Proviso East High School - Provi Yearbook (Maywood, IL)

 - Class of 1933

Page 1 of 160

 

Proviso East High School - Provi Yearbook (Maywood, IL) online collection, 1933 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 160 of the 1933 volume:

Q . if 1 x Q. -1: 22 fm 1 , f A ' WML X XD fda M M X fy Q 3 5,1 U Q 9 if jj! x Q' , AKC J., Rik N Ib Q2 z x +93 QC X mx Gm MW Wfaik 3556 'o . wwf M 7 r9 N 1 3 -JI' Y- . 1? s'1' N 'vjW' -hw - A-1 4 91 , Y 11 'hi L9 A ' gffQ 'L 2 -ni 1 T . ivi ' Y' Lj:E L '1 ffl M-' 'Q Jr I f H NH' - w ht, . f 1 WM M J m w xglwri. f3Tmi.w- 4' . 1335-31 1' W P M , Wir w 'rw 1wi 'E,z ife ' - v 'bf-1, f44?f?3?T' ff. 'Q f wf 9 3 3 GJIIHIIQ IIIDIIRID W I HI I' - 1 W'f WIlI: E21 1 'luu!UlII!!l!llIfI! 'f Published by THE SENIOR CLASS PROVISO TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL MAYWOOD, ILLINOIS 1 9 . 3 3 006906006009OQOOOOOQQOQOOOOOQQOOOQQO 5 ZA' ,, Q xkqff lIFflDllRllE5'W'll5illRlID At this time, there is in the City of Chicago A Century of Progress Exposition, commem- orating the origin of that city one hundred years ago, and demonstrating in manifold Ways the development which has characterized the century. Animated by a breath of the spirit which has inspired this great under- taking, the Provi Staff of 1933 has endeavored to instill in the minds of those Who read this volume, something of the enthusiasm, the courage, and the vision Which are typical of that spirit, and which We like to believe are also typical of Proviso. O90000000069000OQOQOOOOOQQQOOOQQQQQO QOOOOQQQQQOOOOQOOQOOQQOO006000000009 IECNQIIENSIS OPENING SECTION THE FACULTY THE CLASSES ACTIVITIES ATHLETICS FEATURES 000090000000099090QOQOOOOOOOOQQOQOOO 0999000006QQQQQOOOOOQOOQOOO000600090 TO THE SPIRIT OF PROVISO Which, dwelling in a temple erected in the cause of Education, generates the forces of Truth, Beauty, and Nobility, themselves the meter of lasting Prog- ress, and establishes those patterns which make for the advancement of human Welfare, We, the Provi Staff of 1933, dedicate this record of that portion of our lives spent under its guidance. 0000000QOOOQOOOQQOOQQQOQQOQOO0090000 . X, MW Www GW W' Ga Q40 429 Wggwfffw Q E U4 N X XM? W W ,E IIN' Xlkej xi - NN X x X Y. X XXX' Q I 800104, LD W M Q WWWf X X x XXX S X S QXX X S 5 1 X x 1 ,l , Fill., ,I 2 ff' Z r -,.'-- l--f .,.--ff 2 i l 1+ ,ffiii ,?f, ,,--' XXII I IIXXI C. Przfnmfpal ROBB ADM1NIsTRAT1oif..fg'Qj IVILLIAM COULTER Roma, AAI., ,l.D., Prinripal H. E. CARR, B. S. . . . Dean of Boy: Au ustana College Ohio State Universit g . Y Y Northwestern University Lniversity of Chicago 0. IV. XVILLS . . . Burinrfx .llauafrr IiLrZABE'r1-1 B. OAKES, AAI., Dean of Girly 5 . . . . - Michigan State Normal College University of Michigan University of Chicago Columbia University I ' 7? F A C U L T Y . 3-viiuib. ' Ii, K. AMSDEN, B.S. . . gIIdI114.dl.dIfl..V H. I.. PER, B.S. . . . Manual .flrtx ' University of Missouri Lewis Institute University of Chicago Armour Institute of Technology Armour Institute , , Stout Institute JEAN B. CUREE., fufhyiualEdurat1on 'niversity o inois BEss1E AMUNDSON, A.B. . . Co-Librarian I University of South Dakota JOSEPH B. DAVIS, A.M. .. 1. Mathrmatzrx University of Iliinois Central Coilege in Missouri Columbia Lmversity D. B. APPLETON, M. A. . . . Sriruce p1IiVCf?lfY Of Mi?S0Ufi 6 ' University of Indiana Ignllifrsltl' Of Eallf01'YXl9- . ort western illlVCl'SltV ' I . VV. BAER, NLS. . . . illatliematirf Q I , Indiana University PAK DUVAYILI?-S .4 f - I HUH' 'il ' P d U ' v ' niversity o nois ur ue Diversity University of Chicaw ' KIARIE BALDRIDGE, A.M. , . Englifh , 4 - . State Teachers' College, Pittsburg, Kan. INA A' FDDYEEQZC Creek'CC5:?Qgml ummm i . Y . V . Lml erslti of Chicago Kellogg School of Physical Education .ANIY BARNUM, A.B ..,, Hiftory Unlvefslfl' Of Minnesota Ufliliersily of Miqhlgan DOROTHY F EILER4 A B Science Limvefslty of Chmgo 4' Unive2QiQ,3 Oi Illinois ' CARL H. BERcsTRoM, B.E. . . Manual Jrtf UA Y F EMGE A xii E Hfh Northwestern University ' R Iilgig ' U '-versk ' ng ' Northern Illinois Teachers' College Coiulmliga Igxivergifv ARTHUR BOLT, A.B ..., I Idlhfmdfiff UUIVCTSIW Of Chicago UniliQf3i?,nOi5'gLifjgO JULIA ICVANS, AM. . i . Luau Columbia Nsi.f51::f.aif':,Pe1:.?:53:y I.. S. BRACEWELL, B. S. . . illanual .-lrlf UUIVCYSITY of lvlwonsin Bradley Polytechnic Institute iv K ii-WIN? B S M u I Any Purdue University A i A Uhio State Ifniversityi an a L. D. B J ' ' . . . All IA 7 . . REW'I?diana State Normai MM N5 C1.EoRA DELERRE IiAncHiz:R,' Englzsh Armour Institute EIO- i eSte?a?N4p1KFrSl y Lewis Institute Oni? CEE out lc 'gtan Stout Institute lo 3 e mversl Y Ii. F. CAMERON, B. S. . . . Conzmfrfc U' C' POSTERfJBf'?S.t 7 ggilitzczflgzlcf' fffhffflff University of Illinois m e 1 l O I I Rockwell School of Insurance ALMA GALS-i-ER A-B. I i Commnu, Northwestern University Uiiiversity of Iiiinois 7 . Gregg Normal School I . G. CATLIN,Y I?h.B.. . I. . Smence University of Chicago IJPIYCYSIPV of Chlcago Northwestern University Lniversity of Illinois AIARGUERITE L. GARLOUGH, A.M., Englifh GLADYS CHULOCK, B.A. . . Commfrfe Columbia College of Expression University of Illinois Wheaton College U ' ' ' ' f I G. R. COMERY, A.B. . . . Commfrrf mversltl O Owa University of Wisconsin IIUMBERT GENTILIN, AAI. . . Italian Northwestern University University of Pisa Page I4 FLORENCE EVANS GOLDING . . Stenography State College, Kirksville, RIO. Simmons College Gregg College University of Colorado NIYRON B. GOODWIN, B.S. . . Manual .lm Stout University FRANCES P. GOSPILI., A.B., Modcrn Language University of Chicago University of Michigan XVILLA JEAN GRAY, A.M. . . Hifzory Indiana University MIC AHN, B.S. . . . Commcrce University of Chicago NCES HALIMITT, A.B. . . Co-Librarian Indiana University University of Cincinnati Columbia University ANNA M. HARMAN, A.B. . . . Englirlz Indiana University University of Colorado University of Chicago FRED J. HATLEY, B.S., Manual Amr, fltlzlczicf ' University of Illinois NIARTHA HILDEBRANDT, M.S., I7l'I!llht'7l1llZ1.f.Y I University of Chicago OL T36 A.B. . . . Englirh Avlawrence College Columbia University H. G. HOLT, A.B .... Englixlz James Milliken University INIANLEY W. IMMEL, Ph.B., Public Spcaking University of Chicago NIARY ISAACS, B.A. . . Home Economicr University of Iowa CLARA JOHNSON, A.M. . . Stcnography Iowa State Teachers' College University of Iowa Gregg College HARVEY I . JOHNSON, B.S. . . Sciczzcc Ohio YVesleyan University Ohio State University University of Chicago University of California CHARLES E. KASSEL, B.S., Phyrical Education, University of Illinois DOROTHY KAUPKE, B.S. . . Stcnograplzy University of Illinois Gregg College RUBEN R. KUSTER, A.B., Modern Languagc Beloit College University of Illinois University at Munich, Germany WILSON A. LAW, A.M. . . Malhcmatics State College for Teachers, Missouri University of Chicago Northwestern University H. KARL LONG, B.P.E., B.S.,PhyficalEducal1'o1z Springfield College Northwestern University RUTH W. LUNDBLAD Clerk in Slcnography WVILHELMINA MARIII .... .-Irt Chicago Art Institute Bethany College Academy of Fine Arts RALPH W. NIARSHALL, A.B., Ilirtory, Conzmcrcc University of lllinois University of Chicago I'IEI.EN M. NIASTERS, A.B. . . . Latin De Pauw University University of Cincinnati O. H. IXIATTE, B.P.IC. . . Pl1y.ricalEducation Iowa State Teachers' College ' American College of Physical Education I.EI.AND L, NIEDSKER, B.S. . . Commcrrf Missouri State Teachers' College Northwestern University DORA M. KIITCHELL , , Stcnograplzy Gregg School University Of Chicago University of Southern California JACOB INIOELK, Ph.B. . . . Scinrce University of VVisconsin H. G. NIONILAW, B.S., Mathcmaticf, .afzlzlcticr Coe College RUTH NEAL, B.S. .... Science Northwestern University University of Chicago RUTH G. NELSON, A.B. . . Latin, Euglifh Northwestern University WAI.LACE NELSON, MUS. B. . . .llu ic Chicago Musical College Westminster College Cornell University HELEN GRANT NORMAN, A.B. . , Englirh University of Illinois XIARIE OLIVER, Ph.B. . . Home Economic: University of Chicago R. LEE OSBURN, MUs.B. . . . .llufic Columbia School of Music Ottawa University Conservatory Cornell University FLORENCE I. OTIS, A.M. . . jourualimz Oberlin College University of Michigan Pulitzer School of Journalism University of California CHARLOTTE PAYNE, A.B. . . ,llazlzcmazicx Oberlin College University of Michigan NIARGARET E. PHELAN, A.B. . . Latin Northwestern University University of Chicago University of VVisconsin IIOLA PICKLES, B.S. . , Home L'co1Iom:'c,r Unlversity of IllinoIs Columbia Lniversity mums I Page I5 QL' R WW ' K Page I6 R. lf. POPLETT, B.S. . . lllanual Arif Armour Institute of Technology Illinois State Normal University I.oL'Is F. SLIMMER, B.S. Plzyfiral Education University of Illinois Armour Institute CECIL STARK, Ph.B. . . . Dramarirf U ' ' ' fCh' LOUISE PORCH, B.S. . . Home Economicf Colunlggeegiigi of ggiission v Rockford College Lmvefmy of Chlcago HARRY STEGMAN, B.S. . . Manual Arif . I ' I'.MlLY C. REID, AQVI. . . , Englzlrlz Stout nstltute Eastern Illinois State Teachers' College E. VV. STUBBS, A-B ,. 111'-f,,,,y pluvehslty of Illmfm Ohio VVesleVan University Uniyersity of Michigan ' Umverslty of Chlcago C. C. TAGGART, B.S. . . . Svifrzra Ohio Vlleslevan University GRACE REININCA, A.M. . . Englilflz ' ' ' 'V f h' ' Iiastern Illinois State Teachers' College Lmversltl O C icago Columbm Umvefsltl' J. I. TAIILINIADGE, MUs.B. . . . Mufir University of Chicago I.. XY. REMLEY, A.B. . , Scienrf, Azhlftiar Wabash College University of Chicago Ohio State University University of Nlaine HELEN RoRINsoN, R.N. . . School Name Vifest Suburban Hospital ADA ICSTHER Ross, A.B. .7ll0tl1f7'II Languagr james Klilliken University University of Vllisconsin Columbia University Universite de Grenoble, France Northwestern University Chicago Musical College University of Minnesota GRACE TRICC, A.B .... Englifh University of Illinois Columbia University FRANCES H. TROST, A.B. . , Hifmry University of Illinois Lniversity of WIISCOHSIII BIARIE XIALLO, A.B. . Clzrk in Szenograplzy University of Illinois University of XIVISCOHSIII BRYAN XVAGNER, A.NI. . . Commfrfe CHARLES HENRY SAYI.oR, Ph.D. . . Latin johns Hopkins University GERTRCDE SCI-ILUETER, AAI., Modern Languagr Northwestern University University of Whsconsin FLQRENCE H. SCOTT, A.B. . . Engliflz University of Xlichigan Columbia University SERAPHINE S. SCRIBNER, B.S. Stfnograplzy University of Chicago Gregg College JEssIE SEAVER, Ph.B. Englirlz, Stenograplzy University of Wisconsin Gregg College XYINNAI-'RED SHEPARD, AAI. . . Srifnrf University of Michigan University of Chicago University of WVisConsin Kansas State Teachers' College Columbia University University of Montana IXIARY XVHEELER, B.S. . Phyfiral Eduralzion Beloit College University of Wisconsin ILILEEN XVHITE, A.B. . . . English University of Illinois University of Colorado Coll .bia Univers'ty Ra.4Z4-Ju. g RL'TH XLXVHITFIELD, h.B. , , Englulz University of Chicago Northwestern University FLORENCE B. WILLIAMS, AAI. Illodfrn Languagf Coe College University of Wisconsin Universite de Grenoble, France FRIEDA XVUNDERLICH, A.M. IXIARY A. SIGWORTI-I, A.B. . . Stenography University of Iowa Gregg College Northwestern University K ff CLERICAL OR RosE XIRACEK . LEHVERNE OLSON VICTORIA LUX GERDA ALBRECI-IT RIARGARET STEWART FLORA SCHULTZ . Hirtory, Hlodfrn Language University of Nebraska Cornell University University of C iczigo , Srfrftary to the Principal , . . Regirtrar . , flrriftant Serrrtary , . Afxzlftant Secretary Sfrrftary to Bu.rine.r,r Managrr . . xlf.fz':lant Secretary lil-19l.II'1,I. Sxrl'1'n l,1-:s1.1r: ll. .XLLXCX CEISORKII-L Bosco wlonx Xl. Ni-:wcom-:R .XI.Bk'lR'I' C. lxlAR'I'l-INS HUA R D OF Ii D UVATIUN l.eslie li. .'Xllcn, president, is serving his first term on the Board. He is oflice- manager for the Interstate Building and Supply company. Out of two years of service, he spent fourteen months in the :Xir Service in France. Xlr. Allen is past commander of Sarlo-Sharp post, No. 368, American Legion, and is one of the out- standing legionaires in this district. He attended Proviso High School. Leslie Smith, of Forest Park, was elected for a third term last spring. He is serving his fifth consecutive year as secretary. Klr. Smith has been actively engaged in advertising and sales promotional work for years. Albert C. Xlartens. Proviso IQI2. is serving his third year on the Board. lle is a graduate of the Lvniversity of Xlichigan, and is connected with the Blartens Brothers, local dealers in fuel and ice. .Iohn Xl. Newcomer is noxv serving his second year on the Board of lfducation. llc is a real estate lmher in-this community. I George liosco is a new member of the Board. He graduated from Proviso in 1913, and is a resident of Xlelrose Park. Pu Page IS THE PRINC1PAL'S LETTER TO THE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1933: HE schools of a generation ago, with their very narrow courses of study, gave to each one who came the same kind of an education. The large school from which you are graduating has given you opportunity for a program as varied as your likes and dislikes, and with it an opportunity to pursue courses looking toward many different lines of work. If you expect to enter business, you have taken shorthand or typewriting or other commercial work. If you are hoping to go to college, you have taken such courses as cover the entrance requirements of the college of your choice, or the prerequisites of the profession you hope to enter eventually. In either of the above cases, or even if you have not as yet made up your mind what you hope to make your life work, you should realize that education is not confined to the things you have learned in school. Only a very small part of what any adult knows was learned in the classroom. You learned to walk and talk long before you entered any school. Knowledge comes streaming into our minds from the day we are born until we die, and the schools at best can only give impetus and direction to some of the things that may become our life interests. Education helps to develop the ability of the individual to think clearly and forcefully. It trains for good character and good citizenship. It hopes to send the product of the schools out into the community with a willingness to be of service. After the completion of your four years in high school, after the last exam- ination, the last party, the last game, and the presentation of your diploma-then comes the real test-the school of life. To some of you it means a much broader field of work and study. To others it may mean the end of progress, because a few graduates never do any constructive work or study or reading after they are away from the daily direction of their efforts. If your daily work does not compel you to read and study in order to advance, I urge you to set for yourself the task of constructive and continued reading. Read the newspaper, ofcourse, because you must be abreast of the times and know what is going on about you. Read books-books of your own choice, books for pleasure, books on your hobby, books that you have long wanted to read but have never had the time, books on subjects you know nothing about, because each will give to you ideas or facts that you may some day use. Your courses in literature have opened up for you a wide field for future pleasure and'profitg your courses in science have shown the many undiscovered and unex- plored fields of endeavor, your survey of United States history has surely shown you the great need for the study of politics and economics by the people of America, and your opportunity for active participation therein. Take advantage of every opportunity to continue your education by reading. The Proviso High School is in no sense a finishing school. May your graduation be a real commencement. san Cefe ly yours, 541140-fa Q24 THE CLASS OF19 IDIS li. ABRAIIAAI German Club, 1, 25 U. G, A., 3, 4, Ilomc Ifconrmmics Club, lg Chorus, 1, 2. 'lbfnl' Iii 'lla' lfffl uf fL'liIlf. H -IOSICPH P. ROBlCR'l'A lf. AGXICW Spanish Club, 45 Chorus, 1, 2. l,.lt'l1.VHlIf, lciml, and .f11zili11g. lfLxi1n'Rs'1' A I L' PPA Italian Club, 2. ' ' SfJl'l'flL lil' grrrztq .fl.lt'll1'E 1 grran'r.,' ISICRNICIQ RL l'll ALLICN French Club, 1, 2, O. G. A., I, 2, 35 G. A. A., 1, 2, 3g Chorus, 1, 2, Choir, 3, 4. ii.1ll farnfxl wnrkfr if affurfd a plan' in Zllr world. GLADYS AI.I,l'1N Latin Club, 1, 2, General Science Club, 1, O. G. A., I, 2, 3, junior Chorus Accompanist, I, 2, 3, 4. 'illzmznzfng a frcu wnnlr or rlzaflfrizzg a frw wnrzlf. Cm.l'run1A Scnool. or Alrslc AIARIORIIQ ,ICNIC ALLICN French Club, 3, 45 Chorus, 1, 2, 3. Tlzv Nllllllfff nzmzufrf, willz llzr lfrzzvfft heart. WARRICN lt. Al.l.l'.X Radio Club, 4. .llfu of-law worzlf, aflxr all, are ilu' bmi. H l'i1.Mi1uus'1' ' RUl4lCR'I' lf. AAIICS Latin Club, 2' Orchestra, 3 Violin Choir, 1, 2, Library Page, . y -l- 4 .llu.v1f 1.r unzlzzrzgf rlrf but wzld ,ru1u1d,f rwzl1zezl znlo lznu' and luzlff' Rl I'll AIARIUX ARXDT German Club, lg Student Cm1nCil,3,Ch0ruS, 3,11 A. A., 1, 2, O. G. ,'A.,3.4gl5rcu1ze Scholznrship Aleclal. .ll1'.flVf'.V.f uf C0171 muu J't'II.lT and r4fl1fr.fz'lf.H I,ll,I,lAX l'iYl'il.YX ARNOLD Commercial Club, 3. 4, O. G. A., 3, 4. xl lzugr capadfyfur wurkifzg and 1IZllkllIgf7'lf7Id.l'.H RL I'l I COXDIDA ARRIGI II Italian Club, 1, 2, Commercial Club, 3, 45 Art Club, I. U1 1'l llll' llzifl 0111 uf llifz' l!l'1idlt.Vt I H771 lldppyf, A llomm' ClCl.lA ASIIICR Commercial Club, 2, 3, French Club, 2, G. A. A., I, 2, 3, 4, 1200- puint .Avvarnlg Home lfconomics Club, 3, O. G. A., 3, 4, l'lI'CSl1Ill21Il Dramatic Club, Library Page, 3, 4. l'z'f!uf 1.5 likf a rich ftwzf, bmi plain ffl. Pagr I9 Page 20 THE CLASS OF 1933 REINHOLD AUER German Club, Ig Silver Scholarship Xledal. The honor roll oft bearf his name Predicting for him future fame. ALBERT AUSLANDER Latin Club, I, 2, 3, Senior Acdile, 4, Chess Club. 2, 3, Library Staff, 2, 3, Pageant Staff, Student Council, 4, Bronze Scholarship Nledalg National Honor Society. Bright in appearanre, never dull. NORTHWESTERN GLADYS ETHEL BACKUS German Club, I, 2, Home Economics Club, I, 2, 3, Chorus, I, 2- Choir, 3, 4, Class Secretary, 1, 2, WVater Pageant, 2, She haf a heart with room for every joyf' CNot graduatedj ITALO JOSEPH BALDASERONI Latin Club, I, 2, 3, Aedile, 4, Eta Sigma Phi Medal, Italian Club, 3, Pres., 4, Sophomore Klathematics Club, Hi-Y Club, 3, Vice-Pres., 45 Pageant Staff, Provi Editor-in-Chief, Gold Scholarship lNIedalg National Honor Society. There if nothing Jo high he if not entitled to .vet lzix ladder to, ELEANOR JANE BARKER Latin Club, 1, 25 Art Club, 1, 2, 35 O. G. A., 4. Quiet, refereed, and modeftf' ART INSTITUTE MICHAEL F. BARONI He kept counfel and went hiy way. MELVIN BARSEMA Varsity Club, 3, 4g Varsity Baseball, 3, Heavyweight Basketball, 3, 4. Ile ronquerf who endure.v. SYLVESTER BAUMGARTNER '4Good cheer if no hindrance to good life. IDA M. BAUSPIES French Club, 2, O. G. A., 3, 4. '4True to your work and to your frierzdff' IVIARGARET JANE BEAVEN O. G. A., 3, 4, Latin Club, 1, Home Economics Club, I, 3QCl1OI'LlS, Never an idle moment but thrifty and thoughtful of other.v. WILLIAM H. BECK House of Representatives, 3, Forum, 4, Pres., 4A, Debate Team, 3, Bronze Scholarship Medal. 0 world, how many hopef thou do'.vt engulf! JAMES NIILLIKEN EDWIN W. BERNDT Luther Institute, Chicago, I, 2, 3. Give every man thy ear andfew thy roire. THE CLASS OF 1933 LICONA NEVA BlLLlNGliR Latin Club, 2, 3, Home Economics Club, 1, 2, Sophomore Mathemat- ics Club, Spanish Club, 4, Silver Scholarship Medal. Who if iz fan rfad a wornar1?', ARTHUR YV. BIRINGER Band, 1, 2, 3, 4. Than, 1.5 nothing lil:ffu1i. NORTHVVESTERN ADALBICRT R. BIRKHOLZ General Science Club, lg German Club, 1, 2, Radio Club, Vice-Pres., 33, Pres., 3A, 4, Senior Chorus, 4. l,'nlrff a man work: hr cannotfind out what hz i.r ablf to do. BRUNHILDIC CLARA BIRKIGT O. G. A., 3, 4, Silver Scholarship Medal, National llonor Society. ' HW? are, whfn we will il, maxtfrx of our own fatff' CORRINE l'1LlZABIfTH BLACKYVELDPQR Home liconomics Club, 3, Latin Club, IQ Chorus, 2. l11du.r!ry if the parfnt rjforlurzzf' GLICN R. BLOCK 'Z-I light hfart liwf lo11g.' DORO'l'llY BLOOM Home liconomics Club, IQ Latin Club, I, O. G. A., 3, 4, Senior Class Play, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4, 1200-point Award, Chorus, 1, 2, 50-word Type Award. I hold no .rorifly with grz'r'f.', l l.ORl'lNCIC li. BOAL Latin Club, IQ Chorus, 1, 2, Silver Scholarship Lledal. 'illappirzffy if no olhfr than Joundizfff and pfrffrtiou of mind. lJkIKAl.B j0llN il. Bolfiim 'Zlloclffly bfronzef a young man. NIRSSIE L. BOEHMER ,lennings Seminary, Aurora, lll., 2. Latin Club, 3, 4, College Club, 4, Home lfconomics Club, 3. Quin like a rleeping garden, and df charming. NORTHYVESTERN liLYNURl'i li. BOICLKIC German Club, IQ Commercial Club, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, Bronze Scholar- ship Medal. .-I girl whom you would be proud lo call yourfrimzzlf' XV1-:ST SUBURBAN HOSPITAL -IOHN BONACKILR Chorus, 2, 4, Latin Club, 1, General Science Club, 1. 1 Happy .vmilxx his fhararler portray. Y Page 21 TH E CLASS OF 1933 JOHN BREZINA From la Miuzrox J. Latin Club, 1, bor there Jhall some forth rertf' CONSTANCE LAUREEN BROVVN Art Club, I, 2, 3, Latin Club, I, 2, Provi Art Stalf, College Club, 4, Spanish Club, 3, 4, Forum, 4, Choir, 4, Senior Guard, Girls' League, Vice-Pres., 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. A friendly heart with many afriendf' BRUSS 2, Home Economics Club, I, 2, Neo-Pythagoreans Spanish Club, 3, 4, Chorus, IQ Student Council, I. Thy modesty if a candle to thy merit. ART INSTITUTE LILLIAN A. O. G. A., 3, 4, DOROTHY GRACE BUCHHOLZ German Club, 2, Home Economics Club, 3. 4, O. G. A., 3, Bronze Scholarship hledal. True grate if often hidden. BUENGER G. A. A., 2, 3, 4, 600-point Award, German Club, 2, 3, 4, Commercial Club, 3, Treas., 4, Student Council, I, Library Staff, 3, 4, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. lfVell wo rth a plafe in our remembrance. MILDRED B. BUENGER Commercial Club, 3, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, 1. With all women, gentlenefy if the mort perfuafz e ar unzentf' HOWARD E. BURHOP General Scien ce Club, 1, Latin Club, 1, 2, Student Council, 1, 2, 3, 4, Hi-Y Club, 4, Fresh-Soph, Basketball, Mgr., 2, Lightweight Foot- ball, Mgr., 3, Bronze Scholarship Nledal. He putf Cvkrrss FLYI a rainbow round hir troubleff' NG SERVICE FVELYN LUCILLE BCRKART ' Club, 2, 3, 4, Home Economics Club, I, 4, Girls' League A -.,entative, I, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, 3, Bronze Scholarship Medal, national Honor Society. Smiling, cheerful, and alwayf tlze fame DEKALB ,IAAIES BURNIEISTER General Science Club, 1, Latin Club, 1, German Club, 3, Chorus, i,2,4. One man in hir time playa' many party. AIANE ANN Latin Club, 2 I am ,vu Rosnrw HELEN ALLEN BURNETT General Science Club, Sec., 1, Latin Club, I, 2, Girls' League Repre- sentative, 3, Senior Science Club, 4, Spanish Club, 4, Senior Guard, Chorus, I, 2. '5You'llfind her wholefomef' GREENVILLE BURNHAM , O. G. A., 3, 4, Home Economics Club, 4. re eare if an enemy of lifef' ELEANOR BUSSE East High School, Aurora, lll., I, 2, 3. We are more foeiable and get on better with people by the heart than by the intelleetf' THE CLASS OF 19 AN'rHoNY BUTA go-word Type Award. '24 good man rzfwr diff. GRACE ANN BUYER Proviso Players, 3, 4, Latin Club, I, 2, O. G. A., 3, 4, Home licono- mics Club 4, G. A. A., I, Chorus IQ Choir, 2, 3, Operetta, 4, 50-word Type Award, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. dll the worldly a ffagr, and all Ihr men and zcomfn mfrfly playfr,r.', XVILLIAM BYRNIC Latin Club, 1, 2, 4, Consul, .1.QAllll1i0f Hi-Y Club, I, 2, Camera Club, 4, Sophomore Dramatic Club, 2, Student Council, 2, Bronze Scholar- ship Nledal. L'Con.v1ar1ry if llzf complrrnfnl of all thf ollzfr lnmzan :'irIuf.f. Gl'iR'l'RlfDlC CADY Home Economics Club, I, 2, Commercial Club, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, I, 2. HToday bflongr io mf, Tomorrowewlzo can fell? lfVANGl'il.lNl'l 'l'lll'iRl'lSA CAFFICRU Bronze Scholarship Medal. alll wfallh is lllf product of labor. JOHN CHARLES CAlN Commercial Club, 4, Sophomore Alathernatics Club, 2, General Science Club, IQ Latin Club, I, 2. Ahlbilily I-.f of lihflr affourzf willzou! opporlzu1ily. STARR CALDWICLL Proviso Players, 3, Pres., 4, Latin Club, I, 2, Consul, 3, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Pres, lli-Y Club, 2, 3, 4, Forum, 4, Pres., 4B, Provi Staff, junior Class Play, Senior Class Play, Debate Team, 3, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Bid Til? difcourff, I will vrzclzanf Ihinf far. IIARVARD ROBERT C. CARNl'i Latin Club, I, 2, Band, 2, 3, 4. Thai good .ffzzfr wlrirh nalurf affordf 115' IAN prijfrrablf fo mor! of thf lfnowlnlgf tlzar wi' ran acquire. MARY l RANCl'iS CARYVILIC District 35, Sumner, Nebraska, 1. linglish Cabinet, Sec., 4, Senior Guard, Chorus, 2, Choir, 3, Operetta, 4, G. A. A., 2, 3, Silver Scholarship Aledal, National Honor Society, 3A. 4. HO! She will .ring lhf 5az'agfr1ff.fouIQf a bfarfl STATL-2 'liEACIlERS, COLLEGE, AIACOMB, ILL. HARRY lf. CASPICR Hi-Y Club, 2, 3, Sec., 4, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Sec.,Spanish Club, Treas., 3, Latin Club, I, 2, Class President, lg Student Council, 1, 2. I.1iff IAF not foo .rlmrf bu! Ilia! lllrrz' Iii r1lu'ay.f time fnouglz for c'ourlf.ry. PURDUE fl? ' ,cues CHAPPAS JL P Varsity Club, 3, Pres., ootball, 3, 4, Baseball, 3, Basketball, 4. Comm lubricate tlzf body and mind. lDA MABEI. CHASELEY O. G. A., 3, 4, Home Economics Club, 4, Chorus, 1, 2. Emmy Ili a quality of Ilze' lzrarl, if if more than .fkiri drfpfl 2 Pagf 24 THE CLASS OF 1933 N KIOHANNA LECILLE CHASELEY O . A., 3, 4, Home Economics Club, 3, G. A. A., 2Ag Chorus, x, 25 O-word Type Award, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. LiFdI'lhful71f,f,13 and .virzcfrity firft of all. LOLA F ERN CHESTER German Club, Ig Home Economics Club, 3, Chorus, I, 2. Purpo.tz if what giant life cz fllftllliflgfi THORWALD E. CHRISTENSEN Latin Club, I, 25 Chorus, 1, Hi-Y Club, 45 VVrestling:, 4. '4TravfI lrzzflzff lolnationf' BEVERLY M. CLAIM Girls' League Representative, 3, 4. 'klniiabilizy fhinff by iif own liglzlf' GLADYS B. CLARK A quicz prrfon if wflromf fc'frywl1frr. -IAMES F. CLARK Senior Chorus, 3, 4. iilillwff to iff lafz PKIVIILKZI' if dulyf, PAUL D. COFFMAN Latin Club, I, 2, General Science Club, IQ College Club, Vice-Pres., 3, Pres., 4, Student Council. 2, 3, 4, Library Board, Vice-Pres., 4g Sil- ver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Ability i7l2lOl'L'F.T refponfibilityf' .ARKANSAS IRA COLE Managers, Club, 4, Chorus, IQ Choir, 23 Ileavyweight Basketball Mgr., 4. HYIIIETL' if no rdumliozz. likr ad:'fr.fity.,' XORTHW1-gs'1'igxN ROBERT B. COLEAIAN Hi-Y Club, 2, 3, 4, General Science Club, I, Student Council. Ig Band, 2, 3, 43 Silver Baud Medal, 3, District Clarinet Quartette XYinner, 33 Oak Park Conference, lst Vice-Pres. Hr liver at fan' zhatfrfrly linux. IXIORTHNVESTERN VVALTER V. CONKLIN College Club, 3, 45 French Club, 2, 3, 4, Commercial Cl Cabinet, 4g Bronze Scholarship Medal. MThf power Ofgt'l1ZZKl1t'.Y.f 1.1 irre5i5tz'ble'. Amzorm IXIARIE GEORGIA AI. COOK Home Economics Club, Ig G. A. A., 1, 2, Latin Club, I, 2, Spanish Club, 3, Treas., 4, Forum, 4, Girls' League Representative, 4, Board of Directors, 4, Chorus, I, 2, Operetta, 3, 4, Provi Staff, junior Life Saving, 1, 2, Water Pageant, I, Student Council, 1, 2, Silver Scholar- ship Medal, National Honor Society. ReJponJibility if thr greatfft of virtufff' CHESTER COVAY Orchestra, I, 2. g'E:ffrylfzir1g if ax you ldkf ttf' CXot graduatedj ub, 45 English THE CLASS OF 19 ADA fXIARGARl'i'l' CROSS Ifrench Club, 2, O. G. A., 3, 4gvl0llI1 Choir, IQc,l'Cl1CSII'3., 2, 3. 4. Truffr1'f11d.r apprar lf.f.r nzovfzl than cou11l1'QfM'l.H SIDXICY XVII,I.IANI CROSS Iloyne Continuation School, Chicago, 1A, 213. General Science Club, 2, Choir, 2, Orchestra, 4. Lay afidf lzfz'-lmrming lzra:'z'nf.r.f, and Flllffflllll zz clzrfrful rlix- po,ril1'o11. CRAN1-3 A. AIARIIC CLINXINGIIAAI I.atin Club, 1, Art Club, 1, 2, Girls' League Representative, 112, O. G. A., 3, Gold Pin, Home Ifconomics Club, 3, 45 House of Repre- sentatives, 3, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4, I200-POIIII Award, May Fete, 1, 2. lr1':'irfuz', nolhing cr1uldfurp11.r.v ln'r.', 'l'llI'1ODORI'i CZICKANSKI I .rwfar lzf IAJ' lrufhfarlfdq nom' hfllff in my ki11gdon1. liI.I'iN D. DAIIIIIXG iifSU7lZ7ll0l1 ,V!'ll,f1' 1,5 in .rpllf of, not llie' rfxull of, f'rlufaIio11. KIOIIN D'ANZA Chorus, 3, lightweight Football, 4, Golf, 3. Ur will kfrp ll1al good name mill. L'N1'r1-11: S'1'A'1'15s :AIR CORPS ROlilCR'l' CllARI.I'iS DAYID ,lunior Class Play, Band, 1, 2, 3, 4, Silver Band Aledal, Drum Major, 4, Lieutenant, 4, Clarinet Quartette VVinner, 3. l'irIur I-,Y bold, and goodnfff r1fz'frffarful. IXIOR'l'llVl'liS'l'IiRN RCTII DAVIDSON General Science Club, IQ I,atin Club, 2, Spanish Club, 3, Girls' League Representative, 1, 2, Board of Directors, 1, 4, Senior Guard Chairman, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Good nafurfrl, bury, audio all, afrirr1d. AIICIIIGAN NORAI3l'lI,l.Ii DAYIICS College Club, 3, 4, I,atin Club, lg Sophomore Alatheniatics Club, 2, Ilorne Ifconotnics Club, 2, Senior Science Club, 4, Student Council, 3, Senior Guard, 4QCl101'LlS, 1, 2. YH I dofrar flzy nafurr, it lif loo-full o' illr mill' of llumau krlfd- ..H Ilfltg . Wl'ISI.IiY DAYIICS J General Science Club, IQ I roviso I layers, 3, 'I'reas., 4. ULN nzyfflf arlrlforlune' lugfor lllr lima lo vonlff' NORTIIXVICSTERN I DOROTHY li. DAVIS O. G. A., 3. 'IBF .furr of Ilzlr: wlmi I can lzrlp tlzrr to, llzou ,rlmlf not r1z1'f.r. Moonv B11s1.1a Ixs'1'1'rU'1'15 WAI.'l'HIiR A. DAVIS Art Club, 2, Latin Club, 1, Camera Club, 2, 3, Band, 1, 2, 3. Ulm! llfrrulff llinzyflf do what he may, Tlzf ral uxill mrw, and the' dog will haw l1z'.f dnyf, Giucicu Scnooi. or .AICRONAUTICS Pagf 25 Page 20 THE CLASS OF 1933 lVlI.l Rl'ID DAVIS .Xrt Club, IQ Camera Club, 4, Collcue Club, 3. 'II am amazed, mxrhirzhf, and Zan' my way nlnzong thi' fhorzzf and zlahgfrf in llzf' w0r!d.I' I1.1.1Nors LYNN S. DAWSON Camera Club, 3, French Club, 3. ln thy-fare I we The map of honor, truth. and loyalty, Cmcixco ART Ixsrtrurlz MIKIC DIC ANO Latin Club, 4, General Science Club, Vice-Pres., I, Italian Club, 1, 2, Chorus, I, 2, Lightweight Football, 3, 4, Golf, 3. I pray thff' fort fhy hear! to pa!1'rm'r. ILLINOIS ROSICMA RI li D Ii IQLYICN O. Cv. A., 3, 4, G. A. A., 2, Girls' League Representative, 3, HI haw a ma11'.fmzr1d, hu! a wonzarifv mzghlf' Mosmz -IOSICPII RAYMOND DFLBliLI.O Chorus, 1, 3, 4. Hut Ihfrr if mow in mf lhazz thou ur:zlfr.vfandf5I. ARTHUR H. DICRN Camera Club, 2, 4, Senior Science Club, 4, Sports Club, 3, 4. 'Ella who Jayx lirzlf comm1'f.fl1inmflfro!z'rt!r. KiYl'HLIQl'IN L. DICSIQNIS Latin Club, I, 2, 3, Home Ficonomics Club. I, 2, Chorus. I, 2, 3, 4. I'W'0nzf11 will low' hfr, that Ihr if a woman, nwnf worth llzan any man: mffz, that .vhf if the rarfft qfa1.7cc'o1m'H. ALICFI L. DE'I I'M.XR .lrt Club, I, 2, Commercial Club, 4, Chorus. I, 2, 3, 4, Lhlly hoffmz :iffufl ufhz'm!r1ff,i.I' THOMAS DF VRIFS Latin Club, 1, Camera Club, 3. 4, Stamp Club, Sec,, 4, Library Stall, 31 -I- Qf1nar1y good, I zhifzk him hail. ROBERT WY. DITTCS Latin Club, 1, 2, Chorus, I, 2, 3, 4. 'AWfzii'l1 IIA' Il1r,tz'a'f rhuf I muff go? I am wilh both. ILLINOIS MARIIC Ii. P. DOFRR German Club, I, 2, 3, Sec., 4, Library Page, 3, 4, G. A. JK., 2, 3, 4, Izooapoint Award, Board Member, 4, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Truth nffdf no coforg beauty, no prrzr1'.'.I' Wiscorrsix PHILIP H. DOHILRTY . Latin Club, I, 2, 3, HivY Club, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Club, 3, 4, Chorus, l, 2, Provi Staff, Track, I, 2, 3, 4, Swimming, I, 2, 3, 4, Lightweight Football, 3, Heavyweight Football, 4, Class Treasurer, 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. - I'What.f Cdflff lhou Jay all rlzif and nfzw bluyhfi' XNABASH French Club, 2, Ilome Fconomics Club, I, 2, Commercial Club,3, THE CLASS 0F19 ANTHONY S. DUXIXSZICWICZ Fenwick IIi h School 0114 Park III I 2 I3 - v A I -- . -- junior Varsity Football, 43 Sports Club, 4. .'l'lorf if llzy dur rlzafz more ffzaz all mu payf' .XR'I'III,'R II. DOCCIMXS Ili-X' Club, 2, 3, .1.,I.E1IIIl Club, I, lg College Club, 4, Camera Club. 2. 