Girls High School of Brooklyn - Blue and Gold Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY)
- Class of 1936
Page 1 of 84
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 84 of the 1936 volume:
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Q - , V-...fy ,Q .J-4. -L ' was - ' Q-f--.' ff 'Ui' 4 - .1-ff . :--5. .1 .V QQLAQQMQQZL 2 f 9 iz J A QW? ! . rv 5359 Q THE BLUE AND GOLD A Semi- annu al Publicarion of GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL BROOKLYN, N. Y. DR. MAURICE E. ROGALIN, Principal Spring Issue May, I936 TABLE or coNreN1s Page STORIES Boomerang ....,...........,.,,...,,,.,,....,.,.......... .....A.,.... 3 New England Wife ..............................,.., ....... - .. 5 Special Providence for Pam ,,,,,,...,,,,,.. ,,,........ 8 Team Work ,,.,.,....,...,..,,,,,,,....,.................... .....,..... I I Shorf Sfory ......... ....... - .... - .23 Rebel .,,...,..,,,...,., ,......... L .... 2 2 Incidenf .............................. ....,....,.....,..........,.............,...... - .......... - ..4-9 His Life ,.,..,......................................................., - ....,.,......... - ,.,.. ........... 5 0 Lavender, Hollyhock, and Black-eyed Susan ,,,,,. ........... 5 2 Brown Box .,,,,....,,..,....,,.,. ,,,,.,..,..,...,.....,.....,...,,,...,.,,...,,a ........... 5 5 ESSAYS Taps ..,..,....,.,..,,.,.....,,......,.....,.,,..,..,,. ................. 2 0 A Oueen's Funeral ,,..,..,,...,,.,. .,.,,,.,.,.,..,.. 2 I Radio in Realify ......... ......., ..,,.,,.,.,,,,,,, 5 8 Advenrure for Me .,,,.,...., .,,..,,,,.,...... 5 9 Book Reviewing ........ .,........,.,.... 6 I POEMS WI1dI' a Lovely Day! ...,Y. ...,. ........... I 5 Two Poems Io Damrosch ,,....,,,.,.II ......,.... I 8 Spring Glimpses ................,,....,...... ..,...,,.,, I 8 ExpecIa+ions .......,. ,,.,,....., I 8 Sfar Gazing ..,...,.. ........... I 9 Morning ......www ,..,....... I 9 Wind ......,.,.,, ................. 2 O I Boomerang HELEN SADOWSKY, Grade Six THOUSAND feel scurried lhrough lhe swinging doors of Tony's Reslauranl. Ladies lnviled, on Cherry Slreel. A lhousand various hands 'lingered lhe dirly menus and summoned wailiers nearby. Sally Crisholm passed in lronl ol one ol lhe lables and wilh his cuslomary Yes sir? awailed lhe order. Ham and eggs. vegelables on side. collee, and cake 'n make il snappyl Sally shuffled away lo lhe lar-oll kilchen and shouled his order. Anyone who was nol in Tony's lor lhe serious business ol ealing, would have noliced somelhing queer aboul Sally's demeanor. as he minced back and lorlh wilh his damp lowel and lin lray. However, as lhere was no one lo walch him, no one noliced lhal he walked wilh his moulh opened and his eyes glued lo lhe floor. There were olher lhings in lhe wailer business-for inslance lhe meals. The wailer was enlilled lo lhe besl in lhe house and lhe besl in lhe house was a porlerhouse sleak smolhered wilh gravy and burnl onions. One look al lhe porler- house convinced Sally lhal ham and eggs would do lor him. Yes, Sally was bored wilh his iob. and his slomach was also bored wilh his meals. bul-one musl live. and lo live, one musl eal. All lhese depressing lacls Sally knew and knew lhem well. When Sally lrudged homewards al eleven every evening, wilh his Mirror under his arm, he dreamed on his hard uncomlorlable L seal. He dreamed his own privale pipe dreams. Sally, as he rocked back and lorlh in lhe rickely seal, dreamed of walking inlo lhe Fashionable French Grill, silling down and ordering a meal lil only for lhose of lhe genlle class. A Sunday, Sally was oll al lwo P. M. Then in his Sunday besl he would prom- enade lo Broadway and Fillielh Slreel. There h-e would sland, wailing lor lhe miracle lo happen lhal would make him a millionaire. Well-Sally was offered lhe posilion of assislanl cook on a lramp sleamer called Don Quixole . ln Porlo Rico, he was lranslerred lo a sleamship which carried hemp on ils way lo lhe Virgin Islands. Here he was an able seaman. He did nolhi-ng bul walch lhe lusciously fresh food being prepared in lhe spolless while galley. As in all sea slories, lhe Don Quixole was wrecked and Sally and six olhers were dumped inlo a liny boal piled high wilh cases ol food. Whal happepned lo lhe olher six, we neilher know nor care, bul lhe lacl lhal Sally was flung ashore is ol inlenesl lo us, lor wilhoul him we would have no slory. Mosl nalurally. lhe cases lloaled lo shore and Sally opened lhem wilh his crude fool. a large rock. He lound lhem lo conlain iar on lop ol iar of liny sar- 3 dines and Russian caviar daled I896. This meanl nolhing lo Sally, bul il does lo you and me. Here on lhis island, living like Robinson Crusoe, Sally slayed for exaclly seven monlhs and one week. Wilh lwo more weeks of supplies and no relief in sighl, he believed he would slarve almosl immedialely afler il was gone, bul ol course a ship sailed in one day and look him back lo his room on Third Avenue and Forly-sixlh Slneel where, of course, he longed lo be. An unknown columnisl wrole of his advenlure so well lhal lhree weeks afler he gol back, Sally was handed a len-lhousand-dollar check. Oh-yes, Sally's dream did come lruel Sally's lasle in dress was nol so bad as we'd expecl il lo be. When he slapped inlo lhe fashionable French Grill, no one noliced anylhing queer aboul lhis newly-rich genlleman. A very sedale wailer pased al Sally's lable liusl as Sally had once donel and muflered Yes, sir? Sally pondered: he'd do lhis lhing righl. Read off lhe menu and l'll lelll you. Very well, replied lhe waifer. Cocklail Fricasse Pheasanl Soupe Chicken a la King Fruil loes. Sally grinned. l-le lipped his chair back and lhrusl his lhumbs inlo lhe arm holes of his vesl. Then in an amazingly rough voice he answered. Say, buddy, give me a plale of ham n' eggs, vegelables on lhe side, coffee and cake, n' make il snappy. Impressions The snowy fluff of creamed polaloes: lhe icy coldness of a breaker on a hol summer's day: lhe nausealing sea-like odor of fish al Sheepshead Bay: lhe shiny glossiness of shimmering salin: lhe sighl of millions of lillle lwinkling slars seen on a counlry road: lhe clean coolness fell when bedding is changed: lhe sofl downi-ness of an easy chair: lhe picluresque sighl of cows feeding in lhe green paslure: lhe sofl flimsiness of silk and lace undies: lhe sweel fragrance of fresh- cul roses: lhe sofl smoolhness of a baby's skin: lhe penelraling sound of a lrain whislle. PHYLLIS ROUCHWAGER, Grade Six ll- New England Wife MARION PRATT, Grade Eight HE nexl' name on my long lisl was Arfhur Thompson and I groaned al' l'he sighf of if, allhough I did nol' know fhe man eilher in person or by sighl. The groan was for myself because fhe only lhing more unhappy l'han some- one's collecling money lo build a library in a New England lown is fwo people collecling money lo build a library in a New England fown. My experiences of lhe aflernoon had been highly unpleasanl and now, al four o'clock my feel' felf as lhough some experl' forfurer were slicking hol' needles info fhem. My mosl' fervenl' desires were a hol' shower and a nap, bul wilh my lisl' of names as long as fhe mouse's lail in Alice in Wonderland and a Iisl of conlribulions like a bulldog's lail shorl' and curly wil'h evasions. I approached Mr. Thompson's porch. His house was refreshingly clean wil'h brighl new while painl which sparkled in lhe hof summer sun. If should have been a comforfing house lo view: bul' some- how, if had a lense, formal appearance, wilh ils neaf, severe, green awnings and ils inhospilable porch on which lhe chairs sfood in allifudes which rebuked fhe caller for wishing 'ro sif on lhem. I summoned my much-balliered courage and knocked on lhe panelled door. 'While wailing, I speculaled as lo whaf excuse Mr. Thompson would have for nol' wishing lo supporl a library. Many of fhe people on my Iisl had infonmed me l'hal' reading novels would corrupf l'heir morals and lhal lhose who soliciled for such l'hings as libraries were headed slraighl for lhe infernal regions. My feel' were hol' enough lo approximale lhe feeling, and I waifed mosf impalienlly on Mr. Thompson's porch, slanding firsl on one fool lhen on lhe olher. Presenlly. fhe door swung open revealing a lillrle old man in carpel slippers who beamed af me over a pair of glasses perched precariously on lhe end of his nose and said in a high voice Come in, Come in. I've been expeclin' you. You'ne solicifing for fhe new library, aren'f you? Come righl' info l'he parlor- o.n perhaps you'd ralher slay on lhe porch l'his hol' day? I-le moved a chair lo a more hospifable angle and conlinued lo lalk al' a break-neck speed as lhough he expecfed fo be inlerrupfed any minufe. Excuse my slippers. My wife's away an' I was iusl fakin' if a bil' easy while she's nol around. He drew up a chair for himself, saf down in il' and seemed fo be swallowed up enlirely in il's imm-ense proporfions. Seeing me smile. he explained This here's my wife's chain. She's whal you'd call a milie large. lhough she don'l like I should say so. She likes lhis chair here 'cause il fil's her an' she hal'es anyone fo sel in if when she's here. I'm kinda parfial fo if myself, bul I lefs her have her way. ll's easier. This lasl' was said somewhal l'o himself bul his bird-like voice carried far and I could nol help hearing if. My mind, however. was confused by lhis flow, of conversafion and, while I was endeavoring lo gafher my losl' lhoughls from lhe depfhs of a conver- safional woodpile, Mr. Thompson had already succeeded in saying l'wo whole sen- fences, lhe end of lhe second being be glad l'o give you fhree hundred dollars. 5 Absolutely unable 'fo believe my earrs. l goggled ai' him like a surprised bull-frog so Thai he chuckled Haven'1' had many coniribufions have you? he said. People around here ain'+ wha+ you'd call real generous. Seems like mos+ people kinda 'ihink chari1'y begins and ends ai' home. Now l'm lhe o'rher way. l say if you don'+ give +o o'rhers. you'll never ge'r norhin' our of life yourself. Like cas+ your bread upon rhe wafers, you know. Yep, you can pui' me down for lhree hundred dollars, bu+ l wish 'slead of usin' my name. you'cl kind of lei on if came from Tillie. Tha'r's my wife, you know. Tillie's nor real generous herself, rhough mind you she's a line woman. She's pre++y busy 'round +h'e house, whai' wifh cleanin' and such. There ain'1' a cleaner house in ihis 'rown 'rhan Tillie's. He leaned over +o pick up a ihread fnom fhe floor wi1'h an air of guil+ 'ihai' was somewhai paiheiic. To cover my embarrassment I wrofe down +he arnounul' of his confribufion and fhen saying. Thank you very much, Mr. Thompson: you have been mosi' generous l rose ro go, bul' he jumped up saying quickly, Don r go yei. Lei' me give you some iea and iam. l'm qui1'e a hand al' maki-n' fea and i+'s my wife's home-made iam. l'm sorry she's noi' here lo see you. She'd be .neal glad, 'specially since we don'+ have many 'folks comin' fo see us. Tillie's a liiile nervous an' someiimes she bolhers folks. She's visifin' her sisler now. Won'1' be back 'Till 'lonighl' an' would have sfayed longer only she woni' miss her church. Real religious woman, she is. Now fake me Fr insfance. Somefimes of a Sunday. l like io sei on +he porch an' lislen ro fhe binds an' 1'hink ihings out buf no+ Tillie. She goes +o church regular, rain or shine. Bu+ now fha? iam. You iusi sei' here an' l'll go gel if. He disap- peared inside and l obedienrly set A'f+er a while my curiosiry overcame me and l impolifely peeked fhrough +he window info +he parlor. H was a dark room because heavy velve'r hangings covered +he windows shuHing oui' all buf 'rhe cenler panel of light ln +his economical 'I'wiligh1'. l could dislinguish l'he heavy walnul' furnilure, hideously ornamenfed. A whal-noi lilled wi'rh marble cherubim and bisque ladies s1'ood in one corner nex? +o an old melodeon. Hearing approaching foolsfeps, l dared look no longer, bul' Turned io greef my hos'r who appeared carrying a 'fray wi'rh ieapol, cups and slrawberry iam on if. l-le sei il' on lhe Table and asked me if l would pour The +ea. Over our cups. I +o my surprise, 'Found myself, college graduaie and ieacher of English in a counfry-grammar school because of +he depression, discussing books wilh ihe old counlry man. Our conversaiion ranged 'From David Grayson, of whom my friend seemed very fond. 'ro Edilh Wha.n+on. Concerning The lai'+er, l inquired whe1'her Mr. Thompson had read Elhan' Frome and ihen bil' my 'rongue and wished wiih all my hear? 1'ha+ l had noi, for my hosi s face 1'wi+ched wilh a kind of agony allhough he answered quielly enough 'rhal he had. A slrange silence 'Fol- lowed 'rhis remark and finally l rose, ihanked my hosi' and deparrled wiih some- +hing of +he bleakness of Elhan Frome's unhappy marriage reilecred for me in my hos+'s eyes. Many monfhs passed and my pupils confinued 'ro asfonish me wirh +heir abilify +o express lhemselves in English which l, who had had a lhorough course in all brands of English, could neilher read nor undersiand. The library for which l had worked so vigorously had prospered and my pupils pafronized il freely, espe- 6 cially fhe Pefer Rabbif books which impnoved fheir minds fo an almosf im- measurable degree. I had never seen Mr. Thompson again, for a cerfain em- barrassmenf had prevenfed me from calling on him. One day, however. I found myself regreffing never having revisifed him, for in fhe liffle counfry newspaper. was announced fhe deafh of Arfhur Thompson, funeral Thursday. l decided +ha+. ouf of mere grafifude for his generosify fo my cause, I oughf fo affend fhe services: buf when I arrived, l was asfonished fo find so large a crowd. So greaf was fhe affendance fhaf I only succeeded in gefling a seaf in fhe parlor, sfill economically dim. because of my posifion as Teacher of English af fhe school. I looked around af the ofhers presenf and found fhem oddly assorfed. Here were fhe Mayor and his wife af my leff, and af my righf, Jack Smifh who lived down by fhe railroad in a shanfy scarcely large enough fo accommodafe his eleven children. Upon lookinng for 'rhe cusfomary flowers. I found only a preffy bouquef of field flowers gafhered by fhe children. I had nof 'lime 'ro observe farfher because fhe minisfer rose fo begin fhe service. The Bible reading was shorf and simple, buf fruly beaufiful and affer if fhere was a momenf's silence. Then fhe minisfer began slowly. There is liffle I can say abouf 'rhis man who lies before us. All of us have felf his sympafhefic hand. have heard his voice in fime of frouble. There is no one here who could nof fell of a genenosify. bounfiful as if was unobfrusive. There are here, families who could call fhis man fheir sole comforfer in fime of sickness or dislress and if is a fifring 'rribufe fo his unfailing kindness fhaf so many of his friends are presenf foclay. Any words fhaf I mighf say would be fo fhem buf echoes of whaf is in fheir hearfs. Therefore I will say only fhis: I-le walked wifh God upon earfh, and now he has gone away wifh Him info heaven. In fhe reverenf silence which followed fhis conclusion someone sfepped fo fhe melodeon and began fo play Abide wifh me . Af fhe firsf nofes some woman bursf info loud, blafanf sobs. a sharp confrasf fo fhe chokey silence of fhe resi- of us. I furned fo sfare af a huge, red-faced woman in heavy. rusfling black silk. and knew insfincfively fhaf fhis was his wife. - Breakfast The fanfalizing sharpness of grapefruif which makes lips pucker in, Buffer seeping info wanm, brown slices of foasf dainfy and fhing The crackling crispiness of cereal flakes in milk pure and whife, A well-scrambled egg fhaf is browned iusf righf: Fruif-filled, nuf-cresfed cakes, Iusciously sweef, Finally, rich. syrupy chocolafe fo make fhe breakfasf complefe. NAOMI WEINER. Grade Six 7 Special Providence For l3am-- ELLEN STATON, Grade Six T seemed io Pam 'rhai ii' was ever Thus. So Allan had sprained his ankle! Pam's nose weni info a dozen wrinkles. I+ was iusl like Allan +o do lhai' 'rhe week of Car1'er's dance . . . when he was faking her! Forfune never smiled on her, Pam +old herself as she walked, 'rhe one armful of books making her body sway sligh+ly wifh each sfep. And Pam had 'l'Old Allan whal' she ihoughf of him for leH'ing a ihing like Thai happen, in fhe nofe, 'rhaf scafhing liHle nofe 'lhaf she had sen'r him when she heard of Jrhe accident He dese.rved if. He deserved . . . suddenly fhe world came +o an end, and somelhing wiihin Pam's head began 'ro sing The S+ars and S+ripes Forever. Buf in a minufe she realized 1'ha+ she was semi-prosirafe on an unbelievably cold pavement Very romanfic, she reflecfed acidly: Then she fhoughi beffer of it For was noi' ihar a sfrong, muscular a.rm fha? supporfed her? Yes, she realized, when, looking upward, she saw fhai' +he arm belonged fo someone wi+h an undeniably fine head, dark, 'rwinkling eyes, and curling, brown hair. Slowly she rose, wifh fhe aid of 'rhe Hero. And The Hero was falking +o her. Are you hurl? he asked. Pam wasn'i' so sure. She wondered momeniarily if Cupid's arrows were painful. l d'on'1' believe so, she murmured vaguely, buf I fhink my heel is down 'rhai' gra'l'ing. You +ook a nas+y bump on The head. Righi' on 'rhe cement A fleefing fhoughi' made Pam wonder if 'lhai' was a wise-crack. Buf she decided againsf if. He wasn'+ 'rhe +ype. Is +ha+ wha+ hir me? she asked in a quiei' surprise. He laughed and gave her her hai. While she arranged il' on rumpled blonde curls, he looked ruefully a+ fhe sca++ered confenfs of her purse. l'm afraid your mirror's broken, he said apologefically. Tha+'s supposed +o mean seven years of bad luck.' I don'+ believe in signs, said Pam. Bad luck! Mee+ing him! lnvolunfarily her nose wrinkled, buf she siraighfened ii oui' quickly. Her books were once more in her arms, arranged wifh ques+ionable skill. Thanks a million, she found herself saying. Then somehow she sfood fhere. noi' wan+ing +0 leave wifhouf knowing somefhing of 'lhe Hero's name. By ihe way, she said nonchalanfly, +o whom do l owe 'rhe 'thanks for fhis gallanf ad? Lee Mansfield, fullback, he announced, his manly chesl swelling wifh manly pride. Pam was ready for fhaf. Noi 'l'he Lee Mansfield, she babbled, +he one who won all ihe games for-for--for who won all fhe games lasi' season? This is a +hrill. l've always wanied 'io see you. If Lee could buf have known how many games Pam had seen, having been 8 dragged fhere by force, and how much she knew abouf foofball, he mighf have been less