Morton Junior College - Pioneer Yearbook (Cicero, IL)
- Class of 1941
Page 1 of 102
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 102 of the 1941 volume:
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Wifi wf' ,f'wfNEE Q M R Q1 A a.AL'J' ,Uh J J , , . ' J 1 ' Lux U 'f uf t IOC! , Jfg,lA-' fp I7 I ' . Q ff ,.JJO,u 1 9 41 l.OI'LQQ4' xv . . X, . if JJ IJ i'jN JJ ff 'f!1.' yx '.J-ff! CJ xl 1 1 ?f ff W QR. gif Njjfjf 'J' fi FQ' JQQXSJ NX xg mr HIS book is an amplnficaion of a pair of chords, fne Hrs? being a basic narmony and Hue second, an infensive vibrancy produced by a dominanf ninfb chord seekinq Hs resokufion fne melody of Personakines nas been added a barmornc background in Hue form of exha- Y' Icufar acnyifies, an essenlnal of educanon equakiy as imporfanf as Hue ckassroom. The Edijror sn v X s 1 v .. 5 N , 4 U O S A A .f ,fp ,Q 34.4 xi' 0 THE GODDESS OF MUSIC OME nighi' when you siand alone under fhe crysialline heaven, affer fhe myriad sounds of busy life have died away, and you yearn io look oulrsicle of ihis ball of diri upon which we live and i+s heavy afmosphere for The hidden influences and vibraiions which are afieciing us clay by day, lisien, and you shall hear a wealfh of sounds issuing iorfh from ihe regions of Jrhe unseen . . . lisfen, and you shall hear 'rhings which ihe oufward ear has noi heard, 'rhe music of Jrhe spheres which sing celesiial harmonies as Jrhey move in iheir orbifs, ihe serene and unearihly whispers of eferniiy, The ihrobloing of ihe greai world-soul . . . lisien +o all fhis iniiniie varieiy of fones and you have ihe maierials for your arias, your sonaias, your symphonies, your oraiorios. a 0? f Jfff Q' 79,44 fZZ',,,f,4VwQ0f.4..J'.,,, ,17 ,,.6iLf4f,,: 4 fd - ' ,f' ,QI X .V .XQLCA of S ,f - ' f if fu! ,ff . 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A , f,g1Nk,VQ. , rl . j A-'fff 1, 44' V- 1 v ,- f .1...L , .fytgfrfu .ff ' 'Y -, ' 'L ' 24,442 , , . .1-4.2 ' .,fQ 2LfQfz,a4f ' ,, .,,,,'sq,f' gfff , v , 153 0 X., do V ff? 41 , N ' ,f 4 W I f X 7, ,lim 7 6 ff V - 4 MSN e notes OI' OUI' of lik 744 -17 fj,f.f,.,A,.f, fl.,-A. Q! ,M..,,? ,,,f 0 1' , i ipglxh ik!!! . X , xv 2 . slr wir -K A N ,T PRE SIDENT W 50 7720 OL' f v if W Xl ' Ng,-I C Qfln USIC expresse Th s e harmony ThaT Tills a disTincT need or hunger OT The human soul. The lil e and acTiviTies MorTon Junior College are music in Th They presenT an example oT harmony i human living in which every insTrumenT i dignified by an imporTanT of aT V1 S parT which con- TrilouTes ' in some signiTicanT way To a saTisTacTory and pleasing whole. This achievemenT is oT The highesT educaTional imporTance aT a Time when naTional uniTy is The ToremosT need Tor The preservaTion oT The ideals and culTure OT The wesTern hemisphere. W. P. MacLEAN BOARD OF EDUCATION OMEONE has aprly said, By lhe songs a nalion sings we can iudge The qualify of ils people. So il is wilh lhal enlerprising young communily which we call Morlon Junior College. By ils operellas, school songs, and ils choruses, we learn of ifs real spiril, ils leam worlc, and ils achievemenls. All greal accomplishnnenls depend upon liming, which is lhe essence of music. Morlon College hislory shows Jrhal ils Timing has been righlg and in lhese limes ils place in lhe cornmunily as a ramparl ol dernof cralic living, which includes nol only cooperalion, bul underslanding and lolerance, is of ever increasing imporlance. R. W. HOFFMAN. President Board of Educalion R. W. HOFFMAN President of Boa rd GEORGE PETRU Secreiary CHARLES NOWAK EDWARD CHODL RUDOLPH NOVY W. P. MacLEAN President of the College -l-- .,.. .1i.l. ll QHQOTMZHI Jesse P. Gibbs IS worlc in This earlh-round is done, and if is nobly done. ln all 'rhe wallcs of life men cannoi' charge him wilh deceit dis- honesry, nor wrong inrenf, Here in lhis round he 'Finished many heavy Jraslcs, and he has gone hence prepared lo solve lhe problems of The round of soul. ww 1889to194O 'LII' MISS J. GRACE WALKER Deans Dean of Women MISS CATHERINE BOWES Office Secreiary In This Time oT vociTerous lip service To democracy, we mighT remind ourselves ThaT democracy assumes Two aTTiTudes in us, iTs advocaTes: TaiTh in people, in human naTure, and an unseITish desire ThaT The righTs and opporTuniTies oT liTe should be open To all. AT This poinT I begin To wonder wheTher The rising Tide oT cynicism engendered and TosTered by recenT world evenTs-The some- Times amused, someTimes conTempTuous, oTTen biTTer laclc oT TaiTh in The goodness oT human moTives-isn'T in iTselT The greaTesT danger democracy has To Tace. I believe ThaT one is on The wrong Track who habiTually ascribes To oThers moTives meaner Than his own. Perhaps we growing cynics need TirsT To look inTo our own hearTs, aT our own moTives. Those moTives we lcnow or can aT leasT discover. IT They are decenT, void oT malice, generous, perhaps we may sTiII believe in mankind, in democracy. BuT iTTThe generous virTues have vanished even Trom ThaT sTronghold, ones own hearT, Then musT democracy despair. J. GRACE WALKER MR. WALTER B. SPELMAN Dean of Men Lead us, we pray Thee, Through all our days, IVlorTon, hail To Theell' She siTs Torlornly on The campus aslcing her- selT, How can I do everyThing? discouraged, assignmenTs and schedules againsT her, when The sTrains oT The VicTory Song driTT Trom The clubroom . . . hearTs oT courage, and courage comes To her. I Ie TalTers on Tield or courT or Tloor, his play mechanical, deTeaT imminenT, when TighT on rolls Trom The side-lines . . . and an alerT aThleTe inspires his Team. h Then, years laTer, a phenomenon occurs . . . a man, a woman, in The prime oT liTe, meeTs worry, iniusTice, hopelessness, when Trom The dim pasT come sTrains ...' 'hearTs oT courage' '...' 'TighT onll . . . Uloyal and True and a new and yeT old spiriT is relcindled. I'WiTh hearTs oT courage . . . FighT on Tor IVIorTon, Loyal and True. SPEL C. C. Aird C. A. Callahan D. Denfon A. T. Almer A. M. Clem W. F. Doalc M. M. Ames R. C. Cosfabile M. Ellis E. Bedrava F. B. Crum M. L. Falls C. Bell G. Darlingfon H. F. Farber A 143 x . - l-xv - lllll W 'V I6 FACULTY In ihis corner we have The pedagogues, valianily Jrrying lo inieci some general informalion info brains which have an amazing iacully for resisling lhe inlroduciion of knowledge. Even wilh ihis laiier diiliculry, ihe ieachers have done a fairly good iob. A four of inspeciion lhrough 'rhe halls of M. J. C. finds Miss Walker, Miss Falls, Miss Todd. Mr. Lang, Mr. Almer, and Mr. Finley daily doing iheir besi lo malce lhe English language more aliraclive. On The fourlh floor in lhe college laborarories Dr. Crum, Mr. Hansen, Mr. Nauman, and Mr. Thomas hold iorrh on lhe correci pro- cedure in analyzing an unlcnown or charging an eleciroscope. Miss Callahan, ihe physical educaiion in- siruclress, spends her spare +ime bringing cul- lural Mbargainsu io Morion, such as ihe Liiile- lield Ballei lasl January. She also ieaches line aris and ihe rhumba. Tesr lube 'rrouble Coniernplalion l-2-3-Yah! FACULTY Mr. Shelley, Zoology and anaTorny Teacher, can oTTen be Tound aTTernoons in The chernisTry lab working on a Telescope which he has designed. Miss Ellis, whose specialTy is boTany, TransTers her knowledge inTo The hobby oT making spray picTures oT leaves and Tlowers. Speaking oT hobbies, we Tind Mr. Haberrnan, beTTer known as l-Tabby, wiTh his hands Tull advising The ChorisTers' Club, The Or-KesTra Klub, The Vivace Club, and direcTing The opereTTa. There are rnany more, The school direcTory lisTing TiTTy-one iunior college Teachers. Every- one oT Thern, wheTher in The classroom or in exTra-curricular acTiviTies, is helping The sTudenTs To prepare Tor liTe and work, aTTer school is over. AlThough much oT Their eTTorT is casT upon barren ground, There is liTTle doubT ThaT sonneTirne in The TuTure The True value oT The knowledge gained wiThin The pasT year will blossom TorTh wiTh renewed cerTainTy. Knedlicky a zeli Pope pokes Tun EaTing economically C. D. Fariss G. Gaarder C. KaTek G. S. Fencl C. H. Haberman M. Kraemer D. Finlayson R. M. Hale M. A. LamberT H. H. Finley H. F. Hansen L. M. Lang F. French V. A. Hines G. Larimer I7 W. F. Marlin W. A. Richards A. L. Smifh if R. H. Nauman M. Richer W. B. Spelman F. Pope J. B. Royce C. Slevenson W. S. Pope H. T. Sahlin E. H. Thomas M. A. Reid P. C. Shelley H. G. Todd Qs , ll .ox ix Kg X oy I8 FACULTY Aclually, no one does more lhan lo slarl gelling an educalion during his school days. If he gels a good slarl, and if he conlinues lo Travel in lhe righl direclion, he will grow in wisdom, in cullure, and in power. Bul one fools himself who lhinlcs he can accumulale in four or six years enough iniormalion lo give him wisdom or Cullure or power for lhe resl of his life. The college iacully has merely pul 'rhe leaven in The lumpy il now remains lo be seen whelher if will increase in slalure and essence or ii il will slaqnale and spoil. z l X' K 4,z,d!'