3, Lightweight Football, ,1,,BI'0I1ZC Scholarship Xledal. Tin' grraz hope qf.f0v1'f'ty IVA' z'r.'Il1'i'z'dz4af rl1ararn'r. Nouruwi-:s'ri-:Rx ROBICRT I . DUXXD Fenwick High School, Oak Park. Ill., I. junior Varsity Ifootball, 4. UI know tlzz' gfntlfmarz to bf qfccmvfz and :vnrlfzy Kfflilllllfliflll. md xml wiflwui zifxrrr .rn :wil reputrdf, lI.1.1No1s CIXRI. IC. DRICCIISI.IiR Library Board, 3. UCIUIIIHIOII .wiv if zzzflzrsd, ami enough uf it if ,Eft'IIIltV., CORIX IXIIXIC DRYDICX U. C. IX., Type .Xward. Sim war llzf .rccwf marjrfranz If lflr falazl, or rallzfr, Ihr lzfrb fir' gram. I.I'lON.XRD DCBIX I.atin Club, I, 25 Spanish Cluh,.1.g Library Staff, I, 2, 3, 4, Pageant Business Starli, I, Mgr., 2, 3. 43 I'rovi Circulation Mgr., 4. Snzrmllz rum' flu' wafer :c'f1rrrll1rbm0,I' if zlfrpf' CRANI: IIILLEN If'I'HICI. DCNHXR French Club, 3, 45 Senior Ilonie Ifcoiioinics Club, 3, 4, U. U. KX., 3, Senior Chorus, 2, 4QI,RL!CZ1I1ISTillI. lVrlmnzffz1'llzrr ax I-.Vl!I. . f1fl'lIg to !lzf'farlf1. II.XROI.D XY. DUNN Iligh School, Rock Island, III., I, 2, 3. Radio Club, 4. Fur what lu' flax, fn' gl'i'f.V.' ivfzar ln' fflirlkf, fn' fllouuy' Yr! Q!-IVA' he fm! filljuclgmwzt guide Ink bounty. .IUI.I'1S DUPCIS College Club, 4g Xiolin Choir, 2. Thr good l,v1aruz'fm if my trullz and f1fmf.rly,' lfrar 7lflllIl'7lQ,' Wvhal tau he mill llglllilhlf nw? XYICIOR DXYOINICN German Club, I. llz'.f worth if fc'ar1'a1zl-for lllif uwfmnzr lIt'7'f'.H GLEN I.. I'hXS'I' Kelvyn Park junior Iligh School, Chicago, Ill., I. Band, 3, 4. ullif bfrlfr IIUFJ' not breatlzr upon Illf mrllzf' AN N Ii ISCK ICRT I.atin Club, I. 2, Home Ifconomics Club, I, 2, General Science Club, 2 C X X I 3 IVOO voint XVV3I'CI'COIIIIIICI'CI2lI Club 3'U G X -'1.g...,,2,,,4,- -I I ,, . ..., 3: 45 Girls' League Representative, 2, Bronze Scholarship Medal. H.-ll! I .wr in you f.rwurllzylr1w. XIOSER Pagf 27 ag! N' THE CLASS OF 1933 DOUGLAS R. ECKFRT Varsity Club, 3, 4, Cross Country, 3, 4, Track, 2, 3. , Ulla is :imply the rarer! man in tlzf worldf, WILDA F. EDWARDS French Club, 2, Senior Home Economics Club, 3, 4, Commercial Club. 3, Camera Club, 3, O. G. A., 3, 4, 50-word Type Award. 'g.4mer1, zlfyou love l1Ef,f0f the lady if :wry well worthy. ARTHLR FGGFRS H,-I laugh if worzlz a flzoufand groam in any nzarlvftf' BFRNICE FLFTMANN Pageant Stall, Provi Stall, Bronze Scholarship Medal. 'LSlze if young, and of a noble, rnozlwl nature. WILIARD L. FRlKS1'iN Latin Club, I, 2, Chess and Checker Club, 4, Camera Club, 4QB2lI1Cl, It 2, 3, 4- Pirturr mr df I am. GEORGE .X. ICRNST Philatelic Exchange, 3, Senior Science Club, 4, Forum, 45 Student Council, 3. 'Ylfzizlff in rnarznfr, but rffolulf in action. ARTHUR F. FRNSTFR Latin Club, I, 2, General Science Club, IQ Chess and Checker Club, I, 2, Treas., 3, Vice-Pres., 4, Student Council, 2, College Club, 3, Senior Science Club, 4, Library Staff, 3, 4. UI would rallzrr be wiffr Llzan I look than to look wixfr flzan I aruf, BELOIT S.-XM EVFRNDEN .Xrt Club, IQ Sophomore Dramatic Club, Proviso Players, Chorus, 4. Tlzr play'ftlzf'Ilz1'1Ig.', FDXYARD FANNING College Club, 4, Commercial Club, 4, Band, 3. iiQZllFZ boy? Oh yer, my drar: Hut in llzf lmnri-Oh, you .rlzould lzrarl LovoI.A 'ITIOMAS FIXRNFY Varsity Club, 3, 4, Heavyweight Football, 3, 43 Varsity Baseball, 3. NJ man of action acrorrzpl1'flz.e'.s' fhlrzgff' DOROTHY FILINSTEIN Latin Club, I, 2, Commercial Club, 4, Chorus, 4. She fpealer, bflzawf, and arm jun ax ,the ought. ILLINOIS LOREN B. FELT Latin Club, I, Commercial Club. 4, Proviso Players, 4, Hi-Y Club, 4, Band, I, 2, Student Council, I,SWiIl1H1lIIg,3. Happy-go-lucky, fair amlfref, Notlzing thfre 1-5 that lvollzfrf me. ILLINOIS THE CLASS OF 19 l'iAlANUl:1l. I li'l'Zl'1R I follow, bu! am Mol z'nfz'rz'or. AIARGARICT LURRAINIC FI lLI.DSlC Ci. A. A., 2, 3, Vice-Pres.. 4, Izoofpoint Award, l.atin Club, 2, 0. QI. A., 3, 4. Sl1f'f tlnfrrfor Ipod. Sl l l Rl.lCY ANNICTTIC Fl ICLDSIC Latin Club, 1, 2, Student Council, 1, 2, G. A. A., 1, 2, 4, 600-point Award, junior l.ifc Saving, Silver Scholarship Aleclal. Hfll'?ll1f7lZ'.l'J' duff more llzan z'iole11re.', ANNA AIARGARILT l lNK Chorus. 4. Hllfrrr .rilfnrr golden, IU! br a 77Z1.ll1.0lIlllfF.,7 QlN0t graduatedj HARRY FINK Commercial Club, 4. Dorff worry, it malcff deff: wrinklr.f. SAM FINK Basketball, 3, 4, Baseball, 4. Ile if well paid who if wall .fati.rffd. lCRNl'lS'l' X. FINKBEINLIR Proviso Players, 3, 4, Hi-Y, 4, Commercial Club, 4, junior Class Play. 'LFull of-fur: and mifchlfff, loo, Doing thingx lzr .rlzoulclvfl do. CURTIss FLYING SERVICE DOROTHY FI N Kli LA IAN French Club, 2, 3, 4, Commercial Club,4, U. G. A., 3,44 Science Club, 1, Chorus, I, 2, 3. I rlmftfr, rlzallfr HJ' I go. ICUGICNIC FIORAYANTI Italian Club, 2, W'restlinf,z, 4. 'AW'l1af'5 in a r1anzf? EDYVARD Al. l ll'PlNGl11R Band, 4, Wrestling, 4. J miniatunf Ilfrrulf.f. AIARJORHC H. I lSHl'iR llome lfeonomics Club, 1, Latin Club, 2, 3, Chess and Checker Club, 3, 4, Senior Class Play, Girls' League Representative, 2, Proviso Players, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Pin, G. A. A., 1, Chorus, 3, 4. J Jtradfaftfrifrzcl, loyal and truf. Slzf if alwayf happy, nrtirr blur. l l.ORl'1NCl'i A. l l.AKli 0.11. A., 3, 4, French Club, 3, 4, G. A. A., 1, 2. Curly rfzl lzair, lflurerzff l1a.v,' Slze lflw' to damn' I0 peppy jazz. I 'agf 20 ng THE CLASS OF 1933 f ANNA C. FLAX Chess and Checker Club, 3, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, 3, 4. , Wim: gentlfrzesf thffe womfn haw! 1 PAUL G. FLECK Student Council, 1, Neo-Pythagoreans, 2,Camera Club, 3, 4, Provi Staff, College Club, 4, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. A gentleman that if alwayf ll gentIe'man. EVELYN FLORENCE FLOOR O. G. A., 3, 4, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4, zooo-point Award, Chorus, 1, 2, Op- eretta, 3, 4, 50-word Type Award, 3,JLIT1lOl' Life Saving, Senior Life Saving. L'Comf d?1dlf1iP1-lllf you go, On tlzf lightfanlaxtic mf. LEW H. FOLLETT Hyde Park High School, Chicago, I, 2. The irrfprfffzbe fpiril of mankind. MALCOLM WALTER FORSHALL Library Stall, 3, 4, Band, 4. I low nzrrrimeuzfor mfrrimenff wks. CHICAGO GEORGE W. FOSTER Chess and Checkers Club, 3, College Club, 3. For hr'.v ajolly goodfallowf' -I . LEWIS FRANCO Chorus, IQ Football, 3, 4, VVrestling, 4, Provi Staff. 1'll not budge -an inch. IL1.1xo1s DAVID FRANKIE Hi-Y Club, 4, Swimming, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Club, 4. lVlzfn work inztfrffref with play, out out work. FREDERICK FRANZEN Quiet and MU'-cw1tair1fd.', LESTER G. FRASE rl quifl, gfzztlf pfnoiz afwayff' AUDREY FREDERICKSON Home Economics Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Sophomore Mathematics Club, College Club, 3, Proviso Players, 3, 4, G. A. A., Ig Student Council, I, Girls' League Representative, 3, Board, 4, Senior Guard, Senior Class Play, Chorus, 1,Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. k'I.of5 qf initiatives and pap,- Tlzafx zhir girl. Clfvfr? You bf'tf ARTHUR E. FREEMAN Chorus, I, 2. Sr1wo!? I ,fuppofc iff a zzsrfffary avilf' I' THE CLASS OF19 HENRY FREES Latin Club, 1, 2, 3, Spanish Club, 4, Science Club, 1, Chorus, 2, 3, Choir, 4. llf'.r Qftfn ffm, bu! .frldom lZl'tZfd.,7 SICYMOCR NV. FRIICDMAN Latin Club, 1, Class Treasurer, IA, Neo-Pythagoreans, 2, Student Council, I, lixecutive Board, 2, College Club, 4, Pageant Stall, Provi Staff, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Alle krznwf wlzat lzr'.v talking about. Cuicnoo RAYMOND R. IVROSS Latin Club, 1, 2, Commercial Club, 4, College Club, 4, ljrovi Busi- ness Staff, Forum, 4, Chorus, 1, 2. '24 raflz and rfrlclfxf yaulllf' I 111.1 Nois .ICRNICST B. l L'l.LliR Orchestra, 2, 3, 4, Pageant Starl, 4. filer me librrfy nr gin' mf dfrltlzf' l1,I.IxoIs MILDRICD l L'SZl'lK O. G. A., 3, 4. Quin and .ffdalf wax .fl1A'.,' CA'I'Hl'iRINlC W. GADICN G. A. A., I, 2, 3, 4, IZOO-POiHl Award, Latin Club, I, 2, 3, Student Council, 3, 4, Home lfconomics Club, I, 2, Science Club, 2, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Beauty plus bfllZi71.l'.n XYISCONSIN QIICSS ll. GALLOWAY German Club, I. l.1'ler two gfrillfnzfri mllfd info ourf, CL714'rIs-XVRII:II'I' A I-1ROXAlf'l'ICAL Scuoot. RUI' l'lC'l'lCR D. GIACOMOZZI ltalian Club, 1, 2, 3, Science Club, 1, Chorus, 1, Choir, 2, 3. 4. llr',v :wry CL'1-,4'I', bu! Hill .m tall! For prrrlomr Ilziugf arf? :wry .rnzallfl Lizwls INSTITUTE ll GIAYICR Latin Club, 1, Art Club, 2, 3, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, Choir, 4, Girls' League Board of Directors, Proyi Art Stall. 5 Quz'rl, Tallvzrivr? ,YtI,'jiI4.Vl a happy H1 ixfnrf ffl flu' ICL'fl.i, DORIS .IAXIQ GIBSON Science Club, I, Spanish Club, 3, 4, College ClIIb, 3, 4, Senior Science Club, 4, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, .Iunior Life Saving, Senior Life Saving. lVI'.i'f ar au owl in llrr Ilwuglzl and fpffcll. Surrly llfr goal in Ilzif world .fllfill rraclzf' liMMl'i'l l' I . GIBSON HIY Club 2 3 4 X1IsItx lub , . A, , i. U' C , 4, German Club, 1, 2, Football, Mar-, 4 Thr only happy man III ltr calm llzinlxr lz1'nI.frl7' lmppyf, .IOCICLYN RL l'll GlLL lliilill Club, I, 2, 3, 4, lita Sigma Phi Medal, Home lfcononiics Club, 1, 2, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Senior Science Club, 4, Chorus 1, 2, Gold Scholarship Aleclal, National Honor Society. 'N Ripe in 1'L'1i.VdlH71 lil' .fliffl hVl5I.I.ESLliY ll Pugf 31 s I 5 A Page 32 THE CLASS OF 1933 ' ALEX GINDER Hi-Y Club, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Club, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, 3, 4, lfootball, 3, 4. Spode train the mind df well af the body. VIRGINIA GIST Class Play, Senior Class Play, Pageant Stall. Her air, lzer manner, lzer beauty, All who fee admire. KNOX HENRY LAWRENCE GLOS German Club, I. A'He livei to build, not lma.fl. CURTIS-WRIGHT LAERONAUTICAL Scnooi. GEORGE WVALTER GOEDE German Club, I. Few boyf are born with talenlx that rxeel, Rat all are mpable Qt' living well. ZPURDUE ANNE GOGER O. G. A., 3, 4, German Club, I, 2, Home Economics Club, 1. Hflly life lJ'f1Lll of contentment. EDWARD H. GOOSSEN High School, Oak Park, Ill,, I. Latin Club, 2, Chess and Checker Club, 3, Commercial Club, 3. url man he .feemf of cheefful yeftenlayf and confident !onz0rrou'.f. IRENE GRADY German Club, I, 2, O. G. A., 3, 4, G. A. A., 3, 4, Board, 600-point Award, Chorus, I, 2, 50-word Type Award, junior Life Saving. Aly pleafurefjind lheir fourfe in 5P07'f.Y.,, JOHN A. GRANDLAND, AIR. , Latin Club, 1, 2, Science Club, IQ Hi-Y, 3, 4, Varsity Club, 2, 3, Vice-Pres., 4, Student Council, I, 2, 3, Band, I, 2, 3, 4, Junior Class Play, Pageant Staff, Senior Class Play,Swimming, I, 2, 3, 4, Bronze Backstroke Medal, IQ Sub. League Backstroke Champ., 4, Senior Class President, Boys' Conference, Vice-Chairman. He if a genllenzang hir nature if kind and afffable lo every ereaturef' NORTHWESTERN IRENE FRANCES GREGORY O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, 3, 4. Noi craving for society, .llaintaiuing an air of deep .f0l7TlEly.,7 SUSANNA AI. GRICIUS Home Economics Club, 1, German Club, 3, 4, Chorus, I, 2, Library Staff, Bronze Scholarship Medal. g'She newer fouml the beft too good. DOROTHY C. GROENKE G. A. A., 3, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, German Club, 2, 3, Home lfconomics Club, 4, Art Club, 1, 3. Wnrle,7irJ't,' then reftf' BRYANT AND STRATTON Busixiiss COLLEGE PEARL If. GROSS French Club, 2, Commercial Club, 2, 3, 4, Home Economics Club, I, O. G. A., 3, 4, G. A. A., I, 2, Chorus, I, 2, Pageant and Provi staff'1'ypiSt. nTlze mildew' mannery and llze gentler! heart. Freshman Dramatic Club, Home Economics Club, I, 2, Latin Club, 1, 2, 3, College Club, 3, 4, Proviso Players, 3, 4, Chorus, 2, ,lunior THE CLASS OF 1933 ROBERT C. GUIBORAT Band, 1, 2, 3, 4, v N V He works in xzlerzee. CHICAGO CONSERVATORY or Music CLARA ELIZABETH GUILL Latin Club, IQ Home Economics Club, lg Chorus, 1, 2. Her life haf many a hope and aim. ANITA GUSTAFSON Latin Club, 1, 25 Home Economics Club, 1, 29 Spanish Club, 3, 4g College Club, 3, Girls' League, Treas., 4g Chorus, 1, 25 Operetta, 3, 4. J happy girl with afare I0 briglif, It .reemr to make all trouble liglzff' FRANK HACKNIAN French Club, 3, Treas., 4, lli-Y Club, 4, Student Council, 2, Class Treasurer, 3, Bronze Scholarship Medal. Ile lileef to leafe, he lileef to kid, Ile liker lo pleare, and alwayi' did. ELEANOR MAE HALL O. G. A., 3, 4, G. A. A., 3, 45 Home Economics Club, 4, LatinLClub, lg Art Club, 1, 3. She knowf the joy of living. JOHN E. HALYORSEN Commercial Club, 4. Law5 are not mailer: but fervantf, And he rulef flIt'77l who obeyr them. DOROTHY JANE HAMILTON Hyde Park High School, Chicago, I. O. G. A., 4, 50-word Type Award, Library Staff, 3, 4. Thule twinkling eyex are dangerouxf' JUNE ROSE HAMMANG Latin Club, IQ Girls' League Representative, 3, Chorus, I, 2. K'Her life if a bubble, find in lerzgzlz, a xpanf' JOHN W. HANLEY Chorus, I, 4. Jn ajable and eourleouf geritlemarz. YVILLIANI HARDEN Philatelic Exchange, 2, 3, 4. 'fBaz Hill he wax a .roller youllzf' WANDA HARDESTY General Science Club, IQ Latin Club, Ig Home Economics Club, 2. Carefree and light-hearted wax yhef' fNot graduatedj RUTH L. HARDT Home Economics Club, 3, Treas., 45 G. A. A., I, 2, 3, 4, 1200-point Award, Art Club, 1, German Club, 2, 4g Commercial Club, 2, 3, O. G. A., 3, 43 50-word Type Award, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. K'Slze'.v rapable, and not llie leaft bil ojlenfizfe about ii. PHE? 33 A l u 2 5 a Page 34 THE CLASS OF 1933 l WILLIAM CHARLES HARLAN Senior Science Club, Pres., French Club, 3g Band, 1, 2, 3, 4, Drum Major, 4, Lieutenant, 43 Student Council,I, 45 Senior Class Play. 4 HA Jmilefor all, a welcome glad, l .4 wimome, coaxing -way he had. ENID RUTH HARMER Girls, League Representative, I, 2g Latin Club, IQ Home Economics Club, 1, 2, 4, Proviso Players, 3, 4. Where-e'er .rhe goer, :he'5 bound to win Becaufe of her fmilef and .flrady vim. NORTHWESTERN DOROTHY BERNICE HARWIG O. G. A., 3, 4. l'For .vhf is ju!! the quiet kind lfhofe rzaluref never vary. HELEN KATHERINE HAUG German Club, lg Home Economics Club, I, O. G. A., 3, 4. 'AShe'5 quiet, referzfed, and a hind worker. ALBERT C. HEDGES Senior Science Club, 4g Chess and Checker Club, 4, Band, 2, 3, 4, Bronze Scholarship Nledal. '24 moral, Jerifible, and a well-bred rnanf' -ILNE GEORGIA HEIDENREICH German Club, x, 25 Commercial Club, 2, 3g Proviso Players, 3, 4, Home Economics Club, 4QJ1ll1iOT Class Play, O. G. A., 3. L'PreZly if Jhe, alwayf happy and gay. ROBERT W. HEILEMAN Chorus, 4, Sophomore Baseball. A youth, lighthearted and content. CHARLOTTE A. HEILIG Latin Club, Ig Home Economics Club, IQ G. A. A., I, 2, Commercial Club, 4, Chorus, I, 2. 'iller fmilef berome her well. LUCILLE HELEN HELLER Roosevelt High School, Chicago, I, 2, 3. Commercial Club, 4. She haf a true and .vimere heart. VVALTER L. HENRY Lake View, Chicago, IQ Crane, Chicago, 2. Provi Staffg Lightweight Footballg Bronze Scholarship Medal. A eleanfire, a clean hearth, and a vigor ofthe game. JOHN HEROLD German Club, IQ Student Council, 35 Bronze Scholarship Nledalg National Honor Society. ,Tix good to he merry and wife. ELTON HERRMANN York Community High School, Elmhurst, I, 2. A'Silence never maker any blunderxf' THE CLASS OF 1933 DAVID HILGPINBERG 'kllif own l71l.fl71f.f.f waf mort inzporlarzl to him. DAVID MARTIN HlLGliNBI'iRG Chorus, 3, 4. Enjoy the prefenl hour. AVISCONSXN 4 GPIORGIQ HILKO Football, 2, 4, Wrestling, 4, Varsity Club, 4. Ile Ifr u man of real ability aizdfuturef' ARTHUR ROBERT HILL Spanish Club, Serg't-at-arms, 4, Band, I, 2, 3, 4. Ir lhere a heart murif cannot melt? NliWl'1LL HILTON Roosevelt High School, Chicago, 1. Latin Club, 2, 3, Band, 2, 3, 4, Baseball, Mgr., 4. K'A'o penon .fhould be overworked. CHICAGO DONALD ARTHUR HIRSCH Philatelic lfxchange, 2, Vice-Pres., 3, Pres., 4, Drum Corps, 2, 3, Operetta, 3, 4, Chicago Chorus, 4. 'LI try to find the beautiful in life, Jud where il if nof, I create Beauty. KIIUIIGAN CHARLICS HOCKSTRASSICR French Club, 2, 3, 4, Commercial Club, 4, Chorus, 2, 3, 4. Aly thoughzf are my rompaniolirf' .IOHN HODGSON Chorus, 3, 4, Fresh-Soph. Football, I, Lightweight Football, 3, 4. K'Plenly of mischief in one ,rnzall body. XVISCONSIN G1iORGlf1 AI. HOECK College Club, 3, Latin Club, I, Chorus, 2, Choir, 3, Operetta, 4, Chicago Chorus, 4. What he nohly thoughl, he nobly dared. ,I OHN L. HOILLLERI CH Radio Club, 4, Chorus, 4. lVrapped in the folitude Qf hif own originalifyf' WALTER llO1 FfX'IAN General Science Club, I, Latin Club, IQ Senior Science Club, 4. Wir hail :cienfe ay mmff tfuerlfriend and nobler! helperf' NoI4'I'IIwEs'rIsI1N ICDWARD bl. HOLLAND, JR. Quigley Seminary, Chicago, IB. Model Builders' Club, Pres., 4, Latin Club, 3, Radio ClIIb, 3. Living requiref but little life, Doing requirei much. lI.LlNOIS Page 35 Page 36 THE CLASS OF 1933 HARRY HOMAN French Club, 3, 4, College Club, 3, 4. He bear! an honorable mind. NORTHWESTERN WILLIAM JEROIVIE HONQUEST High School, Oak Park, I, 2. Chess and Checker Club, 3, 4, College Club, 4, Spanish Club, 4. Helton may not alwayf bring happinextg but there if no happi- neff without anion. MARGARET LOUISE HOPKINS Girls, League Representative, 3, Student Council, IQ O. G. A., 3, Gold Pin, G. A. A., I, 2, 3, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, Bronze Scholarship Medal. nl rnorlett maiden deeked with the blufh of honor. ADELINE A. HOWARD French Club, 3, 4, Spanish Club, 3, 4, Chorus, IQ Silver Scholarship lNfIedal. It ix tranquil people who aceornplifh much. MADELYN LOUISE HUNT French Club, 2, 4, Senior Home Economics Club, I, 3, Chess and Checker Club, 2, 3, Chorus, 2, 3. To talk without ejort, i.r, after all, the great charm of talking. THOMAS EDWARD HIIRLEY Art Club, I, 2, Camera Club, 4, French Club, 4, Commercial Club, 4, Provi Art Staff. Happine.r.f if a good that Nature Jelly uf. CHICAGO ART INSTITUTE JOHN HYEEBI Band, 2, 3, 4. 'illluxic wafhef away the duxt of everyday lifef' EIQLENE VAUGHN INGHAKI Latin Club, I, 2, Chorus, I, 2, German Club, 2. HI would help otherf, out of afellowfhip feeling. FREDERICK JOHN JACKSON The man of thought .rtrikef deepeft and ftrileef .vat'ett. MARILYN C. JACKSON Cathedral High, Denver, Colorado, I, 2B. Commercial Club, 4, College Club, 4, Latin Club, 2. Full of a nature nothing can tame, But beauty 1-5' alwayf queen. RUTH JEDIKE Student Council, 2, Latin Club, 2, 3, Aedile, 2, hdathematics Club, 2, Girls' League Representative, 4, Commercial Club, 4, Home Economics Club, 4, Chorus, 2, Choir, 4, Silver Scholarship hledal. 'Ulmiability .vhinex by ity own light. MABEL LILLIAN JENSEN Commercial Club, Sec., 4, Girls' League Representative, 4, French Club, 2, 3, 4, G. A. A., I, 2, Home Economics Club, 3, General Science Club, I, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, I, 2. Gaiety it the f0ul'.f health, fadnen' if itf POZ..f07l.,, THE CLASS OF 1933 RALPH A. JENSEN French Club, 3, 4, Commercial Club, 2, 3, 4, Student Council, I. .-lrlm' izaturfx ar: rarrly nz1'lancholy. YICTOR G. JOHANSSON Chess and Checker Club, 25 Chorus, I, 2. Common .ffnff if Zhffavorile daughlfr of n'a.v0rz. AUGCSTCS R. JOHNSON Chess and Checker Club, 1, 2, 3, Radio Club, 3, 4, Latin Club, I. Steady and willing,-6116 lhirzgffor a mam' l1.1.lNols DOROTHY EDITH JOHNSON O. G. A., 3, 4, Pin, Bronze Scholarship Medal. Thfy that .rmnd high have many blaftf to Jhahe them. KENNETH E. JOHNSON Orchestra 2, 3 , ,, 4. , H.lI1lJ'iL' if Gmini bf!! gift to man. DEKALIS LESTER BERNARD JOHNSON Latin Club, 1, 2. The language dfnoln thc manf, PERRY M. JOHNSON Chorus, I, lg YVrestling, 4. The happizzrfs of life corifixlx of one COIIITHMOMJ.f6'ft'I1Tly.H Am-ioux ROBERT JONES lli-Y Club, 2, 3, 4, Band, I, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Orchestra, 3, National Winner of Solo and Quartette Contest. Thru Iii muff: in all Ihingf U' men had eau' THOMAS JONES Band, 2, 3, 4. H.lIll.ffC .flzuufd be callvrl the happy nrt. JACK JORDAN Chorus, 3. Tranquillity t'0HJ1',YlFl1l in a Jiffddillfff of the mind. MARY MARGARET JOSLYN General Science Club, 1, 2, Latin Club, I, 2, Quaestor, IQ Student Council, lg Senior Science Club, 3, 43 G. A. A., 1, 2, Girls' League Representative, 2, Provi Staff, Operetta, 3, 4. J prflly way, a wimzizzgfnzile, Drr.f.fn1' .fo rzfal, and right in Jlylef' c:ARLE'I'ON RUTH C, JESTCS Girls' League Representative, 1, 2, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4, Latin Club, Quaestor, 1, 2, General Science Club, 1, O. G. A., 3, 4, College Club, 4, Pageant Staff, Bronze Scholarship Medal. 1zi.fzhf hraulQfu!1zn'e.f.rity ofhcr nazure lo low .f0nzelhi11g. DEKALB Page 36' THE CLASS OF 1933 JOHN KAFKA German Club, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra, 4, Student Council, 2. Few good lalleen' are found. ILLINOIS BERTRANI KAHN Junior Hi-Y Club, I, 2, Pres., I, Latin Club, I, 2, College Club, I Stamp Club, 2, Science Club, IQ l'1Ol'LlII1, 2, 4, Pageant Business Dept. I, 2, 4, Provi Business Dept., Bronze Scholarship Medal. To he arlizfe if the primary z'orafz'orI of man. REGlNE JANE KALlClNSKl Junior Life Saving, 2, Comrnereial Club, 4, Home Economics Club, 3, 4, Science Club, I, Latin Club, I, 2, O. G. A., 4, G. A. A., 3. 4, Art Club, 3. Her hair war not more .ruinny than her hearff, HYKIEN KANIUK He mahef a Jolituzle, and rally il peare. HELEN KAPLAN Home Economics Club, I, 2, 3, Commercial Club, 3, Chorus. 4. Her lalenlf were of the more filent clam. GEORGE W. KARCH The world if alwayf ready to reeeire mlezzt wizh open arm DONALD KAETZ Chorus, 4. The milder! mannen wilh the hrzzreft mind. KATHLEEN KEENER Latin Club, I, 2, G. A. A., I, 2, Home Economics Club, 3, 4, O. G. A. 3, 4, Chorus, I, 2, Pageant Stall, goaword Type Award, Girls League Representative, 3. 4'There i5 nothing impoffiblefor a willing heart. l,ORl'I'l l'O ul. KELSEY .Xustin High School, Chicago, I, 2, 315. Proviso Players, 3, 4,.lL1Tli0l' Class Play, Student Council, 4, O, G. A.. 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. 'T1'f grace that maker a woman fair. CHRIST KEMPF Football, 2, 4, Basketball, 2, Baseball, 3, 4. Come now, ith' win or lo.re.', ILLINOIS EERN NIARGEERITE KENNEDY Latin Club, 2. HIVut-brown maiden, Thou haf! ruby, ruby liprf' PIQESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL CECELIA ELIZABETH KINTBALL Commercial Club, 4. True humility, the higher! virtue of them all. DEKALB THE CLASS OF 1933 LESTER H. KIRSCHBAUM German Club, 3, 4, Model Builders, Club, 4, Class Treasurer, IA, Student Council, I, 2, 3. Tl1erf if alwayf .fafety in valor. MICHAEL A. KISSEI. It mattery not hozv long you liw, but how. ARMOUR STELLA K. KISSEL Nazareth Academy, La Grange, Ill., 3 xl truefrienzl if forfzfrr afr1'er1d. NANCY A. KIURAS Latin Club, I, 2, Home Economics Club, 3, Sec., 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, I, 2, 50-word Type Award, Bronze Scholarship Medal. UI haw heard oftlzf lady, and good worclf wrrztfwitlz lzfr nanzff' RUTH HENRIETTA KLEINFELDT Orchestra, 4. .llu.ric if tha tru: urziwrfal larzguagff' JAMES R. KLENSKE Lightweight Football, 4. Pray on! .1 batter fair a1vaif,ftl1f'f'. GOTTLIEB G. KNOLI, Chorus. 3. Strong rea.mn.r mah! .frrong aclz'm1.f. KATHERINE KOEPPEL 0. A., Sillev11, charts, and lzu.vlzfrl. HERBERT A. KOHOUTEK Hi-Y Club, 4, Band, 2, Chorus, 3B, Choir, Pres., 4, Operetta, 3, 4, .Iunior Varsity Football, 4, Chicago Chorus, 4. Libr prrffct mu.f1'c ,wt to nobler wordff' ll.LiNo1s ROBERT JOHN KOLB General Science Club, IQ Commercial Club, 2,' 3. 4, Chorus, I, Swimming, 3, Track, 4, Provi Business Staff. lla if well paid who if well Jatiififdf' CRANE ARTHUR -I. KOV EN Latin Club, 1, Aedile, 2, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Treas., College Club, 3, 4, Proviso Players, 3A, 4, Chess Club, 2, 3, Band, 2, 3, Pageant Staff, Provi Stall, Fresh-Soph. Football, 2, English Cabinet, 3, Pres., 4, Student Council, 2B, 3, Boys' Scholarship Award, I, 2, 3, Gold Scholarship Nledal, National Honor Society, 3A, 4. The heiglllr by great men rrathed and leap! Wzrr not attainfd by 5uddenflight.' Ciucixoo FRANCES KRACALIK G. A. A., I, 2, Latin Club, 2, 3, Ilome Economics Club, I, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Italian Club, Vice-Pres., 4, Chorus, IQ Choir, 2' Band, 3, 4, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. A mwiral lady. XVr:s'1' SUBURBAN Hosvrmi. 4' 0 Page 30 Page 40 THE CLASS OF 1933 ' IIARGUERITE BERNICE KRAFFT French Club, 2, Spanish Club, 3, 4, Commercial Club, 4, O. G. A., - 3, 4, Gold Pin, Student Council, I, Bronze Scholarship Nledal. ' g'My heart if ever at your .rervit'e! - CHICAGO NORNIAL EUGENE KREML Student Council, 2, Sec., 4, Sophomore Klathematics Club, College Club, 4, Senior Science Club, 4, Band, I, 2, 3, Wrestling, 4, National Honor Society. HHH pleafant countenance portrayr the man within. ILLINOIS BERNICE KROPP Latin Club, 2, 3, Chorus, I, 3. 4'The gentleneff Qf all the godf go with theef' ESTHER ELEANOR KRUEGER O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, I, Choir, 2, 3, 4B, Operetta, 3. Soft peace ,the hringr wherever The arri11e,r.', MILDRED MARY KRIQEGER German Club, 3, O. G. A., 3, 4, Gold Pin, Commercial Club, 2, 4, Home Economics Club, 4, Violin Choir, I, 2. '24 lovely countenanee ix thefairext of all fightf, And the fweeteft harmony if the zloiee of her we louef' ILLINOIS RUTH VVINNIFRED KUEHL Home Economics Club, IQ Italian Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Chorus, I O. G. A., 3, 4, Bronze Scholarship Nledal. A w0man'.f ,ftrength if mort potent when robed in gentlenexf GREGG iz! 37 RAYINIOND KUNZINIANN Quigley High School, Chicago, I, 2, St. Patriclis High School, Chicago,3. K'Good breeding .fhowf itfeh' moft where, to an ordinary eye, it appearf the lean. RENATA C. KUSCHEL German Club, I, 2, 3, Philatelic Exchange, 3, Commercial Club, 3, Art Club, I , O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, 2, 3, 4. Centle1'n mind, refolute in anion. CONSTANTIN E G. KCTRUMAN IS '4When you're in doubt df to what to d0,d0r1,f1lolt. JULIA M. KYRIAZOPLOS Leyden Township High School, Franklin Park, Ill., I, 2, 3B. Home Economics Club, 4. 'hller lipf hlufh deeper J'LUFFf.Y.,, KATHERINE LANDAUER Central High School, Peoria, Ill., I, 2, 3. College Club, 4, Chorus, 4. Her very frownf are fairer far than Jmilef of other nzaidenf are BRADLEY INSTITUTE ANTHONY LAPI 'Tfoneealed talent bring: no reputation' THE CLASS OF 1933 C. MARTIN LARSON Latin Club, I, 2, General Science Club, IQ Sophomore Mathematics Club, College Club, 3, 4, Senior Science Club, 4, Track, 4, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Ln uf do what honor demandff, IXTICHIGAN NICOLINA LA SPISA Italian Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Vice-Pres., 2, Home Economics Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Pres., 4, Neo-Pythagoreans, 3, Chorus, I, 2, 3, Pageant Staff, Provi Staff, Senior Guard, Girls' League Representative, 2, Student Council, 2, O. G. A., 4, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. '24 good mind po.fJf,v.fe: a kingdomf, DEKALB ARYID VV. LAUKINIAN Spanish Club, Pres., 4. llappinr,r,r 1'.f no laughing martyr. MARGARET ROSE LA VINE 0. G. A., 3, 4, Bronze Pin, Latin Club, 4. '4Woman if a mirarle of divinf C07lfflldifli07Z5.U lSABliL LIQES College Club, 3, Vice-Pres., 4, Senior Science Club, 4, G. A. A., 2, 3, French Club, IQ Home Economics Club, I, 2. W'l1erf rould bffound afacf daint1'fr? MARIE LEMM Italian Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Commercial Club, 4, Home Economics Club, 4, Senior Science Club, 4. 'iliwrytlzing zhat if fxquifite hidef it,rfLf'. EMMA GLADYS LOGAN Home liconomics Club, 4, French Club, 4, O. G. A., 3, Chorus, 1, 2. .4lu.f1ylo:'r oflife and all thingx human. WALTER LOGAN Varsity Club, 4, Lightweight Football, 3, Heavyweight Football, 4. A21 prince among fellowff' ICLMILR LUHRSEN Chorus, 1, 2, Baseball, 3, 4. 'AThz' lruf mfaxurf of lzlfr if not lfngzh, but h0IZEJ'fy.,, DORIS LUND Home lflCOHOHllCS Club, I, Latin Club, I, 2, 50-word Type Award, O. G, A., 3, 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal. 'flladffry if a diamond setting tofemale bfauiyf' ELlNORlf AIARHC AIADERLIR High School, Oak Park, lll., I, 2, 3. Commercial Club, 4, Chorus, 4. J .fwfft atfraclizw kind of gram. MONTI I5 MAGR EE College Club, 3, 4, Proviso Players, 3, 4, Hi-Y Club, 4, Forum, 43 Lightweight Football, 3, 4, National Honor Society. Nfl marwloux wiltyfrllow, I affure you. l1.1.1No1s Pagf 41 D THE CLASS OF 1933 Page 42 DOROTHY FLORENCE MAIWVURM French Club 2, 3, Girls' League Representative, 3, 4, Proviso Players, 3, 4, Home Economics Club, 2, 4, Spanish Club, 4, Senior Guard, G. A. A., I, 2, Chorus, 1, 2, 3, Provi Staff, Senior Class Play, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. The purer! treafure mortal timer a ford I5 Jpolleff reputation. ILLINOIS HARRIETTE W. MALCHERT Chorus, IQ O. G. A., 3, 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal. Quiet and redate war the. MARGFRY I. NIALONE The rountenanee if the portrait of the .f0llZ.,I MARION LORENE MALONE Chorus, I, 2, O. G. A., 3. '6The jirrt duly of a zcornan III to be pretty, WILLIAM MALONE Student Council, I, Football, 4. Silenfe if oft more expreuiee than mere wordff' WILLIAM J. MAROCSEK Chorus, I, 2, Operetta, 3, 4, Chicago Chorus, 4. 'Ullufic if the wordlefx language ofthe foul. FRANK MARRONE A gentleman maker no notre. Q59 CONSTANCF. MARSH Latin Club, I, 2, Student Council, IQ Art Club, I, 2. 3, College Club 3, 4, Orchestra, 2, 3, Band, 1, 2, 3, 4, Vlfinner District Flute Solo Contest, 2, 3, Silver Band Medal, 3, Solo Contest, First Division, 4, Flute Quartette, First Division, 3, 4, National Honor Society. 'gThe hidden .foul Qfharrnonyf' ELM!-IURST JOSEPH FRANK MATEKIOVSKY Stillne.r.r of perron and rtearlinellf of-feature! are signal markx cy' gona' breeding. GLADYS MAXWELL Township High School, Alarion, Ill., I, 2, 3, French Club, 4, College Club, 4. Diligence IAJ the mother of .vucce.f5. PHILIP MCCABE Proviso Players, 4, Student Council, x, 2B, 4A, Class Treasurer, 2, Fresh-Soph. Baseball, 2, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. 4'CooI to hir heart'r core. GLADYS MARIE MELKA O. G. A., 3, 4, Home Economics Club, IQ Connnercial Club, 2, 3, 50-word Type Award, 3. 'cln truth, fir, ,the if pretty, honeyt, and good. 1 THE CLASS OF 1933 l'll.lZ:XBlQ'l'll iXll'lYl'lR Providence Academy, Chicago, I. Commercial Club, 4, Chorus, 4. pl blirhe hrar! niakef a blooming flings. GIADYS Ii. NIICKOW 0. G. .X,, 3, 4, Home liconomics Club, 3, German Club, r, 25 Corn- mercial Club, 35 G. QX. A., 45 Chorus, 2, 3, 50-word lype Virtue alonr lil' lzappineff bflowf' ICRWIN ll. Mll.l,l'IR O. Cr. A., 3. HfI00lIII'.fJ' and almfrzw of lzrat and lll1,l'l. zndzcatf -rim' qualztzeflf' I.ll.l.l.XN INIILLFIR Englewood High School, Chicago, I, ZB. Chorus, 2. i'St ft'Illilj' af mannrrf if Ihr zenith of brautyf' fNot graduatedj RLTTH PIDNA MILLER Community High School, Maple Park, lll., I. Latin Club, 2, 3, 43 Chorus, 2, 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal. J girl with a happy ,ivnilf who fx'f1rk.v flifigfnfly all the cc'llz'lP. RUTH VIOLICT MlLl.liR Student Council, 1, ZA, Commercial Club, 3, l rench Club. A., 35 Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Sawfl1'frlrlarly, lzufy df a ber. l..X VISRNE MISCHNICK Chess and Checker Club, 3. 4, Philatelic lfxchange, 2, 4, German Club, 2, O. G. A., 3, Pageant Stall, Bookkeeping 'l'eam, 3, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. 'Z-I quiet manly ffllouz ROB ICRT N lOl l l'l'l l' General Science Club, lg Camera Club, 3, 4. U.-l gallant man Zil' aborf ill wordxl' JOHN Nl. MORSE Hi-Y Club, 2, 3, .1.QYaI'SlIj' Club, 4, Chorus, 4, Baseball, 3, 45 lleavy- weight Football, 4, Heavyweight Basketball, 4. liz hay thc' fombinrd qualilnw' Qfa man anal an zlllzlffrfl XYORC ESTIQR BICRNICIC KIOSSICY ' lub A W a rd. 25 O. G. l'rench C , 4. Lvl all flu' numbrrf Qf llzf .ffarf ,qizv ligglzt lu Ilzr fair u'z1j.'