flaffered. As if was, he smiled af her wifh charming condescension, and Pam was challenged fo furn on fhe heaf full-pressure. l-ler lips suddenly spread info fhaf come-hifher, personalify smile, and he wilfed. She wafched his resisfance shrivel up, and his condescending smirk change fo an adorably friendly grain. Pam fell fwice fhaf day. And fo whom, he asked, clo l owe fhe honor of fhis . . . er . . . conversafion? , Pamela Taylor, generally known as Pam. A devilish liHle curve fo her moufh complefely disarmed him. Buf Pam was cruel, fhough her hearf pounded. Toodleoo, she said, and +hanks. Waif! he called, fhen looked digusfed. Why didn'f l meef you sooner? l could have asked you fo go wifh me fo Ca.rfer's dance on Safurday. l . . . wasn'+ going . . . buf if I could fake you . . . buf everyone who's going is dafed now. You are dafed, aren'+ you? Of course! Well, fhaf is . . . in a way. You see, my dafe has a sprained ankle, which is rafher a difficulfy when if comes 'ro dancing. Then you aren'+ dafedl Miss Taylor . . . Pam . . . may l fill up your program nexf Safurday? Well, af leasf, Pam fhoughf, flinging her books on her desk, she was going. Buf she wished Silver hadn r bounded up fill she was mo.re sure of herself. Oh Pam! gasped Silver. Guess who's faking me Sa+urday! l couldn'f, Pam muffered saccharinely. Frank Mansfield, younger brofher of Lee Mansfield,J'he scholasfic hero. Even going wifh Lee's brofher is an honor, fhough of course, Lee is 'Hue cafch. Buf he's never been caughf. He's a woman hafer. Then he .really is a hero, Pam murmured medifafively. Good heavens! Of course! Foofball. Why? Because l'm going wifh him. The expression of complefe and undilufed amazemenf on Silver's face was delicious. You . . . you . . . you . . . whaf? l'm going wifh him lf I wene a caf, Pam, l'd hafe you. As if is, l . . . l . . . well, how did you do if? No, don'+ fell me. l've gof fo lef fhe girls know abouf fhis. So long and . . . congrafulafionsln Medifafively, Pam gazed affer Silver. Apparenfly 'lhere was a cerfain degree of imporfance in knowing Lee Mansfield . . . despife fhaf idiofic name. Buf liffle did she realize fhe exfenf of fhaf imporfance. From fhaf momenf she was fhe supreme obiecf of admirafion, hafe, and envy, from every girl in fhe prep school. And when Pam, a shimmering cloud of peach-colored lace, glided ouf onfo fhe dance floor on fhe arm of Lee Mansfield, she was conscious of fhe various emofions mirrored in fhe eyes of her schoolmafes. She realized wifh 9 some pride, fhaf she was dancing wifh fhe handsomesf, mosf afhlefic, mosf soughf- affer woman-hafer in fhe vicinify. Pam was definifely esfablished and happy in if. So if was 'rhaf when Allan hobbled over fo Pam one day, she, remembering whaf his ankle had done for her. greefed him wifh a brillianf smile, insfead of fhe cold shoulder. Pam, he pleaded miserably, l'm so sorry . . . fhe dance . . . Allan. she smiled impishly. you dear, if's all righf. I'm glad you sfayed home-fo fake care of yourself of course. B-buf . . . your nofe . . . Forgive me for fhaf. Allan . . . l'm beginning fo appreciafe you. You're sweet i She planfed a kiss on his puzzled forehead, and leff him pondering labo.riously over fhe inconsisfency of her sex. Yes. if seemed fo Pan fhaf if was ever fhus. A special Providence was always af her side. Providence had sfepped in where she had noi' feared fo freed: on an iron grafing, where she had losf her hearf and a French heel. - Church HE dim duskin-ess of a church af an unfrequenfed hour . . . ifs awesome silence . . . The seemingly rude claffer of feef . . . 'rhe hollow, empfy echoing and re-echoing of a cough . . . fhaf feeling of relief and peace fhaf comes wifh felling God of frials, froubles. and hopes . . . fhe resplendenf, glorifying gliffer of fhe alfar . . . fhe rounded fop of fhe apse fhaf seems fo express infinify . . . fhe colorful beaufy of fhe shirnmerinng red and deep blue lighfs againsf fhe whife and gold of fhe alfar . . . 'rhe feeling of minufeness and insignificance fhaf is experienced. kneeling . . . hope and joy enfering a depres- sed mind and soul . . . fhen being broughf back fo fhe commonplace by fhe clash of The sexfon's broom . . . fhen fhe-oh, well. if is fime l was hurrying home, I have so much fo do- ' HELEN HYNES, Grade Six IO T e a m wo r I4 VIRGINIA WOLFENBERGER, Grade Six I-IROUGI-I half-closed lids I wafched fhe gang come up our boardwalk. They were nefurning from fhe fennis courfs, looking like wel' shoes fhaf no one wanfed fo wear. Chris waved her racquef af me and Johnny gave me one of his asinine smiles. They spilled fhemselves on fhe porch and lay fhere panfing. The heaf was ferrific and so was fhe news fhaf I was aching fo fell fhem. Buf insfincf fold me fo waif unfil fhey cooled down a liffle: if would make more of an impression. I am fold fhaf one of my greafesf assefs is my abilify fo 'lime a surprise. Wha'r's new, Angel-face? asked Johnny crawling fowards me on his sfomach. Oh, nofhing special, I answered casually, reaching for my compact Ugh! Johnny grunfed disgusliedly. Whal' a life! Nofhing, I said, excepf fhaf Noel Devereaux is sfaying al' fhe Ocean I-Iofel, and I'm supposed fo gel' an inferview from her for fhe school paper! Whaf? screamed Carolyn siffing up wifh a i-erk. Whaf? echoed Bill knocking himself over fhe head wifh his fennis racquef. Noel Devereaux! said Chris soffly, Noel Devereaux here af Sea Side! Why she's fhe greafesf acfress in fhe worId! I powdered my nose complacenfly. The gang was duly impressed. I-Iave you fried fo see her yef? asked Johnny faking fhe powder puff ouf of my hand. Leave fhe map alone. he supplemenfed. Yes, I answered, regaining fhe powder puff by force and ignoring his lasf remark, l have. l've fried abouf everyfhing humanly possible, buf she's fhe mosf elusive person I know of. I-lave you gone fo fhe hofel? asked Paul. Three 'Iimes. Whaf happened? Twice she was in conference and once in fhe bafhfub, I replied wifh disgusf. The whole froubIe, sfafed Johnny ponderously mus+ lie in fhe facf fhaf she saw you coming. This wiHicism was followed by a hearfy laugh from Johnny himself and a 'riH'er from Carolyn. I decided fo ignore fhis and fo fhroffle Carolyn fhe nexf chance I gof. Lef's fhinIc, said Chris wrinkling her forehead. There musf be some way fo gef in fouch wifh her. Everyone remained silenf for a momenf, and fhen fhere sounded a fhundenous crash wifhin fhe house. The fwins! I shoufed springing fo my feef. The fwins, agreed fhe resf following me info fhe house. We rushed fo fhe kifchen from which issued a series of hearf-rending yells. On fhe floor surrounded by a few dozen pofs and pans sal' my five-year-old niece, Toodles. Her fwin, Tommy, was execufing an Indian War dance around her. Yah! Yah! he shoufed gleefully, swinging a frying pan af her head. By a providenTiaI miracle he missed: and beTore he could Try again, Bill ran Torward and grfabbed him by The seaT oT his inTiniTiesimaI Trousers. Hey Tecumsha, whaT do you Think you're doing? Bill asked. Lemme go! screamed Tommy kicking his legs and waving his arms. Chris and I ran To Toodles and began To dig her ouT oT The aluminum avalanche. Where's KiTTy anyway? growled Bill nursing a badlly kicked arm. KiTTy is my sisTer and happpens also To be The unTorTunaTe moTher oT The Twins. She's gone To The ciTy. and I have The exTreme pleasure and gneaT honor oT playing nurse-maid To The Twins, I answered biTTerIy. The braTs! supplied Johnny viciously. TogeThier, Carolyn and Chris had succeeded in pacifying Toodles, and Tommy was geTTing raTher inTeresTed in The mechanism oT The elecTric iron. When we had The children par'TiaIIy reconciled, we neTired To The living room. Say, abouT Noel Devereaux and The inTerview began Paul, I-Iave you Tried TeIephoning? No, I said buT I don'T Think iT's a very good idea. Oh, I don'T know, replied Paul, oTFended. I wouldn'T be so sure. lT mighT work. said' Chris. 'Why noT Try? OT course, iT will work. IT's my idea isn'T iT? added Paul. The Trouble wiTh Paul is, he's Too modesT I said wiTh my sweeTesT Jean Parker smile. ITs The shrinking vioIeT in me-oh, hello! This is a reporTer from The- I beg your pardon? -Yes. I wonder if I could arrange an inTerview-oh, she won'T? Well could you-I mean-I'm sorry-OperaTor! I've been cuT oTT! Paul Turned To us, indignaTion wriTTen all over his scarIeT Tace. I-la! ha! hal laughed Johnny, kindly. OT course iT will work: iT s his idea. isn'T iT? We were all laughing cruelly when we heard. You did! I did noTI You did! I did noTI DidI Didn'T! Did! Didn'TI and The Twins were upon us. WiTh a scream Toodles landed in Carolyn's lap, and Tommy bounded aTTer her. ATTer a sTruggIe The Two squirming children were collared and led away by Bill and Johnny. Good HeavensI eiaculaTed Chris. Have you goT Them on your hands Tor The whole weekaend? Yes, I wailed WhaT shall I do? I2 Before anyone could answer, The Twins came back info The room and saf Themselves down aT The piano. Then followed five minufes of The mosf excruciafing anguish and Torfure I have ever been subiecf To. When They Tired of This fiendish pasfime, They demanded supper. IT's only fourl-ThirTy , I snapped. And I doubT if l'II feed you aT all. l wanT my supper. whimpered Toodles. rubbing one big blue eye, while she wafched me wiTh The oTher. Youre a big dumb sissy, you Toodles you! sang her broTher. You sissy, sissy, sissy, sissyl Who's a sissy? demanded The enraged Toodles springi-ng af her Twin who ran away from her anound The Table. She wrenched herself free from Carolyn's grasp and fled affer him. I saw Tommy's fooT cafch in The gafe-leg. buT by The Time I reached The spoT, The Table had crashed To The ground, flinging The lamp, books, and boTTle of glue all over The rug. IT Too-k us an hour To clean iT up, and I was blind wiTh rage. On Top of everyfhing, The cook announced ThaT she infended To give noTice. I asked Johnny and Bill To bring The Twins inTo The living room, and when They sfood before me, I gave Them The scolding of Their young lives. When I Told Them ThaT They were going To bed wiThouT supper, They became peniTenT, buf when I Triumphanfly declared ThaT I would Tell Their mofher how bad They had been so ThaT They couIdn'T go To The circus, They bursT info Tears. Aw gee. Peg said Tommy sfepping forward and Taking my hand, we didn'T mean To be bad-honest we didn'T. Please don'T Tell mofher, Peggy-please. we wanT To go To The ci.ncus so much. sobbed Toodles. l'm sorry, iT hurTs me more Than iT does you I said sTernly, feeling exfremely mafernal. BuT you've been bad, and you've goT To be punished. The Twins wailed simulfaneously, and wenT upsfairs holding each oTher's hands. They looked so Tiny and innocenT ThaT my hearT smofe me, a-nd I Turned To The gang for solace. I goT none, however, as They all seemed To Think me a femal-e dragon: and afTen having said a few Things abouT all work and no play --They wenf home. I spenT The resT of The evening dividing my worrying beiween The Twins, now sleeping like The cherubim, and The inferview wiTh The elusive Miss Devereaux. Perhaps, I Thoughf, I'd been enfirely Too sTricT wiTh Them and had done Them some serious harm. like breaking Their spirifs or somefhing. I awoke laTe The nexT morrning To find ThaT The weaTher was suffocafing. I wenT downsfairs and asked Cook where The Twins were. I don'T know, I'm sure, Miss Peggy, she replied. They didn'T show up for breakfasf This morning. My hearT skipped a beef. Franfically, I looked for Them from aTTic To cellar. I couIdn'T locafe Them anywhere. I ran across The lawn To The Bradford's house and yelled for Johnny. I-le appeared in a dirTy yellow sweafer and uncombed hair. I3 WhaT's The maTTer, woman, aT This barbarous hour of The morning? he asked sleepily. The Twins are gone! I answered. Yeah? he said. So whaT? Johnny, please. I begged. Be serious. They're IosT: I can'T find Them any- where. Will you dnive me To The beach? IT's my lasT hope. The cluTch on Suzabelle isn'T working. he answered, buf we can use Bill's car, come on. Suzabelle is Johnny's Model T, and iT was no surprise To me To hear ThaT she wasn'T working. We raoed over To The GranT's where Chris and Bill were having breakfast Johnny Told Them whaT we wanTed, and soon we wene speeding Toward The beach. I was franTic wiTh worry and Chris was comforfing me by asking if The Twins could swim. I screamed, No and pracfically had a fiT. When we finally reached The beach, I scrambled ouT of The car and ran Toward The ba+hing zone. There was some exciTemenT asTir, and Turning To Johnny, I said in quief despair. The Twins are drowned. O gee, Peg! he gasped. O gee! And iT's my faulT, I wenT on wiTh The calm of desperafion. AT This poinT I caughT sighT of a familiar head of auburn curls. Two heads of auburn curls! The Twins were in Their bed pajamas and slippers, buT Toodles had conceded someThing To proprieTy and wore, eleganfly, a pair of her moTher's kid gloves. I had flung myself upon Them before I noTiced Their companion-a young lady who was digging Tunnels in The sand. I saT back on my heels and gulped. There was a blob of weT sand on ThaT inTernaTionally famous nose, buT iT was unmisTakabIy Noel Devereaux's nose. The ceIebraTed eye lashes IifTed slowly, and Those eyes ThaT senT The shivers down The spines of TwenTy-four nafions, gazed laughingly info mine. I have-n'T had such fun in years, spoke The Thrilling voice, These delighfful children! They ran away! l gasped. So did I. chuckled Miss Devereaux. From your secreTary? I asked. Yes. How did you know, you funny youngsTer? Oh Miss Deverfeaux, l've been Trying so long To geT an inTerview wiTh you for our school paper! If you knew whaT iT means To me! I blurTed ouT all in one rush before I IosT my courage. We'd all give our eye-TeeTh for your auTo- graph. Too. Johnny who had remained in The background, pracfically sTunned, now came up and began To sTammer someThing Too. Bill and Chrisf followed him. I looked aT The Twins and Those very alarming children winked! The circus? They asked. The circus! I answered very emphafically. sinking down on The sand in ecsfacy. Ill- What a Lovely Daylu Thi: ir the firxt warm day we'1ze really had, And everything .reemr .ruddenly quite gay, The :parrowfl twitter hit: one like a Jpray Of .rplintered cryflalg and quite unthinhingly orze'.r glad To be alive andl breathing thi: fine day. BuT sTop and look aT iT anoTher way. Think of The Thousands who do noT see The sun, Who Toil in shops. and TacTories, and mines. From early morning Till The dayligh+'s gone: Think of The man wiThouT a job who dines On liTTle meaT, poTaToes. and some bread, His belly aches Too much Tor him To care WheTher iT's Tair ouTdoors: he Thinks insTead Maybe iT would be beTTer IT he were dead: Or else he waiTs Tor checks 'From home relieT And Turns his eyes away when neighbors sTa.re And Then geTs drunk To show he does noT care: Think oT The workers aT Gauley's Bridge, Virginia, Dying oT silicosis The docTor calls pneumonia Because The company pays him well To be As sweeT and reas'nable and murderous as They: Think of The New York Times and The elevaTor sTr1ike ThaT's a menace To public saTeTy because iT makes Park Avenue Walk upsTairs insTead oT saying FiTTeenTh, please and Thank You . Think of The black-shirTed FascisTs and The Trained lTalian legions FighTing Tor whaT They know noT in pesTilenTial regions: Think oT The armies of HiTler, spreading ouT To The Rhine Laying The maTch To seT oTT The explosive European mine: Think of The Chinese hordes and The Japanese who bring Them By order divine The lmperial Way of miliTanT Nippon: Think oT The hate and The Terror, iniusTice and cruelTy Today. The millions hu-ngry in counTries where wheaT is Thrown inTo The sea. The millions of disciplined people blindly preparing To die For Trade, Tor power, Tor glory ,Tor an EmpTy Lie. Say iT you can lwhaT l know 'you will sayl Fm glad because if: .rurh a lovely day. EDITH SCHREIBER, Grade Seven I5 W b-1 1 THE BALLAD OF BEAU BRUMMELL OR FROM BALLAD TO VERSE lPUNl Helen Meyer and Ellen STal'on Grade Six Beau Brummel was a fashion plaTe. He wore The cloThes mosT up To daTe. WiTh never a wrinkle in his cravaT. Beau would never have sTood for ThaTl Beau was deeply dipped in debT. His purse was dry. his asseTs weT. His crediTors were on his neck . . . Their presence boThered him like heck. Finding himself in a raTher TighT place, He decided The VincenTs could save his face. Pere VincenT was rich: Mariana was sweeT. lAll Beau's expenses could be laid aT Pa's feeT.l Mrs. ST. Aubyn was lovely and clever, To marry our Beau was her earnesT endeavor. AT deepesT inTrigue Mr. Beau didn'T wince. He goT rid of her . . . She meT The Prince. A few evenings laTer, aT a dance. Beau meT Mariana, Thus began his romance. He ThoughT he'd planned all, buT heavens above! He hadn'T counTed on falling in love! Beau wasn'T alone in mariTaI inTenT, Lord Manly reeled in, on proposal benT. Down on his knees he poured ouf his emoTion, BuT our heroine scorned his damp devoTion. Manly's aTTemps aT a love confession Failed To make The correcT impression. As he poured ouT his impassioned pleas, A ierk from Brummell Took him from his knees. When Manly indignanTly sTaggered away, Our Beau revealed whaT he'd come To say. He asked Mariana To be his wife, Be TaiThful, land pay his bills! for life. Mariana reTired To a window recess. Why was she in doubT? Well, you can guess. For she loved anoTher, Though she feared him unTrue, So she haTed To marry . . . buT she liked Brummell, Too. And as Mariana saT pondering There, I-nl FooTsTeps were heard upon The sTair, And Beau, resenTing This inTrusion, SoughT The curTains Tor seclusion. Mrs. ST. Aubyn came in wiTh The Prince in Tow, Saw a curTained recess, iusT The place To go! Princie whispered sweeT noThings in her ear. lOnly The audience. Mariana. and Beau could hear.l Papa VincenT game in, his child he was seeking, ln The window recess he heard someone speaking. lT's Beau and Mariana behind ThaT curTain, He said. lT's noT wrong To lisTen, l'm cerTain! He heard words of love, and ThoughT Things were okay. Bless you, my children! he sTarTed To say. He opened The curTains, flung Them wide. 