McKeesport High School - Yough A Mon Yearbook (Mckeesport, PA)

 - Class of 1927

Page 1 of 207

 

McKeesport High School - Yough A Mon Yearbook (Mckeesport, PA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 207 of the 1927 volume:

Las UAEYOUGHAMQN 1027 X Cbpy glut 3 1987 D FAY SHAW NJAMESFUUDN A Yfmugh 4 Mon ' K f a I YI sm-ron-nv-cr-ner ' Busmsss MANAGER ff' I i! 1 , 1 'fir' A s x f X Z-, R?QQ??E4g 'Fxbliske Cl me Qefqgor dia - 7VX9 'Keesporb T Hgh Qc?-moo 'M9KeespOrt.,P S7 l ''llllllllllllllIIIIHIIQIIHI X 4 1 1 Yough-a.-Mon a i 4 a L M ER! AT HAIL, ALMA M Z '-A 'vo 'N -1 3 Y 333 E41 f 1 iEJLo1'i37:f:j: IR if Q However clear and unfnrgetahle the impressions of class and campus activi- ties now may seem, they will all too soon grow dim and hlurrecl It is these memories and associations of happy school life that this volume aims to preserve far those later years, 'when memory becomes more and more a solace to the soul. git? 331 3-aqimlj-E433-heir E51 Oilceuuoird 5 N i .55-:ini 1 T L- if T :1: fa: 'M a d l l if d .. i .J ' ' I e CLC ag 011 - V n r ' S an expreuion of our keen fatiffae- tion of the splendid Jyftern of .rchooly estahlifhed hy our ahle and far-seeing Juper- intendent of Jchoolf, during his quarter of a century of .fplendid feroice, and in testimony of , the confidence felt throughout the vig' in his ad- fniniftratioe poioerf, and of the high regard he , if held as an educator in our Coninionioealth, we, the clan' of 1927, dedicate thif annioerfargf - oolunie of the YOUGH-A-MON to ' DR. JOSEPH B. RICHEY f - 1 , P N - :E 1 W' ji-gIj11lIlg'AY 1 fic, V61 JOSEPH B. RICHEY, LL. D. City Superintendent of Schools U1 Z 333 -H A Nu ER 0F GRADUATE5 vAx.uATu0N 0F so-1001. PR0pERTY' ' -H l9z6 314 O - jj gi gg I if qsaasse .. .. 25 229 VH xs-126 ' ZZ 206 is - ' an ago In 2,729,250 H zo 1970 neaa - I8 l46 5 , Q ,, I, 156 BB 1314500 4 16 - A09 2, - -- ns noe Q Ei so 5 922,50 , H as nos I-914 pa N -' nz 'ro S io .- 2 4 -. zz, 19 646,00 s ' oe S . 07 No 0F ouATt-15 seas-514 603,41 5 ' - 06 7 l9O -' 33 IBO6 - Q Tgi 2 aNc.REAsE iN as YR. OI zen 5 U05 4 ora 651 Q 561,355 k - 4 H Q3 33 i902 CHART SH ING NO. OF GRADUATES CHART SHOWING VALUATIONS OF P ' NICKEESPORT HIGH SCHOOL VICKEESPORT PUBLIC SCHOOL PERTY , N D902 B26 AT INTERVALS l902 l926 ED l8l O 9 T 333 - TOTAL ENROLLIVIENTS - YEAR! HIGH 'SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL AND GRADE SCHOOLS I - 1926 ao7a uooaa I - as 1999 I04 0 I - 24 1940 10074 I - as n7:s0 960: -' aa 1696 96:6 XI - an 1767 9766 , 20 1277 870 VI - '9 'Ill 22331 IS I ' N - I7 926 I 6666 II 5 8 S 3 3' 3 -4 I6 1206 I 6227 N 'I' T 8 9 3 S- 'W as I06I 6066 I I ,fig T F9 A 'lg-.I I4 696 76667 33+ 333' lm 7.1- Q Q2 IQ, QE 9 Q 5 0 Q' Ia 726 7644 .1 Z M J ,,, 5 IZ- 1, In 679 7722 5' ' 0 5' N Q no S67 7766 I5 2 6 5 7 Z - ' O3 597 7 54 U Ig ' 06 570 7675 .I J - - 07 490 7664 2 , Q 4 3 06 :sea 7660 5 EH '5 In - - os 574 -:aaa I In 5,5 I' Cf. 04 665 6656 I 1: 5 5 - - 06 2.70 6674 I 22 2 g 02. a00 5942 I ' V - CHART SHOWING GROWTH IN HIGH SCHOOL AND TOTAL ENROLLIVIENT5 VICKEESPORT PUBLIC SCHOOLS ' ' I902-' I926 U33 z I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I I Yough-a.-Mon q BOARD OF SCHOOL DIRECTORS A. C. KREIS W. T. NORTON Vice Prexidmt ,5'm-gpmgf WILL PPAFF President H. S. ARTHUR R. M. BALDRIDGE M I I I I I .II 5, I2 I 7 I I I ' ' IIS I I M UOI III-I I I I 'I I I I I I LI Yough-a,-Mon . .. BOARD OF SCHOOL DIRECTORS J. F, CALHOUN D. EVANS - T. D. McKEE MRS. ELIZABETH NEWLIN A. T. ZELLER I 'I 9 2 7 g , M I I I I I ' I I I ' I' I I I I I I M U11 21 McKEESPORT'S FIRST SCHOOL HOUSE Erccted in 1832 A I I I I I I 1 I I I I K 1 I , I Q, Yougp-a.-Mon ACKNOWLEDGMENT EFORE you lies the open book, the tenth volume of the Yough- A-Mon. In it the staff has aimed to portray the activities of the high school during the past year. Two outstanding features mark its inception, namely, the anniversary note, indicating the completion of twenty-five years of splendid service on the part of our superintendent, Dr. Richey, and the motif of the book, the sym- bol of our great commonwealth, the keystone. On each page this symbol has been carried out insome way so as to link up the great- ness of our state with the fine progress-and reputation of our school. The staff is happy to inscribe this volume to Dr. Richey because of his loyalty to the school, his unselfish service to make it a real asset to the community, and his far-sighted vision to secure for it a state-wide reputation. Truly, his record may read in deeds, not words. Before we bid farewell to old Tech High and its happy environs we wish to express our appreciation of the assistance given us by those behind the scenes. Without the hearty cooperation of the school authorities, the faculty, and the student body this volume could not, in any measure of success, portray the progress and spirit of our school. To Mr. Berkema, our faculty advisor, we bestow unstinted praise and gratitude, for his tireless and unselfish efforts have aided the staff greatly that this year book may be a successful volume. His wise counsel and ready help have at all times guided the staff in their endeavors. We also extend sincere thanks to Mr. Bower for his timely suggestions and to all others who have in any way given of their time and talent to this volume. If we have succeeded in recounting the year's history, it has been due entirely to this hearty cooperation. THE STAFF 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I 1 L I Y I I M l13l THE ANNUAL STAFF a H M L S 5 C z 5 3 Z. F5 5' N ZM as r-ll-4 DM UH!! E. Eg 45' -JS Em AEE I ill mm. AM E55 D Siu if W: Mm go 'w Bm Zu z iz: Mm ,fm EJ Me: Sz 54 LI-IS Shi. AN ., .'-gg 'Jo O LD PK! U 'C M LD si Q P4 L, E TE Top Raw: MARIE MARKSTEINER, ELIZABETH LYNCH, ELIZABETH HOFFMAN, PAUL DAWKINS, VIOLA IVCIIEVICH, EMMA Fnrrz, GERTRUDF. ELLIOTT. 511 ll ,Yffijw ' L d - - 'I ' Editor-in Chief ,,,,,, ,, ,,,...,,,,....,.. FAY SHAW V Axfociate Edirar' .,,,A,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,..,, , .KATHRYN W1ssER ' Il Bznineu Mdlldgfl' ,,,,,A,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,.... A... J A MES FULTON - Anoriate Bmiueu Malzugef' ..... . ..A,.., ,,.... H ELEN RADER - DEPARTMENTAL EDITORS ' ALUMNI - LAVINA LONG GRACE GOODE '- ART F- ARTHUR ZOLTEN CHARLES CUSICK - ATHLETICS 1 PAUL DAWKINS JAMES ANSELL M T JOKES ELIZABETH LYNCH ELIZABETH HOFFMAN J LITERARY HELEN R1cHEY ELMER KITE I, MUSIC -J GERTRUDE ELLIOTT MARIE MARKSTEINER TYPISTS ' EMMA FRITZ DOROTHY SURGEON 'T' V1oLA IVCHEVICH ' FACULTY ADVISOR I. BERKEMA 4 L.. JT X25 lil I bw' , llllw E1 AILUUJV E151 lj -1- 31lII'ILTi1:I I A1 rder 0501336153 S THE SCHOOL THE FACULTY THE CLASSES FEATURES ACTIVITIES I ATHLETICS HUMOR 2 1 fuwf gnylllgw l U61 . . . -L me fgcho ol l l I I l' ' 'l I JOHN F. BOWER, A.B., ALLEGHENY, A.M. COLUMBIA Principal of the High School U91 I I I I I I I I ' I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon, JAMES H. LAWSON, B.S., UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Assistant Principal of the High School 1 9 2 M I I I I I I I I I 7 I I I I I I M E201 Y YY,YY, Y, Wifi, ,,,4L ,,, MR. ALBERT MR. BARNES MR. BERKEMA MR. BLYTHE MR. BRADSHAW Miss BRAINERD Miss BRIGGS Miss BRUBAKER Miss BRUCE MR. BUCHANAN Miss BUHLEIER UU I Q I I I I I YoLghla'.hhonI NI I I L I 1 Q ? ' -1 1 L.. ... -I Q .. - Mxss Cnnznwoon Mn. CALHOUN Mx. CARLSON Mn. CONNER Miss COUFFER MR. CRALL MR. CROUSE ' MR. DUNDON Miss DUNLAP MR. DURNER MR. ERWIN -.- L 'I 4- 1 9 2 7 I . M I I I I I I .I I I I I I I I I M IDI J I Miss EVERETT MR. FALLQUIS1' MR. GARING MISS GILLESPIE Miss GILLMAN Miss GOLDSMITH Miss GOODMAN MR, GRIFFIN MR. HAMMITT MR. HEMANS Miss HENDERSON E231 Miss Hon' MR. HUGHEY MR. JOHNSON MR. Kama Mlss KIMMEL MR. KOONS I Miss LAMBERT Mxss Low MISS MAINSSONNAT Mlss MA'r'rsoN Mn. MCELROY E241 MR. MCFEATEKS MISS MCGREGQX MR. MELEY Mxss MILLER Mn. MITCHELL Miss A. NELSON Miss L. NELSON MR. OWENS MRS. PINE MR. PYLE Mxss Ross D51 MR. SCHAD MR. SCHELL Miss SCHWALL Miss STEIN MR. STONER MR. STRONG MR. TALLANT Miss TAYLOR MR. TENCH MR. TRAISTER Mzss TYSON l26l' MR. VINCENT MR. WEIGLE Miss XVELLER Mlss W1-111-12 MR. WIGHT MR. VVVILLAUER Miss Woons E271 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Yough-a-Mon THE TEACHING STAFF THE RGSTER I. BERKEMA, A. M ,......,., ,..... L. W. STRONG, A. B .........., .University of Illinois ,......,,,, University of Michigan ...,.,,,,,, RUTH E.. Low, A. B ,....,.,....,, .,..... N orthvvestern University .......... . C. LILLIAN NELSON, A. B ,,,.,... ....,,, A llegheny College ............... HELENE SCHWALL, A. B ,,,Y,,,, ...,... O hio University ................... LOUISE WHITE, A. M .,.,,,,,, C. M. HUGHEY, A. B ..,.,,,,, University of Pittsburgh .,..,... Ohio State University ......... AUGUST M. SCHAD, B. S ...,,,.. ,...... O hio University ........,....,. ANNA NELSON, A. B ,.,.,,.,.., ,,..... A llegheny College ..,,,...,.... CLARA WELLER, A. B .,...,.,,,,, ,....,. A llegheny College ............... HELEN COUFFER, B. S ,.,.....,.,,,....,.. .....,,..,, WILLARD G. CONNER, A. B Geneva College ...............,...., MARTHA MACGREGoR, A. B ..,,,,,. .,.,,...... M uskingurn College ...,.,.,, EDITH BRIGGS, A. B ............,..... .........., A llegheny College ........ MAUDE W. MILLER, A. B ,.....,. ....... W ilson College .......... SARA MAE EVERETT, B. S .......... ,.......... C arnegie Tech ,....... F. FRANK CRALL, A. B ........... ........... O berlin College .,........ .... SHELBY ERWIN, A. M ,....,... MARGARET DUNLAP .,..,,.,....,..., ........,., Indiana University ............ University of Pittsburgh ......... ........ University of Pittsburgh ...... . ..........Engli.rl7 ..........Engli.fl2 ..........Eng!i.rl1 ..........Engli.r1J ..........Eng!i.rb ..........Engli:lJ ..........Engli.rl: ..........Eng!iJb ..........Eng!iJlJ ..........EngliJh ..........Englirl: ..........Engli.rh ..........Eng!i1h ..........Eng!iJla ..........EngZiJla ..........Eng!iJb ,,,,,,,,,,............HiIf0Ifjl Hiftafji, Sr. Aritla. 0' Gram. JAMES L. MITCHELL, A. B ...,,... .......,,,. G eneva College ........,............ ..............................------ H i-ff0'17 ERIC GARING, A. B ................,,,. ........... T hiel College ........................ -.4-.,--- C iffif-F HAROLD TRAISTER, B. S .........,.... ........... U niversity of Pittsburgh ........ --.-------- H iffgf? DOROTHY E. BRAINERD, A. B .......,.. ........... M iddlebury College ............. ...................-..--.---- H UND' J. C. TALLANT, B. S ..................,..... ........... G rove City ,College ................... ........... C iffirf 42111 Efvwmif-f J. LEWIS HAMMITT, A. M ........ .....,..... W ashingron and Jefferson .......... .................---.....-.- C ivif-f MARLIN Ross, A. B ......,...,.,.... ........... W ilson College .................. ----------, H iff0U' LoRA B. PINE, A. B ..,............... ,.......... U niversity of Nebraska .......... ..............-.----- C iffiff RoscoE C. DUNDON, B. S .......... .....,,.... JOHN S. MCFEATERS, B. S ..,,.,........ ........., Allegheny College .... ............ .Carnegie Tech ................ EDNA L. TAYLOR, A. B .................... ........... W ellesley College .............. MARGARET M. GOODMAN, A. B ...... ........... University of Virginia...... ELEANOR H. GOLDSMITH, B. S ........ ....... B oston University ............ T. E. TENCH, B. S ............... JOHN M. BLYTHE, B. S ....... .Grove City College .......... ...........Carneg1e TeCh.................... E. J. OWENS, B. S ................... ........... C arnegie Tech ..................... J. FRANK BUCHANAN, B. S ........ ........... U niversity of Pittsburgh ....... VAN D. WIGHT, A. B ............ ........... S yracuse University ............. C. R. BARNES, B. S ............. ........... G rove City College ................... OBER D. CROUSE, B. S ....... University of Pittsburgh ........ .........Mutl1em4licJ ........,Mathtmntic: .. . . . . .. .Matbematicr .........Matl1emfzticr .........Mafbem4tic.r .........M:ztbematicJ' .........Matbem4ticJ' .. . .. . ...Mathtmaticr .........Matlacmnticr .........M4themalic: ..........Pb,yI'ic.r ........,.,,.............Pby.ric.r P. D. ALBERT, JR., B. S ........ ........... G ettysburg College .............. ......................... C lffmiifvf ALMER C. HEMANS, A. B .......... ........... U niversity of Pittsburgh ........ ......... C bwli-fffj' will -5'fiH2f0 JOHN F. WILLAUER, B. S .......... ........... U rsinus College ..................... ............................. B ivlagy J. STANLEY CALHOUN, B. S ....,..... ........... P enn State .................. ................. G wgmpby LAWRENCE GRIFFIN, C. E .....,.. ........... C orncll University ........ ......... G HUM! -ffifnrc HARRY L. CARLSON, A. B ........ ........... G ettysburg ................................. .......... G C0gf'4Ph,Jf M. B. BRADSHAW, B. S ......, F. W. VINCENT, B. S ......... Washington and Jefferson ........... Grove City College ........ . ........ .....,....Geagmpl1y ........ Science I 9 2 QM I I I I I I I I I7 I I I I I I M i281 I I I I I I I 1 I I I I 'YI L I gYough-a.-Mon THE ROSTER-Continued AI-BERT T- FALLQU1sr, B. S ..,.............,...,........... Ohio Northern University ....i,,........,......,..,......,,.., ,...V,i. G eagrapby MARGUERITE MAINSSONNAT, A. B., A. M ....,. Hamline University, University of Paris .,.............. .......... F rlrlrll HOWARD C. McELnoY, A. B ,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,w.,,,,,,,, ELLEN MATTSON, A. M ,,..-,,,,,--,, -----,,-- HEI-EN CALDERWOOD, A. B ........ .......,. G rove City College ,,..........,,,. ORA M. LAMBERT, A. B ,i,A,,,,,, ,vYY,..., S yfaeuse -,,,A------.YVA-A-,,-,,,A YYV. BLANCHE G. HOFF, A. B ......... ......... M arietta College ,,,,.,,...,,,.,. ROSMER L- BRUCE, A. B .......... ,.,...... G rinnell College ,,,,,,,,...,,,,....... BYRDE GILLMAN ,,,,,,,,7,,,,7,,,i, MAUD Woons ,,,,,,,,, , ,tiii,,,,,,,,, , LUCILLE BRUBAKER, A. B YYA,,,,, . Y,,-,, U HELEN GILLESPIE, B. S ,,,i.,.,, 4Y,M,,,,, C arnegie Tech ,,,,,,,,w,,,,,,,,.A,,,,,, MARY STEIN ....................... ,..i..... M cKeesport High School ,........ HELEN B- TYSON ................... ,...,.... M cKeesport High School .....i... ELFREEDA BUHLEIER ................. ......... M clieesport High School ...,..... L J .........McKeesport High School.,,.,..,. .........Penn. Normal School............. Ohio University ................. Wesleyan University, University of Besancon ................. ...Frfnrb West Virginia University ................ .......................... .... ...... F r e nvlf ,.......Latin ...........Latin ......,....,,...,,.La!in ....,,.....V......,....,,.B0okk:eping .......,.5'horthand and Typewriting .........5'b0rrhand and Typewriting .......,.Sborrlaand and Typewriring .,..,.....S'lJarzl1and and Typewriting laorzband and Typewriting ...,..,.,.S'bortloand and Typewriting EDWARD . STRIBRNY, A. B ,,,,,,,, ,AAA,,,,, C afgegie Tech V,A,,,,,,,,,,,Y,,,,Y,,,,,,,,,Y,A,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,r.,,,.....,....... M Iliff? KATHRYN M- CAREY, M. B .....,.. .,....... O berlin Conservatory of Music ........,. ......................... M wif ERNA MEINERT .............,.,..,,,,,,, r,,,,,,,, L a Crosse Normal School ,Y,r,,,,,,,,,, ,.,...,.,. P Lyrical Trdirliflg J. C. GRAMLEY ,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,, ,.,,,,wY, S P ringfield College ,,,,A,,,,,Y,,,,,, ,,,,,V,,, P layriral Training RALPH E. CHASE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,.,.-.--, U flivefgity of Pittsburgh ,wA,,,,A,, ,,,,,,,,,.,, A Ibfelif Cailtb MARGARET KIMMEL, B. S ,,,,,,,, 4,,,,,,,, C amegie Tech ,,A,,Y,,,,,,,,,,,,,V,, ,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,r.,. D a martin .Yiicncs SARA HENDERSON, B. S ,,,,,,,r, ,,,,,,,,. C amegie Tech ,,,,,,A,,,, r,,, r,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,, D a metric Srienre F. J. WEIGLE, B. S ..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, i,,,,,,,, C amegie Tech r,,,,,A,, ,,,,,,,, D iretrar of Vocational Ednration J. EDWARD JOHNSON ,,,,,rri,,,,,,,,, ACe,,,,,, C amegie Tech ,,.,,,,,,, ,,V,,i,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, U nir Trade Drafting HAROLD F. DURNER, B. S r,,,,,,r,, r,,,,,,,, P erm State ,,,,,,,,,,,r,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,. U nir Trade Pattern Drafting MARTIN R. Sci-IELL, B. S ,,,,.,,,, ,,,,,,,,, C arnegie Tech ,,,A,,,.,, ..,..,,.,......... U nit Trad: Elcrtririty ALFRED Kmart .,,,,.r,....,,,,r,,..Y.,,,,,i ,..,,,,,A C at-negie Tech ,,,,,,..,,.,,,v,.,,.,,,i.,..,,...,,,,r.. Unit Trade Pamrn Making CLARENCE E. S-roman, B. S ,...,,.. .,VV.,,A. G cttysburg College ,.........,,...,,,,,,..................,.. Merlaaniral Drawing F. PYLE, B. S ....,,...,...,,,,.,,,.... .,.,..... P erm State ......,,.... Unit Trade Eirrtricity and Indartrial Mathematic: MILARD C. KOONS .,......., .,,,i,... M eehanies Institute .......,.i,.,.,,,,....,....,,............. Unit Trad: Drafting E. R. MELBY .......Y....,. c....,Y.. S tout Institute .,.,,,V...,.c. ,....,,...,.,... M erbanical Drawing A Tribute To Duty The longer on this earth we live And weigh the various qualities of men, The more We feel the high, stern-featured beauty Of plain devotedness to duty. Steadfast and still, nor paid with mortal praise, But finding amplest recompense For life's ungarlanded expense In work done squarely and unwasted days. SELECTED . 1 9 2 7 M I I- I I I I I I I I I I I I I M l29l , , 4 W 1 N 1 3 U01 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I. I I jfough-a.-Mon Svvninm Clan Colon MAROON AND OLD GOLD Clmf Flower HADLEY TEA ROSE Clan' Motto NOT FINISHEDQ JUST BEGUNH 1. I 27 I I I K I Y I' xi , 5 J' I r W1 I I I I 'I E IQ' 'Vg I 7 I I I I I I E311 I I I I I I I 1 I o I I I I I , Yough-a.-Mon or CLASS GFFICERS AND COMMITTEES Prefiolent. ..7. ......... ,,,.,,,.,,,,,,,, H A ROLD SOLES Vice Prefitlent ,..,,,,,, ,,.,,,,, M ATILDA BALDRIDGE Secretezigf ,.., .,,,..,7 .,,,,,,.,, M A RY COLBERT Treeztiererm I ,.., .,,.,., 7.,,,,..,,,,..A,,, ,,,.,.AAA C H A RLES WEBER Clam Colon Committee I Elmer Kite, Steven Stokan, Kathryn Forsythe, Dorothy Surgeon, Francis Patterson Katherine Nelson, Jane Shaffer Clow Motto Committee Pauline Thornton, Ethel York, Paul Dawkins, Warren Murrie, Ivy Simpson, Helen Ramsey, Paul Haughey Cleef: Flower Committee Raymond Masters, Olive Gilchrist, Regena Gillman, Cyril Ehrhardt, John Hilty Edith Hoffman, Lavina Long Clezff Imitation Committee Blair Alverson, Gertrude Elliott, Edward Myers, Helen Ingram, Egbert Richards Emma Fritz, Arthur Zolten, Dorothy Porter Fall Dance Committee Fay Shaw, Foster Flegal, Dorothy Everett, Charlotte Biddlestone, Paul Norton ' Sylvan Berger, Helen Richey Holieltty Dimee Committee Frank Young, Warren Murrie, Frank Shaw, Robert Dunn, Elizabeth Hoffman Etta Blair, Mary Colbert 1 9 2 7 5 ? M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M I32l I I I I I I I I I I I I I . S Yopglqea.-Mon I CL ASS OFFICERS Vice Prcxident .Yerretarj MATILDA BALDRIDGE MARY COLBERT I Preparatory I Commercial Prcridmr Tremrzzrer HAROLD Souas CHARLES WEBER Preparatory Preparatory M I V1 9 2 7 I I Y I I 'I I 'I I I I I I I I I M E331 JOSEPH ABRAHAM Preparatory RUTH AMPER Literary Lois APPLF13 ATE Preparatory SENIOR ROLL JENNIE ADAIR ETHEL ADAMS BLAIR ALVERSON Commercial Preparatory Preparatory WALTER ANDERSON JAMES ANSELL Industrial Preparatory DOROTHY ATRON ' MARTIN BAKER JOSEPH BECHTOLD Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory B41 I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon FRANK BEQK MATTHEW BEDELL HARRY BEITZ SYLVAN BERGER Preparatory Industrial Preparatory Preparatory HELEN BERGsTRoM RICHARD BESWICK CHARLOTTE BIDDLEsToNE Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory VINCENT BIELSKI ISABELLE BISHOP THELMA BLACKBURN ETTA BLAIR Preparatory Preparatory Literary Preparatory I 9 2 7 M I I ' I I I I I I I I I I ' I I E351 I - I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Yough-a-Mon WILLIAM BLAZINA NELLIE BOOTMAN FRANCES BOSNAK EINAII BOWIN Preparatory Commercial Commercial Industrial LOUISE BOYLE EDNA BRANT CHARLES EREITINGER Commercial Literary Commercial Q EDWARD BRIDGES BEssIE BRITTON BERNICE BROOKS MAFCGAREI' BROWN Preparatory Commercial Preparatory Commercial 1 9 2 7 I M 1 I 1 5 5 I Q I 5 I I I I I I M l36l I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Monet I M 9 -- 'U .... ..- .- - GRACE BUERGIN EDWARD BUCKINGHAM BRIDGET BUNYAN MICHAEL BURGER ' Preparatory Preparatory Commercial Preparatory HAZELIBURKHRT JOHN Busan MARGARET BYERLY Preparatory Industrial Preparatory ARTHUR CAGEY JOHN A. CALHOUN JOHN C. CALHOUN THOMAS CARDWELL Preparatory Industrial Preparatory Industrial .. - 2 1 9 2 I 7 I A I I I ' I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M l37I .- .- g - CHESTER CARE Industrial MORRIS CHOTINER Preparatory MARGARET COOK Preparatory THOMAS CARLSON DOROTHY CARTWRIGHT LEONA CHERRY Industrial Literary I Literary ISABELLE CLARK MILDRED CLARK Literary Preparatory WILLIAM COOK ELIZABETH CORNICK FREDA COWAN Preparatory Commercial Preparatory E331 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 L 1 M 7- - -- - pYough-a.-Mon 1 'T ELIZABETH CULBERT CHARLES CUSICK PAUL DAWKINS HAZEL DEAN .. Preparatory Industrial Preparatory Preparatory 4 LILYAN Dzcmzx Roar D1 VITTORIO WALTER Domus Preparatory Commercial Industrial - '- ALBERT DGEHLA ALICE DoNMoR.E CHARLES DOUGHERTY MABLE DOUGHERTY Preparatory Commercial Industrial Commercial 51 1 9 2 7 ? 'L' 1 L L 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1-XM l39l I I I I I I ' I I, I Y.,.ug..2a.,:1on' 5 I' LCM T I-. '1 'W Vw' MERCEDES DOWDEN SARA DOWNIE CYRIL EHRHARDT GERTRUDE ELLIQTT .- Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory RUTH ERB DOROTHY EVERETT EDITH FAGERSTROM -- Preparatory Preparatory Commercial MICHAEL FAIX HOWARD FARCUS NATHAN FENSTER ROBERT FERGUSON Industrial Preparatory Preparatory Literary 'I - 1 9 2 7 , M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M i401 Yopugh-a.-Mon I I I I I I I ' 1 I I 'V' ia! I 'W 'KF I ' D I I .. 3 l ..- .- 'W .... ..- -1 - .- it WILLIAM FINNEY FOSTER FLEGAL KATHRYN FORSYTHE HENRY FRAAS Preparatory Preparatory Literary Indilstrial - MIKE FRANCES 5 ROBERT FRANK GENEVIEVE FRANKLIN Industrial Industrial Commercial - EMMA FRITZ JAMES FULTON RUSSELL GARVIN Joi-IN GERBBR Commercial Commercial Preparatory Preparatory 35 1 1 9 2 7 M M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l41l I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon OLIVE GILCHRIST REGENA GILLMAN Annu: GLAUB GRACE Goonz Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Joi-IN HAEBERLEN WILLIAM HABBERLEN MILDRED HAGEL Literary 'Literary Literary MEITVA HALL HOWARD HALLE IRENE HANKINS THELMA HARRIS Commercial Literary Literary Commercial M 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I , I I I I I I I I i421 I I I I I I I I I I I I Yoiugh-a.-Mon I HANNAH HARRISON DOROTHY HART ' JAMES HASSON STELLA HATCHER Literary Commercial Preparatory Literary PAUL HAUGHEY ANNETTE HENDERSON RUTH HEVERLY Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory JOHN HILTY ' HELEN HOCHMAN BETTY HOFFMAN EDITH HOFFMAN Preparatory Commercial Commercial Preparatory M 1 9 2 7 I I I I 'I I I I I I I I I I I M M33 A I I I fl' I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon I ELIZABETH HOFFMAN CLIFFORD HOLMES ANNA HORNYAK STEPHEN HRINKO Preparatory Preparatory Literary Preparatory ' CORINNE HUNII' ALMA HUSTON MARY Hvnux Commercial Commercial Commercial HELEN INGRAM VIOLA IvcHF.v1cH CAROLINE JACKSON ADOLPH 'IACOBYANSKY Preparatory Commercial Commercial Preparatory I 9 2 7 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I l44l CHARLTON JAMESSON MARY MARGARET JAMISON JOHANNA JEFFREYS RUTH JEFPREYS Literary Literary Literary Literary VINCENT JOHNSON DOROTHY -IUEILIERE DOROTHY KELSCH Preparatory Preparatory Literary FLORENCE KING ELMER KITE JAMES KLINE ALEXANDER KLIPPICK Preparatory Commercial Preparatory Preparatory T E451 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Youglj-a.-Mon I WILLIAM KNIGHT HARRY KOHN LAURA KOPACZEWSKI PAULINE Ko'r'rLER Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory Commercial ANNA KRIVONAK ELDRID KUNZE Joi-IN LAMPERT Preparatory K Literary Industrial MORRIS LANDESMANN HOWARD LANDSTROM HERMAN LANG FLORENCE LARSON Preparatory Industrial Industrial Preparatory I 1 9 2 7 I M I I I I I I I ,I I I I I I I I M ' E461 I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon I RAYMOND LEADBEATER CHARLES LEBRETON - GERTRUDE LEECH HARRY LEWINTER Commercial ' Preparatory Commercial Preparatory ERNEST LIEDTKE EDITH LIGHTNER MABELLE LINDBERG Commercial Commercial Preparatory DOROTHY LITTLEWOOD CHARLES LIVINGSTON ERNEST LOFGREN EMMA LOPSTROM Commercial Preparatory Preparatory Commercial M I 9 2 7 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M l47l 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I Y L I Yough-a.-Nlon DOROTHY LoNo LAVINA LoNo GLADYS Loop EL1zAB1a-ru LYNCH Commercial T Commercial Literary Preparatory DOROTHY LYTLE KATHRYN LYTLE EDITH MARKOWITZ Preparatory Preparatory Commercial MARIE MARKSTEINER RAYMOND MASTERS ROBERT MAY HOWARD MAYFIELD Literary Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory 7 1 9 2 7 I , M M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I E481 1 1 1 E1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 W1 1 M Yough- a.- I'fI,or1 L. -1- WILLIAM MCCUNE AUDREY MCFADDEN CHARLES MCKENERY CLARA MENDLow1'rz Industrial Preparatory Preparatory Commercial , RUTH MENDLOWITZ FRANK MESKOWSKI NETTIE MEssER Literary Industrial Literary GERTRUDE METZ BRADFORD MILLER JEAN MILLER TONY MINSO Commercial Preparatory Literary Preparatory IM 1 9 2 7 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ' E493 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 L 1 Yough-a.-Mon M Q -.f 1 t! 1 1 -I A 1 WI -n- -f .- -ni- .- -- Q -3 'I Q 4- - Q - 4 HALLIE MONAI-IAN DOROTHY MONTGOMEVRY JOSEPH MORRELL GEORGE MORRISON Commercial Commercial Preparatory Industrial CHARLES MURPHY WARREN MURRIE WILLIAM MUSE Literary Preparatory Preparatory EDWARD MYERS ELIZABETH NASTA KATHERINE NELSON MILDRED NEVIUS Preparatory Commercial Preparatory Liteerary 1 9 2 7 I M M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I , l50l I I I I I I I I I I I I 'I I I Yough-a.-Mon HELEN NEWMAN WILLIAM NICHOLLS JEAN Nom: SOPHIE NORDER Literary Preparatory Literary Commercial PAUL NORTON ANNA ONCEA EDWIN ORB. Preparatory Commercial Preparatory HELEN OITOOLE VIRGINIA PALMGREEN Jon PALMQUISI' MOLLIE PAPKE Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory I 9 2 7 ' M I I I I AI I I I I I I I I I I M E511 LILLIAN PARKER FRANCIS PATTERSON WILLIAM PEARSON FALCO PICONE Preparatory GERMANIA PLESNIAK Literary DOROTHY PORTER Preparatory Industrial Preparatory Preparatory MARGARET PLISKO SARA POLLAK Commercial Preparatory EI.sIE PRATT Louls PRATT ULA PRESCOTT Commercial Industrial Preparatory B21 F RHODA PROSSER Commercial JAMES REED Preparatory SARAH RICHARDS Preparatory HELEN RADBR MARGARET RALSTON HELEN RAMSEY Commercial Preparatory Literary Ross REISEERG EGBBRT RICHARDS Literary Preparatory HELEN RICHEY EVELYN ROBERTSON JOHANNA Roma Preparatory Preparatory Commercial B31 JOE Roemz HARRY Rononns EVELYN ROSEN SARA ROSLUND Literary Preparatory Literary Literary SYLVIA RYDELL ANNA SAWDERS MARY SCHMIDT Commercial Literary Commercial RUTH SCHOELLER KATHERINE SCHOERVERTH DoRo'rHY SCULLY JANE SHAFPER Preparatory Commercial Preparatory Commercial l54l I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon 7 FAY SI-IAW FRANK SHAW WILLIAM SHAW CARL SHORT Preparatory Industrial Preparatory Industrial RUTH Snzrr ALBERT Suvxco IVY SIMPSON Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory HARRIET Srsco CLOYD SKINNER HELEN SMYTHE ARTHUR SOUTH Preparatory Commercial Commercial Literary - 1 9 2 I I7 I I I M I I I I I I ' I I I I I I I I I M I55I EMMETT SPANGLER MADALINE SPEIDEL MARGARET SPIEGEL RUTH SPIEGEL Literary Commercial Commercial Literary EVELYN STARK HELEN STEELE MARY STEGANIUS Commercial Preparatory Literary HELEN STEWART STEVEN STOKAN ROSE SUCHA JAMES SUCKFIEL Literary Industrial Commercial Preparatory E561 DOROTHY SURGEON Commercial GRACE SzAEo Preparatory ARTHUR THORNTON Preparatory ANDREW Sususxx MINNIE SWEDEURG HAROLD SWENSON Industrial Literary Preparatory OLGA THEODORVICH ESSEX THOMAS Preparatory Preparatory PAULINE THORNTON MARGARET TRAYERS EUGENE TROPE Preparatory Commercial Commercial l57l SARA TURNER Commercial MARGARET VOELKER Commercial AGATI-IA WETZLER Commercial JOHN UHER ROY VAUGHAN EDITH VOELKER Commercial Preparatory Commercial JOHN WEBB MILDRED WELSH Preparatory Preparatory MARION WHITE CHARLES WILLIAMS KENNETH WILLIAMS Preparatory Preparatory Preparatory l58l PHILIP WINGERT KATIIRYN WIss1zR MARION WISSER Preparatory Literary Literary MARGARET Woon ETHEL YORK Preparatory Preparatory VIOLET ZEIGER ARTHUR ZOLTEN IRENE ZUELLI BEN ZWIBEL Preparatory Industrial Preparatory Preparatory E591 GERTRUDE BOLAR JUANITA SETTLE EVA SESSION Preparatory Commercial Literary CLARENCE WATERS LILLIE WHITE Pre arator Pre arator Y P Y We live in deeds, not yearsg in thoughts, not brcathsg In feelings, not figures on a dial. We should count time by heart-throbsg he most lives Who thinks most, feels the noblest, acts the best. E601 SENIOR CLASS COMMITTEES Flower Committee. Left to Right: LAVINA LONG, EDITH HOFFMAN, CYRIL EHRHARDTMIOHN HILTY, RAYMOND MASTERS, REGENA GILLMAN, OLIVE G1Lc1-1xusT. Colors Committee. Left lo Right: JANE SHAFFER, ELMER KITE, DOROTHY FORSYTHE, FRANCIS PATTERSON, DOROTHY SURGEON, STEVEN STOKAN F611 T Senior Class Committees Motto Committee. Left to Right: PAUL HAUGI-IEY, ETIIEL YoRIc, HELEN RAMSEY, WARREN MURRIE PAUL DAWKINS, IVY SIMPSON, PAULINE THORNTON Invitations Committee. Left ra Right: DOROTHY PORTER, ART ZOLTEN, EDWARD MYERS, EMMA FRITZ, BLAIR ALVERSON, EGBERT RICHARDS, HELEN INGRAM, GERTRUDE ELLIOTT f62fl I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I L I .Yough-a.-Mon , as Leading Yough-A-Mon Sellers Left to Right: MARIE MARKSTINER, CYRIL EHRHARDT, JAMES FULTON, FAY SHAW, BLAIR ALVERSON, KATHRYN Wrszn. Let me but do my work from day to day, In Held or forest, at the desk or loom, In roaring market-place or tranquil room, Let me but find it in my heart to say, When vagrant wishes beckon me astray, 'This is my workg my blessing, not doomg Of all who live, I am the one by whom This work can best be done in the right way.' Then shall I see it not too great, nor small, To suit my spirit and to prove my powers, Then shall I cheerful greet the laboring hours, And cheerful turn, when the long shadows fall At eventide, to play and love and rest, Because I know for me my work is best. SELECTED I 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M l63l 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 I 4 . g Yougljra.-Mon SENIOR ACTIVITIES Glorious it is to wear the crown Of a deserved and great success, , He who knows how to fail has won A crown whose luster is not less. HE Seniors of the class of '27 have been unusually active and successful in their four years of high school life. Especially have they been successful in their literary activities in editing both the Red and Blue , the school paper, and the Yough-A-Mon , the school annual. Those who have been greatly responsible for the success which the Red and Blue has met this year are Blair Alverson, the editor-in-chief, Dorothy Everett, the associate-editor, Francis Patterson, the business manager, and Margaret Brown, the assistant business manager. Other Seniors on the staff of the Red and Blue are Lilyan Decker, Michael Burger, Pauline Thornton, Charlotte Biddlestone, Charles McKenery, Frank Beck, Pauline Kottler, John Webb, Charles Breitinger, Robert May, Hallie Monahan, Rhoda Prosser, Anna Oncea, Jane Shaffer, Ethel York, Jeanne Nord, Katherine Nelson, and Charles Dougherty. The Yough-A-Mon , too, has completely excelled all other annuals of previous years in this, the anniversary number. But, with such a talented staHf it could not do otherwise, for on it are Fay Shaw, who is the editor-in-chief, Kathryn Wisser, the associate editor, James Fulton, the business manager, and Helen Rader, the assistant business manager. Thus, with the Work of these and with the aid or Helen Richey, Elmer Kite, Charles Cusick, Arthur Zolten, Marie Marksteine, Gertrude Elliott, James Ansell, Elizabeth Hoffman, Lavina Long, Grace Goode, Betty Lynch, Dorothy Surgeon, Emma Fritz, and Viola Ivchevich, who are also members of the staE, the annual of the class of '27, with all of its merited qualities, is the result. Last May the University of Pittsburgh again staged an interesting literary meet. The intellectual groups which represented McKeesport High consisted of Anna Sawders, Bradford Miller, Grace Buergin, Florence King, and Martin Baker. These Seniors of the class of '27 made a creditable showing for old Tech High, and re- flected great honor upon the system of education under which they have studied for twelve years. In another intellectual group, which is given over to the pro and con method of dispute, are Elmer Kite, Clifford Holmes, James Fulton, and Egbert Richards. These have represented the Senior class at various times in the Tech High debating club. Among the Seniors of our class are some whose tongues are exceptionally skilled in the utterance of the vowelage of gay Paree. Accordingly, they have been made members of the French club and participants in the French play. Those who have received this distinction are Etta Blair, Lois Applegate, Grace Buergin, Grace Szabo, Marion White, Paul Norton, Pauline Thornton, Margaret Wood, Violet Zeiger, Harry Kohn, Florence King, Dorothy Everett, Anna Krivonak, Arthur Thornton, Fay Shaw, Cyril Ehrhardt, Helen Steele, William Knight, Howard Mayfield, Dorothy Scully, Margaret Cook, Ruth Sieff, Dorothy Jubelircr, Mabelle Lindberg, Hazel Dean, and Elizabeth Culbert. The interest which not a few Seniors have taken in the musical organizations of the school substantiates the fact that music hath charms even to a most austere 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I J I I 'I I I I I M l64l 4 4 4 4 4 4 . 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 Yough-a.