Maumee Valley Country Day High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Toledo, OH)
- Class of 1944
Page 1 of 112
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 112 of the 1944 volume:
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M 'ff-4 2 - if f i' f:f '1,fs::fw, ,-W .Q M. fl J A Q , X I W1'AuM'E 1a VALLEY cuuurnvnnv scuun fl WEN mm Wi 2 Published by THE .IUNIUH CLASS of MAUMEE VALLEY EUUNTHY DAY SCHUUL Maumee, Ohio Now Autumrfs fire bums slowly along the woods, And day by day the dead leaves fall. -William Allinqham 4 24 IN f t2f7ffx tk 1 x 24Al A I 'Q ixsly . WA x - 5 f J- - 6 L ,mf ik 1' e , - pk fif ,Wa 1 , A , f f , ffgwf x f 0 Aw '4 I, K 'A .., A s .4 fb K V E' 'I M-Q , X4 2 ' ' ' f , , Xfkw i I W .55 ffm :lg-15.1 y'f'7?iyf+! , 4: w f Y ' , ,!'N 1 wi, Y? U Wk A P Q 3 E2 X F ,Ea N wg, 4 + is S itil 'A' iii K 1 Y 5-T fx . A f ' f 4 X I ' I. . 6 N 4 x N 'F A! 2 ,Q aw 4 ' :F Q . . 4 ses I Rf 1 -Q - A, S v - ff g . Ara f '4 f ' . , 3 v When Spring brings back blue days cmd fair. -Alam Seeger 6 ADMINISTHATIU ibeakcafion Because We are grateful for what he has done for Maumee Valley in the past, for his inspiration as a leader, for his kindness as a triendp because We are proud of what he is doing for our country now: and because We are eagerly anticipating his return in the near future, We dedicate the l944 Olljealller wwe to our headrnaster, Lieutenant Stork. s Lieutenant fj.g.i Willis Stork BUAHD UF TRUSTEES Mr. Hubert D. Bennett Mr. Roscoe R. Betz Wice-president? Mr. Hcrrold Boeschenstein Mrs. Thomas P. Goodbody Mr. Richard R. Iohnston Mrs. Iohn O. Holsted Mrs. Henson L. Iones Mr. Richard Lennihon LTTGCISUFGTD Mrs. I. Preston Levis LSSCIGYCITYJ Mr. Alon B. Loop Mr. George P. Mc1cNicho1 CPresident5 Mrs. Ducme Sircmcrhcm I0 H. MALCULM WllHll ACTING HEAHMASTEH 2 - if G JWQSV4 gr, if W- SPR To the students, My freshman year among you has been made a happy one by the loyalty and cooperation of each of you. War-time conditions have changed, restricted, or eliminated entirely many of the activities which have enriched our school days in the past. The cheertulness and patience with which you have accepted these changes and restrictions, testify to the spirit which makes Maumee Valley great. We have all learned this year to do the best We can with what we have and that, truly, is the beginning of Wisdom. Best wishes to you all, S3660 an 3, ll WE? J Wa? I, if t. Wffgysa ,,t-ow FACULTY HEADMASTER Willis Stork 'f B.A., M.A., niversity of Nebraska: Harvard University -K 1 ACTING HEADMASTER Mfr! R. Malcolm Ward W . . . Kenyon: B.D. Episcopal Theological School, Harvard M PRINCIPAL OF HIGH SCHOOL W L. William Iohnson ............................... Mathematics, Psychology B.A., M.A., State University oi Iowa x Niki PRINCIPAL OF MIDDLE SCHOOL Joseph G. Iordan .......................... Seventh and Eighth Grades, Shop niversity of Maine: Boston University: Bates College: B.Edt University ofToledo 5 if NG N39 , DIRECTORS or LOWER scHooL f XXINQ Spf gvi ubert V Coryell Ir Sixth Grade: Social Studies xglx sw sql- ' I'IG1 UCII:G'LlI'1lXTGIlSlIjT7- 's.'stl. stQQ1l-,H university ' ' 'an P. Smith ................................... First and Second Grades S Buffalo University- Syracuse University RJ . DIRECTOR OF PRESCHOOL ,WM VHj,tLI!llW 'Marion D. Burns .......................................... Nursery School Miami University: Toledo Conservatory of Music: University of Toledo: Froebal Kindergarten Training School Charlotte W. Bayer ........ Fourth and Fifth Grades, English and Social Studies B.A. University of Wisconsin: The Sorbonne, Paris: University of Grenoble Claude Berry ............... . ..... Mathematics 6, 7, 8, Science, Boys' Spo 3 It I B.S. Bowling Green State University UU ' Ioan Bowers ........ - .................................. ..... G irls up P 'lf University of Toledo y ' Florence L. Cashman .......................... . . .Third and Fourth Grades ,lx 7' Marshall College: B.S. Ohio University jaw Janet Davis ............................................. ..... M usic K M.A. University of Michigan I X Caroline Dickey ......... QA-feXa-ni-.'Q3R5S2tx ................... Secretary X5 B.A. Smith College: Katherine Gibbs Secretarial School Renee :Bel el ry .................................................. French vial. D aiu The Sorbonne, Paris Martha Heater. . .' ............................................ Kindergarten B.Ed. University of Toledo: Columbia University I 2 ' On leave of absence to the United States Naval Reserve WZ CL 12 . Aw LEFT TO RIGHT, SEATED: Miss Wolcott, Miss Davis, Madame Geary, Mrs. Bayer, Miss Heater, Miss Dickey, Mrs. Marshall. STANDING: Miss Wood, Miss Parsons, Mr. Berry, Mr. Coryell, Mr. Ward, Mr. Iohnson, Mr. jordan, Mrs. Bums, Miss Smith, Mrs. Waldron. NOT IN PICTURE: Miss Bowers, Mrs. Cashman, Mrs. Hollister, Miss Shields, Mr, Williams. Harriet Hollister. . . .................... .... S ewinq Milton Academy Marianne Homer Marshall ............ ............ .... P r eschool Assistant Ohio State University Marian D. Parsons ................................................ English B.A. Wellesley Colleqeg M.A. University of Chicago University oi Toledo -W9 if-'Af 4-4 44fl Anna B. Waldron ..........................,.... . I ....... Lgrarian Av ' B.A. University of Indiana: B.S. Columbia University oi Library Science Marilyn Shields .... . ............................... ....... G irls' Sports , Benedict R. Williams ................................................ Latin A.B. Kenyonp B.D. Harvard University Marybelle Wood .................................. Lower School Assistant Wheelock Kindergarten Training School Z 1 ir' YQ- U: ' ji , 3 1,, 5 yy, ' 9- Y 1- -. 1. Doris Wolcott ............................................. '.4.'. .Ill .f. . Latin' '4 . N N j' , University of Toledo t fu 'ft-J-JJ-V YZ f ,, , -. X r B fllxaxlotfi 'Q ' roy I4 SENIUHS y. + ',:-:-xg-.'g.,.. 1 1 MARILYN BEIDLER 1 938- 1 944 Dimples-affinity for 72, beer-Tippy-Phi Chi pin - impromptu blushing - detective siories-Luette-executive-13What-what? I6 , X QV' .S X U-ru o X' 60' 'gov-60 Y' aw- gp of' -J -W' ,Ng on 19 cyl vt v x Wy! ,X WY ff. V- ff, Wy 5,2411 fibaoin O27 dxf 5-7 YI Y 8 Us fp xx ,x '90 IJ, 'WP X0 af' b-136' ' wg' W' 0 Jas, . ,A Marilyn Y sk -JV one 69 wf so JQQM-X GY:-.C-QQ31' XX . 3 QM cicfwx QXX-QU-A 5 X-G, SQL , X XXX on KQQO-TI' NU-dz, 66900 soc aura max:-1. Ubi O3 -H43- CIA eofoyx ajax CO CYP. Nfxcg-.CS 5- 'Q-Q in' me an cm JA' L Ute' aexwx Q-1' S2 ., .93 X40 L1 5 x 90.3 . LAD 2 LUETTE GOODBODY 1932-1944 Bangs-giggle--M.V. traditionf-IceHouse- deep voice- - Ha1ley's Comet --Clifton Fadi- man -- Orange captain - vivacity - Buy Only- I7 fit 773. QQQ Q Q The ELIZABETH IAY 1941-1944 Infectious qood humor-fecmther cut-plaid shirt-tails out-drawings-Louis Adcrmic- MV'5 Morqczret Bourke-'White-''Necessities for the Duration . I8 lo fig , , SN f Q 1 D , . Hg, 411, 5 4 kia f N11 -J , lf, -E f - Q I x41f ' . Q-Q 41' 7- fl, QQQCX Q 4 Q. B. I. Xi . h jx Q if X Q '5 X 15 . ' 1 J! L.. A! tr K ff VY! ff jx V I ' 'N 'W .t Nffgf J. jkgyiatf 5,7 Jjfijjdidyif x 7, ' -' , J? f Q67 ,'r j ff J f y M : 9, n,y' YQ 'j A-2 Q J! f, jf fy f t jf , J ff x K J ! x ,jf X , f J J ,X fx X I ' f ,I 1 V X VX ,jf ,. j'! x 1 , r . ty f.4:7-ff I' ' x, ,jjb 1 fi ' ,K 1 W I u N I 17 'N 1 f' .V ,A . 1 7 .9 ffl J I ' ,n 'J 3 , i Boots ww lun-...M MARY HUNTER IOHNSTON 1939-1944 Gentle speech Y- beautiful script - happy days at Huntington-charm ot manner- work program-ftact-sinqing voice-student council president. I 9 w I imrw ,Q 61 S0 - Rf' vvyx X Y Q x 19 X MXQQKGKKQQQ Q A Q Q A M N . 'pi XX Q Q' wx 'K Q' s K X K A X :Q 2 4-'V ' F ELIZABETH DERIA MORRIS 1931-1944 R ds-cro d d t t' -- 11' phvcrting 1 h-k 'tt' - Oh I t 1 --Brown '- ' d h Tony ogy W6 u 4 94,4 Sue . , R ii 5 ,iff 2 Q iv? S45 as K. SUZANNE STONE 1940-1944 Topsy-turvy dcrtes-masscqe- Listen, Kids -sweaters, pleated skirts with beanies to mcxfch-poker face-lczuqhinq-tears 21 NANCY ANNE WALL 1939-1944 The rentcxl library- Oh, you're so dumb, I swear -summer school-Torn - Thursday nights out-Bridge 22 -a df WM, 'J' 'fi 3'Y1,O Vrovb -cop 'A 9? ,,w ,SAo Y59' oo, O5 I 'X I D So my J-ffl 150 J i 50' 'ford wvwahl fb nf' aww' OO own? Hwfpdpx . 'un N uDJ Lhmt ion GY cfwc 599940 ure tion 0' Wrwd jjfn-5 V3.1 kwi- POW-, l 4nnc,x, if Nancy X Q 4 I 1 S W 4 9 1 Q .- -- - .'S K I x F s 7 5 I S X v 1 . v I x t 'F X Y 5 s I h A V s -. v - 4 h 5 In l ., I ' v Mn fo . I Xxx 9 A Y . -T p , s 1' -v , l Q J 4- , 9 Q-jLTi - . - if O. t ,,,. S E: r x zl. X 5 ' ' ,ij -552 1 L 9.1.21 CBQYNLL9 5 ' .- AM'n Martha M. , qv Q S MARTHR' JEAN WQSLFE' 1939-1944 Romance--Choate-A-DeBussy-WTo1e-do Public Library---dtvinq honors-Y--her nephew--f-Crea- tive urqefsauthem plantations with slaves Z3 Name Marilyn Luette . . B. lay- .. Boots . . . Tony . . . Sue- . . . Nancy . Ma1 tha . Favorite Song As Time Goes By . . . I'1l Never Smile Again . . . VVhat's the Use of Getting Sober . . . ln the Blue of Evening . . . PRESENT . . . . A date with Louie. . . . . . . . Addressing 'Writers' War Board ... . . Finishing history. . . .. . . . . Getting her cues. . . . . . . . Iust the Way You Look Tonight ...... Riding in Geraldine . . . . . . Time On My Hands . .. 'Embraceable You . . . NiQht and Day . . . . 24 . . . . Becoming popular. . . . . . . . Finishing yellow sweater. . . . . . . . Public School vice-president. . . INUICATIVE Most Embarrassing Memory Caught crying in closet. . . Holy, Holy, Holy Three man date ........ Falling down Rivoli stairs Rising at graduation with Happiest Hours Friday afternoons .... With the Navy ..... Phoning Mr. Coryell. .Vllith B. lower school .......... With Benny Goodman. . . Talking about Pacl-cards. .On a date. . . . Dropping Luckies in the hall .................. Avoiding homework. -a step in the right Riding? in a red station direction wagon Most Cherished Possession Stadium boots. Tan tights. . . . . B.O.N.D. pledge. Mail Cmale'?l. . . .Tennis shoes. . . Men .... . Knitting bag. . . Ham . . . 