Gracie',,
GENERAL
Social Service'1Club 33
Forum Group '25 Home Eco-
nomics Club 1.
August 16
MAGDALENE M. VORNDRAN
G6Madge79 I
GENERAL
Hiking Club 1, .23 Modern
Language Club 3: German
Folk Song Club 35 Hockey
Team 2.
August 11
MARSHAL WAGNER
f'Marsh,'
GENERAL
President Hiking Club 13
Chapel Choir 2, 33 Vice
President Home Room 1:
Jay Vee Football 1, 23 Glee
Club 2, 3: Octette 2, 39
Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3.
March 8
GRACE WAITE
' "Graaf,
GENERAL
Secretary Zoology Club 1,
35 Zoology Club 2.
'H ' "'NOvember 7
7315: '
.1 A
Page Eighty-six
CHARLES VALLADE
CCTiny79
GENERAL
Orchestra 1, 2.
December 29
MINNIE F, VTASILE
"Mickey,
GENERAL
Commercial Club 13 Vice
President Home Room 15
Glee Club 1: Mixed Chorus
1, 2, 35 Chapel Choir 1, 2, 33
Annual Show 1.
July A28
LILLIAN B. VIOLIONE
Cfljlii
GENERAL V
Social Service Club 25
Dramatic Club 15 Modern
Novel Club 1, Treasurer,
Modern Language Club 2 5
Modern Language Club 3.
August 22
LEO WACHTER
"Luie"
GENERAL
Parliamentary Law Club
2.
January 1
MAXINE WAGNER
'6Maxie"
GENERAL
Social Service Club 2, 35
Commercial Club 2, 3g'Vice
President Home Room lg
Mixed Chorus 1.
December 8
ROBERT WAKEFIELD
' "Professor"
GENERAL
Glider Club 2, Physics
and Radio Club lg Jay Vee
Basketball lg Orchestra 3.
September 14
DON WALKER
CSDM!!
VOCATIONAL
Track Club 35 Secretary
Home Room 35 Track' Team
3. A -
October 29
MURIEI, WALTER
czpats!
GENERAL
President Social Service
Club 25 Hall ,Patrol 2, 3:
Quill and Scroll 2, 35 Editor-
in-Chief, Handbook 35
Horseshoe Staff 1, 25 Echo
Staff 2, 35 National Honor
Society 2, 3.5 Senate 3.
March 24
PEARL WALTERS
"Pearl"
GENERAL
Secretary-Treasurer Social
Service Club 35 Entertain-
ment Club 15 Refreshment
Committee 2 5 President
Home Room 35 Executive
Committee 35 Glee Club 35
Mixed Chorus 1, 3.
February 22 -
WILLIAM WALTERS
"Bill"
GENERAL
President Parliamentary
Law Club 25 Art Club 15
Horseshoe Staff 35 National
Honor Society 35 Secretary
Home Room 15 Vice Presi-
dent Home Room 25 Track
Team 2, 35 Mixed Chorus 35
Chapel Choir 3.
September 23
HOWARD WARNER
"Howd,'
VOCATIONAL
February 17
DOROTHY WARSING
6CDOt77
COMMERCIAL
Entertainment Club 1, 25
Art Club 15 Glee Club 2, 35
Chapel Choir 3.
November 23
HARRY ' WALTER
"nudge
VOCATIO NAL
Auto Safety Club 25 Glider
Club 2.
November, 13
PAUL WALTERS
"Tailspin"
SCIENTIFIC
Aviation Club 35 Glider
Club 25 Physics and Radio
Club 15 President Home
Room 35 Jay Vee Football
1. A
June 14
ROBERT- WALTERS
CCB0b39
GENERAL
Forestry .and Outdoor
Club 25 Botany Club 15
Chapel Choir 35 Glee Club
2, 35 Mixed Chorus 3.
November 21
HAROLD WALZ
G6Hal99
GENERAL
July 31
ANNA- WARSINC
CIAnn,,
A GENERAL
Dramatic Club 15 Secre-
tary-Treasurer Botany Club
25 Vice President Home
Room 25 Secretary-Treas-
urer Home Economics Club
1.
March 23
MARJORIE, WARSING
G6Marj93
GENERAL
Vice President Botany
Club 15 Botany Clubl25 Vice
President Home Rodml 1, '25
Glee Club 1, 35 .Mixed Cho-
rus 1, 3. ,
November 4
Page Eighty-seven
ROBERT WARSING
CGB0b93
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 29 Hi-Y
Club 2, 3.
August 27
DOROTHY WEAMER
CCD0ll9
COMMERCIAL
Dramatic Club 1, 29 Com-
mercial Club 1, 3.
October 31
ALVIN WEBER
"W0wie',
GENERAL
Hi-Y Club 2, 39 German
Folk Song Club 3.
April 18
MILDRED WE1ss
GSMidge53
COMMERCIAL
Dramatic Club 19 Com-
mercial Club 39 Hiking Club
1.
April 22
BENNY WELLER
GEBenny99
GENERAL
Orchestra 19 Hiking Club 1.
March 25
RUBY WESTON
"West',
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 19 Enter-
tainment Club 1, 29 Com-
mercial Club 1, 29 Finance
Committee 29 Mixed Chorus
39 Chapel Choir 3.
December 6
Page Eighty-eight
JERRY WATSON
"Bennie"
GENERAL
Secretary Hi-Y Club 19
Sports Club 39 President
Home Room 19 Jay Vee
Football 19 Varsity Football
2, 39 Track Team 1, 2, 3.
August 20
LILA WEBBER
6CElm!7
GENERAL
Botany Club 19 Secretary
Home Room 1.
January 11
FLOBA WEBER
"Flossie"
GENERAL
Commercial Club 19 Mixed
Chorus 29 Chapel Choir 2, 39
Corridor Patrol 39 Annual
Show 2, 3.
December 7
JOHN WELKER
cclohnnfyas
GENERAL
Track Club 2, 39 Decorat-
ing Committee 29 Nominat-
ing Committee 39 Editor
Horseshoe 39 National Hon-
or Society 39 Vice President
Home Room 29 Track Team
29 Senate 3.
August 15
WINIFRED WERTZ
"Winnic',
COMMERCIAL
Dramatic Club 19 Gregg
Writer Club 39 Commercial
Club 1, 39 Vice President
Home Room 1, 29 Rifle
Team 3.
August 30
ELIZABETH WHEATFIELD
"ElizabeLh,7
GENERAL
Glee Club 3.
September 1
A LORAINE WHITBRED
G4L0rry93
GENERAL-
Forum Club 25 Entertain-
ment Club 15 World Friend-
ship Club 35 Newswriting
Club 15 Mountain Echo 15
Vice President Home Room
25 Glee Club 25 Mixed Cho-
rus 2, 3.
March 28
JAMES WHITE
CGJi,'-ll!!
GENERAL
President Forestry and
Outdoor Club 1, 35 Vice
President Forestry and Out-
door Club 25 Refreshment
Committee 25 President
Home Room 35 President
Senate 3.
September 13
GERTRUDE WILLIAMS
G6Pat3!
GENERAL
Athletic Club 1.
' "f'March 27
,Ik
' fn.
'. JOSEPHINE WILLIAMS
661035
GENERAL
May 22
HENRY WILSCN
C5 ody9,
GENERAL
Sports Club 2, 35 .Tay Vee
Football 1, 25 Varsity Foot-
ball 3.
V January 9
HELEN WITIIEROW
"Snooky"
A GENERAL 5
Social Service Club 3.
October 30
ANNA WHITE
CCAnhi29
GENERAL
Library Club 15 Modern
Novel Club 3.
March 24
ALMA WlI.LIAMS
"Tootsie,,
GENERAL
Library Club 15 World
Friendship Club 3.
April 27
JEANNE WILLIAMS
66Iean59
COMMERCIAL
- Gregg Writer Club 35
Commercial Club 1, 35 Vice
President Home Room 1.
July -20
'1
DANIEL WILSON
E6Danny95
' GENERAL
Physics 'and Radio Club
15 Vice President Home
Room 25 Jay Vee Football
1, 2, 35 Mixed Chorus 2, 35
German Folk Song Club 3:
Chapel Choir 3.
June 4.
KENNETH WINTERS
c:Kennyes
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 25 Hi-Y
Club 15 Physics and Radio
Club 35 Decorating Commit-
tee 35 Vice President Home
Room 1, 2.
July 2
DON WOLF
"Coach',
VOCATIONAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 2, 35 Vice President
Home Room 1, 2, 35 Jay
Vee Football 1, 3.
August 15
Page Eighty-nine
CLARENCE WOLFE
66W0l!ey99
GENERAL
Stage Craft Club 2, 33
Botany Club 15 Glee Club 3.
,June 23
DOROTHY J. YEATER
GCD0t99
COLLEGE
PREPARATORY
Dramatic Club 15 Secre-
tary Home Room 13 Vice
President Home Room 23
Economics Club 15 Mixed
Chorus 1, 25 Chapel Choir
1, 2, 35 Annual Show 1, 2, 33
House of Representatives 2.
March 25
WILLIAM F. YEATTS
MBU!!!
GENERAL
Forestry and Outdoor
Club 3: Civic"Welfare Club
25 Biology Club 15 Execu-
tive Committee 2, 3g Vice
President Home Room 25
President Home Room 35
President National Honor
Society 3.
April 21
CHARLES E. YOUNG
HDOCQQ
GENERAL
Glee Club 3, Mixed Chorus
2, 35 Chapel Choir 2, 3.
August 21
PAUL ZEAK
66Andy99
GENERAL
Aviation Club 35 Chem-
istry Club 1.
November 30
MARY ELIZABETH HWRICTIT
"Sally,
GENERAL
Dramatic Club 2, 3. '
May 6
WALTER V. YEATTS
ucjurlyv
VOCATIONAL
Auto Safety Club 23 Avia-
tion Club 33 Glider Club 2.
November 14
VERNA GRACE YINGLING
ccyingjyas
COMMERCIAL
Social Service Club 2, 3:
Commercial Club 1.
November 5
HELEN L. YOUNCKIN
CCDOZZYSS
GENERAL
Social Service Club 1,
Mixed Chorus 3.
February 13
MELVIN ZEIGLER
"Butch"
GENERAL
Civic Welfare Club 25
Sports Club 37 .Jay Vee
Basketball 2.
August 2
JOHN ZIMMERER
ccjohnnyea
GENERAL
Glee Club 33 Mixed Chorus
2, 33 Chapel Choir 2, 3.
July 25
Page Ninety
l Who's Who
DOROTHY BURD-a0h, my hair'.s comin' down?
That brown hair with its besetting fault belongs to a pair of brown eyes, a
befreckled nose, and a smiling mouth. "Dipper's', our most popular girl and this is
not a believe-it-or-not column. As Literary Editor of the Horseshoe, HDipper" proved
herself a valuable asset. The Honor Society, the Quill and Scroll, and committees are
not nearly all the activities uDipper7, gives her attention to, and never slights any-
thing or anyone.
WILLIAM DAVIS-"Hello Baby."
Just try imagining High School plays without "Billy,'7 the dashing Romeo. He
is assistant Editor, and chief head liner for the Mountain Echo, President of the
Scriveners, and in the Honor Society. When he isn't worrying about his Latin, or
has a play on his mind, he is preparing a speech to be given some time, some place.
Hllm the busiest man in three counties, arenit I?', Also he is the most talka . . . I
mean, the best conversationalist.
LILLIAN ELLSTROM-"Hi-There!" '
Lillian illustrates the saying, "good goods come in small packagesf, She cap-
ably held the office of Vice President of the Senate in her Junior and Senior years.
She belongs to the Honor Society and is a beautiful little singer.
CARL ETTERg"Wouldn't that slap the powder of your face?,'
Carl burst into the theatrical world with a ban in the Romantic A .e and since,
3 3
after his performances such remarks are heard as, 'fIsn't that little Carl Etter a
scream?7' He is one of the assisting editors of the Mt. Echo and is in the Scriveners.
Around the publication room he is noted for his uingenuityf' Indiana dialect, and
frrotes ue sense of humor. Besides he's our most- o ular bo .
s CI P P Y
DONALD KRAFT-f'Teacher, sheis bothering me."
Don was Treasurer of the Junior Class last year, and on the Finance Committee
this year, but heis a National Honor Society man, so don't worry. He can bake the
best cookies of anybody we know.
PAUL GIEC-"Pfew.v
A hard working towhead+that's Paul. He has helped decorate for our socials
for the last two years and he is a very energetic worker on the Annual Staff. What
more can you expect-dependability, co-operativeness, and good naturedness.
ANNE GRIMSHAW-"I thought Fd pop."
uSweet and Lovelyv are the words to describe our popular Girls League Presi-
dent. Last year she was Secretary of the Senate. In addition to her executive ability,
Anne is a very graceful dancer.
KENNETH HEAPSH"What do you think?"
Kenny is the fellow with the big smile who makes you feel at home at the Senior
Socials, for heis chairman of the Reception Committee. He is one of the Latin
Nlntelligentsiaf' and you remember his impressive speech in assembly as President of
the National Honor Society.
ROBERT McNAUGI-ITON-6'0h, I forgot all about that meeting."
And no wonder, for Bob as President of the Boys Federation has a lot on his
mind, to say nothing about Debating, Mt. Echo, Dramatics, Glee Club, Decorating
Committee, Physics and Radios and .... girls.
JOHN MILLER-'The deadline is on Thursday. Copy accepted no later."
John warns the reporters, for as Editor of the Mt. Echo he is chief admonisher.
John belongs to the Senate, Quill and Scroll, and the National Honor Society. When
the band plays, the big boom is Johnny, bass drummer.
Page Ninety-one
'24
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JAMES MONAHAN-"If they work, they stay onf'
says Jimmie, trying to be serious. You know he's president of most every thing
going, his home room, the Hi-Y flast yearJ and even the Senior Class. Last year
he was in the Senate, on the decorating committee, and the baseball team. Hereis to
our prexyl
SARA JANE MOSES-"Hi.' Have you seen Anne anywhere?77
MMO" is our hall patrol captain and she makes the Sophs step. The day before
any social she is to be found in' the study hall on the top rung of a step-ladder hang-
ing streamers. She was on the Junior executive committee and making speeches in
class meetings was her hobby.
WALTER OSWALT-"I am not prepared Miss Stockton?
'4Oscey" is business manager of the Horseshoe, and is responsible for all those
salesmanship announcements on the sheet, declaring that the I932 Horseshoe is the
n all right. Walter thinks it's great to be crazy. V
DOROTHY RICHARDS-"Cee-rusalemf'
The girls' Sports Editor of the Annual is truly representative. A dart down the
floor, and a basket, some quick maneuvering, a strong swing, connection, and a goal,
a "hefty" swat, fast legs, a home run. Dot, our most athletic girl.
MARY ELIZABETH SCHLAYER-"Is there anything to type?,'
She's a Senior Associate Editor of the Horseshoe and generalissimo around that
office. She,s on the debating team, and knows how to employ the art that got her
there, intermingled with wit, anywhere and everywhere. Why the sudden interest in
boys' athletics, Mary Liz?
.I EAN SEADS-
Jean is Miss Salutatorian and a whiz at translating Virgil. Sheas in the National
Honor Society and the Senate, and do you remember the little Russian dancer in "The
Brevities ? 'I
HARRY TAYLOR-"FII Bite."
NHT, belongs to our c'Four-hundredf' He claims that his dignity grew even
though he didn't when he became President in our Junior Year. Weire still wonder-
ing, '4Hi,', if that certain Sophomore doesn't have that something in her smile that
seems to make life worth-while. fHelp us out. Wonit you?J
KATHRYN TERWILLIGER-
Kate-slender, attractive, graces our class as Valedictorian. She is also a mem-
ber of the National Honor Society. And can she play baseball!
MURIEL WALTER-6'Keep out of my way, lim in a hurryf'
And "Pat,' very often is, getting copy in for the Handbook fshe's editorj g dash-
ing to Senate meetings fshe's a politicianjg getting to classes on time fsheis a hall
patroljg finishing the last Trigonometry problem fshe's a struggling mathematicianjg
coming to Quill and Scroll meetings fshe,s a journalistlg and talking Qshe's our best
girl conversationalistl
JOHN WELKER-'5Say, do you do anything?',
Freckles, blue eyes, and a big grin-that,s Johnny. Heis a sprinter he is, not
only on the cinder track and when decorating for socials, but also in getting this not-
able Annual together, for he is Ye Editore. Not only that, but he is a member of the
National Honor Society and the Senate.
JAMES WHITE-"For the sake of Democracy."
Jim is the conservative president of the Senate, and the sporting president of
the Forestry and Outdoor Club. He is short, has light red hair, a few freckles, fsome
significant characteristicsj By the way, he was Chairman of the Junior Refreshment
Committee.
WILLIAM YEATTS-"Oh gee, tl1.at's right?
'6Bill'7 is the chief executive of the Honor Society, but in class history he is listed
under '4Added Attractionsv since he served two years on the executive committee.
The Boy Scouts call him "Mayor,7' and Bill claims his ability to make stump speeches
can be traced to this period of his life. Then there are those what think heis hand-
some.
Page Ninety-two
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"THE TESTAMENT OF BEAUTYU
. . . . . The dance of young trees that in a
wild birch-spirmey toss to and fro the
cluster of their flickering crests, as rye
curtseying in array to the breeze of
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Junior Class Officers
Top Row: Hinman, Finney, Gaver, Miller.
