Dickinson High School - Gnome Yearbook (Jersey City, NJ)

 - Class of 1937

Page 1 of 140

 

Dickinson High School - Gnome Yearbook (Jersey City, NJ) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1937 Edition, Dickinson High School - Gnome Yearbook (Jersey City, NJ) online collectionPage 7, 1937 Edition, Dickinson High School - Gnome Yearbook (Jersey City, NJ) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 140 of the 1937 volume:

W 3 f f 1 Y '-r '- .3 Q' f. - .1 .. ,Z,Z I I V- , I .V .. , Q' X , . , . . ' -a , -' -3 ' f , f kf ' .4 . H lj N M. ' ' -1 ' . . - W . 4 , ' KM 'V . , , Q e V ' A ' K .V1 ' '. Mk Q A ,I , ' , ,, 4 l . .E -Wi-1143-I4-it' z . K u f Qi, L! - - ' ZTRW-,a, 'T ff , . ' fs H S 4 'K'5:'.1--9, - -51,5 . ' , r -A , v -'i.'1'+N Y 11 '-- 4 - ' I I . . I 1 . .1 Y, , '. Tc, 'xr X .Ll . ,s . 'Q 4 YK ,I ,4 -1 'I i 5 . f D V L-.Z ,A -R . . V ' mr'- N jf ,ff A. M- 3 if .P '- , -Q' K A . 4 . ri-Li , ipfg I. if fl 9 , f' DL L g.x,.gg ,-23.13 , ., ' Q w' . -N , N - ' 'w' rn . . 4 ' q 'fx if t .Y, . 'F . . A rj ' 'A L' ., , I . A 9-I A-gg. A A A'. . , ,' , 1 - ' au- 1-'-' J. . 1-E1 ' X ' Lf. 'A f . :fl-' H ' . H'f f'k ' '4 '- '-- , , - . .V ,P is ' ja ML ', , ' 4' ' V ' ' V 1 Q K , 1- ' j- 4 - ' . L 'Mill bg. Q K .D :if r ,N bi I v,,f M . I i e 4 H,!f.,.- . , ,N 5 X. .' - , ,S -Y ,E - .. 2.5 , h 5 ' 'Q .. X, ,JA , '- .Mp . M .A 1 I 5 , I Al 5 '13,' q'S,-- 2- 1-'?g,:1g ' V V .' bilfifi!,fQ.5,1Lx-h'?'f'F -. ' 4 .V w '-,-.L: f-. aw 2.1- www 4 - -, N . a,,r,, -Q55 ww' 5- ,. f -1,454 .W .,,.'. .- xg. . H z M - 5-nb:-.1--af -.iti-7? Ep1 '- '2 ,fYf5'15,5 -Q35 ' --1 - ,L K1 0917 :-3:1 'J ., . -.' 'ff' 1f f'4 ff---4 ' 5. W .X -1 A vw-.-V .. , 5, 455:14 P-wr Wm 49' 4. .. gf- , Ju, .., , .2 ,m.,mg1L ,ii ,gnu Lk! 121433 Fl4kL'!-d5,s:lil:L4+. ALL. I THE MYSTERY He turned his eyes away from life And gazed far out beyond the pale And wondered why, no human eye Had ever sought to pierce the vail That separates mortality From that dark land beyond the sea Of Styx, why all the mystery? Why mortal man has never learned What fate there lies for him in store When from this earth he must depart For habitation on that shore And pondered in perplexity Why thru the ages there should be That silent unsolved mystery. Why souls departed ne'er return With tales of wondrous sights they've So that we, too, may share with'them The joys of which we can but dream What unseen forces hold them there And with them what treasures share That to return, they do not care. Why there is but the one passport For entree to that promised land Across its portals is inscribed To enter death must take your hand No happy medium can there be To cross that dark uncharted sea And reach the shore of Mystery. Said he, by death it must reveal Its hidden treasures will unfold l'll pay the price that I may feast Mine eyes upon its gifts untold I will not wait for death to ride That I will seek by suicide So in that land I can abide. Again to earth I will return And in the world will famous be When I relate of what I learn And solve that age long mystery He died-the world a-waited tense First with excitement-then suspense But naught was heard, save silence. You would control infinity? Thou fool of puny human frame Dened your God, exiled your soul To worship that false goddess-fame SCE I1 Think you more great in power than He Who ruled that till eternity It should remain a-Mystery. -IRENE NICHOLSON --AAA---.?.v.- ,--------A,,- THE W L presented by THE CLASSES OF JANUARY-JUNE I937 l E CHARLES PALK January Editor STEPHEN STRUAPGZEXWSKIW' E f- E ' June Editor , A ' U FRED W. MESSLER Business and Faculty Adviser wM.e L. DICKINSON HIGH SCHOOL JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY vvfvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv-,ifvvvvvvififvv 919 3 Qi wg QW, 5 u CL Page four E THE SYMBOLIC THEME Humanity, from our earliest records of history, has had symbols to express those things which they feared, adored, hated, admired or cherished. Creeds, empires and nations are founded on one or a combination of these characteristics. The highly imaginative human mind always perceptibly keen and eager to paint pictures, formulates, grasps and establishes symbols. In perpetual procession through the pages of Time, we have had the symbolic representations of all the outstand- ing emotions and movements in history. In religion we have the bad spirits, the ogres, the devil, the good spirts, God, the angels. In the empires we have had the symbols of strength and authority, the armies and the officials with all that they represented. In the nations we have the signs of fading monarchies, dictatorships, Fascistic, Communistic, and Republican Democracy. We of this powerful country are indeed blessed and fortu- nate in these troubled days. When others are continually using for their living symbols those of discord and death,- hate and armaments,-we have for ours those of unity and peace. The eagle, his strong wings unfurled, powerful claws and beak, and his clear sharp eyes, Hies above a nation tied strongly together by the pillars of unity and common consent .... Democracy. His main task is not to tear and scatter others, but to collect and hold together his own. The Laurel wreath within which we have enclosed the Father of our country-is our symbol of peace, around him, who was First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen. Our symbols are those of 'Unity-Democracy-Peace. V MQ, A350 DEDICATION The jvunders gf our lVation lahored to give us an instrument with which to chart our course as an independent lVation. The Constitution has heen our guide for nearly one hundred and ffty byears. It carried us safeg through the fweahnesses gf an ifyfant nation to attain a place Q' leadership among the powers gf the world. Yliat through a thorough hnowledge y' it we may govern ourselves hetter and hold fast to the principles that have made gf us a great people, this copy gf the Constitution gf the United States if America and its amendments is presented, in commemoration gf its one hundred and fiftieth anniversary. x w,, fy N' YA an I .-97 49 A W 3 Page fiv Y.. QQ l , 5 M s 3- -, t-YN .v vbnp, A , '2- s2tg,s1r11sI':,f y I 'AP' W W FOREWORD Freefiomf fast a wont, aiways enjoyed. 'Uery ftesiraoie ami the rlearest ora-oiug when one ims uoue or out fittfe of it. Our fathers, you who lmve Laiit tire fouuziatious rf tlzis country, we who proft Ly tlze fruits rf your labor, we thank you. W e thank you hr the estaobslzmeut of tile sol1ools-- tile remit dt which we uow eljoy- H74' tuaufq you for tire Laws which you framed ami tlzrougu wffzeu you eruieavorezi to make us free, just auft equat- We tuauk you for tile courage and spirit you ziispfayeft in your work, wuicu we have always euerisuezl - Your laws izafve matte as free of any Lonztage, uueouferuezi about tue possibility of the pressure :fan iron giove ou our freezloru, ami ltas given us room for imuest tlzozigat ami its expression. Mfg: A250 tfectzbfz e'fect1'or1 Jfection ,Tec tio I1 Jbqection Jfectiion gi?66'fl.0l1 fy .Y Q0 W ,L M , E , an I -7 coNTENTs A A I ........ Owl Staff . . Administration . . . A. . . Faculty II. . . . . Graduates III . . . . . Features IV .... . . . Activities 17 . . l .... Sports VI ......... Humor VII . . . Advertisements Wm ev , I fwmmx v 1 I ,SEQ - -if V, Q U fr, ki A ,N ,,- if W - Q, X A X ' Page eight CHARLES FALK STEPHEN STRUPCZEWSKI January Editor June Ediwf gg , a,3..,.'+: 1 FRED W. MESSLER, B.c.s., B.A., B.s., M.A. Business and Faculty Adviser f 'fu 'SI r Ji? r ..f.5?:f.-x-, :PK X FX -A ig L-. Q 7 1 v5 J A-, r. . ?' Q., A 'E.,, ' THE OWL STAFF CHARLES FALK, January Editor STEPHEN STRUPCZEWSKI. June Editor MR. FRED W. MESSLER, Class Adviser and Business Manager, Owl PERSONAL SUBSCRIPTION Sally Howe, Chairman Elizabeth Krolin, Assistant Chairman William Moloughney LITERARY George Cottendon, Chairman Mary Flaherty, Assistant Chairman Ann Orolen ADVERTISING Raymond Duify, Chairman ORGANIZATION Louis Imbornone, Chairman Otto Huhn, Assistant Chairman HUMOR john Burke, Chairman .Alfred Grondahl, Assistant Chairman SPORTS William Franklin, Chairman William Floyd, Assistant Chairman Anthony Calabro, Chairman Morton Litvack CIRCULATION A. L. Comment, Chairman Catherine Thuring ART Ruth Newton, Chairman Joseph Bulkley, Assistant Chairman PHOTO Frances Maly, Chairman Harold Lorenz, Assistant Chairman TYPEWRITIN G Mary Gillen, Chairman Mary Penrose, Assistant Chairman HISTORIAN ' .Ann Magura FEATURES Louise Lepis, Chairman Carmelo Scafidi - P 'P Page nine OWL STAFF , -ISM , ,pfiiiiiii Q Ne L V 4 X' W ,Tri :, R N ix TL-.1 ' - 'X f X ,J f ' ' Xi ' X-4' ' vu.: A . T 93 Iii:-4.-. I 11? T. GILBERT MCFADDEN, .A.B., M.A. Principal X . DEH 'BT ,.,,,,,- Page eleven . f-'Z' TK- M N 'A 6-, -.-.5 My -N A V ,' -..- 'F X -Alf T hx . A A 6 5- -- ' - . 5,1 JOHN T. BROGAN, A,B., M.A. Vice Principal 'Fu 'ST k --pf' Page twelve rr! ,,,, ,fi-,ills X ff ' A xg - iw.-:rw :galil Wg M fhfx? I. N xXir ', ' 'I Nfuffw Q x f fwkxjf 7 - L Xin, -Q4 A 2-'X.,n JAMES A. NUGENT, I.L.D., Ph. D. Superintendent of Schools jersey City, N. I. X e Din 'ST , Page thirteen X T, M ! X - f 4512 Qwyl X lsr in M l W .1 w. :.5-3231155 4 1 A G X 5 X ka a ,f 5:5 xwA fx, 1255? Q of JAMES J REYNOLDS AB far.-a- ., .. TfQL Qi1i N JZ 'tiff N- H X xx-as ,L : T iX ,c I jp x ...ff 'X c . 7 mx., -5. at '- xi. . ...i - LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT January Class IQ37 We, the january class of 1937, although slightly unbalanced fdue to the labor'which has been thrust upon us as seniorsj feel sufficiently able to compose this, our last will and testament. To the faculty, we grant permission to continue to attempt to collect homework. I, Charles Falk, leave all the worry and toil connected with this publication to all future Owl editors. I, Michael Flora, leave my dapper manner to the next class sheik. I, Ann Orolen, leave my ability to truck to all who will appreciate it. I, Alice Leppard, leave my recipe for French Fried Bananas to all future female seniors looking for a popularity boost. I, Ray Duffy, bequeath all twists and turns of Parliamentary Procedure to destined presidents. We, the seniors, bequeath to George Dynamite Genderowsky the care of all future senior classes. I, Kay Gillooly, do leave to all future class secretaries pleasant memories of a good case of writer's cramp after class meetings. We, the seniors, leave as a suggestion for refreshments for a perfect social, cider and doughnuts. We, the seniors, leave the hope that future classes will have as capable a pinch- hitter as Betty Fox who was always there when needed. I Bill Franklin, do hereby leave my crown and title of Class Clown and Punster to the next best that comes along. I, Rose Margiotta, do leave my 'Jean Parker Bob' to the girl who can wear it as well. I john Popsy Burke leave my charming blush and ability to dance to the Sweet- heart of the next jean Parker Bob. I, Frank Di Nicola, do leave my determination to the next class go-getter. I, Morton Litvach, leave my practical jokes to the next aspiring practical jokester. 1 u I, Charles Schemel, leave all the Dots before my eyes to all blonde-lovers. I, Flo Chapman, leave 'my glistening eyes and surprised look to all future prom hat-check girls. I joe Traynor, do leave my super salesmanship to future chairmen of the Pin and s Ring Committee. We all leave D. A. E. H. S. with sorrow in our hearts, but happy in the accomplish- ment of our goal. Sealed, attested and witnessed this snowy night, june 10, 1937 fconsult your calendarj by: KAY GILLOOLY RAY DUFFY XX 'F-.e bill ff, Page lifteen M ,. ffl-li - . I' il 9 T' A 1 -:LQf1fi4,'31 A V ' ' . , Q.. - ff Nh t ra, f' 11- x , -A Q ' I N v .area-L LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT June Class I937 We, The Class of june, 1937, supposedly of sound minds and common sense, do hereby declare this to be our Last Will and Testament. Item: We bequeath to our beloved Principal, Mr. G. McFadden, everlasting love, and eternal love for his untiring efforts and his magnetic personality that are respon- sible for the high standard of Dickinson Accredited Evening High School. Item: To our struggling faculty, we bequeath our undying gratitude and sincere sympathy for the time they have spent with us embibed in suffering and agony, due to the non-exerting Evening students. Item: To the student body of Dickinson Evening High School, we bequeath our much cherished school spirit and loyalty. May God help them when they reach Pace and Muzzey! Item: To our successors, the Class of june, 1938, we bequeath our tact in cutting classes, and the perfect manner in which we can avoid tests and homework. Item: To Mr. Messler, we bequeath our talents and the promptness with which we always paid our dues. We also bequeath him Godspeed which is needed abundantly to carry out the work of Senior Classes. TO THE FRESHMEN: The salesmanship of Anne Magura to sell tickets, etc. The ability of Norman Grimes to ride the surf board. The noise and iilibustering at Senior Meetings in 108. The height of Tom Neary to the incoming Freshman. The frequency which Mary Gillen, Frances Maly and Louise Lepis attend socials. The friendliness of George Bitterly. The excuses of absence of Michael Stipicuvich. To history students, the recitations of Bill Mahoney. The ability of Angelo Amato, Neil Stadter, and Al Grondahl to pick up girls. TO THE WORLD IN GENERAL: To Editors, the ability of Steve Stripp Strupczewski and Charles Falk, to make the year book. The Congeniality of Ruth Newton, Al Grondahl. The sunny dispositions of Andy Milton and Louise Lepis. The dimples of Mary Gillen. To the N. B. C. Network, the public Speaking ability of Mr. Dineen's public speaking class. To the Treasury Department, the ability of Andy Milton to act in that capacity. To Guy Lombardo, the talents tMusicalj of the Senior Vocal Dissenters. To the Brain Trusts, the brains of the Owl Staff. To all of us, such friendships as Stephen Strupczewski and Frances Maly, Andy Milton and Louise Lepis, etc. p u We hereby select Mr. Messler as sole executor of this, our Last Will and Testa- ment, and do implore him to act with discretion and mercy. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, We, the Class of June, 1937, affix our hand and seal to this, our Last Will and Testament, this twenty-fourth day of june, Anno Domini One Thousand Nine Hundred and Thirty-Seven. Witnesses-Advisers: CHARLES BAUERDORF Drafted: AL GRONDAHL ANGELO AMATO MARY FLAHERTY A STEVE STRUPCZEXVSKI ANDY MILTON Page sixteen SSS , ,Z ,HA--,721-S N ALLTH-FITSRQ aZ M rkf V, 'N E ,X 'A ,k1g:,,, - .X K 'C T ff ii 5, A sf 5 Q TY1- 1-'Y :Z A -41.14 - ':9E.'2ef ...,,,' , F' ACCREDITED EVENING FACULTY T. Gilbert McFadden, A.B., M. A., Principal john T. Brogan, A.B., M.A., Vice Principal Carl W. Barget, A.B., M.A., Supervisor of History and Languages and Student Adviser William G. jordan, A. B., Supervisor of English and Student Adviser john A. Kelly, Supervisor of Commercial Subjects and Student Adviser Charles Antonaccio, A.B., Bookkeeping, Commercial Arithmetic Daniel Blum, B.S., Laboratory Assistant Charles Budenbender, B.C.S., Commercial Arithmetic Grace Byrnes, A.B., French Sarah Calinoff, A.B., Economics, History A. Virginia Carey, A.B., French Benjamin Cohen, B.S., M.A., Chemistry john A. Coleman, B.S. in E.E., Mathematics Martin W. Cooke, M.E., Commercial Geography, Office O gan' ation William W. Couzens, B.C.S., Bookkeeping, Accounting Harold Dickman, B.S., Physical Education William R. Dineen, A.B., English, Public Speaking Margrette M. Fields, B.S., English Z, . 2 - Vincent Fieseler, A.B., English Rita M. Fitzgerald, A.B., M.A., Mathematics Marjorie E. FitzGerald, A. B., English Mary I. Gagliardi, A.B., Spanish Anastasia Garrity, B.S., Typewriting Gerard W. Guterl, A.B., LL.B., English, Public Speaking Thomas F. Hearns, A.B., LL.B., fDied April 27, 1937, History Stanley E. Heller, B.S., in Ed., Chemistry George C. Hermes, A.B., Shorthand Abel Charles Horwitz, B.C.S., B.S., in Ed., Commercial Law john M. Kelly, A.B., History joseph M. Kenny, B.S., Physics, History Helene R. Lawrence, B.S., in Ed., Typewriting Lillian Leukroth, B.C. Ed., Bookkeeping, Business Training James T. Lillis, A.B., Science Henry L. Lowenstein, B.S., M.A., Economics George T. Mclnerney, .A.B., English james J. McKenna, A.B., Latin Charles A. Merklein, A.B., M.A., LL.B., Shorthand, Typewriting X ' 02,33 ff Page seventeen Iggy lm . . ...ala . . V I' .ri X , x X :V-eggrzffvmi'-aiiysgx A N.. Y ,,.,f L ' 7 ll - A Kash! -1. , Z:-Lg --4 sv. -LF P- FACULTY fCont.J Fred W. Messler, B.S. Ed., M.A., Shorthand Margaret H. Murphy, A.B., English, Latin Lena Neuman, B.S., Shorthand Typewriting Alphonso j. Orrico, B.S. in Ed., M.A., Spanish Maurice J. O'Sullivan, A.B., English Henry Ouram, Mechanical Drawing Katherine D. Paterno, A.B., Italian Helen T. Peeck, A.B., English Thomas F. Prout, A.B., History Ralph T. Ripley, B.C.S., Bookkeeping, Accounting Mildred C. Rudnitsky, A.B., Science Robert J. Salmon, A.B., English Philip Scheideberg, B.S., M.A., Mathematics Spencer S. Schorr, A.B., M.A., History Martin Shapiro, B. of Arch., Architectural Drawing Anne Schupper, A.B., Mathematics Anna Sheridan, B.S. in Ed., English, History Morris N. Shimshak, B.S., M.A., English. Algebra Hannah S. Steinhauer, Drawing Celia Streifer, A.B., German Emeline G. Sullivan, B.S. in Ed., Typewriting Constance N. Taylor, A.B., Science Marion E. Thompson, A.B., English George W. Tyne, B.S., LL.B., Science Claire R. Waldron, B.S., Dressmaking Laura M. Walker, A.B., Typewriting Charles S. Witkowski, B.S.E., LLB., Bookkeeping, Business Training Marie R. Manning, Office of the Principal Anne E. Roache, Office of the Principal Catherine M. Donohue, Office of the Principal George G. Coffey, Office Assistant Frank Caroselli, M.E., M.S., Book Clerk jane K. Aston, Librarian Cecilia Hynes, Assistant Librarian Angela Postarino, Assistant Librarian Ann B. Wister, Assistant Librarian Dorthy Witterschein, Assistant Librarian -.fs ,i,,f ..., 1- Page eighteen E Q51 HOOL FACULTY HIGH SC CCREDITED EVENING 'U D UO fb 2. A D fD P? FD fb D xx! f 'N ' .2 ' l ' N . D Q! lag.-EL L- J 74- -Q - PX fu: - siL-iii? Page twenty MR. THOMAS F. HEARNS - April 27, 1937 IN MEMORIAM .Mn Thomas If Hearns, a member of our faculty for Jive years, died of a heart ailment on April 27, 1937. He was a graduate of Holy Cross College and Fordham University School of Law, holding degrees of A. B. and LL. B. from those institutions. W e remember Mr. Hearns as a kindly yet thorough instructor whose calm and scholarly manner earned him the love and respect of his pupils. We extend his family our deep sympathy. FACULTY and STUDENTS X a'f sr Y fu Q? frfhg' 32 Sim MP' A? ff,-A ' iz ,f QQ , 7 Ca-EEQM VL? ,Quik - W 06212 Sf: 'li lr 'n agb QSN 4 gm X ' X 0 232 ' , nw QM K ' I H ? 68222525 ,I W X GRADUATES . N5 N' 1 QW, f . M f J. V ,ff ,ff ff! A fy -. ll l 741 Q .a,X 'Q x .-' RAYMOND DUFFY KATHLEEN GILLOOLY Prefidezzl Secretary ALICE LEPPARD ANN OROLEN Treafurer Vice-Prefidenl JANUARY CLASS OFFICERS x. ?.v'53Ti A D' X X., W r Page twenty-two SS UATING CLA AD JANUARY GR Page twenty-three M - , S fo' Sigh Q S f' ,w 'r-S-vff7- ' n S Mi' N 1 - ijf- '7 Q 'F'i A F L Tl Q N rf V W JY- C1 'Six kN.,4f'2r: M3 CHARLES BAUERDORF ALFRED GRONDAHL Prefident Vice Prefidenl , 1 A MARY FLAHERTY ANDREW MILTON S errelar y Treamrer JUNE CLASS OFFICERS Page twenty-four JUNE GRADUATING CLASS Pagb twenty-five , X jc, S S ieyeggz ,- fe -K: ff ' 1 fm Ll- it ' - 'f ---J lily I -31 f Q -Q. i JANUARY CLASS BALLOT Class Leader ........,................................................................................. Raymond J. Duffy Most Popular Girl ...,........,..,............,.........,......................................... Kathleen Gil00lCV Most Popular Boy ........ Best Looking Girl .....,. The Silent Woman ...... . Silent Man .................... Best Looking Fellow ...... Most Romantic Girl ........ Most Romantic Man ....... Politician ........................ .. Bluffer ..............,.................. Most Likel to Succeed y ...,. Best School Spirit ............ Best Alibi Artist ...... Best Athlete .............. Best Dressed Man ........ Best Dressed Woman ..,.... Best Dancer fMalej ....... Best Dancer QFemalej Teacher's Pet Class Flirt ..................... Sheik ............ Optimist .......... Most Refined ..... Class Leader Most Popular Most Popular Boy ........ Best Looking Girl .r..... The Silent Woman ...... Best JUNE CLASS BALLOT Girl ....... ffffff.'fff.'f.'.'ffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff.'fffffff.'ffffff The Silent Man ........... Looking Fellow ....... Most Romantic Girl ....... john Burke Rose Margiotta Marguerita Rossi Charles Falk John Burke Alice Leppard Robert Fleischer Joseph Traynor Jack Drexel Elizabeth Krohn Ann Amman Frank Di Nicola Michael Kearney ...... George Parks Marion Menaghan Charles Schemel Ann Orolen ........Cecille Dwyer Ann Orolen Michael Flora William Franklin Ann Amman Charles Bauerdorf .......... Ann Logiest Marcus I. Tremble Mary Flaherty Theresa Simpf George Cottendon Anthony Calabro Frances Maly Walter Moloughney Most Romantic Man ........ ....... Politician ...................... Best Best Best Best Best Best Bluffer ......... ......................... ..... Most Likely to Succeed School Spirit ........... Alibi Artist .....r. Athlete .................. Dressed Man ........ Dressed Woman ..,... Dancer fMalej ....... Best Dancer fFemalej . Teacher s Pet ................. Class Flirt ................. Sheik ............ Optimist ......... Thomas H. Neary joseph A. Langley, jr. Catherine Thuring Anne Magura Harold Lorenz Stephen Strupezeski Andrew Milton Anne Ercole Alphonse Comment Louise Lepis Al Gronclahl Sally Howe Cornelius Stadter Louis Imbornone Most Refined ..... ................. ........,................ .......... R u t h Newton .x,, ,, bin 'ST ' Page twenty-six ,rf Z'A'M,- XT K-'QQ' M fir X CL., 54 AA V K, X iji f .. N Q Q L:-QQ . . - 4, K Xl 4 ' -T ' ' f g ' E -N . K X lik: 3 I .4 X 4' t ' ' il 17 bt - 4, X It ' P. 5' U lx A A-. , xg vs '- - , 'S . l ROSE ALCARO Flash Lincoln Fordham Night Watch Spanish Club Italian Club Pin and Ring Committee Entertainment Committee One whom the music of his own vain tongue doth ravish like enchanting harmony. -Shakespeare. ANNA AMMANN Amie St. Nicholas Fordham Senior Play Committee, Camera Club, History Club, Deutche Verein, Owl Staff By your own report, a linguist. -Shakespeare. ANNE ANTONACCIO Ann Lincoln Brooklyn City College Let husbands know, their wives have sense like them: they see, and smell, and have their palates both for sweet and sour as husbands have. -Shakespeare. JOSEPHINE BELLODI Jo St. Michae1's ' Undecided Globe Trotters Pin-Ring Committee Half the gossip of society would perish if the books that are truly worth reading were but read. -Dawson. EMMA BLEDA Em P.S. 8 Christ Hospital Training School Drake Secretarial College German Club Few things are impossible to diligence and skill. -Johnson. CATHERINE CALLAHAN Kitty Dickinson High School N. Y. U. Dancing Club Globe Trotters So lived our sires, ere doctors learned to kill, And multiplied with theirs the weekly bill. -Dryden. ANNA CAPPIELLO Ann Lincoln Undecided Dancing Club Dressmaking Het modesty has concealed much of her ability. -Anon. FLORENCE MARIE CHAPMAN Flo St. Patrick's - N. Y. U. Terpsichorean Society Globe Trotters A true friend is one soul in two bodies. -Aristotle. I g R- , of , ,.- 'P Page twenty-seven i bg,x,,5.- w-- . -, K ,- -- If H V 1 I 1 , . -1. - 1 4 x -.: XX - il? ,. wilt ,xiii N X :rf XSPLAF! LUCILLE Cl-IRISTIANI Lou P. S. 14 Medical Center Dancing Club Globe Trotters Dramatic Society Sweetest melodies are those that are by distance made more sweet. -Wordsworth. ROSE COLASURDO Bubbles P.S. 5 N. Y. U. Globe Trotters Dancing Club Italian Club Music's not immortalg but the world has made it sweet. -Noyes. CATHERINE CONNELLY Kay Holy Family Hunter Great thoughts great feelings come to her, Like instincts, unawaresf' -Milnes. MARY COX Midgie Dickinson High School N. Y. U. History Club Literary Society Law Society Everything that has a beginning, comes to an end. -Quintilian. MARY CURTIS Mary Lincoln High School Undecided Zeal and duty are not slow But on occasions porelock watchful wait. -Milton. CLARA -D'AURlA Tiny Lincoln Medical Center Law Club Spanish Club A merry heart goes all the day, Your sad tires in a mile-a. -Shakespeare. LOUISE DE GREGORY Lou Drakes Undecided Debating Society French Club To wish is of little accountg to succeed you must earnestly desireg and this desire must shorten thy sleep. -Ovid. BERNADETTE R. DELANEY Bernie Lincoln Fordham Economics Club French Club Law Club That in our proper motion we ascend Up to our native seatg descent and fall I To us is adverse. --Milton. Page twenty-eight 's L52 7 fr s T I ' 'X ' - ,gc lf - t K ff ' -'J xv 6 .. EILEEN CECELIA DWYER Cecily Henry Snyder High School N. Y. U. History Club Globe Trotters Glee Club Good Sense, which only is the gift of Heaven, And though no science, fairly worth the Seven. -Pope. ANNE ERCOLE Cookie Lincoln High School Fordham History Club, Senior Prom Comm., Economics Club, Flower-Motto Committee, Globe Trotters Beauty conduces. Fashions do not. -Holiday. MARY FLAHERTY Irish Dickinson High School Undecided Dramatic Society Law Club Reception Committee Secretary of Senior Class Promise is most given when the least is said. -Chapman. HELEN MARIE FLANAGAN Ha-Ha Lincoln High School Commercial Club N. Y. U. German Club Tennis Club There is neither past nor futureg all is present. -Singh. ELIZABETH FOX Betty P.S. 23 Undecided Some friendships are made by nature, some by con- tract, some by interest, and some by souls. -Taylor. NORMA TERENTI Norm D. H. S. Undecided The endearing elegance of female friendship. -Johnson. FRANCES GARDNER Toots P.S. 27 Columbia Night Watch Staff Spanish Club Literary Club A mind not to be chang'd by place or time. --Milton. VIOLET GAWDA Shirley P.S. 25 N. Y. U. Economics Club Dancing Club Philosophy where Globe Trotters Dramatic Club it sooth's the reason, damp's the ambition. --Lytton. - - D yi Q -.r 5. , r- A 1' 4 Page twenty-nine Page thirty wx 'Q- - o 5 F' ' ,pifaff 'Cf is-Wig X-aT-'C 'if-ig!! KATHRYN GELSINON Kay P.S. 20 Fordham Dramatic Club Glee Club Literary Society Pres. Operalogian Club Sec.