'Twas a wraThful Prince he found inside! You blundering fool! The scarleT Prince sTuTTered. ln vain Papa VincenT's excuses were uTTered. Beau emerged To averT The impending scandal, BuT Princie spluTTered like a ChrisTmasfTree candle. For his royal paTience was aT an end, ln his senseless anger he Turned on his friend. l'm Tired of your impudencel l've had enough! Be calm, Wales, Beau murmured, 'And have some snuff. The Prince senT The box wiTh a bang To The floor. He said, Di your snuff! and a greaT deal more. AlThough aT his insulTs Beau didn'T unbend, He knew he had losT a valuable friend. The nexT afTeroon, on The Mall, Were all The guesTs who had been aT The ball. The Duchess was There wiTh avowed inTenT OT seeing Beau's composure renT. You know. she observed wiTh a flighTy laugh, lo The Prince won'T sTand for anyone's gaif. He'll cuT Mr, Brummell, l'll be bound. And we'll see iT all if we sTick aroundl Then Beau came in, and The crowd grew Tense. He was insTanTIy on defense. He sTifFened . . . The Prince was drawing near. He was Too proud To show his fear. The warm air was chilled as The Prince pranced by. By The frosTy glinT of His MaiesTy's eye. The Prince spoke To Sherry, To Beau noT a word. The sound of The silence was all ThaT Beau heard. Bur Peau'5 quick wifs were never sTalled. Who's your faT friend, Sherry? he drawled. The Prince swung around wiTh a sTarTled iump. His chesT was heaving like a sucfion pump. Auby led The deflaTed Prince away. And Beau reTired, having won The day. BuT alfhough he mainfained his usual composure, He knew iT was his social foreclosure. Then a bailiff appeared, an awful mug. To puT Beau Brummell in The jug, And while They were Talking came anoTher cur, Also To puT Beau in The sTir. BuT Beau was sfill a haughfy man. He Turned wiTh a sneer upon his pan. He Took a careful pinch of snuff, And flipped his kerchief from his cuff. He Told The rascals To TroT away. They polifely declined . . . They'd decided To sTay. He used his marriage as a shield againsf Nemesis BuT The bailiffs refused To leave The premises. And Then, in The disfance, who should appear, Buf Beau's fufure bride, Beau sTarTed To sneer. If iT's proof ThaT you wanT, you'll have iT l vowl Hide behind Those big bushes. Be quieT nowl BuT whaT was iT Beau saw ThaT made him Turn pale? T'was ThaT Reggie, his nephew, was close on her Trail. Do you love him enough To make you give me up? Beau heard Mariana ask, and Reggie said, Yupl Then Beau sfepped ouT, To Their asTonishmenT. And viewed Reggie's sacrifice wiTh asfonish- menT. Back and forfh, back and forTh, nobly They punTed her. Poor Mariana Thoughf nobody wanTed herl Beau's cause finally won, buT his unselfishness Gof him Tangled up in a Terrible mess. His lasT excuse gone, The bailiff cracked down. And he knew he could geT no more help from The Crown. The nexT scene is an aTTic room, Dark and dismal and full of gloom. Six long monThs have passed away. And Beau is fading day by day. Of all his elegance Beau is berefT, Only MorTimer and a snuff-box are leff. As well as a valeT. Morf is a friend. He's promised himself ThaT he'll sfick To The end. One day. in To visiT Beau. who should drop, BuT The fair Mariana and her Pop, And laTer came Reggie. Tall and blond. Of whom Beau Brummell is so fond. The guesfs were shocked aT Brummel's plighf, ln rags, he was a sorrp sighf. Beau Told Them The Prince had pensioned him, ThaT This life in The aTTic was merely a whim. Thus once more Brummell saved his pride. Then he Took Mariana's pop aside. Nobly he pleaded unfil VincenT said ThaT Reggie and Mariana mighf wed. BuT for his grand gesTure Beau goT no respife, For sfeadily worse grew his harrowing plighT. And now our Beau is near insane From disgracesand slow sTarvaTion's pain, Then one dark day when Things were worsT, Who info The room should bursf BuT all Beau's friends of Times long pasf, Who have forgiven him aT lasT. So when Beau's wanderinq mind refurned, He saw The sighf for which he'd yearned. He sTarTed, incredulous, as he looked around, WiTh ioy his weakening hearT did bound. BuT They had come. alas, Too lafe, An ignoble deafh was Brummell's fafe. AfTer one momenT of ecsfacy, The pangs of hunger sTruck TaTally. Thus came down The curTain on Beau Brum- mell's life. His lasT days were ones of disgrace and sTrife. BuT now Beau Brummell is world renowned, A more perfecT genfleman will never be found. T 7 T V9-6neon,f?':,i I7 Two Poems To Damrosch l. Having l'asi'ed beaufy, having seen 'rhe dream, He could noi' ireasure if and hide if from ihe world: Having once known, he could noi walk, saiislied, alone: Bur giving of his own, gave his secrel 'ro ihe young. He shared-and from his inspirafion fair flowers grow Un+il ioday, because of him, many more know Of 1'ha'r beaufy-Thar indescribable beau+y Which Damrosch found. Jane Woronock, Grade Five 23 Renowned, buf noi' foo greaf io undersiand Thai' youfh did noi' feel music, only heard Removed: and knowing you1'h he lem' a willing hand, Translaied sfirring noie fo simple word. He could noi' keep l'he beauiy he had 'Found Bui' shared if wi1'h 'rhe world unseliishly. Giffs have been given +o ihe field of sound: He gives his very self fo harmony. Marie Vuolo, Grade Five SPRING GLIMPSES The green pine woods guard The dis'ran+ hills. Armed wi+h sharp, conic spears: The clouds drain milk from +he dew-drenched skies, . Shedding cool, morning fears. The brook, sirefched our beside lazy fields, Seconds a singing breeze: The lark looks on, like a sfrandecl waif, Enchanfed by The frees. Kafharine Carasso, Grade One EXPECTATIONS A year ago 'rhis very fime l praised +he spring in precious rhyme: Today spring lags on muddy 'Feet And drags her iinery in fhe sireef. The weafher does no'r boiher me, l have my mind on oiher ihings: Though no bird warbles in The Tree. The spring wiihin me sings and sings. Edifh Schreiber, Grade Seven l8i STAR GAZING Tiny blue diamonds ThaT pierce Through The sky ,,. Q And flicker around when The moon's riding high, You TinT all The earTh in a cold-rayed lighT. As you TighTly pin in The curfains of nighT. ln hundreds you sprinkle and o'er spread The blue, And ofT as I silenTly gaze up aT you. IT seems ThaT you wink in mocking reply To my sTudious gazing inTo The sky. Twinkling wiTh beauTy, shimmering wiTh ligh+ Whenever you shine on a beaufiful nighT Though you are Tiny and gleam Trom afar, f l envy you greaTly-each beauTiful sTar. Sybil Gowdy, Grade Five Room ll7a bg MORNING Waking, green sparkling grass. ln caps of blue: lmbue The ThirsTy sod- WiTh milk of dew. Sfranded on eTher waves, Cloudlers sTream by: Awry, The Tanager UTTers a cry. Pale. The forgeT-me-noTs Climb from Their bed: Red, polyanTha rose Liffs up her head. GenTly, drowsy brook Talks To The lake: Wake, The sofT ripples call, God is awake! Cafharine Carasso, Grade One. PiTy-an old woman, painTed and bleached: The ToH'ering walk and faded feaTures of seniliTy: The sad eyes of The milkman's nag: The bedraggled sfray dog. DisgusT-filThy s-now: The professional gum-chewerg The moTorisT who races The 'engine or blows The horn when a pedesTrian crosses on a red lighT: The choking smell of cigareTTe smoke. BeauTy-shiny sTreeTs, afTer rainy The TwiTTering of birds on a spring monning: The sofT pudginess of a baby: Trees. RUTH BENNETT, Grade Six. I9 n wlND Oh--somehow I piTy you-cold, wild wind, As you swoop down on The ciTy and envelop The plain. Somehow I Tind your violenT cursing weak. As in one mighTy blasT your anger bursTs again. Oh--bold, hard wind-by anger hoT possessed, As you rage unmolesTed, l piTy you-Tor The hand, When The Tire has cooled and your sTrengTh is spenT, OT warm, calmy, easy-going spring shall Take command. Jane Woronock, Grade Five T a p S e RUTH GRATENSTEIN, Grade Eighi' Day is done: Gone The sun. From The hills. From The lakes. From The sky. All is well, Safely resT: God is nigh. No maTTeg' whaT was being said or being done, aT The sound of Taps The camp became a hushed audience To The low, pealing, noTes To The bugle, echoing iTs song inTo The surrounding hills, and commanding Trom all a deaTh-like silence by iTs imperaTive sounds. l gazed abouT me. A few slower campers were scurry- ing inTo Their coTs. The oThers. siTTing in bed in The darkened bungalow, lisTened aTTenTively and silenTly To each Tull. nesonanT Tone. A Teeling of reverence Touched wiTh melancholy came over The enTire scene like a Thick Tog. I looked ouT upon The campus. Beams oT lighT issuing TorTh Trom a lamp in The Toliage, made The bugler, sTanding erecT before The Tlag pole, a silhoueTTe wiTh The black nighT-encompassed Trees as a background. My ThoughTs wandered Trom This scene To scenes of war-The miliTary bugle sounding Taps, a signal Tor lighTs ouT : and The saddesT use oT all Tor The playing of Taps. The burial oT a soldier. ArmisTice Day! Here again These solemn noTes are played. and whenever They are sounded They seem To dominaTe The enTire evenT, and always command silence . . . The lasT noTe now died inTo The hills. and The sTillness was even greaTer. 20 is Queens Funeral LlI..I.IAN CAMPBELL, Grade Six EFORE I begin my sfory, I musT firsT remind you of an evenT which hap- pened Iasf summer in Belgium. This evenT was The Tragic deafh of Queen Asfrid of Belgium. I was living in Brussels aT Thal' Time, and as my uncle had a house near The palace, we were able To see The whole funeral. AT Twelve o'clock on a beaufiful day of Sepfember. we were having lunch. peacefully lisfening To The radio. when suddenly. The radio sfopped and an an- nouncer solemnly spoke. ATTenTion please. The queen of our counTry is dead. Again and again These same words rang ouT of The radio. There was no more music: everyfhing was silenT. We sTopped eafing and bowed our heads. Now for Three days and Three nighTs The church of ST. Gudule rang iTs heavy bell every minuTe, and befween minufes The loud roar of a cannon could be heard in The disfance. Everyone Talked of The queen's dreadful deaTh. There seemed To be a black veil over The ciTy of Brussels. The shop windows were dressed in black wifh The picTure of Asfrid. Oufside The palace huge crowds of people awaifed The opening of The doors To see The precious body of Their gracious queen. The nighf before The funeral my uncle Took me info The sTreeTs To show me how much The people of Belgium loved Their queen. Barricades were puT up along The sidewalks and people were sfanding alongside of Their chairs for fear some- one would Take Them. All nighf, people slepf on Their chairs. Their heads on The barricades. Balconies of differenf homes were for sale as high as TifTy francs for The day of The funeral. All Belgium seemed To wanT To be presenT To pay Their Iasf respecfs To Their beloved queen. Nexf morning I hurried down To breakfasf and rushed To The balcony. The funeral was To sfarf aT Ten. buf I was ready aT seven. Crowds were under me, and some young boys were sfanding on The roofs of houses. and oThers were perched on Trees and on lamp posfs. Some people who were nof able To geT a good glimpse of The funeral had prepared looking glasses wiTh long handles in order' To see everyfhing by iusT looking info The mirrors. Three hours had passed and The soldiers came marching on slowly .sTep by sfep, carrying The beaufiful flowers of The queen. When I reached The number eigh+ hundred. l sfopped counfing. buf I am sure Thaf There musT have been a Thousand wreafhs, noT counfing Those sfill aT The palace. Affer The soldiers, The gendarmes rode head bowed on black horses: They were followed by The slow pacing march of The boy scoufs and Then by The Red Cross and lasT by The veferans, some lame, ofhers blind. In The fore- ground The king and his followers were in ST. Gudule church hearing The sermon of The bishop. The caskef was carried down The sTeps and The fune.ral proceeded. Then The ca+aTaIque driven by black horses appeared. The caskef was covered wifh ermine, and a big black veil was spread over iT. A hush ran over The crowd and Tears were in everyone's eyes. for To everyone's amazemenf The king was marching mechanically behind The caTafalque his bandaged head bowed, his haf 2I in his hand. A whisper came upon The crowd and one could hear The people say- ing. The king is going To walk alone To Laken where The body of his wiTe will be placed nexT To AIberT The FirsT. Behind, his maiesTy The bishop, in a dark purple robe held his prayer book, inToning The deaTh prayers. The oTher kings anu princes followed in old-fashioned carriages on The sTyIe oT The Time oT Louis The FourTeenTh of France. Thus was The body of The beloved Queen AsTrid borne To Laken where she was laid To resT beside The kings and queens of Belgium. - I2 e b e I RUTH BENNETT, Grade Six I-IE gangling Sunday-school Teacher Towered above The circle of shining Taces, shiTTed Trom one TooT To The oTher, coughed nervously, and said, Is There anyone who hasn'T broughf his pennies Tor The IiTTIe heaThen? You know. children, ThaT you have Tood, shelfer, and cIo+hing, while The childrein in Africa have noT. Why, They do noT even know God! I-Ie peered aT The children as They dropped Their money in The box. I-Ie 'frowned aT seeing one child offer noThing. This IiHIe girl, squirming under his gaze, cIuTched someThing in her small red hands. STaring coldly aT her, he said, I see +haT Jane has noThing To give The missionaries in Africa. Why noT? In a small voice, buT wiTh a deTianT look, she answered, I have Too, buT I won'T give iT! AsTounded and ThwarTed, he Thundered, You will remain aTTer cIassII An hour Ia+er. Jane sTood before The pimply adoIescenT. her head hanging and Tears ready To flow. Trying To look imperious, he ordered, You will give me one reason Tor your seITishness! Jane. Timid, yeT believing her convicTions, bIurTed ouT, I am noT seITish! I don'T know abouT any ol' missionaries and Their naTives. Why should I give Them my money! I see IoTs 'n IoTs of people righT around here who need money. I won'T give iT! Sobbing, she ran Trom The church, never To reTurn. The young man sighed over The cares oT The world, Thinking how preposTerous modern children IIiTTIe girls, especiallyl could be. 22 Short Story NE Typical summer nighT-dark, sTarry, lighTed by a Tull, yellow moon. Paula sTrolled down To The edge oT The lake To waTch The millions of Tlickering sTars dancing on The waTer, under The moTherly care of The moon. Paula saT on a large rock. enchanTed by The serene beauTy, when suddenly she heard disTanT sTrains oT TasT, spi.riTed music. Looking up, she could see small Tires on The opposiTe bank. She could disTinguish brighTly-clad Tigures dancing wildly abouT one large Tire. Her hearT leaped-Gypsies! She waTched exciTedly as her TooT beaT in rhyThm wiTh The lively music. Gypsies held a TascinaTion Tor her. She had seen several in The ciTy, buT her manners had kepT her Trom looking closely aT Them. Besides, in The ciTy, Gypsies were more or less resTrained. Here, They were unbound by The chains oT civiliza- Tion: here, They could do as They pleased and They broke TorTh in noisy merrimenT. JusT like wild birds leT ouT oT Their cages. ThoughT Paula. She was exciTed. To Think ThaT she could have a bird's-eye view of real Gypsies wiThouT having To worry abouT good manners! On The lake, The moon called The Timid sTars To her side as The elongaTed reTIecTions oT The camp Tires danced wildly on The rippling surface. The Trees sToocl by in silenT admiraTion while The leaves Tried To dance in imiTaTion of The nimble-TooTed nomads. Oh. how romanTic, ThoughT Paula- wiTh a soTT sigh. She envied These carefree wanderers oT The earTh. They inspired her wiTh romance. She had read many sTories of Them-abouT how They kidnapped people. especially young girls like Paula herself. How Too romanTic, she repeaTed To herself. Her hearT beaT TasTer as she ThoughT, Wouldn'T iT be iusT Too Thrilling iT-iT They kidnapped mel Her dangerous mediTaTions were broken by The rippling sound oT a paddle on The waTer near her. She looked and saw a young Gypsy girl. abouT her age. rowing a small canoe Toward her. She ran To The waTer's edge and helped The girl pull The boaT on To The shore. The Gypsy held an empTy boTTle. Please give me fresh waTer, she said wiTh a 'Foreign accenT, holding up The boTTle. Surely, answered Paula and led her up To The house. She Took her To The kiTchen sink, waTching her careTully. She did noT really disTrusT This girl-buT she had heard sTories, and, besides, iT was iusT like being a secreT deTecTive. or someThing. ATTer The boTTle was Tull, Paula walked back wiTh The girl. WhaT is your name? Paula venTu.red To ask. My name is BareTTa, answered The dark girl slowly. By The Time They had reached The waTer, The conversaTion was well under way. Paula wanTed To know all abouT Gypsies Trom This girl-she mighT never geT a chance like This. ' 23 Don'T you love To Travel all The Time? asked Paula eagerly. No, answered The Gypsy. calmly. l wanT To have a real home like you. I sick oT move all Time. l wanT live one place and go To school and have many friends. BuT you geT To see so many new people and new places-you would iusT geT Tired oT living in one place. And as Tor school-you are noT missing much. encouraged Paula. She could noT undersTand This girl. She seemed so unlike Gypsies. she was so quieT and melancholy: surely. she could noT be one of Those high-spiriTed, dancing nomads. l see places very shorT Time. l make friends and leave Them righT away. You see my broTher, over There? Paula Tollowed in The direcTion Towards which The girl was poinTing. On The oTher side of The lake, removed Trom gay revelers. saT The soliTary Tigure oT a young man. He was looking ouT on The waTer. My broTher, conTinued BareTTa, he wanT To go To school ve.ry much. He always read books he Tind along road. He love American girl, buT we move, so he no can see her no more. He no like Gypsy life. He run away T'ree Times, she shrugged her shoulders hopelessly. How paTheTic. muTI'ered Paula, half aloud. WhaT you say? inquired Ba.reTTa. Oh-er-you waiT here one minuTe. l'll be righT backl answered Paula running Towards The house. She came back soon, her arms Tull. Here, BareTTa. are some old books Tor you and your broTher. They a.re swell books, noT The kind you Tind along The road. l have no more use Tor Them. Thank you. said BareTTa. asTounded. She was unused To being Treafed nicely. She, like The resT oT her race, was always disTrusTed and suspecTed. Paula piled The books inTo The canoe and gave The boaT a liHle shove To sTarT iT oTT. The Gypsy girl kissed Paula on The cheek, lumped inTo The canoe and rowed away. Paula liTTed her eyes and looked aT The Gypsy camp. Her ideas concerning Those people had Taken on a compleTe change. She TelT very sorry Tor The young girl and her broTher, unlucky children Torced To roam The earTh wiTh Their people. She Turned away Trom The lake and walked slowly home. Her house seemed diTferenT To her now, she appreciaTed iT more. She realized how TorTunaTe she was To be herself and noT a wandering Gypsy. As Tor romance, she had all she had need Tor righT nexT door. 24 A f-P - ' f- ' A o . o 5 Z N . 