Dickinson High School - Gnome Yearbook (Jersey City, NJ)
- Class of 1935
Page 1 of 188
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 188 of the 1935 volume:
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'F' 4 . u- W .i 4 m E 1 r V ll l A f n ll A 5123: ug v I .B.,.gczl 'r 'u 2?1 ? 2 lip? 1 In ' Q E : EI D:-. 3-': E 5,u5,:'-...SME -iiln.-:':K ' fi . ' -.3-E . iw S:-F-Is! ,-- X :,w':,g m1l X I flwfdcf, R X V214 I ,nn 1 ll Q-35:12 :L-I ' . I' '5lI H '7 ? .,..-Hff-'-j DEDICATED 50 Gun D HOREFATI-:ERS Fu ' Q V ' :aZ5'5':'h La-if-Q ll ,QL F I IL E' ThT5 Z1 L., It . - 'f , z -.X ,, 1-1--i,.l.-111 ' I Y ' V DEDICATION To our Fore rztfzers, who have gzsven tts Zz e, fzberty, and the pttrsztzt 0 fzezppz ness, ana' because 0 thezr zmtzrmg e orts and mspzrmg orwardness to greater achievements, we, tbe graduatzhg cfass W' 1935, a'ea'z'eate tfzzs -volume 1 . ' I 1 Q' .5 ,Y :VT F-1n?n '1,l,n34u, 6 ' , rg. ' ' ll I 1 I L 14 ll I I , llt Il f '29 . x I ll. 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ADMINISTRATI 11 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 11 1 11 11 1 1 11 11 11 1 - A - - - - - A - - - A - .. - L .. - , i'i'i'.i.vAfvA,-,,-v-V-,,-,,-V-,,'v4 N,,,,,,,,,v,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,v-'vi'-rv 11 111 1 1 1 111 111 111 1 1 111 11 11 111 11 1 1 1 111 1 1 1 111 111 111 1 1 111 111 111 1 1:1 1 1 111 11111 1 1 11111 11111 11111 11111 11 1 1 1 111 11111 1 1 111 111 11111 11111 11111 11111 1 1 1 11111 1 1 111 111 1 1 11111 111 if-v-.-5 41 1 11 111 11 1. 11 111 11 1 111 111 11 111 11 1 1 11:1 11111111 111111 11111111 11111111 1111 11111111 11111111 11111111 1111 11111111 11111111 11111111 11111 11111111 11111111 11111111 1111 1 111 1 1 1111 1 1 1111 1 1 111 1 1 111 1 1 11111 1 11 111111 1 1 11111111 11 11 11111111 11 11 11111111 11 1 11111111 11 11 1111111 11 1 111111 11 1 1111 1 1 11111111 11 11 4. A 4. ,L.Q4L.14L,L,.v.L,.v,L4.v..1 ..-....---,.-..,.,.A4...,LL.L41,L.v.. 1 11 11 11 1 1 THE OWL JUNE I GH SCHOOL DICKINSON ACCREDITED EVENING HI E r i E I I I Eight 1.935 THE OWL DR. JAMES A. NUGENT Sllf16l'jlZfL'1ILlElZl' of Sl'h00l,f jersey City, N. J. N ine THE OWL JUNE PT, IIA!! 1' 4 - V-M T. GILBERT MCFADDEN, A. B., M. A. Principal Ten 1935 THE OWL JOHN T. BROGAN, A.B., M.A. Vice-Prifzrijml Eleven 1 THE OWL JUNE 'Z fx , ji 7x,fAffTf 5' 1 4 u W a JACOB A- SIEBEN WILLIAM W. STRADER, B.S., AM. Dirertor Teclmiml and Industrial Department 53179,-,,j,0,f gf Mdihemaljw Twelve 1935 THE OWL .,. ALEXANDER SULLIVAN Prexident, Board of Education Thirteen THE OWL JUNE MINNIE V. SHANLEY, Ph. D. THOMAS W. HOPKINS, Ph. D. Axfififznt Slzperifztefzdefzl of 56110015 Affixlmzt Sffperintezzdent of Sfhoolf W JAMES E. REYNOLDS, A.B. Axfiftant Szzperintefzdent of Scboolf Fourteen 5 E i s F E 5 5 l a i i l I I al n E a J F I I 5 3 i .- E 11 1 S fi ,. E 5 2 2 9 s if I. 5 Fl if H Ll i ni -a i is N '2 u i 5 5. n - A ,A L ,1 J i H 5 n E F4 li 11 S7 J 1 e El il 1 I n A 1 'F Q 1 Pl rl' 5 5 Ki Q ll u ,F L1 J I . ik a sf ri ,, 5 11 S 5 5 sf B ii I Q E is E1 5 .1 4 n . -4 ww .1 ..........,., , 53 3- , W sig mpg any-Q in SB If Bl if I if 1, ,QV all f W A up-mg 5... W ' A 2 me 11 f W E ,, .,.f...,-.... 1 U W WM Wham WSJ n. , Y. K W 'mf 33 ,, X -, V. few 'W mmgfwfpwmwefhwwwg W gg M, L' - H' 4 , ,wi, li 'f ,Jil -HIE as-.mf Q... Mfr . ,gg-'1-9-gm, ,m,mf,,Xf, .. W. Hg v 'm M', W fbiwff fm, ' aww-K 2 Q W-' 5 '-W3 'H may Mm, 1' 'M ,..,..,,-9 .QL ,MQW ,' ,Q 175574 1 as ,w4w,?fQggi3g',9wissXiEf,2?Qgfmgg Iggy? W? MWA in H My 3' J' W A w ?5'WffLf?Jwf's ff9wviQ4xs:3?'fffw2Qs6sws2fgwk5 V . F . 223 2-si A QQ-sway v , ,. an ' , ' ' ' wi up s wSfg:,gs1'ft.'xgfvfzzww . 4, 5 : NNN. 'N ' w nz' ' ' X 5 in ......,.. A wg? 'Ii ,V - iv Vzwmbx-,.:'.4fx'1zi , W'-. my ,g k Q1 Am. 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'X -au , ,. v 13, 451 A , W W 4 if 231: M52 H' if R 5 fx K 3 A X , ,. .x 4 YW.. 4 mm 1 gm? , 7 3, I ' V X ' I awp ,L , Q TW 'W Qlpf 5, Wm . .,,,,,,,'9 -,, A sf 'Is ez is . .. sf E ivil., La by Pkc , , , ,-A-..- n I 4 r I P t F'-c uurv X . ,... 4. ,nw ,, ,.., .....,. , , , W - --Y-im W Ah W V Wifi if if i ... A... - -s...L- ACCREDITED EVENING I-nel-I SCI-lool. FACULTY A Q, mmm . THE OWL JUNE ACCREDITED EVENING FACULTY T. Gilbert McFadden, A.B., M.A ....... Principal John T. Brogan, A.B., M.A ......... Vire-Prinripal Carl W. Barget, A.B., M.A ........... Saperzfiror of Hiftory and Student Advifer Vincent O'Shea, A.B., Ed. M ............... Superviror of Englirh and Student Adoirer William W. Strader, B.S., M.A ................ . Superviror of Mathematirf Lincoln A. Bosi, A.B ............................... French Charles M. Broady, LL.B ................... journalism Charles Budenbender, B.C.S ....................... Bookkeeping, fr. Biuinerr Training, Office Organization Lawrence Camisa, B.S., Ed.M ................. Typewriting, Shorthand Jerome Connolly, B.S ............................. Biolegy Veronica Connolly, A.B .,..... ........ E nglifh John Corridon, A.B .,................................... Englifh, Commerrial Law William W. Couzens, B.C.S. Bnrinerr Training Robert A. Coyle, A.B ............................. Englirh Sarah E. Denemark, Litt. B ..... German, French William R. Dineen, A.B ....... ....... E nglifh Ida M. Egan, A.B ........ ....... E nglirh Margaret Fields, B.S ............. ........ H irtory Eugene F. Finnegan, A.B ........ ........ S fience Daniel R. Finnegan ,........... .......... S horthand Marjorie Fitzgerald, A.B ...... ,.. ........ Englirh Rita M. Fitzgerald, A.B., M.A ....,.,....,,,,,.,. Algebra, Geometry Mary I. Gagliardi, A.B ..,,,,..,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,., Spanifh Charles A.. Gerhard, B.S .,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Biology, Phyfiology Gerard W. Guterl, A.B., LL.B ,..,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,, Englirh, Commercial Law, Publi: Speaking Fff'-Uk H2llSfeHd .............. Arehitertizral Drawing Mary G. Hartnett, A.B ......,..,..,,,,,,, Marhemaiiff Anna B. Haynes, B.C.S. .,.,,..,,,,,,, Bookkeeping Thomas F. Hearns, A.B., LL.B ,,,,,,,,,,,,. Higgfy Stanley Heller, B. S. in Ed ,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,, Clgemim-y Peter L. Henderson A.B ...,,,,.,..,,,,,,,, joamalijm William G. JOfCl9.I1, A.B ....... ,.,.... E nglirlo Richard V. Keegan, A.B ,.,.,,,,, ,,,,,,,,-,,,,, E ngljflg J0l'1I1 A. Kelly .............. Sh0rthar2d, T-ypewriting John M. Kelly, A.B ..,.,.,.,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,, H ijlgr-yi Grace M. Kennedy, B. S. in Ed ,.,.,,.,,,.,,,,,, Shorlhand, Typewriting, Commercial Arithmetie Edward F. Kennelly, A.B., LL.B ,,.,,,,,.,,,,, , Englirh, Eeonornirr JOSCPl'1 KCHHY, ....,,.,,,,,.,,,,,-,,,- ,.-,,- P fyyjif-f Marie Kiernan, A.B ...,,,,,,. ,,,.,,. E ngljfly Helene R. Lawrence, B.S ..,..,.,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Commerrial Geography john Lester, A.B., LL.B ............. Mathematirf Nineteen THE 'OWL FAC U LTY fcontinuedj JEIIIICS Lillis, ..,,.,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,-,, S pienfe Henry L. Lowenstein, B.S .,,,,,.,.,,,,.,,, Ecgnomicy, Commercial Law Lester Luft, B.S .......,.,,,...,,,.,,,.,,,,,, Malhemalicj John F. Lynch, A.B., LL.B .,.,.,,,,,,,.,.,,,,,,, , .. Commercial Law, Pzrblic Speaking joseph Lynch, A.B ................,....,,,,.,,.,,,, Biology Francis McCarthy, A.B ........... Englirh, Latin Rose G. McCourt ................ .....,., T ypewriting john McDermott, A.B ..,.......... ,.....,.. H irtory George T. Mclnerney, A.B ........ ....,.... E nglifh james McKenna, A.B .......... ,............... E nglifh Carmela Martoglio, B.S ........... Domestic Science Charles A. Merklein, A.B ...................,.,.,... Commercial Arilhrn etic, Bookkeeping Fred W. Messier, A.B., B.C.S., B.C. in Ed., M.S ............... Shorthand, Typewriting August j. Meyer, A.B ................. Englirh, Latin George Murphy, B.S .....r.. .....,... C hemirtry Marie A. Murphy, A.B ................,...... Shorthand Alphonso J. Orrico, B.S. in Ed., M.A ....... Spanirh Maurice J. O'Sullivan, A.B ................... Englirh Henry Ouram .................... Mechanical Drawing Katherine D. Paterno, A.B ..................,.... Italian Bernard Peplowski, B.S ............................. Bookkeeping, Burineyr Training Thomas F. Prout, A.B ............................. Hirtory Evelyn Reisner, A.B ............ ........ G erman Anthony A. Rettino, A.B ................,.......... German, Economic! Ralph Ripley, B. C. S ................................. Bookkeeping Accounting R. Robert Rosenberg, M.C.S., C.P.A., M.A. Commercial Arithmetic Mildred C. Rudnitsky, A.B ......................... Biology, Phyriology, Phyriography Philip Scheideberg, B.S .................,..... Geometry George G. Shiya, A.B., M.A., LL.B ........... French Joseph W. Sinnott, A.B., LL.B ..,.,............ Latin Raymond Spatz, A.B .................. ......... E nglith S. Hannah Steinhauer .......... ....... D rawing George W. Tyne, B.S ...........r..................... Phyrict, Artronomy john P. Walsh, A.B., LL.B ...........r............ . Latin, Commercial Law Grace Ward, A.B .................,................. S panirh Alexander Wilson, jr., B.S., in Ed., M.A. Phyrical Education Agnes M. Wood, B. S. in Ed ..................... Shorthand, Typewriting Madeleine L. Wood, B. S. in Ed ..... Economicr Marie R. Manning ................................ Secretary Catherine M. Donohue .......... ....... S ecretary Anne E. Roache ............... ............. . Secretary George Coffey .....,. ......r... 0 yfice Atrirtant Frank Caroselli ......... ......... B ook Clerk jane K. Aston ....... ..................... L ibrarian Cecilia Hynes ......... ....... Florence T. Kelly ................. Angela Postarino .,..... ....... Ann B. Wister .... Twenty .Afrirtant Librarian .Arristant Librarian .Arrirtant Librarian ........A.rtirtant Librarian AvAv-if-if-5vAifv'-,4v4v-,-v'v-.f'vA-'Ai'-i,Av-V-V-ifAv-V-v-fr' vAv'v-fav-vii, F: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: P 1 4: 5 : 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: : 4: 4: : P 1 : 4: 4: 4. f 'f 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 'f 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 4: 'f 4: 1 'Z 4: :I j: :I 4: S CD ..YE4-.v,.w-4g4-N jf 4: 444 :4 :4 4: 4: .459-A X KJ. Jw- XJ --,',, Mxahv Xgxkb QT BC THE OWL JUN JANUARY GRADUATIN6 CLASS f 1935 THE OWL JANUARY CLASS OFFICERS Twenty-five THE OWL JUNE JUNE C-BRADUATING CLASS Twe 1 1 1935 THE OWL JUNE CLASS OFFICERS Twenty-.reven THE OWL IUNE JANUARY CLASS PLAY Directed by Giuseppe della Malva Cart joe Heller Charles Grant Vivian Bradley Emma Heller Mrs. Grant Bernard Kriegel Louise Heller Herbert Grant Rosalie Roth Annabelle Heller joseph F. Silverman Maurice Goldberger Willie Heller Kathleen Kelly Catherine Roth Mrs. Callahan Mildred Donnelly Frank Silvia The Family Upstairs was first produced on Broadway and enjoyed a long run. On january 29th before a crowded auditorium it was presented by the january Seniors. Emma Heller as the wife of joe Heller, finds herself in many embarassing situation in trying to make an impression on Charles Grant, who is courting Louise Heller. As a matter of fact, things become so complicated that the engagement is called off. This afiects Louise so much that she is ready to leave home. At this time joe Heller steps in and takes charge. Assisted by his son, Willie, joe carries out a plan to bring the two lovers together. In a scene where all the members of the cast take part the two are reconciled. The play was very well directed by Mr. Della Malva, who incidentally was also a senior. The amusing situations and the fine dialogue held the interest of the audience until the final curtain. Twenty-eight 1935 THE OWL THE RUGGED ROAD JUNE CLASS PLAY JOHN ,....... ......................................... T HOMAS J. SHARKEY JANEY ...... ...... ....... E L IZABETH TRoDD MOSE ........ ...........,... J AMES DILLON EZRA ......... ........... R AYMOND DETRICK SUZAN ...... ........ A NNEMAE DEROCHER JACK .....,.,.........,..... ..................... J AMES BOYLE HELEN ........................ ............ c LAIRE MAJEWSKI DON QREPORTERJ .,.. ,...... E DWARD MAJEWSKI BENJAMIN ................ ..............,... J oHN DARCY CYNTHIA .............. ...... M ARIE HALLSTIEN JONATHAN ........ ...... R AYMOND o'ER1EN ' EIQSQN ...... VERONICA BERTOTTI EQQQYQIZISH ,,,, .. .......... SAMUEL VUOCOLO SAM GILLESPIE ......, ACCURSSIO IMBERNONE YOUNG GIRL ...,.... .......... .,.. J A NET CROWLEY DocToR .,.......,,.......................................,....... THOMAS MORAN After much discussion the play committee finally decided to produce a play of the melodramatic type. In the URUGGED ROAD they found the answer to their hopes. The play started out with an epilogue in which john Strong starts to tell his grand- daughter of the HRUGGED ROAD to love. The story continued through four acts of well-directed acting, which depicted the highlights of John Strongls life. An epi- logue wound up the action and john finished his Story and died in the arms of his faithful servant, Mose. The play was well-acted by the cast and well-directed by Jack Dowling, a profes- sional coach, who was also the director of last year's Minstrel. Tzvefzty-fzzzze wf W , OWL U i W ' :HW 3 W wliwxyu 1 if it , V N ' WMM 'x .ll- W. J, , iw: , in , , Tn , Jw? . ,, vnu, . ww l ?WY qs! i 5 il wi V1 1 1 13 .fam .' gl l ' 'L W 11 'V -1+ iii' LMY. vi Qu, Q5 3' QT IEW M lf W 'f M lm WW ' W ' W 1 J ,fl We M Q x I ' ' Q xflx-f lvl an AA 7 4' Ah 5 I 1 1 ,11 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1' 1 1 11 11 11 11 1 11 1 1 1 1' 1 1 1 11 11 1 1 1 v - Sf , ' il,- v. .. VV Y. V 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 '1 1 1 1 .1 1 1 in 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 11 11 .1 1 11 1' 1 1' 1 11 11 :1 111 11 111111 1 1111 1 1111 1 111111 11 11 11,1111 1 1111111 11111 1 11 11 1 11 1 11111111 11 11 1 11 1 11 11 1 11 11 11 11 1 11 1 1111 1 11 1 1111 111111, 11111111 1113111 11111111 1:11:11 1 1 :11:'111 1 11 11111 11111 1:1111 1111111 1111 1 11111111 11 11 1111 1111111 111 1 11' 11 1 11 1111 1 1 1111111 11 1111 1111 11111111 1 11 1 11 11 1111111 11111 1 11 1 1 11 1 111111 1111 1 11 1 11 11 111 1 1111111 1 11 11 11111 :11 1:11, 11111, 1 1111111 1111111 11 1 1 1111111 1 1 1 1 11111111 1111111 1:11:11 11111111 1 11111 1111 11111111 1 1 1 1 11111111 11111111 1111111 1 111 1 11 11 1 1 11 11 1 1 11 1 11 .1. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 '1 1 I 41 1' 1 11 1 1 'vA - v i'A A 'v-' ' 'Av-fvt :F THE OWL IUNE THE OWL STAFF 1935 THE OWL William Carew ....... Edward Beenick ......... joseph J. Silverman F. W. Messler ............. THE OWL STAFF january Editor june Editor Afmciate Editvr Faculty Advixer and Bzuinerr Manager PERSONAL Catherine Roth ....... ......................... LITERARY James Boyle ......... Anna Halfpenny ......... .................. SPORTS William Voss ,..... .....,.....,...... ORGANIZATION Mildred Donnelly ...... ...................,...,........... ADVERTISING Joseph Fitzsimmons ....... ....,,.....,....,.........,........ C PHOTO Raymond Whalen ...... ................. Thomas Sharkey ...... HUMOR George Fowler ........ Harold Hansen ..... Helen Milanowicz . SUBSCRIPTION AND CIRCULATION Henrietta Schwarting TYPIN G Thirty-three Chairman Chairman Auirlant Chairman Chairman Chairman Chairman Chairman Afriffant Chairman Chairman Chairman Jeanne Crane THE OWL JUNE F. W. MESSLER, B.C.S., B.A., B.S. Ed., M.A. Family Advifer and Bzuiners Manager f 4 D I Thirty-four 1935 THE OWL ACKNOWLEDGMENT e aff nf1u.rt reufize flint in producing CCTl1e Owlv, tllere 1'l'lllJ'f be Jolneone io .rlzow u.r tlre way. In .rincere upprec1'nt1'onf2r re- moving your own unureblzzrlz z'ntere.rt.r5 fm your true jg'l.6l1llJ'hlp and excellent nffvice in .rolving pronlenu, we tlre c1nf.re.r qffonuofy and fune jjj, refpecqfulbz exprefx our .rz'ncere.rt gratitude to Mr. Fred W Mefflezf, our Cfoxf Adviser. E11 word Beenzek Erfftor Thirty-jiue THE OWL JUNE WILLIAM CAREW january Editor Thirty-.fix 1935 THE OWL EDWARD J. BEENICK june Editor Thirty-:even X THE OWL JUNE Xu ff x 1 6 HAH OL D HAM SEN JQSEPH bfhvfrfrzfudmf Jvarfry rug .ffwf-, -uf - V QIRC., 'P .5'U'5' A 556222. Emrv '0f2,i N A. jig .5?V1if?'7'IS'x'NAQf Akyk ' . . ' A , . T - f5TR50f l:i-,,. ,T A , A SPSS? 57 W, ASSOCIATE EDITOR AND HIS STAFF Tbirly-eight P 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: gi 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: P ': 1 1: 1: :I 1 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1' 1: 1: 1: 1: i -I : :' :' : : 1: 1: : 4 : 'AAA'-AAAAA'-A-A-1L4LA4iAvA A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A -A...A...A.AvAfA gp 0' ff ': 4 1: 1635 ..9?V6!7f?ff7l'i Jbfrfbfy I T inn' I7lf6f?f?Fff? . n h . f I A .-Ima if I I I l,' .i.LL5 , Ilfl lj. :lg Isis? 5, 12? OUR ALMA MATER GUIDE us, MOTHER DICKINSON Us .?5i By HELEN FALVEY4 Class 1 While evening bells are ringing We wend our weary ways To where the torch is burning To brighten future days We hasten to its splendor We hearken when it calls It is the light of knowledge , On us its brightness falls Cborzu Hold high the light, loving mother Alma Mater - Dickinson Guide us through the weary valley Lead us till the battle's won. Lead us on though woe betide us With the torch of knowledge gu Till on earth our mission's done. 2 When twilight shadows darken The path on which we tread The beacon on the hilltop Its lights of wisdom spread. It guides us to a brighter land With thoughts of purest gold Where we will conquer darkness In days when we are old. Forty 34N ide J Lgmgyfy Qrenfffmfi Qddfry 1935 Helen Abendschein Abby Dickinson Columbia Academic Law Club The mildest manners, and the gentlest heart. -Pope. Isabelle Anglesea Belle P. S. 25 Panzer Commercial Reception Comm. Senior Social Comm. The sweetest garland to the sweetest maid. -Tickell. Marie Berg Mae General The glw of. the angel in women. -Balfaur. Mary Bonaccolta May Spencer Business College Undecided Commercial Economics Club Italian Club Ice Skating Club This world has angels all to few. -Colerige. Mildred Butler Milly General Truth, when witty, is the wittiest of all. -Mare. Nancy Amato Nance West New York Columbia Academic Literary Club Horseback Riding Swimming Club French Club Treas. Dramatics Soc. Sec. Senior Social Comm. Owl Staff A witty woman is a treasure' a witt beaut A . V Y is a power. -Meredith. Kathryn Beggans Kay St. Joseph's Fordham Commercial Law Club General Organization Swimming Club Reception Comm. Good humor is always a success. . -Lavater. veronica Bemui , 52 'QRonnie Sr. Francis ' Fordham ' I lfrgfehieral tj Law l KY Debating Society Swim ' lub gf General Organization G s rarest blessing is, after all, a good woman. -Meredith. Vivian Bradley Vi P, QS, 25 Undecided ' Commercial Basketball Club Fencing Club Globe Club Commercial Club Good humor is always a success. Lavater. Cecilia Cappiella C Lincoln Columbia General The true ambition there alone resides. - -Young. Y 1635 .52V!!7!'gFfifi fkxifbfy 1 U A N - , .yalwfffffi ,..- Y Antonette Cassella Anne P. S, 23 Katherine Gibbs V V Commercial Italian Club Law Club No sky, is heavy, if the heart be light. -Churchill. Mary Chisirazzi May Union Hill E-Ii - ' Christ Hospital ener Italian Club ight eart live long. -Shakespeare. Mildred Cle U6 Milly P. S. 1.7 Undecided . Commercial She who sings frightens away her ills. T-Cerevantes. Rita Coleman Skippy Lincoln Cooper Union Commercial General Organization Globe Club 'The glow of the angel in women. -Balfour . Jeanne Crane x Jay Undecided Commercial Expectation ends only in Heaven. ' -St. Kentijern. Anne Cassidy Nancy St. Paul of The Cross john Marshal Commercial Executive Comm. Sec. Reception Comm. General Organization Sec. - Basketball Club Globe Club, Sec. Law Society A good heart is better than all the heads in the world. -Lytton. Helen Cicchetti Henry Snyder jr. High Katherine Gibbs Commercial Globe Club Law Club A loving heart is the truest wisdom. -Dickens. Mary Coleman Mary P. S. 12 Undecided Secretary, French Club General None but the brave deserves the fair. -Terence. Catherine Costello Kay Dickinson Columbia Globe Club College Prep The cautious seldom err. -Confucius. Janet Crowley Janet St. Paul of The Cross Tasell General Executive Comm. Ice Skating Club Globe Club Basketball Club Gently to hear, kindly to judge. -Shakespeare Fortv-two 4 i Lgfpfgffgy .52I6f?f'f?!7ii Qdfffy immmw l lzf: ::f iff-ff E gun x vffbffff Mary n'A1ia-.iayf P. s. 28 General Italian Club UQWWJ NTo0ts97 Fordham Economics Club To the pure all things are pure. -Shelly. Sylvia De Fusca P. S. 5 General She most attracts who longest Annamae Derocher Union Hill High College Prep French Club With a smile on her lips and eye. Elvira De Feo P S. 5 Italian Club . Commercial Blondie Undecided can refuse. -Hill. fCTiny9! Fordham tear in her -Scott. Civil, Undecided As the world leds we follow. Mildred Donnelly Millie Lincoln N, Y, U, Commercial - Globe Club Class Play Sr. Prom Comm. Cap and Gown Comm. Owl Staff Fare thee well! And if forever, still forever fare thee well. -Byron. l L 7 H E Fortjlitfaree Mary Dedomenica Henry Snyder Jr. High . General NMayU N. Y. U. 1 l A good laugh is sunshine in a house. l W -Thackery. - l i Helen Deiura Cris P. S. 25 ' Undec' ed' Commergf T e sm 1 c 't ' sweet life, the greater e . l ...f w ,J i M-.NN I ' j c l . 'rf l 5 k xvj 1 Matty Devery ' Mae N 1 to If Undecided K eneral xisithexfairacliixl of peril. -Mann. l l 'X Margaret namnik Maggie St. Iohn's John Marshal 3 Academic Executive Comm. Glee Club Debating Society Law Club General Organization ' - Tri1th is beautiful and divine, no matter -how humble its origin. -Puptn. Frances Dundelli Bunnyf' P. S. 1 g bia ' a Italian Economics Club 'ilence is more eloquent than words. , --Carlyle. 1935 1635 .52vfx7!ffffz7f Qfifbfy l .l7!!H!7f?fff7 Ag ffl- - -H ' l u iiliiii: Helen Eberling Helen St. Bridget's Fordham Globe Club General Organization Academic French Club Literary Club In maiden meditation fancy free. -Shakespeare. Lillian Ehrig All Saints ul-Jiuyss N. Y. U. Commercial Literary Club German Club A friend must not be injured, even in jest. -Syrus. Jennie Filipkowski Jen P. S. 14 Undecided General German Club Reception Comm. A constant friend is a thing rare and hard to find. -Plutarch. Kathleen Fitzpatrick. Kay St. Michaels Fordham Academic Good humor is goodness and wisdom combined. -Meredith. Ida Galvanoni ' Ada Emerson ' N. Y. U. Academic U Orchestra ' Italian Club Modest humility is beauty's crown. -Schiller. 40 Anne Echardt Anne Ji, Lincoln Undecided ll, Commercial 4,1 Glee Club Tennis Club lui Commercial Club :iii We hear each one our own destiny. -Virgil. 4l:' lil Ui' ily 4' Helen Falvey Helen qi? Henry Snyder jr. High Undecided ll, Academic ' 4,1 Glee Club, Pres. Literary Club, Sec. Hi Student Council Night Watch All Knowledge advances by steps, not by leaps. tl, -Macaulay. Ply 4 ill 4 ll, ll lr lil, Frances Finiello Frankie ill P, S, 12 Undecided M General Q . ? Happiness is the natural flower ofBdutyi. I4 - foo s. 44' I p lil 45' Qi ' HG ll n ll Anna Gallagher Q 3 Y itll Henry Snyder jr. High Nurses' Training 417 Academic ,M spanish Club i Globe Club gil, History Club Lifefafl' Club my How near to good is what is fair. -johnson. l U rl, 1 l ll ln: ill, Mary Gilmartin Gil 1 St. Bridget's ' N- Y- U- lil General ' gli, Literary Club FfC11Ch Club ill A delicate thought is a flower of the mind. 41 5 M -R011 n. ll Q , Forty-four Qdfafg fkwefzffexffi fkfifzzfy ' l uT 'k 1 '..!.L!J. I Hun llllllllllllllllfwlql i t -if 4 -' fee? A in 3-il? . n m: 53 m :l??E'?.l :il':':5:':'l':'m Nix: r Anne Glushko Smiles Helen Goode ffuelenn Lincoln Undecided Our Lady of Grace Fordham Commercial General General Organization Law Club Reception Comm. Be true to your own highest conviction. -Channing. Genevieve Grubowski Jean Dickinson N. Y. U. Commercial Swimming Club A shy face is better than a forward heart. -Cervantes. Anna Halfpenny Halfcent Altoona High, Pa. Columbia Academic Literary Club Spanish Club To be gentle is the test of a lady. -Feltham. Beatrice S. Hansen Bea Lincoln Hunter College Commercial Commercial Club ' Law Club Exit Night Committee Fine manners are the mantle of fair minds. - -Alcott. Margaret Hauer Marge All Saints Undecided Academic Law Society Globe Club Ice Skating Club Photographic Club Good manners require space and time. -Whately. Forty-five 4 .gk 4 l 4'4' 4'4' 4:l 4 4:': 4I:y, 44 lllt lily 4 , 4 , lily 4 luv Elia. 4 r 'II' lui 4 l tbl, nl 4Nl 'ul lui 4,3 4 4+ lv lil, l V Il 41+ 4 r 4:4 lui 4 P ll :lf ll Q Swimming Club Victory belongs to the most erservin P 8- -Napoleon. Dorothy Gutzeit Dee Lincoln Katherine Gibbs Commercial Beauty lives with kindness. -Shakespeare. Marie Hallstein Q Ric St. Paul of The Cross, Com. Fordham General Globe Club Swimming Club Ice Skating Club Economics Club Senior Class Play We cannot wish for what we know not. -Voltaire. Alice A. Haughey ' Al P. S. 25 Undecided Academic True modesty is a discerning grace. -Cooper, Louisa Heim Lu Bushkill High N. Y. U. Commercial Noble by birth, yet nobler by deeds. -Longfellow. 163 Qyffffeffffi lbffixxy fZff!7f!Ff!f Jf'Ze'-- i I nl I ' HjjII.l ,u,l ! ., ,' in in fl I nu nl I t X X Nina J - - Lincoln N N. J. C. Sp V Club I pr' e H oul that slumbers in a quiet eye. I ' -Cook. Kathleen Kelly Kath, St. Aloysius Undecided General Globe Club, Pres. General Organization, Sec. Executive Comm. Sec. Sr. Social Comm. Patience and fortitude conquer all things. -Emerson. Regina Kennedy Kelly Undecided General Good manners are a part of good morals. -Whately. Ruth Kronmeyer Rufus P. S. 28 Undecided Commercial Economics Club Order and system are nobler things than power. -Ruskin. Fannie Lindblad Fay Lincoln N. Y. U. Well timed silence hath more eloquence than speech. -Tupper. Antonette Kaysser Ann St. joseph's, W. N. Y. Columbia General Swimming Club There is only one proof of ability-action. -Anon. Marie Kelly Mibbie Lincoln N, Y, U, College Prep Globe Club Spanish Club French Club Patience- In patience there is safety. -Labaulaye. Gertrude Kilmartin Gert Lincoln Pace Institute Commercial Basketball Globe Club Law Club Owl Staff She who respects others, is respected by them. -Mencius. Margaret Lane Margie Dickinson N. Y. U. Commercial Globe Club Commercial Club Hope against hope and ask till you receive. -Montgomery. Ethel Lohse Eth Undecided General Hope is the ruddy morning of joy. -Richter. Forty-.fix Qawfy Uluunu uhn W -Chair-::::t:t': 'Nr' UU mug I W L MT' 'z :lr . 'x::.-Tait 5- Qyexzfffmfi Qmfzffy .f ig Xl Margaret Magee Peggy Lincoln Bellevue Hospital General How goodness lightens beauty. -Moore. Claire Majewska Ray Undecided Commercial Regularity is unity, unity, is godlikef'-Anon. Pauline Malzensky Lee David E. Rue, Jr. High Bellevue Hospital General The two noblest things are sweetness and light. -Swift. Anne Matusovicz Chick P. S. 1 ' Columbia n ommercial ood humor makes all things tolerable. -Beecher. Margaret McWalters Margie All Saints Com. High All Souls Hospital General Globe Club History Club A friend may well be reckoned the master- piece of nature. -Emerson. Forty-.reven Gertrude Mahon Gracie St. Michaels Pratt Institute General Fencing Ice Skating Club Tennis Club Literary Club General Organization The true measure. of life is not length, but honesty. -john Lyly. Estelle Malan0WSki Stall Lincoln High N. Y. U. f Commercial ' Exit Night Committee f'Her very frowns are fairer far Than smiles of other maidens are. -Coleridge. Christine Maraziti Bowie P. S. 52 ' Undecided Commercial Law 'Club Swimming Club Tenmis Club K Spanish Club A true friend is forever a friend. -MacDonald. Marion McKiernan Irish St. Bridget's Columbia Smimming Club Globe Club 1 Night Watch A true, strong and sound mind that can em- brace equally great things and small. -johnson. I Frances Meyer Fran P. S. 28 Undecided Commercial General Organization German Club Those about her, from her shall read, the perfect ways of honor. -Shakespeare. l935 1635 jkvmffffffi lbffixfy 1 faffffffffffi A Ze ' i n I lilililIl .i.u.i, :WIEIY nliiiii Marie A. Meyer Touts P. S. 8 N. Y. U. General Dramatic Society Sr. Prom Comm. We meet thee like a pleasant thought-when such are wanted. -Wadsworth. Irma Millan Babe Lincoln Columbia General . A kind and gentle heart she had. To comfort friends and foes. -Goldsmith. Gertrude Mitchell Demarest N. Y. U. General Wisdom sits alone-Topmost in Heaven. -Willis. Dorothy Nawracka Dot Lincoln Commercial Science Club Economics Club A youth of labor, with an eye of ease. -Anon. Mary 0'Brien May St. Dominic's Academy Columbia General Nothing rarer than real goodness. -Anon. Sylvia Meyers Syl Lincoln N. Y. U. General Literary Club Swimming Club Economics Club However it be, it seems to me 'Tis only noble to be good. -Tennyson. Julia Mis Jewel Dickinson Katherine Gibbs General Organization Pin 84 Ring Comm. Her fondness for meditation produces many clever ideas. -Anon. Frances Morella Fran P. S. 23 Undecided Commercial Bank Cashier Student Council Goodness is beauty in its best estate. -Marlowe. Elsie Nider Elsie P. S. 52 Undecided Commercial Tennis Club 'Tis only noble to be good. -Tennyson. Elizabeth 0'Niell St. Michaels Hunter Swimming Club Harmonica Club Basketball Faithfulness and sincerity first of all. -Confuscius. Tian... ..I.,I . . ,J 4 Qpwy jbafefzfewfd' ZQYQXFQ . i 'iiiim Y Q L!-LBJ' K, l'liV i i ' - Y ' 6 ' ll Noreen Sullivan 'Sullxe 414 Alvina Paul ,,venie,, St. Josephs Com. john Marshal 4l4 P S 28 U d .d d b b Commercial 44l ' ' n ffl 6 Glo e Clu General Organization Q ' 1 Pres., Vice-Pres. and Sec. French C-lub 4l4', Comma-Cla Ice Skating Club Economics Club 4l4l 'fThere's nothing ill, can dwell in such a Humor is wit and love. -Thackeray. 