.l' RCSSICLI. liRNS'l' XIL'EllI.liXl'lgXL'l l' Hi-Y Club, 4, Commercial Club, 45 Lightweight Football, 4. HDay .rrrws nor light morrfairlzful than llll bf. VITO LXMICS XiXRDlEl.l.U l'Tl1r manly par! if to clo with mziglzt and main wlzar yn YALE zz can dn. Pagf 45 'I Page 44 THE CLASS OF 1933 CHARLIQS Chess Club, 2, 3, 4, Senior Science Club, 4, Chorus, I, Band, 3, 4. The gentleman iffull of Zltfftlfi, bounty, worth, and gualityf' ILLINOIS RUSSELL NELSON Latin Club, I, 2, Camera Club, 2, Forum, 4, Senior Chorus, 2. Ile hath many nameleff ifirlueff' FRANK S. NEVVELL Proviso Players, 4, Chess Club, I, 2, 3, Vice-Pres., 4, Hi-Y Club, 2, 3, 4, Chorus, I, Band, I, 2, 3, 4, junior Class Play, Senior Class Play, Band lX'Iedal, 3, Second-Division Winner State Solo Contest. lllu.rie, oh how ,rweetl How weak Languagefadef before thy ,rpelll ILLINOIS GORDON NEVVTON Band, I, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra, 3, 4, Band Medal, 3, 4, State Champion Trombone Contest, 3, 4. Pm not in the roll Qt' eommon men. BERNICE NORBY Commercial Club, 3, Home Economics Club, 4. It haf been .raid that xilenee 1.5 golden,- Thif girl will prove Zo be a mint. ,IOSEPHINE HELEN NORKUS O. G. A., 3, 4, Home Economics Club, 4. She came hither adorned like .vweet flrlayf' RUTH ETHEL NOTTINGHAM Latin Club, I, 2, Art Club, 3. Silence if deep df eternity: Speech if fhallow af lime. NoRTHwEsTERN ANITA INIARIAN NOVICKY French Club, 3, 4, Spanish Club, 4, Home Economics Club, 4, College Club, 4, Chorus, IQ Violin Choir, I, Choir, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra, 4, Bronze Scholarship lVIedal. fl dancer: before .rhe Jtarlf, She dancer .vtraight into our heartff' NORTHVVESTERN ELEANOR ANNE OETTING Commercial Club, 3, 4, French Club, 2, O.. G. A., 3, 4, Girls' League Representative, 2, 3, Chorus, 3. You .ray you like her, zoo? Well, you ran jun bet we do! ELIXIER OLSON Hi-Y Club, 4, Basketball, 3, Football, 3. In Jportf, athletieg With friendx, magnetief, ILLINOIS RUSSELL C. OLSON Chorus, 2, Choir, 3, 4. HL1:fF if a jeft and all thing: .rhow it: I thought .vo once, but now I know it. DON ONORATO Camera Club, 3, Sec., 4, Latin Club, 3, Hi-Y Club, 4, Italian Club, I, 2, 3, Sec., 4, Senior Science Club, 4, Forum, 4, Band, 2, 3, 4, Saxaphone Sextette, 4, Soloist, 4. CheerfulneJf if a .vign of goodizeff a1Id'Qf wifdomf' ILLINOIS THE CLASS OF 1933 MARIAN hnoxnictc OOSTDYK French Club, 3, Home Economics Club, 4, Chorus, 4. Beauty ir an exquifite flower X And it.r perfume if virtue. 1 Lewis INSTITUTE ROSE MARIE ORTENZI Italian Club, I, 2, 3, O. G. A., 3, Ilome Economics Club, IjCl10Tl1S, I, 2. No worry doef the lenowf She'yfull of pep and go. FRANCES SIIEILA USHACGHNESSY French Club, 2, Home Economics Club, 2, 3, Student Council, 3, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4, Board, 3, 1600-point Award, Chorus, I, 2, 3. A .veholar and a good Jport. too: Girl! like thir there are butfewf, FRED OSTLER Fenwick High School, Oak Park, I, 2, 3. Spanish Club, 4. A merry heart doeth good like medicine MICHIGAN 4. ROBERT PALMER Latin Club, I, General Science Club, I, College Club, 4, Chorus. I. Ile plays lifeh' game with head erertf' lI.I.INoIs STEPHEN F. PATCHELL Sports Club, 3, Varsity Club, 4, Chorus, I, 2, Pageant Staff, Provi Statf, Varsity Football, Student Council, Bronze Scholarship Aledal, National Honor Society. Nix limbf were earl in manly mold For lordly .rportx and eontext hold. W'ILLIAlXI E. PATCHELL Varsity Club, 4, Heavyweight Football, 4. No better attribute to fame, Than thore few wordy, alle played the game. ORVILLE B. PACLSEN Hi-Y Club, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Club, 4, Latin Club, I, 2, Chorus, 2, Choir, Sec.-Treas., 4, Operetta, 3, 4, Junior Class Play, Swimming, 2, 4, Lightweight Football, 4, Student Council, 2, Provi Stall, Chicago, Chorus, 4. He can .ring and playfoozball: lli.r lift of airtuer if not .fmall. ARMOUR DOROTHY PEARY Freshman Dramatic Club, Latin Club, I, 2, Sophomore Mathemat- ics Club, Chorus, I, Proviso Players, 3, 4, Student Council, I, G. A. A., I, 2, O. G. A., 3, Gold Pin, Gold Scholarship Aledal, National Honor Society. Hllappinerf if where we-hnd it, but rarely where we xeek it. ALICE JANET PELLER G. A. A., l, 2, Latin Club, I, 2, Home Economics Club, I, 2, House of Representatives, 3, Forum, 4, Commercial Club, 45 Senior Science Club, 4, College Club, 3, 4, Girls' League Representative, I, Fresh- man Dramatic Club, Pageant Staff. A21 rz induytriouf, willing worker i.r they To the door ofxueeerr .the holdf the key. ERNEST E. PELLETIER Hit soul, rineereg in aetiorz,faitlU'ul,' and in honor, elear. CAROL MAE PETERS Freshman Dramatic Club, Latin Club, I, 2, G. A. A., I, 2, 3, O. G. A., 3, 4, Proviso Players, 3, Vice-Pres., 4, Girls, League Representa- tive, 4, junior Class Play, Senior Class Play, 50-word Type Award, 3, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Grave wax in all her .ftep.v,' heaven, in her eye, ir: every gerturr. dignity and love. 1 Page 45 l Page 46 THE CLASS OF 1933 EERN ROSE PETERSON French Club, 2, 3, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, I, 2, Choir, 3, 4, 50-word Type Award, Silver Scholarship hledal. L'She'J fmall, with .vpiritr gay, life love her gentle wayf, ORVILLA H. PETERSON Home Economics Club, 2,3, Latin Club, I, 2, College Club, 3, Chorus I, 2. Noble of heari, noble of mind, Her heart and .foul wilh gold are lined. -IOHN PETROSKY Lightweight Football, 3, Lightweight Basketball, 2. lVhate'er I do, whate'er I fay, Rex! a.r.rured, 1'll have my wayf' ,IOHN HENRY PFLACM, AIR. German Club, I, 2, 33 Sophomore Xlathernatics Club, Chess and Checker Club, Treas., 2, Vice-Pres., 3, College Club, 3, Proviso Players, 3, 4, Hi-Y Club, 3, 4, Senior Science Club, 4, Forum, Serg.- at-arms, 4, Orchestra, 2, 3, 4, Student Council Executive Board, 3, Bronze Scholarship Nledalg National Honor Society. A' Think not ambition wire heeaufr it if brave. CINCINNATI RONALD PHILPOT Philatelic Exchange, 2, 3, Radio Club, 3, 4. 'A The .flrongefr paffion which I have 1,1 honor SOUTIIERN CALIFORNIA MARIAN V. PODS General Science Club, 1, French Club, 2, 3, 4, 50-word Type Award, O. G. A., 3. She mort lioef who llzilzhf rnoft,feel.f nohlefl, and acff lieftf' FRANK A. PRANVVI CK Fame 1-J' the perfume of heroic defdff' RAY C. PRIES Varsity Club, 3, Sec.-Treas., 4, Football, 3, 4. 'Cdfoolhall man, and a bafellall man, And lafl, but not lerzfi, zz lady? rnan.', XFALPARAISO NATHAN PRITIKIN Crane High School, Chicago, IB. Latin Club, 2, Aedile, 4, Camera Club, 2, Pres., 3, 4, Senior Science Club, 4, Forum, 4, Proviso Players, 3, Radio Club, 3, 4, junior Class Play, Bronze Scholarship Medal, Ile doer hit raflefrom day to day, .4 nd meetf whaiewr comm hir wayf' CHICAGO IXIILDRED E. PROVENZANO Italian Club, I, 2, 3, 4, O. G. A., 3, Pin, G. A. A., I, 2, 3, govword Type Award. Hfler modem loohtt Zhe rortagf' might adorn, Swfef af the prirnrofe peepf beneafh lhe thorn. ROSARY MARIE S. RAGONE Italian Club, I, 2, 3, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Freshman Chorus, I. Her oeryfrownf are fairerfar Than .tmilef of other maidenr !lTt'.,, RosARY NAOMI RASMUSSEN Chorus, I, 2, 3, 4, O. G. A., 4. USincere and warm, with zeal well underflood, She mleef a noble pride in doing goodf, 9 THE CLASS OF 1933 ICARI. IQDWARD RATH Chorus, I, 2, Football, 4, Student Council, I. , ufllrrz 1lon'z bozhfr mf, but oh! zhoff g1'rl.f. Prkntrrs NATAI,l E REICH ' G. A. A., I, 2, 3, 4, College ClIIb, 3, Sec., 4, VVater Pageant, 2, Home Economics Club, 4, Girls, League Representative, I, 2, Chorus, I, 2, Choir, 3, Operetta, 4,.ll1l1iOr Class Play, Junior, Senior Life Saving, Senior Guard. Shf farrI'r.r Ihr ftarf in hfr fyff .Ind lhf .fun in lzf'rfr1'frIrlfl1ip.'l VIVIAN A. REICH G. A. A., 3, 4, 600-point Award, HoIne Economics Club, I, 3, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, I, 2, Senior l.ife Saving. UQ1l1't'f?'1.1 I'7.I' off run zlffpg Q16ll'f7l1Zi71Il'.f rj! zrrafurff leap. NIAR,IORlE IIENORE REISZ Home Economics Club, I, 2, 3, Latin Club, 2, 3, 4, College Club, 3, Proviso Players, 3, 4, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Commercial Club, 3, Senior Science Club, 4, Chorus, I, 2, junior Class Play, Senior Class Play, Provi Stall, Choir, 3, 4, Student Council, 4, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. nl rfady wi! and a Cllfffflll fmilf- Thrff arf ihf rlzingf .fhf maleff worth wlll-lF.,, Oiuo NORTHERN l.AlfRA E. REAIES l,atiu ClIIb, I, Commercial Club, 4, French ClIIb, 2, 3, Chorus, I, 2, 3. 'Illufh mirth and no nzarlrlfif, .411 good and no badr1r.f.f. DINLKALH l'iSTllER RESSMAN O. G. A., 3, 4, Commercial Club, 4, French Club, 2, 3, Chorus, I, 2, 3. fl hfarl lhafffflf and ryrx fha! Jmilf, :Irf Ihr drarffl Ilmzgf fha! lzraoen .rupplz'f.f. . ROLAND REYNOLDS l,aIIe High School, Chicago, IB. Band, 2, 3, 4. l'rrfatI'l1'iy hr daih po,r,Irf.f, :ind Ihnf, you know, muff nzfrzvz .fufcf.f.f. ROBERT ,IOHN RICHARDSON Proviso Players, 3, junior Class Play, Track, 4. sl .fpiril ,vupfrior lo ferry wraponf' Al.BliR'l' RlDUl,l l Italian ClIIb, I, 2, 3, O. G. A., 3, 4, 50-word Typc Award, 3, Band, 3, 3, 4- .l'lu.v1'c .fofizvif and l1I'J'Il7'7Il,f Ihr mind That not an arrow dom' n'fi,fta1Icr'fir1c1'.U ROBERT R. RIHA Alorton High School, Cicero, lll., I, 2, 3. '24 loyal tomparI1'o11, an rxffllmztfrikncl, .-I good honfrl worhrr, and trur lo thf md. AIICIIIGAN llERBERT CARI, RODEXBOSTEL Luther Institute, Chicago, I, 2, 3. 1 fw thingy arf fmpoiwible Io diligmzcf and fhzllf' qNot graduateclj ROBERT ROEBER Varsity Club, Track, 3, 4, Cross Country, 3, 4. A2471 athlete brzwf, offeaturff ftrong, llflr ofuen hrlped the lfam alongfl Noivruwesriiitu i Page 47 1 Page 48 THE CLASS OF 1933 MARCELLA ADRIENNE ROI-IDE German Club, I, 2, 3, Home Economics Club, I, 2, 3, Commercial Club, 2, 3, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, IQ 50-word Type Award. ln youth and beauty, wifdom Zi.f rare. XVI-IST SUBURBAN HOSPITAL ROBERT C. ROOS Hi-Y Club, 2, 3, Pres., 4, Varsity Club, 4, Proviso Players, 4, Latin Club, I, 2, junior Class Play, Senior Class Play, Heavyweight Football, 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. A gentleman o'er and o'er, And a lady'x man, what'.v more. ILLINOIS THEODORE W. ROSENBERG Latin Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Quaestor Primus, 3, Eta Sigma Phi Medal, German Club, 2, 3, Pres., 4, Hi-Y Club, 4, Sophomore Nlathema- tics Club, General Science Club, Ig Chorus, I, Provi Staff, Student Council, 3, Library Page, 3, 4, Silver Scholarship lXIedal, National Honor Society. ! 'fHeroeJ themfelvef have fallen behind lVl1ene'er he went lteforefi HAROLD L. ROSS Chess and Checker Club, 3, 4, Bronze Scholarship lXIedal. Virtue if gold, and goodneyy never fearful. LILLIAN GERTRUDE ROSSBERG German Club, I, 2, 3, O. G. A., 3, 4, Gold Pin, 4. It'f the Jmile that Jlze wean Tlzat dricef away careff' ROBERT W. RUDOLPH Chess and Checker Club, 2, Sec., 3B, Vice-Pres., 3A, Treas., 4B, German Club, 2, 3, Violin Choir, IQ Orchestra, 2, 3, 4, Chicago Chorus, 4. He war a man: taflfe himfor all in all, I Jltall not look upon lzif like againf' WALTER RUSANOWSKI Orchestra, 3, 4, Lightweight Football, 4. '6You will do whatever you think you can. ELBERT SARIPSON Latin Club, I, 2, Silver Scholarship Nledal. He 1.1 true and knowf hit mind, And hir friend! know lze'.r kind. CLlFFORD E. SANDELIN junior Varsity Football, 4. ' To be Qf service rather than to lze rmupieuouf VERNON F. SANDKOHL College Club, 4, Commercial Club, 4. Ile foumifavor with every onef' DONALD A. SANDRO Italian Club, 3, 4, Golf, 2, 3, Bronze Scholarship Kledal, National Honor Society. The very stream of liif life he haf ltelmedf' NORTI-IWESTERN MARY SANTINO Home Economics Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Italian Club, I, French Club, 3, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, 50-word Type Award, Chorus, I, 2, 3, Provi Staff, Silver Scholarship Nledal, National Honor Society. Sincere and-faithful and prompt at every fall. CHICAGO CONSERVATORY or Music THE CLASS OF 1933 CATIHIERINP: SCANIO Italian Club, I, 2, 3, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Science Club, I. 'illwayx up to .rome new joke, CANDIDA SCAVO Chorus, I. She'J' hopeful, that we know, .find doef eaeh tail? juft Jo. JOSEPH SCHAEFER Latin Club, I, Hi-Y Club, 4, Varsity Club, 3, 4, -Iunior Class Play, Paizeant Staff, Editor-in-chief,Swimming, 1, 2, 3, 4, Class Secretary 3, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. He .vita high in all the people': heartff' HARRY RICHARD SCHMIDT College Club, 4, Commercial ClIIb, 4, Cross Country, 3, 4, Track, 3, 4, Swimming, 2, 3. The kind that liver today-- flnd thaff the only wayf' STOUT INSTITUTE ROYAL j. SCHMIDT Philatelic Exchange, 2, Science Club, I, Band, I, 2, 3, 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. There are very few perfony who purfue feience aJ you, with true dignity. DOROTHY D. SCHNEIDER Latin Club, I, Junior Aedile, 3,Tribune, 4, G. A. A., I, 2, Board, 3,4, IZOO-POIIII Award, House of Representatives, 3, Forum, 4, Girls' geague Representative, 2, 4, Home Economics Club, IQ Pageant taff. 'lWhatener The attemptr, ,rhe arromplifheff' ILLINOIS HERBERT C. SCHOBEL Hi-Y Club, 4, Varsity Club, 3, 4, Heavyweight Football, 3. 4, Track, 3. OBERLIN Ulnfoothall he'J a hound: I-I better fellow if notfoundf' VIOLA M. SCHOENFELD Commercial Club, 3, 4, German Club, I, 2. 3, Senior Class Play, Home Economics Club, I, 2, 3, go-word Type Award, O. G. A., Pin. ThiJ girl alwayf doef her part W'iIh a willing, eager heart. ALICE SCHRCHL German Club, I, 2, Home Economics Club, 1, 2, 3, Chorus, IQ Operetta, 3, 4. 'Z-I jolly good mixture. ADAM SCHCLTZ Latin Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Chess and Checker Club, 2, 3, 4, Science Club, I, French Club, 4, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Violin Choir, I,OI'Cl1BStrE1, I, 2, 3, 4, Provi Staff, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. Let me have muxir, dying, and I axle no more delight. LoYo1.A ESTHER M. SCHULTZ Girls' League Representative, 2A, O. G. A., 3, German Club, I, 3, 4, Senior Life Saving, 4, Home Economics Club, 4g Commercial Club, 7 Her gay, good-natured grin, Many afriend, will win. RICHARD F. SEA Latin Club, I, 2, Sophomore Baseball, Mgr. If you could know thi: boy, W'e're .ture lze'd bring you joy. I 11 Page 40 Pagr 541 HE CLASS OF 1933 CLARENCE E. SEEGERS l.atin Club, 1, 2, General Science Club, IQ Senior Science Club, 4, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Forum, 4, Chess and Checker Club, 2, 3, Sec., 4, Violin Choir, I. P!ea,rurf and action niahf the hourt ,vhortfl D12 PAUL ALBERT SESTOKES Orchestra, 3. 'LA quitt,frifndIy lad, W'ho'J izfzw, nffofr fad. CHARLES SHANKER Chorus, I, Commercial Club, I. Many rffeioe odeicfq but only thf wifi proht by it. SAKI SHEIN German Club, I, 2, Chess and Checker Club, I, 2, Orchestra, 1, 2, Provi Stalf, Senior Essay Contest, Bronze Scholarship Kiedal, National Honor Society. ul never .fhrink at thf right of boohxfi NORTHVVESTERN GEORGE E. SH ELDON Spanish Club, 3, Chess and Checker Club, 3, 4, Senior Science Club, 4. A quiet, goodfellow: But .rilenfe har itr yay? MARY ELLEN SHERBERT Girls' League Representative, 2, Latin Club, 2, Junior Aedile, 3, Senior Consul, Eta Sigma Phi Medal, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, Treas., 4, 600-point Award, Student Council, 4, Chorus, 2, Provi Staff, Senior Guard, Debate Team, 3, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. ' 'KYO14 know, Ijurt .ray what I think. W1scoNsxN ANTHONY SHIMANSKI Fenwick High School, Oak Park, Ill., I, 2. A hfro if alwayf tall, you knowf, JOHN A. SIEGLER Hi-Y Club, 4, German Club, I, 2, Varsity Club, 3, 4, Swimming, 1, 2, 3, 4, Track, 2, Student Council, 3, 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. 'AA rwimmrr unfqualecl, a rportfmarz romplftf, A rum one to follow, a had one to bmtf' ILLINOIS MARJORIE H. SIEGLER German Club, 2, 3, Commercial Club, 3, Senior Chorus, 2, 3, 4. A'Shf war good df Jhf war fairf, J. DONALD SlNCLAlR Latin Club, I, 21 Chorus, 2, 3, 4. Ambition i.r nothing to nif.', ELEANOR SKERSTON Home Economics Club, 1, 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, 3. Sniile.r may roms, ,vmilef may go, but her fniile if ftfrzzalf' GENHILD ANN SKOGLUND High School, Dania, Florida, I, Miami, 2, 3. College Club, 3, Home Economics Club, 4, Chorus, 4, Girls' Con- ference, I932-I933, Key Girl. Sho if not fonrciouf of hfr worthf' LAKE FOREST THE CLASS OF 19-33 SYIXIQX Sl,lCliR l rench Club, 2, 3, ,Xrt Club, 1, lg O. G. ,-X.. 1, 2QYlOllI1Cl1Olr, 1, 2, Urchestra, 4. Sl1r krioccxf fhf joy of !i:'1'11g.' l,l'lON,'XRD SXIICDBCRG Chorus, I. 1 harm' Ivzwl thr winzl' and h iflf, and I0l1fft'df01' thfjhy of lazzglzirigf' DOR0'l'lll'l.X li. SNIl'll'i'l'ON Home lfconomics Club, 2, Latin Club, 2, 3, General Science Club, 2, Girls' lrcaguc Representative, 1, 21 Provi Staff, Student Council, Bronze Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. hllff ll0llfJ'f,.f1UI?l1V, mrrryfarf haf won hfrfrirndf in ferry plafrf, Wi-1s'r Srnvunax Hosvrmi. l.0RR,XlXli D. SXIILICY 0. G. ,-X., 3, G. A. .'X., I, 2gl'l0lUCl'lCOI10l1llCS Club, I, 3, 4, Chorus, 1, 7 . 'Q-I youd hfart rad1'alffjny. HENRY XV. SKIl'l'll Senior Science Club, Yice-Pres., 4, Commercial Club, 3, Pres., 4. 'AThr tvimif, hr who hrfp,r111'.fown rou1z.ff1. YICRIA Llili SMITH - High School, Pekin, Ill., I. 0. G. LX., 3, 4, Home lfconomics Club, 4. Sincfr1'tj.' 1171dffl4!'lldl1'IIf.T,f plfaff allfl W,-Xl,'l'l'iR ll. SNIl'l'll Proviso Players, 3, 4, l,atin Club, I, 2, Ili-Y Club, 3, 4, English Cabinet, 2, Varsity Club, 49 junior Class Play, Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Cross Country, Class President, 2,3QSILlClCllI Council, I, 2, Pres., 4, Silver Scholarship Medal. Ilia rfzl hair curly and drawn' him junior girly. l,li0X.'XRD SXIl'l'HL'RS'l' Kelly junior High School, Chicago, Ig Tilclen High School, Chicago, 213, WTO tahr thingy ax rhfy hf: That if my philo,rophy. C.'Xl'iS.-XR SUR'l'lNU l1alianClub, I, 2, Band, 4. I hurry fmt, rzsithfr do I fL'urry.', PRED Rl.'DOl.PH SPINO Chorus, l. 2, 3, 4. JI lilllf man who loam an Ilftillfilflllj, RAYl llCI,IJ Nl. ST,-XI,I,NlAN ulgfllff hf.fnzallaf1d.furf, than large' and fail a shadow. FRANK STARCS W'hm1 I hfcanzz' a man, I put away fhfldifh llziugf. Q Ar Page jl 1,11 THE CLASS OF 1933 NELLIE V. STATKUS Latin Club, I, 2, Tribune, 1, Home Economics Club, 3, Senior Guard, Senior Class Play, Camera Club, 3, Student Council, I, 3, O. G. A., 3, 4,4 Gold Pin, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4, 6oo-point Award, Chorus, 1, 2, Choir, 3, P. E. O. Award, 2, 50-word Type Award, Class Secretary, 4, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society, 3A, 4. She mover a goddeff, and the looley a queen. DOROTHY E. STONE O. G. A., 3, 4, Gold Pin, Commercial Club, 3, Chess and Checker Club, 4, Chorus, 3, 4, 50- word Type Award. There if little cj the melancholy element in her. SELNIA LEE STONE Latin Club, 1, 2, College Club, 4, Camera Club, 4, String Choir, I, Orchestra, 2, 4, Chorus, 4, Student Council, 2, Concert Orchestra, 4. 'A Though murir hath eharnzx, A mufician hath more. COLUMBIA INIUSICAL COLLEGE BERNICE STONIS Home Economics Club, 4, O. G. A., 3, Gold Pin, Chorus, 4. A happy nature if the gift of heaven. ESTHER STRICKLER Arsenal Technical High School, Indianapolis, Ind., I, 2. O. G. A., 3. Her nature it all Junfhinef' DOROTHY ALTA STRUTZEL Trinity High School, River Forest, lll., I, 2. Forum, 4, O. G. A., 3. Her ooife war ever gentle, soft, and low, An excellent thing in woman. EDWARD STUIVIPF Varsity Club, 3, 4, Heavyweight Football, 3, 4. fl Jtudent who .ftrioef in every way To do hir bert in work and play. EVA CHRISTINE SURGES Camera Club, 3, Commercial Club, 3, Home Economics Club, 3, O. G. A., 3. In her heart, at in her eyef, No fold referee, but warm ajection Her. JOSEPH VV. SZABO Sophomore Dramatic Club, German Club, 3, Senior Science Club, 4, College Club, Treas., 4. A tall and quiet, handfome lad, W'ho'.v .vometimef good and Jeldom had. ARMOUR DOROTHY MARIE TAGGART G. A. A., 3, Latin Club, 1, 2, 3, Camera Club, I, 2, 3, Treas., 3B, Pres., 4, English Cabinet, 4, Home Economics Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Vice- sentative, 2A, Chorus, 2, 3, P. E. O. Scholarship Award, I, 2, 3, Gold Scholarship Afledal, National Honor Society, 3A, 4. She never found the bert too good. DE PAUW FERNE TANSLEY G. A. A., 1, 2, O. G. A., 4, Commercial Club, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, 3, 4. 'fllappy am I,'-from fare I'mfree,' Why aren't they all content like nze?l' ALICE B. TANTON O. G. A., 3, Home Economics Club, 4, Chorus, I, 2. '4She waf fmall and flight in perronf' Pres., 3, Board of Directors, 4, Senior Guard, Girls' League Repre- THE CLASS OF 1933 KATHERINE TARRANTS German Club, 2, 3, 43 Chorus, IQ Orchestra, 2, 3, 4. Take me juft H5 1 am. NANCY LORETTA TAYLOR O. G. A., 3, Home Economics Club, 43 Chorus, 1, 2, 3. Calm, fool, and rolleetedf' EDWARD THELIN When he laughf, everybody joinx in ERVIN THIESSE ,Iunior Varsity Football. .4lway.r afriend who will lend a lzarzdf' TREVOR HUGHES THONIAS Senior Science Club, IQ Latin Club, House of Representatives, 3, Forum, Vice-Pres., 4, Spanish Club, 3, 4, Serg't-at-arms, 3, Chorus, 1, 2, Choir, 3, 4. Never trouble frouble fill trouble Lroublef you. ,IAMES THOMPSON Latin Club, I, 2, Managers' Club, 3, Vice-Pres., 4, Varsity Club, 4, Science Club, IQ Swimming Team, Mgr. 4. Ufllake room for I1 man. PURDUE ROBERT G. THOMPSON French Club, 2, Senior Science Club, 4, Managers' Club, 3, Sec., 43 Basketball, Mgr., 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal. Silenee if Ilze ,vleep that 11ouri.flze.v fUl.fd011Z.H WOODROW THOMPSON PleaJe go away and let me Heep. LESTER TOEPPER Orchestra, I, 2, 3, 4. nl friendly .fpirit haf llzif youth. S'rou'r INs1'r'rUTr: MARGARET R. TOLSTED Latin Club, 1, 2, French.Club, 4, G. A. A., r, 2, 3, 4, 1600-point Award,Gen. Science Club, IQ junior Life Saving, I, 2, 3, Senior Life Saving, 4, Student Council, ZA, Girls' League, Zlld. Vice-Pres., 3, Pres., 4, Senior Guard, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society, 3A, 4. And one more gift, a Jmile, Like the piercing beauty of fluff. W1sc0NstN VICTOR TOSTI Lightweight Football, 3, Captain, 4. Thzlv boy wrorzgr none, he if alwayi full offunf' LAURA TREFENS Latin Club, 1, 2, Commercial Club, lg G. A. A., Ig Chorus, 1, 2, 3, 4, O. G. A., Bronze Scholarship Medal. All lzappinex: lveelzanee lo thee. Page 54 THE CLASS OF 1933 1 MARGARET WINAFRED TROEGER l German Club, I, 2, 3, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4, Home Economics Club, 4, Commercial Club, 4, Chorus, I, 2, 4. Bid her have good heart. Provis Board ILLINOIS Senior Life Saving, ALTHEA PEARL Home JOHN R. VICE ILLINOIS PHARMACY Roose 'Alle wean the r point 3, Sen C6 JOHN R. TROIKE High School, Shawnee, Oklahoma, I. o Players, 4, German Club, 4, Commercial Club, 3. 4, Library , Pres., 4. A little nonfenfe now and then Zif reliflred by the bert of men. W1scoNsxN PHILIP R. TROTT Latin Club, I, 2, College Club, 4, Bronze Scholarship Medal. Al man of independent mind. ROBERT V. TRUXAI. Fenwick High School, Oak Park, Ill., 1, 2, 3. Hi-Y Club, 4, Varsity Club, 4, Football, 4. HU eyex :fern gazing far away. VIVIAN TIQRBETT Senior Guard, Home Economics Club, Vice-Pres., 1, Senior Science Club, Sec., 4, College Club, 3, G. A. A., 2, 3,.lLlI1lOI' Life Saving, 2, 3, Chorus, 1. She had lhe grace and charm of l'enu.r. KENNETH R. VAN BORG Student Council, 1, General Science Club, I, Senior Science Club, 3, Commercial Club, 3, Latin Club, 1, 2. A carefree prince of joyf' PURDUE VANDERBIIRG Latin Club, 2, 3, Commercial Club, 3, Home Economics Club, 3, O. G. A., Award, Senior Class Play. A quiet girl and ftudious, loo: Give her all the credit that is due. BESSIE R. VAN TASSEL Economics Club, 1, 2, Commercial Club, 2, 3, O. G. A., 3, 4, Gold Pin, 50-word Type Award. She greelf the frowning old world with radiant fmilef, and it smiley back at her. I am .fure care if an enem to life. 5' . EI LEEN ELIZABETH VIDLUND velt High School, Chicago, 1. Art Club, 2, 3, Provi Art Editor. .Marrfelx from her pencil .fhe drew. CLAREY VOELKER Forum, 4, Senior Science Club, 4, Camera Club, 4, Cheer Leader, 3, ore Qf youth upon hinzf' ALMA VOIGT German Club, 1, 2, Sec., 3, Vice-Pres., 4, G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4, 1200- Award, Home Economics Club, I, 2, Orchestra, 3, 4, O. G. A., ior Guard, Inter-Church Girls' Conference, Vice-Pres. The goodnen of her heart if ,vhown in deedf of peacefulneff and kindnenf' THE CLASS OF 19313 VIRGINIA ROSALYN yoizixs Latin Club, I, 2, Girls' League Representative, I, Senior Chorus, I, 2, 3. g'll'il to pfrfuadf and rlzff'qfulIIe.f5 lo flfllgllfgl HAROLD WARD J ,filfnt man if the wwf! f'ruflfd. PAUL L. WARD Student Council, 2, Commercial Club, 3, Chorus, I. HI only wifh to liw my Ziff and find, My hfart in unison with all mankind. PERSIS ETTA WVARREN Latin Club, I,2g G.A.A., I, 2, Home Economics Club, I.2,3,4,'l'reas., 2, Sec., 3, English Cabinet, I, 2, 3, 4, Sec., 3, Proviso Players, 3, 4, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Senior Guard, Girls' League Repre- sentative, 3, Student Council, I, 2, Chorus, I, 2, Choir, 3, Vice-Pres., 4, Class Vice-President, 3, 4, Gold Scholarship Aledal, National llonor Society. '40h, all the giffx the world ojerf Singly on om' lzfad do t'07V1blIlt'.H ICLMIIURST GILBHRT VVAY Grfa!rr man may haw lived, buf I doubl iff, lLI.INoIs LEONARD YVEBER Alodel Builders' Club, Bronze Scholarship Aledal. ll good finfrrefellow wax hr. Noitriiwissrmtx OPAL WICBIQR German Club, lj G. A. A., 1200-point Award, Commercial Club, I, Chorus, I, 2,Jl1I1lOF Life Saving, O. G. A. To do easily what ix dzficull for Olhfff if Ihr mark of Ialenff' ICXIILY ANNA WICFG O. G. A., 3, 4, Library Stati, 3, 4. J fwffz, artraftizie kind of gram. IRAIA MAE NVFILAND German Club, IQ O. G. A., 3, -lunior Life Saving, Bronze Scholarship Aledal. Not afraid lj work, but not in .fympathy with itfl ALINDA A. WPIISS Luther Institute, Chicago, 2, 3. Commercial Club, 4, Home Economics Club, 4, Chorus, 4, 50-word Type Award, Bronze Scholarship Nledal, National Honor Society. Poetry if the morning dream of grrat mz'1Id.f. RICHARD L. WEISSENBORN Latin Club, I, 2, 3, Sophomore Mathematics Club, Chess Club, I, 2. 3, Pres., 4, General Science Club, I. 'Alle if well paid that if well .fati.vjied. l OTTO P. VVICXTLAND Art Club, IQ German Club, I, Hi-Y Club, 3, 4, Proviso Players, 3, 4, l Chorus, 1, Band, 2, 3, 4, Football, 2, Basketball, 3, 4, O. G. A., 4, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. 1li5quiet manrzxr made' him afriend of all. Pagi' 55 Paw' 56 THE CLASS OF 1933 JOSEPH WVENZEL Camera Club, 3, 4. Alan if man, and mafter of hir fate. RICHARD WESSLING Chess Club, 2, 3, 45 Italian Club, 3, Camera Club, 3, 4, German Club, 2, 3, 4, Chorus, 3, Choir, 4. A glint of white fliekerezl in hir blond lock.v. NORTHWESTERN GEORGE A. WESTERHOFF fart himrelfg no more, no lem. KATHERINE M. WESTRICH Art Club, 1, German Club, I, 2, O. G. A., 3, G. A. A., 3, Orchestra, 4, Bronze Scholarship Nledal, National Honor Society. Charaeler maker it.r own deftinyf' LEO WIEGEL 'llle was ihe rnjldext nmnnered man MARJORIE WILLIS Latin Club, I, 2, 3, Senior Consul, 4, Eta Sigma Phi IVIedal, College Club, 3, 4, Art Club, I, G. A. A., I, Girls' League Representative, 2, Student Council, 4, Gold Scholarship lNIedal, National Honor Society. 4'Wil and humor belong lo geniur alone. CHARLES WILLSON He ir :ure to fucceedf' JAMES REAY VVILLSON Latin Club, I, 2, 3, Aedile, 2, Chess Club, 3, 4, Student Council, 2, 3, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. And Jzill they gazed, and Jtill the wonder grew That one rnzall head could carry all he knew. KIOODY BIBLE INSTITUTE LAURA JEANE WILLSON Latin Club, I, 2, Art Club, I, 2. A'Wi.fe and virluouf and good 1-I she. OLIVET HARRIET ADELIA WILSON Latin Club, 3, College Club, 4. Exeepzion5 prove the rule. VVHEATON THERESA WINNEN O. G. A., 3, Chorus, I, 50-word Type Award. To rnatrh the candle with the Jun. ESTHER WILMA WINTER Commercial Club, 2, 3, 4, Senior Guard, Senior Home Economics Club, 2, 3, 4, Choir, 2, Dramatic Club, 3, Sec., 4, O. G. A., 3, 4, Gold Pin, Latin Club, I, Chorus, 1, Girls' League Board of Directors, 4, Home Economics Club, Board of Directors, 4, Oak Park-Proviso Girls, Conference, Key Girl. HI'ou'rel1'he 'X'- , I1'.r hard to find your equal. AIOSER ALFRED A. WITTICRSHEIM German Club, 2. A man rg' mark. MARTHA WITZKIC Home Economics Club, 3, 4, German Club, 1, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, Silver Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society. A good dirporition it more valuable than goldf' GLADYS ICLICANOR WOLK Spanish Club, 3, Vice-Pres., 4, College Club, 3, 4, Senior Guard, G. A. A., I,2,3,4, 16o0point State League Award, Swimming, Mgr., 4, Senior Life Saving, Chorus, 1, 2. Her grratfrt joy rrfidrf in .rport.f, ln thx C. A. A., and infun of all .rort.f. NoR'r11wHsT1sRN MARGARET E. WONDERLING Camera Club, 3, Home Economics Club, 3, 4, College Club, 4, Latin Club. Happy art thou at rf rvery day thou hadft picked up a 1l0fJ't'5ll0t'.,, D15 KALB JAMES M. WOODMANSEE Camera Club, 3, 4, Hi-Y Club, 3, Treas., 4, Lightweight Football, 4. That thoff who :erm mort .rfriour and good, Uftrn fairly burn with mifchirf, if undrrftoodf' AIICHIGAN LICNORE WRIGHT O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, Girls, League Representative, 4. Art needr no rpur beyond it.feQ'. NoR'r11 CENTRAL l l.ORIiNCIC YOUNG G. A. A., 1, 2, 3, Pres., 4, 1200-POIIII Award, Home Economics Club, Vice-Pres., 2, Sophomore Girls, Club, Pres., Latin Club, 1, 2, Soph- omore Mathematics Club, Student Council, 1, 2B, Chorus, 1, 2, Operetta, 3, 4, Senior Guard, Gold Scholarship Medal, National Honor Society, 3A, 4. Hut thou art good, and at thy birth, dear girl, Naturr and Fortuna joinzd to makr thrr grratf' XVISCONSIN MARY EDITH YOUNG Girls' League Representative, 1. Sec., 4, Latin Club, IQ Student Council, 2, O. G. A., 3, 4, Chorus, 1, 2, Proviso Players, 4, Provi Staff, Senior Guard, Silver Scholarship Nledal, National Honor Society. A Jteaclfaftfrifvzd, loyal and trur, If alwayf happy and neon llluffl NORT11 CENTRAL -IOIIN ZAPFICL Orchestra, 1. t'Thr Jmilh, a .filrut man wax hr, And john followr Juitf' LOUIS JERRIE ZISINFELD Latin Club, 1, Lightweight Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Capt., 4, Football. 4, Baseball, 3. Ile ,thot and .taldom 7'lllf.ffI! tlzr ba.rlert. INORTHVVESTERN CARL I.. ZIICGLICR Chorus, 4. Ono cannot know rwrylltirzgf I1.L1No1s Scuool. or PHARMACY CHARLICS ZILIC I worry not: 'Tir naught but warn' of Iz'mr. ROCCO I.. ZITO Chorus, l, 2. 