Park School of Baltimore - Brownie Yearbook (Baltimore, MD)

 - Class of 1944

Page 1 of 96

 

Park School of Baltimore - Brownie Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1944 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 96 of the 1944 volume:

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H X F1 1 x V ' I N V f A if .J xr bn 'K QWX0,fW6? kLf-- AN Sa 'wx 554 ,ff TM ! X WMA Rf ff L-'gsm WHL' Ofbw x. f VLGJ P 'fb H X- , I f-571 5, q iv.. I. X H If- ! 'f Q x' X ,K Z -I Q cl yx ' t 4 I I S 4-'b 7. .lu I1 p,.fw A kgrthv-4 vekvet case, 4 .V . Fine! the su- pages:-1 mu . 5, 5 ,V n- . - ' W'-K' , A of its IQIQCI and read thg awry . , - I qi V .. ' , , . .. V mhahmed byiimxigu' pmple, who have elnphul, and mama , fiiiialtifi Qa' world with iheght - 'arikwaidngfbimnq ffl , I 5 , fl ,jczfzzarine . 5-Jzmfer XYe seniors wish to dedicate this precious recurcl of il year to Miss Foster: our friend, cu-worker, and adviser. For it was she who sliowecl us the hright light of thc future through the wise eyes of the past. C111 4 nmumizrm M GLU, md mm you bllghteu mu memmles D Q XYhile you were with us you lwrighteuerl our hours ju .xdfoloreciafion fo 1 555 610 pafmer am! mr. van, goo Wager Um' CUllStZlllt apprccizitiml to you. Miss Palmer, zmrl to you, Mr. Brook- myer, for being the wisest guides, the stauuchest clefenclers, and the kimlest friends, to all of us in those gangling, trying years, just behind. 1::' A - T? rail Q f 5 is 5.213 HANS FROELICHER, JR. Headmaster You are taking with you a great deal from this school because you have put much into it. It works that way, you know. You have been faithful to quality in your scholarship and there is real breadth in your appreciations. You have advanced the level of responsibility and vitality in the affairs of our community. These are good reasons why we shall look back on your stay here with pleasure. As you have come this far we have known many things togetherg disagreement as a prelude to unity, temper before understanding, disappointment before delight, trial and error before success. All are parts of honest living. Your belonging here could not have been so full and rich without these honest human experiences, nor would you otherwise have known unity, understanding, delight and success. Beneath our small events you have found the purpose of the process and given it your faith. This will be worth remembering when much else is forgotten-and when the events in which you live have import for a larger scheme. I wish for you that your increasing living will discover for you important purposes in living. These are the solid ground of faith. May the faith you take grow to the faith you will need! HANS FROELICHER, JR. f l, .E fi? , , Q, , ,fr 5 L 91 , ' fQf:Q 2 A 2 Ag 4 ?If:w12Si? Qisfff 1 A 4 L . 1 L 42f'i'f:z'71ii,' f' hw gI?:?1Q,,i1f'1 fi? .eil 'ff,i'e+l f ,qgjg . 2wg,fzAf1f,1ggggsv ' Q X ww f drama.,,r:r452eUigf2QQilffifwi This Sfgwgilggggiffw, 1' Y , W M 45051 'nzfif' 5 Z 5 . D A mf, x4-h A , . W, W. 1 , . W ,, 'M' TL ' i 1 539135: L- WH 45 if fu' . 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I, gPwWv.4Nvv'V44? 5 E .1 Law, 2? -9 A-O - u' . f.'1fi'7?I'3 ,fx Q ed' 'qv W ff .. .. 2 wi I5 'ta 2 ggi' if 'ZSABVA gif: sfqww Q L is s f . . Cin fb w - ' -V Y XXX' . X 4 N Q1lII , I f' . . 362.5543 , f . 4 , q ?f -.QZXRK YN K aw' .. v , I A Ke' if - :rf f ' ,iff f x sh 5 Z Me film f XN'e'll l'Cll1Cll1lJCl'Ulll' faculty: for being our friends cluring the years we've spent at l':u'l4. for their timely guidance ancl snhtle influence, and for their encouragement :mtl direction of our small talents tmvarcls il lielcl of work in which we can he must useful to the cum- niunity, and to the wurlcl. 12 WH H M N H 1 1!!! HANS FR0l'II.ICHliR, JR. H cad Master AIARGARET F. COE SllftI. l Z'iS01' Lower School RIARY Ii. AINSLIE Upfwr I1 EVA K. AscuA1f1fEN1sURG K ind crgartcn MAEVE BUTLER BECK Ulvfvrfr I, English ANTHONY L. BOLICSTA Latin, I ntcrnzcdiatc Athlctics IVAN L. BROOKMYER Tcachcr Emeritus Mathaniatics, Science STELLA W. CRIGLER Intcrnzcdiatr' I HOPE EAGLE Kind crgarten KATIIARINE R. FOSTER History, German ELEANOR B. CEARDINER Lilzrarian GERTRUDE GODWYN Dancing, Rhythms, Physical Education SALLY GOLD MAN Primary Assistant DOROTHY O. GRAHAM Intermediate I I MARTHA E. HUNT GirI's Athlctics, Dietitian CHARLES T. JEWELL Sufmrirztcmicnt of Buildings Q.. dflbtky LOUIS!-ITTE P. LASH French LLCILLE LIBERLIES School Physician VELVA Z. AICLEAN Primary II DOROTHY S. RIALTBIIC Intcrnzcdiatc III, Testing GLADYS BIILLER Honzc Econoniics FLORENCE D. NIINES -flrt SABINA UVCONNOR Primary Assistant ALICE CJWENS Secretary EVA A. PALMER Tcaclzcr Emeritus, Vppci' II, Latin HELEN W. ROBINSON Music KQJSWALD J. Rossi Forcign Languages SOL SEC-AL Jlatlzcirzatics, Science CLARA M. SMACK Primary I BIARY C. SMITH Sccrctary RIARGARET STRAHAN Pri nzarlv Assistant HARRIET STRAUSS Kindcrgarten Assistant EM MA L. SUTHERLAND and Grounds Kl.t1d0t'H0t'f6't1 JOYCE F. KEYSER HARRISON E. TOMPKINS Primary Assistant Scicncc, Boy's Physical Education 13 sfzmi, ORA U. TOMPKINS Primary III GRACE VAN ORDER Art, Art Aj2preriaf1'o11 NATIIANIEL E. VOGEL English, Gernzmz CATHERINE NILES VVALKER Secretary confinuen! 'FFERRIS L. VVHARTON Boys Physical Edurafion JUSTIN WILLIAMS Music 'FALFRED XYOLFF Ll'I7I'Cll'j', Social Sfzlciies ELIZABETH O'VVYA'rT Scirfure, Jlflatlzezizatics if Ou Leave of Absence df .gif .24 ZQCAQI' .7 ls a teacher a but , Au imperious glance, A well-schooled mind, Or Napoleon stance? Are educators odd: Is their view myopic? Do their pathways stray From the scheduled topic? Are teachers pedautic, Do they padlock their minds, And smile sickly smiles At habitual grinds ? NO, TEACHERS ARE PEOPLE! Yes. our teachers deserve Their yearly vacation. And we're grateful to them For our Graduation! TEACHERS ARE OUR FAVORITE PEOPI F' 14 X X 2 R 3 1' .n. .' Qc' W, .1 wif, .gf , L.: r - s 5' Q X fr Q 1: .., N ' 1 w x V , ' x .5 5-1 - X I . . , I . ,vqkff J V '1 . ' ' , 'L A L A U .' 1 J- ,W , L. ,Q V ' :Qu ,L x -. , . 1' . ' ,ww V ' ' L V, 'Q . 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Q , z L: N , , 5 A Hz .V 5 ' . s ' A V' 4 I , f ' ' I .L K . I V... illifh A - ,E ., 1, ' 49, i J- i 4 , x :Y F if :I-,aff . : am 4 , f jx e 4 '-rv,-'rf ' Y F 1 F 7 ir' ' A 'Q Ff. , L i q 'N U Q4 Q, ' '22 i V ' F ' 22:5 I .EF ! x , 1. .Q . . , ., 1.4 N -A i . . ' Af'-sig, 1 ., H-Z1 L A . . iam .gizncfgox fo ,Sanford From that very first day, when as tiny tots we trudged, thirteen strong. up the kindergarten steps, milk-bottles and mammas in hand, 'til the very last day, when We tumbled, twenty-eight strong. down the senior steps with diplomas in hand, our class has marveled at the word SENIOR. SENIOR . . . I am a SENIOR! Those words, we felt, would unlock for us the greatest treasures in the world. Teachers would write in such glowing terms that you might mistake johnny's French report for Yellow Stone Park, bathed in a travelogue sunset. Small children would cast roses in our path and hang onto the hems of our garments. A reverent hush would fall over any assemblage we attended, and the radiators would automatically heat up if we glared their way. Of course our experiences prior to becoming seniors hadn't exactly been a prelude to this rosy picture. In the first grade, it was a known fact that the SIENIORS were the people who stood around and said Boo, oh-h, ah-h when we appeared in Halloween finery. VVe're glad that they were impressedg we weren't ! Every 3:15, during our stay in the Intermediate, we would hear a blood and thunder race down the hall. Those are the SENIORS, Teacher said, but somehow we felt that she always put the emphasis on the wrong word. VV hen we finally squeezed into the seventh grade and trotted off to that place of higher learning and debate, The School Council. we weren't a bit surprised at that austere man who calmly rose, after a half hour of confusion and appeals, and stated with resonant voice, It's all so simple, you just have to . . . This man was, of course, none other than our hero, the SENIOR. Our entrance into the senior high was accompanied by the very necessary advancement into the tenth grade. There we were tempted by the daring adventures of Robin Hood's Band fled by some outlaw Senior, of coursejwho raided the girls' locker room and Miss Miller's Kitchen. VVe could hardly wait to join that organization. Suddenly, and after twelve years of expectation, on a momentous day in 1943, instead of rushing noisily into one of the commonplace hall doors, we quietly, and with firm tread, turned our faces toward The Stairs and the Senior Room. That first morning we all sat around in the Senior Circle and looked at each other as though we had wandered in there by mistake. Finally, one of our members shouted, Goshl We're SENIORS. This announcement was followed by a doubtful I-Iurrahf' The atmosphere wasn't too reassuring. But with the ringing of the bell, as we rushed pell-mell down the stairs, the newness began to wear off: and by lunch period we felt that we could lick our weight in teachers and peanut butter --and-jelly sandwiches. Now we have shoved each other down the Senior Stairs for the last time. XVe'l1 never again get our faces pushed into the drinking fountain, we won't hear the prompter's whisper from the wings, or feel the warm glow when a teacher says, Well done. We have finished now. and we would like to ask, How did we do? What were our merits, our faults, our accomplishments and our failures P There is a saying that Even your best friends won't tell you. But this can't apply to us, the SENIURS, for our best friends are the juniors . . . and they tell us everything. 17 MILE gage? They say It's June in January but why stop there? After three years of fun with the best salesgirl in Hutzler's growing boys' department, we recommend her for a steady all-year diet. June is well known for her great mathematical prowess. If you ever get stuck on square root or long division, just call on our Bakerg she'll be glad to help you out. Yes, she's even set her mind on teaching the hoi-polloi their numbers, when she finally escapes Mrs. O'Wyatt's terrible tripod. June is an active participant in the Library Committee's hectic meetings, and her thesis on Propaganda had us all wondering whether La Baker wasn't actually Mata-Hari in disguise. We know that June will go far after she has graduated, for her hiking ability is displayed each morning at 8:59 A. M., when she and cohort Jane stumble wearly up the senior stairs, to collapse, panting, on the nearest desk. They say our school has two modes of transportation -the left foot, and the right footg June certainly proves our point. NVe're glad you came to brighten our group, Junie, and believe us, we'll never forget the Siren of Liberty Heights Avenue. 