New Utrecht High School - Comet Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY)
- Class of 1932
Page 1 of 98
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
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Pages 12 - 13
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Text from Pages 1 - 98 of the 1932 volume:
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o'o 30,000 Alumni ' Founded 1901 liIl01lT 5353693355 J. E. ERON. Principal 853 BROADWAY, comer 14th Street Tompkins Square 6-5923 New York Charfered by New York Board of Reqenls--Regenls Examinalion Given in The School PREPARES FOR REGENTS-COLLEGE ENTRANCE also SECRETARIAL COURSES Dey and Evening Sessions Co-Ed REGISTER NOW A A A A A Q, '7 S' A . ' ogengfmggxeasnafs- 2 Jdll Copuueronal I U ,Elf 6 loln AT -SubJec,tS 6i06'l'l22lc5ll1'.SESf9'b2,2f6 Scioolgraduafbs ATEST OFFICE MACHINES Electric Bookkeepgng - Adding -Comptometers-Calculalofs Ductaphones- Nonselless Typewruters and Stenotypest REGULATION HlGl-I SCHOOL HOURS- Morning' Afternoon and Evening Seas: ozou 'Complirnenis of A FRIEND O E EST. 1909 ' BEekman 3-9435 io a DISANZA BROS. E . 64 FULTON STREET NEW YORK SENIOR CLASS JEWELERS ' 5 Manufacturers of l 1 FRATERNITY AND SCHOOL CLASS RINGS, PINS AND CHARMS Our 22 years of experience will guarantee all workmanship and A E A W- - rnaterials oi? the'highest quality l . ,1:Ep-.fuqee-42 .Y 92505--.. 1, 1. 1 1. 1 .1 -I:1111014114:1:101011:10101 1 ri 1 -I il 2- 1 ' 1 10:0 141 1 1.14.1o1..1.sC-f - -Special Rates To Students- PEARL TYPEWRITER CORP. TYPEWRITERS, ADDING MACHINES. CALCULATORS, CHECK WRITERS, ALL MAKES X Authorized Agents for I f , l All Makes Portable Typewriters A' Q Bought, Sold, Exchanged, Repaired, I Rebuilt and Rented g:::.,,.i ,, E. I I 9 9 B R o A D w A Y S' , Near 29th Street Bogardus 4-4266 Xxx- Q 1:1:1.1:1n1I:1In1nn1D 1l1u1o1n1n1n1n1 1.1c1n1n1 101:11 1:1-oi? U U Rensselaer Polytechnic Instltute II TROY, NEW YORK A S c h o o l 0 f Englneerlng and Sclence Ii Ii HE Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute was established at Troy, New ii York, in 1824, and is the oldest school of engineering and science in 5, the United States. Students have come to it from all of the states II and territories of the Union and from thirty-nine foreign countries. At the present time, there are more than 1600 students enrolled at the school. Four year courses leading to degrees are offered, in CIVIL, MECHANI- CAL, ELECTRICAL, and CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, in ARCHITEC- ll TURE, and in BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION, PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY If and BIOLOGY. II Graduates of any of the above courses may continue their work in the Graduate School of the Institute. The Master's Degree is conferred upon I' the satisfactory completion of one year's work and the Doctor's Degree for three year's work. H The method of instruction is unique and very thorough, and in all departments the laboratory equipment is unusually complete. H An interesting pamphlet entitled Life at Rensselaer, also catalogue and other illustrated bulletins may be obtained by applying to the Registrar, H Room 008, Pittsburgh Building. .1s:.:.:s:s:s:E1::s:s:E:e:E:::-Z-:Q::.-...:.,:..: :E:s:n:::.-4 1011:1u1e1:1:1:1:1:1:1:1:1c1eEG1:1:1:1u1c1:1-:1o1o1:1f1:-1:-en? BROOKLYN ACADEMY ! ! MONTAGUE 8: HENRY STREETS MAin 4-4957 l A CO-EDUCATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL i Registered by the Re- COLLEGE Our school will prepare ' gents, Accredited by WEST PQINT you to enter your col- ! Board of Education REGEN-rs lege in 'the shortest ! Student Activities: A NAP LIS available time and with ! Athletics, Rifle, Swim- N O the minimum of expense I ming, Music, Journalism TECHNICAL and inconvenience I Spring term begins February 3, 1932 One MOE HOROWITZ BETTY EPSTEIN ART JOSEPH GREINS CHARLES l7fVLHV! 'T'fD- ED'lN'CHIEF A55'T' ED Mm: scHooL NOTES LITERARY Hynmv Munn nenmAN KHENH -EDITORS FN2. BERNARD LANG SPoRl'S JMR Racufww Hfxggy 1ucKE'RMAN MoNsof-A045121-1Arv 'sol R-cu AlUN'lNl c :Rc ug Arrow Busmfxs- MMI, Hu MOR emu. awww Ho LU SMARTEN 1se1v.D'ANcszo am me ,farm SECREVARIAL 55511 cnkt. unury A0.MAN. Y AKEN COMET STAFF I Editor-in-Chief JOSEPH L. GREENSPAN Arrociate Editorr Mildred Dunetz Charles Devlin Art Betty Epstein Moe Horowitz George Kanelous Literary Editor! Hy Radin Herman Klienhenz Hnrnor Sol Rich N ar Schotrenfield wg- v Y i 1 Q Ari rilslgnur Pro Virir Litteratif Leo Genzeloff Sylvia Goldberg Bufinerr Marzager Monroe L. Ackerman Pzzblrily Meyer Cherner Mildred Isaacs Arthur Zwerling I Adrfertifing Manager Jerome E. Kappel Sporlr Editor: Bernard Lang Jesse Kessler Alumni Jack Richman Jack Bleckner C irrnlation Harry Zuckerman Flo Lustgarten Miriam Cohen Secretarial Utility Emil Brown Ben D'Angela Betty Schneewies Gavriluk Schmusy Adoirory Board Mr. Isidore Rosenzweig Mr, Zachary A, Serwef Miss Ann Seipp Three DEDICATION Jtliss Jtfiriczm H ersbkowitz WE, the Class of january 1932, sin- cerely dedicate this issue of the Comet to Miss Miriam Hersh- kowitz, newly appointed Head of the History Department, in token of our appreciation of her services as Head of the Economics Department. A Publication by and for the Students of NEW UTRECHT HIGH SCHOOL Vol. XVII February, 1932 No. 2 CONTENTS 0 SHORT STORIES THE GOOD DEED ..................,................................................................... JOSEPH GREENSPAN STRANGER TO THE WORLD ........ HERMAN KLEINI-IENZ ESSAYS IN AN ARTIST, IT WOULD BE TEMPERAMENT ........... CHARLES DEVLIN NIGHT .....................,.,............ DAVID IGNATOW SPECIAL FEATURES PRO VIRIS LITTERATIS ..............,.,....... .................................................,., POETS CORNER ....................... SPORTS ....,.........................,.. SCHOOL NOTES .I,...,... CLASS PROPHECY ......,.. HALL OF FAME ......,.. SENIOR EDITORS ....,,...... CLASS OF JAN. '32 ......... CLASS WILL .................. THIRTY-TWO's 32 ......... AUTOGRAPHS .................. CLASS CELEBRITIES ........ ALUMNI .............................. GROUP PICTURES ......... HUMOR ...................... . 13 12 I5 17 22 28 29 30 31 67 68 70 72 75 88 Five joseph greenspan E night air was sting- ingly cold. The snow fell slowly, silently covering the streets and the stoops of the houses and the window ledges with a virgin whiteness. The brightly lighted windows were gaily garnished with mis- tletoe and red wreaths. It was Christmas Eve and cheer per- vaded the atmosphere. Not so in the heart of Mathers who trudged through the almost deserted streets. He had expected to purchase some holiday clothes with a long anticipated bonus, but Mr. Watkins, his employer, did not hand out the customary Christmas checks. He did, however, place his arms akimbo and very heartily wish them a very merry Christmas. Also, he reminded them that they would have to work half a day to-morrow, Christ- mas. Tired after his full day's work, Ma- thers plodded his way home. AN elderly man, arms full of packages, muffler flying, his face flushed and happy, brushed past Mathers. Merry Christmas, he said, and scampered on his way with alacriry. Mathers smiled bitterly, a merry Christ- mas. No time for holiday for him, he'd have to work to-morrow. He shook his head sad- ly. Life had dealt harshly, unjustly with him. He had nothing but sorrow and none with whom to share it. Of course, the man hastened homeward. His family and friends were waiting for him thereg a merry group to welcome him home with good wishes. There was no one waiting to welcome him, Mathers, at his home, a little musty room in a slovenly boarding house. The landlady no doubt, will cast an annoyed glance at him as he enters and perhaps wish Szx THE GOOD DEED him, in her shrewish manner, a merry Christmas. She will cer- tainly remind him that his rent is due on the first. It would be a happy holiday if his brother Clyde was with him. They would talk about old times, go out for a good time and get drunk. When Mathers had last heard from his brother, Clyde was in a Western prison. That was five years ago, he must be free now. What if he were wait- ing for him in his room now? Mathers be- gan to walk rapidly, almost run. Then he paused and shook his head hopelessly, Clyde did not know where he lived. MATHERS had no desire to go to his stuffy room. Nothing awaited him there but loneliness. This evening, when everyone was supposed to be cheerful and happy, he felt sad and disheartened. A chill clamminess was in his heart. He decided to go to the park and look at the great Christ- mas tree, gaily decorated with colored lights that flashed on and off. AS he entered the park, the snow began to fall more rapidly than before. An oppressive hush, magnified by the distant rumble of the elevated trains, seemed to set- tle around him. Mathers gazed at the tree in silence. He was awed by the grandeur of the great tree with its many-colored lights blinking in the white stillness, the giant sky- scrapers barely defined through the falling snow. Into his simple heart the inexplicable sublimity of the scene seemed to instill a warmth he had never known before. Mathers leaned against the iron rail and slowly shut his eyes . . . god, how tired he was . . . to-morrow he would have to work tithe Qllumet again . . . it was cold . . . but he felt warm inside . . . his head drooped . . . he dozed . . . Mathers is a boy . . . stealthily, he is creeping down the stairs with his brother. . . they peek into the living room . . . father is decorating the tree . . . mother enters with some packages in her arms . . . Oh dear, she sighs, now where did I put johnny's sled? . . . father says, We'l1 hang Clyde's skates on this side . . . then Clyde is pull- ing him by the arm . . . SH . ..let's go back to bed before we're found out . . . SOMEONE tugged at his sleeve gently. Mathers started, opened his eyes and turned around. A shabbily clad person, with collar turned up, cap pulled down over the eyes, stood before him. Mister, could you spare a dime for a cup o' coffee. I haven't eaten for the last two days, whined a hoarse voice. A slight alco- holic odor came from the man. No, Mathers harshly answered as he turned to walk away. Immediately he was sorry for what he had done. The man's fig- ure somehow reminded him of his brother. Clyde would be about the same height as this bum, but better built. Hey, you, he called, C'm back 'ere. The man approached him silently, cau- tiously. Mathers refrained from asking for his name as he had intended to do. Instead, he thrust a dollar bill into the poor fellow's hand and walked away rapidly, for he did not want the wretch's thanks. He could not afford to part with dollar bills so easily, but the man reminded him of his brother so much . . . The panhandler stared after Mather's re- treating figure for a long time. Slowly he dropped his eyes to the bill crushed in his horny hand. With trembling fingers, he wiped away a tear that had rolled down his leathery cheek. Ay, Johnny, he whispered huskily, you've at least given me something to get drunk on. He hunched his narrow shoulders and disappeared into the gloom. AS Mathers left the park, the white pave- ments seemed to assume a cheery aspect. The pureness of the snow seemed to cover the ugly sins of mankind. For the first time Mathers noticed the merrily decorated win- dows. He even looked into some and saw beautilied trees. His heart felt lighter. Work tomorrow- Only half a day, then he'll be free to go out and enjoy himself. He could not understand why he had felt so sad before. THE good deed had cheered Mathers. He never saw this article tucked away in an obscure corner of the following day's paper: VICTIM OF POISONED BOOZE Early this morning an unconscious man, suffering from the eHects of drinking diluted wood alcohol, was found near the Christ- mas tree in Carmel Park. He died in the ambulance as he was being taken to Gou- vorneur Hospital. In his pocket was found an old envelope addressed to Clyde Mathers. No other clew to his identity has been discovered. He appeared to be about thirty-five years of age, is five feet, nine inches tall . . . THE END Seven charles devlin ln An Artist It Would Be Temperament E felt like hitting someone . .. any- one. just to feel the solid flesh under his lists . . . ecstacy. The freshman in front of him irked him. Someone poked him gently in the ribs as he walked down the hall. He turned around with a glare in his eyes . . . Must be some wise guy! But it was only Jim . . . good old Jim . . . but he wished he'd stop poking him in the ribs . . . so uncomfortable . . . a most irritating habit. Why didn't that teacher shut up? All that talk about Napoleon, and Bismark, and Cromwell . . . that was all bunk . . . they were a bunch of fools, anyway. He didn't see where they got their reputations . . . probably had good press agents. He thought of home . . . Gee! he'd be glad to get back home . . . out of school. Somehow, the day passed like a ton of bricks in an Austin . . . That itch in his hair both- ered him . . . why did one have to have itches? They were of no earthly use . . . as far as he could see . . . Same way with bugs . . . he'd never understand why the good Lord had put them on earth. Take, for instance, mosquitoes . . . pesky things. . . HE came into the house, singing. He jumped into the air several times . . . almost hit the ceiling. His mother told him to stop it: he was acting crazy. Why couldn't Eight he be himself anyway? People were awful . . . a bunch of gloom bearers . . . why couldn't he act the way he wished? . . . he was flaming into a terrible rage . . . He'd show them . . . he'd act the way he felt. HE left the house, quietly humming. Nice day, he thought . . . won't do homework now . . . in the evening was the time . . . no use wasting such a swell day . . . The man in the grocery store irritated him. Why did he have to stand there, gap- ing and talking with thecustomers? The store was a place of business . . . not a gab mart . . . what right had he to discuss anything else . . . he felt like choking the talkative customer. He left the store singing again . . . the world was a great place. Swell weather. Nice clerk in the store. His mother was a great pal, even if she did send him to the store . . . He decided to do his homework when he reached the house . . . instead he turned on the radio. Bet there was some good mu- sic on . . . he was feeling great . . . felt like loafing . . . listening to the radio. The thing began to buzz terribly . . . why did it have to buzz? He turned the dial . . . didn't seem to be any music on. Terrible state of affairs . . . no music . . . he felt like swearing heartily for all he was worth HE left the house, muttering under his breath. He met jenny . . . had a talk with her . . . he felt great . . . Jenny was a pretty girl. GDB 0011121 He left her, intending to go to the mov- have to change in the evening? By gosh . ies . . . he discovered he hadn't enough he felt awful. What was he going to do? money to go in . . . the prices had changed Damn the movies . . . he went up the street to evening prices . . . why did the prices . . . blazing mad . . . THE END o Rainstorm Mildred Dtmetz You do not know- But as I watched the train Go out And clash with the horizon, My heart hung limp, My throat Was a mass of Unshed tears, And I felt like The brooding clouds That warned of rain. I turned-and going back I hoped that I might cry And ease the pain That pierced my breast. Then, suddenly, the clouds burst- And large watery drops Fell over me,- And soon I no longer felt grieved, But instead, Full of understanding and love. So I took my rain-washed self Into the little home, And our little girl Who ran to meet me, As I came up the walk, Laughingly cried- Mother, the rain drops on your face Make you look as though You've been crying . . . Nine THE LADY WHO CAME T0 STAY R. E. Spencer T is surprising that an author should produce, as his first attempt, such a mas- terfully written novel as The Lady Who Came to Stay . It is even more sur- prising when we look at the background of the author, R. E. Spencer. At ten, Spen- cer was forced to leave school and help in the family support. Being of a studious mind, however, he spent much of his time reading. Between the ages of 15 of 20 he clerked, read Emerson and Hugo, and stud- ied music. At twenty-five, he was married and earning S1440 a year. A few years lat- er, he began a college course at night in ord- er to gain advancement. Thus he spent his days at work, his winter evenings studying, and his summer evenings writing a book. At the end of four years, 1926-30, his book was finished. In October, 1931, this book, The Lady Who Came to Stay , was chosen by the Book League as the outstanding pub- lication of the month. 