John Adams High School - Clipper Yearbook (Ozone Park, NY)
- Class of 1939
Page 1 of 120
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 120 of the 1939 volume:
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i U-fm? 11-I-1 :fu 'iinil- ii-1 ,i, X l'w'l1 I ll ' 1, , ,lll , guy ffl .lull ' 'llllllilllll lllllWlfrf', O ly 4 V 1 ,N :V ,N y 01 Q M ',-' I ff fx AA ll Ww w re lf iff! if IVVI Vgyw will X L, K K 5 'vi X ff il ' 4 Q.. I 5 I 5 P., i M J 'f' . S 7 'dsl 41 ff' aim yr y 31 ,ull 7 4 . ' .35 X X N ' f I , 'Ll ,J 5 1. T ily li if 7 f W5 if j ff r., -rag e - ' ' F3 j 3 . V ., X 2 5 X QW 1 Biff? Q QQ' Cn The Bridge T is an accepfed fac+ +ha+ +he professions and fhe beHer realms of occupafion have become seriously overcrowded in fhe pasf decade. Realizing fhis, young people foday conform fo fhe general opinion fhaf fheir chances for suc- cess are very slim. Yefg fhe pasf few years have seen many fremendous changes in business and indusfry. Unheard of fields of endeavor have been opened fo new falenf. New professions are coordinafed wifh fhe old ones. By a wise choice of a life work and a sfrong deferminafion fo find a place, fhe youfh of foday can become pioneers in fhe world of fomorrow. Cover Design OiTTITe Bridge .. Below Decks . ..,,..,..........,..., ....,..,.,. . Meyer Schoenfeld Enid Adamy . Doris Kludi World of Tomorrow e,,,i ..... . Message From fhe Skipper , Nigh+ Sfands Senfinel .. ., Selma Greenman Maxwell Anderson Torch Over Moscow World Fairs-I939 Dirge Progress The Rim Game Fafher Was Righf Shoving Off Ship's Company , Abraham Wi+Iin Irving Fink Jean Wiener and William Schwarz Alice Kosunen . John Foley ,, Harold Prager A AIber+ Levenson Officers of fhe Class, January I939 Candidares for Graduaiion I Landfall Dismal Valley Blue Flame Kifchen Police Beau'I'y Parlor One S+uden+'s Decision , Sabofage . Swampshade . Mood Men Club Minuies Sporfscasfing Ship's Library Quiz Corner Cap and Gown Alumni An+ics This 'n' Thar Doroihy Graham S+anIey Schulberg Jean Wiener .. Jean Wiener . June Sfolz ...,.,i, Jack Meyer .. Howard Hall ..,. Margaref Carley Helena Perry Charles Se+zer lsadora Ruffine Pa+ricia Murray , Harold Adler . Sfanley Schulberg Frank Sgambafi I LITERARY Edifor-in-Chief ,..., ,.,,,,,,o., , Dorofhy Graham Associafe Eclifor ,4,,,,..,, ,,,,,,,,,, , ,,,, P aul Lenz Composing Edifor ,i...... . Virginia Masel STAFF Enid Adamy Jean Wiener lsadora Ruffine Irving Fink Sfanley Schulberg William Schwarz ART S'I'uar+ Mufz Douglas Ryan Nalhan Lang George Meyerriecks Roberl Olson Meyer Schoenfeld Augusl Kuhn Harold Hasenfus FACULTY Liferary Mr. George Sullivan Ar+ H , I Mr. Roberf Goldfield Business Mr. Samuel Zimbal SHIPS MANIFEST ELIPPER OZONE PARK NEW YORK MR. WILLIAM A. CLARKE PRINCIPAL JANUARY TWELFTH I939 Volume 8 Number 2 4 Below Decks . TV! 3 .. gf, 'v . -as :im 4 2 ' 7 . 5 E si ., . C .- 1-In N v .7 ' , f 44 XQ l ,-, 1 3 ., 4 SOB SI TE - . -' pig, ITH a rush and a roar and a re- sounding r-r-rip, fhe door is forced shui. Dorofhy Graham has jusf eluded anofher group of sfern-visaged seniors ouf sfalking fhe cusfodian of fhe Senior designafion vofes. We can de- fecf fhe firsf fine gray hairs spread in filmy disarray fhrough her curly locks. Cheer-up, Dorofhy, if won'f be long be- fore fhe news will be made public: if's on page 30, fhis issue. -12' A , - J - 4 Q n of ' x 4 I ' 1 , lu. 1 f . .? XJ ' N if 'rwml R- I 1 x ig ' X' I 'T Doris Kludf, a former edifor-in-chief of fhe Clipper , has offered her services fo her old magazine, and fhis issue con- fains one of her beaufiful poems. We're always glad fo welcome our old friends back, and +rus+ we will have fhe oppor- funify of seeing more of Miss Klud+'s work in fufure issues. We received fhe announcemenf of fhe marriage of a former Clipper edifor, Miss Marianne Sherman fo Mr. Claude Frederick and fake pleasure in exfending our hearffelf wishes for many felicifious years of happy wedlock. Our edifors were in quife a quandary when fhe Clipper confenfs were being se+. Selma Greenman had submiffed a sfory fo fhe Clipper which had been prompfly accepfed. Subsequenfly, Miss Greenman senf fhe sfory fo Liberfy, fhe popular weekly magazine. Liberfy proffered a fenfafive accepfance which, while if afforded us all considerable pleasure, fhrew our arrangemenfs a bi+ ouf of gear. However, anofher sfory was wriffen for 'I'he Clipper lexclusivel by Miss Greenman, so we can reioice af her good forfune wifhouf secref qualms of any sorf. If our old friend, fhe prefzel-man, does nof refurn before spring, our small sfore of imaginafion wil have diminished alarmingly, and our arfisfic nafure will be complefely dulled. We wanf prefzelsl .::-fu, QQ I? il- . .---V iw' 911, 1 so ig. ' ' 1, V- ' -.gi 1 've.iS?f 'Y ii ' , Rv K: 2 ai g First' and Las+ First. tl1t-re w.1s only hl.1t'l4 coltl. Anil the thin, voiceless .1ir Ut' the void. .1 spmgle ol' st.1t's Witli xrhite, tinseeing st.11'e. Deep in .1 vortex of tl.1111e The Birth of li.1rtl1 takes place Se.11'i11g .1 t1'.1il through the d.1rl4. 'lhere .tre men on its face, But their knowledge comes slowly Anti passing yC.lfS .1re t.1ll, Antl their span of life is short Then too, lD.lHlilf1d is s111.1llf'- Yet .1 tll't.lI1'l still tremlwles behintl their eyes, And towers of rryst.1l .md gold will rise. IJf1ri,r Kfmff A Message From The Skipper N a 'Few days, a group of some five hun- dred of you will galher in our audi- lorium in The presence of paren+s and friends io receive +he diplomas +ha+ are +he oulward evidence of 'lhe complefion of your high school work. For mosf of you, +he exercises +ha+ nighl' will mark ihe end of your formal educafion and lhe word commencemen+ will mean for you enlrance in'I'o 'lhe hard school of experi- ence. Wi+hin a few brief years, moreover, all of you will be called upon 'lo exercise +ha+ priceless herirage of our democra'ric cifizenship, +he righr fo vofe. You will help 'ro decide +he policies +ha+ will guide or deier our progress and +o choose lhe men who will make 'lhose policies e'Flec+ive. Seldom have +he lessons of experience been harsher, and rarely have decision and choice in civic and in'l'erna+ional mal'- 'rers been more diFficul+ +han now. A+ 'lhe momen+, our group responsibilily looms larger 'lhan ever. The rapid growlh of means of communicafion has served +o mulfiply +he +ools of propaganda in such agencies as newspapers and magazines, 'I'he movies, +he s+age and, par+icuIarly in our fime, lhe radio. Wi'I'hou+ some meas- ure of crilical mindedness, wi+hou+ 'I'he be- ginnings, a+ leas+, of +he habil of weighing and considering, wi+hou+ some healfhy skepricism in fhe 'Face of ex+ravagan+, con- flicfing, and self-in+eres'fed claims, +he generous impulses of your you+h may only serve +o make you readier dupes for 'I'hose clever enough fo hoodwink you, and un- principled enough fo exploi+ you. A cerfain wariness seems essenrial, if you are fo profecl' yourselves in individual dealings and +o serve +he irue communiiy in+eres+ in your acfivilies as cifizens. ll would be a fragedy, however, were you +o permil' +his caurion, wholesome and neces- sary as i+ is wifhin bounds, 'lo srifle your presenf readiness +o see lhings in fheir road implicafions and 'lo make sacrifices for +he common good. If is my earnesf hope +ha+ our program of inslrucfion and ac+ivi+ies has 'lrained you +o mainfain a frue balance be+ween fhe habil' of sus- pended iudgmenf ihal' is a mark of fhe infelligenf mind, and fhe readiness fo ac+ courageously and generously iha+ char- acierizes your presenf years. WILLIAM A. CLARKE, Principal 7 8 Nigh+ Stood Sentinel SELMA GREENMAN I-lli gentle drops of rain wove an intricately beautiful pattern as they splashed with monoto- nous regularity upon the dimly- lightecl street. The occasional muf- tied blast of an insistent boat whistle, or the blaring of a lone taxi horn were the only sounds that pierced the blanketing quiet tap, tap, tap of the rain. It was very late, and the great metropolis was quietly awaiting the dawn that would start the great machines pulsing which would trans- form the still city into a busily-em- ployed industrial center with far- reaching tentacles serving the most re- mote corners of the earth. But at that hour, night stood guard over silent buildings sheltering weary, sleep-drugged bodies. The cool still- ness of the night was broken by a new sound, a heavy purring sound that could only emanate from the powerful motor of a large cabin plane. Nearly a mile above the sleep- locked city, the Gods of Fate were whimsically playing at a game of death. A white-faced man with great, staring eyes was their pawn, for in the tiny cabin of the rakish little biplane, a madman sat at the controls, living again and again the happenings of the last ten hours. The decision that would spring from his twisted brain would determine the fate of hundreds and thousands of men, women, and children. Arthur Menson had been a prom- inent stock broker in the city over whose fate he was now pondering. Nights he would happily go home to his family, tired, worn, but content. For Arthur Menson had good reason to be happy, his wife. He had ar- rived at the stage of married life at which each had achieved as perfect an understanding as was possible and they had completely eliminated fool- ish quarrels and bickering. They had two adored children, Arthur, fifteen and Ray, twelve. Both boys had al- ways confided their problems to their interested father. Eventually this practice resulted in the strong family feeling which knit all closely together into a loving unit. But all this was before the crash! In the morning the bottom had, both figuratively and literally, fallen out of the market. Wild-eyed stock brok- ers had babbled incoherently as the tape relentlessly trickled out their ruin. The telephone exchange was a hopeless entanglement of jammed wires. Runners wandered in aimless bewilderment, contributing their mite to the prevailing general confusion. It was not a great crash such as that in '29, but it was of great moment to the speculators in that particular section of the country. The crash had affected Menson to a considerable de- gree, but in many other cases it had taken the entire fortunes, and fre- quently the lives of scions of the city's oldest and most important families. Pride and social standing when disturbed, frequently have a curious effect upon human nature. Bankers, financiers, merchants, shrewd business men all, were reduced to cowering children. First came fright, then hate, and lastly, the despair and discoui-agement which make absolute human derelicts out of formerly strong men. But it was in the second stage, hate, that the ruined stockholders sought someone who could bear the stigma of having caused the crash. Guilty or not, a man, upon whom they could vent ther anger, must be found, they decided. And Arthur Menson, the only one in that section connected with the fallen stocks, was the selection of these hate-driven men. Mad with the lust for vengeance they forced him to bundle his horrified family into his small sedan, and es- corted them to the city limits. There they warned Menson never to return to the city for violence would be used in his second ejection. Menson continued along the dismal, wet road, mentally trying to excuse the men who had driven him from his home. The gloomy quiet was broken only by an occasional sob from his wife and the steady throbbing of the powerful engine. Five miles along the highway, hid- den by a bend in the road and the ghostly silhouette of the forest, was stretched a thick cable, taut above the road between two great trees. With an audible grunt of satisfaction, the shadowy figure had tightly secured the cable barely four feet above the paved road. The hgure had hardly darted behind a clump of shrubbery, when a pair of headlights pierced the gloom. The motor was purring steadily as the car rounded the fatal curve. There was a sickening thud and a woman's scream knifed the air as the automobile struck the cable and careened off the road. It rolled into the ditch, then lay still, a crushed and broken thing. The sinis- ter figure crept from behind the shel- tering bushes and unfastened the cable. Witliout so much as a glance at the wrecked machine, it moved off into the concealing darkness. Two hours dragged by on leaden feet, and still all was quiet. Then a weak moan could be detected com- ing from the ditch which hid the car. The form of Arthur Menson crawled slowly from under the wreck- age. Miraculously, he had escaped death and serious injury but at a ter- rible price. The shock of the crash had thrown his wife across him, thus shielding his body with her own. Now, fervently, the man would have welcomed the release denied him. He had seen enough of the bodies of his other children to realize that the mangled flesh was beyond hu- man repair. Although unharmed physically, Menson had not completely escaped the vengeance of his fellow men. The succession of shocks had taken their toll of him, and he was no longer a sane being. His mind had snapped leaving him with but one thought, he must have revenge. Then, and only then, could he die. For two days he wandered through the dense brush, living like a wild animal, sleeping in trees, eating noth- ing but berries and thinking only of his anticipated revenge. Then one day, towards sunset, he had come to a large field in the center of which a group of men were carefully load- ing small boxes into a rakish little 9 I0 biplane. From their conversation he learned that the boxes contained ex- plosives, destined to break up a mine cave-in that had occurred in a coal field not many miles distant. The plane was being refueled for its scheduled departure at midnight. For five long hours Menson crouched be- side the plane laying his plans with hendish calculation while the plane was made ready for flight. At last preparations were completed. The pilot and crew went in to refresh themselves with one last cup of coffee. A single bound carried Men- son to the plane. Hastily he clawed at the door, then jerked it open and clambered in. The idling motors sprang to life. The air was lit by the exhaust. As he easily rolled the sleek machine down the runway, Arthur Menson was glad for the first time in his life that he had been a pilot in 1917. And now, he circled a mile above the city he had loved. The city that housed the men who had taken everything from him-stripped him of all he held dear. In his warped brain, the plan that had been grow- ing, assumed? bizarre proportions. True, he would have gained great satisfaction from battering at the buildings of the city with his bare lists in his futile rage. But no, he had something better than that. He had nearly a ton of explosive death at his finger tips. Lazily he circled over the unwary city. There was the building he had worked in short, short days ago. There, the bank he had traded at, the docks he had visited with his two boys, the streets he had sped along on his way home! The utter futility of the whole thing! His wife's face as it had been be- fore the fatal crash arose before him. His boys stretched out their arms to him. Savagely he shoved the wheel down. The well-loaded plane nosed over. Down, down, faster, faster the powerful motors urged the ship on to its destruction. The air rushed past the slim nose of the ship with terrible rapidity. The propellor was a flat blue against the earth. Fas- cinated, Menson watched the earth come rapidly up to meet him. His grotesquely-twisted face grew more ghastly as he realized the plane was headed for the river that flowed through the heart of the city. Maddened, he pulled frantically at the wheel. He must turn aside. He would not be cheated of his revenge. Witli super human strength he wrenched at the wheel. Wars it giv- ing? It must. It must! The plane dashed ever closer to the smooth flat surface of the water. The wings were shreds of tattered fabric, wav- ing wildly in the slipstream. Sud- denly there were no wings. Still the plane continued its death plunge. In the morning, curious folk might gather by the quiet river. Rumors of a boat explosion would be noised through the city. Perhaps they would be substantiated by a few scraps of charred wood. The slight fervor would soon be quieted and news that really affected the city would take its place. Tomorrow the inhabitants of the magnificent metropolis would re- sume their lethargic plodding through life. But at the exact moment of the crash, a few weary men awoke, swore terribly, and then lapsed into the depths of a drugged sleep. Tomor- row, the weather would be hne for fishing, but now--night stood sentinel. Maxwell Anderson QESTHETIC beauty is immortal! Michaelangelo's fresco, The Last judgment, is one of the most magnificent pictures, both in conception and execution the world has ever seen. It will never die. Milton, Shakespeare, Wagner, Bee- thoven, Van Gogh, Rembrandt and their works will live through eternity. Tut, tut! How we go on! However, let us not concern our- selves with the ancient Florentine School, Elizabethan drama, or with aestheticism of the past. Our con- cern directs itself toward a contem- porary playwright, Maxwell Ander- son and his plays. Perhaps it was an inherent quality that prompted Mr. Anderson to write a satire on corrupt political machines. This quality if inherent stands him in good stead for Both Your Houses was a Pulitzer prize win- ner. Mr. Atkinson says Both as a play and a performance 'Both Your Houses' is real and stimulating. Al- though it is propaganda, it asks no quarter from the complacent playgo- er. Realizing the burden of proof is upon him, Mr. Anderson has worked his material into robust dra- matic style. In this three act play, depicting the appropriations commit- tee in the act of fattening the pork barrel and cheerfully swindling the country, he is circumstantial enough to show how such things are done in the ordinary course of human frail- ties, and he is prophet enough to shout that the day of complacent piracy in politics is drawing to a close. Let us again return to Anderson. We find that before he turned play- NI'l.l.lM WVHVHSV wright, he was a newspaper man, and wrote his first play, White Desert, while an editorial writer on the old New York l-World. As a playwriter Mr. Anderson is workmanlike and discerning. His dialogue in the vernacular has a humorous tang and a rare vividness. In his characters, Mr. Anderson re- veals himself as a man who knows people and relishes both their weak- nesses and aspirations. Anderson is vehement, but a level-headed enemy of evil, he is poet enough to write Elizabeth the Queen, propagandist enough to collaborate in Gods of the Lightning' 'and What Price Glory ? and to realize and report the poorer qualities of his fellow men. Born on December 15, 1888, Max- well Anderson has grown to six feet and 200 pounds. He has a crop of wavy brown hair, which true to cus- tom, always looks as if it needed a combing. He doesn't do much talking and has never been interviewed. He be- lieves all one should know about him is in his plays. I2 u-sy, Ali Y u-mius.s-u manuals. J has sd gush At rehearsals of his plays he is silent, and like Eugene O'Neill he sits in the last row of the orchestra and doesn't say a word. If, at the conclusion, someone asks him to com- ment he is not fussy nor temperamen- tal. If he wants something in the play changed, he merely sits down and rewrites that part of the play. The first time Anderson spoke of doing a play pointing a finger at the government occurred when he made out his income tax report and had to give much of the money he made from his successful Elizubefla, the AQIIUHII. Anderson has been one of Broad- way's outstanding playrights, yet like all others, Eugene O'Neil, George Kelly, Sidney Howard, and Philip Barry, he seldom frequents the Main Stem. Of all the plays he has written, the one he considers the best is his first Wfbfle Dererl, which was a fail- ure. He likes to write poetry and has had five volumes of poetry pub- lished called You Wino Gaz-'e D1'eum.r. Undoubtedly most readers know the story of Mary of Scotland. It is pri- marily for that reason that I mention it. I would consider it Anderson's best play, because it can give us a deeper understanding of Anderson and his writings with some tangible material at hand. I chanced upon a paragraph by Mr. joseph Wood Krutch which said, When Maxwell Anderson decided to write a play about Mary Stuart he must have been faced by a pair of simple alternatives. Whatever view he decided to take of her moral chiricter he still had to choose whether he would regard her primar- .Bun ily rs 1 womrn who happened to be 1 queen or primarily as a queen who lf -5 4 i 'ECQL 1 f -22? 1' . . h ,fx-'X ..,i - ...uc , Q, XF 3 list - A i X 1 gud- IU it ix -fx' it . . ,. X 'Y x ' I 2' , l us...-...vkus I' ia l f 4' 1' - ffl ldllif, 'K 3-1. ., V, A 1 V' ' ' ' .rw x- 4, . . 4- 'lx ,ext ll' 4 I ' ' as-.15. 2.1-r. as V xp ,V , ,A .x'ii!1i' . . H ,V fi' Jff ll' ' il li GH '53 li lx 14. , 1 ' N i . xx ,p ' - ,. iffvl. ' N rx r-Wwxiglk , J - . '- .l'-Wlf ffl fri ' , t iw, i-.Q N N s happened to be a woman, and once that choice was made the whole char- acter of the drama was determined. For good, or for evil, he chose the first alternative, and 'Mary of Scot- land' becomes, therefore, the roman- tic tragedy of a woman who loved and lost. In the background we can see many other historical characters, among them Elizabeth, Bothwell and Knox. We find that Mary had made the mistake of refusing love when it was offered, but above all that she was innocent of any and all crimes charged against her. The story of her various intrigues and of her indiffer- ence to the fate of her people was a fallacy, so Anderson believes, or to be more specific, writes. The one mis- take Mary made was to marry Darn- ley, whom she did not love, and to refuse the aid of Bothwell who could have saved her. I marry him solely for his blood, or something to that effect was Mary's excuse for marry- ing Darnley. After that event we feel that Mary is doomed, for no wisdom, fortitude or even the dynam- ic Bothwell could save her. We know that Aristotle believed that only kings and queens could have personal stories worth telling and that Shakespeares contemporaries had at least the feeling that regal robes were the only fitting garments of a heroic character. We have long re- linquished that point of view, but it is upon this that Anderson counts so heavily. Thus it is that Mary of Smtltnzd is not really a modern play. It must be said, however, that Mr. Anderson's achievements have raised the level of America's dramatic art and have endeared him to the Amer- ican theatre-going public. 'I' NICQOLAIS by the seventh h o u r Y Ivan, Zimkov, Rodya, Za- kim. All to Nicolai's! Wfhispers ll o a t i n g through Moscow fell on the ears of Pavel Alexandrovitch, hurry- ing home to his wife, Tanya, and his son, Nicolas. His brows were knotted in a frown and he walked, eyes down in deep thought, right up to his door. The seventh hour, enth, he called, we for the Tsar. Tanya, a slight woman in a shabby but clean dress, looked at Paval, frightened anxiety in her eyes. Wl1y must you go, Paval? You have a son. A son? Pavel patted Nicolas on the head. Be proud Nicolas. I, Pavel, your father will drive out Napoleon. He nodded his head slowly, ab- sent-mindedly, as if to assure himself of his success. A task in which the Russian troops, preceded by the mighty armies of Furope had failed. Napoleon was a man who would not scruple to use any means so long as he gained his end, he didn't know the word impossible a word that exists only in the dictionary of fools. Austria, Spain, Prussia, had felt the heels of his sure-footed grenadiers and the weight of their swords. Now he staked his fortunes on his Grande Aimee' and had hurled it against Russia. Tanya, sev- strike a blow Smolensk, Borodino, now Moscow had bowed to a tempest which sur- IRVING FINK Torch Over Moscow passed even the forces in the gales of the Russian winter. So the French entered Moscow, a city where soli- tude reigned almost unbroken. Rus- sian troops, ofhcial, nobles, merchants. and the great mass of people were gone. A few fanatics, clinging to the tra- dition that the Kremlin was impreg- nable, idly sought to defend it. Mad-men and those who had a duty had remained. Those who were driven mad by the sound of the invaders foot crunching upon Russian snow, trampling on Russian life. Men who sought to strike the last blow to pay for the pain caused by the bleeding wound inflicted upon them. Men, such as Pavel! Men upon whom Russia could count to wipe out the stain of shame and blood. Nicolas looked into his father's eyes innocently, Alone, Father? Wfill you do it alone? PaveI's face sob- ered. I-Ie grasped his son's shoulder. No, Nicolas, Russia drives out Napoleon. I but do my part. How will you do it, Father? Pavel shrugged. How it shall be done-but here, Tanya, take him. I4 - T Put your son to bed. He asks too many questions. Nicolas ran to his mother. She lifted him to his straw bed. Prayed. Hummed a tender lullaby in his ear. Pavel sat down and began writing. Tanya prayed again stopping every once in awhile to look at Pavel. She signed. Only the clutching fingers of the hand of dozing Nicolas answered her visions of the future. Her husband sat, his square jaw set as though he feared what might hap- pen if he didn't gain her confidence in going forward even though it meant such a sacrifice. A knock! Tanya, Tanya, who is knocking? See, it is near the sixth hour. I must be there early. Tanya hurried to the door. It is Michel Zonstov. Come, Michel. Zomstov, a rugged peasant stomped into the room. His face was unshaven and his hair was a tousled mat. There were signs of strain in his unusually nervous hands and twitching upper lip. Pavel, you are ready? he asked. And Pavel went toward the door. He told himself that Moscow was out there, calling to him, waiting for him. Work was waiting for him. Some great patriotic work. Some un- selfish work. Something, towering high above pride, conceit, and greed. Pavel faced his wife. Yes, I am ready. ' Tanya moved silently to a corner of the room. Pavel followed. Tanyaf' She looked up. He kissed her. Looked at his son. Shook his head and then followed Zomstov out into the night. Once outside they strode cautiously up the road. Zomstov, my friend, do you know what we are to do? We will know at Nicolai's. They walked on without speaking, for the advance French guard had entered the previous day and at night the street was dangerous for a Rus- sian. Pavel found himself thinking of how much would be left for Tanya and Nicolas if he died. He had reached his third field when Zom- stov stopped and quickly flattened himself against a house. French sol- diers! Nicolai's was steps away. Zomstov stepped cautiously. But his clumsy foot kicked some wood. They froze. Who goes there? The voice boomed and re-echoed through the street. Zomstov felt for Pavel's hand. Grasped it. Chuckled. Pavel gripped Zomstov's shoulder. Pulled him toward him. No, he whis- pered hoarsely, you'll be killed. Release me, Pavel. Do you want to die yourself ? Pavel tightened his grip. Zomstov would not be held. He was made of the fervor of the patriot. His fist went deep into Pavel's stomach. He broke loose. Ran down the street screaming, The Tsar, the Tsar! The soldiers fol- lowed. One stopped, took steady aim. Fired. Zomstov fell on his face. Dead. Ha, your aim is good tonight, jean. The soldiers walk- Tiff ed to the body. Kicked it over. That's three tonight. Fifty piece, Gentle- rn e n . The others cursed the speaker's luck and they i moved on. l llllllllll ???T 'Z' -- 1 lli -1- lmuwu n I . . lllllllv wmv ' - NQXXNX l K- ' lff 5.1-1.:' 1 rf. f 3-:I . -4 r.-T.: 4- f'- -Q:-f--S X' ' 1 ,.l ia . f 1- a n C S 3 59 1 .'..,...s..gNL,, iT Y ....r 'f 'u, 1.-.4,.i -i .1 3 ' .1 1 . - A,g,YZL.g..a,, ...l 6 Fifi: -, ,.-'ji ci' 1. jg -I ., 12,6 . ll is 7- i' .5 55 ' .--F-l.-3.5 if lil - ff? IZ-12 .Q 5' 3 ,. ff '-- f f -9 - it 3. 1 . . .-'I' f E 1 1 A l tif . 'v ' . ' 1.11igg1:1QM ' zu. .f '- ,rv--' lrT'W'f' ulllll llllllll ! Pavel dared not move. He waited tive, ten minutes. Then one knock, a pause, three rapid knocks. The door opened and Pavel walked in. Deep inside, the otherwise empty house was filled with peasants. They were armed with guns supplied by Rus- sian patriots. There was little talk- ing. Silence was safety. Each one took orders and left. Pavel looked at the determined faces of the men gathered. He knew them all. His friends. Yasha, with the round belly and bald headg Ivan, flashing eyes, black mustaches. Even Sokol, the slight one, tenorvoiced, shifting eyes. was giving himself to the Tsar. Pavel shook their hands one by one and each smiled as if to say. So, I go. Wlmrlt does it matter? Ivan ven- tured to say goodbye as his hand clasped Pavel's. Hands meeting, hands that had guided ploughs through neighboring lields. Ivan turned, walked up as one of the of- ficers called Paval. Paval, we work together tonight. He pulled his mustaches. Glanced around the room. Come, he said. Pavel crossed himself, took a last look at his friends, and both went out. Outside Ivan explained. We set tire to the warehouse at the end of the market street. It will be a sign to the others to set fire to other ware- houses and E Fire? Pa- v el d i d not u n d e r - stand. Fire. He looked at Ivan puzzled. l llllllllllill 'E' f l ' fwfm: --fin! ,lg 'iff' ' .' .4-'fi'-.Y7'I! I ,.'..:. 'I 'L '22 :A.,f.,, !:.i'-':.5.?4.11a -lf i ii Mi, f' 3711 , ,.,, . ,. .M 1 .: , -' f X ft-2 -' 1 2, f barns.' 21.3. 1. ef ik P. fix. W -,mx :- 5 : -gr 5 '35 Q HL 1' . 1 ' ll 35 I- iii! . gi ll, 5-:Q .gt ff- X T gypsy: lllllllluulllli if Ei I But what ofthe city? It is better to have no city than one in the hands of Napoleon. You are right, Ivan. You lead the way. The two men stalked silently to- ward the market street. Clouds blot- ted out the moon and starsg the sky was black. It hid them in the folds of its great cloak. They groped un- certainly. But each step brought them nearer their goal. Ivan stopped.