Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA)

 - Class of 1937

Page 1 of 100

 

Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1937 Edition, Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collectionPage 7, 1937 Edition, Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection
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Page 10, 1937 Edition, Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collectionPage 11, 1937 Edition, Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection
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Page 14, 1937 Edition, Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collectionPage 15, 1937 Edition, Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection
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Page 8, 1937 Edition, Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collectionPage 9, 1937 Edition, Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 100 of the 1937 volume:

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I Er, mb, , ', h ,I V -vita, v ,, ll W. MK1-fhfw-44 Exif' 'vw W1w-'W 'MEI :lar ' ' H2 g qjr'.fuh1,':'fw,2- ' h',h,. ff Willy, Gif ':5g.ufP?-Aw, ' s - , ,I 'Vi u, 'I - ,n V - . -5:1-5 w ' N41 , I 'igg'w g1l W A I J A 1 lm Q81 If U +A .. :YM 1 AV .V Ii ,fl'y' 'N lug, wk W' v 1 fr 'H W ' H W WM ' 9' g g - ae? Q Elm!- 1'!z vhf lf' Jw ' V N WYE itplwr, ,qu ,F l I 'll . 'nl-Wm, V A: n V' X, l I ' ':--n 5 ,M . W 4 +-inna w ld . . 2-'Q w-,mvr.li14D. 1, .. J-EQELMEEImggggnu-ififiglfi fu' . kv-, K , -1'-L 75+1:'Wf5-5 -':i:i'f'J5 sf- fa 11:-952' '7q ' -N, ' Wy f'+'1f.'??.'.fV.--em ,-Q N 'ff-fr,-1-Q .' FA .1 ,... w-.uivlg wivitfbefkvf-i1?:im mmm TQQ3 A' Yr yu: , x .-r,'Z - ' N, 1,---,, ::1.'4-x, ,-SIL-N1 A l THE staged and managed by TIRZAH BIGHAM and JCSEPH SPIEGEL V O Y A G E R nmeteen hundred and thirty sefven I Ax 'N .FQ sv W , if A EOUR ACT DRAMA WITH SCENES AND DIALOGUE, PORTRAYf ING STUDENT LIEE AT CARNEGIE HIGH SCHOOL...APRODUC- TION OE THE SENIOR CLASS, AND RECORDED AS VOLUME THIRTEEN. CARNEGIE 0 PENNSYLVANIA i fgp-415-A ,Z ...-ff :mme if X I. - tix ,4- , gm JN - f ia l E 'W' Ji1 Ill 1 I 1 .Ji A i' x-fav' 4:-eff T 5. FOREWORD OUR VOYAGEB is your treasure chest of high school memories. In presenting this book, it has been our aim to record the achievements, activities and personnel of Carnegie High School, which have so enriched our school life, and the excellent ideals which have been set forth by the school. The spirit and co-operation of the Senior Class has been most helpful in aiding us in the publication of this year book. We take this opportunity to express our appreciation to the class for the financial aid it has given through the Magazine Campaign F und and Class Play proceeds. The Commercial division was especially energetic in earning money. We wish to thank the teachers, who by means ot their advice and constructive criticism, have made this book possible. The Voyager Staff ONTENT Administration Classes Activities Features A TRIBUTE TO In sincere appreciation of her high standards of scholarship, her eager willingness to help, her ideals of charac- ter, and her spirit of cooperation, we, the class of l93'Y, dedicate this book to Miss Frances Moore. ACT I ADMINISTRATION The office of the scholar is to cheer, to raise, to guide men by showing them facts and appearances. EMERSON. x Rx y V XX X, K . Wx i K xxx ff! MX LW jgfl 74' x Wff !-ig, 3 Mix Q i fx D fx X: My X Q V f v ff N j N SY . fy k ,X rr , V X ,O Pj' , . K .1 -' J UQ - N qw vi + X M wx 5 2 Qi 2 ' JW fb E6 1 aff! fs f I 'fig M X 'xg I X Mr L 5, W 7 H W f 1' X fx 4 X A A! I fnf 1 4' X f 1' INISTRATICN HD l IN MEMORIAM Ocrosizu 8, 1879-MARCH 9, 1937 He was twice as big as he seemed gn They lowered him flown in the earth, And there in the sunset light They scattered flowers over his grave, As meaning to say, Good-night. R. FDVVARD KNARR zXI.FRED Novus. .XL'lil,'S'l' 4, 189-lfNlA1:c'll 3, 1937 Oh, leave not, forever and forever forsaken, Your pupils and vietions to life and its tears! But sometimes return, and in mercy awaken The values you taught to their earlier years. l XVILLIAM C. BRYANT. IDA F. L.-XUl3I,l IN APPRECIATION R. Edward Knarr, the only son of David S. and Caroline Knarr, was born in a log house in Bloom Township, Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, on October 8, 1879. With his five sisters he attended elementary schools in Du Bois. He was graduated from Du Bois High School in 1899, and entered Thiel College at Greenville, Pa., in the fall of the same year. He transferred, however, to VVit- tenberg College at Springfield, Ohio, when Thiel burned. He had learned the painters trade when fifteen years old, and his trade enabled him to pay all his own college expenses. He was graduated from Wittenberg in 1904. After teaching a country school for a year, he became VVard Principal in Du Bois where he served for two years. He married Miss Blanche VVonstettler of Scenery Hill, Washington County in 1907, and they went to live in Beallsville where Mr. Knarr had been made Principal of Beallsville High School. He con- tinued his service in Beallsville until 1918 when he became principal of North Belle Vernon Public Schools. ln 1919 he was elected Principal at Burgettstown where he was employed when Mrs. Knarr died in 1923. He was made Principal of Carnegie High School in 1926 and soon became a well known and respected figure in our midst. He came to guide our high school at a time of change and readjustment. His open mind and conservative judgment peculiarly fitted him to act with unusual caution while he made the adjustments necessary because of doubled enrollment. additional courses, and changing standards. He was always deliberate and sure. VVe have profited by his deliberation and sureness. The community viewed with increasing alarm his failing health during this his eleventh year of service in our high school. On March 9, 1937, he died in Allegheny General Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. He is survived by his two sons: James, a graduate of Pennsylvania State College, who was recently elected to the faculty of Carnegie High School, and Weidner, who has just been graduated from Washington and Jefferson College. Many friends mourn his passing, and the students and associated teachers of Carnegie High School lament the loss of an esteemed friend, counselor, and leader. His influence will be felt in the lives of many boys and girls for a long time. His was a leadership, open and sympathetic to which his associates were happy to be loyal. It was leadership born of character rather than expediency or bleak achievement. All success that crowned his efforts came as the result of his patience, justice, kindness, and wisdom. We shall always carry in our hearts the memory of his graceful generosity, his rare modesty, his native affa- bility, his unbiased and sure judgment, his fine interest in boys and girls, which enabled him to understand their point of view and to ease situations when rela- tions became disturbed or tense. To us whose privilege it was to share his work day after day for nearly eleven years, the value of his service lies more in what he was than in what he did. He was entirely clear and honest in the performance of his duties. He exercised his powers so meekly that many did not realize the length and breadth of his iniiuence while he moved among us. When his passing brought our busy routine to a pause, we became conscious that in him we had had an ideal. He never destroyed that ideal. It still remains. He never used his faculties for ornament, self-gratification or aggrandize- ment, but rather for developing in others powers worth having. In this he was exemplary of The Great Teacher in whose eternal fellowship he now more intimately abides. EFFIE A. NIILLIRIEN. I 1552-i?f I r. f w I I I II I Wlll I llxl N I li XY.XI.'I'I'1II I1.H'I'I'IllI1I'I'I I',NI..I. -l. .XIlIIIl'I! XIDXNIS ..1I XII1-Lhvnv toll:-uv I nglish mul lIisIm'3 ICIYVIGS II. NIINDIIIC, .LIL XIIl5IxllIilIlllI l'nll.--'1- I lIlX4'l III ,. 'silv ul' IIIINIPIII I1 ICIIQHNII I I'. I.Il'Iil,I,, NI.I. V I mu ISIIX ul IlIl'4IbIlI 'Il NI: ,f illn-nm lils IIUIIICIII Il. SXIYIIII I X I5 Xlu 1 ul nw-uw In S rr! I1'1'Ill1uI4u,,5 5 . XI: Ixllllllllll 131111-21- lIIl1'lll1l INN XVZISIIIIIQLIOII :xml .l4'IvI'l'I'SlIII l'oll4-gv Ilislury NIILIDIIICID II. I.l I'1'IiIfINS, .LII l'nix'vx'siIy ul' l'iIlsIvurgh l':Il,2,II5Il and Histor, HIGOINQIC X, IBIIYAN, .LIL N1-w Yurk l'IlIY1'I'SIIj' xIIINI1' XY.Xl,'l'I+IIl II. IHXNIICIKUX l'2lI'Il1'IlI1' Instilulv ot' 'l's-vlllmlo-'x' I'11ix'4-Vsily ol' I'itlsIrll1'y:Il VUIIIIIIIPIZI l'11ivm-1':4ily .Xriist III'2llIll2lIl'. lnslitulw nl Xluswul .XVI Ihunl r-. l 1'Ql1111:4l'nllvgQ-. .X I lnlvv1'sllx' ul I'11Isls111 I1 Nl..X. ITII't'1'I1!I' nl .Xlhlvllu lysimll IGIIIIVIIIIUII, 14 u IIIVIIXI n . mlb N1'Hl'3l.x1xIlI'lx IIN - I llllH1'silvnl VIIISIIIII In I I'2llIIilIIl ami Klurshxll XYZISIIIIIQIUII :ami .ln-Ilnx Il 1'0Il4'g:v Iliwlury, 1'ix'i1's, IYUI NXIIXII I,.1'UIiISI1I'I I IL N Slippvry liuvk Slut: 'I'l'2lCIl1'l'S Vulll-Q1 Illysimll l'I1lll1'ulima I,II,I,I XX I5I'IiIli. IS llnQr-rm lmx'1-rsllv ul l'lIlSIwlll I1 lliiulugy liIi.U'E .I. l'AI'EIi, ILS. 3lzu'gz1t'et NIOVVISOII College fI2ll'll9jIIt4 Institute of 'Feclinology J. S. ROIHS, ILS. State Teztvliers t'olle,t:'e. N. Y. Industrial Arts II. HOXYARID LEE. NLS. Nluskinpzuin College, Bb. C2ll'll9fIlt1 Institute ot' 'l'ec'l1nol0gy, ILS., 31.5. t'ha-lnislry, Physics, tielleral Seienee IDOIIOTHY I.. BENSON, ILS. l'nive1'sity ot' l'ittslmut'gh Iiiologgy l . . g,...l .,...A , , liEIi'l'H.I li. G.Xl,IiIiI4I.'VI'II ILCIS, ILE Rider College Duquesne Vniversity lIOllllll0l'l'I1iI RAYMOND t'. LEE, .LIL I'IHlI'lHOllI State Teachers College VVest Virginia Vniversity l'unnnert-ial KIILXIDYS l'Ol'HIi.-IN. ILS. Indiana State 'l'ez1clie1's College Shorthantl, 'I'ypewritin,gg IDANA A. FRY, M..-L Ohio Vniversity, .-LIS. Vuiversity of I,ltfSIJlll',2fll, MA. Latin and English AGNES E. NESIiI'l I', XIS Grove t'ity College t'oluinlmin l'nive-rsity Latin NIYRA Ii. lSO'I'SI OIiIl, A I5 Grove City College I'ennsylVz1nizt State Vollege I'Il't'llt'Il El'GENE .l.IIIENl.-X, IS N fIill'llPglI-' Institute of rIIQ-'l'IlllOlOjlj' Mat hc-nmt ics S. ICOI,I.IN I'. JOHNSON I I5 Wuyneslmurp: Uollege XN'oostet' College Itlngglisll BOARD OF EDUCATION lrnnl l.'11l1 XX IIM111. lI:1111u1'5. lu-:11'l4111. l11:l1:1111. Nl1'I':11'l:1111l, 'J 1111 l.'r111'Z l 11N11-1', Wallis. Nixon. 'll2lxr.1'l'. SUPERINTENDENT'S GREETING 'l'lu lZ11:11'1l 111 l'.ilLlL'!llI1Ill Zlllll ilu' Sllllvl-llllK'llllK'Ill :11'c 1'1lz1ll1' llllk'lAk'SlL'1l 111 llu 111-l1'11'u Ill- llul s1111l1-111 llf LlZlI'IlCg'lk' ll11g'l1 Scluml. XXI' 1lI'L' lllll tllllf' :lllXllPllN Il1.11 fllll l11-1'1111u- llllllllt'1l 11'11l1 ilu- s1111'11 Ill gmul L'lllZk'llSlll11j l1111 :ll5ll 1l1:11 11111 .u11111111- llu- :11'1 111' lu-ing' Qmuul L'lllZk'llS. 'llu this L'll1l, ylblll' SL'lI1111l l11'1' SllUlllKl lu- 1ul1 111 llt'lIlHL'l'IlllL' L'X1lL'l'lL'llL'L'. X'11l11111:11'y 11:11'lu'i11z1li1111 111 llu- 1'111'i1111s :11'11v11u's 111 llu- NL'lllllll gin-s yllll s1u'l1 L'X1ll'l'll'IlL'L'. Xxlllvlllfl' 1lu-sv 1101111111-s Zll'L' lllllSL' 111' Ilu- ll.lllX 1'1-1'1l:1111111, 1lu1s1- 411 ll 11z11'lu'11l:11' class 111' lll1lSL' 111 llu- Sflllltll IIS :1 11111111-, lllkll' Q1u'1'1-ss 1l1'111'1uls 11111111 llu- 1'41l11111:11'11 Q11-11111-1':1111111 111 :1ll ilu' lllL'llllIt'l'S 111 Ilu- gl'11l1 'lllu :1111111:1l llllllllfllllllll 111 llu- 11111111111 k'llllSlS llu- Sll1l1NllAl 111 llu- 11lu1lc hflllllll. ll is llu- XX'lll'lx 111' lllillly llllIlllS Zlllll lllilllj' ll1lllllS. XXI' c1111g'1':1l11l:1l1- 1lu1 Nl:1I1, f111111s111's Illlll sl111l1-111s 4111 llu- l'11-1'a1f1'1'111' W37. lt is :111 k'XL'k'llL'lll 1llk'k'k' uf 11'111'l1 .lllll 1'1'1l1-cts llu- S1llk'll1llll C11-1111v1':1l11'v s1111'i1 111' ilu- scluml. CLASSES For all your days prepare, And meet them ever alike: VVhe11 you are the zmvil, l7C2ll'f VVl1en you are the l1:m1mer, strike l'lDXVlN lX'IAR1411A:x1. 2 Q f N X ,554 XQ X, ME, M W ! 6551 r f W l f X .x 'af-xf UQ. 1 ,Q 1 Ns J ! Alumllalin .llmliwurl l:2ll1'S llzirlmur I llll THE GRADUATES li0l'lSI1I Alili.-KH.-KM Crafton High School l, 2, Il, Coniniercial Club 4 Nlllllll und HIIIIIIIIK . . . llrklllllg wltll ll. l'. l!UGlil4Ill0 Al,lllSl11ll'I' National Honor Society 3, 4, Clam President 2, 4, Football Manager l, 2, Sl, 4, Class Play 4, Coninwnceinent In-0 . . . unuppy hroun Q-yen . . . u now- Tpea-kebr' lpodlubgi M3119 bQga'l:,tet 4' Class vom:-r . . . but ulwuyn willing to help. 'ltvldly '7' ' ' 99 C u u youthful but shrewd lulsllu-rm mun . . . uttorm-y-ni-Iuw 1In tha- future! . . . our pre-xy for two ya-urn . . . 1-nlltor-In-4-lah-I' ol' lln' Ser null has u pusxinn for Fronll und hon th-N. MITZI li.-XLICS .lunior Oporetta, Senior Choral Club. Svnior Play lll'0gI'1LIll, Spring Concert 2, 15, 4, G Clvf Club 2, 3 nn lll'1'0llllllINhl'lI dun:-er . . . YVIIIMIPIIIQ' nml 1-harming . . . long lnsln-ra . . . Mllzl und Nornm . . . 1-urly hourn . . . li. K. Y. Soror- ity. MANY JANE liAIllS0l'Il JEAN IC. li.-HCIKY Class 'I'rvasurn-r 2, 4, Choral Club 4, C Basketball 2, Cl, Volley Ball 2, A. A Club Ch-I' Club 2, Il, May Queen. Junior 2, Il, 4, G Clef Club 3, Choral Club 4, l'ron1 fl0IllllllllPt', Sophoinorv Hop Coin- .lunior Opt-frotta, A. A. 'Frvasurvr 2, ZZ, initte-4-, Coiniiwrr-ial Club 4, Junior Pen- A. A. Dance Coinniittvo 4 'Hull llolnmlltmi no-u-r too hu:-sy to join in the fun . . . lu-r llvc- fc-vt four ol' num-tlu-ss . . . 11-rnll-'s wntvrlou: mush' 1-Inns . . . 1-ilrls' LL . . . om- nnul only . . . typing . . . our 'llny nzntm-as to Sully S1-hultv . . . sh:-'ll sun-ly In- Qul-a-n . . . nltln Sue- . . . uhh- llnuna-ia-r. 1 -vllllrtvul in llllklllg- 2 45,2 7 ,ir',y-l'., f C? ffl, if lc ' I Wr- ,I sf liiti lu llc-ltz l:t'l'fllt-'llllllll lliglmm Illgllillll NINETEEN TI-IIRTY-SEVEN S.-lN'l'O JOHN lSA'l l'AGLlA Glee Club 2, 3, Junior Operetta-Prin- cipal, Football 2, 3, 4, Double Male Quartet 3, 4, Junior and Senior Liter- ary, Commercial Club, Spring Concert 2, 3, Senior Choral Club ll00lllllI1.l' hi-ss value . , . football hero . . . with Dom . . . harmonlvn playing . . . he lnughn and the world laughs with him. JOHN lll1IL'l'Z lanlfzht of industry . . . Now, I don't know It . . . 98's ln KC'0lll1'fl'y . . . .lt-even the .lt-ep . . . behaving twhile sitting wlth St-ilu-IH. SYDNEY Bl+lR'l'Hl1lN'l'HAL Football 4, Class Basketball l, Com- mercial Club 4 arguing law cases . . . football star . . . driving: the Plymouth . . . provides laughs for the Culnnlert-lnl 1-Inns . . . 1-onversutlon -the bakery business. GEOIQGE IP. ISIGH.-XM lland l, 2, 3, Orchestra 1, 2, 3, Double Male Quartet 3, 4, Sophomore Class Treasurer, Chairman, Senior Dance, Committee, A. A. Treasurer 4, Baseball Manager 2, 4, Glee Club 2, 3 de-hnnalr . . . ll0om fa suitable nick- nnnu-! . , . Ellis-'s pride- and joy . . . 1-nlnely redhead . . . haunting Mr. ll rya n . . . onhhh! 'Phat trmpcr! 'l'lliZ.lH IRIGHAM lillitor-in-Cliicf of Voyager, Yoyatgur Staff l, 2, 3, May Queen Attendant. Na- tional Honor Society 3, 4, Orchestra 2, 3, 4, G Clef Club 2, 3, Junior Literary Program, Choral Club platinum blond . . . nt-ws vomnn-ntatnrs are so fasvinatlm: . . . Q-dltnr nf the Yoy- ager: follolwimr a family tradition . . . May Queen attendant . . . like he-r lllll!4l1'v she hath mharms. 