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' News of the World V for Sabin City Graduation Number, Nineteen Thirty Two Number 4 Punccual Volume 9 A HONOR sou. 3rd Quarter I x. f C Q f-2 riff ,VY5 sl T Pt. 2 Helen Kucha Howard Rice George Berliaut Pt. 4 Sam Fuchs Ralph Gorzynski Pt. 6 Clara Gross Sarah Rubin Albert Finkelstein Julius Klapman Harold Pokras Pt. 7 Lillian Fried Ruth Goldstein Marie Jensen Dorothy Russin John Dabbert 106 Adeline Ksionzkiewicz Pearl Kosecke Betty Hessler Solomon Highman Isadore Denov Edward Segel 107 Evelyn Shefner 108 Amelia Stanczyk Edward Swlder 110 Frances Olesink Adeline Stolarz lll Morton Fingerhut Arthur Retchin 112 Teddy VVierciak MP2 Lucille Reiger 203 Irene Bahbey Adeline Koziol Stella Olszewski Bernice Orlowski Evelyn Rubin Selma Soglin Robert Brownstein 207 Gertrude Freeman Jennie Mostykowska Henrietta Novak 2104 Edith Golden Margaret Lambrcct Rose Levitsky Harriet Lowy Marjorie Minnicks Ruth Petchersky Bertha Scher Esther Weiss Harold Fried 208 Mollie Klein Helene Gorski Martha Novak 210 Charlotte Koziol 21 1 Walter Hyso 303 Francis Janik Harold Kukuk Rose Shuster 301 Leona Chernikod Lorraine Plackewicz Julia Paul Irene Guttman Vvalter Polanin 305 Eleanor Anigo Lillian Go-lonka Olga Lucas Alice Ulanowski Alex Tuzoff 306 Edna Garfield Jeanette Korecki Stephanie Korecki Dorothy Richter Elsie Salo 807 Melvin Stein Sam Cooper Charles Hemmel- stein Florence Kramen Rose Abelson 810 George Brown Walter Fortach Sam Golinsky Sam Mermelstein Sophie Turkiewicz Sylvia Simon 31 1 Raphael Ezgur BOY'S GLEE SINGS OVER WCFL On Wednesday. January 13th, the Boys' Glee Club of Sabin, under the direction of Miss Martha Byrne, broadcasted a program over Station VVCFL at 4 o'clock in the afternoon. The program of songs was arranged around the four points of the compass. The boys sang of bold buccaneers of the nor:h, the wise men of the east, the great open spaces of the west. and imitated the negroes of the south in singing negro spirituals. , The boys enjoyed the trip to the station immensely. It was very thrilling to have an opportunity of seeing the station and of getting close to the mike . The following program was sung: Song of a Man ................... Kotte Buccaneers ........ . ...... . . .Frazier Song of Norway .... . ....... ..... G rieg Every Time I Feel the Spirit .......... .....................Negro Spiritual Doan Ye Cry M1 Honey ............ Noll VVe, Three Kings of Orient, Are. .Hopkins Out Where the XVest Begins ...... Philleo The Capital Ship ............ English Air Wind on the Hill. . . .... O'Hare YOUR BEST Good, better, and best! Don't be at rest Until good is better And better is best. Phillips Junior Star, JUST MEMORIES By SYDNEY JUSTIN HARRIS lDedicated to the Graduating Classl Night breezes blowing, Clouds slowly iioat, Pale lights are glowing, While I in a boat Sit dreaming and thinking Ot days long gone by: Of comrades and loved ones: O Time, how dost ily! The days of the past Have flown away fast, And nothing remains, Only memories last. The memories of joy, of sorrow, of pain, I dream of the days of my childhood again . . . Ah, Youth, you are foolish, You hurry, you run. You covet Fame and Fortune, And then when Life's done, VVhat have you? .lust memories ' Of days long gone by, Of comrades and loved ones, 0 Time, how dost fly! ANOTHER SABINITE ON THE AIR Werner Skudlarek was a guest speaker at the Radio Science Club broadcast Jan- uary 6, 1932. We could hear and recog- nize his voice perfectly. The club told us how to find our pulse and how to count it. We counted our normal pulse and again after running on place 15 seconds to show the effect of exercise. The pupils enjoyed the exercise espe- cially as a member of their group took part in the broadcast. Werner Skudlarek, 311. DOING SOMETHING FOR THE PATIENT Frank McIntyre, the plump comedian. played vaudeville dates one season. One night after his turn he dropped into a short-order restaurant near the theatre for a bite, before going to bed. Sitting next to him was a former circus acrobat, who did a horizontal-bar act 011 the same bill with McIntyre. The acrobat was sawing away at the sinewy knee-joint of a fried chicken leg. Though the knife was sharp and he was athletic. he made but little headway. He waved his arm toward a bottle of ketchup which stood upon the counter near McIntyre's elbow. Say, bo, he requested, pass de lini- ment. will you? De sea gull's got de rheumatism, AN INTERESTING STUDENT In interviewing the interesting species of Sabin City, I have come across one who goes under the title of an artist and sculp- tress. Her name twhether it's assumed or not I don't knowl is Frieda Davis. Her hands are long and slim. They pro- duce charcoal drawings, and clay statuettes which represent human figures and visages. In earnest, Miss Davis remarked, Leon- arda De Vinci. the world's greatest painter, would promenade down the street stopping to sketch faces that had some interesting feature about it. She adds, I like this work and I iind this a most interesting and often an amusing way to spend time. You may see this promising artist walk- ing down the corridors with a Shakes- peziren volume, or psychology book tucked under her arm, stopping now and then to gaze with admiration at some piece of art, Stella Gasiciel, 210. APPLESAUCE I'm going to do my homework now and go to the show some other time. Teacher, may I do some extra work instead of read- ing a library book? My dear brother, give me the towel, I will dry dishes for you so you may go out and play. I always pick out and study my cur- rent event three days ahead of time. How could you ever think of forgetting your gym suit? How could you ever call those lovely children freshies'? Peggy Rornanotf, Stockton Echoes.
