Ridgewood High School - Arrow Yearbook (Ridgewood, NJ)

 - Class of 1932

Page 1 of 161

 

Ridgewood High School - Arrow Yearbook (Ridgewood, NJ) online collection, 1932 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1932 Edition, Ridgewood High School - Arrow Yearbook (Ridgewood, NJ) online collectionPage 7, 1932 Edition, Ridgewood High School - Arrow Yearbook (Ridgewood, NJ) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 161 of the 1932 volume:

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'Lv 'V 5: if 1 N I M., W ' AQ fiff'5 WW , ' 1 1 ?jf'aW : ' filfiff ii gg v?1g'2aai5 wg?gf 5 1 M Z. .R-7 gfrffx j 5 Q 1-Gi 5 1 i 1 A is if ,O 5 A .4, ,,,., L SEA: V-'i 3 U-nn A ,wr ,W A 'psyd' ?3K'x-'IZ Wil' .4,,..,.5 , Q , faqs-zzQ,:.. .Q ,W QE 1 1. ?i'lF?'j' K l ig M? Ei -E - J.. ,, W... :.. l , , iii fl '1 'fi if. 1 I li X N N 9 S: fi THE ARROW Page Two THE ARROW T H B A 12 Q o w Dedication The fluff of 1932 refperffully dedi- clzies lhis 'Tommenremeni Arrow lo Mr. Ira W. Travell in commemoration of the long, faithful Jeroife he haf rendered io Ridgewood High School. Page Three THE ARROW The Arrow published by The Senior Class of 1932 Of Ridgewood High School Ridgewood New jersey Literary Editor Edith G. Burns, '32 T H E A I2 I2 O W Board of Editors Editor-in-Chief Lucy E. Riddleberger, '32 Managing Editor Edwin Lloyd Rees, '32 Faculty Adoiyer Mr. Darby Book and Stage Exchange Marilynn N. Martin, '32 Veronica Hanlon, '32 james Gidney, '32 Alfred Bedingfield, '32 Ann Denny Easton, '32 Elizabeth Klovekorn, '33 Dora Cook, '32 C olurnnift Walter Wines, '32 Bnrinexx Manager George Murray, '32 Assiitant Literary Editorr Ann Price, '32 M. Loring Bowen, '34 A. Frank Berliner, '34 Marion Brooks, '34 Barbara Burchsted, '32 Ruth Inge, '34 Art Adviser Miss Rowe Art Editor: Marshall Thompson, '32 Beatrice Dohrman, '32 Baisneri Advirer Mr. Camblin Adoertixing Manager William Korn, '32 Aniftant Adoertifin g Managerf Robert Brenner, '32 Ruth Meulendyke, '33 Page Fine THE ARROW Page Six T H I: A I2 I2 o w Senior Class Officers ALFRED BEDINGFIELD, President EDITH STEVES, Vire-Preyident ARTHUR HALSTED, Treafurer VIRGINIA RICH, Serremry LUCY RIDDLEBERGER, Editor-irr-Chief, Arrow Page Seven Page Eight T HE A12 I2 ow Alma Mater To you-who were our world for four paxt yearJ,' To you-who have ahforhed our every day,' To you-who took into experieneed handy The molding of an almoft formlen rlay And willed that through yon it .rhonld learn To you-who ojered all, and ax the cost Took more of us than we can ever knowg To yon we owe an answer-won or lost. AJ Jome laxt aid yon give 145, even then, Already others come within your nope to think -More mind: that you are eager to aman- And we, fogotten, Jtand alone with hope. AJ finixhed prodnrts of your work we pax! From thildhood to the world of wiyer men. Lnfy E. Riddleherger THE Anmow Vale B UT doctor, you must admit that no one has lived a completely happy and successful life. Perhaps no one has, yet .... Do you remember Young, james A. Young, the banker ? Why yes. It was shocking his death. In his prime. Young came to me the day he died, deeply disturbed. It seems his son is an amateur chemist, especially interested in poisons. Young humored his son in his hobby and indeed was rather proud of the boy's work. The morning of his visit to me Young was feeling ill, one of his chronic headaches. It was his custom to take a powder I had given him for his trouble. This morning he took some from his table only to discover afterwards that it was a new poison his son wished to have him study up and discuss. When Young told me the poison's name I knew he couldn't live more than twelve hours. However, it was a property of the poison not to take effect until the very end of that time. I told him the news expecting a servere nervous reaction. For a few minutes Young was disturbed but soon regained his habitual poise. Instead of going home Young went to his ollice, I presumed to wind up his affairs. In that respect I was mistaken. Instead of a day spent in gathering of loose ends it was one of great activity in the usual line. After business was concluded Young played a fine round of golf. It was a custom of his to play a round with Joe Scott, the professional. He ate dinner as usual with his family. James, a younger son, was away. You see, he hadn't told his family of his great mistake. During the nap which it was customary for him to take, Young died. I believe, I'm almost certain, he lived a happy and successful life. Alfred Bedingfield Page Nina Page Ten THE A1212 ow Class Song When the clanroomy echo the last goodhye, Anal the rash in the hallf fadef of to a sigh, With headc erect, heartx .ftaunch and true, We choofe our road, for we'11e work to do. Oh, thirty-two, it'.f great to he young, With zeft and purpose and elreamr unmng, With achievements time cannot ejace We'll mahe the world a better place. Walter Wine: THE A1212 ow Class Poem S N 7 E are thc fo-wnspeople of lomorrow, The taxpayers, lhe fommonxenxe Responxihle men. But we have had laughter, Glad gold laughter. We have heen fooliyh And very young. We have worked And known earh other- Ha5n't it heen fun? A Let'.f Jing of the times we laughed zogether Of the timer we'1ze danred And the timef we'11e Jung When we were very :lightly wieleed And madly, gloriouxly young! We are the lownfpeople of tomorrow --------lhe taxpayers, the rommonxense Rerponfihle men. Ann Denny Eaytolz Page Eleven Page Twelve THE ARROW HENRY ACKERMAN Van Passaic High School, 1, Ticket Collector. Football, 5g Usher, '51 Graduation, 3, Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Dramatic Club Plays, 3, 4, The Father in The Obstinate Family, 3, Mr. Barlow in So's Your Old Antique, 4, Key Club, 4g Debating Club, 4, Ticket Committee, Senior Prom, 4, Financial Com- mittee, 4, Chairman, Some of Us Seniors Com- mittee, 4. You have a nimble wit,' I think it was made 1 IJ of Atalarztar heels. DOROTHY ACKERSON Dot Paterson Normal School Physical Training Exhibition, 2. Not .ftepping o'er the bound! of modeftyf' MAUDE I. ALBERTIS Billie Undecided Girl Reserves, 1, Chorus, Arms and the Man, 4, Spring Song Festival, 4, Chapel Choir, 4, Art Exhibition, 4, Special Chorus, 4. 'Iingeringly I turn away lbif late hour. HELEN M. ALCOCK Hirky Paterson Normal School St, Dominico Academy, 1, St. Luke's High, 2, 39 Girls Club, 4. Murb may be Jaid on both .ride.r. BELLE ALEXANDER College Shenendoah High School, Miami, Florida, 1, Dra- matic Club, 1, staff Telum Latinum, 2, Art Ex- hibit, 2g German Club, 2. I would Jtudy, I would know, I would admire forever. ELIZABETH ALLAN Bettie Art School Glee Club, 1, 2, 5, 4, Archery, 2, Girls Club, 2, 3, 4, Scenery, Captain Crossbonesf' SQ Physical Train- ing Exhibition, 2 Track, 13 Hockey Team, 2, Room Captain A. A. Drive, 2, 3, Room Captain, Curtis Drive, 2, Town Council,3, Chorus, Captain Cross- bones, 3, Program Committee, Senior Prom, 4. I like Men. THE ARROW EVERETT ALTHER Business Orchestra, 2, 3, 4, Band, 1, 2, 3, 4, Freshman Base- ball, Track Squad, 1, Varsity Track, 2, 3, 4, Basker- ball Squad, 2, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 2, Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Intramural Basket- ball, 4, State Band Contest, 2, 3, Band and Orchestra Concert, 4. Hear Old Triton hlow hir wrealhed horn. JAMES T. ANDERSON, Jr. jim Business La Grange, Illinois, High School, 1, Bound Brook, New jersey High School, 2, 3, Varsity Football, 4, Varsity Track, 4, Penn Relay Team, 4. He'd spanked it with full twenty galrf' RAYMOND F. H. ANTIGNAT Ray George Washington U. Varsity Tennis, 2, Captain, 3, 4, Interclass Track, 1, Varsity, 2, 3, Soccer Squad, 3, Varsity, 4, Freshman Basketball, 1, Squad, 2, Varsity, 3, Chess Club, 2, Hi-Y, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Chorus, Captain Crossbones, 3, Assistant Editor, Telum Latinum, 3, Captain A. A. Drive, 4, Athletic Advisory Board, 4. l'Higher .rtill and higher. From the earth thou .rpringertf JOHN H. ARNOLD Dutch College Field Day, 2, Pyramid Team, 2, Interclass Baseball, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Basketball, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Track, 2, 3, 4, Game Day, 4, Interclass Volleyball, 4. A little nomenre now and then if pleasant, LUE EMMA BALL Emmy ' Paterson Normal School Vergennes High School, Vt., 1, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Interclass Basketball, 2. Never love unlefr you mn, Bear with all the faultr of man. CAROLYN BARBER Callie New York Art Students' League Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Riding Club, 1, 2, 33 Dramatic Club, 4, Dancing, Red Mill, 1, Captain Crossbones, 3, Intramural Basketball, 4. Her footlr in the .rtirrup-her hand on the rein. Page Thirteen Page Fourteen THE ARROW MILTON BANTA Hooh.r Business Freshman Football, 13 Second Team Football, 53 Var- sity Football, 4, 53 Second Team Baseball, 13 Var- sity Baseball, 2, 5, 43 Intramural Baseball, 53 Inter- class Soccer, 1, 2, 53 lnterclass Basketball, 1, 2, 5, 4, 53 lnterclass Track, 1, 2, 5, 4, SQ High School Basketball League, 1, 2, 5, 4. Your lordrhip ir right welcome hath to Kenil- worth. BEATRICE G. BARUDEN Bea Montclair College lnterclass Basketball, 2, 53 Interclass Soccer, 2, 3, lnterclass Tennis Tournament, 43 lnterclass Game Contest, 43 Christmas Program, 23 Cashier, School Savings, 2, 43 lnterclass Baseball, 2, Ticket Com- mittee, Arms and the Man, 43 Tennis Team, 4. And :till I would argue. ALFRED W. BEDINGFIELD Al Dartmouth Oak Park High School, Ill., 1, 23 N. Y. Times Oratorical Contest, First Place, Ridgewood, 3, 43 American Chemical Society, Essay Contest, First Place, New jersey, 53 N. J. Pharmaceutical Asso- ciation, Essay Contest, First Place, 53 Hi-Y Club, 43 Dramatic Club, 43 Arrow Staff, 43 Van Neste Rhe- toricals, 4g Student Council, 43 President of Class, 4. I am the captain of my foul. LOUIS BEIJEN Bo0Zer Business Physical Training Exhibit, 1. 0h! give me the flarhing brine, The Spray and the tempe.rt'.r roar. HENRIETTA BENDER Business School Room Chairman, lg Girls Club, 2, 5, 43 Room Chair- man, A. A. Drive, 23 Modern Language Night, Properties, 53 Glee Club, 43 Christmas Program, 4. But how can I give Jilence My whole life long? GERALDINE D. BENNETT Gerry Secretarial School Girl Reserves, 13 Freshman Chorus3 Archery Club, 1, 43 Girls' Rifle Team, 53 Girls' Glee Club, 4g Glee Club Concert, 4. Let me glide noirelerxly forth. THE A1212 O'W DORIS BERRY Dory Connecticut College for Women Assistant Captain, Publications, Drive, 1, Girl Re- serves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 35 President, 4, Riding Club, 1, 2, 3, Chairman, Refreshment Committee Junior Prom, Town Council, 4, Tennis Team, 4, Quotations Committee, 4. I awoke one morning and found myrelf famou.r. JOHN B. BETTS fobnnie Princeton Freshman Baseball, Varsity, 3, 4, Soccer Squad, 2, Varsity, 49 Intramural Basketball, 4, Intramural Football, 2, 3, Chairman, Publications Drive, 1, 25 Room Chairman, lg Chess Club. 2, 3, High School League, West Side, 3, 4. Believe me if all lbare endearing young V rlmrmrf' KATHLEEN BIRTWELL Kay Simmons Needham, Massachusetts, High School, 1, 2, Hockey, Home Room Basketball, French Club, Girls' Club, Dramatic Club, Chapel Choir, Library Club, Com- mencement Announcement Committee. Order if a lovely thing. GEORGE H. BLACK George Undecided Freshmen Basketball, Pyramid Team,2g Band, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 45 Interclass Track, 2, 3, 4g Game Contest, 4g Track Squad, 4g Home Eoom Manager, Crowell Drive, 43 Interclass Volley- all, 4. lVe'll make him ring. ARTHUR BLANFORD Art Undecided Freshman Football, 15 Glee Club, 33 Pyramid Team, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Soccer, 3, 4. Common .renre ix an uncommon degree. CORNELIA BOERSEMA Nele Business Paterson School, 13 Track, 2, 3, 4, Broad jump Prize 33 Special Chonis, 2, Soccer Team, 2, 3, 43 Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Chorus, 2, Fashion Show, 3, School prize, 3, Times Research Contest, 4. A .rmile for all, a welcome glad, A jovial waxing way :be had. Page Fifteen THE Page Sixteen 'ell' ARROW WALLACE BOLLAND Wally College Rifle Club, 3, Chapel Play, A night in an Inn, 4, A. A. Association, Ticket Commttee, 4. Where more ir meant than meetr the ear. OLGA B, BONDY Smith Girls' Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 1, German Club- 1, 2, Interclass Basketball, 2, Hannchen, Der Spate Gast, 3, Invitation Com- mittee, Senior Prom, 4, Activities Committee, 4. With gentle and prevailing forre, Intent upon her dertined eourref' OLGA BOZZO 0l' School E Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Soccer, 1, 2, 3, 4, Field Day, 2, Game Contest, 4, Glee Club, 2, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 2, Girls Club, 2, 3, Rifle Club, 3, Girls' Chorus, 33 Chair- man, Christmas Card Drive, 4. Her friendrhip ir 4 luring and eherirhed thing. ROBERT H. BRENNER Beagle Dartmouth Freshman Football, 1, Football Squad, 2, 3, Inter- class Baseball, 2, Pyramid Team, 2, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 1, Z, Track Squad, 2, Assistant Business Manager, Arrow, 4, Boys Costumes and Stage Scenery, Captain Crossbones, 3, Railroad Club, 3, Dramatic Club, 4, Photographer for Cam- pus Cut, 3, For Tipster, 3, Hobby Program, 4. I am the very pink of eourte.ry. FRANK W. BROWER Frank Cornell Track, 2, 3, Soccer, 3, 4, Priest, A Night in an Inn, 4, Radio Club, 3, 43 Treasurer, 4. Work ir the .ferret of .furrer.r. LAURA T. BUCKLEY Russell Sage Girl Reserves, 1, Freshman Choir, 1, Girl's Club, 2, 3, 4, Chorus, Modern Language Night, 3, Glee Club 3, Concert, 3, Dramatic Club, 3, Christmas Choir, 3, Relative, Captain Crossbones, 3, Chairman Christmas Card Drive, 4, Properties Assistant, Arms and the Man, 4. But there ir wirdom in women. THE ARROW BARBARA S. BURCHSTED Swarthmore Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Glee Club- 3, 4, French Chorus, Foreign Lang- uage Night, 5, Glee Club Festival, 5, 4, Special Chorus, 4, Christmas Choir, 4, Literary Staff, Ar- row, 4, Activities Committee, 4. With iz smiling mouth and twinkling eye. EDITH G. BURNS St. Lawrence University Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 5, 4, Dart Staff, 2, Riding Club, 2, 3, RiHe Club, 5, Tipster Staff, 5, Room Captain, Publications Driver 3, Glee Club, 3, 4, Arrow Staff, 2, 3, Literary Editor, 4. I never thought to axle, I never knew. HERBERT S. BUZZARD Herb College Interclass Basketball, 2, 4, Basketball Squad, 53 Second Team Football, 2, 3, 4, Varsity, 5, Usher, The Merchant of Venice, 2, Stage Manager, Cap- tain Crossbones, 4, Modern Language Night, 4, Arms and the Man- 5, Room Chairman, Publi- cations Drive, 2, Interclass Track, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Baseball, 3, Hi-Y Club, 2, 3, 4. Hail to you, women fair. KENNETH CALKOEN Carey College Freshmen Football, 1, Freshmen Baseball, 1, Fresh- men Soccer, 1, Varsity Baseball, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Soc- cer, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Track Meet, 2, 5, 4, Field Day, 2, Intramural Basketball, 5, 4, Operetta, 5. Goodl He'.f got lo be good. NORMAN M. CALLAGHAN Cal Business Band, 1, 2, 3, 4, Junior Orchsetra, 1, 2, Glee Club, 4, Chapel Choir, 4, Mixed Chorus, 4, Band Concert, 5, 4, Varsity Soccer, 4, Interclass Track- 1, 2, 3, In- terclass Baseball, 1, 2, 5, Interclass Football, 1, 2, 5, 4, lnterclass Basketball, 1, 2, 5, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 5, Boys' Fashion Show, 3, 4, Van Neste Rhetor- icals, 1, 2, 5, Chairman, 4, Room Chairman, A. A., Dart Arrow Drive, 1, 2. And 4 ledy'J in the rare, You know all ollner thing: give place. PAUL E. CALVET Cal Columbia Rifle Club, 2, Chess Club, 2, 3, Hi-Y Club. 5, Intramural Baseball, 5, 4, 5, Interclass Track Meet, 3, 4, Interclass Football, 4, Usher, The Nut Farm, 5, Varsity Soccer, 5. A mighty man war he. Page Seventeen THE . L Page Eighteen ARROW ROBERT KING CARSON Cougar College Freshman Choir, 1, Room Captain, A. A. Drive, 1, Drive, 1, 2, Captain, 4, Aero Club, 2, 4, Lighting, Captain Crossbonesf' 35 3, Boy's Fashion Show, 3, Christmas Publications Band, 2, 3, Rifle Club, Program, 4, Usher, The Nut Farm, 4, Glee Club, 4, Lighting Rhetoricals, Committee, Senior Prom, 4, Van Neste Second Place, 4, Aviation Program, 4. With shrieking and fqueahing In fifty different .rharpf and flair. CHARLES FRANK CARTER, JR. Charlie Business Freshman Football Team, Van Neste Rhetoricals, 1, Freshman Basketball Team, Room Chairman, 1, Captain A. A. Drive, 1, 2, Interclass Basketball' 3, Football Squad, 2, 3, Varsity, 4, Track Squad, 3, 4, French Play, 3, Soldier, Arms and the Man, 4, Glee Club, 4, Floor Chairman, Junior Prom, Pro- phecy Committee, 4. I round my barbaric jaw Over the roofr of h0i4Je.r. H. WELFORD CASLER Welf St. john's Dramatic Club, 2, 3, 4, Room Captain, A. A. Drive, 1, 4, Scenery Assistant, Captain Crossbonesf' 3, Radio Club, 3, Scenery Assistant, Arms and the Man, 4, Quotations Committee, 4. The right hand of fellowrhipf' HERBERT ZABRISKIE CLARKE Herb Undecided Rifle Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Soccer Squad, 1, 2, 3, Inter- class Soccer, 1, 2, 3, Orchestra, 1, 2, Hi-Y, 1, 2, 3. 1 approached that awful incahuf With an ahfemf minded air. CURTIS C. COMSTOCK Curt Dartmouth Room Captain, Publications Drive, 1, Intra-Mural Basketball, 1, Dramatic Club, 2, Scenery, History Play, 2, Hi-Y 3, Intramural Baseball, 3, 4, 5, Setting French Play, 4, Properties, 5, Class Basket- ball Team, 5, Quotations Committee, 5, Goth, what homework! DORA G. COOK New jersey State College Track Meet, 1, 3, 4, Gym Exhibition, 2, 4, Inter- class Soccer, 3, 4, Girls' Rifle Team, 3, Arrow StaE. 4, Memorial Committee, 4, Activity Committee, 4. I ain't afraid iw Jnahef or toadr Or hug: or worm: or mice. THE ARROW WILLIAM I.. CROKER, JR. Crirker Cracker Crokeru Business Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, 4, Band, 1, 2, 3, 4, Football, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Boys' Fashion Show, 4. Ola, to be iz Jmootlsiyf' ADELAIDE CRONK Newark Normal School junior Orchestra, 1, Freshman Choir, 1, Interclass Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Contests, 2, 3, Interclass Track Meet, 2, 3, 4, Theresa, Captain Crossbonesf' 3, Dramatic Club, 4, Chapel Choir, 4, Special Chorus, 4, Spring Song Festival, 4, Game Contest, 4, Rifle Team, 3, Soloist, Arms and the Man, 4. She is the Jweelert of all Jiizgerrf' GERTRUDE N. CUMMINGS Trudy N. Y. School of Applied Design for Women Girl Reserves, 1, Archery Club, 1, 4, Physical Train- ing Exhibition, 2, Cheerleaders, 2, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Contest, 3, Chorus- Captain Crossbon-es, 3, Room Chairman, junior Prom, 3, Chapel Choir, 4, Usher, Band Concert, 4, Spring Song Festival, 4, The ferret of life if in art. THOMAS H. CUNNINGHAM Timmy College Track, 1, Interclass Baseball, 3, 4, Baseball Squad, 5, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 3. U'f'lr0m every .rporlr mirld pleafef' EVALENA PAGE CURTISS Ev Middlesex Training School College Girls' Track Meet, 2, Girls' Club, 3, Tipster Staff, 3. To make the world 4 friendly place. JULIUS CZECHAROWSKY Czech College Football Squad, 1, 2, 3, 4, Freshman Baseball, In- terclass Baseball, 3, Orchestra, 1, 2, Hi-Y, 2, 3, 4. This bury world and I .flaall ne'er agree. Page Nineteen Page Twenty THE ARROW MABEL DANIEL Mae Business Montclair High School, 1. A Jmile for you, and dimples too. MARJORIE DARKEN lVIargie St. Lawrence University Girl Reserves, 1, Lincoln-Douglas Debating Club, 1, Art Exhibit, 1, Scholarship Committee, 1, 2, Physical Training Exhibition, 1, 2, Archery Club, 1, 2, Interclass Baseball, 1, 2, 3, Interclass Basket- ball, 1, 2, 3, Interclass Hockey, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Dart Staff, 2, Tipster Staff, 3, Track Exhibition, 3, History Play, 3, Girls' Rifle Team, 3, 4. Unrpoiled by praire or blame. HARRIET DAVISON Hal College Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, Cabinet, 3, 4, Glee Club, 1, 2, Dancer, Captain Crossbonesn, Dec- orative Committee, junior Prom, 5, Senior Prom, 4, Art Exhibition, 4, Dramatic Club, 3, 4. Remember yozfre a Daoifonf' EVELYN R. DAYBILL E,!7pie School Girl Reserves, 1, Archery Club, 1, Publications Drive, 1, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Fashion Show, 1, D. A. A. Drive, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Decora- tion Committee, junior Conference- 3, 4, Decora- tion Committee, Senior Prom, 4, Chairman Statis- tics Committee, 4. And many a hit of fun around Jhe rtrewrf' CHESTER JOSEPH DECKER Chet Business Track Squad, 1, 2, Airplane Club, 1, 2, Freshman Football, 1, Pyramid Team, 2, Glider Club, 33 Scenery, Arms and the Man, 4. Life if jurt a howl of rherrierf' JOHN DE LEON Ponce Rensselaer Polytech Basketball, 1, Track, 1, Radio Club, 2, 3, 4, Rifle Club, 3, 4. Why worry about homework, when one har a radio. THE ARROW LAVINA DE VORE Babe School Interclass Baseball, 1, 2, 3, Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Home Chairman, 1, Interclass Game Con- test, 2, Interclass Track Meet, 2, Glee Club, 3, 4, Relative, Captain Crossbones, 3, D. A. A. Drive, 3, Publications Drive, 4, Art Exhibition, 4. There mort hrixh and giddy paced timer. BEATRICE DOHRMANN Bea Music Study Freshman Choir, 1, Riding Club, 1, Dramatic Club, 1, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 2, A. A. Drive, 3, Glee Club, 3, 4, Scenery, Captain Cross- bones, 3, Christmas Choir, 4, Chairman, Program Committee, Senior Prom, 4, Arrow Staff, 4. Fine art if that in which the hand, the head and heart go together. RUTH DOUGLASS Scudder Girls' Club, 1, 2, 3, Cabinet, 4, Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Glee Club, 3, 4, Chairman, Decoration Commit- tee, Junior Prom, Nomination Committee, 4, Library Club, 3, 4, Chairman, Decoration Committee, Senior Prom, Finance Committee, 4, Property Committee, ','Arms and the Man, 4. Merrily, merrily, .rhall I live now, Under the hlofiom that hangf on the honghf' CLAIRE E. DOW 5 Glassboro Normal School Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 4, Girls' Rifle Club, 4, Dramatic Club, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2. Among the flowerr and gran which Screen her from view. HILDA DORIS DOWNS Maryland Hockey, 1, Glee Club, 1, 2, Interclass Basketball, Class Treasurer, Haddon Field N. J., Basketball, 3, 4, Glee Club, 3, 4, French Circle, 3, 3, Press Club, 5, 4, Point Pleasant Beach Ridgewood High Schol. Who knowr her Jmile ha: known a perfect thing. MARGARET DRENTH Margie Paterson General Hospital School of Nursing Art Exhibit, 1, 2, Basketry Exhibit, 2, 3, 4, Gym Carnival, 2, jewelry Exhibit, 3, 4, Home Room Chairman, Christmas Card Drive, 4. A cheerful temper joined with innocence. 