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Page 24 text:
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Cl-1ARLEs ADAMS CHARLES lgAER EDWARD BELL JOSEPH BEVIVINO LUUILLE BOVUARDI ALBERT CAMINITE ANNA CATANIA Donorm' CEARFQ .lou CERNUH Denis CHRIHTIE RUTH CLARK GRANT CLYDE ESTHER Cook FLORENCE Conn HARLES ADAMS just loved American Government and always drove a car around town that was once called a 'tPlyrnouth . . . CHARLES BAER, our most musically inclined boy, went with Joe McCandless and Joe went with Charles, they both went together . . . EDWARD BELL, commonly called Umbay, was a good math student but in American Government class he never heard anything except the bell . . . JOSEPH BEVIVINO played mushball in the good old sum- mer time and slept in study hall in the school time . . . LUCILLE BOCCARDI was a dependable girl whose ability at working crossword puzzles helped her to decipher copy as the ELLWOODIAN typist . . . ALBERT CAMINITE-jllSl3 one quarter of an inch to grow then behold the six-footer and future store manager . . . ANNA CATANIA,S likes always ended in ings: typing, swimming, sewing, and dancing . . . DOROTHY CEARFOSS, the shortest girl in the class, was a speed demon on roller skates . . . JOE CERNUS, an embryo golf pro, was noted for his ability to skip school and to dig up dilapi- dated jallopies . . . DORIS CHRISTIE was a popular shorty of the class who enjoyed dancing, and who had an incomparable giggle . . . RUTH CLARK was a quiet, sweet, blonde, who was easy to get along with and was a good worker as secretary to Mr. Webster . . . GRANT CLYDE, whose reversible name never failed to confuse the teachers, liked hockey, hunting, and especially sleeping . . . NORMAN Nootze COLAVINCENZO was a tall brown-haired boy who liked Economics, book reports, and Hi-Y Basketball . . . lCsTHER Cook, the dopiest dame in the class, capably guarded the class's shekels in her capacity as secretary-treasurer, and added to her accomplishments by ranking third in graduation . . . FLORENCE CosTA liked Office Practice the best of all her school subjects and, with her jolly disposition, will no doubt succeed with office work. N1CJRI4II4C3 NORMAN COLAVIN ENz0 l20l
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Page 23 text:
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320 College Avenue H320 College Avenue, a comic-murder mystery, was presented by the Senior A Ulass, Dec. 16, 1938 in Lincoln Auditoriuni. The play opens with a party in full swing at a sorority house of a co-educational college. A group of boys and girls are dancing. Suddenly, while the lights are out, and a blue light is playing back and forth on the dancers, and while the boys are changing partners during a Hcut- in dance, Judy screams. A moment later Lee Macon, with whom Judy was dancing, is found lying on the floor dead Y-mysteriously murdered with a hat pin from Judith's hat. The dancers are stunned, dazed. Who killed him? And why? Judy is the most popular girl in the college. When the hard-boiled detective fails to solve the mystery with his roughshod methods of third-degreeing everybody present, from the Dean of Women to the college crooner, Judy persuades the detective 'to turn the case over to her. Then, alone with the girls and boys and Dean of Men and Women, Judy uses her own technique. The key to the mystery rests with Val, who saw a hand with a flashy ring grab the fatal pin from Judyls hat. The climax approaches as the murderer, now dis- elosed as Russell, strangles Val with a necktic so his identity will not be revealed. Suspicion, however, points more and more to Russell and he finally confesses to both murders. After the police headquarters are called, the two dead men walk into the room, and disclosefthe astonish- ing fact that it has been a play within a play. Curtain Joe Metz, Harold Ilouk, Dorothy Magee, Virginia Fraser, Walter Ilobuek, Bob Hall, Martha Potter, Charles Baer, Myron Gelbach, Kathleen Meneiee, Joe McCandlesa, Esther Cook, Anne Ilerge, Helen Hayes, Nick liowall, Ben Keller, Harry Zeiglcr. TIIOSH NOT INCLUDED IN I'IC'I'URI'l Anthony Passante, Ethel Main, Tom Jones, Joe Cernus, Maxine Sehroek, Emma Morabito. Charles Music, Grant Clyde, Charles Adams. l19ll Senior Dey D. Christie M. Gelbaeh, H. Zeigler, T. Jones IW. Ilnrdi, INI. Pishioneri, S, Nlarion D. Magee, T. Jones M. Pishioneri, M. llordi, A. Piaeesi H. Hayes ,' 1 fl I ffi
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Page 25 text:
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OB DEBOR'1'oLI was efficient editor of ICLLWOODIAN and energetic basketball center. Gentlemen prefer blondes and brunettes-he was no gentleman . . . ADELINE DECOLA-Click! Click! that was Addie working seriously on her typewriter. Outside of school she enjoyed whizzing around on roller skates . . . FRANCES DILEONARDO, whose kindly brown eyes sparkled when she typed each day, will be a very considerate and thoughtful nurse . . . ELECTA DOUDS was short quiet, and small, but sweet with it all. Her ambition was to become a stenographer . . . HELEN FLHISCHER, the class musician, whose funny giggle was known to all, was a tall, good-natured girl . . . VIRGINIA FRASER, our valedictorian, always appeared neat and prim. Ginny, a great foot- ball fan, greeted everyone with a smile . . . VINCENT' GALATI, a stocky boy with brown hair and brown eyes, spent his leisure time on the golf course . . . lX4YRON GELBACH, our efficient class president and head cheer leader, won a host of friends with his flashing smile and happy-go-lucky personality . . . JOE GENIVIVA was a quiet fellow who, after a year'S work in the Tube Mill, had the pluck to come back to high school and graduate . . . LOUISE GREGER included typing and science among her favorite Subjects, she wished to become a beautician . . . CHARLES GRETCH had a great desire to become a music instructor. Charliefs favorite pastimes were reading and twanging his guitar . . . BOB HALL was the manager Of the stage crew-maybe that's why he played the part of a playwright so successfully in H320 College Avenue. . . . HELEN HAYES-that tall, blue- eyed blond carried off honors in the play as well as in scholastic records . . . JACK HELBLING who get places via his unique strut, who gets places on the golf course, and who will get places with his personality . . . ANNE HPIIRGIG, whose favorite pastime was 'fdriving my DeSota, aimed for a career at Dietetics . . . HAROLD HOUK-the outstanding singing discovery of the year, also a super-super peanut brittle salesman . . . SARAH HOWELLAKIHHVC You Forgotten SO Soon our I I class song composer? Hel' ambition is to be a French teacher . . . TOM JONES, every Ounce Of him an athlete, was captain of the football team, yet found time to be the most popular boy and best boy dancer in the class . . . ' ' ,J r 1 ' ff!! Biff! 1 Roxmwr DEBORTOLI ADELINE DECOLA FRANCES DIIJEONAICDD ELECTA Douus IAELEN FLEIHUHER VIRGINIA FRASER VINUENZO GAL.A'l'I MYRON GELIKAUH Josmfn GENIv1vA LOUISE GliEGElC CHARLEs GRE'reI-I HORER1' HALL HELEN HAx'Es .lAeK lfELliL1NG ANNA HERO!-: HAROLD Home SARAH HOWELL TOM JONES ELLWOODIAN 2111
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