18 .Ame A8 gG,l10l! The Brownie Board rose to its feet and raised its llalltl fsingular for grammatical purposesj in a solemn salute, as the Qliossj Leader entered. Before proceeding with official business it has been Amelies daily duty this year to disentangle the scrambled mass of human forms squeezed into the Latin cubicle. light a candle under Lebovitz and Levy for pictorial purposes, make room for Debby under the table, and stifle Morton's futile screams for breathing space . The amazing ability of Gertie to simultaneously control Ellen, her canned pear salad, her temper. and our unruly budget, is the envy of every committee chairman in the school. NN'hen Primary One presented its unique version of Hansel and Gretel, Blondie was unanimously selected to play The XVitch . Having thus made her debut at an early age, Ban left the theatre for Still CFJ Life at the Maryland Institute, a study of wild life on the Presidential Mountain Range, a book a day motto, and a bull-dog devotion to the left side of the hockey field. However. she returned to the stage in time to appear as a white-satin-pajama'd Pierrot for this season's Founder's Day Play. C My only love you are so intense! Is it Tuesday? I'll kiss you if it's Tuesday l j This was a part that even Cornell would have cried for. Ignoring these extra-extra curriculars, Amelie has outstanding abilities, and for thirteen years we've watched her write English themes beyond her years . decorate the Council, and almost all of its Committees, as a Fighting member, draw stimulating cartoons for history students who find Hamm tiresome, and manage to get eight hours of that thing they call beauty sleep every night. She is the best Minute-loser the Playshop has ever had, and to top it all she is the Editor of this inflation Brownie. In linal praise. Amelie Cthat accent aigu is her latest additionl is creative, industrious and modest: but as she herself would say, with an airy gesture. il n'y a pas de quoi l 19 EAW, df? 811856 She's delicious, she's delightful, she's delovelyf' That's the chorus you'll hear in any senior conversation, when Helen's name is mentioned. This whirlwind of inexhaustible energy manages to make Mrs. Roosevelt's Day look like a Mexican siesta, and a listing of Helen's accomplishments would Ell a senior thesis box. As Miss Miller's right-hand man, chairman of the Costume Committee, who hasn't lost a back- drop yet, the first Class Treasurer who's never had dues-blues, and the only member of the hockey backfield who can say Knute Rockne, I knew him well , Bennie has established herself on all counts. In planning any class festivities, food, ration points. and Helen are synonomous. She's always on hand to assure anyone with a 22 waist that she won't have it long. When present at these senior functions, Merry Helen proves that Jive's Alive and can go into hysterics at the slightest provocation. Helen is a romantic at heart. Anyone who has seen her Inspiration propped up on the library table during study hall, can easily see why she dashes home every evening to have a little chat with the mailman. She does the work, knows the jokes, and has the love-life. Helen . . . Tres Bien! 20 Marion gfaunfein Morton isn't just a nameg it's the calling card of the grandest person you'd ever want to meet. XYe discovered this in 1930. when the immortal words Does it have a purpose? woke the kindergarten from its hlock-husting lethargy lt was then that Mort came hustling into Mrs. Germain's surprised realm, to he lJred-and-huttered among us less gifted, and less energetic, enlisted volunteers. lfarly in his amazing career, Mort found that work and sleep don't mix: so he gave up sleep! By this move he found more time to teach us our numbers, collect Dixie Cup tops, catalogue each female temptress with one appraising glance. give yearly transfusions to the School Council. do a Houdini with the class cash register. spark three athletic teams, and read the last chapter of The Brothers Karamazovf' VVhen it comes to music, Mort puts his foot down-on the loud pedal! His musical activity began with an operatic Three Little Bears , continued with the complete repetoire of Gilhert and Sullivan: and he is now husily ripping off Class Day skits and songs to promote school spirit. Vvhat a performance! At present M.K.B. spends his time writing to colleges, to take his mind off the army, and filling out Uncle Sanfs order-blanks, to take his mind off college. But 'llhat's life: that's the way you find it-up and down the coast. 21 0, Cifw lt took us eleven ears to find o 3 but in her all our ex uectations were realized, for she is a Y 1 combination of the Better Things in Life. She is the only girl for whom the class will sit up and listen: and though outsiders may not know it, this is a feat comparable only to hearing Miss Hunt order Steak without the Swiss. Joy's beautiful speaking voice, acquired through a ten-year's acquaintance with Merrie England, has us all spellbound: and she is the first girl who was able to make Lady Macbeth sound like Lady Macbeth. J. C. was the able chairman of our Library Committee, who reformed the Study Hall, where silence is golden and studying was a lost art: and her bangs are the envy of every low-brow in the school. She was also active in the Playshop, as the love interest in Androcles, and the Simon Legree of Co-ordinators. lXIadame's statement It's irregular! holds no terror for Joie, and she breezes through French knocking down idioms right and left. She's vice president of the class: her thesis was on China: and if the above kaleidoscopic picture hasn't left you with the impression that she's versatile, we must have forgotten to mention that Joy has read God's Angry Man , too. We cannot say much more except that Joy is a wonderful person, and to know her is to love her. 22 llllllllll ill l l l , ll ll ,lll gzeanor f,woi5in VVay back, when everyone knew where his next President was coming from, the younger Duvoisin child gathered up her hockey stick and pictures of her cat, Blinky, and set out from Hunting Ridge, to follow her older sister to the Big City and Park School. After taking four street-cars, you might think that Ellie would arrive on the front-steps brow- beaten and forlorn. But this is not the case, for you see it takes more than a lost transfer, a bevy of City boys, and a hike up the gravel path, to ruflie this Country Cousin. Her activity list is long and filled with impressive offices. While leading our class through the trials and tribulations of the eighth grade, Ellie practiced that old adage, A soft answer turneth away conscientious objectorsf' As a mainstay, and the present vice-president of the Playshop, she holds Dave up when times are tough, and we can't get a two-thirds majority , and is not above using her spray-gun as an anti-aircraft barrage, to protect the flats , her babies, from grimy hands, Sports are no obstacle for this Angel in VVhite fher uniform is always spotlessj, and she knows the creed of the hockey handbook as well as Madame knows Smith Sz Roberts. Eleanor has always been a silent member of our loquacious class: slow to speak, but quick to act. Her thesis about the U. S. O. in two World Wars also proves that she is all out for Defense. Her socks and sweaters always match, and this typifies Eleanor, who has never been at odds with anyone. 23 Jdfma Elin One day, in our iifth-grade haven, we walked into the class room and saw a little pigtailed girl playing Beethoven and Rachmaninoff on the piano: and though the pigtails disappeared shortly afterwards, Alma, with aid from brother Seymour, has literally serenaded us through the Upper School. As a French student who knows her idioms, and a history student who never forgets a date, Alma is the constant pride of teachers and the aid of stumbling students. She has held almost every oflice in the school and now presides firmly over the treasure chest of the Playshop. Over and above all this, from 3:15 to 5:00 P. M. l 'l P l c a1 y at ea uody, she pursues dancing CS1J3UlSl1, ballet, and modernj, singing, and social life in an amazing manner. lCverybody's friend and the backbone of the senior court of goodwill, Finkie, as joan calls her, is the only member of the class who has never carried a chip on her beautiful shoulder, never held a grudge, and never been sent to Mr. Froelicher's office. 24 Z7 J A Gllflflfte I L8 QVL QP? NYhere is Sam? Is he in the Little Latin Room? Is he in the oliice? Is he behind closed doors? No, Sam is in the Senior Cupboard. Now the Senior Cupboard is a fixture dear to all incoming juniors and the bane of the seniors' existence. It seems to us that we invariably see Sam in there, striving to keep law and order among the lunch boxes and geometry work-books. Keeping law and order and being responsible make up a big part of Sam, and his eternal strife over our Bohemian mannerisms sends him running to the lunch room at least sixteen times in the course of one day for a sustaining bite. Cie., two veal cutlets, mashed potatoes with gravy, stringy beans, bread and oleomargerine, water-ice, and milk with two straws.j Sam is ldealistic with a capital L He really believes that those plaid shirts will keep out the draughts of the north corner of the history room: and his themes have the unmistakable rugged touch of C. li. Ileklille, plus a pinch of romanticism supplied by The VVorld's Great Love Letters. However, there are many sides to this stalwart boy: he is interested in almost every subject. We know that the Grimke Sisters and his orange tie share top honors. Hut afterbig week-ends. when that debonair sloueh invades onr naive group, we sometimes wonder what A. Z. A. has that we ain't got. Sam is an expert on the sunny South, and to hear him tell jane the best way to take a sun bath makes us realize why the Florida Chamber of Commerce loves Samuel Thomas Joseph Herman Abrams Friedenberg almost as much as we do. 25 Jucfiffb QM er? Judy was born on Calloway Avenue, escaped at an early age to Dorchester Road, and escaped from there to Chatham. The remarkable thing about this unexciting statement is that all of these houses are within two blocks of each other, for Judy cannot bear the thought of forcing Zipper, her dog, to find a new flre hydrant. This is typical of Judy's thoughtfulness. She is a friend to every girl, boy, and stray animal on the street, and the protectress of the high ideals that we Hnd it a struggle to uphold. J. G. distinguished herself in the third grade by coming to Park. Since that time she has been busy making us spend our recesses in trees QTarzan educationj, and captivating the hearts of all and sundry with one toss of her black curls. Her marks in English, French, geometry, art appreciation, and I audit in history -unlike the stock market-have never gone down: and she has rotating musical interests, piano, singing, and maybe I shouldn't have pawned the harp . Recently this avocation led to the amazing agreement between Mr. VVilliams and Judy on how to get the correct abdominal tones , which led to the leads in a succession of outdoor operettasi these led to devastating cases of Poison Ivy. Discounting these somewhat unusual attributes, we like Judy because of her Calvert Clothes . her deep purple linger nails, which are ideal for attacking Vllestern Maryland milk bottle tops, and Delbert, her Tobacco Road Romeo. Judy claims she's different 'cause I keep scrapbooks, walk in the rain, and eat dog-food sandwiches. But no matter how hard she tries to get away from it all, she's still a Child Study baby. 26 KQV! .!4!dI'l'LAbtI g8l I don't usuall ask for favors: I don't even want a third termg all l want is tive minutes of Y beautiful, uninterrupted silence. This futile plea 18 hurled before unfeelmg, stoic senior mem- bers at all class meetings. But will Caryl ever achieve that precious quiet? W'on't somebody mlease revive the President! 