Saint Ursula Academy - Scroll Yearbook (Toledo, OH)

 - Class of 1937

Page 21 of 60

 

Saint Ursula Academy - Scroll Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 21 of 60
Page 21 of 60



Saint Ursula Academy - Scroll Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

Class Prophecy lTl-l the best faculties of your imagination We ask you to leap ahead into the glorious year of 1956, with Josephine Hubacker and Geraldine Fox who have succeeded in locating the present destination of the entire class of 1937, by means of a now highly improved television set. Heavens! Joey, l didn't think we'd ever really find them all. lsn't it just too exciting? Hurry, turn it onf' ex- claimed Jerry. Patience, little one, patience. We'll get this on soon enough, remonstrated joey. Now, let's see. NVhere shall we be- gin? Why not start in Pennsylvania? VVhy, look, there's Margaret King. Sec- retary? No, pri-vate secretary to the President of the First National Bank in Pittsburg. Lovely secretary, isn't she ? And there--yes, it is Catherine Stone. My word! Take a glance at that outfit. Now, where could she be going? Let's follow her up the steps, through the revolving door-and into the private office of 'DeWitt and Son', Criminal Lawyers. Bless us! another secretary. And say, you notice it's DeWitt, Jr., not DeWitt, Sr.'s office. ls there ro- mance ? Jerry interrupted with, Quit ramb- ling, Joey, let's move on to the fBig City'. And with a simple twist of the wrist they were there, watching lVIary Virginia Sullivan, the noted artist, paint- ing the portrait of Tamara Tamaera falias Corinne Doughenyj the glorious star of Broadway, now playing 'Portia' in the 'Merchant of Venicef But we musn't linger. There are so many others. VVhere is Gertrude -GisR.1x1,niNu Fox, '37 -JOSIQPHIN li H U imckltk, '37 Schmitt? questioned Jerry. Obi don't you remember? She's the head illustrator for the !Pictorial Re- view'. There she is in her studio. now. What a grand studio! just like Ger- trude. VVell, how about leaving the business district and jumping to New York so- ciety? There in the midst of it all is Lenore Schoen, hostess at a luncheon for the 'elite' of the suburbs. Dear! Dear! Oh, but what's this? The first per- formance of the ever popular Carmen being produced at the Metropolitan Opera House. Who is that pretty girl? Why that's Charlotte Thomas, feature star of the Ballet. But wait, there is more. Over there to the right, in Box A we have none other than glean lvlohr, now married to Dr. Jeffery Derrick, the famous New York physician. Oh, we mustn't forget Betty Kle- man, New York's outstanding social worker, there she stands in the center of a group of poor but sweet little waifs. Look at the smile on her face, she seems peifectly contented making little boys, God's children, happy. Say Jerry, where was lwary Jane Savage? Oh yes! turn that dial to Mary- knoll and meet kind hearted, cheerful Sister Ethel Marie. VVhy, there's Chicago. Helena's there. remember? She is the Dean of the Chicago Institute of Music. She really was cut out to be a musician. 'fGlory be! lf that isn't Barbara Fers- tle! Observe the crowd at that Hower show admiring Barbara's magnificent display - particularly her chrysanthe- THE SCROLL 19

Page 20 text:

