Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN)

 - Class of 1919

Page 6 of 52

 

Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 6 of 52
Page 6 of 52



Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 5
Previous Page

Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 7
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 6 text:

THE BOOSTER The Booster PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY The Pupils of Chas. E. Emmerich Manual Training High School Entered as second-class matter March 30, 1912 at Indianapolis, Indiana, under act of March 3, 1879 Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103, Act of October 3, 1917, authorized October 11, 1918. I N D I A N A P O L I S . I N D I A N A J 5 Cents a Copy j 40 Cents a Semester Vol 21 June, 1919 No . 13 Booster Committee. Glen L. Campbell Editor-in-Chief Crawford Barker Art Editor Frank Cox. Athletic Editor Thomas Gallagher News Editor Benjamin Jordan Personal Editor Robt. O ' Conner. .Asst. Personal Editor Myron Buker Business Manager Morna Pellam Stenographer Helen Carter Stenographer Anna Sandler ...... Stenographer FACULTY ADVISORS. Miss Eleanor P. Wheeler, Miss Eliza- beth Hench, Edward Holloway. EFTH5 In considering the achievements of the year past, let us begin with bas- ketball. Our team easily won the sec- tional and then went to the state tournament. In this we were defeated by the state champions. Five mem- bers of the team are June seniors. Next, Manual triumphed over her competitors in the district and state discussion contests. The winner of these contests is a June senior. Along this line, the debating team, com- posed for the most part of seniors, broke even by winning one debate and losing one. Our track team next in line, won the sectional meet and finished third in the state, being nosed out by the narrow margin of one-third of a point. This team also had as a nucleus a group of seniors. The Roines and Masoma clubs have accomplished a great deal this year. With all these facts, who can doubt that JUNE, ' 19, is peer of them all? Credit for Booster? i or the first time in history, the members of the Booster Staff have received credit for the work done. Is this fair? First, what is the Booster? Is it not a school project, like athletics or debating? Should there be credit the Booster work? Track is as hard, if not harder, than the Booster work. For the lat- ter the student receives credit, for the former he does not. If credit is given for one, why not give credit for both? If the students have too little pride to work for the school without credit, they should not be allowed to stay within its walls. With this issue, Volume twenty-one of the Booster is brought to a close. Next year there will be a complete change of staff, with Walton Cash at the head. Because we have had ex- perience along the Booster line, we bespeak for Walton your hearty co- operation. (Continued from page 2) have families of domestic children who will gather round you in your peaceful homicides in tumultitudinous consanguinity. Sometime, seated in some lovely re- treat in the back yard, beneath the shadowy shades of an umbrageous tree, you will gather round you your wife or husband and the rest of your orphan children. You will there take a retrospective view upon the diagram of futurity, and cast your eye like a flashing meteor forward into the past. Seated in their midst, aggravated and exhaled by the dignity and indepen- dence coincident with honorable pov- erty, your countenances irrigated with intense glows of self-deficiency and ex- communicated knowledge, you will quietly turn to instruct your lit- tle assemblages. You will endeavor to distill into their minds, useless les- sons to guard their juvenile youths against immortality. There, on a clear sunny evening, when the silvery moon is shining forth in all her indulgence and ubiq- uity, you will teach them the first sediments of geometry, by pointing out to them the bear, the lion, and many other fixed invisible consterna- tions which are continually revolving in their bearings, through the blue cerulean fundamu? above. From this (Continued on page 9)

Page 5 text:

THE BOOSTER Class Poem By Anna Cowen I ain ' t a-goin ' to cry no more, no more, I ' m ' ist so tired I ' ist had to bawl, ' An John Bane Stickle is so tall ' At I stretched my neck A-tryin ' to see on which side he parted his hair, ' Nen it wasn ' t parted! Shoot the luck! But I ain ' t a-goin ' to cry no more, no more. We all want on the honor-roll, But we ' re afeard o ' bein ' jeered at For carryin ' books, and we are sceered That we might miss a real good time By stayin ' home a-studyin, ' and never goin ' out ' An nen we cram for tests, ' an get bawled out, But I ain ' t agoin ' to cry no more, no more. Frank Cox has willed evethin ' we got to someone else, ' An Pauline Lewis has told all about us ' An Craw Barker has made of our futures a muss, But Newton Dodge just lets ' em do it. Some of us is sensitive, too, Gol blame it! An it hurts our feelin ' s it does, But I ain ' t a-goin to cry no more, no more. There ' s a case ' tween John Rice and Ruth Smock ' An they meet in the hall ' an just talk ' an talk. ' An Byron Mathews goes around lookin ' like soured cream ' Cause soon he can ' t yell, But will have to keep still ' An act like other civilized folks, he will. But I ain ' t a-goin ' to cry no more, no more. ' Oo ' I ' m ' ist heart-sick, ' an I feel so bad I guess the whole June ' 19 class is sad; ' An I ' ist can ' t help but cry, ' an can you believe it, Our own Emmerich Manual we soon must leave? ' An I ' ist can ' t help but grieve ' an grieve, ' An — oh-my-oh I ' m a-startin ' again, But I won ' t, for shure; I ' ist ain ' t goin ' to cry no more! Benny ' s Farewell to June Class Fellow Classmates: It is but natural for me to feel my own self importance and self insuffi- ciency on this momentous and dire- ful occasion; but as I seldom have recourse to the absurdity of apologiz- ing, I will continue to proceed w ith my discourse. Classmates, you are going out into a great reservoir of Roman liberty. You are to swing the flails of justice over this immense uni- verse, in hydraulic majesty and con- jugal superfluity. You are the mag- nificent triumphal arch on which will evaporate the even scales of justice and numerical computation. You are to ascend the deep arcana of nature and dispose of world problems with equiponderating concatenation, in ref- erence to the future velocity and re- verberating momentum. Such are your sedative and stimu- lating characters. You are all people of domestic eccentricity and matri- monial configuration, not permitted, as many are, to walk in the primeval and lowest vales of society; but you must endure the red hot sun of the universe on the heights of nobility and feudal eminence. You will no doubt all have beautiful wives, or hus- bands of horticultura l propensities, who will henpeck you the rest of your days with soothing and bewitching verbosity. You will no doubt all fContinued on page 4.] ris, the young minister, and Rose Rufli and Paul Stanley as Lowry and Guto Prichard. The Gift, the larger and more pre- tentious of the two plays, is based on the story of Pandora and the box. The leading parts were taken by Mar- garet Lostutter as Pandora and Burke Robison, who played the part of Epi- metheus. One of the most attractive features of the production was the dance of the Muses, a fantastic in- terpretation arranged and staged un- der the direction of Miss Anna Smith. The musical score of both plays was arranged and partly written by Mr. Winslow. Much credit for the success of the plays is due to Miss Perkins, who had entire charge of their pro- duction.



Page 7 text:

THE BOOSTER Athletics By Frank Cox Athletics During the Year — 1918-19. In an article published in the first edition of the Booster last fall, two sectional winning teams (in basket- ball and track) were predicted for Manual ' s athletic card during the pres- ent school year. Last Saturday, run- ning true to form, the track squad fulfilled this prophecy by winning the sectional track meet at the fair grounds; for earlier in the spring the basketball team had accomplished its end of the program. So in reviewing the athletics of the school year one can easily see that to date they have been extremely suc- cessful; never in the school ' s history have there been two sectional win- ning teams in any one season. Basket ball opened up with a rush last fall, there being 219 boys enrolled in the various monogram teams. Due to the enforced Flu vacation the league games were never finished, but a squad of 28 was picked from the showings made, which comprised the state team basket ball squad. The reg- ular schedule opened the 8th of No- vember and lasted until the team was eliminated at the State Tourney in the second round of play the 9th of March. Two teams were carried during the en- tire season and comparative scores show how successful this experiment was. Out of 26 games played by the first team, 18 were won, with the team scoring some 654 points to their oppo- nent ' s 412. A most remarkable fea- ture of the team ' s success was the fact that in the local sectional tourney only 7 field baskets were registered by the opposing four teams played. Rice led the season ' s scoring with 56 field baskets. Conn registered 31 before he left school in January. Secrest rang up 43, Jamison 38, Bybee 37, Keckler 29, O ' Connor 16, Wertz 11, Harmeson 8, and Cox 6. The second team also played wonderful ball, winning the city championship by not losing a game to either Shortridge or Tech during the season. They won 9 out of 11 games played, scoring 263 points to their opponents ' 129. Out of this squad, a nucleus for another success- ful school team is left for next sea- son. Our Track Team Newt Dodge tried about every event in track and field work, but majors in the high jump and high hurdles. He had bad luck at the sectional, getting a bad start in the hurdles, and tying for second in the jump, but lost out while jumping off the tie. Newt has other stuff if he gets down and works. We lose him to Purdue this year. Harry Baldauf is a hard-working man and has had the most successful track season of his career. He shows up best in the high hurdles, high jump and javelin throw. Baldy graduates this year. Frank Messing needs no introduc- tion. He is a star dash man and low hurdler. He, with Frank Garten, won the state meet two years ago. He is going to hum things up over at Illi- nois next year. Albert Jamison is young, but he sure steps the 220 and the 100-yard dashes when he is in good condition. He will be back in school next year. Tubby O ' Conner has been at it again; losing iron balls. He sure will be missed next year when the roll is called. Gardner is a half-miler of no mean ability. He has the right spirit and Continued on page 8 In reviewing the track season, Man- ual ' s winning team has won all her meets, seven straight, and has a fair show to place high in the state. There is no team in the state strong enough to defeat the squad in a dual meet be- cause of its even balance in all events in both track and field. While the meet at Richmond was not won be- cause of the lack of phenomenal men on the squad, the fact still remains that Manual has the best balanced track team in the state. In another week the baseball city championship series will be started at Washington Park, and Manual ex- pects to run true to form by giving the other teams entered something to do if they win over her fighting bunch of ball tossers. So taking our share in the breaks of Dame Fortune, we as a school have had a wonderful athletic school year.

Suggestions in the Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) collection:

Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922


Searching for more yearbooks in Indiana?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Indiana yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.