Shaker Heights High School - Gristmill Yearbook (Shaker Heights, OH)
- Class of 1931
Page 1 of 110
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 110 of the 1931 volume:
“
, uh T1-f-w.,y,,., ,., ' -,3 77 SI 3 Wim! L A 1 1 ,4 ' ln- , - X fm 69 fha? 1 ,ti .lm l THE SHAKER SILHCUETTE 1930-19.31. PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS SHAKER HIGH SCHOOL g roktxxfoian ln a swiftly changing world, it is necessary that established customs and traditions change also. ln or- der that the Annual, lirmest ol these traditions, might better mirror the changes of the last happy year, we have tried to catch and keep its gay, fleet shadows, to preserve them 'in an atmosphere dihlerent from that of other years, and we present them to you, as the record ol the Class of Nineteen Thirty- One, in The Shalcer Silhouette. DEDICATI ON ln recognition ol lier service as adviser to tlwe National l-lonor Society, ol lier cliarming personality, and of tlie endur- ing quality ol lier friendship, tliis book is gratefully dedicated to Miss l-lelene Laitem. . THE FACULTY Mu. ROHEIIT B. PATIN .-I.s'x'f. Supl., Pri111'ip11I Mn. fT11An1.1:s 'IIIIURNTON Miss LKll'ISI1I IIoL1,oN .'1.Y1S'i-Vfflllf 1,l'iIIl'i1II1I 13111111 of Girls Mn. YI. PAH, ALLEN S1'i1'111'1', I1i.vI111 1j Miss II. .IRAN ANm:l1soN 1,i11r11ri1111 Mlss RI l'lI A. IILAIII Illlfill Mlss IXLMA IIUWMN .1111 I I1 1' 111 Il I ics Mn. I l1AN1'Is VV. II1111wN P11-11.vi1r.v Miss I 1.onr:N1'r: Iinowx fif'lIl'I'lll S1'i1'111'1' Mlss IxA'1'x1m'N 0141114111: f:1'f'III!l II Miss CIRACE B. KQRAIIAM Mus. M le. Mn. Mn. l'i11gIi.vl1 IJ0uo'1'1u' R. CQVNN Lniin l'11Am.r:s YV. IAIANICS Shop .IOIIN IIARl!0I'li'l' flixfrlry, l'f1'111111111i1-x IVAN O. HAWK .I1l'C'lIIlNil'!1l l,I'I17L'ilIff Mn. IIowAun Mu1u'rz lf11.11.v' 11.11111 Mlss M1I,mu-in Molmls I,111i11 Mn. RAYMOND Momus Ifnglixh Mlss A11Nr:s G. I'ALM1:n If11g1i.x'l1 Mn. A. I . M. I'r:'r1-:lzsIl.11r: .Il11fl11'11111fi1'.v Mn. XIOHK N. PITKIN f'h1'111i.vfr.11 .-I.v.vi.vf1111f Mu. CARI, Bl!l'HAIilflll Miss IIm.1:N1+1 I.A1'rm1 Miss I71m11'r1n' PVTNAA1 .Il11Il11'11111fi1'.v, l'11111'I1 1 r1'111'11 Typing, Sl111rH111111l Miss IIm.1:N I'Im'AN'r Mn. I . C'. I.1cA1111 Mus. Rvrn S. SA1'11A fvllllkillg Fr1'111rh HisI11r.11 Mn. C'11.Am.1cs G. l'1,An1i Mn. IALFIIEIJ G. IIINSVIIIICIJ Mn. IC. B1:NsoN SAlHiI'IN'l' ,Il111l11'11111fi1'.v lfi11l11gy lJr1111111fi1'.v Mn. IVILLIAM C. Cl.An1c Mus. Ij0R0'l'IIY I,oMMr:N Miss I'AI'1.IN1-: Sm,1.14:ns .I1lIfIIl'Ill!lfif'N Girls' fi'Ij77I f'f'I'IIl'l1 Miss ANN c'RHIUII'I'0N Miss ELSII-I Km.I.l-:Y Miss IIA'r'rl1-: S11:1.0v1:n 1C11gIi.s'l1 Typing .1I.9.visf1111f .Ill1fIlf'7llIlfil'S Miss I'IYlCI.YN IJ11.1.1-rv Mrss KATHRYN MANs1:1,1. Mus. EVA-MAL: S. Sxxrru I.11fi11 Hizglislz Fr1'111'l1 Mlss AIAIIICI. ID. lim' Mus. I,0l!0'I'IIA MARLOW XIII- I.. Ii. 'I'ImAI1.KILL .-I rf S1'7c'i11g IIi.vl11r.1f Mn. VVAYN1: I.. I u1:N1'11 Miss IAJIIISE M1fC'nA1:xu:N Mlss ALr:'r11A Tom: 3111111 1' n111!i1'.v lG11gIi.vIz l'o111ri11g Miss IIIAIHON VVHITTLESEY Miss CQALE IVICKWIIIE lfnglish Jfllgli-S11 plllll' six CZJJJIJ THE CLASS CF FEBRUARY OFFICERS lIl'lIlIN lluuvl lc Nlf'l' l'lIl'lINl.XN ....... I In l IIAIILIIS llluuclz ., .HN rrvlr lwu lhmmc II.Xl!'l' .. . ..NrH'i1rl THE CLASS OF JUNE OFFICERS PlilIll'l' lhtu. .,.... . un' I,u1'lsl: BOI'llll'l'UN .... I nr 'XFN l'.uz'l'wnu:lu'r . N lNl'lIN'l' .XRNUIID lullx 'l'Il:lzNl:x ..., Snriul SENIOR HOMEROOM TEACHERS Miss Blnulr Miss Lil-IIGIIII Miss l'.xl.Mr:1c Mu. 'l'llu.ul,ull,I M lss VV 1 C K w 1 u I-: l'r1'vf.'I1l1f l'rvsi1la'ul I l'l'l1KIll'Y'l' fvllllfflllllll l'l'1.vi1l1lll 'l,l'1'.Till'l'lIl Swrrf IIN'-ll 'l'1'rnxfl:'rr' Clmirmnn Page selwzz Page eight STEPHEN H00 V E R Class Prcsidcnt Q-1-jg Latin Club flj. QZZDQ Parliamcntary Club QZDQ Boost- crs' Club Q-Ljg Debating Club Sccrc- tary-'l'rcasurcr Q-I-jg Track it-l-H f, i l X li0lSl'lll'l' BHLI. Class Prcsidcnt C-l-jg Glcc Club CID. QZJQ Latin Club Qlj. Quzrstor QZQ: Studcnt Council Qljg Slmkrfrifc Statl Boostcrs' Club USD. QLD: Hi-Y Club CSU. Qljg llaskctball QZJ: lfootball QU. MURIHI, BELL National Honor Society Q-lj: Class Secretary fllg Miriam Stagc Lcaguc Qlj, Q2j, QED, Q-lfjg Latin Club CSU. Qlijg wYl7PkSll0ll C315 Glcc Club Qilj, f3Qg Boosters' Club Qlljg Stuclcnt Council President fl-jg G. A. A. QPU, Cljg Baseball QZJ, QU, fllijg Track Qiljg Hockcy QID, QU: Yullcy- hall Baskctball ARLENE BARTZ Miriam Stage Lcaguc Qlj CHARLES BLAKE Class Sccrvtary-'l'rcasurcr Q-Hg Boostcrs' Club JACK BROOKHART Scicncc Club Q-lj: Boostcrs' Club Q-U4 National Honor Society QU MARION BROYVN National Ilonor Society Qilijg Slzukcrih' Staff Qiij, Q-Hg Glcc Club Qlj, Vicc-l'rcsi- clcnt QCD, Acconipanist QZZQ, Qlij, Qilijg Annual Board Q1-jg Orchcstra Qrijg Bus- kctball Qlj, Qilj ALICE CANNHLL Miriam Stage 1.1-aguc Qlj. Q2jg Boosters' Club Q-lijg Workshop QU ROSFZMARY DISBRO .IUNYORE DYSHERE VVorksl1op Qiij, Prcsimlcut Q-U3 Latin Club Q2j4 lioostcrs' Club QZJ. QLD, Qljg 'fcn- nis Qlij, Q-I-jg Intramural Managcr Qiij, Q-I-jg Sluzlrvrifv Stal? Circulation Manager Qijg Atlilctic Association Trcasurcr Qsl-jg Chemistry l,ab Assistant Q-lj .lANl i'1' HICHMAN Class Vicc-President Qljg Miriam Stagi- Lcaguc QU. QD, Qiij, Q-lijg Glce Club QU, Q2Q, Qiijg Boostcrs' Club Qlij, CA'1'HI'lRlN1'l Fl'lELl'lY Glcc Club QCD: Miriam Stagc League Qiij, Qbljg Latin Club Qiijg French Club QED TOM GRIl l I'I'H Class Treasurer Qlijg Student Council Q2Qg Hi-Y Q3J, Treasurer Q-U4 Boosters' Club Qiij, Q4-jg Football Q3j, N Page nine Page len JEAN HARRINGTON National Honor Society Cel-jg Slzulrvrifr' Staff filj, Editor filjg Annual Board 535, Editor Q-Hg Seribblers' League 425, UU, Vice-President Q-4-jg Glee Club QU, fzijg Latin Club QQQ, Qfijg Miriam Stage Leagrue QU, f2jg Workshop QZJ, flij, Ujg Bas- ketball flj, ffljg Track Q31 VELMA HEl,I,ERS'I'HIN Miriam Stage League fiij, fel-jg Latin Club CBJ, QU: Boosters' Club CHQ NVork- shop CSU, Qljg G. A. A. Qiij, fel-Q ELSIE KELl,l'lY Miriam Stage League U55 XVorkshop Qlijg Glec Club QZQ, Qiij EDVVIN LOYVIC Glec Club Qlj, f2j, CD3 Boosters' Club QZQ, fill, C-ljg Slzrlkerile Staff fllj, Qilj, C-1-jg Seienee Club fiij, President Qljg Art Club Treasurer fllyg Annual Board Q-lj GERTRUIJE MACH G. A. A. gap, mg Gif-if Club up .IEANNE OLDS Student Couneil f2jg Workshop Qrijg Lat- in Club C2j, Qiljg Glee Club QZQ, USD. Q-I-jg Miriam Stage League QU, Q2jg National Honor Society Q-ij ' Y ,J kkA xV'Q 'xkkjx .KNPX TFA lmwunnciz POMEROY X Latin Club flj, f2jg Boosters' Club 121. CSU, fel-jg Slmkerife Staff f2j, fiij. fel-jg Science Club GU, Vice-President Qi-jg Art Club CD5 Scribblcrs' League Q-ljg VVres- tling Qlij NETTIE