Southside High School - Edsonian Yearbook (Elmira, NY)
- Class of 1932
Page 1 of 96
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 96 of the 1932 volume:
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I I f if S W Q ' S SL X T I EQ V 6 q, pi ' ' K 1 I f ,al ' ' Viv' i f X fd '424fL ' E , sf , Y .VJ S Jw, 4 4 PS E 4.:'LL'1vQfK-I 14 SOUTHSIDE ,O HIGH SCHOOL NNUAL Volume Eight ' 71 fy lf!! . . , ' Q. we qw Sx452fo'?.rL'9' ' ' S f ,- - '.'il',7'.Qx ' mv.--5 4 , T 7 L11 f gig N , . K V J! X' L ,I ff I ' L ,ff T T - 4 . .Z I . A . ., , x f T r mf X Q ,ji A lf' 4 , Dr, : 1' 's va PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS OF SOUTHSIDE HIGH SCHOOL ELMIRA, N. Y. NINETEEN THIRTY-TWO 5: 'I 2' . ' 'liar' -. ' S X M ' Q ' 1 Q , , I Q. i J F1 ' ' 0 ' X 6 ul p, ' 3 FOREWORD SOUTHSIDE HIGH SCHOOL is to us now a reality, its spirit, our in- spiration. It is our desire topreserve the reality of today as a sacred mem- ory. Therefore, the class of 1932 sincerely hopes that this book will help to keep fresh those sacred mem- ories of experiences at our Alma Mater. May the true spirit of South- side, which we hope we have shown throughout this hook, help and guide us all in time to come as it has helped and guided us before. -Robert Chandler H , tg i E' f- - ' 'iii' - . 0 . ' X n I -f , 0 1 I 5: X. W ' , 9' 1 , i 1 Q - ,I ' - s f 4 .V ff i DEDICATION , O MR. EDSON, to Whom we owe much for his kindly 4 T advice and aid in whatever was undertaken, we, the class Ji F' of 1932, dedicate this, our year book. We sincerely hope that in years to come we may uphold the honor of Southside High in the Way he would desire- uNature might stand up And say to all the world, 'This was a man'.,' rg? l gk 0 ,rl X I V ,yi n i ' 5 ul 1:1 ' i N L Q 5 ,I , ,I ' ' ' . ,' t Q. Q ' W 3 ,Vx T JOHN SEWARD BESLEY President Southport No. 2 Veterinary He is a man, take him all in allg I shall not soon see his like again. Class President 2, 3, 4 Student Council Z, 3 Athletic Council 2, 3 Hi-Y 2, 3 Interclass Athletic Council 1 Senior Play Cast Varsity Football 3, 4 Varsity Basketball 3, 4 DOROTHEA C. SANDBERG Secretary No. 7 Private Secretary One honor won is a surety for more. Business Club 3, 4 Ushers' Club Honor Society Class Secretary 4 El-So-Hi Exchange Editor 2 CLASS OFFICERS 3 f : V Y . sf' , x 7 J N by ,J Appreciation o MRS. BOGART, who has given unlimited time and elliort to the best interests of the Class of 1932, we Wish to express our sincere appre- ciation. '60 friend! O best of friendsfv SARAH BAIRD CONDON Vice-President No. 9 Pratt Institute 4'Women were made to give our eyes delightf' Tri-Sigma 1, Secretary 2 Class Secretary 3 Class Vice-President 4 Business Club 4 i -sxllshers' Corps El-S0-Hi -1 X x tl i, l' 'N 1 X 3 Y , il x x X F 'K xi I JOHN JOSEPH ENRIGHT 'xr Treasurer X i . ll-Iarykx College No nfiari is the wiser for his 'H learning: xve Wit and wisdom are horn with a man. El-So-Hi 3, 4 Hi-Y 3, 4 Rx, Class Treasurer 4 Honor Society ,Co-Chaiyman of Junior Prom German,Club President 4 V, . V X 5 I y f t, I t Q k 1 ' I ' if . ' I I ,f it X ,. f 1 5 W , X I . M f 41, XL? 6 - -fv V - A , .p- Y , M, ' . if ' ' . 1' OO M-adxq -eaxgg W' EVOLUTION M2 SENIOR PLANT Nr Edson Q mf O 75Gcf1er5 , Q 1 4 . 4 , . . .15 '- . . xSwQgs5- ,bfi '--T'. oX .'.X'N'. WZ X.. .S ,TF 1. LWQXL: Ax'xixxNx I Oc? Z QCA XNNN :wi-X X xx Qfb X X X Nx X ?,,?qq,x 3' 21 iv 54? Q qqaq 'Qxxxgnv Y-'75 Qgarxq div N via' 'QQ X Qexxsvxv Q qxyx Q NOW Wxfx X N 5 vw VV X X X Xqgx gjggliix X QQQSN faff+VX3'XQgHQQf6iggx1gSCiX Egwlfifw N S K X Y Q XX XQRX XO X X OQNXXN KW XX x XX xk SX x XX W' Q X x X V QQ X XX X X XX X ! Q QQQ X Q X Q X NX W X X X5xxX5x ibggDjXgQD xx xx QQQQNJ M ' I 'E X. X, 1 x E 57-r , 2 F ',' ,. ' l1'A w ul g. P .'i,f X' X 1 qhi' 8 Qu, , fr ' r . 3 , If . . , f 1 , ' 1 1 S - X ' . .N W t f Q, 1 ' U - F. ' - its 1 PRINCIPAL ---- FRANK M. EDSON, A.M. DIRECTORS INDUSTRIAL - ---- - CLIFFORD F. RICNAUCHT, B.S COMMERCIAL - - - - CLIFFORD L. HARDING, B.C.S ACADEMIC - - - - - - OSMOND G. WALL, A.M. GIRLS, ADVISER EDUCATIONAL ADVISER MRS. S. CAROLYN AUSTIN, B.S. JARANA A. LABURT, A.B. ENGLISH DEPARTMENT Florence Callahan, A.B. Mabel I. Haupt, A.M. Mary Alice Murphy, A.B. Edna Cronin Mary S. Jenkins Mary J. Skeahan Wilhelmina Deister Celia Eldridge, Ed. M. Maude F. Clair Winifred D. Lucy, A.B. John A. Barlow, B.S. Mrs. Luella C. Bogart, B.S. Mildred E. Bretch, A. B. Margaret F. Flynn, A. B. Helen R. Jones, A.B. Victoria E. Kazmark, B.S. Mary C. Rutan MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT Elizabeth V. Smith, A.B. Leslie J. Stottle SCIENCE DEPARTMENT R. Alvin Jennings, B.S. Stanley W. Kraus, A.B. Ruby Irene H. Smith, A.B. St. John, B.S. Catharine C. Ulrich, A.B. George B. White, B.S. Ruby M. Lee, B.S. Kenneth C. Winsor, B.S. HISTORY AND CIVICS DEPARTMENT Alice Magnis, A. M. Henry J. Prechtl, A.B. Laura M. O'Donnell Susan S. Van Duzer Mabel E. Zimmer, Ph.B. MODERN LANGUAGE DEPARTMENT Elsa Brookfield, A.M. Marie Henrichon, A.B. Alma E. Noonan, A.B. Winifred A. Prechtl, A.B. LATIN Madeleine Daly, A.B. Eva A. Spicer, A.M. ART AND DRAFTING Mrs. Pauline A. Donahue Alma D. Hall, B.S. Lynn D. Hunt, B.S. Virgil B. Langworthy, B.S. - COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT ,Ruth M. Cole, B.S. Marion Connelly, B.S. Elizabeth Grube Mrs. Kathryn H. Connelly, B.S. Lucy Graves, B.S. William F. Stewart, M.B.A. Donna D. Van Allen, B.S. MUSIC DEPARTMENT Jean Christian, B.S. HOME ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT Irma Carmody Dorothy Guernsey, B.S. May Alice Jerge, B.S. Marion R. Salisbury, B.S Jeannette R. Draine, A.M. Helen C. Hartnett, B.S. Edith E. Lee, B.S. 97 INDUSTRIAL DEPARTMENT Auto Mechanics: - Machine Shop: Sheet Metal and Plumbing: Ira D. Maynard Ray L. 'Tucker Charles E. Tinney Electricity: Printing: Wood Working: G. Lewis Parso , - Ralph D. Palmer William M. Lantz -I PHYSICAL TRAINING Roland J. George, B.P.E. Frances O'Connor LIBRARIAN ' DIRECTOR CAFETERIA SECRETARY Mable L. Loomis, A.M. Elizabeth M. Ricker Rose R. Hoffman JANITORS , Head: Assistants: Mrs. Belle Gilroy Mrs. Edith M. Libby John D. Lain James Higgins Mrs. Carrie Spencer Q rr 5: - I 'flffx ' A n ag I 0 1 , R51 I L. W I , 1 If 45 I A u tl Q, F., ' - f r 9 W t . ...are . ,i ... vtzgf-15,555 1 MN! if. J 1, x t ist Q 'Y' R a nl S is ,,-- ., , TE, . 7:1 W 0 ,.,,., ' . . 1 f- I 0 1 we X E I Le: X-.L x I f ' L I ' se 1 ' . TRUMAN R. ADAMS BEATRICE MAE APTHORP School3 Business Administration Mt. Morris H. S. Business '6Where there is love of solitude, Quiet persons are welcome the mind has already assumed an everywhere. elevated charaolerf, I A AARON RUSSELL ARNOLD X DOROTHY EDITH ALBA No.3 Arnot den Hospital 3 . ' Business Administrations Siln h r quietnes re is charm ' GAX-.proper man as one shall see Ufrs' ' gist' A in a summer's dayf' C1 sl etball .iss N Hi-Y 4 VW? askeyal 4 Traffic Club 4 ., 4 f , l Football -.4 J' is f I CHARLES JUDSON ALLEN F RENCE YERS Schooll9 Architect ' N0 UB ss dmmlstration A K i'0rte of the few, the immortal names, T ' e eyes springlets in whose ' That were not born to die? s n U U Student Council 4 A 1 wa er a ' , . seen. , Athletic Council 4 ' rar ,O Property Council 2, 3, 4 51 555 9 b 4 l Varsity Football 11 2, 3, 4 h rs' C t I - K Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 4 -I Traffic Squad 3,V 4 ,M V Hi-Y I, 2, 3, 4 i f El-So-Hi Feature Editor 4 Year Book ' WILLIAM G. ANDRUS RUTH ELIZA BACON St.MarylsA Btgsines5Admin' ion Hopkins St.Scl1ool He new wha ,S wh an thafs Quiet in class, but powerful louzl as 4 a met h c wit can fly. 'u s Clu in grazlef' , 41 , neral Chai n, lay' M .lf Honor Society El-Sn-Hi 4 German Club 4 . Interclass Basketball -4 Vshers' Corps ,, I 1 EARL DONALD BALDWIN 1 Southport Corners' Accountant VIRGINIA EDITH ANDRUS E. F. A. Business Adnltixnistration uSf3lf'f6UfVeVlCe, self-1010 Agdgfff The winds anzl zvnves are always on 1 self-controlf' ,T I ' l the side of llze ablest navigatorsfl ' ' Ushers' Corps Hi.Y 3, 4 A Business Chat? 5 Business Club, Treasurer 4 . ,Q K Q t El-So-Hi 3, 4 ,v t. , J - X Iuterclass Basketball 3 2- Q .' fi5I9'r55i7 VJ ' XJ Year Book lx t Interclass Baseball 3 ' Honor Society , 5, w 3, . ,, I . 1 .A A- - O I N A '--. , ' U N Un ,',A , , 1 tl I0 A . - -K . --Y P- V, ,A n l 0 vs- YA . I , ' I N X . I ' M ' l H 1 a X I Q3 ul 0 '41 ' u. -de ff Q ' ll sz M I ' 0 :'Her very froufns are fairer far DELORES FLORENCE MARIE BALT E BESANCENEY E. F. A. us ss A nistration No. 9 Business Administration Self-I ust ' thfg tsecret Oh, blest with, temper whose of s c ss. - unclouded ray I Busi 655 C 4 Q I' Can maine tomorrow cheerful as Lishers 0 s K glydgyxf' 111-50-H1 X' Tri-Sigma Honor Society Sig-ma Delta Business Club 4 Sigma Ushers' Corps Girls' Glee Club El-So-Hi 2, 3, 4 ELMER JESS BECKWITH WILLIAM ALEXANDER No.3 CIFFORD BOWERS 'Vin honest man. close-buttonerl to Farre1l,Pa- U-Of S011th01'n Calif- the Chin, One universal smile it seemed of Broudcloth without, and a warm all ghingsg llellff wifhifl-H Joy past cornparef' Hi-Y 4 ' Hi-Y 3, 4 heal' Bfyk Student Council 3 A U 6 L2-fx K., ' R ABB TT'fBEER EDWARD JAMES BRANN No. . ve lit 0 igan Crane High, Chicago Electricity His bark is rse than his ef, 1 hear, yet say not much Hi.Y 3, 4 But think the more. Traffic Squad, Sec'y-Treasurer-1 year Book Sluc7nt Council 4 I' KX Q ,LJLVV S, LL? 'lag I 7, 5 Q ..,..,.f ,rf xx X ELIZABETH LENORE BENTLEY GL NN MU RAY BREWER N0-T Cornell E1 ' ii. f - Cornell Than smiles of other maidens are. fTi5 indusn iiln ery rank, r g eat , O I 75 3 Varsity rac Interclass S clei 3, 4 Vllrestling 2, Boxing 2 Craftsman's Guild 4 .7 ' ALMA WILHELMINA BERQ-I MAR ARET 4MA I EWER Hopkins St. Sch. ,,,, Bus. Admimx NO' r ' gde Sp Z'he path gfxdyty 1271115 to A N it e L ength is sh! ,n ' 1 UPPWQS sg - c racter , j .,,, - , --r' X ' K 32222220152 4 L6 is , Senior Play - I Honor Society I 1 ' X! 2 'W S ' 'V ' r . ' Xl A- K K f ,,,f'!c2?f I at fi J P ' - , 5 ,- . A v I fs jfs Ji 'jf X' ff Q ' V- ' W L: ,f x E . I I 'Q O I r ' ul F, ' dvi' o V ' I Qi. f 2 . 9 I Lx fl , O I 1 M ' , , ,A K f n I LOUISE NIARCELLENE BU J SALVATORE J H CICCONI N K WWW inistration 'St.Mary's, Roc e r us. d in. E' es 'vi in reserve, filirary Sta ' , - '1 nsbforps fffxfg R 0 st, quiet and r A ' g. vi l For his heart ' in his 'o ., d the art Qiveth g e nl Never art. rsi Football 3, V Inte -lass 1 I t l B ,' In e 5 Basket 1, Z, 3, 4 ', - Int rc ss Track 2 3, 4 L, 1 J' l n e ass wing K ' If , Interclass At etic Council 3, 4 QQ sb , Interclass Socc l, 2 fx:-'fy Honor Society WILLIAM JOHN BURGEY VIRGIL ROBERT CLARK ' South t NO. 1 Southport Qonnersx, Draftsman S' ' gr he was do with Let brisk 'Youths their active mug hgrves pre are. In 'rn al ze s a to Xlfaisigic Tffwk 2, 3, 4 A pleasefwl, ' c Ifterd ass asketball 3, 4 Boxing 7 ?nter.g1,1akss Q ,sebsilli 1, 2, 3 Tricks? -Y lr nterc ass . 0 Cer .r 3 mf.: If A. MARY THERESA CERIO MARGARET ARLENE COLLUM St. Anthonyis Rochester Bus. Inst. Southport School Bus. Admin. Dark-eyed, dark-haired, Sedate, yet bold? Ushers' Corps Business Club 4 Y r B k 'eg - oo Tri Slfllllil 3, 4 A A EIL N CHAMBQES . St.Patrick's X JJ N i vi rl H nall -bu Jrllghityf' . Gl ClubQ,iE an ' ykiz KL,: : ' Reservesis , 2 'V YI ' i ii ,I ' P E ,,., l lii', 5 J fa . jf' 1 x J' VALYN M ARET yet modest. orps ursing ilk ON I uSQ Agministration Care will kill a c li, lel's be merry. uHang sorrow! And therefore, Business Club 4 ' Girl Reserves 1, 2, 3gTreasurer 4 X Sigma Delta Sigma 35 Secly 4 -enior Play - I Honor Society XE4 F WILLIAM JOSEPH CONNELLY St. Mary's College :Tall men, sun-crowned, who live 'above the fog my In public duty alwd in private thinkingf, g K Hi-Y 3, 4 , Traffic Squzml'2, 3, 4 Junior Iflai' Chet A-4 if QUENTIN STARR COOK Hendy Avenue Bus. Admin, A good name is better than bags of gold 1 Hi-Y 1 if I f P 1 504 'ZW' fill 0 if wx . I W .K . I f I AX as 'i ' P1 ' ' ef f is 12 'li' Hou hear that . E- x A I 0 i I D 1 , iii' H ' Q 1 '--. k , ' ,Y N ' if t f 7 BIARICE COOKLIN CORABELLE CRUMB No. 3 College, 6'She is pretty to walk with, And zvitty to talk withf, El-So-Hi 1, 2, 33 Literary Editrwrl Student Council 1 Sigma Delta Sigma 4 Honor Society R ', E CLIFF! RD crco ' ER N- A N . Z' . li Forestry I7 y laughing? al fan: 1 laulgh, toy! hav cf u think he's t the ar gels ttlze goo he llli-Y 4 'Boxing 4 Pyramids X Hopkins St. Sch. Bus. Admin. A merry heart doeth good like medicinef, f gil ROBERT CHANDLER lftica Free Academy Machinist Of their own merits - Modest men are dumhf' V Year Book R L iv , X ..4Q'f EAHLfWi L MI CORDIER MADQLYN Doais iVDAHLGREN No. 9 ' I, 2 5- Mech c f ' 7 N. Nursing 1 . . A iiconte, me 0 Pirwm 'Z lt 0, she dances such a way! .. I A 0w, . , ' No sun apon an Easter-day F fs N Sodllk ff Is half as hne a sightlu I 'L knofv' I , Ushers' Corps ul. Qraftsnrxfs Guild, Pklsident 3, 4 Sigma Delta Sigma 3, 4 ' SICZLI' I Librjary Staff 2 ' f -m y HlT!1Of Business Club 4 V ff P3'rzm ids 2 junior Play Cast V. Assembly Traffic Squad W A I '1 , A ES ,ARL E CREIGHTON ,VIRGINI3 N No. 1 Univ. of Wisconsin N ., . . . ,S o. NT - iIsmesgAdm1n1strat1on Goo lumor only te cheswn .N ,We turned 0,er many book last, ,, ' 5 Sti mah n ' onquests and fogetlfer' maintains th astf' Slgz' 3, 4 Ushers' Corps X R P , ,MTN X i A A V s x K L.. 1 s ' kv'ARD HENRY CROWE St. i ary's ' L . V Q - . Fm 'art ts that tn which the handfvf ,,,., Y , the head, and the heddfgo wi Efrlfefesgoffssz getherf' ' glusinf-si Club - 'etul 'IuJ 2 X N.. I HELENA DECKFIR W'ellslJurg Union Sch. Bus. Admin. Quietness is best? ' EP' N . I ' . 0 1 ' , RX .X ' ' I 'rn N X f . w 3' I 1 L 1 Q i' pf: ' ul F, ' ' X 13 'r -- 1. x R J' Q . . X I 1 W 1 G F . ,Q . 44, ' A Q ' 4 A r SARA L OY DEWITT Baldwin No. 6 Gentle comes the world to these Who are cast in a gentle mioodf, Library Staff 3, 4 FLORENCE RENA DOUGLAS No. 9 Business Administration i'Not having much to say, Gentle and quiet in every way? Girl Reserves 1, 2, 3, 4 DONALD DUNBAR us . Administration 'QW erfuln is glimpses of suns ne on Q ainy dayf, Se ' Pla 'ff B nessx'C 4 'B f V P X IREN L V No 9 VV kKeukq,Qrliefge ' 5245 no In :life ,iYtha, is , pofioerf' Ushe ' rps Y f Interclass Ba Wb,wW, . , f ' 'e' i' , , 'Km I L I EDWARD ELSTGN , St. Mary's Bus. Administration They are never alone that are accompanied with noble thoughts. Iuterclass Baseball 3 Iuterclass Boxing 2 HARRY OSBORNE EVERTS St. Petersburg, Fla. 'CAS he thinketh in his heart, So is he. Color Squad 4 Craftsmaifs Guild 4 Interclass Basketball 4 Track 3 Interclass Soccer 4 Senior Play, Stage Manager E1-So-Hi 4 , MlfDh1lE,5 N' Un' . o O N Roibovl HN ll Lhirtgs ar dy, Xi 7 ' r ' inds ' o.',7 Inter ass Bas all 1, 2, 3, 4 Interclass Ba all 1, 3 Interclass Track 2 'is Interclass Soccer 2, Suyxu Business Club 4-X u rw- JOHN FREDERICK FARR- A St. Marys ' 'Cornell When Nature has work to be done ' She creates u genius-to do it? 4 - El-S0-Hi 3, 4 ' - f Traffic Squad94 Property Council 4 Hi-Y 4 ,f L X f Year Book, Art Editor ' 'Senior Prom, General Chairman D it ,Al S A ., 'Y' RHEA PHYLLIS EDGCOMB iir0U15 ,NLICHAEL FQSSDZCECA No.3 I V W,NurSing lqkgsa. '4 4 z I si graliyhy '6Real uioityequiresj 'fnterprete , QPun dwity is,the, dliteness Ipg eviry ylfleffls f its bl - xml If I -, sa- . ' ' ' vnfif- ' if . qi ,Ali ,D Club 3, 4 , ' 2, 3524 - P 0 gl-So-Hg 3 if - T ' ' . 1,235 . 2g oxm H.. r Sggy as, I as Intercfass Trail: 3?'4 S ' C , V' ' -P ' 4 ' :xiii na h 1, I' nieflias Brazketball ,2, 3 ' lass Vice-President 3-- Honor Society Q W W 1 ' Q I R ' i 9 is I R Q , La. at .R - g efvb. Qs: . u . k-Q-VV F- 1 X 1 8 l K X i I 4 ' 5 . ' H . f W 5 Q' ' ' ,L ' ' tg JAMES HENRY FRICK Wellsburg Union Chain Store Mgr. Silllise to resolve, and patient to performn' Hi-Y 4 Q Traftic Squad 4 ,- ve, WALTER GOOD, JH, Southyfort Corners XX, SA mazfs taskx is always 'light if fuk heart is liglitf' K . Sigma Delta Sigma, Bus. Nlgr. 4 Interelass Basketball 1, 2, Ri, 4 Interclass lhiselmll 2, 3 lr 2 it X. '1 X X V l X i X N , CUNTQN FEDGE., 'T h MARY, CATHERINE GOURLEY 0' Lpt J xl! ' d 'liqmigle P9 ' fSt.Mafy's g W. Elmira Bus. Inst his loftffmw 4 K i4Z'f:Jwiz'2,z:e 1z1zif3,:f?zzi'5m, Traffic Sauad 3 . ,nt p I p I Interclass Soccer,Q V' i ' , BVSWCSS Club 4 K, - If 3 L if lEl? CiJrps t 1 X. Eierdixs? lies-Qebsll 2 le, lv' f CHARLES NIARVIN GETNIAN No. 3 Sisters of the Skillet For now hels free to sing and play, Over the hills and far awayf, Hi-Y 3', 4 Craitsmaifs Guild 4 Honor Society XVrestling 2 PEARL AMBER GINGRICH No. 9 Business Administration Devoted, anxious, generous, void of guile, And with her whole heart's wel- come in her srnilef' Business Club 4 Tri Sigma l, 2 Ushers' Corps 4 X ESS GOLDQQTH, JR. Elo. 7 l EW Accounting rt e L who can, ' An ah ' gement of all that was pleasant in man. - Soccer 3 Property, Council 3, 3 Q41 or 'lvlt ,offense to ll the u6rld exactly as it foes, ,Q I I orps I Circulation Mgr. 2, 3, 4 , Segietary Advertising I will the humor to the MYRLE ELAINE GRISWOLD Edgeworth Sch. Arnot Ogden Hosp. HShe,s got the getg She's got the pep: She's an all-round good sportf, Girls' League 3 Year Book Stal? Honor Society W Q Er x . I 0 1, l . I 1 sg l ig ' ' X 4 I A ' ' qu F1 ' H 15 , ., .w ' ' 'i Y 2 v' lf . if ' is iii . ' I ' H I 9 I , 'LT x ' , 9 I N H' , :X Q . W ' . f , . '1 A 4' 1 A-6 u, 51 ' QS af X 1 - GERALD J. GUNDERMAN .MAX IRVING HAMILTON ff 7 E. F. A. Business Administration Peoria, Ill. ' ' 5 G 2' Friends I have made, whom envy :'Happy am Ig from care I am free! must commend, Why arerft they all contented like f f But not one foe whom I would me?', ' X4 have a friend. Sigma Delta Sigrga 4 J B nd 1 2 3 Interclass Basketball 2 'kj Oichesgmq Interclass Baseball 3, 4 A- , I 1mefC12'SSTfaCk4 a?5.iz,Fs2szC?f 314 VJ' X ' Property Council 4 J ,A Senior Play C st V f A l RO RT 1 1 AAT HAR L CHARLES HAMM 0. Splringfi MCA College 'Hendy I ' . Prepar I' lege uHe suit his bea 26 the hour, 6'All the til o ,go fe ows ip Laugh, li lear r teachf' Coy to o ' whim ba 2, ,-4 Hi-Y l Var it . - all 4 ' Traffi ua 4 Intercla a k tbal 1, A Sigm eltaf gma 4 Interclas a.eball Z, 3 1 F110 ll g, 4 Traffic Squad 3, 4 1 V rsi y aspcetball 3, 4 K 'L Q ' Interclass Blisketball 1, Z I , l f C F MATTHEVV H CKETT i'zDEBOBAH.HAMfLE N0, 7 ' i ymurnalism No.1 7 A ' ,- Ask ' e. Writp, write, 'C hqjestin ff Nady, flflll fl 1 ite thi 5 f smie on er ips, 5 The wo d's a i Iworld, Sh 's bublalitlg with fun 'la'-Jter r write new ' ,Of fif1g6f-fQPS- l gl, l st x t C '12 ' 'l Usllefsffofvs A . I Si,f?ir121Del2zimgigma g, ligment 4 -- Elj5QjH 4 , Year Book ' f-7' , 1 TU 513 3 4 Interclass Tennis 3 tl 1 -A Bask llrl. 2 Varsity Football 3, ff H0153 -0C19fY X' K ' SLEY JAMES HAGAR LOUISE EUDORA HANCOCK Sou ort 4 E. F. A. Business Administration He hat 's frie indeedg HA cheerful temper joined with in- H ' eep t eqgit thy need. nocenee will make beauty attraclizxe, 1 Schoo , 2 knowledge and delightful u'it goods unlent Coun naturedf' Q mic 11 Girls! Glee Club, V.Pfes. 1, 2, 3, 4 O h gt 2 3 f rc es ra ,V Uperetta 4 . s -V W 1 -. y , . GARVIN CH R RS HAMILTON ANNA IXIARY HANRAHAN xlfi fortu 'lei Uit not inugbiritf' Var my Football 3, 4 lnterclass Basketball 1, 2, 3' Interclass Baseball'1, 2, 3 Interclass Boxing 2, 3 Hopkins St. W 3-4 ghy' ical Instructor 5t.Mary'S Nursing NA Smut lhfigft mal? effuinefl in HNever idle a moment, but thrifty and thoughtful of othersf, . 