- Pavel, have you the torches? Are you ready? Yes, Ivan,H Pavel gasped at the thought of the danger. Do we go now? Soon, Pavel, soon. We must be successful. All depends on us. Wznit. The warehouse is guarded. See! One, two three soldiers around the fire. Shoot well, Pavel, for Russia . . and me. Steady! Ready! Fire! Pavel fired, loaded again, fired, loaded, fired. Two men fell, the third leaped for shelter and returned the shots. Ivan raced to the hre. Lit his torch. Ran toward the ware- house. A shot! Ivan fell. Pavel could see Ivan's form fall to the ground. Then he saw Ivan's torch. There it was . . . in his right hand. He could see the warm blood coursing down Ivan's wrists. The arm still moving, moving .... He was conscious of the inner re- cesses of his being. A flaming hope of radiant ecstacy invaded him. Pavel crawled a few yards. Strug- gled to one knee beside the fallen Ivan. Finally, we win! He shouted and flung his torch into the ware- house. I5 ' -pe 31- World Fairs - I939 JEAN WIENER-WILLIAM SCHWARZ PON a marshy, bleak tract of land, which formerly served the purpose of a dumping ground, the inightest city of today has set out to fullill a vision to the extent of realization. Amidst these sectors of ash heaps, New York City has laid plans for the grandeur and splendor of a fair of the world during the year of 1959. It will be a fair which will relate a tale for every man, every- where, because of its reviewing of to- morrow in relation to today. New York will secure an inveslment in good will which will be invaluable to industry and the security of the country. However, most of us do not realize or understand the purpose, signifi- cance, and plans of the Fair. Let us, therefore, delve into some of these as- pects in detail. The theme of the New York XVorld's Fair is to represent the Xvorld of Tomorrow, and will show the necessity of a modern life in unity. The exposition wonders will he dom- inated by the two Theme Centre structuresg the Perisphere, a two- hundred foot, eighteen story globe, seemingly supported by fountain spray, which houses an immense circular theatre for display pointing the high- road to Tomorrow, and the Trylon, a seven-hundred foot, fifty story, three- sided needle. The purpose behind the entire work is to promote international relationships, and to emphasize the interrelationship of all men's inter- ests. So far, sixty-two nations and the League of Nations have accepted invitations to the exposition, and the entire civilized world is expected to participate. The Fair is divided into fourteen major sections, each one significant to modern life. These zones will radiate from the Theme Centre. They are: Government, Production, Transporta- I7 I8 tion , Communication, Distribution, Business Systems, Shelter, Clothing and Cosmetics, Sustenance, Health and Public Welfare, Education, Recreation, Arts, and Religion. The zone ar- rangement eliminates confusion, mini- mizes physical exhaustion among vis- itorsg moreover, it permits a clearer understanding of present day civiliza- tion. Twenty-five nations are laying cor- nerstones for their own buildings in extension of exhibits in the Hall of Nations. These displays are hailed as the first living geography of the world. Each country will present re- productions of its important industries and cities. For example, the Irish Free State is erecting a small island, an exact duplicate in relief of Ire- land. Lakes and rivers will be filled with water brought from the River Shannon and others. Even the soil will come from fields of the counties of Eire. Great Britain has contracted for the largest amount of space in order to house all sections of a vast empire. Among exhibitors will be Australia, New Zealand, India, South Africa, and the Crown Colonies. The exhibit will deal with major industries such as iron and steel, textiles, and fishing, and will show how Britain has contributed to progress in the past and is continuing to do so for the future. The nations will even ex- port humans to complete the exhibits -East Indian weavers, artisans from the Orient, and dancers from Siam are among them. As many as 250,000 hungry sight- seers can be accommodated in the eighty restaurants to dot the grounds. And . . . thirty million frankfurters and hamburgers will be eaten next year at the World's Fair. Many na- tions will present their own foods in their native restaurants. France, for instance will offer a canard nantais a l'orange, Belgium will specialize in Flemish and Walloon dishes, with delicacies cooked in fig leaves, Cuba will have arroz con pollo. Has any- one called the waiter? One of the most magnificent and costly structures is the 360,000,000 Central Mall. A sixty-five foot like- ness of Washington fthe Fair open- ing date, April 30, 1939, commemmo- rates the inauguration of Washington, April 30, 17891, numerous legendary figures, 120-foot pythons, cascaded fountain pools, splendid exhibit halls, hundreds of shade trees, a million tulips, and entirely new lighting ef- fects, are some of the embellishments of the Central Avenue. Amusements, in the form of rides, music, sports, drama, and other en- tertainment will provide great attrac- tions. The music program is to in- clude opera, symphony, choral and religious presentations, light opera, folk music, ballet, and the dances of this and other nations. Children's World may prove the most popular attraction. Games of every descrip- tion will be available in this minia- ture world, and children will be under trained supervision for play, re- pose, or feeding. Other features will be a Strange As It Seems show, Live Monsters, and Enchanted Forest. Men will appreciate the separate building for Men, His Sports, His Clothes. Boys who wish to learn football from experts, may do so at the Academy of Sport. Instruction on baseball will also be given by masters like Joe McCarthy, Lou Gehrig, Babe Ruth, and others. Half a million dollars worth of perfume, cosmetics, powders, and other aids to feminine beauty are to be exhibited in the Cosmetics Building. Nearby, an- other building, devoted entirely to Wonien's Apparel will delight the ladies' hearts with its completeness in detail. Another of the great sights is to be a model of a human eye, so large that several visitors may enter it at the same time. One will be able to see the Fair grounds through its pupil. Tomorrow Town, is an advanced concept of community design and housing. A score or more of full scale homes will advise the visitor what to expect in construction for 33,000 to 317,000 for a home. To complete the picture, roads will be laid, and a modern shopping street, playground, and art center will be in- stalled. Education will be presented as the institution which allows for higher civilization, and prevents catastrophe. The School of Tomorrow will be featured. Informative lectures by child psychologists and doctors, and motion pictures will be shown for par- ents. The Hall of Science and of Phar- macy, will depict the modern scienti- fic needs, control of disease, care of the body, and other items. And still a thousand things to do and see! Railroads on Parade, with a pageant of transportation and a model railway system . . . a wealth of mural and sculpture work . . . the Fountain-Lake Amphitheatre, with an island stage and curtains of water. . . . Belgian diamond cutters at work on real jewels . . . fifty separate gardens, colorful and harmonious, to constitute Gardens on Parade . . . New York, the City of Light, nearly a block long, taller than three stories, representing the entire city above and below ground . . . ten mil- lion volts of artificial lighting to be discharged at intervals in one build- ing . . . and still a thousand things to see. . All this for you and you, to be seen, heard, and experienced at the New York World's Fair of 1939. San Francisco has created its own Treasure Islandf' an island which surpasses even the most fanciful dreams of Robert Louis Stevenson in devising a fairy-like structure in the Pacific Ocean. It uses as a unique setting a 400 acre Treasure Island. A man-made island, built in the cen- ter of that great harbor, the San Fran- cisco Bay. Dredges and scows contributed to the construction of this island which grew by day and night just as that first settlement, San Francisco, grew back in 1849. And there it stands today, dredged from the depths of San Francisco Bay to support the towers and palaces of an international exposition. It stands today firm as a rock, every available space devoted to beautiful buildings and exquisite land- scapes. This is America's ofiicial World's Fair of the West, a ground pageant I I mi-.I x ? if' 5? M5 'r a r , n f lik I il' 'll I I f 1 .L I W Ju X! 1 . l v F ' h- - ., .. I I ., I X 11 , . luv' ' Xf 'i '.fw1 ' .. ' -, tfigyvf ef'fy? f-ie. .. age, 4' ...M , -Qi F1 l ll' lg, r In 1 ,. , A I9 20 of splendor borne of the Machine Age and given to mankind. It is the West's Dream of a Decade. A dream which has become a reality and is supported by the pledge of Americans everywhere. The Atlantic side is separated from the Pacific Area lands by a broad avenue of trees which adjoin the International Palace where interior exhibits will be displayed. Countries exhibiting in the Interna- tional Palace include Denmark, Hol- land, Czechoslovakia, Venezuela, Ru- mania, Sweden, Polland, Bulgaria, Portugal, Turkey, Paraguay, Uraguay, I-Iungary, Nicaragua, Germany, Boliv- ia, and Alaska. These nations, in- tent upon bringing out their best fea- tures, are not too dignified to add characteristic touches to Treasure Is- land fun, will make the Pageant of the Pacific memorable. Negotiations are proceeding with more than a dozen other nations, and the Fair opens on February 18, 1939. At least fifty foreign lands will be represented to make San Francisco's Fair the most cosmopolitan and color- ful in the history of the world. It promises to outdo even that of the Panama Pacific International Exposi- tion which until now has been the greatest show ever held in the West. Nations will be on parade with art and industry or dramatic display. Participating countries will design their efforts so as to express the cul- tural rather than the commercial wealth of their lands. Their exhibits will be built around the themes of historical customs and the recreations of their people, and distinctive arts and crafts. Exhibits will be in the Oriental manner. For, although many will be of modern colorful tone there is something of the languor of Pacific Countries which is to dominate the scene. Not only the countries of the Paci- fic and all Latin America have re- sponded to the invitation to take part in the Fair, but Europe is also to be represented in a major way. Twenty- one countries and one United States Territory will have their own individ- ual pavillions, while another nineteen will exhibit in the International Palace. Nations of the Pacific will be to- gether on Treasure Island in a special area designated as the Pacific Basin Area with the pavillions of various countries built on the banks of the picturesque Pacific Nations. The Pa- villion of European Nations and these countries of Latin America on the At- lantic side are separated from the Pacific Area by a broad area of trees and adjoin the International Palace. Treasure Island is a trifie over one mile square, a bit longer than it is wide and the buildings have been so grouped that they may be seen with a minimum of walking. No museum feet at the Golden Gate Exposition, is the slogan used. The main exhibit group comprises six great blocks of exhibit halls. in general 200 feet wide by -100 to 900 long and radiatingly spaced by broad courts from a central Court of Homes. To build these stately palaces with their combined exhibit space approach- ing some one million square feet, the cost is some 5S6,750,000, including py- lons, pavillions, stautary, murals, im- pressive fountains and manifold archi- tectural refinements. Apparent in the Treasure Island skyline is the slender 400 foot Tower of the Sun, only 57 feet in diameter. At its base is the Court of Honor. Competing in height with the lofty towers of the Bay Bridge and 72 feet higher than the wooded crest of a neighboring island, this dominant architectural note of the Fair has cost approximately 3535o,ooo. It will mount a -I-I bell Carillon during the Fair. A new Pacific style of architec- ture has been devised to exalt the visitor spiritually into a Never-Never Land where romance in the Ancient mystic forms has been blended into long horizontal lines, setback pyra- mids and mosques characteristic of Maylayan, Incan and Cambodian treat- ments. Tlrere will be a presentation of the distinctive American Indian civilization dramatically presented as part of a Federal exhibit. In addition to be- ing an absorbing exhibit never before presented, it is expected to establish a new vogue for a national crafts- manship that will help the Indian to stand on his feet financially. The Temple of Religion, a 35100,000 structure with a great Tower of Peace, will be constructed where creeds will join in presenting religious displays and activities throughout the Fair. A super-pageant that dramatizes the colorful history of the Eastern Em- pire under many flags from early ex- plorations to modern times, will be presented on a 500 foot stage. There will be a large scale duplica- tion of the real Hollywood Boulevard, including five shops and cafes, a studio with sets, sound stages and typical location scenes, and real celebrities of filmdom. Industrial West, a gigantic mil- lion dollar relief map of the eleven western states, 135 feet square, show- ing dams, transmission lines, rail and highway lines and national resources in exact detail, is in the patio of the Hall of the Western States. A huge model mountain, 50 feet high and strations of every type of Western mining will be found in the Treasure Mountain exhibit. A 2500 mile trip will be made in a few minutes. 400 feet long, with working demon- Be the Guest of the West in '39 is the invitation, See All the Wfest, with San Francisco as host cityf' Here is the 1939 XVorld's Fair at the Pacific Gateway, a significant ex- position of the empires that are build- ing in the golden pathway of the Setting sun. 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WERE THFIE HND CMT IN FRONT WAS' gxxx I ff,j ffilofw Hffouy- X fr , f f .91 , X M509 24 -, if The Rim Game IZCAUSIZ of the untiring efforts f Ned Irish, collegiate basket- ball after years of obscurity takes a high place in the field of the American game of today. About S or I0 years ago, basketball was a i' or activity in so far as collegiate ports were concerned. A few years ago Ned Irish, a great showmaker, showed the first big time collegiate basketball game. The opening night at Madison Square Garden was far from successful, but Ned kept plug- ging at his new college creation, big time basketball. After weeks of work, Ned finally gained support of the press in his idea, and as if over- night the game caught the fancy of the paying public. . The first team to catch the fancy of the wild-eyed spectators was the Boilermakers from Purdue University, led by their versatile hook shot artist, Bob Kessler. We remember go- ing to the Garden that night, to see our first basketball game Linder big lights. After the preliminary game which featured City College and Geneva, the Purdue squad came out with blistering bronze w a rm-up trunks. On the lips of every specta- tor was the murmur theres Bob Kessler, that tall husky fellow over theref' and his friend in retaliation, no, it's the short stocky fellow. XVell, to the surprise of the public, Bob Kessler was a skinny, anemic ball player who looked as if he would tire after live minutes of play. As the game opened Kessler drew as his guard the versatile high school figure, Lenny Maidmen. As you probably remember Kessler threw up I8 mark- ers that night and had everyone hysterical. The final score showed Purdue on the short end of the score by two points, foiled by the able foul shooting of XVillie Rubenstein. Another team that came to the Garden that year was the fighting Irish of Notre Dame. This aggre- gation was known to all as one of the greatest Middle Wfest teams ever to assemble on a basketball court. Their leading scorer and playmaker was Marty Peters, who was known to all for his great All-American grid- iron exploits. Peters took the court that night with a sophomore squad of such present day notables as Moir and Nowak. These two sophomore sensations were the whole offense that night and Peters the star. Notre Dame was victorious, but the spec- tators went home knowing that they had a great team representing its sec- tor, principally New York University. This team had everything on the ball. a fast break. a good defense. and best of all the determination to win. The team was made up of Len Maid- men. Milty Schumann at forwards, King Kong Klein and W'illy Ruben- stein at guards. and Irv Terieson at center. This team will go down in Violet history as one of the greatest ever to represent the school from Wfashington I-Ieights. Another team from our city which was called the greatest in the coun- try was Long Island University. After years of hard work Clair Bee, the Blackbird's Coach, assembled a squad of spectacular set: shot artists who seldom missed. This team led by Marius Russo was the highest scoring aggregation in the country, showing scores of 80 and 90 points per game. That year they put on the greatest exhibition of basketball by scoring 12 points in tive minutes to beat a dan- gerous Duquesne team by the nar- row margin of two points. Inciden- tally Harry Grant, formerly of john Adams threw in the winning mark- ers. The following year the team met its first defeat at the hands of Stanford University. XVhen anyone mentions Stanford he automatically thinks of Hank Lui- setti, one of the greatest players of all time. The game was far from interesting as Luisetti and Les Stoefen ran wild that night, but the people went home speechless as they watched the greatest one hand exhibition of shooting. Luisetti, besides being a great shot, was a line dribbler and a versatile passer. Many coaches com- ment that they never saw Lusetti make a wrong move on the court. Last year when this 5111116 Stanford squad came to the Garden to play City College, it wasn't Luisetti the shooter. but Lusietti the play maker. He fed Les Stoefen all night, and Les rolled up eighteen points by half time. Stoefen was nnally taken out on fouls and here Lusietti showed his greatness by going on a scoring rampage. Hy reading this description of the Stanford squad, you must think we belittle the tiny City performers, but take that out of your mindg it was a superior City team that lost to Stan- ford. City lost by two points, but they had Stanford gasping for breath in the last quarter as'they scored I5 straight points to fall one point be- hind the highly-touted Stanford Giants. Wfhen the game ended, every per- son went wild whether he was a Stan- ford rooter or otherwise, stood up, and saluted this great City team. The star for the city squad was Bernie Fiegel, and richly he deserved that honor. That night he took the worst physical punishment that any one man absorbed on a basketball court. Another personage who deserves homage was little Izzy Katz who for the first time made Luisetti look silly. He dribbled, passed, and even scored on lay-up shots from men ranging 12 inches above him. At one time during the game, he stole the ball from Luisetti and scored a basket immediately. Hank stood there in amazement and frankly ack- nowledged the cleverness of his ad- versary by patting him on the back when the game was over. Another breathtaking game last year was the Temple,Villanova shin- dig. The game was featured by the great play of Bill Montgomery and Duke Duzminski of Villanova. These two sophomore sensations did the impossible by scoring six points in two minutes of play to beat the highly-touted, undefeated. Temple 25 26 team. Duzminski as you probably remember, was a member of our great team of not so long ago: the team which won the Queens basket- ball championship in 1956. Featured on the Temple team was Mike Bloom, rangy center, who was picked as all-American last year. Besides these thrilling games, there were many drastic rule changes last year. One of these changes was the elimination of the center tap which gave the small man an even chance against a taller adver- sary from a distinctive play from center. Then there is a ten second ruling which enables a team only that amount of time to where a rangy play is needed. This rule also makes the game cleaner as there are fewer body contacts around the center slot. In former days, a clever ball handler used to draw all his fouls from this position because an inexperienced team would muddle themselves around center and foul the players coming through. Before we end our article we wish to submit a team which we believe ranks as the greatest collegiate team of the last three years. Guard: Willy Rubenstein, N. Y. U. Guard: Hank Lussetti, Stanford. Center: Mike Bloom, Temple. Forward: Bob Kessler, Purdue. Forward: Marius Rus- fs.--iii: '..,'5'f. l X . f . V rv? il i bring the ball across the center mark. The l reason for this ruling --- is to try to eliminate the freezing of the ball. Freezing was very com- mon in former days because when a proficient dribbling and passing team had a one point advantage, they would freeze the ball to protect this margin. This was very unfavorable to the pub- lic as it lowered the scoring of games and the thrills which a high scoring aggregation produces. It is said that a well-known basketball star once froze the ball for five solid minutes and his team won by the low scoring margin of 15-12. The three second rule in the circle also speeded up the game as a station- ary pivot man in this circle is prohibit- ed. This is a distinct advantage for the small man, as a set shot is stressed more than a cut from a pivot play so, Long Island Uni- y versity. The players to watch this year are: Guard: Bob Lewis, N. Y. U. Guard: Bob Hassmiller, Fordham. Center: Duke Duzminski, Villanova. Forward: Ralph 'Dolgoff St. johns. Greatest Team of All Time: Guard: Nat Holman, C. C. N. Y. Guard: Hank Luisetti, Stanford. Center: Mac Kinsbrunner, St. johns. Forward: Howard Cann, N. Y. U. Forward: Mac Posnack, St. Johns Basketball should increase in pop- ularity as the years progress because it is being stressed as a major activity in all schools which in former years used to maintain football as their main sporting activity. Another evi- dence of its ever-growing popularity is that basketball outdrew every sporting activity for 1938. ITH due respect to my father, whose monetary affairs are seldom if ever untangled, I sometimes think that parents have no conception of the needs of an ado- lescent. This was my opinion before entering the living room where my father sat complacently smoking. I determined not to evade the issue and to ask for an increase in allowance outright, no shilly-shallying. If any- thing, I would show my father I was a man. I was not shocked when he, with the same resolve, bluntly re- fused. He explained that a boy of my age had no business taking girls out and that he considered my weekly allotment sufficient, provided I spent it on myself. We argued, lining up pros and cons and finally, I was forced to retreat, with the same opin- ion-that parents have no conception of the needs of an adolescent. A few days after this memorable encounter, a girl who at that time was the inspiration that kept me from utter despondency, was honored by my presence as her partner for the evening. After listening to the broad- cast of a new swing band, we de- cided to have sodas. Long being a devotee of frothsome vanilla, I was somewhat familiar with the soda em- poria in the neighborhood and We set our course for one in particular where the boys usually indulged at ten cents per glass at the foznmzin. Witlm swelling bosom I escorted the damsel to the table: fwhat pos- sessed me, I still don't knowj and we ordered two delicious, creamy sodas. My spirits were high as to- gether in sweet bliss we drew bubbly nectar from out of the ends of straws. Fafher Was Right! ALBERT LEVENSON My bliss was abaited suddenly when the waiter placed a pink slip of paper with bold blue type on its surface, on the table. And then it struck, like a bolt from the blue, so sudden was the impact. Weak-kneed and goggle- eyed I gaped at the bold numerals which seemed to leer at me like some hideous ogre, eyes iridescent in the blackness of the night. I had but twenty-seven cents and the check read thirty! I doubt whether my power of rea- soning would have survived had I not been fortified with the double ball of strawberry ice cream. Nonchalantly, I hope, I murmured something about having to phone, and blindly groped my way to the booth. There are six other members of the family who might have answered the phone, but by some quirk of fate my father's voice reached my ear. Not wanting to waste time, I explained my predica- ment immediately. I was reassured, but before placing the receiver down I heard an odd sound and to this day I think it was the nearest to a smoth- ered guffaw which ever has affronted my ears. And then . . . the Boy Scout move- ment is a very noted and honored work, at least I've thought so from that night. A khaki uniform which soon took on the appearance of my smaller brother was the reason. In his hand was clasped a life preserver in the form of a new shiny quarter. The moral of this story is that if Pop refuses an increase in allowance, he probably is old-fashioned and is trying to keep you from having a good time. 27 - '- aw ' nasa l. A as . r ig id. f' 5 , it . -V ,mi , by ' 4-gif, f A ,Ig -R if - vi . .ff my wi. 'f X1 'jf S- 1? ii I 7 7 ,W ,f X f 1 ff , X -:- The Senior 'Owl -:- Cn,fl1mle,r, rll1f.i'ii'. and Svwlery by Frank Sgrmlbafi and 5411111161 Mintz SENIORS BID FOND ADIEU The Senior Class of Jan- uary I939 will say fare- well lo John Adams soon and wilh lhis parling will go fond memories of Sen- ior Day, The Prom, Senior Dances. Class Nighl, Com- mencemenl, and lhe olher feslivilies in which lhe graduales parlicipaled. The class will also lake leave of lhe person who look care of and who carried lhe burden of all lhe senior affairs, Miss Marie L. Keller. ll was possible. as has been lhe cuslom in pre- vious lerms al Adams, lhal lhe senior affairs could have been held only lhrough lhe efiorls of Miss Keller who seemed al- ways lo accomplish lhe impossible. The whole senior group gives ils sincere lhanks lo you, Miss Keller, for all lhal you've done. and we leave wilh you a senior class lhal wil mainlain lhe lradilions of pasl gradualing classes. ,Ol MR. PATTERSON The Senior Class of '39, wilh all ils misgivings. make a change lo lhe beller and leave lo Mr. William A. Pallerson, as- sislanl adminislralor of lhis greal inslilulion, a group of incoming fresh- men who will read lheir handbooks and remember where lhe lunchroom is: know how lo leave lhe building during a fire drill: and will be able lo poinl oul an up slair- way lhal goes down. ll is lo Mr. Pallerson, lhal lhe graduales give lhanks for diracling lheir school during lhe shorl slay of four long years. JUST ECO-ING To lhose lhree demon pedagogues of our Eco- nomics Deparlmenl, Mr. Harold Yourman, Mr. Fred A. Kuhle and Mr. Richard Clemens. lhe seniors leave a brand new sel of iokes. No more will lhree Mo- guls of Monopolies, lhese Cerlilied Cilizens of Cur- rency. lhese Bombshells of Banking, and lhese Busl- ers of lhe Business Cycle resorl lo lheir own spur- of-lhe-momenl willicisms. Mr. Yourman especially would enioy lhis innovalion as he confesses lhal he's slipping in lhe arl of iesling. Mr. Kuhle would prob- ably also like a lesser amounl of slares by lhe senior co-eds al his ver- salile wardrobe. Mr. Clemens wou'd also appreciale a foolresl for his wandering feel, as lhis would do away with slep- ping on seals and desks. To lhe resl ol lhe de- parlmenl lhe Seniors bid e farewell lhal will long eclhlo lhroughoul lhe halls of Adams. SKIPPER VIEIVS CREW' AS OLD HANDS LEAVE .i...l.