Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH)

 - Class of 1950

Page 1 of 160

 

Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1950 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collectionPage 7, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collectionPage 11, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collectionPage 15, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collectionPage 9, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collectionPage 13, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collectionPage 17, 1950 Edition, Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 160 of the 1950 volume:

The Public Library of Cincinnati 8t Hamilton County The Gift of Roger Bacon High School I Qiki$1 f PUBLISHED SENIOR BV CLDSS . v-L , XML: w n u . x x-Udm! Pep-ralhes atIKoger Bacon.area1ways noisy affairs. Seen belowris a section of the student body, during the rally before the Elder ganne, giving out with that Raise your voices loud and Clear! THIS IS YOUR LIFE MISSAL - the practice of your religion in dailylife at home and at school. COMPASS - the development of your intellectual powers by a constant and determined effort in your classwork. GOLFBALL - the education, not only of your intellectual powers, but also physical. TICKETS - Roger Bacon also fosters your social training by a participation in its various activities and social events. KHHEIL 1$ 1!1 Hum Fl'HIHH. -..- ' A FELLOW NEED ; A FR'kEND' ' M lhnru . lVrL :n.. h1't I J , nn.. Iw- K R1 ! - hdd !.vl wh- - ' T' ' .. .5 tir'k'al- , ?M. g . '- Mantra - . .. , . . . c:3'f,t-:A.'- . , V . . 1.4M um , x '5 k' i a .ma Harnl. ... T HE Tiv'L-IUE: . ' 3 fi r3 H r 1:. O t . 3 U2 K C1 r H C onfidentia Divini Auxilii THE MOST REVEREND GEORGE J. REHRING, D.D., S.T.D. Auxiliary Bishop of Cincinnati In Divino Benepla cito A-HF;4 THE VERY REVEREND RONLUALD MOLLAUN, O.F.NI. .5 Friar Provincial of Cincinnati ' Deus Meus et Omnia E S u .m m o D m u r a .1!- t n .m C S S u e D REV. ERIC GEISEN 0.F.M., A.B. SPANISH 1,2 TYPING l,2 REV. RONALD NUNLIST 0.F.M., M-A. ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL GUIDANCE COUNSELOR ACTIVITIES PLANE GEOMETRY ONE OF FR. RONALDTS ABovE LEFT MANY DUTIES IS CALLING THE CLASSROOMS TO AND FROM ASSEMBLIES. FR. RAPHAEL ABovE CENTER SMILES AS HE FREPARES FOR THE MORNING PHYSICS CLASS. AFTER A FULL DAY or TEACHING FR. ERIC !ABOVE RIGHT SPENDS MANY MINUTES IN CHURCH PRAYING THE PRIESTS' DIVINE OFFICE. REV. RAPHAEL CLOUSE 0.F.M., A.B. DEAN PHYSICS mu; LE ' ' 'udaf an: m! 1.1M ' m' ht- J2 n. THE ONE REASON FOR BA- CON'S FINE PLAYING AND MARCHING BAND IS FR. BEN- NET. THE LIGHT BURNS LATE INTO THE NIGHT IN FR. BEN- NET'S ROOM ABovE AS HE PLANS THOSE INTRICATE FOR- MATIONS FOR EACH GAME. REV. BENNET ROTHAN O.F.M., A.B. BAND ORCHESTRA RELIGION REV. DENIS MORAN O.F.M., M.A. AMERICAN HISTORY GENE KOENIG ABovE CLAIMS THAT THE STREETCAR WAS LATE, BUT FR. WILLIAM SEEMS T0 THINK OTHERWISE w RM. 38 AT 2:l51 RETURNING TO BACON AFTER THREE YEARS AT NOTRE DAME, FR. DENIS LEFT BUSJES HIMSELF WITH SOME HISTORICAL RESEARCH. REV. WILLIAM TRUMMER O.F.M., A.B. LATIN l,2 GERMAN l,2 REV. ERMIN WERLE O.F.M., M. ED. DRAMA MERIT SYSTEM RELIGION 2 ENGLISH l REV. ALDRIC HEIDLAGE O.F.M., M.A. PROCURATOR ALGEBRA mt aw A NUMBER OF FRESHMEN GATHER AROUND FR. FLORIAN ABovE LEFT , AFTER REGULAR CLASS PERIOD, TO SETTLE SOME OF THEIR RELIGIOUS PROBLEMS. IT DIDN'T TAKE FR. ERMIN ABovE VERY LONG TO GET RID OF THOSE DRAMA TICKETS. BOB HUDEPOHL DEMANDS CHeLo PRlCE. FROM THE SMILE ON FR. ALDRIc's FACE LEFT WE WOULD SAY THAT THOSE STAMPS MUST BE WORTH SOMETHING. REV. FLORIAN GREVE 0.F.M., A.B. RELIGION I,h ENGLlSH M FR. PASCHAL CABOVE, WORKING ON THE NEXT EDITION OF THE BACONIAN. THE SCHOOL'S MAGAZINE UNDER HIS DIRECTION HAS BEEN RANKED HIGH AMONG SCHOOL PUBLICATlONS IN THIS VICIN- ITY. REV. FLAVIAN SCHNEIDER O.F.M., M. ED. ASSISTANT PROCURATOR CHEMISTRY THATts NO ATOMIC GUN THAT FR. LUCIAN RIGHT IS USING. FR. LUCIAN HAS SPENT MANY HOURS TAKING THE PICTURES FOR THE TROUBADOUR. FR. FLAVIAN tLErT sx- PLAINS THAT CHEMISTRY con- TRAPTION T0 SENIOR CHARLIE MILLER AND ED BIRCK. You SMILE Now, BOYS, BUT LET'S HOPE IT DOESN'T EXPLODE. REV. PASCHAL VARNSKUHLER O.F.M., A.B. BACON!AN ENGLISH M REV. LUCIAN RICKE 0.F.M., M.A. LATIN CLUE CAMERA CLUB LATIN I,2.3,h ALL RELIGIOUS ACTIVI- TIES, SUCH AS THE ANNUAL RETREAT, FIRST FRIDAYS, MASS, CONFESSION, ETC., ARE UNDER THE DIRECTION OF FR. OWEN. SHOWN ABOVE, FR. OWEN TACKS UP Two RELIG- IOUS REMINDERS TO THE STU- DENT BODY. REV. ALOYSIUS HELD O.F.M., A.B. TAX STAMP DRIVE GENERAL SCIENCE MECHANICAL DRAWING l,2 BACON STUDENTS ARE DOING THEIR SHARE To- WARDS THE REALIZATION OF THAT BACON STADIUM. FR. ALOYS RIGHT INAUG- URATED THE SAVING OF TAX STAMPS A FEW YEARS AGO, AND UNDER HIS DI- RECTION THE STUDENTS HAVE ALREADY COLLECTED THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS. REV. OWEN GEHRING O.F.M., A.B. SPIRITUAL DIRECTOR RELIGIOUS COUNCIL CIVICS AND SOCIOLOGY A VERY IMPORTANT PART OF THE BACON PROGRAM IS THE MORAL AND VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE OFFICE. AT THE RIGHT IS SEEN FR. EDMUND, ONE OF THE COUNSELORS, CHECKING THE FILES. THE GUIDANCE OFFICE ,3 UNDER THE DIRECTION OF FR. RON- ALD. REV. EDMUND MOORE O.F.M., M.ED. GUIDANCE COUNSELOR SOCiAL STUDIES 2 ENGLISH l -. u .Ir A RATHER FAMILIAR SCENE 15 FR. CONAN LEFT USING THE FILM PROJECTOR FOR HIS GENERAL SCIENCE AND BIOLOGY CLASSES. HERE FR. CONAN PREPARES TO SHOW A FILM ON MAGNETISM. IF YOU CARE TO HEAR SOME BEAUTIFULLY HARMO- NIZED MALE VOICES, THEN STOP IN SOMETIME AT ABOUT ONE-THIRTY. AT RIGHT, FR. PETER PUTS HIS GLEE CLUB THROUGH THEIR DAILY DRILLS. IF you THINK THAT ANYONE l5 BUSY, THEN WE DARE YOU TO TRY TO FIND FR. ALAN DURING A SCHOOL DAY. IN THE LITTLE SPARE TIME THAT HE DOES FIND, FR. ALAN RIGHT RELAXES WITH A WHODUNNIT . 22 REV. RONAN HOFFER REV. BERNO BUTZ REV. BRICE MULROY O.F.M., A.B. O.F.M., A.B. O.F.M., A.B. TROUBADOUR TROUBADOUR ASS'T. SPIRITUAL DIRECTOR A B-SCHOLASTIC WORLD AND AMER. HISTORY CSMC WORLD HISTORY RELIGION 2 FRs. RONAN ABOVE, AND BERNO RIGHT WORKING ON THE TROU- BADOUR. FR. BERNO IN A PEACEFUL MOOD CHECKS ON WHAT STU- DENT SECURED THE MOST ADS. RELIGION 3 GENERAL SCIENCE FR. BRICE AaovE GETS QUITE A BANG OUT OF DlCK LANGE- NECKERFS REMARKS, WHEN D1cK APPEARED ON WSAI'S JUNlOR TOWN MEETlNG . REV. LEANDER BLUMLEIN O.F.M., A.B. Ass'T. PROCURATOR WORLD HISTORY RELIGION 3 IF THERE IS ANYTHING TO BE KNOWN rN MATHE- MATICS, BRO. ALBERT AaovE HAS THE ANSWER. HE SEEMS TO BE ABLE TO FIND ANY ANSWER ON THAT FAMOUS SLIDE RULE. REV. GONZAGA MORAN O.F.M., B.S.L.S. LIBRARIAN BESIDES HIS REGULAR CLASSROOM WORK FR. LE- ANDER BELow IS KEPT QUITE BUSY AS THE SCHOOL'S BOOKKEEPER. BRO. ALBERT HARRIS C.F.P., B.Sc. ALGEBRA PLANE AND SOLID GEOMETRY TRLGONOMETRY JUST RETURNED THIS YEAR FROM CATHOLIC UNI- VERSITY, FR. GONZAGA ABovE RESUMED HIS DUTY AS ROGER BACON'S LIBRAR- IAN. MR. JOHN DOERGER, A.B. ENGLISH 3 MR. DOERGER BELow HAS TAUGHT ENGLISH TO MANY STUDENTS AND GRADS. IT LOOKS LIKE MORE COPIES OF MEMORY GEMS FOR THE JUNIORS. MR. GEORGE JOHNSON, PH. STUDENT UNION BOOKKEEPING l,2 IT'S THE END OF ANOTHER SIX WEEKS' PER- IOD AND MR. MEYER RIGHT IS WRITING OUT HIS GRADES. Is THAT SMILE FOR SOME GOOD GRADE OR . . . . MR. PAUL MEYER. ENGLISH 2,3 BUSINESS PH.B. BESIDES BEING MODER- ATOR OF THE STUDENT UN- ION, MR. JOHNSON LEFT IS ALSO MODERATOR OF STUDENT DANCES. HERE MR. JOHNSON TABS DANCE TICKETS. k i i I; g Ii 4 MR. WALTER ORNELLA, B.Sc. MR. ROBERT FANNING, PH.B. Ass'T COACH MR. EMMETT CROWE, B.Sc. JUNIOR SPARTAN PLAYERS BOOKKEEPING 1 HEAD COACH ECONOMICS PHYSICAL EDUCATION ENGLISH I,2 AT RIGHT MR. FANNING IS SEEN SLICING UP A FEW ENGLISH TESTS FOR HIS SOPHOMORE CLASSES. LOOKS A5 THOUGH THE TEST lS EASY. LEFT AND RerT MR. ORNELLA AND MR. CRowE ARE THE Two MAS- TERFUL BACON COACHES. MR. OR- NELLA EXPLAINS A FEW ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES TO PAUL STIGLER AND EVER-PRESENT DONNELLY. THE COACH OF HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS MUST SPEND ALMOST AS MUCH TIME ON A PHONE AS A FISH IN WATER. ASK MR. CROWE. 22 MISS ALVINA DOERGER MR. HENRY LEIST, B.SC. REG'STRAR MISS JULIANA DOERGER ALGEBRA Ass'T. REGISTRAR l ADV. ALGEBRA l MR. LEIST RIGHT , EDITOR OF THE ALUMNI NEws , CAN REALLY SHAKE THE IVORIES. DROP IN FOR MASS AT ROSELAWN, BOYS, AND LISTEN TO MR. LEIST AT THE ORGAN. THE REASON WHY ROGER BACON's OFFICE Is so EF- FICIENT IS ALVINA RIGHT AND JAN LEFT . THEY AL- WAYS SEEM To HAVE THE RIGHT ANSWER AT THE RIGHT TIME. 23 FRESHMEN 38 ROW l, LEFT TO RIGHT: R. VENTURA, J. TILLETT, J. CANNON, T. SCHWAB, H. WEBSTER, M. HICKMAN, R. LANG, A. CIGOLOTTI. Row 2: R. SMITH, G. BORN, M. BERLING, J. MONTGOMERY, P. GEISLER, G. JAWORSKI, w. MECHLEM, J. STOVER. ROW 3: D. THIEMANN, J. ENGEL, J. LUDMAN, P. GOERTEMOELLER, C. GLANDORF, V; ROTTERT, K. Mc- ALLISTER, R. WALTERMAN. ROW H: J. BAKER, K. HAVLIN, L. FLAHERTY, w. MIDDENDORF, L. FISCHESSER, R. HART- MAN, R. JOUNG, R. SOUTH. Row 5: J. CARTER, F. BOLTE, D. LAUMAN, F. VANDE RYT, T. BRACKMAN, J. SZURLINSKI, S. HANDORF, F. KEATING, F. WAGNER. KENNY POEHNER SEEMS QUITE THRILLED IN POINT- ING OUT ROME TO LATIN BOYS, HAROLD FUHRMAN AND JOE MOELLINGER. FRESHMEN 37 ROW l, LEFT TO RIGHT: R. MESSERLE, P. MIDDENDORF, P. BURT, R. SCHERZ, R. GlESLER, J. SULLIVAN, w. KRAMER, T. ISSLER. ROW 2: V. AGRUSO, R. ARAND, w. BUSKER, C. HAMPEL, F. PoHLKAMF, D. SCHAPPACHER, F. DIETRICH, w. VASKE. ROW 3: Da MILLER, A. MINK, D. WOLTERMAN, R. LITTLE, R. HOFMANN, T. PAFFE, R. BROCK, J. HERBST. ROW M: D. BASTIAN, L.LINESCH, P. SCHNUR, G. BRAT- SCHER, J. BOK, E. GROSSHEIM, A. TEKUELVE, R. RIESE. ROW 5: D. SHANNON, J. LUERS, J. SICKING, J. ALBRINCK, T. DINKELACKER, D. ROETTELE, w. MERGENTHAL, C. BEISEL. ROOM 35 tAaovs RIGHT CATCHING UP ON SOME ENGLISH WORK. ABovE PHIL HENRY READS FROM Tooo To HIS SPANlSH BRETHREN. AT RIGHT, INTRODUCING THE THREE KRAUTS , TEMKE, LAMPE, AND SCHWECKE. FRESHMEN 30 Row l, LEFT TO RIGHT: K. ORTMAN, w. BOSSE, R. HAL- LER, J. BERTER, G. LAUB, R. TEMKE, T. VARELMANN. ROW 2: R. HATTLER, J. LAZAK, R. WUEST, H. LAMPE, R. SEITZ, J. SCHINDLER, G. HOFMANN. ROW 3: F. KLEIN, D. APPELMAN, L. HABIG, T. MAXWELL, w. SCHWECKE, w. WITZGALL, R. GRUELICH, R. COSTELLO. ROW h: R. SPIN- NER, w. HECKENMUELLER, L. BORCHERS, K. HANDERMANN, A. HALPIN, F. HERMES, T. GEISLER. FRESHMEN 33 ROW l: J. DUVALL, d. HELLWEG, R. STENTZ, T. MARATTA, T. ENGLED, E. STENGER, D. ALEXANDER, O. BIERMAN. ROW 2: R. TATE, G. BLUM, R. VETELLO, D. MARKS, R. NAGEL, P. HENRY, w. STOFFEL. ROW 3: M. KELLER, A. MONING, d. SARVAK, A. SUER, M. HETZER, G. REED, D. WHITE, G. SCHAEPER- ROW h: J. ALEXANDER, G. LoBuouo, J. MEISTER, R. STAUBACH, J. FINLEY, J. BEHNE, C. MICHEL, P. CONDO. BILL BUSKER, DONALD SCHAPPACHER, WITH THE DICTIONARY. FRESHMEN 35 Row 1, LEFT TO RIGHT: R. BECKER, R. KENNY, J. WUEN- NEMANN, J. HEATH, T. KINNE, C. DOMINO, T. BROSS, D. RETTIG. ROW 2: D. STROHOFER, J. FlORINI, R. BERRY, H. KRAUS, R. FINLEY, E. FINKHEINER, T. GARDONIO, R. TEMKE. ROW 3: R. HART, F. KINTZ, J. SANTORO, J. WETHlNGTON, J. ScHLoTMAN, G. ZEIS, K. ERDMAN. ROW h: J. REIBER, A. HARVEY, P. HUNT, J. REILMAN, J. BRESNEN, T. KEARNEY, T. FELDKAMF ROW 5: A. PFAFFEN- BERGER, J. THOMAS, J. MATTHEWS, D. KLOSTERMAN: R. WITZMAN, C. STAHL, G. BROGAN. TOM PAF'F'E AND DICK MESSERLE HARD AT WORK FRESHMEN 3h ROW l. LEFT To RIGHT: K. POEHNER, R. DOPPES, C. BOSSE, G. DIRR, w. HANSMAN, J. HOLT, P. HAARMAN, F. ANDRIACO. Row 2: w. KLEEM, J. KELLER, R. VAN SCYoc, R. SCHNEIDER, J. TRAGESER, J. GROTE, H. FUHRMAN, w. MEINERS. ROW 3: D. SCHEHR, Pu BEISCHEL, E. OBERHEL- MAN, J. MOELLINGER, P. DEITSCH, D. HICKMAN, D. GANG- LOFF, R. DAUWE. Row M: R. WOLSEFERL R. HILVERS, J. WILLIAMS, F. HAGGERTY, R. GREER, J. MUELLER, R. WIECZORKOWSKl, B. RAFIEN. ROW 5: T. DIRR, G. ENDRES, R. DEIDESHEIMER, T. BRUNSMAN, J. JOHANNIGMAN, WM. BUDDE, R. WALKER, R. VOLMER. 