-Mon 4 , Senior, for in the class of '27 are Dorothy Jubelirer fthe village maid, Micaela, in Carmen D, Harriet Sisco, and Francis Patterson, who have taken leading parts in the Operetta, Polished Pebbles , and also a goodly number of members of the glee clubs and the Senior orchestra, who, too, have lent their musical talent to the school. Those who were members of the glee clubs in their Senior year are Bernice Brooks, Mary Steganius, Dorothy Cartwright, Ruth Heverly, Annette Henderson, Harriet Sisco, Helen Steele, Dorothy Scully, Dorothy Jubelirer, Dorothy Kelsch, Francis Patterson, Raymond Masters, Richard Beswick, and Egbert Richards. The Seniors who have furnished the school with instrumental music in 1926-27 are Gertrude Elliott, Alma Huston, Clifford Holmes, Thomas Cardwell, and Vincent Bielski. The Seniors are athletically as well as scholastically and musically inclined, for on the gridiron, basketball floor, diamond, and track, the class of '27 is also well represented. The football letter men are Charles Weber, Foster Flegal, Michael Burger, John Uher, Martin Baker, Elmer Seitz, Harold Soles, Paul Dawkins, William Friedman, Charlton Jamesson, Steven Stokan, and Frank Shaw. On the basketball floor Harold Soles, Foster Flegal, Michael Burger, Charles Murphy, Albert Doehla, Charles Weber, Elmer Seitz, and Charlton Jamesson played. Those who shone on the diamond as brightly as the stone for which it was named were Foster Flegal, Charles Weber, Edward Myers, and Michael Burger, while on the track team were Paul Norton, Thomas Cardwell, Foster Flegal, Michael Burger, and Joe Roche. Quite a number of Seniors of M. H. S. have shown their appreciation of the high school and the life which it offers by being neither tardy nor absent from school since the time of their entrance as verdent Freshmen through the portals of Tech High. Those who have a place on this honor roll of attendance and punctuality are Dorothy Long, Nellie Bootman, Helen Smythe, Margaret Wood, Paul Norton, Robert Frank, Grace Buergin, Pauline Thornton, Leona Cherry, Marie Marksteiner, Helen O'Toole, Vincent Johnson, Frank Meskowski, Clifford Holmes, Margaret Plisko, Alma Huston, Charles Livingston, john Calhoun, Mary Margaret Jamison, Cyril Ehrhardt, James Hasson, Elizabeth Culbert, Hazel Dean, and Arthur Cagey. In the activities of the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. members of the Senior class have figured, for Katherine Nelson is the president of the Friendship circle of the Girl Reserves, Lois Applegate is the secretary, and Dorothy Porter is the treasurer Paul Norton is the presiding ofhcer of the Hi-Y Club. Thus, with so many active Seniors in our midst, is there any wonder why this class of '27 is the best ever ? DoT KELscH, '27 TO THE SENIORS The true ambition there alone resides, Where justice vindicates, and wisdom guides, Where inward dignity joins outward state, Our purpose good, as our achievement great, Where public blessings, public praise attend, I Where glory is our motive, not our end, Wouldst thou be famed? have those high in view, Brave men would act, though scandal would ensue. SELECTED M 1 9 2 7 cg I I I I 'I I I I I I I I 'I I I' M l65l B I I I If I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon THE SENIOR CHRONOLOGY CIENTISTS tell us that a thing must be before it can cease to be. Therefore, it was necessary for us to be Freshmen before we can be high school graduates. In 1923 a throng of green Freshies ascended the stairs at Junior High to the auditorium. An odd looking and queer feeling crowd we Were. Some felt fear, others joy--emotions were mixed as we began our four years' course in pursuit of knowledge. At 'first the routine was stiff and slow, but soon we began to move about with ease. Our paths were not strewn with roses, though, for soon we stumbled upon our first set of examinations. Many rose to their feet and went on, but a few could not assume. their old places. In all activities, glee clubs, orchestra, baseball, basketball, and football, social times, we have shown that, though green , we could support our Alma Mater. During this year a banking drive was started, and many learned to save their pennies, as well as their thoughts. With these for a background, we felt equipped to ascend to the White Castle on the Hill and take our posts as Sophomores. I At first we had to go through the old routine of finding our way to our classes. The Freshies seemed far below us, but the Seniors were like huge mountains, cold and fierce. The teachers, whom at first we regarded as super-human, began to appear as plain, ordinary folk. On this basis they could do more for us than they could as strange beings, and they surely did their best to help us on to victory. Again, we showed that we were not slackers, when it came to school activities, for we con-f tributed freely, both of our talent and money, trying to make each branch a success. Our music department was no longer under the direction of Mr. Parke, but was directed by Mr. Weber, who, with the cooperation of the students, produced the operetta Carmen' '. Time flies on golden wings , and soon we found that another' year had passed, and we were now dignified Juniors. Having heard students talk about the glory of being Juniors, we expected some-- thing great. Many were disappointed to find that our course of study was much the same as it had been for the past two years. The teachers tried to make us feel our' position and to impart everlasting knowledge. An addition to the Castle on the Hill was made this year, when ground was purchased for our own athletic field. This surely was a boost for the school. Another event of importance was the selec-- tion of class rings and pins, a very thrilling experience, I vow. Every activity was again heartily supported-this year we had some star athletes among our ranks. No longer do we look upon the Seniors as the Unapproachable . In fact, we feel almost on a par with them-and why shouldn't we? Aren't We now occupying the same seats they once sat in at chapel? At last! Can it be? We are now addressed by the desirable title of Senior. Was it not only yesterday we started on our course? Has the time come when we must leave these scenes? The last year of our association under the protection of the White Castle on the Hill is about to come to an end. At our first class meeting' we chose the officers to carry on our business for the year-Harold Soles, president, Matilda Baldridge, vice president, Mary Colbert, secretary, and Charles Weber, treasurer. At later meetings we chose our class flower, the Hadley Tea Rose, and the class motto, Not finished, just begun . Throughout this year social meetings have' been held, giving the members of the various classes a chance to intermingle, and thereby learn that all have the same goal in view. At last the parting time has come-the days are getting fewer and fewer-soon we must leave these familiar scenes and go out into the cold realities of the world. Some will go on under another Alma Mater, others will go into the business worldg few will take up the domestic life. But, whatever they may do hereafter, we wish them joy and success, love and happiness. May the thought of McKeesport High be forever dear to them. 1927 M M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I... l66l I I I I I I I I I I Yough-a.-Mon I I I L I The day is dorieg The time has come When everyone Has lost or won. You've stood the test And given your best, In your past zest May you find rest. Now to the end May your paths trend To help and mendg Thus, be a friend. MARY COLBERT, Clan' .Yrcretmjf f Y Y Senior Message Farewell to thee, our Alma Mater, Ever we render thee tributes dueg Floating thy colors far and free, Folds of the dear old Red and Blue. Leading our feet in the path that winds Onward and upward Where deeds are doneg Keeping within our hearts and minds Our motto Not finished, just begun. Many thy loyal sons afar, Sturdy and noble and brave of heart, Striving each toward a guiding star, In the world of men to play their part. Proud shall we be of thee and true, True to the memories clustering thereg True to the place where friendships grew. True to the ones we hold sincere. Ever our aim shall be to give Service wherever our lot may fallg Faithful to highest aims we'll be, Ready to answer duty's call. True to thy standards we shall be, And to thy spirit ever trueg Living with sincerest loyalty, In the shadow of the Red and Blue. REGENA GILLMAN, '27 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I - I I M l67l I I I 1 I I I en I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon THE SENIOR PROPHECY HE interior of the theatre was a costly setting to the myriads of people seated in the pit. The softly- tinted walls rose in sweeping curves to a magnificent dome, from which hung branching chandeliers sparkling with a thousand lights. The soft hum of voices and light tinkling laughter filled the air, uniformed ushers hurried to and fro, while the orchestra softly played a haunting waltz. Suddenly the house was plunged into shadowy darkness, and the people settled back in expectant silence. The curtain slowly lifted, revealing the stage with a background of dark velvet drapery. The folds parted, and a woman stepped forth. She was tall and finely built. A white robe of almost Puritan simplicity fell in graceful folds to her feet. Smiling graciously upon her audience, she advanced almost to the footlights. She was the famous seeress, Madame Julie. The students of the class of '27 lifted their faces in awed antici- patron. . I was told, the lovely seeress began in a low, sweet voice, that there are some graduates here who wish to know what the future holds in store for them. I will do my best. Ah, youth! what a splendid thing it isl , and sighing she turned to a carved pedestal beside her, on which reposed a huge crystal ball. She bent and looked intently into its depths. Slowly, under her gaze, the milky-whiteness dissolved, and the figures 1947 leapt out in startling distinctness. Twenty years from now- the seeress spoke as the letters faded- I see a long procession. Ah! your ways have parted. Your president, Harold Soles, has lived up to his name, for I see him seated behind the ornate desk of the president of the New York Central. Matilda Baldridge, the wife of a prominent Senator, is supporting a charity ball at Washington, D. C. Charles Weber still shows his athletic inclina- tions, for he is coaching the football team of a well-known eastern college. Mary Colbert has entered the movie world, and has attained phenomenal success. Her name is spelled in huge electric letters over Broadway's most exclusive theatre. Lois App1egate's picture, The Storm , which has attracted the notice of celebrated artists, hangs in a New York museum. Ethel Adams is a demure school-marm somewhere out in the West. Etta Blair's latest jazz success, Two Eyes of Blue , has just appeared on the market. Paul Norton is daily expending his oratorical eloquence on the floor of Congress against the new immigration act. Charlotte Biddlestone is dean of an exclusive girls' school. Margaret Wood is the proprietress of a millinery shop on Broadway. Ruth Erb has married a millionaire, and is enjoying a life of luxury and ease. Grace Buergin is teaching Latin and Greek in one of the Pittsburgh colleges. Dorothy Everett is society editor of the Daily News , and writes nature essays in her spare time. Bernice Brooks is the country's sensation of the moment in her portrayal of Lady Macbeth and other Shakespearian characters. Harry Kohn is general manager of all the Woolworth stores. Mollie Papke has established a popular tea-room on Lincoln Highway. John Gerber is in training for his great bout to defend his title as world's heavyweight champion. Evelyn Robertson is teaching school in the backwoods of Tennessee. Helen Bergstrom is now a countess, and lives in a picturesque French chateau. James Suckfiel has become an architect, and is designing the plans for McKeesport's new hundred story high school. Marian White is the head of the physics department at Vassar. Dorothy Porter and Florence King have set up a hairdressing establishment. Albert Simco's masterly technique on the violin is causing him to be hailed as a second Kreisler. Violet Zciger has become a famous woman lawyer, and at present is conducting the divorce case of Isabel Bishop, who is suing for separation from her third husband. Morris Chotiner has become rich, and is contemplating a trip around the world in his private yacht. Grace Szabo and Alberta Scott have become landscape gardners. Audrey McFadden is an African missionary. Pauline Thornton is a literary critic. Laura Kopaczewski owns a hotel at Atlantic City. A The seeress stopped a moment. At her request an attendant brought a chair. There are so many of you, she murmured pathetically. Then once more she gazed into the depths of the magic crystal. I see Blair Alverson directing the construction of a mammoth viaduct across San Francisco Bay. Elizabeth Culbert and Margaret Cook are head nurses in one of the Pittsburgh hospitals. Martin Baker is head of the mathematics department of Yale University. Freda Cowan is studying art in Paris. Richard Beswick has won fame as a daring explorer, and is heading an expedition through the wilds of Central Africa. Dorothy Atron is an interior decorator, and is furnishing the new home of Lilyan Decker, the famous novelist. James Ansell is a gym instructor at Springfield College. Edward Bridges has put on the 'I 9 2 7 M f 'I T fl- I ! I 9 5 I I I I I I M l63l if ,W WYYW, i Y Y, 7 A, i ,, W ,L ,, ,Lain , IIIIIIIITIIIIIITLI . I - V gYoughf-a.-Mon market a car which rivals the Ford. Hazel Dean belongs to the artists' colony in Greenwich Village. Cyril Ehrhardt is Secretary of the Interior in the president's cabinet. Michael Burger is a member of the 1946 crack Olympic team. He has broken the world's record for the two hundred-twenty-yard dash. Arthur Cagey is furthering his studies at Oxford. William Cook has just patented a new invention-a car running on air. Paul Haughey is chief engineer of a construction company in South America. William Blazina is the dean of Princeton University. Dorothy Jubiliere has been a famous Metropolitan opera star for several years. She is now singing in Lohengrin . James Hasson owns an exclusive men's style shop. John Hilty has become a famous evangelist, and at present is conducting an enthusiastic campaign in Mc- Keesport. Adolph Jacobyansky operates a large pawn-shop. His best customers are his former class- mates. James Kline is an eminent pharmacist, and has a reputation for making excellent milk shakes. Mabelle Lindberg is a dietician in a New York hospital. William Knight owns a stable full of fine Ken- tucky-bred horses, which he is training to win the Derby next year. Ernest Lofgren is at the head of the electrical department in a branch of the Tube Works. Olga Theodorvich teaches a mission school in India. Charles McKenery has won a 550,000 prize for his new novel, The Black Prince. Howard Mayfield is playing Romeo, with Ruth Seiff as Juliet , William Nicholls is the head of a sanitarium in Colorado. William Pearson is on a hunting trip in the Canadian Rockies. Dorothy Scully and Ruth Schoeller are insurance agents. Essex Thomas owns a ten thousand acre Wheat farm out in Minnesota. John Webb, a graduate of West Point, is at present stationed in the Philippines. Raymond Masters and Egbert Richards are completing a concert tour through Erigland, France, and Germany. They are known as the Golden Tenor Twins . Foster Flegal is Ty Cbbb's successor. William Muse is a famous painter. Edward Buckingham is the president of the Bethlehem Iron and Steel Works. Sylvan Berger is the head of the French department at Pitt. Mildred Clark is making her debut at Syria Mosque as a lyric soprano. Charlton Jamesson is the captain of a trans-Atlantic ocean greyhound. John Calhoun has built up a flourishing printing trade. Florence Larson is a famous sculpturess. Joseph Morrell owns and operates an international chain of hot dog stands. Robert May has taken Milt Gross' place, and is the leading cartoonist of the day. Mildred Nevius is a dancer in one of New York's night clubs. Falco Picone has taken Valentino's place in the movie world. Joseph Bechtol is developing copper mines out in Arizona. Nathan Fenster is one of Pennsylvania's foremost criminal lawyers. Harry Le Winter is an eminent geologist, and is engaged in extensive research work. Gladys Loop is a prominent woman suffra- gist. Charles Le Breton is the people's choice for governor of Texas. Charles Livingston is chief of police in McKeesport. Tony Mingo owns the Market . Clifford Holmes is building a hunting lodge up in the Adirondacks. Joe Palmquist is promoting some oil wells down in Oklahoma. Joe Roche is a noted physician and a graduate of John Hopkins University. Evelyn Rosen is famous for her exquisite interpretive dancing. William Shaw is raising cotton in Georgia. Anna Sawders has won a scholarship in a foreign college. Jessie Steiner has become a member of the Ziegfield Follies. Fay Shaw is our minister to England, he is a well-known diplomat. Arthur Thornton is engineering an irrigation project out in Idaho. Helen Steele and Ivy Simpson are choir singers in Christ Church, Philadelphia. Roy Vaughan has become an aviator of no little fame, and is attempting to circle the globe in one flight. Clarence Waters is the leader of a popular jazz orchestra. Mildred Welsh is spending the winter at Miami. Irene Zuelli is travelling through China as a missionary. Elizabeth Hoffman is a model for Worth, famous Paris designer. Lillie White teaches domestic science. Gertrude Bolar is a missionary in southern Alabama. Margaret Byerly runs an exlusive style shop. Neil Crosier holds the world's record in the five hundred-mile speed classic. Vincent Bielski owns a travel- ling circus, in which Mercedes Dowden stars as a tight-rope artist. Paul Dawkins is the manager of the Harris Hippodrome. Gertrude Elliott has won her A.M. in English at Columbia. Helen Feldman paints china and glassware. William Finney and John Haeberlen are members of the Canadian mounted police. Mary Margaret Jamison is a kindergarten teacher. Alexander Klippick has gone into the retailing busi- ness. Ernest Liedtke owns a large dairy farm up in New York. Dorothy Littlewood is the wife of one of Pennsylvania's state representatives, and lives at Harrisburg. Charles Murphy is directing a big forestry project in Maine. Anna Krivonak, Emma Lofstrom, and Gertrude Leech are partners in the delicatessen business. Melvin McSheehy is president of the Packard Motor Company. Dorothy Montgomery is head of the Douglas Business College. Warren Murrie has enlisted in the U. S. coast guard service. Elsie Pratt is secretary to Henry Ford's successor. Emmett Spangler is a prominent Pittsburgh jeweller. Harriett Sisco has sung her way to stardom. Ben Zwibel is a noted tennis champ. Sara Turner and Margaret Trayers 1 9 2 M I I I I I I I I I7 I I I I I I M i69l 5, I I I I I I I 1 I I I I not I YOUgh-a.-Mon I' I are bookkeeping experts. Arthur South is the oflicial inspector at Ellis Island. Helen Rader is governor of Wyoming. Jane Shaffer designs costumes for theatrical productions. Robert Dunn is a noted authority on bugs , and at present is conducting an extensive tour in the jungles of Africa. John Lampert is an efliciency expert in the Tube Works. Helen Richey is the foremost woman's golf champion. Ruth Amper is editor of the Dorothy Dix column in the Daily News . Frank Shaw is taking Will Rogers's place with the Ziegfield Follies. In his spare time he writes stories for Love and Romance . Edith Hoffman owns an ostrich farm out in California. Margaret Brown is prominent in the business world. James Fulton has built up a thriving under- taking business. Emma Fritz is married to an English lord, and is a leader of London society. Elmer Kite is a local florist. Dorothy Long teaches typewriting at Carnegie Tech. Regena Gillman is called the best-dressed woman in New York. Bridget Bunyan is private secretary to a well-known politician. Nellie Bootman designs shoes for a New York concern. Mable Dougherty and Alice Donmore are in the adver- tisement business. Mary Hyduk is a children's specialist. Dorothy Hart has taken up social Work, and is a prominent Y. W. C. A. woman. Viola Ivchevich is a society reporter. Jean Miller is studying art in a Paris academy. Gertrude Metz is a lawyer's secretary. Pauline Kottler writes travel sketches and essays for the Ladies' Home Journal. Corinne Hunt and Melva Hall manage a popular inn just outside of Pittsburgh. Edith Markowitz owns a fashionable Shoe Shoppe on Broadway, which Anna Oncea patronizes. Johanna Robb imports priceless trifles of jade and gold from Italy and sells them in her antique shop. Doro- thy Surgeon takes dictation from Cloyd Skinner, who is a successful banker. Eugene Tropf is a billiard champion. John Uher owns a shop which specializes in all kinds of sporting-goods. He furnishes the equipment for the 1947 McKeesport High School athletic squads. Madaline Speidel and Edith Voelker design patterns for a wall-paper concern. Ruth Spiegel is an employee of the Telephone Company. Rose Sucha and Margaret Spiegel stand behind the information desk in the New York Central station, at New York City. William Friedman plays tackle on the Army football squad. Leona Cherry has entered the movies, and is starring in her first picture. Walter Anderson owns a cotton manufacturing plant in Boston. Thelma Blackburn is taking Cooks' Tour through Europe. John Buser is in the iron and steel business. Isabelle Clark is a famous comedienne on the stage. Mike Francis has become a well-known astronomer. Kathryn Wisser is a member of the 1947 McKeesport High School faculty. Hannah Harrison is in the secret service. Stella Hatcher is at the head of the language department at Columbia. Anna Hornyak is a well-known orator. Mildred Hagel and Irene Hankins are engaged in journalistic work. Dorothy Kelsch owns and operates a greenhouse for Ruth Jeffreys, a florist. Nettie Messer teaches school out in Montana. George Morrison has become a detective. Johanna Jeffreys is writing a treatise on Germs, I Eldrid Kunze is an explorer for the National Geographic Magazine. At present he is journeying through Russia to study her economic conditions. Dorothy Lytle is a professor at Bryn Mawr. Elizabeth Lynch is a member of New York's Four Hundred . Frank Meskowski owns a large cattle ranch in Mon- tana. Harry Rodgers has invented a new kind of fountain pen. Helen Ingram is writing a book on The United States in 1846 and in l946 . Herman Lang teaches pattern-making to the Industrial students of McKeesport. Sara Richards is a college widow . Bradford Miller is a contractor, and has just com- pleted the erection of the most beautiful cathedral in America . Francis Patterson is the official chaplain to the President of the United States. Sara Pollak teaches English at an Austrian University. Edwin Orr is a skillful surgeon. Lillian Parker is his right-hand nurse. Harold Swenson spends his vacations doing life-guard service at Miami. Margaret Ralston writes subtitles for' motion pictures. Andrew Sussuski has won fame for his bronze statue of General Pershing. Ethel York is spending the winter skiing at Lake Placid, the noted resort. Charles Williams owns an electrical shop. Katherine Nelson is conducting a tour for college girls through Europe. Howard Landstrom is president of the Tube Works. Philip Wingert designs men's clothes. Morris Landesmann runs a cleaning establishment. Bessie Britton teaches shorthand and typewriting. Roy De Vittorio is in the paper-making business. Charles Breitinger is captain of a collier which runs between San Francisco and the Philippines. Frank Beck is experimenting with chemicals for a compound which will remove ink spots. Lousie Boyle takes dictation from Francis Bosnak, who owns a huge department store. Elizabeth Cornick and Genevieve Franklin have set up a confectionery store: Robert Ferguson writes travel essays for the Atlantic Monthly . 1 9 2 7 I M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I L f M l70l L, ,, ,L L 1. M .- .- - .4 ..- ...t 4- 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 L 1 Yough-a-Mon Edith Fagerstrom is the librarian of the Carnegie Library. Grace Goode and Addie Glaub are steno- graphers. Olive Gilchrist is a Russian countess, at present living in New York. Howard Halle is a sales- man. Alma Huston is a member of the Pittsburgh Little Symphony Orchestra , Thelma Harris and Helen Hochman are famous woman lawyers. Lavina Long is the star of a late musical comedy still running in New York. Betty Hoffman and Edith Lightner are both artistic bookbinders. Jean Nord's scenario Silver Clouds is being filmed at Hollywood, with Helen Stewart in the role of the heroine and Thomas Cardwell as the villain. Arthur Zolten is the oflicial radio announcer at K. D. K. A. Marie Marksteiner and Ruth Mendlowitz are literary critics. Helen Newman reviews passing plays, while her partner, Helen O'Toole, reviews books. Mary Steganius teaches an exclusive dancing school. Germania Plesniak is a domestic science instructor. Rose Reisburg is a dentist's assistant. Helen Ramsey designs hats. Minnie Swedburg and Sara Roselund have an antique shop full of Colonial furniture. Steven Stokan has invented a static eliminator for the radio. Eva Session is the assistant keeper of a lighthouse on Lake Erie. Marian Wisser holds the record for long-distance walking. Joseph Abraham is a lumberman up in the Maine forests. Dorothy Cartwright is part owner of 2 hotel at Atlantic City. Thomas Carlson is a doctor, and has the contract for examining McKeesport High School students. Sara Downie is a dress model. Hazel Burkert is the wife of a prominent politician. Albert Doehla holds the record for polevaulting. Walter Dodds is the pilot of one of the new fifty-pas- senger aeroplanes. Charles Dougherty has made a name for himself by writing scenarios. Russell Garvin has just published his first volume of poems, entitled Spring , Stephen Hrinko is a surveyor. Ruth Heverly is a kindergarten teacher. Annette Henderson is a mermaid at Palm Beach. Jennie Adair teaches stenography and typewriting. Edna Brant writes short articles for I-larper's Magazine . Harry Beitz owns a bicycle factory. Kathryn Forsythe is at present touring Europe. Howard Farkas is the manager of Kaufman's Store in Pittsburgh. Henry Fraas is in the canning business. Edward Myers teaches economics at the University of Michigan. ' Hallie Monahan is a society reporter for the New York Times . Clara Mendlowitz is a Y. W. C. A. secretary. Sophie Norder is known as the Girl on the Magazine Cover . Virginia Palmgreen lives in a palatial mansion on the Hudson. Margaret Plisko takes dictation from Elizabeth Nasta, a well-known lawyer. Rhoda Prosser is a movie vamp. Sylvia Rydell owns an up-to-date book store. James Reed edits the Wall Street lnconoclast . Katherine Schoervorth and Juanita Settle are interior decorators. Agatha Wetzler is a well-known suffragist. Evelyn Stark and Mary Schmidt manage a successful tea-room. Louis Pratt is a famous movie director. Matthew Bedell has revolutionized the radio business by perfecting a machine for television. Einar Bowin controls the rubber industry in Brazil. Charles Cusick illustrates the stories published in the Ameri- can Boy . Chester Care is the official weather man for this district. John C. Calhoun has invented a new kind of rubber tire guaranteed to last live years. Robert Frank is the manager of a well-known auto factory in Detroit. William McCune is a government official at the U. S. mint in Washington, D. C. Carl Short manufactures gasoline launches. Kenneth Williams is the truant ofhcer of the McKeesport public schools. Duane Dowden owns a gold loving-cup, which bears these words The World's Champion Diver . William Haeberlen is at present directing a motion picture on the Sahara Desert. Raymond Leadbeater owns a large pottery concern in New Jersey. Ula Prescott is an army nurse. Caroline Jackson is a noted spiritu- alist leader. ' Kathryn Lytle is writing a series of articles describing The Scenery of America . Margaret Voelker is at the head of a well-known business college. Michael Faix has taken Spike Shannon's place at the Y and directs gym classes for tired business men. Before the eyes of the fascinated audience the magic crystal slowly resumed its milky whiteness, The seeress arose, smiled mysteriously, bowed, and vanished amid the heavy folds of the curtain. PAULINE THORNTON, '27 M 1 9 2 7 L 1 1 L 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M ' l71l -4? 7 . I .I I I I I -I I L I l, l l l Yough-a.-Mon NI THE SENIQP. WILL Glorious it is to wear the crown Of a deserved and pure success,- He who knows how to fail has won A crown whose luster is not less. E, the Senior Class of 1927, of McKeesport High School, of the city of McKeesport, County of Allegheny, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, United States o America, realizing that we are about to leave the seat of our know- ledge to embark on life's unknown sea, esteem the necessity of parting with our boundless estate of privileges Clegal or otherwisej, interests, and achievements, consolidated by the sincere efforts of four years, by members of said class, the ma- jority of whom have been declared of sound mind, memory, and understanding, Wishing to provide for the disposal of the aforesaid property, hereby stand to direct this to be our last will and testament, thus revoking all wills made heretofore by us. FIRST: To the school, in general, building likewise, we leave our lasting re-' grets on the day of our departure, insuring it our good will and loyalty, always and orever. SECOND! To the school board, Superintendent B. Richey, Principal John F. Bower, and the faculty, we bequeath our sincere and hearty appreciation for their incessant concern of our future prosperity. THIRD: We desire to express our appreciation and best wishes for the future to the physical instructors, Miss Meinert and Mr. Gramley, our athletic coach, Mr. Chase, and the music instructors, Miss Carey and Mr. Stribrny, for their ceaseless efforts for this class. FOURTH: To the Juniors, our successors, we bequeath: 1. Our mark of distinction and dignity. 2. Our front seats in chapel. 3. The privilege of Seniors First. 4. Reputation of having better conducted corridors and a well-kept campus. 5. All printed or literary work, masterpieces of Shakespeare, Burns, etc. 6. The privilege of making the Red and Blue a voluminous success. 7. The honor of publishing the annual. 8. The privilege of holding Senior dances. FIFTH: To the Sophomores, successors to the Juniors, we do will and assign: 1. The honor of being upper classmen. 2. The privilege of participating in all Senior activities. SIXTH! To the Freshmen, successors to the former Sophomores, we bequeath: 1. The right to lord it over the new Frosh. .T 2. The honor of conducting the new Freshies through the halls. 3 . The honor of being a Senior in three years or more. SEVENTH! To the oncoming classes of M. H. S. we leave: 1. The right of losing your way in the halls of Tech High. 2. The duty of supporting all school activities. 3. The duty of respecting upper classmen. 4. All the good luck that we have experienced. 9 2 7 CS-7 M I I I I I J J I I I I I I I I M f72l 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 T1 1 1 1 ereee' 1 L '11 Youghfa.-Mon EIGHTH: To the student body in general: 1. Dr. Richey and the school board. 2. Prof. J. F. Bower and the faculty. 3. The duty of assisting McKeesport schools in having a non-tardy record. 4. All good will and loyalty to the school. NINTH: To the faculty we do hereby bequeath: 1. Our hearty appreciation for their many endeavors to fit us for a higher world. 2. Our best wishes for studious and orderly future classes. . ' TENTH: To the community at large we pledge ourselves to be loyal American C1t1ZCI1S, in behalf of the educational opportunities extended to us. LASTLY: We hereby make and appoint Professor John F. Bower to be executor of this our last will and testament, an to dispose of all other property not mentioned heretofore. We, the Senior Class of 1927, have hereunto affixed our name and seal, this 22nd day of February in the year of our Lord one thousand, nine hundred twenty-seven. President-HAROLD SOLES. Class of 1927, By HELEN ARADER, '27 CSEALD 1 f Y A Senior Farewell Old Father Time has crossed OE four more yearsg Our jolly high school days are o'er, So we must leave with many dreads and fears, Our paths shall part forever more. We bid a fond farewell to old Tech High, The large white school upon the hill: And with a tear, a backward glance, and sigh, We leave with courage, hope, and will. From the friends we have made in the past four years We must part as We tread along our ways, So we bid farewell as our eyes fill with tears, And we think of the joy of by-gone days. Goodby to the teachers who have served us true, And have striven to give the best they could. We will always remember the things they knew, And taught us so well that we understood. Our motto reads, Not Hnished, just begun , And, as we are venturing forth alone, We'll try and try again until we've won A part of this world we may call our own. DoRo'r1-xY HART, '27 1 9 2 7 M l I l l I l l l l l l l I 1 lr M f73l I I I I I I I 'I I I .I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon Andrew, Thomas Azzarella, Chas. Ackerman, Harry Anderson, Dorothy Amper, Claudia Ayres, Louise Abraham, Florence Alverson, Charles Angelo, Anna Anderson, Esther Alexander, Lois Ashman, Ruth Albert, Cecil Akers, Quentin Benson, Alice Brown, Joseph Bingham, Arthur Beresh, John Bathurst, Karl Berquist, Albert Bryan, Daniel Benner, John Bartolome, Evelyn Berquist, Charles Black, John Broadbent, Clyde Brown, Walter Beck, Louis Blackhurst, Evelyn Bergquist, Hildur Booker, Dorraine Bilz, Emma Bechtol, James Batchelor, Edythe Blank, Elma Irene Briggs, George Baird, Helen Berkowitz, Sara Bryce, Janet Bryce, Sara Blythe, Lois Bresh, Esther Burland, Jacqueline Brown, Isabel Broder, Ruth Barkemeyer, Ethel Brant, Marie Boax, Rachel Braun, Joe Bryan, Naomi Boss, Louise Conway, Mae Conlogue, Jean Buninra Conrad, Herbert Cunliffe, Herbert Carlson, Evelyn Crawford, Garnetta Crawford, Lawrence Conley, Andrew Carter, Harry Carroll, Cecelia Cowan, Leonard Cooley, Suzanne Chapman, Edith Clark, Mary Carlson, Bessie Cassel, Frank Corey, Blaine Cupp, Ruth Crosby, Alice Coup, Margaret Callahan, James Chessman, Mildred Carter, Grayce Cleary, Agatha Davis, Leroy Demerac, Nicholas Dougherty, Wilbert Dawson, James Ditmore, Regis Dunn, Elizabeth Ditmore, Goldie Diehl, Kathryn ' Deer, Thomas Dunn, Emily Downey, Beatrice Dickson, Dorothy Dunlap, Edward Dawkins, Wilma Eicher, Ella Eliason, Violet Erskine, Alex Ervin, Gerald Englert, Emerson Ehrhart, Bernice Edman, Margaret Elko, Elizabeth Fillipsic, Michael Flynn, William Finkel, Henry Ferrie, Frank Flaherty, Stephen Funk, Kathryn Franks, Thelma Flynn, Grace Gorring, Jackson Gibala, Leo Gleditsch, Herbert Griffiths, Robert Gray, James Guisler, George Gibson, Robert Guisler, Paul Guisler, Ruth Godfrey, Clara Gamble, William Guiser, Regis Gottlieb, Sidney Gault, Vivien Gosdonovic, John Greggerson, Dorothea Gleditsch, Emma Gross, Freda Gates, Dorothy Giles, Ruth Hartig, Rosalia Hendrickson, Melvin Harris, Olive M. Harman, Donald Hannegan, Raymond Hughes, Wm. Headley, Alice Harrison, Kenneth Hartland, Ruth Handel, Herbert Hackett, Vera Hoerr, George Hunter, Mary Louise Henderson, Doris Hardman, Jack Hess, Thelma Houck, Josephine Harper, Mary Herman, Walter Hetcher, George . Hewitt, Edward Hunt, Eva Hayden, Mae Hagblom, Katherine Hurley, John Houck, Eugene Herpel, Coleman Haught, Beatrice Huey, Leonora Ingram, Martha Johnson, Lloyd Jorgenson, Permelia Jasper, Victor Johnson, Edith Jaycox, William Judkovitz, Milton Johanidae, Richard Johns, Daniel Johnson, Lauretta Jayne, Beryl Junker, William Jenkins, Jane Jones, Ruth Johnson, Emil Johnson, Mary Jenkins, Edwin Jackel, William Kubant, Gladys Kochkodan, Steven Keenan, Ralph Kennedy, Everette Ka lan, Evelyn Kaljkbrenner, Augusta Kilgallon, Helen King, Charles Kochkodan, Demetrius Kline, Preston Kissane, Katherine Kirshner, Lillian Klein, Pearl Kijowski, Frances Kaufman, Alice Kottler, Alma Krow, Marian . Koch, Stella Kinchloe, Laura Kimelman, Sydney Krow, Harvey Linn, William Lacey, Harry Latta, Charlotte Leslie, Edna Littlewood, Earl Lane, Aurelia Leckman, Nellie Leonard, Virginia Lebowitz, Ruth Lyden, Alma Levandowsky, Catherine Long, Bernice Leatherman, Elizabeth Lindquist, Jack Montgomery, William Miller, Frank 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l74l I I I I I I I 'I I I I I Molin, Elmer Middlemiss, Edward McElravy, Frank Meredith, James McKenery, Adalou Meyers, Harriet Matta, Edward Meyers, Herbert Mooney, Gertrude Manning, Marie Mehaffey, Herbert McDonnell, Nora McDonald, Anthony Munnell, Clyde Mulligan, James Mosby, Estelle Miller, Linus McKay, James McCaughan, James Moore, James Melet, Sydney Meizlik, Sylvia Mosher, John Minnick, Beryl McBride, Anna McElwee, Rosemary McKeever, Alice Miller, Ross Myers, Dorothy Mushrush, Helen Mehn, Theona McClintock, Martha Mansfield, Hannah McDonald, Jack Mendlowitz, Leonard McBride, George Moore, Dorothy Novack, Edward Navaroli, Joseph Newhouse, Helen Noren, Ellsworth Yough-a.-Mon The Junior Rooster-Continued Newcomer, Dorothy Nee, William Nelson, Marion Nelson, Eva Nilson, Anna Otis, Alieta Olson, Mae Pulsinelli, Falco Pry, Harr Y Perkowski, Joseph Peterson, Edna Plummer, Marie Pechar, Anna Parton, Elsie Peebles, Helen Palm, Herbert Patterson, Louise Petrella, Mary Jane Porter, Louise Prescott, Ruth Pratt, Ralph Pry, Hugh Panetta, Alice Popoxwitz, Stanley Qualters, Frank Quinn, Albert Reuff, Gordon Reed, Atwater Rosenbleet, Pearl Rickard, Elizabeth Rankin, Lois Rigsby, Richard Rathgeb, Helen Rathgeb, John Ritchie, Elmore Royle, Sara Rack, Morris Sullivan, Philip Sowash, William Smith, Leo Shaw, Paul Schoervrth, Michael Skager, Carl Smith, Myrtle Shaw, John Sniderman, Rose Siviec, Walter Simonazzi, William Swetta, John Smail, Alfretta Sior, Charles Sheridan, James Scott, Lucretia Stauffer, Annabelle Speck, Christy Snyder, William Shaffer, Harry Schweitzer, Earl Sandmeyer, Edwin Samuels, Meyer Stern, Norman Smith, Herbert Simco, Mary Simpson, Gertrude Smolnicky, William Snyder, Thelma Sowa, Helen Spindler, John Stoops, Esther Smith, Margaret Smith, Lillian Skiba, Frances Shermer, Selma Smythe, Katherine Squibb, Mary Tomko, John Tokar, John Thomas, Steven 1 1 1 Tell all the world that summer's here again With song and joy, tell them that they may know How, on the hillside, in the shining fields New clumps of violets and daisies grow. Tell all the world that summer's here again, That white clouds voyage through a sky so still With blue tranquillity, it seems to hand One windless tapestry from hill to hill. Tongreen, Gretha Trimble, Lenore Toms, Margaret Turner, Carl Taksel, Maurice Tauber, Lillie Trauger, Elizabeth Vogel, Paul Van Patten, Earl Vandergrift, Virgilia WVright, James Wallace, Walter Wadsworth, Ross Wilson, Alden Williams, William Welch, Tom Whitehead, Frank Wukoson, Rudolph Wingand, Frank White, Edward Wells, Richard Weinberg, Joe Wolf, Stella Wirth, John Wilson, David West, Helen Weisz, Renee Weisz, Eleanor Wolf, Paul Weitzner, Betty Wisser, Elvira Whitaker, Margaret Whitehouse, Allan Waters, Rogers Yoder, Edwin Zwibel, Helen Zimmerman, Ruth SELECTED I 9 2 7 I I V I I M M I I I I I I I I I I I l75l 5 I I I I- I I I I I I I I I L I g I Yough-a.