'I Page Twenty-one Page Twenty-two THE ARROW NELLIE DRENTH Nellie Paterson General Hospital School of Nursing Art Exhibit, 1, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, jewelry Exhibit, 3, 4, Basketry Exhibit, 2, 3, 4, In- terclass Soccer, 2, 3, Interclass Baseball, 3. Lon of Jincerity, if lor: of vital power, ELIZABETH DUNHAM Betty Swarthmore Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, Interclass Baseball, 1, 2, Girl Reserves Officer, 1, Freshman Program, Track Meet, 1, 2, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 2, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer, 3, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Debating, 1, 2, Business Manager, Maga- zine Drive, 2, Madden Story Telling Contest, 1, 2, 4, Glee Club, 3: Rilie Club, 3, Dancer, Captain Crossbones, 3, History Program, 3, Tennis Squad, 3, Radio Stars Program, 4, Chairman, Quotations Committee, 4. Wit if an unexpected explorion of thought. ANN DENISON EASTON Ann Denny Boarding School Girls' Club, 4, Chorus, Robin Hood's Barn, 4, Riding Club, 2, 3, 4, Arrow, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 2, Senior Track Team, 4. Angel: are perfect, I nm hut 4 woman. KATHRYN M. EDWARDS Kay' Montclair Teacher's College Basketball Team. 1, 2, 4, Baseball Team, 1, Physi- cal Training Exhibition, 2, Room Captain, Maga- zine Drive, 3, Interclass Game Team, 4. A texte for hookr which if Jtill the pleature and glory of my life. JAMES R. ELLIOTT jim College St. Albans School, Washington, D. C., 1, 2, 3, Ten- nis Squad, 1, Tennis Team, 2, Captain, 3, Track Squad, 4. No wonder then that kingr Arjzire to wear hir frown. GILBERT A. FABRE Gil College Pyramid Team, 2, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Room Captain, A. A. Drive, 2, French Play, 4, Fen- cing Club, 4, Commencement Announcement Com- mittee, 4. Awake, my mul, and with the run Thy daily rourte of duty run. I P P i THB ARROW l GLADYS MARY FIELD , Fisk University Basketball, 1, 2, 5, Art Exhibit, 1, 2, Baseball, 1, 2, 53 Girls' Track Meet, 1, 3. A plearing countenance is no .flight advan- tagef' CHARLES FINDLAY, JR. Undecided Freshman Football, 1, Football Squad, 2, 3, Track Squad, 1, 2, 4, Radio Club, 5, Radio Program Com- mittee, 43 Interclass Track Meet, 1, 2, 5, 4. He taker moyt delight in thin gr athletic. LAMBERT FLEER Fleez Business Freshman Football, 1, Interclass Baseball, 3, ln- terclass Basketball, 4. I rarzrzot tell you what the dirkeru hir name ix. MARY E. FLIORCROFT Business AJ merry ar the day if long. HENRY W. FORBES Hen St. Lawrence Ring and Pin Committee, 3, Room Chairman, Pub- lications Drive, 3, 4, Assembly Room Chairman, 4. Comb down hir hairy look! look! it .rtandx upright. VIOLET SHAW FORD Took Bedford College Girl Reserves, 1, Track Meet, 1, 2, Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, Art Exhibition, 3, jewelry Exhibi- tion, 3, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4. From her own graciour nature the hextowf, Nor .rtopr to ark reward. Page Twenty-three i THE Page Twenty- four' v w 1 ARROW SYDNEY FOSTER Sid Architectural School Hit voice rallr on dr rwift ar a river. WALTHER A. FRIEDLAENDER Wally University of Virginia Orchestra, 1, Freshman Choir, 1, Glee Club, 2, 33 Stage Manager, Foreign Language Plays, 3, Decora- tion Committee, junior Prom, 3, Football Squad, 3, 4, Track, 3, 4, Mr. Stanley, Confessional, 4, Snig- gers, A Night in an Inn, 4. Style if the drerr of thought. ELIZABETH FRIEMEL Betty Duke University Freshman Choir, 1, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Mad- den Story Telling Contest, 2, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Music Program, 3, Thanksgiving Program, 3, Chorus, Modern Language Night, 3, Chorus, Captain Cross- bones, 3, Girls' Club, 3, 4, Red Cross Program, 4, Usher, Arms and the Man, 4, Special Mixed Chorus, 4, L'Homme Qui Epousa une Femme Muette, 4. She har the courage of her comfietianrf' JOHN GANZA Undecided Freshman Baseball, 1, A. A. Drive, 1, Public Speak- ing, 1, Crowell Drive, 3. G'irlr are not hir aim. STANFORD G. GESNER Dun College Assistant Baseball Manager, 1, Second Team Man- ager, 2, Chess Club, 2, Physical Training Exhibi- tion, 2, Interclass Track, 2, Interclass Football, 3, Interclass Basketball, 3, 4, Varsity Track, 3, 4. Hit only labor war to kill time. DEAN ROBERT GIDNEY Dine Dartmouth Room Chairman, A. A. Drive, 1, 2, 3, Room Chair- man, Crowell Drive, 2, Assistant Advertising Mana- ger, Dart, 2, Student Council, 2, 3, 4, Freshman Football, 13 Interclass Football, 3, Freshman Base- ball Squad, 1, Interclass, 2, Baseball Squad, 3, In- terclass Soccer, 1, 2, Varsity, 3, Captain, 4, Inter- class Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Varsity, 3, 4, Usher Gradua- tion, 3, French Play, 3, 4, Usher, Nut Farm, 3, Arms and the Man, 4, Physicists Accuracy Club, 3, Hi-Y Club, 3, Secretary-Treasurer, 4, Quotation Committee, 4. I fear thy einer, gentle maiden. THE ARROW JAMES BROCK GIDNEY MaeJlr'0 Dartmouth Home Room Chairman, 1, Freshman Baseball Squad, 1, Varsity Soccer, 3, 4, Baseball Squad, 5, 4, Presi- dent junior Class, 3, Student Council, 3, President, 4, Hi-Y, 3, 4, Assistant Business Manager, Arrow, 2, Literary Staff, 3, 4, Eugene, L'Anglais Tel qu'on Par1e, 3, Maitre Simon, L'I-Iomme Qui Epousa une Femme Muette, 4, john, Confessional, 4, Nic- ola, Arms and the Man, 4, Executive Committee, Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Debating Club, 2, Van Neste Rhetoricals, 2, 3. That if ar well raid ar if I had mid it' my- .relf. J. ELIZABETH GODSELL Betty Hood Girl Reserves, 1, A. A. Drive, 1, Fashion,Show, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Publications Drive, 2, 3, Dra- matic Club, 2, 3, 4, Girls' Chorus, 2, Lincoln's Birthday Program, 3, Invitation Committee, Senior Prom, 4. Sober will: work and .rilent with care. WILLIAM C. GREENDYKE Bill Business Room Captain, A. A. Drive, 1, 3, Room Captain, Christmas Card Drive, 4, Pyramid Team, 2, Inter- class Track, 3, 4, Varsity Track, 4, Albert, A Night in an Inn, 4. Eat, drink and Jleep, But labor, rzix. RUTH C. GREENE Homer Katherine Gibbs School Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Glee Club, 4, Hetty, Good Medicine, 3, Program Committee Junior Prom, Some of Us Seniors Committee. What wondrom life if tlsir I lead, ELMER GREENLAW, JR. Emmy Undecided Football, 1, 3, Varsity, 4, Basketball, 1, 2, Vice President, Triangle Club, 1, Hi-Y, 2, Vice Presi- dent, 3, President, 4, Glee Club, 4. It irrft that I don't like llae girlr, I'm juft 4 lillle afraid of them. FRANK H. GREY, JR. Undecided Band, 1, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra, 3, 4, Freshman Choir, 1, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 1, 4, Inter- class Baseball, 1, Interclass Basketball, 2. 'Mid the clfzng of trumpet: and the march. Page Twenty-five Page Twenty-six THE ARROW JANET C. GREY fan Briarcliff Freshman Choir, 1, Girls' Club, 1, 2, 53 Track Meet, 1. A hreeze of a girl, rornetirner a whirlwind. But a very plearant one withal. AUDREY G. GRIFFITHS Littie College By thunder! of white rilenref' CONRAD GRUNFELDER Grundy Business Track Squad, 3, 4, Interclass Track, 2, 5, 4, Room Committee, 1. Life! I know not what thou art. ELIZABETH GRUNFELDER Lee Secretarial School Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Art Exhibition, 1, Basketry Exhi- bition, 1, 2, 3, Interclass Baseball, 2, 3, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Interclass Soccer, 3, 4, Hock- ey Exhibition, 5, 4, jewelry Exhibition, 4, Picture Committee, 45 Fashion Show, 4. I haften to laugh at everything, For fear of heing ohliged to weep. WILLIAM H. HALDANE W0r1nJ Business Football, 13 Squad, 2, 33 Interclass, 1, 2, 3, Athletic Association Drive, Captain, 1, 2, Room Chairman, 1, 2, Arrow Drive, 1, 2, 3, Publications Drive, 1, 2, 3, 4, Rifle Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary, Bishops Candlesticks, 5, Pyramid Team, 2, 5, Annual Gym Exhibit, 2, 3, Interclass Basketball, 2, Baseball, 2, 3, Scenery, Arms and the Man. Let my deep .rilence rpeah for me. MARGARET HALL American University Western H, S., Washington, D. C., 1, 2, 3. And thir maiden lived with no other thought hut rtudyf' T H E A R s. ARTHUR HALSTED An Hamilton Band, 1, 2, 5, 4, Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, Intra-Mural Baseball, 2, Glee Club, 5, 4, Dramatic Club, 3, fl: Class Treasurer, 4, Arms and the Man, L'Angla1s Tel Qu'on Parle, 5, Dr. Pollidore, L'I-Iomme Qui Epousa une Femme Muette, 4, Soccer Squad, 4, Prophecy Committee, Class Day, 4. Good phrarer are rarely, and ever were, very Commendahlef' ERIC C. HAMMARSTROM Ric Wesleyan University Freshman Baseball, Interclass Baseball and Track, 2, Chess Club, 2, Band, 3, 4, Usher, Class Day, 52 Commencement, 3, Nut Farm, Arms and the Man , Senior Rhetoricals, Soccer, 4. For men may rome and men may go But I go on forever. VERONICA HANLON R0m1i6 Syracuse Freshman Choir, 1, Girl Reserves, 1, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Program, 2, 3, 4, Easter Program, 2, 5, 4, Dramatic Club, 2, 5, 4, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Chair- man, Invitation Committee, junior Prom, 3, Foreign Language Program, 3, Chorus, Captain Crossbones, Hostess, Chairman Music Committee, Robin Hood's Barn, 4: Arrow, 3, Exchange Editor, 4, Usher, Arms and the Man, 4, Mixed Choir, 4, Memorial Committee, 4. Thine eyer are rpringr in whore rerene And Jilent waterf, heaven if reenf' AURETTA HANSON Middlebury Freshman Choir, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Chorus, Captain Crossbonesj' 3, Mixed Chorus, 4, Riding Club, 1, 2, Glee Club, 3, 4, Tennis Team, 4. Angel,r alone, that roar ahozle, Enjoy ,ruth liberty. WELCOME HARTLEY Secretarial School Girls' Club, 2, 3, Sewing Exhibit, 2, 3, Fashion Show, 3. A Jmile that glanred like the golden glinlr on her hair. LESTER M. HARVEY, JR. Lex College Student Council, 1, Dart Staff, 2, Room Captain, Publications Drive, 3, Band, 2, 5, 4, Hi-Y, 2, 3, 4, Program Chairman, junior Prom, 3, Soccer, 4. Fd rather be diferent than right. 1 I ROW Page Twenty-seven Page Twenty-eight THE ARROW RUTH F. HAYES Centenary Collegiate Institute Archery Club, 1, Sewing Exhibit, 2, Interclass Girls' Track Meet, 2, Physical Training Exhibit, 2, Girls' Rifle Club, 32 Girls' Club, 3, 4, Glee Club, 3, 4, Glee Club Concert, 3, 4, Orchestra, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra Concert, 4, Interclass Games Contest, 4. She looked a lillle wirtfrrlly Tlaen went ber .fnnrhine way. VICTORIA C. HAZEL Vick College Interclass Basketball, 1, Captain, 2, 3, 4, Field Meet, 1, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Art Exhibition, 1, 4, Class Statistics Committee, 4, Interclass Base- ball, 1, 2, 3, 4. A .rmile for all, a welcome glad, A genial waxing way .the had. GERTRUDE W. HENDRICKSON Trudie New jersey College for Women Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, junior Orchest- ra, 1, Orchestra, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 3, 4, Physical Training Carnival, 2, Art Exhibit, 2, Freshman Christmas Choir, 1, Orchestra Concert, 4, Rifle Club, 3, Christmas Card Room Chairman, 4, Glee Concert. 3, 4. And moving with dernurert air. FRANK HESSE Smiling Dulcl1rnar1 University of Tulane Football, 3, 4, Band, 3, 4, Room Captain, Arrow Drive, 1, Interclass Baseball, 1, 2, 3, Interclass Basketball, 2, 3, English Play, 2, Interclass Track, 2, 3, Musical Concert, 4, Interclass Athletic Day, 4. They win that nnilef' EDWARD HIGBEE Hig Dartmouth Hasbrouck Heights High School, 1, Track Squad, 2, Training Exhibition, 2, Interclass Basketball, 2, 3, Interclass Baseball, 3, Gym Team, 4, Football Squad, 4, Finance Committee, 4. One mmf rbow a friendly face. LYMAN P. HILL Lenz Massachusetts Institute of Technology Football, 1, 2, Tennis, 3, 4, French Play, 4, Glee Club, 4, Announcement Committee, 4, I-Ii-Y Club. 2, 3, 4, Chapel Program Committee, 4, Dick Barlow. So's Your Old Antique, 4, Christmas Program, 4, Dramatic Club, 4, Choral Concert, 4. There ir work to do but the work can wait. - THE ARROW' JANET V. HILT fan Secretarial School junior Orchestra, 13 Fashion Show, 13 Chorus, 1, 3, 4g Girls' Club, 2, 3, 43 Flower Committee, 4. There war a quiet charm ahout her. CRETE HOLLISTER Holly Business All love, all liking, all delight, W. DAYTON HOPE Dale Business Intra-Mural Football, 1, 2, 53 Chapel Play Given By English Class, Huckelberry Finn , 23 Intra- Mural Gym Team in Special Exercises, 23 Track, 3, 43 Soccer Squad, 4. I have labored .rorrzewhat in my time. SHIRLEY C. HORTON Wuz Secretarial School Freshman Choir, 13 Christmas Chapel Programs, 1, 2, 3, 4g Girl Reserves, 13 Girls' Club, 2, 3, 43 Inter- class Game Contest, 23 Glee Club, 2, 33 Easter Chapel Program, 2, 33 Glee Club Concert, 2, 52 Foreign Language Program, 33 Chorus, Captain Crossbones, 53 Ring Committee, 33 Dramatic Club, 3, 43 Room Chairman Magazine Drive, 43 Com- mittee, Some of us Seniors, 4. O waly waly up the bank Arid waly waly down the hraef' JANET L. HOWE farm Middlebury Freshhman Choir, 13 Girl Reserves, 13 Girls' Club, 2, 5, 43 Glee Club, 3, 43 Room Chairman, Publica- tions Drive, 53 Foreign Language Night, 33 Room Chairman, A. A. Drive, 43 Christmas Choir, 43 Orchestra, 43 Chairman, Music Committee, Girls' Club Dance, 4. Tell her, Juch dijferenl uoter make all thy harmony. ALICE CAMP HOYT Foote Chevy Chase Girl Reserves, 13 Girls' Club, 2, 3, 43 Dance, The Red Mill, 1, Captain Crossb0nes, 33 D. A. A. Drive, 13 Room Chairman, Crowell Drive, 23 Dramatic Club, 3, 43 High School Conference Com- mittee, 2, 33 Refreshment Committee, Senior Prom, 43 Lincoln's Birthday Program, 4. Her danring feet and friendly fare Would get her almoxt any place. Page Twenty-'nine V l Page Thirty THE ARROW JOHN S. HUGHES B0llirhy Columbia Interclass Basketball, 4, Interclass Baseball, 2, 33 Interclass Football, 2, 3, German Club, 3, Locomo- tive Club, 3, Freshman Baseball, Football, Soccer, 3, 4, Tennis, 3, 4, Room Chairman, 3, Usher Class Day, Commencement, 3. The Stag at eve had drzmh hir fill. VIRGINIA DELPH JACKSON Ginnie Randolph-Macon Women's College Dart Staff, 1, Track Meet, 1, 2, Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Clubs, 2, 3, 4, Chorus, 1, 4, Dramatic Club, 4, Glee Club, 4, Riding Club, 1, 2, 3, Rifle Club, 3, Tipster Staff, 3, Interclass Basketball, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Baseball, 3, 4, Field Day, 2, Glee Club Concert, 4, Game Team Contest, 4. 1 turned in my saddle and rnade the girth lighl Then shortened rtirrup and ret the pique right. JOHN R. JASPER johnny Business Track, 1, 2, Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Track, 1, 2, 3, Band, 1, 2, 3, Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, Boys' Rifle Club, 3. A lot of fellow! are caught in the art, who are not vaudeville perforrnerrf' ELSIE JOHNSON Elf Business A heen wind that worhr and worhrf' KENNETH KASSCHAU Kenny Massachusetts Institute of Technolozv Freshman Choir, 1, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 2, German Club, 3, German Play, 3, Hi-Y, 2, Lihts, Captain Crossbonesj' 3, Lights, Arms and the Man, 4, Student Council Monitor, 3, Prom Committee, 3, 4, Glee Club, 3, 4, Glee Club Con- cert, 3, 4, Quartette, 4, Mixed Chorus, 4, Room Chairman, A. A. Arrow, 1, Chapel Choir, 4. Muffy hair cloth truly rover great mindrf' AUDREY MAY KEFFER Azad Middlebury Hasbrouck Heights High School, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Riding Club, 3, 4, Usher, Arms and the Man, 4. A violet hy .4 marry rtonef' THE ARROW HELEN M. KENNY Newark Normal Girls' Club, 3, 4, Girls' Rifle Club, 3, Book Week Program, 2, Fashion Show, 4, Tennis Tournament, 4. Shad0wJ of annoyance never mme near thee. ROSALIE KINKEAD Undecided Freshman Choir, 1, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Mixed Choir, 4, Glee Club Concerts, 2, 3, 4, Chairman Publication Drive, 1, Fashion Show, 2, 35 Chorus, Captain Crossbonesng Girls' Club, Z, 3, 4, Waitress, Robin Hood's Barn, 4, Chairman, Tickets Senior Prom, 4, Christmas Chapel Program, 1, 2, 4, Chorus, Arms and the Man, 4, Basketball, 2, 3, Baseball, 2. The wire!! man ir generally he who thinhr himrelf the leaf! ro. JAMES S. KINNE jim Undecided Room Chairman, 1, 2, Chairman Publications Drive, 1, 2, Gym Exhibition, 1, Track, 33 Cross Country, 3, Captain, 4, Glee Club, 4. , I know the wayr of women. PAUL M. KIPP Skip Wesleyan Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Assistant Manager, Track, 1, 2, 3, Manager, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Interclass Track, 3, 4, Hi-Y Club, 4, Chairman, Wrecking Committee, Senior Prom, 4. How much lier in laughter, the cipher hey wherewith we decipher the whole man. EVELYN K. KLEINMANS Kllnhie University of Maryland Eastside High School, Paterson, N. J., lg Room Chairman, 2, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 2, Interclass Basketball, 2, Interclass Hockey, 3, Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Girls' Glee Club, 3, 4, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Quotations Committee, 4. Thy dome of lhought, lhe palate of the foul. ANNA BARBARA KLOPMAN Business Fashion Show, 4. In all my Jpiril ir no ripple of zzrzrerlfl Page Thirty-one Page Thirty-two THE ARROW RICHARD W. KNOWLES Ditkie Business Woodward School, D. C., 1, 2, Baseball, 3, Glee Club, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 4, Library Club, 4, Track, 4, Intermural Football, 3: Usher, Nut Farm, Faculty Play, 4, Anthony Law, Captain Crossbonesf' 4, Groom, The Wedding 4, Boys' Fashion Show, 4, Music Festival, 4. He if .rimply the rarert man in the world. ETHEI. I.. KOENIG . Smitty Business School Basketball, 1, Soccer, 2, Physical Training Exhibi- tion, Mother, Der Spate Gast, 3, Dramatic Club, Ig Home Room Chairman, 2, Crowell Drive, 2, Fashion Show, 1, Art Exhibition, 1. Her joy, ber grief, ber hope, her love Dotla all within 41 circle move. WILLIAM j. KORN Bill Stevens Interclass Baseball, 1, 2, 33 Interclass Basketball, 1, 25 Interclass Track Meet, 1, 2, Track Squad, 1g Freshman Basketball, 1, Basketball Squad, 2, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 5, Assistant Adver- tising Manager, Arrow, 3, Advertising Manager, Arrow, 4. A modert man in word and deed. JOHN L. KORNET Sax Undecided Freshman Football, 1, Freshman Baseball, 13 Base- ball, 2, 3, 4, Basketball, 31 Interclass Basketball, 2, 33 Interclass Track, 35 Chairman, Crowel Drive, 35 Home Room Chairman, 35 Chapel Monitor, 3g Chairman, A. A. Arrow Drive, 4, Interclass Foot- ball, 33 Nomination Committee, 3. Studiou.r to pleafe, yet not arlmmed to fail. MAURENE I.. LAMB L4ml2ie Scudder Girl Reserves, 1, Freshman Chorus, 13 Girls' Club, 2, 3, Cabinet, 4, Dramatic Club, 2, 3, 4, Chapel Marshall, 3, Decoraiton Committee, Junior Prom, 33 Decoration Committee, Senior Prom, 4. It if 4 womanb' rerzfon to my I will do meh a thing because I will. MAURICE A. LAMMENS Bud Undecided Curtiss Drive, 2g Interclass Soccer, 2, Room Captain, 3g Interclass Basketball, 5, Interclass Track, 3. O, Hell, what have we here. i l I THB ARROW EDGAR LEACH Ed Pace Institute Penrod, Penrod and Sam, 3. Well, well we need not think about it- there if plenty of lime. MARGARET A. LEGGETT Peggy Paterson General Hospital 1'll .rpeak in a monotonoux little voice. MARIE KATHERINE LIPPINCOTT Cube Child Education Foundation Riding Club, 1, Interclass Basketball, 2, 3, Glee Club, 3, Interclass Hockey and Soccer, 3, Girls' Club, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Interclass Game Contest, 4, Flower Committee, 4. Tell me, if .rhe were not defigned The eclipfe and glory of her kind. RICHARD H. LIPPINCOTT Lipp Wesleyan University Triangle Club, 1, Room Captain, Publications Drive, 1, Interclass Track, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Track, 2, 3, 4, Hi-Y Club, 4, Senior Announcements, 4. Thur far we were before the wind. JEAN C. LIVERMORE College Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Soccer, 5, 4, Interclass Hockey, 3, 4, Room Chairman, A. A. Dart-Arrow Drive, 1, 2, Room Chairman, Crowell Drive, 1, 2, Glee Club, 3, Dramatic Club, 4, Track Meet, 2, 3, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Game Contest, 4, Tennis Tournament, 4. A rommde hlithc and full of glee Who defer to laugh out loud and free. ARLINE M. LOEKLE Room Chairman, Crowell Publications Drive, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Art Exhibition, 2, 3, Rifle Club, 4, Archery Club, 4, Red Cross Drive, 4. Quenrhed in the dark rlondf of Jlumherf' Page Thirty-three Page Thirty-four' - THE ARROW ELIZABETH A. LONGSON Belly Business Dramatic Club, 2, 3, Fashion Show, 2, 3, Sewing Exhibit, 3, 4, Quotation Committee, 4. Gentle of Jpeerb, benejirienl of mind. IDA LORENZEN Billie Secretarial School Interclass Baseball, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Soccer, 3, 4, Interclass Hockey, 3, 4, Physical Training Exhibi- tion, 2, Art Exhibit, 2, jewelry Exhibit, 3. ' 'Her eyer are mpplriref Jet in mow. HENRY LOUDERMAN Undecided Baseball, 1, Interclass Basketball, 1, Soccer, 1, Track, 2, Football, 2, 4, Second Team Football Award, 4. A friend in need. REINHOLD FREDERICK LYNEN Reinie . Undecided Hi-Y Club, 3, 4, Tennis, 2, Varsity, 3, 4, Cross Country Squad, 4, Rifle Club, 3, Rifle Team, 4. The holy .rpirit of the .rpring if working Jilentlyf' HERBERT KENT LYON, JR. Herb Dartmouth lnterclass Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Room Chairman, 1, Field Day Exhibition, 2. Let me but do my work from day lo day, JANE C. MAMMEL New jersey State College Freshman Choir, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Track Meet, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Baseball, 2, 3, Ride Club, 3, 4, Ring Committee, 3, Interclass Basketball, 3, 4, Game Contest, 4, Memorial Committee, 4. Tbere'J a deal of devillry benealh ber mild exterior. THE ARROW , MARILYNN NATALIE MARTIN Tad Smith Dearborn-Morgan School, 1, Varsity Basketball, 1, Three Chapel Plays, lg Service Committee, lg Glee Club, 1, 3, Chairman Chapel Program, 33 Girls' Club, 3: Publications Drive, 3, Arrow Staff, 35 Dramatic Club, 33 Dancing, Foreign Language Night, 2, Dancing, Captain Crossbonesf' 2, History Committee, 3, Chapel Choir, 35 Mixed Choir, 3. Follow my heart, my dancing feel Dance ar hlithe ar my heart can beat. WINIFRED MASON Winnie Business Eye: of blue, hair of gold, Lyric that much of laughter hold. PETER A. MASTERSON Pete Manhattan Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 35 Interclass Track, 1, 23 Physical Education Exhibition, 1, 3. I love tranquil roliludef' RUTH E. MCALLEN New Jersey College for Women Freshman Choir, lg Riding, 1, 2, 33 Rifle, 2, 3, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 4, Costumes, Captain Cross- bones, 33 Interclass Soccer, 33 Interclass Basketball, 23 Senior Prom Tickets, 4, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4g Waitress, Robin Hood's Barn, 43 Physical Train- ing Exhibition, 2, Fashion Show, 2, 3. She excelr all women, in the magic of her lochrf' DAVID MCDONALD Mac Massachusetts Institute of Technology Track Squad, 1, Varsity, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball Squad, 1, 2, Second Team, 39 Varsity, 4, Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, Class Basket- ball, 1g Soccer Squad, 35 Bowling Team, 4. Quiet but efficient. JANET MCGLAUGHLIN College Basketball, lg Girl Reserves, 13 Girls Club, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 33 Art Exhibition, 1, 2, 3, 4, Scenery Work for Plays, 2, 3, 4. Lamb: friyh and play, the shepherd: pipe all day. Page Thirty-five Page Thirty-six THE ARROW JEANNE MCROBERTS Undecided Grosse Pointe High School, Detroit, 1, Drew Seminary for Young Women, 2, 3. She loved one face from out the thoufandf' VIVIAN KENNEDY MERCER Secretarial School Dramatic Club, 2, 3, 4, Sewing Exhibit, 1, Art Ex- hibit, 2, 3, Field Meet, 1, Chapel Marshall, 3, Book Week Program, 2, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Fashion Show, 1, Perfect Attendance, 1, Z, 3, 43 Chapel Choir, 4. We find her greater! hohhy if to fhattef, that- ter all the day. LAWRENCE O. MIETZELFELD Larry Rensselaer H Track, 1, 4g Soccer, 2, 3, Chapel Program on Hob- bies, 35 Chapel Play, Bill, A Night in an Inn, 4, Home Room Captain, Curtis Drive, 4, Room Captain, Senior Class Dues, 4g A. A. Association Ticket Committee, 4, Rifle Club, 4. The Jteam lofomotive if hir romlant rom- panionf' WALLACE MILLER Wally College Freshman Baseball, Radio Club, 1, 2, 3, 4. It if hetter to aim al lhe moon than a high tree. rr J. VAIL MONTGOMERY 5'c0tchman Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Baseball, lg Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Hi-Y, 3, 4, Radio Club, 4, Rifle Club, 4. For :lever dealt, he'll make 'emf' ROBERT C. MOORE Red Business Freshman Football, 1, Freshman Baseball. 