'Cmsrfuc rmyti - $06 1 A B O xfixDmef AC DONALD KELLY TRIES TO EXPLAIN THAT GEOMETRY PROBLEM TO GERRY HAAa AND JOHNNY WEIDNER; GERRY LOOKS SKEPTICAL AND WEIDNER WANTS TO ADD A FEW MORE ARCS. SOPHOMORE 31 SOPHOMORE 32 ROW l, LEFT T0 RIGHT: A. ROSENACKER, T. STRASSEL, G. ROW I, LEFT TO RIGHT: H. DRAHMAN, B. SMITH, P. MEYER, HAAB, R. HUDEPOHL, L. WANGER, J. OTTING, T. Fox, J. L. KLEI, P. GEARY, J. HALL, T. FOGARTY, D. F1555. EDWARDS. ROW 2: J. JACOBS, C. SCHMITT, V. WOODRUM, ROW 2: J. COOPER, J. CURRY, S. WEISS, B. HOLLAND, C. SORIANO, d. THINNES, L. DELLERMAN, R. SMITH, J. F. FJORINI, s. HESKETH, J. BURNS, R. FRAKES, C. MAY- BRAUSCH, RON WAGNER. Row 3: E. BLASE, R. CONNERTON, EORG. ROW 3: R. RASP, A. CHAPMAN, J. TEEE, E. RAL- M. HOEHN, R. BALLARD, E. ETSON, J. SIEVERS, A. AL- EIGH, B. SCHLARMANN, R. UNGRUHE, P. HOFFMAN, R. HERR- BERS. Row 4: R. WALDVOGEL, G. FLORA, A. KLEIN, G. MANN. ROW A: J. GROH, J. BROOKEANK, wB KELLEY, J. GORMAN, C. HATTLER, R. WEIDNER. C. STUHLREYER, R. SILVATI, A. ROSENBERGER, J. BORGARDING, J. HEATH. HARTMANN. Row 5: R. RUEBUSCH, D. POHLMAN, R. DAY, ROW 5: P. Fox, v. READY, C. HAGEDORN, A. FLUEGEMAN, ROY WAGNER, J. WEIDNER, C. STEIN, J. Ross. G. MCMAHON, J. GRUPFENHOFF, D. DOPPES. SOPHOMORE 36 ROW l, LEFT TO RIGHT: R. BLACK, R. MICHELS, J. HEEG, L. LOCAPUTO, R. EWEN, T. RAABE, L. FREY. ROW 2: R. EVANS, R. JAEGER, B. MUSSMAN, J. ROBERS, R. FRITZ, d. HOLLSTEGGE, R. GILBERT, K. SPADE. ROW 3: C. DElN- INGER, R. GEERS, J. BERNING, D. CUNNINGHAM, A. REIS- SIG, P. MARCHETTI, J. FARREL. Row M: R. KELLEY, D. ARSZMAN, D. STIGLER, C. STEPHENS, G. REUSCH, J. GIBBEMEYER.. Row 5: R. BOEHM, H. NABERHAUS, N.BRANNEN, P. RIEDE, J. ALBERT, T. BROCKER, R. DOELLMAN. FIATnni n 1A.: JIMMY BURNS tABovz LEFT INTERVIEWS HIS CLASSMATES ON THE SUBJECT OF SOPH- OMORE DATES . A FEW BIOLOGY BOYS ABovE ARE FASCINATED BY FISH. ROOM El LEFT LOOKING AT PICTURES OF EGYPT. THIS IS WHAT i3 KNOWN AS GETTING DOWN TO WORK. SOPHOMORE 2l ROW l, LEFT TO RIGHT: R. RIANCHO, w. WINDHOLTZ, D. GENSHEIMER, R. SAGERS, J. WALLMAN, G. THIEMANN, l. ARZMAN, R. KING. ROW 2: R. TEBBE, J. KRELNER, A. MEYER, J. WEINGARTNER, H. HERDEMAN, R. KEMFER, K. HAUCK, A. STEGEMAN. ROW 3: H. HERRMANN, J. MOELLMAN, D. HARSCH, D. BACHMAN, d. FELKER, P. MADDOCK, T. FREY, R. WIENHOLD. ROW H: A. HERRMANN, w. WORTMAN, R. STURM, D. GLASER, R. BIRKOFER, R. MOELLER, N. SMYTH, D. BRABENDER. ROW 5: D. DETERS, R. HARP, R. NEDER, D. HARDING, E. HENNEL, T. DAVIS, J. OBER, D. KELLY. BIOLOGY Is A FASCINATING SUBJECT TO CHARLEY MOULLIET, JIMMY LOOK AT THOSE BLOCKS OF woool WILGER AND BILL LINFERT. SOPHOMORE I6 Row l: R. SAGEL, R. PURCELL, w. STAHL, J. O'BRYAN, D. LOCAPUTO, S. DAHLMAN, J. KRAMER. ROW 2: R. KLEINGERS, J. SCHMiTZ, R. HEITZMAN, w. HAUSER, R. BIDLEMAN, E. AHR, J. SCHWIETERT, J. FORSCHBACH. Row 3; w. MINK, C. MOULLIET, N. SMITH, C. BRINKMAN, J. KNEiP, J. WERNING, R. LAMP- ING. ROW h: c. SCHEPMAN, J. REES, E. LUIPOLD, D. KAMPF, L. VONDERBRINK, J. BOSSE. J. WILGER. ROW 5: w. LINFERT, w. GEISER, B. HEILE, R. BECK, C. HILL, R. SCHULTZ, w. RIGSBY. . HL.?w.:r:H.rmef .HrW+k w. .LVImvH.-.er..1 .. 9... V1! . L . r, '5 envy JiWUU .u .$.u Engfa .i,.qihlkuaii nw,..RwHw.wWW.J.N..r1M. E.MamevwndnhaknmeWi JUNIOR I3 ROW I: L TO R, c. BORN, E. BrLLMAN, F. SCHMITZ, H. DOTY, L. HUMBERT, J. FARRELL, N. SENA. ROW 2: T. KELLISON, F. DEUBELL, J. NAGEL, D. wEss, R. SHANNON, G. SCHRAND, w. BURKETT. ROW 3: K. DONA- HUE, H. NORDEMAN, R. GEERS, E. MUCCILLO, J. BERENS, T. HAGEN. Row M: C. TRITSCHLER, R. DEARWATER, A. HUDEPOHL, F. CALDWELL, K. HUBER, J. BECK, w. LAM- MERT. DON SEIWERT RIGHT POINTS OUT THE PENNSYLVANIA VOTERS TO FRED OVERBECK. NORB SENA SAT THIS ONE OUT. JIM BECK AND DON HESS BELow TEST THIS GADGET, WHILE HERBERT T. DECIDES TO CONSULT THE BOOK. FR. ERIc's THREE STAR TYPISTS. NOTE THE SERiOUSNESS ON THEIR FACES. 34 JUNIOR 25 RON l: L TO Rj R. DONNELLY, L. CARRAHER, R. BEUER- LEIN, J. KEMEN, D. SEIWERT, R. STRASSEL, D. EVERS. ROW 2: w. MECHLEY, R. NICHTING, T. SCHWARTZ, w. BRoss, R. KOENINGER, T. MUNSON, E. FREKING. Row 3: D. DIRR, M. WEBER, O. LEHMKULL, L. ELSBERND, L. HANSER, P. STIGLER, J. ALEXANDER. Row M: R. ZEIS, w. HORST, J. MONAHAN, R. AMRHEIN, C. HEILMAN, H. DUESING, K. EHEMAN. .0 i Q. - $9a9$ wQ$; JUNIOR 22 Row I: 2L TO R2 R. HENDERSON, A. BARRow, R. GORMAN, J. GARDNER, E. MEYER, C. SMITH, D. LEMMINK, E. WEBER. ROW 2: J. NIEHAUS, J. GONDER, R. SENA, w. VOSKUHL, J. O'BRIEN, T. RIEGER, G. TURNEY, J. WILLENBORG. ROW 3: T. RAPIEN, C. KOEHNE, R. DEIDESHEIMER, R. FLICK, R. SULLIVAN, F. BEITZ!NGER, E. HECKENMUELLER, W. POST, T. MEYER. ROW h: R. SMITH, J. DONAHUE, R. MEINERDING, A. SCHELL, A. REID, D. PALMJSANO, L. STEMANN, P. GRUPENHOFF. JUNIOR I2 ROW 1: 2L TO R2 P. TIERNEY, B. GIESLER, P. LUNN, F. OVERBECK, J. KRISMER, R. ENWRlGHT, H. KNUEVEN, J. CARLOTTA. ROW 2: R. KENNEDY, L. LITTNER, J. SINGER, J. ROGERS, L. MCMANUS, E. MILLER, R. KEMPER, P. JOERLING. ROW 3: G. WILSON, R. HEIDT, J. MEINERS, w. HOFMANN, J. HARTMANN, N. HESTER, D. HASKAMP. ROW u: E. KREINER, K. WURZELBACHER, H. KOTZ, L. MEISBERGER, W. SIMPSON, R. LAMPING, R. BLOM, C. NOE. ROW 5: C. KNOLLMAN, W. LAMMERS, H. EAGLE, C. WITSKEN, 3. HOFMANN, B. BRUNING, J. HUBER, M. BROZ. JUNIOR II , ROW 1: L TO R D. ORBORNE, D. SCHRAGE, J. OLIVERIO, E. COYNE, J. SMILEY, R. WESTENDORF, R. RAKEL, B. NEWMAN. Row 2: J. CLORAN, J. KIST, P. TOBERGTE, H. BROZ, A. MCCARTHY, D. MERCURIO, G. RUHL, J. GARRAD, A. MILLAY. Row 3: R. ELLERT, D. PAUL, A. TEST, C. . HILDEBRAND, R. GRATSCH, c. BIEHN, J. WILLIG, w. M ROEHRICH, E. STRULL. ROW H: E. TURNER, C BULLER, K. THIEMAN, H. RENGERING, R. KISPERT, M. WAINZ, T. HALLER, E. STROTMAN. ROW 5: M. COWGELL, T. WARD, A. DATTOMO, T. WELLING, G. AUSTING, B. FROEHLE, H. ; WERDMAN, R. KESSEN. TOM HAGEN BELOw, EXAMINES THERMOS BOTTLES. AT RIGHT, k LATIN Ill BOYS PREPARING FOR CLASS. THiS BELow, LEFT IS WHAT A CIVICS CLASS LOOKS LIKE; HENDERER IS STUMPED AGAIN. A GROUP OF SENIORS BELow IN ELECTRICITY CLASS. THEY BUILT THESE MOTORS. SENIORS -' 1950 RONALD ALLGEIER PRES. OF RM. 28, HAILS FROM FAIRMOUNT, AM- BITION IN LIFE IS TO BE A PATTERN DESIGNER. AUGGIE'S BEST SUBJECT wAs ELECTRICITY. LIKES TO TAKE LONG RIDES ON SUNDAY AFTERNOONS. CHARLES AUG BACONIAN, B-SCHOLASTIC, MONITOR...BEST sua- JECTS ARE CHEMISTRY AND cuvucs...wANTs TO BE A RADIO TECHNICIAN...A NORTH COLLEGE HILL LAD wHo WORKS AT KROGERS. ANDREW BAMBECK CSMC. MERIT STUDENT...ANDY LIVES IN SOUTHEASTERN ST. BER- NARD. OFTEN SEEN PLAYING CARDS WITH BEERS ...PLAN5 To ATTEND XAVIER AND BECOME A CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT. THOMAS BARESWILT Two GUN CASSIDY HOPES TO ATTEND NIGHT SCHOOL AND BECOME A SALESMAN...SPENDS MOST or HIS TIME CONSERVING ENERGY... wAs A 3000 INTRAMURAL BASKET- BALL CENTER. GLENN BARROW DURING THE SUMMER GLENN woRKs IN THE CEMETERY...THINKS RELIGION Is LESS COMPLICATED THAN OTHER SUBJECTS...HIS GREATEST AMBITION IS TO BE A CARPENTER. RODNEY BAUER R00 :5 KNOWN FOR HIS FAMOUS HOT-ROD...LET'S you KNOW THAT HE HAS NEVER MISSED NOR BEEN LATE IN FOUR YEARS ...USUALLY SEEN WITH NIEMAN, KROGER, AND MARY NAEGLE. GEORGE BECKER RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, MERIT STUDENT, MONITOR ... YOTz ENJOYS CIVICS, BUT LOATHES LATIN AND HISTORY...ALWAYS SEEN WITH LANKY HANK FAGo ...LOVEs TO szM. MARK BEISCHEL LATIN CLUB, MERIT STUDENT...THI5 QUIET LITTLE PRODUCT or WHITE OAK HAS NO AMBITION IN LIFE... PALS WITH BERNIE MEINERS...THINK5 scucncs IS INTERESTING. RICHARD BEITING RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, MERIT STUDENT, ORATORICAL CONTEST... DICK IS ONE or THE FEW BOYS 0F CLIF- TON...PLANS TO ATTEND A BUSINESS COLLEGE...PLAY5 AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL...WAS THE CORPSE FOR EXTREME UNCTION PRACTICE. BERYL BERGMANN LATIN AND CAMERA CLUBS, MONITOR...AMBITION Is TO BE A CHEMICAL ENGINEER... BUGHEAD ADMITS THAT LATIN 3 WAS COMPLICATED AND UNINTERESTING ...ALwAYs POPULAR WITH THE LADIES. EDWARD BIRCK CAMERA CLUB, MONITOR...AM- BITION Is TO BE A MECHANIC... PALS WITH SCHOLLE AND HOESL... HAS A HOBBY or MAKING MODEL AIRPLANES...THAT CERTAIN PAR- TY IS A GlRL NAMED JEAN. PAUL BLESI RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, LATIN AND CAMERA CLUBS, MERIT STU- DENT, MONITOR...CLAIMS CHEMIS- TRY HAS Hls BEST SUBJECT... wAs ALwAYs WIDE AwAKE IN CLASS...0FTEN SEEN WITH MEYER, STARK, AND CLARK. JAMES BODEMER JIM LIVES IN SOUTH MOUNT AUBURN, BUT ATTENDS ST. FRAN- CIS SERAPH...HAS A HOBBY OF COLLECTING ANYTHING...LIKES ALL SPORTS ESPECIALLY BASKET- BALL AND BASEBALL...PALS WITH BARRON AND FRITZ. KENNETH BOEHM DRAMA GUILD, MERIT STUDENT, KANGAROO COURT...BOAST5 THAT HE HAS ONLY BEEN JUGGED l5 T1MES...NO SPECIAL LADIES, JUST PLAYS THE FIELD...AT WORK HE DOES ANYTHING THE WEBER DAIRY WANTS HIM T0 DO.-.FRIEND 0F HOSFORD, DAY, AND RAPPO- PORT. JAMES BOLTE BACONIAN, LATIN CLUB, MERIT STUDENT, GLEE CLUB... BOLT OF NORTHSIDE WANTS To BE A SURGEON ...ALwAYs FOLLOWS MR. DOERGER'S PROVERB, AGE Quoo AGIS ...VERY POPULAR WITH THE GIRLS, HE SAYS. GLENN BRANNON MERIT STUDENT, MONITOR...GLENN wAs VICE- PRESIDENT OF HIS CLASS...THIS IRISHMAN FROM AVONDALE wAs A LITTLE ON THE DEVILISH SIDE, ESPECIALLY IN c1VIcs... DAGo OBSERVES ALL JEWISH HOLIDAYS. 3:9 E 9: F .3 j 'Avf .'l A'i'u'A h . r ; .n it E'. 1.x: - eru iswwvr'iAr-reqmnv RONALD CHAIN RELIGIOUS COUNC1L, DRAMA GUILD, MONITOR, KANGAROO COURT... RANDY WANTS TO GO TQ DRAMATIC SCHOOL AND BECOME AN ACTOR...USUALLY SEEN WITH GOLDIE AND HIS BOYS...COLLECTS GUNS. JOHN CLARK BACONIAN... CLARKBAR HAS AN INTERESTING HOBBY OF COLLECTING ROOSEVELT DIMES ...HITS IT OFF WELL WITH FR. PASCHAL...WANTS TO BE A PHARMACIST ...THINKS THE WORLD AND ALL or MARGIE. JAMES COMERFORD B-ATHLETIC... BIG JIM PALS WITH ELMER AND THE REST or THE INTELLECTUAL SET...THIS LAD FROM COLLEGE HILL Is QUITE A CHESS PLAYER, IF YOU ASK HIM...HAS MANY FEMININE ADMIRERS. EDWARD COSTELLO RELIGIOUS COUNCIL...ED SAYS HE HATES BOOKS BECAUSE HE WORKS WITH THEM AT SCHOOL AND WORK ...WISHES TO BECOME A BOOKKEEPER...CONSTANT FRIEND OF RITA GANGLOFF. 40 LESTER BRUNER MERIT STUDENT... BRUN0 :5 ONE OF THE SMALLEST SENIORS...WORKS AS A GAS STATION ATTENDANT AND WISHES TO BECOME .A RANCH OWNER...COLLECTS ARMY AND NAVY 1NSIGNIA. LOUIS BURKART Lou COMES FROM SOUTH CUMMUNSVILLE...AMBITION IN LIFE Is TO SETTLE DOWN AND RELAX...INTERESTED IN FOOTBALL, BASKETBALL, AND HUNTING...SAY5 HE DOESN'T LIKE GIRLS. JOHN CULLEN RELIGIOUS COUNCIL...THE RUGGED FARM BOY FROM MT. HEALTHY...HUNTING IS RED's FAVORITE SPORT... JUST LOVES TO STUDY ENGLISH...CAN SQUARE DANCE WITH THE BEST or THEM. GERALD CUMMINGS JERRY WORKS AT THE FRIARS CLUB...PLAYS F.0.P. BASKETBALL...IS ONE OF THE SLEEPlEST STUDENTS... ANOTHER LOYAL CORRYVILLE ROOTER...BUMS WITH WOLF, FROEHLE, AND DOEREN. JEROME DAVIS DELIVERS MEAT IN MT. AIRY...ALwAYs GETT!NG HOELSCHER INTO TROUBLE'- ASK MR. JOHNSON...w0R5T SUBJECT IS PUBLIC SPEAKING...HIS IT IS DORIS w. JAMES DAY LATIN AND GLEE CLUBS, MERIT STUDENT...JIM Is A PLEASANT BOY...WANTS TO BE A PHARMACIST AFTER GOING TO COLLEGE...CLAIMS HE HAS NO GIRL FRIENDS - A DOUBTFUL STATEMENT. ROBERT DOEREN MERIT STUDENT...LIKES TO DANCE TO sLow MUSIC ... DERN IS ONE OF THE GOOD CQRYVILLE BOYS... COLLECTS PENNIES...woRKs AT GEORGIAN CLUB SETTING UP PINS. NORMAN DUFFY DUFF RIDES THE AIRLIFT FROM BRIDGETOWN TO SCHOOL...EVERYBODY AT BACON Is HIS FRIEND...A SILENT AND STUDIOUS LAD...HAS A HOBBY OF COLLECT- ING ADDRESSES AND PHONE NUMBERS. F PAUL EVANS MERIT STUDENT, JUN. SPART. PLAYER... CALVERT RESERVE WANTS TO BE A BARTENDER...HAS BEEN PREPARING FOR IT...IN CLASS PAUL Js HELLWEG'S ANSWER BOOK...ESCORTS ROSEMARY. FRANK FAGO LANKY HANK IS ONE OF THE POPULAR CATS ...EXCEPTIONALLY GOOD IN JITTERBUGGING AND PROUD OF THE FACT...NOT LIKELY TO SET THE WORLD ON FIRE...GOOD AT HUNTING AND FISHING. DONALD FAHRENKAMP MERIT STUDENT...DON, THE MEAT CUTTER, HAS AMBITIONS OF BECOMING A COMMERCIAL ARTIST... HAS A Two YEAR MEMBERSHIP CARD IN THE HAPPY BACHELOR'S CLUB...AN ASSOCIATE OF LEE WIEST. ROBERT FELLER RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, STUDENT UNION, B-SCHOLAS- TIC, DRAMA, AND KANGAROO COURT...BDB IS AN ACTIVE FELLOW AT R.B...wILL GO PLACES...WASVERY ACTIVE IN POLITICS. 