-Treas. Success is not an accident, it comes to the man who does his work a little better than the other fellow. -Busch. MARY E. GILLEN Mae St. Bridget's N. Y. U. History, Owl Staff, Literary, Senior Prom Committee, Reception Committee, Senior Social Committee Faith in friendship is the noblest part. Earl of Orrery. KATHLEEN GILLOOLY Kay Lincoln Annex Columbia Reception Committee, Spanish Club, Pin-Ring Committee, Jan. Senior Play, Sec. of jan. Senior Class O, thou art fairer than the evening air Clad in the beauty of a thousand stars. -Marlouwe. EILEEN HANNON Rene Henry Snyder Fordham Globe Trotters Literary Club There's something in writings like armour to the feelings. -Trader Horn. MURIEL HANRAHAN Hannie Asbury Park High U. S. Secretarial School The great thing is not what we get out of life, it is what we put into life. -Vance. CATHERINE HELMSDORFER Kitty Sacred Heart Undecided There are more things in heaven and earth, than are dreamed of in your philosophy. -Horatio. SALLY HOWE Blue EWS Hem-y Snyder Medical Center Dancing Club, Reception Comm., Sr. Class Play, june, History Club, Globe Trotters, Tennis Club, Owl Staff, Literary Society Too fair to worship, too divine to love, -Middleman. FRANCES C. IMPERATO Fran J. W. Wakeman Ufldeflded Law Club Poetry Club Italian Club Follow your honest convictions, and be strong. -Thackerary. 33 'P fn 2 -Q-.N .:t.-Q'Z1feef2f ' 'lg Qs 'SX -X xc' K,-, KK tl If N- 1 ' T X ,J 'X 1 .f' i N ., 1 R385 Q X. gr L AN? O A fr ' THERESA JANKO Terry Dickinson High School Fordham Latin Club Economics Club Globe Trotters Nothing is more simple than greatnessg indeed to be simple is to be. great. --Emerson. WILHELMINA JARINA Willie Henry Snyder Undecided Dancing Swimming To be a well favored man is a gift of fortuneg to write and read comes by nature. -Sbid. MARGARET M. KANE Peggy St. 1oseph's School Learning without thought is labor lostg Thought without learning is perilous. John Marshall -Confucious. MARY KELLY Mary St. Mary's Columbia Worth, courage, honor, these indeed your sustenance and birthright are. -Stedemore. ESTELLE KORYGA Liebchen P.S. 5 Pace Institute Everything connected with intellect is permanent. -Roscoe. JULIA KORYGA julie D. H. S. Undecided Friendship like love, is but a name, Unless to one you stint the flame. -Gay. SOPHIE KOTLOWSKI Red P.S. 6 - Nursing School january Senior Club Swimming Club B2lSkClball Dancing Club Such sweet compulsion doth in music lie. - -Anonymous. SADIE KOWALSKI Chippie P-S- 1 Katherine Gibbs Dancing Club Camera Club Globe Trotters History Club The next day is never so good as the-day before. -Syrus. dsl?- ssl ...,,- 'f- J' 4. .V 'P Page thirty-one ,.,.n as-2-4:--. ,f- -'tix M li: 'I Y f 'nf-1, . go .' 49 -' .-if T - --R. ' '. 'Y-Simi A x sv- --,Nm gag:-gl ?F::s--33' J J S Page thirty-two QPR bin 'BT ELIZABETH T. KROHN Betty P.S. 25 Christ Hospital School of Nursing History Club january Senior Play Owl Staff Secretary General Organization Every science begins as philosophy and ends as artg it arises in hypothesis and flows into achievement. -Will Durant. JEAN MARIE LANE jean St. Aloysius Katherine Gibbs Science has but one fashion-to lose nothing once gained. -Stedman. ANN LEHMAN Holy Family Academy Undecided Law Club Literary Club Terpsichorean Society The ultimate reality of all realities is life itself. -Rev. Fonlkes. LOUISE LEPIS Lou Snyder High School john Hopkin's Hospital History Club, Terpesichorean Society, Social Committee, Economics Club, Italian Club, Globe Trotters Club, Co-Chairman Senior Prom, Owl Staff A lovely lady garmented in light from her own beauty. I -shelley. ALICE LEPPARD Joy Catholic Institute Undecided History Club, jan. Pin-Ring Committee, Dancing Club, jan. Senior Class Treas., Law Club, Dramatic Club Character is the diamond that scratches every other stone, because a good name is better than precious ointmentsf' -Bartol. ANNE LOGIEST Red Henry Snyder High School Kathryn Gibbs Dramatic Club, june Senior Play, Reception Committee, History Club, Dancing Club, Globe Trotters, Basketball Be merry if you are wise. -Martial. ROSE J. MACKEY MQW Haverstraw High Englewood .Hospital Literary Club History Club Economics Club Literature is like a garden, one enters and admires the powers but one has individual preferences. -Phelps. ANNE MAGURA Little Arm pg- 25 Columbia Night Watch Staff, Owl Staff, Executive Committee, Dramatic Society, Spanish Club, History Club, Sr. Play, Grand Opera Society, Publicity Committee' All the charm, of all the Muses often flowering in a lonely word. -T9f1UY50f1- ,, ' ,- we Q .C X so at Xittfb. i K 1 f' ' fr l I X'-.Lf +4 A :I-X., JANE MAKOWSKA Janice 1 St. Ann's Katherine Gibbs l Tennis Club, History Club, Dancing Club, Law Club, Commercial Club The whole purport of literature-is the notation of the heart. -Wilder. FRANCES MALY Fran Dickinson High N. Y. U. Reception Committee, History Club, Literary Society, June Senior Prom Committee, Owl Staff, june Sr. Social, Terpsichorean Society But there's nothing half so sweet in life, as love's young dream. -Moore. ROSE E. MARGIOTTA Margie Union Hill High School Notre Dame, Staten Island Prom Committee, Dramatic Club, General Organization, Art Club, History Forum Nature was here so lavish of her store that she bc- stowed until she had no more. -Brown. ERMA McKELVEY Henry Snyder High Undecided School masters will I keep within my house, fit to instruct her youth. -Shakespeare. MILDRED MCSPIRIT Millie P.S. 9 Undecided Women will love her that she is a woman, more than an man' men that she is the rarest of all women. Y 1 , -Shakespeare. FRANCES MARYANN MERCUN Fran Union Hill High School Hudson College Pin-Ring Committee, Globe Trotters Club, Social Comm., Terpsichorean Society, Reception Committee A true and noble friendship shrinks not at the great- est of trials. --Taylor. THERESA MIELE Terry P.S. 23 N- Y- U- Skating Club Spanish Club Glee Club . The way to cheerfulness is to keep our bodies in exercise and our minds at ease. -Steele. MARY MURAWSKA Ginger Sf, Amhgny Undecided Law Club Globe Trotters Humor has justly been regarded as the finest perfec- tion of poetic genius. -Ca1'lYle- - 's 'yt , ,- -fr Page thirty-three .i.., M 4 i li X, A CN H+' - e 4' :.:,:tg i 1j :mx V fl: ' i 'LZ f K - t . ...J i fy -g f XR Qgbwtwf x M, J- 41:41 RUTH C. NEWTON Dickinson High School john Hopkins Literary Society, History Club, Tennis Club, Owl Staff, Color and Emblem Committee Expression alone can invest beauty with conquering charms. -Fuseli. IRENE AGNES NICHOLSON Nicky Dickinson High School Fordham 'How my achievements mock me! I will go meet them. -Shakespeare. MARIE NIETH Mary Snyder High School Undecided Dancing Club Dressmaking Club Good nature is one of the richest fruits of true Christianity. -Beecher. MARY E. O'CONNEI.L Mary Lincoln High School Packard University Economics Club History Club Globe Trotters Because right is right, to follow right Were wisdom on the scorn of consequence. --Tennyson. MARY T. O'DONNELL Bayonne Undecided Literary Club, Economics Club, Tennis Club, Basketball Friendship is the only thing in the world concerning the usefulness of which all mankind are agreed. -Cicero. CATHERINE O'KEAN 'Skipper Henry Snyder H. S. Notre Dame Basketball Club Fencing Club Tennis Club Terpischorean Society There is no such thing as modern Art. There is Art- and there is Advertising. -Sterner. ANNA OROLEN Dimples Brownsville H. S. Catherine Gibbs Senior Play Staff Prom Committee V. P. Senior Class And behold there was a very stately palace before him, the name of which was Beautiful. -Bunyan. MADELINE GERTRUDE PENROSE Maddy All Saints Commercial john Marshall Camera Club Senior Social Committee Owl Staff Dancing Club Our friends interpret the world and ourselves to us, if we take them tenderly and truly. -Alcott. gi, 3- , Dig gp Page thirty-four ..,,,- 6 1 X fc K u a qu! X' ft ' - ,fj 7 ' 'I Sig Q.: MARIE PICKETT Lincoln High School Undecided Gym Leader Swimming Club Nothing endures but personal qualities. --Anon. MARGUERITE ROSSI Margo St. Michael's Italian Club Globe Trotters Pace Institute Commercial Club Senior Prom Committee Rhyme endures because of love, not love because of rhyme, -Wolfe. STEPHANIE RUTKOWSKI Stephie D. H. S. Undecided Gentle of speech, benefxcent of mind. -Homer. CARMELA SCRUDATO Curly P.S. 52 N. Y. U. Dancing Club, Globe Trotters, History Club, Italian Club The honor of a maid is her name. -Shakespeare. THERESA A. SIMPF Thessa Snyder High Undecided Flower and Motto Comm., Tennis Club, Deutche Verein The value of life deepens incalculably with the priv- ileges of travel. -Willis, STEPHENIE SMUS Stevie Lincoln High School N. Y. U. Bookkeeping Club A man ought to read just as inclination leads him for what he reads as a task will do him little good. -johnson. CATHERINE THURING Cath All Saints Undecided Swimming Club, Dancing Club, Senior Play, Basketball, Tennis Club Knowledge is more than equivalent to force. -Johnson. MARY MAURICE TOOMAN Meet St. Bridget's Fordham Literary Club, Spanish Club, Globe Trotters, Tennis Club The whole purport of literature-is the notation of the heart. -Wilder. dTT bill ' xr' A 1 Page thirty-five M 4 pg . Yi ggyfgf f 'Y D -f 'N , NV v - ff V--,-J K -NIJ 6 A .D ... , t - .Ta -.-gf ' T4 - - rv: H 7 -QC I .5--'Nw ii' ' HELEN TYCH 'Iyc1-le Henry Snyder N, Y, U, Globe Trotters History Club W ln the spectrum of life the rich colors predominate. -Ervine. MARGARET URE Margie Studious of ease, and fond of humble things. Philips. TERESA VLKOVIC Terry Henry Snyder Undecided s Dancing Club The attainment of an ideal is often the beginning of a disillusionf' -Baldwin. EMMA WILKS Em Lincoln H. S. N. Y. U. Commercial Club Pin-Ring Committee Truth is beautiful and divine, no matter how humble its origin. -Pupin. JULIA MILDRED WOLF Teddy Union Hill N, Y. U. English Club, Art Club, Literary Society, History Club, Dramatic Club The perfection of art is to conceal art. -Quintilliar. V ' R- i Page thirty-six NATALIE YORI Nell Hazleton, Pa. Undecided Music is a prophecy of what life is to be, the rain- 1 bow of promise translated out of seeing into hearing. -Child. CHRISTINE GAGLIARDI Chippy Newtown High School Columbia Spanish Club Every fresh aquirernent is another remedy against affliction and time. -Willmott. HENRIETIA ANN SERF Ann Academyof the Sacred Heart Columbia Basketball Club Tennis Club Blessings be with them, and eternal praise Who gave us nobler loves, and nobler cares. -Wordsworth. ROSE VAN NOSTRAND Van P.S. 11 Undecided Spanish Club Musical Arts Club Know thyselfg this is the great object. -Seneca. , Dia 'BY -Y -.MQW at X-lb, Q.: A ANGELO AMATO Angel Memorial High School Notre Dame University Italian Club, Publicity Comm., Senior Prom. Comm., Senior Class Play,, Interclass Basketball, Dramatic Club, Debating Society He, perfect dancer, climbs the rope, And balances your fear and hope. -Priar. CASPER ANDERSON Sweeney Cliffside Park High School Undecided Possession is eleven points in the Law. -Cibber. EDWARD ANDREWS Ed P.S. 11 Diesel Engineering Engineering Society Chess Club Economics Club Hard knocks made better democratic Americans than diplomas. --Schwab. GREGORY AUTREY Dub Lincoln Undecided Dramatic Club Senior Class Play, june, Night Watch The world's a theatre, the earth a stage, Which God and Nature do with Actors fill. -Heywood. CHARLES BAUERDORF Charlie P.S. 17 Hudson College Debating Society, German Club, Executive Council, Grapevine Literary Society, Executive Adv. Board, Architectural Club Speech is power, speech is to persuade, to convert, to compel. -Emerson. RAYMOND BAUERDORF Ray Lincoln High Hudson College Debating Society, Architectural Club, Night Watch, German Club, General Organization, Play Committee, Grapevine Literary Society ' Oh, the heart is a free and a fetterless thing A wave of the ocean, a bird on the wing. -Pardoe. ANTON BENDER Stretch St. Nicholas Cooper Union French Club Swimming Club Commercial Club Glee Club Oh, Pilot! 'Tis a fearful night, there's danger on the deep, -Bayly. ELLSWORTH BERKOWITZ Berk Lincoln Pratts Institute Wise to resolve and patient to perform. -Homer. , 'fn 'ST N, 'l' Z. Eb-. .,.- Page thirty-seven ! 5 ,. .,-., v-f. X f V --rf,-2 ' i X we -g ff xt A Q 715-4 3 gg:'5'3-MJ ---te .:r 'x 1 m ' RAYMOND BERTOLETIE Ben I-if1C01f1 High John Marshall Basketball Dancing Club I do not know the method of drawing up an indict- ment against a whole people. -Burke. GEORGE R. BITTERLY Georgie P.S. 79 Whitestone, L. I., N. Y. Hudson College Senior Play Committee German Club Debating Society Advisory Board I always think one of the great charms of my sex is that the best of us remain boys to the end. -Baldwin. ALFRED BOHNER -- Al Duke University Track Team, Cross Country Team, Architectural Club One of the best methods of rendering study agreeable is to live with able men, and to suffer all those pangs of inferiority which the want of knowledge always inflictsf' -Smith. CHESTER BORKOWSKI Chet P.S. 4 Undecided Law Club Globe Trotters A brave soul is a thing which all things deserve. -A. Smith. JOHN C. BRACCO Jefferson No. 7 Undecided Italian Club History Club Glee Club Terpsichorean Society The drama's laws, the drama's patrons give For we that live to please, must please to live. Anonymous. HERBERT BRAUER Herby Memorial High School C. C. N. Y. Tennis Club Fencing Club I'll put a girdle round about the earth in forty minutes, --Shakespeare. GEORGE BULKLEY Burk D, H. S, ' Undecided Editor Night Watch The journalist holds up a moral umbrella, protecting society from the fiery hail of Conscienccef'-Russel. X T Page 'thirty-eight l ALFRED BUNDIES Al , J. W. Wakeman School Newark College T Track Team Terpsichorean Society Camera Club Night WafCh I do do all that may become a mang who dares do more, is none. . -51'lf1kC5Pea1'e- D' 3 I DQ ji xy i rn 'X 'N F 5 --XL A-gkig xg I. 'S -f - ' ef, ' 'l ir, H, Y T N xlg 7 . F' - N I N., H A 45 rl , f Egg 1 x I Lf. JOHN J. BURKE POP w Lincoln High Hudson College Senior Play, Prom Committee, Owl Staff, Track Team, General Organization On their own merits modest men are dumb. -Colman. VICTOR BUSINSKI Yic St. Ann's Polish School Pace Institute Happiness lies in the consciousnes we have of it, and by no means in the way the future keeps its ptomises. -Sand. JOHN BYKOWSKI By P.S. 1 Undecided History Club good risk to Tennis Team Caution though very often wasted is a take. -Shaw. JAMES CAIVANO Husky Dickinson High School N. Y. U. Genius can only exist in an atmosphere of freedom. -Faitbutn. ANTHONY CALABRO Tony P.S. 1, Hoboken Q Italian Club Engineering Club Debating Society Night Watch A Hatteting painter, who made it his care To draw men as they ought to be, not as they are. -Goldsmith. ROBERT CERNIGLEARO Don juan North Bergen N. Y. U. Football Public Speaking Baseball The surest way not to fail is to determine to succeed. -Sheridan. CHARLES CHAPOORIAN Chip P-S. 12 Harvard The earth is rocking, the skies are riven Jove in a passion, in god-like fashion, Is breaking the crystal urns of heaven. -Buchanan. ALFRED CIRELLI Freddie Union Hill High School Newark Technical Football, Wrestling, Baseball, Track Meet An Athesit's laughs a poor exchange for Deity of- fended ! -Burns. S-few? 9: 'gg Page thirty-nine M il. , r-fm scifi V me-1 s ' .4375-3 Page forty it--Z,1 WILLIAM CLARK Bill Emerson Cooper Union Success in life is founded upon attention to the small things rather than to the large thingsg to the every day things nearest to us rather than to the things that are remote and uncommon. -Washington. ALFONSE LOUIS COMMENT Al Eagan's School of Business N. Y. U. Swimming Club, Glee Club, Fencing Team, French Club, Engineering Society, Senior Prom Committee, Owl Staff, Tennis Team, Dramatic Society Our knowledge is our power, and God our strength. -Southey. LAWRENCE CONNORS Midge Memorial High Harvard Character lives in a man, reputation outside of him. Holland. ROBERT CORRELL Bob Kearney High School Pratt Institute Engineering Society 'Search men's governing principles and consider the wise, what they shun and what they cleave to. --Aurelius. GEORGE R. COTTENDEN. Jr. George Milburn High School N. Y. U. Owl Staff Senior Prom Committee Globe Trotters To struggle when hope is banished To live when life's salt is gone To dwell in a dream that vanished To endure, and go calmly on. A ' -Anonymous. JOSEPH CREFASI Barney Park jr. High School Rutgers Swimming Dancing Music, among those who were styled the chosen people, was a religious art. -Addison. PHILIP DARCY i Phil St, Bridgefs School Fordhzlm Basketball Track Team Youth now flees on feathered foot. -Stevenson. LOUIS DE AUGUSTA LEW Panzer College lincoln High School Football, Swimming, Track, Basketball, Baseball We are all of us more or less active physiognomistsf' --Thoreau. 'ST L ,...,f- ,-f1'..T2.1-.Z if ly I SX Q ,J 'i '7 . . XL? vp A 12' , v - FRANCIS DIETH Frank H' Memorial High School Undecided English Club , One science only will one genius fit: So vast is art, so narrow human wit. -Pope. FRANK DINICOLA Dinny Snyder High Columbia Terpsichorean Society Glee Club Orchestra Il Circolo Italiano He had two distinct persons in him. -Burton. JACK DREXEL Demarest High Basketball Fencing Track Meet I am a great friend to public amusemenrsg tor they keep people from vice. -Johnson. RAYMOND J. DUFFY Ray Sr. Michael's Undecided Tennis Club Pres. Senior Class Globe Trotters Dancing Club O, Truth is easy, and the light shines clear, In hearts kept open, honest and sincere. -Coles. JOHN DURANTE John D Dickinson High School Newark Normal Pernicious weed! whose scent the fair annoys, Unfriendly to society's chief joys, Thy worst effect is banishing for hours The sex whose presence civilizes ours. -Cowper. JOHN ELLIS Jack D. H. S. Undecided The best teachers of humanity are the lives of great men. --Faivesn. WILLIAM A. ENGLAND Bill P.S. 25 Undecided Education is the only interest worthy the deep, con- trolling anxiety of the thoughtful man. -Phillips. THOMAS ENGLISH Tom Lyndhurst High Pace General Organization Track Team The mind of man is this world's true dimension, and knowledge is the measure of the mind. -Greville. Dia 'I N i ASS, Page forty-one M we ,f I F 1-zlgfpfvf'-2'-4-.ZE3x x 'fn iffy WILLIAM ESCHENBRENNER Esch Lincoln High School Hudson College He had talents equal to business, and aspired no higher. -Facitus. WILLIAM FARRANT Will St. John's Hudson College Basketball, Tennis, Fencing, Wrestling Friendship is the most pleasant of all things, and nothing more glads the heart of man. -Plutarch. CHARLES FALK Iggy Union Hill High School Columbia Night Watch Staff, German Club, january Owl Editor, Chairman Play Committee, Dramatic Club Speech is a faculty given to man to conceal his thoughts. Falleyrand. ALBERT FERDINAND Red Lincoln High School Columbia Basketball Dancing Club Friendship is the gift of the gods, and the most precious boon to man. -Earl of Beaconsfield. ROBERT FLEISCHER Bobby Memorial High School Undecided Knowledge, in truth, is the great sun in the hrmament. Life and power are scattered with beams. -Webster. MICHAEL FLORA Mickey Sr. Nicholas Columbia Senior Play Social Committee breath of genius. -Beaconsfield. Dancing Club Deutscher Verein Enthusiasm is the WILLIAM FLOYD Bill Sacred Heart Hudson College Economics Club Swimming The modest, on his unembarrass'd brow nature has written. --Gertleman. JOHN J. FOLEY Jack Sf, Mal-y'5 Hudson College l Basketball 5Pani5h Cl'-lb General Organization to true knowledge is an addition to human power. -Mann- Dancing Society Every addition X QL -ff' Page forty-two fp 0 JZ vs ,'gf ,,NR A ,h xx 'Eff N SX ,ff ' ' X A ,af fs -eg, as ff ' ' X16-N, Q.: A A 2'X...,, Q' WILLIAM J. FRANKLIN Bill Dickinson High School Southern California Night Watch Staff Prom Committee Sincere with himself and those he comes in contact with. -Anon. STEPHEN GADOMSKI Stevie P.S. 57 Casey Jones The reason from the temperate will, Endurance, foresight, strength and skill. -Wordsworth. JOHN J. GARING jack St. Peter's N. Y. U. Dancing Club Basketball Philosophy is the health of the mind. -Seneca. PAUL GRIEK Demarest Fordham German Club Literary Society Debating Society There is first the literature of knowledge, and secondly the literature of power. -De Quincey. NORMAN GRIME Grimzy Washington Irving Columbia Spanish Club A little nonsense now and then Is relished by the wisest men. -Anon. ALBERT GRONDAHL Tim P.S. 27 Hudson College Vice Pres. Senior Class Senior Play Literature is the fruit of thinking souls. -Carlyle. ROBERT BOYLAN Bob Lincoln High School General Organization, Fencing Club, Globe Club Every crime destroys more Edens than our own. St. John's University -Hawthorne. ALFRED GRZYMALA Al Henry Snyder A N, Y, U, Science is simply common sense at its bestq-that is, rigidly accurate in observation, and merciless to fallacy in logic. -Huxley. 'fn 'ST '? ,-,f Page forty-three M -ft -. . , for 'arrests A V 1 , , -:,1d.s++-Y - 'Zil5X Av t N' do 'Tl It ..-.. 'N Hs l -ug: 4574! iif'l:if, -xii WILLIAM GUELLICH Bill P-5- 23 Undecided Jan. Sr. Play Committee, Science Club, Spanish Club The taste of beauty and the relish of what is decent, mst, and amiable perfects the character of the gentle- man and the philosopher. -Shaftesbury. JACK HARTERT jack Memorial High School Oxford Globe Club French Club The world's intellectual need today, is always it's genius. Harlow Shapeley. ARTHUR J. HEAGEN Art Holy Family N. Y. U. Without courage there cannot be truth, and without truth there can be no other virtue. -Sir Walter Scott. LUKE HEINS Heine P.S. 25 Clark University Debating Club Law Club, Literary Club The law-it has honored us, may we honor it. -Webster. WILLIAM J. HICKO Bill P.S. 4 Undecided Camera Club German Club Globe Trotters 'There is no point high enough that one can say: 'This is the peak' -Heifety. OTTO J. HUHN Ott P.S. 22 Carnegie Tech. Engineering Society, Italian Club, Debating Society, History Club, General Organization, German Club. Senior Social Committee Nothing tends so much to enlarge the mind as travel. -Dr. Watts. LOUIS IMBORNONE Louie P.S. 1 Hudson College Italian Club, Pres., Night Watch, Swimming Club, Executive Comm., Dancing Club, General Organization, Publicity Committee, Prom Committee There is only one proof of ability, action. Eschenbackk. GILBERT IRWIN Gil P.S. 24 Undecided He is truly great that is little in himself, and that maketh no account of any height of honors. -Kempis. css., Q.. st!! Page forty-four gs .1 . -1 T-,,-,1g A :Stiff N. V J x SX V. -' X5 F! fxs ,7 JAMES D. JACKSON J. D. Virginia State Dickinson High School Speech is the golden harvest that followeth the flower- ing of thought. -Tupper. FREDERICK JANZ Janz P.S. 1 Hudson College Always take the short cutg that is the national one. Therefore, say and do everything according to sound- est reason. -Aurelius. WILLIAM JOHNSON Billie Lincoln High School Fordham A merchant of great traffic through the World. -Shakespeare. VINCENT KANE Vinnie D. H. S. Undecided Friendship closes its eye, rather than see the moon eclipseg while malice denies that it was ever at the full. -Hare. MICHAEL HARRY KEARNEY Mike St. MiChael'S N. Y. U. Track Team, Commercial Club, Spanish Club, Law Club, Globe Club, Architectural Club, Boxing Team, Tennis Science has but one fashion-to lose nothing once gained. -Stedman. JOHN JAY KELLY Murf St. Bridget's N. Y. U. French Club, Debating Club, Dramatic Club, Basketball, History Club, Globe Trotters Club, Engineering Club, Dancing Club The controlling intelligence understands its own nature and what it does, and whereon it works. -Aurelus. EDWARD S. KENT Red Dickinson High School Casey Jones School Tennis Club l will look on the stars and look on thee, and read the page of destiny. -Landon. EDWARD KUBOOSH Eddy Memorial High School Great thoughts like good deeds, need no trumpet. John Marshall -Bailey. Eg-,,f:'f':D bin -style 6 5-'l'f5g..., 4-,Ili . -Y ',, vm jp' Page forty-live ,,z.1:s- . 4 '--f-,cd Y ,I 1 Q V ' K- X v ff n A .-... PW A W sf- f QSZQQ-Lfshi WILLIAM KURTH Memorial High School Undecided German Club No matter what his rank or position may be, the lover of books is the richest and the happiest of the children of man. --Langford. JOSEPH LANGLEY joe St Pauls Columbia Night Watch, Track Team, General Organization, Executive Committee, Terpsichorean Club, Globe Club, Dramatic Society, Ice Skating Club But chiefly, the mould of a man's fortune is in his own hands. -Bacon. THADDEUS LECHONCZAK Teddy P.S. 37 Undecided Happiness lies in the consciousness we have of it, and by no means in the way the future keeps its promises. -Sand. CAESAR LESINO Bill Brooklyn Polytechnic jeiferson No. 7 Science is simply common sense at its best-that is, rigidly accurate in observation, and merciless to fallacy in logic. --Huxley. MORTON LITVACK Merry Lincoln High School Annapolis Naval Academy Glee Club, Literary Club, History Club, Debating Club, Musical Art Club Let any man speak long enough, he will get believers. -Ballantral. ALBERT FORKEL Pie John Adams H. S., N. Y. N. J. Law School Basketball Glee Club Olypian bards who sung Divine ideas below Which always finds us young And always keeps us so. -Emerson. HAROLD LORENZ SCOOP P.S. 1 N. Y. U. Night Watch, German Club, Owl Staff, Globe Club, Engineering Club, Chess Club, june Sr. Play Comm., Dramatic Club Men of humor are always in some degree men of genius, Coleridge. JOHN LOZA 1 Sf. Am1'5 UndCCldCCl Camera Club ' For science is-like virtue, tts own exceeding great reward. -Km5l5lCY- wx Page forty-six bt 'H P ,fag ' it . A g L ,Z N , ig X X.. -- 7 . I F! fx- ey -J ALEXANDER MAGGIO Al Newark Tech Literary Club, Spanish Club, History Club, Italian Club, Economics Club, Debating Society Character is before money or property or anything else. Money cannot buy it. -Morgan. WILLIAM JAMES MAHONEY Bill Lincoln Fordham Chairman, Social Comm., Debating Society, History Club, Spanish Club, Dramatic Society, General Organization Just while we talk, the jealous hours Are bringing near the hearts and flowers. -Fox. PETER MANOS Pete P.S. 6 Hudson College Night Watch The history of Literature is the history of the human mind. It is, as compared with other histories, the intellectual as distinguished from the material. -Prescott. VINCENT MARCELLARO Vince St. Aedans Hudson College Football, I Baseball, Basketball, Dancing Science deals exclusively with things as they are in themselves. -Rushkin. STEVE S. MARTIN Stasha P.S. 22 Newark Textile Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. -Emerson. MICHAEL MAROTTA Mike D, H, S, Undecided Of all the arts great music is the art to raise the soul above all earthly storms, -Leland. CHARLES MCCARTHY Peck Dickinson N. Y. U. Swimming Club, Boxing Club, Football, Fencing A man makes no noise over a good deed, but passes on to another as a vine to bear grapes again in season. -Bohn. ROBERT MCCLUNG Bobbie Scotland Newark College of Engineering Basketball, Dancing Club, French Club, Tennis Club There is no study that is not capable of delighting us after a little application to it. -Pope. X - 'fu 'ST F. -. 1: 6 T Page forty-seven M 5 O, V ,fl ., 4' 0 -. tr,x A Q- , Page forty-eight ,.Q:fl' '-. 73--.N I 1 .