1g Inter- class Baseball, 2, 3, Intramural Basketball, 4, Intra- mural Baseball, 4. Shall we ever he men? .- THE A12 FRANK MULLER, JR. Wiz College Freshman Football, Freshman Baseball, Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Interclass Track, 2, Interclass football, 3, Second Team Baseball, 2, Room Chair- man, 2. The roar of molonr and .ringing Jtreetr lure him on. GEORGE H. MURRAY, 3rd Stevens Freshman Choir, 1, junior Orchestra, 1, Senior Orchestra, 2, 3, Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Pyramid Team, 3, Nathanial and Tailor, The Taming of the Shrew, 2, Don Cubeb De Cigarro, Captain Cross- bones, 5, Major Saranoif, Arms and the Man, 4, Dramatic Clubv Plays, 3, 4, Key Club, 3, '4, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 3, President, 4, Arrow As- sistant Advertising Manager, 2, Advertising Man- ager, 3, Business Manager, 4, Decorations Com- mittee, Senior Prom, 4. Ye have many .rtringf to your bow. WILLIAM MUSTER ManJe' Columbia Freshman Football, 1, Freshman Choir, 1, Field Day, Pyramid Team, 2, Rifle Club, 3, 4, Interclass Track, 3, 4, Chapel Program, 3, 4, Musical Pro- gram, 4, Scenery Christmas Program, 4, Intramural Basketball, 4, Intramural Baseball, 4, Second Team, Football, 4. Multi: in my fingewf' HELEN MARIE NESKE Business Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Usher Modern Language Night, 3, Glee Club, 3, 4, Interclass Hockey, 4, Soccer, 4, Game Contest, 4, Glee Club Concert, 4, Chapel Choir, 4. A bear! au raft, 4 heart as kind. ETHEI. NEWCASTLE Undecided Freshman Carnival, 1, Fashion Show, 4, AJ good be out of the world as ou! of faJlaion. ROBERT WILLIAM NICHOLS Nine Ridgewood High School Room Captain A. A. Drive, 1, 2, Track, 1, 2, Varsity, 3, 4, Rifle Team, 2, 3, Manager, 4, Cross Country, 3, 4, Band, 4, Band and Orchestra Con- cert, 4. The pigeon will foo, and the dog will have in day. ROW Page Thirty-seven Page Thirty-eight THE ARROW DOROTHY M. NOBLE Dimmie New jersey College for Women Riding Club, 1, 2, 3, Dramatic Club, 2, 3, Madden Story Telling Contest, First Place, 1, 2, 43 Decora- tion Committee, Senior Prom, 4, Finance Commit- tee, 4g Room Chairman, Curtis Drive, 3, Mrs, Pennyfeatherj' Chapel Program, 4, Girls' Club, 2, 5, 4, Glee Club, 3, 4, Special Choir, 4, Thanks- giving Program, 4, Christmas Program, 4. With eyer that look inlo the very mul, ROBERT S. OBRIG Bob Blair Freshman Football Team, 1, Assistant Manager, Football Team, 2, The Taming of the Shrew, Lights, 2, Captain Crossbones, Lights, 3, Arms and the Man, Lights, 4, A Night in an Inn, Lights, 4. I knew in iz fliub! It murt be Si1inlNic, PAUL HERMAN OHMER Lehigh University Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 1, Room Chairman, A. A. Drive, 1, Baseball, 1, Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Interclass Track, 3g Rifle Club, 3, Room Chairman, Tickets, Arms and the Man, 4. The ploughmon homeward plodr hir weary way, JOHN ORR Iron Undecided Track, lg Football Squad, 2, 33 Captain, 4, Inter- class Track, 3, Fashion Show, 4, Interclass Basket- ball, 35 Hi-Y, 3, 4. Winn ir thir life if, full of rare, We have no time to .fiend and Hare. WILBUR OSENGA Willy Business AJ he lhinketb in lair heart, .ro i.r he. RALPH L. OTIS Otis, Columbia University Track Squad, 1, 2, 33 Varsity, 43 Football Squad, 2, 3g Field Day Exhibition, 2, Glee Club, 33 Inter- class Basketball, 3, 4. He whistle: aJ be goer, light-hearled wrelrhf' Q- THE ARROW PIERRE E. PARKER Undecided Track Team, 1, Varsity, 2, Basketball, 1, Rille Club, 2, Chess Club, 2, Setting, Taming of the Shrew, 2, Interclass Basketball, 3, Dramatic Club, 3, Glee Club, 3, Setting, French Play, 3, Usher, Commence- ment and Class Day, 3, Usher, The Nut Farm, 4. A frog he would a wooing go. FRANK C. PARRISH Frank Lehigh University Baseball, 1, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, 4, Soc- cer Squad, 2, 4, Interclass Basketball, 2, 3, Inter- class Track, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Football, 3, Pyramid Team, 2, Track Squad, 4. He if quiet, yet be .reer much. HUBERT T. PARSON Benny St. Lawrence University Triangle Club, 1, Hi-Y, 4, Decoration Committee, Senior Prom, 4, Interclass Track, 2. 0 .rolitudef where are thy elaorrnff' LESLIE F. PELTZER Pel!zer Business Maywood unior High School, 1, Bogota High School, 2, Scenery, Arms and the Man, 4, Inter- class Track, 4. Work firrt and then ren. JOSEPH PERANIO f'joe Lehigh University Pyramid Team, 2, Foo. 'll, 3, Orchestra, 3, 4, Intramural Baseball, 4. Few thing! are imporrzt e to diligence and Jkillf' ELLEN JANE PERRY feanne Business Freshman Choir, 1, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Red Mill, 1, A. A. Drive Chairman, 2, Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Basketball Captain, 2, Physical Train- ing Exhibitiori, 3, Captain Crossbones, 5, Chair- man, Chapel Prograrn, 3, Cheerleader, 4, Chorus, 3, 4, Interclass Baseball, 2, 3, Interclass Hockey, 3, Christmas Program, 2, 3, 4. Dare-eyed, A woman of my dreornrf' Page Thirty-nine Page Forty THE ARROW RUTH M. PETERSON Ruthie Business Room Captain, A. A. Drive, 1, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Luncheon Club, 4, Waitress, Manual Training Dinner, 4. There war u quiet :harm uhout her. MARY C. PHILLIPS Montclair Teachers College Girls' Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 4, Spring Song Festival, 4, James Madden Story Telling Contest, 1, Interclass Baseball, 1, 3, 4, Track Meet, 1, 5, Interclass Game Contest, 4, An- nouncement Committee, 4. What .rweet delight 4 quiet life affordrf' RICHARD PIPER, JR. Dirk Duke University Freshman Choir, 1, Freshman Baseball, 1, Interclass Basketball, 2, Varsity Tennis, 5, 4, Room Chairman, Crowell Drive, 5, Glee Club, 4, Room Chairman, Social Service Fund, 4. He rlept there and culled it studying. DANIEL JOHN PITOT, JR. Dun Tulane University St. Michael's Hih School, 2, 3, Basketball, 3, 4, In- terclass Track, 3. Afoot and light-hearted, I take to the open road. CELESTINA PLACA Sall1f Business Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 4, Interclass Baseball, 2, 4, Track, 2. Like Twilightlr, too, her clurhy hair. JOHN H. POLHEMUS Polly Undecided Football Squad, 1, 2, Varsity Football, 4, Soccer, 33 Freshman Basketball, Squad, 2, SL Varsity Basket- ball, 4, Varsity Track, 1, 3, 4, Track Squad, 2, Freshman Baseball, 1, Library Club, 1, 2. A little ryclopr with one eye. THE ARROW' EDWIN LLOYD REES Lafayette Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Key Club, 4, Arrow Staff, 2, 3, 4, Dart Staff, 2, Servant and Hatter, Taming of the Shrew, 2, Secretary of Class, 33 Ridgewood Herald Correspondent, 33 Floor Com- mittee, Junior Prom, 3, Mr. Ransom, God Winks, 4, Class History, 4, Eligibility Committee, Student Council, 4, Unemployment Drive, 4, Costumes, Arms and the Man, 4, The pen ir mightier than 4 rwordf' B. FRANKLIN REINAUER Frnnky Business Band, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra, 3, 4, Pyramid Team, 2, Music Committee, Senior Prom, 4, Class Will Com- mittee, 4, Boys' Fashion Show, 4, Usher, Glee Club Concert, 4. Thy Gentle hand to rlarp in mine. VIRGINIA RICH Ginny Middlebury Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, Cabinet, 4, Room Chairman, 1, 3, Room Captain, Publicaitons Drive, 3, Rifle Club, 3, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Secre- tary of Class 4, Chairman, Finance Committee, 4, Senior Prom Committee, 4. Strong rearonr make Strong Artionf' DORIS L. RICHARDSON College Freshman Choir, 1, Girl Reserves, 1, Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, A. A. Arrow, 2, Dart Staff, 2, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 3, Chorus, Captain Crossbonesf' 3, Publication Drive, 3, Foreign Language Night, 3, Chairman, Invita- tion Committee, Senior Prom, 4. Fillr the air around with beauty. LUCY E. RIDDLEBERGER Barnard Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Sophomore Chairman, 2, Freshman Representative, Dramatic Club, 1, Thank You Doctor, 2, Secretary, 3, Vice President, 4, Catherine, Arms and the Man, 4, Madden Story Telling Contest, 3, Catherine, L Homme ui Epousa une Femme Muette, 4, Ar- row, 2, 3, Editor-in-chief, 4. Blurl1ing ir the rolor of virtue. WILLIAM L. ROBERTS Bill Dean Academy Bandli 1, 2, 3, 4, Track Squad, 1, 4, Home Room Chairman, 1, Pyramid Team, 2, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, 4, Interclass Football, 3, Interclass Track, 3, 4. Not tl giant, but 4 rapable fellow. Page Forty-one Page Forty-two T H E A12 I2 O W EDGAR POWELL Maggy' Business Freshman Baseball, lg Interclass Basketball, 25 Var- sity Baseball, 2, 3, 45 Interclass Football, 35 Inter- class Track, 35 Intramural Football, 4. A nohle fellow with high arnhitionrf' WALTER F. POWERS Walt Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Class Basketball, 2, 3, 45 Freshman Baseball, 15 Track Squad, 2, 35 Pyramid Team, 55 Hi-Y Club, 35 Student Council, 25 Baseball, 2, 35 Baseball Squad, 45 Varsity Basketball, 5. A tailor afier in a day- A dreamer liver forever. LOUIS PROFUMO, JR. Looey Freshman Football, 15 Chairman A. A. Arrow, Drive, 15 Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 25 Treasurer, German Club, 25 Interclass Baseball Team, 2, 35 Pyramid Team, 35 German Play, 35 Petkolf, Arms and the Man, 45 Prophecy Committee, 45 Interclass Football, 3, 4. Alar, I have not any word: left. WILLIAM L. PULTZ Bill College Soccer Squad, 45 Business Manager, Publications Drive, 45 Radio Club, 35 President, 45 Quotations Committee, 45 Town Council, Secretary, 4. Laugh thy girlirh laughter. EDWIN QUACKENBUSH, Jr. BruZ Colgate Triangle Club, 15 Field Day, Pyramid Team, 25 As- sistant Football Manager, 25 Scenery, The Taming of the Shrew, 25 Second Team Football Manager, 35 Physicist Accuracy Club, 31 Rifle Club, 2, 53 Boys' Fashion Show, 3, 45 Stage Hand, Chapel Plays, 3, 45 Home Room Captain, Publications Drive, 33 Interclass Track, 35 Football Manager, 45 Stage- hand, Nut Farm, 45 Musical Show, 4. Wit and wirdom are rarely .reen together. R. LOIS RAFF Montclair Teachers College Room Chairman, 15 Dramatic Club, 3, 45 Junior Chorus, 35 The Boy Comes Home, 35 Girls' Club, 45 Room Chairman Publication Drive, 45 Flower Committee, 4. There ir unrpeahahle plearure attending the life of a voluntary .rt11dent. THE ARROVV' JOHN ROCHOW Undecided Interclass Baseball, 1, Assistant Baseball Manager, 3, Baseball Manager, 4, Rifle Club, 2, Football Gate Manager, 1, 2, 3. 'Tir woman, woman ruler ur Hill. RUTH E. ROGERS College Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 5, 4, Captain, 1, Inter- class Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4, A. A. Committee, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Rifle Club, 3, Physical Training Ex- hibition, 1, Room Captain, A. A. Drive, 5. Sweet .rmiling and .rweet .rpoken. FREDERICK ROOT Panty Yale Freshman Choir, Band, 2, 5, 4, Orchestra, 3, 4, Christmas Choir, 4, Hi-Y Club, 4, Chapel Choir, 4, History Committee, 4. And laughter, holding bolh hir rider. PHILLIS EDA ROTHROCK PMI New jersey College for Women Washington C. H., Ohio School, 1, School of Roselle, 1, Glee Club, 2, 3, Choir, 4, Library Club, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 2, 3, 4, Girls' Club, 2, 5, 4, Sophomore Chorus, 2, Hostess, College Tea, 4, Hockey, 2, Waitress, Mothers' Tea, 4. My eye! make picture: when lhey are ibut? ANGELA ROURA Angie Wilson Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 5, 4, Chorus, Robin Ho0d's Barn, 4, Riding Club, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 4, Chapel Play, 4. Claarm.r Jtrike the right, but merit winr lbe Soul. MARGARET RYER Peg Business Junior Orchestra, 1, Room Chairman, Crowell Drive, 1, Field Day, 2, Game Contest, 4, Baseball, 2, 3, 4, Basketball, 4, Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Track, 3, 4, Rifle Club, 3, 45 Tennis, 4, Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 3, 4, Quotations Committee, 4. A fare with gladnerr ooerfprendf' Page Forty-three THE Page Forty-four I A12 12 O W ILSE C. SANDMANN Cedar Crest College Spring Carnival, 1, 3, Physical Training Exhibition, 1, 3, Squad Captain, 2, Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Baseball, 3, 4, Baseball, 3, 4, Rifle Club, 3, Skating Club, 4. She loved the day! of old Wfhen Jwordr were bright and Jteedr were prrmeingf' KARL L. SANDMANN Sandy Cooper Union or New York State College of Forestry Pyramid Team, 2, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, N. J. State Art Exhibition on World Friendship, 3, Interclass Football, 3, 4, Book Week Contest, 3, 4. A fellow of few wordff' JEAN SAWYER Jeannie Middlebury College Grant High School, Portland, Oregon, 1, Home Room Chairman, 2, 3, Girls' Club, 2, Cabinet, 3, Vice President, 4, Glee Club, 3, Dramatic Club, 3, Treasurer, 4, Usher, Modern Language Night, 3, Property Mistress, Arms and the Man, 4, Chapel Committee, 4, Confessional, 4, Property Mistress, God Winks, 4, Chairman, Class History Com- mittee, 4. A charm attend: her everywhere. HAZEL M. SCHMIDT Hazel Middlebury Accompanist, Freshman Choir, 1, Girls' Glee Club, 2, 3, Accompanist, Boys' Glee Club, 3, Christmas Choir, 3, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Chairman of Music, 4, Dramatic Club, 2, 3, 4, Chorus Captain Cross- bones, 3, Prophecy Committee, Class Day, 4, French Play, 4. There ir no wirdom like franhnerrf' RAYMOND G. SCHROEDER Ray College Freshman Baseball, Freshman Choir, Interclass Base- ball, 2, Room Captain, Publications Drive, 2, Inter- class Basketball, 1, 2, Captain, 3, 4, Chess Club, 2, 3, Interclass Football, Captain 3, Interclass Track, 2, 3, Track Squad, 2, Varsity, 3, 4, Fashion Show, 4, Town Council, Treasurer, 4, Memorial Commit- tee, 4. He war 4 rmooth-appearin' man. OTTO SCHULZE Ol College Track Squad, 2, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 1, 2, Aero Club, 2. Irn'l that jun! what I thought it would he? THE ARROW' KATHRYN SCHWARZ Kay Parson's Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, unior Prom Committee, 3, Inter- class Basketball, 2, 33 Glee Club, 4, Chapel Choir, 4, Glee Club Concert, 4, Archery Club, 4, English Plays, 2. A .rprightly maiden of love'J mart. CHARLOTTE E. SEAVER Blackstone College For Women Archery Club, 1, Physical Training Exhibition, 1, Debating Club, 2, 3, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, 'The Cure All, 3, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Waitress, Seaglades, 3, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club Con- cert, 2, 5, 4, Mixed Chorus, 4, Chorus, Captain Crossbones, 3, Christmas Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4, Thanks- giving Program, 3, 4, Room Captain, Publications Drive, 3, Business Manager, Publications Drive, fi, Madden Story-Telling Contest, 4. When .rhe impartr her thoughts, Her words have force. ELLEN SELLER fimmie William And Mary Archery Club, 1, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Interclass Basketball, 2, 3, Hockey, 3, Soccer, 3, Glee Club, 3, 4, Concert, 3, Dramatic Club, 2, 3, 4, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Fashion Show, 33 Cheerlead- er, 5. Ahrence mahey the heart grow fonderf' LOUIS V. SERAFINI Lou University of Rome, Italy Room Chairman, Scholarship Committee, 1, Room Chairman, Conduct Committee, 2, Captain, Gym Pyramid Team, 2, Captain, Field Day Team, 2, In- terclass Football, 3, Scenery, Captain Crossbonesj' 34 Chapel Program Committee, 4, Some of Us Seniors Committee, 4. Thi: war lhe nobler! Roman of lhem all. DOROTHY H. SIMMONS Dot Centenary Collegiate Institute Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Rifle Club, 4. Her hair like rertlerr rea waver. CHARLES E. SIMPSON Charlie Business Central High School, Scranton, Pa., 1, 2, Track, 5, 4, Football, 4. Alar the love of women! It ir known To he a lovely ami a fearful thing. Page Forty-five Page Forty-six THE ARROW LOUISE SOMERVILLE Shaw University Track, 1, 2, 3, Art Exhibit, 2, Basketry Exhibit, Z, Hockey, 3, 4, Soccer, 3, 4, Baseball, 4, Announce- ment Committee, 4, Game Contest, 4. And .rtill they gazed and Jtill the wonder grew That one .fmall head could :arry all .rhe knew. MARGARET SOUTHWORTH Goucher Freshman Choir, 1, Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, Cabinet, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Dart Staif, 2, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Modem Language Program, 3, Christmas Choir, 4, james Madden Story-Telling Contest, 4. My true love hath my heart, and I have hir. JOHN SPLITSTONE Split Antioch College Chcss Club, 2, Interclass Football Team, 3, Inter- class Track Meet, 3, Railroad Club, 3, Costume Committee, Captain Crossbonesf' 3, Band, 1, 2, rr 3, 4. AJ if any man really knew aught of my life. MILDRED STADELMAN Millie Simmons TrackMeet, 1, Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Conduct Chairman, 1, Citizen, Julius Caesar, 2, Field Day, 2, Chapel Marshal, 3, Basketball, 2, 4, Soccer, 3, 4, Hockey, 3, 4, Fashion Show, 3, Property Mistress, Captain Crossbonesf' 3, Base- ball, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 3, Rifle Cliub, Captain 3, Manager, 4, Game Contest, 4, Flower Committee, 4. She war active, Jtirring, all fire- Could not re.rt, could not tire. F. CARL STECHERT Heinie Business Track, 1, Rifle Club, 2, Crowell Drive, 2, Public Speaking, 1, 2, Chapel Program on Hobbies, 3, Ooh, whafs the good 0' Jpimzin' words! EDITH A. STEVES Edie Wilson College Business Manager, Publications Drive, 2, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer of Class, 3, Chairman, Ring Com- mittee, 3, Chorus, Captain Crossb0nes, 3, Rifle Club, 3, Girls' Club, 3, 4, Girls' Club Cabinet, 4, Chairman, Waitresses, Robin Hood's Barn, 4, Vice President of Class, 4, Chairman Senior Prom, 4, Memorial Committee, Chairman, Class Day, 4, Will Committee, Class Day, 4. She float: upon the river of hir thoughts. THE ARROW CORINNE STEWART Bennington College, Vt. Freshman Choir, Chairman Publications Drive, 1, Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, Secretary, 3, Cab- inet, 4, Glee Club, 2, 3, Dramatic Club, 2, 3, Ten- nis Team, 3, Vice President, Class, 33 Chairman junior Prom, Student Council, 2, 3, Vice President, 4. TlJougblle.r: of beauty .rbe war beauty? .relf. HERMAN V. D. STEWART Bub Amherst Room Chairman, 2, Varsity Track, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Cross Country, 4, Athletic Association, 4, As- sistant Business Manager, Crowell Drive, 3, Glee Club, 4, Physicists Accuracy Club, 3, Student Coun- cil, 3, 4, Statistics Committee, 4. He all the muntry could eutrunf' ROBERT V. STOKES Bob Dartmouth Soccer Squad, 4, Glee Club, 4, Glee Club Concert, 4, Memorial Committee, 4. We are the maker: of muric And we are the drearnerr of dreamt. WINIFRED F. STOUT Winnie Colby junior College Girl Reserves, President, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Class Baseball, 1, 2, 3, Class Track, 1, 2, Room Captain, Publications, 2, 3, Assistant Business Manager, 3, Room Captain, Arrow Drive, 2, 3, Rifle Club, Assistant Captain, 3, Dramatic Club, 4, A friend may well be reckoned The mailer pieee of nature. JEROME J. SULLIVAN jerry Rutgers Be bolde, be bolde, and everywhere be boldef' MARGARET SULLIVAN Madge Art School Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, Field Day, 2, Track, 3: Interclass Basketbal, 3, Room Chairman, Crowell Drive, 2, 3. Fa.vbioned ro Jlenderly, young, and .fo fair. Page Forty-seven THE Page Forty-eight A I2 I2 O W LEAH TALLMAN Lee Business School Physical Training Exhibition, 1, Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 2, 3, Chorus, 4. Ornament of a meek and quiet rpiritf' MARY F. TAYLOR Sargent Girl Reserves, 1, Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Girls' Rifle Club, 3, Art Exhibition, 3, Interclass Hockey, 4, Soccer, 4. A How foreihle are her u1ordJ! DON TERRY Baldy A Business Ramsey High School, 1, Freshmen Basketball, Track Squad, 1, 2, Field Day, 2, Interclass Basket- ball, 3, 4, Interclass Track, 3, Boys' Fashion Show, 5, 4. Variety'r the very .rllzice of life. HARRY THEYKEN Slim Undecided Freshman Choir, Freshman Baseball, Band, 1, 2, 3, Pyramid Team, 2, 3, 4. The world hnowr nothing of it: greatert men. DORIS THOMSON Tnhhy Secretarial School . Art Exhibition, 1, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Interclass Basketball, 2, 3, Basketry Exhibition, 2, 3, Interclass Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Baseball, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Hockey, 3, 4. Someone laughed like the tinhle of the rain. FRANKLIN MARSHALL THOMPSON rata' University of Michigan Room Captain, A. A. Drive, 1, Rifle Club, 2, Room Chairman, Publication Drive, 2, 3, Room Chair- man, Arrow Drive, 3, Junior Prom, Decoration Committee, 3, Art Exhibition, 3, 4, Art Editor, Ar- row Staff, 4, Senior Prom, Refreshment Commit- tee, 4, Quotation Committee, 4, Poster Committee, 4. Wit and humor belong to geniur alone. 