42 DONALD DUNDES WIMPY rs THE QUIET, SOFT-SPOKEN CHAP... DRIVES THAT RED-FlRE-ENGING-TRUCK AFTER SCHOOL ...HAs A SPECIAL iNTEREST IN ALL O.L.A. JUNIORS. WILLIAM DWERTMAN ANOTHER ST. CLEMENT CHAP... BEE SAYS H13 BEST SUBJECT wAs HISTORY...DISFLAYS QUITE A BOWLING STYLE...NEVER HAD THE PRIVILEGE 0F VISITING RM. HO. RONALD FERGUSON BAND, ORCHESTRA... FERGJE IS A SOUVENIR COLLECTOR.-.PLANS TO BECOME A 5A1 LOR..-WORKS AS A CLERK IN A HARDWARE STORE...SLOW musrc IS HIS DELiGHT...CUTS A MEAN FIGURE ON SKATES. EDWARD FISHER BACONIAN, LATIN AND B-SCHOLASTIC CLUBS, KANGA- Roo COURT...WILL DIVULGE NO INFORMATION IN REGARD To THE LADIES...AS FOOTBALL MANAGER ED USED To SPIKE THE WATER BOTTLES...DEVOURS POETRY. GILES FISHER RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, GLEE CLUB...w0RKs AT THE HOME FOR THE BLIND - YOU KNOW WHY...BECAME FAMOUS FOR HELPING THE POLICE CATCH A THIEF...THE GLEE CLUB'S PERRY Como. ROBERT FLICK MONITOR...BOB IS THE FELLOW wHo ANSWERED ALL HISTORY QUESTIONS WITH A SHRUG OF HIS SHOULDERS ...L0VE5 TO lCE-SKATE BECAUSE HE DOESN'T HAVE TO TALK...GOOD LOOKING. PATRICK FLYNN PAT IS THE GOOD LOOKING, SMILING IRISHMAN... RESIDES IN CLIFTON...PLANS To ATTEND MIAMI COLLEGE ...HAS NO PARTICULAR GIRL FRIENDS...0UT OF SCHOOL PLAYS BASKETBALL AT FRIARS. MARTIN FREY CSMC, DRAMA...LrKEs CHEMISTRY BECAUSE FR. FLAVIAN TEACHES IT...COMES FROM THE UNTAMED REGIONS or GROESBECK...PALS WITH RUGGED RAY HOLLENKAMP ...DIVINE DANCER. 43 . 'mw MW. . mm' JAMES FROEHLE MERIT STUDENT...FRITZ SPENT MOST OF H15 SCHOOL DAYS IN SOLID SLUMBER...DRIVES A TRUCK FOR THE POST OFFICE...MAY BE SEEN WITH SCHOENUNG AND CUMMINGS. EDWARD GANGLOFF RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, CSMC, DRAMA...ED Is FR. ALDRIc's PERSONAL ADVISOR...HAS AMBITIONS OF BEING A TYCOON...HIS EXEMPLARY CONDUCT CAUSED A REVFSION or THE VADE MECUM . JOSEPH GATIO MONITOR... BANANA Nose , THE FRIENDLY ITALIAN WHO IS USUALLY SEEN WITH MOLLOY AND HENDERSON... TO BE A PHARMACIST...HAS A SPECIAL DATE BY THE NAME OF MARY ANN...F.O.P. BASEBALL. VINCENT GERACI BACONJAN, TRACK...WANTS TO BECOME AN AVIATION CADET...CAME TO SCHOOL IN THE DODGE...TOTES A GUN IN RIFLE CLUB...SERVED MASS WITH MILLER EVERY SUNDAY AT READING...LIKES HOMEWORK. 44 PAUL FREY RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, LATIN CLUB...PAUL WORKS IN Hrs FATHER'S BUTCHER SHOP...TAKES THINGS AS THEY COME...LIKES SOLID GEOMETRY BECAUSE IT'S LAWRENCE FRITZ A MOUNT AUBURN BOY WHO WORKS WITH AN ADVER- TISTNG COMPANY...LIKES THE OUTDOORS, ESPECIALLY HUNTING AND FISH!NG...REFUSES TO DANCE...NEVER RECOVERED FROM THE SHOCK or ELECTRICITY. JAMES GIBBONS CLAIMS TO BE THE WORLD'S WORST DANCER...LIKES FR. PASCHAL's JOKES...THINKS THAT SCHOOL DAYS ARE DAYS OF REST...KNOWN TO HIS FRIENDS AS GIZMO. RAYMOND GIBLIN MERIT STUDENT...KNOWN AS GIBBYCAT ...HIS HOBBY IS WORKING WITH WOODCRAFT...BEST SUBJECT ts ENGLISH BECAUSE IT RUNS IN THE FAMILY...NO GALS - WANTS TO SAVE HIS MONEY. FRANK GLANDORF MERIT STUDENT... THE QUIET ANGEL OF ST. BER- NARD ...SEEM5 TO BE VERY STUDIOUS AT TIMES... PLAYS BASKETBALL IN F.O.P. LEAGUE...WORKS FOR THE OHIO WEIGHT COMPANY. DONALD GOLDSCHMIDT BACONIAN, GLEE CLUB, DRAMA, KANGAROO COURT, MONITOR... DON STEVENS ON TV...WANTS TO BE A TELEVISION STAR...HAS A FRIEND BY THE NAME OF COLETTE...KNOWN AS GOLDIE . RAYMOND GROTE B-SCHOLASTIC, MONJTOR...A QUIET, GOOD LOOKING FELLOW...TO QUOTE HIM, ! DON'T CAUSE TEACHERS MUCH TROUBLE ...HAS PLANS OF BECOMING A CHEMICAL ENGINEER AFTER SOME COLLEGE WORK. ROBERT GUSTIN TONY SAYS THAT HE SPENT FOUR QUIET, RESTFUL YEARS AT BACON...BE5T SUBJECTS WERE RELIGION AND HISTORY...LIKES BASKETBALL AND WORKS AS AN USHER IN A DRIVE 1N THEATER . 45 HENRY HARMS FOOTBALL, TRACK, B-ATHLETIC, MERIT STUDENT... THE QUIET BOY OF RM. 27...ELECTED PROM KING AND HAD TO FIX A FLAT AFTERWARDS...ONE OF THE MORE FAMOUS EAGER BEAVERS . JOHN HARTMANN RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, MONITOR...JOHN HAILS FROM NORTHSIDE...LIKES ALL THE GIRLS...WANTS TO OWN HIS OWN BUSINESS, BUT NO COLLEGE FOR HIM... I'M JUST NO BRAIN . JOHN HAUSFELD FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB, CSMC...JACK ENJOYED SCHOOL MOSTLY BECAUSE OF THE MANY EXTRA HOURS OF SLEEP HE GOT...BAc0N's BIG FULLBACK...AMBJTION IS TO BECOME A CARPENTER. MARVIN HELLWEG BACONIAN, MERIT STUDENT... BOOTSY IS REALLY A FINE FELLow...FR. OWEN'S PUBLIC ENEMY NUMBER ONE...PALS WITH THE BIG THREE - WILLKE, HUBER, AND HAGEN...TO STUDY JOURNALISM. 46 ALBERT HAMMOOR RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, LATIN CLUB...A VERY DILI- GENT STUDENT THAT SELDOM CAUSES ANY TROUBLE... AL ENJOYS ALL LANGUAGES, BUT LOATHES MATHEMATICS ...FRlEND 0F ED FISHER. JOSEPH HAMMOOR BAND PRESIDENT, MONITOR...AL'S BIG BROTHER... COMES FROM THE SECTION or TOWN KNOWN AS MOHAWK ...RAISES HAMSTERS AS A HOBBY...NEVER TELLS ANSWERS IN TESTS, ESPECIALLY CIVICS. KENNETH HENDERER DRAMA, CHEERLEADER, MONITOR... MIGHTY MOUSE AT BACON...KEN GOES TO ALL THE DANCES, HERE AND ABROAD...A SODA JERK IN A DRUG STORE...WANTS TO BE A PHARMACIST. GERALD HERBERT HERB IS A STAUNCH MEMBER OF BACON'S HAPPY BACHELOR CLUB...IN HIS SPARE TIME HE WORKS As A GREASE MONKEY AT A GARAGE...CAN DANCE TO ANY KIND OF MUSIC...PAL3 WITH ED TASSET. WILLIAM HERRMANN LATiN CLUB, MONITOR...ALTHOUGH A STREETCAR MONITOR, HE ALWAYS MANAGED TO BE FIRST ON THE KNowLTON CORNER SPECIAL...SAYS THAT HISTORY WAS HIS WORST SUBJECT...GOOD BOWLER. JOHN HESSLER BACONIAN, GLEE CLUB...JACK PLAYS THE DRUMS IN VIC ADKINS ORCHESTRA...CONDUCT IN CLASS WAS EXCELLENT WHEN FAR AWAY FROM HITZMAN...WHO IS JELLYBEAN? DONALD HINSSEN LATIN AND B-SCHOLASTIC CLUBS... RED COMES FROM THE GREEN HILLS OF MONFORT HEIGHTS...LIKES LANGUAGES - HAD A coon TIME...HIS FAVORITE RECREATION IS BOWLING. WILLIAM HITZMAN STUDENT UNION, BASEBALL, B-ATHLETIC, KANGAROO COURT... THE LOST LAMB THAT RETURNED TO BACON ...ROAMED THE PASTURES FOR THE BACON NINE ... CHEMISTRY FASCINATES HIM. 47 u? h. ' 1 '-X'T-w- A mug? .m. m n T-wwvm,rwww w tr mmmmmmmm DONALD HOLTGREWE CSMC, MERIT STUDENT, MONI- TOR...DON GAVE HJS TEACHERS NOTHING BUT WHOLEHEARTED AT- TENTION FOR FOUR YEARS...w0RKs FOR A CHURCH SUPPLY COMPANY... ENJOYS BILL HUBER'S WIT. ROGER HOSFORD RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, BASKETn BALL, BAND, ORCHESTRA... BIG STOOP PLANS TO BE A SCIENTIFIC FARMER...OFTEN SEEN DRIVING ONE OF HIS DAD's NEW CHRYS- LERS...PALS WITH RAPPOPORT AND BOEHM. RONALD HOUCK TRACK, CSMC, GLEE CLUB, DRAMA...51NGS WITH GOLDIE AND HlTZMAN DURING RELIGION CLASS...PLAYS BASKETBALL FOR ST. ANDREwlsm..MAIN HOBBY IS TRYING TO GET OUT or WORK. HERMAN HUBE BAND, ORCHESTRA... HUB PLANS TO BE A RADIO SERVICEMAN...WORK5 AT HELLER'S RADIO STORE... GREAT TRUMPET PLAYER FOR FR. BENNET...TREMENDOUS PlNG-PONG PLAYER...LIKES HUNTING AND FISHING. 48 RICHARD HOCTER DRAMA, KANGAROO COURT... FEARLESS IS VERY TALENTED IN THE FIELD or ACTING...ALWAYS A GREAT HIT IN THE BACON DRAMAS...WORKS IN A LUMBER YARD, BUT WANTS TO BE A RADlO ANNOUNCER. JAMES HOELSCHER STUDENT UNION, BASEBALL, FOOTBALL, PRES. 0F B-ATHLETIC, MERrT STUDENT...JIM wAs REALLY BA- con's MOST POPULAR ... Sc00TER WAS A GREAT ATH- LETE...NEVER HAD AN ENEMY. NICHOLAS HOESL RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, CSMC... THIS FAIRMOUNT CROONER PLANS TO BE A PHARMACIST...VERY POPULAR WITH THE LADIES, BUT MORE so WITH PEGGY AND PAT... NEVER CAUSED ANY DISTURBANCE. RAYMOND HOLLENKAMP MONITOR...RAY RESIDES IN NORTH COLLEGE HILL...HAS AM- BITiONS OF BECOMING AN ELECTRI- CAL ENGINEER...EARN5 HES KEEP As JANITOR OF THE SECOND NATIONAL BANK IN CLIFTON.H GAVE LIFE TO RM. 26. . -uum MELVIN HUBER FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB, MERIT STUDENT... MEL wAs A VARSITY LINEMAN FOR TWO YEARS...WOULD LIKE TO ATTEND OHIO STATE TO STUDY AGRICULTURE... FARMER BOY . WILLIAM HUBER CSMC, B-SCHOLASTJC CLUB, MONITOR...BILL WAS PRESIDENT OF CSMC...MEMBER OF THE GANGLOFF CLAN ... I LIKE TO LISTEN TO GANGLOFF'S INSANE IDEAS ...HOTEL DESK CLERK. HARVEY HUMMELDORF MONITOR... HARV IS ANOTHER INDIVIDUAL WHO LIKES TO ARGUE WITH GANGLOFF..AWORKS IN THE FORBIDDEN TERRITORY OF PRICE HILL...PLAYS THE ONE ARM BAN- DITS...GOES WITH BEA SUDLER. JAMES HUMPHREY JIMMER , A SUPPOSEDLY QUI- ET, ORDINARY STUDENT, IS A FOLLOWER OF ART...HATES ANY- THING CONNECTED wiTH MATHE- MATICS...IS AN ABOLITIONIST OF WORK...CLAIMS THAT HE IS JUST PLAIN SMART . DONALD HUNSCHE BAND, ORCHESTRA, MONITOR ...GATHERED MORE ADS THAN ALL OTHER SENIORS...DON IS A COIN COLLECTOR...MUSICIAN OF GREAT RENOWN...FROUD THAT HE WAS NEVER JUGGED IN ALL FOUR YEARS. RICHARD HUXEL FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB ... BONECRUSHER Hux DEFIED ANYONE COMING THROUGH CENTER ...CLAFMS HE IS A CLASSROOM MODEL...CAN BE SEEN IN ANY POOL ROOM IN CARTHAGE. PAUL JUNGKUNZ BASEBALL, MERIT STUDENT... JUNK IS TOPS WITH THE BOYS...HAILS FROM NORTHSIDE AND IS USUALLY SEEN TALKING OVER THAT NIGHT BEFORE WITH KROGER AND HUXEL...TRIES VERY HARD TO DANCE. CARL KAMPHAUS AUGIE , A MT. HEALTHY LAD, HAS NO INTEREST OR AMBITION IN LIFE...JUST LIVES...WORKS AT A N.C.H. BAKERY...PLAYS OUT OF SCHOOL BASKETBALL ...BUMs WITH MILT KEtFER. 49 :DU'ICDd MILTON KEIFER MILT WAS TO BECOME A CERTIFiED PUBLIC ACCOUNT- ANT...LIKES HORSESHOES, HUNTiNG, AND FISHING... GREAT DAYDREAMER...HAS A PATH WORN TO MABLE'S HOUSE ACROSS THE STREET. DONALD KELLER MERIT STUDENT...DON 15 THE STUDIOUS LAD WHO WANTS TO BECOME A SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS MAN... ANOTHER MEMBER OF BAcoN's HAPPY BACHELORS CLUB ...WORKS IN A FRUlT MARKET. HENRY KEMPE FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB, MERIT STUDENT... THIS RUGGED MAN HOFES TO OWN HIS OWN PONY KEG... LOVES ALL GIRLS, HE CLAIMS...FOR Two YEARS THE PATRIOTIC CUSTODIAN OF THE FLAG. JEROME KENNEDY THE KENNEDY KID wAs NOTED FOR HIS ANTICS IN AND OUT OF THE CLASSROOM...WORKS AT ALBERS IN CORRYVILLE...USUALLY FOUND WITH GENE KOENIG, MULVIHILL, AND KLEI. 50 GEORGE KATHMAN GEORGE ALAN HAS AMBITIONS or MAKING MILLIONS ...A SODA JERK IN A BOND HILL DRUG STORE...THE TARDY LAD ...ANOTHER FAMOUS EAGER BEAVER...PALS WITH GENE KOENIG AND LYSAGHT. DONALD KATTUS SCHOOL PRESIDENT, 3 MAJOR SPORTS, MERIT STU- DENT, BACONIAN, B-ATHLETIC, B-SCHOLASTIC, AND LATIN CLUBS.. BUTCH HAD BOTH THE BRAIN AND BRAWN...HOBBY IS EATING...AMBITION TO EAT MORE. ALBERT KESSE FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB...AL LIVES IN CHEVIOT...PLAYED A LOT OF LINE ON THE FOOTpALL TEAM...COULDN'T GET ENOUGH or BOOKKEEPING... A FRIEND 0F OBER AND PAMPANIN. ROBERT KINNE CSMC...BOB WOULD SOME DAY LlKE TO OWN HIS OWN AIRPLANE...CALLED GINNrNs BY FRIENDS RIEGER AND ZEINNER...THIS BOY REFUSES TO DANCE ...PLAYED FOOTBALL FOR HIS PARISH TEAM. JAMES KLEI RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, DRAMA, MERIT STUDENT... HAS WORKED AT THE FAIR STORE FOR FOUR YEARS... WANTS TO BE A TELEVISION ANNOUNCER...HOBBY IS COLLECTING COINS... HEAD . FRANK KLEIN GOLF AND TENNIS ARE FRANK'S FAVORITE SPORTS ...LIKEs CHEMISTRY AND WANTS SOMEDAY TO BE A SCIENTIST...LIKES TO DANCE TO GERMAN AND POLISH MUSIC...LISTENS TO GOOD CLASSICAL MUSIC. WILLIAM KNEIDL WEE WILLIE SAYS THAT WITHOUT A DOUBT HIS FOUR YEARS AT BACON WERE HIS HAPPlEST...THIS CARTHAGE PRODUCT LOVES TO HUNT AND FISH...HAS MANY FRIENDS. EUGENE KOENlG l'THE HOOD , AS HE IS AFFECTlONATELY KNOWN BY HIS FRIENDS, SAYS HISTORY WAS HIS BEST sua- JECT...WILL TELL YOU THAT HE AS IS AVERAGE BOY THAT LIKES TO HAVE FUN...FRIEND or ROSIE. Ec?, RICHARD KREBS DURING THE SUMMER D1CK WORKS AS LOCKER BOY AT AIRY HlLLS...HARDLY KNOW THAT HE'S AROUND... DABBLES 1N PHOTOGRAPHY...HUNTS AND FISHES WITH ROD BAUER. JOSEPH KREKE MONITOR... ELKREKO HOPES TO BECOME AN ADMIRAL IN THE NAVY...A MASTER BAKER...UNFORTUNATELY LIVES IN CORRYVILLE... KEY MAN II IN HIS HOME- ROOM...PLAYS MUNICIPAL BASEBALL. JOSEPH KROGER FOOTBALL, TRACK, B-ATHLETIC...JOE wAs BACON'S VICIOUS TACKLE...WHITE OAK CLAIMS HiM...BUMS WITH NIEMAN, HUXEL, AND BEERS ...STILL TRYING TO DATE MARIAN...wANTs TO BE FBI AGENT. BERNARD KUETHE DRAMA, KANGAROO COURT... BIG BEN DIVIDES HIS TIME BETWEEN A GROCERY STORE AND A GIRL FROM REGINA...IS THE PERFECT GENTLEMAN IN CLASS... PRODIGIOUS READER. 