John Adams High School - Clipper Yearbook (Ozone Park, NY)
- Class of 1936
Page 1 of 118
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 118 of the 1936 volume:
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Eugene Werber . . . 6 Oh, the Pain of It! ..George Bogin . . 10 Stargazing ..... Irene Moore ..... 11 I Sing Thee . Bernard Lowenthal 16 Emergence Adele Pollak .... 17 Pied Piper . . . Stanley Dickter . . 18 Gaelic Dawn . Inheritance . Hurt ......... Call Me Ishmael Ye Shall Die Shoving Off . . . Ship's Company Edwin Butcher Doris Kludt . Doris Kludt . George Bogin .. Stanley Dickter . . 22 . 26 . 27 . 28 . 33 . 37 . 38 Senior Class Officers ..... . Candidates for Graduation . ................ . 39 40 Last Minute Notes ...... .Eugene Werber .. 78 Landfall ..... . ............... . 79 Tight Squeeze .......... . .jane Schlesinger . . 81 TWigbottle's Sweet Tooth . ..Harry Williams . . 82 Perilous Harbor ....... .James Lieberman , 86 The Ancestral Gong .. ..William Henn 87 Empire City . .. ..I. Damaturco . . 89 Song ........ .Rose Tarr ..... . 92 Over the Wall . . .Dorothy Proctor . . 93 The Wind .Harry Williams ., 95 . . . Mabel Carlson . . . Ship's Library On the Bridge . Advertisers . . . voLUME 5 97 99 ........l0l NUMBER2 1936 15 JANUARY Q 311- -A '-2 SOCIAY' UN -'i ri Lil il J In il Q , , ':, I l ,ja ,li i X S. '20 'Q ' '5W? 1'S',w 'Ns Q 9 ,I 5 Q Q N 1111,4q.Q111 111 . , 471,,ww5+W'..12Zt N., fo 1-9.1911111M.'1w1.1',1f1o1.w11A'1 I N19 11 os 'if I QQ kv- if '1 ' I 46? 1 fm 5 10 iii 5 6' ' S. 1 6510 .W '071 1, 11 1:4:fi Q f,'f4'E ': 3' ' 1 1 d 01 1 Q6 -'lit 'aff' W9 i Q Vi VO' 0 vi 1 61 ,1,. 3 I 1 YM N V 1 1 415, xg' P 4 Z' 'p 190 0 !'1 4 i1 1 f,,1 '1 1 W 46 1,1 01 ,I , 1 ll' W, 1 '-', ,.. 9? 5? 1 .1 . My , Q 1,1 11 I 1 !'1j1 1 109, 1 3 . Y? wnwywsl Oni 1 1 ' 1s fp X 11 Q 1 1 'N ,Q-, ,1 1 1,1 1 0 515 11 Qxy Q 9 , 'Og' '51 'ik 9 09431 'its 0 ' QQOW 10 89.00 1' 11,155 kt -my. 'qf,,f,91'1v 197' '10' 1,30 . 0654 1 ' -- '1,O' 25: X ' I J 611 5 '-,' f. -G1 ,1--1 11 114 s Yds, '19 :fyl 4'9I N1 OW. 1, 1,-QV f Q. f 1 -QQ 943-. 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'-5:1 'fi QI '.'.'l.-J f li:-1 ful 1' Q 1,-051.-H.-w.' 611,41 lv- g'!1'11-- ,.,4ei9 '-1 -1-Q1 w3Q1 Y'f9ZS.3f8al-T 6111-f11,12f ' 411111 ' si 1' 'N Q'.-ffm -:lfy Q uf 'Wk 1, -11,35 5654? yay? Qyiq 3.8 1 1 ' w, Q, A 7 N 6 My 1i!f'5,?' spina? 50, nuff? 0' 4 6' 2, f,'f 'Q11 1Q? 'SQ 14 ' ,envy .0 4 1241, - 1 yn M11 N . 1,-9110 91!Z WOO' 2' I, '15 9 9900, wt 'tfgih y1 91:19 W 1'11 1' 'W' 'CV0 fi' 'H yM1P ity' .QI 1, ,Q 1,-Q19 I - V: '1 WWC ' ' '1' 1'1W9 3ZQ'1W' M051 WW Q 1 1 I 11 10,0 A104 Nl. , 10 001 I1 ag Q MR. WILLIAM A. CLARKE Principal A Message from the Skipper Q FEW brief weeks will bring to a close your school days here at john Adams. I am sure that you will End the thought of Com- mencement and what lies beyond, attractive in its challenge. You are naturally impatient to enter into the world of affairs or to go on to institutions of higher studies. Despite polite phrases of regret as you take your leave, you are properly elated as you approach the goal of your hopes for the last four years. Whatever the difficulties you have had to face, however uninviting the prospect may appear in the future, graduation itself will be an occasion of rejoicing and congratulation. I should like to add my voice to those that hail the happy completion of your high school studies and to extend my hand to wish you Godspeed upon your journey through life. In a school numbering its stu- dents by the thousands and its graduates by the hun- dreds, it has not been possible for me to come to know personally as many of you as I should like. Mine has been in great part an unseen and impersonal in- fluence upon your training in these formative years, but I trust that it has been real enough to warrant my claiming the proud title of friend. It is as a friend that I utter my fondest wish for your success and true happiness. I earnestly hope that you will keep unspoiled your priceless possession, the gift of generous idealism that is the heritage of youth.'May it grow ever stronger with the years for your own happiness and the advancement of the common welfare! WILLIAM A. CLARKE, Primipal kQ.., ., . Spring Wit By Eugene Werber 1 1 1 ANG! The sharp crack vi Luc starters gun was lllblafltly drowned out by the tfCfI1CI1clOuS roar of twelve super-charged engines of the dozen sleek army Boeing P-26 pursuit planes, which a moment before had been compara- tively sweetly purring as they toed the thick chalk-white line, wing to wing. The very earth trembled at this display of the latest toy of Mars, as twelve thundering and roaring messengers of war tore across the velvet-like grass field, rose in one motion, and disappeared into the glare of the mid-day sun. Similar scenes were but a matter of routine, repeated daily, during the years of 1915 to 1918. But this was the year of 1955. These planes did not set out in search of combat with the planes of the enemy. These modern planes and pilots were this day to test their respective merits in peaceful competition with each other and not with a real enemy. This was the day of the Mitchell Trophy air races, the only event in which army planes, piloted by army aviators, are permitted to race in competition with each Other. The huge grandstands at the sides of the field were greatly overcrowded, for here was being presented a contest of skill such as the sporting public always wants but so seldom gets. The conditions of this contest are such that luck plays the smallest possible part in the outcome of the events. Each pilot entered in the race is an officer of the army air ranks located throughout the different sections of the country. Likewise, each plane in any one contest is horsepower for horsepower and strut for strut, the same as each of the other planes entered in the race. It is, therefore, only by skillful maneuvering and superior flying tactics that any pilot can zoom twice around the three pylons of this thirty mile triangular course and outdistance planes of equal power. Six lg , 4 However, a force having considerable bearing on the outcome of these races was the group of insignificant-appearing men, clad in grease-smeared, torn and dirty overalls, who at this time sat or stood haphazardly in the shade of the huge doorway of an empty hangar at the side of the field. These mechanics had come with their officers from the many army airports of the country to repre- sent their respective air units. As in the case of their commanding officers, they felt that the very honor of their units was dependent upon their showing in the air races. Therefore, each day and often at night, these typical grease monkeys had applied all their knowl- edge of mechanics in making the planes of their officers technically perfect. It was these excited men, who were nervously puffing at innumerable cigarettes, with their eyes glued on the planes as they streaked across the sky seemingly straight for their hangar. As the planes neared, the men rose in one motion. Anxiously, they sought the identity of the leader. It was not until they had almost swept overhead that one happy voice cried, Captain Keller's leadin' 'emf' Almost simultaneously was heard, Good boy, Murphy is second, and There's Thomas right on his tailf' The latter was uttered in the strangely anxious voice of Little john who had come up from Bolling Field with Captain Thomas. Well over six feet, and by far the most powerful man of the group of mechanics, Little john had been extremely nervous all that morning. Ever since he had arrived at the field Little Johnl' had time and time again gone over every mechanical detail of Captain Thomas' plane. He was truly satisfied in that he had done his part and done it well. However, although he always outwardly bragged that his plane would win, he really was extremely doubt- ful, for he knew the man who was piloting his plane. I-Ie truly respected and honored Captain Thomas and knew him to be one of the finest aviators in the Pursuit Division. But, still Little Johnl' did not think Captain Thomas was the right man to represent his unit in an air race. And Little johns, assump- tions were not unfounded. Captain Thomas had all the character- istics of a great flyer: stamina, nerves of steel, and a clear head. But, although Thomas was fearless, he was also unusually careful, never having been known to take an unnecessary chance. In an air race Little john knew that a flyer had to take risks in going through trick maneuvers. One could not be too careful and win! f 4' f Q, 1 .fnwf 'ZZ a at, fr WWW .7 X ' 4.2 f Little john was indeed excited when, at the half of the race, Captain Thomas was in third place. The spectators burst into applause as the planes swept around the pylon before the stands. lf' Suddenly shouts stopped and then began with renewed vigor, as C the third plane tore around the pylon in a wide arc, at a terrific I f-i C fff Ti . 2 . 'Qvxe K X Al A !! S ezfefz I f 'X f f ff via! Wo , ,ff X I speed, wavered a moment, one-hundred feet from the ground, and then fell into second place as it rejoined the other planes which had made much sharper turns but at reduced speeds. In the midst of the mechanics, Little john really looked scared as he saw this dangerous maneuver on the part of his pilot, and he quietly slumped down into his seat as the plane again tore out toward the second pylon at the west end of the field. At this time, the group of mechanics burst into a really serious discussion of the possibilities of the race, planes and pilots. Almost immediately a blunt fellow called XXfindy queried, Say johnny, whats wrong with Thomas? He never even cut the throttle on that turn. May gain a little distance that way, but he'll probably end up in the boneyard if he does it againf, And so it was that almost everyone was puzzled at the strange tactics of Captain Thomas. lt was known as a fact that to take a turn, in a tricky army pursuit plane, at well over two hundred miles an hour was almost certain to result in a side-slip, which is really deadly at a hundred foot altitude. Strangely enough, every pilot had throttled down just before making the turn. Except Captain Thomas. Those who knew the cautious Captain Thomas could not understand his queer action and to question his mechanic Little John brought no further solution to this controversy. Little john now appeared to be sick. He was breathing heavily and chewing and pufhng nervously at his cigarette as he watched the dim outlines or the planes on the horizon. His fellow mechanics felt lze had good cause to feel sick. As is the custom of both pilots and mechanics, each mechanic in the hangar was fondling his good-luck piece during these exciting and trying moments. Since each mechanic had done his utmost to have his oflicer win the race, they now resorted to supernatural powers. Little johnu was no exception, for in his strong right fist was held some such lucky-piece. Meanwhile, X5Vindy had secured a powerful pair of field glasses and with the glasses trained on the planes on the horizon was letting out short excited cries to his anxious audience. l'Nearin, the west pylon now. Keller's around. There goes Captain Thomas. Takin' it wide. Didn't cut the throttle at all, darn fool. 'S fallin' in again. Lven with Keller nowfl Little johnl' clenched his fist tighter around his lucky-piece and opened his eyes which he had shut during this seemingly painful but favorable announcement. Again, Windy', at the binoculars was announcing the latest developments. l'Keller an, Thomas nearin' the pylon together. Say, 'joimyr that fool pilot of yours, Thomas, had better quit his maneuvering and cut the throttle this time. ,Tain't human to take every turn at that speed and live to tell about itf' All the pent-up feeling which had made Little Iohni' act queerly all morning, broke forth, as he jumped up in a terrible rage crying, 'iShut up, can't yalu Vfith that, Little john started out of the hangar under the wondering stare of the group. In a lowered voice 'lWindy', con- tinued, 'lKeller and Thomas takin, the pylon together. Thomas goin' wide. 'Little johnv paused to listen. 'lThomas made it again, he's in line now ahead of Keller, came the reassuring voice. . Thomas' leadin' down the home stretch. It's those fool turns of his. He won't throttle 'er down. Here they comef' Wfith that, the planes came thundering into clear view, throttles wide open, and each one keeping its same distance in the long string of planes. A moment later, Thomas, with Keller on his tail, swept past the last pylon amidst the thunderous applause of the excited spectators. As he stood in the doorway of the hangar, l'Little johns face broke into a broad smile, and he seemed to lose all his cares and the anger of a moment before. Little john having apologized to his friends for his strange actions, Windy', ventured to ask, Hjohnny, what kind of a lucky piece have you got? We'll have to get the same kind, huh Fellas?,' Righto, they all joined in, Let's see it! Little johnn appeared to be taken unawares and was clearly puzzled as to what to do. Finally, making up his mind, he declared, Half my luck was the skill of Captain Thomas. Here's the other half V' He opened his clenched fist, and, as a small spring fell to the floor of the hangar, they recognized the true meaning of his statement and actions. There on the floor was the small spring without which an airplane throttle cannot be closed, once having been opened. 1 1 If 1 7i1., ,,i L Oh, The Pain of It By George Bo gin HE rasping, hacking, slash of cut glass rakes your finger, and blood spurts like a wild geyser and trickles hotly on trembling skin. Groping blindly in your pajamas, your big toe bangs against a chair leg. You screech and leap, while radiating twinges of hurt squirm madly in the stubbed member. Someone playfully cognizant of his own humor, grabs your wrist with both paws, and each stretches your skin in a different direction, the Indian Burn. There are livid pricklings of fire push- ing from the hands of that grinning humorist. An elbow shoots from emptiness, splats against your nose. There is a dull solid sort of pain that embarrasses you by making your eyes water. There is the swift, shooting, shrieking pain of a needle pierc- ing the skin. Flame leaps from air, licks with the stinging of bees, the pierc- ing of needles, the boiling of lava, and slashing of daggers. The burn, most torturous, most horrible. There is a sudden clip. Grinding teeth crash down on your tender tongue. It jumps crazily around the concave sides of the roof of your mouth. Your eyes are wet. You moan and wail. A door slams . . . on your linger. Meditate on that pain. Think slowly. The door slamming on your finger. Think of what follows. Think carefully on each minute hurt. Add them up. Two running feet meet space, and a body falls through noth- ingness and earth rushes up to meet with amazing speed, your back. All air is squashed out of you. You make motions to speak. Your mouth utters nothing. You choke. Your lungs beg for air. You cannot breathe. A needle that whizzes, comes slowly and painstakingly into your mouth. It moves toward large caverns and . . . like a hack saw on tin, the drill shrills into your tooth. Swirling, thin, sharp pain that buzzes. Relentless, not stopping. A hair curling sweetly on the end of your chin, is squeezed by the tightness of tweezers. An instant and it is gone. In the interim, dwell on the sensation. Now that I have charmed you with this delightful aperitif, I warn you. Be careful. Do not trip down the stairs. Don't gaze at the heavens while approaching the abruptness of a pole. Don't-- don't-! Ten 1 . -T' ' ' 1 f .r f : 2 'V Q X Q ' l --f gl, X- Q N 7 rv 42713. IQ jx ,xx R Z 0 . ,A , jf -s w s Stargazing 18 - fliffm 4' B' Irene Moore g QS. X X4 f V :sg 7 Sxgffes-Q V li Q wir q 0 T fig If .I -ze ' 7' '4:',,!,9 jf' 4 2 1' 6' Qc X 7 ' x Q Kg xiq 1240 ? X ' ,f 1 'li I N MN Xmkjgi To I WAS lost! Lost in the dense blackness of a forest, lost-and alone. I broke into a mad- dened run as one panic-stricken, tearing my clothing on protruding twigs. Onward! Ever onward! Eyes seeing only blackness, fear over- powering any sensible thought, ears hearing only the frantic booting of owls. Thatls how it feels to be lost in an assignment but I glanced upward at the stars. The stars-Oh yes! Ever since that day I have always looked up at the stars. So it is with the universe. The whole world looks up to a star-a cham- pion. In school the names of some students are more familiar to the student body than others. These are our stars. After graduation we will still remember names of some of the graduates who have estab- lished an outstanding record while at Adams. Gerald McCarthy is one. He was selected a member of an all- Queens team this term, beacuse he was so outstanding in his duties as Adams left end. Baseball has also captured the interest of Mc- Carthy. He plays on outside teams as well as on the school team. McCarthy has managed to get five major letters. Gold and silver Als and P.S.A.L. Pins. This young athlete confesses that he has no definite ambition to satisfy, and after graduation will start in the business world. Another prominent name that we immediately connect with sports is that of Victor Diregela, who has done such fine work on the track team. Diregela, who just loves to run, fl could tell that by the way he jumped up and darted toward the door when I tried to get a few words from himj has brought fame and glory to Adams. Diregela won first place in the borough championship contest. He has no preference in regard to the races he has entered but considers Eleven I ADAMS AT PLAY FOOTBAL i ? I E E I 2 L 1 1 '5 1 P , i 1 themaall on the same level. ,He is the recipient of three Major A's. We also have members of the fairer sex who are sports enthu- siasts. Perhaps they cannot kick a football, but that is a minor detail when you consider what they can do. Take Evelyn Hagan for ex- ample. She is the proud possessor of 2 Major A's, 5 Minor A's, Silver and Bronze A's, junior and Senior Life Saving Pins, -4 P.S.A.L. Pins and 20 chevrons. That in itself is self-explanatory. Basketball is her favorite sport, but she could not get along without the others. Miss Hagan, who is an athlete through and through, plans to go to night school after graduation to take a course which will prepare her for Health education teaching. She expressed a desire to become a member of a good outside basketball team which is probably the reason why she intends to join the Y. W. C. A. when she leaves school. Two out of her four P.S.A.L. pins were won at the girls' athletic field meet. Miss Hagan thinks that more of these lmeets would be the means of stimulating greater interest in girls' sports. Caroline Haas, who has been a member of the Glee Club for four years, is certainly a credit to the organization. .Miss 'Haas says that she has been singing as long as she can remember. She started her first singing at the tender age of four, when she appeared as Gretel in the operetta Hansel and Gretel which was given by her kindergarten class. Miss Haas admits that she took piano lessons once but somehow the task of practicing completely slipped her mind until a half hour before her music teacher came. She can play quite well, but would much rather sing. She would like to sing light opera more than anything. She particularly enjoyed her role in the Pirates of Penzance, and just whispered that she wishes she could be here to sing in Gondoliers. Caroline Haas is also outstanding in scholarship. She has received bronze, silver, and gold A's and has both meritorious and exceptional service awards. You may think that beating the drum is just a matter of hitting a pair of drum-sticks against a drum, but it really is an art and David Skalka has learned it so well that he is reported the outstand- ing graduate in the orchestra. When Skalka came to John Adams. he played the violin but then became interested in the drums. He intends to go to business college to study shorthand reporting, but above all he would like to get into the Symphonic Orchestra as a tympanist. When we think of the Glee Club and the operettas we natur- ally think of the Dramatics group and their productions. Vera Peko- witz, Edward Horowitz, Lester Korelitz, and George Thomas seem to have stolen the limelight, as far as dramatics are concerned. Miss Pekowitz began her dramatic career a year ago and has made rapid strides toward great success. Her excellent acting in Secret Servicel' is evidence of this fact. After graduation Miss Peko- witz intends to take a long rest which she hinted is oneof her favo- Thirteen 'Ve . Ll 3 :EMS . ..,.,' ...U , ffffff A5 WA J ld-wr Q55 Tj! 'M ,. V fi . ae f 9 572 , fi X 4 174 7 If rl wings: I Sing Thee How? How can I tell in words that rhyme In meter set and roted, Wfhat people feel at parting timei How can such things he noted? lld have to start out with a sigh And- At this parting dreary We'll not forget the times gone by- The mere thought makes me weary. I'd have to say 'QI feel the pang- The deep pathos of leaving- And paraphrase the Scotch Auld Lang And feel its keen hereaving. How? Well, listen then Closely to me The time of parting sad? School of our teens we hail thee- Somewhere inside-lym glad. Berfzamf Lozvefzflml E at mergence, , V Ge Q P H A ,J x kd, QL, Is it chaos? The faith of naive child The simple, trusting innocent believing Unused to harsh deceiving- Then the sophist cynicism Ot the wordly adult code. This is but a prelude YV here it duly weighs New theorems on wavering scale And then oheyse For long or little their examples In wild impulsive mode. This is but a prelude, S Where each blunt transtiguration, ls a phase in the construction Of a strong or weak foundation For a newly formed creation Of a specific kind. A prelude still unbalanced, Significant yet dim Wliere character that is to he ls yet a childish whim. Here choose ye well your traits- Young adolescent mind. ' Adele Pollazk. t . Q, vp a ,, 5. ia tr , SXSW.. 137- 1.5. xi abs 'il ,. - -. Cl? M i - st l' 41 -,z ' Q9 T 5:31571 i'f:'l '- '.F:'--,a---f Xsit ks . , at .. , TN K Q ff fx. M '- X3 aff' 0 0 1 -ff.1.fi' zws.-xr 4 1 ,f -r 2 ,Q V le I el' pi 1 ,lg 'My 1' ,Zz My g1w'ZLQT.7ti1 'liQS,Xxc5.gx5, lf- X 3, l ' - Na it QQ-Sligf, By Stanley Dickter .4 -s N 4 l ig,if. L. 1, f ra on fm, tcp, 9af':!f:yT N ' -1, -X 'fn lf.. rem 7 .. . X' 1-E117 2 if fff 2 X -- Z 4,211 2 - ' ,x,?3.,':.,.k.x X fiflz 77 Q2 tggif - . 1' I,-1. Ti: E' -Kg ' 1 E A mr., 1 rf. -- 1 FX. X N354 vnfligx algfa. lli , . V :, A N .L 4 X 'X i 4.7 M1 ,--ix itlvfxiiilll X 5 5 Q pi.-. L Q . -2 4'-11: A 2 .W f, gf f f 1 7 if J, H 2 , 2 .2- VWWJLI 4 i,I-Sw, ' X: ,ix 'Q g iii K .. 