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Tlzc Nincfrmz 'I'l1i1'ty-fzco Graduation Number page Six S A B 1 N I T E J U N I o R January, 1932 5. if if ' ,fain . ci' 'T ft Q 'E .ff if 'I 1 .T 55 , of AV' 5 is fl Left to Right- lst. Row: .lnnctte Korecki, Dorothy Richter, Arthur Rctchin, Helen Fleislnman, Edward Stnnchnik, Idu Berkin, Sylvia Brown. 2nd Row: Hynicn Surgnl, Selina Gold- berg. Jerome Hirsch, Molly Isenberg, Sol Bronstein. Mnrybeth Hibbard, Mr. Ralph ROOM 306-1 1 1 Brown. Stcphuny Korecki, Sam Frcifeld, Emily Ziemba. 3rd Row: l-Elsie Snlo, Bertha Sofo, Alex Orelowitz, Stephany Pytel, Edward Lazar, Morton Fingerhnt, Mildred Moskovitz, i r I i Raymond I'fer, Phyllis Harris, Joe Kop- czak, Adeline Porn, Agnes Kluka. 4th Row: George liiesche. Joseph Jor- dan, Gerhard! VVnllics, Mary Kennedy, Olga Kudrcwich, VVillimn Turkiewicz, Beatrice Jensen, I-Zdnn Garfield, Leo Borelll, Earl 1.4-Blond, John Gondek. A SCANDAL IN CATSBURG Room 1 1 1-306, Years have passed, but my school days come back to me. I remember. the good old times at Sabin and the days I've spent with my old friends in Room 1ll and 306. As I sit in my study and gaze into the ilames and listen to the wood crackle and see it toss and jump, I remember many things. It seems rather peculiar to think that only one of my old classmates has stuck with me. Then and there, my thoughts are interrupted by the hail and snow forcing the French windows of my study open. and as I go to close them, there in the heavy snow, I perceive a messenger making headway toward me. He stumbles and falls as I come to his aid. As we go toward the house, he tells of his mission. What in the world is my partner doing out there? And as I say that, it arouses the curiosity of the messenger who is bold enough to ask. VVho, what, where and what of it? In answer to that, I say that my partner, Arthur Relchin disappeared as he usually does, that shrimp, and now writes me that he is in Catsbnrg. he has a swell case, he needs money, and for me to come quick. fOne week lateri. Upon arriving at the station to get the train for New York. I notice a tablet on the newly constructed Universal Common- wealth depot: HIRSCH, UFER AND BRONSTEIN Engineers Constructed by the Stachnik Machine Co. Designed by Borelli and Co., Inc. Could these names which bring back so many memories be all together on one tab- let? Is this the Jerome Hirsch, Raymond Ilfer. and Sol Bronstein of old Room Ill and 3015? Could they have all been so successful and so closely connected? Yet, at second thought. I always knew members of our old room would accomplish great feats. As I boarded the train for New York at the depot, a boy rushed by Paper, Mister, Paper? After passing towns and villages, again the tablet at the depot aroused my curiosity. Was this the Edward Stachnik of old Sabin? Was this great designer the Leo Borelli I knew. my old classmate? After deep consideration, and thought, I came to the conclusion that it was. After all. Leo did have a lot of talent. Then, I was determined to meet them since I had also been successful i11 crimonology and wished them to know of my success and to know that I am proud of theirs. Then. while glancing through the news- paper. I noticed a large colored advertise- ment: KORECKI STYLE SI-IOPPE 132 W. 5th Avenue New York City Stephanie Korecki, Prop. By golly. what a girl! Well, after all. I knew that she would make it. I made up my mind to pay her a visit before I leave the states for the Old World. Upon entering the depot from the train, in New York, I questioned the information girl as to where I could find a branch or get in connection with Hirsch, Ufer and Bron- stein, Electrical Engineers and Construc- tors, or, the Stachnik Machine Company, but before I could ask, where Borelli and Co. was situated, the face looked up at me. and exclaimed. How is the big crim- onologist getting along? Are you catch- ing many fleas these days, Sam? I looked at the face, and the face looked at me. Who could this face be? But before I could turn rule and quote, the face ex- claimed, It's me, Mary, your ol-d pal. Now what is this? This was the first thought that came into my mind. First, I come across Hirsch. then Bronstein, then Stephanie Korecki, and now Mary Ken- nedy. After explaining the situation to her, I suggested that she accompany me to Catsburg where I need a few assistantsin detective work and investigation. She ac- cepted and we both started for 5th Avenue in a taxi cab which read: ISENBERG TAXI CO. The name just came across my mind but I let it go at that. After riding quite awhile and discussing old times with Mary, she asked me if I knew who's taxi cab I was riding in, but not knowing, she told me that Molly Isenberg, once a head buyer ICIUIIIIIIHFII on Page 15, Col, IJ