52 JEROME KOENIG BASKETBALL, BASEBALL...JERRY IS ANOTHER READ- ING LAD wHo IS USUALLY SEEN WITH SCOOTER, PFEN- NIG, AND GIBBONS...HAS AMBITIONS OF MAKiNG AN H I! HONEST MILLION... PUGGIE AND THE Fox . .RONALD KRAMER GLEE CLUB, MERIT $TUDENT...RON HAS THE RECORD OF HAVING NEVER BEEN JUGGED...GETS A BIG THRILL OUT OF MACBETH...WANTS TO GO TO O.M.l. AND BE- COME AN ELECTRICIAN. RICHARD LANGENECKER LATIN CLUB, BACONIAN dR., KANGAROO COURT... DEACON WON FAME AS DR. KRANKHEIT IN KANGAROO COURT...LIVES ON AMBER LIQUIDS...WELL KNOWN AS ANNOUQCER ON WEEKLY RADIO PROGRAM AT SCHOOL. JAMES LAUMAN RED HAS AMBITIONS OF BECOMING A MECHANICAL ENGINEER...BUILDS MODEL AIRPLANES...LOVES PING poms AND SWIMM!NG...ALWAYS SEEN WITH MARGIE... PALS WITH PETRONIO AND PETTKO. DALE LAWRENCE DALE HAILS FROM SOUTH FAIRMOUNT...HAS AMBITIONS OF GRABBING ANY PROFESSION THAT PAYS WELL.H DOESN'T GO FOR DANCING...SCIENCE IS HIS SPECIALTY ... VALLE . JAMES LICHTENBERG B-SCHOLASTIC CLUB...JIM WORKS IN READlNG GRO- CERY STORE...A HANDSOME BLOND...LIKES ALL SUBJECTS EXCEPT HISTORY...PREFER5 TO WATCH ATHLETIC CON- TESTS THAN FARTICJPATE... L1CHTY . THOMAS LUECKE RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, CAMERA CLUB... LUKE PLANS TO BE A CHEF...I5 FR. FLAVIAN'S FAVORITE PUPiL ...PERMANENT MEMBER OF THE EAGER BEAVERS...A NUMISMATIST...WORKS AT UNION TERMINAL. RAYMOND LYONS GLEE CLUB...RAY IS A NICE CHAP COMING FROM ST. MONICA...HIS DATE BOOK IS LOADED...HAS A HOBBY OF COLLECTING PosT CARDS...ANOTHER MEMBER OF RM. 27. 53 1- DONALD MAINS DRAMA, MONITOR...DON LIVES IN THE VALLEY OF HARTWELL...IS A SODA JERK IN WYOMING...DESJRES TO WORK FOR PkG...ANoTHER MEMBER OF M CLUB OF RM. 28...KNOWN AS THE SENATOR . JOHN MARSHALL FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB...J0HN WAS FAMOUS FOR HIS 95 YARD TOUCHDOWN RUN AGAINST CHAMINADE ... M CLUB MEMBER...WANTS TO OPERATE BREWERY WITHOUT SCHULTE...SOCIAL MAN ABOUT TOWN. MILTON McENENY BASEBALL, BAND, B-ATHLETIC CLUB...HISTORY Is HIS FAVORITE SUBJECT... MAC IS BACON's GREAT SHORTSTOP...WANTS TO PLAY BIG LEAGUE BASEBALL ...PALs WITH SCIAMANNA AND STAUD. ROBERT MCGEORGE MAc's MAIN INTERESTS ARE PLAYING FOOTBALL FOR THE PRICE HrLL COMETS AND JOBY ...U5UALLY SEEN IN GOD'S COUNTRYHWITH THE OTHER FAIRMOUNT aovs...ron HIM CIVICS WAS EASY. 54 GERALD LYSAGHT CAMERA CLUB, GLEE CLUB, KANGAROO COURT... G.L. DABBLES 1 PHOTOGRAPHY AND MECHANICS... DWELLS IN COLLEGE HILL...DRIVESA BIG BLUE BUICK ...hABOVE REPROACH IN CLASS. RICHARD MACKE RELIGIOUS COUNCIL...D1CK Is THE QUIET, PEACE- LOVING TYPE...HIS ONE AMBITION IS TO DRIVE A DIESEL LOCOMOTIVE...MEMBER OF THE EXCLUSIVE l'M CLUB OF RM. 28... MAC . BERNARD ME NERS RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, B-SCHOLASTIC, MERIT STU- DENT...MEMBER OF THE INSEPARABLE TRIO 0F MEINERS, BEISCHEL, AND RIEGER...AN INTELLECTUAL GENIUS... ELECTRICAL ENGINEER... BERNIE . EUGENE MEISTER BACONIAN dR., DRAMA, B-ATHLETIC CLUB, MERIT STUDENT, KANGAROO COURT...BACON BROADCASTER... WORKS ON TV DURING SUMMER... M!CE IS A GREAT POLI TlClAN. . .GREAT ACTOR . . .JOURNALISM. JOHN MERRITT BASEBALL, MONITOR...PLANS TO ATTEND XAVIER AND BECOME GYM INSTRUCTOR...QUTTE A PITCHER ON BACON's BASEBALL TEAM... ENGLISH HAS MORE VARIETY ... MOPEY . VINCENT MEYER GLEE CLUB, MERIT STUDENT...VINCE HOPEs TO ATTEND OHIO STATE AND STUDY AGR:CULTURE...TINKERS WITH GAS MOTORS...SUPPLIED THE VOLUME TO THE GLEE CLUB...DOES SOME DANCING. CHARLES MILLER MERIT STUDENT, MONITOR...BELONGS TO THE ARMY AIR FORCE RESERVE...SERVES SUNDAY MAss WITH GERACI IN READING... CHUCK HOPES TO TRAVEL ALL OVER THE COUNTRY...ALSO DOES SOME BOWLING. WALTER MOELLER BAND, ORCHESTRA...SETS UP PINS AT ST. CLEMENT BOWLING LANES...DOES A LITTLE .JITTERBUGGING... BETTER THAN AVERAGE IN CLASS...SPENDS MUCH TIME IN KATE's DINER... 55 EARL MOLLOY RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, MONITOR...EARL IS A BAR- WYOMING GRILL...PLAYS FOOTBALL .VERY MUCH INTERESTED TENDER AT THE AND BASEBALL OUT OF SCHOOL.. 1N MATHEMATICS... ROBERT MOULLIET FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC, LATIN CLUB, BACONIAN, MERIT STUDENT...BOB IS PRESfDENT OF THE LATIN CLUB... TIGER WAS THE SPUNKY TACKLE ON THE 1 H BACON LINE...AFFECTIONATELY KNOWN As 'B--Rs . ROGER MUENCH CSMC...ROG CARRIES TRAYS AT JEWISH HOSPITAL...HAS GREAT AMBITIONS OF BECOMING A FLOR- IST...SPENDS EVENING AT THE ; BOWLING LANEs...cAN'T FATHOM BOOKKEEPING. GERALD MULVIHILL CSMC, TRACK... MOBY HAS A RARE AMBITION, THAT OF BE- COMING AN UNDERTAKER...SHUF- FLES ABOUT IN A CROSLEY STA- TlON WAGON...SPEEDY CINDER MAN...EXCELS IN GOLDBRICKING. EMANUEL NAPOLITANO NELE INTENDS TO GO TO COLLEGE AND succsao H15 FATH- ER IN THE MONUMENT BUSINESS ...PRACTICALLY RESIDES AT MERGARDS...RIGHT BEHIND SPEED ENTERING THE SMOKER... STUD . NORBERT NERL BAND...wANTs AN EASY JOB WITH LOTS OF M0NEY...AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL AND CYO BAs- KETBALL... KNOB CAN USUALLY BE SEEN WITH A 3.2 BOTTLE... FINDS ENGLISH EASY. FRANK NIEMAN FOOTBALL, TRACK, B-ATHLETIC AND B-SCHOLASTiC CLUBS, MERIT STUDENT, LATIN CLUB... NEMd'Is ANOTHER BACON BRAIN...TO BE AN ALASKAN TRAPPER ...LIFEGUARD...VERY POPULAR WITH ALL. GINO PAMPANIN DRAMA, BACON1AN, KANGAROO COURT... MR. FIVE av FIVE wAs USUALLY LUGGING THAT LITTLE CAMERA ...WOULD LIKE TO BE A BUSINESS ADMINISTRATOR... FAMOUS BACON ACTOR... TANK . 56 MICHAEL PETRONIO MIKE HArLs FROM FAIRMOUNT...PRESENTLY WORKING IN A DRUG STORE...PLANS TO ATTEND COL- LEGE AND BECOME A PHARMACIST... DUKE THOUGHT TEACHERS A BIT DICTATORIAL... REBEL . STEPHEN PETTKO STUDENT UNiON, BASEBALL, BASKETBALL, B-ATH- LETIC CLUB, MERPT STUDENT...WANTS TO BE AN OF- FICER IN THE NAVY...A BACHELOR UNTIL HE GETS COMMON SENSE, HE SAYS... LOVE THAT GEOMETRY . KENNETH PFENNIG KANGAROO COURT...HAs AM- BITIONS OF BEING A GOOD TRAP- PER...FINE BDWLER... TYPING TIRES OUT YOUR FINGERS ... SAYS DANCING ONLY WEARS OUT YOUR SHOES...EXCELLENT ECONO- MIST. RONALD RAPPOPORT BASKETBALL, B-SCHOLASTIC ... BIG RAP INTENDS TO BE A CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT ...VERY STUDIOUS LAD...PLEAs- ANT PERSONALITY...PALS WITH HOSFORD, DAY, BoEHM, AND BAM- BECK. ROBERT REIS ORATORICAL CONTEST, TRACK ...Bos wow MANY HONORS FOR HIS ORATORICAL ABILITY...FA- VORITE SUBJECT rs LATIN... CORRYVILLE FOOTBALL TEAM... MINERAL COLLECTOR...WONDERFUL GUY. RAYMOND RENALDO RAY LIVES IN FAIRMOUNT... FRIEND OF ALL WESTERN HILL GIRLS...EAGER BEAVER BOY... ELECTRlClTY SHOCKED HIM... - PALS WITH HITZMAN, STARK, AND FRITZ... ACE . FERDINAND REVERMAN GETS IN FR. PASCHAL's HAIR BY DOING NOTHING ...wOULD MUCH RATHER FISH THAN GO TO SCHOOL... LOVES MATH BUT DOESN'T KNOW WHY...WORKS IN A HARDWARD STORE. CHARLES RIEGER B-SCHOLASTIC CLUB, MERIT STUDENT...ASSOCIATED WITH BACON AT SCHOOL AND WORK...FAIRLY Goon DANCER...HAS HIS EYE ON CARFENTRY...KNOWN TO FREENDS AS CHAS . 57 JAMES RYAN MONIToR...JIM's BEST SUBJECT IS BOOKKEEPING ...RIDES IN Houcx's OLD '30 BUICK...STOCK BOY AT ALBERS...GOES TO ALL THE DANCES, BUT DOESN'T DANCE...WANT5 AN EASY JOB WITH GOOD PAY. GEORGE SAGEL SAG PLAYS ON A BASKETBALL TEAM THAT HAS WON BUT ONE GAME IN FOUR YEARS...ALWAY5 TRYlNG NEW EXPERIMENTS IN THE CHEMISTRY LAB...LIKES A CER- TAIN I.C.A. JUNIOR. THOMAS SALZMAN SONNY ATTENDS ASSUMPTION CHURCH IN MT. HEAL- THY...FINDS CHEMISTRY VERY FASCINATING...FRIENDS ARE NORMA AND RUTH...GLEE CLUB MEMBER AS A JUNIOR. WILLIAM SCHAD DRAMA, KANGAROO COURT...USUALLY SEEN AROUND THE PRINCIPAL'S OFFICE...HOLDS LIFE MEMBERSHlP IN EAGER BEAVER CLUB...ELECTED MOST LIKELY To SUCCEED ... GOLFBALL . 58 CHARLES ROGERS DRAMA, MONITOR... CHUCK IS AN ARTIST AND WANTS TO STUDY ART...ASKS A LOT OF QUESTIONS IN RELIGION....A CONFIRMED BACHELOR...AN HONEST SODA JERK- JOSEPH ROTHER JOE ENJOYS CIVICS MOST BECAUSE OF THE TEACHER ...A MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL GUARD...LIKES TO BOWL, SKATE, AND SHOOT POOL...PAL$ WITH MAINS, MACKE, AND EVANS. KENNETH SCHAEPER B-SCHOLASTIC CLUB, MONITOR...KEN BOASTS THAT HE HAS NEVER BEEN TARDY OR JUGGED IN FOUR YEARS ...hS INTERESTED IN A CERTAIN PARTY FROM REGINA ...CHIEF COOK AND BOTTLE WASHER AT WORK. LAWRENCE SCHAFER RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, TRACK, BAND, MERIT STU- DENT...WORKS ALSC WITH BOOKS AT THE PUBLIC LI- BRARY..COLLECTOR 0F SILVER DOLLARS... CURLY WANTS TO BE A MUSICIAN. CHARLES SCHAUPP BAND, ORCHESTRA...CHARLIE HAS ONE AMBITION IN LIFE; To BE A BIG WHEEL ...LIVE3 HALF IN ST. BERNARD, HALF IN CLIFTON...WANTS EVERYBODY TO KNOW ABOUT LAVERNE . EDWIN,SCHMALZ BAND, ORCHESTRA, MERIT STUDENT, MONITOR... KEYS Eo's TOP AMBITION Is To BE A GOOD MU- SICIAN...HAS A SOFT SPOT FOR CAROL AND BARBARA ...Is PURE IRISH. WILLIAM SCHMIDLIN RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, B-SCHOLASTIC, DRAMA, BA- CONIAN, KANGAROO COURT, MONITOR...BILL IS UN- DECIDED ABOUT HIS FUTURE LIFE...SMOKES A PIPE ...D15LIKES MATH TEACHERS THAT so TOO FAST . GEORGE SCHMIT FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB... RED DWELLS IN THE FORBIDDEN LAND OF PRICE HbLL...GOOD LlNE- MAN... BIOLOGY HAS TOO MANY NAMES TO REMEMBER ...TO BE A DRY CLEANER... T00THLEss . 59 ! l ! J. 1 i WWhV:i . .u. ROBERT SCHOLLE MONITOR...HA5 A HOBBY OF COLLECTING RECORDS... RUNS AROUND WITH THE RUNNABAUM GIRL...CYO BAS- KETBALL AFTER SCHOOL...GOOD DANCER...CHARLEY THINKS RELIGION 15 EASIEST. RAYMOND SCHULTE FOOTBALL, BASKETBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB...SAYS THAT IN CLASS HE WAS NOTHING TO BE PROUD OF... LIVES 1N PRICE HILL, BUT HOPES TO RETURN TO NORTH- SIDE... INACTIVE MEMBER OF EAGER BEAVERS. JOSEPH SCHWETSCHENAU BAND, ORCHESTRA, MERIT STUDENT...JOE WAS A FAITHFUL MEMBER OF THE BAND FOR FOUR YEARS...NICE CHAP...DESIRES TO BECOME A PHARMACIST...DWELLS IN ST. BERNARD. ANTHONY SCIAMANNA FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB, MONITOR...TONY SAYS THAT HE wAs ALWAYS CONFUSED AND SLEEPY JN CLASS ...PARTICIPATE$ IN ALL SPORTS...INTRAMURAL STAR ...AGREES PERFECTLY WITH MCENENY. 60 HUBERT SCHOENUNG CORRYVILLE HUBE Is ONE OF THE BOYS WHO AL- WAYS CAUGHT THE 8:30 SPECIAL...WANTS TO MANAGE A BOWLING ALLEY LATER 0N...PALS WITH MOUSE AND JIMMER . FRANK SCHOLLE BAND, ORCHESTRA, CAMERA CLUB...BAC0N'5 DRUM MAJOR...RIPPLES THE KEYS ON THE ACCORDION...DRIVES A NEW PONTIAC...AN INDUSTRIOUS STUDENT... FRAN AND FOXEE . Iu IVS JI. J ANTHONY SERVIZI TONY WAS USUALLY A QUIET LAD, BUT HAD HIS BOISTEROUS MOMENTS...LIKES REGULAR DANCE MUSIC... WOULD LIKE TO PACK A ROD As A DETECTIVE...SEEN WITH BRANNON AND COWGELL. HOWARD SHERMAN DRAMA, GLEE CLUB, KANGAROO COURT, MONITOR...THE GOLDEN THROAT OF THE GLEE CLUB...LIKES LUNCH PERIOD BEST OF ALL... HANK AND GOLDSCHMIDT ARE KNOWN AS PLus AND MINUS. THOMAS SIUES LATIN CLUB...THE EARLY BIRD WHO DELIVERS THE MORNING PAPER...F1RST THREE YEARS PLAYED LOTS OF FOOTBALL AND wAs 0N TRACK TEAM... HUNCHY LIKES THE FOX TROT AND BE-BOP. DONALD SMYTH DON PLANS TO CONTINUE HIS STUDIES AT XAVIER... DOES A LOT OF TINKERING WITH THE AUTO...NEVER MISSED A DAY OF SCHOOL...PRESENTLY CAN BE SEEN WORKING IN A SERVICE STATION. JAMES SPEED RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, GLEE CLUB, DRAMA, LATIN CLUB, KANGAROO COURT...THIs THIN MAN PUSHES A i3T FORD ...ALWAYS THE FIRST ONE IN SMOKERtS QUARTERS... TAGGED AS LOVERBOY . JOHN STARK JOHN CAN BE SEEN AT ALL DANCES...A CARD SHARK... FREE DAYS ARE HIS SPECIALTY...AS A RULE NOT TOO NOISY IN CLASS...PREFERS CHEMSSTRY TO LATIN...COL- LEGE HILL BOY. 61 . --.