31 5' CH f flfx ll llw I ' X' ft . Walk' uit i o lifftiiilfftrfjy- -Q. t V 1- at gig, ,fm I , iii. xg -mi SENQG-Libr. A R HE day of the Inter- scholastic Cross-Country Meet dawned bright and clear. Many of the athletes entered in the meet were jogging across the sur- rounding countryside getting the Ufeell' of the course. Over in one corner of the field, several of the runners were taking liinbering up exercises to loosen up their muscles. Down in the locker room, Ralph Woods-tlme pride and des- pair of Roxford High, sat engaged in a less strenuous task. From his locker, he brought forth a sandwich carefully wrapped in wax paper. Removing the protective covering, he opened his mouth wide in anticipation of sinking his teeth into the choice morsel. He was rudely interrupted by the sudden appearance of the Roxford coach. 'A fine cross-country runner you are. One hour before the start of the race, and you sit down in the locker room and begin eating your breakfast! Get out on that field! Ralph, with a sigh of despair, thrust the uneaten sandwich into the back pocket of his trunks and sallied forth upon the field to join the others. Ten minutes before the start of the race, all stopped for a needed rest. Finally the whistle blew for the start of the race, and in a few seconds they were off. At the termination of a speedy half-mile, Ralph found himself at the end of the group. Yet, when the two mile mark was reached, he found himself almost seventy yards from the leader-Johnston of Eastville. He cast a backward glance to see if he had unknow- ingly passed anyone during the past few hundred yards. He was unable to see another runner, but what he did see made his blood run cold. His quick glance behind had revealed two tiny field mice following not twenty feet back! Eigfaleelz Ever since a mouse had playfully taken a nibble out of his hand when he was still a toddling youngster, Ralph could never remain calm if he knew that a mouse was in the vicinity. Yet now, he had not one but two of the fearful creatures running directly behind him! He glanced back to see if he wasnt suffering from some awful halucination. Three more had joined the couple. Ralph could stand no more! With new-found energy he increased his pace and rapidly widened the distance between his enemies and himself. After a few hundred yards, he glanced back again to see if the mice had lost his trail. To his horror, he discovered that the Eve had increased to a full dozen of the awful rodents-the nearest of iwhich was no more than ten feet away from him! He tried to relay his predicament to several groups of laughing people at the sides of the course, but each time he was answered by some jibes and increased laughter. He cast another glance to the rear and was petrified to find that almost fifty mice were scampering along the course! Once, upon glancing back, a slight hope arose within him when he noticed that his pursuers had decreased in numbers. Once before he had heard something about a host of rats following a man. He racked his brain for the answer. Then it dawned upon him! The Pied Piper of Hamlin! And he-Ralph Woods was the Pied Piper of Roxford! He laughed aloud at the thought. Then suddenly he saw something which sent his heart reeling with joy, for there not thirty yards in front of him, was another runner. just as he reached the four mile marker, he passed this lone runner. His swift glance backward told him that the runner whom he had just passed had fallen to the ground where he lay in the throes of hysterical laughter. He tossed wildly around on the hard ground with loud piercing laughter which followed the speeding Ralph for many yards. Soon he drew close to the cross-country men who were stretched out in a line. His furry companions were right behind him although their numbers had decreased considerably. A mere twenty remained in place of the fifty which had pursued him just a few miles back! The thought of those mice following him was infuriating. What had he done that they should pick on him? Those mice followed him as though he were a piece of cheese! Cheese!-the words aroused memories within him. Suddenly, he thrust his hand into his back pocket and from it drew the uneaten sandwich which he had carlessly thrust into his pocket. He tore the two slices of bread apart. There in the center reposed a thick slice of yellow store cheese! Savagely he threw the sandwich as far from him as he could. Three-quarters of the hungry mice sped after the falling sandwich, Wi PM WZ .iw ' if ,L 5.2 11 ':,, if . , - by . 71- .. Fi' I . ,. 1 ' Nineteen X W fl if which some instinct told them was the object of their desire. But five of them whose instincts werenlt up to par continued their furious chase after Ralph. Now our hero found himself well up in front of the panting runners. At the five and one half mile mark, he found himself in second place. In front of him was Johnston of Eastville, who had maintained his lead from the start of the race. Suddenly the East- ville star broke into a mad sprint for the completion of the remain- ing half-mile. He drew rapidly away from the exhausted Ralph, The Roxford ace felt a tug at the heel of his sneaker. He glanced down and saw one of the mice trying to crawl up his leg in an effort to reach the pocket from which the smell of cheese still emanated. Witlm a scream of terror, Ralph broke into a mad sprint which carried him far into the lead. He dared not look back now for fear of stumbling, but a sharp squeak told him the mice were still on his trail. He came into the home stretch with ,fa-at ff-sa ,S X '! -'XX-X x xx, H X, -f.:- '. tubs. ' 42' f f:-' -2- X fa? MSE: f -- Staff-'c I I . - - v 1 I the beat of johnstons running steps drowning out the squeak or his pursuers. Witlm the finish line but a few yards away, Ralph roared past the grandstand like a century sprinter. He broke the tape a full thirty yards ahead of johnson. He came to in the locker room surrounded by his joyful team- mates. Weakly he inquired, Did we win?', '!Did we win? shouted coach Bradley, We sure did! Your strategy gave us FIRST PLACE! When your opponents saw you flash past, they set out to catch you with the result that most of them were so winded, they couldn't finish. Our boys realized what you were doing and let the others run themselves out trying to follow that pace you set up. Not only did we win, but you broke the meet record, by doing the six miles in twenty-nine minutes Hat! That's a record that will stand for a long time! Tell us Ralph, what put that extra speed into your feet ? I don't know whether it was because I was a piece of running cheese, or because I'm the Pied Piper of Roxford! was Ralphls happy reply! Twenty Q ADAMS AT PLAY BASKETBALL ,, , ,W ,, Gaelic Dawn By Edwin Butcher land began many centuries ago and reaches as a light into the gloom of the past to reveal the history of the Emerald Isle in lucid, poetical and prose forms that are at once commanding and effective. It is not until the literature produced during and after the reign of Niall of the Nine Hostages, king during the fifth century, that we can find our written evidences of a great Celtic literature. The early stories, pagan in origin, are mostly mythological. They do, however, provide enjoyable reading in their color and deep emo- tion. They pulsate with the exciting deeds of the giant Cuchulain as he engages in fierce battles, and they are saddened with the life of the sorrowful Deirdre. The story of Deirdre is an interesting one which is known by almost every Irishman. It is one of melancholy that grips. Her life seems a prototype of Erin's when she fulfills the prophecy of the Druid who said at her birth, In your fate, O beautiful child, are wounds and ill doings and shedding of blood . . . For your sake brave men will go into exile . . . You will be a story of wonder to eternity. Although the literature of Erin began many years before Christ, it does not assume much importance until the dawn of the Christian era in the Emerald Isle. It is to the great Saints of Ireland who founded colleges and schools to nourish the learning of the people, and who, in their scholarly wisdom, saw fit to preserve the records and manuscripts of their times, that we owe the literary advance- ment of this country, and the knowledge of it which remains today. Saint Patrick, the greatest saint of Erin, gave impetus to the march of literary achievements. Had not the Danish Invasions in the ninth and tenth centuries set much of this to naught, it is certain that the sagas and poems of the writers of that day would open up a vast store of treasure for the seeker of truth and beauty. Twenty-lurfo HE literature of Ire- Many valuable manuscripts were either destroyed or scattered over the continent of Europe by Irish emigrants Heeing from the terrors of the invaders. The tremendous setback that Irish literature received through the invasion can best be shown by the fact that there exists today in Erin not a single manuscript written fin Gaelicj prior to the eighth century, only copies of other works. Not only were hundreds of previously existing manuscripts de- stroyed but also some of the works of contemporary writers. Despite the ruins of conquest some great writings flowed from the productive pens of the Irish of the time, due, no doubt, to the fact that the original enthusiasm was still alive. Preeminent among writers of the time was Cormac MacCulinan, a bishop, king, and scholar. His greatest existing work is the celebrated Corma,s Glos- sary. It is primarily a list of words and phrases of former years, with an explanation of their meaning, compiled to aid students of the time. Its present use is to reveal ancient history, law, and customs. King Cormac is said to have had a remarkable knowledge of the intellectual things of his day, and to have been conversant with the language of the Danes, Greeks, Hebrews, and Romans. Another great poet of the time was Gormly, daughter of Flann Sionna, High King of Ireland. Gormly's chief contribution to the world of verse was her lamentation over the grave of her husband, Niall Glun-dubh, who was killed in a skirmish with the Danes. This doleful poem is sometimes heard in remote parts of Ireland even to this day. Its tone of mournful despair is evident in the first stanza which Douglas Hyde translates literally: Monk, remove thy foot, lift it off the grave of Niall, too long heapest thou the earth on him whom I fain would love. Three other great poets of the Danish Periodn were Flann MacLonian, called the Virgil of the Irish race, Cinaith O'Hartigan, and Eochaidh O'Flynn, works of the first-named are of the greatest value historically. O'F1ynn has set down in poetic form Ireland's real and mythical history. Historians go to his works for reference for he is one of the few reliable sources for the contents of the early legends and myths. The bloody destruction of the Northern men was ended in the eleventh century by the famed usurper, Brian Boru who succeeded in driving the invader out of Ireland. Brian restored the ruined monas- teries, schools, and churches. Learning flourished once again, but only for a while. Brian himself was killed by the Danes and again the plains of Ireland were reddened with the blood of warriors. Upon hearing of Brian's death, MacLiag, a great poet of the time, was deeply grieved. Even after the death of his beloved patron, his poems were characterized by the deepest solemnity. L Mangan, a comparatively modern poet, has Anglicized his soul- Twenty-tfaree ful apostrophe to the township where the court of Brian was situ- ated: Oh, Where, Kincora, is Brian the great? And, where is the beauty that once was thine? Oh, where are the princes and nobles what sate At the feasts in thy halls, and drank red wine? After eight hundred years of comparative silence, the seven- teenth century found Ireland once again leading in literature. Geof- frey Keating is undoubtedly the greatest savant of this period with his volumes on Ireland's history. There were also the Four Masters and Duald MacFirbis, who, outside of Keating, were the finest scholars that modern Erin has had. It is to these men that the history students of today look for information, for they, collecting and copying the old vellums and manuscripts of their time, did much to preserve the history of Ireland. Irish history during the eighteenth century was clearly and un- mistakably written-in blood. Sad indeed is the tone of the literature of this period, as it tells of men with prices on their heads, of the bitter strife of rebellion. Throughout all the poetry and ballads of the time the reader finds a note of despair, of deepest melancholy. It was during this era that most of the poems, stories, and songs of Ireland heard today were written. It was a time of daring romance, and tribulation and no other period of literature reveals the spirit of the Irish better than this. At this time, too, many Irishmen were driven into exile and, some to their deaths. As a result, not much remained of the young manhood of the Emerald Isle, which was a cause of bereavement among the poets. John Todhunter, in The Bamlaee created a mournful poem where Spectre Erinu sits on the banks of the river Shannon bemoaning her loss. A mother of many children, Of children exiled and dead, In her home, with bent head, homeless, Clasping her knee she sits, Keening, keening! The struggle against foreign domination was the greatest factor in Irish literature at the time. It was usually not a bitter, vindictive one but rather of lament and the telling of deeds of bravery and suffering. Although the use of the name of Ireland was forbidden, nevertheless the poets used allegorical names, such as Cathleen ni Houlihan, Dark Rosaleen, and Shan Van Vocht, which resulted in poems and songs of singular beauty and charm. Many of the poems offer tribute to brave men who fought and bled for Ireland. O'Moore, Sarsfield, Pearce, and Parnell find favor with the poets in songs that praise their exploits and bewail their deaths. However, women too played their part in the struggle, and lit- Twenty-four erature does not fail to recognize their mental anguish when a lover or a husband met death for the cause of the nation's freedom. One of the most pathetic, yet beautiful stories concerning the death of a warrior who was slain at the feet of his lover, is con- tained in Francis Davis, Kallmleen ban Adair: A young Irish colleen runs through the dew-glistening grass of the early morning to the side of her lover who has been wounded in a battle with English soldiers. Behind, her native Antrim in a reeking ruin lies, Before her like a silvery path, Kell's sleeping water rises And many a pointed shrub has pierc'd Those feet so white and bare But, oh! Thy heart is deeper rent, Young Kathaleen ban Adair. During this era a sudden change in Irish literature is apparent. Coming up to the nineteenth century a division in the literature is more forcibly brought to our attention. There are two languages in use: Gaelic and English. Of the Gaelic writers of this country, Douglas Hyde, Padraic Pearse, and Canon Peter O'Leary are the most conspicuous. They adopted a style, fresh and racy, and succeeded in creating a new form of Gaelic literature. To the English writing authors, the language was new. Al- though they were bi-lingual, Gaelic was inherent with them, and it is in that tongue that they seem at their best. Consequently, some of the literature, especially the poetry, was not of equal merit with the Gaelic. However, there were a few writers in the nineteenth cen- tury whose creations rank on a high plane. They are: Thomas Davis, whose work was unsurpassed by any contemporary writer, Clarence Mangan, author of the immortal poem, A Vision of Connaught, and Sir Samuel Ferguson, a very brilliant man, whose best contribu- tion was The Burial of King Cormacf' Then, of course, no history of Irish literature would be complete without mention of the much- liked Thomas Moore. But Moore wrote voluminously and for com- mercial profit. Hence, and this may seem heretical to some, seems to lose thereby. His best pieces capture and enchant, and he truly deserves the place that he holds in the heart of the Irish-and in- deed of the world. It has often been remarked that Irish literature is genuine in the deepest sense. This I think, is because Irish writers have an inti- mate knowledge of what they write. They write of sadness, and what race has felt sadness more heavily? They tell of love and who loves more feelingly than an Irishman? Exile, war, and famine are all known to the Irish and when they write of them they do so with the finesse of touch, born of true understanding. Tzuelzty-jiffe f My y T u i Qmgfg, ' ik 'K ei C 1 .V . ig? O in Q . s Wll ruby M , -- X X' 'g hh' 1 wb. .iii ff - ,'L',! Inheritance X .. , , xx .txt 5- 1 Q . V- ,. 5 L 1 Q To me the hills are given S X, All jade and silver in the spring i.1:z:1l wg! The mourning wind thro' trees- X N. And birds that sing. T14 T To me the sky is given X Pierced by the swallows flight XX? Qi The fingers of the shining rain And pale moonlight. :X ' To me a stream is given Xxx ' M uiple petals covered oer Singing the secret songs 'X N ,, , U :VZ one has heard before. xxx .:, To me are given leaves that dance- The earth is my inheritance. X f A '11 7 V fi Qc , 5 - D - 1 X , , Dorff Kfzzfff. lg' -K -, -X ff FJ - -' 'L 4 -' , T13 If 0' 'W' ,IV E , V Qc' ' 23 X! 'll' 0 1 , - , - ' J Eff. X! l, 4.17 f ll r L eggfhfi ' K l -- 15-4 'XX wf 'R T-' ,f5f?V .'- ' ' ' ' x r ,-:i.'.15r W ,,, s A ir' s tx i ' I u 1 - M K X in i ' K U., -' T I - J n !11lf 'n I l l-lurk I fear the loveliness That darkness brings, I fear the night that steals On sabled Wings. I fear the crescent moon Suspended by an unseen thread, I fear the purple lilac And the hawthorne-dead. I fear the silvered pools And the gentle rains- I cannot help but fear- Wlnen loveliness so pains. Dome Kind! I Call Me Ishmael By George Bogin -- l ERMAN MELVILLE sprang from the awakening seed of nineteenth century American lit- erature. He came suddenly to the stale public eye, like a comet, and like a comet he spun quickly away. Years after this phenomenon had left the skies, someone discovered that some of the sparks left scattered behind had shed a new and strange light. The sparks were resurrected, reunited and the meteor, Herman Melville, was brought back to the wide-eyed gaze of a new public. Herman Melville was born in New York City on August 1st, 1819. He was descended from paternal Scotch stock and maternal Dutch. Until his fatherys death in 1852, the family was fairly well- to-do, but Alan Melville died, leaving little money and eight chil- dren. Herman was a weak child and his cheeks grew paler with the snows of new winters. He was melancholy and moody as a mere infant. Wluen he was six, his father sent this note along with Her- man on the boy's visit to his Uncle Thomas in Albany. Herman is backward in speech and somewhat slow in comprehension, but you will find him as far as he understands men and things, both solid and profound and of a docile and amiable disposition. The crowded houses that the Melville's lived in at various times were only thin coverings for Herman's imagination. His sombre eyes followed the trim little packets across the sea, and he had revisited the ports of the world dozens of times. Alan Melville, himself, had been a great traveller. He had noted down that in twenty years he had travelled 24,425 miles by land, 48,840 miles by water and had been 643 days at sea. Recollections of the stories his father once told of his many travels, of his two year stay in Paris, the books and prints from foreign lands that he brought home, make an older Herman yearn to be suddenly away from the four-walled convention- Twenty-eight alism of New York City. Lewis Mumford says in his biography of Melville, New York taught Herman Melville to be discontented with New Yorkfl When Herman was fifteen, he got a job as a clerk in the New York State Bank and later in the same year he went over to his brother Gansevoort's hat shop to fill the same position. His wild young dreams of adventure and romance were suffocated by the cold stagnancy of the shop. He filled a miserable two years there, and in 1836 when he was seventeen, he went upstate to visit his uncle Thomas at Broadhall. He helped in the hay fields and when autumn came he taught school. His mother had, in the interim, moved to Lansingburgh near Albany, and Herman stayed there for a while. Finding no answer to his quest for life at Lansingburgh, he decided to board a ship for Europe and work his way to the places he had seen only in reverie. He had barely enough money for the trip down the river from Albany, and all the bitterness a young boy is capable of enveloped him as he stood in the cold darkness on the deck of the river boat, the rain beating against his face and finding his neck beneath the upturned collar, while inside the easy-going passengers joked over wine and crackers in the warm and lighted room. Later Melville cries in Recz'bzzwz, echoes from his youth. Talk not of the bitterness of middle-age and after life. A boy can feel all that, and much more, when upon his young soul the mild dew has fallen, and the fruit, which with others is only blasted after ripeness, with him is nipped in the first blossom and bud. And never again can such blights be made good, they strike in too deep, and leave such a scar that the air of Paradise might not erase it. Herman Melville sailed from the port of New York, a common seaman on the merchant ship Highlander,'l plying a route between New York and Livervpool. The Highlander, was Herman's Har- vard, but the courses were not as gentle. He majored in disillusion- ment under the tutelage of the mean and low-characted captain Riga and mate jackson. Melville writes of this voyage in Redbzzrn, a book which he personally considered a pot boiler, but where he pours out in certain parts of the narrative, all the stifled anguish of a youth's appraisal of the world and men. His first bitter disappoint- ment of this period was the crew of the Highlander, Villainous, illiterate, and vulgar, they listened to Herman's moralizing and good language contemptuously. Underneath he discovered a softer clay, but the world had hardened them. Then came his glimpse of Eng- land, Liverpool. Wfas England Liverpool? For Liverpool meant cry- ing babies, bawling women, drunken sailors, miserable slums, smoke- dyed houses, and crumbling docks. London was a little better for its vastness could not intensify the misery as had Liverpool. When Herman returned to America he was to receive another shock, but 'YN P11 fy at A 'TZ , , Q 4 EN ,- 2 2, 5 ... i phage: -- QZ X 5 Q-f i Twenty-nine xx N ,W 9 , Z' X X f N Xl X, F S S- if X 7 this was to be a material one. Captain Riga refused to pay him his correct wage and left him with what amounted to a dollar and a half for the entire voyage. From 1857 to 1841 Melville taught school near Albany and dur- ing this period he began writing. Various immature and wordy sketches