Bottom Row: Martin, Wolfe, Thomas, Robinson.
President. ............ . -..-.-. Wiliiam WOIf6
Vice President ....... ....... D onald Thomas
Secretary ........... ..... S ara Jane Martin
Treasurer ...... .......... C arl Robinson
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Betty Hinman Margaret Finney Robert Baltz Donald Gaver Maxine Miller
SOCIAL COMMITTEES
Refreshment Program Decoration
Betty Smith, Chairman
Jane Mattern
Charlotte Bell
Beatrice Gallagher
Sheldon Ehringer
Mara Martin
Leona Rouzer
Paul Krouse
Kathryn Rupert
Harold Miller
Max McCoy, Chairman
Philip Geary
Arvilla Miller
Mary Moore
Alice Whittaker
June Gorsuch
Miriom Wolf
Emery Harding
Jeannette Hershberger
Thelma Wood
Marie Ziegler
Archie Clapper
Reception
Scott Kurtz, Chairman
Walter Blake
Herbert Freeman
Homer Patton
Jane Findley
Wilbur Kane
Eugene Morelli
Mary K. Myers
Dorothy Pfahler
Robert Gregg
Paul Krugh
Marguerite Jones
Finance
John Klick, Chairman
Marcella Courson
Dorothy Williams
Jean Gibbon
Anna Hobba
Beatrice Benner
Ted Colleruso
Fred Batrus
Henrietta Swank
Virginia Goodman
Gerald Ro-tz
William Stellabot
Carl Robinson, Chairman
Robert Epple
Herbert Dietz
Charles Pack
William Springer
Marjorie Williams
Dorothy Summers
Louella Loudenslayer
SPONSORS
Miss Unverzagt, Chairman Miss Johns
Miss Bancroft Mr. Shaffer
Page Ninety-four
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Junior Class History
ARK ye and listen, while we relate the Junior class history. We shall en-
deavor to bring before you the hopes, the ambitions, the successes, and the
victories of that body.
The tale of our Freshman year is one to be long remembered by us all. ln the
fall of 1929, assuming that noble feeling of the high and mighty, we gallantly opened
the doors of Roosevelt, resolved to be the most aggressive Freshman class that had
ever taken the reins of that school. The mysteries of algebra and Latin, which at first
shrouded our happy days, were soon mastered by our tedious study. As was the
custom, a president was chosen for the school. Sheldon Ehringer emerged victorious
after the smoke of the political fires cleared away. Our annual play, The Torearlors,
was stamped as the most outstanding work of our Freshman year. Recognition
day brought to an end our short lived reign and we looked forward to our becoming
full fledged Sophomores.
We arrived at Altoona Senior High with high spirits-but oln how they were
dampened. Of course, the Juniors and Seniors-were the cause of this catastrophe. It
was not unusual to hear our classmates make such bright remarks as, 4'Could you
please show me to room 1l6," or "Would you direct me to the cafeteria?,' ln other
words we were considered "just naturally dumbn by those most honorable upper class-
men. However, we soon became acquainted with our surroundings, and in a few
weeks everything was running smoothly. The first thing of great import that oc-
curred was the organization of the Sophomore class. To us, this was to be a great
honor for we were the first Sophomores to organize our class. However, by the amount
of buzzing that was to be heard, and by the horror displayed by the Seniors that
such a thing could happen in A. H. S., one would have thought it an insult. Never-
theless, we organized, and very competent officers were elected with Wilbur Kane as
president. And-can you imagine-we were allowed the whole of one social dur-
ing the year. This red letter day was Friday, February 13, and contrary to supersti-
tion a good time was had by all. . Nothing more of grave importance happened ex-
cept, of course, the second semester exams. These occurred amid much nervous ex-
citement and unfortunately reduced the size of our class.
Finally after regretfully realizing that our joyous vacation had passed too
soon, we returned to school, advanced into Juniordom, "the cream of the cropf,
Far too busy trying to find out what chemistry and geometry were all about, we did
not find time to molest the insignificant Sophomores. But we should care, what were
puny Sophs in our life anyhow? Throughout the year, creditable to our class stand-
ing, was the fact that many Juniors had contributed greatly toward the success of all
the sports.
After the highly welcome Christmas vacation was terminated, we met the terror
of terrors-mid-year exams. Greatly depressed and darkened as we had been by
these exams, we were suddenly enlightened and overjoyed that the first Junior prom
had arrived at last.
The end of the school year came much too soon, but since time goes unceasingly
forward, we placed the pleasant memories of that eventful year in our supposedly
more educated minds and turned to face our last year in A. H. S.
Page Ninety-five
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Sophomore Class Officers
Top Row: Eckles, Jaggard, Grove, J. Kelley.
Bottom Row: Duncan, Hite, McGuire, Swartz.
President ............... ....... .......... ............................... R o b ert Hite
Vice President .... . ....... Patricia McGuire
Secretary. ........... ....... L ucille Duncan
Treasurer ....... .............. . . ........................................... ,Iohn Swartz
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Betty Eckels Dean Grove Jane Jaggard Jane Kelley Katherine Kelley
SOCIAL COMMITTEES
Decoration Refreshment Program
William McCracken, Chairman Ann Fowler, Chairman Izore Mangas, Chairman
Charles Montgomery Orvel Fluke
Sara Hartswick
Jane Grimshaw
Buhl Jones
Ann Ohlwiler
Jean Harris
Helen Woo-mer
Lou Allen
Henry Good
Melvin McClellan
Robert Welker
Ralph Treese
Robert Cleaves
Robert Brawley
William Kiser
Harry Lotz
Tom Griffith
Alex Notopoulos
Jane Berkowitz
Helen Replogle
William Jacobs
Ruth Semple
Geraldine Helty
Allen Chilcote
Eleanor Vellino
Margaret Mattas
Kate Shearer
Phyllis Hite
Winnie Eckels
Theodore Hilderbrand
John Harr
Ann Jones
Wilbur Stiffler
Jack Shaffer
Helen Boles
Arthur Fair
Paul Harnish
Mary Jane Smulling
Lucille Anderson
Lucille Sheehan
Betty Anderson
J. Hoenstine
Chad Crumrn
Mary Paul
Edith DeSabito
Reception Finance
Ann Moll, Chairman Virginia Shearer John Swartz, Chairman Betty Knepple
Clair Rhodes Harry Edwards Marion Corbin Dorothy Jackson
Dorothy Groban Libby Hogue Eskil Beckman Grace Cox I
William McCament Janet Dagenhart Leonard Hite Ruth Cunningham
Edward Geesey William Cheers Gale Reffner Cleo McClain
Gertrude Shope Jane Weller
SPONSORS
Miss Orr, Chairman Miss Gray
Miss McGee Mr. Shaffer
Page Ninety-six
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Sophomore History from Keith
HAT a thrill we felt as we entered Keith, that splendid yellow
brick temple of learning surrounded by green terraces and rock
gardens!
The inside was even more lovely than the outside. The auditorium had
been painted in pastel pink and yellow. The gymnasiums were large and
modern in every respect. The cafeteria was more complete than any other
in Altoona. Everything was new and lovely, and we were proud to be the
first to receive our junior high instruction in that beautiful building.
Early in the year we decided that our school colors would be Green
and White. These colors graced our team in its brave battles.
We were members of a new school, and so we had many opportunities
to assist in the various organizations. We wrote songs, published the D. S.
K., our school paper, organized a band, chose a school pledge, and supported
our newly formed team. V
There are certain events of that year that stand out in our memories:
The presentation of Keith Varieties occurred on March 26, 27 and 28.
Everyone present acclaimed this play, a huge success.
Our team invaded Johnstown and chalked up a 6-0 victory.
On Columbus Day, Mrs. Marks, representing the Altoona Chapter of the
W. C. T. U., presented us with a picture of Frances Willard.
On Armistice Day our team defeated the Bedford Junior High, but on
November 21, we were defeated by Roosevelt.
The football banquet occurred December 16. This affair was attended
by the thirty boys to receive awards, the football coaches, the principal,
Superintendent Laramy, and Rev. Peters who spoke on '4What Makes a
Football Player."
During the Christmas chapel exercises on December 19, the members
of the dramatic and glee clubs presented the play HWhy the Chimes Rang."
This play was later presented at Altoona's Little Theater.
The Ladies' Auxiliary of the G. A. R. presented the school with a hand-
some flag on April 27. The following day, the P. O. S. of A. presented us
with two more flags. Several hundred men and women representing this
organization marched to the accompaniment of the Altoona High School
Band from the Penn-Alto Hotel to our school.
The last day in Keith was a very sorrowful one to every one of us. Dur-
ing the last chapel exercises, honor students received their pins, the eighth
grade charge was read, our ninth grade song was sung, and we were wel-
comed to senior high by a member of the senate. We now stood on the
threshold of our high school career.
Page N inety-seven
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Sophomore History from Roosevelt
TOP pushing!" uWhere are they taking me, now?" MCet off my feetli'
these remarks and many more were heard as the class of '34 was usher-
ed from the auditorium to the gymnasiums for the assignment of
classes. All were given reporting room numbers and then allowed to go
home to tell their fates. Next day those who found themselves surrounded
by a sea of new faces met the first social problem in junior high school, that
of making new friends. Other problems soon presented themselves.
Science, Latin, and algebra were entirely new to everybody, but not so
diflicult as some of the Senior High students had predicted.
Athletic activities were entirely new to everyone, but the majority of the
boys and girls willingly put aside their books to support the football team.
The team was certainly worth the support it received. It started the season
with a Very successful game and finished with the loss of only one game out
of five. Probably the most dazzling victory was that over Keith, our local
rival school.
When election time came round, great enthusiasm reigned. Mary Jane
Smulling, the first girl president of Roosevelt, proved herself an unusually
good leader.
The semester tests caused many clouds and heartaches. This group was
not yet accustomed to tests of this type, but the storm soon passed and the sun
began to shine again for everyone.
Basketball season opened the new semester, but Roosevelt did little
more than beat Keith, which was really the one great aim after all.
Probably the most important event of the school year was, as always
before, the annual show. The show was a financial success, but many thought
the similarity to the Annual Show given yearly by the senior high school
detracted from the real entertainment.
This class proudly published a strictly ninth grade number of the Blue
and White, which was really our Annual. This sort of publication is not
usually achieved until the senior year in high school, and so We prized it
highly.
This Freshman year in Roosevelt was really a year of hard work, a year
of unusual accomplishments, and a year of joy intermingled with the un-
avoidable sorrows. Regardless of the fact that almost everyone was anxious
for vacation, each one seemed sorry that the end of junior high days had
come and intensely curious about senior high.
Page Ninety-eight
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THE TESTAMENT OF BEAUTY"
. . . wallid alone with the Muse in her
garden of thought, discoarsing at liberty
with the mazy dreams that came wavering
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"THE TESTAMENT OF BEAUTY"
. . . Like a migratory flock of birds that
rustle southward from the cold fallof the
year in ordefd phalanx.
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Our Annual Record
John Welker Walter Oswalt
Editor-in-Chief Business Manager
N 1906 the first annual was published by the Altoona High School. This
is the twenty-seventh publication, and our staff has tried to make this
year's annual the best that has ever been published. At the beginning
of the year, great care was taken in the selection of the staff 3 and representa-
tives were chosen from the Senior, Junior and Sophomore classes. Each
member has done his or her part in making the book the success that we hope
it to be.
The staff had a splendid co-operation from the faculty advisers
and the Art Department of the school, to whom We are very much indebted
for their services. Mr. Williams has advised us generally on all phases of
publishing the annualg Mr. Dickey has conducted the business end of the
work very competently, Miss Hedden has co-operated very well in getting the
typing work done, and Miss Swayne has very competently advised us in the
literary Work. All the art work throughout the book was done by art students
and the art staff, under the able instruction of Miss Tressler and Miss Bot-
dorf.
This year We have departed from the usual Way of dedicating the book
to an individual and have dedicated it to Beauty. This dedication is in
keeping with our theme, The Testament of Beauty, a poem Written by Robert
Bridges, and published a short time before his death.
We sincerely hope that you will enjoy reading and looking at this An-
nual and appreciate the work of the staff members who have strived to make
it worthy of the reputation of the school.
Page One Hundred Four
The Annual Staff Personnel
Top Row: Snyder, Grabiii, Datrus, Norris, Vvise, Vaughn, Noll.
Middle Row: Richards, Findiey, Williams, Kekalos, Klick, Beckman, Kraft, McViker, Groban, Gluntz,
Larson.
Bottom Row: Santa Maria, Strawe, Schlayer, Stephenson, Welker, Oswalt, Gieg, Burd, Walters.
Editor-in-Chief .......
Business Manager .......
Circulation Manager ........
Literary Editor ....................
Assistant Literary Editors ......
Art Editor ...................
Assistant Art Editors ......
Athletic Editors .......
.......John W. Welker'
.......Walter Oswalt
.......Hugh Norris
......Dorothy Burd
Uohn Kekalos
IAlma Gluntz
.......Rose Groban
Uohn L. Klick
SDorothy Richards
2Carl McVicker
fMary Elizabeth Schlayer Beatrice Strawe
Senior Associate Editors. ............ 4 Marguerite Santa Maria Paul Cieg
lMarjory Stephenson William Walters
- - - Q iFred Batrus ,lane Eindley Harry Noll
Junior Associate Editor. ............. Hzunice Grabiu Marjorie Williams
S 1 S - - ' SAileen Snyder Agnes Larson
op iomore As ociate Editors.. ................................... 2Martha Vaughn Eskil Beckman
Typistc SEdith Santella Margaret Eamigh Yolando Sislo
L A""""""""' ""' Q Hazel Bohn Dorothe Brede Anne Engels
General Adviser ....... ...................... ............................. M r . C. B. Williams
Business Adviser ........ ............... M r. Dickey
Printing Adviser ...... ........ M r. Romig
Literary Adviser .................... ..............,................ .... . .......................... ....... M i V ss Swayne
Additional Literary Contributions made hy
Hugh K. Torrance
Dorothy Gene Reinheinier
Page One Hundred Five
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. Our Newspaper Record .
John E. Miller, Jr.
Editor-in-Chief
signment to each member of the staff of cer-
tain duties, for which that member alone is
responsibleg and the publication of a six page
Christmas number.
The Mountain Echo was awarded second
rating among high school publications of
Pennsylvania in the annual contest sponsored
by the Pennsylvania Scholastic Press Associa-
tion, and was represented at the annual con-
vention held by this association in Pittsburgh
by William Davis, who conducted a discus--
sion of how to secure readers for the school
paper.
Jean Shaner
Sports Editor
HE Mountain Echo, during the year
1931-32, has become established, more
than ever before, as an indispensable
factor in Altoona High School activities.
Despite ra financial low ebb . . . admit-
tedly a customary, but assuredly a plaus-
ible explanation . . . the Mountain Echo
has attained many progressive accomplish-
ments in editorial policy, as well as in news-
paper makeup. Outstanding among the many
innovations were: A change from the old-
ten-point type to the seven-point type, which
brought about a marked improvement in the
appearance of the paperg the publication of
an Alumni Issue, edited by the staff, but de-
voted entirely to alumni news, individual as-
f
Fred Datres
Business Manager
Stimulated by the aims fostered by the
charter members of the Quill and Scroll, com-
posed of the personnel of last yearis staff,
the Mountain Echo has striven to be a
publication admired by high schools over the
entire nation. The success attained thus far
would not have been possible without the
sympathy and inspiration of our faculty ad-
viser, Miss Wray.
To next year's staff, the staff of 1931-32
leaves this heritage,-a school publication
which is enjoyed and appreciated by students
and faculty alike. Make the 1932-33 Moun-
tain Echo an all-American high school news-
paper.
Page One Hundred Six
The Mountain Echo Staff Personnel
Top Row: Corbin, Rice, Faust, Shaner, Lamade, Brumbaugh, Petrarca, Burkhart.
Bottom Row: Etter, Stouffer, Datres, Miller, Walter, Samuel, Davis,
Editor-in-Chief .......
Associate Editor .......
Assisting Editors ..... .
News Editor ........
Sports Editor .....
Exchange Editor
Business Manager
Sales Managers .......
Head Typist .......
Faculty Adviser ..............
.....,lohn E. Miller, Jr.
.......Carl D. Etter
William Davis
Marjorie Stouffer
Helena Samuel
.....Muriel Walter
.........Jean Shaner
Dorothy Burkhart
..........Fred Datres
S Burt Myers
2Marion Corbin
.......Martha Brumbaugh
........Miss Wray
Typographical Adviser ........ ........ M r. Skelly
Reporters: Dorothy Burd, Virginia Barnhart, Marjorie Williams, Jeanette
Hershberger, Renetta Heiss, Virginia Goodman, Ben Troop, Barney Rifkin, Eleanor
Coxey, Jane Berkowitz, Ruth Freeman, Robert Isaacson, Samuel Myers, Ted
Colorusso, Joe Armstrong, June Corsuch, Jeanne Walker, Robert McNaughton, Dwight
Fickes, Harry Lotz, Don Snyder, Lawrence Bretts, Gene Reinheimer, Paul Gieg,
Esther Yingling.
Page One Hundred Seven
The Girls League
Standing: VVoomer, Hirst.
Sitting: Grimshaw. Emeric-li.
