Rhodes High School - Aries Yearbook (Cleveland, OH)

 - Class of 1951

Page 1 of 146

 

Rhodes High School - Aries Yearbook (Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 146 of the 1951 volume:

January Class of 1951 Conquer we shall, but we must first contend, 'tis not the fight that crowns but the end. —Herrick. 1 James Ford Rhodes James Ford Rhodes High School J 3 CLASS COLORS - WHITE AND BLUE Published by Senior Class January, 1951 MR. HOLDEN For educating us in the fundamentals of typing, For serving as the boys' homeroom teacher for the majority of their high school days. For cheerfully giving your time to advise our class organizations. For chaperoning our class social affairs. For developing our desirable traits on the cinder-paths as well as in the classroom. To you, Mr. Holden, we. The Senior Class of January 1951, respectfully dedicate our yearbook. To Members of the Class of January, 1951: It is our hope that each of you has developed a philosophy which rejects the theory that somehow or other, perhaps through a benevolent government, one can expect to receive something for nothing. The future of America will indeed be dark if we discard the belief of our forefathers,—that real security and self reliance are inseparable. Individual initiative and responsibility have been prime factors in developing America from a wilderness to a land of unparalleled progress and opportunity. May each of you contribute your full shore toward its continued progress and preservation. Best wishes to each of you. Neil D. Mathews CLASS OFFICERS WALLY LESER PRESIDENT SHIRLEY TAYLOR VICE-PRESIDENT NANCY WEICH SECRETARY JOHN BUSCH TREASURER SOCIAL COMMITTEE Cyril Urbancic Wally Fanz Bud Platt Janice Huffman Pat Ferguson Lucille Masink Marjorie Hallahan YEARBOOK COMMITTEE Dick Yeager Al Schmitter Dick Bird Al Zagray Lillian Hutter Carole Koepf Bob Platt Betty Coleman CAP AND GOWN COMMITTEE FLOWER AND COLOR COMMITTEE ANNOUNCEMENT COMMITTEE Rudy Verderber Frances Dupcak Clark Fife Olga Flost Ray Dosky Marylyn Ziel Seniors, 1951 HERMAN ABRAHAM, JR. “Abe Freshmon Football; Foreman's Club. MICHAEL AMBROSE, JR. Mick Freshman Football; Foreman's Club; Intramural Sports; Rhodes Bowling Uogut. JOHN M. BUSCH Big John 12A Closs Treasurer; Boosters Club Sponsor; Citizens Club; Student Council; Varsity Trock Manoger '49 and '50; Varsity Cross Country Monoger '50; Spring Show '48 ond '49; Jr. ond Sr. Choir; 1IA and 12B Sociol Committee; Reserve Trock; Freshman ond Reserve Football. BETTY S. COLEMAN Be Be 9th Grade Chorus; Student Council; Intramural Sports; Writers' Workshop; Jr. ond Sr. Choir; Sr. Y-Teen; Citizens Club. Girls' Leaders Club; German Club; Spring Show '50; Rhodes Radio Guild; Yearbook Committee; Dispensary Aid; Operetta '50. RAYMON LEON BENNETT Boron Rhodes Bowling leogue; Varsity Football; Varsity Club. RICHARD DALZELL Dick Boosters Club; Wrestling. RICHARD H. BIRD Dick Freshman Football; Reserve Football; Rhodes Bowling Club; Rhoda Hi-Y; Golf Teom; French Club; Yearbook Committee; Intromurol Sports. ELDA ARDANE DERSCHAU Ardy 9th Grade Chorus; Jr. Y-Teen; Sr. Y-Teen. Homeroom Rep.; Spring Ploy '50; Radio Production; Intro-mural Sports; Spring Cornrvol '49. Seniors, 1951 LLOYD WILLIAM DORNER Duke” Freshman Football; Freshman Basket-ball; Intramural Sports; Rhodes Bowling league; Foreman's Club. RAY DOSKY Ray” Varsity Track (Co-Captoin), Track Squad ’49 and '50; Varsity Foot-boll; Intramural Sports; Citixens Club (Executive Committee); Student Council (Executive); Flower Committee; Notionol Honor Society. JOAN M. ELLSASSER A Coppella Choir; Girls' Glee Club; Jr. Choir; Operetta '50; 9fh Grade Chorus; Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen; F. T. A.; Latin Club; Boosters Club; 12B So-eiol Committee; Intramural Sports; Jr. Journal; lab Assistant. WALTER FANZ Wally” Germon Club; Freshman Football; Intramural Sports; Foreman's Club; Rhodes Bowling Champs '49 and '50; Alpha Hi-Y, Vice Pres.; I2A Sociol Committee. FRANCES H. DUPCAK Fran” 9th Grade Chorus; Jr. Choir; Notionol Honor Society. Secretary; Freneh Club; Latin Club, Secretary; Foreign Affairs, Secretary; Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen; Boosters' Club; Girls' leaders Club; Citixens Club; F. T. A.,-Girls' Glee Club; A Coppella Choir, Accompanist; Commencement Announcements. PHYLLIS DUREY Phyl” Canteen Committee '47, '48, '49; Spring Ploy '49; Rodio Production; Home Economics Club; Jr. Y-Teen; Intromurol Sports. PATRICIA JEANNE FERGUSON Patty” 9th Grode Chorus; Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen; Foreign Affairs, Treasurer; Girls' leoders Club, Vice President; Citixens Club; Boosters Club; French Club; German Club; Intromural Sports; 12A Social Committee; Work and Win Club. CLARK DANIEL FIFE Bud-Pierre” 9th Grade Chorus; Foreman's Club; Freshman Football; 12B Closs Treasurer; Cop and Gown Committee. Seniors, 1951 WILLIAM FREDRICK FISCHER 9th Grad Chorus; Jr. Choir. JOSEPHINE E. GAGLIONE Jo 9th Grode Chorus; Jr. Y-Teen; Sr. Y-Teen; Jr. Choir; Home Economics Club; Boosters Club; Office Work; Spring Ploy '50; Intromurol Sports. DIANA FORBRIZZIO Dr 9th Grado Chorus. HELENE EVELYN FRANTZ 9th Grade Chorus; Jr. Y-Teen, Treos-urer; Sr. Y-Tecn; Home Economics Club; Boosters Club; Spring Ploy '50; Intromurol Sports. PHYLISS MARIE FRUNCEK Phyl 9th Grode Chorus; Dromotics; Intramural Sports; Sr. Y-Teen; Reserve Band. DONALD GAISER Mutt Foreman's Club. MARJORIE N. HALLAHAN Marge 9th Grode Chorus; Rodio Production; Sr. Y-Teen; Home Economics Club, President; Citizens Club; Boosters Club; Spring Ploy '50; 12B-12A Social Committee; Student Council. MARLENE HERBRUGGEN German Club. Seniors, 1951 JACK HOSE A I p h o Hi-Y; Intramural Sports; Ideal Senior Committee. OLGA HOST Jr. Choir; Sr. Choir; Operetto '50; Student Council; 9th Grode Chorus; Cap and Gown Committee. ANTHONY JONATHAN HOWARTH Tony Rhodes Rov'ew, Editor; Latin Club, President; Radio Guild. President; Foreign Afloirs, Pres. '49; French Club, Pres. '50; Notionol Honor Society; German Club; Visuol Aids; F. T. A.; Citizens Club; Spring Ploy •48, '49, '50; Rodio Fall Play '50. Spring Show '48, '49; Ideol Senior Committee, Chairman. JANICE IRENE HUFFMAN Janie National Honor Society; Girls' Leaders Club; Girls' Athletic Association; Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen; Spring Ploy '48; Latin Club; Boosters Club; Intromurol Sports; F. T. A.; Student Council; 12A Social Committee. LILLIAN HUTTER Lil 9th Grade Chorus; Glee Club, President; Jr. Choir; Homo Economic Club; German Club; Jr. Y-Tcen, Publicity Choirmon; Sr. Y-Teen; Spring Ploy '50; Intromurol Sports; Student Council; Citizens Club, Secretory; 11A Clots Secretory; 12B Clot; Social Chairman; Yearbook Committee; Canteen Committee, Chairman '48, '49. GERALD WILLIAM KAMINSKI Krai I” Visuol Aids; Stagecraft; Intromurol Sports. LOUIS JOHN KLEPITCH Louie Germon Club; Audio Aids Club; Rhode Hi-Y; Freshmon Track; Bowling Chomps '49, '50; Intromurol Sports. CAROLE JOAN KOEPF Chucke 9th Grode Chorus; Jr. Choir; Home Economics Club, Treasurer; Spring Ploy '50; Intramural Sports; Best Dressed '50; Rodio Production; WBOE Representative; Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen; Yearbook Committee. Seniors, 1951 JAMES A. LEONARD Jim” Notional Honor Society, Treasurer; Boys' Leaden Club; Citizens Club; Frcshmon Basketball; Vorsity Golf Teom; Freshman Wrestling; Archery Club; Rhoda Hi-Y, Vice President; Intramural Sports; Perfect Attendance. 4 years. WALTER E. LESER “Wally” 12A Clast President; 12B Class President; I1A Clots President; National Honor Society, Vice President; Citizens Club, Vice President; Ger-mon Club; Rhodo Hi-Y; Vorsity Trock; J. V. Football; J. V. Basketball; Student Council; Work ond Win Club; Perfect Attendance. DINO LIOI D 9th Grode Chorus; Jr. Sr. Choir; Boosters Club; Intramural Sports; Foreman's Club; Spring Show '48. DON MacDOWELL Mac” Freshman Track; French Club, Treasurer; Student Council; Art Club; Spring Play '50. JOSEPH T. MARTUCH, JR. Tiny” Lab Assistant. LUCILLE ANN MASINK Lulu” Student Council; 9th Grode Chorus; Glee Club; Sr. Choir; Girls' leaders Club; Citizens Club; Miss Posture '49; Sr. Y-Teen; 12A Social Committee, Choirman; Spring Ploy '48, '50; Intromurol Sports; Perfect Attendance. 4 years. FRANK MIKITKA, JR. Audio Aids; Visual Aids; Foreman's Club; Ideal Senior Committee. RALPH MIKULICH Mick” Stage Croft; Germon Club; Audio Aids. Seniors, 1951 DOLORES IRENE MILLER tt rj 1 erry Sr. Y-Teen; F. T. A.; English Book room Assistant; Distributive Education; Future Retoilers of Ohio; Ideal Seniors Committee; Writers’ Workshop. LLOYD H. MOE, JR. Bud Sr. Choir; Foreman's Club; Audio Aids; Operetta 'SO; Voice Culture. RICHARD M. PARK “Dick Notionol Honor Society; Citizens Club; Sr. Choir; Boys' Octette; Madrigal Singers; Voice Culture; Cross Country Team; Track Team; Spring Shows '47. '48, '49; Operetta '50; lob Assistant; Audio, Visual Aids Club. ETHEL PHILIPPEIT Eth German Club; Glee Club; 9th Grade Chorus; Citizens Club; Boosters Club. ROBERT PAUL PLATT Bob German Club, Vice-President ond Treasurer; Citizens Club; Notionol Honor Society; Freshmon, Reserve, Vorsity Football; Freshmon, Reserve Trock; Freshmon Basketball; Spring Shows '49, '50; Yearbook Committee, Choirmon; Jr. ond Sr. Choir; 12B Vice-President; German Ploy '50, Boys' Chorus. ROY H. PLATT “Bud Notional Honor Society; German Club, President; Boys' leaders Club; Citizens Club; Sr. Choir President; Jr. Choir; Vorsity Football; Reserve Trock; Spring Shows '49, '50; German Ploy '50; 12A Social Committee; Boys' Chorus. RALPH EARL POND “Lily Germon Ploy '50; Band; Orchestra. PHILLIP L. PSOMAS “Phil” it. Choir; Rodio Production; Wrestling Team; F. T. A. Seniors, 1951 JEAN LEONA RADWAY Jeanie” Boosters Club; Fronch Club; Sr. Y-Teen; 9th Grade Chorus; Work and Win Club; National Honor Society. JOYCE ANITA RATH Joy Talent Shows '47, '48, '49; German Ploy '50; Spring Play '49; English Bookroom Attendant; Sr. Y-Teen; Jr. Choir. ALBERT WILLIAM SCHMITTER Updyke” Band; Orchestra; Bond ond Orchestra Club; Yearbook Committee. CAROL LOUISE SCHMIDT Schmid ty” 9th Grade Chorus; Jr. Choir; Sr. Y-Teen; Boosters Club. FRANCES JANET ROTH Franny” 9th Grade Chorus; Student Council; Girls' Glee Club; Intramural Sports; German Club; Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen; Sr. Choir; English Bookroom Assistant; Spring Play ‘49, '50; Lob Assistant; Writers' Workshop; F. T. A.; Distributive Education; future Retailers of America. MARJORIE MARY ROZMAN “Marge” 9th Grade Chorus; Girls' Glee Club; Dramatics. NORMAN R. SINCLAIR Rhodes Art Club. MICHAEL SOPKO Mike Citizens Club; Vorsity Trock ond Cross Country Manager, '47, '48; Foreman's Club; Intromurol Sports; Student Council. Seniors, 1951 DONALD SOTAK Don Freshmon Football; Reserve Foot-boll; Vorsity Football; Freshmon Bosketboll; Freshmon Track; Reserve Trock; Stog Craft; 9th Grad Chorus; Foreman's Club. MYRON STEENSTRA My Varsity Trock Co-Capt. '49, '50; Foreman’s Club; Freshman Reserve Footboll; Spring Flay '48. SHIRLEY TAYLOR Lee” 9th Grode Chorus; Spring Play '50; Rhodes Review Typist; Boosters Club; Home Economics Club; Jr. Y-Teen; Sr. Y-Teen, Publicity Chairmon; Bosketboll Queen Attendant '49; Intramurol Sports; 128 Closs Secretary; 11A-12A Closs Vice-President; Citizens Club; Canteen Committee '48, '49. WILLIS TAYLOR Willie CYRIL URBANCIC, JR. Cy Germon Club; Boosters Club, Choir-man; Foreman’s Club; Rhoda Hi-Y, Secretory; Lab Assistant; Student Council; 11A-12B-12A Social Committee; Freshmon Footboll; Freshman Trock; Jr. Varsity Footboll; Jr. Varsity Basketball; Inlfomvrol Sports; Citizens Club. RUDOLPH F. VERDERBER Rudy Citizens Club; French Club; Rhoda Hi-Y, President; Commencement Announcement Committee, Chairman; Spring Ploy '50; J. V. Basketball; WBOE Announcer; Boosters Club; Student Council; Intramural Sports; Homeroom Bulletin Announcer; lab Assistant. ERNEST E. WAY r • Lrme Sigma Hi-Y; Bowling leogue '49, '50; Intramurol Sports; Freshmon Football; Cross Country; Ideol Senior Committee. DONALD WEHR Sam Foremon's Club; Audio Aids Club; Intramural Sports; Rhodes Bowling Chomps '49, '50; Spring Show '48; Freshman Track. Seniors, 1951 NANCY ANN WEICH None 9th Grode Chorus; Jr. Y-Teen, Vice-President; Sr. Y-Teen; Spring Ploy '50; Rhode! Review; Home Economics Club, Secretory; Football Queen '50; Intramural Sports; 12A Clou Secretory; Citizens Club; Con-leen Committee '48; I1A-12B Social Committee. LA VERNE KAROLYN WOLFF Sr. Y-Teen, Homeroom Rep.; Intro-mural Sports; 9th Grade Chorus. DORIS MAE WELSCHENBACH Dorrie” 9lh Grade Chorus; Student Council; F. T. A.; Girls' Glee Club; Sr. Y-Teen. RALPH WHITE GLORIA WOHL Gl o 9th Grade Chorus; Jr. Choir; Girls' Glee Club. RICHARD A. YEAGER National Honor Society; Yearbook Committee. ALLAN H. ZAGRAY Al” Notional Honor Society; Citizens Club; Audio Aids Club, President '49; Varsity Track; Cross Country Team; Yearbook Committee; Senior Choir; 8oys' Octette; Modrigol Singers; Bond; Orchestra; Spring Show '49; Operetlo '50; Work and Win Club. MARYLYN ELAINE ZIEL Mar 9th Grode Chorus; Girls' Glee Club, librarian; Sr. Choir; Madrigal Singers; Fall Frolic '48; Spring Carnival '49; Operetlo '50; Pop Concert Queen '50; Jr. Journal; Rhodes Re view; German Club; Boosters Club. Jr. Y-Teen, Progrom Choirmon; Sr Y-Teen; Intromurol Sports; Flower and Color Committee. Seniors 1951 JOY CAROLINE ZIMMERMAN Student Council; Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen; Intramural Sports; Girls' Glee Club; f. T. A.; English Bookroom Attendant. LILLIAN LAURA ZUTZ Lit Ideal Senior Committee; German Club; Sr. Y-Teen; Intramural Sports; Rhodes Review Typist; English Book-room Attendant; 9th Grade Chorus. host o VoTinc, To Tlflomeiv UtSSEP Tuts page is OLL OF (Elaaa liiatDrtf One cold, wintry doy in February ol 1947, one hundred nineteen scared and timid freshmen from William Rainey Harper and Benjamin Franklin, entered what to them was a terrifying New World, which in reality was only Jomes Ford Rhodes High School. Here most of them were to spend four years of hard studying!?), frequent tenth periods and zero hours, long visitations to Mr. Bryan's and Miss Hier's offices, not too frequent participation in doss activities, and no participation in raising class spirit. However, in school activities, the members of the class accomplished much more. As the freshmen boosted up their courage, some of them began to moke names for themselves. To blossom out os Junior Journalists under the supervision of Miss McGinness were: MARYLYN ZIEL, DICK PARK. AL SCHMITTER. and JOAN EllSASSER. JOYCE RATH donated her tap-dancing talents to the school os she took part in Melody Fair, the 1947 spring musical. Whilo we were 9A's, our superhuman football squad won the only championship our class was to witness In the spring of 1948, many of our class members assisted in the huge carnival which was under the supervision of Mr. Hicks. As a point of interest, Mr. Goiser's 10B Biology closs was fortunate enough to visit the Cleveland Zoo, during school time! NORMAN SINCLAIR and HELENE FRANTZ won art awards in o contest sponsored by the Art Museum. During the fall semester of 1948, our closs, along with the rest of the school, was very proud of the New Look at JFR. An election wos held in the spring semester of 1949 for Student Council president, and although they could not attain the honor, WALLY LESER and RAY DOSKY campaigned for the office. A few of our members took part in the spring musical Change of Pace, and DICK PARK took top honors by portroying the main character of Pace, the Man from Mars. A very important change that took place in the spring semester (at least for the girls) wos the merging of the girls' homerooms, which had been under the supervision of Miss Lanese and Miss Wilson. Miss Lanese was the victor. Upon returning to school in the