Schenley High School - Schenley Journal Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA)
- Class of 1943
Page 1 of 124
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 124 of the 1943 volume:
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, 3 K X 'X 24 Z 5 X iff xy X f K, J !! ff , V! 'Z TI ,EX X f CW- J ' ' W ff Q I x f H ,ff 1 X W f an X ' L s f 5 ' A XX fax S J 1 X ! , r UUUUHVIF' IUIIIH DEW 7 UE 1. DUDE 1 L J HCM DHL! 1 - X- ! X1- 'Ti-17. xxgggifi f i V W 7- if JM --!, , ff IQQQUL L I: UITV- UU EEC 1-51, w 0J,mbQ 45 L SCI-IENLEY JGURNAL Published by th FEBRUARY and JUNE CLASSES of IQ!-I-3 SCI-IENLEY HIGH SCHOOL PITTSBURGH PENNSYLVANIA The true goal we seelc is Far above and beyond the ugly field of battle. When we resort to Force, as now we must, we are determined that this Force shall be directed toward ultimate good as well as against immediate evil. We Americans are not destroyers---we are builders. Franklin Delano Roosevelt First War Report by Radio December 9, 1941 CONTENTS FACULTY ADVISERS WE AMERICANS February '43 June '43 Summer ScI1ooI i WE ARE BUILDERS Clubs War Activities ON THE UGLY FIELD OF BATTLE Men in Service Letters From Aiumni TOWARD ULTIMATE GOOD MR. I.EE L. I-IARTLEY Vice-Principal MR. HARVEY R. RQBERTS Principal Homer C. Bower, Vocational Director: Ruth Townley. Activities: I. H. Calista Schramm, Chaperon: E. Brenneta Andrews, Chaperon: Frances I. Russell Clements, Class Play Director: Mary A. Mcliibhin, Art Adviser: nal Sponsor. cc 1' -More is thy due than more than all can pay. Cloos, Class Guardian: V. Rayburn, Chaperon: Loretta P. Byrne, Jour WE CLASS OFFICERS: Iucob Pcntukoii, President: Betty Engle. Social Chair- man: Anita Newell. Secretary: Robert Miller, Vice President: Dena Demetroulas, Treasurer. 'e.s2iiE!1l1lllll'5 ' egfmlnnlli H X .A-,l 2 , : ': K B gr: , - ',-. 1. Z MEBLS9 x I 1 4 ' Q S ,. an ' l, S R IOURNAL STAFF: Murray Rosenberg, Editor: Ruth Levine, Senior Section: Arline Levinson, War Activities: Frances Rose, Business Manager: Burton Glinn, Makeup. . 'S51:'..: .f ' S-V' .iii - ' 'LY xi E32 si x, JACOB PANTUKHOFF Class President, Feb. '43, Modern Novel. Student Board Lilaikim- . , . as :xppealing ns I , li. li, . . . fisliing. his huh- hy too . . , iiiipx'i-sswl by prnspr-1-tixw First Ladies . , . :after his nrlininislrziliini. Pn- gineeringr. ALFRED CARTER AllQy siiiiyilivs his S 1' r 11 1: li 0 0 k with sports si1b,ii-vis, His f ll T ll r 0 pi'nl'vssi0n will iw in lhv field of pllysiwzil fitness. for sports. 51:11 seo. :ire right np his nlley. MERNA ALBERTS M-Art flvlirhts il: mln-li-visible clininii'-X. spvviallizes in sports. 4-raves Z1 4':ii'1-vi' in m-cninneree. me 4 ,A CARMELA CIRIELLO Human Behavior l':irniels rvgaxrils hvr tvalvlll-i's c'ni1l'04'- limiaxtolyg is swve-l nn 'llIll'Z2lll. vlutlws, :inil mlaiiiviiiu: will vu rn plenty of snirni' :ls 11 s9r1'PT:1i'y. l Qi he ws- ! if' .V 22 ' LUCILLE LOUISE ALLEN ALLISON Safety Patrol , . HI Hu., druww In Lon ' lungs tn hn- lhw strains ul' llilI'l'j' ii- ,ilursli ION-is in .Izumi-s. is Irnv ln lhf- Hill' Putin' 'i f'lh kli-:ki 'lnfl hlum- D 0 ll U I il ii m U S I in piwmvl-s no sliirlivi' :is lf'f'lil Q the lillwl ll llvlllllvl xx KlI'liI'l'. JAMES COLBERT Band llunvy gun will slap :1 .hip just fm- fnn, lu-:its the lmiivli in rnsh Im' lnnvh, lu-1-ps his 951' on linslini vreann pina :inns 141 lainrl :i illum- ili :i lizlnll. s i f 2 l.nln. 53 ,K ass. , , I. hg igw 1' , 5.2351 25 Q. 'T '- 1551. sg - s.Sss1Q,fz51,-iq HENRY AMAKER 4'H:ink : Aixivi'if'zi's Afl rlvssl-rts :ire 1-A with him: sports and girls :Irv his sewmid loveg Ihv Ning' is his ultimate gmail. JAMES ANDERSON llUll0j'N li ii L z 9 S uw-1' bevfsll-w, is sweet on Svlivnlvy ' s wirls and lilnu-y-1-ye uvvr sports, will hoe nn M, D. JAMES VELVA BRANTLY BREWER , . , , Human Behavior illlls rnrllu lllll lulivs l in ml Svhoulvyys I--laid sho hus no hnnll, lilws his nuisiv Hliiixmniw' :'lfl'TeLif' on thv lwxini. mlinits TW Tiiwiiliii X, hi L. , ,, .Q .Q Jl'Il1'y, nnifs tn :Q si 1 lluimf .lf .lm plintogfiwipln-i s inodel slntmn IKil'llllfll'2lllOll :ind :1 irimla-l wifi-. EARL DAVID CONRAD COULSON Trzivvl is his hobby. 01'Ch9Stl'a. H0 will ,mm the -,SDPQJH is 11 whiz Army to see thi- worlml :xml to lwvp ns on the roaul tri viviui'y while his trziin ut' llmnght runs on spziulim-iii. :xt mnsiv. :i drum' niorg ai flush uf radio. :1 hum: :1 fntu 1'4- rm-ket in the uir, a flying czulvt. RUTH BROOKS l'ull1-vis nhl songs ll' hor Hlliwixii limit l'mnncs ln . shv'll mp with Bill llnhin sun, wlm'll liml hvr So linsy lo llunce With, ROSELLA DANIEL Ulizilm' gives her blood to the Red l i Vrusw. her eiwi':.:y to l si-4-i'vl:1riul Irziining, hi-1' future- to inur- riiipgv with he-r boss. ROBERT ANDREWS Band Fishing is his hohhyt reels when hearing Krupzt, vztsts for at C.1'.A. :lt-:rn-ie. nets an Catz-lt in aterumtutit-s, DOROTHY BROWN Human Behavior ' 'llimplvs' ': grovern- inent will get at work- erg soldiers got her lettt-rsg Scln-nley's swimming: tuatclix-i's get her vote. DOROTHY DEAN Hllotty' dn nee-s :away 1-ares. has lll0Vll' mztnizt. thinks Miss Ratyhurti is tops, will train for defense work. ELIZABETH JERRY ARNDT AZEN . A Capella Choir, HumHBehaV10f Class Play, Student, Uliizzyn, mistress of 33311311 stunt Day l'IlC'l'l12lllll'S, misses at 1-Amfvv H mutivinu Murine: ntisunmler- :intl voxiiprisviz likes stands Spanish. is fnothztll nllm-gfrrv. his 5,611 I V U vluthes stztvzttto. vur- ml NU H '5 MVN ric-ulutn forte. girls GRACE BARNHARDT Human Behavior Nurse fit':1t'iu is :t ltytrvr-fun of Vlztrl Hnhlv, is llll-l'l'lt'tl with joy hy niusif twt-st-t'ihes for her' st-lf at diet ot' tric-nl Q. e i ' S' t.,1ff-if 1 .aight RUTH BLUESTONE Current Events Club. Class Play, Publicity Chairman Big Blum-stone :lures nn tlzttes this- torit':tlJ. hopt-s tn tr-:tl-lt history. 4-latsst-s t'lz1Ssi4':1l ntusit' :ts trips. vrmlln-rts pro JUANITA BOWMAN Chem. Lab. Asst. Keen on the key lmztrtl. lov:-ly in tht l1llJ0l'2ll0l'j', alt-litrlttfnl in flT1llllllllK'R. st-in life. piztnissimo. 1-lticikon. gwatmntvs. lillating in songr. l ' S M 5' M . . Q, C xv 5' t Eli -M I -.K I , 5 5 K ii.. -.iff -at! 9ssz'3.'5a ' :ll - fnf M kk. . . MARION GERTRUDE BROWNE Thespian III, Service BRUN0 Club, Picture Comm., Student Board Props Comm. .A , , ,, V. Drznnzttivs nntkes 21 l'P!'l ' lull PM hit- with horg at husi- tr-rn ht-1' Carver :ts at ne-ss Carver is to he dn-gg designgr, ig but a svenv lending kt-pt in stitvhos by ' 4 towatrcl the rlinntx, glftgr-lung-h mnyigg, A nlzttrintony . . 4X0 st-:uns tn like buked Y comodylj bn-axis. DENA TERENCE DOROTHY ANNETTE DONALD DEMETROULAS DEVINE DUDT DEVITO DUC0 Class Feb. '43 Treasurer, Sec'y 'l'1'r1'ihlv 'V 1' r Y' A ' n U Service Club Pres. Safety Patrol, Safety Patrol fp. ., .f ,- wi,-It 'Vl1NP1'hl1! fliillfea Chess, Publicity Y I A .11 .1 te ,. , Hncpll 7 delmhls 'H fy-1,y,,r,l,, tht. t,,,.m :intl swims to keep 'tDt1ki0. the vivnw- C0!IllTl- llihltslsf' Tijlimiillilfi drum mllm. Skuws trint. think s Mr. ity nt' Blondie. the t'0llc-1-ts hullets :ts t w1-if,.rS- kwilm H 'tub D1,vim,Yly, has H Mme lirnutigrztm is :1 great 1- n r- 1' gy nf Popeye. hohhy. is trigger on lioli Hoyle, is fm. 4,ul.N,m nvws, nntn, is eu re i' fm' tho ve-t'ttrity of l.itth' nntn of Stuff-ty llzttro Ligliijnt nhutgllllg-'illgz jf 1' at tl u at t i 0 n and Ut-plmn Annie, :intl :aims high :ts :L drafts itv0,.t-Oni? H5 l.hm.m', l1ul1sQwit'e's owtipax- the :tnihition of 'l'il- nntn. hits his target ing. tion. liv tho Tuilur. girls, with at hung. - vs' :Sn 'QM' , in V I I 1 f f' L M I ligfj 1' - -ff : ,--.Et is fee. A K, .., , , ., . . 1 l i S t 7 I 1 ff ,V it EV, : WV 'si' K if RALPH SAMUEL MILTON CEACIL EARL EDWARDS EISENSTAT EISNER . - , T .G'l L d ', ,.1,lVVQh,, mm fur HMV NS VV VVV m V VV H: mp, Vice Pres. Current S1221 C1532 ea ers trztwk t1- :t m. suttpx fm' the l':1rrie-ru Flulr. plays vmlm :tml Slllllfi . . l1-ys berry pw and ltresxwl 111-sire: red Events Tu in hits t'l'L'IllP4l :t 1'1ull1x1'ti1m 111' 1-111- 11i'f11l 1' l 1s t h 1' s :tml l1n1-5 to uhm' them li 11 i 1- k 4'1mve-rtilmle-3 llits pm' with his ilxiprvsx01llly2 S1-h11r1- fl'l1'll1lN. tem uff fur l.:1n:i 'l'l1rn1-r, Llrixvs HANNAH EISNER Girls Leaders', Stage Craft 'l'xx'in 1-lips ': 1 XT' t111m11s slmwillgf txxius. in lmwls four strikvs 1 luxx lxxluxxll BETTY ENGEL Girls Leaders, Chem. Lab. Asst., Social Chairman Feb. '-13. lit-ts ra d i atv s Ill1lllLTlllflllllPSS, 1- 0 l - lvwts pli1m1mgr:1pli rw- fm- :1 h1xlmlny,:tlxnSf0!' , A , ,A , V A , , .. liowlin-f. Sht- mm nmlcvs xmnrt 1'l1ulhP2 owls ul hor lvisurv l1wx1 lg gurls, ex- .tlmut th1 tmuntii. , IP- K V lx V. V.m fi mt ig V. h V ,' VV, V A X-V , V I , , A I V mix um zt :sm 1':t '11, HI' VI V Ll' 3 . rl' ls es :tptr 1- pw, f'f'll4,.9 - Nl -l lm' pressml intttest. in xxtll putt tnxx.1t1ls as 1V,M,hM.5 mix up V.mVV,ul tm, :ln mia, IVI:mkmt,ntE,l. BUNN- lless C'2ll'4lC'I'. planes :tml lllkvs. I'Ullt1gl'. l11ism-rs. rim' 1l111'o1':xt1r1'. training. ' L 'V -x ' V .- iiii 'V 3 1 ' JAMES STANLEY RAPHALENA FRENCH GASIOR GATTO liutwh V, ll 1-ul-up Clatss Paley I VVRHhVh.,V Bored by un thf- ptaum. at l41ll1-1' Straus will lmvv . , A , ,, hrztgrgmg bullies. 1l1-- wtth tho lu1l11-s. il smontlt Sttllmg :ts .t . V . . . . . ll:ht1-ll hy tlrvssxiiatlv 1':1r1-1-r 1-urvtfr in smir' Nztvatl Mzxvluttxist, llc' . . , . , , V V mpg. lmmliul ot matr- - - - , - , , , V V tit: wi' C-l1-1't1'11':1l en- lakes I0 wax 5I'lll'Il- Tilmp :in1-vrlxtg, 111-y's Atitl twrogrzttns. ' ' VERA RUTH MARGARET MARGARET ANNA KENNETH GOLDSTEIN GRAHN GRAZIANO GREEN GREISINGER HAHN Service Club, L ' . V -. 4 , Class Play, Chem. V . . ., Th6SPia11 II. 1l5112'f1'2inNafR9e1!2S1lf1S fltlfdt Mx1.H11.f' l'2 'f Lab. Asst., Pub- 1 --limit will 11-11 if Modefll N0V9l Pres., Ring Comm, V' :Em ' 2 'll' amd licity Comm. tion. :wt vlnss: temp- to the Murine-s. is VV V V V - at at Ill :asv uit Mu. .Un ,v- ,, t t. tim, Culfm ri, . f, QV V . . V I V lhmks the Servxro PV KV 5, I,u,,,,.hQr', V . .T 'Hell , lmflls 0 'I ' ' e ' 'I' lnmlfl 'lf lllf bhdlll' Vltilx if mxpitzul. will kid- p1U1m.Kid mu-S Nfmpx' uma ht'l l ff frlllllghl' Cliff Viaflil Vlllrlllftll. SWHUIIIIIHL' slmntet' me-dztls. will 'lull Illom Z' M f llllle lfftllllw. Pvtitv ll T111 I 'X V 7' 'T lg' :xl mil f::iV,l,'fVjl lllltl skating: nlnser- 1l1u ltll his liutxtin! for tzxrlnl ,toll in matlrl- Kiutxn 0lllfNYr plan mAl2ll'LZ'll'm sure lilws Zyl' . 1 K' ' Y. - ,, ,,.. f -, t VN . V 1. - N . I .1..:lI. suis to h1-1lm1't Wtlllllll. SUNY-115 at 1- the 0111-my, now. U-ll 'l-- A mf' plum tml 1:1-1-th - ' A l ' 'ls lllllflli 111' !l'l1llllilllllI.l. gli? Business school: next STHER 'ALGIONE 'rchestra 'etite and sweet is 'Es' ' who craves fun nd laughter, plans matrimonial future, hines when F. A. is round. NORREE PARK A Capella Choir, Song, Yell, Motto Comm. Her pleasant hel- lo and sparkling eyes will brighten m a n y a hospital ward. When off duty. she'll day - d r e a m about pretty clothes. AGNES FILIPPELLI Current Events, Thespian II, Gift Comm, A girl after your own own heart, Goes all- out in the war ef- fort, No novice in traveling, Ever col- lecting pictures. Sail- ing toward college. UAVID LE RSHOVITZ 'urrent Events, lif t Comm. 'Gersh' ' loves ten- is, can add a dence f a problem, serves y b u y in g war tamps, is the ace of 'urrent Events. BMILENE HALL ilirl Reserves, Publicity Comm. l'Shortstop g noth- ng short about her s t a m p purchases. Blue catches bcr eye. Her right field will Je teaching. HELEN GIBSON Picture Comm. goal, best sport oi all: volley ball, fa- vorite hue: shades of blue. DONALD HARBAUGH linjoys classical mu- sic, favors tennis and golf, plans a course at Penn State, de- serves the wings of a Navy pilot. BURTON GLIN N Journal Staff, Thespian III, Comm. Speaker Bright as brass: sensitive as a violin string, complicated as a problem in plane geometry, all lines and angles. MINERVA HARRIS Pres., Girl Reserves ' 'Minnie-3 ', n a med for the goddess of wisdom, plans de- fense work to make the world safe for a l-European tour and hopes eventually to raise her own olives. LOUISE FITZPATRICK ' ' Lou ' ', who says dancing is her first love, waltzes through history an d yearns to swing tools in a defense plant. ALFRED PLE I S CHMANN Chess Alf spouts about s p o rt s and school spirit, t h r i l l s to tunes of Tommy Dor- sey, c l a In o r s for C.P.A, career. N H you QQ 6 fs ox n we S JACK HAYNES Smiling Jack is a Superman at col' lecting scrap. Schen- ley's girls act as a Milckcy Finn on him. He's a Palooka for bowling. X r . J A . U Us ' w t W 'ii rf .R X -IAQJQQA CATHERINE HEINZ t'Kav's shy charm aids hci' in sales- manship, ller grace! ful glide makes skat- ing a pleasure. Iler s i n 11 e r e patriotism fills her stamp book. VERNER FREAS Lieut. Safety Patrol, Social Comm., Student Boa-rd Vern will be a cool-headed Collegian at lVestminster, is not frigid with wo- men nor cold to Glenn Miller, doesn't Frcas at football games. ZELMAN HOFFMAN Chem. Lab. Asst. t'Short-y will strug- gle through phar- macy school. then slide into the serv- ice. He sips his sodas as he jPYkS them, and scintillates with swing band's airs. EDMOND HOLMES Sec.-Treas., Boys Leaders', Orchestra 'tllnm eles s , the st a r - fish of the sxviminin: te a m. a shark at stamp col- lc-4-ting. will make Z1 whale of a good 1-oavh. STEPHEN HOWARD Orchestra, Steve' ' aided in strap eollevt ion is irnpresst-ml by SI'lll'll- l1,y's bantl, lnlilmls airplane models. aims r a flying earner. WALTER I-IOWE Saves stamps, sal- vages serap. takes time to tell tall tales, hates Hitler, might make more money as niavliinist but knows Navy needs men. S , if My 5 i iq ? 5 if 1 . Q f :T gt-44.9. 0 i 1 .' I - KATHERINE RUTH ARLINE LEVER LEVINE LEVINSON t'K:uy g sentimental rnnsii- is lf, Z. on her ears. lion 'i' let ' ' Kay' ' U, U. wear- ing slavks in sehool. Wai' Activities are ln-i' Q. to s t rs rt talking. Class Play, Thespiau III, Girls' Leaders, Journal Stalin Ruthie is a Vlllt llllllllN'l' on a danu flour. has :i fnlli'-lwll smile, is il Iriplm tlirt-at in art on lmsinvss. is tlvtiniit ly one in :x million. ,. .,-ask , wma I 3. ,k,i,. Comm. Speaker, Girls' Leaders, Thespiau III A Capella Choir, Journal Staff Sings like a nighlin- gale, is gentle as a dove. is happy as a lark. is proud as a peawn-k of her em- erald-,-:1'eei1 eyes. ROSE IANNACCHIONE IZ0sio'l will bal- anee Looks for liv- ing. finals rearliiigr a novel pastime, will rt-avli the 4-limax of ln-r studies at liusi- ness eollege. QQ MARLENE LAUTMAN Flower and Color Comm. 'LB :I li 0 ---NVanted1 a pleasant. boss for a g o n il sm-i'1'etai'y. Lost-1 a valuable stiek of gum, l+'onnd: In be the life of a 1'lilS51'l'lll!ll.H JOHN LEWIS Band lain relislies sl11l'l't'4l pu'li vllops, lrililrls inmll-l :lir- planes,en,1nys T. ll. s nrt-ln-stra, plans to rwvntinni- lmlrixving his trumpet. WILLIAM JAY Chess Bashful Bill , mnsa ter mavhinist, model maker and drama ill-- votee, s t 1' i v e s for strength of Super- man. AILEEN LAVINE Social Comm. AU svvinis for fun. wades tlirfnigli light novels, dives into pastry. will float to Pitt- and plunge into teaching. WILLIAM LEWIS Social Comm., Student Board Class Play UIAQNYI ' dashes to ive skating r i n k, sprints to sm-ials. relays informati4ni nf vollege plans. , -.'s. ' - t +R., it lf 1 if ia i 4 2 fi . fa, ALFRE DA J ONE S l renla g faseinati by nursing, enraj tnrt-cl by reading, ii lrigued by eurrei events. delighted I skating and dancin, CAROLYN ' LAZENBY HN i f t yi' receive reel pleasure froi tishing. li u p e s U lmok L. NY, for lift r e pr :i r d s 1-liorolali cake from a goui met's angle. CORNELIUS LITTLEJOHN t'm'm-y is era: about vm-oinit erea pie and lil. YY.. eate, to F011 n t Basi eraves a eareer Civil Serviwes. Clair liis vlmsen whampii is Mix Hubert. 5 - xiii' ' .35 -,X 7 . . .3 N 11 l OPI-IIE ANN ONIDIS KALINAK iumau Behavior K'Annio . a inn nt tg 0 0 t-H qTruU,,,h,g Svhviilt-y's foothull Vith Bwlghpnithhpx, :zum-s. 11 lbllyfdl' nf ANN Iri,-StAi,1,.U,., llut'vnw Stamps, :t ifivzitv, sows us :1 S6t'l't'ltll'j' of tho fu- mhhy, is goin' to hc mm, s0c vtzu x l i FRANCIS KANDRAVY Advanced Orchestra, Mixed Chorus III This sport lik f- S sports. l1'iQS to lm Ov:-1'ylmtly'x Fran , won'I he szitistit-tl till ht-'N all out , will have it nappy lifo. VERNA DONALD FRED 52? Elm 1 mf BSS P ay' , Human Behavoir lion finds in-gun social Comm' I'hinzt'l hui :1 fond- innsiv in tho right j3i,,1,,,L-5-'S no im,-f. 10 ne-ss for fu n n y key, lnlpvs Ihzll hm h.n 1. ,N A H HV V clothvs, deals in dv- th-sirv for hix own I, 1' -W 1 Nuts S 1 gr H 1 H H. N.m,,m b,Ni,,1.S, is IH, MW. with him, vhop sm-V scorns Sfllllt dill' llllll drvnni. lik if s the nu-uns more to him snvinls, lt-:ins townrcl vloso hatrniony ot' tho latw Qt-lmol, fan-nity. DOROTHY ANDREW FRANCES LOGAN MAPP MARAGOS .lt-nn knits for A Capella Choir Girl Reserves, H041 Vi-ms. lnuuxfx 'l't-t-nu with iflons, Ereas- '42 , I Tailor! inornlt- with nnult- X o l o tlight pirojytizkl ll?IgI3E',h3?llY tri-:Ula-lit lm-ttors, mn- with Mixed Uhorns wht- tlnnvc-s to dv- jnyx gg-ood rt-ruling. III. shoots lmskots llllllllll ll0Y'S0!' UIFWSY ,H I K 'I lt.t..A.x t ,Ili Hxwlv I 1 fills hor foto zilhnni lll Pl tl l L l4 ll ll 'li ill 155 , XX U ll 1 Xvith fnulilyfs utlivc- vlork. liko to hu at 1-ozxrli. SVS. GEORGE KING Band liing:i0 , hopvs to rulv :tnothc-1' Cloo- pzltrzl. Khinlw swing re-vortlx fit for roy- alty. :xims to lm t'Sovt-rt-igrii of th me S:1xophonne. JOSEPH KRONZEK ls :n true patriot, buy: tlofonse stnnrips and t-nlles-ts svrnp. lim-px up with war nt-ws. will st-rvv ns nn 4-xpt-vt man-hinist. .ii, :V ' iii ii 'i?..,wf 1 2 A. f , iii si' vig! MI LD R E D LA SKY Midge has tw ci lnwmtllvrxfsziilor il n Ll solclivr: Iwo f2lVfll'llPS -H, Miller :incl T. llniwt-pg I w 0 rpc- viziltivs - Sliortliaxml :intl typing. F wx - ' W xv - Sv J I ORY THELMA RENE MARIANI MARTIN MAUCLAIR Camera Club, French Club Uxlm, dmi-H draft, Social Comm' Hrrlwllyl aspiration' inif fm' 'l lvroft-seion Thinks Glenn Mil- l0r's music has tho right swing, snups tho r-zinierzi slnittt-r in his spare timo, iS Sorry ho vzin't cluin-0. tonvhingrg sivorwition. rvutlingrg Pduvaition. f-ull:-go in Snnthg f-nnvt-rszitinn, spo1'iS2 qun-opqutioli, Glonn Milli-ix stnnlpx lV:ll' Mziiiijw up gxnntl invvstnit-nts, U.Ii.'s Kay Kysm-r. gnu at kivk out of fmvllmzlll. 1 5 1 5 ff l x ii i 1,1 BERTHA MAZZOTTA Big: H1-1'll1:1 2 1l11- 11111i1111. l1I11111l 11l11s111:1 111 lf1'Il l'1'11ss3 111-111- i111ti1111, 11 S1'I'l'1'till'j'Q :11ln1i1':11i1111. l1.li. Zlllll LB.: 111s1111':1t1r111. 11 11i1-0 11111g xxaxlli. MARGARET OBSHEATS Yiv111'i1111s. 1l1111p 0 F. li1fht 11111it11 PW - 1- . . A nfs 1111 the mnko. VVI11111 shz- 11111-11mm :1 w111'ki11Q girl. 1111 thc lmys shv will for- szllic. .1 4' 11 15-.f .. 1 4... . ,' Zuma! S1 Q1 K I 'Fil' w 5f s ' ,.. 111 f' . A 1 l l M 1211 ,Q-li .1 ff '-21 151216 1 , 11 JOHN EDITH MCCALLEN MCCULLOUG-H l' ' A A 1' - - 'I 1 , , . 1 1 s1111l111L -1.1111 ' f11 ..,1AI1!,1 V-Huy, s111111' WNW lllmd will-k' mln 11i1'1' 11'rs1111 I11 luv 1-:11'10 11 1111111 eight l K i ' 1111 11'1f, will sl111g111 I1 1'111'1-111' i11 tho Mvr- Vllillll M111'i111-x. whit- tlvs 11 11'11y ti1111- by 11:11i11g. -3 'Q 09 BERNARD OLENIACZ Orchestra J11s1'-l1:1' l111111s it. 11111 with his 11w11 111'- 1-l10st1'11, 131-ts hot 11111ler thv 1'11ll:11' :xt 1111-11ti1111 111' Jams. linwps 1111111 i11 111'C- 11:11'111i1111 for law 1-axreer. ll1'l' il fur 1'11:11 for LC1'111l11z1ti1111, 111l111i1'1-s 811111-1111-y'slm1g:l111Ils. kzwps il 1'01'111'1l 111' swim! tunes, MILDRED OWENS Xl',X,U'S 1111111-:1l 10 h1-rg lurks 1111lhi111! i11 11ThlPti1: uhililyq 1r111'ks down ull i11- 1111'11111t1o11 111111-111-111111: 1l1':1111z1. f 1 v s 1 Eg ,.,. VR BEATRICE MCKITHEN l51-11 . ri f111111'11 l1111111ti1'i:111. l'lll'lS 1111 llllll listvns T11 Mr. l:lllM'l'll5 11l1iI11s1111l1y, p11-ts 1111r1111111e11t 1-11- ,i11y1111-111 from 41111111- ing. 1-111s the rug: 111 Ih1- 11111xi1' Of L'f11111t li11si1'. RACHEL MURPHY S1111-s l't'L1'lSll'YS xxith ll11y . stvaxk :1111l 1111i1111s is hvr 1111'11I. si11u'i11:' :1111l d11111-111: hit :1 huh 1111111, ll. ll. l11111111ls l11-1' l11':11'l. EVA PACE Stunt Day Comm. T11111g:1111l lurly 11t the l11Il11'. 111'111lClly praxis- os 1h1- pigskin 11111'- :11l1-, s111ili11g:ly sf'1'1'1-S hy s11x'i11g: sT1111111s, clvlxvs 1l11011ly i11t11 1lrv:1111y fl2l1l1 lllQ'. i -ZS.: f A X ww' 1 Kuff- ' 4 Am 1' WILLIAM MCMEEKIN H1-1'1111111 f:1 V 11 r s easy s11l1,i111-ts. r1111-s sl0011i11g 1111-r zxll mh- er :11'livili1's, rollvl skates for 11x1-rviw 11111115 111 1111111 Bllll' ine 1111if111'111. 1 1 DONALD MYERS Social Comm. I1111'ki1- is il :tonne :1l11111t 1-l1i1'k1-11 din- ners. t111lcs 1111'k1-y 1111 s111'i11 I 1-11111liti1111s. 1111111-s 11111 g'11vQr11- 11111111 11111-s11'1 f1111l his 11h111s t'111- 1-11ll0p:1'. 1 ROBERT MILLER Vice Pres. Feb. '43 Class, Chem. Lab. Asst., Modern Novel Bob hunts as Il h11l1l1y. l11111'h. spuzlks well 1111 sports. 11i111s at 11:1v11l aYi111i1111. l11v1fs 1-z1Ti11g CHARLOTTE NAGLE Stunt Day Comm. M 1111 k 1-1 ' 1:11105 1i11111 111 1l11111f1- 111 the l'.S.U.. Iilivs I0 111:111-h :1pp1-liI1- with li i ,Z li111'1l111 :xt l11111'l101111, ulll ln' 1111 iIl'll1j' 1111rs1'. ERVIN SYLVIA PANEK PANTAZIS Orchestra. Thespians III, Y111111 1- 11 ,i11y N Class Play C11111'h lll2llI'lS h11- NVWS H1011 Uf hvr m11r. Ill2lIlS 111 hung fum' l 'l 'Si l'l'.'kS 1111 1111 lltl1ll1' 1-.11 11.1 gj1Lr 'f1fj11f5l','1'1t111511215 'lumtl 1 1-11111 10 11-11111sL to 111' l11-111l1-'cl hlaist th1- .I1111s f1'11111 fm- the 11mq,u,1gh Il llrllllllllilll. Art I11s1i111I1-. 1. . .- -1.-252. .-- :ag-f: - JOSEPH MINEO Publicity Comm. Min H: ready smile, friendly eyesg Versatile as at Schen- ley teacher, zenlous mnthernatieinng bnsea ball fun und, above all, an all right guy. NATHAN NAHMOD Chess K'N:1tie will ,fro into ' owes his weight business, must-les to lifting, credits Svlien- ley's popularity to the girls, would like to give the Axis the business. LAWRENCE PARKER Band, Student Board, Stunt Day Comm. I An into drummer IS Larry who dreams of soinedzuy leading: his own lmnd. liven girls and food :ire forgotten when the band strikes up. 3 ls . 5 S im 2 GAR C ILLE MIX 0 N lJantegue does her part in the wzxr elTm't, likes 0 u 1' plays and sul-ials, hopes to enter the Held of beauty cul- ture. ANITA NEWELL Class Secretary, Feb. 435 Chem. Lab. Asst. Sweet, petite . womplete, MUR IEL PARKER Girl Reserves, Social Comm. M.t',l' likes to play the piano, will be A Major business :ul- niinistmtnr. For cle- tenso l!lUlllPl'S sho will C Minorls taken rnre ol. 2 . ii i l 2 , gifiggz i x Qs? f 2, SYLVIA ELOUISE RICHARD BETTY MOIDEL MOSBY M055 MU1-L Human Behavior Usweet mfmige., is Stunt Day Cogrgm., Properties Comm. t'Syl 3 This future no Sleepytin1e Gull' Pres- Camera Hb NVAVFS h old her angel of inert-y for she's In the H31.,SeiQ 3 mu gil- f . 1 v will take patients' Moodll when s-h e sonds muh S W 5 m l UUEUUUU, b 11 W 0 S pulses in Glenn Mil- hears 31 Ullingtiine ming Mlfriemls him smnips and bonqlsg ler tempo. .Iler own li ai n d '. Business . 1 V V f 2 .,,. li t ,Q vm, tenipemture soars at sr-hool will At likes to lielax Slab? fflllft the mention of tahoe- Lastw end her theme with Pl SHN, Will be Aus' fmles J Cer' olate Cake. song.-5. un M.D. tum sailor. :I , 'Q - Q 4,8 , AX mi! .ll MEYER NEWMAN This p r i z 0 poster pointer :ind fervent food fan will engzigge his energy in llie- x sol C'YlQ.Q'llIt+6I'lllL2'. He wwwm 1 saufrifieed n s t 0 cl spring for sernpl SYLVAN TERESA JOSEPHINE MARIE PENNER PERELLA PESICH PESIK Chem. Lab. Asst. mlirey' will miss Plcturepomm' Social Comm. C3-mera' the 1-:1f'etei'i:1 luis Propertles Comm' xy Q .1 v1',..i,,i,,.f L, V ., ' 4 ' il, A Current Events A Ur' 'Je I' ' Sehynultn . . . 