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Jx '? 'll l' . so Long -9-As HOWDY -7-B's Volume 14 Graduation Number, Nineteen Thirty-three Num ber 3 BOARD CLOSES SCHOOLS TWO WEEKS EARLY 1 Q. il V' 1 ff -4 F115 . I If 'er-J PM , Miss Peterson Engaged Miss Anne Peterson became engaged May 6th to Mr. W. C. Smith. Miss Peterson is planning to continue teaching household arts and supervising the school cafeteria. No date has been set for the wedding, but by next semester we may expect a Mrs. Smith instead of Miss Peterson. The pupils and teachers wish her much happi- ness! Two Teachers Complimented Two of our art teachers, Florence Calla- han, 202 and Ruby Edmonds, 312, were among twelve teachers in junior and senior high schools who were selected to design the badges for the National Education As- sociation Convention which may be held in Chicago this summer. Miss Rowe Transfers We regret to report that Miss Rowe, sci- ence teacher of room 311, has been trans- ferred to the Harper Junior High. Tempo- rarily Mr. Kirchsten will take charge of her science divisions. The students of Miss Rowe's science classes hope that her stay at Harper will be as successful and pleasant as it has been at Sabin. Boy's Glee Club Organized The Boy's Glee Club was started on Friday, April 7, to prepare for the Junior High School Program to be offered at the Century of Progress in June. The club met every Tuesday and Thurs- day in 301. It was under the direction of Miss Mulvilhill. Sam Fuchs. 307, 9A ln order to further curtail expenses for education, the board voted, on May 24, to Public Schools on June 9 scheduled closing June 23. of this action the superin- close Chicago instead of the As a result tendent, Mr. Bogan, ordered that there be no graduation exercises, so that the remain. ing time could be devoted entirely to con- centrated methods of completing the se- mester's work. Additional home work, abbreviated re- siews and inclusive tests were among the methods used to cover the material pre- scribed in the courses. ln lieu of the regular graduation exer- cises, Sabin graduates were handed their diplomas on June 8. The extra two week's vacation deprived the pupils of two weeks of school experi- ence and graduation services, and gave the teachers an additional 5 percent cut on top of a 15 percent cut they received earlier this year. PRINT SHOP BOYS PROVE EXPERTS ln spite of the absence of Harold E. Sanger, printing teacher, due to a serious operation, Sabin has published its Gradu- ates' Number of the Sabinite . Mr. Sanger-has so trained his boys that some of them, working overtime, were able to follow his examples and apply the knowl- edge they have gained under his guidance. The following boys printed the cover and made up every page of this edition wit'hout any expert shop help:- LAYOUT AND MAKE-UP: Chester J. Kozikowski Edward P. Larsen Frank A. Piekarz Joe B. Piekarz Walter Ocwieja Walter Wydra Dave Zimmerman COVER: Walter Ocwieja Walter Wydra Frank Piekarz Dave Zimmerman Miss Georgia Veatch, newspaper staff ad- visor, edited the book, and supervised make- up and layout work. A real test of a teacher lies in the power of application of his teaching in pupils. Sabin, as a whole, is grateful to these boys and to Miss Veatch, who worked dili- gently many extra hours, so that we, the graduates and subscribers, might have as good a Sabinite as ever. THE SOSE CIRCUS The So-circus was held at the Associa- tion House on North Ave., near Leavitt St. for 3 gala days, May 25, 26, and 27 and the cost was only 5c for children and l0c for adults. 1Nothing was over 1001. The whole House took part in it and that meant many Sabin pupils. Cushing Eells