'llune in at graduation to see if Carvl's di mloma talks back. s . l XN'e cant use mere adjectives to describe Caryl, only superlatives will do! C. Rfs activities read like the 1944 income tax blank: they are endless. Hammy, we unsuspectingly asked one evening, what did you do today P lt was a calm and uneventful day, replied our leader. I handled five major subjects, took a music lesson, read 'X'Var and Peace' at recess, ate my lunch between meetings of the Assembly and Class Day Committees, practiced my screams for Mrs. Androcles, took a driving lesson, and on the way home l wrote my thesis on a Glyndon bus transfer. VVhat, we screamed, all in one day! Oh, it's nothing, returned Caryl, and by the time 'l we had recovered our poise, she had disappeared. NVhen last seen she was standing on L1 Jerty Heights Avenue taking part in the Conservation Committee's program, by holding up The Bank. 'l'ruthfully, though, if any of our plans have materialized all thanks should go to Caryl. She has held us together by dint of her own strong character and fine sense of humor, though she would be the last to admit it. 27 Warifyn .!41!a,rfz VVhen you hear the ominous rattle of car-tokens, thesis box, and mechanical-drawing tools. Marilyn is about to make her entrance into or her exit from the school, depending upon the sunls immediate position in its orbit. As a 1942 addition to our harried class, Marilyn has the happy and unusual faculty of being a friendly person, who is the perfect representative of Mr. Hull's Good Neighbor Policy. She promotes South American heat-waves around the radiators. According to Mr. Tom, she is also the only girl who, when faced with a stage plan, blue prints, and a slide rule, doesn't look as though she were a drowning man going down for the third and last time. Over and above her many other talents, basket-ball and art-work included, Marilyn definitely has our votes as the best dressed girl in Park. And to conclude this brief resume, we'd like to state emphatically that Marilyn is a member of the famous Brooks Lane contingent, and has an A coupon on the 0.32 line. Could we ask for more? 28 gem, Quincy owwilfz C Jnee upon a time there was a lonesome seventh-grade class. In its campaign for companionship, it placed a want-ad in the 1939 Brownie, which readg VVe are the class of '44 Our virtues are few, we hope for more. Now, at last, we have found our missing virtue. lts name is Jerry Hurwitz. 'llhis gentleman, who occupies seat ten in the Senior Circle, has endeared himself to our inno- cent group hy his many extraordinary faculties. For years our history class has accepted Gone XVith 'llhe VVind as its Confederate Bible. This year, however, H.. a Tennessinian of long standing, shattered our illusions by not only insisting hut hy proving his point that the Civil VVar was not fought on Scarlet O'Hara's hack porch. At thesis time this astonishing new edition came forth with the calm statement that he was going to give up his all-consuming historyonic tire, to delve into the intricacies of the Russian Ballet. Vile know that this long paper has sprinkled caviar on Mr. Vogel's education: but the class is still waiting for a practical demonstration. ln addition to these surprising accomplishments, Jerry hoards athletic fervor, an amazing knowl- edge of Hamlet's home life, an inexhaustible supply of references , and a genuine interest in music for the multitudes Cie. us j. NVell, Suh, you seen your duty, and you done it , and though we may not he any better , we're certainly a lot happier for your influence , 29 QQZBQLWA JQJZ l D ll is 1 southpaw with a Peabody northern accent. XYithin the Manuna Katz's little gir. e 1 my. Q z short span of twelve years she has pursued every vocation known to mankind. During her stay in the primary Deb was the only pupil who was tall enough to take a bath in the drinking fountain. Qlior this her mother is eternally gratefull. In the Intermediate she taught us how to bury goldfish talivel. Since that time she has narrowed her activities to an Ps intensified study of the drama in all its phases. and a search into juvenile delinquency. This latest interest led to a thesis on The History of Reform Schools and Penitentiaries in the Ninteenth Century , which is a hundred pages of intlammable expose. lJebby's entire scholastic career has been punctuated by the now famous sit-down strikes in Mr. l roelichcr's office, and frequent cries of, But l don't understand, it's so complicated! Com- plicated or not, Kattie has always pulled through with flying colors. She has shown us how to wear everything from a black leotard to something Lena made , and her lifelong friendship with -ludy has the telephone company frenzied. lJebby's relatives are famous. especially Minnie-Ma, who has been dressing the Drama Club for years: but we who know her grandchild realize that grass will never grow under Debby's literary feet. or on theKatz's front lawn. 30 Hilfe Wow Jgiin Bette Mae is a veteran Parker. She came here in the high Kindergarten, and ever since that time her life has been one beautiful picture after another. Picasso had his blue moods and Betz has her purple: but she's put everything down in Black and VVhite for this Brownie, and we think that the finished product has got technicolor beat a mile. ,Ns a child, Bette, was a favorite of her teachers. She didn't say a word until the fourth grade. Came the fifth, came the telephone, came the Revolution! From this time forward, her motto was, Full Speed Ahead , and she proved this on the soccer field, where she was the only mem- ber of the sixth-g'rade team who could face David without flinching. Five feet two-e 'es of blue: tlfis is the ffirl who dedicates herself to an worth cause, mrovidinff 3 s s it's over six feet. But in her more serious moments, Betty is an active member of the Design Committee of the Play Shop, and is one of the few known artists who has lived to see her work in lights. Blood-and-Guts Bess was also a hockey half-back worth much publicity. ln fact, a visitor was heard to say, Wfhy that girl's remarkable. She's a regular floating backfieldf' You must have gathered from this write-up that Bette is a special sort of person. You're right. She's a Special Delivery that's worth waiting for. 31 amaze! olggouifz Everybody tries to be different, but Sammy doesn't. Sammy didn't spill orange-juice down his Buster Browns. Sammy knew better than to wave to his Mother on May Day: and nov: he knows that in French the past participle agrees in gender and number with the direct object, if the direct object precedes the verb. All this may be hard to believe, but since it is undeniably true, we realized that Sammy was the only conceivable candidate for the nerve-racking job of trying to get the whole school to watch the birdie for this Brownie. So, we proudly present our Photography Editorg a man of many talents, many virtues, and yards and yards of film. An ardent supporter of athletics, Leb's activities begin with the first vibration of the 2:50 bell, and 3 o'clock finds him on his fifth lap around the track, weary, but resolute. l Never let it be said that Bovitz Qsee 1942 Browniej has ever been caught napping. He has an answer for everything and his answer is usually correct. XN'hen it was rumored that Park School was riding for a fall , it was Sam, as head of the dynamic Conservation Committee, who put The Hill back on its feet . As a stellar member of the Building Committee, he found time to fireproof the curtains, and find that missing hammerf, VVe could say that Sammy has a future, but that would be redundant. All we can echo is. Isn't he wonderful. 32 arfbrie eui Baker, lianov, lienesch, l5laustein , so Margie begins her day hy recording the senior atten- dance. with an eagle-eye for culprits slipping up the tire escape. Margie established herself comfortably under Miss l oster's maps three years ago, and hasn't hudged since. Her art work is displayed on most walls of the Park School: and as head of the Design Committee of the Play Shop she supervised a knock-out set. Hockey has hecn a highlight in Margie's career, hut hasket hall is her lirst love. .Ns captain of the team of '-l-l she has gained the admiration of the entire school Qeven the masculine con- tingent, who claim, She shoots like a hoyuj. Margie is a pioneer member of the ,Xppropriatious Committee. and a demon for dough. tinct- she has you cornered in the hall. you may as well give up, for with her it's strictly pay as you go. Though we tease l.ex'i by telling her that the only way to make a fire is hy ruhhing two girl scouts together. we love the organization, and we are grateful for her wonderful sense of humor. Margie is a person who can do anything with a can opener, and she is practically perfect in our tifty-four admiring eyes. XYeiler, XYeis, XYilson, XVolman , amen! 33 QU? Organically, Billy is complete with heart, lungs, appendix and routine accessoriesg he weighs approximately 115 pounds with his shoulder pads on, and a complete set of Popular Mechanics under each arm. Spiritually, Billy is a boon to the Brownie: and anyone who has heard the frenzied words hold that pose , may anticipate a real treat when Levy flaunts the finished product under the hall clock. Our Billy is the sheik of the dark room, and co-owner of the only bottle of developer in the school. B. il.. is also an idealist. He hangs from trees, sneaks up behind the Walclorf salad, and anxiously paces the roof with his Kodak, in an effort to make the ugly beautiful, and the beautiful ugly. He can open anything, from Madame's windows to a discussion on why the railroads are here to stayg but his talents don't stop there. He is the only person we know who can keep his hat on while going over bump 1,659 on Dolfield Boulevard, in Efrenfs latest vehicle-the car with the receding rumble seat. Class ically speaking, Billy knows the ins-and-outs of the school. His erratic visits with us have been of the here to-day, gone to-morrow type, and he condescended to join us for gradua- tion only, after a steady diet of North Carolina fried chicken made him lonesome for activities no'th of the border. VVe are glad you are with us again, Bill, so hold that pose . 