-li EDIT-OR Because Mr. George W. Sullivan, Jr., was in lhe lhroes of mak- ing a phonographic re- cording, lhe lille of which is Copy, lhe desired inlerview was nol oblained: bul ev- erybody already knows lhis eminenl Daddy of lhe Campus and Clipper slaliis. We leave Mr. Sull- ivan a firsl period Eng- g'ish room near enough lo lhe publicalions of- fice lo gel him lhere on lime, e winler wilh- oul a cold, a pubs office mail-box wilh mail in il, a slaff diligenlly m e e l i n g deadlines and disliking prelzels lso he can eal lhem himselll. and an expression olher lhan, you're breaking my hearl. NOT A DIZ One would suppose lhal e slern, hard, unrelenlin dean wou'd be a perso whom a sludenl always feared. A senior has only lo look back and recall lhe lime when he was called inlo lhe dean's of- fice. He hadn'l done any- lhing wrong. He didn'l cul a c'ass, wasn'l reporl- ed for misbehavior in lhe lunchroom and he wasn'l caughl wilhoul a pass while roaming lhrough lhe halls of lhe buildinq. His fears mounled as he ap- proached lhe dean and Mr. Confoy or Mr. Byrne would address lhe sludenl, Are you John Smilh? Well here's your service cerlificale. Imagine lhe 9 n l l i r i l ZY DEAN sludenl's surprise as he lhoughl lhe deans were prelly good fellows, af- ler alll The senior class leaves a loken of gralilude lo Mr. Harry Confoy, Mr. Brendan Byrne, Mr. George Lenl, and Mr. Andrew Brennan. The gradualing class exlends ils besl wishes and gives ils lhanks for lhe invalu- able aid rendered lhem by lhe deans. To Mr. Confoy is be- quealhed a sludenl mem- bership of I00 per cenl in lhe G. O.. more success- ful G. O. dances. and many more G. O. eleclions and revoles wilh hair- breadlh finishes. Hoisling anchor in lhe porl of John Adams soon and ready lo sel sail for dislanl harbors, lhis lerm's graduales acling as lhe crew of lhe Adams Clip- per leave lo Mr. William A. Clarke, a school wilh sludenls ready and eager lo do lheir bil in keeping John Adams up among lhe leading high schools in lhe counlry. Our skipper walches lhe progress of a school lhal has. in ils ralher shorl exislence, already made line high school hislory, as il were. He sees a new crew sailing lhe Clip- per, bul he can'l help bul remember and agree lhal, allhough lhere are new faces and new personal- ilies, lhe Adams spiril is slill lhe same. For lhe freshmen com- ing in lo add lo lhe lrue, sleadfasl cilizenry of John Adams we leave an abun- dance of lradilions, lhal will be lheir duly lo main- lain. Nexl lerm will see a hosl of seniors, perform- ing lheir dulies as seniors and carrying on lheir va- rious aclivilies in a com- mendable manner. To lhese seniors we leave a sel of Regenls papers wilh all lhe answers. Zo- To DR. CUSACK A piece of chalk, my kingdom for a piece ol chalk! Wilh lhese words Dr. Cusack slarls anolher rehearsal for her annual play by marking off lines designaling enlrances and exils for lhe cesl ln order lo make her iob a bil easier we leave her a group of aclors who are capable of carrying lhese lines in lheir heads also. plenty of newspaper One Never Knows--Does One! THE SENIOR 'OWL FORECAST ON ENGLISH DEPT. No one inch margins on each side of the paper. heading at the top of the paper, not the first line, skip a line after the title. write neatly-that's the sort of thing you've been listening to tor the past four years, seniors. lts source? The English De- partmentl What could be more tit- tin' and proper then, than to leave to Miss Nolan. Mr. Zimbal, Mr. Nostrand, Mrs. Collins and all ye teachers of English the ideal English student. One whose topic sentences are the cream of the crop, whose commas always are in place, who has never heard of a run-on or in- complete sentence, who frowns on misplaced mod- ifiers lmany a young heart has been broken over a split intinitivel and whose closing sentences would rock Gibraltarl To all of you we leave such a student. To Mrs. Collins we leave an unin- terrupted period, free of cut-slip monitors, notices. etc. We leave ideal com- positions on the best news of the week, motion pic- tures are your best enter- tainment-Ay. all this, and heaven, tool -O- P. s. JOKE! To M'. Yormack, that pedagogue of business ad- ministration, the man who always managed to havo a cheerful and humorous et- mosphere in the class rooms in which he taught, the upper graduates are so bold as to leave a Joe Miller's Joke Book, which has been inscribed, may you use this to the best advantage. Mr. Yormack is always a teacher to respect. His advice and consideration merit the gratitude of all seniors. Page Two THE WILL OF THE SENIOR CLASS For four years now we have boarded here, Preparing to enter the world without fear. But the time has come must part, we must, al- when we And part though it break our heart. But before we go we want to say, We'd like in some way to repay A few of the folk who were simply grand Who never failed to lend the he'ping hand. First to Mr. Clarke, our skipper true, We leave our thanks loyalty, too. And to Miss Keller, our guiding star, We leave a new venturing far. Perfect little gentlemen we leave Mr. Confoy, Including no red cards for any bad boy. To Mrs. Lyons a group of ladies who'll learn That toast is made to eat, not made to burn. A list of well-balanced classes we'll present To Mr. Patterson and Mr. Tobias a gift they won't resent. AFTER QMATHQ and class Mr. Harold Froehlich will be blessed next term with Math students, all av- eraging 90 or over in the Regents exams, so prop- hesy the members of the class of Jan. '39. The faculty members of the John Adams Math De- partment will all be in a dither when it is reported that no more have stu- dents forgotten their rul- ers, pencils or other tools used in the science of mathematics. Added to the surprises in store for Mr. Rando ph Gunthert will be a com- plete sell-out of the Campus every week it is published and a busi- ness statf that will always get the copy. By Giovanna Mendolia We'Il leave for Miss Ber- ner the foot that the shoe will tit So that our glee club members in their seats will rightly sit. To Mr. Riley a tlat iron to keep his dates all straight: To Miss Smith, medicals and dentals in on their due date: To Dr. Cusack, thespians who enunciate precisely: To Mr. Piatti an orchestra which srtings along nice- ly. We must also leave a closet for Mr. Kuhle's suits, To Mr. Scarlata a team with wings on their boots: To Mr. Browne, students who'll read Cicero with feeling: To Dr. Efron formulas that will send all heads reel- ing. Ahrf, all Adamsites, put up your sailsl Keep them pure white with brushes and pails, Work for pails, study for brushes Records for sails and a fair wind to push us. ENCORE! Beethoven ? Mozart? Goodman? No-ooo - Mr. Otto H. Piatti7 Yesl Mr. Piatti and his Senior Or- chestra, outstanding for its assembly presentations and faithfulness on oper- etta nights. To Mr. Piat- ti we leave tuxedo iackets of durabilitv lespecially under the sleevesl to pull through those trying notes. To Miss Jeannette C. Berner, singers and actors of poise and personality, who don't catch colds on opening night. Operettas possessing the same pro- fessional touch of previous successes, and playerscat- ching cues as Dickey does a ball. Long live, Pina- .-lfore! HEALTH EDS ADAMS NEWS To Mr. Joseph Scarlata, head and director of Boy's Health Education, the Senior Class has will- ed him the privilege of teaching a freshman class that will appear complete- ly uniformed during the first week of school, and one which will bring its dental notes before the tirst marking period lthe senior class never didl. To Mr. Nicholas Spata, versatile basketball coach. we leave a team that will defeat Newtown for the Queensboro Championship. To our gridiron mentor, Mr. Pete Troyano, is prom- ised a winning team and the support of all these alumni-to-be. And to his assistant, Mr. Emil Cam- son. the graduates leave intramural teams that will get organized and disor- ganized faster, so that he may start another group of games. To the faculty adviser at the soccer squad, Mr. Andrew Brennan, the Cap and Sowners wish him a group of boys who will play soccer, but also will be willing to till the mud holes on the rear campus with sand before school games. To Mr. Vincent Shields, the Senior boys and girls give such a prize atten- dance to school games that it will necessitate re- funding of money on tick- ets lwe wonder if he wants thatl. And to Mr. Joseph Mor- se, hygiene classes that will have notebooks that were written in class, with clip- pings. -O- LATE AGAIN! To Mr. Morris K. Jacob- son we leave one day when nobody will arrive late to school, so that his late squad will enioy a day's respite. F. Iaol Ship's Company ROPPING anchor after a peril- ous journey, the Clipper has once again reached her port. Her log relates a tale of storms and calms, good fortune and bad. Aboard as passengers are the worthy Seniors of john Adams High School. Her cargo is an abundant one, rich with the spoils of four years. Crammed into the ship's vast hold Adamsites have stored: A good measure of fellowship, loy- alty, and hope. Ambition untempered by fear, con- Hdently facing forward. Friends, many and true, united pioneers in a strange new world. Knowledge, ever useful, everlasting and ever engrossing. Understanding and esteem for fel- low men. A respect for struggleg sorrow for the conquered. And the oustanding among the crew, these notable Adamsites, famed for their particular traits and qualities, posted below: Boys joseph Fontano . Alfred Levenson john Wetterer ..... . . . William Sheffield Warren Beazley . Warren Motz . . . Philip Faust . .. Albert Battista .. William Sheffield Richard Ziccardi jerry Bender .... Frank Votto Paul Leone .... Frank Claro Stuart Mutz .... Robert Sappe William Sheffield Al Cerulli ......... .... William Sheffield William Martin . . . . . . Vincent Pennisi . . . . . . Frank Sgambati . . . . . . . William Sheffield William Shefiield William Sheffield ......Do Senior C el ebrilier Noisiest . . . .. Wittiest .. Cleverest .... Class Pet . . . . Class Poet . . Class Actor . . . . Best Dancer . . . . . . . . Most Active . . . . . . . . . Most Genial . . . . . . Most Bashful . . . . . . . . Most Popular . .. Best Looking ..... . . . Best Dressed . . . . . . Class Artist .... . Class Orator . . . . Most Studious Most Athletic Most Ambitious Most Dignified Class Musician Best Personality ne Most for Adams .... Quietest . . . Literary Light . . . . Girl! Muriel Borman . . . . Audrey Yost . . . . . . Anita Smith Audrey Kerrigan . . . . Miriam Munger . Giovanna Mendolia . . . . . Veronica Riley Hedwig Brauns . . Catherine Behrens Rose Lewis . . . . . Margaret Beig Josephine Butera Madeline Weiderhold . . . . . . . Gloria Vinci . . . . . . . Elsa Carlson .. . Audrey Kerrigan . . . Ruth Zaslavsky . . . . Grace Lehman .. . Audrey Kerrigan . . . . . . Ruth Nilsen . . . . . Marion Cerulli .. . Dorothy Graham . . Catherine Behrens . . . Audrey Kerrigan . . . . . . Most Likely to Succeed. . . . . . 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S ,,AA if 'S i Sf in F ABIQLMAN, NAXXVIZLI.---Senior Arista: First, Second Honor Certificates: Bronze, Silver, Gold A's : Meritor- ious Service Certificate: Chemistry Squad: Attendance Of- fice: Campus News Staff: Chemistry, judean Clubs.- Colnmlziiz Uzzirersiljz ACKER, JOSEPH-Gold Medal for Football: Bronze Medal for Baseball: Silver, Bronze P.S.A.L. Pins: Bas- ketball, Volleyball, Baseball, Football, Soccer Intramurals: Lunchroom, Traffic Squads: Hi-Y, Camera, Tenni- Clubs. --New York l'ni1'er,iiIy. ADDISON, ARTHUR4Meritorious Service Certificates: Trafhc Late Squads: Clipper Staff: Baseball, Basketball, Football Intramurals: Art, Clay, Spanish ClUl7S.-Bllvil1c'll, ADLIZR, HAROLD-Meritorious, lixceptional Service Cer- tificates: News Editor of Campus, Clipper Contribu. tor: Term Representative: Publicity Committee: Baseball, Football, Basketball, Soccer lntramurals: Campus Rep- resentative: Publications Ofiiceg Lunchroom, Traffic Squads. -7QllL'4'7I,l' College. AFFRONTF, MARY-Distingui--hed, Meritorious, Service Certificates: junior, Senior, P.S.A.L. Pins: Secretary to Mrs. Blefkmang Nr. Pattersons Office: Lunchrooni Squad: First Aid, Spanish, Swimming, Basketball, Base- ball, Volleyball, Dancing, Newman ClllbS.-BlI.ff!l?,ff. AMORFSIZ, RITA-Bronze A's 1 Meritorious, Disting- uished Service Certificates: Major, Minor A's : junior, Senior P.S.A,I.. Pins: Leaders' I. : First Aid: junior Life Saving, Secretary to Mr. Patterson: Lunchroom Squad: Swimming, Basketball, Leaders, Volleyball, Base- ball, Spanish Cltlbs.-Vlilziimfvi. IORLUS Ulf? D--P ANDliRSliN, AGNES-Second Honor Certificates, Gold, Silver, Bronze A's : Tironian Club.-Iimivzeri. A X Y i 6 Axoifitsiix, AR'I'Hl'R-P.S.A.l.. Pins: Basketball, rant- gg' hall, Sotxez' Intramurals: Patrol Sqti:1tl.--Iilzmiw1. X SQ 9 . NbliRS Hl9l.l2N-Basketball, Volleyball, Swimming, 1 Pliifics C1 'znwti' T1'ilflIjIIlU Srlmnl, g k, F. g 1, li 'X ' Y . ANDRIZFSKY, ALBlfRT--'Bronze AH: Grade Advisers Uflizei Biology. Science Cllll'lS. BllffI1t'll. ANKER, RUTH-Junior Arista, Bronze, Silver A's g Meritorious Service Certificates: Secretary to Mr. Yor- mack, Mr. Siegel, Mr. Rosenkrantzg Biology Club.- Rr1cff4'fr'ffer' FJ,l'!7i0II AL'.ldFl11-J. ARCI, RUTH---Bronze A , Honor Certificates: junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins, All-Around Medals, Chevronsg Major, Minor Letters, Attendance, Mr. Patterson's Otiicesg Pin, Ring Committee: G.A,A. Council, Lunchroom Squad, Carnpus Captain, Dancing, Swimming, Volleyball, Bas- ketball, Baseball, Hockey, Leaders CIUIUS.-'BI1.l'i71L J',f. ARNAO, JUSEPHINIE-A-Secretary to Mr. Siegel, Mr. Rosenkrantz: Tennis, History CILll'3S.1BIl,l'i!It',lt'. AUSTIN, HELEN-Meritorious, Exceptional, Distinguish- ed Service Awards, Attendance, G. A. Offices, Patrol Squad: Secretary to Mr. Tobias, Globe Trotters, Eco- nomics Clubs.--Kings' COIN!!-1' Hoipilrrl Nllf,l6,l Tmizzing. AVIELLINI, I-IAYDEN-P.S.A.I.. Pins, Baseball, Foot- ball, Soccer Intrarnurals: Lurrchroom, Patrol Squads, Art Metal, Economics, Key of Courtesy, Latin, Newman, Physiography Spanish, Stamp Clubs.-Blnifleiyr. BAGG li'l l', BRYANT-Lunchroorn Squad .-Merrbiuzl M.1r'i11c' Scfnml. E' R BAKER, HAROLD junior Arista, Ifxccptronal, Drstrng uished, Service Certiticatesg Second Honors, Bronze, Silver A's g Silver P.S.A.I.. Pin, Sergeant Lunchroom, Late, Ticket, Dean's Cut Slip Squadsg Cheer Leader: junior, Senior Glee, Key of Courtesy, Service Honors Clubs.- Plxltl Irlililllle. IIARAN DA, Di BRIS.-Bmim' i rr. BARROXXQ ADI? Honor Certihcatesg Attendance, Per- iod I 'Drvisor IN mdern I rrgguages Otlicesg Aid to Miss A nr' r. ja 'ohsx 5Mrs. Klein: Library Squad, G 'mar, Iolleyball, is, Basketball, Girl Reserves Q CllIl'9S.YAllf 1DlHIf1rl7'l.l 1c1'e1.11'irzl Smal. gi ISARTNICKI, I7RANCIiS- Honor, Service Certificates, 5 Secretary to Mr. Patterson, Mrs. Klein, Miss XVettereau, 4 Mrs. Mulligang Attendance, Accounting Ottices: Lunch- , , room Squadg Locker Patrolg Fashion Show, Dancing, 'A Tennis, Newman c:llIl'!S.fBlllf7It',l.t'. 1 J. BATTISTA, ALBERT-junior Arista, Honor Certificates, Bronze, Silver A's , Meritorious, Exceptional, Service Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins, Mrs. Visone's Uthce, Tratlic, Lunchroom Squads.--B111irlcu. BEAZLFY, XX'ARRlfNfHonor, Park and Playground Speech, Meritorious, Exceptional, Service Certificates, Football Intramurals, Secretary in Speech Ollice, Lunch- room, Patrol Squads, Newman, Key of Courtesy, junior, Senior Dramatics, German Clubs.- B11.ii11tnf,v. BECK, OTTO-P.S.A.L. Pins, Baseball, Football, Soccer Intramurals, Lunchroom, Patrol Squads, Biology, Physio- graphy ClUDS.-BlI.fi!l0.f,f. BECKFR, MARY-junior P.S.A.L. Pin, Secretary to Miss Reuss, Miss Langdon, Emergency Room Aid, Newman Cltib.-I3f1.vir1c.r.r. BFHRFNS, CATHFRINIE--ef-Bronze, Silver A's , Meri- torious Service Certilicates, Minor, Major Letters, P.S.A.L. Pin, junior, Senior Life Saving, Chevronsg Secretary of G. O., Secretary to Miss Langdon, Mrs. Fyfe: Prom Committee, G.A.A. Council, First Aid, Basketball, Vol- leyball, Tennis, Baseball, Swimming, Leaders, Art Clubs. ---Nzwrci' TfrliI1ill,Q. BlilG, IVIARGARIZT-Junior Arista, Bronze A , First, Second Honors: Meritorious Service Certificate, Minor A , Junior Life Saving, P.S.A.L. Pin, Lunchroom Squad, Secretary to Miss Keller, Swimming, Basketball, Volleyball, Tennis, Dancing, Newman Clubs.fIi1z.i'im'ri. BFLFVICH, ADliI.li-Honor Certificates, First, Second Honors, Meritorious Service Certificate: Attendance, Gen- eral, Accounting Olhces, Lunchroom Squad, Volleyball, Basketball, Swimming, Tironian, French, Newman Clubs. -Rockefeller Fa.rlJirn1 Amdwrly BFNDBR, GERARD-P.S.A.L. Pins, Bronze, Silver A , Varsity Football Major A , Baseball, Basketball Intra- murals, Clerk G. O. Treasury Othce: Newman, Physiog- raphy, Key of Courtesy Clubs.-Burirzerx. BENSON, IESTHER-Physiography, Latin, French, Span- ish, Law, Stenography, Travel Clubs.-Burinerr. BFSTFRMAN, IELIEANOR--Attendance, Swimming, Ser- vice Othces, French, Tennis, First Aid, Dancing, Volley- ball, Swimming ClUbS.-IXJYll7'J6.f' Training. BliS'1'l2RMAN, LILLIAN-Swimming, Service Ofiices, Suit Room, Lunchroom Squad, First Aid, Volleyball, Tennis, Tironian, Stenography, Basketball, Girl Reserves Cltxbs.-Bluizlerr. BICKLIZ,.CHARLOTTE--Second Honor Certificate, Ger- man Prohciency Pin, Physics Preparatory Room, Lunch- room Squads, Biology Club.-Nnrser' Training. BILINSKI, IZDWARD-Meritorious Service Certificate, Senior, junior Orchestras, Track Squad Minor A , Yeomen of the Guard , Trial by Jury , Baseball, Basketball, Football Intramurals, Miss Berner's Otlice, Lunchroom Squad, Glee, Newman, Track Clubs.-Bow onghk Burinerr School. BILMS, DOROTHY-Service Certificate, Locker Patrol, Lunchroom Squad, Tennis, Dancing, Newman Clubs.- Iin,rif1c',fJ. BINKLIEY, LILLIAN-Second Honor, Service Certificates, Secretary to Mr. Machlowitz, Girl Reserves Club.- Bmiucrr. BLITMHIERG, LEONORA--Honor Certificates, Bronze A's , Secretary to Mr. Kuhle, Miss Smith, Stenography, Dancing Clubs.-Bn.rir1e,rJ. BC Jl.l.OT, PH YLLIS--Bronze A .--Bzzrinerr. BONANNO, CARMIZLA-Second Honors, Service Cer- tilicates, Secretary to Mrs. Knight, Mr. Ellison, Atten- dance Othce, Spanish, Newman, French Clubs.-Brooklyn CUHUAQU. I' U D , V1 7 , - - f is R IAN! MURIEL-P.SA.f.. Pin, sec efiigftd Miss light? Mr. fkow' Mrfl 'lLambert, Mg'5Qlt'menS, Mr. Clel Mrs. Fe idln, Miss Rosen, 1 liss Night Com- niitzeg Volleyball Ub.-NIIVJFIJ Training. BRAFFMAN, THEODORE-Honor, Service Certificates, Tratfic, Lunchroom Squads: Clerk to Mr. Shields, Mr. Morse, Art Otfice, Baseball, Basketball, Football, Soccer Intramurals, Aviation, Soccer Clubs.-New York Univer- JIM: BRAND, HAROLD-Lunchroom Squad, Baseball, Bas- ketball, Soccer Cllll7S.--Bll.l'i7I?.l'.l'. f-3 . -4 l, Jw' !f-,'ff,-9, ' -,c.6fffLf.A, BRAUNS, HlZDNX'lG-Bronze A , Second Honors Cer- titieates, Chairman Prom Committee, Assembly Programs, Leaders, Volleyball, Basketball, Swimming, German, Dra- matics Clubs.-Come!! L'lIiI't?l',fifj'. BROCKMANN, RUSSELL-Lunchroom, Football, Base- ball, Basketball, Soccer, Volleyball, Intramurals, Idle- Hour Club.-Bll.fiI7E.fJ. BROWN, CATHERINE-junior Arista, Bronze, Silver A's , Second Honors, Secretary to Miss Spadaccini, Bas- ketball, Swimming Clubs.-Bzzrirzeu. BRUCE, ELLA-junior, Senior Life Saving, Senior P.S. A.L. Pin, Minor Letters, Secretary to Mrs. Fyfe, Mrs. Goldberg, Senior Pin and Ring Committee, Swimming, Basketball, Volleyball, Footlights and Fashions, First Aid Clubs.-Nurrer' Training. BRUNET, RUSSELL-Baseball Intramurals, Track, Lunch- rooni, Traffic, Patrol Squads, Senior Prom Committee, English Bookroom Clerk, Idle Hour Club.-+BIl.fi!IE5J. BRUNO, ANTHONY-Patrol, Lunchroom, Traffic Squads, Idle Hour Club.-BIlJiIIFI.f. BUCK, FLORENCE-Bronze A , Honor Certincates.- Pure lnrlilule. , l CAMPBIELI., MARGUIERITIE-Honor ball, Basketball ClLibs,-s-I311,rirze,i,r. Campus Staff: Secretary to Miss - liutimii. CARDONA, lil.EANOR-Secretary to Mrs.I-Ialley, Mr. Froeblicli: Tennis, Basketball Cllll7S.fBIl.fiIIt'l',f. CARLIEY, MARGARliT-Abronze, Silver, Gold A's : First, Second Honor Certificates: Spanish Certificate: Spanish, French Proficiency Pins: Seventh Term Medal.- Qncwzs College. CARLSON, IZLSA-Honor Certificates: Bronze A g Lib- rary Squad, General Office: Oil Painting Club.-Prix!! In tzinmf. CARPITNTIER, RUTH-junior Arista: Second Honor Certificates: Lunchroom Squad: Dancing, Girl Reserves CI ubs,--Bm inerr. Certificates: Volley- CAPPO, CONSTANC12--Luncltroom, Library Squads: Disbrow: Baseball Basketball, Swimming, Volleyball, Young Scientists Club-. BUCHHEIT, jULlANNAA-Newman, Tennis, Baseball, Swimming, Dancing Clubs.-Huaizzerr. BUCKHOLZ, RL'TH-Basketball, Baseball, Stamp Clubs. --Cwllml Needlcu'arf1 Trader Srbrml. BULLIS, RUTHfSecretary to Mrs, lNfatlier.-'inrirzerr BUNGENSTOCK, IRMHILD-Service Certificate: Secre- tary to Miss Heizmann, Miss Hess, Mrs. Klein: I.eaders', First Aid, German, Biology Clubs.--Kiugi College, BURKE, ROBERT-Honor Certificate: Basketball, Base- ball, Football Intramurals: Track Team, Assembly Squad, Newman Club.-Blzfizzefr. BUSCH, RUTH-Service Certificate: Luncliroom Squad: Attendance Office: Physiography, Biology, German, Secre- tary of Travel Clubs,-litzrlern ClJiI'fI!I7'iIL'1iL' College. BL'TliRA, ,IOSIEPHINIZ-Honor, Distinguished, lixception- al Service Certificates, Bronze, Silver A's : Major, Mi- nor A's g P.S,A.L. Pins: G.A.A. Council: Basketball Manager: Secretary to Mrs. Ferguson, Miss Goldberg, Miss Smith: Luncliroom Squad: H.If. Clerk: G.O. Office: Basketball, Volleyball, Swimming, Dancing, l.eaders', Hase- ball, Heartltstone, Newman CilLll'1S,fflN.ll7'HJl' Tlulfuillg. CALDAR, JOSEPH-WBasketball, Baseball, Football, Soc- Cer, Volleyball Intramurals: Luncliroom, Patrol Squads: Newman, Biology Cliibs.-Alimjfitfti. CARR, 1iVlil.YN-Senior Arista, Second Honors, Bronze A , Meritorious Service Certificates, French, Attendance Otlices, Secretary to Miss Hayden, Miss Wlershals, New- man Cluh.- li1r,iil1c.ir. f. CARTIZR DELI? . y gdon, Atten i S ll s ctball Vollcyblll X ry to Is s - da LL e, nc t n .' ' I , - 1 , Ba ' , Ten . , Spanis l1l7S.-Ilflillllfd Univerrily, CASSIZLLA, MARGARl3TfGrade Advise-r's, Miss Laws, Mr. Froelilich, Mathematics Otlices, Class Night Com- mittee.-linillltlff. CIASSIA, SALVATORl2fBronzc A , Honor, Service Certificates: Soccer Intramurals: Lunchroom, Traffic, Gracie Advisers Squads, Program Committee, junior, Senior, Glee. French, Newman ClllbS.-f13l!.Vil16',f.f. CAVANAGH, CLARA-Swimming, Newman, Dancing Cliilws.-liriiirzerr. CliCliRl2, FANNIE-H.A. Ofliceg Tennis, Newman, Bas- kethall ClLihs.WBu.iir1e.i.r. CliRllLLl, MARION-Honors, Meritorious, Distinguished Service, Speech, Second Honor Certificates, junior, Senior Orchestra, Lunchroom Squad, Prom Committee, Newman Spanish. French Clubs.-Holy Trinily College. CliRl'l.l.l, Al.l5XANDliR-Gold, Silver, Bronze A's , Championship Sweater, Co-Captain of Football Team, limergency Room, Dean's Squad, Physiology, Newman CllllWS,---Ill!liIlL'f.f. P1 L' 1' A' . 7 ll FLORENCE-Secretary Accounting, Ec- CHOLCHINSKY, onomics, Biology Offices, Leaders, Judean Clubs.-I311.rL CINARELLA, PISTER-junior Arista, Bronze A , Hon- or, Meritorious Service Certificates, Trial by jury. YW- men of the Guard , Soccer, Baseball Intramurals, Pin and Ring Committee, Spanish, French, Newman, Glee Clubs.-Queezzr College. CLARK, THELMA-Senior Arista, Gold, Silver, Bronze A's , First, Second Honors, Meritorious Service Cer- tificate, Attendance Oflice: Lunchroom Squad, French, German, First Aid Cltibs,--Queezzr Cjnllegu. CLARKE, DOROTHYfHonor Certificate, General Of- fice, Lunchroom, Library Squads, Secretary to Mrs. Har- ris, Mr. Goldman, Newman, Volleyball, Basketball Clubs. fffllllffl' College. CLARO, FRANK-Baseball, Football Intramurals, Ser- vice, Patrol, Traflic, Garden, Stage, Lunch Squads.YL'r11- :unity of Sfmlb C.1r'r1lir1.1. CLALFSFN, VlRGlNlAfBronzC P.S.A.L. Pin, Service Certificate: Newman, Garden, Stenography, Swimming, Biology Clubs,-I3lrJine,r.r. ' gl 'LJ f' . Pi J 'f J lab 'i 7, I I , , I -4 , 'i an ' I '1,.:L QQ, I if J if ' 1 h . 2, -1, f'. --,Ca ZOHEN, GlfRAl.D--Briskctlmill, limvtlmill lntnxnniiiil A'S g Tr4illiC, Pzitrul, Luncliruum, l.ilwi'4ii'y, Attcmlaiice SqLiiuls.--C0f1n11f1i.z Ullirwsily. ' 1 . ri . , , ,. fr .A E -,'fW.A Q :J U 3 .x ,, S' J ,,.. xi, ,V COLLINS, INIARY--Humirs Cc-rtilicntesg l.ll'1l.1I'y Sqimilg Newman Cll1lWs.fN1n'.ru' 'I47'.IiIljIl,U. Lvl CONFORTIN, ClfClfl.lA First Huiiurs, Sciviau ffcrlili- Ciitcsg Sccremry to Mrs. Hcitlxclnpcr, Nr, Fuwlcsi RL-wi-il Otliccsg Pin and Ring Coinmittceg Biukctlmll, llincing, Newman, Stenugrglpliy Cfliilwf-.'Xlzi' York lfflm llniimir F Coflvgv. f i CUNNAVALE, lNlADFl.lNlf---Hi'1riiLL' Anil Silver AR , Hunnr- Certincgiteig Lilwrgiry Squad- Qmrn- ffvllv,uL'. CONNIELL, lil.lZABliTH-Junior Arismg Bronze A , Honor Certilicutcsg Attemlqincc, English Otlices: Lunch- roomg Dancing, History, Iiconmnics, Typing, Su-iiugr.1pl1y, Travel, Vulleylmill Cliilwsf---Iizzmzw1. CONNOLLY, MARXYfNL'XK'I11.ll1 Club. -f-' -Nmni' 'l'r.1if1iug. COOKE, FLORENCE-Service Certificates, Library, Lunch- room Squads, Mr. P2ltiCl'S0f'llS Officeg Basketball, Swim- ming, Stenography, Typcwriting Clubs.fB14.fir1cr.r, COl'CiHl:lN, AGNES-Bronze, Silver, Gold A's g Hon or CL-rtilicaitcsg Lilwrnry, Lunchrumn Squndsg Newman Iifnnuinics, Stcnograpliy Clulws.-Bnfinerf. KQOl'R'l'NliY, NX'll.l.lAMgFuotl1a1ll Squairlg Fuotlxill In- tl'.ii11iii'gil.---Sf. Illjflllj l1'f1i1'U1'.fily. iv CRAXYFORD, HAROl.D4Bi'unZC, Silver A's : Honor Ccrtiliciitcsg Gonllnlici's : Ycomen of the Gu11rd g Tri- al by jury , Glu-, Newman Cliilws.--Blzfizien. if 'S 71.5 , ,I J Q ,-n '. DALY, MARION-Bronze, Silver A's g Honor Cortin- Catesg Bronze, Goltl P.S.A.L. Pinsg Secretary to Mr. Mul- ligan: Swimming, Newman ClL1bs.4l3lIfl21C.fJ. D'AMBROSl0, ADOLPH-Honor Certificates: Meritor- ious Distinguislretl Service Certiticatesg XX'on Pliilharmonic Scluolarshipg Senior OfCl1L'SlfLl.-jlIil1i.l7'd Srbool of Mzufr. DANDRILLI, PASQUAHE-Honor Certificate, Soccer Team: Soccer. Baseball, Football, Basketball Intramuralsg Trallie Squatl.--Iilruimifr. DANNIZR, FLORISNCIZ---First Honors: Meritorious, Dis- tinguished Service Awardsg Secretary to Mrs. Keenan, Mrs. Halleyg English, French Otlicesg Lunchroom Squadg Newman Cltlb.fGr.n'u I11.fli.'nte'. DAVAN, VlNCliN'l'----Basketball, Football Intramurals.- Blnizluo. DAVIE DOROTHY-N Bronze A , I itorio , Dis- tingui' ' r ' C t' lea QQ Se re' ' M'1 . u oo 1 q .L ewnu in - 2 . i , I 1 rs, Basketball, Travel Clubs.-Camel! U ss F 58 be N KV' .g t S X x L DF LUCA, FRANCIS- -Qertrntatcs, Dancing., Basketball Clribs.--lirrmrcm. DliVLlN, GliRAl.D---Patrol Squad, Baseball lntramuralsg Track Clllb.LBll.lfllE',l',f. Dllf IIAQ,-'lilSlllf -Seeontl Honors: lbl1lllN.'lllLlllL'S, l:l'4.'llCll Ce-n1'ca 'sg Aisembly Sqlaalg ,Football Basketball Intra- lllLlKllS.f -liurim lf. DIFTZ, GLORIA--Silver. Bronze A's : Honor Certifi- cates, Minor l.ettersg P.S.A.l.. Pinsg All-Rountl Netlalsg junior Life Saving Certiticatesg Chevronsg Secretary to Mrs. Olson: Gratle Atlviser's OtliCe: Program Committee, Newman, German, Swimming, Softball, Baseball, Basket- ball Volleyball Leaelers Clubs. -lin-imur. DILLON, PAULlNli-Honor Certificates, Bronze A , junior, Senior P.S.A,L., Secretary to Mr. Freeman, Ser- vice in History Oflice, Swimming, Tennis, Newman Clubs.-Krzllvcrirze Gihlu SL'L'V6'ft!l'f.l! Srbnul. DITTRICH, HELEN-General Office, Secretary to Mrs. Mclnerny, Attendance Office: Metal, Newman, Swimming, Volleyball, Basketball Clubs.--Hnizzzuo. DIXON, GEORGE-Bronze A , Second Honors Cer- tificates, Basketball NLllTlCl'All.--Bll,lf?I6,fJ'. D iK F BR, AQHRT-Lun iroom, 'Patr Squads, F tlfa , l, Soc ' '. ..XJPins, .tam ,-- miulflf 'I DOIZL. EMMA-Junior Arista: Honor Certificate: ling- lish Ofhce, Secretary to Mr. Froehlich, Library, Lunch- room Service Squads.-Bufizlerr. I DONOVAN, THOMAS-Traffic Patrol, Lunchroom Squads, Football, Baseball Intramurals, Diving Team-- HlI,fiPlL'l',f'. DOSCH, ljDlTHfjunior, Senior Arista, Bronze, Silver, Goltl A's , First Honors. Meritorious, Exceptional Ser- vice Certificates, junior, Senior P.S.A.l.. Pins, junior, Senior Life Saving, All-Around P.S.A.L. Medals, Lunch- room Squatl, Language Office, Secretary to Miss De Ker- nay, Mrs. Yaller, Miss Frietlman, Mr. Bopp, Mrs, Butlin, Volleyball, Basketball, Swimming, Tennis, Girl Reserves, Latin, French, Travel, Baseball Clubs,-Hunter College. DUNLOP, jOHNALibrary, Patrol, Lunchroom, Traflic Squads, Football, Baseball, Soccer, Basketball Intramurals, I --Hn nine.: J. DUXBURY, ROBERT-Late, Cafeteria, Patrol Squads Football Intramurals- -Ivlilerf Sfalei Clltlll Guard. EAMES, MARY--Lunchroom Squatl: Prom Committee, Pliysiog raphy, Newman Cl lll'lS.fHll i im' f r. EBBECKF, MADELINE-Attendance, Lunchroom. Lib- rary Squatls, Basketball, Volleyball, Newman, Tennis, Dancing Cltibs.---Bmiuui'r. FCK, Hlil.l2N-Accounting Oflice, Secretary to Mr. Nurn- berg, Mrs. Greer: Lunchroom, Library Squads, Tennis, Basketball, Swimmin ' Travel, Newman, Volleyball Clubs - -llllfiIIL',l'3'. . K Q WM it IZGAN, l ' ean's Squad, Newman Club.-- liniizltfi r. , IQHMANN. Mllllllll junior Arist' 1 Bronze A , Honor, Scixicc Ccitificf ' unior SLJMASAL Pins Junior Scnio lDra if Secr 'iryftb Mr Mulligan, Swimmingj 'll-1133!-ylxllfgbaill, Leftll-Bs Clubs.QI3n,rinerlv. .ii 75 i , . s vi . , - . vi ' ' 1 ff, EV ' 'N 3 l 24 1, -, Zi! ,' 3 3' f e 1 62 ELLIOTT, ADOLPH-Senior Arista: Bronze A : Meri- torious, Exceptional, Distinguished Service Awards: Cap- tain Lunchroom, Patrol, Trafiic Squads: President of Debating Society: Science, Talk of Town, Honor Service cillll'7S.'YLiI1t'Ulll lvllil wx-fri. ELLIOTT, AUDREY-Gold, Silver, Bronze A's : Honor, Distinguished Service Certificates: History Office: Secre- tary to Mr. Brennan: Class Night Committee: Lunch- room Squad: Basketball, Volleyball, Dancing Clubs.- Iill illicit Y. FLSOFFFR, AUDRIZY - junior, Senior P. S. A. L. Pins: All-Around P.S.A.L. Medals:- Basketball, Dancing, First Aid, Leaders ClLll7S.-Bll.llI1P,lIl'. .1 IEMRICH, MARIE-Senior, junior P.S,A.L. Pins: Secre- tary to Miss Eckert: Swimming Club.-Nln'.teJ' Tmirling. C ITNGliI., M LV ronze A : Honor Certificates: Pro- grai Com 't : rogram, Statistical Ofiices: judean, fan '-i an, Latin Clubi.-C0lIll1I!Jfd L7lZil'L'Y,fff-1. FNTRFSS, CHARLES-bfajor AH: Varsity Football Squad .--- 1311.1 ima .i . FRTOLA, VIOLA-P.S.A.L. Pins: Lunchroom Squad: Swimming, Tennis, Physiography, Stenography, Basketball Clubs.---Aqclplvi Cullege. . n ll li' JUS: HJNSIZ-Bronze Silver A's : Honor 'M 1 'Moor As Bronze Gold P 9 s x ll ound Medal junior Senior lite Jr It In ml: tlillllllt' Wi 'atesg i r 1' , ,S.A.L, ini: Ch ri ' - 3 ' , ' Q' Savin' Pi' , renc fiice: Secretary to Miss DeKerney: Swim , Vol all, Tennis, Baseball, Basketball Clubs. FAELLA, ELAINE-Modern Language, Publications Of- fices: Volleyball, Costume Design, Newman Clubs.-liun zrzefr. FAIVRE, LOUIS-Bronze AH: Major, Minor A's : P.S.A.L. Pins: School Half Mile Record: Trariic Squad: H.E. Clerk: Football, Baseball, Basketball Intramurals: Track, Cross-Country Teams.-Idalm U71lI'8H'ilj'. FARBER, GUSSIE-Senior, Junior Arista: Gold, Silver, Bronze A's : Honor: Meritorious, Exceptional Service Certificates: Finance Committee: General, Home Arts, Attendance, Grade Advisers Oiiices: Stenography, Home Arts Medals: judean Club,-Bn.iim'.i.f. FASULLO, LOUISE-Meritorious Service Certificates Sec- retary to Mrs. Schwartz: Library Squad: Modern Lang- uage Oflice: Newman, Spanish, Music Appreciation Clubs. -Adelphi College. FAUST, PHILIP-Bronze AH: Service, Honor Certifi- cates: P.S.A.L. Intramurals: G.O. Representative: Lunch- room, Traffic, Bookroom Patrol, Dean's Squads: Mary of Scotland : Cheer Leader: Announcement Committee: Dramatics, Newman ClUbS.i-IiIlfilI6'.l'li. FELFPPA, JOSEPHINE-Meritorious, Service Certificate: Trial by jury : Yeomen of the Guardn: Dancing, French, Newman, Glee Clubs.