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Page 12 text:
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THE OFFICE A busy place at any time, the general office under the super- vision of Miss Elsie Novak, school secretary, and Miss Alice Fleischmann, stenographer, delivers telephone calls, hands out supplies, makes up the daily bulletin and checks and tabulates program cards. Besides her general office duties, Miss Novak now offers another service to students and teachers in legal- izing signatures as a notary public. After a day in the office Miss Novak enjoys reading or driv- ing. Miss Fleischmann '40, prefers music, reading, skating or hiking in her spare time. THE LIBRARIES Library 163 is one of the two study places the school pro- vides with faculty supervision under Mrs. Frances Hamlin, co- ordinating chairman. In the picture, Mr. J. Hasler Osborne directs the student helper, Gloria Cowley, in assisting waiting students, Edith Chisholm, Chester Lea and Kenneth Greenleaf. The libraries provide printed material in book, paper, maga- zine and pamphlet forms. All books are catalogued and issued for book reports and class reference work. The faculty library committee included Mrs. Frances Hamlin, chairman, Mr. john Day, Miss Burnice Gibbs, Mr. Harve C. Light, Mr. J. Hasler Osborne, Mr. George Purdy, Mr. Stanley Schubert, Mr. B. G. Wells and Mr. Arnold Wolgast. CAFETERIA At 11:30 and 12:50 each day, students climbed to the third floor cafeteria for lunches. Ready for the hungry, hurrying crowd, Miss Ellen Green, manager, Mildred Kunz, assistant, Miss Juliana Robertson, Mrs. Anita Iserhoth, Miss Elizabeth Noack, Mrs. Noreen Vollmer and Elsie Wilson, assistant, are ready to give their services. No one waited long in the large spacious room because chairs and tables accommodate 750 persons at a time. If the student did not bring his lunch from home, he was one of the 1000 who each day got in line at the counter, took a tray and helped himself to tempting dishes of chile, soup, spaghetti, ice cream, sandwiches, milk or fruit juices, all of which cost five cents or less. Students and faculty were responsible for cleaning up after themselves in the cafeteria. MAINTENANCE STAFF Six men and two women kept the building clean and com- fortable. Pictured here in the community room are Mr. Otto Schultz, Mr. jay Schoebridge, head custodian, Mrs. Margaret Schroeder, Mr. William Creller and Mrs. Lillian Gaham. Not in the picture are Mr. Paul Kunisch, Mr. Henry Remer, night man, Mr. Edwin A. Rogers, engineer, Mr. Edward Buzza and Mr. joseph Kingry. The maintenance staff appreciates perhaps more than others the thoughtful students.
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Page 11 text:
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fmi Teachers Tell Hobbies I irxt Iron' .lwroxxi STANLEY E. ANDERSON atlile-ties, fishing ELOISE BACON Iinilsekeepiiig MRS. SALLIE M. BROWN interior dvi-oratiiig, theatre EARL D. BURNETT piintnp,-rapliy, woodwork MRS. MARIE CRITTENDEN reading MATTIE G. CRUMP milf, theatre BEN O. DAMBERG llllllllllfl, wmuInni'k JOHN E. DAY IlliI'St'IIIll'k riding, tishing ALBERT G. DERSCH Inuatiiig. Iiurtir-iiltiiw nf th iqffllllll li'ull'I MARY M. DOIDGE sports, reading MARTHA E. FISHER painting BERNICE M. FRANCIS hunks. music- MARGARET A. FRASER Irnhnintnn, traveling if iWl'i's AMY A. GATZ sports. sewing BURNICE R. GIBBS lnaiking friends MRS. DOROTHY S. GIESEL hridge, politics ELLEN GREEN theatre, summer sports NOLA MURPHY GUENIN books 'I'liir1l lrlllff MRS. FRANCES M. HAMLIN readiiig SALLY HOWELL sketc-hingr, singing IRVING JOHNSON golf, making furniture MRS. MARY BURT KRUEGER tIu'ee-year-old son, cake-baking LORNA L. LANGE house-planning MARY F. LEWIS reading, knivk-knavks HARVE LIGHT athletic-s RUTH MclLVENNA hridge, gardening SARAH LOUISE MORSE sports Km I aurfl: Row: J. HASLER OSBORNE handball, golf JEANNE E. PARMELEE photography, sketching ETHEL A. PETERSON books, shopping, Q-artnons KENNETH C. POULSON aviation R. GEORGE PURDY golf, talhle tennis HERMAN RAMSEY hard work MAURICE C. SCHMIDT reading, worrying STANLEY SCHUBERT nature ERIC E. SENN bridge. int erinr cleciwatiiig I iffl1 Noir: E. L. V. SHELLEY travel, sports ROBERT H. SHORNEY sports EARL W. SMITH reading, English HELEN M. SPAGNUOLA reading, travel F. ALISON SPENCE gardeninir. reading COILA L. START collecting stones. painting CLARENCE D. STEWART reading MRS. MARY STEWART reading IRMA STOCKDALE music Ni.rfl: Ifow: JEAN E. STOLZ niusii-, sports MARION E. THOMAS music, ariatinn GERTRUDE E. TURNER picnivking, travel WILLIAM L. VONDETTE athletics LINA J. WARD gardening. antiques B. G. WELLS fixing things FLORENCE WELLS gardening BETTY M. WHITE knitting, fishing ARNOLD E. WOLGAST wonrlwnrking, reading: Cu W1 in ' S amp wi- LL. 4'-1: L 'Wt i is -I.. Q. X - 5. tutt p R sh fr it ..,, in .I is i I 1? ...' 5315 Q R