34 Jane's our 6ll'L9 0120 Look what hlew in on the Uranffe lilossri 9 g in . pecial, boys, cried our male members. Thus, -lane, predominantly clad in her sun-tan. came into our lives, straight from the land of grape- fruits and llanlingos. Her sunny disposition and heautiful smile were the envy and delight of our vitamin-ceinscions group. jane quickly acclimated herself to our NVE-2222 climate and our 80 minute periods: for -lane is a student. She pursues French idioms like a sportsman reeling in a speckled trout, and she is the only fisherman we know who has never had to tell the tale of one that got away. 'lane's hlack-market fwe can't get 'emj Canadian tweeds are the seventh wonder of the school. XYhen she says. Feel my skirt. it's made of goat's milk , we all realize that .lane henetits from science and science benefits from Jane. livery XYednesday after lunch our attention is called to jansie's greatest forte, her voice. She's a treat to eye and ear: hut on the basket-hall court she defies all rules and regulations of the color-wheel, and is ou' ' ' lk' A ' ' ' 1 own wa mg rainbow. Her primary colors are tireen and Gray. ln class meetings -Ian , .' ' ,., ana ier famous tililmusters with Morton rock the rafters, and ruin june's digestion. e is the prime defender of women's ll'rlltS l l tonic. ln three years she has transformed our lrarren existence into a tropical garden. 35 64545119 r e5 Cushing's display of knowledge could be likened to a Fourth of july celebration. The class just sat back and oh'd and ah'd at the explosions of hidden facts and obscure answers that came from this sparkler of information. W'eak with relief at having escaped cross questioning from various teachers, each student relaxed with a good Scholastic, while Cushing told, in twenty-five words or more, why George crossed the Delaware standing up, and how if vou can't vet a room b , Z5 in VVashington you can always sleep in the Senate Chamber. Time was when Miss Foster and Cushing could enjoy a satisfying afternoon with Wonders of the Past, a mandolin-and-cello recital, and a drum majorette lesson. The French room was never complete without a picture of Cush in the front row, telling Madame the Roland Park recipe for Pot-au-Feu. As Editor in Chief of the Park School bi-weekly, bi-monthly, bi-headache journal, the P.S. , M. Cfs editorials gave her own angle on situations domestic and inter- national, and made the common folk sit up and take notice. Her pun-fests with Vangie have become a fable and the words General Custard got his just deserts bring nostalgic memories to us and groans to innocent bystanders. But all this is no more, Miss Foster has gone back to her whistle, Madame eats Campbell's noodle soup, and as this Year Book indicates, the class has stopped reading Foreign Policy booklets, and has taken rapidly to consuming the New Yorker. Cushing will be famous: Cushing's funny: Cushing's fung Cushing's gone to Swarthmore! 36 gykzn ied Yeah, that's my picture! D'ya wanna make sumpin' of it P These immortal words, and many like them, originate from one and the same person, Mr. lf. Ries, alias The Voice . The Voice, however, doesn't limit his activities to a Spike Jones arrangement of Der Fuhrer's Face 3 he also climbs, to dizzy Playshop heights. without a net, and has unadulterated blonde hair. No Park picture would be complete without a profile of The Elk, rushing, tray in hand, to a meeting of his brain-child, the Improvement Committee. Commonly known as the Boss to his workers, john L. Lewis Ries not only carries a big stick, but holds it over the junior girls at every recess for various misdemeanors. Athletics have always played a prominent part in the schedule of Cerise fSir Riesj, but when he backs up the goal in lacrosse, he keeps the gallery on its feet in amazment and awe. In the eighth grade, when Elk dropped in for a visit , he was the First boy to swathe his lower limbs in tweeds, and in this capacity he caused a greater sensation among the girls than anything that has hit the school since. But times have changed since 1939, and so has Elkan: though he still pursues his old habit of telling Schloss where to go-and how to get there. Now all his wild oats have been sown, and his energy is harnessed to the business of the day. As Elk himself says, The Time is Now. 37 Jani! gcitaral Hmenlflzaf David drew himself up to his full height Qsix feet, three inches in red, white and blue socksj and froze the Playshop with an icy glance. VVords poured from his lips. XYhere are the faculty advisers? VVho'll second my motion? For gosh sakes, get upg you're sitting on my peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich l So -the Lord High President of the Drama Club cautions his loyal followers, and so we introduce to you our B. M. O. C., who, equipped only with his grey llannels and black tie, has captained a fighting soccer team, headed a greedy Appropriations Committee, carried on a weekly man to man with Mr. Vogel, and played HeathcliFf to our Cathy. Anyone who has listened to Murderer's Row in our weekly singing class must realize that operettas will come and operettas will go. but Little David's arrangement of Far Above Cayuga's Waters will live forever. A man about town who knows where to get a hamburger that doesn't whinnie , Rosie is an exponent of easy living and the proverbial crew-cut. However, Pink Slips are his specialty, and to hear David tell Miss Hunt how the street car jumped the track, why the hall clock is ten minutes late. and how, if she's good. he'll give her one more chance, are oratorical experiences beyond comparison. Dave, you're a man of many moods, and though we don't know what tomorrow will bring, we don't see how it could be any better than yesterday. 38 oui5e . H25enf!La! liarly in the never-to-be-forgotten fall of 1931, one of the Intermediate hell-cats was seen drag- ging a rather timid little girl into Miss Frank's domain, before departing hastily with the all- inclusive statement, This is my sister ! Thus Louise, with a helping hand from brother John, became a charter member of our illustrious, if slightly browbeaten Hall of Senior Fame. Since she is accustomed to driving to school in style, the gas rationing has hit Weesie hard. Nevertheless, she endures the hardships of SZ , to climb the hill every morning, accompanied by a never ending supply of books which my brother used. Sclioolwork holds no mysteries for this industrious soul. French, Miss Miller, and the Costume Dept. of the Playshop are all at her linger-tips, and there has never been a job too large, or too small for Louise to accomplish. Always the first one out to practise, NVeesie is a favorite of the locker room clean-up squad, and anyone who has seen those navy-blue shorts tear down a hockey field or basket ball floor will vouch for the athletic prowess of The Pride of The Seville. VVe hope her interest in nursery schools and the much-younger set will prove valuable in later life, and we relinquish Louise to the terrifying outer world with great reluctance, for we can't imagine what we'll do without her. 39 61,1001 .SZWQM6 All hail to Sara, Whose entrance into any gathering is usually preceded by press agents, fanfare, and a twenty-one gun salute! Bearing this in mind, we naturally had to wait breathlessly for eight years before she decided to join our group. Sara is one of our energetic Firsts , She has always been the first to inaugurate any fad Ci.e. slacks, purple lipstick, size 46 sweater, sen-sen, Mamie , murals on her legsj, and if she ever goes on that much discussed diet she'l1 again be the first! Sara's costume on M-Day calls attention to her importance in the Playshop, and she portrayed Cothurnus to a packed house in the Founders' Day performance. Her artistic talents are also shown in the most recent lunch room mural. Everyone admits that her watermelons look good enough to eat, and Miss Hunt says that they've even demoralized her canned pineapple campaign. Sara is always to be found in the center of a radiator huddle, entertaining with her versatile repetoire, and anyone who isn't familiar with the Swartz-Samuel fable hasn't lived. How the school will miss you, Queen of Bobby Socks and monograms! But no matter where you go, S. S. S. will always spell Smiles, Selective Service, and Satisfaction. 40 WMAM ,SZMM If Nathan is one of our most serious boys , teachers quote with loving inflection. Madame, Nate. and the sulijunctive have never been separated, and his ever ready answer was the constant despair of less gifted chemistry students. The devastating words, It's really VERY simple, Mr Brookmyeru were enough to send most of the bourgeois scurrying for an air raid shelter. . . . Now don't misunderstand us, Nate is not a grind : he just has all the technical gremlins on his side! But during week-end escapacles he sheds his scholastic cocoon, and emerges a social butterfly who won't be pinned down until dead. The bane of this post-seventh-grade talent's existence is that infernal cow-lick. Last year this obsession gave vent to a gestapo haircut: hut after enduring Elkan's heils for an inhuman period of time. our own Bismark went hack to the ever faithful VVildroot. flid. note-he lilushes, too.j For years Schloss was an Army man, but now the Fleet's In , and Nate has heeded the call of the WAVES. At present his only worry is, VVho will keep Uncle Henry's memory alive, and his medals polished ? 