Chicago State University - Emblem Yearbook (Chicago, IL)
- Class of 1951
Page 1 of 152
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 152 of the 1951 volume:
“
a,v(v %i i 95 HiiUiilM mm Chicago Teachers ' College ... 82 years rich in tradition, high in accomplishment, higher in aim . . . cherishing and fostering ideals and ideas . . . famous with the names of Francis Parker and Ella Flagg Young . . . behind it all the motto— RESPONSIBILITY- -at once a challenge and a charge, an impetus and a goal ... all of this, your heritage . . . yours to invest in, yours to build upon, adding to the lofty solemnity of tradition the lively intimacy of memories that will compose your own lasting picture of college days ... a montage . . . with echoed sounds of frantic and frequently unmusical scales, of insistent no-trumps and reluctant passes, of a hundred Parker kids at recess . . . with phantom smells of numberless steaming menus, of the whole- some sticky sweetness of flour paste, of ten minutes of hot basketball . . . with mind ' s-eye sights of the worn, patient figure of Tillie, of the early spring in the green- house, of the rows of lockers, jaunty with notes that are common secrets ... all of this, your inventory of mem- ories . . . Emblem 1951 . . . V .-- % - - U ' ]l Because he rendered significant service to our great profession, because he gave substance to ideals through quiet courage and unswerving conviction, because he persisted in his service to mankind even after his death, we dedi- cate this book to the fond memory of Thomas M. Thompson — and with deepest humility . . . George W. Connelly [ mm ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS GREETINGS — TO CHICAGO TEACHERS COLLEGE STUDENTS In Colonial America, the elementary school teacher was usually a dame without training, poorly paid in kind, and held in low esteem. Throughout the ensuing years, as the need and value of an education became better realized, the position of teacher gradually improved. But as recently as my own early experiences in rural com- munities, teaching was not too attractive. Teachers were expected to board at a cer- tain place, to sing in the choir, to deposit their anemic checks in a particular bank, and NOT to smoke, play cards, leave town over the week-end oftener than once a month, or get married (if a woman). The teaching door was likely to be closed to those of a minority faith or nationality. But elementary school teaching in Chicago in the 1950 ' s is another story! The position of Chicago public el- ementary teacher commands respect. For one thing, only a college graduate may enter it. And many young men, as well as young women, are now entering it, particularly since the war. It is satisfactory to work in a profes- sion which deals with young folks whose lives and personalities are being develop- ed and enriched. Most of them will re- member their teachers with affection, and be grateful throughout their lives. Better than in most suburbs or smaller school districts, Chicago offers the choice of a variety of interesting work experi- ences, e.g.: adjustment service, teacher- librarian, home mechanics, physical ed- ucation, crippled, deaf, sight-saving, un- graded, speech defective, kindergarten, as well as regular 1-8 grade teaching. Opportunities for advancement in- cludes promotions to assistant principal (salary of $5,067 per year of ten months), principal ($6,860), supervisor or director of a special bureau ($6,390 to $7,810), dis- trict superintendent ($9,410), assistant sup- erintendent ($15,492), and general superin- tendent ($25,000). Socially-minded Boards of Education provide cost-of-living salary schedules be- ginning at $2,700 for ten months and pro- ceeding in automatic annual increases to $4,540 in ten years, good conditions of em- ployment, including leaves (sick, military, travel, study, maternity), job security through permanent tenure after three years of probation, pension and annuity upon retirement, a live-hour working day, and no prying into the personal, political, re- ligious or social life of the teacher. Finally, no profession in Chicago offers more job opportunities in the next ten or fifteen years than elementary school teaching. At present, there are several hundred unfilled assignments, and 1300 to 1500 additional elementary teachers will be required simply to serve the great- ly-increased number of pupils known to be coming within the next four years (24,000 more elementary school children by February 1955). For many years, there will be a seller ' s market for elementary school teaching talent. May I conclude with CONGRATULA- TIONS to you who have had the wisdom and foresight to enroll in Chicago Teach- ers College to train for such a satisfying life ' s work. DON C. ROGERS Assistant Superintendent in charge of Elementary Education 1 n J U - Dean Cook 9 Administration 10 Personnel 12 Office Staff 13 Library 14 Chicago Schools Journal 15 February Graduates 18 Seniors 19 Juniors 31 Sophomores ' A ' 39 Sophomores ' B ' 49 Freshmen ' A ' 53 Freshmen ' B ' 68 North Side Branch 70 Departments and Activities 80 Athletics 118 Homecoming 126 Tempo 128 Emblem 130 School Songs 132 Senior Directory 134 Advertisements 137 m H Dean Cook: Take a letter. Miss Durkin Big plans and blueprints — Mary O ' Leary, Geraldine Bow- man, Peggy Pfordresher, Dean Cook, Shirley Satek, Earl Blanchard, Virginia Walsh « . T:. r-. -.r . « ADMINISIIIAIIDN WILLIAM KAISER, Assistant to the Dean JAMES I. SWEARINGEN, Director of Student Instruction EMMA FLEER MULLER, Registrar and Director of Personnel LUCILLE A. SAEGER, Director of Student Activities OSCAR WALCHIRK, Assistant Registrar Andy Penn, Mr. Kaiser and a joke Lenore Larkin, Secretary, and Mr. -Swearinqen Clara Berghoefer, counsellor; Mr. Walchirk and Mrs. Muller. D ERSONNt 0M Esther Hendricks, Lunchroom Manager Dr. Ralph Goode, School Physician and Teacher of Science Iva Hume, Nurse Mary Lowery, Matron Thomas E, Scanlon, Engineer Custodian 12 - J - n - : G fAI GERALDINE BERRY MARY DURKIN GERTRUDE KUEHN LENORE LARKIN MABEL LULU CATHERINE McCAHEY ELLEN McGREAL KATHERINE MULCAHY ELIZABETH MURPHY JANE POOLE LORETTA WALLACE MERCEDES WALSH The Staff -seated: Fritz Veit, Head Librarian; Gaylord Sledge; Marcjaret B. Murray; Lucille Boyd; Lorene J. Wright; Ora E. Anders; Hariette O ' Berry; Margaret Dalton; standing: Anne Roberts; Ellen B. Weiss; Ida Luse; Carol O. Paulson. Not pictured — Jennie TenGale, E. Briggs Caldwell. Searching ' in the Stacks GftAR Checking a choice — Grace Dewar, Colleen McAnully The CHICAGO SCHOOLS JOURNAL, an educational magazine for Chi- cago public school teachers, is edited by mennbers of the Chicago Teachers College. The editorial staff consists of Dean Raymond M. Cook, Editor; Louise M. Jacobs, Managing Editor; Coleman Hewitt, Art; Joseph J. Urbancek, New Teaching Aids; George J. Steiner, News; George W. Connelly, Periodicals; Ellen M. Olson, Books; and Mabel Thorn Lulu, Secretary. The Journal, published bimonthly with the exception of July and August— 18,000 copies of each issue— is distributed to all Chicago public school teach- ers and is available to all Chicago Teachers College students. It has proved to be very helpful to the students in their class work. The Journal is also sent to educational libraries both here and abroad. The mailing list includes edu- cators in Canada, Republica Argentina, Germany, Nova Scotia, Philippine Islands, Puerto Rico, Russia, South Africa, Sweden, and Uruguay, as well as fifty-six U. S. Information Centers in Austria and in the American and British zones of Germany. OcTj ' lL ATER r. Janice Kingslow receiving diploma from Dean Cook; Adelle Azoff, volunteer server; Lillian Young, Frances Wilson, Marianne Walther, William Orris, Robert Michaelsen, Harry McHale. ftMUAfl GftADUAIEE Audrey Cicero, Joan Geisch, Heliobas Hart, Jan- ice Kingslow, Harry McHale, Robert Michalsen, William Orris, Marianne Walther, Frances Wilson, Lillian Young . . . graduates of the tiny midyear class, who received their B.E. degrees without tradi- tional cap and gown . . . but with a commence- ment address by Mr. Connelly . . . with music, vocal and instrumental — Barbara Kelley, accom- panying William Orris singing Panis Angelicus, and Harry McHale singing Danny Boy . . . Robert Michalsen, playing Tschaikovsky on the violin . . . and the faculty string ensemble, with Andante Can- tabile . . . and after the ceremony, the reception, complete with sparkling table, for attending family and friends . . . mm mum Robert Murphy, President Virginia McKinney, Vice-President Elva BergEtrom, Secretary Barbara Hackett, Treasurer Not pictured: William Kelly and Pat Duggan, Student Council Representatives Four years . . . four years . . . memories crowded into the space of the week when we start to count days . . . 5..4..3..2..1 . . . and then the day — graduation day . . . automatic assignments, last minute lesson plans . . . counsellor ' s visiting day . . . and the children — seemingly thousands of them . . . then, for some of us, the sound of bugles on a wintry morning . . . the whine of bullets . . . war — a stark reality . . . democracy, taught with rifles: democracy, taught with chalk . . . comparison, resolving into the big question on battlefront or homefront: we must teach democracy — how shall we teach it? ... and then, the thoughts of accumulated knowledge . . . four years at C.T.C. ... a tradition, a building, something to elaborate upon ... all of this, flashing through our minds as we hear our names — Jog Senior, Jane Senior, and we mount the stand. . . . 19 B9IL9 Lorraine Antimonik Sylvia Arnold Joyce Aurand Emmerine Avant Betty Lou Axelrod Helene Baginski. Gisela Balzweit Dolores Bartolozzi Anne King Bentley Molly Bergen Elvo Bergstrom Constance Bertha Francine Birk Robert Birmingham Marvin Broaderson Laura Brooks IliS i%:.i:K iijs:4 s..a_ f Jack Browne Girtlee Booze Eleanor Bprowski Lorraine Bosco Valene Brandt Jean Brannon Lois Brodd Dolores Burch Laurence Calloway Winifred Carmody Margaret Covcmaugh Sally Qaffy Virginia Collins Mary Jane Coursey Stanley Crockett June Crusor m m 1%=::: liiiCit f Xi ' = - f iL. J t A Tom Curtin Dolores Dickman Mary Dunne Lois Ellis Joan Dougherty Leo Dillon Dolores Durkin Yvonne English Jean DeBofsky Marian Drebing Betty Easoz Jeanette Faber Phyllis De Simon Patricia Duggan Audrey Eggers Joan Feichtinger m m i%== ij ii A f ju.u vAj- x= - hAu. A Irank Fischer Margaret Fisherkeller Vivienne Fokkens Marilyn Fox luriel Frelk Robert Frank Edwin Galewski Betty Gansinger janette Gamer Lorraine Giambrone Rita Gibbons Rosemary Gleason hirley Gustafson Shirley Hammer Barbara Hackett Jessie Heath SENIOE l ife : l,tiiA f J ' L. . = Jl $ th-i jX Helen Heitman Charlotte Hellerman Estelle Holzer Beverly Horecky Evelyn Hudley Gloria Janousek Avis Jaris Minna Rae Katz Rosemary Kearney Mary Kearney Audrey Keefer Bill Kelly Jack Kirby Regina Koehl Belty Koenig Josephine Komiak SOIDRS ( ==x iii sltic - f A4.M vJu.. . r=, JL SA C juLs 24 Ted Lenart Virginia Levy- Joan Lowry Tommie Lucas Elizabeth Manning arion Manning Ann Memmesheimer Colleen McAnulty Betty Lightfoot Jesse Lyles Marie Marciante Madelaine McAnulty Zjij£k JUuVi Ii =. 