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Page Eight The Nineleen Thirty-Iwo Graduation Number SABINITE JUNIOR January, 193 2 s1Zu91Nm:. Edilrd and Pulzlishrd by the membvr: of the Junior Jorzrnalists of The Zllhert Ksaahin Hluniur ilaigb Suzhou! 2.216 Hifsrh Slrrft, Chicago Mary Dopp, Principal . Xu -1 na., t mm o mg! SABINITE EDITORIAL STAFF' Faculty Advisor .....,... Georgia Veatch Sam Friefeld .... ,..,.. ....... E d itor Sid Harris .......... ,...-Isxacialr Editor Aft R6tChiIl. .............. ...Feature Editor Carolyn Rznbinovitch .......... .-11:1-fnhly Editor Sarah Lipshutz .......... .-lui. Axsrmlzly Editor Harry Fox .......... ....,.. B oy.f' Spur! Editor Lillian Zakolski .....,. ,...Girl.r' Sport Editor Mildred Goosinow .... ...,..... C lub Editor Anna Rashko ....... ...... , 'IrrD1-parlmenl Dorothy Kranz .... . ..,. Musir Drpartmz-nt Hyman Goldman .... ,... S rienrr Drpartment Herman Green I Stella Gasicielj' ' Albert Finkelstein .,... ....., C our! Rrparler Edward Lazar .,..........,.. Politirnl Reporler Mildred Yankewich ....... Circulation Afllflllgfl' Rina Abels, Lawrence Abt ..,........ .4:.fi:Iani.v General News Reporters Frances Klein, Irene Bergmann, Frances Kin- zer, Bessie Fzlcuna, Esther Rochman, Sarah .. .... Shop Deparlmenl Rubin. VFQQQYOEJ5 EENE we T - ENJOYING YOUR VISIT TO THE DENTIST By I. M. COI-IN, D.D.S. The subject of this talk, Enjoying your visit to the dentist, may stimulate a bit of humor on the part of many listeners but won't you please listen attentively and be convinced that the title, Enjoying your visit to the dentist, is really well founded and correctly stated. The progressive and scientific spirit which dominates modern dentistry has practically eliminated physical pain from dental service. This has been accom- plished not alone by the use of improvcd anaesthetics, but also by advanced meth- ods and increased skill. Dentistry today is not satisfied with merely extracting dis- eased teeth, restoring them with plates and bridges, crowning and filling the decayfd ones and treating diseases of the mouth. The dental profession is also deeply con- cerned with preventive measures to com- bat these extensive losses. in order that the natural teeth be preserved and health maintained. The prevention of disease is far more important than its cure. So in this battle for health. dentistry brings directly to its patients the reassuring and beneficial re- sults of the successful research work be- ing conducted hy many prominent scien- tists as well as dentists, who are contin- ually reporting new discoveries to bene- fit mankind. This, in brief, is an accurate picture of the extensive health service afforded by dentistry today. The public recognizes the dentist as indispensable in modern life yet there is frequently delay and hesitancy i11 consulting him for service. There is but one predominating cause for this DPD- crastination. Whether it be the young or the old, the man, the woman or the child, the cause for attempting to evade or delay obtaining this beneticial dental service is fear. Now, let us analyze this fear which folks entertain regarding the dental chair. Perhaps we shall discover that an under- standing of the situation will not alone remove the fear but also the pain. This fear, which is a state of mind, so distressing at times. growing so huge in consciousness that it may dethrone reason and warp judgment, is defined as an emotion excited by threatening evil or impending pain, accompanied by a desire to avoid or escape it. The alarmingly determined effect of fear upon the func- tions of the body has been experimentally proven. The scientific world also reports that digestion. assimilation, nutrition and life-maintaining processes in general, are retarded and in seine cases stopped. when fear gains control. A prominent medical authority states that to those who have come ln contact with large numbers of the discontented, the misflts of various kinds, it would ap- pear that more unhappiness, more busi- ness and social failures are due to fear than any other cause. Basil King, in his book on The Con- quest of Fear, writes as follows: I am ready to guess that all the miseries wrought by sin and sickness put together would not equal those we bring on our- selves through fear, which perhaps we do the least to counteract. We are not sick all the time: We are not sinning all the time: but all the time all of us. or prac- tically all of us are afraid of someone