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The Nineteen 'lhirtyfthrce Graduation Number J tu Page Fourteen S A B I N l T E A N N U A l- lone, l933 i Li rl I :l,I'KllQIl,lFl-lalfl ljlji lfflllf flli ill lf l il lil,l'l,fiflijllllifl'l 'li' 'll lil .il lull ll,ilQlllTlj'l'l llllfililll lil ll ill V ' lit ill il l,,l', I ll 'li 'L r ,l iv i b K T fi F' gr 'I 1 ': if fl fl , . .ai fa is i T 1 V 1 ' 1 l .ti I l ,il ,S W I ri , I ' ,Yl i .7 Y' l 5 I Q. V 1 , ll ' I T C jiri l ll li l Ui bl . !,,ll, ll,1l,?l 'i,ill ll lil Ei, lr' lll Ll l'l 'f l, l .H 'la ll,l'1 llplll, H ,l'1 lllkl ' ll 1' ' 1 l' lil ll 'li l, ll ii. i': 1 l I. li Ili lil l' 3 ' ll 'W' FIRST ROW, Lett to Right :fZeb Weslowfski. Mar - THIRD ROW?-Sophie Brenko, Mary Crouse, Doro, ret Patterson. Meyer Kaplan, Anna Rasbko. .lack Shitgl- man. Mr. Boehm, Amelia Facuna, Charles Hemmel- Stein, Florence Kramcn, Melvin Stein, Gertrude Mamach, Arthur Dichholtz. SECOND ROXW:-f Abc Kaufman, Michael Chubinskv, Morton jenkins, Daniel Feder, Mary Mclnick. Ireriu ROOM 307 Feld! Rose Abt-lson. Beatrice Schelllcr, Marion Rohr, Izdwin Leselynski. Phillip Podrousky, Sam Fuch, Sam Cooper, Frank Iiololl. . thy Gilman. Irvine Hertzberg, Leo Gluza, Ezra Cunr, Ferdinand Hein. Kordyan Letyandowski, Bernard Black, Louise Schachter, Josephine Duda, Anna Poepako. FOURTH ROVU:-Ethel Rokotl. Evelyn Ehrlich Marion Brexeman. Elsie Miller, Hyman Hittman. Shirlef Malzel. Victoria XVttltz.xk, Franccx jcrmol, Betty Brown. ROOM 307 ROSE ABELSON Kill Gabby From IVicker Park to Tuley Sr. Dramatic Clubg Glee Clubg Detective Force! Minstrel Showg Cast in XVho NVouldn't Be Crazy g Radio Programs ROBERT BERCMANN From Columbus to Lane Tech Science Clubg Athletic Club HYMAN BITTMAN HifIy From IVicker Park to Lane Tech Bantlg City Councilg Baseball Team BERNARD BLACK lIIm'kit ' From Scbley to Tuley Latin Clubi Printing Clubg Dt'tt'ctiyt- SOPHIE BRENKO From Schley to Tulcy Dancing Clubg Nfinstrel Show MARION BRESEMANN From Columbus to Lucy Flower Dancing Clubg Art Club BETTE BROWN Boop From IVicker Park to Tuley Dancing Clubg Typing Club SAM COOPER Sain From Schley to Tuley Boys' Glee Clubg Know Your City Club! Detective MICHAEL CHUBINSKY Zrrn From IVicker Park to Tuley Science Clnbl Good Health Club MARY CROUSE .Ilm ' From Columbus to Tuley Glce Club: Art Appreciation Club EZRA CUNY From Schley to Crane Good Ilealth Club: Police Force ARTHUR DICKHOLTZ Dirk From NVicker Park to Scburz Band Clubg Dramatic Clubg Capt. of Police Patrol IOSEPHINE DUDA Ru.rif From IVright to Sehurz Dancing Clubi Newapaper Club: Sabinite Stall' AMELIA FACUNA Dimf1lr',r From Columbus to Tuley Dancing Clnbg Art Club DANIEL FEDER Danny From Columbus to Crane Tech Nlt-tal Shopg Scribbler's Club IRENE FELD R1'r1t'r From Columbus to Tuley Dancing Clubg Senior Dramatic Club SAM FUCHS Sn1nmy From Columbus to Tuley Boys' Ulee Clubg Newspaper Cluhg Sabinite Staff DOROTHY CILMAN From Clarke Schley to Tulev City Council Clubg Typing Clubg Hall Guard LEO CLUZA I,rr From Columbus to Crane Tin Shopg Good Health Clubi Police Force FERDINAND HEIN Smtcftl Off From Bancroft to Tulcy Art Appreciation Clubi Metal Clubg Detective CHARLES HEMMELSTEIN lI1'my From Columbus Boys' Glee Clubg Athletic Club IRVINC R. HERTZBERG Shorty From Goethe to Roosevelt Good Health Clubi Scribblefs Club: Police Forcel Lunch Room Force MORTON IENKINS From XViCker Park to Lane Clubg Bztseballg Traffic FRANCES IERMOL Red From NVicker Park to Flower Typing Clubj Art Appreciation Club MEYER KAPLAN .Ilil'z ' From Sebley to Tuley Metal Clnbg Latin Club ABRAHAM I. KAUFMAN From New York School to Tuley Dramatic Club FRANK KOLOFF From Columbus to Crane Checker Clubg Scribbler's Club FLORENCE KRAMEN 1 agir From IVicker Park to Tuley Glec' Clubg Senior Dramatic Clubg Radio Programs: Minstrel Showg Detective Force KORDYAN LEWANDOWSKI Kuri!y From Schley to Tuley Stamp Clubg Newspaper Clubg Asst. Editor of Sabinite EDWIN LESZCZYNSKI IitirIy From Andersen to Crane Checker Clubg Scribbler's Club SHIRLEY MAIZEL From VVicker Park to Tuley Typing Clubi Art Clnbg Detective Force GERTRUDE MAMACH I.'ollf'gialr From Burr to Lucy Flower Typing Club MARY MELNICK From LaFayette to 'Fuley Typing Club ELSIE MILLER From Bryant Dramatic Clubg Glee Club .Ilnrly Court