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Page Eighteen The Nineteen Thirty-three Graduation Number SABINITE ANNUAL june, I93? MITCHELL BRYK ' Red From Von Humboldt to Tuley Craft Club: Art Club: Traflic Oflicer REVA CHAIKEN Ewa From Von Humboldt to Tuley Dramatic Club: Glee Club! Danish Drill HELEN CHMURA Bunny From Moss to Tuley Dramatic Club: Glee Club VICTORIA CHRIST Vicky From Chopin to Tuley Dramatic Club: Art Club MARY ANN COHEN Mary From Von Humboldt to Tuley Dramatic Club: Art Club ANNABELL COFFMAN From Andersen to Tuley Dramatic Clubl French Club: zjuror: Danish Drill IEAN CRANE From Von Humboldt to Tuley Dramatic Club: Art Club RINA DRAZNIN T1.uiny From LaFayette to Tuley Dramatic Clubl Press Club Interviewing Reporter YETTA E. DRAZNIN Twiny and Chubby From LaFayette to Tuley Dramatic Club: Press Club: Sabinville News- paper Reporter: Participated in Youth VVeek IEANETTE FIEDOR Jeannie From Holy Family Academy to Tuley Art Appreciation Club: French Club: Honor Society DAVID FRUMKIN Rnbinoff From Von Humboldt to Tuley Stamp Club: Games Club: Sabin Orchestra: Trafiic Officer: District Trustee MORRIS GERTSMAN 1lIorry From Von Humboldt to Tuley Stamp Club: Art Club ALEX D. GOLDEN .-11 From Von Humboldt to Tuley Games Club: Athletic Club: Trafhc Ofhcerl Sec'y-Treas. of Hi-Y TILLIE S. GOLDMAN From Lafayette to Tuley Dramatic Club: Glee Club SYLVIA GRAFF Sally From Von Humboldt to Tuley Glee Club: Minstrel Show: Youth YVeek Show ALEX GRANAT ill From Von Humboldt to Tuley Press Club: Games Club: Juror: Traflic Oflicer SIDNEY GREISMAN Sid From Von Humboldt to Tuley Athletic Club: Games Club! Trafl-ic Ofhcer: Class President: Capt. of Baseball Team of Sabinville ANNE Z. IATCZAK Shorty From Chopin to Tuley Dramatic Club: French Club IOSEPH IEDZINIAK Jar From Holy Innocents to Tuley Stamp Club: Games Club: Traffic Officer: Bell Commissioner: Honor Society LILLIAN KAPLAN Lil From LaFayette to Tuley Dramatic Club: Glee Club: Cast of Youth Week BEN KARZEN Tarzan From Von Humboldt to Tuley Good Health Clubi Games Club: Traffic Officer: Class District Attorney: Clock Commissioner FRIEDA KAUFMAN Frilzi1 ' From LaFayette to Tuley HELEN KOCOSHIS From Lake Village to Tuley Dramatic Club: French Club: Traffic Ofliceri Honor Society i MARGARET KOFFSKI Margie From Von Humboldt to Tuley Short Story Club: Glee Club LEO LANTZ Shadow From LaFayette to Tuley Good Health Club: Checker Club: Tumbling Team MIRIAM B. LITCHINGER Mirkry From Chopin to Tuley Dramatic Club: Press Club: Trafhc Officer! inquiring Reporter EVELYN LIBIN Effie From Von Humboldt to Tuley Dramatic Club: Press Club: Danish Drill ALBERT MATHEWS Horner From Von Humboldt to Tuley Metal Shop Club: Games Club MARION MAZURSKY Max From LaFayette to Roosevelt City Council: Glee Club: Aldermanl juror: Cast of Youth VVeek '33: Danish Drill DORIS NELSON DoDo', From Moos to Tuley Art Club: Gym Club MARTIN OCHAKOFF Marry From Von Humboldt to Tuley Good Health Club: Game Club ADELE OHRENSTEIN Cnokir From LaFayette to Tuley Dramatic Clubt French Club: Honor Society 9A OLGA PAPUSHKA From LaFayette to Tuley Art Club! French Club HELEN PETRAITIS From Moos to Tuley Dramatic Club: Glee Club BELLE RABINOWITZ Bulbs From LaFayette to Tuley Press Club: Poetry Club: Glee Club: Sabinville Staff: Cast of Minstrel '33 IACOB ROTTENBERG Jake From Von Humboldt to Tuley Game Club: Stamp Club: Sabinville Tumbling Team: Sabinville Baseball Team: Jury Member ALLEN B. SALTSBERG Salts From Von Humboldt to Tuley Athletic Club: Games