111-npzlluil to nun. NI H 1A lk' A Im her unlbitionu lglrst Yezirns to enter Pitt, some businessman rlllcxlt th! XC'-w 1ikPg Hd hw Llwom Likes lnw, Values llllllllf, qtizxlitlecl gvheuley tea tfh K, 1, S Nishmuutl ,l,mI.iHL debates, Aniuses all, In give gentle l'ust and Sfmhnfsy plans lvl H ' Thlt Nuts about photog- Aid to wounded N, Mfund bugiupgb - - - H1 WHS- 11 rnpliy. Chenrtsl. I 'QQ 591' 41 if .xiii l M W 1 ' A H vollege, Nils nvtli2i5f ' mil s. . ifg ,S , ,. . . ,, V smile . . . her own si. -. f .Me lf :st7lsiw..e,:25 I ' ' 55:-:l1,jfLlSgnY Ti r ' is It .. 5 ' -'ff..,,:..- ' ,Lex 3 - , agglm-f..' mee , . nf: N ' I wi Q. 1:-,,-.I -...., K X f A , sf K ay, .g gi MAZIE PINKNEY ' 'Pink' ' plays piano accompaniment to her own vovals, sings praises of lemon pie, lauds Autumn Noe- turne' '. has high- pitehed hopes for college. ANNE SABLOWSKY Student Board t'Honey is writing to soldiers to keep up morale and is minding nine - year - olds in her aim to be a social worker. v :y rs llhi '.,fi?- Ears- 11 7 .gm . is .. ,,, .. .t 1 E... i t. I A f - i t - 2 f gtaf ,f. . . - ,E ,.., 5 X , 3 t 1 ,. .,,,.: ,- ,l.y i E .H JOSEPHINE PITASSI Stunt Day Comm. Gift Comm. HLi'l Joe' ': plea- sure, her letters to soldier eousinsg treasure. her job of selling r e e o r d s , wish, no last minute shoppersg dish, steak and onions. A Vi BETTY SABO Human Behavior. Stunt Day Comm. Betts!' is entit-ing with her vibrant per- sonality. This de- votee of photography is faseinated by the business world. RICHARD POR-CO 'tPorky'! plays the piano perfectly, is hypnotized by hot dogs, goes gil-gil over girls. MICHAEL SARTORE Current Events, Orchestra-, Picture Comm. Mike , heading for Duquesne, loves mu- siv, buys b o 11d s , talks football lingro, likes blondes. MADALIN E PRICE Her favorites: man, the big brother in the Army, motto, Sehenleyysg theme, equality among' racesg song, H.-it Last , dish, all the rive in China. MICHAEL PRONESTI Chairman, Stunt Day Comm. Hliikei' is amazed at ease with which It e a e h e 1- s assign homework, eornplains about unenshioned classroom ehairs, is delighted that the draft age was low- ered. FRANCES D. ROSE Thespians III, Girls' Leaders, Journal, Stunt Day, Commencement Speaker F.D,R.. has l+'.D,R.'s eharm, wit, and Ver- satility. MARION SCHAD Orchestra Desires n u r s e s ' training, loves chile dren, envies convert pianists. admires de- fense attain success. workers, will MURRAY ROSENBERG Journal Editor, Chess, Comm. Speaker, Properties Comm. ' 'The elements so mixed in him that Nature miglit stand up and say to all the world, 'This is a man'.',I SYLVIA SCHNEIER Orchestra, Human Behavior HIlllt'hPSS,, is a prince of a girl who rules musie as king. Pharniaey will crown her ambition. ,. .' -.r .. - . 23.3 x . taiaiq2i25f'1v - . liiiiti ' - 5522.3 Lf' F .' 'Z as f B ax 1,1 S Effffaim M .6 .rg if 3 S 5 sea, ii Hi t ,a .1 'P 41,5 'S .. .,, , ggi? X 'H as X ELEANOR RACZKA Thespians III, Current Events, Ring Comm. 0telia suppresses the desire to be a ferry pilot. She will have smooth sailing guided by her friends liness. She writes mysteries as a hob- by. ARLINE ROSENFIELD Vice Pres. Junior Junto, Chem. Lab. Assts., Props. Comm. Amit-able A r l i ii 0 drives a ear. shifts into high on the war effort. steers toward college. ELEANOR SCHWARZ Library Asst., Song, Yell, Motto Comm. llolds Harry James' hot livks high. S w i in s. skimming sea's surt'a1'e. Seeks secretarial suhjet-ts. BETTE REIHER Stunt Day Comm. t'I x'itla1yl' hns at Crusoe minted 'lww' likes hikes thing out-:sl and vunillu milk shukt-s ttull onesj, liopes to be :t furlnug'li hritlt-.' ' ESTHER RUTH ROTH Pres. Girls' Leaders, Thespians II Red studies 4-hiltl psycliologgy in sparc time, delights in musirniles, eyes at sefmetziriatl position. IRENE SCHWARZ Human Behavior 'tRenie'i: proud pos- sessor nf lied Cross Cer'tiiit':itv. l'0llS1t'll'll' tinus :ilmut t'miimt'i'- vizil suh,iet'ts. rathitl Tmnniy lltmrst-y fain. as i DAVID RENSHAW Pres., Boys' Leaders ll:xvt--Heins plains :tn nrt 1-:tree-r. prob- zthly in Army Cam- mitlzigru, lie declares, HAH I um, or ever lmpt- to he. I owe to my mother. FLORENCE RUBIN Thespians III, Make-up, Clas s Play, Picture Comm. Flo hopes to serve in the YVAACS, is no eonseientious ohjet-tor to lun:-li, ziwnrds medzil to Mr. Clements. LEONARD SCHWARTZ Sec. Chess Club, Class Play 'l'he little main with the big biceps, de- velops with photog- rnpliy and weight lit'ting'. l.en's it IlltlS' ter :tt the lensg vul- lt-Lre haxs eztught his PYP ELEANOR RICCI lS:1l1y : lmt clogs, fzivtwitt- dish: to he :1 grrvotl wife, favorite wishg lltnno l'lt'o- nomiws, t' at v tm r i t e vlatssg H. t'., shtfs his luss. T' 0 i g2Si,r5-f I. X 5 ,. sf sy 1 M tm, is 4 assi. f Q2.?l:V7: Lk , fi i .,.. ,... F M 4- . 'C'li ':' ARLEIN RUSSELL 'tliusty will de-vote her future days to designing tl :i i n t y dresses fm' tlznnsels. She t':xl't-flilly keeps her' kitchen with her t'ulin:n'y arts. EVELYN SCIULLI Pins is :ts livelv :is at vriclct-t, hats her own itlt'2lS zilmut So- 4-mlu- v vtilleets int'- rt.- ' turt-s nt' her fritlntls. f 1.1. 1 VIRGINIA ROBERSON Jenny is nmnzt-tl hy St'lienley's steps. is dazed by Sulieiif ley's arehitevture. is praised for her sew- ing, gazes at :1 fu- ture business wnreer. we 3' ARDELLE ROBINSON Library Assts., Treas. Girl Reserves, Flower and Color Comm. Dell plains to en- ter Virginia Stute Pulls-gre, reads in- nunit-rzilrle volumes of tivtion, enjoys dunvingr. GEORGIA MAE HELEN SCOTT SEBOROSKI Ballkef. Chem- Lab-, llt-len rt-nieinhers the French Club, Jr. tivt- minutes between Junto, Gift Comm. pm-imls, wmidevs :it Hgeorg-ia 1, 4. Q, K. 1, H tilt-nn INlillm s niusiv. states movies give is plenst-tl when skat- her the Missouri. iw, Maine ambition is tu ' he :1 tezielier, Shi- saxys Hiowu lot tu M r. Morrison. ' ' Weise- JOE ROSATO ' KGl't'2lb0l'7 ' vollt-tts pins with lvywurcls on them, fzustc-ns his fancy on ,izilopit-s, will pin his mind on an ut-rtmziiitiezil vn- . rear. WILLIAM SEIFERT Rifle Club, Class Play H1-Sill g past: hats e-njoyt-'fl Selit-nluy's many :xc-tivitit-sg pres! Univ: 4'llllX'l'l 5K'S Oil wan' :ind ateiwulyiiztxii- itisg future: :i lu-ru nl' tht' Air l'm'ps. ' 545 . f . , , ii' ..- at ' ..i-, , if f ' if -i 'f 4 ig' EMILY DONNA MAE SHAGINAW SHANBLATT Gift Comm., U , H , , . Human Behavior lbmum- is distin- Modern Novel rrliislil-fl in lim' gren- A-,iinxw is N-,.,-untill. tlvrww. lmmlax Mum- zlml stmiirrvly luf-ky. bm' lf fl 5I'U I,S 'lm' delights in eluiivimz, :ln l-nimyu llranlisinsuil :ind ax patriot wlm in- YONIA in lmmls. lrvvulllvs an swi'eI:11'y. cloer- ln-r Sllill'0 in tho wzxl' 1-ff'orl. f.fs,,,.,. .- . Vx we , f if-'T is 'L -'- We +1f 'W'7K .'h gl W' fs -- sy .5 it I ,x ' - VIOLA SHANNON Human Behavior SHIRLEY LEE SHAPIRO X Service Club A' 'i : in :x ll about M, . ., musiv :md l',l.., has Swim . lumix to liiuli vsteuni fm- Mr. lluszu-k. li u 5' Q uni' staunius to lu-ut tlw liuml. waits-iw tn vulv vlotlws. m ri V v 1'l1y1lm1il'nlly: liopos In gilillv right into tlw lp ll s i ii Q1 s s world: lu-4-ins in step with tlw Arniy line. gi iff . Vw L Q .xff - A A Uv . 1 A if 1 f? A I T ELIZABETH SOBECK Be-tty l 0 v il Q to rvurl li my U k 5 :und plays: will ln-lp Ille Men In Wliitvnq likes 'l'lw NK'miwn teuvlil-1's, also The H il l 4' A11im:1ls'i2 knit: Hu liurrmveml Time. I ' ,ul MARGUERITE TIBBS '1'il1liy'l luis dvsiarns BARBARA L. TISDALE Bulls buys lmmls. fm' an k'Ill'Pl'l' at llw bvndx hm. mu, U, tl 1' H W i I' Li 1'0: 'd' llillldS. lmws llvr lmvk N11-lfvllfls ml M0715 in :iviwmlxzxiivsg ill-'2llIlS In lnurl limos mu- mvm, mm.. siv, liruslivs il w :x y l'rmd in ai lillrry. i . f. 3. Q fx . i ffy: V74 i if l. A PAULINE LAURA TOMKO FRANCES Mixed Chorus III, VEANY Picture Comm' XV:mls in lm il sum'- ' ' lliIllim 1IPl' llt'i!'lli germ: is kl-pt in ,hw lwido- p,',.,i. stitm-lv:-s llmy sn-xvgiigtg 1, t L. i v - ,I ' is no sow :lt Sin - i'l1l:1tmfr-1pl1seQHlitfilr in gl ' K A 'X I h 0 T Hi ' .A . thinks sl-pzu'nte wife- h mW' Al l l t ' ' le-rims blltllllli lic cut lu-r ambition. out. 3 .i R .. . , FUN 'L . Wkhy . get , Q ALICE SIMON Modern Novel U.Xuil- 7 eyrw tllul lpurlclv. feet that llumw-. iuirse strinfs tlml npvn to lilly Wan' Sluuiirs, mimi my 4-ulll-gre before ilw WAAVS. ISADORE SIMON Class Play Hunk k 1- 1- p i n Lf nr vnunts for lxzy's zxwurnxvv. llm- vrvclils ,loan Ifmituixxv :ns be ing tops :xml is not ut- il loss wlwn it vnrnes 10 plmtngrzl play. RITA DOROTHY SPARDY STQIEY' Human Behavior, A Class Play lim-uutiful lmity will In VIMMNY 5119 N114 lu-1-miie il ln-axuiin-iam furtll lu-r best: for STHTPY fl2 l 4'5 Lfillll lim' llugwu-s' Haxllnwy ml zlilyg will miss slim- volllwts plmtnsi homo swf-vt Immune in llw sowing: lwmlil. mmm' slim-K llzxppy. NUNZIO FLORENCE VERI WALKER Thinkx H .lpunuj-1 Flo yourus to dui is iliv luwost form nl' ll 011 'ht' 1 P ll ll i Q WH' xym 1.9m.h mg l-ourts, is snuglit :ls ggmnl , the Mznrim-s 7' 51 F10 l 'HL 'mr Yi-ri suou. plans to Im tops Zllllllllg' XYUUIPII VUDS .Q -3 ,,,M,.a,.'- I ji -Zbg.23f 6 fn ' l:'u'.S5E' ' g ff u. A . .. .Q igmw W' .. .. x i ... .. .. i uf 1 SARAH SIMON Sorky glides to G I 0 rt n Miller, will slip through business college. slides through life with her 4-ontagzimis smile. CARL STEIN Chess, Class Play t'uiuracle delights in Jimmy llorsey's ntelmlics. tl 0 n a t e blood to the lied Cross, desires eareer as a C.l',A.. devotes Sllzlft' time to movies. EDNA WALZER Social Comm., Human Behavior I 'Babe' ' patterns het' lift- as a tlress cle- sigiit-i'. zips througrli e at ni tu 0 t' t' i at l art. t h i ti k s S4-lu-nley's teavliers are better than sew-st-w. Q5 ESTHER SINGER fioltlen hair and eyes of blue . . . loyal, kind. and trlw- gineer, honest in his BERNARD SWEER Student Board, Triangle Editor, Class Play, Thespians II, Properties Comm. Bernie thinks he is an iiitrtivurt, pub- livizt-s othm-r's secrets in the Triangle, eul- tivates the suavest of hellsitle lnanners. ROBERT WARD A',l'iltlJN+SlllIfPl'0SSf'tl the Axis with eollcet- ed sr-rap, iinpressed by all the latest nov- 1-ls.4lepressecl by any lavk of' f ci o tl , hartl pri-ssl-rl by a navy r 1i't-ei' CORNELL GENEVIVE DoRoTHY S1-IVINSKY SMIETANOWSKI SMITH SU is frank J 1' it n y volleets Ilu1 : boml l!llj'0l', about his ambition U, in, .lu .lirling en, steak antl onion eat- phutos as a hobby. pirtures herself as a er. history liater. aiu- aclniiration ut' the set'r'etary. vit-ws he-i' bitious typer. slinrt- lunvh romug skillful lierl Vross l't-rtitittate hantl writer. as builder ot' gas nmrlel planes, with pride. a l, I 5 - fa f:..:s:, .,,, -. 'W Kilim . H . 613' .--- 1 . , .. 'E LILA TERRY f'latnui's for vlothes and f'aclillut's, loves luneh hour and liter- 8 ature. shows skill in Q sliortlland, is at busy- X body when il. eomvs 2 to business. DOROTHY MAE CHESTER HARRY WEGERT WERNECKE ALLEN Song' Yen' WHEATLEY Stage Craft, Pres.g Mixed Chorus III 'tllottym warbles il sung: about potato Motto Comm. K'C'hesty : Politi- eian, athlete, Beau B 1' u in in e l I likes Stunt. Day Comm. Bound for eulltrge, tluwnt-4l by latest fe- MARY SNELLER Picture Comm., Class Play IH-tsky will lie- :-ome vulturetl taking: a beauty t-nurse to learn niani-t'u1'es fm' beauty ills . The XVAYIGS will earry 1et'ut'uliml the wolltl. 1 I i BETTY WILLIAMS Het'! xvuultl enjoy takin: 'Vyrone Pow- ei s pulse. She will sail to sea, nursing: ffllilll- is UH k 5' Wiill lliiirf male ta s h i o it s. the WAVICS. She smart alee boys. aims Hmifing, fm. H fight errwwiietl king ot' ruin pi'vt.-riIies- 'football- to make things hunt in ilu. :,h1,.f,,-IN of eollt-c'toi's, iw-imwnetl setwi't--pi't-tlit-lmg: tor at 'l'wh, the l'.S.N, to all as llerky, fun. sg---at ei ' -.... f H .. , . X . ' f . .' Q U . 12a - Z-nw' U., 2' ,...fs--i e . we FP S 1 X. -ff. -at ESTHER WILLIAMS -. -y Short 3' has n broad liking' for ue vrt-:un antl dam'- in,-:Q adniirt-s tall if-oplz-. Alu- Lint-oln 'md Mr. It u lu e 1- t 1 w 1 I nts to dit: 'dt-vp into sovial work. Z a 2 s Z 3 5 5 G-ERALDINE WILLIAMS fit-t't'y's hospital- ity is L-xtt-mlm-fl to lnmnn-It-ss dogs, Shr- r-onss-rvus on 1-how for he-lping' tht- war 1-tt'ort. floggrit-s at all tht- sociatls. hounds all tho late-st niovios. - ,I IRVIN HARLICK lIi4'i'ost'opt-s intl-rf-st him, philosophy in- trignt-s him. nn-tlival bat-tt-riology will ab- sorlu him, 1-lassiral musit' plc-asf-s him. -TOHNNIE MAE MOORE J ak Q , a future woman at tht- whr-cl, d 0 t 4- s on Llanving, f a V o 1' s fish and Frenvli fries. is tl. Kiltafs quot-n, JOHNNY H. TWYMAN 'it' o n n t Wt-ard isn't afraid ot' girls. is a tc-rror on the piano, hopes to start- up an 0Y'L'ht'Sl!'Zl of his own soma- day. LLL 4. 0 MAE FRANCES WOODS t't-ntt-rs ht-1' inte-rf-st on Yivtory for tht- l'.S.A., :lot-s her hit in huying: stamps. c-lu-rislit-s a 1-m'tifit-atv from tht- lit-d Cross. will st-v An10l'i4':1 tirstl ' aft:-1' Y-day. JAMES ALLEN Jimmy 1-ollt-vts svrap mt-tal. has iron clt-termination to gc-t to rolls-L50 though sports stt-t-1 his spot- light. FRANK COOPER Properties Comm. Cooper has sown st-Q-ds for future on a farm, rf-aps rt-- wards ot' ltoy's murk- insf 1-lass. will join tht- Marim-4 to plow tht- Axis nntlf-r. i 4109? N93 INDIA HO YEE WRIGHT Chegg Stunt Day Comm' l,ikr- Yan: and Yin India s p 1- n cl s . . , vit-vt-1' but un- honrs writing: lt-tts-rs, assuming . , , intol- lovt-s to hear Svhon- list-nt lint frientlly le-y's vhorns. hopes . . , t-mulates tht- to attf-ntl lnisint-ss NW-st hut typitios vollt-gs-. liastern vharm. PRESTON i BROOKS ' ' V Rnd L'1'ax't-s to K I t h i vain- 11 collt-go va- A 3 it I rot-r, slant-Us tlivint-ly, 7 A ' oats 4-normously. arl- . f mirt-s Alive ardt-ntly. Q ' petritie-tl by patiPnc'e fi ot' pt-:lag-rogue-s. .1 smmioimmsa -' 'fi A DIANA ZELIG-SOI-IN ROBERT FLODIN HXYl1it1-y . to wt'-ar tht- Navy's blur-. is :1 re-cl-lint lmse-hall fan M a t li 0 matit-s and Mt-t-lianival llrawing put him in a hrown study. GOVERNOR JOHNSON Sugar Boy tra- tiont-il It His anihi- tion. a mortit-iang at wood work, no shirkg his speed . hooks to rt-nfl: basl-hall, ht-st of all. LORRAINE MOORE Haiti:-t- ha s al- 1't'I1Ilj' starts-tl a lmau- tit' ia n 3 s t'at't-t-r, vlie-risltt-s Svlit-nlt-yls motto. clt-vours vliov- olatt- vakt-. THEODORE UHLMANN ' 'Ta-tl' ' , . . wine, womt-n. and song: d o t- s n ' t lt-t his straight A rt-rortl in Efhflisli intoxivatc- hnng likes moclt-ls Cairplant-sb: w i ll sing thc- JI a 1' i n e Hymn. MELVIN KLEBER XYho? Mt-lvinl NVhat? An alvizltorl XYlly5 VVants vit-tory for tht- Vnitod Nations! NVln-nf After grad' nation! ROBERT NEWLAND Chess l utu1't- in at 3' o 1' of Boys' Town likt-s golf. baseball. synt- phony, vht-ss 11 n tl spaght-tti, wht-wi Ile knows tht- diffs-rl-mffs he-twt-t-n Knusavits- kg-y antl Shnstiko- YITX. MARY ALICE VERBANAC Tootlit- proves pa- triotism with lmnds, p la n s for roll:-ge, pursur-s cl i m t- s for h e 1' 4-ollc-vtion. i S ploi-asm-tl lay Sltilglltllil and jittt-rhugs. Human Behavior, Library Asst., Song. Yell, Motto Comm. 'tltizzy ln-an sighs for her soltlie-r, plays tonnistorlovt- swort-s. h o p 1- s to shine- in 4-ollt-gt-. ANNE MANNERS tit-ntlo Annit-' ' poi'- 1-olatt-s in ht-r pas- sion for good vlotht-s, Servos on Gm-t-k YVar R4-lit-t' f'0!l1Hl,. plans to att:-ntl P.f'. NY. CLARA NOELL t'lit'k will vlirk as a fashion au- thority. will lwauti- fy lt-s fc-nnnos as at cars-t-r, w a n t s to make somt- lurky man happy, shim-s at ballgann-s and in ballroonis. MARY FRANCES WAGNER M, l .'lTIll?1'9SSC'!I by k'AnL:'s-ls of Mt-ray . opprl-ssl-tl by onli-r Cfj in I'ilfCI0l'l!1, oh- sf-sst-rl with popular music-, rlrt-ssh-sl. usu- ally. in Svln-nl:-y's rolors. GEORGE ZAVASKY St-lt-t-ts se-rviwo in the Mt-rvhant M a rin 0. wollt-4-ts vartoons of the tootltall tit-ltl. re- spt-t-ts rt-ads-rs of the autlior Altsln-ltr-r. PETER PAUL ZIVIC Student Board, Flower and Color Comm. Pett-r - at man of pe-apo who talks of war, a wise- soul who will tru tlown to tho st'-a in ships. Our P1-tt-1' Paul is Salton- lt-y's Pt-tt-r XViinsr-y. AGNES MCDONOUGI-I Ar ranks masht-tl potatot-s and string beans nc-xt to ti, G.. is stilulut-fl by stony start-s. will ln-vome an inmate of tht- inf stitntion of in a r - riapft-. HAYWOOD ROBINSON NYootly p in 0 S on-r a vortain lass. ti. Katt and It, '1'nr ut-r art- poplar with him, Thinks art and wood varving are ua k. GLORIA WARRICK t' o n v 1- 1' s e- S about vlotln-s. thinks typ- ing' is t o p s , huys s tt a in p s to stump S 1- h i 4- k l 0 g 1' ulmt-r, strive-s to he a ston- ograpln-r. COMMITTEES Social Betty Engle, Chairman Aileen Lavine Muriel Parker Fred Leif Edna Walzer Cry Mariani Marie Pesik Donald Myers Verner Freass Song, Yell, Motto Committee Eleanor Schwarz, Chairman NOITSG F ark Chester Wernecke Diana Zeligshon Flower cmd Color Committee Peter Zivic, Chairman Marlene Lautman Ardelle Robinson Ho Yee Picture Committee Mary Sneller, Chairman Marion Browne losephine Pesich Helen Gibson Florence Rubin Pauline Tomko Publicity Committee Ruth Bluestone, Chairman Donald Dudt Emilene Hall Margaret Green Ioseph Mineo Ring Committee Eleanor Baczka Ruth Grahn Stunt Day Committee Ierry Azen, Chairman Charlotte Nagle Richard Moss Eva May Pace Michael Pronesti Florence Parker Betty Reiher Iosephine Pitassi Harry Wheatley India Wright Gift Committee Agnes Fillipelli, Chairman David Gershovitz Betty Sabo losephine Pitassi Georgia Scott Emily Shaginaw Properties Committee Marion Browne, Chairman Burton Glinn Thomas Cooper Betty Mull Murray Rosenberg Iosephine Pesich Arline Boseniield Bernard Sweer Song, Colors, Flower FEBRUARY '43 SONG Tune: White Christmas Song: Katharine Lever, Eleanor Schwarz, Viola Shannon We're going to miss our dear Schenley, The time to part has now drawn nigh. We will always cherish Our thoughts won't perish Of you dear old Schenley High. Feb class of '43 leaves thee: To honor you will always be Our ambition and our pride, And your light will always be our guide. Colors Blue and White Flower Gardenia .V- Journal Art Staff Editor-WALTER CONNER HANNAH EISNER MARIAN DAVIS lANET RICHEY CHAUNCEY AIKEN GEORGETTE LOCKSCHMIDT GEORGE ROSE EILEEN FOLTZ THE CLASS OF FEBRUARY, 1943 presents EVER SINCE EVE A Comedy in Three Acts CAST OF CHARACTERS Mrs. Clover, Iohnny's mother ..................... .... B uth Bluestone lohnny Clover, Editor of The Penguin .... .... B ennett Lewis Mr. Clover, Iohnny's father ...............,...... ..... D onald Leek Spud Erwin, Business Manager of The Penguin .... ..... I sadore Simon Susan Blake, Associate Editor of The Penguin . . . ..... Rita Spardy Betsy Erwin, Spud Erwin's kid sister ......,... .... M argaret Green Martha Willard, lournalism teacher .... ....... Fl uth Levine Officer CCaDDYl Simons .................., .... L eonard Schwartz Henry Quinn, Youngest principal in state .... ......... C arl Stein Lucybelle Lee, Southern Belle ............ .... S ylvia Pantazis Preston Hughes, Football captain ............... ..... I erome Azen Football Players William Seifert Bernard Sweer Burton Glinn Stanley Crasior Bookholders .............................. Mary Sneller and Florence Rubin Directed by Mr. I. R. Clements ACT ONE An afternoon in November ACT TWO Scene one: About ten days later Scene two: Two weeks later ACT THREE Thirty minutes later Place: The Clover house-in Preston, a small suburban town Time: Present f..'-:iilififh4i7f.ffv fi45:G'3'.. WS if -S ,iw Iv, , V -:iiQfflp. ie, XI, . TSW - - - Y 1: fi fP f : A, .J 'lf -iv V as CLASS OFFICERS: Pat Spano, Vice President: Lillian McKee. Treasurer: Carl Dykema President: Mildred DeShan1z. Secretary: Bernard McFadden, Social Chairman. AMERICANS Of JUN! OOOO X945 IOURNAL STAFF: Eleanor Zusinas. Editor-in-Chief: Ianel Hartman, Sen- iors: Walter Conner. Art: Dellaiae Hicks, Clubs: Charles Isack, Copy: Virginia Borlas, Clubs: Aimee Bell, Literary: Lillian Wanger, Features. 1-VS: ,E r s 1 - g-al , kwriaamvffvfirwsf-SY' ' Pfwwvigi' iixgfikfai' Iliff' Y, 4, 1' Q P J M L . ..,wew..?1 :Qi AM! 'K . if Wad gi sd V3 . X N ww 2. .1 S . .. ,.,f - - 1EW QiaEi CARL DYKEMA Class President l fnykeu Pffor persnnality plus Ifiifflf respeet for Mr. Roberts Rffnr exevutive energy S--for a Schenley svholar. AIMEE BELL French Club, Journal Staff The ln-'llfel of the l rvneli elassi Her sinverity rings iruc She rings the hell in poetry EVELYN ABELSON Chem. Lab. Asst., Jr. Junto Ready to praise Mr. Morriscm VVilling: to out-talk anyone Abel to keep :x straight A ret-nrd in linglish. 4 f 11 Nik 5 li- . s Q ANTHONY BELLISSIMO .4-ronyn Dreams of slnmiing: ll it ler Fears being ealled Hinos! beautiful Qian? We .R ini p ein if CHAUNCEY AIKEN Gym Teamg Swimming Team Chink Pool - for splashing Cool 7 to moody girls Fool -- for sports. TREDA BERGER Hopes to enter f-ol' lege. No lilaekuut in selmol Alert at football gxanies All elvar for Ilarry Jarnes. ' . . Ag awk? , . fi. ii. e il 35 W . ff 5. . . X 'M . W Q 6 . 5 5 ?f,Qg?S2QLv Ki iw,-,11'55if 3. 'WEJMJ Lg ETHEL AKERS Do11ie Profession - Beau- til-ian Lesson -- Have am' liition Vnnfession -A Likes G reer Garson. gg ff sw' ,, i ,. l V l RUTH ANNE BAGINSKI Student Board, French Club, Pres, Plea: admission to liar Arguiinenli I . ll. ll., tops Yvrdiet: Holi lfeller, super. HARRY BERGER Basketball 'KJohn L. Sullivan Adnres sports Almlinrs girls Ulamurs for John Kent N. MARJORIE ALDERDICE Shorty Likes seeretarial work Lands Kate Smith Longs for peare. THEODORE ALLEN Teddy' ' Sells strap Relishes relaxation Praises Poe. . U' f 4 1- -,M ,Q N Q WINIFRED BAILEY Winnie VVnnts permanent job as lieautivian A polislierl clanver Unrls up to reall. ROSE BERNACKI XVisli1-'s f art eareei' Pitehes if to keep up morale Ditellcs 4 sl10w1rl'fS. 0 A . CATHERINE BALISTRERI Human Behavior. Library Assistant ' 'Katie' ' NVill study niedieine Works at 1-roi-lietingf XVants to travel. ALIUE BLACKWELL HAI., Apprel-ialion 7 foul ball team Synenpatinn f- Kay Kysel' f,i1'l'lllP2ill0!l A sxwia worker. LOUIS ANDREWS HLOHH Ambition 4 florist Fiction -- lfldgur Allen Poe-sy Predivtion i n rosy future. ALBERT BARNES Leaders HAI., l-'nturo flyer Model plane builuer Kipling fan. FRANCES BOEHM Human Behavior Partil-ipzites as Il patriot Sc-intillzites in sin:- ing Vlmrins xxitli vziiillnr , 1 ANTONETTE ARGENTIERI Library Assistantg Thespian II Toni' ' Personality i Sum- niy Kaye Pe-evo 4 nasty pon- ple Pleasure 7 bowling. f Tgiw' iff f 11,,,M lv? 1 ., K : i CECELIA BARR Cece Vzunp Meade Men Mulodrzinm. GEORGE BOLDEN Football Bone 1-riislwr . . . nivkimmv Bzissnnn , . . fuvrvritc- instrnnivnt- Blum' . . . fuvuritr' vulnr. EARL ARMSTRONG Ea.r1be 'I'n he an-rizil gnnnvr To sm- tho wnrlcl To miss S4-he-nlc-5' tlirls. 5,-..,, ,R ii Biii si .. S. ef . fi I ff ' Q -r , LILLIAN BECK Becky'l intends to nmrig Ile-fends jitter' lbllgfglllgf Sends in-4-mln-il lrloml. DOROTHY BOOZE Mimi, fi likes VK'illi:1m's lumks. Se-wing :incl swing ing, Piano and Pznll linlu-sim. like JUANITA ASHMON Human Behavior Netsie Aspiration: sm-izil wnrkvr Ibn-ti-stuiinii: lout suits Admirzltiun: Marian Anderson. GWENDOLYN BOOZE Gwen llrvnm 7 10 truvvl Svlwiiu- fr to ln- zz svalinsirvss 'l'0nn1 f- S1'll0llll'j'lS fnutlmll s-ll-W-n. JOSEPH AUGUGLIARO L' liz f likvs blues Sits -f in rvxul Jzlvk liflllllllll Wits f like-s Mr, l':irtor's VIRGINIA BORTAS Journal Slow Hin inzilws Ilir' H':u'lu-rs fill. lYunl4I likv in slip Hlinn :1 l inll. ls an l'l1:nnpfp:1ii1 In thu- llvilim-rzlls. 'llfnur llos4's In nur Ginny! ,,-: : J - K 43: 5? A A O I .i,,, ,7- illil Q3 ' O RUTH AUL Safety Patrol, Thespian II rlskippyn IM-sim-s to visit llol- lywoud 'Virus nl' qnivt boys Adnxirvs NYAACS. JAMES BOUMBOURAS Football - '41, '42 .luymis wlwn pluyingg lwmtlmll. lclrililvs 'l'l1rn1-1' and 'I'w:iin lVlilI'Yl'lB nf- Swlionf lm-v's 4'l1m'nl:sl0 1:11-s. , Aww: -32 W 516, lk ,. WW' 5 r M K V WE: ., .W .,-f . ,S V . ,J M l 1145 13.--,X 'uv- HELEN BOYD MILDRED ANNA BROOKS JAMES BROOKS Hguddlesw BRENNER. .