5' . I y f' -1, Q f I I Q X X 'I , ' V E 9 I L-W X '-1, x K I I fi X 4. M ' I - x I as i ll' g' X. 16 a W , , 6271 N I f d! g if ii f X 71 ' U. g, ' - is 4 RU 7 ELI B OT MARGUERITE HOLTZAPPLE NO. 9 NUFSC No. 9 Elmira Business Inst. is To see her is to love her And love but her foreverf' Business Club ' f Girl 3.e?ve , 3 Libra y taff 3, 4 Tri Sigma My Ushers' Co s Imerclass Basket ll 4 GRACE IRE NE HARRINGTON Big Flats Union Beauty Culture To hear her speak and sweetly smile, You were in Paradise the while. CECELIA MERL HARVEY No.9 Artist 6' n f mi artist Fgteoliath thy! decreed, To mak me g od, A 5 B e .' LORETTA CATHERINE ' HENDERSON ' X Eplithport 4 Lilrfarian 'Her voice was ever soft, Gentle, and lowg an excellent thing in womanf' Library Staff 1, 2 Tri Sigma 1, 2 Business Club 4 NORMAN EDWARD HILL No. T Bond Salesman As the bright sun glorifies the sky, So is his fact illumined with his eyes. Student Council 1 German Club 4 Sigma Delta Sigma 35 Sec'y 4 Interclass Basketball 2 Interclass Tennis 3 Football 3 1 i'0h., youth, forever dear, forever kindli' Tri Sigma 1, 2 V: . MARIE LOL!lSE HO.WLfKND l NQT7 y . ' '- i ifyevefleiiitedf fifhen one's ' oppressed, Never' dejectylig when another is blessedfl' ' 1. E' , . , f-Ushe sy' Corps I ' 1 A I' usin ss Club 4' - w ljliiibfak staff 3 U - Propefgy C6lXgo,ilvfX, ' x 'Q 1 GEORGE KEMP HUDSON Southport 5 Radio Engineer Earnest he is, of sober mien, But a twinkling eye is ever seen. Discussion Club ' Science C ub 2 Radio u easurer 4 EL NE AD13 F iiurffrsn 5 Elyri . , t rior,Dec bfQtiih:: l'In. W cfilek r ears a pretty . lump gg V , it Lov WUQ'Zgllou'.s.', o f: is Ho 0 Society , H -fj4V?,., IRENE FLORENCE HUNTER No. 3 Tea Room Manager p nTo doubt her fairness were to want an eye: -Q 4 To doubt her pureness were to , Y want a heartf' ' Interclass Basketball 1g Capt. 2, -1 Interclass Athletic Council Representative 3, 4 W M is , W S i ei 9 . 4 ' - We .Q Q X S .ei te rl ., . 5: A, x . B 1 ' I Q 1 ' I 1 I ' A., I - ,L P, ' - X 17 ' ' 0 A ' ' f I 1 L. . U . 27 - - 1 'I wt ' HELEN FRANCIS JONES I JAMES KENNEDY Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Elmira Bus. Inst. Hopkins St. Stenographer HONG with G kind and ECHWOUS EA reputation for good judgment, heartf, for fair dealing, for truth, and for Ushers' Corps rectitude, is itself a fortune. El-S0-Hi 3, 4 Business Club 4 Hi-Y 4 Color Squad 3, 4 NELUE IRENE KARL WARREN CHARLES KETCHUM E. F. A. Elmira Bus. Inst. NO. 3 Auto Mechanic 6'My smiles must be sincere, SHE is a mlm of menle Of not at UH' He who can turn his hand t any- Ushers' Corps thing-if R P51 DWAR KEENER HELEN MARJORIE KI SAQIE No. ectricaIEXPe1't St atrick's Loiiyjthrfgus. Inst. 6 ' the ITU kind of friend, fi jdty oopslidts in ossessing ' U o d h ' tance freely lend? i 5, xx' Crafts s Guild 3, 4 But in deservin ther if ' ' Stage lectrician 4 v , . 2,4 EISISSSCSTIIE 4 X Intercfa 5 Track 1, 3 Interclass Soccer 2, 3, 4 ROY EDWARD KEENEY MARCUERITE LOIS KIDD N03 Drafting AA d IDA I I Nursing 6'Frien,d to truth, of soul sincere, ,er an Sf fle S em er plgfohlf' In action faithful, and in honour' Huffef tlwiuhole fffw thmubh' Clears, I shers Lorps IHECTCIZISS YYrestling 2 Iuterclass Boxing 2 wg .i I l X Q 5 ft 2 .w SL xx N Sm Az ' A' af as 3 2 Q Ea sm Y E ' J' i it if if A 'J E ID QEATS LOUIS G. KNAPP 0 , , 5 Aviation No. 3 s Q ' racuse Univ. 4 g Xdi ge gfihis life The h rt to conce il the under- idi ff stan 1 -3 rr .. 5 and to ' : V as E ling is plea. res, and his exigute' P Id ' - - wr' ,ass resi ent C gms fvugnfa 3 4 Student Council, President 4 ra mans ui , HLY 2, 3, A Inter lass Soccer 3, 4 Ef.50.Hi 2,43 Esgh Fchoor-11Ba121d33, 4 gooibag 5, 2,5 Captain 4 erc ass rac I 3 Color Squad 3, 4 T?Sg1Et1?2, 3, 4 Honor Society .- 0 .4 'Fix' , 4 0 5 K X . I .4 . I I ,Q .Q .L Q I --I 5, . , f f . W QQ' 1 ' . f il Y fl' 18 ' '1 5 W W V . f , ' 5 I ii' 1 l CX , - Q 1 ee 1 ' f ' L W ' , 1 X 1 -I ' ,L F, ' - f 1 CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH HYDE C ANCELYN NELSON KNIER t Endicott, N. Y. A' '. College Johnson City H. S. Univ. of Penna. - She is just,tlte quiet kind They saw her charming, but they ' Wdosil nature nevarivariesf' saw not half Glit ub 15 T-pegsgurer 2 The charms her douvncast modesty Q 'A V gifg'Rf3S'E'VC 1 concealedf, . w' , ,p-3 ,..,,, S gg, s ers or . Interclass Basketball 3 M FRANCES ELIZABETH JENKINS Ss. Peter and Paul Rochester Bus. Institute 'lSimplicity is of all things the hardest to be copied? Ushers' Corps FRANK WESLEY JOHNSON No. 3 Cornell Univ. 'i0f all the worldls enjoyments What ever valued were, Thereis none of his employments With fishing can compare? HLY 4 I German Club 4 HERPERT DONALD JOHNSON'-K Nc: 9, I pf-fr A 'Southport No. 10 fiooftstanttf lfQll6l'lSXl.d7ilf1gV - rare and itil to ,hndf V Business V' lull? ' Interclass Basketball 1 LOIS ALLEYNE JOHNSON No. 9 Cortland Normal She,s all my fancy painted herg She's lovely, sheis diifinefi Girl Reserves 1, 25 President 3, 4 Sigma Delta Sigma 4 Ushers' Corps Tri Sigma 4 Honor Society ' Senior Play Cast if 0 ,O 30 I ,..4 s MARION EVA X NGB LL A Bayonne H. S. fi ortlg Normal .sHer smg:yly'f:oflig11M1f summer . . J 6z??gli1ersistg1f-like a morn in A ,if l 1 'X l RUTHAHARIEW E. F. A. Stenographer i, I lcrve my life bit not too well as To sing it ante Qf 2046 aluayf' I - I ' iir 'fr ' DORA LAUPER Work is for the livingg Better to wear out than out. Library Staff 2, 3, 4 to TLLSI ELSIE LEONARD No, 7 Cortland Normal ' One thing is forever good: That one thing is successf, s' - ' 'fiifi fx. . 9 . 1 L R! O 1 I , N W ' li Ji I Q ui F.: ' ' A1 4 9 19 rngiv ff All 5 , O 5' , li H LV . f A 1 1 I . x 0 1 il we , i . i X 'J VJ,-V 1 ,f r C ' ' . j , , ' , A K THEQDORElLEVANDUSKI ELEANOR RUBY LOVELL E. F. Af' , Theatre Manager No. 9 ll , HH will heal to the line of right, llseiglzhe chips fly where they may. usiiliss Club 4 ,Senior Boys' Glee Club 4 ' Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 4 El-So-Hi 4 - A A fx Yi LEWIS Hopkins Sisters of the Skillet His be t s music in't gg , y ,KM 1As,l comjigs upjthe st'2zirs. A jolly pal when all is gay A tender pal when all is gray? Glee Club 2, 3, 4 Year Book Staff 4 Ushers' Corps Tri Sigma 1, 2 f , , Q D ALB!! . EN ol CAdvert ingl modes ian n 'er taf C I lf- Guild, T A 3,4 - h' F' I Y rggrazi 3, 4 reasurer us- mss Cl 4 , mills my 2 lv IHA' y , '- , ily X li X XX I I i 1 X1 V- R '-1 f ' -l J' MARY GR. 1 LI at CELLI i E. F. A. ' P vate Secretar ' ' il' 9 A work a t 'lieth no i i t t b asha . ' iffless Club, 'ry ' S ers' 1-ps 1 , fr' Sig a elta igma -easurer 3,4 U TF' 1 ma 3 S ut Council 3 l j ,,'. operty Council 3 PAUL FRAQKLINXALQC Wooo Man , 14,54-' 4. :: 'stror1 e ways sue? e s. Q 'Giee 2, sg!! ' Radiii Club 4' f- High School Bal' 3 XVrestling. Stu ent Leader, 3, 4 LORETTA MAE LONG St. Marys St. Joseph's Hosp. A merrier woman, l never spent an hour's talk withalf' Ushers' Corps llfliyj N rg fi? MARGARET DOLORES MADlGAN ' St. Mary's ' Bus. Administration HGood' humor is the clear blue sky of the soulf' A ' Ushers' Corps' - Business Club 4 El-So-Hi Staff 4 lnterclass Baseball 1, 2, 3 Interclass Basketball 3, 4 THOMQS JClgEP'H MADIGAN I St. Mary's ' SQ? ifort Writer Genius is ma nly an .' of energy. Q41 Year Book Stag Honor Society, 'Vice-President Interclass Baseball 1, 2, 3 Student Council 1 GORDON ELWOO MALLORY No. 9 X G' ' I , lr ss' , r .a . uch r rienils, than enemi . ' Interclass Baseball 1, 2 Interclass Basketball 3, 4 Interclass Soccer 3, 4 l 4 U 5-xx . ,', .4 . If I W ' ,xii 1 Y. in i 1 Q s 0 J x I AT - ul ii? p., ' ' i g . F9 ' F n I 0 Til- Y N O I I , xii. U7 9' f ' f D 1 a w - ,L F, ' - Q HESTER MAPES . V 13195-BDjf1fEW7XN No.7 - , Slug She spealfeth not, but yet there K Vll ef'hf befl f'iCeVlf lies a conversation in her eyes. of mln - so-D...sQi Hi-Y Z. 3 .4 f Busmes ' lub 35 resident 4 Iutgzigaz Basket .ll 1 X J., , 'id . .fy 1 . , i f 3 u , f. M ' Q V V ' 'fi 1 JJ 1' BA TIN N 10 TNI ED No. V L! Business 'l 5 'J' X ONNELL V - ' - ' l U 'T -e life too s 'ousbf V No' JJ Detroit Ford Hosp' -' , ' ' 1u'ha25,si woqwr -' A 'V 'P f0fNufY9' 5 1 fl Y X yface wit gladness eu? ,spreadf A A 4'v' - - A . - s ' , ' in A Seifaxfrwiifsfs. 31.4 f r ef , 4 jf 'I X ' Eu South t Corners G DON DANIEL MCCANN F u. .things are zmposszk JOHN EDWARD o diligence and El -Hi 3, -l kzlli' ELEANOR McCLAIN X H J0 MCKAY ' ' No.9 Philadelphia Nff A Y Pfmtms Presbyterian Hosp. Q 'SNev i mrnent, but thrifty, 66Rare is the union of beauty U ' WSC and purityf, Student Council 1, 2, 3, 4 T' 2 f r ri ,igma Foot-Lite Club 2 X . :J fx 0 V f J! ' Q NORNIAN LEON MCCLELLA D EDWARD JOSWJH MIL 'ER No.9 Advertising NO- g Cabi 1 iklflg - :Thy modesty is a candle HL h-9,5 nd I1 15 Wllwh to thy mqitf' 5 d Z . 'll 'Aer SA S- y , y an y lD.,J,Ul strz ' Blfgiileslgelglubxgina 3 4 Craftsman' G ' zu, X Interclass Tennis 3 lnterclass 3, 4 Interclass Basketball 2 Interclass rack 3, 4 Football 4 -f Student Council 4 71 Q nv- ' 5- . ' wie- ' , Ai 2 . , I NL.,-C x 0 I 1 i X lf' 1 l f Q i. 2 l 4 5 l Q - I 'J 5 I l C I 'l S' f , f A l G6 ' Xu. '31, ' 3'-an LS, uf 5 I iin x if , ' ,4.. lv R, :SHN MEL MANJSFQ MARGARET FRANCIS A In P A l' -College M i N - 3' and tall be Loves in the St lays ' ursmg f ll, of , A 5 o , AA The Chief of F111 uSflfyi,f0f grace? for Populamy' , 'A E150-Hi 3 Interclass Baseball' 1, 2, 3 ' Boxing 3 -- Soccer 3 ' ': .,,, an mg 31 E U X . , K Clg.RALDl.N9fiblERVICK K x F l?1.A.Qx I Business Her dffrjulness was like gli pses of suns, 535111411 clouqly rlayff Usherg' rps. ' , . 2 f , : ' .' ,7 ,f 1. f'f l AGATHA MARIE NELCOSIEQI E F. A. Bus. Adrninistrafjon Qhe has a shrewd wisdom, unafraid Of what mortals fear to losef' JAMES CONROY 0'CONNOR 'UA The ex pli ion of-aiwonder ary's Newsgaper Work sits high' in all thxexpeoplesl IV ' , 1 A Q..g and a 'ri arf, '- Student ' ounqcil Z, 35 V-Pres. 4 Propertyx ouncil, Chairman 3 El-S0-Hi , 4 Hi-Y 3, 4 Senior Pla l Cast Year Book Interclass oxing 2 Interclass Track 2 Cheer Leader 2, 3 MARION O'HARA Patrick's Elmira Bus. Inst. A laughing countenance Oft masks a serious naturef' Business Club 4 Tri Sigma 4 O rf E . I 1 I L ll O XX 1 I If JV A ,L ie, x ' f - ' 1 X ' A f A - u - p. ' - 3 0 9- E . I' , I f f fs ' ul F1 ' ' A I' . f - H N E HR O'LEA RALPH BURGESS PAGE ' A an-'S H ' Southport No. 4 Rochester 'ucood ,wwf th Mechanics Institute k ' 5 h SITO get t ' e ends, nggitfgconl f mjjgizg y b s ess aside? In ercla Ig-asfg , IA I' rack 2 Blsiu S Club I rcl s Baskethall 3, 4 C. BIATILDA OPQARIL E. F. A. 6'Her best 'compan1fons, innocence and healthg And her best riches, ignorance of wealth. Ushers' Corps Business Club -3 MARY ALICE OSTASHESKI E. F. A. Bus. Administration UNO prey am I for poor thoughts. Ushers' Corps Tri Sigma 4 Business Club 4 And tho h he rnlse to his loss Lou E vyxsm R PALM No.1 A- if V. .c. , A NG uruffbfzn EQ erlsei All must 'e lfoinf, ' Q Pfope Y Cohmcil '.if Q14-- Ushers, Corps IVA1 HERBER ISAY'l INLQQAIARQNS No.9 'J C' lj adio Expert .Q p - He makes his prolmise good. Hi-Y 4 I, f Craitsmanls Guild Lili., K .G Boys Glee Clubfl, 1' V. f Honor Society l V rj, e .fr 1 X ll X, 0' C YHA-vx . 1 , MARY ELIZABETH OSTAZESKIP PHYLLIS M, PARSONS ' ' I E- F- A7 BUS- Admif1iSlfali0l1 Horseheads High Beauty Culure C V- H3611 fl' is never Illefllfifill, but Of all our parts, the eyes express, bffgzftfy -is 1 747el29mQ-,e2LQ!N1f'GQQfQff The sweetest kind of bashfulnessf' f A In ,X 4 - Girl Reserves 1 I 7f.' Hcixtgxfgginiigty' J 4 , f I I he gsheri Clgryg 1 v,g,,,,v,f up M LLC' - 1.5. CHI' O0 ' ' I I S' D1 ' K . N ' wi,.-.y ' Y XPiIsli11gtivhaCiiE1i2tlta4 I k Is, f J v ,, E Y7,7i,Y7s,f X s DOROTEH AMELIA PACKARD OLIVE MARION PE KHAM .ludson,I'IilISchool ,' Cornell No.7 C t nd Normal -5-3. 5 est be thy' calm ease. 'GO usic, sp er es e d maid, If , mee CMN e P fe, Wm nfs aids' ' , 1 - , A' T im 2, 3, 4g Pre dent 1 . f .cience C , 3, 45 Sec'y 1 uterclass etball 1 l 'l':5 , ,, Olin ' , , Auiiilius I fit :Q '- fjijg- K,0r Stra 1. , 3, -' f' ma Delta ia 5 I NjHonor Society l Q ff ' ' Fifi' 1-- ' A I '- . 9 1 'f xr ' X ' 1 Q'-N 1 -,V X ' . L fa ' ul il ? F1 ' ' 4 23 W ' s' FRANCES A. PEEBLES ai? E. F. A. Elmira,B1yirless Inst f, O most delicate geridl W'hgffiyVti,ca5r5-,refz a woman ?, , J , I f, , U, -Z! fx sa, , , u. av i: F1 T , 6' ' WILDA THERESA POND Wellslioro, Pa. Her looks do argue her replete with modestyf' 'l'ri'Sigma 1, 2, 3, 4 Ushers' Corps rx fax ' I .ffinxyro I A 7 w if 's I I GLADY5 MAE PERCY HARRIETT BARNES PQRTER No. 9 Bus. Administration :'Come, sing now, singg for I know you sing wellg I see you have a ,singing facef, Girls' League, V-President 3 El-S0-Hi 3, 4 Tri Sigma 1, Z, 3, 4, Student Council 4 U h r ' C s e s orps Business Club 3, 4 X No. 7 Y, lpflllege On with tl? Lacey? Z joy be unconjine ' ,ff No sleep til rngilzhen youth and le meetf, igma Delta Sig'fn!g.4 X' 3 gri-dsggmg 2,313.1 I 4 1 is .tu i' ou ci Ushejg?-Cwxps 'S ' I W s - N f , 1 JAMES KENYO it P Ll ALICE NAOMI PRIEST Breesport I ' ation E. F. A. Bus. Administration 5'There ' I y all reed '4Marks, not men, hdve Had si, 'i In m he re seed always been my aimf, Of leaf g -Q 5 Business Club 3, 4 Ushers' Corps I ,A 1 ' sl ' I V1RGlNIA. MARIAH iPlERCE ELVIE SALLY PURDY NO- TN., I xv Private SCCTCYHTY Southport 4 Buffalo Training nfllwaysx appy, always gay, SCh00l Living CV life vin llef Own Sweet She smiles for the sake of smiling, Way-M And laughs for no reason but fun. Tri Sigma 4 Ushers' Corps Girls' 'League 3 DORIS LOUISE PLUM Bristol H. S. Auburn Bristol, Pa. City Hospi HLove, sweetness, goodness, In her person shinef' Girl Reserves 3, 4 Tri Sigma 4 Ushers Corps Interclass Baseball 3 DOROTHY ARLENE QUICK Elmira Heights NAS modest and as sweet As ever a maid could bef, Ushers' Corps Year Book tal . gt? R 2 . 1 I 'I 1 A X.. X 3 5 X I 'V ' Q Tig: t w is A 3' f i 1 to 1 24 r -- -ty' O E' E . V , H V -., I x , I ' I if-11 ex X ll ' , li 1 ' ., - ul F, - HAROLD GEORGE RAUCH Ng, 9 Printing Above our life we lore a steadfast friendf' ANN TE RE SA RECORD E. F. A. Elmira College 51-AMMYAS v 4'Those curious loclfs so aptly Nuvhmellef I5 Lmfth do all twin'd, Whose every hair a soul zloth trindv , ' I xsjgfir 'Q fl I jul . LEONA B. JQQ lt C ARLAND WILBUR ROSE aff- as JAMES JOSEPH ROURKE St. Mary's lest and youthful jollityf' Traffic Squad 4 Soccer 3, 4 v . JOHN ARTHUR RC is worth doing well? l 1 EDNA LOUISE ROY O Hopkins Street Elmira College V ,- Patient of toil, serene amidst I alarms. ' Tri-Sigma 3 Ushers' Gorps - Interclass Basketball Z, 3, 4 roper y nuncx , G1rl Reserves 2, 33 V-Pres. 4 HOW Society 1-f. A T fsjieani 5 .fi Q, i .1 in W '45 -sf i 2 .Y ii' U ' gee' 1 Bgrfr 'X l3ORIS RUBIN Southport NO. 4 Electrician Niki , ' yracuse Univ. Men of few words 'N am Ehargefl ui' h ambition. are the best menf, C Sei-imafn Club 4 xx A Y F fl s ers' Corp. 2- x Hn cms 4 Cla Senior P, YY .jx X 5 or ff X--XEI-So-Hi, '3Q44 L f J J -V 'cyl 1 nor SOQ1 ty V ,Q.'.,.fL ' -f ' 'st'e' O ' - V. 3' fgma Del! Sigma 3 ,QW K ' OSCAR ROTHWELL FANNY RUTH RUBIN Troy, Pa. No. l Journalism What though success will not filolly, good-natured and full of fun, attend on all, And always a friend of every one. Who bravely dares it some- 4, E1-SO-Hi 4 times risks a fall. Southside Radio Club 3 Q ' Ushers' Corps H Student Council 1 K Science Club 1 Treasurer 4 'I year Book X V , f I Honor Society XXX NU Exf Assembly Traffic Squad R W Q V L X Y f- ' , tiff' - O 5- K N . I ' I lj, I , I I in so . 9' 1 ff' 1 QC - Q as' P, ' - 1 ' 25 Interclass Baseball 1, 2, 3 . 5 P t C '13 4 ' W Q-5 A-- t ,V .Y Www.- r W O 9- X A A Iwri i x . I , I 1. -X J U' ii ' A ' f 5. l V ' -45 ' ul ' wig? ' ROSALIE RUHNIEL CHARLES SCHOTT E. F. A. St. Josephs Hosp. No. 3 Bus. dministration nlfnclourled the day, m gf' gf' Or stormy the night, I, , ' flf' f' f The sky of her hzart l ' ' A441 Is always bright. ss 'Baske Ushers' Corps .K - 3' ' nts I t ll 2, 3, 4 1 nor Socliety, Tr s rer V gf-Sai , t 1 as c - Classifearwtglyfw EARL LAWRENCE RUSSELL E.F.A. FRANCES WILLARD SEELEY E. F. A: Y Secretary' 'ilrwent me solnethingyrzeu' A A '6Whate,er ' e did, was do' with so N, and yozill set me a-,9lfippz'ng. ' N In hi . zloneflu syqztfral to pleasen TJLUC 'fgmbling QNX? A Ks-hers' Corps 'A Tri-Sigma 4 Girls' Glee Club 1, 2 HARRY ANDREW SAGAR, JR. No. 7 Bus. Administration i'fVIyegge2altl1 is health and perfect JOHN EDWIN SEIBERT My coiiscience clear my chief NO- 3 SYTHCUSC UUWCFSUY defensef g'Whose little body lodged Honor Society Business Club, N-Pres. 3, 4 Science Club 2, Sigma Delta Sig Senior Play Washington Ope 3,4 ma 4 retta v a mighty mindf' Interclass Track 1, 2, 3 Interclass Soccer 2, 3 Boys' Glee Club 1, 2 Varsity Truck 3 El-So-Hi Stall 3, 4 Year Book 8 'Xl , A . I-3 X. 'l ' ilk- AV HA EL INA SEIEPARQ N U. S. A cademy A , W , H , . Hendy A enue M Secretary Le l e dredl H . . . on W on A-echeerfuz llgok Q .I Mlresxa Ylish a feastf ' e c lub 3 v , 1 l W, , ,N A 50. 3 gshgrg Lorp? x ,Q 7 V I - 1 - 4 fl-.1 mu ,, , Bliigiiieass C JL 4 J X 'X HELEN GLADYS SCHUYLER No. 7 Elmira College A good heart's worth goldf' Tri-Sigma, Pres. 35 V-Pres. 4 Ushers' Corps E. . . Q 1 K- 4. X.: Q : , P' f l ELIZABETH DO OTHY SHORTSLE VE 'N f r:.F.fl. I ' HHer air, ,her manners, all who saw aiimiredg Courteous though Coy, and gentle, lhoughx retired? ' ' Business Clwbtj 4 V l Ushers'XCorps , Student Gogrgcil, Treasurer 4 Sigma Delti Sigma.4 Tri-Sigma 3 H ,L I 'I-215' ,, I -Lie I ki' R O I I T: I N l , I V' Q- Q. g, ' 26 -Y., W- -.v -Y .. --.V YYY W, ., . vw.-,.v.... W f , ,Q 1 ries. . 