of his were published in the country papers. In 1841 he again boarded a ship for foreign seas, but this time it was from the whaling port of New Bedford and on the whaler Acushnetf' He was not to return until 1844 and during this three year period he sailed on three whalers and an American frigate, lived in captivity with the Typees, a tribe of cannibalistic Polynesians, vaga- bonded across the Marquesans, a chain of islands, and returned finally as a sailor in the United States Navy on the frigate United Statesf' These years became the record books for five of Melville's novels. From his fifteen months aboard the Acushnet'y which he deserted at Nukuheva in the Marquesan Islands, he drew the inspi- ration for Moby Dick, his greatest work. His flight from the Acush- netu with a companion Toby, and his sojourn among the Typees re- sulted in his first book Typee. He escaped from the Typees onto the Australian whaler julia,,' where the poor provisions and bad officers made him glad to leave with the rest of the crew at Tahiti even though he was classed as a mutineer. His adventures with Doctor Long Ghost, physician of the Julia are drawn clearly in Omoo. Wearyf of tramping over Polynesia, he joined the crew of the Ameri- can whaler i'Leviathan from which it is conjectured he landed at Honolulu, where he Worked as a clerk for four months. Wfhen the American frigate United Statesl' stopped at this port, Melville joined the navy and sailed aboard this ship until she returned from her Pacific cruise to Boston in the latter part of 1844. A detailed account of his experience in the Navy, telling of his hatred of the severe discipline and the practice of flogging, is set down in White jacket and Billy Budd. Melville was home, now, at the age of twenty-five with no means of livelihood, but filled with memories of three years of amazing adventure. Fourteen months after his return, he published Typee in New York and London, and although he received good reviews, he was the subject of a torrent of abuse directed against Thirty his mention of the bad effect the white heralds of civilization had on the native Polynesians. A year later he came forth with Omoo which shared the fate of its predecessor. In 1846 he married Elizabeth Shaw, daughter of Chief justice Lemuel Shaw of Massachusetts. He capped a series of lesser novels which included, Mmzii, Pierre, Redbuwz, and While jacket, with his great crowning masterpiece, Moby Dick. From then on his work and life was anti-climax until his obscure and unnoticed death on Sep- tember 28, 1891. The voice of Herman Melville is the rumbling of breakers, the wild cries of whale-seeking men, the deep moaning of sea wind, the gentle lapping of the sails. He swept Moby Dick across the black waves with the thunderous symphony of his speech. Captain Ahab's mad pursuit of the white whale has been given many interpretations. It is the tracking down of evil and misfortune by humanity. Melville painted his picture with prodigious strokes, and he used the greatest living creature, the huge leviathan of the sea, to symbolize the greatest of our quests, the quest for justice, for in that lies the solu- tion for happiness. Lewis Mumford says: The white whale stands for the brute energies of existence, blind, fatal, overpowering, while Ahab is the spirit of man, small and feeble, but purposive, that pits its puniness against this might, and its purpose against the black senselessness of power. Wlio can forget, once read, Ishmael's entrance to dark and gloomy New Bedford on a freezing winteris night, the weirdness and the blackness of the writing, the meeting with the strange but lovable Queequeg, tattooed cannibal harpoonerg eating chowder with Ishmael and Queequeg at a Nantucket inn, where you can taste the tang of the chowder with them, sitting aloft with Ishmael watching the wake of the Pequod and soliloquizing with him? Who can forget the pathos of Stubb, second mate of the Pe- quod,', who, when faced with the terrifying death that Moby Dick would bring, cried almost into the jaws of the huge white whale, A most mouldy and over-salted death, though,-cherries! cherries! cherries! Oh Flask, for one red cherry ere we dieli' Moby Dick is unsurpassed for its skill of language, its dynam- ism, its poetry, and the tremendous foundation upon which it is Tlairly-one built. Its actors are hunting men, the whale, and the sea. Its topic is man and the universe. Melville was a master of dialogue, of swift narrative. He was a humorist sometimes whimsical but mostly bitter, with a deep and acid bitterness. A clue to himself might be found in his description of Father Mapple, the sailors! preacher, in a little New Bedford church. Kneeling in the pulpit's bows, he folded his large brown hands across his chest, uplifted his closed eyes, and offered a prayer so deeply devout that he seemed kneeling and praying at the bottom of the seaf, Decoration by Gabriel Ferrara Thirty-two l . , NVQ' 1 NL. WSW . ,' M, it I 5 fl I ' nw. I Q .fl :alll X N 'I ' -' 'llwln lp sn Xxx X yi ish! feel: n Xl' it Q, ..- Hlll 11 Xl I x I ' its illv Rx I I 3 402. In 5 ... .- ac i .lr ww, XT I 'I s fig.-fra 1'-1-51 f- 2 . wx wffffff l, - . Z aijif i -vftefg hi' I Sa' Jui.z2,q-, 177 ww ' , fy!! 1 f' -f Q-W1 ff f , ,:- f . 1. Ye Shall Due W . lk By Stanley Dickter .tila iiflfft gs' fifl,i.u u . lW' y ,fn . . X. was ' 'If ' all iw I. M74 I! : fi r v!'!'f'i.ff fl! W N Q.a.-1 f.fl':,l yfl I I ' 1.1 Y , ' A Xgfiiry x ' -'M' V ' 231' a 2 g-f 'sw:l1?5',1i2 'N I vigil I it I I Q :gg-5r.'s.:fsf'91 ' ,. ly 1' f I I X eafxlw fy-rf.'.,.Qw.'.'l'f.Q?2if1S, ff , f -'ww-I f www.-ifflwrhwff fr gas, ,L ei 3+:545liffsf:r3' 'irflif is a M . an gig.. f f I1 9, -5 'Et ,, XX f i ness, a young man sat huddled in his chair. Although the room was stifling with the summer heat, his teeth chattered incessantly. Several times the tense figure shuddered as though to shake off the cold hand of Death which was relentlessly reaching out from the gloom of the room. For to-night, before the hands of the clock met at twelve, the life of Charles Wainright was doomed to destruction. The blood-rimmed eyes slowly rose to the great clock above the mantle. As they did so, their frightened owner started as the sonor- ous chimes rang out. Fascinated, he counted each stroke. One- Two Three Four Five Six Seven Eight Nine. Nine in alll There yet remained three hours of life within the fragile shell of what had once been a man. In those last few moments of life, Wainright's mind raced back over the awful period of time preced- ing his strange predicament. Only six months ago he and his two brothers, a happy group, had gone to the theatre to see a famous astrologer who was to appear in person. Wllen this personage asked for volunteers from the audience to act as his subjects, Charles Wainright and his two brothers had been among the sheepish group which had stepped out upon the platform. A grave look had come over the astrologer's countenance when they had told him their birth dates. Then in a solemn voice he spoke, 'IMy sons, the stars hold an evil future for ye. Your birth dates are in sharp conflict with each other. It would have been best had ye three never known each other. But it was not so decreed. Ye are three brothers, and ye shall die as have others before ye because of conflicting dates in their family. I predict that within six months, ye three will die. And so shall ye die-One by the Sword, one by Fire, and the last by Water. I have spoken! Their minds in a swirl, the three brothers had walked off the stage and back to their seats. Of course they didn't believe in all Thirty-!lJ1'ee N the gathering dark- this astrology stuff. It was all just a lot of silly bunk! And when they left the theatre they were once more the joyful trio that had entered earlier. A month passed, and the strange prophecy was forgotten. Then one memorable day a hushed group of patrolmen had carried home the limp form of Frank. The explanation of his sudden demise was brief but simple. He had been engaged in a dueling match. In some unaccountable manner his opponent's foil had fallen off. Before anyone had noticed the danger, Frank's opponent had evaded his guard and had rammed the sharp steel straight for the heart. The force of the thrust sent the blade deep into the unfortunate youth's body. Thus had Frank died-by the Sword! There yet remained Fire and Water! The youngest of the brothers, Harold, had been heartbroken over the tragic death of his brother. For days he sat locked up in his room. There he wrote tragic poems about his brother's death. He entered several of these in a poetry contest. One of the poems won him an ocean trip. For days while he prepared for the trip, eager to escape from the reminders of his brother, Charles pleaded with him to stay at home. Remember the prophecy! By the Sword, by Fire, and by Water. Frank died by the Sword. Now you're inviting death by Water and I-I will be left to face death by Fire! Harold, don't go. I beg you. In spite of his brother's frantic pleading, Harold left for the trip. Even before the boat sailed, Charles knew Harold was never coming back! Witli his brother's departure the fear of death de- scended upon Charles. Feverishly he set about making plans to stave off his approaching death. During the next few weeks workers labored long to fire-proof the Wainright mansion with sheets of asbestos. The floors, ceilings, and walls were covered with fire-proof asbestos. Huge water-filled tanks were set up around the walls of the library. If fire broke out anywhere outside of this room it would never get past that wall of water which could smother any fire the moment anyone pulled a lever on the inside of the library. It was within this room, that the terrified Charles sat awaiting the passing of midnight. That afternoon had come word that his Thirty-four brother's ship had gone down with all the passengers. A terrific explosion had torn the ship apart and had sent it to a watery grave before a single life-boat could be launched, leaving only a few sailors as the sole survivors. Thus had Harold died-by Water! There yet remained Fire! Fire and Charles. These two were all that were left. Now, less than an hour remained before the prophecy could be fulfilled. Two of the brothers had died according to the prophecy. Tonight a third was to die? A third to die by fire. The third to be burned to death. No! No! No! shouted the fear-maddened form, the pro- phecy will never come true! By Fire, by the Sword, and by Water. Ha! Ha! Ha! It will be one by the Sword, one by Water, but none by Fire. Then the prophecy will be false! No fire can harm me now! As though echoing this crazed outburst a great peal of thunder rent the heavens. In the next second a bolt of lightning crashed through the ceiling, narrowly missing the frightened youth. Straight into the far wall went the fiery blot-straight into the wall behind which was stored the great water-filled tanks! Water poured out of the wall into the room. The fear-mad- dened figure quick to realize the new danger, sprang to the door. The force of the water tossed him back into the room. The room filled rapidly and soon the doomed figure realized the futility of his struggles. Hal Ha! Ha! he screamed, the prophecy is false! One by the Sword and Two by Water! The prophecy is false! One by the Sword and two by Water! The proph- The silent waters forever stilled the screaming voice. vs ae wk In London, an aged man sat reading the paper. He slowly perused the accounts of the deaths of two American brothers. One had died by drowning in a room full of water. The other had been burned to death when his cabin had caught fire as the result of an explosion aboard an ocean liner. The old man started as he saw the pictures of the brothers. He shook his head slowly and in a quiet voice said, true to my prophecy-so did they die. One by the Sword, one by Fire and the last by Water! Tlairty-Jive ,, , oi, C23 Q ' l me S xxxlh x ' ' Wiqyy-. ' L l Q 0 0 K O? lll l f'1'il'lfil2l ll Ifgill!!- W-1l'i:Q1:.','.'i1,:i' Mull:1t'M:1u,'qwrw if' iggmmuqu l ga a Five hundred Seniors on a sturdy bark-Yo! Ho! and at bottle of milk. Gather around the mast, me hearties, ,fore me brave crew sets sail to conquer the treacherous waves and whirlpools of the Sea of Life. Now hold onto your ear trumpets whilst I read off the fol- lowing requests: To john Adams, our stout craft for four hectic years, we leave a sincere promise that although we have embarked upon other ves- sels we will carry on the fight for an athletic field with unabated vigor and enthusiasm. To Mr. Clarke, as fine a skipper as ever sailed the seven seas, we leave a mechanical hand to be used on those auspicious honors and awards assembly days. To Miss Keller, we leave our thanks for the help she has so willingly given the senior class in her never-ending efforts to make this Senior Class the best ever. To Mr. Patterson, we leave a wild and wooly Western lasso to snare the wayward in their desperate flights from his keen obser- vation. To Miss Laws, with sympathetic understanding, we bequeath a box of aspirins and an ice pack which will come in handy when con- fronted with next term's Senior woes and misfortunes. To Mr. Zimbal, to aid him at the Senior meetings, we bequeath an extendable electric rod, with which by gently touching a student, he can bring him back from the restful arms of Morpheus. To Mr. Confoy, an illustrated set of dancing lessons to be dis- tributed at the G. O. dances to those poor unfortunates who don't know the difference between a waltz and an Irish jig. To Mrs. Mather, a direction-finder to help her move through the maze of a students reasons as to why he came late four times in one week. Thirty-fix To Dr. Gramet, a species of frog that dissects itself so that the biology students will not have to hack away with scissors and tweezers to accomplish this gruesome task. To Mr. Scarlata, we leave a box of Buck Rogerls disintegrators with which his cross-country team can bore a hole through the hills tlarouglo which they can run instead of taking the customary route over them. To Miss Berner, we bequeath a robot piano that will be able to play a song while she goes around pointing out the right place to her future opera stars and radio crooners. To Mr. Freeman, we leave a complete equipment of dumbbells, parallel bars, and other athletic odds and ends with which he can refresh himself on Fridays after the Cmzzpur material has been read. To Mr. Froehlich, we leave a box of assorted strings, so that his circles won't be so flat in the geometry class. Auf Wiedersehn! The Senior Clan of jmzrzfzry, 1936. - A lichened door That slowly swings Opening darkly On shadowed things. A narrow path By moving sea Herein the things that are- That are to be. xr, fx, X gf 3 awww! X eq x af., i 9 fa 0 xl it X 1 O F rr fs. ., ' , Q57 o w ' QR 3 ff-s . 'xx I 13:11 A 6 X , fl ' f Q ' 4- 5 5 3 '-if be ff, W , jggi ,f 4 , -T X ly, i' ' 4 rw Xi 5' A' Wy A c t . w i C Thirty-Jezfezz E I Ship's Company OTES, votes, and more votes! After weeks of counting, counting, and more counting, the Yearbook Com- mittee finally found itself with a complete list of the students chosen by the senior class as the term's celebrities. If you happened by chance to come into the publications office these last weeks, you fnost likely found the committee buried beneath a pile of large white sheets, you would hear a tiny voice droning, Three hundred votes for-, and someone else promptly answer, Three hundred and thirty for- and a new name would be added to the list as quietest, most dignified, best personality, etc. Out of the muddle of paper and words, ink bottles, typewriters, and pencils, we finally got the exact names which are listed below with their traditional designations. Thomas Dunne .. Lester Korelitz . . . Robert Wood .... Robert Wood ..... Thomas Dunne. . . Harry Williams. . . Harry Oberle ..... Philip Doherty .. . john Carter ...... Charles Rosenfeld. Harry -Willianis. Elwoog Rebhann . Lester Korelitz .... Lester Korelitz .... Thomas Dunne. . . George Bogin ..... Lester Korelitz .... Rudolph Trenheiser Edward Horowitz. . Salvatore Sagona.. Karol Lonieski .... Thomas Dunne. . . Harry Oberle ..... Gerald McCarthy. . . . . .Most Popular. . .. Cleverest . . . .Best Looking. . . . .. ...Best Dressed. . .. .......Most Active.... .. .. ...Literary Light... . . . . .Best Personality. . . .. . .Best Dancer... . . . . . Sleepiest . . . . . Noisiest . . . . . Wittiest . . . Rudol h Trenheiggri . . . Quietest . . . . . . . .Most Dignified. . . . . .Most Studious . . . . . .Most Ambitious. . . . ..... Evelyn Hankin . . . . . . . .Jessica Wolfe . . . . .Dorothy Driscoll . . . .Elsie Sperger . . . .. . .Anna Nolan . . . .Elizabeth Callahan . . . .Geraldine Werber . . . .Regina Navarre . . . .Helen Andrews . . . .Edna Capurro . . . .Edna Capurro . . . . .Flora Burkhart . . . . . . .Flora Burkhart . . . . .Ruth Cornelius . . . . . . . .Anna Olefsky Done Most for Adams ......... Anna Nolan .....Class Poet..... . . . .Class Orator. . . . . . . . . .Class Musician. . . .......Class,- Actor.... .....Class Pet...... . . . .Class Artist... .. . . . .Most Bashful. . .. .......Most Genial.... . . .Most Athletic. . . . Margaret Merrifield . . . . . . .Vera Pekowitz . . . . . . .Minnie Pagano . . . . .Vera Pekowitz . . . . .Evelyn Hankin . . . . .Nancy Tuppen ........AnnaAu . . . . . . . . .Elsie Sperger . . . .Catherine Drewes Thirty-eight C SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS ABELOFF, IRMA-Civics, Basketball, Law, Swimming, Spanish, Stenography Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. English, Chemistry, History, Art Offices. Cyrano. Gen- eral Organization Representative. Library. Secretary to Mrs Braucher, Miss Sharpe, Mr. Piana.-Business. ADLER, GERTRUDE-junior, Senior Arista, judean Club. Honor, Service, Spanish Certificates. Gold, Silver, Bronze A's. Attendance, Publications Oliices. Lunchroom Squad.-Brooklyn College. ALBAMONTE, ANTHONY-Riding, Economics Clubs. Intramurals, P.S.A.L. Pin. Patrol Squad, Book Room, Late Squad.-Merchant Marine Academy. ' ALBANO, DOMINICK-Travel, Spanish Clubs. Honor Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pin. Patrol Lunchroom Squads.-Bus iness. ALBERTSEN, GEORGE-Junior, Senior Arista, Foreman Printing Squad, Garden Club. Program Committee. Ex- ceptional Service, Honor Certificates, Bronze, Silver A's. Health Education Clerk.-Merganthaler Linotype School. ALLOCCO, SALVATORE-Junior, Senior Arista, Chair- man, Treasurer Law, Economics Clubs. First, Second Hon- ors, Service Certificates. Bronze, Silver, Gold A's, P.S.A.L. Pins. Lunch Squad, General Organization.-Business. ALZMANN, CATHERINE-Newman, Riding, Biology Clubs.-Nurse's Training. ANDERSEN, EVELYN-Stenography Club. Service Cer- tihcate, Miss Riordon's Office, Lunchroom Squad.-Busi- ness. ANDREWS, HELEN-Tennis, Riding Clubs. Girl Re- serves Treasurer, Spanish, Mathematics Clubs. Honor, Ser- vice Certificates. Mathematics, Dean's Office, Lunchroom Squad, Locker Patrol.-Adelphi College. ANELLO, JOSEPH--Key of Courtesy Club, Honors Cer- tificate, P.S.A.L. Pin. Lieutenant, Traflic Squad, Sergeant, Patrol Squad, Color Guard.-N. Y. U. ANGRISANI, CARMINE-Spanish, Newman, Glee, Dra- matic Clubs. Meritorious, Exceptional Certificates. Speech Ofiice, Emergency Room, Pinafore, Mikado, Trelaw- ney of the Wells, If I Were King, Gym Plays, Span- ish Festivals.wNaples Conservatory. ANGRISANI, PATRICK-Newman, Spanish, Clubs. Foot- ball, Basketball Nurnerals, P.S.A.L. Pin. Lunchroom Squad, Physiography Preparation.-Farmingdale. Forty AU, N junior,VSenior Arista, German, Globetrot- teilsl - esiden irl Rese Treasurer, Clubs. First and econd Ho rs, v' ertificates, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's. ndance rman, Grade Adviser's Offices, Secretary t Miss Hess, Mr. Richter.-Hunter College. AXELSTROM, FLORENCE-Tennis, Biology, Swimming Clubs. Honor Certificates, Life Saving Pin, Minor Letter. -Dunbar's Secretarial School. BACCO, ANTHONY--Newman, Spanish Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze A. Patrol, Lunchroom Squads. Base- ball, Basketball Intramurals.-C. C. N. Y. BACCO, EMILY-French, Spanish, Newman Clubs. Hon- or, Spanish Crtificates, Bronze A. Secretary to Miss Dis- brow.-Brooklyn College. BADER, LESTER-Honor Certificates, Bronze A. Patrol Squad.--Business. BAGNIEWSKY, FRANK-Garden, German Clubs. Hon- ors, Exceptional, Distinguished Certificates. Bronze, Silver, Gold A's. Philharmonic Scholarships for Music, First Prizes in Children's Science Fair. Orchestra, Band, Garden Prize in Children's Science Fair. Orchestra, Band, Garden Squads.-College. BALDWIN, MARGARET-Swimming, Riding, Tennis, Biology, Newman Clubs. Exceptional Service Certificates. Secretary to Mr. Patterson, Mrs. Fyfe, Publications. Gen- eral, Attendance Otlices.-Business. BARGEMANN, ANNA-Girls Reserves, Volleyball, Bas- ketball Clubs.-Nurse's Training. BARNETT, MARION-Basketball, Tennis, Volleyball, Newman Clubs. Attendance Office.-Business. BAUM, LENA-Arista, French, Dancing, judean, Ten- nis, Dramatics Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates, Bronze A. Captain, Lieutenant Lunchroom Squad. If I Were King. Secret Service. -Hunter College. BAYER, GEORGE-Senior Arista, Latin Club. Honor, Service Certificates. Bronze A. Latin Office, Lunchroom, Cartoon, Photography Squads.--Brooklyn College. BEAGAN, AGNES-Senior, junior Arista, President of Law Club, Newman, Economics, Abigail Adams Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Bronze, Silver A's. Secretary to Mrs. Braucher, Mrs. Olson, Miss, Keller, Lunchroom Squad, Locker Patrol, Finance Committee.-Pace Institute. Forty-one wa-1. . F575 - f., if 'Q f lf , ,f3BCK, ANIT Jima, Span'slixl?qo1f6mirfs, Law, Biol- ogy Clubs.-Bro ne's Business Slfhoo . BECK, GERTRUDE-Tennis, Swimming Clubs. Junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins. junior, Senior Life Saving, Minor Letters, Honor Certificate. Lunchroom Squad, Secretarylto Mrs. Fyfe.-Business. , P J A 1 1 N. a f BELL, ew ai! olle' all, Tennis Clubs. Hon- or Certi cat . s. 1 BENSO ,BasketSall, Baseball, Stenogr S te s. no efforgm, unch oom.-Business. fr'-.R 'Ak 'X BERNFELD, IRWIN-Judean, French, Biology, Physical Science, Physiography Clubs. Honor, Meritorious Service Certificates. Patrol, Lunch Squads, Emergency Room, Soc- cer Intramurals, Numerals, Class Representative.-C.C.N.Y. BERNQUIST, ELEANOR-junior Arista, Spanish, Basket- ball, Baseball, Law Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze, Sil- ver, Gold A's. P.S.A.L. Pin, Two-Year Secretarial Studies Medal. Grade Adviser's Office, English Office.-Business. ff' BE , dean Spanish, Tironian, Econom- ics, aw, Tenn' neral Oflice.-Business. BIGNAMI, GINO-Senior, Junior Arista, Key of Cour- tesy, Swimming Clubs. Service, Honor Certificates, Gold, Silver, Bronze A's. Latin Department, Lunchroom, Patrol Squads.