-Kmlwrizze Gilzlzf Secre- f.1ri.ll Scbfml. .divx K L If x ,XX 7 rl, . i- 'f 1 .Jn F GELST ' Secretary to Miss Keller, . ' wi, Reuss, Mrs. Gould, Miss Wickman, . Mzxldg-I2ea1gVS,. Attendance, Health Education Offices, Lunfhro n, L'il5rary'JSqua ' Freshman Adviser, Program, Pimf' Ring'?hnce Csihin tees, Emergency Room Aid, Swinnnhlf en s, Aakk all, First Aid, Young Scien- s, ?iI, X ec 1 FELGNER, ERIKA-Honor Certificates, P.S.A.l.. Swim- ming Pins, Athletic All-Around Medal: Representative of German Department at Teachers' Convention, Volley- ball, Dancing, Swimming, Tennis, German Clubs.-Binh nerr. FENDER, ELIZABETH-Bronze, Silver A's , Meritor- ious, Exceptional, Distinguished Service Certificates, Sec- retary to Miss W'ick, Miss NX'erschals, Mrs. Braucher, Miss Hayden, Grade Adviser's, Attendance Offices, Pro- gram Committee, Lunchroom Squad, Travel, Volleyball, Basketball, Dancing Clubs.-Bn.fi11e.f.r. FERRICK, EILEEN-Attendance Office, Secretary to Mrs. Mather, Newman ClUb.+BllffII6,f.f. FERRIS, ELIZABETH-Meritorious, Exceptional, Distin- guished Service Certificate: General, Health Education Of- fices, Secretary to Miss Langdon, Miss Feinberg, Miss Gan- non, The Gondoliers : French, Newman, Glee, Phys- iography, Dramatics Clubs.-Sf. jf1wpb'.r College. 1 . Fifi THIN, Em 1 PM I, Soc f, Baseball in. tra 1 ' T c nch ' mirifmzggs, Travel, Pl si ap y, 'Sp 'Sh ClLlbS.-P6 71I1JjllfdI1it ' liege. FINK, FLORENCE-Honor, Service Certificates: Lunch- room, Library Squads, Economics, Attendance Offices, Bas- ketball, Baseball, Tennis, Swimming, Newman, Volleyball, Stenography Clubs.-Kulberine Gibby Serre1.n'i.1l Sfbfwl- FINCKEN, CATHERINE-junior, Senior Arista, Bronze, Silver A's , Honor, Meritorious, Exceptional Service Certificates, Biology, English Offices, Secretary to Mr. Minters, Mr. Rabinorg Glee, Science, Travel Clubs.- B11,vine,t.f. 0 C r00m S . eenr olieg N Service Certifi- tists, Biology, P hy, German, French, Chemistry 1 Cl Ui7S.'P7'iIll lnxll ate. . 0 FQLKARD, XVILLIAM-Honor, Meritorious, Exceptional Service Certificates: Traflic, Lunchroom, Patrol Squads, Economics Office, P.S.A.L. Pins, Basketball, Football In- tramurals, Biology, French, German, Stamp, Aviation, Travel CIUDS,-1ill,fillL'.t,f. ' FONTANA, JOSEPH-Bronze A , Distinguished Service Certificates, Lunchroom, Patrol Squads, Newman, Travel Clubs.-Cooper Ijuiwz Ifzrtillzle. FORMAN, ELSIE-Honor, Service Certificates, Account- , ing, Biology Oflices, Lunchroom Squad, Swimming, Bas- ketball Clubs.-New York Uni1'er.fily. FORRESTER, ROSEMARYfjunior Arista, Bronze A , Honor, Distinguished, Exceptional Service Certificates, Sec- retary to Miss Reuss, Mrs. Fyfe, Lunchroom Squad, Pro- gram Committee: Emergency Room Aid, Newman, Globe Trotters, Swimming Clubs.-Sl. jobnir Univerriiy. FRANKLIN, GERALDINE-Meritorious Service Awards, Music Appreciation, Dancing, Glee Clubs.-Hunter Col- lege. FRIEDIERICKS, HAZIEl.--Meritorious Service Ccrtiticatesg Bronze, Silver P.S.A.I.. Pins, History, Attendance Of- fices, Secretary to Miss Axelg Volleyball, Basketball, Swimming Clubs- liniimrf. FURNIELI., XX'll.Bl'R-Intramurals, Traffic, Patrol Squads, Young Scientist Club. lillliIlL'.l,l'. GAFFNHY, CLARlfNCflf--Silver, Golrl Bfeclals for B115- ketball: Football, Baseball lntramuralsg P.S.A.L. Pins, Tratlir, Luncliroom Squailsg G.O. Representativeg Newman Club, liliiirlcu. GANZ, l5Dl'l'H Senior, junior Arista, Gold, Silver, Bronze A's g Secontl Honor, Meritorious Service Cer- tificates, Secretary to Miss Deliernay, Miss Kuhn, Mr. Riley, Mr. Yorinackg Newman, Dramatics C:lLll'1S.fBll,li- llzii .il GARLICK, PHYLLIS-Honor Certificate, Bronze Swim- ming Pin: Chevron, Secretary to Mr, Piattig Lunchroom Squatlg Orchestra: Dancing, Swimming, Volleyball, Ten- nis, Cierinan, Girl Reserves, Major Music Clubs.-Nurjei' 7'7kliIIflI-Q. GARTIEN, PATRICIA-Dt'lt'lv.n113'y Serf'elilf'it1l Srbool. GIEORG, MARllffjunior Arista, Bronze A , Honor fififlillCillL'S.-'Bll.l.iIlC.F.f. GIEORG, MURIIEI.-Bronze Aug Second Honor Certifi- Cates.-B1z,iir1e,i'i. L GERRY, DOROTHY-Secretary to Mr. Wliiteg Girl Reserves, Volleyball, Basketball Clubs.-Pm!! Imfillzle. GELLERSTEIN, .IEANETTE-Silver, Bronze A's g Hon- or Certificates, Secretary to Miss Heitmang Library, Lunch- room Squads, French Otliceg judean, Economics, Travel, Tennis, Basketball ClUl'3S.YBllJ'i716,l',l'. GICALA, STELLA-Newman, Volleyball, Basketball Clubs.-Burizivrr. GILMORE, GRACEkMeritorious Service Certiticatesg P.S. A.L. Pins, Chevronsg Secretary of G.O.g Secretary to Miss Gannon, Miss Keller's Otficeg Class Night Com- mitteeg Basketball, Baseball, Swimming, Dramatics, Span- ish, Volleyball Clubs.-Mio Dzuibtzrk School for Girlr. GING, ALICE-Bronze A , Seconrl Honor Certilicateg Art Otlice.-Burineir. GIORDANO. ANNA-junior Aristag Bronze A , Hon- or, Service Certiticatesg P.S.A.I.. Ping Secretary to Mr. Yourmang Newman Clilb.-Bmizzwr. Gl,l'CKl.liR, ANDREXXQ-V Iininzto, GOl.DHlfRCi, ANITA- Meritorious, Distinguisliul, lfxcup- tional Service Ccrtiticatusg junior, Sunior Orclicstrag ju- tln-an. Music Appreciation Clulws. -Qui 4 ui iffflft yt, GUl.DSTlflN, JOSEPH Bronze AHL Sctonil llonor Ccrtiticatcsg Spf.-ccli Otlicci Assembly Prograins: Mary of Scotlantlng Alutlcan Cliilw.-linilmwr, uoizDoN,' AN1'noisnuim.-.,i, ismmi, uasrt-maxi Squailsg Basketball, Soccer, Football lntmtnuralsg NL-wman Y . f ' , ' , . k.., - IIBU. N t K .. 'ww 5 -13-3 I Q .W 'A Clul1,4-Sl, fufvrfi Ivlljl i v iffy. l GUSPODARIEC, XX'AI.TlfR -,Silvclg hronLc l,.S,A.l.. Pinsg Bookroom, Patrol Squailsg Baslcctlwall lntr.nnur.ils.A-limi- GOZ, IEVELYN-junior Aristag Bronzu AU: Honor, lllcritorious Svrvicc Ccrtiticatcsg Sccrctary to Miss Stoppg Pulwlications Othccg Program Committcug Luncliroom Squaalg hlutlcan, Spanish, Travel, Tironian Clulwsf lifnirztwr. GHZ. FRANCIQS-junior Aristag Bronze Ang Honor, NL-ritorious Scrvicc Ccrtiticatcs: l'.S.A.l.. Ping Luncliroom Squatlg Pulwliiatinn Otiiccg Secretary to Miss Stoppg Pro- gram, Picture Committccsg judcan, Travel, Spanish Clubs. -Hn-irltwi. GRAHAM, DOROTHYfGirl Lcailcr Scnior, Junior Aristag Bronzfs. Silver A's 1 Honor, Meritorious Service Ccrtitiratcsg litlitor-in-Cliicf. Associate liilitor Clippcr . Associate llkllllll' l'lcacon : Campus Captain: Senior Pulwlicity Conunittccg Luncliroom Squatlg Dcan's Oliiccg Ncwnman, Glolw Trotti-rs Clulws. -lllrzzlw' Cfffflqqu. GRANT, MARGARET'--Housclioltl Arts Otliccg Newman Clulw. linifuui. ' - f gf , ,, , WV i t. , 'vi ll,I.l -V-.u1ior,7F iiirw-Arif 1 Sn-conil 'L' , Q11 2LYf's g .panisli Class Clgfrtiticatcg jul nor, Sgnio Ice Clulwg Yeo- fyiun of Eh: 'E:uard g l.unc vom ii' c , imnfl l ' 1. . . cs, .p a'in3.: lubs. ---Qin t I1 1 Cfufli Luc, 44 r- K - , ',' L - . QL. GRAY, JOHN-laincliroom, Tratiic Squads, Chemistry Laboratory Squads, Baseball, Football lntramuralsg Tennis, Chemistry Clubs.-Yale l'IlfI't'7'.lflj. 6' -4 I GRHCO, FRANK+P.S.A.L. Pins: Baseball, Soccer Intra- vo, I murals, Luncliroom, Patrol Squads.-1314,rim'.r.r. i f GRIEIZN, FLORENCIZ---junior Arista, Honor Certiticatesg Bronze, Silver, Gold A's g Minor Ang junior Life Saving Pins: P,S.A.L. Pins, Grade Adviser's Othce: Sec- retary to Miss Riley, Mrs. Fyfe, Miss Linzmeyerg Pin 3- A, and Ring Committee: Publicity Committee, Volleyball, I Q sl Swimming, Newman ClLll3S.-'IIIHIIUI' College. 'xy , .A 3, ' 3, N . GRIEIENB . ' e Certificate, Lunch, Traf- lic, Patrol, Late Squats' judean, Biology, Law, Dramatics Clubs.--VS1, julizzfi Agrrilj. GRlflfNBl.A'l l', CAROl.lNli--Travel, Art ClL1hS.?IS7'l!fll'- lyn College. GRlliSlfR, DCHROTHY--Service Certificate, Grade Ad- viser's Otliceg Newman Cltib.--limimnii, . ag' lfiirff-+.a11 misli Certificates, GROSSER, NORMA+Honor Certificate, Basketball, Vul- leyball, Girl Reserves Cllll7S.flillDfIIL'tl. GRUIENBIERG, ROBERT-Second Honors Certiticatesg Gold, Silver, Bronze P.S.A.L. Pins: Bronze Basketball, Baseball, Football Medals: laincliroom, Traliie, Patrol Squads, Pliysiograpliy, Hi-Y Clubs- -lilriiarerv, ., ' G TNIN, K ' IN--Honor Award: Soccer Team. Base- b ' ir, ill, Ba 'etbi Intramuralsg Letters for V Socgr, aseball, ,inf Luncliroom, Tratlic I ll 0 flllcrilll l Squads dqp, Clltillxl Bioli 'y, German Clubs,- lx GUARINO, ANTOINETTFA-junior, Senior Arista, Bronze, Silver A's g Second Honors: Meritorious Ser- vice Certificates, Ye-omen of the Guard , Trial by jury , Chevronsg P.S.A.I.. Medals, Newman, Glee, Bas- ketball, Volleyball, Baseball Clubs.-Humor Cf1llu,qe, GURVITZ, MILDRIiDAHonors, Service Certitieatesg P.S. A.L. Pins, Mr. Pattersons, Spanish, Iinglisli Art Otiicesg Secretary to Miss Kuhn, Luncliroom Squad: Swimming, Tennis, Volleyball, judean, Basketball Clubs.-New York LllliI'6'7',filj', I-IAl.I., AI:ICIf+IVIinol' A , I'.S.A.I.. Pins: Iwlaiot' Pins, Emergency Room, H.IZ. Office: Secretary to Miss Ifcliert, Mrs. Clemens: Volleyball, Basketball, Baseball, Hockey, First Aid CIUb5.iA'Ilf',l4'li Trrzizlizlg, HAMILTON, JOSFi'HINE+Tennis, Basketball, Spanish C:lllI'5S.--Bll,liIIL',fJ, HAMILTON, LOUISE-Basketball, Swimming, Spanish, Baseball CILIIWS.-BlUilIL'f.f. 1 XF HAMIS QH, LOIS-H uQ,c:Qmia't 4- it-rf sr-mar, P.S.A.L, 'Pinsg Igggge, Germ iench Otlicesz Sec- retary s . erixy, 'Ng7fIiYer1niriger, Mrs. Budin, M . amer, Mis. , Miss jones: Swimming, Fre 1, German, Globe rotters f:ILlI3S.+'IIHlfL'l' Cnllelqe. HANDFI., HARVFY7junior Arista: Honor, I'.S.A.l.. Pinsg Service Certificates, Dean, Lunch, Patrol, Traffic Squads: Language Fiesta, Biology, Baseball, Soccer, Foot- ball Intramurals.-Villinmruz L'21iierii1,1. HARRIS, HARRY-Track, Football, Basketball, Soccer, Baseball Intramurals, P.S.A,l.. Pins: Aid to Miss Keller, HARRIS, IRXVIN--Senior Arista, Bronze First Second Honors, Meritorious, Exceptional Service Certin Deans, Luncliroom Squadsg Newman Club.-Iiuiinerr. 9 x Cates, Business Manager, Asssitant News Editor, Cam- S, pus , Mathematics, Foreign Languages Offices, Travel, 5? French Clu.b!s.4Qnew1,r Cullegall 1 ,, r i :fi iw .1 I SPV, ,M U 'I ARRISQUN, wa .inzfnttskeib ll, rpmbait, some 1 tm. 4: murals, Mathematics ine J. HARVUITT, IiRNIiST7l-Ionor Certificate: Campus , Luncliroom, Tratiic Squads, Secretary to Mr. Camsong Travel, Spanish, judean, Chemistry Clubs.-Sl. 10171111 I'ui1'f.'r-iily. HASSON, Al.lCIi---Second Honors Certificate, Mr. Pat- terson's, Attendance Otlicesg Secretary to Miss Emerson, jutlean, Tironian clILlI'IS.-BIltllIC'.fJ'. HAUPT, MILDRIED-Bronze A g Certiticatesg Secretary to Miss Disbrowg Baseball, Travel, Swimming Clubs- lIlHilIPl'T, - HAUSMAN, DOROTHFA-Attendance Oliiceg Secretary to Mrs. Ferguson, Mrs. Gould, Miss Halley, Swimming CIlll'7.-Blljfflthfi. 13 HAYDKN, RIENIZIZ-lunior, Senior Arista, Bronze, Sil- ver A's 1 Honor, Meritorious, Exceptional, Distinguished Service Certificates: Bronze, Silver, P.S.A.I.. Pins, Chev- rons: Attendance Office: Swimming, Volleyball, TCDHIS, ,ludean Clubs.-Hniimfiii. HIEDRICK, Hlil.liNfSecret.iry to Miss Bernstein, Mrs. Daniels, Miss Kuhn, Mrs. Clemens, Miss Spadaccini, Stenography, English, Accounting Ofhcesg Basketball, Rid- ing, Volleyball Clubs.--K.1llm'ir1e Gibbi Serre1.n'1i1l School. lllilD'l', HAZIZI.---junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins, Emer- gency Room Aid: Secretary to Miss Langdon, Miss Kuhn, Swimining, Volleyball, Newman Clubs.-Bninlem. H ISIN ISM AN N, H ARlU'fIilr.-if1e,f.f. HlilN'l'Z. GFORGIE -Bronze. Silver A's 3 Honor .Cer- tifiratesg Supply, Patrol Squads, Newman ClUl7.113ll,llI1?,fI. HliMlXlliRlCK, VIC'l'ORlAsYlunior Arista, Bronze A's , Honor, Service Certificates- l31nim'.i.i. HINCK, ANNA---Attendance Office, Volleyball, Basket- ball, l.eatlers', Tennis, Baseball ClLll7S.-Blllfllvllf. HINSHAXXQ FRANCIliS--Attendance Ofiiceg Secretary to Miss Kennedy, Basketball, Volleyball, Girl Reserves Clubs. ---lilrifrlui, College. 6 Q 1 Q: .f ,5 ' fL A as A fr 4.544 HQEPPNIZR, FI.ORliNCEf-Second Honors, Service Cer- titicatesg P.S.A.L. Pins, Chevrons: Secretary to Mr. Riley, Miss Berner, Accounting, Household Arts, Grade Adviser's Offices, Music, Lunchroom, Assembly Squads: Program Cflmmiffeel JUUi0f, Senior Glee Clubs, Girl Reserve, Dancing ClUlJS.-BllJiI1L'.f,f, HOFFMANL MATILDA-junior Arista, First, Second Honor Certificates: Bronze, Silver, Gold A's g Spanish, l'rench Proficiency Pins: French, Spanish Clubs.--Queen: HOLl.lNSVUORTH, DORIS--Art Office, Library, Pa- trol Squadsg Danciny, Volleyball, Stenography, German, .gsm Newman Clubs.-limizzwi, HOI.LXXfEDEl., CATHliRlNli+Secretary to Miss Rior- clan, Miss Feinber,i.:g Attendance, Health Education Oflices, Swimming, Newman, Baseball Cllll3S.-Bll.fiI1CJ',f, HOLUB, MADELINE-Second Honor, Distinguished Ser- vice Certificateg Secretary to Mr. Richter, Grade Advisers, Publications Offices, Lunchroom Squad, Basketball, Lead- ers, Spanish, Swimming, Newman ClLll'7S.--Blli'fl1C'J,l' I HRIST H onor fc Certifi f , ,E ,g Q , J . . -s.' 1 '- i ! ,g P iI1x5 .' nWyQc0Jc'it'Basketbqll,-Footbali ix f ,Z i ,,,,' , ,fri , sc , , 1 ,r Wi 4 ,, 1 , r i' 'A ,y s- Intramura Chem stry Squ ' ewQnan ysiigra h i Chemistry Clubs.-Cooper lfzliongzjlklflgfidgi K P y F. ,, , Q 6 B- ,Qi 5 ' is as. ,. if 6 HOPKINS, BIZRTHA-English Oflice: Secretary to Mr. Zimbal, Miss Beck, Financial, Cap and Gown Commit- tees, Lunchroom Squad: Stenography, Basketball, Spanish, Swimming, Dancing ClUl7S.?G.?'.1tiL' Irzililnle. HOROXVITZ, BFRTHA-Yjunior, Senior Arista: Bronze, Silver, Gold A's g Honor, Meritorious Service Certifi- cates, Three Year Latin Medal, Economics, Latin, Art Oflices: Lunchroom Squad, Aid to Mrs, Mather, judean, Dramatics, Latin, Metal Arts and Crafts Clribmflimffllirl College. IANNACCONE, YOLANDA4Secretary to Mrs. Yaller, Mr. Blazejg All City-XVide Chorus, Trial by jury , Yeomen of the Guardn: Senior, junior Glee, Newman, Travel, French ClllhS.1I5l4tf7lL'lt. IVFRSFN, CLIFFORD--Honor Certificate: Minor Letters, Dean's Squad, Swimming Team, Football Intramurals-- lin iirlerr. JABLONSKI, GFRTRUDF-junior Arista, Bronze A , Honor, Meritorious, Fxceptional Service Certificates: l',S. A.L. Pin: Secretary to Mrs. Clemens, Miss Keller, Miss Brennan, Mrs. Ferguson, Mrs, Keenan, Miss wYCIfL'fQlll1 Attendance, Dean's Offices, Basketball, Leaders, Dancing, Newman, Glee, Baseball, Volleyball, Swimming Clube- - Grnlre luililnfe, Q' JACOBSON, ROY--P,S.A.L. Pins, i.t.iit-li.-Mn, 'rmiif Squads.-Bminetr. F I L jANKOXX'SKl, VITOLD-junior Arista: Gold, Silver, V l A t Bronze A's , First, Second Honors Certificates: Tratlic fy - Squad, Latin Club.-Culzmzbia Lfflirefuzp, qt -IAGUSIAK, HELlfN-Bronze AH: Second Honor Certi- ficate: Junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins: Secretary to Mrs. Olson, Newman, Basketball ClUl7S. 'l3I1ilIIcvr, JOYCE, llliLliN---junior, Senior Arista: Bronze, Silver, Gold A's': llonor, Meritorious, lixceptional, Disting- uished Service fit'filflCLllCS.fBII.l'll1L',l.l'. jl'Il,lANO, FRANK -Meritorious, lixceptional, Disting- uished, Service Awards, junior Orchestra, Band, Latin Cllll7.---QllLL'Il,l' Culfege. '- J' Q KADIZI., LO ' an 'g c ourn Clerk, P.S.A.L. In- tramur ls, Quncir ti imc S iadybPublications Of- f--, if, Q C- 'Jva -4' g bp-' I ite s So c Irticmrti Cfu s bntnzeit fx ' V Xa i l KASSIEBALM, SHIEDERICK---Bronze A , Homif, Sex- vice Certificates, Speech Office, Young America , Mary of Scotland , Newman, Dramatics, Key of Courtesy Clubs. -liurim 1 i. KAY, IEVIZLYN--Service Certificate: Secretary to Miss Berner, Miss Stopp, Mr. Loffming Lunchroom Squad, Pro- gram Committee: Music Office: Gondoliers , Trial by jury , Ye-omen of the Guard , Glee, Tironian, Girl Reserves, Dancing cilLIl'TS.-kBIll'if1L'l'f. KIZHOF, AUDRIEY-First, Second, Honor, Service Certi- ficates, Attendance, General Offices: Luncliroom Squad: Secretary to Mrs. vVCl'Sl1illS, Girl Reserves, Dancing, Volley Ball. Raelcetball Clubs,iRurine'U. KlZlSLliR, XX ll.l.lAM-5Honoi' Certiticates: ,Intramural A's : Publications Othce: Lunchroom, Tratlic, Patrol, Cllienustry Squatls: jutlean, Mathematics, Spanish Clubs.- liwollwl Pnl.i1ez'l1f1ii'.11 lmliflrle. Kl5l.l.lfR, Al'DRliY-Honor, Service Certiticatesg junior, Senior P.S.A.l., Pins: junior, Senior Life Saving, Minor antl Major Letters: P.S.A.l.. All-Around Metlals: Leatlers Ln: Cfhevronsg Stenography lixhibit at Summer Con- vention: Secretary to Miss Spatlaccini, Miss Reuss, hlrs. Greer, Mr, Mulligan, Mr. Yourmack, Mr. I.aGuar1.lia, Mr. Yourmang 0.0. Storeg Library Squad: Lunchrooni, General, Health litlucation, Accounting Otlicesg Biology, Basketball, Baseball, Dancing, Swimming, Tennis, First Aitl, l.eatlers, Newman Cllll7S.--B111fI1L'.l.t. KELLY, DIQHN Honor Certificates, Trial by jury , Yeomen ot the Cillrllllnl Glee Clrilvf-R,Cf.A. Illtfiflllc. KELLY, THOMAS --Bronze A , Major AH: Trallic. Patrol Squatls: Dean's Otliee: Secretary Lunchroom: New- man, ltlle Hour Clubsf--l511i'imKi'i'. KELLY, VFRONICA- Lunchroom Squatlf Ii11i'ir1t'rv. Kl5l.l.Y, wX'll.l.lAM- 'Bronze, Silver A's : Second Hon- ors Cfertihcates: Patrol Squatlg Track and Cross Country Team: Newman, ltlle Hour Clubs.fS1. jllllllkl' LlIIjI'L'J'lfI3. KFRRIGAN, AUDRPY lunior, Girl Leatler Senior Al'- ista: Bronze. Silver, GoltlL A's : Honor, Meritorious, Fx- ceptional, Distinguishetl Service Certiticatesg Senior P.S.A.L. Swimming Ping All-Around Athletic Medals: Chevrons, Alunior, Senior Life Saving: Minor, Major A's : G. O, Term Representative: Cmifmi Business Staff: hiathematics Otlice: Secretary to Miss Keller. Mr. Middleton, Miss Littell, Mrs, Keenan, Mrs. lingelhart, Mrs. Troyano: As- sembly Presentations: Mithc-matics, Dancing, Basketball, Volley Ball, First Aitl: Globe 'l'rotters, Economic, Puppet. Dramatics cillll'7S.-flllllllel' Cuflcge. KING, HAROLD Golil, Silver Basketball: Bronze Foot- qii . 5. N 1 1 - 5- 1, , Q QLW6 filffigf f F 'A I li '1 l'l 11 5 1 if ball Medals: P.S.A,L. Pinsg Basketball Football, Baseball, ' H' Soccer, Volleyball lntrainorals: Patrol Squad: Freshman - ' Information Desk: Secretary to Mr. Scarlata: Health ff ' Iitlucation Ollicesi Newman, Tennis CllIl'JS.+l'iUcHIU!'il I'1li1'r'riili. KIRSHMAN, RAY--Honor Certificate: First Honors in Playgrountl lissay: Lunchroom, Attenslancc, Library Squatl.-f--Nmwi' 'l'r.iir1if1,q. ROSll.-'BIll'fl1t'ii. E . KLEIN, JOHNfSilver Met Football, Soccer lntraiuurals lal for Baseball, Basketball, .-lilziirltmi i. KLIEINSCHMIDT, I.lLLlANfSilver, Bronze A's : Hon- or Certificates: junior Life Saving: Minor AH: junior, Senior P.S.A.l.. Swimming Pins: Chevrons: Secretary to Miss Riortlan, Miss Smith, Mrs. Fyfe: Lunchroom, Lib- rary Squatls: Newman, Swimming, Basketball, Volleyball Cllll7S,fB!lljIIL'H. KNOFDLFR, LAWRIENCFALunchroom Squad: Football , , Soccer, Basketball lntramuralsg lclle Hour Cltib.-Aliniimzo. gr ,Q 0,5 KOBFLIN, HAROLD -lunior Arista: Bronze AU: Sec- ontl Honors: Intramurals in Baseball, Basketball, Football: Tratlic, Lunchroom Squads: jutlean Clllllfptlfjlt'l'I7lllL' lu i'lfllllc'. u KOCH, AGNES-Presliman Information, Basketb. l, Base- ball, Volleyball, Newman, Iieonomics, Get' ian 'ubs.- Qnewzr College. p 4 . A ti v ' CA I.- r nze, Si F, X A's g First, Se o ' juni eni . . i A Chevronsg Vlunipr, ' ife. S. gp ino IaiorQI.Cltersg I.ib- rary ' ' 3 Pool As 's '1 tz glass Niihtlitomniitteeg Swirryning, Badminton,'Firs id, olh all, Basketball, Leaders Clubs.-Bnrinerr. ,, KOVUALSKI, CIiCIiI.IA-Bronze, Silver A's g Honor Certiticatesg Grade Adviser's Otiiceg Luncliroom Squad, Secretary to Mrs. McVey, Mr. Riley, Mr. Morton, Mr. Kilcoin, Miss Howes, Miss Doran, Miss Citren, Mrs. Olson, Newman, Basketball, Dancing Clubs,---Divlelir 5117001 of New Yrnvti. KOZI.OXX'SKI, ADAMfSoccer, Basketball, Baseball In- tramurals, P.S,A.I.. Pinsg Lunchroom, Tratlic, Patrol Squads, Idle Hour Cliib.-Dufelnzzzl-1 Izzriilnlc. KRAKOWIiR, AUDREY-Junior, Senior Arista, Bronze Ang First, Second Honor, Meritorious Service Certiticatesg Spanish Proliciency Pin, Certificate, P.S.A,I.. Ping Secre- tary to Miss -Ionesg Miss DeKernay, Mr, Lowe, Mr. Murray: Luncliroom Squad: French, Stamp, Tennis, ju- dean, Basketball, Spanish Clubs.-llzmlur Cfullugu. KRASNIER, DAIQDlglunior AriSt:L1 Silver, Bronze A's'ig Second Hoiirfi, Meritorious Sd'ViCEfN.QCl4'I'lTCIlfU5, CIO. Store. New 1f6fkiLl1!Yfcr.iily. I ' ' f KRALISF, FRANK-Senior Arista: Bronze, Silver A's g Meritorious, Iixceptional, Distinguished Service Certificatesg Parks and Playgrounds Awardg Poster, Mimeograph, Teachers, Supply Room Lunchroom, Foreman Painting Squadsg Program Committeeg Art Supervisor of Industrial Arts Department, Secretary to Mr. Cronan: Cross Country, Track Teams, Trial by jury , Ye-omen of the Guard . KROIZCKIZR, DORISgJunior Aristag Bronze, Silver A's g Honor, Meritorious Service Certihcateg junior, Senior P.S.A.I.. Pinsg All-Around Athletic Medalsg Chev- rons: junior Life Savingg Minor Lettersg Yeomen of the Guardq: Secretary to Mrs. Bleckman, Miss Iigang Picture, Senior Day Committees: Dancing, Tennis, Volley- ball, Basketball, Swimming, Leaders, Spanish, French, Glee, Girl Reserves CIlLibs.---l311,rir1e,f5. Kl'I.lCH. THIZODORli-Meritorious, Exceptional Service Certiticatesi Swimmingg Aid to Mr. Burns, Dean, Cap- tain of Patrol, Tratlic, Book Room Assembly, Captain ot Luncliroom Squads: Baseball Intramurals, Idle Hour Club, - lint lmlifnte. I.A FORGE. RALPH--Service Certificate, Patrol Squad: Orclic-tra: lunior, Senior B.ll1tl.'BIl,lillL'f.Y, LANPTON. MARGARET-Fnglisli Otliceg Newman Club. --lilnimiv LANG, NA'rHANs Aft squaag Clipper , Campus Art Staff: litrliing, Life Sketcliing, Class Poster Clubs.- C'lI!If7L'V Uuiwz flrl Srlvool. LANTZ, RAYMOND--Ccrtiucates3 Biology, Dean's, Cap- tain of Late, Lieutenant of Patrol Squadsg Secretary for Nr. Shields, Nr. Troyano, Mr. Camson, Mr. Spata, Mr. Brennan: Neuman, Key nf Courtesy Cllll'3S.1BILl'fII6.lI. LANZILLO. ROSE-Honor Certiticatesg Lunchroom Squad: Newman, Tennis, liasketlwall Clubs.-Burincrr. LARKIN, -IANIET-fl.unclu'oom Squadg Secretary to Mr. Friudmang junior Prom, Senior Picture Committeesg Spanish, Newman, Glue Clubs.-Kazberine Gibbr Secre- t.lri.1l Srlwol. LAROCQCA. CARMlil.A4Serx'ice Ccrtiucatesg Secretary to Miss Rcuss, Miss Beck, Mrs, Mclnerncyg General, Grade Advisers Otlices: Luncliroom Squadg Tironian, Biology Clulws. Iinrimii, Eg iff OR S 'C' E :us Q' LARSEN, XWARREN-Bronze, Silver A's g Honor Cer tificatcg German, Tennis Cltibs.-Iiznirzerr, l 1 , U gn , .. f I I , v- -Lf 1 ' . , X x 1 ws J . LA RUSSO, ANNA-Bronze, Silver A's g Honor Cer tincatesg Public Speaking Medalg Lunchroom Captain .r President Debating Clulwg Secretary to Mr. Cosgrove I I Varrnr. ' LAVORANTE, FANNll?-I.unCl1room Squadg Swimming , 2 ' Tironian, Typing Clubs.-Burizzerr. X 9' l fi LAVULIER, SARAH--Tennis, Newman Clubs.gPm1l In Jfitnfe. G. LAXXILESS, HARVEY-Second Honors Certificate, Patrol, 'tx Late, Attendance, Lunchroom Squads: Baseball Intramur- Q V als, Travel Club.SQ1zeez1i College. 0, Q LAYDEN, ROBERT-Library Squad, Newman, Etching ' il ClLII7S,--BIl.llllL'.V.t'. ' r LEHMANN, GRACE-junior Arista, Gold, Silver, Bronze A's : Honor, Meritorious, Exceptional Service Certificates, junior, Senior Life Saving, junior, Senior Swimming Pins, All-Around P.S.A.L. Medals: Major, Minor A's , Secretary to Mrs. Fyfe, Mrs. Clemens. Miss Reuss, , .J A Miss Keller, G.O. Store, H,E. Offices, Term Represen- AN tative, Basketball Representative to G.A.A. Council, Vol- - Ieyball, Basketball, Baseball, Dancing, First Aid, Swim- . 6 Qu ming Clubs.-Queem College. , LEIDECKER, ANNE- on 'il 'r d ' o or Certificates, Ger n ro ' ., .S .. ins: .. ' r ' , F' 'd, Volley- LM , ' I3 .-k I riser' Tmirlirlg. f l s LEON, RTRUDE junior, Senior Arista: Bronze, Sil- x ver, Gold A's , Honor, Service Certificates, P.S.A.L. Pins, Chevrons, Secretary to Miss Selens, Miss Hayden, Mrs. Mclnerny, Mr. W'hite, Attendance, General Otiices, Lunchroom Squad: judean, Tennis, Art, Dancing, Swim- ming filLll'US.fBl4.l'lf1t'.l5. LEONE, PAUL-Basketball, Soccer Intramurals: Bronze and Silver P.S.A.L. Pins, Lunchroom, Tratiic Squads, G.O. Store: Newman, Tennis CZIIIIWS.- I.fHIKQ lilauil l'ui- Iwxrify. in LEU HT, . I-I7-Ho vQ1bNI6I'It9fIlILIS Service Certificates, .. Scc Miss Miss 'Stop ' Rf:present'itive of' GerrqjrY'De9artment at Teachers -ginvention, All City iq High School Chorus, Music Ofiice, Glee, German, . Dancing Clubs.-Nluxiei' Tmining. . LEVENSON, ALBERT-Meritorious Service Certificates, Q Emergency Room Clerk, Color Guard: Locker Room, ' Captain Cheering, Sergeant Lunchroom Squads, Football, Baseball, Soccer Intramurals, judean, Glee, Dramatics, Physiography, Idle Hour, Chemistry Clubs,fBmnHy1 , College. LEVINE, HARRIET-Honor, Service Certificates, Eng- lish, History Ofiices, Secretary to Mr. Klausner, Mr. 0 Rabinor, Mrs. Greer, Mrs. Braucher, Mr. Savitsky, Mr. X Levine, Miss Howes, Mrs. Olson, Mr. O'Sullivan, judean I.. 6 Climb.-Bu.iine.i.i. . LEVY, JEANETTE-Service Certificate, English, History ig, Ofiices, Secretary to Mrs. Greer, Mrs. Braucher, Mr. Klaus- ner, Miss Howes, -Iudean Club.--Delelmnly Inililule. LEVY, MARTHA-Honor Certificates, Chairman of Pic- ture Committee, Secretary to Mr. Appelman, Mrs. Brauch- er, Mr. Savitsky, Mr. Rabinor, Miss Howes, Mrs. Olson, Mr. Yourman, History Oflice, judean Club.-Bu.rine.i.r. LEWIS, MURRAY-junior Arista, Bronze, Silver A's , Honor, Meritorious, Distinguished Service Certificates: Secretary to Mr. Siegel, Program, Freshman Committees, General Organization Store Clerk, Lunchroom, Traffic, Biology, Library Squads, Grade Adviser's Ofiice, Football, Volleyball Intramurals, French Club.-Long Irltzml Uni- rerrily. LEXVIS, ROSE-Junior, Senior Arista, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's : Honor, Exceptional Service Certificates, Spanish, P.S,A.L. Pins, Chevrons, Minor A's , Secre- tary to Mr. McNamara, Adviser's Oflice, Lunchroom Squad, Volleyball, Basketball, Leaders, Softball, Bad- minton, judean, Spanish, French Clubs.-Queenr College. LIEBERMAN SHIRLEY---Bronze A , Honor Certificates: - - Contributor to Blue and White , Iunior, Senior Dra- ' i matics, Lunchroom Squad, Attendance Office, Secretary I ' to Mrs. Ramras, Mrs, Ellner, Mr. Rosenkrantz, judean, , ' Biology, Globe Trotters, Economics, French Clubs.- f I Quewri College. ' l.lFSCHl'l'Z, BlfRNARD4Second Honors, Meritorious Award: Lunch, Traffic, Patrol Squads.fNe11f lurk Ulll- Iwrilll. l.lNDAHl., AR'l'HL'R- Lunchroom Squad, P.S.A.l.. Pins, lllII'1IIl1LlI'.llS.1Hlltill!!Y. LINDIEMAN, GRACli---Meritorious Service Certificate, YL-omen of the Guard , Grade Adviser's Office, Secre- tary to Mr. Goldman, Lunchroom Squad, Girl Reserves, Frencli, Spanish, Swimming, Physiography, Glee Clubs? Htffft for lilfifllclli Cfrfflflqe. l.lSl, MTNA--l.unchrooin Squad: Program Committeel Secretary to Mrs. Schwartz, Biology, Spanish, Travel, Tennis, Dancing, Dramatics, Newman, Dress Design Clubs.---l'r.lfI Illtllllrlc. l.OCURA'l'Ol.O, FRANK- Bronze Football, Baskefball, Baseball Medals, Intramurals, Patrol Squad, French Club. - Xl. -lllflllll lvIIflL'f'4fl1. LOIQFFLIER, ELINORA-Lunchroom Squad, Secretary to Miss Meany, Mrs, Longley, Short Story, Swimming, Bas- ketball, Volleyball Clubs.+DelefJ.n1l-1 Inililnle. LOMBARDO, VINCENT-Spanish Awards, P.S.A.L. Pins, Patrol, Lunchroom, Traffic Squads, Spanish, New- man Cltilws.---Iiniiutw. LORZ, lfl.ORliNCl5 '--- Attendance Otlicez Lunchronm Squad, Basketball, Volleyball, First Aid ClllhS.+l3Il.ti!IL',ll'. l.OXX'NDIZS, W'II.I.lAM-Honor Certificate, Patrol, Late Squads, Basketball Il1lI'LlIlll1l'1llS.--BINj7IE'J',f, 9 J IA, HUR-Sc vice icate, Secretary to Mr. D any Byrne,,, . Le Miss Littell, Color Sq , .ie t it, Cap ai 'q I tr q Lunchroom Squads, Art Supply swim: limer lfy R n Clerk, Baseball, Football, Soccq In ' urals, Aviation, Art, Spanish, Bi- ology Clubs.-1,17 ur llllirlil Illlffllllf. LUTZ, EI.SA+Meritorious, Exceptional Service Certifi- cates, Grade Advisers Office, Secretary to Miss Stopp: Library, Lunchroom Squads, Program, Picture Commit- tees: Biology, Treasurer of Girl Reserves Clubs.- lNvllI'.H.'t' Tmiuiug. MMKINNON, MARIAN--Meritorious, Distinwguished Service Certificates, Secretary to Miss Stopp, Miss Berner: Picture, Program Committees, Chevrons: I.unchroom Squad, Yeomen of the Guard : Student Aid, Newman Dancing, Basketball, Baseball, Spanish, Dramatics, Glee Clribs.-l311,iimf,ir. MADDIEN, vIOHN-P.S.A.l., Pins, Baseball, Basketball Intramurals, Lunchroom, Patrol, Traffic, Late Squads, Newman cilllllflxifll' Yuri llllfI'f.'J'lff'l. MALLOY, LUCIl.l.l3+Attendance Office: Secretary to Miss Kuhn, Basketball, Volleyball, Swimming, Newman ClLll7S.-IIIIIIIUJ' College. i MANZI, ORLANDO-junior Arista, Bronze A : Schol- arship Certificates, Traffic, Lunchroom Squads, Basketball Baseball Intramurals, G.O. Class Representativtz- 'College of lbe Cily of New Yaris. MARCIELL, ARTHUR-'Secretary to Mr. Scarlatag P.S.A.I.. Medals, Soccer, Baseball Intramurals,-li.:rlcrn B.oel1.1ll School. IWIARTIN, VVILLIAM- Bronze A , Honors, Distinguish- ed Service Certificates, Minor A's g Cross Country, Traflic Squad, Music Otliceg Glee Club, Trial by jury : Yeon1en of the Guard , Newman, Latin, Biology Clubs. -Queem College, INLARX, HARRY-Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins, President ol Physiography, Secretary of Key of Courtesy Clubs, - limirzerr. MARZULLO, JOSlfPHlNlffBronzC Aug Honor Certili- Cates, Chevronsg Newman, Basketball, Swimming Clubs.- l3Il.liUL'l,l'. MATTSON, VIOLA-Bronze A , Second Honor Certili- catesg Secretary to Miss Massey, Miss McGrath: Basket- ball, Dancing, Spanish, Girl Reserves Cllll7S.eHlllllltll. MAYIER, BLANCHE-junior, Senior Arista, Bronze, Sil- ver A's g Honor Certificates: Proficiency in French, P.S. A.L. Pins: Lunchroom Squad: French, Swimming, Leaders, judean, Travel, Basketball Volleyball c:illl'5S.i-lgffiflifl-,Il College. MCCARRON, LUCILLI? -Bronze A's 1 Bronze, Gold Swimming Pins, Chevronsg All-Around P.S.A.L. Medals: Minor, Major Letters: Lunchroom, Library Squads, Pro- gram, Senior Day Committees, First Aid, Basketball, Swimming, Dancing Leaders, Baseball, Volleyball, New- man, Travel, Latin, Biology, Spanish CZllll'!S. INllH'.lLl' Tlfilllllllg. MCCARTHY, Ti4lADDliL'Si Track, Cross Country cams: 'brary Squad, I Bronze, Silver P.S.A.L. Pins.-United mor Naryg- ' ' ' . INICCLANAHAN, DORlSfMiss Keller's Oflice: Biology, Swimming Clubs.-Nea' York Slule College of flpfflleil ,'1lU!'lL'lllfllfL' nf F.1rmiz1gd.rle. McCl.liARY, HliLlZN--Honor Certihcatesg Newman, Swimming Clubs.