1 THE ARROW W. BANKS TOBEY Undecided Track Squad, 1, Varsity, 2, 3, Basketball, 1, Room Captain, A. A. Drive, 2, 3, Football, 2, Rifle Club, 2, 3, Pyramid Team, 2, Lights, Taming of the Shrew, 2, Cross Country Team, 2, 3, Toffy, A Night in an Inn, 4, Chairman Lounge Commit- tee, Senior Prom, 4, i-Y Club, 4. The rweetert hourr that e'er I rpend, Are fpent among the larrer, I . CATHERINE TRACY Kit Business College Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Art Exhibit, 2, Costumes, Captain Crossbones, 3, Rifle Club, 3, Assistant Manager, 4, Room Chairman, Arrow, 4, Imitation Radio Stars Program, 4, Red Cross Proram, 4. Her whistle ar :harp ar a ronghirdk Mill. VERA TRUEX Wearie School Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Glee Club, 2, 3, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Chorus, Captain Crossbones, 3, Home Room Chairman, Crowell Drive, 4, Home Room Chairman, A. A. Drive, 4, Invitation Com- mittee, Senior Prom, 4, Spring Song Festival, 4, Mixed Choir, 4. Neither rarelerr, nor too rad, Nor too rtudiour, nor to glad. FRANK R. TYROLT, JR. Business Freshman Baseball, 1, Crowell Drive, 1, 2, Inter- class Track, 2, A. A. Arrow Drive, 2. 0 wearimme :ondition of humanity. EDWARD GRIFFIN UNDERHILL Ed - Columbia Freshman Football, Freshman Basketball, Interclass Basketball, 1, 3, Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 1, 3, Football Squad, 2, Basketball Squad, 2, 3, Var- sity, 4, Track Squad, 2, Hi-Y Club, 2, 3, 4, Inter- class Baseball, 4, Room Captain A. A. Drive, 1, 5, Interclass Track, 3,4. Golden Word: were hir. LEONARD C. VANDERBECK Lenny Undecided Band, 1, 2, 3, Freshman Baseball, Interclass Basket- ball, Room Chairman, Publication Drive, 2, Inter- class Baseball, 2, Football Squad, 4. A quiet lad when people are around, but- Page Forty-nine Page Fifty THE ARROW STANLEY R. VANDERBECK Sian Business Band, 15 Track, 1, 2, Football, 2, 3, 4g Baseball, 3, 4, Hi-Y Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Track, 5, 4. Some have greatnerr thrurt upon them. DONALD VANDERBILT Van Undecided Soccer , 5, Athletic Exhibition, 5, Interclass Base- ball, 2, 35 German Club, 2. In Jilenre, solitude and stern rurrniref' DOROTHY VAN DYKE Dot Business Freshman Carnival, 1. Fil and fair and rimple and Jujjzirientf' MARIE M. VAN LENTEN Business Silenee never hetrayr you, MARIE VAN OMEN Rie Business Be you not proud of that rieh H4ir. .' LUCY RUTH VEGA Glassboro Normal School Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Fashion Show, 1, 52 A. A, Arrow Home Room Manager, 4, Crow- ell Drive Home Room Manager, 4, Glee Club, 3, 4g Contest, 3, Chorus, Captain Crossbones, 51 Sprin gSong Festival, 4, Chapel Choir, 4g Christ- mas Prograrn, 3, Interclass Baseball, 4, Interclass Basketball, 4, jewelry Exhibition, 5. With uulleyr of eternal huhhlef' THB ARROW GANDOLPH J. VIVIAN Gandy New York University Assistant Soccer Manager, 1, 2, Manager, 3, 4, Library Club, 4, Richard, Houseboat on the Styx, 4, Hobby Program, Aviation, 4, Ticket Collection, Football, 3, 4, Home Room Chairman, Red Cross Drive, 3. All day long I have been working. Now I am tired. JANE VONDERLIETH Connecticut Girls Club, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 4, Interclass Basketball, 3, 4, Riding Club, 4. She war a girl of quiet way.r. GRACE L. WALDRON Glassboro Normal School Gitl's Club, 2, 3, 4, Freshman Choir, 1, Chorus, Captain Crossbones, 3, Special Chorus, 4, Chapel Choir, 4, Gir1's Glee lub, 2, 3, 4, Senior Finance Committee, 4, Fashion Show, 4. Few Jorrowr balls .rhe of ber own. MARY ELIZABETH WARE Paterson General Hospital Book Week Program, 23 Art Exhibit, 2, jewelry Exhibit, 3, 4, Rifle Club, 4, Girls Club, 4. Shall I rompare thee to a Jammer day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate. PRUDENCE WESTERVELT Undecided Girl Reserves, 1, Girl's Club, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Riding Club, 1, 2, 33 Glee Club, 2, Hockey, 2, 3. My mind len go a thouxand tlsingrf' KATHERINE B. WHEELER Bev College Track, 1, 4, Baseball, 4. I am myrelf, my own commander. Page Fifty-one Page Fi f ty-two V THE ARROW HARRY B. WILLIS Willie Undecided Freshman Baseball, 1, Soccer, 2, 3, Interclass Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Cross Country, 4, Pyramid Team, 3, Track, 4, Stage Hand, Arms and the Man , Statistics Committee. A quiet tongue .rhowr a wire head. WALTER E. WINES Wall College Band, 1, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain Freshman Soccer, 1, Man in the Bowler Hat, 1, Van Neste Rhetoricals, 1, First Place, 3, 4, Interclass Track, 2, 4, Track Squad, 3, Thank ou Doctor, 2, Music Program, 3, 4, Boys' Fashion Show, 3, 4, Debating Club, 2, The Obstinate Family, 3, Coach of Polly's Hero, 3, Arrow, 4, - Captain Crossbonesf' 3, Times Contest Second Place, 3: His Best Seller, 3, Soccer Squad, 4, Key Club, 3, 4, Stage Manager, Arms and The Man, 4, Radio Program, 4, God Winks, 4, Some of Us Seniors, 4, Prophecy, 4. And wine fry ran of their wit: heguile. Make the .rage frolir and the reriour Jmilef' ENITA WINTER Toon Duke University Girl Reserves, 1, Girls' Club, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 4, jewelry Exhibition, 3, 4, lnterclass Baseball, Basketball, Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Art Exhibition, 1, Room Chairman, Christmas Card Drive, 4, Announce- ment Committee, 4, Glee Club, 4. All grave, all good, her great heart hnowrf' GORDON BAILEY WITHERILL Withy University of Maryland Room Chairman, Publications Drive, 2, Track Squad 1, 2, Varsity Track, 3, 4, Cross Country, 4, Dramatic Club, 4, Hi-Y, 4, Interclass Track, 3, 4. He that eomplier againrt hir will, IJ of hir own opinion Mill. ELIZABETH ESTELLE WOLFE Woof Randolph-Macon Newton High School, L. I., 1, 2, 33. Girls Club, 4. My natwe land, good night. F. MARGERY WOOLSEY Margie Packer Collegiate Institute Pack Collegiate Institute, Brooklyn, New York, 1, 2, 3, 4, Girls' Club, 5, Dramatic Club, 5. Thy roxy lipr .rtill wear a .rmile. THB ARROW N , 1 JANET YOLMAN Business Freshman Carnival, 1, Track, 23 Sophomore Inter- class Baseball Team, 2. A .rmoolla and rteadfart mind. FRIEDA YOUNG F1'ilzi Nursing Interclass Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Base- ball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Hockey, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Girls' Rifle Team, 3, 4g Girls' Club, 3, 4,A. A. Room Chairman, Drive, 1, Art Exhibi- tion, 1, 3, 45 Cheer Leader, 3, 45 Game Team, 4. The tzme you won your town the rare. FANNY ZEEDYKE Paterson Normal School Physical Training Exhibition, 2, Luncheon Club, 4. And made 4 Jzmfbine in 4 .rlaady place. In Appreciation RS. Lester Walsh, formerly Miss Edna Lauer, instructor of Latin, left Ridgewood High School on the first of February, 1931. Mrs. Walsh not only succeeded in building up a firm foundation of the rudiments of Latin in her beginners but also helped those more advanced to enjoy and appreciate a difficult subject. When faculty advisor and general manager on the staff of The Telum 'Latinumj' Mrs. Walsh enabled the editor to publish an excellent paper, under her energetic and capable direction. Mrs. Walsh came to Ridgewood High School in 1916 having previously taught in New York State. She is a graduate of St. Lawrence University. It was with sincere regret but with deepest wishes for her happiness that we who are the last class to have known her, saw her leave. Page Fifty-three YD 3-A O Ov-I G 0 UD 02 WI-l O O O UD Crazy About Sowing Grace Favorite Occupation Characteristic Nickname 6 Gm 'U Q Q Q E Q Q Q 3 N Y TITE JADIQOXV N UI 32 E Ecu Q D4 new 4' . 2-of-1 I- 2 5 NTS gan, 5 .3559-U :Env 5,3350 H, -.,..o+m.w .,..:3m sz: m -Den 5...-C, , 5,....: ::.,..,,4 gg-.. W: o.CIU.2m3a ' 3'x3,.,:-me 4-vm ip, .... 5' as 'U -' U . +w H C8 ro gfv zh'mm Ui0 m-'vlw'DN': H a1 .f3O3'g3s-C-'Sis-4 ..f.:2-- N'-Q..-Q- ' -:5,.1,:?:Iu6'.im3'-'owosgvnvgsam as IDB: mam: U: '-QQFQ: : Ulullmv-125'-Q: URS: E209-eQ: OO av. hav. T2 25' EH nv. Ss: 2 5z8EE S hae! :egg EQ 33 Q2 35 wsswfv Pvc .ON 'D wo NN :JS ev--1 li f-4 S! -4 S! cu -1 rn E-'O5 I: - '-':.-G ati gwcicug-'Dil-1 -1bDq,g::5I.' owl Wo Yr-eww bnqav :I if-G2 o-' H gwmq: ,Q m--3'om '-afc ,-.-s-4 fcg,+'xm '5D:s c ,x--- -C-'fc x-42 ms-.IRAQ :3Jo.E - '-'oo LL'1 'r-'VD OEOEF-Hao wwommww aa 'owEE4W.9.o 3ofVaa'Qm.E.DoooWWBQHI mwBQmw4 w3omwmmmw3mEmHqmooQumoo4 V1 4-7 ,,, : S-4 .p W 5 C! I w E m U sg! 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She S2 23352522 Qiiiiigiiifeiiz 5'a55'8i5 ?5FS9F9959WF?FFFFF?F9?FFSF9F?iF5 54 CD +1 'U az as-cs 5 s:-- A4 C - aaa' Ng-:glen H pg as N NE Pa E O. hy., 1-o.:r-4 .St ,-.0 'U 'co 5: Ea-QED Eggs xzqgggg 39,195 servo M EQQWTESHS Sikwfmgiihwgrgfazwi ww 073 'URL' No.2 Q UD ooh 5.5 QNII1 'Hoe-1..c:'1' 2-:aww NO OOQQQ:1,1:+,7, ,:-5....Uwm,,NQpqP-ang' Qffmmmowesep wopwmmwavshcwmmaogg 'HOU vlHs:.2o :si-': 'Q-SKfJP:.::-D v1mU::'E'-.Mwmm'1 Wiwmwws-ww'-s-Z:,:m s-Haesr:0 .S1,.: 49:-'rv r-1 n-1 v-4 U v-4 sixbieezwaissisfiswfsfiaaii25252 mSmmmmmoknkmmgmmcmkmmiimepQmweii m 3-I O .u C Q UD w VI-4 O 0 O UD Crazy About Saving Grace Favorite Occupation Characteristic Nickname Name E .M O O O Z1 Q3 .-1 ..-1 E In His with bg. .E as F-'Q s- ..-. as I afp, 2 - 3 gina 0 E CD C F 53 :S .CI 0 Kass Kenneth 11119 Ki QS Jam D- cs- . V153 Gi aflnel' H1 His O SI O .-. N ua .- Q. U2 ,,, . GJ E oo' U 3 o U2 O In 4-7 E GJ ra. 32 20 cn: gas M? .E--' gi .H rn IEE .23 L5 O .E u-14-7 has :as bl! m 3 QM I o wow ..-v-irq 'U ::3.29.'.:' ,q as ua ss OC! 111 E 5. ,Q Q3 I .52 .Q ... ,G FH FE V1 3.-Q Ee em '13 mi cu GD gg C6 A .1 c .... M GJ ... .. N ..: M-Eg 3:42 E25 wid? III Q Ffa Env THB ARROW H M71 Zn- 'rn' O 5 F-4o 5o'U mai? Ill 3 sit' ga N.: wc: ... D1 Q3 .H 2:1 E S mmm if Q, B3 SWE Civ 4-v In N 'H M ws: anci D '.-1 I-4 D Arr Rid ss-like manner 5 WU .Es-. W..- :IGS FQ! 9. P cu .S U2 :AE .... Em gh: ang?- 605 W.-C Oo 'Um U: Benn Jean 011 Pars Z C E 5 si OJ EH an q'O'C 21054, sei ,o drum S-4 as E cv ca P1 02 C I: as E1 N mg tennis erm 5a N P1 Neatness .M 2 9 5-4 U VI EELER: E 12.2 Harlow 7 92.11 S31 QM : F511 Ill Dax 4.1:-4 :NW 'ev ..-. 5 an .En ET. U 48.5 V12 C..-1 EW. 0 E EO... P D A G H S ning llfl m I-4 an 50 .E wf E Ill 5 cf W 4-w E. av s-4 EIB-4 .-Cl 4-I O PQ 613 SI s C N Q 413' .gi N Q.-13 aa? mme 3 io: .- o s. NB kenbush 9? 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HN CDE-1 GJ E35 .... 505 DP:-4 .-. .- cu E0 I-4 cv .-4 ..- ua U2 SZ! cu .-1 .-4 Fi '.J O ni :AL Louls Seraii GJ .tv :I F-4 'E 3 gm 9. e 5-4 E Ee V1 as Em U1 as GD V15-4 053 Z3 N 2 O2 2? :S-1 K1 Q. 'U in rn w cv 53 GJ .-. .D 8 rn Q2 S-4 mi 43 fi -P 3 wi 23 :Ho Z0-1-w . 50 EE O EU EIIQSS tit P B V S Pe ba -as ..-4 ..-4 Q -E ep ws O ' O -as 5-4 N B an 4-7 U1 an s: V1 GJ 9 Q3 -P7 ID EE 'U H5 .: . S! 9, ' 0 gnaggggg ..-. 0 C5 as CD ..-1 Q 5: o F 50 E ..-i 4-v C5 O -Q f-4 O -as E 'U bn... QE ... ?m? U2 G2 YD V1 3... on Ez 4-7F-1 5 15 OU vi V1 CU .-. 0 C ..-1 60 .E '- Q4 ca 3.5 SE UIQM Q3 -. 3 av N cz... b1J.:.2-- :' ..-. mv 41 D. fa ... fi .Q E QC le E3 E 4 M aa? 60... .M .-1 CS 3 vi .M O O -4 S'-1 ..-1 Cfrv 'U 512-'CI-M1 MSSE: wlbmtn za. 53. 5a 'U CI LS 2 -ca .QEQQJ 53:65 -A-7 s-4 GS B cu 4-7 U2 G N E si aw LU LAB :AB MB :aT mpson d Terry all Tho Ei gs- cd Q2 .D O P c: .E by 3 on HE' 5 U10 :vc :za sm EGO ing tics Punn Athle Athletics s-4 o E 5 .11 44-4 o cu uz S an U2 etics P. S11 SI 5 Q-4 bn EE an.: 01141 aa U Ki 'Pl ms-3' was f-4.213 O.-Q ima is FE 21160 as 5-1 2 G 3 N 'U cu ..- H 51 Page Fifty five THE A1212 ow Class Will S N I E, the members of the class of 1932, being presumably as sound in mind and body as we ever will be, and ready to rid the local institution of our obnoxious presence, do bequeath, etc., etc., the following: Louis Profumo's figure to Mary Long. Margaret Southworth's naivete to Betty Eggert. Dayton Hope's retiring disposition to Don Smith, Paul Kipp's laugh to anyone that wants it. The soccer uniforms to the incinerator. Pierre Parker's French accent to Herb Rader. Betty Friemells argumentative ability to future debating societies. Gordon Witherill's fertile imagination to the Chapel Program committee. Charlie Carter's line to all would-be shieks. The Held house to the Painter's Union. Lyman Hill's mischievous nature to Bob Tinker. Louis Seranni's brains to the faculty. Walt Wines' scarlet jacket to Mr. Gerfin. An unexpurgated edition of this will fwhich cannot be printed herej to a prominent place on the bulletin board. In witness whereof we, the aforesaid intolerables and incurables, have hereunto set our seal and all that sort of stuff. Witnessed in the bag. Page Fifty-sian THE ARROW Page Fifty-seven THE A1212 ow Hi- -fee Class Prophecy S ATURDAY night Mr. Arthur Halsted and his wife, the former Miss Ellen Seller, attended the new Ridgewood Warner in Ridgewood for the first time since its opening. The crankcase of their car having been lost, they boarded the Ridgewood Avenue bus, which is owned by the Murray and Dunham Bus Line, Inc., and driven by jim Kinne. The Halsteds were compelled to join the ticket line, but the time passed quickly for they saw Edith BurnsL of the Burchsted and Burns Hat Shop, Mrs. Milton Banta, formerly Miss Corinne Stewart, and their three children, and Miss Adelaide Cronk, who only recently secured a divorce from William Croker, the town's ultra modern horse doctor the calls himself a Veteri- narianj. After purchasing their tickets from Harriet Davison, the ticket girl, they were profusely greeted by Manager Reinauer. On entering, Arthur saw Buzzard, the overpaid janitor. The Halsteds were then given a choice balcony seat by usher Hammer- strom. On inspecting the program, Ellen found that as an added attraction the Ridgewood movie, So This Is Ridgewoodj' was being shown. Kay Schwartz was the leading lady with Norman Callaghan playing opposite. The supporting cast included Evelyn Daybill, Ruth Douglass, Betty Godsell, Chester Decker, Paul Calvet, Louis Beijen, and Lloyd Rees. Before the lights were dimmed, the Halsteds glanced among the audi- ence and saw Mayor Pitot and his wife, Marilynn Martin Pitot, Political Boss Profumo, Chief of Police Brenner, Rev. john Orr, and Ridgewood's dog-catcher, Bub Stewart. Lawyer Friemel and President Doris Berry, of the Woman's Club, occupied box seats. Though So This Is Ridgewood was for the most part advertising, the Halsteds enjoyed seeing pictures of Tobey's Barber Shop, Peraino's Fruit Market, Barber's and Lamb's Butcher Shop, and Seraf1ni's Spaghetti joint. On the way home, Ellen and Arthur dropped in at Bedingfields Night Club, which adjoins Forbe's Athletic Club. Dohrman Beatrice opened the door into the lobby and their wraps were left in custody of jean Livermore. Hostess janet Ann Howe gave them a quiet table next to Ice Lammen's Orchestra, which was directed by Hooch Wines, who was also Master of Ceremonies. In the opposite corner could be seen Polhemus and Vander- beck, the eveready bouncers. After a couple of bottles of water, which were served by Blondy Truex, the Halsteds bought a paper from Don Terry, who was easily recognizable in spite of his beard. Page Fifty-eight THE ARROW After calling a taxi, driven by Quackenbush, they found the news head- line to concern President Knowles, who had just vetoed a bill permitting one- piece bathing suits. Another item to strike their eye was the account of the auto accident between Mr. Everett Alther, of Glen Rock, and the Gidney Brothers, two crabby old bachelors, of this town. Traveling with Alther were jack Hughes, Harry Willis, Margy Southworth, and Jeanne Perry. With the Gidneys was their dog Carter and their cat Parker, On arriving home, they were greeted by Hazel Schmidt, who had been out for a ride with Lester Harvey, the milkman. Lester was killing two birds with one stone. What the Seniors Think About Themselves Girl Boy Most versatile Doris Berry James Gidney Best dancer Most popular The wittiest Most attractive Biggest giggler Most absent-minded Biggest bluffer Most studious Most likely to succeed Best dresser Best natured The noisiest Most argumentative Jeanne Perry Corinne Stewart Ruth Greene Corinne Stewart Ann Easton Harriet Davison Maurene Lamb Betty Friemel Lucy Riddleberger Alice Hoyt Evelyn Daybill Shirley Horton Betty Friemel Herbert Buzzard james Gidney Walter Wines john Betts William Puftz Robert Obrig Lester Harvey Alfred Bedingfield James Gidney john Jasper Louis Profumo Frederick Root Alfred Bedingfield Page Fifty-nme T H 1-3 A12 I2 o w Class History Frerlamrzn Year N ON Monday, September 17, 1928, the Class of 1932 invaded R. H. S. This comprising 260 students, each full of hope and vigor, had the distinc- tion of being the last Freshman class to enter this school. These bewildered pupils entered chapel blushing at an '- proar of clapping from the upper class- men. They were welcomed with an instructive talk by Mr. Somerville and then sent forth to classes. Although school ended at one o'clock, the new students felt as if they had had a very busy day, having met new people, seen new things, and had new experiences. Needless to say that many were late for classes, having followed false directions given by loving upper classmen. Only a few days had passed when the Freshmen were acquainted with the Dart, Arrow, and Athletic Association drives. No sooner was that over than the Crowell magazine drive was started, and the newcomers experienced their first real salesmanship practice. The Freshman went into the drive with much more zeal than any other class, securing 549 subscriptions, giving a net profit of 35285. The drive was in charge of Corinne Stewart and Doris Berry, with Mr. Gerlin and Miss Lauer as advisers. Nothing special happened until the end of the first marking period, when many were surprised to find themselves on the honor roll. Several were on the high honor roll. It is interesting to note here that Dean Gidney, Olga Bondy, Betty Dunham, Lucy Riddleberger, and janet Howe kept on that list for the majority of marking periods. In February a member of this class broke the ice and appeared in a chapel play. That person was Walter Wines, who is famous for his dramatic work in R. H. S. The play was a farce, by A. A. Milne, entitled, The Man in the Bowler Hat. In April the Freshman-Sophomore division of the girls' Madden Story- Telling Contest was staged. A Freshman, Dorothy Noble, had the honor of receiving first prize for her rendition of The Matinee Girl. The other Freshmen were Betty Dunham and Mary Phillips. A few weeks later three boys, William Hodges, Charles Carter, and Walter Wines, appeared in the Freshman-Sophomore division of the Van Neste Rhetoricals. June came, bringing exams, and then all was over until the fall. Little did the class realize that when they would return that fall they would still be the lowest class in the school! Lloyd Reef. Page Strzty THE ARROW Sophomore Year T HE two hundred and eighty-nine Freshmen, who turned Sophomore during A the summer vacation, upon returning found their greatest annoyance to be the upper classmen patting them on the back. Not that they deserved credit for any little courtesies they were always thoughtful of doing for the seniors, but they had bad cases of sunburn. In addition to this, to their com- plete satisfaction, they were informed that the school day was to be lengthened. Due to the institution of the junior High School system we were still the infants of the High School. But as one of the English teachers remarked, Babies must play. The Band played, Go Get 'em Ridgewood while the football team got 'em. Even though the Sophomore class did not produce any stars, we had a winning team. Our confidence in Dean Gidney and Corinne Stewart was manifest when we chose them to represent us on the Student Council. The Dar! and the Arrow started off with a hop, skip, and jump, although the Dart soon took a flop. Edith Burns, Lloyd Rees, and Lucy Riddleberger with several others attained cherished positions on the editorial staff. Dramatics brought forth a burst of enthusiastic support from us kids This was shown in the talent of Walt Wines, George Murray, Lucy Riddle- berger, with others, of course, in Thank You, Doctor, as well as in The Taming of the Shrew, the annual production. The Hi-Y and Girls, Club were not long in getting started and a snappy crowd from our class turned out to bother, delay, and further hinder the colossal seniors. However, we certainly showed the Seniors a thing or two about making money. Did we put it all over them in the publication drive? Ah, yes, those were the good old days before the depression. Oh, let's not argue here, but it would be well to mention that Charlotte Seaver and Betty Friemel helped to make the Debating Club a success. Say what you might, we are certainly a class of square shooters come seben, come leben?j No, I have reference to Bob Nichols and his associates whose presence was felt in the Rifle Club. And we mustnlt forget Ray Antig- nat and Riny Lynen whose assistance was valuable in forming a tennis team that won every match it played. Along came Christmas with no Freshmen to participate in the choir, which had been eagerly anticipated from year to year. Nevertheless, an impressive service was well conducted by Miss Waller with the help of the Glee Clubs. Page Sixty-one THE ARROW Say, how about the support we gave to the Basketball Team? Antignat, Greenlaw, Korn, Alther, and Polhemus did their bit to prove the Sophs were there with the goods. With such support as Kornet, Calkoen, and Muller from the Sophomore Class we couldn't help having a good baseball year. Don't forget Bub Stewart and Banks Tobey and their outstanding work on the track team. Let's see, didn't a sophomore win the Madden Story-Telling contest? Dot Noble talked the juniors out of that. It seems to me Bill Hodges also got honorable mention in the Van Neste Rhetoricals. 