-Mon THE IuNIoR CHRONOLOGY HE morning of September 9, 1924, found us a bewildered group of six hundred or more timid Freshmen milling about the side entrance of the awe-inspiring white building known as Tech High, into the mysteries of which we were, half fear- fully and half exuberantly, waiting to be initiated. Then, when the doors opened, and we became lost in a labyrinth of halls, where everybody seemed to hurry by without taking the slightest notice of us, we felt as though we had entered upon a terrible existence. The first day was the worst, however, and after becoming acquainted with our teachers and learning the ways of high school life, which seemed so strange to us at Hrst, we soon acquired the sophisticated conceit by which one can always recognize a Freshman. With this egotism came the feeling that We were indispensable to the organization of which we were a part. Striving to imitate our elders, we formed glee clubs and an orchestra, subscribed for and contributed to the Red and Blue and the annual. In athletics, too, we supported our Alma Mater loyally, in defeat as well as in victory. Undaunted by studies and exams, we grew to like our new environment so well that, when the first term ended, a few of us had become so enamoured with its pleasures that we decided to remain Fresh- men for another year, while the rest of us took a step further toward graduation and entered the Sophomore class in 1925. This, indeed, Was a triumph, for now we could look with disdain upon the insignificant Frosh . The superiority of our position did not turn our heads, however, and, after the novelty of new teachers, new subjects, and new faces in class rooms and study halls had worn off, we resumed our former excellence in studies and in athletics. This time we were encouraged by seeing members of our own class representing us on the football field and on the basketball floor. Now the feeling of conceit, which We had felt as Freshmen, was replaced by the more substantial knowledge that we were really doing something for our school. We began to take a conscious pride in ourselves, feeling that we were beginning to be noticed. Nine months passed quickly, and now, in 1926, we find ourselves Juniors. The Seniors, who once seemed so lofty, have recognized us by extending to us the invita- tion to attend their social activities. In a few months We hope to be able to step into their places, and from there to go out into the world, where each of us will continue to strive to make the class of '28 the best that old Tech has ever turned out. I ALICE PANETTA, '28 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I L., M l76l I I J I I I I W I I I I I L ,Brough-a.-Mon Anderson, Jennie Arthurs, Esther Allison, Edna Albine, Roland Andrews, Mathew Andreaon, John Atron, Marian Anton, Cora Austin, Clarence Anderson, Dorothy Ailstock, Pearl Angelo, Josephine Ailstock, Helen Blackburn, Miriam Buck, Marguerite Breletic, Mary Bobie, Anna Beck, Orville Boyd, David Bodnar, Joseph Bockius, Louise Beckman, Carl Bahm, Flora Bowser, Hazel Barnes, Emma Belpuliti, Leda Broadbent, Clifford Bilz, Hazel Bumbaugh, Robert Burrough, Marjorie Bishop, Annetta Bardanel, Carmella Bartha, Freda Bartha, Rose Boyd, Drusilla Brittan, Chrissie Bondi, Frank Burkman, Herbert Bradley, Jennie Bell, Martha Bergstrom, Walborg Bodnar, John Brannen, Harry Banky, Jack Beaumont, Bess Bouxgo, William Berkovitz, Adolphe Burger, Joseph Balint, John Baczkowski, Walter Banisky, Sam Bastasich, Ivan Burtnett, Mitchell Brown, Alvin Brewer, William Svnphnmnrra THE SOPHOMORE ROSTER Berger, Milton Bashista, John Biddlestone, William Buono, Arthur Bartlett, Helen Baker, Anna Badstibner, Elmer Benson, Ted Cox, Charles Carns, Albert Campbell, Dorothy Cibula, Grace Caslow, Beatrice Conlin, Hazel Coleman, Hazel Conrad, Ella Crossland, Sara Campbell, Louise Campbell, Clara Christman, Helen Cindric, Agnes Clayton, Helen Crissman, Raymond Cartner, Edna Cothery, Thomas Callahan, Clark Crawford, James Countryman, Mable Chotiner, Joseph Calloway, Edward Collins, Robert Crawley, Frederick Coup, Catherine Cook, William Calhoun, Jean Christian, Elizabeth Copper, Edwin Donet, Harry Donnelly, John Dillon, Harriet Downey, Elizabeth Davidson, Garnette Dyckes, Willard Dulany, Wayne Dippold, Harry Dickinson, William Douglas, Crete Douglas, Sadie Donet, Martha Danko, Johanna Donaldson, Ruth Dennison, Kemmer De Augustine, John Dudek, John Donaldson, Helen Ditmore, Kenneth Eckles, Herbert Ehrhart, Anna Eicher, Ruth Eger, Joseph Edwards, Margaret Engwer, Alma Eichelberger, Virginia Evans, William Eisele, Carrie Edelman, Pearl Evans, Finley Eisele, Margaret Ferrar, Albert Ferrie, Annetta Friedman, Dorothy Ferree, George Franklin, Vernon Friedman, Max Fencik, Pauline Feldman, Samuel Forman, George Fox, Esther Franko, Laura Forsythe, Earl Forsythe, Sylvester Friedman, Estelle Farkas, Isabelle Fenich, Louis Friberg, Oscar Filson, Josiah Fehr, Leonard Foster, Sam Farkas, Milton Friedman, Albert Forsythe, James Fitzpatrick, John Fichtner, John Farkas, Sidney Gerosky, Mary Gustafson, Clifford Gerendash, Arthur Geruschat, Paul George, Mary Geltz, Hodgson Geltz, Victor Gayvert, Mildred Griffin, Harold Gibson, John Gross, Annette Guttman, Lillian Graflious, Kathleen Garlon, Margaret Gustafson, Laura Greenfield, Irene Grace, Margaret Gibson, Foster Ginnell, Carl Gilchrist, Marjorie Ilufton, Mildred Hoffman, George Hall, Blanche Hook, Zella Hobson, Florence Hackler, Estella Hager, Edith Harden, Elizabeth Hawthorne, Leslie Hajduk, Andrew Housaman, Louise Hicks, Bernard Hoffman, Fenton Hart, Robert Hardwick, Caroline Hollis, James Harrison, Edith Hassell, Earl Hoffman, Willard Holliday, George Horn, Dorothy Harrison, Pearl Halpert, Lewis Hockman, Lucile Hyman, Anna Hilty, George Herskowitz, Selma Hopkins, Myra Harris, Helen Herschelvoath, Margi Hyak, Anna Hutsko, Mike Hurst, Harold Hickman, Walter Harrison, Harry Hakanson, Frank Haberman, Dallas Holbrook, Edward Hibbs, Arthur Helms, Mable Heatherington, Rea Heath, Clyde Hare, Robert Henskey, George Haberman, Rose Hurley, Wilkes Hallett, Vance 1927 M M I - I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l77l I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon , Iscoitz, Morley Ivchevich, Braun Illman, Thelma Isenberg, Nell Judkovitz, Rose Jack, Alice johnson, Thos. james, Robert Johnson, Nellie Johnson, Kenneth johnson, Hilda Jones, Zella Jones, Nancy Jones, Dorothy Johnston, Betty jacob, Margaret Jameson, Harold Jones, Herbert Jones, Olive Jones, Keith Jenkins, Raymond Kubanick, Edward Knott, Nicholas Kyak, Anna Kniepkamp, Susan Kirk, George H. Kohl, Olive Kirschke, Frieda Kugler, Anna Kalinowski, Charles Kaler, Ollie Kessling, William Kalina, Katherine Kees, Nettie Kearney, William Kimelman, Marian Klausman, Louis Kidney, Raymond Kruper, Albert Katona, Michael Krajack, Joe Kline, Ellen Kusic, Louise Klein, Marion Kells, Catherine Keller, Fred Klein, Harvey Kurien, James Kruszek, Victor Kerezsi, Margaret Klein, Milton Lofgren, Herbert Lunderstadt, Helen Lyle, Jean Longabaugh, Helen Levine, Evelyn Le Breton, Mable Lykosky, Frank Leeper, Victor Lacey, Harold Leezer, Richard Lord, john Lotz, Marie Loya, Michael Lofstrom, Teresia The Sophomore Roster-Continued Lytle, Blaine Little, William Lester, Edna Lloyd, William Lonetti, james Langhart, Ray Lottig, Lois Lacey, James Logan, George Lux, Alvin Leaghty, William Lotz, Clyde Morlock, Lewis Mitchell, Curtis McCoy, Hazel Marquardt, Frank Mann, Millard , V Maher, William Miller, Bernice Meyers, Fannie McKeever, Virginia McLellan, Helen McBride, Marie McNutt, Raymond f Mullen, Edward Mossburg, Philip Miller, Emerson Murray, Louise Milligan, Mildred Manning, Jack Mclean, Ruth Miller, Stephen McAraw, ,Alice Metzler, Emma Millington, Della Murdoch, Samuel Mauchline, Isabelle Mains, Jesse Mansfield, Larue Matthews, Merle McBride, Thelma Mandel, Jane Menzies, Katherine Morrison, Paul McCracken, Richard Maxwell, Graydon Moffat, Florence Mihalek, Martin Metz, Royd Merlin, Alcide Miller, Ruby Mercer, Cecelia Mackanic, Lucille Meyers, Mearlyn Miller, Earnest McClure, Allen Martin, Louis Melegh, Anna McAra, Edna Markus, Anna Malloy, Sam McKee, Helen McCoy, Charles Marnell, Jennie Miller, Billie Merz, Elbert Mehlman, Esther Maund, Richard Malin, Louis Matesig, Cora McDowell, Margaret Meyers, Gertrude Monson, joseph Mellinger, James McKee, Sara Moody, Wilbur Molnar, Eugene Morrow, Gladys Metz, Howard Mayfield, Charles McWilliams, Ralph Mull, Henry Moffat, Herbert Marton, Frank Nelson, Alice Nickols, Rachel Newman, Raymond Nelson, Margaret Nystrom, Malvina Nicholls, Alice Oncea, John Osterman, Evalyn Orbell, William Olson, Lillian O'Leska, William Palmer, Helen Palm, Lillian Papke, Marie,- Patterson, Agnes Penney, Betty Pierce, Carolyn Pliska, Mike Paule, John - Plumb, Merle Price, Stella I Paslawsky, -Olga Patterson, Anna M. Patterson, Lois Patterson, Dorothy Petty, Francis Petach,John , Peebles, Edward Pittler, Harold Parucha, John Packard, Eugene Planchak, George Peterson, Carl Pechuta, Mary Pearson, Alice Payne, Isabel Pomnian, George Pocivanik, Ludwick Pavlic, John Peters, Florence Pry, Thomas Russell, Margaret Roper, Frank Robinson, james Roderick, Ada Roney, Virginia Rudolph, Violet Rausch, Leonard Richards, Louise Reiber, Margaret Raymer, Leona Ritenour, Robert Robinson, joseph Rodgers, Paul Roscoe. Gertrude Reinstein, Nellie Rudolph, john Reese, William Ralston, Edgar Rudolph, Franklin Richards, Gladys Rosenberger, Margaret Regester, Frances Smith, Eunice Swanson, Miriam Stern, Margaret Seddon, Rose Shaw, Walter Simmons, Elizabeth Sandmeyer, Paul Stark, Joe Szymanek, Henry Sullivan, Edward Snyder, Ruth Signet, Margaret Sawders, Viola Smith, Treva Sobkowicz, joseph Siegel, Lilvan Shatzer, Dorothy Sibley, Cornelius Sinsel, Louise Slomberg, Gertrude Spiegel, Hilda Snaith, George South, William Sharrow, John Schmidt, William Schmidt, Charles Sakas, Louis Strong, Ella Mae Schiffman, Dorothy Staniek, Anthony Session, William Session, Thomas Swartz, Matthew Smith, Kenneth Scott, Otis Scott, William Stewart, Helen Stern, Erma Shelton, Robert Soles, Wesley Smith, James Sundstrom, Dorothy Shuppe, Elvira Stallings, John Styche, Thomas Seeger, Louis Schroeder, Bill Smith, Walter Slifko, Paul Sleeth, Ardella Sjoberg, Frederick 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I 'I I I I I I I I I M l73l I I I I I K I 1 I I I I I L I Ei, Yough-ea-Mon to I The Sophomore Roster-Continued Senko, Julia M i Ulm, Dorothy Weimer, Clifford Weinberg, Frank re. Sant, Evelyn Ulewicz, Robert Wea e, Walter Williams, Eleanor Stewart, Loriss Ward, Howard Wallace, Adolph J Sjoberg, Ella Vidnovic, Samuel Wiegand, Kathryn Wisser, Curtis ' Safier, Sarah Vukmanic, Joseph Wilson, John Weisberger, Nettie Spiegel, Stanley Wolf, Jack Webb, Edward H. N'augh, Raymond Wood, Isabelle Winkelvoss, William A Tomac, George Wilson, Roger Wisser, Laura Tedeisco, Lawrence Willman, Lloyd Watson, Katherine - Theodorowitch, Anna Weiss, Sidney P. Weinberg, Bessie York, Weldon . Trax, Katherine Walsh, Helen Whitaker, Marjorie Yecies, Sidney , ' Throstle, Edgar Wisser, Dorothy Wilson, Regina Yanks, Oscar L Thomas, Jean Wood, David Winter, William Yukas, Michael Tully, Frank Wallace, Helen Wiskeman, john Thomas, Robert Woolrich, Richard Welch, Joseph ' Turley, Charles Wilner, Beatrice White, Lois Zollars, Jean Tomlins, George Williams, Cyril Walton, Jane Zobel, Antonette Thorpe, Grace Weinstraub, Mollie Whittington, Ora Zwibel, Louis TT W Y f 1 F' , 1' A Solrloquy As I sat one day in the front hall conning the encyclopedia, I heard a whisper. I looked around, but ' saw no one. I again tried to pin my thoughts on the printed page, but, again I heard the whisper. After a more careful survey of the hall, I decided that it was the statue whichvhad whispered. I listened closely, and this is what I heard: I have stood here for several years watching students come and go. The eager Freshmen, the hard- X ened Sophomores, the indifferent juniors, and the serious Seniors, all have passed. Many have achieved ,, fame and honor, others have not. I have seen them coming morning after morning, some with hurrying steps, some with lagging feet, the guilty-faced laggards hastening as though the Sin-of-Being-Late were i' chasing them. Not all my time has been spent in looking on. Some has been given over to listening in. 4 Excuses, good and bad, legal and illegal, come to my ears. Shufiling of feet and the sound of voices like - the chattering of magpies, rise about my ears like Bables of Confusion. Bits of conversation such as, 'Whom are you taking to the hop?' 'What's your new dress like?' 'Lend me a pencil.' 'Got your Alge- L bra done?' 'Lend me your Latin.' and countless other queries of the deepest concern to those who are assigned heavy lessons as their daily tasks, come to my ears. Students, I suppose, will ever be the same. Let me see. I said once, 'With charity for all, with malice toward none.' I wonder if there is anything U in that pertinent to this high-school-boy-and-girl situatione-I wonder! The bell! I sat for a minute while the pupils poured out during the exchange of classes. I Watched the great man's sad countenance. A smile lighted his features, smoothing the creases made by the Hnger -- of Time. None paid him any heed. It broke into a kindly, human, understanding smile as he looked down upon the blustling students. I heard him whisper with a conviction, Yes, Yes, it's true. , B. O. A., '27 '- I 9 2 M I I. I I I I I I I 7 I I I I I I M l79l I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I L I . Yough-a.-Mon THE SoPHoMoRE CHRONOLOGY N THE beautiful morning of September 8, 1925, confusion found its place in many homes. As I looked toward the east, I noticed a black speck in the sky. As I gazed, it increased in size, until finally I recognized it as a dirigible. Its appear- ance seemed to fit in with the confusion of the morning. ' But-why, the immense figure seemed to stop as it neared me, and now I could read the words, Class of 1929, printed in large black letters on its side. A rope ladder was dropped, and something beckoned me to climb into the plane. As I entered, I looked around and saw a vast crowd of young people entirely unknown to me. Anxiety prevailed on each face. Somehow I immediately felt at home with the crowd. This was probably because I was just as fresh and green as the rest. Before I really knew what it was all about, I felt the ship moving! Soon I learned from my mates that we had begun a nine months' journey through the Land of Knowledge' '. How exciting it all was! Every minute seemed to uncover something new! The hours became days, days, months, during which new exciting events took place. Football season headed everything! We witnessed all the games and. cheered with all our might. Why, we were now Freshmen! Red and Blues , concerts, the French play, the operetta, all brought joy to us, even tho' we didn't know what some of them were all about. At last came the Yough-A-Mon! I-Iow pleased we were to be seen carrying this big book! During the whole trip we had but four accidents. These were examinations. During these encounters a few of us were hurt, and were left behind, while others came through unharmed. Then came June, and the end of the first journey. Like all journeys, part of it had been made in sunshine and part in shadow. After a short three months had elasped, another journey was begun. This, however, was so diderent from the first, for now, take notice, we are Sophomores, a little shy, but oh so dignified! The Freshmen are but tots to us. The routine of last year still continues, but now we are deeply interested in everything that goes on. Our members are represented by a few class members in each organization. These provide entertainment for us. We are probably not as carefree as Freshmen. We have learned to think, which, as you may know, is a wonderful achievement. Now we are ''grown-ups''-upperclassmen! Oh, at first it seemed too good to be true, but now we have become used to it, and are looking forward to the next big step in our lives, becoming Juniors of M. H. S. LUCILE K. MACKANIC, '29 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M rsoi 1 0 ree 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 YOUSH-QjMAOh Allllf Artman, Eugene Arosell, Einar Anderson, Garnet Ackerman, Virginia Allsopp, James Andreychalk, George Altman, Virginia Altmiller, William Armstrong, Marion Ackron, James Abraham, Edith Allen, Marie Anderson, Harry Ayers Jack Bergstrom, Margaret Burnstein, Ethel Bates, Regena Broman, Elmer Barth, Louise Booker, Benjamin Burns, Hugh Bernhardy, Clarence Barnes, Louis Bostak, Ernest Bowden, Lester Bunbarger, Edna Bunner, Grace Burress, Bealey Brown, Bernard Bryant, Carl Barynas, Regina Baczkowski, Alberta Bell, Victor Boyer, Adelene Buono, Aurelio Burge, Lewis Blackistone, Edna Mae Black, Beulah Berthalon, Steve Beck Helen Badders, Corinne Barth, Elmer Bashur, Edward Burns, Catherine Byard, Bryce Benn, James Baker, Melvin Byerley, Gertrude Brenner, James Badders, George Jr Bathurst, Verna Bickerton, Ruth Black, Helen L. Bloomstead Mary Ann Bumburger, Hubert ' illrrahmm A THE FRESHMEN ROSTER Buckley, Charles Bruce, Edith Balint, Helen Bergquist, Margaret Birr, Freeda Black, Ruth Bresh, Julia Brown, Jessie Broder, Nancy Burroughs, Claire Berquist, Edward Bobitch, john Bryer, Ernest Butella, William Bumbaugh, Vernan Brandy, Alfred Berquist, Genevieve Bales, Paul Barkemeyer, Margaret Barlow, Margaret Bridges, Victor Burke, William Burbridge, Robert Bringe, Emanuel Blice, Raymond Betz, Merle Brinkos, John Brletic, Sylvester Brletic, Steve Berger, Beatrice Boyle, Genevieve Bramhall, Roy Beard, Ebert Berkowitz, Evelon Brletic, Irene Brown, Elsie Bumbaugh, Leah Burnstein, Rosella Broberg, Fenwick Biddle, Mary E. Birnkrant, Louis Burroughs, James Bondy, Dorothy Beswick, Davis Brant, Earl Burton, William Catanzaro, Anthony Conant, Maude Considine, Kathryn Charles, Mary Crissman, Robert Cook, Thomas Collier, John Cowan, Martin Cohen, Bernard Cleary, Regis Crossland, Wilma Copeland, Chester Christy, Howard Campbell, May Carlos, Arthur Curran, Mary Chase, Betty Cupchick, Margaret Cothery, Dorothy Copan, Helen Cieslewicz, Ruth Carter, Robert Cornell, james Criik, William Cverna, Pauline Cruden James Cano, Mary Cray, Helen Crooks, Louise Childs, Olive Carlson Ferne Carozza, Quentin k Carter, Emma Cready, Marie Coleman, Margaret , Cray, Thomas Creek, Edna Campbell, Hector Cardwell Robert Christner, Lois Coleman, Billy Carlson, Clair Christ, Margaret Cline, David Chmielewski, Stanley Carstenson, Elizabeth Caldwell, Louise Campbell, Margaret Chontos, Margaret Connor, Elizabeth Caughey, Robert Conl'n, Norman Clark, William Clark, Arthur Downes, Florence Donovan, William Dougglas, Martha Delp, John Davis, Arthur Downes, William Donaldson, Robert Davidson, Donald Douglas, Ralph Darling, Ida Dzcabaczunski, Steve Duma, Helen Dore, Dolores Del Signore, Cecelia Donaldson, Thelma Duboer, Sylvia Duncan, D'uane Duncan, Neil Denning, Harry Duke, James Doyle, Ruth De Vincentis, Alfred Daerr, Lawrence Ditter, Conrad Douglas, Thomas Downham, Winifred DiCecco, Julia Downie, Betty Denning, Jack Disegi, Ben Dunn, Freda Darling, Abe Drye, Marcus Edwards, William Eckbreta, Wilbur Edmundson, Howard Erickson, Helen Englert, Elizabeth Edmundson, Jane Elkins, Grace Erdody, Mary Emerson, Esther Everett, Isabelle Eilart, Thomas Emery, David Englert, Elizabeth Engwer, Hazel Elini, Dorothy Foroler, Kathryn Frazier, Grace Foster, Ruth Fraley, Henry Ferguson, Adelaide Fichtner, Frank Fields, Thomas Farkas, Daniel Farmer, Ethel Fazenbaker, Lewis Friedman, Milton Fravega, Arthur Finney, Helen Franks, Millie Farkas, Ben Ference, John 1927 M l Y I J l I I Y I I l l i l I 1 lilll 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 I 4 4 4 4 4 L 4 Yough-a.-Mon Finkel, Howard ' Firestone, Bertrum Flickinger, Lois Forsythe, Ina Foster, Ed. Fraley, Julia Fritz, Walter French, Donald Ferrar, Anthony Fenster, Sara Firestone, Ruth Gordon, Herbert Gilbert, Howard Grace, Walter Gostovich, Mary Garland, Percy Garlow, Ruth Grinage, Brinton Goodman, Louise Gillman, Catherine Griffith, Charles Gorman, Margaret Garrath, Goldie Griffin, Richard Greenneld, Harry Green, Elsie Gilmore, Marie Gibson, Regis Germelc, Joseph Grahn, Eva Goe, Raymond Gilbert, Mildred Gillespie, Lucile Gothard, Mary Gross, Margaret Gladkowski, Walter Gross, Aurella Gross, Edythe Griffiths, George Gothart, Virginia Garr, James Gilchrist, William Grifliths, Eva Gennars, Philip Geci, Mike Herskowitz, Harry Hevoker, Louise Hutchison, Albert Hughes, Margaret Hoss, Harriet Harris, Collette Hamilton, Clark Hackett, Fern Harze, Clarence Hurley, Patricia Hugo, Cecelia Hoffmeister, Helen Hoffmeister, Agnes Hickey, Lavern Haberman, Harry Hess, George Huston, Vera Halle, Bertha Hamilton, Boyd Harper, Perry Hess, Howard The Freshman Roster-Continued Huff, Helen Harper, Elsie Hartman, Georgia Horwath, Elmer Hemminger, Paul Hoffman, Emma Halleran, Owen Hopkins, Mary Hyman, Harry Herskowitz, Eugene Hendrie, Helen Hardy, David Henry, Ralph Harrison, Chas. Hallett, Kenneth Henry, Leona Hayes, Lotus Henry, Charles Henderson, Robert Haughey, Alice Haben, Charles Hornfeck, Anthony Hruby, Joseph Herr, Elmore Herr, Wesley Hochman, Thomas Heidenfilder, Robert Herbertson Louis Hi-l, Mary Harrison, Neel Hannegan, Albert Hadberg, Edward Helmstadter, Janet Hatcher, Elsie Herskovitz, Grace Hoffmeister, Patricia Hrinko, Mary Haralem, Marie Hanson, Agnes Hall, Eugene Hickey, Sara Hauser, Albert Inks, Bernice Inks, Beatrice Ivey, Dorothy Israel, Sidney Illman, Dorothy Israel, Milton Ivkovich, Burke Izod, Robert Irwin, Edward Imhof, Le Roy Jacobs, Goldie Jones, Edythe Jacob, Andy J Johnston, Elsie Johnston, Edith Johnson, Hazel Jacobyansky, Anna Jackson, Anna Johnson, Carl Johns, Sara Jordan, Donald Johnson, De Witt Johnson, Mardella Jorgenson, Gladys Joshowitz, Isadore Johnson, Sylvia Juraszek, Lottie Joy, Bernard Johnson, Lawrence Jaycox, Herbert Jones, Eddie James, Richard James, Pearl Joyce, Regina Jeney, John Jenkins, Helen Jones, Helen James, Earl Johnston, Theodore Jensen, Vincent Kuhn, James Kittle, Joe Kelly, Thomas Kaczynski, Anthony Klein, Milton Keresi, Matilda Kenney, Marie Kohl, Elmer Keen, Ethel Kalstone, Marion Kaler, William Kalkbrenner, Earl Kika, Mike Kovatz, Ethel Klein, Ruth Kindt, Marian Kimelman, Harry Kinkaid, Mildred Kanach, Louise Kramer, Sinnie Krieger, Lajorie Kunicky, Michael Kozak, Margaret Kostyzak, Johanna Knott, Michael Koos, Mildred Karabin, Michael Kopers, Joseph Kobak, Steve Keddie, Daniel Kazmierczak, Alexander Karabin, Michael Karabin, John Kim, Ruth, Thelma Kundman, Frank Kurry, Michael Klasnick, George Killgallon, William Kaminsky, Abraham Kemp, Jack ' Konkol, Alex Kier, Glenn Klein, Tillie Kushner, Eleanore Kastler, Elinor Kosanovich Stephen Keller, William Kear, Ethel Kutzfara, Frank Kelsch, Louis Kirkland, Hallie Littlejohn, Alice Lawson, Thomas Lander, Muriel Ludwick, Robert Lindskog, Arlington Lape, Edward Landesman, Louis Loefller, Helen Livingston, Dorothy Lundell, Minnie Lowery, Helen Lacock, Cora Lammie, Benjamin Law, Alice Lickert, Edward Lucas, John Logan, Roberta La Rosa, Angeline Lemon, Grace Long, Mary E. Long, James Levine, Helen Lechalk, Helen Lightner, Ruth Lindberg, Louise Loeb, Genevieve Lewis, Sarah Lueckert, Kenneth Lichman, Joseph Land, Jospeh Leonard, Francis Lawniczak, Watson Lebovitz, Eugene Lindberg, Charles Larson, Walter Lynch, Thomas Landman, Lillian Little, Charles Kindskog, Gertrude Layton, Arthur Lindberg, Thomas Lyle, Verna Lofstrom, Ernest Loy, Clarence Maskarinec, Anna Monaghan, Anna Massung, Katherine Minnick, Howard Moore, Charles Moody, Carl Mollis, Achilles Miller, Edward McLaughlin, Regis McCune, Willock McCune, John Maurer, Ethel Minnick, Ruth McClees, George McCleary, Kenneth Morris, Mary Magnus, Joseph Muschat, Harriet Mooney, Clara Melomet, Max Markwood, Francis Maddox, Gertharine McElravy, Louise 9 2 7 M I l I I I U I I I I I I I I I M 82J I I I I I I W 'I I I I IT I L I Yough-a.-Mon The Freshman Roster-Continued Meyers, Glenn McDowell, Veda Moritz, Israel Molin, Carl Mikaloff, Edward Myers, Rose Manning, Kathryn Maturkanig, Albert Majda, Frank Marksteiner, Peter McGovern, Sanford Mervash, Rose Marshall, jean Moore, Herbert Mussulin, Ainiel McMillan, Sara Marquardt, Mary Mazurek, Elizabeth McKenery, Helen Mervis, Mildred Miller, Marion Moskowitz, Irene Miller, Ronald Mullineaux, Clarence MacDonald, Kenneth Moore, Raymond Mangan, Catherine McBride, Eugene Malloy, John Maxwell, Myron McCune, Martha McKenery, Gwendolyn Monfort, joseph Mullen, Patrick Metzler, Charles Mehaffey, Randolph McNulty, Ellis McKinney, Jack Maxie, Verner Mathews, James McGregor, Margaret McKenery, Margaret Morgan, Nan Morgan, Gertrude Montgomery, Evelyn Miller, Irene McDougall, James McCarthy, Mary Maxwell, Helen Mann, Ethel Mehaffey, Martha Mols, Anthony Mooney, William MacFarlane, Norris Mader, james Malseed, Beatrice McKee, Jack Milligan, Hazel Moskowitz, Ruth Meyers, Grace - Miller, Charles Macbeth, Kenneth Malinic, George Middlemiss, Harry Mihucz, Mike Norby, Marie Norder, Gustave Newman, Paul Netzel, Loraine Nield, Sara Nystrom, Ingrid Nayhouse, Shirley Nordin, Anna Neish, John Nehez, James Norton, Albert Nelson, Marjorie Nystrom, Victor Newell, David Nelson, Eleanor Newman, Delbert Noll, Elizabeth Neel, Amy Orth, Dorothy Owens, Delores Ondeka, Irene Osborne, Helen Ord, John Osterman, Lawrence Olsen, Elmer Olack, Bertha Oleck,Jose h Overand, Thurman Orr, Rea Provins, Loretta Patterson, Margaret Paisley, Mary Pearson, Carl Pressman, Irving Pflumm, Frank Pando, Vasil Petach, Mary Peterson, Clarence Pierce, Donald Piper, Harry Polansky, Margaret Popp, Dorothy Palm, Hildur Piconi, John Pollard, Dan Petach, Anna Pryor, Cyrus Prilliman, Warner Pearce, Mary Pearce, Margaret Pohl, Minnie Pratt, Myrtle Pulsinelli, Hilda Pack, Ethel Polrywko, John Parucha, Leonard Parker, Molly Patterson, Robert Pilette, Frank Patton, Floyd Pflumrn, john Porter, William Pollack, William Pierorazia, Julia Peterson, Evelyn Palkovits, Rosella Pohodick, Mike Quinn, John Quinn, Margaret Quick, Rhodes Rippel, Ruth- Ring, Charles Ryan, Charles Read, Helen Isabel Roth, Violet Rosenzweig, Sara Remas, Anna Randolph, Mattie Railingshafer, Grace Rogerson, Ethel Russler, La Verne Riggs, Mary E. Rasp, William Ripple, Arthur Rollason, Dorothy Richards, Nellie Richards, Mary Reed, Louella Rainforth, Joseph Reilley, joseph Rodgers, Mary Rogers, Betty Rowley, Mary Rarabough, Wilbur Richards, William Rosen, Pearl Rosner, Pauline Robertson, Anna Rudolph, Elizabeth Ross, Eleanor Roney, Elda Roche, Frank Reczynski, Edward Richards, Edith Roth, William Robb, Nick Reed, William Shaw, Mable Stretmoyer, Martha Stine, David Shatzer, Eunice Svedberg, Elmer Salitros, Nicholas Susan, Joseph Sunstein, Sylvan Solomon, Milton Smith, Gerard Smith, Bernard Simon, Ralph Shriner, Edward Savage, Sarah Stewart, Ernest Spalla, Thomas Schoeller, Erma Sawders, Helen Stephan, Anna Skepstedt, Helen Siskind, Lillie Simon, Ethel Shaw, Samuel Sayles, Geneva. Springer, Mable Springer, Frank Specht, Katherine Sedlock, Joseph Starr, Francis Smith, Willis Smith, Howell Schultz, Dorothy Starr, Homer Steel, Mae Swanson, Robert Stiger, Ludden Southern, Alice Smith, Clarence Shincup, Leon Speciale, Rosaline Small, Mary Louise Slack, Emma Simpson, Erlean Sullivan, Leo Stewart, Helen Stencil, Ernest Smith, Lake Erie Skolyo, Mary Sullivan, Daniel ' Schulhof, Edythe Shanofski, Francis Schoeller, Grace Stewart, DeWayne Smith, Melvin Sheets, Byron Seastedt, Walter Sedlak, Steve Seitz, William Siegel, David Stratton, Anna Stripsky, Alex Scott, Allen Schultz, Francis Stewart, Finley Surmacz, Joseph Samuels, Sylvia Sowa, John A. Slawita, Henry Shannon, Gertrude Sharik, Mary Sinkuc, Michael Spare, Emily Simpson, William Satterheld, Mary Shaw, Helen Louise Soles, ,lack Spaugy, Alice Srulson, Marion Solvay, John Strahl, Lloyd Sneddon, George Sinechak, John Shriner, Michael Simak, Michael Sandor, Joseph Trathowen, Clyde Toth, William Throp, Carl Torrence, George Toth, Margaret Tilden, Alice Thomas, Emmett Tonnell, Edwin 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I, I M E831 I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I Yougkp-9.-Mon Tracey, George Thomas, Jacob Tomko, Michael Thorton, William Treewasser, William Toth, Joseph Tobias, Eleanor Teasdale, Anna Taksel, Sylvia Tuckfelt, Hilda Thomas, La Rue Thornburg, Myrtle Thornburg, Robert Ulm, Harry Ulm, Chester Uhrich, George Umansky, Annette Unger, Edith Uram, Milton Van Horn, Mary Voelker, Idella Vasko, Betty Vargo, Agnes The Freshman Roster-Continued Vallance, Ross Vaughn, Dorothy Voelker, Edmond Vigoric, Sam Vukovich, John Vano, Genevieve Veway, William Vinnovich, Boyd Weaver, Sara Williams, Charlotte Wise, Leslie Wiskeman, Pauline Wild, Harry Ward, Chatherine Wood, George Wilson, Clyde Whissen, Arthur Willson, Herbert Wray, Mary Waltower, William Watkins, Winston Ward, Evelyn Welsh, Ruth Watkins, Dorothy 1 Stand Straight: Step firmly, thro Wilkens, Robert Walline, Elsie Walfish, Ethel Wargo, Albert Weiss, Paul Welsh, Isabel Weinbert, Maurice Wirth, Emma Weiss, Charles Wilson, Grace Wilson, Alfred Wittman, Margaret Whitefield, Velnan Westman, Anna Walters, Hazel Williams, Adelia Williams, Gladys White, Martha Whaley, Donald Weber, Dorothy Wajdyla, Joseph Wilhelm, John Weiss, Bernice Wolf, Ruth White, Robert f 1 w your weightg The Heaven is high above your head, The good gray road is faithful to your tread. Be Strong: Sing to your heart a battle song, Though hidden foemen lie in wait, Something is there that can smile at fate. ' 'Press through: Nothing can harm if you are true. And when the night comes, rest, The earth is friendly as a mother's breast. Winter, Arnold Wadman, Morrell Wilkinson, George Walrath, Edna Walna, Helen Webb, Ella Wells, Earl Weiss, Florence Wandrie, Herman Wells, Elsie Weinberger, Adolph West, Jean Wolf, Arthur Webster, Alfred Wallace, Boyd Young, Anna Yorchuck, Annie Zeaman, William Zambo, Paul Zolton, Wilbert Zwibel, Joseph Zaber, Emil Zoerb, Ruth SELECTED 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M E841 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M Yough-a.-Mon THE FRESHMAN CI-IRONOLGGY E, the Freshmen of the present term, first met as a class of McKeesport High - School on the seventh day of September, 1926. just 763 enrolled on that long to-be-remembered day. Not unlike the Freshies of former years, we went about with some trepidation as to our fate, but, after a hurried passage through groups of upper classmen, and a trip around the hall in search of our section room, which we at last entered half-fearfully, we were given a schedule for the year and started on our voyage through the sea of high school life. ' The first week was replete with many new thrills and pleasures, but most of them dwindled until they came with a monotonous regularity, which was broken only by special features at chapel and at the meetings of our section rooms, which had been organized into political units. The athletics of our school were soon under full sway, and members of our class did their share towards helping the varsity along, by selling a large number of tickets and by being present at all games to help our gladiators on by lusty cheering. A number of youths taken from our ranks also showed great ability in all phases of athletics by forming teams, which were in a class by themselves. According to the Red and Blue of February 5th, class of '30 led the entire school in the matter of students on the monthly honor roll. As in former months, so reads the issue, the Freshmen have again the greatest number on the honor roll. There are almost one hundred of them on the list. After them come the Juniors, Seniors, and Sophomoresf' So we are doing our bit in the class rooms. When the campaigns for the sale of the Red and Blue and the Annual were in progress, the class of '30 was not found wanting, and sold a fair share of each. In fact, We surpassed any previous freshman class. As members of the class of '30 we are confident that we have before us a greater opportunity than any preceeding class had to show our love for our Alma Mater and to bring glory and honor to it by deeds, which will show the community the value of being a student of McKeesport High School. We are now looking forward to the time next September when we, as Sophomores, will be able to continue the work of a student in our Alma Mater. HENRY FRALEY, '30 I 9 2 7 'N' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M f85j ' W L H561 IIIIIF IIIIL ri 6 ELCILTCS I- -I V 'l I I I I I L I IIQ I I I L. it I I 1 I r I4 1 1 I I 4 1 el I up by Yough-a,-Mon VT P- M. H. S. WINNER IN SENATORIAL EXAMINATIONS, 1 9 2 6 NE of the outstanding events on the spring calendar of our high school is the state senatorial examinations conducted by the State Department at Harrisburg. These examinations, including American history and English, brought the best students of the 44th district together to determine the leading senatorial scholar for this district. Mclieesport High was Well represented in this examination, so much so that Seymour ltscoitz, a member of the class of 1926, Won the scholarship. ' h' ans free tuition in any reputable college or university in this This scholars ip me commomvvealth. Mr. Itscoitz is now a student in the University ofP1ttsburgh. SEYMOUR Irscoirz S 9 1 2 7 1 1 L M M I I I I I I, I I 7 I T J I89j E901 1926 STUDENTS HONOR A1uoN RIPPEL, SAFIER, M DE FRIEDMAN, GERTRU PH STOMBAUGH, Joss EN HOMPSON, EFFIE MCCLEARY, HEL ALDRIDGE, HARRY T OLIVE B FLOYD DAVIS, THELMA DULANY. ENGELMAN, CE FLOREN 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1. 1 Yough-a.-Mon , HONOR STUDENTS, 1 9 2 6 A'For all your doyf prepare, Ami meet them ever ezlikej Where you are the email, bear- Wloen you are the hammer, rzfrikef' HESE lines must have been uppermost in the minds of the honor students of 1926, for their achievements Clearly indicate that they did for all their days pre- pare . Their bearing and striking brought for them the honor of representing the Class of 1926 on the annual Commencement program. Their eEorts marked them as the outstanding twelve out of a Class of more than three hundred students. To them go the laurel Wreathes for noble efforts and Worthy accomplishments. The honor students for 1926 Were: PREPARATORY: Thelma Dulany, Joseph Friedman, Florence Engleman, Marion Rippel, Fred Holmes. - SCIENTIFIC: Sam Broder, Harry Thompson. LITERARY: Olive Baldridge, Effie McCleary. COMMERCIAL: Gertrude Safier, Helen Stombaugh. INDUSTRIAL: Floyd Davis. The ranking member of the class was Thelma Dulany, with a mark of 96.29. As a tangible token of her splendid Work, Miss Dulany Was given a scholarship in the University of Pittsburgh. Seymour Itscoitz, While not one 'of the honor students on the program, added additional honors on the high school by Winning the state senatorial scholarship contest for this district. This makes six scholarships for the school during the past six years, the record now reading: SARA MAE EVERETT, '21 GEORGE KIEHL, '22 WALTER KIDNEY, '22 RICHARD BAYNE, '24 ISABELLE LANNAN, '25 SEYMOUR ITSCOITZ, '26 1 9 2 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1- 1 1 1 1' 1 1 M 1911 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Yough-a.-Mon l l I i L 1 PRoGRAM The Forty-fourth Annual Commencement June 8, 1926 OVERTURE-' 'Athalia ,.,,e,.,,e,,.,,ee,.,1w1 1 ,,11,1,,,,,,,,,ew,,,,1e,,,,,, e,,1 1 High School Orchestra lNvocAT1oN ....4,,.,c,...,,,,,,Y,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,e,,c,,o,,,1,,,,,c,,,,,,Y,,1,A,,,, MUSIC- Ballet Symphonique from CaL1irhoe .,.,....ee,e. .. High School Orchestra ORATION- ' ' The Sesqui-centennial .,,v,,.,,.,,,r,,c.....c,. r.,r, ORATION'uSCC Pennsylvania First , ORATION-' 'Pennsylvania Artists' Mendelffolan Rev. L. D. Spaugy Claezmirzade .t,t,...,...S'am Brader Gertrude .Yezfier .Florence Erzgelmem ORATION- Coal-Tar Products ,t..., .,tt,....,... F layd Dewar MUSIC'slCOSSHCk Revels .,,,.,,,,,,,,, tv,t,, ....,,.t,,.i I . Tmrlaezkojt ORATIo1s1- Pennsylvania In Industry' ',,,,v, ,,,..,.,v,,r ....,..,,, r...t....r.tt..tr,t.... H e I en Stombezugla ORATION-AlThC Historical Background of the Declaration Independence ..s.. ..,...,.,,t,....,.....,,..,.r,....t.,,,,,r..,....... I ofepla Friedman ORAT1ON L.NOfCCl Musicians of Pennsylvania' '... ........ 