-C.C.N.Y. BILLINGS, ELIZABETH-Economics, Glee, Tennis, Lunch Room. Junior Life Saving Pin. Junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins. Exceptional Service Certificate, Lunch- room, English Office, Locker Room, Secretary to Miss Lennon, Program Committee, Year Book Committee.- Business School. BJERTNES, JOHN-Service Certificates. Traffic, Patrol Squads.-Business. BOGIN, GEORGE-junior Arista, Poetry, Globe Trotters Clubs. Honor, Distinguished Service Certificates, Bronze A. French Oliice, Editor-in-Chief Clipper, Reporter Campus, Pictures Committee, Year-Book Committee.- Columbia. BOURKE, DOROTHY-Biology, Tennis, Newman, Riding Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins, Bronze A. Secretary to Mrs. Clemens, Mr. Eckstein, General Of- fice, Lunch, Locker Patrol Squads, Campus Captain, Clip- per, Poster Art Staff.-Pratt Institute. Forty-two I' BORGER, FREDERICK-Honor Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pin. Lunch Squad.-Business. BRADMAN, SHIRLEY-Spanish, German, Swimming Clubs. Bronze, Silver Swimming Pins, Meritorious, Excep- tional Service Certificates. Secretary to Mr. Danoff, Attend- ance, Spanish, German Offices.-Cornell. BRENNER, BLANCHE-Marionette Club. Exceptional, Distinguished Service Certificates, Minor A, P.S.A.L. Pins. junior Life Saving Pin, Bronze A. Accounting, Library, Swim ing e. Supervisor, Lunchroom Squad.-Busi- B MBAUGH -Law, Secretarial Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pin. Lunchro gif sic Squads, Secretary to Miss Lang- don, Miss Ku .-Heffley's Business School. BRUSAK, AMELIA-Basketball Club. Service Certificate. junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins, Attendance, Stenography Of- lices.-Business. BUCHMAN, WILLIAM-Arista, President, Vice-President Bioo C b Vice- siden Club. Physiography, Eco ' t , ramatics, Key of Courtesy, Ma onete Clubs. Clipper Art S ff. If I Were King. Service Certificates, Bro ze, Sil r A's. Traffic Squad, 2'Cam Represent ' ' ion Representa- Mre y ommittee, Manager, Floor anager, Morning Squad, Speech Ofiice, Biology Squad, Grade Adviser's Office, Ticket Seller.--C.C.N.Y. School of Technology. BUCKLEY, GEORGE-Mathematics, Economics Clubs. Service Certificates. Shop, Printing, Traffic, Lunchroom Squads.-Business. BURBACH, WILLIAM-Intramural Basketball. Printing Squad.--Business. BURGESS, JANE-Law, Basketball Clubs. Honor Certifi- cates, Gold A., P.S.A.L. Pins, Tennis Chevrons. Attend- ance, Mrs. Braucher's Offices.-Business. BURKHART, FLORA-Spanish, French, Leaders Clubs. Lunchroom Squad, Locker Patrol.-Brooklyn College. BUTCHER, HELEN-Newman, Spanish, Mathematics Clubs.-St. Vincent's Training Schrool. BUTCHER, EDWIN-Newman Club. Honor, Distinguish- ed Service Certificates. Bronze A. Editor-in-Chief of the Campus, Library Squad, Intramurals.-Business. Forty-iloree Xnj iz,-KM CAFFREY, RUTH-Spanish, Newman, Swimming Clubs. Service Certificates. Silver, Bronze P.S.A.L. Pins. Bronze A. Lunchroom Squad, Attendanse, Latin Offices-Business School. , A I CALOIO ,' -Se , Basketball, Tennis, Volleyba s onor rvice Certificates. Bronze A. Frencl edal. ecre to iss Riordon.-Business. CALLAHAN, ELIZ ETH-+I nior Arista, Civic, Biology, Ri i , Economics, ecretar f Ne man Clubs. Honor, S e tifi te ronze unting, Bi- o yy s. ampusf' . un om Squad. Fi- nan Committe--Business. CAMERER, GLADYS-Economics, Tennis Clubs, Eng- lish Otlice. Locker Patrol.-Jamaica Nursing School. CAMINITI, JOSEPHINE-Newman, Tennis Clubs. Secre- tary to Miss Wick. Senior Day Committee.-Business. CAPURRO, EDNA-Newman, Law Clubs.-Business. VW' 4 CARBO, JULIA-Newman, Poetry, Economics Clubs. Sec- retary to Miss Smith, Mrs. Halley, Miss Wetterau, Mrs. Daniels, Miss Reuss, Miss Kuhn.fBusiness. CARLIN, JAMES-Biology, Law, Economics, Newman Clubs. Service Certiticates. Ring and Pin Committee. Pa- trol, Lunchroom, Assembly Squads. Manager Swimming Team. Deanls Office.-St. john's College. CARLSON, SHIRLEY-Mathematics, Footlights and Fa- shions, Stenography Clubs. Honor Certificates. Secretary to Miss Feinberg. Locker Patrol.-Pratt Institute. CARTER, EUGENE-Vice-President German, Key of Courtesy Clubs. Service Certificates. P.S.A.L. Pins. Bronze, Silver junior Life Saving Pins. Class Night Committee. Lunchroom, Patrol Squads. Campus Representative- Business. , CARTER, JOHN-Honor, Exceptional, Distinguished Certincates. Bronze, Silver A. Patrol, Traffic Squads.- Business. CASELLA, ARSENIO-Economics, Newman Clubs. Gold Medal, P.S.A.L. Pins, Basketball Intramurals, Baseball Numerals. Patrol, Traffic, Lunchroom Squad.-Engineeb ing School. , Forty-four CASELLA, HELEN-French, Newman, Mathematics Dancing Clubs. Service Certificates. French Office- Hunter College. ' VAN MA ,.fc1ub. e ysocfef, e tr ura . C p ' n, Tr c Squad.- ss. Q-Lf . CENTOLA, ALEXANDER-Spanish Club. Honor Ser- vice Certificates. P.S.A.L. Pin.-Business. , CESTONE, JOSEPH-Physical Science, Economics Clubs. Art Commendation Certificate, Silver and Bronze Basket- ball Medals, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins, Football and Baseball Numerals. Sergeant of Patrol Squad, English Book Room Service, Prom Committee.-N. Y. U. CHANDLER OHN Bronze A Hon , I - , or Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins, junior Life Savingjatrol Squkacl.--'Business. I . J , ,f ' ,. - CHANTR , AMN MAY-Tennis gms, Junior Life Sav- ing, jun' and Senior P.S.Af.i1 Pins. Locker Patrol, Dunchrofim Squads!-Businessf 1 I ' l W 1 LI!! I jf' , UU ' if , 111, ,.Jf' -1 . . I I CHERNICK, ARTHUR-Spanish, Economics, Service Hon- ors League Clubs. Silver and Bronze A's, Distinguished, Exceptional and Honor Certificates. Business Manager of Campus, Managing Editor Campus Class Issue, Mathe- matics Ofiice, Campus Reporter.-C. C, N. Y. CHRISTENSEN, CATHERINE-Newman, Dancing, Eco- nomics, Swimming Clubs. Honor, Distinguished Service Certificates, Bronze and Silver P.S.A.L. Pins, Bronze and Silver A's, Senior Life Saving Pin. Lunchroom, Gym Squads, Program Committee, Latin Office.-Business. 140104441 9' 'M' CHRISTENSEN, HELEN-Ba e all, Baseball, Volley- ball, French Clubs. Service Certilicates. Secretary to Miss A. Scheh.-Business. CINNEMAN, ANNETTE-Judean, Tennis, Swimming, Basketball Clubs. English, Biology, Spanish Offices, Pin and Ring Committee, Campus Representative, History Office.-C. C. N. Y. CITRIN, IRVING-judean Club. Intramural Basketball, Baseball, Football, Honor, Service Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins. Lunchroom, Campus Squads.-Brooklyn College. CLARKE, DANIEL-Newman, Latin, Law, Stamp Clubs. Patrol, Lunchroom, Library, Checkroom Squads.-N. Y. U- Forty-five M5545 COHEN, LI.OYDfGerman Club. Intramurals, Swimming Squad, P.S.A.L. Pin. Health Education Clerk, Tratlic Squad, Campus Representative.-C. C. N. Y. COHEN, SYLVIA-Economics, French, judean, Globe Trotters Clubs. Attendance, Grade Adviser's, Library Squads.-Delahanti. CQLMELO, EUGENE-Varsity Soccer Clubs. Junior Var- sity A's, Bronze A, L. Pins, Silver Medal, Basketball, Soccer, Football, Swimming Intramurals, Basketball, Swim- ming Numerals.-Pace Institute. CONMY, JAMES-Newman Club. P.S.A.L, Pins. Dean's Ofhce, Patrol Squad, Health Education Clerk.- St. Johns CONRAD, JOHN--Newman, Physical Science, Biology Prep Squad, Mathematics, Economics Clubs, Service, Bronze, Silver A's, Honor, Varsity Traffic, Patrol Squads, Library, Lunchroom, Dean's Squads, Football, Bas- ketball Intramurals, P.S.A.L. Pins, Health Education OHfice. -Western Maryland College. CORCORAN, JOHN-President Service Honor Group, President Key of Courtesy Club. Bronze, Silver, Gold A's. Captain, Traftic and Patrol Squads, Dean's Ofice, Health Education Oflice. Emergency Room. - U. S. Naval Academy. CORNELIUS, RUTH-Girl Leader of the Senior Arista, junior Arista, Girl Reserves. Vice-President of Mathe- matics, Vice-President of Civics Club. Honor, Service Certificates, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's, Winner of Mathe- matics Contest. Secretary to Mrs. Knight, Miss Lawrence, Miss Keller, Library, Mathematics Help Squad.-Business. COTICCHIO, JOSEPHINE-Newman, Greggette, Baseball, Basketball, Volleyball Clubs. Publications Olfice, Health Education Department.-Business. COUGHLIN, MARGARET--Law, Stenography, Swimming Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins. junior Life Saving. Accounting Otiice.-Business. ' I x CRAG , ED-iqyg-tR itfQirviai2fl' Basketball, v f 'ty ennis s. rdnie Medal, Swimmi g, r s. raFHc, Patrol, Lunchrdom Sqria , th Ejluca- tion tlice.-Alabama. ,Mf V I I CRAGER, RUTH-Marionette, Newman Clubs. Excep- tional, Service Certilicates, Junior and Senior P.S.A.L. Pins, junio! Life Saving Pin, Minor A. Accounting, Swimming,xOtHces, Supervision of Girls Lunchroom.- Business. CR D L, LENE-Secretarial, Physiography, New- , no cs Clubs. Honor Certificates. Attendance flice. ' ess. F oft y-fix CRANMER, WILHELMINA-Riding, Tennis, French, Economics, Poetry, Secretry of Physiography Clubs. Swim- ming Office, Library Squad.-Nurses' Training. CUNNINGHAM, ATWOOD-Economics Club. Baseball Numerals, Bronze and Silver P.S.A.L. Pins. Trafiic, Patrol, English Bookroom Squads.-N. Y. U. CUSIMANO, THERESA-Newman, Tennis Clubs. Service Certificates. Publications Office.-Business. DAAB, NORMA-Senior Arista, Girl Reserves, Mathema- tics, Tennis, Swimming Clubs. Service, Honor Certificates, Bronze and Silver A's. Program Committee, Secretary to Mr. Froehlich.-Pace Institute. DARLING, RUSSELL-Latin, Dramatics Clubs, If I Were King, Secret Service. Honor Certificate, Second Honors Biological Exhibit. Bookroom, Sergeant of Trafiic Squads.-C. C. N. Y. DAVIE, jANETfGirl Reserves, Globetrotters, French Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze A, Bronze and Silver Swimming Pins. Secretary to Miss Hathaway, Lunchroom Squad, Picture Committee.-Business. DEERY, ALFRED-Lunchroom, Rifle Club. Basketball. Football, Soccer, Swimming, Rifle Intramurals, Life Sav- ing Pins. Sergeant of Patrol, Late, Traffic, Lunch Squacls.V Hemphill Diesel School. DEIS, EDWARD-Econtmmics Club. P.S.A.L. Pins, Meri- torious Service Certificate.-Business. DELANEY, DOROTHY-Economics, Law, Newman, Bas- ketball Clubs. Hpnor, Service Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins, Tennis, Secretary to Miss Ryan,-Business. DENNINGER, MARGARET-French Club. Honor Certi- ficates. Secretary to Miss Reuss, Locker Patrol. Library Checkroom.-Business. DERENTHAL, WILLIAM-Newman, Vice-President Ger- man, Garden, Orchestra Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze and Silver A's, Mathematics Pin. Orchestra, Lunchroom Squads.-C. C. N. Y. DEVITTO, PASQUALE-Law Club, Football Squad, Soc- cer Intramurals. TraHic, Lunch Squads.-Business. al - Y- Forty-.vevefz if ,K If ' ff ,Y .l ooo jf 30 W7 4 L' of t La 1 K X O 1 ft , -. V - 5 O J 1, W? if 5 ,Q fl-Q K3 n TX ,f ,Q 5. O Q. i ,KS . 'Q .7 c ,, ' Q if xi Q' 5 Q. 30 ID! f' o 0 ,X J 5 5 Q Q, 1, o nf' Q 7 CJ J , 2,6 D X--.J .gf A CJ V-S M-...df 0 C' 'ID xv O qv DU Z ir oi' 0 IOC QQ I-o 'xx 4 5 Da rys 1 if ,O 9 O O O 'lil 'D Up 0,9 not ,,,,.- D eewfp, Q OC. Q0 C: S, i -ti fa: DICKTFR, STANLEY-Garden, Advertising, Biology Pins, Service Certificates. Campus Columnist. Patrol Clubs. Soccer, Football, Cross-Country Intramurals. P.S.A.L. Pins. Traffic, Lunchroom Squads. Publications Office. Pic- ture Committee. Health Education Clerk.fPace Institute. DILLON, MARCELLA-Newman, Law, Economics Clubs. Attendance Office. Lunchroom Squad.-Business. DIREGELA, VICTOR-Honor Certificates. P.S.A.L. Pins. Majors A's. Cross-Country. Track-Business. DITTA, VITA-Senior Arista, Spanish, French, Newman, Basketball, Dancing Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Bronze A. Spanish Pin. Bronze P. S. A. L. Pin. Lunch- room Squad. Attendance Office. Secretary to Mrs. Fergu- son.-Brooklyn College. DOHERTY, GEORGE-Newman Club. Service Certifi- cates. Lunchroom, Patrol, Printing, Mimeograph Squads. -Columbia DOHERTY, PHILIP-Etching, junior Art League Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins. Basketball, Soccer Intramurals. Lieutenant Patrol, Lunchroom Squads. Finance, Senior Day Commit- tees.-Pratt Institute. DONOHUE, FRANCIS-Harmonica Club. Honor Certi- ficates. Bronze A.-Business. DOOLEY, ELEANOR-Tennis, Swimming, Basketball, Spanish, Economics, Newman Clubs. Honor Certificates. Minor A. Bronze A. junior, Senior Life Saving, All- Around P.S.A.L. Medal, junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins.- Nurse's Training. DRAWERT, CHARLES--Silver Medal Football Intra- murals. Chemistry, Traffic Squads. Campus Representa- tive, General Organization Representative.-Business. gl! DREWE , CATHE INF-Girl Re rves, Swimming, Bas- ketba ockey, Ba all, D g, Riding, Volleyball, Ph si aphy, Ffen , Civics bs. Honor Certificates. , Sxior P.S .L. Pins. nor . junior, Senior Life ' g. Al-Ar d Athl c Ye l. Service Certificates. Qfunchro Sci. Secreta' to rs. Daniels, Mrs. Clem- ens, K Bam e . Picture Committee.-Brooklyn College. DRISCOLL, DOROTHY-Spanish, Swimming, Newman, Tennis, Dancing, Biology, Economics Clubs. Honor, Ser- vice Cerhticates. P.S.A.L. Pins. Lunchroom Squad. Secre- tary to Mrs. Mather, Accounting, English Offices. Patrol Squad. Senior Day Committee.-St. john's College. C , edit Vo a , Tennis, ju e' . bal s. ecre ry t Piana, Miss ' .- usi ss. A Forty-eight DUNN, THOMAS-Football, Swimming Intramurals. Swimming Silver Medal. Major A. Minor A. Senior Life Saving P.S.A.L. Pin. Manager Football Squad. Emer- gency Room Clerk. Gym Clerk.-Alabama. DUNNE, THOMAS-Law, Dramatics, Newman, Football, Intramurals. Ticket Seller. Major, Minor A. Service Cer- tificate. Senior Class President. Eighth Term Representa- tive. Captain of Tumbling and Cheering Squads. Dra- matics Office. Patrol Squad, Emergency Room, Gym Clerk. Health Education Ofiice.-Michigan State. EGINTON, ARTHUR-Mathematics, Newman, Post Grad- uate Clubs. Baseball Medal. P.S.A.L. Pins. Honor, Ser- vice Certiiicates. Patrol, Traffic, Dean's, Biology, Mimeo- graph, Library Squads.-West Point. a S -Aa ' -Law Club. Exceptional Ser- 1 ca ' ' 2 ' , Pins. 41 in 4 oo trolg fame s if ' lth E .- . - . ' . -Bu ' ergen Room EISENSTEIN, DAVID--Vice-President judean, Economics, Short Story, Physiography Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins. Intra- murals. Economics, English Oflices. English Book Room. Campus Squad.-Pace Institute. ELLMERS, CHARLOTTE-Vice-President, Girl Reserves, Tennis, Swimming, Public Speaking, Dramatics Clubs. Honor Certificates. Bronze A. Miss Keller's, Economics Health Education Offices.-University of Southern Cal: ifornia. ELLMYER, WESLEY-Meritorious Service Certificate. Minor A. Campus Representative. Secretary to Mrs. Visone, Grade Advisers Office. Lunchroom Squad. Pic- ture Committee, Football, Basketball, Soccer Intramurals.- Business. ENOCH, GERALD-Service Certificates. Patrol, Traffic, Lunchroom Squads.-N. Y. U. ERNST, ARTHUR-Biology, Track Clubs. Service Certi- ficates. P.S.A.L. Pins. Intramurals. Biology, Patrol, Print- ing Squads.-Pace Institute. ESPOSITO, SEBASTIAN-Garden Club. Gym Intra- murals. Honor Certificates. Patrol, Lunchroom, Traffic, Late Squads.-Business. FELDMAN, BERTHA-Judean, Globe Trotters, Travel, Tennis Clubs. Lunchroom Squad. Dean's Office.iBus1- ness. FERNANDEZ, CHARLES-Football, Soccer, Baseball In- tramurals. Numerals. P.S.A.L. Pins. Lunchroom Squad:- Business. .sw 'V I Forty-nine k.fQ. K, ., ,fo -f 1 X f LM ily il ff, ff -.f'f,f, fi , an iv '- fy. X X Z,. .. X5 . Q Kg. H fb Q-. QClif'xixXX A4 .-.- N J if g ,ir 1 , ly FERRIGN MAR-In Tennis, Newman, Economics, Bas- keltlyl l . sic, Economics Ofiices, Lunchroom, St all, ' us Captain, Health Education Depart- ment. Bushi s. X, FERRO, JAMES-Newman, Physics Clubs. Basketball In- tramurals.-Business. FIELDS, MURIEL-Newman, Swimming, Tennis, Law, Greggette, Economics, Basketball Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins, junior Life Saving Pin, Minor A. Secretary to Miss Feinberg, Miss Smith, Locker Patrol.-Business. FLUDE, ELLEN-German, Economics,Mathematics, Swim- ming Clubs. Junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins, Junior Life Saving Pin. Campus Ofhce.--Brooklyn College. . f FR ELLO,. AN 19101 fi w Club. 'H mfs, Me 't 'ous, Exce 'on Service t a s Mon A. Acc unt g ance Offices, L - '. rolj Secretary to Mr. n m.-Evening Colleg F KS LG 4onor, Service Certificates. a c, Patrdlgflfate Squa .-Business. FREEDMAN, GRACE-,Iuclean Club. Service Certificate, P. S. A. L. Pin. Secretary to Mrs. Mather, Attendance Biology Offices, Lunchroom Squad.-Pratt Institute. FREIBAND, FRANCES-Judean, Basketball, Spanish, Swimming Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze A, Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins. Lunchroom Squad, General Ofiice, Secretary to Miss Steinberg.-Nurses' Training. FRIED, HERMAN-Economics, judean Clubs. Football, Baseball Intramurals. Meritorious, Exceptional Service Cer- tificates. Lunchroom, Supply Squads, General Office, Ser- vice to Mr. McMann.-Brooklyn College. FRIEDMAN, ESIAH4New Yorker, Biology, Economics Clubs. Exceptional Service, Honor Certificates. Biology Laboratory, Library, Biology, Dean's Offices, Lunchroom, Traflic Squads.-University of Texas. FURCHT, MURIEL--Economic, Swimming, Tennis, Lead- ers, Basketball, Dancing, Riding Clubs. Exceptional Ser- vice Certificates, junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins, Junior, Sen- ior Life Saving Pins, Major, Minor A's. Secretary to Miss Keller, Miss Langdon, Miss Kuhn, Miss Bernstein, Miss McGorry, Miss Wetterau, Mrs. Fyfe, Miss Ferguson, Miss Scheh, Prom Committee, Chairman of Year Book, Pin and Ring Committee.-Young's Business College. GAMRAT, JULIUS-Intramurals, Football, Basketball, Soccer, Baseball. Health Education Plays. Tumbling Team. Health Education Clerk. P.S.A.L. Pins.-Business. Fifty GANTER, MARIE-Senior Arista, Baseball, Basketball, Swimming, Dancing Clubs. Bronze, Silver A's. Senior Life Saving Minor Letters, All-Around Medal. P.S.A.L. Pins. Secretary to Mrs. Visone. Grade Adviser's Office. Program Committee. Lunchroom Squad, Campus Repre- sentative. Finance Committee.-Cornell. i4UU24J GARBE, iaijioismrfteiii , i ai' ing, cartoon Clubs ' ertificates. Bronze, Silver A's.-Pratt Institute. f , f f r K-W Z J ' F 'ff I 1 1 ' , f . -GAR,BEiQ,s: i3Ls1ie+aiqiqc.cefciii-fates, Bronze, surf? ' jhikey Club.-Business. W ' GAT1, BBATRics-Newmanfrifonifm Clubs. Mr. Paner- son's, General, Swimming Offices. Locker, Patrol, Swim- ming Suit Room, Lunchroom Squad.-Business. GEBIA, JOSEPI-I4Economics Club. Service Certificate. Numerals. P.S.A.L. Pins. Patrol, Traffic, Art, Lunchroom Squads. Clipper Staff.-Business. GIORDANO, ANTHONY-Law, Spanish, Economics Clubs. Football Intramurals. Service Certificate. P.S.A.L. Pins. Basketball, Soccer Intramurals. Patrol, Lunchroom, Traffic Squads, Finance Committee.-St. Iohn's School of Law. GILLEN, MICHAEL-Key of Courtesy Club, Varsity Football, Tennis Teams. Major, Minor Letters. Bronze, Sil- ver A's. Tennis Medal. P.S.A.L. Pins. Traffic, Patrol Squads. Locker Room. Biology Preparation. Information Desk. Dean's Office.-Columbia. GIACALONE, ANN-Newman, Glee, Basketball, Volley- ball, Swimming, Tennis, Dancing Clubs. Exceptional Ser- vice Certificates. Minor Letter. Bronze, Silver Senior Life Saving. Secretary to Mrs. Clemens, Miss Langdon, Miss Reuss.-Brooklyn College. GLASER, ELMORE-Honor Certificate. Biology Prepara- tion Squad.-Business. GLASER, STANLEYYPresident, Physical Science, Avi- ation Clubs. Meritorious, Exceptional Service Certificates. Chemical Preparation Squad, If I XX'ere King, Secret Service. Physics Squad, Spectrum Staff.-C. C. N. Y. GOEB, HELEN-Lunchroom, Stenography Offices, Secre- tary to Miss Riorclon-Heflieys Business School. GOLDBERG, DOROTHY-Tennis, Dramatic, Swimming, Riding, Glee, French Clubs. Distinguished Service, Hon- or Certificates, Bronze A, Minor Letters, P.S.A.L. Pins, Silver and Gold Pins, Junior Life Saving. Service Honor Group, Program, English Office.-Business. Fifty-one GOLDBERG, EVELYN-Senior, junior Arista. Econom- ics, judean, Stenography Clubs. Honor, Distinguished Service Certificate, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's. General, At- tendance Offices.-Business. GORDON, GRACE-Secretarial, Basketball, French, Law, Economics Clubs. History OHice, Library, Lunchroom Squad.-Business. GOTTLIEB, FLORENCE-Senior Arista, judean, Law, Secretarial, Economics Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates, Bronze A. General, Economics, Accounting Ofiices. If I Were King. -Business. GNAROWSKI, RANCES-Footl' d Fashions, Sec- retar' Clubs. ary to Mr iolloti.-Business. GRANT, KATHRYNH-junior Arista, Honor Certificates, Bronze A. Secretary to Miss Kuhn, Library Squad, Locker Patrol.-Business. GRECO, ANTHONY-Law Club. Football, Basketball, Baseball, Soccer, Intramurals, Lunchroom Squad.-Rub gers. GREENBERG, EVELYN-Junior, Senior Arista, Swim- ming, Riding, Volleyball, judean Clubs. Meritorious Dis- tinguished, Exceptional Service. Honor Certticates, Bronze, Silver A's, Junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins. Library, Study Hall, Lunchroom Squads, Spanish Office.-Cornell GREENBERG, STANLEY-Judean, Physical Science Clubs. Biology, Preparation, Library Squads.-Business. GROCKA, REGINA-Newman, Spanish, Law Clubs. Sec- retarial Oliice.-Business. GRQSJNS I THEODORE-Secretgyial Economics, Har- mggrif 'Ztrnchpoornf Trafi'xcf,FaFFoI Squads?- Business. GROSS, AARON-Intramurals, Football, Basketball, Soc- cer, Baseball, Judean Clubs. Minor Letter P.S.A.L. Pin. Track Team.-Business. GROSS, IRVING-Physiography Club. Soccer, Foot- ball Intramurals. Track Team.-Pittsburgh University. Fifty-two GUARINO, SARAH-Secretary of Senior Arista, junior Arista, Law, Spanish, Secretarial Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Gold Medals. Gold, Silver, Bronze A's. Dean's, Economics, General Offices.-Business. GUNNELS, ARTHUR-Newman, Key of Courtesy Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pin, Baseball, Football, Soccer Intramurals, Swim- ming.-Alabama. GUNNING, KENNETH-Biology, Harmonica, Econom- ics Clubs.' P.S.A.L. Pins. Basketball, Baseball Intra- murals. Gym Clerk. Art Department.-Cooper Union. GURALNICK, LILLIAN-Judean, Spanish, Globe Trot- ters Clubs. Honor, Spanish Certificates. Bronze, Silver A's. junior P.S.A.L. Pin. Secretary to Miss Hathaway. Mathematics Ofiice.-Business School. I H S nior lsta, Gl Cu. Honor, Se 'e ertificate B ' 's. 1 s f Pen- zance. Grade A viser's, Music Offices. Program Com- mittee.-Business. HAGAN, EVELYN-Basketball, Baseball, Swimming, Tennis, Volly Ball, Dancing, Leaders, Economics, Law Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins. junior, Senior Life Saving. Major, Minor Letters. Silver, Bronze A's. Pool, Swimming, Health Education, Publications Offices. Secretary to Miss Fein- berg.-Business. HALL, HELEN-Basketball, Tennis, Volleyball, Baseball, Latin Clubs. Honor Certificates. Minor Letters. junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins. Chevrons. Locker Patrol. Secretary to Mrs. Clemens, Miss Bambey.