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june, l933 The Nineteen Thirty-three Graduation Number SABINITE ANNUAL Page Thirteen ROOM IOS ..,...,. ..,. ......,. ........ A... ........... IAMES MAROPOULOS Jimmy From Schley to Crane Athletic Clubg Baseball Team TEDDY MAKOWAN lf'ally From Columbus to McKinley Metal Club PETER MICHAL Pete From Columbus to Crane Art Appreciation Club! Athletic Club CHESTER MICHALOWSKI Chet From VVhite School Athletic Clubg Baseball Team EDWARD MIX Mixey From Schley Penmanship Club LEON PERLMUTTER PtrIie From YVicker Park to Tuley Tratlic Courtg States Attorney STEVE POLAK Polork From XVicker Park to Lane Good Health Club? IWVOOIISIIOP Clubg Metal Shopg Art Club RAYMOND RIECK Ray From Bancroft Dramatic Club HENRY SARNOWICZ Hank From XVicker Park to Crane Checker Club ROMAN TOMASZEWSKI Simpy From Columbus to Crane Harmonica Cluhg Alderman MICHAEL TYMUSZ Mike From Columbus to Lane 9A Tratlic Patrol, 9A- Oliice Boy noorii-,an . ....,...... .... A... ..,. .e..,.,. .... .... ,,.. . , . I .-Y f STEVE PIEKUT ' Childs From St. Aloysius Penmanship Club STEVE OCWIEIA From Chopin to McKinley Harmonica Club NATHAN SKALL Chine From Von Humboldt to Tuley Glee Clubg Penmanship Club HARRY SPUNDER lI'a1ly' From Montefiore to Tuley Good Health Club! Pcnmanship Club: H. R. Fire Marshall, Juror STANLEY SWIECA Penmanship Club CHESTER SWIECICKI Rui From St. Stanislaus Athletic Club MORRIS ZEIDENSTEIN Skinny' From Haugan to Tuley Stamp Club: Biology Clubg Hall Guard I06-Continued from Page 9 IACK SACKS From LaFayette to Tilley Band, Latin Club, Glee Club MARTIN SARLEY From Mioos to Tuley Biology Clubg Airplane Clubg Hall Guard HERMAN SCHNEIDERMAN Slim From LaFayette to Tuley Latin Club: Boys' Glee Clubg Athletic Clubg Baseballg Boys' Volley Ball Team: judge of Room Court PEARL SPIECEL Baht From LaFayette to Roosevelt Dramatic Clubg Latin Club IACK STEINBERG Franky From Von Humboldt to Tulcy Latin Clubg Good Health Clubi Boys' Glee Club SAM STRAUSS SIre!rh From Von Humboldt to Tuley Latin Club! Athletic Clubg Glee Clubg Baseball, Basketball WALTER SZYMANSKI lIf'rrlly From St. Helen's School to Tuley Craft Club? Biology Clubg Glee Club: Hall Guard VALERIA UNIKAUSKAS Smiles From St. Michael to Tilley Latin Clubg Penmanship Club SAMUEL VICTOR Sam.ron of the I.r1and.r From LaFayette to Tilley Latin Club: Glee Clubg President 9A Latin Clubg Lunchroom Monitor THEODORE WERKOW Trddy From LaFayette Latin Club PHYLLIS WYPASEK Phy1Iip.r 66 From LaFayette to Schurz Dramatic Clubg Newspaper Club: G. A. A.g Reporter for Sabinite MORRIS ZIEGLER Mo.t.rir From Chopin to Tinley Stamp Clubg Latin Clubg Tratlic Squad: Guard IULIUS ZIVIN Zibie From Von Humboldt to Tuley Latin Clubg Biology Club A New Teacher Miss J. Doorenhiem, Art Instructor in 310, is st graduate of the Chicago Art In- stitute and also of the University of Chi- cago which she attended in the evenings. She was formerly Art Supervisor of the Public Schools in Belvidere, Illinois. She is a resident of Chicago. We wish Miss Doorenheim much luck and hope she has a happy stay at Sabin. SOME TEACHERS TRAVEL IN SPRING VACATION By Katherine Horin Miss Reynick and Miss Mulligan spent the week of April 21, in Washington. Miss Heininger motored to Peoria, Ill. and visited two married sisters. Miss Vincent spent the week with her brother in Michigan. Miss Scherbarth took a trip to the woods at Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Mr. Brown spent the week at his moth- er's farm in Michigan. Mrs. Pattison motored to Nebraska. Miss Quigley went to Spencar Islands at Wauconda, Illinois. Miss McKinley journeyed to Iowa. Mrs. Edmonds motored to Brown County, Indiana, and Berea, Kentucky. There she visited the Berea College and the Fireside Industries and also the capitals of three states. Indianapolis, Ind.g