25 Bets Noir Snakes Charlie Modern dance History Noisy study hall Putting tables up in the gym K. P. Certain 7th and 8th grade girls PAST IMPEBFEET lf anyone had walked into the old Smead School tfounded in 1881 by the Misses Mary, Marian, and Caroline Smeadl in the fall of '32, he would have found, figuratively speaking, of course, a trylon and a perisphere: Lutie and Tony, constructing the red reading table which is still in Miss SmiLh's room. These two, who walked side by side in commencement exer- cises last year as junior ushers, were the nuc- leus of the present senior class. Although others came and went, these two remained' together happily, except for a brief interlude in the third grade when they came to blows. Lutie likes to remember that in those days it was she whom the boys backed. Under the guidance of Miss Simonds and Mrs. Bayer, their class passed through the fourth, fifth, and sixth grades. Fin- ally they were joined in the seventh grade by Stinky Beidler. Next we find these original three being initiated into Ye Followers of the Dra- gon , on august association of violent initia- tions. tWho was the dragon? Ham?l ln the fall of '39 Boots became a member of this fast, and increasingly large class, and that same fall, with the closing of the public schools, Piglet Wall and the domineering Wolfess entered the ranks. Before long this group was cooperating with Mr. Stork on that amazing news sheet, the Octo . That was the year the Followers of the Dragon ordered five hundred fir trees, and instead of a large truck's driving up to the door, piled high with half-grown evergreens, to our amazement, one small package was suavely handed us by Miss Dickey. We soon found out that only God can make a tree . Then we came to the time in our lives when we became more conscious of the le's than the la's , when our luncheons were spent in trying to think up ways to get to the counter at the same time as our favorite boy and trying to keep up with the conversation, which was usually in code. At the Misses Semples' that year, decked in pilgrim shoes and velvet dresses, we often saw two future members of the class, B. I. and Susie O., dancing together. Here, on Friday nights we were taught to dance like little ladies, but during the rest of the week we could often be found jitterbugging in the hall science room. outside the In the fall of '40, donning high heels and lip- stick, we tripped into the English room to greet our new classmate, Susie O., and to begin our high school career. We soon became fondly known as the beef trust, after our rather unfor- tunate experience with the Howe boys. This dance was also the scene of Oh, Ioel Our presentation of Dickens's Christmas Carol marked the beginning of our dramatic career. How we struggled with our pahst , hahnds , and neoos l That spring we continually got out of study halls to color programs and to col- lect records for the spring program dance. And what excitement there was as we eagerly watched the door for any alumni home for vaca- tionl At last, in our sophomore year, our present class was completed with the arrival of B. I. We took over our first real responsibility as librarians under Marilyn's leadership. This was the year when we were known as those sopho- mores , when we learned what crust was from Mr. Coryell, and when we were called pigs- CMadame?l. But we showed our true spirit when we gave the gala Hill-billy Hop to raise mon- ey for the juniors for the senior prom. And, oh that senior prom, from which most of us dashed to hear Tony Pastor! lt was a big year for house-parties. There was the time Tony was stuck in the window, Marilyn went to sleep in the chair, and Martha was seen riding a motor-bike through Ottawa Hills at an ungodly hour in her white satin pajamas. At the end of the year we bade good-bye to Ford, and so ended our co-ed days. We returned in the fall of '42'to become the jerky juniors . Every morning the eight of us would gather in the psychology room to discuss the coming dances. B. I. and Marilyn were Brown and Orange captains, and spent many a study hall with Mrs. Schaefer. Before long we were working madly on the Weather Vane . Never a free period went by without B. I.'s snap- ping all sorts of pictures. Every Wednesday Marilyn would call together her little brood, and they would no sooner be reading proof or pasting snap pages than Miss Beard would ap- pear to summon them to study hall. Sue and Tony had one job to do, and it took them all year to do it-the calendar. Lutie and Nancy nagged 26 Martha from October to May to get the Kueh mann's ad. Our class was so original that we decided to remodel our school rings. tAll eight of us are still displaying those rings-Maybe that new design was not so good.l We made our annual trip to Grosse Pointe for basket- ball. We'll forget about that game. Along with the sophomores we gave our version of The Taming of the Shrew in assembly. Sue -wouldn't you know-was the iester, wearing a long, red hat with balls on the end which fell in her face when she bowed. To prove that we were as efficient backstage as on, B. l. was prompter of the senior play, and really knew the parts as well as the actors. lt was at this time that Lutie buzzed off to California, return- ing with a tan over which the rest of us drooled for weeks. In Iune everyone had been wonder- ing for at least a month where the Weather Vanes were, and not until we were about to go into the Final Luncheon did the truck deliver them to the door. At the luncheon, much to the distress of the whole school, but particularly of our class, it was announced that Mr. Stork would not retum with us the following year. The Navy had a priority. In spite of our disap- pointment, and probably because of Sue's wor- rying, fat Christmas she was saying, Get the bids! l the Senior Prom was a huge success. The next morning, after staying up all night at Mariha's, we faced our first job as seniors, cleaning up the debris of the dance. At last the Ierky Iuniors became the Sophisticated Seniors fwe thinkl, and began immediately to claim their senior privileges. I'm a senior and I should have a seat by my- self on the bus! or Come on kids, seniors get the first rowl Don't let anyone fool you, senior year is work, but the fun over-balances it. Teachers really begin to appreciate you! And Mary sends in ham instead of balogna, tea in- stead of sulphur water. Believe us, Mary, we are very grateful. The second week of school the halls were covered with posters: We're set for Luette , Beidler is best , Get in cahoots with, Boots . After a whirlwind campaign of speech making, Boots became our Student Council president. And to see that our senior rights were well argued, Nancy was chosen class representative. Stop inflationl That became the battle cry of B. I. and Lutie. The rest of us are very proud of these two who pledged to Buy Only Neces- sities for the Duration. Embar-r-rassing, wasn't it, when our senior jackets, three months over- due, arrived? But when we come back to M.V. in ten years, you'll see us still wearing those luscious maroon jackets. To prepare Mr. Coryell for the shock he would undoubtedly receive when he should try to direct our senior play, we invited him to a dinner, at his house. Mr. C. served the cocktails -cokes? What a hilarious eveningl' And oh, that cunning little hallwayl For the past four years we had been dying to spend the night at school. At last we realized our ambition. When ' we first conceived this idea, the cots were longer and somewhat softer. To our horror, the buzzer started buzzing at nine in the evening and continued at forty-five min- ute 'intervals until four in the morning. Sue and Boots, our two Amazons, couldn't take it. In the moming we found them firmly entrenched in the teachers' room with blankets, heating pad, pillows,-and a stray dog. They still carry the bruises from their perilous ioumey through the dark hall. Because Lutie was so busy being a B.O.N.D., she forgot to hand our ads in to the Weather Vane board till after the contest had closed. Consequently we almost missed the party with the sophomores. Our last Weather Vane partyl We wanted to give a musical comedy as our play, but decided we did not have exactly the right talent. Mr. Coryell still thinks a flower show would have been appropriate for our in- tellects. Iune 8 and college do not seem far off now. Won't we feel emancipated when we hear the chorus rehearsing for Commencment? This year it will be we who wear long dresses and walk down the garden path behind junior ush- ers. If only Lieutenant Stork can give us our diplomas, our graduation will be complete. FUTURE If anyone should walk into the Maumee Valley Country Day School on May fifteenth in the year nineteen fifty-four, he would find eight women, the class of nineteen forty-four, stand- ing in a group, chatting busily on everything from domestic affairs to bridge hands. They have come for the annual Smead School Asso- ciation luncheon, which is being held in the newly opened glass dining room of Stork Hall. Soon they go to their tables. Seated at the nineteen forty-four table are Mrs. Algernon Swinnerton Abercrombie, the former Mrs. Har- rison Adams, the former Mrs. Clem Iones, nee Betty Iay, just returned from Renop Mrs. William Pettibone, formerly Sue Stone and her guest from New York, Mrs. Randy Randolph fEliza- beth Morrislp Mrs. Iames Whitney iMarilyn Beid- lerlz Mrs. Ronald Butler from Louisville, Ken- tucky tMary Hunter Iohnstonly Mrs. Iohn Smith- ers iNancy Walll. At the speakers' table is the president of the Association, Mrs. Frazier Brooks fLuette Goodbodyl and at her left is Lady Maxin Fortesque Mount Blanc tMartha Wolfe? wearing her fabulous white mink coat. Lady Mount Blanc is here from London to speak on the pro- gress in European reconstruction. Mrs. Brooks has just thrown over the back of her chair the plaid reversible which, as a faithful B.O.N.D., she has worn ever since her school days. Back Whitney familiar at the nineteen forty-four table, Mrs. is talking about the week-end sail PERFECT which she has planned in honor of the three visitors on her largest yacht, Cherokee, in which she has won first place in several deep water races. Mrs. Smithers has just returned from the telephone, looking highly upset, for the neigh- bor across the street with whom she has left Iohn Ir. has dropped him on his head from the helicopter. The city said they would repair the dent in the side-walk, but nevertheless Mrs. Smithers fears that she will not be able to go south to spend the summer with Mrs. Butler while the boys are at camp. Mrs. Randolph toys with her chicken salad, realizing that she is playing in the tennis matches this afternoon. In honor of this famous champion, Mrs. Petti- bone will entertain at a cocktail party after the International Championship tennis matches which will be held at her estate, If You Please . By this time Mrs. Brooks has called the meeting to order and all are attentively listen- ing to an estimate for the building of a senior cabin. As the business discussion goes on, Mrs. Brooks glances at her watch and abruptly calls the meeting to a close, for she will leave this afternoon for Lake Placid,where she will prac- tice for the forthcoming National Amateur Figure Skating Championship. The luncheon adjourns and the rest of the class of '44 seize their maroon blazers and are off in the big or- ange bus, which is now running on the rims. to the tennis tournament. lsn't imagination wonderful? 28 UPPER SUHUUI. 4 E ji. Z ,ifflfl I t Q x W .t ft , 'W l P t xi f 151 Q., 9, Wg LEFT TO RIGHT: Lucy Baker, Virginia Egger, Margery Parkes, William Clark, William Carr. Lucy ...... Secret Bill Carr .......,.. Ginny .... Margery .... . . Bill Clark .... . . X J .' j I UNIOR QUOTATIONS and self-contained and solitary as an oyster. 11 .......... He seems so near and yet so far. . ..... ls it a World to hide virtues in? . . . . . . . l'll speak in a monstrous little voice. In skating over thin ice our safety is our speed. V ,El .,.,g,,. 