-Brooklyn College. HALLAHAN, FRANK-Newman Club. Honor Certifi- cates. P.S.A.L. Pins. Biology, Patrol Squads.-Business. HALLBERG, TORNER-Law, Economics Clubs. Swim- ming Squad. Service Certificates. Lunchroom, Traffic, Patrol Squads. Mail Clerk, General Organization Store.- Business. HALPERN, SAM-Law, Economics, judean, Key of Cour- tesy, Boy's Lunchroom Clubs. Honor, Service, Excep- tional Service Cetrificates. Bronze A. Swimming, Soccer Intramurals. Sergeant Lunchroom Squad. Circulation Man- ager Campus. Treasurer of Senior Class. Editor-in-Chief of Blue and White. -Business. HALPIN, JOHN-Varsity, Track, Cross-Country, Major, Minor A's. Drum Major, Band, Orchestra. Service Certi- ficates. Patrol, Acrobatic Squads.-Northwesten Univer- sity. HAMILTON, MADELINE-German, Girl Reserves, Bas- ketball Clubs. Honor Certificates. P.S.A.L. Pin. General Office.-Hunter. Fifty-three Wi ff l fi M ,IB G C. 2. Lal l wt fo- -ei , fyfab . A-Ji lx .Ip lf QQXC X Y c rx ,X HANKIN, EVELYN-Law, Vice-President of Econom- ics, Swimming, Basketball, Dancing, Spanish, Abigail Adams, Riding Clubs. Swimming, junior, Senior P.S.A.I.. Pins. Junior Life Saving, Minor Letter. Lunchroom Squad. Secretary to Miss Riordon, Miss Keller. Secretary Senior Class.-Nurses' Training. HANNON, JOHN-Junior, Senior Arista, Latin, New' man, Biology, Economics Clubs. History Honor Society League. Honor, Service Certificates. Gold, Silver, Bronze A's. Lunchroom Squad. English Office.-College. HANSON, GRACE-Basketball, Tennis, Volleyball, Swimming, Girl Reserves Clubs. junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins. Junior, Senior Life Saving. Bronze, Silver Pins. Athletic Letters. All-Around Medal. Secretary to Miss Smith, Miss McGorry. Service Certificate.-Business. HARRY, GEORGE-Economics Club. Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins. Baseball, Soccer Intramurals. Biology, Eng- lish Book Room, Gym Clerk, Lunchroom.+Medicine. HECK, ANNA-Swimming, Basketball, French, Econom- ics Clubs. Minor A. Service Certificates. Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins. Junior Life Saving. Latin, Grade Adviser's Offices.-Business. ' HEIDT, ED N -Wa rals. Patrol Squad.-Bush ness. I HEILBRUNN, IOHN-Physiography, Lunchroom Clubs. Distinguished Service Certificate. Bronze A. Baseball, Intramurals. Lunchroom, Traffic, Patrol, Foreman Printing Squads.-Alabama. HEINTZ, ARTHUR-Honor Certificates, Gold, Silver, Bronze A's. Library Squad.-Business. HELLER, CHARLOTTE-Footlights and Fashions, Law, Hearthstone Clubs. Household Arts Office. Secretary to Miss Courtright. Locker Patrol, Fashion Show 1934, Ring and Pin Committee.-Business. HENTZLER, GLADYS-junior Arista, Stenography, Eco- nomics Clubs. Honor Certificates. Gold, Silver, Bronze A's. Two-Year Household Arts Medal. P.S.A.L. Pins. Secretary to Mr. Machlowitz, Class Night Committee.- Business. .. HERRMA c' -senior Arifta, Law Clubs. Hon- or, i , Exce ional, isli Yuished Service Cer- ifica .. Gold, Silver, Bro '. P.S.A.L. Pins. Stu- QB6t Manager, General Organization Store. Intramurals. Lunchroom Squad.-Business. HETZEL, RUTH-Riding, Physiography, Spanish Clubs. Meritorious, Exceptional Service, Honor Certificates, Bronze A. Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins. General, Grade Adviser's Offices, Secretary to Miss A. Scheh, Iklrs. Steinberg, Lunchroom Squad.-Merchants and Bankers Business School. Fifty-four HOFFMAN, FRANCES-Law, Economics, Tennis, Ju- dean, Stenography, Tironian, Spanish Clubs. Service Cer- tificates. General, Attendance Offices.-Business. HOFFMANN, THEODORE-German, Key of Courtesy, Camera, Mathematics Clubs. Honor Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins, Intramurals. Patrol, Traffic, Locker Room Squads.- St. John's. HOROWITZ, EDWARD-Travel, Economics, Dramatics Clubs. Cyrano, If I Were King, Secret Service, Ser- vice Certificate, Minor A. Chairman of Anouncements Committee, Art, Speech, Ofiices, Cheer Leader, Lunch- room Squad. Chairman Class Night, Finance, Senior Day Committees.-Alabama College. HUELIN, RONALD-Globe Trotters, Spanish Clubs. In- tramurals, P.S,A.L. Pin.-Business. HUNTER, CHARLES-Mathematics, Lunchroom Clubs. Biology, Trafiic, Lunchroom Squads.-Stevens' Institute of Technology. HYATT, ARNOLD-Biology, Physics, Economics, Gar- den, Science Clubs, Institute Student. I-Ionor, Service Cer- tificates, Swimming, Football, Soccer, Baseball Intramurals. Traffic, Patrol, Lunchroom Squads, Campus -C.C.N.Y. .46 ,fi I k' - - - 'ff ' Z ' - JABLGN JEss1E--Newman cm , service cemiafafa Secretarial fiice, Campus jim, G. O. Representa- tive.-Business. 1 JACKSON, ELIZA H- etball, Secretarial Clubs. Honor i cate ni? ilver A's. Secretarial Office. -Bus s. 3 ks. f . l - , '.' Qi ., ,f O S , SONYA- unior, Tgnior rista, ater Color Clubs. Honor, Service CertiFicates.wIYurses' Tgai in . JACOBSON, VIRGINIA-Newman, Basketball, Tennis Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins, Picture -Committee, Stenography Office, Secretary to Mrs. Rilly, Campus Captain, Lock- er Patrol Squad.-Business. -s JOHNSON, MARJORIE-Tennis, Girl Reserves Clubs. Secretary to Mrs. Mather.-Business. JOHNSON, VEGA-Girl Reserves, Globe Trotters Clubs. Honor Certificates. Bronze A, P.S.A.L. Pin.-Nurses' Training. Fifty-jirfe g JOHNSTON, JOSEPH-Newman, Economics, Law Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins, Basketball, Baseball, Football, Intramurals. Lunchroom, Traffic, Patrol Squads. Gym Clerk.-Alabama. KANE, GEORGE-Honor Certificates. Traffic, Patrol Squads.-Alabama. KAPPSTATTER, JOHN-Junior Arista, Travel Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Bronze A. Auditorium Squad. Visual Instruction. Secretary to Mrs. Keenan. Program Committee.-Civil Service. KASSEBAUM, EDWIN-Stamp, Chess, journalism Clubs. Intramurals. Service Certificates. Football Silver Medal. P.S.A.L. Pins. Lunch, Dean, Patrol, Trafhc Squads:- University of Southern California. KATZ, EDWARD-Mathematics, Judean Clubs. Silver, Bronze A's. Honor, Service Certificates. Baseball, Bas- ketball Numerals. Pin and Ring Committee. Biology Squad. Dramatics Ofiice.-N. Y. U. KELLY, XWINIFRED-Newman, Secretarial, Hockey, Dancing Clubs. Honor Certificates. P.S.A.L. Pin. Secre- tary Dr. Cusack, Miss Riordon. Locker Patrol.- Busin . E A KENNEDY, JAMES-Newman, Economics, Spanish Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pin. Basketball Numerals.-St. johns KING, ADELAIDE-Basketball, Volleyball Clubs. Secre- tary to Mrs Fyfe. Library Squad.-Business. KING, JOHN-Biology Club. Emergency Room.-Busi- ness. KLEIMANN, SOPHIE-President of German Club, Girls Reserve, Economics Clubs. Locker Patrol, Sergeant Lunch- room Squad. junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins.-Nurses' Training. KLEIN, VICTORIA-Newman, Spanish Clubs. Honor, Spanish Certificates. Modern Language Office. Secretary to Mr. Kassoy.-Music. KLEINSCHMIDT, ELIZABETH-Newman, Dancing, Basketball, Stenography, Tennis, Swimming Clubs. Ex- ceptional Service Certificates, junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins. Gene al, Mr. tterson's Offices, Secretary to Miss Stopp, 0mmit of Senior Class.-Business. l,fi DJ Wim Fifty-six nl t, ,Xl xii -tc' KLEMM, DOROTHY-Newman, Basketball, Secretarial Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze A, junior P.S.A,L. Pin. Secretary to Miss Ziliotto.-Business. KOCH, LORRAINE-Newman, Economics Clubs. Honor Certiticate. Library Squad, Grade Adviser's Ofiice, Secre- tary to Miss A. Scheh.-Pratt Institute. KOCHMAN, ALVIN-Latin Club. Honor, Service Cer- tificates Lunchroom Squad, Latin Office.fBusiness. KOCHNOXVER, WILLIAM-Judean, Physical Science Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins, Intramurals, Art, Stenography Othces.-Brooklyn College. KOEHLER, JOSEPH-C. C. N. Y. KOLMEL, MARGARET-Basketball, Volleyball Clubs.- Business. KOPP, HELENE-Dramatics, Glee, French Clubs. Gold P.S.A.L. Pin.-Business School. KORELITZ, LESTER-Boy Leader of Arista, Physical Science, Biology, President Garden, Judean, French Clubs. Honor Certificates, Gold Silver, Bronze A's, Term Medal, Biology Medal. Service Certificate, Campus', Reporter, Senior Day Committee, If I Were King, Secret Ser- vice. French Ofiice, Biology Squad.-C. C. N. Y. KRACH, KENNETH-Newman Club. Football, Soccer, Intramurals. Biology Office, Health Education Clerk.- Rutgers. , f I I x 'jail' KRAEILEL, ?lEN-Tennis, Newman, Law, Basketball Clubsoipgxusu Captain, Efonoinics Office, Lunchroom Sq ' ocker Patrolfagbnsiness. s KRAKOESKY, PEARL-W-judean, Economics, Law Clubs. Secretary to Mrs. Sharpe, Attendance Oliice.-Business. KRAMP, LEONARD-Newman, Globe Trotters Clubs. -Pace Institute. 'W' . Fifty-Jeven KUCHCQCKI, CHARLES-Bronze Medal, Basketball Nu- merals, .S.A.L. Pins, Lunchroom Squacl, G.O. Store.- Business KUTUJIAN, LILLIAN-Physiography, Stenography, Law Clubs. Locker Room Patrol.-Business. LA BRUZZO, FRANCES-Economics, Newman Clubs. Secretary to Miss Feinberg, Mrs. Ferguson, Mrs. Mather. -Brooklyn College. LADA, WALTER-Physical Science Club. Physics Prep Squad, Patrol Squad.fBusiness. LANE, GEORGE-Photography, Mathematics, Economics Clubs. Late, Traffic, Patrol Squads.-C. C. N. Y. LANGABEER, GEORGE-Intramural Medal, Baseball, Football, Intramurals, P.S.A.L. Pins. Patrol, Traffic Squads, Gymnasium Clerk, Lunchroom.-Polytechnical School. LA SALLE, DOROTHY-Basketball, Volleyball, New- man, Economics, Secretarial, Law Clubs, Service Certificate. Secretary to Mrs. Olson, Mr. Richter, Attendance, Grade Adviser's Offices.-Business. LASANSKY, HERMAN - French, German, Judean, Lunchroom Squad Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze A. Lunchroom, Book Room Squads.-C. C. N. Yf LATHAM, GRACEfSwimming, Glee, First Aid, Poetry Clubs. Minor A's, Chevrons, P.S.A.L. Pins, Senior Life Saving. Secretary to Mrs. Fyfe, Household Arts Office.- Business. ' LAUDANO, ELEANOR-Secretarial Club. Art, Latin Othces.-Business. LAUER, SIDNEY4judean, Economics, Mathematics Clubs. Distinvuishecl, Exceptional, Meritorious Service Certificates, Bronze A, P.S.A.L. Pins, Bronze Medal. As- sistant Business Manager of Campus, English Book Room, Dean, Lunchroom Squads, Mathematics Office- St, johns LAURITANO, MARIE-Economics, Law, Newman Clubs. Service Certificate, Bronze P.S.A.L. Pin. Secretary to Mr. Gonzalez, Mr, Kassoy, Mr. C. A. Burns, Mrs. Zio- letti, Picture Committee, English Book Room, Mail Clerk.-Florida. Fifty-eight LEPARULO, LOUIS-Honor Certificates. Bronze, Silver A.-Fordham College. LESKODY, MARGARET-Newman, Hockey Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze A.-Nurses' Training. LEUSCHNER, FRANCIS-Newman Club, Intramurals.- Business. LEVINE, ISAAC-Physiography Club.--Business. LEVINE, MALVIN-judean, Garden, Boys, Riding, French Clubs. Rifle, Soccer Intramurals, P.S.A.L. Pins, Meritorious Service Certificates. Lunchroom, Rifle Squads, Campus Reporter.-N. Y. U. LICATA, CARI.-Latin, French, Dramatic Clubs. Secret Service. Honor Certificates, Bronze A. P.S.A.I.. Pin. Patrol, Traffic Squads.-C. C. N. Y. LIEBERMA , BE Fiench, Tennis, Law, Swim- ming, Eco mics, nting Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze usiness. LIEBOWIT , FLORENCE-Judean, Basketball, Volley- ball Clubs. Toy Shop, Secretary to Mrs. Byrns, Mrs. Danziger.-Business. LIFTON, HERBERT-judean, Spanish Clubs. Honor Cer- tificates. P.S.A.L. Pins. Intramurals. Lunchroom, Trafiic Squads.-Brooklyn College. LINER, LILLIAN-Tennis, Spanish, judean, Basketball Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pin. Attendance Office.-Business. LISI, JOSEPH-Secretary Harmonica Club.-Business. LIZZIO, CONCETTA-Junior Arista, German Clubs. Honor Certificates. Gold, Silver, Bronze A's. Attend- ance, German, Grade Adviser's Offices. Secretary to Miss Hess.--Hunter College. Fifty-nine if .frzmqt LONGHITANO, SALVATORE-French, Latin Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Bronze A. Latin Office. Pa- trol, Late, Dean's, Lost and Found Squads.-St. john's University. LONIESKI, KAROL-Football Team Co-Captain. Major A. Football P.S.A.L. Pins. Intramurals. Numerals. Gen- eral Organization Section Representative. Health Educa- tion Clerk. Locker Room.-College. , VIOLA o r y ub. Honor, Service Cer- cates. Atten an rade Adviser's Offices. Library quad.-Business. LOWENTHAL, BERNARD--Dramatics, Current Events, Physical Science Clubs. Secret Service. -Brooklyn Col- lege. LUCIANO, ROSALIE-Spanish, Economics Clubs. Honor Certificates. Spanish Award.--Hunter College. LUNEAU, ROGER-Business. LUNDSTROM, LARS-P.S.A.L. Pins. Intramurals. Gold Basketball Medal. Health Education Clerk. Locker Room Squad.-Rutgers. LUTZ, JOSEPH-Varsity Track Team. Intramural Medals. Gold, Bronze, Silver Medals. Queensboro Championships. Sergeant Patrol Squad. Emergency Room . Clerk.-Busi- ness. , MACKIEWICZ, EDMUND-Physiography, Law, Eco- nomics, Stenography Clubs. Service Certificates. Intra- murals. Lunch, Patrol, Traffic Squads.-Business College. MADSON, MARTHA-Tennis, Secretarial, Fashions and Footlights, Priscilla Clubs. Lunchroom Squad.-Business. MANDER, GEORGE-Varsity Baseball. Silver Football Medal. Minor, Major A's. P.S.A.L. Pins. Patrol Trafiic Squads. Health Education Clerk. Emergency Room Clerk. -Alabama. MANNETTA, JERRY-Economics, French, Lunchroom Squad Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins. Patrol, Lunchroom Squads. -St. john's. Sixty MANZI, ESABATO-Glee, Spanish, French, Physiog- raphy, Economics, Poster, Riding, Vice-President Stamp Clubs. Exceptional, Distinguished Service Certificates, Sil- ver Medal for Baseball, Numerals, P.S.A.L. Pins, Minor Letters. Patrol, Trafiic, Sanitary, Dean, Lunchroom Squads. Mikado, Pinafore, Pirates of Penzance. Campus, General Organization Representative.-Vienna. MARCISON, PAUL-BiologY, Glee Clubs, Mikado, Pirates of Penzance. Service Certificates. Lunchroom, Biology Squads, Miss Berner's Office.-Business. -A MARZOLF, GLADYS Fare reg Pfavv, Econom- ics Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pi o o ' c s. Secretary to Miss Duffy, Locker P trol.- ' ess Col ege. MASINK, ANN-Marionette, Dancing, Leaders, Basket- ball, Footlights and Fashions Clubs. Service Certificate. Campus Captain, Lunchroom Squad, Pin and Ring Committee, Secretary to Miss Feinberg, Miss Smith, Miss Langdon, Attendance, Publications, Stenography Offices.- McDowell School of Design. MASON, PETER-Cross-Country Team, Football, Basket- ball Intramurals. Service Certificate, Minor A. Lunchroom Squad.-Business. MATHISEN, IRVING-Economics, Camera Clubs. Base- ball, Football Intramurals. Darkroom, Traffic, Patrol Squads.-Pace Institute. MATWIECZYK, FRANK-Economics, Varsity Football Clubs. Silver Medal, Bronze A, P.S.A.L. Pin, Major Let- ter, Traffic Squad, General Organization Representative. fBusiness. MAYO, CHARLES-Track Team, Spanish, Biology Clubs. Silver P.S.A.L. Pin, Gold Medal for Baseball, Basketball Numerals. Trafiic, Patrol,x Library, Lunchroom Squads, Class Representative.-Wes! Virginia Stat! College. is -x Q r-f v P l ' , V MAZZACCA, C ERINE5!-Law? Economics, Globe Trotters, ewma asketballhyliibs. Service Certificates. Accountin wealth fmucal n Department Offices, Lunchroom ocker Patro,L,8quads, Program Committee- Busines lege. MCCALMONT, MADELINF-Riding, Swimming Clubs. Bronze, Silver, P.S.A.L. Pin. Secretary to Miss Mather, Miss Seele.-Business. MCCARTHY, GERALD-Key of Courtesy Club. Bronze, Silver, Gold A's. Football, Baseball Teams, Intramurals, Numerals. Lunchroom, Patrol Squads.-University of Southern California. MCCAULEY, FRANCIS-Latin, Newman, Biology Clubs. Numerals, Basketball, Baseball, Football Intramurals, P.S.A.L. Pins. Lunchroom, Patrol Squads, Accounting De- partment, Campus Representative, General Organization Representative.-St. john's College. Sixty-one .4 MCCOOK, GEORGE-President of Physical Science Club. Lunchroom, TraHic, Sergeant Patrol, Dean's, Physics Squads. Football, Soccer Intramurals.-R. C. A. Institute. MCGINNIS, MURIEL-Secretary to Mrs. Carstens, Mr. McNally, Grade Adviser's Office, Lunchroom Squad, Class Representative, Assistant Campus Captain, G.O. Representative.-Pratt Institute. MCGRATH, FRANCIS-Bronze Medal Numerals, Basket- ball, Soccer, Baseball Numerals.-Business. MCGRATH, JOSEPH-Law Club. Silver, Bronze, Basket- ball Medals, Gold Soccer Medal. Emergency Room.- Business. MCHUGH, JAMES-Newman, Physiography Clubs. Ser- vice Certificates. Patrol, Trafhc, Lunchroom, Biology Squads.-Syracuse. McKAY, ARTHUR-Latin, Mathematics Clubs. Honor Certificates rcs ntr , Track. uads. Latin Otlice, English m, Cai us aff, Traffic, Patrol S uads A olis. I 1 CKQENNA A - 'all Basketball, Newman, nis, Sten raph C s. juni r Life Saving Certifi- cate, Minor Life Saving, junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins. -Business. MCKNIGHT, FRANCIS-Minor A, Service Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins. Patrol, Traffic, Lunch Squads, Health Iidu cation Clerk.-Business. MCMULLEN, ALICE-Newman, Volleyball, Basketball, Secretarial, Abigail Adams Club. Honor, Exceptional Service Certificates, Bronze A. Secretary to Miss Hgh, Miss Beck, Miss Betz, Mrs. Daniels, Captain Girls Lunch Squad,-Business. MEHLING, GEORGE-Glee, Mathematics, Newman Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates, Bronze A. Mathe- matics, Music Ofhces.-Pratt Institute. f MIZLODY, THOMAS-Newman Club. Honor Certifi- cates, Basketball Numerals, P.S.A.L. Pins. Traffic, Dean Squads, Sergeant of Patrol Squad, H. E. Clerk.-West Point. MERRIFIELD, MARGARET-Junior Arista, Swimming Clubs. Honor, Service Certificate, Bronze, Silver A's, junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins, Junior, Senior Life Saving, Chevrons, Minor A. Secretary to Miss Keller, Mrs. Fyfe, Mr. Middleton, Lunchroom Squad. Campus Staff, Pin and Ring Committee, Year Book Committee.-Business, Sixty-two I Cl-' I AELI , . iming, ckey Cl s. Honor e ' , ronze, ilver A's, J r Life aving Pin, ior and Senior P.S.A.L. Pins, i r. Secretary to Miss Lennon.-Business. MICHAELS, DOROTHY-Glee, Dramatics, judean, Ten- nis, Volleyball Clubs. Mikado, If I Were King. Service Certificate. Biology, English, Chemistry, French Offices, Lunchroom Squad, Campus Representative.- Pratt Institute. MICI-IAELSEN, ALFREDfIntramurals, Rifle, Baseball Numerals.--Business. MILLER, AGNES-Secretarial Clubs. Secretary to Mr. Gold, rs. Mather.-Business. ' N MILLER Q ARD- unior, Senior Arista, Stamp , I , Chess, Biology Clubs. Honor, Spanish Certificates, Silver, Bronze, Gold A's, Meritorious Service, Distinguished Certificates, Late, Biology Prep Squads, Program Commit- tee, Music, Grade Adviser's Offices.-College. MILLER, ELSIE-Tennis, Riding, Swimming Clubs. Hon- or Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pin. Dean's, Grade Adviser's Offices.-Business. MILSTEIN, HARRY-Poster, BiOl0gY, Physiography Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins. Intramurals. Football, Baseball, Dean's, Latin Offices. Patrol, Traffic Squads.-Business. MINERVA, FRANKfP.S.A.L. Pins, Numerals. Patrol, Traffic, Late, Biology Squads.-Business. MIRANDA, FRANCES-Economics, Basketball, Newman, Volley Dancing Clubs. Lunchroom Squad.-Brooklyn. MIRSON, LILLYAN-French, Spanish, Public Speaking, judean, Tennis, Volleyball Clubs. Mr. Patterson's, Health Education Offices.-Pratt Institute. MONZI, GERTRUDEAFrench, Spanish, Newman Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Bronze, Silver A's. Secretary to Miss Keller, Miss Kernay. Biology Office, Campus Representative.-Brooklyn College. MONZI, XWALTER-Patrol, Late, Lunchroom, Traffic Squads. Baseball, Gold Medal. Silver P.S.A.L. Pins. Bas- ketball, Football Intramurals.-St. Johns Sixty-three ,A 4 MOONEY, THOMAS-Newman Club. Gold, Silver, Bronze Medals. Gold, Silver, P.S.A.L. Pins. Junior, Senior Life Saving. Grade Adviser's Office. Assistant, Manager Football Team. Football Numerals. Emergency Room Clerk.-N.Y.U. MORIN, REGINA-Newman, French, Law, Economics Clubs. Grade Adviser's Office. Secretary to Mrs. Olson. -Business. MORRISON, JOHN-Honor Certificates. Bronze A.- Webb Institute. MUH, MARGARET-Economics, Secretarial, Newman, Commerce, Tennis Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Secretary to Mrs. Braucher, Miss Scheh. Program Com- mittee.-Secretarial School. E kill X . ' 3 2 MULLIER, tdATHERrNE++yblleQfball, Basketball, swim- ming eaders Clubsjgluhior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins. jun- ioir, Senior Life Savi gl Minor A. All-Around Athletic edal.-Business. 4 MURPHY, PATRICK-Newman Club. Printing Squad, Meritorious, Exceptional, Distinguished Service Certificates. Printing, Lunchroom, Traffic Squads.-Business. V A- ewman, Swimming, Tennis, er , nononiics, La Is nor, Service Certifi- cates. unlor Llfe SHVI . ecretary to Miss Feinberg. General Office. Prom Com tee.-Business. NEDZA, HAROLD-Physiography Club. Football Intra- murals. French Office. Chemistry Preparation, Patrol Squads. General Organization Representative. Campus Representativ Lunchroom Squad.-Brooklyn College. k 5 N, EL AB Omles Law, Abigail Ad- am , Ten is, i in etball lub . junior, Senior P.S.A.L. i . J ' , ior ' ing. Minor A. Honor, Se ice erti es. I. m Squad. Secretary to Mr. ur n. ication. ce. Chairman Class Night C mmittee. r Boo Committee. Campus Captain.-Business. NIELSEN, ELSIE-Secretarial, Economics, Law, Girl Re- serves Clubs. Campus Captain.-Business College. NIELSON, GEORGE-Key of Courtesy Club. Varsity Football, Track P.S.A.L. Pins. Minor A's. Silver Medal Football Intramurls. Traflic, Patrol Squads.-College. NOBARES, ALBERT-Newman, Economics Clubs. Hon- or Certiflcates. Patrol, Biology, Swimming Squad. Senior Life Saving. Intramurals Basketball. P.S.A.L. Pins.- Business School. Sixty-four NOLAN, ANNA-junior, Senior Arista, Newman, Law Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates, Bronze A. Secretary to Mrs. Visone, Accounting Office, Library, Lunchroom Squad, Chairman Picture Committee, Year-Book Commit- tee, Campus Captain, Program Committee.-Business. NOVAK, PAULINE-Glee, Tennis Clubs. Pirates of Penzance. Exceptional Service Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins. Lunchroom Squad, Secretary to Mr. Biermann, Campus Captain, General Organization Representative, Secretary to Miss Stopp.-Business. NUZZI, ANGELINE-Law, Newman Clubs. Honor Cer- tificate. Campus Captain, General Organization Repre- sentative.--Business. OBERLE, HARRY--Arista, Program Committee, Key of Courtesy, President Economics Club, Vice-President Senior Class, Chairman of Executive Committee, Law, Newman Clubs, Bronze A, Honor, Distinguished, Meritorious Ser- vice Certificates. Dean's, Patrol Squads, Guidance Coun- cil, Intramural Football, Baseball.HBusiness. O'BRIEN, FRANK-Newman Club. Intramurals, Soccer, Basketball Pins. P.S.A.L. Pin. Traffic, Office Squads.- Business. OESTREICHER, LOUISE-Volleyball, Basketball, Secre- tarial, Spanish Clubs. Secretary to Mrs. Fyfe.