54THE LADY WHO CAME TO STAY is a psychological novel, a study of character. It is the story of a conflict that carries on beyond the grave. Supernatural occurrences, such as the return of the dead are used for the furtherance of the plot, but this does not make the story fantastic, add- ing rather to its power. The story itself is a simple one and the interest lies mainly in the characters. The outstanding feature of the book is the con- flict between Phoebe and Katherine, but it is also interesting to study these characters themselves and to note their effect upon the other characters and upon the house in which the story takes place. The book is indeed worthy of praise. Let Mr. Spencer but keep up inthe manner in which he has begun, and he will soon be one of the leading writers of the day. Ten ' PRO LITTE THE ALMOND TREE Grace Zaring Stone GRACE ZARING STONE brings forth a new novel, The Almond Tree . The set- ting is Washington where Mrs. Stone has been staying recently. The book deals with the aristocratic circles of Washington. Mrs. Stone is in a position to know this sphere of society, since she has spent much of her life in these same circles. The Almond Tree is a story of three sisters, their hopes, their disappointments, and their fears. Mrs. Stone treats each of the stories of the three sisters separately. Each of these stories contain in themselves the germ of an excellent novel, and offer great possiblities if properly developed. Mrs. Stone has done fairly well. However, she failed in certain parts. Her picturization is too vivid. The glimpses of Washington are kaleidoscopic and over-brilliant. The cherry trees are too picturesque, the homes too lux- urious, and the society too charming. Even the crises in the story are a bit too tense. In describing Washington, Mrs. Stone makes us feel that she has not lived there long enough to really know the city. We do not get the sympathetic understanding of the city, such as Strong gives in his de- scription of Ireland in The Garden. The Almond Tree is not all that might be expected of Mrs. Stone, but it is a com- mendable effort. VIRIS ' RATIS CALL HER SAVAGE Tiffany Thayer WHEN I finished reading the book and began to collect my thoughts, I won- dered why I had gone through in it two sit- tings and still did not consider it of any literary value. It is not a mystery novel. There can be only one answer, as to why it held my interest so, and that I believe is Thayer's style. The book is interesting and above all well written. It is by far an im- provement over Thirteen Men , the au- thor's first book which created a sensation. What the book lacks is real character. Any author can picture a character who does things without rhyme or reason. Nasa is one of these people. She is temperamental and passionate. Therefore, anything that she does, which an ordinary person would not do, is ascribed to temperament or passion. There is no art in portraying a person who will do anything at any time. A real char- acter has limitations and will act in accord- ance to set characteristics. Nasa does any- thing which the author wishes to make her do. If Nasa were a real character she would not act in extremes at all times. When a book is built upon a character that is not developed but merely does out- landish things, then the book is certainly not a good character study but will be a good seller. Mr. Thayer's intention is to try to prove to you that the reason Nasa is called savage is because she will just do whatever he fMr. Thayerj thinks is the thing you least expect her to do or most expect her to do and you are left in just as much confusion as I am trying to explain the incongruities of the book. If you are very much bored and have nothing better to do, read the book. You will spend an interesting fbut not stimulat- ingj evening. After you have finished, try to piece together the character delineations of Nasa and you will then understand the job that this writer has had. GOD IN THE STRAIN PEN fofan Fort IN God in the Strain Pen , we are shown intimately the life of a group of people in the Georgia Mountains of 1830. A traveling methodist preacher, Ishom Gowe, and his assistant, john Semple come to Ryall Springs. The book tells us of those people who come to the camp meeting of the two preachers, and of the meeting it- self. By their reactions to the news of the camp meeting we learn to know the people spoken of, their lives, their thoughts, and their desires. The characters are expertly drawn, The woman of john Addis , a soul-starved being who has become a mere machine performing the necessary duties of existence without understanding them or caring about them, dull, lifeless, suddenly becomes alive to all the need and longing of her cramped existence when she hears of the camp meting. There is something eminently tender about the character of Sick Sam , some- thing pitiful about the way in which he longs to be of help to his family, but is prevented from doing so by his weakness. The most powerful character, however, is that of john Semple , the idealist, the dreamer, longing for the great solitude of Eleven itbe Qllumzt the mountains. His is a questioning mind as opposed to Ishom Gowe, the supreme, self-sufficient egotist. The character of john Semple dominates the story and lends it unity, the final touch which was needed to make the book a pow- david ignatow erful and masterfully written piece of lit- erature. No one who was not thoroughly familiar with the life of the Georgia moun- taineers could have portrayed them with such delicacy. john Fort was eminently fitted for the task. NIGI-IT HE night is a tomb . . . A pale disc, -shimmering in the heavens, encircles and crowns the moon, round and grin- ning. The melancholy glow the moon sheds, dances and wavers on my finger tips, then scurries away with the wind. The cold light lies calmly on the road as the jutting shad- ows lie black on its bosom serene. The shadows cut massive forms and squares and triangles while some lonely Hgures lie long and thin, heads above the mass. Grey giants are etched on the moonlight. They rise from the bowels of the night to stand towering among the stars. These monsters climb and climb through the abyss. They pierce the clouds and stand bareheaded, bathed in the moonlight behind the sispy, silvery clouds. A CAT stalks my steps, a black form upon which the moon plays its ghostly tune. The green eyes are lost in a wall of , imperceptible darkness and soon I heat a T spitting, snarling voice come from the ground and fade away in a wail. A gentlelwind caresses the night, and winds through trees and grass about me. Through the silence of the night a ship whispers hoarsely. I stand in fog and falling dew. A cloak has fallen. A clock strikes the hour, then silence reigns the night till morn. Twelve herman klienhenz QQ O long! Lots of luck. If there was a covert irony in the Warden's voice, it was not premeditated, and neither he nor his parting guest perceived it. The condi- tions in which they stood were not favorable for the percep- tion of fine shades. And the hand-clasp was hearty. It ex- pressed the Warden's sense of loss. For countless years he had known and loved this man, and now he was departing. IDEALS, in the common definition, the Warden had not, but in the ethical note of prison keepers, he knew what was right, and this man had approximated very near to it. His resigned and ttactable spirit in confinement had bespoken the position he once had held. Before their hands parted, the Warden had considered this and more. He recalled the voice of the exposure, the falsification of the books, flight, arrest-then the plea of guilty, and the sentence-since reduced by good behavior. He remembered, too, that there had been political elements in the case and much talk about scapegoats suffering much for other men's sins. But that was all so long ago, and these other men, sinners and saints, were dead and gone to rewards or reckonings. The little wicket in the monstrous studded doors of the prison closed silently and the man stood in the world again. It was early morning in summer and the sun was sailing listlessly over from the east, with only a promise of the opulent splendor of his mid- day awakening. Over the way, there was an Italian with a hand-organ and a monkey, and from nearby came the hoarse chant of a huckster. Stranger To The World ORIGINALLY, the Peniten- tiary had been on the out- skirts of the town, but it was now environed by rows of small dwelling houses and cheap stores. Once it had worn a littingly penal air of seques- tration, now the sombre dig- nity of its grim, gray walls was floured by the tawdry brick of these interloping neighbors. Yet it loomed so far above them that its granite spaces seemed informed with a sar- donic ridicule which relieved the incon- gruity. There came to the free man a vague rec- ognition that during the silent expanse of time which had widened-on the other side of these walls, the world here, only a step from them, had been ceaselessly whirling away, with all its wonted clamors and con- tentions, heedless as ever of the individual atom. It was a shock to realize that only within there, in that still and separate world, there had been no change. He was watching the organ-grinder's monkey and speculating whether its length of chain would reach to where lay a tossed penny, and he was disappointed when the man solved the problem by shifting his posi- tion. PRESENTLY, he found himself walking. He did not realize this until the peremp- tory shrill notes of a horn sounded in his ears and he started back in sudden panic. When the car had whizzed by, he was visibly quaking, but in a moment he was going on again. Although without purpose in his route, this overpowering fear of the trolley cars delayed his progress so that the morning was well advanced when he stood at a corner Thirteen Ciba Gomer g g in the heart of a business section and watched the crowds press past him. He shrank in the half-shelter of a post with the surreptitious air of one who has no right to be seen. Indeed, he felt vaguely alien and irrelevant, and his forefinger went faltering- ly to his lips, with a motion become ha- bitual. Of all these legions rushing by him, none so much as glanced in his direction, and he wondered why they did not seem to know that he was a lately released felon. He might have found the reason when he fell to studying their faces. The habit of obser- vation had once been keen in him, as it is in many men who constantly handle large sums of money, and even now it was not quite gone. HE saw that only the children wore abso- lutely placid countenances. All others carried a look of preoccupation, often ex- hibiting writhing lips and Hashing eyes or muttering their thoughts in half-audible sen- tences. Once a woman, quite alone, passed near him and he heard her exclaim to her- self, Oh, my! Oh, my! It might have meant only a forgotten pocketbook or a tight shoe, but the tone had a tragic ring. Again, a man talking vigorously to himself swept by, growling. THE None looked toward him, all were igno- rant of his existence, and a great loneliness arose within him. SUDDENLY, an impulse to escape seized him. He felt bound, stifled-as though- as though he were in prison. He turned and fled-first with a rapid stride, afterward breaking into a run when he was away from the crowds. The impulse became uncontrollable. On, on, he sped, throwing startled looks over his shoulder. Once he fancied that a crowd was rushing past him with a great hue and cry, but no one followed. At last, panting and breathless, he drew up in front of his goal. In a subconscious way, he had all the time known whither he was making in his mad flight to escape capture. FOR a moment, he leaned weakly against the little door. Then, with another look over his shoulder he concentrated all his strength and pounded fiercely upon it. The Warden himself appeared and heard the gasp:- I've come back-home! But the Warden shook his head sadly and said:- I have no power to take you in. There is no place for you here now. And he closed the door. END Swv! if 'E' LZ, Q aww. ff' I V Fourteen H POETS' CORNER Truckman Come on, boys-plane the crate up! Let your muscles lump up Under arms and shoulders, Stteaked with grease and dirtll' Ugh! shove her ing Darng it's a job to snap a fellow's limb. A heaving fit for three men To keep that crate from tippin'. Leaped atop the truck, Sitting on the rim, smoking a butt And telling a tale of pugs While the fellows listen in. Giddap you dray plug! Pull faster, you mug,'! There's another job a block ahead, Before you get there we'll all be dead. Hit up! H y Radin o Two Poets He said My notes in minor strain Their meed of glory bring. But oh! to break this solemn chain And make the laughter ring. Another, dreary, bowed with care, Had jested through the years. Alas! he sighed, that I have ne'er In life moved men to tears. H erman Kleinlaenz Q Fifteen ln My l-learl: joseph Greenspan In my heart . . . I am akin'd To the lonely eagle that soars in the West. In my heart . . . I am as the wind Restless, upon a hopeless quest. In my heart . . . I am as grit. In me is the grimy coarseness of it. In my heart . . . I am as the sea, Surging the shore, futilely. In my heart . . . Like the fleeting hours, I caress and destroy delicate Howers. Prairie Night HY Radin Sixteen My Love Charles Devlin You do not know it, But I love you. Perhaps you do not think I do, But I know, Because Each time I see your face I get A funny feeling Way down in my stomach, Not a pain, But A warm glow, Like the one I got When I went on the Roller-coaster! Twilight, The breeze glides over the prairie, Rustles the green grass, that bends slowly Singing its song in combined harmony. The endless blue deepens, The shining red orb sleeps below the hori- zon. Lights twinkle far apart, prairie campfires- The flames throw eerie shadows wherein stand men of the sodg Telling tales of distant homes, fields of gol- den grain. The blackness gathers, the men repose, The fire Hames wane, spreads a feeble glow In the darkness, extended around Heaven and earth are one. Night's nature conquers TRACK TRACK has been for the last eight years the traditional sport at New Utrecht High School. Track will con- tinue to be New Ut- recht's tradition so long as Barney Hyman can continue to put out teams of such excellent calibre as he has done hitherto. 'S S fa: I K wt, gm f At this writing the P. S. A. L. indoor championship meet is' fast approaching. Green and White team has been seen on only one occasion this season, in full strength. In the Stuyvesant games, they amassed twenty-six points to easily annex tirst place. Herewith is the team on which Utrecht's hopes are placed. First and foremost is shot put, an event which has always found New Utrecht supreme. There is not much dang- er of that supremacy passing into other hands for the next two years. Willie Wohle is the standard bearer in this department and the job could not be placed in more capable hands. Wohle has heaved the iron ball past the fifty foot mark, and is capable of doing better. He is followed by Icove, Uchitel and Simon, all capable of placing in any meet. In the sprint events, a new find has come to the fore in the person of Virgil Guglielmelli. He has been literally burning up the boards in practice, and bears consid- erable watching. Harry Walfish and Whitey Rosenthal are the other entries in the hun- dred. The 220 and sprint relay teams will be :omposed of five veteran trackmen, namely: Max Kerner, Max Streisand, Foster Cnzew- ski, Max Lipshitz and Dave Altman. The 300 yard event is also well supplied with talent. Joe Greenspan is due for some fine performances here, if the results of the practice sessions are any criterion. Sam Si- mon, Herb Wolfert, Carmine Pinta and Ronin, also lend their valuable services to this race. Jack Wolfe, the former Bay Ridge Evening star, is at last eligible for P. S. A. L. competition in the quarter mile, and will do his best to prove his worth. Radin, Bloom and Marcus are invaluable to the Green and White team in this phase of track competition. A flock of cross-country men will garner New Utrecht's points in the 880 and the mile run. Foremost among this group may be found Capt. Perry Rosenberg, George de George, Ira Mendelsohn and Sam Sklar. New Utrecht has two line entries in the high jump, in the persons of Sam Simon and Legs Rosenberg, who bid fair to reach marks over six feet in their event. Incidentally, the recent K of C track meet at the Garden found New Utrecht well rep- resented in the persons of some of the fore- most alumni of the Bensonhurst school. Phil Merriam competed in and won the thous- and yard run. Sol Furth, Ira Singer and Bernie Krosney gave a good account of themselves in the sprint series. Seventeen UDB QLUUIZI BASKETBALL IT gives us great pleas- ure to announce through this medium that Mr. George Ross, popular mentor of the basketball team has de- serted the realms of bachelorhood and re- cently betook unto him- self a bride. Congratu- lations, Mr. Ross!!! lf WS - l We are also pleased to announce that the New Utrecht Five has rosy prospects for another borough championship. Many of the brighest luminaries of the past two seasons will have been graduated by the time the regular season starts. Ratzan, Esposito, Hoff- man, Bonavita, Pruzick, and Roskin are among those who will not see service this year. The nucleus for New Utrecht's hopes is centered upon the persons of Capt. Lulu Handweiler, Julie Robbins and Whitey Rosenthal. When the whistle blows to start the regular P. S. A. L. season, the first team will probably be made up of Robbins, Hand- weiler, Rosenthal, Cantarella, Krivitsky, and possibly Vinacour. Supplanting these men, one finds Schwartz, Silverstein, Gennis and Krasner wearing the Green and White. As is customarily done, New Utrecht en- gages in several pre-season encounters. So far, the basketeers have met two of the strongest teams in the city, and performed valiantly although they lost. Utrecht dropped a close one to jefferson, 26-22, but it was a grand encounter from the start to finish. Textile, probably the greatest team in the city, beat the Green Five 36-21. These games have no bearing however on the P. S. A. L. basketball race. The managers, Reisner, Pearl and Good- Eighteen stadt, are at work engaging more practice games to get the boys in shape. When interviewed, Coach Ross predicted a championship for Captain Lulu Hand- weiler and his boys. HANDBALL HANDBALL in P. S. A. L. circles has taken remarkable strides in the past few seasons. From a rather meager number of five Brooklyn High Schools equipped with handball squads, a full-fledged P. S. A. L. sport has grown with divisions in each bor- ough of New York City. At present, Brook- lyn alone has eleven teams. Next spring starts the second season during which hand- ball enjoys P. S. A. L. standing. Because of the growth of the sport, the P. S. A. L. authorities have changed