foil, we leorned from the Rhodes Review that JOHN BUSCH had won three permanent trophies for yochting in the Y-Flyer International Championship Races. Our first closs members to get on the football squad were DON SOTAK and the PLATT brothers. Our first class meeting was held to attempt to organize for future activities. WALLY LESER was elected president, SHIRLEY TAYLOR, vice-president and LILLIAN HUTTER, secretory. As llA'sa few of our members had the honor of being inducted into the Notional Honor Society. They were FRANCES DUPCAK, BUD and BOB PLATT, WALLY LESER, and ALAN ZAGRAY. NORMAN SINCLAIR won another award for his sports poster, the contest being sponsored by the Art Museum. On tho glamorous side, CAROL KOEPF was declared the best-dressed Teenager at Rhodes for a contest sponsored by Halle Brothers. LUCIUE MASINK had the honor of being voted Posture Queen of 1949 by members of the faculty. On Friday the thirteenth of Jonuory, 1950, a number of our class gave the Social Committee the honor of their presence of an informal dance which was named Superstition Stomp. In the spring semester of 1950 Tony Howarth, our English protege, took over the big job os editor of tho Rhodes Review One sunny day the class agoin tried to organize by having a class meeting, at which WALLY LESER wos again elected president, BOB PLATT, vice-president, SHIRLEY TAYLOR, secretary, and CLARK FIFE, treasurer. Again our class was honored by having some of its members taken into the Honor Society. They were JANICE HUFFMAN, TONY HOWARTH, DICK PARK. DICK YEAGER, and JIM LEONARD. Our closs wos always talented in music and dramatics, so ALAN ZAGRAY and DICK PARK took leading roles in the musical operetta Cox and Box. More of the class took part in the second operetta Trial by Jury, both of which were under the direction of Mr. Von Nortwick. When the Radio Production and Dramatic classes gave their spring play Mother is a Freshman, CAROL KOEPF ployed the port of Mrs. Abigail Abbott, or Abigail Fortitude. Othors in the cost were BETTY COLEMAN, RUDY VERDERBER, TONY HOWARTH, and Don MacDOWELL. It wos at this time in our school life that the two boys' homerooms, which had been under the direction of Mr. Roberts and Mr. Holden, were combined, and put under the guidance of Mr. Holden for the 12B semester. Strangely enough, the weather was nice and nearly one hundred per cent of the class attended the 12B picnic, which turned out to be a success Mr. Quayle ond Mr. Hoffman were opposing pitchers in the baseball gome and not so calmly discussed the rules of baseball; Miss Lanese surprised everyone by her batting ability, ond her slides into first base. The Executive and Social Committees got together ond planned on informal to be held one bright Wednesday in June. However, due to the wonderful!?) co-operation of the closs, it remained a plan. Then, June fourteenth came, and we were allowed a short vacation. Upon returning in the fall for our final semester, we discovered that our class had diminished to o mere seventy-four. After a surprisingly energetic class meeting, WALLY LESER emerged, for the (Elass iitatnry-----------------rontinuri) third time, captor of the presidency; SHIRLEY TAYLOR wos elected vice-president with NANCY WEICH as secretory, JOHN BUSCH as treasurer, LUCILLE MASINK as head of the Social Committee, and BOB PLATT as heod of the Yearbook Committee. As is the usual custom, Mr. Tanko took over the 12A boys' homeroom. JOHN 8USCH and CYRIL URBANCIC advanced the Boosters' Club to one of the school's outstanding organizations. NORMAN SINCLAIR, who has been majoring in art for four years, won the 1950 Charity Football Poster Contest, sponsored by the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Norman had previously been a winner of four first places in the Regional Scholastic Contest and two places in the National contest during the lost year. In the remaining weeks, we hope to see more of our class elected into the National Honor Society. On October eleventh, we had our Class Picnic, among the worms and the mud puddles. By the time the ployers finished their football and baseball games, they were soaking wet. No one needed to be thrown info the creek; they could get just os wet by stonding outside the pavilion. Everyone is looking forword to the class informal, Autumn Nocturn, which has been appropriately named Next on the list come the three most important days in the lives of every Senior: Class Day, Commencement Doy and the big night of the Prom. First came January sixth, the night of the Prom. Its name, Stardust, seemed to remind us of the happy times we hove hod, and the happy times we would hove in the future. Class Doy, January nineteenth, a day to be remembered; the day we got dressed up and wore our class flowers and colors, the lost day of school. Then, Commencement Day, the day we began to realize thot our school life had arrived of its end. Who won't remember sitting up there on the stoge in their caps and gowns, thinking over the twelve years they have spent in school, especially the four years of High School? Some will be glad to leave, and others will regret that it is over. And os we march across the platform to receive our diplomas, we are a little proud of ourselves, a little sad ot leaving, but full of hope for the future. FINIS FOREIGN AFFAIRS CLUB FACULTY-MEN GERMAN CLUB FRENCH CLUB LATIN CLUB NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY STUDENT COUNCIL CITIZENS CLUB ART CLUB LIBRARY CLUB RHODES REVIEW STAFF FUTURE TEACHERS OF AMERICA BAND AND ORCHESTRA CLUB AUDIO-VISUAL AIDS CLUB FOREMAN'S CLUB JAMES FORD RHODES' Director—C CONCERT ORCHESTRA tto Schmidt A CAPPELLA CHOIR Director—Gilbert Van Nortwick GIRLS' GLEE CLUB Director—Gilbert Van Nortwick GIRLS' TRIPLE TRIO Director—Gilbert Van Nortwick BOYS' OCTETTE Director—Gilbert Van Nortwick MADRIGAL CHOIR Director—Gilbert Van Nortwick JAMES FORD RHODES' BAND Director—Otto Schmidt Shirley Vale Mary Eberhardt JAMES FORD RHODE Nancy Haxton Ellen Zaretsky Lenore Berlin Jeanne Becker TROPI HIES BOOSTERS CLUB ' mmmmt TRACK TEAM Coach—Ellsworth J. Holden CROSS COUNTRY TEAM Coach—Ellsworth J. Holden Head Coach-Andrew Moran FOOTBALL TEAM Asst. Coaches—William Quayle, William Scott Head Coach-W. W. Vannorsdall BASKETBALL TEAM Faculty Manager—William Scott GIRLS' LEADERS BOYS' LEADERS (Elaas nf Sattuaru 1951 ffiast SHU anil uJpatampnt We, the graduating class of January, 1951, of James Ford Rhodes High School, Country of the United Stotes. State of Ohio, County of Cuyohogo, City of Cleveland, Street of Biddulph, address of 5100, being of sound mind (before the State Psychological Test), and sound body (before gym doss) do hereby leave (before we are forced out) this, our Last Will and Testament. MAIL BAG I Letter 1 — To our dear alma-mater we leave. Letter 2 — To the classes of people (what else?) that follow us we leave a heritage of books (text and otherwise) with our names inscribed therein. Letter 3 —To the faculty and office staff we leave one (1) large bottle of aspirins to be taken immediately after our departure. MAIL BAG II Letter 1 — To the Sports Deportment, we impart the job of filling the following vaconcies on the varsity athletic squads of Rhodes High School: Football; Bob Platt, Bud Platt, Don Sotak, and Roy Dosky Track and Cross Country,- Myron Steenstra, Roy Dosky, Allan Zogray, Walter Leser, and Manager John Busch • Golf; Jim Leonard Basketball; ????? What happened, boys? Letter 2 — We donate the two vacancies left by instrumentalists Albert Schmitter and Allan Zagray to the Instrumental Music Department. Letter 3 — We leave 15 empty choirs in room 315 for the Vocal Music Deportment to fill. John Busch, Frances Dupcak, Joan Ellsasser, Olga Host, Lillian Hutter, Dino Lioi, Lucille Masink, Lloyd Moe, Dick Pork, Bob Platt, Roy Platt, Frances Roth, Doris Welschenboch, Allan Zogroy, and Marylyn Ziel are the members of our class graduating from singing organizations. Letter 4 - The Art Deportment may have the hard task of replacing the talent of Norman Sinclair. MAIL BAG III Letter 1 — To Mr. Matthews we loave the job of getting JFR back to normal after our exit. Letter 2 — We bequeath to Mr. Bryan a now pocket of pink slips, and o book entitled I was sent to Tenth Period written by some of the members of the Graduating Class. Letter 3 — Miss Hier moy have the patent rights on the excuses that we used to get out of school. Letter 4 — We give Mr. Ferguson the job of keeping o record of our many and varied careers. He moy hove the State Psychological Test also. (We wont no part of it.) Letter 5 — To Mr. Hoffman and to Mr. Henderson, our intrepid dog lovers, we leave an illustrated novel, How to take care of your dog. Letter 6 — To Mr. Jacob we give one small sized atom bomb for demonstration purposes. Letter 7 — To Mr. Scott, the new faculty manager, we leave some red ink. Letter 8 — To our homeroom teachers past ond present. Miss Wilson, Mr. Holden, Mr. Roberts, Miss Lonese, and Mr Tanko, we bequeath the very strongest of stroifjackets. Letter 9 — We donate a large megaphone to Mr. Quayle so that he may be heard by his gym classes Letter 10 —Mr. Goiser may hove our pictures that were taken for the permanent record cards. Letter 11 — To each of the athletic coaches we loave one well loaded gun. (In cose your teams start losing regulorly, just point at your head ond pull the trigger.) MAIL BAG IV Letter 1 — To ourselves we bequeoth the best of luck and happiness in the future. THE CLASS OF JANUARY 1951 PS. — The writers of this epitaph bequeath any names that might hove been missed to the right places in the Will. (0ur Bprjirat Apprpriatimi Beggars that we are, We are even poor in thanks. Shakespeare. To Theodore Roberts: The Senior Boys of January 1951 would like to express their honest and sincere thanks for the help and guidance during our first yeors of Rhodes. He has moulded and developed our character, honesty, and sincerity. We hope thot he will continue to be an inspiration to the rest of the students os well as o friend afterwords. To Marie Lonese: The Senior Girls of January 1951 would like to voice thoir sincere appreciation for her wise and helpful guidance during the past four yeors. She hos stood faithfully by us endeavoring to help us to help ourselves. We will leave with one gool in mind, trying to fulfill her belief in us. (lllaaa ffropfym) All oboord. Flying Saucer JFR-51 is ready to take off for o futuramic tour of the United States. Hold on to your beanies, here we go! put-put-put. NORMAN SINCLAIR has a new business—engraving—dollar bills? Here comes Admiral JOHN BUSCH floating down Lake Eric in his steam-driven dingey. A woman's crowning glory is her hair —JOY ZIMMERMAN really got crowned. LLOYD MOE—Semper Fidelis is your guide! JOAN ELLSASSER hos switched to Borden's because she likes Choppy Suey. As we pass the ruins of old Rhodes, we see that CYRIL URBANCIC is just finishing his Ohio State Psychological test. DOLORES MILLER says. Come to Halle's. FRANCIS ROTH says, Go to-Halle's. What's this we see in the Yipsilonte Daily Wheeze? The HOWARTH Players ore presenting that inspiring play. The HOWARTH Story, written by ANTHONY. HOWARTH, produced by ANTHONY HOWARTH, directed by ANTHONY HOWARTH, and starring-RUDY VERDERBER. WILLIAM FISCHER is now a big flash at the Westman Fodak Co. LEON BENNETT is now at the Rose Bowl—picking roses? We have decided that ARDANE DERSCHAU is inVINCEable. MARJORIE HALLAHAN'S favorite state is Pennsylvania. Her favorite song is Hoopsie Do. HERMAN ABRAHAM is joining the Foreign Legion. He wants to find Beaugeste. Where does PHILIP PSOMAS get all those tax stamps? BETTY has recently married a COLEMAN—what a dirty trick that is! Question of the week—is GERRY KAMINSKI another Bob Lemon? Me and My Shadow—ERNEST WAY and JACK HOSE. PATRICIA FERGUSON has settled down and is raising little Wolfes! We see that those two night owls, ETHEL PHILIPPEIT and WILLIAM KORYLAK, ore still flying about on Monday, Wednesday and Friday nights. Is WALTER FANZ'S red face due to the sun or what? DIANA FORBRIZZIO is goddess of the man-hunt. RALPH WHITE—hup two three four. As we pass over Severance Hall we find ALAN ZAGRAY playing first trumpet in the Belgian Congo Drum and Bugle Philharmonic Symphony Association. PHYLISS FRUNCEK is sure having her ups and downs at Taylor's. If we'd have known JANICE HUFFMAN was coming we'd have baked a snake. JOE MARTUCH declares he wants The tooth, the tooth, nothing but the tooth. Look!! LILLIAN ZUTZ is walking on air—her plane ran out of gas. Why does RAY DOSKY have such a sudden passion for classical music? Which way did JEAN use to get her pretty ring? Why, the RADWAY. RALPH (Lily) POND is gorgeous, ravishing, beautiful; he uses Lava. Since JOYCE RATH came to Hollywood, Fred Astaire hos been selling used cars. LUCILLE MASINK is out West hunting Indians, the two wheeled kind. As we pass Washington we can see WALLY LESER running for his third term os president of the United Sfofes. Since LILLIAN HUTTER started working at the Illuminating Co., she's the light of our lives. DICK YEAGER is now professor of math at West Hicksville Jr. High. His next-door neighbor is FRANCES DUPCAK who is instructor of tacit passages in the piano deportment. Have you tried DORIS WELSCHENBACH's prune juice recently? (filaaa $rniifjprg - - - rontiniwii What's that big cloud of dust on the Indianapolis Speedwoy? It's hot-rod RALPH MIKULICH trying to prove that the shortest distance between two points is where the traffic cop ain't. MARYLYN ZIEL—te he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he. Hit song of the month is DUREY with the fringe on top. PHYLLIS that is. Hove you a flot tire? Well, leave her in FRANK MIKITKA's garage. CAROL SCHMIDT soys, The sunshine in California is wonderful. NANCY WEICH says, The moonlight in Florida is pretty nice too. Dr. RICHARD PARK, PhD., B.A., M.D., DDS., has just been voted president of the American Rocket Socioty. HELENE has taken a liner to FRANTZ. The fashion magazines inform us that SHIRLEY and WILLIS ore Monsieur DON MACDOWELL's new TAYLORS. JIM LEONARD is still up to his monkey business—well, chee-chee. What do German girls have that we don't have—diamonds! Just ask MARLENE HERBRUGGEN. Is that the lucky old sun or is it MIKE AMBROSE'S smiling face beaming down at us? In Ohio we find the four botanists, MYRON STEENSTRA, MICHAEL SOPKO, DON WEHR, and LOUIS KLEPITCH, spending all their time on Four Roses. What do DICK BIRD and Mr. Quoyle have in common? Kansas proudly proclaims JOSEPHINE GAGLIONE as its number one girl steer. We hear a great roar from Madison Square Garden as Dazzling RICHARD DALZELL grapples with Hot-Shot CHARLES KUNTZ for the featherweight wrestling championship of the world. What do LLOYD DORNER and DON GAISER have in common—nothing. Three cheers for OLGA HOST!!! She's the only girl In America who can write pithecanthropus erectus in shorthand. DON SOTAK finds only one thing wrong with William and Mary—William won't leave. DINO LIOI is keeping the cows contented of Producers, and that's no bull. Are MARGE ROZMAN and GLORIA WOHL still going steady? Who's that flashy figure walking down Sunset Boulevard? Why it's LAVERNE WOLF—in sheeps' clothing. The game is over, the cheering throng has left, the stands are empty. BUD PLATT has finally scored his touchdown. But who is that solitary figure still out there on the field? It's BOB PLATT!!! —He wants one too. Ever since CLARK FIFE has become president of the A P Company, he's been handing out the baloney. Well, our tour of the U. S. is finally over. Down below us is the familiar sight of the Terminal Tower. Wait! Who ore those two figures jumping over the edge? Good Heavens!!! It's CAROLE KOEPF and ALBERT SCHMITTER, the frustrated members of the January '51 prophecy committee. They've decided that this is THE END. 11A INFORMAL .3PORT 5CRAP3 WONDERFUL IGHTY TRIKE XPERT5 Mot :‘Too Tired To RNSu ERl Joy: GI66LE LiL RU HE’S OUTf CRflOL. Every l FRRNK• NOU)| flC- COULD DO BETTER CORDING TO RULe- P6. 