- .nu ROBERT STROTMAN MUSCLES WORKS IN A CEMETERY...PLANS T0 SETTLE DOWN THERE SOMEDAY...THE OTHER PATRIOT- Ic FLAG CUSTODIAN...FAVORS ENGLISH...REALLY GOES FOR SHIRLEY. CHARLES STRULL BAND, ORCHESTRA... BUD HAILS FROM FAIR- MOUNT...WANTS TO BECOME A PROFESSIONAL BowLER - THE WORK IS EASY...MEMBER OF THE BIG FOUR... DATES NANCY AND HELEN. ALFRED THOMAS AL THINKS THAT THE WORLD REVOLVES AROUND LOCKLAND...AN AVID FOLLOWER OF BE-BOP AND JAZZ ...FORMER FLASH ON THE ClNDER PATH...BELONGS TO BLESSED MARTIN PARISH. ROGER TUCHFARBER Roe CAN REALLY CUT THE TURF ON THE GOLF COURSE...LIVES FOR THE STUFF...WORK5 AT CREST HILLS...CAN BE SEEN WITH SHIRLEY...OUTSIDE or THAT WOULD LIKE TO PLAY MORE GOLF. 62 THOMAS STAUD FOOTBALL, B-ATHLETIC CLUB, MERIT STUDENT... SNEAKS UNDER THE FENCE TO MAKE SCHOOL ON TIME ...ADMITS THAT HE IS A LAZY AND POOR STUDENT ...ANOTHER GOOD LINEMAN... OTT0 . DONALD STEGEMAN DRAMA... RUBY IS TOPS WITH EVERYBODY... STAR OF INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL...BOTHERED BY SPEED IN CLASS...SQUARE DANCING l5 HIS FAVORITE ...THlNKS HE'LL WIND UP A BACHELOR. JOSEPH WAGNER Jo: ATTENDS ST. MONICA'S CHURCH...GREATEST AMBITION 13 T0 MANAGE A STORE...PLAYS CYO BAS- KETBALL...GOES FOR THAT ENGLISH STUFF...PALS WITH MOLLOY AND ZISTLER... IRONHEAD . THOMAS WALLMAN TOM IS A GREAT LOVER OF SPORTS AND JACKIE ... l DANCE AS IF I HAVE LEAD IN MY FEET ... WOULD LIKE TO Go INTO THE DRY CLEANING BUSINESS ...AFFECTIONATELY KNOWN AS FATHEAD . TERRENCE WALSH TERRY DRIVES TO SCHOOL IN THAT RAINBOW COLORED '28 FORD ROADSTER...DOES USHER WORK AT LOCAL THEATER...ALWAYS PLEADS INNOCENCE... SOMETIMES CALLED TURP . RICHARD WETHINGTON DICK CAN MOST OFTEN BE FOUND PARKED BY THE TV SET AT THE PONY KEG...PLAYS F.O.P. BASKET- BALL...wANTs TO GO INTO BUSiNESS FOR HIMSELF... Mouse . LEO WIEST RELIGIOUS COUNCIL, BACONIAN, MERIT STUDENT ...THE LAST MEMBER OF THE HAPPY BACHELOR CLUB ...SCIENCE INTRIGUES HIM...PLUCKS AWAY AT THE PIANO...LEE Is A GRAND GUY. THOMAS WILLKE BACONIAN, BACONlAN JR., STUDENT UNION, B- SCHOLASTIC, DRAMA...TREMENDOUS BRAIN...THE PRIDE or COLLEGEHILL...PLAN5 TO GO TO XAVIER...ACTIVE IN EVERYTHING AT SCHOOL... GERALDINE . 63 JULIUS WOLF KANGAROO COURT... JULES IS THE TALL, DARK, AND HANDSOME SENIOR...TO own A BUTCHER SHOP... STAMP COLLECTOR...DATE5 A YOUNG LASS, BY NAME PHYLLIS...DR!VES THE GREEN RAM . HERBERT WOTTLE B-SCHOLASTIC, GLEE CLUB, BACONIAN, MERIT STUDENT...THE EDITOR OF THE BACONIAN...LEADENG ROLE IN SUNBONNET GIRL ...0RGANIST AT ST. JOHN'S CHURCH...AMBITION IS TO BE A CHURCH ORGANIST. ELMER WUESTEFELD B-SCHOLASTIC, BACONIAN, LATIN CLUB, MERIT STUDENT, KANGAROO COURT...BACON'5 IN- TELLECTUAL GENIUS...MORE BRAINS THAN FLESH...TO BECOME A PRIEST ...DOESN'T LIKE SCIENCE - ONLY GOT 92 . CHARLES YOUNG FOOTBALL... RED PLAYED A LOT OF END ON THE FOOTBALL TEAM...AN EMPLOYEE 0F FR. 1 RAPHAEL...IN CLASS IS ALWAYS RELAXING...FOUND LITERATURE MOST INTERESTING. 'w-' 3 F435.- W4. A - aEE-eg RICHARD ZEINNER DICK ABIDES IN WHITE OAK ...DOES A LOT OF HUNTING... WORKS FOR A CONTRACTOR...VERY MILD IN CLASS...PREFERS BOOK- KEEPING TO AMER'CAN HISTORY ...OFTEN CALLED PICKLES . LAWRENCE ZEPF MONITOR...LARRY Is A ROBUST LAD COMING FROM MT. HEALTHY... WORKS AS STOCK BOY FOR A GRO- CERY STORE...AS SOPHOMORE WENT UP STATE IN BIOLOGY...HAS GREAT FISH STORIES. EDWIN ZIRKELBACH DRAMA, BACONIAN JR., KANGAROO COURT...ED AND PETTKO won AWARD AT HALLOWEEN DANCE FOR BEST MASQUERADE...AMBIT10N IS TO ENTER THE SEMINARY ...CYO BASKETBALL... BIG BERTHA . FRED ZISTLER TRACK, MERIT STUDENT...SPENDS TIME WITH A CERTAIN RUTH...H0PEs TO JOIN THE NAVY AIR CORPS ...ALWAYS BUMMING CIGARETTES...CYO BASKETBALL ... FRITz RESIDES IN COLLEGE HILL. ?4 M: y '9 u' :- Hzn. i 14'.er rrsr , i run... nu- .. ., .If 0 I Ctld 1.. .I. .x T- 9. lnhrv Oh , .guwurw z'f'sn-nyxnp H4. V.t.'?l?xl 9;?.ll bll' l I U F'IIL quad l: ; . . , . .- h. . , 3 Of RH! um, nny ;'u'v u l 1H0? tOMMANDMENI I . l ; I . .u . , a I 7H! 5EVWN CAFIYAL Aug, ennuiw : ! K 'I- Act a! CQNIRHIQN .. . . . . M L pf, f O ASSUMPTION CHURCH MT. HEALTHY CHURCH ST. DOWNTOWN ST- CLEMENT ST. BERNARD 66 PHHISH BHUHCHES ST. RICHARD NORTH C SACRED HEART CHURCH OLLEGE HILL ST. THOMAS CHURCH AMP WASHINGTON AVDNDALE 67 ROW l: hL TO Rh C. BORN, L. HUMBERT, J. CLORAN, B. HOLLAND, T. WALLMAN, w. HAUSER, J. GARDNER, J. KREINER. ROW 2: J. TEBBE, K. MCALLISTER, N. HOESL, P. FREY, w. SCHMIDLIN; P. BLESI, G. BECKER, B. MEINERS. Row 3: E. LUIPOLD, A. HAMMOOR, R. HOFFMAN, J. KLEI, J. CULLEN, R. FELLER. ROW 14: R. MACKE, E. MOLLOY, R. CHAIN, H. SCHOENUNG, G. FISHER, L. WIEST. Row 5: R. LUECKE, E. GANGLOFF, R. BEITING, E. COSTELLO, C. HAGEDORN, G. BERENS. ROW I: hL TO Rh T. KINNE, J. FIARINI, D. STROHOFER, T. GORDONIO, w. WlTZGALL, E. FINKBEINER, M. FREY, L. HABIG. Row 2: F. KUNTZ, J. REIBER, A. HARVEY, w. HEDEMUELLER, E. SANTORO, P. HUNT, T. KEARNEY, D. MERCURIO. ROW 3: A. MCCARTHY, R. KINNE, w. ROEHRICH, C. BIEHN, A. BAMBECK, G. MULVIHILL, w. HUBER. ROW H: D. HOLT- GREWE, C. STAHL, R. KESSEN, J. HAUSFELD, E. GANGLOFF, T. WELLING, J. MATTHEWS. 68 RELIGIOUS UUHBIL The accomplishments of this year's Religious Council were numerous. It sponsoredthe daily prayers for Church and Civil Au- thorities, the distribution of report cards to the Rev. Pastors, and checking at- tendance at monthly parish Comunions. B. S. III. B. The Catholic Students Mission Crusade at Roger Bacon Attempts to stimu- late its members to help the missions by means of alms and prayers. This year the C.S.M.C. sold re- ligious articles and maga- zines, the proceeds of which were sent to the Missions. tt ULUHD HHD mu BUD For this is the chalice of My Blood, of the new and everlasting testament, the mys- tery of faith, which for you and for many shall be shed unto the remission of sins. May the Body of Our LordJesus Christ keep thy soul unto life everlasting. 69 t V! 4 'T33' 1911? eg- .rv-uv um, . -'.' .f HJ? THEFE-:' ' '. n '1 FIRST mm W It is an established custom that all students of Roger Bacon go to Holy Communion on the First Friday of the month. Every student is required to attend the special student Mass on First Fridays. This public corporate act of religion on the part of the students is an essential part of the school program. The parents are earnestly asked to cooperate in fostering this public act of devotion to the Sacred Heart. -- -Vade Mecum HHST rmnnu On the day preceding each First Friday COnfessions are heard in the auditorium by the priest teachers. Each student is given an opportunity for going to confession during the day. On Friday morning the students are called to the auditorium for Holy Mass and Communion. FR. PETER hAT LEFT, PLAYS THE ORGAN, WHILE THE STUDENTS hSHOWN ABovah SING SACRED SONGS AT VARIOUS TIMES DURING THE SERVICES. 71 aw: HHHUHL REIHEHI JIM HOELSCHER tABOVE , TOM WILLKE AND JERRY DAVIS CONSULT FATHER ARTHUR. BELOW AND ON THE NEXT PAGES ARE SOME OF THE OUTSTANDING HIGHLIGHTS OF THE RETREAT. EXAMS OVER, JANUARY 25, 26 AND 27 FOUND THE STUDENTS VERY SERIOUSLY ENGAGED IN THE EXERCISES or THE ANNUAL RETREAT; THREE DAYS OF SELF-EXAMINATION THEY WERE, DAYS OF OPPORTUNITY FOR THE BETTERMENT OF SOULS. THE SPIRITUAL TRIDUUM OF '50 WAS CONDUCTED BY FR. ARTHUR TONNE, 0.F.M., WIDELY KNOWN SPEAKER AND AUTHOR, AND, INCFDENTALLY, A FORMER TEACHER HERE AT R.B. QUITE PROPERLY, EACH DAY BEGAN WITH THE HOLY SACRIFICE OF THE MASS, FACULTY AND STUDENTS ATTENDING. THE REST OF THE SCHOOL DAY WAS FRUITFULLY GIVEN OVER TO LECTURES, PRAYER AND SPIRITUAL READ- JNG. THE RETREAT wAs FITTINGLY CLOSED ON FRIDAY WITH THE PAPAL BLESSING.--- FR. ARTHUR, HIS RETREAT, AND HIS ADVFCE WILL LONG BE REMEMBERED. HHHUHL HETREHT visuiurllxilllr. , . ...I!I OCTOBER HUSHHU OCTOBER ROSARY--Each day of this month dedicated to Mary and the Rosary, the students offer to their Heavenly Mother a garland of itAves , thus honoring her and en- listing her aid in the formation of her Divine Son in their developing Christian characters. THREE KINGS THREE KINGS--Fr. Owen with three of his faithful servers, P. Frey, B. Meiners, J. Klei, blesses all the rooms of the school on the feast of the Epiphany. HIHU DEVUHUHS MAY DEVOTIONS--The students pause briefly in their studies to listen to a short reading on the life and virtues of Mary Immaculate as their daily tribute to the Queen of Heaven during the Mary month of May. STUDEHI UHIUH m L To R: J. HOELSCHER, G. SCHRAND, A. ROSENBERGER, R. DOPPES, T. WILLKE, R. NICHTING, D. KATTUS tSTANDINGl, D. PAUL,W. LAMMERT, L. VONDERBRINK. $1! to promote the leadership of Roger Bacon High School in all things relig- ious, scholastic, athletic and social. The above quotation, taken from the preamble of the political party conshtuHons, adnhrably sunns up the purpOSe and.funcHon oftheStudent Union. This agency of student self-government, basically aims to correlate all extra-curricular activities toward one end, the betterment of Roger Bacon High School. During the school year 1949-50, the chiefactivities and achievement of the Student Union were the following; the magazine subscription drive, social program of dances, assemblies, chance book drive, political con- ventions and student elections. The latter being a practical civic demon- stration of a democratic process in action. SCHOOL PRESIDENT DON KATTUS lAT RlGHTl CONGRATULATES BILL LAMMERT, WHO HAS JUST BEEN CHOSEN THE NEW SCHOOL PRESIDENT. THE ELECTION RETURNS, ANNOUNCED ON WEDNESDAY, MAY I7, AT THE ANNUAL ELECTION BALL, GAVE LAMMERT A MARGIN OF I66 VOTES OVER LARRY HUMBERT, HIS OPPONENT. THE STUDENT COUNCILSHIPS WENT TO JUNIORS BOB KENNEDY, DON PAUL, AND DAVE PAL- MISANO; SOPHOMORES JOE KNEIP, Lou VONDERBRINK AND BILL GEISER; AND FRESHMEN, DICK DOPPES, JIM SICKING AND FRED BOLTE. ishrrllent could only afford a n ad. To his surprise I thn- own on my knees A ' '. I pleaded .1 0 fer n GOLDSCHMIDT, E. WUESTEFELD. ROW 2: E. FISH- ER, V. GERACI, D. KATTUS, R. BEITING, H. WOTTLE, T. WrLLKE, J. BOLTE. the noise of their breathnt Room or Roger DdLUu 1115.1 13$ a G $100,0c S now ha I R Bacon. : af ' ut gm 34 jon CA SOYM' Oikfuxatw ieiiy at wogyh I nib . ,931 m. , $51 v8 es 0 am e - feSTmEd u to a sta lum I ixoix prcmge: 009- izggoxog: ks 1h dwlik 2 easy chair owill helplfVR ESSEEown arroll of aghesive In 19 hOX'XC V3.6 12W: 10990 XXW- 05 CO?- ag? 0 west recults you shoule ' and tossed it to the waiting ferred t' Cat OK O X2 c0i 03X , W 3 'ihm s m ' wt. 11 ' cal Sen 52 OK hog enab. 3C 3X SO-ge X132 .3be od' 1X egs p1 0W3 ,v. It then turned and renewed C? 603 owe 390ch 30 390th DE 2 Ori xx 10139.0 s 6992 XX 9Xanout ' w? o study of damaged equipment. i9 Qqemus b33966 swam ,.,. Cot 10m: facucistem a 50 '1 6; iv. ' ' was none other than Father Ema :30 3m Ochom SPARTANS IN SPORTS 603 5n: shouxd . engaged in one of :the C309 otxdt fConrr'nued From Pa e 14 thwqu'x 31x 4 ogShOOts Of his JOb :1 thgwded' geki - 9 , Xe hmxxia 3:00 5!!! Xic Director . . . lY mmth we :EnetaxX XaVIer-7; Bacon-5 1:13 m0 Cw v42 h?oOJ oh? first of seven e , 1 . , 2,9 t hu 'K'an NE 003 9G The Spartaqs lost that second, is 13:1. wk: J JiS flrst appearance :5 x $30 0 1w hat .C.L. contest m a row When they 3e 1 d mos r1 August 3, 1918, 3 'sm btiixih ks 5'fo OM Ebowed to St' Xavier, 7'5' Ontquowe x'Nb-ch home in Hamilton Vixg t0 31:; agddcfggjfgaw Magth, Bat Igeer Creekxsatq'xcgs ate CiVb cered St, Francis Sem- d' o x - 'o Ons. e o ., 1ana. COdetzn W0 ngeven hits and two 61:10:28 $13350 00 COrO o . 30, and emergeccljlngrn in clear o mode ant . ,the Spartans had nine h' : d , 7. 0 L93; 11;?! 1273 l: W .113! Monasgeryz en- d . W a a o C In Go 13112.. as a pnest m o . F ho ex: me Werrom Its an 31x g min you,- , 1773 e at 19 re ' . 1946 an m WW7 ! :cssxo R 1 h - 1 1 Lb. 6 fro , JI596, fer, a morepent the mtervenmq years 1'; W33 oF TI. 00g 231;; OQI-Iillafp hBlrkofer started on the; RM T R3307? Pen affdxsound of study, workVH 9M iv aggrelievecg Elie Spartans. FrMI o 0A '7? a Igborre h IrUeaat is common to thos WOMA stmgiowvldou V, -m m GS t wlkgtrle p: dro g for the priestho ing, is gem 396:va 9w SON RK S top Rengle fpedt the semina let a 0W i ETXD o E P dy 1'0 :5 deJr 5316', 0301?: time bY e 5? LYT to W? Vunyjl? aback? 09sz J.O94e nee PlaYEd e. 06 .ML. Don 30513675; Rea, 14's: 39 Say In JOC :nsn R0 LS C511?,chntcarlljielder, ha-d'; a FrI'CbaP WI? a0 010?. 1.! 193 o m V- . . as a omerun 1n- n ' 127 1t r 3 Oh, Mu you lrthe fourth mnlng. Summary; uiifiirst filtrle b wagirbe 0:30! keshas :t about . . . ? one wi R H lber 0 on. 13:5 HtmouSta blacfun 37.11 . . o :he others: or Girls, Bacon ........... 5 9 6m be much 'H-nssranb Cbe-J 133i,- Edltor-m-Chlef ................................. . ........ J. Clark Qosed to be a secret; so Xavier .......... 