9. . ' , I , 'LT . . I f I ,- ' SARA SISKIN RALPH HAXTON STRAIGHT Benjamin Franklin Business No. 9 Accountant High Admlmstfatlon ilVirtue alone is sujficient to make a 'iAll who joy would Min must man great, glorious anzl happyf, share it' 'l Business Club 4 Happibneggiqfrls a twin. KF l x l , A I 2 .'y2.,,,s.fV l V , l'k,flP L. DOROTHY HARRIET SMITH NIARIALN AJNNABELLE STLROUSE Watkins Glen' Horseheads ff, Southport 4 ' .Pratt Institute High Tfammg School! . fGSh2: doesnft seem to worry, all is good to lengthen to the last l She's never in a hurry, ' a sunny moodf' 1 Baz she gets there lug!-Zig same. Ushers' Corps -Tri-Sigma l Year Book Ushers' Corps Sigma Delta Sigma 3, 4 Business Club 4 'Interclass Basketball 1, 2 Library Staff 2 , E1.S0.I-Ii 4 Property Council Q Tri-Sigma 2, 3' ' A ' Honor Society SHIRLEY MAE SMITH HELEN LUCILE STALKER l Troy H- , P' G' No. 7 Elmira College ' :GAS HIGTT S lg Lilly is lwlrgii' The ' i 'z seizes the prompt T!f'Si , Tr iff 2, 3,34 X occa '0n- 1 girl r es,4 T asurer, 2, '3 plan I- 5 nel ' d . e 'SETJVTS , 1. f 'Q ,, ' 1. Sciehce .lu 4 I' 'A sg execut - , , J , A ,. ' El-E : ' E it?'S'n3g Associate Ushers' To Honor Society BE I YKAL MARY JANE SUTER E. F. A. . dministration N0, 'Y I Elmira College Fo ,BI pe shall righlen Too busy V gm S me-li to fear to li o dief, sh S E1-so-Hi 1, at sg tan Year oo v Tri-Sigmal YOPC fy H011 4 Sigma Delta Sigma X Business lub 4 Glee Club 2 Ushers, Corps Operetta 1, 4 Honor Society German Club 4 X, MKXRJORIE SNOVER MARY AGNES SWEENEY E. F. A., Surgery,BuHalo E. F. A. Private Secretary As frank as rain on cherry I have knowledge to be true, blossomsf' if My faith can obstacles remove. Ushers' Corps J 1 Tri-Sigma 3 Interclass Basks ball'4 Ushers' COTPS r- ' I N 0 if Q Q . , ' A , I ' ., 9 ' T' 1 1 ' f ' Q W - f 1,l I 1 f I r Qi est ' F., 1 ' 5 1 l ' 27 V . 9, 1 . I I or I I ,ki X . I 1, I Q s. , Y. is 1 i sk 11, l X j 2 it LEON TALLIVIAN KATHLEEN' AMELIA TQBEY I Southport 8 Draftsman '4Wh0 does the best his circum- stance allows, Does well, acts nobly-angels could do no more. GRACE LOUISE THOMAS No. 9 Public Welfare Worker 4'Because of you we will be glad and gay. h - Girl Reserves 1, 233, . Business Club Ushers' Corps ax! i lijgdfdf.. LEWIS H. THRASHER I No. T Physical Education 'That wise magician with the brow serene. Sigma Delta Sigma, V-Pres. 3, 4 Science Club 3, 4 Hi-Y 3, 4 Varsity Track 3 Varsity Football 3, 4 Senior Play Cast Honor Society SouthportN4?f, Lfvfhgjlqursing HShe,s arnied wiQou.l J that's innocent ufit7F1i.U'-fy f . G W Girl Reserves 2, 3, 4 L'sliers',Corpsf ' , My A , . . 1 U J Y i 5 f ' l WILLIAM DALZE-st TRADE 9 No.3 3 I filzarklllolle e l'Pe uasion tips hi tongue wh e'er liegal sf, f Senio 'Pl A Q ast Year 0 , Sigh-i' ,D ta Sigma, P'residenf3 Sciei' ' ' M '1'reasl,ujef 1, 2, 4 Hong kfijeiqf I I . ' -f ,M 'lx f Jw J N-X A L if .IOI-IN EDWARD VALLELY No. 9 Radio fliroadcastingl :Zin artist may walk with emperors and kings. Business Club 4 Year Book El-So-Hi 3 Honor Society Student Council 1 IVAN D, TIPPLE GERALDINE VANDERPOOL V No. 7 Elec. Engineering NO- 9 Nuwiris NA true friend Io cz man is a friend MLW the 7fl'0flfl Slide ,F , 'to all his friends. lef the lvvrld 805 ' , A jig for care, V is ' and a fig for woe' fydfl Library Staff P i ll ' Girls' League 3 RICHARD CLIFTON TIPPLE CHARLES . AL 'AN' LIET No. 7 . X V V , llopkins St.XyQ f P ' ss choo I :'Rare' compound of' orlrlity, frolic, Une lllflbllig H1 5 'll0'q'si X . and 'funf x X .soun and Xie ' g quali' 'i :V Who relished a joke and rejoic'd 4 X, , ii' 2' ',- iii at a p nfl' I 2 in Year Book - ..., Eif - Interclass Soccer 2, 3, 4 ' Interclass Basketball 4 ' 1 - 4 . T - X A I n 1 O 1 I '- .L 3 ' ' iz- - I , I f 1 'V rl, I ix ' 'Q -1 ' ul p1 ' ' -.T 28 H ' Y J1'lff F' - --J-Q . . 4, L 1- ' xl -- ' I Y M O if K E . V , W V , I ' -l f lb W' , ' 9 I f 14 1 '- 1 I ix 43, . fl ' Q ' lf' ' I l auburn curls. The least of which would .send ten poets rating. El-S0-Hi 3, -l Business Club 3, -l Honor Society Girl Reserves Sigma Delta Sigma 3, J Senior Play, Property Chairman ,lunior Play Ushers' Vorps if V- Bus. Admini. ' n ' fhe walks in b A eautyf' 'T' Sigma De ig 4 ' I A Busi 5 S 4 M ' VID NS . I U ' I o gh loyto sight, to memory d ' 1 T t7u e' , cit em n-' I lfi2' er vi'r 1ilrl3, kfzflresitleut 4 Soce r A ' A DOROTHY ELNICE WHIPPLE No. 9 Cortla Normal nHere,.s to the cle r, I May they be with ,us eff. .irfi-si, 1, 2 ' ,Sigmadmlta Si 1ag2, 43 Sec'y 3 Science Club lfqlffg President 4 Junior Pla Cast' :Senior Pl .Cast 'lfshe sh ps ' IHIBIQASS Baskethgill 1 Girls Glee Club 2 El-S H' 1 2 0' 1 Y. Year Book Staff EMILY VIRGINIA K.-XTHRYN Xxx VVALSH WIIITEMAN F 'kb E. F. A. E. F. A. Q. 7' Walter Reed Hosp. We are friends. , :The world is not better if we My mind and! If, ' f worry, F ' X K . -'P P ' ,. And lif6,S.JIO onger if we hurryfi W W fl Eusinesg fplllg-I 1 A A V , . .. t X 7 V l Ljglileixs' E01?ps,IiIiIcIe-Presitleiit KT ,fyvv Student Council 4 ' Af AD-WINE BELL WARREN CECELIA PATRIGLIA ,IQZMAN No. 9 Albany State Stuyijfsxd lg Cofuege . Hllown her white neck. floating ' ' v 4 2, 1 N ..' I, . x N , xx ,y . ILELEANOR KNATIHR i Y. ' i'Tl'l,fT5'4fQ whole reilgi Qcliarnonids inf hweleyesf' Student Council' . 3 ' Tr'-Sig ali 2 ' Gfil Rergefves l gjhers' Corps fl' asketball 2 wf , Jr JV! l s 'MARY ELLEN WIGSTEN No. T Pratt Institute 414 merry heart doeth goocl like medicine. Tri-Sigma 2, 3 A Q ALICE WILLIAMS E. F. A. If. of Michigan l Beauties in vain their pretty eyes may rollg Charms strike the sight, but merit wins the soul. Business Club -1 ' ELIZABETHXGRACE WILSON Ii. F. A. A She tvorlrs with., joy aml u will. As'merry as thei alayff Sigma Delta Sigma 3, 4 Business Club 4 Senior Play Cast Ushers' Corps, Secretary Honor Society ' Operetta 1 5 Cheer Leader 1 O fr F- . ' 'ff?' :' J ' X A I . 3 I ? x . .y ' ' P-I 'li ' L . .I .Q - ,L lg. ' ' fav e I 29 v its-. x, nvvdi,-, Y-. ',.,,., .., O s,:,..w-,iw - v -- Q p ' 5 I V, 'f I Q 1 I :Y N w 3' 1 ' , , 1 A ' l ,,Jf'ff' ' - I 4 ff L f 4 L., I' if AA ljflixr ,J frrnx L CHARL,B'gl L'WOOD I A CATHERINE YEAGER C Olet Court, London ounting 7 i Horseheads Where are t ough brave Briioqs f, X Tfammg School to he ound Ilh hearts of oak, so uc. oifo , renownecl?', Science Cfii 2 3 '40 N Properpy C 3, 4 ioccergf t in 3, German Club VVed11esda ight Dance Fommi tee, Chairman GEORGE EDGAR WOOD ' She was Ihe fprizle of her familiar , sphere+L The llfllgf joy of all who knew her? Tri-Sigma 3g President 4 Ushers' Corps Sigma Delta Sigma 4 Library Staff 4 Property Council 3j Secretary 3 Junior'Play Cast Interclass Basketball 3, 4 , ' Year Book Staff ' M.: Honor Society Q ' Hopkins St. School Navy I um a soldier and unapt to weep LULU ANN YOUNG Or to exclaim on fortu.ne's fickle- NO. 3 ' SLJOS lblfs Hosp. 4 W ness' She lil78S in peace w' h all man- ' Q T land, I ,f In friendship she truef, ' ' Business Club 4 ' -. EVELYN LOUISE WOODWARD DELLA RACHEL ZIEGLER N0 9 Nursing No. 9 Strong Memorial Hosp. I would frgp others omg gioveliness QFJYISQ5 1,'Zi5ZZilf4fg'ehng' fVZlliLtnot the foreign aid of orna- Sggizi C1ur1?S1, 2, 3, 4 But is, when unadorned, adorned the Honor gociety moslf, Tri-Sigma 4 1 Ushers' Corps Library Staff 4 Girl Reserves 4 HONOR STUDENTS---CLASS OF I 9 3 7- RUTH BACON EDWARD BRANN LUCILLE CLUNK MARICE GOOKLIN EARL COROIER IRENE DYKE JOHN ENRIGHT CHARLES GETMAN DEBORAH XHAMPLE LOUIS KNAPP LOWELL Moss HERBERT PARSONS BETTY RUBIN FANNY RUBIN CHARLES SCHOTT LUCILE STALKER ELIZABETH WILSON IDA YEAGER 0 f L . ' A, Y L ' I ff' Q' I any ' ,A X' A I , I G 4, , i 'fr ' 7 4 0 ' un F, ' 8 ' ' 30 , ' - ' X 0 t ' 9'-' 5 X' ' W I -fs ' Q Q if IL, ' L K EMMUYUJS ELIMUILHRS i.,,.., 1 1 X160-,QBQ1 klflvbf. C! Qaoffk leader of Us All O60 B 655 p 4 rj Qf XX Q f' . , eff 65' 90000 679' 66, V . 1 ' 5 , i V Dorothy Wbi Pile A Pres. Scuence Cla , 4 'Fil I1'-Y P . 1 Ylf Book Editors Cbgrles S5531 5 John ferr- Max Tbjlor Sarah Condon P . ' IW lilgnlze re res Ushers Corps Wei txevdadm edge 5' CJOW' I I if . , l x 3 I I I 155 '- , r A rf r r I ' ul - Alf' 1:1 ' ' ' 'Qi 31 1 .f , ' 3 , EET K -- ' ' , ' , X 1 ' . 1 T 3 i X 6 W Q - .., 'ww - , ' 1 X gf, . Y-4: - G X 32 K Q O Q . Alba, Marion Andrus, Doris Arnold, Wayne Ashton, Catherine Ayres, Florence Baily, Elizabeth Ballard, Kenneth Barrow, Eloise Barrow, Louise Bartis Stephen Barto, Anna Bauer, Carl Beardslee, Howard Beidelman, Edith Bennett, Albert Bennett, Alma Bennett, Frances Bergan, Geraldine Bergh, Harold Berry, Bonalyn Bidwell, George Blair, Marie Bly, LeRoy Bowen, Aurelia Bowen, Beulah Bradley, Marion Braveman, Sarah Breck, Gladys Broich, Robert Brown, John Bryan, Dorothy Bryan, Kenneth Bryan, Leo Bucy, Geraldine Burgey, William Burdic, Duane Cadek, Clara Carpenter, Harold Carr, William Cavanaugh, Jerome Chimelewski, K. Clark, Glenwood Collins, Edna Combs, Robert Comfort, Bethel Comfort, Lawrence Congdon, Joseph Congdon, Rita Connelly, John Connelly, Mary Cox, Betty Crane, Marian Cronk, Dorothy Croop, Ethel Cummings, Esther Daggctt, Vivian Deane, Joseph Decker, George Decker. .Jeanette tg . . M CLASS OF 193 3 qDeegan, Eleanor Deibler, John Deibler, Vera DeKay, Thelma Dense, Clarence Derry, Mary DeWitt, Joseph Dickinson, Dorothy Dix, Elsie Donahue, John Donahue, Justin Douglas, John Drake, Manning Dunn, Virginia Dutenhoefer, Wilma Dubois, Fay Easton, George Eggert, Dorothy Elias, Anna Elston, Claire Entz, Dorothea Enedy, Louis Enedy, Teresa Evans, Esther Evans, Pauline Evans, Shirley Everts, Lorraine Eyers, Charles Fancher, Ruth Farmer, Charles Fasset, Margaret Fasset, Thelma Fick, Henry Fish, Florence Fleming, Vivian Forsythe, Margaret Fossaceca, Samuel Frank, Johanna Frisk, Peter Furman, Claude Furman, Walter Galley, Thomas Gannon, John Genung, Florence George, Aileen Gelbert, Lloyd Gelbert, William Gordon, Irene Grady, Kathryn Graham, Lena Griff, John Grillis, Donald Grossenbacher, Addah Gunderman, William Hall, Alice Hall, Charles Hanwell, Marsden Hartman, Harold Hayes, Malacki Hayes, Regina Hazen, Edith Held, Robert Hentz, Thomas Hill, lsobel Hill, Melvin Hodgskins, James Hunter, Betty lngalls, Richard lnscho, Clifton Ives, Geraldine Johnson, Evelyn Johnson, Helen Judson, Laura J uskiv, Anne Karl, Sol Kavanagh, Elizabeth Keefe, Kathryn Kelly, Bernard Ketchum, Doris Kieffer, Lucille Kirton, Gordon Kohlhaas, George Kunzman, Edward Ladd, Eunice Lambert, Katherine Landers, Paul Lathrop, Laurence Lauper, Mary LeGro, Miner Lilholt, Helen Long, Lorraine Longwell, Lawrence Lovejoy, Doris Lown, J ack Luisi, Yolanda Lynch, Joseph Mack, Rosemary Madigan, Gorman Maichisheck, Alice Malone, Rita Maltzer, Blanche Mason, Florence Mattison, Dorothy Maynard, John McConnell, Rena McDonald, John McGill, Gerould McGuire, Clarence Meltzer, Gilbert Merrill, Anna Miller, Cora Miller, Katherine Miller, Robert Monks, Celia Mordue, Edward Morhouse, Mildred Morrison, Gladys Morse, Carmen ll , 51' F' 2, .- ,S ' .xl o Mortimer, Thelma Mosher, Evelyn Motiska, Andrew Nluccigrosso, Sadie Murphy, William Murray, John Nagle, Clyde Nilan, James Nelson, Arnold Newell, Walter Newman, Leland Niver, Nellie O Connor, Betty O'Leary, Agneta Oldham, Robert Oliver, Agnes Olson, Merrill Olthof, Robert Orton, William Osgood, Kenneth OlShea, Arthur Osler, Leola Page, Fern Paine, Ruth Parks, Kenneth Payne, Richard Pearsall, Elizabeth Pickel, Lillian Picken, LeRoy Ploucha, Eugene Presser, Katherine Prutsman, Marian Pruyne, Ernest Putney, Thelma Quandt, Henry Quatrano, Rose Reazor, Karl Reidy, Timothy Reynolds, Howard Rhode, Helen Ritz, LaRue Robinson, Essie Roe, Doris Rose, Charles Ruff ner, Glen Ruggles, Francis Scaife, Dorothy Salisbury, Donald Sanborn, Raymond Saunders, Clarence Saxton, William Schecter, Ruth Scheel, George Schmick, Jesse Schoonover, Valda Scott, Lucile Seihe rt, Jack Simmons, Chloris Shannon, Josephine f P L 1 X Q 0 Q- eife' K Shappee, Franklyn Shay,Jack Sheehan, William Sherman, lrma Sherman, Walter Shipe, Gene Shook, Agnes Shook, Ellen Slocum, Robert Smith, Eva Smith, Floyd Smith, Geneva Smith, Ida Smith, Madeline Sniilen, Evelyn Snyder, Harry Snyder, Jeanette Spaulding, Charles Spedico, Philip Spencer, Catherine Spetaccino, Mary Steinhelper, Martha Stemmerman, Ruth ' Stewart, L,etha Strong, Andrew Sutton, John Swab, Teresa Swarthout, Kathryn Sweeny, Clarence Syndes, William Templar, Theresa Tobin, Kenneth Turck, Aimee Turck, Carol Vail, Kathryn Van Alstine, Leon Van Duzen, Marietta Van Dyke, Frances Von Hendy, Stephen Wainwright, Carl Warner, Elizabeth Warren, Thomas Watkins, Louise Watkins, Malcolm Weaver, Alice Weaver, lda Weir, James Wertman, Florence Wheeler, Earl Whipple, Mildred Whitman, Laura Winnick, Sanford Wladis, Arthur Woermbke, Carolyn Wook, George Worden, Carlton Wright, Donald Yeska, Virginia Young, Alta, Young, Clarence , ,,'jE:: . ' P it 4' fx Q ' 'V ' I Qs, 4, 'H ' ' ' ' ' C -Aa u. p. ' - t o 33 , , li , J A ' km? ? ' -V fn 457 k H. . , , A if ' I X ' 2 I I , X ' 445 ' 6 ul lb-14? F1 I X 0 4, ' I l i I I ' 5 ul F, ' Q L +1 K- 34 it .-,,-s W Q W . 1 'J 1- N O 1 I Tj J 1 I . . I ' i ,gtg X I 1 L it ' . s A Q' I f a , - ,JI g ' ' is Rx CLASS OF 1934 Allen, Dorthea Doolittle, Robert Kahn, Meyer Ogden, Julia Sielnefs lffed Allen, Earl Doughty, Frank Kelley, Rolland O'LeaI'Y, Allen bteppe, C arentle Andrews, lrene Andrus, James Apthorp, Richard Aumiller, lola Bailey, Carl Baker, Charles Baker, Rose Baker, Stella Baldwin, Ruth Barber, Phyllis Bartis, Bessie Barton, Marie Bazzett, Walter Bedrosian, Marian Bennett, Edgar Bennett, Ralph Benson, Raymond Bently, Frank Bishop, Harrison Blake, George Blake, Thomas Boyd, George Broich, Lee Byrne, John Careswell, Leda Carpenter, Leroy Cartwright, Gilbert Chapman, Elizabeth Chimilewski, Thomas Clark, Edna Clark, Sheldon Cogswell, Eula Cole, Daisy Colegrove, Lynn Collins, James Collson, Melvin Combs, Franklin Conklin, Edward Conklin, Richard Cook, Lorraine Coughlin, John Courtright, Rena Covell, Donald Crandall, Aldean Crough, Doris Crowley, John Currie, Donald David, Emma Davidson, George Davis, William Dean, Eleanor Dean, Elizabeth Deegan, William DeKay, Lena Denson, Wenonah Dibble, Richard Q kg . Dunbar, Ray Edler, Geraldine Edsall, Robert Edwards, Mary Edwards, Waldo Elliot, Lydia Enyedy, Betty Farr, William Fiester, Jeanne Fish, Milton Fish, Waldo Fossaceca, Erminia Frasier, Frank Frawley, Robert Freeman, Lynn Freeman, Robert Frick, Ruth Furman, Dorothy Ganung, Gladys Gary, Ralph Gates, Glen Gay, Walter Genung, Marjorie Gervais, Clara Ghen, Carl Ghen, George Gillis, Louise Good, Robert Green, Louis Griswold, Jack Guile, Gladys, Gunderman, John Hadden, John Hanrahan, Joseph Hanwell, Fern Hasbrouck, George Higgins, Mildred Hill, George Hollenbeck, Gertrude Hollenbeck, Thelma Hoobler, Delbert Howard, Emily Hudson, Elsie Hounker, John F. Hullander, Vera Hunter, James Hyde, Russell Hyde, Donald lnscho, Clifton Isaacson, Carl Johnson, Elizabeth Johnson, Ethyl Johnson, Frederica Johnson, Mary Johnson, Stanley Jones, Harry fi x N . , l ' N 4' 0 Ketchum, James Kienzle, Donald King, Thomas Kinney, Mary Kirkpatrick, William Knapp, Lena Kowalska, Gladys Lamb, Gordon L'Amoreaux, Raymond Lambert, Margaret Landenslayer, Leyden Levine, Gertrude Libert, Marie Liddy, Leo Liddy, Margaret Lockwood, Charles Longwell, Ward Lott, Ethel Lozier, J ack Lucarelli, Peter Ludington, Helen Lundgren, Florence Lyon, Cornelius MacDonald, Harry Mace, Ruth Mahan, Louis Malone, Bernard Many, Charles Mapes, Harold Mathews, Marjorie Mathews, William McDonald, Margaret McDonough, Thomas McKay, Helen McWhorter, Betty Jane Merrill, Richard Miller, Warren Monks, Hazel Moore, Carl Morey, Ruth Mordue, Howard Morgan, Jane Morrison, Norman Morse, James Moses, Robert Moseson, Helene Mosier, Ruth Motchman, Edna Murphy, John Murphy, John C. Murray, Leonard Olivey, Herbert Orton, Donald Osborne, Marjorie Pack, Fleeta Palmer, Sloan Parker, Francis Parsons, Geraldine Pearsall, Charles Peckham, Clara Peckham, Erwin Peckham, Paul Perry, Dorothy Personius, Alice Pettingill, Anna Philbin, Anne Phillips, Walter Pike, Elizabeth Pike, Ruth Prendergast, Marcella Quimby, Francis Reber, Margaret Reese, Howard Reidy, Daniel Reidy, Timothy Reynolds, Joseph Rogers, Bernice Rogers, Wayne Roland, Mark Roland, Sarah Root, Ethel Rouse, Luva Rubin, Marvin Rudd, Marcellene Rush, Ceil Sayles, John Schanbacher, Merton Schock, Charles Schonemann. Florence Schonker, Frances Schneider, Walter Scriver, Albert Segar, Ralph Shannon, Joseph Shea, Betty Shepard, Donald Shuck, Bety Shultz, Betty Swick, Robert Smith, Edson Smith, Margaret Snyder, Margaret Sticklers, Ruth Stimmerman, Charles Storm, June Stowell, Robert Strader, Kenneth Strong, Gould, Jr. Suter, Barbara Sweet. Ansell Sweet, Eugene Tanner, Robert TenEyck, Gertrude Tiitt, Ruth Tillinghast, Franklin Thomas, Jack Thorne, Arthur Towne, Barbara Truesdell, Douglas Tupper, Barbara Turk, Aubrey Updyke, Edna Vallely, Richard VanAmburgh, MUTJCT Vang, Alma VanGorden, Robert VanGorder, Jane VanHorn, Florence VanValkner, Gordon Varvin, Edward Vetter, Herbert Voelkle, Jean Vonderlin, John Voorhees. John Voorhees, Margaret Wainwright, Edwin Walling, Isabelle Watson, Doris Wells, William White, Elsie White. Lorraine Whitford, Jane Whitman, Myron Whitney, Jean Widman, Edward Wilcox, Gertrude Wilkins, Ruth Winner, Otis Winters, Bessie Wright, Velma Yavis, Harold Yeager, Howard Croty, William Nagle, William Super, Jane TDeCeaSed Nelson, Merle Spencer, Charles Nichols, Ruth Spicer, Lester Niles, LCSUSF Sprague, Curtis Niles, Thelma Stein, Aaron fl 1- A D 1 I 'ei r 1 as , r J, u. p. ' - has 2 35 V ' I u Q I LN . U '4 ' I 'A X x ' 'f Q f I f , 1 N J 4: ' W I f ' 9 'Q Q, sf , . 4? U. i P: x 0 g, f - ,, E, U- F, ' 1 I . 