OFFICERS
President ................. .................................. i anne Grinishaw
Vice President ........ ........ G eraldine Emerick
Treasurer ........... ........... T vlarian Hirst
Secretary ........ ........ l da Wfoomer
Sponsor ....... ......... M iss Lentz
HE activities of the Girls League began with a preliminary meet-
ing held September 8, at which was featured the Big Sister Move-
ment. The ex-president, Grace Savage, took charge of the meeting
which was held as a party for the incoming girls. The Big Sister Movement
is a new one in the Girls League but it has been very beneficial to new girls.
It was at this meeting that Miss Lentz, the Girls League sponsor, announced
that the scholarships which are given every year to girls were awarded to
Grace Savage, going to Hood Collegeg Evelyn Stiffler, going to Indiana State
Teachers College, and Margaret George going to Shippensburg State Teach-
ers College.
At the first general meeting of the Girls League, nominations for oiiicers
were held, while at the second and third meetings Uboostw speeches and cani-
paigns held the interest. The result of the election held September 29 were:
President, Anne Grimshawg vice president, Geraldine Emerickg secretary,
Ida Wioomerg treasurer, Marian Hirst.
At the fourth general meeting the newly elected officers were installed
The president, Anne Grimshaw, received the gavelg the vice president, Ger-
Page One Hundred Eight
aldine Emerick, received the Book of Records: the secretary, Ida Woomer,
the minute book, and Marian Hirst, the treasurer, Was given the treasurer's
book. Miss Wyland, from State College, who is in charge of the student
teacheris training Work, spoke on uThe Waste of a College Educationf'
On November 10 the Armistice Day Program was held. lt was a very
impressive program, and at the end Miss Lentz read the list of Altoona High
School students who had died in service of the World War. They were Ralph
Alexander, Alton Cole, Chateau Thierry, 1918, William Lynn, Meuse-
Argonne, 1918.
The meeting held December 8, featured the Scholarship Honor Roll of
the Girls League and the presentation of the honor pins to girls who had at-
tained an average of ninety in four solids during the year 1930-31. The
number of pins, which included nine gold, twenty-nine silver. and forty
bronze, was the largest ever to be presented. Mr. Gilbert awarded the pins
and congratulated the girls on their fine Work. Y H
The December 22 meeting was turned over to the Entertainment Group
of the Girls League. This group presented the Christmas program at that
meeting.
At the January meeting it is the custom to have the Superintendent of
public schools, Mr. Laramy, address the League. At the meeting the presi-
dent also presents the past president's picture to the League to be hung in
the hall. Anne Grimshaw, president of the League, presented the picture of
Grace Savage, president during the year 1930-31, to the League.
At the different meetings held, the various groups of the League present
their programs. ln April the Senior girls go to Washington.
Members of the League who went to Washington this year were: Doris
Bollinger, Marjory Barry, Doris Beattie, Lorene Bott, Dorothy Brede, Maxine
Collins, Betty Davis, Minna Ebeling, Hazel Ellenberger, Geraldine Emerick,
Alice Fickes, Frances Fornwalt, Marjorie Gammill, Alma Gluntz, Anne Grim-
shaw, Laura Good, Helen Gallagher, ,lane Hauser, Dorothy Heess, Renetta
Heiss, Harriet Hiner, Dorothy Hughes, Lois Huebner, Betty Hull, Vera
Knepper, Helen Parsons, Louise Lee, Martha Line, Sara Louise LeVan,
Mary McKinney, Thelma McGregor, Irene McCormick, Catherine Maricq,
Sara ,lane Moses, Dorothy Myers, Genevieve Paterson, Mary Pfelfer, ,lane
Phelan, Rebecca Ramsay, Virginia Replogle, Margaret Scholl, Elsie
Schroeder, Erdene Shope, Beatrice Soult, Lorraine Shaal, ,lean Seads, Mary
Elizabeth Wright.
The dinner for the Senior girls and their mothers was held on May 7
ending the activities for the year 1931-32.
Page One Hundred Nine
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The Boys Federation
Standing: McTavish, Knisely.
Sitting: McNaughton, Dollar.
OFFICERS
President ................ ..,............ R obert lVlcNaughton
Vice President ............ .............. H arold Dollar
Treasurer ........................ .............. J ohn Knisely
Recording Secretary ........ ....... D rexel McTavish
Student Radio Director ...... ........ C lement Hershey
Sponsor ........................... .............. lVl r. Cress
OR an organization so young, the Boys Federation has been of remarkable
service to the high school community. Under the able and wholehearted spon-
sorship of Mr. Gress, it has taken a prominent part in school activities. The
Federation, with a membership of over 1,4100 boys, is the largest student body in the
schoolg yet its size has not detracted from its efficiency, for the oiiicers and commit-
tees have had the unanimous co-operation of our boys in everything they have under-
taken.
Besides the unifying inHuence which the Federation has had among the boys,
the school is indebted to it for a number of specific benefits. The Wednesday eve-
ning radio program, under the leadership of MClem,' Hershey, has been one of the
most entertaining and popular innovations we have had in many years. A statistical
survey would probably reveal that several hundred boys and quite a few girls have
given up their Wednesday night dates in order to get the latest music, gossip, and
wise-cracks over the air from WFBC. The program has attracted listeners through
its novelty, and has held them through its genuine worth.
The Welfare Committee of the Federation has been in the limelight a great deal
this year, because its activities have had as much to do with school life in general as
with the Federation. The whole high school has benefited by the active campaign
the committee has carried out against smoking in and near the school building, dis-
Page One Hundred Ten
order in assembly, and the scattering of waste paper in the halls. Funds derived
from the several sources of revenue of the organization are used, through the Welfare
Committee, to provide lunch, carfare, and medical attention for boys whose parents
are unable to secure these necessities for them on account of financial diHiculties. The
nature of this work has, of course, been secret, therefore, a great deal of good has
been accomplished without general publicity.
The Annual intra-mural sports program, in which all the athletically inclined
boys of the school take part, is another activity under the control of the Boys Federa-
tion, through its Athletic Committee. intra-mural sports satisfy the long felt need
for some athletic program in which not only varsity athletes, but all the boys of the
school may take part. Members of this committee, besides supervising home room
contests in basketball, baseball, volleyball, and tennis, assist in the city-wide sports
events of the grade schools. The popularity of these intra-mural sports events is
proved by the fact that many boys took part last year.
The Publicity Committee, although not very well known outside of the Federa-
tion, gives valuable assistance in keeping outsiders acquainted with the plans and
activities of the boys. By maintaining contact with the Mountain Echo and the city
papers, the Publicity Committee is able to keep the Federation's aims and accomplish-
ments constantly in the public eye.
Following a plan established early in the first year of its existence, the Boys
Federation brings prominent men to speak to its members, on every convenient oc-
casion, about many problems of boys of high school age. This practice has undoubt-
edly been of great benefit, and the credit for securing speakers of interest and profit
goes to the Program Committee.
It is to the Concessions Group of the Boys Federation that we are indebted for
the young candy and peanut salesmen who serve us at the football games. Half of
the money taken in by these boys goes to the Athletic Association of the high school.
The Ushering Group, which also is a unit of the Federation, is also indispen-
sable at the athletic field. The ushers, besides showing strangers to the proper seats,
help to keep order at the games.
In addition to those mentioned, there are six other groups affiliated with the
Boys Federation as special clubs, holding meetings every other Thursday. These are:
The Automobile Safety group, sponsored by Mr. Grove and Mr. Jacob Miller, the
Aviation group, sponsored by Mr. Fred Hiteg the Dramatic group, sponsored by Mr.
Snyder, the Forestry and Outdoor group, four sections, under Mr. Dickey, Mr. Pegg,
Mr. Harbaugh and Mr. Hare, the Stage Craft group, Mr. Hauser, the Track group,
under Mr. Bartholomew and Mr. Patrick.
While the Boys Federation cannot hope for some time to compete with the
longer-established Girls League in helping needy pupils through college, it has made
a promising start. During the first year, enough money was gathered from the Fed-
erationis sources of income to give two scholarships to boys who needed help and
whose high school record was commendable. This year, the Federation hopes to
start two more deserving boys on their way to a college education.
The Federation has now reached the end of its second year of existence. The
officers, both this term and last, have done their best for the organization and its
ideals. The boys themselves have worked enthusiastically and given their unstinted
support, without which nothing could have been accomplished. And now, consider-
ing the splendid work of those responsible for the Radio program, the Welfare and
Athletic committees, and of the Concessions and Ushering groups, the six special
clubs, and the scholarship fund to its credit, who can say that the Boys Federation is
not a success?
Page One Hundred Eleven
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National Honor Society
Top Row: Ellstrom, Burd, Santa Maria, Stephenson, Brumbaugh, Seads, Terwilliger, Meese, Datres
Eider.
Middle Row: Walter, Davis, Welker, Kekalos. Kraft, Heaps, Gibson, Hull, Hofmann, Walters.
Bottom Row: Anderson, McNaughton, Etter, Groban, Yeatts, Kline, Lee, Gluntz, Santella.
President .........
Vice President ........
Secretary ..............
Treasurer ,.......
President ..............
Vice President
Secretary ..............
Treasurer ........
Margaret Anderson
Fred Datres
Lillian Ellstroni
Alma Gluntz
Betty Hofmann
Frieda Kline
Robert McNaughton
Marguerite Santa Maria
Marjory Stephenson
Muriel Walter
OFFICERS
First Semester
Second Semester
Members
Martha Brumbaugh
Williaiii Davis
Carl Etter
Rose Groban
Betty Hull
Donald Kraft
Mae Meese
Edith S. Santella
Harry Taylor
William Walters
William Yeatts
Page One Hundred Twelve
.......Kenneth Heaps
......Dorothy Burd
........Gladys Gibson
........Donald Kraft
.......Willia1n Yealts
........Frieda Kline
........Rose Groban
Carl Etter
Dorothy Burd
Charles Eifler
Gladys Gibson
Kenneth Heaps
John Kekalos
Louise Lee
John E. Miller
Jean Seads
Kathryn Terwilligc
John Welker
ROBABLY the Hrst scholarship honor society founded was the Phi Beta Sigma,
established by Dr. William B. Owen in 1900. The need for such honor
societies was felt by all the states across the continent. These societies have
as underlying principles: character, scholarship, leadership and service.
The committee that wrote the constitution of the National Honor Society, said,
4 The purpose of this organization shall be to create an enthusiasm for scholarship,
lo stimulate a desire to render service, to promote leadership, and to develop character
in the students of the American secondary schoolsf,
Service is interpreted as:
1. A willingness to serve the school when called upon.
2. A willingness to do thoroughly any assigned service in school procedure.
3. Willingness to show courtesy to visitors.
4. A willingness to uphold scholarship and maintain loyal school attitude.
Leadership is interpreted to mean:
1. Initiative in the classroom.
2. Initiative in promoting any high school activities.
3. Successfully holding positions of responsibility.
4. Contributing ideas which may be introduced in the civic life of the
school.
Character is recognized by:
1. Meeting individual obligations to school promptly and' completely.
V 2. Honest spirit in classroom and cordiality and sincerity toward teachers
and fellow students.
Pupils who are eligible for this society are those who have attained to a high
degree these four qualities, character, scholarship, leadership and service. They must
be among the first third of their graduating class. Of the pupils who receive diplomas,
not more than iifteen per cent may be members. However, there need not be fifteen
per cent of the graduating class in the National Honor Society.
The symbols of the National Honor Society are the keystone and the flaming
torch. The keystone represents stability and lirmness, and the torch represents light
and knowledge. The emblem of the National Honor Society is the keystone with the
flaming torch on it, and the letters C. S. L. S. which stand for character, scholarship,
leadership, and service. This beautiful emblem is resplendent in color, and neat in
appearance. It is a very valuable possession, and although the members of the Na-
tional Honor Society are not compelled to purchase the emblem, each one wants to
have one and is proud of it when he gets it.
This is a nation-wide honor society and one which every one should strive to be
eligible to join. Will not the emblem, the torch, held high, inspire all of you with
those ideals that challenge your highest and best powers?
Page One Hundred Thirteen
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The Senate
Top Row: Cramer, Grimshaw, Hess.
Middle Row: Miss Krick, Welker, Lee, Blake, Ehringer, Torrance, Moses, Mr. Pegg.
Bottom Row: Walter, Fickes, Moore, White, Ellstrom, Housley, Emerick.
OFFICERS
President ............... ...... ..... ...,. ......... J a m e s White
Vice President ..................,.......................... ..... L illian Ellstrom
Secretary-Treasurer fFirst Semesterl ....... ......... M ary Moore
Secretary-Treasurer fSecond Semesterl ...... ....... J ane Crimshaw
Athletic Committee Representative ........... ...... D Wight Fickes
Sponsor .............................................. ......... M r. Pegg
MEMBERS
SENIOR CLASS JUNIOR CLASS SOPHOMORE cLAss
James White Sheldon Ehringer Hugh Torrance
Lillian Ellstrom Mary Moore Jane Grimshaw
Dwight Fickes Louise Cramer Sara Hartswick
Jean Seads Walter Blake Charles Montgomery
REPRESENTATIVES
Honor Society ............. Louise Lee Handbook ..... .... Muriel Walter
Girls League, ..... Geraldine Emerick Hall Patrol, ......... Sara Jane Moses
Boys Federation ..... William Housley Horseshoe ............... John Welker
Mountain Echo ........ John E. Miller
HE senate of the Altoona Senior High School is a body of students represent-
ing-the three classes and the prominent organizations of the school. Every
school of high standards aims to place a large share of school government in
the hands of the students themselves. For the years 1930-31 and 1931-32 the student
body of the Altoona High School has had its voice in school government.
The aim of the senate is the advancement of the school morale. Its work is the
handling of school law violations by the students, the promoting of sportsmanship at
various athletic functions, the providing of facilities for general social events, and
the stimulating of better co-operation between the teachers, students and parents.
Page One Hundred Fourteen 1
"The Quill and Scroll"
Top Row: McNaughton, Stouffer, J. Miller, Walter, Etter.
Bottom Row: Burd, Davis, Samuel.
OFFICERS
President ............... ....................... ....... W i lliam Davis
Vice President ........... ........ D orothy Burd
Secretary-Treasurer ...... ...... H elena Samuel
Sponsor ................... ....................... ........ M i ss McClure
MEMBERS
William Davis Muriel Walter Robert McNaughton Carl Etter
Dorothy Burd John Miller Helena Samuel
Marjorie Stouffer
HE Quill and Scroll, the international honorary society for high school jour-
nalists, numbers over five hundred chapters. These are located in every state
of the Union, in Hawaii, in England, and in China. More than ten thousand
young journalists from schools which are outstanding in the quality of their publica-
tion work have been initiated into the group and wear the significant gold emblem.
The society was first organized on April 10, 1926 by a group of high school super-
visors and has since taken an active part in raising journalistic journalism. Altoona
High School joined the group last year and adopted the singular appellation of
"Scriveners" for its chapter of the society.
Members of the Quill and Scroll must be chosen from the students enrolled in
high school who, at the time of their election, meet the following requirements: Qlj
They must be of at least Junior standing, Q21 they must be in the upper third of their
class in general scholastic standing at the time of their election Qfor the current year,J
Q31 they must have done superior work in some phase of journalistic or creative
endeavor, Q45 they must be recommended by the supervisor or by the committee
governing publications, and Q51 they must be approved by the national secretary-
treasurer.
Despite the fact that it has been a part of Altoona High School for only two
years, our uScriveners,' group has accomplished a great deal, and much is to be
achieved in the very near future.
Page One Hundred Fifteen
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The Debating Team
Top Row: Schlayer, Thompson, Geary, McNaughton, Colello, Fowler.
Bottom Row: Steinhof, Miller, Hildebrand, Maitland, Samuel.
MEMBERS
Lynn Hildebrand Maxine Miller Helena Samuel Robert McNaughton
Philip Geary
ALTERNATES
Elfrieda Steinhof Malcolm Neuwahl Dorothy Fowler Margaret Thompson
Mary E. Schlayer
Coach ................... .............................. M iss Margaret McCauley
LTHOUCH the debating team has not met this year with the success it had in
1931, when Altoona took third place in the State finals of the Pennsylvania
Forensic League Debates, it has, nevertheless, made praiseworthy efforts.
Miss McCauley, the coach, has developed one of the best debating groups our high
school has ever seen, in spite of the fierce competition of other Blair County teams.
A larger group than usual turned out for the team this year, a sign of growing interest
our pupils are taking in this activity. Both Junior and Senior classes were represent-
ed on the team and among the nsubsf' Maxine Miller and Helena Samuel were the
Junior speakers, and Robert McNaughton and Lynn Hildebrand were the Senior
speakers. Philip Geary, a Junior substitute, debated on March 10, against Holli-
daysburg. Although no Sophomore tried to make the team this year, members of this
class are both permitted and encouraged to do so.
The Altoona Affirmative and Negative teams met Tyrone and Claysburg on
March 3, defeating both opponents by wide margins. The Hollidaysburg speakers
met a similar fate on March 10, and on March 17, Altoona and Williamsburg, tradi-
tional enemies in these inter-school contests, debated at Hollidaysburg before an
audience of several hundred, to decide the Blair County debating title. The victory
fell to Williamsburg, giving our able opponents the right to represent Blair County
in the sectional and State contests.
Although the graduation exercises this year will see the loss of several compe-
tent Seniors, we must not forget that there are as many almost equally competent
underclassmen, who will form the nucleus of next year's team, which should, by
these signs, have an eminently successful season.
Page One Hundred Sixteen
The Hall Patrol
Top Row: Barry, Bathgate, Smith, Cupples, Lotz, Rharbaugh, Epple, Miller, Weber, Valone.