7 as She's a squeotln WC Assistant Edifors .............. W. Schmldlln, H. Wot-He Syour best friends, bu lg to over- ing eachabuk 2 IBiusmessxjxvlhzfnciger JCIEVEOISdZChrg'ldt r1 good authority thm Bac0n+2l; Wesf Hi- I talking tOO whole probleml emure mers --------------- - TGJVIi'er- HG Vanni; e to H10 gM mucl'l, as long as toey fan 100k A5 I Sit her Sports Writers..R. Beifing, R. Moullief, sz Hellweg over a few other thlngs. , I suddenly f1 News Writers .......... E. Fisher, JA Hessler, W. Hube W' HUBER' 50 wrong. It is S. Petfko, L. Wiest, E. Wuestefel J feeling lyin Typis'rs ................ C. Aug, V. Geraci, G. Pamponin U spilled Photographer ...................................... A. Hudepohl . TAKE IT EASY! . turning 11 Faculty Adviser..Rev. PaschalI Varnskuhler, O.F.M 1 ' CHOOL Would be okay, If Other B0 The Boconicn is a student publication of V wmn t for the home' It WY ROGER BACON HIGH SCHOOL 9 BaHeerY work. Thes'e famous HTQSSie t 4320 Vine Street, St. Bernard 17, Ohio 21 By BeHy Aljrfe h 07 um. words have passed the lxps of every uSlaught Subscription: $1.00 . .... - ----o' 1! '1r -.. 1. J.-- L..., nrnr'nn! nf nnn erno or qnnfhpr Vof rkn cam ! ROW l: M. HELLWEG, R. MOULLIET, L. WIEST, J. CLARK, w. SCHMIDLIN, J. HESSLER, D. BHBUHIHH dUHlUH L TO R, SEATED: E. ZIRKELBACH, E. MEISTER, T. WILLKE, R. LAN- GENECKER. STANDlm: R. BALLARD, R. KEMPER, R. DEARwATER, w. BURKETT. Roger Bacon's weexly radio show, uThe Baconian Junior signs on at 8:30 each Tuesday rnorning and presents all the latest scholastic, social and sport news of the week. It is really amazing how these gents can cover all the news so well in terlrninutes. ABOVE AND AT LEFT, HERE ARE THE UNSEEN BROADCASTERS AT WORK. STATION RBHS WITH 5000 WATT OUTPUT HAS A LISTENING AUDIENCE OF OVER 750 INTELLIGENT AND INTERESTED LESTENERS. - SUHULHSHC h 1 .-u-vr. .5 wryn. r u. rt ABOVE, MANY OF THE PUBLIC NOTICES AND CLIPPINGS, WHLCH THESE STUDENTS ARE STUDYING, WERE POSTED BY JIM KRIS- MER. mmsmurnzqn- ! r: um .n-vv .muw 4rlm: ' 1- unnw ROW I: R. PURCELL, J. KRISMER, L. HUM- BERT, E. WUESTEFELD, C. SORIANO, E. THINNES, J. PORSCHBACH, K. SCHAEPER. ROW 2: E. AHR, T. FREY, D. HINSSEN, P. FREY, w. SCHMIDLIN, J. KNEIP, G. SCHRAND, R. KENNEDY. ROW 3: B. MEINERS, J. LICHTENBERG, R. LAMPING, T. WILLKE, J. WERNING, R. FELLER. ROW M: R. HART- MAN, C. AUG, F. WlEMAN, H. WOTTLE, B. HEILE, R. RAPPOPORT, A. HUDEPOHL. CHmERH CLUB AT RIGHT, THREE MEMBERS DOING A PORTRAIT OF BOB HUDEPOHL. GREG SCHRAND, DON WEss AND CARL SCHEPMAN BELow MAKING ENLARGEMENTS WITH RON HILVERS AND ALViN HUDEPOHL DRYING THE PRINTS! ROW l: G. VERS, w. SCHEPMAN, DIRR, G. SCHRAND, G. GERGMANN, D. BASTIAN, R. HUDEPOHL, J. NIEHAUS. Row 2: HOFMANN, J. SARVAK, D. KELLY, P. BLEsi, J. KRISMER. ROW 3: R. HIL- HILVERS, S. DAHLMAN. ROW M: R. GEERS, A. HUDEPOHL, C. D. WEss, d. ROBERS, G. R. GEERS. HIERIT SUSTEHI - --...........-. ... . V-r- :-- SCENE ABovE FROM THE PLAY DRESS REVERSAL STAGED ON MERIT NITE. AT RIGHT, FATHER PROVINCIAL PRESENTS JIM HOEL- SCHER WITH HIGHEST AWARD. JIM GARNERED MORE MERITS THAN ANY STUDENT FOR THE PAST Two YEARS. FATHER ERMJN AND THE BOYS OF THE MERIT SYSTEM DO A TREMENDOUS AMOUNT OF WORK IN COMFILING THE MERIT LIST AND PUBLISHING THE MERIT MARAUDER . ROW l: w. KRAMER, E. Gnoss- HEIM, R. GIESLER, J. Box. ROW 2: J. BURNS, J. GRUPPENHOF, J. CURRY. JUNIOR TUIUH MEETING iEiEWBW 51mm 9. Is the North Atlantic Defense Pact a good rneans for securing peace? This was the question discussed by joint mem- bers from the students of O.L.A. and Ba- con 0n WSAI's Junior Town Meeting, October 25. Principal speakers were Joan Berling and Geraldine Sullivan from Our Lady of the Angels and Bob Feller and Dick Langenecker from Bacon with Mr. George Palmer from WSAI as moderator. The intelligent arguments of the four speakers gained for them the admiration of everyone. JOAN BERLING, BOB FELLER, MR. GEORGE PALMER, GERAL- DINE SULLIVAN AND DICK LANGENECKER. . iIBLI . or Judges for the occasion were Mr. Edwin Havlin, presi- dent of the D.F.T., Mrs. Clara Heath, president 0fthe P.T.A. Rev. Max Gartner, Archivist of St. John the Baptist Prov- ince. ELUCUHUH BUHTEST SENIOR GROUP L TO R: D. PALMISANO, w. BURKETT, J. CLORAN. ROW 2: G. PAMPANIN, R. REIS, T. WILLKE. JUNIOR GROUP L TO R: A. MEYER, w. MECHLAM, C. HAMPEL. ROW 2: T. FOGARTY, J. CARTER, C. SCHMIDT. WINNERS Robert R615 and Allen Meyer BHHD HHD UHBHESTHH ROW 1: P. MIDDENDORF, P. BURT, M. BERLING, P. HAAR- J. MUELLER, R. GRATSCH, D. HUNSCHE, M. BROZ, D. MAN, C. HATTLER, B. GIESLER, w. MOELLER, H. FUHRMAN, SCHAPPACHER, G. HAAB. Row 14: R. WAGNER, D. LOCAPUTO, R. BERRY, F. POHLKAMP. ROW 2: J. OTTING, d. EDWARDS, w. MECKLEY, B. RAPIEN, R. FERGUSON, G. GONDER, N. J. JACOBS, T. MAXWELL, R. GEERS, C. SMITH, L. WANGER, NERL, A. SCHELL, J. DONAHUE', C. SCHEPMAN, L. SCHAE- L. LINESCH, R. BIDDLEMAN, R. ZEIs, R. BEUERLEIN. FER. ROW 5: E. SCHMALZ, R. SULLiVAN, R. FLICK, C. E. FREKING. ROW 3: F. SCHOLLE, M. HOEHN, C. HANDER- SCHAUPP, B. HEILE, C. HOFMAN, H. HUBE, J. SCHWETCHE- MAN, G. BRATCHER, w. BRoss, E. RALEIGH, R. WAGNER, NAU. C. BRINKMAN, J. SCHWIETERT, P. LUNN. This year the orchestra made quite a name for it- self. Together with the Glee Club, the boys did a magnificent job of produ- cing the ttSunbonnet Girl . The orchestra and Father Bennet deserve a uwell done from everyone. The Bacon Band is well known throughout the city as a fine musical and marching outfit. Its for- mations onthe gridiron al- ways draw a round of ap- plause from appreciative audiences. lHHH CLUBS SENIOR ROW l: R. LANGENECKER, R. ENWRIGHT, R. KENNEDY, M. BEISCHEL, E. WUESTEFELD, N. SENA. ROW 2: F. DEUBELL, E. FISHER, B. BERGMANN, R. SHANNON, D. HINSSEN, P. FREY. Row 3: T. SIMEs, P. BLESI, w. HERRMANN, G. SCHRAND, J. O'BRIEN. ROW h: C. NOE, K. DONAHUE, A. HAMMOOR, E. HECKENMUELLER, w. LAMMERS, A. HUDE- POHL. Row 5: R. MEINERDING, R. MOULLIET, D. KATTUS, J. BOLTE, F. NIEMAN, R. RAP- PAPORT. JUNIOR Row I: R. MESSERLE, R. ENGEL, R. SCHERZ, R. DOPPES, C. 50555, G. BORN, R. GIES- LER. Row 2: T. ISSLER, R. SCHNEIDER, R. ARAND, G. JAWORSKI, V. AGRUSO, D. WOLTERMANN, R. SAGEL. ROW 3: R. LANG, R. PURCELL, w. STAHL, P. SCHNUR, C. HAMPEL, C. GLANDORF, J. KNEIP, J. O'BRI- EN, P. DEITSCH. ROM h: E. AHR, w. HAUSER, J. KRAMER, J. FORSCHBACH, R. HEITZMANN, D. BASTIAN, R. HILVERS, A. TEKULVE. ROW 5: J. WERNING, R. LAMPING, R. KLEINGERS, C. SCHEPMAN, B. HE:LE, R. BROCK, J. WILGER. Row 6: R. BECK. J. ALBRINCK, R. SCHULTZ, J. SICKING, T. DINKELACKER, D. ROETTELE, E. LUIPOLD. FATHER LUCJAN AND SOME OF THE YOUNG CICEROS AND VIR- GILs ENJOY ONE OF ELMER'S LATIN JOKES, HF POSSIBLE. Row l: L. BRUNNER, J. CARLOTTA, L. CARRAHER, J. HESSLER, H. HERDE- MAN. ROW 2: T. FREY, T. DAVIS, R. LYONS, T. SALZMAN, G. REUSCH. ROW 3: T. MEYER, R. AMRHEIN, J. STARK, R. HOUCK, G. FISHER. ROW U: H. SHERMAN, H. WOTTLE, R. KRA- MER. D. GOLDSCHMIDT. BLEE CLUB AT LEFT, GLEE CLUB ACCOMPANY'NG GERALDINE PAGE LEFT BELow AND DoN GOLDSCHMIDT. FR. PETER AND CHORISTERS aoTToM ENTERTAIN VISITORS TO CINCINNATI'S LYTLE PARK WITH CHRISTMAS CAROLS. ON THE NEXT Two PAGES ARE DEPICTED SCENES AND ACTORS FROM THE GLEE CLuB's GREATEST TRIUMPH, THE SUNBONNET GIRL . VI F17 1' TH . 15 4 w n; V1 m 75-;- 71.7.? At right, Jeannie MCGuff, Alvin Hudepohl, Georgeann Deitz. wwbhkikx. hunt in, it ?IFPUP... :- tau..b.r.r.w..rr.wL ? u k awwwirn. Lw.v.o.f.$u..ww.. ...,. . MWWWSH. ,m 9 a3 ha map aoe t SWm d mnm TMr re eG H v uHWEfvlaa :41. hlcdisrlafu ville. .1. .HHnurnuhulhuwn - 19.1; nyhtiiif . dUHIUH SPHRTHH PLHUERS ROW I: K. ORTMAN, R. PURCELL, R. EVANS, R. SAGEL, T. HALL. ROW 2: R. HEITZMAN, D. LocAPU'ro, G. MCMAHON, S. DAHLMAN, J. 0'- BRYAN. ROW 3: J. BURNS, w. MINK, J. TEBBE, w. GEISER. BHRISHIIHS PLHU A n-nm- nnrrm A .F 12 1515.: dWMTV-AJFIE. r; E 'A L .I I: :1 i: ii 5 SEHIUH DH-HMHHU GUILD ROW l: K. HENDERER, L. BRUNNER, C. BORN, L. HUMBERT, R. RAKEL, L. CARRA- HER, E. FREKING. ROW 2: G. PAMPANIN, w. SCHMIDLFN, E. MEISTER, G. GONDER, R. SULLIVAN, w. BURKETT, C. ROGERS, S. PETTKo. ROW 3: R. FELLER, T. WILL- KE, A. HUDEPOHL, D. PALMISANO, E. ZIRKELBACH, R. HOCTER, R. CHAIN, J. CLORAN. ROW u: L. STEMANN, H. SHERMAN, D. GOLDSCHMIDT, B. KUETHE, J. KLEI, R. HOUCK, W. SCHAD. H FELLUUJ NEEDS H FRIEND A delightful three act comedy presented on December 1-3 by Bacon and O.L.A. Lead roles were taken by Gino Pampanin and Dick Hoctor as two Franciscan priests; Carol Schott and Marlene Pohlman as two nuns, Don Goldschmidt as nSteve Wilson , and Geraldine Page as HElizabeth . .. mu m um: r .1..- . r mr.ruw-.r1wuwwmar.mnm. mzmrrmmmwmmmen muumh-.t v ' STHDIUHI The hopes and dreams of Ba- con's students, faculty, alumni, parents and friends began to materi- alize as the long awaited uBacon Stadium suddenly became a reality as the first giant bulldozer laid its heavy blade into the Mitchell Ave- nue land. Within a few weeks all of the trees and debris were cleared away to make room for the new structure. ' e m mm? e .meem -. l-tthwh .m M'M'e-nMI-t W ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY II. FATHER ANDREW GAVE THE OFFICIAL START OF THE BACON STADIUM BY BREAKING GROUND. PICTURED WITH FATHER ANDREW ARE FATHER RONALD, ASSISTANT ERINCIPAL, FATHER ALAN, ATHLETIC DIRECTOR, SCHOOL PRESIDENT, DON KATTus, AND MANY STUDENTS. hm m. , 4 v 'z-lr-Fah'tmw' t K , wt::'l.urv-'P - : J? $.81??ng mm : em 93' :1' h' t 1? urryf foayw NI, 3195 J' Hum. m ? 3N? SMDIUH L1,.DESJONLIL. -. - THE SPECIAL CREDIT GOES TO THOSE WHO HELPED MAKE THE MAGAZINE DRIVE A success: To DICK HOCTOR AND JERRY DAVIS OF THE McCoys; TO GENE MEISTER AND HENRY HARMS tPICTURED Aaovzt OF THE WINNING HATFIELDS; TO FATHER RONALD AND MR. JOHNSON, FACULTY MODERATORS. HIGH PROGRESS Doing their part to bring the Staduim to a completion, the students have worked hard for years saving sales tax stamps and selling maga- zines. Father Aloys has done an herculian job as director of the Tax Stamp Drive. High stamp collector for this year was James Felker of Rm. 21. This year'sMagazine Drive amassed a grand total of $6400. To aid sales the school was divided into the feuding uHatfields and Mc- Coys The former won by $600. ROOM OF THE SCHOOL wAs 31+, FR. Luanu's ROOM. THESE JUBILANT FRESHMEN DEFEATED FR. ERMIN'S ROOM 3? BY TWENTY CENTS. .. E N a 1 w. y l. I. a, J .-, l DHHBES Bacon dances this year were defi- nitely ubetter than ever . The social season was formally Opened by the Stu- dent Union Dance. Other outstanding dances were the B-Athletic, Halloween, Yearbook, Farmers Formal, Spring and Election Ball. All dances were well attended and music was provided by such great bands as Vic Adkins and Ches Wahle. FATHER ALAN AND THE ATHLETIC BOARD PRESENTING FOOTBALL LETTERS AND AWARDS. THIS WAS THE HIGHLIGHT or THE NOVEMBER B-ATHLETIC DANCE. PICTURED ABOVE ARE MEL HUBER, MIKE WEBER AND FRIENDS . JOE SCHWETCHENAU eLEFT, IS STUNNED BY WHAT? .. ..-...-.eeu STUDEHI UHIUH DHHBE On Monday night, October 11, the gay music of Vic Adkins swelled the air about Bacon square as the first Student Union Dance got under way. Besides Bacon and O. L. A. other schools represented with Reginia, Mother of Mercy and Seton. Most of the catmen did all right for them- selves by bringing along their sweet- est friends. l1 JACK HAUSFELD ADMIRING THE GAL's Tone . BETWEEN DANCES tABovzt THPS GROUP HAD A GAY TIME WITH THE TALK. tLEFTt HEY, FELLOWS, Two GIRLS DANCING ALONE. 97 HHLLUUJEEH DHHBE THE WINNERS Ed Zirkelbach nursing Steve Pettko. Miss Amy Crabbe under the flower garden. Bacon's hbova three cute check girls. The doctor ht leftL the nurse and injured player are three O.L.A. girls. h A: n- - '-E' HHLLUIJJEEH DHHCE 97;, w. rif ; '4 Wow! Ed Birck with his dainty little Miss-Frank Scholle. h k hummer. The board of strategy before the Xavier game. Bob Moullieths proof that the Bolshevists have overrun China. 99 mamas rnnmm January 28 SENIOR DATE-DANCE 4; I . . . I 1 II. c t HBIHERS FUBIHHL January 28 SENIOR DATE-DANCE FHRmEHS mama January 28 SENIOR DATE-DA CE xi.. 1Iv pr1g-pnrJu-u: .rw ' : flanhqu: 'r ; ' -x mamas F 3mm January 28 SENIOR DATE-DANCE .amumm icm.