Henrietta School - Hub Yearbook (Henrietta, OH)

 - Class of 1947

Page 22 of 80

 

Henrietta School - Hub Yearbook (Henrietta, OH) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 22 of 80
Page 22 of 80



Henrietta School - Hub Yearbook (Henrietta, OH) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 21
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Page 22 text:

Twenty THIRD AND FOURTH GRADES Front row: Lewis Meyer, Thomas Hawke, Ioan Heidrich, Carol Fletcher, Harold Creszler, James Horvath, Second row: Ronald Greszler. Ronald Tucker, Paul Barnett, Elaine Hustecl, Myron Becker, Stephen Howe, Gene Ronez, Mrs. Ada Berger. Back row: David Hufnagle, Charlotte Holcomb, Mary Sivinski, Donna Born, Sylvia Sprinkle, Myron Sprinkle. Absent members: john Fritzf William Szabo, Kay McDowell, Harlene Heyman, Raymond Telling. FIRST AND SECOND GRADES Front row: Ray Tucker, Dorothy Kasper, Iere Simonson, Ralph Cucco, Philip Howe, Io Greszler, Mike Polansky, Marilyn Born, Donna Fraelich, Clinton Sprinkle. Second row- Emogene Schlechter, jean Marie Gould, Johnny Heyman, Wayne Morrow, Arthur Born, Gary Wangerien, Ronald Ronez, Nancy Lamvermeyer. Back row: Mary Kasper, DeEtte Bruner, Dazso Sablack, Tommy Currier, Bob Bonez, Douglas Hand, Dorothy Becker, john Born, Tommy Howe, Miss Brown. Absent: Neal Kothe, Andy Fritz, Marjorie Born, Delycia Howard.

Page 21 text:

Seventh and Eighth Grades Whatever may or may not be said for the school year 1946-47, to the pupils in Grades V11 and V111 it has been just a bit different. No longer do they sit in the same room with the same teachers for all their classes. Now, at the end of each forty-five minute period, they join the general scramble as half a hundred others emerge gladly from one class to proceed sorrowfully to the next. The year opened with twenty-five boys and girls in Room 7, but during the second semester Walter Gottschling left to go to Amherst School. His classmates attended a farewell party for him given by Har- old Bennett. Generally speaking, activities have been much as usual-reading, writing, arithmetic, with a few extras for good measure, such as parties, dramatics, and basketball games. Of course there was also a civil trial which perhaps you attended. Did or did not Lois Kothe's red-and-white Cor was it a black-and-white?D cow damage Billy Docld's carefully tended lawn, resplendent in its green leaves? COr are there green leaves in February?j The question has not yet been fully decided. Occasionally the pupils have attempted to write limericks and other vcrses. Let us close by quoting the best of these, one written by Virginia Lee Greszler: THE MARCH WIND Hear the March wind hlow all clay, Hear it sing, Come out and play. Snow is falling here and there, Though the weather is so fair. Hear the March wind blow and whistle. Swaying, there's a tired thistle. ln the meaolow, grasses blow, ln my garden, tulips grow. Fifth and Sixth Grades As the school year of 1946 and 1947 draws to a close, the students of the fifth and sixth grades think back over the past year with many happy memories. They have tried to lit their scholastic activities in with everyday living experiences. The highlights of the year were the several parties held. Among them were the Halloween partv, Christmas party, several birthday parties, and the PTA party given them for getting the highest percentage of members in the PTA membership campaigns. The fifth and sixth grades have proven to the high school that they are willing salesmen. They have sold tickets for plays, programs, carnivals, Hub supscriptions, and various other tickets. The periods the students look forward to most are the regular gym periods under the coaching of Mr. ,lohn Fails and the periods of leisure in the new home room library. This library, made to create more interest in reading, contains books which the students get from the booktruck, as well as the room's own books. Nineteen



Page 23 text:

Third and Fourth Grades This school year of 1946-47 has proven very successful. We have had several pupils on the high honor roll, as well as the honor roll, throughout the year. We have participated in various programs, especially the Christmas and Spring Music Programs. For the Spring Music Program, our room danced folk dances and sang songs of different countries. The highlights of our years, as we look back, were the days that we had art work, the days thc wicncr sandwiches were served, the days that movies were shown, and every day that was warm enough to permit us to play with our new kicker ballf, - During the year we lost four pupils, Eddy Gottschling, Raymond Telling, Joan Heidrich, and john Fritz. However, we gained one pupil, Douglas Schneider, who came from Amherst. 9 First and Second Grades Reading Clubs, Christmas programs, seasonal parties may come and go every year, but what is this everyone is talking about in the primary room? A bus trip! Yes, a bus trip was planned to the dairy, the Hrc station, and the post office. We made a post office in our room for Valentines Day. We even made our own postage stamps and perforated them with a toy sewing machine. Then we visited a real post office. One day we wrote letters to our mothers about our post ofhce. We made our own envelopes, bought postage stamps, and mailed them. The Music Festival also holds a big place in our spring activities. We practiced songs and choral read- ing for l'The Boy and the Goats. We painted a frieze for it, too. Twenty-one

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Henrietta School - Hub Yearbook (Henrietta, OH) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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Henrietta School - Hub Yearbook (Henrietta, OH) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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Henrietta School - Hub Yearbook (Henrietta, OH) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

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Henrietta School - Hub Yearbook (Henrietta, OH) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 44

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Henrietta School - Hub Yearbook (Henrietta, OH) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 48

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