4 .Q-,Q-105 .Y pk nl 49 ggngg, ,Isl 4. N 0 f ':':'9.'.ww.sae:-zwwzx.q.g.:.gfgzf ' ' ' 0 'MWff 9vwWRy.W349'-3'.'.'.'o'03f14?2r?.'.'.s27,'.4'q:',Q,Q,v,4 0 - In A Q k Q 1 X xy ugfqwm --3W.',w,9'-90''59-Hwm... fwsowhonqfvn W 5 ky, W X xx Xy 132 W!-teeax'w1'2w!4'32w1'2-Szbzww3Q:':e':'I'2Q' - . Q 'I MQ, fx . ,,.:f-1. 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Xa x N 1 N 4 .yea ix 8 QA' .ex W HA L f 5 ,ia N ., ' Q' f V 5 , ' g N X w, Q 8 ...'o:o,...s',M.' V 4 v X X 4' ', ff . '.'.f':. N' ' 5 +, X Y M I X Esate'-t ' ' 4 ' 'XIII' J' X I , M W IL, , X f Q wx, , -N I I .- -wp ,' .. NL -if l -liz M 1' Jw 'A ' ?-' .f fp ASQ ,' ' V lf' f Q 1. x I Y il MQ? M! -' A M X fQu ,u'. NN' 1 ,f j MV' HV 'I' .51 Qi f x 1' 1 W if F xl -X f X I nw! I 1- , i AF IEP? GQADUAI ION WHA! 'F Pres. Senior Class Mos? Popular Girl Colleran, Anne College Div. Pres., V. Pres., Sec.- Treas., Class V. Rep.. Class Rep., Sfunfs, New- man, Press, Traffic. Ol- fice Page, Bank, Jr. Sr. Parry Commillee Record Business Mgr., Baskefball, Swimming, l-lockey, Jr. and Sr. Arisfa, Knock Commifree, Sefflemenl. We oughf fo call her hinge-she's somerhing fo a-door. Sec.-Treas. Division Lolf, Lucille Kafherine Gibbs Sec. School Tennis, Swimming, Set SENIOR OFFICERS Grade Adviser- llemerif Clubs, Bank Rep., Traihlic Squad, Jr. Sr. Parry Commillee, Sec, and Treas. of Fel- 'rer Literary Sociely, Pres, of Felfer Lilerary Sociely, OFiice Page, Sec. and Treas. of Div. Wilh her who wouldn'+ lie a friendship knol? Vice-Pres. Senior Class Pasquariello, Rose Brooklyn Class Rep.. l-lockey. Traffic, Vice-Presidenl. Senior Class. The Dark Horse. Pres. Loyal League Besr All-Around Smiley, Rufh Wells College Pres. of Loyal League, Sydney Parsons Pres. of Div., Class Rep.. Class. V. Rep., Bank Rep., Feller Liferary. Leaders Press, Tennis. Swimming, Jr. Sr. Aris- la, Beau Brummel, Jr. Sr. Parry Com., Selfle- menl, Slunls, Program Com. Like Cheslerfields she safislies. Presidenl Arisla Liffle Violef Business Baskelball, Swimming, Leaders, Feller Lilerary Pres. Jr. Red Cross, Jr. Arisfa, Program Com- miffee, Slunls, Traffic, Office l-lelp, Class Rep.. Div, Pres., Jr. Sr. Parry Commillee, Selllemenl Pla y, l-lousekeeper, Knock Commiflee. So good in Marh +ha+ if you gave her a boy's age and heighl she'd figure our his phone number. Sec.-Trees. Loyal League Terry, Muriel Wellesley College Div. Pres., V. Rep., Ch'rm'n, lnviiafion Com. of Jr. Sr. Parly, Feller Library, Baske+loall, Ten! nis, Riding, Swimming, Volleyball, Slunfs, Sel- Hemenf, Bank, Arisla. Double dose of dimples and pep. SENIOR CELEBRITIES Class Singer Pres. of Div., Jr. Makes you lhink of olcl Skeich Club, Knock LIIWGCR, Nancy Dep'3rI'm9nI'I5 5I'lIn' Greece and Ggddeggeg, Commillee. Business IVI9 light Liferary Lighf Be careful. girls, she's Sr. Arisla, Bus. Manager MOSI' Reliable Meigelmanl Shirley 5 Idfessl desiqninq QT Blue and Gold' Pregg AbI'8mS, Esielle Brooklyn YOLIHQ Miss. Club, Glee Club, Dra- malics Sociely, Library Page, Traffic Squad. Chimes, Siunis, Bank Rep., Press Convenfion, Music Convenlion. Her voice is like Old Golds-Douloly Mellow. Class Aihleie Giblin, Edith Barnard Leaders. Tennis, Swim- ming. Baskelball. Hock- ey, Slunis, Selilemenf, Felfer. Beau Brummel, Newman. Bank. Blue and Gold, Record, Div. Pres.. Class Rep., Jr. Sr. Par- fy Comiflee, Traffic Pro- gram Com., Knock Com- milfee. Office Help, Sr. Arisla, Brooklyn College Tennis, Baskelball. Sci- ence, Press, Traffic. Bank Rep.. Senior Day Com- millee, Knock Commil- iee, Record Business Siafi, Blue and Gold Business Slaril. Ass'i' Sen- ior Edilor Blue and Gold, Senior Arisla. Whal a girl for some- one's son. Mosf Charming Machleid, Mildred Traphagen Pan-American Club, I.ea- der's Club, Slunls, Vice- Rep., Rep., Treas., Sec.. Sr. Arisla, Tennis, Sei- 'rlemenf Play, Selllernenl Club, Parry Corn., Of- fice Page, Music Page. Edilor-in-Chief Record, Senior Ecliior-Blue and Gold, Sr. and Jr. Aris- +a. Class Rep., V. Rep.. I-Iousekeeper, Dramaiic Sfunl Commillee, Tral- fic, French. Chimes. Knock Commillee, Sei'- Ilemenf, Play. Jr. Sr. Parry Commillee, Office Help, Feller. I-las somelhing on all of usr' reads her handwriling. Class Arlisl' Freeman, Kaiherine Ari School Dramalic Sociely, Ten- nis, Slunls, Selllemenl Plays, Office Dufy, Cos- lume Room, Swimming. OWI1 K Zi Class Aciress immel, Edifh N. Y. U. Evening Pres. Dresser Debafing Soc., Dramalic Soc., Beau BrummeI , Man- aging Edilor, Blue and Gold, Tennis, Swimming. Bank Rep. Acls clever-buf maybe she's only acling. Class Musician chlinsky, Frieda Brooklyn College Jr. Arisla, Orchesira Trio, Traffic Squad, Sei- llemenf Record Rep.. Vice Rep., Knock Com- millee. Germany had Beelhoven, Russia had Rachmanin- oil, Ifaly had Verdi. and Girls High has Frieda. Dr. Rogalin's Message. Dear Seniors: Four years ago wh-en you enrered upon your high school s+udies, graduafion was a long iirne away. As you loolc back over Jrhe four years, Jrhe 'rime does noi seem quile so long-indeed, ii has slipped by. H' is imporiani for your iuiure success and happiness 'ro realize The significance of Hileeiing lime. Before you lcnow ii, you will find ii' necessary io meer life on your own. And you musi now prepare more seriously 'for fhai day. You are io be congraiulaied on your preseni' success. li is your foundalion for your career. The besl' in educaiion was ai your command: Teachers, siudies, social life, and everyihing ihar is requisile 'For a happy iuiure. We are proud of each of you. Decide now on your greai obiecliveg build if up on 1'he siruciure Thai you have builded ai Girls High School, and may you enioy abundance of happiness in your chosen field, and in life for years and years and years. Sincerely yours, MAURICE E. ROGAUN Principal Abramowifz, Evelyn Brooklyn College Jr. Arisfa, V. rep., Bank rep., l-lousekepeer, Seffle- menf, Jr. Sr. Parfy Commif- fee, Gffice page, Knock Commiffee. lf personalify were elecfric ify she'd be a power house Apanel, Harrie? Business l-lockey, Newman, Traffic Class V. Rep. f-larrief's busy as a bee She does a lor of work Buf fhere's never been a lesson Thaf she has fried fo shirk. Baker, Gerfrude Juilliard lnsf. of Music Tennis, Swimming, Sfunfs, Music Appreciafion, Traffic, l-lousekeeper, Library Page. Teacher, please lef me fell all l know. lf'II only fake a minufe. Baylor, Lena Brooklyn College The girl wifh fhe Pepsodenf smile. Becker, Pearl Brooklyn College Tennis. A real pearl, buf nof from an oysfer. Birkins, June F. New York Universify Swimming, Baskefball, Ten- nis, Volley Ball, Newman, Traffic, Sefflemenf, Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiffee. l like school-I have fo. Addison, Aurelia M, Business School l-Zaderfr, Efwimming, Library P QS, ra ic, Glee, Chimes, Record Rep., Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiffee. As an afhlefe she does ex- cell, As for her we fhink she's swell. Baillou, Efhel Manhaffan Trade Class Rep., V. Rep., Bank Rep., Swimming, Arf page-I l-lousekeeper. Lgpnie on, Efhel, swing if, Bauer, Pauline F. l-lunfer College Baskefball, Swimming, Ten- nis, Leaders, Traffic, Bank, Jr. Red Cross, Bank Rep., Record - Business, Office help, Jr. Sr. Parfy Commif- fee, Sefflemenf, Program Commiffee, Sr. Arisfa. She's a good swimmer - fhaf's why she always comes ouf on fop. Beck, Helen E. Art School Tennis, Music Appreciafion, V. Rep., l-lousekeper, Bank Rep., Blue and Gold Ar? Sfaff. ln firsf aid class: Whaf can l do for a'swelled head? BenneH, Lucille G. De la l-laufy lnsfifufe Class Rep., V. Rep., Hock- ey, Tennis, Traffic, Newman. No wonder she do'esn'f like a Ford - she spends her life in school dodging peoe ple. Bergdahl, Consfance C. Renard School Swimming. Time and fide waif for no man-so whafl Blausfein, Mariorie Brookiyn College Jr. and Sr. Arisfa, Blue and Gold - Arf and Liferary. Record Arf, Pres. Posfer, Class Rep., Bank Rep., Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiff-ee, Knock Commiffee, Program Corn- miffee, Sefflemenf, Traffic, Library, Ari and Office Page. An arfisf - she draws af- fenfion. Bodensfein, Flora Brooklyn College Baskefball, Tennis, Bank Rep., Lunch Squad, Sr. Day Commiffee. The business fype -- she'd even sfarf a prefzel facfory fo make ends meef. Bosche, Anna New York Universify Leaders, Tennis, Swimming, Volley Ball, Baskefball, Housekeeper, She fhinks Cooper Union belongs fo fhe American Eederafion of Labor. Brewsfer, Loreffa Brooklyn College Swimming, Traffic. Economic ferm: A good- chewing gum, if safisfies fhe desire fo work her moufh. Browne, Evelyn Nurse's Training Hockey, Tennis, Swimming, Pan - American, Traffic, Lunch Squad Capfain, Arf Page. Sh-e does nofhing in parfic- ular, everyfhing in general. Burke, Cafherine Pennsylvania Hall Jr. Col. Swimming, Leaders, Baskef- ball, Tennis, Traffic, Glee, Newman, Housekeeper, Mu- sic, Office Page. Whaf Docfor's Red Head are you, Blondie? Blay, Doris Pace lnsfifufe Tennis, Traffic. Like all fenses she has her moods. Bornman, Adelaide Hunfer College Tennis, Baskefball, Riding, Sr. Arisfa, Sfunfs, Office page. A differenf kind of afhlefe -she has brains. Bowser, Elizabefh Adelphi College Swimming, Tennis. Elizabefh, Elizabefh, don'+ you cry, You'll be married by and by. Brienza, Anfoineffe Nurse's Training Traffic. When do-es Nurse Brienza gef angry? When she loses her pa- fience. Buchwald, Eva Brooklyn College, Evening Housekeeper, Biology Page, Pres. School Garden and Nafure, Poefs Corner, French, Sfunfs, Swimming, Glee, Jr. Sr. Parfy Com- miffee. I can'f help if if l'm a baby - l was born fhaf way. Burke, Mary Pennsylvania Hall Jr. Col- lege Swimming, Leaders, Baskef- ball, Tennis, Hockey, Traf- fic, Newman, Glee, Orches- fra Housekeeper, Music Of- fice Page. Oood 'Evans - She fhinks fhe formula for wafer is h-i-i- k-l-m-n-o lH fo Oi. Burs'I'ein, Charloffe Brooklyn College Glee, V. Pres., Music Ap- preciafion, Sfunfs, Office Page, Chimes. Like an old moving picfure silenf. Byer, Mildred Brooklyn College Tennis, Hockey, Traffic, Chimes, Beau Brummel, Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiffee, Sef- flemenf. 99 44-IOO percenf pure - buf, oh, fhaf ofher 56-IOO percenf? Campolungo Cla ra Business School French, Camera, Skefch, Ju- nior Arisfa, Traffic, Library Page, Office Page, Sfunfs. She didn'f fake Sfen. for fear of cafching Col'. Carr, Eleanor L i b r a r y Page, Division Pres., Swimming, Baskefball, Tennis, Sefflemenf, Leaders, Traffic Class Rep., l-lockey, Sfunfs. School bores me, so I guess l'll graduafe. fr Dave, Emmeline MBrooklyn College f Skefch Club. T She has gone far: she's sfill on lfer Way? Chandler, Sylvia Musical Conservafory Tennis, Lunch Squad, Seffle- menf, Baskefball. If squeaks, buf i'r's nof a mouse. Burwell, Margarei' New York Universify Traffic, Swimming, Hockey, Sfunfs. Silence reigns, buf no one gefs wef. Byrne, Lorraine V. l-leffley's Business School Tennis, Class Rep., V. Rep., Bank Rep., Traffic, House- keeper, Jr. Sr. Parfy Com- miffee. Like Nesfle's chocolafe - sweef and nuffy. Ca rdosanfo, Lucy Traffic, Newman. Lucy's big-so is her hearf! Cary, Helen Brooklyn College Traffic, Tennis, Musical Pro- gram, Sefflemenf, Baskef- ball. She'll gef fhere some day, Slow and sure in her own quiei' way. Curreri, Marie Cify College Library Page, Leaders', Pan American, Tennis, Jr. Arisfa, Traffic, Sfunfs. Wifh all her faulfs we love her sfill-fhe sfiller fhe bef- fer. Curcie, Anna Business School Swimming, Newman, Pos- fure, Library Page, Traffic, Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiffee. She has Venus de Milo beaf -she has arms. Cerela, Michaelina College Traffic, l-lousekeeper, New- man. lflousekeeper - Some day she'Il make a clean sweep. Cohen, lrene Business l-lousekeeper, Bank Rep. Enough painf fo painf a ship, -enough powder fo blow if up. Cohen, Shirley Business School Traffic Squad. She's sfill wondering who won fhe lndusfrial Revolu- fion. Conlon, Margaref Brooklyn College l-lockey, Newman, lvlafh.. Tennis, Traffic, Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiffee. Quief, pleasanf, and clever, May she sfay like fhaf for- ever. Corso, Geraldine Kafharine Gibbs School Baskefball, Skefch, Traffic, Library Page, Knock Corn- miffee, Sfunf, Class Rep.. Sefflemenf. There wasn'f room for bofh of fhem so Cleopafra died. Cummins, Edifh Brooklyn College Mafh., Library Service, Dra- mafic Sociefy, Beau Brum- mel, French, Traffic. Alfhough a fwin she is an individual. spyLwA, V. ,,,,.! bg,AfM-Q, LZ, kb .i,JK.1g,-4f4..,kf,fAe 2T,-- VL, ll , I I,-KJ Ll2s,,,.,, WM' NL 'f'L Y' Ac.,-Ge 1 'cE3i.Zf1TLEfQ' Nighf School , Iw9Fk:nfS-mmrrrfn6pJ'S'F'6'n+sn Guard, Chimes, Girl Scoufs, JF. Sr. Pai-'fy Comrniffe, 7' Color ' O g,J-1.L,,,,L . Sh-ers so wrapped up wifh fhe Girl Scoufs fhaf sh-e probably would have a guilfy conscience if she didnff Q0 a good deed every day. Cohen, Rufh Brooklyn College Science, Traffic, L u n c h Squad, Bank Rep., Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiffee, Science, l-l i s f o r y, Class Bullefin Boards. One of The 400. Cohn, Vivian B. Business School Agora, Biology Service Squad, Sefflemenf Club. You cannof analyze fhis lif- fle girl, l-ler personalify is a con sfanf whirl! Conver, Lois Business School Traffic, V. Rep., Lockers. She bakes cakes. Who helps you liff fhem ouf of fhe oven? Cowen, Mariorie Jr. Arisfa, Capf. of Tenn' l Team, Hockeywwlghalfp , fgeeufjnaru ,Fx funfs, a ef l. ,. .J- lifiihinli. m ine L' 3-w'f 'f Buf yo do'5'ia fhafls whaf . ,g 4:21 J , ' hurfg,-v 1 ,V J, M Cummins, Rose Brooklyn College Mafh. Dramafics, Library Service, Traffic, French, Beau Brummel. When a girl you do see, If if ain'f my sisfer, if musf be me. li-X ..4. .df Czechanski, Helen BaskeTball, Newman. You'd Think she had laryn- gifis - she's so quieT. de Kika, Miriam E. Juillard School of Music Pres. of French, Sec. Treas. Music Associafion, Glee Club, Dramafics, Dresser Debafing, NaTure, Chimes, ChrisTmas Pageanf, Music Educafors' Convenfion. Don'T boTher me now, dar- leeng - ree-allee am Too busy. Dezarro, Helen Business Tennis. To graduafe or noT To grad- uaTe, French is The quesfion. Di Gianni, Angelina Business Newman, Traffic, Library Page, Blue and Gold Sec- refarial Sfaff. Oh, dear! school's killing rne. Well, whaT did you Think iT was? An affernoon Teal EIlioTT, Lois l-lunTer College French Club, Glee Club, Chimes, Swimming, V. Rep., STunTs, Jr. Sr. ArisTa. She's like a mirror - a good looking lgllass. Farnhum, Joyce Cornell PosT-GraduaTe - Riverhead High School. Blue and Gold STaff, FelT-er SocieTy. ln Joyce's hands, a Thing's well done Before iT's even half begun. D'Anna, Agnes Business School Traffic, Newman, Class Pres.. V. Pres., Sec. Treas., STu- denT PianisT. lf hair is a woman's crown- ing glory, she cerTainly was crowned. de la Pauline, Luana DramaTic School French, Tennis, Chimes, Dra- maTics, l-lockey, Office DuTy, Traffic, Glee, STunTs, V. Pres. of Div., Sec. Treas. of Div., Pres. of Class, V. Pres. of Class, Library Page, SeTTle- menT, Beau Brummel, Typ- isT for Record, l-lousekeeper. If good humor were snow she'd be in a perpeTual blizzard. Diamond, Sara Brooklyn College Jr. ArisTa, Pres. of LaTin, Bank, Library Page, Office DuTy, l-lousekeeper, Jr. Sr. Parfy. When God gave ouT brains she musT have been on The line Twice. Drucker, Helene Long Island UniversiTy BaskeTball, PoeT's Corner. An Appendix girl - The kind ThaT geTs Taken ouT a loT. Farley, Florence Nurses' Training She wouldn'T be a pebble on The beach if she were a Ii++le Bolullder. Fein, RiTa L. Business School Tennis, Swimming, Pres. of Science Club. Sec. of Class, Traffic Squad. lvle and Mr. Schumer for- ever and ever! Ah Men! Feinsfein, Laura Brooklyn College French Club, Music Appre- ciafion Club. She's always in mofion - slow mofion. Feldman, Anna Brooklyn College Riding Club, Glee Club. Her hair is red, Her eyes are green, Sanfa Claus is comin' fo fown. Ferrary, Julia Business School Baskerball, Glee Club, Class Banker, Posfure, Traffic. Don'f lei her fool you. Thai' isn'+ a cold - if's smoker's cough. Fishman, Sara Brooklyn College From Glassboro l-ligh. Tennis, Swimming, Music Appreciafion, Class Rep., Sfunf Commiffee, Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiffee. Her foofprinfs on fhe sands of fime were big and deep -she wears size 9. Fleming, Evelyn Nurses Training Tennis, Hockey, Baskefball, Swimming, Traffic Squad, Library Page, Leaders Bank, Bank Rep., Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiffee, Sfunfs Commif- fee. Confribufes daily fo Wrig- ley's income. Fos+er, Pea rl Vice Rep., Bank Rep. As silenl as fhe p in pneumonia. Feldhusen, Elizabeih Business Guard for Sfunfs and Grad- uafion, Sefflemenl' Work, Posfure Club, Swimming, School Garden and Nafure Club, Newman Club. A girl like mofher was when mofher was a girl. Feldman, Lieba S. Michigan Universify Press, Science, Sefflemenf, Tennis, Swimming, Traffic Squad. By a cover you can'f iudge a book, Nor Lieba by her innocenf look. Firfle, JeaneH'e Pralf lnsfifufe Traffic Squad, Sfunis, Jr. Sr. Parry Commiffee, Sec. of Class. She's nice when she's nar- ural, because she's nafural- ly nice. Flagg, Eleanor Cecilia Sargenf l-lockey, Swimming, Tennis, Sfunfs, Traffic Squad, Assis- 'ranr l-lousekeeper, Squad Caplain. She oughf To become a surgeon so she could confin- ue cuffing up. Foofe, Ru+'h Class Rep., Vice Rep., Sec- refary, l-lousekeeper, Skefch Club, Posfer Club, Traffic Squad, Swimming, Hockey, Knock Commiffee, Sfunf Commiffee. She's going +o Praff lnsfi- fufe fo see whaf she can draw . Frank, Evelyn Business School Baskefball Club, Library Page, Traffic Squad, Skefch Nafure made her as he should, Nof 'foo bad and nor foo good. Freeman, Amelia Secrefarial School Leaders, Baskeiball, Swim- ming, Tennis, Traffic, Gffice Page, Bank Rep., Div. Sec- rel'a ry. Her Trademark-a grin from ear 'ro ear. Frumkin, Helen Lunch Room, Traffic, Blue and Gold, Biology, Swim- ming, Volley Ball, S+un'rs, Secreiary 'ro Miss Rolh, Knock Commilfee, Beau Brummel , Chimes , Sei- flemeni, Dramalic, House- keeper, Sr. Day Comm. She doesn'1' aclverlise Cam- els bu'r who wouldn'+ walk a mile for her smile. Gallo, Marion Prali Newman, Hockey, Basker- ball, Leaders, Swimming, Library, Jr. Sr. Parly Com- mi++ee. When she was born