0 Jl Thomas McGeoghegan Virginia McKinney William McMullen Marlene Michaelis Janice Michaels Earl Miller Jerome Miller Dolores Minerva Patricia Mitchell Dorothy Mock James Moore Robert Mueller Florence Moro Frances Morrison Helen Munari Robert Murphy m m afe rX 5iJ :4 i f JOuMV Il. . ,.= Jl tPfA C Z A 26 £ a 1 i David Murray Doyle Olander Marge Parker Theresa Plecki Eileen Newell Dolores Nichol Ella Mae Ohman Marianne O ' Meara Carol Palka Cora Parchia Rhoda Ann Pearson Andrew Penn Marion Pertel Maureen Quaid Clare Ouinlan Alice Rakow ijUssJ W JUU vJlJ- .j i==jO -JL SEIIOftS 9 iik Mary Alyce Ransford Eileen Rasofsky Jean Reuther Joan Riley Kathleen Ruane Leonard Rubin Manuel Sanchez Helen Sandors Margaret Reichert Joan Reuter Helen Romanelli Kay Rontos Marie Ryan Robert Ryan Rogette Schlammes Dolores Schmit m m ifecr: lii :4it A_ § JUuU Vij. ■f ji . 2ti juL.3 Ruth Schneider Gail Schurmon Wilma Smith Sally Stifter 31aTice Townsend Alexander Troas Eleanor Urban Salvatore Vallina Mary Siciliano Virginia Smith Barbara Strickland Delphine Szulakiewicz Mary Troy Carol Turner Dolores Wall Robert Walsh m m ife:i5 i ii:4 iSw f Xiu ' y i thA c A 29 Celeste Welsch Joanne Walther Francis Ward Irene Warner Margaret Mary Wood Rita Williams Jane Woelkers Grace WoUenberg Martha Zaharchuk William Woods Rosemarie Wotiska Anne Youstra Gene Gibbons m m rfezriK j a § 4m.m vJi . . .j Jl KA c jJL 30 f W I Nioft mum Marilyn Thorn, President Marifran McNally, Secretary Fran Finn, Treasurer Mary O ' Leary, Student Council Representative J With three years behind and one ahead ... the junior class, first class to compete with graduates of other colleges for a Chicago Certificate . . . and this semester, the first official taste of teaching — some at pre-practice, more at settlement houses . . . beginning to see the unseen rewards . . . but still, a bit more collegiate than career-minded . . . with more time for activities and bridge games . . . and swelling the ranks, the transfer students ... all juniors, sponsoring a fall freshman picnic . . . coming now and then to class meetings . . . and looking ahead, with mixed feelings, to the time when they ' ll be looking back . . . u u = x 5ii it f 4auU vJlj.. .. .= $ fA C z xU. Bertram Abelovitz Joanne Anderson Gloria Bertoio Marian Borgstrom Leslie Abernathy Marvin Azriel Madeline Betker Geraldine Bowman Marge Adams Roberta Aiken Anita Balzweit Jackie Benson Chester Blair Adeline Bland Henry Bronars Eileen Brown m K t Jf . Joan Alferf Norma Bernsoh Don Bober Orpen Bryan ME mice Budish Dorothy Buehler William Bunch Ruth Burgeman Margaret Byrnes son Catalan Marjorie Clowse Gladys Coleman Marilyn Conroy Norma Cooper osemary Crane John Cronin 3ssie Cutt Mary Dalianis _,.,,,, . H i H B u E =:X lii «A_ § JUMVe Aj- .j -JL thAu.C z A Richard Davis Elaine Feldman Fran Finn Rarbara Freeman Casimir Durava Elvira ' Fiascone Mark Frank Dorothy Freeman Barbara Ellis Lola Farley Carol Friedman Patricia Gaughan Ann Gallagher nIktJf Jb dfe rK 5iiL!siti 2 f XtM vAjuu. . m m Raymond Gerlik Rita Giancola Marcia Grasse Helen Groetsema Joan Hefferman Therese Horan Clare Hyland Joan Kellogg Annetta King William Kipnis Betty Kloman Irene Knock Ruth Lawler Joanne Lee Shirley Lee Genevieve Leonard ( :: x t Zima f i4.MVe Ii- == Jl W th-i LC2tz jX Charles Lewis Jeanine Lux Alfred Mate Celeste McDonough Margaret McGregor Patricia McHugh Paula McNicholas Pauline Merbitz Lynn Morgan William Mulligan Mary T. O ' Malley Vincent O ' Neil Jackie Meyers Angela Otis ilORS iArnold Perlin Jack Perlin JMargaret Ratajczak Dan Remahl Avis Perry Grace Roessler Joyce Ovitz Ann Peknik Lydia Poinsett Mary Rohan Grace Parker Bess Perkins Renee Pope Vincent Romano u u =: liisW a m JUM vJi - ' thA A Shirley Satek Florence Shapiro Mary Shea Thomas Solon Eleanore Teske Joan Duane Thomas Charlene Thompson Marilyn Thorn Jean Thompson Robert Van Hoy Fearl Waicosky Betty Walker Martha Weiler Ruth Wesley Virginia Witzman Rosemary Zahn n fflC[R AW Patricia Scotly, President Gerry Wall, Secretary Nancy Rose Mooney, Student Council Representative Mary Shannon, Student Council Representative Not pictured: Dolores Kazek, Vice-President; Pat Ryan, Student Council Representative A huge class, the largest in College history, swelling halls and walls and classrooms . . . promising big things for future enrollments and a big relief for the Elementary teacher shortage . . . adding measurably to C.T.C. size and immeasur- ably to C.T.C. spirit . . . carrying through to this second big year, with a few losses to Uncle Sam in man-ond-woman power . . . remembering, with the rest of the school, the basketball games, the con- ferences before exams, the first tastes of methods . . . and the strange June feeling — ' we ' re half-way through ' . . . Joan Abrahms Daisy Adkins Nancy Aim Jim Bailey Lovinia Baker Carol Bell Vinita Beuschlein Earl Blanchard Bill Borgstrom Mary Burke Mary Anne Byrne Margaret Byrnes Mildred Alvino Clarice Badauki: Yvonne Bertha Gene Bethka Rose Broniarczyk Marge Burke Dan Bystrowski Karen Carlson SOPHOMOfttS T i irK i£4jt .a_ f AtM Vulj . .= -A. $ t ' fA C Z jX Marge Carlson Vlarea Chavis at Comiskey v ary Cunnea MM Claire Carmody Camille Carter Jean Cates Mary Ellen Cawley Doris Coleman Verma Coleman Ruth Colguhoun Doris Collins Velma Cooper Louise Cortiletti John Costello Consuelo Crump Millicent Dahlstrom Eleanor Demovic Frank De Paul Conrad De Paul M AW . M 5ii :4 s..a_ f AtuV Ji .. RES A P l9 .Sv,] Gertrude Dickson Dolores Doody Audrey Dudley Mary Dyra Rita Ewert Lee Fieffer Patricia Fiscella Donna Fox Phyllis Furman Patricia Gary Aretha Gilliom Joe Gleason William Granger Irene Green Anne Higgins Dolores Higgins Maureen Enright Genevieve Friewe; Ruth Gosswein Jack Hillebrand SOPHOMOfttS T i%:=rK li£4 A i l. vJ - . r=- - $ thj LC juL %J Tole Hillman ' ce Howland na James lena Kanter James Hilton Roberta Hodnett Loraine Horslev James Houtsma Myrtle Ivey Gloria Jackson Jeanne Jockheim Joanne Jockheim Erlinga Jorgensen Alice Judica Irene Jurkovic Helen Kalchbrenner Marion Keske Delores Kazek Phyllis Kidd Pauline Kirby SOPHOMitS T i%: r5 ij;sW a_ f 4i4. L vij.. s= - thA c A Elizabeth Kleckner Mitchell Krauszowski Marion Krik Irene Kypros Kathleen Levin Rose Leo Shulamith Lome Jeanette Lundy Georqe Macklin Mary Madden Jerry Kruchten Joan Lillis Louise Kuehn Isabel Lombardc Dll mm T .aferrX 5i£jW A-- $ At l vJj.. PrA C A ■vV ir 1£M Helen Majerzyk Jean Mann Dorothy Marek Pat Martin Anne Maturi Marilyn McDonald Teresa McNichols Ann Merwick Marilyn Miller Elaine Mojzis Marilyn Monroe Nancy Mooney Rosemary Maroney Marian Morris Barbara Mueller Julie Mulvaney Lucille Matczak Donna Meyering Richard Moore Pauline Nodovic AW DU afe=:3 l ij :4i .a % AtM vJlJ.. . .=.=- JL $ tPfA jJL3 u-wi ' i £f kkk Charlene Naser Loretta O ' Neill Tom Plain Marvin Raskin Annie Lee Neil Jean Oswald James Porter Beverly Reneham Aileen O ' Connell Lula Parker Lorraine Posey Marge Riordan Diane Oehlberg Mary Paulson Barbara Price Bette Rivet Marge O ' Grady Warren Pietsch Florence Roguso Deloyce Roan mwmm t i :r5 £4ic A f Jm UV J .. . nnnie Mae Robinson Estelle Rose Lois Rusco )1 Salario J;seph Samples Joan Sering Shea Laura Siewierski Joyce Smith Patricia Ryan Patricia Scotty Helen Shannon Mary Shannon Helen Stringham Marian Szulakiewicz D ( =M ii CiW a f 4i4.M vij mm A Vivian Tamplin Jennelle Templeton Helen Theiss Jim Tracy Ruth Turner Janice Valentine Elsie Vano Robert VanVlierberger LaVerne Viering Irene Wagner Geraldine Wall Morlene ' Wehrle Barny Weinstein Marge Whelan Helen Williams Jean Williams Lois Williams Margaret Willis Mary Woods Loris Zubb AW HW c4 %== li£4r -A_ f i4.U VJlj. fM C2 jX DU Eft John Fewkes, President Robert Korensky, Vice-President Geraldine BrodsJcy, Secretary Barbara Buckley, Student Council Representative Not pictured: Diane diVita, Treasurer; and Err Student Council Representative The little class of P.E. ' s and Home Mech ' s, de- pendably independent about their distinctive status . . . representing the first official sanction of a whole class with mid-year matriculation . . . returning in September, 1950, to their first fall term in C.T.C. . . . and greeting the spring semester with the gala ' Goody-Goody Party, ' complete with songs and spon- sored freshmen, as well as games and promised ' goodies ' . . . and in June, a backward look to things like the first sessions in an elective course and the last and hardest final exam . . . and a forward look to more methods, and the first real chance to ' teach ' . . . Marianne Azumas Dorothea Baxter Arlene Bayk Joan Bozeman Geraldine Brodsky Barbara Buckley Josephine Cannatoco Barbara Carlson Natalie Coci Geraldine De Groc Carmella De Lucia Diane Deutschman Dorothy Drozd Diane Ellis D w := iisW -a f JU- vJij .. = PfA c z jX in Fewlces Jean Gade inifred Gibson Frances Guzior Zoeann Gadwood Catherine Galotta Reginald General Eva Haworth Joan Hudson Betty Johnson Robert Korensky Shirley Kubilius Maura Lacey Theresa Melanowski DJJ (k = liiLW a f 4a.U vij m 1 Michael Jovavich Arlene O ' Donnell Helen Rossa George Michel Louise Schultz Maurine Shain Ellarita Mills Shirley Farrell Jean Spears Dolores Novak Robert Orth Floyd Wyrick Mary M. O ' Connc Barbara Reynolds Virginia Zaleski SOPiMQRfS J Ai% z:K 5i£4e «A_ f j ' y L. .. . JL $ t fA C A ' . ' ' AW Harry Hague, President Eugene Smith, Vice-President Margaret Shannon, Treasurer Not pictured: Barbara Stolks, Secretary; Dorothy Smalf, Charles Sheehan, Student Council Representatives September is for a freshman, green and new ... a little awed by the orderly confusion of registration and the bewildering freedom of mid-day liberty ... a studied casualness for the first visit to a campus