!Mi '6 i Convenlioneer Demure No hunching l Haloby heads Naughly boy Funny? home FACULTY F A C U LT c.c.f-wan ...... W. E. DOAK , . . D. EINLAYSON ........... C. H. HABERMAN ......... R. M. HALE ......... .... H. F. HANSEN. ..... . W. S. POPE .... .. H. T. SAHLIN. .. P. C. SHELLEY A. L. SMITH ..... . W. B. SPELMAN A. N. Tucker E. Uehren J. G. Walker G. L. Tucker I. Vrba N. A. Ziebell Y A D V I S E R S MEN A. 84 S., Pre-Forestry, Pre-JournaIism .Distributive Education ...........Engineering ...............Pre-Commerce ..........CI1emicaI Engineering .........GeneraI Engineering ..............SecretariaI .. Pre-Medical, Pre-Pharmacy, Pre-DentaI ............SpeciaI Students, Teacher Training, Physical Education, Government Service WOMEN J. G. WALKER F. FRENCH SOCIAL ADVISERS C. C. AIRD C. BELL G. LARIMER I9 STUDENT Qirst Qgbemester JOSEPH SAKALA Presidenl UMEROUS and varied were Hue aclivilies of M.J.C.'s Sludenu Council for Hue lirslr semesler. Planning Hue budgeu and Hue social calendar were Hue ufirsl problems To conlronl Hue president Joseplu Sakala, and members Alice Corcoran, Marian Grove, ArHuur Young, and Lawrence Tollenaere. Represenuing Morlon and leading Hue Commuruiuy Service Discussion group al Hue Junior College Conference held au Wilson on November lo, were RuHu Brebis and Phil Caruer, accompanied by a group ol aboul one luundred lvlorlon sludenls. On December 6, al Hue reguesl of Hue PIONEER, Hue Council sponsored Hue PicuLure Social, an irunovafion combining business and pleasure JOSEPH SAKALA Presiclenl ARTHUR YOUNG MARIAN GROVE MARIAN GROVE Secrelary ARTHUR YOUNG Sopluomore ALICE CORCORAN .fr 'R ' 1. Freshman LAWRENCE TOLLENAERE . LAWRENCE TOLLENAERE Ereslurnan . ,Zu V . COUNCIL econcf cgienzester RICHARD PURVIS PresidenT On The evening oT December 2, The members oT The Council enTerTained The TaculTy aT a Tea held in The superinTendenT's of-Tice. r Perhaps The biggesT venTure which The TirsT semesTer Council underTook was shopping around Tor new campus TurniTure designed To improve The appearance OT The school and To add To The comTorT oT The sTudenTs. The Council members elecTed Tor The second semesTer were Diclc Purvis and lvan Kubanis Trom The sophomore class and Drusilla GroTh from The Treshman class. Members appoinTed by The deans Tor Their meriTorious services were Helen lvloriTz, sophomore, and l-lerberT Langner, Treshman. E RICHARD PU Rvls H PresidenT 3 IVAN KUBANIS or -if i gs HELEN MORITZ HELEN MORITZ ,Q 'T Sophomore T IVAN KUBANIS Sophomore DRUSMA J- GROW HERBERT J. LANGNER HERBERT J. LANGNER Freshman DRUSILLA J. GROTH SecreTary 50? xEANNUTE RC SNUMX Ai? SWR 'Wills- nn-9 M' 55. '9- 4 ff' I I , KW, , f , AR 'WL EREBXS QLN H 11 an , , igf , S . Q an L . S af 3? ffsgg I' 'Q' I sf Sify ,it-'57 f IX AR AADLYC NG Q view BHSHCP Ms MIQHAELS i ES ,: 1,, . . Lg , qi if iii E , z wi ,J .V i I -, x :QNQSEH1 . , IYL1 QL X 1 'Y I iii x ig? . a Q, K x E A J f 3 sf 5 ki ,thx in Sf f Hu V , 'xx if Wag My p 155 5,-.i. Y' M A 'ff vp ' fr 1 RN , .5 ' pg Q 3 ff ggi 1 1 1 '54 f mx if .. J 2 235 N PWM ,Pg , 4 , ff Q f qv si Kp? JA Q52 A 1 f 45 P' 1 f 4 5 5 5 fa A m f mi G Q f N T 5 1 fa Live A1 1 fr , if W .V gg, 1 wif 5 A if '5 EMF -gi f 1 2 5 is Q. 35 frwjiw Q gy 5.55 1 Q U ,Q I 52 01- 5 1 .1 , JOHN CARROLL 1 'fr M rf Af' f EVERY HARRH5 wb FRANNY HALL D ICK AXE N 'Q wg LW fu. 5 DGELDA and ORE5 MA QW X - ' ' new E .127 Mm, ' D104 Puvzvzs 23? MARGE ,ff JANE mm KOLAR SOPHOMORE HONOR ROLL WOMEN Margarel Bishop Rulh Brebis Amelia Cernohouz Lorraine'Cilaoch Arleen Daller Jane Fiial Marian Grove Frances l'lall Mary l-linlerman Gladys l-loreys DeElda Manlhey Delores Manlhey l-lelen Morilz Janel Verlurlh Mary Wein NEN Richard Axen Hansel Benvenuli Francis Discipio Wal+er Gailus Zdenelc Lanslcy George Malcas Louis Marlin James Piaseclci Joseph Salcala Raymond Slelolay Marvin Slippes Carl Slollels Charles Vedra Sleven Yurenlca PRESIDENT'S AIDES WOMEN Delores Argianas Alice Corcoran Frances Craig Barbara Fanla Mildred Gaidos Delores Griesbaum lvl. Julina Gylle Dorolhy l-lraclq Muriel Kremslce Irene Krenelq Jeanne Reinhardl LaVerne Suva Ardell Vill MEN Miles Beran Roberf Boehme l-larold Forlner Louis l-loralc Waller Kopsa Joseph Raha Don Rehlcopl l-loward Rilzma Charles Samec Raymond Sfeispal Gordon Slepanelc George Vosalka Fred Wunder , I I w Q UV A K V ujxxx1 h , fills Q5 GXQSSQS 4 5 zrst C emestcfr Cl-lARLES KOLAR PresidenT i is as ,t vi, fam! lqizfy z- 332- ROBERT VANICEK Vice-PresidenT MARGARET CARROLL SecreTary JUNE CREZSIC Treasurer SOPHOMORE CLASS OF T-TAT good will ever come ouT oT a college educaTion? We, who have had a modicum oT iT, have oTTen heard This guesTion raised: buT iT is doubTTul wheTher we have ever given much ThoughT To iT. Seemingly, mosT oT us were sTriving To prepare ourselves Tor some indeTiniTe mission awaiTing us somewhere in The TuTure. Now iT is becoming increasingly more evidenT ThaT The real reason Tor going Through college was To prepare ourselves Tor TurTher educaTion, By This we can see ThaT no one oT us will ever reach his goal: we will spend our enTire lives approaching, l3uT never reaching iT. STill, Tew Things are worTh worlcing Tor which have an end To Them: The culminaTion oT a Taslq is noT even a TracTion as pleasing or lasTing as The expecTaTion oT pleasure in The TuTure. Some oT us will go on To higher insTiTuTions, buT The resT oT us will conTinue in The school oT SelT EducaTion. 1 Nw 26 econ emester JOSEPH SAKALA Presideni LOUIS MARTI N Vice-Presidenl 'ph' i JEANNETTE RoEsNER Secrelary MARGARET BISHQP Treasurer NINETEEN FCRTY-O E When we chose luriher educalrion in preference fo an immediafre occupalrion, we aulomalically doomed ourselves To a lasling life of unresl. Unlilce orher people, we will never be confenl wilh whal we already lcnow and have. We have seen for our- selves lhal fhere are olher and beilrer Jrhings 'ro be had, and lhal one merely needs To reach oui and lalce Them. Who performed lhis remarlcable lranslormalrion in us? Yes, il was done by lhal group of pioneers who pafienlly bore lhe lorch of educalion belore lhose who were willing To follow, and under Those who were more prone lo linger behind. To fhose inslruclors who were ever ready io sl'ep oulside of lhe bounds of classroom iormalily inlo a muiual inlrospeclrion, we are greally indebled for lheir underslanding advice and helpful encouragement , I g 6? ' Q11 .1 M IM gg I.-5 1 I 1 I My y -N Wm IIN Ny,-NZ L ,I S' 'gr V' I gi gi I wk , 2 N M -V I' ,,: SE if EL ,lL .sly t I 'W Vx 4 .A . Us J I Ez I I S- 1 ,.,,A.. I . ,E I., 5 , .3 A ' , x V v 1' . ' -izv Nas A ,I I aw sg- Rf If ' xl J h LOUIS ALESSIO ORESTE ALESSIO ROBERT LEE ANDERSON RICHARD AXEN 'MILDRED BASIL EVELY NE BASTLIN HANSEL BENVENUTI MAR JAMES O. BO GEORGE BORDENAVE RUTH BREBIS LEONA wk 'NON-GRADUATES GLADYS BARTA GARET BISHOP RICHARD E. BLAHA HUSLAV RD BROCKMAN GRAHAM BROWNE , 2' :fini f gym JEANNETTE CADIEUX ANNABELLE CAPEK T'JAMES CARROLL AMELIA CERNOHOUZ BLANCHE CHALUPSKY JOHN CARROLL MARGARET CARROLL GEORGE CHLADA 'JACK CHOYNACKI BERNICE CHRISTENSEN 'KEVELYN CHLEBOUN LORRAINE CHLEBOUN LORRAINE CIBOCH 'NON-GRADUATES JUNE CREZSIC ARLEEN DAFFER . gs . I fm? E K. in I 'M I . . 4 tm,-1' 5 UE -.531 .21 ERANCIS M. DISCIPIO ELAINE DUCZMAN ETHEL EPPSTEINER JANE EIJAL RUTH EUXA 'HOWARD DVORAK DOROTHY EIALA WALTER J. OAILUS FRANCES HALL EVERT R. HARRIS OERTRUDE GRODSKI MARIAN GROVE 'ELINOR HATTREM 'NON-GRADUATES MARY HINTERMAN ELROY A. HODOVAL W, Aff, ,,A, I ,. :I JN' V :I . Iggy. , Amish 'A A-?z I -,f-.QL I .s'r' I ra I A W It ' IQ? X . - , ' I ., I I , 2,11 f-1:1 S f ,Q L Q I I E' A A4- ROBERT J. HOMOLA GLADYS HOREYS CHESTER IDA ARTHUR G. JAROS JOHN MI KACHMAN HENRY HRUBECKY ELMER J. HRUBES JERRY HUSTAK CATHERINE JENKINS ELAINE JOHNSON CLARENCE J. KADLEC MARIE KASL VERNE R. JOHNSON WILLIAM E. KASL THOMAS KLAVIK 1 'WUI A zma, -Q, ., Y fag X IJ +A 4. F v . .M Q ,g . A? Lf KK i f A xi W sr I , f A E ANTON KOFRANEK CHARLES T. KOLAR VIRGINIA KRAMETBAUER IVAN J. KUBANIS EVELYN LISKA GEORGE MAKAS JAMES MANDA ZDENEK J. LANSKY DeELDA MANTI-I EY LOUIS MARTIN EDWARD MATOUSEK DELORES MANTHEY CHARLES MCCRORY GRACE A. MICHAELS CX, N HENRY MILLER 0fvu0 alf -511,11-.cardftl 0 .,-- us. IFN K4 E 1 .4 A Im 'Q 3 nw xx II I L I HENRY MIZUTOWICZ LILLIAN MORGAN ALEX NORBUT HELEN MORITZ 'ROBERT MOTYCKA WILBERT MRAZEK FRANK J. NOVAK MARY PASCIAK 'WILLIAM NOVAK JEROME PALECEK WILLIAM R. PAROD 'RUDOLPH PEROUTKA 'NON-GRADUATES MARIE PETROWSKY JAMES PIASECKI RALPH J. PRAST 11- I , ,J i! y I 6 , 1. I -f 1 1 1 . Ulf 1 I L 7y'lI,ZL,ff,,T,ff'! 1 9, Zn . 'P' .4 Mir , -.:,:A W ' ' , . , ,l2 - .... RICHARD PROVINSKY J. RICHARD PURVIS HOPE PUTNAM EUGENE ROBENHORST EVANGELINE RAWERS NORMAN REICHERT JEANNETTE M. ROESNER ALDRICH ROTREKL FRED N. SAMUELS 'ROBERT SCHMUTZER MARY RYAN JOSEPH SAKALA JOHN T. SHUBAT 'NON-GRADUATES 'PAUl. SHUMATE GEORGE SLOUKA Ai E Q I 2 Ihr .Wi'.2 av-343 Cf' .. I MARJORIE SMITI-I FLORENCE SOMMER DOROTHY STAI-ILE GEORGE STARESINA RAYMOND STEBLAY MARVIN C. STI PRES JOI-IN G. STOB CARL STOFFELS 'CI-IARLES STOWE EVELYN STOTLAND LORENE SUKOVATY LIBBIE SVARC MILAN SWASKO 'RICI-IARD SWENSON LAWRENCE TARDY I2 I fiw Nm 'NONFGRADUATES M5 J th F x ,. L. , kvhy I Q ' ml J, 3 , I 4' ii k. l ' 'QT' J V, ia ,E , -' ,Q T 1 way J . 4, Y L ' A i V QT I L , L , TLT B - . L VQAI E L Ra jf ,Qi wg V 'A x JACK TARNE 'PAUL TEETER JOHN O. VASKOVSKY NORBERT W. TROCHIM ELEANOR TUREK ROBERT VANICEK CHARLES W. VEDRA LILLIAN VOSICKY JANET VERFURTH ROBERT VODAK LILLIAN VOPENKA MARY ALICE WEIN 'NON-GRADUATES HARVEY A, WITTKE HARDINC5 WOLF STANLEY YEDINAK 1 ' 535 3 .5 Y . W T ir Y .A , T f A1 ,,,T- S T - q 4 K X F- . ,T AV? EGL ARTHUR YOUNG STEVEN YURENKA ALBERT ZDENEK CHESTER ZEILSTRA JERRY ZILKA EDWARD ZIMA HELEN ZUPAN Blunderinq baskefeers Elcl exerclses -fo vicforyu Kegler Balferino Specfawtors af resf Flefchers Kicker RHZ 37 X! J, M, z if 3 Mist M wnester HAROLD FORTN ER Presidenr LOUIS HORAK Vice-Presiden+ ARDELL VITT Secrefary Lum- TQM DAMER Treasurer FRESHMAN CLAS EPTEMBER was warm and genial, bul 'rne 373 lreslwmen wlwo enlered lvl. J. C. fell cold and nor a lillle apprehensive abour slarling llwis new cliapler in llweir lives. Neverllweless, llwis arclic feeling soon passed as lliey consciously assumed The burdens of llweir slalus and began a grind llial Too soon became liabilual. Eleclion Time arrived and llie underclassrnen wenl lo llwe polls lien masse lo elecr as presidenlr, l-larold Forlnerp vice-president Louis l-loralc: secrerary, Ardell Villg and lreasurer, Tom Damer. Lawrence Tollenaere and Alice Corcoran represenled rlwe class on llfie Sludenl Council flue firsl semesler. Life conlinued along on an even lceel, puncluared ar inlervals by sliorl vacalions and socials unlil llwe Clirislmas liolidaysesixleen days of idleness, llwal is, nollwing lo do buf prepare for llme exams wlmiclw were scheduled lo begin on January I7. SOE' -.f ' T ff T -' 'mf f, .J T . MUG' fe Ju., , y W I V' W -fm...