104r OF------ Mighty m kE FRRN: HE'S OUT LIOW HE'S SRFCr THESE Tu o DISR6REE. ErrniE : hmmm-m i i (Sra uatw 3Iampa 3fori Sljoiipa ifitgb Srljonl January, 1951 Nome Address Telephone No. Abraham, Herman On 1-4807 Ambrose, Michael Sh 1 -4443 Bennett, Raymon ..Sh 1-7192 Bird, Richard ...On 1-4065 Busch, John Sh 1 -7700 Coleman, Betty FI. 1-0284 Dalzell, Richard FI. 1-3164 Derschau, Elda Ardane On. 1-6562 Dorner, Lloyd 4301 West 62nd St On. 1-2181 Dosky, Raymond FI. 1-0337 Dupcak, Frances Sh. 1-1060 4492 West 45th St On. 1-3522 Ellsosser, Joan 4742 West 20th St Sh. 1-4440 Fanz, Walter FI. 1-1446 Ferguson, Potricia Sh. 1-2745 Fife, Clark 1520 Schaaf Rd On. 1-4773 2206 Oak Pork Ave Sh. 1-6215 4003 Valley Rd 4515 West 20th St On. 1-3705 Gaglione, Josephine FI. 1-0413 Gaiser, Donald ..............................4615 West 56th St. Hallahan, Marjorie ..........................4116 Biddulph Rd. .. Herbruggen, Marlene .........................4214 Brooklyn Ave. Hose, Jock ..................................4197 Ridgeview Rd. Host, Olga...................................5517 Delora Ave... Howorth. Anthony ............................4406 Tuxedo Ave. .. Huffman, Jonice .............................4314 West 49th St. Hutter, Lillian .............................2705 Colburn Ave. ... Kominski, Gerald ............................4109 Muriel Ave... Klepitch, Louis..............................4225 West 50th St. .. Koepf, Carole ...............................4301 West 32nd St. Korylak, William ............................5215 Vandolia Ave. Kuntz, Charles...............................4499 Broodale Ave. . Leonard. James ..............................5414 Archmere Ave. Lesor, Walter................................4324 Memphis Ave. Lioi, Dino...................................4471 West 12th St. .. MacDowell, Don ..............................4406 West 60th St. .. ...FI. 1-3940 .On. 1-0987 ...Cl. 1-9532 ...FI. 1-7296 ...FI. 1-1367 .On. 1-3982 ...FI. 1-8960 ..Sh. 1-3762 ..None __FI. 1-1261 .On. 1-0405 ..None ...Sh. 1-1867 ..Sh. 1-2245 .On. 1-4111 .On. 1-3104 ...FI. 1-7923 (Srafouatrs rontittueii Mortuch, Joseph ......... Mosink, Lucille ... Mikitka, Frank ...... Mikulich, Ralph ..... Miller, Dolores ... Moe, Lloyd .............. Park, Richard ........... Philippeit, Ethel........ Platt, Robert ........... Platt, Roy .............. Pond, Ralph ............. Psomas, Phillip ......... Radway, Jean ............ Rath. Joyce .... Roth, Frances ........... Rozman, Marjorie ........ Schmidt, Carol .......... Schmitfer, Albert ....... Sinclair, Norman ........ Sopko, Michael Sotak, Donald ....... Steonstra. Myron .... Taylor. Shirley ..... Taylor, Willis ......... Urbancic. Cyril ..... Verderber, Rudolph . Way, Ernest ......... Wehr, Donald ........ Weich, Nancy ........ Welschenbach, Doris White, Ralph ........ Wohl, Gloria ........ Wolff, LaVerne ...... Yeager, Richard ..... Zagroy, Allan ....... Ziel, Marylyn ....... Zimmerman, Joy ...... Zutz, Lillian ................... ....1823 Schaaf Rd..... ..4304 Burger Ave..... ....4013 Muriel Ave.... ....5626 Delora Ave.... ....3114 Natchez Ave. ., .......4364 Fulton Rd...... .......4248 West 21st St. .. .......4302 West 49fh St. .......3614 Germaine Ave. .......3614 Germaine Ave. .......3312 Silverdole Ave. .......5605 Stickney Ave. .., .......2331 Broadview Rd. ....2416 Natchez Ave. . .........4817 Wetzel Ave. ... .........3102 Seorsdale Ave. .........1905 Canova Ave. .. .........3801 Oak Park Ave. .........1922 Broadview Ct. .........4615 Memphis Ave. .....FI. 1-2922 ....On. 1-0141 ....None ....Sh. 1-6970 ....Sh. 1-9535 ....None FI. 1-3797 On. 1-0507 FI. 1-3437 FI. 1-3437 FI. 1-8843 On. 1-4598 Sh. 1-9817 Sh. 1-8035 Sh. 1-0461 None ...On. 1-3704 ...On. 1-6234 ....FI. 1-5765 ....None 4614 Spokane Ave............................Sh. 1-4262 ....3710 Dover Ave, .. .4270 Valley Rd. ... .....5407 Memphis Ave. .....4208 West 50th St. .....2903 Library Ave. ..4819 Biddulph Rd. .....4211 West 62nd St ........4469 West 14th St. .....4783 Broadale Ave. .........FI. 1-6834 .........Sh. 1-0219 .........On. 1-5679 ......2809 Roanoke Ave. ......1414 Plymouth Rd. ......4224 West 48th St. ......4681 Dornur Drive .3102 Ruby Ave. ... ..........3522 Cecilia Ave. On. 1-6853 On. 1-0468 1-0037 Sh. 1 -0428 Sh. 1-0904 1-7689 1-2856 Sh. 1-7599 Sh. 1-6060 1-1986 FI. 1-3486 None ....None AUTOGRAPHS June Class of 1951 Learning without thought is useless; thought without learning is dangerous. —Confucius. Dear old Rhodes High Thy wisdom lights our path. Thy Friendship true Stay with us to the last. James Ford Rhodes High School Published by June Class of 1951 MR. WM. SCOTT OUR DEDICATION The person whom we hove chosen os a dedicatee is one who is always friendly toward the students and their problems. This teacher does many favors for the school such as supervising the printing of programs and tickets for many school activities, and programs for the senior class informal and prom. So to Mr. Scott, printing instructor, we the members of the June 1951 graduating class dedicate our Yearbook. NEIL D. MATHEWS To Members of the Class of June, 1951: If you will be satisfied with nothing less than the top, you must pay the cost of the upward climb. The road will be steep, rough, frequently uncharted, and others may try to crowd you from it, but if you persevere and reach your goal, the rewards should be worth the effort. Not the least of these rewards will be the satisfaction of having done something about your own destiny. Remember that your real worth to your family and your community depends but little on what your job may be, but so much on how you do it. Those of us who are too small to do great things can do small things in a great way. Best wishes to each of you. NEIL D. MATHEWS, Principal. MR. BRYAN MISS HIER In conference we see Miss Hier, Dean of Girls, and Mr. Bryan, Dean of Boys, who through their patience, and understanding, not to mention zero hours and tenth periods, have brought us to the last phase of our high school career . . . graduation! FACULTY-MEN CLASSROOM CAPTAINS FACULTY-LADIES CAn I HAVE u Picture? i E N I O R Senior Class Officers President RON WARZEL Vice President ART VAN DYKE Secretary Treasurer JO ANN SLOTE CLYDE SIMPSON LEADERS ON THE JOB SOCIAL COMMITTEE VIVIAN ALLEN, Chairman RAY BICKIMER ELAINE ALBERS DICK KADLECK JOY LOUDON LARRY BRENNER MARTHA GREGOR ROGER LAWRENCE NADINE KOVEL JIM CRITES VIRGINIA RUFFING YEARBOOK COMMITTEE BOB MEEHAN, Chairman BOB CAMPBELL BOB SUDYK JOE ONDUS CLASS PROPHECY COMMITTEE JANE MUSCHNA, Chairman TOM LAMOUREUX CLASS WILL COMMITTEE DON MACKAY, Chairman DONNA MAE REESE CLASS HISTORY COMMITTEE BOB MIDLIK, Chairman SALLY WEIN CLASS ANNOUNCEMENT COMMITTEE BOB DZIAK, Chairman JIM STAFFORD EMMA TOEPFER NANCY MASCHUK FLOWER AND COLORS COMMITTEE DON MILNE, Chairman DOROTHY McAULEY CAP AND GOWN COMMITTEE JOAN DOMBEY, Chairman GIL REIS CLASS COLORS AND FLOWERS ROYAL BLUE AND WHITE WHITE CARNATION CLASS MOTTO Learning without thought is useless; thought without learning is dangerous. —Confucius. SOCIAL COMMITTEE N. KOVEL, R. LAWRENCE, J. LOUDON, J. CRITES, E. ALBERS, L BRENNER V. RUFFING, R. BICKIMER, V. ALLEN, D. KADLECK, M. GREGOR YEARBOOK COMMITTEE J. MUSCHNA, B. SUDYK, T. LAMOUREUX, D. McKAY, A. SCHROEDER, B. MIDLIK, S. WEIN, B. MEEHAN, D. REESE, J. ONDUS CLASS FLOWER COMMITTEE - CLASS CAP AND GOWN COMMITTEE CLASS ANNOUNCEMENT COMMITTEE 0. MeAUlEY, D. MIINE, J. DOMBEY, G. REIS B. DZIAK. E. TOEPFER, J. STAFFORD OUR DEEPEST APPRECIATION We, the senior class of June, 1951 wish to express our deepest and sincerest gratitude to Mr. G. D. Van Nortwick who was always willing to give any aid or assistance at any time our class needed it. We considered ourselves very fortunate in having Mr. Van act as our class sponsor for two semesters. During this time we always found him ready with advice and useful suggestions. It is our hope that other classes may find that same enjoyment of working with such a friendly and helpful person as Mr. Gilbert Van Nortwick. Slast Will and ®PBtamrnt We, tho Senior Closs of June, in the yeor of one thousand nine hundred and fifty one, being so for of sound mind but weak body, proclaim this document to be our last Will and Testament. During the post four years it has been our profound pleasure to roam the hollowed holls of this glorious high school, and as wc make our departure we would leave this train of thought: PULLMAN I - ATHLETICS Compartment I We leave the glory of breaking the school record for the mile run, set by our own Dale Bussman, to any fleet-footed underclassman who thinks he can do better. Comportment II To Mrs. Cwik we leave the task of filling eleven vacancies in the Girls' Leaders Club, if it's possible. Compartment III To Mr. Vannorsdall and his hardwooders we leove the spirit to be city chomps next year. Comportment IV To the Junior boys we leove one slightly used obstacle course, complete. Comportment V All left over fee tickets and tax stamps we leave to Mr. Quayle so he can buy a new pair of rhythm sticks and a bird both! PULLMAN II - FACULTY Compartment I One traffic light and a policeman's whistle to Miss Wilson. Comportment II To Mr. VonNortwick, Mr. Henderson, and Mr. Horfzell, we leove one jar of mustache wax. Compartment III To Miss Ord we leove on A-1 megaphone so she can be heard in classes. Compartment IV We leave to Mr. Hoffman someone else to hold his hand in the cafeteria. Compartment V To Mr. Bryan ond Miss Hier we leave the traditional cutslips. Berth I Also tho patience to listen to the same old excuses. PULLMAN III - CLUBS Comportment I We leove a quort of milk to Mr. Von Nort-wick to aid the stomach ulcers he will get when he tries to replace the 37 talented, graduating members of the Senior Choir. Berth I To the Girls' Glee Club a new accompanist to replace Alice Brandes. Compartment II We leave the German Club to find some new faithful Ritters to replace those graduating. Compartment III We leove the French Club the ambition to finally organize. Compartment IV To the Latin Club we bequeath any togas left lying in the halls. PULLMAN IV - UNDERCLASSMEN Comportment I We leave the responsibility of buying Mr. Jacob a new tie to the I2B class. Berth I Also to those who aren't already affected, we leave Senioritis. Upper I This includes all of the headaches involved. Comportment II To the IIA's we leave our dear homerooms 219 and 209 complete with lockers. Compartment III We bequeath our homeroom teachers to the incoming 9B's. Compartment IV To the rest of the student body we leave anything you can find. PULLMAN V - ODDS AND ENDS Compartment I To Mr. Heifer we leove a box of safety matches. We're sure he'll know what to do with them. Compartment II We leave the responsibility of supplying records for dances, etc. to anyone with a collection like Emma Toepfer's. Comportment III To the Chemistry Department we leove a Jim Dandy fire extinguisher to put out all fires started by future pyromaniacs. Compartment IV Emma Ference, Donna Jarina, Joan Jedacek, Donna Molloch and Corole Rosch, our diamond wearers, leave to the library one copy of their lofest book, How to Influence Men and Win Husbands, — for any girls to use. Compartment V To everyone we leove our fond memories. Compartment VI We Leove! THE SENIOR CLASS. IN MEMORIAM In the untimely passing of a classmate, the June Class of 1951 lost a friend who will be remembered as a good natured, average, American boy. His shop teachers, namely Mr. Bereit and Mr. Jackson, will remember him as a boy who was anxious to learn and always willing to work and help others. Don Steinhoff met his accidental death on November 18, 1950, while indulging in his hobby of hunting. Seniors, June 1951 ELAINE ALBERS Lane An Club I2A Social Committee Library Club Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen 9th Grade Chorus Intramural Sports VIVIAN ALLEN Viv Radio Guild; 9th Grade Chorus; Vice Pres., Glee Club; Senior Choir; Triple Trio; Jr. Y-Teon; Citizens Club; Student Council; Speech Club; F. T. A.; Spring Shows 'SO, '51; Class Social Chair, man, II A, 12B. 12A; Boosters Club; Hostess 122; Secretory, Sr, Y-Teen; Intramural Sports. DONALD R. ARNDT Ain't 9th Grade Chorus Jr. Choir Sr. Choir Orchestra Bond Bond ond Orchestra Club, Trees. Spring Shows '49, '50, '51 Foreign Affairs Council CHARLENE A. BEBO Char Hostess 122 library Club Sr. Y-Teen ROBERT BECKMANN Bob Transferred from Westlake JACK BELCHER Burp Foreign Affairs Council Student Council 9lh Grode Chorus Radio Production Dramatics CHARLES EARL BETTINGER Oil 9th Grade Chorus Jr. Choir Sr. Choir Visual Aids Club Foreman's Club Spring Shows '49, '51 JEAN T. BEVACQUA Bevie 9th Grade Chorus Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Cabinet Citizens Club F. T. A. Boosters Club Intromural Sports Library Club, Secretary Foreign Affairs Council Student Council Seniors, June 1951 RAYMOND A. BICHIMER fox Jr. Choir Secretory, Sr. Choir Spring Shows '49, '50, '51 Treosuror, Speech Club Freshman Trock Visual Aids Student Council 12B ond 12A Social Committee Intromural Sports Fall Festival '48 JOAN BIGGS Joe 9lh Grade Chorus Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Glee Club Senior Choir Home Economics Club Intromural Sports SHIRLEY BOCKIUND Shirl 9th Grade Chorus Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Intromural Sports Student Council Foreign Affairs Council library Club Art Club Boosters Club F. T. A. GLENN A. BORDEN Tiny Sr. Choir Jr. Choir 9th Grade Chorus Foreman's Club Spring Shows '48. '49, '50, '51 Boy's Octet Freshman Football Reserve Football ALAN BRANDES Rabbit Jr. Choir Accompanist, Sr. Choir and Girls' Glee Club Band Orchestro Rhoda Hi-Y Spring Shows '49, '50, '51 LOIS EVELYN BRANNON loie 9th Grade Chorus Glee Club Intramural Sports LAWRENCE BRENNER Bruno 12A Social Committee Tumbling ond Apparatus Club Student Council Reserve Football 9th Grade Chorus Decathlon Team '49 Freshman ond Reserve Wrestling Intromurol Wrestling Speech Club JUNE M. BRYKNER Junie Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen National Honor Society Secretary, Student Council 11A and 12B Social Committee Dispensary Aid Seniors, June 1951 JOYCE MARIE BUNCH Jay-Bee 9th Grade Chorus library Club Boosters Club Sr. Y-Teen Intromurol Sports DALE BUSSMAN Dale Notional Honor Society Boys' leaders Citizens' Club German Club Sigma Hi-Y President, Student Council Vice-President, HA Closs Coptain, Varsity Cross Country Team, '49. '50 Co-Coptoin Vorsity Track '51 Varsity R Club Speech Club ROBERT B CAMPBEll Soup Rhodes Review Staff Yearbook Committee ROBERT M. CASE Cotey Freshman Basketball Freshmon Track Freshman, Reserve, Vorsity Football Stagecraft Student Council Vice-President, Rhode Hi-Y Intromurol Bosketboll ond Boseboll Visual Aids Club IRENE J. CHIPINKA Renee Sr. Y-Teen Girls' leaders F. T. A. Girls' Glee Club Fall English Ploy Boosters Club, Secretary Intromurol Sports Rhodes Review Typist Student Council DOLORES A. CHITESTER Dally librory Club 9th Grade Chorus Girls' Glee Club Sr. Choir Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Rhodes Review Typist Intromurol Sports JOHN CHONACKI Shin 12B Social Committee Tumbling ond Apparatus Club Jr. and Sr. Choir 9th Grode Chorus Intramural Wrestling HELEN CHRISTENSEN Helen Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Foreign Affoirs Council Boosters Club Art Club Seniors, June 1951 MARY JANE COPSHAKE M. J. German Club; Citizen ' Club; Foreign Affair Council; Girl ' Glee Club; Sr. Chair; Student Council; Booster Club; Speech Club; Jr. Y-Teen; Sr. Y-Teen Cabinet; 9th Grade Chorus; Spring Show '49, '50, '51; Intramural Sport . JAMES CRITES Jim Fre hmon Wrestling Reserve and