Arsenal Technical High School - Arsenal Cannon Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN)

 - Class of 1914

Page 20 of 24

 

Arsenal Technical High School - Arsenal Cannon Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 20 of 24
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Arsenal Technical High School - Arsenal Cannon Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 19
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Page 20 text:

18 THE ARSENAL CANNON Our Teachers' Future fContinued from page seventeefrnj and controls her private fly about and touring soarerf' Miss Frick is a teacher at Bonn University, where she started her course in 1914. Mr. Yenne is a civil engineer. He now has a scheme in his head to build a bridge across the Pacific. Mr. Spear is a contractor and builder. We un- derstand that he has just been award- ed the contract for the new govern- ment building at San Francisco. Mr. Craig is now a lieutenant in the 6th infantry. Mr. Mueller is still a teacher at Tech but he now teaches a boys' cooking class. He in- troduced the work as a side issue to help boys who were going camping. The course is so popular that he now devotes his entire time to it. Miss Fields is now the private secretary of John D. Rockafellow. Mr. Richard- son has retired with a big fortune, which he made as a snake charmer for Ringling Brothers. Miss Davis is manager of a dainty lunch and tea room. Reports have it that she cleared ten thousand on it last year. Miss Smith is physical director of the Los Angeles schools. Her high school classes are the best on the Pacific slope. Mr. Stuart is still principal of Tech which now has four- teen buildings and over three thous- and students. Miss Allen is book- keeper for the Indianapolis Street Cleaning Department. Under her direction this department of the city government has become so well or- ganized that it is a pattern for all other cities in the United States. Miss Lees spends all of her time now running her new auto. No person has a better record for safe and care- ful driving. Mr. Moutani is now con- ductng the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. After a successful season in this city, he is to take his orchestra to Lugano to fill an unusually good contract. Mr. St. John who is still at Tech has an Orchestra of seventy- five. They practice four nights a week and play in the Auditorum each Friday. He has the best High School Orchestra in the States. Mr. Buerck- holtz is a German teacher in Monrova, Siberia. His pupils write glowing accounts of his work. Mr. Collins is buildinng locomotives and planning signals but instead of running lris en- fCovztinued on page twentyj Mathematics iContiozued from page th'ree.j etry. Arithmetic deals with definite or known numbers, wlrile algebra deals with general or unknown num- bers. The unknown numbers some- times are more than one, in a single problem. Gradually from the deal- ings with' letters in Algebra I and II, the course runs into Geometry. Geom- etry is given in order to develop clear and logical thinking, by showing the succession of events in their natural order. This is the thing the geometry classes have been taught in the past semester. Grasp the principle of Geometry, is the slogan, even though you donlt remember the various proofs. If once the principle is learned, the propositions though per- haps forgotten during the summer, will come back to the mind in due course of time. With this in mind the Geometry I and II classes have been studying the book of Wentworth- Smith. The Geometry I's have cov- ered book one, while the 11's have covered books two three, four and five. Thus the course of Geometry is completed. The next step in the mathematics work goes back to Algebra. This is a very indefi- nite subject, and its results are seem- ingly few. Great patience and per- severance is required for this course. The teachers of some of these various classes are Mr. Sanders, Mr. Mills, Miss Hagely and Mr. Anderson. So, the mathemetics at Tech, with their assistance, is accomplished. 0 0 A 0.0 0.0 0.9 Technical at Crawfordsville Technical was not represented at Crawfordsville by any athletes but instead by a few rooters and a few musicians. Russel Cook. Paul Burns, Everett Hughes, Merle Long and Floyd Wrenrick played in the Manu- al Band and represented the talent of Technical. Arthur Hewitt, Ralph Shimer, Frank Hoke. Darrel Montani, Albert Dougherty, Mr. Anderson and Mr. Wedeking were there represent- ing the Technical rooting force. Al- though Tech was not represented in the athletic field, this year, it is hoped that we will be in future 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Some weather this!

Page 19 text:

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Page 21 text:

THE ARSENAL CANNCN 19 A red headed girl is Ester Wood, She wore a rusty colored hood. With rosy cheeks is Rachel Todd, Her best loved fish is the cod. A quick briglrt boy is Jamie Scott, A little argument makes him hot. A little boy, Wayne McMeans, Always studying, to me, it seems. A great big girl is Barbara Pglen., To me, it seems she's always feed1n'. Here's to good old Vernon Griffs, Who does his Latin all in jiffs. A quiet girl is Virginia Brackket, Because she never makes a racket. A knowing boy is Donald Durman, He knows the difference between lec- ture and sermon. A jolly kid the Bakemeyer Fred, When he falls down he hurts his head. A nice maid is Alice Plank, So she seemed sitting on Pogue's Oceans bank. A fine player is Victor Prange, He played the piano while he sang. Said Clarence Miller I'd kill'er, With arsenic I'd fill'er. A chubby girl is Ida Hert, In Latin she always is alert. Much powder on the face of Marjorie Killie, Goes a long way toward making her look silly. Fancy skirts has Lorraine Free, For they are draped as you may see. Will she be an old maid, Dorothy Carey, Or will she find a man and marry. We all wonder why Martha Huff, Is always hungry? Does she not eat enough? Aifancy boy the Pangborn Earl, His cuff buttons are always set with pearl. A funny girl Miss Erma Turk, She often in the corrider did lurk. It takes Mr. Samuel Newman, To keep everything a boomin'. A funny kid the Heathco, Frank, At being sober he is rank. At basket ball our George Mode, Much resembles a little toad. A math. star is Ezra Clark, He works all night in the dark. A smiling maid, Fernetta Mullen, Shes never known to be sullen. A giggly Miss, Elizabeth Scott, But for friends she has a lot. A base ball player, Lehman Holliday, Didn't have time, you oft hear him say. An Irvington boy, is Paul Burns, A half quart measure holds all he learns. A base ball Slayer, Carl Harris, He does all t at he can for us. The fat lazy boy, Max McVey, Playing base ball is the way he spends the day. A German star is Marjorie Nutt, In German she never hits a rut. The Ostermeir girls, Frieda and Gertrude, They are never in a sulky mood. The biggest girl in Tech, Dora Worley Has never known to be surly. The Writer of this, Newell Hall, Does hereby implore you, him not to maul. See the Birdie lConti1zued from page sixteenj he had exposed the rst film, the editor-in-chief announced that she had had her mouth wide open when the film was snapped. And so on until each camera man had had his chance. This was the first chance all the staff had been given to Watch the Birdie. 0:0 0:0 0:0 Tired clerk over a piled un counter- Can I show you anything else madam? Customer- Yes, the nearest way out.

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