-Annan llMisae1, Igutlull: working gil-I Linguist. who Navy is his flltnrvi A Ill 11 mu me In Uslt ' ' A 47 O A A yt' 13, ' ' lluxvaxii Tend patients Llkesx mm jllqlxltrlgn H In 'l':llvnt. -W clamvinf Attvml lru. If Reads. too. YMVY WMM' to QU to livfrivnd sux players. Tflklfll SETTIE CHAPPELL 1 .Chappyy , l'vlIllll'l' movin upvrzl Im' 1 f 1 ii-in MANUEL CHARACH Chem. Lab. Asst. Uwhiskey' ' Intnxivutvll: wiill STELLA CIORA . .Stay SH Beautician-to-he Travel 'i2lI1tlf'lUilf01'm flh0t'0l2lll,' 1-like 'IWW tennis Vlmml' llnrsm-v's tunes fzmvier. Jnvlx Lmulml inn. ' St:lg'::o1'1-fl: hy Al t'mvpvr's jukvs lf:-ll: fur Betty Hrnlvlv. -s 'V g ' .afsfs xi? X, ff' Xos, :xml lmmll ns very ports! :af W .3 if ,Q CONOLA BURNETT ' 'A1bania 'IR-nlllizxtinm: rn-nl. Lunwnlzxtmn: pvuplm- QM-1-xlpallionz N-4-1'w tary. FI-JLIX COCCO Band, Orchestra, uphill, limrfs for liuoxvxvll Will join Mnrlm-s llzls c'41lm'l'ul vym -'Q X, MARY ELLEN BROOKS ' ' Teena' ' XY:1r1ts to ww :1 fine 51'Illll l':1lts-rn :l lmmv llrmf llz-ml ANGELINE BUTERA Service Club, Stu- dent Board, Human Behavior Ange1' ' lfxvn-ls :ls M-1-xw-tz1l'p' lnxultlngf 111 spurls lfvtnls Huy llillzlml. PHYLLIS COHEN Triangle, Features Editor g Junior Jun- to, V. Pres. A wzlmll-ring' min' wlrvl slw A thin! nt' lmisf- :xml lwnllly Ut' mlrznmu, songfs. :xml pm-1l'y Anfl lll'Ullllly lllllnlmy '95 JAMES BRUNICK Orch., Band, Adv. K'Rauger Joe l 11Iu1'0: Arrny Air 1'f1l'ps l'lElYUI'lI02 Mr. Rupert l-'invssvr :ls xnusiuizm SUSIE CARPAGNA -rsueyv lmugx IU Irzucl Likes in read lallmlxs :IT Bull Hope. FRANKLIN COLBURN Perry like-S livzldilm Murlvy Hiding sulzways lilxytlmx of ll. Jzxnms. V Y gm x wolf gi Ji LOIS BRUNN Orch., Band, Chem. Lab. Asst. NLC., Clover k11it11-1' for Rod l'1'11sH. 1'Ix1-111111111' tiutist, Good swi1nr11or. ALBERT CARNEVALI Football '41, '42 1 1Bitty,1 Aims to 111- 11 Manrim- iXD1l12l11t1S 1r11n1p1-1 musiv A1-hos to t1'11v1-1. RUTH COLLER Safey Patrol, Sec. 'KPi11D1'1lii 1il11-A 111 skzltv 211111 1l11111'1'. llaltvs 111211 111-1-ls with 2IlI1il4'1N. 1111s 1111111111111 11111' 1111mm1. 14316 iv iipz 2 fy awww 4 .5 of if' .11 fi mi I, 7' -SI., YK 'the Q xl JOSEPH BRUNO Adds: Navy + haw- l1:1l1 :L future. S11l1t1':11'ts: 1111 1,r1'11111lst111111 1Am11'111-N. Iiivirlvsz his time 111-1111-011 rmiding 111111 1:01111 music. JULIUS CASALI, JR. Casey, Jr. .I111'k of 1111 sports Slzwks pr-1-V0 him li111'ks V111 Tiiineyf fl WALTER CONNER Thespians, Journal Art Editor, Pub- licity Comm.. Ch. Artistic' Rustic 'l'1'1'1'i1i1'. -nw' 'R ,ftp MQEQ, ... 42 -.... 4' E ., 1 1. 3 1 , 1 V .1 ,, l ROSE BUCCI ROBERT BUCHNER MELVINA BUGAY GRACE BUREK Shorty K'Bob Me1. f--311111111-s Red 111111-s 1111 llivlfviis, '1'ur11s to 111o1111s Will l1:1v1f 11 sewre- X1'omz111 i11 wliitv 131-st in lmwlirig, Spilrns homework 1f', 5' S Vflllllllf' 131110 111mut. imma' 1io:111ti1'11l 111 111111-. Yezirns to tr'11x'e1. llllllks ll21 1' 'lillucx lure boys l'5'1l'l1ll1'- Rose 111 141111 by put' vhnsc of Bonds. WT YQY l ' I -. V , fff ',,l 1 KATHRYN - V. CAVANAUGH ,GX ,s HK 11 Q f 5 ay lla! N lill714'1i for 11111'si11g: t Y A-ims 111:11 in 1m11'1 'WX mg' ,Q D si.,,.-a-,- JD W Y1-111'11s for 21 .vv-'Iv ' ' 'x mi11i1111:1i1'1 ALBERT COOPER Journal Art Staff Peanuts Navy: 1l4'Xl stop 1.1111111123 lirsl l11x'1' A111l11I11111: 11111111111 lnuulcs. QS' riff FRANK COOPER F1'2lI1k is: Realistic' Al'11f'111ill.0 Nnlmlc Killlll, 751 if wo. .N HERBERT COOPER 1 1000131 1 li1n'111:Z 1111 but sux Sn111'i11g: 11111111111 x1111'l11 .MI111-imc: S. ll. Sfs girls. fly' an -E i1,Y -111-fy 1 i ,- s W wi 'WA 154 , 7 DORIS B. CORSEY Human Behaviorg Picture Comm. Corsey', lJ.iZZy 111111111 ll111's1-5 H.z1tly 111111111 111111- L',1':1Zy 11110111 F1111- ornfiu. :, if WO' 64 ...--..- WILMA COURTNEY ,txpiraxtiulxz design- in! Inspirzxtimnz il trip I'm-spiraxtinlli il jit 14-rIm11::. ANTOINETTE DUCO Service Clubg Safety Patrolg Human Behavior Duke'l ai ,S :III IN' .I miam - f EF' f J , iivfii ' Lf ,,::xf ', I 3 If gin' ROSE CRAIG MARTIN CROOP SHIRLEY CRUMP BERNICE Girl Reserves Properties Comm' Shir1 CFARIIBSDKI UR0SeyH Armv his ffmxl PUIIIIIS H WIIIII5: Bernie . 14':lx-wing-: Red Airs. his re-wiht-1yf,,r iuai-liinc Desirvs Sf'v1'vl:1r111I Nk H 'I Uuptniri Rivkon- 'IUIIIIIS ff' Iii'-f wrijw YI-Xutimlt gossips Iinoke-r. Trumps Ii'Ul'Ill'NIk'I'. Aafrlffwf Orson I'rnI'vssim1: defvnst- Vurps has his ,,. tales jub- lnyilnyy libre-skof vzlrignlg 'S. Itvsorve conceals 00 ' druniutic talent. S . ef I X fs, tf if ,C-A1112 0 I 'I X Qt I VIRGINIA ROSEMARIE DE VALL DIAMOND Combined Thes- To be tl ,i--wt-I of pians, Sec. at swremry Plain: for stwrvlalry 'lrousllrvs :1 Iaxrfe lfzxu: of Ht-41 Skt-lion waxrdrnlw Iizux: on Oxtrax NIIRIIUIIIPS in alum-in Q, wuiffht, JOSEPHINE ELVERDA EBERTS MYRA EDELSTEIN WILLIAM DZIALOWSKI IIMert,y l.Mikev: HICHELSBACHER Leaders Club Bill ,In Il Iw al svc'1'n'I:l1'y. lmxxl-Il Tlmmzzs is Ilvr llIIlllI1'2lTI0ll1 . . , I -' X m-:urns for tl buy lll HN H I NI I H kuhki uw s-I over xy . r. I' I ' 'l. . Nnrslmls the way tu 'U M' N ti. Millvr. 1 35? ef' . g f ,A si-Z' ll ,W . -1 ,... ., I Qlmtzllimlsi ll. Ili-Ury Mulivzltiuni wurlrl 1w:14'0 IM-lr-rnlimxlirmg 1:1 wyvr. Knits Umm Purls 'l'w0'! fm' sulclim-1's. XVIII be an 'Ltnggt-l uf llervyw. Ihr Ilvzxrt Ht-lm1g,s Ulf- Mmnmy, XVOFIIII :1 NI:u'I1inist Berth: l'. S, X. Ilvzlrtll: ul' lalnim-ss 4 It 'tbl RUTH DANIELS Human Behavior I'Rookie Nursvs notion uf trawl-I Iivzule-s irlxlnw-iliu gllIlL'4'TZll'kt'!'S XVZIIIIS to wrt-stlo tlypewritvr. I I tis ELSA DI LORENZO Girls' Reserves Iflyiuys: nlnking Immun' rull Ixxupluys: lxmv rt ld Ill! :xml sq-xx 11115 Tuys: with idvzx of Xvurlrl trip, DOROTHY ELPERN Thespiang Service Club liporkyl I ,Iuurmulism is Iwr intent, N0 hum ut. zufinxxgr. Lwdrl. Illl A an M! .XI:l1l ls In-r tnvul' . I at mg, xxx! ff. . . ., :Syl Q 1 2, f, is 3 v 'Q K , Q C S .N qs: -' Q M Av . P AL . 6 , i 1' A ll Lv 'W' L ,, , . its ' - - f V i MARION DAVIS MONTE DAWSON EUGENE JOHN EVA DEMBY AVIS DENZIN I u-sllimlx: will ilv- Reach i7llHl2lN gEE'b6XiECp4I'fIo,42. Chem. Lab. Asst. Ave SIE Ilwm Lvunlx :ln nvtivi- life Cggt 42. Sbccer' Siu-4-tem: rvlent- PL-I lwevvz sllwlr l,flASSlOlINZ4 ftirrml needs Air 4-MIM' Basketbaui Mgr. lm-ss mtimxiug: At UN mill. Del f'rvll4-gre: for knowl- P1-tl positiml: semi-- lintioux: vulxveiti-nl Moclifin-zitionz :girls in eiluv tary l'f'fi1'h Slilfke , . 7 Amlrilion: in iutui- Pet, pie-vo: Hlilue Inspiration. .lurk tion' 1,2l,mbev'V MILDRED DOMITROVIC Current Events Club .lMi11,, lil-mls Stvinlmclc XYrites hllUI'IhZlIld liutvx Red Ski-llim ETHEL ERDEKY Mixed Chorus III Tootsie Thrills ru 3lilI'SIlI'4'l Nlitvlu-ll. IH-llglllw 111 llllllgfill' inn Kllzupmflii-Q. Plums an lrilsim-se I-llllll'U, dxf' i - er S ,ff Ag? ff 7 ll'e le e, MARIAN DONOVAN Studeut Board 'LMickey I':lilit'lf'lll in Swim- luriul work l'1'uli4'i1-nl in lmwl- ing Sillfivivllt :xmlmilimx tu join lVAA1's. IRENE FASIK URBIISBH Hr-is stirrurl up ln' llzirrv .laimi-5. , , . lmils :ll llle rzxlll- ucss ut' souu- girls, lbissulvi-s wlxi-In xx'zlT4'i1inL:' Alun Lzidrl. . Luuilnn lllxpvi-lution: gym inwtruclor. JAMES DOYLE Safety Patrol lloylvi Avvelvrzutnrz gun i'0ll4-vtimm A1-1-ilmiilziturf .Iules Ycrm' AcrmlllllmlzltinnI All' l'm'1JS. FLORENCE FINE Mixed Chorus H15 Human Behavior . .peggyu Aspl1':lIlm1Z hfwlill work .Xg:::1'ux:utim1: !llf'll il1'iVf-rs A4lDlil'1Ill0llI Mr, li' dimples, FRANK FINLEY Orchestra, I'lzxys livm'ic'1- sTir'k 'l'l1inlis lfrzmlc Mm'- Qzin rlmrp. lmitnts-s Jimmy Drn'S1'5', ml N !? C 5' ,lf 'Y -r 25 af V .' K . ri 'ii 4 ' SW .Mfg MILDRED DeSHA.NTZ Cheerleader: Thes- piaug Sec. of June '43 'dlillie' ': vivnuiflu l :ivm'i1n rlurm: .T :1 ti. Miller Sings praises of II Jlllllt-'S, sf .-N T !S,? S' .e SHIRLEY FISH Mixed Chorus IIIQ Thespiau 'Tishie' XYl1zilv uf ax wixlgvr rn-r f :11'irw ull S:xi'v:wTif' If 1- lux .1 , UN Sllzlrli :IS al llwssvn MARGUERITE FITZGERALD HMargie' ' Apprnlvaltimxi lriuluib C'mnn1f-11rln1iun: llllmpllri-v Iirvlslrl Cziiii-1-llzilimu: lmu rm Slllfs front drmrs fn' nv 1 'VIN BEATRICE FITZPATRICK Human Behavior Be1111y f11vfn's: 1illf'1'C i11 1101116 'I'1'1111111vl in mnsif' llmwigixiiiu' in f111111'1 MAXINE GLADSTONE Jr. Juutog Girls' Leaders, Social Ch. Max xxnnts 1111151 to Hy. 11111-ks 1110 1'11di0 111:11 im' 111:11 0111 1S1z14'k N1:1:i1'.1' 1,111-ks nn linguisliv :111i1i15. :J wi, I svn 45 1 5 3 . lm, N an 'W 133 'gt MARJORIE DORIS FOGGY Girl Reserves 111-on 151111-xox 1111'n11g:11 Sw:111s0n '1'1':1s1w 11ss111'i11Kvs S4-izvs ,io11r-11'y- nnikingr. ' he X 1 N ' IK. ISAAC GLICKMAN iilkeu Y11g'11bm11I Nll'l'!'f 10XX'IlI'11 1111 11x'i:1Ii1111 1':11'11111' Sails SYX10fl1111j' 1111'u11g11 iiistury. 415 BEVERLY FORMAN Mixed Chorus 1115 Thespian III 1'1?lVUl'110 trio: sing'- ingx 41illN'llI5I, I'l'i1l1- intl' 1 11v1n'i14- 11119: 1111111-Q rn' su-11ug31'11pl1y FilY11l'1I0 mono: 11111110 RITA MAE GLOSSY Ritz Bowling is hips, Spzlrvx 1111 gum' 4'1'111'11111's. S1'1mr11s 11 str-img, r:1pI11-1'. mdk SUSAN FOWLER Tooi Stivks to knittinir. Kim-ks 111111111 1'11i111is11 111f11a1X'im'. Piwks 31Lll'1il11 A11111-12 C sun :is 111115. ROBERT GIBBONS Gibby S111-111s 111-11411-11 for Navy, 1il'ilY!1S 111 1111pe's ,inks-5, 1111111115 111' L1llT111L1 li1'a1111e. IRWIN GOLDBERG 1.11311 'I'r11ins: 111' b11sk1-1111111 Strains: In he :1 15111111 d2l114A'l' Iivigiisz as 141111 1111110 fun. SQ , 'F 'f' ii .I , 1 -We - if .,: 1 N r . .1 :Q-9-?lf5fE5- W-lg... DAVID FRANK A'Dave Sawvst Ilefmisi- 8111111114 1l:11'4'sZ at 1':1i11y duys iran-sz 1'.1'n1o- Pyle, 1 Q 11 1 1, iif- .,g .. .- - A 1 if 1 3 sf f ,- is z , CONCETTA GIGLIOTTI Connie Bnxvlixiar 1'2ltl'S 11 xirilu-, SI111m!1'11p11y r1-'11I up 111-1' il11Q'Y xvilfllt' King' 1:1111-S lllb 111-1' s11111'1- lime, LEON G-OLDSTEIN Gym Team '41, '42, '43 190111: 1 1'c11 .Xllvn 1,4lIH1I 11111'T111'111111u'1st S1-111'1'Z sports. BERTHA FRATTINI 11Be1.,y S112ll'I7 111111111 15141111 llnvis 111 key by buying 111'fl'llNt' Stannps 11111911 1111 141 S1-1'1'- nude in 131llL',11 AGNE TA GILKE S Ni Ni : writvs 111 Army Si Si: S1'1111111Oy's 111111111 11111 Uni: 11111111 11:1n1'i11:. BLANCHE GOULD 1.RedH filidvs on ro1101' 5141111-s. Ile-1'i111-s 1111 11110, Spies 11 lmppy 1'll1lll't'. ,xi ' ky kk A 'ii in 1 ' gif' Xa-141 5.23 - '52 67 .x A, 'K LEONARD FRIEDMAN Lenny Flzmh llmwlmi lun Mr. Pullvn lanlvwr l.0z1HnLE lurmtu' av SYLVIA . . Sidy, , liar: for Cu V1-'er' ll0Ell'l'4l2 l IRVIN GILLIAM piamu als lyivist Ol' sll1'4't'NN. GREENBERG lllrvvy Airs w' -1 dm in to tnxvn-l. Lzmdx on stuwlc-up girls, Sona the Arniy 112 futurv. .av EVELYN FRITZ Fritzie lizlrvs llzlnviugf lYv:1rs lrlllm- :xml rl-nl l ni'vs :is :1 jlllllllwl. '58 C GEORGE GIVENS Bud Milly works in ilu-in llillsi lxllius uw-r lln-lu .lillnz rnvm-S :nlmut thi-m. PAUL GREENBERG Henry Aldrich 'l'l'l11iiI:1tim1: Swliviif luy X lim- mlisllm-Q ,lzilulmiii xxzxilliuf fm' lulirll wlnwlqs llvl:nx:xIiuu: ilrlimx :xml 1:uVImmi1x:'. 4 'IV' gn-ml -rv dw ww -.--J 'L' 'Q , . ,, A ELLA GASTON HEMH Srvlil on svwing Suw-rll in siilpgillgf S1-ll-vis S4-v1'4-t Svrvf lA'l', Q-Qx ll l Q! f XY xx F ii if 2 ' ffl ELEANORE GLADSTONE ,.E1,, l 4-ll for Holi llujm 'l'vlls fall' tum-lvss SIHLIUTS S4-lls l'1-url liuvk, GLORIA GREENE llw: lu-lm Uprl-1':1tim1l1 to -1-4 l uii: Iv kill lup: In spin likm- lnm xkaxll-Nl Thespian III 'Tran' ' uszliust g'1'L-en. ', U' FRANCES GEFSKY EDWARD GENTILE JEAN GEORGE Football Bubs' ' 'iEd llll lnml: im- xkutlx liruwix oyos spzxrlile l 1mtlmll in urvlii- ln ilu- air: :xlmul I0t'llll'0. Spzmifli. l'rziu xpaxrklvs in flIlll4'lll,9f. lizxyser sparkles for l 1 lu. Yin Air Vnrpx. Lg 980 . 5 V lil! .ll TILLIE GREENFIELD Modern Novel, Thespian II Tillie Ym-Mimi: lmolclcevpux' Avrwuliuxi: wzxcling' Alflirtiimxiz A. .T, cll'0Illll. ULYSSES HAMIEL Football Ham Swim! fun lwimlmll mzm Vnllvuv Plain, U11 Illm' rvzlf zl Bl:nl'x1in-flu-ln LILLIAN HANE Orchestra, Thespian III llzirxz !lllll'l'l':lt'l-il'I'N lll:'lm mm-S .lun 5lI'llll14'l l-'inzxlvi In-:u'l1i11:'. 'wr' I 1 . f A 'N 4 IDA HANSON Safety Patrol Blondie Taps typewriter keys, Maps future as nurse, NVraps herself in green. EDWARD HARRIS Track, Safety Patrol Smoothy Admires aviation Makes plane niml:-ls Halls a llarnlcinir'a. ffwvff . We ii. . if if f ' at , Q1- S , 9 Q We 5 'X E 'if we -.. V, H fire .- J JANET HARTMAN Journal Staff, Jr. Junto, Leaders' Club Sweet as sugar Popular as coffee Itare as gasoline. DELLAFAE HICKS Girls' Leaders, Journal Staff Has designs on a. fashion C'Zl!'4'l5I', Is a model Frenf-h student, Has style in lmwlingk S . fx . -4 .D , i iw 1' f XL-1 ' - .ff I S-2 . , Q Q- T1 ,C-Agnff bl ll -' DOMENIC IANNACCHIONE Stamps: , Betty lliwihlc- tops. Mails: for Army Air Uorps inforinalinn, I D4-livers: in lmwlingr. . V Vs. JUANITA .TELKS YSSCKEJSIIAN HAZEL JONES AGNES KANCEL HNitaH liBonnie,, iiAgg.ien Oflllwtsf Vhlllfl 110325, 13 qappeua Chou' Dei-ms social work A1-qnirvs fame as a Rc-sports: Red I Glnnyn WPS, SkllfPI', Skelton, lixpevts: to be IL nurse. Pleasure: singing, Pursuit: operaxt-im: career, Personality: Mr. Roberts. Means to become a sm-rotary, Gleams at poor sports. Admirvs Glen Miller, Asnires tu ber-ome at model. E, U in l,il iii. G A 2 ,... NZM :,E' if ' PERN HILL 'Ternll A IJUHIBSS Rhythm: songs and Sheridan Rhymes fame with happiness. CHARLES ISACK Publicity Comm., Journal, Student Board 'Lf'hurk will sail the ocean blue, After attending a famous U., He finds chemistry no mystery, VVill speedily make history. CURTIS KANE Safety Patrol Killer The Army's his racket, Homework slays him, Hedy Lamarr's his moll, MILTON HIRSCH Student Board K'Hirsh' ' 'l'eniplatim1: 4-onvertihle Itclaxationt Bch Hope Vovatioilz physician. :ff ' Q L' K :m isss -. , f-.QM ...ryan at 4.'. ..5f . Ev? - Dl I X L GILBERT JACKSON 'KToothpick linpressiun: Schen- ls-y's triangle, Ambition: to speak fruin nur stage, lrritaliun: girls who rravk gum. TASIA KARAGEORGE Thespian III, V. Pres., Safety Patrol Tasia Vlings to cheerful 1-olors, Wishes In wa n der. Turns toward teavli- ing. ELIZABETH HODGE Betty,' Pictures a future as a tracer, Outlines plans for mystery novels, ll0esn'ti copy people who talk in movies. -- is EE... DOROTHY J AROSKI Dizzy about dough- boys, Often wears blue, Tends to travel pla ns. VICTORIA KAS ZUBA Thespian III Casey Dramatic, Plot.: secretarial career, Climax: sur-eessful TIlH'l'I'lflg'0. JOHN HOFFMAN Social Committee Jack Amazed at Schen- ley's cafeteria, VVonders at Bob Hope, NVill train as a boot DOLORES I-IOLLERAN Safety Patrol Dolly Unsuppressed desire, nursing, Impressed by Harry James, Depressed by home- work. JOY JEFFRESS Joy impressed by the cafeteria, Means to be a nurse. Happy about buying Bonds. WILMA KAUFMAN Thesipian II, Cheerleader Willie Happy, Cheers for the NVAVES, 'llogies at football games. MARY JEFFRIES 'tLueky : a Poe fan, Dueky: at bowling. Pluvky: in ambition. HENRIETTA KAZALAS Chicky' ' Abhors history. Absorbs secretarial training, Adores ' :At Lasta' ' VONDA HORD Human Behavior Pudgie Dreams: to decorate, Beams: at, J. B., lleemsz Jim smoothest. HENRY KAZMIERSKI Safety Patrol, V. Pres., Football f.KaZ,, Thrilled by a trum- Ditty Considers college a career, Advocates aeronau- tics, ANNA HOWARD ' 'Chick' ' NV ' ' ill get a Job H.-Ks Time Goes By, Experiments with hair-dressing, Laughs at 1 dood it,l GEORGE KEMENY Past: globe-trotter, Present: mathema- tim-ian, Future: mechanical engineer. BARBARA HUNT Human Behavior Balm Swims in spare moments, Fvades empty-heads YVorks to win by Stamp buying. DORIS KERSTIEN i Twin., lfutiure rancher, Lassos an artist' s ccareer, Hounds up all Zane Grey books. '59 Xi Q I R LOIS KERSTIEN DELLA KIIOURY EDISON KIGHT 'i'l'll!lllWlS. 'AC0rky'l Sturnly Nl 0 li ml zu 5 XYi,,f.-y gpm-TS' N.,.,.I.l2l,.y,1,,,1H,. illxlvs lilzllw lllv sun- IL'rnn'vs hats, Vlullws l':n1wivi'. Shim. 'Uv'-Yinm' , Nix 011 IIll'l'M'4. Imnx-im: 1-uilmsinst. AU Ulm' 5 Uiilqllm IVIATTIE LESESNE Human Behavior M illinory: low-s lizlls, 1 4 1 x ANN LINDEN A 'Blondie liuxvls in qs-xrv time, Ulzirk linlmll- strikes lilo skim-s turn Lgrxly. .iilll Navy. his turi- vaisl for Irmlmwxnxx HARVEY LIPSITZ llrws for swirls, linuxxs lr':xx'l'ling' is ilu- :rouln-sl, viuy. Tw ' l14'l'. 'l'ovs Illr' lim' illlylllg 'lAlli:l':If3' xxflw Swmwls high in XV:u1' Slulnps, nxlisixlti. xlllitllalry: lmlvs xxulf. sa. , fu H ffm-' T .W x . fiifg Mm wif' BEATRICE KLATMAN Beacie Aiil'I'lll4' is misss-xl Mrmvy is xviglix-xl. Aillhll' is xx llistlvfl JEANNE KLEIN Library Staff ' 'K1eiuie liillm-s l1or'si-lmzlwli. Nlznlws misvliivf. All-uns to ninrry, 'D Si ALLEN LEBOVITZ lnspi1':1iiui1: 4-lzlrim-I ln-spe-1':1Tiui1: mix- Irux-li mimls. Aslrirntiunz ll. ll. GERALDINE LISTER 'iGe'1'ry is Hs-rry in Ll'T'i'l'll, Mud :xlmut Wliitv i'l1i'istn1:1s. Kiwanis in lrzuxw-l. an BILL LEE Chess Club, V. Pres. lin-x'i'x-:iIim1: x'l1ii1Q-'sv t'l1l-W Amlmirailimif ye'llxwxx'. rislxirxxlifrui Olluinf vi-rung. GEORGETTE LOCKSCHMIDT Journal Art Staff lim-u1',fv likvs ATI, liills hlllxinlizxltzxil S1'l'1'lr:1lle, Vlmvlqr zum- x-v um-l'4-rs .x,. M xi fs M ,,ii vfhi ,,i V V l?u,.xirfi 1a' - ws. 'IT-Q 'N -gf' TM 1 I. f Y fi ,. .,,,:. ,.,L ig yay M NAOMI KLOCKE 'I'l-x ' ': xx ill ln- ax xllmluLU':illll1-l', Urn-.: possibly :1 slvll1xg'i':1plivi'. Blass: aussi-mllli:-s inlprvss lmr, lll.: xx islxm-s distress liur, fin' A me Sf 1 I L x MARTHA LEE Chem. Lab. Asst, Program Chairman l ir'sI lu Vuzlxl l,lwxxl-Ilyll. lin-filsvs In :lid lllx1l'l'4-rs, Will mln- il 1'llllI'h0 in srwiqul xxurli, MARY LOUISE LOIS HLOXN1 v M1-:uns to nu-of Alzm l.:lrlll, Aims In fly zu xllzlllv. llzuxvs uvm' limb llulw. lippx-4-s nt lmlulzlys Q.. xr, ,.v ' K , f' A-:lil if 1- ADELE DOROTHY KOMOROWSKI KRUSINSKI Blondie XVe1iiw hluv. limi: wozxrs it olloo liluos: supt-i' ou ni li'omiron0. lilm-lt: out 21 Jzip somo day. :ff Q as if - N6 rr JACK LEFF -KJack', Amin! ion : to 4lt':1w l liko lotfy, lf znorltez Bob Ilopt- Yoxution: woxmm It-zwlit-rs. GLORIA ANN LOLLER Triangle--Copy Editorg Jr. Junto 4-loi'y ul tilt' li'1:1i1u'l4'. Hlnrivx in 4-lotht-N, Hlowx :about politic' liloriiios tho Irish. A. l':1i'1-s to uri. 'I'o:1i's into wportw I 5, IRENE LEVINE Picture Comm., Modern Novel Club, Sec. Treas. To writo: poetry. To xt-V4-:xinz in il quivt vlurs, To ploy: Il trumpot, ELIZABETH GRAHAM LOWE HBerty Sho mxinv: from XVhiIo Plains. N,Y.. Slim- Nuo: wiwive :li tht- l',S,H.. Sho 1-oiiqlxs-i'o4l: f':lt's:ui'w liulliv NY:ll's. GERTRUDE KURAS Gertie' ' l'oi'follalll1y: ti le-ii M illor. l :1t:1lity: S1'4'i'1-i:1i'y. tiihlniwity: l'i:1x1o ziwoiwlioil. A4 K gf... I GRACE LIBERATORE liimls wfmuiimls for llzxrry .luimw lXvw red vross fours? whilo skat- ing NYould iiko to prow tivo on Hsliow tilts. MILDRED LUBOVSKY Triangle, News Editor: Human Behavior Milly Kuowe tho Hour St-ws for aoltlivrx. IM-lights in ilniwiiig. ima' ,f . Q. -. 1 1. ' ik 3 CLAIRE KUSSART Thespian II Yankee Sviiitillaitiug in song Adopt iu flrnnizitic-s Foml of Flol'itl'x JOHN LAPP Safety Patrol limos to lull for Viral l os. N-ort-s an lint. with XYui' Iiomls. lVill pilot at butterv to Toi io C . , 'S D X, r'N 'bu g F-' Atl '-w,, t N x X Q J f f ' 4 fx ' 3 4 V x . 1 .- .. jf' mlAQlQ.Q?h LORETTA LYONS ROSALEE t iRusty1 1 MALISHAM Will pose for :u t'R0Sie waxiwfvr, Nllinlf to vook for llus model rwl lmir. S' H ls :I piwturv in from-n. Bolle :lt frtwli lioye Sizxli-N :lt liik Spot inuxiv. of- -, L, - SAMUEL LAWLER 'tNew Yorker Lover liwrvaition: drums :xml piano. K4-laixzitioni Vount liziswiv. Purrit-ipiitiorii all the sports. HYMAN MALLINGER Chess K'Bishop Will mow- with tho Navy, .lumps :nt lioxx'liu2'. I5 no rookfwi :lt iiizwlizlixii-x. WILLIAM MALONE Pete luiiioys pliotnurzxpliy. Snnps :xl loot- suits. Pivturos .Xrniy ns future-. JOHN MILLER Art, Air-raid Messenger Boo will join Ml-rvlnmt, Marines, Buzzvs about Bur- nettfs Flin-i'olcl-0, ls stung: by fellows who take- your girl. ' W .. -.vas ELIZABETH MARIANI Human Behavior Desires to lm n nurse. R04 uirl-4 hor s min- l an-h. Admin-s l'. ll. li. ff' V 1 A X t 5'!..',f' I 'life fm. 12 ..e.:,.:.-We. . ff K M9359 THERESA MARINO Chairman of Picture Coming Modern Novel ..Ten.y,, Two cle-sirt-s hns Tre: A stoxiogranpliir t'1ll'k 4'!', And :xr house with n Gable. I... ELEANOR MILLS ' 'Mil1sy iIllIiI'0hSt'4i by Svlmn- loy's hulls. lleprvsslwi hy: Hxlfvll, what, do you know Y Slipym-ssoml nrio to plny tho pizlno, . . -.f1.w -- .K , 4 iles Q. GEORGE EDWARD MINYO, III lfGemn Ki-eps girls' morale sky high. Leaps with prizes in sports, Hvnps of rod-llenils :Irv his favorites. as' BETTY JANE MARTZ t'BetS Likes oftin-if work. Low-s to draw. Longs for luxury. KW BERNARD MCPADDEN McFoo Sm-luvim-s for volloge, Drennis of tlrznhle. Ibm-111s tl-zwlivrs swell. AURELLA MOCZYDLOWSKA Swings to 11 sux, Skates swell. Sm-ks sm-urity. 34 - . 4,4 K nn I? QS. BETTY MARVEL THERE SA MASER f-Berry Becky Our lfnvoritc Nurtnrvs nursing, Blf'Udf H Is silpm-rh in spell Ilnrn-l-s t'Night and ing, IMYH- Rndinnt in rod. IROIHZUICOS, Iflntrunvos J. YY. EDNA McINNIS Chem. Lab. Asst. Reene Inspiration: Uhnrlvs Boyer. Porspirntion: nursing, Synvopntion: wultzes. FELICE MONGELLUZZO Service Club: Human Behavior, Pres. Cherie who will marry. Leaves when argu- ments bf-gin, Bulls :is :ln air hostess. M LILLIAN McKEE Class Treasurerg Human Behavoirg Girl Reserves Ravi-s nhout 'tYirg Evndes profanity Dum-d hy My Buddy. ALICE MOORE Thespiang Leaders, Pres. MAIN Author: George Eliot, Aria: NSIIIIITHPT- time, Ambition: dress clesigning. 2 gg -61 K: -- ' ' 455 5 i A , . I -' V0.2 ' f . 9' ' '-'f 1' V 1 ' .1 f l i lfe Lt. - ' ' - ' if? A fx : . ' .ff 5 IROBERT MATLACK ' 'Bohn IPi'ot't-ssinnt nu-divine, Voxation: girls, 'ovation' '50 5.3- ELIZABETH LUCALL THOMAS MATVAY MATLOCK MATTHEWS Hnaisy Benn Libby Lou, Vrafy about baseball. lnipzitii-nt. tu nurse l avm's Hlirotlier Ham, as to girlxv lT:'t'0'llS' . Hulk' Lazy about home- Dizzy at being: walled liabors to enter wmkl ylihotography. HWY: llC'3JPy d llixois srl l life ROBERT MCMILLEN' Swimming Team Yoratiou: engineer ing. Fixation: RMK, Ort-livstrat.i0n: Ate Last. JOHN MOORE Joh11ny' ' lPloasuru: model air- planes, eevv: early rising, ersonality: Huinplirey Bogart. Greedy for 5500 books, SELMA JANE MEYERS Human Behaviorg A Capella. Choir Doo-doo Aspires to help homeless, Aclmires Madam Chiang, Tires of 1-onvoited people. MARIE NASCONE lVears thi- 'int-odle' out. on Si-hubcrt's Serenade, Seams to favor Mr Roberts, Pius her future to Nl-'t'1'9I2ll'l:ll work. 'Q 2 ' '.' .' ' IUU with H0sa4'k's, Biology class. gy m JEAN MILLER Thespians Vraves sevretarizil position, Raves about Shakes- In-are, Gam-s at Greer Garson. PEARL NEWMAN lim-eps fingers flying, Over the keyboard, Makes magir' nn-lmly 'l'o vharm savapru beasts. . . , f W 1 , ' , Q.-H' L Q 3 B viii ' Qi. .55 . ,i1 MARGUERITE MAZZATTA Marge Imprm-ssl-ll by movies, Obsessed by beauti- vians life, Blessed with sewing ability. Mx.- nd K if 9 l Hi sldeiii ' , W me 'x .s:1:Q. l , :'f , :-: K ES Q? .':.:f JAMES C. MCCLAIN HJ. Cf, l'e1-recl by ,Quin popping. 1 Inipressctl by l Shakespt-art'. i lixalted by aviation. WILLIAM NICHOLS Footballg Basket- ballg Baseball Red Yellow hair, Blue eyes, lied Skelton. 5559 WILLIAM N 0 RVELL Basketballg Bandg Swimming Dill Delights in drama. Toots a truxnpot, Spevialixvs in sports. a FRED OBLEY Combined Thespians, Pres.g Current Events Butch lVeight: no match for Joe Louis. Age: 1-an't 1-veil get a tfup ot' vut't'1-P. l'i'runinent S4-ars: one fave. u 1 all -we -7 . .. wh ,,M wi, JOHN O ' CONNELL Modern Novel Club, Pres. lavw-X lo laugh, IM-volvs rlays I0 mlm- fm-uso, Fillgrvls to Hy fi lfortrvss. WINIFRED OEHLING Smal1fry S11-ws about Yisitinf tho XVQM. lioils al rorner wliistlr-Hrs, liurns for a dcfonsn- job. X 'f V 'S A UQ.. PHYLLIS OESTERLING Safety Patrol Class Play Hphyl, , Blonde beauty hlitzes hoys, Oddities and YI4'M.X her weakm-sm-S, Raves about Iioonvy and Rhine-hart. GENEVIEVE ALFONSE JOSEPH RANALLI RANALLO RANCATORE Stampocl as the Foe aims to Monte Ylaiollvy, lu' 'illady in Red, Rival: Admiral 'Hu t reslstv 'l'H,,,d as mimi,-nr uf llowvy. SUDlllStlf'illPfl girls, I . ID. IL, Autagonizoz Hitlvr, ho deslxls- M,,,1nh,,1 H, brief Musso. and 'I'ojo, 0.11 green, ho dm-s form ot' her sox, Oppose: Lfllllsi vos 'Umat- 4- uivtirs f'orex'v1'. ur -M5 SYLVIA ORZECHOWSKI Band Dolly Touts on a trumgwt Harps about lu-nc-fits for Bond llallis-S. Sax slam-ks. FRANK PIWOWARSKI Swimming Team Sinks all ,iitlorlmsf Dives into Yon I.nrkner's story. 