spot . . . abandoning newness with the new month, and with the first chartered miles to the Pottowatomi picnic. . . throwing heart and slogans intd a big election campaign, and block members ' bodies into the exclusive splash of the frosh swim meet . . . footloose and square-dancing at the Sock Hop, even under the questionable sword of final exams . . . then roasting an April wienie and planning a May dance . . . and all loo soon ... a sophomore . . . AW i%===5 i jLW Sw m Jm m vIi .. ,= 0 Jl f jI v i jJL i Joyce Adams Irwin Albertine Edward Boumgart Mary Burke Rosita Best Connie Bitel Rosemary Brehm Pat Brdiges Melahrene Amers Shirley Barrish Angela Batteas: Leonard Becker Muriel Bell Evelynne Berg Connie Boudos Suzanne Boyle Stella Brando Alpha Brown June Browning Mary Lou Buck! AW onald Budil Anthony Burke Rita Brogan Noymy Bumstein Dolores Butler ois Jean Butts Dorothy Callahan Charles Carroll James Carroll Albert Cartwright larla Chandler Barbara Chartrand Gerry Charvat Mary Lou Chears Georgine Clancy 3ck Coatar Nedro Collins Florence Cooper Ann Cortilet Rose Cortina I ffttSlO I ifecz:2 f Zie, M Jj MV li- . t=- Jl ' f Jl.. bl jX Zelma Curtis Shirley Daluga Clarice Dcrwkins Mary Doherty Joan Dalton Barbara Davia Dorothy Dawson Jean Dombra Daniel Deacy Marcella Donnell Joan De Lacey Marilyn Dickso; Lois Ann Du Mais Winifred Dunce AW afe:rrK S. L!lst W JUuU Vll . ffttSlEO A fiJu v tl juL.3 ishia Erwin Pat Fink j1 Fomatar Virginia Fritsch Kathleen Flynn June Glickauf Maida Edelstein Shirley Ellis Ruth Edmundson Mary English Mary Flynn Ruth Foley Nancy Glusack Maybelle Gough n AW A === s. zji!ii % j ' ' x . Marion Graham Frances Graves Savoldi Hall Dolores Harder Anna Marie Harris Joan Hash Lucille E. Heaney Leo Hennessy Grace Graves Barbara Green Harry Hague James Hicks Richard Higgins Barbara Hills fttSlEd T ( z: i l ZiiiA f AtU vJl4 .j$ .= JL $ tPfA C A John Hoffman Angeline Hurd Anne Hyland Lois Icnes Loretta Jones Nancy Jones Kay Hynes Carol Jacobson Marianne Jankiewicz Marlene Jarrells Vernita Jarrells Marilyn Johnson Loretta Jozwiak Rosemary Kamba Rtsitn T k ==::X 5i J t O f Xi. ' y SL. .. . -A. f hiLC Z jX Elaine Katzman Barbara Kazimir Betty Kearney Marlene Kendall Koye Kerin Marlon Kerrigan Joan Kingsland Betty Knoth Carol Koch Emeldu Kotarski Regina Kraft Sue Krump Joan Kurowski Edward Laban ifik , hrin ' i irK 5i£4 a_ f 4 4.M vJy . ' f jiu l xL. Zlormen La Bianca Joanne Lake ?lgnes Long Toby Macak hil Manteca Joan Marquardt Mary Massie Yvonne Mc Cabe Sonia Lawrisuk Carolyn Lawson Margaret Leonard Helen Marie Mack Alice Magnusson Nancy Mahoney ffitSlO T hA c zA Barbara McCann Marilyn Mc Cree Pat McFarland Dolores McLemore Doris Mills Harold Moody Mary Moorman Rina Naddio Edward Nicol Beatrice Noer Carol Muehr Delphine Musia Marybeth O ' Brien Rita O ' Donnell AW ife r ii tt W JMuU VIi. ■onald Patterson Lilly Pedroza 3verne Pradd Barb Pegford Dolores Penn Toby Roitzik Edward O ' Farrell Margaret Oker Barbara Page William Parker Joyce Penson Marilyn Plank Jackie Roberts Deloris Rayner AW i i?:r: 5i£4i4 .a f J Virginia Reid Gloria Roberts Chrystal Richardson Margaret Riemer Billie Robinson Ruth Ross Helmer Ringstrom Marlene Rinker Helene Russell Dorothy Ryan Joseph Rybok Janice Samples Angle Scalzo Margaret Schm RtSlO T 4i :r5 5iiLt 2 f JUM VJlJ u. t=, -L W f jJ v bl jX )iana Scott Marilyn Shalin Irlene Sluka Dorothy Small -dargery Stanicky Barbara Stolk ban Sullivan Arnold Teich Mary Schalk Barbara Smith Margaret Shannon Helen Sheehan Gene Smith Evelyn Stoginski fifsitn T (k = l Lii 2 m Jm mV uIj- ..s ,= -X tPfA c z A Marilyn Tindall Joan Toannon Marion Toomey Martha Tragnitz Maryann Tucker Beatrice Turner Roberta Turner Phil Valaika Camilla Vanco Dorothy VandernK Judy Vanek Bob Waddick Barb Wagner Lorraine Wainauskis Mable Walker Mariann Wall Rita Wall Joan V olsh Bama Washington Patricia Watson ' B § AW ( ==::Mf,Z it M l Richard Weeks Pat West Cecilia Williams Elaine Williams Naomi Williams Woelkers Joan Yeschek Ben Yohanan Dolores Zachwieja Had Zoellner The newest of future teachers, with their orienta- tion long completed, and their places firmly establish- ed .. . P.E. ' s and Home Ec ' s, recruited and ready to help fill the need ... a little group, big in inde- pendence . . . with spirited elections and poster- pushed parties . . . discovering the lounges and the campus spots . . . watching with the seniors for the warm days, when the green grass and sunshine make free hours a picnic, and an English class a 30- way outdoor conversation . . . and then June, and the new warm worry of final exams . . . but com- pensated for by a precious semester of seniority. n ife:r:5 itJsiL? - f XtMJyvJU- .=. -L f j1.. 1 A.. vonne Belm anet Dove Muriel Bell Stella Budzi Daphne Hennings Carol Hudson Anne Cakok Dorothy De Pratt Bernice Jackson Yvonne Montgomery Mia O ' Leary Henrietta Pow ell Arlene Riebeou Ruth Walker Barbara Wright icrbara Wyrick Sylvia Smith Heading the Branch. Mr. Raoul Haas. Away from their desks, the Faculty. Standing: Miss Mary C. Powers, Psychology; Mrs. Margaret M. Edwards, Music; Dr. Ellsworth Paris, Jr., Hisitory and Geography; Miss Elizabeth J. Wilson, Library Science; Miss Merle Silver, School Secretary. Seated: Miss Mary A. Cunningham, English: Mr. Raoul R. Haas, Education and English, and Director of School; Miss Violet E. Mau, Art. NOfiif Nick Raino, President Sandra Cagen, Vice-President Bobbie Kovar, Secretary Betty Trojan, Treasurer m September, 1950— a new school, established a Schurz for North side freshmen . . . grown indepen- dent, with a healthy mixture of new-worn traditions and new-bom vitality . . . extra-curricular activities rounding out the day — organizations such as drama club, music appreciation club, glee club — and, for the athletic, two bowling teams . . . with social events, represented by coke parties, teas, and Christ- mas festivities ... all made mellow and meaning- ful by the warm feeling between faculty and stu- dents ... a small student body with its own re- wards. . . . 71 Doris Alfredson John Allan Mary Barbato Brtty Backer Barbara Brandt June Bryerton Anthony Chiapoetti Sandy Cogen Robert Anderson Margaret Balla Jewel Beifuss Lois Berggren Mary Cafferata Marie Cannizzo Mary Joan Cullinan Shelia Cunniff Barbara Bambula Louis Bier Dora Carrera Betty Dorenbos NilHIDEfiftAnCf {k =x ij i? a_ i 4u.M vJj. tPfiL A Marilyn Dudley Rita Eckstedt Carol Franke Gloria Gindes Nicholas Golemis Esther Gordon Yolanda Gulino Elaine Haase Erna Folkenstein Walter Gibula Theodore Gregory Joan Hagen Bart Charlotte Finston Jessica Gronek Dorothy Gilson Jeanne Hogan Barbara Folkers Anthoula Godellas Donna Guerrero Peter Jager mjw s Ai%=K li£4s s..a-. f 4u.uV JlA Em Bobbi Kovar Mary Krul Dorothy Johnson Mary Johnson Mary Jo Korzeniewski Rita Katlarz Faye Kozennczak Joan Kramer Dolores Krandel William Kretz Janet Kulczynski Diane Lewandowski Lloyd Linklater Lucille Lipinsk: NOftlHIDEfiftA =M f Zisa f JU. L viJ ' f j1v jX Doris Loehr Catherine Lucey [ames Lynch Joan Mancusi Lucille Paleczny Mary Palm Nick Roino Denyse Ryan Harold Sarnecki Dianne Schaedel Geraldine Schuyler Carol Seng Ellen Sheehan Lenora Sherman i%==rK litiW ' W X j jo jl hj L A Joan Sindelar Stephanie Stephanoff Alice Strusz Arlene Swierczek Alicia Sylvestri Dorothy Tabor Elizabeth Trojan Roseann Tully Mary Jeanne Walsh Georgeann Ward Ardith Weintraub Annette Werle Verdelle Widegren Wilma Wiktorski Beverly Winthrof Clare Zanatta u i =r2 £4 .A_ f 4 V 77 mt filH U Officers: Betly Trojan, Treasurer; Nick Raino, President; Bobbi Kovar, Secretary; Sondra Cogen, Vice-President. The Girls ' Chorus: Dora Carrera, Dolores Krandel, Rita Kotlarz, Lois Berggren, Carol Franke, Joan Allen, Elizabeth Trojan, Yolanda Gulino, Dorothy Gilson, Anthoula Godellas, Diane Schoedel. Faye Kozemczak, Verdelle Widegren, Mary Barbalo. At the piano, Geraldine Schuyler. Agqiegolion oi Council Members. Sealed: Sheila Cunniff, Joan Allen, Elizabeth Trojan, Maryjo Korzeniewski, Alice Strusz. Second Row: Bobbi Kovar, Marilyn Dudley, Sondra Cogen. Nick Raino. Harold Sarnecki, William Kretz, Robert Anderson. Third How: Carol Franke, Lloyd Linklaler. (Below) Boys ' Chorus: Anthony Chiappetti, William Kretz, Lloyd Linklaler, Robert Anderson, James Lynch, Rudolph Zubb. Back: Peter Jager, Walter Gibula, Harold Sarnecki. At the piano. Nick Raino. ' j S k i Jl T ' Girls ' Bowling Team. Standing: Elizabeth Trojan, Joan Allen, Diane Schaedel, Verdelle Widegren, Joan Sindelor, Mise Powers, Sponsor. Seatedb Mary Barbato, Marie Cannizzo, Maryjo Korzeniewski, Alice Strusz, Alicia Sylvestri. Men ' s Bowling Team. Standing: William Kretz, Lloyd Linklater, Nick Raino, Dr. Paris, Sponsor. Kneeling: Waller Gibula, James Lynch, Harold Sarnecki. A pause in her studies: Lucille Lipinski. ib, Arline Swierczek, Tape recording tor English: Dorii Finston, Beverly Winthrop. Original creations: Ardith Weintrc Gloria Gindes. An expert takes over: Bobbi Kovar, Stephanie Stephanofl, Joan Bolger, Marie Cannizzo, Mary Jean Walsh, Sondra Cogen, Joan KraTno ' EPARIMOIS M n Part ol The Faculty: Seymour Rosofsky, Ruth Dyrud, Henry G. Geilen, chairman Three rooms with varying decor— varying from Greek statues to W. P. A. paintings to the abstracts by Art minors . . . five instructors v ith a common goal— giving to the students of today and tomorrow the exciting tools for realizing artistic expression . . . numberless stu- dents, with ink-smeared hands, elbow-deep cloy, or splotches of paint; numberless others, turning out paper cutouts, gay bordered leaflets, and drawings uncannily naive, done with chalk and gusto on rough paper . . . and then, things like the campus elm, posed patiently for its lollipop portrait . . . and that 69th street corner, the one with the floating sidewalk and the wash line cemented firmly to the sky — all are part of the Art department, C. T. C. Building skyscrapers: June Gliclcauf, Elaine Kotzman More Faculty: Chester Colson, John Emerson Wire-twist-toy! Marilyn Thorn, Fran Finn Playing with puppets: Mary Shannon, Joan Serinq, Irene Green Sketching scenery: members of Mr. Rosolsky ' s class The Bnal touch: Pauline Merbitz, Virginia Witz- man N D Hubcap in the wheel of education, turning diligently for all . . . first ac- quaintance, the survey course — ideas from Dewey, Bagley, Parker, side by side with even newer theories and the reality of trips in the field . . . methods courses, vibrating with educational changes, drumming the messages