-M.m-$::w m2 WITH THE SCHOOL YEAR NEARING ITS CLOSE, THE BACON SOCIAL SEASON REACHED ITS CLIMAX FRIDAY, APRIL IN WITH THE COLORFUL SENIOR-JUNiOR PROM. BEAUTIFUL CASTLE FARM WAS MADE EVEN MORE BEAUTIFUL WITH THOSE SHARP-LOOKING BACON MEN ESCORTING THEIR LOVELY LASSES. THE LADIES PUT ON SUCH A FASHION SHOW THAT EVEN NEw YORK DESIGNERS WOULD HAVE APPLAUDED. THE BACON GENTLEMEN AGAIN PROVED THAT BACON PROMS ARE THE GAY- EST, MOST COLORFUL, AND MOST ORDERLY OF THEM ALL. AT ll:00 P.M. BANDLEADER CHES WAHLE AGAIN ATTEMPTED THE GRAND MARCH.SINCEREST THANKS To THE PROM COMMITTEE AND TO FATHER RONALD AND MR. JOHNSON FOR THE GRAND SUCCESS OF THE PROM. PICTURED ABOVE ARE THE COUPLES WHO WERE VOTED SPECIAL AWARDS. AT RIGHT AND ON THE NEXT PAGES ARE SOME OF THE BACON CELEBRITIES AND FRIENDS. . .,. . A X. izan' 5;;'E.ig i'yr illliE$;f L $55M COMMUNION BREAKFAST DAY IS ONE DAY THAT BACON SENIORS AND THEIR PARENTS REMEMBER FOR A LONG TIME. THIS Is THE SUMMATION OF THEIR FOUR YEARS ASSOCIATION WITH ROGER BACON HIGH SCHOOL. THE HOLY SACRIFICE OF THE MAss RE- MINDS THEM THAT THEY ARE ESSENTIALLY CATHO- LICS; THE BREAKFAST, THAT THEY ARE Now READY TO ACCEPT THEIR PLACE AND RESPONSiBILITIES IN SOCIETY AND THE WORLD. HOLY MASS WAS CELE- BRATED AT ST. CLEMENT CHURCH W1TH BOTH GRADU- ATES AND THEIR PARENTS RECEIVING HOLY COM- MUNION. AFTER HOLY MASS SENIORS, PARENTS AND FACULTY RETURNED TO THE SCHOOL FOR A DELICIOUS BREAKFAST PREPARED BY THE P.T.A. LADIES. TOASTMASTER Boa FELLER THEN INTRODUCED THE SPEAKERS FOR THIS GRAND OCCASION. PRINCIPAL SPEAKER WAS FATHER ERMIN WERLE, WHO HEADS THE SCHOOL'S ENGLISH DEPARTMENT AND DRAMA GUILD. OTHER SPEAKERS WERE FATHER PROVINCIAL, FATHER ANDREw, MR. EDWIN SCHMALZ FOR THE DADs' CLUB, MR. EDWARD BOEHM FOR THE ALUMNI, MRS. CLARA HEATH FOR THE P.T.A., AND Boa MOULLIET FOR THE GRADUATES. 109 .w snnnunnun EXERCISES THE TWENTY - SECOND C LASS NIGHT EXER CISES OF ROGER BACON HIGH SCHOOL ST . BER NARD, OHIO GHHDUHTIUHEXEHBISES SCHOOL AUDITORIUM WEDNESDAY EVENING MAY 31 NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTY EIGHT FIFTEEN O'CLOCK HUHURS HHD HUJHRDS THOMAS A. WILLKE FRANK B. NIEMAN BERNARD G. MEINERS XAVIER UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP XAVIER UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI SCHOLARSHIP CERTIFICATES 0F EXCELLENT SCHOLARSHIPS MARK L. BEISCHEL BERYL A. BERGMANN ROBERT P. BLESI JOHN E. CLARK GERALD O. CUMMINS EDWARD J. FISHER PAUL J. FREY ALBERT d. HAMMOOR BERNARD G. MEINERS ROBERT w. MOULLIET FRANK B. NIEMAN RONALD J. RAPPOPORT FRANK H. SCHOLLE Lao H. WIEST THOMAS A. WILLKE HERBERT C. HOTTLE ELMER B. WUESTEFELD MONORARY SCIENCE AWARD THOMAS A. WILLKE EXCELLENCE IN BUSINESS EDUCATION Lou's P. BURKHART ATHLETIC TROPHY DONALD H. KATTUS DRAMA OSCARS ROBERT V. FELLER RICHARD A. HOCTOR THOMAS A. HrLLKE ELMER B. WUESTEFELD NATIONAL LATIN AWARD SUMMA CUM LAUDE JOHN E. CLARK ALBERT d. HAMMOOR HERBERT C. WOTTLE CHARLES WILLIAMS ESSAY CONTEST NATIONAL LATIN AWARD CHARLES WILLIAMS ESSAY CONTEST FIRST PRIZE SUMMA CUM LAUDE THIRD PRIZE 112 .FUUTBHLL WITH ONLY A FEW EXPERIENCED PLAYERS RETURNING FROM LAST YEARS' SQUAD COACHES EMMET CROWE AND WALT ORNELLA DID A MAGNIFICENT JOB 0F FIELDING A CLASSY ELEVEN. WHAT THE SPARTANS LACKED IN EXPERIENCE AND WEJGHT THEY OVERCAME BY THEIR EXPLOSIVENESS AND SPEED. FASTER, FASTER WAS THE COACH'S CONSTANT CRY; AND WITH THAT SPEED THEY WERE ABLE TO OVERCOME MORE RUGGED TEAMS. TOUCHDOWNS CAME WITH UNEXPECTED SUDDENNESS AS THE BACKS ROARED THROUGH THOSE QUICK OPENING LINE PLAYS. THE PLAY OF THE SEASON WAS JACK MARSHALL'S NINETY FIVE YARD TOUCHDOWN RUN ON THE OPENING KICKOFF OF THE SECOND HALF AGAINST DAYTON CHAMINADE. AWARDING 0F LETTERS AND CERTIFICATES: COACH WALT ORNELLA, CO-CAPTAIN .JIM HOELSCHER, FATHER ALAN, ATHLETIC DIRECTOR, -H-- AND HEAD COACH EMMET CROWE. won 8 LOST 2 R.B. 29 COVINGTON HOLMES 7 R.B. 6 LOUISVILLE MALE l2 R.B. 3O WALNUT HILLS 0 R.B. 27 HUGHES 6 R.B. 26 DAYTON CHAMINADE lh R.B. TO NORWOOD 6 R.B. l9 NEWPORT CATHOLIC 6 R.B. 21L XAVIER 0 R.B. 3O ELDER 7 R.B. 0 PURCELL 39 11 4 . K 11 ud W. $ VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM ROW I: J. HAUSFELD, R. MOULIETT, H. HARMS, CO-CAPTAIN, R. SCHULTE, CO-CAPTAIN, J. HOELSCHER, J. KROGER, D. KATTUS, H. KEMPE, w. GEISER. ROW 2: COACH E. CRowE, G. SCHMIT, T. STAUD, T. SIMES, A. KESSE, R. HUXEL, A. SCIAMANA, J. MARSHALL, C. HEILMAN. ROW 3: F. NIEMAN, MGR.. C. YOUNG, M. HUBER, R. KESSEN, M. COWGELL, R. NICHTING, F. BEITZINGER, D. PAUL, A. ROSENBERGER, COACH w. ORNELLA. ROW h: R. SMITH, M. WAlNZ, R. BIRKOFER, T. TASSET, M. WEBER, L. VONDERBRINK, R. AMRHEIN, D. MERCURIO, D. DOPPES. G. SAGEL, MGR. ax ? :1?- g .m W3, , ks - '4: 1! u' a ing N i If. k I n! $fWKXM 59m, SN 39$; ; !.u RESERVE FOOTBALL TEAM ROW l: D. DOPPES, G. FLORA, D. KELLY, S. DAHLMAN, J. HEATH, R. CONNERTON, R. BOLTE. ROW 2: P. HUNT, J. KNEIP, R. WITZMAN, R. FRAHER, V. READY, w. MINK, F. HERMES. ROW 3: R. WALKER, w. BUD- DE, G. GORMAN, w. GEISER, R. SMITH, J. BORGARDING, J. GEISLER. ROW u: D. ROETTLE, J. ALaRtNCK, d. JOHANOGMAN, T. KEARNEY, G. LU BUONO. BHSHEIBHH 5 2 ZUIUEEUIUZJZUZUZUZUSU c UJUUCUUJWCUEDUJWCUCU . o 2 0 I8 M6 60 M2 143 M6 61 5 I 67 33 M6 39 LOST 5 WALNUT HILLS 49 ST. HENRY 22 WESTERN HILLS 25 NORWOOD 35 NEWPORT CATHOLIC Ml CENTRAL VOCATIONAL 35 ST. BERNARD 3T HAMILTON CATHOLIC kl ST. XAVIER 25 COVINGTON HOLMES M3 PURCELL ME 30237025023301! 30302 . u u . o . n . mmwmwmwmm WEED . HUGHES ELDER LOCKLAND WAYNE NEWPORT CATHOLIC ST. XAVIER PURCELL ST. BERNARD ELDER HAMILTON CATHOLIC STATE TOURNAMENT MT. HEALTHY 3T 32 CENTRAL VOCATIONAL 57 HAMILTON PUBLIC 53 116 ACCORDING TO MOST OB- SERVERS THE SPARTAN QUIN- TET wAs ONE OF THE CLAS- SIEST TEAMS IN THE ClTY. TEAM WORK WAS THE OUT- STANDING FEATURE OF THIS TEAM. CAPTAIN OF THE TEAM wAs SPEEDSTER DON KATTUS AT GUARD. AT THE OTHER GUARD WAS THE FLOOR GEN- ERAL, Lou VONDERBRINK, WHO HIT WITH UNCANNY CONSISTENCY FROM OUT. CENTER SPOT WAS HELD DOWN BY SKYSCRAPER CHAR- LIE HOFMAN. AT THE FOR- WARD POSITIONS WERE THE TlP-IN ARTIST, BILL LAM- MERT, AND THE AGGRESSIVE MORT COWGELL, THE TEAM WAS BOLSTERED BY SUCH STALWARTS As DON PAUL, GORDON FLORA AND JIM SICKING. VARSITY BASKETBALL ROW l: L. VONDERBRINK, M. COWGELL, D. KATTUS. W. LAMMERT, C. HOFMAN, D. PAUL. ROW 2: H.T. Do- TY, G. FLORA, D. DOPPES, J. SIGKING, A. DATAMO, R. BIRKOFER, S. PETTKO, COACH E. CROWE. Captain Don Kattus RESERVE BASKETBALL TEAM Row l: A. ROSENBERGER, R. BIRKOFER, D. DOPPES, J. SICKING, R. MOELLER. ROM 2: E. HENNEL, E. AHR, w. GEISER, G. FLORA. R. FRAKES. 117 1 thwia uHerbert T. runs the team as the coach has fallen a- sleep. We won! .. . 'The Scribes and ... Dow KATTUS uPPER LEFT TRIES A JUMP SHOT. BILL LAMMERT LowER LEFT, TO Lou AND Two POINTS AaovE WHO'S PUSHING WHO? FRESHMAN BASKETBAL TEAM ROW 1: T. KEARNEY, P. HUNT, w. BUDDE, J. AL- BRINCK, J. THOMAS, R. FELDKAMP. ROW 2: E. OBERHELMAN, K. McALIs- TER, A. MINK, G. Lu BUONo, D. WALTERMAN, J. SULLIVAN, COACH w. ORNELLA. the Chosen People . . . Don Paul watches a long shot by Vonder- Kattus does a fancy step and flip shot. brink dr0p thru. It hasn't as yet. Hamilton Catholic's Blackwell misses the free throw attempt. Mort tips it in against Wayne. Relay team of Mercurio, Smith, Houck and Test. Frank Nieman burning up the track on the low hurdles. 120 RALPH SMITH GRABS THE BATON AND IS OFF! WooowARD's HEARNDON HAD TO BEAT THE REC- 0RD To OUTSTEP BA- CON'S DON HESS IN THE HIGH HURDLES. Bacon turned out one of its best track teams in years. Coach Ornella really made the boys dig in. Day after day they worked hard and long for the various meets and it payed off. Best of all, Bacon walked off an easy victor in the Greater Cincinnati League Meet. As far as the coach can foretell, Bacon cindermen should be just as good next year. 121 BHSEBHLL VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM ROW I: F. FIORINI, MGR., w. HITZMAN, D. KATTUS, d. MERRIT, S. PETTKO, P. JUNGKUNZ, R. NICH- TING, M. COWGELL, L. VONDER- BRINK, R. LYONS, MGR. ROW 2: B. GIESLER, w. LAMMERT, d. NIE- HAUS, J. KOENIG, R. BIRKOFER, J. HOELSCHER, R. FRAKER, F. FAGO, P. GRUPENHOF. ROW 3: COACH H. LEIST, M. MCENENY, M. HUBER, A. DATTOMO, D. BACHMAN, C. MAY- BORG. AT RIGHT, DON KATTUS SPORTED A BATTING AVER- AGE OF OVER 600 FOR THE SEASON. KATTus LEFT , RAY SCHULTE AND BILL HITZMAN. BoTToM LEFT OUTFIELDER RAY NICHTING AND PITCHER RALPH BIRK- OFER. U1 HUGHES WITHRow PURCELL ELDER READING WESTERN HILLS HAMILTON CATH. PURCELL NEWPORT CATH. NORWOOD ST. XAVIER HUGHES WITHRow ELDER HAMILTON CATH. ST. XAVIER NEWPORT CATH. o n m- m w m m m m m b m m m m w w m m Ln-u OxhdanDkHLU- $r$r-u30m-J-$r . . . - mmmmmmmmmmmmmmxmm o-owoo-Jmmwo-wrwoxox 0N 122 B-HTHLfHC CLUB ROW l: S. PETTKO, J. HOELSCHER, R. NICHTING, E. ME!STER, D. MERCURIO, A. KESSE, M. WEBER. ROW 2: M. BROZ, G. SCHMIT, M. WAINZ, T. STAUD, R. BIRKOFER, R. MOULLIETT. ROW 3: w. HITZMAN, L. VONDERBRINK, M. COWGELL, w. LAMMERT, A. SCIAMANA, M. Mc ENEMY, C. YOUNG. ROW 4: H. HARMS, H. KEMPE, d. MARSHALL, R. AMRHELN, J. HAUSFELD, D. KATTUS. ROW 5: T. BEITZINGER, R. HUXEL, J. KROGER, M. HUBER, T. TAs- SET, F. NIEMAN, R. SCHULTE. In the senior division SeniorRoom 26hs Jim Hos- ford and Ron Rapp0port were just too big for Sen- ior Room 27's aggressive gang. In the junior loop Sopho- more Room 21 wentthrough the entire season unde- feated. They had just too much class for Sophomore Room 31 in the finals. 123 IHTHHWURHLS . : u ,, V . awnwkt' a :3: wmmtheruph-axgg . : , y, '. :, vm-umwws 7xu' kg mm 6W x g Ill AM I P OFFICERS IEHBHEHS HSSUUlHTIUH DHDS, FRIENDS, 1EHBHEHS CLUB D.F.T. OFFICERS .mn... . . m mm m7: s... -.'...m n h- -' n .1 DUB HDVEHTISEHS PLEHSE PHTHUHIZE THEHI! Do you know that . . . .71 ; ROGER BACON ALUMNI ASSOCIAT10N . . is your big brother? Alumni Activities . . . Week-End Retreats at Friarhursl WWW Quarterly Reunion Dances XXXX j g Alumni Bowling League g, A. A. U. Basketball -. :3- Su ortin New Ro er Bacon Stadi Q?! N pp 9 51 um $5 I Annual Basket Picnic Annual Homecoming Bi-Monthly Alumni News . d Xavier University Scholarships - - IS suppone Annual Alumni-Pacully Baseball Game by the Annual Alumni-Faculty Basketball Game Faculty? Awards to Champion Varsity Teams . . supporls all student activities? . . sponsors many activities of its own? . . . READ THE BI-MONTHLY ALUMNI NEWS unmnm c. ULRICH HEHFF JUHES CLASS RINGS 8: PINS Workmanship Quality Service Open from 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 P.M. POP DIERSING CAFE 4825 West Fork Road Phone: VAlley 9604 BOSSE AUTO SERVICE General Repairing Tires, Tubes, Batteries, Repairing 1206 Springfield Pike Wyoming 15, Ohio SPAR TAN PATR ONS BOLTE TEA AND COFFEE CO. AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY COMRADES UNIT 151 283 M. H. SUTTON SHOE REPAIR INSULATING SALES CO. HELSON'S SHELL SERVICE RUSSELL C. SCHNEIDER JEWELER BIGNER INC., TELEVISION STEGNER MEAT MARKET B. H. STORES WIEBELL JEWELER FRIES BROTHERS MOREL'S DELICATESSAN H. MEYER AND SONS DAIRY DR. AND MRS. O1BR1EN MR. AND MRS. V. .T. WUENNEMANN MR. AND MRS. JCS. SCHULTZ THOMAS E. KING LEO E. HEIMERT A FRIEND JOAN MERSCH 1801 Vine St. at Elder St. Bernard Ohio 4600 Vine St. St. Bernard 1739 Townsend St. Elm and Adelia Ludlow, Ky. 2632 Vine St. 2213 Central Parkway 116 Calhoun St. 7041 Vine Street 4903 Vine Street 3247 Jefferson Avenue Washington and Tower Ave. Lockland, Ohio MR. AND MRS. HELSON DR. AND MRS. H. C. VAN WYE JAMES LICHT ENBERG HOWARD SCHULTZ JOS. REISINGER PAT BALLARD H. E. GOLDSCHMIDT Complime nts of ST. ClEmEHT PHHISH ST. BERNARD, OHIO 1850 - 1950 That Ideal Spot. . . HOME SWEET HOME Built to your heart's desire SCHLEUTER BROS. General Contractors and Builders 1620 California Ave. Bond Hill Complete reconditioning of old home MElrose 0836-7839 Compliments of REV. CHAS. H. MCGURN ST. BERNARD CHURCH Winton Place JAS. P. BOLGER COAL CO. Super FueI Since 1895 Enquirer Building CHerry 4760 ROTH'S SERVICE STATION Market and Benton Sts. Reading, Ohio VAlley 9863-2503 THE GEORGE R. HAMMERLEIN AGENCY General Agents for The Mutual Life Insurance Co. MAin 1920 18 East 4th St. Cincinnati. Ohio FAIRMOUNT HARDWARE CO. Paints-Glas s -H0usehold Utensils Radios -Washe r 5 -Electric Appliance 5 WA 9515 WA 9603 1740 Queen City 1772 Baltimore Compliments of B LESSED MAR T IN MISSION Lincoln Heights, Ohio ST. BONAVENTURE SOCIAL 1798 Queen City Ave. Every Thursday Evening 8:30 RM. Donation 5ng Eve rybody Welcome PAT'S SUPER SERVICE CAB WASH AND LUBRICA'HON mu: AND mm av. ml Annang .5. be n-u-aa 1-: Mixed Drinks Whiskey Beer Wine SIMON'S FAMILY GRILL Where Sociability prevails WAbashx9683 Beautiful FleXi-glass Cocktail Bar 1785 Queen City Avenue, Fairmount Propr. T. Donovan Jim Honerlaw Paul Konrad H. 8: K. ROOFERS Slate Work Spouting Roofing Gutters Furnace Work 138 W. Amity Road Reading 15, Ohio VAlley 1838 8: 4006 HERB KATTUS Meats-Groceries-Fruits-Vegetables Horne Dressed Poultry 4509 Vine Street Phone W0 5673 St. Bernard, Ohio Congratulations PHILIP M. COLLINS Class of '29 uSave here today for security tomorrow ST. BERNARD PROGRESSIVE BUILDING 8: LOAN ASS'N CO. 4517 Vine St. UN1655 St. Bernard 17, Ohio Complime nts of ST. PATRICK CHURCH Blue Rock and Cherry Streets Cincinnati. Ohio Rt. Rev. Edward .T. Creager Pastor Compliments of ST . BERNARD CHURCH Winton Place FRANK J. STATH 8; CO. REALTORS An Efficient Staff and Sales Department Both Residential and Investment Property 1764 Queen City Ave. GR 7220 1 Congratulations from ST. FHHHBIS SEHHPH CHURCH REV. SYLVAN BECKER, O.F.M., PASTOR 0If it's musical-we have it. Band 8: Orchestra Instruments Pianos-Organs-Television THE DAVITT 8: HANSER MUSIC CO. 416 Main St. Cincinnati, Ohio 5 FISCHER'S BAKERY for Wedding Cakes and Decorated Cakes 1000 Ross Avenue Jefferson 9300 St. Bernard, Ohio We are proud to be the manufacturers of 1950 Roger Bacon Merit Pins GORDON B. NIILLER, 0: CO. 809 Walnut Street Cincinnati, Ohio THE SCHMIDT -DHONAU CO. FUNERAL HOME 433 Reading Road Reading. 