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Page 13 text:
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STUDENT ORGANIZATION For government and leadership, the Student Organization uses the home-room setup as each home-room includes the same number of students and is a cross-section of the school. The fifty-two home-rooms elect officers, the presidents of the Hfty-two groups make up the school cabinet and the school body elects officers to represent the whole school from this group. The cabinet cooperates and in turn sends represen- tatives to the junior Civic League where representatives of all the schools of the city talk over student affairs. Officers as shown are: james Muehlenbeck, treasurer, George Michel, second semester secretary, Dorothy Geyer, first semester vice-president and second semester president, and Harris Taubeneck, second semester vice-president. Not in the picture are Don Spyker, Ted Heineman and Sally Schindehette, last semester president, vice-president and secretary respectively. ADVISORY PRESIDENTS Advisory presidents are pictured, top row left to right: David Wallace, Donald Bernthal, Donald Oehring, Walter Geyer, Donald Bickel, Kenneth Turbin, Helen Decrock, Harry Sutherland, Bruce Otto, Herbert Saul, James Muehlenbeck, George Michel, Harris Taubeneck, Donald Tripp, john Don- haiser, Robert Schmidt, Victor Sverid, Ben Skelton, Uriel Ham, Betty Raymond, Margaret Gelow and Robert Pfeuffer. In the third row are: Robert MacFarlane, William Small, Virginia White, Tom Dustin, Angeline Goodwyn, Gertrude Harden, Sally Knights, Rosemary Bartlett, Sally Schindehette, Wanda Weiss, Randall Robson, Dan Pike, Coral Oberlin, Viola Nuech- terlein, James Hammond and Barbara Pointer. The second row includes: Dale Young, Betty Ann Walton, Richard Burke, Marion Farmer, Hannah Kerbel, Harold Miller, Betty Haenlein, Dorothy Geyer, Anna jean Toman, Reginald Rippberger, Lorna Schreiner, William Benson, Amelia Klemm, Clemens Nefe and Aldean Voelker. In the front row are: Tom O'Sulli- van, Evelyn Strieter, Helen Farmer, Linn Campbell, Doris Boyd, Carol Heineman, Ora Evelyn Nims, Kenneth Laufer, Pearl Kluck and Marjory Rice. LIBRARY HELPERS To assist her in the library, Mrs. Frances Hamlin chose four- teen students to work before and after school and during their library periods. Some of their tasks were arranging books, keeping the bulletin boards up to date, collecting fines, filling teachers' orders and doing research work for the faculty. Every hour of the day the following librarians, pictured at the right, emphasized courtesy and helpfulness. In the back row are: Thomas Tripp, Gloria Cowley, joan Gray, Agnes Mc- Intyre, Irene Berkobien, Mrs. Hamlin, Flistia Urban, Frances Fassezke and Walter johnson. In the front row are: Margaret Biggs, Elaine Muehlenbeck, Joanne Stone, Alice Cramer and Angeline Binasio. SERVICE CLUB Service Club students are school hosts and must be reliable, ambitious, honest and have average or better marks. Their aim was to keep the school presentable for the public. This group of students sacrificed their library periods that they might aid in bettering the studying conditions by direct- ing their fellow students and guests. Assisting Miss Ethel A. Peterson in advising the club this year were lieutenants, standing left to right: Lorraine Virginia, Musa Gilbert, Frances Edwards, Sarah Carrington, jerry Holubik, Betty Haenlein, Flistia Urban and Marion Wirth. Seated are: Evelyn Ellison, james Collangis, Richard Griffin, Della Block, captain, jean Thomson and June Fraser. Not in the picture are Bill Moore, james Walton and Robert Young.
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