Vonity Basketball Manager 9th Grade Chorus lettermon's Club StogecraM SHIRLEY ANN CUMMINGS Shirt Sr. Y-Teen Boosters Club German Club 9th Grade Chorus Intramural Sports ALIEN A. OAll Pierre Decathlon Team '49 Reserve and Varsity Football Tumbling and Apparatus Club Stogecroft 9fh Grade Chorus BEVERLY DIXON Bev Intramural Sports 9th Grade Chorus Girl ' Glee Club Jr. and Sr. Choir '50 Spring Ploy Speech Club Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Citizens' Club Conteen Committee JOAN MAE DOMBEY Joanie 9th Grade Chorus; Jr. Choir; Wardrobe Mistress, Sr. Choir; Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen; President, Boosters Club; Student Council; German Club; Girls' Leaders Club; Citizens' Club; Spring Show '49, '50, '51; Chairman, Cop ond Gown Committee; Intramural Sport . RUTH DZADONY Dizzy Sr. Y-Teen Home Economics Club Hostess 105 Boosters Club Intramural Sports PAUL DZIAK Diz Foreman's Club Intramural Sports Seniors, June 1951 FRANCINE R. GIRARD Sh Jr. Y-Teen library Club Hottest Intramural Sports 9th Grade Chorus JUDITH E. GOMPF Judy 9th Grode Chorus Girls' Glee Club Sr. Choir Sr. Y-Teen Cabinet Boosters Club Spring Concert '51 Jr. Y-Teen Intramural: DANIEL GRAF Don 9th Grade Chorus Jr. and Sr. Choir Latin Club President, Notionol Honor Society Spring Shows '48, '49, '50 Visual Aids Work ond Win Club MARTHA S. GREGOR Marty Intramural: Sr. Y-Teen Vice-President ond Social Chairman, Latin Club French Club President, leoders' Club Secretary ond Social Choirmon, National Honor Society RONALD GREINERT Ron Model Airplane Club Foremon's Club Homeroom Announcer Visual Aids Club RICHARD GWAREK Rich Student Council German Club Jr. ond Sr. Choir Spring Shows '48. '49, '50 Germon Ploy '50 Intramural Sports 9th Grode Chorus Foreign Aflfoirs Council PHYLLIS ANN HARBART Phyl 9th Grade Chorus Sr. Y-Teen Boosters Club Hostess Intromurol Sports LOUISE ANN HAROLD low Library Club, Vice-President Rhodes Review Typist Jr. Choir 9th Grade Chorus Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Spring Show '49 Boosters Club IRMA HARTEl Irm 9 h Grode Chorus Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Secretary, library Club JOHN HOMOIA Johnny BARBARA J. HOYER Barb Citizens' Club Student Council Jr. Y-Teen 9th Grode Chorus Basketball Queen ‘50 Bookstore Attendant Spring Ploy '49 Intramurol Sports ELIZABETH J. HREHOCIK Betty library Club Intramural Sports Seniors, June 1951 MARTHA ANNE HUNTER Morty Sr. Y-Teen President ond Vice-President, library Club Notional Honor Society ROSEMARIE HUSAK Rosie 9th Grode Chorus Jr. Y-Teen Intramural Sports BERNICE INEMAN “Bernie Art Club Intramurol Sports DONNA JARINA S. D. Football Queen Attendant '50 Sr. Y-Teen Student Council Jr. ond Sr. Choir Spring Shows '48, '49, '50 Intromural Sports Seniors, June 1951 JOAN RUTH JEDACEK Joonnie 9th Grad Chorus Secretory, Jr. Choir Sr. Choir Speech Club Latin Club Jr. and Sr. Y-T n Spring Show '49 RICHARD KADIECK Dkk leaden Club RAYMOND K. KARP Roy Germon Club, President German Ploy '50 F. T. A. Reserve Football Varsity Wrestling National Honor Society DAVID KEARNS Dove Treasurer, National Honor Society; Sr. Choir; President and Student Conductor, Orchestra; Concert and Morching Band; President, Bond and Orchestra Club; Madrigal Singers; Boys' Octet; Spring Show '48, '49, '50; Student Council; Foreign Affairs Council. DOROTHY J. KEERAN Dotty 9fh Grode Chorus Sr. Y-Teen F. T. A. MICHAEL KERESMAN Mickey Rhoda Hi-Y Foreign Affairs Council Band Orchestro Bond ond Orchestra Club Noon Movie Operator Visuol Aids Audio Aids Spring Show '49 DONALD KINZER Dor. Notionol Honor Society Latin Club German Club Canteen Committee Speech Club Freshman Track LAVERNE M. KISS lovey 9fh Grade Chorus Hostess Intromural Sports Seniors, June 1951 JOSEPH KOSTAl Hunk 9th Grode Chorus Jr. Choir Re «rv« Trock Reserve Footboll Tumbling and Apparatus Club Intramural Sports Decathlon Team '49 Freshman Wrestling NEIL KUHN Neil Secretory, Rhodes bowling League JOHN KOTHANEK Johnny Noon Movie Operotor Audio ond Visual Aids Rhodo Hi-Y Reserve and Vorsify Football Lettcrman's Club NADINE S. KOVEL Jelly-Bean Sr. Y-Te n Cabinet; Rhodes Review Typist; Intromurol Sports; Robe Mistress, Sr. Choir; Triple Trio; Girls' Glee Club; Citizens' Club; Girls' leaders Club; Boosters Club; Foreign Affairs Council; Operetta ‘50; Canteen Committee; 12B Class Secretory; 12A Social Committee; Baskefboll Queen '51. LOIS M. KRIEDMAN lowie Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Foreign Affairs Council Art Club Spring Show '49 9lh Grade Chorus Jr. Choir JUNE ROSE KUHNS Junie German Club French Club Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Speech Club 9th Grode Chorus Boosters Club THOMAS H. LAMOUREUX Sam Reserve and Sr. Band Jr. Choir Spring Show '49 Yearbook Committee Intramural Sports GILBERT E. LARSEN ROGER W. LAWRENCE The lodger Citizens' Club Foreign Affairs Council Rhodo Hi-Y Reserve Football Intramural Sports PATRICIA JEAN LEINE Pol 9th Grade Chorus Girls' Glee Club Sr. Choir Boosters Club Latin Club Secretory, Girls' leoders Band and Orchestro Club Sr. Bond Jr. and Sr. Y-Tcen Intramural Sports EUGENE LEWANDOWSKI Plastic Man Foreman's Club Rhodes Bowling Team ROSE ANN IITTURI Rosie 9th Grade Chorus Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Speech Club Jr. and Sr. Choir Girls' Glee Club Student Council Latin Club National Honor Society Ideol Senior Committee Boosters Club Spring Show '49 Seniors, June 1951 RICHARD LOREK Dick Reserve and Varsity Basketball Fo-emon's Club Trock Intramural Sports JOY EMIIIE LOUDON Joy I2A Social Committee Jr. Y-Teen Sr. Y-Teen Cabinet Girls' Glee Club Bond and Orchestra Club 9th Grade Chorus Speech Club Student Council Sr. Choir Boosters Club Spring Show '49, '50 JEAN F. LYTLE Jeonie Notional Honor Society Germon Club French Club F. T. A. Intramural Sports Work and Win Club RICHARD MACK Mac 9th Grade Chorus Intromural Sports Alpha Hi-Y Wrestling Manager, '49, '50 Wrestling Team, '51 DOLORES M. MALINOSKY Do-Do 9th Grade Chorus Sr. Y-Teen Home Economics Club library Club Rhodes Review Typist Hostess 122 Intramural Sports JUDITH E. MAllO Judy Jr. Journal Rhodes Review Orchestra Band and Orchestra Club. Secretory Foreign Affoirs Council Chairman. Ideol Senior Committee Sr. Y-Teen Intramural Sports DONNA MAUOCH Donna Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen F. T. A. Boosters Club Movie Attendant 9fh Grade Chorus Intromural Sports BETTY JANE MANN Boots 9lh Grade Chorus Sr. Y-Teen Rhodes Review Typist Intramural Sports Seniors, June 1951 NANCY JEANNE MASCHUK Ginger Jr. Journol Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen 12B Social Committee Announcement Committee PATRICIA ANN MATE pot Jr. Journol; Rhodes Review; Sr. Y-Teen; Foreign Affairs Council; Girls' Glee Club; 9th Grade Chorus; Sr. Choir; President, Latin Club; F. T. A.; Speech Club; Ideol Senior Committee; Operetto ‘50; Intromurol Sports. GERALDINE FRANCES MAZUREK Gerry 9th Grade Chorus Jr. ond Sr. Choir Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Spring Shows '48, ’49, '50, '51 Boosters Club Science Deportment Assistant Hostess 122 Intromurol Sports DOROTHY JEANNE McAULEY Irish Sr. Y-Teen Girls' Glee Club Jr. ond Sr. Choir Triple Trio Vice-President, Girls' leaders Operetta '50 Queen, Christmos Formal '50 Intromural Sports National Honor Society Color ond Flower Committee Seniors, June 1951 DONALD WIUIAM McKAY FlMthy 9lh Grad Chorus Jr. and Sr. Choir F. T. A. German Club Foreign Affairs Council Spring Shows '48, 'SO, '51 Speech Club Class Will Committee ROBERT JOHN MEEHAN Bob Vice-President, Boys' I o d r s Club; Varsity Track and Basketball; President, Citizens' Club; Student Council; German Club; Community Fund Speaker; Boosters Club; Chairman, Yearbook Committee,- Varsity R Club; Sports Announcer; President, Speech Club; Notionol Honor Society; Rhode Hi-Y. RONALD MENCINI Sheeny Boys' Leoders Club Reserve and Vorsity Basketball Vorsity R Club ROBERT A. MIDIIK Socks' Notionol Honor Society, Vice-President; Germon Club, Vice-President and Treasurer; Alpha Hl-Y, Secretory ond Treasvrer.-Foreign Affairs Council; Speech Club; 9th Grad Chorus; Jr. Choir; Freshman Wrestling; Tumbling and Apparatus; Intramural Sports; Spring Carnival; '48; Boosters Club; Chairman, 12A Class History Committee. MARILYN ANN MILLER Marty Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen 9fh Grode Chorus Home Economics Club Jr, Choir Girls' Glee Club Rhodes Review Typist Intramural Sports DONALD MILNE Mouse Student Council Vice-President, Jr. Choir President, Sr. Choir Spring Show '49, '50, '51 Speech Club Foil Festivol '48 Citizens' Club Color and Flower Committee Intramurol Sports CHARLES G. MISSIG Chuck Foreman's Club 9th Grode Chorus Treasurer, Jr. Choir Sr. Choir Vorsity Track ond Cross Country lettermon's Club Rhodo Hi-Y Spring Show '49 Notionol Honor Society LOIS JEAN MIZANTY L J. 9th Grade Chorus Girls' Glee Club Girls' Leaders Club Secretory and Treasurer, Home Economics Club Jr. ond Sr. Y-T n Intramural Sports PATRICIA A. MORTACH Pol Bookstore AMendont Movie Assistant JANE A. MUSCHNA Muschie Secretary, Sr. Choir Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen President, Girls' Glee Club Spring Shows '50, '51 Citizens' Club 9th Grade Chorus Secretory, 11A Class Triple Trio Student Council German Club JOHN W. MUSSEIMAN Jock Foreman's Club ROBERT NEORICH Ned Foreman's Club Rhodes Bowling Team Intromurol Sports Seniors June 1951 MARILYN K. NEUZIL Mary 9th Grade Chorus Jr. and Sr. Choir Girls' Glee Club Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Spring Shows '49, '50 Hostess 122 JOAN NIELSEN Joonie Art Club 9th Grode Chorus Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Library Club Boosters Club Fo e'gn Affairs Council Intramural Sports LYDIA NIKISHIN III 9 h Grade Chorus Home Economics Club Library Club Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen ln‘ramurol Sports FRIEDA NOSS Dolly Transferred from Brecksville High Y-Teen Notional Honor Society Seniors, June 1951 JUNE ELISE NOTTKE Junie Hostess 105 Intramural Sports JOAN ELLEN PERRELl Jo 9th Grode Chorus Sr. Y-Teen CAROL MARIE OLSON Carol Girls' Glco Club 9th Grado Chorus Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Girls' leaders Club Boosters Club Intramural Sports JOSEPH JACK ONDICH Joe Boys' Leaders Club Citizens' Club Varsity R Club President, Jr. Choir Vice-President, Sr. Choir Boys' Octet Varsity Football ond Trock Spring Shows '48, '49, '50 Freshman Bosketball JOSEPH A. ONOUS Judge Citizens' Club Sigma Hi-Y Boys' Leaders Club Reserve Basketball Freshman Trock Boosters Club Intramurol Sports Yearbook Committee ELEANOR PETERS El 9th Grode Chorus Boosters Club Home Economics Club Hostess Rhodes Review Typist Sr. Y-Teen JANET L PINKLEY Jon library Club Home Economics Club Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Intramural Sports JEANETTE C. POLENSCHAT Jay Girls' Glee Club German Club 9th Grode Chorus Spring Ploy '48, '49 Intromurol Sports Seniors, June 1951 EMU J. POIKABIA Polk 9lh Grode Chorus Stagecraft Varsity R Club Reserve and Varsity Wrestling Citizens' Club Jr. Choir JEANNETTE R. POPCHAK Joy 9th Grade Chorus Girls' Glee Club, Treosurer Rhodes Review Typist Boosters Club Student Council Home Economics Club Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Intramural Sports DONNA MAE REESE Reesie Speech Club; Germon Club; French Club; lob Assistant; Foreign Affairs Council; Student Council; Jr. Y-Teen; Treasurer, Sr. Y-Tcen; Jr. Journal; Rhodes Review; Germon Play '50; Book-room Assistant; Will ond Testament Committee; Office Assistant; National Honor Society; Intro-mural Sports. GILBERT I. REIS Gildo Citizens' Club President and Treosurer, Boys' leaders Varsity R Club, President Freshman Basketball, Football, ond Wrestling Varsity Football Stagecraft Foreman's Club EDMUND RETYCH Doe Citizens' Club German Club Sigmo Hi-Y Boys' leaders Club Spring Show '50 Foremon's Club Work and Win Club NANCY REYNOLDS Nan Girls' Glee Club Sr. Choir 9th Grade Chorus Rodio Guild Spring Play '49, '50 Sr. Y-Teen GERALD C. RIFFLE Riff Stagecraft HELEN ROHDE Helen Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Hostess 9lh Grade Chorus Rhodes Review Typist Intromural Sports Seniors, June 1951 CAROLE JEAN ROSCH Shorty Gorman Club 9th Grade Chorus Jr. Choir Spring Ploy '48 Bookroom Assistant Jr. Y-Toen Sr. Y-Teen Cabinet 12B Social Committee Intramural Sports VIRGINIA ROSE RUFFING Fluffy Work and Win Club; Canteen Committee; 12A Social Committee; Girl ' Glee Club; Sr. Choir; National Honor Society; President and Sociol Chairman, Sr. Y-Teen; Jr. Y-Teen; Boosters Club; Spring Show '48, '49, '50, '51; Secretory and Treasurer, Girls' Leaders Club; Citiions' Club; Sociol Chairman, Student Council; Speech Club; Germon Club; 9th Grade Chorus; Intramural Sports. CAPITA ELEANOR RUSSELL Crete Transferred from Columbia High LAVERNE EVELYN RYBAK Lovey Jr. ond Sr. Choir Jr. Y-Teen 9th Grade Dramatics Hostess 122 Intramural Sports ELAINE M. SAHLEY Elayne 9th Grade Chorus Girls' Glee Club Sr. Choir Fall Frolic '47 Solo Contest '49, '50, '51 Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Operetta '50 Spring ond Foil Plays '50 Jr. Journal Speech Club Intramurol Sports WILLIAM ALIEN SCHIEVE Bill Foreman's Club Varsity Track Freshman, Reserve, and Varsity Football Lettermon's Club JEANNE ELISE SCHMALTZ Jeanne 9th Grade Chorut Boosters Club Home Economics Club Hostess 105 Sr. Y-Teen Intramural Sports ALLEN E. SCHROEDER Al Sigma Hi-Y Jr. Choir Varsity Tennis Yearbook Committee Ideol Senior Committee Rhodes Roview Staff Photographer Boosters Club Seniors, June 1951 RUTH SCHWEITZER Ruthie Home Economic! Club Sr. Y-Teen Boosters Club 9th Grade Chorus Intramural Sports Hostoss IAVERNE RUTH SEDLACEK lovie Hostess 9th Grade Chorus DOROTHY LEE SHAWVER Dotty Hostess CLYDE SIMPSON Clyde Boys' leaders Club Citizens' Club German Club Wrestling Team Track Team Cross Country 128. 