Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY)

 - Class of 1942

Page 30 of 60

 

Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 30 of 60
Page 30 of 60



Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 29
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Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 31
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Page 30 text:

-guru-e:a:: '- -'L- -N 'Q'-'-H 5' IET L. ' , -1 ,TA , is-,, Y . ' . ' . xg, ' s iiiggl' . 1 ,I 7 GLAMOUR Bu-r-r-r-r ........ .a mad scramble: arms, legs, brush cuts, blood-red fingernails, groans, shouts and pokes! The Sophs are be- ing dismissed for the day. Ginny walked quickly out the school en- trance, oblivious to the calls of the 'gang', and into the wet slush of a March thaw. Today was the big day and it had to be foggy, and yes, it was raining slightly. 'I-oops .... gosh, I almost fell, and with this carload of books. Who invented homework anyway?' she grumbled to herself. fGinny had an armful of books which she took home every night, should have studied, but never did.j 'I don't see how teachers expect a per- son to study every night: I've gotta give myself a manicure and ......... I'll bet that new tar cream I sent for came today.' Splat .... a wet pig tail in the eye, Pig tails were one of Ginny's most recent pro- jects. 'Ugh! I think I'll change my hair-do too. Either the boys practically pull them '?T 'l F?' Snipg snip, kerchoo ...... 'Oh dear, now there's a big chunk shorter than the rest.' 'I'll just have to it's sort of ragged in cut the sides shorten the back anyway. I can't see so well in this mirror. This cer- tainly is a tiresome job. I must have worked twenty minutes and my hair still isn't even. I can't cut off any more, it's up to my ears now. What a mess at school tomorrow and the neighbors' tonight.' 'Oh, yes, I'll wear a chiffon turban like Marlene Dietrich and cover it up 'till it grows out again. I'll look much older and more sophisticated.' 'It's lucky Mothe cream on the dresserg have spilled on it a nothing to be sneezed a r put my jar of tar the nail polish might nd 53.50 for cream is t ...... kerchoo ...... or is it? I just can't come down with a cold, not tonight.' 'Say, this cream i s awfully gooey around my ears, smells like rubber cement too. Well, anything for the sake o f beauty. I'll put a little extra on for good measure.' 'There's Mother. What'll she say when she sees my hair? Gues on long enough. At any hair cut will be enough with this black smeared 'This water's hot, of soap. I wonder why Mother'll fix it.' WMother,'Tcalled G s I've had this cream rate, the shock of my ,without her seeing me all over me.' and I'm using plgnty it wonft come off? inny. off, or they get blown winds.' off in these March 'The new neighbors are moving in today, the Brewsters. fSigh.j jerry the other night. Mrs. Brewster spoke of He is seventeen.' 'Of course, Jerry is a boy,' she thought. fMrs. Brewster hadn't stated there was any doubt in distinctly, but when such matters, Ginny never even considered girls.j The cold slush spattered her legs, and her saddle shoes were wet too. 'Maybe I should have put boots on this morning, but since there wasn't more'n a foot Qf snow, I...Oh fudge! Who wears boots these days? It isn't the style.' 'Jerry.V ..... ...I wonder if he's handsome? Oh well, it doesn't matter much if he's a good athlete. Broad shoulders, and the Brew- sters have plenty of money, so he'll probably have his own car.' 'I wish I'd ridden home with the gang. I'm hungry. I'll bet 'Mush' would have bought a Fudge Sundae for me,but one has to be alone with one's thoughts sometimes.' 'Ginny ran up the back steps, put her books on the kitchen table and was headed for the ice box,when a note pad,plainly exhibited reminded her that she was on a diet and on the path to glamour.. 'Oh, well, it's nearly five o'clock. Mother ought to be home from the Red Cross Meeting. Golly, I'll have to hurry to cut my hair before she gets here.' VHaving thrown her on a chair, she dashed We can easily see wet kerchief and coat upstairs. which room she entered by following the wet tracks, and even if they weren't visible, we could hear. Kerchoo! Crash! That sneeze caused the downfall of a bottle of nail polish and dis- aster to Mama's new throw rug. 'Well, I guess it'll just have to be dry cleaned2'v surmised Ginny, 'and I'll have to get' glamorized to meet jerry tonight. These scissors ought to be just right. I wonder how short I should cut it?' ' Mother came up and found Ginny in an at- tack of sneezes, overcome by a tar cream pack and immediately came to the rescue. But alas, here comes Mother to Ginny's room about two hours later. 'Dear,' said Mother, 'jerry Brewster is downstairs and she has the most beautiful red hair. I'm sure you and she will get along just splendidly.' Ginny gasped, 'Mother, did you say She had red hair? A girl?' 'All my glamorizing, my starvation diet my hair practically cut off, this black gooey cream that won't come off, and Jerry's a I girl! Shirley Say, Class of '44 On Daydreaming The most useless pastime in the world is probably the most indulged in. It is day- dreaming. Daydreams are called idleness by the ambitious. They are called fruitless by the successful. ' However, daydreams have been worthwhile. Surely, Edison must have been a dreamer. His dreams have brought forth great inventions such as the electric light, and the phono- graph. If it had not been for daydreams, there would never have been such great men as Einstein, Isaac Newton, and Ben Franklin. Hayden, Beethoven, Bach, and Wagner must have heard the melodies of their greatest compositions in their daydreams. When men relax, as surely they must, their minds are always active--daydreaming. As with all pursuits, there is a time and a place for everything. So, must day- dreaming be kept out of classrooms, business offices and places of labor, to be reserved only for the privacy and solitude of one s home-life. G Marian Saile, Class qf'42