she was so aslonished she couldn r speak for fourreen monfhs. George, Osenda Business School Traffic, Recod, Tennis. A rubber smile-il always s+re+ches- Even from S+. Vincenl To Brooklyn. Gersfenhaber, Esfher B ooklyn College Traffic Squad, Biology Ser- vice. She changed her religion- now she worships boys. Golds+ein, Lillian Brooklyn College Pres. of lvlaih Club, Edilor' in-chief of Ma+hle're , La+- in, Dresser, Jr. Arisia, OF fice Duly, Library Page. 2x3 are 6, plus 3 are nine You may noi' know your maih bui' l know mine. Freeman, Julia New York Universify Pres. of +he Dramafic So- cieiy, Beau Brummel, Re- cord Rep., Tennis, Swim- ming, Siunfs, Coslume Wardrobe, Sr. Day Commif- fee. ll I Y l m a dreamer, aren 1' we all? lno, we're nolzl Gallagher, Eileen Nurses Training Newman Club, Div. Sec., Vice Rep., Lunch, Swimming, Leaders, Secreiary of Music Class. She wan+s change when she pays aHen+ion. Garroway, Rufh Brooklyn Hockey, Posfure. ls 'rhere a piece of cheese in 'rhe house, Rufh is anofher liffle mouse. Gerson, Marion Brooklyn College Swimming, Dancing. Thinks 'the Town Hall Forum is Fred Allen's hour. Glicher, Adele Business School Chimes, Glee, Beau Brumrnel, Seiflemenf, Of- fice Page, Glee Club Con- cerf. Sings Faus+ - fausf and slow. Grafensfein, Ru+h Brooklyn College. Poe+'s Corner, Jr. Sr. Parfy, Baskelball, Sfuni' Comm. The sixfh sense-a sense of humor and a good one af fhai. Greenberg, Goldye Packer lnsfifufe Jr. Sr. Parfy, Office Page, Library, Skefch Club, Tennis Club, Dramafic Sociefy. An unfypical senior-sweef and naive. Greenfield, Blanche Brooklyn College Jr. and Sr. Arisfa, Class Rep., V. Rep., Bank Rep., Sfunfs, Sefflemenf Play, Dra- mafic, Felfer, French Club Sec., Record, Traffic Squad, Office Help, Biology Off., Sr. Parfy Commiffee. For such a liffle girl she does go over in a big way! Hamilfon, Virginia Nurses Training af Bellevue Leaders, Baskefball, Volley Ball, Swimming, Science, Library Page, Girl Scouf. Guard for Sfunfs and Chimes , Jr. Sr. Parfy Com., Losf and found. Knock Com. We like fruif and she's a peach. Hanson, Doris Business School Jr. Sr. Parfy, Traffic Squad, Riding Club. Me and Nelson Eddy. Hoffman, Grace Traffic Squad, Swimming, Record. Grace is quief, she won'f fell l-low she gefs along so well. Holland, Mary Business. Camera Club, Traffic Squad, Sfunfs, Lafin Club. Thinks Conversafion is a losf arf. Greenberg, Mildred Orchesfra, Library, Science, Sfunfs, Tifian, Skefch Club, Traffic Squad. Musically inclined - fhinks John Charles Thomas is a frio. Griffin, Hildredfh l-lunfer College, John Hop- kins Medical School Library Page, Tennis, Hock- ey, l-lousekeeper, Orchesfra, Sfunfs, Sefflemenf. The eighfh wonder-she fook Eco seriously. Hannon, Gerirude Like old China, preffy. Harding, Jean Traffic Squad, Lunchroom Squad. - Whaf would you do wifhouf 'fhe homemaking deparf- menf. Hoffman, Renee Baskefball, Posfure Club, Traffic, Newman, Class Rep., Bank Rep. Always quief, never wild l-low can we knock so good a child? Hommel, Isabel Brooklyn College Camera Club. Silence is golden-she should be very rich. Horowifz, Ann Nurses Training School Glee, Tennis, Dramafic, Traffic Squad. She's sfill wondering wha? made Oscar Wilde. Jacobson, Josephine Brooklyn Tennis, Swimming, Hockey, Sefflemenf, Jr. Sr. Parfy Commiffee. Like a piano-she's grand and uprighi. Jolley, BeHy Business School Tennis, Leaders, Swimming, Class Rep., Class V. Rep.. Bank Rep., Sefilemenr. A lighf hearl' lives long- we won r worry fhen. Kaiser, Alice Silence means fhoughf, some people say, So she 'fhinks and fhinks fhroughour +he day. Kaplan, Florence Music School Orchesfra, Pan - American, Library Page, Tennis, Bas- kefball, Chimes, Sr. Day Commiffee. Miss Cole, pardon my ig- norance. Kaplan, Rufh I-lunfer Traffic, Sfunfs, Leaders, Bas- kefball, Tennis, Library, Of- fice, Page, Felfer Liferary, Record Business Sfaff, Sef- flemenf, Jr. Sr. Pariy Com- miHee, Sr. Arisfa. Her books are like a cafe- feria-open all nighf. Hyrkin, Adele M. Barnard College 6. O. Sfore, Library, Traf- fic, Tennis, Posfure, Felfer Liferary, Sfunfs, Beau Brum- mel, Dramafic, Sefflemenf Club. She oughf fo be a good hisfory sfudenf - fond gf dafes. John, Edna R. Euclid Business School Library, Traffic, Lunch Room Squad. She will make a model wife. For she'll keep quief all her life. Kahn, Sylvia N. Y. U. Glee, Music Appreciafion, Traffic, Bank R-ep., Swim- ming, Chimes. Her descripfion is complefe wifh iusf one word, and fhaf is swee+. Kamps, Kafhryn Business School Tennis, Newman Club. She's noi like an ocean- hasn'1' any waves. Ka plan, Rosalind Business Traffic, Lunchroom Squad, Sfunfs, Beau Brummel, Pos- fer, Record and Blue and Gold Typisf. We wonder if her arfisfic abilify accounfs for fhose perfeci' ouflines in sfen. Keegan, Virginia I-lunfer Baskefball, Tennis, Swimming, Leaders, Sefflemenf, Sci- ence, Lafin, Class Rep., V. Rep., Traffic, Office l-lelp, Sfunfs, Record. lnferesfed in afhlefics, or should we have said afh- lefes? Kehoe, Minnie E. Business School Newman, Tennis, Swimming, Traffic, Library. ln Eco she learned fhe law of demand. We piiy fhe fellow who gefs her hand. Koch, Irene Brooklyn College Traffic Squad, General Of- fice, Baskefball Club, Ten- nis Club, Volley Ball Club, Sefflemenf Club, Skefch Club. ln good nafur-e she abounds 'ro knock her we have no grounds. Kriefe, Ma rgaref Business School Swimming Club, Newman Club. So quief! Maybe if's love! Lamos, Helen Business Swimming Club, Baskefball, Newman Club, Record. She wasn r biffen wifh fhe Seniorifis bug. Llchfensfein, Sylvia Cam-era Club, French Club, Science Club, Library Page, Traffic Squad, Lunch Squad, Sefflemeni Sfunf Commif- fee, Program Commiffee. Jusi an old fashioned girl. lShe sfill blushes.l Llpchifz, Florence Disregard fhaf look of so- phisficafion and call her Fagie. Kober, Irene l-lousekeeper, Newman, Lal'- in Play, Glee, Fashion Show. Likes 'ro work in fhe kifchen Household arfs have broughf her fame, Plain fo see she's simply ifchin' To change her maiden name. Korenvaes, Rifa College Traffic Squad, D'ama'ric So- ciefy, French Club, Miss Wrigh+'s Office, Vice-Presi- denf, Press Club, Wrifer's Club, Poefs Corner. Never kicks anybody--her shoes are Cowards. Lamhuf, Helen College Hockey, Tennis, Science, Camera, Sfunfs, Sefflemem' lf's foo bad Ziegfield died Now she can'f be glorified. Levine, Miriam Nurses Traning Lafin, Science, German, lvlafh Clubs, Library Page. Lunch and Traffic Squad, Sfunfs, Acfive Sefflemenf, Swimming, Posfure, Jr. Ar- isfa. When b'ains rained she musf have been oufside wiih a barrel. Lipper, Vicioria New Yok Universiiy Skefch Club, Sfurrfs, Swim- ming, Tennis. You didn'f ger in for pref- fiesf buf we Think you're 'rhe fops. l-lunfer College Dramafic Sociefy, Liferary Sfaff Blue and Gold, Glee Club, Swimming Club, Beau Brummel, Chimes, Library Page, Office Page, Poe+'s Corner, Traffic Squad. A shepherdess-gefs eve'y- body's goaf. Macro, Viola French Club, Sec., Treas. Agora, Lafin Club, Drama- fic Soc., Beau Brummel, Mu- sic Appreciafion, Tennis, Sef- flemenf, Traffic Squad, Of- fice Page. Viola's always making faces Especially in public places. Mallison, Beryl Praff lnsfifufe Traffic Squad, Baskefball, Volley Ball, Cffice Seffle- menf. She always did like sunshine -maybe fhaf accounfs for her disposifion Maringola, Margaref Business Tennis, Baskefball, Swimming, Newman Club, Class Rep., Vice Rep., Glee Club. Some girls have brillianf minds-she has brillianf nail polish. Masi, Elsie Brooklyn Hospifal Leaders, Felfer Li+., Baskef- ball, Volleyball. Refined like I4 caraf gold. McClary, Mary Jane Praff Blue and Gold Arf Sfaff, Posfer Club. A direcf descendanf of Henry Clay, We wonder whaf made her head fhaf way. Mendelsohn, Henrieffa Brooklyn Felfer Liferary, Science, Sef- flemenf, Tennis, Hockey, Bas- kefball, Library, Sfunfs, Of- fice Dufy, Traffic. Here's a girl af whom we can'f laugh, Affer all she made if in fhree and one-half. Magagnos, Doroihea Business Tennis, Traffic Squad, Red Cross, Bank Rep., Vice Rep. Vice Pres. of Division, Head of Decorafion Commiffee, Jr. Sr. Parfy, Sfunf Cos- fumes. Preffy as a picfure. Mammano, Grace Newman, Tennis, Traffic Squad, Pan-American, Sef- flemenf. Geomefy Sfudenf -Never gefs fhe righf angle fo anyfhing. Marfin, Philomena Business School Traffic Squad. Sh, Sh, don'+ make so much noise. McAleavey, Beffy Nurse's Training School Baskefball, Sfunfs, Newman, Record, Sr. Arisfa, Rep. and Vice Rep. of Class, Leaders, Office, Biology Squad, Traf- fic Squad. Very versafile, falks wifh bofh hands. McDonald, Sheila E. N. Y. U. Glee Club, Founder of Mu- sic App. Club, Camera, Sef- flemenf, Traffic, Library Page, Chimes, House- keeper. My pal, Lily Pons. Miller, Avis Brooklyn Hockey, Lafin Club. ln school, quief and shy. Oufside? Oh, My! Molloy, Margaret Brooklyn Sr. Arisfa, Blue and Gold, Newman, Record, Traffic, Traffic, P. T. Capfain. Office Page, Class Rep., Lafin, Tennis, Swimming, Posfure, Baskefball, Jr. Sr. Parfy Com., Knock Com., Wrifers, Sefflemenf. As sweef as she looks and +haf's saying somefhing. Moskowifz, Edna Brooklyn Tennis, Swimming, Lafin, Blue and Gold, Dramafic, Chimes, Sfunfs, Jr. Sr. Arisfa, Sefflemenf Sec.,- Treas., Traffic, Office Dufy, Biology Office. A E. M. means excellenf mind. Norcom, Mary E. Fiske Universify Tennis, Swimming, Leaders, Generally speaking, Mary is generally speaking. O'Donnell, Maureen Business Newman. Ta fa fa fa fa-Presenfing- fhe lrish. Osfheimer, Violef Nurse's Training Science, Tennis, Traffic Posf. A fufure nurse-Maybe she wanfs fo improve fhe 'rech- nique of holding hands. Pascal, Pearl l-lunfer Chimes,' Ol-ee Club, Li- brary, Tennis, French, Traffic, Science, Bank, Blue and Gold, Camera, Spanish, Sefflemenf, Sfunfs, Music Concerf, Parfy Com. I like my curls and l like foys, Buf mosf of all I like The boys. Moore, Rufh Fashion Academy Tennis, French, Riding, Bank Rep., I-lousekeeper, Vice Rep. I like me, l like me, l'm wild abouf myself. New. Rufh Damrosch lnsfifufe Orchesfra, Chimes, Ten- nis, Music App., Science, Trio Quarfeffe. Also musically inclined- wanfs fo know whaf righf Kafe Smifh has fo sing l feel like a feafher in fhe breeze. Occhiogrosso, Angelina l-lunfer French, Camera, Newman, Lib'ary, Traffic, Sefflemenf. Does homework wifh fhe radio, Are you bored all by your- self? Olenick, Efhel Brooklyn Dancing, Tennis, Pan-Ameri- can, Sci-ence, Traffic, Chief Typisf for fhe Record. From Efhel fhere is hardly a peep, Buf sfill wafer fhey say runs deep. Panfaleo, Anna Nurse's Training School Tennis, l-lousekeeper, Bank Rep. If silence is a producf, Then Anna has a surplus. Peferson, Gerfrude C. F. Young School Swimming, Tennis, German. Newman, Traffic, Class Rep.. Secrefary. A quief girl lwhen she sleeps.l Perslcy, Kafe Business Office Page, Pan-American, Traffic, Jr. Sr. Parfy Com., Music Page. The bufferfly who emerges from her cocoon affer school. Praff, Marion Mounf l-lolyoke Blue and Gold, Record, Jr. Sr. Arisfa, Office Page, Third Year Lafin Medal, Tennis, Sefflemenf, Jr. Sr. Parfy Corn. For furfher references con- sulf fhe biographies of fa, mous women. Quinn, Winifred Praff lnsfifufe Class Rep., Sec.-Treas. of Division, Capfain on Lunch- eon Squad, Leaders, Tennis, Baskefball, Newman. She and Barbara l-luffon lbofh connecfed wifh fhe 5 and 'IO.l Rauch, Adele Business Traffic Squad, Library Page, Ol-ee Club, Chimes, Ten- nis, Vice. Pres. of French Club, Music Proiecf Com., Rep. fo Music Convenfion. The answer fo a l'eacher's prayer. Reilerf, Blanche Brooklyn College Leaders', Orchesfra, Seffle- menf, Traffic Posf P. T., Office Page. l-lere's one for Ripley- She's a nafural blonde. Renn, Olga Business School Orch., lnsfrumenfal Ouar- feffe, Chimes, Tennis, Bas- kef Ball Club, Volley Ball Club, Traffic Posf, Music Secrefary. The long arm-for volley ball and fhe bull fiddle. Poppe, Anna Nurse's Training Sr. Arisfa, Newman, Mimeo- graphing Sfaff, Vice Rep. Sefflemenf, Biology Squad. Going fo be a nurse-Hope you're successful in all your underfakings. Quasha, Phyllis Traphagen Tennis, Traffic, Sfunfs, Chimes, Cosfume Ward- robe. She believes fhaf a girl who does homework wifh a smile is a hypocrife. Radford, Mildred Traphagan School of Design Book Worm, Junior Arisfa, Blue and Gold Arf Sfaff, Pan-Ameican Club, Senior Arisfa, Tennis, Sfunfs, Sef- 'rlemenf Work, Office Page, Class Officer 3 ferms. lf clofhes were dynamife she would be confinually blowing up. Reardon, Josephine Traffic Squad, l-lousekeeper. l-lasn'f much fo say buf sh-e's O.K. anyway. Reiswig, lrene L. Wyckoff l-leighfs Training School for Nurses Baskefball Club, Sfunfs, Sef- flemenf Club. My Sophisficafed Lady- She's as lovely as The song. song. Rhein, Frances Arf Academy Book Worm, Pan-American Sec., Blue and Gold Arf Sfaff, Tennis, Vice-Rep. Like ia cigareffe-a frue companion. Rogers, Frances Edifor-in-Chief Blue and College Gold, Record, Jr. and Sr. Arisfa, Felfer Liferary, Office Page, French Club, Bank Rep., V. Rep., Beau Brum- mel, Sfunfs, Knock Commif- fee. An uncuf cameo. Sanders, Esfelle Hunfer Tennis, Baskefball, Volley, Traffic Squad, .S unior-Senior Parfy, Camera Club. Differenf from mosf women, doesn r falk much. Schackiff, Jean College Tennis, Swimming, Leader's, French, Pan-American, Traf- fic, Wardrobe Dufy, Bank Rep. P. T., Office Page. A professional afhlefe-of fhe fongue. Schipani, Philomena V. Training School for Jour- nalism. l-lockey, Baskefball, New- man, Record. A promising sfudenf-always promising fo do beffer. Schnepf, Eleanor Business Rep. of Record, Typwrifing Squad for Record. Quesfions don'f bofher her- lf's fhe answers. Schwarfz, Rose Business Hockey, Trahfic, Wrifers, Tennis, Class Sec., House- keeper, Sefflemenf. l-ler face is her forfune and if runs info a nice figure. Rubensfein, Enid Brooklyn College Press Club, Camera, French Club, Library Page, Traffic Squad, Baskefball Club, Busi- ness Sfaff Blue and Gold, Business Sfaff Record, Office Page. Journalisfic Aim-Sob Sisfer for fhe Daily News. Saul, Carol Nurse's Training Pr-es. Pan-American Club, Science, Library Page, Traf- fic Squad, Class Rep., Hock- ey, Swimming, Tennis, Bas- kefball, Sfunfs, Jr.-Sr. Parfy. I-lisfory dafes are so con- fusing, Ofher clafes are so amusing. Schilling, Ru+h Hunfer Music Page, Tennis, Swim- ming, Camera, Traffic Squad. Recommended: Grape nufs and Ovalfine. Schneider, Anifa Business Library Page, Science, Traf- fic, Tennis, Vice-Rep., Jr.-Sr. Parfy Com. She hasn'f sfopped worrying abouf her Eco-'rhe feeling was so good. Sch nier, Miriam Science, Skefch, Baskef Ball, Swimming, Traffic. lf's a good fhing she does- n'f live in Sweden. She doesn'f believe in coop- erafion. Sheridan, Angela Wells College Tennis, Traffic, Baskefball. Business firsf if if doesn'f inferfere wifh pleasure. Sherman, Doris Brooklyn Felfer Liferary, Blue and Gold, French. Baskefball, Dramafics Sociefy, Traffic, Sfunfs, Sefflemenf, Beau Brummel, Knock Com. You have many virfues, Of course we know fwog There's sornefhing 'ro whaf And somefhing fo whaf you you say, do. Silversfein, Miriam Brooklyn Camera, French, Traffic, Li- brary Page. Science, Lunch Squad, Sefflernenf Sfunf Com., Program Com. She says she eafs a lof- Lord knows where if goes. Spina, Marie Sf. Johns Traffic. We wonder if she's a +ailor's daughfer? She's always cufiing. Sfeichel, Marion Brooklyn Lafin, Tennis, Hockey, Li- brary Page, Traffic, Jr.-Sr. Parfy Com. Has a hearf like a good hofel, There's room for everybody. Sferman, Augusfa M. Business College Posfure, Life'ary Sfrollers, Office, Traffic. Name any page in The his- fory book and she'll quofe direcily from if. Sullivan, Ida E. Business Orch., Lunch Room Squad. Like Eins+ein's Theory we can'+ undersfand her. Shimizer, Rose Marie Si Brooklyn Evening Chimes. You'll be O.K. when you grow up. monofsky, AnneH'e B'ooklyn Evening Tennis, Baskefball, Science, Camera, Glee Club, Dra- mafics, Beau Brummel, Sef- flemenf, Basemenf Traflic, Jr.-Sr. Parry Com., Class Rep., Sfunfs, Bank. She's so fough she eafs lvlarshmallows raw. Snoke, Marfha Pace lnsfifufe Tennis, Swimming. How could one person do so much? Sfeini, Esfher Brooklyn Div. Treas., Class Rep., Traffic, Tennis, Agora, Pan- Amer., Camera, Bus. Sfaff of Record. She wasn r vofecl cu'res+ buf we know whose cu+es1 she is. Sfrodf, Winifred Brooklyn Junior Arisfa, Lafin, Posfure Club. Sfrodf is fhe quief sorf, Liffle speech buf much fhoughf. Tamburo, Lucy R. Long Island Universify Tennis, Glee, Newman, Chimes, Bank Rep., Class Secrefary, Sefflemenf Club, Locker Room. Preferred-buf noi' blonde. Tampellini, Aurora Brooklyn College Leade's, Swimming, Baskef- ball, Tennis, Science, Sfunfs, Fiesfa, Lafin, Pan-American, Sefflemenf, Traffic Squad, Library and Office Page, V. Rep. Like Coca-Cola-refreshing. Toner, Margarei' Hunfer College Leaders, Baskefball, Newman Club, Library Page, Traffic Squad. If sfill wafers run deep someone is sure fo drown. Vogel, Sylvia New York Universify 'Chimes, Glee Club, Sci- enc-e, Press, Tennis, Swim- ming, Traffic Squad. Nof lvlinniehaha buf Sylvia Siggle Giggle. Walsh, Mary V. Business School Glee Club, Chimes,' Li- brary Page. Anofher one of fhese people who like fo sing-Lily Pons and Rosa Ponselle had bef- fer refire. Welch, Doro'l'hy Long Island Universify Traffic Squad, Library Page. Any relafion fo fhe grape juice people. Werner, AnneH'e Heffley's Business School Swimming Club, Tennis Club. I don'f ask anyfhing for my- self buf please dear Lord send my fafher a son-in-law. X, Thompson, Frederica Business School Tennis, Traffic, Swimming. We had fo have somefhin new, Up here in Girls' High: So Freddie sfarfed fruckin'. Toubin, Berlha Business Orch-esfra, Baskefball, Vice Rep., Bank Rep., Housekeep- er. Where was Moses when fhe lighfs wenf ouf? Vogler, Ainne Business Class Rep. and Vice Rep., Secrefary of G. O .Sfore. Baskefball, Tennis, Traffic, Pres. Camera Club, New- man Club, Jr.-Sr. Arisfa, Office Pag-e. The spice of life, The salf on earfh, Are nofhing compared To whaf she's worfh. Washingfon, Naomi J. Brooklyn College Leaders, Tennis, Swimming, Baskefball, Dramafic Sociefy. Thaf's fhe spirif, Washing- fon. Weinsfock, Esfher Business College. Tennis, Hockey, Dresser, De- bafing, Science, Traffic Squad, Library Page. Whea r+y, Helen Business School Baskefball. A walking adverfisemenf for Camay. Whife, Genevieve Hunfer College Sec.