Club: Sabin's Basketball- Baseball Teams FRED SCHECHTER Frrdzly From Von Humboldt to Tuley Dramatic Club: Press Club: Member of Sabinville News Staff MILTON SCHECTMAN uchinkil From LaFayette to Tuley Athletic Club: Games Club GEORGE SCHWARTZ 'Porgirn From Von Humboldt to Tuley Game Club: Sabinville Baseball Team ORENE SCOTT Smitty From Thomas to Tuley Short Story Club: Gym Club MAX STARR Slar From Von Humboldt to Tuley Metal Club: Games Club: Hall Guard BLANCHE SWIMMER Blandir From Von Humboldt to Tuley Poetry Club: Press Club! Danish Drill! Sabinville Sports Reporter MORTON WALLENSTEIN i'llorIy From LaFayette to Tuley Game Club: Good Health Club: Sabin t AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF PEARL WELKOVITZ fAugust 11, 19191. Well, at least that's said if I could have time of my birth in Hello everybody! kind, a modern eh? what I would have talked. That's the Budapest, Hungary. Well, at the tender age of five I left that country. It was a sorrowful day for me to leave my grandparents and the rest of my relatives, but I was also looking forward to meeting my father whom 1 hadn't seen for a year. We took a train at Budapest for Vienna and from Vienna to Hamburg, Germany. There we took the ship that was to bring us to this wonder- ful country. On the ship my poor mother was sick from the first day to the last, so being a tot, everyone took care of me and it turned out to be a lovely trip with many adven- tures and n-ew things to see. There's one event that I must relate. When we got off the Mongolia in Hobo- ken, it was midnight and pitch dark and we were told to go to a certain place right ahead. On entering we found it to be like a waiting room with rows of seats and many foreigners sitting about. We sat down and suddently it felt as if we were moving as on a boat and looking out of the window we saw nothing but water all around us. Then it dawned upon us that this was the small boat that was bo bring apt ashore to meet the train in New York 1 y. This was only one of the funny things that happened to us: well, we finally got to Chicago, and I started fat the end of October, 19241, to go to school to begin my education. lt was awful at first because I didn't know one word of the English language, but it didn't take long' to learn to speak, and during my second year in America my teacher made me bring my birth certificate to school because she didn't believe I wasn't born here. That was that, but alas and alack, after four and a half years at Wicker Park School we moved and I had to go to La Fayette for the next three years: then fin- ally to Sabin. I'll never forget how sort a' cold and shaky my feet felt when I first ifjzimlfahefs, ltihicnklngloftthel itntelligence test ve 0 a e. a er ' ' half bady. ound it wasn t Well, I've achieved my honors at Sabin, PHO'-lgh to Please any ambitious girl or boy. I've received a number of pins, be- long to the Honor Society and have made many friends: I've learned under the hand of Miss McCormick fWinifred McCormicki many secrets of office work and have en- Joyed myself doing so, and under the guid- ance of Miss I. McCormick to co-operate in anything I do that includes other people. MSUCIC t080ther that's our motto and you freshies or future freshies take a hint from one who knows. Sabin'.s a fine school and will continue tg b? One lf YOU do your share as we have tried to do ours: and I sincerely hope you have as much fun, and get as much educa- tion out of Sabin as I have, Pearl Welkovitz, 21 1 A good thing to remember And a better thing to do Is to work with the construction Dramatic Club: Press Clubi Feature Editor Q I NUI5 the wreckin' Crew. Indoor Team I of Sabinville News ....- ... - -The Locomotive Engineers Journal'