Frankfurt, Ken- tucky: Springfield, Ill. While in Kentucky Mrs. Edmonds saw '4Uncle Tom's Cabin and My Old Kentucky Home at Bards Town. Miss Sutcher spent the week at St. Louis. Miss Peterson went to Muncie, Indiana. Miss Wales entertained her brother from Pittsburgh and spent most of the time at the World's Fair Grounds. Miss Walsh spent her week in Milwaukee, her home town. Miss Veatch motored to Evansville, In- diana for a visit with her parents. From there she made short trips to Henderson and Spottsville, Kentucky. Mr. Goodnick, a graduate of the North- western University, teaches mathematics in P. 6. Mr. Knop, a graduate of State College Penna. teaches social studies in P. 3. SANITY IN THE REDUCTION OF FREE PUBLIC SCHOOL EXPENDITURES Address Before the Advisory Council Luncheon Union League Club, Chicago April 7, 1933 By WILLIAM J. BOGAN Superintendent of Schools I. Introduction and Statements of Friends of Education I. INTRODUCTION The support of the public schools has be- come a matter of controversy. For several years well-financed and well managed cam- paigns against the schools have been carried on throughout the nation by means of propa- ganda sometimes subtle, sometimes crude, but always effective, for the public is in- clined toward gullibility. Attacks have been made in public addresses, in published let- ters, articles and reports not only on the schools of the nation in general but upon those in Chicago in particular notwithstand- ing the fact that Chicago schools have been financed by the teachers and other em- ployees and are being financed today to the extent of more than S3'0,000,000. Rail- roads cut off trains, banks die, and smell to heaven, but the schools go on while in- terest charges mount and enrollment in- creases by leaps and bounds. The schools are charged with extravagance but the pub- lic is not informed regarding the interest and other charges which the schools are forced to pay to the banks to meet the de- lay in the reassessment a few years ago for which the schools were in no way re- sponsible. The money spent yearly for these interest charges is sufficient to pay the salaries of the teachers for more than half a year. The schools of Chicago have kept faith with the depression as the re- duction of 330,000,000 in the budget since 1931 amply proves. Before proceeding to details regarding the Chicago situation I shall read quotations from thinkers who are worried by the gen- eral situation in education: What Friends of Education Say We are watching the courageous fight you and your teachers are making, and are hoping and praying that you will succeed in averting the threatened dismantlement of the Chicago schools. I do not believe that when the people once understand the situation that they will submit to any seri- ous impairment of the education program of the schools. Your education costs in Chicago have never been as great as in other cities of your size, and you have made many serious reductions in order to accommodate your cost to the changing financial situation. There is a limit, how- ever, beyond which you cannot go. At that point you and the teachers of Chicago and the friends of public education must take your stand and tight. -FRANCIS G. BLAIR, State Superintendent of Public In- struction, Springfield. No man who knows his history can doubt that maintenance of the educational process from kindergarten to graduate and professional schools is one of the most in- dispensable safeguards against a type of calamity compared with which economic disruption is negligible child's play. - JAMES ANGELL, President, Yale Uni- versity, New Haven, Connecticut. We have faith in education as the fContinued on Page 155