0 live Baleirielge ORATION- Pennsylvania Civil War Heroes A .... .t,..,,sr....,,.tt,,t,..r.,,1..,..,,,t F red Holmef PIANO DUET-Selected ....rrrr..r,rr,,srrri,rr,r..rrtr.,.,,,,rrr r.,r,rr,r L on Harbaurr and Edith Spiegel ORATION?liSt6PhCD Girard' ',.,,t..,r,rr.,rrrr..t,rs,,rrrt .r,,..r,.,.trr . ,S .rr...,,. Ejfie McC!eez1y ORATION- Birds and Flowers of Pennsylvania 1 ,,tt.,rt.t Harry Tloompfarz MUSIC-L'Pu1Cine110 ,1,,r,r,t,,,r,rrssrrrr1,rttr,,r1rr,,,,,,,stttr,,,,t,,rt,tri,t,,s, ,1,,1,,ttrr,.,,tttr A letter High School Orchestra ORATION- The Quaker as a Character in American History n,,r.,tt,...,Tbelmez Dulezny READING-'John Burns at Gettysburg QBret Hartej t..t ..r,.t,...v. ,......,, M ez rim Rippel MUSIC .ASCfCHHdC,Y ,csr , ,,t,,,t,,, ,,,,,,Vt.,,,,,,,,,,O,,r,,,r,,r,,iY,,Y,,,,,,,r,.,t,, ,....Y,,r.,.....,.. T o Jseli High School Orchestra PRESENTATION or DIPLOMAS .,tts, iV,,,,,,,t,t,,..,,,,,, - ,,,r,,,,t,..r.,ri,,, ......... j o reply B. Ricky MARCH'llOH Wisconsin ,.,,,.,,,,,,,,,c,,,,.r,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,r,,,..,,,,.. ..,.....,.,, W . T. Purdy High School Orchestra M ' F 1 1 L 1 J F I2 1 7 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 :Y-'27 l92l I I I I I I I 'I I I I I I L Adair, Jennie Alverson, Charles Anderson, Alice Andrews, Matthew Applegate, Lois Arthurs, Charles Baker, Bessie Baldridge, Olive Banisky, Sam Barry, Raymond Bashista, John Bayne, Sara Benson, Alice Berquist, Charles Biddlestone, William Bodnar, Joseph Brewer, William Brown, Margaret Burger, Eger Burger, Michael Cain, Dorothy Carlson, Bessie Carlson, Olive Chapman, Edith Cleary, Agatha Clearyulosephine I Conant, Maude Conlogue, Jean Conrad, Ella Conway, Mae Cook, William Daley, Mary Demerach, Nicholas Diggins, Ernest DiVittorio, Samuel Donaldson, Ruth Donet, Martha Dougherty, Charles Dougherty, Wilbert Dudek, John Dunn, Emily Fdman, Margaret Eger, Joseph Eisele, Margaret Elliott, Gertrude Englert, Emerson Engwer, Alma Erskine, Alex Y0Ugh-Q-MAOH HONOR RoLL In Punctuality and Perfect Attendance 1925-1926 The Certificate Honor Fazenbaker, Mary Fraas, Henry Friberg, Oscar Furlong, Dulany Gibson, Foster Gleditsch, Emma Goode, Amy Gorman, Margaret Grifiiths, Robert I-Iachler, Estella Hagbloom, Kathryn Hakanson, Frank Harden, Elizabeth Harris, Helen Harrison, Kenneth Harrison, Pearl Heatherington, Rea Herbertson, Elizabeth Herman, Walter Heveker, Louise Hoffman, Eleanor Housaman, Louise Hufton, Mildred Ingram, Martha Jack, Alice Jacobs, Margaret jacobyansky, Adolph John, Daniel Kalinowski, Sophia Kalkbrenner, Augusta Kelsch, Dorothy Kelso, Louis Kilgallon, Julia King, Florence Kirshke, Freda Klausman, Louis Kniedcamp, Susan Kruper, Albert Kunze, Eldrid Leckman, Nellie Lisniewski, Alberta Liedtke, Ernest Lloyd, William Long, Bernice Luehm, Jessie Mackney, Ruth Mann, Millard Marshall, Jean Martin, Violet Marksteiner, Marie Matta, Margaret Maund, Richard McCracken, Richard McElwee, Rosemary McGrann, George McKenery, Adalon Meredith, Robert Metz, Boyd Millington, Della Miller, John Morrison, Paul Murray, Louise Muse, William Novack, Edward Olson, Mae Oncea, Valeria Orbell, William Owac, Andrew Palmgreen, Virginia Parucha, Edward Patterson, Betty Pearce, Margaret Peebles, Helen Plesniak, Germania Picivanik, Ludwick Prescott, Ruth Ralston, Margaret Ransick, Edna Rausch, Leonard Richard, Elizabeth Ricketts, Dorothy Rodgers, Paul Rosenzweig, Margaret Rotzsch, Hilda Sant, Eleanor ' Sant, Evelyn Sarinsky, Agnes Sawders, Anna Schmidt, Mary Schoeller, Ruth Schoerverth Katherine Schoerverth, Michael Scott, Lucretia Seeger, Louis Seitz, George Shaw, John Shaw, Paul Shellen, Margaret Signet, Margaret Sinsel, Louis Sisco, Harriet Smith, Alice Jean Snaith, George Spindle, Agnes Sollars, Glen Sowa, Mary Stauffer, Annabelle Stawicki, john Stallings, John Stewart, Helen Strong, Ella Mary Stoops, Esther Sullivan, Edward Susan, Frank Suviec, Walter Swenson, Harold Szymarck, Henry Tarsic, Elizabeth Taylor, Edward Thomas, Jean Tongreen, Gretha Uher, John Ulewicz, Robert Ulm, john Umbarger, Robert Urmanic joseph Vadar Albert Volk Louis WI'adsworth Ross Waite, Herbert Walton, jane Waters, Cora Watson, Virginia Webb, Edward Whitaker, Margaret Wilds, Ruth Willis, Mary Louis Wi.liams, Charles Wilson, Alden Woozley, Mary Zajic, Mary 1 ' 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M l93l NDANCE TE AT N I TS HONOR STUDEN Lawer Row HELEN O'TooLE, MARY MARGARET JAMISON, MARIE MARKSTEINER, ALMA HUSTON, MARGARET PLIsIco, LEONA CHERRY, ELIZABETH CULBERT. HAZELA DEAN. RLEN SMYTHR, NELLIE BOOTMAN, ONG, H L HY OROT .' PAULINE THORNTON, GRACE BUERGIN, D Middle LIVINGSTON. ES Eslcowslcx, CHARL M FRANK, CLIFFORD HoLMIzs, FRANK CAGEY, ROBERT UR JOHNSON, ARTH NT Upper. VINCE I I L I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Yough-a.-Mon Akers, Quentin Alverson, Blair Angelo, Anna Angelo, Josephine Ansell, James Ayres, Louise Badstibner, Elmer Baird, Helen Bartha, Freda Bartha, Rose Bathurst, Karl Beaumont, Bess Bedell, Matthew Beedle, Elizabeth Brant, Edna Brant, Marie Blank, Elma Irene Britton, Chrissie Bradley, Jennie Bootman, Nellie Buergin, Grace Bresh Esther Burland Jacqueline Brown, Elizabeth Brown, Mable Brannan, Harry Boyd, David Buckley, Charles Buck, Marguerite Bumbaugh, Leah Bunner, Elizabeth Buser, John Cagey, Arthur Calhoun, Jean Calhoun, John Carter, Grayce Cassel, Frank Cherry, Leona Chessman, Mildred Childs, Olive Cindric, Agnes Coma, Albert Conrad, Herbert Conway, Eleanor Crawford, James Culbert, Elizabeth Dean, Gladys Dean, Hazel De Augustine, John Nellie Bootman Grace Buergin Arthur Cagey Leona Cherry Elizabeth Culbert The Seal Honor Diehl, Kathryn Doehla, Albert Donmore, Alice Duncan, Leil Dulany, Wayne Dunlay, Edward Ehrhardt, Cyril Eichelberger, Virginia Eilart, Fred Evans, Finley Faix, Michael Ferrie, Annette Frank, Thelma Frank, Robert Franko, Laura Fritz, Emma Fulton, James Funk, Kathryn Gayvert, Mildred Geltz, Victor Gilbert, Helen Gilchrist, Charles Grailious, Kathleen Griffin, Harold Ilaberman, Dallas Haney, Mildred Harrison, Hannah Hart, Robert Hasson, James Helms, Mable Henderson, Elizabeth Hibbs, Arthur Holsing, Charles Hobson, Florence Holmes, Clifford Holmes, Fred Hughes, William Hunt, Eva Mildred Hurst, Harold Illman, Thelma Jackson, Caroline Jackel, William Jamesson, Harold Jamison, Mary Margaret Jasper, Victor Johnson, Lauretta Johnson, Vincent Jones, Nancy Kearney, Mary Jane Keeler, Fred Kem , Dorothy Kinchole, Laura Kirshner, Lillian Kissane, Katherine Kissane, Mary Knight, Sarah Knight William Krivonak, Anna Krivonak, Catherine Kubanick, Edward Lafferty, Irene Leadbeater, Raymond Leatherman, Elizabeth LeBreton, Charles Linge, Carl Lister, Edna Livingston, Charles Long, Dorothy Loop, Gladys Lux, Alvin Dlains, Jessie Markwood, Vernon Mansfield, Hannah Matesig, Cora McAllister, Ruth McClintock, Martha McAraw, James McCaughan, James Meredith, James Meskowski, Frank Middlemiss, Edward Middlemiss, Dorothy Miller, Stephen Monohan, Hallie Moody, Wilbur Morlock, George Morrison, George Morgan, Mary Lee Munnell, Clyde Murphy, Cecelia Nelson, Margaret Newman, Raymond Nicholls, Alice Nicholls, William Norton, Dorothy Norton, Paul Oberfeitinger, Hilda O'Toole, Helen Palmer, Helen Panetta, William Patterson, Anna May Pavlic, John Pearson, Alice Planchak, George Popowitz, Stanley Porter, Dorothy Pratt, Louis Prescott, Ula Pry, Harry Rankin, Lois Rippel, Marion Ritenour, Frances Rosenburger, Margaret Rudolph, John Schatzer, Dorothy Scott, Alberta Sharow, Wesley Simco Albert Smith, Kenneth Simco, Gertrude Smith Myrtle Smith, Nannie Stone, Bessie Seniors Perfect in Attendance and in Punctuality During High School Course Hazel Dean Cyril Ehrhardt Robert Frank Clifford Holmes Alma Huston Mary Margaret Jamison Vincent Johnson Charles Livingston Dorothy Long Marie Marksteiner Frank Meskowski Paul Norton Squibb, Mary Thornton, Pauline Tokar, John Toms, Earl Voelker, Edith WVaters, Oratheus Webb, John Wiemer, Myrtle Welch, Joseph Wisser, Kathryn Wood, Davis Wood, Isabelle Wood, Margaret Yoder, Margaret Zimmer, Lillian Helen O'Toole Margaret Plisko Helen Smythe Pauline Thornton Margaret Wood 1 9 2 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 7 1 1 1 1 1 1 M l95l H LU LU 2 I-4 P1l v-I I-4 I-1 r-4 D-4 2 fc LU I-4 ba Q: fc C14 LI-I er Row HELEN RICHEY, MARY LOUISE HUNTER, AURIE LANE, MARGARET MELEGH, SARA BAYNE. Low L. A S 'SE 'D O 52 H: fjsz QS :H V152 O E gm zz PIII-4 SE' :SE gf? 5' Qz 4 25' ZD I2 Q4 T5 ZH! 95 3, QE HE W: Eco :S wr En: an 35 :ES E2 .ES ig E2 QCD Ea D4 Em 85 P32 if-1: E? Ei 9-4 94 U I I .I I I I I I I I I I I L I 5, Yough-a.-Mon THE PITT ACADEMIC MEET McKeesport High Makes Fine Showing HE annual Interscholastic Academic meet, sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh, was staged May 1, 1926. With an increased enrollment, the competition was keen and interesting. The growth of this contest, since its re- establishment in 1924, may be noted from the following figures: 1924 1925 . 1926 Number of schools entered .st,...,, ,,,. 3 5 43 65 Number of pupils entered ..,...,...s,..,.,...t.,stt 281 453 882 Number of tests taken ,..,.....,..,,,,.,,,,,,,,t,,,,,, 490 894 1328 Following the precedent of former years CMcKeesport High took first honors in 1924 and 19259 our high school was one of the leading schools to fight for the cup offered by the university. When the smoke of the battle had cleared away, Peabody High, of Pittsburgh, was declared the winner. McKeesport High was a close second, with Langley, Latrobe, Wilkinsburg, and Sewickley high schools following in the order named. ' Tech High's winners included the following: Joseph Friedman, 3rd in American history, John Miller, honor award in that subject, Harry Thompson, honor award in biology, Seymour Itscoitz and Margaret Melegh, lst and 3rd in French 1, John Miller, honor award in General Information, Mary Louise Hunter, 2nd in Latin I, Florence King, honor award in Latin 11, Martin Baker, lst in Mathematics 1, George Munnell, 3rd in Physics. Two results of the meet Worthy of comment on superior showing include work of Seymour Itscoitz in French I and Martin Baker in Mathematics I. These students, besides ranking first in their divisions, made unusually high scores. Itscoitz re- ceived 44 points of a possible 45, Baker, 25 out of 30. In the Advanced Latin contest John Davis, of Duquesne High, made 22 points out of a possible 25. The student body of Tech High feels proud of the results made by our team. We trust that our beloved Red and Blue will again wave triumphantly in the meet April 30. 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M E971 THE FENCING LESSON mme 'Le Bourgeois Gentilho s of From the first act Mme. Jourdain ,,,,,....,.,A, 4 ' 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 . Yough-a.-Mon FRENCH STUDENTS PRESENT FINE DRAMATIC PRODUCTION HE students of the French department, under the direction of Miss Mainssonnat, presented on Friday evening, March 18, the 17th century play Le Bourgeois Gentilhommef' by Moliere. The production was Well received by a large and enthusiastic audience. Le Bourgeois Gentilhommen marks a new milestone in dramatics in M. H. S., for in previous years tvvo short one act plays have been given. This year the five act productiOn, Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme, displayed the real talent of the cast and the superb coaching of Miss Mainssonnat. The music offerings which featured the play Were under the supervision of Prof. Stribrny. The dances were originated and supervised by Prof. Doehla, director Of physical education in the grades. To Miss Mainssonnat, Prof. Stribrny and Prof. Doehla much credit is due, and they are to be congratulated on the success of the play. Cast NORTON M. Jourdain.. ,,,.....,,... , ' .......... LOIS APPLEGATE Lucile, the daughter ....,..,.. MARY LOUISE HUNTER N1COle, the maid .................., ,....,..., P AULINE THORNTON Cleonte, Lucile'S lover ......... .,,,,,,,,, H OWARD MAYEIELD Covielle, the valet ..,................ ......,,,, W ILLIAM KNIGHT Dorimene, the marchioness .......,. .,.....,., V IOLET ZEIGER Dorante, the count ......,.........i., ,,,,,,i,,, B RADFORD MILLER The Music Teacher ,.......i...... The Dancing Teacher v,.,......Y The Tailor ,... ........,,,..,,....... The Tailor Boys ..,.,..,,,,, The Fencing Teacher ........ The Philosopher ........,,., The Turkish Priest ........ Assistant Priests .......i The Musicians ......... The Dancers ......... Two Lackeys .......... Accompanisr ...,... ..GRAcE SZABO ....,,,...ETTA BLAIR ,.........FLORENCE KING MARGARET WOOD DOROTHY EVERETT .........,HARRY KOHN ,.......,.MILTON JUDKOWITZ . I.... .... S ARA DOWNIE 5 I GRACE BUERGIN MARION WHITE DOROTHY JUBELIRER HELEN STEELE DOROTHY SCULLY HARRIET SISCO EGEERT RICHARDS RAYMOND MASTERS ETHEL YORK EVELYN ROSEN LENORE TRIMBLE MARION CROW MARY STEGANIUS BERNICE EI-IRHARDT ESTELLE FRIEDMAN BETTY PENNEY MILDRED WELSH 4 MARGARET WOOD DOROTHY EVERETT I RAYMOND MASTERS 'Q EGBERT RICHARDS ....,..,.,EMILY DUNN 'I 9 2 7 M I I I ' I 'I' I I I I AI I I T99l H001 ONS I NAT THE OF LLET BA HE T s-4 5 O FQ IUC rilhom Q U CD KA v-4 O U 0.0. U H N-1 O +-1 U, CYS u va cw! v-1 U -CI. 4-1 E O 5-4 I-T-L Synopsis I I I I I I I I I I I I I L Director .,....,,...............,.. Business Manager .........,,... Advertising Manager ....,.,. Stage Management ......... Light Effect ............,...,. Custorne Committee ..,.,,, Makeup ,....., ................... Stage Property ..,.....,,. Ticket Salesman ....,.. Music Director ...... Dancing Coach ...... Yough-a.-Mon The Staff M. MAINSSONNAT SHAW JOHN WEEE MARTIN BAKER, Chairman SYLVAN BERGER, ARTHUR THORNTON MARGARET Cook, Chairman HELEN RICHEY ,........DOROTHY ATRON ....,..r,CYRIL EHRHARDT 1 f f MR. STRIBRNY MR. DOEHLA ScENE:-The action of the entire play takes place in a large drawing room in the home of Monsieur Jourdam, Paris, France. TIME :-The seventeenth century. ACT 1. The czpening scene discloses a music master and a dancing master with three assistants preparing enter- tainment or Monsieurjourdain, a rich and stupid bourgeois, who desires by foolishly imitating the manners of the nobility to qualify himself for the aristocratic society of the haut monde . The artist, by flattering the comic ignorance of their patron, presents a musical dialogue and a ballet number. ACT 2. Monsieur Jourdain pursues his dancing and fencing lessons with a measure of success until an unfortu- nate remark by the fencing master recipitates a quarrel with the musician and the dancer over the respective merits of their professions. Jourdjain in despair appeals to his tutor in philosophy, but this haughty 1n- dividual only succeeds in drawing upon himself the wrath of all the other tutors. When the fracas IS over, Jourdain takes up with the naive joy of utter sim licity the study of spelling. Soon his tailor arriyes with a new suit supposed to be in the acme of style and fashion, and a little ballet number celebrates this festive occasion. ACT III Monsieur Jourdain attempts unsuccessfully to astonish his Wife and his servant with his magnificent costume and ridiculous learning, but they simply laugh at him and scold him. Dorante, a nobleman in straightened circumstances, who makes pretense of introducing Jourdain into society, arrives to touch the easily deceived bourgeois for another loan and to assure him of the presence at the evening's ballet of the Marchioness Dorimene, with whom Jourdain fondly believes he has an affair, but who is really the sweet heart of the count. Cleonte and his valet, in love with Lucile and her maid but piqued by a slight misunderstanding of the morning, enter upon a humorous quarrel scene, but reach, however, a happy reconciliation, and Cleonte demands of Jourdain his daughter's hand in marriage, but is refused because he is not a gentleman , Dorante and Dorimene arrive for the dinner, and the table is brought in to the accompaniment of music and dancing. ACT IV The splendid repast is interrupted by the unexpected return of Madame Jourdain, whose jealous out- burst puts the marchioness to flight. Covielle, disguised as a Turk, imposes upon the unsuspecting Jour- dain the perfectly absurd story that the son of the Turkish Sultan is in Paris and is desirous of marrying Lucile- To render the marriage possible for reasons of title, ,Iourdain is invested with the great rank and dignity of a Mamamouchi. Another ballet number performs the ceremony of this ludcirous investiture. ACT V Cleonte, masquerading as the Sultan's son, is thus, as soon as he is recognized by Lucileland Madame jourdain, accepted into the family, and while the notary is being called to draw up the marriage contract, the company is diverted by an elaborate Ballet of the Nations. I 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I- -I I M D011 1021 rn cn C3 '11 U 19 G! lv-I 5-4 u m 5 'G E r-4 3-4 O .-4 C1 I3 P-a TRADE ELECTRICITY DISPLAY TRADE PATTERN MAKING DISPLAY f1o3l 1041 CLASS CE ESTIC SCIEN DOM MORE O PH ASO 1051 A FRESHMAN DOMESTIC SCIENCE CLASS s-4 4.1 .ri U Q1 nderson, Tc u I V3 V! E 1061 TRAINING SCHOOL FACULTY ERNA MEINERT JENNIE MARKEL, A. R. Kunrz JEAN BAIRD-CouRs1N ETHEL SIMPSON Lols MULLER DR. B. RICHEY ESTHER WILSON HAZEL SANDFORD I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon MCKEESPORT TRAINING ScHooL The Faculty OSEPH B. RICHEY, LL. D., Superintendent ,,,,,,,,,,,,n, ,......Y L ectures A R. KURTZ, A.M., Principal ,,,.,,,,,,,,nn,,,,nn,,,,,,,,,,,,,,nnn,,,nnni,,n,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.i,,,.i,,,i............... ...L.....L.....L,lntroduction of Teaching, Nature Study, Child Psychology EAN BAIRD-CoURs1N, B.S., Training Teacher ,,.,, - ,-.,,,,..,,,,..r,rr..,rrr..r.r,..rr,...r,,...,........... .........,...,,,,.,,Educationa1 Biology, Oral Expression, English Composition HAZEL SANDFORD, B.S., Supervisor of Art.. ..,,,.....,,..,.,..,i,..r.,..V...,.....,,....,,.i,,...i..oo, Art Lols MULLER, Assistant Supervisor of Art ,,,,,c,c ..,,.. ..,.....o,. A r t ESTHER WILSON, B.S., Supervisor of Music ,,,,,.,,,,.,..,,,,,.,.,, ..,....,...,...oi. M usic JENNIE MARKEL, Supervisor of Writing ,...o,.,,,,....,,......,...,.,,......,,........,.. Handwriting ERNA MEINERT, Directress of Physical Training in High School ...... .......,............ I Physical Education ETHEL SIMPSON, Training Teacher .,...,r ,...,...,, P rimary Reading The Students Allen, Edith Hardy Marion Peebles, Alice Andreaon, Anna Herskowitz, Lillian Ricketts, Dorothy Baldridge, Olive Hoffman, Eleanor Rosenzweig, Margaret Bashista, Emma Hurst, Ida Rotzsch, Hilda Beattie, Hazella Irwin, Thelma Sant, Eleanor Berg, Mabel Jacobs, Minnie Shellen, Margaret Mary, Bernhardy Keddie, Rose Skapik, Carolyn Bondy, Nettie Kilgallon, Julia Smith, Nannie Brown, Elizabeth Krivonak, Catherine Sowa, Mary Chrestay, Helen Leger, Helen Stone, Bessie Chrestay, Margaret Lilja, Marie Tarsie, Elizabeth Clay, jane Loya, Pauline Todd, Alice Wandrei Cleary, Josephine Luke y, Clarice Tremont, Marie Conway, Eleanore Mangan, Helen Watson, Elizabeth Daley, Mary Martin, Jennie Weiss, Goldie Dean, Gladys Matta, Margaret Weisz, Florence Filson, Helen Maxwell, Ruth Wiley, Audell Friedman, Esther McCleary, Effie Wingert, Rosabel Giar1santi,Jeane Micldlemiss, Dorothy Yost, Kathryn Goode, Amy Minnick, Virginia Zajic, Mary Goodman, Sarah Moore, Rhea Zenn, Dorothy Haney, Mildred Moore, Vida Zimmer, Lillian M I - I I I I J P I 2 I 7 I I I I I I M D071 1081 TRAINING SCHOOL STUDENTS I I I I I I I 1 I I I . I Yough-a.-Mon THE BANKING PROIECT Tech High School Students Learn Thrift f' ENNIES make dollars. For this reason the schools of McKeesport have adopted the thrift banking system, so as to teach the students the values and advantages of thrift. Benjamin Franklin originated the thrift project and used as his adage, A penny saved is a penny earned. In 1924 the system was established in McKeesport Schools. Since that time they have been doing much to follow in the footsteps of this nationally known advocate of thrift. By the aid and coopera- tion of the majority of students of the schools, and in some cases all of the students, the system has proved, and is still proving, to be an unusual success. The school banking motto is, A penny saved is a good example for the other 99 cents. National banks were proposed by Robert Morris and Alexander Hamilton in 1781 and 1791 respectively as depositories for the money saved by the thrifty and economic people. The Union National Bank of McKeesport acts as the depository for the savings of pupils of McKeesport Schools. During the 1926-27 term it has handled deposits of the schools valued at S50,000. The cooperation of the Union National Bank with the students is greatly appreciated. Nothing is more business like, and nothing will cultivate a better habit than to bank a few cents each week. So, from 2096 to 25? of the 2072 students of McKees- port High School take advantage of the movement set forth to teach them to eco- nomize and to save something for a rainy day. ln each room of the building a cashier, either the treasurer of the room or one specially chosen, acts as the teller for his room. Save a little regularly inspires the high school pupils to bank each Monday. Competition between the rooms of the four respective classes has given rise to a 10002 record in several of them. The officers in the section rooms extend their best efforts to aid the thrift system. By their keen interest they encourage it to a great extent. Most of the rooms of M. H. S. are interested in keeping the high school average as high as possible so as to put the McKeesport Schools at the head of the banking list of Pennsylvania. As a result of the banking system, or the thrift project, adopted by McKeesport Schools in 1924, students have learned the value of being thrifty. In a current issue of the Red and Blue , the official paper of the school, we read pupils bank more money than usual. Section rooms vie with one another to boost the average. Today was an exceptionally busy banking day, 359 deposited a total of 530441. If competition between rooms continues to be an outstanding point, the average of not only the high school but of the schools of McKeesport will show a vast increase. HELEN RADER, '27 I 9 2 7 g 7 M I I I I I I T I I I I I I I I M I109l 1101 THE BANK CASHIERS OF M. H. S. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Yough-a.-Mon ITERATURE 1 7 1 The Urchin of The Streets THE sudden crunch of ice-crusted snow shattered the white silence of the hills. The pale glimmer of the winter moon silhouetted a small, shapeless figure against a white background, where the distant hill eagerly lifted its massive bulk to the peaceful sky. As the tiny shapf moved on across the wide expanse of drifted snow, the outline of a boy was clearly distinguished from the gaunt shadows of the gray dullness of the night. As the boy passed, with uncertainty, up the narrow trail, a shrieking blast blew up from the mountain pass, scattering the loose snow into whirlwinds and carrying with it bits of ice. The child, almost blown down by such violence, drew closer the heavy, dark packet about his frail body, thrust his red chapped hands deeper into invisible pockets in his short jeans, and gathering together all his forces of strength and courage, he determinedly resumed his way. The pink skin of his weary legs was exposed to the chilling gales by the few holes in his home-knitted stockings. His lagging feet were forced into cheap shoes that were much too small for the comfort of growing youth. One leg of the ill- fitting pants persisted in grating his bony ankle. A warm muffler, that was wound carelessly about his neck, frisked madly to and fro. The boy's thin cheeks flushed a deep pink above the quivering chin and chattering teeth. On either side of the slight pug nose, where the summer's sun had generously dotted a bridge of freckles, two wistful brown eyes peered out from beneath heavy lashes. Brown hair escaped from the close cap that was pushed recklessly upon his head. The perceptible stoop of his body, as he straight- ened to regain his breath, suggested that he was already bowed by the cares of life. The incessant wind drew, from beyond a vague horizon line, menacing clouds which molested the Queen of Night with her retinue of dazzling splendor as she trailed across the deep blue courtroom of the heavens. However, as the thick clouds passed, the Queen appeared and reappeared with her white trailing robes, which gently touched the desert of glint-sands of snow. Could it be possible that winter had transformed the hill in so many peculiar ways? Where once the delicate wild rose had brightened the path and masses of larkspur and columbine had waved riorously in the warm breeze, there was nothing but vast stretches of snow. The chanting notes of the silvery night- ingale were silent, save for the rattling of the wind as it hurried, at intervals, through the rocky ledges and cranniesg save for the weird howl of a far away coyote, which sent forth its eerie expression of loneliness, the night was still. The boy was returning from a day's work on the busy subways of the city, where, for a scant sum of money, he sold papers in order to help to earn a living for his widowed mother and his sister. The mother, too, had worked in the city, but, because of the illness of her younger charge, she had stayed at home to give a mother's care to her daughter. At the end of each day's toil the boy and his mother would climb those rugged hills together. Tonight the boy was alone. As though for sheer courage the little lad pursed his purple lips in an attempt to whistle, but he could utter only a weak, toneless sound. This dependable method failing, he amused himself by jingling the few coins in his holeless pocket. His hand came in contact with something sticky, and he drew from his pocket a small piece of peppermint wrapped in dirty white pa er. This he had bought with some of the money he had saved by shortening his lunch menu. When he hadpeaten half of the stick of candy, he suddenly remembered his sister's fondness of candy, and, after retwisting the paper about it, he unsellishly put it back into his pocket. He was hungry, but the thought of the joy it would give to his sister held back the impulse for devouring the remainder of the appetizing peppermint. He next drew forth a small withered rosebud, which had been thrown upon the street from the reach of the street-sweeper's broom. A very faint fragrance still lingered, clung to the dull red petals. After examining the flower, the boy pressed it to his cheek, and then replaced it. He longed for flowers and pretty things as well as his mother. But his yearning was not as great as that of his mother, and for this reason he was carrying it to her. How simple the mind of early youth is! The remainder of the collection was entirely his own. It consisted of a rusty fishing hook, an old top, a piece of twine, a stub of pencil, and a penknife with a broken blade. Each of these things he inspected in turn, and, after counting the copper coins he had earned, he quickened his slow pace and moved on up the hill. As he neared the bend, the welcoming bark of his dog reached his ears. Forgetting his fear of the draped spectres made by the looming trees which pointed bony, threatening fingers at him, the urchin would have run if the snow had permitted him. I He passed the drab houses of the neighborhood and came at last to his own simple home. The warm red glow of the blazing fire stole through the cobwebs of frosty lace on the window pane and brightened the narrow pathway in front of the humble hovel. As soon as the boy's voice reached the ears of those inside the house, the door was quickly thrown open. A tall thin woman came to the doorway and called, Is that you, son? The worried expression of her face changed to one of gladness, and the anxious eyes spoke her gratitude as her son came through the gateway and up the stone-walk. She tenderly drevvhim into a small but warm house, and shut the door against the sweeping winds and the gloom of the night. H. S., '27 TM -n 9 ...- .- Q .1- o Q -p - -1- -1- 1 -a ,I Q an - -- .- f 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M Linj 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 . t Yough-fa.-Mon The Burglar Sir Humphrey boldly confronted the burglar, and with one blow ofhis brawny fist stretched the intruder on the floor at his feet. Anthony gave an admiring sigh as he read this latest exploit of his hero, Sir Humphrey. He wished fervently that a burglar would come along then, so that he could deplicate Sir Humphrey's feat. Anthony's parents had left for the opera, and the little boy was all alone in the big house. He was trying to pass away the time by reading his favorite novel. just then a timid knock came at the door. Anthony awoke from his reverie startled. What if it was a burglar! Slowly he rose, crossed the room and walked bravely down the hall, his heart thumping. The knocking came again, this time more insistent. Anthony impulsively swung the door wide and found himself gazing straight at the black muzzle of a gun held in the hand of a thin, haggard-looking man. Anthony retreated as the man advanced into the hall. Good evening! stammered the little boy, not forgetting his manners. Quick now, spoke the man nervously. Where's the safe? Upstairs in the library, said Anthony meekly. Well--you lead the way-d'ye hear? Anthony promptly obeyed and began to climb the flight of stairs, with the stranger close at his heels. Somehow he could not nerve himself to boldly confront the burglar and lay him low. Suddenly he hesitated and stopped. Would you mind-not holding the gun so close? It-it makes me nervous! he said. The burglar glanced at him sharply, and then turned his gun aside. The boy led the way into the richly-furnished library to the huge safe. The burglar laid his tools, a rusty jimmy and a jack, on the floor and knelt before the safe, keeping a watchful eye on Anthony, who stood discreetly at one side. You won't End much in there, volunteered the latter, only a sword that my grandfather wore in the Revolution and a few other relics. The burglar kept on at his task of twirling the dial. Anthony's eyes were suddenly drawn to the bur- glar's feet, which peeped red and swollen through the huge cracks and holes in his worn shoes. Say -inquired Anthony, What's the matter with your feet? The burglar turned, startled at the question. Oh, nothing, he said ironically, only too much walking, I guess. What size do you take? the boy asked. Nines. Gee! Wait a minute, will you? and jumping to his feet, Anthony ran from the room before the burglar had time to protest, reappearing in a moment with two pairs of heavy socks and a pair of shoes, which he handed to the man. These are some old ones of my father's, he said. You can have 'em. Mutely the burglar gazed from the boy to the shoes, and then sitting down, he quickly removed his battered shoes and drew on the warm socks and confortable shoes. They just nt, he spoke wonderingly. Anthony smiled to himself. His burglar was not ferocious at all. The burglar turned to resume his task, but his movements were so feeble and slow that Anthony innocently said, You look white. Are you hungry? The burglar turned to him. I haven't eaten anything since yesterday morning, he said huskily. Anthony stifled an exclamation of horror. Come with me, and I'll get you something to eat, he said, and he led the way to the warm, cozy kitchen. He foraged in the refrigerator and laced before the burglar a plate of cold meat and potatoes, a bit of salad, some bread and butter, a dish ofncold beans, and some fruit. He lit the tire in the stove, and soon the odor of hot, fragrant coffee filled the room. The burglar attacked the food with gusto, eating the food in huge mouthfuls. Anthony sat watching him with speculative eyes. ' I'm going to be a burglar like you some day, he announced, when the stranger had partially satisfied his appetite. The burglar turned to him impulsively. Son, never get into that trade! It's the meanest, lowest thing in the whole world. Aren't you a real burglar, then? queried Anthony. No-you see, this is my first attempt at stealing! Oh! cried Anthony, acutely disappointed. The burglar finished eating and rose. There was a new light in his eyes and a new thrust to his should- ers. Well, he said I've got to go now! Anthony walked with him to the door and gravely shook hands. The burglar rested his hand for an instant on Anthony's yellow curls. Sonny, he said, never forget that once you saved a man from going wrong. I'm going back to get the job I lost and look the world straight in the eyes again. And you did it, boy, you did it! PAULINE THORNTON, '27 1 9 2 7 ' M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M l'l12l I I I I I X I I I I I I I 'L I Yough-a.-Mon Stubs The afternoon was breathless. The sun was so hot that it looked like a great wax ball, which was melting and losing its spherical shape. The clouds hung limply in the blazing sky. The trees, looking longingly towar the heavens, seemed to pray for a shower to wash their leaves clean of Ehi heat of many days. Even the streams looked small and shrunken as they stretched weakly in their e s. Little Tim kicked up a cloud of dust as he walked, and the patched earth clug to his bare toes. The scorching sun beat down on Tim's short, tangled hair, but his heart sang. He was glad-glad! Today, he was going for his little dog, Stubs, Stubs, whom the dog-catcher had found straying in the village and had taken away. Tim thought of the cruel man, and viciously kicked up a cloud of dust. Then he thought of Stubs. Stubs, play dead dog, now. Stubs would immediately roll over on his side. Now, shake hands. Good boy, Stubs! Stubs would wag his stumpy tail. Stub's tail! Two and a half inches by the ruler. Stubs! Stubs! How much longer to town? A mile and a half. Two and a half and a mile and a half. Tim ran for sheer joy and stopped as he came to the creek. How good it would feel to slip out of his overalls and jump in. Stubs, two and a half and one and a half. Lickety-split. One more mile now. Two and a half and one. The sweat ran down Tim's face, and he mopped it off with a dirty hand. A butterfly evaded him. Tim fell into a walk. He would go up to the man and say, l've come for my dog, sir. The man would lead him to a kennel, where a lot of other dogs would be, and Stubs would be gnawing a bone. Then he would see Tim and leave his bone and run to him, wagging his stumpy tail. Good old Stubs! Then the man would say, All right, take him. And Tim would pick up Stubs and carry him out, and then Stubs would wriggle and want down to run and bite at his heels. The journey would seem short on the way home. Would he never get there? Tim broke into a run. It wasn't far, now. He could see the store where his mother took him sometimes for ice cream. He stopped to look into the window. A little boy sat there eating an ice cream cone. How good that would taste! Tim swallowed in spite of the dryness of his throat. He was going for Stubs. Stubs needed him, and he must hurry. The pavements were red hot. Tim ran to keep his feet from burning. Here he was! He opened the door and went in. He walked up to a man and said, I've come for my dog, sir. What kind of a dog, young man, police or Eskimo? Tim stood on one foot and wagged the other behind him. He blushed and stammered. just a little dog, sir,-about so high. Tim put his hand a little below his knee. A little yellow dog, with a stumpy tail. What's his name, young fella? Stubs, said Tim. Was he an ugly little thing that had a habit of brushing against your legs? He was very friendly, sir. , Oh, I see. Well, that dog was chloroformed last night, young fella. Tim backed up against some boxes. Stubs! Two and a half! He stared at the man. No, he was serious. Tim felt dizzy. He must go. He must go home without Stubs. Good bye, Stubs! Tim turned and stumbled out the door into the heat. H 1. -- D. E., '27 1 1 1 V Lost and Found It was a bitter cold day in the latter part of January. The ground was covered with a layer of snow that had fallen only the night before. The snow was not very deep, but it was deep enough when it came to shoveling it on' the sidewalk. At least Tommy thought so, for it took him hours and hours to clean Mrs. Smith's walks. Then he received only fifty cents for doing it. Nevertheless, Tommy was glad to get the big, shining, half-dollar. What would he buy with the money? Candy, of course, he never did have enough of it. So he put the money into his pocket and ran wildly toward the candy store. He had not run very far when he stopped suddenly. He'd better get one more look at that money before he spent it. He reached into his pocket to get it, but brought forth an empty hand. Gone! The money was gone. Oh, how terrible! He began to hunt for it, and having searched carefully from Mrs. Smith's house to the s ot where he had discovered the loss no less than six times, he gave it up and turned sorrowfully homewardj. Somebody must have picked it up and kept it. Tommy didn't consider the loss lightly either, for his screams could be heard for blocks around. Poor kid, had he only known that his money was tucked safely in the lining of his coat. When he reached the candy store, he wiped away the tears with his coat sleeve, wiped the frost from the window, and peered through. Oh, how good that candy looked! Everything that he liked and had never had he wanted more eagerly now. As he left the window, the tears again coursed their journey down his dirty little face, making narrow white paths the whole length of his cheeks. He was so wrapped up in the sorrow of his loss that he was unaware that his gloves were in his pocket instead of on his hands, and his tassel ca was sitting on top of his head above his half frozen ears. Having reached the corner, he was stopped suddenly by the cheerful voice of a man. What's the matter, sonny? I 9 2 M I I I I I I I I I 7 I I I I I I M ' f1l3l 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1. I . Yough-a.