12A Class Treasurer JEAN CONNIE SLATER Jeanne 9lh Grode Chorus Secretary, Jr. Choir Girls' Glee Club Jr. and Sr. Y-Tecn Spring Show '49 Home Economics Club Intramural Sports DAVID E. SlIVKA Dave Audio ond Visual Aids Rodio Guild Jr. Achievement JO ANN SLOTE Jo Citizens' Club; Girls’ leaders Club; National Honor Society; Foreign Affairs Council; Girls' Glee Club; Sr. Choir; Triple Trio; 12A Class Secretory; 9fh Grade Chorus; German Ploy '50; Community Fund Speaker; Student Council; Speech Club; Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen; Boosters Club; Intramural Sports. ELLEN K. SMITH El 9th Grade Chorus Spring Play '50 German Club Jr. ond Sr. Y-Teen Radio Guild Speech Club German Play '50 Intramural Sports Seniors, June 1951 JOHN ROBERT SPYAK Specs Intramural Wrestling ROBERT IOUI5 SUDYK Whitey Jr. Journal Boosters Club Speech Club Rhodes Review Sports Editor German Club Citizens' Club Foreign Affairs, Vice-President Editor, Senior Paper Intramural Baseball Yearbook Committee Varsity Tennis JAMES C. STAFFORD Jim Cheerleader 9th Grade Chorus Jr. Choir Freshman Wrestling ond Track Spring Show '48, '49 Announcement Committee GERALDINE JEAN STANCZYC Gerry Jr. ond Sr. Y-Tcen 9th Grade Chorus Home Economics Club Hostess Intramural Sports GERALDINE STAUSE Gerry 9th Grade Chorus Home Economics Club Boosten Club Hostess 122 Rhodes Review Typist Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen Jr. Choir Spring Show '49 Intromural Sports BARBARA RUTH THIERGARTNER Babs Sr. Y-Teen Jr. Choir MICHAEL TOMASHESKI Mike Sr. Bond EMMA B. TOEPFER Em Girls' Leaders Club; Perfect Attendance; German Club; Speech Club; Bookroom Assistant; Radio Guild; German Ploy '50; 12B Social Committee; 12A Announcement Committee; Social Chairmon, Student Council; 9th Grade Chorus; Jr. and Sr. Y-Teen; Boosters Club; Intramural Sports. Seniors, June 1951 RICHARD UHER Chip Freshman and Vanity Wrestling Vanity Wrestling Manager 9th Grade Chorus Reserve Football Tumbling and Apparatus Club Intramural Sports JESSE VAN BUREN Jes Boosters Club Intromural Sports ARTHUR VAN DYKE Arty President, Sigma Hi-Y UA Class Social Committee 12B and 12A Class Vice-President Cross Country Track 9th Grade Chorus ROBERT VAN DYKE Bob Sr. Band ond Orchestro Sc. Choir Fresh mon Trock Wrestling RONALD WILLIAM WALSH Mick Rhodes Bowling Team Intramural Sports JAMES WALZAK Jicn Intramural Football RONALD WARZEL Cube Student Council; Citiiens' Club, Vice-President; German Club; Foreign Affairs Council; Vice-President, Secretory, Boys' leoders Club; Rhoda Hi-Y; Vonity R Club; 11 A, 12B, 12A Closs President; Vonity Football; Reserve Basketboll; Boosters Club; Con-teen Committee. SALLY JEAN WEIN Sol- National Honor Society Editor, Rhodes Review Latin Club President, Librory Club Foreign Affain Ideal Senior Committee Yeorbook Committee Jr. Journal ALICE MARIE WERBA Al Coshier in Cofeterio Speech Club GRETCHEN WILSON Oreteh Orchestro Bond ond Orchestra Club Sr. Y-Teen Home Economic Club Intramural Sports Seniors, June 1951 MARCELYN ELLEN WINCHELl Morey Sr. Y-Teen Hostess 9fh Grade Chorus Student Council Intramural Sports MARY WOLFF Saooky Sr. Y-Teen Girls' Glee Club 9th Grade Chorus Spring Show ‘49 Hostess August Graduates JOSEPH CAMBRIDGE DELMONICO Joe Intramural Sports Freshman Football DONALD C. HUBBELl Dad 9tK Grade Chorus Jr. ond Sr. Choir Foreign Affairs Council HELEN KRAYNAK lyts 9th Grade Chorus Spring Ploys '48, '49 Student Council Sr. Y-Teen Hostess 122 Noon Movie Assistant Office Assistant EMMA MANCINI Em 9th Grade Chorus Girls' Glee Club Intramural Sports JUNE MICHOl June 9th Grade Chorus Fall Frolic '47 Spring Show '49 Jr. Choir Intromurol Sports KATHLEEN PIETRAS Pete 9th Grode Chorus; Secretory, Jr. Choir; Sr. Choir; Girls' Glee Club; Vice-President, Home Economics Club; Boosters Club; President, Foreign Affairs; Sr. Y-Teen; Citizens' Club; Spring Ploy '50; Canteen Committee; Intromurol Sports. EMILIA B. MANCINI Mill 9th Grade Chorus Girls' Glee Club Sr. Choir Spring Shows '50, '51 Intromurol Sports THEODORE ZOLA Teddy Varsity Basketball (Elaas igatorg nr “Unmatrs’ liarg” Here we ore, seniors of lost. We oil say way back when to the days of pigtails and scarred knees, knickers and freckled faces. Amazing isn't it—how we ever monaged to fit into those little rod reading chairs! Recess bell rang—time to get out our socks of peppermints and licorice sticks. Remember how funny we looked when we lost our baby teeth? Watching the high school kids stroll by, little did we think we would ever grow so big. Junior high served as o stepping stone to the real thing. We hod the thrill of being upperclassmen; yet it was on a smoller scale. Graduation held its shore of excitement, but cops and gowns flashed through our dreamy minds. In the early fall of '47, we would wolk through the lively halls of J. F. R. Our first high school days were lonely ones. We were outsiders looking in on a world of work. Some of us longed to be back in the friendliness of junior high. After o week our sentiments did a quick change. Wo became o port, on inseparable part, of the wonderful new atmosphere. We were ready to stand behind our school forever as loyal sons and daughters. Hardly had wo got acclimated, when we discovered that a big shindig for the freshmen (that's us) was to be held in the boys' gymnasium. As the skinny, squeaky, giggling girls glided down the steps, the boys ran into corners where they held their own conversations However, under the auspices of several of the upperclassmen, we wero finally persuaded to play such gomes as passing the orange, musical chair, and for those who had enough courage, dance to the popular record of the day. We discovered that JO ANN SLOTE, DOROTHY KEERAN, and JANE MUSCHNA of Girl Scout Troop 52 had volunteered to usher at the annual North Eastern Ohio Teachers' Association Convention ot the Public Auditorium on October 31, 1947. We wonder if they were trying to polish the apple or trying to obtain a merit badge. The freshmen football squad of CHARLES MISSIG, JIM CRITES, ROGER LAWRENCE. BILL SCHIEVE. GLEN BORDEN, RON WAR2EL, GILBERT LARSEN, BOB CASE, EDMUND RETYCH, JOE ONDICH, CLYDE SIMPSON, JOE DELMONICO, and GIL REIS traveled to Kirk Junior High School in East Cleveland on Wednesday, October 22, 1947 to be beaten by a score of 19-7. They put up a stiff battle but failed to halt the very well-organized Kirk team. Officers pro tern of the now defunct '47 class of drum majorettes were DONNA MAE REESE, president and JEAN BEVACQUA, secretary. The RHODES REVIEW held a Foil Frolic Dance on November 7, 1947 to raise money to buy a movie projector for the English Department. Although no freshmen that we know of participated in the planning of the activities, we were entertained by that harmonious Polka Band and a juggling act. On November 27, 1947 people like JUDITH GOMPF and SHELIA GALLAGHER bought their mums and tickets for the annual Plain Dealer Charity Football Game in which our football team competed against Cathedral Latin. The score of 12-0 in the favor of Latin was a hcortbreaker for us. We were surprised to discover the names of JEAN LYTLE, JIM STAFFORD, and BOB SUDYK in the personality column of the RHODES REVIEW under the caption Frosh Stars of 195? It was learned that Jean—don't look now, Mr. Howard—loved to eat pretzels in the noon movies. Jim Stafford had aspirations for becoming a runner, wrestler, and like the rest of the boys, a mombcr of the Girls' Leaders Club. Bob Sudyk's ambition was to follow in the footsteps of his bigger brother—that of becoming editor of the sports page of the REVIEW. He not only fulfilled hi3 wish but also did it well and effectively. Do you remember the I Chew Bub Bubble Gum Because It Blows Bigger Bubbles Fan Club ? What? You say no? Why that wos a tree-main-jous fad. Christmas of '47 arrived quickly. The JUNIOR JOURNAL revealed that JUDITH GOMPF wonted a pigskin for Christmas and that ROSEMARIE HUSAK didn't have much trouble getting a gift for her three-year-old brother. She made a pair of blue trousers for him. Both HELEN KRAYNAK and JUNE KUHNS wanted a roomful of clothes for Christmas, whereas ROSE LITTURI only wanted on angora sweater. We wonder if GERALDINE MAZUREK ever got those eight wheels for her rink skates. MARY WOLFF wanted the picture of Guy Madison, which was posted on her locker, to come to life. Of all things ALLEN DALL wanted an Alaskan sleeping bag. ARTHUR VAN DYKE wonted a motor scooter, but RICHARD KADLECK had bigger aspirations—he wonted a motorcycle. It would be nice to know how many of these wishes Santo actually fulfilled. If you didn't get what you wanted, did you look bock to see if you were a good little boy or girl? Uh Huh! The indoor track season began on February 4 with the regular running of the Discovery Day meet. Rhodians such as DALE BUSSMAN, JOE ONDICH, BOB MEEHAN, and CHUCK MISSIG displayed their running ability. In our 9A semester ROBERT FELTES edited the first issue of the JUNIOR JOURNAL. New members to be added to the post were JACK BELCHER and DAN GRAF. (Elaaa Miatory — rmitimtefc On February 8, 1948, JIM STAFFORD won the 220 and 440 to become Junior Boys' Chomp in the Great Lakes Open Skating Championship held at Jamestown, New York. On Monday, February 2, it finally happened. The girls' new gymnasium was finally opened. Thot ended the girls' gym periods in the boys' gymnasium. Miss Forrey's homeroom 106 ond Miss Ord's homeroom 206 tied for first place for perfect attendance. On March 12 and 13 DAVID KEARNS and ALAN BRANDES participated in the city-wide music solo ond ensemble contests; Dave playing the violin and Alan the piano. Incidentally both received first ratings. In the March 16 issue of the RHODES REVIEW, we saw the volley ball team of the faculty bloomer boys In action. Such celebrities os MIRACULOUS MORAN, FLASH FOLKMAN. JOVIAL JACOB, JOLTING JOE STEVENS, BATTLING BOB SIFRITT. SMASHING SCHMIDT and HOP-A-LEG CASSIDY (Oops, we mean HOFFMAN) had their picture plastered on the sports page. They had the audacity to soy thot they could play ond beat any group thot had the fortitude to stand-up against them. LOUISE ANN HAROLD and MARTHA HUNTER hod to collect 100 pennies before the formal initiation of the Library Club. Publicity charman for the Band and Orchestra Club for the 9A semester was JUDY MALLO. The April 1 edition of the Roads Rcvoo was o humdinger of a paper. It took quite a bit of time to read that issue. Stories were upside down, sideways, backwards and, oh, all ways. The Applochikolos made up of JEAN BEVACQUA. SHIRLEY BOCKLUND. JUDY GOMPF, JOAN JEDACEK, PAT LEINE, GERRY MAZUREK, DONNA MAE REESE. VIRGINIA RUFFING, ELLEN SMITH, and EMMA TOEPFER were defeated by a score of 60-24 by the Pocomocos on Wednesday, April 6 in the girls' gym. GIL REIS was the only one from our class to be elected into the Boys' Leoders Club, April 9, 1948. Then, of course, you remember the Duncan? Moybe this will give you a hint, If if isn't a Duncan it isn't a--------. One day during the month of April a select group of Mr. Gaiser's biology class laid their books aside ond went to Clark's Aquarium to study the flora and founa in hydrogen hydroxide. The Spring Cornivol of 1948, after many rehearsals, finolly got under way on May 20 and 21. The boys from Miss Keller's musical production Nine Period Doze changed scenes and song simultaneously. From our class the boys were BOB MIDLIK, JOE ONDICH, EMIL POLKABIA, DON McKAY, JOHN CHONACKI and DON ARNDT. The fish pond was under the auspices of MARY JANE COPSHAKE. JOAN DOMBEY, PAT MATE, JEANNETTE POLENSCHAT, and GERALDINE STANCZYC. Did you try your skill at the Bean Bag Toss ? The quortet of HENDERSON, TANKO. SCHMIDT, and HARTZELL was entertaining at the performance also. VIRGINIA RUFFING was the only Girls' Leader to be token into that club from our 9A class. Three members of our class became REVIEW reporters at the beginning of the 10B semester. They were JUDY MALLO, DONNA MAE REESE, ond SALLY WEIN. BOB SUDYK switched to Calvert. Oh, no!—he switched to sporls reporting. The first officers of the Speech Club, sponsored by Mr. Sporgrove, were BOB MEEHAN, president; DON KINZER, vice-president; BEVERLY DIXON, secretary,- BOB DZIAK, treasurer, VIVIAN ALLEN and DALE BUSSMAN, social co-chairmen. MAESTRO KEARNS won a scholarship to the Cleveland Institute of Music we discovered on October 13, 1948. The violin he ployed was a Vuilliaume worth $2000. SALLY WEIN and DOLORES CHITESTER were elected into the Library Club on October 19, 1948. JOE ONDICH suffered a broken arm in the opening reserve football game of the '48 season. The Bronze Room is still housed in Hotel Cleveland; the Blue Room is only a song title,- Hotel Carter hos its Rainbow Room, and the Green Room is of the White House, but in the month of October of '48, Rhodes' students began to boast of the various colored rooms throughout the school. That wos the time Jimmy Rhodes finally got his badly needed washing. The Appalochikolas consisting of CAROLE ROSCH, ELAYNE SAHLEY, JO ANN SLOTE, and other volley-ball enthusiasts clinched the Senior League volley ball championship by defeating the Lucky Nine. By being initiated into the Latin Club on October 28, 1948, ROSE LITTURI and DAN GRAF proved themselves worthy citizens of Rome. (Hlasa iftatonj — rimtfiusri We ore proud to reveol thof EMILIA ond EMMA MANCINI were one of the six sets of twins attending Rhodes that semester. LOIS MIZANTY represented Rhodes in the pageant of queens at the 18th annual Plain Dealer Charity Footboll Game on Soturday, November 27, 1948. The girls' modern dancing classes voted NANCY MASCHUCK os one of the best polkateers. We attributed that lean look either to the high priced food in the cafeteria or the wrestling team. In our 10A semester we were pleased to see o new kind of report cords. BOB SUDYK become sports editor of the REVIEW this semester. EMMA TOEPFER, JO ANN SLOTE, VIRGINIA RUFFING, JUDY GOMPF ond PAT LEINE received their first athletic awards Februory 27, 1949. RON WALSH lost no time in getting into the Rhodes Bowling Club. The following were initioted Saturday, May 21, at the Y. W. C. A. into the German Club: DALE BUSSMAN, MARY JANE COPSHAKE. SHIRLEY CUMMINGS, JOAN DOMBEY, ROBERT MEEHAN, ROBERT MIDLIK, JANE MUSCHNA, ED RETYCH, ond EMMA TOEPFER. Honors went on June 1 to JEANETTE POLENSCHAT for the baseball throw; PAT LEINE, for the 50-yard dash. The relay team of POLENSCHAT, LEINE and JURINA, triumphed in the relays. Then, of course, we all remember that fluent anthropologist. Dr. Ethyl Ampenfels, who spoke to Rhodians on Thursday, June 2 with respect to inter-racial relations. The adopted school in Oostburg, Holland was to send tulip bulbs to us in appreciation for our sending clothing and school supplies to their school. At the close of our 10A semester we said good-bye to Dear Ruth and Change of Pace ond the picnics with the Big Creek drench. JOE KOSTAL was off to New York for a three day stay just as soon as the doors of Rhodes had closed for the summer. He went in co-operation with the Sokol Organization of America to compete in the national track and gymnastics meet. The initial start of our junior year found RON WARZEL ond KATHLEEN PIETRAS assisting on the B-R Canteen Committee, and three new teachers, Mr. Quoyle, Mr. Scott, and Mr. Van Nortwick, having been added to the faculty. Lot's now take a look at the boy's gym activities. We found that RON WALSH and NEIL KUHN possessed high scores in bowling. GIL REIS, who is more commonly known as Gildo, was written up as a personality in the REVIEW under the title Ram Football Players. This semester the lollipops displaced the Ye-Ye-Yo-Yo and bubble gum. Everywhere one looked he saw frustrated freshmen, silly sophomores, jerky juniors and studios seniors merrily licking their lollipops. And according to the Lollipop Unlimited Fan Club, Lollipops are the best (shlurp) candies on the market. Mr. Martin's 11B boys led in the Community Chest drive with an average gift of 77 cents per person. Miss Ord's 11B girls homeroom ranked second as a result of their successful bake sale. The Y-Teen held a doll auction of which Mr. Hoffman was the auctioneer on November 17, 1949, for the benefit of the World Fellowship Fund. GRETCHEN WILSON and JANE MUSCHNA dressed dolls that represented Hawaii and Holland. The Speech Club decided to increase their membership by admitting DON MILNE, MARY JANE COPSHAKE, NADINE KOVEL, and JOY LOUDON into the club. Probably the Boys' Leaders and the Girls' Leaders hod the some idea since BOB MEEHAN, RON MENCINI, ED RETYCH, DICK KADIECK, DOROTHY McAULEY, and JOAN DOMBEY were elected info those clubs. By now DALE BUSSMAN joined the ranks of boys and girls who were written up os personalities in the REVIEW. The German Club elected EMMA TOEPFER ond CAROLE ROSCH, secretary and social chairman respectively. In a poll that wos taken by the RHODES REVIEW for the purpose of obtaining more news, RICHARD GWAREK ond GERRY STAUSE declared that the REVIEW was interesting in general and that there is little to be done to improve it. An engraved metal serving fray, designed by EUGENE LEWANDOWSKI, on which is pictured a typical farm scene, was awarded a place in the Nafionol Industrial Arts Contest. Another contest winner wos GLENN BORDEN who took second place in the Tax Stamp Guessing Contest, sponsored by the Student Council. We peeked in a note book which contained the excuses of pupils who were late that semester. Some of the various excuses were: Our ceiling fell in, There wos no one at home to woke me, GUaaa iatorg - - amttnued and I had to feed the goldfish before I left home. We discovered in the REVIEW personalities on movie attendants that HELEN KRAYNAK dislikes people who shorten her first name and that DONNA MALLOCK can't stand chicken. Before the close of the 1IB semester, PAT LEINE, VIRGINIA RUFFING, and EMMA TOEPFER received their second award, a chanille R, for achieving 300 points in athletics. During our 11A semester the ideo of using bullet boxes as purses wos the fad among the girls. Peering through the purses with ex-ray eyes, we sow the ammunition which included: pancake makeup with a dripping sponge, o brilliant shade of Cozy Rozy lipstick, a coke of ultro-violef rouge, mascara, tooth brush, comb, a bulging billfold, glasses, and various other incidentals. HELEN ROHDE, BETTY MANN, GERRY STAUSE, and DOLORES MALINOSKY were added to the REVIEW staff as typists. On Februory 27, we elected our first class officers. They were RON WARZEL, president; DALE BUSSMAN, vice-president,- JANE MUSCHNA, secretary.