15 Ohio Compliments of SI. GHIHGE PARISH REV. .TUVENAL BERENS, O.F.M., Pastor Mm 70m 325,000 3000de SW St. Anthony Messenger The National Catholic Family Magazine Rublished by the Franciscan Fatheiw 1615 Republic St. Cincinnati, 0. $3.00 PER YEAR WRITE FOR SAMPLE COPY SCHOENE0S DELICATESSEN Groceries-Cold Cuts-Produce Fountain Service Beer 8: Wine To Take Out 1703 Westwood Ave. WAbash 9708 Open 7 A.M.-10 P.M. Watches-Clocks-Diamonds Repairing KARL J. MOUCH, JEWELER bay uMoka 72.00 Vine St. VAlley 0435-36 Cincinnati 16, Ohio Congratulations and Best Wishes from CA'RSON'S PHAR MAC Y 4734 Vine Street-St. Bernard, Ohio BARGE'S CONFECTIONERY 3.2t7o-6 Z2 Beer - Wine Eats and Drinks To Take Out 4908 Vine Street St. Bernard, Ohio We Deliver AVon 4975 AVON HARDWARE AND SERVICE Paint-Glass-Household Goods Charles J. Linesch 3510 Reading Road Bacon Grad '30 Cincinnati, Ohio BILL'S TAVERN 4529 Vine Street St. Bernard, Ohio Where Friends Meet Quality Service BEN RIESENBERG SONS, INC. Coal Feed Coke Truck To Bin Service Reading, Ohio VA 0630 VA 0631 111 came from Schmidlins SCHMIDLIN HARDWARE STORE 4729 Vine Street St. Bernard Compliments of GEORGIAN CLUB 2525 Scioto St. Corryville W. J. WIRMEL AND SONS FUNERAL HOME Established 1914 3118 Colerain Avenue at Ethan KIrby 2596 Home Television Commercial Sales and Service BIGNER INC. 2213 Central Parkway at Brighton Cincinnati, 14 Ohio DUnbar 8766-7 ADA CAFE Beer Wine Mixed Drinks Good Food 6900 Vine St. Carthage 11Frank and Pop Trischler P. V. SHOE WALNUT CO. Manufactures of American Walnut Lumber Cincinnati, 13 Ohio Louis Vonderbrink Radio Television Sale 5 and Service ASHBROCK ELECTRIC SHOP 132 W. Benson St. Reading, Ohio VAlley Z989 THE VERY REV. ROMUALD MOLLAUN, O.F.M., PROVINCIAL and THE FRANCISCAN FATHERS of the PROVINCE OF ST JOHN THE BHPTISI Exte nd SINC ERE CONGRATULAT IONS T 0 THE GRADUATES OF 1950 CONGRAT ULATIONS, SENIORS! THE FHHHBISUHH mISSIUHHHU UHlT Extends to you and the students of Roger Bacon High School its sincerest appreciation for the generous and whole -hearted support you have given the Franciscan Priests and Brothers working in God's Mission Field. REV. IRVIN GEHRING, O.F.M. 1615 Vine Street Cincinnati, 10 Ohio JUS. H. UJESTEHDUHF TWO COMPLETE FOOD MAR KET S Lockland Wyoming VA 2342 VA 3835 MARTIN J. FREY INC. Building Contractors Industrial and Institutional Buildings and Maintenance North Bend and West Fork Rds. Cincinnati, 11 Ohio C omplime nts of MAYOR OF ST. BERNARD JOSEPH L. KOET TERS Where recreation is a pleasure ST. CLEMENT BOWLING ALLEYS W $5 WK d: '1! St. Bernard PL. 1933 THE SNOOK-VEIT H LUMBER C OMPAN Y Retail Lumber and Millwork 5250 Vine Street AVon 1840 Manufacturers of Special and Stock Millwork Building Mate rial, Etc . Compliments ST. BONAVENTURE CHURCH 1198 Queen City Avenue Phone WAbash 2541 Rev. Severin Lamping, O.F.M., Guardian and Chaplain of Dunham Hospital Rev. Gratian Meyer, O.F.M., Pastor Rev. Justin Nirmaier, O.F.M., Assistant Rev. Valens Waldschmidt, O.F.M., Assistant Rev. Gerald Held, O.F.M., Assistant Rev. Jerome Kircher, O.F.M., Assistant and Missionary Rev. Aurelian Munch, O.F.M., Pastor of San Antonio Church Rev. Donald Herp, O.F.M., Chaplain of St. Francis Hospital Sunday Masses 5:30, 7:00, 9:00 High Mass, 10:30, 11:30 Holy Day Masses 5:30, 6:30, 7:30, 8:30, 9:30 Confessions Saturdays and Eves of Holy Days: 3:00 to 6:00 P.M., 7:00 P.M. on 10 --- Bowling Alleys --- 10 Fine Recreation Center Free Parking Phone WAbash 9537 Opening evey evening from 7:00 P.M. - Sundays from 1:00 P.M. Everybody Welcome! Give us a try! AVONDALE DAIRY Pastuerized Milk and Cream -A11 Dairy Products- 36 Clinton Spring Ave. Avondale AV. 2.387 T HE IMWALLE MEMORIAL FUNERAL HOME 4811 Vine Street St. Bernard AVon 7414-7415 JOSEPH L. KOETTERS LATHING PLASTERING FIREPROOFING 184 Meadow Ave. Cincinnati, 17 Ohio Phone AVon 8182 THE CITIZENS BANK of ST. BERNARD Vine Street at Washington St. Bernard, Ohio Diamonds Watches Silverware WANSTRATH'S 407 Neave Bldg. 104 W. 4th St. GA. 0560 Experts in Watch and Jewelry Repairing A. Wanstrath Jim Wanstrath THE FRANKLIN SAVINGS and LOAN C OMPANY 1633 Vine Street Open-Saturdays 4 to 8 P.M. -Mondays 4 t0 8 P.M. cum : 2035 Madison Rd. 5 E H. 4' A'- Open Fridays 4 to 8 P.M. C inc innati , Ohio THE B. H. WESS CO. Coal Building Material KIrby 0153 Cincinnati, Ohio 15be O INDIVIDUALLY CINCINNATI. OHIO - MAin 0832 1k 1k 1k OF 3600 i'q II I u . thl. '! i' .- .h hll. W I'rl'n I -.I..I h; t N.Ii. i t s .luu. ullnlhh I I ' I citiqcvi' i l i 'l O In the days of ancient Greece, the Spartans prided themselves on their never-say-dieespirit. Back in the first days of our school's history, 0 spectator at one of Bacon's football games exclaimed: Those Bacon boys fight like SPARTANS. The name was overheard by on observant newspaper reporter who soon made it quite popu- lar and all through these twenty years in every Sport, the Roger Bacon SPAR: TANS have been noted for their coure age, fair play, and their never-soy- I..l C t ,1- t - -- 'i '.'. '4'. -'tl . 'g It ' III NM .h'si'im..i u .:'t die-spirit as well as their truly Fran ciscon fostered ideal of 0 strong mind coupled with 0 strong body. 0 Men of Bacon find that some atmosn phere of true sportsmanship and Chris- tian foirploy prevailing during their hours of recreation at the FRIARS. Here they meet together to further their bodily training but meanwhile never failing to continue their charac- ter formation in a real spirit of SPARTAN comrodship. FRIARS CLUB INC. OHIO AT McMILLAN VIC HONNIGFORD for Custom Built Homes IA. 9338-M 3663 Paramount Rdg. Rd. 11Are you fully covered? MOUCH AGENCY INSURANCE Get it before you need it 7204 Vine St. VA. 7155 Cincinnati, 16 Ohio ST. JAMES CHURCH White Oak Sunday Masses: 5:45, 7:30, 9:30, 11:30 Feast Day Masses: 5:30, 6:30, 7:30, 9:00 CLIFF FOOD MARKET Quality Meats-Fruits-Vegetables uThe Home of White Villa Foods Tower at Delmar AV. 6443 We Deliver KEINER'S CAFE 3.2.7: 81 67a Beer-Wine-Whiskey Beer and Wine to Carry out Ross 8: Greenlee Ave. St. Bernard, Ohio WYOMING GRILL AND DELICATESSEN Less Cummins, Propr. Home Cooked Foods Short Orders Complete Fountain Service 1208 Springfield Pike VA. 9572 Wyoming, 15 Ohio LOUIS SERVICE STATION Jefferson Ave. and Corry St. Cincinnati 19, Ohio AVon 9481 Compliments of THE SERAPH CLUB 1610 Vine Street Meet your friends at- RIESTER'S TAVERN Beer-Wine-Whiskey-Mixed Drinks Dancing every Saturday Night Bob Wehmeier's Orchestra Cheviot Rd., White Oak JAckson 9057 G. 8: S. DELICATESSEN 8: CONFECTIONERY 1801 Queen City Ave. Opposite St Bonaventure Church WAbash 9667 Open 8:00 a.m.-10:30 p.rn. Daily Repairing Dyeing EBERLE DR Y CLEANING We call and deliver 13th and Spring Streets Phone: MAin 0319 Artistic Arrangements Plus Quality And Service BURNET AVENUE FLORIST Flowers For Every Occasion 3104 Burnet Ave, Cincinnati, Ohio UNiversity 0351 NICHTING GROCERIES AND MEATS 1808 Queen City Ave. WA. 9545 A 8c N FURNITURE AND APPLIANCE COMPANY 911 East McMillan St. 2448 Gilbert Ave. WOodburn4710, 4711 COLLEGE HILL JEWELER Opposite Post Office We Specialize In Watches PULSKAMP AUTO SERVICE Auto Repairing Body and Fender Work 4436 Vine St. St. Bernard, Ohio AVon 7082 C omplime nts of MR. AND MRS. F. WALTER BLESI BEIN'S PHARMACY 119 Calhoun St. opp. Dennis Corryville Cincinnati, Ohio Phones: AVon 4806-97058 THE COORS BR OT HER S DAIR Y Industrial Piping and Equipment Installation Maintenance and New Construction PR OVO COMPANY, INC . 4812. Vine St. St. Bernard, 17 Ohio Phone: CA 3222 Success T0 The 1950 Grads- READING KIWANIS CLUB ST. FRANCIS BOOK SHOP and CATHOLIC INFORMATION CENTER Religious Articles Books - Pamphlets 1618 Vine St. CH 7304 C omplime nt 5 of A FRIEND ATLAS MOTORS, INC . Dodge and Plymouth Cars Dodge Job Rated Trucks 3421 Montgomery Rd. Cincinnati, Ohio WOodburn 6200 Shop in St. Bernard Save T ime Save Money ST. BERNARD BUSINESS MEN'S ASSN. ST. JOHN BAPTIST CHURCH Green and Republic Streets Rev. Victorian Ostmeyer, O.F.M., Pastor Rev. Florian Greve, O.F.M., Assistant Rev. Paschal Varnskuhler, O.F.M., Assistant Rev. Alphonse Hoff, O.F.M., Assistant Attend our Novena to St. Anthony Every Monday . -r' . 1th? See the Passion Play During Each Lenten Season .-' K . i BOOKS-MORE BOOKS-ACRES OF BOOKS Be your need for the book of the moment or that long out-of-print ubook of the ages we believe youll find it in your and our Acres of Books. That you may have an ever-increasing supply of books for your selection we are buying more and more books every day--when the better private libraries and book collections come on the market it is ACRES OF BOOKS all the way. When you think of books. Remember--ACRES OF BOOKS--Booksellerstodis- criminating book buyers and to the better College and Public Libraries the country BEHTHHHD smIIH's HBBES 0F 30an 633 Main St. Cincinnati, 2 Ohio 4...:- CINCINNATI ATHLET IC GOODS 110 W. 4th St. Cincinnati 2 , Ohio S. Blankenbuehler F. Busch '9Where you stop we start B. $1 B. SERVICE Clutch Lubrication Brake Tires Road Service Batteries General Repairing Accessories Tower at Delmar St. Bernard, 0. Phones Day AVon 5182 Nite WC 9278 Beer Wine Sandwiches SCHEP9S CAFE Come In and Enjoy Television Schuffleboard 4501 Vine St. AVon 9570 St. Bernard UN 1150 ACE TELEVISION CENTER Experts in Television Free Service with All Our Sets 39 Calhoun Street Opposite St. George Church Corryville Complime nts of TOMMY 'S TAVERN Sharronville , Ohio Success to the 1950 Graduates PURITY LAUNDRY 231 North Bend Road Carthage Cincinnati, 16 Ohio VAlley 1464 It's a hit CAFE MARDI GRAS College Hills Friendly Cafe 6118 Hamilton Avenue 68 years of quality and service H. WOEBKENBERG DAIRY CO. a m , 15-17 Voorhees Street Reading , Ohio Phones: VAlley 0392 VAlley 72.27 MUR-SET STUDIO Official Photographer For THE '50 uTROUBADOUR . Portraits of Distinction . Bridal Groups . Wedding Candids . School and Fraternal Groups Portraits and Candids FRANK MURSET 127 WEST FIFTH STREET Jzy-MYEARBOOKS TOPEKA, KANSAS THE PACEMAKERS OF QUALITY lllr I


Suggestions in the Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) collection:

Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Roger Bacon High School - Troubadour Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954


Searching for more yearbooks in Ohio?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Ohio yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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.