-f ' i Tr at X - , , ' . ,WVU Txyu Nf,.y Kiln' JT 2 J ' Vx T con V E 11 ' emestw' LAWRENCE TOLLENAERE PresidenT JULINA GYLFE -H Vice'PresidenT DOROTHY l-TRACK SecreTary EARL BOLT Treasurer NINETEEN FCRTY-TWO The laTTer were approached wiTh misgivings and many resoluTions To sTarT sTudying earlier The nexT semesTer. T-lowever, These Teelings passed wiTh The TesTs3 and every- one aclcnowledged ThaT The new leaT would noT have To be Turned over aTTer all. The mid-semesTer Treshmen were given Their TirsT TasTe oT college liTe when They were inviTed To The Oloom Chaser. NOT long aTTerwards came The elecTion oT new class oTTicers, This Time Lawrence Tollenaere became presidenTg Julina GylTe, vicee presidenT7 DoroThy T-lraclc, secreTary3 and Earl BolT, Treasurer. LisTed as council members were Drusilla GroTh and l-lerberT Langner. NexT SepTemloer, The presenT Treshmen will become sophomores, carrying on The TradiTions and cusToms oT The college and exacTing The proper respecT and awe Trorn The incoming Trosh. T' T T T 3 IM ANDERSON, ROBERT LEROY , I I , ANDERSON, WM. E, A? S, Q ,Eg S ,, I ANDRES, JOSEPH M. I S 4, A, . V l,,,i.. AROIANAS, DELORIS ,gs 13 awry YQ . I B , -, A u BAKER, CAROL , J - BANAS, CHARLES . ,,,A , x , , BARTIZAL, I-IAROLD I BARTOS, BETTE J. AY S, , 3-A N BASTIAANS, J. OERTRDDE RM I if W: ... gif BAIJMRIJCRER, BETTY N, ,B ,ig ? I I BECAK, ETHEL 8 I ,A BECK, C, WALLACE BENES, RAYMOND A A Q IL BERAN, MILES A I I LRRR D' I F' BLAIBIEAQIBEA4 JHIJBERT XQIC EA' ' A 'CI BLECIHTA Jr FRANK gi 5' BLIZEK, JUNE A. ' ir , 'II I BOEHME, ROBERT F. BUTCI-IER, RAY Af I BOLT, EARL E. a , Ti ' BROWN, MARY T. A I 9 fi , BROZ. LORRAINE 4L'A , A I BDLAT. DONALD j A BULL, DORIS I. , F CAITHAMER, HELEN J, Y A C, Mjfifw I ,M CARLSON, CARL CJ I-.. if ,Q Q.: . CARTER, PHIL I- , I III A CECH, ROBERT E Q ' CERVAK, ROBERT ' E CI-IALOUPKA, MARIAN A. I S , CHAMBERS, WM, A I ,, 5 CHODORA, RLIDOLPH J. A ' Y- Q CHOTT, M. OEOROE f, I' Rn ' CHRISTEN, ALBERT f I Af - CIZEI4, FRANK ,, If 'f 'rl A 57 J' ':,, , CLARI4, EARL J. - ff f 5 J , , CLEOO, DONALD I, +1 f C 2 ri 9 ix, COLLINS HAROLD 7 LJ I -I I ,J A IW, A , CQN.E.QBD,.CH,A,RI.Es - ,, , CORCORAN, ALICE L. COTTER, EDWARD 3 K B- Ri A , 3? , CRAIG, FRANCES CVRCEK, EDWARD II Q f W f,f DAMER, TOM I ,i ,Q if 1, W elf I' DANEK, ALIOLJST J. A A 31 DEMARI4, ANNA MAE IN. DOLAR, MILES -I A DRUKKER, WILLARD DUCI-ION, MARTI-IA M. A 'Q DUKE, JIM IE 2 ,I 5- DIVISEI4, JOSEPH W. 9 I A, A DIJLLA, MARIAN Q 1 A 'Ax DUPUIS, JOAN I ELDER, ARDYS A , I , BB ENOMAN, CHAS. 5 , G35 - '-- EANTA, BARBARA If A A 'iff I Eg - , EEDOROVICH, HELEN J, u 'T' Q x' ff ,, FILLMORE, LORIN 'I EORTNER, HAROLD E. 'XX f FRANCL. SHIRLEY I SIJ t , I I, I FREMOEN, JOHN I J ' ' 'I,,, V -I fl Aff: YR FROLILA, J, MARCELLA XS 31 1 ',,q if I ,gf ff 15 Q OAJDOS, MILDRED E. X -- I - I 5 I A CASS, ANTON C. N J, Im I 3. OEOROACAKIS, ANOELINE A OERSKI, HARRIET LI L I I A OINTER, ALLAN v. , 59 If IE,-.,A OOOOLAK, MILDRED I ' A OOLIRLEY, DAVID , A - A ORIG, VICTOR 1 I' ,5 3 D , ORIESBAIJM, DELORES J. I f f Q f -f1 ' fs - , , ' 'C , I J, ,C E A 1 'I' Iflff-1 I ' Q Q- I OROTH, DRIJSILLA J. GUSTAFSON, DOROTHY R. A , Y GYLFE. JLJLINA ,V .As M , . A y HADRABA, NAOMI M, T I HAIR, KATHRYN L. , . I A ' HALE. HELEN LOUISE ?aY5:, W5A M t q B., F Q, A J2 A IAA ,,Vk AAA.. ., I-IARBUTTE, HELEN R. . R- A HAYLIK. LLJCILLE ' 5 HEINDL, YIOLA L. R., AI If.. AA HEJNA. GEORGE '17 I A Q1 I I HERMANEK. THOMAS ' A 'R HLAYIN. FRANKLIN A FAO HOPRE. C. DELORES A I I HORA. OTTO , A HORAK, LOUIS :f- ' . - I HOVORKAI EDWIN mf? ig? f -- HOYORKA. JEAN iiigigiaf A? EEEE 1 I EfEE ,I 'TRACK DOROTHY A HRADEK, MARJORIE A ' HRIJDA. LILLIAN R, -A , , JACOB. ROBERT C. . .:.5AR5 W I in JACOBS. EYELYNE M. .,, W Ag JAHNKE, WARREN R. gg. E., R' A J: -' A JAKL, ERNEST M. 4' .. ,. JEZEK, GEORGE W. Q JOHNSON, DOLORES T 1 A I I I . g f JOHNSON, ELEANOR M. Q T 1 .111 Q: I ' JOHNSTON. JACK I f KACENA, DOROTHY . KAIN, EDWARD R. I I E--,- ,iv KARASEK, EDWARD A. K I KEEVE, LEONARD . , A KENNEDY, GEORGE .A ,,, f W I KERNER, MARJORIE J, QA ig f . KISLY. JOHN I. LJA A Fry 'j f A A A KLIMA, LAWRENCE 'II A .-slgii- : KOCIK, JOHN . L. KOLACEK, CLARE T I KOPECKY, RICHARD W. I I , I .L J Q T A KORSAI J. WALTER m l A I A - 1+ KOSIN, JOSEPH A. , JJIT ' f KOVANDA, JOSEPH R. 45 JIM if 5 KRAEKA, MARIE 1' C . I Ax I ALJI A KRATOCHVIL, RICHARD TIITI I KREJCI, R. RAY I .F :gh V X KREMSKEI MLJRIEL I , A . KRENEK, IRENE A I ' !,gkg?i' ' KRIER. CHALES M, IX T'J A M, A 1 A ,E ' KRIHA, HELEN I I .AJJ - J, A V fy I Vfi I KRYDA, ARTHUR . If r Q ' KUBISTANT, MATTHEW J. - A ,E A. KLJCHARCZYK, JAMES gg JL? KLJCHTA, VIRGINIA .I A--1V If - KIJEBLER. KENNETH 1 A KURE, CLARENCE M. I ITII I KVASNICKA. WAYNE A H gf' LANOE, T. LESLIE A , .gl A A i j W A 3.. . -I , , , LANOER, ROBERT C. if g A LANONERI HERBERT J. I. - LARLANTEI BLANCHE I ' . f f- Ls- . LEVY, RUSSEL 5. LOHSE. MARY JANE r I I I . I I LQTWAI THOMAS . . I in LOWRY. FRANK R? AY A ' -'CT A 3, A Ig? LYNOAASI ROY E. . A..I Rf' A MACHALA, VLASTA 1 ' A A. A MALECHA. BOB MAROVEC. RUDOLPH H. MARTIN, BUD E. T MARTIN, JOHN l I MARTINECI VLASTA MATHIELJ. ELAINE C 4 'T A qw! M B 919 g, f B gf 1 A' Rui Y MATZ, RITA V. f I fi MAXWELL, BARBARA J. S V- ,, i any N, MELKA, EDWARD R. .. ' - . W' MENDEL. ELEANOR 'ff 15 E MEYER JOAN X 5 MILLER GLADYS A A I I R R A MITCHELL, NORBERT J. A I C MLSNA. MARGARET E. A ZS S 11 -., 2 MODRY. JOHN E. ,QS 2.55. MONNETTE, DORIS -R A 1-C,' MIJCHA. FRANK - A MLJNZAI4, EVELYN .. Q R J ' A NEADER, ROBERT 7f .5 4' V NEHER. DOROTHY S if if R .E NEMECEI4, ROBERT A A gm NESS. YIOLET . A A M I ' NOBLE GEORGENE L. R NOEETZ, DEAN W. C R NORTH. VLASTA L. ,ipj NOVAK. FRANK J. I NOVAK, MAROLJERITE 3,9 A R Q- A- OLISAR. GEORGE r. I + Y ' - - J' P AWLOWICZ. SYLYESTER J. If l I B lg PECHOLIS, RAYMOND . I PEDERSEN. M. MAROE A - . , E PELLAS. CASYLDA M. . A . S , .P . A .R-R PETERSON, VERNA ' PM 1 -1 1 PETRAITIS, DOMINIC J. 44 EBF 'T.. I PHILLIPS. LAVERNE A. i QL ' L. IfiI.5IRA4.fAf1 I P'ND'AK- EDWARC V ' PLACRO, ANN . L I- PLEPL, JOSEPH 1. - FLETCHER, TOM , SWF ' PLETCHER. WILLIAM L. V U ,.., i U . if K PQD4 NINA gg 5 I POLEDNICK, C. CHARLES ' PREBAN, PEARL Y Q PTACEK, LORRAINE R 1 j , S I ,, PLICCI, HAROLD J. 'PE X .. A ,jg OUIRSEELD, MARIAN . RE.. gg I . in RAHA. JOSEPH M. 5 I ,I A A RAKOSNIK, VIOLETTE B. .X X . A. 1 T . REHROPE DON C. SP . . REINHARDT, JEANNE - U I' A REITZ, FRANCES L. , gif REYNOLDS, A. EARL Q 'ff . .. RITZMA. HOWARD mQ'gigf I j N ROBBINS, EVELYN 1 ROESNER. ELSIE -I RLJSSO. ANNA I A . A : 5 RUMBYRT. PATRICIA SAINER OEO. A. , E ' - P'P v e : SALASEI4, JOE R. XJ Xf , E ' 5. SAMEC, CHARLES E. , .f ' A I . A SCHUETT, DOROTHY jxfyffj x I S . .. A .qR.. .R SCHRIVER ROY A. f , .I, 1- , ,. Ti SEIDEL. RICHARD J. C? 9, U- -A .' SHEPRO, MERRILL J. , 1 1- f . SIM. ARTHUR D. Q A i SIMEI4. ROBERT . SIRVATH. LORRAINE M. k D . A S SISTER. ELMER - . .1. A-s qh ,,-5 SKENDER, LOUIS B. SKOGLUND, LOIS B. 1. - T ' ' , L-.K SMEJKAL, KEITH this 11 SMUTNYI LYDIA SODINI. MARIO I W SORINI, J. OTTO .M J. V SOLICER. FRANK J. I l A .. SOUKUP, OLORIA ' . SOURDP. JEROME A. ll x. AAAI SPHMANI JOHN iT 42 STANEK, JOHN M ,A STARMAN, CHARLES . A ' STAUBER, RAYMOND A qs I ',V, b, STEJSKALI FRANK QR I A v'AQ, STEJSRALI RAYMOND J. R I' y STEPANEK, GORDON JJ A A2 STEPHENS, A. HAMLET . STORY JACK E J 'I . STLIDNEY. IRYIN - KVQQ C I g- ' L SLICHYI BOB ,F SULC, FRANK ' . A I SULIK, SUE Bk 5 5 'A SIJNDSTROM, N. ROY SLISINA, STANLEY f I T J fgzb SLJVA, LAVERNE L, AI I 'F - SYEHLA. CHARLES J. QL! g TAMBOLIR, ANOELINE R32 C LL A '5 TAUCHEN, MILTON J, f I C TEAL, GEORGE I TETREV, MILES J. I if A THOLEN, ALBERT M. 2,614 A Y ' :Q I TIMM, CREORCE 3 4 C f TOLLENAERE LAWRENCE I A TOMAN, ART A JAAKJ 14:2-f C TRNKA, ELAYNE 5? N , C JC I TULIS, MILTON - I M C 1 Y VANDERMAR, BERT C, 215- KLTY I , h I VANECEKI NARCY C. f Tj YEJSADA. FRANK A we A I , C YENTLJRELLA, MARION 5 , I I , Hfgff, YICHAI BENNIE E, W D' YISBARAS, SYLVIA E. ' I 2 YII C . VITT, ARDELL M- A A VLCEK, ANTOINETTE B. ' I If 'H I VODA, FRANK ' ' I VOGT, vIROINIA,D. X , A Q fv - VOSATKA, OEORCIE J. A A WAWRZYNIAK, ROBERT , - l WAXEL, SHIRLEY I 5-if ,E 2 WEBER, CLARENCE E. o f K WEINI LUCILLE C. I - -3' I- ' WILSON, DORIS I. ds T ' R C 13, ' S W k WINKLER, VIRGINIA M. A L, A WITTMANN. CATHERINE 1 WOHLEORD, DEAN A YII 'L - I ,1 WUNDER, ERED 'T 'Ei 7 WYOONIKI EDWARD - WYNNE WINONA Xi A A h ZELENKA, MILDRED ZIELINS, DOLORES C, 'JT PQKJNVLJQD 'fl .1 ff 4 K 'y xy ,Nr 1 fm Q54 CLL f M I M Y. CAMERA-SHY FROSH ADCOCK, DOROTHY BAURLE, HELEN LEONA BECKER, FAYE BURSA, DORIS BUSSE, DOROTHY CADA, LORRAINE CERNY, EVELYN ANN CERVENY, ANNETTE CISAR. WINIFRED CLISH, DOROTHY DUNGAN, DORIS FENCL, BERNICE FRANCOMBE, ELEANOR GURNIK, ROSE ANDERSON, LEONARD ATKINSON, ROBERT J. BASTLIN, RICHARD BERG, GENE BINDER, RICHARD J. BLIM, ROBERT BOND, DOUGLASS BROCKMANN, RICHARD CAVA, PETER CELER, FRANK CERNIS, PETER CHARLES, JOHN CHLAPIK, STEVE CHRISTEN, HAROLD CHRISTENSON, ROY COLLINS, RICHARD DAHLGREN, CARL DELESTOWICZ, AMBROSE DEMKOVITCH, GUST EKL, JOSEPH EVANS, HOWARD FARUZZI. NICK FIALA. JOSEPH FIALA, RAYMOND FORAN, LAVERNE FORST, GEORGE FRINK, JACK FULLER, VIRGIL GRIFFIN, ROBERT GUILLAUMIN, GEORGE HALL. JACK HANNUM, EDGAR HARASEK, ARTHUR HARASIN, ROBERT I HAVLIK, THEODORE HEMPEL, LOTHAR HIGGINS, ALLEN HIGGINS, JOHN HLAVA, ORVILLE HOBIK, FRANK HOFFMAN, JOHN W. HOUCEK, FRANK HOWE, WESLEY HURST, RAYMOND R. INCIARDI, JOHN WOMEN HEYER. JUNE HRUSKA, DOLORES JOHNSON, LOIS KADLEC, EVELYN