1i1jfvi'. :fl-il Q- lg 1' V4 14 - , sf' 'f .112 ?Y 'wif JU , , J , nf 1' , 1 I 'TVB . ,yup 9 l.ff1X I-v IH .in 3'uHQflf-n.x0,.,i.l fic' 'nga ffm '4 It p EMM jp! LL tt j f7' 'X fvf' , .1 3' 30 N n 5 K .I XJ-UfCUx ,.vV- V --'UE I Q CN.sa,'-1+-fx.Sk.bvSl,VQzX L. , T Q5-39,5 rlqsufgb '2, 4... at a ffl sub x . If ic-AMALQ sjgw LAW? fb I ! STANDING, LEFT TO RIGHT: Patricia Christy, Margaret Rose Patterson, Harriet Levis, Ion Ayers, Thomas Adkins, Marian Wietinq, Robert Mauk, Charles Iohnson. SEATED: LEFT TO RIGHT: Nancy Boeschenstein, Mary Blair Buqgie. PERVERTED PROVERBS Tom. . . Word to the wise is sufficient. Ion .... ......,. ' 'Pride goeth before a date. Nancy ...... . . Where there's a will the-re's a way. Mary Blair .... ......... ' 'Procrastination is the thief of time. Harriet ..... .. VVhen mother's away the mouse will play. N Margie... ....... A preparation in time saves nine. TSI Teta .... . . . A soft answer tumeth away Wrath. ' is X if Bob... ......... He who hesitates is lost. l 5 Im, Chuck .... ................ ' 'Make hay while the sun shines. X Marian ...... Don't cross your bridges until you come to them. Qi ' ,gk 1.3-A 5 31 L 3 9 A24 -1 -.. fb , h ff Y' '21, va, 4 I 3734 1 ,Q PWM bu-2100 Depyial bgx The. 'ni ' i IB4 KQA-IN 31045 for- hm-x 7, 'ao 354 l0v1,4-,PA he tl Jt,yyl Lum, I! ,levi 5 F1 Xfqd. 51 1 'livwfk vt A SEATED, LEFT TO RIGHT: Frederick Buqqie, loyce Mitchell, Patty Lathrop Peqay Fras r STANDING, LEFT TO RIGHT: Roscoe Betz, lames Nordoff, Eleanor Hollister, Gloria Prudden Albert Patterson, Carol MacNichol, Patricia Sawhill, Sally lay, Betty Bentley. F is R is E is S is H is M is A is N is C is L is A is S is S is FRESHMAN ABC'S for Freddie, who will bet you his money for Roscoe, our air-minded Sonny. , tor energyqBetty has much. for stories, with Gloria's touch. for Hollister, gentle of voice. for Mitchell, her pencils are choice. for alacrity, PeQQY's here first. for Nordhott, his pranks are the worst. for Carol-she has always been here. for Lathrop, who came just this year. for Al, who cleans up the hall. for Sawhill, who likes basketball. for Sally, the shortest of all. 32 fly an ofhgn far,-3m v1l'l0S'n-UC-9 6 Q! The. nlghfm-ve S9 '3'f'-if'j7Vw- dvi 7 69 of fhv. gemggi, ,Q P Q27 C3 Q W ybyn Q 61,5 70x e J Jams LEFT TO RIGHT: Bobinette Kressmann, Ruth Wietinq, Barbara Harrington, Nancy Corbett, Io Ann Iohnson, Sally Watson, Marqot Bennett, Carol Adams, Sally Krapp, Paula Secor, Duane Stranaha Peter Hoffman, lames Morris. U, fhfoif 9009 va PiwY'NGs ' WGZSQUQUQ' wqh T Sally W.... .. ...... '. .. ...... ........ ' 'Touqh' ,eng Margot . . . ....... . ., ....... ..... ' 'Iessle Pessle G t N 1 Carol ...... Q .... All right for you' 'Y6 Sally K. .... . didn't do af' Rcoyne Nancy...4Qg...':' .... Ruthie .... .... ,. . Paula ...... . . .. . loAnn.fll... .... :L .... Well ........ ? ...... ... Beq your puddin 's Blast 1t .... lfyou ask me......' ' . . . Wanna medal? hm ........ . ....... ..... . Pat .................. . Barbara ...... . . ......... . . .... What's up, Doc? peter ...,,. ..,.. Boblnette ................ 1 P 33 14 . 11 . . . Dah-yeah .. . . Oh, can it? . . ...... 'Eurekau 8 A fa Uffrm . Nlgfy Egvioe 1.6 . U-QD-'L K fm MTMMWWWW A.N,,QiJ.- LEFT TO RIGHT ,TOP ROW: George Stronohon, Barbara Lennihfm, Harold Boeschenstein. LEFT TO RIGHT: BOTTOM ROW: Frank Botsch, Harriet Hollister, Helen Moy Crcmdell, Mary Ann Merrill, Carol Hdmpe, Albert Frost. x FLOWERS X. , 'v M- ' Bobs ........ r.'. . lf? . . . . . Violet Iulie .......t . ..... . .. Daisy V Carol ....... . .,-...'. . .Z ..... 5 4, .... .TX . . . . . Rose G Mary Ann b.n f'T. . .1 1 . . ...... . . . Tulip E Harriet ....... . . . . . . .. . Forget-me-not R Frank . . . .... .... .... Ch ryscmthemurn N A George . . . ..... Snap-dragon T Tom . . . V. . Icrck-in-the-pulpit D Albert . . . ....... Tiger-lily E 34 LUWEH SIIHUUL Q-bpg I BBS N-'O 0 nexT l1eoJ- ' X 0fQ,,,,4Q wobble x q'k0'Q gflvgf B 1 LEFT TO RIGHT: Carrietta Rains, Susan Dudley, Roberi Gebhardt, Ioyce Souihard, Hugh Foster. Sidney Warner, Ioan Bentley, Barbara Silverblatt, Raymond Kressmann, Bob Scher, Lynne Morris, Iacque Iones, I-Iutchy Lamb, Charles Cole, Beverly Vickerstoff, Tom DeVilbiss, Terry Williams, Audrey Meyers, David Mebane, Sue Thomas, Barbara Iohnston, Harry Heinl, Iames Templeton. NOT IN PICTURE: John Collins, Mary Bayer. 1.0 05' af J- FOURTH GRADE Q 0 B 1? 'A .X,xMary Bayer , V-,V X' Charles Cole v J' X . A vo- 0 Iohn Colllns x v ,ry Thomas DeVilbiss OX if! dj p Susan Dudley to KX 07105 X0 Y' 'D ,JR f' J, x . 0' X XX: W Harry Heinl David Mebane Audrey Meyers Carrietta Rains Robert Scher Sidney Warner o-'av Terr biflligmb FIFTH GRADE Robert Gebhardt Iarnes Templeton Suzanne Thomas Ll1r'-we mow- V5.5 SVZ.ok.vxYwQ. ll-,ent HU lu lTos'l'oPB EDQWNDNE Um SK ADE Ioan Bentley I-Iuqh Foster Iacqueline Iones Barbara Iohnston Raymond Kressmann Edward Lamb Lynne Morris Barbara Silverblatt Sloyce Southard To Wee ef,..v+vxu.f'A 360' df gd'-0-yy, Beverly Vickerstaff Golf eresa Williams 36 LEFT TO RIGHT ,FRONT ROW: Penny Cance, Barbara Loop, Ianet Mather, Michael Meade, Theodore Koupal, Isabel Hollister, leanne Southard, David Dodge, Iudith Black, Delmar Roos. SECOND ROW: Sally Tasker, Ted Roemer, Virginia DeVilbiss, Anthony Plutynski, Linda Miller, Carl Copelin, Emily Shepard, Carol Bentley, Andrew Harvey, Mary Lou Greiner, Iohn Williams, Teddy Bowers. THIRD ROW: Peter Brown, lack Caple, Jacque Kressmann, Ion Deimel, lack Yaryan, Stephen Stranahan, Sally Loop, Carole Broer, Mary Louise Foster, Barbara Iones. NOT IN PICTURE: Nan Poulsen, George Secor, Mary Alice Starritt, Betsy Walbridqe. FIRST FRADE Carol Bentley Ted Bowers Judith Black Carole Broer Penelope Cance Carl Copelin David Dodge Mary Lou Greiner Isabel Hollister Theodore Koupal Barbara Loop Ianet Mather Michael Meade Wellington Roerner Delmar Roos George Secor Emily Shepard Ieanne Southard SECOND GRADE Virginia DeVilbiss Andrew Harvey Linda Miller Anthony Plutynski Nan Paulsen Mary Alice Starritt 37 Sara lane Tasker Betsy Walbridqe lohn Williams THIRD GRADE Peter Brown lon Deirnel Mary Louise Foster Barbara lones lacque Kressman Sally Loop Stephen Stranahan lohn Yaryan I v VJ! K. , XQQ 1 l lar 1' R7 K' .. 5' x ll of f XL I fx f 4 .Xml 4 IN TREE, LEFT TO RIGHT: Fritz Hehbeleq Bradford Koles, Rubv Yarvan, Fritzie Betz lacauelme Hxrth ON GROUND: Hans Iones, Iudy Williams, Mary Peck, Priscilla Lamb. NOT IN PICTURE: Neil Brown, William Dudley, Paul Hartman, luddie l0hnson. i l KINDERGARTEN Frederick Betz Henson Iones Neil Brown Bradford Koles William Dudley Priscilla Lamb - Paul Hartman Mary Peck Fred Hebbeler Iudith Ann Williams Iacqueline Hirth Ruby Yaryan Iustice lohnson N ,, TN 1 l l , 1 M x Lf '7 I 'ly TOP ROW ,LEFT TO RIGHT: Billy Iennings, Luette Close, Buster Barbour, Ierry Tasker. SECOND ROW: Fielding Lewis, Iim DeVilbiss, Iohn Suhrbier, Jennie Rheinlrank THIRD ROW: Nancy Washing, Billy Stork, Michael Stranahan. FOURTH ROW: Tony Ayers, Louise Dodge. NOT IN PICTURE: George Seney, Lawrence Heinl, David l-lemley, Robert Bayer, Kay Rathbun. NURSERY SCHOOL Anthony Ayers William Iennings Fielding Lewis Kay Rathbun Robert Bayer Sloane Barbour Luette Close Iennie Rheinfrank Iames DeVilbiss Louise Dodge Robert Falconer Lawrence Heinl David Hemley George Seney William Stork Michael Stranahan Iohn Suhrbier Jeremiah Tasker Nancy Washing Robert Falconer UN THAVELINE All of my friends cmd their families have some particular reason why they enjoy travel by car. Some love the gorgeous scenery, others enjoy the com- fort of gliding smoothly along highways, still others like the hours of fun spent in the car, whistling, singing and telling stories. My family loves to travel, though none of us will admit it, however, we have no main objective in traveling by car unless it is getting to our destination as quickly as possible. The Stones, we have decided, have the inherited characteristics of the bird. We love the warm weather and attempt to follow the sun. Our friends call us The rolling Stones and we interpret this as Rolling stones gather no moss. Each year until three years ago, the family has motored south to spend the winter months in Florida. After each trip down Dad says, Never again. But the following winter we find ourselves packing to leave for the sunny South as soon as the first frost bites Father's ears. At five-thirty in the morning we are off. Dad says he likes to get an early start and not drive after dark, but Wade and I realize this peculiar desire is due to the fact that he knows we are not fully awake until about then. However, if five hours of peace means that much to him, we approve. After thirty minutes of attempting furiously to unzip the bag I have so care- lessly closed, after catching Mother's new dressing gown in the zipper, we are really off. Father's first statement is, The first argument between you two child- ren and home we go. Very impressed by this remark or else still a little drowsy, we are perfect voyagers. Wide awake at Cincinnati my first statement is either, How many more hundreds of miles do we drive? or When do we eat? Mother, seeing Dad's first signs of irritableness, tries to arouse our in- terest in one of the well known car games, which usually brings on more confusion than ever. We begin by counting all of the animals on our respec- tive sides of the road. Mother and I are always on the same side of the car in the morning, as I manage to sit on the right side so that I can read the Burma Shave signs, so Mother and I are on the same team. After we have counted three thousand cattle, iso it seems to usl, and Wade and Dad are still on their first hundred, Wade decides he doesn't like this game any more. From strain- ing our necks and over exhaustion there is delightful peace once again. Mother and Father continue their conversation that was so rudely interrupted by boredom in the back seat. Mother--it never fails-hits on something or someone's name that she just cannot remember. She maintains she will go stark raving mad unless she thinks of it. For the next hour we give her sug- gestions as to what the name may be. We all hint at such elaborate names as Rovalinski, Starlick, Iacobson and others. Finally she conquers it, and it always turns out to be Smith or Iones. After this has gone on for a while, Wade and I become energetic again. Since Mother's last suggestion was such a failure, we devise a game for our-- selves. Usually it is a mild game of tag which ends with our slugginq each other. Father then stops the car and we go through the same old routine that every child knows only too well. When will you two ever grow up? We settle it by Mother's sitting in the back seat and my moving to the front. My only statement is, Oh, well, I can see better now. It irks Wade to think that 40 I have an advantage. So after lunch we tear out to see who gets the front seat. As mother drives in the afternoon, it is Wade's turn to sit in front. I am content however, realizing that Dad hasn't said much all moming. Probably he was thinking of games for just the two of us to play in the afternoon. Much to 'my disappointment he falls asleep. I immediately lean over the front seat, trying to get in on the conversation there. Again Wade burns and I find my- self forced to observe the dull expression of sleep. At this point I decide that I shall leave the greater part of my fortune to advertising agents so that they may better entertain bored travelers. Finally comes time for dinner. Father awakens