Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI)

 - Class of 1932

Page 18 of 32

 

Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 18 of 32
Page 18 of 32



Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 17
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Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

June ..THE ORANGE AND BLA CK.. 1932 CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS Girls, Whose membership includes all the junior and senior girls has Club been very actlve the past semes- ter. The officers of the club are: president, Ethel O'Nell: vice-president, Frances Usher: secretary, Catherine Clayton: treasurer, Elva Dunham. The work of the Girls' Club ls divided among several committees. Luclle Sllghtam is chairman of the Ways and Menns Committee which sponsored the Book Exchange by which over S40 was made and the Novelty Sale by which over 57 was made. Miss Ruby Horton ls advisor. The Candy Sales Committee sponsored by the Girls' Club and Natlonal Honor Soclety has been successful the past semester with Josephine Zaccone as general chairman, and sponsored by Mr. Benjamin Ashman. Managers are Mildred Miller, Marjorie Smith, Ethel 0'Nell, Jeannette Little, Myrtle Muzzy, Bernice Cohn. The Social Committee, sponsored by Mls Nell Owen and whose chairman ls Mary Ellen McEvllly has given a mat dance and a tea for Mrs. Ruth Thayer and lvhlss Alice Moore. The Publicity Committee is sponsored by Miss Edlth Isely. The chalrman ls Fern Lull- lng. The Sunshine Conrmlttee, whose advisor ls Miss ,Merle Baldwin has as its chairman. Betty Herreld, With the proceeds of the varl- ous sales, the Girls' Club ls offering two S100 scholarships to Central February and June graduates. The awards are presented on the basis of merit and need. ' 1 vvhose advisor ls Miss Mary Ushers Hargrave has served at all the Club school plays, basketball games, evening DYOSTBDIS, civic orchestra perfor- mances, and at the Hobby show. Gale Clark is president of the organization, whlle Cyril Klingele is secretary-treasurer, and Ed Kil- gore ls chlef of service. Hi-Y Sponsored by Mr. Earl Cruthls. l ls composed of twenty Central Club boys. The officers are: president, John Dahlk: vlce-president, Robert Ewing: secretary, Art Sell: treasurer, Warren Burr: Program Committee chairman, Sam Glllett: and membership secretary, Roland Martens. During the past semester the club has heard interesting talks by Mr. William Doudna. radio edltor of the Wisconsin State Journal, and Dr. C. A. Leadman, member of the City Council. The German Club is spon- Language sored by Mlss Regina Hein Club-7 and Miss Gretchen Haber- mehl. The otflcers are: pr e sid e n t, John Dahlk: secretary, Bertha W'urst: representa- tive, Marlon Speth. The club has had sev- eral lnterestlng programs. One of these was the April Fools' program at which an opera, William Tell, was presented. An orchestra, c om posed ol Art Sell, harmonica: John Dahlk, piano: Charles Statz, drums, and Ken Rasmussen, comb, played the overture. Another interesting program was given ln honor of Goethe, the German writer and poet. Several of his poems were read by Errlan Bere. Marion Speth, Arnold Herman. Marie Singer, Mary Vlernlg, Charles Statz. and Lura, Salter. One of the programs in honor of Wagner, the composer, was held in the Music Studlo. A hike to Sunset Point was sponsored by the club and a plcnlc at Olin Par.k The French Club sponsored by Mlss Elsa Bohmrlch has the following officers: presl- dent, Josephine Zaccone: vlce - president, Betty Herreld: secretary, Catherine Clayton. The maln accomplishment of the club this last semester was the play Pa,uvre Sylvie. Angela Felton took the lead and was sup- ported by the following cast: Elva Dunham, June Johnson, Edna Balsley, Dorothy Swaf- ford, and Margaret Salter. A plcnlc was also sponsored by the club. At its several meet- ings card parties and imaginary travel trips have been given. The Central High music depart- Music ment can justly feel proud, for it has had a trlumphal season. The band and orchestra u.nder the direction of Mr. Leroy Klose have performed well at P. T. A. meetings, at Auditorium period pro- grams, at plays, and lastly, as a. dttlng ell- max at the Annual Spring Concert glven on May 20 after much hard work on the part ol Mr. Klose and Miss Ilah Lunt. Some highlights of the orchestra, have been Fran- cine Jackson and Mary Sylvester, vlollnlsts. and Edna Balsley, nute player. The chorus, too, with Miss Ilah Lunt con- ducting, has ended a season of creditable concerts. Besides singing for auditorium pro- grams and at plays, Central chorus joined with vocalists from West and East I-Hgh Schools to form a wonderful Capella Choir, which sang at three dlfferent schools. The culmlnatlon of the Chorus came, too, at the Spring Concert. Outstanding members of the Chonm have been Doreene Smlth and Bob Mueller. Bob sang l.n the National Chorus this spring. Beginning with the second Dramaticg semester, m e m b e r s of the Dramatic Club decided to elect only a new president-keeping the same vice-president, John Lumpkin: the same sec- retary, Betty Herreld: and the same treas- urer, Everett Carteron. The election held on February 10 ended Ln a. tle between Robert Ewing and Walter Foster. At the next meet- ing, February 24, Walter Foster was elected president. At one of the meetings Mr. Hol- comb, a former graduate of Central and former lnstructor at the Unlverslty of Okla- homa, demonstrated the art of stage make- up. Two one-eot plays sponsored by the Dramatic Club under the dlrectlon of Miss Ruth Kentzler were presented during audi- torium periods. On Frlday, April 15, A Mat- ter of Choice was given. James Hammacher took the part of Mr. Brent: Barbara Buck- man, Mrs. Brent: Elalne Hanson, Phoebe Brent, the youngest daughter: Jane Priest- ley, Marcia: and Edith Olson, Jeannette, two other daughters: Joe Runey, Henry, their brother: Lois Baldwin, Aunt MI a r g a r e t. Sauce for the Gosllngs was presented Fri- day, May 13. Those taklng part were Jane Farwell, Doris June Johnson, John Lump- kin, Marie Stahl, Walter Bond, and Fred Gillette. The Gals, With Mlss Julla Tor- . . meyasltssponsor, Lxterary Society claire Ja c k 5 0 n as president, and Theodore Herfurth as secre- tary-treasurer has several accomplishments to lts credit. They studled several modem poets and thelr works. In the latter part of 1Please turn to Page 'rwentyr Central Honor Pin Wearers Blck KRW! Adelaide Ogllvle, Alvlh Gllllltte. ChB.l'lES Stktl. MBFKBFEC Sllllel. lllddl ll J hl Z l E M ll M b e aw: asap ne means. He en sser. yr s uzzy. Ru y Mae Tracy. Jeannette Little. Front naw: Elva Dunham, Betty Herrera, amuse caan, Marlene smleh, Mme aeu, Jane Farwell. -I 16 I..