Middle Row: Swank, Simmons, Emerick, Buckel, Dollar, Klick, Oswalt, Freeman, Felton, Stauffer, Rupert
Bottom Row: Beard, Patton, Fickes, Grimshaw, Taylor, Moses, Gates, Walters, Wertz, Crum, Corson.
Captain ........ ....... S ara ,lane Moses
Sponsor ........ ....... M iss Marie Lauver
HE Hall Patrol, consisting of boys and girls who have a
good scholastic standing, definite leadership qualities, and
a pleasant and courteous attitude toward all, is an important
part of the administration of the Altoona High School.
The Patrol aids in encouraging the students to move through
the halls in an orderly fashion, observing the traflic regulations on
the stairs.
The sponsor of this organization is Miss Marie Lauver, Who
receives all complaints and ideas for the betterment of the Patrol.
She has as her aids, a head captain, Sara ,lane Moses, and
two sub-captains for each floor.
The head captain visits all floors and sees that the sub-captains
are on duty, while they in turn, go to the posts of their different
squad members to see that they are making proper use of their'
authority.
Thus, the traffic in our halls is regulated by the co-operation
of the student body and the guidance of the Hall Patrol.
Page One Hundred Seventeen
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Girls' Athletic Club
Top Row: Bohn, Mattas, Sault, Price, Johnson, McGirk, Fonner, Clark, Crouse, Lambour, Reese. p
Second Row: Houser, Riley, W. Eckels, Weiss, Beauchamp, Brandt, Goss, Riddle, Smulling, McConnell,
Casner, Johns, Lybarger, Goodman.
Third Row: Nycum, Clowers, Weiner, B. Eckels, Baldt, Snyder, Gibbons, Richards, Hirst, Goetz, Crawford,
R lo le Howell Wert.
ep S 1 .
Bottom Row: Cramer, Cassell, Lumoden, Filler, Benner, Kirk, Fleck, Weltmer, Schraff, Ross, Share.
OFFICERS
President ................ .................................... D orothy Richards
Vice President ......... ......... D orothy Snyder
Secretary ................ ......... G ene Gibbons
Treasurer ......... ........ M arian Hirst
Sponsor ........ .......... M iss Eyre
HE Girls, Athletic Club was organized, Thursday, October 22, under
the direction of its sponsor, Miss Eyre. There are seventy-five active
members, who meet every Thursday morning in the gym during the
activity period. Due to this large membership it was necessary to divide the
club into four teams, each having its own captain, name, and color. They
are as follows:
Marian Hirst-'cPeppy Steppersn ....... ....... G reen
Bertha Boldt-uMerry Makersn ..... ...... B lue
Dot Richards-"Slippery Sixteen" ........... ......... . .. ............. .Red
4'Dutch" Snyder-"The Dutchesw .................................................... Orange
ln extremely hot Weather the members did not play any out-of-door
games except hockey, which added to the enthusiasm and interest of the club.
The purpose of this club is to arouse more interest in girls' athletics
and to make for efficiency in all lines of physical activities. By getting
together each Week the members were able to achieve their goal in an organ-
ized manner.
The achievements of this club lie in the individual. Those girls taking
the most active part got the most enjoyment out of it. The real idea is not
to make great teams but to give the girls something that will prove beneficial
in life. The club develops and prepares girls and makes them more phy-
sically-fit for many of their activities in high school and out of school.
Page One Hundred Eighteen
Auto Safety Club
Top Row: Rudisill, Burn-shire, Weber, Donnelson, Dietze, Capirusio, Herrington, Miller, Kennedy D
Casperrs.
Middle Row: Jones, Logue, Imler, I. Miller, Hanley, Wimmer, Weaver, Bowman, Palmer. Morris, Somers
Breda
Bott m Row: Mr. Grove, Jones, Hubert, Boatman, Giosia, Marshall, Cooper, Gloss, Liedel, Kirsh lvr
Miller.
OFFICERS
President .............. . ............. ...... H enry Marshall
Vice President ................... ......... W illiam Glass
Second Vice President ........... ....... W illiam Kennedy
Secretary-Treasurer .......................... .................. P aul Cooper
Assistant Secretary-Treasurer ............................ Norman Palmer
Sponsors ................................ Mr. Grove, Mr. Miller, Mr. Heiler
WHE Automobile Safety Club is one of the many clubs under
the Boys Federation of the Altoona High School. It was
organized by our sponsors Mr. Miller and Mr. Grove for the
purpose of teaching its members the value of safety in Altoona. In
the city of Altoona, many accidents occur each year because of
carelessness on the part of the pedestrians and automobile drivers.
It is the aim of the members of this club to do everything possible
to prevent these accidents. The Work of this club has apparently
been successful. Many people outside of the club take interest
in the work of the club and try to help it along.
Out of this club the Boys, Patrol was founded for the Altoona
High School. These boy patrolmen are stationed at corners around
the school to direct pedestrians and school children safely to the
other side of the street.
Page One Hundred Nineteen
Aviation Club
Top Row: Yeatts, Clapper, Nelson, Allison, VValters, Barry, Moyer, Hite, Hunt, Glass.
Second Row: Griffith, Fultonovige, Crape, Antes, Snively, Smith, Bumgardner, Rorabaugh, Shaw, Clapper
Third Row: Sassman, Karcz, Shoenfeld, Zeak, Lasher, Luckner, Schill, Rauchle, Tiberiinger, Williamson
Ulrich, McGuire.
Fourth Row: Hite, Gable, Wolfe, Rosbock, Kaufman. Goodman, Clendenin, McKee, Freet, Martin, Hern
Woolson, Bennett, Mr. Hite.
Bottom Row: Bowers, Crayle, Smith, Walker, Nip, Wohlbruck, Simmons, Brubaker, Maruscha, Louder,
Sfl'OSS8l', Stoner.
President.. .......
OFFICERS
Vice President .......
Secretary .........
Treasurer ........
Sponsor ........
...N
Harvey Bennett
.Charles Griffith
...Leonard Hite
.......Robert Griffin
Hite
HE Altoona High School Aviation Club was organized to
aid in removing the fear of flying, and foster interest and
understanding in aviation among the youth of the school.
The newspapers and magazines put fear into youths because
of the gruesome headlines and Writeups of accidents. Most of
these are exaggerated to a great extent.
lt is our privilege to know that flying is the safest method of
travel today. We talk of the types of airplanes that are used in
the different lines of work, of the tests the pilot has to pass for
higher ranking, and of the tests the units of a plane is put
through before they are assembled.
The organization of this club brought so many fellows that
the meetings are now held on the boys, gymnasium bleachers.
Page One Hundred Twenty
Chemistry Club
Top Row: Fideli, Faust, Patton, Moser, Woolridge, Brett, Disabito.
Bottom Row: Mr. Hoffman, Rothert, Stewart, Perry, Reigh.
OFFICERS
President ............. ............................ ....... P a ul Stewart
Vice President ............. .................. J ack Heigh
Secretary-Treasurer ......... ................... W ayne Perry
Sponsor ........................ ......... M r. W. H. Hoffman
HE Chemistry' Club, sponsored by Mr. Hoffman, was an organi-
zation of Junior and Senior boys interested in the study and ap-
plication of chemistry. To become a member of the club it was
necessary to take the course in chemistry offered in Senior High school.
During the year many interesting periods were spent in demonstrations
of chemical actions.
The purpose of the club was to bring about a thorough understand-
ing of the application of chemistry to our everyday life.
During the first semester of the year, the activity periods were
presided over by Mr. Hoffman, who gave demonstrations of practical
chemistry. The second semester was spent in experiments in qualita-
tive analysis which the members carried on themselves. Different types
of earth, rock, and other unknown substances were brought to club, an
attempt was made to find their composition, and many gratifying results
were obtained. The members of this club who were at the time taking
chemistry and those who had taken it before received much benefit
from the experiments and discussions.
Page One Hundred Twenty-one
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Commercial Club
Top Row: Duffan, Chulyak, Culbertson, Soller, Rodgers, Carr, Williams, Eamigh, Shaal, DeBarber, Gar-
gone, Taylor.
Middle Row: Brede, Saloniie, Chulyak, Fisher, Weiss, Brown, Bohn, N. Quirin, B. Quirin, Taylor, Ellis,
Davis, Bock, Schrenk, Royer, Schach, Sisto.
Bottom Row: Miss Duncan, Jadghuber, Cronin, Defazio, Schroeder, Burkholder, Brumbaugh, Stubbs, Wertz,
Hyle, Mclvlinn, Perazzola, Kelly, Crawford.
OFFICERS
President ............,. .................................. M artha Brumbaugh
Vice President ....,........ .............. M ax Schulman
Secretary-Treasurer ................................... Katheryn Bookholder
Sponsors ...... Miss Duncan, Miss Given, Miss Hare, Miss Hedden
HE Commercial Club, governed by a constitution, consists of Juniors
and Seniors taking two or more commercial subjects. The members
of the club are divided into groups of six, with a sponsor for each.
The Gregg Writer Club is one branch.
The purpose of the club is to aid the members in becoming more fami-
liar with modern methods of business and their leaders, to give social op-
portunities for commercial students, to foster leadership and scholarship,
and to render secretarial services to our school.
The club interviews business men of the city in regard to business meth-
ods and the qualifications necessary for secretaries in their offices. This
project will be put in suitable form for reference material.
Each year the Commercial Department, in co-operation with the adminis-
tration, chooses the most outstanding senior student in this department, on
the basis of scholarship and leadership. This year the honor has been award-
ed to Martha Brumbaugh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Brumbaugh of
Juniata Cap. Honorable mention was given to Edith Santella and Pauline
Griiiith.
Martha graduates from the secretarial course of the high school. She
is a member of the National Honor Society, typist for the Mountain Echo,
and president of the Commercial Club. Through the courtesy of the Altoona
Booster Association, their award goes this year to Martha.
Page One Hundred Twenty-two
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Top Row: Brady, Thompson, Rupert, DeVincens, Ickes, Notopolus, Kelly, Faulkender, Montgomery.
Midd1eFRlow: Etter, Levine, McCament, Shallas, Decker, Beckman, Leder, Lamade, Jackson, Mr. Snyder,
a r.
Bottom Row: F. Montgomery, Exline, Kane, I-Iousley, Owens, Browne, Vallade.
OFFICERS
President ............ ..................... ....... W i lliam Housley
Vice President ...... ........ J ames Owens
Secretary ............ ........... W ilbur Kane
Treasurer ........ ........... W illiam Keckler
Sponsor ........ ....... M r. Albert Snyder
x 3 ,
HE Boys Dramatic Club, under the main organization of the Boys
Federation, was inaugurated a year ago under the sponsorship of Mr.
Ben Culler. This club, although in its first year, then had a member-
ship of thirty. This year under the new sponsor, Mr. Albert Snyder, the
membership has increased to forty. The officers elected this year were:
President, William Housleyg vice president, James Owensg secretary, Wilbur
Kane, and treasurer, William Keckler.
The purposes of the club are: To present refined drama depicting
moral and social lessons, to provide a means by which to bring out to the
fullest extent latent active ability of the majority of its membersg to pro-
mote an appreciation of the drama by study of its origin, and styles in repre-
sentative nationsg to develop technique through actual participation in drama
sponsored by the club, and to improve enunciation and correct use of English.
A certain amount of difficulty was encountered during last year in pro-
ducing plays. However, a thorough study of different types of drama was
made by the members. A play given over the radio station WFBG in-
creased interest and stimulated a general well-feeling for the work of the
dramatic club. This year, two one-act plays were selected for presentation.
Page One Hundred Twenty-three
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Top Row: Fowler, Hetler, Humm, Hendrick.
Second Row: Hess, Lichtenstein, Down, Straney, Hecker, Carter, Kattoref, Bowles, Finney, Greenwalt.
Third Row: Hershberger, Jones, Folcarelli, Clapper, Findley, Hall, Chilcote, Hess, Hess, Gaines, Geddes.
Bottom Row: Jones, Billig, Gerhede, Gilmore, Newman, Duncan, D. Fowler, Curtis, Craig, Lozo Ander-
SUU, Vaughn. ,
OFFICERS
President ............. ..................... ....... D o rothy Fowler
Vice President ....... ...... L ucille Duncan
Secretary ............. ........ M ary Curtis
Sponsor ........... ......... ..... . . . ........ Miss M. Ritts
HE Girls, Dramatic Club is organized to furnish training inenunciation, in-
terpretation, and the production of a pleasing tone quality. To gain this end,
the members were given cards with instructions from which each girl gave her
own interpretation of the lines, gestures, or action called for on the card.
This year, the Girls' Dramatic Club put on a different type of play, yet it took
the audience back to the 'ildand of Make Believef' The title of the play was "The
Romantic Agef' by A. A. Milne. The cast for the play included: Dorothy Fowler,
William Davis, Betty Davis and Homer Patton. To Miss Ritts belongs the credit for
the performances presented during the year.
Top Row: Mandel, Meyers, Troxell, Yingling, Williams, Shay, H. Rhyan, Ryan, Mirante, Phayler.
Middle Row: Snowberger, Paul, Mangus, Frank, Snyder, Barr, Anderson, Reed, Reffner.
Bottom Row: Vifoomer, Mock, Shank, Richards, Wright, Miller, Shaffer, Wilson, Simkins, Tilson.
Page One Hundred Twenty-four
lVlr. Hare' s Forestry Club
Top Row: McConeah, Herbert, Loudon, Douglas, Harlan.
Middle Row: Hoover, Adams, McVicker, Ross, Henry, McCachran, Calvert, McConaly, Hatch.
Bottom Row: Lehrer, Curry, Lotz, Gieg, T. Miller, R. Miller, Clabaugh, Lengle.
OFFICERS
President ............... ......................... ................. P a ul Gieg
Vice President ......... ......,......... R obert Miller
Secretary ............... ....... F rancis Claybaugh
Treasurer ........ . ....... Thomas Miller
HE Forestry Club has obtained so many members since it was
organized in 1929 that it is now divided into four groups in
order to accommodate those who wish to join. This group is
sponsored by Mr. Hare who is Well acquainted with outdoor life.
Two of the most importantpurposes of this club are to acquaint
the students With outdoor life, and to teach them the value of natural re-
sources. The club would like to familiarize each student who knows
absolutely nothing about trees or the care of trees with the Wonderful-
ness of nature.
The club took several hikes and was entertained by speakers Who
are interested in this sort of Work. It was also entertained by movies
on different phases of nature in the auditorium and cafeteria.
Page One Hundred Twenty-nine
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lVlr. Pegg's Forestry Club
Top Row: Springer, George, Riley, Smelzer, Mountain.
Middle Row: Snyder, Cornelius, Gill, Armstrong, Little, Ellsworth, Buck.
Bottom Row: Weyant, McUlvay, Osman, Stewart, Heiler, Harnish, Rodgers, Reed.
OFFICERS
President ............. ...................... ....... R i chard Heiler
Vice President ....... ............ H arry Trout
Secretary ............. ........ E dward Stewart
Treasurer ......... ...... P aul Harnish
R. PEGG'S Forestry Club is one of the four forestry clubs in
our school. This club consists of about twenty-five boys
who are interested in the real purpose of forestry. The
oflicers consist of Richard Heiler, president, Harry Trout, vice presi-
dent, Edward Stewart, secretary, and Paul Harnish, treasurer. Mr.
Pegg is acting sponsor of this group.
The purpose of this club is to promote the knowledge of care in
handling of the rifle, and to help build up the rifle team. Mr. Pegg Was
a member of the Gettysburg College Rifle Club for three years, and he
gave instructions on the care and handling of the rifle.
The club has a few members on the A. H. S. Rifle Team, and ex-
pects to put a few more on it soon. Much interest has been developed
through the efforts of the forestry club. lt is planned to have some in-
door shoots, and as soon as the weather permits, to do some shooting
out-of-doors.
Page One Hundred Thirty
Forum Club
Top Row: Nagle, Miss Turner, Fonner.
Bottom Row: O'C0nnor, Korns, Rusynyk.
OFFICERS
President .............. ....................... ......... M i ldred Korns
Vice President ....... ........ B arbara Rusynyk
Secretary .............. ............... M abel Ellis
Sponsor ......... ....... M iss Turner
HE Forum Group of the Girls League is under the direction of
Miss Turner. The club was organized at the first meeting, in
which these officers were elected: President, Mildred Kornsg
vice president, Barbara Rusynykg secretary, Mabel Ellis.
The purpose of the Forum Club is one of great importance. When
out in public, girls often wish to speak fluently, intelligently at any time.
People are judged many times by their voices, by what they say, and by
the way they say it. So the purpose of this club is to train students to
speak correctly and fearlessly, and to be able to meet the World.
The club was organized very recently, and so its achievements
have been very few so far. lt trains girls in voice control, enunciation,
and expression. ln the future, it will offer a course in extemporaneous
speaking, and its members will have the privilege of giving extempor-
aneous talks in general meetings of the Girls League.
Page One Hundred Thirty-one
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Fourth Estate Club
Top Row: Etter, Leslie, Butterbaugh, Coxey, Gorsuch, Burd, Walker, Lotz, Troop. I
Middle Row: Freeman, Ross, Hanlon, R. Sealfon, Lamade, Brett, Heiss, Aurich, Coho, Fenner, Rifkin.
Bottom Row: Straws, Stouffer, Berkowitz, Shaner, Miller, Walter, Davis.