- GIL REIS, treasurer,- and VIVIAN ALLEN, social chairman. The social committee wos composed of VIRGINIA RUFFING, JEAN BEVACQUA, JUNE BRYKNER, NANCY MASCHUK. RICHARD KADLECK. RAY KARP, and ART VAN DYKE. PATSY MORTACH'S nome appeared in the Did You Know? column of the REVIEW. At that time she had three pedigreed collies and about sixty conaries of different types. Various clubs elected members of our class to the ranks of membership. PETE VERCHIO became a member of the Foreman's Club, while CHARLENE BEBO and IRMA HARTEL became members of the Library Club on April 13. MARILYN MILLER. LOIS MIZANTY, LYDIA NIKISHIN, GERALDINE STANCZYC were initiated into the Home Economics Club about the same time. On March 2, JANET PINKLEY and LYDIA NIKISHIN were two of the four Rhodes students who gave a panel on etiquette for teen-agers at the South Brooklyn Branch Library. CLYDE SIMPSON wos the lone Rhodian to reach the finals of the State Wrestling Tourney in 1950. A posture contest for girls was held during March. MARY JANE COPSHAKE, SHIRLEY BOCK-LUND, and HELEN ROHDE represented the three 11A homerooms. BOB MEEHAN received a certificate of merit for his auto-biographical sketch that he entered in the Regional Scholastic Writing Contest. Seven juniors were honored at the National Honor Society induction. The neophytes were VIRGINIA RUFFING, DALE BUSSMAN. DAVID KEARNS, BOB FELTES, MARTHA GREGOR, JEAN LYTLE, and BOB MIDLIK. VIRGINIA RUFFING wos elected president of the Senior Y-Teens. Other officers were MARY FORREST, vice-president; VIVIAN ALLEN, secretary; and DONNA REESE, treasurer. A spring play wos presented April 13 ond 14. In the play Mother Is a Freshman BEVERLY DIXON, ED RETYCH, ELAYNE SAHLEY, JEANETTE POLENSCHAT, and ELLEN SMITH portrayed various ports. Two operettas, Trial by Jury and Cox ond Box, ond o German play, Wirrwarr Fuhrwahr, which is adapted from the Shokesperian play Comedy o Errors, were also presented by the students. DAVID KEARNS. ELAYNE SAHLEY, MARY JANE COPSHAKE, NADINE KOVEL, DOROTHY McAULEY, GLENN BORDEN, DON McKAY. JOHN CHONACKI. JOY LOUDON, JANE MUSCHNA, VIRGINIA RUFFING, VIVIAN ALLEN. JOAN DOMBEY. DONNA JARINA, EMILIA MANCINI, PAT MATE, GERALD-INE MAZUREK, MARILYN NEUZIL. DON MILNE ond JOE ONDICH appeared in the cast of Trial by Jury. DONNA MAE REESE. JANE MUSCHNA, DON McKAY. ROBERT FELTES. RAY KARP, JO ANN SLOTE, and EMMA TOEPFER hod roles in the Germon play. After a primary vote, the Student Council race for president narrowed down to BOB FELTES and DALE BUSSMAN with Dale winning out. Dale's campaign promises were to revive the track ond footboll queen contests, to have a soda fountain in the cafeteria, and to have a fund raising campaign for new auditorium curtains. The Hayseed Hop, sponsored by the Student Council, wos the first record dance held at Rhodes in five semesters. Along about this time ROSEMARIE FREIHEIT transferred to Parma Schoof but transferred back to Rhodes two doys later (Guess she didn't like it there). According to a poll that was conducted ot Rhodes in Moy, 435 of our 1,229 scholars were being schooled in the higher learning of television. These fans can be divided into four categories. First, there were those who were determined to see a favorite show and let nothing stand in their way,- secondly, there were those who became richer every night by charging admission; thirdly, there were those who possessed a T. V. set but hogged it to themselves; ond lastly, there were those who had given up ond just dreamed about Kukla, Fran, and Ollie. DON KINZER said he possessed a long list of T. V. owners within a mile radius of his home. He wouldn't miss wrestling for anything. Toast of the Town ranked high with JERRY RIFFLE and JANET PINKLEY. dlagfi IHtBtorg — rottltnupi Orchestra members who received five semester pins were ALAN BRANDES, DAVID KEARNS, and JUDY MALLO; band members who received five semester letters were DON ARNDT, MICHAEL KERES-MAN, TOM LAMOUREAUX, PAT LEINE, JOY LOUDON, and BOB VAN DYKE. ELAYNE SAHLEY was quoted in the REVIEW os saying that after graduation she hoped to moke oodles of money. On May 26, the Citizens Club held their onnuol banquet, finonced by the Student Council. New members who were present were BARBARA HOYER, NADINE KOVAL, JANE MUSCHNA, JOE ON-DICH, ond ED RETYCH. GIL REIS pitched two shutouts in softball on June 2, 1950, to give room 308 the softball championship. He gave up three hits in the first game ond one hit in the second game. Allso, he led the school In earned run average with 1.9. Pastel-colored roses and streamers decorated the boys' gym for our first informal, The Junior Rose Festival, in June. This ended our junior year. The 12B semester marked the lowest enrollment of 1182 that was ever recorded of Rhodes. New officers of the Library Club were MARTHA HUNTER, president; LOUISE HAROLD, vice-president; and IRMA HARTEL, secretory. On September 13, JUNE BRYKNER was elected to the position of secretary to the Student Council. The Boys' Leaders elected GIL REIS, president; RON WARZEL, vice-president; DALE BUSSMAN, treasurer. This club started a younger chapter, the Junior Leaders. During the summer of '50, Mr. Mathews was appointed head of the Senate Athletic Council. ELEANOR PETERS, GERRY STAUSE, ELEANOR FANSLAU, HELEN ROHDE, JEAN BEVACQUA, JEANETTE POPCHAK ond IRENE CHIPINKA typed for the RHODES REVIEW this semester. According to the Girls' Leaders initiation a new race had appeared. Everyone was fuschio, especially CAROL OLSON. We welcomed heartily the new cheerleaders. They were marvelous, stupendous! But where were the cheers? DALE BUSSMAN was elected president of the Notional Honor Society in October of '50. MARTHA GREGOR was elected secretory of the Latin Club; BOB MIDLIK ond RAY KARP, were treasurer and social chairman of the German Club respectively. IRENE CHIPINKA and DAN GRAF went to the Cleveland Junior Chomber of Commerce in October to give five-minute talks on democracy. Mr. Jacob's modern problems class visited the Payne Avenue police station on October 23 ond 24. JOHN SPYAK'S name was seen in the personality column of the REVIEW in the November 8, '50, issue under the caption Quiet Joes. Remember the time DON KINZER backed the car of the driving class into a snowbank? A science program by the General Motors Co., brought here through the efforts of Mr. Merri-man, physics teacher, was given the 8th period, November 7. The National Honor Society inducted SALLY WEIN, JO ANN SLOTE, ROSE LITTURI, JUNE BRYKNER, DON KINZER, and DAN GRAF into its organization on November 14. CHUCK MISSIG cooched the frosh trackmen this semester. Remember that Thanksgiving Party the German Club scheduled for November 24 which was during the big snow ? It was canceled too late to prevent MISS THIEME ond BOB MIDLIK from holding the bag. Miss Thieme had cooked potatoes for forty people and Bob had to use 8 dozen of A P's best donuts in some way or the other. BOB MEEHAN, president of the Citizens' Club, with the help of JO ANN SLOTE, RON WARZEL, and others led an assembly to bring to the attention of the students the rules which the Citizens' Club has had to carry out. The 12B Chemistry class looked forward to find out what new horrors would happen to JEAN BEVACQUA in lob. When the first issue of the RHODES REVIEW came out on February 14, 1951, it was learned that SALLY WEIN was the new editor. Other seniors on the staff were BOB SUDYK, sports editor; PAT MATE, exchange editor; JUDY MALLO. reporter,- LOUISE HAROLD. MARILYN MILLER and DOLORES CHITESTER, typists,- ALLEN SCHROEDER, staff photographer,- and BOB CAMPBELL, staff artist. On January 24, the girls athletic awards assembly was held. MARTHA GREGOR, DONNA JARINA, and JEAN LYTLE received their second awards, a diamond shaped R for earning 200 points. VIRGINIA RUFFING was awarded the gold Girls A. A. pin for making 500 points in gym activities. DAN GRAF was elected president of the National Honor Society, while BOB MIDLIK, MARTHA (Elaaa Biatorg — arnttmiefc GREGOR, and DAVID KEARNS were elected vice-president, secretary, and treasurer respectively. The Library Club elected SALLY WEIN for president and MARTHA HUNTER for vice-president. On February 9, 1951, the seniors voted on their class officers. RON WARZEL was elected class president for the third consecutive time, which, incidentally, has happened only three times before in the history of Rhodes. ART VAN DYKE, JO ANN SLOTE. ond CLYDE SIMPSON were elected vice-president, secretary, and treasurer respectively. VIVIAN ALLEN was chosen social chairman, and her committee consisted of ELAINE ALBERS, MARTHA GREGOR, RAY BICKIMER, DICK KADLECK. ond LARRY BRENNER. ELAYNE SAHLEY was the only soprano, and also the only Rhodian who took first rating in the Senior High Vocal Contest on February 24. of West High. JANE MUSCHNA and DON McKAY received second ratings. CLYDE SIMPSON and DICK MACK entered the Stote Wrestling Tournament in March, but Clyde came in third in his class. ELAINE ALBERS, ROGER LAWRENCE, and JOAN NEILSON received keys in the North Eastern Ohio Regional Scholastic Art Exhibition, which made them eligible for national competition. PAT MATE was voted head of the Latin Club. BOB FELTES, DONNA MAE REESE, DAN GRAF, ond JEAN LYTLE were chosen chemistry lab assistants by Mr. Ca Henderson. On February 21, 1951, the girls' sewing circles ond the boys' brotherhood societies, having bought their tickets, attended the senate playoff for the city championship in basketball. We saw TED ZOLA, RICHARD LOREK, and BOB MEEHAN warming up before the game which was to run into extra time. Wasn't that an exciting gome? At the end of the fourth quarter, Rhodes and Latin were tied 49-49. However, in the extra time Latin netted a shot ond won 52-50. That was surely a swell gome. The Home Economics Club initiated JEAN SLATER, JEAN SCHMALTZ, RUTH SCHWEITZER, RUTH DZANDONY, and ELEANOR PETERS into its organization. On March 14 the Notional Honor Society held an impressive ceremony ot which DONNA MAE REESE. DOROTHY McAULEY. RAY KARP. CHARLES MISSIG, BOB MEEHAN, FREIDA NOSS. and MARTHA HUNTER were inducted. After pictures were collected from LA VERNE SEDLACEK, DOROTHY SHOWVER, MARCILYN WIN-CHILL, BERNICE INAMAN, RICHARD UHER, JOYCE BUNCH, and o host of others the activity pages for this yearbook finally got started. The senior class held its informal on April 7, its picnic on May 9. its prom on June 2, and its closs day on June 8. Graduation, which was held at the Mosonic Temple on June 12, meant work for some, college for others, and marriage for still others. But wo musn't forget the other members of the closs whom we haven't mentioned os yet. They are ROBERT BECKMAN, EARL BETTINGER. BARBARA THIER-GARTNER. ALICE WERBA, PAUL DZIAK, EDWARD FERTAL, RONALD GREINERT, JUNE MICKOL. BETTY HREHOCIK, LAVERNE KISS. MICHAEL TOMASHESKE, JESSE VAN BUREN, JAMES WALZAK, JOAN BIGGS. HELEN CHRISTENSEN, FRANCINE GIRARD, PHYLLIS HARBART, JUNE NOTTKE. CARITA RUSSELL, LAVERNE RYBACK, JOHN HOMOLA, JOHN KOTHANEK, WALTER LEIGHT, JACK MUSSELMAN, ROBERT NEDRICH, JOAN PERRELL, LOIS BRANNON, EMMA FERENCE, LOIS KRIEDMAN, JOAN NIELSON. and JOE ONDUS. A C T I V 1 T I E S I NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY SPONSOR: MISS EDITH CHERRINGTON STUDENT COUNCIL SPONSOR: MR. E. J. HOLDEN CITIZENS' CLUB SPONSOR: MR. OLIVER HOFFMAN FOREIGN AFFAIRS CLUB SPONSOR: MR. W. T. MARTIN LATIN CLUB SPONSOR: MISS HELEN PALMER GERMAN CLUB SPONSOR: MISS MARGARET THIEME FRENCH CLUB SPONSOR: MISS MARY MANNING LIBRARY CLUB SPONSOR: MISS CALLAVAN SNAPY SHOTS HOME ECONOMICS CLUB SPONSOR: MISS LEONA MILLARD FOREMAN'S CLUB SPONSOR: MR. EARNEST BEREIT FUTURE TEACHERS OF AMERICA SPONSOR: MISS BEATRICE ORD AUDIO-VISUAL AIDS CLUB SPONSOR: MR. JOSEPH STEVENS RHODES REVIEW STAFF SPONSOR: MR. H. T. FOLKMAN BAND AND ORCHESTRA CLUB DIRECTOR: MR. OHO SCHMIDT GIRLS' TRIPLE TRIO DIRECTOR: MR. GILBERT VAN NORTWICK BOYS' OCTET DIRECTOR: MR. GILBERT VAN NORTWICK JAMES FORD RHODES' BAND DIRECTOR: MR. OTTO SCHMIDT JAMES FORD RHODES' CONCERT ORCHESTRA DIRECTOR: MR. OHO SCHMIDT A CAPPELLA CHOIR SPONSOR: MR. GILBERT VAN NORTWICK GIRLS' GLEE CLUB SPONSOR: MR. GILBERT VAN NORTWICK MADRIGAL SINGERS SPONSOR: MR. GILBERT VAN NORTWICK RADIO GUILD FACULTY MANAGER MR. BILL SCOTT Mr. William Scott, faculty manager here at James Ford Rhodes, was an eight letterman in high school. He won two monograms as a West Tech gridder, three as a Warrior thinclad and another three on the hardwood squad. Bill's career culminated when he graduated from Tech in 1929, for it was in that year he became State 220-yard low hurdle champ. He started his teaching career in 1937 at William Dean Howell Junior High where he taught printing. Early in the war he was asked to help out in coaching basketball at his Alma Mater. So, beginning in 1941, he started the day at W. D. H. Junior High and finished up by coaching basketball in the West Tech Gym. Then, in 1946 he moved to West High to act as assistant-coach for the Cowboys' gridiron and thinclad squads and as head basketball coach. This faculty manager and coach has a great future ahead of him at Rhodes or wherever he may be. RHODES' FOOTBALL TEAM U« o right, front row: Co . Doll. Ro co. Oo ky. Reit, Revilock. Bo h r, Golmorini. ley, ,. Second row: Ko.ner Winkle mon. WarroI, Wen . Sotok, M tro. Schenk. Budko, W i ond. Egno. Third row. Kofhonek, Cr ofi, Schieve, Gurik,’Teke.ky, B. Moll, R. Mott. Kratovil. towrence. Baldwin. Fourth row. Cooch Moron. Cooch S ©t , Coach Quoyl , Kurtr Monoger, Bryonton. Jenkint, Wilke. HEAD COACH Coach Moran Veteron Cooch Andy Moron ho been heod cooch in 194b when he re’u'ned from the U. S. Novy. Before he entered the novy he wo oMulonf footboll ond bo k tboll cooch here at Rhode . He attended Wett High School her in Cleveland where he won eight monogrom on the gridiron ond hordwood. He olto ployed bo ketboll ond footboll ot Wittenberg College in !9’8. The high pom of hb high chool coaching career wo 1947 when he led the tquod lo the Wett Senote Chompionthip. SCHEDULE Rhodes .......... 6 Rhodes ......... 7 Rhodes .........26 Rhodes .........13 Rhodes ......... 6 Rhodes ......... 7 Rhodes .........34 Rhodes ......... 20 Lakewood ...........46 South ..............19 Holy Nome .......... 0 West Tech .......... 7 Lincoln ............26 West 0 Marshall ........... 6 Ignatius ...........34 REMARKS The local gridders completed a .500 season last year ond finished third in senale competition. The squad was a young one with nineteen fellows eligible for next fall's squad. Senior members graduating this June are Case, Dali, Reise, Winklemon, Worzel, Kothanek and Schieve. Mr. Moran, head coach, is looking forward to a championship for next year. Mr. Scott is faculty manoger and helps Mr. Moran ond assistant coach Quayle with the squad. Although the squad failed to win a championship they have gained both physically, mentally ond morally. JAMES FORD RHODES' MARCHING BAND DIRECTOR: MR. OTTO SCHMIDT majorettes RHODES VS. HOLY NAME C Afllf B£-t L- BASKETBALL TEAM SCHEDULE Rhodes 27 Central 42 38 52 Rhodes 61 East 49 31 42 48 37 35 26 Rhodes ... 