--Qneem College. McDliRMOTT, RUTH-fy-Iixhgptioiial, Meritorious Service Certificates, Chevrons1 P,S.A.l.. Pins, junior Life Saving, Lunchroom Squad: Secretary to Miss Stopp, Miss Levy, Mr. Hearnsg Program Committee: Swimming, First Aid, Girl Reserves cillll7S.--llll,l1:IIL'H. Mclil.RA'l'H, ALHONSIS -Iimirzeir. McFARI.AND, IELIZABIETH-junior Arista, Bronze A , Honor, Meritorious, lixceptional Service Certilicatesg P.S. A.L. Ping Secretary to Mr. Riley, Lunchroom Squad.4 Lung lilaml l,iI1il'6'f.filJ'. ss 6 ,- MCGINNISS, MARIE-Minor A , junior Life Saving, P.S.A.I.. Pins, Chevrons, Secretary to Miss Armstrong, , Mrs. Keenan, Mr, Goffery, Cafeteria, Library Squads, f Y. College Day, Fashion Show, Open School Week Teas, - f 6 , Finance Committees, Newman, First Aid, Swimming, . r, l Hearthstone, Tennis, Volleyball, Basketball, Physics Clubs. 'K -Nuriei' Tmiuirzg. V McHOI.LAN, INIABEI.-Bronze, Silver A's , Honor I l Certificates: Chevrons, All-Around P.S.A.L. Medals, Bronze, Gold, Swimming Pins, junior, Senior Life Saving, Minor Letters, Lunchroom Squad, Secretary to Mrs. Pleasure, Senior Day, Pin and Ring Committees, Spanish, Newman, Physiography, Basketball, Volleyball, Swimming, First Aid, Travel CILIIWS.-Qllt'L'l1.Y College. - , McKAY, THOINIAS-junior Arista' Honor, Service Cer- 1, ' tiicates: Intraniur-mls' Patrol Late Traffic Lunchroom ' Squads' Varsity Track, Newman Travel, Tennis Clubs.- ff YT blllilltil. , - , 3 5 i sv ' u MCKINLISY, VIRGINIA-Bronze A , Honor Certifi- ' Cates, Chevrons, Secretary to Miss Berner, Yoemen of i. A the Guard , Girl Reserves, Dancing, Tennis, Glee Clubs. - Bu.imeJ.v. ' M EINCK, JOHN-Iimimar. MISINCKIE, JOSEPH-Service Certificate, Basketball, Foot- ' A ' G v ball, Indoor Baseball Intramurals, Patrol, Traffic Squads, Co-Chairman Class Night Committee, Secretary to Mrs. st- Mather, Health Iiducation Clerk, Key of Courtesy, Latin, Dramatics CTIUDS.-l'fIil'FV.til,1 uf IIHtl.libiI1gl1HI. MIENDOLIA, GIOVANNA-Bronze, Silver A's , Honor, Iixceptional Service Certificates, Secretary to Mrs. Greer, Miss Spadaccini, Mr. LaGuardia, Mr. Siegal, Mr. Mulli- gan, Miss Duffy, Miss Reuss, Miss Smith, Accounting, Health Education Offices, Lunchroom Squad, G.O. Store, Pin and Ring, Finance, Program Committees, Mary of 4- Scotlanduz Newman, Globe Trotters, Tennis, Swimming, 2 Dancing, Dramatics Clubs.-SI. jabn'J Ul1il'9I'.tilJ'. , v f' IF 1 ' s MIiY A I 'I, Traffic S - sg Economics, t A , Span! 1 ' an lege of I e it 0 ew I M- 514 MYLRS DOROTHH Honor Ceitihcitc Attcndince Of tice Secretary to Mr Morton Bxskctbrll Dincing Vol lcybxll Clubs BIIIIIIFJJ' if MICARONI, ANTHONY-Bronze Cooper L'11iof1. if ' MIIZDRFICH, HELEN-Junior, Senior Arista: Honor Certificates, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's , Meritorious Ser- vice Certificate, Secretary to Miss Reuss, Lunchroom Squad, Editor Beacon , Tennis, Leaders, Latin, Volley- s . ball, Basketball Clubs.-Hunley' College. ' 3' , .f , MA IIE I-Iono rtiticates, Secretary to r'. Ble' n, Mi g , Lunchroom, Library S c 'e h, S 'i Br anish, Biology Clubs.- P nr! :mimi MINORI, CONSTANCI2-Honor Certificates, Bronze A , General, Attendance Office, Newman, History, Stenogra- phy, Economics, Travelers, Volleyball, Dancing Clubs.- Pran lmlimfe. NITTLF, GLORIA-Meritorious Service Certificate, Junior P.S.A.L. Ping Attendance Office, Library Squad, Secretary to Mrs. Rosenman: Biology, Physiography, Travel, French, Swimming, Girl Reserves, Oil Painting Clubs.-Pipit: lu- IIIIIIIE. X E-a 'ziiia 5 X , 9 - -ANYON 1 L ' wD1ESEg-,, L1 2 V Glu' . X fig ea., if Qs? , H A N 'QW IVR ' 'E lr , p X -xv - 4 ,L 1 K LQ 3 Qf'f A . N x i TZ, gl K ,' 'Q ' E K4 , ,ix 'V g 'f , N '. 4-2 f 4 5 V X X lx 1. , 2 , ,K X E X f he ' N ,Q gl ir 'x i C' '3, 31 1 'K ML: 'N 'i QQQX. xg' 7 ,, 1 ,- , -W' f , , - N .- ,f f I, Q, ,, 'l.,H I , 0' 3 . fff Ap, ' ff' 9, ,,f 7, I f ff' V ff - a : T. X' bw' ,G .4 4 K .Z l A 'Sag--z Ag- . If bpd? Ann'-Y. g '- .x ' q X if I gl , 3 E gn m.!1wH ' 11 hi 1 gif .WS , S- Q1 BAE' WiWa :'t51NXv-nw ' uv XS N' we CCD ' JN T4 EE H ft f Jil6'4'f1' MOGENSEN, CHARLES-junior, Senior Arista, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's , Honor, Service Certificates, Traffic Squad, Travel, Globe Trotters Clubs.-Qnecnr College. I AIO INO, FRANUIS-Meritorious Service Certifi- . , P.S.1?.L. Pins: jtjdior, Senior Glee Clubs, Yeo- en of 'the Guars.lK 2 Socceqdiootbalf, Basketball Intra- fmurals, Geqffamf Newman Clubs.-Brfmklyz College. MONCEAU, ARTHUR-P.S.A.L. Pins, Lunchroom, Traf- fic Squad, French Club, Basketball, Soccer Intramurals, Aff- Biftlvfly Clubs.-New York Slale lllerclhznt Aldlllll' A1-.ide 11173 . MONK, XVILLIAINI-Baseball, Football. Basketball, Soccer Intramurals, Dean, Patrol, Study Hall Squads, Manager of Football Team, Clerk to Mr. Troyano, Mr. Camson, Mr. Spata, Newman, Key of Courtesy Clubs.-lifnimit. 13mi11c,s,v. MOORE, ROBERT-john Adams Band, Trarlic, lunch room Squads.-Burine5.r. MOORE, DANIEL-P.S,A.I., Pins, Baseball, Socccr In tramurals, Lunchroom Patrol, Physics, Newman Clubs MORIARTY, GISRTRUDIZ-junior Arista, Attendance Accounting Othces, Lunchroom Squad, Swimming Club.- DL'lL'j7tllIlj',l' Iflilillzle. ' N 51 MORRA, MlCHAliLfjunior Arista, Bronze A', Honor fr' Certificates, Lunchroom, Patrol, Tratlic Squads, Baseball, Football, Volleyball, Soccer Intramurals.-Bufinerf. Moiuus, A esml Arista, mm, Silver, Gold , A's 3 no ' til' ite: Meritori s, Exceptional Ser- vice ' Aca ,Att ts 'e Qdice Luncliroom Squad, R French, erman, XFirst cl Clubf uceur College. 6 Q. - T, MORRISSIEY, THOMAS--'l'rathc Patrol, Football Base- ball, Basketball Intramurals, Newman Club.-Bulilzerr. MOSKOXWITZ, SlDNFY--Lunchroom, Traftic Squads, Chemistry, judean Clubs. '--- Lung 1.rl.1r1d Lf1l1'erJiIy. MOTZ, XX'ARRFN4Distinguished Service Certificate, Sec- retary to Mr. Levine, Mr. Cronan, Poster Squad, Editor- ' i . 5' ' in-Chief Here 'n' There , Lunchroom, Assembly, Print s a' . Squads, Baseball Intramurals, Audition Cltlb.-B11.fif1eJJ. MUl.l.liR, Dcnais-,rumor Arista, Gold, saver, Bronze ' G A's , First, Second Honors, Term Medal, junior, Senior life Savin ' PSAI Medils' Mror Minor Icttcrs' I . -. g, .., .1 , , Chevrons, junior, Senior P.S.A.l., Pins, Lunchroom, Program Committees: Spanish, Swimming, Basketball, Tennis, Leaders' cillllWS.-ABILI1IIL',l'.l'. MUNGFR, MIRIAM-Service Awards, Chevrons, Minor Letter, P.S.A.l.. Pins, junior Life Saving, Secretary to Mrs. Fyfe, Mrs. Ferguson, Library, Attendance Ollices, Lunchroom Squad: Prom Committee, Tennis, Basketball, Volleyball, First Aid, Girl Reserves, Physiography Clubs. Y I'.u'lt'r Illllfflllf. MURPHY, REGINA-Senior, junior Arista, A's , Honf . mr or, Service Certilicatesg P.S.A.I.. Pins, Attendance, Publi- 1 cation Otliees, Trial by jury , Ye-omen of the Guards , , ,. Sergeant Lunchroom Squad 1 Swimming, Glee Clubsf- ' ' ' IKIIUIIUII. , ,iv , MIVFSCHIZR, LISA-Honor Certificate, Secretary to Miss COIIWJYL Lunehroom Squad, Dancing, Basketball Clubs.- . K ifjfu, C' Q 'U lillilmwi. 'Shiite MUTZ, STUART-Art Othccg Art Supply Squad, Clip- per,l' Campus Art Staffs, Etching, Oil Painting, Poster, Life Drawing Clubs.-Ar! SlIldL'IIl.l' Lcllgize, NADFI., HFRHIZRT-P.S.A.l.. Pins, junior Orchestra: Lunchroom, Patrol Squads, Baseball, Basketball, Football IllfflllllllfillS.+Bll.fiIlE'.H, NALDRli'l'T, FRANCIES-I3niim'u. NAPOLEON, ALIC12+Bronze A , Honor Ccrtiticates, Lunchroom Squad, Secretary to Dr. Cusack, Speech Of- tice, Dramatics Cllnb.-Bnrirlwf. ' 7, .- -.K . I is. 5 .1 -l 07,0 i, A '1 .4 0 , 2 my LN ig 'l N If LSON, ALBERT-B1u'iz1e.o. NELSON, ROBERT-Tratlic, Patrol, Lunchroom, Late, Lockerroom Squads: P.S.A.L. Pins: Secretary to Mr. Troy- ano, Mr. Tobias: Basketball, Football, Soccer Intramurals, Physics, Newman Clubs.fS!. jnlfzfr LLlIjI't'7'.iif-1, NIEDZIELSKI, FlZLlXAP.S.A.L, Pins: Football, Baseball, Basketball Intramurals: Patrol, Trathc, Dean Squads, Sci- ence, Idle Hour Clubs.-Bniizlrfii. NIEVUIEROSKI, HELIZN-Second Honors Certificate, Lunchroom, Library Check Room Squads: G.0. Repre- sentative, Newman, Spanish, Volleyball, Chemistry Clubs. -Nln're,i' TI'.Ii71iII,Q'. NILES, KATHLEEN-junior P.S.A.L. Pin: Tennis, First Aid, Swimming Clubs.WNeu' York lmlirulu uf Iiivlelirr. NILL, PEARL-junior, Senior Arista, Bronze, Silver, Gold A's : Honor, Meritorious Service Certilicatesg Spanish Certihcates, P.S.A.l.. Pins: Chevrons: Lunchroom Squad: Secretary to Miss Smith: 'Trial by jury, Yeo- men of the Guard , Glee, Basketball, Leaders, Softball, First Aid, Swimming Clubs.-llmzler Collvgtz NILSEN, RUTH-junior Arista: Bronze AU: Honor Certificates, junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pins: Senior Class Secretary: Secretary to Mr. Riley, Mrs. Clemens: G.O. Store, Lunchroom Squad: French, Dramatics, Tennis, Leaders, Swimming Clubs.-Milt Dllllbillll Srlmol for Gif-li. NlLSlfN, VUILLY-Baseball, Football, Soccer, Volleyball Intramurals: P.S.A.L. Pin, Secretary to Mr. Rosenbloom: Lunchroom, Traffic, Patrol, Bookroom, Deans Squads, Hi-Y Clllh.LBIl.l'iIIt'.i,l'. NORTON, DONALD-Meritorious Service Certificate: P.S.A.L. Ping Sport Intramurals: Dean's, Patrol, Lunch- room, Clipper Art, Lost and Found Squads: Newman Clubf --Iiniimu r. ii is I NURGIE, ANNIE-Chevrons: Secretary to Mrs. Halley, General, Attendance Offices: Lunchroom Squad, Dancing, Tennis, Swimming, Volleyball, German, Tironian, New- man, Basketball Clubs:-Pina' Izzililnlv. Q'DONNliLL, HIZLIZN-Second Honors, Publications Of- hce: French, Newman, Basketball Clubs.-Bniizzuo Srlwul. 0'HARli, lRlfNlZ--Bronze A g Second Honors: Secre- tary to Miss Reuss: Swimming Club.-lifziimiir Srboul. OHR, AIOSIEPH- -Honor Qertiticates: junior Arista: Bronze AU: Lunchroom, Trathc Squads: Travel, Dramatics Cllixbs.---Cfmlinr' Ivllfflll. OLSIZN, XY'Al.TlfR-P.S.A.L, Pins: Lunchroom Squad.- lin.iim.o. OLSON, HliI.liN-Proticiency Pins: Girl Reserves, Bas- ketball, Volleyball Clubs,-IN'1n',iei' Tl'.Ijl1ill,U. 5 W .fi OSBERG, NAROARlf'l'fSeCond Honors, Service Certili- - cares: junior, Senior P.S.A,l.. Pins: junior, Senior Life SP- , Saving Minor, Major Letters: All-Around Medal: Chev- rons: Attendance Otlice: Swimming, Volleyl'vall, Tennis, K Baseball Clubs,---17414fi.1r1l'1',i lznfilnle. 1 OSTAPUK, -IOHN'-'Mc-ritorious, Iixceptional Service Cer- V tihcatesg Baseball, Soccer, Football Intramurals: junior, 1: Senior Orchestra: Tratlic, Lunchroom Squads: Chemistry, ,r ' A Physiography ClLilis.fl5l1,ii11t',s,i. 5, Pl3.l.lX1liRllNl, MATILDA'-Attendance, Household Arts ' ' Ot ices: Lunchroom Squa l: Bailsetball, Basebill, S V ' ' clllll5S.'Hllljllc'U. A N N I vumlmns PANE, VlRGlNlAfSecretary to Mrs. Olson: General Organization Store: Attendance Otiiceg First Aid, Tennis c,lUhS.--filllllIt,',t,li, Q .- if 5' i V , ' . , fi -,I PAPl NS' , A.l.Blg?'k-Deai1's .u chroom Squads: R HWS' - Wi liyfjllllglll . I. jab: 1' lf'i1i1'e11i'il,i. A PATRIEY, ARTHUR-Basketball, Baseball Squads: Gold Medals, Basketball, Baseball, Football: Silver Medals Base- fl ball, Football: P.S,A.L. Pins: Patrol, Tratlic Squads: Newman Cltlh.--Vlilriifltir. mi ,v ' 'i s PA'l l'liRSON, lfTHlil,---junior Arista: Bronze, Silver A's : Honor, Service Certificates, Lunchroom Squad, Metal Craft Cltih.-fl311fir1e.i'x, ' PELUSO, INIILDRED-Service Certihcatesq P.S.A.L. Pins: Mr. Patterson's, Attendance Otlicesg Lunchroom Squad: Swimming, Tennis, Newman, Basketball Cllll7S,-'BINllIL'J.t'. PENNISI, VINCENT--junior, Senior Arista: Bronze, Silver, Gold A's : Meritorious, Exceptional Service Cer' titicates: Spanish Proficiency Pins: Basketball, Football, Baseball Intramurals: Boys' Corrective Room Clerk: jun- ior, Senior Orchestra: Cafeteria, Bookroom Squads: Class Night Program: Member of Latin Congress: Latin Con- test: Cheering Squad: President of Latin, Spanish, New- man ClLll3S.'1G'607'.QL'lllll'I1 !'!IfI'L'l'JfIw1'. PENTIECOST, DAVID-Meritorious Service Certificate: Patrol, Chemistry, Tratiic, Lunchroom Squads: Attendance Ofliceg Newman Club.-SI. jllbllhl' L i1i1'er'.ii1-3. PERRUCCI, ANTOINliTTli-Honor Certilicateg Secretary to Miss Howes: Attendance, Household Arts, Stenography Othcesg Fashions and Footlights, Basketball, Baseball, Volleyball, Tennis, Swimming, Newman Clubs,--MCDUHH ell Dtiligllflllif School. PETERSIEN, KENNETH-Dean's, Patrol Squads: English Bookroom: Accounting Orlice.--liziiizzeu. PETERSEN, LILLIAN-dSecretary to Miss Egan: Modern Language Office: Tennis, Basketball, Girl Reserves Clubs. liltiflleia. S ,Q PICKETT, DOROTHY-Bronze, Silver A'S g Second Honor Certificates, P.S.A.l.. Pin, Attendance Office.- l3lr,riz1e,rf. PIERCE, Gl2ORGlifSoccer, Baseball, Basketball Intra- murals, Lunchroom, Traflic Squads, Science Clllll-Hlllb nerr. PIETROFORTE, OLYINIPIA-Second Honor CertifiCateQ P.S.A.L. Pin, Publications Oflice: Basketball, Swimming, Newman, Spanish, Volleyball Clubs.-Burirzerr, PIRONDE, JOHN-Baseball, Football, Basketball Intra- murals, Patrol, Traffic, Garden, Lunch Squads, Science, Key of Courtesy Cliibs.-Iifnizzeu, PITTIUS, JOYCE-Junior, Senior Arista: Honor Certifi- cate: Bronze, Silver, Gold A's , Meritorious Service Certificate, Acounting, Grade Advisers, Secretarial Offices, Program Committee, Secretary to Miss Riordon, Miss Spadaccini, Mr. Mulligan, Miss XX'ick, Mr. Riley, Swim- ming, Tennis, Dancing, Girl Reserves Clubs, Treasurer of Girl Reserves.-Bzonzeo. PORTOLANO, FLORENCIZ-junior Arista, Service Cer- tificatesg Picture Committee, Music, Grade Advisers, Attendance Offices, Secretary to Miss Leary, Miss Berner, Yeomen of the Guard , Newman, Swimmin', Basketball, Dancing Clubs.-United Slater SL'l'fL'l.lfiJl Srliool. PRAGFR, HAROl.DfHonor, Service Certificates, Varsity Soccer, Silver Basketball, Baseball Medal, Second Place Queens Basketball Contest, Sportscasting, Sportscope Clipper Contributor, Major, Minor Letters, Lunch, Traflic, Patrol Squads, Publications Oflice, Gymnasium Clerk, Glee, judean ClllhS.-Alil'l7i,Q.1H Stale IN'm'm.il. QUARTAROLO, THERESA-Secretary to Miss Berner, 2. QUICK, BERNARD-Gold, Silver Medals Football, Bas- ketball lntramurals, Basketball, Baseball Squads.-Dele- b.m19'i Imrimre. QUINN, ALICE-wP.S.A.L. Pins, junior 'Life Saving, Secretary to Mr. Moselyg Tennis, -Swimming, Newman, Basketball, Volleyball Clubs.-Burnzerf, QUINN, DIZNIS-junior Arista, Bronze, Silver A's , Honor Certificates, Basketball, Soccer, Football Intramur- als, General Otficeg Traliic, Lunchroom, Patrol Squads, Newman, Talk of the Town Clubs.-Burinerr. RANDAZZO, ANNETTE-Service Certificate, Program Committee, Mr. Machlowitz's Oflice, Secretaryito Miss Wickman, Girl Reserves, Leaders' Clubs.-Blmneff. RATH,lliN, ANNA-Bronze, Silver, Gold A's , First, Second Honors Certificates, Accounting Office, Secretary to Miss Spadaccini, Luncliroom Squad, Newman, Dancing Clubs.-Iiufincir. RISDANZ, ALVA-Junior Arista, Honor Certificates, Trial by jury , Luncliroom Squad, Art, Glee Clubs.- Pmll If1,ilil11Ic'. Miss Seeley, Trial by jury , Yeomen of the Guard , Glee, Newman Cliibs,-Bniirzerr. Q Q' 'P- E- it g RlilCHGO'l'T, STANLEY-P.S.A.L. Pins, Baseball, Foot- ball, Basketball lntramurals, Major A for Football, Meritorious Service Certificate, Lunchroom, Traffic, Patrol Squads, junior Draniatics, Football, Debating Clubs.- Syxzvlriu LlIlfl4'I'.lf1J'. RHINHARDT, BEATRICE-Honor Certiticate, Attendance, Grade Advisers Utlices, Secretary to Miss Wick, Mrs. Olson, Travel, -ludean, Secretarial Studies, Swimming Cllll3S.-BllJ'lIlL'J'.S'. RIZKOXWICZ, AURIELIA-Second Honors Certificatesg At- tendance Otiice, Secretary to Mr. Morton, Program, Prom Committees: Lunchroom Squad, Newman, Basketball, Volleyball, Dancing Clubs.-liniirleff. R li YNOLDS, BIARG AR ET-Attendance Otiice.-Biuiflen. Rlfllj, JOHN--Distinguished Service Awards, Lunchroom, Trathc, Patrol Squads, Physics Club.-Burinerr. RICHIERT, HELEN- -junior Arista, Bronze, Silver A's , Honor Certiticates: Program Committee, Secretary to Mrs. Bl'AlllCllCI'p-Bl!iiI1t:'.f,i', RlliSTliR, HELEN-Honor Certificate, Lunchroom Squad, liasketball clllll3.?Blllflll',U'. Rlli'l'HlilMliR, VIOLET-junior, Senior Arista, Gold, Silver, Bronze A's , Honor Certificates, junior Life Saving, Minor A , Senior, junior P.S.A.L. Pins, Chev- rons, Cafeteria, Library Squads, Finance, Publicity Com- mitteesg Latin, Dancing, Basketball, Newman, Swimming Clubs.-V fSu'.1r'lfw1m'e College. RILEY, VERONICA-Senior, junior Arista, Gold, Silver, Bronze A's , First, Second Honors, Secretary to Mr. Riley, Mr. Yourman, Economics Otiice, Lead in The Drums Roll On, Taming of the Shrew , Mary of Scotland , Senior Day Activities, Tennis, Dramatics Clubs. -Dranzalirr Scbool. ROMANO, GRACE-junior Arista, Bronze A , Honor Certiticates, Secretary to Dr. Cusack, Miss Spadaccinig Speech, Accounting Offices, Newman, Tironian, Globe Trotters ClllbS.-BIIJ'ilIt,'.i'.t', ROMANO, MARIE-Bronze A , Honor Certificates, Attendance Othce, Newman ClUl7.+I3lI.l'iII6.I'I. 1 ROSBNBERG, HIENRIIETTA-Attendance Ofiice, Latin, Judean, Poster, Etching Cllll3S.11xvl1!',lL'.i Training. ROTMAN, DOROTHY-Secretary to Mrs. Schwartz, Miss DeKerney, Art, Attendance, Language Offices, Span- ish Fiestas: Metal Craft, Spanish Clubs.-College of fbe Ciiy of New York. ROTTGER, XX7ILI.IAM-ffGold, Silver, Bronze As , Cap- tain of Cross Country, Track Teams, Major A's : Pa- trol Squad, Spike Shoe Club.-Sl, jflllllhl' L'r1i1'er.ii1y. RUZALSKI, SOPHIE - -luniur Arista: mum Ni ur J AS , Parka nml Il.lygi'ui1mlx fur wi Cummur lfanny Awzlrilg Humrr, Scrvicc Cicrtilizgitcn NL FLIIIN Miss Finn, Mr. Rusurilwlmnu, Mrs. Al11I'L'L1 uni Arts, Pulwliciitiuns Otliccsg ligisclmll, lhslcnt 1 NPIIIIN! Newman ClL1l'1s,fl511ii11ur. RUBINO, NICHOLAS- l.llI1L'llfl7HIl1, P.itrnl Nui in mil. - Rl'CKS'l'l'Hl., HIENRY 'l'mtlic, l.um'lmu Saul sf -5, Y linwlmill, Fimtlmll, l'mskctIw.ill Cllulmf linizm RLTF 'lf, li li ' mira. SL-rvicc flcrtihnitu Iuici mm . , atm, I3 'linli Bmmkmmii, Chu ixr r .lr.itimi' Squgulaz blllklbkll ilI1i5l, clmting, L I 4l1ii u'i!l,1. 4- ,. -4-J Rl'l,li, FRANCIS li.iskctlv.lll, l5.iwlw.ilI Intiin ll iw. lull Varsity: lliiijur AK , 'l'1x1tlic Squni vi hc. 1 liislu-tlw.ill, f,vIl!llIlIfRl.l l'1111uii11 ,At , Rl'SSO, MARYH -lunim' Aristu limiizc Suuml llunui' CL'I'lillC'AllL'5.' flmllir Cfwffi-qi, -Wizfsvmrvvwmssfwfwwf-w mf I .6. RYAN, -IAINIIESA-Hcmor Ccrtilifntcsg Biiselmll, Basketball lIlfl'ilH1llI'LllS1 Traivn-I Cllulm' -flizziizzmf. RYAN, DIOSICPH lilllillfll, J 5 . V -Y SACCABIANU, Slfl5AS'l'lAN--'l'l'zlHiC Squalalg Art, Physi- nglxipliy cillll7S. HlllflIL'vl, QAG.Gli5li, .IYOSIEPH-Bnnwc Ang Honor, Meritorious SCFVIKL' Ccrtilicaltusg Grade Ailviscr's Officeg Sccrctiiry to Mr. Yuurmim,-V-l7ulul1.1111m's lllilllllly, cr, 4. -va - 4 V I 3... 5 SALVATO, ROCKQO lilsclxill, lfootlwall, Socccr, Baslxct- lwall Intramurals, Lunclirooin, Tralllt, Patrol Squatlsg Naw- man Clulvf-Sl. julvfi Fuilwiilj, SAl.VliSliN, LOUIS- Svconil Honors Crrtilicatcsg l.uncl1- rooin Squatlf lllriizlu-'. SANDLER, DORA-fHonor Certificate, l.uncln'ooin Squatl Tironian, hluilcan, Dancing Clubs.--Huiim1i,r. SAPPIE, ROBIERT-Meritorious, Exceptional, SL-rvicc Cox'- lilicatcsg First Honors for Public Speaking Parks and l'Iaygrounds g Baskctlwall, Baseball, Footlwall, Soccer lntra- A murals: Deans Biology. Spr.'c:l1 Otliccsg Lunclirooin, 'fratlic Squads, Locker Room Patrolg Clicci' Lcailcrg Atli- ' In-tit Announcer: Mary of Scotland , Romeo anal Juliet , 6, ty . CQliristinas Carol . A Rn-al 'l'llLllIlKSl.LlYlll1.1H, The Boy xxllhllllljlllilln, 'I'l1c Rivals , Abraham l,inColn , XX'its 'ik' X linrl', l7ivc for Hall Luck , Chairman of Class Niglitg , Stamp, Airplane Clubs. P.n'i.mf Irzililnlu, F SffAfiCilAl7l',RRU, lfl.lZAlilf'l'H--lNlcrittbrious Scl'YiCC CAT- El titicatcg ,lunior l'.S,A.l.. Ping Sccrctary to Mrs. Matlicrg Luncliroom Squarlg Glcu, Basclwall, Swimming Clulus, '- liniiur 1 u, SCl lAl7FlfR, MAY---Senior, junior Aristag Goltl, Silver, ' Bronze A's g First, Scfonrl Honors, Meritorious, lfxf Q' ' 6 ccptional Scrvicw Clurtiliratcsg Minor, Maior A's g l.catl- N f . X. A-v ers l. g Chcvronsg l'.S.A.L. Pins, All-Arountl Athletic Pinsg German Pinsq Lunclmrooin. Scrvicc Squatls: English fJlllLL'Q Sccrctary to Mr. Golrlstcing Rcprcscntativc G.A.A. Counrilg Sccrct.iry of Gr-rinan, French, liconomics, Volley- lwall. l'l.islcL-tlmlll, liasclwall, liarlminton, l.c.ulcrs, Dancing. Softball, Dramatiqs Clulws, lirunllm Cfvlfvlqe, 'effp' H fi - SCQHl.AGli'l'lER, XX'll.l.lAlXl----So1'cr1'. Vollcylwall lz1t:.'n1ui alsg Luncliroom, Tralllc Squatlsf Hlfiimii, is Q5 I Sf,H'l:OT'l'lNlAN, lflI.lfliN-Bronzu AH: Honors. Suiwicc , C,CI'lll1C2llCSQ Household Arts, Atta-ntlancc, Gr-nural Ollifi-sg Asscmbly Programs: Secretary to Mrs, Lyons, Miss Lit- tvll: Marionette, Newman, Footliglit antl Fashions, Cos- tume Illustration Cliilws.----1311-imii. SCHMIDT, XVIl.lNIA+Sccrc-t.lry to Miss Riortlang Motlurn l.anguagc Dc-partmcnt, Basketball, Volleyball, Sofia-r.tii.iI ClLibs.-IS1z.ii11e,vy, A trol, l.uncl1rooin Sqiiarls.--lifriimri, SCHNECKIZNBORGIER. XX'll.l.lAM l',S,A.l.. Pins: Pa- Squmlg 'l'ii'nni.xn Ciluh. lifnirltw. Shllsfsl DI'.lXX'lllj.I, lftching, Oil lliinting filuhs. lm!! If ififnn. SCZHOLI., GIZURCIIZ--P.1trnl, 'I'i'.1llic Sqimtlsg Assuinlwly l'i'ngi'.iinsg Cilcc- Cilnlw, HIIIIIILN. SClHRlfIl5lfR, lil.lfANOR Mr. l'.itlci'sun's Othccg Lunch rnnllt Sqimtlp Swimming, Tennis, Girl llcsc-wc-s, H.isl-an-I lull, Vullcyhgill Ciluhsf lslllillifll. SCHRIVER, NX'Al.'l'lER l,.S.A.l,. Pins: 'l'i'.lttic, l'.lti'ul l.unchrnuin Squads. f-Hn-fmt., 5fiHR0l'DlfR, CATHlfRlNlff-hlunini' Arishtl lillrilfc A Sccund Hunursg l.uncln'num Squmlg Biology Utliccg Gi-r main, SVk'iI11I11lllg Clluhs. Qmwn ffulluqqc. Sqmulsf HlllflIc l, SCQHl'l.'l'Z, ,IOSEPH flinsclmll, Funtlmill. Bxxslwthnll ln- tiuiniurulsz Oracle Atlviscris Othcci Ncwinnn. Spanish 5 ' Lluhs. ll i1frm t flulifurzi, p . K A b 5C1llNX'AR'l'Z. Tll.l.lli-V--.Iuniiw Arising Brnnzc, Silxcr. Gnltl A's g First, Sccuml Hnnnr ciL'I'flllCQllCS1 Ucrin.nn Prnticicncy Pins: Clicvmiisg Scqrctaliy to Mrs. Byriic-s, C l Miss Titus, Miss Falznnc, Mr. Gmssg -luninr ilcc, hu- tlcnun, GL-rnmn, licnnninigs, Trilvcl, Glnhc Trnttrrs. Bisc- h.1ll, Dancing, Svtimniing. Physical Science Cluhsf- liwwi- fl!! fffllfulqa. . SffHXX'll.K. lil.l.A' Hunan' Cfcl'titiciltc-sz SL'L'l'L'l.lI'y tn Mrs. 1- Austin, Dr. Ctisalclu l.uncl1riunn Squatlg Tennis, lircnclm .519 liluhs, Nlrrwi' 'l4P'.IjPIllI.Q. SKQOCA, Ri7Sli'- Honor. Spanish Certificate.: l.u'1clnnun1, l I Q l.il'1rnry Squiulsg Spanish, French, Ncwnmn Clluh. llnu- K ltr f,'uHL'.Q4'. - SCQO'l l'. Rluliltlf-Attumlancc Othccl Seci'c-'airy tn hl'ss ,i i , l Bl'L'IlIl1ll1, Mrs. Liimhc-i't: Bzlskcthull CQli1h.f-liffvizlwi. 6 I 5Cl4Dlilil, Hlfl.liNw --Bronze Aug Hunnr, SL- vim' Curtili- ' c.lIL'S1 Spanish Pmliciuiicy Pinsg Secretary tn Mr. Mould: Art Olhccq l.uncl1romn Squaltlg 'I'riill hy luryq: Num- ' nun, Mcml Arts ilntl Crafts, Glcc Cluhsf 'QNLTIII f,.fIllL'vQL, SCQHNl2IDliR, KATHIQRINIZ- -Suimimg ,luninr Aiism: Gnltl. Silvc-V, lirnnzc '4A's 1 First, Sc-cnntl llUIl4IlN1 l.untln'nnni SCfHNlflDlfR, Rl l'H Sc'cl'L't41lty In Mrs. lii'.mnlni'. linin- Nall. SfiHOlfNl7lil.D, MIfYlfR -- CQ.unpus . Hfilippc-1 Ai 7 I SCHIQB, HliRBliR'l' f-liiisc-hull lllfl'AllNLlI'.llNQ P.itrnl, l..1tt ous .Qt'v' C' il'f91CI!fCS1 'first onogs, Pft1'lis and l'Ia riun s Spa li Cikqyeftg Fx' cli 'PlutIu'll'll1ttoii1 Qlellgjtil lN r. Ciurufin, 'r, U'Fll1ea,' Mr, Slyieldsg Service SLILIMQ 'V rsh' Track eam PrS.A.L, 'IX Edalg Campus S V: ippgtu Cfvigtlibutofg 'l'rax'el,4 r ewman Cllubs. L ff 'riff UM Cixi nf Nui' Yuri. SHAMAN, lfDNA Attendance, Grade Adviser's Ollicesg N J H l.uncliroom Squad: lfinanee Committee, Newman, Fias- ketlwall, Volleyball, l5asebalfl,x 'I'enn'is Qhilws.-.l511.i1flt'ii. Slylfli JLIHAIH l'S llrotilf S1lifl'if A,'5 7ylyiiiN'4 Mer- iii o ft' I SGAMHATI, FRANK--Honor, Meritorious Service Cler- tilicatesg l'.S.A.l., Pins, Basketball, Baseball, Soccer ln- tramuralsg lfditor-in-Cluef of Cainpus 1 Ciliairman ol' Senior Publicity Coininitteeg German, Latin Clubs. ffm- flufl laliiwijlni. SHANNON, CLARA---lunior. Senior Arista, Bronze, Sil- ver, Gold A's 1 Honors, Meritorious Service Certilieates: Seeietary to Miss Kuhn. Mrs. Fyfe: Accounting Otliieei Luncliroom Squadg Dancing, Baslu.'tball, Leaders, Spanish Clubs. ljalzfklllflii luililllle. SllAllCiHNliSSY, IAQDXYARD- Honors Certilieateg lien- ' noniies Otlifeg Trallie. l.unclu'oom Squads, Rille, l7i'em'li Clubs, liniim ii. SHliFl7llil.D, XX'll.l.lAMf-Senior Arista: Bronze A , Honors, Distinguished Service Certificates: Major Letter: l'i'esident of General Organization, Key of Courtesy, Hi-Y, Public Speaking, Debating Cllibs.--fllirl1ig.1f1 51.114 l'r1i1'uriili SHlilN, MARTIN--l.uncli Basketball Intramurals, 'l'ironian Clu i,q.,wXS1.11.i l'ui1driitwi. SHl'lil.l., MARGARIYI3-Bronne, Major, Minor ASU: P.S.A.l.. Pins, Secretary to Miss Reuss, Mrs. Fyfe: Danc- ing, Basketball, Volleyball, First Aid, Swimming, Hase- ball, Newman Cliibs.---limizlcii, SHl'l.MAN, DOROTHY -Honor, Meritorious, lfxception- al, Distinguished Service Certilicates, Secretary to Mr. LaGuardia, Mr. Sieigalp Luncliroom Squad, Serretary of CLO. Store, Tennis, Leaders, Swimming Clubs, 'Deli'- fi.nlli'i luililnlu. SHURMAN, ,IOHNV l'.S.A.l.. Pins, Football, liaseball, Basketball Intramurals, Color Guards: Patrol, Trallit, Deans Squadsg Secretary to Mr. Devinsg Key of Courtesy, Science, Idle Houi' Clubsf -liniiuwi, SIDDONS, DOROTHY- P.S.A.l., Pins, .junior lafe Sav- ing, Secretary to Mrs. Olson, l.unCl1room Squad, Publi- rations Otlice: Newman Cliib.---l511iii1wi, SlliFl5R'l', MARION junior, Senior l'.S.A.l.,g Senior Day Ciommilteeg Secretary to Mr. Yourman, Mr. Breiuiiiigei'. Mr. Hoppg Swimming, Globe 'l'rottei's, Newman, German Clubs, Bniim'-i. Sllililfl., LllCll.l.li---junior, Senior P.S.A.l., Pinsg Minor Letter, junior Swimming Ping Leaders lf: Service Cer- tilicates: Secretary to Miss Langdon, Mrs. Daniels, Mrs. Halley, Leaders, Tennis, Basketball, Volleyball, Swimmini.g, Dancing, Biology Cliibs.-Afidulpfli Cfullegv. Sll.VlfRSTlflN, HAROLD V-Silver. Bronze A's , Honors, A 4 Meritorious, Distinguished Service Certificates, junior, Senior Orcliestrasg Clipper Contributor, Glee, Iludean, lironomics, Frencli Clubs. -fullliard Srlmnl uf llllllllf hll.Vl:5'IRI, CilfORCili -Seniiir Arista, lliiiiiws, Dixtiiihigf uialietl Service Clerticiitesg -Iunnir. Seniur Orcliesttxig Ilhllhll Music Appreeiatinn Cflulm' .Yin Yuri 171110:-llwi. G., J- SIMONli'l I'l, MARIE SL'Cl'Cl.lI'y tu Ixiisx Ciuiiwaly, Bliw XX'etter.iu, Mrs. Ainreielig I.unCl1rnuin 5qu.nl1 Vulleylmill, liisketlmll, Swinuning, Dllllkillljj Cilulws. I7tfi'f1.11ll1'.i lu- lllllllci SINGER, AI.IiRIiD- Bronze, Silver AKAI Serxire Cler- titieutes: Varsity 'I'ri1ck, Crum Country, hnuer 'I'e.unx, IXIJIUI' AS , I.llIlLIl, 'I'r.1tIie. P.ltriil Squmla, IllIl'1ll11lll'.llNl Secretary tn Mr. Mnrseg -Iuileiin Club. lifniznii. 5I.A'I'I:R, CQHARI.IfS IIe.1ltIi Iiklllklllltill Cilellcg Nexxinin Clulvf- liniimwi, SMIGIfI.SKA, FRANCIS? Himniw. Service flertilii'.lte.g First. Seumml I'.S.A.I..g Sennir, -luninr I.it'e Suvingg At- tentliuice, Hnuxeliultl Arts Otlices: Secretary In Miss XX'er- slmlag l.L1ncln'nui1i Squmlg -Iuninr Prom Clmninitteeg Nea- nmn, Iilslcetlmll, Vnlleylxlll, Tennis. Dancing Cluln, Hlliflleu. SMITH, ANITA Aluniur, Seniur Aristap lhuiize, Silver, Cinltl ASH Hunnr, Meriturinus, Ifxteptituml f'e1'x'it'e Cer- tificates: P.S,A.I.. Pins: Spiumli Term Metl.il1 Spninisli I'ruliciem'y Pins, Pi'ugi'iiin, Finnnee Cunmiittees, I.iIwr.uy. I.uncIii'mun Squatlsg Liuin II.If. Otlices: Secretary In Miv Smith, Mixs Reu:-N, Mr. Mitltlletnn, Mrs. M,itIur. Miss INIeiiney, Mrs. Austin, Mrs. Keenan, Spanixli, I..l in, Ililllllll Cilulwsf Qlrecni c,vflllL'.Qt'. SMITH, ANNA' 'SL'L'l'C'iAll'y tn Mr, Burnsg Lilwriiry Squ.1tI: Ciermitn, Newnigui, I'lnwingri1pliy Cllulws. 'N1nici' 'l'r.ii111r1-g., SMITH, CLIFFORD Iilwriiry, Patrol, Dean, Tmtlie Squatlsg Newman filulwx. 'l'e.li'fiw'i' 'I'v'.liu111.q. SMITH, l5DXVARDf5ecuntI Honors Certilirntcg SUCLKCI I IIllI'.lllllll'.ll5. Iiniirlerr. I 4. SMIIH, I-IIfI.IfN--V-P.S.A.I.. Pinsg Vluniur I.il'e Saving I Minor Hixlil Newman, Iieimninics, Law, Swinuning, liais- lxetlmll, Vulleylmill Clulwsf fliniimfii. I SOHI., HIiI.IiN General, AttentI.lnce Oticesg Volleylmll Clulx- lilriiuui. SOIIIDAY, jOHNfBinIngy, Lunclirnnm, P.itroI Squads, G.O. Stureg Health Iiilticntimi Clerkf 'lIll,l'jIIL'.fi', SI'IiIiD, VIUHN Bronze A , Hnnnrs, INIeritnrious Ser- vice Awartlsg French Honor Pins: Fuuthiill, Baseball, Bas- ketlmill, SUCCCI' Iiitimmiiuilsg Pulwlicutiuns, Latin Otfifesl Copy Desk Iiilitm' of UCLIIIIPLISUQ Senior Picture, Publicity Cmnmittees: I.unclinmm. Trutlic Squads, Key of Courtesy. Newiniin, Swiinining Cliibs.-Qnwrzi College, ib- SPIISGEI., FRANK-fSewmI Honors, Secretary to Mr Dooley: IIlll'1ll'I1Lll'klI AR , Guld Biisclmll AS , Var- sity Iizislxetlwilll 'IiL'.lIT1,1IIlllffIUYI. S'l'AKl7Wl'l'Z, LFNA--junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Finsg Sef- retary to Mrs. Fyfeg Dancing, German, Basketball, Swim- ming ClL1bs.+li1fi1l1t,l.i. S'l'ANl.liY, FRANCES--junior Aristag Bronze, Silver As g llonor, lixceptional Service Pinsg P.S.A.L. Metlal3 Minor AH: L , junior Life Saving: Attentlanee, Music' Ulliiesg Serietary to Mrs. Keenang Iainclirooin Squailg l'rogi'ain Cfomniitteeg YL-onien of the Guartlug Basket- ball, Dancing, Swimming, Leatlers, Glee Clubsf--l511.i'iu1c,o, I nf Sllzll' .K SMIQQXN'-41111 'or Aristag Financial Commit- te LI iroqki Squ.ulgllY:irst Aitl, Biology, Chemistry, P r. yf'9l3iLlm.i.i.Q llbs.-'-lX'.Ilf7cl'fl1L' Gifzfu Sc'rri'l.n'i.1f ' l i J l A S'l'lilN, IRI.liY--Fulications cllllflfl -lutlean, Spanish, Freneli, ancing, Volleyball, Tennis, Marionette Clubs, - ,Xl ii 'url lillil iliifi. , ' N S, .IZAB ' flunior, Senior Aristag Bronze M . floor ' itor'o vice C lifat S l l0l',.SCI1- ?r Pb .l.. Pins' r ife Savin , ' . ' quad, 'rt , Attemlal tlicesg French, irl H ' erves Swim- in' ij, S -nior .matifs, Secretarial i s.---Binh . STIQRN, ROBERT-Bronze A 1 Honors, Distinguislietl Service Certificates' Foothill lntr-imurlls' Trallic S nail' , . . . . , . . q , l'l.l:. Clerkf- Qllt'a'l1,l' Cffillqqu. S'l'lfRNlfiK, LFNORE Honors Cel'tilic.ltL-sg Prize Speak- ing Cfontestg Contributor to Blue and XVliite g Secretary to Mrs. Raeliinow, Mrs. Yaller, Miss Xwickg hlotlern languages, Attendance Otlicesg l.llIlCl1l'00I'1l Squadg -lu- .lean, lironomics, Draniatirs, French, German, Swimniin' filLllWN:'-lllllllil' College. Sil'Rl'M, Mll.'l'ON4CIaptain of Soccer Team: Secretary ' to Mr. Spata, Mr. 