'Member the May Festival on the athletic field? If not, don't bother your busy head about it. Ah! What weeping there was when we left for the summer vacation. Our parents wept, because we would be home all day, our teachers wept, because they could not be inspired by our smiling features until another year, and last but by far least, Mr. Somerville had a little private cry. Frederick Roo! junior Year IF we of '52 gained the reputation of being the noisiest and most outspoken class that has trod the dear old campus in many a year, please, before condemning, give thought to our start in life at the beginning of our junior year. Ushered into an obligato of mason's trowels, clanging upon bricks, carpenters, hammers, plumbers' jangling pipes, all bent on developing a bigger and better R. H. S., we were forced to assert ourselves and make our presence known. Any field of endeavor develops leaders who attain their eminence through sheer ability and so it was with us in our struggle to make undying history. Though we all did our feeble best, the honors for successful render- ing of that famous anthem, No Carpenter's Hammer Can Make a Mute Out of Me, must go to Shirley Horton, Maurene Lamb, Louis Profumo, and Fred Root. Class ofhcers have much to do with the success of any class and hence special care was given to our selection. Did we succeed in making a wise choice? Well-look 'em over-the answer must be And how! President, jim Gidneyg Vice-President, Corinne Stewart, Secretary, Lloyd Reesg and Treasurer, Edith Steves. Who was treasurer of Student Council? Corinne Stewart, of course. Also Bub Stewart, Dean Gidney, and james Gidney were our representatives and proved a great help to Corinne with her figures. Page Sixty-two THE ARROW About this time the Arrow and Dart were clamoring for attention, and here Lucy Riddleberger, Edith Burns, Veronica Hanlon, Ann Denny, alias Yel- low Blouse Easton, Lloyd Rees, George Murray and jim Gidney found op- portunity to give vent to their literary talent. Are you asking, Were they good ? They were. The Dart, however, which one of our alumni called the Utheopia in the woodpile, was forced to sing its Swan Songu due to the poor support of the students. The Student Council soon felt the desire for notoriety and presented it in the form of the Level System, which limited the number of officers to some of our more popular students. We apologize for giving so much publicity to Corinne,but when election of oihcers for Girls' Club rolled around she was the universal choice for secre- tary due to her general popularity. Betty Dunham handled the finances most successfully. The class was well represented when Elmer Greenlaw was elected Vice-President of the Hi-Y. On the Dramatic Club staff were Lucy Riddleberger, Secretary, and james Gidney, junior representative. In Captain Crossbones Adelaide Cronk distinguished herself as a most charming Senorita while George Murray, Richard Knowles, and Walter Wfines proved themselves notably serious and dignified Q ?j. As a story-teller Veronica Hanlon proved herself adept by winning the Sophomore--junior Madden Story-Telling contest. If a stage career as a come- dian holds any attraction for Walter Wines, he has given evidence of being on his way by winning the Van Neste Rhetoricals with his Obiturary Poetf' We were indeed glad to welcome Al Bedingfield, who wrote the winning essay on Pharmacy. Musically the class was well represented in the Glee Clubs, orchestra, and band. Much praise should be given the latter for didn't they bring the second prize home from New Brunswick? And now come to the department of strong backs and weak minds Our class contributed literally to the great, the near great, and what have you, in the athletic division. john Orr, Charles Carter, Elmer Greenlaw, Frank Hesse, and Milt Banta did their bit and it was some bit to the football team. Three would-be hikers, Nichols, Kinne and Tobey, enlarged the cross- country team. To the urgent cries for first class men for the basketball team we fur- nished Danny Pitot, Howard Polhemus, and David McDonald. Page Sixty-three THE ARROW Pre-eminent in track were Bub Stewart, half-milerg jim Kinney, Bob Nichols, Roy Schroeder, Banks Tobey, Alther, and Gruenfelder. Outstanding in this athletic division were the soccer and tennis teams. The former contained such players as the Gidneys, Ray Antignat, Kenneth Calkoen, and Richard Stockbower. Members of the tennis team were Ray- mond Antignat, Richard Piper, and Reinhold Lynen. Ray has the honor of being the fourth ranking singles player in New jersey. The Girls, Tennis team was aided by our indomitable Corinne. And so class history is made. Another year of struggle passed for our beloved teachers and they can say again, We've done our best with what we had to work and now it's up to youf' A long summer of rest and relaxation will bring them back to the fray in September, ready to cope with the mature wisdom of other scintillating minds. Selah! I have spoken. jean Sawyer. Senior Year T O be the youngest class of the school for two years, and then to be drop- ped into obscurity as merely those juniorsl' was very bitter, so when last October came with the eventual opening of the school to make us Seniors, the ruling masters of the classes, we stepped back into our familiar limelight, and became once more the unusual class of the school. We weren't even the color of previous senior classes. Fashion had frowned so furiously upon nut brown creatures that almost everyone came back looking pale and interesting. What else didn't that merry month bring? Dean Gidney, generalissmo, established a crack soccer team with Paul Calvet, James Gidney, Raymond Antignat, jack Hughes, Norman Callaghan, jack Whittemore, john jasper, Kenneth Calkoen, Arthur Blanford, and joe Downs before old Ridgewood opened its portals of learning. When the faculty was consumed with loneliness and the paint was dry in the halls, they gave in to our persistent begging, and welcomed the ardent seekers of wisdom who stood clamoring for admittance. There was a new office for late cards, and a new power in the inner office, whom we grew to admire and respect. Up in the familiar 209, Miss Eaton assumed the responsible place that Miss Lauer vacated. There was a new gym, destined to be the scene of two enjoyable proms, and the battle where Dan Pitot, Herbert Schoof, and David McDonald held honors for the seniors on the basketball court. There was a new addition that brought long haired che- rubs in short socks skipping through the corridors Ceven as you and lj. Meanwhile, the magazine drives had swept over the school, leaving us just enough pep to cheer on the football men, of whom Frank Hesse carried Page Sixty-four THE ARROW off the new Hi-Y football award. A few weeks before the chilly Thanksgiving game, the cross-country team hibernated with its champions, Bob Stewart and Robert Nichols. Christmas was tropical, and vacation was abbreviated. The boys' style show afforded levity to the winter stretch when it produced the emblem of the submerged two-thirds Ghandi's goat. Due to you know what the foreign language night was dispersed with in favor of a senior French play in chapel. Those boys did have ingenuity and ambition, for not long afterward didnit they present a musical program after school for the athletic injury fund? We don't remember much about it now, except that we really could recognize the melodies, which was more than we had hoped. The Madden Story-Telling Contest brought Betty Dunham, Dorothy Noble, Char- lotte Seaver, and Margaret Southworth to the platform with a nice display of talent. Bob Carson, Alfred Bedingfield, Eric Hammerstrom, and Walt Wines responded to the call of the Van Neste Rhetoricals. Lucy Riddleberger, Louis Profumo, George Murray, and the Gidneys participated in the annual Dramatic Club presentation which was Shaw's Arms and the Man. Mr. Cook, in tails, led out his band and orchestra in a very successful concert. Miss Waller and her warblers added an artistic evening to the spring calendar. In the athletic world, Bub Stewart shone for track, and Reinhold Lynen, Ray- mond Antignat, Richard Piper, jack Hughes, and Robert Zeiller offered for- midable competition on the tennis courts. It was learned from james Gidney that there was a Student Council whose senior members were: Corinne Stewart, Herman Stewart, Alfred Bedingfield, and, of course, the other Gidney, Dean. As the printer stands waiting impatiently for this effusion, there remain many songs to be sung. There are events to come which we know not of, but can pretend by the hammering in the chapel, and the extra executive meetings, in which Alfred Bedingfield, Edith Steves, Virginia Rich, and Arthur Halsted make important notes on Miss Knox's remarks. They say that the apron planned for the stage will accommodate the additional hundred of the class on that night that Dr. Butzer will deliver the baccalaureate sermon, Amidst a sea of final exams and heat waves and white fluffy dresses we shall find ourselves graduated. And then, to show that we truly learned our lessons once or twice, we'll shout the old class song, To sleep, to sleep, while on- ward rolls the summer toward the awful and ominous spectre of college. Marilynn Martin Page Sixty-five THE ARROW Faculty Miss Ruby jane Abbott Mechanics Institute, Rochester, N. Y. B. A. Miss Estrid Alquist Conectinut B. A- Mrs. Gertrude Anderson Wellesley B. A. Columbia University M. A Miss Carolyn Bailey Mansheld Teachers College New York School Fine and Applied Art Mr. Rodney Bartlett Ithaca College Miss Dorothy Bechert Boston University B. S.g M. A. Miss Fannie L- Bell Columbia University M. A. Keuka B. A- Mr. Carroll E. Benedict Union B. S. Mr. Clifford Berg Buffalo State Teachers College Miss Ann G. Brewster Syracuse Ph. B. Mr. Ellis D. Brown Hamilton B. A. Columbia University M. A. Miss Frances Bushell New York State Teachers College B. A. New York State Library School Mr. john H. Camblin Teachers College B. S. Mechanics Institute of Rochester Page Sixty-six Mr. Donald Cook Mr. J. Paul Darby Miss Matilda Doerken Miss Marion Eatin Mr. Henry Albert Gerfin Miss Erastine Gilmore Miss Faith Goddard Miss Elizabeth Goodale Mr. Newell C. Guillan Miss Gertrude E. Joslin Mr. George A. F. Hay Mr. Edwin L. Kneeland Miss Lois B. .Knox Miss jane Leffingwell Miss Esther Manson Miss Evelyn Noble Mr. James A. Oring Miss julia Plumb Mr. Glenn H. Pofhnberger Miss Nell E. Powell Miss Helen E. Pye Miss Millie Rabe Mr. Eugene Raftensperger Mr. Howard G. Richardson Miss Mabel E. Rowe Miss Elizabeth M. Sellier Mr. john T. Stratton Miss Florence Waller Miss Alice Wharton Mr. Victor F. White THE ARROW New York University Amherst Elmira University of Maine Syracuse University Upsala College Rhode Island Normal Ohio Wesleyan Framingham University of Vermont Colgate Mount Holyoke Colorado State Teachers College A. B.g M. A University of Maine Columbia Universitv New York State College for Teachers B. A Columbia Universitv Wellesley University of Dijon, France Boston University Columbia University Temple University Buffalo State Teachers College Wellesley Gettysburg University of Kentuckv Elmira College New York University Albright College Columbia University Colgate University of Chicago Oswego State Normal Colgate New York University Wellesley Columbia University Rutgers Yale University of Paris B. A. B. A. A. B. M. A. B. A B. A B. A. B. S. B. A. B. A. B. A. M. A. M. A. B. A. B. S. M. A. B. A. B. A. B. A. B. A.g M. A. B. S B. S. A. B. M. A. B. S. Ph. B B. S. B. S. B. A. M. A. A. B Page Sixty-seven THE ARROW Arrow Staff UNDER the able guidance of Lucy Riddleberger as editor-in-chief, the Arrow has concluded a successful year. As in the previous years, there were the Autumn and Christmas num- bers. Our third issue was the timely Depression Issue produced solely by the staff in an effort to ridicule the depression. The literary editor, Edith Burns, with the assistance of Barbara Burchsted, Ann Easton, james Gidney, Alfred Bedingfield, and Dora Cook among the seniors, and Mr. Darby's judgement, successfully maintained a high litereary standard. Veronica Hanlon and Marilyn Martin took charge of the Exchange and Book and Stage departments. The managing editor, Lloyd Rees, con- trolled things efficiently. The columnist was Walter Wines and the art editors, Marshall Thompson and Beatrice Dohrman. The business end was supervised by George Murray, William Korn, with Robert Brenner for an assistant, conducted the advertising. With the closing school year of 1952, the Arrow adds another year of achievement to its past record. Page Sixty-eight THE ARROW Student Council THE Student Council has covered a broader field of student activity this year than ever before. The first contribution was in selling over three hundred dollars worth of memberships to help the Athletic Association. When conditions in the cafeteria were becoming unmanageable the council brought the viewpoint of the students to the attention of the faculty with gratifying results. The outstanding accomplishment of the year was the contribution of about two hundred dollars of relief money to the Social Service. The plan was suggested by joe Turpak of the junior Class. The council has been handicapped by a debt to the Senior Class. By the end of the year it is certain of acquitting itself of this responsibility. The senior members were: President James Gidney, Vice-President Corinne Stewart, Dean Gidney, Herman Stewart, and Alfred Bedingfield. Page Sixty-'nine THE ARROW Football Team T HE Ridgewood Football Team had a very successful season under the supervision of Coach Stratton and his assistants, Coaches Poflinberger and Richardson. They defeated Cliffside, Englewood, and Hackensack, lost to Leonia and to Ridgeheld Park, and tied Clifton, Eastside, Paterson, and Rutherford. For eighteen years the Rutherford team has been a constant winner over Ridgewood. This year, the two teams met and played to a scoreless tie. It was a great game, both in offense and defense. The players who made good on the varsity team are: Paul Arrigoni, Milt Banta, Bob Basset, Herbert Buzzard, Charles Carter, Irvin Crowell, Bob Don, Louis Ferraro, Elmer Greenlaw, Frank Hesse, Henry Louderman, john Orr, and Herbert Rader. The Hi-Y established an award this year for all-round sportsmanship among the football men, on the field and in outside activity. Frank Hesse won the honor this year. Page Seventy THE ARROW Basketball THIS year the Basketball Team was very fortunate in having a new gym- nasium to work in. The team also came out on the Hoof with new uniforms. The following boys, under Coach jim Oring, participated in the majority of the Varsity games: Danny Pitot, Herb Schoof, Bill Ehrichs, jack Epple, Dave McDonald, Eddie Underhill, Walt Powers, Howie Polhemus, and Bob Don. Jack Whittemore was the manager. A captain was appointed by the coach before each game and Danny Pitot was elected honorary captain at the end of the season. Next year Charlievwyant and Bill Bigelow will be co-managers of the team. Although Oring will lose a number of Varsity men at graduation, he will have good material from this year's second team to develop a strong quintet next season. Page Seventy-one THE A12l20W Baseball THE 1932 edition of R. H. S. baseball team has thus far been rather un- fortunate. We have won four games and lost five, but of these five three have been due to poor luck. We have won comfortable leads, booted the ball, juggled it, and dropped it at most inopportune moments. The season opened with a bang, Ridgewood winning over Leonia and Westwood by comfortable margins. Since then our fortunes have gradually dwindled, and with them hopes of the league championship. Nevertheless, batting strength has not been lacking, as proven by the production of lifty- eight runs in nine games. In addition we have a battery worthy of any in the state, in Epple and Offringa, a very competent coach, and many other good ball players. However, that extra dash , the art of clicking , or whatever you may choose to call it, has not been consistently with us. At any rate the team is always in there trying, and like Hack VC'ilson, goes down swinging . Very few members will be lost at graduation, so although we don't have the best of success in 1952, we will in 1933, Page Seventy-two THE ARROW Track Team ' I 'HE Ridgewood Track Team can again be accredited with a successful season for 1932. Coach Kneeland has one of the best sets of track and field men in this section, and their fine work is a tribute to him. They started off on the right foot when they took Cliffside over in the first meet, 74-39. The next week the alumni furnished some strong competition in a practice meet, which they won. Ridgewood's arch rival, Rutherford, journeyed here to be overpowered in a league meet. The mile relay team made a fine showing in Philadelphia by placing third in their event. Hackensack, whom we have defeated regularly for the past decade, upset the Maroon in a closely contested affair. Following this came the Northern New jersey League Championship Meet which Hackensack was confident of winning, but was surprised by the score of, Ridgewood MM, Hackensack 56. The outstanding seniors this year were Stewart in the sprints, Lippincott and Schroeder in the hurdles, and Anderson in the 4-10. The distance mer1 are Nichols and Witherill, while McDonald and Alther handle the high jump, and Gesner is the best pole-vaulter. Stewart was elected honorary captain While Kipp was manager. Page Seventy-three T H E All iz o w Cross Country DUE to the late opening of school last fall the Cross Country Team's schedule was shortened considerably. Mr. Kneeland coached the team as usual and showed what can really be done with a few partisan enthusiasts. The first meet was an invitation meet at Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute at Troy, New York. There were thirty-eight schools entered and Ridgewood placed twelfth. The second meet was with Monticello, N. Y. High School, at home, and staged between the halves of a Saturday football game. This was the only defeat Ridgewood suffered during the season. The third meet found the boys at Rutherford whom they triumphed over with ease, taking most of the first five places. At an invitation meet at Van Cortlandt Park, Ridgewood took eight place with some twenty odd schools competing, and two hundred and twenty-five contestants. In the middle of November Garfield runners were our guests but they came in vain. The last meet was with Eastside, Paterson, on the home course and Ridgewood came in to take the first five places thus making a perfect score. It was a fitting end for such a season. Next year it is hoped that there will be a larger group out for this sport. It develops invaluable material, in all events fwith the exception of sprints perhapsj, for track in the spring. ATHLETIC ADVISORY BOARD Page Seventy-four THE ARROW Soccer Team THIS year Ridgewood High has had good reason to be proud of her soccer ' team. For three months, these soccer booters have worked hard and hung up one of the best records of any major sport activity this year. Ridgewood finished second in our league, and won six games, tied two, and lost three, thus bettering the former standing. Captain Dean Gidney led the team on all these occasions and also most competently coached the squad up to the first game, when Coach Hoshall volunteered his services. Under his skilled instruction, the team improved steadily and obtained its excellent record. Ken Calkoen, the league's high scorer, jack Hughes, and jim Gidney perhaps shared the stellar honors, along with Captain Gidney. The other lucky letter-men among the seniors were Paul Calvet, Norman Callahan, Arthur Blanford, jack Whittemore, joe Downs, John jasper, and Ray Antignat. At the season's close, Coach Hoshall was presented with a gold soccer ball and Captain Gidney with a real soccer ball. joe Martin was elected next year's captain. Page Seventy-five THE ARROW JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Page Seventy-six CHEER LEADERS THE ARROW HI-Y GIRLS' CLUB Page Seventy-seven THE ARROW P--1 -K Boys' Rifle Club THE season of 1931-'52 was one of the most successful seasons the Rifle Club has had in a long time. The team competed in seventeen prone matches of which it lost only six. This is excellent considering that the league of which it is a member, is composed of the best teams in the country. Toward the end of the season the shoulder to shoulder matches began in which Ridgewood met and defeated Dumont, Eastside Paterson, Tenafly, Teaneck, and Boston. In the scholastic matches the club lost only to Poly Prep. of Brooklyn, and to the Men's Riflle Club and the American Legion of Ridgewood. The Willard Trophy Match has yet to be shot, It is sponsored by Dr. Harry S. Willard in order to determine the best four-position shot in the high school. Eveyone is eagerly anticipating the awarding of the prize, as it is a much-coveted honor among the members of the club. Page S eventy-eight THE ARROW Girls' Rifle Club ' I 'HE Senior Girls' Rifle Club has been very active this year. The scores showed improvement in last year's members. Those who were new to shooting also improved as the year went on. The Ridgewood Club enjoyed their meet with Teaneck, the first they had participated in. The following girls competed: Frieda Young, Doris Stone, Majorie Darken, and Catherine Tracy. The Ridgewood girls won the victory with a score of 541 to493. Frieda Young proved to be the best shot, Catherine Tracy second, Majorie Darken third, and Doris Stone fourth. Mildred Stadelman served as Manager, Catherine Tracy as assistant manager, and Miss Goddard as faculty adviser. Page Seventy-nine THE ARROW Pl -K Boys' Tennis Team A WITH four lettermen back from last year, the tennis team is looking for- ward to retaining its High School, State Championship Crown of the preceding year and its record of one defeat in two seasons of competition. Its members are: Captain Ray Antignat, Richard Piper, Rheinhold Lynen, jack Hughes, and Bob Zeiller, ranking in the order named. Due to lack of practice, the team lost a close opening match to Peddie Preparatory School 2-3, but has since come back to overwhelm Hackensack 5-0. The team is to play twelve othermatches against the strongest in the state. Some of the players are expected