- ,,, . xt, 3 F' s....,.g! X ,df 413.19 JOSEPH MQFADDEN '-Joe Sr. Patrick's Hudson College Sport Editor of Night Watch, President of Globe Club, Student Council Literature is the fruit of thinking souls. -Carlyle. DENNIS MCFEELY Our Lady of Grace N. Y. U. Debating Club Dramatic Club Music Club A Horse! A Horse! My kingdom for a horse, -Shakespeare. EDWARD J. McNAMARA Ed St. Joseph Fordham Senior Social Committee Economics Club Law Club Dramatic Club An honest heart possesses a kingdom. -Seneca. ALBERT MILLER Al Undecided Dickinson High School We cannot legislate against a law of the universe. -Wicks. JAMES C. MILLER Jim St. John's Post Graduate Dancing cihb That which history can give us best is the enthusiasm which it raises in our hearts. -Goeth. ANDREW MILTON Andy Maryland Globe Trotters St. john's , Senior Class Treasurer His heart as far from fraud as heaven from earth. -Shakespeare. ROY MINNERLY Swede P.S. 11 Stevens One should recognize that humor is a form of phil- osophy. -Maurois. WALTER MOLOUGHNEY Lincoln High School Pin-Ring Committee Chairman His words are bonds, his oaths are oraclesg his love sincere, his thoughts immaculate. -Shakespeare. Hudson College Tennis Team 'Sl , ,-.., ,- Y-f i.. . -a fffgn ' Su. X .ff t '4+ l.3fK,X ,T ' ' xa 1 EDWARD .MORAN Ed St. Aloysius Fordham Spanish Club, Law Club, Literary Club, History Club, Economics Club, Mr. Prout's Note Club It is, I believe, fair to say that being rich is more of a problem than getting rich. -Goldberg. THOMAS NEARY Tom Dickinson High School Fordham Spanish Club Swimming Not only strike while the iron is hot, but make it hot by striking. -Crowell. PAUL NIMETZ Big P.S. 6 Undecided Ah, to build, to build, that is the noblest art of all the arts. -Longfellow. FRANCIS NUGENT Frank St. Peters Hudson College Every one is bound to hear patiently the results of his own example. -Phaedus. JAMES JOSEPH O'BRIEN O, B. St. Nicholas Hudson College Basketball Dramatics Not every one has the gift of speech, understand the value of silence. --Lavater. CHAUNCEY OGG Kingston High School N. Y. Electrical School The superior man in regard to his speech is anxious that it should be sincere. -Confucius. EDMOND O'DONOVAN Eddie St. Paul of the Cross N. Y. U. Silence is as full of potential wisdom and wit as the unhewn marble of great sculpture. --Huxley. EDWARD O'ROUKE Ed D. H. S. Undecided Literary friendship is a sympathy not of manners, but of feelings. -Disraeli. , Bin 'ST' ,if- . -1 ..1. xsr ixxx l C t p if '-'tt A h 'if' - N -Q .. QQ J- L T Page forty-nine X N N - ' , , ski- K 1 'A inilfz: V -' ffv- '-f- ' . 1- 'Elk' A ff 4 ' - ,-A Y.. K9 ras. Q- T xl! -N, li Q l ,N K QB Fa iy ' T sfif GUS OSNATO Gus Dickinson Undecided Cheerful at morn he wakes from short repose, breathes the keen air, and carols as he goes. -Goldsmith. GEORGE PARKS Parkie St. Bridget's Undecided Dancing Club Economy is the parent of integrity, of liberty, and of ease, and the beauteous sister of temperance, of cheerfulness and health. -Dr. johnson. HERBERT ROBERT PECKLERS Herbie Lincoln Hudson College Track Team, Law Society, Basketball, Globe Trotters, Terpischorean Society The test of all knowledge is to know that you don't know a thing accurately, but do know where you can find it. -Barron. ELMER I. PELSANG Pealty Franklin N. Y. U. Glee Club Economics Club When men are pure, laws are useless, when men are corrupt, laws are broken. -Beaconsfield. THEODORE PITI Ted Demarest Stuyvesant Mechanical School Interscholastics Basketball League Dancing For science is-like virtue, its own exceeding great reward. -Kingsley. GEORGE PREISS Pres P.S, 8 John Marshall Debating Society Law Society Who to himself is law, no law doth need, Offends no law, and is a king indeed.-Chapman. IRA S. RABIN Ira P.S. 37 N- Y- U- Freedom is a matter of economicsg there is little use in claiming to be free if one is economically depend- ent. -ADOH. BRUNO RADZIWANAWSKI ' Radz Dickinson Undecided No general object of desire is known Each has his will, and each pursues his own. -Gifford. Page fifty bf 'sl , riff- X .ffl 'XX'--Af ,J . Ny -,-L 7 'Vx - 6 ., , KVILLIAM REID Bill St. joseplfs Hudson College Music religious heat inspires. It wakes the soul, and lifts it highg and wings it with sublime desires, and Hts it to bespeak the Deity, -Addison. LEO RINDOS Rudy P.S. 22 Fordham Debating Society Soccer Swimming Club Much time and energy is sacrificed while attending night schoolg don't waste it. -Anon. RICHARD ROSIVACH Dick Memorial Fordham Reflect that life, like every other blessing, derives its value from its use alone. -Johnson. - ANTHONY ROSS Tony St. Joseph's Columbia Globe Club Literary Club Remember this, that very little is needed to make a happy life. -Aurelius., GEORGE RUPP Rup Dickinson High School N. Y. U. The sciences throw an inexpressible grace over our compositions, even where they are not immediately concerned. -Pliny. ANTHONY RUSSO Russ P.S. 9 Hudson College Swimming Club, Tennis Club, Wrestling Club, Dancing A little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men. -Anon. CARMELO SCAFIDI ' --Mario Dickinson High School Hudson College Italian Club Spanish Club History Club To believe in the inevitable logic of events is as dan- gerous as to leave things to luck. -Omen. CHARLES SCHEMEL jack Dickinson High School Mechanics Institute Senior Play, Prom Committee Chairman, Glee Club, Terpsichorean Society, Aero Club, Track Club Here comes a man of comfort whose advice hath often still'd my brawling discontent -Shakespeare. S-if :NS big ..,,,- mi, A vga. ,.. AP Page fifty-one M I ,C -,ffl .-,, A i--13.1, A v .r W Yfafli Qewp if- Page fifty-two . -Syv- WILLIAM SMITH Bill Undecided And thou my mind aspire to higher thingsg grow rich D. H. S., in that which never taketh mist. -Sidney. WALTER PEDERSON '-pm-f D. H. S. Undecided Not in vain the distance beacons, Forward let us range, Let the world spin forever down the ringing graves of change. -Tennyson. FRED L. SPIEKER Fritz Lincoln High School Undecided Of science and logic he chatters, As fine and as fast as he can Though I am no judge of such matters, I'm sure he's a talented man. -The Talented Man. WILLIAM STRANGEWAY Bill St. Joseph Pace Institute I have read somewhere or other, in Dionysius of Halicarnassus, I think, that history is philosophy teaching by examples. -Bolingbroke. CORNELIUS STADTER Bing St, Michael's Seton Hall Senior Play Music Club Spanish Club Come, my coach! Good night, sweet ladiesg good night. -Anon GEORGE V. STANGE George D. H. S. Hudson College Globe Trotters Not only is there an art in knowing a thing, but also a certain art in teaching it. -Cicero. MICHAEL STIPCUVICH Mike D. H. S. Undecided The rays of happiness, like those of light, are color- less when unbroken. -Longfellow. STEPHEN STRUPCZEXWSKI StriPD Lincoln Fordham Basketball, Tennis, Executive Committee, Owl Editor, Night Watch, Swimming Club, Terpsichorean Society, Spanish Club The process of most things depends upon knowing how long it will take to succeed. -Montesquieu. 'fu 'ST W W i' we-1 - A . '- 1: -a ANTHONY TERRANOVA Terry Dickinson High School Columbia Basketball Boxing Baseball Though it be honest, it is never good to bring bad news. -Shakespeare. HARRY THOMPSON Harry St. Aloysius Hudson College Pin-Ring Committee Where there are laws, he who has not broken them, need not tremble. -Allieru. JAMES TIDCOMBE Jim D. H. S. Undecided Friendship! mysterious cement of the soul, sweet'ner of life, and solder of society. -Blair. JOSEPH TRAYNOR Pie Our Lady of Grace N. J. Law School Basketball Globe Club Tennis 'Laws and customs were first called into being by the exigencies of human needs and human desires. -Holmes. MARCUS JAMES TREMBLE Marty Ridgefield Park High School Stevens Institute Tennis Club, Night Watch, Student Council, Dramatic Architectural Club, Night Watch, Co-Chairman Sr. Prom., Dramatic Club, Tennis, Globe Trotters, Student Council, lr is not enough to do good. One must do it the right way. --Morley. LEONARD TRZEBINISKI Len North Arlington Rutgers Order and system are nobler things than FAME. -Ruskin. JOHN F. WHELAN N. Y. Evening H. S. Knowledge is the eye tuohnny.. Hudson College of desire, and can become the pilot of the soul. -Durant. , FRANK WHITEHEAD Whitey St. Mary's N. Y. U. Track Team, Night Watch, General Organization X , The press is the fourth estate of the realm. -Carlyle. Se-f f 'su '51 'P Page fifty-three Spa- J gn.:-..s--., !r,A,f,..., l Qffif M 5 f ' C' TNS ,pe TY-This v 1, H S ff T312 A Q ,74 ' my-' X I 1 ' .- 2, i- is c ii S- ?: Page Hfty-four JOHN ZA-IAC Johnny St. Anthony N, Y, U, Architectural Club, Social Comm., General Organization All are architects of Fate, working in these walls of Time. -Longfellow. ARTHUR ZECK Art Union Hill , Varsity Basketball Undecided Charms strike the sight, but merit wins the soul. -Pope. CORNELIUS GROSS Neil D, H. S. Undecided Everyone is the architect of his own future. -Sallust. FERDINAND LOHSE Ferd P.S. 28 John Marshall Literary Club Literature like nobility runs in the blood. -Hoglitt. JOSEPH SMITH Smitty l Lincoln High School Hudson College Literary Club Social Committee General Organization W A sound mind in a sound body is a short but full description of a happy state in this world. -Locke. l THOMAS XVELDON Tom Sacred Heart Undecided The true University of these days is a Collection of T Books. -ABOU- B fn 'ST r up --.va -...Q 'l jf CW 'X -' T 4- ' tlq ' T E A-4',ff4 w23-G TTA X7 x. K 1 f- ., 5-N - ' Q . , r .X 3 7 , :SL 'XS 5 ' A C Y 7 l ga - . XS, i, if- 1 if t S, QA 6 A I vt ,I H SENIOR DIRECTORY-JAN. CLASS Adelaide Adams, 151 Greenville Avenue Catherine Ambry, 262 Duncan Avenue Anna Ammann, 91 Fleet Street Anne Antonaccio, 7 Bergen Avenue Benjamin barry, 105 Orient Avenue Kermit Beckman, 130 Manhattan Avenue Anton Bender, 9 Sanford Place Raymond Bertolette, 312 Winfield Avenue Altred Bohner, 147 Garden Avenue, North B. john Bonaldi, 184 New York Avenue Arthur E. Brunck, 355 Ogden Avenue Danied Bubel, 231 Stegman Street George Bulkley, 246 Pacific Avenue john j. Burke, 207 Duncan Avenue Louis Butkewicz, 134 Romaine Avenue Catherine Callahan, 233 Gritiith Street john Cameron, 139 Grant Avenue Anna Cappiello, 771A Ocean Avenue Vincent Cassidy, 97 Bidwell Avenue Florence Chapman, 199 Tonnele Avenue Charles Chopoorian, 63 Oak Street Alfred F. Cirelli, 171 Lincoln Street john Crook, 142 Beach Street Mary Curtis, 122 Randolph Avenue Ben Czaikowski, 209 Garfield Avenue Frank DiNicola, 136 West Side Avenue jack Drexel, 93 Hancock Avenue Raymond j, Duffy, 641 Ocean Avenue john Durante, 1 Orchard Street Eileen C. Dwyer, 189 Orient Avenue Charles Falk, 229 - 47th Street, Union City Anne E. Farrell, 241 Seventh Street Robert Fleischer, 464 Park Avenue, W. New York Michael V. Flora, 9 Sanford Place john j. Foley, 8g9 Montgomery Street Albert Forkel, 1b6 Palisade Avenue Otto Fortmuller, 282 Ege Avenue Elizabeth Fox, 52 Tonnele Avenue William Franklin, 204 Sip Avenue Stephen Gadomski, 244 Second Street Christine Gagliardi, 129 Magnolia Avenue Mary Gagliardi, 164 Summit Avenue Stanley Gapewski, 305 Ninth Street john j. Garing, 308 Montgomery Street Marie Gast, 239 Ogden Avenue Kathryn M. Gelsinon, Z9 Monticello Avenue Frank Gensicke, 180 New York Avenue Gilda Gentile, 90 Court House Place Kathleen Gillooly, 59 Neptune Avenue Frank Golon, 372 Cliff Street, Fairview Cornelius Gross, 179 Third Street William E. Guellich, 72 Bleecker Street Muriel I-lanrahan, 109 Bostwick Avenue jack F. Hartert, 415A - 13th St., West New York Luke Heins, 2680 Boulevard Catherine Helmsdorfer, 46 Randolph Avenue Irving Hollingshead, 97 Terrace Avenue Gilbert Irwin, 84 Hague Street X 'J 1- Bin 'ST '-'r Edward Ivers, 49 Union Street Frederick janz, 10 Claremont Avenue Wilhelmina jarina, 370 Ege Avenue Margaret M. Kane, 50 Washburn Street Vincent j. Kane, 50 Washburn Street Michael H. Kearney, 337 Montgomery Street Frances B. Kelly, 91 Oak Street julia F. Koryga, 19 Perrine Avenue Sophie Kotlowski, 136 Beacon Avenue Elizabeth T. Krohn, 435 Wayne Street William H. Kurth, 219 - 48th Street, Union City Alice R. Leppard, 320 Sixth Street Morton L. Litvack, 111 Mallory Avenue john Loza, 8 Skillman Avenue jane Makowska, 788 Newark Avenue Eugene Manion, 137 Kinsington Avenue Peter Manos, 3025 Bartholdi Avenue Mildred McSpirit, 139 Pearsall Avenue Marion Menaghan, 172 Fairview Avenue Frances M. Mercun, 747 Main Street, N. Bergen Augusta Metz, 83 Fulton Avenue Raymond A, Metzinger, 43 Poplar Street Roy Minnerly, 117 Vroom Street Edward Moran, 201 Olean Avenue Marie E. Nieth, 231 Grant Avenue Paul Nimetz, 11 Elliott Place Anna L. Orolen, 219 Van Horne Street Edward j. O'Rourke, 11 Bergen Avenue George Parks, 444 jersey Avenue Herbert Pecklers, 71 jackson Avenue Rudolph Peterson, 221 Bidwell Avenue Pio Pianetti, 202 Zabriskie Street Anthony j. Ross, 332 Baldwwin Avenue Marguerite Rossi, 70 Tenth Street, Hoboken Greta Ruhs, 6 Hancock Avenue Stephanie Tutkowski, 37 Dey Street joseph Scaglione, 421 York Street Colanda Scerbo, 409 Third Street Charles j. Schemel, 6 Nelson Avenue Henrietta A. Serf, 10 Williams Avenue George Sileo, 88 jackson Avenue Elbert Smith, 89 Limbeck Avenue joseph C. Smith, 300 Varick Street Michael M. Solski, 128 Maple Street William j. Strangeway, 13-34 Edward Street, Fair Lawn, N. j, james P. Tidcombe, 221 Palisade Avenue joseph X. Traynor, 1024 Park Avenue, Hoboken Leonard Trzebinski, 136 Mercer Street Margaret Ure, 467 Pavonia Avenue Teresa E. Vlkovic, 22 East Bidwell Avenue Alice Walsh, 2 Magnolia Avenue Florence Wehril, 246 Summit Avenue Thomas Weldon, 229 Stegman Street Frank Whitehead, 319 Second Street Eugene L. Wojciechowski, 147 Zabriskie Street Charles Zdunowski, 215 Garfield Avenue 54 Page lifty-tive '4 ' Ties, - - y,Q.-...urge If ' --73 i- . , r-. QV' 521.21154 gg F2 ' wr ' - ' 5--Ei ggfs' SENIOR DIRECTORY-JUN E CLASS joseph E. Adami, 593 - 16th St., West New York Rose Alcaro, 746 Bergen Avenue Angelo Amato, 132 - 21st Street, W. New York Annamae Amormina, 157 Palisade Avenue Caspar john Anderson, 8 Apollo Street Helmet Anderson, 56 Linden Avenue Edward J. Andrews, 311 First Street Gregory M. Autrey, 59 Garrison Avenue Charles F, Bauerdorf, 215 Duncan Avenue Raymond Bauerclorf, 215 Duncan Avenue Josephine M. Bellodi, 324 Fifth Street, Union City Clara Benton, 134 Union Street Ellsworth David Berkowitz, 43 Boyd Avenue john Bilinsky, 181 Myrtle Avenue George R. Bitterly, 223 Duncan Avenue Emma A. L. Bleda, 794 Tonnele Avenue Chester Borkowski, 227 Garfield Avenue Robert A. Boylan, 114 Duncan Avenue john Bracco, 921 Gillies Ave., North Bergen Lloyd Bradbury, 3143 Boulevard Herbert J. Brauer, 143 Bowers Street Alfred J. Bundies, 296 Hoboken Avenue Elizabeth Burke, 29 Condict Street Victor C. Businski, 285 St. Pauls Avenue john Bykowski, 134 Morrit Street james J. Caivano, 178 Webster Avenue Anthony George Calabro, 134 Congress Street john Cappiello, 15 Union Street Dorothy Marie Carroll, 20 Stagg Street Robert Cerniglearo, 104 Laidlaw Avenue Lucille Christiani, 673 Ocean Avenue William E. Clark, 305 Sherman Avenue Howard W. Cody, 301 Fulton Avenue Rose Marie Colasurdo, 304 Second Street Francis joseph Colligan, 272 Fifth Stret Alfonse Louis Comment, 123 Thorne Street Catherine A. Connolly, 8 Liberty Pl., Weehawken Lawrence X. Connors, 108 - 23rd St., W. N. Y. Robert Correll, jr., 213 Harrison Avenue, Hasbrouck Heights George R. Cottenden, 268 Palisade Avenue Mary Catherine Cox, 21 Second Street Rita Frances Cramp, 20 Crescent Avenue Joseph G. Crefasi, 2 Baldwin Avenue Phil Darcy, Jr., 319 Varick Street Clara R. D'Auria, 109 Ferry Street Louis De Augusta, 224 Wegmnn Parkway ed of ST Page fifty-six Louise De Gregory, 4 Fairview Avenue Bernadette R. Delaney, 5 Paulmier Place Frank Paul Dieth, 5222 Blvd., Guttenberg Olga P. Doughty, 363 Ogden Avenue Michael Durovcsik, 222 Van Horne Street John F. Ellis, 71 Tuers Avenue William A. England, 249 Liberty Street Anne Christie Ercole, 7 Stegman Court William J. Eschenbrenner, 154 Dwight Street William E. Farrant, 201 Delaware Avenue Albert Ferdinand, 354 Bergen Avenue Mary V, Flaherty, 203 Third Street Helen M. Flanagan, 86 Storms Avenue William A. Floyd, 43 Stegman Street Frances C. Gardner, 104 Booraem Avenue Theresa C. Gauger, 27 Poplar Street Violet J. Gawda, 229 Tonnele Avenue Mary E. Gillen, 335 Varick Street Jerome Gold, 516 Bergen Avenue Pauf Griek, P. O. 508, Mountain View . Norman Grime, 130 Carlton Avenue Albert Grondahl, 49 Carlton Avenue Alfred W. Grazymala, 156 Dwight Street Eileen Maura Hannon, 280 Ege Avenue Arthur j. Heagen, 175 Congress Street William J, Hicke, 955 Communipaw Avenue Sally Veronica Howe, 223 jackson Avenue Otto Joseph Huhn, 493 Liberty Avenue Louis Imbornone, 61 Grand Street Frances C. Imperato, 59 Hopkins Avenue james D. Jackson, 184 Union Street Theresa Janko, 23 Hopkins Avenue William H. Johnson, 22 Danforth Avenue John jay Kelly, 276 Monmouth Street Mary R. Kelly, 130 Mercer Street Edward S. Kent, 192 Clinton Avenue john F. Klem, 223 South Street Estelle Koryga, 19 Perrine Avenue Sadie Kowalski, 101 Greene Street Marie J. Kranzow, 26 jefferson Avenue Edward Kuboosh, 643 Harrison Pl., W. N. Y. Alice Kuhne, 544 jersey Avenue Jean Marie Lane, 834 Grand Street Joseph A. Langley, jr., 45 Seaview Avenue George Keefe Larsen, 182 Bergen Avenue Thaddeus Lechonczak, 585 Grove Street Anne Marie Lehman, 14A Van Wagenen Avenue ,- 1 - -N ,y,...,..--k+'Y3Qg5 '--f -Nt, 5 gyembxeix M ri 'X , -- -S he-' ef f H FJ! X N9 7 SENIOR DIRECTORY Louise A. Lepis, 89 Danforth Avenue William Caesar Lesino, 149 Paterson Plank Rd., North Bergen Anna Mary Logiest, 451 Bergen Avenue Ferdinand W. Lohse, 103 Lincoln Street Harold F. Lorenz, 396 New York Avenue Ann Mac Donald, 12 Howard Place Rose E. Mackey, 146 Griffith Street Alexander J, Maggio, 238 Pine Street Anne Mae Magura, 493 Tonnele Avenue William James Mahoney, 12 Fairview Avenue Frances Maly, 127 Mercer Street Vincent X. Marcellaro, 456 Wayne Street Michael N. Marotta, 197 Orient Avenue Steve Martin, 372 Bramhall Avenue Charles E. McCarthy, 611 Main St., N. Bergen Eugene McCarthy, 270 Hancock Avenue Robert McCIung, 343 Bergen Avenue joseph R. McFaddent, 196 Randolph Avenue Dennis Edw. McFeely, 1204 Hudson St., Hoboken james J. McGrath, 85 Romaine Avenue Erma McKelvey, 589 Garfield Avenue Edward J. McNamara, 15 Hopkins Avenue John Paul Mecir, 453 Palisade Ave., W. N. Y. Sylvia Mehlman, 170 Clinton Avenue Theresa Miele, 62 Wright Avenue Albert Miller, 31 High Street James C. Miller, 242 Beacon Avenue Andrew F. X. Milton, jr. 46 Summit Avenue Walter Moloughney, 211 Fowler Avenue Mary E. Moran, 128 Clerk Street Eleanor E. Morris, 2814 Boulevard Mary Murawska, 18016 Fourth Street Thomas H. Neary, 38 Reservoir Avenue Ruth C. Newton, 117 Kensington Avenue Irene A. Nicholson, 51 Monticello Avenue Francis Xavier Nugent, 155 Mercer Street james joseph O'Brien, 967 Summit Avenue Mary E. O'Connell, 61 Condict Street Marty T. O'Donnell, 240 Ninth Street Edmond G. O'Donovan, 71 Hutton Street Chauncey S. W. Ogg, 387 Forrest Street Catherine O'Kean, 63 Bayview Avenue Gustave M. Osnato, 8 St. Pauls Avenue john J. Patatanick, 304 Johnson Avenue X .ae 'I 31 :rxn 7 JUNE cl.Ass ccontp Walter Pederson, 43 Van Houten Avenue Elmer 'Irving Pelsang, 1964 Third Street, N. B Madeline Penrose, 87 Lafayette Street Marie Pickett, 872 Montgomery Street Theodore Piti, 232 Park Avenue, Hoboken George M. Preiss, 73 Booraem Avenue Ira Rabin, 407 Grove Street Brune A. Radziwanowski, 29 Garrison Avenue William J. Reid, 12 Stagg Street Leo V. Rindos, 259 Pine Street Richard W. Rosivach, 783 Hudson Avenue, West New York Evelyn D. Ruggiero, 291 Central Avenue George Rupp, 166 Carlton Avenue Anthony Ralph Russo, 283 Wayne Street Carmelo Scatidi, 578 Newark Avenue Carmela J. Scrudato, 318 Eighth Street Theresa Agnes Simpf, 50 Clarke Avenue William A. Smith, 179 Virginia Avenue StephanieA . Smus, 444 jersey Avenue Fred L. Spieker, 51 Stuyvesant Avenue Cornelius T. Stadter, 610 Pavonia Avenue George Vincent Stange, 9 Spruce Street Michael C. Stipicuvich, 123 - 21st St., W.N.Y. 'thomas Stirling, 138 Prospect Street Stephen Strupczeski, 71 Bright Street Anthony Terranova, 216 Palisade Avenue Harry William Thompson, 2280 Boulevard Catherine Frances Thuring, 213 Woodward Street Mary Maurice Tooman, 148 Lexington Avenue Marcus james Tremble, 58 Gautier Avenue Helen joan Tych, 87 Gates Avenue Mary J. Vlkovi, 40 Yale Avenue Rose Van Nostran, 85 Van Reypen Street Paul Veteto, jr., 262 Virginia Avenue Helen M. Walsh, 645 Newark Avenue john F. Whelan, 111 Beach Street Emma A. Wilks, 264 Winfield Avenue Bessie E. Williston, 114 Clifton Place Julia Mildred Wolf, 603 - 37th St., North Bergen Philomena M. Yacenda, 24 Westervelt Place Natalie P. Yori, St, Mary's Hospital, Hoboken john Zajac, 206 Seventh Street Arthur Zeck, 247 Ogden Avenue Page fifty-seven Ni i M 4 , ' . . , N-.. V If If ' fl m Z, ' 'l . W 1 'N A i :af Tas? 4157? X T::5'1'3'- 1 . ff 'T -, , it Lg.,-SF' A FOND FAREWELL T0 A TEACHER One of our best known and very active teachers, Miss Rudnitsky, teacher of Physiology and friend of many of the seniors and students, will leave this term never to return again as a teacher, but at times as a friend and visitor. Miss Rudnitsky came to Dickinson Evening February, 1933. She said that the four and a half years of teaching in this school were years never to be forgotten, years that were thoroughly enjoyed. Miss Rudnitsky leaves us to become Mrs. Robert Forer. The seniors and her friends wish her years of happiness and countless blessings in her new home at Trenton, New jersey. Interviewed by G. Cottenden and R. Duffy. TUESDAY NIGHT IN ROOM IO8 All Senior meetings are scheduled to start at 9:40, but after some of the seniors come to the meeting it is already 10 o'clock. The Senior class President is Mr. Charles Bauerdorf, who starts the meeting by asking Miss Flaherty to read the minutes. With- out any delay, Miss Flaherty is on the Hoor reading the minutes, but oh! Mr. Stripp does not seem to be able to hear her, so Miss Flaherty must read the minutes over and much louder. Then Mr. Milton is asked to read report on financial matters generally running into the thousands and thousands of dollars. No one ever doubts Milton's report because-he has such an honest face. After the treasurer's report is read, old business is on the floor. Bill Mahoney has to report on the Social Committee. This report which lasts an hour, is accepted by Mr. Imbornone's motion. Then after the meeting is resumed again someone asks for a second motion on the Social Committee's report. The President then, gives out a couple of dirty looks and everything is okay once more. Aha! Mr. Langley having finished his report on the Publicity Committee, tells the President that his friend was treated harshly when asking for more refreshments, even though he only had eight helpings. The girls on the Social Committee get a little peeved and tell Mr. Langley and his friend where to get off at. Even so far that his friend should take a long walk for himself. At any rate the shouting dies down, and like the pacifist that I am, wish the subject to be thrown out. Then comes the best report of them all and that is Mr. Stripp's report on the Owl,'. He gives a stirring speech in which he says we must get ads . He urges the Seniors to do their part, he sits down, but still dissatisfied. A few other things are discussed con- cerning rings, Play, etc. But the clock is striking 10:30, and no one can stay longer than that, so Mr. Imbornone makes a motion to adjourn the meeting and is quickly accepted while the mad rush for the door is made. A smile costs nothing but creates much, It happens in a flash and the memory sometimes lasts forever, It cannot be bought, begged, borrowed or stolen But it is something that is no earthly good to anyone until it is given away. So if you're in a hurry and rush, o meet some Who is too weary to give you a smile, leave one of yours, But no one needs a smile as much as he who has none left to give. AL. COMMENT. bin 'ST , H-.f Page Hfty -eight -dk Te? wwf' '52, ,- 1 7 Effirsfmi wife- + l l.-JT'1'u- 1 41? ' 91 '1 elm.. Q mx Q l 2932533 agiggggfi gk xr g 255359 M5645 2. 'Q E QQ 265925 figs-K A 9 M we 45 .i , 24855 + - , W exif, IN?-NN FEATURES M 4 .- xii . A Rs... V L 'Z 1- J. -3. xiii, . .. 