-Treas. Dresser Debafing, Pres. Dresser Debafing, Chimes of Normandy, Ten- nis, Baskefball, Traffic Squad, Glee Club, Music Educafors Convenfion. She's gof wisdom-in her foolh. Wieman, Alfreda Nurses Training School Swimming, Baskefball, Valley Ball, Tennis, Leaders Club, Traffic Squad. She spends one period every day laughing ai fhe freshies. Williams, Vera Julliard lnsfifufe of Music Music App. Club, Library Service Page. She passed everyfhing while going lo school-she walked so fasf. Wolf, Lillian Hunfer. Tennis, Leaders Club, Baskefball, Eelfer Liferary, Sfunfs, Traffic Squad, Lib- rary Page, Business Siaff of Record, Senior Arisia, Vice Rep., Sec.-Treas., Sefilemenf. Oughl' fo sell real esiale- knows lofs. W fe Glad s Y I Business. Slfunfs, Class Rep., Traffic Squad, Beau Brummel, Usher for Chimes, Seffle- menf Plays, Housekeeper, Liferary Sirollers, Dramafic Sociefy, Tennis, Swimming. If she wanfs io go fo Heaven, To parlake of all ifs joys, She had befrer fhink more of fhe Lord, Than she does of fhe boys. Zager, Sarah Brooklyn Evening College Housekeeper, Pan-American Club, Traffic Squad, Lunch Squad. Wha+'s mine is mine: whal's yours is mine. Whife, Marion Kafherine Gibbs School She'll give lhe key fo her hearf and lhen change fhe lock. Williams, Dorofhy Business Hockey, Baskefball. lnferesfed in afhlefics - aren'l' you? Wolfe. Emma Ari Page, Orchesfra, Library Page, Bank Rep., Traffic Squad, Biology Page, Baskei- ball, Hockey, Class Rep. and Vice Rep. Sfunfs, Glee Club. Sings Carmen - She'll be carmien round fhe mounfain when she comes. Woods, Eleanor wk Tennis, Swimming, Traffic Squad, Baskefball, House- keeper, Library Service Page, Posfure Club, Chimes. Gravify has no effecl' on her nose. Yuder, Helen Hunfer Posfure, Tennis, School Gar- den and Nafure Club, Biol- ogy Squad, Traffic Squad. Sefilemenf, Sfunis. She fhinks she's a wil'-she's only half wrong. Zeidner, Bernice Nurses Training Lafin Club, Swimming Club. Traffic Squad, Sefflemenf, Sfunls. Sings like a lark -- lsn'l' il fime for 'rhe birds fo mig- rafe? Newman.. Malh., Pos+ure Zeiger, Evelyn Nurses Training Orchesira, Leaders Club, Swimming, Posfure, Traffic Squad, Library Page. Whal' has The rrolley car +ha+ Boys! Girls High hasn'+- f W .sr wsu S 1 l Zlofkowski, Regina Business Traffic, Lunch Room Squad Talk is cheap-she doesnf like cheap lhings. Class Celebrities Wi++ies+ L , Class Cui-up ,s,,,,.. Mosf Vivid Personalily ,,,,,,. Class Baby . ,,ss Teacher's Pei , , ,,,,,...,... ., Mos? Likely To Succeed Mosi Talenred ., H ,,,s,.ssssssss Biggesr Bluiier , Frnendliesr ,, s.., H Possessor of lhe Besl Class Spiril Class Polilician ,,,,,.., ,,,.,.........,,,,,,, , , Cu+es+ we ,, L ,L Typical Girl Senior , Mosf Sfudious ., ,.,,,,,. ..sss.ss H Mos? Likely To Be Married First, , , Besf Baskelball Player Bes+ Tennis Player ..sssssYsssss Class Swimmer ,,s,s,.,,..,,,,s Class Hockey Player ,..., Mosr Sarcaslic .,,... L .Evelyn Abramowilz ,,,,,,,,Eleanor Flagg , ,,,, ,Muriel Terry . ,, ,,,,.. Pearl Pascal , , ,,.Violel' Li'H'le L ,,,w Marion PraH Luana de la Pauline ,L...ssssi ess.....Viola Macro .,,,i,..,.....Lucille LOH L L ss... Annefre Simonoisky .,..,....Lillian Goldsiein .Dororhy Magagnos . ..... Virginia Keegan .. .... Winifred Slrodl ,,AnneHe Werner , ,,ss . .,.....,. Pauline' Bauer , ,ii... Adelaide Bornmann ,,,,,,......... June Birkins , ,,,s ..... M argarel' Conlon .,..,,,.....,.w....l-lelen Yuder +' f wx.: Q A 57 , -:- AUTCGRAPI-IS -:- , , by MWWW- ' X U ' K ' . 1 E ' ' . if .fy 5 Wu g ?zAv'f f wJY M Fry 1, , . W MW if - H 9 my :QM ,.A Ai, Wir .f,P ' ' - l. 1 , .ff . IQQ ,V 5. P V ,7 it W' fp fy f X, , W ,fj W . JV-Q x sf' '- 4 ,L . I . Q' .Vial lfllw H. u j . L.. hs- glh., s lx- i QYJJ5 l!A:,vf:- ' AA . Q Q U t V , Y Yr f M H Q - A 1 'Q- E if v 2 fi an ad' Dnuxs l n c I cl e n t JANE WORONOCK, Grade Five She was very ill. l-ler young life, in facf, was in serious danger. Medicine was boughf and aclmi-nisfered. l-lor mofher had suddenly become grave and whife, and her sisfers were like noisy elves. unexpecfedly ordered by some high aufhorify fo be sfaid and mafure. She. herself. had losf her vifalify and desired nofhing buf resf. and freedom from fhe pain fo which she was so unaccusfomed. She musf fighf back, said fhe docfor. Yes, fhey all knew fhaf. She was alone now. How she feared deafh-and yef she did nof wish fo live eifher! She could nof sfand fhe pain any longer. Her mofher had genfly closed fhe door, praying 'rhaf she would sleep for half an hour. She looked around her, af fhe pussy-willo-w free oufside fhe window and fhe sun genfly sfroking fhe c-eiling. She was nof surprised when on every wall, shadows seemed fo form figures which she easily recognized. She saw a farm, wide acres covered wifh narrow rows of corn, and a boy carrying wafer from a disfainf well. As he came info fhe foreground she knew insfincfively fhaf he was foo small fo be carrying fhose heavy pails and she whispered, Le'r me help you. Then, her mofher was fhere, who felf her head and fip-foed ouf puzzled and worried. The show con- finued. She suffered while he was misfreafed by fhe people who owned fhe beaufiful farm. and burned wifh ioy when he decided fo leave. She wafched him sef ouf down fhe counfry .road and fraverse long miles. He slepf in a railway shack and af down moved on. seeking a cify. In fhe evening he reached New York, and she saw 'rhe buildings as 'rhey seemed fo him-'rumbling piles of bricks ferrifying and malicious. She perc-eived also. fhe hurrying people, all of whom seemed fo be heading for him, frying fo knock him down. She was hauinfed by his face. pleading and 'rerrified and she fossed in her bed powerless. Then fhe picfures disappeared for a minufe and iusf as swiffly fhey were fhere again. She viewed a black and yellow faxicab, racing down a sfreef, hurfling fowards fhe boy. He was lying fhere now, his body clinging pafhefically fo fhe wef asphalf. She had seen him as he was hif by fhe vehicle, buf somehow her mind insisfed fhaf he had died of fear and had nof been harmed af all by fhe wheels of fhai' flambuoyanf monsfer. Then, when he was lying in fhe morgue, a Gypsy enfered, looking for a losf husband. She wenf over The sheef-covered figure of The child. fook one of his lifeless hands in her own chubby ones and looking af fhe palm said. And such a long life-line foo. Thai' was all. He was foo young fo die. He should have lived. And, she iusf a few momenfs ago had fhoughf of deafh as beaufiful and a means of escape. How could she? Why should she? lf was weak of her fo be ferrified of life as he had been of fhaf car. She iusf could nof give up! When fhe docfor came. in 'rhe evening, he could nof unclersfancl fhe change which had come over his pafienf. The medicine was quickly and eagerly swallowed. Her sisi-ers began fo be normal. Yes, fhe world was a greaf place for everyone. 49 H I s l. I f e EDITH KIMMEL, Grade Eighl' N fhe early hours of a dreary morning, a lean young man wifh a worried expression on his face, was rummaging fhe drawers of a dilapidafed. old bureau. in a fufile search for a shirf. The one opporfunify has come al' lasf, and no half-way decenf shirfl he muffered. Twenfy-five minufes lafer, he was waifing in fhe oufer office of a yarn manu- facfurer and gazing infenfly on a comely young sfenographer who was pounding away on a fypewrifer. His eyes followed many obiecfs in fhe room-a large graph on 'rhe wall, neafly marked in red ink, a chair, wifh a conspicuous crack in ifs middle, fhe sombre gray of a long filing cabinef, and a poor copy of a nafure scene on a calendar from fhe Municipal Bank. Yes-his eyes were surely wander- ing and drinking fhis all in: buf oh, how sfafionary his mind was, cenfered on 'rhaf one fhoughf which had been racing 'rhrough his brain ever since his uncle had fold him fhaf he had recommended him fo a friend of his, and perhaps- A brisk, energefic-looking man, handed fhe secrefary a nofe. She slowly read if, and fhen half-apologefically mumbled fo our hero wifhouf fhe half-way decenf shirf, fhaf Mr. Morris was sorry, buf The posifion of shipping clerk had already been filled. He wearily puf on his coaf, which had seen many a season, and plodded homeward. This wenf on for quife awhile, unfil finally he gof a iob in Ellery Sfreef. lf was in a shop where finishing work on cloaks and suifs was done. ln fhis sweaf shop, he had fo work from six a.m. fo seven p.m. wifh fiffeen or fwenfy minufes for lunch, if he had any. ln fhe beginning, he felf very awkward in 'lhis sfuffy fenemenf room, crowded in wifh all kinds of people, of all ages. Fiffeen worked in his room. ln fhe busy season, somefimes he made as much as seven or seven- fiffy in one week! A forfunel Then he could eaf smoked fish or have 'lea wifh his meals for a few days! Yel' when he did make fha? regal salary, he gave prac- fically all of if fo his mofher. He had fo hurry home. Nighf classes would begin in fwo hours. He wormed his way fhrough fhe furbulenf crowds. An elderly woman wifh a worn shawl wrapped over her sheifel lwigl was bargaining wifh a small Jew, who grew quife alarmed when she fhreafened fo buy her fish on fhe nexf pushcarf if he wouldn'f reduce his price. Slovenly-dressed children played noisily in fhe guHers and dodged in and ouf affer fhe cars had given fheir warning, a long and loud blow from fheir horns. As he reached fhe corner of Cherry Sfreef, he saw, in her cusfomary spof, fhe Apple Annie of Easf New York, old and pafienf Baba lgrandmofherl, only she sold fhaf oily Turkish halava candy which fasfed simila.r fo sfraw affer a few bifes. However, he was fond of if, and sorry for her, so he pressed a sweafy nickel in her palm and puf fhe small package in his coaf pockef. He walked a few sfeps. The package fell ouf, and fhe confenfs were sfrewn all over fhe burning pavemenf. He had forgoffen fo fix fhe lining of his pockef: yef he knew he wouldn'f fix if, when he gof home. He had 'threaded 50 so many needles. He had basfed so many hems. As he Trudged up The bare sTeps, sTumbling now and Then, because The halls were so poorly liT, The various friendly odors of food enTered his nosTrils- gafiITa fish from Mrs. Goldberg's kiTchen, home made lukshen lnoodlel soup of Mrs. Berger, and The pleasanT aroma of dahuchTer leber lchopped liverl coming from The direcTion of his own door. He laid a heavy hand on The door-knob, and as The door squeaked back inTo iTs original place, his moTher, a wan, Tired- looking woman of abouT forTy-five, wiTh large red hands, greeTed him, and his hearT was lighT. AfTer The few supper dishes were clea.red away, he saT in his shirT-sleeves on The fire escape Trying To find some relief from The hea+ of The Tenemenf ouT There. He was Too weary To go To nighT school. His eyes were sunken in, a greaT weighT was on his mind, and he saT There waiTing paTienTly for his faTher, a poor Jewish peddler, To reTurn. In TifTeen minufes, he had dozed off, alThough he had Tried so hard To sTay awake. He had To make a reporT on The social background of Russia in The laTe nineTeenTh cenTury and he should have gone To The Public Library To geT ouT The book ThaT his insTrucTor had recommended, DosTeovski's Crime and PunishmenT. The racking cough of his consumpfive moTher and The clicking of The door awoke him. He arose wearily, sTifF from The posiTion he had remained in so long. Slowly he shuffled in The direcTion of his modesT room, undressed, plopped inTo bed, and dreamed of The gheTTo of middle ages--The gheTTo, which sTill enclosed his spiriT, and debarred his desire for happiness-The happiness which should be The birThrighT of everyone AT The crack of dawn, he aroused himself, and once more his life had begun. o lmpression The spicy flavor of old-fashioned gingerbread-The subTle fragrance of gar- denias-The sighT of a kiTTen Trying To climb The sTairs-The long, lasTing sTrains of a Hawaiian guiTar-The cool, smooTh feeling of weT clay under my feeT-The sofT drizzle of a spring shower againsT my face-The TempTing aroma of frankfurTers roasTed in The open-The fasT, romanTic rhyThm of Spanish music-The soffness of a pine needle bed-The TempTing sourness of green apples. i I , 7 y ZITA CHESI, Grade: Six E I 2 l H - U . '67 5l Lavender, l-lollyhock, and Black-eyed Susan MARION PRATT, Grade Eigl-1+ HE brighf gold flames of fhe fire on fhe hearfh lif up fhe faces of 'rhe fhree old ladies who sal' around if. The flickering flames casl' dancing lighfs on old- fashioned furnifure, on rag rugs so 'finely worked fhaf you would suspecf fhaf one of fhe old ladies had made fhem. On fhe manfel shelf sfood an old French clock whose dial was like a wise face fhaf had seen much of life. One old lady leaned forward fo pick up her kniffing. She grunfed as she leaned for- ward, for she was pleasanfly plump and bending over was nof her favorife pasfime. As she benf, fhe fire lif up fhe silvery-gray of her hair and her merry, wrinkled face. Brown eyes like liffle amber beads sparkled wifh quief humor. She refrieved her kniffing and furned fo look af her companions, fhe lasf of her school friends. On her leff saf Mrs. Elizabefh Bedford. a grass-widow. l-ler hair was fhe mag- nificenf whife produced only by years of diligenf care. She wore a black velvefl dress which was, perhaps, a liffle ouf of place againsl' fhe homely furnifure of fhe liffle room, yef which sef off her queenly figure fo greaf advanfage. Af her fhroaf lay a sfring of pearls which broughf a fainf finge of envy info fhe merry brown eyes of fhe liH'le sfouf lady. She furned from fhem and her eyes resfed on her hosfess, a liflle, slim woman in a soff, violef silk who held in her hand a lavender sachef. Genfle blue eyes dreamed of fender secrefs beneafh her silver hair. The plump lady smiled fenderly, fhen clanked her needles 'rogefherz Well, Elizabefhf' she began, how wags fhe world wifh you? l've seen your name offen in fhe sociefy nofes lafely, buf very liffle of you. l'm having a perfecfly splendid winfer, Mary dear, responded Elizabefh. l've been sfudying child psychology you know under 'rhe mosf marvelous feacherl Perhaps you've heard of her? l-ler name is Miss Marfin. She suggesfs fhaf we each fake an orphan and fry ouf her fheories on him. l so fhoroughly believe in her fhaf l should be almosf fempfed fo fry if if l knew whaf fhe bufler would say fo having a boy knocking over 'rhe furnifune and such. I simply couldn'f spare Gregory. l-le's so efficienf and was such a help wifh George when he was drunk. lGeorge was my fhird husband, you remember.l The liffle lady in violef clasped her fhin hands fighfly fogefher. lf would be so lovely fo adopf a sweef, li'Hle boy, she sighed, reverfing fo fhe imporfanl' 52 Topic. l've oTTen ThoughT oT iT, buT I never could Tind The courage. I was so aTraid he mighT Turn ouT wrongly, and iT would break my hearT. The plump lady Turned Toward The Tire To hide her smile aT The ThoughT oT whaT a boy would do To Lucy's soTT silk pillows, of how he would TormenT her cherished Furball. Furball was, oT course, The MaITese caT, who mighT have been a Tur ball once buT was now a nasTy-Tempered beasT who snarled when anyone aTTempTed To siT down in his chair, which was cer+ainly The mosT comTorTable in The room. As Mary saT Thus, EIizabeTh leaned over and Took her kniH'ing Trom her lap. WhaT an inTeresTing sTiTchl she exclaimed. How do you do IT? I once Tried To Take up kniTTing buT Robe.rT lThaT was my second husband! declared' iT made him nervous To see The needles moving. He was a very iumpy man. He couldn'T endure The sighT of a ,pendulum swinging back and TorTh so I had To geT rid of my beauTiTul grandTaTher's clock. IT was an heirloom Trom Jim's side oT The Tamily. SomeTimes I wonder iT iT was ThaT TacT ThaT iT had belonged To my TirsT husband ThaT made RoberT dislike ThaT clock so. His nerves were plenTy sTrong enough To sTand The exciTemenT oT waTching a prize-TighT, a horrid sporT, by The way. Yes, isn'T iT? agreed Lucy. So bruTal and bloody! Mary laughed. IT you could see my grandson, Tommy, aTTer a TooTbaII game, you would Think prize-TighTing a mild sporT, she said. He's always coming home minus a TronT TooTh or wiTh his knees looking as Though They had been Through a meaT-chopper. He's quiTe a clever liTTle 'fellow Though, and capTain of The Team. He reminds me of Fanny PeTer's son who was killed in The war. Poor Fanny! She was so wrapped up in The boy and iT was such a shock To her. Yes, agreed Lucy. War is a horrible Thing. I really believe ThaT Fanny died oT grief alThough The docTors did say iT was hearT-TroubIe. IT seems sTrange To Think of our old 'Friends dead, mused ElizabeTh. Such good Times we had back in The old school! Remember The Time you came To school in your besT silk parTy dress and Johnny Henderson pushed you inTo a mud-puddle? asked Mary. I can see you now chasing down Oak Avenue aTTer him while all The boys sTood along The sidewalk and laughed aT you. I can even remember some oT The names They called you. Never mind ThaT, broke in ElizabeTh hasTily. Besides I goT back aT Johnny. There was a Time when he would have given The world Tor a word Trom me, and I didn'T give iT. Remember how he used To sTand ouTside meeTing-house and beg To walk home wiTh you and how you Tlounced by and Took Ed insTead? asked Lucy. No one ever would walk home wiTh me, Mary laughed. The boys were all aTraid ThaT I would say someThing perTecTly d.readTul abouT Them aTTerwards ThaT They'd never be able To live down. Old memories swepT over The Three like a cloud scenTed wiTh rose leaves. Lucy remember a cerTain Tall young man who had wriTTen verses To Lucy. A man who had loved The scenT of lavender. A man who had been so weak, so despicable and yeT so lovable! ElizabeTh looked inTo The Tire and saw hen youTh, 53 blasfed by an arranged marriage, saw beauTiful houses, gorgeous counTry places and always herself everlasTingly searching for a happiness sTill unfound. Mary saw in The fire, conTenTmenT, a loved husband. children's happy faces. As she looked. The French clock chimed and she sTarTed. Half-pasT Tive! she exclaimed. Lucy, I will have To go. l'm having dinner wiTh my daughTer-in-law and l'm To mind The baby while she and John go ouT. l musT go Too, said ElizabeTh. l'm going To hear Josef Lhevinne TonighT and l musT dress. The Three rose and wenT ouT The door, leaving The Tire To die inTo glowing embers on The hearTh. ESTELLE MILLER, Grade Six. - Spring Spring is associaTed wiTh many Things in my mind: The muffled Thuds and Thwacks of rugs being beaTen: The sooThing genTleness of a refreshing April shower followed by The disfurbing Tickling of a coming sneeze TogeTher wiTh Tearing eyes and a running nose: The delicaTe