'Llfor lzopr ir but the dream of tlzofr who walcff' These members of the Class of 1933 had their pictures published in the 1932 Provi : XViIbert Block, Harold Scheel. Mary Catherine Selcer is being graduated with the Class of 1933. Pa ge 58 IN MEMORIAM ALEC BROWN BORN NOVEMBER 24, 1915 DIED DECEMBER 9, I932 ANDREW BALLENT BORN OCTOBER 8, 1914 DIED APRIL 8, 1933 BOTH WERE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1933 .IOHN GRANDI,AXI7 PERSXS XVARREN NIQLLIE STATKUS PHILIP IDOHERTY A NEW PILGRIMS' PROGRESS BEING THE HISTORY or THE CLASS OF I933 BY VVALTE R SMITH ND so it chanced, that, in the historic fall of the Year of Our Lord IQZQ, a goodly number of pilgrims, being the mighty Class of'33,did gather before the Wicket-Gate giving access into the land of Proviso. And they raised aloud their voices, calling to the keeper of the gate for admittance. Then the keeper, hearing them, did come nigh and ask who was there, and whence they came. Whereupon the brave band did cry out in answer that they were seekers of the Celestial City of Graduation, which, it had been told unto them, lay in that way. Too, they revealed to him, that they, having come safely from the City of Destruction, Grade School, wherein they were no longer content to dwell, and having traversed perilous country in which they had escaped the Slough of Despond and other dangers which beset them, were at last come to ask guidance to the Celestial City. The keeper then did smile kindly upon them,and deeming them worthy travel- ers, did grant admittance unto them, because they counted it, to reach their goal, Well worth the running of a few hazardous difficulties. And when they were got within the gate, the keeper beckoned that they come a little way with him that he might point out to them the way they must go. Then he showed unto the eager group a straight and narrow path, saying that it had been cast up by the rulers of the land as the only way to the Celestial City. And he said that there they must go, and not forsake it, for the many ways that abutted down upon it were crooked and wide, and led but to Destruction! So it was, that, when they had taken their leave of the gate-keeper, the host of pilgrims did look about among them for leaders who might safely deliver them through the quagmire of evils and terrors which lay on every hand. Not the least among these difficulties were the troublesome natives which dwelt in the land-the scorned sophomores, the proudful juniors, and the all-wise seniors who did make vainglorious boasts, greatly awing the members of the group. And though these people never ceased in heaping coals of flre and brimstone upon the weary heads of the pilgrims, they, the pilgrims, did go on their way without fear when they had laid the duties of leadership to the lot of Harry Casper, Annetta Young, Gladys Backus, and james Belline. And right nobly and well did the four execute the Page 50 Page 60 mandates of their respective offices, wherefore were their guides deeply pleased because of it. And when the company had gone but a little way on their journey, they came to the foot of the Hill of Difficulty, sometimes called Curriculum, the which when they had seen it did put them in fear and amaze, for the way did lead directly up the Hill. Now there were in the same place two other ways which did turn at the bottom of the Hill, the one to the left, and the other to the right. And alas! There were those who turned aside from the narrow path to set foot in those tempting byways, and so were soon come to Destruction. But many were they who kept in the right way, and in this wise they did escape fearful perils! Soon it was, that, on the honor roll of athletics were clearly inscribed the names of two warriors of the band, the name of the one being Phil Doherty, and of the other, John Grandland. And their perplexed sires were made to worry about their offsprings' strange aptness in running about in the bath. Others among them, the valorous footballers, did receive unto themselves great honor. And in that very twelve month the heavyweight gladiators did wax so exceeding strong as to van- quish, in the fair conflict, the Central High School of Lima, Ohio! Therefore these records do here give mute reminder that the score of that bitter struggle was 32-2, the which did arouse great jubilation in the land. But know ye now, reader, that even as great thought was bestowed by guiding sponsors upon both mind and body of these travelers, so also great care was taken that they might not be made to lose heart while clambering up that steep place, the Hill of Difficulty. And so it was that when they were got to a pleasant arbor made by the rulers of the land for the refreshing of weary pilgrims, they sat down to rest them, and herein did Tom Skeyhill address them concerning one Benito Mussolini, the which was far-famed even unto the bounds of that Great World beyond the Celestial City. Moreover, there was also a certain Rosa Raisa, who did raise her voice in joyful song,the like of which never before was heard in the land. And the band was put in wonder and awe that she of her own ability could do so. But it was written that they might tarry no longer,and theystarted up and sped them on their way. And soon were they come to a place where Lions were chained by the way. Wherefore many were afraid and thought to turn back, for they believed that nothing but Death was before them. But the guides did chide and mock them for being in fear, for they said that the Lions were but Examinations, to be won over by Patience and Will. And then was the band shamed, and they passed easily by the Lions, which did them little harm, but roared and leaped in a fearful manner about them. In truth, Old things were past away, all became new. And so it came that the Class of ,33 did survive the trials and dangers of their first march, the which was verily a good beginning. So when, after nigh onto three months' repose, the hardy pilgrims again addres- sed themselves to their journey, they, knowing full well the low esteem in which many beheld the sophomore, did hurriedly choose leaders to defend them against known and unknown dangers. Soon it was proclaimed in the land that Walter Smith, James Belline, Gladys Backus, and Philip McCabe were those whose grave trust it was to acquit themselves well, each in his own office. The Class of '33, now in the second period of its march to the Celestial Gates, did strive mightily to relieve the dullness of mere journeying by taking up the implements of battle to renew their strong onslaught in all opportunities for zeal and genius, and it is here set down that right worthy of praise were their feats in scholarship, athletics, and music. The gifted ones in the realm of scholarship did joyfully receive medals cast in solid bronze, the which were in proof of their industry and abilities. Wherefore did many look upon them in envy and eagerness, and they decided in their own minds that, by dint of toil and striving, they might gain for themselves a silver or a gold reward, the which were presented to those juniors and seniors who truly merited them. And many were the sophomores, desir- ous of fame in athletic prowess, who were inspired by the gladsome fact that the Proviso company of eleven did humble the proudful players of Everett High School of Massachusetts in a thrilling contest, the which did conclude with a 7-6 victory for the Blue-and-White standard-bearers. Great was the joy and clamor which prevailed! Now, as the pilgrims sped them on their way, their sufferings at the hands of churlish juniors and seniors were to some extent alleviated by reason that they, the Class of '33, were the first sophomores so fortunate as to dwell within the then recently builded Gothic castles, which the rulers of the land had deemed it wise to construct, thus better to shelter the ever-increasing multitudes which did valorously select that way as their means of going to those vague regions, the Great World. And, among the many wonders within the Walls of the new ediflces, there was a library surpassing fine, the splendors of which did cause all to gaze upon them in spellbound awe and appreciation. But, as it was truthfully written: A Christian man is never long at ease, When one fright's gone, another doth him seizef' And, as the band betook themselves on their journey, they were come to the Valleyof Humiliation,wherein they were hard put to itgfor when they had gone but a little way, they espied a foul fiend coming over the field to meet them, and his name was Apollyon. Now it was the purpose of this monster to bar them from the way. And the group, after casting about in their minds whether to go back or stand their ground, remained and met with him, and did engage in sore combat, in which a few of their number did receive slight wounds. And great yelling and roaring did the dragon-beast make all the time of the fight, but at last he was done to the death. Wherefore did the guides, together with all the company, proclaim a festival in honor of their victory. Thus it was that those worthy sophomores did frolic and make rejoicing. And great was the orgy of revelry and banqueting which did prevail beneath the leafy bowers created for the junior Prom. Here also did fair maidens cast devastating and beguiling glances upon those valiants who had captured their fancy. And lo! Even as the belligerent travelers did traverse unscathed the morass of the Slough of Despond and vanquish the heights of the Hill of Difficulty, so too, had they victoriously emerged from the evils besetting them in their sophomore year. So came it to pass, that once again, the travelers, of a mettle now tried and tested in crucibles of fire and brimstone, bestirred themselves after a second long period of respite, and set out on their way. The Class was then, as a result of abundant past experience, even more certain of the course to be pursued, wherefore did they immediately select captains for the third stage of their journey. And it befell that Walter Smith, Persis Warren, Joseph Schaefer, and Frank Hackman did receive various commissions, the which were bestowed upon them by the group. The pilgrims, now molded into a unified legion by not infrequent baptisms of scathing fire, a few of which have herein been recorded, did manfully strive to surpass the awesome achievements of their past two trials, and, by dint of toil and the sweat of their brow, they raised aloft the banner of doughty deeds for all to gaze upon in wide-eyed envy and amaze. Behold! As before, many of the band did apply themselves to scholarship in such wise that the rulers of the land did endow them with silver and, yea, even with gold emblems, the which did show their superiority in intellectual things. But even these symbols were not thought by some to be ample award, so to six of the band-Carwile, Koven, Statkus, Taggart, Tolsted, and Young-were granted memberships in the Proviso Chapter of the National Honor Society. A munificent bounty, indeed! Now it came about that there was much evidence of talent in Music, and among the juniors were many who did show themselves to be possessed of wondrous abili- Pagf 61' Page 62 ties in band, chorus, and operetta. Dramatics, too, were verily not lacking junior aid, inasmuch as thirteen were taken within the fold of the exceedingly exclusive Proviso Players. These and other followers of things Thespian did join in numerous dramatic presentations, the most noted of which were Pink and Patches, and the operetta, Carrie Comes to College? But even these were hard put to match with the Class Play, The Boomerangf' a joyful comedy, the which did seemingly banish dull caref' from amidst the onlookers, for many manifestations of mirth were heard and seen that night, and even Thespian gods on their thrones did chuckle softly as they gazed upon the antics of these, their puppets. Others of the group, the devotees of Hercules, did right masterfully wage hard battles of physical strength and skill, which were without equal in all the land. Chappas, Stumpf,Pries, and Schobel did add much to the glory of Proviso's gridiron expo- nents, and Grandland and Doherty were two whose names were spread abroad, by reason of their abilities in the sports of Neptune, the king of water games, and Mercury, the fleet-footed. But verily, all the aforementioned feats of learning, versatility, and strength were esteemed as naught when came the time for the junior Prom. Here, of a truth, did the juniors come into their own. They, acting as hosts to the then friendly seniors, did hold sway in a vast hall wrought by magic rites into a wondrous setting of Indian design. Lol Gay blankets did adorn the walls, gayer Indian pottery contained abundant greeneries, the mellow glow of dimmed lights did create imag- inary scenes of a shadowed wild wood, bathed in silver beams of a mid-summer mocn-such was the place for that joyous event. The seniors, however, did have occasion to act as hosts to the juniors when, in accordance with the ancient custom of the land, the Informal was held. Here likewise, in different but fitting surround- ings, did dreamy couples sway to music in great wise similar to that of Aeolian harps or, indeed, to that made by the sirens who did attempt to ensnare Ulysses. But, even as all these things were happening, the pilgrims did come nigh unto the Valley of the Shadow of Death, wherein dwelt all manner of demons, hobgoblins, and satyrs, who did, if they were able, waylay and destroy those who durst venture within. But the band, although trembling and afraid, did come out in safety. This and many other things of like nature did they meet and vanquish, until they came in their way to a place from which could be discerned in the distance, the alabaster walls of their goal, the which was the shining Celestial City. There, in that place, did they encamp, thus refreshing and resting themselves, and they did gird themselves in preparation for the last step of their journey. Also they bethought themselves of the doubts and fears which had assailed them in each successive march. And as they did so, they recalled in what marvelous manner they had escaped the fearful terrors and traps which they had met in the way, wherefore did they now plan to make the last mighty effort, one which would end in joyous victory for all. It so chanced, that, as they cast about for leaders of the assault upon the Celes- tial City,they glanced with favor upon john Grandland, Persis Warren, Nellie Statkus, and Phil Doherty. And, at the behest of the Class, the four did solemnly accept their honored positions, the while swearing full allegiance to the cause of the pilgrims. As they had vowed, the band vehemently advanced upon the City, and many were the events which did aid them in their way. A goodly number of seniors were esteemed as worthy of bronze, silver, or gold medals, according to their excellence in scholarship. And, upon a select group, the members of which has distinguished themselves in many and varied ways during the journey, was conferred the high place of membership in the National Honor Society. Magnihcent 'flettersn in the numerous sports of Proviso were, with pomp and ceremony, presented to justly proud warriors, the which did richly deserve them. And there also occurred in that year, the epic battle of giants, for Proviso did meet in lusty combat the warriors of Atlanta Tech. But, alas-the former did come to defeat at the hands of Atlanta, and the scoreboard proclaimed I3'6 at the end of that wearisome fray. But, relaxation and merrimcnt must needs ever be thought of, so, in time, came the senior Christmas festival. Here, beneath an azure sky bedecked with twinkling stars and clouds of fleecy white, finely wrought, the wayfarers did conduct them- selves in light and gay manner amid evergreen trees, the which, being lighted with all colors, did make delightful refiections on the gleaming floor. Then again did the Class gather together, thus to further their acquaintance with manyg but they assembled in a meeting-place beautified with flags of the nation and red, white, and blue streamers, for it was the event of the coming of a new Lord of the nation, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who did take ofiice on the day of March 4. The Senior Mixer and the Junior Prom were occurrences of great moment, therefore did they cause much jubilation throughout the land. Came also the hour for senior Thespians to employ to their advantage all the dramatic talent which was thought by the guides to have lain dormant in them for a considerable time. And they did present their Class play, The New Lady Bantockf, a lively comedy which did cause many patrons to laugh mightily. Oh, Doctor, a riotous operetta, and Bimbo, the Pirate, the English department play, did also receive much acclaim because of their excellence. Yet another event of renown was the senior essay contest, which was held to commemorate the anniversary of the death of a certain celebrated English literary man, Sir VValter Scott. And so it was that Sam Shein did deservedly capture first honors in that clash of skill and Wizardry of the pen. Then the courageous Class of ,33 did at last draw nigh unto the portals of the Celestial City, and, being in profound wonder and amaze that they had come to the end of their journey, did with sober mien enter into the gates, the which were thrown wide for them. Clothed in the manner of the City, in cap and gown, did they invade its Wallsg where they found that this goal, for the attainment of which they had met with countless hardships, was but a phantom city, whose gates did open directly upon the Great World, the which did seem to them shorn of all glamor, and revealed, bleak, dismal, and forlorn. But this Class of '33 did gaze back upon four years of wonder, fear, happiness, and successg and as they gazed, they did lose themselves in realms of sweet memories and tender reverie. They gave thanks and WCFC COIIICIII. I HAVE WONDERED By BERNICE ELFTMANN I have often wondered- God- If you ever felt discouraged, Moving through darknerr without light, Through chaos withoutforrn, Laboring to make a heaven and earth, Lahoring, waiting, Jtruggling, in the dark, Moving over troubled waterf- Were you Jometirnex troubled yourrelf? Pa ge 64 WHO'S WHO IN THE CLASS OF 1933 THE FOLLOWING STUDENTS HAVE BEEN CHOSEN BY THE FACULTY AS THE MOST OUTSTANDING IN THEIR CLASS ITALO BALDASERONI LILLIAN BUENGER PAUL COFFMAN PAUL FLECK AUDREY FREDERICKSON SEYMOUR FRIEDMAN JOCELYN GILL REINHOLD AUER LEONA BILLINGER BRUNHILDE BIRKIGT EVANGELINE CAI-'I-'ERO IX IARY FRANCES CARWILE HARRY CASPER TVIARIE COOK RUTH DAVIDSON SCHOLARSHIP Gold M edalf ARTHUR KOVEN FRANCES KRACAI,IK MARTIN LARSON PHILIP MCCABE DOT PEARY IVIARJORIE REISZ JOSEPH SCHAEFER Silver Medal: MARIE DOERR PEARL DREWS SHIRLEY FIELDSE CATHERINE GADEN RUTH HARDT ADELINE HOWARD RUTH JEDIKE NICOLINA LASPISA DOROTHY MAIWURM SPECIAL HONORS NELLIE STATKUS DOROTHY TAGGART MARGARET TOLSTED PERSIS WARREN MARJORIE WILLIS JAMES WILLSON FLORENCE YOUNG LAVERNE NIISCHNICK CAROL PETERS THEODORE ROSENBERG MARY SANTINO WALTER SMITH OTTO WENTLAND MARTHA XVITZKE IVIARY EDITH YOUNG JOSEPH SCHAEFER ITALO BALDASERONI INTARGARET TOLSTED -IOHN GRANDLAND VVYALTER SMITH . SAM SHEIN . . . Pageant, Editor-in-chief Provi, Editor-in-chief Girls' League Prefident Senior Clan Prefident . Clan' Hiftorian . Scott Exsay Award MUSIC GLADYS ALLEN . . Piano FRANCES KRACYALIK . Clarinet DIARY FRANCES CARWILE . Vocal CONSTANCE MARSH . Flute ROBERT DAVID . . . Clarinet GORDON NEWTON . Trombone JOHN GRANDLAND . . Trombone DON ONORATO . Alto Sax CHARLES HARLAN Baritone Sax ROBERT RUDOLPH Viola ROBERT JONES . . Trombone ROYAL SCHMIDT . Clarinet HERBERT KOHOUTEK . Vocal OTTO WENTLAND Piccolo WHO'S WHO IN THE C ART EILEEN XFIDLUND DRAMATICS CAROL PETERS SERVICE ARTHUR KOVEN . . NICOLINA LASPISA . . THEODORE ROSENBERG . DOROTHY TAGGART . JOHN TROIKE . . KATHERINE XVESTRICH L A S S O F 1 9 3 3 MECHANICAL ART HOWARD BURHOP EDWARD HOLLAND HENRY PFLAUM ROBERT Roos English Cabinet Secretarial Work Library Service . English Cabinet . Library Service Clerical Assistance GIRLS' ATHLETICS DOROTHY BLOOM . . Basketball, Baseball, Volleyball MARIE DOERR . . Basketball, Baseball, Volleyball IRENE GRADY .... Basketball, Swimming DOROTHY SCHNEIDER . . Basketball, Baseball, Hockey FLORENCE YOUNG . . . Baseball, Volleyball BOYS' ATHLETICS RIELVIN BARSEMA .... Heavyweight Basketball, Baseball JULIUS CHAPPAS . . Heavyweight Football, Heavyweight Basketball, Baseball PHILIP DOHERTY . . JOHN GRANDLAND . JOHN MORSE . RAY PRIES . . . HERBERT SCHOBEL . . . . Heavyweight Football, Swimming, Track . . . . . . . . Swimming . Heavyweight Basketball, Heavyweight Football, Baseball . . Heavyweight Football Heavyweight Football, Track ATTENDANCE Seniors neither absent nor tardy in four years Girls ELEANOR HALL NIARY SANTINO PERSIS WARREN Boys KENNETH JOHNSON ROBERT DAVID , HERBERT KOHOUTEK MARTIN LARSON Page 65 Page 66 PROVISO TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL IYIAYWOOD, ILLINOIS COMMENOEMENT PROGRAM, lXIay 21-26 Sunday, May 21, 8:00 P. M. BACCALAUREATE SERYICE Processional March I I A E Address . . REV. R. A. HARRIS Recessional lNIarch MUSIC BY HIGH SCHOOL ORCHESTRA Tufsday, May 23, 2:30 P. M. Play, The Diabolical Circle ..... SENIORS Axe Ceremony . . . JOHN GRANDLAND, NORMAN KELLY Presentation Of Class Gift . . . . JOHN GRANDLAND Presentation of Provi . ITALO BALDASERONI Music . . . . . SENIORS Friday, May 26, 8:30 P. M. GRADUATION EXERCISES Processional, POrnp and Circumstance' '.... Elgar Address ...... DR. CHARLES M. THOMPSON Presentation Of Diplomas . LESLIE B. ALLEN, Prefidfnt of Board Recessional, War lWarch Of the Priestsn . . . Mfndelxsohn Clary Motto Act well your part, there all the hOnOr lies. Clan Color: Cardinal and Gray KENNETH SMITH I TORMAN KELLY XIARIAN BACKUS HARVEY WATERS WHO'S WH IN THE CLASS OF 1934 THE FOLLOWING STUDENTS HAVE BEEN CHOSEN BY THE FACULTY As THE MOST OUTSTANDING IN THEIR CLASS CHARLOTTE ANDERINIIXNN JOHN BAUMGART RUTH BAUSPIES NORMA BLOOMBERG DELLA BOEGER ELEANOR BOEGER JAMES BOUGHTON ADELINE CHRISTENSEN SCHOLARSHIP Gold Medal AIILDRED BRADY Silver Medal: ADA FLETCHER AIILDRED FLOTOW ALICE GILL HENRY JACKSON LUCILLE JESCHKE VIRGINIA JONES NIARY KARLSON NORMAN KELLY EVA KOSCHMANN ESTHER LOSSIN DOROTHY IXIAHNKE LOUIS IXIARCHI AIARY OILL GEORGE PALKA WILLIAM RENCE EMILY VVESTERHOFF VIRGINIA VVHEATLEY MUSIC HENRY JACKSON Cornet CARLTON RIECR . . Alto Sax RUTH KILBEY . , Piano HELEN STEFFENHAGEN . . Vocal ESTHER LOSSIN . Cello EDMUND AFOLKMANN . . Oboe LOUIS NIARCHI . Tuba LUCILLE XVALLINGSFORD . Piano ROSA LEE OSBURN . . Piano WILLIAM XYEICHLEIN . . Banoon DRAMATICS IXIARIAN BACRUS BETTY LEE ROBERTSON SERVICE NORMAN KELLY . . . Englixh Cabinet VVILLIAM RENCE ...I. Engliyh Cabinet GIRLS' ATHLETICS IXIARY EAST . . . Hoekey, Baxketball, Baseball HELEN HALL ..... Hockey, Bafketball ELEANOR NIELIIAN .... Hockey, Bayketball BOYS' ATHLETICS RAYMOND CROLL .... Football, Bayketball JOHN ZXIIZEN ..... Football, Bafketball XVALTER PEARSON . Football, Basketball, Traek VINCENT PETERSON . . . Football, Baxeball HERMAN SALZBRENNER . . . Football, Wrestling VVILLIAM VVATTERS . . Football, Bafketball, Track AV Page 68 JACK LAROCCO DAWN ERICKSON SHIRLEY FINE CLIFFORD CLARK WHO'S WHO IN THE CLASS OF 1935 THE FOLLOWING STUDENTS HAVE BEEN CHOSEN BY THE FACULTY AS THE MOST OUTSTANDING IN THEIR CLASS ELEANOR ARNDT AGNES BAILEY MARGUERITE BAILEY JUNE BRUNKE CHARLES CAMP ROY CARLING SYLVIA CATENACCI GWENDOLYN CORBETT YEDDA DORF BONNIE ERNST SHIRLEY FINE KEAWANA GARMAN SCHOLARSHIP Silver Medal EVELYN IXXIEGGELIN Bronze Medals ALFRED GLAESS JANE GUSTAFSON FRANCES HAY DOROTHY HOHE REX HORTON DOROTHEA HUXHOLD MARION KELSTROM DONALD LEAL IDA LITKE HILDA IXITAHNKE CHARLOTTE POPP IXIARION PTOLEMY LORA PUSCHECK GEORGINE REAY FLORENCE RITTMUEL CATHERINE ROBB ERNA SCHROEDER ROGER SEDGWICK LEO SEREN AARON SPOLIN CHARLOTTE STRONG JEAN STUBBINS ELVENA ULRICH LILLIAN YOUNG LER MUSIC EVANGELINE BUCH . ..- Piano 'EDNA KINGDON . . Violin BEN COYTE . Vocal ETHEL KINGDON . . Cello RUSSELL CURRIE Clarinet IYIELVIN KORRELL . . Violin FRED GADEN . Violin JEANNE NOTTINGHAM . . Violin KEAWANA GARMAN . . Violin HARRIET SHILKAITIS . . Marimba DONALD KANE . . Bay: Viol ALFRED SMITH . . . Violin GORDON KENNETT . Flute HERRICK VAN GUNTEN . . Vocal ANTHONY VTIRZI . . French Horn SERVICE HILDA IXIAHNKE .... Englifh Cabinet KENNETH ROCKEFELLER . . . Englixh Cabinet GIRLS' ATHLETICS SHIRLEY FINE ...,. Bafketball, Bafeball, Swimming SHIRLEY JAMESON . . . Hockey, Baxketball, Bafeball, Swimming DOROTHY KLUPPING .,.. Hockey, Barketball, Baseball GEORGINE REAY . Hockey, Dancing GEORGE FLOOD . XKVILLIAM JOHNSON JACK LAROCCO . JOHN TIEFENTHAL . BOYS, ATHLETICS ' Football, Baxketball, Football, Basketball, . . B afketball, Baseball Baxeball Football Bafeball IJ-LROY Fox XIAY CLEMENT BETTY XYGUNG f'I1HOMAS JESCHKE WHO'S VVHO IN THE CLASSOPW1936 'I TIXE FOLLOVVING STUDENTS HAVE BEEN CIIOSEN BY THE FACULTY AS TIIE MOST OUTSTANDING IN THEIR CLASS A52 SCHOLARSHIP Perfect Seal Record BEATRICE ARRA GEORGE CASPER XIATALIE NOURSE URSULA BIRKIGT JUNE EHRMAN DAVID PFLAUM LILLIAN BRECKENFELDER FRENCH HARD TY ELFRIEDA XVEISS GERALD BRUCE VIRGINIA JOHNSON ROSEMARY XYILEY 'Df.fIg..,wa' ' ' I W De'-5 1 , MUSIC . . . Vocal RUBY SHAW . Piano HARRY FLACIISBARTII . . Violin GIRLS' ATHLETICS BEATRICE AIILLER .... Soccer, Bafleetball, Volleyball THERESIX VAN DER AIOLEN . . Soccer, Baflzetball, Volleyball BOYS' ATHLETICS ' CAIN DANDRIDCE . . Football, Baxketball HOWARD TIIELIN . Football, Bafketball AAS Pa ge:69 x ff 1-.11--,,, -'L xx ff Jf' v 1 ,..-l..-.L--1 s-49? wiv? 77'-1, fi' fy 5 Q 4 rf .. fl M V1 Q' az-1-' ,ffi ,?:. Sig' 3 C J: xr :ff ,. iw' h . 1-. fll3AllbllE5llNlllIDAllR THE LEGEND OF 1933 By STARR CALDWELL Should you ask me, whence these stories, Whence these legends of our progress, VVith traditions of our Wigwam, Mighty Wigwam of Proviso, I should answer, I should tell you, From the home of a great nation, From the nation of the four tribes, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, Freshmen. Ye who love a nation's legends, Ye whose hearts are with Proviso, Listen to this quaint old story, Legend of Nineteen Thirty-Three, Stay and read this rude inscription, Read my song about my nation. SEPTEMBER 6.-Open wide thy mighty portals, Open wide thy giant wigwamg Let the tribes of old Proviso Gather at her friendly fireside. 9.-Here at last we have a picnic, In the woods a Girls' League party. 21.-Then we name the Senior Chieftains, Grandland, Doherty, Statkus, Warren. 22.-Now the war dance of the pigsking Pep assembly in the Great Room Stirs the blood of all the nation. 23.-Freshman maidens hold big picnic By the side of Running Wlater. 24.-Proviso battles with the pigskin, Conquers over tribe from southward, Conquers over Riverside. OCTOBER 3.-Pep assembly in the Great Room, Proviso on Suburban warpath, Out to win Suburban title, Cherished championship of pigskin. Page 71 Page 72 Blue-and-VVhites go to XVinnetka, Conquer over team on Lake front, Conquer mighty old New Trier. -G. A. A. then holds a mixer, Open House to tribes in Great Room. -Alas, alas, our tribe is beaten, Evanston attacks on home grounds. -Junior leaders chosen promptly, Kelly, Smith, Backus, and VVaters. -Proviso puts on all her war paint, Beat Morton,', in pep assembly, Proclaims aloud her bloody War cry. -On our campus hlorton triumphs, Triumphs over poor Proviso. -Heap big singer in the Great Room, Singer from the great Grand Opera, Signor David D'Orlini. -Pals meet pals in boys' gymnasium, English Cabinet holds a conference. Now you lazy, loafing senior, Get you started on your essay, Essay on Sir VValter Scott. NOVEMBER -Speeches, parades, meetings, dancing, Preparing for Atlanta Game, Nlighty tribe from suthur1 Georgian Comes to battle with Proviso. -Great sun god looks over battle, Sees Proviso take a beating. -Armistice program held for nation, Speeches by our VVorld VVar Veterans. -Great Oak Park tribe takes a Whipping At the hands of Old Proviso. -Junior tribesmen stage production, Mrs Bumpstead Leighw is given. -Now our nation gives its thanks, Big assembly in the Great Room, Baskets given to the poor folks. VVe, Proviso, offer thanks. -Alumni hold a dance in boys' gym, All old warriors reunited. DECEMBER Sons and fathers round the campfire, Listen to a talk on football, At a banquet for all sportsmen, Listen to the mentor, Hanley. 18. 16.-Senior tribe enjoys night dancing, IQ.- Christmas party in gymnasium. -Seventh Annual Nlaywood Chorus Gives a concert in the Great Room. Papooses entertain their parents. 20.-Proviso's singers hold their concert, Christmas concert in the Great Room. Spirit reigns in hearts of nationg Dollies given to the sick ones, Little children in the Hospital. 21.-Glee pervades the nation's feelings, Proviso Girls, League holds a party. JANUARY I3.'ixI3tiHCC dance in gymnasium. 14.-Proviso Physicists visit ice plant, 19.- zo.- View the works in Hines Hospital. In the social room a drama Tournament is by the footlights, And at last the winner's chosen, 'Op O' Me Thumb,', the best is voted, Lauded to the very echo. Thirty-Three's Provi Staff is chosen, Hearty warriors for this task. Tribe from northward beats Provisog Evanston conquers all our cagers. Morton conquers over wrestlers, But our mermen splash to victory, Fleet as salmon in the waters, Proviso's swimmers take the honors. Big Chiefs of nation have yuletide party, 27.-Band Concert to all comers Leaves our hearts soothed by sweet music. FEBRUARY 5 'Across the hills, the music Hoating, Music from our fine musicians Iinchants the peopleof our nation With a concert in the Great Room. 17, 18-Drama plays a part in nation, P. T. A. plays in the Great Room. junior Pals meet one another, Mystery, at last is ended. IQ.-AHOthCf Band Concert is given 20. To the nation in the Great Room. -We listen to a mighty warrior, VVarrior Charles E. Lofgren, Chieftain in the great expedition Under Commander Richard Byrd. Page 73 Page 74 7, 8. 2I. 22. 29. 4. MARCH -Lo! The strains of rhythm dying, In the palace of syncopationg Evening party held for seniors, Evening party in gymnasium. Proviso fourth in Suburban Track Meet, Braves of nations hold big contest In the field house of our rivals, Garner fourth place at Oak Park. 5.-Symphonic Program in the Great Room, Given by the band and graduates. 16.-P. T. A. again holds council, 16, I Council of the folks, assembly, Listen to a noted lecturer, Dr. Palmer on '4Better Citiesf' 7, 18.-Older boys now hold a conference, Sixteenth annual district conference. 20.-Faculty Warriors under hatchet, Scalped in caging by P. G.'sg Juniors and Seniors hold a tusselg Seniors tomahawk the foe. 24, 25.-Band Contest is held in Wigwam, Proviso gets superior rating. Many soloists ranked superior, Proviso's proud of her musicians. Nlaidens stage a mammoth program For the Forest Park Woman's Club. 25.-Singers enter Chicago Chorusg I. I3, I Orchestra players in great symphony. APRIL -Hi-Y members hold a party, Have an evening of social dancing. -Artists stage an operettag Great production in the shelter, In the shelter of admirers Colorful Oh, Doctor they stage. 7.-Nation has an Easter recess, All the tribes are given freedom, Freedom from the nation's Wigwam, Free access to land begun. 7 -Seniors hold a play in Great Room, Hilarious laughter fills the Wigwam As they see The New Lady Bantockf' -Band holds dance to raise some Wampum Evening dance in Nlaywood Armory. History classes go on journey, Journey to Lake Michigani, To Chicago Historical Society. -Juniors, Seniors have a mixer, Night of fun is held in Wigwam, Dancing, laughing, and light feasting In the council of the two tribes. MAY 5.-Into old Proviso's Wigwam Come the artists very silent, Silent till their music sweetly Echoes over all the Wigwam. 6.-Ever faster, faster, faster, 11.--P. T. A. holds its last meeting, Election for new chiefs is held. National Honor conferred on warriors, VVarriors of Proviso's Wigwam, W'arriors who have served Proviso. 12.-Commercial Club holds its fine banquet In the Wigwam of Proviso. 13.-Orchestra journeys to Sterling Morton Participates in State contest. 16.-Tribe of Freshmen holds assembly, Displays the talent of its Warriors. 16, 17, 18, 19.+All the students of the drama Hold their tournament in Wigwam, People from all over nation Come to see the drama players. 19.-Juniors, Seniors, hold a party, Great festival of the twelve moonsg Juniors bid farewell to Seniors In the council hall of the four tribes. 20.-On the morrow come the Sophomores, With their party in the ballroom. 21, 26.-Comes the Week of big Commencement, Week of joy and celebration. 21.-RCVCFCHd Harris speaks to Seniors In the Baccalaureate service. 23.-Seniors revel in Class Day ceremonies, Day of life for Senior warriors, Ax and Provi presented to Wigwamg Play: The Diabolical Circlef, 26.