RADCI.IFI E Glen Club QU, f2j, Qlljg Miriam Stage League fl, EVELYN ROSENSTEIN Freneh Club 121, Qiijg Miriam Stage League fly, f2jg Latin Club QU, .fiijg Glee Club f2j, Q3jg Workshop f3j, Q-I-jg Scribblers' League 135, Q04 Boosters' Club ROBERT SNELI, Latin Club flj, f2jg Glee Club QQ, frijg Science Club Qlij, Secretary Q-l-jg Boosters' Club Q40 MARSHALL STALLEY Class Secretary fljg Parliunu-ntury Club fljg Boosters' Club Qlj, fill, fiij, Qljg Glen Club C173 Lutin Club QU, Consul QLD: Student Couneil 121, Qi-jg Slml-'ffritw Stuff Q1-jg Seribbla-rs' League fill, Treas- urer Qljg French Club QZJQ Athletic Assn- vintion 'l'reusurer Q-lj RUTH STOCKHAUS Glue Club QLD, Qtlj, fel-jg Miriam Sluge l.1-ugue Qlj., 121: Vibrkslmp fill, Q-Hg Lutin Club QD: Student Council Qiljg Boosters' Club Q-lj J A M E S TAY L0 R Football fill, Q-Hg Truck ,I LYNN NVILFORD ' Boosters' Club ' 149 it RONALD ARCHBOLD Latin Club flj, President 121g Art Club UD- 429, GU VINCENT ARNOLD Nutiunul Ilunor Society Q-1-jg Cluss 'Prens- urvr ffljg SlllIlu'l'l'ifll Stuff GD, My Latin Club QLD, flijg VVOrksliop Treasurer ADELINH BAKER Mirium Stage League Qlj, QZQQ VVurk- shop Q-lj RICHARD BANKS Lutin Club flj, Treasurer Clljg Seienu' Club Qilj, 135, HQ WALTER BRCKE RT ELIZABETH BHEBE Miriam Stage League Cljg Leaders' Club wa Page eleven Page 111101 vc RUTH BELL Miriam Stags I.k'EljIll0 111. '21, 131, 141: Boosters' Club 131, 1113 G. A. A. 121, 131, 1-I-1g Hockey 121, 1314 Basketball 111. 121, 131g Volleyball 1213 Baseball Czl- CU, C43 HILDA BENZ Miriam Stage Lvaguv 111, 121. 131, 1-11: Glu- Club 121, 131. 1lf1g G. A. A. 131. 111: Baskvtball 121. 1351. 111: Bawlmll 1213 Hoc'k0y 121 MARY ANN BLACK llaskctball 1214 G. A. A. 131. Yivn'-l'r0si- clvnt if-L1 COCRTNEY BOCKS'1'AHLl'1R I.atin Club 111, 1213 Scicncc Club 1251, Ss-crvtary 1,1-1g Football 1-L13 Aviation Club 131.7 National llonor Society 1l1 LOUIS BODY Stuclcnt Council 1113 Latin Club 121, 1314 Baskn-tliall 1314 Boostcrx' Club 131, 111 MARY LOUISE BOUGHTON National llonor Sovivty 1114 Class 'l'rvas- ur:-r 1251, Vice-l'r1-sirlciit 1114 Student Counvil 131: Art Club Vice-Prm-sirlvnt 131. Pri-siclm-nl. 1-L14 Annual Board 1351, Art Eclitor 1i1g Boosters' Club 1:31, 11.13 G. A. A. 121, 1231. 1'L1g Shrllrrwill' Staff '-I-13 Track 1214 Volleyball 1313 Ilof-ka-y CU MAX BRITTAN MAUDE BROOKS Riding' Club 1114 G. A. A. 121, 131, 141: Miriam Stags' I.:-aglu' 131, 1413 Latin Club 111, 121, 1313 Hockvy MARGARET CAMPBELL G. A. A. 131, 14-14 Miriam Stage- I.x-agua' 121, 131, 1-4-14 Latin Club 121, 1313 Slmlrrfrifr' Staff ANNE CHABIBERLAI N Miriam Stagrc League 111, 1251 li E TTY C HA P M A N lfrcncb Club flj. fijg l.atin Club flj, Sccrctary flljg Miriam Stagc Lcaguc flj, f2j, flij, fvijg xA'0I'liSll0I! fl-jg liaskctball fiijg Hockcy fill Bl'l'.l l'Y C0l l ll'lLD U. A. A. f2j. flij, frljg Miriam Stagrc Lcaguc fljg Latin Club Sccunclus Consul flj. Scriba f2jg Frcncb Club flj. f2jg lioostcrx' Club f-I-Q4 Nlmlrcrifr' Staff fiijg llaskctbull flj, fiijg Yollcyball f2Q, ftlj. 1 1 fvljg llockcy f1.j, iiijg Track f2.j LEAH COLEMAN VVorksliop fllj, fiij, frijq Boostcrs' Club f-I-jg llockcy frij, fl-jg liaskciball fiij NVILLIAM COMHLLA liaskctball fllj, fiij. f-U4 Bascball flijg Football f-lj ELLIOT CURRY Class Vicc-Prcsimlcut flj, Prcsidcnt f2j, filjg Studcnt Council flj, f2j, fljq Atlu- lctic Association Prcsitlcnt f-1-jg Hi-Y flij, Hjg Boosters' Club fltjg Tcnnis f2j. fiijg liascball fiijg Football f-Hg Baskctball flilg National Honor Socicty frtj IRENE CORNELL Workshop filjg Miriam Stagc Lcaguc flj, f2j. fiijq Boost:-rs' Club f-U l I,0R1'1NCH COHNSVVEET Frcncli Club flj. f2j: Glcc Club f2j, flij, frljg Vi'orksliop flij, f-1-jg Slmkvrilrf Staff LAURA CURRO Glcc Club flij., f-1-jg Latin Club fill, Miriam Stagc Lcaguc fiij, f-Ljg Baskct- ball flij MARIE DAERR Slmkcrifa' Stull' fikj, Editor ffl-jg National Honor Society f-I-jg Scribblcrs' Lcaguc flij, fijg Miriam Stage Lcaguc flj, f2j. filly Latin Club flj, f2j, ftljg Orclicstra CU' 123, C35 ROBERT FISHER ' French Club fljg Shakffrilf' Staff f2j, fiijg Football Squad flij l Page lhirlcen Page fourlvvn HELEN FLEISHMAN Frm-null Club QU, Qiljg Miriam Stage 7 J I I ' Lcaguu QU, QU. Q' jg .atin Club Q Q, QLD MARVIN FOX Class Treasurer QU: Latin Club QZQ: limlslwrs' Club HELEN GALVIN Frvncli Club Q2jg Miriam Stags IICZIHIII' on VIRGINIA GAHBISON Miriam Stage Ia-agua' QU, QZQ, QED. Svc'- rf-tary QU: Studvnt Council Qiijg Scrib- blors' League QISJ, Svvrc-tary QU: Shnkrr- ill? Staff QZZQ, Qiij. Club Editor Q-U4 Latin Club Q2j, Qiij, Q-U: Fr:-ncll Club QU, Q2jg Ulf-cr Club QZQ, Qtij, Q-U4 Boosters' Club Qilj, QAUg G. A. A. QZQ, QIU. Q'Ug VVork- shop QED: Iluckvy QZQ. Qiij, Captain Q-U3 Volleyball Captain QZQ, Qiijg Track QD: Baseball Captain Qiijg Annual Board QU B ETTY GEISM E R Miriam Stage League QU: Latin Club QU, QZQ, Qiijg French Club QU, Viva-- Prcsidvnt Q2jg Shnkrlriff Staff Qlljg VVork- sbup Qlijg G. A. A. QU, QZQ, Qlijg Ilockvy Q2j, Captain Q3jg Vollvyball Qilj, Qlijg Baseball QZQ, Qtij IRIS GOLDBERG Fra-nc-I1 Club QU, QLD: Latin Club QU, QZQ, Qiijg Miriam Stags IA'1lf,!lll' Qlljg Itid- ing Club QUQ Buostvrs' Club QU JANET HAIISELL Glec Club Qilj. Qilj, Acumnpanist, Proxi- de-nt Q-U: Ci. A. A. QZZJ. QZU, Q-U3 Latin Club Qiljg Boosters' Club Qiij, QU: Shnkw- ffl' Staff QZQ. QJU, Class Editor Q-Ug Miriam Stagv Ia-agua QU, QZQ, QISQ, Vivo- Prusidc-nt Q-U: Workslmp QIU: Hockoy QU, QZQ, Qlfljg Basketball QU, Vnllvy- ball QU. Qiijg Base-ball QU, Q2jg Track QZQ I+' REIJA MAE HAESSLEY JAMES HALL Fr:-m'li C.lub Q2jg Latin Club Qiijg Track Squad Qlij LAURADEL HALL Miriam Stage Imzlglle' Qlj, QLD: Lcadvrs' Club Qsjg G. A. A. QZJ, Qiij ADELAIDE HAMILTON MARJORY HAMM Miriam Stage League Qlj. Q3jg Track Q2j KATIIRYN HANLEY Glue Club Qllj, Qvljg Miriam Stage League 4-33, C43 JAN HT HARRISON Glec Club QU., QD: Miriam Stage League Q2j, Q-U: VVorkshop Q-U4 Slzakffrifv Stall' Qfljg G. A. A. Q2j, Qljg Hockey Q2j, Q4-jg Annual Board Q-lj Bl'lRNICl4l HARTH Miriam Stage League Qlj, QZQ, Q3j, Qalfjg Vi'orksliop Qiij, QQ: Art Club QU, QZQ. QIU, Seeretary-Treasurer Q-I-jg French Club Qlj, Q2jg S,Illk4'I'ifl' Staff Qilj, Qljg An- nual Board Q-Hg G. A. A. QZQ, Qiij Ill'lLl'lN HAYS Latin Club QU. QZQ, Qlijg Miriam Stage League QU, QLZJ, Q3j, Qlrjg VVorksbop Qiijg Boosters' Club Q1-jg Hockey Q25 Bl'l'I l'Y HODGE Miriam Stage League Q2j, Qiij, Q-Ljg Art Club Q35 M ILDRED HOULE Miriam Stage League Qlj, Qilj I'Il'lL1'lNl'l IIRUBES Miriam Stage League QU, Q2jg Latin Club Q2j, Qlijg G. A. A. Qllj, QLD, Q4-jg Basket- ball, Captain Qlj, Q2j, Qlljg Baseball Qlj, Qilj, Qiijg Iloekey Qljg Tennis