36 0 Adair, Ruth Adams, Ruth Aldrich, Herbert Allen, Alden Allen, Floyd Allyn, Elton Aloi, Samuel Anderson, Gladys Anderson, Kathryn Anderson, Mable Andrus, Francis Arnold, Harold Arnold, J une Ayres, Harvey Bacon, Arthur Bacon, Paul Baily, Virgil Baird, Robert Baker, George Baker, Howard Barney, Mildred Bates, Glen Bates, Richard Barto, Eugene Beardslee, Alice Belknap, William Bennett, Leona Bently, Mary Ellen Berbary, George Bergh, Helen Berry, Gordon Besanceny, Morton Besley, Florence Bidwell, Robert Biggs, Mary Blouvelt, Lorena Bortle, Millicent Bowes, Lester Boyd, Mervin Bradley, Donald Brann, Paul Bramble, James Breck, J ack Brennan, Edward Brewer, Berdena Bresca, Georgia Brookman, Carl Brown, Frances Brown, Kenneth Brown. Myrtle Brownlow, Billy Broschalm, Russel Buchanan, Charles Buckholtz, Juanita Bullock, Alice Bullock, Verna Burnham, Benjamin Button, Jane Cadek, Franklin Callahan, Geraldine Calpus, Harry 5, . . . I , . Q I t f '-V 4, av ' Q KL 1, 45 pg Cavallero, Michael Chamberlain, Ruth Chapin, Gladys Clark, Earl Clark, Robert Cole, Merton Coleman, Agnes Coles, Irving Collson, Esther Comfort, Anna Bell Conklin, Wayne Connelly, Ronald Cook, Martha Mae Cooklin, Kathleen Cooper, Clinton Cornish, Florence Corwin, Delores Costello, Eleanor Cowger, Rose Crittenden, Anor Crofutt, Kenneth Cuer, Lawrence Cuer, Leona Cummings, Mildred Cunningham, James Dalton, Barbara Davies, Carl Davis, Harriett DeMark, Gabriel Dempsey, Helen Derwick, Thomas Dewey, Doris DeWitt, Allen Dickenson, Helen Dodd, Jeanette Dodge, Lawrence Donahue, Helen Donahue, Leona Douglas, Robert Douglas, Wesley Drake, Esther Drake, Robert Dunn, Greydon Erband, Ruth Elliott. Martha Espey, Mable Evangelis, George Ewald, Sybil Ewald, Thelma Ewing, Russell Fanning, LaVerne Farmer, Carl Farr, Mary Ferris, James Fisk, Margaret Fishbough, Hazel Fulford, Adeline Furman, Robert Furnquist, Kenneth Farnsworth, James Gary, Douglas CLASS OF 1935 Getman, Richard Giesa, Ruth Goodwin, Fonda Grady, Ruth Griff, George Griswold, Maurice Griswold, Vera Gunderman, Joseph Halliday, Ethel Halliman, Margaret Hamel, Vance Hample, Robert Haner, Ethel Hart, Gladys Harvey, Erwin Harvey, Violet Hasb rouch, Jane Hathaway, Ruth Hays, J ack Hazen, Sarah Heatley, George Held, Norman Hewitt, Harold Hill, Donald Hill, Robert Hoagland, Lamar Hofbauer, Teresa Hourebon, Eugene Hurd, Ruth Hurst, Robert Hyde, Norman Jenkins, Florence Jessup, Katherine Johnson, Bernice Johnson, Jay Johnson, Rhoda Jones, Frederick Jones, Walter Kaiser, Frances Keene, Ella Keller, Helen Kelly, Geraldine Kelly, Leonard Kelly, Mary Virginia Kelly, William Kichman, Helen Kilpatrick, Patricia Kitchin, William Knight, Beatrice Kromer, Ernest Kunzman, Emery Lane, Marion Lanning, Harold Latterell, Charles Leach, Willard Lemoncelli, Nunzio Lewis, Esther L'Hommedieu, Ethelyn Libby, Oliver Liddy, Cathryn Loomis, Arthur Lovell, Robert Lovejoy, Edward Lynch, Geraldine Lynch, Kathryn Lyon, Cornelius MacDowell, Doris MacLeod, June MacLeod, Katherine MacMahan, Dolores Madigan, Anne Madigan, Eleanor Madigan, Frank Malcolm, Charles Mallory, Joseph Manchester, Eleanor Manning, Lucille Mannix, Ellen Mariman, William Morrell, Harry Massey, Elsie Mathews, Melvin McCabe, Anna McCallum, Evelyn McClelland, Helen McConnell, Zelda McDonald, Hazel McDonough, Daniel McDonough, Margaret McGlenn, Robert McLain, Walter McNaney, Edward McWhorter, Chester Meisel, Lawrence Meddeugh, William Miller, Dorwin Miller, Donald Moffat, Donald Monks, John Moore, Robert Moore, Stanley Mordue, Howard Morgan, Ruth Morris, Adele Morris, Clayton Morrisy, Robert Morse, Robert Moses, Alvin Mosher, Caroline Mosher, Julia Mudge, Vera Murray, Kathryn Mustica, Orlanda Myers, Walter Nelan, Betsy Oldroyd, Fay Olthof, Clinton Osgood, Ivan 0, Shea, Harold Page, Manville Patterson, Lillian Patterson, Ronald 1 ' , GX' 1 A g i- ' l x Pearsall, Charles Pearson, Eleanor Peckham, Rosemary Pedrick, Francis Peet, Walter Perry, Dorothy Peters, Robert Peterson, Ralph Pettingill, Eva Phillips, Harold Phillips, Hubert Pierce, Glenn Pierce, Lester Pint, Leo Pi per, James Potter, George Prester, Bernard Raplee, Frances Reese, George Reed, Florence Reeser, Helen Rhode, Clella Riggs, Kathryn Robb, Philip Rockwell, Russell Root, Geraldine Rothwell, Leona Rouse, Harley Roy, Jane Ruffner, Doris Ruhmel, Charles Rundell, Bertram Russell, Craydon Rutty, Robert Ryan, Edward Ryan, William Sayles, Frances Schuckers, Millicent Scoops, Richford Scriver, Mary Seagers, Edythe Segar, Eugene Seibert, William Seymour, William Shalts, Robert Shay, Jose ph Sheely, Daniel Shellenberger, Betty Shepard, Julia Shepard, Marcella Sherman, George Shook, Mae Shultz, Robert Sick, Robert Siskin, Evelyn Skelly, Carolus Skinkle, Marion Snyder, Evelyn Sorenson, Orlo Spear, John Spencer, Leonard Spicer, Lester Stalter, Robert Stanton, Emma Stickler, Cleaoral Steinhilper, Glenn Sterling, Julia Storch, William Strater, Bernard Sullivan, Walter Surace, Sarah Swartz, Floyd Sweet, Eugene Sweet, Evelyn Swisk, Robert Taylor, Ruth Tencroech, Elizabeth Terwilliger, Alfred Terwilliger, Paul Terwilliger, Pearl Thomas, Dorothy Thomas, Helen Thomas, Robert Thomeson, Donald Thornton, Virginia Thursby, Winifred Tifft, Marjorie Tipple, Eloise Toby, Francis Tower, Carl Tuthill, Gertrude Vallely, Joseph VanDeburg, Doris VanHorn, Randolph VanPatten, Eleanor Vorhees, John Vunk, Raymond Wallace, Coe Walsh, Mary Walter, William Watson, Bruce Watts, Russell Welch, Chester Wells, Durland Westervelt, Irma Whalen, Mildred Wheeler, Carl Wheeler, Dorothy Wiggins, Elmer Williams, Dorothea Wilson, Betty Wladis, Marjorie Wombaugh, Phyllis Woughter, Frances Wood, Carlton Wood, Marjorie Woodward, Eleanor Wright, Kenneth Wrigley, Ruth Yavis, Harold Zeigler, Franklin Zepp, Crosby Carmer, Robert Garris, Jay Loop, Henrietta Payne, Ira Spencer, Nellie Mae Carpenter, Harvey Gena, Robert Lounsberry, Marion Payne, Raymond Spirlk, GCOrgC y ' f' . . I ' ff ff . 0 1 ' 1. 37 II I I I I 1 . L Z l W. I I I W I ' U .' F1 ' I 1 MEMORIES or 1935 Msmokms Iill never forget ,till the day I die My first day at school in the Southside High. My first report card was not to blame That the highest mark was the one over my name. My first assembly I hardly recall But it was held sometime early that fall. My first composition for the El-So-Hi Was never presented so welll pass that by. Strange experiences have I none Except being caught with chewing gum, And the honor roll--that lovely peach Has always been just out of my reach. Embarrassing moments I've had a plenty Maybe fifteen, sixteen, or even twenty. Vlleeds in my garden they may grow But I grow tall flowers so they won't show. DOROTHY PERRY, '35 MY GARDEN OF MEMORIES Deep in my heart I have a garden green, IX'here bright hI1ed flowers stand serene. They are the blossoms I tend with careg I want them to flourish, grow lovelier there. Loved by the wild things, by the birds and bees, All in my garden of memories. The blossoms of gold, and of rose, and blue Are deeds I have done that are good and true. lim proud of these, ashamed of the weeds, For they are my weak and thoughtless deeds. And my well-loved friends are the birds and bees All in my garden of memories. ESTHER LEWIS, '35 THEY REAP AND WE PLANT We the Freshmen, are planting our seeds which will grow into Howers or weeds of our garden of memory. We have the prospect of reaping our harvest where they have already reaped. We have good times which lie ahead. Many are the positions that we must fill. Our liowers will bloom where those of the seniors blossom now. They have a full garden to take away. We have ours to fill. JACK D. HAYS. 735 SEEDS ON FERTILE SOIL Southside is a garden in which all things we plant will grow to beautiful memories. Our first days at Southside, our first assemblies and report cards will linger in our minds and form material for reminiscences in years to come. Wlhen we have failed to do our duty and go to class unprepared, thunderous questions come tumbling at us and we receive them with as- tonishment and wonder. Although startling and embarrassing at the moment, they will seem amusing and enjoyable to think of after school years are over. The school is the fertile soil for our garden. The lessons are the seeds, that blossom forth as habits, either good or bad, depending on the care they receive. Good habits are the flowers that bloom and Hourish while the bad habits are the flowers that wither and die or the weeds that spoil the beauty of our garden. Our books are the tools we use to cultivate our garden, and oIIr homework and tests are the hard work that bring forth promising results. If we arenslackers and do not perform our duties as we should, our Howers will die from lack of care and oI1r gardens will be failures. DORIS DEWEY, 735 MEMORIES Memories to be glad in, Not to be sad ing Memories to live in, To gain and give ing Memories for trying And not for sighing. Memories for striving And hearty thriving, Memories bright, Oh, hold them tight, For God who sendeth, He only lendeth. MARJORIE Woon. 335 THEIR FIRST REPORT CARDS HFreshmen, Freshmen, quite contrary How does your schoolwork gofw MWith Ais and Eis and B's and C,s All standing there in a rowf' EMILY IVIORRIS. '35 0 5' H , ' ' . 'gina' -1, 'ws X W E A I I I -LX ,. N A I , if 2 X . .L ,Y X , 1 W ' . I M 1. 41, I X fa if I O F E . I I N . I , I -..Q IQ ' , E I , ' .I l 1 Q t MEMORIES OF 1935 MY ALPHABET OF MEMORIES A-is for assemblies, we all do our bit, B-is for blame, the frosh are hard hit. C-is for cafeteria, only beans, and ice cream: D-is for dreams, they're not what them seem. E-is for El-So-Hi, our esteemed school paper, F-is for fame, we hope for this, later. G-is for gum, a disgusting habit, H-is for the honor roll, may we all make it! I-is for initiations, we all have to submitg I-is for jokes, which don't always fit. K-is for Knapp, our council president, L-is for lessons, these we lament- M-is for marks. mostly C's, D's, and E'sg Nkis for nonsense, if you please! O-is for operetta, will we forget? P-is for parties. we oft-times regret. Q-is for questions, that ought to be solved, R-is for regents, in which all are involved. S-is for shouting, you make yourself hoarseg T-is for teachers, of learning a source. Uwis for umpire, in our basketball game, V-is for the victory, we wish to gain. VI'-is for wedding, of a classmate so dearg X--is for X-mas baskets, we send to give cheer. Y-is for yearbooks, yells, and youth, Z-is for zealous, which we are,-forsooth. VERA GRISWOLD, '35 Weeds in his garden? He has none. He does his assignments one by one. His seeds are planted all with care. In hopes of growing flowers there. He tends to them with patience bright, And all his work is always right. Vlleeds in a garden are out of place, They spoil the beauty and mar its grace. S0 a little work and a little toil, VI'ill keep them out of the fertile soil. BERTRAM RUNDELL, '35 OUR GARDEN OF MEMORIES Who will ever forget the class of '32? No- body. YVhy not? Because they are real South- side students with Southside spirit. Who will ever forget Louis Knapp, a fellow for green plants Ithe Freshmenl to look up to. These flowers will ever flourish. Soon they will be picked from our garden, but they will live for- ever in our memories. GEORGE EVANGELIS. '35 69' MY FIRST TRIP TO SOUTHSIDE Confidence, that was me. It was written all over me until I came in sight of the building. Vague apprehensions took hold of me. My foot- steps became slower and slower. I stopped. I considered a bit whether I should run blindly away or stick it out. Anyway what is there to be afraid of, I thought. Will I meet somebody I know? If I do, I'll ask him what I should do. Confidence came over me with a rush. I began to whistle. I confess it was only half-heartedly. There it was again. Suppose I shouldn't meet anybody I knew. Oh! that heavenly desire to bolt and keep on going 'till I fell exhausted. Nonsense, I thought, 'cyou aren't a grammar school pupil. Keep going. I went. VVILLIAM MARINAN, '35 WEEDS IN MY GARDEN Although I am only a freshman, I have a great many weeds in my small garden. These weeds consist of unlearned poems, unfinished assignments, D's, E's, and undesirable actions. I know no way to pick them but to study and work hard. These are the killers of weeds and if you can poison weeds you can have a very desirable and beautiful garden in which to live. It is always much nicer to go to parties and other things, but as you neglect your garden your weeds will grow to be even more numerous. If they become too numerous your garden will die and will have to be replanted in order to grow. MAURICE GRISWOLD, '35 As a freshman I can see How funny little seeds can be. In the seventh grade they start Trying hard to do their part. In the eighth year then they sprout Bringing weeds without a doubt. Little Freshies, aren't they proud? Little green sprouts, seniors vowed. I have three years yet to go Until I bear more seeds to sow. Then I'll look back o'er those years Until my eyes grow dim with tears. WIINIFRED THURSBY, '35 r 'QEEQT ' . , 6- -. .gc . . Pr X l I ' a 9 f , t X M 0 I I Ili V k fe x V I! N-f 4' 1 f'- X- if Q' . Q --4 ' ul it at F1 ' . E' ,ll . lliz , . ' u. 4 4' 1 ? Q A lQ V 'W O if , Q Q ' , 0 , 1 In ,1 X f Q A I L NV. x X ,X f I I ,X Y tw 1 I S , , ' I Q 7:71, A .35 f,4 , 0 -Y - .X o ' u, ww fa '11 40 1 ' 'saga i -' Ya, gig I. ld X i WW II? -X. li Albeck, Edward Avery, Priscilla Ayers, Harvey Bacon, Arthur Baldwin, Eleanor Bazzett, Marian Becker, Winton Belknap, William Belin, May Bennett, Curtis Besley, Lewis Black, Helen Bloom, Harlow Bowers, Raymond Bramble, James Brewer, Harland Brewer, Wealtha Broich, Marjorie Brown, Gertrude Buchanan, Florence Bullock, Cecile Button, Ronald Campbell, Everitt Carpenter, Harry Carter, Thomas Cavallero, Michael Clark, James Cole, Francis Collier, Virginia Combs, Ida Louise Cone, Clark Conklin, Grace Coppola, Saverio Corwin, Elizabeth Crayton, Blanche Culver, Robert Davis, Clara Davis, Marguerite Deane, Robert Deegan, Daniel Dewey, Paul Dickens, Florence Duchine, James Dunlap, Clair Dunlap, Gwendolyn Dunn, Dorothy Dunn, Marvin Dutenhoefer, Ralph Earle, Dorothy Easson, Carolyn Edler, Dorothy Emerich, Charles Ernest, Lawrence Espey, Arthur CLASS OF 1936 Evangelis, George Eyres, Bertha Eyres, Gladys Fahrenwald, Katherine Fernquist, Kenneth Frederick, Walter French, Irma Fruit, Myrvin Frymirc, Virginia Furman, Robert Gamer, Robert Ga rvis, J ay Gavitt, Gerald Gibson, Mary Jane Good, Doris Grady, Mildred Graf, Robert Graybill, Robert Greene, Beatrice Hagberg, Fred Haines, Betty Hanchett, Norma Harbot, Sallie Harrington, Marion Harrington, Myrtle Harris, Ruth Harvey, Erwin Hathaway, Maxwell Held, Norman Helm, Ruth Hewitt, Evelyn Hood, Ronald Holt, Lillian Hotter, Durwood Huff, William Hulslander, Gladys Jacque, Cecelia Johnston, Helen Keener, Harold Kelsey, Gladys Kennedy, Ida Kenyon, Marjorie Kingsley, Harriett Kistler, Alice May Kunzman, Emery Ladd, Richard Lawrence, Jane Little, Irene Little, Lulu Long, Joseph Long, Maxine Loop, Lucile Lovejoy, Virginia Lynough, Ambrose Lyon, Edwin fVlacFeiggan, Malcolm Maher, Vivian Mallory, Joseph Mapes, Richard Marble, Beatrice Mathews, Melvin McDonald, Roy McMullen, Arthea McNaney, John McWhorter, Chester Meade, Madeline Mellor, Eleanor Mencing, Geraldine Miller, Donald Miller, Maxwell Montgomery, Alwood M orissey, Joseph Morris, Emily Morrison, Kenneth Mosher, Betty Mosher, Norma Munsey, Ruth Norman, John Nurss, Robert 0'Connor, Herrick Oldroyd, Clifford Olthof, Clinton Osgood, Barbara Osler, Marian Puget, Reginald Paine, Raymond Park, Kathleen Parrnenter, Herbert Pedrick, Frances Perry, Norma Peterson, Claude Peterson, Ralph Pettingill, Janet Phillips, Shirley Pi per, James Ploucha, Florence Potter, George Preston, Bernard Pulford, James Pullen, Paul Randall, Richard Randall, Robert ' Reinhart, Betty Reynolds, Sally Rice, Clifford Rouse, Arthur Rubin, Herbert Rubin, Sidney t Sadler, Barbara Saltus, Earl Saunders, Myrtle Scheel, Robert Schmick, Hayes Schmick, Ruth Schott, George Sheely, Robert Sherman, Daniel Slater, Alice Slater, Leonard Smith, Melvin Snyder, Walter Sorensen, Willis Sprague, Helen Stalker, Norma Starck, Elsie Starck, Pauline Stevens, Elaine Stewart, Wilda Strader, Bernard Straight, Florence Strong, Kathryn Strong, Richard Struble, Margaret Stubbs, Donna Swartz, Floyd Taber, Evelyn Tanner, William Thomas, Phyllis Thomas, Ralph Thorne, Ernestine Titus, Nancy Tobey, Francis Tobey, Virginia Torrence, William Trader, Robert Truesdale, Marjorie Walker, Philip Warren, Norma Washburn, Laura Weston, Carolyn Wheeler, Richard White, Philena Whitman, Lorraine Whitney, Robert Whittaker, Lincoln Wilson, Margaret Yeager, Ruth Young, Leland Yunis, Helen Yunis, William Zeigler, Laura ' f' -, - . ' ' Q ul F1 ' ' ine l 41 if I 9 ' D' . . '- if1'ii ' f A S A I ,Lg-f x O I I ' xx. lg ' ' ' 'wa I ' , MEMORIES or 1936 A DOG-GONE MEMORY The teacher says she,s very brave, fAt least pretends to be I. One day she met a dog called Dave. 1'As harmless as a Ileaj. uOh take that horrid thing awaywl Came from behind the chair. The little dog who'd been so gay Slunk out, with injured air. FRED HAGBERG, '36 A BITTER MEMORY A cooking class on baking A doctor on the iphone, A tummy which is aching And a ligure lying prone These are the memories of years gone by At dear old Southside High. Lois STooKs. '36 MEMORIES OF EIGHTH GRADE LATIN CLASS In the heart of a little chamber In my memory chest, I hold A thought which in Life's trying hours I hasten to unfold. How well I do recall it, That door, when 'ere I pass- ,Twas there for many a happy hour I sat in my Latin Class. Through many a lesson I wondered Just what ,twas all about, What good were these meaningless words to me They were useless, beyond a doubt. But now my feelings are different And when by that door I pass I think of the valuable treasures I hold from my Latin Class. WIILLIAM TANNER, '36 A GARDEN OF MEMORIES A Garden of Memories recalls to me many things, but one thing that impressed me most was the Christmas Assembly. The seventh and eighth grade students participated in the affair. It was a very beautiful and picturesque scene. Will you ever forget the angels singing, the ani- mals talking, and the fatigued shepherds lying around? Wlien the stable door was opened and the Christ Child and its mother appeared. it seemed to me as if I were with them in Beth- lehem. As Christmas is a beautiful celebration of the year, the assembly is one of the most treasured blossoms in my garden of memories. ANTN1-:TT Fossacsci. '36 A FLOWER IN MY GARDEN OF MEMORIES At the end of the eighth grade at Southside I can look back over the good times we had and be glad that I was ever a pupil there. Many humorous things happened. I will never forget the laughs I had at others, expense while we were reading 'IThe Legend of Sleepy Hollowf, I-low I laughed over the queer pro- nunciation of wordsl You will remember the quilting party at Herr Van Tassel's home. While describing the departure of the guests, one brilliant student related, L'Some of the damsels mounted on pinions fpillionsl behind their favorite swine fswainj. Ichabod Crane certainly must have had a capacious swallow if he could swallow well- buttoned fbutteredl griddle cakes. I wonder if he swallowed them buttons and all? I never really have believed in evolution but animals as well as humans must have changed considering the time Ichabod's horse sat on its hunches fhaunchesl. I hope the next class can pronounce better than we did. MYRTLE HARRINGTON, '36 1 . .,..,.