-To the Seniors, Charles M. Thompson Utters Words of inspiration, W'ords to cheer them on their pathway As they fare forth from Proviso. Other events are soon forthcoming, Proviso expects good news from contests, To be held in month of June. My legend now is at its ending. Tales of nation follow closely Follow in the long procession, And in the annals of the ages, In the Progress of Proviso For the year of Thirty-Three I place now this new edition, Place it in a tomb of pages, Pages of our nationls volume, As a record of the past year. 7 Pagf 75 IIQLA ffl BAND SOLOISTS Twp RnwfHx'r:m1, LEE, NIARCHI, longs, CIRIZDITY, SCHMIDT. SA1.vA'1'mu. .llfdriff RUTZYYRII-ICR, Xuwrox, ONORATO, XVEICHLILIN, xlzxcksox, KAk1.sux. lfnfmm RrfwfCI.z-:A11-:NT, BURIIOP, HE11., NIARSH, SKII.KAI'I'IS, ORCH1iISTRfX RICPRI4Sl'IX'l1Yl'1YIiS lffp RfJfC liANI-I, cjKliDI'I'Y, UAIJ1-LN, SA11'r11, Ill'DULI'Il, K0kRrg1.1,, Nliwrox, Luckr liffffffm Roca'-Xo'1 1'1NUHAA1, I','I'111-:L lxlxcznox, IQDNA lxxxcsnox, QJARAIAY. THE OPERETTA TWUSIC DEPARTNIENT HIC music department of Proviso has not lessened its activities this year, but has on the other hand added a new activity in its participation in the In-and- About Chicago Music Festival. The contributions of the vocal organizations, the choir, and junior and senior choruses, were varied. The choir and the orchestra presented the annual Christmas concert on Tuesday evening, December 20. During the year the choir offered several Sunday evening concerts at neighboring churches, and the theater orchestra furnished music for various assembly programs. On hlarch 25 Proviso sent fifty- six vocalists to the In-and-About Chicago chorus, directed by R. Lee Osburn, and thirteen members to the In-and-About Chicago orchestra, which presented a concert at Orchestra Hall. To finish their activities, the choir and the orchestra presented the operetta, Oh, Doctorlf' on April 7, and assisted by the senior chorus gave the annual spring concert on hlay 5. The orchestra, under the direction of Wvallace Nelson, has continued its good work this year, and the violin choir has produced able players for the orchestra. Proviso sent orchestra, soloists, and ensembles to the state contest at Sterling Morton High, May 13. The orchestra and several soloists ranked first. The band opened its year with active work on football selections and field ma- neuverings. Then followed a series of concerts, one the evening of January 27, one the afternoon of February 5, and another on Sunday, February 19. The climax of this series was an alumni concert given Sunday afternoon, March 5. Proviso then entered ninety players in the band and nineteen in the solo contests in the North- east lllinois District contest on Klarch 24, 25. Three bands, Waukegan Township High, Deerfield Shields High, and Proviso Township High, were given superior rating and entered the state contest April 27-29. Proviso also placed twelve so- loists and four ensembles in the superior class to represent the school at the state contest. At the State contest, Proviso's band won a first group rating in both concert and sight reading. The following soloists and ensemble players won the right to partic- ipate in the National contest in June: Trombone, Robert Jones, Gordon Newton, Cornet, Henry Jacksong Saxophone,Carlton ReichgPiano, May ClementgWoodwind ensemble: VVilliam Weichlein, Edward Volkman, John Kracalik, Franklin Jacobson, Brass ensemble: Henry Jackson, Julius Credity, Carl Karlson, Robert Jones, Gordon Newton, Louis Marchi. Pflilf' 77 ff THE SENIOR CLASS PLAY HE senior class of Proviso presented The New Lady Bantock, on Friday evening, April 21. The play by the well-known playwright, Jerome K. Jerome, had a very wide appeal to the audience. It is a comedy of English lifewhichoffered an opportunity for some very humorous moments which were made the best of by the cast. Fanny, the new Lady Bantock, stepped from the musical hall stage to the drawing room of an English country estate, where she found that her servants were all relatives of hers who had never approved of her. Complications arose when her uncle, the butler, tried to train her for her new position. Her stage manager, Newte, had plans for reconciling her relatives, a most upright family, but Fanny tried to settle her own problems by discharging the whole staff of twenty-three servants. Lord Bantock finally realized that marrying one's own butler's niece was not such a crime after the hlisses lvetherell confess the truth about the first Lady Bantock. The cast consisted of: The Misses Wetherell . . AUDREY FREDERICKSON, DOROTHY BI.ooIvI Doctor Freemantle ...... STARR CALDWELL Susannah Bennet . . . Martin Bennet . . . Vernon YVetherell, Lord Bantock Fanny .... Jane Bennet . Ernest Bennet . George P. Newte . Honoria Bennet . Our Ernpire : . DOROTHY NTAIWURM CHARLES HARLAN JOHN GRANDLAND . CAROL PETERS ALTHEA XXJANDERBURG . FRANK NEWELL . ROBERT Roos . . VIRGINIA GIST England . PERSIS NVARREN Scotland . ESTHER VVINTER Ireland . NIARJORIE REISZ Wales . . BIARJORIE WILLIS Canada . , RUTH JUSTUS Strait Settlement . ISABEL LEES Australia . . LoRETTo KELSEY New Zealand AIARGARET TOLSTED Africa . . . NIARJORIE F1sI-IER India . . . NELLIE STATKUS Newfoundland . . VIVIAN TURBETT Malay Archipelago . . . VIOLA SCHOENFELD The understudies were: Marjorie Fisher, Marjorie Reisz, Philip McCabe, Frank Hackman, Sam Evernden, Virginia Gist, Alma Voigt, Edward Fanning, Marjorie Willis. Lillian Buenger was the book-holder. The cast was under the competent direction of Miss Cecil Stark, director of dramatics at Proviso, who has coached many Proviso successes. The fine acting, artistic setting, and authentic costuming, combined with excellent feeling for character, made the play a produc- tion long to be remembered. The student committees and faculty supervisors are to be commended for their help in producing a finished production. The faculty supervisors were: Art, Miss Marm, Costumes, Miss Duvall, Properties, Miss Phelan, Music, Mr. Osburn, Programs, Miss Norman, Printing, Mr. Brennen, Tickets, Mr Johnson, Publicity, Miss Otis, Mr. Marshall, Mr. Law, Ushers, Mr. Baer. The student committees consisted of: Costumes: Esther Winter, chairman, Marjorie Reisz, Marie Doerr, Ruth Justus, Grace Buyer, Howard Burhop, Wesley Davies, Orville Paulsen, Properties: Ruth Davidson, chairman, Marie Cook, Philip Doherty. Theodore Rosenberg, Leonard Dubin, Stephen Patchell, Dorothy Taggart, Art: Lynn Dawson, Lorraine Smiley, Jeane VVillson, Fern Kennedy. Page 79 JUNIOR CLASS PLAY HIL Class of I934 presented for its aIIIIual dramatic project, Mrs, Bumpstead- Leigh, a sparkling comedy by Harry James Smith, on Friday, November 18, IQ32, in the high school auditorium. The players proved equal to the demands ofthe play and WOI1 praise for their brilliant performance under the able direction of Kliss Cecil Stark. The cast consisted Of: Nina . . . JOYCE HEII,EINIANN Anthony Rawson . . . IRVING VVEEC. Kitson . . EDMUND XvOLKMANN Justin Rawson . . EVAN GAUTHIER Geoifrey Rawson . . XYALTER PEARSON Bliss Rawson . . . . TXIARIAN BACKUS Klrs. Leavitt . . . ELIZABETH RIENDEIXU hlrs. Bumpstead-Leigh . BETTY LEE Robertson Xlrs. De Salle . . . . .AUDREY POLLITZ Yiolet De Salle . DOROTHY RIILLER Rlr. Leavitt . . XYILLIAM RODGER Pete Swallow ..... LOUIS MARCIII The understudies Were: Isabelle Ther, Arlene Rupietta, Helen Christiansen, Hazel Belleau, Wiilliam Rence, VVilbert Wolff, Edward Grieve. Lucille Jeschke was the official book-holder for the play. Credit is due to the various committees and faculty supervisors who performed the work necessary to produce the finished presentation. The faculty supervisors were: Art, Miss Nlarmg Costumes, Nliss Duvall, Klake-up, Xlr. Immelg Properties, Xliss Phelan, Stage Manager, hlr. Goodwin, Klusic, Xlr. Osburng Programs, Kliss Reiningag Publicity, Klr. Law, Tickets, Xlr. johnson, Ushers, hlr. Baer. The chairmen of the student committees were: Art, Carl Guineyg Properties. Alfred Rockefeller: Costumes, Helen Christiansen. l GIRLS' LEAGUE NDILR the leadership of the officers, president, Xlargaret Tolsted, vice-presi- dent, Constance Brown, second vice-president, Rosa Lee Osburng treasurer, Anita Gustafson, and secretary, hflary Edith Young,and ably guided by the Dean, Miss Oakes, the Girls' League pushed forward and completed another happy, interesting, and successful year. Committee chairmen were: social, Audrey Fredericksong service, Ruth Davidson, finance, Esther Vliinterg publicity, Ruth Giaverg program, Nlarie Cook. The ETSI Girls' League activity of the year was a gay evening dance on October 15. Sunshine Pal Week for residents of the Baptist Old People's Home was held during the last week in October. On Friday evening a party was held at the Home where each girl was presented to her pal. Junior Pal Vlieek was supported by the entire group of junior girls. Each girl had a pal to whom she sent notes and letters, concealing her identity until the party at the end of the week. Perhaps the most outstanding event was the Girls, League Carnival. The halls and the many booths were richly decorated in bright colors. An amusing play, a gypsy fortune teller, a photographer, Spanish entertainers, clowns, and a fish pond were a few of the numerous attractions. Proceeds of this Carnival were turned over to the Girls' League Scholarship fund. As in previous years, the League spread Christmas cheer by decorating and distributing Christmas trees to veterans at the Speedway Hospital, and by donating many dolls and scrapbooks to the shut-in children at the Cook County Hospital. The series of informal teas given by the League for every girl in school was a new project presented this year. Short programs started the teas promptly at 3130 P.M., after which dancing was enjoyed and refreshments were served. Some programs consisted of original skits, others, of talent features, and still others, of interesting speeches presented by outside speakers such as hlisses Hazel and Louise Chou, Chinese students at Rosary College. The lovely spring-Hower installation ceremony was presented for the new Girls' League officers of1933-1934. This inspiring service climaxed the year's activities. Pagf S 1 Page 612 THE 1933 PROVI STAFF EXIBERS ofthe Provi Staff Were selected from among fifty-seven applicants. They Were chosen because they desired to be on the staff, they were in the upper third of their class scholastically, and they Were recommended by the faculty. The following students Were members of the staff: ITALO BALDASERONI ...... Editor-in-Chief ARTHUR KOVEN AND SEYMOUR FRIEDMAN . . Afxoeiate Editor: BERNICE ELFTMANN ....... Organizaziom XIARIE COOK, PHILIP DOHERTY, PAUL FLECK, DOROTHY NIAIWURM, THEODORE ROSENBERG, TXIARY SANTINO, ADAM SCHULTZ, DOROTHEA SMEETON ..... Senior Committee IXIARY IXIARGARET JOSLYN . . Faculty AIARY EDITH YOUNG . . . . Girlr' Activities AIARJORIE REISZ ...... Special Activizie: STEVE PATCHELL AND XYALTER HENRY . . . Boyf' Athletic: STARR CALDWELL, AIARY ELLEN SHERBERT, SAM SHEIN . Featurer PEARL GROSS AND NICOLINA LASPISA .... Typifts ART STAFF EILEEN YIDLUND, CHAIRMANQ THOMAS HURLEY, RUTH GIYXVER, NATALIE REICH, CONSTANCE BRONVN LEWIS FRANCO ........ Mounting ORVILLE PAULSEN ...... Snapfhot Editor SUBSCRIPTION AND CIRCULATION LEONARD DUBIN, CHAIRMANQ SIDNEY BERMAN, GOTTFRIED IXIARTIN, EDMUND XPOLKMANN, BERTRAM KAHN ADVERTISING STAFF CHRIST KEMPF, RIXYMOND FROSS, ROBERT KOLB, ALFRED XVITTERSHEIM, HARRY FINK Kliss Florence I. Otis, supervisor of the publication, Was assisted by lXIiss Eileen Viihite. The other supervisors Were: Nliss Viiilhelmina Alarm, artg Harry Stegman, mounting, B. Vilagner and Ii. F. Cameron, business and advertising. V vi f if , Oo ,N LIBRARY BOARD AND STAFF OFFICERS OF THE BOARD JOHN Taoikrz . Prerident PAUL COFFM.-xx . Vice-Prffidmzt RACTICAL experience in library work is afforded the members of the Library Board and Staff. Both the board and the staff are composed of students who are willing to work, and whose character is unimpeachable. The duty of the board members is to act as library monitors. During each period of the day, before and after school, four monitors are on duty, with the power to give written warnings to students who persistently violate the rules of the library. Monitors at the door see that all books are withdrawn in the proper manner. The staff, consisting of twenty-three members from the upper classes, assist the co-librarians, Kliss Bessie Amundson and Xliss Frances E. Hammitt, in the routine work ofthe library. They return books to the shelves, and read their shelves daily to keep the books in the correct order. They also do desk work, which consists of checking books out, mending, filing cards, and taking care of overdue books. During the Book Week QFebruary 20-24D, sponsored by the English Cabinet, there was a substantial increase in book circulation. Interest in the American frontier was aroused by a display of books concerning it. Pagc N3 Page 8,1 THE ENGLISH CABINET ARTHUR Kovex . . Prfsidant Vi 11.L1.xM RENCE . . . Vue-Prefzdent IXIARY FR,xNcEs CixRwrLE . . Secretary OUCHED by the magic wand of imagination, Tom Sawyer, HYears of Grace, Don Quixote, and other well-loved books, both old and new, opened their leaves to reveal to an interested audience the people living within them. This happened at the book pageant, written by the four faculty advisors and produced as a climax to Book week. Several departments in school participated in Book week, which was sponsored by the English Cabinet in conjunction with the libra- rians and the English teachers in the school. The Cabinet advertised books, characters, and authors. It promoted three contests: character-matching, book review, and poster. Inserted every day in the bulletin was a quotation stating the beneflt or the enjoyment to be derived from reading. Also there were statements about interesting books dealing with mathe- matics, French, German, English, and geography. On the blackboards of the study halls appeared daily the names of books liked best by student officers of important organizations, and the reason why the books were selected. The librarians arranged a display of literature about pioneer life in America, and following Book week gave an exhibit of book posters and the books which they represented. Nfembers of the Cabinet are chosen from students who have a high rating in scholarship, leadership, and character, and who desire admission to the Cabinet. There are in the Cabinet five seniors, two juniors, two sophomores, and one fresh- man. The faculty advisors are lkliss Nlarie Baldridge, Bliss Cleora Fancher, Kliss Helen Grant Norman, and Nfiss Emily Reid. The Cabinet purposes to help students to express themselves better, both in speaking and in writing. lXfIembers ofthe Cabinet make a list of all errors reported by the different departments, interview each pupil reported, and hand a report to the English teacher of the pupil. NATIUXAL HONOR SOCIETY lCXll3lCRSHlP in the National Honor Society of Secondary Schools is the highest honor accorded a student. Those who rank in the top third of the class in scholarship are eligible to membership. They are elected by the faculty on the basis of leadership, service, and character. Six members of the Class of 1933 were elected to the society in their junior year: Arthur Koven, Xlary Frances Carwile, Nellie Statkus, Dorothy Taggart, Nlargaret Tolsted, and Florence Young. Fifty-six were chosen at the election held last Aprilg they were formally inducted into membership at a meeting of the Parent-Teacher association on the evening of Xlay II. .-X1,ni:R'r.Xi's1,Axm:x l'rAi.o Bnumsrgicoxi HxL'Nnll.m-1 Bikxnrr CoNs'rANc1-3 Bxows: l,l1.i.1AN Bmixol-:R l'Ivr:1.YN l3L'kKAR'r Gimcr: Bvvi-Lk STARR CAl,IJXX'l'L1,l, l,l'CII.I.l-I Cimsialazv l'Ai'1. CoFm1AN xlARIliCC1CJK RL l'H IJAYIDSON Xlmur: Doi-:nn l'1ni.iv llmu-:icrv l'Al'1. l l.r:cx ,lrnxrzy l'lRliDkiRlCKSON SEYMOKR l R1ienx1AN LiA'l'HklRINli Gzxnrzx BIUCI-jI.YN KTILI. RVFH llmuri' -louis llrikoux l,o1u-:'r'ro lir:1.sr1Y lfimxcrgs KRACALIK lfruuxl-1 KILESIL Nlmcrix l.AksoN Nicouxzt l.ASP1sA Xlorvrui AIACLRI-ll-L DoR0'rnY XlAmL'RM CoNs'rANcr: RIARSII PHILIP XICCAI-xr: Rvrn Y. XIILLER I,AvEkN1eNl1scHN1cx STI-:PHEN PATCHEL1. lJoRo'1'HY Pl-LARY Cxxnoi. Przrrzns llENRY PifLAL':u KIAIUORIE Rielsz Ronrgxu' Roos 'lhrgouoxia Rosiixis mm DQNALD SANDRO XIARY SAN'1'1No -losi-31-11 SClIAI'1l'IiR Rowxl. Sclmllvl' .Kumi ScHL'1.Tz SAM SIIEIN XIAKY l':LI,IiN Sllieknl-:k'1' Alonx Sllfcmuk Dono'rnr:A SMI-11-:TON P1eRs1slYARk15N ,XLIXIJA Wiaiss O'r'ro Wk:N'rLANb RA'l'HIiRINIi XVliS'l'RICll XIARJORIE XYl1,L1s -IAIXIICS W11.1.soN XIARTHA Wiwxiiz XlAliY l'lm'rn Youm: Pagf 85 Pagf 86 PARENT-TEACHER ASSOCIATION NIRS. SARAH VAN GUNTEN . . Prefident NIRS. LILLIAN SCHUSTER . Vine-Prefident AIRS. CARRIE WVALLINGSFORD . Secretary NIIss JULIA EVANS . . . Trfarurfr OTHERS and fathers who desire to understand better some of youth's most important and serious problems do not miss the meetings of the Parent- Teacher Association, for there they are addressed by internationally known lecturers who speak with a deep understanding of youth. This year's guest speakers were Dr. C.A. Spaulding, of River Forest, Dr. Charles Barker, and Dr. Albert W. Palmer, president of Chicago Theological Seminary. Dr. Barker, who was physical advisor to the late William Howard Taft, spoke to the parents concerning their responsibilities to their children. Dr. Palmer spoke on Building Better Cities. This year the association has been of greater assistance than ever before to needy students. It purchased lunch tickets, clothing, and street-car tickets, and thus enabled many pupils to remain in school. To swell the treasury of the worthy student fund, from which these deserving students obtained their needed supplies, a card and bunco party was held on November I, and the annual benefit on Feb- ruary I7 and 18. Three groups combined to make the benefit a success-faculty, students, and teachers. At the last meeting of the year, May II, induction of newly-elected members of the National Honor Society took place, and oH'icers for the coming year were elected. THE BAND PARENTS' ASSOCIATION B. C. YOUNG . . Prexident HENRY JACKSON, SR. . . Virf-President ROYAL SCIIMIDT . . Serretary F. S. NEWELL . . . Treasurer AN any one play good music if his uniform is an object of ridicule, and his instrument is old and in poor condition? No,,' said parents of the band members. A group of them pledged themselves to support the band in every way possible, and formed a temporary organization for this purpose. They invited other parents and friends of children in the band to join them, so the Proviso High School Band Parents, Association came into being. Although the temporary purpose of the organization was to make it possible for the band to enter the state contest on an equal footing with other bands, the organ- ization is building chieHy for the future and permanent good of the children who Will, in the future, enjoy band training. The organization raised money by sponsoring an evening of cards and dancing, and a benefit movie at the Lido. It purchased about 51800 worth of new instru- ments and new uniforms. PROVISO PLAYERS STARR CALDWELL ...... President CAROL PETERS . Vice-President ESTHER WINTERS . . Secretary WESLEY DAvIEs ...... ,Treasurer MISS CECIL STARK ..,.. Sponsor NY actor who has ever felt the thrill of grease paint and trembled with excitement for his cue in the wings, knows why drama has such an appeal for the members of the Proviso Players, chief dramatic organization. Dramatic entertainment for the school was furnished largely by this group. At the Girls' League Carnival on December 9, it presented the Kelly Kid g at the Girls' League Tea on January II, Pearls , at a meeting of the Parent-Teacher Asso- ciation on February 2, an allegorical play, A Slave with Two Facesf' As membership in the club is limited to fifty, all the students in the club success- fully passed try-outs before a committee of faculty judges. The members not only strove for mastery of the principles of drama, but tried to stimulate interest in histrionic activities in the school. SOPHOMORE DRAMATIC CLUB GILBERT DAUDISTEL ..... President GEORGINE REAY . . Vice-President VERONICA REICH . . Seeretary WILLIAM O,ROURKE ..... Treasurer NIISS CLEORA FANCHER ..... Sponsor ISCHIEVOUS children, lovesick youths, crabbed old gentlemen-these and various other types ofhumanbeings are portrayedbymembers of the Sopho- more Dramatic Club. The principal accomplishment of the club was the presentation of plays by various groups, under the direction of club members. One of these productions, The Initiation, was presented at a sophomore talent assembly on February II. These plays promoted skill in dramatic art, and made for a more general interest in dramatics throughout the sophomore class. THE GREEN MASK ROBERT CLEMENT . . . . President BETTY ROSENBERG . Vice-President RUTH SHAW . . Secretary . . . . Treasurer . Sergeant-at-Arms MISS NIARGUERITE GARLOUGH . . . Sponsor ROBERT LYNCH . CLARENCE RUFFER . . OUNG actors, designers, and managers-members of the Green Mask, fresh- man dramatic club-produced plays for the enjoyment of freshman audiences Each production was a co-operative project. Various members wrote the plays and sketches, while their fellow members portrayed the roles. These students all had a fair scholastic record and some histrionic ability, accor- ding to the try-out committee. By participating in the various phases of dramatic activities, directing, acting, and stage setting, they satisfied the spiritual side of their existence, and found an outlet for the creative ability which they possessed. The members concluded a fruitful year by visiting the Goodman Theatre in Chicago. Page 87 Page SS RES RGMANA Fin! Semeyter Second Semexter lX'lARJORIE VVILLIS . Senior Comul . RIARY ELLEN SHERBERT WILLIAM RENCE . . junior Conrul . . JOYCE HEILEMANN -JESSIE BOEHMER . . Quarxtor Primm . . XVILLIAM RODGERS Miss JULIA EVANS . . Magirter . . Miss JULIA EVANS HOUGH they are students of a dead languagef' the eighty members of Res Romana are wide-awake and active.This year they made a special study of gods and goddesses of mythology. They presented The Curse of Curiosity, a play depicting the mythological origin of the entrance into the world of all evils affiicting mankind, and The Golden Gift of iVlidas, a play based on the mytho- logical story of the greedy king who turned everything into gold by touching it, and thereby lost all his possessions. After their studying about the old Romans and Greeks in their monthly meet- ings, the language of Cicero and Vergil takes on a new meaning and interest for these students, and they are positively eager to begin their amo, amas, amat. STUDENT COUNCIL VVALTER SMITH . . . . . Prexident GOTTFRIED NXIARTIN . Vice-Preridznt EUGENE KREML . . . Secretary MIss ELIZABETH OAKES ..... Spomor O-OPERATION between students and teachers is promoted by the Student Council, consisting of representatives from each home room. The Councilis chief work this year was the firmer establishment of the Point System, first used in Proviso last year. The system was worked out to encourage the more retiring students to engage in extra-curricular activities, and to keep over-ambitious stu- dents from participating in too many. - Points, Varying according to the time required for the activity, are given for each activity. The plan limits the number of offices held by any one person in the school, and prohibits a student from engaging in activities totalling more than twenty points. The Council distributed Thanksgiving baskets to needy families, as in former years. COLLEGE CLUB PAUL COFI-'MAN ...... Prfrident ISABELLE LEES . . Vice-Prerident NATALIE REICH . . Secretary JOE SZABO . . . Treasurer Miss AMY BARNUM ..... Spomor OLLEGEl Four years filled to the brim with new experiences. That is what the future holds in store for the twenty-five juniors and seniors with member- ship in the College Club. These students desire to rnake the most of their four years in college. The College Club helps them to realize this desire. It shows them how to adjust themselves to college life, and how to take a richer and more significant view of their new experiences. The members study bulletins from colleges having a special interest for them, so that they will be properly prepared for entrance there, both scholastically and financially. They are acquainted with the various aspects of college life through personal visits to campuses of nearby universities. This year the club visited both the Northwestern and the University of Chicago campuses. STARR CALDWELL ERNEST FULLER STEPHEN PATCHELL PAGEANT STAFF LTHOUGH financial conditions made it impossible for the Pageant to con- tinue as a weekly publication, the staff, composed of seniors with a good record in journalism, was able to publish a paper each month. Members ofthe staff, under the supervision of Miss Florence I. Otis, were: JOSEPH SCHAEFER, Editor-in-Chief ASSOCIATE EDITORS SEYMOUR FRIEDIIAN ARTHUR KOVEN ASSI STANT EDITORS I'rALo BALDASERONI RUTH JUSTUS REPORTERS :ALICE PELLER HELEN DUNBAR BERNICE ELFTMANN PEARL GRoss ELIZABETH GARRET PHYLLIS RRICRL VIRGINIA GIST JOHN GRANDLAND RATHLEEN KEENER TYPI STS BUSINESS DEPARTMENT E. F. CAMERON, Supervixor BERNADINE LURIE GEORGIANA STRONG NIC RONALD PHILPOT DOROTHY SCHNEIDER OLINA LA SPISA HELEN TODD FREDERNA XVEZEREK CIRCULATION B. J. XVAGNER .... . . Supervifor LEONARD DUBIN . . .llanagrr SIDNEY BERMANN , . . . . .1,f,ri,vtant .llarzager IL CIRCOLO ITALIANO ITALO BALDASERONI . . President FRANCES KRACALIK , Vice-Prefrdent DON ONORATO . . . . Secretary SERAPHINA LA SPISA . . . Treasurer VITO SURICO . . . Sergeant-at-Armx HUMBERT GENTILIN . . . Spomor MMORTAL Rome, the cradle of civilization, Florence, center of medieval culture, Venice, home of romance-these and other Tuscan cities became famil- iar to the seventy-tive members of the Italian Club through the interesting reports and discussions presented in their monthly meeting. As a part of its service program, the club sponsored a benefit concert by David D,Orlini, operatic tenor. The proceeds were added to the fund for needy Italian students. Other club events were a talkie on the dedication of the statue of Anita Gari- baldi, an old-fashioned Valentine party, and a combined picnic and treasure hunt. Page S9 Page Q0 LES AMIS DU FRANCAIS HENRY JACKSON ...... President GLADYs MAXWELL . . Vice'-Prarident CHARLOTTE ANDERMANN . . Secretary FRANK HACKMAN ..... Treafurer Miss ADA Ross ...... Spomor ARLEZ vous Francais? If so, come with us to a meeting of Les Amis du Francais and see why France isn't just another countryto students withone yearof French. Perhaps you will hear of the deeds of valour, chivalry, and romance of feudal France, maybe you will listen to a discussion of Paris, that radiant city which is an expression of all the beauty and perfection of France, you might hear a talk on simple, gentle Brittany, with its loveliness of age-old seclusion, or you might happen in when the club is planning one of its social affairs. This year there were four: the annual Halloween dance for the school, the Thanksgiving matinee dance, a Christmas party, a Marionette Show at the Girls' League Bazaar, a picnic, and a talk by the French consul, Edmund Meyer, who spoke on French Schools and French Ideas on Education. DIE DEUTSCHE JUGEND THEODORE ROSENBERG . . . . Prnidfnt ALMA VOIGT . . . Vin-President lVlAR1E DOERR . . . Secretary R. T. SHINER ...... Treafurer hlxss GERTRUDE SCHLUETER .... Spomor HE members of Die Deutsche Jugend, a club for students with one year's credit in German, discuss Germany with its legendary splendors, and also keep up-to-date on current events in modern Germany. Their study results in a greater knowledge of the geography of Germany, and of the culture and customs of the German people. The club gave a Christmas party in December, it combined with the Italian, French, and Spanish Clubs to put on a program at the Girls' League Carnival, and it enriched its treasury by sponsoring a dance for the school. A picnic on May I5 served as a farewell meeting for the seventy-five members. LA SOCIEDAD ESPANOLA ARVID LAUKMAN ...... Przfident GLADYS WOLK . . Vice'-Prefident DOROTHY PEARY . . . Secretary MARIE COOK . . . . Treasurfr ROBERT HILL ..... Sergeant-at-Arm: H Miss FRANCES GOSPILL ..... Spomor PAIN -the magic word that opens a new world to the forty members of La Sociedad Espanola-a world delightfully gay, old, and languid. In inter- esting meetings, the students become familiar with the ,customs of the Spaniards, they sing the same songs which dark-haired senoritas hear from dashing caballerosg they listen to gypsy music, full of passion and wild yearning, they visit in imagina- tion this exotic, fascinating country with its historic shrines, its colorful fiestas and pageants, its picturesque gypsy quarters. The study Of Spain, where the receding centuries have left their charm, adds interest to the members' classroom study of the Spanish language, for all members of the club must have studied at least one year of Spanish. This year, two one-act comedies were presented, and talks on bull-f'ighting,and on the use of Spanish in business, were given. JUNIOR HOME ECONOMICS CLUB HILDA AIAHNKE . . President CAROLYN BLUDORN . . Vice-President SERAPHINA LA SPISA . . Secretary LORA PUSCHECK . . Treasurer Miss RIARY IsAAcs . Sponsor N artistically arranged home that reHects the personality and intelligence of the owner, beautiful clothes that enhance the appearance of the wearer-these are part of the dreams of every normal girl. The Junior Home Economics Club shows its members how these dreams can be made realities at a moderate cost, if they will but develop their resources in the household arts. This year, a talk on Own Your Own RoOm,'i a visit to Sears Roebuck and Company's household clinic, a discussion of pottery,a style shOw,and demonstra- tion teas, all suggested to the girls ways of beautifying their homes, and of making clothes appropriate to their type. A Kid Party, a Christmas party, a garden program, a musical recital, an indoor Hbeachl' party, and the organization of an Orchestra, all made for a friendlier atmosphere in the club, and taught the girls the value Of co-operation. JUNIOR HI-Y CLUB First Semester Second Semester HARVEY ANCEL . President GEORGE CASPER CLARENCE DE WIRE . Viee-President . . CLARENCE DE WIRE AARON SPOLIN . Secretary . AARON SPOLIN LEO SEREN . Treasurer LEO SEREN ROBERT LOCKE . . Sergeant-at-Arms . . HARVEY ANCEL J. B. DAVIS . Sponsors . LELAND MEDSKER 'MON, folks! Try your luck. Five cents! NO more, no lessf' These calls were heard at the Girls' League Bazaar where the Junior Hi-Y Club had a nail pounding booth, as part of its program of service. Sixty freshman and sophomore boys are members of the club. They find in it congenial companionship with regular he-menf' who desire to live morally healthy lives by using clean speech, and by being fair and sportsmanlike in everything they do Included in this yearis activities were a boxing exhibit, a magician's show, and the presentation of three one-act plays. Page QI Pa gf Q2 THE FORUM STARR CALDVVELL ...... Prerident TREVOR THOMAS . . . Vice-Preridfnt DANIEL RIAHER . Szcretary-Treasurer HENRY PFLAUM . Sfrgeant-at-Armx RIANLEY VV. IMMEL ..... Spomor F one were to visit the Forum, public speaking club for upperclassmen, he would see modern Ciceros displaying their oratorical ability before a critical but appre- ciative audience. The group contains thirty-five students who are Working to improve their skill in public speaking. The debates and discussions on world problems which take place in the meetings develop in the members the ability to think clearly and to express effectively their thoughts. This year, such topics as taxation, cancellation of war debts, and technocracy were debated. SENIOR SCIENCE CLUB CHARLES HARLfXN - . Preridfnt HENRY SMITH . Vice-Preridfnt VIVIAN TURBETT . . Sefretary WILLIAM XVEICHLEIN . . Treaxurer JACOB VV. lVlOELK ...... Spomor HE whir of wheels! The Hashing of sparks! Cries of surprise and delight! These can be heard and seen at any meeting of the Senior Science Club. The members perform experiments in an effort to see what makes the wheels go round in the world. Filled with an insatiable curiosity, alive to the possibilities of learning new things, they enjoy all the meetings of the club, at every one of which are set forth interesting facts concerning the world around us. This year, the members-all of them upperclassmen-helped others to see the fascination of science by sponsoring for the school two movies on scientific subjects. A visit to the Edward Hines Radium plant proved interesting and instructive. SENIOR HI-Y CLUB ROBERT Roos ...... Prerident ITALO BALDASERONI Vice-President HARRY CASPER . .... Secretary JAMES FVOODMANSEE ..... Treaxurer ERPETUATING those glorious ideals embodied and established by staunch, steadfast knights of old, the Hi-Y Club of Proviso carries on. Dashing, stalwart, physically fit, alert and self-coniident mentally, steadily pointing to still greater achievement and a higher development of sportsmanship, the members of this organization seek to create, maintain, and extend throughout the school and community high standards of Christian characterf, Proud are they of