inquisiTiveness of a welcomed crocus: The balmy earThy odor afTer a warm rain: The .resounding slam of a screen door: The adverTisemenTs of facial and body Tonics: The peneTraTing clinging odor of camphor moTh balls: The semi-TarT yeT luscious smooThness of The season's T'irsT sTrawberry: The echoing empTiness of rugless rooms. - Impressions The frighTening sharpness of long Tingernails: The sofT silkiness of clean. washed hair: The safiny smooThness of baby skin: The cheerful whisTle of a Train: The shimmering coolness of iello: The delighfful cooing and gurgling of a baby: The sofT caress of a summer breeze: The breaTh-Taking blasT of a winTer wind: The ex- hilar-aTing feeling one has when sleigh riding: The securiTy of an open Tireplace during winTer snows: The luxurious comTorT of cool sheeTs on a sofT bed afTer a hard day's work: The uTTer peacefuln-ess one feels when Thhe sunlighT sTreams inTo The bedroom in The morning: The dismal bleakness of a rainy winTer's day: The ridiculous rush of Thronging mulTiTudes in The business secTions: The empTiness of everyone's ulTimaTe goal in life. THELMA EHRLICH, Grade Six 54 The Brown Box EDITH SOHREIBER, Grade Seven STAND on The corner of Bedford Avenue and Sullivan Place some laTe winTer nighT, and waTch The lighTs coming down The hill and around The curve by EbbeTT's Field, noThing buT lighTs on The black slope, Two by Two. lf one sTares aT Them long enough, one begins To imagine all sorfs of wild and fanTasTic Things. They are rushing aT you, They are wolves on The Trail, They are The animals going inTo Noah's Ark aT a Terrible speed To escape The flood, Two by Two. IT was' iusT such wild imaginings ThaT were filling Susan's mind as she sTood There, abouT one o'clock of a Friday nighT. She was swepT off her feeT by The swifT, conTinuous movemenT of The auTomobiles, and was hardly conscious of her surroundings. A fainT cough aT her elbow. and a feeling ThaT she was no longer alone. broughT her ouT of her .revery. Her face acquired impercepTibly ThaT obliTeraTing sfane which is so necessary an accomplishmenl' for young women who insisT on being ouT alone laTe aT nighT. A young man sTood beside her. l-le had a sensifive, clean-cuT face, wiTh large blue eyes and a kindly mouTh, buT he was very Tired. His Tall, lean body drooped. his shoulders drooped. his head drooped. even The faded blonde lock of hair ove.r his forehead drooped. Pardon me. he said. l wonder if you would do me a favor. lf l can. IT's very simple. JusT Take This lhe reached inTo his coaT pockeTl. Don'T open iT Till Tomorrow. Do whaT you please wiTh iT Then. IT was a small oblong box. wrapped in brown paper and Tied wiTh a red sTring. Susan looked aT iT awhile, Then smiled and asked: lT's noT a Time-bomb, is iT? No. Please do Take iT. If you will. Though I sTill don'T see why you're doing This. Couldn'T you give me your name and address. so l can reTurn iT if I wish Too? lT-iT's inside. Thank you so much. l shan'T forgeT your kindness. Goodnight Good nighT and he refurned away info The darkness. ll The sun was spilling pale gold on The decks of The S. S. Calamares of The UniTed FruiT Line. as she lay in dock aT Recfor STreeT. IT was a few minuTes before sailing Time, and' she had been well scrubbed for her iourney To Jamaica. Panama, Canal Zone. and oThe.r porTs. Now she basked like a caT in The winTer sunshine, her moTors purring wiTh energy and saTisfacTion. Susan came briskly up The gangplank, feeling very young and foolish for all her TwenTy-Two years. Suppose she had reasoned falsely, and he were noT on This ship affer all? Suppose he weren'T even running away? Suppose- An officer came ouT of a door. very clean and hearTy in a brass buTToned A 55 uniform, his face brown wiTh sunshine and Wesf Indian winds. Good morning, said he, WhaT can I do for you? There's a man here I musT see, she said, he signed This morning under a false name, I don'T know whaT. I-low do you expecf-7 I-Ie's Thin and blonde and has blue eyes. I-Ie signed This morning. You must remember. I Think I do. Anderson, he shoufed down The sfairway pasT The door. There was some noise down There as The call was relayed, and finally a head was seen coming up. I-lere's your young lady To see you, Anderson. You've only a few minuTes. so hurry. I-Ie Ieff as The young man reached The Top of The sfars and faced Susan. Did you have To come? he asked, as if Though he had hoped she wouIdn'T buT had hardly expecfed iT. Where's The police? I came To Tell you, you needn'T go away. Here, This is for you. She held ouT The IiTTIe brown box. You can'T give iT To me. And I don'T wanT iT. Yes, I can. IT's mine. Yours? By whaT righT? IT was my house you were in IasT nighT. Well, why don'T you have me arresTed? Aren'T you angry? No. I-le did noT know whaT To say, and dropped his eyes. Look, she said, I donT need iT. You Take iT. You can use iT far beTTer Than I. WhaT good would iT do me? I-low much would iT sell for? I'd live on ThaT for awhile and Then I'd be sfarving again. lT's only posfponing The ineviTabIe. I'm sure I could geT you a job. FaTher knows so many people. If There's anyfhing you can do aT all well, he probably knows someone who could use iT. I'm a good bum, I guess. BuT isn'T There somefhing you've sTudied?' My educafion sfopped before I sTa.rTed To specialize. I can play Tennis and swim and dance gracefully, and noThing else very imporTanT. WeII, she said, your worries are over. I-low do you mean? FaTher owns a hoTel. You can play Tennis and be a lifeguard and dance wifh The unaffached ladies. I know iT isn'T a pleasanf job, buf iT's beTTer Than This and Soufh America. 'Oh, yes. I wasn'T Thinking of ThaT. I-le was looking aT her now, aT The fine honey-colored hair and The candid grey eyes in The smoofhly chiseled face. And meanwhile you can sTay wiTh us, Till The season opens. I'lI Tell fafher you're someone I inviTed clown from school. There's only he and The housekeeper: so iT will be quife easy. And here's The ring. 56 Now how aboul' if? She held oul' her hand in a frank and 'Friendly gesrure. l-le fook il' in bofh his, and fhey sfood 'rhere smiling al' each ofher. Then he opened +he box, and slipped fhe ring upon her finger. No, here if is. The sfone caughf 'rhe pale rays of lhe win'I'er sun and reflecred +hem wirh a brillianf green flame. I+ shone and sparkled upon fheir fwo faces, lil now wilh hope and a friendship which mighf, perhaps, +urn info somefhing more. If shone as brighfly, almosf, fhoughl' Susan, looking down upon il, as if if were indeed a rare and precious emerald, and noi a green garnef from some- where in upslafe New York. IP. Cnaon lj Winterset Maxwell Anderson was recenfly given an award by 'l'he drama cri+ics of various New York papers because lhey have considered +his poefic drama +o be one of lhe besf Broadway producfions fhis year. Win+erse1 ' discusses fhe life of Mio, +he embifrered son of a man who had been elecfrocured and who was really guilfless of fhe crime he was senfenced for. Mio soughl' revenge. The judge who had senfenced him, ably played by Richard BenneH, and who knew of his fa+her's innocence was driven insane because of his +ormen+ing con- science. In lhis play, we can see 'rhe definife relafionship of Mio's case wilh fha? of lhe famous Sacco VanzeH'i case, a case which is a blol on lhe annals of iusfice in our courfs. Mio, played by Burgess Meredi+h, falls in love wifh Miriamme, a Jewess, whose brofher had seen Mio's falher go To +he elecfric chair, know- ing Thai he wasn'l' acfually guilly. Anderson 'ihe realisi' fhen becomes Anderson lhe romanricisf, and spends The resl' of his lime being concerned wi+h fhe plighl' of lhe lovers. I+ seems inconclusive. Here he had presenred a problem, he had showed lhe fulilily and hollowness of personal revenge, buf Then he srops- he goes no lurfher. The poetry fairly sings in fhis play, and undoub+edly Ander- son's moufhpiece is Miriamme's fafher, undersfandingly porfrayed by Anafole Winogradofi, who reciles his palienf and beaufiful philosophy Throughouf fhis excifing play. EDITH KIMMEL, Grade Eighf 57 Radio in Qeality JOYCE FARNHAM, Grade EighT HEN lisTening To a radio program, one finds iT mosT enioyable and saTisfy- ing To conjure up glorious, impossible picTures of The performers. l-learing The dulceT, coaxing Tones of a crooner, unseen as he is, one quickly Thinks of him as painfully handsome, Tall, and single, and revels in iT. LisTening To The dignified voice of The announcer, one imagines iT issuing from The disTinguished form of a genTleman whose hair' is becomingly greyed aT The Temples. Radio lisTen- ers live Their lives blissfully ignoranT unTil one day They happen To lend Their ear To some ugly, buT True rumor, or They chance To see a picTure of Their idols, and find ThaT Their worshipped ones are noT as They ThoughT. While compleTe disil- lusionmenT is noT always The oufcome, iT is a Tax on The faculTies To conTinue Thinking Tenderly of ThaT crooner knowing he is slighTly bald and buck-TooThed. And iT is iusT as dampening To one's ardour To find ThaT disfingue announcer shorT and of pillow-like silhoueffe. JusT To add To The miseries of you who cherish ofher sweeT illusions concerning radio, leT me conTinue my harvaingue. AT ChrisTmas-Time, several years ago, perhaps you heard a broadcasT from England in which The laTe King George made a speech To all his kingdom. Each ouTposT of The English empire was swiTched on To say a few words of holiday greeTing To iTs sovereign and sisTer colonies. India, Canada, SouTh Africa, AusTralia, and oThers parTicipaTed in The evenT unTil a message had been heard from each and a chain of greeTing had been formed around The earTh. lT was breaTh-Taking To hear each successive colony idenTify iTself. The wonders of science were broughT vividly home. How awe-inspiring iT was To link The efnTire universe, ThoughT lisTeners. Science is wonderful, iT cannoT be denied, so, perhaps iT was beTTer ThaT The radio audience was noT aware ThaT The messages w-ere being reeled off phonograph records in The broadcasTing sTaTion aT CovenTry, England. AT oTher Times, when The annou-ncer says, We Take you now To Paris or Berlin or Bu-enos Aires , The chances are he is Taking you no furTher Than River- head, on Long Island, The receiving sTaTion where The original program was received and TransmiTTed To disks To be used aT some fuTure Time. One reason for This is The difference in Time beTween The ATlanTic Seaboard and The resT of The world. There are Tive hours' difference beTween New York and ConTinenTal Time. When you hear a noTed Vienese boys' choir broadcasT in The evening, l hope you are noT under The impnession ThaT iTs members are geT-Ting up aT Three A. M. To sing songs for you. They have broadcasT Those songs aT some Time during The day To The recording machine in Riverhead, which plays The record af a more convenienT hour. AnoTher example of This record-playing broadcasTing was in Ki-ng Edward's TirsT speech made early in The spring. We heard iT aT exacTly The same hour as The king had macle iT-buT noT The same Time. MosT people here would sTill have been in bed while The speech was being made in England, buT Thanks To The 58 phonograph record, we were enabled To hear iT IaTer. These records are more oTTen made TurTher in advance Than one day. This is because oT weaTher condiTions. For example, iT a radio announcer promised To Take you now To Rio de Janeiro and a TerriTic equaToriaI hurricane were raging, making recepTion impossible, The program would have To be scrapped and be replaced by The sTudio quarTeT or The like. Foreign broadcasTs are recorded as Tar ahead as possible as a resuIT. The only way To Tell wheTher a program is a re-broadcasT or noT, is To IisTen To The announcer. OTherwisfe There is no way oT Telling, and To avoid disilIusionmenT, perhaps iT would be beTTer noT To IisTen To The announcemenTs made aT The beginning oT a Toreign broadcasT. Thus you could go on your way, happily ignoranT oT The maTTer-oT-TacTness oT life. Y F T T - R.d DC onfrb Adventure For Ivle HELEN JOHNSON, Grade Six ATE willed Thar my parenTs have a shorT IiTe, and I was IeTT an orphan aT The Tender age oT Three. An aunT who had always been exrremely Tond oT me, decided To Take The place oT my dear moTher, oT whose loving aTTecTions I had been deprived so early. AunT Helen, having lived in ATrica wiTh her husband who had been a gov- ernmenT oTTicial, had become greaTly aTTached To The people oT This new counTry. IT was iusT aTTer she had made plans To make her home There Tor several years ThaT she heard oT my parenTs' deaTh. ImmediaTeIy she came To America To see whaT could be done. She wished To reTurn To ATrica buT hesiTaTed To Take me wiTh her, Thinking ThaT The climaTe would be none Too healThy Tor me. AunT Helen Then ThoughT oT placing me in a boarding school, buT where? Ther'e was no ouT- sTanding boarding school in The UniTed STaTes To which a colored child oT my age could be admiTTed. Finally, we sailed Tor France where I was placed in The Pension- naT des Religieuses de NoTre Dame de la Compassion in SainT Denis. Thus was The beginning oT my wonderTuI advenTures. BeTore leaving Tor ATrica, AunT Helen spenT a Tew days wiTh me, sighTseeing and shopping in Paris. Young as I was, I goT a greaT Thrill ouT oT iT all. IT was indeed a sad day Tor me when dear AunT Helen IeTT me in The convenT surrounded by The somberly dressed SisTers and children who spoke only French. I picked up French quickly and easily, and soon became one oT Them. I sTill 59 remember some of The days spenT in The convenT. I recall The day I fell upon The cobbIesTones in fronT of The Chapel and broke. exacfly in half, one of my baby fronT TeeTh. We played House and Bad WoIf in The beaufiful, spacious gar- dens in The deep snow in WinTer. a'nd enjoyed The duck pond in spring. I re- member The class-room wiTh iTs sTraighT-backed seaTs. The liHle slafs upon which we scribbled our numerals. The alphabef, and drew sTick figures and Iolly-pop faces. I recall The RecreaTion Hall where in The dayTime our IiTTIe fingers were kepT busy sewing and embroidering for hours, six days in The week: There Too, we were enTerTained in The evening and were served hoT chocolaTe and prunes. To This very day I am fond of wine and chocoIaTe. as wine and chocolaTe were The only bevenages given us. I will Try never To forgef Those beloved convenT days. I sTayed a liTTIe more Than a year in The Convenf. AunT Helen had proposed To have me educaTed There: buT I had been raTher delicafe as a child. and when Madame Chapefeau, a friend of my aunT's who lived in Paris and ofTen visiTed me. wroTe ThaT I was noT so sTrong as I should be, This hope was aT once given up. Soon I sailed for Africa wiTh a Miss Hubbard wiTh whom my aunT had made all necessary anrangemenTs. IT was indeed a pleasanl' Trip. By ThaT Time. I spoke French fIuenTIy, buT I sTilI cannoT imagine how Miss Hubbard and I goT along: she spoke only English and I, only French. I was quiTe a favorife among The pas- sengers and officers. How proud and delighfed I was when The chef on board made a lovely cake iusT for me. on my birfhdayl Africa was sfrange, new To me: and I was greafly impressed by iTs sfrange people and iTs foreign afmosphere. Our house was large. spacious. and aTTracTive. DirecTIy 'back of The house sTood The garage where AunT Helen kepf her Buick. The yard was exTensive: There. gnew numerous fruiT Trees and AunT Helen had raised all sorTs of vegeTables. We drank only mineral wafer which we ordered direcTIy from The UniTed STaTes. The nafives wondered aT me as much as I aT Them. They sTood aghasT in uHer incomprehension when AunT and I conversed in French. I. in reTurn wondered whaT They were saying in Their naTive diaIecT and broken English. My aunT consTanTly inferprefed. And so I found Them To be quiTe friendly, and we were soon greaT friends. There are only Three incidenTs ThaT I vaguely recall which occurred during my shorT visiT in Africa. Once. AunT Helen and I seeking relief from The Tenrific evening heaf, soughf The seashore. We were driving slowly along The sandy road when suddenly The wheels began To spin aT rapid speed, round and round in The sand which had Then become quife deep. We had very IiTTIe Trouble in being rescued. Friendly naTives, abouT fifTy in number, from a neighboring village acTu- ally carried The car back To The hard road! AnoTher Time, while driving Through The inTerior, we sfopped by The roadside To have lunch. The memory of The overhanging Trees, The wild blooming orchids. The dielicafe odor and The profusion of color sTilI lingers. When we Turned To enTer The car. Aunf Helen noficed some- Thing swinging from a huge limb over-hanging The road. And There. noT far away from us. wiTh his Tail TighTly coiled abouT The limb of The Tree, swung a large boa consTnicTor ready To sTrike anyfhing ThaT mighT come his way. I can assure you ThaT we did noT linger To admire him: we sprang inTo The car and backed quife a 60 disfance unTiI we were able To Turn inTo anofher road. NoT long affer This, while driving Through The inTerior on one of Africa's dark, sTarless nighTs, The auTomobiIe lighfs suddenly snapped off, and aT The same Time. The engine wenT dead. For- TunaTeIy, There were friends wiTh us and afTer a few shoves, The lighTs swiTched on and The engine purred once more. BuT, oh, Those few minuTesI We were in consTanT fear ThaT, while we were ouT of The car, a ferocious beasT mighT pounce ouT of The hidden bushes, or ThaT a snake would sTrike or fall from The Trees above us. Hoping ThaT I would improve in heaITh, AunT Helen arranged To have me live in California wiTh a friend, and so, AunT and I wenT direcTly from Liberia. WesT Africa To San Francisco, California. A monTh laTer, my aunT again reTurned To Africa. I lived four years in California, improved greafly in heaITh and progressed rapidly in school. BuT finally, when AunT Helen reTurned from Africa, we came To live in New York. Here, I was puT back a year. This is easily undersfood when one knows ThaT The educafional sysTem of New York requires ThaT ariThmeTic be Taughf in as eanly as The second and Third grade, and alfhough I was up-To- dafe in some subiecTs and ahead in oThers, I did noT know ariThmeTic. In Cali- fornia, very IiTTIe aTTenTion is paid ariThmeTic unfil one enfers The fourTh grade. I have lived in New York ever since I IefT California, aT firsT in ManhaTTan. IaTer in Brooklyn. BuT I hope To refurn again some day To Paris To bring Those happy