4l4l ICIUPIC-H -Shake5PCafe- . l 1 Q:l4 41 4? . - 4 l'4 PBtel'S0n upllten Regina Phelan uJeann St' Nicholas N' Y' U' ll Sacred Heart Hi h N Y U General in g ' ' ' Dramatic Society History Club 4414 General Law Club Sr. Prom Comm. 41 ll To know how to wait is the great secret of The highest friendship must always lead to U4 success, -Anon. the highest pleasure. -Fielding. 4l44 . l 4:4 34 . l - - nsilu Mlnerva P0l'tel' HN-hnn PQ s. 5 N. Y. U. Q All Sang I Sk YQLL a in u Commercial Law u A I Ce g Italian Club W Photographic C ub Her words are trusty heralds to 4::4 Czzziiliff 15 3 51995131 kind of uutlgillini 4? 41 44 4 P 41 4 l Anna Probkop Anne 4':l ElSie.R2Yll10!lll El P. S. 22 St. Francis Hospital 4l4 Cllffslde Park High N- Y- U- Commercial 4ll4 General G1 b C1 1, N' ht Watch French Cl b O e u 4 l Liiirary Club Chairlady, Sr. Sociial Studious of ease, and fond of humble things. ll, U U , H -phillips 444, Beauty is the flower of virtue. -Ray. 4 41 45 41 4 P pl 4 P - - at n Glarys Reddmgbon Glad 444 Rlta Rens 4 Rene Lincoln Fordham 444 P. S. 32 Packards Business College 4 Commercial 4,5 General Law Club 4:4 Globe Club Paradise is open to all kind hearts. 4,9 Living jewels dropped unstained from heaven. -Becauger. M4 -Anon. Fnw'-1l-nirm E 163 jkrmfeendf Qmtry 'U'e'n?!?7!2 g V4 ff If ll fr, .7jfLiif ' I I tn' nlllln E gy I '.!lU...- Riff! VA i' ' 'l S .iiillill X -fel Mary Rinaldo Curly P. S. 27 State Normal Commercial Pres. of Vice Coun. in Student Coun. Law Club Service Club Cashiers' Club Thus, if small things we may with great, compare. Catherine A. Roth Kay St. joseph's Com. Fordham Commercial Reception Comm. jan. Class Play jan. Sr. Social Comm. Owl Staff Chairman, Cap and Gown Comm. Her modesty has concealed much of her ability. -Anon. Eleanor Sczesny 'Snooks Sacred Heart Fordham Commercial Sr. Prom Comm. Tennis Club Swimming Club French Club Spanish Club Cap and Gown Comm. It is a friendly heart, that has plenty of friends. -Thackery. Mary Sexton Mae Henry Snyder jr. High Undecided General Perseverence is irresistible. -Sertarius. t Viola Sochinski Violets l P. s. sv N. Y. U. Commercial Commercial Law Glee Club Few things are impossible to diligence and skill. -Johnson. Mary Romanchak Kay P. S. 6 Christ Hospital Commercial Law Club Globe Club Success is the crown of effort. -Anon. Rosalia Roth Rae Holy Family Undecided Academic Globe Club Literary Club Glee Club Humor is the mistress of tears.--Thackery. Theresa Semenecz Tess Lincoln Panzer General Fortitude is a great help in distress. -Plautus. Grace Sheehey Gracie St. Aloysius Hudson College General Quality, not quantity, is my measure. Helen Stapf Nell Lincoln St. Elizabeth College Commercial German Club Literary Club Swimming Club Globe Club The flower of sweetest smell is shy and lowly. -Wardsworth. IU! hu I TWV, X. E , ,.r,,--,-W.-N-5 - .1 -1 . 1935 W f ' Qmgzgy Qfenfeemfd Jkddffy 1 I ! ' 'imgpef Y . lllMiii'l'.lliUF+1iii ':'1f 2 f 1 N In 5. Catherine Stephen Pennsylvania Commercial Columbia ','Politeness costs nothing, and gains everything. Lady Montagu. Helen Thaler Nell Undecided General Good reasons must, of force, give place to better. -Shakespeare. Madeline Tobin Mad Our Lady of Grace Nurses' Training General Reception Committee Kindness is virtue itself. -Lamartime. Lillian M. Treusch Bud St. Aloysius Columbia Academic French Club Sec, and Treas. Student Council Rep. Her words are trusty, heralds to her mind. -Ford. Elizabeth Trodd Betty Commercial Whoever perserveres will be crowned. -Herder. Fifty-one Martha Tegtmeyer Teggy D.q H. S. Undecided W General , Politeness is to goodness 3 What words are to thoughts. , -Jouhert. l Cehelia Thompson Ceil Liricoln Pratt Institute Commercial Silence is more eloquent than words. W -Carlyle. Lillian Tracey Pat St. lDominic's Academy Columbia X Academic G. QO. Council Executive Comm. Debating Society Literary Society Redeption Comm. History Club Q Der Deutsche Verein Shit: who know the most, believes the least. 3 3 V -Buckle. i U' ace Tricarica Tricky . 6 Undecided A Commercial l Bashful sincerity and comely love. , -Shakespeare. Kay Tunyn Kay Lincoln Columbia 1 Commercial The virtue lies in the struggle, not the iprizef' -Milne. l H535 .QVJIMIFKYIJ Qfrfbry HWMWA . ffi 'FTC fl, l-tj M. lf-Inf ll..lviZ1 fi- ll l . U H gl, Irene Wawrzonkiewicz Fuzzy iltta yander Krulk U d Rged tll gt, Amhony-S Undecided mco n n eci e Com c' 1 Commercial 4,1 ilwimming Qiibb me! la Cheerleader Thought, discovered is the more possessed. lnl armomca u Globe Club Tennis Club -' Oung' lnl All our dignity lies in our thoughts. gl -Pascal. ll ll ll Cecelia Wendelken Bobby lul Demarest J. C. Medical Center tl Margaret Whelan HPUEKYU Academic Qll, G I Basketball Team Swimming Club N mera Fencing Club Capt. of Cheer Leaders tl Literary Club Spanish Club ill, Creation is great, and cannot be understood. Biology Club ll icarlylen Action is the genius of nature. -Blair. lnl ' l ll ll ll Marion white ffwhiteyv Alice wittenborn Al Dickinson Undecided St. Bridget's Fordham Commercial College Prep We give our best affections to the beautiful, Q HB . b . ,, only our second best to the usefulfv e great in act, as you have een in thought. 1B01-ee. gl, -Shakespeare. . ' ll lnl 4,3 tl ll Jean Zaorski Smiles ll, Helen Zyskawski Zik Dickinson Undecided lvl Lincoln Medical Center Co gl General French Club Literary Club ll, A , Tennis Club Fencing Club lu Globe Club Tennis Club Make your b oughts into action. ' lll, 'IA C01-lfage I0 ifldufe and to 0bCY-H -Necker. 4,15 -Tef1nY501'l- il ll ln? Marion Lynn Mah lnl Jean Leszcznski Chic Undecided' 4,49 P. S. 1 Undecided Commercial tb? Commercial Yeaf5 teach us more than b00k5. 1Ane1-bach, uDlllgCl'lCC is fhe l'1'lOIhCl' of good l1lCk.H ll. Ulla.. Q lkffdafy DU Vi ilxiiyfii .Qyeffffefzfi Qakxry new ga an Louis Abrunzo Lou Dickinson John Marshall Academic Debating Society Law Society Fencing Club G. O. Council Who tracks the steps of Glory, to the grave. -Byron. Victor Barbalinardo Vic General Eternal sunshine settles on his head. --Goldsmith. Edward J. Beenick Scribe Pennsylvania Fordham Academic Owl Editor, june Track Team Manager Nightwatch Editor Photo. Society General Organization Basketball League Student Council Theban Legion Advisory Editor, Nightwatch An able man shows his spirit by gentle Words and resolute actions. -Chesterfield. Blair J. Benson f'Doc Henry Snyder Jr. High Fordham General Water Polo Swimming Club Press on! a better fate awaits thee. -Hugo. Charles Binkowski Bink P. S. 32 Pace Institute God helps the brave. -Schiller. Fifty-three Vincent Amitrani Vine P. S. 27 Fordham College Prep Literary Club Ring 8: Pin Comm. French Club Play Comm. Let us do or die. -Burns. John C. Bartlett Jack Lincoln Rutgers Commercial And learned the luxury of doing good. -Goldsmith. George Belhummer George Dickinson Pace Institute Commercial True as the needle to the pole, Or as the dial to the sun. -Booth. George Berkoben George Henry Snyder jr. High Undecided General Senior Social Committee Ambition has no rest. -Lytton. Richard Borchek Dick College Prep Common sense is very uncommon. -Greely. 1935 1635 jglfifffifi Qfffbfy 4 A fwfmyny, 5 X Y Qi Edward Borman Evening Tech. and Ind. High General A gentleman makes no noise. Edward Brander Emerson UC-ussyfl Harvard -Emerson. HEd!Y Seth Boyden General Law Club Economics Club Nature designed us to be of good cheer. -Jerrold. Theodore Bumiller, Jr. Garnet Chr, Ring 8: Pin Comm, German Club Debating Club Self trust is the essence of heroism. -Emerson. William Carew Bill Manuel Training Columbia General Owl Editor, jan. Literary Club French Club Globe Club The essence of poetry is will and passion. Hazlitt. Olaf Christensen Ole Dickinson Pace Institute General For I am nothing, if not critical. -Shakespeare. 44 4 44 4 44 I 4 4 44 43 4 4 444 444 4 44 4 4 44 4 444: 4 4 4 4 4 4 4444 4 4 44 4 4 4 44 44 4 4 444 444 4444 44 3455 44 43 4:3 4444 43 44 4 4 44 43 4 4444 4 4 444 4 4 4 4 4 44 4 44 4 4 44 4 4 44 4 4 444 4 44 43 4:3 ta James M. Boyle Jim Business School Fordham General Pres. june Class Treas. Student Council Pres. G. O. Council Debating Society G. O. Executive Comm. Nightwatch Character is a diamond that scratches every other stone. -Emerson. Wilfred Broderick Fred Emerson Undecided Commercial General Organization To know how to hide one's ability is great skill, -La Rochefoucauld. Rocco Capalbo Dickinson General Track Team Liberty is an elusive thing. John Carotenuto Frankford High, Penna. Academic Quick believers need broad Frank Cioffi Dickinson College Prep Italian Club flR0c00!, Undecided -Smith. uJ0h-nnyn Temple shoulders. -Herbert. Frank Undecided Genius can only exist in an atmosphere of freedom. Fairburn. Fifty-four Iii: l unll Ill' l an in H h l?f2f2zfy .52wef2f'emf6 Qddfry 1935 t 'l viui1Ii741-Sc-.. : ..1.L!J. - nun lllllllllllliwyli-alll :FEE-F7 ?'???19i2?f ? 'l-H' B Frank Coccaro Frankie Alfred Coco Al Lincoln Pace Institute General General - H Measures, not men, have always been my Custom reconciles to everything. -Burke. markj- -Goldsmith, Abraham Cohen Abe Robert Conway Bob Emerson U. of S. C. General College Prep Spanish Club uDi5Patch is fhe Soul of businessfl Men must work, and women must weep. -Cl l6SICI'flCld. -Kinggley, Donald Cruger Don John Czeterko Yosh Sr. Amhony Undecided General General Economics Club Basketball Duty is the demand of the hOUf- -GOCIhH- Do that duty that lies nearest thee. -Goethe. 303111 ' ' Val Giuseppe Della Malva Pasquele Sr. Bri U. of S. C. pn 5. 28 U ' . fR Y General A General mv O ome Pres- ' 1 ' , Sclence Club Coach, jan. Class Play Chr. Play Comm. la! . General Organization d H , H , , Open my heart and you will see, grave in- Deefls a ne 'suffice Wh1't'ef- side of ir, Italy. -Robert Browning. Sfwey Delnegfo Del Michael. Del Pezzo Del I-mmln N' Y- U- Dickinson I Undecided Genera College Prep , Deutsche Verein 1 Once bitten twice Shy. ?Huxley- Humor is the foam on the wave of life. 17iIn,,lT.m -Bairnsfather. H335 fwffffffffzi Qmzfy Y , - Q' t , .7ae0f?ek'f? p If I rr I ll litlll :mfr JSE: Vendel Derer Ven Industrial To bear is to conquer our faith. --Shakespeare. 1 Raymond Detric P. S. 12 lCRay7! N. Y. U. oll e Prep He makes no friend, who never made a foe. -Tennyson. Joseph Donohue , Joe Drake's Undecided General Spanish Club Wrestling Club He who weighs his burdens, can bear them. WMartial. Charles Engelbart Chris Union Hill High N. Y. U. Academic General Organization Pres. German Club Integrity gains strength by use. -Tillotson. Bartholomew Enright Skippy Lincoln Villanova General Basketball A faithful friend is better than gold. -Burton. George A. Desmond St. Josephs General Faith is character. James Dillion Our Lady of Grace Academic G. O. Council, Vice-Pres, Vice-Pres. Swimming Club llnesl! Undecided -Winton. KlJiml! Fordham Harmonica Club V. P. Sr. Class Learn to labor and to wait. fLongfellow. ,,1fWLj'f,fJgt 6f4 Erwin Duhinsky Union Hill High General Treas. German Club Basketball League A friend is worth all hazards Dubin Undecided History Club we can run. -Young. Francis Engleke i Frank Memorial Pratt Institute Academic Varsity Tennis Jr. Varsity, Basketball Wrestling Club V . Tennis Club Be slow in choosing a friend, slower in changing. Edward Finucane St. Michaels Basketball Economics Club -Franklyn. 'Moosef' Notre Dame Gym Class Football The more the marble wastes, the more the statue grows. -Angelo. DJ-Fm .-JV . : : fkfidffy i fkyefrffexffi Qmdry 5 U U - , m . ' llllliflaqigism . ' , i ?F 5, as as an BEIEQU IJ James Finucane Jimmie St. Michaels Notre Dame Academic Basketball Football Pres, Economics Club Gym Class Friendship is the wine of life. -Young. George Fowler Jr ' St. Pauls A. I. B. Academic General Organization Treas. of Sr. Class An aifable and courteous gentleman. -Shakespeare. Cornelius Friedin Neil P. S. 27 Undecided General Fencing Club Tennis Club Good humor is always a success. -Tarater. William Fr'end n rinc ton General The soul is strong that trusts in goodness. -Massinger. William Gerth Bill Dickinson Cooper Union eral A hand that gives, gathers. -Sue. DJI4.. ..-.. -.. Sl ll gn en: el' ii ii H 2'-i ll Qu, el: 4:3 4 lr this tub ll :iz ll ll ll bl, ln, en, tn, en, tm ll it :Hi iv cn? 4 5 H, 4,4 4 P gl Q 5 pi 4,49 QQ Joseph Fitzsimmons Fitz St. Peters Prep St. Johns Academic French Club Owl Staff Chr. Exit Night , 'Chr. Adv. Comm. Reserve is the ex ression of respect rd those its o ' s. QW f De M ie Henry Freitag Tobey P. S. 160, Brooklyn Rutgers Academic The unshine of the mind. -Sytton. Solomon Friend Sol Washington Irving High U. of P. Academic Debating Club Loudness is impotence. -Tanater. John Geraghty Jack Sf. Pauls Undecided Commercial Nightwatch Swimming Club Globe Club Great men are sincere. -Emerson. wx Jacob Gnirre it Jake A . ral , -xv i Happiness see made tof be shared. Z! -Corneille. -I I .5-?!f6!7fK6'f7ff Qfzfbfy 11725677 ff, ff? V rw lI .!.L!4 ,j, -.. lllllanjtan f fmlilf' nliiiig Maurice Goldberger Goldie He,-man Goldrarn 55G0ldy7, Barringer Rutgers Academic P. . 25 'A' St. Peters Vice-Pres. Sr, Class Sr. Class Pla! Play Comm. Debating Clu Student Council Genera' He gave to Misery all he had-a tear ,, b f . , , , H And gained from Heaven all he wished-a edge 0 honesty 15 mmphcltv' . friend. -Thomas Gray. Novalls' Farrell Grogan Fal Joseph Gl'0mek Son A11 Saints Fordham Lincoln Undecided Tennis Club French Club C0ff1m6fCi211 Honor lies in honest toil. -Cleveland, What is honorable, is also safe. -Livy. Harold Hansen Hans John Hauerstein Jack . ' ' h ' ' h . . St Marys Cat oliixgfjggluie Ford am Memorial Columbia French Club Treas. Senior Class ACHCl6IT1iC Photo Society Cap and Gown Comm. German Club Law Club He who sings frightens away his ills. -Cervantes. Humor is wit and love. -Thackeray. Robert lfleim Bob Martin Hejke Mart P. S. 9 Fordham P- 5- 7, N- B- Columbia General General Student Council Few things are impossible to diligence and Perseverence is King. -Shaw. skill. -johnson. Edward Higgins Edu Frank Hughes Frankie St. Pauls St. Peters , l , General Catholic Institute Columbia Law Society Debating Society - Globe Club Ice Skating Club Academlf Theban Legion UK 1 d b . d l. ,, Iron sharpens irong scholar, the scholar. now e ge comes, ut wis om mgers. -Talmud. -Tennyson. M Fiftnr-eiaht l '5' 'E he ii' Ei 'E' - iifliiellf: :! llrglg: : . 22' 'Q Luiz, 'H ' 5' 'Xt S as Y 2 Q- 'S Q '52 . g 'tb 55. . 3, :lap Q Accursio Imbornone P. S. 1 A '4 College Prep, General Organization ' Debating Club The mildesr manners with the Raymond Johnson P. S. 6 , Charlie N. Y. U. Italian Clubt bravest mind. -Homerf lKRayH Univ of Penn. General A modest man never talks of himself. -Bruyere. Joseph R. Kindstrand Joe St. Michaels Fordham Law Academic Debating Society Swimming Club General Organization Dominic Kocot Doc St. Ann's Undecided General To endure is greater than to dare. -Thackeray. ndrew Krall ' ndy 1 I. . K ,I Trinity J bia French lu Student Council Sincerity is the most compendiou: wisdom. -Chesterfield ,. A,.A..-..A..,g4L1L, A .zi---- ::..--,.-g71',vi'i,i,. M Q5 Ti Q. 'H C 2 I S -4. 3 5 D ,YAY.'..-,.-Ajv.-A-.YAY,G-,.'Av.,v,.v..v,,v,.v,, D '-f-wfAifA1f1,Lv -fAv'-vAiAvAv'x,Av'2,-vAv'v'v-W Arthur Johnsen Arty P. S. 6 Undecided ener Vi wh shuns t y. - ddison. MY Kenneth Juncker Ken Dickinson High Columbia Commercial The noblest character is stained by the addition of pride. -Clauclanius. William King Chubby Lincoln Undecided General To bear is to conquer our fate. -Campbell. Louis Koehler Lou Robert Fulton Columbia Academic French Club German Club They also serve, who stand and wait. -Milton. Bernard Kriegel Numie Lincoln High John Marshall Commercial The noblest motive is the public good. -Virgil. 1935 41:2 ' .t7!fff7fifFff? 7 ' Henry Krlete Whitey W N. Y. U. Literary Club French Club General Organization Sr Social Comm. The plants look up to heaven whence they have their nourishment Shakespeare. Dominick Labrozzetta Nick Columbia Mens thoughts are much according to their inclination -Bacon. Peter Lambert Pete Sr Joseph s Columbia Pm and Ring Comm Globe Club greater. Sir Sidney. 6GL0u,! Dana Organization -Sertorius. Mischa N. Y. U. Debating Club Deutsche Verein His deeds imit le like the sea Cjhapman. .A XXWXP Mike Undecided Self respect is the best of all. -Ballou. Gerald J. LaChere Kid Pratt Institute Literary Club Sr. Prom Comm. great fortune. -Seneca. Dimples Fo tdham W The countenance is more eloquent than the H ll tongue. -Lavater. John Lafan Jack ..N0thing is E4nd it out. , -Herrick. James Lyons Jim The best hearts are the bravest. -Anon Civ-hu .P L42-fygyffj .9zfff2f6tf,f2fi fewfbfd UE ', , ,il . llllllllllllilllllllliiilt 'l '3i lilefuu n X wp -r X . t Willia Mac Murren Mac Dickinson Oxford Academic Spanish Club G. O. Comm. Executive Comm. Student Council A gentleman is silent about his own accom- plishments. -Anon. George Marcopolus D. H, S. Undecided General Great hopes make great men. -Fuller. Nicholas Masselli Governor Lincoln High Hudson College College Prep Swimming Club Debating Club Literature Club Law Society Proper words, in proper place. -Swift. Nicholas Matsoukas Nickie Dickinson Undecided General General Organization All true work is sacred. -Carlyle. Hugh McCarthy Mac Hamilton Academy fScotlandJ Edinburgh U. General Soccer Team Photo Society Globe Society St. Anr1's CScotlandj N. Y. U. Joseph Maksymowicz Mack P. S. 22 N. Y. U. Academic French Club Swimming Club Tennis Club He that is of a merry heart, hath a continued feast. -Dates. Peter Marotta Pete Dickinson Pratt Institute Academic God has placed no limit to intellect. -Bacon. Charles Mason Charlie D. H. S. N. Y. U. General Intellect is the soul of man, the only immortal part of him. -Carlyle, Frank Mayor Cutey Union Hill High J. C. Normal General Labor is the law of happiness. -Stevens. James McCarthy Jimmy General Organization Pres. Globe Club No labor is hopeless. ' General And the sign of a true hearted sailor Is to give and to tal-te a good joke. Dibden. 163 iwffzffffffi Qffdzfy 4 4 Wzffffffffi A g fr- ' x up ' l r i I ll l4l l U m -.aflfr .E-.Hal ' I4 il- l2l:l Donal McGlynn Lucky Holy Cross Undecided General Knowledge, love, power - there is the com- plete life. -Amiel. Edward J. McNary Mac P. S. 8. U. of Michigan General Basketball Swimming Club Economic Club Ice Skating Club The success of most things depends upon knowing how long it will take to succeed. -Montesquieu. Joseph Miller Joe General Fortune is not content to do a man one ill turn. -Bacon. Leopold E. Molzon Leo P. S. 1 Carnegie Tech. 4 College Prep German Club A bird in a cage, is not half a bird. -Beecher. Edwin Moore '4Ed All Saints Fordham General A true friend is one soul in two bodies. -Aristotli. 44 4,14 4,4 4 4 44 4,44 4,14 4 4 44 4 4 44 4,14 4,14 4,44 4,44 4 4 44 4,14 44 4:14 444 4,14 aa i 44 44 4 4 44, 444 444 444 444 444 4:4 4,44 4,14 4,14 4, 7 4,14 4 4 4:44 4 44 444 44 44 l HUB John McGowan Bub St. Peters Undecided Commercial Law Club Globe Club A honest man is the noblest gift of God. -Pope. Frank Miceli Mitch Dickinson Undecided General Orchestra Ill fortune seldom comes alone. -Dryden. Alexander Minasian Al Emerson C. C, N. Y. Commercial O Fortune, Fortune! all men call these fickle. -Shakespeare. Francis Monahan Brad Xavier High St. Peters Academic General Organization French Club Freedom is not Caprice, but room to enlarge. gBartol. Thomas Moran Tom St. Joseph Undecided General The march of the human mind is slow. -Burke. fgfmyfa .52'z4zff2.f'fff7f4' fkfiflffy U D :ZA T . ll: 1 -Xl xiii? 1 f LL gg E151 E EJ 'T' 5-F tl: :-: zz: :4:-.4 .. - 89.30 U Edward Morrisett Twin Dickinson Newark Tech. Academic Tennis Club, V. P. Law Club Senior Social Committee He is a silent fellow, yet his virtues speak eloquently for him. -Anon. Raymond 0'Brien 0'B Regis High Hudson College General Fencing Team Globe Club Debating Society General Organization The essence of humor is sensibilityg warm, tender fellow-feeling with all forms of existence.' ' Carlyle. George Ozol Russian Riga Latvia Newark Tech. Academic Economics Club Flashes of mettiment that were wont to set the table on a roar. -Shakespeare. Cosmo Palmitessa Cos Union Hill High Fordham Commercial Com. Law Club Spanish Club General Organization Member Hope against hope, and ask till ye receive. -Montgomery. Eugene Peterson Pete Lincoln High Undecided Commercial Globe Club He scatters enjoyment, who can enjoy much. -Larvater. alia ll il rl, 4m 4,,, til' tl 4:3 4,4 4 ll M, in 4 4' pl 4 4 M 'nl '44' 4,14 4,44 4 4 ll Q Q 1 Y 4::l 4,14 4,14 4' P 44 4,14 4,44 4,14 4,14 llll 4,3 4,44 4, tl lu' 4,3 4,14 41+ 4,14 44 ll 144? xox Joseph Mulderig St. Aloysius High lcMil!! N. Y. U. General General Organization Nightwatch French Club Coolness and absence of heat and haste, indicate fine qualities. -Anon. Bruno Ortelli Emerson Penn State General ' Hope springs eternal in the human breast. -Pope. Nicholas Palladino Nick P. S. 32 N. Y. U. General Italian Club History Club In struggling with misfortunes lies the true proof of virtue. -Shakespeare. Alfred Parodi Al General Politeness is the flower of humanity. -joubert. Vincent Picone Vin Emerson Fordham Commercial Italian Club Basketball Eloquence is the poetry of prose. -Bryant. 1635 Qufwfffmfi Qfvdxfy ll nlaalos Wzfffrffffffi .I 'TTI ' C I IEdlli. .!L!.g , Jlliiffli III i .0 . ll Ei: I- Alexander G. Phillian Alex Washington Irving john Marshall Academic French Club The value of a thought cannot be told. -Bailedy. William Poulston Bill Lincoln Columbia Commercial Experience makes us wise. -Hazlitt. Arthur Provost Bing Lincoln Alabama General He, the sweetest of all singers. -Longfellow. Italo Ratazzi Seek ye first, the good things of the mind, and the rest will either follow of itself or its absence will not be missed. -Bacon. George Reich , George P. S. 27 Undecided n l The rts are ever the bravest. ' -Sterne. John B. Pierce Jack Lincoln Undecided General The eye strays not while under the guidance of reason. -Syrus. Kenneth C. Pratt Kenny Lincoln American Inst. of Banking General 'Kindnessg the poetry of the heart. -Almi-Martin. Anthony Rataiczyk Tony Cliffside Park High Columbia Academic Pres. jan. Class G. O. Rep. Emerson N. Y. U. Literary Club Globe Club General Organization Frank R. Reardon Frank St Michaels N. Y. U. Commercial General Organization Courage is tempermental, scientific, ideal. -Emerson. Edward Reilly Eddie P. S. 1 N. Y. U. Globe Club Swimming Club German Club Everyman must get to Heaven his own way. Frederic. n-. fcgf,,b,5, .Qwefzfeemi fafzzbfy uni t f :glI Fl: SQMEW ':':::: w1l-V M as I' F I U I u ii i . HQ John Reilly Johnny Memorial American Embalmers General Courage never to submit or yield. -Milton. fi ' . uk 1 1 -' 1 'l rio G. S I iffy' -'lj J caMartyv9 . 'dy 'f Fordham 4 f l Academic al n Club Economic Club . I Law Society What is aught but as 'tis valued? -Shakespeare. John Scanlon Jack Lincoln St. johns General Tennis Team General Organization Philosophy is the health of the mind. Serecca. 4? Robert Schoellhorn Bob General A burden becomes light, which is cheerfully born. -Ovid. Adolf Schrader Ja A ,, U. s ber General - Of C- Basketball Team G Football V. P. Econ ffl Tera The rel a man denies himsel mms C u he sh ll ,obtain from God. ,the more , -Horace. ii Sixty- ve 2 A 4 I ll lil, tip lui dl, lil, lily ir' I li ll ll 4:15 4 ly 4 4 l lip 4 4 l lhjl 3 35 ll 4::4 ini '44' lr' ill, ln' ill' 4 4 ll il ll, li 4 44 l '4 44 44 lu lu Ernest Rusch Buster P. S. 73 Columbia General Nightwatch Ice Skating Club Worth makes the man, and want of it the fellow. -Pope. Charles Sajtlawa Sage Memorial Stevens Tech. Technical Architectural Club He, from whose lips divine persuasion Hows. -Homer. George Schimmel Georgie Lincoln N. Y. U. J General Our best thoughts comes from others. -Emerson. 4 I , 4 - 4 'Slack' Leo J. ,sehr Panzer St. Alloys: S i General H n may dismiss compassion from hls heart, Hut God will never. -Couper. 4 l 4 xf caT0mY' 4 Thomas Shaljlfey r John Marshall Jefmynr P ' J Acade WX 4 ' V y .!Debating Society law So ery 4 Ji h , g ' ' CE. l--Afoollylq nomyndy then be righrlbyeguzlgr- 2 I 5 , 4 1635 .jgfffffffdflf Qfrfkrp L: fijtiilrrg 796011270 , -ET: i III' iniiu U in Ill :'II 1 dmv 5 Joseph Silverman Joe P. S. 28 Columbia Academe: Student Council Law Club General Organization Globe Club Literary Club Chr. Pin 8: Ring Comm. Debating Club Asso. Editor, Owl Debating Team Persuasion tips his tongue whenever he talks. -Cibber. Chester Slauson Chet N. Y. U. College Prep XY hat is the best government? Trot which teaches us to govern ourselves. -Goethe. Peter Spadora Pete P. S. 5 Undecided General The less men think, the more they talk. -Montesquien. C0l'lleliuS St3nt0l'l rsNeiln Commercial A good name is better than bags of gold. ' -Cervantes. r Frank Straglibatti Hsu-agv Emerson Seth Boyden 1 . Commercial Law Club Economic Club A man dishonored is worst than dead. -Cervantes. Frank Silvia Ike P. S. 23 Undecided General Good counsel has no price. -Mazzine. Leonard Smith Smitty P. S. 27 Cooper Union General Those who command themselves command others. -Hazlitt. ! 2 N K John Srodinski Jack Sr, Mary'5 Columbia Academic Nightwatch General Organization Tennis Club Spanish Club lf you wish to preserve your secret, wrap it up in franknessf' -Smith. Earl Stoveken Oil St. Benedict's Columbia General General Organization Ice Skating Swimming Basketball The world knows nothing of its greatest men. -Taylor. John Sullivan Sully X Commercial MCD f few words are the best men. -Shakespeare. K 1 O Szxly-.fix - 5,032-y .gglfiffffiif QHQXFQ 1935 I: :ni :i5':E:mmi5'i -T 'E' ' Louis J. Stenkiewicz Lou P. S. 37 N. Y. U. General Organization French Club Debating Society It is hard to askg it i sweet to give. me. de Girardin. Sargent Tarzy Gootch General Memorial Undecided Basketball Trifles, not even in trifles can excell. -Young. - W Walter Van Glahn Van P, S, 6 Undecided Commercial Nothing endures but personal qualities. -Whitman. William VOSS Bill P, S, 3 Pace Institute College Prep Pres. Photo Society Tennis Club Chr. Cap and Gown Comm. Owl Staff G, O, Debating Society Sincere with himself and those he comes in contact with. -Anon. John Joseph West Jack P. S. 11 Undecided General Debating Club Literary Club Law Club French Club Sixty-:even A ..,.v,.v,.v,.v..,,,v,,v,,v,G,.,,.-.cvAvmv.-,,.,v.N ,-1,-V-V-.,-v-4.-,,A.,-V-.,-.,-.,-V-V-V-V-.,-.,-V-.F JLx41 g,l,:,:,v,i4L4L4 4Q..-..v.1,.:.:.gx as-v-vi,'v'v'1fwfQfwfv'ifffxfv'v'v4v if Q John Sznurkawski Dickinson Technical Architectural German Club us!! Columbia Literary I would rather make my name than inherit it. -Thackery. William Thompson Pop Dickinson Columbia General Basketball Team Gym Team Economics Club Generosity is the flower of justice. -Hawthorne. Phillip Villone Phil Stuyvesant Newark Coll. of Eng. Commercial Spanish Club Pride hath no other glass to show itself, but pride. -Shakespeare. Salvatore Vuocolo Us l!! a P.S.1 Commercial Photo Society Italian Club The man who fears nothin is St. Peters Debating Club as owerful as 8 P ' he who is feared by everybody. -Schiller. Raymond Whalen Ray St. joseph's N. Y. U. College Prep Basketball Globe Club Keep what you gotg the ills that we know are the best. -Plautus. H535 .ilcvefffrmfif Qfifbry .. 