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The Nineteen Thirty-three Graduation Number page Twenty S A B l N I T E A N N U A L june, 1933 Ann Siembab, Kathryn Simon, Harriet P ROLL apgra, Lila Spira, Claire Weinstein, Lillian SECOND UARTER Ovmk- CL 9A 36 BA Q 5 .IA 26 304-Joseph Jedziniak, David Frumkin, e , .B::::::::23 883211322119 -31:31:13: 2 f?efg3f,g Helen Km-is A-deli Oh- ' i E B Cl' 37 M305-Helen? Baenson, Marcella Banikin, 9A . arian Fuen er, Ida Krasna Helen im- l ' M106-5-amk Iileff, Sandford! Lipsclgultla, baggg H1 Pt E y C j artin irs y, ohn ic ett, ernice oc - '- 9,911 9 F0 - I 'ky A G ' ' B tt L Ph 11' W , 208-Shirley Cohen, Dena Heckman, - Easik. nne arm e y ane' y IS y adel?.Rabinowit1., Samuel Bartlett, Alex U 201-Bernice Barnes, Irene Bugaj, Ce- Ott ned' Wa do Jones' C I- iq Celia Kozak, Irene Kozioly Ann Roth' ibranchl .... . ............................... 41' - 211-Walter Hyssv Harry Stein' Rev- 204 .llllllllllil:llzlllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllll10 V ' 7- H , mond Zlotek, Pearl Welkovitz, Leona Pacin. How does your room rank? L ,,,, Illi . Q ' J -- 306-Evelyn Arkove, Michalma Elash, -ll- ' A f 5 f Gertrude Freeman, Jennie Mostykowska, MAYBE THE ROOF LEAKS! Did you know that not only our houses and yards were cleaned during Clean-up Week but also Sabin's yard, halls, rooms and assembly hall? Well, some of the children will say, How do you know? Well look for your- self. Look in your rooms and see if the tloors aren't spic and span, inspect the as- sembly hall. Ah! but the halls, how do we know that? Monday morning we discovered water in some of our lockers and wondered about it. We soon discovered how clean the halls were and solved our little mystery. Josephine Duda, 307, 9A Part in Safety Contest Pupils Take Many Sabin pupils responded to the con- test called the Century of Progress Safety Contest. The Yellow Cab Co. olfered 1,000 free tickets to the Century of Progress for boys and girls. The object five rules for n on the streets. The ten boys and ten girls submitting the best twenty sets of five rules will spend an entire day at the Cen- tury of Progress during the Exposition with admission to the fair and all expenses with- in the grounds paid. Joanno Lesinski, 106 The Girls Glee Club of room 301 pre- sented a program over station W B B M the third week of May. Katherine Horan, 106 of the contest was to-write the prevention of accidents Miss Esther Shanley, who has taught sci- ence in 309 this semester has returned to the Schiller School from which she came last September. ,-.,. .1 What Would Happen In l06 If John Pickett got a D. David Pickovitz came to school before the tardy bell for a whole week. Paul Bahry sat in his seat without talk- ing to anybody for half an hour. Jack Hirsch lost a stick of gum. Harold Neuhauser ceased to grin. Pearl Spiegel and Betty Lane were friends no longer. Sanford Lipschultz came to school with- out a necktie. Joanna Lesinski cut her tresses. Phyllis Wypasek wore anklets to school. Valeria Unikauskas used only one nega- tive in a senten-ce. But what WOULD happen if Miss Scher- barth stepped into the room and said No Math. today, boys and girls? I esk U. l ! ! Wanda Zydorczak. 311-Emily Kolena, Sabina Malkowski, Ida Saritz, Morris Ziedenstein, Jordie Bjorna. 301-Leona Chernikotf, Sidney Paul, Victoria Sutkowsky. P. 4-Mary Ann Bell, Bennie Heine- kamp, Geraldine Kahn. 108-Leonard Herst, Abe Siegel. 