Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI)

 - Class of 1942

Page 23 of 136

 

Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 23 of 136
Page 23 of 136



Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 22
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Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 24
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Page 23 text:

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Page 22 text:

renal: Ten seasons now, the world has been in conflict. Lives have been lost, families separated, countries fallen. A few months after the war had begun, the Republic of France was overcome. It was hard to realize that this country, which had been the first European nation to sound the death knell of tyranny and raise the flag of Liberty, now lay at the mercy of a ruthless invader. Her language, customs, and culture felt the axe of the oppressor. And almost two years later, in the Fall of 1941, a French refugee, Rose Feldman, told Central's French Club of her flight, together with her parents, from Luxem- bourg, through France, Spain, Portugal, to America. Then to Central's French Club, came Mrs. Caminsky, a former Parisian school teacher, who told of quaint customs of her native land. Reuben Silver, with a cast from the membership, presented the plays, The Mystihed Doctor, The New Year's Gift, and Nicette. All this was staged by sponsor, Miss Ward, and officers M. Levenberg, president, M. Cohen, secretary, and D. Lipchinsky, treasurer. B. Weiss, E. Levine, and I. Hoffman succeeded the ot.hers in spring. France, as a land, has been conquered, but France ' in the heart of Le Cercle I CIW ll 0 still lives on .... Yes, proud France still lives in us despite all. For Dumas, Hugo, and de Maupas- sant will not let us forget the glory that once was hers. Books, the record of man's achievements, grow out of war and peace, happiness and pain. They educate, moralize, delight, and chill. They lift some people out of their everyday surroundings, into a fairyland of golden glow. To others, they are only a subject for comment, when conversations grow dull. In the Fall of 1941, the books were tinged with war flavor-William Shirer's Berlin Diary, Ernest Hemmingway's For Whom the Bells Toll, and Eric Knight's This Above All. Thomas Wolfe, who had created a new medium of prose-poetry, died suddenly. Masefield in England, and MacLeish in America turned to writing patriotic pieces. John Gunther produced another timely non-fiction work, Hlnside Latin America, while Pearl Buck's Dragon Seed added another star to her stellar list. So each author gave something of himself in an effort to communicate with a reader. And all of their work was neatly alphabetized, classified, and laid upon some musty library shelf, there to stand the test of time. Some will be thumb-worn ten years hence, but most will bear the bitter-brightness of seldom-leafed pages. It is left for the future to decide whether 1941 produced any literature of unforgettable quality that will live with O great names dflll of past .... Great names in literature? None will live longer than Caesar, Cicero, Homer, Ovid, and Virgil. From the Gallia est omnis divisa in parts tres of Latin Q41 to the Arma virumque cano of Latin f8j, there is delight and pleasure to all Latin students as they ponder over world-famous lines. From the little settlement on a hill on the Tiber, founded 753 years before Christ, Rome grew to become the home of ancient civilization and the starting point of modern. Through Rome's military and political growth, Latin spread to Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, Roumania. The English language became indebted to Latin for over half of its commonly used words. To further the interest in Latin, to inform students of a people that have played so important a part in the history of the world, to tell of a people who had conquered all of the ancient world, Central reorganized its Latin Club in the fall, 1942. Spon- sored by Miss Flynn, the club carried through its fall semester with Dorothy Lazar, president, Alvin Nusbaum, vice-president, Margaret Berriman, secretary, Betty Shaffer, treasurer. During the year the club enjoyed a lecture by Miss Edith Kovash and celebrated Latin Week by presenting a Latin play and banquet. Novel, too, in the Club's activi- ties was the answering of roll call by reciting a Latin quotation. Spring officers included Alvin Lippitt, president, Margaret Berriman, vice-presi- dent, Leonard Zubroff, secretary, Lillian Stine, treasurer. Eighteen French Club Ist Row: B. Blumrosen, E. Budnitzlty, F. Pradell, R. Weinberg, S. Rovetch, M. Levenberg, E. Zubrin, A. Baschin, S. Klein, 2nd Row: D. Goldman, A. Lipsitz, J. Greenbaum, A. Harelik, E. Beresh, B. Greenberg, S. Stone, S. Green, I. Must, 3rd Row: N. Lister, M. Cohen, D. Lipchinsky, R. Phillips, R. Elconin, E. Levy, M. Brenner, E. Kawa, D. Know, 4th Row: S. Kess- ler, D. Lyons, B. Kurtz, E. Sandweiss, A. Shenker, M. A. Dunivan, R. Mol- denhaver, B. Eder, Standing: B. Weiss, R. Grauer, P. Brickman, Miss P. Ward, A. Sokanoff, R. Cohen, A. Karbelnick, R. Silver, S. Sarashohn, F. Kasin. Library Staff Standing: S. Franklin, J. Fink, S. Schooler, G. Rothbard, M. Berriman, B. Alexander, P. Duncan, E. Platnick, J. Reading, J. Scupholm, B. Neimark, S. Levine, D. Zemmel, Seated: L. Zussman, V. Weiss, P. Melnick, H. Freedman, H. Minasian, L. Glenn, P. Pechenik. Latin Club Standing: D. Lazar, Ist Row: Miss Flynn, M. Berriman, S. Plotnick, C. Bobroff, J. Jacobs, D. Cooper, 2nd Row: R. Leash, B. Schaffer, P. Anplebaum, L. Stine, R. Mathis, R. Mohr, 3rd Row: R. Rautenberg, E. Luby, L. Zubroff, A. Lippitt, C. Lippitt, R. Cole.



Page 24 text:

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Suggestions in the Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) collection:

Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Central High School - Centralite Yearbook (Detroit, MI) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945


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