41 ima .gzfmrf mi er I cried and cried: I was never so embarrassed in 1ny whole life ! says Ellen, as she recalls her first May Day. No sooner had I danced out upon the Green, than the leering faces of proud parents sent me scurrying tearfully into Mrs. Germain's comforting skirts. It was then that I realized that public appearances were not for me l Au contraire ther pet letter phrasej, Ell can completely disregard the cheering crowds while blitzing another tennis victim. At home her cups have substituted for everything from an ash tray to a practice basket on the Hellers' lawn, and when engrossed in a meaty magazine or narcotic novel, Olaf and HO, could chew up her favorite red shoe-string hair ribbon and she'd never know the difference .... VVait 'til you read page eighty nine! Toward the end of her lower-school life, Eileen devoted herself to collecting every tall, dark, and handsome , and to losing everything from her green leather jacket, that prehistoric blue pocket book, and thirteen white slips, to daddy's new bike. These regrettable habits have pursued her through high school, and though she was our first Glamazon to receive her blazer, she lost it the following day! As captain of this year's hockey team, she was compelled to wear Amelie's ultra-baggy sweat shirt-and those tennis shoes looked familiar, tool In the eleventh grade Ell had her first scholastic change of heart , and has recently decided to take education under her maternal wing. In Council she seconds all of Morton's motions and after a successful P.S.,' career, and a ready adaptation to Low Man on a Totem Pole , she was elected Assistant Editor of our Brownie. As for her personality, how can we describe it! It bubbles, it chuckles, and its ever-ready good humor is contagious. Mr. Vogel thinks that Ellen is Park School's answer to VVhitney Darrow Jr. 5 but we will always attribute her real success to Spontaneous Combustion ! 42 .jczref mijd Vvhen we heard about him, we exclaimed, ls it a bird? ls it a plane? ls it Superman F No, said Mr. Ifroelicher, it's a new Senior Boy. I realize that such a phenomenon is cataclysmic, but this time it's true. Men's suffra YC has beffunf' XYe couldn't believe it, but on Monda morn- iv Y mg we were not disappointed, for there in front of Mr. Vogel's desk stood a symphony in red flannel. From underneath the complete works of Bach, Beethoven, and Karl Marx came a low moan. May name is Karel, but I'm not a girl. Now, after eight months of close association, we are prepared to disclose the inside story of XVeiss, or why Androcles never had a lighting chance. Karel, though a babe in the woods among so many wolves, came into his own without any trouble at all. The lead in the Fonnder's Day play gained him city-wide renown. and his resonant baritone makes us all realize how lucky we are to have captured him, even at this late date. Karel is interested in humanity. The earth is his laboratory: the human race is his clinic. If there is one man in the world who knows how the other half lives fwhich half, escapes us at the momentj. that man is Karel Vlleiss. Our class has diversified opinions on almost every subject. but we are agreed on this one point: Karel is a grand person, and we know that some day he, just like the best songs, will go to Carnegie Hall. 43 4 :xanga ine 5011 From tender infancy, Vangie has been an early riser. She sleeps so little that the sandman hardly knows her. VVhen she dreams, she only has time for a synopsisg and Vange was the first woman to discover that you can cut a sleeping pill in half, and enjoy a nap. Vangie disagrees with Freud, and can even tell you why! This is her outstanding claim to famed Her current hobby is reading quickly. During a recent speed test Vange sat in the dark room, and the Brownie Photographer set off a flash bulb. In the ensuing split second of glare, Wils read t'So Little Time , and got halfway through her College Boards. Add to these supernatural feats, an inexhanstible appetite for hard work, shown by her achieve- ments with the Inter-High-School Congress, her position as an indispensible cog on all Varsity teams, her title as a one-man Cheering Section, her loafers and high white wool socks, and you have a picture of Saroyan's conception of Young America VVants to Help. Vange has been called everything, from a Sad Apple to a Dissipated Biscuit . But we realized that she combines beauty and brains, and though she'd walk twenty miles to hear a cliche, we can proudly say we know her well, and we knew her when! 1 Loc. Cit. Cf. Thesis. 44 Z8 inch dog. it W, W, mm XX'hat are little girls made of? Sugar and spice and C'VCl'yllllllQ' nice. 'l'hat's what loanie is , made of. She has that Lalox smile, that 1reaches-antl-cream complexion, and those liquid eyes . g . . . o. is it any wonder that Reds asked us in 19-ll, Have you he' rd zl t ' l' l 1 1 a Hou my itt e cousin P Yes. we had. for who could help hut like and admire the youngest member of XYolman. Inc. joanie is talented, and her devotion to 'l'allarico is second only to her skill on the keyboard. Her repetoire includes Bach, lioogie-XYoog'ie, and Assembly-Room-lllues. joan says, If you'Ve never heen to a Peabody dance recital, heard ahout the hoys across the lake from Tall Pines Camp, or met Miss Bessie Evans, you aren't lit to wear a size four Hutzler Hiker. 'loanie is intelligent and amhitious. She headed a radical .Xssemhly Committee. was Secretarv of the lnter-High-School Congress. and her thesis had that well-groomed look. il. XY. is athletic, and when she meets a hockey foe she states QI l:t ' ll' IJ and dust they hecome. as she nXVllllJ5n down the alley. L np ll ua y, ust Thou Art , .loanie is enthusiastic, and this qualit ' has carried h ' tl ' ffl . ei nou 1 manv hysterical to 1 note her s . . l experiences .... lo our knowledge she is also the only woman who has swnln the tiwynn flak Channel. To sum it up, she is a girl with a 22 inch waist, a 2-l hour schedule, 26 million friends and a Those who know her, say that Lucy may attract the males, hut ,Ioan U' tg tl ,X '-N . ,es ie rmy avylf. 45 .Mdforicaffy agioealing ESTABLISHING A BEACHEAD--In Kindergarten, our small task force. consisted of Amelie, Helen, Louise, Ellen, Debby. David. Betty Mae, Sammy, and Morton. David and Morton began pulling up radiators, Ellen wrung out her bloomers, and Helen displayed the smocking on her imported white dresses, to the amazement of Sammy and Debby. Thus we began our campaign! FIRST SKIRMISH-Led by the same crowd, a fortress of blocks occupied by the male animal was recaptured by the gentle violets-the girls thus exhibiting their first signs of superiority. Debby's family was really quite upset because she wasn't in the high reading-group. SECOND SKIRMISH-Our mid-morning nourishment was enhanced by Sammy's starry-eyed enthusiasm over the milky way. We even permitted ourselves to let down our braids and play milkmaids in the May Day. It was a grade A year. THIRD SKIRMISH-The class was up in arms because David was being monopolized by Helen. and the let's be against club congregated, banishing a victim each day from its select society. Then one day Judy marched in bearing the white Hag and a batch of Nora's cookies: naturally Morton stopped reading his Amoco calendar to observe this latest material. FOURTH ATTACK-As we struck out for Maryland's Rolling Road, several members of our class began their life-long study of tobacco. And in coed cooking Amelie annoyed us all by actually eating her welsh rarebit. Our first wholesale invitation to Blaustein's was issued and. as we communed with nature, all the mysteries of farm life were revealed by Mr. Burnham. FIFTH ATTACK-This time, nature communed with us, and we explored our 19 acres, commuting regularly to Miss Coe's office. Alma made her debut as the Great Pacificatorg Vangie taught us to play kickball without stepping on her hair 5 and we donned our cheesecloth to emote in Orpheus and Eurydiceu. Yet Mort and Betty Mae managed to find romance among the Dixie Cup tops. SIXTH ATT ACK-Our little army assumed the responsibility of the Intermediate Bank, electing E11 and Judy as bookkeepers, to Sammy's disdain. These two embezzled the funds well into the summer. We came through with our usual blue ribbon for producing the most superior radishes, and pulled them up just in time to begin bombarding the upper school. SEVENTH INVASION-Our forces were replenished by warriors Samuel and Duvoisin. Eleanor insisted on proving her French ancestry: Sara showed us how one may wear a scarlet- and-maroon ensemble, and Debby and David, while fighting for our seventh grade rights, caused a student-council scandal that led us to our title of The Vulturesw. Amelie blushed! EIGHTH INVASION-We crept through the forest primeval, weeping bitterly over the plight of Evangeline, while Cushing's entrance forecast fashions in slacks. Elkan, Nathan, and Sam trotted in and, clad in the inevitable cheesecloth, donated their male voices to our Iolanthe chorus: while Louise was blown from fish pond to flat in the fifty-mile gale which accompanied each of our performances. Billy inaugurated the camera-without-film, for seniors who couldn't take pictures. 46 NINTH BATTIJ2-Drag out the cheeseclothl Hulda of Holland , our next hit, was a Dutch treat. Caryl came in, unable to understand why we bothered with homework, and so she introduced to us her, I do it between bells plan. Margie accompanied Caryl in full-dress uniform, emblazoned with the creed of the Girl Scouts, And Joanie entered with references from Reds. Her constant struggle to present Bessie Evans in her lndian Tribal Dances revolu- tionized the assembly committee .... And Debby said, W'hy F . . . 'l'liN'llH BA'l I'Lli-Iii Upper Four, we covered our homeroom with blue paint and ourselves with glory. Alma mixed her Beethoven with Basin Street, and introduced us all to the best boogie-Woogie player in town. XVe acquired a new secret weapon when june , our blonde bombshell arrived. And we gave our Sophomore Hop Ccourtesy D. RJ with Tommy Dorsey's orchestra .... in the nickelodeon. lCI.liVI'1N'l'H BfX'l'Tl.E-.-Xt last we sighted our objective, and camped in the Junior Class. Cushing assumed title of Big Chief VS , and jane decided to stay for the winter. Marilyn set up camp by the radiator, and we welcomed Joy to take the lialamer out of our accents, while Amelie and Morton stayed up all night with the sheep, writing the Class Day script. FINAL VICTORY-General Hamburger was named Chief of Staff for the second term, and received fresh supplies from jerry and Karel. NVe gathered forces for a strictly family Halloween party, and Nathan upheld his record by becoming inebriated over the cider. NVQ rebuilt many devastated and war-torn school activities, and as this Brownie goes to press, our class is still locked in the little Latin room, negotiating for a lasting peace. 47 yeh us on V Pen---shun! QWG' fwo peasarks ulfra -ultra violel' 0VV6r' ou 38 q town meefing oF Hmeshuirs OPSVI For ins PGCHOH leI'Q be 'candid Qouwx Faces PW uhlfe :ff 1t3Zf,'w?Mas2 a: ,w,g',',,'- '-MQ,-,. ,. Q Q3 , 'S . ' 31, - rnofhxnq 'A A 5, ,A 5525- XX r K X on Pop of Hweworld new Sw-3,0 H1 We O Aka Qe.w52 a clixie cup rms 0 ' 'Tx I f LQ ,9 ' 'a Y - 4 . Q 514 1, Y, 'Q ,I ' 4 4,1 . 