the rules so as to allow more competition amongst a greater number of players. To the existing schedule of three singles games and one doubles is to be aded another doubles contest, thus necessitating a seven man team in lieu of the previous teams of f1ve members. New Utrecht's representatives, last spring, compiled a rather fair average, in emerging victors in six contests while tasting defeat in five. From that squad of last spring, Coach Frankel has lost four valuable members, Captain Fine, Fox, Segal and Finestone, by graduation. To replace them and to act as a nucleus for next season's team, are Ray Brick, singles and doubles star of former campaigns and Si Silverstein. Mr. Frank- el who is devoting all his spare time in coaching the newcomers in the intricacies of the wall game, sees embryo stars in Stan Simon, Shepp, Shapiro and Axelrod. Mr. Frankel refused to comment on the team's chances in the approaching campaign although he did paint its opportunities for arm, atnmer the championship in rather sombrous colors, due to the fact that our opponents have retained their stars of former years. As formal practice has not been com- menced and is starting about the seventeenth of February, Coach Frankel stated that can- didates are yet permitted to report. He ap- peals to the students to come out for hand- ball, if they wish to see it maintained in New Utrecht High School. F OOTB ALL X f . WITH the University I i of Southern Cali- fornia's victory over Tu- lane, New Year's Day, the curtain was rung down ,on the 1931 football season. From the viewpoint of a Ut- recht student, the season was not altogether successful. True, the eleven won five out of seven games played, but the two that were lost were bitter pills to take indeed, for the simple reason that they were admin- istered at the hands of the Green and White's staunchest rivals, james Madison and Boys High. New Utrecht opened her season with a most successful onslaught against Thomas jefferson, Ben Roskin leading the boys so a 14-0 triumph. The next game was what is known in the vernacular of sport as a breather. The Bensonhurst eleven took an easy one to the tune of 20-0 from a scrappy Lincoln High School eleven. The next two games will long be remem- bered in the history of Utrecht sport. The Green and White team had the eyes of the scholastic sporting world focused upon them, as they upset the odds two weeks in suc- cession, beating Manual Training and Brook- lyn Tech, 12-6, 6-0, respectively. On November 14, Utrecht traveled to Boys High stadium to meet the team rep- resenting Samuel Tilden High. The team was greatly hampered by playing on a strange Held and also by weather conditions. The result being that Utrecht managed to eke out a 6-0 win over the Silver and Blue team. THE following Saturday found the boys still dog tired from the pounding of the much heavier teams of Manuel, Tech and Tilden. Nevertheless, the Utrecht eleven had to face its rival, james Madison. The stands were jammed to capacity and were a pag- eant of gorgeous colors. In the field, the Black and Gold band and cheer-leaders were vieing with the music and cheering of the Green and White stands. From the opening whistle, it was apparent that Utrecht was in no condition to play a team as strong as Madison on that particular day, but Ut- recht fought gamely until the end. Time and time again, the line held desperately as if their lives were at stake, on the 1 or 2 yard lines. But no human body can as- similate punishment forever. Twice the Black and Gold managed to wiggle through the lines for touchdowns. When the final whistle had blown, the Green team lay in the dust, with a 13-0 defeat chalked up against them. Coach Warchaizer then set himself to the task of preparing his team for the final Thanksgiving Day clash with Boys High. Carl Dosic, captain of the cheer squad sug- gested a pep rally as a means of strength- ening the boys' morale. This plan was agreed upon, and arrangements were made to hold the rally in the school auditorium. When the day of the rally dawned, out of the 8000 students in the Bensonhurst school, not more than 100 students attended the gathering which showed the eleven that they no longer Nineteen dtbe Qtumer had the support of the student body. So, when Thanksgiving Day arrived, the team that faced Boys High was thoroughly broken in spirit, besides being bruised in body. Despite Roskin's touchdown, and the playing of Conte, Cerevalo, Segal and Rag- gazino, Utrecht was overwhelmingly defeat- ed 32-7. With the close of a football season, var- ious all teams are always picked, and 1931 was no exception. Phil Raggazino, joe Ceravalo and Marcus Segal of the Utrecht eleven were honored by all-Brooklyn rating. HEREWITH is the lineup of the 1931 edition of the Utrecht football season. Ends: Dan Lesselbaum and Danny Del Vec- chio, two of the finest all-around ends play- ing football in high school today. Tackles: Red Mangiamelli, Cassaza and Cheriak. who have been keystones in the powerful Green line. Guards: Phil Raggazino and Mug Migliachio. Phil was the unanimous choice of the sports writers as the outstand- ing guard in Brooklyn scholastic football cycles, need more be said? Stalwart Migli- achio was an impenetrable barrier to all who face him. The work of Phil and Mig rivals that of the Damon and Pythias pair of two seasons past, Gewant and Simnowitz. Centre: Marcus Segal, generally considered the best center on the New York football horizon this year. Segal could kick, charge, hold and do a dozen other things that are required of star linesmen. The backfield consists of Ben Roskin, the nearest thing to Albie Booth to ever cross the portals of New Ut- recht, Conte, the most spectacular and most dangerous ball toter and kicker we have seen in action this season. Joe Ceravalo, plunger, passer, leader extraordinaryg Cris- afulli, a steady, dependable back that any coach would thank the heavens for, and last but not least, Hy Picker, the life of the team. Every eleven needs a spark plug, and Ut- recht's carried the label Picker . Picker is a triple threat man, besides being a fine fel- low on the field and off. mffsqjfvd fl ve-'limb 'SDK ,N 5615? 6351+ ,Qu 4 W Twenly Iv gzjfivf ,Sheff :lyqgi i f '53 if, TES Mr. Leonard has been in print so often lately that he hast1't found time to read all the articles. wt . Generally speaking, school is a tough racket: If you answer questions briefly in history, you don't know your stuff, If you say a great deal, the teacher thinks you are bluffing. If you go to class, you are annoyed for a period, if you cut, you are suspended. Eunice Kowalsky knows a boy who has the largest tonsils in the United States. Imagine the embarrassment of the vac- uum cleaner salesman who once asked the President's wife if she had a little Hoover in her home. You won't be so smart now, said father to Willie as he put away the strap. In a bio. class: Ambitious Octopus to his gal: Let me put my arms around you, sweetheart. The Pilgrim fathers gave thanks for a dry land and now they have it. fOh Yeahlj Stop! John! Stop! you're crushing me! Stop! What do you think youlre doing, writing a telegram PH One: Hear about the gal in the cotton stockings? Two: No, what happened to her? One: Nothing. Julius Gottlieb tells us how we won the Soccer Championship. I saw time was getting short and there was no use in playing any more in the snow so I picked up the ball and began an end run which demoralized the entire Morris team. As one of the opposing players was about to tackle me, I shot the ball at the basket on the outdoor basketball court. The ball bounced on the rim and one of the Morris players caught it and immediately threw it up the ice where I interecepted it with the hockey stick I was carrying in my pocket and batted the ball far over the out- Iielder's head. I, being a bright young man, raced to where the ball was to land and on the fifteen yard line I attempted a drop kick that fell short into the goal, thus giv- ing New Utrecht its first Soccer Champion- ship. Irene Tautitz, pretty typist, Really made a hit With her new boss, Dave A. Meyer. But she had to quit When he noticed on each letter She had signed DAM:IT After studying physics, we have come to the following conclusions : Wind is air in a hurry. Vapor is patched water. A circle is a line which meets its other end without ending. Young man,', said the angry Mr. Fine, as he grabbed the senior by the collar, I believe Satan himself has got hold of you! ! Said the Senior: Yes, I believe he has. She blushed in surprise, although she had expected this, she could not stifle an excla- mation. Her friends had warned her that it would come to thisg but she had not thought his feelings were so intense. Oh! the shame and consternation that were hers! For she was a mere child, and he was a high and mighty. He was the Principal and Twenty-three dtbe Gomer p he had popped the question, When can I see your mother ? I kissed her only once last night because -nobody interrupted us. Undertaker's song: I'1l be glad when you're dead, You rascal, you. Charlie, the Cynic says: A man who's been lucky in love is a bachelor. MORNING BECOMES EVENING QA Biology in Three Sactsj Scene one and three quarters: The front of the Sact mansion in the outskirts of some woman. The morning sun is just dying in the west. The apples are ripe. A man is smoking a cigarette-somewhere else. Sic: War is hell! Sac: Then I'm not going to war! End of Act One: curtain rings down midst tremendous, fervent, magnificent, wonderful, great applause. Scene Four and Five: Outskirts of the Sact Mansion: It's another female, this time. Same time, same place, same characters. The sun is dead. Sac: Oy! Sic: Oy! Curtain: Silence in the theatre. They are overwhelmed and cannot clap. Scene nine and twenty: The inside of a pickle barrel. The sun has risen, night has gone tout for a drinkj. The characters are three pickles. One: I am wet. Two: You are wet. Three: -11 End of play: Theatre empties. In fact, it has been empty all the time. Twenty-four Dr. L.: Why were you absent yesterday? Milty Tenenbaum: My grandmother died. Dr. L.: What? This is the third time she has died this term! M.T.: Yes sir: but my granfather was a Mormon. Mailman: ls this package for you? the name is obliterated. Bertha: No, the package can't be for me, my name's Rubman. A wise old owl lived in an oak, The more he heard, the less he spoke. The less he spoke the more heard, How few are the students who imitate this bird. Our science department states in cases of bloody noses it is not advisable to prevent the flow of blood by a tourniquet around the neck. Mr. Inman recently returned a plate of spinach to a restaurant because he declared the spinach was lacking one of its vitamins. Many people have drawn out ways of saying the same thing. Betty Epstein says, The green grass grows all around. Joe Greenspan says, The green foliage contin- ues to vegitate in the vicinity. Betty Epstein: Did you ever take chloro- form? Leo Genzeloff: No, who teaches it? Mr. Rosenzweig: Why weren't you at re- hearsals yesterday, Adler. Sid Adler: Because I wasn't there. Ben Kline: Well, I guess I'1l go into the study and study. Ben Katz: That's a good idea. I'm sleepy too. GED2 Qllnmzt THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW In cases of severe ptomaine poisoning a little camphor oil, rubbed gently in the toe- nail of the middle toe of the right foot, will leave the patient almost entirely unaf- fected. A little turpentine and a handful of flour, mixed with one pint of red ink, wlil often produce a mixture quite unfit to drink. The tonsils should be oiled regularly and bathed in warm sunshine to prevent rust ac- cumulation. Two drops of cod-liver oil with dental floss to a blue serge suit will often produce a grease spot. We wish to inform you, that the Comet beat the nuhr in basketball, 12-O. The nzzhr of course, was ashamed to print it. As the daily newspaper describes it- These two blows weakened the latter and after taking a few more punches the referee stopped the light. Goldie: Have you ever been to the town of the clogged sewers? Silvy: No. Where is that? Goldie: Venice. Mr. Saunders: What is the meaning of the word technique? Max Lipshitz: The act of accomplishing the impossible with the utmost difficulty. Mr. Swhan: Where do we take sugar from? Allen: From the sugar bowl. . Mr. Cohen and Mr. Moses went to see a wrestling match between Jim Londos and Stein. When they got in the stadium the match was started and Londos had a head- lock on Stein. About twenty minutes after Londos got another headlock on Stein and Mr. Moses said, Let's go, Cohen, this is where we came in. Socky Levitan: What did your father say when he saw such low marks on your report card? Mel Margolin: He didn't say anything, because he realizes the depression. Mr. Grubnick tells us about the time dur- ing President McKinley's administration when an ardent Republican said of the Dem- ocrats, I will not insinuate that all the Democrats are horse-thieves but I will say that all horse-thieves are Democrats. Bernard Lang tells us that the seventh form dance was quite a success in spite of his absence from the affair. Did you know that: Prohibition is producing staggering re- sults? Scotch jokes are now being bottled? A polished gentleman is not always bright? Dog days are bad enough, but cat nights are worse? The owner of a second hand car is al- ways trying to 'start something? Radio is still in its infancy? We can tell that by the noise it produces. The penitentiary is no place for a journ- alist. It takes too long to complete a sen- tence there. The meanest man in the world is the warden who puts a tack in the electric chair. I came to say good-bye. I'm going to be operated on at the hospital this evening. Well, I hope everything comes out all right. One: I hear that Jack only likes blondes. Two: So they say. I'm dyeing to meet him. Twenty-five A Message To The Senior Class From Dr. Leuchs N a few days you-and I hope this means all of you-will be grad- uated from our New Utrecht High School and will have completed another stage-I trust it may not be the last stage-in your education- al career. I congratulate you most heartily upon this definite achievement and I wish you the highest possible degree of success in the future. Most of you have been so regular in your attendance, punctuality, and general deportment that I have hardly been able to make your personal acquaint- ance. In all of you I have the utmost faith and I cannot express too em- phatically my unshakable belief that there resides within each one of you a great store of goodness and of usefulness which has manifested it- self during the years of your membership in this school and which will continue to manifest itself, of course, along far deeper and broader lines, as you grow older. It has been the pleasant duty of us, your teachers, to guide and to help you in your formal education. Perhaps we seem at times to have been unduly abrupt and severe in our attitude toward you. In a large institution such as this, discipline and precision are necessary factors. If there is one last thought I would have you carry away with you it is this: We teachers, I think I may speak for all my colleagues, do not for a moment imagine ourselves to be any nearer to perfection than any other group of persons is, or should hold itself to be. We are human and we err. Our field, education, is an art of infinite intricacies and possibilities. We, who are engaged in it, are probably more often than any one else at a loss as to just how to act. But we can truthfully say that we are a serious, conscientious, striving body of persons. It is this confident belief that has invariably prompted me, as Dean of Boys, to uphold at all times, the decision of the teacher. He may not seem to you always to have shown perfect judgment, but as you look back I trust you will feel that he was sincere in his dealings with you. You will find similar conditions as you go forth into the world for which we are supposed to train you. You may often have to submit to the dis- agreeable and the difficult, you will occasionally have to face conditions in life that seem unfair and that are, indeed, false, when measured by the standards of scientific accuracy, yet you will find yourselves all the better for such occasional experiences. And so I hope you will leave our school with the feeling that we, as a body, have meant well with you and that we shall ever be glad to hear from you and to see you again as the years roll on. F. A. H. L. I wezzly-Jix MR. SERWER Adviser fo Class of January, I932 .ii CLASS PRQPHECY U . FTER passing four phlegmatic years of wading through Macbeths, Burkes, and what-nots, I was finally graduated from that institution of learing known as New Utrecht High School. Confidentially, mayhap a bit brazenly, I strode forth into the world that had been pictured to me as kind and unselfish. Alas! and alack! The puny protection of all my knowledge was insufficient to ward off the scorn and derision that met me. Thus it is that I hid myself, for twenty years, in solitude. On the fourth of February, 1952, cu- riosity having overpowered discretion, I ven- tured into the world a second time. The first member of the january '52 class that I ran across was Harry Zuckerman. Fa-cheese, he exclaimed, where have you been all this time, Joe ? He was on his way to Jack Goldberg's dentist's office and from there to the Mildred Isaacs Theatre. We're showing the 'Green-grey Galoshes' by none other than Mildred Dunetz, he said. No ? I questioned in surprise and doubt. Yes! says Zuck, and Jack Bleckner, Lucy Zinberg and Sylvia Katz are starring in it. No ? I questioned in surprise and doubt. Yes! Zuck said, and Harry Greissman is the publicity agent. Greissman ? tooted up the voice of toothless Bernie Selevan, wasn't he in our class? Yes, I think I can chisel some tickets for tonight, and off he scurried throwing a hurried nod over his shoulder. And if you want to know something, Perry Rosenberg is going to run in the La- bor Sports Union Olympics for the fourth Twenty-eighl time, said Abie Ratzan at my elbow. Reluctantly, I had to tear myself away and go to accomplish the fulfillment of my quest. My plodding feet carried me in the direction of Union Square. The square was black with people. My strength was too puny to enable me to get nearer to the speaker. In despair I was about to depart for other parts, when suddenly I beheld none other than William Curtis fnow a successful Tammany man, with Sylvia Dubrow on his arm. Bill, I shouted, you've got to help me get close to the speaker. Sure, sure, he answered nonchalantly pointing to a small group standing on a side, there is the solution to your problem. To my extreme confoundment I noticed that the group was composed of former classmates. There was Ben Roskin, who was now playing short stop on the Brooklyn Dodgers, joe Ceravalo, star half-back of the New York Giants and soon to retire to coach Notre Dame's eleven, and Hattie Un- gar, now Olympic swimming champion. I acquainted them with my problem. J-j-just f-f-follow us, said joe Ceravolo. Pow! They broke through the mob and we were in the front row before I could say Gavriluk Schmusy. While passing through the mob I had a fleeting glimpse fo Sarah Richman, Eunice Kawolsky, Jack Richman, Sarah Koplowitz, Gizella Fire- stone and Joe Weisdorf all attentively listen- ing to the speaker. I immediately recognized the speaker on the platform. It was Leo Genzeloif. He was swiftly moving his arms hither and yon in excited expostulation. fC071fi7ZZl6d on Page 661 'P . . . WWW i W W lf!! .