-Business College. OLEFSKY, ANNA-Senior Arista, Law, Economics, Ju- dean, Honor Service Clubs. Honor, Exceptional, Distin- guished Service Certiiicates, Bronze, Silver, Gold A. Lunchroom, Girl Patrol, Stage Squads, Art, Economics, Latin, Health Education, Home Arts, Music, Accounting Offices, Prom Committee.-C.C.N.Y. OLSEN, KENNETH-Intramurals, Football, Baseball, Science Clubs. Printing, Trafiic, Lunchroom, Patrol Squads. -Busi ss. , +. OL LV IGTEconomics, Basketball Clubs. Honor Ce ' ates, Br nze ' A. Attendance, General Offices.- Bfisiness. X 4. I N K I Q-fl N Li '. 'VXI ' LSON,K-YUTI-I:lTriarXgle,GSecretarial, Tennis, Basketball Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze, Silver A's. Grade Ad- viser's Office, Mrs. Olson, Miss Scheh.-Business. PAGANO, MINNIE-Poster, Campus, Art, Secretary of Mathematics, Economics, French, Basketball, Volley- ball, Poetry, Globe Trotter Clubs. Meritorious Service Certificate. Orchestra, Picture Committee, Campus Cap- tain.-Pratt Institute. PAGE, CHARLES-Economics, Mathematics Clubs. Excep- tional Service, Honor Certificates. Traffic, Patrol, Lunch- room, Dean's, Late, Emergncy Room, Locker Room, Grade Adviser's Squads, Campus Captain, General Organiza- tion Representative, Picture Committee, Clerk Boys' Gym, Ticket Seller.-N. Y. Merchant Marine. Sixty-five g 5 S I 1' Y -s--oS5N -,vs-,.',..,,. .. y - -'-n .. w ,.fi iff if 'W PARDUCCI, MARY-Fre , Basketball, Secretarial, Newman Clubs. Honor Certificate. Swimming, Locker Room, Library q ads.-Business College. P R l HO B al, Soccer Intramurals, z Silver , etters, Basketball, junior Var- iy, f l. trol Squad, Championship Bas- ketball .-B sine . PEICOWITZ, VERA-Dramatic Club, Secret Service. - Business. ', ANN asketball, Volleyball, Law, judean, H ,412 , A ' i i Lc lubs Biology Office Lunchroom it Training. PENES, IRENE-Spanish, Basketball, judean Clubsg Hon- or, Service Certificates, Bronze A, Biology Office, Lunchroom Squads.-Brooklyn College. PENIE, FLORENCE-junior Arista, Footlights and Fa- shions, Dancing, Basketball Clubs. Honor, Distinguished Service Certificates, Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins, Bronze, Silver A's. Lunchroom Squad, Secretary to Miss Keller.- Business. PERRUCCI, JOHN-Spanish Club, junior Varsity, Gold Medal Baseball, Basketball, Silver Medal Foot- ball, Numerals, P.S,A.L. Pins, Squad Letters. Health Edu- cation Department Clerk, Locker Room, Lunchroom, Pa- trol, Printing Squads.-Notre Dame. PETERSEN, HELEN-President Secretarial, Economics Clubs. Honor, Exceptional Service Certificates, Bronze A. Secretary to Miss Riordan, Mrs. Olson.-Business. PETROCELLI, VICTOR-French, Basketball Intramurals. Lunchroom Squad.-Business. PIAZZA, SARAH-Basketball, French, Newman Clubs. Economics, German Offices,-Business. PIESCO, NATALIE-Biology, Latin, French, Newman Clubs. Service, Honor Certificates, Bronze A. Library, Lunchroom Squad.4Brooklyn College. PITRE, AUBERT-Poster Club. Service Certificate. Cam- pus, Clipper Art Staff. Patrol, Traffic Squads.-Pratt Institute, Sixty-fix PLOSZAJ, HELEN--Dancing, Basketball, Newman, Footlights and Fashions, Economics Clubs. All-Around Medal.-Business. POLICASTRO, ANTOINETTE-Newman, Law, Econom- ics Clubs. Service Certificates. Captain of Lunchroom Squad, Health Education Department.-Business. POSNER, JACK--Judean, History, French Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pin, Gold, Silver, Bronze Intramurals. Patrol, Dean's, Campus, Lunchrgzl-rf, Assembly Squads.-St. john's. PRO A . iticates, Bronz A. Pa- trol, i, ate qua s. ra rals.-Busine . Q 7 PURIFICATO, PHILIP-Spanish, Poster, Newman, Eco- nomics, Biology Clubs. Gold, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins, Cap- tain of Intramurals. Service Certificates. Patrol, Library, Trafiic, Lunchroom, Biology Squads.-St. Johrfs. QUAGIATO, FERDINAND-Track, Cross-Country Clubs. Patrol Squad, Soccer Intramurals.-Brooklyn College. QUINN, ROBERT-Newman Club. Honor Certificates, Bronze A, Medals, Basketball Intramurals, Track, Swim- ming, P.S.A.L. Pins. Traffic, Patrol Squads, Health Edu- cation Clerk, Cross-Country Squad. Soccer Track Major Letters.-Rutgers. RABBENE, BENJAMIN--Economics, Law, Biology Clubs. Service, Honor Certificates. Patrol, Lunchroom, Traffic Squads, Bookroom, General Office.-Business. RADOMSKY, SEYMOUR-Meritorious Service. Floor Manager of Campus, Mathematics, Spanish Offices.- Business. RAGUSA, CHARLES-French, Spanish Clubs. Rifle Team, Silver Medal, Letters, Numerals, Saxophone Quar- tet.-Music. RAUSNITZ, WILLIAM1Stamp, judean Clubs. Bronze, Silver, Gold Intramural Medals, Numerals, Silver P.S.A.L. Pin. Campus Business Staff, Emergency Room Clerk, Health Education Clerk, Traffic, Squad, Biology Office.-Business. REBHANN, ELXVOOD-Traffic, Patrol Squads Oflice of the Guidance Council, Emergency Room.-Business, Sixty-.fezfen REINER, KERMIT-French, judean, Lunchroom Squad Clubs. Honor Certificates, Bronze A. Lieutenant of Lunchroom Patrol, Sanitary Squads.-Brooklyn College. Omoo s, 'L an La ' V , ' tifica , .S. PK Bu ess J f R GOFF, SELMA ' r Arista, Law, judean, Econom- ics Clubs. Honor, rvice Certificates, Bronze A. Cafe- teria Oflice, Lunch oom.-Business. ROMAN, STELLA-Secretarial, Newman Clubs. Secre- tary to Mrs. Lyons.-Business. ROSENFELD, CHARLES-President judean, Physiography, Economics, Orchestra, Short Story Clubs. Service Certi- ficates Intramurals, Numerals, Gold, Silver Medals for Intramural Basketball. Economics, English Bookroom, Spanish Office, Orchestra, Program Committee, Finance Committee.YSavage. RUBINO, MICHAEL-Mathematics, Economics Clubs. Honor, Meritorious Service Certificates. Football, Baseball, Soccer Intramurals.-Brooklyn College. O RUCKSTUHL, ALBERT-Junior Arista, Poster Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Patrol, Dean's Squads. Gen- eral Organizatiori Store Accounting Office.-Art Trade School. 3 ' RUFF, MATILDA-junior Arista, Tennis, Girl Reserves yvyj Clubs. Honor, Exceptional Service Certificate, Bronze, Sil- ver A's. Spanish, Secretarial Ofiices-Miss Dunbar's Busi- ness School. www RUHLE, JESSIE-Globe Trotters, Swimming, Tennis. French, Economics, Basketball Clubs. Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins. Latin Office.-Business. RUSSELL, WILLIAM-Senior Life Saving, P.S.A.L. Pin. -Business. RUVOLO, EDITH-Spanish, Newman, Economics Clubs. General, French Economics, Campus Offices.-Business. SABOLIS, CHARLES-Newman, Economics Clubs. Hon- or, Service Certificates, Bronze, Silver A's, Varsity, Swim- ming Team, Minor Letters, P.S.A.L. Pins, English Book- room, Picture Committee, Silver Swimming Medal.-- Fordham. Sixty-eight SAGONA, SALVATORE-Spanish, Poster, Newman, French, Key to Courtesy Clubs. Honor, Service Certifi- cate, Alexander Art Medal. Library Squad.-Business. SALMINEN, EDWARD-Intramurals, Soccer, Basketball, Baseball. Patrol Squad.--C. C. N. Y. A I a I' xx. .. Qywf .51 - PM , sc F' EDWARD-Senior Arista Basimibairz B s, P.S.A.L. Pins, Honors, ,Service Cer- tificl s. Traflic, Patrol, Lunchroom Squads.--C. C. N. Y. SCALO, ANTOINETTE-Law, Newman, Priscilla, French Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Economics Office, Program Committee, Lunchroom Squad.-Nurses Train- mg. SCHATZ, DONALD-Spanish Club. Bronze, Silver, Gold A's, Honor Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins, Baseball, Bas- ketball, Soccer Intramurals. Biology Laboratory, Biology Ofiice, Service Department, Campus Wing Manager.- Brooklyn College. SCHEFFEL, MILDRED-Secretarial Club.-Businessf ,I f SCHEFFERINE, ETHEL-B ketbal f ' i r rial, New- man, Economics, Law, Glee lu an .A -Pace In- stitute. , I f SCHERMEYER, RICHARD--Newman, Rifie Clubs. Ser- vice Certificate, Health Education Office, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's Traffic, Lunchroom Squads, Rifie Team Major A's.-N. Y. U. SCHLUSSMAN, DA I D-Economics, Judean Clubs. Bronze Medal, Soccer ,n r i als. Library Squad.-N.Y.U. S .bl K SHIRLEY 1' at omics, Riding, Swimming, sketbal I! sqball, Vol - ll, Leaders Clubs. Service Athletic er ficates, P . ' ll inor Als, junior Senior e 25 1: S 'JE' to rs. Clemepsf Educati O ' ce.-Cornell. ff! SCHNEIDER, WILBUR-Orchestra, Airplane, Band Clubs. Service Certificates. Orchestra.-Ernst Williams College of Music. GCI-IOLZ, RUTH-Newman, Swimming Clubs? P.S.A.L. Pins, Junior, Senior Life Saving,'Service-Certificate, Minor A's, Bronze A. Secretary to Mrs. Fyfe,-Business. S ixty-nine SCHUCK, HELEN-Girl Reserves, Law Secretarial, Fa- shions and Footlights Clubs. Bronze P.S.A.L. Pin. Sec- retary to Irs. Fyfe, Locker Patrol.-Business. SC , lRENE+junior, Senior Arista, Leaders, sk ,all, French, Law, eball, President German b, Honor, Service ificates. Silver, Bronze A's. erm lV1'eB?f-L, fe Saving, Senior P.S.A.L. All- Around Athletic al. Accounting, French, Publica- tion, Secretarial E 'or of Campus, Secretary to Miss Duffy, Lunchroom Patrol.-Business. SCHURMAN, ERNST-Glee Club, Mikado, Pirates of Penzance, Economics, Physics Clubs. Service Certi- ficate, Soccer, Basketball Intramurals. Program Commit- tee, Emergency, Corrective Room Clerk, Patrol, Traffic, Music Office Squads.-Columbia. SCH TZLE, etb l olleyball, Secretarial Sucre to .- ' . Club Grame iology Offke Business .2 SCHWART SYL cono , ysiogr y Cl '. v' e Cer' . Secretary to iss ' .-Business. ' SCHWARTZ, WILLIAM-Mathematics, German, Ju an Clubs. Service Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pin. Lunchroom, Library, English Bookroom, Traffic Squads.-Business. SCHXVENKER, RUDOLPHhJunior, Senior Arista, New- man, Airplane Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates. Bronze, Silver, Gold A's, Term Medal. Band, Orchestra, Latin Office.-C. C. N. Y. SCULLY, ELIZABETH-Economics, Newman, Law, Swimming Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pin. Secretary to Mrs. Fyfe. -Business. SEBASTIONELLI, MARCIA-Newman, Glee, Spanish, Swimming, Dancing Clubs. Clipper Art Staff. Service Certificates, junior, Senior Life Saving Pins. Health Edu- cation Department, Trial by jury, Pinafore, Mika- do. -Pratt Institute. SEELEN, FLORENCE-Tennis, Swimming, judean, Eco- nomics, Tironian, Basketball Clubs. Chevrons. Publica- tion, Biology, History Ofiices.-C. C. N. Y. SENESCHALL, WILLIAM-Service Certificate, Bronze, Silver A's. Stage Squad.-N. Y. U. SEXTON, JOHN-Newman, Spanish Clubs, Service Cer- tihcate, Gold Medal Basketball, Silver Medals Football, Baseball, P.S.A.L. Pins, English Bookroom, Chemistry Office, Traffic, Patrol Squads.-Catholic University. Sezfefzty SHAVELL, HENRY-Junior Arista. Honor, Service Cer- tificates, Mathematics Contest Pin, Biology Contest Award, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's. Latin Department, Lunchrnom Squad.-C. C. N. Y. SHORE, JOSEPH-Junior, Senior Arista, Swimming Team. Gold, Silver, Bronze A's, Minor Letter, Term, Latin, Swimming Medals. Secretary to Mr. Witson, Mr. Mann, Mr. Tobias, Program Office, Exceptional Service Certificate.-Business. SHUELL, EDWARD-Newman Club. Football, Baseball, Soccer Intramurals.-Business. SHWILLER, SEYMOUR-Junior, Senior Arista, Football, Latin, French, Mathematics, Biology, judean Clubs. Gold, Silver, Bronze A's, Honor Certificates, Junior Varsity, Varsity Football, Minor, Major Letters. Secretary to Mr. Mann, Mr. Tobias, Program Office, Service Certificates.f C.C.N.Y. SILVERSTEIN, IRVING-Mathematics, Economics, Span- ish Clubs. Honor Certificates. Lunchroom Squad.- C. C. N. Y. . .13 , .' sirzvis, WANDA-Law,-Ne man Clubfs. est-i-vice cem- ficates, f?Bronze, Pins,f.'uGrade Advisers Oflictflvlrsi Vi6on9,'Lu room Sqtfad.-Business. .. Z! yn V., -, VII, ,, n i . SIZEMORE, LETTIE-Tunior Arista, Basketball, Vice- President Secretarial Club. Honor, Service Certif1c't . Attendance, Stenography Offices.-Business. SJURSEN, ARNOLD-Biologk General Science Clubs. Biology, Shop, -unchroom Squads.-Alabama. SKALKA, DAVID-Orchestra, Band. Honors, Exception- al, Distinguished Service Certificates, Bronze, Sil- ver A's. Lunchroom Squad, Biology Office, Corrective Room.-Business College. SLATER, WILLIAM-Newman Club. Service Certificate. General Organization Store. lntramural Football, Basket- ball.-Business. SLUTZKIN, RUTH--Tennis, Swimming, Law, Judean, French, Economics, Stenography Clubs. Bronze P.S.A,L. Pin, Tennis Chevrons. Library Squad, Secretary to Miss Golden, Mrs. Paquette,-Business. SMIGELSKA, -IOSEPHINE-Newman, Economics, Law, Stenography, Basketball, Swimming Clubs. Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins, Junior Life Saving Pin. Honor Certificates. Program Committee, Accounting, Grade Adviser's Office. -Business. Seventy-one jf' x SMITH, CHARLES-Globe Trotters, Economics Clubs. Track Intramurals, Auditorium Squad.-Notre Dame. SMITH, IRENE--Newman, Basketball, Swimming Clubs. Honor, Distinguished Service Certificates, Bronze A, Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins., English Stenography Offices. -Business. ' 0-J'-A' 4 SMITH, PAUL-German, Science Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins, Late Squad.-Brooklyn College. SPERAQ i, Law, Young Hostess P.S.A.L. Pins, Service Certificates. Secre- Levine, Mr. LaGuardia, Art Ofiice, Prom ELSIE-Newman, Abigail Adams, Riding, Swimming, Tennis, Economics, Tironian Clubs. Silver, Bronze P.S.A.L. Pins, junior,- Senior Life Saving, Minor, Major Letters, Chevrons, Service Certificate, Lunchroom, Pool Assistant, Locker-Room Squads. Secretary to Mrs. Fyfe.-Marjorie Webster. SPURGEON, KAY-Junior Arista, Glee, Dramatics, Ten- nis, Biology Clubs. Service Honor Certificates. P.S.A.L. Pin, Program Committee, Secretary to Miss Keller, Dr. Cusack, Miss Gannon, Mr. McFawl, Mrs. johnson. Cy- rano de Bergerac, If I Were King,', Trelawney of the Wells, Pirates of Penzance, Secret Service. --College. STACK, VALLIERE-Basketball, Riding, Swimming Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates, Bronze A, junior, Sen- ior P.S.A.L. Pins. Chevrons, Secretary Miss Manny, Mrs. Hamson, Mr. Goldman, Mr. Patterson, General, Chemis- try Offices, Campus Captain, Library, Lost and Found Squads.-Nurses' Training. STEINBERG, JESSE-Track Team, Rifie Team, Judean Club. Bronze A, Minor Letters, P.S.A.L. Pins, Gold Medal for Rifle Intramurals. Emergency Room Clerk, Biology Prep Laboratory, Biology Office Clerk.-N. Y. U. STEINKE, ADELE-Young Hostess, Economic, Stenog- raphy Clubs. Finance Committee-Business. STEINMETZ, ELEANOR--Law, Secretarial Clubs. Grade Adviser's Oliice, Miss Betz.-Business. STONE, ELSIE-Secretary to Mrs. Fyfe, Miss Keselenks, Library Squad, Emergency Room.-Nurses' Training. STOTZ, HELEN-Tennis, Footlights and Fashions, Young Hostess, French Poetry, Oil Painting Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pins, Service Certificates. Secretary to Miss Bernstein, Miss Kuhn, Miss Langdon, Locker Patrol, Girls Emer- gncy Room, Program Committee, Lunchroom Squad, Campus Representative.-C.C.N.Y. Seventy-Iwo STROHSAHL, HERBERT-Lunchroom Clubs, Service Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins. Patrol, Lunchroom, Traffic Squads.-Business. STROLLO, MARIE-Newman, Fashions and Footlights, Hockey Clubs. Attendance Office, Secretary to Miss Mac- Dowell, Lunchroom Squad, Year-Book Committee.-Bush ness School. SULINSKI, CHESTER-Poster, Cartoon, Newman, Soc- cer, Football, Basketball, Baseball Intramurals. Honor Certificate, P.S.A.L. Pins. Biology Squad.-American School of Design. SUSMAN, ISAAC-Inventors, Physical Science, judean, Economics Clubs. P.S.A.L. Pin. Supply Room.-Brook lyn Vocational. SWANSON, MI DT-seninnnnntn, Tennis, Basket- , nu, V1 Swimm'n , ing, Leaderj, Dancing, 'A o atics, Ne 'a , 'ology aseball Clubs. r, fslinguished, e e, Ath tic ertiicates, Bronze, iver qi B. . . nio Sen' ife Saving. Secre- tary 'on Olgce, an Ring, Co-Chair- :nn Prom Cog? ittees, r Group.-Prospect Heights Nurses' Training. TAKUSH, JOHN-Economics, Mathematics Clubs. Patrol, Traffic, Lunchroom Squads.-Rutgers. TARDINO, JOHN-Service Honor Group, Vice-President, President Boys Lunchroom Club. Exceptional, Distin- guished Service, Spanish Certificates, Bronze, Silver A's, Silver Medal Soccer Intramurals. Lunchroom Squad, Gen- eral Office, English Office, Class Night Committees.- Business. TEDFORD, HOVIARD--Economics, Short Story, Biology Clubs, Intramurals. Bronze A, Honor Certificates. Library, Cafeteria Squadsg Picture Committee.-N. Y. U. TEED, DOROTHY-Stenography, Economics Clubs. Lock- er-Room Patrol, Accounting Department.-Business. THOMAS, GEORGE-President Newman, Economics, Key of Courtesy, Glee Dramatics Clubs. Exceptional Ser- vice Certificate, Cyrano, Trelawney, If I Were King, Secret Service. Chemistry, Patrol Squads, Speech Office, Section Representative, Prom Committee Chairman Finance Committee.-St. john's. THOMAS, LUCY-Service Certificate. Secretar to Miss Y Wick, Miss Wetterau.-Business. TIENKEN ' ' It , I e Lea r unior Arista, Globe Clubs, Honor Servi e t1 c I ramurals. Dra- matics, As s nw News, News ' 1 - E itor Cam- us io Preparation uad Business. , - . ,P Y . J ' Trotters, La qxge . 5 4 t ' Pr s dent Commerce , D 'x A .. ,,,,, A. d- p , 9 A ,' B' A 1 .- . X A ' o Seventy-three 5 -as 'H' 4 .?,,,J:.'g - .,,, .., , gt. .2 I 2 .ma . fd ai, .., ip, uf .V .. 1. . ,, . .N . 1: . . TIERNEY, ELLEN-Spanish, Newman, Tennis, Biology Clubs. Lunchroom Squad.-College. 5 I TRENHEISM an DOLPH-Marhemfyics, ,Que-I Clubs. Bas15p!bi.l1l,'gfcer,xL tramulsllil-lo 11f 'lf'Z5il'ificates, Term 'Medal, Gold, Si1g5Q1B.qmze sjsiilvef P.s.A.L. Pins.- Qooper Unioqf 9 TISU S, JO CilPH-Harmonica, Garden, Poster Clubs, Trac ntry Teams. Intramur lettersT'M'Echani- cal rawing Department.--Business. ' ,.,..,g - 1 ,J J TULLY, KATHERINE-Young Hostess, Newman, Eco- nomics, Tironian, Swimming Clubs. Secretary to Mr. Gold, Mrs. Grief, Lunchroom Squad, Locker Room.- Business. A TUPPEN, NANCY-Riding, Puppet, Swimming, Etching, Oil Painting, Tennis, Dancing Clubs. Service Certificates. Lunchroom Squad, Grade Adviser's Office, Secretary to Miss Scheh.-Mt. Hollyoke. TUROWSKI, ALEXANDER-Football, Track, Economics, Law Clubs. Lunchroom, Trafiiic Squads, Grade Adviser's Ofiicc, Secretary to Miss Scheh.-Business. UFIER, EDWARD-Mathematics, Aviation, Baseball, Football Clubs. Soccer, Basketball Intramurals. P.S.A.L. Pin. Lunchgoom Squad.-Brooklyn Institute of Technology. I I I UNTEl2fIrAC ramatics, French, Judean, Economics . counin c , Stage Squad, Secre- tary to Miss Duff . , iss Spadaccini,--Pratt Institute. VAIL, GEORGEABiology, Swimming Clubs. Distinguish- ed, Meritorious Service Certificate, Swimming Medal. Lunchroom Captain Printing, Traffic, Patrol, Mimeo- graphing Squads.-Business. e 'al, Economics, Harmon- ica Cubs, tramuralhtBaseball nor Certificates, Bronze A. Slerk n alt Educa Office, Patrol, Traffic Squa s.- . VIOLA, JOSEPH-Traffic, Patrol Squads, Captain of Late Squad, Captain of Key of Courtesy, Dean's Squad, Captain of Flagbearers, Service Honor League. Meritor- ious, Exceptional, Distinguished Service Certificates, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's. Cutting Squad, Clerk in Gym- nasium, Class Representative, Lunchroom Squad, P.S.A.L. Pins.fSt. johns College. VlRGlLIO,'MACHAEL-Track, Football Teams. Service Certificates. Patrol, Traffic, Lunchroom Squads, General OfficC.fColumbia. Seventy-four I VOLPF, LENA - Newman, Basketball Clubs. Silver, Bronze, Swimming Pins. Silver P.S.A.L. Pin. Lunchroom Squad.-Business. VON GERICHTEN, ARTHUR-Intramural Letters, Ser- vice Certificate. Biology Oihce, Traiiic Squad, Gymnasium Clerk, General Organization Representative, Campusl' Captain.-Business. VARNOFF, MILDRED-Physiography, Newman, Young Hostess Clubs. Honor Certif1cate.fBusiness. WAGENBLAST, THEODORE-Newman, Stamp Clubs. Numerals, Football, Baseball, P.S.A.L. Pins. Patrol, Lunch- room Squads, Gymnasium Clerk.-Business. Wyyf, - ,A ii I I rv! DBUssER',f?tDELAiDEHNev.-man, smear-tai, Bas- etball Clubs. Honor Certificates. Bronze, Silver A's. Mr. Pattersons Office, Picture Committee.-Business. WALSH, GERARD-Varsity Swimming, Varsity Football, Newman, Intramurals Clubs. Major, Minor Letters, Gold, Silver, Bronze A's. Silver Medals for Intramural Swim- ming, Gold P.S.A.L. Pin. Health Education Clerk, Locker Room Patrol, Captain Swimming Team.-Rutgers. WEBER, IRMA-Iudean Club. Honor Certificates. Li- brary, Accounting Defnartment.-Business College. WEINER, LILLIAN-judean, Fashions and Footlights, Swimming, Economics, Basketball, Tennis, Hockey Clubs. junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins. Library, Lunchroom Squads. -Business. . WEISBARTH, IRWIN-Glee, judean, Civics Clubs. Nu- merals Football, Basketball, Baseball, Soccer Intramurals. Patrol, Lunchroom, Squads. P.S.A.L. Pin. Mikado, Pirates of Penzance. -N.Y.U. WEISMAN, LEON-judean Club. Library, Lunchroom Squads.-Business. WERBER, GENE-xDi 'nguished ice Certificate, P.S.A.L. Pi . sistant ews Edi or Campus,l' Col- umnist. ai n Se ' ublicit ommittee.-Brooklyn College. WE , GER Glee, Dramatics, Tennis, Ho ash' n F hts, Girl Reserves, Prom, F 'al C itee Cl . Service Cer' cates. P.S.A.L. Chevr s peech C Lunc 0- Squad, Mi- o, U aore,' If I 4' e . ' .ng ratt Institute. K . Seifefzly-jive ,xl X XJ K7 Q I - I bv' I 'ji Wagga XV I, 'SM IMI 'VE51ONICA+AX , Law, Economics, Newm , Tironrih, ice-President, mggcretary Law Clubs. Honor, Service Certificates, Bronze A. Glee Club, Mi- kado, French, Accounting Othces.-C.C.N.Y. ta rs Mis ff ' ' ' E, IM ,w -Q-Hockey, B ,-Q' 42. tball, Econom cs, l 1' K niatla Cl e pi' 'ce er Ur. ' s .S.A fY - 'L' , ' uh iss I --ste' Ex I . I' WHITE, JOHN-Key of Courtesy Club. Gold, Silver, Bronze A's, Traffic, Late, Patrol Squads. Captain Soccer Team, Health Education Clerk, Soccer Intramurals.- Business. WILLIAMS, HARRY-Junior Arista, Chess and Checker, Poetry Clubs. Honor, Distinguished Service Certificate. Clipper Editor, Campus Humor Columnist, Associate Editor, Beacon, -Columbia. WINHARDT, HAROLD - Law, Economics, Biology, Stenography Clubs. Service Certificate. Patrol, Traffic Squads.-Busin ss, , V ' A WISBA , 'ELEANO I Law Club. Honor Certificate. Ac ou 'ng diifce- irtass. 4 ju 1 I l I s WISE, JOHN-Oil Painting, German Clubs. Life Saving Pin, Intramural A. Patrol Squad.-Pratt Art Institute. WOLF, HELMUTH-Minor A.--Engineering. ,W ffl W LOTT nis, sw 'lmin matics Cl .S.A. Pin, ror, Seri? 'f aving, Minor s. nc ro ibrary Sq ' and Ring Com- ttee. N. , WOLFE, JESSIE -- Senior, Junior Arista, Volleyball, Swimming, Spanish, French, judean, Glee Clubs. Gold Term Medals, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's, Service Spanish Certificates, Pins for Spanish, Medal for French Alliance Francaise, Spanish and Mathematics Contests. P.S.A.L. Pins. Chemistry Ofhce. Picture Committee, Library, Campus, Captain of Lunchroom Squads.-Hunter. WOOD, ROBERT-Key of Courtesy Club. Junior A, junior, Senior Life Saving Pins, P.S.A.L. Swimming Medal. Varsity Swimming Team, Clerk in Deans Othce, Patrol Squad.-Engineering. Law, nis, Swimming, Basketball, Stenography Clubs. P. . . . Pins, Athletic Awards, Service Certificate, Chev- o . Bio Ofhce, Locker Patr , ibrary Squads, Gen- e l Or 123.0 Representative, ampus Captain.