Q3j ELlZABl'l'1'H I'IUN'1'l'lR h'lI1Ilx'l'l'ifl' Staff QISQ, Assistant Editor Q-1-jg Miriam Stage League Qlj, QZQ, Qiijg Latin Club Qiijg Art Club Q2jg Orchestra Qlijg Glee Club Qlijg National Ilonor Society fill Page liflecn Pay? s i.l'ic'1'n HAl,l,Yl'i l'lUN'l'ZINGl'lll W'orkshop C-Hg Cilcc Club PIIYLISS ISRAI'1I. SAYLOR .IACOBY National llonor Socivty Pri-sidcnt Q-l-J: Annual Board Assistant Editor 1-U: Ath- ls-tic' Association Scvrvtary Q-lj: NVorkshop QI-jg Glu- Club QZJ, fiijg Latin Club QD, tlijg lntrainural Managvr fiijg Track Squad QZJ, fill B l'i'l l'Y .l El I lil1'lS l i'4-iivli Club flj, 'l're-asurm-r Clljg Art Club QZJQ lloostvrs' Club QI-jg Miriam Slagv I.t-aglw C174 Latin Club Primus Consul flj, Scvundus Consul UQ, fill: Svribblt-rs' l.t'3lg'llt' fllj, flij, fl-Q: Hlmlrrfrih' Stat? Qilj, Literary Editor Q-I-jg NVorkshop QZU, QU: G. A. A. Q2j, fiij, QU: llockcy 121, Q-H: Volh-yball UQ, QCD, U13 Track Q25 MARY JONES Miriam Stage lA'1ljZ'lli' QU. QD: Uh-0 Club fiijg Lcadvrs' Club Qtijg I'-ask:-tball fly, 121, CHQ Hm'km'y filj, QU: Base-ball fill, Volluyball QSSJ ALICE Kl'lI.I,EY Latin Club fljg G. A. A. QZQ. Qiljg VVork- shop Qilj, QED I I.ORHNCE KHI'I.INGl'll'l Class Sc-vra-tary fljq G. A. A. S1-crm-tary Q2j, fiij, QU, Miriam Stage Leaguc QU, f2j4 Student Counvil QU. QD. f-lj: Bas- kvtball, Captain fly, QZQ, GU, Q-UQ Latin Club CZQ, ffijg Athletic Association Yiw- President Hjg Boosters' Club HQ JUSTIN KUZELI. Class 'Treasure-r f2j: I.atiu Club CU. 'l'reas1m-r QD, Qiijg Boostt-rs' Club QZJ, CJD, fstjg Student Council Qiij THEODORE LERMAN Student Council Qljg Basketball QQJ, CU, fslrjg Football HELEN LEVISON Latin Club QU., Q54 Scribblcrs' Lcaguc Q2j, Qilj, Q4-jg Shalrvrilw Staff 131, UQ: Student Council frijg Animal Board QD. Literary Editor Q4-jg Art Club flj VIRGINIA MCGOVNEY French Club fljg Art Club Clj, C214 Miriam Stage League Qlj, QZQ, f3j, Chg Workshop Q3j. Q-UQ G. A. A. f2j, GD, U03 Hockey QU, Q2j ALVIN McNl'1I,I,Y French Club Qljg Art Club ffijg Aviation Club Qiij l+lLl'lANOlt MCTAGGART Art Club Qljg Miriam Stage IA'itglll' QZJ, fiijg Basketball flj, fiijg Track Q23 ANIJRHYV MEI.DRUlNI Annual Board Business Manager Hjg Hlzukvrifa' Stat? filfjg Boosters' Club H14 Student Council Q-Ljg Latin Club flj, QZQ, Qiljg Tennis Qllj, CSD. Captain ffl-Q BETTY MERRELL Latin Club Qiijg Glcc Club C-tj HENRY M HRLE Aviation Club, President Gil. Hjg Stamp Club QU. UQ: Track QQ, GH, Q4-jg Football QQQ, QD BEATRICE MILLER Latin Club Qlj I5I lRN1CE MILLER Latin Club QU, Q21 YETIVE MILLER Latin Club QU MARY MUELLER Miriam Stage League Q2j Page smmnivelz Page cighleen RAYNIOND NEEDHAHI Tennis ffly, fl-yg Basketball frly. f-ly JANET NULL French Club fly. f2yg Latin Club fly. f2yg Art Club fly. f2y, flyg Vllorkshop fiiyg Boosters' Club f-ly KATHERINE PECK French Club fly, f2yg Latin Club fly, 629, C39 EMMA POPOCZY Latin Club fly FRANK PRl lNDl'1RGAST Latin Club fly, f2y, filyg Seribblers' League f2y, ffiy, President f-tyg Shakcrifr' Staff f3y, f-1-yg Annual Board flyq Boost- ers' Club flyg Intramural Manager fiiyg Tennis yli!lHl,SICl' f-ly LJ VVALTER QUAYLH 5 xg Ili-Y fiiy, f-Lyg Boosters' Club f2y, f-lyg Football Team f2y, f3y, fl-yg Bas- ketball f2y, f3y, fel-yg Baseball fiiy, fly DUDLHY RITTE NCUTTE R Latin Club fly, f2yg Science Club fly CHARLOTTE ROBINSON Latin Club ftiyg VVorksliop fliyg G. A. A. f8y, f-4-yg Miriam Stage League filyq Art Club f2yg Boosters' Club f-lyg Baseball filyg Hockey fel-yg Basketball f-tyg Track C25 DOROTHY RONK French Club fly, f2yg Latin Club fly, f2yg Glee Club fly, 4254 Art Club f2y, f3y, Vice-President fl-y: Miriam Stage League fly, f2y, f3y, Treasurer f-ly: Workshop ffiy, f-I-yg Boosters' Club f-I-y: Annual Board 4454 G. A. A. f2y, fiiy, f4-yg Hockey f2y, Basketball f2y, f3yg Baseball f2y, fllyg Volleyball f2y, f3yg National Honor Society fly ROBERT ROSE Latin Club flyg Chess Club fly: Boosters' Club 4254 Debating' Club fiiy 5 RITA ROSEMAN Annual Board 1-15, Scribblers' League 1-1453 Art Club 115. 125, 115g Miriam Stage 1.eap:ue 115. 1253 Basketball 115 M ARGA R E T R 011' E l reneb Club 115, 125, Latin Club 12153 Glue Club 115, 125: Miriam Stage League 115, 125, 135, 1415, G. A. A. 125, 135, 1-I-54 VVorksbop 135. 115: Boosters' Club 11-5, National llonor Society 11-5 HOSALIA SCIIMALZ G. A. A. 125, 1215: Miriam Stage League 12153 Glee Club 135 MAYBl'lI,I.H SCIIWAHTZ Glee Club 115, 125, 12354 Freneb Club 125, 135: Miriam Stage League 125, 135, 1415: G. A. A. 125, 135. 115, Vi'orksliop 1:35, 115: Art Club 115. 125 lIl'lI.l'l'N scnivmiI,r1u Miriam Stage League 1l5, 125. 13354 Boosters' Club 12155 S,I!IIi'l'l'lf1' Staff 11-5 B1'Z'I'TY SEITZ Miriam Stage League 1-L55 Hoosiers' Club on HI-1I.l'ZN SEI,l5EN Miriam Stage League 115, 125, 1355 Latin Club 115 l'lfII1.0MENH SHHA Miriam Stage League 115, 125, 1255, VVorksbop 185: I.atin Club 115, Glee Club 115. 125, 135g Boosters' Club 125, 135 XVILMA SIMON Miriam Stage League 115, 125, 135, 1445, Latin Club 115, Consul 125, Glee Club 125g Boosters' Club 135, 145, Orebestra 135, Class Viee-President 1255 RUTH SLYH National Honor Society 1-15g Student Couneil 125, Secretary 135, Vice-Presi- dent 14-5g Miriam Stage League 115, 125, Seerc-tary 135, 14-5: G. A. A. 125, Sec- retary 135, President 14-5: Glee Club 115, 1254 French Club 115, 125g I.atin Club 115, 125, 135g VVorksbop 135, 1-1-53 Boost- ers' Club 1-I-5 fixnl ,X 71-' 5 ' x I, Page ni neteen wx si Page twenty Q,52' IIARGARET SMITH Student Council Clijg Miriam Stagc Lcagus Latin Club CU, CZJ RALSTON SMITH Class President CU, Ciljg Ili-Y CZQ, Sec' rs-tary CDD, C4-jg Slmkrfrilw Staff CZJ, Ciijg Student Council Clj, CZQ, Ciijg VVorkshop CDSJ, C4-jg Boosters' Club C2j, Ciij, CH: Football C2j, CJD, CU, Track C2j, Crip, C-Hg Basketball C-I-Q ICLEANOR SNYIJHR Boosters' Club GARTH STINE Scribblr-rs' I,C!l,2'lll' C-ij MARGA It RT STEWA RT VVorkshop MAE SVOBOIJA Frcnch Club Clj, C214 Latin Club Clj. Clljg Glee Club C3j, C-Hg Miriam Stagi- Lcague Clj, CZJ, C3j, C141 GERTRUDE TEXTOR French Club Clj, C2jg Glcc Club Clj, C215 G. A. A. C2j, C3j, C4-jg Miriam Stage League Clj, C2jg Boosters' Club C3j, C-LQ VIRGINIA TYLER Student Council C2jg Latin Club C2jg Art Club Clj, C25 JOHN VAN VALKENBURG Student Council C-lj, Latin Club C2j, C354 Glee Club C3jg Boosters' Club Clij, C4-jg Workshop CM, Track CID, CH LUCIA WARNER CZQ, Ciij, C-I-jg Frm-nch Club Clj, CZJQ EI,1N0Rl1Z 5VA'1'11lRBURY Class Treasurer Q35g Glen: Club Q15, Q25, Q2i5g Latin Club QI5, Vicc-President Q25g Student Council Ql5g G. A. A. QI5, Q25, Q35, QAL5g Miriam Stage Lcaguc Q25, Q35, Q-L5 : Nlmkcrifc Slat? Q35, Exchange lflditor