1 ,Auf 7'H,'T', Jfzixg gi. l , ,114 994 ' I fl NJ 1 1,3 lilo:-lmr Ilfbflllill' llnlmmu Ilomlern-nko I :No RlT'I'H llIi0l'Hl'IIl JOHN ISODNAIC G Clef Club 2, 3, Commercial Club 4, Band 1, 2, Class Basketball 2, Commer- Junior Operetta 3, Spring Concert 23, cial Club 4 senlol' Choral Club nent, nllellt, llllfllflll . . . uollu jerker . . . low alto volvo . . . wlth Alla-e . . . u zenloun shy and lmshful . . . A54 in conduct . . . re- typlnt . . . 1-any pcolmr. unpertllrlwd . . . cle- served und thoughtful. lllzhthll to know. l llANl'ES E. BOHMAN Senior Choral Club, Senior Dance Com- mittee, Class Treasurer 3, Commercial Club 4. Junior Prom Committee, Sopho- more Hop Committee pretty hloml hulr . . . Sue . . . doing olllce work . . . with Mury June . . . ooh, that runlll-. JAMES ISONIIIGIRIGNICO Football 2, 3, 4 1-reutor of wlttlc-hnnn nent to .lunIm . . . 1-nrtoonn . . . Wrolng XItl'f . . . lllllfi hut Illl!41'lll1'Y0llN. f 1 3 f,,,f. ' ,os f , .H . . . to llnnk IWIRANUIS N. H0800 Voyager Staff 1, 4, Senior Class Play, Senior Literary, Senior Nominating Committee, Band 1, Double Male Quar- tet 3. 4, Choral Club, Glee Club 1-urefrue Onsle . . . lllPlllb9l' ol' the Yhgl- lnntos . . . tnlkutlve . . . Ruxyhs l'nl . . . ln- te-rents-cl In an fronhnmn .... In-rry is the mann-. conversing with Elulne . . . mirrors . . . Pr'1dxu ll llrauyr Ilyrnv Calnpbell Czlstellnni NINETEEN TI-IIRTY-SEVEN MA RY A. ISIRAIDXYICLL Volley Ball 2, Girls' A. A., Senior Choral Club, G Clef Club lovely Indy . . . conservntlve colors . . sense of humor . . . sophlnsticntecl . . llrn1l . . . l'0lll'llK'l' of hor l'0llTll'fl0lll. LUIS JOANNE ISRAGG Basketball 1, 3, 4, Volley Ball 1, 3, 4, G Clef Club 2, 3, Senior Choral Club, Commercial Club 4, Girls' A. A. l, 2, 3, 4, Ring Committee 4 friendly BIIIIIQ' . class . . . cheery l'HARLES P. BYRNE Class President 3, A. A. President 4, Senior Play Cast 4, Commencement Pro- gram, National Honor Society 3, 4, Band 1. 2, 3, 4, Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4, Double Male Quartet n gentleman and n scholar . . . nnexvellml ln chemistry . . . witty . . . 1-lonkroom .ues- slonn . . . the 'l'InkA-r: relnenlher! . . . lt's n nm-orc-her. mlm-pl ni: through Inw hellos . BEN l'AfVll'BELI. Commercial Club, Class Basketball 2, 3 tnll, blond, and handsome . . . Keen most with Blanche . . . history recltutlonn . . . playing lmskcthnll . . . ex-usher from the Carnegie Theater. RIUHAIRD J. 4'AS'l'l1ll.LANl Voyager Staff 4, Vice President 3, Sophomore Hop Committee, J u n io r Prom Committee, Varsity, B. B. Mgr., Class B. B. 2, 3, 4, Senior Choral Club, Junior Literary Rich . . . za rt-ndy Mllllll' for nll . . . super snlesmnn . . . My 1.'ul'd f . . . l ent nplnlch . . . Nh-lieesport hound. A ,. ' fl ,ff Ngfx r. 42 Y,-,4 1 X TI-I f XZ Nl ! Cash-Ili Childs l1lIlIZAIil1l'l'H NI . IX-XS'I'I'l Illll Commercial Club Vico President, Junior Opvretta, Spring Concert 2, 3, 4, G Clef Club 2, Sl. Commercial Club 3, 4, Choral Club nn-nl and 4-lllvlc-nt . . . NIIIIIYIIIK . . . rnplll rm-udlng In lhllfthllllll . . . l'0lllllIQ'l'1'lIll l'Illh nu-1-llmrs . . . known to her frh-mln un I.Ilvhy . 11 E GRADUATES I4lYI1lIA'N l'. CHILDS Girls' A. A. 2, 3, 4, Star Magazine Sales- man, Sophomore Party Committee, Choral Club, Junior Sz Senior Party Committee, Junior Pennant COIIIIIIIIIPP, Conunercial Club, Senior Play Commit- tee NIIIIPI' KIIIPSVVCDIIIIIII . . . llkeu Ford l'N's . 4-any on the ryrn . . . with Murthu . . un uhle history stud:-nt. FHA II LES XY. I'IlA'I I'Y Senior Choral Club holnterous . . . I'9llllIld!l un of lflldlly lfllnsrn . . . u huselmll pitcher . . . nsk the clog: ulnout hls proofs . . . Cheer . . . n horse fum-lor. M.-IIIGAIIIWI' I . FONLEY G Clef Club Il, 4, Spring Concert 3, Com- me-rcial Club 4 1-hntu-rhox . . . ulnu-mee . . . true frleml. Ioynl l'0Illl'lHlP . . . shorthand trnnnlnllons . . . illlllllfll vurlu. .N 1 , YJ. 3 1,14 ff ,.. DIARY JANE CORBA G Clef Club 2, 3, Senior Choral Club. Spring Concert 2, 3, 4, Junior Operetta, Gym Exhibition 2, Senior Class Play lI'nderstudyJ tnklng' life 1-any . . . u lu-en mul nh-rt mlml . . . IIIIHYIYIIIIIIIMIII In clothes . . . zeonlrlry propositions . . . hlvyvlllurg. Dankowsky Danziger Davis Dazen Dillon NINETEEN TI-IIRTY-SEVEN STEVE DA NKOVYSKY Glee Club 2, 3, Junior Operetta-Prim cipal, Choral Club oh, those eyes! . . . a dlsnrmlng smile . . prnetleul joker . . . but u :ood singer . . fflllelllllel' the operettn!!! DOROTHY MARIE DANZIGER Volley Ball 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball 1, 3, 4, G Clef Club 2, 3, Senior Choral Club, Spring Concert 2, 3, 4, Commercial Club 4, Girls' A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Girls' A. A. Pin Committee 4 reudlng magazines . . . Dot . . . unuully seen with Agnes . . . n good llnneer . . . petite and personable. BOND S. DAVIS droll . . . driving for the Doctor . . . Ray, Bond, and Ylnny . . . snappy clothes . . . dates nt the Country Club. RUSSELL DAZEN Class Basketball 1, 2, B Squad Basketball 3, Varsity Basketball 4, Football 1, 2, Baseball 4, Gym Squad Leader 3,4 tobacco club . . . Russ . . . Star Athlete . . . anonymous notes . . wlseeraeks ln history class. ANNA MARY DILLON wenrs oxfordn . . . seen with Jenny . . nent . . . talks to Tomlinson ln school . . quiet ln her one period n dny clans. N4 'wa .fpivxl ' 'wb cf ff' , , x l-Illis I-'ure-ri l 1-ru l nn:lro llaunble THE GRADUATES MARY l,0l' ELLIS Conunerciul Club President 4, Volley Hall 1, .i. 4, Basketball l, 3, 4, Girls' A. A. l, Il, 4, Senior Choral Club, Comuler- cial Club 3, 4,12 Clef Club Il, Shaler High School 2 comnlerclul 1-Illlnlvlng . . . guy null l'l'll0ll- nlr . . . jolly pgooll l'llllllNllIl0ll . . . nthlc-th-s are hu-r long null . . . 1-urls und npurkllnnr 1-ye-n. MARY ANN I .-Xlilfllll G Clef Club 2, 3. Junior Operetta, Sen- ior Choral Club, Spring Concert 2, 3, 4, National Honor Society 3, 4 elm-Ilgllts In books . . . charm serve-cl unob- trllnlu-ly . . . sure to run-1-es-ul . . . nmlnhle . . . Lntln llnglllnl. EMMA M EIH'l41IDl1lS FEIRA G Clef Club 2, 3, Choral Club 4, Junior Uperetta, Spring Concert 2, Il, 4 bcuuty In the Lutln lllllllllfl' . . . clothes ol' cllnllllvlloll . . . llllllvhlllllllf . . . Illu-14 4-unlly . . . scorn-t umhltlon: to mnrry n rich nmn. H ELEN JOAN FIJNA R0 G Clef Club 2, 3, Junior Operetta, Sen- ior Choral Club, Spring Concert 2, Ii, 4 hnhliy-K0-llleky . . . Inbox, puppy . . . lllnzllnh recltntlonn . . . :lurk eyes . . . pol! wlth Luc-Ille. JAMES ll. G.-Xllllllllll lland l, 2, 3, 4, Junior Literary, Orches- tra 1, 2, Glee Club 2, Band Concert 3, 4, Spring Concert 1, 2 Bones . . . runs u cn! form . . . lzeonwtry propositions . . . olwnyn hnppy . . . NYC-ll -uh- . . . lhlllllnz for Mr. Iirynu. OF Fellini ki Glasser lll'l'l'll Hreoi' llallinu NINETEEN TI-IIRTY-SEVEN PEA RL GERLOVVSKI Colnniercial Club 4, Senior Choral Club, Spring Concert 4, Girls' A. A. 4, Volley Ball 4, Sophomore Party Committee shorthulul whiz . . . fllll-l0YlllK' . . . active in tlelil of sports . . . those vlvld ehupexlux . . . fxlee ulwnys In SlllllPN. HAIRRIETT GLASSICR Voyager Staff 4, Salutatorian, Pitts- burgh Post-Gazette Reporter 4, May Queen Attendant, National Honor So- ciety 3, 4, Sophomore Hop Couiluittee, Junior Literary, Music Clubs 2, 3, 4 one of the moderns . . . satlrlnt . . . writer of no menu nbillty . . . May Queen atteullullt . . . u very popular Inns . . . salu- tutorlnn. l-'I Y ELYN GREEN Voyager Staff 4, National Honor Society 3, 4, Choral Club, G Clef Club 2, 3, Chairman Pennant Committee 3, Sopho- more Hop Committee, Mgr. Sophomore Girls' Sports 2, Girls' A. A. 2, 3 her lah: lllue eyes ure the tops . . . knlttinl: . . . how lloes my hnlr look! . . . tuklng her tlme 4llfe'n no longer if we hurry! . . . Hvle alul her euue. lil lH INF! GREEN Girls' A. A. President 4, Volley Ball- Captain 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball-Captain 1, 3, 4, G Clef Club 2, 3, Senior Choral Club, Junior Pennant Committee, Com- mercial Club 4, Chairman-A. A. Dance Committee an K','llll'lllNf . . . elepenllnhlllty plus . . . n towerlng Senlor . . . llkes hleyeles . . . und ehumn wlth llelen. MICHAEL G. HXNXA Senior Play Committee Edison ln the making' . . . qlllet, renerved. good nntured . . . small of stature . . . hut not of gray matter . . . telllnp: the time of llxly. J J A llnnnn llnyns llurris Hines Holmes THE GRADUATES SADIE HANNA Basketball 2. Commercial Cluh happy unll guy . . . l'hIll'llllllK smile . . . :short In ntnturs- . . . llnrk ey:-n llllll hnlr . . . ullh I'c-url. MARY ELIZA Rl4I'l'l-I HAYES G Clef Club 3, Junior Operetta, Senior Choral Club, Commercial Club 4, Volley Ball 1, Girls' A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4 vumnu-rvlul 1-lub Qlllllllllffffl . . . reddlsh hulr . . . toot tnlkutlve In ldnzllnh 1-Inns . . . ulntlng . . . u true lnlum- frh-ml. MARY LOUISE HARRIS Cheerleader 2, 3. 4. G Clef Club 2, 3, 4, Junior Operetta, Annual Salesman 2. Gym Exhibition 1, Girls' A. A. l, 2. Commercial Club 4, Senior Party Com- mittee nvrnlmtlvn whlln- 1-hm-urls-aulllur . . . one of the mont lmpulnr . . . ell'erv4-nvvlltly ullvc- . . . hun n Illlllll of hor IDIVII . . . lwtlte null nwevi. ll0RlflR'l' A. HINES Class Basketball 4 pnln with l'ntt4-rnon . . . Frm-lu-h lll'l'9ll1 . . li. 0. ll. 'l'. . . . 4-Ionkroum ns-rmlulm . IDOPnll'l she- knuw uny nl' the llllM!l'l'l'Nf' 1 Koi, f ' ,J f h K' lx. 1 A 1 NAOMI JEAN HOLMES Class Secretary 4, Cheerleader 1, 2, 3, 4, Girls' B. B. 3, 4, Girls' V. ll. 3, 4, Music Clubs 3, 4, Girls' A. A. 2. 3, 4, Junior Literary, Senior Dance Commit- tee SkIppy . . . lIl'lllllllfll'N . . . 1'0llI0l'lllll0IlN wltln Il. Il. In lie-mn. 1-Inns . . . 1-hee-rlender . . . nltty . . . ulwnyn lllllgllllllf, ulwuys pray. lluinal Irvin Kearns Kcarton Kelsey NINETEEN THIRTY-SEVEN WV ASY L HOM.-X C0ll1lll6l'ClZL1 Club 4, Band l, 2, 3, 4, Senior Choral Club, Class Basketball 4 hnir slleked lmvk . . . hlgh speed iyplst . . . f'0Illlll9l'l'llll Club lneetlngs: sitting out the dum-en . . . never shy among friends . . . helpful, hi:-hearted. MARY ll. IRYIN G Clef Club 3, Spring Concert 3 movies and plays . . . distinguished hand- writing . . . never sud nor blue . . . friendly . . . one nf the tnller Senlors. JEAN ELIZABETH KEARNS Girls' A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Spring Concert 2, Volley Ball 4, G Clef Club 2, 3, Choral Club 4, Girls! A. A. Dance Committee, Gym Exhibition 2 elunslenl features . . . qlllet nnd denlnre mins . . . she reeltes when others full . . . thenter-1:01 ng . EMILY MAE KEAIRTON Coininercial Club 4, Senior Choral Club, G Clef Club 2, 3, Junior Operetta than slow drnwl . . . worrying whnt to wc-ur . . . quiet . . . liked by ull the elnsx . . . 1: Inrilllnnt lnw student. friendship wlth llnth. LUCILLE KIGLSEY G Clef Club 2, 3, Junior Operetta. Sen- ior Choral Club, Spring Concert 2, 3, 4 chewing gum . . . fneInI l'Xlll'l'NNi0llN . . . nnnully rides to sehmrl . . . she Illlly he taking temperatures some dny . . . hns n reudy smile. N x 'x fl ,s fv ' VW JV' wif 4 gi- 5 , X Q. ffl I TH Kiszm' Klee ANN.-K Nl. KISZEIC C0lIlIllQl'Ciill Club 4, Girls' A. A. l, 2, 3, 4, Volley Ball l, 2, Sl, 4, Basketball 1. 2, 3, Gym Exhibition 2 1-huttlng' with Suclle . . . hulr neully wnvell . . . frlenally Iunn . . . liaise you handed In your shorthun1lf . . . 1-Imran-terlzell hy nwl-utern. E GRADUATES A N NA li lllfllfl Senior Choral Club, Commercial Club 4, Spring Concert 4 sm-hnol glrl l'lllllllll'Xl0ll . . . llken lhlhert 'l'uylur . . . hlnek wavy trensen . . . blush- ing: . . 'seen wltll Kathryn. Flililll li0EHllEll qulel mul lmnhful . . . what blue eyes!! . . . nexer overwnrkn . . . hut In hlllilly . . eleel rleully lnlnded. IIKIGNM S. KUIKPIICL Senior Choral Club, G Clef Club 3, Conunercial Club 4, Spring Concert 3, 4, Double Male Ql18.I't9t-fACC0lllDZl.I1iSl nlwayn hun numethlng tu muy . . . well llrennell . . . helps llllllly with her mnsleul ulvlllty . . . frunk und eurelree . . . llken to urlrne. ,xxix , .2 .n ff S-FWEL ,, 43,1- 0 ,V . Q32 .l mf-it llf' if llE'l'TY M. KYLE Basketball 2, Volley Ball 2, Girls' A. A. 2, 3, 4, G Clef Club 2, 3, Senior Choral Club, Junior Operetta, Spring Concert 2, 3 lnellnell tn he ulhletle . . . ll lilrl Scout . . . Gosh, l'm hungry. . . . wllllng to plc-use . . . llken to he up und elolng. an don Li-vin Imwis Long Lyons NINETEEN TI-IIRTY-SEVEN AIITHUR LANGDUN Class Secretary 2, Class Basketball 2, 4, Glee Club 3, Junior Operetta 3, Voy- ager Staff 4 'foh gc-g-zo.-sh . . . that old rnttletrup . . well lik:-cl . . . horseback rldlng . Unis . . . In- drawn with skill. NORM.-1 LEYIX National Honor Society 3, 4, Senior Play Cast, Senior Literary Pl'0gl'3,lll, Junior Literary Program, Senior Nominating Committee, Choral Club, G Clef Club Il. Girls' A. A. 2, 3, 4 elrulnutlcs Interest her . . . 1-lwerfnl und witty . . . giggles with Mltzl . . . nn nlnle ellu-utlonlst . . . pvtlte . . . Ilflllly wine. pnulnl hlollsh: quoted fl'lllll Sm-e . LA YERNE YVEISSERT LEWYIS Band l, 2, 3, Senior Choral Club, G Clef Club 2, 3 quite an 1-ssnylst . . . also lllllliflll . . . W'hut's your hurry! . . . does tlne work ln sc-honl . . . and also lllIlllllK'l'N n home. JEAN HOPE LONG G Clef Club 2, 3, Senior Choral Club. Spring Concert 2, 3, 4, Junior Operetta, Girls' A. A. 3, 4, Star Magazine Sales- woman nlwnyn with lla-len . . . lllqllllvllllll . . . has fun whlle revltlng' . . so nent nml dallnty . . . Hllllfll' humor. WILLIAM LYONS Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Manager of Magazine Campaign, Senior Choral Club, Senior Literary, Sophomore Party Committee '5lll'l'Pllf on youth . . . our vallnlnllrn lnnn- nzer . . . adept at salem-plm: . . . pranks for lfllllebn In-neflt . . . n king nt the dana-1-! . . . clotlu-s lllllkl' the man. I . if N J V J TH Mannion Mupsione TOM DIANION Basketball 2, 3, 4 Henna . . . hhrh scorer . . . In the Fm-nl . . . l'0lllPl to Ilfe when he seen ll hnnket- hull . . . Illlltff but full of fun . . . nlnl hnmlnollw. too. ISA BELL LOUISE Commercial Club u shy lass . . . never talks never appears hurried . . tlunn . . . n friendly nmlle SOPHIE MATWIUZYK G Clef Club 2, 3. Senior Choral Club, Spring Concert 2, 3, 4, Commercial Club 4, Girls' A. A. 4, Basketball 4, Junior Operetta qlllvt . . . depelnlnhlc- worker . . . skirts und blnlllwn . . . typlluz room: Illllllllllllf un the keys . . . :olden brown hulr. ,ff 52, if .f,QliA'P '- ' ,jill H' I- ' S ' l ,A 1. A fly-, lair' E GRADUATES WILLIAM MAPSTONE Vice President 4, Senior Play-Property Manager, Junior Operetta, Junior Prom Committee, Senior Literary Play, Soph- omore Hop Committee, Senior Choral Club eroonlng and clownlng . . . vlue-president of the claus . . . happy-no-lucky . . . lmnjo eyes . . . who 1-nuld forget the play!!! MARSH out of turn . . . . prompt rceltu- fnr ull. FLORIQJNCE MAY Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Volley Ball 2, 4, G Clef Club 3, Senior Choral Club, Girls' A. A. 1, 2. 