istry and of economics. Un the second floor now we literally could look down on our sister class-the freshmen-with sympathetic tenderness. Class enthusiasm and cooperation characterized each new enterprise. That year the juniors took over the Easter issue of the Scroll and after weeks of work and worry and planning we presented the school with a magazine to take its place with the best. Then more weeks of work and worry and planning and this time the junior-senior picnic which came off splendidly. Time rolled by and we entered our fourth year. Alas, it was to be our last. Last year's juniors became this year's eeniors. Yet the girls confided in me that they didn't feel the least hit different. VVe were still plain, common, ordinary people. But others treated us differently. Now we were the first dismissed at noon, now we sat in the front rows of the auditorium. So to show our school spirit we began the year by a very suc- cessful campaign of Scroll ad soliciting. And went over our quota! Next we turned our talents to the writing of words to a school song. Again we suct- ceeded in having our song chosen as the one to he used during the year. The Scroll staff was selected and the first issue came off the press to be greeted with delight by everyone who read it. At Christmas time the seniors visited Marybrook and presented the girls with presents, refreshments, and entertain- ment. After Christmas the Senior Dramatic Club began preparations and rehearsals for the three-act play, Mansions . The evenings of March 6 and 7 were eve- nings of revelation--bringing to light our hidden dramatic talent. Then the members of the class, after weeks of anxious preparation, research, and read- ing, wrote the religion essays. And now we are looking forward to the last few weeks of school at St. Ursula's. They hold much in store-the junior-senior picnic, the senior banquet, and Commencement night. The girls and I realize that these are weeks con- taining strains of joy and festivity and also strains of sadness and wonder. Sad- ness at leaving dear old S. U. A. where we have spent four happy years. Wonder at what lies ahead in the years to come. The others are doubtful about their fu- ture but I am certain of mine. I shall only be a has-been, a ghost of my former self. But now l am turning into a pro- phecy what I really intended for a his- tory. And as this quaint, little, four-year-old with her grown-up manners paused, l smiled at her and thanked her for tell- ing me such an interesting story. She told me that just talking to someone made her feel so much better. Thus the Class of '37, and l parted. Q 18 TH E SCROLL



Page 22 text:

mums and her new species of zinniasf' Let's go on to VVashington. The VVhite House couldn't run without a couple members of the class of 1937 and yes-rhere's Mary Frances Gilhooley, the Secretary of Labor, conversing with Alice lylae lialog, who has just returned from Germany, with her annual report of the United States' standing with that country. Could that be ?-lt is, lnez Leyland, President of the National Catholic School of Social Service entering the building itself. Doesn't she make a grand social worker? And Jerry look! There's the Golden Gate, the entrance to San lirancisco. Yes, it's in this city that Jeanette Fink has reached the heights of success as a world renowned woman sculptress. lsn't that marvelous F Hut we must pass on. Here we are in Hollywood. Uo our eyes deceive us? Take a look at that Rolls-Royce and its driver, will you? lf it isn't Mary Lou Mominee on the way to the M. G. M. studios where she is chief cinemato- grapher. She is going to be occupied today in photographing the latest dance step of the famous Gladys lklohr-Leslie Davis dance team. There they are now. Uon't they remind you of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers? Never realized Gladys was so graceful before. Wasn't lVIary Ellen lVIcGuane in Florida? Why', of course. That's she, helping her fiance with the 'blue-prints' for their home near Palm Beach. lWove it about one degree, .loeyfl said Jerry, and youlll get Tampa. Yes, here we are. There is Dr. .lane Soubier, the great bacteriologist, con- centrating at present on the destruction of the streptococcus germ carrier. Richmond, Virginia is to be remem- bered particularly, for lrene Zach has entered the Order of Dominican Nuns there, and is nursing now in the Rich- mond Mercy Hospital. And still up a little further in Tren- ton, N. J., the lylarquis de Velez has succeeded in winning the heart of shy, sweet little Ruby Rapp, and friends are buying wedding gifts. So much for the United States, we need a change of scenery, don't you think? asked Jerry. Sure thing, 'replied Joey. Let's have a real change,-Liberia, how is that? For that's where Mary Elizabeth Sullivan is doing extraordinary mission- ary work. Oh! isn't Liberia strange? Look, Maryls over there, doesn't she seem happy? Nof for Europe. Lucile Beckham, the popular novelist, is there in Russia obtaining material for her new novel, which, if it is as good as her others, is certain to meet with instant approval. Italy is to be remembered because Janet Lindecker has her summer villa in Naples. And why not? Perfect setting for a poetessf' And we must catch a glimpse of the Olympic Games in Switzerland for Rita June Miller is competing this year as the National Representative from Amer- ica, and we are most anxious to see the outcome. Then there's Betty Thompson in Berlin. President of the Conservatory of Music. See, she's conversing with that young musician nowf' And Paris where Helen Rita Cou- sineau creates the latest Parisian coif- fures, and Mary Rita Cowan has become for Parisian Society what the famous 'Adrianl is for M. G. M. studios. Now we must turn to literary Eng- land and Hampshire, where the first Woman Poet Laureate-an American and a graduate of our class-Margaret Mary Stimpfle is quietly spending a few weeks escaping from her demanding 20 THF Scnou.

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