Q-L55 National llonor Socicty Q-I-5 FLOYD 5VHAI.1'lN lloostcrs' Club Q-l-54 Stamp Club Q35 VIRGINIA YVH ITNEY Miriam Stage Lcaguc Q35, 4 Hockey co ovv1fzNno1,rN WILLIAMS French Club Q25g Latin Club Q15, Q25g VVorkshop Q35: Miriam Stage Lcaguc til C'l C55 til a-v'v' JUNE YVILLIAMS Frcncli Club QI5, Q25g Miriam Stagc League QI5, Q25, Q35: Workshop Q-t5 LEONARD YVILSON Scicncc Club Q255q VVrcstling Q35 ADA YVISH French Club Q15g Boosters' Club Q15g Glcc Club QI5, Q25g Miriam Stage League C15 C'D , .4 MIRIAM ZAVELSON Scribblcrs' Lcaguc Q45 DANIEL BRICKER Student Council Q15 g Glce Club Q25 4 Foot- ball Q25, Q35g Track Q35, Q-L5 JOHN TIERNEY Class Social Chairman Q-L55 Student Coun- cil Q11-53 Art Club Ql5g VS'0rkshop Q45 A ' :- ROBERT TRUNDLE French Club Q15g Latin Club Q25, Secun- dus Consul Q35g Scicncc Club Q35, Treas- urer Q4-5g Annual Board Q-L53 Track Q25, Q35g Wrestling Q35g Glee Club Q35 Page twenty-one aiu' liaycr. llvvora lh-clntvl. liutli lim-kc1', Ruth lilacklmrn. .lolin Brooks. Ernest Clark, Donald Conn-lla, Iwo from-nwctt. Margarvt llougln-rty, Fred Harvey, liolvcrt Hcrlvrnck, Russell Kaplan, lI'lStl1l'l' Kulmcr. .losvpli Ll'lg'lltlll1, .Ivan Ia-on, Philip Page lwcnly-Iwo THE SENIOR B CLASS OFFICERS RIFIIARD Srzxz I'r1'.x'i1lm1f lil rn l m:m'soN Vivf'-Prr'.virlz'nI PIIILII' CAllRI l'lI Srwrf-frzry lfmin RAGAN T fl'HSIlr4'f l,0li0'l'llY xl.-HN Social fllllliflllllll Mn. HANI-:S lllnxs .-I111'i.wr Mr-llonougll. Norman McKay. Ralph Mcrcclitll. Gvorgc Moorv. Mary Hclcn Mouck. Alicc Nord. Otto Patti-rson, Elinor Ross-nlnlum. Lloyd Roth. Harold Sf-mph-. Georg:- Srscn. HQ-nry lVaclc'. Angvlinc lVarncr, Ruth lvurwagc, .lam- Zidcl. Edward THE JUNIOR A CLASS OFFICERS YVAM: HELBIS lhliln' lNIA'rzi:N Vi LEAII Cll-INTLE 1iALl'll l1l'GGI.ES Doms PA'r'1'1cnsoN Presizlcnt ce-Presirlzfnt Sr'crr'f11ry 1ll'l'!18IlI'f!T Social Chairman Miss BOXVI-IN Class .-Irlviser Albright, Rudolph Allen. Horace Allyn, lvilfred Ambler. Mary Bair, Fred Baker, Ruth Bellamy, Betty Beneda, Edward Bergman, James Berry, Robert Bissett, Eleanor Blair, Vachel Bolz, Roger Branea, Antoinette Bucher, Harry Byus, Elinore Cameron. William Campbell, Janet Chandler, Ruth Chileote, Adeline Clezie, Julia Cohen, Howard Conroy, Franklin Corbett, Jack Courtright, Fred Cox, Fred Davies, Virginia in J YA Drucker, Eugene Dye, lxvlllilllll Eigenfeld. Morris Erisinan, Barbara Esty. Janet Fliekinger. Katherine Freund. Dorothy Galbos, Edward Gallitte, Irene Garbo. Ina Geisiner, Molly Gilbert, Eugene Gilliland, Francis Glaspy, Leonard Green, Celeste Green, Marvin Griesinger. Betty Grimshaw. John Grow, Grave Haas, Carol Hacker, Ann Haneeska, Sally Hansen, Lillian Hexter. Edith Hix, Frances Elizlbeth Hollander, Ralph Jaeger, Elizabeth Page iweniy three SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 THE JUNIOR A CLASS James, Edwin Janowitz, Everett Jcwitt, Edith Jindra. Jean Karnak, Susan Kaufman, Ruth Kirschhaum, Mildred Kissack, Marian Kolosai, Elizabeth Krivanek, Roy Kubach, Gladys Kwiatkowski, Leonarda Lamb, Margaret Lamneck, Bertha Lederman, Harvey Levy, Edith Levy, William Liderbach, Mildred McCort, James Margrander, Lennore Martin, William Meink, Frances Nimeth, Eleanor Paxton, Jean Peabody, Carroll Peterson, Mae Pfeiffer, Elizabeth Quay. Eleanor Renfro, Richard Richardson, Charles Reinhardt, Dorothy Rini, Angela Robbins, James Robinson, Kathleen Rogers, Harry Rosenblum, Earl Sabad, Elaine Salzinger, VVally Schroeder, Jane Scott, Sue Shull, Robert Smith, Charles Stibr, George Swatek, Edward Tatro, Jack Thomas, Jean Thomas, William Vail, Nancy Vargo, Julius Vaughan, John Vitek, Margaret Wagner, Gordon Walter, Albert Watkins, Louise Weil, Caroline Weil, Louise Wessman, Oke Whitney, Betty Widdows, Linda Williams, Jean Williams, Margaret Wilson, Virginia Winsper, Mary Eliz Wise, Edward . Woodburn, Jack Page twenty-four abeth THE JUNIOR B OFFICERS 'NIIHIAM Ni-twizm. Prmvfrlcrzi l lIlABl'I'l'Il lz0I'GIITON 'Fifi'-1JI't'SIlll'IIf IXIARIAN Bax:-:s Sl'C7'PfI1l If Ai 1 in-zu Bom' Treasu rer Miss Si-:Lm-:us Class Azlziiscr N 1 IJEACII Clziss fI!I1Z'ISl'I' OFFICERS RUTH L1-:UTNER . RVILLIAM Mom: . . BIKENT BAXTER . E LEANOR Hanvi-:Y .lim Czmu . .... . Aishton, Jane Barker, Emily Barnett, George Bassett, Jean Batzer, Marjorie Benes, Marian Black, Carrie Blake, Janet Body, Alfred Boughton, Elizabeth Breves, La Verne Brill, Evelyn Brunner, Erwin Carpenter, Priscilla Cermak, George Coffield, Alice Comella, Mary Darrah, Braden Dercum, Ilse Fier, Frances Garden, Betty Gedney, Robert CLASS RIOBERT NITSCHKE . . Gerstenberger, Elsclou Griffin, Katherine Hacker, Joseph Hanley, Gertrude Hansen, Laura Hertz, Janet Hildreth, Eleanor Howell, Irene Hubbard, Winifred Hurley, Richard Irish, Henry Kaplafka, Leonard Kardos, Ernest Kehres, Leona Kovanda, Alice Lake, Elizabeth Lee, William Lifshitz, Evelyn McCaslin, Doris Malbin, Herman May, J ack Metzger, Lucerne Miller, Russell - SECOND SEMESTER . . . . . .PTl'.Yl!it'IIf . . .Vice-Prcsirlerrf . . . . . .Secrrlary .......Trca.rurcr .Social Chairman . . . . . ..'lssisIa11I Nelson, Margaret Newell, Miriam 0'Grady, James Parker, Sterling Pease, Betty Phillips, Dean Renfro, John Sanborn, Marjory Sanford, James Scheulfler, Mildred Schneider, Richard Sell, DeWitt Smith, Robert St. Clair, Ruth Stewart, Mary Jane Studeny, Marie Swift, Allison Takacs, Helen Van Aken, Florence YValker, Eleanor Watters, Alice White, Jack Page lwenty-livc Adelsperger, Dorothy Ahlman, Elizabeth Aishton, Fred Alhrun, Margaret Allen, Jeanne Armstrong, Mary Assin, Emanuel Barker, Violet Baston, Richard Beehtol, Lucretia Bechtol, Virginia Belding, Jolm Bell, VVindsor Black, Joseph Bloom, Norma Brandes, Frank Brink, Mildred Bucher, Ruth Burger, Lynette Burrows, Charles Byrd, Dorothy Campbell, Jean Carpenter, Virginia Cerny. Solange Christiansen. Dorothy Christman, Paul Chopp, Lucille Cieslak, Arthur Page twenty-six SOPHOMORE A CLASS OFFICERS HJCIIARD NICIVPIIFCR Jmms SIBIKISON View B1-:1 rv SANDS Aivrmfn STI-:RN MARY YV:-:lsr-2 L L Prmillvllt -Pr1'.s'i1l1'11! SCCl'f'f0l'.lj Tf0HfY1lfl'F Social Chairman Mus. MARLOW Class A 1l'Ui.w'r Miss XVHITTLESEY Class Adviser Clark, Eleanor Clawson, Sherwood Coen. Hyman Coleman, Jack Cool, VVilliam Corey, VVorden Cornswcet, Harold Cowley, Augusta Currier, James Day, Ralph DeLoss, Betty Denzel, Jane Deutsch, Jane Dieekow, Elizabeth Dodd, Bertel Dvorak, Edna Hshelman, Martha Evans. William Feldman. Arthur Feeley, Mary Fisher, Arlecn Follett. Tom Frankel, Ruth Freer, Frederick Gerstenberger, Gretm Gicl, Adelbert Gleeson, YVilliam Goldberg, Leonard :l SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 THE SOPHOMORE