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Iune, i933 The Nineteen Thirty-three Graduation Number SABINITE ANNUAL Page Fifteen MARGARET PATERSON Scottie From YVicker Park to Tuley Senior Dramatic Club: Typing Club: Monitor PHILIP PODROVSKY PllIap From WVicker Park to Tuley Metal Shop Club: Good Health Club ANNE POPAEKO Puppy From VVicker Park to Tilley Dancing Clubl Typing Club ETHYLE RAKOFF Ellie From Von Humboldt to Tuley Dramatic Club! Glee Club ANNE RASHKO Red From Schley to Flower Dancing Club: Glee Club: Sabinite Staff: Lieut. of Detective Force MARION ROHR Babe From VVicker Park to Tuley Dancing Club: Typing Club BEATRICE SCHEFFLER Bm From Columbus to Tuley Senior Dramatic Club: Dancing Club: Treasurer G. A. A.: Detective Force IACK SHIFFMAN Slliflif From YVicker Park to Crane Tech Boys' Glee Club: Scribbler's Club: Police Patrol: Traffic Force V MELVIN STEIN l'IIl'I From Columbus to Tuley Boys' Glee Club: Athletic Club LEO TUNKIS Tarzan From Penn to Schurz Boys' Glee Club: Athletic Club: Baseball ZEB WESOLOWSKI Zrl:l1y From Schley to Crane Boys' Glec Club: Scribblefs Club SID ZIEGLER Zirgy From XVicker Park to Lane Biology Clubi Scribbler's Club: Baseball Sabin's Suburb Becomes SabinviIle April 21, Schley, Sabin's Branch decided upon Sabin Ville for its name. They also elected the following: Helen Krzanowski, Village President: Florence Kleefild, Busi- ness Manager: Berenice Walas, City Clerk: Alex Seidel, Village Treasurer. Four trustees were also elected from each room. The village meetings are held every Friday, 3rd period. The song they haxie chosen as their school song is, Sabin Vil e. Josephine Duda, 307, 9A LEON COOPER 211, 9A During Clean-up Week Sabin's eighth grade team won the eighth grade district baseball tournament at the association house. Our team won over Langdon school, with a score of 8-3. Sabin Boy Drowns Gilbert Salazar of portable 10 drowned In the Des Plaines river, near Milwaukee and Devon ave. on May 8, 1933. The acci- dent occured, when three boys glided on a raft up the river. Gilbert reached out to get hold of a branch, the branch cracked, and he fell into the water. His companions jumped in after him in an attempt to rescue him, but his struggle in the water prevented them from approaching. The day of the accident was the first that he had ever been absent from school. Gil- bert's death is mourned by many of his friends in Sabin. Joanna Lesinski, 106 Mr. Boehm- What happens to lactic acid when you put it in glycerine. Ben- It gets wet. REDUCTION OF EXPENDITURES iContinuedl foundation of democratic government . . . Our schools need the appreciation and co- operation of all those who depend upon them for the euucation of our youth--the state's most valuable asset. -I' KANKLIN D. ROOSIJZVELT, President, United States of America. We must take an aggressive attitude for the schools if we are going to see our children through, This is not a matter of passing resolutions. It is a matter of fight- ing and there is no better thing to light for than the American school child. - RAY LYMAN WILBUR., Fo1'mer Secretary of the Interior. In times like these, invest in boys and girls. Men talk about buying stock at the bottom. When you invest ln a boy or girl you are always buying at the bottom. You are sure that the youngster is going up, and there is no telling how far. 1 invite every man and woman in America to take a flyer in Childhood Preferred. 1 predict a great future for this security. lt nas investment merit combined with the most exciting spec- ulative possibilities. You are sure to get a man or a woman: you may get a great man or a great woman. -BRUCE BARTON in The Oklahoma Teacher , December, 1932. It is true, as the terriiied Technocrats say, that a single turbine now has a capa- city of 300,000 horsepower. But it has not a single horsepower capacity for editing a newspaper, or creating beauty, or caring for the sick, or governing a city, or min- istering to human souls who are weary and heavy-laden. And all the turbines in the world cannot develop enough horsepower to take the place of a single school teacher. -DR. WILLIAM 'l'Urtl+'AN'I' FUSTER, Address before Chamber of Commerce, Fitchburgh, Mass., January 26, 1933. If the political and economic leaders had followed the teachings of the schools, we should not be in our present difficulties. The schools never taught