of Pro- gressivism . . . philosophers dissected, studied, compared, and newer men with new yet ageless ideas — all read, questioned, and sometimes assimilated . . . then the initiation period — pre-practice — confronted with 40 sets of indi- vidual differences; the only shield a unit plan and a waning self-confidence . . . then it ' s over — you pass, you practice, and life becomes a maze to be solved with units, lesson plans, projects ... all problems brought to this door . . . and behind it, sympathetic counselors who check the weather for fledg- ling pilots . . . and after practicing ,the course is charted — solo . . . The Faculty— Marie Tierney, Claran Fulmer, David Kopel, Lucille A. Saeger, Louise V. Holslein. Gorge W. Connelly, Chairman; Dorolhy D. Berg, Louise Tyler, Irwin Widen. Mr. Connelly in conference — a semii group Mr. Widen. Philosophising in Edu tional Philosophy Special News Bulletin Top left — The Faculty, iniormally: Dr. McMillan, Chairman; Jacqueline Krump, Joh Tarburton, Rosemary Murray, student; Elmer Smith, Jim McCarthy, student; Louis Jacobs. Lower picture — The Faculty pose lor an Emblem Picture — standing: George J. Steinei Elmer Smith, John S. Carter, William Card, John Tarburton. Seated: Mary E. Flynn, Louise Jacobs, Jacqueline Krump. Not plcture i Eloise Thetford. r a itplains things to Dr. McMillan A crowded office, steeped in personality, distinctive and always alive ... in one cor- ner, a timid and too-respectful freshman in conference; in another, a bantering senior who has learned how surprisingly approach- able, even friendly, are these Olympian in- dividuals — despite their appalling eloquence . . . the crowded office overflowing into other offices, but lending to them the down-to-earth dignity of the English dept. . . . revealing, enlightening, broadening, adding poise aijd magic in a vital field . . . from the first awa of Communications to the revelation of American Lit. . . . from the amazing re-dis- covery of childhood ' s literary wonderland in Kid Lit. to the earnest and sometimes embar- rassing reviews in Methods . . . and finally, to the special province of Contemporary, Romantic, Shakespeare, all reserved as elec- tives for that courageous and esoteric group, the English minors . . . and little things a few will remember, but mirrored — modified — in the memories of many ... a student ' s hesitant smile in the hall, answered by a spirit-lifting first-name greeting ... a flash of poetic insight, timidly offered, enthusiasti- cally received ... cm unwitting witticism, and its undeserved professorial smile of ap- proval. . . . Tarburlon, Mrs. Ourieff — comparing notes. No madness in Dr. McMillan ' s Method; Frank Fischer, looking sinister; Dolores Dickman, not impressed: Dolores Nichol, Joan Dougherty, David Murray- ID The Faculty — Barbara Wheeler. Ella B. Roark, Gertrude O ' Hagan, Cha Shining stoves and snacks: Robert Or Miss Wheeler, Mary Dyra, Anita Bo ' .r Home Economics — two funcuonal rooms and three functioning teachers, with a small var- iety of useful courses, designed to give a domestic approach to education and an edu- cational approach to domesticity . . . from Nutrition, where vitamins count and calories are counted, with metabolism rates and meal- planning rites ... to Family Life, where child- ren and budgets have to be healthy, and week- ly panels handle weighty problems . . . and for the Home Mechanics minors — from the cooking room with shining stoves and dining surprises, where lab hour is lunch hour and lecture ses- sions make hungry students ... to the sewing room, with humming machines and hemming operations, where the boys have a challenge and a chance, and fabrics and fashions share the spotlight . . . and the little dept. office, where the Home Ec. instructors are at home, and inquiring students find invaluable aid . . . Above — Fashions in fabric: Vdlene Brandt, Dolores Nichol Below — Humminq machlnea: Mary Kearney, Beverly Horechy, Coleen McAnully, Madeline McAnully, Betty Gansinger and Avis Jaris. - i m ID m Industrial Arts — where an instructor must be jack-of-all trades, with the mechanical equivalent of a green thumb . . . where lab work is creative, and new skills con- structive . . . every student, learning practical and excit- ing abilities . . working with ceramics and solder, metal and mimeos, wood and wire, printing and plastics . . . studying tools from awls to augers, and electricity from basement to attic . . . and the Home Mech. minors, probing deeper . . . learning by doing, and doing with ingenuity and assurance . . . and some of the work — jewel-like plastic pieces, colorful ceramics, platters and paper weights, trays and trifles — posing proudly and festively in the gay lab showcase, where finished products ore displayed with pride, and where every passing stu- dent stops to look with wonder . . . and again inside I. A. — the tool room, a triumph of neatly catalogued cubby holes . . . the office and its store-room, with a semingly endless variety of supplies, from sandpaper to sudden inspirations . . . the tiny ceramics room, with mild-look- ing, but deceivingly exotic glazes, and the remarkable potter ' s wheel . . . and the press room, where C.T.C. tickets and programs are often printed with grace and graciousness . . . and the wonderful lab room itself — complete with drills and kilns, jigsaws and big sinks, work tables and working stud ents . . . Industrial Arts . . . At the wheel: Potter David Murray In the runoif: Printer James Hilton In judgment: Insitruclors Coleman Hewitt, Chairman, and Joseph Byrne Expressing approval: Robina Grant, Henry Bronars, Lorraine Antimonek; at the saw, Florence Shapiro Displaying dexterity: Louis Barnes, Ruth Colqu- houn, George Pfeilfer; in background: Pat Russell, Gloria GroUa, Lorraine Antimonek Pressing needs: Charles Lewis, Roberta Turner, Florence Shapiro, Jean Gade, Ray Gerlik, George Pfeiffer, Henry Bronars, Ruth Lawler, Josephine Koniall; behind the bars: Janice Budick The Faculty: Viola Lynch, Shirley Stack, Ellen Olson, Chairman, Dorothy Willy Senior KgP ' s in conference with Miss Lynch u. D niD 92 Kindergarten, first grade, second grade . . . where a teacher must be a musician and magician, artist and athlete, pedagogue and parent ... for these jobs, our KgP faculty helps the future teachers . . . among them, practice-teaching seniors, paid like half-day substitutes . . . many ostensible jun- iors, accelerated summer-school-wise, and now really seniors — due for paid practicing and more late classes . . . and elementary-trained teachers al- ready in the system, now working for KgP certificates ... all busy with reading readiness, paste and psy- chology . . . taking the courses intensively offered by a vigorous faculty . . . and all helping to fill the needs of thousands of post-war tots, crowding the lower grades, crying for a fabulous number of teach- ers to help them start their small careers . . . Natural arrangements: Rosemary Joyce Heifer This discussion is paneled: Joan Kilgalen, Shirley Alter, Dolores Wall, Janice Michaels. Martha Zaharchuk J. The ACE Tea: Rosemary Zahn, Bess Perkins, Therese Horan, Shirley Satek, Leslie Abernalhy, Maria Chavis, Delores Minerva, Audrey Eggers, Yvonne English, Peggy McGregor The Association for Childhood Education International — an imposing name for an imposing organization, with 580 branches and 56,000 members ... the College branch of A.C.E., working with its world-wide cousins to achieve the high purposes of A.C.E.: attaining the education and well-being of children in their various habitats — home, school and community . . . promoting desirable educational programs and practices for nursery, kindergarten and elementary school children . . . raising standards of professional training for teachers and leaders in the field . . . and working to bring members together and keep A.C.E. closely knit in function . . . and the varied A.C.E. activities — attending local, state and national conferences and conventions . . . sponsoring lectures by leading educators for C.T.C. slud3nts . . . and now a tradition in the C.T.C social calendar — A.C.E. ' s Christmas Candle-lighting ceremony, an inspiring annual ritual . . . the Spring Tea, held yearly and graciously at the home of Miss Willy, the faculty spon- sor . . . and the always successful May breakfast, a warm get- together ... all helping to create the important social by-prod- ucts of professional fellowship . . . ACE oUicers — top to bottom: Rosemary Wotiska, Rosemary Zahn, Virginia Walsh, Shirley Satik, Annella King Mmscio Library Science ... a field newly named but truly important ... all C.T.C. freshmen acquiring new and amazingly helpful tools for effective use of limitless library resources . . . and the Library Science minors, trained to bring the l ibrary into the classroom . . . with a wide knowledge of new literature and old, for young interests and needs . . . seing, sampling and digesting hundreds of books of all varieties in each library sicence course . . . and carrying dozens of them home, armload after weary armload . . . but finding in them magic doors to childhood ' s enthusiasm, and magic keys to effective moti- vation . . . holding classes in a new room made of two rooms, with roomy cabinets for books and book jackets, and light wood desks for teachers and future teach- ers ... and in the room, too, on special days — the youngest students, accelerated readers from Parker Ele- mentary, giving needed experience to junior teachers . . . and the faculty — giving inspiration and willing in- struction . . . helping library work to grow in fame and function — from Bus ' s Subject Index to consistent counsel in every class . . . The racuhy— Eloise Rue, Chairman: Frnz Veil. Elizabeth J. Wils Mary Beth Moran and Mary O ' Leary, with Miss Rue in the background, and accelerated readers in front. The Faculty: Joseph Urbancek, Chairman; Jerome Sachs, William Coyne n Calculating Calculus: Roessler Top: Abaci claiiniiiq ottenUon; Fran Finn, Irene Kelly, Mr. Urbancek, Mary Kearney, Mary O ' Leary, Vinita Bushlein, Elvira Fiascone Mathematics — the foundation of the sciences, the base of modern civilizaticfti . . . personified in C.T.C. by the Math dept., home of the logical-minded ... for some, a struggle through higher math — trig, calculus, analytical geometry . . . for all, math of measurement — the ancient and recent history of the age-old problems of counting and calculating . . . and math methods, using simple examples and teaching aids, with pie plates for fractions . . . the math faculty, with sympathetic suggestions, and helpful hints, cheerfully given . . . units, courses of study, areas of learning, mimeographed aids — all lodged in filing cabinets, all free for student use . . . and the math club. Kappa Mu Epsilon, an honorary society for math minors . . . where numbers are amazing and amusing, en- lightening and entertaining . . . and meeting members make plans for special events, like speakers, banquets and parties, and the officers ' trip to a Missouri Math Convention ... all adding interest to experience and good fun to good learn- ing . . . BoHom, Methods in point: Pat McHugh, Mr. Urbancfk, Don Nuzzo, Gloria Berloia, Marilyn Thorn 96 K.M.E. members, first row: Dr. Jerome Sache, spon- sor; Genevieve Leonard, Marie Marciante, Helen Groetsema, Jean DeBofsky, Mr. Urbancek; Second row: Gladys Coleman, Betty Kloman, Carol Palka. Manuel Sanchez; Third row: Delphine Szulakiewicz. Joyce Aurand, Virginia McKinney, Pat Mitchell; Fotirth row: Helen Farazis, Grace Roessler, Regina Koehl, Margaret Mary Woods, Frank Ward; Fiilh row: Alyce Rakow, Phyllis De Simone, William Woods, Mr. William Coyne. K. M. E. I Gen Lois Rusco, Anne Higgins, Leonard, Renee Pope, Carol Palka K.M.E. oiiicers. Standinq: Helen Groetsema, Gen- ieve Leonard; Sealed: Gladys Coleman Dr. Sachs, Betty Klomarr m.