3, 4, Play Day 2, 4, Spring Concert 3, 4, Commercial Club 4. Flo . . . In the Cnrnelrle 'Pheutrr . . . Ilfhlefll' ave . . . snoomls In history clans . . . she trnvm-In for her eduvntlon. HCC u tnoy McKinley Mills Mmgfnii Nesbit NINETEEN TI-IIRTY-SEVEN RAYMOND Mcl'All'l'NEY Manual Training 4, Band 1 hnselmll suit! . . . Ray . . . nntomohlles . . . what the well dressed man will wear . . . rhythm when he walks . . . English rem-ltutlons. DOROTHY M CKINLEY Voyager Staff 4, Senior Literary. Volley Ball 3, 4, Choral Club 4, National Honor Society 3, 4, Junior Literary, G Clef Club 3, Girls' A. A. 2, 3, 4. first honors in the Intelligent-e Text . . . a good dnneer . . . with Wnfrner . . . she has Il systeln . . . und green eyes. J. ARTHUR MILLS Football 1, 2, 3, 4, Junior Literary, Junior Prom Committee model nlrplanes . . . lllllIlIl'Q'l' of Al VVII- llulns . . . lanky and jovial . . . Art . . hrnln and hrnwn . . . sketching. RU'l'l-l ELAINE MORGAN Valedictorian, Junior Operetta-Prim cipal, National Honor Society 3, 4, A. A. Secretary 4, Music Clubs 2, 3, 4, Liter- ary Programs 3, 4, Assistant Editor of Voyager 4, Gym Exhibition 2 personnllty plus . . . hest dressed girl . . . nuthorlty on etiquette . . . lwllllllll' Will! the llllldles . . . IIrynn's FlossIe . . . oh, those heuutlful locks. JAUK NESBI1' Glee Club 3, Double Male Quartet 3, Spring Concert 3, 4, Football 2, 3 physics shark . . . on lleechwood . . . no longer shy . . . with Handy . . . tnlklmr . . . Ilon't yn thlnk no. or cIon't yu Q . . . rates with the fPllllll9Il. r' X7 H IVQJQYTSL 4 E 50: Q4 . ,,.,. f,N.1 J XOY1'llI H Imnnn-Il I'n-rllnzin l'm-rrv I 41 'lm THE GRADUATES OF IDA NOYl'1I.l.l Senior Class l'lay, Colnlnercial Club Sec- retary 4, Senior Choral Club, G Clef Club 3, Girls' A. A. 2, Il, 4, Junior Oper- etta, Basketball 3 three lllllNk4'fI'l'l'Hl llln, Ulgn. nml Ilelen . . . l'l'lll'klllK' Iler Klllll . . . weekly juli: 0. Ii. Ing typing eopien . . . Ianni: reellnlions . . . dld nell ln the plny. JOHN 0'll0NNl'lllIl Class Basketball 4 Irish . . . lots of energy . . . Xiuslllnglon llusll . . . elonkroom NPNll0llN . . . nh-e ills- poxltlcm . . . 1' Ylpzllnnte. 4'.-UNIX M. l'lf1RliMAN Senior Class Basketball Manager, Coln- mercial Club 4, Senior Choral Club. Senior Dance Cllllllllllli-MJ, Senior Party Conuni ttee ful . . . attends ull nehool exents . Ineensunt tnlker . . . Mr. Iieq-'ps erllle . qulle knoll lonkl ng. liA'I'Hl4lIiINlfl PEIRICY Conunercial Club 4, Senior Choral Club, Spring Concert 4 nlwuyn lenlllng n helping hnnel . . . snlnrl 1-Inthen . . . sweet nlmpllelty . . . Rule . . . Phllllllllllljl' wllll Ilnrrletl. 1,- U, 'try 4 ll' Ii. HAliIill1l'l l' l'l'lRSl.1Nl G Clef Club 2, 3, Spring Concert 2, 3, 4, Class Secretary 3, Senior Choral Club, Senior Play, Junior Operetta, Junior Prom Committee, Commercial Club Vice President Mlus l.'lH'Ill'llIl'N rlxhl hnncl girl . . . her help wlth the Yoynarer nppreelnteal . . . vhn- eluus . . . she l'lIfl'6 qnlte n lhrllre . . . Hur- rlett nnal llelen. 9 l'e1rozelli l'im'ard Poole Ramhe llelflnele NINETEEN TI-IIRTY-SEVEN NORMA PETROZELLI Volley Ball 2, 3, Basketball 2, 3, Girls' A. A. 2, 3, G Clef Club 3, 4, Commer- cial Club 4 ranks among the best daneers . . . seen ln n green our . . . wlth SIIIIIIIIIP . . . she qnlh- hlen . . . llllllllllllll' ln lun' elnss. MARTHA E. PICARD Senior Literary, Senior Choral Club, Girls' A. A. 4, Volley Ball 4, Junior Prom Committee, Senior Dance Commit- tee, Commercial Club 4, Basketball 4 notes to Sue ln Inw olnss . . . l'oke5 . . rldlng to ru-hool . . . sweet nnll nmluble . . . Rosslyn Farmers. NYILLIAM J. POOLE 8:l-lyk Whexs':-he made lt . . . popular with the dnmnels . . . open nir tnxl . . . has il rlngnlde seat . . . nnll dlmples . . . n :unil- lng lrlnhmnn. l l-IRIS IKAABE Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Carnegie High Swing- sters 4 Uhrln and Sonney . . . Bunk Nlzhtern . . . he loves hln drums . . . English reeltntluns . . . never rushed. PIERINA U. RAlf'l+'AELE Gym Exhibition 2, G Clef Club 2, 3, 4, Commercial Club 4 Ilttle hnt not least . . . hlgll heels . . . the llttle zlrl wllh the biz vulee . . . worrylnp: . . . lndustrloun student. TH Ralston Rll'lllll'tlN0ll Ross lluslmik 5 int ix Y ELM A M. RA LS'l'ON G Clef Club 2, 3, Senior Choral Club, Girls' A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball 1, 2, Volley Ball 1, 2, 3, Hand 1, 2, 3, 4, Jun- ior Operetta hln name ls Pat . . . eurly blonde halr and a nweet nmlle . . . elarlnet . . . n lovable pernon . . . SwIna'nter'n aeeompanlst. E GRADUATES Glflt DRG E RICHARDSON front seat ln lnw clans . . . Pie . . . passes others' notes . . . never talks ln elm-is . . . ex-t lrneg'le Panther. NESBIT M. ROSS Orchestra 1, 2, 3, Glee Club 2, 3, Jun- ior Operetta-Principal, Choral Club, Double Male Quartet 4, Band 4 matinee ldul + glasses . . . reading the lll0l'lllllK' funnlen . . . hlltory reeltntlonnf . . . one of the Swhu:sters . . . muuleal. EDNA RUSHN l K Senior Literary, Commercial Club Treas- urer, Senior Ring Committee, Girls' A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, G Clef Club 3, Senior Choral Club, Junior Operetta, Basket- ball 1 blonde trennen . . . sweet and lovable Illlllll- en . . . sorting trannerlptlolnn . . . popular . . . Connnerelnl Club Meetlnxx: Have you broulrht your clues! DOMINICK T. SANTAVICCA Football 2, 3, 4, Glee Club 3, 4, Com- mercial Club 4, Junior Operetta Ilona . . . football hero . . . alnbltlon: to be a IIIIDYIP dlreetor une and Mussolini . . . worried about shorthand. Schulte Seibel Scinbrnt Senibrait Silvestri JOHN SUHULTIC - JOHN SEIISEL Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Class Basketball 3, 4 Class Basketball 2, 3, 4, Varsity B Schulte and his gang . . . playing lmse- Squad B' B' 2' Senior Choral Club hall . . . member of the hand . . . and seems lazy ,Iqphn , , . NHQ-Ilo, Joe . . . uYll'l0llS ta ell.i0!' it . . . loaflng with the llvyl-I. llquId . . . The Monkeys VVeddlng . . . having xt goud tlme . . . rllllng In old Iron- sldes. AM BROSE SEMBRAT Class OHicer 2, Literary 3, 4, Voyager Staff 4, National Honor Society 3, 4, Choral Club 4, Double Male Quartet 4, Party Committee 4 gifted with the power ul' orntory . . . dex- teroun . . . good things came In small packages . . . W .Q J . . . radleal . . . classroom debates. PETE SEMBRAT Commercial Club 4, Class Basketball 1, 3, 4, Senior Choral Club, Glee Club 2, 3 HELEN M. SILVESTRI Voyager Staff 4, Senior Choral Club, G. Clef Club 3, Commercial Club 4, Spring Concert 3, 4, Junior Operetta-HI'rin- worries the girls . . . supplies gum and , cipal 1-andy . . . he never has a worry . . . arrives just ln tlme . . . flddles wlth a typewriter. skin like alabaster . . . and raven lacks . . . typing demon . . . long nails . . . Harriett and Helen, lnseparable. K4 ,4'Xf IAQ ' 'wig , Khin f Pr 'i Slit:-r Smith Smith Snyder N nltu THE GRADUATES MA BEL Slillflflll IIIIIIIIIPIIIIIYPIQ' elrenned . . . an vertnln Pitt hx-ro . . . K001'-llllflll'Pll . . . wllllnx to I4-ml n he-lplng hnml . . . nnnully In pray nplrltn. HANNAH LOUISE SMITH Voyager Staff 4, Junior Literary, Senior Literary, Senior Play, G Clef Club 2, 3, Senior Choral Club, Commercial Club 4, Senior Party Committee rate-July worker . . . llken the IIIUYIPI . . . the Voyager typlst . . . pgonnlp wlth Ida: . . . lnvell by ull . . . ve-run-cl In history. THICLMA A. SMITH Junior Operetta-Principal, G Clef Club 2, 3, Volley Ball l, 2, 3, Basketball 1. 2, Senior Choral Club, Commercial Club 4, Girls' A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Spring Concert 2, 3, 4 ll Llly l'onn to lu' . . . known ns Slnltty' to ns . . . nt-en: olierlng Ill-ork-0 . . . mud- 1-nt lnsn . . und one to he rm-nu-lnln-red. v RAI MOND 0. SN! DER Senior Choral Club, Commercial Club, Senior Dance Committee, Spring Concert nlwayn worrylnx nlmut lllnloxy . . . clause of ll Int uf 4-ummotlon . . . tull, dark, and hnndsnnu- . . . gh Ing nclvlve . . . glrl shy. Hl4llil1,lN M. s0L'l'l1RS Senior Choral Club, Basketball 2, 3, 4, Volley Ball 1, 2, 3, 4, Girls' A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, A. A. Editor 3, Senior Play Pro- gram Committee, Mt. Lebanon Play Day 3, Gym Exhibition 2 une of the nmnt nthletlc . . . llalr styles . . . with Jenn . . . In-uutlfnl hands . . . n NIIIIPI'-lllllillllllll. sr 1 Spiegel Spence- Spinda Springer NINETEEN THIRTY-SEVEN FliANl'ES li. M. SPECA Greensburg High School, Basketball 1, 2, Senior Choral Club Spring Concert 4 correcting pnpers . . . constantly with Con- stance . . . tlptoes through the halls . . . I-'nur' . . . n brunette In-nnty. JOSEPH S1'lE'GEL Business Manager 2, 3, 4, Band 1, 2, Il. 4, Orchestra 2, 3, 4, Double Male Quar- tet, Senior Choral Club, National Honor Society 3, 4, Nominating Commit- tee 3 big hrnwn eyes . . . Sonny . . . looks for- ward to I-'rcnch class . . . shy . . . n :mul munxurer . . . faint heart nm-'er won fnlr lllllld. GENE SPENCE Football 2, 3, 4, Class Basketball 4, Senior Choral Club, Voyager Staff 4 nn unwilling: French student . . . nmatenr llll0't0jIl'!lllllQ' . . . urlglnntor of '37 0lllllll'lllN . . . in the midst of things . . . hvnrty laughter. MIKE SPINDA Commercial Club 3, 4, Junior Literary, Senior Literary, Senior Choral Club, Voyager Staff 4, Class Basketball 1 thonglltflll . . . cheerful. hnshful Sllllll' . . nm-ver 1-nnght nnpplny: ln history 1-Inns . nlwnys romly to snet-1-hify .... Vs in 1-on duct. 1il l'H ELEANOR SPRINGER Basketball Manager 4, Girls' A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Chairman of A. A. Pin Committee 4, Volley Ball 4, Gym Exhibition 2 In-nutlfnl black lmlr . . . dlnmles . . . his ln- ltlals ure ll. VV. . . . llllllllli . . . were-n't lfllfllwl pk-tures cute? A :fv il, .f 'ixl' F45 f- Q I NJ I Sl1'l'Il Slrous SZt't'l'lliI flvilllibl' 'l ull in THE GRADUATES A lllSl4Ill'l' S'l'l lKN S01lll0lll0l'6 Hop- Chairman, tllee Club 2, Il, Class Basketball 2, Il. Senior Liter- ary, Varsity Basketball 4, High Commit- tee -f'lll1ll'lIliill, Operetta 3, Senior Class Play 'l'nxl . . . Yillllllllll' ll lllllgll .'I'0Ill ex 1-ryonv . . . nlmrle-nts . . . usslstnut tn the :assist- nnt . . . known the Intent l'Xlll'1'HHi0lIN . . . lll'l'I'HHllI'y quulilies for making' l'l'l1'llllS. ICINYA RD M . STROUS Glee Club 2, Cl, Senior Choral Club, J unior Literary odorih-runs toluu-1-ma . . . 1-nrrespomla-In-e with Hllnm-s . . . tlmt IllIlllNilll'lll'l . . . lu- lliex' Illllll . . . playing: 4-rims-1-ross. XIAIH' li. SZICEIRISA Voyager Stull' 4 Qenior Choral Club, .llmior Operettzx. G Clef Club El, Com- mercial Club Cl, 4, Junior lliteratry. S0lJll0Ill0l'0 Hop C0lIll1lll,l0Q', Girls' A. AX. l. ZZ. 23, -l nnistrt-sn ut' the Illlillf-lll'llNll . . . snfl brown 4-yes . . . l'llNllllI LEl'lIl'l0llHIll'HH . . . In-lpful . . likes lo renal lllllH'!lZllll'N. Xl0NR0l1I'I'.XYL0li Senior Choral Club, Glee Club 2, 13, lfootbull 2, 35, 4, llouble Mule Quartet 3 u foothnll llalnh . . . LZ l'. . . . nn-h II nim- teuor volvo . . . qulet uml xc-ry lmluntrlouu . . . l'urn1-:le 20, l'ruftnn O!!! f , 41 lj K- lx, hifi I 7 , JOHN 'I'l'llK0 flll'l'llll'llllIlI notes . . . nh-lu-s In Nl'lPIll'l' . . n !I'lll'klllK nuln . . . Il l l'l'lll'll stullt-nl . . nlwnys qulet. ltillll XY:1uus-1' XV2lll'll0l'll lVz1tn'lun'11 NVQ-iss:-rt NINETEEN THIRTY-SEVEN l'.-VPSY A. 'PYRONE Glee Club 2. 3, Junior Literary, Double Male Quartet 3, Senior Choral Club, Spring Concert 2, 3, Commercial Club 4 prefers history to anything else . . . Xl sport-minded student . . . walking fffem- mes to school . . . elennn huts for n living . . figuring Inw eunes. lll4I'I l'Y BAINE XYAGNER Voyager Staff 4, Basketball 2, 3, 4, Vol- ley Ball 2, 3, 4, Vice President Girls' A. A. 3, Junior Literary, Junior Prom Committee, Music Clubs 3, 4, National Honor Society 3, 4 so nthletie . . . the manner of a munneqnln . . . Bee . . . ll tall and slender lnss loved by all . . . entertaining . . . one of the hnine trllsters. ALICE PEARL VVATCHORN Girls' A. A. 2, 3, G Clef Club 2, 3, Junior Operetta, Senior Choral Club, Commercial Club a constant companion of ll. Il. . . . joking with Mary Lon . . . laughter and gnyety Brill:-ret . . . quite a singer. HhLluN L. HAH HORN G Clef Club 3, Senior Choral Club, Junior Operetta, Spring Concert 4, Sophomore Hop Committee, Commercial Club 4, Girls' A. A. 2, 3, 4, Volley Ball 2 nnother nmznzlne fun . . . blonde locks . . . notes to Lois . . . singing seems to he Il fnlnlly nrt . . . draws llnitutive ph-tures. ALYIRA BELL Vl'EISSER'I' Senior Choral Club, Basketball 4, Volley Ball 2, 4, Girls' A. A. 2, 3, 4 in scientifically minded lxlss . . . lflnxllsh l'0l'iflltl0llN . . . interested in nthletien . . . ll well trained mind . . . soft tones. ,M ' 'Q V! faxil 'WK ,.r 4- fd' xK xYl'l'llll'lIIl4'l' NVQ-rtln-inn-r NW-sl' GR xx J I SIDNEY W'l+lll'l'Hl4llHl'lIC Class lluskvtball 4. Senior Choral Club. SPlll0l' llzmcv Conunittee l'nn4-ho . . . Znzu Pitts' hnmln . . . pralt- tln- . . . Minn Mllllra-n In ll rnclh-nl . . . 1llIt'lll0llIllll1' llntln trnnulntlonn . . . ntrnnp:er tlmn th-tIon f lll l'H l4ll.YIll.-X XYIGPVI' Senior Play C0lllllllU.P9 foollulll 1'll1IlllNl1lNf . . . tiny . . . un curly hlrnl . . . xl-ry 1-nrnm-ut In hc-r work . . . mot- to: Inhor 0ll'l'l'0lll1'M ull things. I'l1l'I'l4IR XVUZNI.-Ui Coxnxnvrcial Club 4, Class Basketball 2 tc-nnlng the Klrln . . . Sh-wfoot . . . hollln ll noft spot In Mlnn Cos-hrnn'n he-nrt . . . nn uhrupt manner ol' sin-1-1-In . . . hun ulwnyn In-en an mood student. A51 ,M - 'wlWQ 17 fjnyf' 44. K' ' I IPM ADUATES OF 19 'l'Hl4l0ID0I! E W'lCll'l'Hl+llM Eli Senior Dance Conunittee, Class Basket.- ball 4, Senior Choral Club l'nn4-ho No. 2 . . . wlthnut the gn-stlln-.u . . . llllllllltlllli' . . . u zum 1-hvwer . . . llste-ning: to the hnselmll lEllllli'H . . . unll plnylnpr the mnvllhu-N. EIAINIG VYHl'I'I4l Senior Dance C0l11l11lf,t9t-l, Girls' A. A. Dancv Colnmittee, Girls' A. A. 2, 3, 4, Basketball 4, Volley Ball 4 utlulylnp: 4-In-lnlstry . . . odd 1-yen . . . with Iflmnm . . . u :ood sport in lu-r own qnlc-t wny . . . u tennis vhunlplon. JOHN ZADARKO t'hntn . . . rex-ltlng ln history . . . ldlflnfs pet . . . glrl-shy . . . wlth 5ll'lllZ . . . n good nm-uk:-r. JUNIORS 1 1 l1'11111l I1'1111': S111-1'11:1. 'l'11111-11. Sus. XX'i111:1111s. Z11111111. Z21ll'111'111I1i. X'il11'11N111, XX11 A1 1 'l'l1 1i:1111s1111. S11:11'11s. 1111111 l1'u11': Z:11111s11i. XXQEIIIN. XX'X'21l1. N11'l'1l11111ll, 11. 511111-111-11. .X, Sus. XX'i1h S11'111'1i, 'l'1-1111111's11-1'. .X. 811111-111-11. N11111111i11s11y. irrl l1'r111'1 XX'1'sl1-1'111:11111. '1'. XX'1-1111-I. X'111111L:, XX'i1s1111. S111i111. XX':11:1xi1111w11s11i. 711 11111, S11'z111w1111. l11l1 I1'1111': XX'111'11l'1'1i. X':11'1i11s1i,1'. Si11s1-11. XX'y1i1-. XX'11z11i:111. S1'1111. 'lllf 1'111'1 1' qs. 1- 11 . ': ':: . 'I' --null 1'1111': 1- . '- . ' . .'111 , 1'Rl1 ' , '. .. 1 '1 113. I IVIY f i1'l 1'r 11: ' I 111,:'1'111' . . 11 Z, .:1's , V1 ' '. I ', 1-:P 111' 11 g..-1i11:.l: ,., :..:S11 011111. hw. 1111116 111 I 1 1111111x 11111 1 111111 1111111111 X111 1111111 1111111. N11 I 1111 1111111111 1D111111111111 X11 11111 11 11111 1':s11-1'. '1'. 1'1111'- A ,P 11111111111 1 11111 Ill 11 I1 I1 K' F1 'I I1 1 I111 1 1111111 X111 ll 11 X11 X11 1 111111111 111111111 111111111111 I1 , 11111111 r , vj 1 I1111 X 11111111111 111 X11 111 1 111 Xl 1111111 X11 l111 11. 