Page 17 text:

1932 ..THE ORANGE AND BLACK.. June CENTRAL CASTING HIS is station WCF, owned and oper- ated. ln the interests of the students of Central High coming on some page in the magazine tat least I hope it Isl, at this time we join the CHS network to bring you the program entitled Central Casting with your announcer Wally Foster . . . hello every- body this is ci course program and we're So- lng to do away with all formality as there are a lot of things to be said during these short lines because I'm go- ing to endeavor to answer so nle of thc questions that I have been showered with and here they come . . . Is lt too late to get a snapshot of you with your autogmph? asks A. Student, No, there are a few left and ll' you send ln a the Central Casting l walter Fusler top of one of these colymns ln to me I'll see to it that you will getone... sus as A. Friend writes ln and sez I have writ- ten several letters to you asking you this same question alld haven't seen it answered in your column yet, and on it goes, will you please tell nlc who played the part of Phoebe Brent in the one act play, A Mat- ter of Cholce ? and I heard that her nlotllcl' took her home after the performance nt the PTA, but I think that some He-Man dld. Can you and out who he ls? I think 4'Phoebe did her part well , . . to tell you the truth friend this is the first letter I have received but never the less I found out what you wanted to know, so that's ull that matters, The girl that played the part of Phoebe Brent in that play ls really Elaine Hanson and the big he-man that took her home from the P T A is really Hank Kllnert or else I'm terribly mistaken . . . s s s s s Is Myrtle Fcster, who is in one ot my classes. your sister? wrltes a J. I-I. S. stu- dent . . . yes she is my sister . . . and as for the rest of your note, Thank You . . . to think that there has been a couple going around ever since Xmas that you haven't exposed in your colymnf' sez a reader, their names are LaBelva Morehouse and John Du- Bois . . . well I'm awfully sorry but I do admit that. I can't keep up on all of these couples . . . And do you know what boy has glven me the cold shoulder for a year and for that same length of time I have been trying to check up tif you pleasel on him and I just found out that in a case of emergency he had to have his folks cut his hair so that he could usher at the last Snring concert at Central? . . . can you picture two such boys as Howard Gearhart and Eugene Schroeder sitting on a front porfh swinging at eleven o'clock at night? they were . . . did you know that Jack Norton has a neck of girls coming out to see him every day wlllle he ls at the Hospital? scrib- bles some one . . , s s u s s And we saw Dick Engels and Bernice Cohn after the Spring Concert down on Gorham street . . . and some one tells me Kenneth Rasmussen and Jean Gearhart are so so so . . . Jimmy Dean, Carter Lelder, and two others were paradlng around Gorham and Johnson Streets with their shirt-tails flying behind them tthe same night, after the Spring concert! . . . they took and pushed fl car that was parked down on Gorham street down by Conkllns Ice House . . . Say Jean your behavens lately are terrible er sumpin cause someone tells nle that you and Chuck DeBois were seen together on that memor- able nite of the spring concert . . . Poor Ray Hankel' sobs someone. the spring and a girl have got hlni . . . he draws about one line a day ln drawing class and the rest oi the time he sits and thinks of that girl . , . and do you know try as hard as I mlght I couldn't and out wllo that girl is , . . s s s s s Donald Cowan and Meyers Victor are con- tinuously runnlng up and asklng me if the other one has told nle anything about the other . . . If I'm not wrong then the diploma with the most names