4: 50112576 ' I url -im' 54.4 ll' ut 414 'll 'I If I i L: ulzzill Myrtle H. Kieper Rusty Dickinson Fordham General French Club Ice Skating Club Good reasons must, of force, give place to better. -Shakespeare. Henry Witasloski Window P. S. 1 Brooklyn Poly Tech. Industrial Wit is the guard of moments, but genius is the God of ages. -Bruyere. Joseph Zang ,J64 Tris Demarest f I 'fl N. Y. U. , 44g,LC0mmercial J eutsche Verein I iqtjixydbf what honor demands. -Racine. Viricent Sweeney Vince St. Paul's Fordham Academic Never be satisfied that what has been achieved is sufficient. -Charles M. Schwab. Raymond Iannuzzelli Boysy Lincoln High Rutgers General General Organization The richness of mankind lies in his diversity. -Herbert Samuel. Q 444 4 4 4,4 4,44 4,44 4,44 4,44 4,44 4,4 4,44 4,4 4,44 4,44 4,44 4,44 4,44 4,44 4,44 4,4: 4 4 Q 4 4 4 4 44, 4 4 4 4 4444 44 4 4 44 4,4 4,4 4,4 444, 4 4 4 444 44 4 4 44 4,,4 4 4 INK '44' 4 4 44, 4 4 4 4 4 Jeremiah Woods Jerry St. Pauls St. Johns Commercial Literary Club Tennis Club Nightwatch Spanish Club No one sees what is before his feetg we all gaze at the stars. -Cicero. John Egan Jack Undecided Academic Oh be my friend, and teach me to be thine. -Emerson. Charles Tronco Chas Commercial Lincoln N. Y. U. The actual value of a genius often lies in his very singularity. -Mencken. Sixty-eight Kkfzdxfy Su rf '4 ii 6-A 4- N-QmI:::,m. fa --1 Qweafefmfi Qmdffy B R ' - lA F E m n SENIOR DIRECTORY Name Address Course Nancy Amato, 235-241 - 31st Street, Woodcliff Academic Marie Berg, 81 Thorne Street Academic Veronica Bertotti, 210 - 10th Street Academic Mary Bonaccolta, 12M Laidlaw Avenue Academic Mildred Butler, 9532 Summit Avenue Commercial Cecilia Cappiello, 15 Union Street Academic Anne Cassidy, 161 Webster Avenue Academic Mary Chisirazzi, 106 Lenoard Street Academic Mildred Clevely, 428 Mallory Avenue Commercial Mary Coleman, 486 Mercer Street Academic Rita Coleman, 486 Mercer Street Commercial Catherine Costello, 645 jersey Avenue Academic Jeanne Crane, 141 Pearsall Avenue Academic janet Crowley, 226 Webster Avenue Academic Mary D'Alessio, 1006 Sumtnit Avenue Academic Mary Dedomenico, 198 Clendenny Avenue General Sylvia DeFusc0, 330 Newark Avenue Academic Helen Deiuro, 39 Giles Avenue Commercial Annamae Derocher, 722 Park Avenue, Weehawken Academic Mary Devery, 635 Garden Street, Hoboken Academic Elvira Di Feo, 410 Monmouth Street Commercial Frances Dundelli, 145 Grand Street Academic Helen Eberling, 80 Palisade Avenue Academic Lillian Ehrig, 407 Pacific Avenue Academic Frances Finniello, 94 Belmont Avenue Academic Ida Galvanoni, 130 Highland Avenue Academic Mary Gilmartin, 219 Wilkinson Avenue Academic Helen Goode, 910 Garden Street, Hoboken Commercial Genevieve Grubowski, 239 - 14th Street Commercial Anna Halfpenny, 114 Clifton Place Academic Marie Hallstein, 217 New York Avenue Commercial Beatrice Hansen, 287 Claremont Avenue Academic Alice I-Iaughey, 184 Nelson Avenue Academic Margaret Hauer, 160 Randolph Avenue Comercial Louisa Heim, 285 Terrace Avenue Commercial Nina. Januzzi, 2 Howard Place Academic Antoinette Kaysser, 969 Park Avenue, North Bergen Academic Regina Kennedy, 114 Clifton Place Academic Ruth Kronmeyer, 364 Webster Avenue Commercial Margaret Lane, 78 Webster Avenue Commercial Jean Leszcynski, 436 jersey Avenue Fannie Lindblad, 128 Stevens Avenue Commercial Ethel Lohse, 103 Lincoln Street Commercial Margaret Magee, 448 Wayne Stretet Academic Claire Majewska, 202 - 3rd Street Academic Estelle Malanowski, 268 Danforth Avenue Commercial Pauline Malzensky, 300 Paterson Plank Road, Hoboken Commercial Anne Matusovicz, 440 jersey Avenue Commercial Marion McKiernan, 339 Montgomery Street Commercial Margaret McWalters, 196 Van Horne Street Academic Frances Meyer, 102 Thorne Street Commercial Marie Meyer, 101 Reservoir Avenue Commercial Sylvia Meyers, 29 Monticello Avenue Academic Irma Millan, 37 Williams Avenue Academic Julia Mis, 198 - 3rd Street Commercial Gertrude Mitchell, 194 Sherman Avenue Academic Frances Morella, 17 Giles Avenue Commercial Mary O'Brien, 277 Harrison Avenue Academic Elizabeth O'Neill, 206 Seventh Street Commercial Noreen O'Sullivan, 239 Beacon Street Commercial Mildred Peterson, 125 Ferry Street Academic Sylvia Pignatta, 330 - 3rd Street Commercial Minerva Porter, 13 Van Nostrand Avenue Commercial Anne Prokop, 244 Pacihc Avenue Academic Gladys Reddlington, 749 West Side Avenue Commercial Mary Rinaldo, 139 Columbia Avenue Commercial Mary Romanchak, 332 Baldwin Avenue Commercial Eleanor Sczesny, 640 Garfield Avenue Commercial Theresa Semenecz, 449 West Side Avenue Academic Sixty-nine 1935 fwfxfffffffif Qfffbfy I A 7 Y nu 2 2- I lllfdfyfklfl ,.f wt, .nzlif , 1. I lllllll. .tt tt. , me INITI: File H-lv , I, V' Sli If 4 '- SENIOR DIRECTORY fcontinuecll Name Address Course Mary Ann Sexton, 62 Warner Avenue Commercial Grace Sheehy, 70 Boyd Avenue Academic Helen Stapf, 213 Clendenny Avenue Commercial Catherine Stevens, 6 East Street Commercial Martha Tegtmeyer, 212 Hopkins Avenue Academic Lillian Treusch, 26 Nunda Avenue Academic Grace Tricarica, 83 Laidlaw Avenue Academic Elizabeth Trodd, 25 High Street Academic Kay Turzyn, 1861 Boulevard' Commercial Cecilia Wendelken, 153 South Street Academic Margaret Whelan, 683 Summit Avenue Academic Jean Zoarski, 427W Henderson Street Commercial Helen Zyzkowski, 116 Arlington Avenue Academic Vincent Amitrani, 1153 Summit Avenue Academic Victor Barbalinardo, 533 Ocean Avenue Academic Edward Beenick, 350 Eighth Street Academic Blair Benson, 19 Kensington Avenue Academic George Berkoben, 146 Boyd Avenue Academic Charles Binkowski, 381 Armstrong Avenue Academic Richard Borchek, 129 Magnolia Avenue Academic James Boyle, 96 Van Wagenen Avenue Academic Edward Brander, 774 - 39th Street, North Bergen Academic Theodore Bumiller, jr., 123 Collard Street Academic Rocco Capalbo, 32 Emerson Avenue Academic john Carotenuto, 77 New York Avenue, Union City Academic Frank Cioffi, 267 Railroad Avenue Academic Frank Cocarro, 91 Jordan Avenue Academic Abraham Cohen, 642 Communipaw Avenue Academic John Czeterko, 178 - 8th Street Academic john Darcy, 84 Van Wagenen Avenue Academic Michael Del Pezzo, 151 Thorne Street Academic George Desmond, 45 Fleet Street Academic Raymond Detrick, 230 Seaview Avenue Academic james Dillon, 285 Sherman Avenue Academic Irwin Dubinsky, 118 - 40th Street, Union City Academic John Egan, 85 Van Wagenen Avenue Academic Charles Engelbart, 115 - 34th Street, Union City Academic Frank Engleke, 946 Hamblet Place, North Bergen Academic Edward Finucane, 338 - Sth Street Academic james Finucane, 338 - 8th Street Academic joseph Fitzsimmons, 9 Fleet Street Academic Henry Freitag, 6 Zabriskie Street Academic Cornelius Friedin, 647 Liberty Avenue Academic William Friend, 149 Stevens Avenue Academic John Geraghty, 46 Seaview Avenue Commercial William Gerth, 6 Elizabeth Street Academic jacob Gnirrep, 800 Townsend Street, North Bergen Academic J. Farrel Grogan, 134 Maple Street Academic joseph Gromek, 138 Sussex Street ' Academic Harold Hansen, 267 First Street Academic john Hauerstein, Jr., 116 - 28th Street Academic Robert Heim, 3 Underwood Place Academic Martin Heike, 144 Bentley Avenue Academic Edward Higgins, 40 Greenville Avenue Academic Frank Hughes, 292 Barrow Street Academic Charles Imbornone, 40 Greene Street Academic Arthur Johnsen, 389 Ocean Avenue Academic Kenneth Juncker, 237 Bowers Street Academic joseph R. Kindstrand, 96 Maple Street Academic Dominic Kocot, 48 Walnut Street Academic Louis Koehler, 348 West Street, Union City Academic Andrew Krall, 63 Corbin Avenue Academic Henry Kriete, 265 Ogden Avenue ACadCm1C Michael Kruglinski, 1281 Riverside Place Academic Dominic Labozzetta, 38 jewett Avenue Academic Gerald La Chere, 295 Griffith Street Technical and Industrial Peter Lambert, 494 Pavonia Avenue Academic john Lefinte, 38 Centre Street Academic Meyer Lurie, 67 Wayne Street AC2ClCm1C Seventy fgmfbfg, .Qrefrfeefzfi Qadffy ll , , llllllllllllllllliiiw 1--A SENIOR DIRECTORY fCont-inuedj Name Address Course james Lyons, 186 Fairmount Avenue Academic joseph Maksymowicz, 375 Johnston Avenue Academic Peter Marotta, 19 Bergen Avenue Academic Nicholas Maselli, 76 Storms Avenue Academic Charles Mason, 12 Bond Street Academic Hugh McCarthy, 252 Pacihc Avenue Academic james McCarthy, 252 Pacific Avenue Academic Frank Mayor, 899 Poplar Street, North Bergen Academic Donal McGlynn, 402 Rose Avenue Academic John McGowan, 397 Summit Avenue Commercial Edward McNary, 310 Palisade Avenue Academic Frank Micelli, 125 Brunswick Street Academic Joseph Miller, 306 Woodword Street Commercial Alexander Minasian, 604 Palisade Avenue Academic Leopold Molzon, 213 Clinton Avenue Academic Francis Monahan, 243 Fourth Street Academic Edwin Moore, 245 Whiton Street Academic Thomas Moran, 24 St. Paul's Avenue Academic joseph Mulderig, 293 Fulton Avenue Academic Raymond O'Brien, 135 Prospect Street Academic Bruno Ortelli, 17 Hague Street Academic George Ozol, 654 Bergen Avenue Academic Nicholas Palladino, 281 Newark Avenue Academic Cosmo Palmitessa, 760 Monroe Street, North Bergen Academic Alfred Parodi, 414 - 25th Street Academic Vincent Picone, 240 Ogden Avenue Commercial William Poulston, 113 Rutgers Avenue Commercial Alexander Phillian, 295 Grove Street Kenneth Pratt, 90 Pearsall Avenue Academic Arthur Provost, 24A Williams Avenue, Academic Frank Reardon, 50 West Hamilton Place, Commercial Edward Reilly, 143 South Street Academic john Reilly, 23 - 22nd Street, West New York Academic Ernest Rusch, 148 Linden Avenue Academic Mario Sabini, 27 Concord Street Academic Charles Sajtlava, 337 - 26th Street, Guttenberg Academic john Scanlon, 148 Glenwood Avenue Academic M. George Schimmel, 499 jersey Avenue Academic Robert Schoellhorn, 70 Park Avenue, Guttenberg Academic Leo Schier, 74 Winfield Avenue Academic Adolf Schrader, 3149 Hudson Boulevard Academic Thomas Sharkey, 224 Old Bergen Road Academic Leonard Smith, 52 Grace Street Academic john Srodinski, 210 Van Vorst Street, Academic Cornelius Stanton, 205 Fairview Avenue Academic Frank Straglibatti, 433 New York Avenue, Union City Academic john Sullivan, 49 Neptune Avenue Commercial Louis J. Stenkiewicz, 206 Ninth Street Academic john Sznurkowski, 178 Twelfth Street Academic Sargent Tarzy, 149 Erie Street Academic William Thompson, 283 Griffith Street Academnc Charles Tronco, 199 jackson Avenue Phillip Villone, 265 Fifteenth Street Academnc William Voss, 57 County Avenue, Secaucus Academnc Salvatore Vuocolo, 59 Gregory Street Academic Raymond Whalen, 281 Liberty Avenue Academic Henry Witoslawski, 385 Grove Street Technical and Industrial Jeremiah Woods, 3268 Boulevard Academic Joseph Zang, 326 York Street Academic Helen Abendschein, 54 Stupvesant Avenue Academic Isabelle E. Anglesea, 26 Columbia Avenue Commercial Kathryn T. Beggans, 257 Baldwin Avenue Commercial Vivian Bradley, 120 Zabriskie Street Commercial Antoinette C. Cassella, 32 Liberty Avenue Commercial Helen E. Cicchetti, 67 Williams Avenue Commercial Margaret M. Domnik, 416 St.Paul's Avenue Academic Mildred E. Donnelly, 417 Union Street Commercial Anne E. Eckhardt, 46 Woodlawn Avenue Commercial Seventy-one .5e?0'6!7fc'ff7fW Qfzftzfy I fwefweffi 1635 - . ' . itll 'H If nl I .. paul an -gg SENIOR DIRECTORY fconunuedp Name Address Course Helen J. Falvey, 20 Grant Avenue Jennie A. Filipkowski, 765 Ocean Avenue Kathleen C. M. Fitzpatrick, 4 West Hamilton Ann K. Gallagher, 99A Claremont Avenue Anne Glushko, 116 Van Horne Street Dorothy E. Gutzeit, 112 Seaview Avenue Kathleen A. Kelly, 11 Stegman Terrace Marie K. Kelly, 275 Lembeck Avenue Gertrude F. Kilmartin, 470 Ocean Avenue Gertrude F. Mahon, 304 Woodlawn Avenue Dorothy T.Nawrocka, 341 Montgomery Street Elsie A. Nider, 314 Ninth Street Alvina A. Paul, 59 Bleecker Street Regina A. Phelan, 243 Danforth Avenue Elsie V. Raymond, 93 Shaler Avenue, Fairview Rita H. Rens, 79 Newkirk Street Catherine A. Roth, 31 Beach Street Rosalia Roth, 43 Carlton Avenue Viola C. Sochinski, 331 Henderson Street Helen Thaler, 501 Bergen Avenue Cecilia A. Thompson, 105 Lexington Avenue Madeline F. Tobin, 462 Ogden Avenue Lillian C. Tracey, 133 Van Wagenen Avenue Rita Vander Kruik, 50 Glenwood Avenue Irene Wawrzonkiewicz, 176 Fourth Street Marion M. White, 375 Webster Avenue Alice Wittenborn, 25 Beland Street Marion Lynn, 609 Bramhall Avenue Louis P. Abrunzo, 233 Summit Avenue joseph C. Bartlett, 2540 Boulevard Geor e X Belhumer 24 Griffith Str g . , 9 eet Edward Charles Borman, 441 Fairmount Avenue Wilfred D, Broderick, 97 Beacon Avenue William Carew, 120 Hutton Street Olaf Christensen, 360 Woodlawn Avenue Alfred Coco, 25 Madison Street ,Guttenberg Place Robert J. Conway, 969 Fourth Place, North Bergen Donald W. Cruger, 130 Grant Avenue Giuseppe A. Della Malva, 81 Congress Street Savey Delnegro, 301 Ege Avenue Vendel Derer, 129 Hopkins Avenue Joseph Donohue, jr. 158 Lexington Avenue Bartholomew A. Enright, 23 Belmont Avenue George Fowler, 6 Cator Avenue Solomon Friend, 281 Sherman Avenue Maurice M. Goldberger, 326 Summit Avenue Herman Goldram, 132 Hutton Street Raymond C. Johnson, 127 Van Nostrand Avenue William J. King, 80 Baldwin Avenue Bernard Kriegel, 77 McAdoo Avenue Andrew P. Lang, 311 Sherman Avenue Louis La Praia, 326 York Street William MacMurren, 3710 Hudson Bulevard George Marcopolus, 104 Stevens Avenue Nicholas Matsoukas, 239 J3CkS0fl Avenue J. Edward Morrisett, 190 Palisade Avenue Eugene Petersen, 258 Arlington Avenue jack Pierce, 294 Armstrong Avenue Anthony Rataiczyk, 418 Gregory Avenue Italo Ratazzi, 418 Gregory Avenue George J. Reich, 97 Charles Street joseph F. Silverman, 204 Sherman Avenue Frank Silvia, 23 Weldon Street Chester H. Slauson, Jr., 3687 Boulevard Peter j, Spadora, 330 Second Street Earl E. Stoveken, 233 Grant Avenue john J. West, 52 Van Reipen Avenue S evenly-two Academic Academic Academic Academic Commercial Commercial Academic Academic Commercial Academic Commercial Commercial Commercial Academic Academic Commercial Commercial Academic Commercial Academic Commercial Academic Academic Academic Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Academic Academic Academic Academic Commercial Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Commercial Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Commercial Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Academic Ikffzbfy jkafefzdfefzfd' Qadxfy i IQ35 I ': 'I I E 53 LIFE TIME It isn't any trouble for the bird to learn to Hy The dog picks up its instinct in the twinkling of an eye But life has countless lessons and endless blows to give Before a man can truly say that he has learned to live. The lifetime of a bird is brief, give dogs their food and drink, They do not ever lie awake at night to plan and think. But man has endless problems to be solved as best he can And he must suffer many woes to learn to be a man. He follows this and follows that to find his folly out, In search of peace, and pleasure long he gropes his way about His blunders and failures cause him suffering and distress, For age discovers truths to him which youth could never guess. He slowly learns that character by strength of will is made He has to teach himself to stand, when others flee, afraid So much there is that puzzles man at every bend and turn That seventy years are not enough for all he wants to learn. He reads, he thinks, experiments, builds first his hope on gold To find at last that wealth and fame bring little he can hold And dwelling on the lasting joys which friendship's had to give He sighs, to think that he must die just when he'd learned to live -Cecelia Wendelken .T OUR SCHOOL Dickinson Accredited Evening Ever shall stand 'bove all As the light, which will always guide us, Onward, on to all. Look aloft at our banner Colers, blue and gold For though we pass on From her stronghold, We'll always heed her call. Dickinson Accredited Evening Ever we'll cherish thee In after years, and after thoughts Our memories of thee will be. CORNELIUS C. FRIEDIN and ANDREW KRALL S eventy-three I jkzffffffgfffi Qfifzxry A Afafgpfyfffy 635 f' 1 me-Y - ITALO RATAZZI january C lam VALEDICTORIAN The sincerity and great power of understanding of our valedictorian is shown be- yond all doubts by his splendid record. The fact that he was voted an intelligence far above that of the average is but an addition to his many qualities. He attained an average of 91921. He came to Massachusetts from Brazil at the age of twelveg learned the English language and other fundamentals and received sufficient credit to attend a higher school. Compelled to leave grammar school due to economic circumstances, he managed to find time to continue his education at Emerson Evening School. From there he came to our school in February, 1931g an honor both for us and for him. Without such an school he would have had a difficult time in furthering his arnbitionsg in bringing to a reality his hopes. His greatest interests lie in the fields of sociology and political economy. A man well adapted to and typical of such outstanding subjects. To his line character, his noble ideals, his true ability and to his comforting com- panionship, we, his fellow classmates, bow in due respect. DircipuluJ ext priori porterior die.r. -Syrzzf. Seventy-four rg fgfpfggf-5, Qwenffenfi IQZFZQFQE 1935 D llllilll' 'na'llw ' 'swim 1-:+1 n n . EDWIN MOORE june Claw VALEDICTORIAN Edwin Moore has attained an average of 90.5 in his studies during his matricula- tion at the Dickinson Accredited Evening High School. He was born in january, 1908, and received his elementary education at a parochial school. He was forced to leave school to embark on a business career. After staying away from school for nine years he came to our school where he studied diligently for four years. The result of which was his high scholastic standing. He was liked by all the students and faculty because of his generosity and capacity of knowledge. The graduating class wish him as much success in his future endeavors. S eventy- five 1635 f .fgyffiffffffi lbfzftzfy I ,ikfffffyfflff rx ul ANNE CASSIDY ALUMNI AWARD At the close of each school year it has been the custom for the Alumni Association to select one of the graduates as the most outstanding student of that year. This selec- tion is made by a committee composed of the Faculty and Alumni members. . Miss Anne Cassidy was chosen this year as the most deserving student. For several years she has been one of the most popular girls in the school, as evidenced by the fact that she was recently chosen as the All-American Girl of Dickinson Evening. Her charming personality has won her many staunch friends in the school, and everyone has a good word to put in for her. Miss Cassidy has given much time and effort to extra- curricular activities, which include the Law Society, Reception Committee, Basketball Team and Science Club. She also serves in the capacity of Secretary of the G. O., of the Globe Club and the Executive Committee of the G. O. Although she is an excellent stenographer during the day and gives so much-of her time to the school activities, her academic record has been far above the average. F judging by her past record for industrious, energetic support of all these things and her capacity for hard work, Miss Cassidy should be a very successful person in the future, and we hope that john Marshall, where she intends to continue her studies, will appreciate her as much as Dickinson Evening has in the past. Seventy-.fix fgfyggffgj r527l'?K7f6'6'!7XJA Qwffffy l 1935 JUDGE NOT judge not the rich and the merry Who command and for money receive, Judge not the poor and the lowly, But in them all believe. Judge not the neglectful lover, ' Who strays from his sweetheart's embrace, What right have you to judge a brother If in his soul, he has but grace. -Mildred Donnelly. wk :if ar FRIEND Who near to me or far away, Until my life shall end, To me my heart You'll always be An unforgotten friend. Pk PK P14 TO ANYONE We have come to the end and I go my way With nothing behind to regret, We have loved and lived in the light of day, So let us say goodbye and forget. Let us part with no word of sorrow, Though the future seems cold and gray, Mayhaps we shall find on the morrow What we thought we lost to-day. -Anon. Severzly-Jeven .522ufx2ffff7fi lbfzdxfy I 1 Iyfgfwgfi 11-'E My I Emi W7 uliiziflq JANUARY CLASS FLOWER Qardenia JUNE CLASS FLOWER giose S ygh fkpggffy I I .Q'Jf6'f7fJffx7fi Cwifdffy - 1935 WU .el III ,W 1 iiQEE5:x2u1F1n2u1 'ff K ' FELQBJU U ' JANUARY CLASS MOTTO Qbotest Qfierz' Hr Gan fBe fDoneJD 'Qc' JUNE CLASS Morro gactum Gst Ut Was 'Been fDoneJJ 5 y 1635 iaamffffifff Qfrfhfy .. 1 Wzffafwfff 7 , 1- I il l wi If HELEN FALVEY january C lan MERITORIOUS SERVICE AWARD Helen Falvey was selected as the most outstanding senior from the January Class by a committee of the Faculty. Having this distinction, she will receive the meritorious service award. On graduation night, a medal will be presented to her for her distinguished work in curricular and extra-curricular activities. Miss Falvey entered the Dickinson Accredited Evening High School in 1930, after completing a secretarial course at All Saints' Commercial Academy, and completed here the prescribed four-year academic course, with an excellent average. She has confined all her social interests to Dickinson Evening activities and has pro- moted the success of many of the school clubs. She was a charter member of the Glee Club and rose to the presidency of this organization in September, 1934. In 1931, to- gether with her sister, she composed the Dickinson Evening Alma Mater. Always a literary enthusiast, she served as Secretary of the Literary Club for two terms. A couple of years ago she served on the Night Watch Stall. Other activities include membership in the French Club and Swimming Club. All her friends sincerely wish her success in her future endeavors. Eighty .s fk'7QJfQ .Qwavffeahfi 6.-?X7f?!fy V 1 1935 .,,l.,,5 31 , I EUWARD J. BEENICK june Clair i MERITORIOUS SERVICE AWARD Edward J. Beenick was chosen by the General Organization, as the recipient of the Meritorious Service Award for june, 1935. Mr. Beenick has been editor of the Night Watch for three successive terms and has been the Advisory Editor of the Night Watch for two successive terms. He has been active on both the Student and the General Organization Councils. He also made a success as manager of the Track Team which progressed rapidly under his leadership. Mr. Beenick came here from Pennsylvania and has done wonderful work in his four years at this school. We have sincere hopes that he will carry on his good work in the future, as he has in the past. He will be long remembered by his many friends, both students and the Faculty, for his able achievements. Eighty-one .52V6!?fc f0'fEf .Qxrfbry 1 Zygmyff, .? : IB35 ,ITIEEIYIEIE flil iI'i3iT7 Milf. SENIOR CLASS COMMITTEES QJANUARYJ RING AND PIN COMMITTEE joseph F. Silverman .........................,.......................................... .................... C hairman Edith Repoli .......................................................................................... Afrirtanl Chairman Wilfred Broderick, Lillian Treacy, Maurice Goldberger PLAY COMMITTEE Giuseppe Della Malva ..,..................................................................................... Chairman Catherine Martell, Maurice Goldberger, Marion White PROM. COMMITTEE George Fowler ...r..,. ,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,.,, ,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, C h airman Mildred Donnelly ....................,........................i....,............................. Arrirlant Chairman Christine Maraziti, -Gertrude Mahon, Wilfred Broderick, Louis Abrunzo, Maurice Goldberger SOCIAL COMMITTEE Elsie Raymond ......................................,........,......,,............,....,,.......,..... .,..... C hairman George Fowler, Catherine Roth, Ed. Morrisett CAP AND GOWN COMMITTEE Catherine Roth ........ ..........,..................................................... .................... C h airman Mildred Donnelly ....... ........ A rrirtant Chairman Eighty-Iwo V I H535 M Qpgffy Qfenfffmfi fbfidfry IUUIIIJQUQU U v -y,ai llllIlI!ll1lilllliHi2eii SENIOR CLASS COMMITTEES KJUNEJ RING AND PIN COMMITTEE Theodore Bumiller ............................................,..,........................,...................., Chairman Gladys Reddington ...........................................................................,.. Auimznz Chairman Julia Mis, Adolf Schrader, john Sharkey, Vincent Amatrini PLAY COMMITTEE Thomas Sharkey ..................... ..........,....................................................,. ...... C la airman L. Molzon John Srodinski Meyer Lurie Vincent Amatrini joseph Synurkowski Cecelia 'Wendelken Salvatore J. Vuoculo Elizabeth Trodd Veronica Bertotti PROM. COMMITTEE Andrew Krall .............................................................................................. ...... C hairman Raymond Detrick Edward Reilly Mildred Peterson Henry Kriete Peter Lambert Rita Coleman Marie Meyer Eleanor Sczesny Anne Matusovicz CAP AND GOWN COMMITTEE William Voss ............................................................................................. ..... C hairman Mildred Donnelly Thomas Moran Edward McNary Antoinette Kayser Harold Hansen Mary Romanchak Nicholas Maselli Margaret Lane EMBLEMS AND COLORS Gladys Reddington .............................................................................. ...... C baifmfw Mary Riwaldo, julis Mis, Nancy Amato Eighty-three OWL AWARDS Eighly-fwfr p fkfiljfy .Qnfffffarfi QWQKOQ nearer-Ies..e 1935 nun , I 1 , I: :EQFJN :'QM::u:m1v-Sur221.211 B352 E S F5 . THE OWI. RECEIVES FIRST PRIZE The Nineteen Thirty-Four Owl was awarded first prize by the Columbia Scholastic Press -Association. This association conducts annually a nation-wide contest for High School Year Books. In addition to the first prize award, the Association also awarded a Gold Medal which the Owl lost by a narrow margin. The Owl Staff and Mr. Messler are to be congratulated not only for bringing this distinction to our school, but also because this is the third consecutive year that the Owl has won a prize. In Nineteen Thirty-two, the Owl was awarded second prize. We were also a sec- ond prize winner in Nineteen Thirty-three. In Nineteen Thirty-four, it was decided we had the best book-second only to the Gold Medal Awardg this in a field of over a thousand contestants. Spurred on by the accomplishments of its predecessors together with the invaluable advice of Mr. Messler, the Owl Staff of Nineteen Thirty-five believes it has produced a book worthy of the highest honors. Eighty-,ive 163 Qyzwfffvfi .Qmfbry I ,fiefyffeffi M il It X , Y-34 V -as ggi? 1 2- -:fs . E1gMf!!'fWH Columbia Scholastic Press Association Eighty-.fix 4+ 4+ 4+ 4 4 4 4 4+ 4 4 4 + 4 44 4+ 44 44 4+ 4+ 44 4+ 44 4+ 4+ 4 4 4 4 44 1+ 4 4 44 4 4 4 4 14 4 4 4 4 4 1+ 4 4+ 4+ 4 4+ 4+ 4+ 4 4 4+ A 14 4 14 14 4 75 144 1+ 1+ 144 1+ 1+ 4 44 5 44 4 4 4 ' 444' 4 411+44 + 441 414 4 41 4 44 444 1+ 1+ 444 444::44 44411444 44411444 141 114 +44 + 4 4 4+44 4+ 44144 414 4 4 11441 1441144 41 4 4 1144 4441444 414 4 4 4444 41 4 4 1144 4441+444 44411+44 44411+44 444 444 44 14411+44 44411+44 1411114 14441+44 4441444 4444444 44444444 4444+ 44411+4 44411444 14411114 1144 44444444 +44 + 44 +4 +44 + 41411+41 411141 141 4144 4 4111+4 441+4 1414114 +4 4441144 4441144 444 444 4444444 4444444 141441144 4444444 14444+44 44444444 4444444 4443444 444 111i 4 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 444 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 14 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 44 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 44 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ 44 4 -7, 3 -Y 1? , ,, v E: 5 WA ii 5 vi- I A 1 uh, ,M A A wp, A! A ,' X H V '1 ff 9il i: za' X 9 ff lx ,N H1241 My ,-.-, ' wr '11, ' ', , :U ':' iw J 1 ,51- 1 . 351- 1' num- '-1 , 'wil '3 '2'm - V' H T ' - 1 i '- V , Lwljlyw ,,:!L'M'QL'u,,f X' , ,1 wf'w 1 HV., ,,Qf 1 ,J 5 ,w . flu ga!-iwJ:LT 'N ---! 'W fum' Th 'N 9 N. 1 tu 5, H' 1,, hy' WW ' 'vifw -NE,g H , 151 ,S.1 M pf:, ' W W W ?r,lnk.' W1gif3f.,.- U . LM Y yfEg,1fN VW qi 3 g,fg L,,'d' W , ,Q-vw M ,W , guwwf V m'l.,i' mb gi' ,W ian., ,W W HI, jx! ,'nW,,'5 fum -'QL QV if ww N ,M 3 WW'wg-' 5. 'fi P'Qg 'gJ ' Ww N K3 iwl' .W , T,'w2ad'Q 3fWwus5' + 1, M ,,. fmt, - FM ,M-,ERN WA, 1 ' H' M ,,., '5E :,3'wq,9,'11-,Mui yigwm X . fx' 1322 tx ' 21 'Q-Ill? W 'QQ'1MfMl1f'ili My H3-, ' if 4 'Q' 'M W- IW, 'J' 5.1 ' 1,ug:M.' 1Fn'1,u W 'l1j: 4 ' f H m vw 41' 3' W E, Mn 'WL 'jlfj uv, W kiln, 4 ,V ,g,1','iv,.:' 11,151 1,4 w, W. M. f' 5 -54 ,Z Mlwfvf 3:1 ' f- Y M Xb- W' J Nu, 14 l35 jaUM ,. X13 ,H ,W .uw J' ,Nici-wi' 4 M ,Q ,V'41,,,N N-, 1 ,WW :WEE 31 , ',,W1i:: ,w www r f v -w ' NSPS, M WL f.iWu5m '19fgl3FiN3'9 W- ,,,.!.,1, I 1R-?: Wy,' wwf, M nfl? -9 'yQw if'-11 ,, ,,!,,,4x,,', ' W' v .wm'suu,N , 'lwnf ,Img ,, .XJ Y: ' My 1 ujQ'I Y, 1' FEATURES CLASS BALLOT QJANUARYJ 1. Most Popular Boy ............................ Anthony Rataiczyk 2. Most Popular Girl ...... .......... K athleen Kelly 3. Athlete .................... .......... V ivian Bradley 4. Handsomest Man ..l......................... Bernard Kriegel 5. Beauty ................................. : ............ Mildred Donnelly 6. Did Most for D. A. E. H. S. ........ Senior Class 7. Best Dressed Boy ............................ William Carew 8. Best Dressed Girl .......................... Christine Maraziti 9. Most Ambitious Girl ......... .......... L illian Tracey 10. Most Ambitious Boy ..... 11. Best Dancer QBoyj ....... 12. Best Dancer fGirlj ....... ..........George Fowler ..........Edward Morrisett Cecelia Thompson 13. Stenographer ................ .......... G ertrude Mahon 14. Mathematician ..... .......... N icholas Matsoukas 15. Artist ................... .......... L ouis Abrunzo 16, Musician QBoyj .......... .......... G iuseppe Della Malva 17. Musician fGirlj ............. ...,...... R egina Phelan 18. Model School Teacher ....... .......... M argaret Domnik 19. Critic .........................,... .......... I oseph Silverman 20. Class Baby ...... 21. Giggler ...... 22. Class Flirt ...... 23. Sheik ..................... 24. Warbler .................... 25. Talking Machinet ........ 26. Most Respected ........ 27. Society Belle ......... 28. Politician ........... 29. Comedian ......... 30. Woman Hater ....... 31. Man Hater ....... ..........Frank Silva Rosalie Roth Irene Wawrzonkiewicz Qlfiflflyohn Pierce ..........Helen Falvey ..........Helen Abendschein ..........Gertrude Kilmartin ..........Isabelle Anglesea .....,....Donald Kruger ..........Edith Repoli ..........Wilfred Broderick ......,,.,jennie Filipkowski 32. Shortest .....,,.,,,..,,,, .......... E lsie Raymond 33. Tallest ........,....,.....,,......,,,... .......... I rwin Towell 34. Best School Spirit ......,..................... George Marcopolus 35. Most Likely to Succeed .................. Maurice Goldberger 36. Wittiest ............................... 37. Most Quiet .............. 58. Best Alibi Artist .......... 39. Most Dignified Girl ....... 40. Most Dignified Boy ....... 41. Most Romantic Man ....... 42. Typist .......................... 43. Crooner .................... 44. Poet .............................. 45. Most Modern Girl ...... 46. Most Modern Boy ........... 47. Most Glamorous Girl ......... ..........john Hicko ..........Carolyn Smith William King Eckhardt Chester Slauson, jr. Solomon Friend Elsie Nider Reich ..........Herman Goldram Katherine Beggans Edward Fitzgibbons Rita Rens 48. Tarzan .............................................. Benjamin Newman 49. Nell Brinkley's Ideal Man .............. Robert Conway 50. Future Hollywood Star ..... ............ M arion White 51. Most Brilliant Boy ......... .......... I talo Ratazzi 52. joe Penner ...........,...... .......... W illiam MacMurren 53. Best Swimmer ....... .......... A lfred Coco 54. Optimist ........ .......... E mil Uhorchak 55. Best Liked ...... .......... C atherine Roth 56. Novelist ........... .......... M arie Kelly D y 57. Writer ...................... .......... E arle Etoveken ' A 58. Good Reporter ........ .......... E lmer Williams ..: I 59. Humorist ............... .......... S tanley Oring k i 60. Most Refined ......... .......... A lice Wittenborn , ri L,-:ii-W. . 'NA A' 'T' ', is l Ts. gr - . r' . ' Ninety an ln1lu.1l. . . - CLASS BALLOT QJUNEJ Most Popular Boy ........ Most Popular Girl ...... Athlete ...................... . Handsomest Man ............................ Beauty .............................................. Best Dressed QBoyj ....................... Best Dressed 'fGirlj ...................... Most Ambitious Girl ........ ......... Most Ambitious Boy ...... ......... William Voss Elizabeth O'Niell Adolph Schrader ' Edward McNary Mary Coleman Senior Class Did Most for D. A. E. H. S. ....... . .Peter Lambert Veronica Bertotti Helen Zyskowski Edward Beenick Best Dancer fBoyj .......... ......... R ayrnond O'Brien Best Dancer QGirlj ........ ......... M ary Devery Stenographer ................ Anne Cassidy Mathemetician ....... Anna Halfpenny Artist ................... Musician QBoyj ....... Musician QGirlj ....... Critic ................. ........ Giggler ............................ ......... Model School Teacher ....... ......... Class Baby ........................ .....---- Class Flirt .......... Sheik ..................... Talking Machine ..... Politician ............... Comedian .......,.. Woman Hater ..... Man Hater ........... Shortest ...................... . Best School Spirit ........ Tallest .............................. Most Likely to Succeed ..... ......... Most Quiet ...................... ......... Wittiest ........................ Best Alibi Artist .......... Most Dignified Girl ........ ......... Most Dignilied Boy ........ ......... Typist .......................... Crooner ..................... Poet .............................. Most Modern Girl ..,... Most Modern Boy ...... Most Glamorous Girl ...... ......... Most Romantic Man ........ ......... Tarzan ................................. ......... Nell Brinkey's Ideal Man Future Hollywood Star ....... ......... Most Brilliant Boy .......... ......... Joe Penner .................. Best Swimmer ....... Optimist ............ Best liked ....... Novelist ......... George Berkoben Frank Miceli Janet Crowley Raymond Detrick Noreen O'Sullivan Nancy Amato Lillian Treusch Sylvia DeFusco Hugh McCarthy Thomas Sharkey Salvatore Vuocola Raymond Whalen Theodore Bumiller, jr. Marie Hallstein ..........Gladys Reddington Charles Englebart Kenneth juncker Helen Goode Henry Kriete Rita Coleman Richard Borchek Julia Mis Edward Higgins Mildred Clevely Arthur Prevost Andrew Krall Elenore Seczney .........joseph Fitzsimmons Elizabeth Trodd Frank Hughes George Ozol Charles Imbornone Mary Romanchak Meyer Lurie William Thompson Blair Benson Henry Freitag Mary Rinaldo ' Edward Finucane Writer ................ Ernest Rusch 2 Good Reporter ...... john Darcy ' Humorist ............... John Reilly X Most Refined ....... Harold Hansen . S5 s P r,,..,, ,, e1-'71g--r- - 't W1 H-.i' .:.. ' i -1- N 'eff fe A .fu 'l Q i W iiiiiiiga E' ,- -E 1 -: i nis- .XH - l1!n'ii .' nhl' an WN -QQ f -' Q , .1 1.-.p ',' 4, D '- . .. ,txagrrx gz,3Qf.i1ti f . ff: - f ' , no . ... EDlTOR'S NCTES The editor, like practically every other writer, chooses topics which he believes will be of special interest to those who read this book. So, taking a hint from a recent class- room lecture, an attempt is being made to pass upon you what we believe to be a sound idea to a local situation. 1 A college ,education is a failure unless it enables you to find the niche where you belong, said a famous educator. This statement is of supreme importance, since it sums up in a few words the whole purpose of a college education. A large majority of Dickinson Evening seniors are making plans to further their education at some higher institution of learning. Therefore, with a bit of friendly advice, find your particular niche. Numerous students continue to follow a particular course, not because they are interested in it, but because of an outside influence, perhaps the urging of a parent or a friend. Many an individual has come to a conclusion that because his friend can tinker well, he should become an engineer, while actually his proper place may be inthe press gallery or in the courts of law. Whether a man is fitting himself for his calling in life is a question that only he himself can answer. The answer springs from the inner consciousness of each individual. A man may be an excellent draftsman and yet never make an architect, he may be handy with his hands and,yet make a better accountant than a mechanic. We are all familiar with the man who goes through college with flying colors. He is popular and a good mixer, he enters heartily' into' undergraduate affairs and at the end of his course he graduates with high honors. D Everybody unites in predicting for him a highly success- ful career in his chosen profession, and yet after graduation he turns out to be a miserable failure. Why? I-Ie didn't find his niche. Modern life is so complicated, so filled with obstacles for one to hurdle. There are so many professions requiring the same talent that it is difficult to judge in what directions a boy's gifts lie. Perhaps at some university one has a better opportunity than anywhere else to discover his particular leanings. Sooner or later, the thoughtful student will be confronted with this question, Arn I preparing myself for my proper vocation in life and if so am I preparing myself in the right way ? Unless the preparation is thorough and of the right sort, the student is doomed to failure from the start. If he fails to take advantage or make the most of his education he no doubt will be a tinker, a clever one perhaps but still a tinker, while others who take full advantage of the opportunities they now possess will become masters. Consider the facts of this story and some day some of you will return to this grand institution and say, I have found my niche. EDWARD J. BEENICK, '35. N inety-two HISTORY OF DICKINSON ACCREDITED EVENING HIGI-I SCHOOL The wonderful growth and progress of the William L. Dickinson Accredited Evening High School in the short span of one decade must certainly prove highly gratifying to those civic and educational leaders of our community who ,saw fit to cooperate in its founding. Their foresight has made it possible for many thousands of our fellow citizens to intellectually improve themselves with resulting benefits to both themselves as individuals and the commonwealth as a whole. We are deeply grateful to them for the opportunities they have given us and sincerely hope the future will continue to increase the benefits so abundantly derived under their guidance. ' 192511926-FIRST YEAR Wfhen Dickinson Evening was officially opened as a fully accredited evening high school the 695 students who comprised its first enrollment quite naturally had not the slightest idea of the tremendous growth their school would enjoy in the years to come. They came to evening school to obtain belated but necessary high school credits to enter college or to work for a diploma. They had no secondary purposes and we must believe them to be a rather dull group because we can nnd no trace of extra-curricular activities such as we have today. As far'as can be ascertained their activities were nil. Probably the students abstained from such activities because they felt that success could not possibly attend such efforts in a night school. How completely wrong they were if they entertained such a thought has been conclusively proved by the school records of later years. The end of the first year showed a total of fourteen students with sufficient credits to graduate. The fact that they were extremely disgruntled because they were obliged to take an evening high school diploma is an indication of the attitude with which the school was received during the first year. There was nothing that transpired in that first new school was received during the first year. There was nothing that transpired in that first year of our Alma Mater that was indicative of the splendid future which she would shortly enjoy. 1926-1927-SECOND YEAR The school reopened in September, 1926 with 814 students enrolled. The new attitude which was to carry our school so far was immediately discernible in the friendly manner with which the previous year's students greeted each other. Much to the discomfort and chagrin of the faculty they were occasionally conversing with each other in the corridors between classes. Soon the desire to become better acquainted was evidenced and groups were request- ing a school dance, while others were proposing a school paper for the publication of notices and topics of interest to the student body. Principal McFadden was deluged with the details of proposals by committees of students sponsoring the formation of various activities. Athletics made its debut in night school with a basketball team formed in March 1927, which played only one game against the Dickinson Day School. The season was practically over before the team had been organized and started to practice. The number of graduates in the second year had grown to 30 and the schoo1's extra-curricular enthusiasm seems to have found itself. Many of th-e students had become such good friends that is was with much enthusiasm that some of them planned for social affairs together during the summer vacation months. The entire evolution of our school spirit in this second year was remarkable and led up to the many bigger things which were to be undertaken in the third year. The Valedictorian of this second year graduating class, Mr. Le Varge, was to bring nifx if . ..-1T1J,.?lt!--Tivlbd U' W1 Lg IW Il'I'leE Q ,,. I ' 'Z bf the first great honor to our school by winning the 31200. scholarship given by the Rotary Club of Jersey City in competitive examination. 1927-1928-THIRD YEAR The enrollment of the third year about 1145 students desirious of attending Dickinson Evening. The school was certainly growing at a rapid pace. Principal McFadden had decided during the preceding summer vacation that something would have to be done to relieve him of the details of extra-curricular work such as had over- burdened him during the second year. Therefore, with the beginning of the new year a Student Council was organized to take care of this work. Daniel Sullivan was elected its first President and served until the Spring term, when Julius Caroselli was elected to the office to serve during the second term. The Council was to prove its worth immediately. The Basketball Team was furnished with suits. A Track Team was sponsored in February 1928. Both teams became very active in their respective fields. A Baseball Team was proposed but because of the expense involved in properly out- fitting such a team the proposal was defeated. However, those interested formed a team and paid their own expense. They enjoyed a very successful season. This was the first and last baseball team to date to represent Dickinson Evening. The desire to have a publication for the printing of Dickinson Evening news became a reality when the D'ay School invited the Evening School Student Council to join them in the presentation of a paper for both schools The Council accepted and Kleon Tsibikas and Helen Haas were the editors for the Fall Term. William Burns and Helen Haas carried the editorial responsibilities for the Spring Term. The first material was printed on December 21st, 1927, and on five additional occasions before the end of the third year. The subscriptions were handled through the Council. The Council had also started to sponsor school dances with much success. The Senior Class of 1928 was formed early in April 1928, and Jack Friedman was elected President. A Senior Dance Committee was appointed and a group of workers were formed for the purpose of compiling material for the first publication of our annual yearbook, the OWL. Forrest Tunbridge was chosen Editor of the twenty page booklet which represented the first effort of a Dickinson Evening Senior Class to publish an annual. ' The end of the third year showed a Senior Class of 57 members, almost double the number of the previous year. 1928-1929-FOURTH YEAR When school was re-opened in the Fall of 1928 to begin its fourth year it had an enrollment of 1650 students. A new commercial accredited department had been added to the curricula. Previously only the College Preparatory course had been offered. The Night School journalistic enthusiasts led by William Hanlon established an independent paper for the evening school and held a contest to name it. The title The Night Watch was finally selected. Mr. Hanlon very successfully edited the new publication for the first term. He was succeeded by Rosemarie Gorman who was selected to serve in this capacity during the Spring term. The Student Council continued its good work under I. Waldman, who served as President during the Fall Term. Jessie Jardine, the first girl to become President of the Council served during the Spring term. A new activity, The Literary Society, was founded in March, 1929, with Walter Bednach serving as its first President. It proved to be very popular from the very beginning. It was therefore the first cultural society to be formed in our school. The new sports additions included a Cross-Country Team which became the 1929 Hudson County Champions. The girls formed a Gym Team, a Tennis Team and a Fencing Team. The fellows started a Football Team, A Tennis Team, and the afore- N inety-four mention Cross-Country Team, in addition to the already established Basketball and Track Teams. The Coach of the Fencing Team was Vincent Wanamaker who was also very active in other extra-curricular activities. Other members of the Wanamaker family were to come in later years including Douglas, Warren, Cora and Julia, all of whom were to become active in our extra-curricular activities. The Royal Family of Dickinson Evening. The new football team after losing the first two games to Brooklyn Evening and Belleville High came into their own and won the remaining three games of that season against Curtis Evening, Erasmus Evening, and Bay Ridge Evening, in very convincing fashion. Since no football team would be complete without cheerleaders, Rosemarie Gorman and Peter Tarby did the honors and became the first cheering squad of Dickinson Evening. The Owlr' Basketball Team became the holder of the unofficial Metropolitan Evening High School Basketball Championship after defeating Brooklyn Evening, the former championsg Fordham Evening, Bay Ridge Evening, James Monroe Evening, Erasmus Evening and others. The Senior Class of january, 1929, elected joseph Carroll as its President. They decided to merge their class activities with the june Class and to this end appointed Harry Cohn as January Class Editor of the Owl. The Senior Class of June, 1929, elected Walter Dolan as President and Therese Ahlbach was appointed Editor-in-Chief of the Owl. This Class undertook the first Senior Class Play in Dickinson Evening and presented the play Ducey directed by Mr. Carl W. Barget. Matilda Bosshardt who completed her High School course at Dickinson Evening in the school's first four years of existence became the Valedictorian. This young lady lived in Fairview to where she had to commute each evening. Despite her handicap she held the record for never being late or absent in those four years. As may have been noticed from the facts related the girls certainly enjoyed the limelight in this fourth year of ,Dickinson Evening with a Student Council President: a Night Watch Editorg and Owl Editorg and the Valedictorian. It must certainly have been an enthusiastic Class of 76 members who received their diplomas in June, 1929, after such a banner year. 1929-1930-FIFTH YEAR The fifth year started with 2,549 enrolled students and a much enlarged faculty group. The school had now changed from the comparative quiet of the iirst year into a veritable bee hive humming with activity. Many new activities were to come into existence during this fifth year. The Student Council started its third year of existence and Douglas Wanamaker was elected President -for the Fall term. Therese Ahlbach was elected President for the Spring term, thereby becoming the second and last girl to date to ever hold that coveted honor. It was during' this year that one of the finest leaders of Dickinson Evening was started on his way to an inspiring extra-curricular career. The facts regarding his start are known to but a few and have never before been recorded. It was September, 1929, and nominations were opened for class representative to serve on the Student Council and a new student by the name of Al Harding was nominated. Al declined the nomination. Another classmate later nominated him again for the same position. Al was about to decline again when still another classmate whispered to him Go ahead and accept the nomination, you won't win the election anyway. This sarcasm angered the otherwise complacent Al and he did accept and was elected. This was the first of seven successive terms during which he was to serve his school as a member of the Student Council, as its President in 1931, then as June Editor of the Owl in 1933. Q .g -h 1-L. I I-4-rw Ninety-five if. 15:14 1 K xxx . a R J , The Night Waldo continued its career with Rosemarie Gorman reelected Editor for the Fall term and William Hanlon who was its first editor was again elected to that post for the Spring term. He featured in the final issue of the school paper a personal interview with Mayor Frank Hague. The Literary Club under the presidencies of Douglas Wanamalcer and XVilliam Koprowski had a very successful year. The new activities formed in September, 1929, were the Glee Club under the leadership of Joseph Tucker, directed by Mr. Moritz Schwarz, and the Chess Club under the supervision of Mr. Leon Varnum of the Faculty. October, 1929, ushered into existence the Debating Society under the faculty supervision of Mr. Charles Brody. The fellows became somewhat envious of the girls' Fencing Team and started their own group and soon had a good Fencing Team in the field. Another new organization, the Archery Club, was formed under the very able direction of Mr. Reekie of the jersey City Archery Club. Our Basketball team retained its Metropolitan Evening School Championship by defeating all rivals in a splendid campaign. February, 1930, a Boys' Gym Team was formed for the first time in Dickinson Evening under the supervision of Mr. Alexander Wilson. The football team had a very successful year until they made a disastrous trip to Stamford, Connecticut, to play the strong and fast Stamford team. The game was lost by our team with the score very one-sided. The loss of the game was small, however, compared to the seriousness of the injuries sustained by many of the members of our squad during the game. Sammy Milberger, the manager of our Track Team, worked hard to create the first Annual Metropolitan Evening Championship Track and Field Meet held at Pershing Field, under the sponsorship of Dickinson Evening. This Meet has been held every year since and has brought much prestige to the name of our school. The Alumni Association was organized during this year to form the modest nucleus of that powerful and active group we now have. Miss Anne Del'Orme was elected first President. The Senior Class of january, 1930, elected as their President, Leo Marmostein. The june Class elected Michael J. Flannery, as their President, and Sophie Marka was selected as Editor of the third year book, the Owl. The 120 graduates of 1930 con- tained 11 who had received all their credits at Dickinson Evening. One of the 11 was Anna Reheis, the Class Valedictorian, who had completed her course in four years. john O'Regan was appointed Vice-Principal for the Evening High School. So ended the fifth year of Dickinson Evening in a veritable blaze of glory. 1950-1931-SIXTH YEAR The beginning of each school year brings with it promises of greater deeds to be performed and new records to be set. At the beginning of the second semester of the sixth year in the school's history a total of 5154 students registered. The new courses offered this year included, Architectural Drawing, Mechanical Drawing and Italian. There were additions to the Faculty, now comprising sixty-one members. Principal McFadden at this time felt that the maximum growth had been attained but times brought with it continued growth. At a Convention of School Superintendents in Detroit, our school was given a high rating and characterized as one of the leading evening schools in the country. The Fall Student Council elected David Gladstone, now one of the distinguished graduates and active alumnus, as President. For the Spring term, Albert Harding became the Chief Executive. The Night Watch continued its illuminating ways and became greatly improved N inety-.fix due to its two editors, Bob Lionetti and Rose Buonocore. And through the Night Watch fame to the fore the progressive abilities fcapabilitiesj of Rose Buonocore, who is responsible for the many innovations in the school paper. During this period the hrst column appearedg also, an extensive editorial page, and interviews with Dr. Nugent and Mr. Harry F. O'Mealia. At this time was organized the Athletic Association with Joseph A. Egan President, and it was established to promote and supervise all school activities. The extra-curicular activities added four new groups of interest, Circolo Italiano, Riding Club, Swimming Club and a Girls' Basketball Team. This made a total 'of twenty-two groups actively interested in the further development of Dickinson Evening. The other groups included, Archery Club, Chess Club, Glee Club, Literary Club with M. Hentz, President, the Orchestra under Mr. Moritz E. Schwarz, and the Debating Society. Other students were also very sport-minded, and besides supporting the Football, Basketball and Track teams, they had for their own participation a Gym Team, Tennis Team for boys and girls, and boy and girl Fencing Teams. The football squad attempted the impossible and became a more wiser but saddened group after the finish of a vigorous schedule. Although the Scarlet and Gray warriors fought with determined fighting spirits, that was not enough to overcome both the opponents before them on the field and the fact that besides working during the day, classes were attended during the evenings. The best the Owls could get this year was three ties and a single touchdown victory over other evening schools and four decisive defeats at the hands of the best Prep School teams in New jersey. Coach Gerrity's name should go into this history as an outstanding individual to the cause of making Dickinson Evening known throughout the Metropolitan area. The Basketball Team was more successful, and the Owls in competition against other County Schools shared fifth' place with Emerson, six victories to seven defeats. Our team was at the best against the stilfest opposition and recorded victories over St. Michaels and St Peters, eliminating them from Championship possibilities. Dickinson Evening was runner-up to the Day School for the city title. Credit for the fine showing must be given to Coach Miers and L. Thompson. The Alumni continued its constructive work but on a much larger scale and under the auspices of these graduates, a St. Valentine's Dance was held in the school gym. The January Class had James Beaverson as President, while David Gladstone was President for the june Class, and the Vice-Presidents were Malcolm Gentz and Frank Henry respectively. Editor-in--Chief of the Owl was James Delano with Rosemarie Gorman as Associate Editor. Many of the most illustrious students of this school were included among the 173 graduates, who received their diplomas on june 20th, and so closed the sixth year of Dickinson Evening. 1931-1932-SEVENT H YEAR New records were set when 3965 students enrolled for the seventh year. This necessitated adding nine new members to the Faculty and the number of instructors was now 59, instead of 13 as in 1926. Mr. J. E. Reynolds was appointed as student advisor. The school was further recognized as capable of proper training for advanced study when james Andrea, Harold Gilman and john Kircher successfully passed the entrance examinations to Annapolis. The Student Council electedias their Presidents for the Fall and Spring terms, Walter Letzsch and james Carse. The Council itself was composed of 56 members. The Night Watch celebrated its fourth year in an article written by William Hanlon. Benno Knirsch was Editor-in-Chief, with Rose Buonocore and Miriam G. Rau as Associate Editors. Early in the school year an assembly was held in the Auditorium f '2 . . . . 1 x . for the express purpose of further bringing to the attention of students the value of this 5, 5 . li f' -if K-:rl -- - N' .,.,. - '-eflgj-:Til 5 ff , ' 5 znety-seven ' -gf .1 'f' A-'A'rgV,j--g:Qb,gfVi..J 1 I IE Eg A T l 0' U '--.N , '.alyi,,, , sg, vi:-,::'J,., I. I. .- a 0 nh 'fx R 5 h W Q nf' engaging enterprise, the Night Which. The Night Watch staff was now made up of eighteen students including ten reporters. Four more groups were added to the extra-curricular activities. These were, Architectural Club, Le Cercle Francaise, Deutsche Verein and a Soccer Team. The other activities still included those of the year previous, all remaining intact and all showing gains in membership and interest. The Football Team followed a different course this year and competed against day school teams only, playing seven games. The lack of time for training again proved an unsurmountable barrier to success on the gridiron, failing to win and obtaining as solace a tie with a powerful Union Hill team. It was during the seventh year of Dickinson Evening that the greatest basketball team ever to represent this school showed their stock of training by winning the Hudson County Basketball Championship and the State Evening High School Championship. Coach Meiers whipped together a well balanced and highly polished machine with James Henry and William Thompson being selected as members of the All County Team. The Track Team scored more points this year than lastryear in the Metropolitan Evening High School Track and Field Championships but still placed second to New York Evening. Another laurel was added to the Evening School by the Soccer Team in winning the Metropolitan Evening School Championship. This is a self-coached team and should be credited as an asset to the school. The Alumni Association now boasts of over one hundred active members and now makes an annual award to the most representative student in the Senior Class. The january Senior Class had as President George Hyde, and the june Class was represented by Lawrence O'Rourke. Ernest Knirsch was Editor-in-Chief of the Owl which was dedicated to Thomas Alva Edison. This edition of the Owl was awarded a first place in a contest with other high schools conducted by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. The Class numbered 201 graduates. Three significant individual efforts were signalized by success, Miss Jane Mastronardy won second place at the semi-finals in the New York Timer Oratorical Contest. Vincent Russo won first prize for the best written essay on the Constitution, and Miss Marie Jack was declared winner of the contest for the best essay on George Washington. The latter two contests were conducted in our school. So closes the brilliant seventh year of Dickinson Evening. 1932-1933-EIGHTH YEAR A The eighth year started with 3965 students and sixty-three teachers. Principal McFadden, in an address to the students was proud to say that there was no more inspiring sight than those faces of students facing him and realizing that they were there because of discretion. The first meeting of the Student Council resulted in Walter Wygant being elected President of this most august body. He was destined to be the last President of the Student Council. During the second term the General Organization replaced the Student Council. A special assembly was called and Principal McFadden outlined the features of this governing body. james Boyle, chairman of the former Student Council Committee, which framed the Constitution was honored by being elected as the First President of the General Organization. He had been active in various activities and he proved to be worthy of this high post in school government. The object of the General Organization was to centralize all school activities under one central controlling body for the mutual welfare of all concerned. This General Organization was further controlled by an Executive Committee consisting of six student members of the General Organization appointed by the President, and six members of the Faculty appointed by the Principal. This Committee is considered as the last court of appeals in extra- curricula matters. Ninety-eight Edward J. Beenick was elevated as Editor-in-Chief of the Night Watch staff, composing 21 members. This staff included an Advisory Board of Benno Knirsch, Rose Buonocore and Samuel Zerinsky and eleven reporters. The new activities formed this year were the Law Society, History Readers, El Circulo Castellano and a Post Graduate Club. Another innovation was the formation of the Reception Staff to usher in various events transpiring in the School Auditorium. The various language clubs and other societies still held sway as in former years. This year the School was no longer represented on the gridiron. The futility of this extra-curricular activity was quite evident and it was unfair to the students them- selves in asking them to play football after a day's hard work and a session at school. The Track Team under the able coaching of Louis Lepis finally came through and scored a sensational victory to record the initial championship of the Metropolitan Evening School Meet. This was due in no small measure to Al Maszalek who performed brilliantly in the field events to establish new marks in the shot put and the discus throw. The Basketball Team was not so successful competing against all day school teams. Against eleven victories there were thirteen losses. The Faculty organized a Tennis and Basketball Team and have given at times earnest though somewhat comical exhibitions of their still youthful ways. One of the most important events in the annuals of our School was the first debate, held between this School and the Day School. Dr. Nugent presented the trophy to the winning team, which was made up of our own joseph Beirme, joseph Silverman and J. Barry Johnson. The Alumni Association still struggled for existence but perserverence prevailed and it is a good omen of success. 