'Q A Xizngg M is - 4 t Page sixty JANUARY VALEDICTORIAN JOHN J. GARING John Garing wins valedictorian honors for the Class of january, 1937, with a high average. john was born in lower jersey City, and attended St. Peter's Parochial School from which he graduated in 1926. He then attended Eagarfs Business School in Hoboken for a period of one year. He entered Dickinson Evening Accredited High School in 1932, soon becoming very popular with his fellow students. Through his participation in the extra curriculla activities that lends to make the work at Dickinson Evening more enjoyable, he gained the friendship of students as well as his teachers. Being legal minded, he expects to enter Hudson College in September and there expects to take a pre-law course. If this feature can be judged by the past, john's scholastic success is assured. gg-f A 51.32 s..,!p 0 'S ' J-' f , 1 ' I i K 11 r' '7 xxzggx if A .ei 45 X .,, 1 -in I J UNE VALEDICTORIAN LOUISE DE GREGORY Only records are true accountants of accomplishment and abilityg if so, what more splendid record can one achieve than to be the most outstanding student in his class as to merit? If the respect and reverence of one's fellow associates have for a person, signified the achievement of worthy objects, what better proof can be re- quested from any source than that respect and reverence which comes from these who have already reached their goals? Who is more brave of honor and merit than one who struggles against odds, and standing alone wins out? Who is more worthy than one who is beset by adversity and still is determined, cheer- ful and unswayed from one's course? Miss De Gregory was born in New York City. She is now an orphan. Her father died in 1922 and her mother in 1934. As to her education, Miss De Gregory had her elementary edu- cation in Carlstadt, N. After the completion of her elementary schooling she attended business school, where she was trained for her present position, that of legal stenographer. Five years passed from her graduation before she came to jersey City and found the opportunity to realize her ambitions-to attend Accredited Evening High School and work for a High School Diploma. Her present purpose is to continue her education in College, either Hunter or New York University. CS? Page sixty one M, QE M -,, ffl WE-:Divx U KN 'If, ER S - 14LQ'.H-illm A S- if E X ,N I-l,f ' , C - y LOUIS IMBORNONE ALUMNI AWARD It has been the custom for the Alumni Association at the close of each year to select one of the graduates as the most outstanding student. This selection is made by a committee composed of the Faculty and Alumni members. Mr. Louis Imbornone has been chosen as the most deserving student for this year. He came to this school from the Dickinson Day in the fall of 1934. From the Techni- cal Industrial Course, he changed over to the General Course. He was elected the most popular young man in a popularity contest conducted at a Mardi Gras given by the school in 1936. He has won many friends and everyone has a good word to put in for him. Mr. Imbornone has given much time and elfort to extra-curricular activities, which include the Italian Club of which he served as President, the Terpsichorean So- ciety as Vice-President, and the Executive Committee as chairman. Other organizations in which he has been active: Literary Editor of the NIGHT WATCH and on the Advisory Board, member of the General Organization, the Senior Prom Committee, Swimming Club, and the Chairman of the Organization Committee on the OWL Staff. He is employed as a draftsman in the W. Ames 8: Company of jersey City. His record at school has been far above the average. judging by his past record for industrious, energetic support of all these things and his capacity for hard work, Mr. Imbornone should be a very successful person in the future, and we hope that Hudson College, where he intends to continue his studies, will appreciate him as much as Dickinson Evening has in the past. P Page sixty-two ffff 'N at a,,7f'5i-pf-6e fe-f M 'NC .C I 555:52-iii' C? ttf? as i1 '.. X M ix, SWIXXLS ' '7 :w'x...,, aj.. . T '..,-.i5 'csc- I 1- . i PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S PLAN TO ENLARGE THE SUPREME COURT CATHERINE THURING ' 1 -n The following speech was made by Miss Catherine Thuring at john Marshall College, in which, she won second prize for the Dickinson Accredited Evening High School. Miss Thuring was coached by Mr. William Dineen. It is remarkable that the President's plan to increase the judiciary was generally conceded by everybody to be entirely in accordance with the Constitution. Congress has the Constitutional right to increase the membership of the Supreme Court but an increase of six justices at one time would be unconstitutional because the intent behind the proposal is unconstitutional. Such intent being not merely to amplify the court but to create a majority which would sustain certain legislation, otherwise likely to be declared invalid. This is a method to circumvent and alter the Constitution by avoid- ing the amendment method, the only constitutional method for changing the Constitu- tion. Those who so blithely assume that this court packing scheme is clearly constitu- tional should be reminded that there is something known as the spirit of the Consti- tutiong that the Constitution has a soul as well as a body. What does the Constitution mean to you? I can tell you in one sentence what it means to me. It means govern- ment which is a government of laws and not a government of men. It possesses but one safeguard against the encroachments of party spirit, and that is the independence and impartiality of upright judges. Once the Supreme Court has been manhandled and perverted, it would be futile any longer to consider its position under the Consti- tution. Supreme, it certainly would not be, but rather a servile adjunct of the execu tive power, parroting the shifting views of the President. Now everyone knows that changes take place purely with the presumption that they shall be advantageous. If we acquiese to the plan for the re-organization of the judiciary we would do well if we made ourselves familiar with the inevitable after- math. Were the six new justices installed it is probable that the result would be a government whose supreme power is in the hands of a few, masquerading as democ- racy. I ask you, is that what Mr. Roosevelt wants? fCOI1lil1I16d on page 132j 'S 'st , g ' ' Page sixty three M -'A',,i2s.. - K lm r9.5-1-'f--A ,ia 5 f Jpla,-.sragiaggp ,r ' I - ,X K 4 - f . i A V .. X 1 'X ll 7f.,.,.r:v X .sr ' 1'-1' - +L- Agn 5- EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE AWARD I KATHLEEN GILLOOLY January Class A Kathleen Gillooly was unanimously chosen by the executive committee to be the most worthy student in the January, 1937 class to receive the Meritorious Service Award. Her spirited and enthusiastic interest in extra curricular activities, her attractive personality and her high scholastic standing were primary factors in the committee's decision. Miss Gillooly first attended St. Paul's R. C. School. After graduation she enrolled in Lincoln Annex and in September 1934 entered Dickinson Evening. During her first term she became interested in the school's activities and served on the Reception Committee. She was Vice-President of the Committee during her senior term. The Spanish Club also attracted her and she was an active member up to June, 1937. Her popularity was displayed by her classmates when they elected her their january class secretary. She also served on the Pin and Ring Committee. She also was active in the Senior Class Play. Playing the part of Rose Parker, Kay rendered a never to be forgotten performance in Polishing Papa . Dancing is her hobby in which she finds relaxation and enjoyment. Her secret ambition is to travel until she has seen what the world looks like. Not content to terminate her studies at this point Miss Gillooly is entering Colum- bia University in September. - The members of the faculty, senior class, and the students wish Miss Gillooly success and happiness in whatever field she may choose for her life's work. D X -Q ea I BT , Page sixty-four ., 'NN - 'S . fe lf pw es A E . ,, A I -ia J P . . ii- J EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE AWARD CHARLES BAUERDORF june Class Charles Bauerdorf was selected by a committee of the Faculty as the most out- standing senior from the june Class. This distinction entitles him to become the recipient of the meritorious service award. Mr. Bauerdorf graduated from P. S. No. 17 in January, 1931. At the age of fourteen he entered the employ of the Guarantee Trust Company as a page boy, grad- ually promoting himself to becoming the bookkeeper of the concern, a position which he now holds. He began attending classes at Dickinson Evening in 1932 becoming very active in extra-curricular activities. As a member of the Debating Society he served as Vice-President for one term. Two other organizations, the Architectural and German Clubs he served in the capacity as Treasurer and President for one year. He was a member of the 1936 General Organization Council, At present he is the president of the Senior Class and one of the seven members of the Advisory Board of the Executive Council which is temporarily governing the activities of the school for this term. His other activities include a membership in a Grapevine Literary Society of which he was one of the charter members. This Society was founded on the same basis as Samuel johnson's Literary Club. His hobbies are Debating and Handball. Mr. Bauerdorf is planning to attend Hudson College where he intends to take up the study of Banking and Finance. We wish him success in all his future endeavors. d sf..-gf r -,P Page sixty five I .X 'il I 'T' I . ' - - fx , K., ...V g ff Wm NM Y WX!!! v ' sv. QTPE-2.578 -.-1 , - -,.c' .ig 2 'J CONSIDER OUR CONSTITUTION The inherent spirit of liberty and love of personal freedom, which has survived and flourished throughout the span of the history of the United States, had its beginning in the hearts of the earliest settlers of this country. It was this force which motivated the pioneers of 1607 and 1620 to come here, seeking recognition of their rights to the enjoyment of private property and personal security. Although the origi- nal thirteen colonies primarily owed allegiance to the British Crown, each colony, nevertheless, through its own popularly elected legislature, was practically independent of England and of the other colonies in the management of its affairs. The distance from the British center of government encouraged this habit of self-government. Little wonder, then, that they should join themselves in common resistance against English autocracy when pressure was brought upon them to subject themselves to rules which they had had no part in framing. No matter how great the pressure of British rule, it was now too late to divest these Americans of that part of themselves which had enabled them to subsist in face of devastating hunger and unimaginable hardships. The colonies formed a firm league of friendship and absolved themselves from all allegiance to the British Crown, but even at this time their organization was merely for common defense and by no means constituted a merger of their individual govern- mentsj On the contrary, with the formal declaration of independence, they guarded all the more jealously the rights and powers which they had taken to themselves. Therefore, the Articles of Confederation of 1781, which were drawn by the same Continental Congress which had originally been formed for the purpose of prosecut- ing the war of revolution, were merely an agreement for mutual assistance in case of outside interference, for in these Articles there was not a vestige of power given to the Federal Government which they purportedto establish. The fear of a central govern- ment still retarded the colonists in their groping for the ideal republic. Never once did they forget their goal-- Tloat lhere United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and ivdependemf rtaterh Under the Articles of Confederation, the sole Federal authority was an assembly con- sisting of one member from each state. There was no administrative head, no Federal judiciary, no means of enforcing the collection of taxes-the Congress was powerless to command because it was subject to the caprices of the various states. There was no respect for the Federal assembly on the part of either citizens or states. In this lax system of government, each state looked only to its individual desires. Taxes were paid when and if they pleased, in some states, the debtor classes passed debt-repudiat- ing laws, they hindered each other's commerce and trade. As the seriousness of the Confederacy's condition increased, the states issued paper money, sold worthless bonds, and impeded the recovery of debts. Foreign countries scorned American traders. So serious was the situation that it gave vent to seditious outbreaks, Men of intellect and responsibility, who realized the gravity of the situation, saw in this economic confusion and social disorder nothing short of anarchy. and feared that the country was once more in a fair way of becoming the prey of a European power. At this point of our history, exactly one hundred and fifty years ago, the country stood on the brink of chaos. Would it survive as a whole or would it, after a series of internal conflicts, become the helpless victim of hungry, conquering empires? This was the turning point, not only for the people then living. but for the general welfare of posterity, for the offspring of those who had come so far in search of a new life- S! 'BT ofa BT' T-P Page sixty-six nff?':'v Na. c ,.,. f ei t'ff', X jg' f-xx W i TF-fi' f Q ,fx if f Q, , X ,, .. ff jf X -X ,af .aff Sy ' .I li' I s r, f7 N-, A A --X - -Q --.. coNsloER oun coNsTnuTloN qcanap for ourselves. Realizing the urgency of the situation, and seeing their fondest dreams fading, that famous group of patriots to whom we owe our present democracy rallied with all the strength of their minds and bodies to alleviate the alarming circumstances. They were authorized by the various state legislatures to revise the Articles and submit them to the then Congress for approval. When a sufficient representation had gathered at Philadelphia, on May 25th, 1787, the Convention got under way. By unanimous consent, it was decided that the Articles were not worthy of consideration, and they proceeded to create a constitution which would not only satisfy the multifarious demands of the several states, but also establish a strong national government. Not only did they lack a comprehensive basis of pertinent precedents, but they had to contend with the needs and desires of thirteen separate states, all of which were avidly aware of their own interests. Their debates covered all of the questions involved, and it was inevitable that compromises and sacrifices would have to be made. Only through the magnanimous and unselfish con- cessions of the legislators-all of whom, although representing conflicting elements, nevertheless cherished the attainment of an amenable fundamental law-could be decided such questions as the representation from the Southern states, the method of taxation, the payment of foreign debts, the establishment of a stable currency, the method of representation in Congress, the reconciliation of small and large states, of North and South, of farming states and manufacturing states, of exportation and the slave trade. Their most difficult and most important problem was to establish a balance of power in a central government which would not permit of usurpation by any one branch, but which would at the same time leave to the individual states a sphere of action sufficient to satisfy local conditions. They had to seek a middle ground. They worked in desperation. The country was in the midst of a depression. There was danger of bankruptcy and anarchy. Those were difficult times, just as difficult as 1893 or 1929. Thus, it is evident that the fundamental problems of gov- ernment are much the same today as they were in 1787. Those men who bore the onus of straightening out this state of affairs were fifty-five in number-twenty-one had been soldiers, seven had served as governors, and thirty-three were lawyers. There were also some who were business men, farmers or physicians. Thirty-nine of them had learned, through actual participation in it, that the Congress of the Confederation was a total failure. Their ages ran from twenty- six to eighty-one. The delegates, in most part, had had a share in drawing their state constitutions and had watched them work, they compared merits, practices and devicesg they knew how a certain written law would actually work out in practice, they knew that they must make allowances for unpredictable emergencies and unavoidable develop- ments, and that they could not include too much. The staid, mature judgment of Benjamin Franklin-a member of the delegation from Philadelphia, then at the venerable age of eighty-one years -in many instances checked the energetic impetuosity of the younger men. He is credited with suggesting that all matters of revenue and appropriation should be decided by the House of Representatives, and that the members of the House should be chosen for each state according to population. Washington and Madison were among the delegates from Virginia, in which state the proposal for a Constitutional Convention had originated. Washington was unanimously elected President of the Convention. Madison, com- monly referred to as Father of the Constitution , having determined to make a per- gl rv: 'fu 'ST ...fp ,..',. Page sixty seven ar it 2 .f tgkvmgzgglixg-N -A .' ,,f-?,.,ae-9' R1 - A F T ' pa 4 -R Qs., XS' rl Q33' N --rg - ces +24 C-.Le bf CONSIDER OUR CONSTITUTION fCont.J sonal record of the Convention, became the reporter for posterity, setting down all that was said and done. He loved this task and worked at it untiringly. He also made an exhaustive study of confederacies and was always ready to moderate feelings between representatives of two conflicting states. He said: The states are divided into different interests not by their difference in size, but by other circumstances, the most material of which it if are the Northern and the Southern . Alexander Hamilton of New York probably took one of the most alert parts in the delegation. He favored a strong Federal government, with subordination of the states, and had no patience with those who were timorous about over-riding the powers given them by the Continental Congress, saying: To rely on and propose any plan not - adequate to these exigencies merely because it was not clearly within our powers would be to sacrifice the end to the means . Although his plan was not adopted, he very willingly supported the Constitution as finally drafted. Through The Federalist , a political publication of the times, he vehemently vindicated the new Constitution. The widespread knowledge and experi- ence represented in this Convention was commensurate with the task at hand. Certain important phases of government finally adopted had been in existence since the time of Magna Charta. Some were analogous to the Lycian Confederation and the Swiss Confederation. From the British Constitution was taken our head of state, with the power of veto and command of the Army, the two legislative houses, conservative and representative, and the Bill of Rights. It is interesting to note that due to the misinterpretation by the famous Frenchman, Montesquieu, of that portion of British law relating to the functions of the ministers of the Cabinet, our Conven- tion adopted his model, thus barring our Cabinet from any participation in the legisla- tive branch. The venerable Ten Commandments also served their end. The Convention left no source of information uninvestigated, but gleaned from all known forms of government what they believed best for the interests and needs of the colonies and combined their knowledge with it to form the ideal Constitution. That for which they had no precedent, the combination of state with national powers, grew out of the needs of the times Consider our Constitution. The more that is known of it, the better it appears. All citizens prize dearly their enjoyment of private property and personal liberty, and so should they prize that which has made this enjoyment possible, because it is an undeniable fact that in the near future the comprehensive and active interest of the common citizen in our constitution and in the changes proposed in it will be the deciding factor as to whether our present status shall continue to be. It is they who will decide the form of government under which the children of tomorrow shall live. LOUISE DE GREGORY. . ,V-'-w ofa 5, Page sixty-eight .QL .T- -'E A. N X ' . R rf- .Slit , 452-2 W .. 2 I' f Y 612 , ' 'I-ji! .1., X if Q ' 'l i ,i n f A 'WM Iii .0 ,gg I -5' I r f ,-1 .' I, 5,1714 , V, ,X-xx, i h ,,1, ff! Q - I 5 gl , -' .X N, it . Sigh , , ffqf -'i A f Tbsp -. ill 1, ffl ,. 'Il llixl ' all-'I' 6.7! if lffllfsf' ' 91' 'Y Q , A :0x 1,-1 pi Y ni :Wx f 'inf ,. - 2 r .- ...l fiiii ' --.ffz,'l I 14 - rl ' gl .f :N : f .V 'iff 4117 ff 2 ff, 'l J I f ,flfllit 32,84-P' ' A lf iwfv-willy x' 'ST' ' X' THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect Union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the ,United States of America. Article I, Sec. 1. All legislative powers herein grant- ed shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Represen- tatives. Sec. 2. The House of Representatives shall be com- posed of members chosen every second year by the people of the several States, and the electors in each State shall have the qualifications requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the State Legislature. No person shall be a Representative who shall not have attained to the age of twenty-five years, and been seven years a citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be an inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen. Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union according to their respective numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole number of free persons, including those bound to service for a term of years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other persons. The actual enumeration shall be made within three years after the first meeting of the Congress of the United States, and within every subsequent term of ten years, in such manner as they shall by law direct. The number of Representatives shall not exceed one for every thirty thousand, but each State shall have at least one Representativeg and until such enumeration shall be made, the State of New Hampshire shall be entitled to choose 35 Massachusetts, 8: Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, 1, Connecticut, 53 New York. 63 New jersey, 43 Pennsylvania, 8g Dela- ware, lg Maryland, 63 Virginia, 103 North Carolina, SQ South Carolina, 5g and Georgia, 5. When vacancies happen in the representation from any State, the executive authority thereof shall issue writs of election tofill such vacancies. The House of Representatives shall choose their Speaker and other officersg and shall have the sole power of impeachment. Sec. 3. The Senate of the United States shall be com- posed of two Senators from each State, chosen by the Legislature thereof, for six years, and each Senator shall have one vote. Immediately after they shall be assembled in conse- quence of the first election, they shall be divided as equally as may be into three classes. The seats of the Senators of the first class shall be vacated at the expira- tion of the second year, of the second class at the ex- piration of the fourth year, and of the third class at the expiration of the sixth year, and of the third class at the expiration of the sixth year, so that one third mav be chosen every second year, and if vacancies happen by resignation, or otherwise, during the recess of the Legislature of any State, the Executive thereof may make temporary appointments until the next meeting of the Legislature, which shall then fill such vacancies. No person shall be a Senator who shall not have attained to the age of thirty years, and been nine years a citizen of the United States, and whoshall not, when elected, be an inhabitant of that State for which he shall be chosen. The Vice President of the United States shall be President of the Senate, but shall have no vote, unless they be equally divided. The Senate shall choose their other officers, and also at President pro tempore, in the absence of the Vice President, or when he shall exercise the office of Presi- dent of the United States. The Senate shall have the sole power to try all im- peachments. When sitting for that purpose, they shall be on oath or affirmation. Wlten the President of the United States is tried, the Chief justice shall presideg and no person shall he convicted without the concur- rence of two thirds of te members present. Page sixty-nine The Constitution of the United States Cont. judgment in cases of impeachment shall not extend further than to removal from office, and disqualifica- to hold and enjoy any office of honor ,trust, or profit under the United States, but the party convicted shall nevertheless be liable and subject toindictment ,trial, judgment, and punishment, according to law. Sec. 4. The times, places, and manner of holding elections for Senators and Representatives shall be pre- scribed in each State by the Legislature thereof, but the Congress may at any time, by law, make or alter such regulations, except as to the places of choosing Senators. The Congress shall assemble at least once in every year, and such meeting shall be on the first Monday in December. unless they shall, by law, appoint a different day. Sec. 5. Each House shall be the judge of the elections, returns, and qualifications of its own members, and a majority of each shall constitute a quorum to do busi-- ness, but a smaller number may adjourn from day to day, and may be authorized to compel the attendnce of absent members, in such manner and under such penal- ties as each House may provide. Each House may determine the rules of its proceed- ings, punish its members for disorderly behavior, and, with the concurrence of two thirds, expel a member. Each House shall keep a journal of its proceerings, and from time to time publish the same, excepting such parts as may in their judgment require secrecy, and the yeas and nays of the members of either House on any question shall, at the desire of one fifth of those present, be entered on the journal. Neither House, during the sessionof Congress, shall, without the consent of the other, arjourn for more than three days, nor to any other place than that in which the two Houses shall be sitting. Sec. 6. The Senators and Representatives shall re- ceive a compensation for their services, to be ascer- tained by law, and paid out of the Treasury of the United States. They shall in all cases, except treason, felony, and breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest during their attendance at the session of their respective Houses, and in going to and returning from the same, and for an yspeech or debate in either House they shall not be questioned in any other place. No Senator or Representative shall, during the time for which he was elected, be appointed to any civil office under the authority of the United States which shall have been created, or the emoluments whereof shall have been increased during such time, and no person holding any office under the United States shall be a member of either House during his continuance in office: Sec. 7. All bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives, but the Senate may pro- pose or concur with amendments as on other bills. Every bill which shall have passed the House of Representatives and the Senate shall, before it become a law, be presented to the President of the United States, if he approve, se shall sign it, but if not, he shall return it, with his objections, to that House in which it shall have originated, who shall enter the objections at large on their journal, and proceed to reconsider it. If after such reconsideration two thirds of that House shall agree to pass the bill, it shall be sent, together with the objections to the other House. by which it shall like wise be reconsidered, and if approved by two thirds of that House, it shall become a law. But in all such cases the votes of both Houses shall be determined by yeas and nays, and the names of the persons voting for and against the bill shall be entered on the journal of each House respectively. lf any bill shall not be returned by the President within ten days fSundays exceptedj after it shall have been presented to him, the same shall be a law, in like man- ner as if he had signed it, unless the Congress by their Page seventy adjournment prevent its return, in which case it shall not be a law. Every order, resolution, or vote towhich the concur- rence of the Senate and House of Representatives may be necessary Qexcept on a question of adjournmentj shall be presented to the President of the United States, and before the same shall take effect shall be approved by him, or, being disapproved by him, shall be repassed by two thirds of the Senate and House of Representa- tives, according to the rules and limitations prescribed in the case of a bill. Sec. 8. 