- W. ........ --. ..,..............,.. - .... , ,. Lou Lnrre N peas - , 65,11 SASRVJC? 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V f ' ' 45 K - ' R31 Nl lllllllll 3 umum mumlml lllllhlm A IIIIINLM In mum 1 3 nw... 5 A uw, uiwfffuuni llllllllill G ki 1 y !llllRl9l mnun: . i 2 ,, DIQCQ iid QQQI 'XXV V1-ff' 'F' - ff-V N'Q.1'l... s l ii B9 GITIQBES' of Jlanuzrrg F Q V' !1 , Q :rg ' 5 'I f A i f SW Vi kk GXX!NJa1fkX9ANkY9 SXNXQRXRNJAXX' X YSAXXKQRXXAUAKX W ,,: 6 K 'fps 315 2 , 'lil 1 gb Q fr: .l.,,,. XP: 'yu i is Q .qv . A 9'3- 12-'v . ,X . .+ .M 'uf Aw .fu 5.1 1 V. 9 fm, ff ,T A y ,M l. Ha V .. L . L if . j 6 Q ff-3 A EV, 'Q La Q- sd lfiwfsv' W M Hn J' . SL! , xi-.1 ' ,sv , KZ L-I 1 A, ,E 3? 5 if mw- .M , Nga-5 ,445 .H at -V V95 'kiizli , ivy ' - i Aw 3 .gf ,sau 451114 3' f 4+ if 'V 4. The Qlumet 1. ABRAMS, PEARL Brooklyn College. Organization Office Arista, Program Com. She's a fiend for the Arista. 2. ABRAMS, SYLVIA C. C. N. Y. Office Squad, Class Officer, Nice girl. 3. ACKERMAN, GERTRUDE The Katherine Gibbs School. Latin Club, Swimming Club, Basketball. If being good-natured was money, Gertrude would be a millionaire. 4. ADDIS, NAT C. C. N. Y. Arista, Service Squad. Vincent Lopez, Cab Calloway and Nat Addis. 5. AFFRONTI, ADELINA Cooper Union. Service Squad, Office A fair daughter of sunny Italy. 6. AIZENMAN, ABRAHAM D. Brooklyn. Captain French Squad. From Dr. Leuchs I am. 7. ALMQUIST, LEONARD C. C. N. Y. Service Squad. He's a good Math student-he 8. ALTERLIEB, SIMON Cooper Union. Pres. Chess Club. Another painter. 9. ALTMAN, CARL U. of Tibet, China. Nuhs, Service Squad A Chinaman? 10. ANGELO, ARTHUR C. C. N. Y. Italian Club. Angelo mio? 11. APPEL, JESSE U. of Carolina. Program Committee. Would that all boys Appel to us like him. 12. APPELBAUM, SIDNEY Alabama. Treas. Unemployment Fund, When the teeth are shut, the tongue is at home. 13. ARI-INSTEIN, MORTON U. S. C. Hall Squad, Lunchroom Squad. A great admirer of Cicero. 14. ASHPIS, HANNAH Barnard. English Office Squad, Arista. It isn't only drinks that make her dizzy. 15. ASKINAS, MILTON N. Y. U. Orchestra, Auditorium Squad. Sleeps with his glasses so he can see his dreams better. 16. AVERACK, GERTRUDE C. C. N. Y. Junior Arista, Swimming, Modest and retiring. 17. AVNET, LILLIAN Office Squad, Class Secretary, Gym We wondered if you knew Allen Ir- win-1? 18. AXENZOFF, DORIS Columbia. Sorores Amicitiae, Basketball Why rworry all the while? Don't wor- ry-crack a smile. 19. AZARA, KATHERINE Hunter. Senior Arista, Program Com. And a nice girl at that. thinks 20. BACON, LOUISE Lieutenant on the Service Squad, Floor Manager, Comet, Dr. Leuch's Squad. Small time big shot. 21. BADER, CARRIE U. of California. Class Officer, Drama- tic Club, Biology Club. Partner in crime. 22. BAKER, HARRIET N. Y. U. Office Squad, Gym Squad, Why men leave home. 23. BANCHEFSKY, LILYAN L. I. U. Madrigal Club, Debating. I apologize, Miss Quirk!! 24. BANNO, CARL CHARLES Oxford. Lieutenant in R. O. T. C., Just a dancing sweetheart. 25. BARATZ, MADLYN N. Y. U. Nuhs Representative, Biology Club, Organization Squad. We knew her when she was Mollie . 26. BATTAGLIA, SARAH St. John's. Spanish Club, Italian Club, She is sweet, we have no doubt, 27. BECKER, JEANETTE N. Y. U. Class Officer, Adeste Fidelis, Sweet and lovely. 28. BECKERMAN, SYLVIA Business. Swimming Club, Dancing Club. ' We can't knock this girl. 29. BEEKMAN, FRIEDA Coumbia. Dancing Club, Nuhs Repre- sentative, Sorores Amicitiae. When opportunity knocks, she says, Open the door, sis. 30. BELLANCA, MIRTHE Columbia. Hall Squad Member, 4 terms, Strength of mind is exercise, not rest. 31. BELLER, BEATRICE Radcliffe. History Office, Floor Mana- ger of the Nuhs, Class President, 4 terms. Radcliffe-depression hasn't hit your father. 32. BELZER, IDA St. John's. Service Squad, G. A. L. Representative for 2 years, Vice-Presi- dent of Class, 3 terms. She's in love, and how! Ask Herbie. 33. BELZER, LILLIAN Delehanty Institution. Swimming Squad, How about that Prom ticket? 34. BENFANTE, IGNAZIO C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Unemploy- ment Squad, Nuhs Representative. Iggy, keep an eye on me. 35. BENTY, JENNIE Travel. Arista Assembly, Office Squad, A small bundle of charm. 36. BERGER, IRWIN C. C. N. Y. Lunch Room Squad, Soc- cer. Too smart to live, but giving the world a break. 37. BERGER, RUTH St. John's. Nuhs, -Comet Representative Am I nertz about nurses! 38. BERGER, WILBUR Very serious, bound to get there. Thirty-three GDB Gomer 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. BERKMAN MEYER .Brooklyn College. Aviation Club, Lunch Room Squad. Never kicks anybody, his shoes are cowards. BERKOWITZ, ALICE An Alice without a blue gown. BERKOWITZ, JULIUS H. First Institute of Podiatry. Swimming My brakes are no good. BERKOWITZ, PEARL Precious stones are 10,000 leagues un- der the sea, but pearls in New Utrecht will always be. BERKOWITZ, ROBERT N. Y. U. Baseball Team, Track Team, Oh Bob! BERMAN, HAROLD C. C. N. Y. Biology Office and Book Room Squad, Junior Arista. He went horseback riding once, but got sore and walked back. BERMAN MICHAEL .N. Y. U. Service Squad, Track Squad, Are you coming to the Council meet- ing? BERMAN, MORRIS Service Squad, French Book Room A great fellow, he'd even share your last nickel. BERNSTEIN, JOSEPH Cooper Union. Class President, Lunch Born to blush unseen. 10. BERNSTEIN, MILTON U. of Yokohama. Service Squad, Arista Not the least but the admits ith the best of the Bernsteins. 11. BERNSTEIN, SYLVIA N. Y. U. Lunch Room Squad, P. T. Another bump on a log. 12. BETENSKY, DAVID Business. Lunch Room Squad, Nuhs, He's so dumb he thinks a nightmaxre is a milkman's horse. 13. BIRNBAU M, EDITH Maxwell. Lunch Room Squad, Nuhs, A teacher to be. 14. BLACHIER, HARRY C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Program Committee, Organization Office Squad Still water runs deep. 15. BLEIBERG, DONALD N. Y. U. Glee Club, Annex Squad, I kee an e e on me. 999, P ll 16. BLECKNER, JACK Harvard. Merton of the Movies , Pres- ident of Dramatic Society. I don't want tea, I don't want you. 17. BLICK, RICHARD Cornell. Organization Squad, Track, He puts question marks on his ex- amination papers. 18. BLOOM, ELLA University of Wisconsin. Class President, Do we like her? Well-we don't know her well enough. 19. BLOOM, RUTH Hunter College. Office Squad. I give up. 20. BOGDONOWITZ, IRENE C. C. N. Y. Comet Representative, What an earful. 2I. BOKSER, FLORENCE Senior Arista, Captain Dr. Leuchs She should take to flying, she's al- ways up in the air. 22. BOLTINO, JENNIE Jennie devoted all her time to home- work???? 23. BONDAR, SYLVIA Nurses' Training. Service Squad, What will she be nursing in a few years? 24. BORENSTEIN, RUTH St. John's. Nuhs Representative. A Latin student par excellence. 25. BORNSTEIN, YETTA Maxwell Training. Debating Club. Dr. Potter gave her A for person- ality. 26. BOROFF, SAMUEL C. C. N. Y. Junior Arista. If silence were golden, Sam would be a veritable man. 27. BOURGEOIS, EDMOND Business. Service Squad, Swimming, Not a perfume, but it does smell. 28. BOYLE, JAMES Quiet and helpful, if he were helpful. 29. BRAUNSTEIN, TINY C. C. N. Y. Nuhs Representative, S. I. W.. A. Girl Reserves, Comet Represen- tative Well-what's in a name anyhow? 30. BRAZNER, JULIUS U. of Rochester. Founder of Aviation Or is it brazen? 31. BRENNER, WILLIAM Brenner the Viking. 32. BRESS, PHILIP C. C. N. Y. Arista Assembly, Service Squad, Oifice Squad. If he stayed away from the girls he might have good marks. 33. BRIGHTMAN, SYLVIA C. C. N. Y. Lunch Room Squad. Paint box beauty. 34. BRINA, HELEN Travel abroad. Italian Club, Spanish Club, Swimming Club. A modest possessor of charm and in- telligence. 35. BRISKIN, CLARA N. Y. U. Service Squad, Swimming, Plump, but pleasing. 36. BRODSKY, RAY Brooklyn College, History Club Mem- ber, Secretary of English Class, Treas- urer in French Class. Just a Ray of sunshine. 37. BRODY, BERTHA New School of Social Research. Nuhs A sweet little girl, with a heart like a pearl. . 38. BROSK, BERNARD Scandinavian Prep. Stamp Club, Comet Brosk, I'll give you a Frosk. Thirty-five Ghz Qllnmet 1. BROWN, FLORENCE Brown U. The Brown who is going to Brown. 2. BUCHOLTZ, MORRIS C. C. N. Y. Biology Office and Book Room Squad, Program Committee. Someday we'll stick a pin into him, to see if he'll really scream. 3. BURK, SADIE Sanitary Squad, General Office Squad, What's right is not wrong or left for that matter. 4. BURSTEIN, SYLVIA N. Y. U. Glee Club, Lunch Room Who is Sylvia? 5 CALIMAN, MONTE Abroad. 2 years Lacrosse. When I grow up I want to be a hockey player. 6. CALIMAN, ARTHUR St. John's. Nize boy. 7. CALOGERO, THOMAS C. C. N. Y. Lunch Room Squad, Au- ditorium Squad, Class Secretary. Arista? Baloney! 8. CAMILLIERI, AMELIA Europe. Italian Club, French Club, Intelligence and charm. 9. CANADE, EUGENE Pratt. Lacrosse, Italian Club. Just a good smearer. 10. CANTOR, NORMA U. of Wisconsin. Swimming Squad, Her brains and personality are her tickets to success. 11. CAPECE, JOSEPHINE Trafuel. Service Squad, Comet Repre- sentative, Swimming Squad. Rosy cheeks and flashing eyes. 12. CARDILLO, ALDA Pratt. Girls Medical Society, Basket- ball Club. A beautiful, peppy cutie! 13. CASALENA, ANTHONY St. John's. Editor of Italian paper. A lady-killer. They look at him and die of fright. 14. CASTRIOTA, ANGELO U. of Wisconsin. Track Squad, Italian Club. Satan's messenger, The Imp . 15. CATIN, MAE Nurses Training. Service Squad, Presi- Dent of Prefect 3 terms, Commercial Office Squad. What's she training for, actually? 16. CERAVOLO, JOSEPH Syracuse. Varsity Football, 3 years, Varsity Baseball, Varsity Track. J-J-Just a g-g-good g-guy. 17. CHABOTSKY, JOSEPH Cooper Union. Track, Brush Club, Silence is golden: Joe is broke. 18. CHALEFF, RAE Brooklyn College. Arista, Track, Ser- vice Squad. What price makeup! 19. CHALIFF, CELIA C. C. N. Y. Class Officer 6 terms, Y is she going to C. C. N. Y.? 20. CHARVES, MEYER U. of Notre Dame. Basketball. He has some strong charfves. 21. CHARLES, LEO Ohio University. Class President 4 terms, Officer of Service Squad, Officer of Auditorium Squad. I call my dog Hickory because he has a rough bark. 22. CHESSLER, HERMAN N. Y. U. Service Squad, Class Vice- President, Latin Club. Little Hermie from Utrecht. 23. CLEMENZA, JOHN N. Y. S. Merchant Marine Academy. The original Darwin exhibit. 24. COHEN, AUGUSTA Hunter. Service Souad. Sanitary We can't knock this girl. 25. COHEN, DAVID U. of So. California. Basketball, Class Officer, Class Basketball. Changed his name to Cohen so he could go to Notre Dame 26. COHEN, DIANA Travel. Medical Society, Service Squad, It's not the salary, it's the experience. 27. COHEN, ETHEL Springfield City College. Class Secre- tary, Basketball, Swimming. She changed her name to 'Cohen to be diferent. 28. COHEN, ETHEL Work. Basketball Club, Lunch Room Another member of the working class. 29. COHEN, GERTRUDE C. C. N. Y. Class President, Lunch Room Squad, Treasurer of Class. One of the Cohens! 30. COHEN, JACK Cornell. Nuhs Representative, Latin Club. Jack, what have you read? I have red hair on my head. Yea, he's that dumb. 31. COHEN, LOUIS C. C. N. Y. Latin Coaching Squad, It's just formlulari. 32. COHEN, MORTIMER Nuhs, Students' Council. Oh, Morty! 33. COHEN, OSCAR Heidelberg U. Nuhs, Comet, Class Officer. Quick, Oscar, the Flit! 34. COHEN, WILLIAM The Swiss Navy. Service Squad, Lunch Room Squad, Debating Team. No relation to 0'Brien. 35. COHN, ESAH C. C. N. Y. Comet Representative. Why teachers quit young. 36. COMASAR, GLADYS N. Y. U. Service Squad. Another fair graduate. 37. CONOSCENTE, SALVATORE N. Y. U. Class Secretary, 3 terms, He Conoscents to go to N. Y. U. 38. CONRAD, ARTHUR L. Notre Dame. Rifle Team, Hockey Modesty is the best policy. Thirty-:even GDB Gamer 1. COOPER, SYLVIA Brooklyn College. Senior Arista. She does things well. How well? 2. COPELAND, IRVING A. St. John's. Class Secretary, 2 terms, Mr. Corbett's side-kick. 3. COSTARELLA, HUGH C. C. N. Y. Business Manager Il Classico , Lunch Room Squad, Service Squad. Some hue, eh? 4. COTTON, ARNOLD J. U. of Kalamazoo. Nuhs, Track Squad, Put Cotton in your ears and listen to him sing. ' 5. CRISAFULLI, LINDA Maryland. English Office Squad, Nuhs, Dramatic Society. As a woman she's beautiful, As an actress she's wonderful. 6. CURTIS, WILLIAM News Editor of the Nuhs, President Junior Form, G. O. Jr.-Sr. Exec. Any knock -would be too 'much of a boost! 7. CYTRYN, MORTON L. St. Jacobs. Assistant Chief Sr. Ed., Do you want to see my operation? 8. DAMAST, JESSE Ohio. Track Squad, Class Officer, How he loves to attend school! fUghJ 9. D'AMICO, BLASE A. N. Y. U. Sergeant of Lunch Room E-zferybodgfs friend. 10. D'ANGELO, LEONARD Service Squad, Comet Staff. He picked up a girl and went down to Dr. Potter. 11. D'ANGELILLO, DAHLIA Business College. Glee Club, Regents Squad, Class President. A flower in bloom. 12. DAVIDOWITZ, JANETTE C. C. N. Y. English Office Squad, To know her is to love her. 13. DAVIS, IRVING Business. Lieut. Auditorium Squad, Lieutenant who rules Captain of Au- ditorium Squad. 14. DAVIS, LEON Brooklyn College. Treasure Arista As- sembly, Manager of Annex Reporters, A candidate for Phi Beta Kappa. 15. DAVIS, SYLVIA Hunter College. Junior Arista, Swim- ming Club, Gym Squad. Thumbs up. 16. DE FELICE, ALEXANDER St. John's. Service Squad, Italian Club. Alex the great. I7. DELLARIA, ROSE M. Hunter College. Organization Office Sweet and low! 18. DE LUCE, ANTONIO N. Y. U. Senior Glee Club. No relation to the Opera Singer but just as good. 19. DEMERER, DAVE Broklyn College of Pharmacy. Soccer, Now that Dave has a diploma, he thinks he's a diplomat. 20. DICKSTEIN, ROSE Pratt Institute of Art. Program Com. A would-be artist. 21. DILIBERTO, JOHN C. C. N. Y. Italian Club, Service Squad, De liberti or death. 22. DI LORENZO, ERNEST Service Squad, 1 term, Bank Agent, Just a good boy. 23. DI MARIA, SALVATORE Columbia. Lieutenant of the Service Squad, Supply Squad. 0. K. Colonel. fAdressing Capt. Louj 24. DI PAOLA, TECLA Columbia. General Office Squad, Gym Squad, Nuhs Representative. He's been so quiet all the day, We therefore haven't much to say. 25. DIRECTOR, LEO C. C. N. Y. Manager Track Team, Direct her to Leo. 26. DONO, RAYMOND I do no. 27. DORF, VICTOR C. C. N. Y. Lieutenant Service Squad, Zebra! 28. DORMAN, BERNARD N. Y. U. School Band, Class Officer, He'll get there! But when? 29. DORMAN, VICTOR U. of Wisconsin. Has the qualifications of a door man. 30. DRUCKER, SYLVIA Brooklyn College. Office Squad, Annex School is a pleasant pastime. 31. DUBE, SYLVIA U. of California. Gym Squad, French Club, Swimming Club. Now that school is over, are your worries too? 32. DUBROW, IRENE Business. Service Squad, Book Room Squad. Destination - Business -in order to support G-r-g-e S-r-i-z-n. 33. DUBROW, SYLVIA G. Barnard. Vice-President of Senior Class, Captain Office Squad, Arista. Smiles and dimples, full of cheer. Hats of, boys, Zippy is here. 34. DUGAN JAMES R. P. I. Swimming Team, Science Club, Lunch Room Squad. Utrecht's Son of Erin. 35. DULFON, BEATRICE Swimming Club, Service Squad, Secre- tary of Prefect. It won't be long now, seh said, as she bobbed her hair. 36. DUNETZ, MILDRED Brooklyn College. Associate Editor of Comet, President of Writers' Club. Someone said she's bright. As an editor she's all-right. 37. EDELSTEIN, BEATRICE N. Y. U. Jr. Arista, Miss Simpson's. Smiling of the depression. 38. EDELSTEIN, HARRY MELVIN Savage. Hall Squad, Swimming, Fenc- ing. Laurel's only rival fLaurel Ki Hardyj Thirty-nine GDB Gomer g 1. EDISON, PEARL Business. Medical Office, Service Squad, She calls her dog Sandwich because he's half-bred. 2. ELINOWITZ, ISADORE St. John's. Track Team, Service Squad. Red, the janitor's boy. 3. ELKIN, THEODORE Yale. N. U. H. S. Staff, Service Squad, Teddy's always willing. 4. ELLIS, ESTHER N. Y. U. Adeste Fidelis, Senior Editor. Fine girl, is there anything Ellis? 5. EROCOLINO, NICHOLAS C. C. N. Y. L. R. Squad, Auditorium A good guy. 6. ERSTER, MIRIAM Damon and Pythias lSee Beatrice Ro- senj. 7. FASSBURG, FLORENCE Brooklyn College. OHice Squad, Comet Rep., Nuhs. 'Though a shy little one, Flossie is a honleyj. 