or something. These statements are sufllcient to prove the prevalence, the seriousness as well as the probable disaster which may result from entertaining fear in our mental home. The folly of fear has been eloquently described by Emerson, as follows: Some of your griefs you have cured And the sharpest you still have survived. But what torments of grief you endured From evils which never arrived.! Over two thousand years ago Aristotle discovered that unwise training in early childhood was the basic cause for fear in later life. The ability to prevent fear from seriously affecting the normal de- should be The par- ideas can their chil- believe that they had been concealed. It ls therefore quite or adults do not of children, any velopment of the chlld's mind of vital importance to parents. ents should know that their hardly fail to be conveyed to dren, even though they imperative that parents discuss in the presence diiiicult dental experience or symptoms occasioned by an abscess or pains from neglected teeth. 'Their tender minds greatly magnify those experiences. Fear to go to the dentist may easily be aroused in this way. Such experiences cause fears in later life which may be difficult tc conquer. The individual thus afflicted. may not be able to account for his tear, as evidenced by this well knowwn rhyme: I do not like you, Dr. Fell, The reason why, I cannot tellg But this I know and know quite well, I do not like you, Dr. Fell. The child may require dental attention as early as the age of two months. Regu- lar visits to the dentist should not be de- layed later than three years. Dental ex- aminations should be made about every six months, as the chlld's teeth decay much more rapidly than the adults. This early attention is very important in preventing any dental ailment reaching the stage where it will cause needless pains and be difficult to correct. A small cavity is easily, quickly and palnlessly filled Without treatments or use of anaesthetics. So why delay until it becomes a large cavity? Re- quest your dentist to give you dietary ad- vice for your child. This will be very helpful for the prevention of dental dls- turbances as this information is most val- uable and effective in early life. The chlld's visit to the dentist will then be brief and less often. Yet these visits will be sufrlcient for the child to become ac- quainted with the dentist and his sur- roundings under these favorable condi- tions, thus overcoming dread on the part of the child. The modern reception rooms have pictures and magazines which inter- est the child, some even providing a play- room. The operating room does not re- semble a hospital unit, but its furnishings are cheerful. attractive musical. The dentist greets the child pleasantly, name. and with and often even calling him by his first a few jovial remarks puts the child at per- speaks of things fect ease. The dentist and incidents that are of interest in the r-hild's daily activity. Thus he gains the little patient's attentive co-operation and his confidence. The child learns that the dentist is not to be feared, but that he is just as human, just as kind and just as considerate as his parents. If the child is old enough to understand, the dentist shows in advance just what instruments he will use. thus winning the confidence of the child and dlspelling fear. If an extraction be necessary the dentist will practice no deception as to what he intends doing but will explain to the child the importance and necessity for its removal and that this will be done practically without pain. The child's tooth may be infected, abscessed, thus poisoning the en- tire system: or. it may be preventing his permanent teeth from Properly growing in the jaw. While the dentist is care- fully using the dental bur for rem.ovlng decay from the tooth, the child will often exclalm that it tickles. Thus the chlld's mind, free from fear, experiences no pain. The child will also appreciate being told that the filling of the tooth will per- mit him to enjoy chewing his food with- out auy more pain. The fact that this work has been painlessly accomplished will make the young patient a grateful friend. Parents will have no difhculty in continu- ing the child's regular visits for dental examination. We adults. are but children grown up, some of us having grown up just a bit more than others. The causes of fear in, adult life are often but repetitions of the fears born in childhood. Thus we adults may be startled by fears aroused when we are in the darkness of a cellar. I Continued an Page 14, C ol. 31
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