-Mon I lost my money, Tommy replied pitifully. Well, well, that's too bad. How much did you lose? Fifty cents. Never mind, sonnyg here's a nice new fifty cent piece that- ' ' these words, Tommy looked angrily into the man's face, snatched the money, and held it tightly in is st. So you're the fellow that found my money, are you? You were going to keep it, too. Well, I'lI tell my father on you. He will whip you. I know where you live, too. Having uttered all this in one breath, Tommy turned swiftly, dashed down the street, and disappeared into the candy store, leaving the kind-hearted gentleman to figure the problem our for himself. GRACE FLYNN, '28 1 1 1 The Preparatory Course of Mclieesport High and the Gymnasium of Budapest: A Comparison The different conditions of life in the two continents make the school system different. The great industrial development of the New World and its busy commercial life require that everybody shall get an almost uniform education, one that teaches and prepares for the struggle in life. Most of the people are simple farmers, who do not need more than four years of public schools, where they study the elementary knowledge. But the people in the cities have no other opportunity than to choose an intellectual profession, as that of physicians, lawyers, etc. To secure this profession the gymnasium is necessary. It is based on classic culture. We have many abstract subjects. In all our school days we have to learn the Latin classics, as Virgil, Horace, and Ovid. We have to absorb the history and literature of the Greeks. We study the famous Greek dramas, as you study Macbeth in the local school. There is a difference also between the relation of the pupil to the school here and in Budapest. Here, the student accefpts the school as a leader of his conscience, and respects the school much more than the European pufpil oes. This is probably because the American school is traditionless, and is always in the service of re orms. Not so with the Hungarian student. At home we read the modern books. We become acquainted with modern ideals of art, literature, and make our spirit contrary to the conservative spirit of school. It is always the nature of every student to like the modern things better than the study of literature written two thousand years ago, though they are classical and beautiful. So it happens that in Budapest the students sometimes have greater influence on each other than the teachers have on them. We have more opportunity to talk with each other than you have here. After each subject we have a ten minute period in which we discuss everything that interests us. We speak about plays we have seen in the theatres, concerts we have heard. We talk mostly about the books we have read. I think that we read a little more than you do here. Then, instead of reading true stories, we read the most famous books of the world literature. We never judged a person's cleverness by his mark in examinations, but by how educated he is. One of the chief means of securing education is reading. It is true that we do not study after reading. Here the students study much more. Our teachers never required that we should write out our lessons in history and literature. We just had to know them. So, half of the class came to school unprepared. It is a very good idea that you have to outline everything. I fancy the students are not enthusiastic about it, but really it teaches logical think- ing, for you have to point out the essentials of every subject. Besides, it forces one to learn the lesson. The examinations are also very useful here. The teachers always know how much the pupil knows, and so it makes possible just marking. We have examinations in Budapest, also, but we have only one special question, and so our whole mark depends upon whether we know that question or not. Here you practically learn everything from books. We had few books, because the teachers explained the lesson the greater part of the period, and we just listened to it. There were some of us who never studied at home, We understood so well the explanation of our teachers. Another interesting difference is this. The students here are very loyal to their teachers. You work very earnestly, prepare the lsseon carefully, cheat very little on examination day. We were loyal only to our class-mates. This you can understand, if you know that we were classmates not only for one year but for the whole eight year course of the gym- nasium, and we all became Very intimate friends. It may bs of interest to know that in Budapest we had certain unwritten laws, as, for example, if ten people from a class of thirty did not learn the poem we were supposed to learn, the whole class stood up and said that they had forgotten to learn the selection, or could not learn it. Then, too, every day there was someone who would prepare the Latin, German, and French words of the tests so that the others could copy them. If we did our al ebra or trigonometry lesson at home, we would have to come early in the morning so that the rest couldg copy our work. During examinations we were supposed to prepare several copies of the answers for passing throughout the room so that the whole class would have the same results. If we thought the teacher would give us a test, we would empty the ink bottles, before the teacher came in. 'ghenhwe would tell him. We can't write without ink! By the time we had other ink it was too late or t e test. r 9 2 7 I M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M 11141 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 L 4 , , c Yough-a.-tglpn Of course, all this is student humor. In reality, we did love our teachers as much as you do here, sometimes with greater affection. At the end of our school year our teachers became our advisors. We loved them as second parents, whom we did not forget when we left school. Rather, we formed an ever- lasting friendship with them. There are some differences, it is true, between students of two different races on two different continents, and in two different countries. But they are small when compared with the great similarities between every eighteen year old girl and boy all over the world. In San Francisco, as well as in Paris, in McKeesport as in Budapest, we all know and feel that life is before us. We are all full of hopes and dreams for our future life. All over the world students sing, Gaudeamu.4' igitur fuwner dum mmm. . SARA POLLAK, 27 Y 7 1 Sir Roger Confesses Since the good old gentleman is dead, I believe that it will do no harm to relate an incident that hap- pened at a meeting of our club some three years ago, but which has been kept a secret by all the mem- bers until now. It was a bright sunshiny day, a rare thing in this foggy old city, and our group was all assembled in a little coffee house near Temple Bar, that is, we were all there except Sir Roger. For some reason or other, the kind old knight was late. In the interim our talk drifted to many far-separated subjects. Sir Andrew and the clergyman were having quite a heated argument about whether or not it was right for a sailor to work on Sunday. Captain Sentry tried to tell the scholar that being a soldier had more honor in it than winning a lawsuit. Will Honeycomb tried to interest me with an account of his latest love affair. Our group was becoming quite boisterous, and I am afraid something terrible would have happened if Sir Roger had not arrived. All were suddenly calmed by the sight of this benevolent old gentleman. Despite his soothing effect on us, he looked very troubled in mind. Something seemed to darken his brow, and a great burden seemed to weigh down his usual jovial spirit. He seemed as if a hack had run over him, squeezing out his good humour, leaving him in sort of daze. Captain Sentry was the first to inquire after his health. The old squire replied in a half-hearted way that he was as well as could be expected of a man his age, but that he had a very grave matter to relate to us. He continued thus. My dear friends! I am quite ashamed to call you that after the way I have deceived you. But, had you been in my place, I believe that you would have done the same thing. We gave the old fellow our best attention, not knowing what to expect, but we were not prepared for the blow that struck us when he continued, Almost twenty years ago I married the widow. My courtship of her had been long and full of difficulties, as you probably know from what I have told you before. But I must tell you how I won her. I bribed a servant to find out in some way what she was going to talk about the next time I called upon her. This domestic reported to me that he had seen her reading several books and pamphlets on trade and commerce. So I, getting all the books on the subject that I could, learned so much about it that in a conversation with Sir Andrew Freeport a few days hence I greatly astonished him with my knowledge of his hobby. Perhaps the good merchant remembers the day yet. Not waiting for Sir Andrew to reply he continued. I called upon her in a week, and, when the conversation drifted to the subject of trade and commerce, I was ready for her. I soon left her far behind in the discussion by analyzing every trade route that ever existed before I finished, even to the red Indians along the rivers of the New World. The effect was instantaneous, for I could see that her heart was now mine. The minute her confidante left the room for the refreshments I laid my heart at her feet and won her, much to my great joy then, but later to my sorrow. My wedding day was one of the happiest days in my life, and our Hrst few months of married life were uneventful, but extremely happy-love is blind. But we soon found that we were of entirely different temperaments, she, for refinement, learning, and city life, but I, for simplicity, hunting, and country life. Both of us recognized our differences, and, after another three months, we saw that we were not made for each other, so I built her the establishment that she now occupies, and I decided to stay at my ancestral manor. We obtained a secret divorce, aided by my influence as Squire. We parted as friends and lovers. This was the only great disappointment that I have ever had in my life. We have kept our secret Well guarded for all these years, and I am sure you, too, my friends, will keep it also. Iam done. He sank into a nearby chair, leaving us all stupified. Captain Sentry, grasping the situation, With comforting words, got him on his feet and helped him to a cab. We followed to the door like hypnotized beings and saw the old gentleman off on his way home. We heard nothing from him for the next two weeks. Then I received a short letter by the post from the old Knight's country home. It ran as follows: Coverley Hall September My dear Spectator: I am back at my old homestead safe and sound, and am completely over the reaction caused by my confession .... The only thing that I lack now is companionship, for my pastor is visiting in the next 1 9 2 7 , I I .I I I I I I I I I I I I I 51151 I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon town for three weeks, and my butler's mother died yesterday. If you have nothing pending for a few weeks, I would be glad to have you with me for the coming hunting season, I remain, Ever your friend and admirer, SIR ROGER nn COVERLEY. Having presented you with another proof of the good squire's kindness and generosity I will close this paper with an anecdote from the ancients. There was an ancient Greek, Fri, who by trickery won a very lovely maiden, Par, the nuptials were all prepared, when suddenly the sky opened, and Par disappeared. For forty days and nights Fri prayed to the gods. Finally he received this message, Rejoice, You have been saved from a great catastrophe when your spouse was taken from you. Anything won unfairly brings trouble. Rejoice. Possibly this is the cause of Sir Roger's misfortune. PAUL W. NORTON, '27 f 1 Y Seniors, Farewell I Farewell, farewell, O Seniors dear! As from this campus you depart, May thoughts of school be always near, And never leave your heart. The task is done thro' four long years, And hard you worked, no doubt: That in the future you may have Necessities and comforts stout. Through many battles have you fought, But the hardest still confronts you, And we hope that in the future Nothing but success may greet you. Now we, the Juniors of to-day, Who yet face our last year's tasks, Hope success will come our way, As well as yours, O Senior class! And your dear Old Alma Mater Can only give to you Best wishes for a prosperous tri , When you leave the Red ang Blue. LEONARD COWAN, '28 7 1 7 Spring Fever By One 'Who Knows Some say, There ain't no such thing as spring fever. But there is!-not a mere supposition either! I'm speaking from experience, because it's an almost chronic state with me-at times, dormant. It is a gfeailfifl disease, very contagious, but seldom fatal. At present I am suffering from an acute -attack of this iss u curse. Symdptoms: persistent good-nature, indifference 5 procrastination, aversion to exertion, mental restless- ness, an a general lack of ambition, inspiration, and initiative. This ailment is almost incurable. The afflicted are unapproachable. When they are scolded, the rebuke does not meet with disfavor, indignation, rage, remorse, or any of the desired effects. Instead, it will probably evoke a spasm of hysteria, a fit of giggles, a lazy grin, and in general, be accepted as just another amusing incident in the day's program. Appeals to the sufferer's ambition, intelligence Cor lack of itD, or common sense are of no avail in arousing a stir for better or for worse. Sulphur and molasses are quite disgustful to them-even sassafras tea does not arouse the sluggish blood. There are two possible cures: first, let them alone, and they will either starve or come out of their lethargy. The latter will likely happen, because Caccording to Dorseyj -to satisfy the hunger for good is the strongest human instinct. Second, yeast, with its inexhaustible supply of merits, might aid their condition and gain for them a little publicity in the bargain Cif they photograph wellj. To a person of normal health this subject offers boundless possibilities for discussion. But I am so sorely atllicted with the fever that even this feeble attempt has been a mighty effort culminating in apathetic es air. P H. T. R., '27 'I 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M D161 I I I I I I I 1 I fr '1 efre v L I Yough-a.-Mon An Incident at Glendale Whenever I see an old colonial style house, with ivy climbing all over its weather-beaten walls, and surrounded by a spacious lawn, I think of the summer I spent at Glendale. When my last college year was over, I deserted the noisy streets of McKeesport and sought rest and seclusion at my uncle's home at Glendale. His colonial style house was surrounded by a beautiful, velvity lawn. It seemed a great relief to me to be away from the noisy rumble of city streets and go to a place where I could pursue further my writing. That evening the drowsy atmosphere of the little town possessed me, so I retired early. I curled up on the soft tick of an old fashioned bed, and soon dozed off into the realm of dreamland. Some few hours later I woke with a start. No, I hadn't been dreaming. Someone was walking on the balcony adjoining my room. The room was dark, but the balcony was lighted by the moon. Furtive shadows played upon the walls. A feeling of terror gripped meg all sorts of gruesome fancies ran through my mind. I cour- ageously jumped from my bed and cautiously crept toward the door. My stealthy footsteps must have alarmed the intruder, for, when I reached the balcony, there was no one to be seen. Ire-entered the room, crawled into bed, and was soon asleep. The next morning I accosted my uncle and told him of my adventure the previous evening. From him I learned that my aunt's mind had been weakening since the loss of her son. Although appearing quite normal, she at times would think she heard Marion calling to her. She would then rise from her bed to go to her son. My uncle had not intended to take me into his confidence, but now he told me how he would wake at nights to Hnd his wife had gone. He would then get up and follow her to see that she came to no h' . arm Doxoruy SCULLY, '27 f Y 1 A Senior's Promise My high school days will soon be o'er, And then my soul shall be As free as birds when high they soar, Oh! happy I shall be. I ask of life the chance to prove That I'm a worthy soulg I promise every stone to move That keeps me from my goal. I'll hitch my wagon to a star, CYou see, my aim is highj, And ifI don't go quite so far, I'll never need to sigh. The best in life will be my aim, No less will satisfy, I'll always try to write my name, In gold upon the sky. fo bring great fame to Old Tech Hi- To honor Freedom's Land- To do my best with all I try, I vow, with heart and hand. ELME11 Kim, '27 1 1 1 We Wonder Often we wonder why the teachers get cross, And why always they seem to pick on the Froshg But sometimes it's the juniors or the Sophomores, too, Then, perhaps, a Senior will get a real taboo! But when it's all summed up with some great care You will End with the student the trouble is there. E H 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I , I I M 111171 118 I I I I I I I I I I I I fctivities I I I I I I I' I I I I I I M 1 1 1 1 1 1YoLghja.-NWOH1 1 1 W1 L 1 ,,a-P' --1-itil EVENTS f Z:J ,fax-T' NX or is f X iml .- ssprgmgfp f 1 . e 6 ---N ' ,, :V sfumes smnr i-- Sf'f' I-xi' JY'-K 4 IN EAQNEST Scnoot. OPENS - 5512-9 Z, 'Q'-j f 'ffl X in 1 1 I f 1 f fs 1 ,li gf fi-fi FooTB N3 SEPTEMBER Mouklfij 1-Oh, my! School will soon open again. 4-High School teachers begin to arrive in McKeesport. Teachers' meeting in Shaw Avenue building. 5-New teachers begin to investigate Tech High building-almost as lost as the Freshies were at one time. 7M-School begins for another 180 days. June 7 is a long Ways off. 8-We met our teachers, and were assigned our duties. 10-One week of the school term has already expired-thirty-five more. 13-One Week of Work behind our back, school is fully organized, with close to 2,000 students enrolled. 16-We liked our new seats assigned us at the first chapel exercises. 17-The Freshmen viewed the Maud at first chapel. 23-The football tickets Went on sale. 25-Mclieesbort High played her first rival, Clairton, the score being 6-0, in favor of M. H. S. 27-Another comfortable, rainy day. 28-The glee clubs were organized under the supervision of Miss Carey and Mr. Stribrny. 30-September has passed us by. Christmas will soon be here. Q, 1 9 2 7 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M 51211 I I I I I I I 1 I I TI I I I , Yough-a-Mon 1173 'lf-T HIGH LIGHTS af: eg: XII Il f A-1? OF x - 4 X'f 54 Q51 OCTOBER .rf N rj' Q ff' I. .ag FII 44252 'Z gy FIRST E.xAMs aa-as I f .l1',M'7 HQSQN .,p' J-' ofa f -A f :- iii- , HALI0IATE,ETNiOCIT'3l A af M . 1-The beginning of a new monthg just eight more to go. 2-Donora downed M. H. S. by a score of 19-O. 4-Our first banking day. Ofhcers are elected for the various rooms. 5-Second school month opens auspiciously for all of us. 6-Opening meeting of the Hi-Y Club at the Y. M. 7-The teachers of Tech High received their first checks. Smiles were quite' noticeable. 9-M, H. S. meets another rival, Monessen, the score being O-O. 12-Columbus day. A few observe the holiday. 16-Mon City defeats Tech Hi, 16-9. 21-Girl Reserves conduct morning chapel. At afternoon chapel Dr. Flowers lectured on A Tip on Futures. 22-First half of exams are overg that's one consolation. But oh-Monday! 23-The boys are defeated by Connellsville, score being 21-O. 25-Seniors hold their first class meeting. Various committees are appointed. 28-Announcement of Red and Blue and Annual staffs. 31-Halloween seemed to be observed by all. Parties all over town. y 'I 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I J I I I I I I I I I mn I I I I I I I F I I I I I L I , - v , Yough-a.-Mon. - I L. R2 -,- Oqffm ffffff Evam-5 Xlllx' I - , . -0f- 2 as l ' Novr-:Mean i ll 1 .- :I I 5 at Aesszslsf I I .' E W., 'I 2 Nov. 4 f ,v ap ,fx L ' V I sf, J y , fd-v4 Q X, Z ...e.- H . O , X- Z . we 'f J fa t 7 W 2 2 Q-jg? V Ml X IN fee Q 1 I ml 4 4 2 1-014414 ex ,Rsposn Q Amos -THANKSGIVING W BEAT DUQUESNEQ9 1-Second month closes. Only seven more. 2-The new dial telephone system is demonstrated by Miss Snyder. Much interest was aroused. 3-M. H. S. cries, Beat Dukane . Mr. Bower encourages the team. 6-M. H. S. defeats Duquesne in a royal battle, 3-O. Flegal shines. ll-Our first holiday, just like playing hook . Armistice Day. 12-Homestead wins close game, 7-6. 16- Bud Soles, Senior class president, names personnel of the flower, colors, and motto committees. 18- Red and Blue goes on sale. The total pledged was 1810. 20-M. H. S. downs Elizabeth, the score, 13-O. This marks end of football schedule. 24-Room 201 starts club plan to buy the school annual. Miss Gillman be- comes room cashier. Many old students visit Tech High. Thanksgiving is here. 26-Another holiday to be thankful for-Thanksgiving. The first Senior dance is held at the Penn-McKee. Teachers hold annual institute in Shaw Avenue building. The rest of us enjoy the holiday. 27-Institute continues throughout the day. 30-Back again to resume our work-maybe! WI I I I I 1 9 2 7 I I I I I I ' I I I I I S57 D231 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I A YOUgh-a.-Mon Y g Q ,ff HISTOQY g -V U C EN A T U 67 L mv! - 'la g Eg C7 ,.., ,, f cf AJ 1 - 1 fs.. - A 1 I X M A I I II ' r I CLEE CLUB f Q CONCERT' I-4? Y VA A1-ION - 2224 C6211 'f DANCEQ23 U RED Q Lu v ' 'Dec it gag X X I PI.l?:?JL:I:I'U ' ' 2. i',i' T ezsv IN CLASS fc Z' 3 7 3 AT HARRISBURG , .faf' , wg, , .I ,Q QQ X'YIff5fff 2-Another school month passes into eternity. 3-The first issue of Red and Blue is published. A huge success! 9-We are treated with a few selections by the glee clubs. They are advertis- ing the fall concert. 10-Tickets on sale for concert. Put over successfully. 14-Mr. Bower brings good news-exams. Glee clubs give fine musical concert in Tech High Auditorium. 16-Postmaster Hershey asks us to rush our Xmas mail. 17-Unexpected-Varsity downs Alumni, scoring 33-29 in basketball. 19- A Merry Xmas is the new saying. 21-Forty-live minute tests are held. Second issue of Red and Blue appears. No more school 'til next year. 22-Christmas vacation starts. Teachers scatter to the four winds. 23-Senior class holiday dance at the Penn-McKee. Big times and fine dancing. 24-Mr. Weigle attends vocational meet at Louisville, Ky. 28-Miss Gillman attended Pennsylvania State Education Association at Harris- burg. 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I 'I I I I I M f124I I I I 1 I I I I I v I I I L 4 Yough-a.-Mon 54962 WK! 5 W-as 4 7 72 -L ,QQ HISTORY L 4 f, MQ E -or-1 , 5 JAN UARV 1 '. Q f KS ,lj -7 X X L, jg Men- HOMESTEAD Exams - as-an New Ap? EAR ef fkf 13 'alma 1 gf ape - wa- cs X - - K ' 9 REPORT- ' JAN 1 E15 Q :Stu 1-Turning over a new leaf for the coming year. Resolved: to carry CLIE new year's resolutions-maybe. 3-We start our New Year on Blue Monday . Basketball season is opened. 4hThe Bob Jones Party gave an interesting program. M.H.S. plays Pitt Freshies , losing by score, 54-24. 5-Mr. Bower awards prizes to those selling the most Xmas seals. 7-M. H. S. begins the league games with a victory. Clairton defeated, score, 19-14. 10-The student body, faculty, and board attend Bob Jones Tabernacle . Over 1000 students turn out. 11-M. H. S. Freshies meet Donora Junior High at Donora. Quite a game! 14-Munhall is defeated by Chasemen, 21-18. 16- Freshies play Munhall Sophomores at Munhall. They are getting in practise to do bigger and better things. 17- Red and Blue enters journalistic contest at Harrisburg. 18- Dukane wins close game, 18-16. . 20-M. H. S. meets victory over Homestead, 29-24. 24-Senior class meeting held. Class in debt from dance held during Xmas holidays. 28-' 'Happy Days' '-exams. 19 2 7 M III I IL I I I I I I I-I I M 51251 I 1 I I I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon If, 4 -J 5' TRACK 4 S Everws BEQN5 X aff' if I 1 ft . FEBEQBARY E X E25 , ,Eg 3 III 'Q ' I f . S5 I - ff- I X I I I. XXX, - LJNCOI..N,S I ff- I I BTEIZ-'S' 5' V .. VALENTINE 00 I ' f- I j y DAY I N 3 I gl WASHING oN' BIRTHDAY- 'K ' I Q? H 1-Close victory, 24-23, in favor of Mon City. 2-Gym boys put on splendid performance in chapel. 3-Annual goes on sale. Boys' glee club boosts the annual sale. 4-Another victory for M. H. S., a sad story for Clairton, 31-17. 8-Fifth school month ends here. Term over half done. 10-Girl Reserves entertain the faculty of M. H. S. 11-Munhall plays at McKeesport. We Won by a score, 36-13. 12-Lincoln's Birthday. Freshies enjoy the chapel speakers. 15- Dukane overcomes M. H. S. 22-20. 18-Another sad story, Homestead defeats M. H. S., 17-15. 21-Mr. Bower announces the essay contest. Prizes are offered for scholarships. 22-All good Americans celebrate this day-Washington's birthday. 25-Our boys gain a victory over Elizabeth, 22-11. Quite a change. 26-The Red and Blue awakens a few of the subscribers. 27-Prof. Crall, head of history department, goes to Dallas, Texas, to attend N. E. A. Prof. Jordan, formerly history instructor, takes Mr. Crall's classes. 9 2 7 S l W7 1 1 I 1- I ! ! I I I I I I L M D261 I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I Youglj-a.-hflon ffX,- EVENTS f'- ff-if MARCH Q- f--frfs' Qs S-Xi .fc Q f ' SPRING STARTS YQUQH ', MARCH Zlg A s II rg 2.7 i L wr: GO TO PRESS DOWNS lb r-Acuurv -- FRENCH 1-A beautiful day to be glad in, but a sign of more wintry weather. M. H. S. defeats 3 Monessen, 26-30. -The orchestra favored us with a selection. A concert is coming. 4-Varsity defeats the Faculty by a score of 34-22. 5-The Red and Blue enters the popularity contest. 8-Six months behind us. Three more to go. 10-Mr. Bower invites all students to take part in the Oratorical Contest for ' 'State 14 issue. Scholarship. -The Board of Education announces plan to launch a million and half bond 17-Wearing o' the green. 18-The French play goes over big. Some of us star in Le Bourgeois Gentil- hommef' 21- Spring has come. First baseball practice. The boys are getting in trim. 25-Local oratorical contest is held in Shaw Avenue building. second. Francis Patterson, Industrial, Wins out in the contest. James Fulton lands 29-Some of us learn that exams are due April 8 and 14. 31 stead's -District oratorical contest is staged in McKeesport. Smith, of Clairton, vvins the McKeesport district oratorical Contest. Home- entrant is the second choice of the judges. 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -I M L1272 YB I I I I I I Yoiughla.-lJ1on I I I I I I M ' ' I CONSTITUTION OIZATOIZICAL CONI'EfJT if d APRIL e , I 1 fwfr M a 5 VACATION W I i ff ' M 770' 55,2-f-af-2 .If .2 Af- H M, -- A msesatt Dreams ML- G56 1-All Fools' Day. 4h-The boys are practising hard for the baseball squad. 5-At last we end the seventh month. 8-Exams are here once more. We finish them next'Thursday. 10-Palm Sunday-Getting ready for Easter. 14-Memorial of Lincoln's Assassination. 15-Good Friday-another holiday. 17-Showing off our new bonnetsf-Easter. l9'Patriots' Day. M. H. S. opens another season of sport. Edgewood is our first rival in baseball. 20-School resumed after a few days' vacation. 22-We travel all the way to East Pittsburgh to see the second game of the SCHSOI1. 26-M. H. S. has another rival to contend with,-Wilkinsburg. 29-Again We travel to win. We reach our journey's end at Turtle Creek. 30-Pitt Literary Meet. Hope We win! Louisiana was purchased 124 years ago to-day I 9 2 7 QEQQEL1 I I I I I I I I I I I I 'I I I Iv' 1283 A.. I I I 1 I I M I I I I L I Yoiagh-fa.-hdion I CALENDAR MAY .JUNE - f 7 aww si:i' E ly .. -- . J June-7 5 e :L If- t corarfveucfmt-:Nl- , Q - i X Q-'f ' - V l S A A I ww EX? mtr 7 OWR Y-5'6 M May 1-May day. june 3-We seek victory at North Braddock. 5-Senatorial exams are held. 6-M. H. S. meets Edgewood again. We aim to win. 10-East Pittsburgh competes with M. H. S. for the second time t 13-Again we find ourselves playing Wilkinsburg. 16-The eighth month ends. Only 10 more days for the Seniors. Seniors leave M. H. S. behind. 17-Turtle Creek High Finds itself at McKeesport. 20 30-Memorial day-we visit the Silent City of Death. 5-Baccalaureate services are attended by the Seniors. 6-Commencement is held at Harris for 8th grade. 7-Senior Commencement-We bid M. H. S. goodbye. 8-Picnic day-Curtain falls on our act as Seniors. his season -M. H. S. faces North Braddock in the last game of the season. M 1 9 2 7 Iil I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Ci-Ml? D291 1301 THE RED AND BLUE STAFF JEANNE NORD, PAULINE THORNTON. Fin! Raw: AURIE LANE, HALLIE MONAHAN, JANE SHAFEER, FRANK YOUNG, DOROTHY EVERETT, Second Raw: MARGARET BROWN, ROBERT MAY, LILYAN DECRER, FRANCIS PATTERSON, ETHEL YORK, DAVID BOYD, ANNA ONCEA, CHARLES LE BRETON. ossER, PR DA WEEE, RHO HN CHARLOTTE BIDDLESTONE, Jo ALvERsON, IR 4: ..1 FQ :Z rn A 1- KOT PAULINE ELsoN, CH ARLES BREIUNGER, Row: KATHERTNE N Third ,-1 M 4 li U ERTY. GH Es Dov I I I 1 I I I 1 I I I I I L I ,y Yough-a.-Mon I THE RED AND BLUE HE Red and Blue , the student newspaper of Tech High, has completed another successful year in its apparently un-ending career. Last year the Red and Blue was converted from a booklet into a newspaper, and the result was so encouraging that no change has been made. The paper had an overwhelming sale last November, when the yearly canvass was staged. Approximately 1650 cash subscriptions were turned in. This was the highest number ever sold in the history of the high school. The students have cooperated whole-heartedly with the staff by contributing stories, poems, jokes, and essays. A special feature this year has been the contri- bution box, which was placed in the front hall. The paper, as usual, has been well- received in other schools, and there are approximately sixty-five high schools on our exchange list. The Red and Blue is unique inthe fact that it is supported entirely by the students, and, therefore, does not need to include advertisements within its pages. This has always been a matter of considerable pride to the school body. The staff has aimed to make the Red and Blue a real school paper by publishing clean, wholesome stories, inoffensive humor, snappy poems, and feature articles dealing with every phase of school life. Much of the success achieved this year has been due to the untiring efforts of Mr. Strong, the faculty advisor. The Staff Editor ..,,,,,,.,.,.,,,,,,,, ,,7,,,,,,,,,,,..,.,.,,,,,,,,,, A W .....,..,.. BLAIR ALVERSON Auiftdnt Editor ,,.,,.,,,,, ........ D onorm' EVERETT Buxincn Mamzgrr ,,.,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, ..,...,.. F RANCIS PATTERSON , Amiftdnt Bminefr Mqndggr ,,,,,,, ,.,.. MARGARET BROWN School Nrwr .,.,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,,,,,,oo.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,AAA,,,,,,,,,A,,i,,,,,,,..,,r,.,,.,,,.,,.,,...,..., LILYAN DECKER Athletic Editor ,,...,,.,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,V,V,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,...,... MICHAEL BURGER Literary Editorr .... PAULINE THORNTON, CHARLOTTE BIDDLESTONE, CHAS. MCKENERY, FRANK BECK Exchange Editor ,,,,,,,.,....,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,.,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,..................,...... PAULINE KOTTLER Alumni Editor ,,,,.....,....,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Y,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,sis,,,,,,,,Y,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,.,,,,,,i,,..,.,,...i.,....,...,.... J OHN WEBB joker Editor ..,.,,,,.., 1 ,,,,,,, ,,,,,s,,,r,,r,,,,,,,,,,,................ C HARLES BREITINGER Art Editor .,,ii,,,.,..,, ,.,,,.,7,,,7,,,..,.,,,.,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,.,.,...,....... R OEERT MAY Circulation Editorr ..., ,,,,,...... H ALLIE MONAHAN, RHonA PROSSER, ANNA ONCEA Fdrlilgf Aduzrar ,.,., ,,,,,,,,Y,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,..,...,,........,,,.,..,..,..... L . W. STRONG School Reporters AURIE 'LANE JANE SHAEIIER CORNELIUS SIBLEY DAVID Boxn ETHEL Yom: PEARL HARRISON CHARLES DOUGHERTY JEAN N ORD WILLIAM COLEMAN KATHERINE NELSON 1 9 2 7 , M I - I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M U311' 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 L 4 Yough-a.-Mon it M ',4I V, rg,le?5r,Vl,Zr1, ,rn ae lg, 7 7 In V-,x:glv,,, . f, ,, V,.: .,w.,,v.t-mm, it ,Y ,.i,, , .reel M L .VV, rr V4 I l ., Arm ? - new ,4., . ,f . I 'P . fn ' - ' i 'M'vn'f5. ' ' we f'f:r::e.-:ws - i ,a 'f'ffi ' ent ,G 4 v , M-5' rrg . .. Y' it 2 s -V tj . 4. Frei Tn 'h': lf! 'X 2:ii,f3Q2M5-:51g.,':'.,.,....,...v.r.m.---'-'Qi ' I f. 5'-W .. .. --s 'T fri., Zi mf' f - 1 7 : av--ll ' ,...,4v-new frag?rrr13ealfe'ne.ina.nia-J: -- 5 515f Nff'ef .5-qiw lun if re -fer.-QL-: ' ,, -t - haw' S: 2314,-1-rua.:-T,-3-2'-, . e.: .. :nn 'n 'F n'?'-9g,,i'1i5'f,,i'-i2.:i1H5 li'av.g,,gf4'6gKgw7gx- .pr .gsgqr , ,egagmst .4,.-. ,.T5-.n-new rg- 4ws,,,5?'1,49m,er,: V, af ' ' g . . 4,..444 , H , - eilinfffiflrjrs' 1 2 -swf' pau:-u:nEg,.seef?2-anne-2-trail: . .:, .-H .fthe-ia 'frm .V M. 1, 'f, :::5eisn a:1n-'f-Wi ' 1- f fain smart 3?-iiriairenfeefttg-'gin-Q -A f. tant' QV4- . ' ' f 1f'fnf.: if We-s'f-pref-.ef2,e 'twine ' 'rn 1 ef-H' --f1n2?s'3e,-wif-n 1 . fn WQ-:ai-'45-r?ff' -va-WU!-ev- I fi5 lEir,.f:n-+'sl'9R9Z'fn,2a'? 'nn-fz....:'i 'lr Sir- I ' W - . +-ass-XWWN W n'.,v-Wf1 '.is-Ji MW . ei I. ra 'W . .Q izitanlamzs -Q.. --.v fa,ff'Q'rsm-mr y f 1 fe r N I . -1 - READY REFERENCE DICTIONARY . SENIORS - NEWEST REVISED POCKET EDITION Seniors are a queer, two-legged biped' of the Announ mam-A Wa t or br uh . HV genus canus. There is nothing particularly r drcerl' D b . S51 b e especial 1 disgusting about those creatures, for they re- - Cscrvc of tl C fi ating u ' semble human beings in many respects. How- BCHS-D1V1dCd 1l'1f0 FWO Q19-SSCS, Hfsf afld 55501141 ever, they have their peculiarities, as all abori- IDCHS, 10 great Clcmafld Cluflflg C1155 PCf10dS- ginals do, and I will now proceed to demonstrate - Blotter-Something to look for while the ink some of them. The male Senior is invariably an dries. excellent billiard shot, and may be seen' almost Desk-A space offering infinite possibilities for any Cvnnlns kllllng Poofii lnnnnnnf b.l111n54S,1n -l Promising young artists. any recreation roo-m. ey are easiy istin- X . . uished from other inhabitants of the work house 1 oriigigg-333315215225 igglggsnorcs study fnnJnn1- y the enormity of their heads, a size 8 hat being -- s . ' - A e I very common among this species. Sadly enough, Exnnsn-A Pfacflcal Coufsc ln f01'gC1'Y- their minds are slightly affected and they enter- Gym-Something that makes you late to your tain a popular delusion that they are right and - next class. the world is wrong. The female of this species Juniors-An intermediate stage of development 15 a Very beautiful Cfeatllfc, bit abc, 15 iadlly between Sophomore and Senior. Consider them- han?Pefed by th? Clfiafacteflsflc nn SIZE 0 t C selves lrlgrllrelv Superlor ro borlr Senior. The majority of the female Seniors are O h S.d r h P Ar . r r b. l. not troubled by an over sufficiency of intellect, in lfirer .1 C 0 I C aper- fmt u Su len or but some are so exceptionally brilliant that they q yf can compare with some members of the faculty. Parking-A Place to Put Your Car to hnvn the At one time a Smithsonian geologist believed fenders CfumP1eCl- he had discovered the fossil of a Senior, who had -- Pen-Something to borrow on book report days. lived in the Neolithic age, but on further investi- penell and par-,er..Arl experlslve luxury never .gat1on, it was ascertained to be merely the skelton brought ro elass. of a long eared horse, 1. e., a donkey. - Seniors-A species of super-beings defying A description. .Peg W. Ctranslating VirgiD While the damp Shelk-A fellow who earl keep his seat and night was falling, the hero dislodged from sleep. - flirt with the girl who is standing up. 1 Sophomore-An annual phenomenon peculiar Dot.- Oh, Miss Woods! , to senior high schools. Recent startling scientific Miss Woods.- What is it? investigations have disclosed that with proper Dot S.- May I take my typewriter home?' care and consideration, some varieties may develop Miss Woods.- Why? -e into rational human beings. Dot.- I want to study it. M I 1 9 2 7 I I I I I I I ,I I I I I I I I D321 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Youglgfa.