9B 204-Arthur Fingerhut, Harold Fried, Solomon Kahn, Edith Golden, Esther Kahn, Rose Levitsky, Bertha Sc-her, Evelyn Tan- nenbaum, Lillian Waxman, Esther Weiss. 203--Irene Davlantes, Evelyn Rubin, Selma Soglin, Robert Bronstein. P. 10-Lillian Gurber, Lillian Vilatzer, Chester Michalazowski, Maurice Sabin. P. 2-Erma Bell, Margaret Lambrecht, Angeline Mucho. 110-Helen Kucha. 206-Beatrice Chernausky. 8A 208-Raphael Ezgur, Florence Panter. P. 3-Vera Dahmer. 205-Aaron Levin. 304-Evelyn Westfall. 8B 212-Leah Berger, Fay Goelman. Blanche Levin, Lillian Liberman, Mary Perewoski, Evelyn Rubin, Zelda Zelkin, .ack Steinholtz. 210-Cushing Eells, Tobie Bernstein, Esther Kahn, Lucille Krause, Ruth Levin, Harriet Rosenstein. 305-Jack Nusbaum, Fannie Bernstein, Annabel Williams, Lorraine Walavitch. 308-Victoria Koperny. 7A 101-Loretta Arendt, Pauline Crouse, Stella Brokowski, Maxine Goldberg, Irene Hatfield, Phyliss Mlodzikowski, Margie Per- rin, Nich Borawich, George Koloif, Max Orlowski, Irving Waldman. 112-Shirley Kahn, Bernard Levy, Nich Turacek, Minnie Stolarsky, Miriam Levin- son, Virginia Kossowski. 201-Ruth Kuhlman, Kala Naiman, Wan- da Michuewicz, Adele Levinson, Genevieve Walk. 302-Jeamme Tannebaum, Shirley Le- bedow, Marion Sokoloff. P. 6-Hillary Grabowski. 7B P. 5-Sidney Levy, Harold Muth. BRANCH 301-Pearl Benjamin, Sally Goodman, Katherine Krechowsky, Helen Krzanowski, Joan Olender, Alice Ru zin , Rebecca Schwartz, Gertrude Tauf. 303-Helen Aidlin M rt Fin s i , y h dle te n, ,Frances Pornes, Dorothy Scherwicki, Mary In honor of President's day, April 30, the Write a Rhyme Club wrote some rhymes about our president, Franklin D. Roosevelt. ,lj-lere are a few that were selected as the est. Elsie Colditz, Asst. Sec'y. Our president is a hard working man And trys to please every-one the best that he can He passes the bills, one, two, three And doesn't hoard money like you and me. Elsie Colditz, 303, 8A Franklin D. Roosevelt our president Whose White House is his residence Has worked with Congress, and made new plans To save the farmers and their lands. Fred Berss, 110, 9B Uncle Sam has got the man Who works and works as hard as he can He is driving the depression from the land And is giving us a helping hand. Sarah Levine, 310, 'IB Our president is the man Who does the best that anyone can He has offered us a new deal And promised to get depression by the heel. Eileen Harris, 310, 7B Our president is working hard For us to get the lucky card And when we get it by the hand We'll have prosperity in the land. Pauline Kroop, 112, 'TA Our President Roosevelt is the man That helps his country all he can We all hope that he succeeds Because he always does good deeds. Birdie Postil, 112, 7A President Roosevelt is the man Who passes the bills as quick as he can He passed the beer bill you all know And once again he is on the go. Depression will be over soon And everyone will eat with a silver spoon. And a lot of farmers will give a cheer With a lot of money and a stein of beer. Louis Rymarcsuk, 206, 9B Mr. Boehm's Diarama To Be Displayed at N. E. A. Convention Mr. Boehm is creating a diarama which is to be a part of the education exhibit for the convention of the Teacher's National Educational Association to be held in June in Chicago for the World's Fair. The diarama is a miniature stage, set up with artistic scenery. Figures and fur- niture are on the stage. This diarama is to represent a play produced in the school: it is also to illustrate one of the activities of the school. Anne Lashinsky, Betty Jean Petersen,
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