KAYSER, AILEEN KLOUZAR, GLORIA KOLPEK, EVELYN KRCEK. JULIA KREMSKE, MURIEL KRIZ, DOROTHY KRUEGER, SHIRLEY MEICKE, JUNE MOORE, DOROTHY NOVAK, LA VERNE MEN JACHIM, ROBERT JANOTA, RAY JELINEK, ERWIN JOHNSTONE, ROGER JONES, RICHARD KALAL, RALPH KAMONSKY, SLAVA KASPAR. GEORGE KASPAR, ROBERT KENNING, JACK KILSTROM, KENNETH KING, GERARD KLOUDA, WALTER KOLARIK, FRANK KOLODZIEJ, GEORGE KORBEL, WILLIAM KOSTKA, JAMES KOTLIN, JAMES KRATVILLE, JOSEPH KRUML, ROBERT LAVATY, HOWARD LHOTKA, ARTHUR LIDINSKY, EDWARD J. LIEWALD, LOUIS LIVANEC, GEORGE LUBIEN, JAMES MacGILL, ROBERT MAGDA, EDWARD MALLY, FRANK MARIK, JOSEPH MASA, ROBERT MCCALL, JOSEPH MCCARRON, GEORGE MCCARTNEY, EDWARD MECLURE, JOHN MELKA, EDWARD MILLS, THOMAS MORO, CARMEN MORRIS, JAMES MOULIS, WILLIAM MURRAY, RALPH MUZIK, EDWARD MYSYK, PETER NADHERNY, ROBERT NARBUTAS. JOSEPH NECHVATAL, RAY NEILSON, ROBERT S PRUCHA, MARION ROTH. MIILDRED ROYCE, LUCILLE RYBA. JULIA SANTI, MARY ANN SMUTNY, LYDIA SOELKE, EDITH SOUCEK, HELEN STADLER, ARLICE STANLEY, DARLENE STOLK, RUTH STOWE, EDITH VYTLACIL, OLGA WHITCOMB, SHIRLEY NERAD, JAMES NOVAK, ERWIN OKLEPEK. JOHN PANEK, JAMES PAVLINEK, PAUL. JR. PIERCE. ROBERT PLICKA, EMIL PLOURD, KENNETH POLKA, JAMES RAMOUIST, FRED RE, BILL ROBERTS, JOHN ROBERTSON, JOHN SCHAD, JOHN SCHWASS, HARRY SELLEN, GEORGE SIDAK, ROBERT SISCO, GEORGE SIMUNDZA, PAUL SKARIN, BURTON SLADEK, ARTHUR SLADEK, RICHARD SMAUS. ROBERT SOELKE, ROBERT SOLAWETZ, WILLIAM SOLDAT, JAMES OUCEK, FRANK JAMES SPATNY, EDWARD STAVA, FRANK STIPEK, EDWARD STRANSKY, LEONARD STUBBING, WALTER STURNFIELD, ROBERT SUMKA, ELMER SVOBODA, KENNETH SWANGREN, GORDON TRINKA, GEORGE TROIKE, KARL ULCHAR, RUDOLPH VAVRA, DICK VENT, OTTO VODICKA, VINCENT WILL. ELMER WILSON, KENNETH WOLF. FRANCIS WYGONIK, EDWARD ZITNIK, EDWIN ADDITIONAL SOPHOMORES BUSCH, VIRGINIA HEIMBRODT, ARLENE HORA, BEATRICE BARTOS, MILTON BOLEY, RICHARD BONAGUIDI, DAN BOYER, JAMES BRAZDA, MILTON CHISHOLM, WARREN CHOBOT, VINCENT COSTELLO, JAMES DECARO, SAM DOKTOR, EDWARD DUBINA, VICTOR FENSKE, ELLSWORTH FINCH, RAYMOND FOGARTY, JAMES GOZDIAK, RAYMOND GROTKE, EARL HAJIC. EDGAR HEJNAL, ALDRICH HERMAN, JAMES HOFFMAN. DOUGLAS HRYCH, ROBERT HYNEK, EDWARD INCIARDI, JOHN JAHNKE. MILTON JECMEN, GEORGE WOMEN KRISTAN, MILADA F. LIEBENOW. GLADYS PELANT, VIVIAN E. MEN JEMM, GORDON KAPLANEK, GERALD KASMER, FRANK KASTHOLM, PHILIP KEBSCHULL, FRED KLIMA, JAMES KRAFKA, OTTO KRATOCHVIL, JOE KREJCU. JOE KREMPETZ, EDWIN LANDI, SPARTACO LINDEMAN, RICHARD LOWERY, KENNETH LOWRY, FRANK LUKES, EDKARD LUNAK, ROBERT MANN. JEROME MICHALEK, ROBERT MITCHELL, ROBERT MOORE, HOWARD MOSETICH, JOSEPH MRAZEK. GEORGE MURRAY, JAMES NITZ, EUGENE OUSKA, ARTHUR STELTON, ROSEMARY STRNAD, THERESE VON, JUNE PADALIK, MILES PALMER, HOWARD PARPET, FLORIAN PESEK, IRVING PODLESAK, ALDRICH PRUSA, WARREN RIPKEY. EUGENE ROZYN, MARSHALL SASS, ROBERT SAUTER, JULIAN SHERS, ALPHONSE SLADKY, EUGENE SOBIESKI, RUSSELL STURNFIELD, ROBERT TANANA, EMIL THERMOS, LOUIS TUGANA, GEORGE TURSICI-I, FRANK UROUHART, BLAIR VASKOVSKY, JOHN WEISER, WILLIAM WILSON, EARL ZAVISLAK, FRANK ZBASNIK. HENRY ZIARKO, RAYMOND I Slrudenfs De gang Dry IOGSI Innocence SI'ewdenIs CANDID CAMERA Foo-logs Singing wallers Frosh? lea Kissprool7 Back +o Nafure Fi+h Columnisl Grovle Polling place Viclory dinner Cauglwl in flme acl Dunnir1g's-Visi'rors7 Bunker Bean Mammy Jane Two dukes Your move The Flapper ,cf , -Lael 5 VJJ Mrfid J ,MLM ,, D M4 . I K MA ., . . 1 . jf? .X i --g,.i? lQ,-. fx v ffl' fo J X t X R , e, A f . f A . V 463, WA fygffff WV fx Xfgfgxlvbxf X fwV'Ngxi xx r U I, lp XA .y C AQQA f XR QW New ? f A f V f e W 1 XR 1 fxx we WJ JWA fi WU vi X 'I J X gi-xp Q A 11 u I is Rh X f ix xkqkj Q H Jiffy! X 7 ' X5 A X ,X N 5' , ,I 92, XX KV! - 'XX ' 'Six XV , -gl 6 we ' HAZ' rl, . y' A Nj! M. 47 1 qof one foo Hof sfuff Ahlqmmhhhm H' Duck! 7 ELAINE!!! Beaufies amd? Skepflc 7 X f N X X 'N N Q x N E x mf Ex r N J f ,ff ' 'XMi'..i M 'Ask www 92-of-4. H . QM, ,.....f.. 'lviwm' x-A-Y-Wv1wy,,,,f,,,, ,. WL., gtgv PRESENTIN BOOK TWO f 1 Y iff 1 0 f' f R I 'IQ Q 'Q' n 7 I Q , ,' Y 'Q 1 , , V .mf x 'J f I-.if -H I ' Q ' LJ . . . , I 1 ,1 J , . I X V ',...,, , ' ,fl J 5 'MS - ' x .h LI 'list ,lf ,, x ' p E 1 K I' ' 'Kd Jws 'W '- Nr-Q xl' 'Q '.. L 1 '- fc, A.. . .s Q 'A 1' X 5. Cgll !lCl4'4'l7,04fLy gr our mQ!0C!?J 015578 1941 PIONEER STAFF mia 4 i V M, .. . T ...if -T 7 KY ZDENEK J. LANS MAMAN GROYE Ci Editor Administration Eddor ass ZIMA DWARD JEANNETTE cmieux E spores Editor Activities Ediiof EVEN YURENKA HANSEL BENVEITIUTI ST Literary Editor Photography Editor CHARLES W. VEDRA Editor-in-Chief E, oT The PIONEER sTa1':T, have been chosen To assemble The maTerial which we hope will preserve Tor you The memories of whai you will oTTen reTer To as The happiesT years oT your liTe. Now ThaT our Task is compleTed, we will nolr Try, as oTher ediTors have done, To bore you wiTh an irlcsome Tale oT our diTTiculTies or accom- plishmenTs, ThaT is a Thing oT The pasT. LeT us raTher loolc inTo The TuTure, as all healThy youTh should, and share wiTh a despondenlr people some oT The visions oT poTenTialiTies ThaT our resTless and Tremendous energies have exTorTed Trom iT. For who can say ThaT all is losT, when as some giganTic crea- Ture we arise and speak as one, WiTh me, all Things are possible! We are now hunTing our way ouT inTo a TuTure oT iniiniTely greaTer possibiliTies Than any pasT age ever dreamed oT. We desperaTely neecl a new sysTem oi educa- Tion, a more viTal religion, improved Torrns oT government new uses Tor leisure, ancl HOWARD R. RITZMA EVANGELINE RAWERS TOM DAMER Business Manager Secretary Ari Editor new ways oi living. ln lhe fields of eco- nomics and human relalions youlh will find Ihe chance Io use inlelligence and origi- nalily. Who, for example, has as vel found an answer Io war, poverly, vice, greed, grall, and dozens ol olher dillicullies? Who, in Ihe fulure, is Io give lo The world Ihe symphonies, 'rhe painlings, Ihe poelry, Ihe novels, and Ihe drama which will enrich life? PHOTOGRAPHERS Merril Shepro Augie Danek ARTIST Irwin Sfudney ADMINISTRATION Ruih Brebis Alice Corcoran Drusilla Grofh CLASSES Evelyn Chlebou n Irene Krenelc ACTIVITIES Lillian Hruda Vlasia Marfinec Jeannette Roesner SPORTS Robert Cervalr Lorraine Ciboch Vlasta L. North COPY WRITERS Miles Beran Jane Fijal Walter Gailus Julina Gylfe George Malras Lillian Morgan Jerome Pale-cel: Richard Provinslry Carl Stoffels Lorene Sulrovaty June Von Jerry Zilka MIN I J x 'IJ' I ' A Y 1 I I ,fr , ,fi ii 53 J il ,lx is N A .. f70rt1 1 alle lie? .n ii 5 i up 'W sw x .4 CARL growers EirsT SennesTeI' Edilor CLARENCE KADLEC Second SernesTer EdiTOf COLLEGE wiThouT iTs newspaper is like The sky wiThouT sTars. Each in iTs place enriches human experience by adding a cerTain spice To The commonplace. A sprighTly school paper has This qualiTy oT brighTening The Tedium ThaT is someTimes school liTe. College newspaper producTion may be Termed an advenTure in Teamwork wiTh The sole obiecTive of publishing a noTeworThy biography oT coIIegia+e affairs. Each member oT The sTaTT is an individual possessing a peculiar TalenT and inspiraTion. IT Therefore resTs upon The shoulders of The ediTor and The adviser To guide The advenTurer's abiliTy inTo proper channels and harness The enThusiasm To propel him. An ediTor's Task is onerous. l-lis is The responsi- biliTy oT keeping The venTure moving once The novelTy of newspaper work vanishes. Work which was once a pleasurable Task oTTen degrades inTo drudgery. To even oTT The peaks and depressions oT The sTaTf's energy inTo one homogeneous uniT is his greaTesT problem. This accomplished, an asTuTe viTal paper is The resulT. To ignore lhe adviser would be denying lhal a sleamship needs a compass. For back of The COL- LEGIAN slands a man ready lo profler consrrucrive crilicism. Though he lacllully buf lirmly correcls obvious blunders and censors arlicles which he be- lieves lo be delrimenlal lo lhe well-being ol lhe school, he is even more willing lo give credil and encouragemenl lhan admonilion. Names and evenls gleaned by lhe COLLEGIAN Slalls diligenl ellorl' may pass inlo lhe oblivion lhal is hislory, bul somelhing will remain a lasling abslracl accomplishmenl. ll is lhe lorce exerled by lhe paper in lhe building and moulding ol school spiril. No less imporlanl is a newspapers influence upon ilrs slahl members. l-lere is a minialure seclion ol lile wilh ils problems and responsibililies. The sludenl who valianlly assumes lhese chores places himself ahead in lile's cavalcade. ll was wilh lhis in view lhal lhe COLLEGIAN was eslablished and has been lhus mainlained. MR. HOWARD l-l. FINLEY Adviser TOP ROW: E. Johnson, G. Teal, R. Provinslry, G. Vosatlra, J. Modry, C. Kacllec, C. Moro, T. Damer, M. Grove. MIDDLE ROW: E. Chleboun, H. Moritz, W. Gailus, M. Hraclek, M. Gajdos, D. Monneite, S. Yurenka, J. Meyer, J. Roesner. BOTTOM ROW: F. Craig, L. Johnson, K. Hair, C. Stoffels, L. Klima, V. North, D. Hraclr, M. Venturella, L. Ptacek. EMBLEM s T A F F - . 1, r -,I First Semester: . 'tx . -i :i i....'