their record! Rightly should they be. A service organization, they provided Christmas baskets for the needy of Proviso township, sponsored the Oak Park-Proviso Boys, Inter-Church Conference and, in true Christian fashion, revealed a willingness to be of service. SENIOR HOME ECONOMICS CLUB NICOLINA LA SPISA ..... Prefident DELLA BOEGER . . Vice-Prefidrrzt NANCY KIURAS . . Serretary RUTH HARDT . Trfayurer Miss LOLA PICKLES ..... Sponxor UGAR and spice and everything nice are of interest to the members of the Senior Home Economics Club, an affiliated member of the American and Illinois Home Economics associations. All of the one hundred nine members have taken or are taking one of the courses in the Home Economics department. This year the Oak Park-Proviso High School Girls, Conference, the club rally, at which oliicers and sponsors of neighboring high schools were present, the presen- tation of a program for the Forest Park VVoman's Club, and social gatherings, all fostered a feeling of friendship. Interest in home economics was stimulated by a demonstration on How to Tie and Dyeug a trip to the Textile Clinic at Sears Roebuck and Company's downtown store, a film, Cotton, From Seed to Clothng and style shows. THE COMMERCIAL CLUB HENRY SMITH ...... Prfrident BETTY PHILPOT . . Vice-Prefident MABEL JENSEN .... . Secretary LILLIAN BUENGER . . . . Trzafurer Miss ALICE HAHN, GEORGE COMERY . . Spomors EMBERS of the Commercial Club, all of whom are upperclassmen with a unit of credit in commercial subjects, desire to attain efficiency in economic adjustments through a better understanding of the economic organization of the society in which they live. They are aided in this by escorted tours through large industrial plants, and through friendly discussions among themselves and with business men who visit the club. Guest speakers this year talked on Salesmanship and on Receivership of Banksf' Trips were taken to the lVorld's Fair grounds, the Chicago Lighting Institute, the Chicago Daily Tribune plant, and to Sears Roebuck's wholesale establishment. A farewell banquet on hlay I2 ended the year's activities. THE RADIO CLUB ADALBERT BIRKHOLZ . . . . Prerident CARL KIXRLSON . . Vice-Presidznz GORDON KENNETT . Secretary REX HORTON . . Treasurer JACOB XIOELK ...... Sponsor turn of the dial. Laughter and gossip of boys and girls pour into the room. Across the blue waters of the Pacific from golden Australia, from picturesque Japan-come greetings to Proviso. Little wonder that the fifteen members of the Radio Club are so enthusiastic when they can catch with their antenna part of the living energy of these people. Chosen because of their knowledge of radio commun- ication, and their familiarity with the continental code, the boys broadcast from a radio station which they themselves built in the tower room. gf' 0 Pasf 94 THE CIVICS CLUB FRANK ORLAND . . Prefident JUNE PERKINS . . Vice-Prefidfnt EDNA OWEN . Secretary JOE IACONO . . Trearurer Miss GL.ADYS CHULOCK . . Sponsor USTY, frowsy shops with care-worn and dilapidated frontsg streets jammed with carts and stands loaded with every variety of clothing, new and old, people worming their way among the piles of every-hued merchandise-the Ghetto! just one of the places visited by the Civics Club on its trip to interesting points in Chicago. Others were the Shedd Aquarium, the Lighting Institute, and Hull House. The Civics Club is one of the few clubs whose membership is made up entirely of freshmen and sophomores. All of them have been enrolled in vocational or com- munity civics classes. The club is trying to develop in them a civic spirit and an interest in current events. This year's activities included a mock trial and a picnic supper. NEO-PYTHAGOREANS RAY LEE . . Prfridfnt LILLIAN YOUNG . . Vice-Prffident ERNA SCHROEDER . . , Secretary-Treaxurer Miss CHARLOTTE PAYNE . . Sponxor I dream of angles A and B, Planes and solids interest me. XO say the Neo-Pythagoreans, sophomore mathematicians. Although all of the forty-two members were outstanding in freshman algebra, they want it known they do not live and breathe and have their being in mathematics. A glance at their activities for the year will prove this. They contributed a picture gallery to the Girls' League Bazaar in October, they had a float in the parade for the Atlanta, Georgia, football game on November 27, and they frolicked at a Christmas party. Several members of the club represented the book, 'Tun with Figuresf' in the Book Pageant on February 24. A trip to the Planetarium on March 29 brought the yearls activities to an end. CAMERA CLUB DOROTHY TAGGART . . President THEODORE LAssEN . . Vice-Prefidenz DON ONORATO . . Secretary EDMUND VOLKMANN . . Trearurer H.LXRVEY JOHNSON . . Sponfor HE members of the Camera Club realize that photography is an artistic med- ium of self-expression, and use great care in taking pictures. They not only record the Outward appearance of things they wish to remember, but also record emotions or abstract ideas suggested by or seen through something tangible. Outstanding events of the past year included a trip to the Chicago Camera club, a Christmas party, a talk on picture composition, and an exhibition of pictures taken and enlarged by club members. Several times during the year, talks on various phases of photography were given. Members of the club enriched the treasury and provided a pleasant pastime for themselves by making and selling jig-saw puzzles. CHESS AND CHECKER CLUB RICHARD XVEISSENBORN . President ARTHUR ERNSTER . . Vice-President CLARENCE SEEGERs . . Secretary CHARLES NEFF . . Trearurer F. VV. BAER . . Spomor HECK and double check! No, that's the wrong guess. This is not Amos ,n' Andy in their nightly sketch over the ether, but the twenty-five members of the Chess and Checker Club engrossed in the Royal Game of Chessf' This year a chess tournament held among the members promoted new interest in the innumerable solutions of chess. 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E ,.- , J .I -. , K 2 W -f-1 i:1e1 , -' 'ai .fl 1 rf--I-r-5 :- '- M H Pr 'f-.513-.21. -'Q-jjf'-g:Pfg5., A.fu-5-Sufi.--.1,7-5-.-f ,,f-f.+j:,'5'5'- :'f'T 31 r - 5:-'Q If. if , . : J, -fn Sa, ..,f,., .rjI.4 . , .5,.zE-.:,,.'..- .'3'T1:-3' M jf: ,',1 1 4. :-, -A 3 A , ..x . ,H-tl.:-.I V- I, Q W, - . 1 ,,,, 3 11- Z, .1 Xu. ,313 Y '. -' 1 fWlHlHIHlL9 GM Q3 3 VARSITY CLUB HE Varsity Club-the ultimate goal of every loyal Proviso boy in athletics. A major letter is the prerequisite for this honorary organization. The Varsity Club stands for clean sportsmanship and fair play, it also aims to extend school spirit to the surrounding community. One of the primary duties of the club is school service. The club members kept order at the annual Grade School Basketball Tournament, and worked in co-operation with the officials. A tea partyvwas sponsored by the club Nlarchg for members of the Deerfield basketball squad to promote more friendly relations between Proviso and the northsiders, and to reciprocate for a Deerfield luncheon given for Proviso's football team at Highland Park. Many strenuous hours of practice must be endured before an individual can acquire a major award. To realize the endeavor and persistency required in ob- taining a letter, one must earn the major HP. In acquiring the coveted award, an individual must call upon that commonly inert element, school spirit, to animate him to a degree of intense action, heedless of tired and aching muscles. After the trying tasks in the actual competition for a regular berth on a team comes the true testing and tempering of the prospective Varsity Club members, the initiation. This exacting test is made by the old members of the club to see whether the novitiates are capable of withstanding certain trials and tribulations. After this final analysis has been made, a pleasant year of friendship and activities awaits the new members as well as the old. The Varsity Club members are con- sidered among Proviso's student leaders, boys who exemplify the ideal qualities of the school. A dance in honor of the Atlanta, Georgia, football team was held Saturday evening, Nov.5. The affair brought the sons of sunny Georgia nearer to the hearts of Proviso students and featured several of the southerners in songs and dances. The annual Varsity dance took place on May 6 in the Proviso social room. This traditional hop supplied great diversion tofthe Proviso letter-men. Julius Chappas was elected president at the first meeting held October II. john Grandland and Ray Pries were elected vice-president and secretary-treasurer, respectively. Pugf O7 Pdg F QS ILAVYWEIGHT FOOTBALL H 4 LJ o Q on U U O rr 41 -I v: lil ii D-4 1:1 E- E- Id ..: .1 5 U7 o o CZ. ill m o Q I-IJ fn Q4 O T4 A in I-IJ Z Z Lv-I Ed I N -I 4 CII an Z C 2 Lil v-1 Lf. :Q E cu B4 A L12 ll! Ill fc M : U Top Row-COA P: F ni STRUB, joHNsoN, SCHAEFER, JENSEN, GINDER, ERS, NE, STEINHEBEL, PEARSON, WATT LO A M LIMMER, RATH, PATCHELL, m CO 'COACH S COACH REMLEY. cond Row COACH F ER, ST 0 MIZEN, Hruco, KOHOUTEK. PATCHELL, S. STUMPF, PoLL1Tz, SCHOBE1., CHAPPAS, GENGLER, TRUXAL, WXCZ d RowfDoMAszE hir EN- ON. S JOHN APLAN, SANDELIN, FRANCO, Klrcmzos, PALDINA, Emu, Bunn, ZUcHowsK1, CARRACIO, K Lewis m Row- Bono HEAVYWEIGHT FOOTBALL HE heavyweight pigskin-pushing corps of ,32 responded to the call September 1. Forty-five two-cylinder stripe-striders reported with superfluous energy to be united into a yard-devouring Blue-and-White locomotive. Under the auspices of Coaches Louis F. Slimmer, Leslie Remley, and Charles Kassel, the lads became more voracious yard-eaters. The first official sod-nicking was done at York, September I7. There were no six-point push-overs in the first half, but a York fumble on the Proviso fatal stripe, and Eddie Stumpffs prompt nestling of the cherished hairless sated bleacher thrill-lust. In the fourth quarter, York toted the ball over for six units and kicked for a 7-o final tally. The primary encounter on the local white-washed lot on September 4 was with Riverside. In the third quarter, a romping Riverside rookie broke loose. It seemed to be a touchdown, but a fiash of Blue-and-White fettered him from the rear on the 7-yard line. Bill Watters prevented that scooping up of six units and caused a scoreless tie. October I brought Roosevelt to the home gridiron. In the opening minutes, the Proviso lads battered Roosevelt on off-tackle smashes to a six-point pulp with jack LaRocco the principal factor in the scoring. Schobells educated pedal ex- tremity guided the ball to collect the extra point. Roosevelt scored on plunges in the second quarter. With thirty remaining seconds of play, a Roosevelt back raked down a Proviso pass and scratched the gravel for a touchdown, placing the tally at I4j7 in Roosevelt's favor. In the New Trier fray, October S, the local stripe-hoppers did a classy bit of beef-shoving. However, the Winnetka lads crossed the final stripe in the third quar- ter. Their boot for the extra point was shattered on an upright. With the pork tegument on the I-yard line and 30 seconds of play, Phil Doherty garnered six points on a plunge. A general bunny-hop followed Herb Schobel's decisive kick, setting the score at 7-6 in Proviso's advantage. The Evanston shin-skinning on October IS occurred on the home field. The locals put on the yard-grabbing act, and Obie Lemons did a six-carat snatching. Our kicking contemporary, Herby Schobel, nabbed the added point. In the third period, Evanston pilfered enough yards from the Blue-and-White for two touch- downs, laying the count at I2-7. On October 22, neither Proviso nor Nlorton was able to tally until the fourth quarter. The Blue-and-White difficulty lay in the penalties precipitated against them. In the fourth quarter, Morton scored twice. Shortly before the game closed, LaRocco thundered through the Cicero throng for six units to set the loss at 14-6. A 7-7 tie was the result of the numb-fingered encounter with Deerfield on a bleak October 29 day. Ray Pries scrambled over the ultimate stripe for half a dozen units. Schobel's skilled toe took the point. Deerfield squeezed out a six-digit tally and balanced the score on the kick in the third period. After a neck-kinking aeronautical show, a Tech High team of Georgia goal- getters from Atlanta dragged the major portion of a I3-6 score south of the Mason- Dixon. The Proviso stripe-striders pulled Marching Through Georgiaf' antics in the first quarter. Pries pranced over to the sunny-side on a plunge. November I2 terminated the season in the most gratifying gridiron-grappling with Oak Park of the past five years, a I9-7 Blue-and-White victory. After proving the porosity of Oak Park's line, Ray Pries ostentatiously grabbed a darting Doherty pass and jauntily crossed the revenging stripe. Another Doherty dirigible in the deft receptive fingers of Hermie Salzbrenner netted the second touchdown of the first period. The dextrous dodging of Salzbrenner marked this the outstanding play of the game. Proviso's final six-point jogging was the result of a prize pass from Pries to Doherty. Pagr Q9 Page 100 Top Row-COACH FTATLEY, DUcHEsNEAU, PALADINO, FLOOD, TfVATERS, CROLL, BALLAST, MGR., KIA- GREE, HENRY, TOsT1, SCHOFF, Asslr. COACH. Srcond Row-DEWIRE, iXSSlT. MOR., BRUCE, CONRAD, JOHNSON, KLENSKE, Buck, ZEINFELD, PAULSEN. Third Row-PETERSON, RUSANOWSKI, VANDENBROUCKE, DyANZA, HODGSON, OLsON, COFFMAN. Bottom R0w'xTAROUSEK, DEANO, XNIEDERHOLD, NEWBERG, DoUcLAs, NTUELLENHAUPT, GINDER. LIGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL Fight, Team, Fightlw is the cry that best expresses the spirit of the IQ32 lightweight team. With a record of only one defeat in ten games, the team added further prestige to the already formidable reputation of Proviso lightweights. Proviso was scored on Only three times during the season, and every tally was by the aerial route. The season opened auspiciously with eighty candidates reporting for the first practice. VVith only five lettermen back, Coack Hatley was faced with the task of building up a new team. The schedule was opened with Proviso journeying to York, to battle the power- ful Elmhurst team to a O-O deadlock. Riverside proved to be the first victim ofthe year, being sent home with the short end of the I8-7 score. Arlington Heights furnished little opposition, and Proviso had an easy time in piling up a 31-o count. LaGrange proved the only dark spot in an Otherwise brilliant season, dealing our boys a 7-O defeat. LaGrange scored as a result of a long pass in the first quarter, and spent the remainder of the game in warding off repeated attacks by Proviso. Franklin Park and Fenwick were easily disposed of, I9-O and 7-o, but the hlorton game was a disappointment to Proviso fans, ending a 6-6 tie. Proviso started off with a bang and pushed over a touchdown in the first quarter, but then folded up playing a very ragged game, and permitting Morton to score her only touchdown on a Hsleeperl' pass. Arevived team,however,met and trounced Maine,25-o on the following week. Improvement continued, and Franklin Park was again treated to a trouncing, 26-o. The season was climaxed with the annual Oak Park tilt. Playing on a frozen lTCld, neither team could unleash a consistent attack, and the result was a O-O tie. hlagree and Petersen were the leading ground-gainers for Proviso, while Oak Park seemed content to keep the Blue-and-White from scoring. i Under the excellent tutelage of Coach Fred Hatley, the Proviso lightweight teams have lost only three games in three years.. This is one of the best records made by Blue-and-VVhite athletic teams in interscholastic competition. Trip Row-COACH KL'sTER, CxrgmoNs, Dnxpiunmz, ZAPLER, LvRBEL1S, Rmsoio, Klux. Srfund Row4Col.z, lxuzax, BERLINER, DOLAN, GOODHEAD, Oiusr. Boflom Rflfllfvlvlll-2I.IN, Ovrzxmi-:Yi-LR, Blu-3ziNA, l.Aw1.r:R, Klittrgx. FRESH-SOPH FOOTBALL The first call for the frosh-soph eleven brought forth a bunch of young, husky Provisoites. Coach Ruben Kusteris task was to assemble these lads in a formidable team to represent Proviso. The first game of the season was a practice tilt with Roosevelt on October I. The opponents, football technique proved to be just the equal of Proviso's, and the result was a O-O deadlock. The next encounter was against New Trier at VVin- netka. The New Trier pigskin-pushers carried the inflated ellipsoid across in the first quarter. The Blue-and-Vlhite tried valiantly to score, but to no avail. Dand- ridge, local end, did some very fine defensive work. October I5 was the day scheduled for the Evanston football game, which turned out to be a track meet. The North Shore boys piled up 32 digits, while Proviso netted nothing. The advent of Proviso into the Suburban League win column came on October 22. Morton furnished opposition and the final tally stood at I9-7. Overmeyer scored two six-point accumulations, and Thelin was responsible for the other touchdown. Miller is credited with the extra point. The next game was a practice tilt at Riverside, and served mainly as a preparation for the Oak Park game. The annual water pageant against Oak Park on November I2 proved to be far from that. The field was as hard as granite, and the victims of gravity found quite a hard reception awaiting them. The Blue-and-Vlihite pigskin toters played an excellent brand of football. Miller scored Provisols touchdown on a 25-yard jaunt, and Overmeyer added the extra unit. Oak Park scored twice and seemed content to hold her lead for the remainder of the encounter. Kuster's proteges promise to bloom forth into victory-clinching Blue-and-Vvhite heavyweights. Charles Kassel, assistant heavyweight coach, assisted Xlr. Kuster in the coaching duties. The freshman team played but two games during the season, and both of these were against Morton. One ended in a O-O deadlock and the other was 6-0 in favor of the Cicero first year men. Kuhlcmeyer coached the freshmen. Pug: 101 Pagf log Top RowYCoAc11 XIATTE, FULLER, DOHERTY, GRANDLAND, GLEASON, TQHOMPSON, MGR., SIEGLER. Botmm Row4CARUso, Go1.nsT1-ZIN, S'rAL1.h:v, FRANKIE, VVINTER, PAULSI-IN, Bom-IM. SWIMMING HE Proviso tankmen, with veterans in every event, enjoyed a successful season, finishing in a tie with Evanston for second place. The first meet with Crane resulted in a double triumph for Proviso. The seniors won, 36-23, while the juniors did even better, coming out on top, 39-13. Xlorton contributed the second victory of the year, being sent to the bottom twice, 44-15 by the seniors, and 32-23 by the minnows. In the senior meet, Proviso captured every first place except the breaststroke. Doherty and Grandland were again the high point men. In a senior meet, hlaine proved too tough, and gave our whales a 41-15 ducking. Doherty garnered eight points to lead the Provisoites. In the following meet, Fenwick nosed out the seniors in the final events, winning 30-29. A second tilt with Crane proved less fortunate, the seniors losing 35-24, though the juniors came through with a 27-17 win. The first league meet was against Deerfield, and proved to be an easy victory for Proviso. The seniors helped themselves to a 47-12 victory. The juniors had to be content with a 28-25 score. Klorton was next submerged by the whales, but the juniors were taken for a plunge, 35-18. Doherty and Grandland were the leaders in the 46-13 trimming given by the whales. Evanston, however, took a hand in things and gave Proviso a double beating, the seniors being drowned 42-1 1, and the juniors, 35-18. New Trier was not strong enough and went down in a 36-23 defeat. The juniors lost, 34-21. Oak Park, the Suburban champions, closed the dual meets with two victories over Proviso, the whales coming through, 44-15, and the minnows winning, 3449- Proviso placed fourth in the Suburban finals. For the seniors, Grandland placed second in the 40-yard free style and third in the 100-yard backstroke. Doherty captured second place in the IOO-yard backstroke, and the medley relay team, composed of Frankie, Siegler, Doherty, and Grandland, placed fourth. For the juniors, Boehm came in third in the 60-yard free style, and Goldstein was second in the breaststroke. Nlost of the senior team is graduating this year, leaving Coach O. H. lX'Iatte with the task of building up a new squad next year. Top Row-Coma, Alon., Mouse, Frmc, C1-mx-1-As, COACH Loma. Boltom Row-B,xRs1:MA, jonxsox, Pmnsox, 'WATT12Rs, Nhzex. HEAYYWEIGHT BASKETBALL ROVISO'S heavyweight hoop-hawks happily punched out enough sphere- sinkings to clinch a third place in Suburban League ratings. Three teams were selected by Coach Karl Long from the capering cagers who reported at tl1e first bellowing for basketball material. The squad emerged from foreign court entanglements with eleven victories and ten defeats. The principal participants in these gratifying games were Barsema, Rlizen, VVatters, Johnson, and Pearson. The primary sally of these swish experts resulted in a 34-19 loss to York, of Elmhurst. Two victories, both 28-21, were the Blue-and-White accomplishments in two encounters with Riverside. In the 33-15 subjugation of LaGrange, Wvally Pearson was high point man with seven sinkings. The last of the pre-league practice games was lost, IQ-18, to Harrison. The first league courting of the Blue-and-VVhite was done at Oak Park, De- cember 21.11 was a dashing demoniac affair, terminating in a 30-25 east of-the-river victory. The return game with the Orange-and-Blue on February 3 was a con- science-easing 32-25 Oak Park squelching. A moody Morton team returned home January 6 after a 25-IQ defeat on the local hardwood. The Cicero corps reversed conditions to a 34-19 conquering of Proviso's cagers February 18. VVhen pitted against an audacious New Trier team, Proviso lost two games, IQ-I8 and 31-28, on january I3 and February 17, respectively. A 32-25 defeat at Evanston on January 20 was partly due to the unfortunate disqualification of Mizen and Pearson early in the fourth quarter. 011 the home hardwood, February 24,as the date of a 40-21 catastrophe for the league-leading Evanston quintet, was registered. On january 27 Deerfield so dextrously dodged Proviso offensive sallies that the game closed in a 30-26 Blue-and-VYhite defeat. However, the tables were twisted to a 25-22 Proviso win Klarch 3. At the Stagg Tournament, the boys won over hlorgan Park, 28-27, in the last few seconds of play on a toss by Sam Fink. A 30-29 loss to New Trier put Proviso out of the tourney. In the York sectional contests, the Long lads placed third, beating York, 31-24, Leyden, 35-10, and losing to Hinsdale, 30-25. Page 103 Page 104 Top Row-CoAc1-1 REMLEY, FARNEY, GUINEY, TIEFENTHAL, THoMPsoN, KICK. Bottom R0w'FLO0D, lfVENTLAND, ZEINFELD, WOODINIANSEE. LIGHTWEIGHT BASKETBALL HE lightweight basketball team survived a hard-fought season, made up of 16 games,with a reputation of clean, hard aggressive playing, even though the boys failed to Win a majority of their contests. The opening game, played at York, resulted in a 22-14 victory for Proviso. Tiefenthal was the high point man of the game. Proviso was not so fortunate in the following games, however, dropping two contests to Riverside and one each to LaGrange and Harrison. Three of these battles were lost by the margin of one basket. Oak Park, the first league opponent, was beaten in a nip-and-tuck tussle, 35-27. Guiney and Zeinfeld led the Proviso point-makers. Morton was the next visitor and proved victorious, 30-23. New Trier was easier, however, and was defeated 37-23. Journeying out to Evanston, Proviso was nosed out in the final minutes of a thrilling game, 39-31. The accurate shooting of Tiefenthal and Zeinfeld kept the outcome in doubt until the last. Deerfield handed our boys one of their worst defeats of the year, winning by a 41-27 score. The game was tied at the end of the third quarter, but Deerfield ran up 20 points in the final frame. Entering the second round of Suburban League schedule, Proviso redeemed herself, swamping Oak Park for the second time of the year, 43-28. Continuing this fast clip, Proviso bowled over New Trier in a close game, the final score being 31-27. Morton and LaGrange checked the victory march in two successive games. The former came out on top of the 31-25 score, and the latter barely eked out a 27-26 victory. In the high-scoring battle of the year, Proviso lost to Evanston, 48-40. The game was fast and bitterly contested, with Flood putting on a shooting exhibition, gathering 24 points for Proviso. The season was completed by a 32-8 defeat in- flicted by Deerfield. Coach Leslie Remley deserves a great deal of credit for building up a steady, I CNW l RliSH-SOPH. l5,XSlil'i'l'B,'Xl,l, Twp Rmc'-Coficn lifxssrzi., Orsux, ScA1,i-LTTA, H. 'l'nr:1.1N, llmxskxoxx, clROIJ'l', Uoonnr-:An, SA1.iNs, Klux. lifflmnz Row --IMVIQIUIAX, SIE!!!-Ll., CONRAI1, l,. l,IPTOXV, lhmnisii, l.RBl'II.IS, Dfixnium i smooth-working quintet from comparatively new material. Captain Zeinfeld and VVentland took care of the guard positions very competently, while Flood at center and Tiefenthal and Guiney at the forward posts performed brilliantly. With a number of regulars returning next year, Coach Remley has high hopes of turning out a team which will put in a strong bid for championship honors. AIYNIOR Y.XRSl'l'Y Bi-XSlil'i'l'B.Xl.l, Twp Run'---Xlok1'1'Z. Xlc5k.,ClAl 1'ni1-QR, KVRTZ, U'DoNNr31.1., XlIl,l.l-ZR, Crmcu lil'1il.rL1x1m'i-'R linimrri Ruff'-ffU11.1.r-:'r'rrL. 'I'RAi-P, limo, Willcox, Koi-zvxia. Page 105 Page I06 sf- F sa.. LJ Top Row-LARTZ, THOIVIPSON, RICHARDSON, LOBDELL, BURK, ZAPLER, W. SMITH, KIICKOVV, FEINNER, TANDERSEN, PATTERSON, ADIZLMAN. Sammi Row-DILLON, NIERTINEIT, WINDERS, LOGAN,PALADINO,SCHOBEL, li. SCHhlID1',OPIE, RIADISON, GAYLORD, NYAHLDICK, LARSON, ROEBER, COACH NIATTE. Third Row-LAUBLY, MGR., BUTA, KELLY, XVATTERS, Parxnsox, H. SCHMIDT, BUCK, SANFILIPPO, HESTERMAN, VV. SMITH, IQOCKEFELLER, CARNE, CAMPBELL, Ass'T. MGR. Bottom Row-SCHAUBERGER, Biwss, NIICHAEL, BERLINER, E. KIICHAEL, XYIIQDIQRHOLD, KOCII, KRACALIK, COHEN, KAPLAN. TRACK TARTING the season with the handicap of meager indoor practice facilities, Coach O. H. lVIatte's Blue-and-VVhite track squad shaped up fairly Well at the beginning of the outdoor track season. In the Suburban League Indoor Track meet held at the Oak Park Held house, Saturday, lNIarch 4, Proviso finished fourth. Phil Doherty garnered high point honors by carrying off two second places in the 60-yard high and 60-yard low hur- dles. Bob Roeber finished third in the mile jaunt. The team showed promise at the meet for a successful outdoor campaign. The beginning of the outdoor season saw the senior squad go into somewhat of a slump. Proviso was defeated by Maine, 68-54, and by York, 895-gzyz. The following meet Proviso emerged from her slump to outclass Austin, 65 2-3 to 56 I-3 the juniors had a more successful start in conquering Riverside, 58-28, Austin, 55-40, and losing to Maine and York by rather close scores. The burden of the senior squad in the outdoor meets was carried by Phil Doh- erty, who made a specialty of taking the choice honors of the 220-yard low hurdles and the I20-yard high hurdles, besides placing in the dashes and field events, Bill Viiatters, who occupied the majority of cherished dash positions and ran in the relay, Bob Roeber, who placed well to the front in the mile runs, and Wally Pearson, who excelled in the 440-yard cinder-disturbance. Herb Schobel tossed the discus for sizable non-stop t0urS. The junior worries were mitigated by Berliner and Logan, who performed in the dashes and hurdles, Xlichael in the Broad jump, and Zapler in the shot put. Doherty, who placed second in the hurdles at the state meet last year, and Pearson, who placed in the quarter mile,looked early in the season as though they'd repeat Cif not betterj their previous showings. This yearls squad had unlimited supplies and enthusiasm, and used them to the best advantage in all its encounters. I v Top RowfCoAcH Ax-PLETQN, Huxrox, MCR., VANDENBROUCKE, Ass r. MCR., CHAPPAS, Ulu-xi-:L1s, TROCKELMAN, NIIZEN, -IoHNsoN, IXUHLEMEYER, Tkorsxv, COACH Loxc. Srumzd Row-SEM-im., BAnsr:MA, LAUKMAN, FINK, DUCHESNEALY, Luuksux. CEINDER, Pun-ns, Doxovxtx, DEAN. Bollom R020-RIHA. Tull-'ENTim1., Rouxuv, PETERSON, CLYNNINGHAM. XIu.1.r:R, Mokse, WALLACI-1, lluxxm.. BASEBALL HACKI-With the first days of spring come the crack of the bat and the chasing of the elusive spheroid. Coach H. K. Long began out-of-door procedures as soon as the weather man would stand by for sunny and fairer days. A large number of enthusiastic boys turned out to represent Proviso in the national pastime. julius Chappas, Bud Nforse, Kiel Barsema, Vince Peterson, Iilmer Luhrsen, Sam Fink, and Ray Pries constituted the veteran followers of the little white sphere. Chappas, ace of the Blue-and-VVhite pitching staH, and Bud Morse, catcher are the components of Proviso's strongest battery. These lads have Worked together for four seasons and gave batting exponents plenty to watch and Worry about in the form of whistling smoke and fade-away curve halls. Donovan and YYallace alternated with Chappas at the hurling end of the battery. Alex Cinder and Urbelis substituted for Nlorse behind the bat. With plenty of reach and a dexterous receiving mitt Mizen held down the first sack. Tiefenthal, a sophomore, marked the keystone sack position with commend- able apple-grabbing abilities and a well-directed peg. Conrad, a contender for this position, played a close second to Tiefenthal. The shortstop position was filled alternately by Bob Hurrel and Ray Duchesneau. Hurrel, the favorite of the position, is consistent at ash-and-horse-hide connections. Peterson and Wallace displayed expert tagging and pill-stopping at the hot corner. Fink, Luhrson, Barsema, and Johnson executed the bush-whacking activities of the outfield. These eagle-eyed outfielders of the wide open spaces did a peppy bit of ball trailing to Blue-and-W'hite advantage. Results of games played to date: Proviso . . Austin . . Proviso LaGrange Proviso . , Austin . . Proviso Lane ..... . . Proviso . . Marshall Proviso Lane ....... . Proviso . . Klarshall Proviso Evanston Proviso . . Concordia Proviso New Trier Page 107 Page 1049 G OI .F Top R!lfL'7RAX' FLYLLER, PHILPOT, SHIMAXSKI, SANDRO, COACH FOSTER. Hollow RowASL7R1co, Rm' FULLER, DE.-Xxo, RAFKA. 1 xl J 'I U ! 