A CLASS Goldman, Natalie Gove, Richard Graber, Mary Gross, Stuart Gustafson, Mildred Guttman, William Hadsell, Cornelia Hardy, Ruth Hawkins, Vivienne Hellerstein, Herman Hennage, David Hinig, Howard Holman. Sue Jarms, Jack Johnson, Margaret Jones, Bernice Ruth Keleman, Joe Keppler, Marcella Kintner, Genevieve Koerner, Elmer Kruse, Mildred Lader, Maurice Landrum, Katherine Lang, Wilbur LaMond, Charles McCall, Kennedy McCormick, Robert McGuire, Malcolm Mack, Robert Majoros, Edward Mallinak, Raymond Mau, Stewart Meister, Edward Miller, Lorraine Morton, Leonard Narten, David Nau, Ruth Needham, Robert Nehrer, Irene Noderer, Jack Offtcrmatt, Ernest Passafiume. Rose Pietrowski, Beatrice I lolatsek, Robert W Porz, Melva Pritchard, Louise Prout, Jack Quigley, Ruth Ragan, James Reid, Catherine Reinhart, Betty Rockwood, Charles Russell, Harold Russell, ltfildred Salisbury, Mary Louise Schultz, Dorothy Scott, Josephine Shupe, Rosalie Sipan, Frank Smith, Louise Snevel, Wilbur Speddy, Marian Sprafka, Eleanor Stein, Carol Stern, Nelson Szego, Carl Szekely, William Traster, Earl Urschel, Evelyn Ward, Eleanor Ward, Wilfred Weil, Betty Williams, Tom Winship, William Wolcott, Virginia Wolfe, Sterling Zavelson, Lester Zimmerman, Barbara Zimmerman, Milton 'hambu- Page twenty-seven Akcrman, Maxine Amato. Josephine Andrews, Zenas Armstrong, Freda Arndts. Grctm-lien Barber, Rose Beattie, Mary Jane Bvneda, Josephine Bissett. George Boes, Hal Bottomley, Thomas Bower, Wayne Brandes, Dorothea Brown, Marjorie Brown, William f'ampbell, Helen Cantclla, Jolm Carlotta, Frances Chisholm, Jane Comella, Ninfa Comella, Philip Crippen, William Curro, Anthony Curry, Jane Davis, Martin Dowling, Marjorie Duncan, Ralph Page twenty-eight if SOPHOMORE B CLASS OFFICERS JAY STRANAIIAN Presirlellt SARAH Noun Vicr'-Prf'.s'id1'11! XVILLIAM Il0GERS Secrrfary-Treasurer JEAN ZINNER Social Chairman MRS. SACIIA Mfn. Class Allviser YV. C. CLARK Class Edmonds, Robert Finan, Richard Fontanazza, Lucy Funk, Robert Gavin, Nancy Gertzlin, Nelson Giardino, Agnes Giddings, Robert Goldberg, Elaine Goldsword, Robert Goodrich, Arthur Greenberg. Karl Griswold, Bruce Guttman, Theobald Hajek, Ladimir Hamilton, Rosalie Haynam, Crystal Helper, Sylvia Henshillwood, Janet Herzfeld, David Hick, Esther Hiigel, Margaret Hillwig, George Horstman, Robert Hubbell, James Jack, Betty Jack, Clarence Adviser SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 THE SOPHOMORE B Jaffe, Samuel Jones, Richard Kelling, Edna Kemmerling, Fern Kichler, Cecile Kihomy. June King, Mary Jane Koniar, Marie Kuhn, Richard Levine, Myer Lukas, Frank Mach, Frances Machol, Fred Malasca, Marie Malbin, Ruth Mathews, Helen Merrell, Ethel Millican, Lois Palmer, Betty Jane Pentland, Anna Peritore, Norman Petrequin, Robert Petrone, Victor Plunkett, Margaret Porter, Ruth Pratt, Harrison Prendergast, Mignon Radcliffe, Ruth Reardon, Raymond CLASS Reinhardt, Paul Rini. William Rosenberg, Sarane Sanson, Anthony Schiffer, David Selman, Edith Shackleton, Robert Shaw, Louise Shube, Frances Sitar, Steven Stein, May Stone, Adela Stromp, Robert Toth, Marigold Trentanelli, Marie Waldron, Frances VValker, Birney VValker, Charlotte VVallace, VVilliam VVeiss, Ruth VVhite, Jean VVilson, Margaret VVoody, Elizabeth VVyckof'f, Charles Yohman, Albert Young, Edward Zencoe, John Zinner, Jean Zirm, Jolm Page Iwenly nme Ahrahaui. Ruth Adcl:-:pm-rgcr. Junior Atlvlstvin. liolwrt Aniohir. Ralph Arvli:u'ki1-, Ill-lon Balv. Elinor llamlvlow. l lor4-mu Banks. Margarct Barkvr. Lum-illc liarrm-n, Hi-nry Batzvr. Lois llayvr. Virginia Bm-nmlcr. Marjorie- Ba-xsirv. Nlmlvlm-im' llisphain. Dorothy Bl1'txc'llcl'. Lois Bodvk. Ruth liolz. Norma Bowvr. llonalml Braithwaitv, John lircslvr. Bvtty Bri-tsclim-izlvr. Rutl Bronstm-in. Sylvia Brookvr. Phyllis Bryon. lirncstinc Bllt'llilIliHl, Virginia Budin. lidith Burrows, VVilli:nn Cainphcll. Marjorin- Carlson. Rohm-rt Cassaro. Charlcs Ccrnik. Milan Page thirly l Chill-otc. Dolorvs Cochran. wlllllillll Coffin, Carol Cohn-n, Richard Collins, Sylvia C'ouu'lla. lmna Corhctt. VVilliau1 Crowell. JIIIIICS Curtiss, Margarct llI'lll'liL'l'. Gwvnrlolyn Dustin. .lohn lilunnons, Betty lingcrt, VVillian1 Evans. .lvwvl l inn. Elfin Fisllvr. Clare-nvc Fisllcr. Mary Louisa' lslkfllliflg, Holme-rt Franklin. Howard l'll'l'TlCll. Charlvs Garho. .lohn Gillcn. Milton Glynn. Mary Gray. Buhl Griffcn. Gordon Grimshaw. Gcorgc Haas. Robert Hcrhruck, Howard Hcssingcr. Alim- Hr-ttingcr. .lane Hunter, .lack .lc-ffz-ries. Richard Pivrl FRESHMAN A CLASS OFFICERS CilIARLl'IS fi0RSBI'RGII Prr'.vi111'nl ucm Hman Vice'-Prr'.s'irl1'r1t Romzirr lisc'iir:muN Sl'l'l'!'f!l ry- Trwrzsu rvr Miss Cmzualrrox f'las.v .rI1l1'is1'r Mn. Mounts f'Ia.vs ,'l1I1'is1'r Johnson. Holm-n Kalal. .losm-ph Kassouf. Mathilcla K1-llvy. Jani- Kvttvrvr. Hvlrn King. Bm-tty Klcin. Rim-liard Klugc-. Rolwrt Koclling. xvlllllll' Kovachy. Gcorgv. Kovamla, l ram'm-s Kovanda. John Kray. B4-tty Kuhach. Lorvnz Kuvn-ra. Howard Kuzcll, Ruth l.c'c'llm'r. Rohvri lmfton. Gilhcrt lmstcr. Mac Lifshitz, Sarah Lonardo, Frank Louis. Charlcs I,upic-a. Anna Molloy. VW-ston Mach. Hclvn Majoros. l ram'vs Mal:isc':1. l,uc'illv Mapes. Marian Marcsh. Anthony Marc-sh. Matthew Masch. Shirlvy Ms-tzgcr. Bradlvy SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 THE FRESHMAN A CLASS Milam, Marjory Miller. Ida Miller, Mary Louise Mills, Nina Milne, Paul Monson, Shandor Murfett. Charles Nagg, George Nathan, Jack Nelson, Mary Lois Eleanor Wilson Osborn. Palmer, Patmoe, Doris Paton, Geraldine Perkins, Donald Pierce, VVilliam Pink, Thelma Polear, Gertrude Pollak. Irma Proudfoot, Douglas Quayle, Joseph Rahn, Dorothy Ramsdell, Peggy Rather, Hugh Reimer, Morris Richards, Marshall Rife, Catherine Rini, Eleanor Rini, John Robinson, Betty Rose, Robert Rose, William Salzinger, Aliee Sargent, William Schade, Elizabeth Seager. John Sell, Gladys Semple, Robert Sheppy, Frank Zamiska, Clara Simon, Edward VVilliam Simon, Selma Sipan, Joseph Smith, Virginia Speddy, Rita Stern, Annette Stewart, Betty Stohlman, Clara Stone. Stanley Sundberg, Carl Svoboda, Robert Swailes, Richard Swift, Marjorie Sykes. Hagan Taplin, Clark Taylor, Barnett Terebes, Dan Thayer. Jack Theis, Elsie Ann Thompson. Robert Trentanelli, Josephine Turner, Jane Ursehel, Dorothy Van Aken, Marion Vopalecky, Florence Wadelin, John VVaha, Mary Lou Waid, Betty Walker, Marvin VVall, VVilliam VValther, Janet VVarburton, Frank VVarner, Shirley VVebster, Jeanne VVilliams, Jane VVilliams, Robert Wilson. Jane Witter, Dorothy Young, Dorothy Page thirty-one l FRESHMAN B CLASS OFFICERS RICHARD P I-'UNDER President ALICE JANE GAIIEISON Vice-President