-Mon I DEPARTMENT or Music USIC, the universal language of the soul, is rapidly assuming its rightful place in the life of our high school. Prior to the present year the musical activities have been supervised by one in- structor. This year marks a departure from this plan, and now two teachers supervise the work of this department. Professor Stribrny now is giving individual instruction in orchestral instruments, in addition to directing the Junior and Senior orchestras, the Boys' glee club and the Freshman chorus. Mr. Stribrny has also been the violin soloist at the student concerts. Miss Carey, the new assistant in music, has conducted Freshman chorus classes and theory classes for Sophomore and Junior literary students. A special feature of Miss Carey's work has been the teaching of music fundamentals, voice production, and music theory to the Seniors who plan to pursue post graduate work next fall. Miss Carey is the directress of the Girls' glee club, is the piano soloist, and accompanist. Miss Carey is especially qualified for the position she now fills. She is a graduate of Oberlin Con- servatory of Music, with a B.M. degree. For two summers she has served as music counsellor at the Luther Gulick Camp for Girls, in Maine. Prior to coming to McKeesport Miss Carey was the directress of music in the Charleston High School, Charleston, West Virginia, where her clubs won high honors in the 1926 state music contest. EDWARD STRIBRNY, A.B. KATHRYN M. CAREY, B.M. Carnegie Tech Oberlin Director of Muric Arrirtanf in Muric M -I 9 2 7 I I I ' I 'I I I I I V I I I I I I M L1331 1341 THE SENIOR ORCHESTRA I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I ' M You gh-.1-Mon M I P- .., Fin! Vloln HENRY FINKEL CHARLES ALVERSON THOMAS ANDREW W FRANK CASSEL GERTRUDE ELLIOTT ESTELLE FRIEDMAN VINCENT BIELSKI MELVIN HENDERSON RUDOLPH WUKOSON BEATRICE CASLOR HERBERT BURKMAN ANTHONY CATANZARO - ,. .Yeeand Vialn ' ' GRACE CARTER DOROTHY GREGERSON ALMA LYDEN 1 JOHN SHARROW JOHN WILSON JOHN ORD ' DOROTHY VAUOHAN ZELLA JONES THOMAS SESSION 4. BLAINE LYTLE MITCHELL BURTNETT .. Violaf Cellar BMI ELMER HORVACK EMMA HOFFMAN CHARLES MCCOY ', WILLIAM DICKINSON GEORGE HILTY CLIFFORD GUSTAFSON Clarinet Flute E -SWIIXUPWW 'v Q ANNA BAKER ETHEL ADAMS ESTHER MEHLMAN THOMAS CARDWELL SYDNEY WEISS MERLE BETZ JAMES MADER C .Saxophone 7' HERBERT MOFFAT EDWARD DUNLAP Piana French Horn Lihfafidfl ' T- FRANK HACKANSON JAMES MOORE HARVEY KROW I Curnetx, ' .. PEARL HARRISON ARTHUR WOLF CLIFFORD HOLMES HERBERT SMITH-Pereuuion-JACK MCKEE 'J in .- Ifialnr ,, JOHN ORD CHARLES MCCOY JOHN WILSON ISABELLE EVERETT BOYD HAMILTON HILDA PALM SARAH NIELD ESTHER FOX MARJORIE NELSON ,- , ELEANOR NELSON MITCHELL BURTNETT JOSEPH MONFORT DOROTHY VAUGHAN ADELADE FERGUSON ALBERT HAUSER EUGENE MCBRIDE PERCY GARLAND ALFRED BRONDY 0 , HERBERT WILSON Q Cella Flute BMJ' ' 4- EMMA HOFFMAN ESTHER MEHLMAN CLIFFORD GUSTAFSON BILLIE PORTER Clarinet! - F ANNA BAKER FRANK HACKANSON MERLE BETZ E Saxophone .. 'L KENNETH HARRISON AMES MADER WILLIAM SESSION C Saxophone - WILLIAM SCHMIDT BENJAMAN BOOKER VERNER MAXIE MARTHA MCCUNE LOUIS RELSCH Carnetf - PEARL HARRISON WILLIAM THORTON ARTHUR WOLF Pereuuian Piano - JACK MCKEE BILLIE MILLER BYARD BRYCE A .. I 1 9 2 7 M M I I I I I I I I I I I I I ' I I 51351 1361 UNIOR ORCHESTRA THE J y 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 L 1 . - 1 1, Youghf-a.-Mon I M THE FALL MUSICALE Presented bythe Glee Clubs of the . Mclfeesport High School Assisted by Mr. Stribrny, violin, and Miss Carey, piano. HE fall musicale, given by the members of both the Boys' and Girls' glee clubs assisted by Miss Kathryn M1 Carey, pianist, and Professor Edward Stribrny violinist, was a huge success. It was presented on the evening of December 14 1926, in the high school auditorium, and was an excellent display of the talent of these clubs. The program was delightfully varied, and consisted of the following numbers: Part 1 1. On Wings of Song ., ,tV,. .t,,,,., r ,,c,,,,.,,,,,,c..,, r,..t.,cAt M e nelelrfobn Flower Song' '-Faust ,,Yt,,,,,.c,,it,,,.,.,s,,,,,,,,,t,, ,iv,t,,,,,,,... G azmoel Mixed Chorus 2. 'HA Green Little Apple ,,.,,,,,,.,,,,.v,,,,,,,,c,,,,c, .,,,,c.,t,c. C onmel A Spring ldyln ...,,,,,,,.,.., ,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,.. F eezrif Kindling Wood ,,. ..,,,...,,,,,.,, ,,,,t,,V,r,r,,,,,,,t., ...i,tc, C 0 llege Sang Nelly Was a Lady ......,,,,,..,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,t,,,, ..,,..,,,, C allege .Yong Boys' Glee Club Part II 1. Etude de Concert ..,t. .,,sc..cYt,.,,,ic, ct1c.,t,.,i.,,,....... L l .rzt Magic Fire Music ......,,.....,...,.,,,,,...,,s..,,,, .si.t.s, W ezgner-Brezfrin Miss Carey Allegro non troppo . Symphonic Espagnoleu ..,c,,,.,Att,.,t,,,,,,, 7, Mr. Stribrny .i,.i,,,Lezlo Part 111 1. The Christmas Holly ,,,,,,,,,,1,.,,,,,,,,,,,,, W. Rlayf-Herbert 'Christmas Snow .r ,,t,w,,,c,,,,,,c,,,r.,,,,.,r,,i,t,,,,, tt,t..c,,,,.,,c,,.,r,Y G rlfg Cantique de Noel ,,,,,t.,.,,,,r,,,,r,,,,s,o,,c,r,,.Y,,,,,, ,,.,,,V,, A deem Girls' Glee Club 1 9 2 M I I I I I I I I. I7 I I I I I I M l137l IBH 1927 THE COMBINED GLEE CLUBS, Fall Concert U -3 4-A A Scene from M -. 9 -. I .- I .. ..-. .4- -- ,.. .... I ,M 1 1 I 1 I I 4 Ta I a I I 1 I I Yough-a,-Mon PERSONNEL OF THE GLEE CLUBS BOYS' GLEE CLUB Firft Tenor BRYCE BAYARD EDWARD PEEELES BERNARD JOY DONALD HARMON DAVID SIEGEL JACK MCKINNEY Second Tenor PAUL VOGEL CLIFFORD GUSTAFSON ARTHUR ZOLTEN LOUIS MARTIN CLIFFORD BROADEENT G M .- - ..- T , Baritone EGBERT RICHARDS FRANK CASSEL .I VICTOR GELTZ HAROLD LACEY GERALD ERRINE DONALD KEDDIE JACK MCKEE ' Ban' FRANCIS PATTERSON RAYMOND MASTERS RICHARD BESWICK WILLIAM DICKINSON J. DE AUGUSTINE CHARLES SCHMITT 'f I Director Accompanift MR. STRIBRNY FRANK HACKANSON I ... 7 GIRLS GLEE CLUB - Firxt Soprano .- DORIS HENDERSON ELIZABETH DUNN BEATRICE DOWNEY DOROTHY JUBELIRER DOROTHY KELSCH MARY HOPKINS KATHERINE MENzIES TRIXIE HAUOI-IT HELEN MUSHRUSH HELEN CLAYTON GRACE FRAZIER HARRIET SISCO -I JOSEPHINE HOUCK GRACE BUNNER MARY JANE PETRELLA LOUISE SINZEL RUTH PRESCOTT KATHRYN WATSON VERNE MILLER H Second .fopfuno HARRIET HOOS MAE CONWAY KATHERINE KALINA LOUISE PATTERSON ' JEAN MILLER ESTELLE HATCHER MARIE MCBRIDE RUBY MILLER MARYE STEGANIUS HELEN STEELE HAZEL CONLIN THELMA FRANKS - BERNICE ERHART HELEN KILGALLON GARNETTA CRAWFORD Alto DOROTHY CARTWRIGHT ARDELLA SLEETH MILDRED MILLIGAN ELIZABETH DOWNEY DOROTHY SCULLY ANNETTE HENDERSON MARY CHARLES HELEN WEST 6 JANE JENKINS KATHERINE SMYTI-IE MILDRED CHESSMAN BERNICE BROOKS ALICE RUTH SPAUGEY GEORGIA HARTMAN RUTH HEVERLY ... Direolrexf Acrompnnixt MISS CAREY EMILY DUNN -I ..... .- 1 9 2 7 I i I I I I 'I I I I I I I I I M I139I 1401 ESTRA ORCH CAST, WITH EBBLESH 'P ED LISH PO I I I I I I I 'I IT I I I TI TIL I M Yough-a.-Mon POLISHED PEBBLES Operetta in Two Acts Polished Pebbles , an operetta by Otis M. Carrington, was presented by the mixed choruses of the high school, May 20-21, 1926, in the high school audi- torium. The cast, ably assisted by various choruses, reflected great credit on the director, Mr. Stribrny, and his assistants. The leading characters Were: UNCLE Bon ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,, MRS. O'BR1EN.. I ROSALIE ...,.,,..,.,,,,,, WINIFRED ,,.....,. MILLICENT .,...,,. MRS. GABBLE... MR. GABBLE ,..,. MARTHA ,....,... NICK .,,,..,,,,,, Overture ,.,..... 1. Opening Chorus THE PROGRAM ACT I 2. I For One Can Say ,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,v,,,,,,,,,,,,,,v,,,,,,,,,, , . Chorus of Welcome ,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,, . When I Was In Paree . :ion Black Joe QFost . This and That ,....., .. . The Picture in the W g1'i11 e aj ',',',i. I if. I 3 4 5 6. Farewell ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,. 7 8 9 . Aeroplane ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 10. Polished Pebbles ,,,,,,,,, ,i .Mrs. O'Brien, Millie, ,MROBERT SLEETH SIGNE SJOMAN ....DOROTHY JUBELIRER ,,............HARRlET Slsco LENORE TRIMBLE ,,,,,.,,,.,,,,,,BETTY MCCUNE ,....FRANCIS PATTERSON Mxmaiuan MILLIGAN . ,,,.., . E RGB ZEvGscHM1nr f G 0 Q .......High School Orchestra Winnie, Mrs. Gabble, Gabble and Chorus Rosalie and Chorus O Brien .........Rosalie and Bob ..,,,,,,..Mrs. O'Br1en, Millie, and Winnie ...Martha and Nick .Millie and Winnie .......Rosalie and Mrs. Gabblc 11- Finale ..................... ,,,....., P rincipals and Chorus Selection ....... ,,,.,,,... ,,............ O r chestra 44 Pls lk Pls Pk Pk ACT II 12. Opening Chorus- Working on the Farm ,,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,, .,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,................... ........ C h oruS 13. It's Shocking to Say the Least ..................... ......... M rs. O'Brien, Millie, Winnie and Bob 14. Mother Sent Me Out .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,...,,,,,. ,,,.,,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,...........,,............... , ..NiClc 15. Sunbonnets, Red and Blue ,..., ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, R osalie, Martha and Sunbonnet Girls 16. Town Talk ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..,,,,,,,, M rs. Gabble and Chorus 17. 'Tm Sorry ...,...................,.,., ,,,,,,,,,, M rs. O'Bi-ien, Millie, Winnie, and Chorus 18. Pleading ....................... ,,,..,,,,........,................... R osalie, Bob and Chorus 19. Waving Corniieldsn ......... ..,..................,............................ ......... B O b 20. Finale ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,, P rincipals and Chorus Exit ,,,,,,,,.,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,.,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. O rchestra 'I 9 2 7 . M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M H411 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I . Yough-a.-Mort WINTER CONCERT Presented by the Orchestras of the McKeesport High School HE winter concert given by the instrumental organizations of the high school was presented Thursday evening, February 10. It proved a great success, and reflected great credit on the music faculty. One of the features of the program Was the short talk by Mr. Stribrny, in which he explained the difference between a viola and violin and a cello. The patriotic note was combined with the musical features, when James Fulton and John Webb presented stirring orations on Lincoln and Wash- ington. The fullwprogram follows: March of the Gypsies ...,. .. Gavotte ,,t,,..,,t..i.,,...r,...,,,,.r,, .,,,.,,,,,, Overture 'Spring Delight' t.t............,.,...... A Junior Orchestra Oration, Character of Abraham Lincoln ......, N. Carr C. Stnrbnck S. Fetzrir .,....,..,fnmer Fulton HR21yIT1O11d Overture .......................,......,.......,... ........,,. A nzbroire Tbamnr Parting March, from Lenore symphony .,..tttt..tt,,...,..tt,,,,.,t,,,,,,,,,,, j' . Faff Romance ...................................,t...,,,.....tr...rt...t.tt....tt..tt......tr,, W. A. Maqnrt String Quartet: ELMER HOVARTH, HENRY FINKEL, THOMAS ANDREW, MR. STRIBRNY Oration: The Human Side of Washington ..r.t.,. ,....,.t.tr j alan Webb H. S. Pinaforem .,.,.,, ,,,,,,,,-,,,,,,,,, ,,,, ,,,,,,, E . G rieg HThC ROSaryH.. .................,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,, T ,..,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,, E . Nevin Trumpet S0l0 PEARL HARRISON Spanish Dance .......,....................,,.....,.,....,.,,..,.,....,..,,. .,...... M . Markowfki Senior Orchestra I I I I I J ? I2 I 7 I I I --.J I I M D421 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 - A Yough-a.-Mon L ALI BABA AND THE FORTY T HIEVES Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves , a musical comedy in tvvo acts, a prologue, and an eqilogue, was presented vin the high school auditorium, May 12, 1927. This splendid comedy, founded on the story of the Arabian Nights, made a decided hit with the large and enthusiastic audience, and reflected great credit on the music department. CAST OF CHARACTERS NARRATOR ,,,,,,,A,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,AAA.AA,,,,,A,,,A,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,i... S peaking Part SHEMSEDDIN, Captain of a band of robbers-Wm. Dickinson... ............................, B255 ABDULLAH, First Robber-Arthur Zolten ..........,............,.......... .........,. S peaking Parr SECOND ROBBER--Victor Geltz .........,......,...,...,,...,.,.,...,........... ........... S peaking Part THIRD ROBBER-Harold Lacey ,,.,.,.......,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ........... S peaking Part MRS. CASSIM, sister-in-law of Ali Baba-Mildred Milligan .... ......... M eZZO-50 1'af10 ABDUL HASSAN, foster son of Cassim-Frank Cassel ,,......... ......... B aritone EOWD CASSIM, brother of Ali Baba-Cliff Gustaffson ......,....,........ ........ B aritone ChighD MORGIANA, slave of Cassim-Dorothy Jubelirer ,,..,..... ................ . .S0p1'a1'10 MUSTAPHA, son of Ali Baba-Frank Hackanson ..,..... .. ............... Tenor ALI BABA--Egbert Richards ,.,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ..........,,. B a1'itOI1C FATIMA, daughter of Ali Baba-Elizabeth Downey ,.,,...... .................. S OPFRHO MRS. ALI BABA-Grace Bunner ,.............,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,... ,,...,.. ......,.... S p Cakirlg Part PRINCE OF ISPAHAN-Raymond Masters ...........,.......,................,,,.................. ........ S peaking Part CHORUS: Robbers, Slaves, Dancing Girls, etc. THE PROGRAM OVERTURE .......... ,,,,,.,,,,.,,,,..,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,. .......... I n strumental PROLOGUE ,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ........ ..... N a r rator ACT I A Forest outside the City of Bagdad A ROBBER'S LIFE ,,,,,,.................,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..r,,,.,,,,,,,,,,...................................... Chorus of Robbers I'M THE CAPTAIN OF THE ROBBER BAND ....,,.. .........,. S hemseddin and Chorus of Robbers SONG OF VENGEANCE ,.....................,....,..,,..,,,,....,. ..,........ S hemseddin and Chorus of Robbers KNOWLEDGE SONG .........,...,,....,.......................... ....................... A bdul Hassan and Chorus POOR RELATIONS ,,.,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,..,,.........,.,,....... M r. and Mrs. Cassim OVER THE PLAINS OF ARABIA ........ ...................... M orgiana and Mustapha THE MAGIC CAVE .................,...,.,,.,,., .................................................... M ustapha FINALE ,,,,.,............................,,.......,,,, ,...,.,.,..,,...,.. ........,,. S h emseddin, Cassim and Robbers ACT II A Room in Ali Baba's House HAIL, OUR LADY FAIR ........ ..........................................,......,........... ......... C h orus of Maidens DAY DREAMS ..,.,.,................ .................,....,...............,,....,.................................... F atima FIRST BALLET .,.....,..,,........... ,.,,,,,.,,,....,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,............,,..,,,.................,,.,..., I nstrumental KISMET .................,.,............................ ....,.... A bdul Hassan, Fatima, Mustapha and Mrs. Cassim PROCESSION OF SLAVES ...................... ................,.....,,.,,..,......................................,................. I nstrumental THE TROUBLES OF A FATHER ........., ,................................,............................................................... A li Baba SECOND BALLET .........................,,..,.,. ,.,,....,,...,.......,.......,........,...,.,....,..............,............................. I nstrumental FINALE .....,...,........,.,,,......................... .......... M ustapha, Morgiana, Ali Baba, Abdul Hassan and CIIOFUS EPILOGUE .,....,...,.... ,...,...,.................,,,,,,,,,,,,...................,......,............,...........,,...... N arrator '27 M 19 lll'l 44444444444 M H431 I I I V' I I I I I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon , THE RED AND BLUE A rgglg'-siEf1 r HJ-5 I-l-E, Al a 'ters golora proudly -Hg mg. a. Em- blem we love, 'thg colors,5o+kI5 blend ed, l Red. unCI'l2l1e Speak of 'Hue Blue we pledgefoihee-onlr love, l l+e-'ElwI:-ul leur-sonafmusf-share, 1 1. lllilll - ' l - 11 D T 1 5:10111 1' ' zulf--' I Q 11 T F lg' 11 I:-3 J' J ' rinrrxlr in -11: '- J 1,11 JJ Dil .E ED' Red 'for fha sun 'than-crimsondeepor pur-ple whose bm:-ns oreshining on us Guide of our Blue 'for 'l'l'1e way as 'true-assfara-a-bove. skg 50 brigl'1'Eand5c'fair -- .- ' .- -C I . U5-1.21711-L U---14-' ll ll E ' N C: 0 -1 : A .J o QD fo 9 f A E - :' .uc :il ' ' ' ' - - I ' v 1 1 I y 9 ' p94 J li L1 F ' I I l us , , 1 L - :L I - '- I - ' - . f-:: Y, I :E J H-3 2:-:5-'sr-ages: l ll I . 1 : Q - I : F E f I! E Q I ' l - I I ' .vu nan, es- 4 Ill uassf 55:1- I-- v , -I -I I 1 'Hr' 'rg - m 29 ' SJ my I li- I -E F. S- I ! ' 2 - ' ' - .. S '. , 'll 5 in i' , f IIL . . q 5 I if , Ill 'ul 3 - .. JV Q In H 3 lu: WI g 'lr Ill In Lg ll H I le 3: ' .1 ' -If 5 :gl .... , 5 'lt :as if :aa -I -HI IM ll. ,I L 'I 21 f . H. 5 Il II q A l' 'EU -'Q' I X I! -.,, E - I ti aj . -rw se.. LE: il -II 5 .I ll 3. ll I M H 5- lg I: 5 :iii 1:0 3 II . - N yu 2 x ml -n 1 lhll -wn 2 lv N all - if 4- 'R I 5 ll- 3 'I' f . , sg il . il g ml lil 35 ll I' IIL ,,- s I I . D ll 5' -gi 'll ' Ill -3 X ig, LW E ' R- ' ff I I. - -I 'Ili 'MX ' N El 'il' new 5 I ll E 5 - 5' llllll' 'illly - I. 11 in :E HI ' Im- I - -I lr 3 lll ' ' X I3 fl '?i lll.. Ellijdmfa Im gl wg: U :ii 115-5 1, . , , Q . 5 , I -gg 'Lia . ..- 'TNQ 'Nr 3, 3- - 5 ll H441 C7-Iothletics I l I 1 I I l 4 4 I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 A Yough-a-Mon ATHLETIC HONOR ROLL Varsity Letter Men CHARLES WEBER, Cap FOOTBALL tain ATWATER REED, Manager MARTIN BAKER MICHAEL BURGER PAUL DAWKINS WILLIAM FLYNN FOSTER FLEGAL WILLIAM FRIEDMAN TONY GAUDY A JAMES FORSYTHE CHARLETON JAMESSON ANTHONY MCDONALD HERBERT MANNING JACK MANNING WILLIAM NEE JOHN RUDOLPH HAROLD SOLES ELMER SEITZ FRANK SHAW CORNELIUS SIBLEY STEVEN THOMAS JOHN UHER PAUL VOGEL BASEBALL WILLIAM MAINS, Captain JOE JOHNSTON, Manager CHARLES ARTHURS RAY BARRY FRED BRIGGS MICHAEL BURGER FOSTER FLEGAL TONY GAUDY EDDIE HIRSHBERG JAMES MCARAW EDDIE MYERS EDDIE PARUCHA CHARLES SPRAGGS CHARLES WEBER BASKETBALL HAROLD SOLES, Captain ANTHONY MCDONALD ARTHUR THORNTON, Manager CORNELIUS SIBLEY FOSTER FLEGAL FRANK WHITEHEAD 1 9 2 M I I I I I I I I I 7 I I I 'I I I M 11471 I I I I I I I new I I I I I aL I Yougljv-a.-Mon I I M. H. S. IN ATHLETICS CKEESPORT High has enjoyed another prosperous year in her athletics. The Red and Blue banner has been well upheld by her Warriors on the gridiron, the basketball court, the baseball diamond, and the Cinder path. Though the school did not produce a W. P. I. A. L. winner, yet in each sport the boys have made a very creditable showing. The school was fortunate to secure as coach Ralph C. Chase, All-American tackle in 1925. Mr. Chase is a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, where he was a star football and basketball player. In his Senior year he was captain of the foot- ball team. The coach is a native of Wilkes-Barre, and is a graduate of that high school and of Wyoming Seminary. RALPH C. CHASE ' University of Pittsburgh The Cozzth I 9 2 7 f I M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M 51481 Football 1 1 I 4 I I 4 1 I I 4 I i 1 4 Yough-a.-Mon BAKER WEBER REED BURGER WO weeks before the opening of school the coach issued a call for the candidates for the team to report. Only five letter men were available. Around these the coach built his machine. What the boys lacked in experience they made up for in pep and spirit. After much experimentation with players the coach finally welded his team together for the opening game with Clairton. Though the field was a sea of mud, with rain falling throughout the game, M. H. S. won the contest by the score of 7 to 0. At Donora McKeesport received her hrst set-back. The heavy Donora line and the speedy backheld played havoc with our team. M. H. S. was outweighed and outplayed at every stage of the game, the nal score being 19 to 0. I Before one of the largest crowds of the season McKeesport held her old rival, Monessen, to a scoreless tie. Monessen was confident of winning, but our boys played a superior brand of football. The breaks of the game went against us. The team showed a big improvement over previous games. The following week the team travelled to Mon City to play the strong high school team of that city A crushing, whirlwind attack by Mon City in the first half swept M, H. S. off her feet. At the end of the half the score was 13 to O. But, in the last half McKeesport outplayed her rivals, the final score being 13 to 7. The early lead was too great a handicap for our boys. DAWKINS FLEGAL FLYNN FoRsY'rHE i I 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I D501 I I I I I I I I I I I La ' I L. I YOUgh-Q-MIDH J. MANNING MCDONALD MILLER MOORE HE next Saturday saw the big come-back. Tarentum, with a team that was reported to be of champi- onshig calibre, was forced to bow to McKeesport to the tune of 13-6. The former team was out- playe from start to finish, Tarentum being on the defense continually. Our opponents got her touchdown on an intercepted forward pass. The game with Connellsville the following week proved a heart breaker, for Connellsville handed M. H. S her worst defeat Somehow our boys could not get started Furthermore, all the breaks of the game went against us. The second team apparently played a better game than. the Hrst team. The Hnal score was 21 to O. The latter half of the season saw a. great change in results. The green team rapidly developed into a well-oiled machine. McKeesport's rivals from across the river, Duquesne, came over with an unblemished record. McKeesport nosed out a three to nothing Victory The game was a tense one for players and spectators alike. McKeesport's line stood out prominently, and Duquesne was unable to cross the goal. This game brought out the largest crowd in the history of the local school. Homestead was our last foe abroad. On the opening kick-off Homestead made her touch-down, followed by a kick for goal. For three quarters the two teams battled on even terms. In t'1e closing moments of the last quarter M. H. S. made a touch-down. The try for goal failed, the final szore being 7 to 6. ' FRIEDMAN GAUDY JAMESSON H. MANNING 1 9 2 7 QM I I I I I I I I I I I K I I I I M D511 44 4 4 I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 I , Yough-a.-Mon NBL: RUDOLPH Surrz SHAW HE season was brought to a close with the game with Elizabeth. From early reports Elizabeth did not have a strong team, but she, nevertheless, put up a valiant fight. M. H. S. was never in serious danger of being scored upon. Yet, when her goal was threatened, Elizabeth played her strongest. McKeesport crossed her goal line twice, the final score being 13 to O. This game was a Fitting close to a rather successful season. In all the games the Tubers showed a Fine spirit, and put up a good fight. Though SIBLEY SMITH SOLES STOKAN most of the players were green and inexperienced, yet the coach soon had a real team fighting for the glory ofthe Red and Blue . . A few weeks after the season had closed the letter men met in room 203 to elect a captain and a manager. The lot fell on Wm. Nec, and he will lead the future gridiron stars on to sweeping victories. Cornelius Sibley is the new manager. THOMAS Umm VOGEL M 4927 M I I I I I- .J I I I I I I 'I I I' 51521 Basketball 154l VARSITY BASKET BALL A. MCDONALD MANAGER THORNTON SQUAD Left fa Right: CQACH CHASE, WHITEHEAD, FLYNN, CAPT. Souzs, FLEGAL, 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 T1 1 1 Yough-a.-Mon THE GAMES BRIEFLY TOLD HORTLY after the close of the football season the Coach issued a call for candidates for the basketball team. Fully seventy-five men responded to the call. After weeks of intensive drill the Coach finally picked his team. The opening game was with the Alumni, whose strong line-up consisted of Clay, Schweitzer, Gilchrist, Hirshberg, Siegel, Arthurs, and Moritz, all letter men of former years. The game was hard fought throughout, and gave the Coach line opportunity to try out the new men. The lead see- sawed back and forth, with the varsity emerging victor by the score of 33 to 29. McKeesport 24 Mon City 19 In a non-league game McKeesport defeated Mon City at Mon City by the score of 24 to 19. The Tubers had a strong uphill fight throughout the game. Not until the Hnal quarter were they able to nose out a victory. The locals put on a hne exhibition of foul shooting. Flegal and Whitehead were the out- standing stars for M. H. S. McKeesport 24 Pitt Freshmen 54 The great Pitt Freshmen team came to the local gym and downed our boys to the tune of 54 to 24. We were outclassed from the start. Pitt's larger players were able to cage the ball from under the basket. Yet, the Tubers played a brilliant game, slipping through the Pitt defense for nine Held goals. Capt. Soles and Flegal were the leading point makers, 19 points together. McKeesport 19 Clairton 14 In a hard fought game the local varsity defeated Clairton 19 to 14, on the Tech gym floor. At the end of the third quarter Clairton was leading by a score of 14 to 11. The last quarter saw a great change, the score being soon evened, then increased. Soles and Flegal were the outstanding scorers for M. H. S. Salsi played best for Clairton. McKeesport 16 Duquesne 18 In a thrilling game with our old rival from across the river the Red and Blue warriors suffered their Hrst league defeat. Three times the score was tied, but Duquesne finally Won out 18 to 16. The Kowallis brothers starred for Duquesne, while Whitehead put up the best game for M. H. S. Thirty seconds before the time of the whistle S. Kowallis sent the ball through the rim, thus bringing gloom to our loyal rooters. McKeesport 21 Munhall 18 The M H. S. passers went to Munhall and defeated the high school team of that city by the score of 21 to 18 after a rough and tough battle. Munhall had a trick floor, and it took our boys some time to get used to it. In this game the forwards scored for the Hrst time, getting 13 points between them. Mun- hall presented a strong defense, which it took some time to penetrate. McKeesport 29 Homestead 24 Homestead High came here with a good team and a great crowd of rooters. The game started off with a rush, with M. H. S. quickly taking the lead, never to be headed. Whitehead starred for McKeesport, with eight held goals. Oats played best for Homestead. This was her first defeat of the season. McKeesport 22 Elizabeth 11 McKeesport handed the Elizabeth five a bad drubbing on the local floor. The latter team failed to put up much of an opposition. The passing of the Chase men was a pleasing sight to the spectators. McKeesport 22 Mon City 24 In the return game with Mon City McKeesport found a vastly improved quintet, for Mon City returned home with the score 24 to 22. Whitehead starred again for M. H. S., getting seventeen points. Crall put up the best game for Mon City. McKeesport 31 Clairton 17 For the second time this season McKeesport defeated Clairton on her floor. M. H. S. had no trouble at all to win handily. This time our guards did most of the scoring, making twenty-three points. Clair- ton put up a good fight, however. , McKeesport 36 Munhall 13 The Red and Blue warriors completely outclassed Munhall on our floor. There never was any doubt as to the final result. Whitehead and Flegal scored twenty points. Martin starred for Munhall. Early in the game the subs had a chance to show their wares. The locals held Munhall to one point in the first half. McKeesport 20 Duquesne 29 Battling vainly against the fastest offense launched against her the McKeesport quintet lost to Du- quesne, 29 to 20. The largest crowd of the season saw the great game. M. H. S. never seriously threatened to lead. The Kowallis brothers again starred. Flegal and Whitehead led the local attack. M 1 9 2 7 Le 1 L 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M l1551 1 1561 VARSITY BASKET BALL SQUAD ANAGER. REUFF, ASSISTANT M MURPHY, VOGEL, SEITZ, JAMESSON, REED, 0121-ILA, ight: D Left ta R 1 1 1 1 L 1 L 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 .1 . W - Y L- yoqgh-a.-Mon p M McKeesport 15 Homestead 17 McKeesport High lost all chance to win the sectional championship when Homestead won cgut in the l l ule. closing minutes of the game. Whitehead was forced out of the game because of the persona ou r This greatly weakened our attack. Our six point lead soon dwindled away to a defeat. McKeesport 22 Elizabeth 11 McKeesport closed her W. P. I. A. L. schedule with a smashing victory over Elizabeth on the latter's fl . Th me was slow and uninteresting. The Coach kept the first team in only long enough to oor e ga assure us a victory. The subs played a fine game against Elizabeth. This score was the lowest made against McKeesport. McKeesport 30 Monessen 26 In a post-season game with Monessen M. H. S. won a very closely-contested game. Had it not been for the sensational Work of a sub, Pat Murphy, the final score might have been the reverse. When ' ' ' ' h ame on Murphy entered the game, the local school was trailing by six POIDES. But Pat soon put t e g ice with four brilliant field goals and one foul. The play was fast and furious all the way. McKeesport 30 The Faculty 21 In the annual game with the faculty the varsity showed their teachers something new about basket- b ll. Th facult line-u consisted of the Coach, Jack Gramley, the assistant coach, Frank Buchanan, a . e y p captain of the state championship team, Koons and Fallquist. But the faculty could not cope with the varsity, who played a fine game throughout. McKeesport 39 Monessen 31 -The closing game of the season was the return game with Monessen. In this game Pat Murphy again was on the war path, for Pat practically defeated Monessen single-handed. Murphy dropped a goal tirough the rim just as the whistle blew. In the extra five minutes Pat ran wild, scoring nine points imse . On the whole McKeesport enjoyed a good season, winning all her games except five, losing two of l , these to Du uesne winner of the sectional honors. The season has been unique in that only six p ayers, C1 1 including the manager, received the coveted M. Those receiving the letter are Captain Soles, Flegal, Sibley, Whitehead, McDonald, and Manager Thornton. An innovation in basketball was tried out this year. Assistant Coach Gramley placed a Fresh-Soph ' ' h' m laved Junior team on the floor to play 'the preliminary games in the local gym, At various times t is tea p , high schools in this neighborhood for the expressed purpose of preparing players for the varsity next year, ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . Th as Soles and Flegal graduate in June, Sibley will be ineligible ecause of the age limit requirement e h' h d d McDonald and the subs left to form the 1928 prospects for next year seem bright, with W ite ea an quint. 1 1 1 the west A Senior stood on a railroad track, The train was coming fast, The train got off the railroad track, And let the Senior pass. Fresh.- What keeps people from falling off the earth? Senior- Why, the law of Gravity. Fresh.- Yes, but how did they stay on before the law was passed? Dude-at restaurant- Bring me a dish of those calories I have been hearing about. He- After the party I asked her if I might see her home. Him- What did she say about it? He- She said she'd send me a picture of it. B. Soles- Peg sure is a striking beauty. J. Webb- I'll say so, she stopped me twice.' There was a young man from Who courted his girl with zest. So hard did he press her To make her say Yes, sir, He broke a cigar in his vest. Dum.- See that man over there? He is a pugilistf' Dummer.- How's that? Dum.f'AHe boxed cantaloupes all last sum- mer. ' Sambo.- Say, boy, yo' all is so black yo' name should be midnight. Rastus.- Sho' 'noughl-well, youse just about five minutes to twelve ya'self. An annual is a great invention, The school gets all the fame, The printer gets all the money, But the staff gets all the blame. 1 9 2 7 , A I I I I I T M I I I I I Y I I I . f157l 1581 2 fc Lu I-1 BALL KET BAS OPH -S FRESH V, 0 E n-'I h-I 1 1-1 un ac. an Q nu o m m U un :J .-1 n-1 D K-4 :Z P4 O RS Q 'R Mi OTINER, POLLARD CH Lower aw: BRINKOS, Uppm' REUFP, MQLLINEAUX, SWEDBERG, LEYTON, COACH GRAMLEY A Spring Sports 1601 VARSITY TRACK SQUAD, SEASON OF 1926 Row: E. JOHNSON, SHRQEDER, SIBLEY, BROWN. Lower DER1c1csoN, MEREDXTH, IRw1N, T. SEss1oN EN NORTON, PRILLIMAN, H Raw: W. SEssIoN, MCCUNE, BREWER, HARRxsoN, iddle M L.,JoHNsoN, ARTHURS GRAMLEY, CoAcH. Tap Raw: SLACK, MAN., l 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 L 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 I Yough-ia.-Mon A TRACK REVIEW CARL SLACK, Manager JAMES ANSELL, Ass't Manager HE track season opened with about twenty-five candidates reporting to Coach Gramley. As there was but one letter man left,iit became necessary to rebuild a whole new team to represent M. H. S. in track circles in 1926. Due to the un- favorable weather conditions the team spent about six weeks indoors. During this time the team was whipped into shape, being weak in field events and strong in the distances. Inter-class track meets were held at Cycler Park. Cf the three scholastic meets in which M. H. S. was represented, the team succeeded in scoring in every one, thus showing much improvement over the track teams of previous years representing M. H. S. The M. H. S. track team lost its opening meet at Donora, being defeated in a dual encounter by a score of 60 to 49. At this meet we made a fine showing, suc- ceeding in taking four first places, and giving our opponents strong opposition in all events. In the next meet we did not fare so well. This was the Mon Valley meet held at Clairton. Due to strong competition we succeeded in landing only two first places. We captured third place with a score of 26 points. The last meet of the season was the W. P. I. A. L. meet held in the Pitt bowl. Lloyd Johnson entered the mile run and took third place, thus giving M. H. S. its only point. Summaries of the winning events and men:- l00 yd. dash-Irwin 220 yd. dash-Burger, Irwin, Flegal, Norton 440 yd. run-Flegal, L. Johnson, Schroeder 880 yd. run-Hirshberg, Brewer One mile run+L. Johnson, Hendrickson, E. Johnson Relay-Hendrickson, L. Johnson, Danko, Burger. DiscussAArthurs, lngle, Burger Shot put-Ingel, Arthurs Javelin throwfBurger Pole vault-StauEer I 9 2 7 Q 5 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M 51613 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 L 1 Yough-a.-Mon BASEBALL REVIEW WM. MAINS, Captain JOE JOHNSTON, Manager HE baseball season of 1926 was not much of a success, the team winning only two of its league games. One of the outstanding games was that with McKees Rocks, which went ten innings to a draw, due to darkness. It was indeed, a pretty pitchers' battle, with Briggs and Otey quitting on even terms. . The Schedule with Scores: April 17 McKeesport ,sss,,,,..,,s,,,,, 4 Alumni .,......,.,, O 21 Mclieesport s,,,.,.,..s,Y.,... 1 Edgewood..,..,., 23 McKeesport v,,...,.,.,,.,.... 2 McKees Rocks 28 McKeesports, ...,...,,,....,. 9 Wilkinsburga., 30 McKeesport ss,,,..,..s,,,,... 5 Braddock ........ May 4 Mclieesporta s.,.V.,..sss..v. 6 Oakmont .... .... . . 6 Mclieesport ss,,.,,,..s,,,,.,, O Edgewood ..,.,..,. 11 McKeesport ,,,,,,,...,,s,.... 1 McKees Rocks. 14 McKeesport .,,.,,,.,ss,,.,.,. 10 Wilkinsburg ,s,.. 19 McKeesports, s.., , ...s,s.e,.. 8 Braddock ...... 20 McKeesport ,sss,,,s...,ss.... 4 Oakmont ........... THE TEAM Mains, captain, catcher and short stop, Flegal, short stop, Barry, short stop and fielder, Berger, fielder, Weber, first base, Hirshberg, second base, Briggs, pitcher, McAraw, pitcher, Parucha, third base and fielder, Spraggs, catcher, Gaudy, fielder, Fox, fielder. ' All of the regulars have graduated except Flegal, Weber, and Burger. Around these three letter men the coach will have to build a new team. New and promising material will greatly augment his work. Indications point to a successful season this spring. As the annual goes to press, over seventy-live candidates are trying out for the open positions on the team. '92 157 Mlllllltil-7lIllliM 11621 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 L 1 Y0Ug!'I-a,-Mon 1 PHYSICAL EDUCATION CKEESPORT High has probably advanced more in physical education than any other high school in the Mon Valley. This has been due largely to the fine Work of Miss Meinert and Mr. Gramley. In the girls' gym free hand exerci- ses, flag and dumbbell drills, and apparatus Work are carried out. These are sup- plemented With games, as indoor baseball and basketball games. The dancing class is an added feature. The workin the boys' gym is somewhat similar to the girls' vvork, calesthenic exercises, body developing exercises on the apparatus being special features. Mr. Gramley has also developed an unusually Hue gymnastic team. The team has given interesting exhibitions in chapel, also at dinners, smokers, and banquets. ,l. C. GRAMLEY ERNA MEINERT SPfiHg5C1Cl C0llCgC La Crosse Normal BWI, Gym Diwflfil' Girlx' Gym Dzrectrerr M 1 9 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 p1 1 7 1 1 1 1 1 1 M D631 1641 2 fc LU I-4 2 sq an En 5+ O CQ Y, COACH. rn ..x 2 1: cz U Z. D o W1ssER, MORLOCK, CALH H. an Ill ,I ca Z U-I Z. 42 Q o M m U o bd ui Z 41 Tap: D. Kocmcon :S D v-I mn E an ..1 QC Z.. 2 Z I O P1 ui 3 Z 1: It 4: .4 .4 4: LJ f-3 na. 1 U ..i' D-1 2 Z 'C 41 35 E N.. M Ill Front: HARE, GINNEL. BOYS' GYM TEAM IN ACTION Mary S.-A'What kind of a dress shall I wear tonight? Katherine F.- I don't know, why? Mary.- Well, I just wanted to know whether to wash for a round neck or a square one. Speedy D.- Only fools are positive. Edwin O.- Are you positive? Speedy D.- Positively. Di.- Sir, I believe you're trying to kiss me. Ed.- Well, now that you understand. suppose we quit assaulting each other and cooperate a little. Skid.- Just think every time I breathe, some- body dies. More.- Better use Listerinef' H651 Miss Woods insists upon calling herself a girl. Well! why shouldn't she? New York still calls herself new. REALLY! The conduct of a Senior varies inversely with the distance from the teacher. WAYS OF ADDRESSING A TEACHER Freshman-Sir? Sophomores-Huh? Juniors-What? Seniors4 Aw, what do you want? Mr. Crall- Would more limited restriction of immigration aggrevate or mitigate the struggle between capital and labor? Harriet S.