8. FECHTER, MAX C. C. N. Y. R. O. T. C. First Lieutanant. Future Pershing! 9. FEHDER, LOUIS Cooper Union Lunch Room Squad. I'll fade her. 10. FEIGELMAN, RUTH A. Cornell. Adeste Fideles, Merton of the Movies . Step right up and call me eocotic . 11. FEINMAN, SYLVIA C. C. N. Y. Senior Dramatic Society. A real good sport in more ways than one. 12. EEINSTONE, IRVING M. University of Alabama. Varsity Hand- ball, Senior Glee Club, Madrigal Society. Alabama Kid. 13l FEINSTEIN, LEON B. C. C. N. Y. Aud. Squad, Handball, A true gentleman and a good sport. 14. FEINSTEIN, MIRIAM Radclife College. Gym Squad, Arista She's the kind Utrecht is proud of. 15. FEIT, PEARL Office Squad, Hockey, Basketball. She's no economist-can't economize in economics homework. 16. FELMAN,JEANNE Hunter. Math Squad, General Office, Started to run, because popularity is great fun. 17. FELS, FLORENCE University of Honolulu. English Office Squad, Arista Assembly, Program Com- Did you do your Eco? 18. FENDRICH, MAX Service Squad, 5 terms, Track Team, Our dancing son. 19. FERRARA, JOSEPH Italian Club, Service Squad. The result of four years. 20. FERRARI, JOHN , He's so patriotic he even wears a union suit. 21. FERRAZZANO, CARMINE THOS. St. John's. Service Squad, R. O. T. C. What a beautiful maiden name. 22. FICHANDLER, THOMAS Brooklyn City College. Service Squad, To discover who plays tag on Tag Day. 23. FIERING, AUELINE Cornell. Associate Chairman Athletic Field Committee, Nuhs. Industrious and sincere. 24. FINlE, SIDNEY Ohio State University. Fencing Team. Captain Louis pal. 25. FINKELSTEIN, MILTON L. I. U. Football, Lunch Room Squad, Why teachers retire. 26. FIRESTONE, GIZELLA Brooklyn College. Editor Der Trom- peter , Organization Office Squad, Arista I just can't draw cartoons- 27. FISCHTAL, ARTHUR C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Junior Arista. Age of miracles-hot air rises, he stays down. 28. FISHER, SYLVIA Travel. Comet Rep, French Club, 1 The jish're lFisherJ still biting. 29. FLAM, VITA New York University. Junior Arista, We don't know this girl. 30. FLATYEMAN, ELEANORE Columbia University. Tennis Club, Danc- ing Club, Organization Squad. 'Tho she's our brilliant secretary, she still finds time to be merry. 31. FLAX, SIDNEY Penn State College of Optometry. G. O. Representative, Track Team, Printing Hello Handsome. 32. FLEISHLAR, ETHYLE Travel. Class President, Swimming, Sten. Office. Ethyl -20 miles on the gallon. 33. FLIGELMAN, ETHEL C. C. N. Y. Lunch Room Squad Blah! 34. FORMOSA, PETER Abroad. Varsity Swimming Team, Just another Formosa. 35. FRANKELJETHEL Long Island University. Basketball, Danc- ing Club, Comet Rep. Half woman-half child-how about her wits? 36. FRATANGELO, JOSEPH St. John's College. Manager Football Can I play baseball? 37. FREED, EVEL-YN Hunter. Nuhs Rep., Leadership, Gym Squad. Pep, vigor and vim are sure to win. 38. FREEDMAN, HELEN Brooklyn College. Service Squad, G. A. L. Quite a decided student -when she de- cides. Forty-one I m. ., x 2 I Q the Qtumet 1. FRIEEDMAN, ROBERT Nuhs, Art Staff Comet. He'd be a cock-eyed wonder if he were a wonder. 2. FRIEDLAND, GRACE Hunter College. Lunch Room Squad, One seldom hears her. 3. FRIEDMAN, HAROLD C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Lieut., The Smiling Lieutenant . 4. FRIEDMAN, JEAN Long Island University. Swimming Club, Eighty is no speed, a new invention is No need. 5. FRIEDMAN, MAY Medical Society, Gym Squad, Lunch Room You may, if you may, but may you? 6. FRIEDRICH, ARTHUR Swiss Naval Academy. Service Squad, Wants a P. G. course at Sing Sing. 7. FUCA, WILLIAM C. C. N. Y. Assistant Editor of Il Clas- sico , Italian Club. To use a teacher for an anchor on a boat. 8. GAIMARI, ALFONSJE Columbia. Football, Nuhs, Service Squad. A nice, quiet chap. 9. GALBO, JOSEPHINE Maxwell Training College for Teachers. i .SLhe thinks Columbus discovered Amer- ica. 10. GEBHARDT, HELEN Nurse at Bellevue. Gym Squad, She's going to nurse away the High School pains. 11. GELB,JULES New York University. History Office Ambition-Head waiter in the Auto- mat. 12. GELFAND, CARL C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Lunch Room Somnambulist. 13. GENANDES, RUTH Brooklyn College. Girls' Reserve, Nuhs, I t's wise to be natural when you're nat- urally wise. 14. GENTSLINGER, ROSE MARIE Savage. G. A. L. Executive, Leadership, New dresses will hide those muscles. 15. GERST, HELEN Her ambition is to get the man behind the Camera , 16. GEVIRTZMAN, SARAH Browne's University. Dr. Leuch's Squad, She's so forward especially with Dutchmen. 17. GIGLIO, JOSEPH College. Just a Giglio. 18. GILBERT, GIEORGE University of Southern California. Capt. of Aud. Squad. At California, they're looking for a double for Rex, the wonder horse. 19. GILINSKY, EVELYN N. Y. U. Gym Squad, Actually a student. 20. GIMBEL, IDA Long Island University. Secretary of English Class, Treasurer of Class, Chock full o' charm. 21. GINDI, ELI N. Y. U. Nuhs Representative, Comet Mahatma Gindi. 22. GINSBURG, RACILE Maxwell Training. Nuhs Manager, A single dose of dimples, a double dose of pep. 23. GLASS, JOEL U. S. Military Academy, West Point. He'll be in the Reserve Order of Tin Cans. 24. RICHMAN, SARAH Hunter. Students' Council, Arista. . A big noise over a lot of something. 25. GOLDBERG, FRANCES Business. Service Squad, Swimming. She's up to the minute in every way throughout the day. 26. GOLDBERG, JACK University of Buffalo. Chairman Unem- ployment Fund, President Senior Class. All girls sigh. 27. GOLDBERG, ROSIE . . My ambition is to have ambition. 28. GOLDBERG, RUTH New York University. Latin Club, Ger- man Club, Basketball. No matter when you meet her, she'll greet you with a smile. 29. GOLDFAR-B, TOBIAS C. C. N. Y. Arista Assembly, Arista One nice chap. 30. GOLDMAN, CHARLES C. C. N. Y, Service Squad, Lunch Room The man with plenty of gold. 31. GOLDSHEIN, ROSE C. C.'N. Y. Comet Representative. Uses Ivory Soap-99 44-100W pure. 32. GOLDSTEIN, HELEN St. John's. Swimming Club. A modest, unspoiled child. 33. GOLDSTEIN, HYMAN I Columbia College. Nuhs -Staff, Service Squad, Comet Representative. He's an alchemist-He wants to make gold from steins. 34. GOODMAN, ABE I g Brooklyn College. Arista, Latin Coaching Squad, Goodman? 35. GOODMAN, JEANETTE Office Squad, Basketball Team. She's so good 'Knock on wood'. 36. GOODMAN, MILTON University of Hoboken. Service Squad, No such thing. 37. GOODMAN, RUTH N. Y. U. Comet Representative, Class Officer, Basketball Team, Innocence personified. 38. GOODMAN, SAM C. C. N. Y. Captain Commercial Office. He makes a lot of noise-but he does it quietly. Forty-three The Gomer 1. GOODMAN, SIDNEY Captain of Mimeograph Squad, Always full of doit . 2, GORDON, DOROTHY New York University. Service Squad, Dot's a nice kid and we all like her. 3. GOTTESMAN, ABE N. Y. U. Library Squad, Auditorium Squad, Mr. Golub's Hall Squad. Ask Mr. Golub. 4. GOTTLIEB, JULIUS University of North Cafrolina, Captain of Physics Squad, 4 years Varsity Soccer -All Scholastic, Baseball. We can't boost him 5. GRABAWETSKY, MIRIAM Brooklyn College. Lunch Room Squad, A member of the Lunch Room Squad 6. GRAFF, DAVID St. John's University. Captain of Span- ish Book Room, President of Captains' League, Senior Editor. Utrecht's biggest grafter. 7. GRAMMAR, ROSALIE St. Joseph's College. Basketball Team, An athlete and a scholar. 8. GRECO, DOMINIC St. John's College, Auditorium Squad, Desire-to emulate Col. Lindbergh! 9. GREEN, BEATRICE Maxwell Training School. Office Squad, What .a nervous rwreck. 10. GREEN, MIRIAM Cornell. Arista, Tennis Swimming Clubs, On the demand side of economics. 11, GREENBERG, BENJAMIN B. C. C. N. Y. Medical Society, Dramatic Society, Chem. Squad. As full of pep as a Utrecht-Madison gwme. 12. GREENBERG, GOLDYE Business College. Swimming Club. h Her senior editor was afraid to knock er, 13. GREENSTEIN, MINNIE N. Y. U. Program Committee. The perfect sweet girl graduate. 14. GREISSMAN, HARRY N. Y. U. Associate News Editor of Nuhs, Small, but snappy. 15. GROSS, EVELYN The Personality Kid! 16. GROSS, HERMAN University of Alabama. 3 years Eng- lish Book Room. How's the big brother? 17. GROSSMAN, SIDNEY U. of Southern California. Service Squad, Sidney! 18. GREENSPAN, JOSEPH Brooklyn College. Editor-in-chief of the gomgt, Track Team, Sr., Jr. Executive of Runnin' and writin' and crusadin'. 19. GROSS, SYLVIA N. Y. U. Secretary to Miss Manahan. A Gross' of personality. 20. GUGLIELMELLI, VIRGIL N. Y. U. Track Team. Champion spaghetti crocheter. 21. GULKIN, SYLVIA N. Y. U. Senior Glee Club, Office Squad, Sweet, neat, petite. 22. HABIB, VICTOR St. John's. R. O. T. C., Service Squad. Ha-Ha-Habib's bit is nit. 23. HALEM, BERNARD C. C. N. Y. Mimeograpm Squad, 2 years, President of the Chiselers' Union. 24. HALLORAN, DONALD Brooklyn Poly. Engineer! 25. HALHERN, ALLEN U. of California. Movie Club, Science Club. Is eat so? 26. HALPRIN, ESTELLE Oxford. Comet Staff, Dramatic Society, She's reserved. Reserved for whom? 27. HANDSCHUH, LEONARD L. Columbia. Biology Squad, Service Squad, That's your job. 28. HARRIS, BERNICE Pratt's. Swimming Club, Dancing Club, Sweet, petite, Bernice is hard to beat. Boop-boop-a-doop. 29. HARRIS, HORTENSE Pratt Institute. Office Squad, Brush Club, Swimming. She wonders why they say the Pacific is Pacific. 30. HARRIS, VICTOR St. John's. Swimming, Track, Science Club. Studied biology so he could say Eat your heart out . 31. I-IAUGE, JOE Bell Laboratories. Biology Squad. A little big man. 32. HELLIER, FANNIE N. Y. U. Gym Squad, Lunch Room Squad, Quiet at school, but exercises her vocal chords at home! 33. HELLER, JESSE C. C. N. Y. Spanish Club, Service Squad, See for yourself. 34. HERSCHBEIN, NORMAN C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Sergeant, He'll get there some day. 35. HILLSBERG, ABE C. C. N. Y. Senior Arista and Junior Arista Member, Class President, Program Committee. We see him as thru the halls we walk, And wonder if the boy can talk. 36. HINDUS, MILTON Assistant Captain L. R. Squad. He made a sweeping success of high school. Blah! 37. HITTNER, BERTHA N. Y. U. Senior Arista, Junior Arista, Neat, precise, always nice. 38. HOCHBERG, ALVIN - U. of Alabama. Service Squad Officer, You so and so. Forty-five .,-M., 'N . .i.1V:,11 k , :iff5'm' QU N53 S, 411112 unmet A 1. HOFFMAN, JOSEPH St. John's. Lieut. Auditorium Squad, Happy go-lucky, carefree and bright. 2. HOFFMAN, MURRAY Wisconsin. Captain of Chemistry Lab. Captain of the 'African Golf team'.' 3. HOGLUND, WALDEMAR Business. Track Team. Just plain Haglund to you! 4. HORN, ESTHER Pratt Institute of Design. Dramatic Club, Is she nice? I .ask you. 7 5. HOROWITZ, HELEN Brooklyn College. German Club, Ger- man Library, Regents Recording Com- mittee. Abooe all, a scholar. 6. HOROWITZ, L. HARRY Stevens University. Madrigal Society Wake up, big boy, Regents are over. 7. HOROWITZ, MYRA Maxwell Training School. Lunch Room Just a sweet girl graduate. 8. HORWITZ, SHIRLEY Hunter College. Arista Assembly, Latin Office Squad, Program Committee. 0. K. 9. HUPCHER, ROSE St. John's. Swimming Club, Office Squad, Rose is a good chew . 10. HURWITZ, HELEN N. Y. U. Physics Prep, 5 terms, Nuhs. She's an early Reiser, but it's merely a worm. 11. HUTTENLOCHER, FRANCES Business. Nuhs Representative, Gym Squad, Office Squad. She reached one goal-graduation. 12. IGNATOW, DAVID A boost you want, a knock you'll get. 13. IMBERMAN, BEN Ohio State University. We can't knock him-he's a regulafr feller. 14. ISAACS,MILDRED Hunter. Captain Math Office, English Office, Executive Junior Arista. You'll see her on 14th St.: neafr the Civic Rep. 15. ISRAEL, CORNIEL St. John's College. French Club, Office Squad, Swimming Club. Friends has she 'many-Foes has she any? 16. ISSLER, ESTELLE New York University. Library Squad, She'll win her vway with that Kolynos smile. 17. IVERSON, ARTHUR St. John's. Hockey Team, Lacrosse Team, He prefers 'em blonde! 18. JACOBSON, TILLIE University of Wisconsin. Nuhs Repre- sentative, Swimming Squad, Class Officer. Another worker, and we sure like her. 19. JOSEPHS, ESTELLE N. Y. U. Service Squad, Pretty, winsome, and then some. 20. JOSEPHOWITZ, JEROME Columbia. Nuhs Staff, Arista Assembly, Secretary of the Arista! 21. KANNIER, HAROLD St. John's. Service Squad, Merton of the Movies. Kanner take it? 22. KAPLAN, IDA Hebrew Teachers' Institute. Service Squad, Program Committee, Arista. Business before pleasure, maybe? 23. KASTIN, PEARL Columbia. Physics Prep Squad. Pearls are precious, and she's no ex- ception. 24. KATZ, SYLVIA Business. Miss Simpson's Secretary, Of- ficer of Classes and Clubs. Actions speak louder than words. 25. KAUFFMAN, REVA Brooklyn College. Math Office Squad, Better done for than said. 26. KAUFMAN, JEROME Arista, History Squad, German Club, How's your Eco getting along? 27. KAUFMAN, MERVYN U. of Southern California. Service Squad, Future absent-minded professor. 28. KAUFMAN RALPH Brooklyn College. Organization Office His picture tells the story. 29. KAUFMAN, RUTH N. Y. U. Office Squad, Service Squad, Just one of those-1 30. KEHRMANN, SAMUEL N. Y. U. Bank Representative, Chess Club and Eco Club, Lunch Room Squad. He's as useful as the p in pneumonia. 31. KERMAN, RUTH B. C. C. N. Y. Nuhs Representative, Ser- v1ce Squad, G. A. L. Don't over-work yourself 32. KIRSCH, HEIJEN N. Y. U. Swimming Club, General Office Has kept her own affairs, and with work we hope she'll get there. 33. KIRSCHNER, NORA St. Lawrence U. Basketball Club, Swim- ming Club, Hockey Club. I wonder who this quarterback is that she always talks about! 34. RESNICK, LOUISE Cornell. Medical Society, Swimming, A mild and modern modest miss. 35. KLEIN, EDITH Long Island Hospital. Lunch Room . Good sense and good nature do ever goin. 36. KLEIN, HAROLD U. of So. California. President of the Medical Society. Harold's second name's Klein' 37. KOETH, SELMA C. C. N. Y. Dramatic Club, Dancing A good poet, if you don't know it. 38. KOPLOVVITZ, SELMA C. C. N. Y. Lunch Room Squad, Gym Squad, Swimming. It's the Red in her-blood. F arty-.rezfen V r GDB QEDIIIZI 1. KORN, YETTA U. of California. Glee Club, Class Offi- cer, President of Ronohs. A girl who is sincere and true, 2. KOWALSKY, iEUNICE Abroad. Senior Arista, Gym Squad, Mr. Greenberg's pal - ouch! 3. KRAMER, LEONARD U. of Vienna. Sergeant of Lunch Room Something attempted, something done. 4. KRAVITZ, IJEONARD C. C. N. Y. Class Secretary, 7 terms, He's so wild, he's crazy over himself. 5. KRISTAL, ELI Swimming Team, 2 yrs., Service Squad, A gallon of talk to a teaspoon of wisdom. 6. KRITCHMAN, BENJAMIN Columbia. Medical Society, History Club, Got such a kick out of his first cut- he's still cutting. 7. KROMASH, SAMUEL N. Y. U. Office Squad, Biology Squad, Kramash is a new metal-no polishing 8. KUSHNER, BERNARD St. John's. Class Officer, General Office Honest, it ain't my fault. 9. KWIAT, FRANCES Centenary College. Commercial Office, I If we only knew her, we could knock ter. ,,,,,, 10. LACHS, LIBBY N. Y. U. We like her better every day. 11. LAMBERT, BERTRAM Yale. Nuhs Staff, Comet Take it on the lam, bert. 12. LAROCCA, ANGELINA Hunter College. Italian Representative, Gym Squad. She doesn't have much to say, But we certainly like her anyway. 13. LAUTMAN, WILLIAM U. of Michigan. 3 yrs. Basketball, 2 yrs. Class Officer, Football. What an Eckel! 14. LIBOWITZ, HESTHER C. C. N. Y. Gym Squad, Lunch Room Free from care. 15. LEDERMAN, SYLVIA South Cofrolina. Gym Squad, Service Squad, English Office Squad. It's always circus time when she is near! 16. LEDVITCH, JUDITH Brooklyn College. Gym Squad, Office Squad Secretary to Miss Steigman. Red hair, a dimple, and a double dose of pep. 17. LEHMAN, YETTA ' Damrosch Conservatory. Miss Simp- son's Squad, Gym Squad. Generally speaking-Well she is. 18. LEMKIN. LOTTIE N. Y. U. Glee Club. An I. W. W. Industrious Wise Work- Staff, Club, Nuhs er 19. LEMUS, JOSEPH C. C. N. Y. Fencing Squad. The idol of his class, he's been idle for years. 20. LERNER, DAVID School of Hard Work. L. R. Squad. The fencing wizard? 21. LDERNER, FLORENCE School of Journalism. Regents Recording Committee, Class President, Arista. As straight-laced as what she wears. 22. LESSELBAUM, MAX Brooklyn College. Medical Society, His- tory Club, German Club. 'The end of the football team. 23. LEVENTHAL, IVAN God 'Only Knows. Service Squad, Band, Relative to the Czar. 24. LEVIN, HELEN Atlantic University. Class Officer, An- nex Service Squad, Annex Book Room Squad. She'll be so Pacific-fied at Atlantic U. 25. LEVINE, DAVID N. Y. U. History Squad, Assistant Manager of Basketball Team, Service Squad. He must be Irish. 26. LEVY, HELEN Travel. Tennis Club, Hockey Club, Gym Squad. Sweet and jolly-that Helen's way. 27.' LEVY, LILLIAN Brooklyn College. Junior Arista, Eng- lish Office Squad, Gym Squad. Why so very quiet, Lil? 28. LIGHTER, FLORENCE Brooklyn College. French Club, Ger- man Club, Hebrew Club. No! I am not French , 29. LIEBERMAN, MOLLIE Barnard. Miss Simpson's Squad, Treas- urer Ronah Girl Reserves. Pretty' face, gracious ways. 30. LIFSCHITZ, SYLVIA N. Y. U. Arista member, French Club, 100 Per Cent Pure. 31. LINSKY, PHILIP N. Y. U. History Squad, Service Squad, Bo, Yo' feet ain't mates. 32. LIPPMAN, SYLVIA N. Y. U. Wish we knew of all the Sylvias that bloom in New Utrecht. 33. LIPPOFF, MIRIAM N. Y. U. Gym Squad, Leadership Club, The kind the boys all like to meet. 34. LIPSHITZ, ROSE N. Y. U. Glee Club, Basketball. A sunny smile, that's her way. 35. LIPSTADT, SHIRLEY Long Island U. Gym Squad, Swimming She thinks a football coach has four wheels. 