'lhe Congress shall have power To lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States, but all duties, imposts, and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States, To borrow money on the credit of the United States, To regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes, To establish a uniform rule of naturalization, and uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States, To coin money, regulate the value thereof, and of foreign coin, and Hx the standard of weights and meas- ures, To. provide for the punishment of counterfeiting the securities and current coin of the United States, To establish post offices and post roads, To promote the progress of science and useful arts by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discov- eries, To constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court, To define and punish piracies and felonies committed on the high seas, and offenses against the law of nations, To declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and water, To raise and support armies, but no appropriation of money to that use shall be for a longer term than two years, To provide and maintain a navy, To make rules for the government and regulation of the land and naval forces, To provide for calling forth the militia to execute the laws.of the Union, suppress insurrections, and repel invasions, To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the militia, and for governing such part of them as mav be employed in the service of the United States, reserv- of the ing to the States respectively the appointment officers and the authority of training the militia accord- ing o the dicipline prescribed by Congress, To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatso- ever over such district fnot exceeding ten miles squarej as may, by cession of particular States, and the accept- ance of Congress, become the seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like authority over all places purchased by the consent of the Legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erec- tion of forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards, and other needful buildings, and To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested bv this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof. Sec. 9. The migration or importation of such persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit shall not be prohibited by the Congress prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and eight, but a tax or duty may be imposed on such importation, not exceeding ten dollars for each person. The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or in- The Constitution of the United States Cont. vasion the public safety may require it. No bill of attainder or ex post facto law shall be passed. No capitation or other direct tax shall be laid, unless in proportion to the census or enumeration hereinbefore directed to be taken. No tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any State, No preference shall be given by any regulation of commerce or revenue to the ports of one State over those of another, nor shall vessels bound to or from one State be obliged to enter, clear, or pay duties in another. No money shall be drawn from the Treasury but in consequence of appropriations made by law, and a regular statement and account of the receipts and expen- ditures of all public money shall be published from time to time. No title of nobility shall be granted by the United States, and no person holding any office of profit or trust under them shall, without the consent of the Con- gress, accept of any present, emolument, office, or title, of any kind whatever, from any king, prince, or foreign state. Sec. 10. No State shall enter into any treaty, alliance. or confederation, grant letters of marque and reprisal, coin money, emit bills of credit, make anything but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts, pass any bill of attainder, expost facto law, or law impair- ing the obligation of contracts, or grant any title of nobility. No State ,hsall, without the consent of the Congress, lay any imposts or duties on imports or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its in- spection laws, and the net produce of all duties and imposts, laid by any State on imports or exports, shall be for the use of the Treasury of the United States, and all such laws shall be subject to the revision and control of the Congress. No State shall, without the consent of Congress, lav any duty of tonnage, keep troops or ships of war in time of peace, enter into any agreement or compact with another State, or with a foreign power, or engage in war, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent danger as will not admit of delay. Article Il, Sec. 1. The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America. He shall hold his office during the term of four years, and, together with the Vice President, chosen for the same term, be elected as follows: Each State shall appoint, in such manner as the Legis- lature thereof may direct, a number of electors, equal to the whole number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress, but no Senator or Representative, or person holding an office of trust or profit under the United States, shall be appointed an elector. The electors shall meet in their respective State, and vote by ballot for two persons, of whom one at least shall not be an inhabitant of the same State with them- selves. And they shall make a list of all the persons voted for, and of the number of votes for each, which list they shall sign and certify, and transmit sealed to the seat of the Government of the United States, directed to the President of the Senate. The President of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates, and the votes shall then be counted. The person having the greatest number of votes shall be the President, if such number be a majority of the whole number of electors ap- pointed, and if there be more than one who have such majority, and have an equal number of votes, then the House of Representatives shall immediately choose by ballot one of them for President, and if no person have a majority, then from the tive highest on the l-ist the said House shall in like manner choose the President. But in choosing the President, the votes shall be taken oy States, the representation from each State having one vote. A quorum for this purpose shall consist of a mem- ber or members from two thirds of the States, and a majority of all the States shall be necessary to a choice. ln every case, after the choice of the President, the per- son having the greatest number of votes of the electors shall be the Vice President. But if there should remain two or more who have equal votes, the Senate shall choose from them by ballot the Vice President. The Congress may determine the time of choosing the electors, and the day on which they shall give their votes, which day shall be the same throughout the United States. No person except a natural-born citizen, or a citizen of the United States at the time of the adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the office of President, neither shall any person be eligible to that office who shall not have attained to the age of thirty-five years, and been fourteen years a resident within the United States. ln case of the removal of the President from office, or of his death, resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the Vice President, and the Congress may by law provide for the case of removal, death, resigna- tion, or inability, both of the President and Vice Presi- dent, declaring what officer shall then act as President, and such, officer shall act accordingly, until the dis- ability be removed, or a President shall be elected. The President shall, at stated times, receive for his services a compensation, which shall neither be increased nor diminished during the period for which he shall have been elected, and he shall not receive within that period any other emolument from the United States, or any of them. 7 1 I Before he enters on the execution of his office, he shall take the following oath or affirmation: l do sol- emnly swear for affirm, that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will, to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States. Sec. 2. The President shall be commander in chief of the army and navy of the United States, and of the militia of the several States when called into the actual service of the United States, he may require the opinion, in writing, of the principal officer in each of the execu- tive departments upon any subject relating to the duties of their respective offices, and he shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment. He shall have power, by and with the advice and con- sent of the Senate, to make treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur, and he shall nominate and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate shall appoint ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, judges of the Supreme Court, and all other officers of the United States whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by law, but the- Congress may by law vest the appontment of such inferior officers as they think proper in the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of departments. The President shall have power to fill up all vacan- cies that may happen during the recess of the Senate. by granting commissions which shall expire at the end of their next session. Sec. 3. He shall from time to time give to the Con- gress information of the state of the Union, and recom- mend to their consideration such measures as he .shall judge necessary and expedient, he may on extraordinary occasions convene both Houses, or either of them, and in case of disagreement between them, with respect to the time of adjournment, he may adjourn them to Page seventy-one The Constitution of the United States fCont.l I such time as he shall think proper, he shall receive ambassadors and other public ministers, he shall take care that the laws be faithfully executed, and shall com- mission all the officers of the United States. Sec. 4. The President, Vice President, and all civil offi- cers of the United States shall be removed from office on impeachment for, and conviction of, treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors. Article III, Sec. 1. The judicial power of the United States shall be vested in one Supreme Court, and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish. The judges, both of the Su- preme and inferior courts, shall hold their offices during good behavior, and shall, at stated times, receive for their services a compensation, which shall not be dim- inished during their continuance in office. Sec. 2. The judicial power shall extend to all case, in law and equity, arising under this Constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties made, or which ing mbassadors, other public ministers, and consuls, to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, to con- troversies between two or more States, between a State and citizens of another State, between citizens of differ- ent States, between citizens of the same State claiming lands under grants of different States, and between a State, or the citizens thereof, and foreign states, citizens, or subjects. In all cases affecting ambassadors, otherpublic mini- sters and consuls, and those in which a State shall be prty, the Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction. In all the other cases before mentioned, the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, with such exceptions and under such regula- tions as the Congress shall make. The trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeach- ment, shall be by jury, and such trial shall be held in the State where the said crimes shall have been com- mitted within any State, the trial shall be at such place or places as the Congress may by law have directed. Sec. 3. Treason against the United States shall con- sist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort. No person shall be convicted of treason unless on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act, or on confession in open court. The Congress shall have power to declare the punish- ment of treason, but no attainder of treason shall work corruption of blood, or forfeiture except during the life of the person attainted. Article IV, Sec. 1. Full faith and credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may by general laws prescribe the manner in which such acts, records, and proceedings shall bep roved, and the effect thereof. Sev. 2. The citizens of each State shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States. A person charged in any State with treason, felony, or other crime, who shall flee from justice, and be found in another State, shall, on demand of the executive authority of the State from which he fled, be delivered up, to be removed to the State having jurisdiction of the crime. , No person held to service or labor in one State, under the laws thereof, escaping into another ,shall,.1n con- sequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up on claim .of the party to whom such service or labor may be due. Sec. 3. New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union, but no new State shall be formed or erected within the jurisdiction of an yother State, nor any State be formed by the junction of two or more Page seventy-two States, or ports of States, without the consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress. The Congress shall have power to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United States, and nothing in this Constitution shall be co con- stued as to prejudice any claims of the United States, or of any particular State. Sec. 4. The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of government, and shall protect each of them against invasion, and, on application of the Legislature, or of the Executive fwhen the Legislature cannot be convenedj, against domestic violence. Article V. The Congress, whenever two thirds of both Houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose amend- ments to this Constitution, or, on the application of the Legislatures of two thirds of the several States, shall call a convention for proposing amendments, which, in either case, shall be valid to all intents and purposes as part of this Constitution, when ratified by the Legis- latures of three fourths of the several States, or by con- ventions in three fourths thereof, as the one or the other mode of ratihcation may be proposed by the Congress, provided that no amendment which may be made prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and eight shall in any manner affect the hrst and fourth clauses in the Ninth Section of the First Article, and that no State, without its consent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate. Article VI, All debts contracted and engagements en- tered into before the adoption of this Constitution shall be as valid against the United States under this Consti- tution as under the Confederation. This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in puruance thereof, and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land, and the judges in every State shall be bound there- by, anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding. The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial officers, both of the United States and of the several States, shall be bound by oath or affirmation to support this Constitution, but no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States. Article VII. The ratification of the conventions of nine States shall be sufficient for the establishment of this Constitution between the States so ratifying the same. Done in convention by the unanimous consent of the States present the seventeenth day of September in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty-seven and of the independence of the United States of America the twelfth. AMENDMENTS Article I. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exer- cise thereof, or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assem- ble and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. l Article II. A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. Article III. -No soldier shall, in time of peace, be quartered in any house without the consent of the owner, nor in time of war but in a manner to be prescribed by law. Article IV. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against un- The Constitution of the United Sl:atesjilCont.i reasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrant shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the plce to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. Article V. No person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a present,- ment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war or public danger: nor shall any be twice put compelled in himself, nor without due be taken for Article VI person be subject for the same offense to in jeopardy of life or limb, nor shall be any criminal case to be a witness against be deprived of life, liberty, or property, process of lawg or shall private propety public use without just compensation. In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be in- formed of the nature and cause of the accusationg to be confronted with the witnesses against himg to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the assistance of counsel for his defense. Article VII. In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise re-examined in any court of the United States than according to the rules of the common law. Article VIII. Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punish- ments inflicted. Article IX. The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or dis- parge others retained by the people. Article X. The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respecively, or to the people. Article XI. The judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by citizens of another State, or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state. Article XII. The electors shall meet in their respec- tive States, and vote by ballot for President and Vice- President, one of whom at least shall not be an inhabi- tant of the same State with themselves. They shall name in their ballots the person voted for as President, and in distinct ballots the person voted for as Vice Presidentg and they shall make distinct lists of all persons voted for as President, and of all persons voted for as Vice President, and of the number of votes for each. which lists they shall sign and certify, and transmit, sealed, to the seat of the Government of the United States, di- rected to the President of the Senate. The President of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates, and the votes shall then be counted. The person having the greatest number of votes for, President shall be the President, if such number be a majority of the whole number of electors appointedg and if no person have such majority, then from the persons having the highest numbers, not exceeding three, on the list of those voted for as President, the House of Representatives shall choose immediately, by ballot, the President. But in choosing the President, the votes shall be taken by States, the representation from each State having one voteg a quorum for this purpose shall consist of a member or members from two thirds of the States, and a majority of all the States shall be necessary to a choice. And if the House of Representatives shall not choose a President, whenever the right ot choice shall devolve upon them, before the fourth day of March next. following, then the Vice President shall act as President, as in the case of the death or other consti- tutional disability of the President. The person having the greatest number of votes as Vice President shall be the Vice President, if such number be a majority of the whole number of electors appointedg and if no person have a majority, then from the two highest numbers on the list the Senate shall choose the Vice Presidentg a quorum for the purpose shall consist of two thirds of the whole number of Senators, and a majority of the whole number shall be necessary toa choice. But no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of Presi- dent shall be eligible tothat of Vice President of the United States. Article XIII. Neither slavery nor involuntary servi- tude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within thc? United States, or any place subject to their jurisdic- i n. Sec. 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation, ' Art1cle'XIV, Sec. 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United Sttates, and subject to thejurisdiction there- of, are citizens of the United States, and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immuni- ties of citizens of the United States, or shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdictitn the equal protection of the laws, Sec. 2. Representatives shall be appointed among the several States according to their respective numbers counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed, But when the rights tri vote at any election for the choice of electors for Presi- dent and Vice President of the United States, Representa- tives in Congress, the executive and judicial officers of a State, or the members of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such State. or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebel- lion, or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State. Sec. 5. No person shall be a Senator or Representa- tive in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who ,having previous- ly taken an oath as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State Legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two thirds of each House, remove such disability. . Sec. 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in sup- pressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be quest- ioned. But neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss of emancipation of any slave: but all such debts, obligations, and claims shall be held illegal and void. Sec. 5. The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article. Article XV, Sec, 1. The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States, or by any State, on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. Page seventy-three The Constitution of th 6 ' ' United States fCont.1 Sec. 2. The Congres shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. Article XVI. The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source de- rived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration. Article XVII, Sec. 1. The Senate of the United States shall be composed of two Senators from each State, elected by the people thereof, for six years, and each Senator shall have one vote. The electors in each State shall have the qualifications requisite for electors of t e most numerous branch of the State Legislatures, Sec. 2. When vacancies happen in the representation of any State in the Senate, the executive authority of such State shall issue writs of election to fill such vacancies: Provided, That the Legislature of any State may empower the Executive thereof to make temporarv appointments until the people Hll the vacancies by elec- tion as the Legislature may direct. Sec. 3. This amendment shall not be so construed as to affect the election or term of any Senator chosen be- fore it becomes valid as part of the Sonstitution. Article XVIII, Sec. 1. After one year from the ratifi- cation of this article the manufacture, sale, or trans- portation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all teritory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited. Sec. 2. The Congess and the several States shall have con-current power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. Sec. 3. This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by the Legislatures of the several States, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the date of the submission hereof to the States by the Congress. Article XIX, Sec. 1. The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States to or by any State on account of sex. Sec. 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. Article XX, Sec. 1. The terms of the President and Vice President shall end at noon on the twentieth day of january, and the terms of Senators and Representa- tives at noon on the third day of January, of the years in which such terms would have ended if this article had not been ratifiedg and the terms of their successors shall then begin. Sec. 2. The Congress shall assemble at least once in every year, and such meeting shall begin at noon on the third day of january, unless they shall by law appoint a different day. fgtirii Sec. 3. If, at the time fixed for the beginning of the term of the President, the President elect shall have died, the Vice President elect shall become President. If a President shall not have been chosen before the time fixd for the beginning of his term, or if the President elect shall have failed to qualify, then the Vice Presi- dent elect shall act as President until a President shall have qualifiedg and the Congress may by law provide for the case wherein neither a President elect nor a Vice President elect shall have qualified, declaring who shall then act as President, or the manner in which one who is to act shall be selected, and such person shall act accordingly until a President or Vice President shall have qualified. Sec. 4. The Congress may by law provide for the case of the death of any of the persons from whom the House of Representatives may choose a President when- ever the right of choice shall have devolved upon them, and for the case of the death of any of the persons from whom the Senate may choose a Vice President whenever the right of choice shall have devolved upon them. Sec. 5. Sections 1 and 2 shall take effect on the lif- teenth day of October following the ratification of this article, Article XXI, Sec. 1. The eighteenth article of amend- ment to the Constitution of the United States is hereby repealed. Sec. 2. The transportation or importation into anv State, Territory or Possession, of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxicating liquors, in viola- tion of the laws thereof, is hereby prohibited. PROPOSED CHILD LABOR AMENDMENT The following amendment was proposed to the Legis- latures of the several States by the Sixty-eighth Congress. having been adopted as a joint resolution by the House of Representatives 1297 to 691 on April 26, 1924, and by the Senate 161 to 231 on june 2, 1924. It was ratified by Arizona 1192513 Arkansas 11925-1g California 1192513 Colorado 1193213 Illinois 1191315 Iowa 1193313 Maine 1193313 Michigan 1193313 New jersey 1193313 North Dakota 1195511 Ohio 1193312 Oklahoma 1193313 Oregon 1193315 Pennsylvania 119331g Washing 1193315 West Virginia 11935l2 Wisconsin 119251g Wyoming 119351. Ratification by thirty-six States is necessary. ' Sec. 1. The Congress shall have power to limit, regu- late, and prohibit the labor of persons under eighteen years of age. Sec. 2. The power of the several States is unimpaired by this article except that the operations of State laws shall be suspended to the extent necessary to give effect to legislation enacted by the Congress. iitietig 'X-I, wilt U it' at Emi X53 1 , flash ' L. 4- - I lf ,V I - -WV Al --' ziuxixl Q -gr 412 -' YY J -gf! -Q E 4if,'f1l-'53,- ,glll'f1 if IW . - 3 ff-eff 5 ft ' . Exggi- . i Y- is :L A s k Page seventy-four 17- ,gk ffffffag 'QM IK! SM I , ,Sf 7 'fi' . s , 514 7 CQ , I , ' I 43 gfltm H I I 655522533 4934545 9 I Iv , , , 'V 1' I ,II W I I I EK I I I ,fi 322356 ,wily I I I I 5 I r. -, X N , , Q 9 0633253536 5.igf:.ii 5'g' ACTIVITIES l Q I M 4 l N--. , as as gear'--ee V I A ,sf x v fi U N-jx-Y XM A N Q- ' - --fl, ksizxiifay Q rw e - 1.1wP.