5 WRESTLING Top Row--COACH SLIMMER, CLJNNINGI-IAM, POLLITZ, PA'rcHE1.L, KIQEKII., Iouxsox, XIGR Iiufzom Row-BUONALTRO, FIORAVANTI, Cuxrsruxsrpx, HILKO, KAPLAN, FIPPINGER. GIRLS' A'l'Hl.liTlC .XSSUCLXTIOX Trip Rvwflfasr, Nu-zmiav, Borsa, Dorzkk, Ri-mv. liotfwn Rox'-XX otx, lftook, X orxo, SHIQRBERT, GRAIN. G. A. A. GAIN the Girls' Athletic Association triumphantly led itself into a role of prominence in Proviso activities under the fine leadership of its oflicers, Florence Young. president, Iivelyn Floor, secretary, and IX'Iary Ijllen Sherbert, treasurer, who worked in co-operation with Miss Mary R.Vl'heeler, head of the department and sponsor of the activity. On October 15. the G. A. A. held the Fall Play Day, at which a number of girl athletes from six neighboring schools participated in the numerous events. Hockey games started the day and were followed by a swim in the school pool. A matinee dance was given on january I3 in order to replenish the funds in the treasury of the association. liven with eligibility for membership requiring each member to have at least loo points before she can be initiated into the association, and to earn an additicnal loo points to retain her membership, the old G. A. A. members fully supported their organization, and many new ones were gained. A Hockey Spread, and later in the season a Valentine Party were given for the entire organizaticn. On KIarch I2, a Splash Party was held in the school swimming pool for the girls with G. A. A. memberships. To start the program, a refreshing dip was enjoyed by every girl. Later many fascinating and unique relay races and water stunts were performed. In one race the girls swam carrying open umbrellas, and in another, lighted candles. Tennis, hockey, volleyball, basketball, baseball, ping-pong, and junior and senior life-savingwere supervised by the club managers and coached bythe instruc- tors, Miss Vlvheeler, IXIiss Eva Eddy, and Miss Jean Currie. The hockey season was greeted with great enthusiasm by the girls who reported for the practices. In the colorful tournament held at the end of the season, sophomores, juniors, and seniors equally divided the championship. In the annual basketball tournament, the sophomore girls conquered the other teams, thereby winning first place. In the volleyball tournament, the freshmen's colors rose highest, awarding them the championship. Page 100 1 0 E 3 Q n N5 A i ax .A E 2 ae E s 3 E if Ri as as 55 E 53 +5 lIE5lIDlIlClIDIOlIRlIl1MlQ THE SPIRIT OF PROGRESS IN PROVISO O! From a small institution in 1911 has developed a vast Proviso in 1933. Only the indomitable Spirit of Progress in Proviso has made this feat possible. The Progress has been, in large measure, material. Does not our fine building, with its majestic tower, vividly portray that? Have not the growth of activities and the wide-spread prestige and fame gained throughout the nation by publica- tions, music, and athletics, depicted that? But, having acquired gains of a material- istic nature, our attention should now be turned to greater development of the individual. Greater intellect and a broader knowledge should be the ultimate goal of every individual in Proviso. The United States has, within the last one hundred years, progressed far beyond even the most fantastical imagination. From primitive methods of communication to radio and wireless, from horse and buggy to automobile, from candle light to electric light-the nineteen hundredth anniversary of the death of our Lord finds an America inspired to greater ideals by the Spirit of Progress. Now the problem arises, VVhat about the aesthetic and spiritual Progress? Although this hasn't been altogether neglected, it certainly needs to be emphasized more. It is the aim of Proviso to participate in aesthetic and spiritual Progress by teaching her students to regard more highly the prime factors which make up a Progress of this nature. Proviso stands ready to do her part. The Class of 1933 has put the shoulder to the wheel of Progress, and comes forth into the world, leaving beneficial contributions to the posterity of Proviso. The responsibility for keeping the wheel rolling and for seeking out every possible advantage for the Spirit of Progress in Proviso, falls upon the shoulders of those who continue their work in the school. Proviso has excellent facilities for its students, an inspiring faculty, and a perfect housing for the Spirit of Progress. Having been made the benefactors of a great deal of material Progress, let us strive for greater ideals in education and industry, and for the apex of spiritual achievement. Page III Pug: 112 ACT WELL YOUR PARTg THERE ALL THE HONOR LIES INCE the day of the Creation, down through the ages, each generation of man has inscribed his contribution to the progress of the human race in the great tome of humanity and has laid the foundation for the exalted man of the future. Tl1e torch of honor has ever illuminated the efforts of those who have striven to the best of their ability to fulfill their obligations for their existence on the earth. And in their striving toward this goal alone have they ever attained happiness, whether or not their efforts have been crowned by achievement. For it is in the service of others that man finds happiness and contentment, only when he loses himself does he flnd himself. Man, says Dr. Louis L.Mann, eminent religious authority, is civilized only when he fulfills his obligations to society. A person should find a job to his liking, and stick to that job. In the great design of creation, each man is assigned his own definite post. But, success is not: necessarily the only path to happiness, al- though it should be anultimate aim,for oftentimes,aspirations that spur a man on to try that which he may himself feel incapable of doing, give him that most happy feeling of self content. As Browning says through the lips of the venerable Rabbi Ben Ezra: What I aspired to be and was not, comforts me. For what man aspires not to be, he never is. To make the best of and to act well whatever part one has chosen, is to attain the glory and honor of statesmen, of warriors, of philosophers, of men. The Seniors of the Class of 1933 will do well to follow the words of wisdom ex- pressed by the immortal Pope which they have chosen as their motto, 4'Act well your part, there all the honor lies. Here lie happiness, success,service to others- all to be guided by the Golden Rule. These seniors and the other students over the United States will become the scientists, artists, authors, statesmen, writers, and great figures of the future according to the way they fulfill the requirements set before them. And so, in the great pattern of life, each person helps to complete the whole. Whether he fits in ill or well, will depend upon the manner in which he plays his part. Not one life shall be destroyed, or cast as rubbish to the void, VVhen God hath made the pile complete. Forward, Class of 1933! VVith a will to do, a strong hand at the stick, and a splendid code to guide you, may you have a lucky take-off and a happy landing. A CENTURY OF PROGRESS By SAM SHEIN new day is bornl A new era has begun! Our living and our thinking, having assumed unprecedented aspects, portray with an animated vividness that dynamic spirit of progress which today permeates our life with accelerating power. The portion of civilization included within the last ten decades has had the instinct of workmanship. The VVorld's Fair welds the strong voices of science and industry into a symphony exultant. The Century of Progress Exposition, Chicago's effort to interpret the spirit of a century of advancement, gives a meaning to those seemingly confused movements of humanity. It is to the glory of the new day that the color- ful pageant of progress is dedicated. Chicago's achievements, concentrated within the flourishing epoch of one hundred intense years, are a worthy expression of her people's pride, a fitting ac- knowledgment of service rendered by the wholesome union of pioneering energy and productive intelligence. It is a wilful, determined nature which animates this Chicago, sprung from a log cabin fortress, in this, the resplendent celebration of her centennial. It seems an escape from reality. Reaching out for heaven rise huge sprawling skeletons of steel with their curious cubistic lines, their awkward nakedness, their imposing lankiness, their rigid formality and austere incongruity-the incompre- hensible immensity of it all moves one to rhapsodies of ecstatic Wonderment. Upon the lake lands of the Gem of the Nation have been erected edifices to Modernity, simple, strong, bare of profuse ornamentation. About the plan of this history-making cavalcade and its architecture hovers a nobility, a magnificent simplicity. At the entrance to these meadows, inviting mankind to flock, to see, to wonder, stands a high steep face of white rock, in dig- nity: the Administration Building. Incongruous, unconformable to the traditions of the architecture of the past, is the Travel and Transport Building, its head held aloft on cables, for this is the dome that breathesf, Through infusions of new vitality, architecture has avoided attenuation and feebleness. Satisfying the prevailing tastes, art has come down to the market-place, exercising freedom from restraint, it is not concerned with inculcating traditions in the future abode of mankind. One hundred years-in the story of man's development and in the evolution of what we are wont to title civilization, it is but a fieeting second. In the midst of his labors it refreshes, it invigorates man to cease and take account, for he has gorged himself with plenty. Conceived and designed to satisfy the many-sided spirit of our civilization, the Exposition renders reverence unto the perpetuator of progress, the mighty power, Science. Science, pioneering science, has extended the frontier of life. Into the latest development of human enterprise have been intro- duced the forces of systematized knowledge. The intense application of science to the world's work and the enrichment of its life depicts a crowning achievement of the simple and strangely enigmatic creature, Man. Today is a new day. Men and nations have paraded forward, history has been created. Customs have been discarded, and new standards suggested. The World's Fair emphasizes the profound truth that man has become the creator of his tactics of living. The old century was lighted in by tallow dips, and out by electricity, rode in on horseback, and out on airplane, came in talking as the Neanderthal man, and went out using a microphone, commenced with a quill pen, and finished with a linotypeg began with hands for labor, and ended with the powers of the universe in harness. Our chief concern has been the exploitation of science for physical advantages. Man's work for a century has been inspired by the desire to render human life more secure and happy. Page II3 Page 114 .Attempting to forge for itself some coherent concept of man and his life, man- kind demands of a silently inscrutable universe: Teach me thy ways. The command finds its expression in the Hall of Science. In these spacious chambers can we learn humility. The same note is struck in the Travel and Transport struc- tures, in the Electrical group, in the Agricultural buildings. Each is a sanctuary sheltering and nurturing the breath of life of the scientific vision, the boon of the dying years, a vision implying the exploration of our environment so that we may first of all locate ourselves within it. Clearly, the Fair, modelling these processes, is educational. Man seeks to know! In Chicago, where world's ends meet worldis ends, nation shall meet nation, man shall call his neighbor Brother, God has made of one blood all nations and all peoples. How courageously, how defiantly, does A Century of Progress-truly a worldis fair with the might of the world, forty-four nations co-operating-herald the renaissance of a fraternal fervor among races, peoples, nations. A Century of Progress has given birth to an age of the development of human and social forces, an age wherein the intellectual tension of peoples is centering upon the spiritual and social. Man's reverence for his God! Can any temple satisfactorily shelter such a noble essence? The Hall of Religion, a lofty shrine with a harmony divine-it encourages. In such a dedication, the eternally human has found vocalization. The world is yet not sold to unbelief. God and the good life yet remain the core of all creeds. America has revoltedg she has stepped forward. Asserting her freedom, she has required that all individuals contribute to a rich communal expression. Vanished is the agricultural frontier of America, but the pioneering spirit which it engendered and stimulated has become rooted in the people. Night! The cloak of darkness, like the curse of ignorance, wraps the splendors of the land. And then, a spiritfs work. The heavens light, the richness of the rainbow, stiiiing in its intensity, thrills, the grand kaleidoscopic panorama sweeps swiftly all the barriers of man's perceiving senses. The Fair, circus of sights, with thrills as varied as all humanity, has become a beautiful entity in the swirling life of a great metropolis, its cool heights standing out against an agitated man-made sky line, magnificent in its message. So light, so swift the shadows dart and dodge. The black, the ominous, sinister shades, sombre and sprightly, frisk and fret on steel, on stone. Great masses of vivid reds, blues, yellows, daub the individual dignity of the buildings. Motion! Color! With the modern spirit, excitement is an appetite, it is engraven on our nature. Speed, like a phantom, has captivated our fancy. It is the age we dare to live in. It typifies the modernism so vital to our existence. The Century of Progress Exposition reflects this spirit. True modernism acknowledges its allegiance to the benevolent despotism of the machine. Although prone to chafe at its restraint, submissively do we accept its blessings. The machine, in all its glory, or lack of glory, pride of the ingenuity of the mind of man, shall be mounted upon a pedestal and considered a complex personality by the eyes of the masses. hfachines have projected us into a new world, a world of change, and to live in this world of change requires flexibility and adaptability. Scientific knowledge represents the effective understanding man has gained of the great mysteries of life, of things outside himself, and the effective understanding he has gained of himself as one of the parts of the universe. Exact knowledge and faithful interpretations of science impose cumbersome burdens. The new day pleads that the intellect and moral ideals and controls shall develop in harmony with the growth in possession of scientific knowledge. The Pageant of Progress moves forward. Humanity gazes in awe. POEMS BY BERNICE ELFTMANN OPPORTUNITY Yesterday Some one knocked at my door. I looked out, And saw on the steps a little boy. I wanted to get ready a proper Welcome for him, So I left him standing there While I prepared to receive him. I was gone only a few minutes,' But when I came back, The boy was gone. He'd grown tired of waiting, And gone next door. ACKNOWLEDGMENT These things I thank thee for, 0 God: Gold in a western sky, April rain, slanting in from the cold, drab sea,' Saucy, red-breasted robins, Singing at twilightg Summer sunlight on wings of butterfliesg Luminous clouds, floating quickly by, . Like fieeting dreamsg Misty red peonies brimming with rain,' The eerie cry of the loon in gray marshes, Stars shining over a hill In a green and violet twilightg Sheen' of snow under a winter moon,- Glean of old copper, sparkle of crystal gobletsg Old linen, faintly perfumed with the dust of yearsg Vagrant, fragile flowers in soft-tinted vasesg A fireplace of ancient, mellowed bricks,- Captured Beauty in a line of verseg And love ------ . PRAYER FOR A CLASSMATE Oh, God, be good to him and kind,- IIe has a Soul-he's sensitive and shy, Comrade of dreamsg He shares the sorrows of the world- Weeps for children crying in the nightfor bread, Sobs for the trials of withered age. Too soon the world will wound his tender heart, And he will come with his soul all black and blue Unless you hold him fast, this child of your creation: Give him, oh God, your special care- Won't you do so, please? Page 115 Page II6 K Mx 'gpg V472 A 5, 4 g Xi J , p sm M Q A g J 'K tfvf' 3 fx , 5 Q' R wif? S, QM, imfl J 1 5 E 1 -4- im ' g 3T'L9:i1w 6-5111 HL, 7 . ' v ,., :V g E V ' ' . .5 'f V' ?+- TV -a 'fi 1 ,, ' K X , L A H' E A a X . L -v - . 3 s A, X K 3 ., -. 55 ' A A SPIRITUAL CHALLENGE TO PROGRESS CAN INTERVIEW WITH DR. LOUIS L. MANND BY ARTHUR KOVEN ROGRESS is a ratio, said Dr. Louis L. Mann, Ha ratio between what we are, what we might have been, and, therefore, what we should have beenf, Such logical reasoning seems to be heightened by Dr. iXlann's dark hair, sharp eyes, silver tongue, and golden personality, combined with a keen intelligence and a vision beyond the era. He is firm in his convictions, and is not affected by any false modesty. Seated in his study in the Hirsch Center of the Sinai Temple, of which he is rabbi, Dr. Mann assumed none of the formalities to which his station entitles him. As a student interviewer, I was entranced by the simple but powerful phrases in which Dr. Kfann presented his ideas. Aided by his friendly mannerisms, I soon was imbued with a portion of his spirit as he began the conversation. VVe find that material progress has outstripped social and religious progress, he affirmed. '4This in itself becomes exceedingly dangerous. If a child equipped with a horse and buggy ran into a cr nwd, he would do some damage, but the horse would soon stop before dire results occurred. If that same child drove a high powered motor into the crowd, the havoc would be great. VVe have materially progressed so that it is difficult to control our material world with our less well progressed moral and intellectual development. As a result, first, we find ourselves living in a paradox of plenty. Vive starve for want of food because there is too much food. We let children go barefooted for want of shoes because we have manufac- t'ured too many. Xfaterially, we have mastered the problem of production, mentally, we are stranded on the problem of distribution. Secondly, we find many claiming to have lost their faith in God. These are times that test such faith. VVhen conditions were bad elsewhere, strangely enough, our faith was unshattered, but when fate knocked at our own door, and we found it accompanied by such misery, suffering,and unemployment as has been common in Europe for the past fifteen years, many found their faith had vanished. The question may easily arise as to whether such faith ever existed, it should be based on the brotherhood of man, but we thought of ourselves, first, last, and always. We have based our system of livelihood on a foundation of greed. God never intended all the steel to belong to one small group, or all the oil to another. It is astounding to think that at the period of greatest prosperity, in our country, the world's most prosperous country, fifty-five per cent of the people did not make a living wage. The greed of man has made him forsake God for gold. To imag- ine that God has forsaken man is child-like and foolish. Wie have the moral and social codes sufficient to guide us, but we pay them no heed. The picture, however, is not all depressing, assured Rabbi Mann. For the time man has been on the earth, his progress has been considerable. In my grandfatherls day, a sixteen-hour working day was the rule, today, half that is law, and we shall soon see the time when six hours will include the day's labor. This has given and will give man more time for the aesthetics of life, for which he has so long been hungering. Along with this, infanticide has been stopped, dueling ended, and education brought within the reach of the masses. The mass itself is unintelligent. A minority must always rule, and always does. The trouble with the masses is that they care more for their stomachs than for their minds. To most people a full dinner pail is more important than social progress. A minority with ethical purports may be an ethical majority. One on the side of right against all, represents an ethical majority, all but one on the side of wrong, represents an ethical minority. The youth of today are confronted with many problems, asserted Dr. Mann. Page II7 Page II8 The same youths,however, will be changed after they reach thirty. They fall into the rut of their elders and lose their vision and idealism. The youths must have intelligence, and intelligence is non-material and non-mechanistic. They lack moral courage, and have not faith in their convictions. A college diploma appears to be an inoculation against future learning. Man never uses all the powers that he possesses. It is a scientific fact that thirty-eight per cent of our potentialities is all we ever use. W'e advance as far as the next person, we may have the vision to go further, but we do not. A great writer has said, 'He who turns from his vi- sion lies.' Let us represent the denominator of a fraction with our potentialities and the numerator with our accomplishments. We must see that the numerator remains as large as the denominator. The youth of today must provide and select the leaders of the future. Unless they choose the wisest and the best to govern for the good of all, they have abandoned their God. What is the greatest impediment to spiritual and social progress?', I ventured to inquire. The greatest source of misery seems to be man's inhumanity to man,', he replied. The VVorld VVar is an example of this. Three months before the war, David Lloyd George said to England: 'Give me S200,000,000 and I will obliterate the slums of England, alleviate disease, cast out the social maladjustment, and abolish the poverty of Englandf The newspapers the next day carried cartoons of Lloyd George with his finger pointing to his forehead. Three months later came the VVorld 'War and Great Britain spent S200,000,000 not once, but many times, and not to alleviate disease, abolish social maladjustment, and dispel ignorance, but to maim, kill, mutilate, and to manufacture widows and orphans. As long as we are willing to spend a thousand times as much to bring hell on earth as to bring heaven on earth, we cannot progress. We must remember that society is organic, that we are our brothers' keepers, whether we will it or not, and that there are natural laws in the spiritual World and spiritual laws in the natural world. We must remember that conditions in this world are results of our own choosing, or lack of choosing. To be sure even- tually, through economic pressure, we shall be driven by economic necessity to moral and social changes, but then these changes are necessities and not real moral changes, for moral changes embody a choice. VVe must remember that the group is responsible for the individual, and the individual for the group. . Does nationalism affect racial brotherhood ?,' I queried. True nationalism builds the state, he answered. Nationalism is to a country what individualism is to a person. The evil is caused by a perverted sense of nationalism that sets up spite barriers that exclude fellow men. International and economic distress have been created by man, not by God. Tariff walls have become spite fences. 'Let nations remember they are but menl' From the days of Hosea, we have been taught that God is love. Yet men have, by their actions, denied, and, by their works, belied their faith in a God of love. Suspicions, hatreds, jealousies, prejudices, malice, and ill will are found in abundance. Yet, the man who hates his fellow men has lost God. People that are given over to national animosity have lost love. We have it in our power to declare an old-age pension by which those who through science have had an additional nineteen years added to their lives, may not be thrown upon the human scrapheap to die in ignominy. Wve spend thousands to pension the soldier who destroys, we dare not abandon the worker who builds. In the cities, one finds slums that create crime, disease, degeneracy, and delin- quency. Through law, these could be removed and playgrounds put in their places. This would save not only money, but human lives. The Golden Rule has not tarnished, evidently it is pure gold.', In concluding, Dr. Mann quoted a little stanza: There is a destiny that makes us brothers, No one goes his way alone, All that we pour into the lives of others Comes back into our very own. THE ABBEY PLAYERS AN INTERVIEW WITH ARTHUR SHIELDS By ROBERT VAN PELT HE Abbey Theatre Players have come, played, and conquered. Making their first visit to Chicago since 1913, they intended to stay only two weeks, but their visit lengthened itself to three, four, five, six, and even seven weeks. Their unique acting swept Chicago off its feet and left a deep admiration for them in the hearts of all who had the good fortune to see them. Arthur Shields, director of the Abbey Theatre Players on their American trip, ushered me into a large room back stage which contained the familiar odor of grease paints and other cosmetics. He is a man short of stature, middle-aged, with a large store of vitality. lNlr. Shields has a cultured bearing and a marvelous intellect. He had just finished a remarkable performance and hadn't yet removed any of his make-up, so while he proceeded to get back to nature, I was bidden to ask my questions. Declining to talk about himself, he proceeded to give me the history of the Abbey Theatre, an institution that is the very heart of every Abbey player. It was back in 1897 that two or three people used their imaginations and began talking of forming an Irish National Theatre. This theatre was begun without a repertory of plays or a company of players. There was one 'rib' however, an unacted Irish poetical play by VV. B. Yeats, 'The Countess Cathleenf The idea was first formulated, however, back in 1893, when the Irish Literary Society was organized with the aim of interesting people in literature of the past, and of creating an appreciative audience for the work of future Irish writers. To produce in Dublin was not easy. Although the city possessed three or four excellent theatres, they were, as they are now, dependent on English touring troups for their acting. In order to produce 'Countess Cathleen,' it would be neces- sary to gather actors from England and to rent a hall. This required more money than the poet, Yeats, could afford, so he appealed to two of his friends: Edward Martyn, a country gentleman of culture who was soon to prove himself a play- wright, and the person to whom, if one person is to be singled out, the Abbey Theatre owes most, Lady Gregory. It was necessary to secure a guarantee to cover the expenses of performances of 'The Countess Cathleen' and a play of Mr. Martyn's, 'The Heather Fieldf In order to do this, Lady Gregory sent the following statement to some of her personal friends: 'We propose to have performed in Dublin, in the spring of every year, certain Celtic and Irish plays which, whatever be their degree of excellence, will be written with a high ambition, and so build up a Celtic and Irish school of dramatic liter- ature. We hope to find in Ireland an uncorrupted and imaginative audience trained to listen by its passion for oratory, and believe that our desire to bring upon the stage the deeper thoughts and emotions of Ireland will ensure for us a tolerant welcome, and that freedom to experiment which is not found in theatres of England and without which no new movement in art or literature can succeed. We will show that Ireland is not the home of an ancient idealism. W'e are confident of the support of all Irish people, who are weary of misrepresentation, in carrying out a work that is outside all the political questions that divide us.' The necessary money was guaranteed, and in 1899, the plays were given in a Page IIQ Page 120 large concert hall in Dublin. A year later, further performances were staged, and the following year, the third of the series of plays was presented. It was soon seen, however, that the importing of English companies for these plays would never lead very far, and it seemed as if the end of the Irish dramatic literature had come. By chance, there was a little company of players in Dublin headed by VVilliam and Frank Fay, two brothers. They decided t0 join Mr. Yeats and his friends, and the Irish national theatre movement had a rebirth. A new dialect, the Anglo-Irish, was used by these players. It has been said that the use of this dialect created the Irish players. There followed years of wan- dering, giving performances where they could, using crude scenery and inadequate lighting, playing to meager audiences in halls unfitted for representations and t0 a hostile pressf, '4VVhat ideal kept urging them on and helped them surmount their difiiculties? I asked. Their w0rk,', was the simple answer. Those players were working for ideals and for aspirations, and not for worldly gains. From their very beginning, the Abbey Players worked for something new, something that was natural and simple, something that did not have the artificial air of the English stage. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the theatre was harnessed by conventions of all kinds, the predominating one being the producers idea that the stage must be kept active. Actors moved ceaselessly, purposelessly,from one part of the stage to the 0ther.The Irish players at that time were learning the value of simplicity and sincerity. They were learning to use no movement that was not a necessary one, and to strive for beauty of speech. In their attempt, they brought a realistic element into their acting that even today is characteristic of the Abbey Playersf, During the first six years of their existence, the players were amateurs, in the sense that they were not paid for their work and could rehearse only in their spare time. However, in IQO4 they made a trip to London and gave two performances, winning the admiration of a generous Englishwoman, Miss Horniman, who was so struck by their performance that she took an old theatre in Dublin situated in a defunct Mechanics' Institute, altered it, equipped it, and handed it, together with an annual subsidy, over to the directors of the players. The gift of this theatre and this subsidy, continued iXIr. Shields, set the players free to devote their whole time to their art. The theatre, however, even after Miss Horniman had done her best with it, was no great thing, it is the theatre we still inhabit-called the Abbey Theatre because it is situated in a street called Abbey. The auditorium seats only 550 people, even then the seats do not all give a good view of the stage. The stage itself is a mere pocket-handkerchief, sixteen feet deep and nineteen feet wide. That small stage, however, has been the cradle of many a masterpiece and a training ground for many a player of genius. W'e have often been asked what brings such unity t0 our company, and what makes our theatre a national organization. The perfect understanding of the actors who have played with one another until they sense every movement that is to be made, is one of the main factors in our unity. The fact that our plays are deep- rooted in Irish soil and Irish history makes them unique. Their absolute locality gives them an air of reality and simpleness that can scarcely be found in the drama of any other nation. The European war nearly killed our theatre. It gradually scattered the company, and at the end of the war, there was a balance in the bank of but 5500, as Miss Horniman's help had come to an end. The theatre had been bought from her, and now unsubsidized, had to pay its way like any other theatre or die. Things seemed very dark. We found, said Mr. Shields, that our troubles had just begun when the war ended. The Anglo-Irish War was a war on our own doorstep, vitally affecting every potential theatre-goer. Street ambushes at any hour of the day or night encouraged respectable citizens to seek their homes after their day's work and to stay in them. Following this, the curfew added to our misfortunes. It was bad enough when it sounded at midnight, worse at eleven, worse still when it moved back to half-past ten, damnable at half-past nine, and finally ridiculous at eight-thirty. Imagine trying to run a theatre when your audiences have to be in their homes by half-past eight and cannot leave those homes before three the next morning! There remain- ed only two alternatives: to start the performances at four a.m. or five in the afternoon. VVe tried the latter, but with little success, and were on the point of extinction, when the War blessedly ceased. Following right on the heels of the Anglo-Irish war came the Irish civil war. This was not quite so bad as the previous war, but left its sting. The Abbey Theatre was finally subsidized by the Irish government, being given 54,000 the first year and 55,000 the subsequent years. With this subsidy, the theatre was altered and a School of Acting and a School of Ballet were estab- lished. NIeanwhile, in the Abbey Theatre itself, said Mr. Shields, we play for forty- six weeks of the year, changing our program each week. It has been only recently that we have played outside the British Isles. VVe have behind us a tradition of years of willing, unpaid service on the part of directors, players, and playwrightsg a memory of lean years of war when players' salaries hardly kept them in boots, and a knowledge that the work of our theatre has played no small part in the creation of our state. In fact, small as we are, we are in every sense of the word a national theatre, something which can be seen in Dublin and nowhere else in the world. Every summer increasing numbers of visitors cross the Atlantic or the Irish Sea for the sole purpose of seeing our work. I repeat, however, that our history can teach nothing to any other country, least of all to England. Our recipe for a national theatre could have been cooked only over an Irish fire. There has been behind it the