39 41 26 42 45 47 22 Rhodes 53 Lincoln 39 Rhodes 40 West 32 Rhodes 55 Marshall 40 Akron Host .......51 The 1950-51 hordwood season will be well remembered by Coach Vannorsdall and our class as one of the outstanding in his long coaching career. Mr. Vannorsdall immediately commenced to show his coaching ability in 1919 at Fremont High School where they were twice champs of the Little Big League. Then he transferred to Washington High where his basketball team won the title in the Central Ohio League. Next he pulled up stakes and took over football, track, and basketball at Akron East High. Coach Van lost only four grid battles in his four years there. He also led the trock team to two city titles and his basketball teoms were runners-up twice for the State Championships and tied twice for city laurels. Then Von came to Cleveland West Tech in 1930 and built up a team which tied for the Senate Basketball title. In 1935 he came to Rhodes. From 1936-1938 the Ram pigskin teams were unbeaten in 22 games when West Tech broke the string 20-0 before 18,000 spectators here at Rhodes field. He coached such stors as Les Horvath, All-American from Ohio State and former halfback for the Cleveland Browns, and Bill Putich, presently the Michigan quarterback captain, and Rolph Armstrong, Ohio State end. What factor has mode Van successful in his years of coaching? It has been his keen interest in sports, a wealth of knowledge, and his many years of experience. He graduated from Antioch College with 12 letters in the three major sports: football, basketball, and baseball. Since Rhodes took up basketball in 1933, the local teams have won 52 percent of their encounters. Eleven of these battles were lost by one point. In the last seven years the locals hove copped 50 out of 78 games in that span for a percentage of 64. To show you the power of our coge squads in the past five years, Rhodes has won 28 Senate battles and lost only 7. CWbclL TRACK TEAM Coach: Mr. E. J. Holden RHODES OUTDOOR TRACK SCHEDULE 1951 RHODES INDOOR TRACK SCHEDULE 1951 April 13 Feb. 16 Collinwood High School 3:10 Feb. 23 John Adams 3:10 April 20 Feb. 27 St. Ignatius 3:10 March 2 West High School 3:10 April 28 March 8 West Tech High School 3:10 Moy 4 March 9 K. of C. Gomes, Arena 7:30 May n March 12 Rocky River ond Berea 3:10 May 12 March 16 Rhodes Subway Meet (West-West May 17 Tech-lgnatius and Rhodes) 3:10 March 30 City Indoor Meet, Arena May 19 Prel. 2:00 Finals 8:00 Moy 23 May 25 June 1 Quadrangular Meet Rhodes 3:10 (Parma, St. Ignatius, John Adams, Rhodes) Lakewood High Varsity and Soph. Meet Uhrichsville Relays West Tech Relays John Marshall High East Tech Relays Rocky River (Soph, ond Freshmen) N. O. District Meet Rhodes 3:10 There There 7:00 Rhodes 3:10 There 3:30 West High State Moet ot Columbus Senate Meet Rhodes Prel. 9:30 Finals 1:30 Rhodes 3:10 n H r o r o n I CTn n _ f mm CROSS COUNTRY Coach: Mr. E. j. Holden GIRLS' LEADERS BOYS' LEADERS COACHING STAFF NOON MOVIE OPERATORS (Hlass fJrnjihmj Wissssssssh! We're stepping into our otomic time mochine which will foke us into the future. The dials ore set for June 12, 1975. Herrrre we goooooooooooo. The destination is the now famous rostourant, High Heaven —six months, two weeks, and four days' journey. This now fabulous place adorned in crepe paper and cut slips, with isinglass windows is open wide in expectation of this great event—the reunion of the class of 1951. First to dent the threshold is TOM LAMOUREUX with pod and pencil in hand—he's finishing the final draft of the 1951 closs prophecy. GIL Big Swede LARSEN tries to pack his lumber ax awoy before he starts reviewing old acquaintances. DON KINZER, the famous M.D., hos just arrived with a large display of bi-carbonate of soda which he will administer to each guos? upon leaving. BERNIE INEMAN has come to show us her ring. Is this the one she started ot dear old J. F. R.? The fabulous arm chair strategist especially appointed to assist General MacArthur is none other than CAPTAIN GERALD RIFFLE. ELAYNE SAHLEY. famous songwriter, has come to thrill us with her finally completed blues ballad, My Johnny. BOB DZIAK is looking for a new job, television seemed to the Nemesis of the Broadvue Theater. Still crying is JACK BELCHER because of the 99 he received in sewing. We see MARTY GREGOR, head of 33 nursing schools still complaining, Gees Man, the prices are high ; as she poys her taxi fore. Trigger-finger GWAREK and associate Baby-face GREINERT are now top men In the Chicago underwork; both spend most of their time keeping away from the Kefauver Committee. LAVERNE LILLY RYBAK has token leave from her school of Fundamentals in Modesty (??) to accompony her three best pupils, ELEANOR FANSLAU, ROSEMARIE HUSAK and DOROTHY SHAWVER. LARRY BRENNER hos just established himself as Einstein's predecessor by his revolution of the theory of nuclear fission. MARY JANE COPSHAKE, ace pediatrician, is asking, Hos anyone seen Mr Hoffmon? GIL REIS arrives with his 8 year old son who hos just been expelled from the third grade for not shoving. PAUL (Morton) DZIAK goes bock to Unionfown, Pa., decides thot, after 25 years, big-city life is not for him. BOB SOCKS MIDLIK, Unionfown kid, has just completed his onion town dictionary defining 'youns,' 'did ju-ever etc. The two gold dust twins—NEIL and JUNE KUHNS orrived kind of lote, but they're still ready to entertain us. In walks BOB CASE who has worn out six pairs of size 13D's, as he decided to walk all the woy from his Dog patch home. The lote VIVIAN ALLEN hos willed her class ring to anyone who con find it. (Clue: in the proximity of May Company.) RICHARD MACK and RICHARD UHER are seeking their fortune by supervising activities ot JOHN CHONACKI'S Gymnasium. JEAN BEVACQUA hos just come in with a happy lough on her face and a Stromboli sandwich in her hand. Multi-millionaire JOHN HOMOLA makes it a point to hand out C -notes with every handshake as he greets old clossmates. Little CHARLENE BEBO peep, hos lost her sheep and don't know where to find them. DONNA MAE REESE has invested her savings in an exclusive Madam Albers outfit, but still wearing her patched and rethreadod F sweater. After 25 years of study the class just hos found out ARNDT ain't in the dictionary. There's a switch. Footballer BILL SCHEIVE took time out to wash off the last piece of mud from the West High game just so he could attend our reunion. We notice that MISS VIRGINIA ROSE G. G. RUFFING'S face turned a pretty crimson os she hears thot Mr. Hoffman is to be our guest speaker. DICK LOREK arrives all smiles becouse the long drink of water he took during the arena cage tilt (strictly on the level) has finally reochod his feet. (Elaas ffroptjmi — amtimird A big commotion is heard outside—BOB FELTES, now director of the Smithsonian Institute, is offering JOE ONDICH one million dollars to donate his car. (By the way, that is the some cor which we all made fun of back in '51.) PAT LEINE is making her home in Florida due to many unfortunate incidents in her hometown. Her homecoming was requested by BEVERLY DIXON whose newest frailer has arrived. All eyes focus on the door as LOIS KRIEDMAN enters. Although she has completed several modeling courses she is still the same old Lois. BOB BECKMEN has just come up with a reply to Mr. Hartzell's question on wit and humor. NANCY REYNOLDS has a lifetime contract with Cleveland Zoological Park keeping house on monkey island. Put on your sales resistance because the famed Fuller Brush salesman, RAY FOX BICKIMER is here to entertain us with his sample case and a few selected traveling salesmen's jokes. By yumping yimity here comes HELEN CHRISTENSEN just off the boot from her native Denmark. A little late, but not last, DALE BUSSMAN comes jogging in from South America building bridges oil the way. JOE THE HUNK KOSTAL has just completed o gymnastic tour of Czechoslovakia which was made via hot rod. MIKE KERESMAN and JOHN KOTHANEK, reformed pyromoniacs, hove been elected to the positions of president and vice-president respectively, of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees. JOAN BIGGS comes in with o book in her hand. At long last she's learned the first word in the Word Wealth Book. EARL BETTINGER is trying to boost enrollment for his School of Prospective Casanovas. News has arrived from the famous Berlin zoological garden that DER THIERGARTNER will be unable to attend due to o sick lion. Any relative to BARBARA? RON MENCINI has just been lot out of the bird house after 25 years in captivity. SHIRLEY BOCKLUND drives up in her father's car. After 25 years of hearing her voice he finally gave in. DAVID KEARNS and ALAN BRANDES just came in, however they will not be able to stay long. They hove to catch a plane, as they hove an engagement at Carnegie Hall. MANAGER JIM CRITES is wearing his whites, and is expected to help DR. KINZER with the psychoneurotics. ROGER THE LODGER LAWRENCE is still soliciting orders for name cards by God. Congratulations ore in order for the trio of CHITESTER, FERRENCE, and JEDACEK who are celebrating silver wedding anniversaries this year. The contented kid, GLENN BORDEN, has just orrived with the last thing in cows—they're pasteurized. ALLEN DALL, the foreign interpreter, has just arrived with his universal greeting morti baba-titti lala. FRIEDA NOSS has given up telling Personal Regimen classes about St. Luke's Hospital and is now talking to JUNE BRYKNER who is an avid listener. She in turn wants to talk about Dove's expedition. Another one of the BUNCH has just arrived—JOYCE that is. After 25 years SHIRLEY CUMMINGS has finally earned a moster's degree in her life's work-stagecraft. We see RUTH DZADONY must hove been shopping—she's loaded down with packages. Toking advantage of Consumer Education, eh, Ruthie? The sports fans at this confab are currently being seon mobbing BOB WHITEY SUDYK, Sports Editor of the Cleveland Press, trying to get the latest word on the hometown Indians. The heavy word is that ROSE MARIE FREIHEIT has won a job os secretary for JOHN D. LEWAN-DOWSKI, Plostics millionaire. BARBARA HOYER is employed at a pet shop. As you may remember, she had a lot of experience working with birds. Hey gong, if anyone wants to step out in style, here's your chance. In the distance we see MADMAN DELMONICO and his string of convertibles. Unable to fear herself away from the familiar surroundings, LOIS BRANNON has accepted the job of waitress at High Heaven. We find the famed lawyer BOB MEEHAN acting as attorney for the defense of the class of '51 vs. the State of Ohio Psychological test. GUass Prnpljmi — nmtimtefc IRENE CHIPINKA surprised us. She orrived lote but the fact remains that she was never late 25 years ago. MARY FORREST'S presence is immediately noted because of the fact that everyone now possesses a new pair of shoes. Sis has a partnership in Harden's. Eyes turn toward the entrance in time to see Washington bound RON WARZEL, sparring a few hours from his presidential campaign, arrive to meet his old constituents. JOAN DOMBEY and SHEILA GALLAGHER are now combining their talents to operotc a first aid station in Berea. Unfortunately, ED. FERTAL will be unable to stick around for the second round of Skudburgers, he has a heavy date tonight. FRANCINE GIRARD doesn't know too much about boots but she can sure recognize a Skipper when she sees one. JUDY GOMPF is sporting a complete R. R. outfit. It's a bonus for 25 years of loyal service. RON WALSH, the now famous Kegler, has just defeated Andy Vorapopa in the National Bowling Congress finals. The Sewing Circle soys that LOUISE HERALD morried the wcolthy John D. Tribune and is now part owner in a famous Scandal sheet. We find JOHN SPYAK now employed ot the Toe-Knee-Chest-Nut Lumber yard. He is still looking for the Board of Education. The boys at the soda bar say that classmate, the Honorable Judge JOSEPH ONDUS. will be the new commissioner of baseball in 1975. Tearing himself away from the Rat Hole where he is currently engaged against Willie Hoppe for the National Billiard Championship we find cue stick DON MILNE. Librarians MARTHA HUNTER and SALLY WEIN ore currently telling of the elbows they rubbed in the library of congress. Is that the sun setting? Oh, no. IRMA HARTEL just walked info the room. (Her hair is just as red as it ever was.) In one secluded corner we find PHYLLIS HARBART. JEANNE SCHMALTZ. RUTH SCHWEITZER, and GERRY STAUSE sitting quietly watching the festivities, but then, the quiet ones are the ones to watch. Well, look who's coming in now. DICK KADLECK, in his usual green and white uniform, is now managing a Fisher Brothers Store. LITTLEFIELD says, Tinkle, tinkle little stream, how I wonder who has the squirt gun. DR. JEAN LYTLE, noted chemist announces the discovery of o new element—Rhodenium. We find that the noted columnists of the syndicated column Rhodeo of the Notion, PAT MATE and JUDY MALLO, are here gathering facts. The wealthy DOLORES MALINOSKY who gained fame ond fortune by selling Insurance policies to the closs of '51 draftees has just orrived. RAY KARP, now wrestling coach at Ofterbein University, just come in with BOB NEDRICH who has attained all the prestige on advertising manager may attain. Lab technician ROSE LITTURI, is testing the solubility of coffee at toble number one. DON HUBBEL, graduate of the Hoffman School of Law, Is presently making his debut in politics, his publicity agent is DAVE SLIVKA. Just seen stepping into the bar is applesause king JACK MUSSLEMAN. Tailing close behind is that cool character acting os chauffeur is BOB VAN DYKE. Well, well in walks MIKE TOMASHESKI who has just replaced Oscor Bergman os fashion editor of the Plain Dealer. (Good old 11A Personal Regimen.) EMIL POLKABLA and his customary crew cut just arrived with the Mrs. ond all the little Polk's. ART VAN DYKE, who is currently setting outboard racing records, is also still a fovorite with the girls. ALAN FLASHBULB SCHROEDER unable to be here today, is an aerial photographer for the good old U. S. Novy. CLYDE SIMPSON who represented the U. S. in the 1972 Olympics splurged on a bottle of cream soda and a bag of Fritos. ELLEN SMITH and DONNA JARINA ore still pretty busy living becouse of the fact that they ore not dead yet. Three o'clock in the morning. (Eksa Jlmpljery — rontinuri GRETCHEN WILSON just flew in from the Empire State worried very much that she missed the reunion. Lovers of old records have found a friend in NANCY MASCHUK, especially her old favorite. There'll Be Some Changes Made. Word through the grape vine has arrived that LYDIA NIKISHIN and JANET PINCKLEY just couldn't quit serving the teachers in the lunch rooms for they are now found at the home for the aged still nursing the teachers. JIM STAFFORD, millionaire ship builder, is passing out free samples—oufographed kiddy-craft sail boats. Talking with the boys in the backroom is sharpie ED. DOC RETYCH, who is currently eluding Cleveland police for not getting an M.D. License to go along with his nickname. Getting in kind of late is DON McKAY and not far behind chasing the noted Mortician, his Lob assistant, DAN GRAF. McKAY started to swipe test tubes of CH3CHO (formaldehyde) in high school in preparation for his career. JO ANN SLOTE has arrived to take her place among the throng. Taking notes of course. We see that offer 25 years PATSY MORTACH has finally set the styles with her long hair. Seeing GERRY MAZUREK again proves fhot the roomers are true—she never attained her hearts desire. At the reunion banquet CAROL OLSON finds herself setted in front of J. ONDICH again. What a fate after 25 years of peaceful living. DOROTHY McAULEY has finally reached the goal she has always desired. She is our good will ambassador to Ireland. To entertain us EMMA TOEPFER, the star of stage and screen, hos just arrived to give us a preview of