'L ' A X lffffl 1: pdvlova and Friend dl-9 if our 5 I'ol rafio Yxeav+s and mowers ji Ze garided You have worked with us. You have played with us. As children you dipped our braids in ink-wells And kidded about our first pair of long pants. 1 VV e have joked with you, VVe have scorned you. VVe have asked you to our meetings, And we have kept our secrets from you. But soon you will take our place, For we are Seniors. Soon you will do the little things That drove us crazy, and made us happy All this year. You will graduate from building snow forts To writing theses that seem unending. You will graduate from eating in the rooms, To lead the growing chain of school activities. You, who ran through friendly halls, W'ill soon wear the crisp, unbending white, And the proud set smiles, that lead to Graduation, and Goodby. 50 X X ,ff in i nfl: T' 1 M H' W i ,, v 4, ,g H. ix 'gow-fi vi, A ,w',q! : Wm Wim''-1 .,g,,bu.,y,,. m, W,,w,.Jinvbi.,Lrlwi -M'n.,.v'. ,is ,, .nu om, W.. if 37 PPE? 62110 VVhen we were very young VVe thought you. oh, much younger still, And wondered if the time would come When it would be your job to fill The offices at Park. Yet now we share activities? You too are on the varsities, And you rule quite as much as we. And now, you see, VVe do not think of you as young. THE SENIORS RosEL H0b'FBERGER, President IEFREM Po'r'rs, Treasurer CAROL LEIBOWITZ, Council Member JOAN BETTE SEI-'F, Council Member NANCY STRALYS, Cozmfil Jllvlrzber MARGARET BIQRNISY Giconcm LICVINE HELEN CAPPEL IELSBETH LEvv JACK DUKE HAROLD LITT1,EnALi2 HARRIET I'IIGHS'1'liIN EEREM POTTS BEHRL HIRSCIIBIAN RUTH CAROL ROSICNBERG ROSEL H0121-'BERGER JOAN BIETTE SEEE ALAN LEBOW NANCY STRAUS CAROL I.E1aow1'rz CAROLINE VVEIS 53 mmm 5 I S F2 fl ,9,.'J2l Czlftl' We think of you As the hulwarks of each team. And remember you In talkative hudclles, In loafers And plaid shirts. VV e hope that you, who always seem So carefree, VVill remember us. THE SIENIORS. JOHN KATZ, President x BARBARA BLAUSTEIN, Trvczswrr HOWARD ROSENTHAL, Vice President WILLIAM PLISSNER, Council Member MAURICIQ VVYMAN, Cozmril Jllcuzbvr BARBARA BLAUSTEIN FRED FROELICIIER SIDNEY FUTTERMAN JEAN GRAHAM NANCY HAMBURGER JOHN HIfI4I,lfR DAVID HISRMRXN NIARGOT Hrtss WILSON JONES PAULA KAIRYS PIIYLLIS KANTER MAIYRICIC VVYMAN 55 -IOIIN KATZ PAUL LICVINIQ PATSY INIILLER W11,1.1Aru PLISSNICR HOWARD ROSIQNTIIAI. DORIS SCHAPIRO -II'L1is SIIAIVITZ Rom-:RT STARK BARBARA STIQRN ANNE VVEILIQR HARRIICT' VVULBARSHT m s 1-qw M X I jf PM jftfee We cannot say go forward Because we know That youdhayje set your goal 5 And with each chogen sport At your control, - You've been the Spartans That we've grown to praise And trust. Yet now as days Elapse, Yv?E'kIaow we must away And leave you. ' I THE SENIORS. VIRGINIA 0'CONNOR, President ' ' CHARLES Wmstm, Vice President JANE WHITE, Council Member A HALIJJC1: WILLIAMS,'COM1lCil Member fELI.EN LEVI, Tredmrer ' nw , IIMNI Asrcm I MADELEINL Kwrzxv BARLILM Ll-:E Bnncowxrz JERRY KOMAN D?w,'CAPPEL ELLEN Lr:v1 Smtmoun Fn-uc VIRGINIA O'CONNOR STANLEY Fmmxnr LEE Pun An'rHUn GDLIISTEIN Romzxrr NRAPPAPORT B.um'r'rm Garwsrmnntgn V LEE Rosmvnnnc JOAN Hncmi , t JILL Rorrmw mQfQQQ t t I f Mmzjomn KAUFMAN JANE Warne I ALLEN Kntum t t HALLOCfK WILLIAMS . CHARLES WxLsoN ,Q 'M V, , It t L57 W I I N W 'WW1'131IfI ,'II I xt wwwjwMXLIKIV ' Iv NWI I Im H ,Wm WV W IIII ' I uhm! ' uw: N wwhwwxw! X M1 U X X! ' xwlxw M W W W N NJ jx-ml 3' 131 ,,,, 'W I,'I :,,,, . 1 g , N 'Y:,1,,1'Y1Uq,l:11, ,,,., Mx.. , ,,,,, ,,,. , ,w Q' ,w Vw - I , I, W ', ' WW v 1,'1i 1'1l ix !,,,,1,vuM 'WN ,'uW, ,I U- yyMw J1Hwi?I 'X Uwxktig-W , Hf, , A N U H W W V+ .1 N, N N!! 37 PPE? W0 How Often have we wished that we were you, And could laugh some more together As you do: And play some more as you will play, And work as One as you have. For you have found the way That many seek- The way tO play, THE SENIORS. And work, And laugh together. ELIZABETH BLAUSTEIN, I'rvsidcnt BEVERLY MOSER, Sccrrtary ROBERT VOGEL, Treasurer VVILLIAM -HELLER, Council Member JOANNIE STARK, Council Member LOUIS SCHAFFER. Comzvil Mrmbvr HOW'ARD BERMAN IJOROTHY BREITSTEIN ELIZABETH BI,A1's'rEIN S'1'AN1.EY BRAGER ANN GOODMAN EIJNVARD HAMBURGIQR WILLIAM HELLER CHARLES HL'TZI.ER JOEI. HETZLER LESLIE KATZEN ROSE ANN KAHN JUDITII KOLKER LOU ISE A NN ZAMOISKI 59 CHARLES LEBOVITZ JOYCE lXlENDlfl.SOl'IN BEVERLY NIOSICR ALICE NILES CAREY R11-is LOUIS SCIIAFFER HOWARD SCHLOSS LORRAINE SHAPIRO SALLY SILVERMAN ,IOANNE STARK FRIEDDY STRAUSS ROBERT VOGEI. mlwuvjzw x 1 L rl J , We HNF Y a i I I mi, ., ,l' ..' H 'll Wl lllllfll l Ml f U WF l X l 'IIf..,. I .--WL , fl .rj -I. A 'll' W l .,,, .. me-..-., -,...... .. ,..,...t4,.... ,., .I L, . l l 0 el' VL8 7 PPI Now laden with eagerness And with puppy love, Y ou are at the preface of a memory book On whose pages you will place The joys above The half forgotten sorrows. And all your ventures, Bold and free, are not supposed To end Before the book is closed. THE SENIORS. GEORGIA ANN LEVI, Prcsidmzt ALICE HECHT, Treasurer Jo VAN RANDALL, Vice President PHYLLIS MACHT, Secretary ALICE VVEINBERG. Council Zllmnlnvr '1'm:oDoRE BONWIT STANLEY DORF FREDERICK GOODMAN IXIORRIS GREEN ALICE HECHT THOMAS Hass RTAXINE KALTFMAN PATRICIA IQLEIN RODERICK VVILSON 61 GI-1oRc.IA :ANN LICVI PIIYLLIS TNIACHT RIIODA MosER BABEIQTE NEWMAN Jo XTAN RANDALL WILLIAM RANDOLPH FLORENCE SIIAPIRO ALICE XVEINBERC. X hd' klujdm b!OOd,SWGdrd.!'ld Sofia . mag dag E cldssg dag the countil sfands Together If I-Gs 3400! .xgclfiuifiw .yn .14 MAH' ear This has been our country's second year of war. To the outsider Park School hills are just as green, and our Hag Hies as bravely as ever. But within the school the tempo of the times is swift, and our program has been altered to answer the problems of todays pressing needs. VX'l1ile we pride ourselves on our latest accomplishments and activities, we cannot help but men- tion our greatest, and perhaps our most felt, contribution to the war effort-our alumni in the various branches of the service. The entire school is proud and confident that through them we are doing an unpleasant but necessary job, and doing it well. VVe, at Park, although remote from the war area, have felt certain responsibilities suddenly thrust upon us. Sales of bonds and stamps have become an integral part of the school, and the Appropriations Committee has allotted a larger sum than ever before towards the war effort. Under the auspices of The Improvement Committee the students have stepped into the places of absent employees of the school, and have filled the jobs competently. Red Cross work, gifts for the soldiers at Camp Meade, and incidental drives for worth while social enterprises have blazed a trail of enthusiasm through the classrooms. Everyone has helped in some phase of the work. For a long time the Park School has felt that an organization composed of many schools throughout Baltimore could be more powerfully effective than a single body, striving alone. This year our plans materialized with the formation of the Inter-High-School Congress, a representative body composed of members from the many high schools scattered over the city. Under this body several committees have been formed, to help solve the problems facing the community today. It is hoped that the optimism of its members will bring about a new era of cooperation and achievement. Our outdoor activities at school have been expanded to include calisthenics as a daily ritual. The Conservation Committee has remained a constantly working concern, and its efforts have borne visible fruit upon our sadly neglected grounds, and an obstacle course, modeled after one at Camp Meade, is under way as one of many M-Day projects. These then, have been our material accomplishments during the past year. VVe cannot honestly say that we have made any great sacrifices toward the present struggle, but we hope that our small efforts have aided in bringing us a step nearer to the victory, and a step nearer to the Peace. 4 64 Q 1 it Ns ff! , l iw! l'- W W T ,l 1 5 15, if of r T- it - I LXY I W1 p, E- X Lf, ijde sgbdoof Cnnncif lXl0R'l'0N B1,AL's'1'r31N, Pl'f'.YltlFllf lfI.1,iiN XYiQi1.iiR, l'1'4'c l'1'v.via1v1zt MAURICE WyMAN, Trmszwvz' The School Council is the central body of the activity system at Park, and is the chief organiza- tion controlling student government. Its name, School Council, implies several important facts which are usually not realized by outsiders, sometimes not even by the student participants. First, it is a medium between students and faculty, where problems may be discussed and acted upon to the best advantage of all concerned. Then, too, unlike many such bodies, it is an organization with which all members of the school family are vitally concerned, as it is a place to which anyone may come, voice his opinion, and under certain conditions, have voting privileges. The largest shares of the Council's work are divided among its several committees, the most important of which are: The Assembly Committee, which plans and presents assemblies: The Appropriations Committee, which handles the solicitation, collection, and distribution of all funds from the student body: The Co-operative Store Committee, which manages the school storeg The Library Committee, which tries to make the library a more attractive and more useful place, and several other groups with jobs of similar types. In addition to controlling these committees, the Council does many other things. Most important is the effect that it has upon the student moraleg the realization that here is a place to which any student may come to express himself whenever he wishes, to have his problems discussed and acted upon, and the feeling of the student body as a whole that it has a share in making and enforcing the decisions that make the school a better place in which to live. livery year there are people who say, The Council doesn't do anything , and there are those who complain, These meetings are a waste of time, we never decide anything. These people are always right! The organization is not perfect, nor is the school which sponsors it, and it is that very fact that makes the Council and other activities so worth while. This year's Council hopes that it did its job just a little better than previous Councils, and it hopes that it has given some suggestions and laid some ground work which next year's organi- zation can follow, with even greater success. 65 we .Shand pufnam fpfagrifzop IJAVID R. Ros1aNTu.xI.. l'1'c.vifIv11f .