'l'royano, Mr. Lappg Goltl, Sorter, Basketball Intramural lNIedals.-1311-ifmrr, . K '- S'I-'UMPliR, HAZFI.fl-Sronze, Silver A's g Honor Cer- tihcatesg junior, Senior P.S.A.L. Pinsg Travel, Biology, Girl Reserves, Metal Craft ClLibs.Wl3nsir1e,i,i. SUMMFRBIELL, ROBERT- Stamp, Airplane Cllll7S.-1lll.li- 11911. SUPIZRTI, ANGFLINA--Bronze Ang Honor CL'l'llllC1llCSQ French, Newman Clulus.-limiazeiy. SNX'lfENFY, DOROTHY-junior Aristag Broiue, Silver A's g First, Second Honorsg Tennis Clllh.-i'lIlI.V: '. Col- leer' .s- SYVFRTSFN, THELMA--Meritorious Service Certilicateg P.S.A.L. Pinsg Junior Life Savingg Secretary to Miss Kuhn, Mrs. Halleyg Luncliroom Squad: Tennis, Swimming Clubs. -1li'U'fej'.r l3,'on1u,iJ Srluwl. TESSIIER, LEONARD-Silver, Bronze F.S.A.l.. Pinsg Baseball, Basketball Intramuralsg Biology, Late, Patrol, Campus Squadsg Hi-Y Club.-Bnuiueo. 'I'Hl'Nl2l.l., MILDRED --'Mcrit1v1'im1s Scrvicc CL-r'tiliv:.ltcs1 I.uncIu'uum. l.ihr.lI'y' Squgulsg Picture Clmmuittccf .N'lH'w' A, 'l'r.1jr1!llg. 5 ' K sn ' TIBAVIDU, lNlA'l l'HlfXX -f-Gulnl, Silver l'.S,A.l,. Pinsg Fmmtlmrll, Soccer' l.L-ttcrsg l.um'I1rr1un1, l..ltc, l'.ltrul, lrrlllif Sqlz.uls.--lilniflm1, TIISDIQMANN, DORA Hmmm' Cc1'tillc.ltc: Secretary to , Mrs. Gould: 'l4L'IlIll'S, Girl Rcscrvcs, Vullcylmll Clubs. Iimifzu r. 6 G ' A 'roAl., Rcasrirx1ARx' swurrr',- K., Mr. Mu1l.g.mg lumlr- rumn Squmlsg Newman, GL-rmgur, Tennis, 'I'irunigm Clulwx. n - - -llfnmr ffffllcgr. '1'OlfHKli, PAIQL- -Mc1'itul'iur1s Scrxicc 1.1.-l'tific4ltc3 Dark- 1'm1n1: Art Supply: Lute, Pl.l'.llllC, Patrol Squads: Atten- llklI1fC Otlrccg Gllll7Cll'lYfICl'5. CQ.1mcr.l Clubs. linwimw. 'l'Ol.l.BON, ANNA --Sccuml llmmrx: l',S.A.l.. Prmg Alun- ior Life Suvingg Minor Ang Scclv.-t.1ry tu Mr, Riclrturg Swimming Clulm- lifwim 1 s. 1 N X x .xllfltl Ir. hy, lg! - l4OMNASl,'l.U ,xTH 'l1tllll1CC Office. --- N 4 N F sr , TONKINSUN, ROlilfRT- Silver AHL Scuunl H4ill1Dl'5Q lruzr-'xml-ru, 'l'ra1lHC Squaulsg Succcr, B.l4Cl ILlll lnt1'gunur..l.s.-- lin rimw -. 'i'iRlNU, VlNCliN'l1--P,S.A.l.. Pills: 'l4l'alCl'i, l5g1Scl'1.lll ltukctlmll. Soccer, Vullcyhull, lfmrtlmlll lIllI'ilI11lII'kllS. l'ui- zwwill' 'ff Sfl1llf7L'7'fl C.1fifw'11i.1. A 1 J 2 J -' P 'Cv gf .f 5 ,A 'l4iy1lKA, INTLABLH- liljgsnzu' A '?,Flm1ur CL-rphiics' SQ: .1?Iuru mfh rs. K -ihz Iw'kmlcrTp1Ylal1gL1a1QQ,J-35560: Nclx'uu,m. M-111 lw n Q'iKlll, Sax , Clu 5.Y5QHlLfL'I1l Cfulfelqg TUSCANO, jOHNMAHnmn', Service CfQi'tific.ntesg Truf- lic, l'.itrnl Squaielsg l51lSClNlll, Hasketlwiill, Fnutl-iiill Intru- murillsg lille Hour Clulm- hlinvimii. 5 K F 'J G TRAPANI, GliORGl2-wBi'm1ze. Silver A's : Meriturinus, lixceptinnnl, Distinguislieil Service Certificatesg Bronze, Silver l'.S,A,l.. Pins, l.uncl1mnin, Patml, 'l'i'4illic Sqimils: ffnlni' llL'Lll'L'I'Q Hmltli liklLlCLlllllIl, l.ockc1' Ronin Clerlxl Key uf Courtesy, lille Hnnr Cliilvs.--Iilziiflvfi. 'l'liOl'lfANO, AN'l'0lNlf'l l'lf l'i'i.1l lwy jury , Yeun1en nf the Gii.ml g Glee, Art, Poster Clliihs.-Blrmzeix. , x lYl.l:R, l'l.Olil1NC,l1 Seinin' Ai'1st.1g Hnnnrs, Distinguisli- ' eil Service Clertiticatesg Secretary tn Miss Keller, Miss ' i XX'ickg l.uncl1mmn Squgulz Vimllcylmll, Travel, French Clulws. fllllllbf' Collage. ' l l'lfllS'l'AlfDil', wlANlf'I'-Biniize A , Honor, Servin- Cfertiliuitesg Minor Letter, junior, Senior P.S.A.l.. Pins, Aluniin' Life Saving, SL-f1'L'tiii'y tn Miss Frieilinaln, Mr. lireiminger, Miss DeKernny, Mr. Gonzalez, Mrs. Klein, Miss .lunesg Vulleylull, Swimming, Biiskctlmll, Buselmll, l.e1lilers, 'l'l'1lYL'l, Newman, Frcnfli filLll3S.+Ql1t'L'lI,l' Colfcgqv. lf'l'liRS'liAlfD'l', VlOl.li'l' lfnglislm Olliccg SuCl'cmi'y Pro giqnn Climiiimitteui Secretary tu Mr. Phisterg Newman, Svlllllllllljl Clulws. l'1.llI luilflnli. 11 - VAl.lfN'lilNlf, RAYlNlUiYD ---' flirallllf, l,AllI'lll Squinlsp Himse- lmill, lilslwtlwiill, Fuotlwiill lnti'ilinu1'4ilsg lille Huur Clulw. f . , 1 . VALVANA, liMll.Y' Tennis, Newin.in Cilulwsf Illi- fv,n1ly'i luifilnle. Vlfl'l'Cl'l, -IOHN--'P.S.A.l.. Pins: Bilsclmll, lilslxctlmll Siwfcell, Fnntlmlll lIllI'Q1IllllI'AllSQ l'iit1'nl, 'l'1'ii1lic, l.uneln'nun1. l.llL'liCl'l'UUl'l'l Squuils: NL-winiin Cllulw.-SI. fnlwfi l'r1i1uiill. VliRRY, ADliI.AlDlff Sec'1'etii1'y tu Mis. Yailler, Miss XX'einl1crgg Girl llcservcs.W,4ifilplvi Cfffflclqf. 'Il i I' K I ' Pl O I x 9 ' i 1 1 VINCI, Gl.t,Kl,xL-JLIIITDI Alisfa, Honor, Meritorious, lux reptiuf1a1,Service gerfiticatearf Hmnze P.S.A.l.. Pins, Term Representative, lnanclirodm Squad? miiliigy, linglish Ot'- rices: Secretary to Mr. Giilclinaiiy Miss Doran, Newinan Cllll If-Bllljllell. ' I . 'N . , .f I . Sf. .-5,' VINCIGUIZRRA, INPAY-Secretary to Miss W'ettc-rau, Miss Mcliorry, Mrs. Clemens, Miss Kuhn, Girls' liniergency Room, Tennis, Vo leyhall Cliihs.--Nnriui' Ti.1i1.'il1Aq. V C li i FQ? A Xlzrwrfihs S vicg 'er- tili ' 1, i ' .. ins, 'ini bn: Minor ' ' lil . ce' Avimming, Drmftjcg ji A In i 'Q . u . . voicrr, MAR i--.iiim.i.-, semi ws, .sJy'?7 retary to Miss r strong, Householcl ' A 1 Heirtlf stone Club.-lim' eu. ' VOLKENS, ELLEN-junior, Senior Arista, Golil, Silver, Bronze Ks , Honors, Meritorious Service, Public Speak- ing Certincatesg P.S.A.L. Meclals, Swimming Pins, Minor Letters: Chevrons, Secretary to Mrs. Ferguson, Lunch- room, Assemlwly Squails, Basketlwall, Volleyball, B.iseh.ill, lfirst Aicl, Dancing, Newman, Travel, Art, Spanish, Swim- ming, German Cliihs,-Qm'rZr.i Cnllwge. , vorro, FRKISK sf Mciaiiiifip' bsiingiiisiiciii, lax. CCPUUIIQII' ,Qc-rvibe Cclitilicates, P.S.A.l.. Pin, Minor Af, ,Senior Class'iPresiilent, Iiiglith,Ternl 15.0. Repre- sentative, Student Mgnlwer of Burl 't Ciiininitteu Late, Library, Printing, Hjolqgyg- Lunchrituhv, Dean, Jfratlic Squads, Health Education Clerk, Latiii, Art Otiices,Spc-ech, Science, Latin, Qpanish, Dramatics, Newman, Physiography CllllJS.-L llf1'L'l'fflj' of Alirfrigiuz. XX'AGliNSlZl,L, WXR NTHi'Tlih'lv Certiticates, l'.S.A.l.. Pins: Soccer Intramuras, ,Patrol Squad? Physics, Matthe- a matics Cllll3S,-B1l.1flIL'l'fZf ' ' - ' ' 'C XVAGNIQR, HELEN- Bronze A , Honors, Service Cer- titicates, Secretary to Mrs. Greer, Miss Spadaccini, Ac- counting Otiice, Lunelironm Squacl, Dancing, Newman, Spanish, Tennis, Basketball Clubs., -DL'lL'l7.lIIfj'.f Irlffifntu. XY'AliNl:R. MARY Bronze An: Honor Certitiates, Se.- retary to Dr. lifrong lainchroom Squacl, Tennis, Volley- hall, Nevxinan, Gerinaii Clulws. Iiniimfii. XVAl.KliR. GRACIE-f--Honor Certiticates: Bronze P.S,A.L. Pins, Secretary to Miss Smith, hir. hfulligan, Mr. Your- inack, Lunchroom Squail, Baselwall, Cvirl Reserves, First Aiil cillll'tS.TBlllj?1t'l.l. XX'Al.liGA, JOHNW-lNIeritorious Service Certificate, Foot- hall, Soccer. Volleyball, Baseball lntramuralsg P.S.A.l.. Pins, Lunchroom, Patrol, Deans, Tratiic Squads, Clerk in liniergency Room, Pliysiograpliy, Newman Clubs.-W liuiirluii. NX'Al.TliRS, MARl0Nf Secretary to Mrs. Mather, Basket- hall, Volleyball, German Cliihs.-Bniizzeir. XYANZHR, BIERTHA--Honor Certificates, Secretary to .Mr. Burns, Newman Cliih.-7-l3n,iim1i.i, WARD, IEDNA--First, Seconil Honors, Service Certificates, junior,Senior P.S.A.I.. Pins, Secretary to Miss Brennan, Mrs. Fyfe, Miss Kuhn, Mrs. Daniels, Lunchroom Squad, General, Attenclance Otlices, Spanish, Dancing Clubs,- Dili'fv.i11li',r lrzitillrlff. XYARD, MILFORD f -lunior Arista: Bronze, Silvur ANU: Si-ronil Honors, P.S.A,l., Ping Patrol Squadg Program f-UIllIllIffk'L'Q Cirailr Adxisn-r's Utliccg Basketlwall, Soccer flulas. lllfifllt l i. l . 6 .i gg.:-.f xx'A'i'i4iNs. Maiiofxinriv.st-r...i.1 Hamii-5 Co-iiiii-.iitsz at- Si-.'i'ct.ii'y to Mr. vlacolvson, Mrs. Klcin: Modcrn lalllgllilgif 'Na ' Utliri-1 Ncwnian, Cicrinan, Spani-li ClLllWS,fQlIc'L'llt' C.'ollu,Qt'. 7 XX'A'I l', Cil'iR'liRl'Dlf- P-.lunior lata' Saving, lxlinor A , - lironzv. Gold P.S,A.l.. Pinsg l.ilvrary Squad: Vollcylmlll. liasulwall, Sxxnnniing, l'1.iskctlw.ill. Girl Rv.-serves Cflulwsf - liniimii. XYl'lill, Cilfillililf- Squad l.ctturs: Malor Ang Swininiing 'l4i'ain. liflllnf Stalti .Xfziyx , V l.. J yi XYl'l.iI3R, ll',Al'l.A- CJficvi'oiisg P.S.A.l,- Pin: Suit Ronin: 'ALA'I1xylllL'Q,dlllL'C.1,NCXN'll1.kIlQ Volleyball, Tennis, First Aid filllllfrumvlll it igk 14l.Ifllfflg. 4, XYlflN'l'RAlll5. -IOSliPH--junior, Scnior Arista, Bronze. Silwi' A's : First Honors Ccrtitiratesg First Honors in 0- I. Parlxs and Playgrounds Public Speaking Contest, Tratlic, Patrol, laincliroom. Latv Squadsg G.O, Store, German, Axiation Cfliilws,--'Qfnwu ifrzffvgc. XYlNDlfl., CilfR'l'Rl'Dlf --Junior Life Saving, P.S.A.I.. Pins: Cliuvronsg Library, Luncliroom Squads: Tironi.in, 'licnnis Clulwsf- Nun' lrrlfii Irlffilnla of Divlvfiar. XX'lSl.liY, Rl l'H- 'Honor Ccrtitiratcsg Clicvrons: P.S.A.l., Ping lfirriiim-, Pnlwlirity Committees: Campus , Latin Orliicsg Si-i'i'ctai'y to Mrs. Matlwr, Cafeteria, Lilwrarv Squailsi 'l'ravi'l, Frcm'l1, First Aid, Tcnnis, Dancing, Nui:- 'nan fillll3S, 'Hll,l'iIlt'l.f. XVIESSMAN, CIHARLIQS--liroiwu. Silwr, Gold Aish: ' l First Sctond Honor Cfui'tiliCatcs.- liffiim-1. XX'lf'l l'lfRlfR, JOHN- Dislinguisllcd Scrvitr CQcI'tiliL'atc1 Football, Basclwall, Baskctlwall Intrainurals, P.S.A.I.. Ping linicrgcncy Room Clcrlxg Scfi'ctary to Mr. Rotlicnlwurg. Mr. Delaney, '1'ratlic, Patrol, Late, Dt-an's, As-'cinhly Squads, Pliysiograpliy. Secretarial. Newman. Pulvlic Speak- ing Key of Courtesy Clul'1s.--I7ilvfv.111l1'.i Illilifnlu. 5 XX'Hl'l'NllM, XX'Il.l.lAlNl---'Footlwall, liasclaall lIlII'.lll1LIf.lls1 W' Q ly P,S.A,l.. Piiis.-l3n,iim'o. X WICKMAN, -IOSIZPH '-lll.lllll.lf,lII Cfufligi. XVlCKS, .lOHNk-Iunior Arista: Bronze, Silver A's g llonor, Meritorious, lixccptional, Distiixgiiislictl Scrvicu Ccrtilitatcsg Studcnt Manager G.O. Store: Boys' lfinur- gcnfy Room. I-i.li, Play, Luncliroom, Traffic, Patrol Squads: lfnglish Bookrooin, Camera. Salcsinansliip. Ad- vertising C,:ll.1l3S.---HlllflltlK. XX'lliDliRHOl.D, MADlil.lilNli'-Sci-vice: Certificate, junior P.S.A.L. Pin: Clievronsg Sccrctai'y to Mrs. Hally. Miss XY'cttcrau, Mrs. Ferguson. Mr. Riclitcrg Grade Advisers Otlifc: Fiaskctlwall, Tennis, Volleylwall, Dancing, l.L-adcrs, Ulcc Cliilws.-llulvlamzfqg'i Illllffllfk. NWILKIN, VIOLET--Bronze, Gold Swimming Pins, Ser- vice Certilicate, Lurichrooin Squad, Secretary to Miss Beck, Dancing, Switnining. First Aid, Girl Reserves Clulws. B1llillL'l',l', W'lSl1Al l:R, XX'lLl.lAM-f liniimii. XX l'I'l.li' 5X hIf.lLiliii1i', Senior Arista, Honors, U15 's i ' ' ci iici liusinc ss M ,' 1 i s, ,ijt l Service C tl 'Q tes, ' Ma . of us , c 'tary to Mr. Lipschitz, Mr. Goldman, -ni. ry ' A Captain of Cliemistrv Mime- ' S acl C to 1 - A ' . ' ogiaph S , o utor 'Clipper ', Dirl.rooni: ., C,hc-inistry, Photog, a hy Clubs.--I'zlirwiiri iff fif.rf1,rr11.1. NVOLFF, liRl.lNli--Swimming, P.S.A.l., Pin, Spanish Clulm- -linuimii. VUQUDARD, l.L'CY--Setxmml Honor Cfertilicate, Mayor, Minor AE , P.S.A.l.. Rins:'Chevrons, Secretary to Mrs. 4 Halley, Mrs. Ferguson, Leaders, Basketball, Volleyball, X Sivimining, Dancing Cfliihsf SH'.I4.'lllt' Iillillfljfll. XX'U'I'liRlCH, GUSTAVIY--lfxceptional Service Award, , Silxer, Gold l'.S.A.l.. Pins, Silver, Gold Foothall. Base- lwall Intramurals Medals, Late. Luncliroom, Tratiic, Patrol Squads, Health Education Clerk, Key of Courtesy, New- man, Physics, Idle Hour Cluhsf- l'r.1ll lllllfllllc. YACHELSON, BLANCHIZ- Dean's Oflice, Sxxiinining.:, lflaskethaill, Tennis, Spanish Cluhsf- Hlrvirlui. YANNVCCI, RACHlil.-Alironze A , Honor Certificates, Attendance, General Offices: Newman, History, Sf,-1,.,g. raphy, Volleyball, Dancing, Travel Clubs, l'r.it.' lwigf- fllfil. YOST, Al'DRliYfHonor Certificates, vlubnior l',S.A,l.. A Pin, Secretary to Mrs. Harris, General Otlice, Language Department, Lunclirooin, Library Squads, Spanish, Volley- hall. Oil Painting Cluhsf-Pr.1lf Iuililnle, 5 xi Yl'SKliVl'l'CH, Al-FRliD-Honor, Meritorious Service ' - fiertilicate: P.SiA.l.. Pins, Patrol, Tratlic, Lunchrooin. Late Squads, Newman, Spanish, Photography, Harmonica Ciluhsf Nur' Yuri IlIljI'L'7'lfl'l, M C' ZFCIQOR, IZUGENIT--junior Arista, Silver A , Hon-ur Ciertilicat.-L 'liack, Queenshoro Cross Country Champions ' 4, ship Team, Patrol, Lunchroom Squads, Travel, Spilseil tg .. ' Shoe Cluhs.--Sl. jnlvrfi l'1lfl't'V4jl'l, 3 ZKICARDI, RICHARD--lvfajor A , Foothall. lflasehall - - i' Intramurals, P.S.A.l,. Pins, Art, Tratlic, l.LlllL'llI'UOI11 ci' ' qv . Squads, Poster, Art, Modeling, Biology, Spanish, New- 'f s ' :nan Ciilws.--Miil1'u.w SIJIU Culfclqu. ZACyXHl:l.W- enior firlsymffyiwllcl, Silver, lfsronze , , 's', irst nors, Mer nous, Distinguislietl Service if Ce ilitntesgjllcretaryi tm rs. Klein, Mr. .lacolw en. Miss Qt-Kerhaygf IVi0ClUl'l1'l, JIIIQLULIXCS, Lihrary, Lunchrooin .quadsgl ,-'Newman, G'erman Cllll5S.'WQlll,'6IIl Cullelqt. mxiqovici-i, NiNA4smift- Award, P.S,A.L. Ping ' liinergency Room, Library Squad, Attendance Office: Sec- p retary to Miss Langdon, Metal Art Craft, Volleyball, 6 fv- Haskethall, Baseball flll.ll7S.S1xvlll'.lCl' Tlllillfllg. A ZASLAVSKY, RUTH-!Senior, junior Arista, Bronze, 1:2 Silver, Gold A's , Honor, Service, Spanish, Speech Cer- tlilicates, German, Spanish Proficiency Pins, Gold Medal , for German: Term Medals, Secretary to Miss Hathaway, I Luncliroom Squad, Campus Captain, Language, Mathe- flil.AZO, NIRIAM li1'11117e UAH: H1111111' f:L'I'llllCLllL'Q l.1111tl11'oo111 Sillhltll T1'1.1l hy 'l111'yi', Yeo111e11 ot the fillillmlnl T:ICllkll, vlu1le.111, TT.lSl'iL'llW.lll, Swirxiuiing, Ulu' Clluhx, N111' Yfffl I'f1i111'1ilV1, 15, K L- , flC.ifARDl, Rll.llAliD M.1yo1' iA'g li1111th.1ll, li.1seh.1ll N l11II.lllllll'.llx2 l'.S,A.l., Piusg Art, rl-Illlllf, l,1111t'l11'11o111 A Squ.1tlx1 l,UNlL'lA, Art. M11tleli11g, lilolugy, Sp.1111sl1', Xen- A 111.111 Cluhs, ,lll1!'11.g'.111 SLIM tfofftgt. 9, 2 K Q., 1 , Q TIKMVND TEDXYARD--P.S.A.l.. Piuxg 5tlCfL'I', lint- ' lull, limlietlwglll, SXXTIIIIITIIUQ l11t1'.1111u1'.1lm1 lillllfll, l,.lllA1Il 1 lllfillllki SKILIJKTNZ lllle llouig I'l1yx1o1g11.1pl1y c,llll'PN. ILL f'f.mf1'1 luifllnft, 7.llNllXil'RMAN, NATIT,-KN X111 Yful l411i11r1i.'1 .ge ZIMMISRMANN, PAl'l. .lllllllill Se11io1' Aristng l51'11111e. A Silver, Goltl HAYBUUQ Fiist llonors, lNle1'1to1'io11s Serxice cl'l'llllL'Llll'i1 P11t1'11l SL1u.11l, l'11f.'11f 51,1111 INJ11, ll f11'f1f'11' I .1i1' Pi1'!1f1'111' Mi1'l1.1el Klvrffiiiry .mtl P11111 'lmflzit' The Plt'llll'L'S whieh 11re on 1lispl.1y. Are those ol' Atl.1111's hest, They're serious-who 11w11it the l'1'.1y, l o1' soon they l..lL'C the test. They he.1r .1 look ot detii.111te. Their llllg ol' strile llllliLlI'lCd. They seek to form 11lli11nt'e Witl1 the outside worltl. We hope the years they've spent with us WMS time not spent in vain, They venture out with knowledge plus The will to learn .ind gain. To you who le.1x'e us now These thoughts we would eonyey Ciootl lutlif lfglrewelll To you we how Antl hope you'1'e like-tl your st.1y. Alum lldlefftfr' fl I I fe 'ff XA, ff' 1 J' -3- The Mocking Bird -:- X Lyrics, Script and Production by Frank Sgambati and Samuel Mintz January, 1959 FAMED ACTORS GIVEN ELMER The Academy of Infer- nafional Aris has awarded Ihe slafueffe, Elmer, fo Paul Leone and Madeline Weiderhold for giving fhe Iwo besf performances in molion picfures. Mr. Leone is ihe ac- knowledged Apollo of fhe silver screen. The role of Charlie Ching in Ching's Greafesl' Case was con- sidered a masierpiece of defecling, if noi' acling. Miss Weiderhold won her Elmer for her por- frayal of Pinky O'Hara in Gone Wilh lhe Breeze.' Ahmee Siudios who have fhese 'Iwo greal' siars un- der confracl, plan fo feam fhem fogefher in When Charlie Ching Meefs Pinky O'Hara. WIITY-OKL BROADCASTS Chosen as fhe wiffiesf boy in his graduaiing class in I939. AI Levenson, will live up 'Io his repufafion fomorrow nighf. This is fha dafe for AI, as he will make his debuf on fhe five minuie broadcasi of Shakespearean Producfions over sfafion WEAK. The play Hamlef, will be presenled in ifs en- fireiy. Deducling fwo commercial announcemenfs of one minuie each and off, I'he program will con- sume fwo and one-half minuies of fhe Iisiener's fime. Neverfheless, fhe radio audience will hear the complefe slory of Hamlet lMaurice Evans used five hours fo presenf ihe play 'Iwenfy years ago.l Levenson is sfill having frouble in perfeciing his parf. He will enacl' fhe role of fha voice off-sfage. SOAP-BOX John Wefierer, known fhroughouf fhe cify as a sfirring speak- er, and fhe quiefesl boy in ihe John Adams graduafing class of January '39 was arresf- ed yesferday for speak- ing wifhouf a license. When faken fo 'rhe Tombs for police line- up he was held for quesfioning. Giving him fhe fhird-degree, police officials unsuccessfully bombarded him wiI'h endless queries. In spife of much coaxing. Wefferer confinued fo resoluiely d e c I a r e, quo'Ie-I won'I' Ialk- unquofe. ARTISTIC MUTZ CAUGHT AGAIN Sfuarf Muiz, w a s broughf before fhe Coun- fy Judge again lasf nighl. He was charged wifh de- facing fhe signs of fhe Consolidafed Transif Co.. and was arresfed affer a hard-foughl' baffle. This is fhe 'Ihird 'lime Mufz has been arraigned for fhe same reason. The new cuslom of fha adverfising company is fo prinf ifs posfers and signs with fhe musfache and re- marks already on fhem. Mr. Muh, now nearing 37, rebelled af 'Ihese unar- fislic signs, and for 'Ihe sake of ar'I', he has been erasing fhese markings 'Io refurn fhem fo fheir nai- ural sfafe. Muir. who is working on XYZ Federal Arf Proiecf No. 396037 in Hoboken. will be remembered by many as fhe class arfisl' of January '39. He sfarf- ed on his presenf iob af- fer a vain affempf fo crash info 'Ihe funnies. SQUEEDUNK ELECTIONS FAVOR SHEFFIELD AS MAYOR Q Mr. President! My friends and our neighbors, and as fhe au- dience hushed info silence. fhus Frank Voffo, Presidenl' of fhese Unifed Sfafes of America, opened his in- augural address in fhis year of I958. Wifh a grim, infelleclual fone and a slighf sway of his gray- haired head, he confinu- ed, If is my greafesl' achievemenf for mankind fhaf I offer fo you, my people. fhis magnanimous insfilufion and plan, fhe CFOAPTFGOPOTUSOA which in shorf means, COMMITTEE FOR OLD AGE PENSIONS TO FOR- MER G. O. PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Ahem . . I seem fo recall fhaf in my youih I had experi- ence fo govern fhe siu- denls as Senior Presidenf of my c'ass in a Iiffle backwoods school on Long Island, somewhere in fhe '3B's. And if I musf say so, I handled fhe posifion rafher well. Why I remem- ber, when single-handed I barricaded myself in fhe General Office and wifh- sfood fhe affack of fhe powerful Hipi-Hapas, one of fha fiercesf tribes ever fo come from Ihe Hillife ferrifory. So, in all fair- ness 'Io former G. O. Pras- idenfs, I insfifufe fhis bill. Line forms foward 'Ihe righf, l'm Iirsf, ha-ha. -01 FRESHMAN! Affeniionl John Adams Alumni of fhe Class of January, '39l The Alumni Associafion has announced plans for a reunion fo be held in l'he near fulure. Climaxing a heciic monih of campaigning 'Ihe ciiizen s of Squeedunk, Norfh Dakoia levery one of fhe fiffy of fheml elecled William Shelfield as Mayor. The fown boasfs of a populalion of iifly-fwo, buf old Doc Newfown was sick on elec- iion day and fhe Widow Smiih of hit wifh lhe mayor-e?ecI's aufomobile lfhe only aufo in fown.l Twenly years ago, Mr. Sheffield was vofed fhe mosf likely fo succeed af John Adams. He has finally fulfilled his class- mafes' predicfion. He has also done mosf for Squee- dunk. He was Posimasfer, Leffer Carrier, Consfable, Police Commissioner, Milk- man, lSheFlield's Milk, gei if?l Head of fhe Deparl- menf of Sanifafion, Sfreel Cleaner, School Principal, Chairman of Ihe Cifi1en's Council, Parson, Deacon and Tax Collecfor. lHe confesses fhaf fhis lasi posifion is Ihe one fhal causes him fha most worry., loi AUD-REY Miss Audrey Kerrigan, vofed as fe girl who was fha cleveresf, fhe mosl ambifious, lhe mosl' likely fo succeed. and fhe one who did fha mosf for Adams oul' of fhe grad- uafing class of January '39, was elecled as vice- presidenf of fha Union for Beffer Treafmenf of High School Freshmen yesferday. Miss Kerrigan promises fhaf no more will fhe freshmen bear fhe brunf of fhe abuses in our schools. No more will Ihe sen- iors mislead 'Ihe newcom- ers info believing fhaf fhere really is an elevalor in John Adams. A Word to the Wise! THE MOCKING BIRD ALONG THE WHITE WAY Heaven's Below sTar- ring Those Two ripping. roaring, and dauy dra- maTisTs, Monsieur Philip FausT and Mme. Veronica Riley sTraighT from The Clipper, Paris. This is The Ti:sT appear- ance of The Two on The American sTage since They sTarred l?l in Their high school days aT John Adams High School. Monsieur FausT was The hilarious sTar in MQW of S-:,oTland when he was buT a mere amaTeur. Since Then he has 'ken To The heighTs of Tame and forTune. WiTh him has risen his colleague and co-sTar Mme ley also an John Adams. They opened lasT nighT aT The Pink-Hair Bowling Alley wiTh a sell-ouT iThe seaTing capaciTy of The house is 3l, noT counTing ThaT broken seaTl and The criTics acclaimed Heav- en's Below as The besT ear-sTirring comedy of The year I958. Monsieur FausT and Mme. Riley have had a long sTrugg'e, having been awarded The leading parTs aTTer 9 years aT The ex- pense oT France. lCom- monly known as reliefl. -0.- COOPED UP The NaTional DelegaTion of Women's Clubs For The PrevenTion of CruelTy To Chickens, oTherwise known as The NOOWCFTPOCTC voTed Miss Josephine Bu- Tera as Vice-PresidenT. She was The mosT pop- ular lady aT The elecTion meeTing when she inTro- duced The new, non-skid, burglar-proof, chicken coop wiTh a builT-in radio. IT can be recalled, upon invesTigaTing The records, ThaT Miss BuTera was voTed mosT popular girl when she was Senior Class Vice-PresidenT. Veronica Ri- alumnus of Page Two l r POTSVILLE NEW'S HAS A READER: POETESS FAILS AT RHYMING A banqueT was held in The celery room of The HoTeI Bilgewaler for The EdiTor ot The PoTsville News, Old Man Frank Sgambah. The banqueT was held in honor of The second anniversary of The paper w.Th The versaTile SgambaTi as EdiTor. The aTTair was sponsored and aTTended by The subscrib- e.s and The prinTer. The ediTor said ThaT iT was quiTe crowded in The celery room wiTh Tour people, buT iT was about all The commiTTee could afford. NexT year, The sTal7f, The inimiTable Sgam- baTi. and The prinTer, hope To hire a reporTer and also acquire anoTher sub- scriber. Making a ToTal circulaTion of 3-Wowll FILIBUSTER The long-sianding rec- ord of 24 hours of conTin- uous TilibusTering was aT The broken lasT week eighTy-TiTTh session of Con- sHrHng gress, when ThaT Congressman from Pennsyl- iTongue- Talked 33 con Tucky, RoberT waggingl Sappe and gesTured Tor - secuTive hours on The bill, Resolved, ThaT The House of RepresenTaTives' door on l03rd STreeT be open- ed daily from I:0I P. M. To I:02 P.M. SenaTor Sappe is now an ouTsTand- ing candidaTe for The No Bell iNobel Public Speak- ing prize for This ouTsTand- ing accomplishment, QUIETTTTEASE! The Annual Hog-calling conTesT, sponsored by The Scoscawe-we Slau g h T e r Houses, and The CounTy Fair CommiTTee, was won by Joseph FonTana. Upon inpuiry inTo FonTana's pasT records, all ThaT could be found was a yearbook, in which he was voTed noisi- esT. When asked how he did iT, Joe replied, ScaT! When you read The verse on your New Year's card This year, you will probably be reading an aTTernpT of ThaT greaT poeTess, Giovanna Men- dolia. ATTer her elecTion To The posT as class poeT aT John Adams in '39, Miss Mendolia w e n T sTraighT To The IargesT publisher in New York and applied for a posi- Tion, buT Their was none available. The presidenT of The company promised The poeTess a iob if she could Tind a word To rhyme wiTh orange. ThaT is The reason why Miss Giovanna Mendolia is now wriTing verse on New Year's cards. She couldn'T rhyme orange. MUSIC, MAESTRO Carnegie Hall is To be The scene of The TirsT con- cerT reciTal of Ma'amselle Marion Cerulli, and Mon- sieur VincenT Penisi, who have excelled in music during Their high school careers. The usual swing music which has been in The spoTlighT Tor The lasT TwenTy years, will make way for someThing novel in The way of music. Miss Cerulli and Mr. Penisi who graduaTed in I939. will play a music long 'For- goTTen. IT is known, oddly enough. as classicaI! The convenTional price of Two dollars wifl be dis- pensed wiTh as The pro- moTers will be glad To geT anyone inside The audiTor- IUYU. -O- SUCCESS The Ladies' Home Jour- nal has iusT announced The appoinTmenT of a new EdiTor-in-Chief. She is Dorofhy Graham, voTed The LiTerary LighT of John Adam High School. CONTRACT FOR COACH The board of direcTors of Hicksburg Sub-Normal has announced a renewal of The conTracT of Alex- ander Pop Cerulli as Their fooTball menTor. lco- rulli and his Tamily com- pose The members oT The board.l For The lasT sixTeen years, Cerulli has been Turning ouT losing Teams for Sub-Normal. He will be remembered as The mosT aThleTic boy gradu- aTe oT The Class of Jan- uary '39 aT John Adams High School. LasT season, The Sub- Normal eleven was defeaT- ed Ten Times ouT of Their eleven games. The oTher game was a Tie, l-I, be- cause boTh Teams failed To appear on The grid- Iron. Pop, despiTe his scia- Tica in The hips, neuralgia in The chesT, and rheuma- Tism in his legs, will di- recT his Team from from The sidelines. He is The only coach in The coun- Try To direcf his Team wiTh a baseball score card. -0- FASHION - 1959 ATTenTion all advocaTes of beTTer dressl Boger FeeT and Gusseks, 'Famous dress sTylisTs, have an- nounced Their incorpora- Tion, and wifl celebraTe This evenT by holding a gala fashion show. The Two sTars of This giganTic producTion will be Gloria Vinci and Frank Claro, chosen besT dressed girl and boy of John Adams back in I939. These mannequins will display The smarTesT ouT- TiTs ThaT The company has To offer. Miss Vinci will have as one of her en- sembles, a whiTe burlap wiTh dark black verTical sTripes, and a Tive pound ball and chain To maTch. This is known as The Singa Singa sTyle. Dismal Valley DOROTHY GRAHAM AY burst upon the valley with startling abruptness. All the queerness of the past weeks culminated in this-the last day. lt was so strange, how everyone, from the tiniest papoose to the old chief realized the great import of this day. It was just another day. Yet some subtle sixth sense told them that this was the end. For many moons, some- thing ominous, a prelude to sorrow had been present. Everywhere in the peaceful valley, and in the wooded hills beyond, it could be felt. The little forest folk had lost all their former friendliness and retired to their hidden, leafy homes. No longer did the children of the tribe play their noisy games in the deep woods. In- stead they remained within the com- fortable call of their mothers' voices. Even the great bronzed braves, ever fearless and invincible, retained dog- ged, weary expressions. Hunting and fishing, although carried out as usual, had lost all their former good fun. And yet stranger, the disappearance of the whispering wind that had played about the treetops. Replaced now by a growing, moaning gale that tore at the tepees and foretold im- pending danger. But above all these, one thing more threatened the happiness of the tribe. The old chief was ill, seriously ill. He lay in his hut, unable to move, unable to speak sanely, lying in great pain. Eagerly his feeble words were snatched up and repeated over and ox er again by his loyal tribe. Finally on that last day strength seemed to flow back into his weak- ened body. His sons, overjoyed, car- ried him outside to a knoll where he had spent many happy hours over- looking his valley. He was lying on that little hilltop, when the two horsemen came into view. As the cloud of dust approached, the other members of the tribe gathered curi- ously to wait the newcomers. Men, like these, had never been in the val- ley before. Pale, white skins. Queer clothes. A language, strange and dif- ferent. By means of signs the white men soon imparted their news. Many more white people were coming. They liked this valley, They were going to settle here. And then the strangers departed as quickly as they had ar- rived. Two hours later, as a rosy sun was setting, the old chief died. His sor- rowing tribe buried him at twilight on the hilltop. A thin skimming of clouds that had stolen out of the west since sunset obscured the stars. The moon was only a dim glow low over the valley, seeming to take light rather than give it to the world. The only light in the shallow valley came from the light of the camp fires. Fires that burned while the red men talked and tried to relieve a mind that was as troubled as the sky above. Crosslegged they sat, their faces like wood-carvings, pondering over the sit- txation uncomprehensive to their sim- ple minds. They had to cope with this situation, leaderless. Their dark faces were lost in the waving smoke, ap- parent, red in the light of the fires. And so the night wore on. The next day a caravan of covered wagons came to the valley. To the great astonishment of the white men no Indians were there. HERE had it gone? Yester- day it was knocking at the door, shouting loudly for him the precious key, but now it was gone. just one little twist of fate and it had gone. No! No wind had blown his opportunity away, just a little man, just a tiny, little man, with a high forehead, bulging eyes, and beautiful, white, long-fingered hands, just tive feet one inch of a man, he had assumed the role of fate. to find However, opportunity was not the only thing that little Mr. Panda had banished from the door when he dis- missed Ken from the Art Studio, he had also sent love and life and hope along. Ken did not want to think of that horrible dismissal. Sitting with Helen in the restaurant he did not want to think of anything but her. Her lips, so beautiful, so red. Her eyes, danc- ing, so blue. His Helen. His Helen of Troy, the most beautiful woman in the world. But her lips, her red lips, became the pink lips of Panda. And her eyes the green bulging eyes of Panda. And Ken couldn't hear her voice or her soft and flowing words. All he heard were the cursing colloquialisms of Panda. He brushed his hand in front of his eyes a few times, but he couldn't wave Panda away. He could see him resting in his swivel chair. His head cocked to one side to hear what Ken said. He could see the scene, that dramatic scene, in Panda's office. That one act play, where Panda in a fiery speech had told Ken what he thought of his work. Where Panda had risen from that comfortable chair and had literally thrown him out of the office. And tonight, tonight when 79 A W X-N NN it is .... i .,... QQ .... , lllllml l lllll .ll ' it U ll lil! ,Is i l 60 .Q .iri N ' :w:.,x 'aniuir Q Flame J STANLEY SCHULBERG he was with Helen, Panda was here, too. Panda . . . that tiny little man . . . here he was also. Ken took Helens left hand in both of his and turned her engagement ring round and round her finger. He looked at the small white diamond as it passed his view. And each time that it did, he tried to remember the night he had given her that ring . . . the pleasant things . . . the happy moments. He winced. Panda's leer- ing face obscured the tiny, brilliant solitaire. He held Helen's hand tighter as if he were going to lose her. She was lovely. She always was lovely. His Helen. His Helen of Troy. Someday he would paint her portrait. He would make it more famous than the one of Mona Lisa. Helen's smile was too bewitching to be compared with Lisa. He would P- 'i:fT3lH:!:'l4f' ..