[. I The Music Dept. . . . with an enthusiastic and energetic faculty, working in classes and after class- es to encourage musical growth ... in Methods, where practice in sight-singing and rote-singing makes right singing ... in Appreciation, where each class hour is a concert hour ... in the special realms of the music minors — Harmony, History, Ear- training . . . and in the extra-curricular activities choir, with daily rehearsels, directed this fall by Miss Tahney, this spring by Mr. Simutis, and heard with pleasure through most of the building . . . with an annual Christmas program, inspiringly sung in the auditorium, and overflowing into carol -singing through the halls and into the foyer, around the tra- ditional Tree . . . with the gay and twice-annual choir brunch, brightening mid-semester mornings . . . and the newly-revived Spring Concert, with well-seasoned and seasonal sounds, given for a day- time and an evening public . . . Phi Alpha, where monthly meetings feature recorded music programs, and an annual recital helps bring C.T.C. talent to light . . . and the C.T.C. — Wilson orchestra, which plays a big part in programs like the ones at Christ- mas, Pan-American time and pep-assembly time . . The Faculty: Sylvan D. Ward, Elizabeth G. Hennessey, Catherine N. Taheny, Chairman; Leonard Simutis Bottom: The C.T.C. choir in assembly Phi Alpha assembled The College String Quartet: vio- lin, Sylvan D. Ward; cello, Dieter Kober: viola, Paul Carlson; violin, Ernest Liden. In Hannony, Seated: Maria Chavis, Pat Bourke; Standing: Blanche Kirch, Mary Woods Chamber Music: Mary Lou Chears, Vivian Tamphn. Sonio Lawrisuk, Mary Woods n n You can tell them by their manner By their muscles and such, You can tell a P.E. minor But you cannot tell him much! The P.E. dept., promoting well-rounded develop- ment in curriculum and muscles . . . appearing tc all Frosh and Sophs in the form of children ' s games and dancing, in badminton, tennis or the cold splash of swimming ... to Juniors in First Aid and Health . . . and to the P.E. minors, in all these plus a val- uable background of Science courses like Anatomy, Physiology and the formidable Kinaesiology, and in the strenuous gym electives,- all helping to give the future gym teacher an insight into all phases of phys- ical training . . . the P.E. dept., pointing with pride to the outstanding coaghes and instructors in Chicago elementary and high schools . . . and promising to turn out more of the same in the classes to come . . . The unproiessional touch: lames Lilek, Maur L cey. Jion Eczemcin, Joyce Howland Waiting their turns to test and rest: William Bunch, Ed Walsh, Tom McGeohagen The Faculty: George Boyle, Joseph Kripner, Chairman; Louise Robinson, Louise Christiansen, Ursula Maethner, Gertrude Byrne Where square dancing goes round How high the hancsland: Betty Koenig Crawling over the waves: a Soph srwim cla; The Squirrel Cage t:m. The Spring Board. Standing: Doris Neuby, Virginia Zaleski, Joyce Howland, Jean Osiwald, Lorraine Waunaiskis, Joan Marquardt, Ruth Edmonds, Annetta King; Sealed: Dolores Zachwieja, Louise Schullz, Lois Rusco, Florence Moro, Marian Kerrigan, Carol Koch, Arlene Podewell Some of the Fall Board: Irene Jurkovich, Gloria Berioia. Belly Kloman, Barbara M ' -Cann, Ruth Edmondson Hail to the victors valiant . . MA A Champs oi 1951 The Junior Class Football Champs: L. to R. Vince Romano, Bill Mulligan, Tom Solon, Al Matz, Dan Remahl, Dick Davis, Howie Freedman With the great increase in the number of men on campus, the Men ' s Athletic Association, founded two years ago, was able to sponsor intra-mural tournaments in wrestling, table ten- nis, basketball, track, football and softball. Much of the credit for the success of the organ- ization is due to the members themselves, for all M.A.A. events are student-planned, student- coached and student-organized. Grunt ' n Groan Champs: 135 lb. class — Jack Browne 145 lb. class — Tom Solon The W.A.A., a much older organization, sponsors sports activities for the girls at C.T.C. Represented are volleyball, tennis and table tennis, swimming, bowling and square dancing. One of the most successful projects was the baseball team, which ended its fun-filled season with a ' varsity-alumni ' game, which ended in an alumni victory and a party. The Basketeers Trophy Winners: L. to R. Pat Hague. Ed OTarrell Ben Reilley, Ron Budil; Front: Leo Hennessy, Capl. 103 tramural Basketball D D Faculty: Clarence Gilford, Sol Eilert, Edvin Byre, Chairman. A small department with a big job — for three instruc- tors, whose duties cover classroom teaching, with topics varying from self-delusion to standard deviation, from study habits to schizophrenics . . . with special tools, varying from the Inkblot Test to the strange headgear for cephalic-index measurement ... in the tiny office, the faculty — meeting every student in conference, with the often surprising results of the Personality-Adjustment Test . . . available always for sympathetic consultation . . . and the psychology club — Psi Chi Phi, formed for the select group of psych minors, and others especially inter- ested in the more complicated ' whys ' and ' wherefores ' of psychology . . . with scheduled meetings and unsched- uled experiments . . . with special lectures and extra- special speakers . . . with visits to State Mental Hospitals — Kankakee, Elgin, Manteno . . . and the Psi Chi Phi Banquet, rounding out the season, where social tenden- cies take precedence ... all of this, psychology . . . How fast can you tap? — Dorothy Drozd, Floyd ' .Vyrick. Dr. Gifford n The Depl. Chairman — Earl E. Sherff The Faculty: Dorothy V. Phipps, Herbert Lamp, James M. Sanders, Edward C. Colin From the greenhouse to the cat lab . . . covering a wide area in square feet as well as in the field of science — with due emphasis on the three natural kingdoms . . . and with a kaleidoscopic array of remembered impressions ... the little green triumphs of botany ... the first friendly introduction to a skeleton ... the curious satisfaction in growing the most foul and bushy mold culture ... the surprisingly lively field Jrips— bird walks and tree talks . . . piled-up paraphernalia for Science methods — stuffed birds and fish, slides and rock specimens, designed to channel junior interest to nature . . . and cat anatomy, with P.E. ' s familiar to the point of the nicknamed cadaver, and un- suspecting Kg.P. ' s, who may innocently open a ' cat ' drawer . . . the obliging atoms, who sit for compounded portraits in Phy. Sci. . . . and a fascinating vicanous trip to Africa via slides and lecture by a faculty world traveler. . . . 106 1 %.3 i P ' Isi Methods celestial and teneslrial — lack Kohler, Vir- ginia Collins, Marion Pertel, Robert Kirkpatrick Growing ability These cats are cool — Bebop and Sadness with Dan Bystrowski, Mottie Green, Joan Hudson, Mike Jovovich 107 The Social Science Dept. . . . spanning eras and areas with equal ease . . . giving to future teachers the magic formulae to make the heroes of history, the journeys in geography alive and interesting . . . each instructor, a specialist ... in geography, where maps have meaning, and where everyone has been to Tibet ... in World history, where Babel is real and today ' s news is news ... in American history, where the Indians are first, and people and ideas come before dates ... in Economic Geography, where the Eskimos chew hides and the rich get richer ... in Community stud- ies, where the field is explored by trips and teaching . . . and after the curriculum, the club . . . one of the oldest at C.T.C., ushering in April in the Pan-American way with exhibits and an atmospheric assembly . . . sponsoring lectures on subjects like Cuban economics and post-war Japan . . . sponsored by Dr. Branom, also guiding spirit behind the inspiring, in-sea- son Social Science bulletin board . . . Ths sixth stale — Carmen La Bianca, Gloria Jackson, Philip Marescljn Sighting a specimen — Joanne BuKin, Dr. Branom, Angeline Hurd, Noami Burstein, Charles Johnson, Georgene Clancy Officiating — Maureen Ouaid, Jim ' . Moore, Barbara Hackett The So Sci Club — A casual sessi The Faculty Standing: Vernon Brockman, Charles Monroe, Joseph Chada.- Seated: Henrietta Fernitz, Fred K. Branoin, chair- s n n Faculty member, Verna Outieff, student Arlene Bayuk, and unidentified pleasan- try Part time Faculty member Romola Hicks and business Protege of the more extensive English dept., a smaller one, large in function . . . located in a friendly office, containing principally a busy wire-recorder, a cupboard filled with props, chairs for nervous speakers, and two speech teachers with desks ... an unambiguous arrow, strategically placed outside the door to the well-hidden room, helpfully announcing ' SPEECH APPOINTMENTS ' . . . here, those new to CTC learn with astonishment of un- noticed lisps and fuzzy enunciation . . . follow- ing the revelation, correction closes marked by a pattern of self-conscious reading aloud, ses- sions with the cruelly candid recorder, home- work of endless lists of words to repeat — and finally, the good speach and release. . . . 