-Xmiiuic BANOV, Secretary IfI.1QANoR lJi'vo1s1N, Virc Pf'0.s'iclvrzt ALMA FINK, Tft'!I.S'LtVt'I' This September the Sarah A. Putnam Playshop was faced with a new schedule, which excluded much of the time formerly used for extra-curricular activities. However, interest was high, so the faculty and student members decided that it was worth while to keep the club going, even if it mcant inroads upon their schedules. lt was further decided that the Founders' Day Play, .Xndrocles and the Lion , which was chosen the previous spring, was too great a practical experience in dramatics to be cancelled. So the Playshop, together with its faculty advisers, started laying plans, and, by means of an M-Day here and a Saturday there, managed to snare enough time to produce one of the best plays ever presented to the school. The short curtain- raiser, Aria da Capo , superbly enacted by tive girls, must not be forgotten either: together with the other play, it made the Founders' Day evening thoroughly successful. The big problem after the Plays were over was to decide whether Playshop activities should be continued. There was much criticism of the club and of the time it usurped in the schedule. Nevertheless. after several hotly debated meetings, it was decided that the Playshop should continue, but that it must have a firmer working basis. The answer to this was a constitution, which was immediately written, and the plans now in progress for a revival of the monthly meeiingsu during the months to come. Now that the Playshop has a strong foundation on which to function, many successful seasons are in View and it is hoped that the fruits of Miss I'utnam's many optimistic plans will soon be realized. f gy - 1,2-gsvzs' Q41 Uulrm vky L 'ILP J 66 - If mil X 4-WW lf' 33 iz' 57 4 qw- ., 2g5?3ff 'sa .4 W ! 7 ww' 3 . 1 WN vf ,nv ,Nw 4, , F' K F .A'F f'.m.: 1 'I it c7!Le gfownie Ear liDITOR-IN-CIIIIQF ..... ..... i Jnmliv Runoff Bcsixicss NIANAGICR ..,...,,,, Morton li!lIIlSff'1'1l .Xss1s'1',xN'1' l':DI'l'OR ..,,,,. ,....... E Ilan LlIf'1ll67' Assocmric l':DlTOR ........ .,..... J zrdy GflI.Y17f'l ff .XRT l':Dl'l'0R ...... ..........w.,. I lefty M. A7101-Il l'no'rooRAPuY EDITOR ..... ,, ,, Sinn Lvlwowifs .-XDvIsl:R .........,........................ Miss Katlzarinr R. Foster Assistants: C. H4IIllI7IlI'fjFl', IJ. IXYKILS, H. I.vr'1', IV. I.f'i'y, D. Roxvlzflztzl. Elkan Rim, E. ll'iIson And as always, we are grateful to Mr. 'l'ompkins, and thankful for his invaluable assistance with the photography. If someone asked you. XYhat is the Brownie? what would you say? NVould you tell him that the Brownie is a tradition, to he written hy the senior class, as a solemn duty and privilege? NYould you say that it is the culmination of the work and dreams of the class which presents it? Or would you say, as we do, that the Brownie is the heart and pulse of the school, steadily heating a record of time, progress, and the achievements of the people within it? XVe hope that in reading' this yearbook you will see the picture of Park which we have tried to present. A picture of life. filled to the hrim, and overflowing on the edges. THR l!RowNIi: Romeo 68 77 4 H 5 g Ae . 001' l'iUI'l'0R-IN-CHIEF ...... ., ,,w. 'X itllll'-V R. Sfl'tIIlS lil'SlNl-:SS M,xx,ttpi-QR Y,,,,, ,,lffW,,, lmffy .tXss1sTAN'r lin1ToR. ...... Cum! l,vi1m:u1't: l,i'i-iqmuv liorrozq ,,1V , ,,AA elim.,-4-1 llf,1f1N-,-!,f,- ART l'illl'l'0R ......,, . ...... .,... I Xjlifll Ci. lXI0.Yt'llI7t'l'fj SpgyR'1'g l':l1l'l'fjRSH .--,- jmm IJ, SL-If l At'I'I.'rx' ,XIJYISURS A ,Y,.,,, llr. 7iUlIIfVkl'H.V f't'f '!lf' I-f'T 1' fllr. Vogel XYhen we. the juniors. took over the jolm of editing the l'.S. . we were faced with many prohleins caused hy the war. tif course this affected our imnhlieation, lint in no way rlid it hinder it. This year we iniineogrznmlied the inagazinc at school. therehy saving the wartime cost of ltaving it printed. Many new and needed features were added. XYe institnterl a new section entitled l'.S.S.t J. fllark School Service Organization 1, chielly for the enjoyment of our alninni at war, and tilled the maffes with mictnres which ffreatlv enhanced the I'llZllf21ZlllC'S a 1 mearance. :N h , Pr 'Ilhis season we did not make a point of stressing the literary section, as have other l'.S. hoarrls. We tried instead to high-light the school news and activities. The l'.S. was fun to write. inn to print, and we hope that it was also inn to read. 69 tpfizoding gaclwar H Now that we are leaving Park School, our constant thoughts and hopes lie with you, the six lower classes. Our twelve years have just Hown by, and suddenly we wonder if you in the kindergarten are still spilling orange-juice, and building log-houses: and if Helen means as much to you as she meant to us? . . . Do you First Graders still play King and Queen in the alley-way by the stepsi and do the second-grade boys scare you by yelling, Look, no hands from the top of the jungle gym, while their girls play with marionettes and listen to records of the Nutcracker Suite? . . . Are the high and mighty Third Graders forming clubs and taking a sudden interest in animals? . . . ls the Primary still as we left it? Are you having the fun that we did? Does the Fourth Grade play hop-scotch and jump rope, and read Maryland my Maryland ? Do they plant English gardens inthe sandtable and burn holes in double-boilers? . . . Do you still play house under the bushes. in the Fifth Grade, and take long walks in the woods in spring? And. do you still wish that the floor would open up and swallow you when Miss Coe straightens out all your problems. without raising her voice? Are there cliques. and crushes on senior boys? . . . Sixth Graders, do you feel very grown up and superior now? Can you send the kick-ball way over second base? Do your gardens always win the blue ribbons? ls your art work displayed on a mural? XVas the Lower School Times a success: did the Bank get its accounts in order at the very last minute: and aren't you anxious and just a little scared to pass on into the Upper School? We were, and now that we're about to leave you all for the last time, we're just as anxious and just as scared. We hope that you'll remember us, and realize that you're the luckiest people in the world, for you have a lifetime of work and pleasure behind you. and a lifetime of work and pleasure before you. rliHE SENIORS 70 Z I I l'fHIKIl1V WN x 'Ni ..... nf- .fr j In rv rmvd in If N748 CDIQLUQI' XSZAOOI Nine o'clock, and from Pikesville, liorest l'ark, Mt. XYashington. the Liberty Heights section, and down in the city, come busses and station wagon, discharging passengers large and small totaling a hundred or more. They stream into the building. bringing bookbags, lunchboxes, dolls. extra clothing. special books, maps. half-finished models, and even a pet gadget or two. XYagons, sandbox. sliding board. and swings are soon put busily to use by the younger children. 'l'he playground is tilled with life and colorfllhe tive-year-olds feed Molly Rabbit, and then engage themselves with blocks. paints. housekeeping equipment. tools or clay. 'llhe three R's claim the early part of the morning for the older children. lt may be with three or four other children. or it may be with the entire class, but for each on his own level is the chance to learn. and to practice what he learns. The world is full of many things to be investigated or experienced. Ideas. people, and past and present events are challenging. How did the long-ago people tell time? XYhat kind of animal is the camel? How about the Panama Canal? XYhat of lialtimore's past and present? By what means can peas and potatoes become muscle and blood and energy? XYhat makes a city? From Medieval guilds, whither? The Three Pigs and Siegfried have lent themselves equally well to dramatization. the only question being one of age level. Dramatization, dancing. and music have been inseparable: the three combined to bring alive The Knee-High Man, Davy Crockett. The Swordfish, lchabod 1'addock and the XYhale, Philetus limnpus on the Canal Boat. and Old Dan Tucker, as presented at 'Flianksgiving time. Paint brushes have been busily wielded. Color work has shown polar bears on chunks of ice, primitive man protected by his tires, a picture map of lialtimore, illuminated letters, and much else. Really lovely blockprint cards were turned out at Christmas. Clay has been persuaded lo take on various interesting and pleasing forms. Shopwork and sewing and cooking periods have been productive, not only of good tangible results. but of knowledge and skills. lloys and girls have planned and participated in a number of assemblies dealing with art. the story of Maryland, maps and map-making, and the seasons. For other assemblies there have been slides, piano numbers, played by music pupils, poetry, an informal talk by Technical Corporal lfdward Sipple on his experiences in the Pacific, and a talk by Mrs. Gardiner, the school librarian. Of the remaining months of the school year 1943-4-l we can only say that we know they will be busy and interesting. Children and teachers together look forward to them happily and conlidently. 3liXlQll.XlllC'l' l . CHIC. 73 .Q if ,Mlm .14 .Cllirg I wish I was a fairy In the petals, bright and gay. I like the birds that sing f In the Morning. Oh, Heaven! Oh, Heaven! I wish I was a fairy So I could fly in the clouds. I like everything that God sends down. God sends love. PETER ENTART Primary I jf. ., I'LfZL 5 08171, I love whatever I have, I eat what's good for me. I love the things I see, Because they're good to me. I love to sleep- It makes me healthy. I like everything I have, My dolls best of all- Especially my Nana Doll. F RITZI HAMBURGER Primary I The funniest pumpkin in the world Is my eggplant Jack-O-Lantern. The funniest part about it is That we ate the scooping out Last night for supper, With cheese. EVE DAVENS Primary I I am a tiger. I live in a cave. My father goes out to hunt for me. My grandmother helps me to sharpen my claws by scratching on a tree. The tree is next to my cave. I am a little tiger.. 