'l'x'0acls ummplorwl paths. GARDENIA REED HGigi,, Case History: long: desire to bo nursv. 1l0IIlD6'!'lli,lll'UZ risvs all 'l'rl1aikowsky, Present Voilmlitioii: raptivatml by Mr. Rupert. ' lm J f 5, QL gn Li' sf tw JOHN O' TOOLE Swimming Team Pecks'l Busliuls ol' wrap collw-tm-rl. Pounds tahlv for Irish slow, Tons ol' ambition for Marinos, MARY ESTHER OWEN French Club t'Butch Stimulation: A'SlEll'IillSl, ', Ag'ggravalion: roiu-1-its-cl people Aspiration: coll9gP. HENRIETTA PODGORSKI A 'Henry' ' Plationi p--:im-l'i1l family lil'v. Yr-xation: 1-olml u'v:iIlirI'. DAVID POMERANTZ Safety Patrol: Base ballg Basketball Dave 1 w. l'ravos to pit:-h with P11 xtx Admiratiou: Frank liravus Miss Sample Sinatra, EUGENE REESE f'Augie Says saxapliom-x are swell, Endeavors to bv an eligimwr. Be-:uns about hrown and lgllvililll. llavos ahout, I.ou li uhrig. PAUL RE IFMAN Peize Bats high in lxasv- ball, Flies out at the bell, Kirks a hout. home- work. as , Q S, an is Q f fair . V, Tis.. L . ju, 'BS- it M 3 ' . 4. f i . li' - 5, ,1,Qf,Q, L ,'k, EMILY PANZA ..Emmy, 1 Soft! on Ski-limi. sou' vm-iiirs und suv. 1'ostw:u' plains: plod- imy this plum-1. isni :xml leisure ul il ggwfritlmiizin. :v ff im-wi i,:i ANITA PONDEXTER Human Behavior ' 'Jimmie A: hilly of li-isurv li: foggged :lhuul XY. H.. UN: zi cloths-N dv- siggniug futurm-. JANET RICHEY Chem. Lab. Asst. V. Pres. Thespian II ' 'Ja,ucy Faiiirii-s voiiiiiin-iwixil :url 4':ii'i-or, Like-s to look :xt Mzull-line f':xi'i'ull, llvi' llvaxrt livlmius to liiimldyf' -.'f' Arial 11 ,ioli ut ,1oi1i'ii:il- MARY PANZERA ' 'Panzy' ' limi- 1 To ihv R1-il Uruss c-ziiisv. Mzlkvst :I Willy ol' xx lmiiaimi split, lk-sixw-si ax daisy ol 11 lllllslvzii L':ll't'l'l' THRESSA PARCO Mixed Chorus IIIQ Human Behavior HPen11y Sain-41: hriiius fm- lvllsimlss c'0ll0:L'l'. Pvmiy: puts hm' diimis into ch-fi-iisi liurm-el: reputulimi for rhythm. W BEATRICE PARRY Shorty Assm-izutiuiiz .Tenn Yzlrlivls, Yowzliimlf Vivorlil trnvvlm-r. Appiw-4-ialtioii: Svlivii ley's pep raillivs. 'i11s,i..iWs H' ig, MQ 33 13 2 J , iii is ? , . 24 Q VY 3 4 E? fail . WILLIAM PARRY Student Board 'l'uriivi' Iuriis his hi-nil, llmilvwurk hzlnipifrs him, Buslni-ss xxill km-ii him busy. ANNA PERSIC Service Club f'0lItiL'lllIlS 4-liquvs Vrwlln-vis rings Ciiiiilriixws musiv gd? I1 - . il om, el -N J f X I Ill! .li .I , ' I 'V JOHN PRICE JAMES PUGH Johnny HRa.zor Aspiriition: 'Fliinks lizum '.i'llI'lH'I' 'll.0:iIliei'1ium'lcs.' slinrp. Yvxutimi: ' Puts an rug, Vldil fhflmlllf- Hus hull niziuy ax liispirzilimiz l ui' vlnsl- sliaxvo, x Mo and My Hail. -y RUSSELL RICHEY Chorus 'KRuss lhiwirizitiririz lhnizilrl lim-zlrfziil. Yiwulimlt girls xxhx r'i'zu'lc guna, lil-sliimlirm: 'I'1':i4lv Svllimi. b NORMA RICOTTI Human Behavior ' ANorm' ' Stri--Ily iiislriiixii-iv Izil. 'lla n1:ii'ry il lmml lvzuli-i', 'l':ilu-s nolus in sliiwtllziml. BL avi, if g zff is ' i AGNES ROBINSON -ul-ip, 1 Plvnsliiw-2 dum-iiipr. ll:-4-Vv: people who pop Ellili. l'i-rsmmlityz hi-1' ln'ollii'l'. LOUISE ROGERS 'KGinger Hupvs 10 he il s4-i'l'0- .Iill'j'. llzis lilintw willow! mix. llzulm-s igiiiii-1-1-114-laws. 1 Q . 'V 'WW F ' ii., JAMES ROLL Asiiirzilimxz lmsim-ss vrmllL'LEr', Aclmwltimi: vlzirini-l, .imlniirzllimii Milo. l,m'l':iim'. Service Club K... EMELIA ROSSI Millie l'IllTIxmlll l5 'll llzlvvx :llmut Yzlviull A , Pinvs for Poe Favors lurrnll lflvnu , , , ,' no-lux IU IW I ' Slugrs wltlx Snmtrax. AMllrim,- 'X liinlw fm' Begin ilu 151--fllim' 3' VLADIMIR SLOMBERG . .Law , l,!livs Svln-nlvx w lovely lvzxvln-1'w. ,Hts ax 4-11 1-:nplauln of gym I4-an Ill l7!'v:1nls uf tvs llllTOHllllJlll'N, ting -'W y fill yi-li' zz CLARA SMITH l':wl: :xrtl-mlml ll4r111ewl4':1xl Ilurlx. l'1'vN4-xut: ix wild :alumni 1 lurk Lvzllylv. l llllll'A'I will lrevulm ll Iv:u'l1n-l'. ' fi ? 453 V W ir ,it f- .mS:w.g iiff .iifiiiifi i RHEDA RUBIN l4Rhen Musiv: soft, :xml nwllnw, I'4-1-vm-'C :1 primpiug: ll-llmv, Vulfvri il prwiollx pink. ELVA SMITH Smithy Valli for xkzltinr. liliflvs over pizulm laws, 'l'xx irls to AllSNIYlll'l Xvillll. lll ef . ,,,,!,. . ...,, ..m. '51 YH X 7.34 if . fr 4 L -N1 JOSEPHINE RUTKOWSKI BERNADETTE RYAN ' 'Bonnie' ' 15:3 3 45 415 wg , ARLENE SABLE Thespian III, Secy.-Treas. ll'-Ton lrevl vu: lull lull wvallllvr l,lf'ilYlll'1'f sports. llilllllll- Pvvw-I 1-mn-1-iTt'fl ll Wll'xd S lmyr. X ' 3 , . In llvr lm-rum-llllyi il crlr- ' , min M,l,1gl.I.-H l':1ul llllllffllil nmlu-N lwr we-iling zum. Flving: is lim' llwwli- HRH HVQT S Relzlxzxlirm: Hull llruw-' Yi-XzlIim1: rl-zulillgg lmul4ln-r Ilotc-rminaxtiun: lllll'Sll1g .., z,,- Ei, 4 5- 7 V, A ..,,. J I L, . FREDDA ANTHONY IDAMAE SCOTT SCHWEITZER SCORDIALOS ..H0ney,, Triangle. Junior 'l'4-zulu-1-1 IF. N pmrl Hmk Junta, Gift Comm. 1 Mr. 3I4'lAUl'lIllA'li, fam l !'+11l4l:xK Srln'11lvy'N l 'x ll'l J3 Ye-ry: ixxI1-lwwtm-rl in n'l'n-mliim-. llnrry .lnnl-is nllrxixxgr. Vlvu-I' :lm :nn vtlilmg l'lluqu1-111 :ns :ln 11r:xlm'g i'l1:xrmin: :mil 4liQ- axrming. l 1-zxiurvz truxnlwt. SWPM. g'1'i4l. on hvln nlm x S GERALDINE ALLEN SMOOKE SMITH Chem. Lab. Asst. lqerry-1 UAV, llvlivvl-N llllxe' lnllws- ,lmlliliuu In lu' an ful. 4lm'lm', llvligrlltw in elrvzxmy flzullvimx. lvillllh ilu- war won., Ae-AI lm' ll.A. Wil llama' lmuks. Aflmirzxiiun for ,lum- l,l't'lNM'T'. ADELINE SNYDER A Cappella, Choir Addie l'vvX'v1l ln 1-um-4'ltK'll pvuplv. lil-liovwl by llzxrry James. liolievuml to M- il :mml simrn-r, Milli s4ff'f ..' i N5 iv! nn if z le . nf dv' in , N, J... f gn 1 5. V .I ' gui: 4 :Sa 3 ff' 'ff'f'?f ik' 60 rfff' 1 .z:...: I ' B98 - . A5291 ::::::.: JO SEPHINE SACCONE Jetta Band Chem. Lab. Asst., Professimi: iuusiv. Yi-Nation: lute straw-t on rs, Relaxation: listciiing to Goodman. ELEAN OR SA RN O W S KI A 1 Elie i f To join thi- XVAYl'ls, this girl will skip? Hoi- Ax the Axis is im quill! Sho wants to thwart thi- paper hunger, So yo heave-lin! Lvt-is up the anchor. JOSEPHINE GEORGE SHIELDS SEKOWSKA t'Specks likes lied will be :I lxhotographv tele-phono operiitrir, IN ,nmol A ' XVhit9 lllll'lSlTI1RlSm bfi' f' AIM is her fnvnritv, Q' 1 em 'N' Blume 'caiusu she Ixuuvgev Villlilf lu: Zl WAAV. Sumplionos. EDWARD PATRICK SPANO SPANGLER V. Pres., June '43 'AIA-fty li livziilwl --PMN Hkw the right for the- Envy. Thiliks lipslivli all wrmig. ' ll in .fi Anil Nlllllilllll. alivlc. girls. Atlmires H. Milli-r. 'lilll'llh to thc Ariny. ELAINE SARRAF MEN A sl-wetzxry to B. H1-ll is hor' Q, A vermin xhtfll if rurpornl I QV, 'gbf 'hr SAMUEL SHUSSETT Thespian III ' 'Flash' ' Sold on smfiuls, During in Sm-01's at llI'2ll1lZ'llll'h Snobs. s i i EDWARD SAUNDERS Social Comm., Property Manager Shiins girls with had niuuners. llupm-5 to gn to s-nl' ls-gre, Skates and swims in spare time. ,fi A- , ri f ,RM 'qs 'M fl it ff fo,--,1-b5?f.i,.,f,.,-,,ffziwst :I 1 , W. ...,,. L, THEODORA SCHACHTER Toby 'I'vnniw: hor wport, To not: il million. llor 1'aif'qi1vt: dress tlwigningr, l.m'i-xi Bob Hope. MARIAN STAR THEODORA AARON STEIN Starlight STARLING .lauruii thinks drums In ,Fuel CNW? Baby Starlillgl' iii thv :ll'4mVt'. 1,1-ight. A Thrills to sohliurs, lldhiltll like to lm-xt Un twinkliiig: foot A lfliittr-rs :shout ni-w :Juggling girls, right, vlutlivs, li-4-:nts time- by wait!- XX'ill huiltl il nest 'mf' Nllllll. V. Nada w, f. ' h.. .why 1 ,, Q 5-iffijsgr ' ofa I , .. ' V '9'z!f'1,,' Nfl 4 ffl? 'R f 'xf fr . ...E . . QE 4 no ii U I 4 ' www .v'Q',f.'L. , . fe 4 f i '-A7 I R 3 1 it V u 'vw' '14 Q 4' lv ' I Z' if it S31 v 11. sw? Mr., AW .M JW N JW Wif i 7 DORIS SCHULZ uDeen Ili-nrt-id liurrios hi-r livurt heat. Pnrtiailities :ire pou- nuts, pinim, Hen- ri-iclg iuuwiv. IllOYlt'S. lli-xxreid. THEODORE STEPIEN Football, 41, '-125 Basketball, '42, '43 Student Board, Pres. ALSlt'lP.,i our zlllllvtv. 1.4-:ilu fm' ni 1-mxvliiiiel i'Ill'4'Ul'. Skips :lt Iht' trills of :1 vlziriiit-t, A : , , .-. f we f 5 M X Ax Z is :Q f-5 , i V-.1-2 ,0w ,, 0 Q 5 u, Q .. S i z, .1 Ex V ,MJT , 48 I by W R Q f - 4552: fi ANNA MAE SYDNEY STYLES EDITH SUSSER ANGELINE SUZIO STEWART f Asia, 1 . .Honey , HAnge1, y Kqeepn lizxlmlrmf IlllIll2l1l11'C lfyes: lmmxlm splitw. lf thrilled lay .lulm lie-vpx buying lmmle. pluxws l-1:11-,Z 1401, HOW, lmyluv, lmualllxl In rletl-nw of l'i4it111'es fell' in :ln NWN hm. Nmt-f lx vluillenl lly wily lxxplmpf. ullive. ' gfirlw. Kemps praise ns Mzxy be :1 mulls-l ls akillvd in Iypw- stonu, pilnl, xxriling, , 1 we .. le fm, ia- A 1 .Q ji-Yu l 'f, WALTER TENGOWSKI Baseball, '42 XY:xll xtriluw up mu' for 11 llllnlpvt. XYlxil1- nilflxtxxrurli llitx fm' :md will:-. DAVID TRUNICK BESSIE TSOURIS WILLIAM MARY URSO A Cappella Choir Safety Patrol, UH?-'MANN Shorty'l D.T. Leaders' Club KB111 1'rzxx'vs 1r:1x'vlix1g'. llulw skating: tnpw Bebe Bflff' lllmut thu Sznvvs YVQU' Slnmpf. .Ximx fm' AN115. l'4-rxmmlilyi Iwi 'ini' I Al' XX':1ix'1-X v:11'1-vu' fm' yl.1,,,.N xlzwkx ml l'uul llvlulwlnl 'IW' '5 NU' 0' W.XX'l'fS. Kirby I,m,H,: high hwlg Lllim our lunvlm lixvlsninux illI0ll1 llm' Sliwks- ,HWHL , , Syn-rum-1' 'l'rzu'y. I,Il5llIlli'I vnllm-vlixxu Lwkx WM' hl1 l' lmxvlty pine Pau-ll xx vm-lc. 4- , ,. , pw, 'TR .. S. -LLLI :jx 'mv-1 r . RICHARD SWIERCZEWSKI ' 'Dick' ' lim-:1fl5: fm' zmytllinr. Aim: fm' l,eu1lu-1 llt'l'lis, l'irv: :xl In-mXi11e lrllmllx, A LEONA THOMPSON lllleew XYill ln' zulrxl- Blalrum .Xmlvrwu 111111-lcmlx lu-r pulw. Nlmleliu: quivrs hm' llL'l'YL'S. JEAN VANIELS ' 'Bloudief' livalrnx xxxllx H.I',, Nvvlrh In ln'vl't'l' X im, mn. MARY JEAN SZALINSKA Sl1z1II!' will Inlu up mlrxiuf, lx lmvvvvll ln' vnu alum 211111-vl14-xxmlx Illlpnw-ssvnl by um fuotlmll team. ,r 09' 'DVS x f 'R A ., ' VIRGINIA THRASHER Virgee 'l'l11':1xl11'x Il11'u1l:1'l1 lllv. lieullx runny lu-:lvl Spzulvw up ull lmugil--xx :login-. THOMAS VAS ILARO S Stunt Day Comm. Allllmr: NVm. K4-11 Rf lilnvk Xl:l:'i4'. liw'l'Q':llim13 lfmlin Alvxxue lu ,ifliu ilu- llunln: Alu--lv. Wrnm-:lk Nlaurim- YM1. lmH,l K'm'ps, ' ' ' Dil! . , , 'wk A B ' A7 'L Q . fl ,M f ' A ll? gl Q x yn 39 . Q' A, 'Q Sa RUTH SZRAMOWSKA Shrany linvicfs llr:1lnl4 S figurv, Cuts ax grrxml figxxro Un skates. FlgIlll'llS lu-1' dxul is sxxoll. A , 5 1' ',,, , ' - N in LOIS TIEDEMAN A privzxtfx sox- 'llmllyn xx'ill ln-. Herby Kmxnex' fxlilw her to 11 T. lVitlx Mr. .lulxn Payne- fl1e'xl luvv a flute. But to gIlllN'l'l':ll'lilllf folks she gixw-s thx- gate. RUTH VDOVIN Iiczxdingx is HllIlllQ-'lxll my, Ivsos spurt- vlxnxxggv tu buy wtamxpx. 'ffxyxxptwl lrx' Nlllllllll'f. H2lF!'lL'Il lay 1-mxvx-in-ml buys. if 'KZ' REGINA SZURSZEWSKI Reggie llulc-S ngzxinst rxxmrvrs. Qxu-vu nt' atc-nog' ruplzy. lxl-:all in lplxxv. 'Vw' GERTRUDE TRADER 4-Gertyx Ym-x:xtirx11 : lxumx-xx rn-k on XVl't'l-i'1'll4lN. l :1sn'i1mtimxZ lliIl'l'j' ,lxxlmw l'x-4xt'1-fsirxn: lll2ll'l'l'l l 'SWF YOLANDA TAMBURI ' 'Londaf' 'l'0ur'lxing tempts he-r. 'frxlmyet thrills hs-x'. Stunt llilf' Sntisfios her. PINDLEY TRUMPOWER Trump llaxs tlmugrhts nf tmxwl. liillx for Lowell Vllllfllllllh. Paxsws up dam-i1xp:. Ilezxlf in art, illlll wports. MARY ALICE MARGARET VERBANAC VOLOVIC 'l'nmlix- ix :xn Aix 'tMargie lluill XY:u'4l4-lx. AMN for flml Suu-Q l'x-x'm'1ls for faux Sluvks' l,,,lmMl l . . rllllfllw tfxxxwxrll Turlr NX I-Il manly zx nxxllxmx- hull-N Mmkm ZlIl'4'. 43 Sings und swims, mu' 4. V4 ff l x if E W ,W f jk 'W ff I ,A I a, l w ll .4- may v i RUBY TAPER Thespians III, Victory Corps P1151 ltum-sl: bk lt mg. mlnrxwnxpg. irxgr. lmxxlf l'rx-sa-nt: :l luuxfr nt' lllzxr Stnnxps. l'llllll!'0I I xx ill tiwklrx typm'xxl'll01' livxw ANN VUK l'nvx't stuml ul: xx mxlllsfly m my 1-xxmw :x llillltl tn N ll Y 'Q inxm-llx-rf, Ill-X :l'l':l1lrl --Svlmm l fllxly. , V K gif Jeifb' A tif' f' N plf VIVTAN HENRY TEMPLIN TEMPLETON Hull: lxls t':xx'ul'l1L' Ynlllnlrlc- sc,-vrvtzxry Nport. l '- Moll: Vrisvillzx llzmv. l'5 'l 5 l l0l'9SlS- lfzxlls: for :x trum- Yitulilx' fm' cl:xm'ing:. petk tmxx-5, 'EN 11 vxs. x f r'r is x 2 . SL 1- -- ulnwll Q Q fa ' 1 J ROSELLA WADKINS Pitts l'l:uxN: tn UIITPI' Ilr1xx':11'1l ll.. l'l4-nwx1l'x'3 trr rezlfl. l'xfl-x'v: tw lm tvzlsx-ll. ' -if i X , ll ll,l N 16,34 'F ,, M W -1 fi vs I'- V P V JOHN WALSH Football: Basketball Capt. 'KBiggie liuin: fmxllmll :xxxxl lmflcvxlutll. l't'Il2lll!l'NI Sirlx xxlm wlxmkv. Kin-lu: tmxxxuxwl Nzxvx gmll. , 4' wa.--. JOHN WALTERS Student Board, Safety Patrol, Capt. Banker, Historical Society, Pres. ' 'Johnnie lmiivvs Night :ind lmyf, lilzimw-s :tt H32 oy:-s ot' blue. i'iIll!'itllt't'S J. NV. I SAMUEL WANETIK A vivztwiotis laid with 4-yvs of hluit. lit-firvs to wish .tll l1ollloxx'ot'k ntlivu. NX'hil1- Abbott :tml Vostt-llo he'd printf pursue. Wei , i Qui tv 3 , . I AUDREY YOUNG Human Behavior Dixie Bobo Knotts musit- :intl howling, lit-:tux must- he wvztllliy, JOHN YUHASCHEK Gym Team l'Whitie Hum-s towztrd Al 2ll'Ill0S. Iluist-w good modvl ,Q ws LILLIAN WANGER Journal, Modern Novel, Thespian III At -'l'rig shtfs no prix, H I I ln Latin sho s sittin tsmoothj. But don'tv start your l'uniin', For 'spite :ill shi-'S huniztn. JOHN BOSSICK MBOU Aspires to :ttlvncl t'oll0g'J0 Atlniirmfs Mr, l'ull1-n Tires ffl of xxonwn. WILLIAM S. MORGAN Track Hilly lit-ity. llaxtm puh- XVill :Io forth to st-ru-. Yozirns for his otxn hoine. VIRGINIA ZABOROWSKI Ginny War Stamps. Airplnnes Ifztrzuxztv plum-s Strauss VVultzt-s. EVELYN WASKO HBV., XVork: t'lori1'z1l. Interests: uiiivt-iwatl, IM,-lights: musivztl, RUTH BROOKS 'l'o Ilatntwi Throug'l1 life Anfl to :ttlinirv Joe Louis! Professional rlxtut-in: tempts ht-r SONIC deny sho will mukf' Broztrlwnv, ROSIE MAE JACKSON The Kidl' l,'olli'1'ts snnpsliots of vlztssilizttt-x. Protests :uruinst 'im ing mulls-il Milly , Selevts song :mtl tlum-el :ti-ti :ts profession. MARY OCH Human Behavior Pines for :tu zxvizttion vaxreer. Spruwes up xxith blue, Palms tlowil vtilvtl pt-oplv. on volt- DOROTHY ZIELINSKI t.D0t,f Yvztrns to siuff N Spurns voiwvitt-tl people. 'l'u rns to profossioti Vlotlivs should he l'h 'S' :tl niodvlimr, lvt':tl1iil't1l, l'r:t ist-s St'ilC'1llPYi s pool. if k,k . aug ' it '-.,.', 5 ' ' 9 J I Q 7 it Y X a - h .... .AM I .tm F' A ...ff EDWARD WAUGH Whizzer Ice'-Skelton in tht- wintor, Springs with thought for lmnzt 'l'urnor, Falls for Svlit-nlt-y's lunch room. GEORGE FRANKLIN lie-V no'or se-on without his sntt-lim-l, His vovnhulzxry :two t'otigrt'2Izltlons, Proztvlios ngzninst. presont claxy vvils, Partial to hymns. HARRY KODISCH Swimming '-11, '42, '43, Gym Cookie Vrovks: th-signs ot' iLff'I'llIlH'S futzxlt-s. Crumbs: Axis with Bontl lPllY't'll2lN4'S, Cutter: up in snappy Qlothox. AIRA PARKS Parks Hilfkif to Ully Devotion. Sparks: fly nt morn in: :tsst-nililios. Murks: tloxxn an ln-:tu tin'i:ui's l'Ill'L'l'l', FLORENCE ZIELINSKI Peaches Ile-stinntion: NYAAl s, Adxnirntion: Ci lviln N illor, llesperzttionz iiusliing: tlishvs, LJ-r Ri Q, 'S?ix.f' DOROTHY WEBB Dot Selevts Red Skelton Collovts inaxtvh vovvrs Flat-ts Sl'l'fl'iil1'lill cart-Or. WILLIAM FRICKE Bill Looks for rum-hinist ,ioh Longs to tratvt-1 Likvs tht- piano, JOSEPH E. KUNKLE Football 'KJokie' ' NYorkout: on SHS Olovvn. 'l'ouc'htiown: xx ith Bonds, Field soul: ztgzxinst, Axis. THOMAS PIERSON HT. P. Blows out on tho trumpet. As't'oinp:tnivx lf. ll. frvqliontly. Attunn-fl to history. RICHARD ZIELINSKI Student Board, V. Pres. Dick 'KPit'ks Air l m't'e, Lis-ks NYM' Stamps, Kirks about llury. 4 1 ENVI, W ' EDNA WELLONS ' 'Dimples' ' Strives to attend Pitt, Tries to buy stamps each week, Drives fresh boys away. MILTON FRIEDMAN Pool impresses him Money obsesses him Swing depresses him. PAUL GREGORY MALACANE Stumpy Goes to bat for baseball, Stops short- at mysteries, Strikes a spark in Spanish. GERTRUDE SCHRAM 1 .Betty , Telephone operator, Signals for lied Skelton, Contacts all jam sessions. DONALD SMITH Smittv VVill go to welding school. Burns for a chance at Hitler, Flares at talkative girls. CHESTER ZUKOWSKI Cheerleader cnet Acclamation: every- thing about Schen- ley, Yocalization: Sun- rise Serenade, Determination: to return to a farm. BEATRICE WILBURN iiBea'H Likes dancing, .Toe Louis. and the tune of White Christ- mas. EILEEN HASPER Likes men tea:-hers, Longs to travel, Loves musiv. THOMAS MCFARLAND Mickey Treasures his violin, Often dreams of music career, May some day lead a symphony. HARRY SCOTT Socks fickle girls, Boxes as a hobby, Locks Army in heart as future. ANDREW SUBSARO Baseball Suby will join Navy, Sails into sports, Vliill embark for many lands. zi.'Eifki:LXi?GAH x . EDWIN WILSON 4 KI-me, y YVears blue, Appears to like Shakespeare, Reports yen for sports. HELEN IGNATOFF Rush Saves: VVar Stamps Graves: a wealthy man, f'YVaves : her destination. CONCETTA MANGANO ' 'Connie' ' Is an admirer of Ronald Reagan, VVas an avid radio fan, YVill be a perfect secretary. AGNES SEAMAN Profession: war industry, Vocation: stage appearance, Vexation: bragging boys. THELMA ULANOFIE' Tootsie Sweet as f'6Hl2Oti, Satisfied by selling, Salutes those in service. MARION WILSON ' 'Mar' '+kittenish, Little bows, Big smile. RICHARD IMHOFF Julio Dreams of planes, Marines, his goal, Screams at Hzoot suits . J UANITA MITCHELL Skeetsga devotee to Mark Twain, Matrimony, A million dollars. BETTY SCHICK Bets Sets nursing as a goal. Gets 'too cold on snowy days. KATHERINE WILLIAMS Kitchie Fascination: social work, Uaptivation: piano music, Stimulation: blue. ELEANOR zUs1NAs Journal, Editor-i11- chief, Leaders, Club, Class Play Thespian II One little maid from school is she Pert as a schoolfgirl well can be Filled to the brim with girlish glee Most versatile maid at Schenley 5 Nazigzgzs .ay K I ,af t .- MARGARET WOLF Human Behavior, Service Club -lpeggyyy Diversions: blue, bowling, Begin the Beguine and Buck. Aversions: heaps of homework. PAULINE YALCH Polly has eyes of blue, ls ravishing in red Likes YVhite Christmas. -. Miki t Qi 2 wi s . . . as-. egg' HATTIE WYATT Hats Brims over with French, idioms. Crowns Alcott best writer, Pins ribbon on social service. SYLVIA ZUPANCIC Vexation: noise in noon movies, Aspiration: defense work, Laudation: Pre-sidcnt. Roosevelt. HERMAN RUMPH Football, Basketball Best in basketball, Sold on a sax, Keen about college RUTH ALI Ruthie Iivautic-ian with ga iw CELIA ARMSTEAD Peevixli on-r gum vhc-wars. I'z-i'nianm-iit mania for Plc-asant. nvvr lirmito Ilarry Jamvs, Imtiuns of luve for friends. GERALD HOLTZ Jerry Ilan:-vs tn llorsm-ly, Shirlcs wliaviim, l'alutix'att-d hy Vapp. 1' JAMES BAILEY l .hmm Snaps Miss Townlvy Q4 if Q' . f. 'fw- s r N A 5 , 'N Y, at MARION BALL Cutie Ilnpvs tu gn tn L, fb. .qw ' Z .x--- H ' 5: 'EQ' t -. , , A . X 13.1.3 J? 'J' 1522 PAULINE BLACK FRANK Possum like-s BOROWSKI Serenade in French Club' Blue, 'y Secretary Dogs Red Skoltmi's footsteps. Bears a grudgro against self-tiattvry. Cats get her goat! 'Ei 7,1-M-1-xx 1 51 INEZ HAMMETT Net SEIYQN wal' wtainpw. Raves about .lavk Bonny. Vraves 1-ullm-:Q-. NORMAN KRELL Norm Saves money for War Stamps. Raves about his fu- ture--tlio Army. Shaves evr-ryrlay lint as favorite. Brazil, hooks, Ne-grativo towards Mum-s almut. boys, ptlrS,,,mh1,. in dum., draft dodgers, liaiiggiiiggmi girls. ing. Pivtures photography .Toki-s about lirxlx as future. llupc. 4: 1 N . WILFRED 4 GOLDBLUM NVl1iIy'x im- pi'va:w4l by S.ll.S.'s Ntag: lunlh TOUIH. I.ullalxy of thx' A Rain. and vxplor I ing. Q- M LORETTA MARY KINDLER ARNOLD KRELL JOHNSON K'Red Triangle if U Teddy llanr-as and dates l'it.t.'x his dl4iill1lA Sings iiitn-S11-vvii daily, tion. Nm S h 'iS' lfavrn-s Pullmi and lrnitatvs llalliliurtnn, Skatl-s with xkill, Buyer, Thinks truymmvs 'Triuniplis with tht- Buys lirmndx for dress 0.K., l UmI 1 fhuv- 'Papa ist-up Ilavii vs. i..g. . kg ri-1-'Wiki with admiration. reluctantly. l rank4-y. up in th4- air about VVes't Point. Flying: high in l4'i'vm'h vlass V1-ilingg Zero an U and S i'L'1mi'ts THOMAS HARBAUGH Twin will find ad- u-nturo .VM aiiotlivr llalli- llurtmi. In a Supl-r Market storm- line XYill lu' found a- working. EARLE LAFEAN Junior Aero Club, Pres. l'lanC4-js tn ho a ra- dini man in the N, A. V, Pilntx :i t'm1rfwhPel9d lit-tsy llis targvt f Svhvn- lm-y's lllunds-s 'kd' ,. -LK . . V - .. V 1 . ,fm bi 5. hw as fn fm mfr . . M 1 1,1 1 M .1-5' .gr --,'L f K - SYLVIA HAROLD CHOSKY ALVIN CLARK CAENEVALE Chem. Lab. Asst. Stooge 5 S111 I A l'11-:1s111'1-: l'1'il1l11lL'f K115' liyn-1' -H1i:1y 1111191 1 1'l'i 1119111 1'1-1w'1'Z 1111111119 w1111 Niulll 1.i1'1- l'lLl11l 11:11es 111'111 lll1'I1l1'S, 1-1111y 11111111-xx111'1c 1il'1- 1'1':111ls 111111111 11. Xlill- l'1-1's111111li1y: 151111 1i1111ki11g' f 111111111115 cr. 1111111- 11s :1 1'111111'1' adv' QW' WILLIA.M HENNING Band, Orchestra, Safety Patrol, Chem. Lab. Asst. XV111f 111'111's wi111 YVi11i11111 1.. S11i1'1-1'. dogs 151111 1l11p11's SUMMER 2.2 HARRIETT HOFFMAN Thespians II Harry 1111111115 11111' vue for 1111f f11111r1'. 111-1111s 111e 1'11r111i11 1111 f11111st1-ps,11w11w:1ysb 1':1111'y 111011, seen in l11'11w11. will 'l'11i11ks Monte VV001- pussy-f11111 11 111 1-ol' lvy :1 gm-'alt star. logv. il g:rP1111 star. MILDRED JOSEPH MARION LAWLER 11L0ver11 f1f'1Q1 i'x1'lb' ' l'hf! r lmvvs Harry .11lY11CS, 'I ' RIIV ' ,l 1 ll ' 1 ' 1 'l'11 be 111v11d by 11111111 1 fuvts S111 f 111 1'1-1111 tiful girlscfj 1 1:ilL'11t'1 1911-111 , ' 1 , . 111111111 11111-1 11 new hfwx Qt 1 'll H 1'11111'111'1i11111 1111111112 l111' s111'1:11 11111-li. ,aww .. w r . 5 X CURTIS HOLMES ' ' Jllggie' 1 11211121114 :11 A11111111 211111 1'11s11f1l11. 1'11x11'1l11. 1111111'1'ss1-11 113' S1'111l11f l1'y's girls, NY:1111s 'L1111:11'1: 1111 1-:11'111. SYLVIA MAURO ' ' Sill' ' 11l1il'S 111:1111111rs 111211 1111-asv. Chills XY1l1'll 11-118011, '1'111'i11s 111 1l111'1'y .1:11111-S. an Qi 1 l 11 11 V 8 41 .,. 1 '1'l'F11i.. . .... 1 X11 WARREN COVENIA Warren 11111-hes 11111111-w111'lc. XYis1111s 111 111' 11 11111- 1'11i111s1. 1 is111-s 10 1111ss 1111- 111110. fx DOROTHY DELAC 'HI1-1-11 iw 111 11':1Y1-1 11111 Q11-1-11, 1111s 111-1-11 1111111'1m1 111 51 :1 1-1111-s. lx 11111-pfsizl-, 5'2 SCHOOL JAMES MCCAUL Orchestra., Safety Pa-trol Irish Hoes for 11vi:1ti1111, Vlnsses 11111111-w111'lc wi111 .1a1ps. 101114. l'z011l1x l'4'111'1111-11' 11 ALTHEA MITCHELL Girl Reserves AV ' is 1-v1-1'y11110's 11:11 111-11 is 111'1' y1-11 Q11i1'1i1-11s 111 1'1'1111 11111111-11s ,A . '1- , . F ry Mk . . 35 we ,, 1. I vqqggw li 1 ., .f llg, iv . .J , g. JANE EBKEN 11Eppie11 Y111':1111111 -51-11111: 111s1111'11111111-r -111111 1111111- As11i1':11i1111- -1111-11'111s STANLEY NEFOPULAS M511-11 -f 111i1111s s1111'ks 111-M-1'v1' 1 11911211152 1911111111111 :iw-S 111111 1 kivlc, 51:11'i1111 l'111'11s is 111s g11:1l. Y , W 'S N --'Ne' I K gf ,V .x m - , ,1 F 1 9 - Q.: y, . I : it V ,. f la l l ' A V ' Q1ff.il'ffQ K K Q 't ,1, it I VIVIAN NIXON ANNA ONDIK JOSEPH O'TOOLE ftveei. rtMimiH HJ-oem Vast: sam: with Paul lm-ilu 7 she is ntrtl Kivks about girls' llulwsmi Ht,5V,,l,i A fm. Tum, niakv-up. Pri-wut: vuriks and my Horsey! St-ores a t0uf'li1l0u'n var:-s for the siek I.'H,fn A honor than with clarinet play- l'lllIlll'1'I wants a sue- 1-:-ssful Ill2ll'1'lil,E.'k'. THOMAS SHELBY Sw'imming, Gym Team 1,110-I' dancing g:i'l1'x'1's, Saxnphoncs tease, Navy will seize. , 3,5-fu . we-M SEQ utht-r stenugsf ing, final is Navy. SUMMER -Mir- 4, In 8 u . 1 ! ALICE STOKES Third Prize for Negro Essay Contest UBOOH Yu4'atiun - speaking I'rot'ession -- con- vert, singrer P4-rsrmality - Mari' an Amlersrm ,dsx 1 Nqr: 2 A' at f MARY ANN TABACJAR ' 'Mala' ' ll:-r red Cflxlomlj rises at roriveitvtl people ller favorite vulorf blue. A white werltling' -- ht-r future. f P '- w , 1 IRENE PEARLMAN Human Behavior 'tRen.ie The radio -- het' fa' vorite line. The rnninivrvial nt-ltl ther goal NYonlcl gladly spun- sor Skelton. 