1-I1':111s. 111111111-12 ' 1 11 111 ' 1 K , 'J Q- xt K ' ' df 2 t JUNICRS l'run1 li'uu': Pike, Miszezyelm. S1'lll'f'llN'l', l'nlTol'1l, Sl'lHllll'E'l', Nowaeki. .su-ond lt'nu': I'uhlm:ln, Itotll, l'regn:lr, Rowe, S. Schulte. I.. Prosser, it Reiss. l'retler. Nt-sbil. 'l'liir1l Ifmr: Mosehiwsky. Nixon, Sum, St'llIll'1'l'. l'2lllt'l'NUll, Xlelielyey. Klelll l'iehi. Moore, Ross. llaxllm-l'. 'l'up It'nu': Sehepis. l'lmnmel'. Ray. tlrris. l'l'1'llitl. N. Ustatte. Penn. Pau Mykita. MEMOIRS OF A JUNIOR The third chapter of our high school education has ended. lt is one of four chapters ot' our life which, in years to come, will bring us many pleasant hours of reminiscent conversation. Therefore, it is our desire to make the most of them, for we are laying the foundation of our future life. Looking back over the past three years of our high school career, we re- member distinctly the tirst time we crossed the threshold of Carnegie Hi, as part of its student body. We admit the fact that our freshmen term was spent in great anxiety over the expectation of becoming Sophomores, for we would then be upperclassmen. Vthen we resumed our studies in the early autumn of nineteen thirty-tive, there was no time to josh the lfreshiesf' as we were occupied with more impor- tant matters. Those who were athletically or musically inclined were participat- ing in the various sports or musical activities offeredg those chosen to lead our class were trying to fultill their oftices to the best of their abilities, and all of us were busy with the various scholastic tasks that we must accomplish as Sophomores. However, the last of 'lune approached and our days as Sophomores were numbered. ,Xfter another seemingly short vacation, we returned once again to our books. Now began our third high school year. Shortly after the usual trouble concerning schedules was settled our class had a meeting, at which time the following were selected as otlicers: .lack Xtilson, presidentg tiene lloyd, vice font lfmr: Il. Alupstum-. 1'. Mm-1'1'e:1ily. Ilawhaiker. Y. Koi-piel, Koss. Karis. Suomi lfmr: Hodleski, Ilutehisuu. Ilelm, llllfllli-'S. lfzlrher, Gregg, Geisler, Kalp- lan. Kvisling. 11:11 Row: M4-Pziiwl, 1-'i-emu, Lister, Hinds, llaudensllield. I 1'ederiek. Hertz. Hicks. Grur. p lfmr: llvrnmn. Malrelwtto, 4iI'ilj'Zt'l', llolt. M4-al. ldlplilliilll, M:u'Iuc-4-i. presidentg Virginia Aspinall, secretaryg and Mildred Corba, treasurer. Due to the willingness of these class officers and the generous help of our sponsor, Miss Moore, our Junior year has proved to be very successful. Our first social event was the gala Thanksgiving Party held under the combined leadership of the Junior and Senior classes. The nineteenth of February nineteen thirty-seven will live long in our memory, because on this date we held a skating party which, although we had had our ups and downs it turned out to be a great success. The annual junior Literary was held in the early spring and the carefully planned program provided delightful entertainment. NVe, the Junior class. not only contributed greatly toward the social functions of the school but also in the lield of sports. For the majority of those who received letters for their work on the football gridiron, the basketball court, and the baseball diamond were Juniors. Our last and most important social affair was the junior Prom, which lived up to expectations by being a glamorous success. Everyone felt the Prom a grand way to climax this, our long-to-be-remembered Junior year. In a short time we will set forth upon our last venture as high school students. It is therefore our aim to have achieved much as an organized group, when we have completed our high school education. And, as a graduating class, we sincerely hope that we will have lived up to the standards and high ideals for which Carnegie High School is known. JUNIORS JUNIOR JOLLY JINGLES .Vnme ABRAHAM, 'IQHOMAS ..,,,, ABBOTT, HARRY.. . ADAMSON, RAY .,.,.,,,,...A ALBITZ, EDWARD ...... ,,,... ASPINWALI., VIROINIA ........ ASTORINO, ANDREW.. . . BAKER, WILLIAM ...,A,,,A BARR, JAMES ...,,,,,,.,..,,,,,,,,A.,.,, .. BARUM, BETTY JANE ,...,.... ...,.,,,, BEADLING, MA RY ELEANOR BIGLEMAN, ELEANOR ,,,... .. . . BELL, I IRGINIA .,............ ....,,, BELTZ, RALPH . ,...,A...,. . BIANCHI, Louis ....,,,,,A,AA,,A BONDERENRO, I.YDIA. Bosco, BLANCHE .,,,, -... BOYD, CIENE. ,Y.,,.Y..,. . BROOKS, OLIVER .......,,. BROWN, MARTHA ...,...,. CASTOR, CLAYTON ........ . CA'l'HCAR'l', RAY ...L,... CENGIA, SILVIA ,,,,,,,.,. CHANNAS, PETE. ,.,.,,,,,, CHIRUMBOLE, ANNA ,,,,, ,,,.,L.Y......Y. CHIRIIMBOLE, THERESA .,..,,,,,,,,.... CORBA, NIILDRED .......,........ CORBA, VLADIMIR .. .,,L .. CROCINELLI, DELLA. ,,,.. . CZAPLISKI, SOPHIE ,...., DOMINICO, MARY. ......... . DANROIISRY, STEVE ........ DAZEN, RussELI. .... ..... . DIETERICH, HENRI ',.. .... EVANS, JANICE ,... FARBER, CECELIA.. ...,.,. .. FREDERICK, STELLA ....... u ni an It it It .4 it it H Hes! Known .45 Mor! Seen Favorite Expression Abe .,.............. Paper store ........,.,..... ............ . ... Lend me 'two bits ' Abbott ,........... Swinging it with Schulte ......... ..... ' 'Get me :I job, Wilson Ray .....,.... ..... F reshmen girls .............. ........ ' 'That was some night Bud .. . ........ Around town ,...............,..,.. Hey Dody Ginny ......,. ...Playing at a typewriter... I wonder where George is? Andy ...... ,.... S tudying.. ..........,................. I ought to make 'A' in conduct I.il' Abner .. . .Home ............,. ..... . .. ........... How do you like the accent? Buck .............. Bellis Drug Store ...........,,...... Aw, quit your kiddin ' Bert .... . .. ..... Jimmy's Candy Shoppe ....... Oh-Ah Beadling ........ Knitting ....................,......... Ohg For heaven's sake Ellen ..... .... . ..With Irene ..... ,...................,.. ' 'I da' know? Bell .......,........ Fixing her hair ................... ....... ..... ' ' Them thar's fighting words Beltz .............. Smith's Confectionery Store. Going to the show? u -I u Louie ,.... ......... Sitting beside Miss Lutckens .......... ..... ' 'I'm not doing anything Lydy , . .... ...In concerts ,............,...................... ..... ' 'We have a new piece Babe .............. Correcting papei-s..... .......,....... ..... ' 'You said it Bene ..........,... Playing his baritone.. ....... Some class, eh? Brooksie ........ Walking with Josephine ....... I don't know Marty ...... .... P aling with Syl .................. DrOopsnoot Jake . ...... ...Writing shorthand ........... Only 98 in shorthand again Catry ,....,. ...... W caring fancy shirts ....,..,.. I disagree asyl.. Pete .. ..... ...... . . .. , Anna' .......... Trese ....,... Putz .. .... ....,.. . . u n With Marty ..................... Teasing Weasie ........... Correcting papers ........ With Veronica.. ..... .. Collecting dues .......... Corba . ...... ...In a Ford ........... Del ...,,.. .... . .. Toots .. ...... .. Dom ............. Talking to Rose.. . Being quiet ............. With Helen .....,...... Donk ........ ..... D ixie- Theatre... ,. .. Russ ,.,,.,,,.. ..... Huntm ..............,,.. Hienie ............ Riding his bicycle... Jan . ............... . Cel ....,..... ....... Dutchess ....... . ,, Making cancy. ... ............. tt it u It tt It u -I it u u Drizzle puss Watch my smoke I can't do that Heck Hot snazzy Hey, you What ri life Hi ,vaP!Y Oh, yeah Okay Let's go hunting l doubt it Didja' bring your dues? At. Bank Nite ..,... ...................,.. ...,. ' ' Now listen Stephy With May... ......... ............. ......... . . ...' 'Oh, yeahg that's what you think' FRETON, JULIA .. .. .... Julie ................ Worrying about shorthand .......... . Do we have a tCSt to-morrow? KIEISLER, BE'I'rY ...... Bert ........... Arguing with the teacher ......... ..... ' 'lt don't make sense GER'rz, JOSEPH . . .. Dody .............. Studying his lessons ...... ...... ' 'Hi 'ya' Sophie GODLESKI, ALICE . . ....... Al ........ . ..... With Verne ........................, Oh, goodness IIRAYZER, WILLIAM ........ ......... Bill .... ..... ....... A t the show ........., ................ ' 'Hey, Norb HAUDENSHIELD, GEORGE .... ...... . Houdy . .. ....... Giving the girls a break ....... That's tender, kid HAWBAKER, GEORGE ............,....... George .. .. ...... In a Chevrolet .......,............ Ye Gods HEI.M, MARGARET ..... ........ ' 'Margie ...... ...... A t McFarlands .,... - .... ......... ' 'Have I been good, Miss Moore? HENDZEL, WALTER ........ Walter ... ........ Being quiet in the room ....... Says you HERMAN, HERBER'l' ........ Herby . . ...,.... Arguing with Mr. Lee ........ Ain't she a honey? HICRS, CILADYS .,..,....,.., Gladys .... ...... S hooting from center ...,...... Jiminy HIGLEY, LESLIE ........ Bunny ...... ..... T alking to McMillan. ....... I wasn't talking HINDs, MAY .... ............ ' 'Bud' '...,. .. ..... At home .....,.............. . The gang was down HOI.'l', ROBERT. . .. ...... Poo . . ........ In Sheraden .............,.......... Let's go to Sheradenn HIVGHES, KATHERINE. ....... Kay .. . .......,. With Ruth Pretter ............,.. Do you have a mirror? Hv'I'cHIsoN, IRENE. ...... Hutt-hy . ........ In that little Blue Car ..... Gee whiz KAPLAN, VERONIA ..... ,.., ' 'Verne ... ........ With Al .......,................. Oh, Gee! KARIS, NICK ,......,......... . Cris .......... ..... B aker shop ...................... How's the gang? KEISLING, MARY EMMA... ...... ... Blondie ,.,,....., In Wheeling.. .,................... Oh, nuts! KORPIEI., W.AI,'FER ......,. . Willie .,.... ....... C arrying basketballs ........... ..... ..... ' ' GO 'way! Koss, MIKE .... ,,,.....,.. . . erk ..... .......... L oafing at the paper store.. ..... ..... ' 'Hi jerk! IYAGEMAN, WlLl.lAM ........ .ageman . ....... Sleeping ................................... How many, kid? LISTER, DONALD ..... . Don ........ ....... W ith Bill ........ ..................... ' 'That's what you think! lVIAPS'l'0NE, RAI.:-H .... ..... lVIARCHE'l I'0,xvILLIAM .... MARTUCCI, JOSEPH .......... MEAL, wlAI.TER. .... .. . . MISZCZYCHA, NELLIE... MOORE, JOHN ............ ......... MOSCHIWSKV, WALTER ............... MYKITA, MITRO ...... ............ MCCARD. JOSEPHINE .. MCCARTNEY, RAY.. ..,... . . ss Ocean... Sunoco Kid .... ,, Jw ............ it Walt .,.......... . Vitch ........,...,. Mappyn.. ....... Ridinglin a chevy ..... .. Following Cuddy ..,,............... In Physics Lab... .........,.... Fibbers .......... Fighting with I.ouie ....... Mutt ....... ...... F iddlin' around ..... ..... Jo .,., .... ....... Vi ' ith Oliver... ........... Ray , .... ..,..... Driving to Crafton ..,..... u u In shows ..................... ............... ..... Laughing the fifth eriod ......... ..... ' At the Carnegie Lilirary ..... ..... ..... ' Sayg honest? Did you do your shorthand? III-Ii, IPOPYVD 'Have your Physics, Joie 'Comes ser swer ser ere 'Boy, that French! u Don't et so tough! S Hi ya' Margie! Oh, dear! To be sure Name MCCREADY, THOMAS ...A,,, MCKELVEY, IRwIN .,.,..... MCMILLEN, HARRY .,.,..A NESBIT, XNILLIAM ..,,,.. NIXON, JACK .,,,,.,,,,.. NOWACKI, SOPHIE ,...... ORRIS, EMMY LOU ...... OSTAFFY, NELLIE ........... PAF!-'oRD, KATHERINE., PATTERsoN, CHA RLEs,,. PAWLOSKA , FRANCES .,,..,,. PICHI, FRED ,,....,.........,,... PIKE, LOUISE .,.. ...,,A...... PLUMMER, VIRGINIA ..., .. PREGNAR, IVIARY. ,... PRETKA, JOHANNA ...... PROSSER, I.II.LY,, ,, PUHLMAN, ROBER'F ,,,., ,,., RAI-'I-'AELE, Ross ,,,,,,,,, RAHNER, GEORGE ..,,... RAY, SALLY LOU ......,I .I., , REISS, LOUISE ..,. .,,..,,..,Y. . . ,,I, ,,,, . RICHARDSON, GEORGE, .,.,.,,, ....., Ross, JOHN ,Y,,I.,,I,,,..,., .,.,,,, ,I,,Y ROTH, ROSELLE ,,,,,,. .,,,..,, RowE, EDNA JANE ,.,,,.,, SAM, MICHAEL ,,,...,....,,... SANTAVICCA, DOMINICK ..,,,,, ,,,,,, SCHAFER, RAY ,.,.,,.......... SCHAFFER, Fl.0RENCE,,..,, SCHEPIS, JOSEPH .,,.,.,...,, SCHREIBER, ALLEN ...,.... SOHULTE, JOHN ,...,...... SCHULTE, SARA ..,I,.,,I.,,,. Scorr, ELSIE MARIE ....,... ,,,,,, SEK!-:LIcK, AMELIA ...,.... SEKELICK, HELEN ....... SHERBA, JOE .........,,. SINSELL, BETTY ....... SMITH, JAMES ............. SOLOMINSKY, ANNA,,..... SP.-IRks, CLIFFORD ,..... STEPER, RUTH. .........,. . STREITMAN, JEAN ,,,L,,, Sus, ANNA ................ Sus, STEVEN. .,,,,.., , ,.,,,,,,,,,..-..- SWANSON, ANDY., ,L,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, TE LTHORSTE R, EI.IzAsE' TUREK, JOHN ...,.... ........ IIURKO, JOHN .....,I,,...,.,,. I'H ..,,..,.,,,, VOLANSKI, MI'FRO,.., XNALASINOWSKI, HARRY WATTS, HAZEL ,.,........... WEIKEI., THOMAS ,..,....., WESTHRMANN, THOMAS WILCHECK, ANNA .,....,,,, XNILLIAMS, NORBETT .,,,, WILLIAMSON, SHERMAN WILSON, ISARELLE ......,. WILSON, JACK S,,S,.,,.,,,,,,, WOZNIAK, EVELYN ,,,..... WYA'FF, MARIE. , I..,,, ,, WYLIE, MARCELLA .,,,..., YOUNG, CLARENCE ,,,,, ZADARKO, JOHN ...... .. .....,,,DD. ,,,, , . ZALENCHAK, MATI'HEW ,.,D,I, U,,,,, ZALETSKI, MARIE ..,.., .,D. , ZU mic, STANLEY ..,S ZUPON, FRANK .,..... , 5? JUNIOR JOLLY JINGLES Hes! Known .45 A v Tim' ,. ,,,,,,,,, Irv . ,. .S,,., 44 n Pee Wee ,,,,,.,. - .. It u u u It Has , .,,,, ,.,,, , Nick ,,,,,, ., . Snooksn .....,.,..,. Matz Seen Making model airplanes., .............. .. u Fuvorile Expression Gee, does that plane Hy! Leaning against Miss Moore'S desk .,,,. I didn't hear the assignment VVorking at the Bowling Alleys ,......... .,. Wh:1t time is itil' Laughing-, ..,....,....,I.................,,...... ,. .On the hill ,,,,...,,..,.....,.......,..,.......,. Talking to Tootsie.- ..,. ,. Lou ,. ......... With May I,,,,.,,.,.,.,, Nan . . ,,,,,,.,, Doing shorthand ,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. Kate .,,. ,,,,..., W ith the other three .,..,.,.....,,,.., Senator .,,,,, ,,Wirh V. Bell and M. Brown., .. .. Tootsie .. .. Mary , ,,.,..., ,. Jon n .I In Corky ' ,,,,,,,,,,,, Fred , .......I,.,., . Gig , .. f.'.fffff Laughing ..,.,,..,.,,....,...,,,.....,.,,,,..,. Minding his own business ........ With Gwenny and Wilma .....I.. Giggling .....,....,.,,...,...,....,,,.,..,..,.,, With that Oakdale crowd .......... Doing bookkeeping ...,..,....... .. Lilly ,,,,....,. ,Arguing with Sally .,..,,,. Push , ....,,.,. ,Proving theorems ,..,.., . Ro ,,,,.,.,,,,. ,..., A t the radio ,...,...,...,.., u George .,.,,,, ,,,. H Sal .,.,.. .. .. Bunny ,,.,,,,,,,,, - H u u a u Rosie ,,...,,..,,.,, - .. Pie ,,,,,,,,,,,, . Eddie ,.,.,.,...,.,. Chewing gum ,.,........,,...,. ..,,,.At BelI's Drug Store....,.......... Talking to all the boys ,.,,..,,,.,,.. Up Main Street ..,,..,,,.,...,.,...,... ..., n rt N .Y A Quiet!! A U .. U A You're tellin' I! U .1 Who, me?? u x What's our shorthand ?' I have a drag! I don't know about you! ffoh, pshawr' Going skating? I go for history I'm gon'na be a pirate! Do vou mean it? Isn't that cute? . . . and, I only made 90! Yeah, me too Do I like turquoise rings, Joe! Prove it! That's what I said!', You're teched! And how! That's okay! Johnny' ,........, Making noises in Glee Club ........, Buy a Dodge! At C.C.C. meetings ............,......,..,.,, GoO'ness! Trying to think ,.,.............,...,.......,...,.,,.... I da' know! Mick ..... ., .,,,, Reading at the Carnegie Library ......,. .. U It It -1 u it .