36. LITTMAN, MAX U. of Maine. Nuhs Circulation Staff. Don't judge a man f?J by the color of his tie. 37. LITWIN, JEANNE Arista, Glee Club and Swimming. Oh boy how neat. 38. LOMANGINO, NICHOLAS N. Y. U--Now York Unemployed Forty-nine w N 1 1 w i l N V 1 1 s Ghz Qtumet 1. LIPSON, IRVING J. Captain of Service Squad. Which would you prefer: Norma Shearer, Greta Garbo, or B-L-E-I 2. LUSTGARTEN, FLORENCE Maxwell Teachers' Training. Ass't Cir- culation Manager of Comet, Comptroller of Senior Class, The better half of the three L's. fLip- son, Lustgarten, and Lottenbergj 3. LOTTENBERG, LOUIS G. N. Y. U. Captain of the Service Squad, Chief Senior Editor of Comet. Built like Quebec-on a bluff 4. LOPATKIN, RUTH Brooklyn College. Senior Arista, Pro- gram Committee, Class President. Scholarship plus charm-who could ask for any more? 5. LORENZO, QUARTANO Fordham. Italian Club, Track Team, He has the intelligence of a bullet- 6. RALPH, LUCANO Fordham. Service Squad, R. O. T. C., He's O. K. 7. LURIA, ELSIE Hockey, French Club, Associate Editor Practice makes a writer. 8. LUPOWITZ, MARIAN What have you? 9. MANHEIMER, DEAN N. Y. U. Arista. Dean Manheimer of N. Y. U.! 10. MAIN, PHOEBE Brooklyn College. Biology Squad, Arista. Blue-eyed blonde, and she's smart. 11. MANEZON, ALBERT Spanish Club, L.R. Squad, Service Squad. Bull Montana. 12. MANDEL, JULIUS Iowa. 2 Years Varsity Soccer, Track. Actually scored a goal? 13. MARGOLIS, RUTH N. Y. U. Hall Squad, Senior Glee Club, She's never in prefect, she's faithful to Mr. Cohen's Squad. 14. MARKMAN, DOROTHY U. of California. Service Squad, Arista. What does that sinister look signify? 15. MARKOWITZ, CHARLES Lieutenant Service Squad, Golf, Track. He's ambitious, if nothing else. 16. MARKOWITZ, IDA Business. Gym Squad, Swimming Club. Mother's pride and joy. 17. MATE, STELLA N. Y. U. Basketball, Swimming, Hockey. She'll be a good mate to somebody. 18. MAURIELLO, LOUIS C. C. N. Y. Senior Editor, Arista, Track They call him Chuche! 19. MAY, NETTIE C. C. N. Y. Office Squad. Of Nettie we have no kick, we all agree that she's a brick. 20. MEDON, LUELLA St. John's. V. P. of Seventh Form, G.A.L. Gentlemen prefer blondes. Can you blame them? 21. MEIROWITZ, AMY Brooklyn College. 2 Years Organization Committee. Ow-itz-mire we must go through. 22. MELTZER, BEATRICIE Cornell University. Junior Arista, Biol- Modest possessor of that happy blend -Those two qualities, student and friend. 23. MEYER, ESTHER C. C. N. Y. Class Secretary, Basket- ball, Hockey. Honest endeavor is the greatest factor in success. 24. MEYERS, RUTH Business. Swimming Squad and Club, A real good scout. 25. MEYERSON, CHARLES C. C. N. Y. Evening. Service Squad, We don't know him. 26. MOGAVERO, PROVIDENZA Long Island University. Physics Prep We like her even if we don't always get the name right. 27. MORIBER, FLORENCE N. Y. U. Class Officer, Gym Squad, A queen in disguise-a treat to the eyes-but only a stage hand. 28. MIHLRAT, JACK N. Y. U. Track, Service Squad, Oh you little runner. 29. MILELLA, ALBERT Lunch Room Squad, R. O. T. C. There was a fella By name Milella 30. MILKMAN, RUTH University of Akron. Gym Squad, Class Officer. Her many charms are added to by her modesty. Us that 0. K., Ruth?J 31. MILLER, HARRY C. C. N. Y. Member of G. O. He's a good guy, when you know him. 32. MILLER, PHYLLIS New York University. Service Squad, Her prefect teacher doesn't under- stand her. 33. MILLER, WILLIAM Guggenheim School of Aeronautics, N. Y. U. 2 Years Class Officer, Aviation .Like an aeroplane--always up in the air. 34. MITCHELL, HAROLD Lunch Room, Program Committee. Son of his father, Mr. .Mitchell. 35. MITTLEMAN, GUSTAWE Business. Here's hoping he gets ahead, he needs one. 36. MONTALBANO, JOSEPH Thinks Ben Jonson is the father of Samuel Johnson. 37. MOSES, SYLVIA Brooklyn College. Junior Arista. Timidity is her virtue. Fifty-one L the Qllumzt 1. NAVARRA, ANTHONY C. C. N. Y. Swimming Team, Track, Not Sierra? 2. NECKRITZ, BENJAMIN C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Comet Staff, Nuhs. Benny sent me. 3. NERI, JEROME Service Squad, Lunchroom Squad, Bas- ketball Squad fAnnexJ. True to his name. 4. NEUEELD, JOSEPH U. of Budapest. Captain of Soccer Team, Chem Squad, P. T. Clerk. See Nick. 5. NEUFELD, NICHOLAS Brooklyn College. Soccer Team, Lunch- room Squad, P. T. Squad. See Joe. 6. NONOGRADSKY, DORIS Maxwell Teachers Training. Nuhs Rep- She's going to take psychology. 7. NOWICK, HERMAN C. C. N. Y. Service Squad. If you don't know Nowick you don't know no one. 8. OCHS, FRED Business. Service Squad, Track, Lunch Room Squad. Hi, there, Ox. 9. OLSON, HERBERT E. N. Y. U. He came all the way from Brooklyn 10. OROFINO, ROSE N. Y. U. Office Squad, Swimming Club, Neat, preciseg always nice. 11. OXHORN, SEYMOUR Louisville, Ky. Chem Squad, 3 years, Oh, yeah' 12. PAPA, JOSEPHINHE Business. Program Committee, 2 terms, Josephine Papa and Mama. 13. PARLATORE, GILDO City College of New York. Golf Team, Told Mr. Moses how to grow up. 14. PELLEGRINI, FRANK FL. I. U. Nuhs Representative, Comet Just a good boy. 15. PENNA, ROCCO Colgate University. Italian Club. Spells his -name with a capital. 16. PENSAK, SYLVIA Brooklyn College. Basketball Club. Sylvia has red hair, and plenty of freckles to match. 17. PENSO, JOSEPH N. Y. U. Service Squad. May all his children be Service Squad- ders. 18. PERLOW, SARA St. John's. Hockey, Mrs. Friedman's Squad, Basketball. See if you can find it, Swra. fWith apologies to Mrs. J. F. Friedman.l 19. PERLMAN, MOLLIE C. C. N. Y. Sorores Amicitia, Hockey, To catch the crook in a persons' arm. 20. HESSIRILO, POLLY Brooklyn College. Gym Squad, Program Committee, Member of G. O. Just another girl. 21. PESTER, HORTENSE RHODA Gym Squad, Mrs. Avirett's Squad. Very often giggles. 'To rhyme her walk also wiggles. 22. PETRULLO, MARGUERITE Damrosch. Spanish Club, Swimming 0. K. as a musician, but as a neigh- bor? 23. PICKER, HYMAN U. of Idaho. Football, 3 years, Service Squad, Auditorium Squad. Future C. C. N. Y. quarterback. 24. PILIERI, MARY Business. Hockey Team, Organization Oifice. As noisy as a falling snowflake. 25. PINCUS, ARTHUR U. of Alabama. Nuhs Representative, His one great ambition is to be a graduate of Vassar. 26. PLUMB, BURTON Colgate. Civics Club. He admits he's modest! 27. POMIERANTZ, ELEANOR Barnard. President of Prefect, Math Squad, Tennis. Very Pompy . 28. POSNER, EDITH Brooklyn College. Miss Simpson's Squad, I Miss Simpson says so, why shouldn't 2 29. POSNER, SYLVIA New York University. Program Com. Her only labor is to kill time. 30. POSTELNEK, REBECCA University of Paris. Lunch Room Squad, Someday she'll be a success, someday. 31. POWERS, DAVID U. S. Naval Academy. Service Squad, Devoid of Power. 32. PRESSMAN, MORRIS Captain Spanish and German Office He'd like to see the dawn blush. 33. PRONSKY, LOUIS Long Island University. Service Squad, He's generous on the school's account. 34. PRUSLIN, KALMAN N. Y. U. President of the Senior Aris- ta, Captain of the Fourth Floor Hall Dignity and wisdom, what a combina- tion. 35. PRISS, MOE University of Wisconsin. Hall Squad, Well' he's graduating at last. 36. PUGLISE, LOUISE New York University. Chemistry Squad. Louise is sweet. 37. RABB, ARTHUR U. of Pennsylvania. Captain Hall Squad, His ambition is to water the bulbs in an electric light plant. 38. RABINOWITZ, ISIDORE New York University. Baseball, Class Basketball, Class Oificer. Lives with his parents in their house. Fifty-three Qlibe Qlnmet 1. RABINOWITZ, JOSEPH N. Y. U. He took study as a major. 2. RADIN, HYMAN C. C. N. Y. Track, Nuhs, Comet Lit- erary Editor. Gullible Radin. 3. RAFFER, GERTRUDE Business. Glee Club, 2 years, OH'icer of Class, Comet Representative. She'll always go you one better. 4. RAFF'ER, MILTON St. John's. 2 years History Squad, Cap- tain of History Squad. We asked you for a book a month ago. 5. RAO, VINCENT New York University. President of the Spanish Club, Editor of the Spanish Paper El Correo . The Spanish Jimmy Valentine. 6. RATZAN, ABRAHAM University of erusalem. All-Scholastic Soccer, Championship Basketball, Presi- dents G. A. L. It's a revelation to watch him sock that ball. 7. REDNER, ROSE Brooklyn College. Hall Squad, Senior Glee Club, Junior Orchestra. They can't make them much better' 8. REICH, HELEN Leader Senior Arista, Sten and Type Committee. Genius .V ! 9. REICH, LEO Brooklyn Pharmacy College. Class Pres- ident, 1 year, German Club. He's so loud he can't fall asleep. 10. REINER, HERMAN Hall Squad, Chem Squad. Boy comedian of Brooklyn. 11. REINER, SOL Pratt. Service Squad, Library Squad, Is there anyone finer than Sol Reiner? 12. REINGOLD, BERNICE N. Y. U. Spanish Club, Treasurer of the Adeste Fidelis, Senior Editor. Nice girl-Bernice. 13. REINSTEIN, DANIEL L. I. U. College Entrance Squad, Tennis. One of Mr. Leonard's gentlemen. 14. REISER, WILLIAM Captain Sten and Type. Why girls leave New Utrecht. 15. RELKIN, RITA R. Maxwell Teachers' College. Gym Squad, As pretty as a picture, and what a frame. 16. KITOGRAPH, EVA Brooklyn College. Lunch Room Squad, The kind that one remembers. 17. REZNITSKY, ALFRED St. John's College. Lacrosse, Football, Snow Shoes. 18. RICH, HERBERT C. C. N. Y. Program Committee, Sec- cretary Math Club, Debating Squad. He'll be a great help to his mother. 19. RICH, soL. S. Brooklyn. Service Squad. Rich-in pestful ways. 20. RICHMAN, JACK University of Pennsylvania. Alumni Editor of the Comet, Students' Council, Horatio Alger's prodigy. 21. GOLDBERG, EVELYN N. Y. U. Office Squad, 2 terms, German Just another Goldberg. 22. RIDLESS, HARRIETTE New York University. Captain Appel- jack, Ronoh Girls, Basketball. One of her favorite Ridlees. 23. RIFKIN, HY Northwestern. Program Committe, Nuhs How high? 24. RIFICI, JOSEPH St. ohn's. Track, Cross Country. To find out how long medium is. 25. RISPOLI, JOSEPH C. L. I. U. Medical Society. Even his breath comes in short pants. 26. RITTENSTEIN, BELLE N. Y. U. German Club, Gym Squad, A million dollar baby. 27. RITZER, ESTHER Business. Swimming Club, Tennis Club, You won't find it on the ceiling, Esther. 28. ROSE, GRACE Maxwell Teachers' Training. Class Of- ficer, 3 terms, Swimming, Basketball. Miss Rose is grace personified. 29. ROSENBERG, NATALIE St. John's. Arista, Secretary of Class. What's the Arista going to do, now that you're leaving? 30. ROSENBERG, PERRY University of Madrid. Captain Track Team, Junior Varsity Basketball. He wants to cultivate Spanish blood. 31. ROSENBLUM, ABRAHAM C. C. N. Y. Comet Representative. He doesn't like dogs, so he eats frank- furters. 32. ROSENBLUM, ABRAHAM St. John's. Soccer Squad, Library Squad, Is Rosie still bluming ? 33. ROSENBLUM, LOUIS Columbia. German Club, Junior Arista. Can write, can read, and can not. 34. ROSENBLUTH, ISIDORE C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, History So fast, his future is past. 35. ROSENTHAL, MIRIAM C. C. N. Y. Lunch Room Squad. Her nature's sweet - She can't be beat. 36. ROSENIWASSER, SIDNEY N. Y. U. Inventor of rosewater. 37. ROSKIN, BENJAMIN China University. 3 Years Baseball, 2 years Basketball, 2 years Football, Pres. of G. O. As good a President as Utrecht ever had. 38. ROTH, HILDA Pace Institute. Senior Arista, Program Committee, Organization Office Squad, Who is she going to pace ? Fifty-five T The Qlomet 1. ROTH, JULES C. C. N. Y. Track Squad, Debating. 2. ROTHENBERG, MARION A . Barnard. Captain of the Engllsh Office She is as pretty as she is clever, 3. ROTHENBERG, MYRON C. C. N. Y. Orchestra, Arista. Utrecht's Fiddler. 4. ROUFBERG, GEO. N. Y. U. Auditorium Squad Corporal, Lunch Room Squad. There goes the Auditorium Squad. 5. RUBIN, EVELYN St. John's. Arista, Seventh Form Com. Evelyn, come him, rub-in this lini- ment! 6. RUBIN, JACK T. U. of Vladivostok. Captain Arts Squad, Why girls who leave home come back. 7. RUBIN, SAM Tri-State College. Auditorium Squad, He uses Faery Soap!-Elmer Zilch. 8. RUBEN-STEIN, ELI C. C. N. Y. Spanish, German Squads, Don't tell him-he's got a girl. 9. RUBINSTEIN, LUCILLE University of Afghanistan. Arista Sen- ate, Dramatic Society, Program Commit- tee. If the eyes don't put you wise-what will? 10. RUTT, JACK New York University. Service Squad, I just dote on creampujs. 11. RADOM, JACOB West Point. Major R. O. T. C. Class He's a good scout. 12. SACHS, JULIUS Ya-le. Arista, Service Squad, Organi- zation Office Squad. A big man in a little way. 13. SACHS, LEAH ' Cornell. Office Squad, Class Officer, We'll vouch for her. 14. SAFIR, BERTHA N. Y. U. Office Squad, Regents Record- ing Committee, Nuhs Representative. Hope N. Y. U. can use you. 15 SALSBERG, JOSEPH Columbia University. Service Squad, 'The Historian. 16. SAKOWITZ, RUTH Hunter. Miss Schoenfield's Squad, What are you going to hunt, Ruth? 17. SAKS, EVELYN Business. Swimming, Basketball, Office Squad. She has Saks appeal. 18. SALVATORE, CARLETTA C. C. N. Y. Italian Club, Track Team, 0. K., Salvy. 19. SANTULLI, THOMAS Columbia. Program Committee, Man- ager Football Team, Chem Squad. He is not lwell-known, but he is efi- cient. 20. SAVITZKY, NATHAN N. Y. U. Service Squad, Baseball Team, We can't knock him. 21. SCAVUZZO, JOHN Assistant Manager Football, Service Squad, Baseball. 'The biology expert-A receiver of homework. 22. SCHAMIS, ELSIE Cornell. Miss Simpson's Squad, Gym Squad. Nowadays they call it a Sexton. 23. SCHAPIRO, PEARL College of Pharmacy. Miss Schoenfleld's Squad. The Pearl of Great Price. 24. SCHECHTER, FAY C. C. N. Y. Basketball, Italian Club, She thinks that the late bell is too early. 25. SCHECHTER, HELEN Business. Lunch Room Squad, Regents Recording Committee, German Club. You're worldly wise, but youfve much to learn. 26. SCHEER, WILLIAM Swarthmore. Secretary of the 7th Form, No, Willie, cube sugar does not come from cube roots. 27. SCHEINHOLZ, LAWRENCE C. C. N. Y. Evening. Biology Squad, Does he like his eco ? 28. SCHLAR, ROSE A. Mt. Holyoke. Lieutenant of Bookroom Squad fAnnexJ, Program Committee, What a scholar? 29. SCHLEIFER, BETTY C. C. N. Y. Secretary to Mrs. Avirett, How's the boss??? 30. SCHMIDT, BERNICE Cornell University. Junior Arista, Biol- ogy Club, Class Officer fPresidentJ. One of the best. 31. SCHNEIDER, BEATRICE N. Y. U. Gym Squad, Tennis Club, Bet she gets away with unprepared marks. 32. SCHNEIDER, IDA N. Y. U. Swimming Squad, Hall Squad, As sweet as the rythm of her name. 33. SCHNEIDER, YETTA New York University. Office Squad, She must have insomnia. She woke up twice during a class. 34. SCHNEIDERMAN, SYLVIA French Office, 7th term. The kind one likes to meet. 35. SCHNEIDERMAN, TULLY Leland Stanford. Leland, I won't Stan-ford it. 36. SCHNEEWEISS, BETTY University of Vienna. Regents Record- mg Committee, Miss Simpson's Squad, We'll see you at Brooklyn next term. 37. SCHOFIELD, THEODORE S. West Virginia University. Nuhs, Med- ical Society, Chem Lab Squad. The only way to get a-head is to use the one you've got. 38. SCHOTTENFELD, RUTH Business. Comet Representative, Nuhs Sweetness personified. Fifty-Jeven I W AAM.. I I 1 1 R Qlibe Qllomzr 1. SCHULMAN, ABRAHAM University of Honolulu. Math Club. Beware of the grass skirts. 2. SCHULSTOCK, EDWARD Ambition is to be government worker to do nothing. 3. SCHULTZ, BERNARD City College. German Club. Lunch Room Squad. Schultz, the beer baron. 4. SCHULWOLF, MEYER Oberlin. Assistant Captain Lunch Room Squad, Printing Squad. Schulwolf, leave the girls alone. 5. SCHWARTZ, HAROLD C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Mimeo- graph Squad, Track Team. Just another service squadder. 6. SCHWARTZ, LILLIAN University of Syracuse. Office A scholar-but not a prig. 7. SCHWARTZ, MADELINE Business School. Gym Squad. Low! but of high intensity. 8. SCHWARTZ, MEYER New York University. Auditorium Squad. Perpetual motion-he is always in a blizzard. 9. SCHWARTZ, NATHAN N. Y. U. Basketball, Baseball, Senior Comet Editor. Follow him and you'll never go wrong! 10. SCHWARTZ, RUTH Hunter College. Basketball, Comet Rep. If you want news, just lend a willing ear. 11. SCHWARTZ, SOL University of China. Service Squad, The mosquito with a moustache in- stead of a sting. 12. SCHWARTZBERG, MIRIAM Brooklyn College. English Oifice Squad, A sy'mphony in a flat. 13. SCHWIMMER, IRVING Alabama. Biology Squad, Track Squad, He was also there. 14. SEAGREN, CARL New York Merchant Marine Acad. Civ- ics Club, Science Club. Ah, he's going to be a pirate. 15. SEELIG, HARVEY Harvard. Captain Mr. Wa1dbaum's Squad, Secretary Senior Arista. Studied everything-but the exam questions. 16. SEGAL, MARCUS Soccer, Football. Do you see a gull? 17. SEIDEN, FELIX Class President, Soccer Team, Class Sec- retary. Actions speak louder than words. 18. SELEVAN, BERNARD Hollywood. Senior Prom Committee, Buys Comet on credit-class chiseler. 19. SELIG, ROBERT N. Y. U. Chess Club, German Club, ' He's been. as useful as the letter P in pneumonia. Squad, 20. SEREBRINSKY, HELEN St. John's College. Secretary of Class One ofthe busy bees. 21. SHANDLING, MEYER Brooklyn QC. C. N. YJ. Track, Golf. African Golf? 22. SHAPIRO, FRANCES Business. Library Squad, Stenq Office, One of the two lmanyj Shapiros. 23. SHAPIRO, PEARL I C. C. N. Y. Comet Representative, A Pearl of a girl. 24. SHAW, MATTHEW Brooklyn College. Service Squad, Lunch Room Squad, Fencing Squad. He'll make a good fence. 25. SHEA, JAMES N. Y. U. Office Squad, Class Officer, James, shea was here! 26. SHELDON, PAULINE g Brooklyn. Mrs. Friedman's Squad, Vice- President of French Club, Lunch Squad. Who are you Sheldon? 27. SHENK, MILTON N. Y. U. Lunch Room Shenk you. 28. SIEGXEL, MAX Class President, Handball Squad, Swim- ing Team. Why girls stay home. 29. SIEGEL, MORRIS C. C. N. Y. Library Squad. M. S. of the R. O. T. C. in C. C. N. Y. 30. RUTH SILVERSTEIN Brooklyn College. English Office Squad, We knew R. S. 31. SILVERSTEIN, SOL S. University of Southeast Kalamazoo. Track Team, Soccer Team, Library Squad. S. S. S. Surely something simple! 32. SIMONS, CHARLES Alabama. R. O. T. C., Hockey. A great admirer of Bulloch , 33. SIMON, DANIEL - C. C. N. Y. Nuhs, Vice-President Class. Sigh, mon Daniel. 34. SIMON, FLORENCE N. Y. U. Arista Assembly, Lunch Room Always in a reverie. 35. SINCOFF, SIDNEY Brooklyn College. ' Lieutenant Lunch Room Squad, Writers' Club. Get the sink off the floor! 36. SLACHTER, JEANETTE Art School. Gym Squad, Service Squad, Her face is her boost. 37. SLAVITSKY, SADYE Adelphi. Treas. of Junior Form, Treas. of 7th Form. A barrel of noise, Sadie. 