OFFICERS
President ................ ...................... ........ J e an Shaner
Vice President ......... ...... H ugh Torrance
Sec'y-Treasurer ......... ....... J ane Berkowitz
Sponsor ............... ........... M iss Wray
O prepare for the future Mountain Echo staff the Newswriting or
Fourth Estate Club met bi-monthly in Room 200. There the can-
didates Who wished to prepare for school newspaper Work were given
some of the fundamentals by the sponsor, Miss Wray and by members of this
year,s staff.
Frequently, as supplementary Work, outside speakers were brought in
lo address the club. Mr. Richard Barclay of the Altoona Tribune and Mrs.
Krick spoke to the club during the first semester.
During the year, various members of the club prepared speeches on
the great American journalists such as Joseph Pulitzer, William Randolph
Hearst, Adolph Ochs, and E. W. Scripps.
The meetings of the Blair County Scholastic Press Association which
were held in December and in April at Tyrone and Hollidaysburg were at-
tended hy several members of the club. Some members visited New York to
attend the Columbia Scholastic Press Association Meeting.
From this club the future editors of the Mountain Echo are chosen.
The duties that they will incur when in staff positions are explained and re-
portorial work is made easier for them.
The officers of the club were not elected to their positions but were ap-
pointed by the sponsor so as to get better results. Under these officers the
club, consisting of thirty members, had a successful year.
Page One Hundred Thirty-two
Hi-Y Club
Top Row: Nicodernus, Vveber, Yorgy, Schmidt, Hite, Miller, Batrus, Craine, Blackburn, Botwright, Oswalt. 1
Middle Row: Namey, Craft, Gaver, Wolf, Rudisill, Lafferty, Warsing, Ehringer, Gracey, Keller, Rotz, N
Mr. Pohle, Williamson.
Bo tom Row: Geary, Madara, Hershey, Heaps, Kurtz, Taylor, Pack, G. Rotz, Reichard.
OFFICERS
President ............... . . ......... Harry Taylor
Vice President ...... ........ J . Scott Kurtz
Secretary .......... ........... C harles D. Pack
Treasurer ...... ....... F . Kenneth Heaps
Sponsor ........ ........... A . E. Pohle
HE Hi-Y Club of Altoona High School consists of representa-
tives of the sophomore, junior and senior classes, and is gov-
erned in accordance with by-laws as laid down in the club con-
stitution. The club serves as a connecting link between the school and
the Y. M. C. A. Thus it benefits its members by giving them the oppor-
tunity of enjoying privileges at the NYU building.
The purpose of the Hi-Y club is to develop the youth spiritually,
mentally, and physically. For spiritual guidance the Hi-Y club spon-
sors a menls Bible study class at the Y. M. C. A. each year. All mem-
bers of the club are obliged to maintain a high scholastic standing. The
Hi-Y basketball team upheld the physical reputation of the organiza-
tion in its most successful season.
The club is one of the most active of its kind in the state in send-
ing representatives to various state Hi-Y conventions. An annual ban-
quet for the fathers and mothers is a feature on the club's program. lt
is the purpose of the Hi-Y to maintain order in the cafeteria. This work,
well done, has gained considerable merit for the organization.
Page One Hundred Thirty-three
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Library Club
Top Row: Stiver, Getz, Zcigler, Miles, Howser, Ramazzotti, Livingston.
Middle Row: Tobler, M. Meader, Kelley, Smith, Snavely, Johnson, Hicks, Miller, Gluntz.
Bottom Row: Quenzler, Simmons, Miller, D. Meader, Buckel, Lower, Freight.
OFFICERS
President .................. ...................... ....... M a rtha Meader
Vice President ......... ........ P auline Buckel
Secretary ............... ............ M artha Miller
Treasurer ....... ,. ......... Madelin Simmons
Sponsor ........ .... ...... ,.... ....... ...... ....... M i s s M a ud Minster
HE aim of the Library Club is to give students an opportunity to
develop the power of iinding, the art of sifting, the habit of reference
books, and the opportunity to develop skill and resourcefulness in
the use of library facilities.
Each girl selected one of the following committees on which to work:
Program, Shelf Reading, Magazine, Clipping, Book Truck, and Bulletin
Board.
Scrap books made in various high school libraries in the United States
were borrowed from the American Library Association. Methods used in
other schools were studied and compared with those used in our school.
At the second and third meetings, reading habits were discussed by the
girls and also by a guest speaker. Each girl was asked to observe her own
reading habit, to decide what she considered an ideal reading habit, and to
aim toward the latter. At the close of the term the girls gave reports of their
findings and what they had succeeded in accomplishing.
Quotations were selected by the club and printed by the mechanical
drawing department for use on the large bulletin boards in the halls. These
were changed once a week.
The Forum and Library Clubs gave a Saint Patrick Tea in the library
for the mothers on March seventeenth. For this occasion the club Worked
out a play on the subject of ul-low the Home Boom Club Can Help to Develop
Reading Habitsf'
Page One Hundred Thirty-four
Modern Language Club
Top Row: Border, Waltz, Hughes, Kekalos, Morelli, Vorndran.
Middie Row: Barry, Fiore, Defelbaugh, D'Aguanno, Stout, Chiodo, Davis.
Bottom Row: Viglioni, Janeri, Hepner, Natele, Fiori, Renttinger, McMonigua1.
OFFICERS
President .................. - ........................ ...... E nes Natale
Vice President ........ ....... A lice Hepner
Sec'y-Treasurer ........ ............... M ary Fiore
Sponsor ................. ...... lVl r. Grimminger
UE to the increasing popularity and interest manifested toward the
field of languages, taught in our high school, the Modern Language
Club, an organization comprised chiefly of students Who are mak-
ing a close study of one or more languages offered in the school curriculum,
has recently been organized under the zealous sponsorship of Mr. Charles
Grimminger, head of the Language Department.
The object of the Modern Language Club is to give the eager members
a thorough understanding of the background of the language they are pursu-
ing and to enable them to realize the beauty, which is involved in the
Romance Languages, which have undergone many changes during their de-
velopment, due to the many influences which gradually introduce new forms.
The detailed discussion of the effect of these influences together with the
tracing of foreign Words and phrases which still prevail in our noble language
is the main undertaking of the club. It especially affords each member an
opportunity to acquire a better knowledge of the history of our native tongue
and its relationship to other languages.
Each year, thus far, the club has sought to display its progress by a
program in which the nations have been represented by their outstanding
peculiarities such as native peasant dances, foreign songs in solo or chorus,
playlets, and impersonations of famous characters.
Page One Hundred Thirty-five
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Modern Novel Club
Top Row: Miss Woouier, Sperry, Heberly, Becker, Karns, Renninger, Shartel, Gallaway, M. Shay Mc
Cormick, Willis, White.
Bottom Row: Barr, Tregoning, Lukens, Lyons, McClure, K. Shay, Burket, Cunningham.
OFFICERS
President .............. ............................. ......... C a rol McClure
Vice President ....... ...................... ....... K a thryn Shay
Secretary .......... ........ M arian Lyons
Sponsor ......... ........ M iss Woomer
EMBERSHIP in the Modern Novel Club should be an
important item in the repertoire of all those interested
in the different phases of contemporary fiction. This
club, in past years, has attempted and succeeded in giving its
members higher standards of judgment and appreciation of the
novels of the day, interest in those Works which are both educa-
tional and entertaining, and an acquaintanceship with their con-
temporary literary hgures.
This year the club purposed to do those same things in ad-
dition to studying and becoming acquainted with the Works of the
more popular writers of the day. Those authors chosen from the
multitude were, Zona Gale, Zane Gray, Kathleen Norris, and
Temple Bailey. Book reviews were given, extracts were enacted
before the club, and the life stories of different authors were pre-
sented to the club.
Considering the fact that the club met on alternate Thurs-
days, it has accomplished wonderful things under the capable
leadership of Miss Woomer. lt has brought into the lives of its
members adventure, knowledge and appreciation of the best stand-
ards of better type of modern literature.
Page.One Hundred Thirty-six
Physics and Radio Club
Top Row: Wirt, Kalb, Kiesewetter, Hass, Winters, Fusco.
Bottom Row: Mr. Stong, Shingler, Bopp, Gill, Leidy.
OFFICERS
President ............... .............................. ........ B e rnard Bopp
Vice President ......... ............. S herman Gill
Sec'y-Treasurer ........ ......... W ilfred Shingler
Sponsor ............. ............... M r. Stong
HE Physics and Radio Club has three officers at present
to attend to the welfare of the club. As only one mem-
ber so far is interested in physics experiments, it is large-
ly a radio club.
The purpose ofthe club is to help those interested in radio to
learn more about it. Those members desiring to become short
wave transmitting amateurs are assisted in learning the tele-
graphic code and in getting the necessary technical knowledge re-
quired by the government before operator and station licenses can
be procured.
Some members have radio apparatus with which they ex-
pect to build short wave receivers soon. The president of the
club and one other member have already had their amateur sta-
tions on the air for about a year with assigned call letters,
WSDYF and WSBLJ respectively, and have contacted with sta-
tions all over the United States, even to the west coast.
Page One Hundred Thirty-seven
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Social Service Club
Top Row:L Wagner, Weimer, Anderson, Keim, Meyaham, Rhodes, Kissel, McCabe, Petterson, Douglas,
Hor on.
Second Row: Blair, Rouo, Meredith, Siegel, Bazoar, Kartz, Schmelzlen, Brown, Dively, Miller, Ying-
ling, Johnson.
Third Row: Rita, VVisel, Kennedy, Donnelley, Dietrich, Rich, Johnsonbaugh, Bair, Wendt, Mann, Jones,
Walker, Larson, Burket.
Fourth Row: Haller, Weaver, Koelle, P. Brown, McCracken, Dore, Kane, Savine, Kivolek, Kaezor, Mc-
Cormick, Smithmyre, Smith, McClain, Donaldson, Shandelmeir.
Bottom Row: Vaughn, Hulnm, Peffer. Brown, Dughi, E. Evans, Wagner, Walters, Douglas, Evans, Henkel,
Fay, Williams, Miller, Loyer.
OFFICERS
President ............. ....... A nn Rollason
Vice President ...... ...... A lison Douglas
Sec'y-Treasurer ..... ........... P earl Walters
Sponsor ............. ..... A ngella Unverzagt
HIS year the Social Service Club has 126 membersg this is the largest number
it has ever had. In order to make the work easier it was divided into four
divisions: Welfare, School Service, Story Telling, and First Aid. lt is the duty
of the Welfare Group to plan for the Christmas activities of the Club. At a tea given
in honor of the mothers, this group presented the one act play the 'cQuest at the Inn."
The annual trip to Williamsburg was made, and oranges and gifts were presented to
each orphan. The members of this club hope to serve the school better in the years
to come.
Top Row: Miss Paul, Grove, Johnson, 'vVeingard, O'Del1ick, Meader, McCar1, Bracken, E. Laws, Ham-
mond, Miss Unverzagt.
Bottom Row: G. Laws, Mariqc, Mariqc, Jaggard, Gates, Keith, Marelli, Monte.
Page One Hundred Thirty-eight
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Top Row: Mr. Emanuel, Capidoli, Jones, Nelson, Dublin, Sheeder, Harding, Barr, Hoenstine, Fouss.
Second Row: Colello, Focht, Irwin, Luke, Johnston, Harker, Crothers, Pavoni, Masucci, Lee, Brown.
Third Row: mcclellan, Hoover, Bussman, Plunket, Conrad, Milton, Poet, M. Patt, Shock, Fowkes,
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BottomMRovX:lfJlapper, Shively, J. Watson, Calderwood, Merin, Dillon, R. Patt, Shute, De Fraene, Wyland,
ars a .
OFFICERS
President ............. .................... ....... W i lliam Dillon
Vice President ....... ........ E dward Milton
Sec,y-Treasurer ...... ........ F red Laiferty
Sponsor ............... ........ M r. Emanuel
HE Sports Club of Altoona High is made up of the
baseball, football, and basketball men of the school,
and many other followers of high school sports. When
the club was first organized several years ago, it consisted of
eleven members. Its popularity increased in the succeeding
years, until at present the enrollment is sixty-two. The club
met regularly bi-monthly during 1931-32, and during the
meetings many interesting things, dear to the sports fan,s
heart, were discussed, such as the new football rules for 1932,
and interesting experiences by the boys themseleves. The
officers are: William Dillon, president, Edward Milton, vice
president, and Fred Lafferty, secretary-treasurer. The club
was sponsored by Mr. Emanuel.
Page One Hundred Thirty-nine
Stage Craft Club
Top Row: Shellenberger, Sheep, Schmidt, Pannebaker, Schlachter, D. Wolfe, Stom, McBurney.
Bottom Row: Plesenski, White, Watson, Porter, Eider, C. Wolfe, Blair, Mr. Hauser.
OFFICERS
President .............. ............................. ....... C h arles Eiiler
Vice President ........ ........... l ames Porter
Secretary .............. ........ K enneth Herbert
Treasurer ....... ........... lVl ax Watson
Sponsor ....... ........ M r. Hauser
HE development of the theatre and stage from ancient times
to the present is shown by charts and pictures, shown to the
members of the Stage Craft Club. Then various stage terms
and equipment are presented by mimeographed sheets and verbal ex-
planations, supplemented by visits to various stages in the city. EX-
perienced boys coach the others in the various duties about the stage
so they can help with rehearsals and the presentation of plays. Reports
on interesting articles pertaining to the stage are presented by members
during club meetings.
One of the purposes of the club is to furnish boys with an oppor-
tunity to engage in an enjoyable activity, started perhaps when in
junior high school. Another purpose is to have, available in the school,
boys capable of assisting in the presentation of any plays or presenta-
tions which may be given.
The Stage Craft Club has helped boys to become familiar with and
expand their knowledge of stage terms and equipment as well as the
various duties necessary for the successful presentation of many plays
given by various school departments, Boys Federation, Girls League,
Dramatic Department, Annual School Play, etc.
Page One Hundred Forty
Track Club
Top Row: Bingham, Hammies, Boahm, English, Fleck, Walker, McMu1in.
Second Row: Ernest, Askey, Batrus, Armstrong, Muir, Evengelists, Patterson, Bauer, Miller.
Third Row: Miller, Taylor, Calderwood, E. Fouss, Fluke, Neubold, Thompson, Stoop, Russell, Lamorte
Miller.
Bottom Row: Bloomfield, Piccililo, Wissinger, Clarke, Rupert, Sherwin, Hicks, Rhodes, Hoffman, Wash-
ington, McCrea, Filer.
OFFICERS
President .............. ...................... ......... P a ul Sherwin
Vice President ....... .......... H arvey Rupert
Sec'y-Treasurer ...... .................... J ohn Hicks
Sponsor ............... ........ M r. Bartholomew
HE Track Club was organized in 1930 by Mr. Bartholomew,
and at first was not very popular. This year,s club, however, is
one of the outstanding ones of the school. The enrollment is
large, and programs are carefully selected by the sponsor and the com-
mittee. Students are welcome whether they participate in athletics or
not.
One of the aims of this club is to have speakers from different
parts of the country who are or have been famous track stars. They
speak to the boys on different phases of track work, and in turn the
boys are able to overcome some of their weak points. The club has had
such speakers as Nate Cartwell, coach at Penn State, MAP, Bates,
Olympic broad-jumperg 'aDick,, Detwiler, outstanding Penn State track
man, and others.
Another object of the Track Club is to help the members aim higher
in what ever they may do. This club stresses clearly that it is essential
to have the lighting spirit every inch of the Way, because an event is
never won or lost until the end, to have high idealsg to form good habitsg
and to keep a clean mind. When an athlete competes in an event, he
must concentrate with determination to battle to the end. These quali-
iications are taught and achieved by the members.
Page One Hundred Forty-one
Ushering Club
Top Row Frederick, Allaman, Timmins, Gibson.
Second Row: Brady, DeAnglis, Geesey, Sell, Harr, Smith, Mitchell, Penny, Orner.
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Third Row: McCracken, Harshbarger, Santopietio, Comrad, Rouzer, Miller, Burket, Plunkard, Wertz, Davis. i
DeAngl1s.
Fourth Row: Crumm, Swartz, Centeone, Manecchio, J. Hoffman, Nearhoof, Weidley, Oswandel, Garthoff,
Hershey, Dumm, Young, Bender, McCament, Datres.
Bottom Row: Powell, Roakey, Dollar, Shucker, Innuzzi, Mr. Plummer, Norris, Martello, P. Gentile, Rines, '
Rizzo, Gentile, Sarvis.
OFFICERS
President ........ ....... J ames Norris
Sponsor ....... ...... C . C. Plummer
HE main object for the formation of the Ushers' Club
was to take care of the crowds at the athletic games.
This year this club has completed its second success-
ful season, in assisting at all basketball and football games.
The ushers are posted over the stands to assist our visitors who
are not acquainted With our gridiron and cage facilities.
All the ushers wear arm bands to distinguish them from
other students. Boys Wearing these arm bands have the right to
keep upstarts and undesirahles from entering the crowd, to
keep people without reserved tickets out of the reserved sec-
tions, and to keep general good order in the vicinity of their
posts.
In order to perform these duties, it is necessary to have
someone teach the boys. This position was filled very well by
Mr. Plummer, the clulzfs able sponsor. We, as students, owe
a lot to these boys for their guidance at our lectures, games
and plays.
Page One Hundred Forty-two
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Top Row: Hite, Perry, Whitbred, Mayer.