- 5, ,, q 1 . gr 1'-4. O . I is 1 x O 1 I I V, N H7 1 I f a t I 'L ,I pg ' ' it S ' ee v . V . I . Q . I , X f X , 'l an .1 ' Q , . I ,f . 1 , f f Il AJ ' ul P, ' ' - fi MEMORIES OF I 9 3 6 PIES-AND? In cooking class some girls did try To make a nice, big cherry pie, But when the crust began to burn, To Hee from there they sure did yearn. Well just another crust that's wasted. I wonder how it would have tasted If it hadn't burnt so bad, And shrivelled so it looked quite sad! My, Miss Lee was in a rage, And ,round there how she did rampage! She said we weren't to be trusted Which made us simply all uregustedf' RUTH YEAGER, '36 A MEMORY OF EIGHTH YEAR Nou' listen my children and you shall hear Of a memory of that good eighth year. Can you still hear the sound of ringing voices in the large assembly hall, when we first sang our Alma Mater, written by an eighth grade boy? Oh, yes, I can remember that day above all the rest. It was a glorious day, when we went into the assembly hall, because we were all looking so proudly up at our new hero. Just to think he was an SB student and also a member of Home Room 108. We waited and watched and finally the time came when we were to sing that new and triumphant song. On each line we could almost see the name of William Tanner, William Tanner, this song was written by William Tanner. Now, at last the assembly was over, and we were all march- ing out. The song was sung, hurrahl hurrahl We shall never forget him, the boy who wrote our Junior Alma Mater. In that good old year of 1931 Weill never forget what was done. V IRMNIA FRYMIRE, 736 I REMEMBER- Little Miss Weston Kept on a pesterin, Wihile teacher was doing her stuff, So into the corner Was banished the scorner And Caroline thought it was tough. EARL SALTUS, i36 VISITORS IN OI One day during our 7B year, we had visitors in spelling class. Vile were in 01, studying very hard, when we heard a mischievous giggle from outside the open window. Looking up, we saw two small girls and a small boy. Wfhen she saw our attention was upon her. one of the girls immediately proceeded to turn somer- saults over the rails, by the outside gym door. This greatly amused the class and several sup- pressed snickers came to the ears of Miss Skea- han. We were, of course, told immediately to pay attention to our spelling lesson. In the meantime, the children who had advanced closer to the window and were now leaning over the sill, began to discuss the merits of the class and classroom in a very entertaining man- ner, such as: HSee that boy over there, I know him. And-- HI wish we could chase them out and use this place for a play housef' Of course, very little attention was paid to spelling. Miss Skeahan realized this and at- tempted to send the children away. They did not wish to go, but after telling them that they would have to come inside or leave. our strange visitors decided to do the latter and they left rather reluctantly. MARY WoLcoTT, ,36 Q A I I t 9 1 I It at ' ul pt ' ' .a v if .. 0' Y lf ' ' ,, ,Es- , -K f -G' Us ,M P ,, A g W ' Q-1 ' 5 Q 1:1 ' C 'Z ' 44 ,Q . Adams, Marie Albeck, George Alling, Marian Allen, Barbara Anderson, LaVerne Andrus, Lucille Andrus, Vivian Arber, Marjorie Ayres, Egbert Ayres, Paul Bailey, Coral Jane Bailey, Gordon Bailey, Kathryn Balmer, Marjorie Barber, John Barnes, Donald Barrows, Helen Bartis, Tommy Barton, Billy Barton, James Batty, Robert Beach, Fay Benedict, James Benjamin, Frank Bennett, Glen Bennett, Vera Benson, Evelyn Benson, Mary Belle Berwick, Virginia Besley, Ruth Bidwell, Mary Jane Bourke, Inez Boyd, Clifford Bradt, Allan Brewer, Charles Bright, Charles Brixius, Elmer Brooks, James Brougham, Louise Brown, Dorothea Brown, Rexford Brown, Walter Buchanan, Ivan Buckbee, Robert Bunn, Sara Burgett, Alfred Burley, Meryle Burnett, Doris Burns, Robert Burt, Dorotha Butler, Rose Campbell, Clifford Chapin, William Chilson, Geraldine Clark, Foster Cogswell, Vivian Connelly, Gordon Cook, Jack Cook, Phyllis Coon, Phyllis Cope, Jacqueline Cordier, Ruth Corso, Michael Crittenden, Hugh Croft, Arlene ' ul IL, ' L L CLASS OF 1937 Culver, Allen Currie, Betty Davies, Ednajane Dickens, Francis Dostman, Ralph Dostman, Winifred Douglas, Helen Driscoll, Arthur Dunlap, Esther Dunn, Raymond Erikson, Harold Evans, Roxana Eyres, Gladys Fanning, Naomi Farr, Margaret Farr, Rita Ferris, Lydia Flansburg, Howard Fossaceca, Antnett Freedman, Henry Fries, Shirley Fulford, Katherine Gardner, Alice Gardner, Walter George, Margaret Gilbert, Franklyn Gilbert, Harold Gloeckler, Leonard Glover, Earl Goldsmith, Charles Goodwin, Doris Goodwin, Harry Grof, Donald Graves, Walter Greene, Melvin - Griliith, Myrtle Gustin, Eloise Guthrie, Margaret Hadsell, Herbert Hagerman, Ellen Haight, Richard Hall, Esther Hall, Gertrude Hammond, Robert Hample, Henry Hanmore, Celis Hanmore, Frances Harper, Marion Harrison, George Havens, Janet Held, William Helm, Zane Hendershott, Robert Hewitt, Yolanda Hinkleman, Kenneth Hopkins, Juanita Horning, Harold Hough, Betty Hubley, Lucy Hufford, Catherine Hummer, Orril Hymes, Betty Isaacson, Robert Jenkins, Richard Johnson, Helen Johnson, Mott Johnson, Ruth Jones, Anna Jones, Marguerite Jones, William Kane, Rosemary Kay, Raymond Kelleher, William Kemp, Raymond Kenyon, Harold Killeen, Mary Kirkpatrick, Anna Kitchen, Robert ' Kitchin, Betty Knowlden, Jeanette Kowaska, Donald Krise, Warren Lampman, John Lampros, Thomas Langworthy, Ethel La pere, Grace Latham, Marzetta Lathrop, Mary Helen Latterell, Eleanor Lawes, Donald Lawrence, Robert Leonard, Marie Leupelt, Virginia Lewis, Betty Lewis, Herbert Lewis, Walter Lindgren, Nona Lockner, Gladys Loop, Catherine Lott, Lois Lovejoy, Betty Lovejoy, Harry Lovell, James Lutes, Helen Lyons, James Mallery, Margaret Mallory, Gerald Manchester, Florence Mandley, Edna Many, Frances Mapes, Kenneth Martin, Deborah Mason, Dorothy Mathews, Louis McDowell, Alice McDowell, Marion McMillen, Leslie McNeill, Frances Meisel, Byron Mellor, John Meltzer, Saul Merriwether, Milton Merriwether, Norma Messing, Clarence Miller, Charles Miller, Robert Millerd, Eleanor Mola, Mary Monks, Irene Montgomery, Angie Moran, Marguerite Morgan, Margaret Morris, Frederick Morris,Lewis Morrison, Anna Morrison, Frances Morrison, Helen Morse, Billie Mosch, Albert Mosher, Gordon Nagel, Edwin Nelson, Ardell Nelson, Robert Newell, Aletha Newell, Betty Newell, Marjorie Nichols, Allegra Nichols, Allyn Niles, Richard Norman, Vivian 0'Daniels, William Oldham, Lois Osler, Mark Outt, Gertrude Packard, Dorothea Packard, Joyce Palmer, Ernest Pariitt, Ellison Park, Duncan Passmore, Doris Patterson, Alice Patterson, Ralph Peckham, Finley Pensinger, Kathleen Perrin, Margaret Peterson, Carmela Phillips, Marion Pike, Lorilla Pipp, Calton Pitt, Geraldine Platou, Ida Porter, Robert Raplee, Harry Rayhall, Charles Raymond, Charles Raymond, George Reese, Edward Reynolds, Betty Richards, Alice Rickard, Carl Ridge, Robert Robb, Charles Roberts, Shirley Robinson, Inez Root, Lucile Rouse, Frederick Rubin, Inez Sagar, Esther Samuels, Harold Seeley, Thomas Scheel, Charles Schonher, Earle Scott, Geraldine Shaylor, Norman Sheely, Burr Sheely, George Sheive, Marjorie Shellenberger, Paul Sherman, Loring Smith, Dorothy Smith, Gerald Smith, John Smith, Mary Smith, Roxanna Spencer, Russell Spirithes, George Stabel, Albert Stachel, Rita Stadelmaier, George Stadelmaier, Joseph Stage, Howard Starkey, George Steiner, Ola Stewart, Phyllis Stone, Kenneth Stooks, Jack Stooks, Lois Taft, Elizabeth Tallman, Barbara Taylor, Elaine Tenbroeck, Earl Terpenning, Everett Thayer, Arthur Thayer, Helen Thayer, Marguerite Thomas, Glenn Timbrell, Edward Tower, Arlene Towner, William Towner, Lois Vandemark, Frances Vosburg, Rexford Wagner, Maxine Wainright, David Wainright, Ruth Walker, Beverly Walsh, Charles Watson, Donald Weiskop, Thelma Wells, Frank Weston, Robert Whalen, Mary Whitford, Robert Whitman, Ruth Whitman, Joseph Whitmore, Dorothy Wild, Harry Williams, Clinton Williams, Wilford Wolcott, Mary Woodhouse, Mary Woolard, Dorothy Woolf, Phyllis Wrigley, Doris Yeager, Jack Young, Helen Yunis, George Zcigler, Elizabeth , ' ff' . I 'I ZF - . 0 1 I , X W ' QA I 1 i i I' I -I f li . . u. iz, ' ' 4 45 V IS iii ffllig? I . . I . 0 . T 4 1 F' v - 0 , ' I F W 9' w e ' U. ' - FIRST IMPRESSIONS 1937 MY FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF S. H. S. When the teacher in the sixth grade said I was promoted I did not say anything while the other girls were full of joy. When I reached home I began to think, 'AI will have to get new clothes, and they will think they are better than If' and many more unpleasant things. When it was time to go to S. H. S. in Janu- ary, there was a lump in my throat. When I reached the school I found it altogether differ- ent, for they didn't think they were any better than anyone else and I am doing better since I got over my silly imaginations. KATHRYN BAILEY, ,37 MEETING NEW FRIENDS If by chance I had not been standing in front of my home om door one September morn- ing, I could nxunow have such happy thoughts of my first term' in seventh grade. 0f.course I knew several people in seventh grade but I nyst naturally wanted to know more-for instance, that pretty girl opening her locker half way down the corridor. It would have been awkward to go up to her and say, 'fLet's get acquaintedfi I wouldn't know what to say next, and by that time the buzzer would Imuzz. So standing there thoroughly occupied in my imagination, I was suddenly interrupted. HSeen the cafeteria?', No, I hadnit. So the next step was to it, What a sunny, pleasant place, just like a restaurant! The next day noon I ate my lunch there. And what a lot of girls! They are now my closest friends. Two weeks from that day as I walked into my home room I thought, 4'This is a regu- lar luxury. It is a pleasure to go to school. MARY JANE BIDWELL. '37 MEETING NEW FRIENDS When I started down to High School, I almost danced with glee. I met many kind and true friends Wvho are very near to meg I love them all so dearly, And I think they all love me. And if we work together, A success we're sure to be. The teachers also are our friends, Giving us good advice, They treat us all with great respect, Though sometimes we're not nice. If when I leave dear Southside A success I fail to be, I cannot blame my teachers, Because they did their best for me. THELMA WEISKOP, 337 MY FIRST IMPRESSION OF S. H. S. My first impression of Southside High was like that of a small player on a large and very crowded football field. After an hour of shov- ing and being shoved, I reached the bulletin board and found my home room was 106. I received a strange piece of paper that other students called a program. To me it was a fifty-fifty split between a chess board and a first lesson in the age honored language of the Greeks. 1 The ever sounding buzzer was to me a signal to get lost and spend an extra live minutes in searching my program puzzle and the spacious corridors. But as the days wore on, I began to get accustomed to those ever ringing buzzers and came to the conclusion that Southside was a great school. ' DONALD LAWES, 537 ,, ,gig s , 'I . 5' y . I' X' D X 1 I ,Y I .Vg QV X4 . Q, .Y f fl ! ,u,. , J -f K I, Q ul isa!! F, e l T V...........,. ,V . - ff N . . , f , W ' Q' I f a t - ,L F, ' - sissa f fs FIRST IMPRESSICNS 1937 MY UNLUCKY DAY There has been only one day that I consider very unlucky, and boy!! was that unlucky!! The first thing that happened was when a group of boys, including myself, broke a school win- dow. While playing catch, one of us-not say- ing who--threw the ball through the gym win- dow. We started to run, but I remembered that there were many boys who had witnessed the scene, so we went to the office. Miss Hoff- man told us to see Mr. Edson during fifth period, which we did. That same day, in elec- tric shop, which was fifth period, I lost my friendis knife. All this happened on Lincolnis birthdayfand now I wish that it had been a holiday. JOHN BARBER, ,37 MY UNLUCKY DAY My goodness, what an unlucky day! I was so disappointed when I received my report card. I started to see how many hours I had toward the honor roll. Let me see? English, five, Oral English, two, Math, five, Sewing, two, and History, three. Oh, dear! only seventeen! I needed a dish pan at that moment to catch the tears that will never be forgotten. I was afraid to go home and tell mother. I was ashamed of myself, and Oh! such terrible things passed through my mind. I hope I shall never in all my days nave such an experience again. BETTY REYNOLDS, '37 MY UNLUCKY DAY Once when I was whispering I got a good blistering: It hurt so bad, ' I told my dad. And I went to bed VI'ithout being fed. OLA STE1NER, '37 fe' MY FIRST IMPRESSION OF S. H. S. My first impression was that it was a mean old place with a lot of high hatted Seniors, but afterwards I thought they were the whole school. At first it seemed as if I was just about as big as a pin in a great big box. I could hardly wait the first day over here to change classes to find out what it feels like to be changing classes all the time. I didn't like it at first at all because nobody paid any attention to me but the traffic cops. Well. you canit expect to be the center of at- traction in a school of 1800. But now I just love it at Southside. ALICE RICHARDS, '37 MY FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF S. H. S. When I first came to Southside and saw those large corridors and all the rooms, I thought, HOh my! will I ever learn which way to go and to what rooms to go? I was so afraid that I would get mixed up and get into the wrong rooms. When I went by the different shops it looked like some factory. I said to myself, 'fThink of all the fun I'll have running those machines and making dif- ferent things when I get into those shops. It seemed as though the days went twice as fast changing rooms every hour. I liked il very much after I got acquainted. KENNETH STONE, '37 , . I -f-A M . s I I ,- u Q f Y X , - ' I Sw '. -. X ' 1 Y . w ' . f . f K W fl . u. F1 4 Q ax.-l-lu g .L V.. haf uv Eqe .S e e JY J U TX at Q Q? ? if Q 552, Q Uumor De? cu-Tw'newnT Arfflcs H , smsnnnlmim iillig mi i 1QlQE! ' KhiK igiiiEii ii! . Emiiimiawi aaa iii i eii sel g , g m ail f .BOOK WOTWS Daily' -Scvxnwmaqe O Qkf Xf xx -M 'M H D jk 5 YCO. Elmira GCT -SCT 7 govni Tm ev . Zi x? Wed. NlcllnTs 5v1aKe Dance Thar STT 4 ' OX! i A i ' i ' I l I i 1 ' Q A - LQ-ve'.s ming! -Le-gm uf . I I L . K L 'Q 418 .-. gg.-. mf - O ' ' Q . I f x I I I Q I I I Y if ' Q' A 'Q ' e as ' Q, 9 ' - 1 WELL KNOWN FACTS ABOUT LITERATURE It wouldn't be difificult to imagine Dorothy Hood taking Phoebe Pyncheon's place in the House of Seven Gables,'7 would it? 'fYon Cassius has a lean and hungry lookg He thinks too much: such men are dangerousf, ls that why we watch John Farr so much? Edmund Burke cannot surpass Bill Trader when it comes to oratorical ability. Orpheus may have Hdrawn iron tears down Pluto's cheek, but Gladys Morrison can make the piano talk. Shakespeare asks the amorous question: '4Tell me where is Fancy bred, ln the heart or in the head? Southside's corridor sheiks seem rather wise on the subject. King Arthur may have had his Knights of the Round Table, but S. H. S. has its Knights of the Traffic Squad. ln the same ldyll, who is Sir Galahad around here? John Besley rides a horse, doesn't he? :Tor always l am Caesarw-or maybe itis Cicconi. lf Teresa Record hasn't the stateliness of Portia and the fair tresses of Ophelia, then we can't imagine of whom Shakespeare was thinking. Just as Brutus made history by stabbing Caesar, so did the Class of l932 make money by Hanging the Goose. Vvho reminds us of the patient, silent, suffering Griselda of '4Canterbury Tales fame? fl surely cannot be Dot Smith? CL ' My business was song, song, songg l chirped, cheeped, trilled and twitteredf' Page Jimmy O'C0nnor at the Wednesday night dances. From the neighboring school Come the boys, With more than their wonted noise And commotion. Maybe Longfellow foresaw the parade from P. C. to Southside. Mr. Edson spoke! The wood-birds ceased from singing, And the squirrel ceased his chatter in the oak-treefl A scene in assembly: NI know a maiden fair to see, Take care! She can both false and friendly bv, Beware! Beware! Did someone say this to Walt Good? l 5: X N . I I I 3 I , I .. if an ' ul F.: 1 ' l l 49 f O i . xx , Q . I Y 4 ' N Nix' I - X ' 1 1 I X 0 , x , 1 1. if f .. , . ul 7 F1 4 gf' 4 , gl ELRSS 2 5' 1 1,15 A X 5 , . N I 'E 5 . f' ,w I 1 ' 'I x . A V w f , ' ' I' ng!-5 1 lm ! ., . 7,5 . , un f 4 Q mix 30 Q V . .. 1 - tg ' , 5' , X y I , ' a s ' '44 ' q, 12, ' ' ir s i SONGS WE CANVT FORGET .lust Friends ...................... ..,...,...........,..........,.... C harles Schott, Louis Knapp You Try Somebody Else ..... Just a Blue-Eyed Blonde Beyond the Blue Horizon ...... All of Me .......................... Three Little Words ....... Just a Gigolo ............. Junior McKay to Miss Zimmer in History Class Shirley Smith Prosperity Red Reidy Did you pass? Arthur Niver The Vagabond Lover ................................ .....,. E lmer Beckwith Was That the Human Thing To Do? ........ ....,..... F lunk Seniors When VVe're Alone ........................,....... ....... H onor Study Hall Lucky Little Devil ............ . Sweetheart of Sigma Chi Lois Johnson Arlene Collum Blue Days ..............,.......... ....... R egents Week Little Girl ...................... ........ F anny Rubin You're My Everything ......... ...,.... S outhside High I Promise You ..................... ......,. M iss Zimmer How Long Will It Last? Tell-Tales ...................... You Call It Madness .... Being a Senior The Scribe Jesse Schmick v u' F1 ' 6 'g g l 51 ' 'hi , ll ik 3213- , Q ar Y X - - - rip is ' ul F1 1 MY GARDEN Arbutus, Trailing ...... E ...... Aster .......,...........,. BalJy's Breath ..... Bachelor Button ..... ............ Bleeding Heart ....... Cactus .................. Forget-Me-Not ..... ........ Gladiola ................... Jack-in-the-Pulpit ....... Laurel ................... Lily ...... Narcissus Petunia ....... Rose ................... Sunflower .............. .,............ Sweet William ........ Violet ................ 0 B X Madalyn Dahlgren C. Basil Wood .. Tiny', Forsythe Earl Baldwin William D. Trader . UCaesar Cicconi Dorothy Whipple Gladys Percy Justin Maloney Cecelia Harvey Marice Cooklin James Frick Karl Beers Arlene Collum Don Dunbar William Connelly Louis Knapp QUESTIONNAIRE FOR 1941 Am I a success? Have I lived up to the ideals learned at Southside? Do I still know my school-day sweetheart? Do I chew gum? Am I tardy as I was in school? Which teacher stands out in my mind now? What memory makes me grin? What memory makes me blush? - What do I wish I had done differently? Am I retaining an interest in my Alma Mater? Q gr H F. K . I I .4 . , I I ' - 'M f ' ' ' A 41 ' ul 5:1 ' ' 'J l 52 J 1 . O 5- ' 1 r fl ' 6 ql F1 1 ff:-'x - ., f UZEPUWEEUVILEQEE-tux W X I ff?- I' J Tfenljmg Tonugbl 5' www mm s gg I: C I 0 lon KX SLJJQXQ-X33 jp- 3 fm?-Q- SH. . ,, ixgfw X Q' 5 S ,gg ,pa .., ,U X beam Numa uf -vi?-Wqfkk llfx x -A Q f x uv NK A , Y, A l W Acddweaiher beauiy trcaiment S4 W Zb., I 4, EQUXXQXQWM - 8' W' v X if 'S M if Q A, f 06, ., .V 4, I MZ? V Wren ntue toes ffl ' ff - I - - 53 1 X - ra?- W -- -- +- V fv- , 1 Ai-.fr V -fn ' ,L V, Av .K N Q. F, ' ' J' MY MAGIC MIRROR C961-D 0 wad some power the giftie gie us- To see oursel'es as ithers see us. THE SENIORS SEE THE SENIORS Most Popular THE FACULTY SEE THE SENIORS Most Original Elizabeth G. Wilson Louis C. Knapp Harriet Porter Charles Wood Cleverest Blufer Most Amusing Virginia M. Pierce William D. Trader Elvie Purdy Roy Lewis Most Cheerful Neatest Eleanor K. Whiteman James C. O,Connor Sarah Condon Charles Schott Most Romantic Most Athletic Dorothy H. ,Smith Robert W. Habersaat Madalyn Dahlgren John Besley Biggest Ciggler Most Friendly H. Lucile Stalker C. Max Taylor Lois johnson John Enright Most Ambitious Most Cheerful Luflille E- Clllflk .l0hl'1 .l- Enright Grace Limoncelli James O,Connor Most Bashful Most Romantic Irene F. Hunter Charles J. Allen Elizabeth Wilson Matt Hackett Most Sedate Most Studious Sarah B. Condon Harry A. Sagar Marice Cooklin Lowell Moss Best Dressed Most Dependable Dorothea Sandberg Charles J. Schott Lucille Clunk Louis Knapp Flirt Shiek Most Argumentative Madalyn D. Dahlgren Roy Lewis Dorothy Whipple William Trader If . 5, Q. I ll V' b . hx I ', I W ' - 5 A 1 X f r A Q W? as ' ul F, ' ' -r li 54 I? , ,, W- W. , .Af I O if S . , i r- I Q l I N U4 B , ' 3 1 Q Q -fl ' U. IL, ' ' H 'J L MY MAGIC MIRROR C5619 'GO wad some power the giftie gie us- To see oursel'es as ithers see us. THE SENIORS SEE THE FACULTY Fairest .................. Best in study hall Stilfest examiner .. Friendliest .... n. Most stylish ....... Wittiest ....... Most conscientious Best looking ..... ,Iolliest ........ Least talkative .. fx' Elizabeth Grube Margaret F. Flynn Helen R. Jones Elsa Brookfield Kenneth C, Winsor Mabel I. Haupt Mabel E, Zimmer ,lean Christian ., Henry J. Prechtl George B. White I ' . 1 , X Q , t lg f X I Q Q 4. Q' F, I ' 8 X 4 xv 1 Q F 50 4 ll n . P 1 ' I I 9 I ' , H i I I h 3 I -. ,L , , x ul , 1 p k f , 'T 1 A-l f-I V .1 I ' . -',- V. , Q - v I- I -A gs ,L F, sg- R Editor - - - - MAX TAYLOR , , LUCILLE CLUNK Associate Editors - V LOWELL MOSS Business Manager - - - RICHARD CARLSON Literary Adviser - - - MISS MAREL HAUPT Business Adviser - MR. CLIFFORD MCNAUGHT , MRS. CHARLES DONAHUE Art Advisers ' ' ' L ' ' ' MR. RALPH PALMER FEATURE WRITERS Fanny Rubin William Trader Dorothy Smith SPORTS SNAPSHOTS ART STAFF Elmer Beckwith Dorothy Whipple Robert Broich Ida Yeager John Farr James O'Connor John Vallely Charles Allen Richard Tipple LITERARY STAFF Earl Baldwin Robert Chandler Merle Griswold Dorothy Hood Thomas Madigan Harry Sager Edward Brann Earl Cordier Matthew Hackett Eleanor Lovell Mary Ostazeski Bessie Smykal Mary Cerio Virginia Graybill Arlene Quick Elizabeth Wilson TYPISTS Rhea Edgcomb Marguerite Kidd Helen Kissane Matilda Oparil Bessie Smykal Mary Alice Ostasheski CHARLES NTAX TAYLOR Editor . 7 X Union College Wor , courage, honor, th se indeed, Yo sustenance and irthrig t aref, is nor So ' ty Igh S ol Band 1, 2, 3 tud Souncil 1, 2, 4, a urer 3 '- , 3, 4 Squad 2, 35 Chair an 4 E o-Hi 4 Flag Raising Squad Chair- man 3, 4 Year Book Editor Foot-Lite Club 2 German Club 4 Class Treasurer 1, 2 Interclass Basketball 1, 2 Interclass Tennis 2, 3 f ol Orchestra Z a f LUCILLE ELIZABETH CLUNK Associate Editor No. 7 Elmira College A truer, nobler, trustier heart, More loyal or more loving never beatf' Tri-Sigma 3, 4 Science Club 3, 4 Ushers' Corps Honor Society Secretary El-So-Hi 3, 4 Year Book Associate Editor LOWELL EDWARD Moss Associate Editor Albany U. of Rochester Work under any circum- stances, all circumstances High School Band 1, 2, 3, 4 High School Orchestra 2, 3, 4 Property Council 3 Boys' Glee Club 3, 4 El-So-Hi 4 Year Book Associate Editor Honor Society Senior Play Cast Hi-Y 4 -ff' RICHARD CARLSON Business Manager No. 5 Ulf he be not fellow with the best king, Thou Shalt find him best king of good fellows. Trafic Squad 4 Student Council 1, 4 Hi-Y 1, Treasurer 4 Craftsman's Guild 4 Junior Prom C0'Chairman Senior Play Publicity Chairman Interclass Tennis 4 Year Book Business Mgr. Honor Society President 62 ff, 7 . -QCHYT 'k x 5' A I I' . 0 , I 1 if CK Y ' x I L-, , f ' I ' X - Q' f : P X K if-V4 ' ul F, ' X ' Y V I ef 16' ' 56 1 I , t , Q tl A, 14 Q Q 37' . X 1 'I lt, I Q I TT 3 . I ' ' I Q 1 fl - V-22 - ,L 1 p, ' - THE SENIOR PLAY HThe Goose Hangs High, a comedy depicting the trials of an average family. was presented as thedSenior play December 4 and 5, with Miss Florence Callahan as coach. The leading parts were taken by Harry Sagar, Lois Johnson. Arlene Collum and. Vlvilliam D. Trader. John Besley and Dorothy Whipple also carried major roles. High spots of the play were Hugh and Dagmar's love scenes. the twin's discus- sion with granny concerning her death, Lois, modern ideas, Leo Day's Hclimbingfi Kimberly's verbal duel with Bernard Ingalls and the big quarrel scene. Others who ably completed the cast were Betty Ruhin, Elizabeth Wilson, Alma Bergh, Donald Dunbar, Lowell Moss, Max Hamilton, Lewis Thrasher and James O,Connor. The settings were the work of Mr. Lantzis shop, lighting was arranged by the electric shop under Mr. Parsons, supervisiong Mr. McNaught presided at the curtain ropes. William Andrus acted as general chairman. a Q I 17 - 1 I ff, ,- u -uc, 3 ' M ,v .. 1, gg - U, 9 -' - , ff 4 57 X 0 Z 9' . W V I I I 4 ,nw X , I ,. I 4 , 5 W , I I A , f T ff ' - 'Q -21 ' ui IL, ' ' ev z f i J . STUDENT COUNCIL Every Monday at 4:00 in ll3, the Student Council, our law-making body, convenes to transact the school's business. It is composed of forty representatives. one from each home room. These take the students, ideas to meetings and bring back reports. This body is ably guided by Mrs. Ralph S. Austin and Mr. Frank M. Edson. Preszflffnt ...........,.....,....,.,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,,,, Vice-President ........ Secretary ............,.,. Olwljlinton Olthof O2KNlildred Lewis O3-George Hill O4-Norma Warren O5 -Lincoln Whittaker 07-James Mack O8-Mary Scriver 09fWilliam Mayo lOl-Clinton Williams lO2-Lorraine Cooke 103-Ruth Mace lO4-Robert Porter 105iWalter Sullivan 106-Sara Bunn 107-Norman Hyde 108sCeorge Schott 0 fir CJ .Louis Knapp Treasurer .,........................,. Elizabeth Shortsleeve ........James 0'Connor Assistant Treasurcr..................Eleanor Whiteman .v.....Rhea Edgcomb Sergeant-at-armsn...... James Mack REPRESENTATIVES H3-Ellen Mannix 213-Ernest Pruyne 217--Forrest Young ll-1-Winifred Thnrsby 214-Richard Carlson 218-Kenneth Strader ll5Alnez Rubin 215-Kenneth Crofutt 221-Wlilliam Wells U6-Robert Gamer 216---Helen Mc'Clellanrl CafeiEarl Allen llTfAnna Morrison 118-Ardell Nelson' H9-Richard Jenkins 201-Barbara Sutei' 203--Fern Page 2O44Roseinary Muck 205-Louise Barrow 206-Harriet. Porter 207-Ruth Baldwin 209--Rhea Edfccomh Qlfleflohn Connelly 212-Ceronld McGill W , Athletic CouncilfCharles Allen, Clara Painton Business Club-Gladys Percy El-So-Hi-James O'Connor Property Conneile-Jerome Cavanaugh .lunior Classs-Gene Shipe Senior Class -Max Taylor Signia Delta Siggina---Eleanor Whiteman Sophomore Class-William Wells Ushers' Club--Elizalieth Shortsleeve Hi-Y-Karl Beers , nga:- Q I ' Q kv Q9 1 --. . i , I ' f f . l un F, ' ' J F A ' . - I ' y fy - f ' , 3 ul ll., ' ' ff EL-S0-I-II This year the El-So-Hi has accomplished its purpose of giving to the school every two weeks a good live-cent, four-page paper. Under the guidance of Editor Mary Jane Suter, the staff several times printed special six-page issues. Managing Editor .........,.............................. Mary Jane Suter Associate Editors ,,,,.......,.... Lucile Stalker, Robert Miller Assigmnent Editor .......,,...,..,............,..........,...... Betty Rubin Business Manager ......,.,...........Y.,.,,............., James Kennedy Advertising Manager ...............,.,..........,,.,., Adaline Yvarren Sports Editors ..,.........., Deborah Hample, James O'Connor Literary Editor ....,., ,.,.... ........,.,....,........ IN I arice Cooklin Exchange Editor ,... ,.....,...........,... R hea Edgcomh Art Editor ,,.,,,.,....... .,.......,.........,..,.,...,.,,.. J ohn Farr Feature Editors ..........,,............,. Max Taylor, Charles Allen ADVERTISING STAFF Lorraine Long Margaret Madigan Gordan McCann Dorothy Scaife Harry Sagar Adaline Warren Earl Baldwin Delores Baltimore Arlene Collum Theodore Levanduski Vera Deibler Mary Gourley BUSINESS STAFF Forrest Young John Farr ,lames Kennedy CIRCULATION STAFF Virginia Graybill Barbara Suter Sam Smith Harry Snyder Fanny Rubin Marvin Rubin Ruth Bacon Florence Llmdgren News Writing ADVISERS Miss Mildred Brecht Edith Beidelman Helene Moseson 'Aavgtrtiqin L Mig Ruth Cole Jerome Cavanaugh Lowell Moss ' L H i ' ' ' ' K J Lucille Clunk Harriett Porter . W TYPISTS .lohn Enright Francis Ruggles Adalme Warren Florence Besanceney Russell Hyde Charles Schott Glfldys FCYCY Geraldine Edler Edward Kunzman Dorothy Smith Alice WIIIIHIHS Ermlnia Fossececa Barbara Tu!-,per Rena Courtright Dorothy Scaife , . Sarah Condon 0 if H , ' f' ' t s ' I I . 1 f D M r Q I I V , X v , , x - A , a, v L, V ' u. ta - has ' 59 1 ,W ,V . ft' R ' , ' , it , X ' , ' Q . i .4 ' ul 1 F1 ' a V. 2, K LIBRARY STAFF The Library Staff originated in the need for girls to aid the students of Southside in the library. The purpose of the Staff is to become better acquainted with library work in order to be of greater service to the school, also to make our library routine efficient. A regular meeting is held every Thursday afternoon in the library and a social gathering about once a month. Adviser .................... ...,.. M rs. Mabel Loomis President ........... ,...... F lorence Ayers Vice-President ,... .. .......... Dorothy Hood Secretary ........... ..,.... V irginia Dalton Treasurer ........ ......,,,,,..,,,.s,it.,.,,.,, ..,,,, A g nes Oliver Irene Andrews Eleanor Ashton Lulu Button Evelyn Charlton Sara DeWitt Lenora Donahue Vera Griswold Thelma Hollenbeck Lena Knapp Gladys Kowalska Dora Lauper Gertrude Levine Mildred Lewis Ethel Lott Helen Ludington Ruth Mosier Marie Shultz Geraldine Vanderpool Jane Van Gorder Marguerite Voorhees Isabelle Walling Norma Warren Laura Washburne Carolyn Vvoermbke Bernice Johnson Rosemary Peckham Ida Yeager Dorothy Keene Ruth Pike Della Ziegler . W ll Y V 4.21:- J i x . I -: . V Q I , sn, A , 5 ' ., '. . f lg . 1 '1 1 ' .V . - ---' 1 - - -1 1 -QQ -. ' ,L st aff P, 3 5 60 +14 ' Q' 1' ai it f 0,13 ' ul ' 0 asa ? t HONOR SOCIETY Members of this worthy organization, approximately one-fourth of the class. are chosen first hy the teachers on the basis of scholastic standing, initiative, coopera- tion and participation. They are then voted upon hy the student body'-Asuch a pro- cedure taking place each term. lt is the duty of those linally decided upon to uphold high scholastic standards. The students attaining this coveted honor are: President ........................ Richard Carlson Secretary .............. ........ l ,ucille Clunlc View-l'rr'.sirlf3rtt ......,....... Thomas Madigan Treasurer ................ ....... C harles Schott Adviser ................ Miss Marion Connelly FIRST TERM SECOND TERM Ruth Bacon Alma Bergh Richard Carlson Lucille Clunk -Rhea Edgcomh .lohn Enright Harry Everts Charles Getman Lois Johnson Louis Knapp Thomas Madigan f I .. W. f' x,., Lowell'Moss Mary E. Ostazeski Betty Rubin Harry Sagar Dorothea Sandberg Charles Schott Lucile Stalker Mary ,lane Suter .lohn Vallely Adaline Warreii Elizabeth Wilson 5' Earl Baldwin Delores Baltimore Salvatore Cicconi Arlene Collum Marice Cooklin Earl Cordier Virginia Crayhill Joseph Griff Myrle Griswold Deborah Hample Elaine Hunter Charlotte Hyde Herbert Parsons Olive Peckham Louise Roy Fanny Rubin Dorothy H. Smith Max Taylor Lewis Thrasher Williani Trader Ida Yeager Evelyn Woodward I i x O fi' . I HE. - 1 Q Q 1 f I NS ik' -, x , 1 W I , I Q I Q 0 ul F1 ' 1 s J . , . 'fa' ' .af . -Q I , nf' I ' Q. Q . - GIRL RESERVES The Girl Reserves is a club of high ideals, organized to promote friendliness and comradeship among the girls of Southside. Their purpose is 'gto find and give the best. Meetings are held every Wednesday twice a month after school in ll3, once at noon in 03, and once as a social gathering at the Y. W. C. A. Ruth Adair Bessie Bartis Edna Berry Marion Bradley Alice Bullock Arlene Collum Florence Cornish Vlurion Crane leanette Decker Adviser ................. ......... ...... M i ss Lucy Graves President .......,,..,. ,,,,,,,. L ois Johnson Vice-President ................. .,.......... L ouise Roy Secretary ................,,,.,,,,.,,.., ,,,... G race Thomas Corresponding Secretary ....,,, .,,... ..,.,, D orothy Scaife Treasurer Eleanor Deegan Vera Deihler Lenora Donahue Florence Douglas Lorraine Everts Margaret Fassett Hazel Fishbough Dorothy Hood Charlotte Hvde ,,,....Doris Plum loy .lohnson Laura Judson Dorothy Keene Lena Knapp Doris Lovejoy Helen McClelland Vlariorie lVlcConnell Helen McKav Leola Osler .lean Volkle Rosemary Peckham llssie Robinson lane Roy ,lane Soper Helen Thomas Kathleen Tobey Velma Wright Della Ziegler V . . I 1 J I X D K I I' I iii - Wlgf w 1 ' , --,.. A I i igil . - .a - u. 1.5 Q ' ' is Y 62 - ' f' E - . 'M ' 1 , ' M ' . Q ' '1 X I - .L ,Q ' A - as is X-ki ,-. HI-Y 1'cWe, the members of the Southside Hi-Y Club, pledge ourselves to create, maintain, and extend throughout the school and all communities higher standards of Christian character. Besides making speeches in the Junior home rooms, the ideals committee, lead by Chairman Floyd Sweet, instituted the honor system in a few midyear examinations and in one study hall. Under the guidance of President Charles Schott, several interesting parties were held. Meetings are held every Tuesday evening at 6:30 at the Y. M. C. A. lli-Y otlicers and members are: President ............. Vice-President ..... Secretary .......... Treasurer .,.... Arfviser ....... Charles Allen Earl Allen Aaron Arnold Earl Baldwin Elmer Beckwith Karl Beers William Bowers William Connelly Quentin Cook Clirlord Cooper John Douglas Ralph Drake lohn Enright John Farr lames Frick Charles Getman Harold Hamm Marsden Hanwell Frank Johnson lames Kennedy Louis Knapp Edward Kunzman Raymond L'Amoreaux Leo Liddy Donald Luden lanies Mack Gordon Mann .I ack Martin William Mayo Jermyn McCahan .lohn McDonald Vernard McEwan Cerould McGill Robert Miller Lowell Moss Clyde Nagle .lames Nelan Arthur Niver .lames O'Connor ., ...... Charles Schott Francis Huggles Forrest Young ......Richard Carlson .........Stanley Krouse Robert Olthof Kenneth Parks Herbert Parsons Dick Payne Davis Phelps Ernest Pruyne Arland Rose Glen Ruffner Donald Salisbury Albert Scriver Cene Shipe Robert Slocum Kenneth Strader Andrew Strong Ansell Sweet Floyd Sweet Max Taylor Arthur Terwilliger Arthur Thorne Lewis Thrasher Charles VanVliet Carl Wainwright William Wells Donald Vifright W, ' 5' 4 . S B r I 'I if i 0 1 , l v Y 'Q ' ' ,N i ' C .a ' ul ii iz, ' 5 .fi Y 63 SECOND GROUP , . , te 5 . ,arg l MI , ul F1 ' ' :I SOUTHSIDE BUSINESS CLUB I'resz'rlenL ..,,...,.,..,,......,... Vernard McEwan Vice-President ....,,.. .,........... H arry Sagar Secretary .............. ...... G race Limoncelli Treasurer ..............................,. Earl Baldwin Sergeant-at-a.rms ..,.,........... Louis Fossaceca Adviser ...,.. .,,.....,,.,.. IN fliss Elizabeth Grube ,Purpose--To become acquainted with the business men of our city and to unite, de- velop, and strengthen commercial stu- dents in business methods and conditions. Prominent business men of our city are secured to speak at our club meetings. In this way we are able to bring about a closer relationship with them. The club has established a custom of send- ing a representative to New York City on an ed11:ational trip. This year two representatives will make the trip. William Andrus Florence Ayres Delores Baltimore Alma Bergh Eileen Blades Florence Besanceney Mary Cerio Arlene Gollum Sarah Condon Edward Crowe Madelyn Dahlgren Donald Dunbar Pauline Evans Pearl Gingrich FIRST GROUP Mary Gourley .loseph Griif Ruth Harbot Thomas Hentz Marie Howland Herbert ,Johnson .lames Kennedy Angelyn Knier Theodore Levanduski Donald Luden Margaret Madigan .lack Martin Norman McClelland Thomas O'Leary Mary Alice Ostasheski Mary Ostazeski Gladys Percy Alice Priest Leona Root Dorothea Sandberg Elizabeth Shortsleeve Ralph Straight Marian Strouse Grace Thomas Adaline Warren Eleanor Whiteman Alice Williams Elizabeth Wilson Lulu Young Truman Adams Virginia Andrus Robert Eyres Marianne Grady Louise Hancock Loretta Henderson Helen Kissane Iack Lown Nellie Niver Matilda Oparil Bessie Smykal Frank Schiave Dorothy Scaife John Vallely Anne Waschczyn P w I A ,. rw . r . I XC I ,fl 1,711 G9 .t u. 4 ,F1 ' X - of I- 64. . - ul an Q - fs Es. SCIENCE CLUB To cultivate a knowledge and interest in science among memhers and to promote good fellowship, is the aim of the Science Cluh. This organization. under the guidance of Mr. John Barlow, has enjoyed hikes and parties. It also sponsored an entertainment hy Robert G. Thrasher, an inter- nationally known magician. This year,s special project has heen photography. , Its meetings are held every Monday evening in room 217, where Dorothy Vlihip- ple as president presides, assisted by Rhea Edgeomh, vice-president, Marion Rohh. secretary, and William Trader, treasurer. Nlarie Barton Howard Beardslee Edith Beidelman Lucille Clunk Mildred Lewis Edward Morgan Roberta Myers Harry Sugar Jesse Schmick Harry Snyder Lewis Thrasher Barbara Tupper Charles Wood Evelyn Woodwurrl . 