1 The Senior Class consisted of 241 graduates and it was a class well worthy of being one of its members. The traditional Cap and Gown attire were used for the first. Walter Wygant of the january class, and Albert Harding of the june class, collaborated in their efforts to produce the Owl and both of these individuals were the recipients of the gold medal awarded by the Alumni Association, as the most representa- tive students of their individual graduating classes. Charles A. Werner and Walter J. Eskowski were the respective Presidents of the january and june Classes. The chief feature of this eighth year was the changing of the student governing body. 1933-1934-NINTH YEAR The new year was opened by a message from Principal McFadden to the students in which he explained the continued growth of the Evening School. There was a reg- istration of 4,819 students and the Faculty was now made up of 75 members. john O'Regan was transferred to the Day School as ViceaPrincipal and john Thomas Brogan was appointed as the new Vice-Principal of Dickinson Evening. The second President of the General Organization was William Woods and he was succeeded by William Burns. The importance of this body was further impressed by C. W. Barget, Chairman of the Executive Committee, in an article published in the second issue of the Night Watch that year. There were thirteen recognized School Organizations. Circolo Italiano, Debating Society, Deutsche Verein, El Circulo Castellano, General Organization, Glee Club, History Club, Law Society, Le Cercle Francaise, Literary Club, Orchestra, Post-Gradu- ate Club and the Swimming Club. Charters were later V granted to the Commercial Club, Globe Club, Photographic Society and the Architectural Club. The Debating Society distinguished itself by successfully defending the Governor A. Harry Moore Trophy for Debating, which it had won in 1933. In recognition of his fine work and because of the Night Watch winning a third place award, Edward Beenick was reelected Editor-in-Chief for the third term. He was succeeded by james J. Daly, who was Sports Editor the term previous. SF !i' J i N nip-wif -- -' U H -s' - .--.3sA, A Ninety-nine . . - u gQ,1't if'-ag, J use ,I , y . ye , , ,, i s weaty' ' - .X:- W - , .0 ' in '.J , vi. ,- In the line of Sports the Track Team repeated its brilliant victory of the last year by again winning the Metropolitan Evening High School Track and Field Championship. The Basketball Team captured the Metropolitan League Champion- ship losing only two out of ten games. The Fencing Class won nine out of twelve matches. The Wrestling Team, besides winning six out of ten meets, won three second places in the Hudson County Championships. There were 361 Seniors in the Graduating Class. john Dugan and Robert J. Gracey were the respective Presidents of the january and june Classes. The Co- Editors of the Owl were Frank Caufield and M. Leonard Miner and it was this issue of the Owl that won the Columbia Scholastic Press Association Award in competition against all high schools in the country. The Senior Prom was held in the newly opened New Gymnasium. And the Meritorious Service Awards were presented to Margaret McAghon and jane R. Mastronardy for their faithful service to Dickinson Evening. The Alumni Association contributed greatly to the students of this School by presenting the Doctors Spencer and Kagey, of N. Y. U., in a lecture series. This Association found new inspirations and honestly endeavored to create the nucleus of a Scholarship Fund that would some day aid some worthy individual. 1934-1 93 5--TENTH YEAR The Tenth Year showed an enlarged Faculty group of 67 teachers and a record enrollment of pupils. john Darcy was elected President of the Fall G. O. and Patrick A. Orrick was chosen President of the Spring G. O. The Night Watch elected Ernest Rusch as Editor for the Fall term and George Conaty for the Spring term issues. A The Dickinson Evening Debating Team defeated their old rival from St. Peter's Prep in a debate held in our auditorium on December 21st, 1934. The coaching of john F. Lynch, teacher of Public Speaking, has been largely responsible for the suc- cess of this team. On May 29th, 1935, our team defeated the Alumni's Debating Team. A new activity was added to our spirts in the Ice Skating Club. They enjoyed a successful season and undoubtedly will achieve higher heights in the years to come. The Alumni Association tendered a highly successful testimonial dinner to Dr. James A. Nugent at the Hotel Plaza in celebration of the tenth anniversary of the Dickinson Accredited Evening High School. The Alumni Scholarship fund was greatly increased by the profits of a number of activities. A series of lectures were sponsored by the Alumni Association rendered by Dr. Kagey of N. Y. U. on the general topic Philosophy for the Layman. A pageant was held to celebrate the dual anniversaries of the 300th Anniversary of the American Secondary School and the Tenth Anniversary of Dickinson Accredited Evening High School. The text of this celebration which is printed elsewhere in this book was written by Carl W. Barget, Assistant to the Principal. . New regulations' were devised to govern the future organization and administra- tion of the Night Watch. The new regulations imposed a merit system of choosing the Staff. The january Seniors elected Anthony Rataiczyk as President and William Carew, january Owl Editor. james M. Boyle was elected President of the june Class and Edward I. Beenick became the june Class Owl Editor. The Seniors numbered 543 for both classes. This year the New jersey State Board imposed the three-subject rule on all evening school students. Hereafter, as long as this ruling remains effective, a student may carry only three prepared subjects a term. 1925-50 by JAMES M. BOYLE ' 1931-as by LEoPoLD E. MoLzoN -f,..1 ' -5 A- g2i!i-DXTMTN ,T ', P - fy -' ,, ' ' One Hundred 'Pill' l 1652'- Ei'-s -M s- f,j'1lEjf,i,yj ' - ff 'nn' THE TERCENTENARY CELEBRATION OF THE AMERICAN I-IIC-SH SCI-ICDL The following play celebrating the 300th Anniversary of the American Secondary School was written by Carl W. Barget, assistant to the principal and presented to the entire assembly on Monday evening, May 20th. The characters were portrayed by members of the undergraduate body and Alumni Association of Dickinson Evening. Costumes for the periods depicted were obtained for the occasion and gave the local color to the scenes. The prologues and epilogues were given by James M. Boyle, President of the Senior Class of june, 1935. As the celebration ended Dr. James A. Nugent and Principal T. Gilbert McFadden were then called to the platform to say a few words after which they were each pre- sented with a huge birthday cake appropriately adorned with small replicas of Owls. Mr. Carl W. Barget and Vice-Principal john T. Brogan were then called upon for a few words and each was presented with a large box of cakes. All of the cakes were baked by Mrs. Rosenblum, a student of our school. The huge celebration then ended with the singing of the School songs by the entire assembly present. PROLOGUE We are about to witness the beginnings of of an activity as old as the world itself. From those first moments a newborn child turns its eyes toward the light it is the beginning of learning-learning by experiences or observa- tion, learning by an innate interest which arrests the simple attention, learning by com- pulsion for the sake of self-preservation. Thus pass the days of youth into manhood and old age, the constant process of learning keeping apace with each setting sun. As man gradually developed through this learning, he reared a complex civilization about him, and it became more and more necessary for a more rapid learning process, lest the men of a younger generation might fail to maintain the high standard already achieved or to improve the condition of his fellows or the life which was his. Those people who came to America to seek better living, surely turned away from many highly developed, traditional, and beloved insti- tutions. Compare the wilderness of New Eng- land or Virginia to the revered cultivated places of Old England! The beauty and fragrance of the parks, the cool quiet of the stately cathedrals, and the dignified repose of the universities, must cer- tainly have caused a regretful departure from the Mother Country. There lived, however, in the hearts of those who came to the shores of America, a yearning for a replacement of these things, and, urged by a traditional standard of appreciation, they set forth to accomplish their aims. There are always those among men who con- tent themselves with the few necessities of life, who have no imagination beyond the common- place. Sons of toil, they carry on their daily tasks without complaint, instilling in their children the same unimaginative, rigorous, mundane attitude toward their lives. New Eng- land had some of these, but in lesser degrees than might have been expected. The plane of intelligence among the early settlers of Mass- achusetts was not low. The percentage of College graduates in New England was equal dowing their younger generations with high principles and the prompt response to the demands for an enlightened pursuit in life. It is no wonder then, that within a little over a decade of residence in America, they took especial effort in training their youth. In accordance with their accustomed resourceful- ness, having to supply their needs of their own labor, these worthy people began the training of their own preachers. Since they held the spiritual life to be all-important and' Hrst pur- pose for education was to train the youth for the ministry. Thus came the study in Greek and Latin only. This activity we are about to witness is not unlike the moment when the elders, mayhap the grandparents, of a youth are about to bequeath him the heirlooms they have used and treasured through their live. What memories these articles awaken! As each article is given him, the tradition is repeated. This is the sword of your great-great-grandfather, son the aged gentleman would say, he fought for the rights of his countrymen at Flodden in September of 1513. He was with the Earl of Surrey, a man of 70 years, whom the Queen Catherine, daugh- ter of Ferdinand and Isabell, had sent in the absence of her husband, Henry VIII, to defend the English against the invasion of the Scotch King james IV. And so, with recall of deeds of heroism and virtue, the inheritence of the young man was bestowed. The sword of no real value but for the ideals it held. In the same spirit, perhaps, those who hurry across the pages of time here in America, knowing that life is fleeting, that there are many things to leave for the following genera- tions, bequeath not swords, not heirlooms, but traditions alone from the past. Thus we come to the early attempts of the Colonists to safeguard the spiritual life of their children in bequeathing them a large inherit- ance of learning. In this spirit we behold the establishment of the tirsr school for the youth of New England, the Boston Latin School, actually instituted in 1635 in Boston by the forward seeing men of that small New England community. This first secondary school is the parent of all the secondary schools of the United States, 26,000 in number with approxi- I T . m to that of the inhabitants of England. Con- . fronted by hardship often causing Premature mately 6,000,000 .students in attendance. ,, V j death they were conscious of the need of en- fR1se of Curtainj N 'if'-ri' 1, . s 4 ' 1?-'.'ff.'!' 'tan' I i - One Hundred One L: EES , 'L' - ' in -F1160 Q 1'-A T' , 'jg 'uiiwg Jil! '.3nt.Lm' wr , fx- ,I . . , u.g,. Mix! ',- ghf. 1 ,. .Q - - . vi' n '.J',, , -' ' THE TERCENTENARY CELEBRATION OF THE AMERICAN HIGH SCHOOL fContinuedl EPISODE I New England Colonists discussing the estab- lishment of a school for the training of their youth in Latin and Greek: 1st Colonist: So there must be those children to be trained in Latin own learning was in spelling, writing and our brethern aim too carry on as we have and Greek! Aye, mine my mother tongue, at composition. Methinks high. 'Twere better we by teaching our young of our own knowledge. 2nd Colonist: The turmoil of this land, the wild forests, beasts, and elements have nigh caused us to unlearn the finer, better things we knew! I am told that the Reverend John Cotton late of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, England, is urging upon us a Latin and Greek School for our children. He is said to have originated one in Boston, England, and did much while Dean of the college to foster this school. 3rd Colonist: 'Twill not make a son of mine healthier of body, stronger of arm and keener of eye. 'Tis toil we encounter here, not literature. 4th Colonist: Yet few of these very excellent men of Reverend Cotton's type will join with us here. The better preachers remain in Bonny England. We must prepare those of our youth to take the ministry, else we shall have no preachers. God's Book above all others must be read among us. lst Colonist: Hast thou so much wherewithal to carry on thus? How shall the school be conducted? Of certain, there will be no learned man to offer his services at instruc- tion without fee. Scarcely canst thou care for necessities at present, albeit thy desires run far be ond y . 3rd Colonist: We twain bethink us of the cold hard facts, Aye? Brother? Qto 1st Colonist! 4th Colonist: It must be said of Reverend Cotton that he hath the Christian virtue of Steadfastness. Not rain, nor snow, nor frozen roads, nor blackest nights, nay, not e'en our discourtesy toward him indispute, can withhold him from the purpose he hath undertaken. 2nd Colonist: A gathering to be held at the meeting house in a fortnight will decide the fate of his noble enterprise. He arrived in Boston but less than two years ago, but he has more generous spirit than many among us. When our brethren are assembled and the vote is called, wilt thou not shout a lusty aye! with me? I have vowed to bestow upon my fellows all the blessings possible. 3rd Colonist: My mind is made up. Thou can count thy brother with thee in thy undertakings by the will of God! 1st Colonist: Here comes Dame Craddock and Dame Eaton. Worthy husbands have they and favored by His Majesty in the Charter of Masachusetts. 4th Colonist: It is such as these who should support a school from the gathering wealth in their holdings. Let us ask them their mind concerning this proposed school. QDame Eaton and Dame Craddock enter and approach the group.J of pans and the turning of the wheel. But our sons, and the sons of our sons who will come after us-these be men! Who are to rule and take the course of events here after us? Wilt thou that they live forever in a wilderness, without the reading of a book, nay, not even God's Book? 4th Colonist: Dost recall my words? I am of the same mind, Dame Eaton! CTurns to Dame Craddockj And what thinkest thou, my good' woman? Dame Craddock: My son doth obey meg but wouldst thou have obedience a blind obedi- ence because of no mind of his own? The state would not want such citizens. Are we come across the seas to be free, to obey another tyrant because we have no eyes, no thought, no powers behind the forehead? Are we slaves or freemen? 1st Colonist: Mayhap we have set our feet too heavily upon the earth of this wilder- ness and have forgotten the stars. That son of mine will come in good season, with learn- ing, to release our feet from the sods, to point our eyes upward and to teach us a more perfect song unto the Lord. 3rd Colonist: I shall be one of the group when the Meeting taketh place to shout ac- cord with the Elders and to offer thanks to Reverend john Cotton for his wisdom and persistance in insisting on this great effort for our future enlightenment, happiness and peace! Group: fMoving off stage! fMurmers among them of assent to the ideal fThe entire group pass in the direction taken by Dame Eaton and Dame Craddockj Ill at at It at And so the party return to their own con- cerns with the resolve that their children shall have the best advantages the conditions will permit. The entire of New England at that time might have embraced not more than three thousand souls. Boston was a community of huts with a Meeting House, at once their church, their Government Building, their Social Centre. Its roof of sod, its floor of dirt gave evidence of the small comfort and lack of wealth among them. It is notable, however, that these thrifty people, without the necessities of life in many cases, held to the things of the spirit, the cultivation of the mind, the dis- cipline of spirit, the elevation of the soul. The Boston Latin School was to become a fact. A faint flicker of that greater effort which turned into a national tradition, a veritable blaze of energy and endeavor-univer- sal education. in 4: 4- lf 4 EPISODE II Slow curtain. All characters on stage. Brother William Blackstone, Brother John Cotton, Brother Ezekiel Symmes, Town Moder- ator, Brothers and Freemen of the Town of Boston fThose who had appeared in Episode IJ. Place: Town Meeting House, Boston. Moderator: At ye direction of ye Honorable Governor of ye Massachusetts Bay Colony, this meeting be declared now open. fTurn- f , 2nd Colonist: Greetings Dame Eaton and ing to door at side of stage by which the ' . A Dame Craddock. fThe girls bow pljeasingly G0V6fh?J1i enters, Governor Winthropj Ye , ' but not too familiarlyj Might we eg thee Honora e john Winthrop, Governor of ye ' : 1 your opinionbof this izgin and Greek School Colony of Massachuisettli Balyi! ffkll standhas proposed to e raise ere? Governor enters an ta es is p ace. W en it E Dame Eaton: Ah! these matters are not for us. seated, Moderator sounds gavel.J One might say that we are for the scraping Governor: Freemen and Brothers! We have I' ff, -H' in W I' y N , sl-F , t ,TTU -. One Hundred Two 71-sl ' 'i ' , ' . lg'a'- or gf- Y ' ' at .-.f,,:- - - II' ci 'iris' , re-lv - ' ' Mi' 331 'L ua ' . 1 5-1' Q.: THE TERCENTENARY CELEBRATION OF THE AMERICAN HIGH SCHOOL fffontinuedl called this meeting today for ye purpose of caring lor ye demand for a public school for ye teaching of ye sons of this colony. Strong men must be built if we would have departed ye land. God hath carried' us safe through troublous times. Through His guidance have we builded our homes, pro- vided sustenance for our bodies, and pro- cured places for His worship. Let us then look to preserve these blessings which we have had and advance learning to posterity. Time will now be taken to discuss the means for promoting learning among our people. This worthy matter shall be drawn up by me and my committee. What be ye will of ye freemen and loyal sons of ye Colony? Brother Symmes: Methinks, Sir, that ye plan be one of ye craziest in a long time. Ye idea of taking sons of honest, hard-working men out of yea fields to study books be short-sighted in days like this. These be days for hard work and worry for all. Learning would better begone 'till the times turn for good! fFew calls of Yea are heard.J Brother William Blackstone: Sir! Brother Symmes does not realize the truth of the matter, mayhap. There be much to consider before one judge. This school which we have discussed in ye previous sessions would be a place of learning for all ye public, and known as ye public schoolg but to attend need not be compulsory. Doth a father have need of his child's labor in ye fields, he may yet control his family. Brother Symmes needs not send his boy. It will be merely for those who hath a wish to attend. My son shall certainly be one of these, be it God's will, and, methinks with many, that ye school be a great necessity and will do ye community great service. Brother John Cotton: Sir, many of us agree with Brother Blackstone. Often hath this problem been before us. If it be true that none of our fellow colonies may boast that every citizen can read and write, let us pledge ourselves to a new and broader vision for our children and our children's children. Let our Massachusetts Colony lead our people into better ways that we may do all in our power to lead aright. There is, among us, one whom methinks suitable for ye position as schoolmaster, be our proposal accepted. Happily would I pronounce the name. Governor: We grant that permission, Brother cotton. Brother Cotton: I name, for ye first school- master a brother fitted and reliable in ye person of Philemon Pormort. Governor: Thee speaks, I know well, of an able man. fTurning to assemblagej All those who favor Master Pormort as a teacher, to establish learning by means of a public school in our Colony will please let it be known. fChorus of Aye'sJ Let it be like- wise known, then, that on this thirteenth day of ye second month, in ye year 1655, the Freemen of ye Town of Boston passed this order: It is now generally agreed upon that our brother, Philemon Pormort, shall be entreated to become schoolmaster for ye teaching and nurturing of ye children with us. Also, in part payment for his services, he shall be given thirty acres of land. Is there any furthur discussion among ye brothers? QA pausej Then let ye meeting be adjourned until further necessity. Moderator: Be this meeting adjourned until further necessity. fCurtainJ at at HF er at And so the Boston Latin School was founded. The classes at Hrst for a period of ten years were held in the home of the Schoolmaster, or some home which was offered for the purpose. Frequently, the kitchen was the scene of stu- dious activities of the Boston youth. It is of note that this school was a secondary school. The elementary education of reading, writing and composition was carried forward by the parents of the boys. The plane of the average intelligence in New England was not low. It is especially commendable that all could read and write and that the elders took time and had the patience to teach their children these fundamentals. They wished to save their chil- dren from the intolerable burden of ignorance and looked forward to the day when those who then carried the work of their colony should relinquish their labors that others would be prepared to take the tasks. The Boston Latin School was at first sup- ported by private donations and by rents from town lands, especially three islands in Boston Harbor. It was free to whomsoever had the necessary elementary requirements of reading, writing and composition, passages of the Bible taken for the purpose. So to the rich and to the poor, to the high and to the low came the opportunity to learn Latin and Greek as the gateway to the professions: Ministry, Law and Medicine. The number that came to the school is un- known. Many years of its existence are un- accounted in its record. The first building erected as a school in 1645 was built on the present spot occupied most fittingly by a statue of one of its illustrious graduates, Ben- jamin Franklin. This bronze stands at a corner of the lawn of the present Boston City Hall. It is now at School Street at the rear of King's Chapel. Old Tremont Street crossed School Street which continues Beacon Street uphill. It was here that the boys would bob-sled in winter and it was here also on Tremont that General Percy's troops were lined on April 19th, 1775, before marching on Lexington. General Haldimand, who commanded under General Gage, had his headquarters at this intersection of Tremont and School Streets. The sledding downhill past the house annoyed the General's servant, who threw plenty of ashes on the roadway. The Latin School lads chose a committee to wait upon the General, who admitted them, heard their complaint couched in genteel terms statng that their fathers before them had improved it as a coast from time immorial. The General ordered the servant to repair the damage, saying that he had enough trouble with Boston men and wanted none with Boston Boys. It is beyond our time and ability here to tell of the many interesting episodes which took place in this locality, We hurry now to the more important masters and' their inde- fatigable work of preparing youth for useful and busy manhood. Among the greatest was Ezekiel Cheever. We know not his appearance except that Hawthorne in Grandfather's Chair describes the New England Classroom which was typical of Cheever's own at the Boston Latin School. EPISODE III Slow curtain Place: Class-room, Boston Latin School. Characte1's: Ezekiel Cheever and 12 Students. Time: Spring 1675. -- !J 'N I-if'--33' 2g - -,,. -, 511- - ' ,- ..-DT - One Hundred Three I 1',,'E,l. , 1. ' up-tp? mxrnxltff' wil: , I lEE5Q X' I fe' I ti ' an , --1, ,. v Y ,Q- . W 'J ,. -1 THE TERCENTENARY CELEBRATION OF THE AMERICAN HIGH SCHOOL fcontinuecll Equipment: A kitchen, benches, Colonial cos- tumes. Pointed, long white-beard for Cheever. Fire-place, pots and pans. The effect of a kitchen with wood-basketg pots and pans in evidence. Students: Murmuring one with the other. Cheever: Class will now come to order. Tacite! Tacite! Master Stoughton, give the syntax of pertimescendum, paragraph 11 pf the 2nd Oration of Cicero against Cata- ine, Stoughton: fTurning pages, finds place and beginsj Pertimescendum is a gerund agreeing with the noun bellum. Cheever: You do not understand the differ- ence in the use of gerund and gerundive. Master Ellsworth, continue. Ellsworth: Pertimescendum is a gerundive, not a gerund. The gerund is used as a noun in the oblique cases. Pertimescendum is a ger- undive, is used as the adjective modifying a word which might be considered its object, thus bellum is the noun with which the gerundive agrees as its modifier. Cheever: Correct. Translate, after reading the first sentence. Ellsworth: O bellunm magnopere pertimescen- dum, cum Catalina sit habiturus hance prae- toriam cohortem scotorun. O war greatly to be feared, when CMataline may be about to have this praetorian cohort of debauchees. Cheever: Translate sit habiturus more smoothly. Ellsworth: Cataline shall have this- Cheever: Master Satterthwaite, give the form of habiturus sit. Satterthwaite: It is the periphrastic form. The future active of habeo, in this case in the subjunctive expresing a circumstantial rela- tion having an element of potentiality. Cheever: Very good. Master Eaton, continue. Eaton: I am not prepared, sir. Cheever: Thou hast not completed thy task? fAngrilyJ 'Tis unbecoming a youth of thy station! fSilence - students look fearful- Cheever strokes beardj Thou shalt have sun- dry duties to perform therefor. Turn ye to thy books, all of ye, and not one single sound until my return. I go to get neces- sary encouragement for Master Eaton. fLeaves room.j Ellsworth: Urge for thee, Eaton. Stoughton: Mightest have know! Eaton: What a place, St. Paul's School and Emmanuel College where he studied! Slave drivers! Cateby! Thou knowest not either! I shall take the flogging for ye all! Cateby: No wonder they tried him in the Church at New Haven! Unreasonable or something. But hush! he comes! Cheever: fReturns with birch rodj Master Cateby! Heard I your voice? Come hither! Thou and Eaton may both be tanned. Cateby: Sir: we all know it not. fSeveral students rise protestingly.J Cheever: QStroking beardj Well! ye are in- deed but shielding Eaton. I shall declare ye session longer by two hours! Mayhap ye will know thy lessons thereafter. I excuse Master Ellsworth now for his excellent reci- tation. Quite potential this! Master Satter- thwaite may also go. 1After both depart, making bow to Cheever, absolute silence.J of the Declaration of Independence, john Le- vertt, Samuel Langdon, Edward Everett, the late Charles William Elliot, presidents of Har- vard Collegeg Cotton Mather, clergymangjames Bowdoin, Governor of Massachusetts, james Lovell, son of john Lovell, one of its school- masters: Henry Knox, General and Secretary of War under Xvashington, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Charles Sumner, Wendel Phillips, john Lathrop Motley, Historian and Ambasadorg john Ber- nard Fitzpatrick, Roman Catholic Bishop of Boston: Henry Ward Beecher, Edward Everett Hale, Samuel Pierpont Langley, Physicist, Phillips Brooks, Episcopal Bisho of Boston, teacher in the school, Edward Clliarles Picker- ing, Astronomerg Martin Nulmore, Sculptorg Mathew Horlsuis, Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence. . It is uncertain just when the Latin school was opened in Boston. A subscription was raised by certain richer inhabitants of Boston at a meeting held in August 12th, 1636. In 1647 the General Court or Assembl of Mass- achusetts ordered that a school of, the type which afterward came to be known as the common school be maintained in every com- munity where there were hfty householders, and in larger centers of population of at least one hundred householders a grammar school was to be provided by taxation. Opposition to the Latin school became great- er as need for practical education arose. The falling away of apprenticeship methods em- phasized the demand for commercial and indus- trial training. In this way, by the middle of the 18th Century, perhaps through Benjamin Franklin's efforts at establishing an Academy for liberal education in Philadelphia, a modern trend in schooling began. The early documents of the Dutch West India Company contain allusions to education for the youth of those early years in our own locality here. In 1638 the Articles proposed for the coloni- zation of New Netherland contained a provision that each householder should bear a tax for maintenance of a clergymany and schoolmaster. The earliest reference is in a remonstrance addressed to the High and mighty Lords, States General of the United Netherland of july 28th, 1649. This document complained of the failure of the authorities in America to apply moneys collected in the Dutch Church for the purpose of a school. The matter of education dragged on, and was cared for locally by the Presentor or Sing- ing Master of the Church Service who also officiated when the visiting Dominies from New York were not at hand. Their visits never exceeded three annually. There was not a resident preacher in these parts until 1751. The Township of Bergen whose education we have been discussing, that forerunner of what is now called jersey City Heights, was established as a community in the purchase by Director General Peter Stuyvesant and his Council of this entire section from the Indians. This was done on january 30, 1658, before the return of the inhabitants of Old Bergen who had been driven out in a terrible massacre by Chief Pennekek and his Indians a few years before. This entire area and Staten Island had 5 I S1 C ' been laid waste by the savages. . f ' 3: OW urtau? Those of the inhabitants who had fled to 4 I I I safety in Manhattan now petitioned in 1660 to - The Boston Latin School boasts of many return to the Old Bergen Section. They were iw- 1 illustrious citizens as its graduates. John permitted to do so if they would fortify their I Hancock, Samuel Adams, Benjamin Franklin, community for protection. Thus Old Bergen E William Hooper, Robert Treat Paine, signers was surrounded by a high stockade. The area i sg 'Y J-g' 14' ix.