Middle Row: Bell, Hiclison, Garman, Vvillxams, Cassidy, Bulick, Dougherty, Meader, Jones, O'Keif. 5.
Bottom Row: Hilten, Kaiser, Neal, Leamer, Anderson, Treese, Trigo, Ketring, Steinhoff, Shroyer. ries?
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OFFICERS '
President ............. .......................... .......... H e len Holler
Vice President ...... .....,.. M argaret Treese -
Secretary .......... .......... P auline Miller
Treasurer ....... ...... M argaret Anderson
Sponsor ...... ........ M iss Helen Faust ,A
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N entirely new phase of work has been introduced to
the Girls League through the World Friendship
Group. At the first meeting of the group the officers
were elected, a tentative program for the year was planned,
apd committees were appointed to carry out the work of the
c ub.
The group was established to keep student activities in
close contact with World interests. A friendly attitude toward
people of all nations is an important trend in modern think-
ing.
One of the activities of this group has been the making
of flags of all nations--a tangible display of its aims. At
a meeting of the Girls League, the World Friendship Group
presented Lady Gregory's Spreading the News. Believing
that friendship should begin at home this group sponsored
two social events: a tea, and a Christmas party. The meet-
ings of this group have brought forth some unusually interest-
ing discussions.
Page One Hundred Forty-three
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. Zoology Club
Top Row: Imler, Mr. Wimmer, Richette, Balthaser.
Bottom Row: Sutter, Cummins, Waite, Rusynyk.
OFFICERS
President .............. ............................ .........,... E a rl Smith
Vice President ....... ...... C ladys Cummins
Secretary .............. ........ G race Waite
Sponsor ......... ...... M r. Wimmer
HIS club consists of the small membership of thirteen stu-
dents. These members are either present students of the
zoology classes or are past students who have had some
experience in the Work. The officers consist of a president, a vice
president, and a secretary, who with the aid of Mr. Wimmer, the
sponsor, conduct the meetings.
During each club meeting the members aim to learn more
about the statels native animals, and in addition, try to gain a
general knowledge of all animals. In order to study and observe
the animals of Pennsylvania more closely, trips are planned to
places of interest.
The special interests of each member were carried out by
means of projects. Each one made a booklet in his projectg these
are to be kept by our sponsor for future use in the science classes
of coming years.
Page One Hundred Forty-four
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"THE TESTAMENT OF BEAUTY".
In love of freshly prowess Hellas over-
esteem'd the nobility of passion ami of '
animal strength, and 'the Niibclamation of
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Varsity Football
Front Row: Calderwood, Lichtenstein, Shively, Shute, Fusco, Hanley, B. Patt.
Back Row: Sipes. Lafferty, Shock, Dillon, Dinges.
Part .... .......
Hanley .........
Fusco ........
Shute ............
Shively ............
Lichtenstein ........
Rush ................
Laiferty ........
Dinges ......
Dillon ..........
Mllton ..........
Altoona
60 .....
33 .....
60 .....
87 .....
36 .....
13 .....
28 .....
51 .....
19 .....
27 .....
25 .....
7 .....
VARSITY LINEUP
Left End
Left Tackle
Left Guard
Center
Right Guard
Right Tackle
Right End
Quarterback
Left Halfback
Right Halfback
Fullback
SEASON ,S RECORD
.......W1ll1amsburg
South High, Pittsburgh .........
..........Bellefonte
..........Hollidaysburg
.......L0ck Haven
..........Newcastle
...........lohnstown
.......C1earfield
.......Huntingd0n ..
.......Portage
.......Tyr0ne
.......,l0hn Harris
Page One Hundred Forty-six
.......De Fraene
.........Wyland
...........Yavasile
.S. Clapper
Watson
....................Blake
Calderwood
..........Merin
...........Sipes
..........Fowkes
.........Shock
Opponents
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HILDA "DU'LL" CALDERWOOD
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TO MY RIGHT IS MY WIFEJIER NAME WAS HILDA DULL.
I LU-fL,U1?LjiHEIwIA AIA MARRIEDSIIELESHEI DIDNIT NEED
TO USE A DULL NAME,TO BE I MARRIED THE SWEETEST
GIRL IN THE CLASS.FOR 38 NEARS SHE HAS BEEN BY MY
SIDE.A GOOD WIFE .A GOOD BUSINESS WOMAN .WITH ALL THIS
WE ARE STILL IN LOVE. EXCEPT WHEN WE PLAY GOLF.SHE
CLAIMS SHE GETS MORE OUT OF GOLF THAN I DO BECAUSE
SHE HITS THE BALL TWICE AS MANY TIMES.
2 JOSEPH waters MHUDUCKYS
NEXT TO MY WIFE IS A MAN I ALWAYS ADMIRED WEN I
WAS IN HIGH SCHOOL. JOE MAD5s.CKS.HE ACTED LIKE A
BUSINESS MAN ,AND I-IE WAS ONE.I LIKED TO CALL HIM NTI
SILENT JOE",BECAUSE HE WAS THE BEST LISTENER THAT
OUR CLASS EVER HAD. IT TOOK A SMART PERSON LIKE
JOE TOILISTEN TO ALL OUR CRIPES AND TROUBLESJN HIS
QUIET WAY HE RAN A TIGHT SHIP.I THINK HE GOT SOME
OF HIS TRAINING FROM BALDY RCB.JOE,THIS EVENING
WOULD NOT BE COMPLETE WITH OUT YOU HERE.
Front Row: Gill, Ehringer, Collello, Watson, Vvilson, Hoenstine, Conrad.
Second Row: Mr. Bartholomew, trainer: Shock, Sipes, Dinges, Calderwood, Blake, Shively, Shute, Fusco,
Hanley, B. Patt, Dillon, Lafferty, Milton, Lichtenstein: Henderson, manager.
Back Row: Mr. Emanuel, head coach, McClellan, R. Fouss, Fioli, Merin, J. Watson, T. Rush, P. Clapper,
Shingler, Yavasile, Marshall, De Fraene, S. Clapper, Wyland, Yeager: Bashore, line coach.
HE 1931 Football season was opened by an early session of practice at which
many veterans of both the Varsity and the Junior Varsity of the 1930 team
participated. ' The season looked bright from the start as the brilliant Maroons
faced and disposed opponent after opponent. Then the squad, like many other
celebrities, met its Waterloo when John Harris High School of Harrisburg invaded
Altoona.
Throughout the entire season the team showed a variety of play both on the
offence and the defense which almost amounted to genius. The varsity players had to
fight hard to hold their places because of the stellar qualities of the second string men
who showed very good form throughout the season. Following is the history of the
attainments of our team in the 1931 season:
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Page One Hundred Forty-seven
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Our Victories and Defeats
ORTY candidates for the Maroon squad participated in an afternoon
workout when the A. H. S. scored nine touchdowns at Mansion Park.
Williamsburg High was licked 60-0, the score being the highest ever
marked up against the Blue and White Paper-town team.
Under the leadership of Eddie Milton, the Altoona team stepped out
in their new scarlet jerseys. These uniforms proved no detriment to the
work of the 4'Scarlet Steppersn as they reeled off twenty-two first downs to
the visitors seven. After a march of sixty yards, Milton carried the ball over
the goal for the first six points of the season.
The Williamsburg game can be remembered for its lack of penalties,
there being only one for each team. Altoona received one of five yards
for being off side and Williamsburg one for five yards for taking a fourth
time out.
Altoona,s scarlet grid team was scored on for the first time when Pitts-
burgh's South High team advanced on Altoona only to receive a defeat 33-6.
Their lone score was achieved when '6Snaps" inserted the second and third
squads.
In the first quarter uBig Bill" took the pigskin over on a triple reverse
and then kicked the extra point. During both the second and third quarters
Patt, lanky end for the Cardinals, recovered fumbles which later resulted in
touchdowns. In the second quarter Lafferty sprinted thirty-live yards for
six points, and again in the last quarter Shock, substitute full-back ran
thirty-five yards for the final score.
A good sized crowd of about thirty-five hundred witnessed the battle
with Pittsburgh's game team. Culyas, quarter-back for South High starred
during the game, playing a large part in the South's lone touchdown.
The Emanuelites enjoyed a field day as they snowed the Red and White
visitors under 60-7. The first two squads had an easy time of it but the third
proved a little too weak, allowing Captain Kelly to carry the ball across in
the final quarter for Bellefonte's only touchdown.
During the entire game the points piled up so fast that some difficulty
was experienced in keeping track of the score. Most of the touchdowns were
made after long runs of from twenty-three to seventy yards. Dinges, Sipes,
Milton, Marshall, and Porta each made at least one touchdown.
Page One Hundred Forty-eight
Altoona made seventeen first downs to the Red's one. The best Belle-
fonte gain was forty-five yards on a pass. 'csonny Boyw ran fifty yards and
walked twenty for the best yardage of the day.
The fourth consecutive victory of the season was chalked up to Altoona
as an 87 to 0 score was easily gained from our blue and white neighbors. The
Maroons' aerial game proved no weaker than their ground work which was
very good:-'A A
Altoona,s first touchdown was scored in the Hrst two minutes of play.
Lafferty caught a Hollidaysburg punt on his own forty yard line and carried
it over the goal after a brilliant exhibition of broken field running. Dillon
contributed twenty-three points to the Scarlets' score, Dinges donated twenty,
and the rest were divided evenly among Milton, Sipes, Lafferty and Shock.
Last year the Blue and Whiteis eleven held the Maroon Avalanche to a
single touchdown. ln defeating the Burgers in the ,3l game the Scarlet
Steppers came within two points of establishing an all time scoring record.
In spite of a steady drizzle, approximately five thousand football fans
packed Mansion Park stands to witness the defeat of our Lock Haven op-
ponents to the tune of 36 to 6.
During the first quarter a pass, Dillon to Lafferty, was good for fifty
yards and a touchdown. At the end of the first half the score stood 24 to 0
in favor of the Maroons. ln each of the last two quarters a touchdown was
achievedg in the third quarter a pass, Dillon to Babe Patt, resulted in a
touchdown, and in the last quarter HSonny Boy" carried the ball over for the
final six points.
Thus in spite of the hard fair fight waged by the purple gridders from
Lock Haven, Altoona again carried home the scalp to decorate the already
crowded trophy cases of the Altoona High School. Every one agrees that
Lock Haven is an antagonist worthy of any school.
In spiteof numerous signs of bad weather, and the distance separating
the two towns a large contingent of Altoona rooters traveled to New Castle
to witness the defeat of the uTin City Warriors." Due as much to the fight-
ing spirit of the Maroons as to any other one thing, the sixth Win of the season
was chalked up to Altoona, adding another thirteen points to Altoona's grow-
ing score and six to that of their opponents.
Every man on the team played real football marring the record only
by numerous scufiies. A pass, Dillon to Lafferty, netted the first score in the
Page One Hundred Forty-nine
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second quarter and a series of line plunges in the last two periods increased
the record by six. Sipes, kick after Dillon's realized the thirteenth point.
New Castlels lone touchdown was achieved by a continuous hammering on
right tackle, weakened by the absence of Lichtenstein injured in the Bellefonte
game.
The high school regrets the poor sportsmanship displayed in the near
riot which almost spoiled an otherwise perfect Altoona Day. Our team did,
however, gain the football played with as was their right.
ln the twelfth annual meeting with Johnstown, held at Point Stadium,
the Altoona High snared the football victory, winning 28-0. One of the
largest football crowds to ever watch a scholastic game in Johnstown was
present.
Shock filling the fullback position was more than just a substitute in
that game. Although he fumbled twice, due to an inrush of tacklers, on a
dozen occasions he tore off large gains and starred on the defensive. The
first touchdown was achieved by Captain Dinges who intercepted a forward
pass and ran forty yards for a touchdown. Don Shock in two successive
plays made thirty-three yards through the Johnstown line for the second
touchdown. In the third period Altoona gained a safety. After a march
of fifty-five yards, Captain Dinges again carried the ball over the goal line.
Dillon rushed the extra point. The final score was achieved when Eddie Mil-
ton raced fifty yards for a touchdown. Seven other chances to score were
offered to Altoona. ,
The bands of both schools attended the game and looked snappy as they
strutted their stuff before the game and between the halves. A parade was
staged on Eleventh Avenue after the return of the special train to Altoona.
Playing their third out-of-town game in as many weeks the Altoona
'Scarlet Steppersn invaded Clearfield and defeated the Black and Red
Marauders from that town by the one-sided score of 51-0. lt was a field day
for the Emanuelites as they outplayed their mountaineer rivals in every
department.
uFlash" Lafferty began the scoring immediately after the starting of
the game by running back a Clearfield punt fifty-five yards. During the re-
mainder of the game the locals ran wild, and before the game was over
Shock and Dinges each had two touchdowns to their credit, Sipes, Shingler,
and Patt also had a six pointer besides the one scored by Lafferty. Sipes
was successful in scoring the extra point on two occasions and Dillon scored
one.
Page One Hundred Fifty
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About twelve hundred Altoona fans braved the cold and made the
journey to see the fray. Their efforts were repaid as every member of the
squad saw action at one time or another during the game. At no time dur-
ing the contest was the Altoona goal in danger.
Playing one of those kicking games in which Altoona is usually supreme
due to Dillon,s kicking ability, the Maroon squad downed Huntingdon at
M'HHSi0l3-Pifk 19-0.
For the first five minutes there was but an interchange of kicksg then
a series of plays pushed the ball over the Huntingdon goal for Altoona,s first
score. Dinges added the other point. In the second quarter, after more kicks,
Lafferty caught a punt on the Huntingdon thirty-five yard line. A number
of line plunges was all that was then needed to pile up another six points.
A third score was achieved in the third period while a fourth might have
been made in the last quarter if Milton had not fumbled the ball giving the
Huntingdon team a touchback.
A new diversion was provided during the half in the form of a parachute
jump by J ack Somers. The bands of both teams paraded, each forming the
letters of the schools.
Held to 7-0 in the first half, an aroused Maroon and White Eleven
scored three times to take the victory 27-0. The Portage Tornadoes gave Al-
toona just about the toughest forty-eight minutes of football experienced in
any game. The whole Portage team played championship calibre football
in the first half, but the second period was all Altoona's.
The hustling gold suited team from Portage ran everywhere during the
first half, doing everything but scoring. In the beginning of the second half
when Haddad broke through and spilled Dillon for an eight yard loss the
Altoona team woke up and began to play football. An exchange of kicks
followed and Altoona received the ball on her own thirty-five yard line. Here
started a march that went sixty-five yards and ended when Dinges shot across
the line for the score, the first in the last half and the second of the game.
Milton made the sensational play of the day when on Portage's three yard
line he took a lateral pass, and seeing a wall of Golden shirts ahead he re-
versed his field and carried the ball over for six more points.
The Portage High band, a nifty musical and marching organization was
much in evidence from the time they marched on the field till the end of the
game. The Altoona musical aggregation, which had done much all season to
keep up the morale of the uScarlet Steppersf' also gave a brilliant exhibition
both before the game and during the intermission between halves.
Page One Hundred Fifty-one
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The eleventh straight victory of the season was won When, on Thanks-
giving, the Tyrone squad invaded Altoona for the annual game that this time
should decide the W. P. l. A. A. championship. Both teams played to the
limit throughout the contest.
In the first half the Orange team was hard to subdue holding the
"Ginger Snaps? to a 6-6 tie. The third quarter brought a change as the
Maroons pulled into the lead which they kept for the remainder of the game,
Winning by the margin of 25 to 12. Every man on the team played stellar
football and they surely deserved the win which led to the game with the
John 'Harris High for the State Championship.
The record crowd was a sight of which every loyal Altoonan Was proud.
The band also was present pepping up the spectators and helping keep every-
body warm. A great thrill Was experienced by Lafferty's spectacular hun-
dred yard run in the last half.
John Harris traveled to Altoona for a post-season game to determine
the State Champions. An exciting game Was ,experienced by all the fans
even though the Altoona team did drop the game to the Eastern District
Champions to the tune of 13 to 7.
The game of the season was against the NGinger Snaps" from the kick-
off to the last Whistle. Nothing seemed to stem the series of bad breaks that
Altoona received. Despite these unlucky incidents the John Harris team
knew they Were up against a stubborn rival as the Whole team was playing
real football throughout the game.
For the first time in a great While Altoona found her band out numbered
although they were not outplayed. Both bands received big cheers for their
snappy appearance and their excellent playing.
Page One Hundred Fifty-two
The Jay Vee Football Team
Top Row: Mr. McCreight, coach, L. Riccio, McGee, Miller, Wolf, Woomer, Vasquino, Auman, Johns,
Abrams, Martillacci, Rudasill, McLaughlin, Barr, Himes, Wilson, Shoemaker, Gracey, Watson,
Namey, Stevens, P. Ricco, Gioiosa, Leighty, Perry, Vilkag Mr. Morse, assistant coach.
Middle Row: Cunsman, Jasrnis, Johnson, Marushak, Del Grosso, Hoover, Gwin, Robison, Stewart, Wolf,
Adams, O'Brian, Plvnket, Schmidt, Stere, Leith, Nelson, Balt, Flegal.
Bottom Row: Managers, Horton and Hasen. '
NDER the mentorship of coaches McCreight and Morris there has
been built up a snappy well drilled team called the Junior Varsity,
better known as the Hlay Veesf, This squad has shown the merit
of the HScrubby" lVlcCreight system by completing an undefeated season
against the minor high schools of the state. Forty-four members received
their letters this season, most of Whom are either sophomores or juniors.