74 Niagcv ULLMAN Primary I I WA EX Mr. Fix likes to drive to the country on Monday mornings. But he cannot go now because ot the war, and he cannot get gas to go. So he just sits at home and reads a book on how to be a good citizens. And I hope he will. SHEPPIE GLASS 0... gb... We have dogs in our neighborhood, But they never do us any good. They chase the cats and kill the Birds: They are worse than cattle herds. All we hear is dogs and cats. If we don't hear dogs and cats, We hear all about the mice and rats. VVhen we go for a ride Dogs and cats are always beside. MICHAEL ROBINSON Primary III men if painf .xg nclfure When I paint a picture Alas! alack! The pig's snout is too short, And the cow's tail is too long. It seems that everything's A little bit wrong. But I hope that when I get big Maybe I can make a respectable Pig. DOROTHY R. O,CONNOR Intermediate I 75 Primary III we NQOPIWL The threatening thunder roared Like an angry ancient lord The wind whistled by Like an ugly god in the sky. You could hear the rain Pattering on the window pane. As the lightning shot through the air, There was a flashing glare. A streak of lightning, a bit of rain, A rumbling of thunder, and quiet again. ANNA SCHAFF1'-:R Intermediate I le 0656 Wan. lui man? .JJAIJIJJ Once there was a little man that was afraid. One day he was walking in front of a haunted house. The house winked at him, And he stopped. The house had not had any one living in it for ten years. He went up the steps at the front of the house, And went in the house, He had one match only, and lit it. He went up the stairs. Then he came to the last step And fell through a trapdoor. It was full of bats! And one came so close to him he could have touched it. Then he saw a door, and went to it, and opened it, And saw the garden, and then went home. fNonciss story. ALFRED HIMMELRICH Intermediate I. 76 D .7Ae ,Quiz What brings the country to the city, What brings shade and peace and flowers In the shadows of the tallest buildings? All this is brought by the parks, the parks. What fills your heart with country air VVhen you are really in the city? Your heart is filled with the songs of birds As they twitter in the branches. All this, too, is brought by the parks. the parks All this I think as I walk through the parks To school each day. RICHARD ULLMAN Intermediate II .fdgfdltam OQVLCO ffl, His brows were dark, His face was lean, But a kinder man was never seen. He did his very best His whole life through, And always knew just what to do. He helped the slaves, And set them free, A truer man there'll never be. He was tall and thin, His legs were long, And also he was very strong. And to this man we should ever be gratefulg And so on his day of birth, VV e should celebrate with mirth. BARBARA BERMAN Inter111z'diate II 77 anna Nanna was a friend of mine, That not a soul could see. I told her all my troubles And she tried to comfort me. Wheii little Janey went away And there was no one here to play, Then my Nanna came in handyg Uh, this fairy, she was dandy. Nanna came to see me one day. Now let me see, Oh, yes, 'Twas May. .Nanna looked real hard at mei You're not as young as you used to be. You now are able to care for yourself. You don't need the help of a queer old elf I called out to stop her, But of no avail. My Nanna had gone VVithout leaving a trail ! But now I'm grown up, She was right, I can see. But we were good friends, My Nanna and nie. Sooicv EAGLE Intermediate III 78 fs 4 ,.!4!0cAeg soon as it was dry enough to slide down the Intermediate embankment without being mistaken for a mudball, the girls turned out for hockey-and you've never seen such an enrollment. Practice was spent in learning hockey-skill and techniques, and they are not easy. But follow- ing the trend of previous seasons, everyone looked forward to the games. The Varsity had a fairly good season, winning four out of eight games. The J. V., however, we're proud to say, kept its record clean by coming out victorious in all attempts. This year Park School discovered that meeting new friends through hockey can be as exciting as the game itself. The squad played many heretofore unchallenged teams and had a grand time. linthusiasm lasted until the very end of the season, and we again thank Miss Hunt for being such an able coach. The team played its last game in early December, and before you could say tear down the goal , hockey was a past chapter in the history of 1943. Team Members: Ellen VVeiler. Captain. -Ioan Seff, Nancy Straus, Marjorie Levy, Joan VVolman, Anne VVeiler, Amelie Banov, Helen Cappel, Helen Benesch, Betty Klein, Eleanor Duvoisin, Evangeline VVilson. 80 OCCEI' Soccer is a game of skill which requires teamwork, plus a well-coordinated set of leg muscles: and when played correctly, it can also be a lot of fun. This year's soccer squad set out indus- triously to prove the above points. A willingness to learn, and a spirit which was particularly stimulated by the freshmen, added up to a successful season, which, incidentally, is not revealed by the inspection of any scoreboard. 'llhis year more time was spent on fundamentals and the results were apparent: our attack scored more points than had the teams of several past years put together, and the defense clicked more successfully. VVith this background it is easily seen that Park is once again on the road to good soccer teams and athletic success. Squad lXlClllllCI'SI David Rosenthal, Captain. Morton lllaustein, lflkan Ries, Samuel Lebovitz, Nathan Schloss, jerry Hurwitz, XVilliani Levy, Fred Froelicher, Alan Lebow, Harold Littledale, John Heller, John Katz, Howard Rosenthal. Sidney Futterman. Jules Shaivitz, Maurice XYyman, Lee Rosenberg, Dan Cappel, Seymour Fink, Arthur Goldstein, Charles VViIson, Paul Levine, Robert Stark. 81 QA , 53548 tgaf Some girls like hockey, some like lmasehall. but all girls like haskethall. The turn-out this winter was eager to learn, eager to play and eager to win. Practices have lmeen regular ancl well-organized. 'l'lie girls comliinecl their resources to make a fast-moving. sharp-shooting team, Captainecl hy Marjorie Levy. we have clmvnecl many foes aucl enjoyed an active season. Miss Hunt, as always, encouraged and developed each of us to form a well-balanced squad. XYe clicl have the spirit, we clicl have sportsmanship, and we clicl win the games. Team members: Marjorie Levi Captain. Nancy Straus, lillen NYeiler, 'loan liette Seff, lfvangeline NN'ilscm, Carol Leilmuwitz, Helen Cappel, Patsy Miller. 82 ogg ' fgaoleffaff Novembcr-liaskctball! Those words are practically synonymous at the Park School. As soon as the gymnasium is cleared of scenery from the Founders' Day Play, the boys move in to spend the entire winter there, practicing and playing basketball every day, weekends included. We started this season with a favorable outlook, having with us all but two members of last year's varsity. Wie planned a huge schedule, and from the beginning of the season we played two games every week against First-rate opposition. The result of this high-grade of competition was a number of successive losses early in the season which, however, dampened neither the hopes and spirit of the team nor its followers. The boys practiced diligently, and under the always perfect coaching of Mr. Tompkins, developed a smooth team, which did well from all stand- points. As in past years, we competed in the B-Conference, and although we did not win the champion- ship, we did play some Hue basketball. Our experienced team made an impressive showing, and the school is proud of this season's squad. Captain: Morton Blaustein. Squad Members: David Rosenthal, Howard Rosenthal, John Heller, Fred Froelicher, John Katz, lilkan Ries, George Levine, Alan Lebow, Harold Littledale. 83 Nl 53 , Q N S 2 5-2- 7 ...,... ,- me ,fix ai S loving agjoorlfd As the seasonal temperature rises, spring fever and athletic fervor compete for student par- ticipation. The lacrosse stick usually lures the boys to the cradle, and their forays with city teams are an athletic high spot. 'llhe girls divide their attention between the hasehall diamond and the tennis court. Games and matches with opposing schools are always looked forward to hy teams and loyal supporters, In addition, archery, badminton. and nature hikes, are on the program, and we know that this spring as in other years, enthusiasm will arrive with the first crocus outside the hoys' locker room, and continue till the last lacrosse hall is lost. 23' N x.4igz 'VE ' vs' 9, - x,- 1 to qu 84 GRC 9:5 H jlw WL05f C0l11J'61,g80lA:5Hl980,9 0 we PLOW You put muscle where no muscle was before. You trained and developed unclisciplined linclies and minds. You harnessed individualism to a wheel of team work, Ancl taught sportslnansliip where none was known. Wie thank you, Miss Hunt, and you, Mr. Toni, for all these things, and for showing us the sheer fun of NYorking at Play, and Playing at XVork. Tina S1-:N1oRs. I mi-V9 l wi X , s:H:f 85 ded KM hdqdkawa goes Fo fown Me QU Jsur 6 O Vegs A XMQM Of! GY I5 eslhfe 4 OFF H16 record I be-:Fore crewcul' man In Hrs iron mask JZ' mfoi .Xml so we leave. We have not lingered here for very long, 'llhougth toclay our high school years are over. llihat marle them pass so quickly hy? XN'ho blew the time away? XN'as it you, was it I? Surely none of us can say, and Yet, when we think of time well spent, Of carefree hours and friendships deep, We know that years may Hy and memories dim, But tucked in each and every heart VVe'll always cherish' our small part Of Park School. True SENIORS 87 nn L. W' w 1- w , w w ' wJW'ol' , , u , ,, ' v' ww W n ,fx 1 Www ,w 1 u ,W 'W W M1 M W nv U n 6. W .W E yu -3: w ' ww 11 'N ,H If Az u':u,1, ,ws Nu, , , J 4 4 I .WWW .J iv , ' LxwHLlxwwL1i1w'iiJ9li111 l1. J! H Wu X 'l ,1'-llif4!l,...Lwv-,J.J.n ZZQWWWIM! aff , 1. ,,1. wi! 1 ' 3.4. 4. - ff... ' w4'.:7,,. , wfx , w gg, t -.P . 41, . I r'-1611 mg, Z'-Aff. X 5. ' 'Qkiei -I 1' Ji'-' 1 ' ' -' :.?.j'M'.S E I-'fl ' I' 5 1 J X . , Q V' .- .-11. .v 1. 1 -4' 1, Q-1 N h ,ui-14, 1-I+ . 'Vx E. 1 ., J, ., Ny, 5: Av., . r- f.,-- .' 'I . : c N. ' :, ., . . 52.152 t . H1 -' . 'J . . , .1 3...a-13-M31 - X- - - . v, , J ' N - , 1 5- . -1, '. J' nu -. -. f ' , i 'ff' It :KL 'A' .: ,gn Jw... V- . 35.1. .l-.-F, ...em .- 'E-,J 1:.J B'f Tw ,,, - ,,-ri, 1, , N A.. -,Q 'ff V.. VIL Y , , , , :.-,.3 x 1 4, . . . I-.11 . K- 3, wk . A. I .ITE jgrfgti 17.1-' 4fY'rff5' 3' ' - ., 1 rg' ,, . Q v L.,-..-., . fl . Q- . ' iw M ' 'i 57.1 .- -' - ' .r::1gi.-X-if 3 Y- il Q iff: Q-,,,. K fg E g L... 5 -L1 4.4 U , L 1 in V 'T Si ' j ' -'ini JI-.I w , lg , -1- .. ,f .. ,. u-ig. --.-. I-fd ,NL V Y., -, I, Au w. 51. - 1 3 07.51 .5-5 .AA ' 0 HQ 4. T75 ? ' .3 Jug-- ww -',-1 -' J: . fi, ' -I -3 'K' , . ' '-f1,.i, i ' j .mil .- -:--.m Q X' I . . I - 0 1 ..' e. A . i, 'J u , , 1 X i1.,3.. -:,'.. 4 ,, An' ' iii. 3 .fi '. .,,...4:, ,- ,Tl r 4 .f, Q - v


Suggestions in the Park School of Baltimore - Brownie Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) collection:

Park School of Baltimore - Brownie Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Park School of Baltimore - Brownie Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Park School of Baltimore - Brownie Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

Park School of Baltimore - Brownie Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Park School of Baltimore - Brownie Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Park School of Baltimore - Brownie Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959


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