38. SMILOWITZ, OTTO C. C. N. Y. Brass Band, Lunch Room. Otto, behave. Squad, Track Fzfty-nine 'em ui 2' , M .f hy 4.5 gwff .gf 'EL .2 I fS 7', GDB Emmet 1. SMITH, ANNIE Brooklyn College. Arista, Service Squad. Everything normal! 2. SMITH, SAMUEL C. C. N. Y. Assistant Manager of Track, Nuhs Representative, Arista. And they go to Africa for ivory. 3. SMITHLINE, PINCUS N. Y. U. 5th Floor Manager's Office, Class OHicer, Nuhs and Comet Rep. Gas rises-wonder vwhat's keeping him down???? 4. SOBIEL, BEATRICE N. Y. U. Comet Publicity Staff, General Office. A word of note, advice perchance, The Lindy Hop is not a dance. 5. SOBEL, JACK St. John's. Qualifications for St. John's-a high school diploma. 6. SOCOLOFF, ELIZABETH Brooklyn College. Class Treasurer. Probably! 7. SOKAL, MARTIN Economist-on ties. 8. SOLIT, RUTH Maxwell Training. Office Squad, Ser- vice Squad, Glee Club. She's still wondering whether the man who invented life savers 'made a mint. 9. SOLOMON, MAURICE N. Y. U. Service Squad, Auditorium Which is his first name? 10. SOULE, MILTON C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Track, He's a regular fellow. 11. SPARER, MURRAY H. Damrosch. President of Glee Club, Robin Hood, Debating Varsity. Our golden-voiced basso is leaving. What will our Glee Club do? 12. SPERLING, LOUIS C. C. N. Y. Auditorium Squad, Service The only senior who did'n't take it seriously. 13. SPITOLOWITZ, ESTELLE Business. G. A. L. Representative, She's a great sport, 14. SsENGO'WITZ, BENJAMIN New York University. Track, Lunch He'll be a violet. 15. STANG, ROBERT Cheer Squad, Glee Club, Track Team. Who is this guy Einstein? 16. STARK, MARY C. .C. N. Y. History Club Class Sec. Mary, I am Stark nerts about you. 17. STEIN, HANNA Harriet Mills. Secretary of Class, Lunch Room Squad, Basketball. I'm good, aren't I? 18. STEIN, HERMAN U. of Southern California. Class Secre- tary, Mr. Golub's Hall Squad. Give Greta 'my regards. 19. STEPONSKY, BERTHA France. Regents Recording Committee, We studied Spanish but we are not go- ing to Spain. 20. STERMAN, MIRIAM Travel. Arista Senate, Service Squad, Go, Tourist. 21. STEMPEL, HELEN Ann Reno Institute. Class Secretary, The tender glow of modesty gives lus- tre to her charms. 22. STERNHILL, SYLVIA Program Committee, Office Squad. That must be a sternhill to climb. 23. STONE, SOL Columbia. Football Team, Tennis Team, Sol is as hard as Stone. 24. STRAHS, JEANETTE Cornell. Lunch Room Squad, Bank Squad, Girls' Medical Society, Service Sweet and low. 25. STRELSER,JEANETTE Syracuse. Mrs. Friedman's Squad, An- nex Manager of the Comet, Class Officer. L'Amour, toujours, l'amour. 26. STRELZER, ROSAMOND C. C. N. Y. Floor Manager of the Nuhs, O. K. 27. STRUM, LOUIS C. C. N. Y. Modern Language Squad, Isn't the uke broken yet? 28. SUFRIN, HARRIET Syracuse. Senior Editor, Adeste Fidelis, It's her friends who are suffering. 29. SUSSER, GEORGE Union College. Orchestra, Captain of Biology Squad, Book Room Squad. One of the fine fellows of Utrecht. 30. SUSSMAN, MAX C. C. N. Y . Fencing Team, Hall Squad, He's the one wc've been looking for- 31. SWIRSKY, ALFRED N. Y. U. Cross Country, Track. Run! Run! at the Gun! 32. TANENBAUM, SYLVIA Vassar. Arista, Basketball, English Of- Iice Squad. . What more do you want, boys? 33. TANNENBAUM, ELSIE Business. Office Squad, Class Officer, Elsie has brains and Elsie has wit, But best of all, Elsie has Hit . 34. TATARSKY, SYLVIA Brooklyn College. Organization Office Squad, English Office, Junior Arista. She hasn't very much to say, But we like her anyway. 35. TELENGATOR, SELMA N. Y. U. Gym Squad, Hockey Club, Sue me! I'm wrong. 36. TENENBAUM, MILTON Raymond Street. Current Events Club, Economics Club. Why not try a scholarship to At- lanta? 37. TERKOWITZ, IRVING Southern California. Football Squad, O witz turk, are you? 38. TESSER, FLORENCE C. C. N. Y. English Office, Lunch Room She hasn't found one yet. Sixty-one 4 - f 1 Ghz Qtumet 1. THOMPSON, WILBUR St. John's. Football, 2 years. Spends his spare time yawning. tHe never has a thing to do.J 2. TISCHLER, ALICE Business. German Club, Office Squad, One good sort is Alice, and that's the way she'll always be. 3. TOSTO, JEAN Hunter College. French Club, Spanish Club, Newman Club. She'll major in Latin. 4. TRENTACOSTI, ANNE Business. Basketball, A Private on the Service Squad, Italian Club. The skin you'd love to crush. 5. TROCCHIA, FRANCIS, J. Brooklyn. Track Team, Service Squad, Service Squad, bah! 6. TROPEA, MARCELLO A. Brown University. Pink ones look much better! 7. TRUTT, RUTH Radcliffe, Floor Manager of Nuhs, She's quiet and sweet. 8. TURCHIN, EDITH Tallahassee, Florida. Ronah, Treasurer, Personality plus. 9. TURIETSKY, ISIDOR Nuhs Rep. 10. TURK, IRVING Spanish Club, Madrigal Society. Utrecht's Helen Kane. 11. UCHITEL, WILLIAM St. John's. 4 years Orchestra, 2 years Track, Nuhs and Comet Representative. If he could shot-put like he plays the viola- 12. UNGAR, HATTIE Brooklyn College. President G. A. L., Cheer Squad, Vice-President of G. O. I'd go through 'unger, thirst. 13. OSIELEFF, BELLE College. Alternate Delegate to Junior Red Cross Council, Swimming. The belle of the school looking for a beau. 14. VANDERNOOT, EDWIN N. Y. U. Book Room Squad, French Club. Not a friend of the Vanderbilts. 15. VANTINE, HARRY JR. Massachusetts Inst. of Technology. Ser- vice Squad, Math Club, Lunch Room Squad. Vundime is all he's worth. 16. VELLENSKY, JACK C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Nuhs Rep. Vale, Vellensky. 17. VIGILANTE, ANNE Hunter. Girls' Medical Society. Our wish. is for your success. 18. WALL, HELEN Office Squad, Hockey, Hebrew Club. Miss Wall to you and you and you. 19. WALLENSTEIN, HANNAH Business. Lunch Room Squad, Swim- ming, Comet Representative. Hungry women! 20. WARRENHUND, LILLIE C. C. N. Y. Gym Squad, Swimming. Her curls are gone now and she's a Miss. 21. WARSHAWSKY, HARRY Service Squad, Handball, French Club. What shall we say about him? 22. WASSERMAN, HARRIET L. I. U. Class President, Mrs. Huber's Assistant, Basketball Club. She'll make a good saleslady for Ma- cy's. 23. WATTENBERG, MIRIAM N. Y. U. Spanish Culb, Swimming Stepchild of silence. 24. WEBB, DORIS Damrosch. Madrigal Society, General Office Squad, Gym Squad. Mrs. J. L.'s prize pupil??? 25. WECHSELBLATT, MARTHA Pratt. Class Secretary, Gym Squad, Always happy, always gay, 26. WECHSLER, JACK Catawaba, N. C. Football Squad. When homework and pleasure clash, Let homework go to smash. 27. WEINER, MIRIAM N. Y. U. Dramatic Society, Secretary ln Danny is the name-Poetry' the side- ine. 28. WEINGARTEN, PHILIP C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Lunch Room Philip's in the wine garden again. 29. WEINGAST, JACK U. of Pittsburg. Track. Er . . . Er . . Well it's like this 30. WEINRIB, SAM C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, Nuhs Rep. Nice, if he would quiet down a bit. 31. WEINSTEIN, HAROLD L. Pace Institute. Program Committee, If the U. S. could have the first syl- lable in his lost name! 32. WEINSTEIN, MORTIMER Unknown. G. A. L. Representative, I just love my English 8 teacher. 33. WEINTHROP, ABRAHAM N. Y. U. Physics Squad, Book Room. A descendent of the Massachusetts Winthrops. 34. WEISBERG, HANNAH Hunter. Editor Nuntius Romanus , Sweet, sedate and how cynical. 35. WEISDORF, JOSEPH C. C. N. Y. F'ootba1l, Student's Coun- cil, Class President, 2 years. Just another bolshevik. 36. WEISSBLUTH, MITCHEL Brooklyn. Math Club, Program Com- mittee, Science Club. Mitchel isn't wise-Weissbluth. 37. WEITZMAN, FREDA Columbia. Basketball, Latin Club. Latin and Basketball-what a com- bination. 38. WELDON, MARJORIE Business School. Marjorie, will be welldon the house soon. Sixty-three 1. 2. 3 4 5 6 '7 8 9. WEINER, SYLVIA Brooklyn College. Mrs. Friedman's Squad, Senior Arista '31, French Club. What price glory. WHELLAN, SYLVIA Cornell. Service Squad, Organization Squad, Mrs. Friedman's Squad. Don't mind her, she'll grow up some- day lwe hope . . .J WILLIG, HANNAH Savage. Vice-President of G. A. L., W Oh How! Savage? WILNER, HENRY Brooklyn College. Track Team, Class Just one of the boys. WISOTSKY, TILLIE Savage. Mrs. Friedman's Squad, Ronah What? Another Red Savage. WITKIN, HYMAN Brooklyn College. Arista Senate, Or- I m not a teacher's pet.' WODOWSKY, LILLIE C. C. N. Y. Swimming Squad, Gym Squad, Service Squad. Watch her eyes flash- WOHLHANDLER, HELEN Brooklyn College. English Office Squad, Silence is golden-She's a winner. WOLFERT, HERBERT U. of Pennsylvania. Associate Editor Nuhs, Co-chairman Utrecht Field Cam- paign, Track Team, 3 years. Oh hear the Wolfert! 10. WOLFF, IRVING C. C. N. Y. Service Squad, P. T. Squad, A wolf in Irving's clothes. 11. ZELENETSKY, MEYER Penn State. Baseball, History Club, The first thing he does when he wakes up is open his eyes. 12. ZINBERG, LUCY Regents Recording Committee, Dramatic Club, Program Committee. Casanova, Bernhardt, Govrich and Lucy. 13. ZINGARO, MARY Maxwell Training. Italian Club Mary had a little lamb-what'll you have? 14. ZUCKERMAN, EVELYN U. of California. Class Officer, Dra- matic Club, Biology Club. Sweet incense of God. 15. ZUCKERMAN, HARRY N. Y. U. Circulation Manager Comet, President Stage Craft Guild, Secretary Senior Class. Harry's Oh Kay--shy and modest. 16. TELSEY, DAVID Fordham. Captain Lunch Room, Track, Dave always sees Starrs. vf -qq CLASS Wu gi. ONTRARY to the declarations of other graduating classes as to their mental and physical state, we, the Senior Class of January 1932, claim the distinc- tion of being the only one whose abilities and attainments conclusively prove that we are the sanest and soundest of mind and as close to physical perfections as the P. T. Department is to initiating intra-mural ath- letics. What a problem the writers of this will are faced with. Is it our fault that the mem- bers of this graduating class have taken so much that there is practically nothing to leave? No, and yet we must go groveling and snooping around the school in order to find even a ream of paper to leave How can we adequately reward the eight thousand two hundred students and the one hundred and fifty odd members of the faculty when the Board of Educa- tion and the City of New York are practi- cally bankrupt and can't even buy new text books to displace those that we keep as souvenirs. Alas and alack! Woe unto the scribes. Here is our futile effort. Ahem! Hear ye, hear ye, hear ye: To Dr. Potter we do bequeath fthrough no effort on our part you will noticej an- other Senior and Freshman Class who will in due time dispose of the goods of the school as humbly as we do now. To Dr. Leuchs we leave a goodly sup- ply of pink cards which he may cheerfully use to decorate his parlor windows and not for blackmail. To. Mrs. Aiverett we leave the duty of handing out sick passes to young ladies de- sirous of seeing current Broadway produc-Q tions. A To our successors, fhow did success get into that word Pj the incoming Senior Class, we leave all intact except Eco books and Eco teachers. To next term's Senior Class Officers we leave the headaches gotten by our officers trying to collect class dues. To the incoming Freshman Class we leave notice that the General Office is not on the tenth floor and that the sixth floor of our building is the roof. To the rest of the school we leave a bunch of pests fmisnamed Comet Repsj who will endeavor by might and main to make you pay to read the works of aspiring literary lights. To Mr. Serwer, our good natured Senior Adviser, we leave a term of freedom before he is harnassed to next term's graduating class. To Mr. Rosenzweig we leave the sugges- tion that he use his dictionary and find a substitute for What are you doing here ? We have nothing to leave to the faculty. This will be a fair exchange. To Mr. Leonard we leave our sincere thanks for all the little favors and help he has so cheerfully bestowed upon us. To Mrs. Lederman we leave a few kids in short pants who might be actors if they were spanked daily. To Miss Mullins we leave a Witty editor. To the Nuhs staff we leave our sympathy for that 12-O shellacking they received at our hands in the semi-annual literary bas- ketball game. To Miss Grant we leave the few members Sixty-five Qtibz Gamer of the Arista who do not attend the Stu- dents' Council meetings. To the Eco teachers we leave the su:- cessors of the graduating Red Menace:-i . We hope they have a rough and teddy time. To the Cavanaughs, our Custodian En- gineers, we leave the brand new scratches and autographs gently engraved upon the newly planed desks. . To Mr. Fine we leave that obscene pub- lictaion called the Students' Council Bulletin which he seems to enjoy reading. To Mr. Swahn we leave a copy of Bally- hoo so that he can put some good jokes up on the Bulletin Board. To the incoming Comet Editors we leave a steel lock on the door to stop the hoi- polloi from entering the sacred portals of the Comet office. To Mr. Weise, our photographer, we leave a new set of dizzy poses and we give him full permission to start a comic strip. To the next Service Squad Captain, we leave a bullet proof vest. To the Eastern Printing Company we leave a minus sign. QThe minus stands for a pair of scissors and an em ruler that one of the Comet Staff members appropriated., We wet our seal and dub this asinine and entirely uncalled-for document a will. Our only witness is an ageing typewriter. We await our fate calmly and with complete joy and courage. Before concluding we leave this advice to the students: Read your text books as you would a novel. A good deal of fiction is to be found in both. JOSEPH GREENSPAN Party of the Pint Part LEO GENZELOFF Party of the Second Part MILDRED DUNETZ Party of the Third Part THE SENIOR CLASS Part of No Part Sixty-.tix CLASS PROPHECY-fContinuedj i'Fellow workers, he was saying, the Capitalist system makes beasts of men. It is a system under which production is for profit, not for use! It is a system under which the working classe produces all and gets nothing but suffering in return. Below the platform stood little Milty Ten- enbaum, with rosy cheeks and a poutish smirk on his lips and a pack of pamphlets in his hand, nodding his head from side to side in silent acquiescence. A little further back stood Lou Lotten- berg. Hey, joe, he said to me confidentially, I'm waiting for an excuse to crack him over the head. just wait awhile and you'll see some fun. Crack him one? You're sure? said a voice at my elbow that I immediately recog- nized as Herbie XVolfert's. Whatta scoop! How's this for a headline, 'Kop Kracks Kommunist But he didn't do it! I said in surprise. What of it? The public likes it,' and shouting in vociferous glee, Herbie began to shoulder his way through the crowd. While watching him disappear in the midst of the mob, I noticed Hy Radin with a Daily Worker reporter card on his hat. Suddenly everything went black. Bril- liant fl-ashes of light leaped across the void. Little balls of fire burst asunder and threw oil myriads of colored lights. My head throbbed. I staggered around. Irv Lipson's hand shook me by the shoulder. Wake up joe and stop dreaming. That Class Pro- phecy must go to the printer's. Don't for- get to mention Flo Lustgarten and Vic Dorf. I opened my eyes and gazed at my sur- roundings. I was in the Comet Oifice. I covered the typewriter over which I dozed and as I left the office murmured under my breath, Were they dreams or visions pn OI 'CU sn LU 1-5 3 X' 'S wa S x Q Wx 1 R Q 'S F4 out trime W be Should ery I0 Z0 HJ' A E dm N a.: C eg, Bleckner Viotha shot Acting Picking 'em UP Moustaches Brown Emil ambitious Clicking cubes His staff Sevens Ceravolo Guisseppe All-Amercian back Modesty Himself Pickled cucumbers Crisafulli Linda Flying high Has none Personality REDS Curtis Bill A caddy Teeing off Wise-cracks Dirty jokes Dorf Vicks Fired Service squad Noivousness Lou Q ?j Dubrow Tsippie Squelched Rapid recitations Activity Night life Dunetz Mil-dread Criticized Poetry Criticizing Dreams Genzeloff Comrade In Russia International Students' Council Red Flag Goldberg Jake Married Selling pretzels His lumber-jack Miss Gold Greissman Harry Taller NUHS-mongering Vir ue Ice-cream and cake Gross E Evelyne Flirting Her form Mr. X Greenspan Crusader A comrade Demanding a ic sandwich COMET Bet, she knows who Lipson Billie Recruited to the Ranks Cutting classes Billing Noodlezoop Lottenberg Dr. Leuchs Police Commish Pink cards His whistle Ruth Lustgarten Flo-flo A bankeress Refusing Prom invites LUCRE Too strong Pruslin Kal In opera Arista His hair Miss Grant Radin Everybody Gagged Talking Talking More talking Rat an Hey, Rat Idolized Bashfulness B. B., So cer, etc. 4th Street, Coney Reich Helen Married to Einstein Studying Her marks Latin Rosenberg Perry President Arguing Track team Hot feet Roskin Benneh An athlete Iroquois Football Janes Rubin john Kelly A gigolo His looks Painting Miss Balassi Isaacs Millie Absent-minded Speaking Who knows? 48 Bay 28th St. Selevan Toothless Annihilated chiseling chiseling chiseling Sobel Bea Queen for a day Buzzing Refusing propositions Any big-shot Tenenbaum Runt Chastised Finance Sec. I. W. O. Red cheeks Boitha Uchitel Beefy A musician Shot-putting Violining Tillie Ungar Hy' Hattie Drowned Swimming Yeah, Utrecht Abie Wolfert Hoibie Better Track Frank Dubaish Miss Mullins Zinberg Lucy An actress Acting Acting UQ Phil U1 Zuckerman Zuck Good-but is careful Raymond Street Kibitzing Woman hater Z 101:-1:s1c1ry1 1 1 1 11 1-1-10... 1 11 1-1101 Autographs io1.1f io:o1o1uioio:n1q xty-eight 1 1 1 1 1 1-1 1 1 1 1 1 -- -------Q -1 1454 101 1... 1 1 -22-10101 11-1 1 Faculty Autographs U U U U u n :v ev an ru xr u 1. +I ww wr n 11 wr wa 11 wr rv u n wa rw In o u fu an :x ar an 11 av fn l! II Q Il an u 0 a.,---,,- -,-..---. -. -. ---, 13:1 21.0-G-:,..,-.,-A,-4. Sixty-nine 'Y Hott xc xy ow! , 1 u A A .,x my . . Toe uv-een an I .1--fa L' NL..-J ,-IJ.: 41. -vw.. , gif 'K 'D V f 4 , Q . , 7 1 ,A,. -T .-1 ,4 4,4 - Hg N' f' ' , FN X P' H I'-A.. 