Page 29 text:

av:-my 3-gg Q, f , - ,rv .'wiq Q fi1'pR! ,, ,' .-fatal. a -f' iff? 't if -kk . AJHFA Jar iii: 'Q .i,,6H.,ag I ' q.5iMW gf -gf 4, ,. Q Q. li .1 ilix I Q 2 tif. l' f Q' 'J H lA gm' ' Q 'wwf uf fi .I , 2 -4,. ' W' edwwwvjfu, QXNJQSNQN ' Q 3. 6- . we-Q , ft gqiq7.W 'Pl' LH' U 4 A Kitten Like a soft ball of fur 5 Was this little brown kitten, 5 Like a still picture U When he was sitting. ' U Blinking his eyes Q And swishing his tail: 4, Twitching his whiskers, -M'j M And looking so frail. ,fi-gf Better not tease him, He's quick as a flash. Life ofua Pencil I was new a mere few weeks ago, E Sitting proudly on a counter in a box, When who bought me but Susie's beau, Dark haired joe with the wavy locks. These few mere weeks, Oh! such a-life, Who'd guess a pencil could suffer so? I've been shortened again and again! Life's a strife: I've'been thrown across rooms, nicking ribbon bowm I've drawn cartoons, teachers, and boats: Yet I had nothing about it to say: To girls I've never,seen, I've scribbled love notes. . Life is surely full of dismay. ' I'm bitten and scarred as if I'd been in warg My big new eraser was bitten, then tossed! My limbs from being thrown are sore, My will was bent to another boss. He'll turn right around And give you a scratch. Jean Dickout, Class of '44 In 1941 the consumer had taken atory course in education. On De 1941, his notice of admission in of reality was officially received. In this all-out war against Powers, the citizen of the United a prepar- cember 7, the school the Axis States has Yet I shou1dn't complain, thinking over my past, For me there'l1 never be any more tasks: I hope this handkerchief box refuge lasts. How am I 'sitting pretty?' you may ask? My secret I'1l reveal to you: Remember dashing Joe, my first owner? I've been borrowed by all he knew. Poor beau of Susie! Such a loaner! At last, I I was lent came to Susie herself: to her by her old beau, become a necessary cog. It is his duty to face the facts without flinching. He must also make the best of a serious rubber short- age. He must face higher taxes without grumbling. Soaring food prices should be taken as a matter of fact. He must show char- ity toward Red Cross and all other beneficial organizations, as well as his own government. He must lick his wounds, swallow his pride and flinch from nothing. He must' and will .make it clear to the barbaric hordes that he believes in himself and his countryf With a prayer in his hearf, a fight in his body, and an unbreakable spirit he will say: She kept me--sly as an elf, Now I'm a treasured mementol-from Joe. r Marie Park, Class of '45 THE COLE CIRCUS On November 7,1941 the Student Association- sponsored the sensational fifteen-act james M. Cole Indoor.Circus, featuring jumbo, the four and one-quarter ton elephant of Madison Square Garden fame. A great financial success, the circus net- ted the school around 5110. Much of the credit for making this a success goes to William I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one na- tion, indivisible, with li- berty and justice for all. Howard Hartley, Class of '42 Let's Remember Pearl Harbor Let's'Remember Pearl Harbor In everything we do, Remember the fallen soldiers Who fought for me and you. Letfs remember the slogan: 'Loose talk can cost more liv Because you never know - Where there mayfbe some spies. ES 'Q f!! 5- ' Mary Tassone Class of F46 Allen, general chairman. The whole student body worked with him and with other student leaders to undertaken in student well as in make the greatest activity ever by any council an accompfishment cooperation and participation as financial returns. xx 271- , ThelschooL'supo1ied the Midway which lined the lower corridor from end to end. The concessions were: fortune telling, ring- the-duck, bingo, pitch penny, darts, hand- 5 writing analysis, skeeball, and most out- standing of all, the Gay Nineties Revue, under the direction of Mr. Keith Wilson. Featured among the reviews were beautiful girls, arrayed in the gayest costumes of the Nineties. The stage show consisted of the Bearded Lady, the Wild Man from Borneo, the Strong Man, and a stirring melodrama. . The community wholeheartedly supported the activity and all who attended, both old and young, enjoyed Elba Central School's first attempt to present a circus. - June Zipfel, Classfof '44



Page 31 text:

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Suggestions in the Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) collection:

Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Elba Central School - Revue Yearbook (Elba, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947


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