-Busi- ess. Seventy-.fix WUTE ICH, EMMA - Newman, Spanish, Economics, YANNUW GI , Kwman, Secretarial Clubs. Honor ertifica . Program Committee.-Nurses Training. JMS 'l NW ZAHN, RUTH-Economics, Law, Newman, Secretarial, Basketball, Footlights and Fashions Clubs. Secretary to Miss Betz, Lunchroom Squad.-Business. xi, ZAKRZEWSKI, 1Jhl'ELiN-Hyror, Service Certificates. Bronze, Silveq' A'. Frenchyjdccountjng, Cafeteria Offices. -Busi S., ju , It J' 1 i J 7' .J ZEIGER, ANNA-Swimming, Basketball, Volley Ball Clubs. Minor A's, P.S.A.L. Pins, Junior, Senior Pins for Life Saving. Attendance, General Offices, Library Squad.-Business. ZEITEL, ELEANORE-Economics Club. Service Certi- iicate. Dr. Gramet's, Miss Riordon's Offices.-Business. ZIEGLER, ALFRED - Mathematics, Physical Science Clubs. Bronze A. Patrol Squad.-Business. ZIMLER, LILLIAN-Honor Certificates.-Business S eventy-seven gn fl? Q I ,lx Q Y 0 Fe 3 i ts V .1-A X x .Es , A i Last Minute Notes By Eugene Werber OW that the question in reference to graduation is no longer 'fare we or are we not but instead, whether we are sorry or glad to leave john Adams, we find that there are extremely mixed feelings, steeped in starving emotion, in- volved in reaching a decision. By some, it is taken for granted that only if we have been stu- dious will we regret this leavetaking. Conversely that if we have been indifferent we will welcome this opportunity, to escape these protec- tive walls. However, each and every Senior, after spending four years in attaining his or her goal, realizes that he is going to miss many of the contacts and activities in which he participated at school. For instance-Mr. ex-Adamsite will find that when he is seated in a restaurant, and someone gently drops a plate to the floor, he will feel without support and even foolish if he chortles aloud with glee, as was the best of etiquette according to the old lunchroom traditions. Or when someone rings a gong, and he by instinct lines up for a fire-drill he will feel most conspicuously foolish and alone. Surely, at first, most of us are going to feel out of order in walking the halls of an office building without the protection of a pass. However, even after the graduate has long forgotten the old john Adams traditions, he will still be able to relive the grand old days when he fearlessly was sent to the Dean on Senior Day-when the seniors were so snooty during his own freshman days, of course he changed that. He will recall how in the winter of '34 he ploughed through mile after mile of snowbanks in order to be on time for a geometry Regents, only to find that the impossible had happened and the Regents were delayed for half an hour. There will be a happy tear cascading when he thinks of the traditional Turkey Day beating which Adams' football team yearly dealt out to its closest school rival Richmond Hill-of the long snake-dances following team victories, and of how he insured the success of the term play by portraying the extremely difficult role of a soldier fwith a wooden swordj and crying Long Live Franceu at the climax of the play. However, should we not be able to stand our isolation, we must be consoled in the knowledge that Alma Mater believes in the charm and the hospitality of the open door. Seventy-eight v Stl NYG I Twig of Y RE 'iS?'m Q7 , .X 3 if x 'af 95 55 7 if JA as We gf 1 I X, XX 2 46 2,1 1 349!2'?:5f,7f A X , X X pf gf 1 54 L News Z 1 I' 6 , f 2' I VZ! x X. 'xkdwx 5 I f f .ti N sw ,f . if m f 4 f A Zlii-5'li:?Qf'N' fist--?Pf??r!eii' iff iss? 1' siiirg' it 2. 1 -gq 21 fy 3-' f , si, , ,' I-.mr-fsls sd- I' f at ' 'Y Q f xx I X 'ISK f 'Dil ,vlitv K ,Q N EQXTE f 54 H , gf 4. 55,3 ' 4, g5,.f5?Q L, 'ff I ' f5 Zffft aff' .1 fi H f ' sh' Q2 9 li .' V. . ,fig .' .,:-,gpfyrw L-:ab ,ffl gf - ,. f y ,iv 'Em --s fm X:- ?. w I iii fff if ,J ' .-' ' ffm. 7 f ,r f fir Q, Q Z Q 1 gf' ,i,f,4i'i' ,' 4:0 ap ,l ,sfgsferb 5 f A if , - I 464, . 4 vi ,H -' , f I l 417.1 , I ffm : Qu, w- fi .v-.-sq?-Qavt.-:-aw' . gy ft ,ff :,,1:e,,gj. A f ffl' v i f f- . N. C X 45 S V Q-fwx '.-g'v'v' . , K if 'Af A f .1 M- iv Q Q .X .ar-1 x . I , . ., ,A , fQ X..-4.-..-1 , ir 1, 1:,fgg,'11 -gf , ff - ff , W W fa J .4 XX X . fjwmg Good evening, everyone! This is the United Pickle Works program bringing to you The Voice of The Future, a thrilling insight into the year, 1946. V Tonight this mysterious seer of the future takes you to the grand ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel where the john Ad- ams' Senior Class of january 1936, is holding its First Annual Reunion Ball. Here the sweet music of Rudolph Schwenker's Swanee Trouba- dors fills the air as the spotlight is centered upon Philip Doherty and Regina Navarre who hold their audience spellbound with their intricate dance steps. As their dance ends, Thomas Dunne of acro- batic fame executes a few back Hips and is soon hanging by his left ear from the chandelier. Then with a deft movement, he double- somersaults through the air and makes a safe landing by catching onto the overgrown moustache of Lester Korelitz who has been arguing with Vera Pekowitz on the all-important issue of Should lollipops be sold to children over the age of ten ?' There's Anna Nolan, running around the banquet table with paper and pencil, feverishly jotting down just who will sit in front of the radishes, next to lettuce, etc. In her haste she collides with a strange ngure whose hair hangs down to his shoulders! It's George Bogin, the world-renowned poet! It was only last week that George won a first prize with the following little ditty: 'The sea, a bee, a tree, a weenie and me.' Now, isn't that a lovely little verse? Over in a corner, drinking iced tea are Charles Rosenfeld and Edna Capurro, the famous radio duo who fill the air waves with their noisy impersonations of mob scenes. Everyone is laughing as Karol Lonieski, his face a crimson glow is escorted onto the floor by Anna Olefsky, prominent chair- man of the 'Committee to Educate WallHowers.' Among the dancers is Gerald McCarthy, recently voted the most valuable player on an all time All-American team. Gerald is busily assimilating some of the latest dance steps as taught by his beautiful partner, Dorothy Driscoll, the fair young lass who smiles at you from those numerous testimonial ads. Speaking to a group of friends is Robert Wood, the handsome screen star of Hollywood. Robert has just completed his latest picture entitled, 'The Shiekis Last Shriek,' a thrilling tale viv- idly illustrating what the well-dressed Arab will wear. Sezferzly-fzilze T f N N M ' 'li F 5 1, augur g ., Q 53 Q53 .-5.12. f.'-1+ its Watching the dancers is Rudolph Trenheiser, recently voted 'The Modern Sphinxf There's a bit of commotion at the door and in rushes Edward Horowitz, with a horde of fans at his book. Eddie is fresh from his Broadway success in 'Dr. Jackel and Monsieur Hyde., It was in the closing performance of this play that Mr. Horowitz received his greatest shock when he discovered, after drink- ing his mysterious potion, that he had finished the last of his man- ager's bitter cough medicine. As Eddie rushes onto the floor, he is cordially greeted by Harry Oberle and Elsie Sperger of the Recep- tion Committee. 'Sitting at the banquet table we see Stanley Dickter, radio's out- standing gag man, trying to type next week's script and eat a celery stalk at the same time. Among the late comers, we see Elwood Rebhann escorting Flora Burkhardt. It was this charming couple who played the stately king and queen in Betty Callahan,s Pulitzer prize play 'Throngs That Throng The Thronef To one side seriously talking over future plans are Harry Williams and Salvatore Sagona, comedian and artist respectively. Their. collaboration on the comic strip 'Gorilla Mike Among The Ants' has sent many a reader to the floor in convulsive laughter. According to latest reports these two lads have received several tempting Hollywood offers to produce animated cartoons. Standing close to the orchestra are Evelyn Hankin and Jessie Wolfe, besieged by a horde of admirers clamoring for the next dance. Off in a scheduled corner is Ruth Cornelius eagerly digesting that popular first seller 'Poems by Margaret Merrifield' Nearby, speaking to several old acquaintances, is Minnie Pagano, leader of the first symphonic orchestra composed entirely of women. Dinner is soon disposed of, and now the orchestra swings into the mellow strains of 'Home Sweet Home,' and the jolly crowd slowly files out of the grand ballroom, each happy in the success of the others. As the last person leaves, the room is filled with the memories of the preceding ten years in which so many up-hill battles were fought by these gallant Adamsites to achieve their ends. And the walls seem to whisper that in the next ten years and in the years after that, the battles will have subsided and the fruits of their hard won success will be enjoyed by all. Eighty Tight Squeeze By jane Schlesinger ETE stared out the window. Icy frostings on the glass were only duplicates for his frozen lingers, and the high snow banks along the pathways were no more solid and cold than his heart. His brain worked in a series of automatic clicks. He was sit- ting, a snowman, in his classroom, with a pencil in his numb hand trying desperately to pass this test. He took his eyes from the glit- tering white snow, looked down at his desk. The white paper was covered with yellow spots. The teacher's face was a yellow blank. He closed his eyes, and his tongue passed as an icicle over his dry, white lips. He looked at the paper, read the first problem. It was merely a botch of figures and letters, meaning nothing. He dug his finger- nails into the desk and fought to understand it. Slowly the panic subsided and he relaxed. A summer, so many years ago. They had gone to the beach for a day, a day in june, 1917, and were sitting near the crude fence beneath the boardwalk. His mother, father, and himself. He could feel the warm, white sand slipping through his baby toes again. There was a hole in the wall but a cat walked majestically un- necessarily around-the long way. Pete couldn't understand that. His father had laughed, winked at Pete's mother, then an- swered. Can you imagine a son of mine not knowing that. You see, Pete, he measures the hole with his whiskers. If they won't go through without touching, he knows the rest of him won't fit either. Mother had laughed and then father and before he knew it, he had laughed too. His mother had suddenly stopped and picked him up. She was serious, and she said, Remember, Pete, never tackle anything too tight for your whiskers. Then she had cried. The next day his father had gone away, and never come back. Pete hardly remembered him, but his mother-. That was the way it was now. Had he tackled something too big for him? If he couldn't do this for her, he didn't want any- thing else. His eyes suddenly focused on a small black ball of fur jumping around in the snow outside. A coal-black tomcat, It slipped through the bars of a fence, into the street. Pete looked down at the paper, and it seemed to answer itself. Eighty-one Twigbottle's Sweet Tooth By Harry Wfilliams . . HE doorbell rang as doorbells have a habit of doing, and Martha Twigbottle scampered to the door in order to let in the head of the home and her sole support. This honorable and corpulent person was Mr. Twigbottle, who was returning from an afternoon of shopping. Martha,l' he said, as he followed a pile of bundles into the living room, this is a cold night. Everything is frozen, and the snow is piling high on the streets. The snow is piling higher on my carpet, grumbled Martha. Andy, why don't you wipe your feet before you come in P Q'Martha, tonight is a night when I'm glad I can return to a home and family. Tonight is a night when I'd like to be comfort- able in an easy chair with a book or a newspaper. Hello, pop,H greeted Edgar Twigbottle, the future doctor of the family, did you price that football on the avenue ? Eootball? queried Andy as he deposited the bundles on the kitchen table, Was it a football? I thought you said baseballf' I said football. Edgar disgustedly went back to his algebra. just then the big sister of the family, who very much resembled her father in weight, bounced into the room. Daddyls right, she announced, It was a baseball glove. Whereupon she received a fluffy pillow full upon her brand new 'iBreeze of Something or Other face powder. Martha began to poke into the bundles. Wl1at on earth have you got here, Andy? she smiled. It's a wonder you managed to carry all that. Martha,,' Mr. Twigbottle suddenly swooped down and snatched a small flat box from the table, I have a little present for you. This afternoon, while walking up the avenue, I suddenly said to myself, 'I haven't surprised my Martha for a long time,' so I Eighly-frm I ADAMS AT PLAY HIGH JUMP fc X iff' 3-Y e: E'C - , M' f ,' , -LT, e- fi g A it T P fy ' in ' sf .X f --ffllfezf eeft E, ff ,W f- Wifi U U' - K stepped into 'The Cream Shop' and bought this box of candyf, O, goody, candy,', squealed Carol who was on a diet, 'KI hope they're chocolatesf' Candy? Edgar popped up, Let me see. Yes, open it, Andy, Martha was broadly smiling. 'Now just a moment here. Mr. Twigbottle reached for his glasses. Before I open it I'd like to make something clear. When eating candy, one shouldn't make a hog of himself. Some people eat a whole box by themselves, which I think is a very disgusting thing. Candy should be eaten moderately. Two pieces is enough for anyone, three at the most. There's enough for all, and they'll be some for tomorrow nightf' It didn't take the Twigbottle family long to dispose of the wrapping paper and cord. Each member took two pieces and then reposed in various chairs of the living room. Edgar went back to his homework, Martha read a magazine, and Carol looked at the newspaper. Mr. Twigbottle sat down in his favorite chair with his favorite newspaper and made ready to enjoy himself. In one hand he held the newspaper, in the other a round piece of chocolate. With a sigh of contentment he placed the candy in his mouth and crunched downward with his few remaining teeth. For a second nothing happened, and then suddenly the sweetness of the flavor began to touch Mr. Twigbottle's taste. Slowly, he smiled and began to chew vigorously on the sweet morsel. Wider and wider his eyes opened as the chocolate finally slipped down his throat. Never before in his life had Mr. Twigbottle tasted such a wonderful thing. At no time had he thought that such a tasteful sweet existed. Trying to hide his enthusiasm, he casually reached into the box and withdrew his hand with the second piece. It took no more than ten seconds to disappear completely. Mr. Twigbottle shook his head sadly. After all, two pieces-besides he had said, three at the most. But three didn't satisfy Andy either. The head of the home should after all be entitled to four, and then with the usual, Just one moref' the fifth disappeared. Martha had become so interested in the magazine story that she saw nought that occurred. Likewise, Edgar was absorbed in example 25 on page 153, while Carol continued with the magazine section of the paper. All the candy in the world could not have made her leave the melodramatic story of Ann, the landlords Eighty-four Qi .1f g3.'f1 '? : w ' .- -4:5 ---aipfgaf tif 'iw f 2, rf: f efi, B - fe e k R L 7 L -I A: -' +a. A -l ' , vst m a. NA daughter in love with the tenant who could not pay the rent. Meanwhile, Mr. Twigbottle was absorbing an article on in- flation as well as one piece of chocolate candy after another. Every time he came to a semicolon, his hand would automatically reach into the box and bring forth a new piece of chocolate delight. Slowly, the contents of the box began to dwindle. Where before, there had been rows of beautifully carved sweets, now lay crumpled brown wrappers. One lone piece remained in the corner and this was being searched for by Mr. Twigbottle. Finally he found it, swooped it up to his mouth, and left behind an empty box. Pangs of sharp pain were making him start. The news- paper landed on the old mop in the corner, and the head of the house threw his hands to his stomach and stood up with a loud groan. It startled the other three-fourths of the family. What's the matter? cried Martha, dropping her magazine. My stomach! My stomach! cried Andy hopping about the room. What shall I do?,' Martha followed him about in an effort to grab him by the arm, but no opportunity presented itself. i'Get a doctor! Get a doctor! he shrieked continuing his weird dance and all the time holding his stomach. Oh dearf' Carol began to wring her hands, What has happened? He's been poisoned!!' She looked wildly toward her brother who still stood staring. Suddenly, Edgar's brain was blessed with an idea. He swiftly strode to the candy box and after digging his hands among the wrappers, a wild light entered his eyes and he straightened up with a death- defying, i'So!', Carol joined her brother and in a moment Martha was dragged to the scene of the crime. Why, he's eaten the whole boxf' she exclaimed holding it up to a better light. Andy suddenly stopped his weird maneuverings long enough to see three heads slowly turn in his direction. Three pairs of eyes blazed at him from across the room as he shrank to the wall. Then suddenly, he dashed wildly for the staircase and in spite of his aching stomach galloped upstairs, darted into his bedroom, and hastily locked the door. Home and family, indeed! thought Mr. Twigbottle as he collapsed on the bed. Eighty-jive r, . SS Si Ill , S-faq ffl is im. Ilbldwx illy Illi- Wada il! vil- mf M5 Ry Perilous I-larbor By james Lieberman S the good ship EXETER, a six thousand ton steamer of the American Export Line arrived at the port of Jaffa, I first began to realize the danger of jagged rocks along the coast of Palestine. On the ship, men, dressed in long white garments, who looked as if they had just stepped out of bed, were inspecting baggage. They were customs officers. Finally, when the inspection had ended, small rowboats could be seen coming out to meet our steamer. My question concerning the purpose of these small craft was answered by the First Mate who said, This is the way you're going ashoref' To my astonishment this was really true. When the time came for me to leave, I was hustled down the ladder and thrown at least ten feet into the outstretched arms of one of the Arabs. Since the waves reached as high as the first row of portholes, you can very well imagine how I felt. An exciting journey then began. Under man power, the little boat made its way toward the rocks, where in the dim light of the morning, a wrecked and battered tanker could be seen gripping the rocks with iron claws. I asked my Arab guide how this had hap- pened. His answer was that what I saw was typical of the many accidents which had occurred along this treacherous coast, despite master navigation. , Suddenly our boat shot high into the air on the crest of a wave. With one sweep it cleared the shoals and reached its destination, We were safe at last! Arriving on shore, we were hustled to a sort of infirmary which in our country is equivalent to Ellis Island. There we were examined carefully to see if any new-fangled epidemic was being brought into the germ-infested country. Being dismissed from this building was an art in itself, but trying to get a taxi or any other kind of vehicle was entirely a different story. Finally when a dilapidated automobile had been obtained out of the seven hundred other offers, we piled into the ancient four cylinder Ford with all our bags andibaggage, and amongst the many cries of mud-bespattered Arabs journeyed on to the holy city of jerusalem. Eighty-fix The Ancestral Gong By William Henn l l UDDENLY, from the midst of chattering voices of many guests who were examining sou- venirs of odd types, rang forth a sound which attracted the attention of all the guests. One of them had struck a gong of Chinese origin, which had a figure of a dragon on its center. The handle of the hammer was of ivory with figures of Oriental mythology carved on it. The guest struck it again and was about to strike it a third time, when the host, Dr. Cordon, came hurrying into the room with raised hands, crying Stop! At this, the guests and the host exchanged startled glances. Upon reviving from his sudden perturbation, Dr. Cordon stammered, Don't strike again! Wliile saying this, he removed the hammer from the guest who was holding it. Astonished, the guests all let loose a volley of questions. They took Dr. Cordon's thoughts back exactly one year to that same day when these strange events had begun to occur. He was to be parted from his wife through the necessity of tak- ing a tour of China to study and to practice medicine there. It was decided that in exactly one year from that day he would return. His wife was to sojourn in Europe for the time, returning on the given day, one year from then. Dr. Cordon's first case in the hinterland of China was that of an old native suffering from a local sickness. Treatment involved several visits. After his cure the Chinaman, realizing his good for- tune, wished to repay the doctor. Knowing the Chinaman's financial situation, however, Dr. Cordon refused to accept any fee. To his surprise, he was presented with a gong which the Chinaxnan ex- plained had been handed down from father to son through many generations. Since there was no one to inhert, he gave the treasure to the doctor. Eighty-.fez'e1z The aged Chinaman warned him, though, not to ring the gong three times in one day, for it would bring either health and happi- ness or death and destruction. The gong had not been struck for three generations. The exquisite mechanism was then carefully packed in an an- cient fibre-lined box which had the figure of a traditional dragon stamped in gold. On returning to the hotel with his prize, Dr. Cordon decided to strike the gong several times to satisfy his curiosity since he had at that time, no belief in superstitions. The first time he struck, only a hollow sound issued forth. The second time, there was merely repi- tition of sound. The third time, no sooner had he struck, than three sharp knocks on the door were heard. A messenger boy stood there with a telegram which read as follows: Dr. joseph Cordon: We regret to inform you that Mrs. Cordon was apparently killed in crash of Plane No. 6412 Paris-bound. Unable to identify victims, but reserved seat records list Mrs. Cordon Will wire funeral arrange- ments pending investigation. Europeme Air-Wayr Yes, half of the old Chinaman's prophecy has come true, but a dreadful one it has been. I'm keeping the gong as a remembrance, said the Doctor. . . At this, the guest who had held the hammer before, was again fondling the gong. Accidentally his hand struck the gong sharply. No sooner had he done this, than an abrupt knock was heard at the door. Everyone stood transhxed. What was to come? After a slight pause a second knock was heard, and a third. No one uttered a sound until finally Dr. Cordon moved slowly toward the door and opened it. Great was his surprise when he saw a messenger holding a telegram. Shakingly, Dr Cordon reached for the letter and slowly opened it. lt read: joseph dear, So sorry not to be home on schedule. Plans changed last moment. Took boat instead of plane. Expect me in three days. Virginia. in sw ' :.. X lc .., ,v' 52, SZQQMK ' 5' rf X- QS-' 'D-, T v ' -Q1 i gg ' s Dlinwiza Ei gbty-ei gb! Empire City By Josephine Damaturco HIGH-PITCHED whine as the elevator shot up-seconds passed, the car shuddered to a stop, and the door opened. Wearily I stepped into the lounge of the Empire State building tower. A few steps, and I sank into one of tlie open leather chairs. Beneath the circular balcony the whole of New York lay, the New York in which I had spent an entire afternoon. I was exploring the city-my city. I had started early, intent on visiting every representative point of the island. I did. Now I was regretting it. It wasn't all I thought it to be. Ch, I had been partly right. The beauty is there, but in the vastness, its huge miracles of machinery. Yet it wasn't that. It was something hidden at first-the true nature of the section. The memory of the squalid tenements of the East Side district was vivid still in my mind. The shouting street vendors, the varied smells, the dirt, the noise. And the Bowery with its drift- wood of humanity. The people, too, were different, the routine of their day was mechanical. All hurried. Gone, too, was chivalry. I was hurried and trampled upon. In the subway I could not find a seat and from the row of different faces I could find no kind invitation. In the middle of the street-that moment when I stood undecided and the harassed young policeman voiced his sarcastic, Well, make up your mind. I wandered away, ashamed, with the warm blood surging to my forehead and cheeks, with the mockery of the cross-street crowd ringing in my ears. How I began to hate it, the unnecessary haste, the blindness. I longed for the days of quiet when New York was young. And in the age of speed and raucous auto horns I wished myself back- Turn back o' time in thine infinite flight -I wish I were- I. am. I opened my eyes on a quaint cobbled street in little old New York-1905. I looked at the sign post on the corner pole. Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street-I stared in amazement. Two carriages bumped over the pavement, ghosts of a by-gone day. A pedestrian stood on the opposite curb, now he advanced to the middle of the street. What's this? A four horse carriage is coming around the corner. The two meet in the center of the street. The driver pulls up on the reins and halts the horses. With a lift of his top-hat, he Eighty-nine motions the other across the street. With a bow the pedestrian ac- knowledges the courtesy. O chivalry, you had not yet died! I walked toward Broadway. A red-striped pole stood in front of a shop. From within came the sounds of a harmony-blended quartet rendering the perennial favorite, Sweet Adeline. I peered in. The four stood grouped in the back. How queer yet fashionable they looked in their quaint straight cut, checkered and striped suits with the six-to-eight button front. They stood there contentedly singing, a carnation in each button-hole, a bowler tilted over one ear, bustling moustaches thrust together in song. I walked on past the quiet shops. The silence was broken by a clattering roar. Overhead the still new Sixth Avenue L was passing. Necks craned up, eyes popped. On Broadway, a horse-car crossed my vision and then another. Suddenly there was a disturbance in the direction of 39th Street. I walked and looked that way. A gang of street urchins streamed around the corner, laughing, hooting, shouting, 'iGet a horse, yah get a horse. The horse-car drew abreast of the corner. The steeds reared in terror. The driver hauled on the reins. Around the corner traveling at the incredible speed of ten miles an hour shot the latest edition of the gasoline buggy. The driver sat bolt upright in his seat, his frame encompassed by a huge cap, linen duster, goggles and gauntlets, his hands clutching awk- wardly at the unfamiliar mechanism. His companion, a member of the gentle sex, wearing all of the aforementioned garments in ad- dition to a huge linen veil, clutched fearfully at the side as the machine putted around the corner and chugged up Broadway, preceded and followed by the faithful street gang which whooped at every honk of the 'bellows' horn. Across the street, a man came out of the Hamboyantly-billed the- atre and hung up a sign, Box office now open. I glanced at the signs- Floradora! Broadway's greatest hit. Twilight had set in, the street gas lamps were poked into action. Somewhere a door Boats move slowly closed sharply, shutting out 'my view of the cobbled street, gas lamps, small wooden buildings and queerly-clothed figures. I opened my eyes to see the elevator door shut. Startled, I arose and walked to the outer balcony. A panorama of New York was spread before me. Majestic buildings, ing New York. Below, ements in the distance. air of freshness about, and noises, the district silver streams glinting in the sunlight divid- a million people moving at once. The ten- Windows reflecting sunbeams. There is an new to them and me. Gone are the odors is strangely peaceful, from this height. up and down the rivers as the setting sun stains the water. Dusk brings the myriad lights, matching the stars and the bridge beams. The lights continue to twinkle throughout the Ninety city. The subway rushes like a glow-worm through the darkened suburbs. Broadway, the Gay Wliite XVay becomes artificially alive. I left the tower feeling content. My dream which seemed so distant now, hardly mattered. I had seen modern New York as a whole not relegating myself to a single section in order to judge the entire and found it comparable with nature. The faint memory of my dream, if such a thing was, served only to make me realize how little old New York had grown. I left slowly-I was hungry and tired. I had enough of New York-for one day. Nizzel-1'-ru 116 Song I feel so gay, So very gay. I know not why The hours go by. But here I lie. Far in the day The dreamy day, I look on high Up toward the sky See what I may. I cannot play I cannot play, I do not cry I only sigh And faintly say Some other clay Some other day. R056 Tawf N ineiy-two The Wind N ifzeiy-three I used to hear the roaring wind That shook the house at night And through the open window blow To scare the candlelight. I used to watch the trees bend down And red leaves whirled away. The wind would blow the white sails down As it swept across the bay. And I disliked the screaming Force Who tore my frozen cheeks And wondered why, it bellowed by And what the monster seeks. But now I think the wind is good It puts new zest into the world For like the snow and rain And freshens us again. H awry Williaffzis. Q ADAMS AT PLAY BASEBALL 1 w 3 3 E n H l . Over The Wall . By Dorothy Proctor I ULLO and Vorenus strode through the viae of the Roman camp, gesturing fiercely, and arguing loudly. Ah, quarreling again? asked one of the centurions, with a grin. Pool Vorenus said, and turned the corner. Pullo halted for a moment and inquired, How soon will the fortifications be completed ? In about three or four hoursj' he answered. But tell me, Pullo, have you decided yet, who is the better of you two ? Why of course, I'm the better, but Vorenus won't admit it. The soldier laughed and said, You'll be able to prove it today. Cicero expects an attack before sundown, and there will be many opportunities of showing your valor. Pullo looked up eagerly at the ramparts and cried, I will be the better, and you shall be the first to congratulate me. Then he disappeared into one of the tents. The Gauls made an attack a few hours later, and the battle was waged fiercely by both sides. Vorenus and Pullo were fighting together behind the ramparts, but Pullo was becoming a little impa- tient. He was afraid that he was falling a little behind Vorenus in the number of men he was killing, so he mounted the wall, and shouted back to his rival, How do you think welre going to defeat the Gauls, if everyone is as cautious as you? I'm going to do some real fighting. This day will settle our disputes. Then he turned to the enemy, and finding a spot in which they seemed to be the thick- est, he jumped down among them. Vorenus was so astonished, that while he gaped with open mouth, one of the Gauls chipped a piece off his ankle. But Vorenus didn't notice it, for he was already following Pullo. N ifzeiy- jive lu the meantime, the latter was in dire straits. He had slain one of the enemy, but a dart had stuck into his belt, and it prevented him from drawing his sword. At the crucial moment, iVorenus sprang down among them, and they all turned to him. He drove them back quite successfully, until he stumbled and fell into one of the holes which were so numerous. Pullo had at last freed his sword, and now came to the rescue of his rival. Together they fought, until a great number of the enemy had been killed. Then they both retreated within the fortifications, and were highly complimented by all the officers. And Caesar wrote, Nor could it be determined which was to be preferred in bravery to the other. On the following day, Pullo and Vorenus strode through the viae of the Roman camp, gesturing fiercely, and arguing loudly. Ah, quarreling again? asked one of the centurions, with a grin. Pullo and Vorenus stopped for a moment and looked at each other. Then, each of them grasped the Centurion by the collar, and threw him over the wall. X f 'Vx 'N 2 K ff my D 'P' fa C - QQ ' c 9 f , 1 ' ' . v Ze' 9. XFX' f L- 9 x I ,- J ' -W .,... yy 1,4 :.,4,...i5,,i .Q 'nm -i1--- - fp... ,id K H5114 T ' SHR, l ' 5 X 10,10 ', 'lull p-in f, 'WL- Csm. ' 3- N ifzezy-fix lm 'fL.Qk3 X X li g', Z iff -WW r X W X i'li51U'J My RILL, drill, drill! They are up with the dawn, rain or shine, hurrying through their soldier toilets, rushing down the iron stairways and springing into rigid attention in the forming ranks, sharply answering to the rapidly called roll, scat- tering to their rooms to spruce up for inspection, sure of repri- mand if anything goes amiss, sure of silence only if all is well. They sweep and dust, fold and arrange and rearrange each item of their few belongings, stumbling over one another's heels at first, yet with each succeeding day marching to meals with less constraint and great- er appetite, spending long hours of toil and brief minutes of respite, twisting, turning, developing every muscle, most of them hitherto unsuspected and unknown. This is the discipline, strict and unrelenting as that of the days of grim old Frederick the Great, except that it tolerates no act of abuse, that Captain Charles King describes as that under which plebes at West Point are instructed. But wonderous indeed is the transformation wrought in two weeks of such drill under such drill- masters. Mr. King's novel Cadet Daysn follows the four years in the lives of a few boys, as unlike as the parts of the country they represented, as they were put through the paces,', and marched out of the Academy, men, well-versed in military tactics, mathematics, engineering, and what is more to be valued, with a full realization of the whys and wherefores of discipline. However, there is a lighter side to this, as to the life of every college freshman. And the yearlings, forgetting the miseries of their plebe year, plagued the hopeless new cadets, devising without mercy, new and more tricks, each day, until the plebes hadn't a min- ute's respite and were compelled to be on guard at all times. One of the unfortunates in particular was destined to be the butt of more than his share of well-directed pranks. A pet at home, and the brightest scholar of the high school of his native city, more- over, the boy officer of the high school battalion, of whom it was confidently predicted that He would need no drilling at all at West Pointn-it was gall and wormwood to his soul to hnd himself the N inety-Jewell object of no more consideration at the Point than the greenest coun- try boy. For, as he had come to show those cadet fellows a thing or two they never dreamed of, they were determined to take downu so highminded a plebe, for the cadets brook no such attitude. just so long as he kept to the neighborhood of the barracks, he was safe. But for no other reason than that he had been officially warned to keep away from the camp of the yearlings had he become possessed with the longing to cruise thither. Old cadets couldn't cross sentry posts and nab him, he argued. I'll just aggra- vate them by coming so near and yet keeping aloof. Poor, crest- fallen, indignant plebe. He was instantly surrounded by a frantic mob of young fellows mad with exultation at being at last released from plebehood, and eager to try on the new boys the experiments lavished on them a twelvemonth previous. The officer in charge caught sound of the affair, however, and made instant descent upon the division, only of course, to find the suspected place deserted, and the only face that looked in the faintest degree conscious of guilt or wrong was that of the luckless plebe himself, who cautioned against entering the camp, was nevertheless caught in the act and could never explain any more than he could help his presence on danger- ous and forbidden ground. There is always a certain amount of romance attached to any story of any military academy, and this book far from being an exception rather contains more than its share of interest in the stir- ring account of the lives of the West Pointers. Cadet Days will truly keep you in a state of excitement and enthusiasm from the time the boys enter as plebes, with all the woes attached to this lowest form of life as it has been called, until that supreme moment, when, amid drums, and bugles, and the cheers of classmates, men leave, commissioned officers, ready for service to their country. Mabel Carbon ' 1, 3 K, Qtr Nz. a i J-Lv . F 'lawn x , AL'-XLJ W -x ' an f 'fy AMC: y . i-ii, , i .... , i Q2 Y N 'Wt L J QY3XQi?iia16.rQa ' ' , 54 -1:2091 ,mag-f--1 .A-.--BS' ,Q H400 1 - ,, ,.,., .. . It- Ll . as -ew 4-fr .., N inety-ei glol ffffff LITERARY George Bogin ,.,..,. . ..,,,, ..... .................... ,..,.....,.................,,....,....,. .....,.,,... A s s o ciate Editor Dorothy Polvaski ,........, .,,...........,... A ssociate Editor Eleanor Sinkel ...,.,....... Cgmposjng Editor Walter Storey Harry Williams Elinor Brandstatter Doris Kludt ART Arthur Frost Adrienne Hohenstatt Dorothy Merdes Shirley Sack Frank Schwartz Dorothy Chick Virginia Sexton Maurice Gerland JOl'1f1 Crawford George Connelly FACULTY Mr. George W. Sullivan .........,,.........................,.,......,,......, ...4...........,,........,,., L iterary Mr. Robert S. Goldfield ....,...... .,........,, .............,,... . ,,,.....r . ..,..... A r t Mr. joseph Machlowitz ,.., 4 ,,.,,................,,.......,.....,...4,4,,,..,.,.....,,,,...........,..,......,...............,,...,...... Business X fe la aff ., M pe s tl 5 ff . n r 2 Ar,ggg!s'2l ig! 5 , f 3 ri! 'A , MNT- L - Z ZW., . fg lylll Cf' f 41 ,Z - T . 'f ' 4 'Zf3Z ' 15 4 HEN church bells rang out the old year and steamship sirens tied down their whistles to announce the coming of the swaggering youngster, 1936, we couldnlt sense any- thing but the hope for better times underlying all of the various modes of celebration. This year substantial facts make a solid foundation for all our hoeps. The graduates of john Adams high school who soon go to make their respective Ways in the World can realize that prosperity is definitely returning and that the fnkld ahead, though still difficult, is marked by encouraging green lights, traditional signal to go ahead. Wherever they go, these graduates will take with them as part of their heritage, memories of their school days. We hope that this School issue of the Clipper may always serve to remind them of the happy days in Adams and of the general affection in which they are held by those of us who remain behind. Graduates, may success attend you every step of the way! N znely-nine Autographs - fglpf' W M4-...M fZ 12f5fM ffi5,fgfgp Maw M gif W . IW XL WWwwfM mfiwf K PACE INSTITUTE Daytime and Evening courses in Accduntancy fC.P.A. or Businessl, Business Administration, Sec- retarial Practice, Shorthand Reporting, Marketing, Advertising and Selling. Field studies of New Ycrk business. Courses include both business and cultural subiects. Men and women. Phone BArcIay 7-8200. PACE INSTITUTE, 225 Broadway, N. Y. Q. CHEMICALS ' U Laboratory Apparatus 77 ' s Micrzoscorss , ' X Q Biorogrcai Reagents K wwf , j 'NN FREE. 'Sena mr neo Qxx ly ' Eli E gllrutraled Catalog ' ' 2 f -4--WINN, pepmror if in 4 Q iz-1. rv zanlsr., Ng AVIATION TRAINING Complete courses in Sport or Professional Flying and Mechanics. Mechanical training includes practical engineering, actual work on live modern engines and licensed air- planes. Highest Government rating. Ideal training location on Roosevelt Field. Gradu- ates successful. Free placement service. For booklet HS, write RUOSEVEHT AVIATION SCH JUL, INC., Mineola, N.Y. DELEHANTY Day and evening courses in Shorthand. fypcwriting, Bookkeeping. Also complete Business Course including OEice Machines. INSTITUTE 120 West 42nd St., N.Y.C. STuyvesanl: 9--6900 BROOKLYN ACADE MY all rovdmues glzhen Unlveiilguons 'QSC-ht flu OB I:i'3'1scho1::idPolI Point and FOUNDED 1900 Fully Accredited Co Ed High School Courses Students individually trained to meet College entrance requ.i.rement.s 'MONTAGUE 6 HENRY STS.. B'KI.YN. N.Y. I I D SPRING, SUM!IlER Ir FALL TERMS Day . and sessions Ssvqnin R95 ' Upe . 9 1... gw col'-F3 upon 'seine' .tqtzogisizgiiml grmedmmn 4-4951 . . . Prepares for . . . ERD PREP SCHOOL 853 BROADWAY. N. Y. C. Tel. TOmpIrins Sq. 6-5923 All Academic and Professional Colleges. Also Business Courses Day-Evening-Co-ed Chartered by Board ot Regents Registration Now Open Founded l90I SETI-I I.0W JUN IOR CULLEGE CULUMBIA UN IVEBSITY Students admitted in February and September O Liberal arts program for well qualified men, leading to the Colum- bia University degree of Bachelor of Science, and admission to the professional schools of law, medicine, dentistry, engineering, architec- ture, journalism and library service, and to the professional courses in optometry. Address inquiries to: SETH LOW JUNIOR COLLEGE, 373 PEARL ST., BROOKLYN, N. Y. One bundfwi-0126 A BUSINESS BUILT ON SERVICE I Q I 5 - - - I Q 3 o 2I years of Salislaclion lo The I-Iigh Schoos and Colleges of This Cily E uipped wifh The mosf modern kind of machinery Q we can insure promo? execulion of your prinhng needs ..,..... Eflicienlly and Economically EASTERN IDVQINTING coMDANY PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS School and College Books, Daily, Weekly and Monfhly Publicalions I4 Cool: Slreel Brooklyn, N. Y Telephones PUlaslci 5-l535-I536-I537 YOUR INSPECTION OE OUR PLANTTIS W-ELCOMED AT ANY TIME Klimpl Medal Co. . Manufaclurers of Photo Engravlng CO' Medals, Class 8: Frafernify Pins Prize Cups 8: Trophies, efc. Eastern I35 Wesi' I9'rh SI'ree+ N. Y. C. 303 Eourlh Ave., cor. 23rcl Sl. -ii New Yorlc Cily TEL. WATKINS 9-5693 GRAMERCY 5-6963 SPECIAL PRICES TO JOI-IN ADAMS STUDENTS One hzmcired-iufo Phone Vlrginia 3-7455 Korotkin Supply Co. I35-O3 CROSSBAY BLVD. We carry a compleie line of HOUSEFURNISHINGS. PLUMBING and PAINT SUPPLIES GLAZING DONE Gi1'l's Central School FOR BUSINESS TRAINING Secreiarial 8: Business Courses Admission Al Any Time Individual Insfruclion Day and Evening Classes Y. W. C. A.-CenI'raI Branch 30 Third Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. S ASK FOR CATALOGUE Eleanora W. King, Direcior TRiangIe 5- I I 90 Student . Progress Planning 'Individualized methods Q! imgmqion in Bookkeepinn. Shorthand, Typcwriiing, Calculating and Business Machines. Secretarial Finishing Cours., o fu! Evening Dictation Cluusp Students pro. gross as rapidly as their ability permim Catalogue upon toques! Williamslmrgli Savings Bunli Building ONE HANSON PLACE BROOKLYN Al Ilatbush Avenue fllslIIONln ITIILIIC 3-ill! TYPEWRITERS ALL MAKES SOLD-RENTED-REPAIRED J. J. Burrows 248 Paichen Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. IO6-36-95ih Sireei Woodhaven, N. Y. S Phone Vlrginia 7-3I2I Phone HAddingway 3-6854 One huztcired-llJ1'ee 8 EVergreen 59268 BUTCHERS L. HELLER CQ. S9 Wholesale CONFECTIONERY 8ls+ S+. cor. I-lammels Blvdf AND SPECIALTIES Rockaway Beach 147 Harrison Avenue N. Y Brooklyn, New York EVANS MILK CO., Inc. 3480 Fulton Street Brooklyn, N. Y. S PHONE APPLEGATE 75I5I One lfumired-four BORDENQS ICE CREAM 2350 Fifth Avenue New York City C PHONE Eneecomae 40200 Q ' QMAM Day and Evening Sessions Placement Bureau 0 Begin at any time :-.L- Easily accessible from all secf:ons H EFI-'LEY QUEENSBORO SCHOOL CYPRESS and MYRTLE AVENUES Q BROOKLYN, N. Y. TEI..Hegeman 3-5631 a'1'eci-jive CENTRAL PHOTO E GRAVING CORP. 137 East 25th Street New York City PHONES MURRAY HILL 4-7I2I-22 BRUWNES ausmfss cnufuf All Secretarxal, Commercial and t BusmessMachmeCoursesoihrod ln Daytime and Evening Seuxonl Personalized lnstructxon Individ- 'omnn ual Entrance, Progress and Grad- lu' uation. Free Placement Service Catalogue upon request T LIFAYETTE AVENUE, BRIIUKLYN At Fhthuph Avenue :Phone NEvins 8-2941 Regal Pants Shop Largest Retailers of Pants, Sweaters and Stportwear 165-I2 JAMAICA AVENUE Opp. Valencia FOR OVER NINETY YEARS THE STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE Pettit St Reed, Inc. BUTTER, EGGS AND CHEESE 38-40 North Moore Street NEW OYRK CITY ESTABLISHED I 936 Purveyors to Hotels-Restaurants-Steamship Lines kCity and Country Clubs -menu-v-F Institutions Telephones WAIIter 5-74 I 2-74 I 3-74 I 4-74 I 5-74I 6 One hundred-Jix C 0 NT I N E NT AL BAKING CG., Inc. Bakers of Wonder Bread C T. RISSACHER 95-21 Sutphin Boulevard Jamaica, L. I. Q Wholesale Fruit and Produce VANTINE Portrait Photographer 155 Parkville Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. - - - Official Photographer For Senior Class January 936 One lame dfedf Fraternity, College and Class Jewelry Commencement Announcements Invitations, Diplomas JEWELER TO THE SENIOR CLASS OF JOHN ADAMS HIGH SCHOOL A L. G. BALFOUR COMPANY Manufacturing Jewelers and Stationers ATTLEBORO, MASS. A Represented by W. G. PFORR 535 Fifth Avenue, N.Y.C. One hznm'1'ed-fzifze l W V41 I V' , 7 ,Y V,JJ'Af jdi I A X JU IVA! X . ul!!! WW 45,2331 'X 1 X , H M f M ' X Giluhb ff. 1 Q , 7 , 1 4 ei- ay , ,V .fi , ! W L
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