5 , . ' ' HELEN PEARLSTEIN Human Behavior Pearli1: . , . bowl for pleasure Hopes fm' vivtory NYilI take up aero- nautics SCHOOL IRWIN BANKS Buddy' ' I :1v'nrit'e-Miss Lor- rame Futu1'e+doughhoy Fun-drums DOROTHY KIRSCH 'KTw'inny Aspiration: nffive wiwk Y:-xatimi: history .Xtlmiration: Kay liyser BERNARD SCHWARTZ 'KBuddy liutldy is one ot' the llmneos. Vs:-ful eN'erx'wl1vr0 THELMA FIELDS t'Susie XVisheS to he two inches taller, Fishes for smivenirs and ribbons. Dishes it out to van veiterl buys. SELMA LABOVITZ Hsippyn Beautiful in hluv. lfizzes with fun. Bubbles with Huh Hope. Sparkles as s4-t-rv- tary. CAROLYN SMITH 'KCaro1 Vertihvatifmi tliree years non-tartlinew Vexation: any volor exrept lrlnt- Q 'S gig U, Z5 f , is V. is H, BERNARD ROSSI Jackson Prfit'vsst-s to he an u1'vliesti'a lvatlm-r. f'0nt't-sat-s '1', ll, and J. K. art' trips. II11lJT't'SSl'N tha- svliool with his szixuiilimie. JOSEPHINE FRANKLIN Josie Tradition: Glenn Miller Cuntlition: sleeping Ambition: he-autivian JOSEPH MARTIN Joe Roams from lmme, Asks for a sax. Nantes planes as his game. PAUL WITHERSPOON The Gaitox- llersrmalityitlt-4n'g:e Xlaslinigton tax-vvr PltlllSlll't tlIlllt'lllg ll 3095! Aspimitimiz a growl Peeve i t's'ni:xlv lbiretzts his imwt-iw joh wolves aprailxstt our favs ABRAM WALKER HELEN WOOLING IRENE ZF-FF 'AAbie Blue Y ht-1' t'avtu-ite Zealous student XVants a business ra Hllm' English shark reel' Red 3 at the lnnvh F011 fm. thu Nyindv Finds all ga-is alikt rush Cay A Devoted to My IM- LOW' Q' 5' l 'i'4 'f l Flare for speakilig ration wllrld if 5 . A ' Sb' COMMITTEES-JUNE CLASS '43 Bose Craiq Martin Croop Elverda Eloerts Anthony Belissimo lack Hoffman Tasia Karaqeorqe lack Lapp Mildred Brenner Anna Brooks Virginia Deval Properties lanet Bichey, Chairman Harriett Hoffman Theresa Marino Publicity Walter Conner, Chairman Charles lsack Gloria Loller Social Edward Saunders Doris Schulz Buth Szramowska Georqette Lockschmidt Bernard McFadden, Chairman Elizabeth Matlock Bheda Buloin Edward Saunders Chester Zukowski Flower and Color Louis Andrews, Chairman Leonard Friedman Song, Yell, Motto Milton Hirsch, Chairman Evelyn Fritz Samuel Shussett Edith Susser Lois Tiedeman Victoria Kaszuba Bill Lee Harry Scott Frank Finley Ann Vuk Ring Antoinette Duco, Chairman Rosemarie Diamond Bessie Tsouris Felice Monqelluzzo Picture Theresa Marino, Chairman Beverly Forman Tillie Greenfield Betty Marvel Doris Corsey Gift Mildred Luhovslcy, Chairman Ianet Hartman Phyllis Oesterlinq Fredda Schweitzer George Minyo lohn Walters Pantukhoif Elected Class . linda, sim Presldent in 12 B Electlon ' 27fg3:,,,,h'd bp Q - I ifnle 'Paw Cami Dy Four 028' s, qmcers LQ:-..,,,.,, Bgffflffriilgslijfemd. The Tr' kg x re mm '4'4imff ''--.ffOk14r.lN'0I1rgQ, ut' movie pr esuh 0 gffgnyfjffri-H ......, .-.-, ' 26 to DQ N' e or '-we 4'-.. ----.,.. ' 1'41 ,3fp, A ' - --.. K ,I 'f- .4',' -, - , . Rurn' feu,n 0e lslgrfgy Q bo: azyss V15g .'. ', 'v r H f3g'f5H?Aiff.:'ff f h cel' 5160, F Is Sej El- r e e O N M- U -mf Jq d 1' Se .e0ted 1' Alek De 3 11101. C ve . D 1 Qs, 'S0'? 'F Oleg Ma 88 P 'he ' 0 me M S l U'-'Blix I8 r f1fref'5fffke '-Xas N le1q el11 y M d President? X 1cffZ,,'Wn Electe W W alters S Vice President Drip: me Verner Free' -- . Rooilafft ' f X nt Board Launches fun. I j Mr. R. C. Clements f Af Seleets February y Acts Feature Ughrrgr a smut-s ofn-yours which , 4, of :he Enalmrd MIHSIFCIS Heck' Sys. r J A ,Chosen rhr- xi h V - ollr 1. john eral rh f 'O ge 'S the 9' fyvrll Parririparijnofv EMIS S nal resirlenl musicaf:-rl 'Or ,the IZA 'Stun' D 1 , , das 7- ele em P W, uhyfh ,S .h Ever Slnce Ex, f' X AM hjg year- Cted b v e Freas dorfllhursday S? eduled '- 1. , A , by mleloimce I 'X if' UZ L fe1rasPA '1o! J the d'r'C 0n Of Manuaryz nts. X 000' :gre-mi mea star . Byrne, sponsore W Stude Three Drives rg S .Tun in 3 WI d ,W e rss Ma, . r- i , L4 1 d 5 l f e 251310 f cruz: Spffcrlzt-fr f ', 1IzjffSaIure y KXQ,-5 d'V'H4' Pfiein-:res i y eq, 0, Amo,-Fan Whmh of GK 6 Mouimms where 3 WUC SW!! Y: 3 S l fS d ' . 8 Q Wim anfgas Q9 QS. Usb for 'hffUSelv'xm'F'lf:1 e . ep! X S Q66 9 -915 gg 0 enrurajnmem fro rbaflff' 'gin ' X Qyso9Ytk5q1 dx bd' oxof-Xxti4e9oe 3 'adm Ski: el 1' .Y ' Xb ef vi' W ' 0 . f 5, 4 . 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' 1- QRQQQY QV' Jf'-11.7-52'-5-EM El . -1 -'miwfir sw ,2 '.: Qsvwr-S swnmhxxerku 6 ..,,-,UE -11 U-:Ulu mae -O ,'1 , 9 G 5.15013 ,D-D IH- QD? 3 ,- lCa11pfXla1e Pvt Suanlev '4 A Qggwguv SN,-U --c 15 325' 1 Nw-sgEE'iHc-5' WN 55-51 Arts and Crafts Miss Carson Miss McKibbin Miss Woodside Clerical Force Mrs. lones, Book Clerk Miss Suck, Chief Clerk Miss Gigliotti Mrs. May Commercial Mr. Greene Mr. Griffin Miss Hughes Miss lohnson Mr. Kirkpatrick Miss Martin Mr. May Mr. McCormick Miss Minehart Miss Palmer Mr. Riggs Mr. Howe Mr. Bubert Miss Sample Miss Sheppard Mr. Wheelen English Miss Byrne Mr. Clements Miss Dollman Miss Hearst Miss Henninqer Mrs. Klein Miss Ledwidge Miss Lindsay Miss Malick Miss McFarland Miss Orr Miss Schenck Mr. Story Miss Taber Miss Watkins Miss Wenzell FACULTY Custodian Mr. Ulmer Domestic Science Miss Lilley Miss O'Connor Miss Rayburn Miss Trembly Girls' Adviser Mrs. Thorne Industrial Arts Mr. Bailey Mr. Carlin Mr. Carter Mr. Cooner Mr. Phillips Mr. Wolfe Languages Miss Dickey Miss Lorraine Miss Mitchell Miss Rogers Librarians Mrs. Kirtland Miss Yabroft Locker Guards Mr. Apfelbach Mrs. Murphy Mathematics Mr. Davis Mr. Kahler Miss Mollenauer Miss Townley Mr. Veverka Music Mr. Brautigarn Mr. Held Physical Education Miss Andrews Mr. Blair Mr. Gross Mr. Kortner Mr. Miller Miss Ramsey Miss Spurrier Miss Topp Science Miss Eirner Mr. Gruver Mr. Hemans Mr. Hosack Mr. McKelvy Mr. Morrison Miss Home Mr. Smith Social Science Miss Cannon Mr. Cloos Miss Eakin Mr. lsenberg Mr. Pullen Mr. Bial Miss Schramm Miss Stewart Mr. Straitiff Miss Trimble Laundry Mrs. Caler L H ,,,, , . . . we are builders . . . we are determined. These strong phrases might well have been uttered by any student of Schenley. For we are determined to build both mind and body to such perfect inter- dependence as to inspire confidence for any future undertaking. S u ch determination is witnessed through the spirited participation in the Varied activi- ties which high school offers. The ensuing pages are a picturization of the clubs, sports and service organizations which are offered as extracurricular pastimes. The physical and the mental capacities of every individual must coordinate. Well-balanced citizens are a necessity, not only during crises, but always. Democracy depends upon the people establishing it and functioning in it. It is such citizens that Schen- ley aspires to produce. The activities section is an expression of that ideal. . . we are builders: builders of a new and war- less World: builders of a fearless and constructive period: builders, tirelessly working, toward ulti- mate good. AETIVITI ES . . WIA AP! QUXZDEDS LIBRARY ASSISTANTS Mrs. Kirtland, Sponsor D. Allen, A. Araentieri, M. Ar- qentieri, C. Balistreri, M. Bruno H. Hoffman, B. l-loplcins, L. lath owslca, G. lordan, l. Klein, A Moore, A. Neiopiilos, l. Poszy wak, A. Robinson, E. Schwarz l. Seboroslcy, R. Tomasilc, M Triantotillou, D. Zeliasohn, l. Zivic. AT YOUR SERVICE V BOOK MARKERS SERVICE CLUB Mr. Rigas, Guardian B. Alford, M. Browne, A. Bu- tera, A. Duco, D. Elpern, V. Goldstein, lf. Monaelluzzo, B. Rubin, l. Butlcowski, S. Sablow- slcy, S. Shapiro, P. Wolf. ln which we serve! -that is the rnotto ot Schenley's stu- dents' Service Club-an organ- ization which does the secre- trial Work tor the faculty. Tests, study sheets and other data are rnirneoqraphed and prepared by the rnost capable conirner cial students ot the school un- der the direction ot Mr. Rigas. STUDENT BOARD Miss Townley . . ....... Sponsor Iohn Walters . . ....... President Verner Freas . . .... Vice President Betty Marvel . . ..... Secretary A. Agraphotis, F. Armbruster, I. Azen, R. Baginski, L. Borsczk, G. Bruno, I. Budney, M. Burkhart, A. Butera, S. Chosky, H. Cooper, H. Crawford, T. Croom, P. Crosby, L. DiVito, M. Donovan, I. Edwards, S. Friedkin, W. Harper, M. Hirsch, A. Howard, I. Hutchinson, C. lsack, l Kalet, E. M. King, I. Lardas, H. Lee, B. Lewis I. Lois, l. Lukaski, I. Marion, M. Mayovsky, L. McKee, B. Mehalick, R. Melnick, L. Melnickak, W. Mertens, S. Morrow, S. Moscovitz, B. Muros, M. Oleinick, N. O'Mally, M. Paletas, I. Pantukhoft, L. Parker, W. Parry, K. Phelps, Pt. Pichersky, F. Piwowarski, H. Ptodis, I. Scalise, l. Shriver, E. Siegel, C. Smith, S. Smith, D. Spanos, E. Spardy, R. Stemrich, B. Sweer, B. Teeters, R. Tomaski, N. Watzman, I. Williams, R. Zielinski, P. Zivic. ln peace time, the work of the Student Board is vital, indeed, but in war- time it becomes doubly important. ln addition to its regular activities in aiding in the campaigns for subscriptions, the collecting ot money for the infantile Paralysis Fund, the gathering ot old clothes for the Goodwill lndustries and its whole-hearted support of the Cleanup campaign, the Student Board has now undertaken new war activities. The members have led the student body in the collecting of scrap metal, old keys, records and books tor men in the armed services, musical instruments for war prisoners and in raising funds for the Bed Cross drive and the Buy a Ieep campaign. Through the Student Board the pupils are learning the Ways ot Democ- racy by actual practice. LIGHTS! CAMERA! ACTION! . .V- THESPIAN III Miss Ledwidqe, Sponsor Saul Chosky, President Sam Smith, Vice-President Virginia DeVall, Secretary- Treasurer M. Browne, W. Conner, M. De- shantz, D. Elpern, S. Fish, B, Forman, F. Gefslcy, P. Green- berq, L. I-lane, T. Karaaeorqe, V. Kaszuba, R. Levine, A. Lev- inson, R. Mehalick, I. Miller, F Gbley, S. Pantazis, M. Pauley, E. Raczlca, F. Rose, P. Ruben, Z. Ruben, B. Ryan, A. Sable, S. Shussett, L. Wanqer, W. Wer- ner, C. White, E. Williams. THESPIAN II Miss McFarland, Sponsor Harriett Hoffman, President Wilma Kaufman, Secretary- Treasurer A. Arqentieri, R. Aul, S. Baker I. Bennett, P. Cohen, M. Croop S. Ferraco, A. Fillipelli, V Goldstein, T. Greenfield, A Kidis, W. Kina, C. Kussart, A Moore, I. Muir, I. Richey, M Rosenbloom, E. Roth, L. M Schrader, S. Smith, W. Smith M. Soller, B. Sweer, R. Taper E. Zusinas. THE WORLD'S A STAGE Ak2? SREAVWS fL.eFvm95i:l?,a T '. ' X - ', . - A W- N oz. X3. ::Ns ',!. '3 fN's-'-.?1+1t5.X...QX'3SSBkN ff- ' l T ' V '- 2:2 unm..-... ' ,Www www ff 2 STAGE CREW l 55? .sr 155 M153 an . V. .. W , , A, , WS, Tv' . 0 M . A5PX?8v9i3,Z?g?l , 4. , K A. ,rf E . :aff . i 'T ' l ,:a5S,.:.,., :gl -U ak if ., . A ' tl' 1 i f is , .ff 2 r Q , j A ,Y . ,Q 3 X MA? A W Y tv f Q Ss 1 l ' 'Z - f f Q 32 .G f 5 gf f 2 6 2 W ' w , , n ffm .. .., .. if - - APLAYISBORN Aspiring Bernhardts and Barrymores have a chance to try their talents in either of Schenley's two Thespian groups. Both groups act as theater-worlo shops where members learn the problems of behind-the-scenes production. Scripts are read and discussed, costumes and props are selected before plays are produced. Every conceivable problem arising in production is solved. Since each member is an active participant, each one has an opportunity to profit from the criticism and suggestions of the entire group. Here embryo actors and actresses learn that a finished production is not possible without the efficient aid of the Stage Crew, Stage Craft and the Make-up clubs. This irreplaceable trio, although very seldom honored, deserves a large share of the applause following a production. The Make-up Club miraculously transforms adolescents into grandfathers and elderly matrons. The Stage Craft and Crew construct, paint, and decorate scenery. The little horney touches of curtains, books, and log fireplaces are supplied through their activities. Actors and technicians cooperate to give Schenley audiences true pleas- ure by their theatrical endeavors. SCENE SETTERS Mr. Carlin, Guardian Hay Babo, Manager Lloyd Hughes, Assistant Man- GQ 91' A. Eagnelli, l. Farrell, Ed. Gray, L. Kuczynski, W. Kwiatkowslci W. Mertens, C. Naylor, I. Ro mano, G. Shane, G. Viaropu- los, l. Vittore, Ho Yee STAGE CRAFT Miss O'Connor, Sponsor Dorothy Wegart, President lean Ewing, Secretary Anne Augugliaro, Treasurer E. Councel, M. Del Sarda, C Eisner, H. Eisner, B. Hopkins, E Kelly, T. Koslcoder, D. Martin E. Moidei, N. o'MQiiey, 1. Rich: ards, B. Swadow HV- ORCHESTRA Mr. Held, Sponsor A. Aniiqnani, B. Ball, M. Blinn, G. Brown, B. Brown, I. Bruniclc, L. Brunn, P. Cooco, H. Cohen, D. Coulson, E. ljalqione, li. Finley, G. Forernan, L. Hane, W. Henninq, E. Holrnes, S. How- ard, F. Kandravy, l. Keliayas D. Leally, E. Laiean, M. Lever T. McFarland, B. M o o r e, B Moss, B. Gleniaiz, E. Panek, Z Perlow, G. Badiclc, W. Barnsey M. Sariore, M. Scliad, S. Schnei- er, S. Slornbera, P. Spano, B. S i a n t o n, H. Teiielbaum, G. Trader, N. Vfaizman, B. Wirth, I. Zefi. 1 BAND Mr. Held, Sponsor B. Andrews, B. Ball, G Brown, I. Bruniclc, L. Brunn, G Bucci, F. Cocco, l. Colbert, H Cousin, F. Finley, W. Harper W. Harper, W. Henning, S Howard, C. Holmes, S. lacoverti E. lannaccnione, X. lncollinqo C. laclcson, W. Kerr, G. Kina, S Kubrick, l. Lewis, B. Neaman W. Norvell, S. Grzechowslci, L Parker, D. Pasquarelli, T. Pierf son, l. Francaiore, W. Bockar B. Rossi, l. Saccone, B. Srniih A. Swartz, I. Twyrnan, L. Wel- lons, E. Wilson, W. Yarussi. A CAPPELLA CHOIR Mr. Brautigam, Sponsor F. Agy, I. Azen, F. Clark, N. Conley, L. Conrad, E. Erdeky, N. Fark, F. Fine, S. Fish, B. Forman, P. George, S. lettries, V. lohansen, F. Kandravy, E. Korpa, M. Kruschke, V. Krushinski, C. Lazor, A. Levinson, l. Lewis, A. Mapp, A. Mc- Cartney, L. McKee, S. Meyers, W. Morgan, A. Netopulas, T. Parco, M. Pauley, K. Racki, R. Richey, A. Snyder, S. Stoyanott, S. Styles, D. Taylor, R. Tomasik, P. Tomko, K. Trainor, D. Trunick, A. Vuk, S. Wanger, D. Wegert, G. Wilhelm, F. Zielinski. The strains ot music are an inspiring accompaniment to any activity of youth. Schenley has its own music-makers to add zest and beauty to both gay and solemn occasions. ln its early days, music study consisted ot courses in harmony and music appreciation. Then came the development of separate classes in vocal and instrumental music. Though not many make music their careers, participants in these classes tind them ot great value. They gain poise and experience in appearing on stages before large groups and over the radio. The school audience gains from the musical program a deeper appreciation and understanding ot classi- cal music which will enrich their lives. Music adds interest to all our school events. The vigorous boom of the band accompanies the cheers at pep-rallies, and makes patriotic songs more inspiring. The choruses delight us with moving anthems, lilting carols, and lyrical folk songs. The sweet, dignited notes oi the orchestra leap into being at a wave ot the baton, as though called to being by a sorcerer's wand. School memories will be intertwined with strains whose individual notes may be elusive but whose nostalgic beauty will recall Schenley. Who can forget the organ's mellow richness, the black-robed chorus singing allegiance to the Alma Mater, the band urging tootball heroes on to victory? The solemn march as we move slowly down the aisle at commencement will live in memory as the grand finale ot school lite. AGILITY ABILITY GYM TEAM Mr. F. l-laar, Sponsor Stanley Freeman, Manager Leon Goldstein and Vladimir Slornhera, Co-captains O. Burney, H. Clay, I. Chiriaos, D. Coulson, A. Dartenzo, G. Demetroulas, S. Fowler, D. Gra- ziano, S. Green, H. lacolier, W, lay, G. Lardas, S. Lawler, l. Lawry, G. Lewis, W. Linton, l. Mcl-lale, M. Polimus, A. Rodgers, D. Schwarz, T. Shelby, E. Sieqle, S. Slomherq, S. Yuhascheke. ..v , BASKETBALL M. Aronson, I. Atkins, l-l. Ber- qer, S. Choslcy, L. Gross, R. Meenan, W. Nichols, S. Pavlo- chovic, P. Rieinian, l. Santa, R. Schaick, I. Schemp, T. Stepien, l. Walsh. DRIBBLERS FOOTBALL A. Aqraphioiis, R. Babo, G Bolden, l. Bonibouras, A. Car nevali, E. Conrad, L. Czarneclii E. Del Vecchio, G. Fish, E. Gen tile, U. Harniel, W. Harper, M Kruschlce, E. McNicholas, G. Minyo, W. Nichols, P. Pan chura, M. Peays, G. Poliiis, C. R a c lc i, A. Richardson, H Rumph, T. Stepien, R. Trosky, l. Walsh, S. Weiss, W. Yarussi. WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE MAKINGS OF A TOUCHDOWN V - SWIMMING A. Barnes, B. Baur, W. Prey, T Garmon, E. Gorney, G. Kas zuba, H. Koclish, S. Lawler, R Maqnoiii, R. McHale, lj. Pan chura, H. Parker, F. Piwowar ski, R. Ricci, P. Ritchie, R. Smith R. Thomas, G. Weiner. DELECTABLE DEBATERS . .V- HISTORICAL SOCIETY Mr. Pullen, Guardian Fred Gbley, President Vincent Graziano, Secretary Ft. Altord, A. Bellissimo, R. Bluestone, C. Chartotillis, M Domitrovic, M. Eisenstat, A. Gil ipelli, D. Gershovitz, H. Hott- man, T. Kerins, R. Luczalc, A Newell, I. Pesicli, l. Quinn, E Ftaczlca, W. Robinette, M. Sar tore, P. Slevin, D. Smith, E. We- hoter, W. Werrier. IUNIOR IUNTO Miss Trimble, Sponsor Gloria Loller, President Arlene Rosentield, Vioe-Presi- dent lacqueline Zivic, Secretary E. Abelson, F. Ellenboqen, R Finkelstein, B. Friedman, M Gladstone, E. I. Hamilton, I. Hartman, S. Hasper, I. Kalet, P Keopp, O. Mamula, M. Morri son, L. Pinslcer, R. Rubin, F Schweitzer, M. Thomas, R. Tom asik, D. Urlina. CURRENTS OF CURRENT EVENTS CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANTS Mr. Morrison, Sponsor Robert Miller, President Peggy Bailey, Vice-President Kathryn Lafean, Secretary Anita Newell, Program Chair- man E. Abelson, K. Bowmen, L Brunn, M. Charach, H. Chosky A. Colaizzi, C. Conner, G. Croz- ier, D. Davis, E. Demby, R. Di- Bucci, B. Engel, C. Fenstersheib G. Franklin, D. Garley, M Gladstone, R. Grahn, M. Green M. Henderson, W. Henning, Z Hoffman, O. Hyatt, H. lackson D. Kalet, M. Lee, E. Mclnnis F. Panchura, E. Perlow, I. Rich- ey, B. Robinson, A. Rosenfield, l. Saccone, G. Scott, L. Shrader, E. Siegel, A. Smooke, M. Trim- PGY- -'M--'--'-W--V--. f.. BETTER CHEMISTS THROUGH 113 ETIOUETTE FOR WOMEN OF TOMORROW HUMAN BEHAVIOR Mr. Hosack, Sponsor Vivian Templeton, President Rita Spardy, Vice-President Margarite Fitzgerald, Secretary l. Ashmon, E. Arndt, C. Balis- treri, G. Barnhardt, F. Barr, l. Best, F. Boehm, E. Branch, V. Brewer, D. Brown, l. Bucci, A. Butera, C. Ciriello, A. Como- rosky, D. Corsey, V. Cribbins, R. Daniels, R. Diamond, A. Duco, E. Evans, T. Fields, F. Fine, B. Fitzpatrick, M. Gigglot- ti, M. Gilligan, R. Gorney, B. Hodge, V. Hord, B. Hunt, S. Io- nidis, S. Kress, V. Lee, M. Les- esne, M. Lubovsky, B. Mariani, S. Meyers, S. Moidel, B. Mon- dell, M. Och, T. Parco, l. Pearl- man, H. Pearlstein, A. Pondex- ter, G. Ranalli, N. Ricotti, B. Saloo, l. Schwartz, S. Schneier, B. Shannon, R. Tirkeltaub, E. Walzer, B. Wedd, M. Wolf, A. Young, R. Zaborowski, D. Zelig- sohn. REFERENCE FOR REFEREES HV- BOYS' LEADERS Mr. Blair, Sponsor David Benshaw, President Charles lohnston, ViCe-Presi- dent Edmund Holmes, Secretary- Treasurer C. Aiken, A. Barnes, B. Baur, G. Brown, S. Brown, H. Davidson W. Duqan, W. Erey, T. Gor- man, E. Gorney, W. lones, L Kniqhton, B. MCHale, W. Boch- ar, B. Sm ith, B. Thomas, S Wane-tik, G. Weiner. SUPERMEN GIRLS' LEADERS Miss Andrews, Guardian Esther Both, President Gertrude Trader, Vice-President Ceacil Eisner, Treasurer PeQQfY Bailey, Secretary Arlene Sable, Social-Chairman Z. Bluestone, L. Braider, D. Burt, P. Cohn, M. Copetas, Z. Dorsey, l. Dzialowska, H. Eisner, B. En- gel, M. Gladstone, A. Grecula, l. Hartman, M. Hayes, D. Hicks, M. lames, D. Kalet, P. Keelan, K. LaEean, B. Lain, B. Levine, A. Levinson, A. Lewis, E. Lied- erman, A. Lirnpert, M. Miller, A. Moore, S. Morrow, T. O'Cal- laqhan, M. Pauley, B. Robin- son, E. Bose, M. Rose, A. Rosen- thal, H. Rosenthal, Z. Rubin, A. Scordialos, A. Shack, B. Swa- dow, B. Tsouris, B. Ulanoft, B. Wirth, l. Woltt, E. Zusinas. NEW WORLD PUPILS--OLD WORLD FRANCE MODERN NOVEL Miss Dollrnan, Guardian Ruth Grahn, President lohn O'Connell, Secretary- Treasurer C. Church, F. Copetas, C. Fen stersheib, M. Fink, B. Friedman T. Greenfield, V. Goldstein, I Levine, T. Marino, Fl. Miller, I Pantulchoif, R. Paris, E. Shaqi- naw, A. Siniore, L. Wanger. BOOK WORMS Hof, .YZ .W FRENCH CLUB Miss Lorraine, Sponsor Ruth Baqinslci, President Ftosella Wadkins, Secretary E. Amos, C. Berlin, G. Canton G. Freernan, A. Howard, S. lei- iries, G. lordan, l. Kiella, L. King C. Lazar, M. Lawler, T. Martin E. Matlock, A. McCartney, l Muir, M. Neal, C. Norwood, M Owen, A. Reynolds, H. Ftodis A. M. Sable, G. M. Scott, W Shatter, D. Spanos, l. Spangler A. Thirnoleas, M. Tiscliler, H .V- 5 Mm.. af 1 HOLDING THE MIRROR UP TO NATURE CHESS Mr. Rial, Guardian Murray Rosenberg, President Leonard Schwartz, Secretary Ho Yee, Treasurer Bill Lee, Custodian H. Chosky, D. Dudt, A. Fleisch- man, C. MacLeody, H. Malling- er, H. McVeogh, R. Newland, N. Nahmod, C. Stein. CAMERA Mr. Kahler, Sponsor Richard Moss, President Edmond Siegel, Vice-President Saul Weiss, Secretary I. Baker, W. Barnes, D. Frazier N. Green, S. Green, P. Heuloer G. lackson, H. Iackson, E. Kara- george, I. Kennel, G. Lardas, O Mariani, S. Penner, G. Rubin M. Sanes, I. Silberg, R. Swierc- zewski, P. Torin, C. Zukowski. THE PASTIME OF KINGS TRIANGLE STAFF M. Bosenbloom, Sports, F. Schweitzer, Third Paqey B. Sweer, News Editor, P. Cohen, Second Page, M. Lubovsky, News Edi- tor, G. Loller, Copy Editor. Schenley's weekly newspaper, THE TRIANGLE, is sponsored by Miss Elizabeth Malick. SAFETY PATROL Mr. Cooner, Sponsor Donald Dudt, President Henry Kazmierski, Vice-Presi- dent Dena Dernetroulas, Secretary Dolores Holleran, lda Hanson, Co-Social Chairmen L. Allen, B. Aul, F. Balkovec, l. Best, L. Bloom, M. Chemel, B. Coller, L. Cox, H. Davidson, l Doyle, F. Drost, A. Duco, D. Flack, I. Floratos, V. Freas, V. Graziano, A. Grecula, S. Grit fin, E. Harris, W. Henning, C lohnston, C. Kane, T. Kara qeorqe, K. LaFean, I. Lapp, B Lewis, I. McCaul, l. Mont, A Nefopoulas, P. Osterlinq, D Pomerantz, B. Bosato, A. Bosen thal, B. Ryan, l. Shandrick, E Setchie, H. Snyder, M. Sparks L. Tiedeman, B. Tsouris, P Walker, I. Walters, N. Watz man, B. Wedd, B. Wirth, l. Zeit JUNIOR G-MEN H ivixi K wks X 5 'X .iffy G1 9 gales . 'i -QQW . - ' . .. -af f V .- :-.. - Q. .yfsf x v.. . '15 V f- MPT. 2 wi, fu E14 as P5 riff' , . f , ., 2 J I .,.. -:,,,.d:-.-.:.::v:- .5 , V '2 I , 35516 ' 1 is :if I I .,.,. av I ,.. . , V ..q i, Q- '.' fi i.,. . . Q - ' liri .,, Q- ' -t'..-- ' :,. llzqf . Zbl R In A ,.,l, izl- I, - ---- ' 2 ' A -zzzt i' Y' t' sf N! MQ d - tr- .... + L :1'-' 't1 't A ' Ir' M f 3 if its H -'v:' . 'L -.-f .fi '1l', Q M Q- . ,' 1 1 1,32 :'1 ...::: 2 rtk ' ' rrr n r rnii AT.: rs , ,.,,,. - i'nnsn't i'tt fn' y tn' - ,i . . M kli trrs T ,1 53 ':' -Z -:- 1 A'-' 4 -12 -'- ' :'E l' lf. ,,1 Q -'.. I awe gfgsgi, It-,Q,,A.g.. ww ',I',Qg:,wl, A ' ' M V . ,W zn',.j,L ' M. 5-Z. ,Uv :.cfa.,,A A-Q, - A ' - I . - f: f- - wwx-.M-w we - . :. s f:'g,g,-,, 'Q gtk! N . .. ' , 1 , , 91 ......xQ' '-'3?15s.Z.se3 5EI.imw.L2J.r..'212-MLQ,Q-y,..',,,l - if . 