. it A J : RICHARD AXEN X A 'N ' ' i . . V' I .fri i I' A DELORES MANTHEY I . -. ,. A Associate Editor 1, 5, . i,Zw.K. GEORGE BORDENAVE H- -' 5 Editor g i ya Q sr: , - . K .. , ,, ,. .,.,.,..m... Associate Editor -' I - r GORDON STEPANEK I Business Manager Second Semester: JULINA GYLFE . Edzt 'rl fj A I A K - .,-- , i,f,1.:f - I 5 6, 1 'O' it ar . i I A . .. r s. g z -. rm su - , v we S JANE FIJAL . Associate Editor YV '. .fj, x ' ,- . r FRED WUNDER I ' ii Q. Y. Associate Editor i K ,Q .f ROBERT F. Boer-IME Business Manager The crowning teather in the cap ot achievement ot a student is to have some ot his retlections published in the EMBLEM. This years two issues contained caretully chosen literary productions written by authors displaying talent in many departments ot our literary activities. ln addition to distribution in our college, many copies ot the EMBLEM are sent to other parts ot the United States. Miss M. I.. Falls and Mr. A. T. Almer are the advisers. Resolved: That the nations ot the Western Hemisphere should torm a permanent union. That was the subject with which the small but powertul debate team did mental gymnastics this year. Atter warming up in a series ot debates with individual colleges, the squad swept the North Parlc and Maine tournaments. Their record ot titteen victories and only three deteats won tor them the coveted tirst place laurels in the state conterence. DEBATE TEIAIM Lett to Right HOWARD RITZMA MILES BERAN PHIL CARTER Not in Picture MILAN SWASKO W. J. CHERRY, COACH . PUBLIC M V wg, T qi, Miles Beran Blanche Chalupslzy T X ' Francis Discipio 1, 5, , ,, T I p- '- Q- 'Q . . T kg g'LV Mildred Cajclos Marjorie Hradelr John Skulteiy X 5. Dolores Johnson George Teal 'ag M When Dean Spelman and Mr. l-l. l-l. Finley conceived The idea oT a Public Press Service Tor The college, They had a Two-Told purpose in mind. The obvious reason was To creaTe an agency wiThin The school Tor The disTribuTion oT college news To local and meTropoliTan papers. The second purpose was To ohfer To sTudenTs The opporTuniTy oT wriTing Tor a proTessional newspaper. ln This capaciTy iT has served and grown unTil This year iT boasTed a sTaTT oT Teri members. There is no excuse Tor anyone TorgeTTing The name, address, or Telephone number oT any TaculTy member or sTudenT oT MorTon: These can easily be Tound in The reliable and convenienT DirecTory. This Tive-cenT bargain is noT a novel proiecT, even beTore The TirsT copy was prinTed in l93l-'32, TypewriTTen records were disTribuTed To The sTudenTs. Compilers Evelyn Chleboun and Marge l-lradelc and DisTribuTor Gordon STepanelc made These books available To sTudenTs by November. s in DIRECTORY EVELYN Cl-TLEBOUN GORDON STEPANEK Compiler MARJORIE HRADEK DisTribuTor Compiler THE FIREFLY f Q62 X ig I , il, f l X i x.,,...f'i C. I-l. HABERMAN Direclor FTER lwo monlhs of painslalfing preparalion under lhe able direclion ol Mr. Charles l-l. l-laberman, lhe sludenls ol lvlorlon offered lo lovers of music THE HREFLY, Rudolph Friml's well- lcnown operefla. Anliqualing all similar presenla- lions of previous years, Jrhis operella was slricrly modern, lhe scenes originaling in New Yorlc and Bermuda. Assisling l'labby were Miss Calherine Callahan, who arranged lhe dancing numbers, and Mr. Russell Bonaguidi, who direcled all fhe dramalic work. Grace Michaels, slar of lasl year's operella, porlrayed The lille role in her characlerizalion of Nina, lhe Firefly girl. Also conlribuling lheir ulmosl lo The success of The performance were fhe members of lhe line chorus, who were well repaid by +he applause of one of lhe largesl audiences ever seen in our audiforium. Tluose wluo wifnessed flue producfioru will nof soon forqef flue subfle enferfainmenf and fine music supplied by flue casf. Cerfainly fluey will never forgef flue duef Sympafluy as if was performed by Doris Bull and Keiflu Smeilcal: nor will Love ls Lilce a Firefly or 'lgiannina lvliaf as sung loy Grace lvlicluaels, ever pass info oblivion. Buf per- luaps flue climax of flue evening occurred wl'uen Keiflu Smeilcal sang 'lAn American Beaufy Rose and Jeaneffe Roesner, Morfonls own Beaufy Rose Queen, appeared on flue sfage. To fluose wluo confribufed fo if and fo fluose wluo saw if, flue opereffa will always remain as an evenf in wluiclu worries were forgoffen and in wluiclu fluaf infangible and illusive emofion, luappiness, was realized. K ofifivdh OPERETTA CAST Captain ,, , Tom Pletcluer Sybil Van Dare June Meiclre Suzette Margaret Bishop Pieiro Everi Harris Geraldine Van Dare Doris Bull Jack Travers, Howard Ritzma Mrs. Van Dare s Jane Farsi Jann Thurston Keith Smejlral Jenkins Ray Jsnoun Herr Franz ccccc eennge Makes Flower em Marian erm Nina, the Firefly , . ,, Grace Michaels Correlli , George Teal Anfonio Colombo ,, , Elaine Jolunson , Vi - --1? - ,V,, . w rm ' A ,-, , M A My , 9 ,? 1 ORESTE ALESSIQ PGH Prem Chairmen SCENDNNG qangphmks wire bon voyage srreemers SHN wflmferrmg. The Prem-qeers Neff Wie wedd or realiry for ern everwirwqxs cruise in a luxerieus ocean liner on We M. J. Sea. Ferqerfen were We fesrs, Yedures, and prebiems which make up We daiiy reulrirweq for before rhem were hours Wed wirh gaiefy, lauqhier, and romance. A Ce- eperailye OFHHCEGW moon dispersed Irs charms emerwq We dancers, whereas paNms suqgesfed We speU of exeilc Yamds fe Hue seurrw. The Hours dipped by a5mes+ umrweiicedq fhen We sfrains of Kenny Leiqhr- ronxs ercrwesfra faded away, and rhe long-awaifed buf Sher?-lived prom was ever. FALL PROM COMMITTEE MUSIC John Modry Roberf Anderson, Chairman Carmen MOTO Edwin Hovorlca Jack Roberison DECORATIONS Ruth Brebis, Chairman Warren Chisholm Keiih Smejlral Lawrence Tollenaere PUBLICITY George Vosatlna, Chairman Mildred Gajdos Tom Klavilr INVITATIONS Dorothy Clish, Chairma n PROGRAMS Grace Michaels, Chairman Alice Corcoran Joan Meyer WORK William Wieser, Chairman CLEAN-U P Jerry Palecelr, Chairman SPRING PROM COMMITTEE GENERAL CHAIRM Evert Harris MUSIC Robert Anderson, Jerry Husialr Hubert Blazina Miles Beran DECORATIONS Francis Discipio I Alex Norbui I Mildred Gaidos Elsie Roesner PUBLICITY Harold Fortner, C George Forst Frances Craig AN INVITATIONS Irene Kr.eneIz Colchairmen Mary Hrnierman Chairman PROGRAMS Ruih Brebis, Chairman Frances Hall WORK Cmchagrmen Gordon Stepanelr, Chairman CLEAN-UP Louis Horalr, Chairman Wallace Beclr hairman Charles Banas Franlc Novak Charles Sfarman 6I u a 3 ff ' ii il' s is EDWARD MATOUSEK LOUIS ALESSIO President EARL CLARK Vice-President WILLIAM PAROD Secreiary ANTON KOFRANEK Treasurer L 2 fp IAWI fs fy f l Ne President ROBERT HOMOLA Vice-President RICHARD E. BLAHA Secreiary CLARENCE KADLEC Treasurer MEN'S CLUB IT you don'T have your homework, The lvlen's Club room is The place To geT iT. I-Iere, in The Tinal resTing place ol: man, The perplexed Treshman can usually Tind an obliging sophomore To explain some diTTiculT assignmenT To him if he is noT busy chasing an opponenT's king across a chessboard. A radio Turned on Tull blasT and a crowd oT gesTiculaTing and arguing collegians make This an ideal sTudy room. This year The lvIen's Club again puT on The STageTTe, a parTy resTricTed To men only. ln addi- Tion, The club sponsored The Annual Masquerade Ball, The FaTher and Son Banquet and The Barn Dance. In a spiriT oT generous exTravagance, iT conTribuTed 55.00 To The lvlorlron Scholarship League and received The disTincTion of being The TirsT club oT M. J. C. To donaTe To This league. WOMEN'S C L U B The Big SisTer Tea was The TirsT social evenT spon- sored by The Women's Club This year. AT This aTTair The new members oT The college acquired a real insighT inTo college liTe ouTside oT classes. The Women's Club annually sponsors The MoTher-DaughTer BanqueT, The ChrisTmas ParTy Tor The less TorTunaTe children oT The neighborhood, The ChrisTmas dance Tor The sTudenTs, and The Backward Dance, where The women Talce The iniTiaTive and escorT The college men Tor one unTorgeTTable eve- nings This has Turned ouT To be a clever meThod oT demonsTraTing To Them The problem oT expenses wiTh which The men usually have To cope. The women exhibiTed Their cooperaTive abiliTy when They ouTboughT The men in The ChrisTmas Seal Drive and snaTched MorTie, The panTher Trophy, Trom under Their noses. MARGARET BISHOP De ELDA MANTHEY Presicleni Presideni JEANNETTE ROESNER FRANCES HALL Vice-President Vice-President JANE FIJAL ARLEEN DAFFER Secreiary Secretary DRUSILLA GROTH FRANCES CRAIG Treasurer Treasurer at J K Ch , 1 T W l U- dw X is 5 m 4 Q, , J J 4' 4 X. COMMERCE CLUB A. YOUNG Presideni R. GASS Vice-Presidenf M. VENTURELLA Secretary N. MICHALEK Treasurer OPERETTA GROUP THE FIREFLYH SADDLE CLUB Firsi Semester J. R A MANDA Presideni . LUNAK Vice-Presideni . VITT Sec. 81 Trees. Second Semester V . KRAMETBAU ER President J. MANDA Vice-Presideni E. TRNIfA Sec. 8: Treas. Commerce Club Men and women in+eres+ed in fhe business world can spend an in+eres+ing year full of business, lrips, and social affairs as members of fhe Commerce Club. Afler view- ing 'rheir noble campaign during Mum Day, when fhe members sold big yellow mums +o Morlon s'l'uden+s in order 'ro collec+ money 'For +he Tuberculosis fund and for Chrislmas baskels, we may well be assured +ha'I' our fu+ure businessmen will be generous as well as infelligenl. Field frips +o such places as Mar's, Campbell's, Weslern Elecfric, and fhe Ford Planl in Delroil' are annually a parl' of +he club's program. Cperetta Group The purpose of lhis organizafion was +o prepare sfudenfs for roles in fhe opereHa, FIREFLY, which was pu+ on +his year by lhe college. Because of an unusually large number of oulsfanding vocalis+s, musical fervor in 'rhe school grew very s+rong and a few appearances of individual performers al' some of +he assemblies foreshadowed 'lhe unusual falenf which was fo be presenfed lafer. Under 'rhe direclion of Mr. C. H. Haberman, +he members mee+ fwice weekly +o praclice choral work. Mr. Bonaguidi, +he dramalic direcfor, and Miss Callahan, 'rhe dancing inslrucfress, also assisled in making +he opere'H'a a success. Saddle Club The Saddle Club is an organizalion l'ha+ conlinues ifs ac+ivi+ies +hroughou+ +he en+ire year. From seven fo eighl every Friday morning 'lhe experienced members of +he club ride forfh for an hour's recrealion, while +he newer members iusl' ride. Besides fhe weekly ride, +he club also sponsors longer rides on holidays such as lhe 'rwo-day ride +o Lake Zurich lasl summer. Anofher highlighf