Arthur Hill High School - Legenda Yearbook (Saginaw, MI)

 - Class of 1946

Page 33 of 120

 

Arthur Hill High School - Legenda Yearbook (Saginaw, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 33 of 120
Page 33 of 120



Arthur Hill High School - Legenda Yearbook (Saginaw, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 32
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Arthur Hill High School - Legenda Yearbook (Saginaw, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 34
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Page 33 text:

completed its third year of organization after many years of inactivity. Members' projects included mounting animals, dissecting ani- mals and plants, assembling skeletons, and giving reports on the latest medical discov- eries. Bios Logia members were hosts to the Bugs Ball , an annual all-school dance after the junior Play. In Arts-Dramatics Club, Hillites interested in the stage participate in plays, skits and dramatic programs. Club members this year played roles in the Christmas and Commence- ment Pageants and the club play, He Couldn't Marry Five , besides ushering at other all-school performances. The BOC Club, made up of band, or- chestra, and choir members, presented musi- cal programs at meetings in which every member participated sometime during the year. These programs included solo as well as ensemble work. Membership in Quill and Scroll, the Inter- national Honorary Society for High School journalists, is granted to students doing out- standing work on publications, providing they have a B average in all classes. Meet- ings were held every other week at the homes of various members. As a group they studied the writing and publishing activities in Saginaw, besides participating in various contests. The Latin Club boasts an active member- ship of 101, the largest in school. Club mem- bers work for points which raise them in the Roman social rank from slave to senator. The social events of the year were the Christ- mas party, the annual potluck in the winter, and the picnic in the spring. Spanish Club members worked for points and the high scorers were given awards. Everyone helped with the annual Sombrero Swing , a dance given after the senior play. A new feature was added this year. All stu- dents taking first semester Spanish partici- pated in the Junior Spanish Club, which pre- pared these members for active membership in the Spanish Club second semester. The members of the French Club made and sold gold and blue pom-poms for the Turkey Day football game. With the pro- ceeds from this sale, the club purchased a Victory Bond and donated it to the Memorial GEORGIANNA CHISHOLM, FRANCES COLLVER, president, GLORIA SCHULTZ, MARY WILTSE, ond JOANNE ELLIS, officers of the Arts-Dramcitics Club, select their ploy for production. BOC Club officers, DICK CHRISTIANS, SAM REID, and MARQUEEN AYERS, first semester prexy, watch DICK HARTMAN, second semester president, ploy. DON STONE, president, JOANNE ELLIS, JOHN BAUM, LORENE BAUMANN and NANCY HENRY, Quill and Scroll officers, discuss the Gallup Award as outlined in their magazine. Past and present officers of the German Club, BARBARA FLACK, first semester president, VALERIE VANDER- MADE, BOB KUSHINSKY, BEVERLY SCHMIDT, and DORIS LUTZ admire Arthur Hill pins, which they sell to Hillites during football season. Dick Froeber presided over the club second semester. Latin Club committee members plan their April meeting-CAROL ROBINSON, EDNA HEIMBURGER, NORMAN CRANDELL, MARGARET SANFORD, JOCELYN LOYSTER, president, HELEN WAYT, JUNE NEVVMAN, DOROTHY THAMM, JANE TUBBS, and MARILYN ZORN. Rifle Club members, NORMAN SPARKS, JACK GRUNOW, DOUGLAS SMITH, president, and ROGER BOHL check the results of a session of target practice. Stadium Fund. The club also packed boxes to be sent overseas to needy French families through the local Red Cross. German Club members participated in games and contests and studied music of German operas. The club's project was the sale of Lumberjack booster pins during the football season. Students interested in agriculture get to- gether in the FFA Club. This year the group tested dairy herds for butter fat, soils for fertility, analyzed farm problems, and culled poultry flocks as Future Farmers of America projects. Members entered the public speak- ing and demonstration contest and came home with the Regional Championship. Boys interested in guns joined the Rifle Club. Members shot in the postal matches in which Arthur Hill entered two teams. Eight matches were scored and the junior team tied for first place. The tie was shot off and scores sent in to determine the winner. Girl Reserve Officers, ELEANOR ROBSON, ANNIE BINASIO, JEAN PATERSON, president, JACKIE FENT- NER and MARIE VLASSIS, look over the scrap books containing the year's accomplishments. JUNE, 1946 29

Page 32 text:

Club presidents number eleven-DON STONE, MAR- QUEEN AYERS, BARBARA ELACK, JEAN PATERSON, BARBARA EIB, NEWELL WARSIN, DICK MICHEL, ALLAN MANDELSTAMM, DOUGLAS SMITH, FRANCES COLLVER, and IRIS HEILBRONN. Getting information about the Michigan Boys' State are Hi-Y Club officers: ERWIN EICHHORN, PETE RUSSELL, RAY BIERLEIN, and DICK MICHEL, president. CL-BS I FUN Clubs at Arthur Hill include nearly every field of interest a Hillite could wish. Special arts, science, language, and service clubs make up the greater part of Arthur Hill's social life. The Arthur Hill Hi-Y Club of boys spon- sored dances after Friday night basketball games and purchased the new electric score- board for the gymnasium. The boys work together to strengthen their religious life, give more intelligent understanding to social problems, and help themselves and others with special problems of adolescence. Their meetings are divided into discussion, recrea- tion, business, and trips each month to dif- ferent churches. The Girl Reserves Club sponsored quiz programs, auction sales, tours of the Bell Telephone Company, parties, and teas. As projects, the girls made an afghan and potted Howers for the Red Cross, packed Christmas and Red Cross boxes, and sold refreshments during the basketball games. The club works towards training the girls to be leaders and to work together. Students with an interest in science and a B average in chemistry and all other classes are eligible for appointment to the Alchem- ists or Crucibles Clubs. Reviewing chem- istry learned in class, taking an occasional trip to spots of interest to chemists, and social combined meetings made-up the year's program. The Bios Logia Club, for biology students, The Alchemists, girls' chemistry club, members are-First Row: left to right, JO ANN SCHIAN, JOANNE OLM- STED, and DOROTHY DOERFNER, president. Second Row: WILLA KINGRY, NINA KOEHLER, GLORIA PATTON, and CHARLYS PIERITZ. Third Row: BARBARA EIB, JOCELYN LOYSTER, JEAN ANN SCHULZ, JOAN FLEISCH- MANN, and MARGARET PIETZ. WILMA SCOTT, JEAN CATES, GAYLE POUND, and PAT DAVIDSON, members of the Bios Logia Club and Bugs Ball dance chairmen, joke over Gloria , the biology department specimen. Barbara Eib is president. The Crucibles, boys' chemistry club, prepare to leave for the Dow Chemical Plant in Midland-Left to right: BILL STEWART, DICK SOWATSKY, EARL EBACH, ERWIN EICHHORN, ARNOLD KEINATH, JIM KLEEKAMP, HAR- OLD BRAEUTIGAM, CLEM FELDMANN, DUANE NUECHTERLEIN, JIM MICHEL, DICK KEINATH, DICK MICHEL, and CHARLES LAKE. John Finger is president of the club. KENNETH FIERKE and GERALD KLUCK, FFA members, demonstrate their battery nest. On the table a mash feeder and a single unit nest are shown. Newell Warsin is president of the club. JACKIE TUKE and BILL BOOTH purchase flowers from ALICE RISDON and RUTH ZORN at the Spanish Club's Sombrero Swing. Allan Mandelstamm is president of the club. To provide a French family with much needed food, NORMA CRANDELL, BEVERLY FRANZ, French Club mem- bers, and IRIS HEILBRONN, president, pack a box to be sent overseas. 28 LEGENDA



Page 34 text:

' at if T M F, 2-. ' ye L li E at ies f rv 4 ' 1--- WI sk i S ,:,,. -MB :,..v ., -,,: . , :zzivvv I Iw i' 1 .. ' I v ii. I -A: - I 12 iqq is . I ...A ': . .'-,. .1 ,...-. t - I - - ---:- - I ziz -'2'A ' vqiqi . . f t:-rf?-I' s 50 MARILYN REEDER, PHYLLIS PSCHOLKA, GLORIA PATTON, JANET PATTON, and HELEN RATHS appear as goddesses of liberty in the Commencement Pageant, The entire cast of the commencement pageant take part in the patriotic finale. All united countries and all the service branches were represented. ART OF PRETENSE . . Shudders, suspense, and spine thrilling action were all a part of the evenings program when the senior class play, XWeather Clearing, by Franklin A. Wfarren, was presented March 28 and 29. The setting is in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains at Boulder Ridge, a stop-over where a passenger plane is forced down until the had weather clears. Charm, Hirtation, and more charm were appropriately displayed in a hilarious production of Charm School , this year's junior class play. The comedy accented Austin Bevins, who inherited a girls' boarding school and insisted on running it according to his own ideas. He CouIdn't Marry Five, this years Arts-Dramatic Club Play under the directions of Frances Collyer and Mary Wiltse, provided an evening of laughter. The visiting son of the boss who fell in love with each of Mr, and Mrs. Barton's Five daughters, after many trying problems and with the help of Granny, hnally decided to marry the daughter who was a nurse. Arthur Hill presented its Commencement Pageant at the City Auditorium for graduating seniors and their friends. The pageant. CLIFFORD BUCK in Weather Clearing suddenly takes on the role of tx gangster. CLIFFORD, holding a gun, ARTHUR DOERSAM and ALLAN MANDEL STAIVIIVI, seated, and SHELDON BLOOMFIELD, GALE BREU, and DICK MICHEL. On the set tor the senior class inlay Weather Cleciringw-ART DOERSAM, GALE BRFU OLADYS MrNEIL, JOHN FINGER, DICK MICHEL, ALLAN IVIANDELSTAIVINI, IOI-IN BALIIVI, GLORIA RATTON, CAROLINE COBB, SHELDON RLOOIVIFIELD, CIIT FORD BUCK, eiutl NINA KOEHLER. BILL AGRE, DAVID JOHNSON, HARRY MILES, DICK SCHULTZ, NORMAN CRANDELL, and CHARLES CHURCH in the iunior play f'Charm Schoolf' Taking part in the iunior play Charm School -ELAINE NORRIS, JANET PAT- TON, PAT HARTLE, MAROUFEN AYERS, GEORGIANNA CHISHOLM, ELEANOR DOERSAIVI, BILL AGRE, DAVID JOHNSON, DICK SCHULTZ, NORMAN CRANDELL, tinri CHARLES CHURCH, LEGENDA

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