Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1933

Page 64 of 184

 

Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 64 of 184
Page 64 of 184



Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 63
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Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 65
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Page 64 text:

Jfze .7933 Qfomce sTarT To lool4 very solemn and reliable. ln The monTh oT May There Tiourishes a mild Torm oT bribery, and There is coniecTure as To who will be The nexT ediTor oT The Record. On May 26Th The EdiTors were announced in The Record : ediTors oT The iVlanual : l-ioover and Vier- eclcg oT The Record : Kahn, lvlunsell, and DelacorTe, of The QuarTerly : Barnouw and T-looverg oT The MAN- NIKIN: lvlunsell, DelacorTe, and Viereclc. STern became presidenT oT The 6. A., while Henry and Tyrrell were Vice-PresidenT and secreTary, respecTively. There were oTher se- lecTions, such as: Bliven Tor head oT The Library CommiTTeeg Munsell as chairman oT The Social CommiTTeeg and ExTon, by The unanimous voTe oT one, chosen presidenT oT The ArT Club. These elecTions relieved The Tension somewhaT, and Tor several days Tellows wenT around congraTulaTing each oTher. The newly-chosen ediTors immediaTely became smug and saTisTied, relaxing Their responsible Taces Tor a momenT. Meanwhile school wenT on, drawing near To The Tinals and The college boards. The TaculTy liclced an unTorTunaTe 'VarsiTy baseball Team, on which were Orsenigo, l-lemmerdinger, Euld, and Urie. This blow senT The school reeling Tor a while, buT we recovered. Euld and ExTon won The A. A. P. S. doubles TiTles, and The Tennis Team lwhich also included STern and ivliddlediTchl , had a very good season. Unlike The year beTore we did noT have many good Wednesday aTTernoon programs. There were several singers on Thursdays, how- ever-a girl Tor insTance, sang The Big Brown Bear Said 'WooT'. There was also a Tellow who showed us J. Green-home boy who made good. lwiTh charTsl ThaT he could play The saxophone well because There was someThing wrong wiTh his windpipe. SENIOR YEAR: WAR AND PEACE lClass oTTicers: Carlisle, Pres.: STern, Vice-Pres.: Kahn, Sec.: T. PTeiTTer, Treas.l l-lorace Mann, said Mr. TillinghasT, is a school Tor young genTlemen. Winlcie, Mary Ann, and Ely. -T' CO T

Page 63 text:

Jim 1933 Qlowe Tion because iT seems provincially a Horace Mann pasTime. We TiTTh- Tormers were Too old and digniTied To ioin in This game, buT we looked on wiTh ToleranT amusemenT. The idea is: a Tellow has a chesTnuT miracu- - lously Tied To a sTring or a handlcerchieT. He holds This aT arm's lengTh, and anoTher Tellow Tries To spliT iT open wiTh his chesTnuT, which is similarly secured. IT he does break his rival's chesTnuT, he evidenTly geTs some sorT oT saTisTacTion ouT oT iT, buT if he doesn'T, The game iusT goes on and on. Besides chesTnuTs, oTher Things which were new To Horace Mann ThaT year were lal lvlr. BaruTh's CreaTive English Class, lbl Miss HasseTT, and lcl The campaign againsT cheaTing. These all spealc Tor Themselves. Also, in The Tall, Henry was awarded The coveTed lvlorrey Scholarship. The TooTball Team had raTher grim prospecTs aT TirsT. Ump was delayed in sTarTing aT H. M, Hem: good Cmzen' The season, however, was shorT and successTul. '33 members oT The Team were Crsenigo, Edwards, Buchsbaum. Marsilc, Cowl, and T. PTeiTTer. The soccer Team did especially well. Cowl had deserTed To The TooTball Team, so The only veTeran oT The class oT '33 was Henry, who was ably supporTed by classmaTes DelacorTe. Gerlach, Urie, and Herman. BaslceTball had a good season Too. The Grady-ComTorT-ErnsT TriumviraTe oT '32 absorbed mosT oT The scoring, buT Orsenigo, Edwards, and Vollmer also counTed during The Team's diTFiculT schedule. In November came The Fall .. DramaTic Club Show, The FourTh - 3 1.34. A. ? is Wall in which Rice and McGowan ' wwf? 1 . ' - F' 'Hs were women, Bliven a buTler, Bar- i - ,.. . , M y fri 5,QwTgr ' - A, . yA, nouw a consTable wiTh a bald head, 'R .y ..i 3 and ToussainT a murderer wiTh a T waxed musTache who had shoT , somebody- The FourTh Wall was , K , -- K -' gb- i ' ' i ' ' well received, alThough iT was noT as I happen TO be an idealiw-EX+on. big a hiT as The DicTaTor, which The club presenTed in March and which was one oT The mosT popular shows ever given aT Horace Mann. ln The casT were Bliven, McClave, Barnouw, PTeiTTer, and Rice. Munsell was The business manager oT The club. FiTTh Tormers always begin To geT TidgeTy Toward The end oT The year. Those who expecT To geT iobs on The Record or MANNIKIN 59



Page 65 text:

Jim 1933 IT was The opening day of school, and The rows of young genflemen who saT direcfly before him composed The senior class of I933. We no longer resembled STeig's Small Fry, for we were now Trying To muscle in on The Pefer Arno crowd. Our arms were folded and our foreheads furrowed. We were, however, slighfly surprised in one re- specT. We didn'T feel as enormous or as grown-up as we had expecfed. Seniors had once looked so Towering and maTure To us, Thaf iT felT sorT of anTi- climacfic To be seniors and nof To feel any differ- enf. l-lowever we signed our pink and blue slips wiThouT experiencing any acTual disappoinfmenf. As seniors we once more plunged info an alfruisfic fervor. The class of '33 seems To have enTerTained a genuine passion for currenf evenfs and argurnenfafive discourse. This had been formerly confined To The lunch-room, where seniors J had shouTed over Their soup abouf such subiecfs as BOY SCOUT Dougie Communism and Space. James Fuld, liffing orafory from The lunch- room up info The library, sTarTed a Speaker's Club and was made presidenf. McGowan, Viereck, Bliven, Rice, Lindsay, Delacorfe, and ofhers spenT Monday one-o'clock periods in haranguing diminufive audiences abouT Socialism, Technocracy, educafion, The Russian experimenf, and The developmenf of musical insfrumenfs. Meanwhile lnTernaTional Clubs were being formed. and To cap iT all Comrade Rice journeyed as To The Chicago Anfi-War Congress. On his refurn Comrade Rice banded TogeTher a liTTle AnTi-War Commif- Tee, which had a noT very pacific meefing in sTudy hall. Perhaps This peace movemenf was sTarTed by The gloomy Docfor Bafes, who spoke To us in Assembly, Five Dairy Maids. and who seemed To draw some mel- ancholy pleasure from saying To us, You boys will probably all be in The nexT war, and mosf of you will be killed. We had a loT of speakers in assemblies, who sfressed The facT ThaT we sfudenfs were graduafing info a chaoTic world, and ThaT The fuTure of sociefy depended on us. One speaker, who sTarTed describing The mafing habifs of The bee, ended up in an exposifion of Socialism. We ' 'H bl y.

Suggestions in the Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 76

1933, pg 76

Horace Mann Lincoln High School - Lincolnian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 151

1933, pg 151


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