to do well in the Bergen County Cham- pionship which will occur this spring, and of which Ray Antignat was runner- up last season. They will also compete in tournaments this summer. Because the High School has no courts, the team practices and plays at the local tennis clubs. Mr. Gerfin is the faculty adviser of this sport. Page Eighty THE ARROW Girls' Tennis Team ALTHOUGH the Girls' Tennis Team was made up this year of entirely new members, the girls of Westheld, Hackensack, and Rutherford round that they were not playing against four rookies The first singles were ably played by Eleanor Thompsong and the second by Helene Lynen, and the doubles by Mildred Stadelman and Auretta Hanson. Miss joslin's spirited coaching added much to the skill of the team and the business was well enacted by Doris Berry in the capacity of manager. Ridgewood has been invited to compete in the New jersey State Champion- ship Tournament for Girls for the Anne Cumming Memorial Cup at Westheld, Here's hoping. Page E ighty-one THE ARROW Dramatic Club THE Dramatic Club this year has been very successful under the able super- vision of Miss Esther Manson, coach and adviser, and of its officers: Pres- ident, George Murray, Vice-President, Lucy Riddleberger, Secretary, Ann Price, and Treasurer, jean Sawyer. It has been the custom to present three chapel plays yearly to create an interest in drama and to develop the talent of its members. The first of these, entitled The Confessional, was presented by Richard Tennant, Betty Alla- bough, Mary Long, jim Gidney, Walther Friedlaender, and jean Sawyer. So's Your Old Antique was a comedy played by Mary Louise Walton, Lyman Hill, Henry Ackerman, and Richard Higgins. The last offering was God Winks, cleverly done by Walter Wines, Betty Friemel, Betty Ockford, and Lloyd Rees. The school judged this play the best play of the year and Walter Wines best actor. Richard Tennant was acclaimed the most talented actor in the series by the judges' vote, and james Gidney and Walter Wines received honorable mention. The year was brought to a close with a good 'representation of club members in the school's presentation of Arms and the Man . Page Eighty-two T H E A ra 12 o w Arms and the Man T HE try-outs for the major production of the year were held the first week in February and were open to the entire school. The play chosen was George Bernard Shaw's brilliant comedy, Arms and the Man, dealing with the falsity of war's heroics. . A large number of people tried out and it must have been an extremely difficult task for the judges to decide on the characters. After much controversy, the following cast was selected: Raina, the young, charming, beautiful heroine ..... .......... A nn S. PriC6 Louka, Raina's fiery-tempered, high-minded maid ....... Mary Louise Wfalton Catherine, the proud Bulgarian mother of Raina .....,.... Lucy Riddleberger Bluntschli, the professional chocolate soldier .... .... R ichard Tennant Serguis, a handsome, swaggering soldier .... .... - George Murray Major Petkotf, husband to Catherine ......... ---louis Profumo, Jr. Nicola, a faithful servant with a good head ................. james Gidney Three handsome soldiers-- --Dean Gidney, Arthur Halstead, Charles Carter The play was presented on March 18th and 19th after hve weeks of rehearsal. The costumes, which came from Brooks, fitted both the parts and the people who were enacting them. A great deal of credit is due Miss Man- son who gave her time and energy in directing the play. The cast enjoyed working with her immensely. Page Eighty-three THE ARROW Orchestra 'UNDER the very capable direction of Mr. Cook the orchestra has passed a successful year. They assisted this year in the Armistice and Thanks- giving programs, the dedicatory service of the junior High School building, the Christmas program, the school play, Arms and the Man, and Commence- ment. The string ensemble, organized by Mr. Cook, played for the Harrison Ave-- nue Parent-Teachers, Association, the Girls' Style Show, the Christmas pro- gram, 'lThe Nut Farmf' and the Easter program. The orchestra was represented in the New Jersey State Orchestra by Frank Grey, who played the trumpet, and Kathryn Kerner, who played the Hrst violin. The senior members of the orchestra included: Strings, Ruth Hayes, Gertrude Hendrickson, joe Peraino, Herbert Verhulst, trombone, Fred Root, trumpet, Frank Grey, Everett Alther, William Crokerg tympany and percus- sion, Franklin Reinauer and Walter Wines, piano, Janet Howe, Winifred Hobbs. We hope that the good work done this year will be an inspiration to next year's organization. Page Eighty-four THE ARROW Band THE Band had one of its biggest and best years since its organization. Mr. Cook demonstrated for the third time that he was capable of developing a good band in our High School. In addition to playing at the football games, the band was seen and heard in the joint band and orchestra concert and marched down Ridgewood Avenue with Governor Moore to open the new Warner theatre. The band was the hardest hit of all organizations by this year's graduat- ing class, The members to graduate are: Frank Grey, Everett Alther, William Croker, and William Roberts who played trumpetsg Robert Nichols and Frank Hesse who played clarinetsg Fred Root and Norman Callaghan, bassesg john Splitstone, baritoneg Alan Cannon, Eric Hammarstrom, Franklin Reinauer, and Walter Wines who upheld the drum section. Page Eighty-five THE ARROW Boys' Glee Club OUR experienced pilot had our plane ready and the course mapped out with her co-pilots, Winnie Hobbs and Ralph Stoughton, helping to navigate the ship. Through unavoidable delay we started behind schedule time but soon the plane was swiftly winging our forty some odd passengers to our first landing field. A long drive through the clouds to Ridgewood's High School, where a fine Christmas program was enjoyed by all. After a rest an atmosphere of high hopes once again forced our plane to record alti- tudes. On the way a bit of squally weather enveloped us, making several occupants a little discouraged and desirous of landing, but the sun pushed these clouds away with his big, round shoulder and everybody enjoyed high spirits once more. Circling over our last landing field, Miss Waller delicate- ly worked the plane down to an excellent three-point landing at the Spring Concert. On climbing out more than a few were heard to praise the trip. Page Eighty-six THE ARROW Girls' Glee Club T HE Girls' Glee Club, consisting of about seventy girls, can justly be proud of its accomplishments during 1931-'32, Under the leadership of Miss Florence Waller it has met every week for practice, the results of which have been outstanding. The chief aim of this or anization was to incor orate beautiful tone , . . 3 . P . . quality and expression into the selections, and thus present to its audiences singing which was worthy of a more experienced group of choristers. Its first public appearance came early in the year when a musical program was presented in chapel. As is customary, the Christmas chapel program consisted mainly of music. The carols proved very effective. One of the high lights was the rendition of The Carol of the Russian Childrenf, by the Girls' Glee Club. The culmination of all the club's achievements came in the Spring Festi- val, a concert given by the vocal organizations. In this program, on May 20, the combined Glee Clubs gave Ridgewood an opportunity to enjoy their artistic singing. Page Eighty-seven THE ARROW Special Mixed Choir ANEW addition to the Music Department of Ridgewood High School was the Special Mixed Choir. It contained the best forty voices from the two Glee Clubs. Rehearsals were conducted each week, and the choir's premier appearance was in the Armistice Day program, sponsored by the churches of Ridgewood. It also contributed the music for the Thanksgiving chapel exercises. l With Miss Waller directing, the choir gave two public performances in December. Christmas carols were sung for the members of Mr. Kneeland's Night School. The vestments and the excellent singing of Christmas selec- tions lent a great deal to the holiday spirit. A new program was inaugurated at Easter, when the choir performed creditably. Likewise, at the Spring Festival in May, it lent a professional air to the singing. The choir has proved itself worthy of many more birthdays. Page Eighty-eight THE ARROW .Radio Club THE Radio Club of Ridgewood High School is a meeting place for the 4 lovers of wireless communication. The club has eight licensed operators, amateurs. The amateur as a citizen speaksa language of his own, builds transmittersand receivers from junk and hay wire, communicates across thou- sands of miles and makes friends in the many countries of the world. He serves the nation in time of war as a radio operator, in times of peace as a carrier of messages, and is a communication link in times of disaster and storms. ' The club gives codepractice to those seeking a part in this fascinating game. There is a transmitter in the school with which the members talk or gossip with many experimenters. ' The officers for this year were: President, William Pultzg Vice-President, Wallace Miller 5 and Secretary and Treasurer, Frank Brower. The club had fifteen members this year. Its achievement since the beginning is the produc- tion of ten licensed amateurs. Page Eighty-nine THE ARROW Library Club THE Library Club is now established in its new home, the Sara M. Hughes Memorial Library. Under the capable leadership of Eileen Costa, Presi- dent, and Betty Rice, Secretary, the club had a most successful year, growing from a membership of twelve to nineteen. A new system of admitting can- didates to membership was adopted by the club. Applications must be sub- mitted to a committee. During the spring months the club has been conducting a series of cake and candy sales to help buy a picture for the library. Among the social activities of the club the trip to Bear Mountain for ice skating was one of the most outstanding. The senior members are: Betty Rice, Ruth Douglass, Howard Polhemus, Richard Knowles, Phyllis Rothrock, Gandolph Vivian, and Kathleen Birtwell. Page Ninety THE A1212 OW We have a Ball, We have a Barber, We have a Berry, We have a Croker, We have a Field, We have a Sawyer, We have a De Leon, We have a Korn, Cook, We have a Stokes, Burns, We have a Kornet, We have a Lamb, We have a Hilt, We have a Lyon, We have an Ohmer, We have a Parker, We have a Parrish and a Parsons, We have a Pultz. We have a Wolf, We have a Rochow, We have a Root, We have a Ryer, We have a Sandman, We have a Seller, We have a Simmons, We have a Terry, We have a Willis, We have our Betts, We have our Downs, We have our Lammens, We have our Nichols, We' have our Rich, We have our Young, Misfits of '32 but no but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but but HO HO HO I'1O HO HO IIO HO I10 HO DO HO HC IIO 110 I'1O IIO HO HO I10 HO I'1O I1O IIO I'1O HO 1'1O I'lO HO I'1O And though we have an Anderson, Hanson, johnson, Mason, Masterson, Peterson, Richardson, and Thompson we have no Daughter. Bat Scissors Razz Frog Flanders Wood Fountain Meal Music Chops Sword Tiger Khayyam Pen Church Heart Door Ha-Chow Beer Bread Sleep Salt Mattress Cloth Knight Money Ups juice Sense Poor Aged Waller Wine: Page Ninety-one THE ARROW ARCHERY CLUB Page Ninety-two GIRLS' HOCKEY TEAM T 11 15 A I2 I2 o w Acknowledgments The ARROW Staff wishes to express its appreciation to the following: MR. DARBY, whore conflant ejortr and encourage- nzent have won him our Jincere rerpeci and ad- miration. Miss ROWE ana' MR. CAMBLIN, who have ro effi- cienzly fonafueted the ar! and husinexs afepartmenlf. Miss PYE, whose flames typewrote the entire annual. MR. RAYMOND DWYER of zhe Federal P1-inring Company.. , , AL JIAN ,STUDIO for photography. We are' grateful to these and to innumerable 'others for their willing cooperation. Page Ninety-three RIDGEWOOD SECRETARIAL SCHOOL Amo KNOWN AS W'llle I1 iEBne 1oo North Maple Avenue Ridgewood, N. 1 I Teaches Quickly and Well All Subjects that go with a Good Secretarial or Business Education and Helps Graduates to Obtain Positions UNPREPAREDNESS FOR BUSINESS RISKS FAILURE PREPARE NOW! PREPARE PROPERLY! PREPARATION GUARANTEES DESERVED SUCCESS PREPARE VVELL! PREPARE AT THIS SCHOOL EVERYTHING FOR TENNIS RACKETS FROM 352.00 UP. -N A wide variety of models to select from. if 1-I-1-I-1-Iii I 5 Racket Covers, Presses, Marking Tapes, Y TlT+T+T+1+1+1g-. Nets, Reels. Spalding, Wright 8: Ditson, Tilliilllftil and Penn. Balls 3 for 31.00 ' ' V TENNIS SHOES, DUCK TROUSERS, K ' 1: l . i N International and Champion ll +' 'MQ SPECIAL Famous Rackets, open and L S closed Throat Models, Com- li plete with Cover and Press 1. 35.95 GOLF GOOD QUALITY BAG WITH 4 SPALDING CLUBS ------ S5-95 MATCHED SET-5 SPALDING IRONS -------..-'-----' S10-00 BOBBY JONES M A T G H E D SETS ................... 350.00 is E? Y SPORTOCASIN AND B A s S LE S I ' . . . . - 33. +:-'.g.4-. :g:g:-:1:-:-.-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:11:35gtg:pi:rf:g1:rg:g:gl353:55-:1:::':f:f:Q:215:15:13 .,., -,', 3 .5-:-:Ez SWEAT ERS ............ 31.98 1 P X, '-- feral iG3g3.1g-gQ.ry,- ,.-r 1 , 5- 2 Y Y, -V OLDTOWN CANOES, MOTOR BOATS, ROW BOATS. CAR- LOAD TO SELECT FROM- JOHNSON AND EVINRUDE MOTORS JANTZEN AND SPALDING BATHING SUITS ALL THE NEW MODELS 53.45 up ' ' :sux r a STAY-A-FLOTES b..,i....2,'I'.m.'2E RUBBER CAPS SLIPPERS BAGS Th ch . B. AU GHA EVERYTHING IN SPORTING GOODS 128 BROADWAY PATERSON, N. J. JANTZEN and SPALDING BATHING SUITS 54.50 up Sleeveless Sweaters ..., 352.50 Tennis Rackets ..... 351.95 up White Ducks .... -- 1.95 Linen Knickers .... 2.95 up Tennis Oxfords s...... 1.50 Slacks ...... .... 3 .50 pr. E. W. COBB 53 E. RIDGEWOOD AVE. Tel. RIdgewood 6f1450 RIDGEWOOD, N. J. RIDGEWOOD'S MUSIC STORE MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS OF EVERY KIND Sheet Music - Instruction Books - High Grade Strings and Accessories - Expert Repairing Done on Premises Instruction on all Instruments ,449 vicroiz , A RADIO sALEs maconns W W AND SERVICE Ridgewood Talking Machine Co. 103 EAST RIDGEWOOD AVENUE Tel. 64265 ' Open Evenings THE ALJIAN STUDIO PORTRAIT and COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS Frames-Standing Hand Carved Wood-Leather and Metal Any size wall frame made to order. QZDGRJ Kodaks-Cine Kodaks-Projectors-Stewart Warner Movie Cameras-Films Your Kodak snapshots will receive professional attention in our amateur finishing laboratories Qfmg-x9 In our blue printing department we are capable of handling your blue print requirements. Whether it is one yard or fifty yards long, our continuous blue print equipment will deliver same in one piece. THE ALJIAN STUDIO 15 W. RIDGEWOOD AVE. fflljian Bzzildingj Telephone Rldgewood 6-1000 EVERY FLOWER A FORGET f ME. f NOT 63 N. Van Dien Ave. fB1ock East of High Schoalj Ridgewood, N. I. Telephones ' Rldgewnod 6-4760 6-4761 Distinctive Floral Creations Fresh Cut Flowers from Our Greenhouses SHerwood 2f0O64 FEDERAL PRINTING CO. PUBLICATION and CQMMERCIAL WORK 200 ELLISON STREET Near Public Service PATERSON, N. BRECI-IIN'S - One of New Iersey's Best Drug Stores - Q WILSEY SQUARE RIDGEWOOD SALEMY AND SON 125 EAST RIDGEWOOD AVE. RIDGEWOOD, N. J. Telephone Rldgewood 60.080 Z. SALEMY WM. SALEMY Ladies' Underwear Decorating Made to Measure Curtains, Draperies, Bedspreads Making' Life Sweeter.-The wags are telling it at Harry Lauder's expense, but I wager a pretzel he hadn't a thing to do with it. At any rate, the story goes that Harry was play- ing golf one bitter cold day. At the end of the round he slipped something into the caddie's hand and said kindly, That's for a glass of hot whisky, my man. The caddie opened his hand and discovered a lump of sugar!-New York Morning Telegraph. JERRY'S SEA FOOD ! Ph Rld 6,1 0 MARKET one gewood 8 6 Dealer in Sea Food Only W 32 Prospect St., Ridgewood, N. J. EMIL MACH Tel. Rldgewood 6f5873 WATCHMAKER AND OUR MOTTO: Quality and Sewicc Oyster R In Season JEWELER Oysters and Clams on the Half Shell Clhnyggfiffl Zlefofiifal Vogue Building We Deliver Twice Daily 12 Chestnut St., Ridgewood, N. 1 Open Evenings Phone RIdgewood 64292 THE RIDGEWOOD TAVERN Noted For Its Home Cooking SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER 166 - 168 East Ridgewood Ave. Ridgewood, N. LEONARD The Sanitary Barber Shop 35 Prospect Street Our Specialty is Ladies' and Men's Hair Cutting Yes, we cut children's hair, too Quick-Stepping with Cupid.- John- Yes, I had a little balance in the bank, but 1 got engaged two months ago, and now- J aan- Ah, love makes the world go round. John- Yes, but I didn't think it would go round so .fast as to make me lose my balance. - Ch7'ist1h1,1L Science Monitor. EAGLE PHOTO ENGRAVING COMPANY INCORPORATED 318 WEST 39TH STREET NEW YORK CITY Phone Rldgewood 6f0083 YOUNG 86 BORTIC COAL CO. Lehigh - Pittson - C O A I.. - CANNEL COAL FOR FIREPLACE USE 9 Franklin Avenue 139 Franklin Avenue Sales Office, Coal Yard Opposite Erie Station The Park Restaurant and Confectionery A good place to eat all ways WM. F. BRUSSEN, Prop. SUBURBAN RADIO SERVICE 49 Hudson Street R1 ew I N. J. Ridgewood New jersey T l. 6-3434 Phone 6fl287 8 Marked Antipathy I On one of the billboards featur- ing an advertisement for those BOOT SHOP famous brothers' cough drops, a l d : T k t b d fviitlmalyofii? S a e one 0 e New Low Prices on all Footwear Under which some clown has added: I wouldnt sleep with THE WALK'OVER STORE either of themg -Walter Winchell in the Daily Mirror. 44 E. Ridgewood Avenue School of Nursing HACKENSACK HOSPITAL Hackensack, N. Three year course offered to High School Graduates. School is approved by both New York and New Jersey and is recognized in all other states. Buildings beautifully located on Hackensack Heights. Nurses residence comfortable and homelike. Classes enter February and September. Write for booklet. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, New York A scHooL or ENGINEERING AND SCIENCE THE Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute was established at Troy, New York, in 1824, and is the oldest school of engineering and science in the United States. Students have come to it from all of the states and territories of the Union and from thirtyfnine foreign counries. At the present time, there are more than 1600 students enrolled at the school. Four year courses leading to degrees are oifered, in Civil, Mechanical, Electrical, and Chemical Engineering, in Architecture, and in Business Administration, Physics, Chemistry, and Biology. Graduates of the enginf eering courses are prepared to take up work in any branch of engineer- ing. Graduates of the course in Architecture are prepared to practice their profession in any of its branches. Graduates of the course in Busif ness Administration are prepared for careers in business or for the study of law. Graduates of the courses in Physics and Chemistry are fitted for research and teaching in these fields, as well as for practice in many branches of applied science. The course in Biology prepares for research and teaching, for work in sanitary engineering and public health, and for the study of medicine and dentistry. Graduates of any of the above courses may continue their work in the Graduate Sch-ool of the Institute. The Master's Degree is conferred upon the satisfactory completion of one year's work and the Doctor's Degree for three year's work. The method of instruction is unique and very thorough, and in all departments the laboratory equipment is unusually complete. An interesting pamphlet entitled Life at Rensselaer, also catalogue and other illustrated bulletins may be obtained by applying to the Regis- trar, Room OOS, Pittsburgh Building. Uhr iliihgewnnh News PUBLISHED THURSDAY AT NOON Publishers of Glen Rock Record, Midland Park Post and Allendale Argus Do You Get the Sunday News Every Sunday Morning? 30 Oak Street Ridgewood, N. Telephones Rldgewood 6f1900, 6-1901 Put the Lid On.- Father, did Edison make the first talking- machine 7 No, my son, God made the first talking-machine, but Edison made the first one that could be cut off, -Wataugom. It has been proved that a herring traveled from New York to Liver- pool. Goldfish, of course, think nothing of going right around the globe. -Humorist. The Alling- Waters Rubber Co. SPORTING GOODS BASEBALL, TENNIS, AND GOLF EQUIPMENT FISHING TACKLLE Suede Jackets and Vests Sweaters 131 MAIN STREET PATERSON, N. J. BEACH TOGS FOR JUNIORS FOR GIRLS- Overalls 51.50-Gay Pajamas 32.95-Striped Shirts 351.50 with slacks in color or white 51.50-and Bathing Suits 33.95 topped off with a hugh straw hat at 5151.95 FOR BOYS- Slacks in white and navy 31.50-Linen Knickers in crash 31.00-Grey 31.75-and White 31.00 and 351.95-Sport Shirts 2161.00-and Polo Shirts with zip fronts 51.50. LOLITA MERRIHEW INC. NO. 15 OAK STREET Ridgewood, New Jersey A ' T' R ' Birthday and Wedding Cakes Ccessones Hes epam RIDGEWOOD CYCLE ELITE PASTRY SHOP COMPANY French Chocolate and 144 East Ridgewood Avenue Tea Cakes Iver Johnson, Columbia, Pierce 5 S. Broad Street BICYCLES Ridgewood New jersey Model Airplane Supplies Tel' 64130 Phone 6-2553 F, C. Okerlund I New Racket on Dad.- Bobby fSh01't Of TYIOHSYJ- HI ,salfv dad, I All Explained.-Slow Waiter fin have you any Work youd llke me 1 London restaurantj- Your coffee, to do? Father ftaken by surprisej- Why-no-but--er-- Bobby- Then would you like to put me on the dole? -Tatlefr sir 5 it's special from South Amer- ica, sir. Diner fsarcasticallyj- Oh, so that's where you've been? -Punch THE VOGUE East Ridgewood Ave., at Chestnut Street WOMENS' AND CHILDREN'S WEARING APPAREI Representing Standard Brands of Merchandise Gold Stripe and Vogue Hose Fownes and Adler Gloves - Sport and Dress Coats Phone 614069 Ridgewood, N. J. AFTER GRADUATION WHY NOT make recreation your vocationg enjoy your work and give pleasure to othersg be healthy and happy and teach others to be the same? Such is the life of a teacher of physical education. SAVAGE SCHOOL For Physical 'Education Established 1890 A Teacher Training School which prepares men and women to become teachers, directors, and supervisors of health and physical education in schools, colleges, playgrounds, clubs, private instia tutions, and industrial organizations. . The curriculum of the three year course in- cludes practical instruction in all forms .of ath- letics, gymnastics, games, dancing, swimming drarnatics, and the likeg also the essential courses in education, psychology, anatomy, physiology, hygiene, and others, thoroughly covering .the theory and practice of health and physical education. AN EXCEPTIONALLY STRONG FACULTY CATALOGUE UPON REQUEST Increasing demand for teachers. Salaries high- er than for grade teaching. Employment bureau for students and graduates. REGISTER NOW FOR CLASS ENTERING ON SEPTEMBER 19th, 1932 SAVAGE SCHOOL 308 West Fifty-ninth Street New York City The Money you spend on Gifts should be spent on permanent gifts. Watches and Jewelry retain a far greater intrinsic value through the years than any other gift. Mark this graduation with a gift WEBER The Watch Man Jeweler dz Optometrist Low prices for honest merchandise that lasts. AN ATTRACTIVE SHOP Always well stocked with useful and novel gifts and greeting cards to meet your requirements. LITTLE GREY GIFT SHOP 21 Oak St. Ridgewood l 'tWhat was the tax at the gar- bage-man's ball? Ten scents a dance. -Reserve Red Cat. One Thing Needful.