East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ)

 - Class of 1925

Page 31 of 46

 

East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 31 of 46
Page 31 of 46



East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 30
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Page 31 text:

THE ORIENT SUGGESTIONS FOR COMMENCEMENT Ah! Sunflower” (Blake), presented by Miss Dorothy Goertz. “An Apology” (Morris), presented by Mr. Bruno Becker. Clear and Cool” (Kingsley), presented by Miss Lucille Littig. The Good, Great Man” (Coleridge), presented by Mr. Philip Clark. The Grasshopper” (Cowley), presented by Mr. Richard Miller (with illus- trations). 1 Wandered Lonely as a Cloud” (Wordsworth), presented by Mr. High- land Beaman. The Lamb” (Blake), presented by Miss Mathilda Del Negro. My Days Among the Dead Are Past” (Southey), presented by Mr. Melvin Morrow. Ode On a Grecian Urn” (Keats), presented by Mr. Carl Riff. On a Lap Dog” (Gay), presented by Mr. Otto Kennedy. Cheerfulness Taught by Reason” (Browning), presented by Miss Cath- erine Oliva. “To a Mouse” (Burns), presented by Miss Mildred Hirleman. Sir Galahad” (Tennyson), presented by Mr. Leo Neiwirth. If I Leave All for Thee” (Browning), presented by Mr- Leslie Rohn. “Mark When She Smiles” (Spencer), presented by Miss Edith Sliter. On His Having Arrived at the Age of Twenty-three” (Milton), presented by Mr. Michael Windus. “On Sleep” (Drummond), presented by Mr. Joseph Sefack. Since There’s No Help” (Drayton), presented by Mr. Chester Zawadski. Take, Oh. Take Those Lips Away” (Shakespeare), presented by Mr- John Dinzik. The Tiger” (Blake), presented by Miss Regina Wolf. “Three Years She Grew” (Wordsworth), presented by Miss May Calcagno. To Althea From Prison” (Lovelace), presented by Mr. Leo Brach- Violet! Sweet Violet!” (Lowell), presented by Mr. John Weir. With An Armchair” (Lowell), presented by Mr. Fred Landolfi. Eleanor Makes Macaroons” (Lowell), presented by Mr. Norman Conrad. The Dancing Bear” (Lowell), presented by Mr. Oscar Buehler. “Absence” (Lowell), presented by Mr. Franklin Clancy. To a Sky Lark” (Shelley), presented by Miss Mildred Cohen. The Skeleton in Armor” (Longfellow), presented by Mr. Edward Burns. Ichabod” (Whittier), presented by Mr- Ignatius Scarpitti. “The Last Leaf” (Holmes), presented by Mr. George Golden. Drifting” (Read), presented by Mr. George Di Giovanni. The Fool’s Prayer” (Sill), presented by Mr. Clifford Morrison. Little Boy Blue” (Field), presented by Mr. Paul Otto. In the Hospital” (Howland), presented by Mr. Franklin Bruenig. The Chaperone” (Henry Bunner), presented by Miss Anna Begley. XXIX

Page 30 text:

the orient In 1924 he was a member of the track team and was just nosed out of a point scoring position at the city championship meet. A spike wound in his knee greatly handicapped him in the meet. This year he again played on the ball team and was one of its outstanding stars. Fred was forced to shift from second base to catcher, but this did not seem to affect his playing in the least. His best game was against Orange when East Side defeated that team. It was mainly due to him that Orange’s streak of eight straight hit games was broken. In this game his hitting was responsible for all of East Side’s runs- East Side loses a game fighter in Fred Landolfi. Paul Otto’s athletic activities commenced in 1923 when he tried for the track team. He was not successful in his first quest for the coveted letter, but with a never-say-die spirit he supposed that his time might come.” -In 1924 he again went out for track and this time he became one of the stars of the team. His high jumping that year was of the highest order. He won the Battin meet with a splendid leap of five feet two inches and three weeks later repeated his triumph in the Clifton meet with a leap of five feet three inches. In the 1924 Ironbound meet he again showed his heels to all comers when he captured first place from a large field of stars. His leap here was five feet two inches. This year Paul has been better than ever. His jumping has been of the sensational order and he looms as a strong contender for the city title when the city meet comes off. In the first meet of the 1925 season against Passaic he made an amazing leap of five feet four inches and won the event. In the Ironbound meet he again demonstrated his striking qualities by finishing in a tie for first place with a leap of over five feet. Paul Otto has been a splendid example of an East Side athlete and East Side is sorry to lose him. Ignatius Scarpitta is a fine example of a fellow who, without any especial qualifications for engaging in sport, made himself a first-class scholastic athlete and an East Side letter man. In was “Scarpy’s” stick-to-it-iveness that carried him to the fore. Every afternoon he could be seen in the school yard practicing at his chosen sport, the javelin throw. Day after day he con- tinued and his reward was third place in the city championship meet and his letter. East Side may have had better athletes, but East Side has never had harder working athletes. Chesty” Chester Zawadzki is another example of a successful athlete who went in for sports late in school life. For three years he was a quiet, unas- suming, likeable young chap who attended to his studies and took little in- terest in his school’s athletic activities. But watching the Bears play every afternoon instead of doing his homework made him take such an interest in baseball that he finally tried out for the team. He immediately became a XXVIII



Page 32 text:

THE ORIENT The Wild Ride” (Guiney), presented by Mr. Thomas O’Rcilley. The Mocking Bird” (Hayne), presented by Miss Rose Slitkin. Eve’s Daughter” (Sill), presented by Miss Marion Dunn. “Charleston” (Timrod), presented by Miss Mabel Mitchell. Virginia” (Lowell), presented by Miss Nelda Pendleton. A Vision of Peace” (Lowell), presented by Miss Amelia Davidson. The Wild Honeysuckle” (Freneau), presented by Miss Anna Shead. My Life Is Like a Summer Rose” (Freneau), presented by Miss Emily La Falce. “Love in the Winds” (Hovey), presented by Miss Helen Marshall. “The Spanish Gipsy” (Elliot), presented by Miss Elizabeth Curimano. The Guardian Angel” (Browning), presented by Miss Mildred Wetmore. DAY AND NIGHT-Our Slogan We not only give you the best there is in Business Secretarial Education, but we also do everything in our power to make your stay at Drake’s pleasant. SECRETARIAL COLLEGES NEW JERSEY and NEW YORK 120 BROAD STREET, ELIZAIIETH 171 K. FRONT ST„ PLAINFIELD 223 MAIN STREET, ORANGE Othrr Drake School» In New York. Brooklyn. Pn»»nlr. I’ntrriton, I nion Hill. Ilxiyonne anil Two In Jersey City The nearest to perfection some people get is being a perfect nuisance. Anthony Paollella take notice. RAG—Popular Music—JAZZ GUARANTEED IN 10 TO 20 LESSONS ON ALL ORCHESTRA AND BAND INSTRUMENTS. FRANKLIN STUDIOS 25 New Street (Next to Hahne Co.), Newark, N. J. Telephone lnrket 112s. All Kind» of Instrument» for Sale. Open IO A. 1. to 0 I . |. 119 POLK STREET MVASK.K4 Harry Gilroy is going round these days with an anxious expression on his face. He should read the story of the Purloined Letter.” XXX

Suggestions in the East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ) collection:

East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

East Side High School - Torch Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939


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