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Page 37 text:
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Do you want to buy a ticket to a Davis football or basketball game, and lorl a booster for one of the dances or said games? Were you interested in attending a stupendous, colossal production of the Dramatic Society? lYou, too, could have your seat reserved for'no extra charge.l You wanted to contribute to the March of Dimes, didn't you? Did you?--But why go on? lf you an- swered yes to any or all of these questions, the person you were undoubtedly looking for lif he or she' wasn't out looking for youl was your HOME ROOM REPRESENTATIVE. That char- acter was the person in your home room who was chosen to be your representative in the school government, because, besides all of the aforementioned little duties, it was also the job of the Repsl' to receive any brickbats, bou- quets, or just suggestions in general, vote on these ideas and then pass them on to the C. O. to have something done about them. ln a school as large as Davis, a working organi- zation must be kept running on greased wheels at all times. The Home Room Representatives were one of the most important cogs in the wheel of our school government. Together with the G. O. Council, they were your voice in the running of your school. The Home Room Representatives were just a group of your fellow students, who, under Mr. Searle's direction, worked just a little bit harder than most to make Davis the best high school in the country. The concensus of opinion lget usll among Davisites was that they definitely did succeed. HOME ROOM REPRESENTATIVES lTopl Row l: B, Cunnigton, K. Metcalf, D. Wilson, Row Z: A Felter, E. Forster, V. Lambrosa, M. lmpagliazzo, N. Ullman, Row 3: N. Brown, M. Hamblen, B. Altman, S. Hamlin, j. Cavanaugh, j. Mayo, R. Omer, E. Cowen, G. Cowen, Row 4, j. Goldberg, j. Meserole, M. Dahnke, j. Cellini, M, Giacco, N. Vaughng Row 5: j. Madata, G. De Napole, D, Pantuso, F. Gulliano, C. Nordone, B. Shaver, A. Weinberger, S. Suss- man, M. Burton, Row 6: Mr. Searle, D, Ross, W, Brush, D. Pearson, D. Starnm, H. Denhoff, S. Trachtenberg, W. Brown, N. Di Filippis, S. Soss, B. Balkind Page thirty-flwee
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Page 36 text:
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E9 O H718 OES lfyou saw bewildered looks on the faces of lost souls the first week of a new school term, you may be sure that they belonged to our new com- ers to the l-lilltop, commonly called sophs. Their confusion was not lessened by the mis- chievous pranks played on them by Miss Brown's boy marshals, who delighted in directing them to the lunch rooms via the boys' locker room. Fortunately, we had a corps of life savers called the l-lOME ROOM ADVISERS who were always on the alert to guide and protect and comfort the waifs, and to set them at ease. These girls re- membered the days when they themselves were helpless sophs, rescued from the deep blue sea by the helping hands of other girl Advisers. The Advisers, under the expert guidance of Miss Lewis, and The very friendly girl advisers really contrib- uted a great deal to Davis. lt certainly would have been hard for all of us to have gotten along with- out them when we were new-comers to Davis. HOME ROOM ADVISERS lTopl Row l : S. Felstiner, N. Zeuner, C, Singer, 1. Shipley, P, Foley, D. Mauriello, P. Fox, l. Reiner, D. Ruggiero, V. Stasko, L. Altobelli, B. Lockwood, M. Marx, M. lmpaliazzog Row 2: L. Curtis, R. Hudes, l. Tvveedell, E. Forster, B. Tucker, A. Mauer, l. Meserole, F. Schneider, B. Wingberg, l. Fer- guson, I. Perkinson, C. Taylor, N. Bernardinetti, E, Luks, E. Reinholzg Row 3: M. Rosenthal, S. Dubrowin, A. Graz- iano, R. Fennell, C. Waechter, M. Weidt, Miss Lewis, L. Del Buono, l, Habel, D, Ceva, E. Tiberg, M. Burton, E, Hubbard 52 with the cheerful assistance of Miss Redmond, our dietitian, served a dinner at the beginning of each term to the new- comers. An entertainment given before the dinner, consisting of student talent, always helped to break the ice. Usually popu- lar songs were sung by all, often times followed by a variety show of short skits put on by the students, and rehearsed by Miss Feaster, our dramatics teacher. ln February of this year we had in addition to the popular songs, a humorous one act Q play entitled Too Many Marys. Some of the important roles U were played by Ellen Sinagra, Goldie Pearl, and Lois Livingston. The unsung, hard working heroes, The Stage Crew, were Bob E Fulton and Ralph Brozan. Mariana Weidt was the make-up girl. THE BEVVIL- UEQF D SOPH Page tliirty-two
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Page 38 text:
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.Z cgzfzitcfz in time Teacher, please help me thread my needle , or Is this how you measure a half-teaspoon, teacher? Having a ten year old girl look up at you and say those words, or ones like them was probably hard for most Davisites to imagine. But to the forty-three girls of the GI RL'S CLUB VOL- UNTEERS it was all in a day's work. Of course at first when someone called them teacher it was a little strange. But after a very few weeks, those girls, who each spent one after- noon a week at the Girls' Club, began to feel al- most like teachers land found themselves liking the feeling, tool. Besides cooking and sewing, the girls also had dancing, library, drawing, and music groups. They played the piano, and helped make pot-holders and the like, out of seemingly useless scraps. They mended wounded rag-dolls, and often a mild case of wounded feelings. They dropped helpful hints on how to do the newest rumba steps, and also how to keep cramped kitchens neat and clean. And when an irate youngster came running up exclaiming that Mary's trying to do all the work herself, teacher, well, to one of the Girls' Club Volun- teers, it was all in a day's work. GIRLS' CLUB VOLUNTEERS lTopI Row I: I. I-label, j. Steinberg, j. Mayo, j. Colnes, M. Bur- ton, j. Gaines, P. Kasenetz, j. Tweedell, E. Forster, A. Stern j. Barnett, B. Fairstein, Row 2: P. Whalen, M. Mastrandrea, D. Ceva, C. Waechter, L. Ceva, I. Robinson, S. Doshay, E. Tiberg, B. Bergman, B. Tucker, j. Levine, B. Loudenslager, T. Twiggs, Row 3: L. Lupo, Mrs. Mac Donald, R. Puccio, N. Reinhardt, M. lmpagliazzo, M. Caputo, R. Weiss, I-I. Aurisy, A, Picone, M. Sinagra, j. Carlson, A. Covell, R. I-Iudes, F, Ambrosino, L. Klein, C. Griswold, P. Warshaw Page tlzirfy-jour Charm, personality, hospitality, and good grooming weren't just abstract words to the Davis FUTURE HOMEMAKERS OF AMERICA. The girls really worked at acquiring these graces. Besides discussing them they gave a practical demonstration in the form of a tea, and also sponsored a school-wide fashion show of clothes the girls had made themselves. As for the results of all this activity-well, of course some of them were noticeable right away, but for the long range ones we just had to wait until the Future I-Iomemakers really became the homemakers of future America. FUTURE HOMEMAKERS OF AMERICA iBeIowI Row I :Miss Sherman, G. De Angelis, F. johnson, G, Cop- pola, Row 2: M. Mulhern, G. Corcione, j. Swan, A. Marquez, j, Bonner, G. jones, Row 3: I-I. Burns, A. Autieri, M. Dahnke, E. jones, j. Ellis
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