Lafayette High School - Oracle Yearbook (Buffalo, NY)

 - Class of 1938

Page 18 of 100

 

Lafayette High School - Oracle Yearbook (Buffalo, NY) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 18 of 100
Page 18 of 100



Lafayette High School - Oracle Yearbook (Buffalo, NY) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 17
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Lafayette High School - Oracle Yearbook (Buffalo, NY) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

16 THE LAFAYETTE HI Ann Cloak In September of the year 1934, our favorite freshmen were welcomed for the first time by Mr. Gott into his Plant. Conspicuously new, long pants, loud shirts, suit coats, bright colored make-up, and nervous thumb-twiddling children were to be seen throughout the large horseshoe-shaped assembly. M. Boland was there as was R. Spear. S. Birzon was seen passing notes to l. Davis. E. Wort- ham's, W. lardine's, and A. Clamp's STGRY OF THE COLORFUL hair was the cause of much comment. C. Lumsden, F. Ciccarelli, and A. Haley were comparing their new bill folds. M. Gram had already started worry- ing about her senior exams. After l5 minutes of dazzled searching, D. Carestio and P. Dellinger finally found Cto their dismayj, that Rm. 32 was situated in the basement. B. Cole and M. Feinsinger startled Lafayette audiences with their extraordinary talents in the school mu- sical. lune exams ended our initial year at Lafayette. ln the fall of l935, the sophisticated sophomores returned. Having stumbled through Algebra, Biology, and Latin, they were now headed for course No. 2, which contained Caesar, Geometry, and the annals of Ancient History. C. lacobs glid- ed through the halls quoting Caesar, while Cf. Allen, S. Fuller, and C. Brown were in a corner in Rm. 3 trying to prove two triangles congruent by S. A. S. Teachers were in a guandary as to what to do about A. L. Smith and A. O. Smith, F. Cleary and R. Cleary. From the school of prac- tice came M. Cfrabau, C. Cfeorgi, E. Thom and A. White. Also F. Breese, D. Beyer, C. lmpelliter, and E. Burley. W. Dahlke, M. Staley, H. lanis, and l. Battles played on the hockey team. M. R. Lavin's hair was speculated upon and there were Some of the girls in 1934.

Page 17 text:

M ORACLE YEARBOOK 15 We of the graduating class of l938 are indeed happy to have you with us this evening. This is an occasion for which we have planned and worked long, and it is with eagerness that we present for your enjoyment this long-awaited program, when for the first time we come together as a class. It is our hope that our plans and preparations will have enabled us to spend with you a most pleasant and enjoyable evening. I During this last year at Lafayette, we have become increasingly con- scious of the turmoil and struggle which prevail throughout the civil- ized world today. Foreign political upheavals, constant war-threats, important domestic problems, are constantly kept before our minds in flaring newspaper headlines and radio talks. With these and other equally momentous occurrences taking place about us, we have felt it a primary duty to keep ourselves well informed in all these matters. Yet it cannot rightly be said that we are unprepared to face these problems. Our four years at Lafayette, spent in constant acquisition of knowledge in various subjects under the remarkably patient super- vision of Mr. Gott and our teachers, has instilled firmly within us that rare ability to see and think clearly in everything, to weigh carefully both sides of every question before drawing a final opinion. We are more grateful than we can express for all that has been done for us, and can only hope that in time we shall be able to justify if not exceed the confidence and faith in us expressed by our faculty. From this all-important pathway of our lives, our courses will begin to take more definite form, branching out in countless directions. We shall no longer be a united class, progressing together as a unit in all we do. We shall have to accustom ourselves to take our places as self- dependent individuals in the world. For some of us fate and oppor- tunity have decreed still higher education, through which we may broaden our limited knowledge and open the way for greater success in our undertakings. Still there are numerous others, destined for im- mediate entrance into the world of affairs and the well-known school of hard knocks who must take it upon themselves to be more quickly assimilated into adult life. No matter how diversified our paths may become, regardless of what may be our ultimate destination, we shall always be united by the common bond of Lafayette tradition, so deeply imprinted in our minds during our brief stay here. In our fields of life, irrespective of their type, we may be proud and more than slightly thankful for the extensiveness of our high-school training. Traditions become outmoded eventually and must give place to new ones. We can say only that we sincerely hope that the classes who follow us will continue to uphold and cherish the splendid ideals of Loyalty, Honor and Service which have for so long been a tradition at Lafayette and which are our common heritage. ln our separate, we, the class of 1938, will in all circumstances endeavor to hold in mind these principles, and hope that by this observance, we may be- come better citizens and be able to give better service to our fellow for



Page 19 text:

ORACLE YEARBOOK 17 CLASS CDF 1938 those who swore that she had a different wig for every day in the week. G. Kener and P. Devio asked I. Gorman and W. O'Brian if they were ill when they started counting the cups in the trophy case. I. Guarino sang in the Glee Club, while M. Freedman, I. Giovino, P. Cecala did a bit of tooting in the band. W. Denny, H. Clement, and L. Donnelly spent some of their valuable moments indulged in a fierce paper-wad battle which greatly dis- turbed F. Werman, l. Tripi, A. Petrella and A. Bellinger. Many sore fingers were the result of the friendly handshake of l. Puleo, who nonchalantly squeezes your hand until the bones crack. E. Maggio, W. Karg, and R. Weir, devoted their time to the homeroom basketball team, while A. Wooler, D. Meier, S. Walker, and R. Hinney devoted their valuable minutes to their textbooks. Exams and vacation followed. Again we come back, with browned faces and brush hair cuts, to course No. 3 known to the H. S. Stud as the term of the folly lunior. Cicero, Physics, and Int. Alg. were waiting for us to hurdle them. We had lost part of our number in the lune exams but had gained V. Ogden, M. Hebard, and D. Smith, who had decided to adopt the five-year plan. I. Patterson's soprano voice was heard when she sang Some of the boys in 1934. George Deming in the assembly. H. Fackler again won honors in the declamation contest. B. Marshall was pretty shaky when he went up on tne stage to get a check for a dollar. He wrote the lunior song. B. Karg was nominated All-High in Basketball, while C. Brooks made his major in Tennis. l. Hurst, B. Vaughan, l. Styers, K. Sher- wood, D. Reed, and M. Ricotta supported the girls' sports. C. Cherry made the All-

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