of las+ year was a ride wilh +he Saddle Club of 'rhe High School. As an addilion fo 'rhe regular assembly programs, +l1e club annually enlerlains 'rho sludenls wi+h an exhibilion in which members of similar clubs from olher schools lake parl. u W6 CN X ,Sql 631 S Secretarial Club The Secrelarial Club is a uni'l' of a na+ional organizalion including alumni as well as s+uden+s. An annual magazine, STENOPRINTS, is published by a ceniral socie+y and disiribufed lo member schools for lhe purpose of uniling +he various clubs wi+h a common ground of in+eres+, and lo lei 'rhem exchange ideas and experiences. This club has visi+ed +he Chicago Slockyards, where many of +he members saw +he faclories of fhe Oleomargarine Company, Libby's, and Swi'H's for The firsl' lime in Their lives. Club parlies and Chrisimas baslcels were also included in lhe club's calendar. Some members of +he Secrefarial Club receive appoinlmenls +o 'The ALPHA Pl EPSILON, +he Secreiarial Nalional Honor Socieiy. This year's appoinlees are as follows: GERTRUDE GRODSKI MILTON C. JAHNKE JAMES E. PIASECKI GLADYS F. HOREYS DeELDA C. MANTHEY HOPE L. PUTNAM DELORES F. MANTHEY Scholarship Club Because of +he human love for emulalion and dis+inc+ion, clubs which require a high sfandard of scholarship and leadership from s+uden+s find less di'Fficul+y in a'Hrac+ing and holding lheir members. The Scholarship Club requiremen+s are an average of B in college, or lhe equivalenl' in high school. The purpose of fhe club is +o give i+s members a social background and +o acquain+ fhem wiih o+her colleges, +heir require- menis, opporlunilies, and fees. The mee+ings are usually held mon+hly al' +he homes of ieachers and sludenlsg Mr. Spelman and Mr. Aird are +he co-advisers of The club. ' 4 i 5 SECRETARIAL CLUB D. MANTHEY Presideni L. JOHNSON Vice-President D. MANTHEY Secrefary J. SHUBAT ,Treasurer v SCHOLARSHIP CLUB First Semester J. SAKALA Presideni J. GYLFE Vice-President M, E. HINTERMAN Secretary second semester M. efzove President I. KRENEK Vice-President J. MODRY swefafy ENGINEERS Firsi Semester R. HOMOLA ,President E. TANANA Vice-Presideni C. BANAS Sec. 8: Treas. Second Semester M. C. STIPPES President F. J. NOVAK Viceepresideni S. YURENKA Sec. 81 Trees. PAN-AMERICAN CLUB O. HORA Presideni H. R. RITZMA Vice-Presideni V. WINKLER Sec, X1 Trees. Engineers' Club The Engineers' Club, second in size only fo one ofher Morfon organizafion, is, wifhouf doubf, foremosf in acfivify and influence in school affairs. Under fhe very able guidance of fheir adviser and sponsor, Mr. Finlayson, fhe engineers have complefecl a varied and inferesfing program. To acquainf fhe members wifh acfual engineering operafions, frips have been made fo indusfrial planfs such as Crane, lnfernafional Harvesfer, Wesf- ern Elecfric, and fhe Elecfromofive Corporafion. Sfudenfs inferesfed in Qfurfher educafion in fhis field have even visifed fhe engineering deparfmenfs of Purdue and fhe Universify of lllinois. I Pan-American Club For fhe firsf fime in fhe hisfory of Morfon Junior College, Spanish has been offered fo fhe sfudenfs. As a resulf of fhis course, a new club, called fhe Pan-American Club, was formed. This organizafion, of bofh Spanish sfudenfs and ofhers inferesfed in Pan-American affairs, infends fo promofe Spanish conversafion and fo acquainf ifs members furfher wifh condifions in fhe Americas. During fhe pasf year members have invesfigafed fhe possibilifies of fufure employmenf in Soufh America and have seen several movies of frips fhrough fhis parf of fhe New World. The regular round of parfies and acfivifies was followed. ,AL y ANI J ourneyers' Club We hike, we bike, and we travel by car is the motto ot the Journeyers, one ot M.J.C.'s youngest clubs. lts creator and president was Thomas Gary Klavik, who organized field trips to various points ot historic and scenic interest. Other activities included skiing parties, a Christmas party, and assembly programs. This club has dedicated itself to the task of reviving interest in exploring the out-ot-doors, a pastime now almost exclu- sively lett to Boy and Girl Scout troops. Its existence guarantees to keep that pioneer spark ot adventure alive in the hearts ot adventure-loving men and women. Education Club The Education Club, advised by Miss French, is largely composed ot students enrolled in the Teacher Training curriculum. Members ot this club have attended their annual breakfast hike and appeared on a request radio program over station WHFC during National Education Week. Perhaps the most important event which the club undertook was the annual spring tea, to which were invited the teacher training students ot the past ten years, the Morton taculty, and the teachers from the Riverside and Brookfield grammar schools, who had acted as supervisors ot the student teachers enrolled in the second year education course. International Relations Club Taking an active and enthusiastic interest in present political and social problems ot the world is one of the chiet activities ot the members of the lnternational Relations Club. This organization, in addition to maintaining a small reference library of its own, invites well-known speakers to lecture to its members. Since there are so many vital problems facing the youth ot today, the club believes it necessary to keep abreast with the current news. ln this connection the club attempts to make students aware ot the many ruling social torces and to help them toresee the ditticulties that will confront them after leaving school. A1 l Q54 mutt ill. T JOURNEYERS' CLUB T. KLAVIK President P. PREBAN Vice-Presideni M. KERNER Secretary V. VODICKA Treasurer EDUCATION CLUB First Semester E. BASTLKN President E. JACOBS Vice-President M. A, WEIN Secreiary E. RAXNERS Treasurer Second Semester E. MENDEL President A. PLACKO Vice-Presidenf E. JACOBS Secrekary V, VOGT . Treasurer INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB Firsf Semester M. BERAN . .President J. FIJAL Vice-President B. BARTOS Secreiary E. SPATNY Treasurer Second Semester M. BERAN President J. FIJAL Vice-President V. NORTH Secretary H. MORITZ Treasurer f' V 4..f .-4 s I' A x J., Z VIVACE CLUB First Semester M. GROVE President C. BAKER Vice-Presideni G. MICHAELS Secrefary W. WIESER Treasurer Second Semester G. MICHAELS Presideni R. CERVAK Vice-President L. SUVA I , Secreiary R. KANDERSON Treasurer . 5 I FRENCH CLUB Firsi Semester T. KLAVIK , President A. CERNOHOUZ, , Vice-President S. VISBARAS Secretary F. J. NOVAK , Treasurer Second Semester L. TARDY, Presideni V. PETERSON Vice-President D. MOORE Sec. 8: Treas. OR-KESTRA KLUB Vivace Club The Vivace Club, advised by Mr. Haberman, was originally crea+ed by a small group of music lovers who desired furfher experience and con+ac+ wi+h 'rhe field of music. Hs purpose of s+imula+ing and main+aining in'reres'r in famous composers and 'I'heir music has aHrac+ed +o i+s ranks some fifly adheren+s. A+ +heir monihly meerings +hey are enferfained wifh programs feafuring junior college +alen+, and +hey occasionally aH'end various music halls and opera houses. A 'lalenl' for music is noi' demanded from any member, all +ha+ is required is his enfhusiaslic in+eres+ in music and his presence a+ +he meefings. French Club C'es+ ici qu'on s'amuse. Oui, here class rouline is complefely forgo++en while les madamoiselles el' monsieurs gel' +oge+her for a good +ime. The program of +he pasl' year was packed wi+h varie+y, including such acl'ivi+ies as French songs sung by Doris Bull, slides and films abou? France, recordings of famous French operas, monologues, guessing games in French, and communify singing. All fhe 'rhings which class 'rime cannol' possibly include, and more, are enioyed wi+h l'espri+ vif in 'rhe friendly social afmosphere of +he French Club so enlhusiaslically sponsored by fhe club's amiable adviser, Miss C. Bell. Or-Kestr-a Klub S+uden+s specializing in music as a career or a hobby should invesiigale +he valuable fraining offered 'ro i+s members by +he Or-Kesira Klub. Here, as in o+her organizafions, +he musician exchanges viewpoinls, suggesiions, and experiences wiih fellow members and, in addi+ion, learns +hrough observafion 'rhe more lechnical elemenls of music such as forms, harmonic choices, rhylhmic combinalions, e+c. In rhe orcheslra he learns discipline by obedience 'ro 'lhe conduclorg and af'l'er furlher advancement he learns fhe more inleresfing and enlighlening phase of inferpreling music wifh an underlying mood or passion. l f fr .iii N v T Radio Association The Radio Club has direc+ed iis aciiviries foward giving Hs members an undersiand- ing of +he iundamenfal concepis of modern radio and radio ielevision. Wiih +his in mind, a class was organized +o receive insfruciion in ihe exaci' use of fhe Morse code and ihe underlying elecirical principles of radio. This class, under +he supervision of Mr. E. H. Thomas, supplied i+s members wi'I'h sufficieni' informarion and incen+ive 'ro s+ar+ building and operaiing +heir own s+a+ions. The club has Hs own licensed s+a+ion wiih a +ransmi1'+er and receiver. Radio hams can spend +heir ex+ra +ime on ihe fourih floor in rhe radio shack. Camera Club Working in close cooperaiion wi+h ihe COLLEGlAN and +he PIONEER were 'ihe members of 'ihe Camera Club. Since mos+ of ihe members have been in+eres+ed in phofography as a hobby for a long +ime, each possesses and works wi+h his own camera. ln addiiion +o faking picfures, +hey develop, prin+, and enlarge ihem in order +o cu+ down ihe produciion cosfs. Their chief diFFicul+y ihis year was +ha+ of finding a suiiable darkroom in ihis school, bu+ finally, because of crowded condiiions, fhey were forced +o abandon ihe idea and make all of 'rheir piciures ai iheir