- Yes, I think so. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Youglfg-a.-Mon 1 BOYS' GYM IN ACTION-In Pyramid Formation IN A RURAL HOTEL If you want a bell-boy, Wring a towel. If you get hungry during the night, take a roll in bed. Baseball players will End a pitcher on the table. Ifprsons wishing good board will call the lumber mi . If you want to write, take a sheet off the bed. 'Hou can't get a square meal: we serve on round ta es. Flegal.- What's worse than raining cats and dogs? Soles.f I dunno! why? Flegal.- I-Iailing taxi-cabs. There was a young lady named Florence, Who for kissing professed great abhorrence, But when she'd been kissed, . And found what she'd missed, She cried till the tears came in torrents. Frosh.- Say, did Washington fight the battle of Bunker Hill in 1620? .Soph.- Duncel I suppose you don't know that Lincoln didn't discover America until l776? K., Wisser.- Marie, you're pretty good in Englishg so which is correct' when referring to a train,- Here he comes' or 'Here she comes? Marie M.- Why, 'Here she comes' K. Wisser.- What, if it is a mail train? Pat. M.- What do you expect to do when you graduate? Paul W.- Die of the shock. The High School Belle wants to know: Who is the best looking girl in school, and why am I? Macbeth.- To be massaged or not to be, that is the question. Banquo.- Ayeg there's the rub. lst. Hunter.- Let s go hunt rabbits. 2nd. Hunter.- I ain't lost no rabbits. Gerald.- I read that Dickens sometimes worked on one line for two weeks. Geraldine.- That's nothing. My uncle worked twenty years on one sentence. Lavina L.-' 'Was Robinson Crusoe an acrobat? Leona R.- I d0n't know. Why? Lavina.- Well, here it reads that after he had fmished his day's work, he sat down on his chest. Mr. Barnes.- What is a vacuum? Russel G.- I can't tell, but I have it in my head. Mr. White- Find the least common denomi- naror. Edith H.- Gee, is that thing lost again? 1 9 2 M I I I I I I I I I 7 I I I I I I M f166:I 1671 PLAYING INDOOR BASEBALL GIRLS' 51681 JUST A GIRLS' BASKET BALL GAME I I I I I I I 'I I I I I I I I L Yough-a.-Mon PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEMONSTRATION Given by The Gym Classes of the McKeesport High School I N interesting physical education demonstration, under the direction of Mr. Gramley and Miss Meinert, was staged in the boys' gym May 14th. A large and enthusiastic audience applauded the beautiful dancing numbers and the fine drills. The various exercises proved the fact that our gym work is one of the out- standing features in the physical education of the high school. THE PROGRAM 1. Flag Drill ..,. ..,..,,,.,,II,, ,,,,I,,,,,,v,,,O,II,,O,,,,,I,,,,,I,,, . , .Sophomore Girls 2. Marching ,.,, ,......I.....,...I,,,,,,,.,,,II,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,I,,OI ..,,,.,,,,I,,I.. F r eshman Boys 3. Skirt Dance, La Czarine-Mazurka ...... The Dancing Class 4. Wand Drill ,......., ' ,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.I,,I,,,,,,,,,,,,,I,I,,,, .,I.,,.. B o ys' Gym Team 5. jolly Coppersmithsn-Dumbbell Exercises I.......,.. .............. J unior Girls 6. Tumbling., I,I,..,,,,,,,,I,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A,,,,,,,,,,. H ,,,,,,,,,,, ,,..,,.I B oys' Gym Team 7. Russian Dances a. Hungarian Rhapsody b. The Magyar The Dancing Class 8. Class Work ......,,.........,,, ......... F reshman Boys 9. Reed Drill ..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, I,.I........ S enior Girls 10. Apparatus ,I.,.,.,,.l...,I,I,,,,,,,,,,,I,,,. I....,.. B oys' Gym Team ll. Tulip Time-Dutch Dancenm .,,....,I., Dancing Class 12. Indian Club .,II....,....,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,I,,,I,,,,,III, ,,,,.,,I,,, ...,..., B o ys' Gym Team ACCGMPANISTS Girls ...... ' ,,,,,,,,,,II,.,,Ir.,,,,,,,,,,II,,,I,,I r,.,.,l.,. L ois Harbourt Boys ...... .,I..,,. H erbert Conrad I I I I I I I' P I2 I 7 I I I 'I I I I D691 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 e 1 1 1 1 1 1 L 1 Yough-a.-Mon THE ALUMNI RoLL HE Alumni editors have made a departure from the usual order followed in former annuals. Instead of citing achievements of the graduates of the high school, they have listed, according to the years, all the graduates ofthe school from 1884 to the present time. This roster, then, contains the names of all students who have received diplomas from M. H. S. 1 884 Douthitt, Esther N. Gibson, Harry W. Harrison Elizabeth M. Hodginson, Clara Hutchison, Kate N. Junker, Edward P. May, Arthur R. Painter, Anna B Richards, Anna R. 1885 Curry, Glen Haber, Louis Lawrence, Clara A. Stuckslager, Harry 1886 Brown, Sibbie Campbell, J. Frank Chester, Eden Coursin, Minnie St. C. Gibson, Frank Z. Jones, Esther Ann Ludwick, Anna Miller, Anna B. Miller, Harry C. McClure, Belle McConnell, Ella Scott, Cordelia 1887 Dean, Anna Eastwood, Anna Fullerton, Mary Ellen Leezer, Duane P. Whitaker, Jennie May Smith, Duane P. 1888 Davis, Nellie S. Foster, Mary Mathilda Hammitt, Eva Hampson, Lillie Hoffman, Lou Jackson, Elizabeth E. Kay, Thomas Kenmuir, Harriet Loretta O'Neil, Mary Penney, Lou Phillips, Kate Reed Sara Anna Robbins, Lorrin R L. Young, Robert 1889 Carroll, Margery Clark, Milner Codville, Judson Coursin, Nellie Ehrhardt, lda B. Haler, Agnes Harsha, Nettie Hutchinson, Queen McGraw, Abraham Mclntyre, Mary Painter, Eva White, Flora 1890 Allman, Anna M. Beam, Sylvia Campbell, William V. Coyne, Nellie Fell, Jennie M. Kern, Florence Lysle O. Lizzie McClure, Anna Patterson, Eleanor Phillips, Mary 1891 Brannon, Nannie Chambers, Minnie Hall, Agnes Hamer, Lettie - Jones, Elizabeth Lindahl, Ellen McCune, Martha Neel, Mollie Roland, Phoebe Steele, Margaret R. 1892 Adams, Judson S. Haber, Edward Mains, Matildha H. McClure, Arabella McClure, Lizzie Rankin, Charles A. Smith, Martha Steele, R. L. Walsh, Ora Ednetta Woods, Maud 1893 Aravess, Agnes Craig, Charles Harrison, Charles L. Hill, Emma Lynch, Minerva Russell, Jennie Russell, John Schmidt Louis Scott, Ida Josephine Shallenberger, Thomas Soles, Kate Westbay, Pearl White, Curry 1894 Auld, Arthur Baird, Janet Beam, Ada Briggs, Martha Brown, Charles Daft, Ida Lawrence Freman, Elizabeth French, Amanda Hamer, Grace Morris, Laura Patterson, Mame Penney, James Pitzer, Cora Pollard, Jennie Simon, Sophie Soles, Elizabeth Steele, Thomas Stephens, Myrtle Stewart, Boyd Young, Clyde 1 895 Altman, Emma Andre, Elizabeth Bachman, Lee Bachman, Sadie Black, Susan Etta Calhoun, Marguerite E. Catrow, William A. Ferguson, Agnes Glassby Frey, Caroline W. Gordon, Nellie M. Harrison, Walter Hill, Florence Edith Johnson, Mable D. Johnstin, Elsie Mae Knight, Susie E. Lynch, Genevieve Mayer, Joseph McClelland, Maude B. Mehaffey, Edith Jane Miller, Grace Mae Moore, Grace Emma Powers, Matilda Viola Reed, Charles I. Rodgers, Odessa J. Shaw, Anette Stockdale, Nellie M. . Trich, Anna V. Wallace, Minnie Winklevoss, Rachel Ann Wolf, Wilhelmina 1896 ' Adams, Alvah Arthur, Herbert Bayton, Bertha M. Bedell, Mattie May Bennett, Mable Blose, Daniel Patterson Briggs, George Burkholder, Arka Virginia Corry, Elizabeth Amney Cowan, Harriet J. Dixon, Ben Dumm, Colin Haler, Josephine Hartman, Harry B. Henderson, James F. Hill, Howard S. Hill, Rebecca Rankin Houseman, Edward Kohl, Marie Lees, George McCune, Frances Grace McCune, William Rissler, Marie Scott, Blanche Mable Smith, Flora May Seifert, William White, Margaret 1897 Buchanan, Belle Burr, Grace Carlson, Herman Carlson, Adda ' Drew, Walter Wallace Evans, Effie Fehr, Mary Estella Haber, Dewitt Jones, Sara Jane Kearney, William Stone Lawton, Linnie Coyan Lindquist, Emma Lindquist, Rachel Anne Lugner, Gertrude Lynch, Margaret Gillespie McCarrell, Harriet Newlin, Harold V. 9 2 M I I I I I J I I I 7 I I I I I I M mol 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 L 1 Yough-a.-Mon THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued Riggs, Clifford Russeil, E. Margaret Russe l, Maggie Scott, Alva Armstrong Simon, Alcie Louise Soles, Mazie . Thompson, Mayme Vankirk, Adelaide 1898 Bayne, Richard Cecil Beresford, Elizabeth Chamberlin, Ida May Cowan, Victor W. Craig, Lynne K. Davis, Florence Ethel Eaton, Nina Eba, Edna Jane Erickson, Arthur Evans, Elizabeth Ogg Everett, Ellie Beryl Fawcett, Emma Brown Fiddler, Martha Hardwick, Phoebe Brown Herbertson, Robert Hibben, Nathan Thaddeus Hopkins, George Everett Howard, Sara Elizabeth Kenmuir, Elizabeth H. McDowell, Elizabeth McCune, Arthur McCune, Caleb Mellinger, Lillian P. Nill, Bertha T. Pierce, Martha Elizabeth Smith, Marie Taylor, Edna Livingston Trich, Nellie White, George Winklevoss, Nellie Mae Young, Mary Lorena Ziegler, James Albert 1899 Adams, Ethel Albertina Adams, Elizabeth Bachman, Florence I. Brisbin, Emma Brown, Anna Coon, Elva Woodall Cowan, Susan A. Edmundson, Jennie Reed Foster, Samuel D. Francis, Lawrence W. Goodwin, Abbie Harrison, Kathryn Hitzrot, Elsie L. 1 Kearney, Charles W. Kerr, James Richard Knight, Walter Scott Lugner, Rudolph E. McCawley, Mary McKee, Thoma D. Parkins, Mary Ellen Petty, Mary Inez Price, Flora Adelaide Scott, William E. Smith, Mollie Estelle Swaney, Lester L. Teter, Anna Belle Thompson, John W. Tillbrook, Gertrude Waters, Jane Wright, Bertha Zimmerman, Elizabeth A. 1 900 Chisholm, Jennie Leppig, Minnie 1901 Altmeyer, Walter S. Baker, Vivian Earle Bogart, Mary Cecelia Brown, Charles F. Calhoun, Audley Herbert Fishman, Maggie French, Cecil Gardner, Roy Edmund Garvin, Mayme Edith Gray, Clifford 'I Herbertson, David K. Kurtz, Mayme E. Larkin, Henrietta Lysle, Thomas R. McClelland, Anson B. McCombs, Cora B. McMillan, James Vere Morton, Earl Austin Niven, Mary Elizabeth Patterson, Burt N. Patterson, Jean Elliott Pitzer, E. Linda Raymond, Mary K. Riggs, Walter Lee Simon, Israel A. Sinsel, William E. Sundstrom, Charles E. Tawney, Myra Corrine Trich, Jennie E. Wells, Albert G. White, Laura R. Wood, Edna Zimmerman, Retta R. 1902 Baird, Jean Bonnett, Alice Bradford, Alice Burr, Myrtle Cook, Mable C. Davies, Margaret Davis, Bertram Davis, Roland R. Edwards, Lucille Enty, Margaret Erickson, Charles Ferguson, Margaret Forsburg, Hulda Frost, Robert Hammer, Hannah Hillstrom, Ellen Jackel, Katherine Keith, Leah King, Carrie McClure, Maude Montgomery, Wayne Morgan, Margaret Nelson, Anna Orr, Isabell Osborn, William E. Piper, Russell Rosen, Maude Rudbert, Lillian Smith, Nelle D. Smith, Pearl Snowden, Stella Spear, Carrie Wyant, James 1903 Brown, Bertha Colquist, Helga Derry, John Eichler, George Forrester, Mary Frantz, Harry Gillman, Byrde Goldberg, EV2- Hagerman, EIVH- Hillstrom, Arthur Holloway, AV1Cf1 Kelley, Blanche Kerr, Beulah Kuhl, Anna Lloyd, Mildred Logan, Nellie McCune, David P- Parmiter, Matfk Quantz, Edward Rae, Charles Reed, Etta Rose, Cortula Rotheram, Ada Schaum, Mildred Smith, William Squibb, Abigail Stull, Kathryn Thomas, ElSiC Wersderfer, N311 C- Wickard, Kathefiflfi Wickard, Percy William, Mary Yarman, Mable De. Young, Roy 1904 Callahan, Richard Crawford, Charles Dickson. Leland Gardner. Harry C. Helier, -Lillie Hodgson, William Kaplan, Frank R. S. Kerr, Mildred Minehart, Lillie Parker, Sara Robinson, Samuel Sperry, Pearl Thompson, Bert Walker, Lena Young, Thomas 1905 Calhoun, Margaret Calhoun, Noel Davis, Mabelle Finney, Grace Gordon, Nellie Gregg, Blanche Jones, Marie Kaplan, Sara Kendrick, Mable P. Kimling, Anna Marshall, Anna Marshall, Josephine McCombs, Blanche Mitchell, Margaret Moses, Pearl Neel, Frances Orr, Mary Piper, Mary Simpson, Exie Richards, Katherine Schmitz, Elizabeth Shallenberger, Marion Simpson, Ethel Stucki, Blanche Thomas, Charlotta Watson, Jane Weddell, George White, Grace 1 906 Becksteadt, Tena Carlson, Agnes Caughey, Martha Danley, Texanna Dulany, Blanche Forrester, Elsie Goldberg, Samuel Gothart, Bess Hammit, Courtney Hutchison, Margaret Hoey, Belle ' Hodgson, Lillian Hohman, Gertrude Hughes, Marion Hurndom, Grace Keil, Isabel Keller, Morris Lees, Harry Lenhart, Elrod McCain, Florence McClure, Edith Morelock, Carl Moses, Bus Nau, Bess Nell, Hiram Nichols, Jennie Pryor, Eugene Redman, Jean Reed , Kenneth Robinson, Jesse M I I I I I J P I2 I7 I I I I' I I M T fl71J 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 41 4 4 4 4 4 L 4 Yough-a.-Mon Ross, Sadie Russel, Alice Sinsel, Martha Tassey, Ethel Walker, Mary Walker, Sadie Welsh, Edith 1907 Best, Ada Braumberg, Sidney Brown, Evan Campbell, Mayme Caughey, Frank Christy, Lida Dulany, Grace Eccles, Mayme Eitemiller, Katherine Erickson, Gerturde Firestone, Harry Foster, Roy Friedman, Armir Gamble, Wm. Ginn, Mildred Gleason, Margaret Glenny, Alice Goetz, Emily Haley, Lois Hall, Bessie Harday, Clara Jenkins, Maude Kreisel, Ella Lotz, Nellie 5 Lutz, Freda Marshall, Elizabeth McKee, John McMillan, Doris Miller, John L. ' Munson, Ella Permiter, Owen Rhodes, Elizabeth Russel, Alice Scott, Olive Skolsky, Bessie Steiff, John Strachan, Hazel Watson, Jennie White, 'Charles 1908 Baker, Bertha Bayard, Ethel Beswick, Lucinda Churchfield, Elmer Danley, Neil Demmler, Maude Evans, Margaret Firestone, Belle Garvin, Hazle Gillen, Leslie Greggerson, Nelle Guy, Katherine Hanley, Edith Hatch, Gladys Herring, Virginia Hill, Nettie THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued Hofelt, Rufus Jones, Jennie Kelley, Anna Belle Kerns, Ethel Kerr, Charles King, James Koch, Stella Lansing, Marie Levy, Julia Lippert, George Lugner, Ingrid Lysle, Ada Mains, Bella Mains, Bella Marshall, Mable McClure, Bella McCune, Jesse McLain, Susan McMichael, Charline Morton, Hester Nolder, Sylvia Patterson, Mary Reed, Mildred Rupert, Katherine Russell, Anna Schmidt, Lena Simon, Celia W Simpscin, Clell 2, Verner, Alfred Wilson, Ruth Wood, Alice 1909 Axtell, Robert Stockton Baird, Margaret Waldie Baker, Richard Edward Barr, Marguerite Elizabeth Berry, Ralph Edgar Bishop, Annie Gray Caroll, Edna Ethel Cassin, Louis Caughey, John Emil Cook, Annie Mary Cowna, Nelle Mae Crowell, Anna Belle Davis, Lillian Julia Downey, Mable Annette Eccles, Susan Fry, Rachel Ella Fulton, Mary Elizabeth Gillen, Thomas Raymond Griffin, Callie Lathan Hagan, Hazel Corrinne Hill, Anne Harper Holby, Sara Eva Hoey, Susan Retta Hoffman, Irene Buser Hollis, Sylvia Oak Hoser, Augusta Ingram, Florence Irwin, Roy Foster Jeffrey, Jane Turnbull Lechman, Edna Elvera Leuhm, Walter Whiteman Llewellyn, Marguerite Lutz, Lena Louise Martyn, Vincent Smith McCard, Nellie Valentine Milholhand, Edith Pearl Munson, Hannah Mae Murray, Katie Pearson Nicholds, Elizabeth Jane Raden, Linnie Theresa Rankin, Ralph Russell Richey, DeWayne G. Rowland, John West Schaffner, Lucie Hartenese Seymore, Walter Signet, Martha Smith, Wilda Norris Stevenson, Jennie Graham Stuckslager, Helen Beam Wampler, John Truman Weiss, Harry Manuel 1916 Ackerwell, Bess Arnowitz, Joseph Bayard, Clifford Best, Richard Brown, Pearl Burgess, Gerturde Cain, James Carroll, Leota' Caves, George Clark, Helen Clewet, Maude Crossman, Edna- Firestone, Samuel Freeman, Olga K Frew, Grace Friedman, Blanche Garvin, Grace Garvin, Ida Garvin, Nellie Gibson, Gertrude Ginn, Jennie Goetz, Margaret 3 Grinberg, Besse Harrison, Margaret Harrison, Zora Harry, Edward Hawley, Francis Henskey, Elizabeth Hershey, Ruth I-Iillstrom, Florence Hodgson, Ada Israel, Samuel . Itscotiz, Samuel Johnson, Hilda Kaplan, Ida Long, Florence Lang, Matilda Latta, Clifford McCord, Jean McCowley, Denny McMichael, Jay Metz, Margaret Muse, Ora Nelson, Freda Packer, Geneva Powell, Edwin Price, Dorothy Rader, Bernice Reiter, Sydney Rice, Elizabeth Ride, Mildred Robinson, Jeannette Rodkey, Elmyra Rosen, Katherine Ross, Besse Rutledge, Ralph Sanial, Albert Schleisinger, Louis Schreider, Hiram Schuck, Hilda Schwartz, Louis Simon, Abe Smith, Fern Vankirk, Gertrude Verner, Irene Walker, Mary Wolf, Frank Wood, John Young, George 1911 Anderson, Esther Anderson, Helen Bangert, Carrie Bell, Jay Bell, William Berger, Roselle Blattner, Adolph Brown, Heleri Brown, George Brown, Francis Burbridge, Alice Carlson, Edna Caughey, Dorothy Charles., Edith Cock, Robert Crow, Julia Dauble, Margaretfi Decker, Mae Dunstan, Lavinia Erickson, Leon Falkenstein, Chris, Jr Fallquist, Ada Fawcett, Marguerite Firestone, Rose Fox, Garnet Gorzo, Julius Harrison, Marie Harrison, Una Hellier, Eva Hite, Pearl Ingram, Anna Kerr, Martha Kistner, Corrinne Knight, Erma Kough, Olive Lessner, Nellie Lindquist, Judith Lyons, Annie Mains, Ruth McClure, Merle McElory, Helen McMichael, June 1 9 2 M I' I 1 I I I l' I I7 I I I I I I M 11721 IIIIIIILIIIIPI LI Yough-a.-Mon., M THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued McMullen, Adelaide Milmoe, Isabelle Mitchell, Mildred Moifet, Edna Nelson, Lillian Newlin, Edwin Nill, Henry Ohsberg, Edith Payne, Grace Petrie, Harriet Petzer, Ethel Quinn, Hannah Richey, Lucille Robinson, Lillie Roessing, Virginia Salving, Hilda Seigle, Samuel Setterber , Ellen Shaw, Edith Soles, Robert Symington, Martha Thomas, Adelaide Thompson, Katie Walker, Francis Weddell, Charles Weyer, Pearl White, Adelaide Wood, Robert Younkins, Ethel 1912 Angeline, Mildred Anna Applegate, Mary Corrinne Baldridge, Virginia Luella Bell, Mary Frances Berger, Margaret Viola Bertel, John Birnkrantz, Louis Norman Blattner, Rose Breitinger, Hazel Alene Burland, Oliver Kier Carothers, Anna Elizabeth Carpenter, Donald M. Cuthbert, Frank Edward Daum, Viola Findley, Emma L. M. French, Edna Mae Fuller, Neva Adelaide Goldberg, Adolph Gilbert, Louis J. Goldberg, Manuel Edgar Griffin, Alberta May Grinherg, Anna Edith Hardin, Nelle Hamilton, Calvin Finley Harrison, James Renwick Hemminger, Violet Gladys Henderson, James Jenkins Herold, Wm. W. Hillstrom, Edwin Leonard Hitchens, Richard Hoak, Vera Margaret Hobby, Edna Grace Jayne, Ruth Glen Kerr, Abigail Kerr, Marian King, Lillian Ruth Kline, Wm. Byron Kohl, Blanche Limmel, Virginia Lees, Robert E. Levy, Cecilia Lindberg, Ethel Marowitz, Max Maund, Margaret McCaughan, Helene McKee, Wm. Johnston Mendlowitz, Joseph Metz, Dlfrieda Morgan, Suse McClellan Nordlander, Hildur Rattone, Paul Peters, Edward Pollock, Nancy Quinn, Thomas Reiter, Frederick Reynolds, John Paul Rubards, John Ride, Mary North Sabol, John Gregorious Serena, John Shorslcy, Elizabeth Strom, Harry Struble, Minnie Thomas, Hazel Thomas, Marie Wagner, Grace Wagner, Margaret Weller, Karl Weller, Martha White, Margaret Wiester, Chester Young-Laredlda May 1913 Ackerman, Sam Arnowitz, Etta Auberle, Esther Ayers, Lillian Bangert, John Baughman, Helen Berry, Margaret Bolt, Herbert Boots, Clyde Brisbine, Ruth Brown, Joe Buck, Rose Cam bell, Martha Chilgs, Walter Crow, William Davis, Grace Defalco, Mary Dennen, Elizabeth Donahey, William Donet, Esther Douglas, David Duncan, Marguerite Eckman, Ellen Feck, Elizabeth Fehr, Martess Feightner, Hazel Feldman, Morris Fenski, Alma Fisher, Abe Gambridge, Lily Gang, Myra Garrison, Irene Gelb, Bessie German, Evelyn Gerstner, Gertrude Gillis, Edith Glasgow, Renetra Goetz, Eva Grimes, Nelle Haag, Edward Haber, Hazel Hamer, Mary Heimlich, Laura Hemmons, Katie Henry, Mazie Hill, Blanche Hilt, Hazel Hodgson, Howard Hoffman, Viola Kaplan, Esther Kaplan, Robert Kent, Marie Kern, Helen Kritcher, Minnie Kuhl, Gertrude Lichtenstein, Sadye Liddle, William Lindblad, Henrietta Loefiler, George McClintock, Harry McFadden, Grace McKee, Eleanor McMillan, Audrey Means, Arthur Earl Miller, Moseh, Joseph Parker, Parker, Charles Walter Patterson, Donald Patterson, Dorothy Peterson, Elmer Pitzer, Robert Pratt, Annie Price, Marie Pryor, Felene Ragner, Ellen Randol h, Iva Reinfelg, Rose Robinson, Inez Robinson, Lillian Ruffner, Isabelle Seitz, Lesetta Shaffer, Carrie Simeral, Mable Squibb, Warner Stevenson, Martha Stone, Rudolph Stucki, Wilmina Stuckslager, Eleanor Sundstrom, Alice Thomas, Lucile Trimble, Alberta Walker, Ida Walthower, Margare Wampler, Alan Ward, Louise Weddel, Howard I1 Weddell, Walte Weisz, Ruth Werner, Clara West, George Wood, Martha Wyant, Richard Zoerb, Ella 1914 Anderson, Alva Anderson, Conrad Anderson, Selma Bacon, Albert Barth, Elizabeth Bedell, Agnes Belgrade, Joseph Bissell, Willard Boss, Bertha Bowers, Ralph Brown, Esther Burkhart, Selma Carlson, Mable Craig, Edith Cramblet, Riddell Dahlstrom, Litta Dreiling, Arthur Dunstan, 'Edith Ferguson, Emma Firestone, Lillian Fisher, Lena Fleck, Joseph Fleckinstein, Amelia Gatter, Carl Gayvert, Sigrid Garvine, Blanche Ginn, Alma Goldberg, Sarah Griffiths, Mable Grimes, Kathryn Grubbs, Elmer Hahan, Helen Hardy, Hazel Hartman, Martha Holenger, Gertrude Ingram, Elizabeth Johns, Esther Jones, Catherine Jones, Thomas Kahan, Helen Kaplan, Mary Kelso, Herbert Kessler, Morris Kingen, John Koch, Aurelia Koch, Mary Kohn, Harry Kohn, Max Lange, Charles Lemmon, Raymond Lindberg, Hildegard Lueckert, Hattie Mansfield, Earl Martineze, William McLaughlin, Marie Miller, Catherine Miller, Emilie Morgan, Frank 1 9 2 7 M I I If' I I I I I I' 'I I I I I I M f173l I I I I I I I ' I I I I If 'I 'YI I Yovghra.-Mon S Mull, Anna Newlin, Mary Nordlender, Thure Mylander, Marie Reiter, Howard Reynolds, Theodore Richards, Elizabeth Rodecap, Ree Rosengarth, Marie Rowland, Corrine Rubenstein, Ethel Rudberg, Victoria Schmertz, Eva Schmidt, Ellen Sertell, Pearl Smith, Grant Snyder, Jean Stine, Rose Styche, Ellen Strawn, Leo S. Tauber, Margaret Trimble, William Tyson, Thomas Waddell, Hazel Walker, Emaline Weddell, Clinton Welsh, Nellie Whitefield, Georgina Wood, Austin Woody, Virginia Worrell, Mable Zugsmith, Roy 1915 Anderson, Harry T. Bacon, Gladys Baker, Ethel Bartles, Ellen Berger, Rebecca Bergstrom, Agnes Bolt, Nellie Bosley, Ruth Bradshaw, Earl Brown, Ben Byers, Helen Calhoun, Stanley Carlson, Oscar Conklin, Ida Dahlman, Ruth Day, Harold Demmler, Marie Doehla, Alice Dougherty, Marie Edman, Corrine Erickson, William Firestone, Louis Giifln, Lois Gillis, Margaret Goode, Clarence Gorzo, Sara Gulfey, Grayce Hallan, John Hamer, Gustaf Hamer, Lettie Hardin, Ross Harris, Beatrice THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued Harrison, Earle Hickman, Elton Hitchens, Olive Hollis, Tina Horniius, Reed Irwin, Grace Irwin, Virginia Johnson, Dora johnson, Gladys Johnston, Nellie Judkovitz, jacob Kane, Margaret Keller, Hazel M. Klein, Adelaide Kline, Joseph Knoll, Herbert Latta, Mary Levy, Harry Lewis, Consuelo Little, Maude Linge, William MacDonald, Alice MacDonald, Louise Moskowitz, Helen Mattox, Walter McCawley, Mary McDonough, Beatrice McKeever, Harold Miller, Lloyd Miller, Madeline Millinger, Geneva Morelock, Anna Morrison, Estella Murphy, Patrick Nill, Carl Nelson, Ruth Ninian, Ivey Nordfeldt, Harry Oden, Theresa Ohrman, Della , Ord, John L Pearson, Alma Peckman, Hazel Pepper, Pearl Peterson, Edith Pollock, Alcie Power, Marie Prichard, Edith Regensburger, Marie Reineld, Alice Richards, Thomas Risher, Elmira Roman, Rachel Rotheram, Edward Ruby, Elsie Sanner, Benjamin Schmidt, Martha Seidell, Mollie Skarbinski, Severin Speilman, Flora Steelberg, Charles Stephen, William Stone, Conrad Sullivan, Gladys Sullivan, Harry Tassey, Edward Tawney, Louis Volk, John Weiss, Ida Welsh, Thelma Whiteaker, Laura Wood, John Wood, Marion Zeller, Cyril 1916 Adams, John Aikens, John Altman, Idesta Batchelor, Maude Badders, Boyd Beck, Helene Berger, Hannah Beverage, Marjorie Bevil, Eleanora Bieberstein, Rose Birr, Minnie Black, james Black, Raymond Bortz, Ben Breakall, Margaret Broadbent, Frances Brooks, Katherine Bryant, Sara Buhleirer, Elfreda Devenny, Eleanor Fehr, Vankirk Feldman, Max Finkel, Sophie Firestone, Irene Gardner, James Geitz, Charles Glasgow, Edith Gleditsch, Eleanore Goldbladt, jess Greenberger, Etta Grinage, Bessie Grinberg, Samuel Haler, John Hardy, Louise Harry, Mildred Hitchens, Walter Hughes, Tillie Hutton, William Ingram, Sarah Itskowitz, Nathan Jackson, Janet Johnson, Frances johnson, Hildur Jubelirer, Sara Julin, George Junker, Arthur Kaplan, Cecilia Kelly, Pearl Kuhn, Margaret Kunze, Albert Larson, Ruth Lewis, LeRoy Lofstrom, Lillian Madden, Teressa Mahla, Margaret Martin, Julia McElroy, Howard McKee, Watson McLaughlin, Rose McLellan, James Meredith, Elmer Meredith, Walter Millington, Rose Morgan, Gladys Murphy, William Neiman, Evelyn Nelson, Anna Parker, Maude Penny, Sara Perry, Mildred Peters, William Peterson, Elmer Peterson, Gladys Pierce, Mary Pierce, Roy Pitzer, Ralph Reiter, Helen Reiter, Milton Rhenstrom, Fred Robinson, Arch Robinson, Gertrude Rosengarth, Alvin Samberg, Tillie Sechrist, Raymond Sharsky, David Small, Yolanda Speidel, Dennis Speidel, Hilda Steward, Kern Stone, Marvis Thomas, Hazel Tolin, Freda Ulm, Corrine Wagner, William Wandrei, Henry Westbay, Juanita Weyer, Rosanna Whitehead, Florence Wolf, Frank Woodward, Helen Zebrovius, Louise 1917 Aber, Howard Ahlquist, Mabel Albig, William Andslander, james Anderson, Madge Ayers, Marion Baldridge, Robert Barber, Evelyn Barney, Delia Berger, Belle Bergerstrom, Olive Biddle, Laura Bradshaw, Gertrude Bresnahan, Pauline Broder, Ruth Brown, Elizabeth Buckingham, Ruth Burbridge, Ralph Burland, Melba Buser, Russell Calhoun, Margaret 9 2 M I I I I I F I I I 7 I I I I I I M D741 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Yough-a.-Mon l I Canose, Bertha Chamberlain, DeWitt Chase, Helen Chase, Katherine Cherry, Beatrice Clay, Jessie Coleman, Eleanor Cooper, Gladys Day, Charles Douglas, Gordon Dritcher, Lawrence Edmundson, Viola Edwards, Lottie Feldman, Joseph Firestone, Henry Firestone, Samuel Fisher, Freida Florin, Amelia Friedman, Abe Friedman, Nathan Frye, Margaret Ginn, Edgar Goetz, Helen Goldberg, Celia Gordes, Lucrece Greenwald, Jacob Grover, Helen Grossman, Ben Guffey, Carl Haag, Charles Haber, Lucille Hackett, Kenneth Hartman, Ella Havekotte, Fred Heath, Ruth Heathley, Ethel Heimlich, Bella Herold, George Hill, Esther Hoser, John Jackson, Florence Jacobs, Gertrude Johnson, Bert Johnson, Lewis Jones, Gladys Kees, Lillian Keller, Mark Kelso, Mary Kenip, Missoura Kemp, Norman Kennedy, Hanora Kerr, Carlotta Kessler, Blanche Kinney, Mary Kistner, Helen Kitoy, Samuel Klein, Bertha Klein, David Kostyzak, Alex Land, Gertrude Leonard, Bertha Lindamood, Harry Lindbom, Marion Little, Isabelle Loya, John Mason, Mary Maxwell, Lorena THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued McAllister, Irene McCarthey, Mayme McCarty, Lillian McCawley, Lillian McClelland, Jennie McClintock, Margaret McClymont, John McCrea, Elizabeth McCullum, Ruth McGee, Carrol McMichael, Charline McMillan, Ethel Mendlowitz, Morris Milliken, Charles Milliken, .Frances Millington, William Molin, Gustaf Monk, Florence Moon, Gertrude Moritz, Lena Moskowitz, Joseph Murphy, Anna Nell, Virginia Neiman, Annabel Nesbit, Florence Newhouse, Catharine Nicklass, John Nill, Jacob Nilson, Ebba O'Malley, Charles O'Neill, Edward Ord, Lillian Palmer, Ruby Payne, Myrtle Peterson, Carl Pitzer, Lawrence Pohl, Henry Pollock, Roberta Potter, Charles Power, John Pry, Anna Raden, Harry Reilly, Mary Reiter, Tena Rhodes, David Richards, Margaret Richards, Porter Ross, Joseph Simpson, Earl Smith, Lloyd Strong, Marcellus Smith, Theodore Smith, Thomas Tierman, Anna Mae Thomas, Mary Thorpe, Edward Trostle, Hester Tuxford, Salome Valentine, Harvey Waddell, Pearl Warady, Michael Warren, Flo Watson, Harold Weiss, Dora Werner, Jessie Weimer, Mildred Westbay, Beatrice Whitaker Elizabeth Whitaker, Marcella Yancey, Elizabeth 1918 Abel, Hulda Abraham, Maurice Allison, Priscilla Auld, Arthur Ayers, Helen M. Baird, Ellen Ball, Efhe Bebout, Rachel Beedle, Evalyn Belgrade, Hector Benson, Ethel Biddle, Ada Birberstein, Stella Bintz, Marie Borrman, Carl Bruce, Beatrice Buckweitz, Minnie Budd, Russell Burkholder, Harry Cadman, George Campbell, Sarah Carlson, Harry Caughey, Lois Caves, Anna B. Chamberlain, Miriam Clay, Pauline Cook, Elmer Crossland, Irene Dean, Charlotte Ditter, Kathryn Doehla, Alma Drury, Claire Duff, Glee Dulany, Mary Duncan, Loretta Everett, Helen Feldman, Jacob Ferguson, Duane Ferrie, Florence Findley, Etta Fisher, Rose Fleming, Margaret Forbes, Flora Fraley, Charles Friedman, Harry Frost, Rachel Gagan, Joe Gall, Frederick Garbett, Ruth Garrett, May Gilchrist, Dewees Giles, John Gorzo, Rose Granger, Stanley Green, John Gusky, Frances Hamilton, Sarah Harrison, J. Wesley Hartnett, Alphonse Heath, Ross Heckert, Sarah Henry, William Hoak, Raymond Holpert, Abe Hooper, Elsie Howe, Charles Inks, Elmer Itskowitz, Louis Jaycox, Gertrude Johnson, Leonard Johnstin, Ruth Jones, Edna Kaufman, Velma Kees, Minnie Kelly, Edward Kinkaid, Nellie Klein, Morcus Kroft, Helga Lakenan, Margaret Lange, Margaret Lawrence, Edwin Leezer, Jean Levine, Sarah Lichtenstein, Arnold Lichtenstein, Harry Lindamood, Elizabeth Lohr, Carrie ' Long, John Loya, Stephen Lucanish, Mary McLaughlin, Rachel McLean, Hazel Means, Walter Mercur, Pauline Mermelstein, Lucille Morelock, Katherine Myers, Mildred Neemes, Margaret Park, Elden Parker, Blanche Peckman, Arnold Peters, Charles Pierce, Marybelle Ramsey, George Roessing, Robert Rogers, Elizabeth Roman, Louis Roscoe, Jennie Rosen, Abe Roush, Anna Scott, Helen Schultz, Warren Seigel, Harry Smith, Gertrude Soles, Mildred Sourthers, Robert Sowash, Christine Spiegel, Margaret Stein, Jacob Stine, Stephen Stuckslager, Elizabeth Stone, Theresea Swenson, Grace Szlacketka, Vincent Tauber, Naomi Teemer, Charles Trimble, Vera ' Tyson, Helen Volk, Bernard Walker, Levi M 1 9 2 7 ' I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M f175l I I I I I I I 1 I I -I I I L H Youglfg-a.-Mon Wampler, Robert Watson, Denver Weiss, Lillian West, Alfred Williams, Helen Wood, Paul Yates, Marion 1919 Alm, Alida Altman, Mable Baillie, Jean Baird, Spencer Barger, Mary Barth, William Beighly, Paul Berger, Sylvester Betz, Richard Biesey, Helen Blose, Ralph Bowser, Charles Budd, Isabelle Burnstein, Emanuel Butter, Tom Byerly, William Carlson, Carl Carlson, Rhoda Carroll, Marie Caskie, Magdelina Christner, La Reine Christy, Viola Clifford, Elizabeth Coch, Margaret Coleman, Ruth Conlogue, Catherine Considine, Shirley Davis, Bertha Dickson, Melissa Dierken, Claire Dillon, Mary Dougherty, Ellen Downie, Harry, Drexler, Winnie Ely, Maryan Flanagan, Helen Fluke, Hulda Foster, Juanita Gailey, Glenn Garbett, Sarah Gayvert, Gladys Geiger, Edna Gensamer, Max Ginn, Walter Goetz, Roland Gregg, Alan Gross, Elizabeth Hanlan, Eugene Hardisty, Kathryn Hassel, Clyde Havekotte, Harold Heathley, Flora Hibbs, Aimie Holmes, Elizabeth Holt, Geraldine Hoser, Amelia Jarnes, Dorothy Johnson, Anna Johnson, Oscar THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued Kemp, James Kincaid, Daisy King, Susan Kirshner, Helen Kistner, Helen Knauss, Chester Knight, Hilda Knoll, Katherine Kopsheski, Walter Krow, Herbert Kuhn, Georgana Kunze, Frederick Kurtsrock, Arthur Lamb, Helen Lind, Elsie Lindamood, Rose Lindberg, Dorothy Lindquist, Ruth Mache, Sophia Madella, Andrew McAbee, Clyde McCarty, Robert McClelland, Florence McCormick, Elinor Mercur, Nathan Mermelstein, Ruth Montgomery, Margaret Morgan, Charles Motman, Bessie Moskowitz, Adolph Moskowitz, Hilda Moskowitz, Louise Mussler, Dorothy Nelson, Julia Newhouse, Lucilla Newhouse, Rose Nicklas, Louise Nilson, Mabel Ord, Frank Palmer, Mary Parker, Helen Patterson, Dorothy Penny, Isabella Peterson, Hildegarde Rae, Mary Rankin, Olive Reed, Ruth Reiter, Adolph Reiter, James Richey, Martha Robinson, Jean Sbarsky, Irene Scheidhour, Stella Shaw, John Shelton, Alice Smith, Arthur Souilliard, Esther Spiegelberg, Lydia Spielmyer, Alma Steele, Edwin Stone, Clyde Swartz, Paul Sweitzer, Leslie Thompson, Mary Tobin, Alicia Tyson, David Tyson, Esther Ulm, Louis Vidila, Victoria Wandrei, Frances Warde, James Weiss, Lillian Welsh, Roberta Welty, Edward Welty, Mary Werner, Ida Wood, Mildred Worral, Marion Yingling, Helen Young, Margaret Zebrovius, Bertha Zeller, Beatrice Zwingler, Lydia 1920 Am er, Lewis Andi-zrson, Olive Baldridge, Donald Ball, Edward Barth, Ralph Bathurst, Edith Beaumont, Ward Bedell, Walter Beighly, Ruth Berger, Ben Black, Margaret Briggs, Edith Briggs, Samuel Brown, Elizabeth Bryce, Cecil Bryce, Clifford Buck, Rose Buckingham, Charles Busch, Kathryn Butz, Sarah Carlin, Rudolph Carroll, Dorothy Chase, Maurice Cherry, William Christenson, Corrine Christy, Mary Clay, Harry A. - Connelly, Joanna Conroy, Regina Coulter, Naomi Cramblet, Earnest Curry, Linford Dahlman, Naomi Damm, Edith Davidson, Carol Dennen, Anna Dillon, Joseph Dougherty, De Lillian Dunlap, Elizabeth Dutcher, Bevan Ehrhart, Ruth Entler, Emma Everett, Frank Fady, John Fallquist, Albert Farcus, Tillie Feeney, Madaling Feldman, Maurice Felton, Flora Finly, Margaret Finkel, Samuel Firestone, Ruth Firestone, William Fox, George Friberg, Lavinia Friedman, Morely Garbett, Roy Gelb, Helen Greenwald, Harry Greggerson, Grace Gumbert, Charles Hagblom, Violet Hammitt, Lewis Hardman, Paul Harrison, John Hartman, Mary Hassel, William Heimlich, David Hill, Bessie Hilt, Ralph Hoak, Ethel Hoberg, Elsie Hockman, Morris Hoerr, Philip Hreha, John Hughes, Richard John, Lela Johnston, Harry Jones, Mercedes Kaminsky, Harry Keeley, Josephine Kengle, Russell Kinkaid, Laura Kinkaid, Walker Kinney, Catherine Klein, Ruth Knodel, Elizabeth Kohary, Charles Lammel, Charlotte Larson, Ellen Larson, Victoria Leek, Grayce Lewis, Robert Lightly, Margaret Little, Dorothy Loach, Mae Logan, Mary Lohr, Marion Louden, Violet Long, Margaret Loya, Mary MacDonald, Paul Markus, Fred Mayfield, Thomas McCain, Florence McCawley, Samuel McCelland, Charles McCune, Lillian McDevitt, Joseph McKee, Marion McLaughlin, Winifred McMillan, Harold McMillan, Nell Means, Louis L. Miller, Gertrude Moffat, Joseph Molin, John Mooney, Anna Moore, Muriel 9 1 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M f176J fl ., Morgan, Bertha Moritz, Daniel Murphy, Elizabeth Murphy, Gladys Neemes, Dorothy Nill, Cora O'Brien, Madolyn Palkowitz, David Palmer, Karl Parker, Margaret Peistrup, Margaret Peterson, Elsie Potter, Nora Quantz, Esther Quantz, Mildred Rankin, Mary Rasel, Sara Reese, Madeline Rhodes, Florence Ritenour, Eugene Ritter, Dorothy Robbins, Betty Roderick, James Roessing, Twila Rubinstein, Louis Russell, Elsie Schmidt, Marie Scholl, Charles Schrager, Morris Seigle, Ella Seitz, Mary Selen, Swen Sharp, Edith Sheets, Wilda Sieber, Alvin Sisskind, Elsie Slomberg, Cecelia Smith, Ruth Snaith, Ralph Steelburg, Mildred Stern, Fannie Stern, Morrell Stubbs, John Styche, Benjamin Sweeney, Theodore Taylor, Helen Taylor, Jack Thomas, Florence Thomas, Robert Thompson, Kathryn Trostle, Emma Ulm, Marie Verner, Thomas Vodilla, Louis Wallace, Esther Wampler, Anna Wander, Helen Weissbefg, Harry Weisz, Sophia Wells, George Westerberg, Mildred Whitaker, William White, Naomi Whitehead, Clyde Wiegand, Laura Willig, Walter Wilson, Dorothy Winkelman, Francis 1 1 1 4 ai t 1 1 1 4 to-of-if 4: in Yough-a.-Mon THE ALUMNI ROLL--Continued Winkelman, Katherine 1921 Anderson, Carl Edward Andrews, Leonora Barth, Margaret Emma Berquist, Anna Elizabeth Bertolotti, Henry Bortz, Lily Rose Buchanan, Frank Buckingham, Wilma E. Beck, George G. Burkholder, Allen W. Calder, Chas. G. Callahan, Veronica A. Carlson, Carl A. Carlson, Mildred Almeda Cock, Willard C, Crawford, Ruth Eleanor Crossen, Wm. Henry Dougherty, Mara Rita Dougherty, George J. Decker, Hilda Patricia Dillow, Mildred Ethel Dodd, Louise Elizabeth Dodge, Gertrude Elvera Edmundson, Zena M. Ehrhardt, Hildred Ione Engelman, Arthur H. Evans, John Daniel, Jr. Everett, Sara Mae Farkas, Harriet Fell, Katherine Louise Ferguson, Mildred Anna Firestone, Milton Fisher, Lillian Elizabeth Flanagan, Virginia Mae Fleck, Gertrude Rosina Floto, Alfred Henry Flynn, Abram James, Jr. Fritz, Edgar W. Fulton, Mabel Irene Gardner, Frederick Gayvert, Ella Louise Geisel, Mabel K. Gephart, Joseph C. Gessner, Clara Cecelia Giles, Bass Goe, Ruth S. Goetz, Adine Marie Goodman, Sydney M. Gray, Helen Elizabeth Gregg, Isabel Hagan, Marie Helen Hammerberg, Isabella Handel, Elizabeth Harrison, C. Edward Hartman, Arthur H. Hassel, C. Chauncey Haughey, J. Edgar Hill, Martha Rigby Hill, Reuben Teter Hoffman, George N. Hunter, Isabella Hutchison, William Inglis, Mildred Elizabet Ingram, Henry H. Irwin, James Shaw h Jackson, Beatrice James, Helen Margaret Jaycox, Jack M. Johnson, Francis C. Jones, Catherine Jones, Lillian Jones, Melvin Jubiliere, Ben P. Kallquist, Emelia A. Kees, Daisy Belle Keller, Elsie Kelso, John Wallace Kemp, Edward Locke Kimelman, Mildred King, Harry Kenneth King, Howard, W., Jr. Kipp, Anita Edith Klein, Samuel Klingensmith, Charles R. Knight, Mary G. Kreis, Helen Annette Krow, Charlotte Helen Lamb, George M. Latta, Allan E. Lebowitz, Jack Lemmon, Helen Levine, Fannie Levy, Bernard Lewis, Orlando Lichenstein, Hilda Livingston, Mildred I. Logan, Laura Jean Lux, Minnie MacDonald, Jessie M. Malloy, Alfred M. Maloney, Helen G. Mandel, Isadore Martin, Frank K. McClure, Jean Lucille McClure, Marjorie McConnell, Wm. M. McHolme, Mary E. McKee, Mabel McLaughlin, Agnes C. Mermelstein, Sidney S. Miller, Marguerite Molnar, Elizabeth Moore, Charles Havice Morrison, Laura Ruth Murphy, Nora A. Nelson, Roy A. Nieman, Pierson Papke, Alberta Parke, Byron L. Peairce, James C. Peebles, John B. Peckman, Eugene Fay Peckman, Wayne Peters, Kathryn Peterson, Charles D. Pitcock, Hugh Dudley Priddy, Emma Alice Ramsey, Edwin C. Rankin, Grace Ransick, Clyde Rosen, Fanny D. Roth, David S. Sabol, Mary Dorothy Shipley, Joseph Daley Shoemaker, Philip South, Harry Benton Spittal, Alma Irene Squibb, Alvah McCune Sullivan, Francis Sullivan, William Tauber, Capitolia R. Teplitz, Annabelle Ulm, Katherine Vukmanic, George Jos. Voelker, Alice Louise Volk, Emma Marie Walfish, Louis M. Walfish, Rose Wander, Samuel Ward, Helen E. Weiss, Albert R. Weiss, Elsie Weiss, Sadie Helen Weissburg, Samuel West, Mathilda Westbay, Eleanor White, Juliet White, Wm. Whitney Wickard, Walter L. Williams, Marguerite Wordtt, Paul Yecies, Goldie York, Anna Blanche Zeller, Albert Noble Ziobro, Edward L. 1922 Albig, Reed Allen, James Amper, Helen Amper, Sara Applegate, William Auslander, Manuel Badnerosky, Michael Baird, Thomas Baird, William Barney, Earle Baumgartner, Elizabeth Beaumond, Helin L. Benson, Lillian Berger, Leon A Berger, Selma Bergstrom, Adolph Berkemeyer, Helen Bicsey, Joseph Blackburn, Bernice Blackburn, Helen Bowers, H. Russell Bradshaw, Ruth Brakeall, Ethel Brewer, Ida L. Brletic, John Brochar, Margaret Brown, Albert C. Brown, Charles Butler, Arthur R. Butler, Frank Campbell, Electia Campbell, Jean Campbell, Louise J. Carlson, Edla R. 9 2 7 , M 1 M I W Y l l K F I l I L L I 1 F 1:1771 I I I I- I I I 'I I I I I I L I X . Yough-ia.