-Butcher- Round Stea ? Bride- T e shape d0esn't inter- est me, so long as it's tender. - Southern Farmer THE RIDGEWOOD LINEN SHOP 6 W. Ridgewood Avenue Linens Lingerie Handkerchiefs French Novelties Laces Infants' Wear MONOGRAMMING TO ORDER The Ridgewood Department Store-84 E. Ridgewood Ave. HOOD - STEVENS, Inc. RIDGEWOOD'S MOST PROGRESSIVE STORE Complete line of Dry Goods-Notions of Every Description Extensive line of Wearing Apparel for Men, Women and Children Telephone 6f3 110 Helen E. Upham HELEN ELIZABETH F ROCKS 1 South Broad Street Ridgewood, New jersey THE RIDGEWOOD HERALD PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS Herald Building Broad and Hudson St. Telephones: 6-2000-6-2001 33.00 Per Year Delivered the day it is issued jOSEPH'S BEAUTY SALON Experienced Beauticiam Permanent Waving-Facials Finger Waving-Manicures All treatments at reasonable prices 49 East Ridgewood Avenue Tel. RI. 6-4616 ei GIRLS CLUB Y. W. C. A. SOPH.-JR,-SR. Friday Evening, 7:30-8:30 OUR PURPOSE To find and give the best Autographs ,-. S' E'?4 x , . .- ., .1 w Y' ..: M. w . I . K P N 'X 4 GPI ,fu 4 . P4 S- . . ...!.:-iw : .,.,.:,.:..' .xl ,ye ,- ' GQ 12? -1.'1 uv. 4 Y I Q x R . . 1 .r- f R . xg K x .4 -.nl J - ,V ' .- .. . ,M . M., .vu SJ , 4. . mx .M 1- S uw 'Q . . . P' X11 VW. X m 0. x.. HQ. ur. ..,-.5.i.i,,.. ...W . ., . ,.- ' ...,,., -- 1-,f'..1'2 . Q., . i .,,.. 4 ..,., , 1.I.. T . 1 1:-'fff 5 :.1' 'V 2 .-.-1-.1- ..f 4 4 . ..- ip- ' ' ' ..VE.1 5 ,. 3 ' 'YG ,. ?..1..y . 1. K. , 4 '.U... 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V- 'V-311. .'-3 gwfff ,gg ,Eg Q. ., VV , VV xVf'5Vf , V VV'-N I, I V, V 'Hwy .j-LF . 'V ' . V: ,J Rfk, Q . W, 'HV ,. .. ,V: V Spy. 'ef-lfi ?12 ,. V I ' 15 'ff ,,.:' 7 cV,' V' ' 5 J-pg'-A A , ', A 'V'f.:ff1.V ,,Vfff- . -V -V -. ,V V ,V V2 , ,. JV . ,V VN., , V. , V , I :'.'hQ:?: 2-V if- V V V7 f-rff4T'f .,V. ' QVHQ .Hi ,V'fff.-,,'-IH?-i-1. -' ,V ,f 5-P, .f F5 V 1V 1 xr.:V,34, V' . . - V ,Ax wig gf .jfv , 'Mfr Aff-'Hy , V ,,,.' -,VJ ,f - ,yy-A vw: 'V .- , f 'V ,mr1f' .xuix .Y ' 'rw 5 MV V-1, V ff 4161! Song of Summer Dis is gospel ioeatliah sho'- Hills is sawt 0' hazy. Mecldas level ez a flo' Callin' to ole lazy. Sky all white wif streaks 0' blue Sunshine sofly gleamin', D'ai1i't no wuk ltit's right to do, Notlii1i's 'right but areamiiii Breeze is blowiii' wif perfume, Jes' enough to tease you Hollyhoclcs is all in bloom, Smelliii' fu' to please you Go 'way, folks, and let me 'lone, Times is gettin' olearali - Summalus settiii' on de tk'o1ie, Au' I'm a-layin' weak huh! Paul Laurence Dunbar PAGE 2 JUNE 17, 1 932 V ii ' y SHELF y ' 'CYD r V IX n J Q 5 J l --- I ENTRANCE TO EAST ER N Eastern Jnnior High Schoot!Eastern J ifnior High! Eifer trite to thee wetlt be,worhing day by day! Loyal to thy oolors,the Maroon and the Gray, Rahlrahfrahl Rah!rah!rah! Eastern J anior High! JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 3 l l l i 3 MR, L.F.HIRE MR. J.C.COX DEDI CA TI ON These men hold a high place in our respect and affection. They lend to our myriad woes a sympa- thetic ear: they judge our disputes fairlyg they have for us always a word of wise counsel: they greet us each day with a cheery smile. It gives the Arrow Staff the greatest pleasure to dedicate this Arrow to our principal, Mr. Hire, and our assistant principal, Mr. Cox. PAGE 4V A JUNE 17,1932 THE ARROW STAFF Editor in - chief - Swanson Shields Printshop Foreman - Thomas McVay Claire Paulson Olaf Paulson Maxine Holmquist Donald Mann Marguerite Wilmot Evelyn Shields Rex Lamoureaux Edward Cook Sponsors - Mr. Schoenoff, Miss Abbott THE EDITOR OBSERVES The students of Eastern.and the faculty, regretfully watch the departure of the present 9A class. While at Eastern they have accomclished many worth while achievements, which have added much to our school. The 9A oflicers have rendered the duties of their respective positions eflicently and commendably. Other members of of the class-many,many others-have excelled in various lines ofthe endeavor. And of course we shall long remember those versatile athletes,Richard Yeager and Bill Boroska. All in all, the 9A class for June, 1932, will be long remembered in Eastern, and they carry with them our congratulations for past successes and best wishes for the future. Swanson Shields JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 5 THE NINE A COUNCIL THE MEMBERS Clifton Ashley Theodore Harrington Joe O'Connor Patricia Becker Lloyd Huntley Charles Oxley Elwyn Brown Ann Kastner Alberta Pape Roy Brown Dolly Latozas Florence Perna Alfred Dumigat Ada Lowrey Mary Perna Maxine Evans William McFarland Marysue Sculley Wayne Evans Frances Meyers Blanche Sitts Marcel Ferrand Robert Nelson Clarine Thomas Elegra Fraumann Ruth Newcornbe Harry Watkins Jesse Williams THE COUNCIL The 9A Council is composed of all the officers of the seven 9A homerooms. It forms the legislative body of the class. The council chose its own officers from its own membership, as follows: presi- dent,Lloyd Huntley: vice-president,Ann Kastnerg secretary,Florence Pernag treasurer,Charles Oxley. These four people came each from a different homeroom. The entire council was divided into four com- mittees with each council officer officiating as chairman of one com- mittee. The president was chairman of the 9A assembly committee: the vice-president,the gift committeegthe secretary,the 9A partygthe treasurer, Dress-up Day ,and the 9A movie. This plan of govern- ment has proven very satisfactory, and has many advantages over other plans that have been tried. r PAGE 6 Q'-1 JUNE 171932 Thelma Anderson James Arnold Patricia Becker Marie Boyd Sophia Bulas Naomi Byrne Donald Caswell Miriam Cox Chester Dixon Kenneth Esler Marcel Ferrand NINE A ONE CLASS ROLL Lois Goff Genevieve Heard Margaret Herron George Houstina Edith Hubbard Virginia Hughes Maisie Jackson Ronald Jackson Joseph Kantz Ann Kastner Ruth Ann Kleist William Kohler Alma Miller Ruth Newcombe Eulalia Smith Howard Smith Domth Stewart Ferrel gweazy Wayne Van Hook Helene White Dorothy Tinson Donald Tinson CLASS HISTORY In September,1929, forty five of us from various grade schoals, entered Eastern,and enrolleu in Mrs.Elliott's homeroom. There were six other groups entering at the same time. The average number of us who made the honor roll has been high, and our punctuality and attendance records excellent. Many of us have been oflicers in var- ious clubs, with very good work to our credit. During our stay here,we have given two assemblies. The first was while we were 7A's and was a Japanese play. The second occur- red this semester, and was acelebration of May Day. On this occasion Eve had a homeroomuorche stra ,consisting of a piano, violin, and ango. We have enjoyed ourselves very much during the past three years,and We regret exceedingly that the time has come when we must leave. JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 7 NINE A TWO CLASS ROLL Dolores Betts Gene Guellec Robert Nelson Harold Burdette Ralph Harrington Harold Odle Ruth Brown Gerald Hershberger Alberta Pape Caroline Cantor Ralph Holler Ruth Penman Henry Carr Kathleen Jeremy Paul Sage June Collier Donald Jockwig Eunice Sanders Grace Craig Teddy Lazarski Marysue Sculley William Craig' Lillian Lewer Arlene Seaman Alfred Dumagat Carrol Liddy Mildred Shuler Mildred Finkle Lova Lingle Harold Souther Wilfred Flynn Earl Long Fred Westscott Laura Goodrich Ardith Moyscs Edwin Willhite CLASS HISTORY As 7B's our membership included pupils from the various grade schools in and about Pontiacgbut now,as9A's we have representatives from all parts of the United States. We are happy to count among our members Alfred Dumagat,who came from the Philippine Islands two years ago to complete his education in America. We are proud of such people as Carrol Liddy, 1931 spelling champion of Pontiac: Alberta Pape,an all A studentgHarold Souther,a member of the Glee Club: Robert Nelson and Donald Jockvvig,Hi-Y members, and Ruth Brown, library assistant. Three of our girls are officers in the Big Sisters Club, and a fourth isa member. We are proud,too,of the rank and file. the common folks Whose loyal friendship made possible the a- chievements of the others. We wish to thank our teachers for the interest they have taken in us, and we shall not forget, as we go forth to become loyal citizens of senior high school. s PAGE 8 if JUNE 17,1932 Lillian Avis Lester Avis Pauline Beach Genevieve Best Keith Brandon Kenneth Brandon Mary Bengry Margaret Burling Ivan Clark Billy Collias NINE A THREE CLASS ROLL Carl Carlson Maxine Evans Wayne Evans Basil Elwell Audrey Gatz Effie Godfrey Theodore Harrington Lloyd Huntley Mary Hoover Albert Miller CLASS HISTORY William Nesbitt Frances Carpenter Roland Carlson Bessie Porter Eileen Proulx Cora Proulx Glen Peck Maxine Philpott Garnet Roberts Doris Roberts Ellen Sargent Frances Schiefler Lowell Schmyser Barney Sarokin Rollin Fraser This group contains at present thirty energetic boys and girls. An unusual occurrence is the number of them who are related to each other. This helped greatly to promote harmony and co-operation within the group. We are about to leave Eastern, but we will try always to be loyal to her ideals and standards. JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 9 NINE A FOUR CLASS Rom. Bessie Ball Bill Boroska Lowell Boyer Clyde Brewer Florence Campanaro Eleanor Coleman Charles Crickon Dulcie Dalton Norma Gorman Dorothy Grosjean Delma Kayga Raymond Kent Dolly Latozas William McFarland Alberta Merritt Frances Meyers Lucille Moriarity Olga Muha Jesse Muniz Geraldine Powell Monica Raczka Ray Ritter Duane Rumph Louis Sach Eston Saylor Edwin Schmock Lula Schneider Evelyn Seaton Vincent Serra Fred Sleppy Elnora Sorenson Harold Stewart Myrtle TerMarsch Clarence Thomas Mary Toth Richard Yeager CLASS HISTORY On a very warm Tuesday in September, 1929, thirty-eight very bewildered youngsters came to Eastern. Mr. Cox ushered them to Room 203,and put them into Miss Wel1ington's hands. Very soon all their fears were swept away, and all the the rough places made smooth. During the first year, some of the members moved away,but they were quickly replaced by newcomers. Now we have reached the pinnacle of our desires-we are 9A's, and ready to leave: but leaving is not so pleasant as we thought. Our days at Eastern have been happy ones, and it is with profound re- gret that we say farewell. PAGE 10 i JUNE 17,1932 Ida Baldwin Lennie Ball Edwin Bartlebaugh Kenneth Berdan June Bowman Frances Carr Max Coleman Harriet Dexter Beulah Gullett George Killinger Helen Kimpel Violet Kirkwood NINE A FIVE CLASS ROLL Lucille Koschig Rex Lamoreax Regina Laska Ada Lowrey Marjorie Mack Dale McFarland Margaret McMorris Thomas McVay Carl Measell Grace Morgan Minnie Norman Joe O'Connor Charlotte Ofiara Dorothy Olson Florence Perna Mary Perna Homer Peterson John Sach Isabelle Saddler Thelma Slater Casey Smlth Milton Snyder Victor Woods Hazel Young CLASS HISTORY Three years ago we 9A-5's entered this school,an ambitious class, convinced that we would succeed, and determined to have a prosper- ous three years. Girls and boys alike organized many athletic teams which met with few defeats and many victories. Hi Y Club, Glee clubs, Speech and Art departments numbered many of us. We boast of twin musicians, the Pernas. Last but not least, Frances Carr was award- ed her gold E, the first eighth grader to attain that honor. We know that the school will little note nor long remember what we said here, but we hope that it will never forget what we have done here. JUNE 17, 1932 ' PAGE 11 Esther Allen Clifton Ashley Lavern Beaty Ray Brown Woodrow Davis Wesley Dennis Thyra Gemmill Lila Harrington Cassius Hulbert NINE A SIX CLASS ROLL Beatrice James Aldena Jennings Earle Kehoe Francis Lafferty Miles Navarre Elizabeth Omelian James Parker Marie Roselli Blanche Sitts Isaac Smoot Gretchen Temby David Terry Martin Tomrell Ralph White Verna White Jesse Williams Mary Woodley CLASS HISTORY As the time draws near for us to leave Eastern our feelings are strangely mixed. Though there is a thrill at going to High School. there is also a feeling of sadness that we are reaching the end of three very happy years. It is almost pleasanter to look back than to look into the future. As we survey our homeroom records,we find that of the twenty- seven present members, only seven entered as 7A's. Some of the newcomers hail from Florida,West Virginia,and Arkansas. It is our hopethat all members of our room will find it possible to continue through High School. No matter to what places we may go, our memories of Eastern, and Mrs. Whitfield,our homeroom teacher, will be among our most cherished memories. PAGE 12 'f JUNE 17,1932 ----M l NINE A SEVEN ' CLASS ROLL Doris Banghart Virginia Hollinger Wilma Sheck Laurine Blanchard Eileen Hunt Melvin Simon Beatrice Breckinridge Bertha Korman M S .th , Elwin Brown lrene Lasley My ml Roderick Byrd Eleanor Lockwood Norma SWICUP Delmar Campbell James Minehan Kenneth Supernault Alice Fosbender X Lewis Moon Doris Walker Elegra Fraumann , Ruth Morin J W H Stephen Gray Harold Orman , ane 8 ac? Callie Harper Charles Oxley ' Harry Watkins CEQHQHISTORY We seem to hold the record for having had the most homeroom teachers since entering Eastern. The first day we had Miss Doyle, who was transferred to Washington. Miss Bajari was in charge of us for a few Weeks, when we were given to Mr. Graff, who remained with us for the rest of the semester. When we entered 7A. Miss Ba lger became our homeroom teacher, and we have been together ever since. Our homeroom periods as 9A's have been occupied largely with business affairs, but we found time to do a little dancing to prepare for the 9A party. We hope that we shall all meet at High School next September. JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 13 gare-well AS we leave the halls of Eastern, Memory turns back to the days When we were only Seven B's', And learned our school to praise. We're sorry to leave you, Eastern, We have learned to love you so, But we know that our successors Will carry on when we go. We're saying farewell, dear Eastern, To continue Life's lessons to learn, But you will always be the dearest and best, And our thoughts oft to you will return! Alberta Pape and Carrol Liddy PAGE 14 'f JUNE 17,1932 NINE A CLASS SONG garewell to Gastern Air: Michigan, my Michigan Oh, Alma Mater dear, Eastern, my Eastern, A song of courage and of cheer, Eastern,my Eastern Of all threeythou art the best Thine honor greater than the rest, By loyalty you stand the test, Oh, Eastern, my Eastern. We've been here long enough, Eastern,my Eastern: We've had it soft, and had it tough, Eastern, my Eastern: We've traversed the last mile, Having been with you a little while: And now, say Farewell with a smile, Oh, Eastern my Eastern. Now our parting days are nigh, Eastern, my Eastern: So we shall have to say good by Eastern, my Eastern: May we thankfully say I ever, ever shall obey The teachings of Maroon and Gray, Oh, Eastern, my Eastern! Victor Woods JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 15 9 A Class Day Program June 15, 1932 March- ..,, - ,-,- ,,,.,,..,,,,,,,,,, - ,, --,E.J.H. Orchestra Class song ,,., ,-M,, ,-,,, ,,,,, A , ,--,,- , ,,,., ,. , ,,- -...,. 9A Class fwords by Victor Woodsj Welcome ..., , ,,,,, ,H N, ,-,,,-,,,,,.. ..., L loyd Huntley 9A President vocal Solos- .,,,, ,-,,,, ,.,,,.,, ,,,, ,,N,,, Q -,,,,., , - M i Ss Ola Hiller Friend of Mine - My Prayer , Accompanist-Mrs. Hogue On theThreshold ,, , ,.,, ,,,,,,,, ,,,,.. ,. ,... .- ----9A Play 9A Movie ...,,, --, , .,.,- -- ,...... -,-.--- 9A March ,..e ,M ,,,,,, ,..,, -,,, , ,,-The Orchestra HONOR STUDENTS 1. Frances Carr 2. Alberta Pape 7 3. Lillian Lewer 8. 4. Dolores Betts 9. 5. Ronald Jackson 10 HONORABLE MENTION 6. Beulah Gullett Carrol Liddy Maxine Evans Virginia Hollinger Delma Kayga Edwin Bartlebaugh -Ardith Moyses - Kathleen Jeremy Mary Perna-Naomi Byrne The following have not been in Eastern for full six semesters ,but have consistently high records: Marysue Sculley-Mildred Shuler-Minnie Norman-Patricia Becker Pauline Beach PAGE 16 JUNE 17,1932 EASTERN LGYALTY Some Vslavls ull muslt 67 6a7c'6'lee C7146 5 f'W2W1f' 11.11 J-+L A LeT ms Ya.i:e. ou .tan-5 ol P,-4n.:v13 Eudrn 1'a.m'.r Hills! WiTh . J Ji J J .I on-1 J 1 q E' J cours-5: xfaunh and gln-AT ii.-I.:-,-:I'hg b:s1 ol all BT: ki-ml Ru-U: 'fa J V r ' ,IT .ffw-' ts f J-l 'fucker-5 Kind .na True. And Jour covnvanzs hzre'r'To 5'-.'. Ml! 1 -wr -f A I at J 'Q or Q 4 of V Y ' o U12 so Live To hgh,-If Snug To Eu-Tern Junior High! V ckzuma P g1pF9g,i If .5 If U '.,,.L,vJl' EarTu'h Iunivr Musk Jehu! S Enhv-v. Jung, H535 1 Env Tru T.. Thu. uv-'llLe. iggg,EflVgMV w 'Vv:J 305 5, 61.3 L 'gil 'lv Thj colorg , TL, wmmun 4nAThf.y-:J 1 3: if V I Ei Q1 41 I cy R4Uf+K'.-fd-1. R1mf.L1v.x! Emu, Jun., Hiubf QQQ usb: 1 PAGE 18 'f JUNE 17,1932 Kenneth Brandon Harold Burdette Carl Carlson Max Coleman Merton Davis John Englert Kenneth Esler Donovan Everling Allen Haney Theodore Harring- ton Lyle Hincks THE BOYS' GLEE CLUB CLUB ROLL . William Howard Lloyd Huntley Donald Jockwig Russell Johnson Joseph Kantz Robert Lawson Harry Mansfield Thomas Martin L.D. McLauchlin Thomas McVay Norwood Miller Joseph O'Connor Ceorge Olson Harold Urman William Ossman Homer Peterson J os Pietsker Edgar Plympton Joseph Robinson Frank Sias Robert Snay Harold Souther Leo Stamas David Terry THE CLUB Edgar Thomas Martin Tomrell Elvis Trawick Donald VanSlam- brook William Welsher Victor Woods Richard Yeager Mrs. Hogue-Spon- sor The Boys' Glee Club have completed the busiest year in their history. Never before have there been so many outside calls for musi- cal programs of various kinds. Their work in school has consisted mainly of the monthly chapels,whi h were most helpful to the entire school. While service is their chief objective they try hard to develop traifs of co-operation,loyalty,leadership,aud higher citizenship.Twen- ty-four homerooms are represented in the membership of forty-three. One affair they have each semester solely for themselves - the Ban- quet, in honor of the departing 9A boys. As one of the boys said, How shall we ever do without them? But - Larry on we always have, and always shall! JUNE 17, 1932 K PAGE 19 Lillian Atkinson Frances Carr Glenadine Clark Betty Burns June Druley Evelyn Eastman Alice Fosbender Beulah Gullett Doris Harrison Eldonna Hayes Maxine Hinshaw Virginia Hughes Eileen Hunt GIRLS' GLEE CLUB V CLUB ROLL Kathleen Jerf my Maxine Johnson Ann Kastner Phyllis Kastner Ruth Ann Kleist Annaliese Laarz Maude Lawrence Wanda Ledford Grace Mc Ginnis Ardith Moyses Dorothy Olson Roberta Parker Florence Verna Mary Perna Geraldine Powell Marjorie Redmond Marie Roselli Arlene Seaman Margaret McKerrow Dorothy Stewart Edna Mc Vety Virginia Stiles Alberta Merritt Florence VanHorn Violet Miller Hazel Young Alma Miller Sponsor-Miss Belscamper THE CLUB The Club has had an unusually busy year, singing both in school and outside. The girls have given several sacred programs at church services. They have sung at Longfellow School on three occasions, twice for the Modern Woodmen, and at the W.C T.U. convention. They have given two entire assembly programs, and have appeared on others. This does not begin to exhaust the list of places at which they have sung, but it will be seen that the Girls' Glee Club really de- serves to be called a service club. ' PAGE 20 JUNE 17,1932 i l EASTERN Jr. HIGH SCHOOL ORCHESTRA- Arlene Anthony Magnolia Ashton Kenneth Brandon Roland Carlson George Comas Nicholas Drakos Myron Fancher Kenneth Fisher STRING BASS Maxine Evans THE PLAYERS VIOLINS Evans Gladding Jenny Gray Zelda Kendall Connie Kentros Marjorie Mack George Morgan Stanley Verbeck Marguerite Wilmot CLARIN ETS Harold Lottner VIOLAS Genevieve Dalgleish Emma Jane Parkinson Lula Scheider VIOLONCELLOS Louise Hayman Arlene Seaman Virginia Taylor FRENCH HORNS Wendell Bell Bessie Porter Edwin Schmock Ralph Clifford TRUMPETS Lowell Boyer PIANO Monta Lotan Lois Hitchcock Lester Smith Director - Mrs. Enid Harris William Welsher ACTIVITIES The orchestra has appeared in several affairs outside of school, at two P.T.A.meetings,three assemblies,the May Festival,and at the 9A class day exercises. Their success has come as a result of con- tinous, conscientious eEort e'very day, during their class period. Y kiqwif ,M V ., I ' Y f ' ,il i 3 :,E tiwn ??Q i A ,, , g I K 4 kg' Aga V Q Q 1 , ig 5 S ' L sf. A .' i n V fi fggipf ' E Y 1 ' K iii, 'rf' N A .4 ' Q. , V , ' 9' , , ' , ' W 5 'I . s B gi ' k 'rg 7 ' A .. ' P m HF 5 Mg , -V H , , ,LLK : Ll A . 1 , 'X L L L,' - , - . - F ' . - f 35321 ' . z ,P ii K E A Q65 PAGE 22 ' JUNE 17,1932 THE HI-Y CLUB CLUB MEMBERS Roy Brown Russell Johnson William Ossman Max Coleman Joseph Kantz Claire Paulson Allen Gerlach L.D. McLauchlin Swanson Shields Theodore Harrington Thomas McVay Edgar Thomas Lloyd Huntley Robert Nelson Mr. Cox - Sponsor Donald Jockwig George Olson THE CLUB The Hi Y Club has at present seventeen members, Harold Wilson having been admitted since the above picture was taken. The pur- pose of the club is to try to spread the germs of right living throughout the student body. The boys do this by trying to live up to the Four C's , which are the platform upon which the organiz- ation stands. These Four C's are: Clean Speech Clean Athletics Clean Scholarship Clean Living JUNE 17, 1932 ' PAGE 23 THE BIG SISTERS CLUB ROLL Dolores Betts Kathleen Jeremy Gretchen Temby Lois Blake Delma Kayga Adeline Thomp on Violet Brewer Violet Roark Florence Van Horn Mary Buliga Marysuo Sculley Marguerite Wilmot Naomi Byrne Arlene Seaman Sponsor-Miss Mcuermet Dorothy Stewart THE CLUB You probably don't know much about your Big Sisters' C1ub,but we are quietly functioning and have been steadily forging ahead. Under the able direction of our sponsor, Miss McDermet,our club has accomplished many projects during the year, best known of which is our regular semester party for the 7-B girls. This has a real place in the school,tending to make the newcomers more quickly feel at home. Our goal at all times is service, in any way that will tend toward a bigger and better Eastern . Our 'latest project is an Eastern Ushers Club, in which we combine With the Hi Y to promote a cor- dial atmosphere at all assemblies or other occasions. 