- Ojicerf The Executive Committee was organized in january, 1933 Its duties are to advise and finance all the extra-curricula activities of the school. It had been previously acknowledged that all actions taken by the controlling group in extra- curricula activities are subject to approval of the Executive Committee and of the Principal of the School. First row-Left to right: Miss R. Fitzgerald, Miss K. Paterno, Miss M. Murphy. Second row-Left to right: Mr. J. T. Brogan, Chairmang Mr. C. Budenbencler, Mr. W. Jordan, Mr. G. Hermes. Wliile considerable degree of freedom has been allowed in the management of the affairs of the many Clubs, it is likely that the ever growing interests of the School may demand closer supervision by the controlling group and the Executive Committee to avoid conflicting aims or too wide a range of activity. E-Zz bf-,L 'EE J- fr Page seventy-six w,,.:,,.,v- --f 113 -:fs--4, or C JZ M Lf' Xie ,V Le R XXX Af f X fx, 7 V , 'T XXXN X-1-ll-IF - X ' gl YK f A to , fr . . Xlgu X N, A i. AIM X of . L, :ja . .T L-Ci T'.L'.:f' . , CLUB PRESIDENTS This group was organized in February, 1937 A newly organized controlling body supplanting the General Organizatin whose policies proved to be a failure. The rulings and judgments of all the extra- curricula was best thought to be supersived by the leaders of these organizations with the able assistance of the Faculty Executive Committee. First row-Left to right: T. Fleischman, Engineering Clubg A. Magura, El Circulo Cas- tellanog Ian Jamieson, Fencing Team, Paul Brennan, Globe Trotters. Second row-Left to right: Mr. J. T. Brogan, Faculty Adviserg R. Rosenblum, Literary Societyg R. Friclc, Glee Clubg E. Roycraft, Economics Club, Louis Imbornone, Terpiscorean Society. Third row-Left to right: E. Reilly, Dramatic Societyg A. Comment, J. Slane, C. Bauerforf, Der Deutsche Vereing W. Smith, Night Watch Staff. Fourth row-Left to right: A. Kroszner, Bookkeeping Clubg C. Ranne, History Club, Carl Balbo, Italian Clubg George Bitterly, Debating Society, Fred Schulz, Commercial Club. This newly formed controlling group introduced the membership of those students purchasing an activities card. The group is also proud of the fact that they are resuming the Mardi Gras, which is to climax all the social activities of the school year, It feels that in the creation of this original idea in secondary schools this school will be looked upon, as in the past, as the object of imitation. An Advisory board elected by the members of this group include.: C. Balbo, P. Brennan, C. Bouerdorf, W. Smith, M. Tremble, W. McFadden and G. Bitrerly. R , -Ne 'fn 'ST r Page seventy seven M 'A A v S- Ra NW FF-- im -'rzv X 444' f ' Cr: v-. pq. Ny .-Qi: JANUARY CLASS PLAY PoLisH1NG PAPA CAST OF CHARACTERS Papa Smith .............. john 1. Burke Sam, the Salesman ........ Michael Flora jane Smith ......,,...... Anne E. Farrell The Housekeeper ........ Elizabeth Krohn Dick Brainerd ........ Charles j. Schemel The Maid ........,. Sophie M. Kotlowski Rose ........................ Kay R. Gillooly Peggy ...........r............ Ann L. Orolen Lord Dabney ........ Arthur E. Brunck Arthur Smith ............ Frank DiNiCola Fred W. Messler .............................. Faculty Adviser The january Class's three-act farce Polishing Papa, written by Clark Willard and coached by Harry C. Nehms, was well received by one of the largest crowds to ever see a class play at D. A. E. H. S. The plot deals with Papa Smith, eccentric sausage manufacturer, father of Arthur and jane Smith, recently out of college and possessed of ultra-modern ideas. In the midst of the confusion jane brings home a bogus English nobleman who gains Papa's hearty disapproval. Aided by Rose, a friend of jane's, the children persuade the old codger to think along more modern lines and to allow Arthur to run the sausage business. A Papa arrives in the nick of time, saves the rapidly-failing business, and the spurious nobleman is revealed as a ship steward. The old man tops off his detective work by bestowing his blessings upon Rose and Arthur and upon jane and Dick. Not to be left in the lurch Papa marries his housekeeper and the play ends on a happy note. bin 'BT 5fi-f:L FQ'!- Page seventy-eight ,. -.Bl-d'., ' .VF f' l 'A '7 . ff' xg. ! 5-,Fu A JUNE CLASS PlAY THREE CORNERED MOON Directed by HARRY c. NEHMS THE CAST MIS. Rimplegal' .-..--.,. ..................,........... ...... C a therine Thuring Douglas Rimplegar ..... ..,,,,,,, A ngelo Ammo Kenneth Rimplegar ,..... , ,,,,,,,,,.,., Niel Smdtef Jennie .......................... .....,........ A nne Magura Ed Rimplegar ........,... ..... IN Iarcus J. Tremble Elizabeth Rimplegar ..,.. .............. A nn Logiest Donald .............,.......... ,..,,.. G regory Autrey Dr. Alan Stevens ,.......,.... .,....... ........................... A 1 bert Grondahl Kitty ...............,........,.....................,, ...,,.,,..,.....,.,..,.....,,..........,,.,,,......,.... S ally Howe Fred XXV. Messler .................,............ Faculty Adviser On june 9 the June Class presented Three Cornered Moon, the story of the Rimplegars who exchanged witticisms with the depression. Elizabeth Rimplegar, lacking more serious things to worry about, cultivates rt naive' weltschmerz and plans suicide with her immature novelist Fiancee. When Mother Rimplegar, vague and Highty, announces the collapse of the family fortune, Elizabeth and her spoiled, idle family are lost until Alan Stevens assumes a mild dictatorship and induces them to go to work. Sobered by the sanity and sweetness of living by working, Elizabeth becomes dissatisfied with Donald, who, lost in his dreams, feels artisti- cally exempt from the responsibilities that confront him. Even the mad Rimplegars have learned to adopt more realistic standards of living, though they can never give up their peculiar humor and their innate Hippancy. Those included in the Play Committee were George Bitterly, Chairmang Raymond Bauer- dorf, Mary Kelly and Anne Logiest. R big A . ,.- P Page seventy-nine M WN Q v if . -Z, i N P - - f A ' ' , , 1 . ,PX hs... X 'K i.- ,-,. N33 gn,3?Nl . 5-iff' as Xi,-17 . --Q ee- H r i.Tg,iPaTg-' NIGHT WATCH AND ADVISORY STAFF Officers George O'Brien, William Smith .......... .................,. E ditors Peter Manos, john Kramer ,........,..,... .... A ssociate .Editors William Bremner, Frances Gardner ........., ........ B usines Managers Maurice J. O'Sullivan ........................................................ Faculty Adviser Advisory Board Maurice O'Sullivan, Chairman, Mildred R. Rudnitsky, john M. Kelly, jr. ' l The iirst Night Watch Stal? was organized in September, 1928. First row-Left to right: john M. Kelly, jr., Mildred R. Rudnitsky, Maurice J. O'Sullivan, John Kramer, Mary Thompson, William Smith. Second row-Left to right: Rose Rosenblum, Marcus Tremble, Dorothy Treadaway, Victoria Costanzo, Joseph McFadden, Anthony Calabro, Ann Magura. Third row-Left to right: Paul Brennan, Edward Reilly, Gregory Autrey, Harold Lorenz, Ian Jameson, Frances Gardner. The pupose of the Night Watch is the accumulation, organization and publication of news of student and school activities, in conjunction with literarv activity of merit. The Night Vfatch is a member of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. The ,Tanuarv Board of the Night Watch Advisorv Board consisted of Mr. O'Sullivan chairman with Miss M. Rudnitsky, Mr. I. Kelly, 'Louis Imbornone, Paul Brennan as assisting members. The Tune Board of the Night Watch Advisorv Board consisted of Mr. M. O'Sullivan, as chairman, being ably assisted by Mr. J. Kelly and Miss Rudnitsky. g -- -'Q 55,5 ii? Page eighty iff? if .. 'X xQ'Tf f ef ce-Cfffs . on K -J . r X ' 7 ' Q ..' COMMERCIAL CLUB Officerx F. SChulZ ..... ......... ...... ........ P r e sident A. Bender ......, ....,. V ice-President H. Flanagan ...... ......... S ecretary G. Beck ................... ..,........... T reasurer Mr. C. Budenbender ..................... ................................ F aculty Adviser This Club was Organized in December, 1933 - The purpose of this club is to create a spirit of good will among the Commercial stu- dents of this school to acquaint them with modern office equipment and provide enlightment in the held of Commercial vocations. First Row-Left to right: A. Bender, F. Schulz, Mr. Budenbender, H. Flanagan, G. Beck. Second Row-Left to right: A. Pastine, C. Ricker, S. Peck, R. Wallace, S. Parish. Third Row-Left to right: C. Bauerdorf, H, Pell, R. Bauerdorf. The activities of the Commercial Club consisted of visits to Broadcasting Studies, Hay- den Planetarium, Chase National Bank, Federal Reserve Bank, Breyer's Ice Cream Co., General Baking Co., and other points of interest. Ag u Ks e fu 7 . Page eighty-one ---,.-- , mx M ty--- ...W if-1' i fe A ess.- v 'l ,gif ' ig..-Ns 0 R F sjf iffflj ,- . '. Z BOOKKEEPING CLUB Officer! Arthur C. Kroszner ...... ..,,,,,,,,,,, P resident Beatrice Kaplan ........... .,,,, V ice-President Ruth Monroe ......... ..,....... T reasurer Ruth Monroe ................................ ......... ...........,.,.,... S ec retary Mr. Charles j. Antonaccio ...................,.......................... Faculty Adviser The Bookkeeping club was organized April 28, 1936 The purpose of this organization is to promote interest in Bookkeeping and Accounting by means of prominent speakers in this field and related subjects. Also the enlightment of these subjects by the use of photography. First row--Left to right: A. Maggio, B. Kelleher, M. Stetson, A. Kroszner, Mr. C. Antonaccio. Second row-Left to right: J. Goebel, R. Reid, B. Radziwanowski, J. Scuclese, R. Fry, L. Watson. Third row-Left to right: J. Bolognini, J. La Due, C. Beggans, W. Jones, A. Bennett, P. Giaquinto, F. Riddell. The features among the activities of the Bookkeeping Club for the past term were a speech on Internal Revenue Act , by a prominent speaker, some of the most useful and helpful advice by Mr. Antonaccio, a social for the benefit of the members and motion picture at every meeting night among which were Electrical Transmission of Speech , Getting Together , The Executive , Making Books and Origin and Development of Hand- writing . 'fn 'ST .P Page eighty-two iff X' 1 X M23 Q 3 ji . XX -W - -- X . 7 AQ 5 -5 - X RECEPTION COMMITTEE President ...............,.....,........ ..... H elen Fahey Vice-President and Secretary ..... .................,..... F rances Maly Faculty Adviser ................................................ Mildred Chaiter Rudnitsky The Reception Committee was organized in 1931, The purpose of this committee is to receive and conduct guests of the school to their respective placesg to maintain orderly assembliesg to endeavor to have the audience disperse in a quiet fashion and to strive to have the students assemble quickly, quietly, and in a man- ner which will uphold the prestige of the school. It will always stand out as a iustly selected group of young ladies, each possessing poise, a sweet personality, the charm of sociability, and a dignified manner, First Row-Left to right: Maxine Cassidy, Catherine Burke, Eileen O'Leary, Olga Zeni, Catherine Birskholtz, Ruth McVicar, Dorothy Mcwalters. Second Row-Left to right: Mildred C. Rudnitsky, Anne Cassidy, Alice Cullivan, Ann Logiest, Sally Howe, Mary Gillen, Mary Flaherty. Third Row-Left to right: Katrleen Gillooly, Elizabeth Gunderson, Dorothy Algeo, Dorothy Treadway, Frances Maly, Helen Fahey. The members of the committee ushered at the Alumni Lectures, the Alumni play, 'the january and June Senior plays, the Technical and Industrial graduation, and the Accredited Evening High School graduation. They also acted in the capacity of guides on Visitors Night. bfi '33 ,J Page eighty three 4 fxui-L:-gtk, 2, ,...v-ft V .. '--' ' ir if lv Qxiu '. C-Sngw A .., ' Nil 74 rs aff! :fgal Q A DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN Officer: Charles Bauerdorf ...... .................... ........... P r esident Anne Guckenberger ...... ........ V ice-President Anthony Budinich ...... ......................... T reasurer Rheinhold Frick .,..... .............. R ecording Secretary Grace Beck ,.,........ ......... ...... ......,.. C o r responding Secretary Miss C. Streifer .................................................................. Faculty Adviser This club was organized in February, 1935 The purpose of this organization has been to cultivate a knowledge of the language, customs, and literature of the German people. First row-Left to right:R. Frick, A. Guckenberger, C Bauerdorf, Miss C. Streifer, G. Beck, A. Budinich. Second row-Left to right: F. Hochstein, C. Ricker, H, Pell, E. Shrednicke, R. Bauerdorf, T. Bumiller. Third row-Left to right: W. Kurth, A. O'Kelly, C, Connolly, N. Ostertag, A. Kluve, A. Ammann, G. Bitterly. Fourth row-Left to right: Weiss, E. Hughes, H. Lorenz, P. Greik, E. Laskowski, J. Whalen. Numbered among the activities of this organization during the past term was a visit to the German Liner Hamburg, numerous voyages to the German Theaters in the quaint old German section of the metropolis and a enjoyable visitation of the successful musical show that ran for many months on Broadway, White Hore Inn . The club initated a policy of spring and summer voyages into the great outdoors, starting with a trip to Central Park, a hike to the Orange Mountain reservation and a boat ride to Rye Beach. lt expects to close its official season by its participation in the International Night celebration and continue throughout the summer its enjoyable activities. N 'fu 'ST y Page ei ghty-four if age Ex: gf Z, x X 6-s , an .E 1 ' fl ,-in X -' - 7 'e c Q' LITERARY SOCIETY Officers Rose Rosenblum .,.... .............. ,,,,,.,.,, P f egidem Ian M. Jamieson .... .... V ice-President Kathryn Gelsinon .... ,,.,, T reaguref Helen I-8116 -.-.......... ............. S ecretary Mr. G. Mclnerney .................................,...,...,.,.......,,,,,.... Faculty Adviser The Literary Society was organized in 1928 The purpose of the Literary Society is to stir the dormant qualities and advance the interest in literature and other cultural subjects of the pupils of the school. The activities of the Literary Society, were the presentation of chosen works of famous authors and Creative works by various members of the organization. First Row--Left to right: R. Rosenblum, Ian Jamieson, Mr. G. Mclnerney, K. Gelinson, H. Lane. Second row-Left to right: E. Cooke, A. Stahl, M. Dudek, L. Smith, A. Lehman. Third row-Left to right: T. Gallagher, R. Fry, A. Maggie. ,Q Dia 'ST .f K, FN' I Page eighty-tive , - , Q---A, 7 'NT'5 0 M... ,fill Q,,,Z:i, Y' ' M I5 i gf -4' ri?- LOS VIVANTES Offirerr Anne Magura ....... ,................... .......... P r esident Frances Gardner ......... ..... V ice-President William Hassloch ....... .......... T reasurer Katherine Pacia ..........,................ ...... .....,............................ S e cretary Mr. Alphonso Orrico ............,.....,........,...........,......,,.. Faculty Adviser This club was organized in September, 1931 The purpose of this organization is to permit students of the Spanish Classes to enjoy those activities of cultural significance to the student of Spanish which the restricition of the class room does not make feasible. Also to promote the objectives of the Pan-American Union with which the Club is affiliated. First row-Left to right: W. Hassloch, K. Pacia, Mr. A. Orrico, A. Magura, F. Gardner. Second row-Left to right: W. Guellich, F. Waldeman, M. Cassidy, M. Lombardi, A. Killeen, A. Maggie. Third row-Left to right: A. Amato, R. Hickey, C, Ricker, T. Neary, J, Edgar, A. Kluve, R. Gregorzck. Fourth row-Left to right: P. Villano, H. Sherwood, G. Dall, R. Frick, C. Smith, N. Grimes, I. Jamieson, W. Reid, J. Fuchs. The activities of Los Vivantes has included the attendance of Spanish motion pictures, Spanish fiestas, plays and radio broadcasts. There were also illustrated lectures and travelogues, addresses by prominent Spanish olficials, recitation of Spanish plays, and the presentation of radio artists. The club also cooperated with the Pan- American Union in furthering its purpose. if of 'ST y ,fp Page eighty-six ' !lf',5 0 NT' 'S , 'v - Sslgg 5 . N if- 2 fl! EL XX -'K ' :J l QQ, '7 3' :' IL CIRCOLA ITALIANO Officer! Carl Balbo ......... .............. ,........,. P r esident Carmelo Scafidi .... ...... V ice-President Elvira Galasso ...... ........... T reasurer Lena Sargente ................rr,....................................,........................ Secretary Kathryn D. Pateno ............................................................ Faculty .Adviser Il Circolo Italiano was founded in 1929 The purpose of this organization is to increase the knowledge and acquaintance of its members with the Italian language, literature, and customs. ll Circulo Italiano lists among its activities the attendance at an Italian opera Il Trova- tore , radio broadcasting at Radio Station VU. O. V., and various Italian show houses. A tour through the Italian village in New York City, presentation of radio talent at alternate meeting nights, lectures by prominent Italian men, and participation in the International Night, . First row-Left to right: V. Chinigo, L. Lepis, C. Balbo, Miss K, Paterno, L. Imbornone, C. Scrudato. Second row-Left to righ: A. Calabro, O. Huhn, A. Panczer, A. Comment, A, Logiest. Third row-Left to right: J. Luzzi, H. Hamilton, E. Cacchioli, A. Amato, E. Maida, N. Reina, C. Celauro. Fourth row-Left to right: J. Cooney, F, Burke, A, Garguilo, J. Pasqualetto, C. Williams, V. Castellano, A. Pesce. Fifth row-Legt to right: T. Gallagher, P. Giangulano, J. Bracco, A. Bundles, j, Grego, A. Russo, P. Brennan. -'X GN D131 f 'P Page ei ghty-seven V . -C. .. -.-M A i,,,f 5' K , --: vs ' S-xi elfff MUSIC APPRECIATION CLUB Olfirerr Ralph Marcel ..... ....,.......... ,,,,,,,. P 1- egident Rheinhold Frick ...... ...,. V ice-President Stanley Brozd ...C...... ....... T reasurer Annemarie Kluwe ,.... .............. S ecretary Alphonso J. Orrico .............................. .................. ..... F a culty Adviser This club was organized in September, 1936 To foster an appreciation for enjoyable music and to render instructions to those possess- ing reasonable amount of talent. First row-Left to right: J. Kenny, M. Korzeniowski, A. Kluwe, F. Koscheka, Mr. A Orrico. Second row-Left to right: N. Soluri, D. Giangulano, J. Orrico, P. Giangulano, A. Russo. Third row-Left to right: A. Calabro, J. Soluri, R. Truchan, C. Smith, R. Frick. This club has been active in the performances at school affairs and radio broadcast. They have attended many symphonic concerts and instrumental recitals, and conducted class instruc- tion in the presentation of lectures. b X it at - Page eighty-eight ,,,.65KF xx e S X We if X s e ff J H yd T A to A i 9 1 'K --' GLEE CLUB Officers Rheinhold Frick ...... ..........,.,., ,,,,4,,,.. P f egident john Slane .......... ..... V ice-President Edna SiII1m00S ....... ,,,,.,,,.,, T reagufef Kathryn Gelsinon ...... ,....,.,,,,,,, S ecretary Mr. Moritz Schwarz ............................................,.,........... Faculty Adviser This club was organized in 1930. The purpose of this organization is to further the interest and acquaintance of its mem- bers with music and songs of the better type, also the study of choral music. First row-Left to right: E. Simmons, R. Frick, Mr. Schwarz, K. Gelsinon, B. Yayson, V. Palubnick. Second row-Left to right: R. Wolfe, J. Fuchs, E. Cooke, A. Stahl, L. Smith, A. Comment. Third row-Left to right: A. Grieco, T. Gallagher, C. Smith, C. Wanamaker, A. Kelly, J. Bmcco, J. Slane. This organization has been prominent in school affairs having participated in various performances in assemblies, commencement excersies, and radio performance. wx Dill Q, QS-...jfj Page eighty-nine g'! Qfiiq f ' - GD, PLS.. lll 'Xi ,, GLOBE-TROTTERS CLUB Ojjricerr Paul A. Brennan ................................................................. ...... P resident Leo Flannigan .............,.., Vice-President Sadie Kowalski ..... - ,..,,.,,,,.,,,,,, Treasurer Sally Howe ............................... Secretary Mr. M. W. Cooke ...,,.. Faculty Adviser The Globe Trotters Club was organized February, 1936 The purpose of this organization is to promote an interest in Commercial Geography and to create a feeling of good fellowship among the members. First row--Left to right: P. Brennan, S. Kowalski, Mr. M. W. Cooke, Sally Howe, Leo Flannigan. Second row Left to right: R. Kelly, A, Amato, G. Cottenden, L. Lepis, M. Tremble, A. Milton, B. Zjawin, l. Dombrowslci, F. Maly, M. Gillen, M, Tauber, E. Glastetter, H. Buonocre, E. Hannon, M. O'Cormell. Third row-Left to right: R. Lynch, J. Luzzi, A. Jiavanelli, A. Panczer, W. Floyd, O. Huhn, M. Murowski, H. Tych, C. Thuring, C. Scrudato, K. Callahan, A. Comment, F. Mercun, T. Neary, D. Treadaway. Fourth row-Left to right: A. Zech, A, Guckenberger, G. Beck, C. Ricker, T. English, M. Tytus, A. Calabro, E. Horylja, H. Lorenz, J. Caroselli, B. Logiest, A. Crolen, R. Rudolph, H. Rungermann. Fifth row-Left to right: C. Ranne, G. Priese, W. Conklin, W. Hicks, T. Lynch, G. Stange, K. O'Kean, J. Bracco, R. Reid, K. Puskis, I. Scott, T. Miele, Among the highlights of the social activities of this organization were visits to the Brooklyn Navy Yard, National Biscuit Company, Cut-Rite Wax Paper Company, New York Daily News, and a demonstration of the teletype equipment by the jersey City Police Department. X bfi '33 QA Page ninety We ff I 'X sc ff ' . ' Y, K-My cf gw Xxx l. 7 XCJ -Q A ' ,, A IT ARCHITECTURAL CLUB Officers John Zajac, Jr. ......... ..,.,.,,,.,.,,, ,,,,,,,,,,., P r esidenr Marcus 1. Tremble ..... ...... V ice-President james Curry .,,,,,, ......... T reasurer Howard Englert ....... ............ S ecretary Mr. Martin Shapiro ............................................................ Faculty Adviser This club was organized in September, 1929 First row-Left to right: Arthur Hanez, Ed. Leskowski, Stanley Chase, Mr. Shapiro, J. Zajac, M. Tremble, Second row-Left to right: G. McCul1ill, R. Bauerdorf, H. Englert, W. Zeidles, J. Curry, W. Remus. Third row-Left to right: H. Anderson, M. Kearney, C. Bauerdorf, C. Zdunowski, J. Mathus, W. Alcorn. The activities of this club were a series of lectures given by local architects, visiting model homes and also visiting buildings of Architectural interest, and socials during the year. 'fu 'ST ,if- '?' Page ninety-one w fffgzi FFF?-:FQ . , .eg . .. .,.-. , . - 1 458' T4 'IF-I lli 4 'Ni 1 5..4'! A Q41 Cgiigwltgf ENGINEERING SOCIETY Ojfirerr Theodore Flelschman ............, President Joseph Sarno .,.,,. .,,.-. T reagufef Edward Andrews... First Vice-President Otto Huhn ......... ,.,,,,,,.,,,,,, S ecfetary Edward Brophy ..Second Vice-President Mr. H. Ouram .... .,.,.,, F acuity Adviser This club was organized February, 1936 The primary purpose of this club is to promote good fellowship and mutual aid among the members and to further the interests in engineering. First row-Left to right: O. Huhn, E. Brophy, E. Andrews, Mr. H. Ouram, T, Fleischman, J. Sarno, R. Correll. Second row-Left to right: A. Calabro, J. Goebel, W. Scott, R. Brannigan, R. Kelly, E. Bocchiaro, P. Villano. Third row-Left to right: H. Daniels, W. Pawloski, J. Martin, J. Slane, A. Gomment, F. Solomon, K. Thomaier, H. Lorenz. Fourth row-Left to right: J. Aumenta, P. Bisett, D. MacRae, C, Leigh, C. Rose, E. Ander- son, H. Cody, C. Balbo, J. Moretti. Night flight in American Air Lines Flagshipsg visual and mechanical demonstrations of Combustible gasses by Ethyl Gas Corporation. Vitaphone pictures of inaugurating the Lind- bergh Line to South America. Also, pictures of a complete South American Tour as con- ducted by the Pan- American Lines. Lectures on aeroplanes and meterology, by Professor Craft of Hudson College and New York University, who is also technical adviser to American Air-Lines. Propellers, cylinders, panel instruments, etc., received for study and permanent custody from the U. S. Navy and U. S. Army Air Corps. ib'..., ' bf st 7.1: Page ninety-two .--. -. , Ts? Q ASX 'X x 5 lf .2 ' cw, X 'X he N X fr .ff - ,- XX,ff:' Q. 5 l-' 1 A A-Ss.. v 2?- fgfl . . -fy 'r-'..- ' -a... ,I .V LAW CLUB Officer! Leslie Carrara ........ .,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,, P r esident Benjamin Kasper ..... .... V ice-President Barth Moore .......... ..,,..... T reasurer Michael Tytus .......... ............. S ecretary A. Charles Horwitz ..............................................,........... Faculty Adviser The Law Society was organized in 1932 It has as its aims the association of a group having a common absorbing interest, the fur- thering of knowledge of the functions of law, and the stimulation of interest in every day problems of legal signilicance and their solution, First row-Left to 1'ight:L. Schwartz, M. Tytus, D. Treadaway, L. Carrara, Mr. A. C. Horwitz. Second row Longo, A -Left to right: H. Englert, H. Cullen, K. Gelsinon, V. Chinigo, S. Ciaccia, J. Lehman, J. Meckier, M. Merezio, Third row-Left to right:H. Wronski, J. Devlin, A. johnson, W. Conklin, J. Burke, S. Parise, L. Fourth row Anderson, During Antonacci, R. Kelly, W, Reid. -Left to right:P. Wermert, A. Amato, P. Darcy, R. Fassnacht, A. Kroszner, C. J. Goebel, H. Ruttledge, P. Campbell, M. Redclington. the year mock trials, debates and open forum discussions were held, and promi- nent representatives of bench and bar addressed the group. Supplementary first-hand inform- ation was secured through frequent visits to local courts while they were in session. s . bfi '33 'P Page ninety-three M -A--5125- - ws' 6 Lg W ,I A -.sa Q-Iii Qiiflg-354' .fre - Q.. ' S-5'- ECONOMICS CLUB Officerf Edward Roycraft ..... ...,.,..,,,... ,,,,,..,,., P r esident Herbert Gage ............. ..... V ice-President Mr. Henry Lowenstein ..............................................,....... Faculty Adviser This Club was organized in 1935 The purpose of this organization is to foster and stimulate more intelligent thinking and develop the discussions of present day problems. Firstlrow-Left to right: A. Bender, D. McFeely, H. Gage, E. Roycraft, Mr. Henry Lowen- stem, Second row-Left to right: M. O'Donnell, T. Janco, B. Kaplan, M. Fuschetto, J. Bracco, M. Pocatille. Third row-Left to right: M. Tauber, M. O'Connell, P. Brennan, C. Smith, C. McCarthy, J. Eller, G. Stange. Fourth row-Left to right: P. Wernert, H. Wronski, P. Darcy, J. Slane, A. Comment, W. Clark, M. Tremble. The activities of the club including a series of lectures on History and Growth of the Police System and Finger-printing , Finger-Printing and Crime Detection , and Finger- Printing Bullets . Among the places of interest visited by the group are the Museum of Science and Industry, Breyer's Ice Cream Plant, R. H. Macy's Department store, National Broadcasting System, Federal Reserve Bank, Chase National Bank, and the New York Stock Exchange. It engaged in an inter club debate with the debating society and also sponsored a contest on social science subjects. R DEH -,, in ,...., ,- Page ninety-four f-C'---'T-ed, x ,fi ,I ' if J f' X ' ff ' Y-gi-', , DEBATING SOCIETY OffiL'Bl'J' G601'gC Bittfirly .... ...,............. ..,.,..,.,., P r esident Carl Balbo ............ ...... V ice-President Anthony Calabro ........A,, Treasurer Mary Thompson .,... .,..,,......, S ecretary Mr. W. Dineen .................................................................. Faculty Adviser The club was organized in April, 1952 The purpose of this club is to develop the inherent abilities of the members in the art of self-expression and argumentation. Members participated in two debates over station WHOM. Engaged in a debate with the Economics Club. Open forums were held weekly at the regular meeting of the society. First row-Left to right: G. McCal1ill, A. Calabro, M. Thompson, Mr. W. Dineen, G. Bitterly, C. Balbo. Second row-Left to right: A. Maggio. O. Huhn, R. Bauerdorf, C. Bauerdorf, W. Mahoney, A. Magura. Third row-Left to right: F. Solomon, R. Cerneglero, F. Galinski, V. Costanza, J. Kramer, A. Comment, A. Amato. X 'Qw of R iAP Page ninety-five 5 V Ajfkbm A. adv-T2 X - ,424 ' A- N. V f .X ' -3 , A f - rg..-S My Q-Nj! .a,X .A A x-:gf -11'-1' 5 . - if , .51 - t A Qg.g :i k ' if OPERALOGIAN SOCIETY Ojirer: John Capecchi .............,.....................................,...............,.,,,.,,.,, President john Provost ................ ..... ,.... ..................,.................... V i c e-President Kathryn Gelsinony . .. ..........,................... ......... S ecretary Kathryn Gelsinon ........ ,..,......,, ............,. 4 ...,.... T reasurer Miss Magrette M. Fields .................................................. Faculty Adviser The Operalogians were organized in March, 1937 First row-Left to right: j. Capecchi, Miss M. Fields, K. Gelsinon, J. Provost. Second row-Left to right: J. Slane, D. Treadaway, H. Ruttledge, P. Brennan, P. Sweeney, A. Magura. Third row-Left to right: R. Rosenblum, W. Bigus, F. Frazer, C. Albruscato, L. Borgers, A. Corgment. Fourth row-Left to right: H. Wronski, V. McMahon, H. Englert, A. O'Grady, A. Logiest, E. Reilly. The purpose of this organization is to stimualte an interest not only in the music of the great operas but in the stories as well. . Dfw 'ST f gg. fi- Page ninety-six 9' A-,4-if-1 Xxx I, 'N x X 's.f,-.-ijy!f4q'RNQ.S'.:::1- ' Nt, i rio' 1 K 'i - 5 ., xiii, 7 XT' I H N' l 5 6 - , we of I ' DRAMATIC SOCIETY 4 Officerf ' Edward Reilly .........,,.... ......... P resident Anne Magura ....... ..... V ice-President Kathryn Gelsinon ....,,. .......... T reasurer Kathryn Gelsinon .............. ..... ....................... S e cretary Miss Margarette Fields ....................,............................,.. Faculty Adviser The Dramatic Society was organized in February, 19321 First row-Left to right: A. Magura, Miss M. Fields, E. Reilly, K. Gelsinon. Second row-Left to right: C. Abruscato, D. Treadaway, H. Ruttledge, J. Slane, P. Sweeney, Third row-Left to right: R. Rosenblum, M. Comment, P. Brennan, L. Borgers, J. Capecchi, J. Provost. Fourth row--Left to right: A. Logiest, V. McMahon, H. Engert, H. Wronske, F. Frazer, A. O'Grady, E. Bigus. The society has presented several playlets for the pleasure of its own group among which are: Don't Tell My Wife , Sophomore Sue , Here We are , Xmas Carolers . Several auditorium programs were prepared and directed by Miss Fields, Faculty Adviser, with most of the members of the Dramatic Society taking part. , Dia 'ST' Page ninetylseven . -.f if 1 ! Z ,!lA!k,m-a-I-T.Ei ig Q4 X' 'ff cj? ,lm . . f.,,'w- --, K.-,yr TERPSICHOREAN SOCIETY Ojicerr Vincent Gaffney .... .......,...... ......... P r esident Louis Imbornone ,... ..., V ice-President Harry Hamilton ..... .,...... T reasurer Dorothy Both ..,.........,.. ....,........ S ecretary Mr. John M. Kelly,Jr. .............,.......................................... Faculty Adviser This society was organized in March, 1956 The purpose of this club is to promote friendship and good will through the medium of social contact as well as recreation through dancing. The Terpsichorean Society hlls a well needed position in extra-curricula activities with their appearance. It affords recreation to advanced dancers and gives the inexperienced an opportunity to gain practice. First row-Left to right: R. Killeen, K. Finnell, L. Imbornone, V. Gaffney, Mr. J. Kelly, H. Hamilton, A. Logiest, M, Black. Second row-Left to right: C Scrudato, R. Colusurdo, J. Luzzi, R. Kelly, A. Panczer, L. Lepis, A. Comment, A. Leppard, P. Brennan. Third row-Left to right: V. Chinigo, R. Brannigan, A. Calabro, O. Huhn, R. Fitzgerald, E. McNamara, J. Crefasi, A. Amato, R. Duffy. Fourth row-Left to right: T, Gallagher, R. Ried, J. Bolognini, J. Pasqualetto, J. Bracco, A. Bundies, J. Grego, A. Russo, A. Platz. i WE., - H 'ST ,p ' W Page ninety-eight Q 'ae- Q- QQ ffifgf, 'gigs ik if 7 QQ' Q aw 15,11 l Nxilxxk 040221: wwf QQQSBQXX 5 +f,'::sQ -5:5544 Q53 d 315553 sga A M v ff 'C' UT5-Ax SPGRTS Q 1 - f V Nut . -HM 5 Q'YTf,9!l -...T -..n-Y- 1-3 BASKETBALL TEAM 1 Officer: George Colley ..... ,....................... .,A,., ,,,.,,x,A. C 0 a ch john Luzzi .................................................,......,....,....,,....,..,.,,..,,. Manager Edwin Hughes .....................................,........................ Assistant Manager Top Row-Left to right: Coach, G. Coffeyg A. Keenan, J. Nugent, T. Crimmins, J. Stanton, S. Strupczeski, and J. Luzzi, Manager. Bottom Row-Left to right: B. Seleski, C, Saltzman, R. Lilley, V. Kelly, A, jivanelli, and E. Hughes, Assistant Manager. The boys of the basketball squad deserve much credit for the way they played in every game. They at all times conducted themselves as real sportsmen and did nothing but bring credit to the name of D. A. E. H. S. D. Record of 1956-57 O D Record of1936-37 O 20-Alumni ..,.........,.....,......,,.,,...,......, ,..., 1 7 25-St. Patrick's fElizabethj ....... ..... 3 0 12--Long Island U Frosh ........ ..... 4 7 20-Evening School Faculty ..... ..... 1 0 33-Newark Prep. ................ .,,.. 1 7 19-Brooklyn College Frosh ..... ..... 1 3 15-Long Island U Frosh ..... ...,, 2 8 12-Stevens' Teck JV .............. ..... 2 3 14-John Marshal Frosh ........... ...,. 2 1 24-Pratt Institute JV ..,.,... ..... 1 2 10-N. Y. Deaf School ..., .................,,,,,. 13 17-St. Patrick's ..........................,.......,.... . 14 51-St. Francis College Frosh .........,,..,.... 33 27-St. john's Frosh .................................... 62 George Coffey and the student body wishes to compliment John Luzzi, manager, and Edwin Hughes, Assistant Manager, for the part they contributed to the success of the team. In the early part of the Spring the Basketball team sponsored an intra-mural Basketball league. From this league many promising players for next season's varsity, have developed. The 1936-37 Basketball squad opened its season under the guidance of a new coach, George Coffey, former St. Peter's Prep and Fordham court star. Coffey worked hard with the team for three months in preparation for the heaviest schedule ever encountered by D. A. E. H. S. Out of fourteen games, many of which were with College teams, the Evening School was victorious six times, defeating such powerful squads as Pratt Institute, Brooklyn College, and Newark Prep. S' AQ 'iff 'P Page one hundred CI. JL 'F N K X f E J Nl '7 . xo, -A A 5 vs , 'XS i - . NN In -- , . r FACULTY BASKETBALL The Faculty Basketball Team was organized during the 1932-33 season under the direction of Messrs. M. O'Sullivan and G. Coffey. Seated--Left to right: G. Hermes, M. Shimshak, C. Horowitz, F. Caroselli, B. Cohen. Standing-Left to right: C. Antonaccio, W. Jordan, J, M. Kelly, G. Tyne, C. Budenbender, M. O'Sullivan. The purpose of the Faculty Basketball Team is to bring a stronger bond between the faculty and the studentsg to furnish funds for sports equipment for the varsity team, and to aid the scholarship fund of the Alumni Association. X ees 'f sr .P Page one hundred one '51 N- ur,-nut-.L M 4 , I paw-miig A v 5- ' fe -c fa italy Wim ,p.,L TRACK TEAM Ojj'irerJ Al Marszalek .......... .............,......... ...,.... C 0 ach Theodore Bumiller ...., ............ M anaer Fred Roti ................ ................. C aptain john T. Brogan ........... ..,..............,................................ F aculty Adviser The Track and Field Team was organized in 1929. This team was formed to further the friendship and good will, which personal contact and competition secures, for those who perform their duty with ideals and actions of sportsmen. First row-Left to right: Mr. J. T. Brogan, T. Bumiller, M. Baranski, L. Scerbo, A. Marszalek. Second row-Left to right: J. Bachusky, S. Alexanclrowicz, E. Zalewski, F. Roti, S. Szymanski. Third row-Left to right: J. Burke, V. Zalewski, M. Kearney, J. Scerbo. To the Track team of 1937 the entire student body of Dickinson Accredited Evening High School owe more than praise, for the marvelous record that they compiled in the face of almost insurmountable handicaps that has insured a ranking unsurpassed in the glorious annals of Evening High. Under the guirance of Coach Al Marszalek and catained by their outstanding star Fred Roti, they took art in indoor and outdoor meets numbered among which were the Yorkville Athletic Meet, the Lincoln Revival Meet, the Seton Hall Track Meet, Villanova Invitation Track Meet, climaxing their season with the successful conduction of the Meet under the direction of the D. A. E. H. S. Athletic Association. At all these events they captured many places. At the Villanova Meet they won high ranking in competition with schools from all over the country. Although they failed to retain the Evening School's championship they gave a great account of themselves. g S- of 'BT Y fp Page one hundred two X - 153. b fff' f-xc , -S f I , - - M QM D fr, .sy sh- Kr K 7 C af X59 V A A fa I S4 cf' TENNIS TEAM Ojjticerr Andrew Pevour .... ......-.-.--... ---- C 2 PU-in Marcus Tremble ..... ..........-..---..---.------------------- M afligel' Maurice j, 0'Su1livan .......,........................ Coach and Faculty Adviser The Owl Tennis Team was organized for its ninth season under the direction of Coach Maurice O'Sullivan, Three victories were recorded in the hrst live contests, after intensive practice sessions at Bayside Park had prepared the squad for the season. During these five contests Louis jahn was undefeated in singles competition. The members of the Varsity Team are Louis jahn, Andrew Pevour, Michael Scimone, Herbert Brauer and john Kramer. Left to right-Louis, jahn, Michael Scimone, Coach Maurice J. O.Sullivan, John Kramer, Herbert Brauer. May 1-Lincoln ............. 8-St. Aloysius ....... 15-Dickinson .... 22- ' Ferris ........ sf e ex Away Home Home Away 'f st ..,,f- june 5-Lincoln ...... 12-Ferris .......... 19-Dickinson 26--Faculty ........ Home Home Away Home 'T Page one hundred three f , me-C Q 'P Q ff' A,..cfX,3y A S' Qin-Lf!! -..,-' ,E-:-5 1 TENNIS CLUB Ojfirerr Marcus Trcmble ....... .... P resident Herbert Brauer ...... ...... T reasurer Catherine Kennedy ....... .......... S ecretary Mr. P. Scheideberg ,..... ...,. F aculty Adviser This group was organized in March, 1933 The purpose of the organization is to bring together students who have tennis as a common interest and to provide facilities for practice. Also to teach beginners the funda- mentals of the game and how to play correctly, through instruction and competition. During the off-season tennis matches are played in the gymnasium. However, as soon as the tennis' season opens the players play on the public courts. First row-Left to right: H. Brauer, Mr. P. Scheideberg, M. Tremble, C. Kennedy. Second row-Left to right: R. Duffy, J. Provost, J Kramer, W Bigus Third row-Left to right: M Cassidy, A Cassidy, E Kaprowski, T Carey g e- be Y 6 Page one hundred four f Wg? 'Sic iffy? QAEM M by ' V I 3 PM vgvi, , . . , ffllw2,2N Swv? 400 7 iilgw. 43 .Q-53313 dwgggifafkf 231: J? Q 'A NM QSXWQ W5 vii-X avg sggmg-,away cgi? Il?vg.- Vg 42255 Allldkagf ALUMINI M , M12 A . A L ff lm fx 'yi ras' ll 'xi 5 , . .--f as , 1 m-,-,- . ALUMNI BASKETBALL TEAM T Michael Lamont ......................................,.....................................,..... Coach Citro Citro ..........,.......... ....... A ssistant Coach William Thompson ....... .......i.,..,.,,, C aptain john Luzzi ........................................................,....,......,,.,......,..... Manager Mr. john T. Brogan ..........,..........L.............,.,..,.,.....,........,,..L,,,,,,., Adviser The Alumni Basketball Team was organized in October, 1935 Sitting-Left to right: Sacks Roamer, Rube Fried, Bill Thompson, captaing john O'Connell, Michael Lamont, coachg Leo Thompson, Reinhold Schrader. Standing-Left to right: John Luzzi, managerg William Forsell, Ernie Cutler, Fred Maritz, Sal Citro, john Serihn, Frank Smith and Tommy Rush, assistant manager, The Dickinson Evening Alumni Basketball Team playing its second year of outside basketball against Hudson, Bergen, and Union Counties, have established themselves as one of the strongest teams in this vicinity. The Alumni's record in two years of playing, shows them winning 42 out of 48 games the first year and 50 out of 60 games the second, giving them a record of 98 victories against 16 defeats. A The team has been coached by Michael Lamont, former Evening School player, and his work with the .Alumni Team has been tireless in an effort to establish them as Hudson County's favorites. The Alumni boast of victories over the St. Peter's Club, Matty Picenno's, Lynd- hurst Collegiates, New York University Evening School, Rocknes, Little Ferry A. A., Ballard and Ballard, and the Elizabeth Sons of Poland. Page one hundred six A, N 4f'qnT'AJxix JZ N5 'iff 3 -,-.ire A: , J . v W It cdr, x , Q - g .1--r TNS, K il ,V ' 7 ,I X si A -f' . --, A .. A X... 7 'I iii. ':QF1:.- . -,... ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Walter Wygant ....,.. ..,.......,,...,. P rCSidEl1I Helen LYl'lCl1---- ....,......,. Corresponding Teresa M, D'AlVia ..,,...,.,,...,. Vice-President lVllCl'lilf?l A- I-3m0flf .... ......,,,,,,,,,4 S ecfetafieg Amelia H, DeBenedetta ....,,,,....,... Treasurer joseph Carroll .......... H Henrietta E. Schwarting ..f...Rec. Secretary George Dengrove ..... 'W' Sergeam5'm'Arm5 John T. Brogan ................ Faculty Adviser In the Fall of 1929, a group of twenty graduates of the School met to discuss plans for the formation of an Alumni Association. The present-day Dickinson Accredited Evening High School Alumni Association is the result of this meeting. Membership has steadily increased in the years which followed, through the graduation of each Senior Class, with a present membership of almost 2000. The interest and spirit is demonstrated by the manner in which the members attend the meetings, both social and business. As compared to some of the other school activities, the enthusiasm and spirit responsible for its conception are quickly bringing it to the fore. The aims of the Alumni Association embrace practically all fields of intellectual endeavors: and in following these ideals, the Association is certain to be a credit to its members and to the School. The Scholarship Fund-In order to insure the growth of this fund, the Alumni Associa- tion has arranged to set aside a certain per cent of the profits received from the various affairs, dances and receptions held by the Organization in addition to monies received from other sources. In this way, the fund has grown to an extent which warranted the awarding of the first Alumni Scholarship in 1936, this is to continue each year. Another annual feature of the Alumni Association is the awarding of a Key to the most representative student of the Senior Class. And, each year, the Alumni Association tenders to the Graduating Classes a Reception- Dance which is held in the new gym. Among the educational activities of the Alumni Association during the past year was D .CQ in 'ST -le S V .-.,f- Page one hundred seven w 'f-p 5-,L . ... .- iz A , v , w- fri- ii Q AXA - . ea! xii-if-1. 1 V -ug- EL ..igg:5,, ALUMNI ASSOCIATION CCont.l the presentation, in the school auditorium, of a number of well-known educators who spoke to the students of the School and members of the Alumni. The Alumni Association plans to have both a Boat Ride and a Bus Ride during the summer, dates for which have not as yet been decided upon. The Alumni meetings have been rather exciting for the past few months with proposed plans under way covering a General Convention of the Alumni Association of Dickinson Accredited Evening High School to last a week, which is to be headed by Tad Tulin, assist- ed by Dav Gladstone, Michael A. Lamont, Amelia H. DeBenedetta, Cora L. Wanamaker, james Boyle, Henrietta E. Schwarting, Teresa M. D'Alvia and George Dengrove. Since this Convention would prove to be a gigantic undertaking and require much time for its plans, same has been postponed for the present, and the original plans will be carried out in the Fall. In the meantime, the main social event of the year will be a Reunion Dinner-Dance, to be held at the Swiss-Chalet, on Saturday, June 19th, 1937, which will be preceded by a Get-to-gether Dance held in the new gym on Wednesday, June 2nd, Alumni meetings are held every second Friday. It is hoped that the new graduates will continue to keep the spirit of the School at heart and take up with the Alumni Association of D. A. E. H. S. We extend a courteous welcome to all new members with the hope that each one will join in the activity of the Association and actually be a part of it. ALUMNI CHATTER CLASS OF 1929 Amelia Boshart teaches school in Fairview. Why doesn't Julius Caroselli come to meetings? joseph Carroll is still with the john Hancock Insurance Company and always seems to be looking for business. Lawrence J. Feeney, who graduates in june, 1937 from Fordham, has been doing practice-teaching in Demarest High School ffemale classesj. We wonder if Larry still rides the ferry boats? Rose-Marie Mocco teaches school in North Bergen. Where are all those once very enthusiastic students of the Class of 1929? CLASS OF 1930 Mary E. Carroll is now married. Catherine Enright married Charlie ?, and both are the proud parents of a four- month-old baby. William T. Finnegan is where? Michael Flannery is now a dentist. Why don't we ever see George Galvin, Sylvia Golub, George F. Grenier, Dorothy E. Larkin, Winifred V. Porter, Anna R. Reheis, and all the other members of the Class of 1930? A CLASS OF 1931 Does anyone see Al Carroll with Gert Snell? Frank Cerco is still interested in autos and the Shore. Where, oh where, is Andy Heintzman? Thomas Higgins has made himself conspicuous by his absence. Mae Mahoney is still interested in Alumni affairs. Why does Bill Pendergast let his busines get the best of him and his disposition? And where are all the other members of the Clas sof 1951? X of' 'ST Page one hundred eight l I W yr F Ex., 'ri - 7 I KX :JJ ' n i A 5. QQ, . J ' ALUMNI CHATTER KConl:.J CLASS OF 1932 David Dohrman is still writing ads. Frederic Friesendorf is seen about the Journal Square section, but one losses sight of him before he can be attracted. What has happened to Florence Janko? Elizabeth Malone is an office secretary at the Margaret Hague Maternity Hospital. Is John O'Connor still planning to attend Oxford, England? Douglas R. Wanamalter, having discontinued his theological studies in Spokane, Washington, found the gal of his heart out West and is happily married, and at present he is connected the Washington Water Power Company. Dorothy Wardley is never seen around the School. Why don't we ever see Angela Barbata, Eleanor Chaney, Clarence Clark, George A. Feneis, Edmund Holmes, Benno Knirsch, Helen Larkin, James Lepis, Josephine Lepis, Doris Meyer, Margaret Newton, Charles Pleus, Rosalie Quinn, Gustav Roesch, Edwin Rauscher, William Sahr, Bovio Scialli, Martin Slacum, Felix Stanizewski, Helen Sulkowski, George and Ruth Tegtmeyer. Alice Terashan, George Toth, Philip Tulipan, Gertrude Unger, Jessie Rinaldi. and all the other members of the class of 1932? CLASS OF 1933 Jeanette Hallahan and Walter Case QEskowsky are now Mr. and Mrs. Amelia DeBenedetta four Treas.J is one-half of the committee meetings. George Dengrove fGenderowskyJ is still called Dynamite,'. We will be very happy to welcome Al. Harding and congratulate him. Walter Letzsch is now happily married and we are waiting for him to fly in from Chicago to sell us some insurance. Meta Lundy is still faithful. Vincent Russo doesn't seem to say much at the meetings any more. Walter Wygant four Pres.J certainly has his hands full at our meetings. What has become of William R. Ahrens, Eleanor Anderson, Edwina Berg, Helen Broedel, Rita Burke, Irving Calamia, Charles S. Campennella, Walter A. Meyer, Robert P. Clark, Miriam Coholan, Arnold D. Danielson, James and John D'Alvia, Martin Dolan, Florence I. Donahue, Harry G. Drapeau, Robert J. Duplessis, Alice Egan, Walter Fahrer, Margaret Fox, Louis Fraulo, Gene- vieve Guilfoyle, William H. Hartmann, Robert J. Healy, John J. Henry, Carl Hinz, Robert Kelly, Mildred J. Kopp, Harold P. Krantz, Charles LaRue, Dorothy Logiest, Harry Mason, Mary P. Magnet, Joseph Mesel, Russell G. Mailley, Claire Maxwell, J. Vincent McCarthy, Richard T. McCormick, Walter J. Mendles, Edward M. Moye, Mary Mulpeter, Eleanor Murphy, Robert and Walter Pahl, Catherine Roemlein, Joseph Roerty, Hugh P. Ruddy, Marie Sal- vatore, Rudolph, Seliger, Jewel Senkowska, Anne Thorsen, Joseph G. B. Tucker, Marion Underwood, Charles A. Werner, Ralmond Wolfe, Charlotte R. Woolson, and all the other members of the Class of 1933? X Big , ,.-. Page one hundred nine 1 A T' rr s so 'C it TIL X ,..-A - vu'- ALUMNI CHATTER CCont.J CLASS OF 1954 Elsie M. Ammann married J. P. Bruniger and they are the proud parents of a one-year-old daughter. William F. J. Burns is another happily married member. Karl Ege QPythias and Robert J. Gracey are still the same old pals. Judith' M. Esehak is married toa New York City artist. Michael A. Lamont is the other half of the committee meetings. What has happened to the Politician, james A. Loughlin? john Leppard is about to say I do . Henrietta E. Schwarting four Sec'yj is still very active in school affairs, and intends to concentrate better in the goings-on at the meetings so that there will be no further arguments about the minutes. Cora L. Wanainaker has made her appearance again-she is always taking Civil Service tests. , Where are Catherine Adams, Matthew Ahearn, Doris L. Aiken, O. Peter Barozotto, Viola M. Boltman, john N. Bongino, Frank W. Canfield, Anita C. Coholan, Samuel C. Dixon, Agnes Egan, Thomas Feneis, Wanda Fedrowitz, joseph E. Georgi, Samuel Ginsburg, Harry T. Gross, Walter Guinon, Alfred Jaffe, Peter Marcopul, Donald McCue, Ann McLaughlin, james F. Meold, Agnes C. Merz, Edith Patrick, Henry Rohlling, Lillian Sandell, Francis X1 Schlig, Eugene H. Schmitt, Patrick F. Sharkey, john R. Swartz, Vincent J. Synol, and all other members of the Class of 1934? Dorothy Lehmann and M. joseph Kelly-are they still a couple or are they women CLASS OF 1955 john Darcy is tired of working nights in the bank. ' Giuseppe Della Malva, chaiman of the Play Committee, is on the road, in the show business. John Geraghty is connected with the Chemical National Bank of N. Y. Gertrude Mahon shows up once in a while. Ernest Rusch is still with the MacFadden Publishing Company. jack Stevens is a Junior Draftsman with the United States Navy Department. Why don't we see Nancy Amato, Vivian Bradley, Mildred Butler, Mildred Don- nelly, Kathleen Kelly, Claire Maiewska, Cecelia Wendelken, Edward J. Beenick, Robert Conway, Edward Finucane, George Fowler, Farrell Grogan, Harold Hansen, Edward Higgins, Peter Lambert, Hugh and james McCarthy, Thomas Moran, Edward Morrissett, Edward Reilly, Thomas Sharkey, Earl Stoveken, john Sullivan, William Thompson, Jeremiah Woods, and all the other members of the Class of 1935? CLASS OF 1936 Kathleen Bergin has already taken the big step . Eugene DeMartini is rather active in the School and its affairs. Marguerite Grom and Arthur N. DeBuske expect to say I do in june. Helen M. Mast and John G. Douglass Qclass officersj also expect to say I do during the month of June. X 'fu BT L Page one hundred ten ' :JI +22 ,B A ALUMNI CHATTER tCont.J Alfred J. Hening attended the first meeting of the Alumni and gave an excellent report on the affair we held at the Elk's Club. Why don't we see Claire Guppara, Margaret R. Finnerty, Marie A. Helg, Marie jach, Ida G. Hoffman, Marie C. Nortarianni, Kathryn A. Tight, Dorothy Treadaway, Madeline M. Wurtz, Edward L. Anderson, William B. Chambers, Michael Ehnat, Lawrence Geraghty, Thomas Hartnett, Henry Miller, joseph J. Miller, Patrick A. Orrick, john 0'Neil, William Richards, Reinhold Schrader, and all the other members of the Class of 1936? MISCELLANEOUS Theresa Ahlbach '29 and Teresa D'Alvia four Vice-Pres.j '32 are going to attend meeting from now on so that they will know what is going on in the Alumni Association. Are Kay Shappert '31 and John J. Dugan '34 that way about each other? joseph Dollard, former Dickinson basketball star, who married Helen Henry last year, is playing basketball at the Hoboken Y these days. Miriam Rau is already married. We are happy to have Mr. Q'31j and Mrs. f'29j jack Langan fformer Anne Del fOrmej back with us again. Which one walks the floor now? We heartily welcome the young men and women of the Classes of 1937 into the ranks of the Dickinson Evening Alumni Association. We congratulate you on your successful completion of undergraduate work at Dickinson Evening. No more will you tread her halls as undergraduates. The fact that you will be at once happy and unhappy at leaving is a contradictory statement that will never need be explained to you. Dickinson Evening and her brood of Owls have taken their place in your heart and with each passing year you will treasure more fondly the happy memories of them. The Alumni .Association represents a splendid medium for continuing these friendships formed at school. The dramatic, debating, athletic and social functions are almost certain to interest you. We invite you to utilize their advantages to the utmost. We want you to help maintain and further the aims of our Association and help us tosurpass the magnificent achievements of the past year, forever carrying the name of our Alma Mater to still greater heights. The milestone you now pass probably looms large before you, but you should not permit it to hide from your view the many milestones beyond. Your demonstration of perseverance as a graduate of Dickinson Evening is certainly worthy of still higher achievements. A stop in your upward march might prove fatal to your ambitions. A period of leisure and self-satisfaction might lure you from your chosen vocation and leave you stranded by the wayside of failures and would-be-successes. The goal for which you have thus far sacrificed so much would then be lost. You have given the world ample proof that you are made of the sterner stuff ! Continue the good work! The members of the Dickinson Evening Alumni Association extend to you, one and all, their sincere good wishes for your future health, happiness, and success. The members of the Alumni Association of Dickinson Accredited Evening High School are proud to extend their congratulations to Albert C. Harding, a member of the Class of June, 1933, who graduated from the Colorado School of Mines this year as an honor student. Further success to you, Al. 