Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH)

 - Class of 1948

Page 15 of 184

 

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 15 of 184
Page 15 of 184



Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 14
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Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

As regulars in The pony chorus were DoTTy Spen- cer, MargiT Friedlander, Jean EllingTon, and MargareT STayTon. In The girls' singing chorus were Barbara Jaffe, Irmgard Kroeger, Helen CalverT MyrTIe Irwin, and Jo Pease. In The boys' singing and dancing choruses were Dick Bauer, Ken MiTchelI, Bill Williams, Amiel Wohl, and John Zeigler. TweIfTh NighT was The annual Shakespear- ean producTion puT on aT WalnuT Hills This year. Sam Davies and George Haynes of our class were parT of The casT. Mr. STewarT, aT The annual Shakespearean banaueT, Took The unprece- denTed sTep of offering To whoever idenTified a few lines he quoTed from one of Shakespeare's plays, a free lunch wiTh Miss LoTze in The faculTy Iunchroom. Sam Davies received The honor by Telephoning Mr. STewarT aT his home afTer The banauef and sTaTing The answer. Our spring play, The Bluebird, while by no means a producT of our own class, displayed The TalenTs of many of our members, noT only in The spoTlighT buT also offsTage. The play was given Twice, an unusual occurrence in The annals of WalnuT Hills' dramaTic hisTory: a regular Friday evening performance and a maTinee The Thurs- day before, To which members of The sevenTh and eighTh grades of oTher schools and of Wal- nuT Hills were especially inviTed. WiTh so many characTers symbolic of various elemenfs of na- Ture, amusing evenTs were bound To happen backsTage. Eddie Minor's face was red when, in answer To Miss BelIvilIe's quesTion, Is The Ass here? , he had To confess ThaT iT was he. The ChaTTerbox VarieTy Show, which was produced This year, offered To members of every grade a chance To display Their abiliTies. The PeanuTs of '46 and acTs from The sevenTh and eighTh grade as well as TalenT from our class were included. The ChaTTerbox raised The money iT needed, buT The fun we had would have amply compensaTed our efforTs in any evenT. Supervised by iTs PresidenT, John Zeigler, The Junior Hi-Y gave a Dinosaur Dance in April. The unusual feaTure of This dance was The aTmos- phere of prehisforic Times, compleTe wiTh mon- sTers, dinosaurs, caves, live cave men, and oTher fugiTives from The Cenozoic Age. High-lighTing The evening was The music of Johnny CIark's fif- Teen-piece band. WiTh The coming of spring, all of us began looking forward To The B. A. Prom, which, for The firsT Time, we were permiTTed To aTTend. Dick Schwab was seIecTed To be junior chairman of The affair, and DoTTy Spencer and Barbara GeisT headed commiTTees. Ever since The sevenTh grade we had anTicipaTed This May when we could join in This dance as privileged upper- classmen, We were noT disappoinTed, The prom of I947 lived up To our expecTaTions. Our gym was magically Transformed. Circus was The Theme, and The moTif was carried ouT by The gayly colored side-show painTings of faT women and Thin men, sword swallowers and snake charmers. Even in The choosing of The queen The circus paTTern was used wiTh a wheel of forTune spinning unTil iT poinfed To The lucky winner. Then The perfecT nighT did noT end for all wiTh The end of The dance, parTies aT The homes of several sTudenTs kepT The enTerTainmenT going. As graduaTion approached, The iunior girls as well as The seniors were anxious and an- Ticipafory. The seniors were, of course, waiTing for The faTeful day when To The music of Pomp and CircumsTance They would march down The aisle. The junior girls, Too, were hoping To march down The aisle as members of The TradiTionaI Daisy Chain. Chosen on The basis of personal appearance and refinemenT by Miss Clarke and her Senior Council, Ten girls lead The procession carrying The chain of fern. IT was universally agreed ThaT The girls chosen merifed The honor of boTh counTs. They were Rosemary Danner, BeTTy Ann Davis, Jean EIlingTon, MargiT Fried- Iander, Joan Gradison, Joan Henke, Jane Long- naker, Jeannine McCue, Lois Ann Pfau, and Nancy Sebasfian. ,W If Mfd S Q lliif f' I' T' S y si eg Q5 ,S f as X - Eg .5 X Big Sisfers and Big Brofhers for The nexT year were chosen as were officers for The class and The various publicaTions. WiTh ThaT we prepared To Take on The responsibiliTies and privileges ThaT go wiTh The TiTle Senior . This sums up The firsT five years of our school hisTory. Our lasT year is recorded here for all To see. IT is a record of fun and enioymenT, buT ThaT is noT all. IT is a record of high school achievemenT, which will noT end unTil The sTrains of Pomp and CircumsTance play ouT our year and ring in commencemenT. CommencemenT is beginning, and we The class of T948 are ready now To begin The shaping of The fuTure, our fu- Ture and ThaT of our world.