and I whisper in his ear -tl wouldn't want Wade to know that I wasn't having just as much fun as hel how disappointed I am with him for going to sleep. He promises faithfully that it will not happen again. Dinner and a movie leave us all tfor some reasonl exhausted. One night in particular, Dad found Wade trying to dye the soap in the wash basin with his new chemical set. He had burned his hand and all was in an uproar again. As Dad bandaged the burned hand, I heard him say, This is the last trip of this kind. We all fear that he meant it, as the Stones haven't been rolling since. Let's hope it is because of gas rationing. Suzanne Stone, Twelfth Grade THE FUHTHESS There she was on the deck, stripped to the skin, her turrets protruding fore and aft, and her engines glistening in the African sun. A brand new Boeing B-l7F, waiting to be unloaded, reassembled and put into action. She looked drab in her desert camouflage, but yet she still seemed to retain that adven- turesome air most airplanes have. She went to the -teenth squadron and was promptly named Myrtle, the Fertile Turtle, a name which belied her sixty-four hundred horsepower. Her armored skin could withstand the hail of .50 calibre Nazi steel that she would soon encounter, and her eggs hatched more than turtles. On her first mission her ten masters, combined with about .50 calibre Brownings managed to have four swastikas transferred to her pocked skin along with a single bomb under the pilot's window. When the number of bombs had reached twenty-five and the swastikas twice that number, she was given a new crew. By this time she had been practically remade from hangar queens , those of -her comrades who had been pronounced unfit for anything but the donation of spare parts. Today was to be her last mission. After today, she would fly back across the ocean and teach more youngsters to fly. This, of course, would have happened had not Fate intervened. While over -----, Germany, she was suddenly flown into one of the more lead-filled portions of the air. It looked as if a giant sewing machine were making stitches along her body. This really bumed her up, literally as well as figuratively, as her right wing was a sheet of flame. She spun downward like a weird, flaming corkscrew, and at about five thousand feet there was an explosion, whereupon approxi- mately one-third of her went back up again. After that, nothing but the drone of planes and the faint tattoo of .50's against metal. lon Ayers, Tenth Grade 41 FUR MEHITUHIUUS ACTIUN BEYUNIJ THE CALL UF DUTY-- Me, I'm only a decrepit old storekeeper with just enough strength to look over my tortoise-shell glasses. What with this war and the point system cmd the triplicate copies of baloney them tellers down in Washington wants, I was gettin' pretty sick o' this dad-blamed liie. Yep, feet on the stove in the winter -bunch o' the old codgers Uncle Som don't want, huddlin' round the prover- bial cracker barrel-listenin' to 'em a 'pratin' and prattlin' 'bout this and that, livin' was kinda' on the borin' side. But a little incident that happened this last week in town kinda gave me a little a' that reiuvenaied energy, er' sorne- thin'. Pardon me while I get eloquent ter a few minutes, and let me tell ya' about Sal. I guess you might say Sal was born on the wrong side of the tracks. Yet she was all the mischief and gaiety that could be compressed into a four-byu four body. Yes, sir, Sal was one of the liveliest lookin' curs I ever saw. But after all, Sal was a cur, and she didn't belong on the swanky side of the town. Young jim Talbut found her when she was a pup, struggling for lite down in the creek bed. One ot the kennel attendants had thrown her there with a five pound stone around her neck. Well, lim dug her out and from then on the dog was his, body and soul. It was a queer match, those two. lim was hard and tough, inclined to be a little on the moody side, a pessimist, the city folks would call it. On the other hand, Sal was completely abounding with joy. She didn't try any ot the common tricks that dogs will to win a pat on the head, like shoving her nose into his hand. No, Sal was content to follow him around wherever his wander- ings might take him. lim didn't like school. Well, Iim chanced to wander over to the swanky side of town one day, Sal trotting happily at his heels. He happened to come near one ot those big hedged-in estates over at the north end of town. Well, I don't rightly res member what makes boys Want to go explorin', but up and over he went. lim wanted to see an old dance pavilion back in the woods. It's been deserted now for about twenty years. Used to be popular back in prohibition days, but its floors are rotted with leaves covering everything. It was quite a ways back in the woods and in the dead of winter. It must have been ten below that day. But lim must have been pushed by fate, because just as he got t.here, he fell through one of the planks and struck his head on a board. Sal didn't know what to make ofthe motionless body: she whimpered softly and set back through the cold. Now Sal isn't a big dog and that was quite a trick getting back to obtain help from the town. Me, I went along with the party Sal led back to the boy. Iim's in the hospital now, recovering from the concussion, but at least that's better than being frozen to death. Like I say, I'm just a storekeeper, a 'philosophizin' here and there 'bout things, but it 'pears to me them gents down in Washington who're handing out them medals for bravery could kinda' slip one ot 'em on the side to Sal. Now I don't claim it's, so marvelous for a dcg to back track a path and get help for her master. Shucks, no, you see things like that ever' day in the papers, but you see, Sal happens to be blind. William Clark, Eleventh Grade. 42 So Ts-neu! Vuosz Flmvv FLRTY EYES KNlTTlN,F6R Hmmm 'VMCQM MfELL,I'LL-ELL yum- 'Barone IT QLLBEGHN -low Aeon You? MAN Sworvraae Q New Conv '1 0,CLOCK ----- i -6-,,,,,....--f .,,,,,,........-f.-mv'- I ,........ ..,...-W-ww,-M-m . W, UL, X, ,W,,,. Sw 'gb H , . . 2. wa 1-afffj W UN SAILING To me sailing is like riding on a roller coaster. I never want to make a habit of it: once a season is enough. When I am in a sailboat, and the water is slapping against or splashing over the bow or the stern, or whatever the front is called by more learned mariners, I am completely uncomfortable. The smell of the wet ropes nauseates me, the darnpness of the bottom of the boat insinuates itself through my sneakers, my hair blows in my face, and I wish for terra firma. I well remember my first rendezvous with Neptune. I am unfortunate en- ough to have a number of friends who dote on sailing and who, from the beginning-of May to the end of September, insist that I share their joys on the briny deep. Finally, I had been enveigled one season. I arrived at the dock dressed in a white sharkskin short and shirt outfit, which Be-st's catalogue advertises as perfect for sailing, and found my colleagues decked in warm slacks and sweat shirts and dirty, dilapidated tennis shoes. They looked like typical sailors and I, like a typical landlubber. Of course I expected to be able to relax and look at the sky and the water and have all kinds of nice thoughts, but this turned out to be one of those windy days when the water is tossed into ever coming hills over which the boat must climb or through which it must plough. It was impossible for anyone to be settled. As soon as I became com- fortably seated and began to think, Well, this isn't half bad, the head man shouted, Prepare to come about, and I did as the others and ducked my head. The skipper, as I believe he is more correctly called, then said a num- ber of salty words, of whose meaning I had not the slightest inkling, and the boat turned around. Those who had been on the low side were then on the high side and vice versa. There really isn't much difference in the sides- each is as wet as the other-except that on one side your feet are lower than your head and on the other your head is lower than your feet. After three or four futile and back-breaking attempts at balancing myself on either side, I allowed myself to fall to the bottom side, which I found perhaps more damp but more to my Iikingwat least I could slip no lower. There I huddled deep in thought. All good things must come to an end: I told myself that it must be so with bad ones, too. When I was asked to grab the jib sheet, I laughed a nervous laugh and said something like, Why, of coursel and then thought, Where is the jib sheet and if I grab it, what on earth shall I do with it? Some- one finally handed me a rope, and I held firmly onto it until it was jerked from my hand at the skipper's nautical command, after which the boat turned around again. I righted myself and began to meditate, arriving at this conclusion. To learn to sail one must learn a new language. It's a sort of code, and anyone who steps on a boat not knowing it is automatically made to feel out of place and like an idiot. The skipper commands him to sit on the starboard, please, move a little aft, grab the jib sheet, hold onto the tiller for a moment, tighten the main halyard, etc., and before the voyage is over, the igrioble outsider wishes to jump overboard and end it all. I came quickly to my senses when one of my dear companions said the wind was dying and he thought we should have to head for home. The wind 44 Buss GLA:-vouncuu. OFF DUTY Tue Hsu :wo Hen Bnoov G no - Goo FLRS H Joanna: Can you 'TBv'Tuas? THE Vscro RS fi did die-so dead that we stopped. The sun began to sink behind the trees and my heart sank, too. We just could not be there for the night. Any experienced sailor seems always to have some means of locomotion when his ship is be- calmed on quiet waters. This skipper pulled a paddle from one of the many dark nooks and crannies, with which he proceeded to pull us over the water. I thanked the Lord for his ingenuity. Arriving on shore, I felt the same emotions that Iohn Payne did when he wrote, Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home. Mary Hunter lohnston, Twelfth Grade BUUKS - A HEVELATIUN UF PEHSUNALITY The other day I was cleaning up my father's bookshelves. My mind started to wander as it usually does when not occupied by the work in hand. I pic- tured by means of his book collection, the type of man my father is. Here is a shelf of Irish books: you can easily see that he is a staunch Irishman. Each has been worn by much handling. However, they have not been mistreated by a careless reader. This man takes pride in books, and has a deep rever- ence for them. The condition of a volume often can tell as much about its reader as the type of book can. Next I start dusting a section of biographies. A lover of history has collected these. Four or five on the subject of Welling- ton reveal his special favorite-a brave soldier and a shrewd politician. Poetry is not lacking on my father's shelves, but most of it is of a rather boisterous type- There was a young lady of Ghent. A group of books on figure skating point out his favorite sport, while beside them are several editions on the care of dogs. The collection is not