5, g . I ll 4: . I 1 1 ' ul F, ' is N, 65 ' . . , 'W . ,gy . Q C any y I A ' -45 ' ui ti, ' ' ii' A ss l l USHERS' CLUB The Ushers' Cluh under the able guidance of its adviser, Mrs. S. Carolyn Austin, elected the following ofiicers for the past year: president, Sarah Condong vice-president, Eleanor Vilhiteman treasurer, Gladys Percyg Student Council representative, Betty Shortsleeveg assistant student repre sentative, Fanny Ruhing secretary, Betty Wilsong assistant secretary, Mary Jane Suter. Because its aim is service for the school, the club has ushered at all the social events and has had duty at the hostess table, the health room, and the Parley Cohurn telephone, The meetings are held the hrst and third Friday of each month in room 209. Dorothy Alba Virginia Andrus Florence Ayers Delores Baltimore Alma Bergh Marcelline Butler Evelyn Charlton Lucille Clunk Madalyn Dahlgren Virginia Dalton Helena Decker Irene Dyke Rhea Edgcomh Pearl Gingrich May Gourley Marianne Grady Virginia Graybill Deborah Hample Ruth Harhot Dorothy Hood Marie Howland Charlotte Hyde Frances Jenkins Lois ,lohnson Helen Jones Nellie Karl MEMBERS Angelyn Knier Marguerite Kidd Loretta Long Margaret Madigan ' Marjorie McConnell Boherta Myers Matilda Oparil Mary A. Ostasheski Mary E. Ostazeski Louise Palmer Gladys Percy Virginia Pierce Wilda Pond Arlene Quick Marion Robb Leona Root Louise Roy Betty Rubin Fanny Rubin Helen Schuyler Frances Seeley Josephine Shannon Hazel Shepard Betty Shortsleeve Dorothy Smith Bessie Smykal Lucile Stalker Marion Strouse Mary Jane Suter Mary A. Sweeney Grace Thomas Kathleen Tobey Adaline Warren Dorothy Whipple Eleanor Whiteman Patricia Widman Elizabeth Wilson Ida Yeager Della Ziegler , . 9? . K g I uv iii- O 1 7 rv- . ,Z , I , - 1. th 66 Q U- ,, l-, ? N. E 5 3 f gif? g + .Q if 3 ' ul 1:1 ' ' -, H 67 xx 1 ' f' . , 0 f 1 . 'W L ri - we i f , , ul if a 0 4 5 Q TRI-SIGMA Tri-Sigma is a girls' cluh organized for social reasons. lts purpose is to promote sports and sportsmanship in Southside. The girls of the club are interested in sports and endeavor to interest others. The first and third meetings of the month are held on Tuesday at 1:00 o'clock. The second is held on Wednesday in the form of a social gathering. The fourth is a supper on Thursday in the cafeteria. Adviser ....,....,. ....... N liss Alma Noonan President ........... .................. I da Yeager Vice-President ..... ....... l lelen Schuyler Secretary ...,......., ....,.. R hea Edgcomh Treasurer ..... ...............,,..,..... ....... L o rraine Everts Marie Barton Bonalyn Berry Edith Beidelman Eileen Blades Eleanor Bowes Mary Cerio Lucille Clunk Eleanor Deegan Virginia Dunn Geraldine Edler Margaret Fassett Betty Goldsmith Katherine Grady Ruth Harbor Lois Johnson Mary .lohnson Lena Knapp Grace Limoucelli Helen Lilholt Helene Moseson Florence Motchman Roherta Myers .lulia Ogden Mary Ostasheski Mary Ostazeski Olive Peckham Gladys Percy Virginia Pierce Doris Plum Wilda Pond Marion Robb Frances Seely Hazel Shepard Eva Smith Ida Smith Shirley Smith Mary Sweeney Barbara Tupper Marguerite Voorhees Emily Walsh Laura Whitman Evelyn Woodward Della Ziegler . 5, N . I nv Z... 0 I p , Xi ul pg ' ' - X 68 if fl - ui F, ' - snuf f- 1 E Z i l FLAG RAISING SQUAD The duties of this squad are to conduct the Hag ceremonies hefore and after school at 8:50 and 1:10. Their work has attracted widespread attention. and as a result other schools are following the idea. Many compliments have been given the squad and students for this patriotic cerernony. Mai-L Taylor ........................,. Clzairman Wilfird Kelts ....,.........i Mlsst. Chairman Roy Lewis Fred Morse Robert Culver Melvin Vfatkins Q ,. gr . I ' -1 l . I r 12 ' N ' , ' Q I 'rs hu X- x I f ' . W ' I . , ' I - 'ffl 2.4: ' u. in p, ' - af 4 69 , 7 ' . , ' . 7 ' i ' I Q 1 I , 45' I 1 I i t ' ui ll, ' , ' 6'-21 MT. VERNON OPERETTA The Music Department of Southside High School, under the supervision of Miss Jean Christian, Miss Irene St. John, and Mr. George Abbott, produced an operetta, 'gMount Vernonf' on April 29 and 30. They were ably assisted by the Girls, and Boys' Glee Club, also the High School Orchestra. This operetta, in three lyric scenes, pictured Washington, the man, at three significant moments of his life at Mount Vernon. The first scene took place on the eve of his departure for the First Continental Congress at Philadelphia, in 17743 the second, on his return home at the end of the War for Independence, in 178443 the third, during the last year of his life, in 1799. The three scenes aim only to show the father of his country in his intimate surroundings. Among the most beautiful parts presented were the birthday party of Nellie Custis, a soliloquy of Washington in his old age, and the wedding of Nellie Custis. The concluding scene ended with a choral glorihcation of George Washington with special reference to the bi-centennial celebration of his birth. The leading characters were as follows: George Washington-Harry Sagar, Martha Washing- ton-Louise Hancockg Eleanor Calvert-Florence Lundgreng Jack Custis--Edward Kunzman, and Nellie Custis-las a childJ, Marjorie Sheive, and Kas a womanj-Vivian Daggett. Other members of the cast were: John Barber Madalyn Dahlgren Lawrence Lathrop Robert Slocum Albert Bennett John Enright Carl Moore Mary Jane Suter Walter Brown Jeanne Fiester Aletha Newell Barbara Tallman Sarah Condon Norman Hill Mary E. Ostazeski William Trader Allen Culver Lois Johnson Betty Jane Quick Adaline Warren i ff s . ft . I . '- If t, 1 , 1 - - ul il Q ' .aff A 70 P Q Q ,, 1 'SE-'T X , tw W zz 9 7 NN Q y - - I' QEVE: ' 0 EP' . A - M fy f ' G u. F1 V i f 71 l 2 -fs ' ul 'isa' F1 ' ' 3'-2.4 NS SIGMA DELTA SIGMA 1THE SENIOR DRAMATIC socngrrt There have been several previous organizations in Southside High School for dramatic work, among them the Foot-Lite Club and the Dramatic Club. Last year, l93l, again saw the organization of such a society--Sigma Delta Sigmafunder what seemed the best of conditions. Living up to their purpose to cultivate an appreciation of drama throughout the school, they have sponsored many dramatic projects under the direction of their capable coach and adviser, Miss St. ,lohn. Probably the most outstanding of this yearis contributions was the historical play commemorat- ing the bi-centennial of the birth of George Washington. This effort was enthusiastically received by the student body in the Senior English assembly and in a second performance before the Southside Parent-Teacher Association. Not only has this society sponsored many dramatic events, but also numerous social activities. Probably the one best remembered by Sigma Delts is the Second Annual Banquet held March 31. On this occasion an initiation was held and many new members were accepted. Adviser ......,,....,,....,....................... Miss Irene St. ,lohn Treasurer ...............,......,,.. ......... G race Limoncelli President ..........., ............ M atthew Hackett Financial Secretary .............. .......... A rlene Collum Vice-President ........,,...,.,,,........,.,....... Lewis Thrasher Business Manager ..........,....................... Walter Good Secretary .,......,..,.,..,..,...,...,,,...,,,,,...,,,,.,,,, Norman Hill Student Council Representative..Eleanor Whiteman Aaron Arnold Madalyn Dahlgren Max Hamilton Carl Moore Henry Quandt William Trader Kenneth Ballard ,lohn Douglas George Hill Gladys Morrison Harry Sagar Adaline Warren Phyllis Barber ,leanne Fiester Lois Johnson Merrill Olson .lesse Schmick Anne Waschczyn Albert Bennett Charles Getman Roy Lewis Mary E. Ostazeski Elizabeth Shortsleeve Dorothy Whipple Florence Besanceney Marianne Grady Ruth Mace Olive Peckham Dorothy Smith Elizabeth Wilson Marice Cooklin Harold Hamm Norman McClelland Harriett Porter Mary ,lane Suter Ida Yeager Theresa Swab Alta Young if . , J 5 ., , 'A ' I sf' , x I ,iff g - 'E .-fs ' ul ina? 1:1 ' i sa-ff X 72 . - , ' T7.. 1 1 W ' , ' ' ea N , i s W 1 ' S- ' d I 1 ill X GIRLS' GLEE CLUB The Girls' Glee Club is an organization to promote interest in choral work for girls. Besides going Christmas caroling, the group also enjoyed a party for new mem- bers during the first semester. Parts were taken by the club members both in the operetta, uMount Vernon, and in the annual spring concert. Meetings are held every Tuesday and Thursday, eighth period, in the music room at Parley Coburn School, and from 4:00 to 4:30 in room 101 at the South- side High School. Director .,...,..... ...,.,...,.Miss Dorothy E. Connor .flccompanist .......,..... ,,..,...,.... E . Lydia Elliott First Sopranos- Irene Andrews Leda Careswell Lorraine Everts E. Lydia Elliott Viola Gerard Louise Hancock Eleanor Lovell Hazel McDonald Anna Merrill Betty Jane Quick Eva Smith - .lane Soper Martha ,lane Steinhilper Adaline Warren Ruth Wilkins Betty Wilson Second Sopranos- Alma Bennett Edna Collins Vera Deibler Helen Dempsey Martha Elliott Margaret Fassett Edith Hazen Zelda McConnell Betty ,lane McWhorter Vera Mudge Marion Robb Altos- Doris Crouch Sybil Ewald Thelma Ewald Alleyenne Hanville Aimee Turck CLQ49 SENIOR S. H. S, BOYS' GLEE CLUB The Boys' Glee Club, with Mr. Lynn D. Hunt as adviser, serves to promote interest in music among high school boys. At the meetings held every Tuesday and Thursday in 101 from 12:00 to 12:30, Carl Moore presides while Edward Kunzman assumes the tasks of secretary and treasurer. This year the Glee Club has been active in the Washington operetta and an assembly in April. First Tenors- Russell Ewing Theodore Levandusky Sloan Palmer Jessie Schmick Second Tenors- Albert Bennett Miner Le Gro Warren Miller Harry Snyder Baritones- Russell Hyde Donald Kienzle Edward Kunzman William Mathews Carl Moore Lowell Moss Frances Quimby Basses- Richard Ingalls Paul Lockwood Mark Roland Herbert Vetter Accompanist-Martha Elliott 4 ' - - . , , , t ' 1 Msg fb ,E , , f .K w . Q' 1 e A f 1 - ul P, ' - sg 73 Violins- Violas- Trumpets- .,: '4 ' A . ' . ' LI I ' ' f N 5' ' Q' I la - A - ,L F, ' ' . ELMIRA HIGH SCHOOLS' ORCHESTRA H931---19323 The Elmira High Schools' Orchestra is composed of upper class students of both the Elmira Free Academy and Southside High School. Practicing weekly under the trained direction of Mr. Abbott, they have developed into an orchstra of high quality. The object of this organization is to further acquaint the students with high class music and hcl'- them develop music appreciation. Conductor ......... .................,... ......... G e orge J. Abbott Olive Peckham Dorothy Eggert John King Bertram Rundell Geraldine Ives Rose Connelly Richard Cetman Margaret Sheive Helen Boardman Dale Hood Marjorie Newell William Groff Robert Denison Paul Wills David Wladis Agnes Oliver Irving Sandler Cello- Albert Berbary Basses- Lawrence Draper Hunter Corliss Flutes- Henry Collin Stewart Peterson Clarinets- Gerald Pritchard Henry Fischman Bassoon- Marshall Terry Raymond Hauver Adolf Peterson Horns- Lowell Moss George Dostman Trombone- Floyd Sweet Percussions- Donald Jayne Ernest Dobberstein Pianos- Esther VVilliamson Virginia Graybill Richard Riley owe JUNIOR ORCHESTRA Under the able guidance of Miss Christian, the Junior Orchestra has developed rapidly in the past year. As soon as it was definitely decided to have two assemblies a week in Southside, the Junior Orchestra was initiated to play for the Junior Assem- bly on Tuesday. Besides their accustomed duty of playing for this assembly, the musicians also have entertained at the Marionette show, at the Parent-Teachers' meetings, and at Fergusonys Revue. The orchestra holds a meeting every Monday afternoon after school in 101, The organization: Ruth Yeager Lester Pierce Harry Morell Violins- Flute- Cornets- Robert Hample Max Miller Robert Culver Robert Sheely Clarinets- Edward Timbrell Richard Getman Marzetta Latham Richford Scopes Roxanna Evans Drums- Robert Ferris Marjorie Newell Trombones- Robert Drake Shirley Roberts Gerald Mallory Piano- Durwood Hotter Clark Cone Betty Wilson Ralph Dutenhoefer . ? . s Q I 'I Q I ' , it Q 1 '--. X- , I f 'I A W , I -ff -1.7 I l y t' QQ -1 ' ul itself P: ' 6,-' S 744 v . s , , ' , , '- V I X W ' , L 1 l I 'fm' . M '- 4 v j - F1 ' o 75 ,.-,-.-Y l LSTA With stmp collecting the side. they have formed the St PHI SIGMA MP COLLECTING CLUB! very interesting hobby of some of the boys at South- arnp Collecting Club under the advisership of Mr. Jennings. This interesting organization has as its object the collection of both foreign and United States stamps and has sponsored the unique collection on display in front of the oliiee. President ........,..,..... Vice-President .....,.. ,,.,...,Lawrence Lathrop .,,,.,..Ja1nes Hodgkins Secretary-Treusurern ........,,,.., lack Lown Joseph Condon Merrill Craze Miner Le Cro Andrew Motiska Robert Hample Leo Pint Russell Hyde Walter Sullivan W , , I ' Z 1 3 ' ul 51.445 p, ' ' , Q ' 75 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 l l 1 4 1 1 S l 1 l 1 J 1 1 and 1 0 gr li . ' dy ,. ' ,!Ex g. ' Q S I 1 I X Q , I V' - x U' ' 'C ' ' . .43 v ul ' v , - 5 X 5 PROPERTY COUNCIL Under the direction of Jerome Cavanaugh, the Property Council has in every way carried out its purpose to keep the school in as neat a condition as possible. Besides having home room inspec- tion, the Council this year placed hostesses in the cafeteria during the lunch hour in order to pre- vent any undue disturbance. Cafe 01 Representatives from each home room meet every other Tuesday afternoon at 4:10 in room 113. Chairman .........,.....,..,,,,,.,,..,,,..,,.,,.,,.,.....,.,,,,.... Jerome Cavanaugh Vice-Chairman ,,,, ,,,,,,,,4,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,.,,,,,, W 'illiam Sheehan Treasurers ....,.... Jeanne Fiester, Edward Kunzman Secretary .......................... ,, ,,,,,........,,....,...,.,,....,r. ., Wheel Shed Cornrnzttee c...,,, ,,,,,, .,,,o ,,,,,,,,,,r,,.,,,,,.,.,,,,,, Cafeteria Committee Sergeant-at-arms fldvlser ............. -Willis Sorenson 08 -George Evangelis 09 02-Velma VVright 101- 03- 04- 05 07 .Jeanette Whitney George Ghen 102 William Farr Raymond Paine 103 Edith Seagars -Bernard Malone Orril Homer Fred Rouse Jeanne Fiester Gladys Ganung Margaret Lambert .Theresa Swab .John Farr ......Donald Wright ...,....,....John Farr George White 106 -Gertrude Outt Shirley Roberts 107-Gabriel DeMark 108-.lames Duchine 113-Dorothy Keene 114-Dorothy Thomas 115-lnez Bourke 118-Fay Beach Kenneth Hinkelman 119-Shirley Roberts Gladys Laekner 201-June Storm Betty Shook 203-Theresa Swab 209 210 212 213 214 215- -Louise Roy William Sheehan -Donald Griffis Richard lngalls -Edward Kunzman John Farr Herbert Aldrich May Belin Ruth Mosier James Lovell 204-Rita Malone 216--Elsie Massey -Richard Randall 104-Mary H. Lathrop 116-Robert Andrews 205-Claire Elston 217-Donald Wright -Carol Reynolds Edward Timbrell Evelyn Hewitt 206-Bessie Smykal 218-Aaron Stein Miriam Gilbert 105-George Dostnian 117-Evelyn Benson 207-Phyllis Barber 221-Herbert Vetter Mary H. Lathrop . E, 0 ti O , wg.: - l ' - A I 1- , 1 I Y' , ts Q 1 --. 4 , 1 f , lg - f if f ' . 4.4 - ,L E ' - - K. 76 , ly uw- - l ,N I - -1 ' Q E- 0 I I H. . H x S . I Lg- V, V V Q I I fl ' qi .Zi p, ' ' iss? X CRAFTSMANS GUILD The Craftsman's Guild is composed of boys only. Under the capable advisership of Mr. Lantz. the club works out its purposes: a desire to gain a closer contact with industry, to encourage a greater pride in the quality of hand workmanship, to preserve the best traditions of the guild system of the middle ages, and to promote a social and fraternal interest among the students of the industrial arts department of our school. Business meetings are held the second Wednesday of each month in the Practice House. Social meetings are in charge of members of the iaculty in the shops, drafting departments, and mathe, matics department. Remember the Craftsmanis Guild assemblies March 4 and 8? President ..........................,........................................... Earl Cordier Vice-President ....... ....... M elvin Watkins Secretary ..,.......,. ........ P aul Landers Treasurer ............. .. . ........... Roy Lewis Sergeant-at-arms ......... ................ ,... ........,..............,.. H a r ry Everts MEMBERS Charles Baker Frank Frasier Alec Marchisheck Franklyn Shappee Glen Brewer Charles Getman Herbert Miller Jack Shea Leo Bryan Robert Held Fred Morse .Ylerton Shanbacher Richard Carlson Melvin Hill Herbert Parsons Edward Unwin William Deagan Ralph Keener Ernest Pruyne Robert VanGordor Richard Dibble Wilfird Kelts Albert Scriver Gordon VanValkncr Manning Drake Miner LeGro ilugene Seagar C-LQG TRAFFIC SQUAD Boys of the Senior and Junior departments compose this society to relieve the tralhc congestion in the corridors and to maintain silence throughout the corridors during assembly. Meetings are held in the Health Room whenever called, with Max Taylor pre- siding as chairman, assisted by Karl Beers as secretary and treasurer. Mr. Stottlc acts in the capacity of adviser. THE SENIOR SQUAD Charles Allen Earl Allen Aaron Arnold .lohn Breck Richard Carlson Jerome Cavanaugh Salvatore Cicconi .lohn Connelly Donald Currie .lames Frick Robert Habersaat Harold Hamm Max Hamilton Andrew Motiska Jermyn McCahan Allen O'Leary James Rourke Albert Scriver Gene Shipe Robert Slocum Alfred Terwilliger Herbert Vetter Malcolm Watkins Coe Wallace Donald Wright THE JUNIOR SQUAD Alden Allen Lewis Besley Daniel Deegan Allen DeWitt Greydon Dunn Robert Gamer Frederick Jones Walter Myers Robert Nurss Clinton Olthof Ronald Patterson George Schott Clinton Williams . 59' 3 . I I y it , O 1 I lag X W ' 9' X . a.a f ul 'd eli p, ' ie- N 77 K O if . I i t I K . I I I su ' 9' ,' Af' f Q ,fl - ul F1 ' Q 6. SOUTHSIDE RADIO CLUB Hello Folks- This is Station S. R. C., the Southside Radio Club, broadcasting its annual pro- gram under the direction of its adviser, Mr. Ralph D. Palmer, and its officers: 1 President ..............................,,............ .... ...,.............. R a lph Gary Vice-President ....... ,....... H oward Beardsley Secretary .......,....... .,..... Clarence Saunders Treasurer ............................,.. .,........ O scar Rothwell Correspondence Secretary ...... ....... G ordon Kirton Custodian .............................. ,..... P aul Landers with the help of its members: William Carr Donald Miller Lewis Dunham Reginald Paget Robert Graybill Robert Vangordon Alec Marchesheck owe GERMAN CLUB The most recently formed organization in Southside High School is the German Club, which meets semi-monthly. lts purpose is to aid the pupils in their knowledge of German language and customs. President ...........,.........., .. .......... John Enright Vice-President .........,....... .....,........... B etty Rubin Secretary and Treasurr ...... .,.......... K atherine Presser Adviser ...........,....,........... ...... M iss Winifred Prechtl Ruth Bacon Frank Johnson Merrill Craze Katherine Presser John Douglas Betty Rubin .lohn Enright Glen Ruffner Virginia Graybill Mary Jane Suter Norman Hill Max Taylor Dorothy Hood Charles Wood V - . 1 0 i f- 4 0 X ' ' ' ' 1' X I ' if . I X. 1 L I P , c A . un F1 - - ss Q 721 0 5' D , . f 'QE -, . -xr i - A' ,Lu g R. I 'VJ' 5, sq I g 3 ta gs 'Ml-IIEL IECILIZAJZFJK QQ! Q2 LUQIQOSPJD if 1-,J yozzfzfe orgozffn aff 77 Irs OPHCQQQ werzg DMM QQQWQQM, VICE-DPEQ, if 5JEC,0ND 40736717126 M,W5n52,:ZZzrzf1?5rf4ZZff0L INLJQQITEDVRQEZ UQQMSDQQQDIJQKZZQZQFTEQWDQ Comeau. SEASON Yllzmb Wifi! MQ Sf Cuosav A GUQQD Oro 'IDE QLL-QTATE QQUADS 'L 7 'fa WAS? Tue Q8 Eamon? OP H5550-L14 057221 M99 SMATING Afeouwn TUE D25 Amo Irv GI UE MAS fmrcve Qoumo IN Bucmrgws 5oc1aF:QLD KUWKEQJFOQ 7UMBL ERS T Img BASKETBALL Games Mai 55095 A2 'E QALDQ kxlmcox my Wgffgmyfifi LJODQQ Tum ym Gm Qs Moen Ram, Laoxfwe A A I Q Bama A 1 mess QND OTQEQ Evsms DMD Lmsslbs rfr Does! w a W ES! W . G m a 3 'i q' 4' 'S 79 'L' .Ll T Q I 0 , n , ' I ' U. itz? F1 ' ' Q-NJ VARSITY FOOTBALL Through no fault of Coach Hirst and Co-Captains Louis Knapp and Daniel Punzo, the Elmira footlmall team participated in a rather disastrous season. After swamping Oneonta and Eastwood, they dropped three successive games to Ithaca, Auburn and Binghamton. The weak teams of Onondaga Valley and Canton were victims of the Elmira onslaught. The season closed with a close victory over the Alumni in a benefit contest. The Blue and White hacks came through despite the weak line, scoring a point every minute and a half. Score by Time of Games Quarters Elmira Opponents Game Min. Date Elmira ....,. 613 7 7 33 32 Oct. 3 Oneonta .... .,.... 0 0 0 0 0 Elmira .......... ..,,.. 6 6 19 6 37 42 Oct. 10 Eastwood ...... ...... 0 0 0 0 O Elmira ,,..... ...... 6 0 O 0 6 42 Oct. 17 Ithaca ..... ...... 0 7 0 O 7 Elmira ,,,.... ,,,,.. 0 0 0 0 O 42 Oct. 24 Auburn .... ...... 6 0 0 6 12 Elmira ,...,.,,.. ..,,,, 0 6 0 0 6 42 Oct. 31 Binghamton ............. ...... 7 0 0 7 14 Elmira ....,.................... ...... 1 3 6 613 38 42 Nov. 7 Onondaga Valley ....... ...... 0 0 0 0 I 0 Elmira ..................... ...... 7 13 32 6 58 30 Nov. 14 Canton ...,............ ...... 0 0 O 0 0 Elmira .,.... ,..... l 3 O 7 O 20 40 Nov. 21 Alumni ...,.......... ..... 0 13 O 2 ' 15 Totals ,,.,..,. ..,......................,,.. 1 98 38 314 LETTERMEN Louis Knapp, Co-Captain Salvatore Cicconi Max Easton, Captain Elect Patrick Clate Daniel Punzio, Co-Captain Stephen Bartis Robert Slocum .loseph Graham Charles Allen Aaron Arnold ,lohn Besley Glen Ruffner Albert Scriver Ambrose Ogrodowski Robert I-labersaat Lewis Thrasher Walter Hockey ff . 1 ' , Q 1 , , ' , T 9 I X 1 YE x ' I L ' I s. T. l, X I K, ff-W I O , ,,,-N 4 ,... p ff 1 2 ,1 x 80 4 , MZ: - , hx X . V . I J E . , ln Q I I W . M I I I I j 7 x I I 3 ' fat 'Z , ran Qi! iid 1 u . Q5 g f l F1 0 l 'ff 1 VARSITY TRACK, I 93 I With scant time for practice and inexperienced candidates, Coach Hirst produced a fairly well balanced track team. The relay team, composed of Richard Payne, Edward Peterson, William Ladd, and Louis Knapp, gained three first places in as many meets. In Webster Haskins and Raymond Seely, Mr. George had two consistent point-getters as ,pole vaulter and hurdler respectively. Elmira took third place in the Southern Tier meet with 29 points, and second place in the Sec- tionals with 22 points, hut dropped the meet to Waverly 45--50. Event Southern Tier Waverly Sectionals 100 yard ....,. ...,,,.,...............,,...,......... K napp second .........,.,,,..,,,................... Mile ..,.,.....,,.. Brewer Second Brewer first LETTERMEN 440 yard ............. , ..,,,,..,............ ..,,.... P eterson first ........ ......,,,..,............... P oims , Ladd third ......, ..., S eely second Scored 220 LOW Hurdles 'nseely mst Seely first ..... Hines fourth Louis Knapp ,,.,,, 26 220 yard ............. ,. .,................... ....v...... K napp first ...... Knapp second Richard Payne ,,,-.-- -,,,,, 2 2 yard ..............,.. ..-. .......,..--- --------- L ewis Illlfd ..,... ................................ E dward Petefsgn Broad ,lump ........,., P ar Tconh Payne second ,..,..... ,... Payne second William Ladd ' ' 16 . ayne Ourt . . . Raymond Seely ...., ...... 1 3 High ,lump ...... ,,....,............,................ H askms third .......... Haskins fourth , . . Webster Haskins 12 Pole Vault ,,,.,, ,,,..,,. Haskins first .........,..,.,... Haskins first 'Vlax Easton ......,. 5 Shot Put ...... Easton first Botnick second Relay ..... .,..,,, E lmira first ....,..,.,,.., Elmira first ...................... Elmira first , --,, 0 sf , -.. V -t an ' A L X ,N 9 I , ' ' I 1 'Q' ' X 7 . . Q ul F., ' ' acer ! l . 7 0, P Q 0 I iii' 1 l I L C 1 I sg, ul g I x BUYS' VARSITY BASKETBALL Although Elmira gained only second place behind Bingo in the Southern Tier League, she had in Brusie Ogrodowski and Captain Julius Vecellio, the high scorer and star guard of the league. Brusie scored 122 points, while Captain Vecellio had only 10 points scored on him. Edgar Sebring was elected captain for the 1932-1933 SCHSOH. Arthur HlfSt+C!I!lC,l Frederick Frasier-Mgr. Elmira 12 Cortland ......,....... ..,..,.l,,, Elmira 22 Oneonta ,,.,..,.,,,,,,,. ,,,,.,, L ETTERNIEN Elmira 25 Binghamton ,.....,,.,,, ,,,,,,, - f - , - Elmira 27 Elmira Heights 1ECEiiE?aqC,r11wta111 Elmira 19 Norwich ,.........,...,,, ,,,,.,, 1 Elmira 27 lthaca ................. ....... 06553 illllgigieargiaat Elmira 28 Endicott ...... Harold Hamm Elmira 23 Cortland ....,.. Harold Hurst Elmira 28 Olleoma ' Ambrose Ogrodowski Elmira 18 Binghamton .,.,, .,4,,,, P jdqul, Sebring Elmllfl 31 N01'WjPh '2 Clarence Spaulding Elmira 41 Elmna Heights Stlmley Updvke Elmira 31 lthacu ..................... ...,,,, i ' Elmira 24 Enrlirott ...... . 0 I- , ,i.g,: A I 2411- , O 1 r 5: , W ' X E f I , i 1 ' i Q. lg, ' ' i X 82 ,I ,in f I ' .' . W , 1 f I 1 X ., O 1 ' 9 L ll - ' :di ul - F, V Q GIRLS' VARSITY BASKETBALL The Elmira six, coached by Miss Mary O,Dea, completed a very remarkable season. chalking up seven victories against a single defeat. Leona Paltrowitz was again honored as this year's captain. Louise Dawdy and Alice Eaul acted as co- IYl3H3.gCI'S. The Elmirans were successful in conquering Cook, in spite of its four-year record of no defeats. Union-Endicott. champions of the Southern Tier, was defeated in two contests by the Elmira sextette. Betty 0,Connor was chosen captain for 1932- IQ33. Mary Bamburg was named manager. The following girls received their varsity letter: Leona Paltrowitz, captaing Katherine Nixon, Dorothy Gillette, Julia DeEilippo, Ruth Ferguson, Roberta Myers, Dorothy Alba, and Betty O'Connor, captain-elect. Elmira Elmira Elmira Elmira Elmira SCORES ., 51 Elmira Heights .,.. .,.,,.,,. 9 .. 40 Ithaca ,.............,, ......... 1 8 ,, 12 Cook ..............,......... ......... 1 1 .. 25 Ilnion Endicott ,..,.... ..,,..,,, 1 7 .. 35 Elmira Heights .... ..... 4- Elmira .. 21 Ithaca ..,..,.,,,......r. .,,..,,,, 4 8 Elmira .. 44 Owego ,................... .......,. 1 5 Elmira ...,. 34 Union Endicott ,....... ......... 2 5 . Er -N K . I ll I . I 1 , 1 A 9 ' S' w f ' . W ' I ' I I Qt X ll Q- fi u ' F1 ' ' 1 83 ,f . V T E Q I H K Q 1 I I X M ' ' I If l , il fl VARSITY BASEBALL A clean sweep of three double-headers with Owego, Ithaca and Cortland crow n l the efforts of the 1931 baseball team in the Southern Tier,League. However, in t 1 play-off for the league championship, Bingo, our ancient rival, mastered a lightln Elmira team in two straight games. Frank Lagonegro A mbrose Ogrodowski Robert Fox-Coach Thomas Keane-Manager Elmira .....,.........,.. ................... 9 Reformatory ...... ................ 9 Elmira ........ 4 Cortland ......... ......... 3 Elmira ........ I4 Cortland ..... ..... 6 Elmira ........ I5 Owego ...... ..... l J Elmira ........ 15 Owegzo ...... ..... O Elmira ........ I0 Faculty .... ..... 4 Elmira ........ 4 Ithaca .... ...., I Elmira ...,.............................,.. .. IO Ithaca .........,.........,....,..... .,... I SOUTHERN TIER CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES Elmira ........ 0 Bingo ........ 8 Elmira ........ 5 Bingo ........ 6 LETTERMEN L James Deegan Jay Hall Louis Paltrowitz Charles Allen John Cassetta Francis Comereski Robert Davis .lames Morelock Harry 0'Donnell J Y, Glen Ruffner Clarence Spaulding James Wilson . 5' K X . 1 '-lg! X C 1 , , I is -I ' u. isa!! pg ' ' i Bl W 1 mf- F L.. f . F9 s E A S A I , X O 1 I ii. M ' . 1 I ii I Q n 1' ' Q, E ' - 'S INTERCLASS BASKETBALL, I 9 3 1 - 1 9 3 1 ln this year's lnterclass Basketball, the Seniors were victorious. Many close games were played, with every game interesting to watch. A special treat was the game in which the faculty played the P. G.'s in the second round. ln the preliminary to the Oneonta game, some of the lnterclass players opposed the Reserves in a game, but were defeated by a close score. Won Lost P. C. Seniors ......... ...... 8 0 1.000 Sophomores .,... ...... 6 2 .750 Juniors ................ ....,,. 5 3 .625 Frosh .................................... 2 6 .250 P. G. Faculty ................,.,... 0 8 .000 Seniors who won their numerals in the lnterclass League are: Robert Eyres, Captain Ralph Page Robert Clark Charles Schott Walter Good James Weir Q56 GIRLS' INTERCLASS BASKETBALL This year some very exciting contests took place in the Girls' gymnasium on Monday and Thursday nights. The Seniors and Juniors were very evenly matched-much to the Seniors, chagrin. The Seniors won every game in the lirst round, the Juniors took all the contests in which they engaged during the second round. As a result, it was necessary to play a three-game series to decide the champions. The first resulted in a tie, the second was taken easily by the Juniors, the third also was a victory for them, but a hard one, for the Seniors held the lead until the last quarter. Thus the Juniors were declared honest-to-goodness champs. League standings: FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND W on Lost W on Lost Seniors ....... ....... 4 0 Juniors ..,.... 4 0 Juniors ....... ....... 3 1 Seniors .........,. 3 1 Freshmen .... ....... 1 3 Sophomores ....... 1 3 Sophomores .. ....... 0 4 Freshman ...,. 0 4 MEMBERS Seniors- Juniors- Sophomores- Freshmen- Irene Hunter, Captain Dorothy Hood Miriam Gilbert Ruth Harbot Irene Dyke Louise Roy Margaret Madigan Marjorie Snover Ruth Bacon Ida Yeager Anna Barto, Captain Lorraine Everts Leola Osler Virginia Dunn Martha Steinhilper Eleanor Deegan Amy Turck Ruth Stickles, Captain Alma Vang Dorothy Smith .Jane Soper Emily Howard Mildred Lewis Marguerite Snyder Lena Knapp Erma Stanton, Captain Eleanor Madigan Virginia Kelly Helen McClelland Patricia Kilpatrick Helen Hathaway Rosemary Peckham Pearl Terwilliger Ruth Wrigley Elsie Massey KT ' ' i I , ',. X. I 1 I 85 : I 4' O f n . ,. . A Q I 0 I X 1. . 'Y 1 Q u. F1 ' HOME ROOM BASKETBALL Fourteen Senior home-rooms participated in the Basketball League this year. In the finals 214 defeated 210, 42-12. This was a closer game than the score indi- cates. The tournament was capably directed by Mr. George, with Bill Olivey and Bob Eyres as referees. Those of 214 who participated in the games are: Richard Tipple, Captain Charles Allen Joseph Griff Max Hamilton Herbert Johnson Theodore Levanduski Thomas Madigan Elwood Mallory Members of Home Room 101 which won the Junior Home Harry Lovejoy, Captain James Barton Charles Bright Loring Sherman Gerald Smith Harry Wild 9663 Room League title are: INTERCLASS SOCCER Although experiencing two defeats out of six games played, the Seniors under the captaincy of Charles Wood, climbed to first place in the Interclass Soccer League. The Seniors took all the honors of the leagueg namely, high scoring and most of the positions on the Interclass team. Joseph Griff led the scoring with four goals. - LEAGUE STANDING Won Lost Tied P.C. Seniors ........ ...... 4 2 0 .666 Sophs ...... ...... 3 2 1 .500 Frosh ....... ...,.. 3 2 1 .500 Juniors ........ ..... 1 5 0 .200 SENIORS WHO EARNED NUMERALS THOSE GAINING POSITIONS ON THE Charles Wood, Captain ALL INTERCLASS TEAM Glenn Brewer Name Class Position John Brown Charles Wood Frosh R. W. Robert Clark Charles Pearsall Frosh R. I. Harry Everts ,Joseph Griff Senior C. F. Robert Eyres William Seibert Frosh L. I. Joseph Griff Ralph Keener Senior L. W. Ralph Keener Wilfird Kelts Senior R. H. Wilfird Kelts Charles B. Wood Senior C. H. Elwood Mallory Sam Roby Soph L. H. John Rourke Andrew Motiska Junior R. F. Richard Tipple .loseph DeWandler Soph L. F. Melvin Watkins Kenneth Osgood Junior Goal . ? v 4 .5521 , X l I x I' r Q 1 I O - ul p, ' ' 5 P f I 86 .yi f 7 . I I y .:, ,A X 0 I I y- ' an It 1 INTERCLASS BOXING Stiff competition was the feature of the Interclass Boxing Tournament. A crowded house was entertained for two hours each afternoon. The boys showed their ability and training in stiff bouts. In the eight classes the winners were: Phantomweight-75 lbs.-Arthur Espey ,lunior Flyweight-45 lbs.-Daniel McDonough Flyweight-105 lbs.-Thomas Chimilewski Bantonweight-125 lbs.-Robert Hurst Featherweight-135 lbs.-William Burgey Lightweight-145 lbs.-Anthony Cieri Light Heavyweight-155 lbs.-Philip Sbedico Heavyweight-Unlimited-Aaron Arnold Coaches-Salvatore Cicconi, Garvin Hamilton C566 IN TERCLASS WRESTLING The wrestling tournament, coached by Charles Allen and Stephen Bartis, was combined with the boxing tournament to give the school excitement for the week of March 15 to 23. The ability of the contestants was exceeded only by their desire to give the crowd good entertainment. The winners in the eight classes were: Phantomweight--75 lbs.-Jack Breck Junior Flyweight-95 lbs.-Roy McDonald Flyweight-105 lbs.-William Ryan Bantomweight-125 lbs.-Loring Sherman Featherweight-135 lbs.-Jack Seibert Lightweight-145 lbs.-William Seibert Light Heavyweight-155 lbs.-Earl Allen Heavyweight-Unlimited-Charles Allen Q-awe TENNIS and I-IANDBALL TOURNAMENTS Two new events were added this past year for the benefit of interclass partic- ipants-handball and tennis. The handball tournament was for doubles only. There were many hard-fought matches, with the winning team, Lozier and Moses, both of the 10th year, defeating Pearsall and Seibert of the 9th year by the close scores of 21-17, 17-21, and 21-5. In the tennis tournament, which was capably managed by ulVlike George, many participated. The event was not completed, due to adverse weather conditions and excessive rains which left the courts in a had condition. SA ' 1 KT ff ,1 ,' ff .N . I ' - 1 ' , X lf' ' W , f a - . - ul p, ' 3 .sa g 87 f A I 1 1 L f L . 1 Q35-' X A... . 6? J Lxf- D I 9 x x 2? -' u. ta X INTERCLASS BASEBALL, 1931 With the entrance of a Faculty team, the Interclass Baseball League took on a new spirit. The teams showed more interest and incidentally played hard to beat the Faculty. The season ended in a triple tie for first place, the Juniors, Sopho- mores and Freshmen holding .the prominent positions. The Faculty had a tough time with the Junior High in a tie for last place. THE TEAM STANDINGS Won Lost P.C. Juniors ........ ....... 3 2 .600 Sophomores ....... 3 2 .600 Freshmen ........ ...... 3 2 .600 Seniors ............ ....... 2 3 .400 Faculty ................ ...... 1 4 .200 Junior High ........ ....... 1 4 .200 C966 INTERCLASS TRACK, 193 1 Interclass honors in track were taken by the Junior Class at the annual meet held last Spring. The meet was hard fought throughout, with all the contestants in good form. Numerals were awarded, for the winning of five points or more, to: Year Points Salvatore Cicconi 1932 13 William Yeomans 1932 10 Walter Scott ................. .... 1 931 10 Joseph DeWandler 1934 9 Edmund Mosher ..... .... 1 931 8 Ralph Keener ....... 1932 7 John Maynard ......... .... 1 932 7 .lack Seibert ......... 1933 7 Walter Jones ....... 1934 6 Edward Miller ......... .... 1 932 6 Donald Wilson ..,...... ........ 1 931 6 Lawrence Prunier .,.,,.. 1934 5 Ernest Pruyne ..... 1933 5 Q9 I 215' .. 1. . . 5 I I, Q I , . 1 , 1 ul p1 ' - 'S A. - ' 'P El' 1 . ' 1 et . x. K f . X 3 1 ' ' f o t., - L 'f , X X : , -- 1 1 V fs , W y f ,S -fl ' ui F1 ' ' MEMORIES DO YOU REMEMBER: Billy Trader asking Dot Whipple if she had ever thought of dying? Those days that teachers faced the prospect of no pay? Mr. Krouse offering Lowell Moss a dime for a soda to find out what soda water was? That unfortunate accident Miss Lucy experienced in the Faculty Assembly? In that same assembly, Miss Haupt carrying a goose? Our old friend, HPete,, Johnson, as Father Time in the Birthday Assembly? Mr. lVlcNaught stumbling through all those impossible games in calling 211- roll? That thrilling last shot by Vecellio in that Bingo game? How wonderful the Senior Prom was? The triumphant entrance of Arlene Collum and Billy Trader in the Senior Play? Louis Knapp and Dorothea Sandberg as our May King and Queen? When James 0,Connor captured a letter 4'Cousin Mack was writing to 'Dear Kay ? ' 'Z' A 1 0 1 I , K' it ' M w I - ll. F1 ' ' l 89 S x x I 3 f. G' ' Q' ' is ' ul P1 ' .- 1 , H1 5-f I . M X ,, ' ' I Nj 'Y fi -f ,fzfv-lufh I 'Q WJ LMJI I ,viii X jw 4 .lm ,N 'a Ai -4 N 1 J 'xx R' .K A 3 5 1, gx 5 a X5 Ni , W m X if K 'J JJ: A , 'g OJ GV 1 fl' -7 J! x A f xx J Y 4 f fx A' V N N , , S ,I X V '- X - if J , f 0 fr ' , . f- f' l l -f Y 9 . I ar 1 I ' N Q I g X .5 4 1 I ' Q44-1 ' ,L wi ' ' ff 90
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