determination ofa few people, that determination which was expressed thirty years ago in the statement signed by Lady Gregory, Mr. Martyn, and Mr. Yeats, but the theatre has been shaped by the genius of its playwrights and its players. Its future is unknown, it is hidden in the brains of the dramatists yet to come. Page I21' Page 122 NOTEBOOK OF A POET FANTAS Y A thousand stars Stud a midnight sky, And the virgin moon Floats serene Through ethereal clouds. ROMANCE A car, A star, A moon, A night in fune- Romancef JEAN STEVENS SUNSET High on the windswept walls of the sea I watched the crimson sun In magic splendor, And as it sank, The heavens glowed in crimson blush, And I watched from the rugged elif. FOR A FRIEND For the sparkling smile Of a joyful friend, I gave up all my loves-. But she placed her hand Within my heart, And cut the vein of life. LIVING LOVE Once you were young, Before our love. Now you are old, But still we love. OUT OF THE NIGHT Out of the night Came a song to me. Sweeter than sweet Was the song I heard, Made from the notes Of a sweet bird's throat,- Fragrant with perfume Of roses' bloomg Light, with the light Of a million stars,' Sweet was the song I heard. F ORGOTTEN A kiss in the night, To remember forever. A kiss in the night, Forgotten by day. ITALY MARCHES FORWARD Cdn Interzfifw with Prince Lodovico Spada Veralli Potenzianij By SEYMOUR FRIEDMAN PON my admittance to his modest three-room suite on the eighth fioor of the Drake Hotel, Prince Lodovico Spada Veralli Potenziani, Premier Benito Mussolini's representative at the Century of Progress, turned from gazing through the window and smilingly advanced toward me. Seemingly about forty years of age, tall, straight, and dignified, his dress showed him to be observant of those decorous sartorial niceties demanded of those of his station in life. What is the Italian people's sentiment toward the Century of Progress?', I asked. They think it a very courageous idea in this depression. It is a credit to Chicago, to America, and to the people who started it. The Italian people are beginning to realize the importance of the part it will play in international, social, and economic relations, and are very enthusiastic about it. Italy will have its own building on the fair grounds near the Hall of Science, it will be finished by june IF' What will be the nature of the Italian exhibits FH I queried. The building will house only exhibits pertaining to the material, mechanistic progress of the country. It will not exhibit any of the arts. After all, the primary purpose of our part in the exposition is propaganda. VVe want to make Italy known as a great nation.', It has been said that a nation is making progress to a more enlightened civil- ization when it keeps the welfare of its youth close to its heart,', I suggested. Has Italy progressed very much in this manner? The Prince smiled and shrugged his shoulders. A nation which is dominantly Fascist thinks of its youth more than any other nation in the world, so much so that the official anthem begins with youth. It sings and acts youth. Youth is its natural expression. The Italians value their youth very highly. VVe revere and admire them. Young people are at the head of the administrative offices. In fact, there is no room for old people in Italy. We have state guidance as well as family guidance for them, and very often the state cares for the babies of poor people, raises, and educates them until they are eleven years old. Our schools give them excellent physical training and devote much time to sports as well as to academic training so that they soon become helpers rather than charges of the state. At the age of sixteen, boys usually are taken into the guard to be trained. After they finish their preparation, they may or may not-it is entirely voluntary-enter the Fascist party. Since their training is militarized a great deal, they learn the meaning of true discipline. In Italy, discipline is the heart of everything. There is an annual addition to the ranks of the party of about 4ooo youths. I suppose the sentiment of adoration and respect for Mussolini is the common one in Italy, but occasionally we Americans hear of this sentiment as being on the decline. Is this report true?,' Ah, no! The Italians all love and adore Mussolini. And why not? Before he came, they were poor, now they are well off. Bolshevists and anarchists ran ram- pant and destroyed their tranquility before, now there is peace and order. lX'lus- solini is symbolic of the vigorous and public-minded leadership which Italians love. They love his resoluteness, firmness, quick-decision, his bravery. I don't think they would ever tolerate another leader while he is living. What message do you think the Italian youth would like you to convey to the young people of America ? I asked. Hesitating at first, then speaking in a confidential tone, he said, I would like the American youths to come to Italy to see what progress the generation has made. It would be very nice if fellowships for high school and college students were estab- lished so that they could visit each other and become better acquainted. After all, one cannot truly know or understand the foreign view-point by observing the customs and habits of a foreign nation from a distance. Pre 123 S ARIZONA ETCHING BY KATHLEEN FARNSWORTH I think of rainbow rnountain:,' I dream of burning :and:,' I :ee :tampeding cattle, Cro::ing Arizona lartd:. I recall wild young cow-boy: Yelling, Who0pee.', I-Ieyf,', and Hof A: they rode outfor the cattle At the rnorning': jir:t bright glow. I've :wapped :torie: with pro:pector: Grown wizened, brown, and old, A: they tramped the mountain: over, Seeking eagerly for gold. I've been held by :tartling :un:et:, With their warmly blended hue:, Changing :and: to rare:t color:, Purple:, red:, and brighte:t blue:. Oh, could I but return there Where the nighf: :o thickly :tarred, Iffhere the coyote howl: at rnoonri:e, And the cactu: :tand: on guard! S U N S E T BY MARGARET KELLY At the cl0:e of day, when the :un goe: down, Ca:ting it: glow o'er the dark, du:ty town, A feeling of peace come: over rne, A: the day :lip: into eternity. The day': work i: done,' the :etting :un See: the children corne in from their playg Ha:ty word: and unkind deed: . Are forgotten at the clo:e of day. The fair :ky blu:he: a ro:y hue, A: the lingering :un drop: out of view, And the :tar: to lofty height: will mar. The moon ri:e:,' it i: night once more. Page 125 Page 126 CALL FOR THE DOCTOR OR WHY Is A DRESS REHEARSAL? Being a :kit in five :cene: and afade-out. BY ERNEST FULLER Scene I TIME-AftCf the Liberty Bell rings C3215 p.m.l PLACE-Proviso's auditorium. The :hade: of evening have ju:t been drawn, leaving only uncertain ray: around the edge of the :ky-light:. The metallic ring of locker: being clo:ed and occa:ional bit: of laughter and talking filter through the hall door:,' otherwi:e :erene :ilence predominate:, except for certain my:teriou: :ound: i::uing from behind the :tage curtain:. Finally the:e, too, cea:e,' the light die: away. When all human activity ha: de:erted the place, faint ray: of :ome unearthly light begin to glowg my:teriou: figure: appear on the :tage. They are the :pirit: of operetta: of other day:. POCAHONTAS-Fellow spirits, lend me your ears. I come not to praise Oh Doctor, but to bury him. Before many moments pass, this stage will be the scene of the final rehearsal of ProViso's annual operetta. We gather here tonight, to show up our successors. For years we Worked hard to build up Proviso's musical reputation, but lo! these ungrateful young wretches take all the credit for her fame unto themselves. They boast of their band, their orchestra, their choir, and their Operettas. It's about time that we did something to remind them of us. CAPTAIN CROSSBONES-I move you that we swoop down unexpectedly upon the dress rehearsal tonight, and do all in our power to make it a grand Hop. POCAHONTAS'IS there a second? NIANY SPIRITS-Second, second! POCAIIONTAS-ThOSC in favor signify by the usual sign. Carried. Be everywhere evident, but nowhere in sight tonight. Come on, John. EXEUNT. Scene II TIME-6:45 the same day. PLACE--the same as before. The player: have arrived, but all i: not hot:y-tot:y in Denmark. No one know: -gut what i: the matter, but it i: only too obviou: that the Spirit: are taking revergge. he orche:tra leader wave: hi: baton with :uch gu:to that he keel: overfor the count. he dramatic coach i: :o nervou: that her :ilhouette re:emble: futuri:tic art. DRAMATIC COACH-Come, come, girlsg you have only two minutes to get dressed for the opening chorus. In the meanwhile, I wish you stage hands would push this big set over alittle to the right. No, a little more-not too much-easy, easy-just an inch more-there!-no, just a fraction of an inch more to the left-hold it! Hold it! Oh-h-hl fThi: goe: on for ten minute:, till one :tage hand mi:interpret: an in:truction and pu:he: the :et in the wrong direction, which cau:e: it to lo:e it: equilibrium and topple gracefully down on the head: of the opening choru:,ju:t a: the curtain i: being drawnj Scene III TIME-two hours later. PLACE-guess where. The :econd act ofthe operetta i: now ready to be rehear:ed. The re:ult: of the jir:t act can be plainly :een :tamped on every face. The conductor, who ha: hi: right arm in a :ling, hi: coat of, and onefoot re:ting on a drum, look: like a doughboy who went over the top and ran into :omething. Hi: expre::ion i: that of a :ick man. But hi: jiner courage win: out, and he throw: out hi: che:t and :tep: into the drum, a: the opening chord: ofthe entrance mu:ic :ound. The curtainfpart. The orche:tra get: the :ignal: mixed, and in:tead of playing :oftly, it put: all it: old pep and fire into the :election. The leading :oprano :trive: in vain to be heard over the racket of the orche:tra. Her voice and :he both grow weaker with the :train, and amid the anal note:, :he collap:e: and i: carried out on a :tretcher. Scene IV TIME-an hour late. PLACE-where else could it be? The final act i: about to be rehear:ed. The curtain part:. LEADING LADYCIO her loverj-Gee, Roland, how bright the moon seems tonight. CAside- Look romanticn you says. Do you want to queer this for us both Pj ROLAND YCS, my dear. It reminds me of-of- STAGE WHISFER'-Of that old Spanish song. ROLAND-It reminds me of that old Spanish song. CAside--Get off my feet. Do I look like a rugij Shall I sing it, dear? LEADING LADY'Y'CS, Rolly, please. . fASIDE'BUt I learned my lesson the last time you sang. VVhere's that cotton for my ears ?j Roland begin: hi: romantic love :ong about :ix tone: of pitch. The villain, thinking that thi: i: hi: cue, da:he: upon the :tage and :tart: afinhghtfor po::e::ion of the girl, who get: too close to the encounter and i: bowled over by a :weeping left from the villain. Scene end: in confu:ion. Scene V TIME-just about. PLACE-where do you want it? The curtain part: with queer noi:e: i::uing from the orche:tra pit. An inve:tigation reveal: that the tuba player ha: the wrong :election, the cornet player ha: hi: mu:ic up:ide down, the flute player i: -duting the drum part, and the piani:t i: playing from memory-a long way from it. Adju:tment: are made, and more and le:: choru: girl: take the limelight with a gay bit, Dance of the Raindrop:. The jir:t and the :econd row collide :o often that the leader begin: to wonder if the dance :houldn't have been captioned Fling ofthe Hail:tone:.,' , The girl: go into a huddle, come out of it, and are ju:t about to :tage ano.therflouri:h when the mu:ic :top:, and leave: them hopping around with no more rhythm than ajelly ji:h out of water. The Finale mu:ic :trike: up, and everybody da:he: out to be on the :tage for the grand ending. fu:t when everybody i: jammed on, the rope: break, the curtain collap:e:, the fu:e blow: out, and the orche:tra put: a fini:hing touch to the occa:ion by playing Why Can't Thi: Night Go Un Forever? The Fade-Out. TIME-the wee small hours. PLACE-the same old hang-out. The auditorium i: totally dark. The tympani re:t contentedly in the orche:tra pit. Melancholy moonbeam: :neak around the edge of the :kylight:, and dance acro:: the :tage, :atirizing the activitie: of an hour ago. Where did the Spirit: go? Why, they left in di:gu:t at the end of thejir:t :cene. Page 127 Pagf 128 e e ' to e ax 1 H ff' ff H e fl, . ,af View sffeffzel . We X 215. 'rf X Sy .ku llilll? X I , 'Af Il I f lm XR? fe lilgafllix t 3 Sai, A lla, gl X xxlffligiyifi ik , lx 7 TTTTW illfai e dj Hair :vga-SZ: 0 T I Ii , 5 A 0 , 135. 6 ag V L 1 I of it QLQTTES 'U GG? If-4 6' 6' gnigqkf W PROVISO CANDIDATES FOR THE MISSING LINK BY HSHERBYN From ont of Darwinb' chain, He loft a linle or fog Maybe one of there will fit, Picked .fpecially from our zoo. Chief cocoanut-thrower And king of the band Was a bright young Swede, Named John Grandland. First lady ofthe land, A ravishing young miss, Was known to the apes As Warren, Persis. Chief scribe of the joint, Whom the books did fuss, Vilas a romping young monk Christened Nellie Statkus. Head crook of the dive, Who extracted a fee From unsuspecting apes, Vilas the chimp, Doherty. The Hanthropoid annualv Chuck full of baloney, VVas edited by one I -Baldaseroni. Head yodeler of the zoo, In Caruso's style, Was a gibbering monkey Called Peggy', Carwile. Lady in waitingi' And pink tea', fed Was a tiny gorilla Tagged Marge Tolsted. For brains in the place A she won the prize, A jumping ape-ess, Name-Marjorie Reisz. The big word-slinger On Webster', did dine, Was a tall Orang-u-tan Called Sam Shein. Head seer of Proviso In exhibition pen, VVith specs on his nose VVas Art Koven. Eating Wheaties all the time, And filled with vigor and vim, Weighing a mere two-eighty--- Ape Thompson, Jim. From infinitesimal spinach tree Out of which he fell, Wlas a black-headed chimp Called Steve Patchell. The big Ape Adonis, A countrified Jasper, GableH of the gorillas, Alias H. Casper. Known as the Irish element Because of her fight Is six-foot babooness Dubbed Lenore Vllright. The blue-grilled baboon Who ,made her jaws go, The prize of the zoo,- Meet-Vange Caffero. Quick, Henry, the Flitl' He's bothered by Heas, Star Cocoanut kicker, Known as Ray Pries. Hanging over the drinking cup Into which she did spill, But fioated like a top Calmly-Jocelyn Gill. The ape with the horse laugh Cracked as the Liberty Bell A self-sufficient chimp Was Starr Caldwell. All the males in the land She held in her fist, A beautiful gorilla Miss Ginnie Gist. To the tallest monk From a tiny babe, Ate bananas galore, Skinny Phil McCabe. The monk with a hairy lip, Who a razor did shun, Was awarded a shaving mug Inscribed-Gordon Newton. Merrily, once a day, She swung on her trapeze, Did a tiny Anthropoid, Called Isabel Lees. Chief Gabber midst us all, Who made every one weary, Was a black-headed ape, Alias Dot Peary. Shunned from the joint, A ladies' recluse, A strutting young Orang Named Robert Roos. An argument-seeker Who talked like heck Was ever hunting trouble, Gorilla Bill Beck. There was peroxide there, And the blonde of the town Was a stately young miss Called Connie Brown. Biggest gossip of the zoo And town high-flyer Was a jumping baboon Called Grace Buyer. The strongest gorilla, Who by her arms swung, A freckle-faced ape Was Florence Young. A blustering gorilla VVho liked to boss, VVas a six-footed Ape Called Ray Fross. The baboon bunk Was made to go By a curly-headed monk Named Schaefer, joe. But Prize ape of all Who slung all this dirt Is nominated for the link, Gorilla Ked Sherbert. Page 129 Page 130 PEDOGOGICAL PERAMBULATIONS One o'clock, in three minutes mor And it's early yet, Last night I retired at four. If only I could get A stunt for that faculty! Waste paper all over the place, ea What I don't throw away, I erase. Stunts-Features-Faculty- But they're separated by eternity. Amsden, Bergstrom, Bracewell, and Brenneng Cooper, Ewing, Goodman, And Stegman: They represent the Manual1Arts, VVhat to do-inspiration departs. Amundson, Appleton, Baer, and Bolt, Baldridge, Barnum, Cameron, and Holt, Carr, Catlin, Chulock, Comery, and Foster, Davis, Duvall, Eddy, After them, Galster. Eilers, Emge, Evans, Fancher, and Garloughg Gentilin, Golding, Cheer up-fifty more or so. Gospill, Gray, Hahn, Hammitt, and Harman, Hatley, Hildebrandt, Hogan, and Immelg Isaacs, Kaupke, Kassel, And Johnson, squared, Kuster and Law,-- I'd give up if I dared. Lundblad, Marm, Marshall, and Morey, Masters, Matte, lwedsker, Oh! It's a Long story, Mitchell, Moelk, Monilaw, Neal, and Norman, A couple of Nelsons, And one-real Phelan. Oakes, Oliver, Osburn, Otis, Payne, Poplett, Pickles, Porch, Reid,- I'll get 'em all yet. Reininga, Remley, Robinson, and Ross, Saylor, Schlueter, For a rhyme-I'm at loss. Scott, Scribner, Seaver, Shepard, Sigworth, Slimmer, Stark, Stubbs, Taggart- At least the list is thinner! Tallmadge, Trigg, Trost, VVheeler, VVagner, Vallo, White, Whitefield, Williams, Wunderlich-the last so ------ z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z MORAL-BC glad you don' Morton. tgo to WHO'S WHO AND WHY NOT- Most Homely VVorst Dressed Most Impolite VVOrst Athlete Noisiest Quietest Least Popular Dumbest Giant Midget Biggest Snob Absent Most Boy ART DOUGLAS RED SMITH ERNIE FINKBEINER PHIL DOHERTY HARRY CASPER STARR CALDWELL SWEDE GRANDLAND ART KOVI-:N ITALO BALDASERONI PHIL MCCABE ' FRANK HACKMAN ROLAND REYNOLDS Girl VIRGINIA GIST VIVIAN TURBETT FLORENCE YOUNG DOT SCHNEIDER LORETTO KELSEY MARY ELLEN SHERBERT PERSIS WARREN DOT TAGGART ADELINE HOWARD LAURA REMUS MARGARET TOLSTED VANGE CAFFERO fOr did Our printer pie his type ?J FANTASY BY STARR CALDWELL Love is afantasy merry, An etching of .rilvery night, A tramp through the meadow: of heaven, A ripple in poolr of delight. You may climb up the hill of ajeclion Where the Jkie: are of brighten blue And :it at the throne of Venux. I'll try it onceg come now, wonit you? Page lj! Pug Q2 Y, v VY Q V Yi' L ,VW .A'N,,YI V V 775' v YY' L- in ff W ,gg PHE TE: fl' 4 T' T, A ff' 't-SL , T .A D 1-, 35 J '-,oo I T4 2 Q5 mfg? HQ ffWf ID 64 fl X N23 K WZ W 5' Q X T 1313 if X' cw TU 1- i'-l- T T O rj' QQQCQW A 9 QI T 'f 'T kv T -f-TW ff T QW, ,H TQ U LQ- T Tw A MATTER -QF TASTE AT,Qf ' 7ngo5o C3Rv H,5o,t? -LL A '5'i 5KEiC 'Y A all M -Q .Qi 'A MMV, X ,J VY I r N-if WNQQZ T 252552 if riff QCQ fggf , I 'N' az f I . . , f XA-X , Z f T - V iff Ncf T is ' T 5293 T f M, TTTT T Nff, 14 ' . 3 2 Eff, f , I , 1 ff 1 - 5 5 I f l 5- Sei- - f , l T 7 Z : ' ff I ' 4' 1, 'yy-lg, L A ' ' ' Q .f- Y-7-,,., f.x J B -, Z , 2 .,. 5 1 1 T lk!-1,17 B .-.., Ti.. - -T NV 'mfqm N 'N , 1 1 IT 1-A W? f Xjf , . Lx p WX T I 1 7 , 1 ' f A , h Sierx , ' Mfr! W xx 1 1 A B' WIIAVLIIILU4 ' V I 1 ,T ' T 1 Z 3 5 f, ,N ,V ! LQQ X iff T 1 7 T 3 fzf has J f ' X ' Nl Xfllf 1X 'fi j 6 jf , tual j i xx -Ll I U1 X X L! 2 AIX, T T I 1 5 3 'Z--it T i OLYWAD .so ME PovygR' ,T L- 'i STUQI E5 IN VALUES ,N JT suv -- Sv QV ', cu... -nn W ' Nu ff l HERCULE5iV.S. CUPIP , T ' ' ' 'f T T T T T T ev T T: W3 Tf KET- 4 WE fr wH'w '-.'i L !-vi 'N' 'X' ggi! Hmm. xl, x U fQf?F. 'T T134 L f '5'5i ' A MN lx j -Q1:g in xA . ,xi X of ' , QM' X W M Lv Tw vga 'T T T' T, ,Q . f W YV V7 0,414 . V , 1 T T Fi -Hr H fi! INT -3 -F T x ov 1.1 T Q- xx sd ' M52 Q41 'P 1 1 seem AND YE SHALL mm TJ JUL!-ET WHAT ROM-E-OWEDN ?17 - 7 Y T Y YY ' f-Ig - 7 Musnc HATH Powm H LA ' Y , 'lf -A FOOLS' FIELD DAY TIME-Midnight, Feb. 29, 1933 PLACE-Five-and-Dime store CONTESTANTS-Provisonian G. A. A. .lUDGE'HClCH Moody Vl'ills PRIZES-Left-handed cut-glass monkey wrenchg a doughnut holeg yards of cheese cloth. Fin! race-Counter hurdling along main airle. Lost by Marg Fieldse, time: 3 months, four years, and I8 seconds. She leaped no counters and forgot to start. Second to none-Anne Eckertg she fell asleep behind first counter. Prize-pair of ear muffs. 1-'im Meat-Shoot the pmt VVon by Marie Doerr. Length: two millimetersg time: two hours. Second to Kay Gaden. Distance: 2 inchesg time: any time. Prize-one straight pin. 440 mile race lVon by Shirley Fieldse in the slow time of one minute. Second place to Alma Voigtg time: on her hands. Prize-sur-prize. Baby Context-For bert phyfique or .fumplthin XVon by Gladys Wolk. Sherbert lost by a forfeitg some one broke up her baby carriage. Prize-two yards of black crepe. Longeft .fubmergence in pool. A CDrinking fountain used.j Won by Dot Schneiderg time: I5 minutes. Second to Opal Wleberg time: not time. Q Prize-big, long drink of water Marble: W'on by hlarie Cunningham, who won none, lost none, and had none. Xliss Vlvheeler disqualified for hunching. Prize: P Hotch Scotch Won by Margaret Tolsted, who jumped 25,000 miles and one inch. fMoral: Use Firestones.j There were no other contestants. Prize-bottle of pop. Double Dutch Wlon by Florence Young-who was disqualified because she is Canadian. Place awarded to Frances O'Shaughnessy. Prize-unknown, believed to have been swiped by umpire. Tiddle de Winky. Won by Evelyn Floor, who shot the man hole covers into a tea cup without hurting the manhole covers. Prize-free booklet on how to become strong. Paper-wad-.rhooting context Vlion by Dot Bloom, who shot the left hind foot off an ant twelve miles away under a cement sidewalk. fThe Baron is her instructorj Second place to Catherine Scanio, who missed the broad side ofa barn. Prize-a machine gun. Skipping Context Won by Lu Buenger, who skipped school all day. Second to Irene Grady, whose heart skipped a beat. Prize-cheese cloth galore. VVinner of cut-glass monkey wrench was Atlanta,,' who won none, lost none and was not there. Page 13 3 Page 134 INTELLIGENCE TEST . Close your eyes, without counting on your fingers, name the eleventh William Wordsworth did not write QID Ulmitations of Immoralityf' Q25 Tin Horn Abbey, Q31 The World Is Too Much For Us, Q41 The Face Tennyson wrote Q11 The Charge of the Lunch Brigade, Q25 Idles of the INIEN ONLY I. ANSWER: TRUE Q-H OR FALSE QOJ Amwer Q J 1. In one word tell why you are not an honor student. Q J 2. How many volts in a peck? Q D 3. A peck of what? C 7 4 letter of the alphabet. Q D 5. Who made. you come to Proviso? Q D 6. What do you think of the impending crisis? Q D 7. What for? Q J 8. Was Socrates a boy or a girl? Q D 9. When? Q D IO. Have you ever had the measles? Q D 11. How many? Q D 12. How many of Immel's fifty jokes have you heard? Q D 13. How many other schools refused to admit you? Q J I4. Can a bald man grow whiskers? Q D 15. Why do they build rivers so close to the bank? Q D 16. Is that so? Q D 17. How long can the choir warble? Qanswer in milesj Q D 18. Can you darn holes out of socks? Q J 19. Is it? Q D 20. What is a geezeling? Q J 21. Man or woman? Q D 22. Can you do it? Q D 23. Do you believe in intelligence tests? II. PLEASE ANSWER IMMEDIATELY. C D On The Bar Room Floor . Q 7 Kings, Q35 Useless, Q4D St. lNIaggie,s Eavesn. Q J Robert Browning had nothing to do with QID The Pi Eyed Piper, Qzj Rabbi Ben lVIalone, Q3j The Defeat of the Spinachn. III. IVIATCHING EXERCISES Selfctiom Author: No. of Author Q D I. The Shooting of Dan J. D. Anonymous Magrewn Shakespeare Q D 2. Mother Goose Rhymes Rembrandt Q D 3. The Dying Hobo Pluto Q D 4. Little Bo-Peep Michael Angelo Q J 5. Casey at the Bat Pythagoras Q J 6. Brother, Can You Spare Dante Rossetti A Dime Alfred Tennyson Q D 7. Calamity Jane Chaucer Q D 8. N Casey Jones' Last Ride Shelley Q J 9. Old Ironsides Charles Dickens Q Q IO. Paul Bunyan Einstein PERSPIRING REPORTER ASKING- What is this thing called technocracy? BOB Roos-It isn't anything like love. I know. IMMEL-Oh, technocracy? 'Tis like a breath of fragrant spring in the midst of dreary winter. AL AUSLANDER-I am a man of silence, but I will say a few words. Far be it from me to speak unnecessarily for the purpose of elucidation, but upon this in- stance allow me to clear the haze of the question with which you abruptly affront me with, etc., ad infinitum. ITALO BALDASERONI-Itls like getting the Provi to printg it can't be done. F. I. Otis-Technocracy? It's elemental, it's fundamental, it's colossal, it's the ulimate, it's hyperbolic in its profundity. Why procrastinate any longer? STARR-Silence is golden. SWEDE GRANDLAND'II,S hot stuff, this technocracy. ART KOVEN-Blue is a beautiful color, isn't it? NELLIE STATKUS'DO you think so? PHIL DOHERTY'I,ll take vanilla. DOT PEARY-So much for that. MR. MOELK'-I only read the funnies, how should I know? JOHN SIEGLER-Sez who? MARY ED1'rH YOUNG-I wonder. FLORENCE YOUNG-JuSt between you and me, I don't think. Which brings us back again. What is technocracy? Pug: 135 Page 136 I, I1' -XT WM wg wma SWM?1lHl55Wf , ' JW2'E gfxlk JLJN? Q U if V xv . My Xrxj 6 ,' A x :af X Q pg f 5 U XM N 'iii L , Q Y rf fx Wg , .JU J, X -WR kg 0 Z tg' f X rl X 1, -- - 1 ef if--.,f JV' f 'Yfil,ff54Ys'XA, , flxrr YQ, 4 XE X' X ,701 , End: M Q J yy?-' 333932 WWE? 7 r Ti' ffxy IJ- 1317 ix 'uwwfhf V' M QW Q :-U1 , ,wr U U 37119 X wiv:--E .cz ,lQ::, Wg, Mb X ,fLO1 ,f 1 Q , ff? fn sf? . , , K1 Q . iipf X3 K ffqd fx ggfyixf r,- ,:' f ' K F-P' ,- - 2 x- N U -off '- : fffg X 5 H5 1391- fLV.Q'Mf f Q 349 U y1iQfQ6ggf3-?1NFNpyf 20,9 M7535 1 'MVg QjQ?avi,, M iiffm2g-U fix aqfs W fH4UfUQl1Qjf,l1 QV,H5gZf15? J 5? HQ WQ 2 52564 ixfgiiu 19 51QN?JilA 'A W?iE8 55 . Ili' X9 fffwfiwrfff ygmWWi?5 35 X QQ JQQL Jgwgf 5 4 A ' ,,5f, far UfUa4 f fqf IN THE soon ou: DAYS ,,H-- j WHEN CHQCAGU WAS YOUNG 5 24 'Q X A 1 ENCHANTEDYIY p gRovnso 'ATHn.ETE v jr- X041 57,514 nsLAND 25. E443-Wo ON summen DUTY gj-NUU3QWM,mU3.,-,4Um,M,MW-- Q? W -- NX Nj L.:-A W N, f XW-vb.x .164-7' w- f 1 -'W -' '--- - pf- NJ? '-' -' ,Hx ss- B ' v M Uftegif LQWJQQA UQ 1 'l 7X ' il fLf5'V?'f' L sk W Mp F ' , .k,,,...r . 3 X 1,15 nv'-Q f' U Q' Q 1 SKY 'mi iF A 'O Lv fb f -.x-wg, X --- f C , J ll ' Vpfwrx fgj' wgl+ffixQ .. -WN I3 Q. 1 ,55 5, .--' X 5 D j:4- '- '?1f' ON TERRA FIRMA OR wp f f nf f i T- D Ammo APPLIED v ' fi, 1.9 Ja Q A f 5- F Pnovzso TUMBLER KEEP5 IN ' + TRAINING AT: 1 U OLD HEIDELBER E ff o7fbX Q A UncE vsRsA ,QHJ ,' fljk ' I I :IC . '71 ,' Q 1 N 1 - Y T 1 ,E . Y NzvAfhHaWw! f 4 .. .. -,A A - 1 E I fx Of ? V 5 Iliff ,t V' ,z I ', u X fx w - my ART U 36 ffirw .N 40,1 Y i J' I, Y f ,J '- J - 1 fgif yjp 1 'f U,, 'fl R x .1 1 , X xx fx WW ' 'Q 4- , X B 'QQ ni? I :L A AT 5 X f X' Q rf V V ff ,Sl , ' A 4 'X . ,f if :IX ,LTC ' WAVAW - ' 5 - -' ',7v,, f- ' , ' - , V lj LF1av4ff i',7 1' 0, v rlawr TRAVELIWNGI on TRAVE f 1' AND TRANSPORT BUILDING INN OUR PRIZE PANEL Picture Of Xlr. Law crack- ing a joke. NOTE: Use your imag- ination. Picture Of Mr. Long not getting excited at a basket- ball game. NO note. Mr. Carr in act of falling for the line of a smart guy. NOTE: Impossible. Portrait Of Miss Hilde- brandt chasing Mr. Stubbs down the hall. NOTE: Pick your win- ner. Picture Of Nlr. lloelk holding up an electron. NOTE: An electron can- not be seen. Mr. Marshall in the act of running from a bold bad junior. NOTE: Etc .... Picture of Steve On time with the Weekly news. NOTE: Reserved for hliss Otis. Picture of Persis without Bob. ED. NOTE: DOn't say it. Starr Caldwell in a silent moment. lXOTE: Starrwas absent. Uhle Chappas in the act Of reciting in U. S. History. NOTE: He was asleep when the picture was taken. Miss Hogan in Jerusalem on St. Patrick's day. NOTE: Notice the Green border. Picture Of Sam Fink's honor roll pin. NOTE: It's solid ivory. Page 137 Pagf 138 DICTIONARY AIN'T-8 swellegant verb indispensable in the vocabulary of the average freshman. BUNK-popular term describing all subjects. CAFE-where bread lines and ill-bred lines are formed daily. DITCHING-'H scholastic elopement. EXCUSES-alibis we hand the teacher for tardiness, etc., usually threadbare and ancient. FISH-those who swallow everything fed to them by seniorsg genus of under- classmen. GYM-place to hold dancesg also joint to show off muscles developed in ten easy lessons. HUH ?-a shortened form of I beg your pardon. VVhat did you say? I. Q. Clntelligence Quotient-something we were supposedly endowed with,but which has become lost, strayed, or stolen. JUNIOR-SENIOR PROM-the one time juniors come before seniors. LSKIDDIESH fMiss Otis, pet aversionj-a synonym for freshmen. LUCK-that rare chance when you were able to bluff teacher into believing you knew what you were talking about. Mismv-from 8:20 to 3 :15. OPERETTA-chance for screechy sopranos to reach high C3 for aspiring tenors to show off the wonders of Listerine and Pepsodent. P-big Blue and Wlhite letters displayed on expanded chestsg usually on S8 Hub special sweaters. QUIET-HH obsolete word, appearing in librariesg what the teacher yells in study hall. REPORT CARDS-means of letting fond parents know what dear teachers think of their offspring. STUDENT-a species now extinctg something teachers pray for. TEACHERS-words can't express them. UNDERCLASSMEN'-CVCFY one below a seniorg inferiorsg something to tolerate. VACUUM-space your brain was intended for. VVIASTE BASKET-place to deposit discovered gumg something to shoot paper wads Rt. XAMS-torture devices thought up by teachers to cause miseryg necessary evils. YOUSE--a simplified form of you is. Z-Z-z-z-sound emitted from oral cavity when pupils are in the abstract senseg sign of bad breeding. ACKNOWLEDGMENT The 1933 Provi Staff wishes to express gratitude to the business men who liberally contributed to our advertising section. We request the readers of this edition to study carefully the names which follow. We solicit for these merchants your patronage, students and friends of Proviso. Pug: 130 ADVERTISEMENTS BELMONT ICE CREAM COMPANY Ices and Sherbets 3551-61 Addison Street, Chicago juniper 1160-61 BORMANN, INCORPORATED Funeral Home 115 Broadway, Melrose Park -' Melrose Park 714-715 CARL FISCHER, INCORPORATED Music Dealers and Publishers 306 South Wabash Avenue, Chicago Webster 7817 THE GIBSON STUDIOS Portrait Photographers 58 East Washington Street, Chicago Central 3982 WILLIAM G. KORRELL Coal Dealer 9 N. 23rd Avenue, Melrose Park Melrose Park 729 LYONS BAND INSTRUMENT COMPANY Complete Band and Orchestra Equipment 17 West Lake Street, State-Lake Building, Chicago State 0258 MCBREEN HOME UTILITIES COMPANY Electrical Supplies 156 Broadway, Melrose Park Melrose Park 2312 MELROSE PARK LUMBER COMPANY Lumber 2511 Lake Street, Melrose Park Melrose Park 690 H. J. MOHR 8: SONS COMPANY Coal and Building Material 915 South Maple Avenue, Oak Park Forest 338, Euclid 515, Austin 3502 ADVERTISEMENTS C. M. MOLINE Coal and Coke OfBceiOak Park Avenue at C. B. 8s Q. R. R. Yard-Ridgeland at C. B. 8a Q. R. R. NATIONAL SHOE COMPANY Shoes and Shoe Repairing 24 North Fifth Avenue, Maywood C. L. SCHMIDT Coal, Wood and Cinders 1612 Main Street, Melrose Park SEEGERS 8a HOMAN Hardware, Paints, Electrical Supplies 118 Broadway, Melrose Park ISOVZ Broadway, Melrose Park LOUIS SHEIN Newspaper Agency SILVERMAN'S HARDWARE STORE Ben Will Treat You Right 718 South Fifth Avenue, Maywood THORHAUG'S BAKERY 1304 South Fifth Avenue, Maywood Bakery WESTERN MARKET HOUSE Wholesale and Retail Meats and Provisions 127 North Kedzie Avenue, Chicago 7607 Lake Street, River Forest SUBURBAN TNIARKETS 1011 South Seventeenth Avenue, Maywood THE WOLK STUDIO 7314 Madison Street, Forest Park Photographers Berwyn 530 Maywood 98 Melrose Park 2166 Melrose Park 699 Melrose Park 4490 Maywood 236 Maywood 1430 Van Buren 9622 Forest 1996 Forest 192 Pagr 141 E Q 2 I 1 1 ,1 . 3, -- 19 - F ' 1 ...Ng '30 1 lv :. I I Q' ' W 'S . ,. A A ,., '. ., J , L 1, XM, i v j3li,f.V... , L , .... n 4.1 l ,A.. I H. , ., L., . F.. I ' - '52 1 4- ' Ng ., 1., X c. A Mg 3: ' -A am ,,s!h. 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Suggestions in the Proviso East High School - Provi Yearbook (Maywood, IL) collection:

Proviso East High School - Provi Yearbook (Maywood, IL) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Proviso East High School - Provi Yearbook (Maywood, IL) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Proviso East High School - Provi Yearbook (Maywood, IL) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Proviso East High School - Provi Yearbook (Maywood, IL) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Proviso East High School - Provi Yearbook (Maywood, IL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Proviso East High School - Provi Yearbook (Maywood, IL) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936


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