homes. In spi+e of fhis handicap some very fine piciures have been prinied and published. Forestry Club Though +hey number less +han a dozen, pre-foresiry s+uden+s have organized ihe Foresfry Club. This small group decided io go forih and learn for irself 'lhe +hings abou+ na'I'ure which could noi be read in a book: and so afrer lisfening 'ro experienced speakers from +his and oiher schools, ihe members wen+ on field irips +o verify whai' fhese leciurers spoke about A+ +he Morion Arboreium +hey wiinessed an excelleni' example of iree surgery, and saw a colleciion of almosi' all fhe 'frees which could possibly be grown in +he s'ra'l'e of Illinois. They also visiied +he Rosenwald Museum, an inieresfing +rip 'for any club. 63535 RADIO ASSOCIATION 5. DECARO President F. NOVAK Vice-Presideni E. HARRIS Sec. 8: Trees. CAMERA CLUB FORESTRY CLUB G. CHLADA President F. NOWACZYK Vice-Pres., Sec. X1 Treas. Ae:-fe CMM 1 NBC LISTENING GROUP PLAYERS' GUILD J. FIJAL M. GROVE President Vice-Presideni H. LANGNER Sec. 81 Trees. GYMNASTS G. SLOUKA M. VOKRAL J. EKL J. ZILKA President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer NBC Listening Group The NBC Lisfening Group was organized by Dean Spelman af fhe requesf of fhe Nafional Broadcasfing Company. This famous corporafion consfanfly conducfs surveys fo defermine 'rhe popular public opinion of fheir educafional programs, and so encour- ages sfudenfs from various schools fo wrife reporfs of fheir reacfions while lisfening fo fheir favorife enferfainmenf. Each member of 'rhis club concenfrafes his affenfion on one program every week and mails his crificisms fo fhe s+udio's publicify deparf- menf. The group also fook a 'rrip fo NBC's Chicago siudios fo find ouf for fhemselves iusf how broadcasfing is done. Players' Guild Anxious +o exercise fheir fhespian falenfs, fhe dramafisfs began fheir 'rheafrical season wifh Cedric Moun+'s Twenfiefh Cenfury Lullaby under fhe direcfion of Mr. R. Bonaguidi. Close af ifs heels in December followed Thornion Wilder's The Long Chrisfmas Dinner, an unusual play rich in panfomime and one in which some brillianf new falenf was disclosed. The sfar presenfafion of +he year evolved, affer sfrenuous pracficing, on March 7, when fhe four-acf farce, HlS MAJESTY, BUNKER BEAN by Lee Wilson Dodd was sfaged. Headlining fhe producfion was James Piasecki, supporfed by a disfinguished casf. Gymnasts Though nof well known, fhe Gymnasfic Club has sieadily gained in popularify. Whereas ofher clubs are known for fheir parfies, programs, or frips, fhe gymnasfs meef regularly fo pracfice fheir body-developing exercises and fhus reap benefifs in fhe form of self confidence, endurance, and imaginafion. Judges award poinfs fo fhose displaying originalify of form and coordinafion of mofion. A man musf be experienced on af leasf eighf pieces of apparafus before he is considered a gymnasf. All 'rhis makes gymnasfics sound like an arduous sporfg buf when one enfers info if, fhese difficulfies are rapidly overcome. 13N -L 9 252 f ' fllh X.f,-Nlw Pre-Med Club To anyone in+eres+ed in medicine, a Pre-Med Club mee+ing is +he place lo become acquain+ed wilh +he science of diseases and +o acfually work wi+h ma+erials. The club has sponsored +rips 'ro 'rhe Cook Counly Hospi'l'al and +he Universify of Chicago's medical school. Hs members have seen cadavers, fhe morgue, an operalion, and cancer movies. They have mainfainecl daily, during +he evening hours of school, a firsl- v 'J , L I Q PRE-MED CLUB A. ZDENEK ,,,, President R. JANOTA ,Vice-President L. SUKOVATY ,, Secretary A. CORCORANH ,.Treasurer aid deparlmenr and have found +ime fo enioy fhemselves a+ a spiri+ed Chrislmas parly. Pre-medical s+uden+s can proudly poin+ 'ro 'lheir club and say, Tha+'s really a do- somelhing organiza'rion. If P V if . v,2!f r 91 is tffzletics WN A T H L E T I C SUPERVISION L, H. Baison E. J. Bedrava Q, G, KudrnovSllY G. Lagerlol l' ls D. Finlayson P' R' Pav me A. P. Kova nic N. A.Zielaell GEORGE S. FENCI. Alhlelic Direclor N FIELD and in gymnasium our coaches are conslanlly slriving lo raise lhe heallh sland- ards of our young men, and oblain viclories for lhe school. Cerlainly Lag Lagerlof has done a com- mendable iob in giving us lhe lirsl class loolball leam we had. Coach Eencls ellicienl managemenl of lhe alhlelic deparlmenl lell' him ample lime lo develop a line baslcelball leam. A glance al The lraclc l'eam's slring ol viclories is sullicienl proof ol lhe capabililies ol Gus Finlayson. Coach Pavlinelq has lalcen over lhe dulies ol baseball coach wilh an enlhusiasm insuring lhe success ol his learns. Allhough Coach Bedrava is a science Teacher, he has lhe physics ol wreslling well under conlrol. Under lhe direclion ol Coach Kovanic, lhe soccer leam has booled ils scores lo lhe lop. Wilh lhe experl advice of Coach Balson and Coach Ziebell, lhe lennis and golf Teams have slormed lhe courls and fairways ol olher schools, bringing baclc lheir share ol viclories. The gymnaslic leam has done well under lhe guidance ol Coach Kudrnovslcy. V A R S I T Y :W U , ., . Wfgififif A 1 . rivet 2 7 L if 35, ' ' Q5 f . we J J L. L E 'I' 'I' E R IVI E N VA' A zf' 'Ki A . ,l V' if JOHN CARROLL RICHARD PURVIS President Vice-President ROBERT VODAK JOHN VASKOVSKY Secretary Treasurer HE VARSITY CLUB had a very 'Favorable year wilh a record enrollmenl. Presidenl John Carroll was aided in planning The club's aclivilies by Vice Presidenl' Diclc Purvis, Secrelary Roberl Vodalc, and Treasurer John Vaslcovslcy. Al' The beginning of 'rhe year, The members of The club palrolled The halls belween 'rhe college library and The campus. Allerwards, 'rhey concenlraled Their eflorls on Their +wo principal aclivilies of The year, The club assembly in l'he spring and The picnic held in The summer. Wifh The rrophy given for The besl assembly of The year in mind, The fellows worked ou? a program which mel wilh The approval of all who saw il. The oufing held in lhe laller par'r of The school Term was also successful, and broughl oul some of The mosl novel ideas of The year. TOP ROW: J. Kosin, M. Vo- lcral, G. Swengren, R. Provinslry, L. Tollenaere, R. Anderson, F. Samuels, C. Zeilstra, C. Ida, C McCrory. BOTTOM ROW: J. Zillca, G. Slouka, A. Young, E. Matousek, J. Carroll, R. Vodal: E. Maddoclr, R. E. Blaha, R. Cervali, G. Kennedy. l r f X 1 I Ax! V KM ,aryl l in T f 'Xu T . 'xiz xlb jj qpvl MT T 515: Jim FooTBALL sEAsoN WhaT sporT requires compleTe harmonious co- operaTion, courage, power, and drive? OT course ThaT could only be TooTball. For This reason every M.J.C. rooTer is proud oT his Team: The squad possessed all These qualiTies, and more! True, They did noT amass huge scores: buT ThaT is noT The main purpose ol' The game. The imporTanT poinT is ThaT They proved Their abiliTy To wiThsTand The pressure of The opposing Torces and reTurn equal meas- ures oT The same. Their TirsT game wenT To WrighT, bu+ iT was much closer Than The score indicafed, DespiTe Their lack oT reserves and experi- ence, They gave a good accounT oT Themselves againsT a heavier Team Tavored To win The con- Terence championship. The PanThers suTTered Their second deTeaT in The La Salle-Peru game, all The scoring being done in The second quar- Ter on inTercepTed passes. A speedy running aggressiveness showed evidences oT Their rapid improvemenT when They played The Wilson Team To a sTandsTill, losing only because oT Two bad breaks - an inTercepTed pass and a blocked kick. -Q BACK ROW Coach Lagerlof, R. Motyclca, L. Tollenaere, P. Simundzal R, Cervak' Stejspal, A. Young. C. McCrory. SECOND ROW: R. McCaffrey, R. Pechous, D. Chambers, F. Parpet, N. Michalek, W. Wieser. THIRD ROW: W, Solawetzl E, Kagke, R. Harazin, G. Kennedy, M. Tulis. The PanThers Tinally hiT The vicTory Trail againsT NOrTh CenTral College. SmOOThness and cOOrdinaTion were exhibiTed in The con- sTanTly sparlcling play. The decisive vicTory Over DeKalb leTT no cloubT in anyOne's mind ThaT The PanThers were a much improved ball Team, and Trorn The beginning They played Their OppOnenTs OTT Their TeeT. The MorTOn gridders baTTled The sTubbOrn Morgan Parlc Team TO a O-O Tie in The annual Homecoming TilT. The unyielding line play handcuTTed The OTTensive OT boTh sides. The PanThers bared Their claws Tor The lasT Time in a scuTTle wiTh NOrTh Parlc, buT were unable TO obTain a vicTOry. The pigslcinnersl success is largely due To The leadership OT CapTain Ray STeblay and The Tireless wOrl4 OT Coach LagerloT and War- ren Chisholm, The laTTer being unable To play himselT because OT The Tour semesTer ruling. lvlOrTon lVlOrTOn lv1orTOn lVlorTon MOrTon MOrTOn MorTon E. Robertson, E. Lulres, D. Purvis, R. HoFFman, J. Praser, C. Zeilstra, W. G. Swangren, R. Steblay, J. Carroll, FOOTBALL SCORES o ss . Mwfighi 25 O ., ,,., La Salle-Peru 20 O, ,.... Wilson I4 I3, N ,,,... NOrTh CenTral O 22M H ,,,, De Kalb 7 O ,..,.. , ...., Morgan Park O 6, ,, .,,NOrTh Parlc I3 J Q BASKETBALL s E A s o N The l94O-i4l baskeTball Team was a Tine TesTimonial To The coaching abiliTy OT AThleTic DirecTor George Fencl, who succeeded Coach E. A. WrighT. By building a Team around ArT Young, The only remaining leTTerman oT lasT yearis Team, he was able To develop a smooThly Tlowing combinaTion oT Treshman recruiTs. Re- Turning nexT year will be Tom Damer, George ForsT, and Ray Pechous, who will again become imporTanT cogs in The Blue and Orange bas- keTball machine. CapTain fXrT Young proved To be The main oTTensive ThreaT as he Topped The scoring iisT in game aTTer game. Florian ParpeT reached The peak oT his playing season in The sTaTe Tour- namenT as he sparked The Team inTo TourTh place. Jim Bohuslav Took good care oT The pivoT spoT, and Tine games were played by Ray Ziarko and Dick Purvis. ArT