's-S-- i , 55 '51 AP Page one hundred eleven ll -The in 'T',raA-- Q kj-Blix Qi V cg if so so 'T El Qill -,.,.. ., P :,,.,r:v X .Q -V '- . .c-? -435- ips THOUGHTS OF A GRADUATE LAST MINUTE - With the shuffling of many feet, the sound of countless voices, whispering, laugh- ing, with much excitement and fuss, the auditorium of Dickinson High School becomes rapidly filled. Commencement Night-and the entire school takes on the appearance of a very gala occasion. This night, apart from all others, is the night when the Seniors of Dickinson Evening reach their goal, attain their objective, and receive the final reward for work done and time spent in Dickinson. There is a curious solemnity, yes, even sadness felt only by those wearing caps and gowns. Each one of us looks back over the many months spent working here. What pleasant memories we all entertain of that grand time. Most of us feel un- explainably unhappy, and, thinking-realizing that we are no longer students, to come nightly to this grand place and participate in its regular routine, we almost frantically wish that this were not graduation night, that we should not, in a short time, walk across the stage to receive our diplomas, which will tell us that our work in Dickinson Evening is completed. But, someone may ask, aren't you glad that it's all over? Do you mean the Club meetings we held planning for this and that, having heated discussions on important questions as whether we should buy balloons for the St. Patrick's Day social with shamrocks on them or get twice as many plain green ones for the same amount of money? Do you mean the dances and the basketball games and other social functions at which we had such glorious times? Do you mean the nights we crammed so before Mid-terms and Finals with the teachers giving up such definite hints as to what to expect but never what not to. No, we are not glad that all that has come to an end. Of course, just like any other task, we had work to do, things to study and learn, and homework to prepare and difficulties to overcome round of pleasure by no means, but, now we feel as though, with the completion of our High School education one of the most beneficial and enjoyable periods in our lives has ended, quite to our sorrow. The line of graduates moves slowly, up the stairs, and across the stageg each one confident and proud, forever jubilant, still there is but one thought, one emotion is foremost in the mind of each graduate and that is a loving devotion and unfailing loyalty to Dickinson Evening which will increase and grow stronger as posterity becomes a realization. -ANNE LOGIEST. cg .5531 Page one hundred twelve A S' Q Q- H-dk T3 40, . 'SRX 2 335223: 1 7 x f -ok Wu C' s , ' N. SLA EQ? Y f604b5,5,33 Ev fabixwwa Qnl N, 225 Ni 112.0 K w Aa -:W sitggt 'J 031 4' X , x40 ' I-I fl! ff fe! 2524 32 'Q 62 94, of 'feb gpg? UMQI? 4494? Mais- -5553545 ri MQW 7 7 5i'?'Nw?3 7? fi -...Z gggh 4 v 3 e ..2'7 ,. s.- 'la 4 K, .1 nn ef! -1-r: -W3 RL' ' gh U- I Q! J! fgf ff' . si Q f7f?f',1if1- xv?-,75 T :X A ff - ' 9 ,.-V ef' r X fa-'f ff 5 l:f 3'1!fN -2 V 2.1 Vw Ty fav 'T fi ivy 5-A?gQN'X,.v ig! fl - W4 xx. dwllllxn X V il I . -ch, TV . i in . I mwwfx . , - il- X 1 1-I x A ee 4 ':-'.mlK-- f J M , L lQ ai v xx If 3. i f 3 ef- .ai gem K: I.: ' '50 T' xl XS, ff A nxif 4'-Q' Ax fpiw X 2 H- ,jx 555 -J , 1' ,f ,, - W V naflfewxf' Q38 'QQ W!! N Af.-JE , n .A X X I iff N6,:+.,,5 IDHO L Z' f 1' x X aw w w new W, gif -01 'ge' A 's if i X K.ke.'XTvTms QM, is ej 4, 1 X f X! ,. 0 A f Q .4qy, OwI'NS'l:lq X if ei Z NX' lf' n f .in Q. n max' X -,: Nw-3. ff: we if Q i , e ee y fwmf--N'- df-fe' ' We 7? 1 ff ' - A 'ar' mam ow1. ' i :Q K l OUR SENIORS IN ACTION Page one hundred fourteen 1? -- -225 x... ,, -27 f-xx -s X' 'J' 'uf X- K, tr A W ,. ! ' ' :rj THE DREAMER Give me the soul of the dreamer Witli visions beyond today, To labor and trust the future To bring me its finest pay. He who has no tomorrow, Lives but the drab today, Knows not the joys of striving, The building of yesterday. Dreams are the mighty giants Born in each fertile brain Let them not lie in stupor But arouse them to work for gain. -Kathryn CAN YOU IMAGINE? john Burke following thru at a dance? Mr. O'Sullivan with a four-in-hand tie? George Bitterly being late for a Grapevine meeting? Louise Lepis without those curls? Andrew Milton wifthout his pipe? Anne Magura not being active? Mr. Messler relaxing? Louis Imbornone not seconding a motion? Wagga J rg IF. -. , -r 4' ff 471 - Gelsinon. Mr. Feisler not being concerned about his students and the school? The seniors attending a meeting en masse ? Angelo Amato without his clear enunciation? Miss Rudnitsky wi-thout her flashing smile? Leaving Mr. M. Kelly's class without learnig something of history? Mr. Dineen not being polite and considerate? The Owl Staff without the help of Mr. Messler? Being bored in Mr. Lillis' class? The evening school without the Mid-terms and Finals ? Miss Taylor being boisterous? The Night Watch without the Gossip High-Lites ? Ruth Newton not being helpful? Neil Stadter not wanting to do dramatics? FAVORITE EXPRESSIONS Mr. john M. Kelly- Very good, very good, fine. Mr. W. Dineen- Do you follow me ? Mr. Lillis- Go in Mr. Cooke- Do you Miss Sullivan- Class, Mr. Lowenstein- As the corner and make shamef, get it? stop your typing please. the time is drawing to a close-we better step on it. s-, Dig RUTH C. NEWTON. Page one hundred fifteen re Q .fl fi fr' I I ' 1 .6.-,ixfytl P - P1 . rt -2-5 How About Smoking The class composition was on Kings , and this is what one boy wrote: The most powerful king on earth is Wore king, the laziest, Shir-king, the wittiest, jo-king: the quietest, Thin-king: the thirstiest, Drin-king: the slyest, Win-king: and the noisiest Tal-king. Bredren, said the colored preacher, when you' livah's out of ordah what is good for it? Livah pills. When you' system is run down, what is good for it? Tonic pills. Fo' othah bodily ills yo' take othah pills: but deah bredren only one kin' of pills for soul dat's out of ordah, and dat's de goss-pill. fgospelj. Teacher: Who was the king of France during the Revolution? Confused Student: Louis the Thirteenth-no, the Fifteenth-no, the Fourteenth-no, well, any- how, he was in his teens. The mistress was telling the new Scandinavian servant about her duties. These things belong to my nephew: he won't come home until this summer. He's in Yale. Ya, too bad. How long he ban there for? I don't understand. What do you mean? My cousin, he ban there too. He got drunk, the judge say, Sven, thirty days in yail. The professor had written on the back of a student's paper: 'Please write more legiblyf' The next day the student went to the desk and asked: Professor ,what is that you wrote on the back of my theme? The laziest guy in the world handed in at exam paper in which he said the following: Please see Pete's paper for my answers. Teacher: If you substract fourteen from a hun- dred sixteen, what's the difference? johnny: Yeah, I think it's a lot of foolishness, too. i Only Distantly Related Two sons of Erin were talking together: And so your name is O'Sullivan said one. Are yez related to Maurice O'Sullivan? Very distantly, said the other. I was me mothers' lirst child and Maurice was the thir- teenth. True to Erin Two Irishmen were discusing the grave illness of a friend for whom the doctors had given up hope. Said Mike: Pwhat's the matter wid him, any WHY Gangrene , replied Pat. The saints be praised, said 'Mike. for letting him die wid the roight color. 9.- Qt..,13 ben Page one hundred sixteen ' Knew His Parsing Teacher: Parse the sentence: 'Tom married -Iane'. Small boy: Tom's a noun because he's the name of something. Married is a conjunction be- cause it joins Tom and jane. jane's the verb because she governs the noun. Poor Dog Father: What are you drawing, jim? james: Why, a dog. Father: But where is his tail? james: Oh, that is still in the ink bottle. Couldn't Raise Him A: Were you born in Texas? B: Yas suh. A: And raised there, too? B: Dey tried to raise me once but the rope broke. Mama, said little Elsie, I never yet saw any picture of angels with whiskers. Do men not go to heaven? Well, yes, said Mother, some go to heaven, but they get there by a close shave. Gentle Reminder Mr. Poorpay: I would like to have this pair of trousers reseated. I sit a lot, you know. Tailor: All right, and I hope you brought the bill I sent you along to be receipted, too. I've stood a lot, you know. Hoaxer: I underwent an operation yesterday. Easymark: You surprise me. Was it very serious? Hoaxer: I had a growth removed from my head. Easymark: Great guns! And here you are up and around and looking fine. Hoaxer: Yes, I had my hair cut. Many Turnovers There is too much system in this school busi- ness! growled Tommy. just because I snickered a little, the monitor turned me over to the teacher, the teacher turned me over to the principal: and the principal turned me over to the paw. What that all? No, Paw turned me over his knee. Strip: Tell me George, will it be an offense if I catch lish in this pool? Coffey: No, it will be a miracle. Litvack: My grandfather died at 96. Falk: That's nothing, my aunt died at 140- Waterman Street. 'I - 1 HI: Q4 E gg 3 Ekbflglwx-if 'E 9- kglgfif, Sim M7 E44 JCER E 0 uv 'pxgngpva .L L-JUL-Ez. E E 41? UN E 4? :fc-KXKN, PQ-25? r I gl QQU W W - QQLSX E E ' 'Eqfige Sm E 0' tax E 'fb- :Qu w Q YJ? V in ADVERTISEMENTS lNDEX TO ADVERTISEMENTS A Art Reproduction Corp. Page .......l22 Amer. T. W. Co. ................ ....... 1 29 Amato, Angelo ........,......... ....... 1 19 Academic Cap 8z Gown. B Ben's Grocery ....... Bittery, George ..... .......l24 .......l29 .......l30 Balbo, Carl ........ ........ ....... 1 2 9 C Chmura, Paul .,.................. ....... 1 21 Carlton, M. 8: U. Mart. .... ....... 1 21 Christ Hospital ............... ....... 1 30 Chasis 8: Son .,....,.......... .......... 1 26 Court House Market ....... D Dynes, James W. Dieges 8: Clust ...... .. DeK1mpe's .................. ' E Executive Council ..... F Feucht, J., '32 .......... Flaherty, Peter ........... G, G1aeser's Sons .......... M. H. Gordon ......... H Hudson College ........ Huck, John ............. Holterman, J. ......... . I .......l2l .......l29 .......l25 .......l2l .......l31 .......l2l .......l19 .......l29 .......l2l .......l19 .......l29 .......l29 I. Pioneri Pol. Club ..... ....... l 29 J Jacktman ..... ..... .... Jan. Seniors ........... June Seniors ............ Jackson Tie Shop ...... Page one hundred eighteen .......l21 .......127 .......l20 .......l29 K Page Kollege Klub .............. ........ 1 30 Kost 8: Baird .............. ........ 1 30 M Markus, D. C. ................ ........ 1 21 Manhattan Florist ........ ........ 1 29 Majestic Tailors ........ ........ 1 29 Magura, M. J. Marshall, John ....... ........121 ........1l9 Miron, B. ..................... . ........ 121 N Nehms, H. .................. ...... . .. ...... ..l2l New Baldwin Florist P ........l30 Plaza Tea Garden ...... ........ 1 29 Prof. Petersen ......... R ........l29 Ruhe's ..... .............. ........ 1 2 1 S Sunder, F. ................ . Staiger, Charles ..... Simons, John ........... ........l21 ........l29 ........123 Scott Printing Co. .... ........ 1 28 Spencer's ...................... ........ 1 19 Sheffield Silver Co. ...... ........ 1 30 Sewing Club ................ ........ 1 19 Silverstein, Dr. B. .... ........ 1 29 St. Francis ............... ........ 1 30 Silon, Harry ................ ........ 1 21 T Tolfsen, H. T. ........... ........ 1 21 Three Girls .................. ........ 1 21 W Dr. Westberg ........... ........ 1 19 Waldstein, L. .......... . Z ........l30 Dr. Zumft .................... ........ 1 29 JO' Square Advanced Secretarial Courses 2-7156 for High School Graduates ACCOUNTING Special and Summer FINANCE Near Journal Square Classes PLACEMENT BUREAU Comptometer, Dietaphoue and Adding! Machines 910 Bergen Avenue at Newkirk Street JERSEY CITY, N. J. PAT RCDNS DR. WEISSBURG PETER FLAHERTY SEWING CLUB ANGELO AMATO WHN MARSHALL I-luDsoN COLLEGE A fDivision of St. Peteris Collegej A Co-educational Institution chartered and ap- proved by the State of New Jersey GRADUATE DEPARTMENT A course of study leading to a degree of LL.M. COLLEGE DEPARTMENT Two years' liberal arts course, preparing the stu- dent for entrance to the Law Department. LAW DEPARTMENT Three years' standard law school curriculum lead- ing to the degree of Bachelor of Laws CLL.B.7 SPECIAL COURSES DEPARTMENT Banking, Public Speaking and Debate, Parliamen- tary Law, English. No entrance requirements needed, and no academic credit given in this de- partment. WIN A CO-EDUCATIONAL SCHOLARSHIP! Open to all High School Graduates. Write For Particulars Registration Now Open! Term Opens Oct. 4, 1937 Write for Bulletin of Information describing courses and cost of tuition. JOHN MARSHALL COLLEGE OF LAW ALEXANDER P. ORMSBY, LL.D., Dean 40 JOURNAL SQUARE JERSEY CITY, N. J. ae ACCOUNTING FINANCE GENERAL BUSINESS EDUCATION PRE-LAW, Evening Session 37.00 Per Point ae il Hudson Boulevard at Montgomery Street Jersey City, New Jersey MARITAL WORKS Mr. McKenna: Cheer up, old mang why don't you drown your sorrow ? Al Maggie: She's bigger than I am, and, besides, it would be murder. Page one hundred nineteen Gompliments of JUNE CLASS 1 3156115 937 HUMOR OF WEDDED BLISS Apple- I was a fool when I married you. The Mrs.- I knew that, deal, but I thought you would improve. Page one hundred twenty Compliments of HARRY C. NEHMS C.P.A., LL. B. Compliments of Mr. H. GORDON Compliments of PAUL CHMURA, Jr. Compliments of D. C. MARKUS Compliments of MARALENE JEAN MAGURA Compliments of Ruth C. Newton Rose Mackey Betty T. Krohn Hoboken 3-1362 Webster 4-2177 Jour. Sq. 2-9645 The Home of Sweets HARRY SILON RUHE'S Wholesale Manufacturers of PAINTS, WALL PAPER 85 MASON SUPPLIES Hardware, Electrical 85 Janitor Supplies 312-314 FIRST ST., HOBOKEN 426 CENTRAL AVE., JERSEY CITY ICE CREAM and CONFECTIONERY 544 Newark Avenue Jersey City, N. J. DICKINSON EVENING HIGH SCHOOL BOOKS BoUGII'r and s0LD at M I R O N ' S 518 Newark Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Best Wishes to the GRADUATION CLASSES of 1957 ' JOSEPH FEUCHT, '32 SAY IT WITH FLOWERS DeKIMPE'S FLORAL SHOP 285 Central Avenue Corner Hutton Street Journal Square 2-0924 Telegraph Service You May Graduate from D. E. But Not From the Local Bunnery SUN DER'S BAKERY 520 Newark Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Tel. Journal sq. 2-5293 WE DELIVER ACHTMA ,S CARLTON MEAT and VEGETABLE I I MARKET ce Cream, Confectronery and D. CAMMARANO, Prop. Luncheonette Carlton and Montrose Avenues 855 BERGEN AVENUE Jersey City, N. J. - Jersey City, N. J. Phone Bergen 3-8528 COURT HOUSE FIIUIT s Y'EGE'1'A Bu-: INIARKET s. SCAFIDI at soNs 572 NEWARK AVE. JERSEY CITY, N. J. Best Wishes of A FRIEND I want to get a divorce from my husband. On what grounds asked the lawyer. Insanity Was he crazy at the time of your marriage ? Oh, dear nog I was. - Page one hundred twenty-one Tim Ekguwhgx 0zDW5imweQf'YZeC9aJ me the Sill! and Craffffzanfhzf 0 f the ART REPRODUCTION CORP I2 JOURNAL SQUARE - JERSEY CITY, N. Phone: jOurnal Square 2-1999 - New York Office: 96-5d1AvENUE NEW YORK CITY, N. Y. Phone: GR3lHC1'Cy 5-9397 Warden, said the criminal who was ticketed to the gallows, I need some exerc just what kind of exercise do you want ? I I'd like to skip the rope, he grinned. I e one hundred twenty-two RINGS vw PINS vw KEYS for Clam gf JANUARY I 9 3 7 fzmzzlrbea' by JOHN E. SIMONS QD.A.E.H.S. ALUMNUSQ 551 FIFTH AVENUE New York City J E W E L E R DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY REMOUNTING DIAMONDS a Specialty Little b y t L k t h t t y k g Well, miss t t t h d t k Pg hddt yh Gotho CLASS OP1937 umfghiglxa NATIONAL ACADEMIC CAP AND GOWN CC. vx.f'b'Q-afxw A R C H S T R E E T PHILADELPHIA, PA. W MANUFACTURING :-: SPECIALTY :-: JEWELRY DIECES 81 CLUST I7 Iohn Street :-: : New York, N. Y. ' OFFICIAL IEWELERS - - - to - - - CLASS OF JUNE, 1937 fijbdlla ATHLETIC IVIEDALS 81 TROPHIES FRATERNITY JEWELRY Sally H Two weeks ago I refused to marry Freddie, and he has b d lc g heavily eve MadelineP Y tht f lhhbt fFdd -h k h to stop a c I b P g hundred twent yi Cl-IASIS 6' SON Photographers 41 HARRISON AVENUE Jersey City New jersey Phone Delaware 3-6455 QJWKD h Completely Equipped to Render the Highest Quality Craitsmanship and an Expedited Service on Both Personal Portraiture and Photography For School Annuals QJWKD Official Pbotogmplaer of the THE OWL Rose: That young bride worships her husband, doesn't she ? John: Well, she places burnt offerings before him three times a day. P g h dred twenty-six cmwhmmbqf IA UARY CLASS 1937 XID An electrician had arrived at three A. M., and was sneaking upstairs when his wife called out: What's the matter? Wire you insulate ? Page one hundred twenty-seven QIXUZZ Qlflifdlfligg Q LAYOUTS carefully made COLORS in the right combination TYPE to express the atmosphere and spirit of your business PRESSWORK from careful make-ready E PAPER of proper selection INK made from the Finest pigments BINDING-the fitting climax in the production of a Fine piece of printing DELIVERY-All work neatly packaged and delivered when promised. Que flgeinesilf Phone us for your next printing order WEbster 4-3420-1-2 REctor 2-7388 SCCDTT PRINTING CCM RANY UNE SHERMAN AVENUE O JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY , . P g one hundred twenty-eight Phone Journal Square 2-5686 DR. GEORGE ZUNET Optometrist 251 Central Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Journal Square 2-2359 PROF. H. PETERSEN DANCE STUDIO 454 Hoboken Avenue Near Five Corners Webster 4-2848 AMERICAN TYPEWRITER CO. TYPEWRITERS SOLD, RENTED 85 REPAIRED Rates to Students Exceptionally Low 362 Palisade Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Established 1860 Tel. Hoboken 3-0902 F. GLAESER'S SONS CLEANERS 8z DYERS 132 HUDSON STREET, Hoboken, N. J. ONE STORE ONLY Works: 31 STANFORD PL., Jersey City, N. J. Compliments of Phone Bergen 3-4181 J IPIONIERI POLITICAL CLUB 1252 uncorporatedp Special Prices For Holiday Orders and Parties Headquflftefsi Phone Orders Taken and Delivered 616 Summit Avenue 475 Ocean Avenue Jersey City' N' J' Jersey City, N. J. Delaware 3-2915 JAMES W. DYNES ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 350 Communipaw Avenue Jersey City, N. J. FROM MAKER T0 WEARERP- JACKSON TIE sHoPs Specializing in TIES - HOSE - SHIRTS - NOVELTIES 209 Newark Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Tel. Journal Sq. 2-0990 CARL R. BALBO Insurance IN ALL ITS BRANCIIES 77 Larch Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Delaware 8-0592 MANHATTAN ELORIST 555 Grove Street Jersey City, N. J. MAJESTIC 'CLEANING sr DYEING COMPANY LADIES' and GENTS' TAILORING 277 Grove Street G. SUHBETIAN, Mgr. Jersey City, N. J. Compliments of HUCKS BEAUTY PARLOR 479 Central Avenue Corner of Congress Street Jersey City, N.,J. Phone Delaware 8-5728 Dr. BENJAMIN D. SILVERSTEIN DENTAL SURGEON Hours: Mon., Tues., Thurs., 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Wed., Fri., Sat., 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 215 Pavonia Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Tel. Del. 3-9167 BEN MICHNA, Prop. BEN'S GROCERY STORE GROCERY and STATIONERY 556 Varick Street Jersey City, N. J. Tel. Delaware 3-3118 CHAS. STAIGER Finest Grades of MEATS and CHOICE POULTRY 334 Pacific Avenue Jersey City, N. J. EOR CHOICE CHINESE Eoons- P L A Z A T E A G A R D E N 2928 Hudson Blvd. Truth A doctor fell in a wellg O And broke his collarbone. Q The doctor should attend the sick And leave the well alone. Page one hundred twenty-nine Journal Square 2-4246 NEW BALDWIN FLORIST F. Sz J. VLACHOS, Proprietors Artistic Floral Work Our Specialty 512-14 BALDWIN AVENUE JERSEY CITY, N. J. Near Newark Avenue KOLLEGE KLUB Union City, N. DON RICHARD'S Swing Band Established 1880 KOST 8r BAIRD DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY REPAIRING PROMPTLY AND NEATLY DONE WORKSHOP ON THE PREMISES 650 NEWARK AVENUE Near Five Corners CHRIST HOSPITAL , SCHOOL OF NURSING Interested in young women who wish to enter the Nursing profession. High School Education including one year of Biology and one year of Chemistry necessary. For further information apply: DIRECTOR OF NURSES 176 PALISADE AVENUE Jersey City, N. J. Bergen 4-9017 LEO WALDSTEIN QUALITY BUILT CLOTHES 70 NEWARK AVENUE jersey City, N. GRAPEVINE LITERARY SOCIETY GEORGE MCCAHILL RAYMOND BAUERDORF FELIX SOLOMONS CHARLES BAUERDORF PAUL GREIK GEORGE BITTERLY WILLIAM MAHONEY DAN MCGREW Compliments of SHEEFIELD SILVER CO. 546 CLAREMONT AVENUE jersey City, N. Compliments 0 f ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL E. Hamilton Place jersey City, N. OF COURSE Louise Lepis: When will a preacher perform a marriage ? Andy Milton: I don't know. When will a preacher perform a marriage P Louise Lepis: When he has a right two. Page one hundred thirty A OL. ompliments 0 fv . Q46 xecnfwe wfmcf . ?-NNN? Burke: Here's a smart advertisement. Rose: Wl1at is it, John? Q Burke: Wanted-Boy for bakeryg must be an ' early riser, born in the yeast, and a good mixer O -such a one will get his dough every Saturday night. Page one hundred thirty-one A 'fCOIZlf7lll6d from page 631 a The Supreme Court represents the nucleus of all the judicial power in the United States and is often, yes too often, the essence of nation-wide controversies. Neverthe- less our government is based on the theory of checks and balances in order that one department may not be more powerful than the others. This distribution of power has been commonly termed by our President as The Three Horse Team , but from all appearances the executive head isn't content being just one of the horses, but must sit on the driver's seat as well. The President declares that these three departments must here and now clear the track for his program or progress will suffer paralysis. But of the many new deal projects, I find no record of their being barricaded. The Supreme Court has not blocked the governments efforts to give work to the unemployed, nor its eiforts to save the owners of farms and homes from foreclosure. They have not failed to protect bank depositors by insuring their deposits nor have they intervened with the govern- ment in determining the nature and dictating the value of the currency. It is unnecessary to emphasize the point that if more care were taken by Congress in the drafting of its measures, and if the President refused to approve bills which were loosely worded, the Supreme ,Court would be forced in fewer cases to disapprove,- as unconstitutional, laws about whose ultimate purpose there is no disagreement. If the Legislative branch would take pains with the laws it drafts fewer would be declared unconstitutional. To corroborate this statement I find it apropos to refer to the recent Frazier-Lemke Act which was approved by the Supreme Court after formerly declaring it unconstitutional. The bill being so crudely drawn the President said of it when he hrst signed, that in some respects it was 'loosely worded'. It now develops that its loose wording made it unconstitutional. It also develops that a little time and effort have been able to correct the fault. That the Supreme Court itself, has had the courage to reverse a previous decision, knowing as it did so, that it would throw itself wide open to threat, is a heartening thing. But there is nothing new in it. Decisions have been reversed before in our history. In no case, therefore, can the change be regarded as yielding to partisan political pressure. . Another reason for the re-organization of the judiciary, claims President Roose- velt, is that -more justices are needed on the bench because it is behind with its work. The ideal seems to prevail that more justices would retard instead of accelerate the disposition of cases. The old adage about the broth and the superbuity of cooks appears to apply in full force. The experience of justice Story when the court's membership was increased from seven to nine is inspiring to note. .Almost a hundred years ago he wrote these words to a friend: You may ask how the judges get along together? We made very slow progress and did less in the same time than I ever knew. The addition to our number has most sensibly affected our facility as well as rapidity of doing business. 'Many men of many minds' require a great deal of discussion to compel them to definite resultsg and we found ourselves often involved in long and very tedious debates: I verily believe if there were twelve judges we should do no business at all, or at least very little . In reiteration to justice Story's thoughts, our present Chief justice, Charles Evans Hughes, has continually maintained that an increase in the number of justices would impair, not promote the efficiency of the court as there would be more judges to hear, more judges to discuss, 'more judges to be convinced and to decide. Today we behold the justices of the Supreme Court being reprimanded as per- petrators and assailed by politicians of high and low degree, in the newspapers and on the air. Is it any wonder then, that the sanctity and independence of the highest tribunal in the land is no longer respected nor upheld even by liberty-lovers of our nation? Long ago it was said that eternal vigilance is the price of libertv, and we must not forget that it is in times like these that the enemies of our institutions get in their most effective work. Page one hundred thirty-two 5 Q F- E E E Y' ,, 'np- gg 1 xr Ha . fe-'Q 1 T' uf '+-


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