GEORliPI SIMS Secretary FImNeIs LEoNAnn Treasurer GonnoN SINCLAIII Social Chair-man Mlss BROWN Class .'ldz'isvr MIss Momus Class A11'viser Ahlman, VVarner Baker, Robert Barkley, Jack BI-il, Arline Bell, Dorothy Benedict. lfllizabeth Bloom, Nettie liogardus, George Bosco, Anthony Bricker, Jane Brunner, Gertrude Burger, Virginia Cox, Arthur Furry, Betty Day, Edward limmert, John Engel. Carl Evans, Harry Fried, Mildred l ried, Roslyn Garbo. Diva Giaidino, Josephine Page Ihirty-Iwo Glaspy, Rita Goldmar, Sanford Gray. Gardner Green. Nathan Haserot, Chester Hasken, Jack Hays, Betty Jeanne Hexter, Louis Hildreth, Jack Jaswood. Betty Jordan, Betty King, George Klaus, Florence Klaus, Helen Kovanda, Edward Lauer, Peggy Long, James McDonnell, Ralph Mc-Guire, Jean Meltiorris, Jean Mathews, Frances Metzger, Albert Miller. Xfelba Moeder. Robert Mortus, Harold Obenauf. Evelyn Pope, Thomas Prior, Lily Proudfoot, Howard Root, Gilpin Rutledge, Claribel Saltzman. Tillie Schuck, Betty Seitz, Thora Solomon. Lois Stafford. Frank Swegenor. Lula Mae Tuttle, Virginia VValls, Ewart VVatt, Bill VVilliams, Bob VVilliams, Walter Wolcott, Dick Zill, Leonard S CLUB? THE CLUB YEAR HE elimination of an activity period this year has cut down on the work of many clubs. The Hi-Y, Latin Clubs, Glee Clubs. Stamp and Aviation Clubs. and the Orchestra have all disbanded. The brief review following. touches the high spots of the activities carried on by the remaining important organizations. In addition to its regular duties, the Student Council paid special attention this year to the conduct in the halls. working out a trattic system to reduce congestion. and seeing that all lockers were kept locked. To add to their other troubles. the Boosters were assigned the job of enforcing the new rules. The National Honor Society decided after the February initiation to hold regular meetings in order to promote further unity and service in the chapter. After-school rehearsals being inadequate. Mr. Sargent introduced Saturday llI'1lll12ltll'Sn this year. A large number of enthusiasts turned out. and have produced very successful plays. including the Clirixfmas Carol and ICf'tIU1l7lll. The ltliriam Kerruish Stage League devoted its time as usual to service to others. At Christmas. each group furnished one family with food, clothing. and gifts. They also made patchwork quilts for the Rainbow Hospital. The Scribblcrs were responsible for inducing Langston Hughes to come and speak to the upper classes. Their other important guests were the poet .lohn French VVilson. and Dorothea Speith. editor of Time and one of our alumnzf. The Debating Club is the only newly organized group this year. with Mr. Morris as faculty adviser. This club expects within the next few years to furnish a team to represent Shaker in inter-scholastic debates. In addition to tlleir own work. the Science Club members made several inspec- tion tours through the new school. Now we can be sure that it is being properly built according to the laws of physics. Instead of devoting all their time to one project, the members of the Art Club took up a new and fascinating type of art at each meeting. The Biology Club undertook the making of a nature trail through the woods as one of their most interesting duties. The Girls' Leaders Club has adopted a new and larger organization. Their major project is helping to conduct girls' gym classes. These organizations have carried on their activities outside of thc school schedule. and in spite of this handicap have made the club year a very suc- cessful one. Pagc Ihirly-Ihrcc THE STUDENT COUNCIL AIUIKIIQI, Bi-:LL . . . RI ru Snvu VVILLIAM Romzns Fmzn KAIIAN .... llxuuw MA'rzi-:N . JAY STRANAHAN Mn. 'I'1mA1LKlL1. OFFICERS ......PfI'.Sil1l'Ilf . . . . . .... View-Pre'.9i1ler1I .Q-..---.....--1.1 qrcrefarq . . . . Tr4'11sur1'r-First SPn1cstf'r . . . .Traasurr'r-Sacond S1'1n0.s'h'r . . . . . . . . . ..-1.vsi.s'tant Treasurer . . . ....... I acu11y .'lrl'visf'r COMMITTEES Civics CVUIIIYIITTTHR Marshall Stullcy-Chairman Adclhcrt Gail Charles Wyckoff Frank Lucas Robert l'lSl'llCllH!lll Social Cv07I1,7IliTtf'6 Elliot C'orc'y-Chairman Betty Gricsinger J ohn Vunvalkcnhcrg Ralph Ruggles .Imncs Hagan Pep Rally Committee YV:uic Hulnis-Chairman Martin Davis Charles LaMond Betty Kruy Lois Butzvr Page' fhirly-four ,-lclveriisirzg Committee' Franklin Conroy-Chairman James Hubbell VVilliam VVinship Howard Herbruck Charles French Assernbly Commiftee Richard Senz-Chairman Robert Harvey Louise Watkins Florence Keplingcr Andrew Meldrum lllubs Commitiee Card-Chairman Alice Watters Betty Ahlman J im THE NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY SAI'I.oI: JACQIIY . ....... l,l't'8illl'lIf Mlss I,AI'rI-:M .. ..I acuIfy .vlrlviscr MEMBERS VINQI-:N'I' AIzNoI.II MIIIIII-:L BIQLL CoIfII'rNI-:Y l30CKSTAliLER LIARY I.oIIIsIc BoUuII'1'oN JACK BIIOOIKIIAIIT BIARION BIIowN EI,I.Io'r Conm' MMIII: IBAERR Rl I'1I I EIusIIsoN Q J I-:A N HARIIINLGTON ELIZABETH HIINTI-:II DOROTHY BIAIN .IICANNE OLIIS DOIIOTIIX' RONIQ BIARGARET Rowlc RICHARD SENZ RUTII SLYH ELINORI: YVA'rI-:IIIIIIRY Page thirty-live .IIYNYORR Dvsniziuz .. Page THE SHAKERITE STAFF NlARlH IEAERR ....,. l'l1,izA1n4:'ru III'N'I'ER . . . lii:'r'1-Y J 1-:FFRn:s ..... I'h:m-:N l.RvlsoN . . . HIAUIIICE I.ADHR .... NIARSIIALL S'rALLm' . RORERT KUr:Nno1,n ROISEIVI' B iam. ....... l'lllA NK l'1u-:Nui-:lmAs'r I.AwR R NCR Pom mum' l'l1,rf:ANoR HARvm' . . . .. . VINe1+:N'r ARNOLD . . X IRGlNlA CQARHISON .. .lANm' HAns1-:LL , .... l'1LINoRi-3 XVA'l'ERIlI'llY . . . . .1'.'11ifor-in-elzief . . .ls.vi.vf1n1t Ifrlifor . . .Liferary Iflllfllf' . . .Ferlfllre Iffilflif .. . . . .rl.s'.vi.vfanf . . ..-llhlelics . . ..'l.s'.visIn11l . . . . . ..-l.v.visfm1t .........'1.v.vi.vIar1! ......-llumni lfrlifor .. . . . . . . . ..-Issisfzzrzl . . ..-Irllliiilisfrnfilni Nf':c's ROHEIVI' Nl'FSCliKhI .... l'll.0RENCE CoRNsw1-:i:'r ISERNICE l'IARTE ..... RALPH Remax.:-:s . EDVVIN Lowlc AIARY I,0l'1sr: Bm NIARION BROVYN . Miss WV11l'I 1'm:si4:v MR. 'FIIRAILKILL George Barnett Brent Baxter Elizabeth Houghton Helen Campbell Molly Geisiner fornelia Hadsell lhiriy-six 'GHT UN .. REPORTERS Janet Harrison James Hubbell Ruth Kaufman Miriam Newell .......l'lub Ifrlifor . . . . .f'lu.v.v Iflllflll' . . .1'l.I'L'11IIHgf' Ifrlifor ...... . Jlssisianl ..........Ga1la11ou! . . . . . . . . . ..-I.vsi.vi11l1f l'irculation Jlannger ... . . . . . . ..-I.s'.vis111nt .. . . . .f'arfooni.vf . . .Proof lfeazler . . . . .Proof Reader 1,if1'r11ry ,Al rlvixer lgIlSllI!'S.9 .