-Mon Carlson, Elizabeth Clifford, Doris E. Considine, Joseph Corey, Beulah Cornell, Ruth H. Cowan, Jackson D., Jr. Cox, William J., Jr. Crookham, Annabelle Danner, Hazel M. Davis, Mildred M. Dennen, Leland Dickson, A. Bess Dingeldine, Margaret Dougherty, Rachel Farkas, Lillian Fisher, Robert Flash, Rose B. Foster, E. Louise Fritz, Hazel Fulmer, Kline Geiger,.Sara B. Geisel, Sara Gilbert, Eleanor Greenfield, Charles Guisler, Edith Gustafson, Charles Hankins, Orabelle Harris, Pearl Hartman, Rodney S. Hassen, Ruth A. Hayes, John A. Heath, W. Franklin Herold, Paul F. Hill, Alice H. Hill, Gertrude M. Hill, George Hitchens, Margaret Hoerr, Stephen Holley, Paul H. Holloway, Mabel V. Holtzman, Marie Hopkins, Daisey Horne, Herbert Houck, Lawson E., Jr. Household, Angela Humenansky, Emil G. Jamison, John Jaycox, Edmund Jaycox, Melvin Johnson, Margaret Johnson, Pauline Johnston, Jean Johnston, Samuel T. Jones, Edwin W. Kant, Carline L. Kaplan, Sidney A. Keefer, Anna M. Keefer, Dorothy M. Kelliher, Marjorie R. Kidney, Walter G. Kuhl, George W. Krow, Ruth R. Kuhnert, Curtis Liddle, Ray A. Liedtke, Edith H. Lindberg, R. Pauline Lindbom, Doris M. THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued MacDonald, Flora Macllroy, Elizabeth Mansfield, Ruth E Masters, Harold L McAllister, Paul W. McAllister, Ralph McCarty, Isabel McClure, Glenn T. McClurg, May W. McCormick, Charles L. McElroy, Walter D McKee, John E. Mehaffey, Irene Mendlowitz, Sidney Merritt, Grace A. Miller, Alvin F. Milligan, Lawrence W. Montgomery, Caroline E. Moore, Martha J. Moritz, Minnie L. Morrison, Stanley Moskowitz, Rose Moss, Sara L. Murphy, Catherine M. Neemes, Mildred E. Nill, Anna E. Parker, Harold B. Pollard, Sara J. ' Potter, Marie Rasel, M. La Roux Reber, J. Harold Rehnstrom, Martha L Reiber, Dorothy L. S. Roehn, Willa I. , Rosengarth, Laura A. Roush, Martha Satterfield, Louise Schweitzer, Elsie E. Swartz, Helen I. Serena, Elmer P. Sieber, Ruth H. Sinn, Helene M. Sjoman, Agnes E. Slone, Gertrude Smith, Adelaide B. Squibb, Edna H. Steckman, Vyrl A. Stewart, Armour A. Stinson, Mac A. S min ton Doroth E. Y 8 , , Y Thompson, John G. Tobin, Sara B. Tolin, Walter F. Tuxford, Alice Ulm, Alice L. Walrath, Nelson E. Wargovich, Joseph B. Weddell, Grace A. Weinberg, Jane G. Wilson, Muriel L. Wood, Jessie M. Wood, Margaret E. Young, Mary S. 1923 Ackinclose, Verna Aderin, Olive Allen, Maude Aliskowitz, Charles Ansell, Irene Armour, Jack Beardmore, Ray Bedell, Beulah Belgrade, Harry Benson, Lily Bishop, Margaret Boax, James Boord, Mary Brown, Lillian Bringe, John Burnstein, Fannie Bosnak, Genevieve Cahan, Isadore Calder, William Callahan, Dorothy Campbell, Clara Mae Carlson, Albert Carlson, James Carlson, Tom Clarke, Thomas Clay, Mercedes Cleary, John Cooley, John Crawford, Lucille Davis, Lillie Dickson, Christy Donmore, Harry Donnelly, Kathryn Douglas, Edith Dunlap, Bertha Edwards, Robert Edwin, Hazlett Elliott, Rosella England, Eva Englert, Raymond Erickson, Sara Everrett, Edward Farrell, Paul Feeney, Irene Felton, Donald Ferrar, Tessina Foster, William Fox, Robert Fried, Rae Fried, Rose Garner, Raymond Gill, Arthur Gold, Simon Goode, Mildred Gorman, Josephine Greggerson, Helen Guffey, James Guifey, Lowery Guffey, William Haney, Helen Hardman, Helen Hardman, Ruth Hardy, Daniel Harrison, Margaret Helmstader, Ernest Helmstadter, Richard Helquist, Clifford Herskowitz, Sidney Hibbs, George Hillegas, Grace Hindle, Holmes Hirsberg, Lee Hoagland, Sara Hobby, Byerly Hobby, Gray Hrinko, John Hurly, John Inskeep, Alonzo Irwin, Katherine Ivey, Jack Jackson, Katherine Jamison, Gertrude Johnson, Mable Jones, Thoburne Jubelier, Bernard Jubelier, Sophie Judkowitz, Bessie Kaplan, Herbert Keely, Alice Keeler, Sam Kelly, Clifton Kengle, Grace Kessler, Maurice Kincaid, Harry Kirkland, William Knutson, Arthur Kufen, Charles Lannan, Annie Larson, Edwin Larson, Henry Lebowitz, Florence Leezer, Boyd Levine, Esther Levy, Sylvia Lewis, Gordena Lichenstein, Rose Lind, Kenneth Lindberg, Gladys Lindquist, Henrietta Lofstrom, Paul Logan, Jennie Long, Harriet Long, Mary Lotz, Clara Lusk, Charlotte Lyden, Margaret Mackanic, Anna Maloney, Francis Mansheld, Earl Marquis, Helen Martin, Isabel Maurer, Jolm McCall, Marion McClure, Elsie McCune, Margaret McElwee, Murray McFadden, Katherine McGettigan, Helen Mehaffey, Lester Mercur, Sol Mermelstein, Milton Messer, Isadore Metzler, Elizabeth Miller, Gertrude Miller, Helen Miller, Marie Lindquist, Ruth L. Albine, Gladys Hill, Harry Milligan, Virginia 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M D781 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 e4 4 4 4 Yough-a.-Mon , I Millington, Edith Mitchell, Alice Moffet, Blair Moffet, Mary Molnar, Anna Moore, Thelma Morgan, Mildred Morrison, Lois Moskowitz, Sam Murphy, Emmett Muse, Grace Muse, Minnie Nayhouse, Theresa Orman, Margaret O'Shea, Leona Paul, Herbert Peck, Amy Peebles, Catherine Peterson, Lawrence Peterson, Mildred Pigozzi, Robert Pistel, Carl Rae, Jean Reiber, Arthur Reinstin, Yetta Reiter, Hilda Reiter, Theresa Riddle, Alice Rippel, Ethel Ross, Marion Rosche, Marguerite Roush, David Szdlowski, Johanna Safier, Esther Samuels, Lillian Schneider, Raymond Schwartz, Bernard Schweitzer, Howard Scott, Henry Scully, Virginia Shaney, Ruth Sheets, Glenn Shupe, Lois Silver, Sam Simmons, Charlotte Sinn, Elizabeth Sinn, Glenn Skepstedt, Roy Smith, Esther Smith, Gertrude Smith, Raymond Sniderman, Dorothy Soethe, Fred Stearns, Ory Steele, James Stefanko, John Stenson, Helen Taksel, Lillian Tatalowitz, Sam Thomas, Lillian Thompson, Charles Thorn erg, Albert Trimble, John Trostle, Bernice Vaughan, Elizabeth Veatch, Zelda Voit, Ruby Wagner, Hannah THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued Wallace, Charles Wander, Maurice Watson, Cleona Watson, Esther Watson, Katherine Weinel, Ralph Weiss, Bertha White, John White, Maetilda Wiegand, Margaret Williams, Norman Yost, Mildred Young, William Zeugschmidt, Cecil Zumpe, Morrell 1924 Allison, Ethel Am er, Helen Andperson, Hilda Anderson, Mable Auberle, Rose E. Ayres, Mildred L. Baker, George Bayne, Richard Berg, Eleanor Rf Berger, Morley Bergstadt, Adolph Gerrstrom, Eleanor Berkowitz, Pearl Best, Elmer Bilhartz, Katherine Blair, Roy Blythe, Virginia Bogue, Frances A. Bondy, Sara Borland, Norris Breyer, Joe Brletic, Mary Buckingham, Eleanor Bumbaugh, Mildred L. Butz, Dorothy Caldwell, Bernice Carlin, Arthur Chamberlain, Harvey Cherrington, Edyth Cherry, Charles Christner, Alan Cohen, Dorothy Louise ' Considine, Raymond Cook, Martha Cooper, Ruth Catherine Corey, Evelyn Corey, Jean Corey, Lois Cowan, Isadore Cox, Helen Louise Cramblet, Ruth Crates, Newell Cribbs, Helen Culbert, Alvin Cuncliffe, Richard Cunningham, Ethel Davis, Dorothy E. Davis, Vera Dickson, Benjamin Doersch, Gertrude Douglas, Nedra Dunlop, Martha Dunlap, Louis Eisele, Harry E. Elko, Helen Englert, Jessie A. Erickson, Harry C. Fallquist, Alice Farkas, Ruth Ferguson, Donald Fields, Boyce Fillipsie, George Flaherty, Mary J. Fluke, Rothwell Flynn, Helen Flynn, Jack Fried, Betty Louise Frischoltz, Ruth Fuehrer, Herbert Fuller, Ellen I. Gee, Margaret George, Dorothy Ginnel, Anna M. Gleason, Lucille Greggerson, Edna Guskey, Sam Haney, Tom Hardman, Thomas J. Hassel, Roy Heath, Hugh Heckman, Hazel Helmstadter, Philip Helmstadter, Vera Hensky, Edith Hilt, Alberta Hoffman, Marion Holly, James Hoop, Harriet Hoser, Clara . Houserman, George Hritsko, Michael Hurst, Evalena Hurst, Thomas W. Huttenhower, Catherine Ingram, Edith lsenberg, Samuel Jaycox, Hartley John, Rachel A. Johnson, Mildred lda Johnson, Ruth Johnson, Sarah R. Johnson, Walter Judge, Bertha Gertrude Kalbaugh, Harry Kaminsky, John Kees, Mildred Kendall, Ethel Kern, Elsie E. Kidney, Lois Killgallon, Catherine Kimmelman, Morris Kirshner, Mable Kistner, Esther Kite, Hannah Klein, Rose B. Kunes, Dorothy Landstrom, Irene Lang, Franklin Langhart, James Larkins, Howard Larson, Walter F. Latta, Harry W. Leasure, Raymond C. Lewis, Mary Lindquist, Gertrude Ljungquist, Elsie Logan, Elmer Louden, Elmer Loya, Julia M. McDonald, Munroe Maher, Elizabeth I Malloy, Harry McCowin, Gladys I. Manning, Kenneth Manuel, Millie Manuel, Mollie K. Marsh, Mildred Mayfield, John H. McConnel, George H. McDermott, Elizabeth McGlashan, Agnes McKinney, Harrison Meizlik, Harry Millinger, Vera Millinger, Mildred Millinger, Ruth Minnick, Marjorie Moon, Bertha Moore, Evelyn Moore, William Morgan, Herbert Morrison, Edward Newhouse, Dorothy Newhouse, Edwin Noden, Sara Nystrom, Carl M. Obusek, Andrew Oliver, Clyde Olsen, James E. Owen, Nora Helen Palm, George Papke, Herman A. Parker, Emma Pearson, Harry Peebles, Earl Peterson, Theodore Phillips, Irene Pink, Clara Plumb, Clara Polansky, Olga Polhemus, Mary E. Prideaux, Marion E. Purkiss, John Rach, Arthur Ralston, Joseph Ramsay, Margaret E. Ritter, Ruth Richards, Frank Roderick, Frances Rodgers, Emil Roman, Rebecca Rosenbleet, William Ross, Hilda Rowe, Harold Rubenstein, Dave Sawyer, Edna Schaum, Helen 1 9 2 M I I I I 'I V I I I 7 I I I NI I I M f179J rl I I I V' I I I I I I I I I L, I Yough-a.-Mon Seitz, Charles Sharp, Margaret Shaw, Raymond Shupe, Huston Sieber, Dorothy Sior, Amelia M. Sior, Rose Violet Sjoman, Stella Skager, Anna Slawita, George Slomberg, Adelaide Slomberg, Dorothy Smith, George Smith, Mae Elizabeth Snyder, Raymond Sowa, Walter Squibb, Laura Steiner, Ray P. Stenson, Gertrude Styche, Margaret Styche, Mary Ella Sucha, Anna Szdlowski, Natalie Taylor, Margaret Esther Teplitz, Edna Phoebe Thompson, Anna Thompson, William Tiderman, Hilda Tracey, Eleanor Trich, Howard Vaughan, Lucille Vetter, Hilda Vignevis, Mary Voelker, Adela Walline, Emelia G. Waltower, Mary Weckerly, Chester Weinberger, Edward Weiss, Gertrude Phylis Wells, Lewis West, Ruth Wickard, Duane Wild, Susan Mabel Wilt, Vera Wisser, Isabelle Wordtt, Earl Znetko, Andrew 1925 Auld, Mary Anslander, Sylvia Abel, Edgar Angelo, Paul Angerman, Jack Arosell, Arthur Ackard, Helen Anderson, Rachel Bain, Ralph Baird, Charles Baker, Bertha Barnes, Sylvester Beardmore, Beatrice Bechtol, Anna Berg, Mabel Berkowitz, Mildred Bevan, Bernice . Biddle, Elettia Biddle, Elsie THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued Black, Joseph Black, Rebecca Bloom, Jack B. Bloomstead, Car W. Boyland, Alberta Brewster, William Bringe, Ernest Broadbent, Ruth Brown, Charles Brown, Richard Bryant, Frances Cahan, Sarah Campbell, Gertrude Carlson, E. Pauline Cartwright, Beatrice Cartwright, Betty B. Caughey, William Celisha, Muriel Chemsak, Anna Clarke, Edward Clay, Francis, Jr. Collins, John L. Collins, Paul P, Cooper, Samuel Cornell, Anna Correll, Hilda Cribbs, Donald Crosier, Fred H., Jr. Cuncliffe, Charles Davis, Marie Decker, Jack Ditter, Marie Dixon, Violet Dodds, Alma Dodds, Ruth D. Douglas, Alice E. Duncan, Elsie Duncan, Inez Duncan, James Dunshee, Margaret A. Edge, Alice Eger, Lawrence Ehrhart, Alice Faby, Dorothea E. Faix, Mary E. Farcus, Sara M. Farcus, Henrietta Farcus, Laura Fawcett, Thomas C. Feldman, Betty G. Feldman, Nathan Ferguson, Clyde Firestone, Morris Frances, John Franklin, Alva Gall, Albert Gambridge, Margaret Gottlieb, Milton Gayok, Michael Geisel, John Gilchrist, Kenneth Gillen, Gardner Goetz, Arnold Graham, John Greenfield, Abraham Guisler, Dorothy Gumbert, Alan Hackett, Olive I. Hall, Samuel Hamer, Anna Hamer, Gertrude Handel, Ernest Hanna, Elizabeth Hare, Jack Hargrave, May Belle Harkness, Edythe Harrison, Charles Hartman, Katherine Heaven, Bertha Hedstrom, Evelyn Hedstrom, Ingeborg Henderson, Kathryn Henry, Richard Herbertson, Robert Herwick, Boyd Hill, Harold Hill, Tom Hilty, Helen Hochman, Joseph Hoffman, Genevieve Hoffman, Mary Household, William Huey, Oliveretta Hyland, David Jackel, Marie Jacobs, Elsie James, Marion Jenkins, Laura Johnson, Charles Johnson, Raymond Johnstin, Sara jones, Vera Judkovitz, Joseph Kador, Elizabeth Kaufman, John Kearney, Arthalinda Keeley, Helen Kelsch, George Kindaid, Raymond Klein, Hazel Klein, Max Knight, Kathryn Kohn, Fannie Kostyzak, Dorothy Kottler, Emma Kratville, Ceclia Kremkau, Florence Kretchman, Glayds Kretchman, Thelma Kuder, Matilda Lane, James Lannan, Isabelle Larson, Alfred Larson, Carl Liik, Milton Lindberg, Eva ' Little, Anna Mary Little, Harry A., jr. Loop, Samuel Loo e, Willis Lordi Elsie Ludwick, Louise Lueckert, Kathryn Lunderstadt, Carl Lusk, Margaret MacAra, Jean Mackinac, Katherine Mann, Raymond Marsh, Edna Martin, Flora Matta, Joseph Matthews, Will Maund, Elizabeth May, Jean Mayfield, Arthur McAneny, Ethel McCawley, James McClintock, Sarah McKeever, Kathryn McLaughlin, Martha McLein, Helen Mehalfey, Hilda Mercur, Ruth Meredith, Dorothy Merritt, Alice Merschat, Minnie Messer, Frances Metzler, Sara Miller, Viola Moffat, Clarence Monahan, Virginia Morgan, June Moritz, David Moskowitz, Max Navaroli, August Nayhouse, Edith Neely, John M., Jr. Neish, james Neuschwander, Ral h Newxomer, Mildredl Oats, William Olex, Harry Olsen, Alice Ondeka, Albert Orman, Alice Orman, Myrtle O'Shea, Margaret Osterwald, Kathryn Palkowitz, Robert Parkins, Louise Paul, Richard Paul, Ruth Peterson, Ethel Pierce, Dorothy Pierce, Elizabeth Piper, Robert Pollard, Anna Pottholf, Helen Reed, Martha Reese, Beatrice Rehnstrom, Gustaf Reichenbach, Charles Reigard, Mark Reisberg, Celia Rhodes, Frank Rice, James Richards, Caroline Richards, Helen Richard, Virginia Richford, Creagh Roche, Ruth Rosen, Marion Rosengarth Robert Rosenthal Aaron I 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I L M nsoj P I I ,I I I I I I I I I I I 'YL I , Yough-a.-Mon Rosenzweig, Pauline R.osenzweig, David Rubenstein Albert Sabol, Helen Samuels, David Schaefer, Wi ton Schwartz, Israel Schweitzer, Frank Scott, Byron Scott, Mercedes Scully, John Sechrist, Eugene Seddon, Dorothy Seigel, Edmund Sharp, Elizabeth Shatzer, Robert Shick, Elizabeth Simco, George Sisco, Margaret Smith, Thelma Snodgrass, Marguerite Snodgrass, Homer Snyder, Helen South, Mildred Stanyard, Hesse Swedberg, Anna Steele, Ruth Stern, Erma Stewart, Samuel Stickrath, Irene Stromer Madeline Thompson, Mary Thorpe, Ella Tonell, Florence Topley, Blanche Torrance, William Trathowen, Charles Trimble, Helen Trostle, Stella Trott ,Eleanor Uhlig, Elsie Ulm, Marion Umansky, Meyer Vadar, Margaret Vankirk, Radcliffe Vidnovic, William Vitori, Anthony Wargo, Rose Waters, Ruby Watson, Thomas Wells, Otis Welmer, El'zabeth Whitaker, Kenneth Willman, Catherine Wilson, Leroy Winklevoss, Anna Wisser, William Wood, George Wood, Virginia Young, Ruth Zimmerman, Paul 1926 Albine, Lela Allen, Edith Anderson, Alice THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued Anderson, Anna Angerman, Adloph Arthurs, Charles Auberle, Jack Auslander, Helen Baker, Bessie Baker, Duane Baldridge, Olive Barnes, Wilda Barry, Raymond Bashista, Emma Bayne, Sara Beedle, Elizabeth Behr, Charles Benaglia, Amy Benson, Raymond Berkowitz, Maurice Bernhardy, Mary Billy, Emma Bondy, Nettie Bramball, Harry Briggs, Fred Brinkman, Florence Broder, Samuel Broman, Florence Brown, Elizabeth Brown, Mabel Bryant, Bess Buchweitz, Herbert Calder, Alexander Calder, Olivia Callahan, Fred Carlson, Olive Carter, Melvin Chambers, John Clay, Jane Cleary, Josephine Conley, Mary Conway, Eleanor Daley, Mary D'Angelo, George Danko, Joseph Danko, Veronica Daugherty, Clark Davis, Floyd Davis, Harvey Dawson, Anna Dean, Gladys Di Vitorio, Samuel Donaldson, Lawrence Dotson, Elizabeth Downing, Edgar Dulany, Thelma Dunlop, Gilmer Eckles, Helen Edwards, Ruth Ehrhardt, Kenneth Eilhart, Fred Eliason, Linnea Engleman, Florence -t Engwer, Fred Fazenbaker, Mary Filson, Helson Flynn, Mercedes Fox, Carl Frass, John Frank, Thelma Friedman, Esther Friedman, Joseph Fritz, Raymon Furlong, Dulany Gibson, Glenn Gilbert, Helen Gisser, Edith Goode, Amy Goodman, Abe Goodman, Sarah Granberg, Irene Gross, Gladys Hale, Marion Halleran, Isabel Haney, Mildred Hardy, Marion Harbourt, Lois Har er, Ferne Hergertson, Elizabeth Herrlein, Helen Herrlein, Marjorie Herskowitz, Lillian Hiteman, Esther Hitchens, Dorothy Hoffman, Eleanor Hoffman, Doris Hoffman, Helen Holmes, Fred Hornfek, Raymond Household, Ruth Hurst, Ida Ingel, James Irwin, John Irwin, Thelma Iszauk, Ernest Itscoitz, Seymour Jacobs, Minnie Jasper, Carroll Johnston, Carl Johnston, Joseph Kaiser, Walter Kalinowski, Sophia Kant, Adele Keddie, Rose Kees, Helen Kelly, Anna Kelly, George Kelly, Mary Jane Kelso, Lois Kilgallon, Julia Kimelman, Robert Kindaid, Clyde Kissane, Mary Klein, Ruth Knutson, Roy Ktivonak, Catherine Kufen, Emma Laffetty, Irene Landstrom, Bertil Leger, Helen Lesniewski, Albert Levine, Joseph Lilja, Marie Linge, Carl Lofstrom, Walter Logan, Ford Logan, William - Long, Dorothy Lowrie, Paul Loya, Pauline Lukey, Clarice Mains, William Marko, Joseph Massing, Henry Mackey, Ruth Maloney, Margaret Mangan, Helen Mann, Florence Malseed, Helen Margo, Julia Martin, Jennie Martin, Violet Markus, Alfretta Matta, Margaret Maxwell, Ruth McAraw, James McGavern, Jack McElwee, Cornelius McGrann, George McKinney, Edward McLaughlin, Herbert MacMillan, Roselle McAllister, Anna McCleary, Effie McCune, Betty McGowan, Mary Meizlik, Joe Mendlowitz, Morris Menzies, Graham Merlin, Ernest Meredith, Robert Meyers, Jacob Melegh, Margaret Miller, Clifford Millington, Norman Miller, John Middlemiss, Dorothy Minnick, Virginia Moldovan, William Moore, Frederick Morlock, William Morlock, George Morris, Fred Moskowitz, Herbert Moore, Edna Moore, Rhea Molnar, Mary Moore, Vida Morgan, Mary Lee Murphy, Cecilia Meyers, Charles Naysmith, Edith Norton, Dorothy Oberfeitinger, Hilda Oncea, Valeria Palm, Elliott Palmer, Harry Panetta, William Parucha, Edward Patterson, Betty Patterson, Lewis Patterson, H zel Paule, Susan Pavlovic, Pete Peebles, Alice Pratt, William Proctor, Samuel M 1927 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M Lisij I I I I n I 4 I 1 o o I I t a Yough-a.-Mon Qualters, Robert Raboid, Ruth Ransick, Edna Reed, Denzel Rasel, Harry THE ALUMNI ROLL-Continued Shellen, Margaret Shepard, Edward Sherer, John Sjoberg, Bernard Skager, Edwin Rhoades, James Sieber, Mabel Richards, Esther Simco, Gertrude Richetts, Dorothy Slack, Carl Richardson, Minnie Sleeth, Robert Rippel, Marion Smith, Alice Ritenour, Frances Smith, Alice Jean Roman, Edith Fay Smith, Charles Rosenbleet, Sidney Smith Emil Rosenzweig, Oscar Rosenzweig, Marga Rotzsch, Hilda Safier, Gertrude Sant, Eleanor Santner, Carolyn Sarinsky, Agnes Schoeller, Clarence Schriber, Virginia Schmidt, Henry Seitz, George ret Smith? N annie Soethe, Helen Sowa, Mary Spiegel, Edith Spittal, Hugh Stauffer, Glenn Stawicki, john Starr, Alice Spielm Steele, an, Alice Lester Steinert, Bentley Stern, Estelle Stencil, Helen Stombaugh, Helen Stone, Bessie Styche, Elmer Susan, Frank Tarsic, Elizabeth Tatalovic Walter Thompson, Harry Thompson, Rebecca Trautman, Louise Trelogan, Harry Tremont, Marie Tobin, Eleanor Tuckfelt, Harry Ulm, John Umbarger, Robert Vankirk, Herbert Viets, Dorothy Volk, Louis Waite, Herbert Wallace, Mike Wallace, Sidney Wandrei, Alice Warrady, Irene Waters, Oratheus Waters, Walter Watson, Elizabeth Watson, Virginia Webb, Mortimer Weinel, Luther Weiss, Florence Weiss, Jack Whaley, Virginia Whindleton, Mary Wiegand, Alice Williams, Lawrence Wilson, Harold Wills, Mary Louise Wiley, Andell Wingert, Rosabel Woozley, Mary A. Yost, Kathryn Zajic, Mary Zalac, Joseph Zeugschmidt, George Zenn, Dorothy Shaw, john Stenger, Helen Ward, Edward 1 1 1 DO YOU REMEMBER When we got lost every time we left our home room? When we shivered and shook every time we met Mr. Bower in the halls? What we thought of a Senior? Miss Woods.- Ernest, what do you have in your mouth? Ernest L.- Lumber, Ctooth-pickl NOBILITY OF CLASS '27 King Soles Queen Jean Duke Weber Duchess Annette Lord Webb Lady Sara Archduke Kite Kaiser Dawkins Sheik Speedy Premier Fulton Czar Sylvan Sultan Ansell Ambassadors Patterson, Flegal, and Shaw Mussolini C. Breitinger RULES FOR TABLE MANNERS If eating corn on a cob, be sure to adjust it to your mouth as you would a mouth organ, but do not run the scale too rapidly. Do not, by all means, wear your napkin at half- Syrup is a nourishment, do not use it as a lini- ment. Coffee, tea, and milk should taken internally, not externally. The height of a diet is displayed by a person who will not wear a stiff collar because there is too much starch in it. Child to its Mother: Mother, won't you speak to Sonny? He is on the fly paper, and there are a lot of flies waiting to get on. Andy.- Say, what are you thinking about, Jim? Jim.- Thanks for the compliment. Mrs. Ziff- Why did you select those trousers? Buddy Ziff- Because it says here, They can't be beat! Ed.- I don't feel like talking tonight. B. L.- Great, then I can hold your hands. Seitz.- Racing for a train? Flynn.- Naw, just training for a race! Father.- Say, why did you run away with that lawyer? Daughter.- You told me to follow my coun- sel! ' mast. Jellies should be used as body food, and not as No. 1.- Hello, ole derby, how are you? salve. No. 2.- All worn out. I 1 9 2 7 M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M flszj L' I I I I I I I I I I I 'I Ftfiumov I I I I I I I I I I IIIIIII I I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 L 1 Yough-a.-Mon IN VIRGIL Miss Calderwood.-1-' flames, turn your page- you have read half a paragraph on the other side. Teacher.- You were to write a poem, and this paper has nothing on it. Stude.-i'Oh, that's blank verse entitled My Thoughts in Class. IN CAFETERIA Frehie No. 1.- Beans. Freshie No. 2.- Beans, Freshie No. 3.- Beans, Kind waitress.- Three Beans? Freshie No. 1.- Hey, I want more than three beans. He.- Can you suggest a title for my new book on England's most famous battle. She.- Why not call it 'Scraps of English History' Her teeth had a star-like glint, So glittering, so pearly white, Still further the resemblance went, Like stars they came out at night. And this is the end of my tail, said the cat as she backed into the lawnmower. Strolling along the quays of New York harbor, an Irishman came across the wooden barricade which is placed around an enclosure where emigrants suspected of suffering from contagious diseases are isolated: Pat.-Cro a bystanderb.- Phwat's this board- ing for? Bystander.- Oh, that's to keep out fever and things like that, you know. Pat.- Indade, Oi've often heard of the board of lhealth, but it's the first time Oi've ever seen it. Poe.-Qcrying rapturouslyl- My heart is with the ocean. Seasick Novelist.-ftaking a firmer grip on the raill.- You've gone me one better. Pa heard him give our high school yell, For joy he couldn't speak. He murmured, Mother, listen To our Johnny talking Greek. Oh, no indeed You can't be put in jail for Killing time Hanging pictures Stealing kisses Shooting the shoots Smothering a laugh Murdering French Jack.- I had a bad dream last night. M. B.- Yes, I saw you. There are bright momemts in a teacher's life. At a recent exam a pupil defined a volcano as follows: A mountain with a hole in the top, and if you look down the hole, you can see the creator smoking. You say our papers were identical on our last examination. Well, what more would you have, sir? That's but cooperation. You say she wears a 'touch me not' air? No, but it's always a case of fresh paint. Listen, my children, and you shall hear Of the trials and troubles of a high school year, Called at seven, not ready at eight, Rush to school ten minutes late. Forgotten lessons burden the minds, Large and smallgfour different kinds. What do you think is the sweetest sound That comes to us the whole day round? Hark! there it is, the air doth swell With the beautiful chimes of the four o'clock bell. IN GEOMETRY Teacher.- What does E. D. mean? Bright Junior.-'iQuit and Eat Dinner. Referee.- Foul, Freshie.- Where's the feathers? Senior.- ShI-This is a picked team. Old Colored Mammy.- I'se wants a ticket for Florence. Ticket Agent Cafter 10 minutes of weary thumb- ing over railroad guidesD. Where is Florence? O. C. M.- Settin' over dar on de bench. Swear by your friends-not at them-it's safer. First Prof.- Everything I tell that boy goes in one ear and out the other. Second Prof.- You're wrong-sound can't cross a vacuum. J. W.- I walked past your house last night. S. R.- Thanks I would like to know.- If all the chewing gum used in high school were rolled into a ball, would there be enough to stick the elusive Caesar into the heads of the suffering Sophomores? Which is more beautiful to the average high school student-the Mona Lisa, or a picture of our basketball sizzling through the hoop? Passenger.- How are you today? Conductor.- Fare, please. I 9 2 7 I I I I I I, I I I I I I I I I M I185I I I I 1 I I I 1 I I I I I L I . Yough-a.-Mon We Have Lots of Things in Our Class: a.-Dean b.-Bald Ridge c.-Shaver CShal'ferD d.-Sisco e.-Masters WHEN EARTH'S LAST APPLE IS TAINTED CApologies to Kiplingl When earth's last apple is tainted and is rotting on the tree, When all its lovely playmates have been chewed by you and me- , Oh! What will all the Seniors do when it is time to lunch, And no rose-checked sweet apple can be found whereon to crunch? Oh! Sandwiches are lovely, and they're mighty filling, too, But, somehow, they grow tiresome when you've had quite a few, So, when earth's last apple's tainted, why the thing to do of ca'se Is to substitute for this fine fruit, A lotta applesauce! CORRECT YOUR ENGLISH, SONNY! Sonny.- I just seennf g Mother.- What---now, lyouii vvatch your grammar. Sonny.- That was just what I was trying to tell you-Grammar is down at the barbershop getting her hair bobbedf' Ike.- I knew my roommate would lose the game. Mike.- How's zat? Ije.- He always fumbles at the keyhole. OVER THE WIRES Father.- Hello, John-Why didiiit you make better grades? John.- I can't hear you, Father. Father.- I say, why did you not make better grades? V John.- Father, I can not hear you. Father.-' 'I say, John, do you need any money? John.- Yes, fifty dollars will do. Sa doesn't this table ti a lot? Patron.- y, p . Waiter.- Yes, it is setting a good example for the people. - Patron.- Thank you, sir. Prof.- My wife has gone to the West Indies. Friend.-' jamaica? Prof.- No, she went of her own accord. The more you study, the more you learn 5 - The more you learn, the more you forget, The less you forget, the more you know, So, why study? The less you study, the less you learn, The less you learn, the less you forget, The less you forget, the more you know: So, Why study? H Balloonist Clost in fogD Hello, down there! Where am I? Farmer.- Ye can't fool me young fella, you're up in that there old basket. Sam, I'll give you a pint of Scotch if you'll hurry over to rny house and get my grip. Hurry, now!-iWhat! Haven't you gone yet? Gone? Boss, I'se back. Love may be blind, but the neighbors are-n't. Mr.- I can tell you how much water flows under the Brooklyn Bridge to a quart. You.- How much? Me.- Two pints. HORSE OR HOARSE Mr. Erwin,- I'm afraid I'm a little hoarse this morning. It was a quarter past twog And yet he showed no sign of leaving. For why should he when The class wouldn't end until two-thirty? He.- When I was young, the doctor said that ifI didn't stop smoking I would probably become feeble minded. She.- Well, why didn't you stop? i ' Frank S.- Why is it that a black cow that gives white milk makes yellow butter? L. L.- For the same reason blackberries are red when they are green. A Stude QFreshD Prof, someone told me your hair was dyed. Prof.- It's false. I Stude.- Yeh, that's what I told them. Miss Gillman.-' 'Now you two go to the board, one use chalk, and the other use his head. Sam.-' 'That's a swell shirt you have on. How many yards does it take to make a shirt like that? Bo.-' 'I got three shirts out of one yard last nite. Miss Dunlap.- Would you like to join us in the missionary movement? Ethel Y.- Is it' anything like the Charleston? Ike.- Why didn't you answer that letter I wrote you last week? Jane S.- I didn't get it, and besides, I didn't like some of the things you said in it. He.- Do you care for horses? She,- No, I wait on table. 1927 M M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Lissj Yes.-'KI found a splinter of wood in my soup. I I I .I I I I I I I I I I I Yo u S h-Aa: Mio n DIARY OF A BUSY SENIOR M. 7 :OO-' 'z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z. 7 120-' 'z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z. 7:45-Alarm clock rings. 7:46- !!!!!!!!!!! 7 :50-' 'z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z.' 7:58- All right, I ll get up! 8:01- z-z-z-z. ' 8:20- What became of my clean shirt? 8129- Gulp-Swish-Gulp. 8 230-' 'Br-r-r ! 8:45-Enters school room. 9 :OO-' 'z-z-z-z-z. 9:45- I don't know, etc. 10 22571 'z-z-z-z. 11 :OO-' 'z-z-z-z. 11 130' I don't know. etc. 11:55- Gee! I'm hungry. 12:03- Get outama way! 12:30- Gulp-Swish-Gul p. ' ' 12:35-Starts to comb hair. 12:45-'Finishes combing hair, M. 1:00-Walks through the halls with Her. 1:01-Blushes fiery crimson. 1102- Oh-ah-yes-uk-huk! 1:03-Wonders why his collar is so tight. 1 :O4-Straightens tie for nfth time. 1:05-Enters Home Room. ' 1 130-Gets lecture for inattention. 1:34-Attempts to capture post season fly. 1 136-' 'z-z-z-z-z-z. 2:03-Trips over own feet and bumps into Her. . 2104- !IIIIIIIII 2:15'-:'No, ma'am-I mean-er-yes-no- ma am. 2:20- I don't know. 2 :25-' 'z-z-z-z-z-z. 2:35-Calls on Mr. Bower. 2:36-'.'I didn't mean to do it. I won't do it again. I forgot. 2:45-Heaves heavy sigh of relief. 2 :55- z-z z-z-z-z. , 3:00-II29II,5I? I 'ff' 3 :15- z-z-z-z-z. ' 3:20-Looks at clock. 3:22-Looks at clock. 3 125-Looks at clock. 3:29-Walks over to waste basket. 3:30-Leaves cloud of dust behind him. 3:32-Gets report. Wonders why he is so patriotic. 4:04-Walks home with Her. 4:14-Passes drug store. Looks other way. 4:45-Makes date. 4:50-Leaves Her and goes home singing. 5 :OO-Studies. 5 :05-' 'z-z-z-z-z-z. 5:15-Eats five slices of bread and butter. 5:30-Makes fire. Cuts wood. Runs errands in the fliver. 6:00-Eats three apples. 6:15- When do we eat? 16:16 - When do we eat? 6:17- When do we eat? 6 130 -Goes upstairs to Wash. 6:31-Dabs at face with damp cloth. 6:35-Finally eats. 6:36-Remembers date. Strangely loses 2-PPCfiCC- H Patient.- Where's the chart? 7 :OO-Reads funny papers. 7:15-Studies. 7:16- z-z-z-z-z. 7:20-Gets dressed for date. 7:25-Drops collar button. 7:27-Drops collar button. 7:28-Drops collar button. 7 :BO-Censored. 8 :OO- Looks at clock. 8:01-Yavvns. Paces up and down room. 8 102-Studies. 8 :O3-' 'z-z-z-z-z. 8 2301 Combs hair. 8:40-Adjusts necktie. 8:50-Puts on overcoat. 9:00-Starts for date. CNote:-I never had a date so I'll leave 2 few hours to your imaginationj 12:00-Enters on tiptoe. 12:01-Discards shoes. 12:02- z-z-z-z-z. Doubt.- Here, waiter, this doughnut has a tack in it. Waiter.-' 'Why, the ambitious little thing must think it is a flivver tire. ' Mr. Wight.- How do you remove the paren- thesis precededby a plus sign? Neil C.- With an eraser. Miss Dunlap.- Ruth, how did it happen that you and Sara have handed in the same answers on my history test? Ruth H.- Er-have you never heard that history repeats itself? ' No.- What did you do with it? Yes.- Oh, I ate it with the rest of my board. Walter D.- Get me as 40 inch yard stock. Frank H.-Ca Soph. after 15 minutesD: I-Iere's one left having 37 inches. 1 U I've raised a lot of families, sighed the elevator boy? SOME DEFINITIONS A fast man-one who can play tennis by him- self. Famous Heads-Cabbage heads, lettuce heads, red heads, dead heads. Mr. Crall.- Now, Clifford, did the Indians have any social groups? C. H.- Sure, haven t you ever heard of the Indian clubs? Optician.- Now tell me what the letters are on the first line. 6 M I 9 2 7 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M I187 I I I 1 I I I 1 I I I I I L I Yough-a.-Mon M Mr. Crouse.- Can anyone in this class tell me why the positive sign changes to minus sign when it is moved from one side of equation to the other? Helen Stewart.- I'll bite, Mr. Crouse. The cross bars are knocked on when it goes through the equal sign. First Cat.- I'd give my life for you, dear. Second Cat.- That's too cheap,-nine or nothing. Mr. Berkema.- What are you going to do when you finish here? E. H.- I'm going to get my degree, and then spend a few years with art. Bernice.- That a new hat you have on? Dot Scully.- No, I'm just taking our parlor lamp shade out for an airing. Dumb.- Wait until I get my goat gloves. Dora.- Your what? Dumb.- Oh, well, I used to call them kid gloves until they got so old. Ham.- Say, what do jelly fish live on?' Egg.- I dunno. Why? Ham.- Ocean currents. Egg.-'AOhI The other day the fire chief Stopped me, and he said,- Have you seen the new fire hose. And I asked him,-are they red? Mr. Crause.- Define center. A. Reed.- The center is-er-a the-ah- Mr. Crause.- Well, hurry up. A. Reed.- The center is the middle. Miss Mainssonnant.- There is going to be a 55.00 hne in this class for anyone who forgets that Venir de means 'have just'. Senior D.-fin unison? who gets the S5.00? i'Manda, you remind me all the world of brown sugar! How do you Egger, Rastus? You seem so sweet and so refined! TO THE STUDENTS OF 1928 We were once pupils in room 208, I Our honorable motto is, Don't be late Should you drop any papers on the floor Mlle. Mainssonnat soon would show you the door. A Mary.- Say, I wish I could have been the inventor of the alphabet. jo.- What makes you wish that? Mary.- Then I wouldn't have had U around! Jo.- Do you want a job, john? John.- What kind of a job? Jo.- Why, painting whiskers on Fords to make Lincolnsf' Brown.- Yes, I am engaged to be married, and I've only known the girl two days. White.- What folly! Brown.- Ziegfield's. Bill.-i'Gee, I spent an awful night. Phil.- What was the trouble-nightmare? Bill.- No,-white mule! Bill Jones wrote on the blackboard: A'Bill jones can hug the girls better, than any other boy in this school.' The teacher, seeing it, said: Billy, did you write that? Yes, ma'am.' The idea,-well, you can stayin after school. The pupils waited for Billy to come out, and then they began to tease him: . Got a lickin, didn't you? Nope, said Billy. Got jawed? ' Nope. . What did she do, then? they asked. Shan't tell, said Billy, but it pays to advertise. The boy.- Are you from the far north? The girl.- No, why? The boy.- Cause you dance as if you had snow shoes on. I Mr. Strong.- Now let's run over the lesson, class. Charles.- l-lonk! Honk! Advertisement.-In Electric Light Store Win- dow. Don't kill your wifeg let our machine do the dirty work. An honest confession is good for the soul, But good for the soul alone, For an honest confession of not knowing the lesson Decreases the grade ten-fold. Peg W.- Are you waiting for the next mail? E. Y,- No, I'm going to be a little more particular than that. The Pittsburgh Printing Co. David J. Molloy Co. The Northern Engraving Co. Printing Covers Engraving Pittsburgh, Penna. Chicago, Illinois Canton, Ohio I 9 2 7 M I I KI I IT ...I I I I I I I I I I FRESHM! THE - C' v- x DP if rf I' J SOPHOM THE , ,,,,, - X-Rus Tiwfrra . ,Y 1 S-' Wqygg, . zcnqfwg H fn-.fn ,. Q 1+ vs Em W, ul xx. 4 is.: K 454 wav 5:43 3-13 GQ, Min' :gy an 1 iii f. .4 S2379 4 Pa ff is 'Q x, A w, Y N 2 ,.,. ,, M. -S fi, '-'31 frm - H ,isiffgi ,. , . , 1 S 5 'A ..,5w..f23fgu?9 ,, 5.1 I . QQ, . .L . ,. V ,il l x: .gfg...fT ,gg Nag, 5 mg E , my - x h -K Rf, my .,. .gw2.f.zx' an f 9 2 fy.. N! X ' P!-' fl, 1. ,gif W1 .A fl Qfiivfb? 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Suggestions in the McKeesport High School - Yough A Mon Yearbook (Mckeesport, PA) collection:

McKeesport High School - Yough A Mon Yearbook (Mckeesport, PA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

McKeesport High School - Yough A Mon Yearbook (Mckeesport, PA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

McKeesport High School - Yough A Mon Yearbook (Mckeesport, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

McKeesport High School - Yough A Mon Yearbook (Mckeesport, PA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

McKeesport High School - Yough A Mon Yearbook (Mckeesport, PA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

McKeesport High School - Yough A Mon Yearbook (Mckeesport, PA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930


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