110 PI.JL L ■- ]B -r 4 1 n n L J J L 1L - Andy Penn, President Marian Pertel, Secretary Dolores Wall, Ti Student Council casual — Row 1: Marilyn Thorn, Mary Therese O ' Malley, Miss Lucille Saeger, Faculty Sponsor, Marion Pertel, Dolores Wall Row 2: Pat Scotty, Patricia Duggan, Mary Shannon, Jackie Meyers, Mary O ' Leary, Dorothy Small; Row 3: Andy Penn, Charles Sheehan, Bob Murphy, William Kelly, Celeste Walsh With grease-paint and set-painting, pub- licity schemes and promoting sales, stage presence and stage props . . . T. W. presents its two yearly productions . . . this season, two wonderful and widely-differing women, My Sister Eileen and The Heiress, successfully sharing annual honors . . . also theatre parties, to commercial and college plays, and ban- quets and assembly skits ... all planned in the scheduled meetings and the sponsorial mind to expose interested Workshoppers to all possible phases of that fascinating and yet functional field . . . drama . . . Top left W.nna Roe Kalz and Marie Marciante— costumed period. Center lelt — Dan Remahl giving the air to Lois Butler and Peggy Keevers-My Sister Eileen ' Bottom left— Ovation for Mrs. Ourieff— after ' The Heiress ' Top right — Making up — ' My Sister Eileen ' Bottom right — The cas.t and crew — ' My Sister Eileen ' Top — Wyn Carmody and E. E. Gibbons — tenderly Heiressing. Center left — The heiress omd suitor — Joni Evans and Ed Walsh Center right — Dolores Butler — Matronly approval; Marylou Buckley — maidly efiiciently; Joni, Ed — madly in love Bottom left — Ed, Joni, and Formidable Frank Dalton 113 Bottom right — T. W. — a congregation — iront row — Milton Mayer, Jack Hillebrand, Mike Jovovich, Deanor Borowski, Mario Marciante, Muriel Frelk, Arlene Bayuk, Mrs. Ourieff, Wynn Carmody; back row — Marv Raskin, Manuel Sanchez, Tom Solon, Dan Remahl, Paul Ernst, Howard Denton, Dick Davisi, Gene Smith, AUce Rakow. Mrs. Dorothy Berg, Co-ordinator of Teacher Recruitment .A Sponsored by Miss Marie Tierney, C.T.C. s Future Teachers of America club finishes its third year of active professional programs . . . with a functioning member- ship of 151, and 40 members at the Northside Branch . . . with advantages including junior membership in the National Education Association and the Illinois Education Association, plus subscriptions to their journals . . . and opportunities to participate in the professional activities of the club . . . activities like the big Spring Teacher Re- cruitment , Program, in which an organized committee of student speakers addresses groups of high school seniors about teaching advantages and opportunities, aided by Mrs. Dorothy Berg, the College Co-ordinator of Teacher Recruitment ... a climax to the program, the May Open House, with C.T.C. dept. exhibits and displays open to high school observance ... a Student Teacher panel discussion ... a Mystery Package sale in the Foyer . . . and a Coed Lounge Square Dance, professionally called and generally enjoyed . . . High School Seniors — Open House Guests FTA casual — Rose Leo, Andy Penn, Marion Pertel, Mary Therese O ' MoUey, Miss Lucille Saeger Ted Lenart interviews a prospective CTC student The Exhibit — Gertrude Dickson and Joan Sering D Fellowship — doing charitable work for many seasons and many groups, with the support of auto- matic all-school membership . . . aiding Chicago ' s needy children and C.T.C. ' s needy students . . . collecting toys for merrier Christmases and eggs for happier Easters . . . welcoming freshmen with a warm-hearted social . . . extending festivities to the Parkway Settlement party, and monetary aid to or- ganizations like Kiwanis, Red Cross and the Cancer fund . . . raising deserved dollars by sponsoring bake sales, flower sales and social events — teas, Christmas parties and square dances . . . uphold- ing vigorously and consistently a chartered tradition — support of all school events . . . and crowning the semester ' s unselfish ac tivities, a Fellowship banquet, where active. members, present and previous, gather to enjoy mutual and immediate personal fellowship . . . and the social company of Miss Saeger, Fellow- ship ' s busy faculty sponsor. . . . ■m Fellowship officers — Mary Therese O ' Malley, TheresiB McNicholas. Nympha Maturi, Lorraine Posey, Gloria Bertoia Marion Perfel, Andy Penn, Dolores Wall — fellow- ship business Fellowship Bake sale in progress 115 - 1 ■J V ■n Activities Workshop ... an ambitious un- dertaking, sponsored by Student Council . . . with a twice-annual purpose — co-ordinating the school activity calendar to avoid organizational conflicts . . . with meetings before the begin- ning of the semester, where officers of every group meet together and dates of all semester meetings and activities are planned ... all of this, a so-far successful venture . . . shown by the issuance of the official Tentative Calendar of Activities for the Forthcoming Semester . . . Parent-Teacher-Student Association ... a vigorous organization, its most important phase — education of the parent to promote better understanding of teachers and of school aims, and a development of public opinion that will benefit young people and bring the home and the school into closer relation- ship ... the theme of this year ' s PTSA program — Examining the Values of a College Education — carried out in various phases during the panels and lec- tures at the monthly meetings, which also featured opportunities for exhibition of C.T.a and Wilson talent ... in November of 1950, the PTSA ' s backing of the Gateway Amendrrent to the State Cons titution, continuing its tradition of promoting interes) in civic affairs . . . and finally, the enthusiastic moral and financial support given to students and student activities by PTSA mem- bers, as well as the energetic example of board members, working in adult education programs, such as Human Relations and Civil Defense . . . D y m CROSS Red Cross ... a flash of gay dresses, high heels, earrings, on cheer- ful charmers, going to Great Lakes to entertain the boys in the hospital . . . cakes, cookies, candy, donations, ' fund- raising bake sales, for the National Red Cross Fund Drive . . . freely admitted workers, dressed in aprons and caps, collecting donations from pleasure seek- ers at polo games, ice-shows, roller derbies . . . and all students, going to First Aid classes in 5A — triangle band- ages, sterile compresses, six man lift — receiving for their pains and treatment of pains, an impressive certificate . . . The ladder of success — Ther Francine Birk, Minna Rae Katz Lorraine Giambrone, Left to Right — Joyce Ovitz. Mary Dalianis Ruth Biirgeman, Morion Krik, Gloria Bertoia Pat Gory, Marge Whelon, Millicent Dahlstrom Pot Thovis. Athletic Director, basketball coach, Physical ed- ucation instructor, and an outstanding sports personage, George W. Boyle Talking over team possibilities are guard Ed OTarrell and assistant coach Gene Gibbons The Colonels One-Two Punch Jim Tracy and Jack Hillebrand Typical of the games won by the Colonels was the 72 to 58 victory over Elmhurst College in the first home game of the season. The highly rated Panth- ers, led by high-scoring Bob Seller, were never ahead after the fast-breaking juggernaut of the Colonels rolled up an early lead and maintained a near 20- point margin throughout the remainder of the game. Forward Helmer Ringstrom led the scoring for the Tutors with 20 points while center Jim Tracy con- tributed 14 tallies. It was teamwork that won for the Colonels in this game and in later games. Guards Chuck Sheehan and Jack Hillebrand, ably assisted by reserve Don Sparks, soon developed an uncanny accuracy with their set shot. Sparks was equally effective on the drive-ins that never netted him less than five baskets a game. The backboards were controlled by forwards Marty McGrath and Helmer Ringstrom who succeeded in gaining a high percent- age of rebounds which turned into sparks that ig- nited the dynamite fast-break of the Green and White. Many long hours of practice put the Colonels into top-notch playing form; many locker-room ' skull ' practices and pep talks by Coach Boyle put the Colonels in a fighting spirit; and an ever increasing number of spectators gave C.T.C. one of its greatest basketball seasons. 118 CHICAGO TEACHERS COLLEGE Outstanding Player One of the highlights of the year ' s Homecoming celebration was the pre- sentation of the Most Valuable Player Trophy to Colonel center Jim Tracy. Tracy broke four records with his scor- ing prowess and is here shown receiv- ing the trophy from alumnus Marty Gray of the ' 47-48 Colonels, the captain of the Alumni team and the recipient of last year ' s award. Frosh Basketball For the first time in the history of the school, C.T.C. had an inter- school Freshman Bas- ketball team. Coached by Gene Gibbons, the Freshmen provided a training ground for fu- ture Varsity members. The Little Colonels held contests with such schools as Loyola, Elm- hurst and the C.T.C. North Side Branch. The success of this year ' s squad may guarantee a continued schedule of games for this newest of all C.T.C. activities. BASKETBALL SCHEDULE 1950-1951 S,,,„,„h„ ,, Whc.icm A..V N. lomh r J 1 — l.nob l .-,crnher 5 — Iil;. ,.M Tc:!. l ,c.-ml.cr 8 — llimui. (N.vv ' l ,ccn.hrr SI — tur.la . IKo-mhrr 14 - 1 !i„ivir.i IVo-mbrr It. ' , ■■■' ' u z ' r T i uZ ' , ' 2Z ,!- ' ! ' ;::: 1:;;:::; i. iz l-.-hr„.,rv 9- F lr,,-,,, r Away Vcbn, r« n-llli„„i, T„h Home Rbr„„y 20-DcK.lh _ . Hnmt lebru.ry Zl - Alumni (Hom.-comins) _ . Hume Februan- 22 - Gcr r W.llUm. Home ALL HOME GAMCS V III. litOIS AT .j; ,..,„. G ' m ' l lc l s nf iIk CTC ALUMNI ASSOCIATION ,„„ , „, MENS ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Colonels Li kGeo,,e Willia. 7 m :?:l!L o SA s r S c r- P i Ws % .