-lrlz'i.v1'r Ruth Quigley Harold Roth Ralph Ruggles Helen SCllWClIlll r Hlizalmetll Pfei ffer .l use-ph ine Seott .lean Thomas THE ANNUAL BOARD JEAN HAIIIIINGTON .. SAYLOII JACOIII' HIf:I.I-:N LI-:vIsoN LOUISE vVATKINS .... VIIIIIINIA GAIIBISIIN . . . RALI-II RIIuuI,I:s ...... JEAN 'I'II0MAs ......... MARY I,0IfIsI: BoI'uII'r0N PZDYYIN LOWE ......... DoIIo'rIIY RIDNK .. BPIRNILTPI HAIITI: .. IIITA Rom-:MAN ....... CoI'II'I'NIcY BocIcs'I'AIII.I:II KATIII-:RINI-1 FLICIIINIIEII RoIII:II'r IFRUNDLE ..... BIARION BROX1'N ...... ANIIIII-:w MI:I.ImIrnI . . . FRANK PnENIII1:IIIIAs'I' .. VVII.I.IA1vI Mom: ..... JANI-YI' HAIIIIIsoN . . M1ssPALIvII-:II ... Mlss Em' ..... MII. VPIIGRNTON .. . . . I'Iditor-in-chir'f ..-lssistant Editor ..Literary Editor . . .Literary Staff . . .Literary Staff . . .Literary Staff ...Literary Stag' . . . ..-lrt Editor ...-lrt Staff ..,A1rt Staff ..,flrt Staff . .Art Staff ...,-lrt Staff ......-lrt Staff . . . .Sport Editor .....CIub Editor IfIl.Vi71l'S.9 Manager .. .Business Staff . . .Bizsinffss Staff . . .Biisirufss Staff .Literary Adviser . . . . .Art ,'1d'visvr .Biixiwwss Adviser Page thIrtI1 Seven 6'ff!lE7IC5 HHN Mr. lil'lllHllik'l' vann- to SllJllit'l' a yn-ar ago. he- fan-Q-cl tht- clonhh- task of making in-w frivncls and of hnilrling up good tm-anis from strange- :incl sonivwhat, grm-4-n mate-rial. HL- has cm-rtainly acc-oinplisln-cl hoth. lla- has won his way to tht- hm-arts ot' Shakm-r pm-oplc hy his tint- sportsmanship, 4-onph-il with his otha-1'arlniirahlv traits. Aftvr 1-rt-ating many chainpionship tt-anis at South lligh. Coach Bruhaka-r swnis dn-stim-rl to rlc-vm-lop Shakz-r tn-anis of tht- sanu- caliin-r. Alrcady hm- has lcd our hoys into a tic- for first plan- in haskvthall, and pilott-ml tlll'lll into sm-4-oncl plan- in football. It is always hard for a nm-w 1-oac-h to talu- thc plum- of one so wc-ll 1-stahlisln-cl in tha- hm-arts of Shalu-r students as M r. Ensign. Coach llruhakc-r su-ins to han- tht- sann- powm-r that Coach Ensign had to gm-t tht- hoys to put 4-va-ry ouncm- of cm-rgy thcy possa-ss into tht- spirit of tho gainv. NVQ- hope that he- will nu-ct with as much sm-L-4-ss in tht- futon- as hm- has had in tht- past yn-ar. Page Ihirly-eight w Q E' - l FOOTBALL THE TEAM TVALTER QV.-n'I.i: ..... . . . XVIIQLIAM Du: JACK I CARL Bm'nA1uciz Robert Bell Courtney Bockstahler Ed Beneda Bill Comella Tony Curro Albert Cornsweet Elliot Corey Adelhert Giel Joseph Hacker VVadc Helms Edward James Joseph Kuhner VVcstern Reserve . . Brush ...... . Bedford .. . U. S. ........ . Euclid Shore ...... Euclid Central .... Maple Heights .... Total . . . . ......Cr1p!ain cl0RHl' r'1 .... Illl111Hg8TS .........C0ach Ted Lcrman Edward Meister Otto Nord Ralston Smith Robert Smith Charles Smith Henry Srsen Edward Swatek Richard Senz James Taylor Gordon VVagner Lester Zavelson THE SCORES 0 Shaker . , . . . -1-1 . 0 Shaker.. 16 . 7 Shaker.. 14- . 13 Shaker .... . 2 . 6 Shaker.. 12 . 20 Shaker .. 13 . 0 Shaker.. 28 416 Total ...l26 Page thirly-nine SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 THE FOOTBALL SEASON NDER the excellent coaching of our new grid mentor, Carl Brubaker, Shaker's light but hard-fighting team made a fine showing in the Eastern Greater Cleveland Conference, capturing second place and bowing only to Euclid Central, the champions. This was a very creditable performance, but it dis- appointed Mr. Brubaker, who had hoped for a championship team. Shaker opened the season with three victories over its ancient rivals. In the first game, Shaker defeated Western Reserve Academy by fast playing and the spectacular long runs of Quayle, Comella, and Bob Smith. Although it was the first game of the year and played on a Saturday, a big crowd was out cheering for the team. The second victory, over Brush, was closer, harder fought, and more interesting than the previous one. Bob Bell stormed through the opposing line in a brilliant play, blocking a punt and enabling Shaker to score a safety. Comella proved to be the individual star of this game, bringing the stands to their feet many times with his long runs. Shaker's third victory was over Bedford, and although there was little indi- vidual brilliance, the team worked together well and came through on the upper end of a 14- to 7 score. The next four games were a series of victories and defeats. The first setback. at the hands of University School, was a torrid battle with both schools playing well, but with Shaker's defense a bit weak. In the last quarter, with Shaker behind, the boys staged a rally and carried the ball for three successive first downs, only to lose it just before the game ended. The following Friday the team was victorious over Euclid Shore. This day was cold and rainy, and because of the slipperiness of the ball and the condition of the field, the game was slowed downg however, Shaker completed four out of five passes, one of which, Quayle to Corey, resulted in a touchdown. Our second and last defeat was administered by Euclid Central. This game proved to be an individual battle between Walter Quayle and Jack Shea, both fight- ing to be high point man of the Conference. Fox Smith also did notable work, catch- ing a long pass and falling over the goal line with it, besides playing a fine defense. However, despite the excellent playing of these boys, Euclid Central won. The last contest, by which Shaker retained second place in the Conference with a 28 to 0 victory over Maple Heights, proved to be very much of a track meet, and all the players were in top form. A good part of the scoring was done by the subs, Wagner, Nord, Senz, Giel, and Meister, who will probably form the nucleus of next year's team. Page forty BASKETBALL THE TEAM Hi-:Nur IRISH, JonN VAUGHAN . . . NIR. BRUBAKI-:R VVilliani Comm-lla Elliot Corey Emanuel Assin Paul Christinan Leo Comella John Corbett Worden Corey Anthony Curro Ralph Day Ted Lerman Robert Edmonds Eugene Gilbert Robert Goldsword Ladimir Hajek David Hcrzfeld Joseph Kuhner Frank Lukas . . . .Managers .. . . . . .Coach VValter Quayle Ralston Smith Ravmond Needham Otto Nord Victor Petrone Robert Shull Henry Srsen Robert Trundle Lester Za velson THE SCORES Shaker .... . . 33 Shore ...... . Shaker . . . . 28 Bedford . . . . . Shaker . . . . 59 Maple Heights Shaker . . . . 19 Brush .... . . . Shaker . . . . 3-L Euclid Central Shaker .... . . -1-2 Shore ...... . Shaker . . . . 18 Bedford . . . . . Shaker .... . . 18 University . . . Shaker .... . . 2-11 Maple Heights Shaker .... . . 27 Brush ...... . Shaker .... .. 33 Euclid Central Total .. . . . 