1 Qllibzfafg II JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 25 My Dream Boat I sail across the ocean wide, While white capped waves dash by my side The clouds above drift slowly by, And birds go soaring through the sky. My gaze is fastened,as I drift, On one white cloud that seems to lift From out the sea, then toward the skies My glistening dream boat seems to rise. 1 lie in wonder in my boat, While through the sea cf dreams I floatg My thoughts are far from Worldly care, For sweet perfume is in the air. Ilook again, but just once more, For now my boat has touched the shore- I waken in a big arm chair, My dreams have vanished into air. Phyllis Baldwin 8B 2 -....g,l.. Springtime How happy is Springtime, When winter is gone. With the twitter of robins To wake us at morn. The trees' early budding, The calm balmy airy The whole joy of living Should drive away care. Ruth Hart 7B-2 moz 26 FW JUNE 17,1932 Was Richard a Good King? To every wide-awake boy who is acquainted with the tales woven by great writers of the past around famous deeds of chivalry of long ago, the mention of the Lion- Hearted sends a thrill through his body. , When he hears Richard's name, the boy thinks of a great man, a man of huge build,a man with broad snoulders,a man who commands the attention of everyone present, and that is what Richard must have been. Although many things were credited to Richard, l do not think he was auch a great king ss England wsuld represent him. I think Rich ard would have liked to trade places with any knight or even an out- law, of that time. He did not enjoy the worries of a government. I think that in order to make a success of a thing, a man must like do- ing it. That is why Richard could not have made a success of rul ing England: he did not like it. It was true he struck-home to the hearts of the English people, but that was because of his romantic ways. England gloried in that sort of thing in his time. King Richard tried hard to mix his two great desires : one to be a great knight, the other to be a great king. I do not think any man could have reconciled two desires which led in such directly opposite directions. And yet Richard was loved and admired by the majority of his people,and the Lion I-Iearted's name is still a stirring one. Evert E. Johnson April n April comes with a smile, and a tear, A moment of sadness,a moment of cheer. Now see the sunshine-now the rain pours :loun- April,if you please,is like a funny clown! Grace Crrig. JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 27 SPRING The tender grass is sprouting Upon the distant hills, And through the ground comes peeping The yellow daffodils. I heard a robin singing This morning, loud and clear. I think that he was saying That sprinst is almost here Geneva Weatherholt 8A-5 ,-..l...l.T- Flowers The flowers of life are many, And they are all very sweet, From the prettiest flowers in the garden To the dandelion at my feet. The sweetest flowers wither- The roses soon fade away, But oh! the lovely flowers Within my heart will stay. Grace McGinnis 8A-5 My Mother My Mother is all the world to me, She's as nearly perfect as she can be. My heart would be broken and slow as time, If I ever lost that Mother of mine. ' ' Fern Kelly 7B2 EVENING The crickets sing up on the hearth, The frog-filled marsh ia ringing: The thrushes by their vespers G mark The coming of the evening. Robert Rice ,.,ll..1-i- Pontiac Home of my hea't,1 sing of thee, Pontiac,my Pontiac: Thy beautiful lakes I love to see, Pontiac, my Pontiac: Thy wondrous schools and fact- ories Thy lovely homes,thy parks, and trees- All these I love,and ever praise, Pontiac,my Pontiac. I'll boost thy name until the end, Pontiac, my Pontiac: Aad all my wealth in thee l'1l spend, Pontiac, my Pontiac. Thy buildings tall are my great pride, Thy churches fair on every side 0 may I ever here abide, Pontiac, my Pontiac! Elmer Greenwald 8A-5 PAGE 28 JUNE1721932 K 'fcgbeir acts are their best introductzbn- JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 29 4 K 4 1 I-Iere's to comrades, tried and true! ,-iii?--- It's all very 'well to have courage and skill, And it's fine to be counted a. star, But the single deed with its touch of thrill Doesn't tell us the man you are: For there's no lone hand in the game we play, We must work to a bigger scheme And the thing that counts in the world today Is, How do you pull with the team? Edgar A. Guest PAGE 30 JUNE 17,1932 l l l THE HOME ECONOMICS CLUB CLUB ROLL Magnolia Ashton Verda Ball Patricia Becker June Bowman Gertrude Briggs Jean Brady Jean Colpus Miriam Cox Zenobia Eisenhart Frances Fulcher Vivian Groner Marguerite Groner Gladys Golden Ina Harmon Jean Huntley Dorothy Hall Flora Hoskins Marion Hancock Barma Johnson Mary Kentros Alberta Kline Lillian Kraft Laura Lawson Evelyn Lee Marjorie Mack Beatrice Mattinson Elizabeth Mazurek Geneireve Minton Hazel Monroe Ruth Morin Betty Morrison Helen Mazurek Fern Mawhorter , Elsie McDonald Marion McKellogg Patricia Miller Lena Nacarato Evelyn Roark Josephine ttoselli Florence Salisbury Eulalia Smith Freeda Stanley Dorothy Stocker Anna May Sach Bernice Smith Kathryn Stottlemeyer Virginia Taylor Hazel Terry Dorothy Tinson Pearl Troup Edna Whale Ruth Winkley Sponsors - Miss Thrash Mrs. Elliott el' THE CLUB The club is truly a service club. Last fall they gave almost a hun- dred dollars to be used in building welfare Work Without this mone - Y, there would have been much less work of the kind carried on. They have made d 1 ' ' ' ' many o ls and animals from o1lcloth,out1ng f1a.nnel,and rubber. They have had six get-togethers, and are already planning for next fall. JUNE 17, 193 2 PAGE 31 THE-WHAT-TO -DO-CLUB THE CLUB ROLL M'ld d Finkle Beatrice James Shirley Reeves Arlene Anthony 1 re Marion Berger Grace Golding Helen Kimpel Wilma Reeves Violet Brewer Betty Gould Lucile rtoschig lsobelle Saddler Frances Bruce Jane Gould Huth Lewis Ardis Sullivan Wilma Butler May Graves Ada Lowrey Gretchen Temby Ruby Carmean Jenny Gray Helen Moskos Helen Vojnar Grace Carrick Alice Grusnick Minnie Norman Allien Whitwortl. Eleanor Coleman Della Harroun Charlotte Ofiara Dorothy Wirth June Collier Beatrice Hartung Isabelle Olson Dorothy Woodley ' k Mary Woodley Frances DeGrow Margaret Herron Aurelia Par er Dorothy Duckett Daisy Hoffman Mary Plake Miss Hiller -Spon- Catherine Evans Edith Hubbard Demetra Pratt sor THE CLUB The What-to-Do Club has had a busy and profitable year. Once a month the club has sponsored a matinee dance. The girls have had two candy sales,and two noon movies in the form of radio programs. e every The proceeds in both cases were used to pack lunches onc h' ester the club bought a make-up two weeks last semester. T is sem box , to be used as needed for weekly assembly programs: and 'con- ' d mmittee tributed a substantial amount to the Honors and Awar s co l b as was responsible for the recent to help pay for pins. This c u w compaign for better conduct in the cafeteria. At the clcs e of the first semester,the club girls and their guests enjoyed a dinner party in the cafeteria. Plans are in progress for a picnic this spring. The girls feel that their aim to be of service to Eastern has been realized to some degree. PAGE 32 fir- JUNE 17.1932 1 THE SUNSHINE CLUB THE CLUB ROLL Esther Allen , MNIOU Freeman Lois Robinson Lennie Ball MQYUIG GUeUthl'1' Mary Scribner Mary Bateman L0l5.HlfChC0Ck Rozella Simon Ruth Brown Carrie Holder Laura Spillers Nellie Binga Helen Johnson Flora Sach Genevieve Dalgleish Bertha KFWOHBH Jennie Walenski Blanche Donley Cora McKinney Geneva Weatherholt Louise Ezell Florence Paulson Bernice Whiters Margaret Freeman Eileen Reed Miss Hallenbeck - Sponsor THE CLUB The quilt and the scrap books shown in the picture are 'ust sam- J ples of what this club has been doing in its endeavor to help scatter sunshine among sick or unfortunate people. Assistance has been given Eastern's Welfare Committee in the way of providing lunches and clothing for boys and girls in the build- ing. Plants were grown and sent to sh many ways and at all times, the club has striven to live up to its name. ut-in Easterners. Thus in JUNE 17, 1932 ' PAGE 33 THE INDIAN LORE CLUB THE CLUB The Indian Lore Club has twenty six members, working individ- ually or in groups on projects of various kinds. One group is making totem poles, using telephone poles. This group includes: Jay Baldwin Harvey Sayles Bill Mooneyham Clifford Johnson Harry Watkins Richard Graham Charles Rutherford A number of girls are making necklaces, in sundry colors and designs. These girls are: Lova Lingle Zelda Kendall 1 Ruth Peabody Maxine DeLorge Evelyn Brown Lillian Sherrod Laura Goodrich Wanda Cvwdrey And the head dresses-just gorgeous,they are! Watch for them- Forest Elwell Carl Kohn Clarence Sternberg Rollin Fraser Leonard Laska Joe Vojnar Lester Bailey has made an Indian suit. Richard James has made a new-fangwed' bead loom that works fine. Earl Long is making a bead arm band: and Monta Lotan has made a pair of moccasins,using split cow hide,the bead-work being in the thunderbird design. Leon Vervvey has been making bookends,by covering bricks with bu: lao, and painting Indian designs on them. These are to be used on the tables in Room 218. Many other articles have been made. Bill Mooneyham is Sachem: Clarence Sternberg, Scribe: and Harry Wa,tkins,tom-tom player. PAGE 34 JUNE 17,1932 .4 ARCHERY CLUB . CLUB MEM BERS Leo Crandall ' Victor Wendler William Meyers George Morgan Ralph Harrington Floyd Crawford Lester La Rivers Max Richardson Robert Caswell Theodore Sarson Eugene Isbell 1 Paul Sage Robert Nelson Robert Flsher Ronald Biskner Russell Winger Albert S9-HGCFS John Everett George Pratt Leonard Hutchinson Henry Carr Barney Sarokin Mr.Trimpe.Sp0nsor THE CLUB The Archery Club was one of Eastern's newest Clubs last Sep- tember. Its organization was due to the growing interest in archery as a. sport. The first of the year was spent on the history of arch- ery, and the making of tackle. By means of the money earned by a noon movie, a target was obtained. After that, most of the time was devoted to learning to shoot. . A tournament, Lhe first of its kind in Pontiac, was arranged with Lincoln. The competing teanis consisted of the three best archers from each scnool. Eastern's team included Barney Sarokin, Eugene Isbell and William Myers,with Max R'chardson as substitute. The shoot was the Junior American Round of thirty arrows at distances of 20,30,and 40 yards. Eastern Won the first two matches with a score of 316 to 311,and 120 to 96. Barney Sarokin was hlgh polnt man. JUNE 17, PAGE THE AIRCRAFT CLUB - The above pictures represents a part of the Aircraft club. A small group was chosen, the better to show the model planes. Those in the picture are: Edward Archey The other members of the Myron Fancher John Biltz club include the following John Haldiman Ezra Hogg, boys: Francis Hincks Walter Perry Richard Acre gggslgegfggg Fred Schumacher Robert Bradley Donald Stwm, Lee Seibert Nathel Bush Edward Vyse Clayton Smale Thomas Bilkey Russell Wlnsel' Mr. Stolpe - Sponsor This group represents the Aircraft Club which has been active in Eastern for the past four years. During this period, many boys have had an opportunity to demonstrate their air-mindedness. PAGE so ' JUNE 17,1932 POPULARITY CONTEST WINNERS PRE'r'r1Es'r GIRL - Ann Kastner HANDSOMEST Boy 1- Bill Boroska MOST POPULAR GIRL - Marysue Sculley Mos'r VOPULAR BOY - Harold Stewart Gim. wi-io TALKS Mosr - Ruth Ann Kleist BOY WHO TALKS Mosr - Theodore Harrington THE CONTEST This Popularity Contest was the second of its kind to be spcnsor- ed by the Arrow. It was apparent that a great deal of interest was felt,for almost a thousand votes were cast. A seven B boy almost took first p'ace as the handsomest boy, but of course such a thing could not be allowed,so theninth graders rallied, and Handsome Bill won. One amusing feature was the number of votes cast for the Perna twins . Evidently a great many people wanted to vote for one of them, and not being able to decide which was which, cast a blanket vote . When such a ballot was read, the tellers simply gave each girl one vote. The general feeling over the results seemed to be that each winner was perfectly suited to the title he or she had won. It was most unfortunate that Bill Boroska and Harold Stewart were seized with unaccountable attacks of bashfulness on the day this picture was taken, and could not be persuaded to appear before the camera. JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 37 THE SCRAPBOOK CLUB A stands for Arnold, a jewel is she, For a Pearl is a jewel, that's plain to see. Then B is for Barrett, Bulas, Bengry, and Beach, Also Betty, our president-each one is a peach. We have some line girls whose names start with C, As Carpenter, Cumberworth, Crevier, these three. In our roll of D's, two fine girls are seen, Harriet Dexter, and Mary Ellen Dean. Our E stands alone, like a twinkling star- She is none other than Erma Eckalbar. For F see Ferguson and Feliksa,too, Irma and Leonora, both true blue. Of G's there are many,I'll name them for you: Lois Goff,Mary and Rose Gerzanics.too. You think these are many? They still are too few, For Sybil Graham, Irene Green are in this crew. And we find Virginia Gerber there, too- To the G's we give all the honor due! Only one name begins with an L, But Margaret Louckes represents it well. M stands for Miller,a girl with smile, 5 For Erna's always smiling, and happy all the while. And then of H's we discovered four- They're all so very pleasant we wish there Were more- Mary I-Iudson,Margaret Howey,Altha Harroun ani-ii Eleanor urs - In very good manners they are well versed. N is for Newcombe, an excellent maid, And Rutn's popularity never will fade. . Next comes Parkinson, Pascher, Pape, and Patrick, too. I think they are all splendid girls,don't you? R is for Roach, and Leona's so sweet That not very often her equal you'll meet. Last but not least, the S's we see, That we're glad they are here we all agree. There's Schiefler and Sorenson, Storum and Schoff, And with these names, I must sign off . Written by a member of the club PAGE 38 Q JUNE 171932 Homeroom 207 Gfficers President - Albert Zumbrunnen Secretary -Emma Caldwell Vice - presipent. - Norman Houle Treasurer - Evelyn Price Victor Avram Sophie Bowback Ruth Brown Emma Caldwell Verlyle Coleman Jay Corey Floyd Crawford Nellie Farnell Lueile Fleetwood Vivian Foster Patricia Galbraith Librarian - Sophie Bowback Teacher-Miss Mac Keller CLASS ROLL Bertha Geney Cecil Goff Harold Grant Charles Hayes Martha Hooper Norman tioule Adair June Dorothy Lamb Jack Mac Morris Clifford Mitchell Emily Nacarato John Nesterick Eleanor Nichols Ruth Peabody Evelyn Price Edward Richards Charles Rutherford Billy Searle Lillian Sherrod Leo Stamas Joe Vojnar Harold Welch Albert Zumbrunnen xxgrxfgiigghl W P I P r I-...-...i- PAGE 40 JUNE 17,1932 3 l THE BASKET BALL TEAM The Line Up FIRST TEAM Boroska - C Woods - G Raines - C Stewart - G Oxley - F Yeager - G Iv1cVay - F Coach - Barrels BOYS' ATHLETICS The first basket ball team played eleven games, of which they won eight. Tbey were assisted by the second team,whose member included Broadnax. Plympton, Holmquist, Jockwig, Holler and Kehoe. Wlth very few exceptions. every boy in Eastern participated in thelbasket ball activities. there were teams in each room who played each other, and who played against teams from other rooms. In the Homeroom League. a team composed of members from Rooms 300 and 116 were the 9th grade champions: Room 110 supplied the 8th grade champions, and 209 the 7th grade. In the Junior League the White Sox, McDowell,captain, were the championsgand in the Senior League, the Reds, Stewart,captain, won the same nonor. Each championship team won seven games. It has been clearly demonstrated in Eastern that sports are for all boys, regardless of age or ability. 1 JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 41 l THE BASKET BALL TEAM 'rr-:AM MEMBERS Dorothy Olson Naomi By rne Elizabeth Omelian Frances Carr Beualah Gullett Florence Pernaieaptainl Violet Kirkwood Mary Perna Ruth Ann Kleist lsobelle Sadler Coach-Miss Lapisch BASKET BALL Of the four teams entered in intramural competition, this one won all their games, thereby winning the right to represent Eastern in inter -scholastic games. They played one game with the High School C teamgone with Washington, and one with Linco1n,and were winners in each game The girls played especially well this year, and co-oper- ation and teamwork spelled success. The other three teams which were defeated by this one in the championship contest were captained by Alberta Pape, Maxine Evans, and Jane Wallace,each team finishing in the order given. PAGE 42 'f JUNE 17,1932 K THE GIRLS' ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION MEMBERS Dolores Betts Laoma Wilcox Ellen Sargent Alberta Pape Mildred Shuler Louise Hayman Maxine Evans Delma Kayga Helen Pratt Jane Wallace Marysue Scully Lois Blake Bessie Porter Naomi Byrne Alice Hubbard Doris Johnson Margaret Miller Mary Mazurka Lillian Lewer Adeline Thompson Miss Lapisch-Sponsor ' THE CLUB The Girls'Athletic Association takes the place of the organization formerly known as the Girls'Athletic Club. Its activities are much the same as the lattenand likewise its purpose. The memoers have had an unusual number of social affairs this semester: a skating par- ty, a dinner at Genevieve Best's, a Bunco party at Miss Lanisch's home, and a hike in May. On May 13 the girls presented The Red Beret Jazz Band at a noon show, and it was voted a complete suc- cess. The aim of the club is to promote healthful sport among all girls, and to develop leadership. JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 43 EXCHANGE The type of school paper which we have been issuing this year has not afforded us much opportunity for exchange columns,but we have none the less enjoyed those school publications which have come to us from far and near. We have an Exchange file in our Arrow corner,in which We put clippings from papers that come to us. These may be editorials, poems,stories,jokes,news items,or any one of many others,but all of them seem to us too good to throw away. Occasion- ally we receive a copy of one issue of a school paper, and then never hear from that school agan. It is impossible to form any idea as to the poorness or excellence of that paper from one reading. But we like best our old friends,those who come frequently, and nearly al- ways have semething of value for us. So to you old friends, and to the newer ones, and to our occasion- al visitors as well, we send greetings. Come again next fall, all of you! The Bugle - Minneapolis Surveyor - Kalamazoo Hi - Light - Honolulu Arrow Head- Ottawa Hills Ohio Northern Light-Cordova,Alaska Lincoln Log - Rockford Ill. Harding Bee Hive-Steubenville, Reflector - Saginaw 01110 Flashlight - sandy City, Utah Holmes Spun Covington Ky' J .H.Broadcast - Adrian The Tractor 'Dearborn Kernels - Louisville. Ky. Orange and Black Charlotte Binford Bulletin-Richmond, Va. Powell Echo ' Washington D'C' Curtin Jr. Citizen - Williamsport, Marshallite - Pasadena Pa. PAGE 44 JUNE 17,1932 -- cfqfutograpfvs - - aa-4564,-44 JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 45 , cgMf0gT6lPl75 I-,,,,l..-1--1--1' PAGE 46 f JUNE 17,1932 PUPPET STAGE CLUB ROLL Leon Braknis Virginia Golden Eunice Merrill . Jack Bryan Sibyl Harmon Herbert Parmenter Mary Buliga Frances Johnson Violet tdoark Shirlie Corbin Connie Kentros Wilfred Siggs Evelyn De Long Carrol Liddy Robert Morris THE CLUB Early plans made bf the club went far aqley , for the wild animals which were to be a part of a zoo became unruly, and the cir- cus had to be postponed until fall. However, our Amos and Andy skit was Well received. The club went to High School one day and listened to an interesting talk on puppets given by Paul McPharlin, one of Detroits leading puppeteers. Following his talk, a marionette show was presented by the hlgh school cIub,some of whose members we still claim. We know that our work is important, because our own magician earned second place in a national contest among junior high puppet organizations. The above picture depicts our master in his workshop. We hope that we may serve you more often with better marion- etts in the future. - 4 JUNE 17, 1932 PAGE 27 A ffswxx ze. Vest g Q, Q iii zltr ii fi' '.A, 5 C357 . X623 Gen. Lang. Teacher: Why is the English language called our Mother Tongue? Bright Boy: Because women use it more than men. Math. Teacher: This question seems to puzzle you? 9A Student: lunderstand the question all right. It's the answer that puzzles me. W4 -- -E-i---- c Science Teacher: Name a belt north of the equator. Student: Canit, sir. , , c Teacher: Correct. A ... 5.1. . What could be worse than a giraife with a stiif neck? A centipede with corns. my - - -- g..--,..- Science Teacher: Who first made Paris green? 9B Student: Helen of Troy. Q ---151.- 9A Test question: Name a case of a great friendship made fam ous through literature. Answer on 9A paper: Mutt and Jeff. ,.-i,h.,... . A goat ate all our other jokes, And then began to run, I cannot stop, he softly said, I am so full of fun. CZQIz'ng5 I saw the silver wings on high- A hifge airplane was passing by. Beyond the flujy eloudsfap there, It sailed away, I knew not where. Oh, how I yearn to sail away In the airplane of ly'e today, To guide my ships across dark seas, And set my plane against the breeze Grace McGinnis SA-5


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Ridgewood High School - Arrow Yearbook (Ridgewood, NJ) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Ridgewood High School - Arrow Yearbook (Ridgewood, NJ) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937


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FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.