-fa :' -.iv : ef 'fer' 3-wifi' -1' 'NVQ' .W- i yi I lilllli 80 portray her face so as to outdo Sar- gent, the master. Homer, Whistler, Rubens-masters-artists-a l l would be considered in this canvas, besides the touches of his own genius. Helen would be glamorized-glorified. Yet she seemed too beautiful to paint, even for Ken. He wondered if he could paint her lips as red as they really were. Her eyes as sparkling. Her hair as lustrous. His Helen was a subject that could never be done in oils, water colors, or temperas. Well, it was pleasing to think of such things anyhow. How nice it would be if he could keep on dreaming. But, Panda-Panda-Panda. Oh, no matter what Panda thought of his works. No matter what the critics wrote of his paintings. No matter if they did not admire them. He, Ken, praised his own art. Not an artist, they, his enemies, said of him. For they were his enemies if they did not like his masterpieces. His enemies did not matter. Of course, every genius has to die before he is dis- covered and Ken could not expect to be praised now for he was indeed a genius. Helen looked as if Michel Angelo had sculptured her. His Helen al- ways looked that way. Gorgeous, lovely, delicate. Her azure eyes looked so sympathetic when he told her his troubles. And it was her own soft, soothing voice, not the harsh, hard one of Panda that answered Ken. Paint, paint, said his Helen. His Helen of Troy, the most beautiful woman in the world. They walked home together for they lived in the same apartment house. The night was cold and damp. It was the type of darkness that made one shiver. The street lights created glaring yellow stars above stiff posts. Ken held her hand tightly. They didn't speak. Their foot- steps echoed again and again to give a weird sound to the night. And all the time Ken thought of Panda. That little man. Tiny little man. He could still hear him laugh, cold, calloused, crackling. That tiny little man who laughed at his beautiful painting. His gorgeous masterpiece. The shades of green that blended so perfectly with the blue sky. The red barn that contrasted so daringly with the shades of green. His Spring Landscape. But Panda didn't like it. Panda, the head of the art school. Ken could still hear him shouting and yelling, Painting! Masterpiece! That canvas is an insult to nature! An insult to nature! Indeed. No, it wasn't nature that was wrong, it was Panda. That little fool just couldn't recognize a master. Some day. Some day. But the little man still remained in Ken's head. He still pierced his brain with a pitchfork. Ken left Helen at her door and walked up a flight to the apartment above hers. He felt a little relieved for Panda did not follow him up the Stairs. He unlocked the door. If be roulcl have only unlocked that other door fu enxily. He turned on the light. He heard the most beautiful woman in the world say, Paint, paint! -iaai Yes, paint! Paint what? Wlioiii? . . . The chair? No! The bowl of flowers? No! His bare room con- tained little else of inspiration. The candle? . . . maybe the candle . . . yes the candle . . . atlame and the rest of the room dark. Yes, yes, the candle .... Paint, paint! He lit the long white candle. It burned hrst red, then blue, a weird blue, an azure blue, a sickening blue. The bureau, the chairs, the bed, threw their long macabre shadows up- on the wall. Threatening fingers of dancing darkness. Machiavelian shad- ows from which ghostly forms seemed suddenly to detach themselves. Ghostly . . . ghastly . . . frightening. But no, these seemed to te friendly ShilLlUVVS . . . gf0NVll1g Stfklllgefi stronger-stronger. These Weren't shadows. He knew these people. This was Rembrandt and this Van Gogh and this Cezanne-his friends, his masters .... Paint, paint! He did paint. Rembrandt sug- gested that the background be black. And the candle a brilliant blue, suggested Van Gogh. Yes! Yes! said Cezanne, super- vising the work. More blue heref' said the sun- stroked genius. Darker here, dark- er, said Rembrandt. Yes, yes, said Cezanne. Somewhere in the distance a clock srruck four. Paint, paint! said the candle smoke. Darker, darker, said Rem- brandt. Bluer, bluer, said Van Gogh. Yes, yes, agreed Cezanne. A clock struck five. Keep painting, said the smoke. The candle's burning on the canvas, said Rembrandt. It still needs a little more blue, said Van Gogh. Yes, yes, agreed Cezanne. The shadows continued their dance as the three masters guided the young artist through his work. I'm finished, I'm brushed! Ken screamed. See how it's burning now. I must show it to Panda who says I am not an artist. I am the greatest artist that ever lived. Yes, yes, said Cezanne. I'll open this door and get down these stairs to Panda, Panda. Yes, yes, said Cezanne. Now down the stairs. Look, my colleagues, the door below my room is opening. It's Panda, the man who said I was not an artist. I, not an artist. Yes, yes, said Cezanna. He's speaking . . . fool. His voice. Wluose voice is that? Oh, Panda, Panda . . . fool. I am an ar- tist-a great artist. I painted a blue flame. Yes, yes, said Cezanne. Ha, I have you, Pandaf' Kerri Stop screaming like a woman. Ken! XYfhose voice is that? Wliose? I'll choke you, Panda. I am an ar- tist. I'll choke you Panda . . . choke you. Yes, yes, said Cezanne. Witl1er, wither! Die Panda. I am an artist. 8I Kitchen Police Swish, swish, the dust mop goes As slowly as can be, I can't dust now, my mind's in throes Witli thoughts of ships at sea. I picture me upon a boat So elegant and fast, Taking me to shores remote To countries of the past. I'd gaily promenade the deck Or watch the frothy sea Do as I please-but what the heck, I know these things can't be. Yes, mafI'm dusting! -fftless and lessj At night, neath stars so bright Witli beaus galore, in regal dress I'cl dance away the night. Next day, I'd sleep as late as one Have breakfast served in bed, And then go out and have some fun, Do things of which I've read. I'll soon be done, mafn But I guess That trips are not for me, Because, you see, I must confess I'm awfully 'fraid of the sea. 1 ll ic11er 6? 'ft Crf'?ftf'll'llv,1, I ' .J in ,.vgi.slz, W' ln- Q t. 3 fy ,J 4u. . Kfwrff 1 alum x t x . 'z,'fZ .' - , e .gs .,1.z?5!?H , all -.. - N K IIA! ,LN ...wh .fl- A-Ki K , M., ,- H- Q Z D W Sw! ug' ll l ..fs.. I ,I rc ull ll A .'l i., V1 ' 1 ' fl I ,I I , gf. K 'T'T's,', . iff ' +1 A 0 0 , 'U f ' ' L g of - fl f' , 4' f If 5' il 'Z 1 I I W 1 ft 3 .I 'A f X 1 ,- '. - IQ, 'Y . . 7 'fig - ll'- infill' Eglin A .A My, ,',,:g-. I A J lm til it ll qw 'll-::,.,,f i.nNT!A, 1,5 l' J 'tif ll ' llllllln ,I . . :W ,yt 9' I ln ir, 'itll Xlfj l . ' 5 4 ti A ' -X ' so llllliiw x. X I . , It 'ri 'un ,H llllll' -:Ill I .W I Beauly Parlor Wfhy, oh why, should I sutfer so XXfhene'er to the beauty parlor I go? In restless torment I sit and fret, Does it tlo any good, I look worse yell Under the dryer I sit and bake Wislming I were in a nice, cool lake It seems for hours my hair stays wet The result of course, I look worse yet! The people around seem at their ease Je, For when I Complain they say Quiet please J.: Oh me! O, what can be done, and I bet That when I get out, I'lI look worse yet. Everyone worries about some little thing Mother worries when vases I fling The presitlent worries about the tleht But my hair is my caref It may tall out, yet! fam lluieuer . X K l llllillllz me gil fvvvx i ', -v'sf'v- nf ' 1-sf-qrxfx ' x in in f W, 'W' llllllllllll i pl llllllllll i l 5 g I 4' J Wage? n .., ,rg tx , 1,5 'z , ,II Till: lll5'l.,..,., Ig fffmllll QM u mmm 'l i 'I I WJ ,rl I I I' ii.. iii rr. QW rrfinallfllyyllllll my 'S' UART M- S , Q X 24' '33 g - W 2 S, e i ll A 1 A JZ ' 'A rullll ' Wyman, M , 4 One S'ruden+'s Decision . JUNE STOLZ HE only sounds in the class room were the vigorous scratch- ings of many pens. A pleas- ant-faced, sympathetic teacher was standing at the window watching the students, engrossed in an apparently difiicult Regents examination. Her eyes fell upon one student, who had not written for several minutes. Walking to his side she asked softly, Do you need something, young man ? No, Mam, I don't need anything. Mournfully, I just can't keep my mind on the test. The proctor sat down in the seat next to him, saying as she did, Perhaps I can help you if you tell me what the trouble is. The boy with an eager burst of con- fidence replied. 'My Dad only has three more months to get his compensation. What has that to do with your examination ?' NXfell you see, Mam, I have been promised a steady position in Feb- ruary on condition that I have a dip- loma. But I won't get a diploma be- cause I'm going to fail this Regents. Then there will be no one to support my Dad, and he will have to go to an institution. The doctor says the shock will kill him. Why donit you get busy then, said the proctor, and answer these questions ? But, teacher, it's useless. Re- signedly, I'l fail anyway. I don't know anything. The teacher, with a determined ex- pression, stood up. Young man, do you know what you're going to do when I finish speaking to you? No, Mam, what? You're going to pick up that paper, answer those questions and you are going to pass this test. XVhat would your dad say if he knew he had a quitter for a son? A quit- ter! The shock would be worse than if you had failed. Do you realize that by sitting here moodily like this you are announcing to everyone that you are afraid of this Regents. Afraid of a little piece of paper with a few questions on it! A strong, hulk- ing fellow like you! Well, in my opinion, you are a weakling-you don't deserve to be here. Wfe don't want boys like that in our school. Now you pick up that paper! Leaving his desk she turned quickly and walked to the front of the room. As she occupied herself with some papers, five minutes passed. Glanc- ing covertly at the student, the teacher discovered that he was nervously turn- ing the paper over and over in his hands. Ten minutes went by. The boy was still puzzled and undecided. Fifteen minutes went by. The proc- tor turned to the blackboard and wrote, Time now: 11:00 Exam ends: 12:15 Turning about and glancing at the student, she caught his eye and smiled encouragingly. Suddenly his expres- sion changed from gloom to grim de- termination. Looking up at the teacher he smiled broadly and then picking up his pen, began to write furiously. , v K as I N G w a s quite proud of his ability to Hy. He, whose W ancestors had been humble coolies, now owned a pi- lot's uniform, and received great re- spect for his posi- - W tion. As a result 0 z ' 31 , N lllll f X l X ' N w ,I-R ry ll Ny XXX flvl' l . Vp l l Xl Lllliililxi' . fri-n i all lqlll lxldlxhlm W X 'l ' X134 .T di. : ' ' FY-g -Q ,gl CMT i 3 ii, we i W ' D Y l 'W .Wa 'gf - .,i'. l'J . Al 0Ql:,I . of the war, he had been taught how to pilot a plane. Witlm this training had come a fierce, national pride, and he was willing to lose his life for his country. He was overjoyed when, because of his deadly accuracy when it came to dropping bombs, he was chosen to blow up the Cho Kang Bridge. A one-way flight into enemy territory might seem a doubtful favor to you or me. To Ling, however, it was a great honor to be able to die so bravely for his country. The time had arrived for blowing up the bridge. The river which flowed under it had become impas- sible, because of the force of the great floods. Cho Kang Bridge was of great use to the enemy. Across this bridge huge numbers of men and sup- plies were sent, and important com- munications were brought to the rear. Ling was not the first one to at- tempt the difhcult task. Many others had lost their lives miserably in their attempts to destroy it. One man had floated down the river with a boat- load of explosives, but the boat had exploded before the task was done. Another soldier had tried to plant the explosives there by the land. How- ever, his ruse had been discovered, and he had been executed by firing squad rifles. Many more men had at- tempted the feat. All had failed, and Sabotage JACK MEYER the seemingly invulnerable bridge still stood. However, none of these at- tempts had been made by a man with the courage and daring Ling pos- sessed. Besides, he had bombs, sold by the North folk, of intricate and deadly pattern, to aid him. Bombs that with Ling releasing them would not miss their mark. These deadly missiles would destroy that immovable bridge. How proud Ling's ancestors would be of him- he who would succeed. That night Ling checked his ship carefully, including the bomb racks. He went over all the control wires, inserting new and firm ones where he discovered one that looked weak. His gas tanks were all filled fully, and his oil checked. Then he posted a guard in front of the plane, and, satisfied that it was as nearly per- fect as he could make it, he turned in. Ling took off at daybreak and headed East. He quickly flew the plane up to its ceiling to avoid enemy Hights. His plane was only a pur- suit ship and with the bomb racks, carried only enough gas for a one- way trip to the bridge. Wlmen he sighted it, he climbed high above it and dove straight down, dropping four of his eight bombs before pulling out of the dive. He noted no effect, and so the next time he aimed carefully and slowly in dropping the rest of his bombs. just after he dropped his bombs, an anti-aircraft gun scored a direct hit on his plane, and so he never learned, at least not in this world, that some Northern munitions maker had neglected to fit his entire load of bombs with firing pins. Cliff- 86 N a Louisiana field in late afternoon there scurried a dusky shape, stumb- ling through the tall blue-green grass. There was a muffled splash and a fan of ripples spreading mute tidings down the bayou. Then Gator Foot clambered wet and dripping up the far bank and, flashing a look behind, disap- peared into the rich tangle of trees and underbrush. Here in the somber coolness of his marshy glades and with the first haz- ards past, Gator Foot set off with the joy-charged swiftness of a liberated fish restored to its native element. He crashed through thick barriers of ferns, tall grass and bushes for a few hundred yards and then striking the narrow trail he sought, swung into a jogging trot and headed west. As his pounding feet sent him flying between the trees and hurled him across the gulleys and moss-clad logs, a con- sciousness of what he was doing awoke and stretched itself in his brain. Gator Foot was running away. He had already started. It was done, and now he could not go back, never, unless . . . they caught him, and the crushing thought goaded on his pounding feet. He would not be doing this if the old master hadn't gone away and sold the plantation. In those days, Gator Swampshad e HOWARD HALL Foot was the plantations hunter. He supplied the master's table with rab- bits and opossums, and killed the foxes that rogued off the chickens from the coop, and any night he chose, he had only to ask the master and he might take the dogs and gun off into the bogs to hunt. The dogs were almost his then. They all loved him and minded him as though he owned them. Then the master went off to At- lanta and sold the old place to strangers. He went away and de- serted Gator Foot, and the new folks didn't let him hunt, or even go into the marshes. They took away his gun and sold the dogs. The old times were gone, and Gator Foot was made to work in the fields with the rest, all day in the sun. He never felt the cool shade of the swamp or heard the barking and baying of the pack. Many nights he had lain on his cot staring wide-eyed at darkness and had thought and shuddered with cold sweat, knowing he could not do this. But the sting of a foreman's whip on this sun-seared afternoon had driven thoughts and fears away and he was speeding into the marshes. Already the ground he traversed was softer, the air more dank and the sun toward which he sped was sagging low and cool. Soon dark- ness would aid his escape, for even in the bottomless black of the swamp night, Gator Foot could find his way. He was bound for a place where they could not follow. And after that, he had heard of a place to the north, up the great river where he could find kindness and rest. He would lie hidden deep in the swamp until the search was over and then he would escape. But now he must hasten. Perhaps they had already missed him and were even now gath- ering for pursuit. Gator Foot had looked with sick, hot eyes on the awful punishment of runaways who were caught. He would simply not be caught! Now his black feet were slushing through mud and slime, driving an arrow straight for his hiding place. Panting now, he pleaded with those feet not to forsake him as those other things had done, but to keep on going. And on they went, pound- ing deeper into the wild place and yet deeper as the sun sank and shad- ows stretched away . Then with lungs aburst he saw he had reached the end of the path, the deepest passable point of the swamp and the lonely haven which would protect him. He lurched toward it and spilled his weary, heaving body onto the sod and did not move or think for a long time, from the relief of it. About him, the green unmoving waters were streaked gold by the dy- ing sun. Its rays filtered through trailing curtains of Spanish moss, like hoary beards on the ancient black cypresses which stretched their cloaked arms overhead. Gator Foot lay on a small island of half-dry ground, his breaths great quivering gasps. His shirt was torn by brambles, and his overalls were caked stiff by the green scum of the water and the mud. He gazed through the deepening shades to the east, watching furtively and listening rigidly. Now the sun had set, and from everywhere he heard the humming, buzzing songs of the myriad insects awaking to their nocturnal pursuits. From the gay twilight a bat flitted down to prey on them, and a huge swamp owl came skimming silently from somewhere and soared out to the west. Gator Foot peered after him, twisting around. Yes, an owl might go there, but not those creatures who must walk, for that was Dead Man's Marsh, the mystic, dismal, and forbidden heart of the swamp. Even the wild creatures, the wary foxes and swamp rabbits circled it in their rovings and would not enter, no matter how fiercely the hounds pressed them toward it. Gator Foot had seen all these things for he had often hunted close by and he always shunned the deadly place. Now it was night. The still, sing- ing blackness of the swamp had fal- len and Gator Foot sharpened his senses and listened more intently. The blatant croak of a frog made him start. Fear was tightening its grip on him. By now the search had started. The grim pursuers were beat- ing the bushes for him, combing the fields for him, cursing him. If he were found, their wrath would be more than the flesh could bear. So Gator Foot waited and listened. Small far off things moved in the black waters or gave half-heard cries and a faint melancholy breeze stirred the hanging mosses. Their trailing tips stroked the water's surface. All was stillness and timeless peace and then-his heart leaped with the chill of terror! Far and faint from the distant re- cesses of the cypress groves, came the bay of a hound on the scent. He waited land again the wailing cry came inexorably closer. Then louder and truer, until Gator Foot' reeled 87 88 when he recognized from the familiar sound that the pack was his. His own dogs that he had raised and trained had been brought to track him down! He shuddered in the darkness and tried to swallow the fear at his throat and told himself they could not track him so deep in the swamp, but the sound grew louder and he knew that the dogs were keeping to the trail in the joyous hope of find- ing their old master again. As he had hunted the creatures of the swamp on many nights, now he himself stood at bay. The hounds were smelling him out and behind them, gaunt hard-faced men, armed and vengeful, were coming to scourge and llay him. But how could they track him here, all the way in here, through the water and the mud? Yet always the baying was closer and louder and soon as he listened, his senses brought to him the sound of their running. He pulled himself, quaking, to his feet. Then he heard harsh voices urging on the dogs and saw the swinging lantern lights like dancing devil's eyes. Then their snarling oaths outlining their , vengeful justice on 1 him, and their plans for his punishment. No! There was one , way out. Dead Man's Marsh! He, Gator Foot, who knew the swamp as on one else, would find a way through and thwart his 4 pursuers. He drew a heavy breath and lurched away into the black- ness. His stealthy feet made sucking sounds in the wet ground. Every cautious foot-step might fall on a trap- door to death. Suddenly his footing sank, and he found himself in thick ooze and water to his waist. First, he struggled. Then he tried to grip him- self. Easy now! He groped about with uncertain feet, each step dragging him deeper. The water rose to his chest as he moved along. Then the bottom dropped away. With a hysterical surge he tried to spring clear, but the waters grasped him, hurling him down. His head whirled as he struggled with the smothering Hood. His senses began to slip. Then the slime seemed to melt away and free him. A warmth glowed within him. The world spun and stood still at once. A voice called his name and turn- ing slowly, without emotion, he SHXV, smiling above him, his old master. Gator Foot, he said, Wl1y did you run off, when I wanted you? Here, l've brought the hounds. Take them A f and bag some game for the big dinner tomorrow night. Grasping Gater Foot's hand, he beckoned him to follow into the swamp. The pursuers reached a small island of half- dry ground. T h e y stopped and peered for it was about as far as they might venture. N0 sound came to their listening ears. Gater l Foot had made good his escape. f' ll Z jf MUNI 1: r .1 .a . ' M: 1-.sm .-'. L -'-,.,f.4w-T I ' .',,:.,w fy! ! e r' ,J JT' Q1 'U .' 5- Q 5,-I . ' vi. 't FL' 3. 1 952. Jig gs , xg' A x Y 90 Mood Men MARGARET CARLEY H12 mood men of the silent films are gone. They have been rele- ' gated to the ranks of the past along with the silent films, and they are only exhumed now and then to provide a few throaty laughs. They were brewers of all emotions, those wraithlike figures, always heard but never seen, who haunted the thea- tres in the days of the silent films, and tried to soothe the patrons to silence by dreamy passages and to drown them out with fortissimo. The mood men furnished the early movie-goers with an outlet for their feelings. They were the egg beaters of the theatre. It was their job to whip up the emotions of the audi- ence. Back in 1894 with the first showing of a motion picture, the need for a musical background or accom- paniment was established. The great success of the movies today lies partly in the fact that the spectator not only views the events passing across the screen, but lives them by picturing himself in the part of the principal character. XVith the early silent films, sans musical accomplishment, this was found to be impossible. The clacking whirr of the film from the project- tion room, the shuffling of feet on the floor, the cracking of peanuts and the coughs and wisecracks from the rather embarrassed audience during a particularly emotional scene created an impenetrable barrier between the audience and the screen. The specta- tor remained a spectator, looking on while characters paraded across the screen. With the innovation of the mood men, however, this transition that is the ability of the audience to imag- ine themselves as the central character of the film was made possible. The distracting noise of the pro- jection room was drowned out by the music of the pianist or organist, and the tension in the atmosphere was largely relieved. The music expressed the feelings of the audience, and at the same time helped the continuity of the film. Few of us realize, however, that these men who sat in the front of every theatre, playing for the silent pictures, were undergoing a contin- uous, tedious round of hard work. Playing for the silent films was an art that required an infinite amount of patience and endurance and was sometimes akin to martyrdom. The mood man unfortunate enough to play in mining districts of the west, wore a wooden shield on his back to absorb the shock of a few over- ripe missles that managed to reach him when certain restless members of the audience were particularly dissat- isfied with his interpretations. The average salary for mood men in small towns was anywhere from thirty to thirty-five dollars per week, and they created moods continuously from 1:50 P. M. to 10:30 P. M. Small towns, perhaps to cover an in- feriority complex, have a habit of as- serting their rights more vigorously than their larger brothers and sisters. This was true in so far as the lot of the mood man was concerned. Voci- ferous protests were heard if any one hand playing was attempted by the mood man, while he furiously gulped down a ham sandwich with as much dexterity as he could manage. The mood man held on to his job n..zinly by quick thinking. Because or his close proximity to the stage, u.: pianist had great difficulty in de- termining his identity of objects on the screen. To use a fictitious ex- ample:-if smoke suddenly belched across the screen, to our pianist, it might resemble anything from the ex- haust of a Buck Roger's rocket ship, to the Chicago tire or the smoke from a cigarette. If our mood man was clever, he would craftily stall by going up and down the scale, until he finally decided whether the theme should be Fireman, save my child or Two Cigarettes in the Dark. Eventually the mood man was taken partially out of his misery by the in- troduction of a cue sheet. This sheet accompanied every film and gave hints as to the moods which would follow in the film, leaving the selec- tion of a song to lit the mood to the pianist. lirno Rapee, the savior of the mood men, was himself originally a mood man for the Capitol Theatre. He brought 52 moods into one volume with ati index of every page. Yifhile the heroine slept in a jungle glade, the mood man might be com- placently ambling through Lullaby from Jocelyn, when a ring of fire planted by the villain would spring up around her. The mood man, see- ing smoke billow across the screen, merely consulted the margin of Mr. Rapee's book and found Fire Fight- ing, page 200. A split second to turn the page and he was in the midst of the inferno. Each player had his standbys, and many good men had a few in common. Chopstick efforts were produced the minute a Chinaman appeared inno- cently on the screen, and the strains of Chinatown, my Chinatown, would peal forth. If a drunk toddled in, the univer- sal theme was, NY!e won't go home until morning. If an indiscreet screen lady had a romance with an already married gentleman, the mood man would inevitably play, Sweet- heart, if you talk in your sleep, don't mention any name! If any unfor- tunate Thespian were forced to walk the plank, he would be accompanied by, Will You Take a Walk With Me, Baby? On the other hand, should the hero find hfmself in an embarrassing predicament with vora- cious cannibals, the mood man would be on hand with- Beefsteak for Sup- per, Sweetheart, or I Met Him in a Pot of Stew. Occasionally a laggard pianist would be wakened from his reverie by hisses and groans, to find himself playing We XYfon't Get Home Until Morning, or Hail, Hail, the Gang's all Here, while on the screen an elderly grandmother was reading the Scripture to her young grandson. This seemed to relieve the tension a bit. The arrival of the talking pictures spelled the doom of the mood men, who slowly sank into obscurity. To- day, all that is left of them are their old cue sheets and special scores, souvenirs of another lost profession. 92 .f ?-' xx. ffiwfs, v-fi I Q . xxx 1 Y x .Q X l 5 Q ,. 