without its smattering of murder mysteries. These are the indication of the avidity with which he listens to the daily radio serials. Of course, there is an edition of the World Almanac, his old standby, a relic of his days as a certified public accountant when the emphasis was totally on figures. If you take notice of a person's bookshelf, it is possible to have a glimpse into his mind. My mother's taste runs to romantic novels and long narrative poems, whereas my brother dotes on practical, dry books about business and banking. If you take any of your friends, you will find this revelation brought home to you many times. Books are read to satisfy our desires when we are not required to put up a front for the public. Thus books reveal the true character of their owner. For example we will take Iohn Doe, a ruthless, unemotional business man, who would willingly take all of a poor widoW's money, though he already has plenty. But what do we find on his shelves? Why, copies of Shelley, and Keats, and other great poetic masters. Looking into Mr. Doe's past, we find that his mother died early, and he had to fend for himself from the age of twelve. This appearance of brusqueness is only a front, for protection. Books can also serve to recall the different stages we have passed through. In a far corner are stuck the reminders of our highly imaginative childhood: ALICE IN WONDERLAND, WINNIE THE POO, HEIDI. Our next stage was a little more adventurous: MOBY DICK, TREASURE ISLAND. Then, during junior high school, books about high school girls, our heroines, took first place along with cheap dime romances. Next we reached the novel stage: REBECCA, GONE 46 Ha yn! Leo ART VHS 'Boss Bun ans We Dm Mane Beueve 'Boy Miers Gam. Cuscw Lumens WITH THE WIND, Hilton's works, and our especial favorite, Nathan, There also was the time when We discovered the really great books for the first time. Something inspired us to rush to the bookstore for copies of the works of some of the old philosophers. One day We were reading our English assignment in that dreaded subject of poetry, and suddenly discovered that it was beautiful, romantic, adventurous and actually enjoyable. Our bookshelves are stocked with our favorite poets: Keats, Shelley, Masefield, Benet, Kipling. There are, of course, other selections found in our collection, but by their condition, one can see that they were added because, everyone was raving about the book or Mother thought it was appropriate. One often hears the saying, If only that dog could talk, what stories he could tell! We never need say this about books. They do talk! Luette Goodbody, Twelfth Grade. THE RETURN As she Walked into the station, she was surprised at the noise and con- fusion. The building had always been dark 'and dingy, but now it was even more so with many people coming in from the wet and mud of the streets outside. My, but it was crowded! She would have to push her way among many khaki, navy blue, and olive drab figures. Oh, there was a seat by that marine lieutenant. She noticed his medals and overseas stripes. She remem- bered the time Bill had tried to explain to her what they all meant. Once she had wanted to show her intelligence and had innocently said, Hello, Lieu- tenant, to that Major friend of hers. The station seemed to be filled and over-flowing with laughter or tears. That young sailor looked happy as he pinned the rather wilted red rose on his mother. She remembered a similar rose, now faded' and dry, in her scrapbook of Bill she had at home. A captain over by the door turned to get a last look at his Wife as she and the children left the station. She wondered whether, as he turned the corner, he secretly wiped a tear from his cheek. But his wife would never know and would go back to her war job, happy in knowing that by buying war bonds she was helping him return and bringing nearer the day when a home of their own was no longer a dream. Those four boisterous sailors coming in now must be heading for the U.S.O. She wondered whether they would enjoy the cookies she sent as well as Bill used to. He always said she was the best' cooky baker in the world. He made her promise that the day he came home, after the laps were licked, there would be cookies in that old cracked cookie jar. The clock said it was almost time now. Yes, the train caller was announc- ing, Train from Chicago in ten minutes for Cleveland and all points east. That was it. She thought she had better look at the telegram once more. She pulled a crumpled yellow paper from her purse, We are sorry to inform you that your son has been killed in action. We are sending the body-. Virginia Egger, Eleventh Grade 48 THE TRIUMPH UF FHEUKLES Right at this minute, as I look at her, Freckles is growling at her mother in her most fierce voice, her front feet stretched forward, her hind perfectly straight, her excuse of a tail going lickity-split as she cautiously eyes the bone her mother has in her mouth. She gives a little start, a warning bark, and lunges, playfully of course, for the bone. Whiz!-they are off. Through the hall, into the dining room, around the table, into the kitchen, then back into the hall, through the living room to the sunroom they race-Freckles a foot behind her mother, Skippy, because of an unpredicted somersault as she hit the linoleum on the kitchen floor. I fling open the front door and out they go-only so fast that they trip over each other and leave the bone on the doorsill. Undaunted, Freckles races back, leaving Skippy, who has decided squirrels are more interesting just now, only to find the bone in the mouth of Boxer, the neighbor's pup, who is five times her size. Greatly surprised, she retreats a few steps, sits down, and glares as though thinking, This insolent pup has no right to my bonel Why, he's only three months old and I'm eight! With this she gets up, puts her nose in the air and saunters by Boxer with a manner which just says, You can have that bone: I know where there is a larger one. Boxer, curiously licking his chops, falls prey to her crafty plan, drops the bone and lopes after her around the corner of the house. Immedi- ately l hear a sharp bark and a yipe! Oh, poor Frecklesl But, the next second all I can see of Boxer is a flash of tan as he streaks for home while Freckles reappears around the corner, her nose held even higher than before. She steps up daintily to the bone, picks it up, marches up to the door, where I am standing, pauses, looks up at me and wiggles her tail, then scampers up the steps and into the dining room and the seclusion beneath the table, where I soon hear her chewing on her hard-eamed goodie. A short while later I notice the chewing sound has stopped. Going in softly, I see Freckles, who has tired of her bone, standing in the living room doorway. She looks slyly around to see whether there is anyone who might interfere with what she intends to do and seeing no one, advances wearily to the couch and with amazing strength for one so supposedly exhausted, jumps up and on the couch pillow. With her paws and body she pats and twists it into shape and lies down. Seeing me enter, she nestles down closer into the pillow and blinks her eyes innocently at me in such a pleading way that I, even though I know Mother will scold me if she finds her there, lean over and pat her reassuringly and then tum away as she utters a happy, sleepy, little puppy grunt. Boy! Do I rate! Marian Wieting, Tenth Grade 49 TU BUY A HAT I trudged wearily up the fourth flight of stairs in Lasalle's. The eleva- tors? Oh yes, they were working, but today is Saturday. This had started off to be a perfect day. First we were going to the shoe department to get the biggest, most durable pair of shoes we could get wih my precious shoe coupon. Then we were going to the interior decorator's to see what we could do with the four walls and a ceiling that composed my room. But horrors of all horrors, as we were coming down past three, Mother spied the hat! The hat, if it could be classed in that category, was a dreamy creation of combs, flowers, and a lacy veil. Aha, she cried, I must have it, and off she rushed. She encountered one of those persuasive sales girls who are de- termined to send each customer away with at least three hat boxes. Fifteen minutes later, I moved away from my chair and began to pace the floor. I thought of the movie We were going to see, MADAME CURIE, but I knew I couldn't tear her away from the hats. .... Now this hat .... perfection .... I caught snatches of her expert sales talk and sighed inwardly. This was going to be such a perfect day. Then I had an idea. Mother was a B.O.N.D. I could work on her con- science. I started my sales talk. I knew enough to make it sound like small talk and not like a lecture because, if there is anything Mother hates, it's a lecture. As I progressed, I could see a troubled frown on her face. Then I told her that Perrysburg School had joined the B.O.N.D.'s and that some people were going so far as to wear safety pins instead of buying buttons. I certainly wish BJ. or someone could have been there to hear me. Well, to make a long story short, we left without a single hat. Aha, I thought, now we can go to the movie. I repeat, I thought we could go to the movie. But I was due for a surprise. We drove off and I hastened to tell Mother she was driving away from the theatre. She looked at me with glazed eyes. Movies! she said with a haughty tone. Here l've been nice to you all day. I took you shopping, but you gave me a talk on the B.O.N.D.'s. Well, going to the movies is just the same as buying a hat. Next time you'd better just let me buy a hat. Yes, Mother, I agreed weakly. Betty Bentley, Ninth Grade CHANGE A The forests, silent haven of the Indians, Took little notice of the threatening danger When the explorer, daring Ioliet, presaged- Like the first tiny trickle through a weakening dam- The crushing onrush of the backed up reservoir. The French and then the English enlarged the gap, And then the dam, the Alleghenies, broke And loosed its flood of pioneers in search of homes Upon the virgin forests, which-in the way and valuable- Were cut and used, never to be restored. - Tom Adkins, Tenth Grade 50 GH WuATFlFnca l Lvou Our'B:Low! A NEW ,Br-Icom I-lnwnv Guns QT Lns-rl SHE -I-2-wus:-IT Cessna TS NEXT fanfs 'Bonnoz 'Dewar LET-IT-:us HAPPEN To yo SUIINIJS I am listening to the songs of the birds: The plaintive coo of the mourning dove, The gay songs of the lark and the robin, The rasping cry of the crow. I am listening to the humming of the Iocusts, The peaceful drone of the bees, The chatter of a scolding, scurrying squirrel, And the murmur and sigh of the wind in the trees. Then to my ears comes the lazy purr of a motor boat on the river, From the highway I hear the swish of cars, And the zoom and zing of the heavily loaded trucks, And the sounds of Nature give way to the sounds of Man. Hoot! Hoot! shrieks the whistle of an approaching train, Nearer and nearer comes its rumbling, rattling, clinking, clattering, To drown out all other sounds. The rumbling, rattling, clinking, clattering fades away in the distance, The zoom and swish subside and the sounds of Man are silent for a time But the sounds of Nature persist. And I am listening to the songs of the birds, The humming locusts and buzzing bees, The chatter of a scolding, scurrying squirrel, And the murmur and sigh of the wind in the trees. Nancy Boeschenstein, Tenth Grade. WITH EMUTIUN THHUUGH HELL Ally Fodette is a Canadian war worker. A former tree-topper, he lives alone in a tar-paper shack. His nearest neighbor, Ioe Cousino, lives five miles to the northwest on the speedway-like hill road which is their only link with Woodburn, eight miles south of Ally's place. The one vehicle of traffic on this wilderness thoroughfare is Ioe's model T which makes one trip to town daily. It takes Ally and Ioe to their jobs at the Stackpool Arsenal in Wood- burn where they, along with nearly one hundred and twenty five other former lumbermen and trappers, produce the incendiary bombs Canada is contribut- ing to fry Schickelgruber out of the war and into the depths of Tartarus. Ally has just returned from work and finished off a meal of reheated hash. When he is relaxing and trying to hear the hockey game from Ottawa over his 1920 model battery set, a chance thought switches his mind away from the game and the radio. Could I have left my soldering iron plugged in? He examines himself. 