Kryda s rough and Tumble brand oT ball was seen in numerous relieT appearances. ln The semi-Tinals. lVlorTon played againsT a TasT JolieT Team, going down To deTeaT by a score oT 54-20. Cn The nighT oT The Tinals, lV1orTon played againsT La Salle and iusT missed The Third spoT by a score oT 3883. EighT wins and eleven losses was This yearls record, and The elecTion oT George ForsT as capTain during The nexT season ended The Ivl.J.C, baskeTball acTiviTy Tor The year. BASKETBALL SCORES Morlon 44 Morlon 32 Morlon 36 Morlon 38 Morlon 35 Morlon 30 Morlon QI Morlon 24 Morlon 36 Morlon 42 LEFT TO RIGHT - TOP ROW: R. Stejspal, R. Ziarko, F. Parpelz, A. Kryda, L. Keeve, F, Bleclwta, J. McClure, Coach Fencl. FIRST ROW: R. Axen, R. Purvis, R. Pechous, Captain A. Young, G. Forst, J. Bohuslav. Morgan Park Wriglml I-Ierzl La Grange Maine Joliel Joliel La Salle La Grange Maine I6 53 34 30 40 57 42 37 60 35 Morlon Morlon Morlon Morlon Morlon Morlon Morlon Morlon Morlon 60 28 33 47 39 TOURNAMENT 63 3I 20 33 Amer. College Wrlglwl La Salle ,Morgan Parlc Amer. College SCORES Maine Norlln Parlc Jollel La Salle ie TRACK SEASON SCT-lOOL TRACK RECORDS l00 yard dash-George Guillaumin l940-:l0.2 220 yard dash-George Guillaumin ,, I939-:22.8 440 yard dash!John SundsTrom l940f:52.7 880 yard run-l'larry lvlcCarTney IQ39-2104.8 Mile run-William Goding . lC?39-4:40.3 l20 yard high hurdles-WilberLueTzow l937-:l6.0 220 yard low hurdlesfWilber LueTzow l937-127.5 Pole vaulT-Colin Higgins I937-l roll High iumpfColin Higgins l937- 5'8 Broad iump-Colin Higgins . l938f2ll7 ShoT puT-STanley Sereyha . , l937-386' Discus Throw-Joseph Briggeman , l940fl22i3' Javelin Throw-Jaclc Yuccas . . l937-l 83'l l 3. 440 yd. relay-Allen, Rasmussen, , l939- 245.0 PrisToupinsl4y, Guillaumin 880 yd. relay--Allen, Rasmussen, ln spiTe of The laclc oT adequaTe TaciliTies Tor pracTices, The Traclc Team won iTs TirsT Two meeTs againsT LaGrange and Maine by wide margins. They losT Two subsequenT conTesTs To Chicago Teacher's College and Armour and were sched- uled To enTer six more in The TuTure. CapTain Billy Re gained prominence in The Tield oT Traclc as a pole vaulTer The TirsT season, Taking a TirsT Tor The Orange and Blue in mosT oT The meeTs. ln running evenTs he also did well Tor himselT by placing in The 220, 440, and halT- mile. MorTonis number one speedsTer, Ray lvlcCaT- Trey, sTarred in The sprinTs, breaking several indoor records. OTher Team members worThy oT menTion and The evenTs in which They enTered were: Ray Benes, guarTer mile: John Fremgen, halT mile, Verne Johnson, discus and shoT puT, Roy SundsTrom, iavelinq Tom Damer, running broad iump: and Chiclc Engman, mile. Louis Slcinder and l-luberT Blazina, Treshmen, showed a greaT deal oT promise in several meeTs. CondiTioning The runners and providing Them wiTh The incenTive and desire To win is a diTTiculT Taslc, buT one which Coach Finlayson is well qualif Tied Tor. l-lis close conTacT wiTh young men in his i eil K ,clagses seryes TS win Their respecT Kuda, and Guillaumin , , l939-l:36.0 andx d on, j Yu 'T' Xjwlrv KIXXIIJ NNKJE, 5 . F ,l xi M f' A-S jk -V' xr T151 I' : 1 . -7, XJ I J i 4'3 i i 7 ll , ..,,' X I ln The spring, a young man's Tancy Turns To base- ball-and oTher Torms oT piTching. Rudely awak- ened Trom Their sTaTe oT hibernaTion, The men opened The season wiTh a series oT charley horses, sore arms, and overworked brains. Since The baseball Team was more or less a phanTom aT The Time This'copy wenT To 'prinT, only Two pracTice sessions having been played. deTiniTe inTormaTion concerning The Team's acTivi- Ties was noT available. However, some of The men who answered The TirsT call, and who prob- ably evenTually became varsiTy Team members, were: Clark, DeCaro, ForsT, Hora, KraTville, Kryda, LoTina, Mrazek, Neader, NOTTTZ, Pechous, Sisco, and Sobieski. CapTain Florian ParpeT, an ouTTielder who filled in nicely aT TirsT base lasT year, and Edward 'Q ' . 9.4.4 L5 ..s...qy IJ x ww. 0 'L,, rr.- K IJ I , . ' 1 ., ,,..L,4-- ,,,.- 4-QV K 4,1-tra! 1, L5-Wk I l i l. I ,-i- 4, 4 ' J it L4 , .. -' , I 5 1' F ' ' X . 1 I ' ' . , Q BASEBALL 1 sEAsoN lv1aTousek, lasT year's guardian OT The keysTone sack, were To become The nucleus OT The new Team. This is Pav's second year as menTor oT The Junior College Baseball Team. LasT year's base- ball season was markedly disa'sTrous. Losses To La Grange, Wilson, and WrighT and a single vic- Tory over l-lerzl ended The conTerence season wiTh an average oT .25O. Non-Conference games wiTh The high school Trosh-soph resulTed in a vicTory and wiTh The high school varsiTy a loss, making a season average oT 286. This year Coach Pavlinek hoped To make The M. J. C, diamondmen again a power in league circles. CATHERINE CALLAHAN WOMEN'S LETTERWOMEN ACH year flue W. A. A. finds among ifs members several women wluo enfluusiasfically parficipafe in sporfs oufside of flueir regular gym classes. Affer fwo sporf seasons, fluese women can be seen wearing flue W. A. A. emblem: and affer four seasons, fluey proudly display flueir W. A. A. LETTER- WOMXEN u u luv f 7. 4 if 1 igdu. 1 , u -3' Q- , J ui W L. Ciboclu D. Fiala M. Bishop J. Verfurflu G. Horeys An exluilarafing swim, an excifing game of baslcefball, or per- luaps some volleyball, are all a parf of W. A. A. acfivifies. Yes, one of flue many fluings flue W. A. A. planned was flue Tuesday Msporf nigluff' a nigluf during wluiclu flue college women used flue gym and swimming pool from seven-fluirfy unfil nine olcloclc. Some of flue ofluer fluings sponsored by flue W. A. A., under flue direcfion of lvliss Callaluan and various commiffees, were flue several luilces, feas, parfies, a coeducafional playday, and, of ourse, flue annual assembly. IM-Ax,4 wr 'wxgduuypwfoa-v Aviva -- JLJJ fd-fvfbfl-fu! Mylan' ' .'L L?wiriVl'7XJi Qu., EY 1, . .,g15.,v1..f1-Milf fi g, K JL. A ' f SPORTS CALENDAR Mock Tea Brealclasl I-Iilce, Clwrisfmas Parly, , W.A.A.fEngIneer's Imlayride Know Chicago I-Iilce , Welcome Parfy Dues Early Co-ed Play-day., Annual Assembly Oclrober Ocrober December December February Eebruary Merch , April May 3 23 I4 27 I6 I8 I8 26 9 ' '- .f2'::, 2 ' I Aw 2 I 'Y 6' I gf X I wa if W Q 5 ,,,. F, V :M , ,. , I V ,,. I ll me A 3' W I .. EVANGELINE RAWERS JULINA GYLFE ELAINE MATHIEU JANET VERFURTH QL'-fi 5 5- a A 5 .vcd P 11 yqg H nina tqvi .ng oar-k.'.u5 ..3,.,,,. I WOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION TOP ROW: H. Moritz, M. Krafka, S. Visbaras, L. Svarc, G. Horeys, E. John- son, M. Bishop. MIDDLE ROW: J. Fijal, D. Bursa, I. Krenelr, D. Gries- baum, M. Kremslxe, R. Brebis, L. Ciboch. BOTTOM ROW: D. Johnson, J. GyIfe, J. Verfurth, E. Rawers, E. Maihieu, V. Kuchfa, F. Becker. TOP ROW: E. MendeI, E. Jacobs, D. Monneite, M. Pederson, A. Tambour, B. Christensen, E. CI'1Ieboun. MIDDLE ROW: V. North, I. Hinz, D. Neher, K. Heir, L. Suva, D. Fiala, L. Sirvath. BOTTOM ROW: A. Elder, A. Capek, V. Vogt, B. Fanta, S. Wartenberg, L. Ptacek, M. Froula. 89 I 5 ' 1 ' f , 6 . M V , if VM QAlTh The en's sporTs do noT geT as much publiciTy as v . ii I 1 T menlsh, ey, neverTheless, Turnish an exciTing season OT J . y . L co Tan. 5 fi, Ji I ii n we Fall, one Tinds The college women bundled up in ' i 5 ' 5 warm s kicking and blocking The ball around The speed- ? , . Q. A ' V bal rTs Speedball is s+ilI The mosT popular sporT wiTh The R ' lj' il 1 1 en des iTe The bruised shins ThaT occur when an opponenT 'ii ifffmisses The ball and--. BuT iT's all in Tun, and The women haTe V 'X ' 'J leave iT Tor The winTer sporT, baskeTball. S' P E E D B A L L Pass iT! Here, here! Block herl : These are The cries ThaT come TorTh Trom The girls' gym as The winTer sporT season geTs under way. Here, boTh The good and poor players, running and and shouTing, Tired and red-Taced Trom a hard game of baskeT- ball, are dashing abouT The gym Tloor, while, Trom The sidelines, B A S K E T B A L L Miss Callahan reminds Them of TundamenTals. WiTh The coming of Spring, The women leave Their indoor game oT baskeTball and venTure ouT oT doors Tor an All-American game, man-hunTing. They play a good game-To acquire or keep ThaT cerTain man. ln The early Fall and Spring, The women enioy a swiTT game oT Tennis in The annual TournamenT. Miss Callahan also insTrucTs Them in The arTs oT diving, swimming, bowling, and archery. SporTs are acTive and wholesome, and The college women have many chances To improve Their TundamenTals ard exhibiT Their skills. 90 JDJ! . -+5 f 4 i kr A,,A, . k-v'h YK-- f 'i ' 7 sf' fi. X. 3' M195 Tai? Xgfifaa TOP ROW: I. Krenek. Qv,,,5KiBSb8U1J. Verfurth, E. Jacobs. BOTTOM' ROW: s. Krueger, A. Georgackis, E. Mathieu, J. Fijal, H. Moritz. TOP ROW: E. Mathieu, I. Kreneic, S. Krueger, D. Griesbaum, D. Bursa, J. Verfurth, H. Caithe- mer. BOTTOM ROW: H. Moritz, C. Koiaceiz, A. Georgackis, J. Fijai, E. Jacobs. 9I Perfecf specimen Corky Comfab Romeo and . .. Morfiefied .mconfinued fsee ebovej I wodd foo Programs The 'xpepsw +Wif1S Lunch muncher Bashful I ff , If ., of ,J-WJL-fjf. 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A S' fybfzotograp y VIOLINISTS EINGERS VIEW MONTAGE, PERSONALITIES E I ACTIVITIES II,, I s Ii gg, W E G H 3 . , If B, 'J HJ 'I K VX I ,I MQ aI R x 'x 'Q' X W , 0 ,,,MerriII Shepro Hansel Benvenui I-IanseI Benvenufi ,IvIerrIII She-pro kqcknowfecfgnen ts .1 JOSEPH E. MATOUSEK e X: Pon+Iac Engravhwq 84 EIeCIroIype Co. IIS II .I I -, Q f if, JWILLIAM R. NIEHAUS ' 2. J . CJ-X 5 Fred KIein Co. . gi 5 I l ,J ' J 'jx DEL A. MOFFATT -I .2 J CQ I Koverkraff Yearbook Covers 9 .- . ,- Q ,IX JosEPH E. GESSNER u J X1 'X Gibson S+udIos JA 'Y '5 ourrorao o. DRUSCHEL 1 ,I I ' Morfon I-IIQII School 'J u I EX I xiiiz 3 I x 3 IQ 'X JORAYIS CAMERA sToRE 1' x 5 J mix W
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