These boys will replace the large number of graduates who will necessarily
leave the varsity before the season of 1932. Due to the coaching they have
received this past season they will be able to carry on the torch of the Altoona
fameg showing the fans that Altoona's glory is not dependent on any one
team.
SEASONS RECORD
f. Vfs Opponents
39 .... ...... B ellwood ....... 2
20 .... ...... l ndependents 7
32 .... ...... R obertsdale ..... 0
7 . ..... Saxton ........ 0
33 . ...... Orbisonia ............ 0
39 .... ...... R oaring Spring ..... 0
Page One Hundred Fifty-three
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Varsity Coaching Staff
Mr. Emanuel, Mr. Bartholomew, Mr. Bashore.
MR. EDWARD F. EMANUEL A
LTOONA High Schoolas head coach in football, basketball, and baseball is a
native of Harrisburg, in which city he began his remarkable athletic career.
For four years he played on the Harrisburg Tech teams that from 1917 to
1920 gained national fame. During four years at Gettysburg College he participated
in the three major sports, winning a captaincy upon three different occasions. Since
1925 Mr. Emanuel has attended the best coaching schools in the country, and has
studied the Rockne, Bezdek, and McCracken systems under their personal tutelage.
MR. KENNETH R. BASHORE
Mr. Bashore, our football line coach, represented Colgate University and Ship-
pensburg Teachers College in sports. In the latter college he was captain of the
football team. He has had much coaching experience, being mentor for the Tri-
County championship basketball team while at Caleton High School, and coach of
all sports While at Beaverdale.
MR. RICHARD BART HOLOMEW
Our football trainer and track coach, Mr. Bartholomew, was a star football and
track man at Altoona High years ago. At Penn State, in later years, he Won fame
as captain of the track team. He holds the Penn State record for the 100 and 220
yard dashes. In 1927 he placed second in the 220 yard dash in national intercollegiate
competition.
Page One Hundred Fifty-four
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The Varsity Basketball Team
Top Row: Mr. Emanuel, coachg Rudisill, Clarke, L. Patty M. Patt, captaing Marnuccig Dickey, manager.
Bottom Row: Shock, Merin, Miles, Shute, Dillon, Sipes, Plunket, Fowkes.
HE football season closed and practice was started for basketball. Many
of last years players were welcomed back on the floor. The prospects of an
excellent season under the leadership of Coach Emanuel seemed almost a cer-
tainty. The season started off with a bang, and then, disaster. Throughout the re-
mainder of the season the team seemed to be followed by some jinxg easy games were
lost and teams that appeared unbeatable were defeated or held to a low score. Be-
low is the line up of the team with its interesting record.
PERSONNEL OF TEAM
Forwards Centers Guards
Rudisill Fowkes M. Patt
Shute Clark Shock
Dillon L. Patt Merin
Knepley
Plunket
THE SEASON'S RECORD
Altoona Upponenls
29 ...... ............ S tate College .......... ........... 1 1
24 ...... ........ J ohnstown ......... ....... 9
33 ...... ........ P hilipsburg ........ .... 8
22 ...... ........ W illiamsport ..... .... 2 6
25 ...... ......... P ortage ............. .... 9
23 ...... ......... W estinghouse ....... .... 1 3
37 ...... ......... P hilipsburg ..... .... 9
28 ...... ......... P ortage .......... .... 3 0
27 ..... ......... F ranklin ........ .... 2 5
13 ...... ........ J ohnstown ...... .... 1 6
12 ...... ......... M t. Union ......... .... 2 I.
13 ..... ......... W illiamsport ....... .... 1 9
25 ..... ......,.. A lumni .............. .... 2 1.
13 .. ..........., State College .......... .... 1 8
Page One Hundred Fifty-five
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g Jay Vee Basketball
HE Jay Vee Basketball had a fairly successful season winning eight
games, losing four, and tying one. The team was ably coached by
Mr. Albert Snyder, who has a long basketball record.
was captained by Schmidt, a guard. -' '
PERSONNEL OF TEAM
First Team Second Team
The team
Del Grosso ........................ Forward Robinson .......................... Forward
Schmidt ...... ........ G uard Ernest ....... ........ G uard
Deginsky ........ ....... C enter Wolfe ...... ....... C enter
Knepley ...... ........ G uard Kuritsky ...... ....... F orward
Franks ..... ........ F orward Davis ....... ........ G uard
Substitutes
Harris, McLaughlin, Miller, Shamis
THE SEASONS RECORD
f. V. s
12 ...... ........ S hoemakers ...... ....... ....
15 ...... ........ P ost Graduates .................
20 ...... ........ B road Avenue Presbys ........
28 ...... ........ D e Molay ...................,.....
21 ...... ........ N ational Guards .........
23 ...... ........ S t. Luke's ..............
15 ...... ........ F aculty ......
31 ...... ........ A lpha 5 .........
51 ........ Hi-Y ..............
33 ...... ........ S olers ....................
8 ...... ........ A ltoona Indians .....
11 ...... ........ N ational Eagles .....
8 ...... ........ T ornadoes ............
Page One"Hundred Fifty-six
Opponents
25
16
18
17
19
.. 7
.. 8
13
16
18
11
17
8
The Girls' Basketball Team
McGirk, Goodman, Bohn, Former, Hirst, Houck, Smulling, Slick, Snyder, Mattas, Howell, Gibbons, Rep-
logle, Boldt, Richards.
HE Girls' Basketball Team of 1931-32 had a very successful season being
piloted by its captain, Dorothy Richards, who has three letters to her credit.
The team was ably coached by Miss Eyre and Dorothy Richards was chosen the
most valuable player on the team. The 1932-33 team will be captaincd by Ruth Bohn.
I PERSONNEL OF TEAM
Captain .......... ................................................. D orothy Richards
Forwards Jumping Centers Side Centers W
Dorothy Richards Virginia Goodman ' Mary ,lane Smulling
Marian Hirst ,Margery McGirk Helen Replogle
Mary Houck
Ethel Howell
Guards
Ruth Bohn
Marie Fonner
Nellie Slick
Bertha Boldt
Dot Snyder
Margaret Mattas
Jean Gibbons
SEASON7S RECORD
Altoona '
38 ..... ....... A lumni ......
32 ..... ....... W indber ....
4-5 ..... ....... P ortage ..........
25 ..... ....... S tate College .....
31 ..... ....... A ntis ..............
26 ..... ....... M artinsburg .....
29 ..... ....... S tate College .......
Page One Hundred Fifty-seven
Opponents
17
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21
15
.. 9
18
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The Track Team
Top Row: Coach Bartholomew, Watson, Edelman, Robinson, Fickes, Hoffman, Boyd, Lantz.
Middle Row: Fluke, Rhodes, Bonebreak, Milton, Sherwin, Rouzer, Rupert, Shoenfelt, Fouss, Hicks.
Bottom Row: Olson, Acker.
HE track schedule was opened for the season of 1931 by the customary handi-
cap meet in March 27, in which more than one hundred short-trunked athletes
of the Altoona High School participated. Despite the earliness of the season,
unusually fine form was shown by the runners and weight handlers and some ex-
cellent marks were registered. Weather conditions were ideal for the events except
for the slight handicap which was experienced by the sprinters in running against
a breeze that blew up the track. The meet brought out the finest entry list for a track
team in the schoolis history, each of the events having from five to twelve entries.
A second handicap meet was held on April 3, and considerable improvement
was shown by the entire team. A number of Alumni who have achieved places on
college teams also took part in several of the events, and in this manner assisted in
conditioning the squad. Y
The annual intra-class track and held meet was held at the Mansion Park field
on ,April 10, and proved to be a close and hard fought affair because of the keen
rivalry between the members of the different classes. The senior students won thc
first leg of the competition for the George C. Hetler tropy, offered by the Altoona
Leather Store.
The Altoona High School Varsity track team ran roughshod over the Alumni
track and field men in a meet held on April 18, at the Mansion Park field. The Var-
sity piled up 83 1-3 points and the Alumni 4-1 2-3 points.
The Altoona High relay team won the Pennsylvania State Relay Championship al,
the annual Penn Relays at Franklin Field, Philadelphia, April 24-25, the quartet of
Maroon runners featuring in the scholastic division. This win was Altoona's sec-
ond relay championship, the former victory being made in 1928. Altoona drew pole
positions to start against their ten opponents. The team consisted of Paul Sherwin,
lead off man, Eddie Milton, second, John Hicks, third, and Harvey Rupert, anchor
man. An attempt to win the American championship failed.
Altoona High showed a decided superiority on the track, winning the third annual
dual meet against Bedford High School on May 2. The two teams battled neck and
neck but in the end the Maroons led by two points. One record was broken at this
meet when Ed Conrad hurled the javelin 157 feet, 5 inches. The old mark was 154
feet, 9 inches, established in 19244 by Bob Wicker. Bedford opened the day by taking
first and second places in the 100 yard dash. The 4-4-0 yard event was taken by Harvey
Rupert who ran a wonderful race with Shoenfelt and Milton running second and
third respectively. Altoona won seven first places and Bedford six.
Page One Hundred Fifty-eight
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THE RELAY TEAM
Rupert, Hicks, Milton, Sherwin
Repeating last year's feat, Altoona High's track and field team won the Penn
State lnterscholastic championship at Pennsylvania State College on May 9. Altoona
entered in the MBU class and battled Bedford into submission during the track events,
after the Bedford County team ran up a slight margin in the morning. Altoona
scored 51 points to Bedfordis 4-3Mg. K
Capturing six first places and breaking two records, the Altoona cindermen won
a smashing victory in the District 6 track and field me-et, which was held at Mansion
Park field on May 16. Altoona took 59 points, 36 more than its nearest competitor,
Clearfield. Four records were broken and another tied during the meet. Rupert,
classy Maroon hurdler, featured when he broke the 220 yard low hurdle record of
27.1 seconds, by covering the distance in 26.4 seconds. Dinges failed to break the
pole vault record but broke the school record of 10 feet 8 inches when he topped, the
bar at 10 feet 9 inches.
On May 23, the annual P. 1. A. A. state meet was held at Mansion Park. Twenty
schools were represented, lifteen in the class A division and five in the class B
division. Altoona High won the meet with a total of forty-one points.
Altoona planned a meet with Clearfield for May 30. This meet was not held
however, and the track schedule officially closed with the state meet on the previous
Saturday.
Page One Hundred Fifty-nine
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The Baseball Team
LTOONA experienced her usual seasong that is to say very good. Altoona
took the pennant with an undefeated record. Some extraordinary batting
marks were set during the season. Sipes and Cipriano hit safely in each game.
Sipes had five hits in succession and in three games made four hits. Some fine pitch-
ing was also displayedg Jimmie Petrarca, fanned thirty-seven batters in three games.
He set down fifteen batters in one game and fourteen in another. Sylvester Russell
fanned twelve in one game. An unique feature of the season was the presentation of
two trophiesg one cup to the champions and the other an offering of Altoona High
to the runner up, which was Roaring Spring.
VARSITY TEAM
Catchers ..... ............................................. C ipriano, Marshall
Pitchers ...,..... ........ P etrarca, Russell, Schmidt, Monahan
First Base ........ ....................................................... M arkle
Second Base ....... ......... D illon
Shortstop ........ ........... S ipes
Third Base ....... .......... E . Rush
Left Field ....... ........ K enner
Center Field ....... ........ R ussell
Right Field .......... .......... L afferty
SEASONS RECORD
Altoona Opponents
11 . ........ Roaring Spring ....... ..... . .. 9
f17 ........ Martinsburg ....... . 3
15 ......... Claysburg ....... .. . 0
21 ......... Morrison Cove .... .. . 7
17 ......... Williamsburg .... .. . 1
3 ......... Roaring Spring . 2
23 ......... Martinsburg .... .. . 3
20 ......... Morrison Cove .... .. . 0
9 ........ Claysburg ...... .. . 0
15 ........ Williamsburg ...... .. . 1
The Altoona High baseball champs opened the 1931 baseball season with a run-
ning start when they defeated the Roaring Spring team 11-9. Jimmie Petrarca and
Paul Cipriano were the veteran battery which opened the season for the Altoona High.
A crowd of five hundred attended the gameg many left when rain threatened in the
first rounds. McGee, right fielder for Springs, pulled the great catch of the day.
He took a drive off Marklels bat in the first inningg although in diving for the ball
he fell, he managed to hold onto the seamed pellet.
Altoona High's fast stepping diamond aggregation added another win to their
laurels when they pounded out 20 hits to make 17 runs and trounce Martinsburg 17
to 3 on the Prospect Hill diamond. 'tBig Bill" Dillon rapped out three home runs and
a two base hit in his five trips to the plate. Home runs were also chalked up by
Page One Hundred Sixty
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Trostle and Kenner. Martinsburg sent three runners across the plate during the first
period but were held scoreless the rest of the game. The Maroon pitchers showed a
marked improvement.
The Maroons initial trip met with success as the "Snaps,' Emanuel nine defeated
Claysburg on the Bricktownis own home field. The 15 to 0 whitewash was the first
shut out in the league during the season of 731. Jimmie Petrarca, leading chucker for
Altoona hurled the entire game holding the Claysburgieam-Ydownrto. four hits, the
home plate never being threatened. Eddie Rush, captain, featured with four hits, one
going for a triple.
The Altoona High Maroons won the fourth straight ball game of the season,
licking Morrison Cove High at Prospect Hill. Altoona took the game 21 to 7 in
seven dusty innings as a gale fanned the dust and dirt several times causing a halt of
baseball actions. Cove High had one good inning, the third, when the Cove boys poled
out six runs.
Henry Kenner, Altoona's slugging left fielder, got two homers While Gene Sipes
and Jack Markel also hit circuit blows in the game with Williamsburg at Prospect
Hill. 6'Butch', Schmidt started in the box for Altoona and succeeded in striking out
nine of the Williamsburg boys. ln the seventh inning he was replaced by .limmie
Monahan who in turn was replaced by '6Speedball', Russell. Altoona got 16 hits,
17 runs, and 2 errors, Williamsburg had 8 hits, 1 run and 1 error.
The sixth consecutive game of the season was won by the Altoona squad after
a real battle during which the Maroons brought in 3 runs to the 2 made by the
Roaring Spring High. The win practically cinched the Blair County High Baseball
League championship. Coach Benf0rd's crew was held scoreless till the seventh in-
ning when a high Hy off the bat of Don Butler was dropped by Kenner in left field.
The game, hard fought from start to finish was a pitchers' battle. Berkheimer fan-
ned seven batters while Petrarca turned back eight.
In but five innings of play the Maroons defeated the boys of Martinsburg 23 to
3. Altoona High went on a batting rampage and some real fine hitting was done.
Sylvester did some fine work in the pitcher's box.
Cove High proved themselves gluttons for punishment by taking a good beating,
on their own field, from the Maroon batters who had 21 hits and 20 runs from Ayers
their pitcher. It was the second time in the '31 season that the Altoona team defeated
the Cove boys by a large score, but the first time that they held them scoreless. Sipes,
shortstop, laid out five hits in six trips to bat and Ty Rush who also played a flashy
game had three hits in four trips.
Claysburg's unique battery featuring Jack Oakley, pitcher, and Robert Mosley,
catcher, were unable to check the Maroon hits in the second Claysburg-Altoona game.
The Ernanuelites knocked out 17 hits and 9 runs while Jimmie Petrarca pitched his
second shut out game of the season over the Bricktowners allowing but six safeties
and fanning fourteen batters. In the latter rounds Kenner slapped a neat homer and
Eddie Rush had a double.
Altoona High ended the baseball season by scoring the tenth straight victory,
defeating the Williamsburg team at Williamsburg to the tune of 15 to 1. The game
ended after seven innings. ln the second inning the Maroons cinched the game by
scoring eight runs. Gene Sipes and Eddie Rush each bagged out four hits, and Bill
Dillon made the path circuit four times.
Page One Hundred Sixty-one
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Girls Hockey
Top Row: Hirst, Douglas, Fonner, Snively, Boldt.
Middle Row: Snyder, Howell, Richards.
Bottom Row: Replogle, Crawford, Rudasill.
OCKEY for the year of 1931 proved most successful. With great interest
and enthusiasm shown throughout the entire season, and with about three
weeks' practice, the class games began. The schedule and scores were as
follows: ,
DATE TEAMS ' SCORE
Nov. 16 ..... ...... S eniors vs. Juniors ....., ...,.,.. 1 -0
Nov. 17 .... ..... S enio-rs vs. Sophomoresm.. ...... 1-0
Nov. 18 .................... Juniors vs. Sophomores ............. ......... 2 -0
The four teams of the Girls' Athletic Club also competed. The schedule and
scores were as follows: .
DATE TEAMS SCORE
Nov. 19 .... ..... S lippery Seventeen vs. The Dutches... ....... .1-1
Nov. 20 .... .... P eppy Steppers vs. Merry Makers ....... ...... 2 -0
Nov. 23 .....,...... Slippery Seventeen vs. Merry Makers ................. 1-0
Nov. 24 ............ Peppy Steppers vs. The Dutches ...................... 1-0
Girls' hockey is still in its infancy, but one would be surprised to know how
many girls came out for the first practice. There were seventy--live, each eager to do
her part in making the 1932 hockey season a success.
The girls certainly enjoyed this sport this season and wish that those who follow
will get as much enjoyment out of it in the future as the members did during the
season of 1931.
