Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN)

 - Class of 1949

Page 16 of 114

 

Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 16 of 114
Page 16 of 114



Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 15
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Page 16 text:

Our Women Teachers CLENCY, RUTH is our art teacher. Well, Miss Clency, the third monitor picture finally came out fine. Her pet peeves- are people who waste paint and those who make nasty remarks about her car. CLEVELAND. ALICE M. who teaches General Science and Math sure is feeling happy about the diamond she received the day of the Senior Supper. Her pet peeve is snapping gum. Welcome to Tech, Miss Cleveland. Vi e hope it isn’t ‘‘Hello”, “Goodbye”. COUVE. ELEANORE has a pretty hard schedule this year. She teaches English, and is working on the Bulletin. Her pet peeves are noisy classes and poor bridge hands. Her pet verse is: The freshmen are quiet and on time, The sophomores get a hit noisy But when it comes to seniors you have to wait for them. How about it, seniors? COX, THELMA is a regular substitute at Tech this semester. She teaches Advanced Sewing and Home Service. She doesn’t care for people who don’t keep their word. Mrs. Cox is a most natural and understanding teacher. DAGGERT, LILLIAN A. teaches Home Management and Home Me- chanics. Miss Daggert always wanted to know how to encourage more girls to be interested in Y — Teens. She must have found a way — just look at the Y — Teen pictures. Girls who wear their hair up come in for little praise f rom Miss Daggert. DEAN. ORPHA M. is the teacher who runs the 6-ring circus called filing and introduction to business. Vi hatever you want done send it to Miss Dean. The wandering teachers are net so welcome though. DIETRICH. GLENN A L. teaches both Advanced and Beginning Sewing. See all those pretty dresses and aprons and blouses. “Gum chewing”, says Miss Dietrich, “mixes not at all with fine seams and fine stitches”. EASTWOOD. A. VERA teaches Business Etiquette and Shorthand. The senior girls want to know what method you will use in changing their seats. Miss Eastwood’s pet peeve is audiences who do not listen to speakers. ERICKSON, INGA E. is our school Nurse. Her pet peeve is the Monday morning disease in students and Friday absentee list. FRISK, ETHEL V. teaches English. Miss Frisk is one of the teachers who gets into the spirit of things. Yes, she is the director of the cheerleaders. Her pet peeve is braggarts. HAM ILL, ALICE teaches Home Service. By the way, Miss Hamill is also teaching the Virginia Reel to anyone who is interested. She is the sponsor of the Red Cross. Her pet peeves are not fit for publication. HANLON, MARGARET E. teaches Math IV and Bookkeeping. Miss Hanlon is another new teacher. W elcome to Tech. She also does not appreciate gum chewing in classes. HEBNER, W ILHELMINA is the Beginning Typing teacher. She plans to graduate us from the “hunt and pick” class into the “sight unseen group. LANDON, MARIE is the girl’s co-ordinator. Miss Landon is busy trying to figure such problems as “where is the Science Room when you have no room available for Science ’. LANTZ, GERALDINE is the teacher of advance typing. She is supposed to be a teacher and also a production manager. All the typing for the different departments of the school comes over her desk. No wonder she has many peeves. Sometime ask her about automobile troubles. McCORT. MARIAN teaches English and Business Training. If you open the English Room door you would find the likes of Julius Caesar or some character from The Fall of the House of Usher”. MOENCEN, ANNA is our Ge- ography teacher. She tries so hard to show us all about our world, even uses movies regularly. She cannot understand how a girl can live so long and know so little about ge- ography. Her pet peeve is do-nothing students. MORGAN, MILDRED P. is an- other new teacher at Tech. She teaches Comptometry. Here are the machines with no number higher than 9. It should be so easy but the girls say different. Her pet peeve is hurrying 12

Page 15 text:

Our Teachers The teachers always say to us, “Now when Joe X was in school here we did etc. , when I first came here Plumbing shop was over in, etc. “Boys used to act like men, etc., etc.” This causes us to wonder if the faculty members really know what they are talking about or if they had merely heard such rumors. So one ambitious morning we took a look in the Chart of 1929 — twenty years ago. We invite you to turn with us to the faculty pages. On the first page we see the likeness, 1929. of Orpha M. Dean. On the second page appear Fred E. Benson, Ann Moengen, Wilhel- mina Hebner and H. E. Holloway. On page three, at the very top of the page, our two long time pals and chronies — Marie Landon and Vera Eastwood. T. M. Flack and Henrietta Steiner are on the same page. Page five is graced with the likenesses of R. M. Wilson and Mary Lou Rogers. One the last page of the section Henry F. and Mary M. Kieckheafer, James B. Campbell and Henry L. Callan- tine appear. Do those names sound familiar? Out of thirty-eight on the faculty in 1929, fifteen are still with us twenty years later. Can you find a better record anywhere in the country? Yes, we decided that our teachers know Tech both as it is and as it was. We salute these men and women who have given twenty or more years of their lives to the boys and girls of Hammond Tech — the veterans of the 20 Year Club. 11



Page 17 text:

TEACHERS ROW 1: Charles Jaris, Henry Callantine, James Campbell, Thomos Crouch, Alphonse Waite, Albert Poschcn, Richard Fuller, William Michaels. ROW 2: Ruth Clency, Mildred Morgan, Inga Erickson, Esther Morgan, Lillian Dagger!, Geraldine lantz, Helen Thomas, Margaret Hanlon, Ethel Frisk. ROW 3: Ruth Walker, Alice Cleveland, Elcanorc Couvo', Vera Eastwood, Mil- dred Peohl, Marian McCort, Gerald Kacklcy, Clarence Welly. ROW 4: Eskin Cromwell, Walter Weffenstette, Florian Kwolek, Cassell Weidman, Milton Wilson, Anthony Hadady, Albert Schell, Harry Wilson. ROW 5: Harold Holloway, Theodore Flack, Quentin Johnson, Paul Hoemann, Victor Camsky, Charles long, Arnold Robinson, Fred Hopper. TEACHERS NOT SHOWN IN THE PICTURE Thelma Cox, Orpha Dean, Glcnna Dietrich, Alice Hamill, Welhelmina Hebner, Anna Moengen, Mary Lou Rogers, Betty Jane Rybolt, Henrietta Steiner. Geoigo Bercolos, Louis Birkett, William Burris, Harold Carlson, Henry Kicckhcafer, C. Vandeventer, Boyd Zink.

Suggestions in the Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN) collection:

Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Hammond Technical Vocational High School - Chart Yearbook (Hammond, IN) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952


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