5 f 2, X 0 . Fe Club Minutes HELENA PERRY T'S nice being a senior, very nice, but it's lots nicer when you can reminisce and say, Will I ever forget the fun I had in Swimming Club? or words to that effect. There are, in the graduating class this term, quite a number of boys and girls who have scared up a creditable record in the field of extra-curricular activity during their stay here at john Adams. Perhaps one of the liveliest of young ladies is Alice Hall, who serves as secretary for the Art and Metal Crafts Club. Alice was in the midst of some important piece of crafts- manship frolled smock sleeves and allj when interviewed. Do you in- dulge much in outside activity, Alice P She nodded, My father often asks my why I bother to come home to eat and change outfits! This is read- ily explained when you view this line- l wmn ll r tl TN is 7 5 AL, l gf R o up: volley and basketball, base hockey fthree terms agoj, first aid, dancing and swimming clubs, serving for two years on the G. A. A. Council, re- cipient of P. S. A. L. Pins, three minor letters, fand hopes for a major, and acting Secretary of the Spanish Club. Further, the special gym class, the Leaders Club claims Alice too. That's all very swell for school, but Adams closes its doors sometime, what then ? Then, Alice continued, I attend Scout meetings. Ah, now we're getting some- where, this reporter beamed, what are your duties ?,. For a while I was a scribe but now I'm secretary for Troop No. 134, fbeing a secretary is rather usual for this Hall ladyj We have a place in Bear Mountain named Camp Watika where we hike, etc. Wheri at home we frequent the parks and museums. All scouts take various tests to advance themselves, included in these are the Semaphore and Morse Codes. Upon graduation Secretary Hall will attend the Lincoln Nurse's Home for a degree and then will try passing a civil service examination. An authority on the ups and downs of high school life is Albert Leven- son, captain of the Cheering Squad. Many were the times Al led us through Adam's sky rockets and reckity aces while the Blue and White eleven soured the sweet dis- positions of a visiting team in an earnest tussle. But does Al's career stop before the grandstand? No, no, no, no! On the Prom Committee, Sergeant of the Lunchroom, Color Guard Squad, Physiography, Idle Hour and Chemistry Clubs, jr. Glee Club, Dramatics, baseball, and soccer. He was on the Boys' High track team, and about two years ago wrote the aviation column in the Cmzlpzzx. Wl1at's your destination after grad- uation, Al? Brooklyn College, where l'll major in languages, probably German. Then again I might decide on Physics. 1-Iaven't made up my mind exactly. Evelyn Kay, President of the Girl Reserves, lingered outside of room 128 long enough to answer queries on the girls' club activities. Today we're having an initiation at the Y. W. C. A., she disclosed. The Girl Reserves is a part of the organiza- tion known as the Candle Light Service, so we hold initiations there. Evelyn was Vice-President of the club before becoming President, and has found group environment truly bene- ficial. At one time I lacked the spirit to speak before a class, but through my social contacts in club rooms l've rid myself of this handicap and no longer consider it such an ordeal. Then too in clubs you meet such a variety of friends, whereas you would usually associate with just one type. The Glee, Dancing, Swimming, and Trionian Clubs have provided happy hours for Evelyn too. Comptometry beckons to Evelyn Kay, which means in any man's language Business School. Wl1ic'l1 has not been determined as yet. Another enthusiastic girl is Grace Frankie Lehman, present manager of the Basketball Club and eighth term representative for the G. A. A. Council. Grace has participated in sports every term in school and thinks there's nothing quite like them. Basketball, Baseball, Volleyball and Swimming Clubs have been Grace's pets, and through them has merited twelve minor and three major letters. ln addition she earned the Red Cross rs T CH 6 R 5.1-1 214 955' l l ' hi Q, Lv l . 1 ' Am l X 1 ' D U Q l ' 4 : l V tl cal 0 j . Q ,ji ' .ull V, ,.,, Ig. s .:..'.-' f. l s Emblem of the First Aid Club by passing the Standard First Aid test. What is the work of the G. A. A. Council this term, Grace? XVe've been concerned for quite some time in drawing up a Constitu- tion for the Council. Having definite rules would settle the voting problem. That is, when any question arose in connection with club functions if we had a Constitution we could refer to it instead of having to vote each time we're in doubt about something. Girls' Commercial, Bay Ridge, and many other schools have one. The Council has Publicity Committees mainly to urge freshmen to enroll in behalf of Athletic interest, which is usually lacking at that time. XXfhat would you say, Grace, ac- counts for the failure of girls to join sports clubs P I'd say that many of them feel that they aren't cut out for sports or aren't good enough in sports to go out for them. They don't care to im- ,- B ge- ' X 4 pu? Y ' A If 25' i C K' exg prove themselves, show lack of inter- est and as a result never participate in anything extra-curricular. 93 Sfsqfffsgpislfing w J CHQ LES Smgh Q Xl l ' Hlgthresident athletic machine X5 that has so favorably and ex- ' 1 nplarily functioned in the past musttstop for its usual overhauling. An overhauling that replaces import- ant cog-wheels of athletic achieve- ment so that the new parts may fit into mechanisms worn smooth by long, efficient operation. This part- ticular overhauling job must be per- formed every six months when that inevitable depleter of successful teams reappears, namely graduation. Al- though this introduction may seem a trifie mechanical, it is purely super- ficial because I am sure that every coach and teacher at john Adams feels in our athletic graduation a deep sense of pride and satisfac- ' , tion upon their plishments. ig O all he athletes who l will pass from great accom- Mr f t if A' -S our halls and fields of competition, Alexander Cerulli and Grace Lehman stand out as the most exceptional, and as the possessors of the most imposing rec- ords. Cerulli has recently concluded four years of varsity playing, in which he has proved himself one of the most outstanding gridders ever to don a pair of cleated-shoes, in the victory- studded history of our comparatively young school. He figured prom- inently in the conquest of the city football chamionship in 1957, and ii, the capturing of the Queen's grid crown this year. I suppose it is needless to mention t h a t Cerulli was rated efiicient enough to be selected as a member of the All - Queens g r i d s q u a d three y e a r s consecutivel y and designated a position on the more select All-City team for a period of two years. Perhaps the most signifi- cant fact emphasized by the selectors of these various honor teams is that the versatility of Cerulli enabled him to play end, center, or tackle as the situation demanded. He usually played a line position on the offense, but was converted into a roving center on the defense. He was in every way worthy of the distinction of being the most capable in New York City at his posi- tion. Al has also received numerous scholarship offers, and although it has not yet been divulged which he will choose, I am sure that his selection will be the one that will benefit him most. Although girls very seldom appear in the limelight because of the lack of competition in interscholastic athletics, there is one member of the senior class who is very worthy of mention because of her remarkable successful record compiled in ac- tivities conducted by the Girls' Health Edu- c a tio n Department Grace Lehman in her four year s stay at john Adams has captured so if 'fig' c Q- K 'X . 74, xg C W' . many laurels that I fear Q c' mention of them all would seem like a mere chronological order of events. Miss Lehman in the past was a mem- ber of the G. A. A. Council, and this is the third time this honor has been bestowed upon her. She is the proud possessor of eight minor letters and two major letters. Con- sidering the limited number of girls who can win major and even minor letters each term, not because of lack of ability but of an absence of op- portunity, her gaining of two major insignias will be more readily appreci- ated. Miss Lehman has participated in the activities of the swimming, basket- ball, dancing, volleyball, and baseball clubs and has always emerged with at least a service chevron. She met the rigid requirements for and garnered five P. S. A. L. medals for all-around athletic ability, and for a junior and senior life-saving medal. However im- pressive her sports record may be, it must be remembered that Miss Leh- man's ability is not confined to the basketball floor or to the baseball dia- mond. but that she has been cited also for her leadership in intramural ath- letics as well. It was through her un- tiring work and help that many of the aforementioned clubs were organized and made to function. The athletes w h o conducted themselves in such a manner as to credit the Queensbor- ough championship in football as well as in cross-country to john Adams composes a group of graduating athletes that may very likely not be duplicated in the future. Among the graduates we find Marty Kalichman, co-captain and all-Queens selection for the past season taking leave after four years of brilliant, win- ning football. Gerald Bender crash- ing flankman, Stanley Reichgott, bril- liant quarterback, and Frank Paneeci, dependable lineman are among the graduates. In cross-country we find a championship squad, composed of such brilliant harriers as Captain Bill Rott- ger, Hal Ostrander, Eugene Zaccor, Lew Faivel and Tod McCarthy passing on to college or to other fields of en- deavor. However, it is rumored that a few of these boys are to serve to- gether aagin at Dartmouth, via the scholarship route. The track team will lose Gerald Devlin, sprinter, while the soccer aggregation will part with its most valuable member, Captain Babe Strum. Robert Tonkinson, Harry Goldberg and Harold Praner also go. Casey Mont- will, celebrated two- letter man, will con- tinue exploits in soccer and baseball outside of school. Perhaps some of these athletes may meet again, whether it be on the field of competi- tion, in the business of- fice, or in the school- room, and it will be th to remember that they received your fundamental training in sportsmanship at john Adams and will apply those principles to whatever they may choose as vocations. W li 'vii fr. .F 1 a gf eir good policy 95 96 Sl1ip's Library ISADORA T is readily agreed that before one reads a book about the highly controversal topic, Russia, he must be prepared to examine the qualifica- tions of the author. This is espec- ially important in regard to Assign- ment in Utopia by Eugene Lyons, since the book is written from a per- onal point of view, and what the au- thor says may merely be an expres- sion of his own feeling toward the government. Before Eugene Lyons 'entrance into Russia in 1928 he was a firm believer in the philosophies of Marx and was convinced that the Soviets were achieving a Utopia. He considered his appointment as correspondent for the United Press in Russia a great triumph for the cause. Now, he would be in a position to spread the gospel through his reports unlike the former ones which were considered diluted by capitalistically-inclined re- porters.. And so he entered Russia determined to understand the revolu- tion and to dig down to the core of this great event. It was prob- ably this sincerity which soon made him an undesirable in the land of the Great Exper- iment. j '- - Assigfmzefzt in U I 0 p i 11 wasn't written until after Mr. - Lyons left Russia. The book '7 J' I 1 u i consists, mainly, of his reac- 'E tions to the Soviet system. dm., Rather than discussing the RUFFINE wholesale suppression of any former bourgeois. The argument of the Soviets that this suppression is neces- sary until Russia is thoroughly social- ized does not seem justifiable to Mr. Lyons who says that the happiness of future generations, theoretical that it is, does not condone the extinction or suffering of millions of living folk. The book is a timely document, and it is recommended to anyone who is interested in social developments in Russia. Those of you who read Mrs. Frank- lin D. Roosevelt's daily column My Day may hardly be struck by her journalistic skill as much as by her ability to be all over the country at once. In the morning you may find her in Chicago addressing a XVomen's conference, in the afternoon she will be descending the shaft of a mine in Pennsylvania, and then she will go on to spend the night in Hyde Park. Yet, despite all this activity, Mrs. Roosevelt has found time to write a book which she calls This is my Sfory. The book is written in the simple and direct style in which she writes her column. Born to a rich and socially prominent family, Mrs. Roose- velt has always disliked the - staid conventions of her class. Her youth was not very much different from that of any other girl in her position. After her marriage to her , Q 11, structure of the government, he dwells on the effects of the system on the people. He describes staged trials and cousin, Franklin, she blos- somed out as the public-spir- ited person that she is. It is pleasant to End that Mrs. Roosevelt shares identical felings with you on problems of cooking and house furnishings, as well as on pol- itics perhaps, or trade. History is told in many fashions, some terribly dull and others highly engrossing. A Book of A111erim11.r by Rosemary and Stephen Vincent Benet is not recommended for a his- tory book report, but it is suggested for an hour or so of entertainment. The book consists of a series of portraits in verse embellished by fit- ting illustrations that in themselves are worth the reading of the book. The authors begin with Christopher Columbus and continue through until they finally meet U. S. A. The Benets have a charming way of put- ting things. Wlmen they write about the puritans, they enclose the follow- ing lines which are good enough to repeat: Who as a punishment for sinners Invented boiled New England Dinners? To U. S. A. they ask whether future generations will call this the savage era or the good old days? Although the book, Bambi by Fe- lix Salten is the story, or rather the ex- periences of a deer, it should not be classified among the usual animal stor- ies. It does not revolve about any par- ticular incident in the life of the an- imal as visualized by a human who desires to interpret it as an example of either fidelity, courage, or the other virtues. You are introduced into a new world of beings who have thoughts and aspirations not unlike your own. Bambi is a deer. His home is the small glade in which he was born. Wlieii summer comes, Bambi is taken out of the glade into a world of mys- teries and secrets. He is delighted by the warm sunshine and soft zyphyrs of the meadow and by the gentle crea- tures whom he encounters. But as beautiful as the world is to Bambi, he is disturbed by his mother's caution and constant references to the dan- ger and Hef' Bambi finds that one can't resign himself to fears and that he too must enter this eternal struggle. A familiar note in our own lives is sounded in a conversation between two leaves who realize their time has come and are speculating on an after-life. But they can't make a decision, no leaf ever came back to tell them. In this day of sharp shoes and girl reporters, the modern girl is sup- posed to be free from all binding conventions of other days, and on a par with the male of the species. But woe to the modern girl, for she too is being sadly underrated, and her knowledge of social etiquette is slowly dwindling. Here is a book that comes like a cry in the wilder- ness to all the girls lost in the Rules. It is written by Beatrice Pierce. Miss Pierce is sympathetic to all the prob- lems and seems to know just what every girl wants to know. She tells how to brush up your conversation, how the schoolgirl should conduct herself, and how not to be a wall flower. She caused this reviewer a little consternation when she came out with the statement that the oyster fork belongs on the right-hand side, not the left. So, if you have any such dilhculties a bee-line to the school library is the suggested remedy, and if the book is out, use your preroga- tive on a reservation for If'.r More 1:1111 lVbe11 You Know llae Ruler. 97 2 'Mufti ill j pmol riff lf I 'V . ' I ,X 98 a W 5 ' W ,jf- s-Jliqi,-.bywfyvvii.-if I ! j V- -if j' I . 'H I jw ' J i .ot 'utj:,u jul If . 3 X M-in li mi f-Q, A jjttlju. .f-if 1 .1 -.tam -ir' , a ik 1...-..:, 5.e.H j k, 9 i f gl! X4 J A I If . f , 5 :':lL 'A . .v.- . Y, 'Z' .----- ' uiz Corner PATRICIA MURRAY Qzzerlion: Wl1at was the greatest thrill you experienced during your stay in john Adams? Hedwig Braum: I experienced my biggest thrill on the occasion when I danced for the first time on our as- sembly stage. The warm applause that came to my ears when I finished my performance, left me bewildered but happy. Robert Suppe: It is difficult to ex- press the feeling that overtook me when I appeared as guest announcer on the program, Your High School Reporter. This, I should say, was my biggest thrill. joseplaine Butera: The incident that provoked my greatest thrill was an exhibition basketball game, in which I participated several terms ago. It was a tit-for-tat competition, and this made our victory more exciting. Wfilliam Shejield: My biggest thrill? Wluy, that's easy. My being elected President of the General Or- ganization afforded me that pleasant sensation. Madeline Wiede1'b0ld z My greatest thrill and happiest moment were ex- perienced simultaneously, and the oc- casion was when I was informed of the position I held on the Senior Celebrity List. jaorepla Fontana: The thrill of my school life occurred during the presen- tation of the latest term play. It was during a change of scene, and most of the cast were assembled backstage. I was in high spirits, and decided to give my version of a member of the English nobility. My impromptu act was greeted so warmly, that it left me with an elated feeling for the re- mainder of the evening. Kay Belarew: Well, the day I was informed that I had garnered the Sec- retaryship of the General Organization provided me with that enjoyable feel- ing. And believe you me, I was thrilled ! Phil Fazufz The thrill of my high school career occurred just this term, when I was chosen to portray the leading masculine role in Mary of Scotland. Grace Lehman: Absolutely the biggest thrill I experienced in Adams occurred when the team of which I was a member, received the coveted basketball pennant awarded each term to those who emerge victorious in the tourney. Audrey Kerrigau: My life in Ad- ams has been just one thrill after an- other. But the greatest of them all occurred, when I was elected Girl Leader of the Senior Arista, in an exceedingly close race. I, . mm' yin. e f 1 L my I Q 5 if imilIilihlllllllilimulllI V Q 5.5. 4 5-- f-.73-'-,.,f-f' , , ,. E 'il 'l ,S 1 ii 1 Y' 4. - f i 1 i I ' N s , Q. slxi ,A K :,,jlnn.i il I ini, r - -sl ls'-SS A. I Iii lg F' 1-. 5555? - ',.'. - ,-T -LG V Cap and Gown HAROLD ADLER HE turning point CJf d. Prom bids began to go like hot Wzir was the battle of Gettys- C 5 Cap and Gown question burg. The turning point of this' year's graduating class activities was the fourth meeting of the term Up until that critical period it looked as though the Senior Class of janu- ary l939 was doomed to become just one of those groups that graduate each semester. And maybe not even that! Previous to that time, only 57 bids had been sold for the Senior Prom. Senior Day plans weren't even being discussed, and the Cap and Gown campaign seemed doomed to failure through the inactivity of the entire class. Such a situation if it had continued would not have led the Seniors toward a successful and joyous Commencement. A remedy for the problem was siinpleg merely awaken the Seniors from their reverie. But how? Even the thought that there might not be a Prom failed to stir them. Maybe it was the snow, maybe the Thanks- giving turkey and holiday or perhaps the Uniform Examinations. Any one of these might have been the contrib- uting factor, but with an unexpected tremor the Senior Class actually stir- lo re hopeful, and then came the greatest senior meeting of the term! Miss Marie L. Keller presided and in a most calm and gentle manner announced that the Senior Prom would be held Friday, December 16 at the Hotel Pennsylvania. This was a great announcement and sighs of relief could be heard distinctly throughout the assembly. And then to climax the meeting, two students proudly model- ed the Cap and Gown before the applauding, cheering, and whistling Seniors. The vote whether or not to wear this attire was almost completely unanimous. For the first time in Adams history, new graduation regalia was to be worn. Witli such great news to bolster up its lethargic spirit, not only did the Senior Class of january '39 go on through a most enjoyable and success- ful graduating term, but the thought of Regents as the last obstacle seemed almost unimportant, as plans were being made for the grand future, out- side the door! 99 IOO Alumni Antics STANLEY SCHULBERG , In Illllll lllll ff X mx XVTEXN xxwwx kk W 'lm Il A ' 'ir' ' Srl W will- i nlll half if -1 f.- J'f I fl? 11:14 1 A, , Ailes: M A A X - 2 - -- -afi- ACH term about live hundred students graduate to become our Alumni. There is nothing so gratifying as to hear from these for- mer students that they are doing well. Not all of them follow their original plans, but sooner or later they find themselves on the road to success. Gloria Washburn, former General Organization President has suffered her first disappointment as an actress. The story that the leading lady breaks an ankle or loses her voice or falls down a flight of stairs just before the curtain goes up, apparently isn't true in real life. Gloria, who is studying ballet and dramatics at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts was given the part of understudying the heroine of Case History, a play that opened up at the Lyceum Thea- tre, New York. Even more unlike the stories, the critics didn't approve of the play, the opus closed in a week and Gloria didn't get her big chance. She didn't even meet the actress she was understudying. Better luck next time, Gloria! Morton Harris, who was the busi- ness manager of the Ctllllflllf, had this Believe It Or Not incident. It seems that Morton, who attends Queens College, had to see Hamlet for one of his courses. He had tried to get tickets for the Shakespearean epic, but could not do so. He spoke to the box-office attendant and told him his sad, sad story. The box- ofiice attendant sent him to the door- man, who after hearing Harris' dra- matic tale, sent him to the manager. The manager nodded sympathetically and told the usherette to show Harris to a seat. Morton saw Maurice Evans' Hllfllfef, sat among white ties, top hats, and tails, free of charge, Believe it or not! Lester Forman, after attending New York University for two years, has opened his own store. Forman General Sales Company is an organi- zation where you can get it whole- sale. According to all reports, the business has done extremely well for the first month. Keep up the good work, Lester! Cupid reports that quite a few of our alumni have said I do. Mar- ianne Sherman is married and has deserted Washington for Winston- Salem, North Carolina. Esther Dumtschin, Bess Feldman and Mary Kern have gone to the altar, too. jerry Blom is holding down his job in Philadlephia, but he manages, somehow or other, to get home for weekends. George Vay has a job in Wall Street. Howard Donald, who received his medical training at the University of Alabama, is looking for an interneship. Queens College seems to be very active with Adamsites since our grad- uates are there. Mildred Cleary, first girl G. O. President, Sylvia Gillun, Jennie Radus, Dorothy Pleau of the Pubs Ofiice. George Norwig, Mar- garet McCherry, and Dorothy Kirby are also there. EVIEWINCI the past term's ac- tivities, we have come to the conclusion that the fall term of 1958-'39 will be looked upon as one of the banner periods in john Adams annals. It has been tive months chock full of surprise and innovations which will not soon be forgotten. This is true especially of the seniors who have played a major role in making this term one other than the usual run of the gamut. First of all the G. O. elections es- tablished several records in regard to landslides and nip and tuck races. The term play, Mary of Scotland was one of the most successful held at Adams, and it becomes more notc- worthy when it is realized that it was the most difficult presentation ever at- tempted by the john Adams Dramatics Class. Taking the sports angle, we con- clude that even though greenness and inexperience were prevalent in every department, namely, football, cross- country, soccer, basketball and swim- these teams, kept Adams Queens com- the forerun- ming, each one of through expert coaching, on the top of the list in petition and up among ners of the city high schools. in football, a squad which boasted only the versatile playing of All-City Al Cerulli and the clever football mind of veteran Marty Kalichmann before the season started, outweighed and uoutexperiencedf' we might say, in every encounter, fought in such a manner in the opening tussles that no high school team would meet a chal- lenge for a brawl on Thanksgiving day. Coach Joseph Scarlata came up with undoubtedly his best cross-country team at Adams. His harriers took the borough championship easily and This 'n' That' FRANK SGAMBATIq.,Kg placed fourth in th tain Bill Rottger will mt br the tape in high school co eti as . graduation also will take Gene Zac ii- But now we come to the class tug january '39, the senior group li has produced several firsts whu ' 'e worthy of mention. Caps and gow as you all know, is the graduation dress. This was the topic of much controversy in many of the recent sen- ior classes, but this time the gradu- ates definitely decided on caps and gowns and their determination was not to be daunted. For Senior Day, the seniors wore pennants instead of the usual caps. And for the first time we had a male treasurer, Eugene Zaccor. Those seniors whose untiring efforts to make this, their last term in Adams, their most successful, are deserving of all the thanks that can be bestowed upon them. Senior Class President Frank Votto and Vice-president Josephine Butera should both make a success of their future undertakings as their outstanding work on senior ac- tivities marks them of a super-fine quality. Both Frank's and josephines personalities have been, along with the charm of Secretary Ruth Nilsen, the shining symbols of a highly suc- cessful senior term. Lg i kk sk ess X o b X NIM ga , , .. 9 4, ' X XT . F xx x 5 c- . X, X9 Qs so X - s X X, X X S , an X . ag. gm, - V X--15 .aw - - .ar ff i ' - -- s. 4- .t 'N . ii- ,arc m i Mi i Q 7 if 1 'Y' 7 2 in f Z QX. ,, 1 ,, , t 4 -.1 x- , I . ,s ' I gf, - 'aft will H ,Ml Z' ll' i 9'l i 'lf Rf, 5,31 if 'im :T5!F,,,.l.Ac' '-5:9 Q ff 112: ff --,wflzh . i N l J tl l Xxx If W Ill! vim ' ' .I I, Y N 2.13 ',' 7-.l , Xl 4 Ill. .-.lb,3Y'iZ!- , Q -rf Ai' -git! 34 ' f -'3 gi 13944 '7 fi if . ' .. 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I, .nu 9 51.5 -fl'o: v SY.: v-101 I 05 nf 1 2:7'FbQ,1.-nf'-'-s we '.: 'N 'f:'C-'r t- ' ' eh' fd su x Q BORDEN'S ICE CREAM I s 2350 Fiffh Avenue ! 0 New York Cify 1 N I X Phone EDgecombe 4-0200 I Y, U' .I , if ,',i,4,., T' I 4, A ,, L f 1 ,I A .1 ,ff 4U','yf,.,i, GA .dfvvl J 'K J! k I' K' AV' 4 1 ...' J -. LP' I 5 Q I I, Lrg V PATRONIZE YOUR CAFETERIA , ERS - AND - PUBLISHE 510 aa E'Q'fjTfH'N' PHINIINE -33- IZIIMPHNY zee,LH:12u,2.Ys MERKEl'S Firs+ In New York U. S. No. I Grade 94Il SUTPHIN BOULEVARD, JAMAICA, N. Y. --- +--LGIRLS'1l--' Central School for Business Training SECRETARIAL AND BUSINESS COURSES INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION AND PROGRESS THOROUGH TRAINING :: FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE Day and Evening Closses it Ask lor Outline ol Courses Y. W. C. A.-CENTRAL BRANCH 30 THIRD AVENUE. BROOKLYN, N. Y. :: TRiang1e 5-1190 ,1 1-:LI-:ANORA w. KING, Director L i. ' Sound fraining for ihe superior secrefarial and iunior execufive posiiion. Also courses in all fypes of modern business machines - Individual promoiional plan - Super- vised office experience - Successful placemeni bureau. Member' of Nalional Associalion of Accrediled Commercial Scliools DAY 8: EVENING CATALOGUE SESSIONS Cypress and Myrile Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. UPON REQUEST l-iEqernan 3-2926-2927 -.T--i l60- I6 Jamaica Avenue, Jamaica, L. l. JAmaica 9-I98l-I982 La Touraine Coffee Company Pfzllllj' af BOSTON NEXV YORK CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA CLEVELAND SYRACUSE Anthony Cappola I-i6-I2 JAMAICA AVENUE jAmz1iuL 6-3569 Jznnaicu, New York Sea Food S peciallies Necco Sales Corp. 202 CANAL STREET COrtl:1ndt 7-2339 New York City GRamercy 5-6953 KLIMPL MEDAL CO. 303 FOURTH AVENUE New York Ci+y 5,417 4. V, ,mm k ,, ' 4-' N ,L Q' X--. fi xr? 2- fm .X -. , , . ,fz zaoe W. of. .if ,' xi x , f N , If :Mais 132Sf?i4'f,fk'Pe'a , nlufibxd' KSA 7W2x3a5'fh x,z!w , kxff A , ' Haj 5 A , J I .::,'A' V ix. .1 sx' A l,:,. FX Y u n Q M Ai Jing., NEW YORK f1,3l7xl'i4 Tel. Wfxlker 5-0423 Wallace, Burfon and Davis Co Wholesale Grocers Supreme Brand Food Producfs Norfh Moore and Greenwich Srreefs New York Miss DUNBARTS SiEl1I1DllllL 186 IORALEMON STREET BROOKLYN, NEW YORK SECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR GIRLS U4 sawvvssful FOIYIIJIIHIHOII of inrlivirfuuf vofwlrillg mul rarvfuuy grcuforl group work vrmlllvs vvvry slurfvnl lo crcvorwxplisln ffm mos! in lllv Ivusl limv Placement Service Free Day Course Only Cnlnlogg und I.isl of Iivnployvrs on rcquvsl Tvlvplmm- VI-RIANGI If Q-7.120 Cl-liclcerinq 4A4l2O-I-2 S'randard Ho+el Supply Co., Inc. Fine Meats 352 WEST wh STREET New York SUN RAY BAKERIES I30 Sfeuben S'rree'I' Brooklyn, N. Y. f A R C O N Y A+hle+ic Recondiiioning Co. of N. Y., Inc. Cflvnflwxr .md Ilvfzzrjldwu' of Alblelh' Eq11ff7l1lL'l11 7609 I8+h AVENUE BROOKLYN, N. Y I BEnsonhurs+ 6-37 I 7 DIEGES ancl CLUST I7 John S+ree+ New York, N. Y CORTLANDT 7-8143 Manufaclurers of Specially Jewelry Class pins, class rings, Ira'rerni'ry, jewelry, medals, cups, Irophies, plaques DESIGNERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF THE OFFICIAL JANUARY AND JUNE I939 CLASS RINGS AND PINS W. M. EVANS, Inc 3480 FuI'ron S+ree+ Brooklyn, N. Y. ' Phone APplega+e 7-5 I 5I ARTHUR STUDIOS Official Pholographers FOR THE 1939 CLIPPER Specialists in School Annuals I3I Wesi' 42nd S'rree+ New York Cily I mf 51' Qhmiay 14 Xff1.wff X M wW ' 'A
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