From the three class teams, Miss Eyre, with the aid of Miss McGinnis and Miss
Kantner, selected a Varsity Hockey Team which is as follows:
Center Halfback .... Eleanor Crawford
Right Halfback ....... Helen Replo-gle
Center Forward ......... Dot Richards
Right Inside. .... ..... M arie Fonner
Left Inside ..... ..... M arian Hirst Left Halfback ........... Bertha Boldt
Right Wing .... .... V ada Rudasill Right Fullback .......... Ethel Howell
Left Wing .... . ,..... Helen Snively Left Fullback. . .. ...... Dot Snyder
Goal ......... .......... A llison Douglas -
Page One Hundred Sixty-two
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The Tennis Team '
HE Altoona High School stands out as one of the few
high schools in the State of Pennsylvania that has a
tennis teamg and we can be proud of it.
The schedule played during the season of 1931 was not
as complete as we hoped because of the fact that few high
schools have tennis teams. It was a disappointment to coach
Hauser as well as to the team members that not enough
matches were played to make the players eligible for letters.
Varsity Substitutes
Tom Parsons Raymond Perry
John Miller Paul Woolridge
Sam Sealfon Gwin Madara
Bob Haight
Curtis Beerman
THE 1931 SCHEDULE y
Date Altoona Opponents
May 9 ........ 1 ................ Alumni .............. ....... 4
May 11X ........ 6 ................ Williamsburg ....... .... 1
May 23 ........ 6 ................ Saxton ................ ' .... 1
A May 3014 ........ 5 ................ State College ...... .... 0
'lc Games Away
Page One Hundred 5 ty th ee
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The Cheerleaders
Montgomery, Green, R. Sealfon
THE CHEERLEADING STAFF
Head ................................................................ Sam Sealfon
Dick Green, Ralph Sealfon, '6Chet', Montgomery
OUR cheerleaders Were chosen last fall from a group of candi-
dates by Howard Lindaman. They led the cheering at the vari-
ous athletic events during the 1931-32 school year.
In their uniforms of Maroon and White they presented an ad-
ditional touch of color to the events. The full squad was in attendance
at all of the football and many of the basketball games.
Few stop to realize that these leaders Work just as hard for our
success as the members of the team. Much practice and concentration
was necessary to prepare them for their duties.
The HAltoona Locomotive" is perhaps the best known and best
loved of the yells. Of the songs other than the uAlma Mater," "On
Altoonai' reigns supreme.
Page One Hundred Sixty-four
lntra-Mural Sports
NTR L sports featuring l5ac ltcvo11eyball, track,
wrestling, boxing, foul shooting and baseball, had a very suc-
cessful season during the 1931-32 term. Since this phase of
competitive sport is being stressed in our school, many homerooms
had very successful turn-outs for the different sports offered in
this field.
. SEASONS RECORDS
BASKETBALL WRESTLING
4.3 rooms entered-Room 221, 17 Entries
winner, Room 216, second. Class Winner
115 lb ...................... W. Hildebrand
125 lb ........ ........ H . Weissinver
VOLLEYBALL 135 lb ........ .......... W . Martellaici
30 r00mS entered-Room 114, 1415 lb ........ .......... R .Di Nicoli
Winners Room 232, second- 155 lb ........ ................ E . Fusco
165 Ib ......... ......... R . Capodgoli
TRACK
10 rooms entered-Room 114, BGXING
winner, Room 307, second. u
Events: 100 Yard Dash, Mile 12 Elilfles n
Run, 880 Yard, 440 Yard, 220 Cla-55 Wlflllel'
Yard, 120 Yard Low Hurdle, Shot
Put, Discus, Javelin, High Jump,
Broad lump, Mile Relay, and Pole
Vault.
130 lb ....................... P. Campaniro
145 lb ........
150 lb ........
155 lb ........
Schroeder
Alamprese
Fusco
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FOUL SHOOTING
119 Entries ........ Winner, I. Brooks
BASEBALL f1931J
Winner ............................ Room 115
Page One Hundred Sixty-five
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Special Information Regarding Athletics
ATHLETIC COUNCIL
President .................................................................... Levi Gilbert
Vice President ......... ......... ,I . N. Maddocks
Athletic Director ..... ............ R . H. Wolfe
Secretary ..................... ........ R . L. Thompson
Student Representative .......................................... Dwight Fickes
MEMBERS OF THE NATIONAL ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIP
SOCIETY OF SECONDARY SCHOOLS
Morgan Shute
Paul Cipriano
Maurice Patt
Fred Wonderlick
Charles Burkhart
Edward Milton
William Dillon
Harry Dinges
Fred Laiferty
Morgan Shute
Dennis Shively
Ernest Fusco
Vincent Hanley
William Lichtenstein
Maurice Patt
Tyrus Rush
Samuel Merin
Eugene Sipes
Donald Shock
Sheldon Clapper
Jerry Watson
Paul Clapper
Robert Wyland
Telesphore De Fraene
Roger Blake
Dorothy Richards
Marian Hirst
Virginia Goodman
Helen Replogle
Ruth Bohn
Henry Kenner
James Petrarca
Fred Lafferty
James Shoenfelt
George Robinson
Herman Schmidt
VARSITY NAU LETTERMEN
Howard Calderwood
Alfred Yavasile
Bernard Porta
Eddie Rush
Paul Fowkes
Edwin Marshall
David Henderson
John Hicks
Harvey Rupert
Paul Sherwin
Edward Conrad
Vaul Rouzer
Howard Bonebreak
Richard Fluke
George Robinson
James Shoenfelt
Clarence Holfman
Earl Fuoss
,lack Edelman
Frank Acker
VARSITY "An GIRLS
Marie Fonner
Nellie Slick
Bertha Boldt
Dorothy Snyder
Mary I. Smulling
Page One Hundred Sixty-six
Charles Trostle
Dennis Shively
Telesphore De Fraene
Vincent Hanley
Paul Fowkes
Kenneth Rhodes
Charles Fickes
Hartley Olson
William Lantz
William Boyd
Max Watson
Paul Cipriano
James Petrarca
Herman Schmidt
Sylvester Russel
Lewis Markle
Henry Russel
Henry Kenner
Charles Trostle
Wilfred Kimmel
Louis Patt
Samuel Clark
Edward Rudisill
Samuel Sealfon
William Dickey
Margaret Mattas
Gene Gibbons
Ethel Howell
Margery McGirk
Mary Houck
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MUSIC
HE Music Department has been the scene of many activi-
i ties during the past year. The Glee Clubs and Mixed
Chorus did excellent work under the direction of Mr. Linda-
man and Miss Eberle. The Boys, Glee Club added much to the
success of the Annual Show, and the Girls, Glee Club presented a
fine Easter cantata. The band has made a great improvement in
playing and marching and played for the band concert in April.
The orchestra also played in a concert held during Music Week.
Besides the Symphony Orchestra which consists of seventy
members, there are two small concert orchestras. The first is led
by Mario Del Bianco and the second by Mr. Krivsky. Both orches-
tras represented our High School on different occasions, at schools,
clubs and plays. The brass quartet and string quartet have also
presented entertainment.
4'The Brevities of l932," presented for the benefit of the
Horseshoe and the Music Department, was a great success from the
opening chorus to the last encore. The first act was a conventional
minstrel show, enlivened by different jokes and quips together
with songs and dances. The numerous gags of the end men were
appreciatedg Sparrow Mannion brought down the house with his
famous impersonations. The songs and dances were numerous,
and made the second act well worth seeing and listening to. A
finale by the entire company brought the house to its feet with a
burst of clapping and cheering.
This was all made possible by the hearty co-operation of the
entire Music Department.
A
Page One Hundred Sixty-eight
MR. HOWARD A. LINDAMAN
Head of Music Department and
Benefactor of the 1932 Horseshoe
Page One Hundred Sixty-nine
Boys' Glee Club
Top Row: Wolfe, Lindsey. Leathers, Frantz, Llewellyn, Young, Carolus, Glunt., Kline, Hobson, W. Davis,
McNaughton, McCly, Mannion.
Middle Row: Fickes Brubaker, Woolridge, Wagner, Maurer, Sweet, Kraft, Ziegler, Gates, Breen,
A leb Botwr'ght Mo r Brown
DP Y, 1 Y Ye 1 -
Bottom Row: McCama,nt, Vavelli, J. Cochrane, Berley, B. Cochrane, Zirnmerer, Harrison, L. Davis, Stere,
Hershey, Taylor, Miller.
HE Boys, Glee Club of the Altoona High School has completed one of
the most successful years in the history of its existence. It has pre-
sented numerous pieces at the various school and community affairs
throughout the past year. Each appearance was greeted with great acclaim
by those present. At the Annual Show their musical numbers created much
of the interest.
The membership of approximately forty young men sought teaching
under the able directorship of Mr. Lindaman, commonly called uPop.,'
Director ....... ............................. ........ lV l r. Lindaman
MEMBERS
Margaret Horner, Accompanist
Gerald Browne
Lawrence Davis
William Davis
Clement Hershey
Paul Woolridge
Charles D. Lindsey
Richard McCamant
Clyde Miller
George Stere
Robert Walters
John Zimmerer
Roy Frantz
Dwight Fickes
Leroy Hobson
Charles Young
Peter Crivelli
Wayne Leathers
Charles Llewellyn
Max McCoy
Gerald Koober
Harry Taylor
Leroy Ziegler
Gerald Appleby
Charles Botwright
Alvin Burley
Bernard Cochrane
William Harrison
Carl Kline
Robert Moyer
Marshal Wagner
Owen Brubaker
Donald Kraft
Dick Green
Ted Gates
John Cochrane
Dick Breen
Clarence Wolfe
Andy Muir
Bob lVlcNaughton
Page One Hundred Seventy
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Girls' Glee Club
Top Row: McGraw, Collins, Rodgers, Cummings, Beattie, Bartholomew, Perchy, Taylor, Jones, Rlgg,
Gallagher, Brooks, Lupfer.
Middle Row: Walters, Rollason, McKinnery, Adams, Wheatiield, Bollinger, Temple, Woomer, Bott,
Gluntz, Gladfelter, Balliet, Anderson, Lambour.
Bottonin Rong M. Warsing, D. Warsing, Dey, Gibson, Billig, Hubba, Romerosy, Karns, Groban, Schade,
roug .
NE of the outstanding musical organizations at Altoona High is the
Girls' Glee Club. For the past few years it has been under the
very able sponsorship of Miss Eberle, having at the present forty
members. This is an increase of ten over that of last year.
The Girls' Glee Club has been very active, presenting numerous concerts
in the assemblies. A much appreciated program was also presented at the
Easter Services.
Director ....... ........ M iss Eberle
MEMBERS
Geraldine Adams
Margaret Anderson
Anna Balliet
Doris Beattie
Mary Billig
Doris Bollinger
Lorene Bott
Beatrice Brooks
Maxine Collins
Lucy Cummings
Rose Dey
Dorothy Funk
Katharine Gallagher
Arlene Gauntner
Lois Gehrdes
Gladys Gibson
Viola Gladfelter
Alma Gluntz
Rose Groban
Anna Hubba
Margerite Jones
Beatrice Lambour
Hazel Longenecker
Beatrice Lupfer
Cora McClaren
Virginia McCoy
Grace McGraw
Mary McKinney
Elda Prongle
Dorothy Reifsnyder
Elizabeth Rigg
Anna Bollason
Dorothy Schade
Betty Taylor
Thelma Temple
Pearl Walters
Dorothy Warsing
Marjorie Warsing
Elizabeth Wheatfield
Alice Woomei'
Page One Hundred Seventy-one
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The Orchestra
HERE is no other organization in the high school which does as much for
the school as our orchestra, under the direction of Mr. Frank Krivsky, a new
member in the music department this year.
The orchestra meets the third period every day and practices for such events as:
Lectures, chapel programs, Christmas and Easter entertainments, and the like.
A new plan has been tried out this year and has proved very pleasing to both
the music director and students. Every Tuesday and Thursday are set aside as days
when special instructions are given by Mr. Krivsky with the aid of Mario Del Bianco.
This is essential to make the whole orchestra better and provides individual attention
when it is needed.
The Music Department has some instruments of its own, which are used by stu-
dents who are eager to learn music and cannot afford an instrument of their own.
This is one of the finest things about the department, in that it gives many a chance
to learn to play some favorite instrument.
The orchestra this year has been especially outstanding and we hope that it will
be the same in years to come.
Concert Master Second Violins Trumpets Accordion
Mario Del Bianco Dorothy Richards Dick Smith Clem Hershey
Fi,-S5 Violins Mary Billig Marie Szeyller Baritone
Philip Stadler Eddie Lehier Melvin Bennett Drexel Mcfravish
Charlotte Nickoli Frances Frank Elwood Rudisill .
Naomi MCK1ain Glenn Calvert Pwwlo
George Kalb
Emma Ventresca
John Miller
Eugene Donally
Margaret Mattas
Harold Smith
Anthonene Valone
Thomas Moore
Paul Rfnes
Amelia Nickoli
Saxophone
Harry Lotz
Robert Replogle
Jean Melcher
Clarence Stitt
Fred Wyant
Jack Rouzer
Charles Lindsey
Charles Lockard
Ruth Miller
John Vanettozi
Margaret Douglas
Vivian Jones
Harold Rosefsky
Anna Mae Beecher
Wlaltcr Pitrowski
Audrey Wissinger
Clarinets
Bill Housely
Jack Douglas
Alison Douglas
John McNamara
T rombones
Harry Clapper
Bob Stahl
Earl McKinely
James Bryant
Gerald Koofer
Marirnba
John Miller
Beatrice Lambour
Cello i
Dorothy Fowler
Jack Strassler
June Stoner
Bass Violin
Roy Frantz
Lillian Valone
Viola
Phyliss Marsden
Bass
Harry Holfman
Gerald Brown
Page One Hundred Seventy-two
Karl Robinson
Bob Wakefield
Bassoon
Orville Grey
Oboe
Joe Aveni
Piano
Margaret Horner
Margaret Weimer
Drums
Robert Boyer
Walter Allan
French Horn
John Pross
Tympani
Dick McHale
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The Band
NDER the leadership of Mr. Krivsky, the director, and Clayton Hippo, the
drum-major, the Altoona High School band has steadily increased in size
until at the present it has a membership of 70 pieces.
During the football season the band turned out for every game, giving the Held
a gala appearance as well as pepping up the team and crowd. It was also in attend-
ance at many of the basketball games.
An unique custom was adopted this year, in as much as the members were per-
mitted to wear the Altoona "Af, which privilege was previously granted only to the
members of the athletic organizations.
Director .............
Drum Maj or ........
William Acker
Joe Aveni
Albert Bamgurtner
Melvin Bennett
Charles Brown
Clark Brown
Fred Carothers
Harry Clapper
John Cooper
Eugene Craine
Mario Del Bianco
John Douglas
Harold Dunlap
Don Gaver
Joe Gerhart
Joe Gill
Dick Green
George Heaton
Henry Hebbruan
Glen Heiss
William Hawsley
Charles Jones
MEMBERS
Gerald Koofer
Charles D. Lindsey
James Lloyd
Charles Lockard
Richard Logue
Edward Levy
Given Lotz
Harry Lotz
Jim Laudenslayer
William Lower
Mike Marnalla
Frank Marshal
Dick McHale
Duncan McFarlan
Carl McKinley
John McMamars
Drexel McTavish
John Miller
Carmel Perretla
John Pross
Bob Replogle
Jack Riley
Carl Robinson
Page One Hundred Seventy-three
Krivsky
Clayton Hippo
Elwood Rudisill
Leo Samson
Harry Scholl
Richard Smith
Richard Snyder
Bob Stahl
Clarence Stitt
John Veneltozzi
Edward Wissinger
Earl Woodcock
Lewis Zeigler
Clayton Hippo
Mike Nardelle
Charles Bush
Orville Gray
Thomas Griffith
Gerald Browne
Leonard Wertz
Henry Good
Ralph Palmer
Albert Musto
John Davis
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Boys' Octette
Top Row: Crivelli, Ziegler, Fickes, Gates, Green.
Bottom Row: Moyer, Botwright, Miller, Lindsey.
HE Boys' Octette has been an outstanding feature in
the Music Department this year by helping out in the
Annual Show, Chapel, and special events. This
organization, under the direction of Mr. Lindaman, head of
the Music Department, has been successful in every phase of
its Work. It gives an opportunity to those boys who Wish to
sing and help their school, for higher learning in music and
vocal training.
MEMBERS
Dwight Fickes, Manager
Pete Crivelli Robert Moyer
Leroy Ziegler Charles Botwright
Dick Green Clyde Miller
Ted Cates Charles D. Lindsey
Page One Hundred Seventy-four
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"The Testament of Beauty"
WAS at thatt hour of beauty when the setting
sun squandereth his cloudy bed with rosy
hues, to flood his lbtfd works as in turn he
biddeth them Good-nightg and all the towers and
temples and mansions of men face him in bright
farewell, ere they creep from their pomp naked
beneath the darknessg . . J . .
Verily by Beauty it is thatt we come at Wisdom,
yet not by Reason at Beautyg and now with many
words pleasing myself betimes I am fearing lest
in the end I play the tedious or-ator who maundereth
on for lack of heart to inakel an end of his noth-
ings. Wherefor as when a runnerwho hath run
his round handeth his staff away, and is glad of
his rest, here li break off, knowing the goal was
not for me the while I ran on telling of what cannot
be told.
Robert Bridges.
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