2- , - .gQ......ii..l:s,Q1-.,.4s.:l.ms .,... ' 1 1' V 3 '- THE VICTORY CORPS A red V for Victory! That is the proud emblem Worn by many students in Schenley High School to signify that they are full-fledged members of the High School Victory Corps. This organization plans to foster and promote in the high school Wartime programs four primary objectives: to guide the stu- dents in critical service and occupational training needed in wartime indus- tries: to teach the students various services which they may render While still in schoolp to strengthen the young bodies of the next generation by the in- creased Victory physical fitness programy and to teach Wartime citizenry. On Friday, March 12, 1943, the first one hundred and fifty students were initiated as general members of the organization in Schenley. These students, having complied with the necessary requirements for general membership, are now ready to qualify for special branches of the Victory Corps, which are: the Air Service Division, the Land Service Division, the Sea Service Division, and the Community Service Division. In order to qualify for membership in any one of these branches, the student must be planning or must have begun preliminary preparation to give service in that special division. The require- ments of the Air Service Division requests a program of studies which includes aeronautics, courses in model airplane building in special workshop classes. The Land Service Division asks that the student follow a schedule including laboratory science, shop classes, and mathematics. Similar prerequisites for membership in the Sea Service Division have been laid out. For Community Service Division recognition, the student must participate in a community serv- ice such as teaching, medicine, nursing, library science, social work, or other servicesg homemaking, child care, home nursing, social service or nutrition. When our enemies challenged our country to stand up and fight, they challenged each and everyone of us, and each and everyone of us has ac- cepted the challenge for himself and for the nation. That statement was made by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt when the High School Victory Corps Was first organized. Thus even the high schools of America are doing their share-the High School Victory Corps is the proof. -Doris Kalet. lohn W. Studebaker, U. S. Commissioner of Education, states: We are engaged in a War for survival. This is a total War-a War of armies and navies, a War of factories and farms, a War of homes and schools. Education has an indispensable part to play in total War. Schools must help to teach individuals the issues at stake: to train them for their vital parts in the total War effort: to guide them into conscious personal relationship to the struggle. Students in the Nation's 28,000 secondary schools are eager to do their part for victory. To utilize more fully this eagerness to serve, to organize it into effective action, to channel it into areas of increasingly critical need, the National Policy Committee recommends the organization of a Victory Corps in every American high school, large or small, public or private. REORGANIZATION OF CLUBS The clubs of Schenley have been organized into two groups in response to the demands of war time. The Service Clubs meet on Monday: the Elective Clubs, on Thursday. Included in the latter are three new clubs: the Art Club sponsored by Miss McKibbin in room 3ll, the Map Club in ll6 guided by Mr. McCormick, and the Garden Club which is directed by Mr. Smith. Those students of Schenley who work under Miss Mcliibbin have a var- iety of assignments. They draw the diagrams which are used by Mr. Bailey's Aero Club for airplane spotting. The national drives for scrap, old silk, nylon hose, books for servicemen, and blood from donors are brought to attention by the colorful and significant posters created by Schenley's youthful artists. Also important are the replicas of the Victory Corps insignia displayed on the bulle- tin boards throughout the school. Mr. McCormick firmly believes that in order to follow the course of the war, everyone should be familiar with world geography. He guides the twenty members of the Map Club in map construction. They are also taught the dis- tances between certain vital points. ln this manner, they are better equipped to follow the events of the day. The fourteen members of Mr. Smith's Garden Club may some day be among the first-rate farmers of our country. At present they are concerned chiefly with crops which can be sown in small victory gardens. All benefit from discussions concerning the care and cultivation of a model garden. The Service Clubs, also, are doing their share. War Stamp chairmen have been appointed from each home room to act as whips for the War Stamp sales at Schenley. leep squads have been organized in the form of competitive contests. The feeling of rivalry has sent the sales soaring to unbelievable heights. At a recent meeting of the Student Board, pamphlets were distributed con- cerning entertainment for our boys who are prisoners of war. They carried their plea to the home rooms: and students throughout the school contributed books, musical instruments and games which will brighten dark hours for American soldiers. All this work is carried on in the Activity period on designated days. Service clubs meet on Monday: group guidance is held on Tuesday, Wednes- day is the time for War Stamp sales, senior class meetings, and individual guidance: Thursday, elective clubs meetg and Friday is scheduled for Audi- torium meetings. The conversion of Schenley's clubs from peace time fun to war time neces- sity has been met with spontaneous approval and acclaim, Schenley students are performing a threefold activity by becoming members of such organiza- tions: they afford an expression for their patriotism, contribute to the war effort, and find pleasurable expenditure for leisure time. -Marilyn Sparks. GIRLS' TRACING The girls' tracing class pre- pares its members tor useiul employment, putting them in line tor placement in detense plants. There is now a special demand tor girls skilled in trac- ing. These lassies under Mr. Cooner's supervision t ra c e blueprints tor victory. Many ot them plan to work in local in- dustrial plants to relieve men tor duty in the Armed Forces. FLYING HIGH AERONAUTICS ln training boys tor the Air Corps, the aeronautics class saves the Government looth time and money and otters the students a distinct advantage in beginning this training While in high school. Among other things are studied the theory ot tlight and meteorology. Mr. Gruver is shown demonstrating some ot the principles oi mete- orology. STOP! WOMEN AT WORK GIRL RESERVES The Good Samaritans ot the Girl Reserves busy them- selves in useful war time as well as peace time work. These versatile young women change from making paper dolls to knitting for soldiers without batting an eye lash. They have been among the first to support Schenley's drives to salvage scrap and to sell War Stamps. Miss Stewart is their inspiration as well as their sponsor. WHATS COOK NG? GOOD SAMARITANS BOYS' COOKING Now, more important than ever, when well balanced meals are vital to the health of the nation, the boys cooking class presents a knowledge of nutrition. The lessons will prove valuable in preparing those boys interested in enter- ing the commissary department of our Armed Forces. Not only will they be good Army cooks, but, girls, think what husbands these boys will make after a semester with Miss Tremblyl ON THE UGLY FIELD OF BATTLE Beruh, Ioseph, 113 Bor1and, David, B-4 Brown, George, 103 Burwe11, Iames, 306 Carfagna, Anthony, 112 Catu11o, Vincent, 102 Crawford, Andrew 1., 202 Crawford, Thomas, B-3 Cosper, Wi11iam, 113 Couison, David, 302 Cynkar, Frank, 120 Daurora, Aibert, 220 DeBucci, Edward, 120 De1cimmuto, Nick, 316 De1 Vecchio, Eugene, 300 Do1an, Stan1ey, 306 Donate11i, Anthony, 212 Engiish, Herbert, 326 Eorbes, Windsor, 106 Gi1bert, Aaron, 306 Hampton, Ciyde, 122 Homonczyk, Henry CHomnick1 Ka1mick, Arno1d, 316 Knox, Constantine, 301 Komar, Ioseph, 319 Kramer, Herbert, 205 Captain Percy B. Cczley Wi1ey, Bando1ph, 313 Kraus, Iohn, 309 Lee, Iohn, 304 Lucas, Iames, 102 McDonne11, Dona1d, 308 Maier, Victor, 326 Mori, Dominic, 316 Morrow, Char1es, 112 Mu11er, Bobert, 103 Murphy, ioseph, 110 Parker, Emanuei, 208 Pauios, George, B-8 Petre11i, Fred, 304 Price, Tames, 202 Bobinson, Chauncey, B-3 Seifert, George, 107 Shieids, iack, 102 Ske1ton, Benjamin, 318 Smith, Arno1d, B-8 Stone, Eugene, B-8 Sutton, 1ames, 116 Thomas, Samue1 Thornton, Charies, 316 Travis, A1fred, 206 Tsikerdanos, Ernest, 306 Tsouris, Gust, 205 Weaver, Tack, 103 HEADQUARTERS 392nd Bombardment Group lH1 ARMY AIR FORCES March 24, 1943. To the Students of Schenley High School, Pittsburgh, Pa. Dear Friends: Your Iournal Staff has graciously asked me to write for you a letter of advice. The responsibility is a heavy one-and yet I dare. The Youth of 1917 were called upon to make great sacrifices to insure, so We were told, democracy and world peace. Some of us devoutly believed, and still believe, that those ideals were, and are, worth fighting for. But the Elders of our generation failed us. They allowed limited knowledge, narrow bigotry, personal feeling, and visionless partisanship to obscure the supreme objec- tives and obstruct the attainment thereof. Today the Youth of 1917 together with a new generation, your generation, is paying the price of that blind and bigoted leadership. Perhaps if we of '17 had been better informed, if we had known better how to make our desires effective, We might have employed greater wisdom in choosing and controll- ing our leaders. We might have directed them how better to achieve our aims. This, then, is my advice to you, if you would not be plunged yet again into this maelstrom of waste and War-Study well the plans and schemes for promoting peace and happiness in the post-war world. Study them individu- ally, study them as groups, until, out of the confusion, there crystallizes a clear conception of the kind of post-war world you want for yourselves and for your children. Study equally Well the words and deeds of today's leaders and would-be leaders. Then support with vigor and enthusiasm, in all possible ways, those men and women of vision, judgment, and ability, who will labor to make your dream come true. Believe me, your youth and energy combined with the years and experi- ence of those of us who have never ceased to hope, teach, work, and pray, cannot fail to create that glorious World for which intelligent men, throughout the ages, have longed. Not in all history have the possibilities for the realiza- tion of this dream been so bright. On your generation rests the tremendous responsibility. Prepare yourselves to meet it. And rest assured that the Youth of '17 are with me when l say that l am not only hopefully but Confidently yours, PERCY C. CALEY, Captain, Air Corps, Group S-2. WAR DEPARTMENT BUREAU OF PUBLIC RELATIONS Washington, D. C. October 30, l94l. Dear Miss B-: From now on I have a new assignment-I cover the White House for the Army. This morning shortly after ten, I approached the Executive Wing fthe west wing! of the White House. Identification card in hand, I passed the guard at the gate. At the entrance two strapping, uniformed, White House policemen arose. There were only a few reporters there before meg one, a woman who has covered this assignment for her paper through three administrations. The walls of the anteroom are finished in creamy Ionic columns mark the threshold. In the center there is a massive brown table adorned by the carved heads of water buffalo. This is a traditional parking space for newsmen's overcoats. In a few minutes they began to trickle in. Raymond Clapper was the only one I recognized until Lee Rashall, formerly of the Chicago Times, now in the offices of Co-orclinator of Information, greeted me. With a scarcely audible rustle one or two, and then a dozen men moved near the first door to the left. Agency men are generally allowed to stand nearest F. D. R.'s desk. I am not far behind. Soon Kato of Domei Clapan's APP came in. He is a small, smiling, black-haired boy. The Press Corps lit up. Before many minutes the whole room seemed to float in a blue-gray haze. Five, ten, twenty-five-and-a-half minutes! Then-a sudden Oh, a bolt, and a shove, as we rushed into the hall beyond the door! Secret Service men lined the short corridor. Suddenly we were in the Execu- tive office. The President of the United States! His face is lined: it is a handsome face in many ways, but lined and per- haps more than a little tired and worn. He's still wearing the black tie and armband of mourning. He reached for a cigarette, he inserted it in the famous amber holder and placed it in the side of his mouth where it pointed to the ceiling like a cocky plume. A toss of the head, the rakish holder slashing the air, confirms the showman, the cartoonist's delight, F. D. R. Unquestionably his head is that of a thoroughbred. Today he wore a white shirt and a gray suit, quite light for late October. His coat was buttoned, the top one open. He was absorbed in the wire story of the sinking of the USS Reuben lames until some called All in! Then: Mr. President? -and we were off! No change in our relationship with Germany, no news if we had sunk subs and no news even if he had the informationy Navy performing assigned missionlThrust and parry, the tilt of the holder, the toss of the head! Once he loosed that famous smile which was better to see than the tired, lined face. His face is long: he has a double chin-except when he tilts it with that Stratosphere tilt.-llosephus Daniels of Mexico has resigned, and F. D. is sorry. On and on, until the newsmen, eager to get these statements on the wires, yelled, Thank you, Mr. President and rushed for the two doors. Steve Early sat to the left rear of the President, and Charley Michelson, old and quiet, sat to the right. I rushed back to the office to write the story with the most limited circula- tion of them all--twenty-five copies to be distributed to army chiefs! My good wishes to all my friends at Schenleyl Cordially yours, ALBERT W. BLOOM, Captain, Field Artillery General Staff. ODE TO IEFFERSON BARRACKSH I'm sitting here and thinking Of the things I left behind, And I hate to put in writing What is running through my mind. We've eaten meals of dough bread And cans of half baked beans, We've stood a thousand Guard Mounts And cleaned up camp latrines. We've marched a hundred thousand miles Yet never left the post, We've studied till the dawning hours For Education most. When finally, taps have sounded, And life's cares are laid away, Then we'll do our Final Big Parade Up the stairs on Iudgment Day. The Angels will all welcome us And the harps will start to play, We'll draw a million canteen checks And spend them all that day. lt's there St. Pete will greet us With a loud and lusty yell, Come in you boys from IEFFEBSON BARRACKS, You've served your hitch in Hell! Corp. Robert A. Grimes 573rd Tech. Sch. Sa. Miami Beach, Florida A. A. F. T. T. C. Friday evening, November 27, 1942. I-Iello everybody: Perhaps you've been wondering what I've been doing since leaving Fort Bragg: so I'm writing as many of the details as possible. I left Fort Bragg and boarded a ship for overseas. I didn't leave the ship until I landed in CCEN- SOREDD. The trip at sea was uneventful as far as any action was concerned. I spent most of my time on deck looking for fish and watching the waves and other ships in the convoy. I wasn't seasickg but, I must admit I became dizzy a couple of times when we hit a storm. On Saturday, KCENSOREDJ, the Army took over the ship's guard to allow the sailors to be free for landing operations soon to follow. I became a sky look out watching for enemy planes from my station, which was the highest point on the ship. Early Sunday, CCENSQREDP, our troops began landing. Shortly after- wards the French began firing. Our battleships answered with salvos of shells, and the battle was on. I didn't see any land action since I didn't disem- bark until Thursday, ICENSOREDJ, by which time we had a truce with the French: but, I did see our war ships and planes in action. I saw only two French planes: they both crashed into the sea after being hit. Our arms and equipment were far superior to those of the French. When I went ashore, I saw the havoc that had been wrought by our forces. At present, I am stationed not far from CCENSOREDD. I am taking my turn driving an ambulance from our hospital to different troop dispensaries that we have set up. The civilians here are mostly Arabs and Moroccans with some French. The clothes of the natives are white robes that look like night gowns. If it weren't for their beards you could hardly tell men from women. Nearly all the natives ask the soldiers for cigarettes by use of the sign language. Some of the children have also learned to say 'gum,' 'candy,' and 'smoke' All of these items were brought with us from the states. Only American soldiers can get them. Yesterday was Thanksgiving so we had Thanksgiving with turkey and all the trimmings as well as candy, gum, cigarettes and canned peaches. After dinner, I went to the town nearest us with some of the fellows to look the place over. There wasn't much to the town, but I had fun buying a couple of beers and postal cards from the French. Since I couldn't understand French and they couldn't understand English, it took a little time to figure out how much American money would be equal to the number of francs they Wanted. When I got through with my purchase, I had left from my dollar bill a handful of French paper money. We decided to use it to go sight seeing by taxi. We hailed a cabbie, who was a Moroccan. The cab was a buggy with two donkeys pulling it. Five of us rode through the town for twenty francs or about an American quarter. Regards and best wishes for a Happy New Year to all, PRIVATE SIDNEY MOIDEL. EXTRACTS FROM LETTERS West Africa There is a stench in the market places that is more foul than any we have experienced before in our long trip. The sewers run open between sidewalk and street. A mile or so beyond the town is a leper colony--houses painted black. May heaven have mercy on the poor creatures. Some come up close to our cars. They know they must not touch anything, but they hold out their hands so that coins may be dropped into them. South Africa The British have been extremely nice. l rode up to this city with a Scotch- man who told me, with knitted brow, that the chief reason we're not winning this war with great rapidity is that the Scotch have not been allowed to wear their kilts. Syria We had a great time shopping in stores that were like caves in the walls. Everything is piled up on flat straw placques. They sell dates and olives and fruits. Fellows selling a sweet sugary candy walk along shouting their wares. The streets are filled with all kinds, shapes, sizes, and races of men with donkeys, goats, sheep, and dogs under foot. Near East We were invited to supper one evening in this city of CCENSOHEDJ. When we arrived, we thought we had made a mistake. There were no table, no plates, no silverware. We all sat on the floor, rolled up our sleeves, and went to work. My buddy, who is a south-paw, had his troubles because here it is proper to eat only with the right hand. India Bearers can be had for a few cents a month. You have no idea how many of them an officer must have to run his quarters. To give you an idea, not just any bearer will wash the tub after a bath. That is the job of the tub boy. Nor will the tub boy use a broom: that is the job of the sweeper, the lowest of menials. Nor are bearers limited to officers only. Boy, is the American private having the time of his life getting service! Australia These people in Australia are fine people. You'd think you were back in the States about twenty years ago. That's the impression we get anyhow. We get along fine with themg the soldiers are good fellows and like the same things we do, but they are a little peeved because the American soldier is taking all the girls. These girls-well! They sure go for Yanks. Some of them are awfully tempting, just like American girls. If they could get the clothes and make-up that the girls at home have-wow! No, I'm not married yet. . . . toward ultimate good . . . beyond the ugly field oi battle . . . we Americans are not de- stroyers . . Three short phrases characterize the contents of the Features Section. The variety of mood and material which is to follow, reflects the personal individuality and free spirit of the Ameri- can student. Humor and seriousness have been blended to produce a cross-section of ideas. lt is the record ot any senior, anywhere in America. To us who have been hurled bewilderingly into our first encounter with war, imminent issues and critical decisions have become daily routine. But because we are young, fun and humor must have their place in our consciousness, too. The realiza- tion of our unique position urges us to try to record for posterity some of our experiences as a war gen- eration, as well as to record for ourselves some of the delights of our years together. . . . toward ultimate good . . .I Toward the ulti- mate good of a lasting peace-toward the ultimate good ot youth's continued freedom to express his ideas and ideals-toward the ultimate good of se- curity and p e r m a n e n t progress! This versatile phrase means just what you want it to convey. And so, we leave this portrait of our own period and mode of existence to you, the builders of tomorrow. FEATURES '1.. TOMJZVPD GOOD, ,WI F MY DATE WITH SCHENLEY A few withered and crushed gardenias, a dog-eared, lipstick-stained pro- gram-tangible memories of an exciting evening. When my date with Schenley has come to an end, what shall I have to remember her by? Memories indelibly stamped, unforgettably secure! Of what shall these mem- ories consist? Shall they be a few discarded Triangles, or a worn-out Iournal, or a withered bouquet of commencement flowers? No. Shall they be filled with the maze of buildings which surround Schenley or the magnificence of the scenery viewed through the windows? No. No mere man-made hull, no tangible, concrete substance can hold the true meaning of Schenley. On the contrary, it is found in an almost indescribable, aesthetic and somewhat mystic feeling. My memories will be crowded with scenes in the vastness of our halls- the familiar group gaily joking near lll, the agonized faces of those anticipat- ing one of Mr. Straitiff's tests, the relieved group dazedly coming from the Chemistry Lab., a forlorn freshie looking for 226, Mr. Roberts' easy drawl on a humid Iune morning, the rush of confusion which is a fire drill, the loitering group of chattering girls who fill the washrooms, waiting for the 3:50 bell, the excitement of class play, stunt day. Prominent will be the teachers in my boundless theatre of recollections. A remembered glimpse of Mr. Clements easily reclining in his revolving chair, Mr. Veverka writing on the blackboard, Miss Rogers intense with discussion, Mr. Wheelen smilingly chiding a frightened freshie, Miss Byrne conducting a heated discussion in one of her 11A classes, Miss Townley zealously keeping the lunch line in order. These and a thousand other familiar glimpses and impressions will crowd my haze of thoughts when I think of Schenley and all it means to me. People-friends, rivals, acquaintances, teachers, form the life blood of Schenley. These I shall never forget. For an empty, desolate Schenley is one which I do not know, one which l do not Want to know. I shall always re- member her as a bewildering haze of ceaseless activity. I need no tangible forms, no flowers, no programs to remember my date with Schenley! -Eleanor Zusinas. LETTER TO POSTERITY No other four years could have produced the mood of the high-school days of '43. We were reared during the recovery from the Great Depression and shocked into maturity by the declaration oi the greatest of wars. We were a combination of sophistication and naivete with a mild but chronic case of spring feverishness. We went through all the stages from diligent freshies to blase seniors and senioritas--from surreptitious dabs with a lipstick and first dates to hooks , hot foots, and Latin ponies Life was just a bowl of cherries, and we had hearty appetites. We were also products of the Great Drug Store Age. lt was here that school elections were held and teachers put on the pan. We sipped our cokes and talked of moron jokes, Harry james' trumpet, Errol Flynn, Gone with the Wind, Bob Hope and the new blonde from White Plains. Boys were either drips or solid dates. The school roll call on Friday could have