on will belong to Rufus Henry Peat Karllcs, Junior . . . yes that's all one name and if you don't believe lt, look for yourself on that list on the bulletin board in the main corridor . . . Smith may be a com- mon name but there will be only one on this semesters dlplonla at Central . . . Say Aleen Anderson have I been misspelling your name all this time or was lt spelled wrong ln the program of the Spring concert? They spelled it Ayleen . . . and according to the some manuscript they spell Mr. Bennett's name Homes Bennett and Evercttfs last name as Canteron . . . the three trumpeters are Charles DuBois, Charles Martin rand not quite a charles but almostb, Challs Olson. s s s s s Wlllle I was digging through by notes at home I ran across the copy of the first colymn that I ever wrote for this glad rag lMlrror to youl. And just for old tlme's sake let's print it again. Here it is word for word: Did You Know That . . . By IVALTER FOSTER -ras ms: issue of me Mum was issued Feb. 26. 1924? -0- Joseph sam of New Mlll, England. ls s gms bowler slnmuga he lm us Arms? '-0- In the xssue or me lvlu-for on Sept. 24, ms, an ul-one was pnuu-d ssylug out -.I 15 1, a Central teacher had his mustache shaved? Imuglns. -0- lulss asus mud likes to Iss sluts? twins npulnglss to lm-.J -0- In 1012 almost all of the boys used sun wnlts collars? .lust pleture Dlel: Edward. OH. OH. And the girls wore ankle length dresses? -Q- A pls can as rut tum sugar pieces with only time cuts? 'ny lt. Use yuul- Gs-um. .0- ons - fourth equals three - slghtns? rln muslcl. -G- John ann-ll, s mlm ur u small town, rc t u r u ed home ms: an absence ur ell years and found his uu-u :raver -0- Ruth Goetz believes ln Santa Clnus?? He called her up nnrl asked her what she wanted for clu-lsuuus. :Ask hem -9- A quart of milk weighs muse num u Quart ur el-um? A little dllTerence ln the size, eh? wllot? s s s s s HE WORDS of Miss Hand Have you got your column? . . . the writing down of notes ln classes of funny incidents . . . the teacher taking them away and tearing them up into shreads . . . the threat of some-one warning you npt to use tllelr name . . . the thought of being saved by finding some contributions ln the Mirror box . . . the trip to the box . . . and finding that some- one has been there ahead of you . . . you reach for an aspirin and walk down to the drinking fountain and the water ls turned oft' . . . here comes so and so maybe they can tell me some news . . . nope, they don't know ally . . . -there comes my co-worker maybe she has some left overs that I can use, I'll ask her . . . say Elv- . . . Wally have you anything for my column? . . . but we agree that there lsn't a soul doing any- thing unusual . . . here lt ls Friday and nothing done I guess I'll do lt over the week-end . . . Monday morning . . . Miss Hand and of course, Is your column ready? . . . I'll have it ready the second period . . . the second period finds me sitting at the type-writer thinking of past incidents and writing them down . . . ah! there's the fourth page and so that's that . , . the Mirror comes out . , . Oh gee your column is good this time Wally. better than ever says some one . . . aln't it a grand and glorious feeling? yes that's the life of a columnist, s s s s s The best signs of Sprlng ure: Alvin Gillette writing notes to Mary Ellen . , . Bill Bethel with his sleeves rolled up . . . Edna BslsZey's lovey-dovey speeches to Edmund Hart . . . Jean Gearhart's going swlmln . . . Miss Hand buying another new dress . . . Dave Malec with his shirt all unbuttoned . . . Ber- nice Cohn carrying a lilac . . . Aleen Ander- son holdlng a flower in the fountain to glve lt a drink . . . the office filled with flowers, plants and fish bowls . , . tlocks and docks tcontlnued on Page Twenty-sevenl



Page 19 text:

1932 ..THE ORANGE AND BLA CK.. June UP AND DOWN THE CORRIDOR . . By Elva Dunham . . 203 HAD A VERY Uninterested visitor not so many weeks ago. Some one's dog became lonesome for hls master and so he followed him to school. He stayed in his ou'ner's session room all morning. but none of the classes pleased him so he proceeded to block up the aisle by stretching out and going to sleep. We don't know just what was done to him, but see- ing that Prevention of , Cruelty to Animals Q week was .lust a short I time ago, perhaps he I was treated all right, - Q 1 Q D0 ANY OF YOU 1Glrlsl remember the style show that was I . given byasllk manu- facturing com- I pany? Alice Jenks who modeled quite a few of the clothes was told to slip on a pair of beach pajamas. She tried to slip into them in a hurry and found that this dress, as she thought it was, was terri- bly tight. Vlfhen the demonstrator came in to get her. she informed Alice that she was only in. er-ah, one part of the pajamas. Q . Q IVELL, TIIERE IIAS Been a lot ol criticism about mentioning people too much in here, but when two people do things as crazy as Jay Ashbrook and Johnny Ellestad do, they deserve to get a. little more publicity than some of these people who beg to have their names printed. Jay came to school with a pair of red and green striped sox to match his red and black striped sweater, Marian Longhcm asked him where he got them and he sa.ld, They're Johnny's, but I took them from him because he has two handkerchlefs of mine that he is wearing out. Just my way of getting even. Q - . IF MORE PEOPLE Would follow the lead of Mae Meyers. the milk men wouldn't have anything to worry about. She, her mother. and her sister are so fond of milk that they order three quarts daily. And none of this ordinary milk for them either, they want the kind that is half Elva Dllllhlllll Buddy ..,.. cream ! . . . DEFINITIONS: Sweetness . . . . Marjorie High Self-consciousness Vernon Conlln Pep ..... . . Vera Lee Enthusiasm . .... Art Sell Reliability . . . Josey Zaccone Catherine Clayton :Qu AND NOW' FOR A Bit of novelty l?J. Bob Wellman is one of these boys who doesn't ask but just tells: for instance, when he wants a date. Before the spring concert. ho sent a. note to one of the girls taking part, and the noted stated that she had a date with Bob, etc., etc ..., Needles to say, she broke everyone of her other previous engagements to go with what-a-man. Perhaps you all know by this time that the girl is Betty Torgeson, s - - IF YOU IVANT T0 See a show but haven't the dosre-ml to go, don't be brckenhearted, Stay after school for a few minutes and watch Central's Tar- zan go through his antics. Although he doesn't pick up fair maidens. he does carry other boys up and down the corridor on his bark. No 3:ee-wees either, but regular hefties. Q Q Q 0lI, FOR. GOODNESS' SAKE! To use that well known expression. What do we know about two certain girls! They write notes about each other rand complimentary cnes, tool and drop them in the Mirror box unsigned. How unlady-like or maybe it ls the thing to do if no one else will do it for you. We simply can't mention names, but one might be a blond with rather light blue eyes. which leaves out the person you thought it was. . . - ANOTHER NICE SIGNATURE Is that of Harold Slotten. Look on a library card to see lt, He makes the I-I look like a. cnpit-al S and thcn adds the S of his last name. . Q Q JUST JOTTINGSZ Our fellcltatlons to Adelaide Ogllvle, who is only an 11B and already has her honor pin . . . on a. reserve card in the back ol' one book was, Oh, gee, r wanted it. well. maybe it was in little stronger language . . . Shorty Cowan for once hasn't anything to put in the paper about someone he doesn't like so well . . . Peter Margetls gives lm- promtu talks ln class lwhen the teacher ls outy about seeing one of his class-mates out canoeing with her brother t?J . . . overheard This ls a picture of sunset in the evening . . . Maybe it's time vacation is coming . . . the good-looking leather notebook zipplng up on three sides that you see Miss I-Iargrave carrying was given her by the English teach- ers for Christmas . . . Seniors will insist upon coming into the library at 3:45 and expect to find good history reference books . . . N0 one can persuade Oomle Burr to wear his brother's turtle necked sweater to school . . . Q - Q AND SPEAKING 0F TURTLES Gen Cusick walked home with a little turtle in her hand. We don't know who gave lt to her, but we do know that Hazel Schultz had lt that morning. 1 Q Q WHAT WOULD MIRS. GRUNDY Say if she knew this? One of our Central release turn to Page 'rwenty-'rwm Sick: When I get ahold of him I'll take him apart like a clock! Hick: Better not, Bill. Sick: Why? Hick: Did you ever try putting a clock together? -5 17 1-

Suggestions in the Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) collection:

Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

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Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Madison Central High School - Tychoberahn Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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