-lit , « ■■• ' = c CHUCK SHEEHAN MARTY MCGRATH JIM TRACY We ' ve got the team, and we ' ve got the So fight on, to VICTORY! —The Colonels of 1950-51 DON SPARKS JACK HILLENBRAND HELMER RINGSTROM A TEAM IS AS GOOD AS ITS SUBSTITUTES . . . C.T.C. ESTABLISHED RECORDS BY ' 50-51 COLONELS Highest number of points scorea by a team in a season — 1203 points in 18 games. Highest number of points scored by a team in a single game — 88 points — against Eureka. Highest number of points scored by a single player in a season — 291 points by Jim Tracy. Highest number of points scored by a player in a single game — 32 points by Jim Tracy. stand together fight side by side, John Costello, Phil Valaika, Joe Anderson Just watch our colors fly, Norbert Smolinski, Ed Nicol, Ben Yohanan, Milt Mayer Sol Salario, Ed OTorrell not pictured With only four lettermen back from last year ' s team, Coach George W. Boyle had to re-organize his Teacher ' s College basketball team to meet one of the toughest schedules that a Colonel five has had to face in recent years. With returning veterans Jack Hillebrand and Jim Tracy as a nucleus, the starting team was rounded out by All-City players Helmer Ringstrom, Marty McGrath and Chuck Sheehan. The Colonels began the season with little success, drop- ping their first two games to Wheoton College and Loyola University. From then on the Teachers went on a rampage to win 13 of their next 16 games. This was the season for smashing records, as the Green and White Quintet broke seven of C.T.C. ' c establish- ed records. What is even more heartening is the fact that the C.T.C. team of ' 50- ' 51 was composed of all Frosh and Sophs with only one Junior in the group. With the entire squad due to report back next Sep- tember, predictions have it that next season ' s Colon- els will be one of the outstanding teams in the Middle West. 122 Xt. el 1 4 v-t ' r|| lUgM k 9. B M Sj ii X l g 1 fl 1 Ml y-1 L 1 w 4 H l wt ' ' u r V 55J V, i The Victory C of the 1951 Baseball Colonels Top row: Bob DiMuzio, Ron Budil. Zeke Bororian, Ben Yohanan, AI Matz, Dan Brystrowski, Helmer Ringstrom Center: Bob Mueller Bottom row: John Fewkes, lack Browne, Ralph Bunche, Kavork Boghosian, Bob Kerensky, Phil Valaika, Leo Hennessy Led by team captain Bob Mueller, the Col- onels started off the season with two victories in practice games against the Illinois Junior College Conference champs, and continued to win two of their next four games. The Tutors were hampered early in the season by bad weather, which curtailed practice, and caused the Boylemen to cancel a number of scheduled games, but the Green and White spirit was un- affected and came through with flying colors as pitcher Jim Lilek earned himself and his team a niche in C.T.C. ' s Hall of Fame by hurl- ing a no-hitter against Elmhurst College. This feat was the first of its kind in Teacher ' s College history. The Colonels turned in superlative de- fense exhibitions throughout the season, but were hindered by a scarcity of base hits. With five lettermen returning next season. Coach George Boyle expects to better this year ' s .500 average. Dolores Wall — the College Queen umm Homecoming — a gala affair beginning at 6 P.M. and officially ending at midnight, but representing weeks of preparation and pub- licity before, and months of memories after . . . from the first glimpse of the decorations, red-white-and-blue with their George Washing- ton motif ... to the festive feast of dinner, where friendliness was the keynote . . . the excitement in the gym, with the alumni-varsity game, which yielded the expected Colonel vic- tory ... the thrilling sight of the Homecoming Queen ' s coronation, with throne and officially- placed diadem . . . the successful mixture of hilarity and nostalgia, for patrons of booths and exhibits . . . and the final success of the Home- coming Dance ... all accomplished by will- ing work, with alumni-student-faculty cooper- ation, and the special co-ordinating job done by Maureen Quaid, Homecoming Committee chairman . . . Well, Well— George and Martha! William Coyne and Peggy Pfordresher The crowned Queen and part of her Court Erna Falkenstein, § Outscored but never outfought— THE ALUMNI BASKET- BALL TEAM 1st row: Joe Tadelman, Floyd lacobson, Joe Podraza, Martv Gray, Dick Excell 2nd row; Spin Salario, Semen Peltz, Don Taylo Dillon, Coach Henry Smidl. 3rd row: Morion Sczwcek, Gus Jones D Tempo — pulsation of the campus . . . beating a deadline every two weeks . . . galleys, copies, inserts, ads, requisitions — all piled up to frustrate the ever-patient janitor, who shuts one eye on deadline day . . . the roar of the presses equalled by the roar of the editor when copy errors are found . . . banquets, parties, and a never-end- ing supply line to the local malt shop . . . confidential columns, written by an unidentified student whose victims thinly disguise their glee and identities . . . news stories and feature articles telescoped to fit space ... the bi- weekly search for an ' interesting person on campus, ' with the not-too-great problem of variety ... the Tempo office, official and unofficial home for all good staff mem- bers, gathering to discuss everything from Tempo to teach- ing . . . editorial boards, sounding boards for news . . ' . divided, united, always revising . . . Tempo . . . Concentrating on layout — Eleanore Borowski, Virginia Levy The Big Staff — Front Row: Marie Marciante, Eileen Rasofsky, Eleanore Borowski, Virginia Back Row: Dolores Durkin, Stan Crockett, Betty Manning, Albert Cartwrighl, Emmerine Avant, Barbara Strickland, Ted Lenort Marie Marciante, Spring Edi- tor; Ted Lenart, Fall Editor; Eileen Rasofsky, Fall Manag- ing Editor; Jackie Meyers, Spring Managing Editor; Shir- ley Satek, Spring News Editor; Howard Denton, Staff Photo- grapher. Right: John Carter, Faculty Sponsor This Picture was not posed— Left to right: Minna Rae Katz, Eugene Gibbons, the back of Irene Jurkovic ' s head, Shirley Satek, Betty Manning, Eileen Rasofsky, Virginia Levy Two Tempo fans: Marie Marcianle, Jackie Meyers, and bulletin board Rose Leo, Dr. Carter, Marie Marcianle and copy in question t l r gL Wf ' V _Jr Miss Mary E. Flynn, Faculty Sponsor Emblem, annual documentary of the year ' s projects, pro- gress and people . . . this year, the Christmas party, attended and enjoyed by staff and quota-filling subscribers ... the periodic flood of Emblem posters, complete with suspense . . . the last minute near tragedy of the lost layout — an unsolved mystery ... the long-suffering men students who had to rise to the smoky treble of the women ' s lounge during the pho- tographer ' s long run ... the gradually diminishing staff, and meetings held for the perennially and sporadically faithful few ... the conscientious janitor, at first dubious of the legit- imacy of the late-working staff, but permanently convinced and beamingly cooperative when the camera pointed his way .... the patient perambulating photographer, lugging equipment from dome to engine room for casuals, with a new assistant every hour . . . the after-schoool paste-up sessions in a music room, accompanied by a passing pianist . . . the urgent, mad dash for copy ,and then painful Procrustean editing . . . and Tempo, graciously offering office space and advice which were gratefully used . . . the assistance of vctrious cooperative faculty members in various capacities . . . and the utter in- debtedness of all Emblem workers and readers to the invalu- able and tireless guidance of Emblem ' s versatile sponsor, Miss Flynn . . . Muriel Frelk, Managing Edi Howard Denton, Photographer ]30 Business Emblem staff members — Charlene Naser, Pauline Kirby, Barbara Mueller, Alyce Rakow, Jerome Miller, Gene Gibbons, Sports Editor, Shulamith Lome, Annie Lee Neal, Nancy Aim, Floyd- Wyrick, Carole Hillman, Joan Sering, Janet Samples. Seated — Wyn Carmody Muriel Frelk, Miss. Flynn — with paste and print Staff Members Not Pictured . . . Joan Alfers, Norma Bernsohn, Arlene Bayuk, Albert Cartwright, Howtird Denton, Winifred Duncan, Maida Edelstein, Shirley Ellis, Lola Jean Farley, Jean Gade, Rita Giancola, Gloria Jackson, Irene Jurkovic, Phyllis Kidd, Lucille Matczak, Rina Naddeo, Avis Perry, Toby Raitzik, Vivian Tomplin, Robert Ward. Special Thanks To . . . Mr. Sylvan Ward — for the School Songs page; to members of the Tempo Staff; and to Jim Moore, Betty Gansinger, Maureen Quaid, Rose- mary Murray, Pat Maher, Peggy Hoggat, Mary Alice Ransford, Alyce Rakow, Patricia Mitchell, Jim Porter, Peggy McGregor, Paul Ernst, Heliobas Hart — for help . . . Pauline Kirby, Charlene Naser — with big plans Dina Zouras. Pauline Merbi pasted layout n — with a sticky probk HATS OFF TO THEE! Hats Off to Thee has been used as a sound off number in C.T.C. since 1938 when Mary Catherine Brennan was enrolled in one of the music classes. Miss Brennan was always full of pep and ready and anxious to do more than her part in the extra activities demanded in the music department. To turn up with just the right song at the right time was typical of hei enthusiasm and interest in the school. Shortly after she completed her studies at C.T.C. she enter- ed the Novitiate of the Sisters of St. Dominis at Adrian, Mich- igan. After several years of additional training she was sent to Dominican High School in Detroit where she now teaches piano, organ and choral music. Extra study at the University of Michigan has rewarded her with a Master of Music Degree in Piano. This little school song was just a start in the field of composition. Her music pen has since turned out two Ave Marias, a Hymn to St. Dominic, a Welcome Song and several school songs. Hats off to you. Sister Gertrude, O.P. C. T. C. HGHT SONG! Come on and fight on to glory! That is exactly what James Sedlack did in World War II. One of his missions was a raid on the Romanian oil fields where his plane was shot down. He was reported missing for several months but finally turned up as a prisoner of war. He escaped from prison camp and found his way back to England. When he returned to the States he entered C.T.C. and completed his course for a Bachelor degree with a minor in music. Further study at the American Con- servatory has earned for him a Bachelor of Music with a major in instrumental music. Before his graduation from C.T.C. Mr. Sedlack composed the C.T.C. Fight Song. His words and music, as well as the complete orchestration, made a terrific hit on first performance. Since then the music has continued to enliven many assembly programs and pep rallies. Another of his compositions, Im- pressions for Orchestra, was played in public by the Wilson Festival Orchestra. Mr. Sedlack made an excellent record in his singing and demonstration classes. In one of his practice schools he produced exceptionally good choral music along with a fife and drum corps. At the present he is playing trumpet with the Atlanta Sym- phony under the direction of Henry Sopkin. He is also an in- strumental teacher in one of the high schools in Atlanta. He plans on receiving his Master of Music degree from North- western this summer. SOIOft DIfttCIORY Alexander. Troas 1 4519 S. Champlain. WA Aher, Shirley 344 S. Keeler, SA Arnold, Sylvania 4312 N. Bernard, JU Aurand, Joyce H 5710 S. Albany, RE Avant, Emmerine 47 W. Garfield, NO Axelrod, Betty Jean 6602 S. Riehmond, PR Baginski, Helens D 5058 N. Mango, MU Bclzweit, Gisela 8444 S. Elizabeth, ST Bartolozzi, Dolores 2250 W. Cermak, FR Bentley. Anne 3009 E. 80th PI. Bergen, Molly : 638 W. Arlington PL, DI Bergslrom, Elva L 5717 W. Race, AU Bertha, Constance M 505 E. 33rd, CA Birk, Francine 1229 Cornelia, BU Birmingham, Robert J 7351 S. Dorchester, MI Booze, Girtlee Ramey 5924 S. Lafayette, NO Borowski, Eleanore A 1740 W. Augusta, EV Bosco, Lorraine M 6623 S. Karlov, PO Brandt, Valene M 7710 S. Normal, CE Brannon, Jean M 4728 Evans, KE Brodd, Lois Marie 900 N. Lawler, AU Brooks, Laura Louise 6603 S. State, WE Browne, John F 146 W. 70th St., HU Burch, Dolores 6119 St. Lawrence, MI Calloway, Lawrence 5234 S. Dearborn, AT Carmody, Winifred J 5039 W. Adams, MA Cavanaugh, Margaret M 8937 S. Justine, HI Claffy, Sally A 2320 E. 70th PI., DO Collins, Virginia 9533 S. Leavitt, HI Coslello, Mary D 519 W. 44th PL, BO Coursey, Mary Jane 1634 Winona, ED Crockett, Stanley 1 1 128 S. Loomis, BE Crusor, June B 201 W. 94th St., CO Curlin, Thomas G 7840 S. Wood, RA De Bofsky, Jean 5470 Greenwood, DO Denton, Howard 11309 S. Bishop, CE De Simone, Phyllis. 