- er..-EB - ' ' ' iii-5-xx-- - 'T -Hp-cliff 1 ,,. W lf' , l ,' ' ' . -. - a -A ::. ,I 2. ' One Hundred Four ' dl l 754. I-v, 3 0 4 .J i. l 5f'E,i.f2 23. f 'X -. 0 -A fy? -' . fl ..- ' . ' - - fifiifg , -13 . n ' Or , f' ' ' ezf. . ' -' THE TERCENTENARY CELEBRATION or THE AMERICAN I-nel-I sci-loot M fcontinuecll enclosed included the present Bergen Square where Public School No. 11 now stands. Two years later in 1662, Engelbert Steenhysen appeared in Bergen as Clerk and Schoolmaster. He was a tailor by trade. No building was provided until later. Again two years elapsed and the English in 1664, took this entire country from the Dutch. New Amsterdam now became New York and this land was called New jersey in a Grant from the British King Charles II to Lords Berkely and Carteret. Governor Phillip Carteret granted the Town of Bergen in 1668, the right to lay out such proportion of land for the maintenance of a preacher and schoolmaster and the keeping of a free school for the education of the youth. This land once laid out was not to be alienated, but to remain and continue from one incum- bent to another. Land was laid out and was under the control of the Old Dutch Church wardens, until in 1790, the school instituted by them was incor- porated as the Bergen Columbia Academy located on the site of the present school No. 11. I As the Township of Bergen developed civic- ally, conflict arose between the Civil Authori- ties in the Trustees of the Freeholders of the Township of Bergen and the Trustees of the Academy. A legal battle waged for several years. It was finally terminated in the manner which you are about to witness. ' EPISODE IV Office of the Freeholders of the Township of Bergen. Characters: Jeremiah Van Winkle, Peter Sip, Martin Winne, Garrit J. Newkirk, and Garrit Van Reypen. Cornelius C. Van Rey- pen and George Vreeland, Trustees of the Freeholders of Bergen. Time: September 25th, 1813 Van Winkler Gentlemen, I wish to introduce the Trustees of the Freeholders of the Town of Bergen, Mr. Cornelius C. Van Reypen and Mr. George Vreeland. fThey both bow to the other men.J C. C. Van Reypen: Gentlemen, my nephew, Garrit Van Reypen, will introduce the Trus- tees of the Bergen Columbia Academy. G. Van Reypen: I beg Privilege to introduce Messrs. Jeremiah Van Winkle, fextends hand in his direction and each succeeding person the same,J Peter Sip, Martin Winne Garrit I. Newkirk, and myself as Trustees of the Bergen Columbia Academy. Van Winkler Let us to the matter which has brought us here. For a long time a contest has waged between the Trustees of the Free- holders of the Township of Bergen and our- selves as Trustees of the Bergen Columbia Academy. The claim has been made that you Mr. Vreeland and Mr. Cornelius C. Van Reypen are the only legal representatives of the Township of Bergen. We have de- cided to convey by this deed, the title and interest in the property both to the lands set apart by the commissioners for the use of a Free School in the Town of Bergen and to all monies arising from the sale of a part thereof and to the bonds, mortgages, vouchers and securities in this annexed schedule. Peter Sip: We assign these to the Freeholders, Inhabitants of the Township of Bergen and to their successors in office, and assigns. The for the use of a school or schools, CThey successively sign the deed and Van Winkle hands deed to C. C. Van Reypen.J Newkirk: The conveyance is in the spirit of the old law of December 7th, 1763, when the Legislature ordered a survey. The Common lands had been misused and at this time 3 lots were set aside for a free school for the town. In 1790 two of these were sold and the Academy was built on the third lot at the time the Trustees were appointed for the legally incorporated Academy. ' Winne: My ancestors of the Winne Family have a record of the year 1668, when Phillip Carteret, the patentee of King Charles II of England, granted to the Town of Bergen right to choose their own Minister, and being chosen by them, all persons, Free- holders as well as the Inhabitants, were to contribute according to their estates and proportion of land for his maintenance and the keeping of a free school, or to lay uot such a proportion of land for his mainten- ance as they saw ht, which land being once laid out was not to be alienated, but to re- main and continue for ever from one in- cumbent to another, free from paying high rent or any other taxes. Peter Sip: Afer that regulation, following the coming of the English, at the time our people petitioned to return to our old Dutch system of government, there had been trouble col- lecting the School taxes. The Magistrate and Schout, or Sheriff as he was called, com- plained to the representatives of William of Orange, then King of England. This was in 1672. They were upheld in the collection in 1673 and the following year the people of the outlying districts begged to be ex- cused from the taxes. But the law of 1763 ended that trouble. Newkirk: Yes, only to bring on this difficulty which I earnestly hope is now settled. G. Van Reypen: Up until the present time, the schoolmaster has been appointed by the Old Bergen Reformed Church. They of the Elders, the Consistory, and the Pastor often visited the school to witness the teaching in elementary and classical subjects. In the early days Latin was not very popular with the Dutch, but it was maintained by the Clergy as a necessary subject. Vreeland: I have here a record of the land and an account to the sum of 355,500.41 Van Winkle: Correct! And now begins the public administration of Education in Bergen. Vreeland: All hail New Jersey! Was not our great President james Madison educated at Princeton? Our war With England has not daunted his zeal for the education of our youth. Let the Education of our State stand high among the sister States! fCurtainj The lower part of Jersey City - Powles Hook-an island and originally part of Old Pavonia-in 1800 constituted only Major Hunt Tavern its outbuilding and a stone house. In 1820 less than one thousand inhabitants had settled in this lower part of the city, and it was in this year that the community received its charter. It remained, however, a part of Bergen Township which occupied the region about the present Bergen Square and Public School No. 11, the very lot previously belong- ing to the Corporation of Columbia Academy. A school will always be there because of the 'lli 7 ...U-- its-9. 932. no-cn Q59 E313 -.- nav: 'D' 522 rpOun iam fi E-35 aaa v--v-so D gg.: E39 use O o Q' rs 'own fb 3.39, me: 5 Q25 . at ls. fi B23 m, urn'-I .. are N. . E 4 9,5 Vie-4 gr,-ear Ho. 5 .. Deana . f 5.0.3.2- IA 5 ' FD'-'N - J? . I ' Lx . . W. 50: -' . i In - jf, It - . . 'Z' ':::-fb .!',vAH1f', 915-2 I ngnug, 1 235.3 4 -n ff .f..ff, S, C-fag , f Egfr ll 'I' i,.:.. nl FD H' 'flrrfhaf' If aa?- . ..-Sintra '14 ra- .i E: .1-1 , ,I .U rt--- -4 'X ,.i,e.'f-in I cj Q 1-1 ' , :-. ,, Qual, ' 4 '.--g ', 'IU' . ffil , - - ,im 'f,.'y.f11 .. 0 'V' .V - f THE TERCENTENARY CELEBRATION OF THE AMERICAN HIGH SCHOOL fConl-inuecll of their conveyance to the Freeholders of the Township. A great scheme had been drafted in Pavonia by The associates of the jersey Company, a power in the State of New jersey, and a group of promoters who had as their attorney Alex- ander Hamilton. These men, the founders of early jersey City, were Richard Varick, Jacob Radcliff and Anthony Dey. Two lots had been given by them for a school . It was first established in 1835, and called Mechanics School. Mr. A. T. Smith was first Teacher. He taught in a building which was a Church, the school, and a jail. Public School No. 1 was built and only partly sup- ported by the city. The money was taken for more needy cases. By this time the Associates had witnessed the growth of the City of Jersey, so called in a new charter of 1829. In 1838 the connection with the Township of Bergen was broken and it became a separate community. Van Vorst, or the section just down the hill from our school, was added in 1851. In 1869 all of the communities in Hud- son County which had been erected in 1840 apart from Bergen County, were asked to de- cide on the consolidation of the several munici- palities into one under the name of jersey City. The election of October 5th, 1869, decided that Jersey City, Bergen and Hudson City become one, and in 1870 the present charter was granted by the Legislature. Greenville was added in 1875. A Board of Education had been organized in Bergen in 1864 of 9 members. The first school ordinance in Bergen was in 1843, when all money from Tavern licenses, the city quota of surplus revenue, interest of the city propor- tion of the Bergen Corporation Fund and money annually received from the State School Fund was to be appro riated to the support of Public School No. 1 kept in Town Hall and such other public schools as the Common Council might from time to time erect and establish. The fee was 50 cents per quarter for spelling and readin' , for writing, arithmetic and other branches of learning 31.00 per quarter. The first public school in Bergen was in 1848. In that year the Council of Bergen a propriated 82,300 for six teachers. fPopulation about 6,0003 Mr. G. H. Linsley was principal in 1851. The charter granted in 1851 to jersey City which added Van Vorst provided for a School Superintendent. fQThirteen years earlier than in Bergenj The first Board of Education meet- ing took place january 14th, 1852. There were now three schools in jersey City with an annual expense of 358,425.00, 156,500.00 being for salaries. In the annual reports of Superintendents frequent allusions are made to establishment of a High School. Mayor Gopsill in 1867 alluded in his message to need of it. ' Superintendent McCoy in 1868 made the statement that: It would not be easy to find a city as large as jersey City in New York or New England unprovided with a High School. Superintendent Bevans and Assistant Superin- tendent William L. Dickinson stated in 1870: The time has come when it is proper to schools. Our students are unable to take appoint- ments to West Point or Annapolis. Finally, in 1872, a High School was estab- lished, even in the fact of opposition. Hudson City had tried it and failed because they could not supply enough teachers for the lower grades. Mayor Charles H. O'Neil1 and Super- intendent Willia mL. Dickinson urged the movement. The building known as Public School No. 5 on Bay Street was taken for the High School -the 3rd and 4th floors for the High School -the lower floors for the Elementary School. The organization, begun October 31st, 1872, was sadly arrested by the burning of the build- ing on the evening of December 23rd. Only the outer walls remained standing. While re- construction of the building was in progress, the High School assembled at Kepler's Market Building which ultimately became the Academy of Music--corner Gregory and Warren Streets. It was a three year course. The first grad- uating class comprised 24 students in 1875. 82 candidates had applied for admission and only 71 admitted. As noted, one third of these graduated. ln 1873, 149 candidates applied, 110 admitted. In 1874, 185 candidates applied, 133 admitted. Within a year the burned building was re- constructed and on December 23rd, 1873, the anniversary of the fire, the school was formally opened. I 5 3 Q fr at 4- if as EPISODE V Place: Bay Street School. Characters: Citizens and their wives, on way from the opening of the school. Time: December 23rd, 1873. 1st Lady: Every speaker tried to make it a joke that the High School should be on the third and fourth fioors. In that it was indeed high. 2nd Lady: I thought I'd faint when each of the speakers except Mr. Dickinson said he was not going to make a short speech and then each one of them took from 15 to 20 minutes. . 3rd Lady: It is just as a lot of nothing to me, those speeches. 4th Lady: I thought the program opened nicely with the instrumental duet by Miss Gaddis and Miss Credde. 5th Lady: Mr. Gaddis had to make a speech, he had his youngster on the program. Annie did the French recitation Le Lac very well. 6th Lady: To me, The Morning Is Glowing by the pupils was the best on the program. 7th Lady: The double quartette was good, only the weather is too cold to think of Spring Delights. lst Lady: Ah! Mr. Pangborn, you are going to make note of this in your newspaper, The Evening Journal, are you not? Pangborn: Unfortunately our staff are not in sympathy with the High School movement. It has so often been said that the poor are taxed to educate the rich man's children. Mr. Thomas of the Board of Education asked me to come and I did so out of respect to him. Znd Lady: Mr. Thomas kept going long after interest in his speech was gone, I suppose he felt it his duty to be present, since he has , 1' urge the establishment of a High School. The the buildings as his chief interest for the : influence of such a school would not be limited Board of Education. Principal Baron, what -3 to its own pupils and teachers, but it would think you of this dreadrful panic we are in? have a powerful tendency to improve the lower Since April, the financial condition is grow- K departments, elevate the standard of scholarship ing worse. and promote thoroughness generally in the Prin. Baron: Indeed, nearly one thousand I i , - 'I' T '1 ' in - ' -gf-.il3i ,x- W:-:fe . i c' 'F I I rg g 1- ',. ,Y , , 1 in-',j,Bl nfl. -L-. wi fm - t . - I ' E ' ei wi- 'Ulf' One Hundred Six -. I ,J do f 'EJSUIN ' - -3 .T- I V 5. Agni: - I , . fzgv-,,.-' N oo xp . ' ' . . -to THE TERCENTENARY CELEBRATION OF THE AMERICAN HIGH SCHOOL CContinuedl financial organizations throughout the country have failed, but as I have often heard it said, the world must go on, things do not go out of existence, it is simply a readjust- ment we must make. Establishing our High School at a time like this, has seemed to many citizens a mark of folly. It is a step forward and a step which cannot be retraced. In my opinion, men think harder, work better, accomplish more in periods of stress. While Rome was not built in a day, the things of lasting good are slow of growth. What think you, Reverend Holloway? Rev. Holloway: True things in life will always survive, the trivial pass away, 2nd Lady: Hark! I hear the students singing the school song, written for this occasion. fSong by Glee Clubl CCurtainJ -r 4- at wk as As the event of the opening of the High School on Bay Street, now a storehouse for the Board of Education and the comments on the program and current interests of the day passed into History, the Educational Activities of Jersey City continued. In 1905 the Bay Street School was moved to this building, then one half its present size. We are at present in the auditorium of that original buildingg the second, or northern half of this structure was added in 1912. Evening Schools had been in operation in jersey City since the winter of 1865. In 1867 there were two schools for men and one for women. The term ran from October to March, five sessions per week, each session 22 hours in length. In 1868 there were 1,187 persons enrolledg by 1873 this had increased to 1,317. These schools were all elementary. Dr. John M. Thomas in his inaugural ad- dress as President of Rutgers University said: In 1860 there were four High Schools in New Jersey. Sixteen years later there were eleven, with 1,607 studentsg in 1924, 157 High Schools with 86,459 students. But there was one High School not in this list, it came into existence the following year, 1925, The Dickinson Accredited Evening High School. After carefully considering the establishment of an accredited evening High School in Jersey City and after writing to almost every State Board of Education of the various States of the Union, Dr. james A. Nugent, Superintendent of Schools of Jersey City, made a strong ap- peal to the State Board of Education of the State of New Jersey. While Detroit and Chicago had been doing a little work of Evening High School standard, New York had the only well established insti- tutions of this kind in the East. Dr. Nugent represented these facts to the State authorities and urgently pressed the claim for the organization of such a school in this city. Many residents of jersey City were seek- ing higher education in other cities at great expenditure of energy, time and money. Why should our earnest youth go away from their own community for such study? Hesitancy and doubt had characterized the attitude of previous school heads toward an accredited Evening High School. Dr Nugent's reason he is called the father of our Accredited Evening High School. No more fitting occasion than this year, the tenth year of its existence, can be selected for rejoicing in satisfaction and pride at the achieve- ment of this school. And now, as president of the Senior Clas of june, 1935, I turn the celebration of this event to the president of the Alumni of the Dickinson Accredited Eve- ning High School, Mr. William Habermann. 1 It is with pleasure that I participate in this occasion as representative of the graduates of our Alma Mater now in her tenth year. I note that I am not alone in the festivity, for in the previous episodes on the stage, and in the audience before me, I see many of our Alumni present. I wish at this moment to express for my fellow graduates, some of recent classes, others of longer standing, the sincere appreciation of the benefits and good which this school has afforded us. We heartily thank the Father of Dickinson Accredited Evening High School, Dr. James A. Nugent. We wish to acknowledge the ever sympathetic and kind consideration of our principal, Mr. T. Gilbert McFadden. To the members of the Faculty, past and present, we offer our thanks for their patience and interest in us, and we hope that our efforts and future achievements may in a small way compensate for this nurturing care. We are about to celebrate this occasion by recounting in brief the many developments, growth and success of our school. fRise of Curtainj EPISODE VI Birthday Cake Well! we are going to celebrate! A Birth- day Cake and ten candles. Ten eventful years. I shall try to call back these years, and have Each one tell you important facts of its own ays. fAt clap of hands, girls spring from the cakej. Oh! years! you have come back to us! Mem- ories all of you, but living still! I cannot recall those interesting things you know. Would you refresh my mind? How many teachers has our school had in each advancing year? fGirls give numbers, 15-17-21, etc.j Anr how many graduates do each one of you claim? fGirls respondl. just how many students have enrolled each year? But you first year, tell me of any outstand- ing facts about yourself. What distinction can you claim, oh 2d year? l've heard it said that an OWL appeared to you-the third year. EPISODE VI fLarge cake on centre of stage, decorated with 10 candlesj. Habermann: fTurns and sees cakej. Well! we are going to celebrate! a birthday cake and ten candles. Ten eventful years. I shall try to call back these years and have each one tell you important facts of its own days. fAt clap of hands girls spring from cakej. Oh! years! you have come back to us. Memor- firm belief, sound argument and excellent fore- ies all of you, but living still. I cannot re- 1 sight, caused the State Board of Education to call those interesting things you know. x ' grant the Charter for this school. No amount Would you refresh my mind? fTurns to , of effort was spared by our present Superinten- girls, who have come to front of stagej. i -'- dent to offer the youth of our City opportunity How many teachers has our school had in I y E in pursuing further Education. This is the each advancing year? 5 ' N --za - One Hundred Seven .- - -'ff 1,-'lt -El , I - I I ,-1 N' - -OW ': :Ky 5'-.1 Q 1:1 - C 15. id 1. . I ii req., ig, gg L 'NN-,, . 1 ':5:.,V,-If ,Lf ' : 'T . ' nu , x, QA Vx JS, 'M . f f ,gxgw .I 4 . N, I A , J va THE TERCENTENARY CELEBRATION OF THE AMERICAN HIGH SCHOOL fContinuedl Girls: fl-9 consecutivelyj 1'5-17-21-27-4o-5o-6o- 65-70-81. Habermann: And haw many graduates do each of you claim? Girls: 14-30-44-76-120-175-201-241-361. Habermann. just how many students have en- rolled each year? Girls: 695-814-1145-1650-2549-3154-3965-4170 4819. Habermann: fTurns to First girlj. But you, first year, tell me of any outstanding facts about yourself. lst Girl: My year was one of beginnings, there were only Academic classes conducted. There were no organizations for extra curricular ac- activities. The Senior Class rebelled against receiving Evening High School Diplomas. Mine was the year in which they still said It cannot be done. Habermann: What distinction can you claim, oh second year? 2nd Girl: During my year the Rotary Club recognized the school standing by awarding the Valedictorian, Frederick LeVarge, the Rotary Scholarship. There were still only Academic courses provided for. The first Athletic team made its appearance in March, - 1927, and played one Basketball game. Habermann: I've heard it said that an OWL appeared to you, the third year. 3rd Girl: Yes, we had the first annual, a small paper covered book consisting of 20 pages. In this year, too, the Gymnasium and the Library were opened to the Evening School students. There was no separate school paper, we were given a page in the Dickinsonian. The first Student Council was elected and a Track team was organized at this time. Habermann: Did anything of importance hap- pen to wou, the fourth year? 4th Girl: The first Senior Class play, Dulcy, under the direction of Mr. Barget, was pro- duced in my year. The Valedictorian, Miss Matilda Bosshardt, was the first pupil to complete the four year Evening Course, earn- ing all her credits here. Our Evening School paper The Night Watch, was first pub- lished in this year. The Commercial Depart- ment was added to the curriculum. A foot- ball team won the Metropolitan Evening High School Championship. The first club, the Literary Society, was organized at this time. Habermann: What can you tell us about your- self, fifth year? 5th Girl: It was in this year that a Vice-Princi- pal was appointed, Mr. john O'Regan. The following clubs were or anized, in this order: Glee Club, Chess Clui, Debating Society, Fencing and Tennis Teams, and the Archery Club. The Annual Metropolitan Evening Championship Track Meet was organized by Samuel Millberger. Habermann: What hav you to tell us, sixth year? 6th Girl: The OWL evolved as a REAL book- with a board cover. The Riding, Swimming and Italian Clubs were organized at this time. It was in my year that our Alma Mater song, Guide Us, Mother Dickinson, was composed by the Falvey Sisters. Habermann: Seventh year, what have you to tell us? 7th Girl: During my year Mr. Messler became Senior Class Advisor. The OWL became a big book, and was dedicated to Edison. Three Evening School pupils passed exam- inations for Annapolis. Special awards to Seniors were established as follows: 1. The Meritorious Service Award, which was the gift of the Students' Council. 2. The Most Representative Student Award, given by the Alumni Association. The Deutscher Verein, Le Cercle Francais and the Architectural Club were organized during this year. Habermann: Have you anything of interest to tell us, eighth year? Sth Girl: My year was known for the organiz- ing of the General Organization, which re- placed the old Student Council and Athletic Association. The Law Society and the Span- ish Club were also started. Habermann: What about you, little ninth year? 9th Girl: The OWL reached new heights: it was awarded a FIRST PLACE in competition with the Nation's Schools, by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. Commencement Exercises were held in the New Gymnasium for the first time. Mattial Thiebaux was the 1000th graduate and, besides his diploma, received special press notice. Habermann: That's funny! This is a tenth an- niversary and yet I only see nine years on the sage. What happened to the tenth year? 110th Girl gets off stool and trips to front of stagej: Oh! there yau are. What can you tell us? 10th Girl: I'se this year, the tenth year: I'se ,still to youngg I ain't got no thithitics! fRuns to Habermann and whispers in his earzj Call Dr. Nugent and Mr. McFadden to the platform. fPresent first cake to Dr. Nugent and second to Mr. McFaddenj. Habermann: Especial thanks are due the fol- lowing students and Post-graduates who la- bored to make this program a success: jos- eph Tucker, who typed many copies of the script and aided in bringing the groups to- gether. Frank Cerco and W. Finnegan, who made the artificial cake. Mrs. Rose Rosenblum who baked and decorated the real birthday cakes for Dr. Nugent and Mr. McFadden, and for the ten girls repre- senting the years of our school. Henry Stender, Stanley Michna, Harold Sher- wood, Robert Gilbert, J. Farrell Grogan and J. Rose, who aided in the arrangement of the stage properties. Miss Kathryn Clow, who made designs for period costumes. Miss Lucille Von Dohlen and her Reception Committee, who received our Honored Guests. Mrs. C. W. Barget, who accompanied the Glee Club. The Lincoln High School Orchestra for their selections. Mr. DeCotis, of the Day School Faculty, for his co-operation in supplying the lighting. Ted Glinki and his staff, for operating the lights. And all others who assisted in one way or another to make this evening an enjoyable one. THEN CALL ALL OF THE CAST TO THE STAGE and announce that the GLEE CLUB AND SCHOOL WILL SING: IT CAN BE DONE. fFinisj One Hundred Eighl 4 Q Q Q Q Q Q QQ Q Q Q Q 'Q Q Q Q 'T Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q . Q Q Q IQ Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q 'Q ALUM N Y Y' 'Q 'QQ QQ QN Q4 QQ' QN QQ Q4 Q4 1:1E-A3134-A.z3:.'-Aziz:-if A-f:3fxAXA:-X-I-:AIAXAIAX-:+:AX-.-,AXA-.--.4:.--.4-v-v-.124--.l-.-.- ,Y Q: az-,i:3i,.-4-,fi:3-:-g3ig4Qi:+5Qg-5-.PfQAP-n-5-P-1--..41- A -J'-6 Y Y Q':'4':4' 4'4'4Q: Q'Q Q 4'4Q4Q Q'Q Q'4,4Q QQ'QQQ Q Q'QQ :QI :Q'Q 'Q Q QQ QQQ Q 'Q'4'A' IQ' r 'Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q ff 'QQ Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q 'QQ 'Q Q 'I 4' Q 'Q -,14.v,.v-W.-Av4.w,.i4.vAt..v,.w-A-Aw. ,, At A A ,, Agni.-,L,i,Q,Q4i4Q,, 4-J A . William H. Habermann Therese B. Ahlbach ..... Mae Mahoney .......... Theresa D'Alvia ...... Catherine Adams ........ Mary Quigley .,............ Lawrence J. Feeney ...,. George Genderovsky .,... ALUMNI ASSOCIATION President Vice-President Treasurer Recording Secretary C0r1'erp0z1ding Secretary Correrpozzdifzg Secretary Sergeafzl-at-A1'nzJ Sergeanl-at-Army A., I-'hiijlll 1-1 . john T. Brogan ..........................,.........,..........................,.......................... Faculty Adiiirer The highest peak in the activities of the Alumni Association, which was organized in 1929 by a small group of twenty students, was reached on February 15, 1935, at the testimonial dinner which it tendered to Dr. james A. Nugent, the father of The Accredited Evening High School, in appreciation for the school of a second chance,', which has become the familiar term used in designating their Alma Mater. At this formal demonstration, to which nearly 400 students, Alumni and Faculty attended, joseph Carroll, former president of the Association, presented Dr. Nugent with a wrist Watch. Cooperating with the student body the Alumni participated in a pageant on May 20th in commemoration of the 300th Anniversary of the secondary schools and the tenth anniversary of Dickinson Evening. A series of monthly lectures on Philosophy for the Layman by Dr. Rudolf Kagey, of Washington Square College, New York City, was sponsored by the Association. Among the other activities which the Alumni sponsored, was the Alumni-Varsity, and the Alumni-Faculty basketball games, the annual boat ride which is to be held on july 2nd, the Alumni vs. Varsity debate on Public Utilities and the social for graduating students of the school. A percentage of the proceeds made on all activities is regularly added to the scholarship fund. The first scholarship award will be made next year. One Hundred Ten ALUMNI NEWS jim Loughlin, '34, is still trying to obtain political power in this fair city and be a colleague of our Mayor . . . Frank Schlig, '34, is air-minded, having enrolled for a course in the National Flying Cadets . . . Henrietta Schwarting graces our corridors in working for the Alumni . . . Mickel LaMont may still be seen talking to the fair dam- sels of the school around the campus . ..George fDynamitej Genderowsky has been elected Sergeant-at-Arms of the Alumni Association . . . We wonder who has been elected to keep him quiet . . . Kathryn Clow is still emulating Percy Crosby with her artistic talents while dispersing books at a local branch of the Free Public Library . . . Frank Cerco, '31, and his Packard can be found outside of the school almost every eve- ning except when he is visting a certain library . . of course he is interested in booksf ?j . . . joe Carrol, '29, has been transferred to Passaic where he is cashier for an insurance company . . . Walter Eskowsky, '33, is contemplating middle aisleing it with jean Halla- han of '33 . . . Willie Finnegan, '30, can be found playing baseball at West Side Park every evening . . . Therese Ahlbach, '29, has gone in for baking in a big way . . . Sammy Milberger, '33, is once again a familiar figure around the corridors after spend- ing many months in the Medical Center . . . Mae Mahoney has developed a fondness for auto riding on Tuesday nights . . . Tom Morgan, '33, is employed at Wanamaker's and works every night but Tuesday . . . Eddie Papendick is thinking very seriously of buying a large stock of the Erie Railroad between Passaic and Waverly Street where Mildred Kopp, '33, resides . . . joseph Dietz, '33, middle aisled it on the 17th of June . . . Eddie O'Rourke also left the ties of bachelorhood and became a benedict on june 15th . . . Walter Wilmot expects to middle aisle it in November . . . Bill Burns became a benedict on the 16th of June . . . Joe Beirne, '33, married in july, '33, is now the proud father of a bouncing baby girl . . . joe Egan, '31, is also the father of a bouncing baby girl, now 2 years old . . . Elsa jerlat can still be seen looking for David Gladstone, '31 . . . Vincent Russo is doing a fine job of stooging for President Habermann of the Alumni . . . joe Roerty, '33, may still be seen escorting Cecil Wis- niewski, '34, hither and yon . . . Sadie T. Falvey was appointed chairman of the Boat Ride to be held on july 2 . . . Frank Cerco would like to make the acquaintance of a certain teacher Who appears in the office now and then . . . Helen Lundberg, '31, is very active in political fields . . . Joe Tucker, '33, was production manager for Mr. Barget's pageant . . . Alice Eagan and joseph Farley, both of the '33 class, have since become one . . . Mary Carroll, '30, can be seen sporting around town in her new Chevie . . . Anne Del Orme, '29, is now happily married to Jack Langen, '30 . . . john Pop Celander is now a member of the Ministry . . . Gertrude Snell, '31, is engaged to Al Carroll, '31 . . . Ernest Witenborn, '31, is now a benedict and commutes from Long Island . . . Gertrude Colleran, '31, recently graduated from the Jersey City Nurses' Training School, as did Antoinette Popiel, '31 . . . Eddie Preissler, '31, has purchased a share in the bus line between North Bergen and East Orange where Gladys Kroog, '32, resides . . . Julius Caroselli, '29, has high pressure . . . Thomas J. Higgins, '31, was elected President of the Owl Club . . . Karl Ege, '34, and Bob Gracey, '34, are the Damon and Pythias of New York University . . . Mike Flannery hopes that the Alumni will patronize him when he opens his dentist office . . . Gert Mahon and Mary Quigley may be seen cantoring along the bridle paths almost any bright Sunday morning . . . jane Mastronardy is still very much interested in public speaking . . . another male who is going to midde aisle it is Patrick Barry Casey, '29 . . . Willie Habermann, '31, has an interest in the bus line from Union City to Greenville . . . what a ride . . . We wonder why Mr. Barget called Lawrence Feeney, '29, WOLF ? ? ? . . . Eddie J. Beenick, Owl Editor, '35, is seeing Lillian O'Hara around and it is reported that they f 2 are that way about each other. ' 1 E N i ,.'! ll -- ' T' l' ':'3-2'-L' One Hundred Eleven 'T , f ,,.. sc if i' 1 y' 'H F' gas l I l E-554, 3 Tl? Xl wFa'5l . 1'-' '-' ,, p --R, 1 , '-'lfifg - '41 1-.,,-5 .I I' ' ' . hs' Q Y' 'uv'- L, , -' -.. OHS OUR 'GRADUATES Alumni members pursuing higher fields of study may be found in colleges in vari- parts of the country, some of which are listed below: Robert J. Gracey, '34, New York University Karl Ege, '34, New York University David Gladstone, '31, New York University, elected chairman of Student Activities Bernice Kiracofe, '29, Graduate of Panzer, at present attending Rutgers james MacMurren, '33, Notre Dame University Vincent Wanamaker, '31, New York University Albert Harding, '33, Colorado School of Mines Edward Preissler, '31, New York School of Accounting john D'Alvia, '33, Hudson College Walter Wygant, '33, Hudson College Lawrence Meehan, '33, Hudson College Walters Bednash, '30, Hudson College Michael Flannery, '30, Graduated from University of Maryland, june, '35 Ralph Gianotti, '29, Graduated from Bucknell, june, '35, AB Degree Lawrence J. Feeney, '29, Fordham University Rose Mocco, '29, Graduate of Beaver, now teaching school at North Bergen james Delano, '31, New York University Marguerite Regan, '32, New York University Selma johnson, '31, New York University George Rimington, '33, Pratt Institute Henry Stender, '33, Pratt Institute Francis Grant, '30, Catholic U. of Washington Louis Dinicola, '30, john Marshall Anna Paterno, '31, john Marshall joseph Caretta, '32, Panzer Rose Verrando, '29, Hunter john Dugan, '34, john Marshall john Biwaski, '34, Pratt Institute One Hundred Twelve IN MEMORIAM ROSE MARIE GORMAN QIN MEMORY OF REGGIE GORMANQ She singeth low in every heart, W'e hear the each and all ,.... A song of her who answers not, However we may call: She throngs the silence of the breast, We see her as of yore, The kind, the brave, the true, the sweet, Who walks with us no more. It is with deep regret that we tell you of the sudden death of Reggie Gorman, member of the june Class of 1931. Most of you knew Reggie, loved her for her fine sportsmanship and sociability. Those of us who had the pleasure of being in the same classes with Reggie, will remember the ever ready hello and smile to each and everyone. 0 i 7 5' . Q H t D 45 - '?- 'ff' .ff.7rfZfyr F iii El 1' l' ' ' llwllllgfit One Hlmdred Thirleefz i7'f:A'Qiw 'll :le .- , ' 'ii' ' 'I .ha ix' -.Txw e - N--' , n ' uv '- I ' ALUMNI EVENTS One of the outstanding summer reunion events for Dickinson Evening students and friends will be the Annual Boat Ride of the Alumni, which will be a moonlight sail on Tue5daY, July 2, 1935, aboard the SS. Americana. Miss Sadie T. Falvey is chairman of this affair and as Miss Falvey has been a most successful chairman and committee worker ever since her induction into the Alumni in June, 1951, we are looking forward to our greatest financial and social success. As the regulation rate of 31.00 is being charged and as the boat affords a pleasant sail, plus dancing to a good orchestra and, in addition a Broadway Revue is staged, the investment is more than worthwhile. The Alumni Association looks forward to greeting you at the Exchange Place Pier at 7:30, july Znd. Please get your tickets in advance by calling the chairman or any member of the able committee. 1 5: , ig ai'-EAA ' T 1' one Hundred Fourteen ' .s.-' 5 -tr CRGAN IZATI Y 1 41 41 41 441 1 11 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 1 1 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 1 1 1 41 1 1 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 1 1 41 41 v-4 1 1 1 1 1 41 41 1111111 11 41 41 1 11111 1111 1 11 11 1 1111 1111111 41144114 1111111 111111 1111111 1111114 1111111 1111111 1 1111 111 1 11114114 1111114 1111111 111111111 1 11 1 11111111 41141111 41141111 41144114 11111111 1111111 4114114 4411:4114 11 1111111 1 1111 11111 1111114 1441144 1 11111 41141 1 114114 11111111 1 41141111 41144114 4114114 1 111111 14414114 14141 111 1 11111 1 1 1 1111 11 1 111111 1 11 1 11 11 1 11111 41141 1 11 11 1 11 1 11 11 11111111 1411441 11111 1 1 1111 N V11 1 1411414 11 1 111 111 11 1 1 1 11111 41414141 11111111 111 1 1 1 1 1 1 11111111 11 1 1 1 1 11 414141141 4114141 11111 11111111 1.1.11 S U w Ji QL WI 'Wi U. PE 1 Hi M .1 1, '4- I Q I , 1, 0 5. 05, U lvllfll f9AfIll NISIUJWI gc N? KZIVI wx lu un M' lllllllllli A 5 A llllh. Q Q Inu ,lu ' ,, H, .... ., . .. llllll '---. -' - ' - ' UQ., 1 :Hu Q V .. Q.. ' L 1 I Sl U ,in 1 . -. . . . ,x QE.:-1. 4117! A- -. -- ch,-5 , . ' A f u Q ,qs N ' I..-- H ,Ulu 1,-,:1.?J ily- Q- U: ,f f f - 9 ,4 .'.'.'.'r:' , 0' 0 111-:z . q m f W ., is 1 if u- 'i .,, ll xltl tl fill W, Wil Q. Q: tl f lil ill L, l ll ul uf it tile? lit lm ffl' x K 1. W lil li 'll'l Y . fill .45 H, Mit W., ili- vl'1 --...S M-..j...- ,. 'ffl ze , ,Q itil? .wi , .. .mg ,I , . li IJ We filll i i , X f Z EXECUTIVE COUNCIL The Executive Committee is composed of twelve members, six student members, the president, the treasurer and four other members of the Student Council appointed by the said president, six faculty members chosen by our Principal, T. Gilbert McFad- den. This committees chairman is also faculty adviser of the General Organization Council. Student members are changed at the beginning of each term. Those officiating from September to january were: john Darcy .............. .................. P resident joseph Dollard .........,,,,,........... Trefzrzzrer james Boyle, Thomas Blake, janet Crowley, Patrick A. Orrick The Student members for the semester, February to June, 1935, were: Patrick A. Orrick t................ President John O'Toole ......... Student Clmirzmzfz james McCarthy .................... Treafmfef' Anne Cassidy ....,,,,................... Secretary joseph Kindstrand, Marie Helg, Helen Mast The Faculty members of the Comittee for the same period were: john T. Brogan .................................................................... Chairman Rita Fitzgerald, Mildred Rudnitsky, Vincent O'Shea, john Kelly, Lawrence Camisa, john McDermott. The Executive Committees duties are to advise and finance all the extra-curricular activities of the school, and act as an upper house in deliberating and formulating the general school policy. Although considerable freedom has been allowed in the governing of numerous club affairs, certain precautions must be taken to curtail these activities and it is at this point that the Executive Committee decides. , t .. .' Q, V 1 . ' Jr., 2 One Hundred Eighleelz ,a- .pci JZ D. A. E. H. S 'I ll NIGI-IT WATCH George Conaty ....... Ernest Rusch ........ Ediior-in-Chief Adrfirory Editor joseph Langley ....... .,........ S porlf Editor john Srodinski ..,..... ...... A cfiziilief Editor William Chambers ...................... Feature Edilor Lloyd Oliver ........... ........,.......... B winery Manager Katherine Tighe .. Arfirrant Bminerf Manager Charles W. Brody ...... ............................r...... S aperzfimr Peter Henderson ........... .........................,...,.. Famlzy Aduifor To the above mentioned staff and to the following reporters: jerry Woods, Maebeth Kupfer, Robert Gilbert, Ellen Conaty, Alice Sandell, john Geraghty, Marion McKiernan, Martha Hillel, and Louis Behrman, we owe the deepest debt of gratitude. Their untir- ing efforts after school hours, extending many times until early in the morning, has proved a boon in cementing the various organizations and activities of the school. Their work has been justly rewarded, ranking as it does, as one of the outstanding High School journals in the country, having again captured third place honors in the rating of High School papers by the judges of the Columbia Scholastic Press Associa- tion. They have brought honor to us and for this we honor them. One H zmdrea' N izzeleefz 4 l 4 j l I nj gl l l lj lil 4 nj lj j l 1: l I jj l ' l l GENERAL ORGANIZATION QJANUARYJ John T. Brogan ...... ...... I iafnlly Atlz'i.rer John Darcy ......,.................,,,....Y.,.......V ......,...... P feritlezzf Thomas Sharkey, Williirin Gantner .,..... ...... I fire-Pre.ritfe11i,r Kathleen Kelly ,.............w,,.......,........., ....,,,,...... S cfrreff11'y joseph Dollard ....,......l...,,7.,....ll.,..YV,.......,,Yl...........,.........,.,.. Trea.i'ff1'e1' Fourth General Organization Council Sept. to Feb., 195-'i-1935. The Fourth General Organization Council faithfully carried on with the traditions of the previous Councils. The Council, the fourth of the newly formed General Organization, boasts of sixty- four elected members, which is truly a real representation of the students of this school. The General Organization Council, under the guidance and leadership of its offi- cers, has faithfully and successfully enforced the laws of its Constitution, giving to all students the same rights and privileges. This proves the justice, fairness, and democracy of our Evening High School. The remarkable achievements of the Organizations committee which spent end- less time investigating and improving the activities of the school, was well appreciated. It was only after considerable effort and careful consideration that charters were granted to the Economics Club, the Commercial Club, the Harmonica Club, and the Ice Skating Club. One of the most outstanding accomplishments of this General Organization Council was the financial and social success of its Halloween Dance. .,.... ,-. G ,... ' x 2' xl i . , v Ai A 1 ri, fl f. . - ft xii. 'fffffg -15:-ef: eiiillfi ' T .l2 g.- One Ifllilcflftf Tzreulj i One H flmfred Trveuly-wze fix.,-Et?--i-21 1-mi ' V-3 ., , .. X GENERAL ORGANIZATION QJUNEJ Patrick A. Orrick ........ ............. P rerideazl james McCarthy ,, Y,,,..,......... .... T 1'ea.rf1l'w' Stanley Adlar ,.,,,,, ........... V ire-Preridenf Ann Cassidy ,,,,,,,,,..............V.... Scfrclzzry john T. Brogan ..,.,,.....,,,.......r,................................... Famlfy Adzirw' February to june, 1935 The Fifth General Organization under the able leadership of its President, Patrick A. Orrick and his group of officers has strenuously exhibited its power in enforcing the laws of its constitution. justice, fair play and democracy reigned supreme in granting to all students the same rights and privileges. The General Organization has been proficient as a guiding hand for the many clubs that are now part of the school. The remarkable achievements of the Organiza- tion's Committee spent endless time investigating and improving the activities of the school. One of the most outstanding social functions of the Fifth General Organization was the tremendous success of the Spring Dance which was held in the New Gym on May 10th. The affair was a most gratifying success both financially and socially, due to the innovation of a twelve-piece orchestra. A most outstanding and sensational achievement of the General Organization was the investigation of the school newspaper, the Night llffafrh, by the President, Patrick A. Orrick. After due deliberation by a committee composed of six faculty members and six student members, regulations governing the organization and administration of the Night Watch are to go into effect at the beginning of the next term. The General Organization contributed a fixed amount to the Alumni Scholarship Fund, also appropriating money to make the Meritorious Service Award again possible to be awarded to the most outstanding and deserving senior of the june Class. l ! After an exceedingly active summer the Globe Club reconvened and immediately proceeded to the business of electing new officers. After a spirited contest john Darcy was chosen for president, with Michael Byrnes, Noreen O'Sullivan, janet Crowley, john Quinn and Anne Cassidy undertaking the other duties. Within a few weeks, however, the merits of the new president were recognized by the General Organization, and on the advice of Mr. McFadden, he resigned. A second election found Raymond Whalen victorious. Conrtimiiozz-Margaret Hall, Chairman, Helen Most, Mary Scott, Cornelius Dorans and William Ryan. Membenhip-Edward Higgins, Chairman, Vivian Bradley, Anne Burke, Mary Byrnes, and Grace Cassidy. The winter social was held on December 14. In addition to an excellent orchestra and superlative refreshments a most unusual feature of entertainment was presented. A Bagpiper's band and costumed dancers gave Irish and Scotch selections to delight the Faculty as well as the students. The committees responsible for the success of the affair were: Social Committee-Edward Leach, chairman, Jean Clark, James McCarthy, Helen Dillon, joseph Quail, Noreen O'Sullivan and john Darcy. Ticket Commillee-Helen Most, chairman, john Douglas, Jennie Mras, Mary Cas- sidy, Margaret Finnerty, and Helen Mueller. Refreilamefzl Commiftee F Mary Scott, chairman, Margaret Hermberg, Theresa O'Niell, Grace Cassidy, Marie Hallstein, Lucy Toomey, Rose Kiernan and Anne Cassidy. Entertaizzmefzt C0mmi!tee4Raymond O'Brien, chairman, Ethel Eyerman, Rose Carr, john Quinn, Helen Eyerman and Margaret Patrick. Decorating Commizlee-Ronald Gately, chairman, Evelyn Kendall, Marie Gast, Edith Patrick and Edward Higgins. At Christmas time a party was held in the school, during which the Faculty Advisor was presented with a radio. The committee in charge of this party was Walter O'Brien, chairman , Florencelacobshlangt Crowley and Hugh McCarthy. if the sponsorship of Charles Peter and , . 1 i rg, FranLt,1QENeill, Jq5,ry,,'O'Callala?4ai Con Dovans and john Kennedy. Songs and stories ffff1futt?d.53 M -LY: ef ' 1 i -.-,...-Z...:ZL. 'T-1 fill: -' 44.51-1 Y- , ,rf gt .:..:, GLOBE CLUB One Hundred T11'e12ly-l1z'o One H mzdf ed Twenty-zflaree Among the other outstanding -' --'-- n'-- vited guests, a series of weekly articles on Irish Hist , - Ray hale . hik o e I Orange Mountains under the direction of Helen Gor nd Athleti mra '- . Simultaneously with all this activity a- v. ' - -. 1 0 F Q- rn , hidden facts in Ye Gaelic Gossip 2.:i:r:E:::wE5::::::?::::::::::5E5::':E::::::::' Jacobs. The opening of the new term brought another election. On this occasion the ver- satile Scotch athlete and scholar, James McCarthy, was chosen to occupy the chair, with Florence Jacobs, Lucy Toomey, Anne Cassidy, Walter O'Brien, and Marie Hallstein as the supporting officers. A series of one-act plays and mock trials now engrossed the club. The details were authenticated by Edward Higgins, William Russell, George Knebs, Joseph Feucht and George Gendevovsky. The highlights of the dramatic activities were the sponsorship of a performance of Hamlet at the Davenport Theatre attended by over three hundred, and the presenta- tion of championship ERA John play of Northern New Jersey, with the and Jarnesu following select cast: Thomas Finn, Arthur Bromoski, Michael Flynn and Catherine Curtis. Outstanding among the speakers of the terms were Counselor James Doyle from Senator Moore's office, on The Contributions Ireland to the Educational Progress of the World, and our own Mr. Kennelly on The Irish Literary Contribution. A hike in May under the direction of Margaret Stuve enjoyed the customary suc- cess of such affairs. The Spring social on May 29 assumed the form of a barn dance. Social Commiitee--John Douglas, chairman, Ruth Gounwald, Mary Anderson, Maureen Eastmead, Roy Wulff and Tom Foley. Ticket Committee-Dorothy Treadway, chairman, John Darcy, Helen Most, Mary Byrnes. Refrerbment Committee-Madeline Penoose, chairman, Kathleen Phillyss, Florence Griffin, Mary Hallwvon, Jennie Mras, Mildred Butten, Margaret Hanen and Mary Stoveken. Decoration:-Jean Patrick, chairman, Dorothy Meyer, Ronald Gately. During this term the destiny of the Gossip Sheet was guided by Dorothy Tread- way. ' The first bus outing of the season is set for June 30, with the anticipation of a repetition of last year's fun. Oficerf September June Prgyidgng ,,,,,.,,,.,..,,,,.,,,,,,,,. .,....... J ohn Darcy Ray Whalen James McCarthy Fin! Vice-Prefidenl ,,,,,.,,,., ......... M lCl13.Cl By1'l'1CS Florence Jacobs Second Vice-Pferidenl ....... ......... N 01'6C1'1 Oisullivall Lucy Toomey Secretary ,,,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,.,.,, ,.,...... J anet Crowley Anne Cassidy Tfgafufef ,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,.,,,,,.,,, .,....... J ohn Quinn Walter O'Brien Ayjiymnt Tregrurer ,,.,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,., .,....... A HUC C3.SSldy Marie Hallstein Editor Ye Gaelif Garfip Sheer ,,,,.......... Florence Jacobs Dorothy Treadaway RECEPTION COMMITTEE Lucille Von Dohlen ..... ........... P reridenl Elizabeth Trodd ....... ...... V ire-Prefiden! Helen Goode ,.............l.,....... ......,.,.. S ecretary Miss Mildred C. Rudnitsky ........ .,....... I iarully Ad1fi.rer The Reception Committee since its organization in 1931, has competently served the school during all assemblies and social functions. The purpose of this committee is to receive guests of the school, to aid in main- taining order during assemblies, and to endeavor to have the audiences disperse in a quiet manner. The members of this committee possess dignity, poise, and amiability which makes them worthy of upholding the prestige of the school. I E One H zmdred Twenty-fozzr sD.A.E.H.S TENNIS CLUB Frank Engelke ....... ........, P rwident Anna Kroling ...... .......,.... V ice-Preridefzt John Eckel ..,......... ......... S em'eta1'y-Trearwei-' Phillip Scheideberg ..... .......... F acuity Adviser This organization owes its existence to the untiring efforts of john Eckel, Robert Padberg, and Phillip Scheideberg. Since its origin in March, 1933, this group has advanced steadily as a social success. This is most evident in a membership of sixty as compared to sixteen the first year. Its purpose has been to bind together the students who have tennis as a common interest and to provide facilities for practice. Beginners are taughtthe fundamentals of the game, while the more advanced players improve their technique by participating in match games among themselves. W Various games are on the schedule for this group-among these are the Varsity Tennis Team, Hoboken Tennis Club, the Alumni and the Faculty. One Hundred Twenty-fire LOS VIVANTES Alfred Hening ...A. ............ P refident William Birdsall .......... ........ V ice-Prerident Harold Mac Murren ....., ............ T rearurer Claire jennewein .....,.,. ................ S errelary Charles Berkowitz ...,... ...... S ergeazzt-at-A1'111J A. Orrico ................. .....,.,........,...... .................. F a rally Advirer Los Vivantes, formerly the Spanish Club, was organized September, 1931, to further the purpose of the Pan-American Union, namely, to promote better feeling be- tween the countries of Latin-America and America. Another function of this organiza- tion is to provide students of the Spanish language with a greater appreciation and inter- est in the customs and people of the Spanish speaking countries. This organization, one of the largest in the school, under the direction of Mr. Orrico, has just completed one of the most active years since its inception. Most notable in its outside educational program, were visits to Spanish restaurants, museums, and ships. In the school itself, Spanish films and dramas were presented in order to better acquaint the student with the language itself, and the customs of Spain and Spanish speaking countries. While in the class room, Spanish songs were sung to impart the gaiety of the Fiesta. Among the many outside social activities was a bus ride during the Winter, and outings and picnics during the Summer. All these in addition to the usual successful socials and dances. One Hzzmlred Tu ezzfy Jia D. A. E. H. S DRAMATIC SOCIETY George O,Brien ....... ..... P resident Sydne Winneld ....... ..... T reasurer Nancy Amato ....... ................. S ecre I my James J. Walsh ....... ....... S ergemzl-at-Armr Margaret Fields .............. ........................................ F acuity Advifer Under the supervision of Miss Fields, Faculty Adviser, this new addition to the extra-curricular activities of D. A. E. H. S. was organized in April. The society is interested in the writing and portraying of all phases of dramatics, a study of the lives and works of famous players and playwrights and the modern theatre. The society already presented various plays at its meetings, the programs including a novelty radio night, a pantomine of Romeo and Juliet, and Spreading the News, an Irish play and others. l Vg? 'fr Ozze H zmdred Twenly-rezfen l ,xx F2247 0' FENCIN6 TEAM Thomas Blake ........ ..,,.,, C azpfqin Edwin Moore ...... .,.,.....,,,,,,, M wager Alex. Wilson .....,...,.............,,.,,.,.,.,....,,.,,,,,.,,,.,.,....,,,, Family Adviser The Fencing Team was organized in 1928 under the supervision of Vincent Wana- maker. The purpose of the Fencing Team is to instruct the students in the art of fencing and to supply the necessary material for a fencing team in order that they may engage in outside competition. The Team is composed of Thomas Blake, Edwin Moore, Ray O'Brien, William Fleck and Jack Gnirrep. The Team has been coached by Michael Carbone and William Fleck. The team, competing against the following organizations, was victorious in six of the eleven matches. The teams fenced against: Barringer Evening Southside, Newark Barringer Day East Orange High Trinity School of N. Y. Emerson High Seth Low, Jr. College, Brooklyn JUNE One I-Imzdred Twelzfy-eigh! in-f'1A-Aff DAEI-IS 4 l I E4 lv 7 4 I l l l n 44' A i 'r -A 4' 4, Il 4, '44 4, nl GLEE CLUB J'Ol'lU P. Sl3.l'1C ........... ,,4,,,--,, P rgfldgnf Catheflfle GClSlUOD ..... ,.-.--,,,-. V ife-Pfejidenf Helen Mil2lI10WiCZ ....... ....... S ecretary-Treasurer Mollie Tallbef .......... .,,,,,,,,-,,,,., L lbfgflgll Thomas Gallagher . ' ' Lzbmrzmz Moritz SCl1W2lI'Z ..,,.,....,.,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,---- F 4 gylfy Adyzjef The purpose of this organization is to further the interest and acquaintance of its members with music and songs of the better type. This organization has been prominent in the affairs of the school, having partici- pated in various performances in the assemblies, commencement exercises, radio per- formances and rendering its services at the recent Pageant. Also giving various socials and attending a performance of the great musical suc- cess The Great Waltz at the Center Theatre in New York City. 4 ala 4 4:4 :Qs I 4 4 ll 14 4 415 4 4 44' 4 4 441 4 4 4 4 4 44 4 4 One Hundred Twenty-nine 4 l SWIMMING CLUB Prerident Joseph Miller ...., JHIIICS B. Dillon ,............ ....... V ice-Preridem Genevieve Grubowska ..... Elizabeth B. O'Neill ........ Treamrer Secretary Raymond Borroni ....... .,.., S ergeafzt-zz!-Arm! E- Finnegan ..........,..................,....,.,..,,,..,V,,...........,.... Family Adrirer The primary purpose of the Swimming Club is to encourage and instruct the art of swimming to all members of the club. The secondary purpose is to promote good fellowship and a spirit of co-operation and friendly feeling amongst the group. Due to the lack of facilities swimming has not been the main activity. However, the Swimming Team has competed with such teams during the past year as the jersey City Y.M.C.A., Montclair Y.M.C.A., Bayonne High School, 23rd St. New York Y.M.C.A., meeting with average success. The social activities during the past year included Swimming Parties at the People's Palace of this city, Skating Party at the Belleville Skating Rink and many other of the school functions. The Swimming Club Social which was held in the Old Gym on April 1'2 was the largest and best attended in the school this year. To this we point with great pride as we believe this shows the high regard in which this club is held by the school. Although the club attempted to secure the use of the new Gym Pool for the school as well as all Swimming Club members this term, we did not succeed as the Board of Education felt they could not possibly afford the extra expense this would entail. We have great hopes, and believe the hopes will be fulfilled, that the Pool will be opened for the use of all Swimming Club members of the Dickinson Accredited Evening High School beginning next term, September, 1935. We also wish to take this opportunity to point out that there will be held, after the examinations this term, a Water Carnival against the Faculty. Although we cannot guess at the results we believe this would be an interesting point to bring out. 2-,.-, : A B One Hundred Tlozrty One Hundred Tlairty-one I' ,I I II 4 J D. A. E. H. S. LE CIRCLE FRANCAIS Tad Tulin ................ ....... P refidenl Annamae Derocher ........ ..... V ire-Preriden! Mary Coleman ........ ........ Secretary Nancy Amato ....... .............. T reazrurer George G. Shiya .....................,.................................. Family Ad1'iJ6l' The French Club was organized under the direction of Miss Joanna Gallagher and Mr. George G. Shiya in the fall of 1931. Its charter members consisted of ten students then enrolled in the French classes conducted in D. A. E. H. S. Its purpose is to bring together all members of the faculty and student body of Dickinson Accredited Evening High School who find pleasure in the consideration of the language, literature, art and life of France. At the fortnightly meetings, French games are played and French songs are sung. From time to time, interesting trips to French centers in the metropolitan district are planned and made. In addition to the foregoing, a survey of French literature was this year made under the supervision of Mr. Shiya, as faculty advisor, in which students of his advanced classes in French participated, to the pront of both those presenting the lives and works of French authors, and those who heard essays delivered. 