her latest stage hit, Jolly Emma. JEANETTE POLENCHAT is pouting again. Could her favorite sang still be Fudin', Fussin', and Fightin' after 25 years. So tired--------it's 4:00 in the morning---------- MARILYN MILLER has soid absolutely nothing. Her motto must still be, Mums the word. With the arrival of JUNE MICHOL, the room is scented by the fragrant aroma of perfume Repulsive, two bits on ounce. The Queen of the past, basketball, is still a queen—jellybeans. MISS KOVEL hos become quite the candy magnate. We find KATHLEEN PIETRAS home on a furlough. It seems somebody colled her Pete in front of a draft board and the next thing she knew—Korea. The word around the Hollywood and Vine section of the back room is that GERALDINE STAN-CZYC the 1962 Mrs. America is a sure bet to be elected the Reunion Queen. The life of the party os usual was the humorous quartet of BETTY HROCIK, BETTY MANN, LA-VERNE KISS, and DOROTHY KEERAN. These girls are available for wedding, parties, etc. Through the doors of High Heaven has just passed JESSE VAN BUREN, the Smiling Sociologist, whose motto is, A picture is worth a thousand words. Everyone is astonished by the fact that JAMES WALZAK transportation accomplishment which started with a motor Scooter—then a car and now he's landing his V-2 rocket. I guess the marines hove landed as far as HELEN KRAYNAK is concerned. JOY LOUDON, the female Benny Goodman, now performs with Phil Spifalny's all girl orchestra. ELEANORE PETERS and JUNE NOTTKE being quite roodily adapted as hostesses have made everyone feel quite at home. CARITA RUSSELL, LAVERNE SEDLACEK, and ALICE WERBA just walked in attired in navy blue. The Red Cross claims them as members. Speoking of crosses JOAN NEILSON is doing all right for herself by making Hot Cross Buns. Is that dime-store jewelry that JEAN SLATER has on? Well, it's no wonder, she is only a manager of one of the Woolworth's establishments. JEANETTE POPCHAK ond MARILYN NEUZIL hove become quite famous with the green nail polish fad although we fail to catch the St. Patrick's day tie-up. Greetings from the Five A. M. Club. (ElasB — rmttinaefi If you are ever down in Moy's Basement and you should see two blue eyes and a head of blond hair peeking out from behind some gloves, just say Hi, LOIS. (MIZANTY that is.) Just returning from Czechoslovakia, while carrying on on extensive study of juvenile delinquency, is HELEN ROHDE. Cinder boy CHUCK MISSIG just jogged in with the news that Gromo MALLOCH has finally earned enough money to bring her hubby and family to the Reunion. Up above we see some crazy pilot doing nose dives, it must be our Amelia Eorhart—CAROLE ROSCH. BOB CAMPBELL is doing some fancy commercial doodling. By the way he is noodling on the side (for Campbell Soup that is). MARY (the wolf gal) WOLFF has just Informed us that she can not attend our reunion because she's in training for the annual Sadie Hawkins Day. On the absence sheet is JOAN PERRElL; she is still ot home studying her Shakespeare. Here comes JANE MUSHNA, a little late, oh well, she hos had her shore of trouble. Now we've had a glimpse of what's to come. So let's get back to 51. P. S.-Don't forget your reunion suits. Although we're not short order cooks. We do a good job when it comes to yearbooks. The Class Will and History were all very fine. It was the Class Prophecy that gave us the hard time. Along come a group who accepted the chore. But when we were through if was long past four. Les set the challenge—The challenge was met. And this we hope we will never regret. THE SLEEPY SIX. Albers, Elaine Dorothy .... Allen, Vivian Joanne ....... Arndt, Donald R............. Eebo, Charlene ............. Beckmann. Robert T.......... Belcher, Jock James ........ Bevacqua. Jean Theresa .. Beftinger, Earl ....... Bichimer, Raymond Arthur Biggs, Joan ................ Bocklund, Shirley M......... Borden, Glenn Allan ....... Brandes. Alan Charles ....... Brannon, Lois Evelyn........ Brenner, Lawrence Joseph . Brykner, June Marilyn ...... Bunch, Joyce Marie ......... Bussman, Dale Roger ......... Campbell, Robert B. Cose. Robert Meisfer Chipinka, Irene Joan Ch'tester, Dolores Ann ....... Chonocki, John Walter ...... Christenson, Helen Kirk .... Copshake, Mary Jane Crites, James Arthur ....... Cummings, Shirley Ann ..... Dali, Allen Arthur ......... Dixon, Beverly Joan ......... Dombey, Joan Mae ........... Dzadony, Rufh ......... ' Dziok, Paul V.......... Dziok, Robert T........’ Eanslau, Eleanor ........... Fe,tes. Robert Richord ..... Ference, Emma Louise Fertal, Edward Robert ...... Forrest, Mary Joan Freiheit, Rose Marie I....... Gallagher, Sheila Noreen Girard, Francine Ruth ...... Gompf, jucjith Eleanor ...... Graf, Daniel Irvin Gregor, Martha S............ Greinerf, Ronald Edwin ..... Gwarek. Richard Herbert, Phyllis Ann ....... Harold, Louise Ann ......... Simtory ...4158 West 36th St...... ...2508 Oak Park Ave...... ....4596 Fulton Road .... ...4112 Biddulph Ave...... ...4171 West 58th St...... ...6704 Meadowbrook Ave. ...4247 West 63rd St...... ...3113 Tompa Ave......... ...1752 Saratoga Ave...... ...4511 Henrifze Ave...... ...4393 West 61st St...... ...4448 West 35th St...... ...4413 Gifford Ave....... ...4108 West 48th St...... ...4853 West 12th St...... ...4307 West 12th St...... ...4338 West 63rd St...... ...3827 Spokane Ave ...... ...3440 Broadview Rd...... ...1330 Plymouth Rd......... ...5301 Biddulph Ave...... ...5980 Ardmore Dr........ ...2052 Hillcrest Ave..... ...4221 Jennings Rd....... ...7002 Woodhaven Ave. ... ...4239 West 62nd St...... ...3215 Roonoke Ave....... ...1913 Broadview Ct...... ...5706 Biddulph Ave...... ...3811 Cecelia Ave....... ...4621 Gifford Ave. ....... ...4169 West 49th St...... ...4169 West 49th St...... ...3901 Stickncy Ave...... ...4713 Ira Ave .......... ...4252 West 50th St...... ...3719 Biddulph Ave...... ...2005 Mayview Ave....... ...2155 West 101st St..... ...1778 Saratoga Ave...... ...4444 West 35fh St...... ...4389 West 61st St...... ...1500 Ferman Ave........ ...3202 Ruby Ave............ ...5824 Archmerc Ave...... ...4463 Broadview Rd...... ...3256 West 86th St...... ...4179 West 62nd St...... ....SH. 1-0452 ...ON. 1-1884 ....FL. 1-5516 ...ON. 1 -3808 ....ON. 1-2586 ....ON. 1-3948 ....FL. 1-8568 ....ON. 1-4240 ....FL. M729 ...SH. 1-5330 ...SH. 1-7923 ....FL. 1-3635 ....FL. 1 4084 ...SH. 1-3919 ...FL. 1-2405 ...SH. 1-6291 ...SH. 1-8397 ...FL. 1 -8656 ...ON 1-7749 ...FL. 1-8806 ...FL. 1-0770 ....SH. 1-8567 ....SH. 1-1335 ....SH. 1-1477 ...ON. 1-5054 ...FL. 1-2441 ....SH. 1-0721 ...FL. 1-6127 ...FL. 1-8458 ...FL. 1-4397 ..ON. 1-4321 ..ON, 1-6218 ..ON. 1-6218 ...FL. 1-4599 ...SH. 1-2243 ...SH. 1-9528 ..ON. 1-3723 ...SH, 1-1614 ...AT. 1-6394 ..ON. 1-0843 ....FL. 1-2676 ...SH, 1-0662 ....FL. 1-9076 ..ON. 1-2304 ..ON. 1-5932 ..ON. 1-5775 WO. 1-6378 ....FL. 1-8341 Utminrg-------nmtttmrti Hartel, Irmgord Elfriedo ... Homolo, John .............. Hoyer, Barbara Jeonne ..... Hrehocik, Elizabeth Joan . Hunter, Martha A........... Husak, Rosemorie ......... Inemon, Bernice .......... Jorino, Donna Jeanne ..... Jedacek, Joan Ruth ....... Kadlock, Richard G........ Karp, Raymond Kenneth .. Kearns, David Eugene ..... Kceran, Dorothy June ..... Keresman, Michael A., Jr. Kinzer, Donald Wayne .... Kiss, LaVerne Marie ...... Kostol, Joseph ........... Kothonek, John Fred ...... Kovel, Nadine Susan ...... Kricdmon, Lois Mary ...... Kuhn, Neil Gene .......... Kuhns, June Rose ......... Lomoureux, Thomas H. ... Larsen, Gilbert Evan ..... Lawrence, Roger Woyne . Leight, Walter ........... Leine, Patricia Jean ..... Lewondowski. Eugene J. . litluri. Rose Ann ........ Lorek, Richard ........... Loudon, Joy Emilie ...... Lytle, Jean F............ ,3117 Portman Ave......................FL. 1-9179 4238 West 49th St.......................ON 1-5646 ,4101 Germaine Ave.....................FL. 1-7049 .3705 Leopold Ave......................FL. 1-5629 .4421 West 67th PI......................ON 1-0610 .5016 Stickney Ave.....................FL. 1-4389 .1916 Merl Ave.........................FI. 1-9592 .4105 Muriel Ave.......................ON. 1-8425 .4311 Behrwald Ave.....................ON. 1-5439 .4075 West 48fh St.....................SH. 1-7369 .5420 Ira Ave..........................SH. 1-5032 ,.4396 Pearl Road ....................SH. 1 -7625 ,.2201 Hood Ave. .....................SH. 1-1571 .27 E. Hillside Rd„ Seven Hills....... None ..5900 Parkridge Rd...................FL. 1 -2359 ..2805 Notchez Ave.....................FL. 1-0131 ..4478 Broadview Rd....................FL. 1-7530 ..4854 West 14th St....................FL. 1-0200 ..3316 Montclair Ave...................ON. 1-4994 ..4538 Bader Ave.......................FL. 1-2112 ..4175 West 48th St....................SH. 1-6812 ..1651 Cohassett Ave., Lkwd. ..........AC. 1-6523 ..4413 Behrwald Ave....................ON. 1-4823 ,.4397 West 10th St....................SH. 1-4658 ...4768 West 20th St...................ON. 1-4575 ..3212 Cypress Ave., W. Tech Even.....SH. 1-0588 ...5012 Vandalia Ave....................PL 1-6091 ..3217 Tote Ave............-...........FL. 1.3706 ,.5420 Stickney Ave....................ON. 1-5501 ,.4408 Archmere Ave....................ON. 1-7717 .,3114 Oak Park Ave....................PL 1 -3321 .,2700 Tote Ave...................... SH. 1-6789 Mack. Richard ............. Molinosky, Dolores Mary Mollo, Judith Ellen ....... Malloch, Donno Clark ...... Mann, Betty Jone .......... Maschuk, Nancy Jeanne „ Mate, Patricio Ann ........ Mozurek, Geraldine F....... McAuley, Dorothy Jeanne McKay, Donald William , Meehan, Robert John ....... Mencini, Ronald Louis ..... Midlik, Robert Andrew .... Miller, Marilyn Ann ....... Milne, Donald Henry ....... Missig, Charles G.......... Mizanty, Lois Jean ........ ,3719 Cypress Ave. . ,4413 West 48th St. . ,5202 Vandoiia Ave. .4406 Clybourne Ave. .2209 Denison Ave. .2322 Montclair Ave. .4652 Morningside Dr, .2503 Ralph Ave ..... .4353 West 60th St. . .3523 West 44th St. . .2210 Oak Park Ave. .5415 Wetzel Ave ... .4136 West 48fh St. .4218 Henritze Ave. , .2023 Tampa Ave. ... .5305 Ira Ave....... .1937 Mayview Ave. ...FL. 1-7373 ...FL. 1-1419 ..SH. 16507 •ON 1-7188 .. None ...FL 1-4388 -SH. 1-4720 ON. 1-2737 •ON. 1-9357 •ON. 1-7257 -FL. 1-6668 •ON. 1-6181 —FL. 1-0871 •ON. 1-0745 ...SH. 1-4035 ...SH. 1-8529 •ON. 1-2468 limtory-----nmtimtpo Mortach, Patricio Ann .................6209 Muschna, Jane Ann .....................3902 Musselman, John W., Jr.................2717 Nedrich, Robert .......................4454 Neuzil, Marilyn Kay ...................4396 Nielsen, Joan Elizabeth ...............4362 Nikishin, Lydia .......................4309 Noss, Frieda Elizabeth ................4550 Notfke, June Elise ....................5908 Olson, Carol Marie ....................7813 Ondich, Joseph Jack ...................3606 Ondus, Joseph Albert ..................3106 Perrell, Joan Ellen ...................2211 Peters, Eleanor Rose ..................2616 Pinkley, Janet Lee ....................4302 Polenschot, Jeanette C.................5410 Polkabla, Emil Joseph .................4300 Popchak, Jeannette R...................3207 Reese, Donna Moe ......................4803 Reis, Gilbert L........................3720 Refych, Edmund A.......................8213 Reynolds, Nancy Jane ..................4531 Riffle, Gerald C.......................4089 Rohde, Helen Morgaret .................4223 Rosch, Carole Jean ....................1736 Ruffing, Virginia Rose ................6807 Russell, Carito Eleanor ...............1800 Rybak, Laverne Evelyn .................6123 Sahley, Elaine Mary ...................4200 Schieve, William Allen ................4856 Schmaltz, Jeanne Elise ................4709 Schroeder. Allen E.....................1925 Schweitzer, Ruth Mary .................4301 Sedlacek, LaVerne Ruth ................4424 Shawver, Dorothy Lee ..................3819 Simpson, Clyde Arlington ..............6614 Slater, Jean Connie ...................4291 Slivka, David E........................4455 Slote, JoAnn ..........................4419 Smith, Ellen ..........................4392 Spyak, John R..........................4240 Stafford, James C......................4409 Stanczyc, Geraldine Jean ..............4206 Stause, Geraldine .....................4119 Sudyk, Robert Louis ...................7007 Thiergartner, Barbara Ruth ............4870 Toepfer, Emma B........................4913 Tomasheski, Michael E..................1816 Dellbank Dr.....................ON. 1-0205 Biddulph Ave....................SH. 1-1771 Natchez Ave.....................SH. 1-6868 Broadale Ave....................ON. 1-2464 West 50th St....................SH. 1-4180 West 61st St....................SH. 1-5137 West 50th Sf....................SH. 1-7044 South Hills Dr..................SH. 1-2925 Delora Ave......................SH. 1-5686 Lanyard Dr., Parma .............SH. 1-1632 Burger Ave......................SH. 1-5685 Hillcrest Ave...................SH. 1-5072 Tampa Ave.......................SH. 1-7582 Portman Ave.....................FL. 1-7795 West 50th St....................ON. 1-2298 Stickney Ave....................FL. 1-9878 Henritze Ave....................ON. 1-1130 Colburn Ave.....................ON. 1-3973 Ardmore Ave.....................SH. 1-9566 Biddulph Ave....................FL. 1-5130 Pelham Dr., Parma ..............TU. 5-1627 South Hills Dr..................FL. 1 -0026 West 57th St....................FL. 1-1038 Clybourne Ave...................FL. 1-3144 Saratoga Ave....................FL. 1-4440 Brookside Dr....................SH. 1-7696 Tarlton Ave.....................FL. 1-7482 Dellbank Dr.....................FL. 1-9133 West 23rd Sf.................SH. 1-3136 West 13th St.................SH. 1-7008 Gifford Ave.....................FL. 1-8553 Cook Ave........................ON. 1-4929 Wichita Ave.....................FL. 1-3806 Fulton Rd.......................SH. 1-3675 West 25th St.................SH. 1-5015 Flowerdale Ave................ON. 1-2253 West 12th St....................FL. 1-5808 Pearl Rd........................SH. 1-2502 Spokane Ave.....................SH. 1-4071 West 66fh St....................FL. 1-5991 Ridgeviow Rd....................FL. 1-6560 West 61st St....................FL. 1-7034 West 24th St....................ON. 1-2743 Buechner Ave....................FL. 1-5568 Brookside Dr....................FL. 1-1208 West 14th St....................ON. 1 -3054 Bader Ave.......................FL. 1-5979 Amberley Ave....................FL. 1-1689 Simtory-----------rotitttusrit Uher, Richard Charles SH 1-7340 VanBuren, Jesse C VanDyke, Arthur Albert 4886 West 13th St FL. 1-3692 SH. 1-2150 ....FL 1-7092 Walsh, Ronald William FL. 1-3955 ....FL 1-7800 4886 West 14th St SH 1-4067 Wein, Sally Jean Werba, Alice Morie 4347 West 56th St 4811 West 19th St SH. 1-8455 FL. 1-6644 FL. 1-6459 Wolff, Mary Frances ON. 1-0743 SUMMER SCHOOL Delmonico, Joseph 2022 Hood Ave FL. 1-0474 FL. 1-5960 Kraynak, Helen 3330 Walbrook Ave FL. 1-3561 Mancini, Emilio Mancini, Emma Michol, June Marie 3713 Dawning Ave 4407 South Hills Dr FL. 1 -9879 FL. 1-9879 FL. 1-0501 Pietros, Kathleen 3209 Hilicrest Ave ON. 1-6797 boys .................69 GIRLS ............... 96 TOTAL 165


Suggestions in the Rhodes High School - Aries Yearbook (Cleveland, OH) collection:

Rhodes High School - Aries Yearbook (Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Rhodes High School - Aries Yearbook (Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Rhodes High School - Aries Yearbook (Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Rhodes High School - Aries Yearbook (Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Rhodes High School - Aries Yearbook (Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Rhodes High School - Aries Yearbook (Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954


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