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If xg, , X , . ig, x 9 gf? 1 ' f i K REA K .R V N .. ul X :X 4 '. -' Xteiqi 'JP ' LuC7!ZWSb2?.. if Y, , 1 f Q' Q ff V gf X A s k rx, 8 'Q A L VC , X ffgf 'ami X x . was 5 - 'TBZGP I LQAIcef up W, 3255956 W A 'EQQNBZ wif? 4 x f 4 1:62 'xg' .L 'Sosa PM erqvohp . pU?'x 355 M All Anvvgekx 'R fy' '69 A - i Evehxh Gvobb If XX ' f 75 Nod' A lb C 'V' Subd W ' 'A ' 5. gg 3 ,VJ - '-' . ' iw X7 f r ,f 1 EV f A 1 ff! QQ , Q ll Q, ff A ,Q Q F ,X 123' ,. arg wif, Y L x 4-.1 I Q7 M, X if ., 'ER -1 QW .. K Tier-me. , '13 5 oXK+'mcKan evwn A W 1 my-,.N ' 3 if 4. ,fv rl ig! ' ' 9,417 1 I ve , if fir ' , 5 . f 95 al ' l 5,3 4 f , 7' t 2 W 4, 53 3 z 1? 5 if :v Q ZZ. Hown uck 1 fa 2 ORAT o FR v cube K v,QxxQXE?QX-gf-1-aff .A Sid Perlow, '31 is now attending C. C. N. Y. He has won an unusual honor in receiving his letter in Track during the first term. Jennings Bently Lang, '30, former Comet Business Manager and Prom Chairman, is now pursuing his studies UQ at St. john's College. He now holds the important posi- tion of Dramatic Critic of the St. john's offi- cial publication. He is also out for the ten- nis team. Marty Dibner, now attending the Univer- sity of Penn, is a member of the Art Staff of the university's magazine, The Punch Bowl . He has also played varsity 150 pound football and is a regular member of the Lacrosse Team. Matthew Hess Shulman, '25, is attending Brooklyn College. Up till December 4th, he had a leading role in Vicki Baum's play, Grand Hotel , a little known Broadway production. Al Shapiro, Dave Schlansky, Herb Por- esky and Arthur Sammeth, all of the class of '25, are attending Brooklyn College. Abe Zinberg, '31, is now singing at the Albee Theatre. Ruth Paul, '31, former associate editor of the COMET, is one of the Paul sisters who sing with Phil Spitalny's Orchestra. Abby Sundell, '31, former Green and White football star, is now on N. Y. U.'s Lacrosse team. Stretch Harrison, '24, a three letter man while at New Utrecht, has recently become entangled in the bonds of matrimony. Artie Brown, '27, has received his sheep- skin from the College of Pharmacy of L. I. U. and is now employed in a drug store on Fort Hamilton Parkway, as a soda jerker. Seventy-two The one time eminent Utrechtite, Mac Friedman '25 is now a member of the New York State Bar. Harry Kaufman '23, of football fame, has recently returned from Hollywood where he was associated with the firm of DeSylva, Brown and Henderson, as office boy. Harry Holtzman '27, former C omet scribe now is situated in an art studio of his own in Greenwich Village, where he has met with fair success. Blanche Luria '27 is teaching English in Palestine. Harry Solomon '26, is now a member of N. Y. U. QNew York Unemployed, due to the depression in the interior decorating business. Irving Chiz Chilson '25 graduated Georgetown University in 1930. While at Georgetown, Chiz was a star end on the football team. At present he is engaged in the building line and in his spare time he's training in Stillman's Gym for his profes- sional debut. fPleare turn to Page 861 -----,.Y , x ERif rA1N's Lznoun DR.LIEbE,Rl'XRM SRM' NR. P ma SPAN1sr1 SQUAD ' MRS. WGROSSYIAN SOCCER TE AN EMLEQMQH Boox-mom SQUAD Miss swan 'V 1 - ..- EYXGLISH OFFICE SQUAD M N155 LEW I'IR3.HEREDIA FRENCH-ITALIAN SQUAD 1mLmBER1'1m ji-...1 IBRARY SQUAD Y zvms cnooxm GIRLS' sEN1oRA:ms'rA was sm? sorf GIRLS JUNOR. ARTMSTTA M mRs.GRossmxr1N BOYS' JUNIOR ARISTA . V MISS GRANT V '1 TROYWETER STAFF M155 GRUIBER BGOK RECEIPT SQUAD N155 KOECHLING ROIC. MR. FIPPEL Bnimscwnn f1R.cu1,z.EN swioqmrncsns MRSERWEK v-WU HAH f 1 i . uur-is STAFF russ rrunnms 'I 5 V AUDHORIUM squnn MR5. FRIEDMAN ' 1 1 I an A K SEVENTH roam omcnszs QMR.APPLEBBUNA ,Q 4-nun.-an 1 s v l cr-man sam ma. SCHOEHFEILD onGAmzAT1oN om: mss comm PRINTING SQUAD , HR-COHEN I-n-n-an-n V' 4 u Y' a ng nv-1-v-av ---an-fp v v 4. -- ------ -- - B GlR1.'S out CLUB Miss BERAAN N.U.H.S.BAND gg ' W Fikgcunnnv I' B-IoLoc.Y sqvnb yussmnkcug V' 1 E 3715! 611111191 4,-l...- ., A ,. V 1 onus Mrmcm SOCIETY l'kl5S 2 lARCUS 'I flrbe Qllumet 'I' l:1oioE:l:i:iti':l:l i 15.111 Muriel Goldfinger '31's attending St. Drydock 4,7406 'Iohn's Evening College. In the daytime, E Muriel is modeling for some firm. We al- ways did notice those curves you have. E Formerly PAUL EPSTEIN B o B B Y 7 S Philip Silverstein, '31's attending Brook- lyn College. Phil hopes to be a French teach- er. Boone Fortune Philip! ll Exclurive Walter Cohen '31, who used to fill up the scoreboard for Utrecht's rifie team ,is now C01-I-EGIATE CLOTHES learning to fill teeth at the Buffalo Univer- . . II fof sity Dentistry School. U Boys, Youths, Young Men Thea Turner '31 ,is playing forward po- sition on St. john's basketball team. 74 Canal Street ll Bob Mann '31, captain of Utrecht's champ- New York ionship tennis team, is now continuing his l racqueteering business in C. C. N. Y. George Kaplan, '29 who was also capt. of Utrecht's tennis team is now performing for Columbia on the crew, on the lacrosse field and as a star tennis man. Sam Gallin, '28, of Green and Wliite football fame, has achieved prominence on the campus of the University of Pennsyl- vania by making the Kappa Nu Fraternity. Our past performers of our championship track team are all busy at present. Sol Man- delblatt is working hard on the U. of Iowa track field. Ed Friedman ran on a record- breaking relay for N. Y. U. Mike is burn- ing up the cinder path at U. of Penn. Ira Singer, National indoor 60 yard sprint champion in 1931 is now running for the Millrose A. C. Bernie Krosney, his team- mate and runner-up, is running for N. Y. U. Ei gh! y-.fix 'fouio1o---- -- 1-- -.r1cslL-:ol1:1:i:ni -1- ----Y? --,ioie-1.-. o:0----21o1f------11qpg------ 1 ll Q ll u l l is ll u H H 11 H u u u u u u II o :go Get Them in the Lunch Room OH BOYS! BRICKS! DIXIE CUPS! Parties Are Our Specialty SPECIAL RATES and FREE Delivery For Students By Calling ATLantic 0711 K. DROGE, Inc. . 6508 - 6th AVENUE . Brooklyn, N. Y. ,.. ..-,-1o,,,,,,7 A Red hot stoves And greedy flames That stick out their tongues N G And cry, Fuel',g Sweating stokers C Far down in the hold, Shoveling coal-yawning mouths, Scrubbing sailors Up on deck, Shining and scraping With caloused hands, Grease grirned engineers Oiling and shining, Shouting and cursing, Keeping the ship to its courseg Suave stewards Moving like shadows, Groveling and bowing For larger tips, Beau Brurnmel officers Kissing ladies' hands, Adding links to their chain of amoursg First class passengers Showing off linery, Trying to spend superfluous wealth, Second class tourists Dressed like sportsmen, Collecting souvenirs Of their only crossingg Ocean liner, Miniature city Of hypocrisy and class, Plowing its way through the blue-green deep With Red hot fires Tended by stokers, Racing engines Q Cursed and oiled, Suave stewards, Bootlicking rnarrons, Beau Brummel officers t Flattering ladies, First class passengers Putting on swank, Second class tourists Taking pictures .... -,Eighty-xeven Tim: My wife and I have had a quarrel. You know she is getting frightfully stout, and last night I told her she looked like an inflated balloon. Not every man has his price. Some can't get theirs. I think your husband dresses so nicely and quietly! You should hear him when he's lost a collar button! He: Does that mysterious reptile, the joint snake, really exist? Hee: Yes. Itis habitat is any prohibition state. Do you suppose we shall ever have uni- versal peace P Hardly. I fancy marriage will never be entirely abolished. Craw: How do you get your wife to be- lieve what you say when you come home late? Shaw: First I listen to what she accuses me of doing, and then I own up to it. jim: Well, you can hardly blame her for going up in the air. 0:0-Eizieieieiaiei:1:1ei:1:::1:1eieiezeieieieiziezzzezzz:izioioio An Atrnogphere of Purpoge and Refinement ip . .N College Grade Cour'5e5 S . IN. ' 3 PPof'e55ional BLQSITIQSS Education ll - I-it.gi'iw lf- 5 wqgusn IQSQQQIUOI- ii 1 N! W Vi Ai uno: I h 5 gm ll-I -E' Of E:u5nne55 Administration and ' Secretarial Science lj II 42233 FEEL STREET 11 AT PEARL AND WILLOUGHBY STSUBROOKLYN, NX wmrf ron :Auron P1-fofvs MAIN-4-4097 Individual Help Generously Given and Frequent Special Reviews Assure i Successful Preparation in Minimum Time for i COLLEGE ENTRANCE on BUSINESS i OUR DIPLOMA ADMITS T0 LEADING COLLEGES i Regents exams are given here in Jan., June and Aug. r All high school and commercial subjects ' ! Day and Night-Co-ed Supervised Athletics Get Catalog 356 FLATBUSH AVE. EXT., BROOKLYN, N. Y., near DeKalb Avenue Opp. Paramount Theatre DeKalb Ave. B. M. T. station in Building : Accredited by Board of Regents, Board of Education and leading colleges Q 0:91111e1az:i:i:i:i:::::i: zzzaioifz-,::e::zEz:1:pe::::i::e1.1:v:oqo:4 Eighty-eight 51:11:34:inin1-nininzmnimriui-,in1ui31-ei11:n1-c-1n1-1-1--,-1n1-fi-,1i,1--.1-1. BROOKLYN COLLEGE OF PHARMACY OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY i Forly-second Session beginning Seplember I932. Courses leading lo The degrees of Graduale in l Pharmacy lPh.G.l and Pharmaceuiical Chemisl lPh.C.l Gradualion from an approved high school course or The equivalenl is required of all enlering ' sludenis. Special courses offered in Blood. Urine, Wafer and Food Analysis. For cafalogue and 1'ur+her informafion address William L. Harloe, Regishar: 600 Lafayeffe Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. In i L i i F i L L l L L l r- ' Q 1 'o ninioioiuiuin -1 in 11 u -1 5141111 1- :missin 1- n 1 :aiu 11 :n 1 nioininininiuiu Office: I98 Broadway Phone Corlrlandl' THE MAHNKEN COMPANY MANUFACTURING JEWELERS CLASS PINS, MEDALS, TROPHIES, BADGES Special Order Work NEW YORK CITY rio1u1o1o14.1 11,1 1..1,1-1L1,1.,1c11.11.1 1 1 -.4,1,1n1o10g4q' o i V i I i 1 ra Eighty-nine ,1o1oia1n1-1Jic1:v1c1.11.1n1.n1o1,2oioi4n1-1. ioo: Gibe Qlumet First juror: Young Attorney Bray made a mighty fine speech, didn't he? Second juror: Wonderful! I wonder which side he was on. The twilight sleep that takes away From every birth its pain Might very well be tried by all who ride Upon a railway train. Willie, don't hit him with that bottle. We have a nickle deposit. Your: Why is there such a demand for asbestos mattresses in Arkansas? Next: Silly! Because of the Hot Springs ll Can your eyes be called schools because there are pupils in them? If you bend your trunk, can it still be used for packing purposes? Who feeds the calves of your legs? What kind of fruit grows in the palm of your hand? Are there any tools in your chest? Could you run for the base of your skull if someone hit the balls of your feet? Can the arches of your feet be used for building bridges? Look! Our team is on the 10-yard line!! That's nothing. So is their team. ,Y,,,.- -.-.-.,.-,- - - - -.-.,-.- .. - -L-.- -.-,-.,-..-,- - -..g. u n .go EFI'-IUENEY PLETE COURSES l it 4 MONTH COM 'al Sch00l 5 it 3 ANU t, ZS, Sgcmfarl latbush Ave. Q ll Exzcu llllostrand Ave' negf2FlL20 ed 2 176 Phone MAr1Sf'9ldp0sH:ionS Seoul' ii a 0555 5 ' G i Day and Even ng pERSUNAll7y cis-zu: 1310: 1:1 1- iii 1 Z-1:1 -L-11:1 11111-:iii 1 Z Z,1,:Z.,:4:1.,ixg, U , E.FFLE.Y'g S CHiCNJI, z l cWi1liamsburgh Savings Bank Building ll cilanson .walsizazflaf Exif aclfawfwem aww, l e B QHII Glommercial Subjects : Zelepkaw dkwfg 5210 I Begin Jlny Glime l -, .,.. D-- -.., --,-,,e.-.- - uma u 5 .g...----,.-.,-A--f,-a-e- - Ninety - - ----- -flag. UDB 41031211 Teacher: What is a Vacuum? fSilencej Teacher: I said explain, not illustrate. Teacher: Prepare questions 1-10 omitting nine. QWhat's wrong, we ask you ?j Ruth rode in my motorcycle In the seat behind me. I hit a bump at sixty-five And rode on ruthlessly. Man may learn to fly like a bird, but he'll never learn to sit on a barbed wire fence. May: Who was that gentleman I saw you with the other day? June: That was no gentleman. I'm not a blonde! Theres a wise crack, said the pugilisf as he floored his opponent. Physics Prof: Give me an example of like attracting like. Stewed: Pop drank some wood-alcohol and it went right to his. head. Where does the hole go when you take your finger out of the water? A bottle has a neck and yet it has no throat. A chair has a back and yet it has no backbone. A: Have you a careful chauffeur? B: Very. He never runs over any one unless he's sure he can make a getaway. He: How you getting on at college? Hee: Oh, all right. I'm trying awfully hard to get ahead. He: Well, heaven knows you need one. e coz: K H All Graduates of E thlS school are ellgtble 5 foradmissionto Pacelnstitute II -a nationally known and distinctive Drofessional school of technical training in Business Administration Accountancy Secretarial Practise Classes for beginners at Pace Institute ft prepare high-school graduates for imme- diate earnings. Many Pace graduates are ll now treasurers and controllers of large e corporations-others are in successful U accountancy practise. H Field trips to the offices and plants ofthe 5 largest organizations in New York City are conducted especially for day students in the Accountancy School and for day students in the Secretarial School. Students and Parents are invited II to confer with the Registrar. i Day School - - Evening School I ' ll Pace nstltute ll 225 Broadway New York I l0WHlllillllbillillillltblllilbitlllll'i' ,igboi wi I0 ' . . !. . . then It will be College 'worth your while to 9 read - H - U II S T U D E N T l DEVELOPMENT U l! By PROF. 1. E. WALTERS, U Purdue Umvefrsity. Introduction by DEAN A. A. POTTER, Purdue University. new to make the most or college. Ther- oughly practical counsel, showing what ex- 't pert guidance and personal effort can do to strengthen Weak traits, improve strong points, avoid mediocrity. A book for every ' student to read and follow. Cloth. 186 pp. ll Pr-lee 51.75 ll ISAAC PITMAN at soNs U 2' WEST 45th STREET New York, N. Y. E er:-::::o1od::1ciici:foil1Eoie Ninety-one ali ' allege - enooxlxu -- Four Down-town Divisions LAW-Dr. George W. Matheson, Dean Courses leading to degrees LL.B., LL.M. and j.S.D. in preparation for State Bar Examinations. Admission on two years of college work. Post Graduate courses of LL.M. and J.S.D. in lieu of part of clerkship. Students admitted in Sep- tember. February and June. ACCOUNTING, COMMERCE 8: FINANCE- Dr. Joseph C. Myer. Dean B.B.A., B.S. in Ec., M.B.A. and M.S. in Ec. and Accounting courses preparing for C.P.A. exams, high school teaching of com- mercial subjects and executive work. B.B.A. carries 5 years' experi- ence credit for C.P.A. B.S. in Ec. course gives business training and prepares for Law School. Combined B.S. in Ec. and LL.B. in 5 to 6 years. Degree courses for High School graduates. Other courses open to non-high school graduates. Spring session begins February S, 1952. ARTS 8: SCIENCES, Boro. Hall Division- Rev. Daniel M. Leary, C.M., Dean College courses in preparation for admission to law schools, also courses carrying credit toward degree of B. S. fSocial Science Cur- riculumjg courses preparing for teaching academic subjects, com- bined degrees B.S. and LL.B. Spring session begins February 8, 1952. Day and evening classes. Entrance on 15 academic credits. PHARMACY-John L. Dandreau, Dean Courses leading to degrees Ph.G., Ph.C., B.S. in Phat. in prepara- tion for State Pharmacy Examinations. Requirements for admission- Pharmacy qualifying Certificate. 5 days a week Q9 to Sj. Fall session starts September, 1952. ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE, 96 Schermerhorn Sireei, Brooklyn, N. Y. Please send me information on courses checked: Q I Law fState Bari C I B.B.A. lC.P.A.J 1 I M.B.A. or M.S. Q Q Post Graduate Law 1 J Accounting fC.P.A.j Q J Public Speaking f J Pharmacy, Ph.G. Q J B.S. in 'Ec. and LL.B. Q I Business English Q D B.S. in Pharmacy 1 J Teach. Com. Subj. Q J Salesmanship Q D Ent. to Law School K J Teach. Acad. Subj. 1 5 Income Tax Q J B.S. Degree I J Journalism 1 D C.P.A. Review 1 5 B.S. an LL.B. Q J Acct'g for Lawyers Name .......................... - .......... ............................... S tfreet..- ............. . City ofr Bofroughsu- ....... ............... .S tate ...... . N inet y-two 1.1 1.1 1 1 1.1 . . . . .1011 1 1 101-141'1v10'0-01f14'1+11-1-r-0--1-o1r1r1n1 1 1 1 1 0:0 l o EISE ST DI 6403-will AVENUE l BROOKLYN, N. Y. E ll Uifechi 6'lOl8l Opp. Walker Thealre l+'s noi fhe camera i+'s +he man behind if l l! U i ! II 3 l! ll 3 l l U l l l l ll ll l l l ll ll Official Phofographer To New Ul'rech'l' High School l l -SENIORS - Your negalives are on file al' my office- Drop in and I will arrange special rales for your porlrail. l Joseph Weise I 1 1 1 1.1 1.1--1,r1.i1.a-...mv-11,11m1,x1.a14wc-s, Ninely-three o'o 1 11-11 1 1,111 1..1..1.1-1.1.,1,1,,1 131,,1n1n1C1: ,:..-01.1.1,.1..1n1..1..1..1.1..11.11.,1,,1, ., , C i. fNg?B U SyI-WNMEA B U I L T N S If: R ! I g 191 5--1932 I i I7 Years of Salisfaclion Io The I-Iigh A Schools and Colleges of Ihis Cily I i Equipped wifh The mosl' modern kind of machinery i we can insure prompf execufion of your every Q wanl ....... Efficienfly and Economically I i EASTERN PRINTING CQIVIPANY PRINTERS 8: PUBLISHERS I School and College Books, Daily, Weekly and Monihly Publicaiions I i I4 Cook Slreel Telephones PUIeski 5-I535, 6 Brooklyn, N. Y ' Qouia iRsPEcTioi1i ee ouia PLANT is VELCOMED A? ANY Time v 0,411 -.1 1 1.1 1 1 1-111 1A11:1:1:1:1::1 1s1::1:1:1:1 1:11111 1 1 1:1 1:1::1:1: o'o1 1 1, E n iv is II 1 ,. ll 1 : n e 3 0.0 N inet y-F our PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 1-01:11:1:1::1::1::1.1::11.1.1,1 1,11 1 1,1 11 , '1nvwq-u:.--- - One half hour's consultation at the proper time will always help you get out a better book EASTERN PHOTO ENGRAVINC COMPANY 133 West 19th Street, New York City WAtkins 9-5692 ,icininizni 1:1a::1:m-if-1:1 :-.::i:::.i 1oici:ic1oio:oi 101 SUPPORTOUR SCHOOL PUBLICATIONS vioini 142101-ri:-1:1-:1-:i:i:1:s1c1:i:i:i:l:inl1ici::o:c-12101 Ninety f L, 1 w. .5
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