Page 14 text:

zorus olreody heoded The odverTising sToTT of The I2emembroncer. Sophomore Alon Trovis wos The only member of our closs To eorn his TooTboll leTTer. AlThough we won buT Tour oT our Ten TooTboll gomes, we Triumphed gloriously over our TrodiTionoil rivol, WiThrow. Few will TorgeT The double line we mode Through which The Tedm possed, cheered on To The losT gome oT The seoson. Our boskeT- boll ond swimming Teoms copped ciTy chompion- ships. BZ XXV! ly ,li l X 'ff T' -5- 2 Yi if is J 4. S . mv Q? -QF r 1' Our chief conTribuTion To The sociol life of The school wos The sophomore donce held in The spring. ATTer such suggesTions os The Lirpo Leop lApril spelled bcickwcirdsl, The Sopho Swing, ond The April Fools, we ogreed To coll The donce The Blossom Bounce . Gur choirmon, Frcink Lozorus, spenT mony horried hours wondering wheTher or noT The donce ocTuolly would Toke ploce, os so mony diTTiculTies occurred To upseT our core- Tully loid plons. None of us will TorgeT The doy ThoT, To publi- cize The evenT, our commiTTee wos supposed To presenT o skiT oT The close of ossembly. Every doy Tor oi week we hod procTiced, cmd, Tor ci wonder, we knew our pc1rTs perTecTly. Tense wiTh onTicipoTion, we woiTed Tor our big momenT To orrive. The speoker finished, we were recidy To go when, To our horror, The curToin closed in our Toces. We hod been TorgoTTen! Dick Wolf worked like mod os consTrucTion choirmon, ond we were well pleosed wiTh his re- sulTs. From April 26, The donce wos posTponed To Moy 3, buT oT losT The greoT doy orrived. To our c1sTonishmenT, The donce wds ci success. We were Thoroughly proud, since Tew WolnuT Hills donces in The posT, oTher Thon The B. A. Prom, were so well oTTended. GT course, we hed such drowing cords os The Melody Monglersf' George Thompson's mogiccil TolenTs, Bob Heid- enreich's iiTTerbugging, ond BeTTy Vorkony's pi- ono ploying. We sTrove To moke our donce on ouTsTonding evenT, ond our eTTorTs were re- wcirded by The donce's becoming o TrodiTion. As o closs, we were beginning To hiT our sTride The spring oT '-46. ffeuenfh grade SepTember 8, T9-46, we begon our junior yeor wiTh ci renewed zeol ond ci resolve To work horder ond moke This our besT yeor. Mony of us Took porT in TooTbc1ll, boskeTboll, ond dll oTher sporTs. Alon Trovis wos on inTe- grol porT of The vc1rsiTy TooTboll squod, ond Mel Fisher ond John STevenson begon To show much promise os coming boskeTboll sTors. Rich Holler wos cilso o viTol member of The swimming Teom. An excimple of our high scholorship wos The TocT ThoT TwenTy-one members mode The highesT possible score in The Ohio SToTe ApTiTude TesT. Junior heolTh exolminoTions, greoTly Teored, come wiTh GcTober. Seniors, old in The woys oT The evenT, whispered inTo our eors horrible Toles oT The reveloTions oT The ossembly, rigid physi- col exominoTions, ond blood TesTs ciT which ouT leosT hcilf The pupils olwoys ToinTed. We shivered in drecud c1T The ThoughT, buT The whole Thing Turned ouT To be noT neorly so bod os we hod c:nTicipoTed. In TocT, since we were dismissed from our cldsses, we roTher looked Torwoird To The physicols . Our mosT glowing success of The yeor wos The PeonuTs of '47 . Under The direcTion of John Zeigler ond Ken MiTchell, The show now be- come o TrodiTion. The Bowery Bc1bes provided mony loughs, os did The humor of Amiel Wohl ond Pierre Keck. The pony ond horse choruses odded much To The show, ond The Girls' Sex- TeTTe, Borbershop Quc1rTeTTe, ond The singing choruses bolonced The producTion wiTh Their ren- diTion of Doncing in The Dork ond The Whole World ls Singing My Song . The mogic of George Thompson ond BeTTy Vorkony's nimble- fingered rendiTion of Deep Purple showed The wide scope of our TolenTs. We spenT mony long hours during The ChrisTmos holidoys reheorsing Tor The PeonuTs , ond The presenTc1Tion of Jonu- ory 9 proved ThoT our eTTorTs had noT been in voin. In The WolnuTs of '47 we olso shone. STor- ring in The conTinuiTy, which wos wriTTen in porT by Lindo BeTTmon, were BeTTy Ann Dovis, George Thompson, Tulone lTkoTT, ond HorrieT STornboch.



Page 16 text:

Clan a4cfuiAer 591 Since our freshman year, Miss Margaref Schwenker has served as our class adviser. l-ler experience, good sense, and sincerify have sup- porfed us whenever we needed The securiTy of Trusfvvorfhy advice. ln our sophomore year vve gave The Blossom Bounce , which esfablished The Tradifion of a spring sophomore dance. Miss Schvvenker, vvifh her sfeadying influence, helped us vvifh our plans and preparafions for This parTy. T ln our junior year she sponsored and ad- vised The Peanufs of '47 . She also spenT her Safurday mornings and parT of her Chrisfmas holidays here aT school so ThaT vve mighT re- hearse sufficienfly and Thus presenf a finished performance. Now, in our senior year, Miss Schvvenlcer's job grovvs, if possible, even more arduous. l-lers are The monofonous defails of graduafion which done, go unnoficed buf, if forgoTTen, are glaring omissions. Miss Schvvenker has meT our expecfafions. l-ler capable, efficienT manner, her unfailing, cheering helpfulness, her consTanT adherence To The sfandards of righf and Trufh have given our senior class The basis of our high school life. We, The class of '48, can only say, Thank you. 12

Suggestions in the Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) collection:

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951


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