Battin High School - Red and White Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ)

 - Class of 1950

Page 33 of 52

 

Battin High School - Red and White Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 33 of 52
Page 33 of 52



Battin High School - Red and White Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 32
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Battin High School - Red and White Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 34
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Page 33 text:

Each day as soon as school was done, I hurried to the organ loft and practiced my dreary exercises. As I absorbed technique upon technique, a melody crept into my repertoire. I cherished this tune and repeated its simple strain, using different pipes every time. Once it was a mellow love song, in an instant, it was transformed to a plaintive lament, then to a triumphant bursting of joy. Eight weeks flew by, and Mr. Brown left on a two-month tour of Europe about the same time that summer vacation began. He gave me many, many pages from a big gray book to work on during the summer months. I practiced during the noon hours and again toward night time. The thick walls of the old structure barred the season's heat waves. A number of friends came inside with me to listen, they said, but really, I suspect, to escape the summer weather. Came September and I knew the assigned pages to perfection. No more would I teeter and totter back and forth, searching for the pedal notes. No more did the chords seem choppy and disconnected. All the phrases seemed smooth and polished to me. I saw Mr. Brown on a September Saturday and arranged to begin lessons Friday afternoon. I practiced now with fervor. The hour came at last. Cheeks aglow, I made the ascent up the stairs, good-naturedly scuifed oif my loafers and slipped into the black, old-ladyish oxfords whose raised heel gave my anklet-clad leg a slightly rakish appearance. The last minute practicing almost made, me forget the time. He's Eve minutes late. Perhaps his dinner was delayed. Ten minutes slipped by. My enthusiasm waned. VVhen a quarter of an hour had gone, I descended into the center way. Footsteps were clearly audible. Why are you so late? I asked. W'hatza matter here? cackled a gruff voice. It was the sexton. Have you seen Mr. Brown? Didn't ya hear? He was walkin' on Main Street, when smack! a cab knocks him down Hat as flat can be. He's laid up for at least six weeks with a broken kneecap - may never be able to play again. Slowly I went upstairs. I turned off the powerful motor, slid once more into my loafers, put out the lights, and walked home, with my sedate, black oxfords dangling by their laces at my side. fP.S. - Mr. Brown did recover and did feel that my summer's work had not been in vain.j . MERRILL SKRAMOVSKY, ' 50 ullluq

Page 32 text:

I chose to study in the familiar church with the organist who played there. The first time I came for a lesson, Mr. Brown asked me to play a piano solo. I whizzed through my masterpiece, a polonaise by Franz Liszt. That's quite pianistic, he remarked. You'll find the organ quite different. There couldn't be that much difference, I assured myself as I followed him up the middle aisle of the church. Spectres seemed to come from each cheerless pew. The clip-clop of our steps sounded through- out the dark interior. When we reached the door on the left side of the foyer, Mr. Brown produced the key and creak! the door swung open. The click of the light switch echoed dismally up to the belfry. When we reached the loft, nothing but the sun-lit altar could be distinguished by a glance down- ward. No bright lighting, no silly hats, no tired children-nothing but darkness. The empty choir seats formed a U-shaped border on three sides of the console. The low balcony railing and the organ bench completed the rectangle. I seated myself on the long narrow board, my back to the enormous auditorium and my face to the four rows of keys. Little plastic tabs shaped like Hat lady-lingers protruded in neat rows of twelve. Each of these had printed upon it a name and number. The organist knocked down a few tabs here and there, after first pushing a button on the side to start the motor. He then sounded a few notes. These WERE quite different from the simple 88 pianoforte keys. A completely new method had to be mastered. Keyboards couldn't be called keyboards, they were manuals Tabs were not tabs, but stops The initial lesson was all technique. I was accustomed to the piano on which you can strike a note and continue to sound that note by put- ting the sustaining pedal down. Not so on this instrument, because there is no sustaining pedal. Now I had to keep my linger on a key till it was time to let it up and, in the meantime, awkwardly exchange my fingers so the next note could be reached without difliculty. Learning to use two feet in conjunction with two hands was quite a task. When probing the strange wooden slats with both feet, a safe balance was hard to maintain. And because I was a novice at this odd form of equilibrium, I fell into the organ three times. I wastglad I hadn't fallen backwards, for the balcony railing was no higher than the organ bench. I was given a key to the door of the spiral steps and thus had access to the church at any time that I could muster the courage to enter the silent darkness and not feel frightened by echoes of my own footsteps upon the tiled floor. I brought a Hashlight to disprove my ghost theories. I l



Page 34 text:

LO'V!E'S LABOUR LOST Now is the problem: What to cook for lunch? A bowl of soup for my Honeybunch? A lookin the pantry. What does it reveal? Not even soup for a decent meal! So I put on my coat to run to the store, The place is crowded with shoppers galore. Maybe I need some pepper or salt? If things are tasteless, it'll be my fault. I guess I really don't need tea, In spite of our dear Arthur Godfrey. Do need coffee or is it bread? I This is driving me out of my head!j Do I need peas or a pint of milk? Or is it flour, as Soft-As-Silk? Here I wander, trying to think: Maybe it's cider or something to drink? If I keep this up, I 'll never get started! A fool and her money, they say, are soon parted. l start down the aisle and go through the store Buy everything in sight, and a little bit more. Then I stop for a chat, while I put out the cash, Pick up my change, must be home in a Hash. My steps are lagging, and how my arms sag Under the weight of this huge shopping-bag. lk wk lk I The phone rings - it's my dear Honeybunch, Saying l1e's taking The Boss out to lunch!!! MARIE ANGELLO, '50 Consider how fortunate is the SHE Wh0's always sure of getting a HE! 5 SUZANNE HOFFMAN, '50 Cadillac? Mink? There's nothing I'd like better Than that longexpected letter! IENNIE SCROFANI, ' 50 They say that walking is good for the figure- It gives me an appetite that makes me bigger. JANE OsUcH, '50 32 CROWN OF GLORY Comb it and brush it And set it every night, Take it out next morning- Still it looks a fright! IEAN GRUEN, ' S2 MI SERY Have a salad - no more candy. Books on calories come in handy. No potatoes, no more pie. When I think, I just sigh. Protein bread! Why not try it? Oh, what misery! Darn this diet! IEAN GRUEN, ' S2 lane, while dashing through the wood, Had felt so very lively. But glum she was that Wednesday next With a case of poison ivy. VERA SCHEDIN, '50 A !D!RIV!E!R'S DIILEMNIAS fWith apologies to Ioyce Kilmerj I thought that I would never learn To shift a gear, or make a turn, Or learn the way to work the clutch, And not to press the gas too much. I thought that everyone was mean To beep at me 'cause I was green. I couldn't understand just why They hung the trallic lights so high, Or why, although I steered quite fine, The wheels went over that white line. I 'll get my license-if and when- Hope I'll stay alive till then. NANCY ERNST, '50 , ,,. L

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