- tt It 44 It Dom ....,,.,,,,,,, Breaking training ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, . Rayn ,......... ,,,,, W ith Jeanne ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Afer' ....,,,,,,,,,,,. With the other three. ,.,,,. . Joei' ..,.,...........,. Jo!-:ing in English class ...............,.... Mouse ....,,.,,,,, With the other three ..,.,...,......,..........,.,.,. Schultz ,, ,,,,,,. W orking on the model T Ford ,,...,,,, Sally ,,, . ....., In the upstairs hall ,.......................,.... Scotty .,....,,,. .With some kin of our cheerleader ,... ..... Mildred ..,. ,,,,, S tudying ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ., Helena ..,,.,, ,,,, D oing night work .,,,.,,,,,..,,,,,,,.,, Mit .... ..,,,, In the boggs ...,,...,.,, Snitleln .,,,.,...... With Mary Eleanor ........,. ..,,,,.....,..... Smitty .. .,,,,, ,, uso' 44 ' . .. ..,....,.,.,.,, Talking ....,.....,...,.,..,..........,.......,.......,,.., ClIl'I ',i ........,,, ...Getting kicked out of Glee Club u At Luther League ............ ,,..,,.,...,.......,,,. Rufus ,,.. ,,,,. . At Bell's Drug Store ,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,. ,,.,.,,, . Bill ..,.,, SusSie ,.VI'ith the other three........ ...Chewing Slim ,.,.,,,.,....... In the Carnegie Theatre ........,....., Percy ,, ...,....... At the Holland Chevrolet Co .,,, Betty ,,..,..,,...., In the C.C.C. column. ,............. Turk ..........,,.. Around town ....,.,.........,.,...,....... ::J0hn, ..,..,.. ,,,,,,, P owell's wreckersm., .,.,....,,,..,. Hallie ..,.. Mit ,,,,,.,.,,,,,,. .Up at the Bowling Alleys .......... Harry , .,.,,. ...Reading cowboy stories ..... ......Making the Honor Roll....,.,.. T0m,'.. .. ,,.,,,,,.. With a certain Freshman....... Tarn ...... ..,., ,.,.. R i ght behind Wilson ,......,,,,. Christy ..,,,...,. With Nellie ,,..,... ......,..,,.... . .. Norb , ,,,,,,,,,,.. Walking home with Dot ....,.. . Sherm .......,.,.. Studying Physics .....,.....,,..,,........,. Sis .......,........,. With George ..,.,.,..,....,.,.,.,,,.,, .,,,,,,.. . . 5peed .,. ..,..,.... Running up the stairs at 8:1434,,,., Wozy ..,........... Being humorous ..,.,,,.... .,.........,.,... , ., Mimi ,,.,,...,..... With Emory, ,...........,...,..,,..,... Marky ,,,.,,,...., With Betty Jane Geisler. .,,. , , n v Wimily' .,........ On Court Street .........,,,.,.,, u u at Mamie ,..,.. .,.,. H In .tzupnn V- Stan .,.,.,,,.,..,,,. Kata . .... ....,,. A t the Library gym ,,,,.. . Struts .,........,. Riggie's Gas House ....,., Smgingu.-. ...,., ,..,....,, , At home. .,.,.,...,...,,.,.. .. Southern Grounds ...... 'As far as I know Pop, come here! You ugly thing! Are you crazy 'er sumpin'! Not me!' Hi, toots! Is it time for the bell! rr tr tr rt U It DO you understand it? Some fun! Is that so! Let's play golf! Oh, boy! Ya' jealous? Oh, nuts! Hi ya' picklepussn 'Lo, Hon Honest to truth Huh ? ,, Have vou seen 'Chris' lately? You have something there, boy Chevrolet's the best Band practice to-night! I'm behind in bookkeeping What's our Physics assignment Hey, Turk ! 4'Who do you think you are? Gee: thanks, me too! Put me in coach! I'm a woman hater! Oh, gosh! Theses helens! Hi ya, 'vitch'! Uh huh Shucks! Hi ya' keed Why aren't you on time, PIP' I'm not taking gym to-day! Me too! I'm going to play basketball! What did you say- Are you going to the show? I'm bashful! One perfect copy E SOPHCMORES HISTORY th XYIM-n wa-, Ili-Q Snpliwiimc Class of CZll'IlL'Q'l0 lligli Scliunl ln-gan this tn-rm. at sanu- fl-cliligi of unccrtainly wliicli Su uvurwlicliiicil us as lfix-sliim-n still pusscssul us, llmvcvci' it was only a mattcr of a few Wu-las lmcfurc wc lm-gan to fvcl as llimlifli wc rvallx' lJL'l0ll4 L'll licrc. NYC soon joinccl the zlctivilics of tlic ' FI , N iippcwlzlssiiia-11 :mil ln-czniiic a vital part of thc school life. .Xl ilu' Iirst class iuccliug' nur nfticcrs wcix- L-lcclcil as folluws: .IAVK XY1cl.1.s ....... ..... Y 'rcc1.v1u'ur Nlixlua.-xiu,:'i' Iilslixivk .. .. Vim' l'ri'si41'ul1f Im-:Nic l,Ul'lYt'II.XIi . . .S'vc1'l'lf11 x' .laria XY:-1l.l.s .... .. Tl'L'4IXIH'L'I' Um' Iirsl social cvcnl, ilu- Soplimiirlrc l'a1'ly ,Illlll thu Suplmmurc Hop. which took place in May, wcrc lmtli wry succcssful. XXI- arc just llvgllllllllg' to fully rcalizc our uppurtuilitics ancl responsibilities. INK' are clctcrmincfl as in- mlivinluals :mil as an urganizcil group to czirry tlicm out to llic In-st of our almilitics , .1 J Frrmt I-'out -I2lIllSl'll. 1'. llnllaml, J. tirvvn, .I. Davis. lilt'l'I'. l'Ix'ang:1-lisla. Do: uvm ll up Ilm xo I rnnrl lion, .. . . , . x 11. . . 0 .. . x ms. ' irrl I ': ln' .4 son. ws. ., iw' '. . . s. . ' iwin . z ': '. iusf. X ll llal H.: k, Hill'2l1'5'. KI: avll, .l. n. I lb WA ' X llollalul ll Ilollp l-' I'l-- IIl'lllI'l1'Il II llol' Yilv II l'lH . ffjwf-'. K2l1'ZlIliII'SliI. II. llii-ks. A. Irvin. .IilI'XIS. Q7 ,xjlif- ' 'Ill l'nu I lg Irlln Illrt I I mg I-ln ' XI lllu in ll lu' I f'I,f7'xg II linux IIIIIIIIIII Iv In gs 'mm ,Isl SOPHOMORES ,,.--.. , A , --f- .I -Q I-run! lrulrz Nlmrp, II. lim-u. Sivnivlci, Sllmllw-zylx. I'. IIHIIIIIIIH. lim-la. Nilvm-lq Nrrrmrl Ifmrt Iiimmn-ll, I. IIIIIIIYUIIZIIQ. li, I'vrry. Ninwn. .l. 741-In Nl. I':lrlcs. IIIiI'llIIIl'X. A. Vim, S:lwi1-In. .I. It:uII':u-Iv. 'l'l1' I'vlrnxl-Ili. SIl:11Iv. I'i4':l. ,- . .. . . - . A V bmi. II. Hlixvr, lrrl fu'4lll'l .I. I'e-rry. .l, I'n1'ks, I'nppm-Irvin-r. XI. So-In-lik, NI. Olav'-up I.nlt4-1' X Inf: hun . I,. 51'II2lIIl'I'. XI. InllNIlIlIIi. N. l'1mlv. II. II:l:lIw. Il. SI-ull. I'. Ihmv-1'. N Visio. I'1'IlII'N, NIIIIIVNII, Svlwih, II. S:unl:u'iwi. lruul lfnlr: II. 'I'ul'n'I1i:l. 'l'. SIIXIIUV. XVI-Ils. Zillslii. S1wl'l'il1g. 'I'nl'IqmvsIiy, II. Suv- lc N 1-mul l.'u1v'1 .I. XYilli:lIl1sun. I.. S rivazvl. ZlIIi A. Sw- ' 's 4 I NX Jrlxi! if NIH. .. ' ' '. : '. ,' ullln , 'U ', H vm . ,lf Kaur: NI. Swe-llllmwslii. Stolnrski. ZIIIUIIFIIIIIC, .l. J. XVI-lm, 8291 Z. . . Il' El . I. vig . I' I -A -2 ,.r' X1 7 2 I-1'. .L ,'IllIIIl. Wahl. Zyrn. I I . mnllmxx Iii. Xl. NUII4'I'N, I'z:1V. q'qf'1I?S7, sz -...ling-. xv l:m.+i. .x. mmf. fm..-Y 5' Ilfinl l.'nn': 'l', Styx. Smljnli. 1'. 'l'l1lIl4-. .I, YIIIINVIIIIIC. I'l'ImniIi. W, Sprinuvr. Jw- x'77I'L XYII 1 I XY4 ilxlm XY lllx NUI n NX Ilul XX II lx 'I' ,Qi I un, Y:u'1-inn. ' 1 nhl X XX n XIII X IN I- my II1IIIIl x IIIIIIIIIIN ' SOPHOMORES E pgxgx' 1-'N '- - 1- . .w,--Q -.--.-- . .. ,F . . V lnml hun I., NI:um'1:nnl1mlvv. Inmv. Nluvlx, 1, Xlvlxm-lu-3. I.. XI1'l:ulIl11.x, XX, N, Linn, xIt'l:IIlllir. Xl4'XIlm1. mrnufl lfulr. Xl:lm'vllllm. Nlnlxxlvzlxli. X. Xlznrxh. Xl. XIINVZAVIIII. XI. NI'-lxlnlu-lx. Nl1'4':1lw. X:1pivl'. linuul. XlvWilli:lms. X. Iinrpin-I. Ilufvl lmfl: I'. Nl:ulxxl:'z3L. I.. Xll'l'JlIllIll1I. Ill Xllllu-1, .IA Nllllc-I3 IP, XIIIIN. I. XIIWLZLIII, II, Xlnlwgznln, Xlfu-lnrinu, Xl:ll'c'Iww. if Nixon. 12. Linn, Xl. linlu-lm. 1', Nfmulx. Imp lion l.z1u-nlxzl. H. N1-u-Ili, xl2llII'l'I'. 1'. XI:lni4-lr. U, NIIII4-IA. Xl:ll'Iin-V, XI'-lx :I-V, II, Xl:-I :ll'I:nml. Xluplv. lim-III1-V, um I ll lllm I7 ltvllllllll lallni I1lnl XIIIHN NI lllllll lullnf I x Ny 4 ll.n1' luxu Ii Xllnl l tllllx xlhll Ik Inxul I fllllllllllltblt I. Ill f f 5 P . , I I'1'1ml I' 'Z I. Vu: . , I : , In ', Z- -'s.. I 3 1':ur1.u. ff1,.'g.-fm. Nt -our ' 'i Z .. , ,. ': I.. -. ', 5- C,f-RZQ,.f' Immg ,xllLllISliIll'. In-rlimzvr. l'. .Mlm .ki. 1,5743 'llfirfl lfulr: IZ. llvzuilillr. l:IlI'l'lIlj. lf. Il:1l'l'. l', Vllzmlll I 1lIl ll lou ll 'I l'c-Iv .X1lillllSki, N, Vol:-, lillI'Il'i2lI, 1'l':llrIn. Yllghkg 'lvl I-'HIFI V. Vllzlppvl. .X, 4'ul4-, llulliuns. Ilnrnx Xu lil' liljzln, I. ,Xln':lI1:lnl. Ilurlu-y, Xl. l:1'l'Il'lllllill. , lv ,. FRESHMEN HISTORY Of all the students attending Carnegie High at the beginning of this term there were none more excited than those making their debut as high school students. The first semester fifteen of our class members left school, leaving two hundred and fifteen pupils. The tearing down of the old fountain, at which so many former lfreslimen had been initiated, evidently prevented the hazing of our class. This of course was not in the least regretted. The organization of the Freshmen class took place under the guidance of our able sponsor, Miss Lutckens. VVe chose john Carver as our first president and XYesley Quinn as vice president. The other officers chosen were Lelia Nico- lussi, secretary, and VVilliam Lowar, treasurer. We were pleased to see our class mates take part in the school activities. They attended the football and basketball games, the dances, and many of the parties. ln athletics we not only attended the games, but also had several boys on the football squad. ln basketball four of our boys were on the ll-squad, two of whom had regular positions. After such an encouraging beginning, we are eagerly looking forward to our Sophomore Year. Frlmf 1n'0l1'Z llolowzlly. lllanliey, Kizik. Perri, Hranaulzl. Holland. Ifll'l'llll0I'. Srrnurl Itmr: llovson, Haidos, llussiek, Fitzp:ltl'iek, H1-rlzu-li, Ilermnll, Ken- I V. - , ,. . ,, - , ,mx lhlrrl lion' : Julal. If lSll1'l', Ilowrylvllztk, IFVIIIQI, llilliiilll. I. lxenrns. t-oodlllzln. ,A ef,- llumecki. llilton. y vit 'lop li'uu': l'l2llf'l4llll. fi0l'l'l'l'lh l'll'1llt'l'i4'li. finlousis. llowanec. 4il'0PlllX. K:u-znl:11'- ski. lxnousv. . , ff' tiny? , singer. Keller, fi2ll'2IIl. llalnnu. gl' Y ii, -,I 51 FRESHMEN xx. . 1 X X 3,57 If If If 'lyf j 4 j ', Q X XsX,X1XxX '-,NxlxNfX Vx w:'.NQxQ'XQ15ijlEQ xx. 'n f ff? Q 4 P ' ' fyi 5 X '-Xxx XXFQFSNQQ l 1nut Ifrur: Sm-llzuh-. llolh. l'i'l'ilNil!i. Ilolmum, l'runlm. S1'll2llTIll'l', Snlm-1-Ili, Ile-ml. Nwrwlrl Noir: l'lllllil'illllll. l':lnIus4v. l'4ullu-lsik, l'i1-i, llmm-n. llivh:ll'4is1m. l':lsvm-, l'ik4-. l'Illmnu-r. S1'hl'fH0l'. IN-rsinslii, lhlmlnlpll. 'l'hirrI fn'0ll'I Nzulm-Ili, l'1'1-vii:-. l'uIlm'k. Sm-lux-nwr. l'I:lpp4-rl, llivllzllwlsml, In-ush Illilllll. Quinn. Ill-ul. Sm-In-nnpp. . Top Imrr: I'vn4IIc-lun. I'vl'imIr:1, l'm-I1-rs. Iluluulm, l'npivm-lmlc. lim-11, Ihlnlino. I'f'nnl lfmr: Sl'2l4'llI'iSl. S1-ilu-l. Ska-l'l, Siallvy, V, Smyth-r, 'l'horp1-. Shvl'l'ic'k. .' :mph-s, Slum-rifT. 'I'4-Inllwky. SUS. . 4'nn1l I.'nr1': Smh-nlc, I'ilwrio. S11-t1'm':l. IC. Nnyulw-r. SIM-k1l:l. Spimhl. Sin-val. 1: mfr: Slniwnrski. Silw-slri. NYVIHIN. Story, 'l'vln-lu. Solmlnwski. Tobin, Sum 4'l'l1lll. S4-In-lick. 'I':usz. 2 N52 , ff kriyvlf - I f 1j'., xl fffjxg Sn-In-Iivk. Sululninsky, Nlnsik. .X. Siu-I:nl'. Sus. Slll'lll'!'. Q '. 'I In I QW A' Q I uni Ifurr: XYHHJIIIINUII. Zzlelalrlw. l'IIum. ll. Yuunup Wilson. XY:uIlvl's. Wim-xx. XY4m4I:lll. XY:llIN. N1I'1lllIl Ifnlr: 'l'1bl'4'IIi5I. Yilolv, Wil:-ox, l'I'llIII. Willurel. Walk. Ynsinski. ZHIUII' wlmlc. Wills. Zulnivk, I'sIinu11Ql:1. iwl I.'nr1'1 Z.VI'2l. Wuzuizllc. 'l'llI'Il1'I'. Wilvhulq. Wh-ss, KVM-In-I. Wumis. 'l':ul11:lsw. lnp Ifmr: Z:llmrkn, Wumling. ,l. NOIIIIII. lvI'llilllili. Vzlmle-1'x'm'r, l'1':1m. Yum-lmli. Wm-nuryn. Zvnmll. N14 'l'ul FRESHMEN W... , -H ,,,-4,-Jiyxy-Avg ' 1 xx, Nf. l'i'mrt lfrnrz Attutvs. 1'1-rnsini. Vullini. Imwidm-lmk Va: Niftlll Iluul Lulu: -nnrl Ifnlr: f'1'lll'Y liwing' Ilrmvn Xlwlwlim- Pohl: Inwlllw Nl Xfllbfilllb hw till' . 1 . - - -- . . v. . , .1 . A r' 'I'Ilin'vI Ifnlr: Illl!lPYi1'll, A1Il':1u'n:l. f'iIll'llIil. l'nnnin hun Dlti 1 nur filillll Ahlml, II. llvl-tvnllml. INll'iNll. ls-mzm. lqtlllllbllllx I '.--' g-.vw ' .-: AU-Iyfz. '- Q 71 , : ': . . . 'Vsqj . ,UQ z lforr: ltllillllwl. Vumlil. IN-lla-r. Il, Alnmsll, IHDIIIIXIIII, Iiurlc, M. Almosll. Iiigr FRESHMEN xy Front Ifnlrz Nlzltwivzyk, limwhill, Uplunlm, Luwzlr. l'. Liwosz. Lisowski. Nlyliln Kwivrivn. Nrcmlfl Noir: Aluxmn, Nl1'N:1Il. Nlmnxw. l.u,uun-, 5Iv4':ul'I1u-y, JC. Xlillvr, Xiwlussi Mvl'uy. Nm-lzvl. 'I'l1iV1l lfmr: NI. ilstzlth-. U. Nixon. xl0lIIEl2ll1', xl0Z1'l'Slii, U'Ni1-ll. lbvvsxn-y. 16 Liwusz. Nligrlimw-0, Alum-r. llalnhy. 'l'up lfmr: li. Nixon. liuvslnis. lim'oI1m'im-z. N. Hstnlll-, I4ll21'Illl1'iIl, Lzmn. Lmly Nuwanli. xI0l'l'iIllilll. ACT III ACTIVITIES Man, in society, is like a Hower blown in its native bud. It is there only that h' t, there only reach their proper use. his faculties, expanded in full bloom, s me ou Cowrxan. Si- 1 XJ ij? Ei :IA 1 X D Q Q P' 'L -. Q . Hp K Hmx WX ' 4 MM? ,, X +A VOYAGER STAFF , , . I lrlurr lzalzlnm. .. xl I'f1.Y lx ........ l.il1'mry lxflilm N4N'l.A'fj' lfrlilm' lluumr lidilm' lfuyv' ,f1tl1ln'Ii4'.v tfirlx' .1Ulll'ffr'.Y . . ,'lflf.vi4' lfflilnr ltiulmm Spin-gn-l Npimlzl SIll'll4'l' NC'IIlIlI'III Nm-vrlul Hlzlfm-1' HI'l'l'll 1'2lNIl'HlllIi Smith Wm-sis-l'lx1:lnl1 l'l'm'Ila:: 1:ll'x4-1' Slum-l'x'ivIi !frlv'lm'f11Cllzirf... ...'I'mz.x1l Rum ml Hll.Villl'.X'.V ,llnmrgrr .. ...JUSI-ZI'lI 5I'II-Yilil, . . , 1 Nlllil-I Sr-:Nm I lull: ....... Hum 'I 'H W Rl l'II 1XIulup.xN .lX'.X'l.VlAIlllf ls'11.vil1w.v.v ,llmmglrr ..l'4R.'KN K linsur ' 1.1-1x1-i fNI'I-.Nfl-1 T-vfzxl ........ flfllltll' lzdzlnr ..... Juumr li1:.v1m'.v.v .Vg .S'nf'lm11mr4' lzrlzlm' .X Nl :clam-1 Sr. M IERXI NI un' SZ!-il-zulu x .Xlc'1u1'R l..xNulu:x .lhnemll Y MvKlxl,l-ix' .,.Il.xmm4:'l'n lil..-xsxl-zle . . , . . . .lin-31.s'N Khalil-:N l'rr.vl1l11r111 lfux. .1151 l if IWQN Q 'X , J E Xlurgnn llosvn lulllgulmu Xlvliinle x XYJILLIIPI' SHXINIVE WullinLg5 ltnrlmm lm- II.xxx.xHI.m'lsl-:Sx1l'1H .'l'rmx1.xs XY:-1s'l'l5lm1.xxx r, .,..,luu.xN NA l,Rl-f'I'lx.X l'rr.vl1muu lfdilnr ............ -luux C.xlu'r2k IZ, I'.I.l ZAllIi'l' H I I ICRRIVK 'Nile Ilnwxlur I Iflf ..l-umm KIM, XX lzLIAlN1.s .Shfvlznzrmrr l?zm'1n'.v.v .llgr'.R4m'liNr: l!Axlu:ul'1e .lilrlnxlclv L','xs'l'lil.1.ANl lfuvnllwv . '1fT'f.V1'l' ..., ..., . . . - ,. ......l!l'1'l l'x' XX ,ruaxlcu , . . I Incl.:-ix Sllxl-1s'l'lu CLEF CLUB This year the G Clef Club has been composed entirely of hlunior girls. The alivision of parts is as follows: iifteen first Sopranos, sixteen second Sopranos and seventeen altos. Their study has been almost entirely along the line of oratorio, the works of Mendelssohn. .Xt the spring concert they sang I VVaitecl for the Loral from his Hymn of l'raise and the unaccompanied trio Lift Thine Eyes from his lflijah. 1 t an Q 9 f l 7 .23 M. fi A v I , HT in -. , if i - 5-qi E: Q ' If :z S li. 6- a..- Ezi if - ' T ' I-'rout Ii'ol4': Mm'l':ll'1l, Hell. l'2llT4H'll, P. ll:llT:wle, Zalletski. 1'llirumlml1-, 1TiNZl'Zyl'llGl. Aspinwull. Seoll. l4':lrhel'. Sellzu-'ll'el'. ll. Iinlfzlele. Nvrollzl I.'nu': lmminieo. XYilson. Kearns. S1'lll'i!'lN'I'. NONYSIFIQT. Selnllte, Slew-k. Svks-liek, Solominsky, Prosser, llslrris. Third Noir: Sinsell, lliglenuln. ICYHIIN, l:Zll'lllll, F1'et:l11, Sll'Piflllilll. l'l'llilll3ll'. Vorlm, 1'roc'sfnelli, Holl- leski. llinmls. i lllll'fll I-'mrz II. Sekvlik. Hrivr. Rowe, Hay. Ilelm, N. 0st:1lTy, 'I'eltllorster. K1-isling. l'llllllIll1'I', Hregpg, Hosvo. Top lfmr: Yarlinsky, Uzzlplielii. Wozniak, Iinmlvrenko. Orvis. Wylie, l'r9tk:l, Iiemlling. Uonley, A. xY2ll1fll0l'll, lIlll1.'lliN4Hl. T HE BAND l :'onl lfoir: Ilnlslou. Itomll-rvnko. liXI'llI'. ll. Alvliolt. 'l'. Snytlor. Slrons, lS1':u'1l, S1'llllll'ill, Sin Alomugzm-. Nloorv, llElXYllIlliK'l'. 'l'u1Il1-. ll. lliplliuln. Lownr. irrinn' Nr:-unfl Noir: l'om:1so, l':Y2lllQIl'llSlIl, 'l'horp1-. llc-liz. Nlylcilu, llomnn. Blom-x'. Nl'll2H'lTl'l', Ilurkvy. Ilzmlw. ' ' ' ' ' - '- ' 4 ' 1' Yi' Ili:- Svhultv. lxorpu-I. xlillll, I.:lng1-V, .l:ll'x'ls, Ilupznn. Holm-llon. 1-AIA, Wilson, Quinn. , . xon, In-rim-li, Williamson. i:u1'l.' Noir: Hohmzln, Nlosm-liiwsky, Spiq-ga-I. H. Ilighmn. ll. Sny1l4-r. 