Chaney High School - Lariat Yearbook (Youngstown, OH)

 - Class of 1933

Page 30 of 106

 

Chaney High School - Lariat Yearbook (Youngstown, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 30 of 106
Page 30 of 106



Chaney High School - Lariat Yearbook (Youngstown, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 29
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Page 30 text:

1. .- .. : 1'r r 13 4 fl tv it- i,krir' I I l if il E, i A .1 V . dwarf Q i sf Q , , M H.ma5WX?nfQ .fwa-.:e- 'f x 1 . 4 up. Y Szekely are founders of the Margaret Spinster's Home. Catherine Schuster and Katherine Hoffer both insist that they are the famous Kitty to whom a millionaire willed his millions. Dorothy Traut, the renowned basketball player, has returned to her Alma Mater as the instructor of gym. Lucile Collins and Nettie Taylor have established a library of their own and are in full charge of it. Helen Tarkanish and Helen Giba have recently won first prize in an lnternational Talkathon. Iames Ignozzi, the man of mystery, is now giving instructions on how to break women's hearts. Barbara Drake, Virginia Mehlo, and Sophie Cenky have recently opened a home for stray dogs. lulia Ward published a book on How to Do Math and is now collecting the royalties. Tommie Gray is the world's most famous or- chestra leader. The little miss who sings so beautifully with the orchestra is Christine Sici- liano. Ann Tecau is teaching Rosemary Gentile and Louisa Anderson how to eat spaghetti. She claims it is an art. Beatrice Hawkins has established a school for reducing. Don Heck- ert and Bud Boyle have entered a walkathon and have been walking for 1530 hours. Both are bound to win the 151,000 prize. Bernice McCollum and Helen Matusak are both training to swim the English Channel. Iohn Nanovsky, Nick Sestok, and William Stoll are playing in a three-piece orchestra, under the direction of Howard Moore, at the big- gest hot-dog stand in Canfield. Virginia Hendricks, Vivian Iohnson, and Barbara Fabanish have at last perfected their wonderful compound to make them grow. Michael Dulick is very busy as he is the world's most famous surgeon. He has many helpers, among whom are Frank Dussek and Stanley Kramer. Ray Gensler and Howard Gundry, the two comedians, have succeeded Colonel Stoopnagel and Bud. Mary Farkus has succeeded Gracie Allen, but instead of searching for a lost brother, she is hunting someone to take Georgie's place. Martha Baehler has established a school for public speaking. Bertha Booth and Leona Gerst are among her students. Edna Cleverly has been on Broadway for three years. Her popularity is partly due to her manager, Iames Duffy. Thelma Moss is dietician in a most famous London hospital. Viola Moore is poet laureate of the United Kingdom of Rhymesters. Ann Kutsko and Pauline Kramer have collaborated on a play, The Art of Husbandry. lt remains to be seen how cordial a reception it will receive from the American public. Cyril Furman, Donald Habeger, and Robert Kane, devoted to the study of the whys and wherefores of puppy love, own and operate a home of puppies in order to obtain first hand information. Genevieve Myers is an economist forsooth. Her flaming red hair, forming an aura of light around her wherever she goes, forestalls the monthly payment of electric light bills. Wylie McCleery owns the largest chicken farm in the United States. Bill McWilliams is now the editor of the New York Times. Helen Brindiar is manager of a large Paris shoppe. We turned the stone slightly and the forms disappeared. Quite satisfied, we decided to cease searching. Magdalene Filipsin Charlene Steinfort Page Twenty-Eight

Page 29 text:

'l- - l9g,- THE.-SIG VEDH' - 33 THE PROPHEGY By Magdalene Filipsin I-Fv-rv GYPT, the land of the Ptolemies, the cradle of the human race, was like a magnet that drew us to it in the year Anno Domini 1950. We were ever enamoured of col- lecting curious bric-a-bracs and unraveling the secrets of the tombs. It was in a grotto- like mausoleum that we found in a secluded recess the diamond lens whose powers we were to try. This jewel was a diamond of 140 karats, submitted to magnetic currents for a long period. We applied our eyes to a hole drilled through the axis. Gently and with greatest care we turned the diamond a hair's breadth. Behold! forms floated out into the space. They were the forms of none other than our former classmates of Iune '33, and we were enabled to visualize them as they appear today. Iohn Cebriak and Ioe Kiren appeared in their laboratory analyzing the chemical composition of a flea, with I-Ielen Plunkett nearby, mourning the loss of her pet. Ed Croft and his assistants, John Toth and Charles March, have set up a school for wayward waifs in the South Sea Islands. . Evelyn Allen and Irene Williams have established a renowned night club in Barce- lona and have found that their knowledge of Spanish obtained from Miss Martha Laugh- lin is profitable. Michael Ferencik, known as the modern Michael Angelo, attracts crowds by appearing on Broadway clad in his artist's smock. Magdalene Filipsin, who swallowed a dictionary while in school, is teaching kindergarten children their A B C's. You would never know our Eleanor Bader. She has succeeded Lulene Pillsbury as secretary of the Y. W. C. A. and is now wearing Oxford spectacles, accompanied with a spinster's dough- nut at the nape of her neck. Darwyn Brown, who was the clown of the school, is now a prominent undertaker. Annette Argenziano and Lena Pupino are the assistants of Ellen Runyan in the I-Got Your-Dough Insurance Company. Ernestine Hinely and Margaret Gerst are now in Germany teaching Kaiser Wilhelm the German language. Paul Brown and Ludt Welch are tight rope walkers in the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Peter McDermott and Billy Crowe are partners in a publication house in Chicago. Betty Schrader, who led a wild life while at school, is now married and living in Newark, New Iersey. Alberta Wagner, who loved nothing better than to dance, is the proud mother of Hink and Dink, the famous dancing team. Mary Wick, the sedate young lady, is now in Russia dancing in the Russian ballet. Marjorie Wighton, who ranked second in the beauty contest held by the seniors, has had her face lifted twice, and it is expected to fall again soon. Charlene Steinfort, the heart breaker, has married a millionaire nonagenarian. Frank D'Aquilla, a little but mighty senior, is now astounding crowds by his ability to lift 5000 pounds. Robert Davies and David Harris have taken Mutt and IeE's place in the comics. Margaret Callan, Margaret I-Iomolya, Margaret Iakupcin, and Margaret Page Twenty-Seven v. x .D , , ,Q A,,,,....aMu...........1,....,,



Page 31 text:

-.-.. ',. f THE BlC'--l'f.E.D.fl..j-.,X3........,,, . SENIOR ACTIVITIES . .+- '-62 The Senior class began its activities very early. Its first social function was a covered-dish dinner which was held at the school on December 14. From 4:00 to 5:30 p. m. a variety of pastimes was enjoyed in the girls' gym. Some tried their luck at ping-pong and cards while others danced to music played by Tommy Grayls orchestra. At 5:30 dinner was served in the cafeteria. After dinner toasts were given by Mr. C. W. Ricksecker, principalg Miss Bernice Fawcett, senior girls' adviserg Michael Dulick, Mary Wick, Eleanor Bader, and Dorothy Traut. At the conclusion of the meal all joined in and helped with the dishes. With such dish washers as Billy Crowe, it did not take long to finish. One of the most important features of the last year was the Senior Assembly, which was held on Friday, Ianuary 13. Although it was a bad luck day, it was a great success. A school girl was having trouble doing her homework which was in the form of cross- word puzzles. A huge electric cross-word puzzle was the setting for the stage and each act represented a word. While the girl was working the puzzle, she fell asleep, and while she slept, another girl came and worked one for her. While the puzzle was being worked, several acts were presented. The first number on the program was a few selections played by Tommy Gray's orchestra. A silent drama was given with Billy Crowe as the hero. Dorothy Traut as the heroine, and Iames Ignozzi as the villain. Oh yes, and Sheriff D'Aquila, who captured the villain! All took a trip to Spain where they were entertained by Charlene Steinfort and Helen Matusak, who did a Spanish tango. By some magical power they were taken into the past, about twenty years ago, to a real barn dance. The girls wore gingham dresses and the boys were well-groomed in overalls. But a barn dance is not a barn dance without a caller, so this place was filled by Bud Boyle, who managed his birdie in the cage very well. For a few moments everyone was terrorized by ferocious looking animals which suddenly appeared, followed by the popular Mickey and lMinnie Mouse. Terror soon left, however, when the animals began to dance. How surprised the girl was when she awoke and found the puzzle completed! 'The next social activity was the Senior Prom, held in conjunction with the Ianuary Seniors. This was held at Club Vogue on lanuary 24. The clever dance programs were developed in the Ianuary class colors, black and silver. The girls in their beautifully colored dresses and the boys in their dark suits presented a gala spectacle as they prome- naded. The promenade was led by Iohn Kurtz, president of the mid-year class, and his partner, Emma Gardinier, secretary of the mid-year class. The blare of trumpets and saxa- phones came from Bill Cowden's orchestra. Betty Lou, our own little blues singer, sang two popular selections. There was also a floor show. The Senior play, Laugh Clown, by C. L. Eaddy, under the direction of Miss Mollie Russell, was presented in the school auditorium on May 4 and 5. The Iune '33-Ianuary '34 Prom was held on May 26. The concluding activities of the class were Class Day on Iune 2, Baccalaureate in Iune 4, the banquet on Iune 5, and Commencement. Page Twenty-Nine

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