war, they taught peace: the schools never taught extrava- gance, they taught thrift: the schools never taught disregard for law, they taught re- spect for law: the schools never taught na- tional isolation and seltishness, they taught international participation and coopera- tion. Now the people, as they strike out blindly to save themselves from economic disaster, are about to wreck the schools as if that would accomplish their end. We can find millions for highways, billions for pub- lic enterprises, but we must pare and scrimp on education. We are making helpless chu- dren and youth in need of higher training for professional leadership, pay for our folly. -LOTUS D. COFFMAN President. University of Minnesota, Address before Department of Superintendence, February 27, 1933. H MISUNDERSTANDINGS OF THE CASE FOR PUBLIC EDUCATION The impacts of the reassessment, the stock market crash, the real estate market debacle, the tax strike and the depression have been so severe that no intelligent per- son, whether educator or layman, would deny the need of educational economies. However, in the campaign for retrench- ment, statements are sometimes made which are not supported by the facts. I should like to refer to a few of these statements. Statement No. 1 There had never been available data in the offices of the School Board, on a clear ancl scientific basis, showing the exact loca- tion and capacity of all our various schools in a clear and coordinated manner, looking QContinued on Page 351 SCIENTIFIC FACTS WORTH KNOWING By REGINA STARZEC, 108 More than 900 species of flowers grow in regions north of the Arctic circles. The ordinary house fly travels anywhere from one to one hundred miles, according to tests recorded by the Scientific American. An ounce of spider web if straightened out would extend about 350 miles. Shooting stars have a speed estimated to vary from twenty to forty miles a second. Recent psychological tests have shown that college students do their best work in the middle of the week. The average depth of the ocean is two miles. African locusts four inches long feed upon mice. Bees have no eyelids. The earth is absorbing energy from the sun at the rate of 162,000,000,000,000 horse power, which is in the most part im- mediately radiated back into space. Oxygen is said to be a cure for seasick- ness. The pace of glaciers is seldom more than an inch an hour. A turtle can lay 150 eggs in a half an hour. The short-toed lark of Tibet builds a wall of pebbles on the exposed side of its nest to protect itself from the wind. A gorilla four feet, six inches in height has the strength of four strong men. It has been estimated that it would take 680,000 full moons to give the same strength of light as we receive from the sun. A bullet travels at the rate of 3,000 feet a second, which means 2,000 miles an hour. If eggs are dropped out of an aeroplane from a height of several thousand feet they disappear into a fine egg rain before they reach the ground. It is said that an elephant does not reach proper maturity until it is forty years old, and that it may live for over a century. What Would Happen in 307 lf- Sam Cooper kept quiet for five minutes. Anne Rashko-became friends with Meyer Kaplan for one day. Charles Hemmelstein broke up friend- ship with Melvin Stein. Kordyan Lewandowski won his battle with P. M. over Mary Crouse. Frances Jermol fredj lost her jolly dis- nosition. Betty B1'own, Mary Crouse, Kordyan Lewandowski, and Irving Hertzberg finally found a good class prophecy. Mr. Boehm became friends with Arthur Dickholtz. By Irving R. Hertzberg Former Sabin Girl Leads the List at Tuley Graduation A graduate of Sabin, Lillian Goodman, stands first in scholarship on the long list of 389 pupils who will graduate from Tuley High in June. Lillian was an excellent pupil during her attendance here so we are not surprised at her outstanding achievement as a high school pupil, but we are indeed proud of her and her enviable record.
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