'll1'lllllDl'Hlt'I'. lloss. Lyons. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' I Xlrl ll 114-ln-rs Youui. Sus. lloll. Xlziulvy, Loyd, xx1'hl1'llllillHl. M.lps1om-, llom.l, 1. Nixon. . . . yo , , linougli prnisc cannot ln' Q'lX'L'l1 to tlic lifly-nine incinlmcrs of the lmncl znnml to Mr. NV. ll. CZilllL'I'Ull, tlicii' alilu mlircctor, for the cxccllcnt conccrt of ,Xpril sixl cc-nth. :mil thu music zu the SL-nim' play in l7cccinlmc1'. During this vm-zli s coursc of music, thc band made a study of the cvcr popular l.:u'go lay llzmmlcl, :incl 'l'l1c l,llg1'll1l'S Chorus from 'li1llllll1Zll1Sl'I'. It is Mr. C:um-ron's mln-sim' llun thc mcnilmcrs learn to appreciate the lictlcr composi- tions in lln- classical worlal of music. 11. cull ot popul org lllll lllll .X group of ilu- vwszitilu nicnilu-rs of the lmzmcl formucl :in orcln-sti':1 lmowii 's 'l'ln- C:ii'in-ggiu lligli Sxvirigsln-i's. Tlicsc musicians stuclicml lln' popularly url swing music :m1l, :ll llic conu-rt plziycml sclvclions from llu-ir im-pci'toii'c zu' music. ln sm-vcii yn-:u's, lln- lizunl has grown into one of tlnf most imporlzml stiulciit zmizzilions in mln- school, Tlicy lizivc :ulmlccl not only cliccr :unl zcsl with ilu-ii' sic on lln- footlmll lin-lil, liul lizivc lmuconic ll wu1'tl1u'l1ilc zlsscl to lln- com- nily :ls wcll. R J , fffxiii T- fi' 'V rl, ix A J SENIOR CHORAL CLUB Front lfnlrz May. 1'ie:1rd. Wvisserl, xV2lil'll0l'll, '1'nylor. S. XV1-'l'llll'llllUl', Stern, Snyder. Spimlu, Seilwl. Nesbitt, Hyrne, Ross. Vlulty. lining. flx'i't'l', Szeerlm. l'l1'I'il. Second I-'out Spiegel. 'l'. Smith. Ralston, Kelsey. lc!-lill'lllll, Childs. Ilollnmn, l:lll'lb0lIl', Glasser. Klee. Perry. Xlorgnn, II. li. Smith, llloeher. Ellis, fllDl'llIl, Herlowski, Korpiel. Now-lli. XVZILIIIPIZ 1l2lI'I'X. .Xl1lisl'l'l. Thirrl lfolf: llnlwiezyk. Kyle. In-wis. lflISllllili. lmuziger. Lyons. H. Iliifllillll. S1Il'lll'1', l'. Sl'Illlhl'ill, llos1'o, l'. xl'l'l'llll'lllll'l', 'l'. lllpillillll. Sjleezl. I4':11'el'i. Silt:-slri, I'Q'I'Sl5llll. lluyes. Top lfnlrz Ifunzlro. Long. llulnu-s. 'llXl'0Il1'. A. Nl'lIllbl'Jll. Blapslom-1. Vvrlnlzln. l'2lSlt'll2llll. Iialtlzlgliu. 1il'1'l'll. Levin liules Vusln-Ili. Nleliinley. Sulu-rs. r A ,I X? 'iz :'1k7'H,75Tv, jf V' Mi The Senior Choral Club is the most atlvancetl vocal organization of the school. This year the cluh consists of twenty-three sopranos, twenty-seven altos, sixteen tenors and eleven basses. They are allowed but forty minutes per week for practices. but when preparing for special events, extra rehearsals are neces- sary. According to tradition, the Choral Club selected their May Queen anal two attenclnts to rule over the Spring' Concert. On Hay tweilty-eightlt, Mary lane llarhour was crownetl Queen, with Tirzah Higham and Harriett Glasser as attenclants. The most pretentious performance this year was the rendition of Saint- Saens' The ,Xviator at the concert. This organization is one of which the school may justly be proucl. 4 Fur m'rl1csli':n, 11 ESTRA Slllllll gi-mip of plzlycrs mxniiig their min instrumcnls, mcets mum- :L xwvlc fm' thc scricms slnfly of music. This yi-:ny thc fullmving il1SlI'lIIllL'1llS in-1'c m usa' violins, llulv. Cl2llilllL'lS, lruinpcts, li'mnlmu11L', l1:l1'iIm1L', sxlxupliuiic ilrnm, :mal piunu. Nlr lh'x in IQ flwiimis th 11 thi mnliutm slucly ninsn tion mmx l ul ' .' I ' .' ' ,' ' 'I 2 ,' Ill S. l.:1sl your, iiitciiw slucly was inzulc of :nn llungzn'izm nunilmvr, hut this yn-zn wa- liziw slniliwl thu i-wr iinpnlzn' llluv llzimihn- hy Strauss. This mnnhci' cun- stilul-Q-il lln- ninjfn' sclvrlifm :lt thc Spring' llUHC01'l. , muI Huff: lim'lni4-I. S1-ull, llugsln, 'l'. lllillillll, 1:2lllllll1', Snyxlm-V, Ilniulm-11-lulm. Nlykilzu. IJ. l:lLLllillII, Nm-ui-l. Xlillizlinsnn. Quinn. .mf-mul lfulr: XIZIIPNIUIIU, HlllliXYIll4X. Nl. Nl5kiI:l. liQI'll1', Slruns. lhulmlzln. 'l'1-Itl1m'stvl', Nlmwv, llnll. 15.11-I. l.'ulr'1 Ilulul, liwin-vu-n, Ixlwpivl, I ff' 4 3 ASNE, 3ffQ?5i:E'Pp ,' f!'L- i 6- xi 'AW 0 ' 'li ,,,,,. An Sl' xi THE GLEE CLUB CZlI'IlCQ'lC High School is one of the few schools in Xllegheny County that boasts fl glee club of boys. For many years. there has been such 2111 UI'QZ1I1lZZlll1ll1 in our school. It is coinposecl of singers selected by the music clepurtim-nt from the sophomore :incl junior classes. This year's club nuniberecl twenty juniors :uul twenty-eight sophomores. mlivimlenl as follows: ten first tenors fourteen second tenors. fourteen tirst basses :intl ten seconcl basses, Xt the spring concert. be- simle singing :1 group of songs, they forinefl Il niixecl chorus with the ti Clef Club to sing' May Tune, acloptecl from l lotow's Marth:1. and :ln zlrrzliigenleiit , of the Sextet' from the opera l.ueiz1 cli Lzinnnerinoor' by llonizetti. 1'VllHf,u'1llI'I lltllllllilll. Iliulev. II Xlmlmil l'nhInn-un lr-nnkuwskv l:l't'4'll smith Nu 1 ' ' X l , A . . , . , ., . . , . yier, Nll1'l'l'IIl2. Moore. .srrnnrl Ifnlr: Xl4'l JII'l1lIlll, Nletliunis. l'vI1'ox1-Ili. Nc-lmile. Korpil-I. 'i'Ili1'rI Ifulr: Linn. l'orh:1. Mills. Xlylcilzl. lliltc-r. Yousvlmlc. lllivvr. I'Iv:ln:eIisl:l, Williznnson. lines-o. l'uurtl: I.'4m': Nlaipslnnm-. Hors-slat. ltoss. Willisnns, Johnson. Ilojd, Nm-vitro. Fifth Ifulr: Hair:-Iles:-. llnwlmlu-l'. Palrks. Sparks. Ni.:-fl: lfurr: u'4'Sl4'l'Ill2Illll. Iloelt. Domialni. llelielvey. Nixon. 'lop l.'uH'1 XYilsoll. Springs-V. Nl0l'llI'lIl2', Lister. ' ,v MWF I , si' H R' SENIOR DOUBLE MALE QUARTET v. 1 ., - lfunl hon . 1.1-no N1'Illlll'ill. llilllililllll. liuwl. Ifmrg Spiw-:fl Xlulm-rl liwln-1111 Vow Vvrm- Um- popular group this ycar was the mloulmlu malc quarlcl, composcnl of sight QL-nior lmoys from thc SL-nior L'l1o1'al Clulm. Tlwy sang at scvcral sclxool gatlwr- gs aml ilu-ir lalum was lu-arlily apprccialcll by local lJl'Q'1l1llZIllllDllS whcu llwy vpcarul on ilu-ir lll'IJQ'l'2llIlS. Tllcsc boys formal thc nuclcus of a malc chorus xx'l11rl1 sang' a cloulrlc l1lllI1lM'1' in the CUllllllL'!lCL'l1lClll, program. :WY aw 1 vp fliifsfflli 73: .ff THE SENIOR CLASS PLAY On December 18, 1936 the class of l937 presented its class play, The Tinker. Coached by Miss Effie Milliren, assisted by Mrs. W. P. Geiser, the three act comedy was a success, financially as well as dramatically. Carnegie Library Hall was filled with an appreciative audience, who were entertained be-tween the acts by Marie Bales, dancing, and the Band under the direction of Mr. VVal- ter Cameron. The players were as follows: Tinker ........... ..... C harles Byrne David lVhitrLey ....... Ruggero Aldisert Ethel, his wife .......... .... N orma Levin Marjorie, their daughter .... . .. Naomi Holmes Jack, her brother ......... .... F rank Bosco Jeremy, David's brother .... .... A lbert Stern Jane, .Marjoriels friend Ida Novelli Left to Right: Stern, Levin, Novelli, Holmes, Aldisert, Byrne, Bosco. Ii . r VF, -,,' gr ,ij tX'i: 'JT af' .' :ASO H , 5, THE COMMERCIAL CLUB I-'111111 I.'111r: X11-. l1l'l'. l:il1lil'1l,2l. S1-111111-:11. W11z11i:1I1. N1111111:1, 'l'1'1'11111-. 3111115111111-. Ii:11'i5. 51-1-111111 I1'1111-3 .1l11':1I1:1111. 1'l1iI115. 1'11-111-11. 111111-5. l72lllZl1.Z1'I'. Ii:11'l111111'. ll11I1111:111. .1-11115. 'I'I1i1'1l l1'1111': ll:11111:1. 11111. 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U11 1-111-11 111' 1l1L'S1' 1111115111115 111111111- 111g 1111- l111'1'Zl1'y 1l1'11Q'1'Z11I1, 1l2ll1L'111Q 111111 1'1-f1'1-5111111-1115 111-rc 11111-1'1-11 111 1111- 1111111 8111111411 113'1I1l1IlS1l1111. 131-1'111'111111115 111 liL'1'l11l'lg' 111111 1111- C1l1'1'L'l11 SK'11S1lll 111111 1111 11111511' 1'111'l11Sl1Q11 111 Il I'l'L'lll'1l1l1Q' 11111c111111- 11111111- 1-111-11 C111111111-1'1'1ll1 L'1ll11 1111111112 Il 1111121 111-lAIl1I'. 1111 hl111111111'1' 11, 51-1-1-1'111 S1-1111115 1111-51-1111-11 Z1 111111' 1-1111111-11. X1-1-1-1 S111 11111111.11 '1'111- 1l11l11111L'1'L'12l1 1.11111 111-111 1111-11' L'111'151111115 1'111't1 1111 171-1'1-111111-1' 18 111511. 111 11111111 I11L'1'1111Q 1111 11111-1'1-51111g 111'11g1'11111 11115 111-1-51-1111-11 111' 1111- 1'111111111111-1-- 111f1'11511'g'1-. 'l'l11' 1111113111 191511-11137 0111151511-11 111. 11111'11'-111f1- 1111-111111-15: 1111-1111-1-1Q111 S1'II111l'5 111111 51-11-11 -l11111111'S. '1'111-51- .l11ll1111' l11Kx111l1Kx1.S 5111111 1111-111 1111- 11111'11-115 1-111' 1111 111111 1111-111:11 Q.l11l1 111- 11138. 111- 1-x11-1111 111 1111-111 11111' 111-51 1115111-5 1111' Z1 511111-551111 11-111' rlqllk' 1111-111111-1'5 111. 1111- 1l1l111111L'1'C12ll 1411111 111111- 11115 111Jl11lI'111l1111.' 111 111111111 1111-11 51111115111-. N111 11111111111111 1'. 1.1-1- 1111' 1115 1111111-1'51:11111111g' 111111 111-1111111 1l1l'1111Q1l1lll11 1111- 1'1-111'. l'111i1l111l 111111' 1111' 1:1115 NI! 11 l1N1 1 .tl , .. .N g,1111l1ll1l'K fQv1 1 11. 1 I, l ir.1l l'11'1- l'1'1'.'1'1'111 .. ll:X1'1'Il-Tl' 1'11 .11N1 .Sl-1'11111l 1'11'1' l'1'1'.111l1'11! . .. 1C1,1Z,11111i'1'11 L'.15'1'1-11.1.1 I 4, - . . . fr -1 .81-1'1'1-I11-11 ........... ....... 1 17,11 IX1111-:1,1.1 'l'11111'1 '1'1' l'l1JNX l1l'911 'Ili 111451 , ,S .,, SENIOR MAGAZINE CAMPAIGN 1111 110111111-1' 17. 111311, thc Sc111111's 5111 51111 1111 the gflf1l1 ship uA1?lQI1Z111k' L'Zlll111Zl1gfl1U 111 1111111-s 111 1'c11c11111g 1'111't S200 111111111 11'l1I'1y 1111ys. r1I11L' 05111121111 111 Q11111111111111, 111111111111 1.y1111s was 11111y 11ss1s1c11 hy 111a11-S 11121 N11ve111 111111 C'h111'11-s 11yI'l1L'. .Xll 11 IL' Sc11111rs W1111 511111111-11 1111 t111s ycsscl C1,111sl11ulc11 Il 11Z1I'11X1'Il1'1i1llQ', 1-111-11 g'ct11' C1'L'XX'. Thu 511111115 s111g1-11 Zl 0111111-st 111 Svc which of thc two g1'111111s 01111111 11l1'Il 111 1111111' s1111sc1'111t11111s. Thc L'11111111c1'c1111 '11CZ1l11. 1611 hy 11111 Nou-111, 111115111111 111 thc 101111, .X1111111g thc 1:1'cxx'. 1'1YL'1yIl C1111115, 1161011 S1111c1'S. 11111 K11111s111111- 111111 111111111111 1.11111sc 81111111 wure 111111111113 for the 11u11111c1' of 111'11c1's 1111-y 111r111111 111, .Xt thc 01111 111 thc 111111111111 t1111c. thc ship E1I'l'1YC'11 safely at 1'1'11'1 --122111 111111 was 111111111111111111 1111111 1058 W1'IL'11 thc now Senior c111Ss 11111 1111111011 lhcir 'AC1111111111g'11. x' 7115- lx WYJX6 I-'1'n11l H011 . Xl:11'sI1. 11H1IIIliIlI. 1'l1il1ls. I1y1111s. S1111-lli. 11j'l'IlI'. ll. 1., Smith. l'1'1'si:111i. S11Y1'N1l'1. 1 11111 N111-1111. 11. 5111115111111-. l1':11'1-ri. W11il1-. 12111223 W1-wt. I,1111u. S0111-rs, 1':1s11-Ili. I 1-1':1. 1'l:11I,1'. T111 I' ': U .1 ,ng NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY 31 QI C ,-111. 4 1-11 '7 T 0-UK 'T' I-'ruul l1'r111'i 1:I'1'1'll, 1lig11:1111, S1-lu-lik. 1,1-vin. 1'1'1-11111. N1-1-111111 I.'1111' 1 I-':11'1-ri. xll'1i1ll1l'j', xllllililll. ,Xl1lis1-1-1, W11g:111-1: l'I111111111-1-. 11l:1ss1-1'. 'l1llil'1l l.'1111': l1:11'11111. K1'1S11llp1. H1-1111, 1I11y1l. 'l'1111 l1'r111': N1'IlI1ll'iI1, Willi:1111s1111. 1:j'l'lll'. S1111-g1-l, '1'111- N111i1111:11 111111111' 811111-15' ill C1111111-gg'i1- 11ig11 SQ1111111 was 1-fll1lll1K'l1 111 1111- 11-111' 111111-11-1-11 1111111111-11 111i1'1y-six. 1Xcc111'11i11g 111 111s11'111'1i1111s in 1111- 1'1111s1i1111i1111, 1111- I11L'l111lQI'S :11'1- 1'1111s1-11 1JL'k'ZlllSL' 111' 1111-i1' s1'11111111's11i11, k'111l1.flC1lJ1', 111111 11-11111-1's11i11. 1-'i1'11-1-11 111-1' 1'1-111 111 1111- S1-1111111 111111111' s111111-111s 111111 1111- 111-1' C1-111 111- 1111- 9111111111- 111111111' s111111-111s 1'11111111'is1- 1111- 1111-111111-1's11i11, 111115 111-1-ping' 1111- 11511111 11c1w1-1-11 1111-1115' 111111 1111-111y-1iv1-. This yL'l1l', 1110 1.XX'C1VC S1-111111's, 111111 w1-1'1- 01121111-1' I1lCll11lL'l'r1 11151 y1-:11', 1x'1-1'1- :1g11i11 1-11-Q11-11 111 1111- L'1l11J, Zl11l11g wi111 1-ight .11111i111's. Miss 1C11i1- K1i11i1'1-11 is s111111s111' 111111 11'1-11su1'1-1' 111 1111- 111'g1111iz111i1111. .XXI 1-1cc1i1111 was 111-111 1111 1111- 111i1'11 111- Huy, 1l1l1L'11'L'l1 1111111111-11 111i1'1y-s1-v1-11, XY1111 1111- f111111wi11g' 1-1-s1111s: l'r1-si11'1'111 ..... .. Rl l'll NI11111z.xN I'i1'1' l'r1'.vi11'1'11l .. . -11lSl'Il'll S1-11-1111-i1. .S'1'1'1'1'I111 v ..... .. 11IC'1 l'Y XY,-x1:x1-211 Nb N J 1 A if 551111- ' ' , ,VL 1 6 lc 11 f 11,,f.u A --, J 11 DANCES SENIOR DANCE What a grand and glorious finale to four happy high school years! On Fri- day evening, january 22, the Seniors entertained at their well-planned dance. The Harding Gym was attractively decorated in the class colors, blue and white. ably abetted by seemingly hundreds of vari-colored balloons. Couples danced to the music of Harry Baker and his Blues Chasers. A rhythmic orchestra, a lovely setting, happy friends-for what more could one ask? JUNIOR PROM Lo! The Harding Gymnasium has become a dignified Westiiiinster Abbey' This is in preparation for the Junior Promenade, the outstanding social event of the school year. On April 30, students and their friends danced amid the colorful decorations, which breathed the atmosphere of the Coronation of King George VI of Great Britain. Vivid royal colors-purples, blues and golds-and the music of the Pennsylvanians made the Prom a truly exciting dance. The Seniors salute you, Class of l938, and thank you for the lovely affair held in their honor. SOPHOMORE HOP 7 Wx V a :ff f .'f'?': .s. ,I V V. NK-ggi? ffp. is, . , ,n t The Sophomores' turn to entertain came on Friday, June 4, when they held their annual Hop. For the occasion, the Harding Gym became a charming vineyard, complete with arbors, benches and even a moon! Dangling from the white arbors were clusters of luscious-looking grapes-an effect achieved by the use of many purple balloons. This was a typical spring dance, creating an at- mosphere of cool colorful rusticity. A. A. DANCES Carnegie High students found the school calendar for 1936-1937 dotted with a series of those highly-successful, ever-popular, informal A. A. Dances. These sport dances, scenes of care-free friendship and companionship, were held on November thirteenth, October sixteenth, and April twenty-third at the Harding Gymnasium. A song vender furnished music for the first two dances while, on April twenty-third, couples danced to the happy tunes of the Campus Serenaders. GIRLS' A. A. DANCE Congratulations, girls! You may well be proud of the inauguration of your social activities, for your first attempt at sponsoring,a dance proved very suc- cessful. On February twelfth, happy students attended a colorful Valentine dance at the Harding Gymnasium. Decorations in keeping with the season transformed the gymnasium into a veritable valentine. The dancers reveled in the gay tunes of the Carnegie Tech Swingsters. INDUSTRIAL ARTS DEPARTMENT '11111' 11111'1111s1- 111 111111111111 111111111151 111' 1111- 1l1l111S1I'IZl1 arts 111 11111. s1'1111111 1s 111 gin- 1-x111'1'ssi1111 111 Il 1'1-111 111-s11'1- 1111 1111- 1l2ll'1 111 1111- 11111' 111 1'1'1-1111- 111' 11111111 s111111-- 1h1ng. 111 giving L'X1ll'k'SS101l 111 111111 11211111111 instinct, 111- 1111- 111111- 111 111-v1-11111 1111' 1111-111111 1'1111111'11y 111111 1111111111-s 111 1111- 111111 111' 1111-:ms 111 11'11111111'111'11111g 111'11j1-1'1s 111 11111' 111-1111111111-111, 11'1- 1'11111-111111' 111 11cc11111111ish 11-1111111 111111-c111'1's: 111's1. 