been called at the Stanley Theater. We raved about Lana Turner and Tyrone Power. We wore our hair over our eyes a la Veronica. We jitterbugged to jive and swung to swing on the jukebox. Our universal costume was short skirt, long, wide sweater, and dirty saddle shoes. junk jewelry, harlequin glasses, and artificially lightened pompadours were our exclusive inventions, Cin the groovej. We idolized Superman, ate Dagwood sandwiches, and had Sadie Hawkins' Day dances. We blissfully ignored the handwriting on the world's wall, thinking the message was not for us. Then the unlucky December 7 made V for Victory our sole motto and aim. Boys eagerly left to join the fight for the four free- doms. Mr. Caley left to become an Air Corps instructor. We bought bonds to keep us from Nazi bonds and licked a stamp to lick a lap. Girls wore slacks to First Aid classes and baby-doll haircuts for convenience. We didn't mind gasoline rationing and blackouts on dates. O no! We didn't grumble about Rayon hose, paper lipstick tubes and rationing. In fact, most of our jokes were about coffee and sugar rationing. You're sweet enough to be rationed was indeed a compliment. We laughed at Private Hargrove and sang lustily ln Der Feuhrer's Face , Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammu- nition , Dear Mom. We admired those who Wore A Pair of Silver Wings and longed for the day When the Lights Go On Again All Over the World. When you of the class of '63 call for your date in an airplane or call her up on a photo-telephone or when you sit comfortably in your home and Watch the World Series over the latest television set, you'll laugh smugly thinking of the prehistoric days of the flighty forties. just remember that we consid- ered ourselves ultra-modern, ultra-sophisticated and just generally hot stuff. -janet Hartman. Lillian Wanger. SOME ENGELS ON AIR-RAIDS GIBSON time to learn what to do during an air-raid. The WARDens will help you VERI much. So far, all wardens ROSE to their duties, and will con- tinue to do MOORE of their fine work as long as you do not HARRIS them or SCI-INEIR at their work. SCHIULLI you will co-operate. If you have LEFF your HOLMES when you hear the siren, do not FREAS to the spot or TERRY on the way but increase your PACE. If someone is lingering after all have fled to shelter, WALK-ER WRIGHT to the nearest refuge and PARK-ER. If in a WOODS or shady GLINN, during an air-raid, lie down in a MOSS-y spot, cover yourself with something GREEN or BROWNE. Be careful not to RUSSELL leaves and give yourself away. If in your HOLMES with your girl, LEVER to extinguish the lights. The PRICE of blinds for your blackout HALL isn't much. To have toys and MAPPS in your blackout room, is HOWE to keep children occupied. Children sat calmly ANDREW during previous raids. If in a public shelter, mind your MANNERS and don't create a PANEK. A-MAKER of trouble is never welcome. Be sure you keep COUL,SON, or YEE'll be LEFF by yourself. PENN-ER hide your fright. For entertainment in a shelter, there may be a WALZER or cr DEVINE SINGER. In these shelters you may come in contact with an EARL, a DUCor, a KING. There are also ANDREWS, ALBERTS, DANIELS, HOWARDS, and MAR'I'INsp you may even meet your future mates. IOHN's-SON may MARIA ANI, AND-ER-SON will be called LITTLEIOHN. ARNDT you going to do your ZIVIC duty so there will not be a re- NEWELL of what happened to the FRENCH? DUDT, DUDTII -Ruth Levine. Arline Levinson. TID BITS Phyllis Osterling in that red sweater always reminds me of the high school kids in the Galbraith cartoons. Eleanor Ricci and Bess the Landlord's Daughter have something to split a hair about. Has everyone seen the picture of Dot DiVito's good-looking Naval Cadet brother? Very refreshing. Oh, excuse me, I thought you were Hannah. Oh come now, Mr. McCallen, you know you'll miss Miss Sample. Watch the birdie, Miss Sneller. Verna Faye, do you really need those glasses? Subscription to Readers' Digest? , Franny. Oh, pardon me, I thought you were Ceacil . Is Elizabeth So-Big ? lake Pantukhoff-- My friends . -Virginia Bortas. CRIME WITHOUT PUNISHMENT ln a little HAMMCDETT surrounded by GREENFIELDS, lived Old Man Dykema, who was a farmer, not an ASHMON nor a TRADER. Of CORSEY had many BARNS and many, many AKERS. AUL the townspeople thought he had a HORD of GOULD and that he was a HARTMAN. ln fact, they said if he had a wife he would not treat her GENTILE, but would THRASHER. He did not trust the BANKS5 so he kept his ROLL under the tree on whose BRANCH a BROWN BOYD sang merrily. One FOGEY night, he took his box of money through the LANE and across the BROOKS to the LOCKSCHMIDT. Leave MALONE and come to-MAURO, said the latter. OCH, OCH, l've lost McKEE, cried Dykema. So he was asked to STEPIEN and by the light of a TAPER the box was opened. Looking inside, the miser yelled, HKEMENY Crickets, it's empty! The thief WILBURN if l catch him! After raising KANE, he began to search. He looked in the ALl and around the CONNER. He dragged DELAC and tore down DE VALL, but he could not FINE it. Days passed and finally the old man said: FRANKly, no FOWLER crime was ever committed. lust then, his friend rushed in and said, The YOUNG, HANSON FORMAN of the MILLS stole it so he could buy a DIAMOND for the BELL of the BALL. Dykema said, NlXON the punishment. Since we can't get the gold BECK, URSO it seems, let him go SCOTT free. This affair made a NEWMAN of the farmer. He said good-bye to the STAR-SPANGLER Banner and went to Africa to HUNT LYONS. -Lillian Wanger. Charles lsack. A PUNNY STORY Once, when Rosy the Riveter was in jail resting her EAKIN bones, she decided that she would like to get out, since she was getting into a GRUVEfrl. She told the warden she would go STRAIT IFF she got out. The warden, who was glad to PALM 'ER off on some one else, began PULLEN wires and soon Rosy was free and a truck came to CART 'ER away. Rosy went right to her beaus Ray and DICKEY, who had been KORTNER before she went away and who were regular HEMANCSD. But although she loved her two faithful friends, Rosy soon met a WOLFE and began to ROME. And did RAY BURN! He did not believe the STORY Rosy told him and so, when the leaves were GREENE and it was MAY, he ended her life with a CANNON. -Lucy Braider. FEATURES OF THE TEACHERS Miss Lilley-In dirty jeans and pig-tails Miss Sample-Lonesome for Davy Pomerantz Miss Andrews-With a glamour bob Miss Ramsey-Hitting high C Miss Mitchell-Losing an argument Miss Dickey-Not wiggling her foot Mr. Hemans-Without his hair Mr. Morrison-Dying of hysterical laughter Mr. Clements-Without his after-lunch candy bar Miss Henniger-Doing a ballet Mr . Kahler-Without anecdotes Mr. Rial-Voting straight Democratic ticket Mr. Hubert-Smoking a cigar Mr. Cloos-With two six-shooters on his hips Miss Lorraine-Bossing the grave-yard shiit Miss Cannon-In spike heels Mr. Wheelan-With handlebar mustacheos Mr. Veverka-With stickum on his hair Mr. Brautigam-With laryngitis Miss Trembley-Burning a pork-chop Mr. McCormick-With a goatee Mr. Rowe-Minus his smile Mr. Carter-Cutting a rug Mr. Pullen-Going deaf -Virgin Sh-h-h The Teachers of Schenley aren't human, l think! Their bones are lead pencils, their blood's made of ink, Their minds run on night Work, they sure pile it high, And the pupils pore o'er it till morning is nigh. We can't skate nor jitterbug, play ball nor bowl, 'Cause We'Ve gotta get night Work, if A is our goal. Our shoulders are bowed by the Weight of the books That We tote home each night, lest We get dirty looks. l'll tell you a secret: it's Why seniors cry When their moment of freedom is lingering nigh, They are tears of pure joy, when they see the light Of freedom from toil they have done every night. The class room's the place for lessons, we say: Don't waste midnight oil, eve's the best time for play, Or as we go on we may find out, I think, That our bones are lead pencils, our blood made of ink. -Margaret Campbell ia Bortas I OPEN LETTER TO SCHENLEY'S FACULTY Dear Faculty: We, the students of Schenley, think you ought to know about the Xam- flems. Oh, come now, don't raise your collective eyebrows at us in that cynical mannerg Xamflems really do exist. Aviators have their gremlins, caffein-fiends have Mr. Coffee Nervesg and we've got-the Xamflems. When ai question on a history test asks us to name three Third Parties, who writes down the Birthday Party? Not us-it's the Xamflems! Who makes a paper- aeroplane out of our answer sheet and glides it to a perfect three-point landing on the teacher's nose? Not us-it's the Xamflems! When a question on a chemistry test asks what happens when hydrogen and oxygen combine, who writes TNT? Not us-it's the Xamflems! And these are just some of their milder tricks. When a student makes a mistake on a test and wants to erase it, one Xamflem sits on his nose and plays yo-yo with the eraser, while another one writes over the mistake again, with ink. When a student doesn't know the answer to a question, the Xamflems stand on his head and shout as loud as they can, Hey, teacher, call on this one! The poor student tries frantically, desperately, to beat them offg the teacher thinks he's raising his hand: and there you are! Xamflems are rather homely creatures. They're born with horn-rimmed glasses: because after all, they'd overwork their eyes anyway and have to get glasses, so why not start out with them? On their heads Xamflams have erasers and instead of hands they have little typewriters. First they erase some words of a question: then write new ones in to confuse the poor, hard- working students. Every Xamflem carries a disintegrating gun, a small buzz saw and a paint sprayer. The Xamflems spray test papers with fluid from the disintegrating gun so that the minute you start to erase-prestol No paper! With the buzz saw the Xamflems saw off pencil points. They coat the lead of your pencil with white paint from the paint sprayer, so that no one can read what you write. Xamflems firmly believe that woman's place is in the home, so no Xippettes Cfemale Xamflemsb have ever been seen in a classroom. Occasionally, however, you may run across a sub-Xamtlem serving his ap- prenticeship. However, don't get the impression Xamflems aren't patriotic. Over half the Xamflem population of Schenley has joined the XAAC CXamflem Army Auxiliary Corpset. The job of the XAAC is to bother soldiers taking aptitude tests, civilians taking entrance exams, high school students taking the V-12 test, etc. ln fact, wherever students are out of their minds, it's safe to say the Xamflems are in them. So you see, dear Faculty, at heart we are all genii and have definite angelic tendencies. Who starts all the trouble? Not us-it's the Xamflems! Yours imploringly, The Students of Schenley. -LUCY BRAIDER. Any English Eight Class Schenley High School February 3, 1943 Dear Miss X: Do you believe in the theory of evolution? Or do you prefer the Biblical theory of mankind's beginning? No matter! Whether she descended from an ape or Eve the fact still remains that Mary Ann Smith is on the earth. Her ancestors Were, at their best, rather queer people-so We shall just forget about them. After all, the only person who counts now is Mary Ann. When you see Mary Ann for the first time you think, Oh my! But how Wrong you are-she's really a nice person-ask anyone who doesn't know her. She's a conceited ass, but unlike most conceited people, she tlaunts rather than denies this trait. Mary Ann manages to become ecstastic over people and things which are shunned by everyone else. It is possible for her to argue for hours over some insignitcant point of a big problem. She likes nothing better than to pop off about something of which she knows nothing. One of her pet habits is watching others make fools of themselves by trying to impress other people. After sneering at them for a While, she resorts to plagiarism of their methods. Her acid comments shine like jewels in the coal-pile of human speech. Definitely anti-social, Mary Ann stands alone with Maine and Vermont in a sea of 46. She loves to tell people what she thinks of them-especially if she doesn't think anything of them. The average human being is thought to be a cross between a jackass and a moron. Of course, you must realize that Mary Ann herself is far above average. She hasn't many bad habits. Mary Ann, for all her faults, is a tireless Worker with a grand sense of humor. She is now quite convinced that she Calong with Westbrook Peglerl has been put on the earth for some special reason-and most of her time is spent in trying to convince the rest of the World of this fact. Mary Ann would like to go into politics but is afraid she might develop the Eleanor Urge for travel. So, Miss X, 50 years from now your pupils Will gaze upon you, starry- eyed as you tell them that once upon a time Mary Ann Smith sat in this very room. Sincerely yours, -M. A. Smith CBortasJ. LITTLE THINGS TO REMEMBER I-low Dry I Am ........... How Long Did I Dream?. . He's l-A in the Army and He's A-l in Our I-Iearts. . . Two Sleepy People ,..... Moonlight Becomes You. . ..................LoisTiedeman Ring, Telephone, Ring ............. Sam, You Made the Pants You Were Never Lovelier I Had the Craziest Dream Please Think of Me ....... Too Long ..... There's a Great Day Coming .... I Love to Whistle ......... All This and Heaven Too ........ Mr. Franklin D. Roosevelt lones .... You're an Education in Yourself... Blues in the Night ........ Miss You ................ You Made Me Love You .... My Devotion ............. Five Foot Two, Eyes of Blue ....... What Goes Up Must Come Down. . . .....................ChemistryClasses During Assembly Programs ..................PercyB. Caley ....Morning After the Night Before . . . .Betty Marvel . . .Norree Fark ....Gloria Loller Honor ....Freshies and Sophomores ................Graduation ........Pat Spano . . . .Phyllis Osterling . . . .Carl Dykema . . . .Burton Glinn . . . . . .Report Cards . . . . lohnnie Walters . . . . . .Rheda Rubin . . . . . . . .Football Team . .......... Chemistry Lab. Seats -Lucy Braider Doris Kalet BOY AM I SCARED--. Freshie- Well, here I am. Gee, is this place big. Now, let me see, do I have everything I need? Yep, here's my rnap and compass. Need them in case I get lost. I-Iere's the elevator pass that senior sold me. Gosh, I forgot to buy my ticket to the noon movies. I-Iey, who put that room number over the moving picture booth? Gee whiz, where do I go now? Boy am I scaredlf' Sophie- Well here I am again. Do I have a pretty practice teacher in Eng- lish! I'll have to get her telephone number. Gee, do I have a sweet blond sitting next to me in history! Are Schenley girls nice! What I would give to go to the senior proms. Oh, oh, I don't have my homework for next period. Boy am I scared-. lunior- I-Io hum. Yes, I'm still around. Boy am I tired. Oh, well, I got Chem. next period and can I sleep! Now let me see. One year, fifty-five days, five hours, thirty seconds to be in this school. Gosh! At the rate I'm going I'll be an old man before I'll get out. And that's not counting overtime. Speaking of overtime, old battle axe wants me to put in some after school today. Boy am I scared-. Senior- Yep, you're not rid of me yet. Well, that senior prom is next week. A lot of good it is. l'm broke. I joined a new course just today. lt's a waiter's course. They want to teach us how to go forth to serve. Well, I entered to learn. Annd now I'm going forth to serve. Boy am I scared-. -William Werner. BLACKOUT Everyone gets busy in the evening. In the basement lohn's fixing up a storm-door, Dad's relaxing after a strenuous 'day's Work, Mom's upstairs finishing her Weekly ironing, A muffled clattering accompanies Mary's dish-washing. Everyone is busy in the evening. Only, things are a little different now. There is a War on, a World War! Our rushing is all for Peace: We got used to riding but learned again to walk, You can't eat everything you want any more. 'Cause things are a little different now. Black-out, Bl-ack-out, Blackout! A screaming noise tears at eardrums, One by one the house lights dim, go off, ' Street lights lower, flicker faintly, die out, Then sirens are stilledp the darkness is complete, enveloping. It is a bl-ack-out, blackout! , Time passes slowlyp the minutes drag. A tension grips everyone, The tiny sound of dripping water fills the house, The wall clock booms the passing seconds, Floor-boards creak and groan in the quiet. The time passes slowlyy minutes drag. Yes, it must be different now. There is cr War ony A World War! When everyone is busy a blackout siren sounds, A deep silence falls, lingering endlessly. There is a War ony A World War! Some things must be different now! -Frances Rose REVERIE IN THE RAIN The rain came down slowly and softly, running over his helmet and down his face in beaded streams and then dripping off the end of his nose. The gray cement was cold against his back as he huddled in the corner, and the steel felt acutely uncomfortable, crooked in his elbow. He looked out of his brown eyes wondering at the feeling inside of him. lt wasn't at all as he had expected, not a flag feeling, or a band feeling, or even a my country feeling: it was sort of a hollow, uncertain, indecisive nothingness inside of him. The rain was dropping quietly now. As quietly as it had dropped before as he had walked into the dark auditorium to hear the story of the world. Every Sunday it had unfolded for him the hugeness of it, the beauty of it, the goodness of it, while he sat high up in the darkness of the concert hall. The wondrous tale came out of the richness of the brasses, the smoothness of the woodwinds, the clarinet, the oboe, the bassoon, out of the beauty of the strings, the violins. The violins had always held for him the feelings of the earth and of the sky, and of the sun and rain, the rain which now wet the wool of his uniform, making it prickly and uncomfortable. He wished he could walk into the drugstore on the corner now and wait for it to clear up. Maybe he would have read a magazine' or talked to the druggist, the one with a black mustache. The store had a nostalgic quality for him as he thought of it, so had the rest of the town, his home, the school, the church, the stadium, the people, and the sounds. He remembered the boys shouting as they played ball, the band music in the movie house, quiet talk in the evening, footsteps on the stairway, and raindrops on the sidewalk. Now too, he could hear the rain as, trickling down his helmet, it rolled past his ear. Weather like this at home would call off the ball game, and the people would turn dissappointed from the gates. They would come back the next day though. They would return to the sun baked green and tan field, to the crack of the bat against the ball, the cheer of the crowd, peanuts, hot dogs, and score cards. Everyone was a fan back home, even the girls, the clean long-legged girls. For only a moment he thought of just one girl, of two straws and one chocolate soda. Then there wasn't time to think any more. The signal was given, and he lifted his body over the gray concrete side and sloshed noiselessly through the ankle-deep, rain-spotted surf. The silence of the French coast was broken only by the chatter of machine guns. , Later the rain and the waves washed away the blood. -Burton Glinn. A SOLIDIER'S DREAMS Here in the fathomless African night, I know that some day I shall return home! Some day I shall return To a hill high above the smoke of a city, And peer into the peaceful sky, And dreamy To the garden at sunrise And that feeling of exultation at daybreak when I look up the sleeping city And know that only I am alive, awake, To the smell of hot cakes and biscuits coming from the kitchen, To the crunch of snow on a winter night, To the coolness of clean sheets: But most of all, oh God, To the arms of my loved ones, Happy that this strange interlude ls forever over. -Margaret Rose. Prisoners of Hope ..... Good Master ........ The Great Quest .... Lost Horizon .......... . Let the Hurricane Roar .... We Must March ...... Voice of Bugle Anne .... Little Boy Lost ....... Hunger Fighters ..... Voice of the People .... Six Foot Six .............. 20,000 Years in Sing Sing. . King's Henchmen ....... Microbe Hunters ..... Up From Slavery ....... Wild Animals I Know ..... The Storm .............. The Mortal Storm ................ BOOKS OF THE YEAR . . . . Underqrads . . . .Mr. Roberts A . . . . . . . Graduation Day . . . . .Morning Assembly . . . . .The lunch line . . . . . . .Mr. Brautigam . . . .Freshie on first day . . . . .Third lunch students . . . . .The Student Board Rubert . . .Four years in Schenley .............The Faculty Miss Eirner and Mr. Smith . . .. . . .. ...The Graduates . . . , .Schenley boys . . . . . . .Miss Byrne .........The final exam Above Suspicion .................. ............... M r. Hartley Our Hearts Were Young and Gay .... . . . The Land of the Silent People ..... ,.... For Whom the Bell Tolls. . . The Patriot ............. Escape ........... Waterloo Bridge .... . Beasts, Men and Gods .... The Rains Came ......... G-String Murder Mysteries Out of the Fog. .A ...... ... School for Scandal ..... The Rivals ........... Of Mice and Men ....... All Through the Night ..... You Can't Go Home Again .... Keys of the Kingdom ...... The Stars Look Down ..... A Leaf in the Storm ..... The Yearling ........ Bolling Years ......... And Now Tomorrow .... High Flight ............... They Were Expendable. . . .The teachers' lunch table . . . .The boys' lunch room Student who missed locker ...........Captain Caley . . . . .Bationing holidays . . . . . . .Report cards . . . .Triangle Staff . . . . .Final reports . . . . . . CENSORED . . . . .Exit from 113 .....................Scl'ienley . . . .Westinghouse and Schenley . . . . . . . .Between you and me .............Westudy .......Notwith those U's . . . . .Excused absence slips .................Faculty . . . .l2A Doing a Thesis ...........Freshman ....Four at Schenley ............Saturday .....Home with an A .....The lournal Staff Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speakinq Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking Speaking SPEAKING OF NAMES of fashions ....... of food ..... of cuffs ....... of rationing .... of Weather. . . of plains. . . of time ...... of pennies. . . of less ..,... of money ..... of furs ......... of servicemen .... of skies ...... of glasses. . of birds ..... of patriots .... of men ....... of capitalism ..... of magazines ..... of l..ocksCchmidtl. . . of dismissals ..... of postponements. of brave defenders ..... . . of swords ........ of circuses. . . of hills ....... of pastures ..... of bosses ..... of right ....... of churches .... of trees ..... of Hans ........ of smoothness .... of fruit ....... of one ....... of chimneys .... of streets .... of hav ...... of miracles ..... . . . .we have Styles . . . .We have Cocco . . . .We have a Coller ......we have Fish . . . .We have Fogfqvl ......We have a Hill . . . .We have a Klockfel . . . . .We have Mills . . . .We have Moore . . . .We have Nichols ......We have a Sable . . . . .We have a Seaman ......We have a Star ......We have a Stein . . . . .We have a Thrasher . . . . .We have a Trader . . . . .We have a Wolflel . . . . . .we have Banks . . . .We have McCaulCsl . . . .We have a CMclKee .........We have a Bell we have a Kancelflationl . . . . .We have a Marinfol ........We have Shields . .We have a Carnevalfel .........We have Fields . . .We have a Greenfield ... . . .We have a Forman . . . . .We have Leffftl . . . .we have Pughfsl ....We have an Och . . . . .we have Fritz . . . .We have Corsefyl . . . . .We have a Parrfvl ......We have Aul . . . .we have Smooke ......we have an Ali . . . . . .we have a Bailfeyl . . . . . .We have a Marvel --W. KING and P. KAPSIS. PROVOCATIVE HYPOCRITE Sometimes I wonder about my sister Margie. Mother says she's just like Grandmother Loller, with some of Daddy's characteristics. Grandma thinks she's just like Mother. But I'm sure she's like no one else in our family tree. Margie is just Margie-and there's no getting around it. You'd like her if you met her-people usually do. She makes an excel- lent first impression, something I've always envied. She can make Great Aunt Bea happy by assuring her that she's quite right-the Younger Gener- ation is going to the dogs. She can make Aunt Mary Ellen equally happy by exclaiming- Oh, I don't like your hair that wayg it's too extreme! The other way was betterl -even though it's the very latest, most expensive per- manent styling. You see, she learned at a very early age what I shall probably never learn-that the way to be successful with people is to know when to do and say the unexpected and when not to. When one ot my friends calls up, he or she is very likely to be engaged in an animated conversation with Margie by the time I get to the phone and probably will have forgotten the reason for calling me. My dates never seem to resent Margie as an older sister. When they come to see me they even like to have her around to keep the conversational ball rolling. You never seem to mind things Margie can't do-but you never forget the things she can do-her delightful bragging won't let you. I watched her dancing with a new man one evening. lust as the dreamy waltz ended and she dipped gracefully, the orchestra broke into Deep in the Heart of Texas. As her date started to hop agilely in front of her, Margie batted her long brown lashes and said in heart breaking tones- Oh, but I can't jitterbug. just then the orchestra went into the 1-2-3-4 sequence that is usually clapped by the audience. Everyone clapped, that is, everyone but Margie. Her eyelashes fluttered again, you could see that her heart WAS breaking. Oh, I can't even clap in time! she murmured. You could see that the poor yap was caught, hepcat though he was. That's all right. You don't have to jittery it's all these other girls know. Some people think Margie has personality-plus, but we know that it's just a charming way of getting what she wants. Things some girls couldn't get away with at all are part of Margie's stock in trade. Margie's sense ot values is twisted. Somehow, she just doesn't seem to care about conventions. Her characteristic, Oh, well dismisses any subject. One Saturday afternoon when we were in the midst of housecleaningjwith the plaster torn down in the hall, the rugs up, and the furniture piled like layer' cakes, four nuns from Cathedral Convent dropped in. Mother was petrified. She couldn't say a word from embarrassment. I disappeared into the bedroom and didn't come out 'til they left. But from the keyhole I could hear Margie inviting them to sit down in the mess and gaily carrying on a normal conver- sation. When they left-Mother raved, I crept out and stared aghast, but Margie just laughed and laughed like Little Audrey and said between gig- gles, Mother, you look so funny in those curlers. When I think of Margie, I oiten think of the quotation, All the World's a stage, for it surely is for Margie. She has so many poses I couldn't possibly describe them all, and that is why she seems to me a provocative hypocrite. -Gloria Loller. A BOOK A lofty mind has found a thought. A potent phrase is born. A sharpened spear from mind is wrought That none can treat with scorn. As here, for us who see as blind, A thinker shows his precious find. A giant of steel with grasping hands, Full rising from its bed, With roaring sound slowly expands Its chest oi blackened lead, As here and in more rooms behind Is made a tool for all mankind. A bowsprit through the seas of time, A light that men may see Whatever iancy makes sublime By tuneless melody. But know ye that to earthly mind 'Tis but a book in humble bind. -Murray Rosenberg. SCHENLEY IN WARTIME I All out for warl Young America intends to be free. Young America as represented by the students of Schenley High School, by forthright expression and whole-hearted effort, indicates its ability every day to strive for that freedom. Wherever in industry or in the armed forces you find men and women extending effort and making sacrifices, you find their children who attend this school reflecting the same spirit, attitude, and beliefs. For many of its students, Schenley is the center of their war activities. Boys of Schenley have Commando training where they must learn to keep their bodies physically fit. They learn to swim with weights, to tread water, to carry their fellow men to safety, to overcome obstacles, and to scale heights. Their coaches give them the same training in calisthenics that the soldiers at the Army camps use. The boys of Schenley upon graduation are ready for military careers, making the missiles of war, or business careers to keep the framework of American economic life intact. Girls of the school are on the job daily receiving training to prepare them for nursing or war-aid careers, and in actual production of materials that are needed by the armed forces in the fields. Bandages are rolled in tremendous quantities to go directly to the hos- pitals in the field of operations. Gowns and caps are produced for the Red Cross workers as well as for nurses' aides and orderlies. Defense courses in regular school hours and special courses after classes are filled with eager girls. The school is not the only outlet for Schenley students to participate in this national emergency. To-day girls are taking over many of the jobs which were formerly held by boys. Department stores are employing them as ex-1 tras for after-school hours. Special classes here at Schenley are conducted by representatives of these stores. Pittsburgh mothers in war plants have sent out a plea for after-school student helpers. Schenley girls are answering that call, watching youngsters, doing light housework after school hours. One may find Schenley girls employed in drug stores as soda-jerkers 7 as usherettes and cashiers in some of the neighborhood movie-houses: and even as gaso- line station attendants. The boys are not letting the girls get ahead of them, for they are filling innumerable positions. Working in mills or heaving coal may not be pleasant at first, but our boys realize that this type of work must be done. They know that The harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. Everyone participates in the food rationing program, by limiting himself to one dessert and fewer helpings of the scarce food in the cafeteria. Students give careful attention to selecting the foods which are most healthful to their growing minds and bodies. ln the classrooms, pupils are required to learn the insignia and chevrons of our armed forces. History courses have been cut down, so that each day there may be time to discuss current problems and events. Cooperation in air-raid drills enables the authorities to clear the upper floors in a few minutes. Thus the students of Schenley High School take their place at the side of the nation in going all out for VICTORY! -Doris Kalet. -Marilyn Sparks. SCHENLEY IN WARTIME II All out for War! There is the lilt and thrill of it in the air. Our drab, monotonous freshmen cmd sophomore days seem like memories of another life, purposeless and un- real. How startled we would have been then to have come upon posters ask- ing, Will you give your blood? or Will you help buy a jeep? We have even got used to the men in uniform that appear in our halls. Once in a While a sailor or soldier can be persuaded to tell the class what has happened to him in the last few months. My tanker was blown up under me. l swam through oil- or No one in Pearl Harbor that morning suspected- or Our outfit has chalked up-! Perhaps most shocking of all is the experi- ence of recognizing in that trim, alert, young soldier, johnny lones who all through high school sat as if his spine were made of India rubber and walked as if his feet were attached to the earth. The war has left other marks on us. Tough athletes who played four years of football without an injury emerge from Commando training scratched and bruised. Girls who yawned through Hygiene, work like fiends, over First Aid manuals and stay after class to ask questions. Nobody goes straight home to study or to fool around any more. Everyone has some kind of job. We who loved the staggered hours which gave us extra sleep in the morning-miracles of miracles-wish we were back on the early schedule so that we might begin Work sooner in the afternoon. Of course, there is fun-plenty of fun. Miss X is lecturing a class who has the fidgets-Mr. V. has passed paper to forty trembling physics students for an unannounced test. Four long bells! AIR RAID DRILL. Everybody out. Down to the basement and sub-base- ment. Move along, move along. Here's one thing more important than tests or lectures. Room numbers painted on the walls-gather beneath them. Roll call. Who's missing? Stand against the inside wall, away from opening. Noise! Everybody talking at the top of his voice. lt's deafening. Perhaps someone begins a song. Might as well enjoy it for it's a city-wide drill-a whole hour in the shelter. The P.B.l. agents come visiting. High school citizenship records become matters of major importance. Handsome naval officers administer tests in the auditorium. There are special programs to recruit nurses, WAACS. Girls show other girls their latest V-mail letters. Someone comes in with trophies from North Africa-Mildred doesn't join the gang at the 12A table. Someone whis- pers that the family has received a wire from Washington-Tom, her big, teas- ing, handsome brother Tom, is missing in action-. We go soberly to class. Thus the students of Schenley High School take their place at the side of the nation in going all out for VICTORY! -Lillian Wanger. HOW TO PRODUCE A YEAR BOOK The first thing to do when you wish to put out a year book is to choose a staff. This task is of utmost importance and should be done very carefully. A member of the staff must be a person of definitely superior mentality: pref- erably, one who has mastered the mechanics of writing. He should be effi- cient, that is, he should know that B comes after A in a filing system, and above all he should put it there. Other desirable qualities are wittiness and the ability to arouse sympathy. The latter is especially important, since the only way to sell yearbooks is to get the student body to feel sorry for the staff. As a final word of warning on selecting the staff, disregard the advice of others: they don't know a darn thing about it. Now that you have chosen a staff and handcuffed them to the nearest fireplug, you must choose a sponsor. A sponsor must be a backlashirig, beetlebrowed, two-fisted dictator of a person. Good sponsors are usually of the type who beat little children and bark at stray dogs. It will probably be very difficult to get someone to fill this position because as the sponsor must fight the rest of the faculty, the engraver, the printer, the paper manufacturer, the student body and the staffg she is liable to end up a wandering, friendless person who mumbles to herself. tl-lonest, L.P.B., I was only kiddingj Having obtained a sponsor and a staff, the hard part is now over. Clear sailing lies ahead. There remain forty weeks till publication date. This means thirty-eight weeks in which to sell Readers Digests and two weeks in which the book can be ready for press. Preparing the book is almost no trouble at ally you merely have to choose a theme, plan the layouts for one hundred and twenty-eight pages, fit the printing to the available space, take five hundred or so pictures, choose paper and a cover, get the art work done, write five hundred write ups, turn out several thousands Words of features, solicit for subscriptions, placate irate students and faculty members, haggle with the photographer, bargain with the printer, barter with the engraver, beg from the O.P.A. and W.P.B., and sell ads to people who don't want to buy ads, so that they can sell products to people who don't want to buy products. The book now comes off the press. lf it is only a few weeks late, consider yourself lucky. There may be a few mistakes, right pages in wrong places, people left out, and the principal's picture upside down, but don't be upset. You have a year book and that is what counts. All that remains, is to resolve: next year it will be different, but not too different. --Burton Glinn. f 2 E. E I -S - ,S Z Q ,, Q '-r...-A xii 5 F 1: . ., .F A' as ,ff ,f Q is 2 yy Q fiffif 'xg 3' gg it S L L , g,gfag3wm , -'? 'M ine 5 a 1 ,J 11 Q' 1007: JOURNAL SUBSCRIPTION HOME ROOMS 201 AD QUOTA CLUB Advisor, Mr. Carter Doris Kalet Fredda Schweitzer Doris Corsey Felix Cocco The Ad Quota Club is an organization made up ot all those who have sold at least one full page ot advertising. Since advertising is one ot the Ways to finance this publication, the students who bring in ads render a valuable service to the Senior Class. This year more than nine pages were procured. Since l928 Mr. Carter has been in charge ot the business management ot the Schenley lournal. lt is he who handles the money, balances the budget, and signs the checks. No Watch clog at any other treasury has ever done a better job. One ot his many duties has been to stimulate seniors to stimulate business men to expend good money tor space in this publication. ln return every senior is obligated to patronize those commercial houses Whose ads appear in the following section. Never before in the history of the country has there been greater demand l for the trained man or woman. Such a demand can be met by young men and women continuing their studies to become physicists, chemists, or engineers doctors, dentists, nurses, or pharmacists: accountants, statisticians, or teachers of languages, mathematics, or sciences. THE UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH Address the Registrar I I Best Wz'shes to the l GRADUATES OF 1943 from the p BETSY ROSS TEA RooM l qLLrLLLL,-.-, Phone ATlantic 1425-1426 I Piltsburglfs Oldest Florist Remaining in Same Location HARRIS BROS. FLORISTS Specializing in Wedding Bouquets and Funeral Designs Q Market St. and Liberty Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa. Compliments of The KAY BOYS' CLUB WM. S. HOWELL Director lt Pays to Look Your Best MARIE'S BEAUTY SALON Specializing in all branches of BEAUTY CULTURE 2550 Centre Avenue MA. 0892 SChenley 7 66 9 l General Automobile Mechanics GAS...ESSO...OlL COLLINGER'S SCG-I-TY-,S FUR CLEANERS SERVICE GARAGE Certified Cold Storage 2414 Cenffe Avenue SAM SCOTT, Prop. 4524 Liberty Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa. Schenley 9756 V GARDEN Our Victory Garden Last year was a tlopg Our beans were just vines And our onions, all top. We planted our seeds, But they didn't come up Though We planted each one ln its own paper cup. So we shopped all around For plants large and small, We watered them otten And hoped they'd grow tall. But our puppy got in And buried his lunchg Then forgot where he put it And dug up the whole bunch. We cursed and we cried, Gave up there and theny But this year we're going To try it again. -Margaret Campbell. ,,u ,E . l Compliments of 5 Compliments of S T R E A M L I N E M A R K E T 3 LIGHT'S BAKERY Boulevard of the Allies 4763 Liberty Avenue Centre Avenue For Information Call PITTSBURGH JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT 118 SIXTH STREET ATLANTIC 7616 The Thespians constantly rave The storrn of the critics they brave But while doinq King Lear We really do tear That poor Shakespeare will spin in his grave. ...VJ The Iournal is one big headache We think it is all a rnistache And when to our terror We find out an error The results are just like an earthquache. . i if ,xx Compliments of G. VV. GAINES i YN, V . Ccmyplimcmls of R. D. THOMAS GIQNERAL CoN'rRAc:To1a bkfflb 36 I 6 Fifth Avunuc Nlayfiowcr 9160 6 SCIICHICX' 5 6 Z l I-IerbertV. SPERLING Funeral Home Pearl St, Pittsburgh. Ill, IVIf3xyfIowcr 55 77 AIELLO PHARMACY Your Nez'ghborhood Drug Slorc IIITIIER I.. zXlEI,I.O. IDILG. 4612 Iibcrry Aw, Pittsburgh. Pa. CONIPLIMENTS OF THE NEGRO HISTORY ASSOCIATION An organization devoted to the cause of publicizing the contribution of the Negro to world progress and democ- racy. JAMES MILLER. President MARY WADE, Secretary a Specialty MAYHOWH 6792 1 Phone Schenley 4820 JOHN MASCIO MELWOOD DRUG CO Haberdusherq and Ready Made Clothing 4631 Centre Avenue Tailoring Cleaning, Alterations l P' b h P 4731 Liberty Axe. Pittsburgh, Pa. Hts urg a 41 J L THOMAS CAFE ' Home of Good Cooking l I COMPLIMENTS OF THE Chicken and Spaghetli 4502 Liberty Avenue There Wcrs cz blond lcrd named Dykemor, Who Wgs known to he quite C1 schem-CI. The girls gave grecrt sighs When they sow his blue eyes, And his presence mgde rooms dll dglegm ...Y- Fred Obley's ioined Pitts ROTC ln uniform he's cts bright gs can be, He regd dll the posters And joined with the most-ers So that the whole World could be tree! ...Ye In French she's otlwgys the one to excel ln other studies she does equorlly well. Though gregt is her mind She is grgcious gnd kind This charming young lcrss, Aimee Bell. CORSEY FAMILY TRUST PROTECTIO . . . how does tt benefmt a FATHER? T takes present worries about the ultimate financial protection of his wife and chil- dren, olf his mind. It gives him the comfortable assurance that the financial plans he makes for them now will be continued and carried out in the event of his death. Furthermore, Trust Protection can be planned to protect even the youngest member of his family. We invite any father with property to leave to acquaint himself with the many ways in which this experienced Trust Institution can be of permanent service to him-and to each one of the beneficiaries of his estate. Fl DELITY TRUST COM PANY :541-343 FOURTH Ava. mv-rs e u R G H Member Federal Deposii Insurfmce Corfmraiiozz I I I T II AI BOIII I WHITE EAGLE PARISIAN MARKET J. LUCZAK, Prop. DOWNTOWN Roosevelt Hotel Building Penn Ave. near Sixth St. EAST LIBERTY 5929 Penn Ave. 4409-4411 BUTLER STREET SChcnIey 4986 4919 PENN AVENUE I IVIOntrose 36611 I I I I I BUSINESS TRAINING COLLEGE SECRILTARIAL ACCOUNTING BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION COIIRSES I I FULTON BUILDING PITTS BU R G H ATLANTIC 2678 E I E I E I UUE Us I AFTER GRADUATIQN Phones ATIantic 2900-01 Prtpare for atzisrlgiroduction Job XVQ Tvlggmph IIIUWWS THE NATIONAL YOUTH , ADMINISTRATION ' HILL S FLOWERS underlhe I Dave Hz'Il's Only Store Vwfar Man Power Commission I Box 776 New Post OIIIICC Building I Pittsburgh, Pa. IVIR. XVALTER PETTY Iflowers for All Occasions 541 Sixth Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa I I EE E . BEST WISHES to the members of the SCHENLEY GRADUATING CLASSES UF 1943 ,,..f l ' 1 x :Apu ,F Sfrem Sfudios Official Class Photographers 433 Penn Avenue Plttsbu gh P BORTAS' EYE fNEARSIGHTEDl VIEW OF SCHENLEY HIGH SCHOOL Schenley is a large building in which approximately 3,000 pupils teach the facts of life to some 90 teachers fthe teachers, of course, think that they do the teaching. Hall lts points of interest are many-a few of them are: On the ground floor: The Caieterias-which perpetuate the bread line idea. CNot really bread, of course, just two dessertsj The Girls' Gym--which usually resembles an assembly hall filled with the International Order of Blue Bloomer Girls. The Boys' Gym-about which nothing can be said. Secret military oper' ations. However, l have it from a reliable neutral source that Commando tactics are being taught. On the first floor: The Auditorium- Morning assemblies, during which we sleep. Afternoon assemblies, during which we weep and Noon movies, during which we get kicked out. Chemistry Lab.- Our greatest glory is, not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall. Office-nucleus of the Schenley cell. Iournal Office- Day after day, day after day, We stuck, nor breath nor motiony As idle as a painted ship Those senior write-ups Land o'goshen. Second Floor: The Library-Cradle of Schenley genius. 224-Mrs. Thome's Court of Human t?l Relations. Third Floor: There is nothing much up here-only the Triangle Office. V E T T E R BEAUTY SHOP 4203 Butler Street Pittsburgh, Pa. , Compliments of BLANK BROS. FUNERAL HOME 3222 Forbes St. Pittsburg SChcnley 4000 11, Pa. l l 1 ROBERT GESTRICH Jeweler and Optometrist 4726 Liberty Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. Best lVz'shes to the GRADUATING CLASS of 1943 SUPERIOR PRINTING PLATES THE COPPER HALFTONES AND LINE ETCHINGS THAT WERE USED IN PRINTING THIS BOOK WERE MADE by zffze Superior Engraving Co 235 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. o DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Y ,YY ,, V ,V ,,,, Y K t I . 2 Phone ATlantc 7231-2 NICK'S i L I SHQE REPAIR 3 BUD SAUNDERS 4308 Butler Street F L O W E R S PllIfSb111'gll, Pa. 222 Stanwyx Street SChenley 0266 Pittsburgh, Pa. 1 I N AT1miC 8512 l LET US DO Vggue Beauty Salgn Your Maintenance and Repair 2223 Center Avenue Interior and Exterior Work Vogue means keep in time with the ROOFING INSELBRIC latest styles to suit your personality. TRY Us t A. Coceo Operators-Aretha Mosley and CONTRACTOR Vy'ilhelmena Thompson 459 Pearl St. Free Estimates Given Catherine Green, Pwpi i 3 so 7694 or so 6514 -Y Y 7,-Y ,Q 4, an, had A FABLE the tragedy of mr. p. there once lived a man Whose name was mr. p. mr. p.'s only ambition in lite was to become a great journalist. he Wrote tor the london times, the man- chester guardian, the new york times, p.m., and action comics. but he was still not satisfied. mr. p. telt that his supreme triumph would come when he had Written tor the SCHENLEY IGURNAL. so he came to pittsburgh and begged mr. roberts, miss byrne and even eleanor zusinas to let him write tor the SCHENLEY IOURNAL, but they would not allow him to Write tor the IOURNAL because he couldn't sell reader's digests. --Burton Glinn. The Stevenson 6- Foster Co PRINTERS - LITHUGRAPHERS - STATIUNERS 421 Seventh Avenue - Pittsburgh, Penn IWW: COLLEGE Ammums I-IIOI-I SCI-IOOI. YEAR BOOKS MONTHLY PUBLICATIONS l Our representative will be pleased to assist you when I compiling your next Publication. . . . Telephone GRant I55I . . . PRINTERS SINCE STAR DRUG CO. 2450 VJylic Ave. Cor Beattie St. Best Wl'Sh9S Io the CLASS GF JUNE 1943 from S h l 9764-9585 . . l C en ey , Sanitary Lmen Supply I Pittsburgh, Pa. i . l I 2015 Wyandotte St. Pittsburgh, Pa. I i L I JOURNAL STAFF LILLIAN WANGER Grable may be able but Wanger has languor, Lil has skill. VIRGINIA BORTAS Virginia bored us. RUTH LEVINE Levine is keen, Levine, divine, but the task is mean to opine whether 'tis Levine or whether, Levine. IANET HARTMAN Some say it started with Eve, but not I, for I believe Ianet began it. She can steal your heart, man. CHARLES ISACK He's not exactly an industrious herog in tact he might be likened to Nero in that he tiddles while Miss Byrnes. AIMEE BELL The marksman thought he'd pun as he handed her the gun, stating, Aim, me belle. MURRAY ROSENBERG I Worry about Murray tor he's the ed and he'll raise ned because I can't rhyme Rosenberg. WALTER CONNER Conner is just one big drink of Walter. FRANCES ROSE It you are sturnped, ask Rose, she knows, tor through the toughest questions Frances prances. DELLAFAE HICKS For the 1944 candidate in the presidential rnandidate, the Iournal Staff picks Dellatace Hicks. L. P. B. Miss Byrne'll brave Worry eternal, headaches infernal, Wrinkles external, and trouble internal for the Schenley Iournalf' --Burton Glinn. Ghzfoqraplzs
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