4 4 III I II tl I 4 I 4 ,I ,I II 4 4 I 4 4 4 4 4 I I 4 I 4 I I I i ECONCDMICS CLUB James Finucane .... ...,........ P refidefzz Adolph Schrader .... ........ V ire-Pferidenl Edward McNary ......,. ......,,.... T 1'6cZJZll'91' Mary Pelleachio ........... ......,....,,... S erretary Henry L. Lowenstein ....... ....,... F acuity Adviser The purpose of the organization is to foster the stimulation of more intelligent thinking and developmental discussion on present day economic problems. Experimental problems of the present administration are of those which are most discussed during the meetings. The organization enjoyed and benefited much by the addresses of the Faculty members. It also made field trips to places of utmost interest. UN f One Hundred Thirty-two One Hundred Thirty-three D. A. E. I-I. S LITERARY CLUB Lucille Von Dohlen ,........... .......... P refident Sydney Winheld ......... ..... V ice-Prerident Vincent Amitrani ........ ........ S erremry Marie Lynch ......,... .............. T l'Bd.fllf'?1' Vincent O'Shea .......................... ....... Farulty Advifef The distinction of being the oldest extra curricula organization in the school is one that can not be taken from the Literary Club. This club possesses other distinctions, however, and they are many and varied. Since its inception it has held steadfastly to its ideals of furnishing to the pupils an avenue for the creation of original literary work, and for the development of the art of self-expression. Nor has the field of the drama been neglected. The club's dramatic presentations are a proud port of its history, and there are those who believe that its efforts in that direction account n liarge measure for theschool's renewed interest in the art of the stage. During the last two terms particular attention has been given to the composition and delivery of original poetry. Many of the members feel that, in addition to im- proving their appreciation of poetry, they have found a new Held of cultural endeavor. So active has the organization been this year that it has been necessary to hold meetings weekly, instead of twice a month. Charles Engelbart Helen Stapf ..,...... William Ahlmeyer Anna Amman .,.,. DER DEUTSCI-IE VEREIN Preridefzt Vice-Prerident Treaxzner Secretary Anthony Rettino .................................................,...... Family Adzfirer The policy and purpose of this organization since its inception in February, 1935, has been to spread German cultureal ideas, and to familiarize its members with German art and literature. Meetings are held every two weeks at which motion pictures outside speakers, dra- matics and son fests are resented. Occasionall socials were held and theatre arties 8 P Y P arranged. ' U N One Hundred Thirty-four 'E 4 D. A. E. H. S PHOTOGRAPI-IIC SOCIETY William Voss ...... ............ P refident Adrian Bomert ....... ......... V ire-Preridefzt Elvina Greco ........... ...... S ecrelary-Trearzner Francis McCarthy ...................................................... Faculty Adifirer On May 14, 1934, there was organized in this school one of the most active and interesting of organizations. Its purpose has been to encoura e amateur h t h . g r p o ograp y, discuss the various phases of picture making and developing, to endeavor to establish an exchange of negatives, and form a collection of scenes. Their activities have been numerous. These have included developing printin 1 8 and enlarging of snapshots made by different cameras. They have most adroitly pro- duced on the screen a class picture, entitled The Vanishing Class. The entire mem- bership of the club participated in this. To stimulate interest and to engender into the minds of the entire school the W k or thattthis group has attempted to accomplish, a picture contest was inaugurated It is believed that a friendly rivalry resulted and a mutual benefit was derived inasmuch as the inter-changing of views was established. One Hfmdred Thirty-jiz'e ARCHITECTURAL CLUB Charles Grandi ............... ....,.... P rerident Raymond Bauerdorf ,..... .... V ice-President Dorothy Kossman ...... ,..,.. S ecretary Joseph Downey, jr. ...... ...,......,.. T rearurer Dorothy Treadway ..... ................. L ibmrian james Kearney ........ ........ S ergemzt-al-Armr Frank Halstead ..........,....... ..,. .......... ....... ...,.. F a c u ily Advimr The club was organized in September, 1929, and reorganized in May, 1935. The club motto is One for all, and all for one. The purpose of the club is to foster good fellowship among its members in their training in architecture, and an appreciation of good architectural news and training. The meetings are held on the first and third Fridays of every month. On the regu- lar meeting night the club sponsors lectures by prominent local architects and engineers. The important social event of the club is a dinner and entertainment which is planned for the last Saturday in June, at the Berkeley-Carteret Hotel, Asbury Park. james Kearney, Chairman of the Arrangements Committee. john Scerbo, Chairman of the Welfare Committee. Lawrence Geraghty, Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. 2-5 One H andrea' Thirty-.fix D. A. E. I-I. S DEBATIN6 SOCIETY Edgar Lee ...........,...,.........,......,...............,...,...... . ............ Prefidefzf Edward Higgins ,........ ,...... V ire-Prefident John Fitzpatrick .......... ...,.... T rearzlrer Raymond J. O'Brien ...... ............. S ecretary John F. Lynch, Jr. .... .... ...... F az culty Advifer just as beauty expresses the soul, so speech expresses the mind. It is to develop the art of self-expression, to mature the reasoning powers, to foster school spirit and to interest its members in current topics that this society was organized in 1930. Among the various activities of this club, are, weekly debates, elocution contests, inter-scholastic debates, individual speeches, and study of Legislative procedure. Occa- sionally dramas are presented in order to develop poise and dramatic ability. Activity has been the foundation of this society, and one may best see the evidence of their in- dustry, when awarded the A. Harry Moore Trophy for Debating. The annual Oratorical contest provides this group with their last public exhibition. The six best speakers of the society compete for gold, silver, and bronze medals, before distinguished judges and the entire school body. The annual dinner of the society will climax this year's social activities, at which time visiting speakers will be presented. One Hundred Thirty-.reven l LAW CLUB Edward Higgins ..... ..........., P resident George Krebs ....,.,.,.... ....... V ice-President Edward McNamara ....... ........... T reayurer Helen Goode ......... ................... S errezary Mary Devery ......,.... .r..... A Jriflant Secretary John T. Corridon . Faculty Adviser The Law Society was organized in 1932. Since that time, it has proved an invalu- able aid to the students of the school, especially those in the commercial law classes. By the use of mock trials, it clearly illustrates the application of legal principles, principles which would be otherwise overlooked by the student. The participants in these trials are members of the society who give their time freely, to make each and every one successful. The meetings of this society are held on Tuesday nights, in Room 302 at 10:00 P. M. Any student who wishes to become a member may attend any meeting and submit his name I One Hundred Thirty- eight l . lr r n r lr lr lu 11 r 4 I y . c .,-..g.l d..d.a -- a , . , l -ii- lr 'a K D. A. E. H. S ICE SKATING CLUB Elizabeth Trodd ........ ........ P rerident Jerry O'Callaghan ........ Vice-Preridenl Rose Serwetz .......... ........ S ecretary Helen Dillon ...... .............. T rearurer Lincoln A. Bosi ...... ..,............,........ i...... F ez rzdty Adviser The intention of the organization is to teach beginners and to perfect the technique of those already familiar with the art of ice-skating. Consequently, to develop a team to represent our school in this thrilling sport. Activities consisted of two outings to Bear Mountain. The members participated in tobogganing and skiing as well as ice-skating. The team, composed of E. G. Galvin, Harry Hamilton, Charles Kohler and james Laughlin, won its meet at each outing, Ham- ilton starring in the first and James Laughlin in the second outing. As pointed out in the local newspapers, our school is the lirst high school in this county to be represented by a team in this field of athletic endeavor. Following such an auspicious beginning the team is very likely to get a full schedule next season. One Hundred Thirty-nine SCIENCE CLUB john R. Swartz ....,. ...,....................,. f ............... .........,.... P 1 'efidenl A. Shuerer ..... ......... V ire-Preridefzt Barkely ........ ............ T rearzzrer Verbeua ....... ...... Secrelary The Science Club was organized in 1933 by Mr. Czeladko and students of science. They have been meeting on Friday nights since their inception. The purpose of the club is to further the knowledge of our environment and to idealize the facts of science. Activities are: visits to museums, a social, scientific debate, discourses by members of the club on scientific topics. The latest endeavor of the club was to compile into a paper scientific data of today touching the highlights of present-day science in every field. il?-9 N One Hundred Forty D. A. E. H. S IL CIRCOLO ITALIANO Eugene De Martini ....... ............ P reridenf Paul Scrudato ......... ....... I fire-Preridefzt Jean Landolfi ......... ............ T 1'eaJzn'er Frank Di Nicola ........ ................ S ecretary Kathryn D. Paterno .......... ....... ........... ........ F 4 c ully Adviror This, one of the oldest clubs in the school, organized in 1929, was founded to promote and foster interest in Italian intellectual and cultural history. And more specifi- cally for the mutual improvement in Italian elocution, composition, and debate. During this last year educational visits were made to Steamship Lines and Civic Centers. The semi-annual social and the theatre gatherings were marked with the usual large and convivial group. Their success, we know, will be as great if not greater in the future, as it has been in the past. One Hundred Forty-one f ,M -N, H. 'N . I QL w ' wifi Dir' -wg ,1 ' u : Ii , 'E '43- t' , JM- W ,AML I wi fhv W. mwxwv '315 Suv' ' M M ,QM . .ff :KS wan 'G fn. X ,gy . ,N Fla 1 UH' fx! ,iq .. :Swv N W.. X . 2 if LMA' -Qhkl N QM ,, A , .v +A M ' , 11 1 1 1. ,. W1 'N ., Wguu X W-,M . 'W NW T ww , ll Z - r I we rg Dy X- L' ' , I X fi-gg Q X151 sN ' ?,u f I .JK Lf Pf' - ' -.- - -. . 'XB walzmv I T 0 '!f?5'0hf f f GIRLS' BASKETBALL Margaret McAghen .... ..........,......... C ouch Miss Rita Fitzgerald .,,.... ........ F acuity Adifiror Since its organization in 1932, the girls' Basketball team has, each year, played an exhibition game between the High School pupils and the Alumni. This year, having been assisted by the coaching of Miss Margaret McAghen, they again performed, on May 3rd, co-operating with the Tennis team. The Girls' team has been organized for the purpose of allowing the girls to partici- pate in athletic inter-school competition and was the result of their own request for privileges which had formerly been accorded only to the boys. The group meets every Monday night after school in the New Gymnasium. i E E uc- -- One Hundred Forty-four D. A. E. H. S CHEERLEADERS Cecilia Wendelken ......... Ida Hoffman, john Luzzi Caplaiu john Brogan .......A..,.....,........... ,.,,.... Family Adviser Its purpose is to cheer the Dickinson Evening Varsity Basketball team to victory in all its games, both home and away, and at the same time to get the support of the student body to cheer with the squad. The team has held practice two and three times a week. It was picked by the Messrs. john Brogan, Alexander Wilson, and George Coffey. Mary Bondarzyk, our ex-captain, was chosen honorary coach for the present season. One Hundred Forty-five l TENNIS TEAM John Eckel .......,.... .....,..,....,....,..,..,,,,,,., M amzger Edward F. Kennelly ................................ Faculty Advirer and Coach The Owl Racqueteers are now in the midst of their seventh competitive season. A majority of the matches played have resulted in victories for the Red and Gray. The purpose of the Tennis Team is to stimulate and maintain tennis as a sport. Practice sessions were held at Bayside Park, the team's home court. The members of the team are: William Finnie, Frank Engleke, Ray WulE, Theo- dore Parusis, and john Eckel. The season's schedule included the following matches April 20-Lincoln Annex April 27-St. Peter's Prep. May 3-Faculty May 4-Dickinson May 1 1 May May une une une une Lincoln St Peter's Prep. Memorial High School Tennis Club Dickinson Lincoln Lincoln Annex UNE 18- . 25- ' J 1a ' I 8- . . J 15- ' J 22- ' One Hundred Forty-fix A E I-I S SWIMMING TEAM Ray Dahl .......... ........ C ouch Lou Degusta ....... ...,,,.,.,.......... M imager james Dillon ........ ......... A rfimzfzt Manager E. Finnegan ................................................................ Faculty Adviier One of the outstanding organizations now functioning at the Evening School is the swimming team. The Owl swimming team is always ready to meet all comets. During the term, the team engaged the following teams in competition: jersey City Y.M.C.A.g New York 23rd St. Y.M.C.A.g Montclair Y.M.C.A., and Bayonne High School. One of the outstanding events of the team was the Water Carnival against the School Faculty, at the new Gym pool. It was at this carnival that the pool was officially opened to the Evening High School pupils. V One Hundred Forty-seven TRACK TEAM Al. Marszalek .A..,.. ...... C 0am Steve Szymanski .....,. ..,,.............. C aptain Alex Wilson ...... .... ........... . . . ....,.......... Faculty Adzfirer The Dickinson Evening Track Team has secured during the past indoor track sea- son a brilliant record. Not once during the entire season did the track team return from a meet without scoring some points in competition. For two successive years Dickinson Evening has won the Metropolitan Evening High School track and held championships. Practice was held every Wednesday and Saturday at Pershing Field, The members of the team are: Fred Roti, john Kufel, john Scerbo, Steve Szyman- ski, john Diehl, Charles Nolte, james Degnan, Theodore Bumiller. One Hundred Forty-eight D. A. E. H. S WRESTLING TEAM Flip Wadleigh ...... ................... C 041619 Rocco Russo ...... ....... A J.ri.ffani Coach Phil Russo ............ ............. C aptain Anthony Russo ........ ....... .......... .......... .................. A I a 1 Zdgel' The wrestling team was authorized by the General Organization in December, 1932. The purpose of the team is to promote physical culture in the school and to in-T struct the members in the art of wrestling. The team won eight of ten meets. They also entered in the inter-scholastic meet held at Lehigh University. The teams which the school competed with were the jersey City Y. M. C. A., Hoboken Y. M. C. A., the German Oak, and other High Schools of the Metropolitan district. The Wrestling squad is composed of Rocco Russo, Phil Russo, Walter Gruzcyk, Peter O'Neill, Paul Scrudato, Frank Engleke, Leo Sourifman. One Hundred Forly-nine I-I sa HUMOR He sent his precious poem to the editor: Let me know, at once, whether you can use it, he wrote, as I have other irons in the fire. In a few days the answer came back from the editor: Remove irons, insert poem. wk an is g Courtier: Hail, oh King! King: Can't! I have to reign! as as if . Old Man: Ah, my boy, itis terrible to be old and bent like me. Young Man: Yes, and it's bad enough to be young and broke like me. PK lk Sk Groom: Good gracious, Mary, what a long pie. It's too big for just two of us. Bride: Yes, I know, but I couldn't get any shorter rhubarb. if SK wk Johnny: What makes the new baby at your house cry so much. Tommy: It doesn't-and, anyway, if all your teeth were out, your hair off, and your legs so weak you couldn't stand on them, I guess you'd feel like crying yourself. ' SIG SF 214 Hubby: Ah, that's the gal that smiled at me on the train. Nice gal. Wifey: She must have beenqnice or she'd have laughed right out instead of smiling. ak an an Judge: You admit you drove over this man with a loaded truck ? Driver: Yes, your honor. judge: What have you to say in your defense ? Driver: I didn't know it was loaded. Sk Sk at Betty: Well, dad, I fooled them at school today. Dad: What did you do? : Betty: You see, we had visitors, and the teacher asked me to give Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, and I said he never lived there. sk sk Sli Butcher: You don't want this meat madam? Then why did you have me cut it 05 ? Fair Customer: Well, I lost twelve pounds and I wanted to see how much it is. Q gl s- es . 4 l i Q , ci ,T QI , ' H UL in Y: g 0, 'f. l jk algal! One Hundred Fzfty-two ' HUMOR Walter: So you were born in Georgia? joe: Yassuh. V Walter: What part? Joe: Why, all of me. is an an Math. Teacher: You have a good head for geometry. Freshman: Why? ' Math. Teacher: Both plane and solid. as 1: HG Funny it never repeats itself to me, said the puzzled student over his history examination. as sf an I notice you are early of late, you u.sed to be behind before, but now you are first at last. as as an Did you ever attend a school for stuttering? N-n-no, I j-j-j-just picked it up. as ae an VVhy does a red-headed girl always marry a quiet fellow? She doesn't. He just gets that way. Sk Sk Pk First Devil: I-Ia ha! Ho! Ho! Satan: Why the laugh ? First Devil: I just put a woman into a room with a thousand hats and no mirror. Sk Sl' Sk Does your husband always lie to you ? No, some nights I'm too tired to ask questions. Sl' 0 ill Father: My son, I hear you have been most recalcitrant. Son: Be yourself, Pop: you've been doing cross-word puzzles again. FII ik Sk Ad. in English paper: He's probably dead now, but if not, I should like the motor-cyclist who cut in between my car and a coach near Pothill on Sunday to know that his survival owes nothing to my good wishes. -IWLX 'ig - 'erTJf13 ,wii F U J ni One Hundred Fifty-'three f ,, Yin , .L-.. V, Aww ,- -if 'Tm -5i'5Ex'Q N, .gli j .,a-,ig m ' . ef Q 'gi , if N u i - ,!'-:H-'s lll.4lmlilllll?-5:5 X f ,A I-IQMGR What's your name? the store manager asked the applicant for a job recently. Ford, replied the lad. ' I And your first name ? Henry. - - i u u Henry Ford, eh ? remarked the manager with a smile. That's a pretty well known name. The boy looked pleased. , Yes, sir, it ought to be, he replied proudly. 'Tve been delivering groceries around here for two years now. - , ' ' ' vs ar an i Well, sir, the upshot of it all was that it took me ten years to discover that'I , had absolutely no talent for writing literature. Q You gave up ? Oh, nog by that time I was too famous. as :ie ae The Smiths are on the balcony and can hear a young couple talking in the garden below. Mrs. Smith: I think he wants to propose. We ought not to listen. Whistle to him. - Mr. Smith: Why should I? Nobody whistled to warn me. ff an :if A young man at college wrote this letter to his father: No mon No fun Your Son' To which his father immediately replied: , How sad ' . Too bad Your Dad Do you know what Henry Ford said after the banquet P No, what did he say ? V 8. ek SK Pk Teacher: What is a miracle P 1 ' Bright Pupil: An elephant hanging over a cliff with its tail tied to a daisy. 1: as :ie Professor: Will you please stop exchanging notes in the back of the room ? Student: Them ain't notes. Them's dollar bills. We're shooting craps. Professor: Oh, pardon me. . l 2 N qi 1 i Q , it ' 4 . e 51 7 '5f1 lT ,T lib! ' 'Y P I v , , ,AZ-lil li i F T it - . . fy .8 one Hundred Fx fy-fam Nfwllll l L' 'A Ut A-we it t if? ...'fe:?'!f!+f ' Q - V MT ' C ww .fum ,I I I I One Hundred Fifty-jiz e l7,.f--I. 1.0 , , .L - ,gm 4 :wg-F?-.WQ53 '-frigii- - W- - ,.- -, -, ,.,,,,,YI I ,'-- ' : ::':a:. , A 'Al .I ' '- I . V- .-.,..,.. , P 2 , Imtjlf X ,,, ,415-IE,-I Y, IH I 1.1113 I IIII I Is, II I ji I I III----M -I 1. 'I I ,X II III III II! II3 :I I 1 I If 3 I II II I I I, II I I I I II II III ,I 'XII ,Is 'I I I I I fi I I In .,, III II II III I 'U III .II III4 III II III I II II 5 If' II fx ..-..-1 Y., . .JI,,,41 I I r L , .NNI :W-K, II .- w-,... MII? 'fi wf.,.II' I qw-v,., , W7 ,A III 1 N ,. ,rx 'M ,2 wjx III Tlx .g,f.Mm ff? QI If-'I-wx :Ji 'YR-. - J- U-......I'. . , I -. Tv. I 1 II .ffr : :IIA I 'III fm If,,I ,,fA.,4-1.,,-M. 1, N III I 1-,,, -,I I -. ,-.Iv--mf,-1. .Ng IQIIHI-52II:Sv::?a ISIII: Fi Iwi, III' if 1 III' I IIIII IIar'If-:-:,I:.-IQ M sw 1' I II II ' Il'I'IIIE'I - I I II I -. V wfrxfvfvf nI.ICj'-1s.x.'e,Iyg+ I 'I Il, H I-I II I II I I Imvsi..--::I-, I -.ug --M ,Y V ,-,. 4.7 -- Ni I-112' ruff. ,, I, I ' I 7. X '.,I I Twflix 754. :if-IeII,g.:g-I1sw:w,,,, g LAI II ?F0 - IUI ' ' iispty Gr A-:I.fx E,-41:1 IM!-itxI W, 41,.,,1i,f,ql,,1,:d:lifh IH42-f'L .- , ft.- I fav M'J':4,f' If .., , M 92 f4, 1.,g ' Luz' -Ia, ' N a. f -, - I I W: 59 I I - NK- .-IQQ1-1, i.,.,::' 419, N1i3.x'.- SQi 1l' 'rf' ., , ,- 4X.s:,56. V Iw,, Q, It :-it 'wr I. ' nh I-rw I , Ii'T,,,7P .IN --I. I -'I -J I I, -I-IA.,.,.-A' ' . ,f.,. mm, M N 0 0 of Q o Q X757 fl ' 4 W ff A if! , 5 n o In Z I , J X Zn! W ADVERTISING My 3 -If ADVERTISERS ALICE'S BEAUTY SHOPPE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BERHENS BROS. BOTHE, M. 81 CALISSI, BEN CAP and GOWN CHASSIS 8: SON CHRIST HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING CLASS OFFICERS COHEN, ISIDOR sl CO. COMPLIMENTS OF LL. B. DRAKE COLLEGE GENERAL ORGANIZATION, JAN'Y GENERAL ORGANIZATION, JUNE GREENE, J. W. HUDSON COLLEGE JANUARY CLASS JUNE CLASS KOST S1 BAIRD LANE, DR. M. J. MARRA'S DRUG STORE MILK AD. MONACO, JIMMY A. HARRY MOORE NOVICK, SAMUEL, Inc. PACE INSTITUTE PATRONS SIMMONS, JOHN E. SPENCER BUSINESS ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL ST. JOHNS UNIVERSITY STEPHAN'S COLLEGE TRUST COMPANY of NEW JERSEY RIDER COLLEGE J UNION CLEANER SCOTT PRINTING I ART REPRODUCTION CO. One H zmdred Fifty-eiglol KOST SL BAIRD INCORPORATED 650 Newark Ave. Jersey City, N. Oiifieiai jewelers 'U' CLASS -- CLUB -- FRATERNITY -- SOCIETY -- SORORITY RINGS -- PINS -- KEYS -- MEDALS LOVING CUPS -- PLACQUES -- TROPHIES Repairing promptly and neatly done. Workshop on the premises. 4 ESTABLISHED 1880 4' 'we also maintain a complete OPTICAL DEPARTMENT CEifi5 ?Lfhe1t'DIz1nt On Hundred Fifty-nine PACE INSTITUTE A School ol Businesslechnology Courses of intensive character, preparing for various occupations in business, are given at Pace Institute in daytime and in evening classes. These courses include among others the following: Accountancy and Business Administration Summary CC.P.A.J Accountancy Secretarial Practice Shorthand Reporting Shorthand Speed Classes Advertising and Marketing Selling and Marketing Credit Science Bulletins, interesting vocational book- lets, and class dates are available upon request. Inquire of the Registrar by per- sonal call, by letter, or by telephone, Barclay 7-8200. Visitors are welcome. PACE INSTITUTE i?r5v?'5'?:i?:'ZW9f BEN CALISSI and His ORCHESTRA Sweeter Than Sweet Rutherford 2-1188-W COMPLIMENTS OF A. Harry Moore Gompliments of they lumni Association One Hundred Sixty RINGS - PINS - KEYS for Class of June 1935 Furnished by john EQ. Simwns CDAEHS ALUMNUSJ 551 FIFTH AVENUE New York City JEWELER DIAMONDS, WATCHES, IEWELRY REMOUNTING DIAMONDS A SPECIALTY One Hznzdred S ty 'Patronize Our efldfvefrtisers THE SISTERS OF THE PQOR 012 You Can Attend College in the Evening ST- FRANCIS HUDSON COLLEGE 1 NEWARK AVENUE ST. FRANCIS JerseyCiry,N-J. HOSPITAL COMMERCE FINANCE PRE LAW Jersey Clty New Jersey Sevens Dollars Per Credit Point SERVING THE PEOPLE OF HUDSON COUNTY FOR OVER FORTY YEARS THE TRUST COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation jersey City - Union City - Hoboken - Weehawken - West New York In Weehawken: The Park Trust Co. CHRIST HOSPITAL SCHOOL TIME T0 SPECIALIZE This is a day of specialization. Business men of NURSING want employees who are definitely trained for a definite job. Interested in yOllI1g WOIIICII Whg Wish Rider College offers that kind of preparation in . . Accountancy, Secretarial Science, Commercial t0 CHICIT the Illll-'Slllg PI'0fCS5l0U- Teaching, Business Administration, Journalism and other fields. Hi gb Sclzolastzc Ratzng Necessary Decide now to Specialize at 176 PALISADE AVENUE RIDER C01-LEGE Cit OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Jersey y Founded 1865 TRENTON, N. J. Everybody needs M I L K drink 4 glasses a day One Hundred Sixty-Iwo CLASS OFFICERS JUNE CLASS JAMES BOYLE ........................ President JAMES DILLON .............. Vice-President HAROLD HANSEN ................ Treasurer ELIZABETH B. O'NEILL ........ Secretary EDWARD BEENICK ........ Editor Owl JANUARY CLASS ANTHONY RATAICZYK .......................... President MAURICE GOLDBERGER ................ Vice-President GEORGE FOWLER ............. .......... T reasurer GERTRUDE MAHON ....... ............... S ecretary WILLIAM CAREW .............. ........ J an. Editor Owl Qi CAP AND GOWN COMMITTEE WILLIAM VOSS ............ June Class Chr. CATHERINE ROTH ...... Jan. Class Chr. MILDRED DONNELLY ........ Jan. Class HAROLD HANSEN .............. June Class One H zmdred Sixiy-three STEPHAN'S COIFFURE 644 Montgomery Street JERSEY CITY, N. J. Specializing in the ART OF PERMANENT WAVING Webster 4-4030 SAMUEL NOVICK, Inc. Painters' Supplies - Sanitas Wall Paper 241 Central Avenue Opp. Franklin Street JERSEY CITY, N. J BEST WISHES FOR SUCCESS JIMMY MONACO AND HIS ORCHESTRA MORRY SHULTZ, Manager 559 Westside Avenue Palisade 6-1085 GERARD A. MARRA, Ph. G MARRA'S DRUG STORE We Specialize in PRESCRIPTIONS 1285 Paterson Plank Road Bergen 3-1531-R JERSEY CITY, N- J - opposite lst Nam Bank SECAUCUS, N. J COMPLIMENTS OF UNION CLEANER 1. W. GREENE 757 Mont om r Str t 320 Grove Street g C Y ee JERSEY CITY NEW JERSEY ICFSCY Clfy, N- I- Weak Eyes and Cross Eyes Our Specialty ' DR. M. LANE OPTOMETRIST Spingarn Arcade Building 589 Summit Ave. fat Five Cornersj Jour. Sq. 2-2919 JERSEY CITY, N. J. ISIDOR COHEN 8: CO. Makers of CLEVER FITTING CLOTHES 174 Fifth Avenue Stuyvesant 9-1841 NEW YORK BEHRENS BROS. 1f'EIvmTan.uE com. jii 5 vvfcol KOPPERS COKE - FUEL OIL Office: 1297 Paterson Plank Road Yard at D. L. 8z W. R. R. Union 7-2700 SECAUCUS, N. J. Delaware 8-0142 M. 81 BOTHE COSTUME STUDIO Theatrical and Amateur Productions Supplied 552 jersey Avenue JERSEY CITY, N. J. Phone Union 7-5394 ALICE'S BEAUTY SHOPPE FREDERIC PERMANENT WAVING Complete Beauty Service 922 Broadway, near 29th St. WOODCLIFF, N. J. Compliments of L. L. B. QjX 'Patronrize Gm Qflldfvertisers 'D One Hzmdred Sixty-four THE GENERAL A URGANIZATIGN January 1935 Q OFFERS BEST WISHES TO THE SENIOR CLASSES JANUARY 4. JUNE 1935 lewwgxwwf 'ed Sixfy-fire PATRONS EMMA BERNIUS WILLIAM BRYAN JEAN CLARK ARMANDO-VESPERINO D. S. EHRICH JOHN HENKEL ARTHUR KEEGAN MILDRED KENNEDY M. .sl W. GIRLS MEET ME AT MIRON'S HELEN MCCARREN FLORENCE MCKENNA JESSE MOSKOWITZ MUELLER'S AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE FRED NELIUS GEORGE J. PYLE MARY KAY ROMANCHAK RUHE'S CONEECTIONERY ELIZABETH SCHUMANN JOHN E. SIMMONS M. SPOONER S. T. M. GIRLS UNEEDA CARD CO. MRS. H. VOSS WILLIAM ZENGEL One Hundred Sixty-fix SECRETARIAL COLLEGE - JUNIOR COLLEGE Founded 1883 Founded 1955 FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE EMMA GLEASON, President Dr. B. F. STALCUP, Dean CHRIS C. ROSSEY, Registrar 11 CONCOURSE EAST, JERSEY CITY, N. Sr e uhm? ixtiversit BOROUGH HALL DIVISION SUMMER SESSION-JUNE 3 and JUNE 24 COLLEGE of ARTS and SCIENCES Day and Evening Courses leading to degree B.S. or in preparation for law school. Fall Term Sept. 16. SCHOOL OF LAW Three year Day or Evening Course leading to de- gree of LL.B. Post Graduate Course leading to de- gree J.S.D. or LL.M. Fall Term Sept. 23. SCHOOL OF COMMERCE Day or Evening Courses leading to degree B.S. in Econ. or B.B.A. for High School Teaching and in preparation for law school and Certified Public Accounting Examinations. Fall Term Sept. 26. COLLEGE OF PHARMACY Day Courses leading to degree PH.G., PH. C. and B.S. in Phar. Special Courses. Fall Term Sept. 23. Registrar-96 Scherrnerhorn St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Telephone TRiangle 5-0150 D A Y EVENING WQMJLX 910 BERGEN AVENUE QBankers Building, ENROLL NOW FOR SUMMER TERM ADVANCED STENOGRAPHIC COURSES FOR H. S. GRADUATES SPEED CLASSES AND OFFICE MACHINES PLACEMENT SERVICE One Hundred Sixly-Jerelz -TI-IE- GENERAL ORGANIZATION J U N E 193 5 'fqexr K 64525 I EXTENDS TO THE SENIOR CLASSES JANUARY - I935 - JUNE BEST WISI-IES FOR TI-IEIR FUTURE SUCCESS dd ggh w COMPUIMIENTS of JUNE CLASS 1935 W Gompliments of JANUARY QLASS 1 9 3 5 C-LQ?-D CHAS S SL SO . .Thotographers . 41 HARRISON AVENUE Jersey City, N. J. Phone Delaware 36453 '43- COMPLETELY EQUIPPED TO RENDER THE HIGHEST QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP AND AN EXPEDITED SERVICE ON BOTH PERSONAL PORTRAITURE AND PHOTOGRAPHY FOR SCHOOL ANNUALS 'GSP Official Photographer THE OWL One Hundred Severzty-one THE ENGRAVINGS in this issue of The Owl 'Biff are the Skill and Craitsmanship - of the- ,bk Art Reproduction -1? Corporation 26 CORNELISON AVENUE JERSEY CITY 0 NEW JERSEY 0HddS y au Are Rzgfzf There is . . . 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