111 11-1111 1111- 11111' 111 s1-1- 1111- IlL'L'L'SS11j' 1111' Il 1111111 111 1111 111s L1ll11L'l'1.Zl1i1llgS1 s1-1'111111, 111 1'11111- v1111- Il s1111'11 111 1'1111111-111111111 XY1111 111111-1' 1111-111111-rs 111 111s g'1'111111g 11111'11. 111 1n1'1'1'11s1- 'fl' 111 his 1111'11 111111111' 111 1111 1111Ill'4S. NY1- 111s11 111' 111 111-v1-11111 Z1 1111111 111111 1'11111'11,, . 1 ,, , 111'11111-1' 1111111111u 11111'111'11 11'111'11, ll 11111- s1-11s1- 111 1111111'ec1111111n. 111111111111-, 1'X11C11lL'SS, Il 111-11111-1' 1'1-s111-1'1 1111' 1111- 111'1111c1'1y 111111 rights 111 111hc1's. The 111111-c11v1-s 111 1111s 111-1111111111-111 111'1- 11411 111111' 1-11111'111111111111y i11111111'111111. 11111 111s11 1-ss1-111111111' 1'1111111-1'11-11 with life. HOME ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT '11111' 11111111- 1Cc11n111111cs 1,L'1l2ll'1lNL'Il1 1n111c1' 1111- 111111111111 111 Miss l1l'ZlCL' fZl1J1'1i 11215 1111111111-11-11 21 SL1L'L'K'SS1:ll1 y1-111 s S1l111y 111 1-'111111 111111 C1111h111g. The 111111 111 the 1-'111111s 1'11111's1- was 11111 111111' 111 1l111lI'CSS 1111- s111111-111 XY1t1I 1111- sC11'111i11c 111'1-1111111111111 111- 1'111111s 11111 111s11 111 s11'1-ss 1111' n1111'1111111111 v111111- 111 1111-111 111111 111 111-v1-11111 1111 111-s1111-tic 1111111'1-1111111111 111 1111-11' 111'1-1111111111111 111111 SCl'V1Ilg'. 81111101115 11'1-1'1- 1'1-111111'1-11 111 111-1-11 El c111ss 1101011111111 111111 111118111110 1-111'h lesson with 111111r11111'1111c 1l1C1Ul't'S. 111-s1111-s l11Zl1i1I1g El 11lI'gL' 1'11111-11111111 111 1111- 11111-s1 c11111111111111s 111111 1111111111111-1s 111 111'111-1' 111 1111'1'1-11s1- 1111-11' u111Jl'2ll'yu 111 1'1-ci11cs. The C111ss 1111-11111'1-11 111111 s1-1'vc11 111111' 011111- 1111-11- 11111111-rs, 112lV1l1Q' IIS their g111-sts, 11-111'h1-rs 111 the HZ1l'111Il,Q' SC1111111. IiU111C111L'S, which s11'csses the 1111111'11vc111e111 11f 11fc and living' 111I'0L1g11 s1'11-1101- 111111 Zll'1, 11'11s 1Il1l'1l11L1CL'11 1111s yCZll'. This c11111's1- c1111s1s11-11 111 t11'11 units, Y1111 111111 Y11111's1-lf 111111 1111111c Nlll'S1Hg' 111111 Chi111 C111'1- ,X 1'31111y 11111111 1'1f some 1l1lZIQ1llZll'y 111' 1'1-111 1'h1111 was 11'1'111c11 111111 11111s11'11t1-11 by 1-11ch s111111-111 11111111 1111- 1111111111-111111 111 1111' S1L111y 111 C111111 C1111-. T111- s1-11111111 SCl11CS1C1' 1v11s 11cv1111-11 111 1111- 11'111'11 111 L'111111111g. The 11-11111111111-s :11111 1111- 1111-111'y 111' SL'XN'1llg 111111 1'1111h1ng 11'1-1'1- 111'1-s1-1111-11 111l'1ll1g'1'l 1t'L'1lll'1'S 111111 1'111ss 111s1'11ss11111s, ll 111111-11111111 Z1Q211ll 11L'1l'lg 1111- 1111-1111s 111 1'1-c111'11i11g' 111111 111llS1I'1l11llQ such 11'111'11. ,Xs 1111- s1-11'111g 111'11j1-cts 1111' 1111- yL'lll', the s111111-111 11111116 S1t't'1J1Ilg' 1111112111115 111111 1XYIl 111111-1' QZlI'l11Cl11S. The 1'1111hi11g c111ss1-s 11-11111111111-11 IY1111 Il S1111- S111111' 1.f1VL'l1 1111' 1JLlI'1'l11S 211111 f1'1UIl11S 111 1111- 111111111115 5ch11111 11y1l1ll2lS1Lll1l. 5111111-111s 11111111-11f11 gLl1'1I1L'1l1S 111111 1111-1' 111111 1111111c 111 1hc11' c111ss1'1111111 11'111'11. 'Q MAY Ql'l-IICX ffflflllill. I:Ill'IlllllI'. 1lIrl.w.w'1' 'fs 4 NS YI'fl!N,X IIH tlrllw- Assistant LABORATORIES ATHLETICS For when the One Great Scorer comes To write against your name, He marks-not that you won or lost- But how you played the game. CZRANTLAND RICE. UA N1 it QM , EW Xi 'WWE X YX X X mqxm ,X M j ,R-1 -1-vw., SCL X Sf IHIIIIIIII ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION NJ ! f - K '4 J l V. wr'- .I f Iwfl In I-'iyfllli lI.Yl'IIl', Nlr. Iinarr. lliuhatn. Miss 4'tn'ln-tt, Nlnruan. Xlr. St'llllIllIll'IIl'l'. Nlr. .Minn ,Xnimtlit-r yvar nt' athlvtit' activity in tht- high sulitml is tlrawingg tu a clust: AX glzltlut' hack tlirungli tha: rccurels shuws that altlningh no illtwscliulztstic chann- piunships nvrc won, tht- various tcains all clitl wcll. lntcrcst in tht-ir prugrcss, ln' lmth stnflt-nts antl tmrnspt-uplc. was at a high lt-wl lllI'tillQ'l1t7lll tht- yt-ar. llns Iinanvial, as wt-ll as nnmral support, aitlcil grt-atlv in liUl'IllQl'illQ tht- t'tlt1l1L'll'S prtigrrnn nt' athlt-tics fur as many as pussihlc. 'lihc willingncss of tht- llnarsl uf lfiltiultimi tu ht- ot' ht-lp w'l1cin-x't-r antl wlvci't-rt-i' pussilmlt- was also Qrcatly appro- Ciillctl. Klurc sturlcnts than vwr lmcfsnx- tnult part in extra-curricular physical ac- tivity ut stunt- surt ur othcr. 511 grcat was thc tlcnianil tm' tlmn' sparc that thc fzivilitics ut' thc scliupl wt-rc usually inaclcquatc to accmninmlatc tht-ni. This lack was innst imticcztlmlt- in tht- intlmn' sports anfl was largely rt-spunsilmlc for thu tlccisiun against thc acltlitinn ut' wrcstling tu tht- list ut' tcanis sptmsurctl hy the athlctic assnciatirni. 'lihv cuntlitiun of thc athlctic ticltl prcclutlctl the possibility ot' starting' any track activity antl also greatly lllIL'l'ft'I'l'L'll with thc rcvival of luischall this ycar. This latter hantlicap, liuwcvcr, will hc 1'c1nuvctl ln' anuthcr your anal, if prt-st-nt plans niatcrializc. tht' forincr alsu within a wry ft-w yt-ars. 'l'ln-n participants :intl spuctators alilw will t-njny sports in a sctting thc equal nt any in thc statc. FCOTBA 1 . Front Noir. Imft fn Niyfht: Spence. Iliellardson. S2llliilYiI'I'Rl. Uzittaglia, Kia-sling. Poole. Movlirinp: Ross, llonderenko, K+-osky. Brooks. Secoml lfnzrz 'l'4-lop. lluseo, Swanson. Annes. A4l:l1nson. llurk. Slningrer. T, XVi4-kr-1. xlPll'f'll9Nf', 'l':iyIo1 Wilson. 1lllil'llIllllUlP, Illleseliiiiailii. I'm-ndleton. Thirfl lfmr: Mgr. Altlisert. l'o1nivt-lmk. Ilavo, Smith. Astorino. Yee. XVQ-'Il1Il'j'll. Ivomiaini. Foam-h Selin- lll2l4'ilt'l'. XY:ilisinowski. Walk. Matrelielto. Hertz. Ilzitig. Ilzlvis, t'irell:l. Asst N212 ll2llNll'llNlllPlll- Ass'l Mgr. IVURIIHAS. Top Nutr: Story. ll:ll'l'. L. Wit-kel, Namtelli. Saleetri, Xvtlllif-'l'. Ilurlie-gh, Y:uiflel'voi't. Silt-ox. Nlazvrslil l'e-Irozelli, Iiato. I.. lim-o. I':lulino. Hills. XYhen football season started in the fall, about eighty eager boys reported to Coach Schumacher for practice. Ut this number only seven were letter n1en from last year's squad. -Xfter four weeks of strenuous practice the team was ready for the tirst game of the season-llridgeville. Carnegie won this game, 20-O. Practice then began in earnest for the toughest games of the season were to follow. One Friday after another the best teams of the class A division were met. The team worked hard, had lots of spirit and gave all it could but that was not quite enough for them to become victorious. After suffering these undeserving defeats, Carnegie was determined to wreak vengeance upon Crafton. Amid the nnfurled tlags of Armistice Day, an undaunted football machine thundered to a 20-0 victory. This victory enabled Carnegie to regain the E. Cole cup. At the annual banquet given by the Rotary Club, varsity letters were pre- sented to Capt. Tom NVeikel, Capt. Elect Carl Marchese, Merle Rock, Lawrence .-Xrmes, Ray Adamson, Santo Battaglia, Oliver Brooks, Nick Chirumbole, Dom- inick Santavicca, Howard Keisling, Fred Moehring, Williaili Poole, jack Rich- ardson, Bill Springer, Monroe Taylor, Jack VVi1son and student manager, Rug- gero Aldisert. Bud Rock was chosen the most valuable player and received the li. Cole trophy. The seven lettermen who will be missing' from the starting lineup next season are: XYeikel, Rock, Chirumbole, Taylor, Battaglia, and Santavicca. L L Y 1 FOOTBALL NJ J VARSITY LETTERMEN -uf- f X 4:- . F 1 -f 0 V l. KA If x ,w5:h.L f, ',f ffjfl 4'. W' Hy: 3 lik ,K l , ,ff- f Top to Bottom, ll:-ft Vpright: Fhirumhole, Brooks, Wiekel. Capt., Poole, Moehring. Annes. Top to Bottom, Night lfprighf: Mills, Ilonde-renko, Marclleso. Taylor. lluttagrlizl, s1Dl'lll2t'l'. lmft to Right, f,'z'osNbur: Wilson. Kim-fslimz. Snlltavivcal, Rock. Rll'll2ll'1lS0lI, Spell:-e, Allnmson. Inxcrtsz l'o:u-h Sl'lllllllllCllP1', Alllise-rt, Slullc-nt ll:m:lgv1', BASKETBALL VARSITY LETTERMEN i I 1 u i Tnp In Iiulfnm: S11-rn. Ilnxn-11. 5f01'lll'illI. Cmlvll Amlanus, filllllilill Khlllitbll, CIIEHIIIIIN, f'zlstvll:mi, Stu- ds-ni Mgr.. Ihmlv, XI2ll'4'lll'Nl'. Wilson. 1 :ff WV X6 R QR BASKETBALL ron! Ifnlr: Nlntwii-zyk. Kerr, l'l:ippel't. Wilson. t'ole. luvlf Ii'uH'1 Alnhott. Sl'lll'll4'li. l'ii':l. Story, .XlllI1'N. Korpivl. Asst Mgr. f w f f 'NP f x 'l'he teznn which representetl Carnegie High School in hzislcethull this past season was hettei' than hzul been generally expectecl. XYith lllzinion the only holtlovei' from the previous sez1son's varsity sqnzul, it was not thought that hoys niovetl up from the li-squzul were experienceil enough to compete success fully with the other teznns in Section Ylll. The mlevelopment of Dzizen, how ever, into Il worthy ruiniing-inzite for Nlzinion gave the teznn two cztpuhle for wzmls, :mil hzul the gnzmls :intl center iniprovetl :is rzipiclly, the teznn's tinzil stzinlling in the section woulil have heen higher than fourth place. Only occa sionully tlicl the lmoys in these latter positions play the bzislcethzill that was ex pecteil of them :intl several games were lost that coultl have been won hy Z1 more consistent :intl generally hettei' type of lmzielc-court play. ln league competition two games eztch were won from Coruopolis :incl Ncliees Rocks, :intl one each from Mt. Lehzinon :intl Stowe, while two eztch were lost to Crzifton :intl liorinont, unil one ezich to Nt. l,eh:inon :intl Stowe ln non-league contests, two each were won from l3i'itlg'eville :intl KlelJon:iltl one ezich from lfintlley :intl the Alumni, :intl one was lost to CllIltJllSlbl11'Q. Ut the seven hoys who ezirneml letters, Mzinion, llzizen, :incl l'oole :ire seniors Clizinnzts. NlZlI'Cl1CSC, Moeliring, :incl Yllilson are eligihle for another yezn' ol mzix' zinc with Co e, zi suhstitu e forwartl, will likely form next sezison's stzirtinx 'i , . - . . . -4 . - 9' coin nn: 1. 5 Q ' My ' 2 ' mv' stitt competition ri ee ive vzirsi ' lllZliCl'.Z . VF- W i if' if ll l l t e ffgiwxm l ttioi lti hltlx hoxxtxci th it thq xiilll L fini ffif'llP ' several nieinlrers of this yezn s ll-squzitl who are l'L'gZll'llL'll :is excellent pros n ll t ty 111 l'-fit. we u -,V tht BASEBALL The 1937 baseball team was not an outstanding one, but it did well enough, considering the handicaps under which it carried on. Of the seventy-odd can- didates who reported for the first practice, only three had had previous baseball experienceg too much rain and consequent lack of practice hindered the develop- ment Of the playersg and all the games were played on foreign fields. Added tO these were the facts that the season was half over before a catcher was found who could even hold the ball, and that the team's best hitter and outfielder left school after having played only three games. But the season also had its brighter side. The pitching of Moehring in practically every game was of a high orderg the play of the infield, especially Captain Channas at short, was very goodg and the hitting of the team as a whole was often timely. Very few of the players will be lost by graduation and with this year's experience, Carnegie High should be a real contender for the title next year. lv WIFYQ ' lu! ng air, Ye b . lg, N INTER-CLASS BASKETBALL 1 . 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A '-, 4 GIRLS' ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Since the organization of the Girls' Athletic Association in 1933 under the sponsorship of Miss Corbett, its membership has increased from forty-hve to over one hundred and twenty-tive girls. This club is made up of those on the interclass teams, managers of the basketball and volley ball teams, and any others dee-med worthy of membership by a vote of the club. Une of the aims of the organization has been accomplished this year when badminton equipment, which is used in the gymnasium classes and can be used by the club members at any time, was purchased. Socials were held frequently in the school gymnasium for the purpose of forming a closer relationship among the members. Various programs were planned by the appointed committees and every ,-X. A. party was well at- tended. The peaks of the social program were the Skating Party and the Valen- tine Dance. Ruth Inez Greer, the 1936-37 club president, is to be commended for the splendid progress made in the organization this year. She' was a worker as well as a leader. Other ohticers for the year were: Vice President, Betty XYagnerg Secretary, Silvia Cengiag Treasurer, Irene Hutchison. -X committee headed by Ruth Springer selected a standard club pin for the girls. Miss Corbett suggested emblems for the Senior and Junior members who played in three volley ball games or at least twelve quarters of the twenty-four. Twenty-eight emblems were given out this year. The 1937-38 club officers are: Prt'Jidv11f ............... .. Xl,-x1u:.x1:l4:'1' Hlirxl Vim' fJ1't'.l'IllIt'lIf .. .. IRHNH I'lll'I't'lIISUN Secretary ..... .. INIARTIIA Bkowx Trvczszmv' .. . . AIILDRIQIJ SoI.'1'i-:ics 1- run! lfmr: Il. McKinley, Ile-rnmn. M. Solters. lloyee, ll. Soltc-rs. Long, llurkey. llurlmur. l'a1'kl-s Mewnln-. Napier, Smleulc, Zuk. Cole. Springer. Kearns. Stys, Nowak, Vorlm, Staples, Blast-ellilm Nvrrnlrl Itmr: N. Solominsky. Metzger, Williamson. lloup. Mm-I :lrlaml. Mm-Willizuus, Holmes. t'm-ngiu Greer, ll. IVSIIIIN-'l'. llutehison, Iztllllllilll. H. I'l'l'l'X. Swentkowski, Wa-ng:1'yn. I'l!lIllllll'l', II4-lm, Glas ser. l . Klee. Donnelly. Ilarovitz. Thirrl Ifmr: Illlllllli-ll, N. Miszrzyella. xVII4'IlQ'1'li, IIIHIPIIIHII, Nieolussi. VIIHPIIPI. Ilrown. Iionderenko , . . - - luvans. ltulston, lwagg. White, 1I2llll'9l'. Marlier, Ellis, ll. Watellnrn. Wozniak. V. Wagner. Scott ' XVellinp:s. Ant-I'. l'ie:1rrl. IL Klee, M1-Kinli-y, Selieinpp. I-'mlrtll ln'llll'C l4'itzp:ltriek. II2ll'l'j', Ilassiek, M. Nliszezyellal. Peters, llanzlgzer. NVutts. Netzel. Il Sekn-liek, XVllli:u11s. Herlowski, Kiszer, Nova-lli. Howe. 3IL'l'l'IlIliill. Maple. Kyle, Weissert, Sllllill' ski. lI:ll'lllll. Nw-lar, A. Solominsky, IIl'j'illl, Vzur, llryeenko. Garaui. Sawiuki. Top RIIIVI SIN-'lIlllZlIl. Selmtfer. S4'Ill'Il-'lI0l'. I'z1tTord, Keller, Hanlon, llandulpll. Miller, Kovanis S4-ke-liek. May. Srlwilm, Nowneki. Ilmlovali, Seibel. Teltllorster. lieadlinpr. Hlvgg, ll. AINDIINII, A Wyatt. llim-s. GIRLS ,J VOLLEY BALL Volley ball and basketball make up the greater part of the girl's athletic program. Volley ball is the first class sport in the fall, and try-outs for the teams were held early in October. As the season progressed, it was evident that the honors would go to one of the upper class teams. The Seniors, having won first place in the interclass competition in 1936, fought hard to hold the championship for a second time. They finally succeeded in attaining their goal by defeating the Juniors in two hard-fought games. The Junior team ran a close second, winning all but the two games with their chief rivals, the Seniors. The Sophomores and Freshmen, although they were subdued by the upper class teams, were eager competitors, and must be commended for their fine playing. Captains chosen for the volley ball teams were: Seniors ....... ............................ R UTI-I INEZ GREER Juniors .... SYLVIA CENGIA Soplzoniores .. . VIRGINIA VVAGNER Freshmen .. .. DORO'l'1IY ABoosII slfzxlons JITNIORS Front Row: White, McKinley, Springer. Second Rolo: Gerlowski, May, Danziger, Sol- ters, Kearns. Top Row: Holmes, Wagner, Greer, Ellis, Bragg. SUPHORIORES Front Ifouf: Parkes, Zuk, Swentkowski. Sz-rand Row: Schieb, Bryan, Boyce, Metzger. Top Now: Williams, Manion, Donnelly, Maur- er, Wengryn, Wellings. Front Row: Miszczyclla, Paiord, Sehrieber Corba, Hutchison, Watts. Seroml Row: Solomiusky, Bigleman, Streit man, 1Ielm, Barum, Evans. Top Row: Sekelik, Hicks, Pretka, Bonderenkn Cengia, Brown. FRESIIMAN Front Row: SCll9IllDD, Hassick. Alxoosll, No wak, Astorino. Second Row: Miller. Kiwanis, Seaehrist, Gal' an, Solominsky, Netzel. Top lfofuf: Randolph, Keller, Wilcox, Sekelick Styx, Staples, Nicolussi. .1 ii 'N GIRLS' Basketball followed closely upon the volley ball season, and after a few weeks of practice, Miss Corbett chose the class teams. Although the Freshmen and Sophomores showed outstanding teamwork and excellent sportsmanship in every game, the juniors and Seniors really made this an interesting basketball season. The Seniors were undefeated until they were forced to bow to the Juniors at the close score of 30-27. Of course, the Seniors were disappointed at losing this game but did not give up hopes for being the all-round champions. By winning this game, the Juniors moved into the leading position. In the second round of games, the ever-hopeful Seniors upset the Juniors by an overwhelming victory. The score in this game was 39-16. Now the two upper class teams were tied for first place. A third game between these two teams was scheduled, and, as luck would have it, ended in a tie score, 35-35. Miss Corbett and the captains agreed upon an additional tive minutes. The Seniors, realizing the situation, mounted their efforts and defeated the Juniors, 41-37. Captains for the various basketball teams were: Seniors . . . . ....... . . ................. .. RUTH IN!-:Z GREEK Juniors .. MARTHA BROWN Soplwmorcs . .. LEONA SAWICKI Freshmen .. .. Dokoruv A300511 SICNIORS JVNIUIRS Front Row: lmnziger, May, Solters. White. Front Now: l'engia, Sehrieber, Patford, Watts Top Row: Ilohnes, Weissert. Wagner, Greer, SPCIHHI Rom: Brown, M. Sekelik, Streitmall, A Ellis, Braizpr. Slll0lllillSkX. Top Row: Plummer, Hicks, Pretka, Iionder- SUl'IIOMOIll'1S nm Ll 'S' Front Rmr: Sawivki. Parkes, Iii-yan, Swent- 4. ,.. V v kowski, Znk. Spelar. 1RLhHMAx Top Rmrzl Wellings, Wongryn, Fazzini, Maur- Front Row: Astorino, Aboosh, Persinski. sf- Wl 2l 'S- Top Row: Miner. sekenk, Staples, Nico- lussi, Yusinski. Randolph, Guran. Q V..,k,,,, X BASKETBALL XX REMINISCENCES HITHER, THITHER AND YON . . . Getting adjusted to being a Senior . . . the cigars that smoked the man- agers at the Crafton game . . . Charles Byrne's laugh . . . So the school actually had to burn before some of the students got out . . . The Vigilantes . . . Ambrose Sembrat's announcements . . . the victory goal posts . . . Gangsters at Carnegie Hi? No, only Hines making enough noise for 57 in Chemistry Lab . . . Jeremy of the Tinker who went to ruin from too much buttermilk . . . Miss Moore and her glasses . . . George Washington with lipstick-the hussy! . . . Getting in perfect copies . . . Graduation . . . Can you ink why some of the occupants in room 5 were blue when they received notes one afternoon? . . . Jacque I . . . II etc .... the announcement of Sue Bohman's engagement to Joe Wilson at an A.A. Dance . . . Chemistry students working in the dark room . . . Rugy debating . . . blue Mondays . . . Mr. R. C. Lee admitted he was wrong . . . Mr. Sawhill ruling his mathematicians . . . passing . . . Mutual Admiration Society founded when the Seniors received their proofs . . . Taming of the Quail . . . waiting for the bell to ring .... WHAT'S YOUR MONIKER? You MAY SPECA IDA GAMBLE any TOM on that TURKCOJ. The BLOCHferJ was MARSHing HOMA acROSS a GEORGE ANNA LONG GREEN PERRY to the WEST where PETEnear all his folks lived. He walked FERA DAZEN days, ANNA then in the ALDISERTed SILVERSTRIan part of the land a BIG BARBOURus LYONQSJ RUSHNIK at HAM. The man WHITE and STERN was in BARRY BRAD DANQZUGER. HARRY was! WASYL he do? It SEIBEL to kill the TURK. WELL, he POOLED himself together and began to RUSSELL with the ANNAmal. Suddenly SEMBRAT, JOHN, came from no where, BUD JOHN was a brave CHILDCSJ, because at ZADARKQOJ moment he shot the LYON in the KISZER with his BYRNEing RAFFAELE. SOLTERS is, there is NORMA. SENIOR VOCABULARY Freshmen-Insignificant pieces of inert protoplasm. Sophomore-One who is foolishly wise. Junior-A son who bares the same name as his father. Senior-The tops! Atom-The first man. Slang-American language. Yawn-Class pastime. Keyhole-Something you look for at 3 A.M. Bulletin-Rapid firing of a gun. Book-An object you take home and never open. Key-See keyhole Andrew Mellon-A type of grapefruit. Cheer-Something you do at football games to keep warm. Checkers-One checks in and the other checks out. Millionaire-A man who never went to school. REMINISCENCES QUOTATIONS Please refrain from audible talk. The Missouri Compromise line was set at 370 Fahrenheit. The positive degree of superlative- is super. J, P. Morgan is a mountain-millionaire. I just canlt phantom her out. Any questions P Would you like to buy a ticket to the Senior play ? I've got to check a cash. Get rid of your cud. .K It didn't phrase me a bit. Quiet! QUIET! quiet! Quiet! H Didn't I tellyou to notice when the sauce boiled over P I did. It was half past ten. There were two sets of electrical returns. cl It's imperial to me. Your assignment for tomorrow is . . . Why don't you act like a Senior F H Smally you, clazyf' You're back a lot in your work. How long have you been absent ? Since the French Revolution. No loitering in the halls. Class is excused. A BROADCAST Ladies and Gentlemen: We are here at the Open Air Stadium broadcast- ing the football game between Thesems and Thosems. There is a great crowd watching this thrilling exhibition of weaklings trying to out weak and out ling each other. The Thesems fans are up there snoring away and the Thosemszes fans are doing the same,-the copy cats! The score Cyawnj pardon me, is a tie 73 to 37 in favor of Whichems. What a game? A shower has started up and awakened the spectators. lt has also shrunken the football and ah,-a huddle and the men have decided to play baseball with the shrunken pigskin. The four left over players are playing leap frog. VVhat a battle! Whosit makes a home run. The shot is heard ending the fourth and final quarter. The score is deuce. It certainly has been one grand afternoon, my radio fans, CMotherj. Listen in next week at the same time when we shall report to you the play by play descrip- tion of the A.A.U. swimming meet at the Huntington Valley Polo Fields. Until then, remember these programs come to you through the courtesy of the G.G.G. l f Co., Inc., the Goody Goody Gumdrop Company Incorporated and broadcasting K station N U T S. A 1. w,f1,, JV' ml llm ' .Yi --. ffifi: I 5,9 CLASS PROPHECY THE RETURN OF THE VOYAGER Good evening, everyone, good evening. We are here, as you know, to an- nounce the World Premier of The Return of the Voyager at the Op'ry House. Play-goers and critics have eagerly anticipated tonight's opening. We are broad- casting the entrances of the notable guests from the lobby of this palatial edifice constructed by Michael Spinda and Fred Koehler. The elaborate murals deco- rating these walls were painted by Mary Szeerba and Helen Solters. Before the guests arrive en masse, let us report some of the outstanding facts concerning this brilliant production. The cast includes as leading ladies the Misses Martha Picard, Ida Novelli, and livelyn Childs. Sidney Wertheimer, the little orange boy, is trailed by his brother, Theodore, who picks up the peelings. Frank Bosco plays the role of a soap-box orator. The dreamers are John Seibel and Ed Strousg Doughboy, Sydney Bertenthal, the Aunt, La Verne Lewis, Faith, Alvira Weissertg Hope, Jean Barry, Charity, Betty Kyle. The popular mechanic is portrayed by Arthur Langdon. Past experience has fitted Florence May for her role as The Hiker. Two nieces, Helen Funaro and Lucille Kelsey, and Pierina Raffaele, a small maiden, complete the cast. The Stage Manager is Mary Lou Ellis and the prop- erties are in the care of Mabel Slifer. Russell Dazen has charge of the sound effects. The orchestra, under the direction of Maestro Steve Dankowsky, includes joe Spiegel, Chris Raabe, Velma Ralston, Irene Korpiel, John Schulte, and Ray- mond McCartney. Beautifully attired guests whose limosines have been opened by that genial doorman, Monroe Taylor, are being ushered into the theater by Ben Campbell. Among the first arrivers are Miss Harriett Glasser escorted by Duke O. Kent- U-C, whose brother Duke You-Or-Don't-You was recently joined in holy wed- lock to Miss Betty B. Wagner, noted Fifth Avenue stylist. There is james Bonderenko, otherwise known as Jasbo, the poet. .lasbo is accompanied by Mr. VVilliam Mapstone who has supplanted Mr. Calvin Perlman as the Superintendent of the Squirrel Insane Asylum in Brazil. Arriving now are the Honorable Messrs. John Beltz, the French Ambassa- dor, and Nesbit Ross who was recently appointed to till the vacancy in the Greek Embassy when Miss Ruth West decided she Moscow to Russia to join Miss Jean Long. Here comes Mr. Arthur Mills designer of the Wingless airplane in which Mr. William Sugah Poole made his record breaking flight around the world. A most interesting group is now approaching, my friends. The lovely former Tirzah Bigham on the arm of he-r husband, the well-known news commentator. You know they have just returned from Goona Goona where he covered the latest civil war. Behind them is none other than Miss Mary Bradwell exquisitely gowned in ermine and escorted by a very attentive gentleman. As they pass by, our attention is attracted to a number of unusually dis- tinguished looking persons whom we recognize as Senator Ruggero Aldisert, the powerful politician who is being seriously considered, we understand, as the next man to throw paper wads from the head of the White House table, one of the finest scientists of our age, Professor Charles Byrne. Byrne, having com- pleted his invention of a pocket umbrella, has taken the place that Albert Ein- stein once held, and the modern Floyd Gibbons, Ambrose Sembrat. These illus- trious so and so's seem to be arguing about something. By the way, Charles Clatty just does not seem to be able to stop horsing around. Perhaps he is waiting, like- many others, to get a glimpse of Glamour Girl Naomi Holmes who is now entering with a host of autograph seekers hounding her. There is quite a bit of excitement but with wonderful poise she CLASS PROPHECY manages to reach her box. The box opposite has evidently been reserved for author, Albert Stern, where he is already comfortably seated eating peanuts. Mr. Stern has just returned from Paris where he wrote his latest book, Is Gravity Here to Stay? Mr. Stern's peanut shells are carefully aimed at that well-known Man-about-Town, Mr. George Bigham, who has lately been seen running around in the best of triangles. The proprietors of the fashionable Silvestri, Persiana, Danziger Co., Inc., cosmeticians, are being ushered to their seats. The front row is already filled by those razz-ma-tazz playing boys from Broadway, Matthew Zalenchak, Wasyl Homa, Pete Sembrat, john Bodnar, John Zadarko, john Turko, Dominick San- tavicca, Pete Wozniak, and Michael Hanna. Mary Hayes, Anna Klee, and Edna Rushnik, the holders of winning tickets in the Irish Sweepstakes, are entering, followed by the Misses Ruth Springer, jean Kearns, and Hannah Louise Smith. These Red Cross workers have just returned from the Hood disaster of the Sahara Desert. Missionaries who also aided in this worthy cause were Misses Louise Marsh, Louise Abraham, Kath- erine Zbalishen, and Anna Kiszer. And how did big Bond Davis break his arm? Did it happen at his Long Island estate during a rocking-horse polo match or who was that lady we saw him with last night? Accompanying him is Bill Lyons, the African big game hunter, who on his last expedition captured a stripeless zebra. Santo Battaglia and Norma Petrozelli, vocalists in Burp Belcher's Orchestra, have arrived. Lois Bragg and Helen Watchorn, co-society editors of the New York Chimes have in tow Gene Spence, the murder mystery author. Tattle- tale Tom Manion is spilling the Beans again to George Richardson and Patsy Tyrone, the current matinee idol. Cassanova jack Nesbit is arriving with two conspicuous blonds from the Follies of 1906. And there-ah, there is that autograph collector, Richard Castel- lani pestering Mr. Raymond Snyder the only bass in captivity who can reach high C. There, too, are Emma Fera and Mary Corba, these renowned authorities on what the well-dressed sitdown striker should wear. Near them are Mary Irvin, culinary expert, Alice Watchorn, dietitian, of the We-Fix-Un Hospital, and that cute little trapeze artist Mary Louise Harris. Frances Bohman, charming fiancee of the prosperous manufacturer of Safety- First Safety Pins and Mary Jane Barbour, wife of a big steel magnet, have just made their appearance. Ah, here are several members of the successful Ice Follies of this year- Misses Ruth Blocher, Emily Kearton, Margaret Conley, Anna Mary Dillon, Pearl Gerlowski, Katherine Perry, and their graceful leader, Mitzi Bales. The modern Sheila Barrett, Norma Levin, joins the group. With her husband arrives the former Ruth Morgan. I hear they had to buy a dachshund the other day so that their six children could pet the dog at the same time. Yippee! Here comes that grinning hill-billy cowboy, James Gamble. The theater is now practically filled and it is almost curtain time, but still they come. Late arrivers are Elizabeth Castelli and Sophie Matwiczyk, secre- taries to Robert Hines, cashier of the social register, social workers, Frances Speca and Mary Farerig Sadie Hanna, owner of a prize winning French poodle, and John O'Donnell, the millionaire who made money on crooked dough! QI-Ie's a pretzel manufacturer . . . lllj Everyone is seated,-the theater darkens-and as the curtain rises on 'iThe Return of the Voyager your guest announcer, Evelyn Green, calls Curtain on this broadcast. -Finis- 'f 1, EPIL Y 1 f 1 ' 1 1 1 1 , 1 1 TEMPLE GARLAN DS 'I'11cr1- is Z1 tcmplc 111 my heart XV111-rc lllfllll or rust can never 1111110 A t1-11111lc swvpt 111111 sct Zlllillll., T11 llllllik' 1115' soul Il 11111111-. .xllll Yllllllll z1111111t 1111- 11111115 of it llzmg gz11'lz1111ls that f111'1-ver last. That g':1l11c1'c1l 1111cc are always swcctg Thc 1'11s1-5 111' the Vast! .X, MA111' I . R11111Ns11x 11 f 1 1 OGU Autographs Qfflzztocgmpbf CLQG Photograpliy by D, RGSSICR, Carrick, Pa. 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Suggestions in the Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) collection:

Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Carnegie High School - Voyager Yearbook (Carnegie, PA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943


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