7755 S. Ridgeland, SA Diamond, John W 2610 S. Normal, DA Dickman, Dolores A 9345 S. Laflin, HI Dillon, Leo L 9422 S. May, BE Dougherty, Joan H 5721 N. Virginia, SU Duggan, Patricia 7533 Chappel, BU Dunne, Mary 9345 S. Laflin, BE Durkin, Dolores A 7331 S. Michigan, AB Easoz, Betty 10424 S. Union, BE Eggers, Audrey R 2749 N. Leavitt Ellis, Lois A 6119 S. Rhodes, MI 4-3572 2-5946 8-5635 7-8260 7-8082 6-2001 5-1443 3-5072 6-1072 7-0258 5-1597 1-1351 3-9006 7-0705 4-3734 7-5803 3-1007 6-7276 7-6492 6-1194 3-9793 3-9301 5-4845 6-2567 5-5017 3-0493 5-1555 8-7952 4-6789 8-7832 4-5034 3-3920 3-8598 3-9230 1-8445 6-6219 5-3923 8-9504 4-1592 8-4841 8-7780 4-1543 8-6111 English, Yvonne L 6117 S. Bishop, PR 6-3819 Faber, Jeannette 942 N. Washtenaw, HU 6-6532 Feichtinger, Joan L 8226 S. Bishop, RA 3-5894 Fischer, Frank P 7539 Drexel, HU 3-8462 Fiaherkeller, Margaret 5437 Haddon, CO 1-7690 Fokkens, Vivienne D 7318 N. McVickers, RO 3-2348 Fox, Marilyn J 6446 Eggleston, AB 4-2659 Frank, Robert 4624 N. Central Park, JU 8-5755 Frelk, Muriel J 1729 N. Maplewood, HU 6-1258 Galewski, Edwin E 4407 W. Thomas, SP 2-9512 Gansinger, Betty C 3923 W. 66lh PL, RE 7-4197 Garner, Jeanetts 2339 N. Kilbourn, BE 5-0057 Giambrone, Lorraine 4704 N. Rockwell, ED 4-3611 Gibbons, Eugene E 6559 S. Albany, PR 6-2052 Gibbons, Rita 6230 S. Justine, GR 6-1736 Gleeson, Rosemary 8111 S. Wood, RA 3-6875 Gustafson, Shirley J 2141 N. Kilpatrick, BE 5-1956 Hacketl, Barbara 8526 S. Throop, HU 3-7909 Hammer, Shirley R 6801 S. Parnell, AB 4-3790 Heath, Jessie C 566 E. 36th St., AT 5-4680 Hegarty, Belle 10642 S. Talman, CE 3-4711 Hellerman, Charlotte 5016 N. Troy, KE 9-8761 Hoggalt, Marie M 1850 N. Humboldt, AL 2-9797 Holzer, Estelle S 1 549 N. Leamington, ME 7-7198 Horecky, Beverly M 10258 Avenue L, SA 1-1660 Irmen, Eleanor Marie 6822 Ridgeland. Janausek Gloria 1611 S. 60th Ct. Cicero, TOwnhall 3-6095 Jaris, Avis 76 W. Hickory, Chicago Hghls., ChL His. 610W Katz, Minna Rae 7252 S. Yates, HY 3-0965 Kearney, Mary 1253 W. 97th PL, CE 3-6376 Kearney, Rosemary 9301 S. Justine, HI 5-6455 Kelly, William F 9927 Longwood, CE 3-1445 Kilgallon, Joan K 4432 W. Jackson, MA 6-6796 Kirby, Jack R 4726 Evans, KE 8-2922 Kirkpatrick, Robert J 4707 W. Washington, AU 7-2656 Koehl, Regina T 8143 Peoria, VI 6-5866 Koenig, Betty J 655 Junior Terrace, EA 7-2622 Kohler, John F 7416 Euclid, BU 8-2732 Kramp, Charles 3525 Winchester, LA 3-1883 Lahey, Marilyn P 1352 N. Mayfield, ES 8-1932 Lenart, Thaddeus W 4928 S. Paulina, Levy, Virginia 825 Independence, KE 3-7195 Lightfoot, Betty B 6541 Rhodes, DO 3-9386 Linklater, Laurel M 1926 N. Kimball, AL 2-2091 Lowry, Joan S 8037 S. Sangamon, HU 3-6540 Lucas, Tommie Jean 33 E. Garfield, MU 4-7906 Lucich, Dragana L 3245 S. Princteon, CA 5-0729 Lyles, Mary J 3549 S. Wells, LI 8-8734 134 s D L U fltCIOIlY Lynch, Dolores 7539 S. Chappel, Lynch, Margaret 8201 S. Throop, Maher, Patricia 3 36 S. Rockwell, Manning, Elizabeth 5478 University, Manning, Marion A 8418 S. Throop, Mariante. Marie 3452 Southport, Maturi, Nympha A 4938 N. Rockwell, Mawst, Patricia L 6145 S. Maplewood, Memmesheimer, Ann 7617V2 Saginaw, Michaelis, Marlene 7300 Bennett, Michaels, Janice 7952 Rhodes, Miller, Earl 10822 S. troy, Minerva, Dolores M 6134 W. Warwick, Mitchell, Patricia 4324 N. Francisco, Mock, Dorothy Alice 4984 N. Kolmar, Moore, James F 7039 South Park, Moro, Florence M 5934 W. Grand, Morrison, Francesj 10147 Parnell, Mueller, Robert F 9567 Prospect, Munari, Helen C 1 142 W. Grand, Murphy, Patricia M 9923 S. Morgan, Murphy, Robert A 6559 S. Maplewood, Murray, David A 6233 University, Murray, Rosemary 6565 S. Yale, McAnulty, Colleen 8242 S. Clyde, McAnulty, Madeleine 8242 S. Clyde, McCarthy, James 6037 S. Union, McDowell, John A.._ 6037 S. Union, McGeoghegan, Thomas R 821 1 S. Perry, McKinney, Virginia M 6732 S. Loomis, McMuUen, William R 6537 S. Parnell, Newell, Eileen ' . 1502 N. Crawford, Nichol, Dolores M 9335 S. Lafiin, O ' Brien, Lois M 10026 Charles, Ohman, Ella Mae 10825 S. Maplewood, Olander, Dayle R 6719 Newgard, O ' Meara, Marianne 6716 S. Maplewood, Palka, Carol Ann 6321 S. Whipple, Parker, Margie T 1314 Hyde Park, Pearson, Rhoda A 5729 S. Homan, Penn, Andrew J 8126 Indiana, Pertel, Marion E 6541 S. Whipple, Plecki, Theresa 4402 S. Maplewood, Poray, Richard T 2939 N. Albany, Ouaid, Maureen C 9401 S. Justine, DO 3-8725 ST 3-4006 LA 3-2682 HY 3-9820 ST 3-1377 LA 5-8285 AR 1-5660 WA 5-0195 RE 4-3703 RA 3-3435 VI 6-1776 CE 3-0583 PE 6-1665 KE 9-2573 PA 5-511,6 RA 3-2143 BE 8-1504 CE 3-3273 BE 8-4283 MO 6-5796 CE 3-0245 RE 7-7619 PL 2-9288 ST 3-3396 ES 5-2447 ES 5-2447 WE 6-4515 WE 6-4515 ST 3-1855 RE 7-0441 WE 6-1659 AL 2-7690 CE 3-0432 CE 3-3082 BE 8-8741 RO 1-1007 RE 7-6152 RE 7-7393 WA 4-0318 GR 6-3047 TR 4-7792 RE 7-8065 LA 3-0778 HI 5-5360 Ouinlan, Clare A 7819 S. Cornell, SO 8-4470 Rakow, Alyce M 4449 N. Springfield, IR 8-7373 Ransford, Mary A 4836 Jackson, AU7-0337 Rasofsky, Eileen 4633 S. Drexel, DR 3-4456 Reichert, Margaret 7954 S. Wabash, TR 4-9359 Reuler, Joan M 8246 Vernon. TR 4-8721 Reuther, Jean 2845 N. Francisco, EV 4-7921 Riley, Joan Patricia 4351 S. Greenwood, DR 3-5259 Romanelli, Helen M 430 W. 97th St., CE 3-6472 Rontos, Katherine 1543 W. 21s,t St., CH 3-9729 Ruane, Kathleen 8036 S. Justine, VI 6-0429 Rubin, Leonard M 4448 N. St. Louis, KE 9-9114 Ryan, Marie T 5525 S. Wolcott, PR 6-4302 Ryan, Robert F 6049 N. Albany, BR 4-3469 Sanchez, Manuel 4507 S. Justine, Sandors, Helen 4853 W. Rice, AU 7-7849 Sayre, William R 6817 S. Carpenter, AB 4-8573 Schmidt, Dolores A 7116 N. Western, SH 3-2608 ■Schlammes, Rogette M 1522 N. Parkside, ME 7-6759 Schneider, Ruth G 2324 N. Harding, CA 7-5064 Schurman, Gail A 653 Cornelia, EA 7-3639 Sherlock, Charles W 9740 S. Hamilton, BE 8-9849 Diciliana, Mary C 7743 S. Greenwood, RA 3-5206 Smith, Virgie Jackson 3739 S. State, OA 4-3629 Stifter, Sally S 1 142 S. Kedzie, SA 2-6091 Strickland, Barbara 9438 S. Forest, PU 5-7532 Szulokiewicz, Delphine 2439 W. 47th St„ YA 7-2775 Townsend, Clarice H 9120 S. Stewart, WA 8-1922 Troy, Mary E 5438 S. Union, AT 5-4131 Urban, Eleanor D 1 81 6 S. 59th Ct., Cicero, OLympic 2-7635 Wall, Mary Dolores 7816 S. Euclid, RE 4-5244 Walsh, Robert J 1644 W. 79th St., TR 4-6055 Walther, Joanne 7435 S. Euclid, BU 8-1732 Ward, Francis G 7515 Yale, VI 6-8961 Warner, Irene T 3344 Maple, Brookfield. Brkfld. 8958R Welsch, Celeste 7130 S. Hermitage, HE 4-3442 Williams, Rita L 601 1 Prairie, PL 2-0686 Woelkers, Jane F 8121 Ellis, RA 3-7249 Wollenberg, Grace R 4934 W. Jackson, ES 8-7148 Woods. Margaret M 1 133 E. 81st PL, RE 4-4859 Woods, William E 5217 S. Halsted, LI 8-4313 Woliska. Rosemarie J 5849 N. Magnolia, RA 8-1792 Youstra, Anne 11718 Wallace. Yule, Elsa Lindenberg 2053 E. 80th St. RE 4-2577 Zaharchuk, Martha A 2735 N. Lockwood, BE 7-5020 ..■■. k— — Jh m ■' . ' jS G ¥m M i t ' l I njs (Dfcfood yV7 (fl THE CHICAGO TEACHERS ' UNION CONGRATULATES THE 1951 GRADUATES OF THE CHICAGO TEACHERS COLLEGE AND WELCOMES THEM AS FELLOW TEACHERS INTO THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS OF CHICAGO CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS OF 1951 CHICAGO TEACHERS COLLEGE ALUMNI! SALUTE TO THE NEW GRADS! Another June has rolled around — with another large group of CTC students entering the teaching profession. OUR SEVENTEENTH ANNIVERSARY Each generation of CTC students since 1934 has found us to be a dependable source for their text and college supply needs. Next September, 1951 will mark the seventeenth anniversary of our existence as a college store serving the CTC Campus. WE GLADLY SERVE YOU It has been a pleasure to serve these developing community leaders during these years. We look forward to more years of service as more CTC students matriculate. YOUR COLLEGE STORE WERKMAN ' S BOOK AND SUPPLY STORE N.E. CORNER STEWART 69th STREET CONGRATULATIONS BEST WISHES TO THE 1951 Graduating Class Jo - Jo BOOK Store 401 WEST 69th STREET Southwest comer Stewart and 69th Street STewart 3-9768 HAVE FUN! ENJOY YOURSELF on a GREAT LAKES CRUISE On a Sister Queen of the Great Lakes S.S. NORTH AMERICAN . . . . . . S.S. SOUTH AMERICAN The ONLY ocean type, exclusively passenger cruise ships on the Great Lakes GEORGIAN BAY LINE 128 WEST MONROE STREET, CHICAGO 3, ILL. 140 CHICAGO TEACHERS COLLEGE COMPLIMENTS OF STUDENT COUNCIL COMPLIMENTS OF CAMPUS LUNCH 6846 STEWART AVENUE WHERE THEY SERVE GOOD FOOD COMPLIMENTS OF TEMPO COMPLIMENTS OF CHICAGO TEACHERS COLLEGE CAFETEHLA PHONE AB 4-4212 OPITZ CATER 1 NG DINING ROOM BANQUETS, WEDDINGS and PARTIES 344 W. 69th ST., CHICAGO 21. ILL COPY PAPERS SALES SERVICE AGENCY. INC. 700 West Lake Street, Chicago 6, 111. Complete Line Paper and Supplies for all Duplicating Machines. COMPLIMENTS OF K. M. E. COMPLIMENTS AND THANKS TO THE 1951 GRADUATING CLASS VINCES SANDWICH BOARD 525 West 69th Street FROM YOUR FRIENDS OF W. A. A. COMPLIMENTS OF BETA OMEGA CHI ♦ e HOWARD DENTON — — Candid Photographer Weddings and Portraits CE 3-9230 r!« • ' %- k J %, J i Of 5 ' )
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