52 I -E-IEY G Iva Ut VoTHMlN.S Two MEADE D 'DENON M. Aw ONE GOTCI-IH on-E MN! 'BRCK To HISH SCHOOL WruEsLEyVncnTaaN Lac Wausau 0-lvl vv 'N- Y 'Kit -N3CLw-V1 Good God! he exclaims. Come to think of it, the last I remember, it was off its stand and awfully near that cardboard box of lettering paints. These thoughts hit him next: l can never be sure till I get to the plant. Fire cou1dn't spread far from that box, could it? Soon he is sure there was a wooden waste barrel right under the place on the bench where the inflammable paint was located, and he sees fragments of the burning box floating into that barrel of oily rags. Having convinced him- self that the soldering iron is probably red hot by now, Ally doesn't have to use much more imagination to put the whole arsenal and then the town into flames. During these last thoughts his emotions finally catch up with him. His perspiration-covered brow looks like a sponge in the process of being wrung out, and his insides feel like one that has already been wrung out. His muscles, Weak from the terror his mind has created, his drumming temples hotter than his mentally produced inferno, Ally sits down to reorganize his fire-frenzied wits. As he grips the arms of his chair, it becomes clear that the only way he can remove the spectre is to face it by going into Woodburn. Not thinking to go to Cousino's for the car, he sets out on foot. Remembering the pace he'd devel- oped while sharing a cabin with Frank Cloud, a Huron Indian, Ally breaks into a jerky trot. I've too far to go to keep this pace up, he thinks as after the first mile his breath begins to come hard. I guess l'll cut her down some. I don't feel that I've got enough strength left now to crawl into town. A vision of explod- ing fire bombs and of flames spreading through the frame buildings of the town ends all thought of slowing down and Ally struggles on. I'm sure glad there's no snow on the ground. I'd never be able to make it with both my skiis and snowshoes in town at my sister's, he reasons as his mind takes ecape from thought of his aching body and the reason for this endurance feat. As he slows down to a walk for the last three miles, Ally's emotions slow down, too. He sees that the town, at least, isn't flaming. He is further relieved when, upon rounding the final curve in the road, he sees the arsenal looking no different from the way it looked any other time. The fire could still be confined to my section, he reminds himself. I hope the watchmen are on their toes. Speechless and breathless he hands a watchman his pass. Gosh, it's sure funny how people are so completely unconscious about having done things they do every day as habits, mused Ally as, at two A.M., he pulls the Hudson Bay more closely around him in bed at his sister's house in Woodburn. William Carr, Eleventh Grade 54 5Mu.c Jun- Fon A 'PICTURE ,PASS Damn 5 Funsw' Snow 'Baca Fon Q Dm' Ducnl -I-DOT To OT! II BUY DIED LIIST NIGHT A boy died last night! lt doesn't make any difference whether his name was Vanderbilt, Cohan, or Pulaski. The most important thing is that he was an American. Also that he died in poignant and awful loneliness out some-- where in the torn verdant jungles under a starless silence ten thousand miles from home! Missing in action ?Those were the obscure lines that appeared in the morning communique. That was all. Now he lies, crumpled in a desolate eternity beside the twisted wreckage that not long ago was his sky-riding ticket to the sun-lit heavens. Now the smiling face, proud head, and broad shoulders remain only in a picure frame that is in a living-room in a shady little house. Many people died last night with loved ones at their sides. But this boy went through a thousand deaths without a friendly voice or the pat of a kind, helping hand. The pain must have been awful, his thoughts making him sad and lonely. His Mom and Dad . . . The drugstore for sodas or cokes after the school games . . . The leaves that had to be burned . . . The snow that had to be shoveled . . . What did his friends do? Did they send flowers and condolences? Did they call and say he didn't die in vain? tThere's nothing you or they can do. For, you see, a boy died last night and there's no way to get around it! I Paula Secor, Eighth Grade FIFTY MILES TU THE EIILLUN lack and Bill had been working in their basement workshop for three week-ends. Hand me that screw, please, said Bill, as he lifted the motor into place. Then he screwed it in tight and with the help of Iack attached the wheels. Boy, Iohn and Bob will sure wish they were us when this car is finished. Iust think of going to school in our own private car. We should get about fifty miles to the gallon with this invention, said Tack. Let's take her up stairs and try it out! shouted Bill. Up the narrow stairs they carried their automobile, resting from time to time. At last they got it outside and over to the gas station. One gallon please, said Bill as he handed he man eighteen cents. They pressed the self-starter and there was a loud rumble as the car started. Hurray! shouted Tack while Bill opened and closed his mouth. The boys climbed in and were off. When Monday rolled around, they got into their car and started off for school. As they passed the bus, they honked their horn and everybody looked out and they, too, opened and closed their mouths. When they got to school, everybody wanted to ride in the car. But the boys just said, Make your own. Tom Boeschenstein, Seventh Grade. IN MEMUHIAM MR. FRED WANDTKE, who died December 25, 1943, after twenty-one years of faithful and devoted service to The Smead School and The Maumee Valley Country Day School 57 X 4 if ig- , s I T-fs! 5 E35-2353 '-'fs-f'3 2 Q' ' ggkieianggu 1 6255325-Q5 A-v vmnvs V- ,, 253323 E5 gimgaggmf 4 gefromfjqg ,,,,1llz0l 122355322 Q18 rm 3 55515-ng? 2 , 5502x5315 .:,js643ui6f-Sag-5 SER 0 .1 O l I Q Egg x' I XXI CALENDAR September 13. Mr. Ward meets and greets the school on opening day. 17. The year's assembly season opens with the movies of the 1943 com- mencement and reports of our delegates to the Ferry Hall conference last Iune. 22. Students are assailed by speeches and political posters in the Student Council election campaign: Luette, Boots, and Marilyn running for the presidency. 23. Boots Iohnston wins the election for Student Council president under the banner, Vote for Honest Iohn-sion. October 6. Seniors review best-sellers at the library assembly. Mary Blair Buggie gets another book to read in recognition of her having read twenty-three during the summer. 8. Books are dropped and hockey sticks and footballs grabbed for a field-day as the mothers have a luncheon. The lOth and llth grades take the prize in a treasure hunt. 13. Mrs. Schaefer goes South to visit Private Schaefer, and stays there. 21. The girls lick the shin-guards off Maumee in the season's first hockey game: score 4-0. November 6. The B.O.N.D.'s achieve nation-wide publicity in Raymond Clapper's column. 10. Gttawa Hills pays a visit to try a new sport--field hockey in the snow, the object to see how quickly you can distinguish the white hockey-ball from the snow balls. 24. Thanksgiving vacation, two and a half days of it! December 3. The sophomores and seniors eat chicken and collect junk at a party given them for their work in the ad campaign for the WEATHER VANE. 10. The sixth grade presents an entirely different war play: TWO WAYS OF LIVING. l7. The sophomores enjoy a temporary change in character as they pose for a tableau of the manger scene at the Christmas assembly. 59 lanuary 1 O. 1 2. 25. February 9. ll. 19. March 8. 9. 10. 14. 15. 17. 27. 31. April The school holds its breath as the faculty fights the ilu. We miss the wild man of Borneo as we visit his homeland on a trip through the East Indies with Mr. Ward. Holland-Big night: floor show tthe faces of the chorus resembled those of the 8th and 9th grade girlsl, piano solo, sixteen dollars for the March of Dimes, and tthe most easily forgotten partl defeat for both teams at the hands of the Holland Reserves. Mr. lohn Richards in an assembly gives us an architect's idea of a postwar Toledo. The well-publicized W.E.A.S. is revealed to us as the White Elephant Auction Sale. It brings the freshmen a hundred dollar sale of war stamps. Our safety valves blow off, we get a four day week-end. The seventh grade and their nostrils get to know early what a chem- istry lab is like. They skip lunch to visit the chemistry department at T.U. lntra-mural basketball competition remains keen as the whistle blows with the Browns just one basket behind the victorious Oranges in the last game of the season. Everyone, the freshmen girls in particular, stuffs himself with birth- day cake from the mammoth model made in celebration of B. Bent- 1ey's birthday. P. Stranahan and T. Boeschenstein also ran. The Brown and Orange unite to entertain the Blues from Maumee with defeat at basketball and cokes at 5:30. Mrs. Alexander brings us four of the twelve characters from Tabori's THEY CAME TO LONDON in our annual book review assembly. The sophomores break war-time tradition by bringing back the Hill Billy Hop. tSince when do hill billies hop to H. lames?l Test Week! At least they're only co-ops and not finals. Well-timed spring vacation begins. Everyone can have his spring fever at home this year instead of at school. WEATHER VANE GOES TO PRESS! 60 MW7 EHAUUATIUN, 1943 PHUEHAM Processional ................ . . Elgar Maumee Valley School Song Let All Thinqs Now Livinq ...... Girls' Chorus Address ............ President Philip C. Nash University of Toledo The Golden Day is Dying and 6th Grade Girls Presentation of Diplomas Willis Stork, Headmaster America The Beautiful ................ Ward Benediction ........... Rev. R. Malcolm Ward GI e UY T UNLY Nlzusssmss Fun THE T URATIUN The B.O.N.D. movement started in the history room of the Maumee Valley Country Day School. Present were two seniors, Luette Goodbody and Betty lay from the Prob- lems Class and their teacher. The students were convinced that inflation was a grave menace and had met to do something about it. Conscious that their small voices might never be heard above the din of cash registers, ringing in easy, war-time spending money, they were none-the-less determined to make an effort. They named their move ment the B.O.N.D.s after the initial letters in their slogan, Buy Only Necessities for the Duration. Their first step was to write for suggestions to various people throughout the coun- try whose advice would carry Weight. Their first reply came in the form of a commenda- tory notice in the late Raymond Clapper's column on Saturday, November Sth, 1943. Sensing the publicity value of this mention, they began the movement by explaining it to their fellow students, drew up a pledge card, and solicited signatures. When a group of prominent authors came to Toledo for a Book and Author War Bond Rally, Betty Iay and Luette Goodbody were invited to speak on the same platform with them when they made a tour of the Toledo high schools. Later, delegates were invited from all the Toledo schools to meet and consider adoption of this movement. News of the movement was spreading. On December llth, Mrs. Roosevelt men- tioned it in My Day. On Ianuary 16th, New York's PM carried a story of it. On Ianuary 18th the proceeds of a quiz program over WSPD were turned over by the sponsor to the expense fund of the B.O.N.D.s. The lanuary 17-22 issue of WORLD WEEK, a student news magazine .carried a one column story on the movement. ln its February 15th issue, PIC magazine carried a three page story with pictures. The movement now seems fairly launched. It is hoped that it may gather momentum until its effect on inflation can be felt. 62 Siqn 'B.QN.D WUI. GRGAMZB T0 CGBAT RISING WLATIBN DME sau,-u'gi.I'Nn.a,. To my mx, md N ,. N M..IQ..Q LLM mu Q-idmnd kr NIV F912 in u,4,.., A in 4-rmxw Nw. J .mm-m 'muy MW .1 nw umm. ww cmmq my X un mm.: Tu- mm. mm 4 nm -ww mmm. N if w M., Ano re u , mn -mm 'my cm, Nwwnm mv If-Q nh mm M ,A mms mmbxy Qmfm .W umm m- ww. -vs nm M, ,.,....4 ,.n,.w ..,A ,.. LOCAL NEWS PAGE ,def .U -, ,w,,,.,, ,,. V-ff: an w ma- - K Jess Buying in War Urged Upon Students H in I X an ins H rr.,1m.a.', nf mm nun sl-s....1x n., s,.f....a 0 ,KN ,Q Story uf H. 13. N. IIA lisjulm l'rm:r,xm .mfiKfJ'f4'lT'IT'M1A ,'Qi T- l if '- ,infix f B.0.l.D. Movement Gsows As dults Adopt Plan Q Tmmy lounnn! Puiicfxn Fun M f, . M ...- ,U :umm llllalionlighl fx ,fm .4 ,MW .31 , uv- . ,A -H - f..-: ' - ,.,, 3 4,, H,-uf V w -v 5 . ifix.-f 14 mmf, 1 Q in vw Q -'WX 'W -v ww w ofvvfwr , 5' ff ff y- X' Y 'A ' H ,,..,,t', 1. 31 .,., W.. 4- H 1+ -W N - no Ummm m .mem 'R' 'X f' ' V' k X M' ,M ..... ,.. W. Emi , Q., ,v , 1 1 . nf ,ff 1 .wh 4, wh W .W ,, ,. X1 W V j Y' ' Q 1 M..- ., -. , .M ...M .1 ,-,W me umm- ..-,mm f, f 5-5 1,2 U' j' ' ' ' .. ,... .f...,. W- X mx. ,.L, mf. H A Y ,, lx ,....-,,.,,.m.,,.M,..,u.11.m.. - , M- .K 1 , , , -x y H HH ' mm fm W,,x,...,.n, W. , , ,.., . ., L , - , V ' Q 0 N D Gains -WM. mm ay- M-,1.,.,, ' L, , ,. I 3 Q' fy . . . . M H H mu , , E , V A . X., . ,,, ,Q , , '- 4 .0 sl-may ' - 'Mi ' U h 4, ,f ww ,: wg W-R., 1 ahona ye 'x ' 'X 1 5,2 2.'LLT'.il5QIl.,.?,.?..'1.1..,Z 52 ? f 7, ,1 ' yy - + 'ff 'V ff UM .X , ...Mb-W...d Wfrv Lf iz -' -QM ,f 'G-4. xv W-'W A. , . N H ww- mi Q- . H --4,3 X , 'wwe-:ff-V , '-U M ' ' U c.w.,w.,.W 1,t,,,,,,, L. ,. , ,.,,, ,,,,.,,.M M v... ...., .W . ,XJ . ,i K H ,V i , -, V V H , x,. Wd. W ., W 1 L-1 ,W E A, ,, A M , V . M. ,.,1,.,,fw,L, ww, M- ,Q Y x 5 ' X , '-W' T' U 0 U i -V ,:XK,..:k,,,.L..... 1. Mg- ...3 if--Ehrxgg, . ,. .,,. ,. ,. W V N WA , ,. Us A su- M. -W ,.w,..mW ,, ..,., ,A f--qqimx QI ', Euggijgggi,f fTif i?'2.'ff.i ' W fmqm . yy' V 1,1 W Jam: x 7 -N, i in - ,m..w,,ffm -:gm 1 .3 1.1 W, umm. . . -:., , ,f .H W- , , Wa, A wwf. .M W. N. , X , .W-..v.,.,.l. ,,,, ,M ,. .,, Q 2 , - -1 --, Xnmmm.-ma ,mf if 1-an of an 11 in du ... vw. u....,., -1 ,. .. A gm rf' 1 n.1..,.,..-r,1.f.m.. , , U .,, X V, .M ww .. 1 , 4 . I -wr 3 n, K..-.....h.. .rm N.. 1'-JT U' 'ITM a v H- ,,., . Ht- A M, . . , , ,. M , ,' 1 . 4,0 A M 1 W W,- , , I f' ,, hz. f Q - ,.., K, , Nxfi: Q Hgfmv., L,,,,,,, 1 v 4 5 Alxrrrl .ww wv, ' , if Y Nl. ,,L...,1.,,L,, , M .- G. 5- ., ,, ,1,,.,,, , N 1 ,,., .k.. ,. i , mf X.,-M W. ...-. 1 A ' gg , B 1 . A W. HXZKXK U: Ji' .ff .kv Y. , .1 -:Q ,.,,,, Q mm I - , 31, ,ir .11 , ,, .M . L, . . .rv . 4 Ky A :mer mum W -,,.,,, , A ,,,,, ,. ,U , V -, ,- ..- , COMBAT NFLA'r1o . Ohio. whuol Lid! willuml prompting slart at firslwlasn unli- ' s ., ,, drive of llwir own. make :ulnhs sign ple-dgr carrls lu lmy War Bonds INFLATION I5 .... .. A msn: M wma ' 'Vw . fi' f XV, . OUR Domus -1. OUR DOLL: IE A l.0.NvU.'-BUY ON Ounsuvis huns, Smls kv the Dunencu BUY A BOND - - Bull Un Attuh' SWK A BOND - -Thu Prana! With n Falun! STOP INFLATION NOW' SIGN YN! PLEDGI! Ivan! ie be n B.O.N.D,! num. l W. N sm, sqm ,.,n.W., 1 ,..,...,,. lp an my nm nf- Buy 0.-ly Num.fz,, lm sh. Ummm., we bw af Se. .. ,,...am. at mn. .na m.,,....1 was, .Na QU ms. .M c rn... lm .. nm .. wmv. r..nn..mf. x Mn ,M Qu. f-.my Q W. .. an.. -ny im. lm..-C. sv B..-dm an Win, M4 am. u W. .M ,.4.4,. mn, no mm.: f...m-.om s.,...1..,. NE Join Thr Bemdn rx, ,- ,- ,-W4 .U fgmxnx 1 n ... . Q. H-4m,.,4 ew . V -W ,IWW .M ey, W ,,..4w,-W .U wc,,-.WW ' ww A 'I-U Mn--fo 1 xi., ,vm -uw .MW fa..fm,.U-1, Q, --asm um MW, s.,zv.1..:.,.,w ' vm M .U Mm4,-f.+wff,,,.M Mu. ,,X...v.W xwmm. mm M H :W hw .mm L, .WL 1 .,,. W nm mn wk f-- mi fu 1. fy W ,U .M EW 5. U.. mc.M,1W1smw, .mf mmfw s 'MM ww H mm ,X ,WMS 1'.m,,-...L me ,... L. ww- 4 4 .1 M 1, M, ml Wm., ,- ww- M -V. ,Www mf .N W w .1 mX1,.,.nw X-M. W . K. ms .www M ,,, M AWS -,...X. .,,,,-....,.,. x Sunbag 'mes 0 2 63 Charles S. Ashley, PFC. United States Marine Corps Richard Moria, PFC. 148th Infantry, United States Army Lester G. Purcell, Cpl. United States Army Air Corps Iames Secor, P. O.f3C United States Navy Willis Stork, Lt. lj.q.l United States Naval Reserve Harry Wieting, SXZC United States Navy Bryant Wood, SXZC United States Navy 64 ,s A-Q ,ww IK I wwf Af 'v .-fat Nw !.4 65 I 1 1 AS WE ADVERTISE Modern Mohawks on the War Path They Satisfy .................... . Good to the Last Drop ........ . Well, I swan. How about you? . . That school girl complexion . . . Twice the work in half the time . . . . n 'Please limit your call to 5 minutes . . . They are smooth and mild ..... Less noise-more profit ......... You look your best in a polo coat . . Only the world's finest culture pearls Satisfaction Guaranteed Always . . A smiling Service to Your Home . . . Like a Bat Out of Hell! ........ . For that well groomed 1ook ...... . So round, so firm, so fully packed . . Avoid 5 o'clock shadow ...... . . The Strength of Gibralter .. Right Combination . . . . Time to Be-tire ....... . Eventually, why not now . . 66 . . . Freshmen 5A's . . . . Marian W's stitches . . . . . Martha's diving . . . . Albert Patterson . . . . . . . . . . Iunior English . .... Madame G's study hall ...........Facultyt?l Smead Room Nancy W. and Marilyn B. W. Vane Lit. . . . Co-op scores Buses 4o'clock . . Play jacks on the floor Lunch tables . . . Senior play rehearsal .. Our objections to tests Seniors Weather Vane Board ...........TheEnd ACTIVITIES 3:22:61 Standing, left to right: Pat Stranahan, Boots Johnston, Bill Clark Nancy Wall, Tom Boeschenstein. Seated, left to right: Teta Christy, Sally lay, Margot Bennett Margery Parkes, MEMBERS Mary Hunter Iohnston ..... . ....... President Nancy Wall .......... Senior Representative Margery Parkes ...... Iunior Representative Patricia Christy . . Sophomore Representative Sally lay .......... Freshman Representative Pat Stranahan. . .Eighth Grade Representative Tom Boeschenstein .......... Seventh Grade Representative William Clark ................. Representative at Large for High School Margot Bennett ................ Representative at Large for Middle School 68 CHRISTMAS PHIJEHAM Scripture Reading ................ Mr. Ward O, Come All Ye Faithful .............. Group Up on the Housetop .............. lst Grade So Did l-Gibb ......... 2nd and 3rd Grades Soloists-Sally Tasker, Barbara Iones Three Kings-French Carol ...... 6th Grade The Sleigh-Kountzvlteiqqer.High School Girls Shepherds' Christmas Carol. .Reirnan-Dickinson Soloist-Ruth Wietinq Tableau-Manger Scene . .Sophomore Class O Little Town of Bethlehem .High School Girls Standing, left to right: Boots lchnston, Martha Wolfe Luelte Goodbody, Patty Sawhill, Nancy Wall, Margaret Rose Patter son, Marion Wieting, Teta Christy, Miss Davis. Seated Margery Parkes Standing, left to right: Barbara Lennihan, Bobinette Kressmann, Io Ann Iohnson, Peqqy Fraser Gloria Pruclclen, Margot Bennett, Margaret Rose Patierson, Lury Baker, Pat Lathrop, Teta Qhristy Eleanor Hollister, Mary Ann Merrill, Carol Adams, Buth Wietinq. Seated, left to riqht: Marilyn Beidler, Boots lonnston, Luette Goodbcdy Ccaptainl, Nancy Wall. UHANEE ANU BHUWN CUMPETITIUN 1943-44 HOCKEY October 28, 1943 .... November 3, 1943 November 11, 1943 .... BASKETBALL February 24, 1944 March 9, 1944 'March 23, 1944 Nancy Wall 70 Played for participation points. Orange-4 Brown- 1 .Orange--O Brown-- U .Orange-U Brown- O Orange-10 Brown- 9 Orange-12 Brown- 10 Oranqe-14 Brown- 4 High scoring forward in basketball, VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM FORWARDS Luette Goodbody Betty Dee Morris Nancy Wall SUBSTITUTES Marilyn Beidler Betty lay GUARDS Sue Stone Boots lohnston Martha Wolfe SUBSTITUTES Lucy Baker Ginny Eqqer Standing, left to right: Sally lay, Betty Bentley, Carol Hampe Patty Sawliill, Harriet Levis, Nancy Boeschenstein, loyce Mitchell, Marian Wieinq, Margery Parkes, Carol MacNichol, lulia Crandall, Sally Watson, Sally Krapp, Barbara Harrington, Nancy Corbett. Seated: Mary Blair Buqqie, Betty lay, Betty D. Morris tcaptainl, Martha Wolfe, Paula Secor. Not in picture: Ginny Eqqer, Harriet Hollister. 71 AWARDS Iune 1943 Silver M. V. Second or More Award Luette Goodbody Betty D. Morris Marilyn Beidler Nancy Wall Martha Wolfe First Year Award Sue Stone Virginia Eqqer Betty Icy Boots Iohnston Nancy Wall Margaret Rose Patterson Marian Wietinq 72 VARSITY HUIIKEY TEAM FORWARDS Martha Wolfe CR. WJ Sue Stone CR. 1.7 Betty Tay CCJ Marilyn Beidler fl... LJ Marion Wietinq CL. WJ HALFBACKS Nancy Wall CRA Luette Goodbody CCJ Nancy Boeschenstein KLA FULLBACKS Ginny Eager CFU Boots Iohnston KLJ GOALIE Betty Dee Morris SUBSTITUTES Margaret Rose Patterson Lucy Baker Teta Christy Margery Parkes 1 t HUCKEY SCHEDULE October 21, l943 MV Opp. Maumee ...... .... 4 O October 27, 1943 Ottawa Hills Senior Hiqh .... .... Iunior High ..... .... November 4, 1943 Maumee ....... .... November 10, 1943 Ottawa Hills Senior High . . . . . . Iunior High ............. PLAY IIAY RESULTS CHome GamesJ March 3, 1944 Maumee 1-liqh School Maumee Valley ....... February 2, 1944 Maumee Valley . . . Ottawa Hills .... 1 0 3 O O Score 6 ...22 ...ll ...IO VARSITY BASKETBALL Date Nov. 30, 1943 Tontoqany . ' ........ Dec. 8, Maumee Reserves . . . . Dec. 16, Maumee Reserves . . . . Ian. 7, 1944 Tontoqany ........... lan. 18, Ottawa Hills Reserves. . . ICLTI. 25, Holland ............ . lan. 28, Waterville .............. . Ian. 31, Bowling Green Reserves. . . . Mar. 6, Maumee Reserves ..... . VAHSITY Iohnson--Forward Clark--Forward Ayers-Center Mauk-Guard Adkins--Guard Carr--Reserve 74 MV Opp., 18 39 25 15 19 17 25 7 19 28 24 54 4 58 13 16 18 45 Standing, left to right: Chuck Iohnso Albert Patterson, Ion Ayers, Bill Ca Tom Adkins, Bob Mauk, Bill Clark. JUNIUH HIGH BASKETBALL Date Opp Ian. 7, 1944 Tontoganylunior High .... 9 Ian. 13, Glenwood ............. 21 Ian. 18, Ottawa Hills Reserves .... 13 Ian. 25 Holland ............... 24 Ian. 28, Waterville Iunior High .... 33 Ian. 31, Bowling Green lunior High 18 Feb. 3, Glenwood .............. 24 Feb. 8, Tontogany Iunior High .... 26 Feb. ll, Bowling Green Iunior High .... . 13 Feb. 24, Ottawa Hills Iunior High. . 28 Mar. 6, Maumee Iunior High ..... 15 F JUNIUH HIGH VHHSITY Stranahan- -Guard Nordhoff--Guard Patterson-Center Buggiee-Center Betz-Forward Morris--Forward Kneeling, left to right: Albert Frost, Tom Boesch- enstein, Peter Hoffman, Iim Nordhoff, Fred Bug qie, Pat Stranahan, Iim Morris, Sonny Betz, George Stranahan. 7,5 INDIVIDUAL PDINTS LETTERS 2-inch . . ........... . . . 4-inch . . . . . 6-inch . . . . . . . 8-inch ......................... IEnd of Basketball Season? Bill Clark ...................... Chuck Iohnson . . . . . . . Tom Adkins Ion Ayers ...... ..... Bob Mauk ..... ..... lim Nordhoff . . . . . . . . Iirn Morris .... ..... Sonny Beiz .... . . . Pat Stranahan . . . . . . Fred Buqqie ..... . . . Peter Hoffman ...... . . . George Stranahan .... . . . A1 Frost ............ . Bill Carr ........ . . . Frank Baisch ...... . . . Torn Boeschenstein . . . . Al Patterson ..... . . .300 .700 1200 1800 1640 1605 1505 1475 1455 1055 1055 965 965 805 395 520 220 200 140 340 530 INDIVIDUAL VARSITY SCDDES SENIOR HIGH Bill Clark ................. .... 4 5 Chuck Iohnson .... .... 4 0 Tom Adkins ..... .... 2 9 Bob Mauk . . .... 28 IonAyers.., ..... . ...... ....l0 Iim Nordhoff ............... .... 4 IUNIOR HIGH Sonny Betz ................ .... 3 9 Iirn Morris ...... .... 2 9 Albert Patterson . . . . . . . 4 Iirn Nordhoff .... .... 2 1 Pat Stranahan .... .... 2 5 Fred Buqqie ..... .... I 4 XIJE ARE. -I-Lil FRSTIBUS! SPORTS 'ONE HALF Swoaous ? SHE THOUGHT ITWAS HAM -Sporevs -OTHER HALF Hsu 'Bam A BouT THIS S 3 in 'Nl' wifi WEATHER VANE STAFF William Clark ...... . ............... Editor-in-chief Virginia Egger ..... . ............. Business Manager Margery Parkes. . . .... .Assistant Business Manager Lucy Baker ..... . ........., Photography Editor William Carr ...... .............. F eature Editor 78 The editors wish to thank the adver- tisers for their generosity in making possible the publication of THE WEATHER VANE and ask you to patronize them. 79 Our Appreciation is Extended to RAY BOSSERT STUDIOS for Photographs THE GRAY PRINTING COMPANY FOSTORIA, O1-no for Printing Premier Poultry Farm Equipment THE NATIUNAL IDEAL CU. WARNER ELECTRIC BROODERS PREMIER PRE-FABRICATED FARM BUILDINGS A. Sr P. Tea Company The Christy Company Fremont, Uhio SERVICE HARDWARE 6 REPAIR CO. Perrysburg, Ohio Phone Perrysburg 4-4152 United Music Store R E C O R D S H O P Swing or Classic It lt's a Record, We Have I tl! Victor-Columbia Bluebird--Okeh-Decca Open a Charge Account 422 St. Clair Street Open Evenings May we take this opportunity to thank the students of Maumee Valley for their patronage? WILLIAMS GRILL 335 St. Clair St. GOOD LUCK Compliments of SCHREIER GREENHOUSE E. River Road Wa. 1941 Perrysbura, Ohio HAPPY LANDINGS Compliments of DAVIDSON BROS. MEATS Maumee, Ohio COLONY MARKET 2130 W. Central Ave. FINER FOODS Open Nights Until 9 P.M. Compliments of CONLON BUS CO. W. I. VEITCH Dry Goods and Notions lO4 Louisiana Ave. Perrysburg, Ohio Phone Perrysburg '4-4271 l Hope You Go Over The Top A xgrierw! Eeralda Phealt, Inc. 711 Madison Avenue Compliments ot CI Friend DEMPSEY OPTICAL DISPENSERS Dispensing Opticions since l9l2 in Toledo, Ohio Compliments of A FRIEND MRS. PIATT'S BAKERY ll9 Louisictno Ave. Perryslourq, Ohio Phone Perryslourq '4-4 l6l Glf1fLlO3lflfLQlfLff5 of BAKER RRUTHERS Inc. CLARE I. HOFFMAN, INC. INTERIORS A FRIEND Compliments of HOLEFKA GROCERY 616 Dixie Highway LEO S. HILLEBRAN D INSURANCE lj! 5Wff5zA0f,f me CAM, Of 1944 zmumhe31s9a X STQCK. 1 sz E ::':?225: 11E 0 0 EEE5EE:EE5?E.f 1 ' E 1' 6 E fi 5 : Haan ca BELL G' BECKNVITH 5l9'52l MadfsanAve.,roledo oh.o PhoncMaIn320! l . X ,f Compliments of THE BBOER FREEMAN CO. Skilled Libbey craftsmen are now making glass products vitally needed Rn mmm. Hands dun yemenday cmxned an exqumne Libbey vase or stemware piece today mold many electronic bulbs ot various shapes and sizes. For these essential glass articles can only be blown and finished by masters ot the glassmalcefs an. ThatiswNhy youinay haveto pompone-KH a'whHe-a complete collection ot Libbey crystal. LIBBGY IDODGRD QMGRICQD GLHSSIUHRG BHUEH-FREEMAN Compliments of MAUMEE LUMBER AND SUPPLY THE MCMANUS-TROUP CO. Complete Office Outfitters COMPANY Stationers, Blank Book Conant at Clinton St. Manufacturers, Printers Phone 3-3111 Maumee, Ohio 713-715 leffefeee Avenue Compliments Compliments of of ROSSFORD SAVINGS BANK RHEINF RANK HOSPITAL Compliments Compliments of of SOUTH SIDE LUMBER 6. SUPPLY COIVIPANY ROGER BROTHERS 1307 Prouty Ave. Fine Groceries and Meats Ad. 7168 A FRIEND Compliments of A FRIEND ,. 3 .X '- ' P Lt we P , y X E R 301466 MAe5!Ling . Since the first maiden peered curiously at her reflection in a still pool, a smart girl has learned to rely on what her mirror shows her other folks will see. Obviously, her mirror provides her last look before their first admiring glance. Since a mirror is so critical, it's essential that it be made of Polished Plate Glass . . . because only mirrors made of Polished Plate Glass qive true and undistorted reflections. Libbey-Owens-Ford for years has made this kind of glass . . . qlass that is fully ground and polished on both sides . . . and many of America's finest mirrors are made ot it. When you buy a mirror, be sure that it bears the familiar red, white and blue L-O-F mirror label - your assurance of fine quality. C Logo - Great Name in Glassul D. D. GROSS PACKARD MOTOR CARS Moline, Ohio Compliments of GALLAGHER-IOHNSON CORP. ODORLESS CLEANERS Phone Lawndale 1146 4023-25 Monroe Street Compliments of Two Friends Compliments of KEWPEE HOTELS CMity nice hamlourqsl Monroe G 23rd Sts. 314 No. Erie St FRAUTSCHI BROS. HARDWARE Paints, Stoves, Sporting Goods, Radios, Electrical Appliances Phone Walbridqe 0615 Rossiord, Ohio HOFFMANN'S Grocery and Meat Market A FRIEND Perrysburq, Ohio 30102 301905 . . . MWWAR Bows AND STAMPS f XQlfLl!05If . . . 30? !MClf0lf'y xQWfL0lf'lf'0lfU -Af-kt Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp Compliments of The Reuben Realty Co. Reuben Building 618-20 Madison Ave. T O L E D O , O H I O Compliments c. L. HASKIN co. of GEO. W. LATHRQP SQNS, INC, 2139 Madison Avenue Adams 1248 CONTRACTORS For Low-Cost Transportation White Trucks, Buses, and Horse Cars CENTER OF TOLEDO'S SOCIAL ACTIVITIES . Jim Gmmo are QW? HOME OF TI-IE BEAUTIFUL 57 JOIWJJO M0141 KNOWN FROM COAST TO COAST FOR ITS SMART DECOR, SUPERB FOOD AND SERVICE, PLUS DANCE MUSIC BY TI-IE NATION'S OUTSTANDING BANDS ak 'k ir C7418 WZJPJ. . . AND ITS ULTRA-ATTRACTIVE RAINBOW ROOM FEATURING GLASS DECOR FROM TOLEDO'S OWN GREAT GLASS PRODUCING PLANTS ak 'A' 'lr DANIEL I. O'BRIEN, President and Managing Director Phone F. G. LEYDORF CO. KALINOWSKYS MARKET Quality Foods-Reasonably Priced For Good Food 1949 Broadway Toledo, Ohio Garfield 8696 phone Adams 8234 PALMAN'S I UNIOR SHOP 18 Spitzer Arcade Where Young Toledo Meets PAUL LOESSER PHARMACY Gm-Held zsox Cor. Monroe and Lawrence Avenue Ferdinand Roth FINE FURS 232 N. Erie St. Main 9717 Toledo, Ohio Compliments of the A. F. Schwalbe UNIVERSITY DRUG STORE FURS 3047 W. Bancroft Street GRRMM TRUCK ard TRAILER CURP. MANUFACTURERS OF VANS Open . . Semi-Closed . . Closed . . Refrigerator . . Warehousemen's STAKE BODIES FLAT BED GRAIN HAULERS STOCK HAULERS 4 WHEEL TRAILERS POLE TRAILERS UTILITY TRAILERS DOLLIES HEAVY DUTY DUMP CHASSIS TRUCK BODIES Compliments WILLIS DAY STORAGE EU. Ad. 7144 Compliments of Compliments of BROOKS' REXALL DRUG STORE C A N T E E N Superior Street Rosstord, Ohio 969 Dixie Hiqhway Rossford, Ohio DIETHELM BROS.. INC. Prescription Druqqists Madison Av. Cor. Erie DAVIS BUSINESS COLLEGE Summer term openings Iune 5 and 19 Fall term opening Sept. 5 Cor. Huron and Adams Toledo, Ohio FELKER for Fine Foods 2107-2109 Ashland Ave. Toledo's Fernde1l Store Telephone Main 3191-ADams 4510 Compliments of HOLST CLEANERS Rossford, Ohio Wa 5307 HAUCK'S IUVENILE BOOTERY Quality Footwear Smart New Fall Patterns For Street or Dress Wear Phone GArtie1d 9771 1844 West Bancroft at Upton Ave. HOUCK'S REXALL DRUG STORE Cor. Louisiana and Front Perrysburq, Ohio. gmail , . UML En THE BURDE MARKET Fancy Groceries and Meats'-We Deliver 3049 West Bancroft Street, Old Orchard Compliments of THE KOCH LUMBER CO. Maumee Perrysburq Waterville We treat you I the year . A FRIEND Compliments of an Uncle Ga. 4621 THE FULTON MARKET Rogers Brothers Meats-Groceries-Fruits 2495 Collinqwood Ave. Toledo, Ohio lust For Bobs FURS BY GENFAN 224 Erie Street In Toledo since 1908 Compliments of Compliments THE C. A. MAUK LUMBER CO. of o Toledo, Ohio Seottle, Washington Sophomore Augusto, Georqio Mother X-RAY SERVICE DR. c. w. SASS' Compliments Veterinarian l525 Broodwdy, dt South Street of U Telephone ADoms 2610 Grgmdfgther Residence ond Oiiice 827-829 Colburn St. TOLEDO, OHIO Compliments of the Compliments ENGEL DRY CLEANING co. of Bcddgddy Compliments of or Friend Compliments of A FRIEND Compliments of IUST RIGHT CLEANERS Mr. and Mrs. L. L. McGrady Perrysburq Phone 4-4281 CLARK A. WEAVER Veterinarian Large and Small Animals Perrysburq, Ohio Day School For Young Women DICKINSON SECRETARIAL SCHOOL A select school with individual traininq Third Floore-Ohio Ruildina Adams 73l0 Katherine M. Webb, Director A FRIEND KAZMAIER MARKET Allen and Robert Kazmaier Finest ot Meats and Groceries Dial 4-4325 Perrysburq, Ohio RAY BOSSERT STUDIO Phone I.Awndale 2000 A FRIEND COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND Individual Service I-Iair - - - Skin - - - I-lands BLANCHE BEAULEY Licensed Burnham Shop Main 0040 2214 Madison Ave. C 1 f Toledo Stamping 81 Maoulaoturing Company 90 F B ld TOLEDO OHIO THE WESTWUUD THEATHE Sylvania at Iackman Road A1 h Finest in Motion Pic FREE PARKING LOT PARK LANE HOTEL The Best Home Address in Toledo On Collingwood Park Iefferson Ave. at 23rd St. MA. 2151 Toledo, Ohio RICHARDSON GARAGE 410-412 Iefierson Ave. and Richardson Parking Lots 220 N. St. Clair St. 227 N. St. Clair St. THE RUPP 6. BOWMAN CO. 315-319 Superior Street SCIENTIFIC DEPARTMENT Compliments Chemicals and Apparatus of Instruments of Precision Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wade Microscopes and Balances Supplies for School and Industrial Laboratories jfaia ,Space HULDS BEST WI F ll H .fd jrienj - 31 e F1 Ls.: ef ? 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