days back To life. I shall Then be older and more able To appreciaTe The beauTy a-nd grandeur of Paris. Book Qeviewing EDITH KIMMEL, Grade Eighf ISS VAN DOREN discussed The problem of book reviewing wiTh greaT ease- probably, because she herself had prepared innumerable crificisms of books for her paper, The New York Herald Tribune. The TirsT poinT she raised concerned The aTTiTude a book reviewer should have Toward The parTicuIar book he was reviewing. Alfhough There is a sTrong Tendency To show-off your own wiT aT The expense of The book being crificised, iT is a wise policy To avoid This high-haTTing : and as she so apfly puT iT, The good iournaIisT never submifs a snooTy, smarT-aIeck review To his ediTor for his consideraTion. Then. she wenT on To explain ThaT The Type of review would naTuraIIy depend on The policy of The paper or magazine you work for. For example, The readers of The New Masses wanT The inTerpreTaTion and emphasis of The Theme of a book To be pro-Communisf or aT IeasT pro-SociaIisT, iusT as The conservaTive readers of The Time magazine expecT Their book-reviewers To uphold The sTaTus quo. Under This same poinT, Miss Van Doren said ThaT iT is essenTiaI ThaT The individual book ol be ,reviewed by someone in sympafhy wiTh The views evpressed in iT. ThaT is, an ediTor usually won'T give a book like l-lerberT l-loover's Challenge To LiberTy To an advocafe of The New Deal To review. Then, of course, iT would be equally senseless To ask a Whife Russian To review, leT us say, John STrachey's Coming STruggle for Power. ln siffing The wheaT from The chaff, There are various Types of books which The .reviewer does noT have To bofher To review aT all. The Tirsf Type Miss Van Doren has labeled illiTeraTe books-ThaT is, books ThaT are worTh- less, iusT debris. Purely Technical books and TexTs are noT reviewed aT all. The so-called hammock-reading, or The popular and lighfer ficTion books are reviewed, Miss Van Doren announced wiTh a Tragic noTe in her voice. IT is obvious ThaT she doesn'T enioy Faifh Baldwin's lachrymose Tales, alfhough l remember she did admiT, quife shamefacedly, ThaT somefimes she read deTecTive sTories for relaxaTion purposes only. The laTTer parT of Miss Doren's discussion Told a biT abouf The mechanics of book reviewing. The reviewers specialize in ce,rTain fields, so ThaT if a new book on science, or a book on arf or religion is published, iT is immediaTely given To The parTicular reviewer who knows mosT abouT The subiecf, or, who aT leasT, claims he does. The publishers issue caTalogs abouT Twice a year-usually in The fall and spring. If The book is noT published on Time, The galley proofs have To be ,read by The book-reviewer. This is preTTy hard' on The eyes, buf forTunaTely, if The unbound sheeTs of The manuscripT can be obTained, The iournalisT does noT have To decipher The leT'Ters on a galley proof. Under ediToriaI blue penciling, Miss Van Doren had This biT of advice To offer: don'T give your crificism of The book before wrifing a bif abouT iTs conTenT. There is a sTrong Tendency To plunge inTo our own opinions abouT The book, before even remoTely suggesfing The naTure of The book being reviewed. We imagine ThaT iT has already been read by our readers, and we have noThing furTher To add excepT our own commenTs. Miss Van Doren firmly sTaTed ThaT book reviewing should be The lasT phase of iournalisfic work-all oTher ends of The field musT be Tried and worked aT: Then, and only Then, is iT advisable To Try book-reviewing. - ll EAD END is a sTudy of a confemporary problem which This sociefy has noT successfully dealT wiTh yeT-ThaT of crime. Kingsley, The auThor, in his earThy dialogue shows The definiTe connecTion of environmenT To crime. Briefly, The ploT concerns The rise and fall of a noTorious gunman of The Easf side. and of The effecf his life had upon a youThful lame archiTecT who Tipped off The police as To his whereaboufsz his poverTy-sfricken moTher, who refused To see him or To accepT any of his dishonesf money: and his firsT sweeT- hearf, now reduced To prosTiTuTion because of economic forces. And even as his bullef-ridden body lay in The guTTer, a pool of blood around iT, Tough kids and leaders of sTreeT gangs were being made because of eifher lack of inTeresT or The unconcerned aTTiTude of many of us. Reform schools are noT The ainswer, and seTTlemenT houses and boys clubs are Too few in number To make any marked difference in This crime problem. This powerful play is forcefully acTed and vividly presenfed. 62 ll ARS HIS IDIOT should have been received wiTh a waving of banners and a blowing of TrumpeTs when iT came ouT some monThs ago. buT iT only speaks more Tor The righTness of Tomlinson's observaTions ThaT iT was given a favorable review in The Times and Then relegaTed To an oblivion where iT by no means belongs. This is a book abouT war, and iT is noT parTicuIarly TlaTTering To The sTaTesmen who make war or The common people who IeT Them. IT does noT shouT or shake iTs TisT aT us. IT Takes each phase and shows us The in- curable roTTenness of The whole maTTer. Each chapTer is prefaced wiTh a Telling quoTaTion Trom anoTher wriTer. One in parTicuIar I believe deserves menTion. IT is a IeTTer wriTTen To The ManchesTer Guardian during The Boer War, and is a saTire on a resoluTion made by a high church commiHee To The eTfec'T ThaT The rigours of war have an ennobling influence on The souls OT The soldiers. IT should be engraved in marble and seT up beside The DecIaraTion of Independence or The Magna CarTa in every insTiTuTion where The minds oT The young are being educaTed. UnTorTun- aTely They mighT noT undersTand iT. Tomlinson makes a plea Tor inTeIligence and common sense in our aTTiTude To- ward war. In a sTrucTure Thaf is roTTen and TiIThy wiTh decay. There is IiTTIe hope in removing The Top sTorey. The raTs will remain iusT The same. He explodes all The peTTy IiTTle argumenTs of Those who say war is desirable or aT mosT cannoT be pre- venTed. because man is a beasT of prey and musT always be TighTing. He shows us The glory inherenT in soldiers dying Tor Their counTry. and inTanTs being blown To biTs in a London bombardmenT. And he Tells us, someThing which is noT new. buT which we need To have repeaTed To us all The Time, and ThaT is. ThaT all wars are economic wars. ThaT They are ToughT Tor Trade, Tor power, Tor naTuraI resources. Tor anyThing, in TacT, buT whaT The professional paTrioTs say iT is. An Englishman. he says, BriTain has no policy, only inTeresTs . And TwenTy years aTTer The lasT war. her sTaTesmen are proTesTing as vociferously as Their predecessors ThaT They do noT wanT war. only peace. and are conTinuing To proTecT Those inTeresTs in a manner which musT, as iT did Then, and always has. lead To conTlicT. The TruTh is ThaT They wanT peace, buT will noT pay The required price Tor iT, and ThaT is. The sacrifice of The unalienable sovereigniTy oT The individual sTaTe. IT is Tomlinson's sTyIe, as well as his ThoughT, ThaT makes This book memorable. IT has The smooThness and TIuidiTy of poeTry, and The impacT, noT oT The caTapuIT or The sTeeI Tank, buT of The precisely-aimed and well-placed buIIeT oT The sharp- shooTer. For breviTy, for lucidiTy, for The sheer beauTy of his sTyIe, I doubT if Tomlinson has a rival among modern wriTers of English prose. For clearness oT vision in This mal-Ter of war and peace. I wish he had more among all Thinking people. 63 CX, Edifor-in-Chief .. Managing Ediior Associaie Ediror Senior Eclirors .......,, ,, Arr Edi+or .,,,,..,,.. Business Ediior .,,,,, STAFFJD ...........,.,...Edi+h Kimmel ......,,...-.....Edi+h Schreiber Shirley Meiselman Eslelle Abrams Frances Manfrin .......-.....Nancy Lilwack V Literary Neva Lindgren Zila Chesi Norma Cohen Joyce Farnham Rulh Bennell Blanche Lusiig Stahl: Marion PraH' Doris Sherman Gladys Siegel Berry Vermilyea Marie Vuolo Jane Woronock Art 'Staff Sec'y.. Marjorie Blausiein Mary Jane McCleary Rose Gnconlro Epolela Hardy Muriel Hill Rose Lundy Mildred Radford Frances Rhein Arline Slorey Audrey Wolf V Business Staff Edirh Giblin Pauline Auerbach Carolyn Dreyer Edna Moslcowilz Mildred Meyer Neva Lindgren Enid Rubensrein Josephine Morley Margarei Malloy Pearl Pascal Esielle Abrams Marjorie Mehrlens Geraldine Cohen Yeiia Dunn FACULTY ADVISERS Ar+ ,,,ssr, .,.,....,..,..........,....,.,.....,.,........Y,..,....,..,,... M iss Beulah S+evenson Buginegg .......,.,.............. Mr. A. Lowensiein L. Mrs. Grace E. Beadman 'lerary 'A ii M iss Margarei' D. Flynn 1. Sninbxrs Z BOROUGH HALL DIVISION SUMMER SESSION JUNE 3 and 22 COLLEGE of ARTS and SCIENCES Day and Evening Courses leading io degree B. S. or in preparaiion for Law School. Fall Term Sepf. I4 SCHOOL of LAW Three-year Day or Evening Course leading To de- gree of LL. B. Posf Graduafe Course leading +o degree J. S. D. or LL. M. Fall Term Sepi. 2I SCHOOL of COMMERCE Day or Evening Courses leading io degree B. S. in Econ., or B. B. A. for High School Teaching and in preparafion for Law School and Ceriiiied Pub- lic Accouniing Examinafions. Fall Term Sepi. 22. COLLEGE of PHARMACY Da Courses leading 'Io degree Ph. G.. Ph. C. and B.gin preparafion for Medicine and Drug, Chem- ical and Biological fields. Classes begin Sept ZI. Registrar-96 Schermerhorn St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Telephone Tlliangle 5-0150 snooktvn ACADEMY I SUQIVIDIEB HIGH SClIO0L July 6 fo Augusf 25 o Academic 8: Commercial Subiecfs Save time, make up failures, graduate with your class. Our superior record assures your success in Regents and Home School Exams. Classes limited insize-Register now! . MONT AGUE AND HENRY STREETS a Sub-'ect Borough Hall Stations f0ne block from Schooll Telephone MAin 4-4957 CI-IOOSE A LEADER . Miss Dunbar's School embodies 'rhe resulrs of many years of experience in iraining able young women 'For SECRETARIAL POSITIONS Individual Coaching :: Carefully graded group worl: :: Limilecl Enrollmeni Register for classes now forming - - Catalog upon request MISS llUNBAll'S SClIO0L l86 JORALEMON STREET at Boro Hall BROOKLYN. NEW YORK Phone TRiangle 5-7420 SUMMER SCHOOL cunreueo sv sono or :seems IIIU 6 T0 AUGUST 25 IIEGISTRATIDN NOW IIPEII nfcsms Exms owen HERE IN Aucusr Ill. IICIDEIIC and Commercial Subjects REPEAT llld ADVANCE DAY-EVENlNG'C0-ED EXCEPTIONAL PASSING RECORD LAST SUMMER SPECIAIJIED NSTRUCTION ASSUIES IESUIJS S PER SUBJECT IN 15 DAY SCHOOL 853 BROADWAY CORNER 1-ith STREET. N.Y.C. TGNPKINS SQUARE 6-5923 FOUNDED 1901 ' 1. E. ERON, PRIN. P CEINSTITUTE Courses of intensive character, for various occupations in busmese and for the professions of accountancy and shorthand rgnorting, and including Igoth technical an cultural subjects, are given at Pace Institute for men and women in daytime and evening classes. The courses include the following: Accountancy for C.P.A. Practice Summary QC.P.A.J Accountancy Accountancy and Blllihlll 'Administration Secretarial Pnctloe Shorthand Reporting Shorthand Speed Clause Advertising and Marketing Selling and Marketing Credit Science Bulletin, interesting vocational booklets, and zlassdetesareavailableu ure quest. Inquire of the Registrar E3 per- sonal call? by letter, or by telephone, BArclay -8 00. Visitors are welcome. mc: msmurr an BROOKLYN SECRETARIAL SCHOOL Secretarial-Business Machines- Brush-Up Courses Day and Evening Schedule . . . Also Summer Courses 202 LIVINGSTON STREET, Brooklyn, N. Y. 0 . A. 3. 5.3 Tmmgle 5-assi Mrs. M. C. Baird, Principal C pp --l--- SUMMER HIGH SCHOOL-CO-ED 5 A gubim In JULY 6'I'h TO AUGUST 25fh I5 Day School Save iimog remove conditions or failures: repoaf or advance: onfor college sooner No Scimv lab- F--I DAY AND EVENING SESSIONS Regenis Exams Given Here un Augusi -FUL'-Y APPROVED- ouk DIPLOMA Aomns TO LEADING coLLEeEs All Academic and Commercial Subiecfs 366 Flafbush Ave. Ext, Brooklyn, Opposife Paramouni' Theafre Requesi Cafalog MAin 4-8558 DeKalb Ave. B.M.T. Sfalion in Building Secrofarial or Commercial Course--3 Monihs-Day: S35: Evo.: S20 Compliments of American Beauty Florist, Inc. ANTHONY D. GILAS, Pres. 526 Nostrand Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Phones: NEvins 8-3411-3415 Bonded Members of the Florist Telegraph Delivery Association Progress Plamun Indivklulhod lolhodudhnnaiq-mi. 'Wh Pill. has-thagi, Typovming Calllngoadluhaalhh lvonusgbiemnadunu. Iaulnupc. mu pulyuaauaumypmgm lv tudem X . 9 loo:!:rial Finishing :ITC 0 ll l,Ol loqlaal ms gs Ball Illllg ON' HANION PLACI, 1011! Ll llalbiol lvonno lla lfllllld I-Ill . H. RENKEN D IRY CO. 584 Myrtle Avenue BROOKLYN, N. Y. Telephones, MAin 2-67410-1-2 Compliments of HENRY PAPE INC- Distributors of HELLMANN'S BLUE RIBBON MAYONNAISE BEST FOODS MAYONNAISE BLUE RIBBON POTATO CHIPS BLUE MOON CHEESE BLUE RIBBON BOUILLON CUBES BORDEN'S FINE CHEESES NUCOA 42-50-21st Street Long Island City, N. Y. M A R Q U A N D SUMMER SCHOOL Co-educational Accredited by the State Board of Regents Regents Examinations given in August The School Features: Cool, well-ventilated rooms, swim- ming pool fur boys, small classes for individual attention. Approved teachers. Momings only. Ease of Access, only a minute from the Flatbush Avenue Station of the Long Island, all subways, elevated and surface lines School Opens Monday, July 6 For further information, call or write Leonard H. Calvert, Headmaster 55 Hanson Place, Brooklyn STerling 3-7000 . .-- uw -cr-f -if e o '- a ,XMW y 4 1 w A, at at , A 4' K - - Q gs . ,rg g el I N N. ,Q 9, 1 A' 128' 3' 4,1 1 'Q f. A. s efve-:l'Z'.m....r... an J- 5 Q '.--- ' f,- ' . ' - 'Y 'wil , f A 1-2if2f1535-255f5?:s2i2iQi:55: - . ,t' ,- 4 ..f..:,f1,:.. r 1 1, it ff, 3 1 ,lf ' 1' ff ,ff I' I A T-Q'-.4 . ,JJ Q. 5 I' Q7 .v we . ' , 1: Z A 4 f , 1 Y 45 I in fc ., yt Venucb. sr 'px 0+ X' 48' 4 'Z in QMS! X 0 After graduation from high school, you must choose between a job and a career. You are, at this moment, approaching the crossroads of lite. Your individual desires and capabilities will undoubtedly influence your choice. The decision which you make now will determine the :acces orfaiinre ol your liie's work. 'l'ornorrow's achievement will reflect today's choice. eTo you Senior: who decide upon a pm- iessional career, the Broohlyn College ol Pharmacy suggests the Profession oi Pharmacy. O Of all the professions, none presents such diversification of pod- bilities as that of Pharmacy The Graduate in Pharmacy' can qualify for Such varied positions as Hospital Pharmacist, U. S. Amy or Navy Pharmacist, Manuiacnu-er's Detail Man, Laboratory Technidan, Phl- ltacy Joumalist, Pharmaq Proprietor, Pharmaceutical Maldtdtl. and some titty others. 0'l'he Brooklyn Collegeof Pharmacyotfenthoroughtrainingink practice ofPhanuacy.'l'he instruction iedividedintoathneeyearooale kBdlllQlOdIOd0g!O0OfQidll8lOlIlPllll'm8C1lPlLG.l,lldCDiY Iouryearcourseleadingto the degreeolBachelorofScienoeinPhl- Candies yelrhlue neil Yunnan-eilvtlelaeeallieCebgelekan puhivid ieeevik Wiki C Ais.hldlelhlenaieaqueeq-1 equipment and facilities make the kooklyn College of Pharmacy a symbol at septem- ecy in the field ol Pheumaeal Education. Egg' -f l ,' IQiQ3:'5.'f-- fri- 1 .-r:r gg - ' f-1r1gfgr:fEr:rE--- -4'1 ',:f:f' 1-E-Q..-1:1 1:.---. .51-E1vlriiiiriilfgg-liflffli '.-:f- :f:fr1f:f:E:rZ- fri? rar . HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION The SAVAGE SCHOOL conducts an accredited course in the theory and practice of health and physical educationg prepares men and women High School graduates to fill positions as supervisors, directors, teachers, and leaders in colleges, schools, playgrounds, recreation and community centers, camps, clubs, and industrial organizations. Catalog Upon Request ---- Employment Bureau for Graduates Register now for clase entering on September 25, 1936 Graduates of this three year course may complete the Bachelor of Science Degree requirements in one additional year at certain recognized colleges. savanna SCIl00L iiiwizikfgifnif Ge LIPSHEY STUDIO YJHOTOGIQQILDHEIQVQ raphic portralis' Eilgitghqtillbr different DBIQE' 'Doxzganrnsr' Fine Porfraiis- noi by accidenf buf fhrough ar+is'rry 1961 Ihifbfd ,Limiting f1?f0obLqfi- Sblird 3-I 122 COM PLI M ENTS OF Staff of Girls' High School Bank PAULINE BAUER ANNE COLLERAN EVELYN FLEMING VIGLET LITTLE AMELIA FREEMAN EDITH GIBLIN LUCILLE LOTT MARGARET MOLLOY SARAH DIAMOND PEARL PASCAL Always faking out of The meal-tub and never puffing in soon comes io the bo'Hom. -Poor Richard Edmafs Inn For Wholesome Food in Pleasant Surroundings HALSEY STREET Near Nosfrand Avenue Commercial Stationery Kodaks and Photo Finishing Greeting Cards A. C. Lawton l3l7 FULTON STREET Open Evenings A+ Nosfrand Girls' Central School for Business Training SECRETARIAL AND BUSINESS COURSES INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION: ADMISSION AT ANY TIME Day and Evening Classes :: Ask for Catalogue Y. W. C. A.-CENTRAL BRANCH 30 THIRD AVENUE, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Eleanora W. King, Direclor TRiangle 5-I l90 Cole's Prescription Pharmacy CUT RATE DRUG AND COSMETICS 496 Nostrand Avenue, Corner Halsey Street Breakfast :: Luncheon :: Dinner Served A REPUTATION FOR PURE FOOD AND SODA Compliments of English Book Marks ALL MDS HELEN CUSICK KI6IHICiCh,S VIRGINIA MULLEN EUGENIS HOFFMAN Book Store ELAINE ROSENBLUM DOROTHY KOHLER LORAINE THOMPSON 124-5 Fulton Street Bef. Nostrand and Bedford Aves. NEvins 8-2746-7 Pfister and Sitterley Wholesale and Retail Druggists FULTON STREET AND NOSTRAND AVE. Brooklyn N. Y. Brooklyn's Leading Druggisl' Compliments of Bruno, J r. YOUR HAIRDRESSER 479 NOSTRAND AVENUE DIVISION VIII ORANGE TIES MISS PARSONS Grade Adviser DIVISION VII NAVY BLUE TIES MRS. LEVERT Grade Adviser DIVISIQN VI DIVISION V YELLOW TIES RED TIES MRS. BYRNE Grade Adviser The whole is groafer Ihan any peri Boosf your school wi+h all your heart MRS. AGNES FOLTS Grade Adviser MISS DIVISION IV PURPLE TIES MARGARET PFISTER Grade Adviser DIVISION II GREEN TIES MISS BARTLETI' Grade Adviser DIVISION III MAROON TIES MISS SYME Grade Adviser DIVISION I LIGHT BLUE TIES MISS A. BENNETT Grade Adviser This book was printed by THE EASTERN PRINTING CO., 14 Cook St., Brooklyn. Telephones PUlaski 5-1535-6-7. Illustrations were printed from plates made by Boro Engraving Corp., Engravers of Perfect Line, Half-tone and Color Plates. The advertise- ments were arranged by The Richmond Advertising Service. L - :fff-Ji -ff: 1 '-fL ,T .1 ,-1 1 J' .,-.--1. L f- ., AVA '-3-.A1 ggaaewfa- 1 . ,. AA.---ATieiAIf. 5-i3i'!At-. 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