335 Opponents Won 8 Lost 3 13 26 19 29 20 16 23 22 12 13 18 211 Page forty one TRACK THE TEAM Harry Davis Frederick Hagan Emanuel Assin George Semplc Robert Bell Ralston Smith Eugene Drucker Henry Srscn Morris Eigenfeld Edward Swatek Adelbert Giel Robert Trundle James Hall Gordon VVagner Joseph Kuhner Albert VValters Robert McCormick Leonard VVilson Henry Merle Charles VVycot'f THE SEASON OR the first time in many ycars Shaker's track team opened the season with a defeat in the C. A. C. meet. This can he accounted for by the fact that the hoys were competing in Class B, Class C having been eliminated. and also competing against most of the prominent schools in Ohio. The material for the 1931 season. although quite green. showed great promise and under the leadership of Don Kelly, who starred in all forms of athletics at Shaker a year ago, will probably mold into a fine squad of track men. At the time the Annual goes to press, the boys are practicing for the triangle meet with University and Heights and promise to defeat their ancient rivals. Page forly-Iwo TENNIS THE TEAM fvx N ANDREW lsIEI.IllH'M . . . . . .faptzzin FRANK l'Ri-:Nm-:RuAs'r . . . .... fllanagcr MR. C. G. CLARK .... ...... ...... C 7 oach Elliot Corey .lunyore DyShere Raymond Needham THE SEASON HH success of last year's tennis team was even greater than Shaker's most ardent supporters had hoped for. Undisputed winners of the city championship, Captain Don Stauffer. Andy Meldrumv, Raymond Needham, Elliot Corey, and .lunyore DyShere finished the season without a single defeat. Probably the most pleasant of all the victories were the 5-0. -L-l trimmings we administered to Heights and University respectively. Bus Corey proved con- clusively that he will be an invaluable asset to this year's team when he and Meldrum defeated the U. S. championship double team, 6-2, 7-5. The spot-light of the season falls on the defeat of East by a score of 3-2. This was the Hrst match that East had lost in three years, and it came as quite an upset. As a result of this triumph, the team received Shaker's first tennis cup. It seems likely that it will not be the last one, since, with the exception of Don Stauffer, the entire team remains from last year. The team will miss Merrill Gross, who was an excellent manager, but it feels certain that Frank Prendergast will very capably fill this vacancy. Mr. C. G. Clark, who was largely responsible for last year's success. will return as coach this season. With prospects so bright, we are looking forward, as the Annual goes to press, to many exciting matches and another championship team this year. Page forty-three SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 CHARLES Rrclmnnsox MR. Prrlux ........ Belding, Jack Blackburn, John Body, Louis Cameron, William Comella, Leo Comella, William Corey, Worden Curro, Anthony Edmonds, Robert Fleming, Robert Hajek, Ladimir Helms, Wade BASEBALL THE TEAM THE SEASON ....Jlll7IlIgf'7' ............C'0lll'lI Helwig, George Hubbell, James Lee, William Lucas, Frank Martin, VVillian1 Noderer, Jack Quayle, Walter Rittencutter, Dudle ' 5 Ruggles, Ralph Traster, Earl VVhite, J ack VVilliams, Thomas AST season, the first recognized baseball team that Shaker has supported proved its value by winning over two-thirds of the games played. The series started out with a 14--7 victory and rose steadily to its high spot when our boys over- whelmed the Shaw nine, the city champs, in a torrid 5-4 foray under the steady pitching of Jimmy Gould. The return game, however, was more or less of an anti-climax. Shaker found herself at bat in the ninth inning on the wrong end of a 9-l score, then our team woke up. They brought the score up to 9 and 8, but the game was suddenly snatched away and Shaker lost one of its bitterest contests after a brilliant seven-run rally. This year the season starts with practically the same infield but with no vet- erans for the pitching staff or outfield. We are going to miss the consistent pitching of Gould and Lowry, and the heavy hitting of Vaughan. The position on the other end of the battery is very capably filled by Mel Comella, who is really the spark- plug of the team. As the Annual goes to press, Coach Pitkin is offering his right eye for a good pitcher, but looking over a promising crop of youngsters from Onaway. Quayle, Cameron, and Lee will probably take care of three of the four infield positions. On April 14, Shaker opens the season at Lakewood. This year's schedule includes 16 games. Page forty-four THE GIRLS' ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION OFFICERS ltlrril SLYII ...... ...... I Jrfsirlenf BIARY ANN BLACK . . . .IYICl I,Tt'SIl1l'llf ltvru I.r:u'rN11:u . . . ..... .Secretary lYA'l'Al,lE GoLnMAN . . ....... Trrmszlrffr Mus. LOMMEN ..... ..FaeuIty Adviser Miss GRm:NLi-:Alf . . . ..Al.r.vi.vtar1f .-111-uiser THE SEASON INV ideas. and a more interesting calendar than ever before. made the G. A. A. a very important organization to the girls this year. A new ruling. which forbids any girl to make more than two first teams. encouraged many more participants in all the year's activities. Outside sports were especially active. Golf lessons by a pro',. swimming in the Cleveland Heights pool, and skating on the Shaker Lakes were additions to a schedule already including tennis, riding. hiking. baseball. and hockey. Basketball. however. proved to be the scason's most popular sport. The sophomores won thc inter-class banner. and the climax of the season was a bitter contest between the champions and an All-Star team picked from the losers. A Varsity was chosen by judges from these teams. On March 5. all the Iirst teams went to Bedford for the annual Play-Day. Out of four games. Shaker won two. losing the others only by small margins. A big party was held for members on March 20. with Mr. fiourlcy. commis- sioner of recreation in Cleveland, as speaker. The gym was decorated. there was music for dancing. and refreshments were served. so that it was one of the social successes of the year. The club feels that it owes much to Mrs. Lommen and Miss Greenleaf for its progress this year. Mrs. Lommen. although this has been her first year with IIS. has offered many new ideas, and stimulated a great deal of enthusiasm. Miss Greenleaf was hcr able ally. Page forly-live Y M err J it ffyjiak my BELIEVE IT OR NOT- ISS DILLHY reads Life. 20,679 middies were worn in Shaker halls from October to February alone. Alan Harvey wears gloves in school to keep his hands warm. There are 33,721 tile blocks in the NVQ-st wing. A husky-looking 9B was looking for the school elevator. Gordon VVagner eats three eggs for breakfast, and drinks six glasses of milk a day. If you get mixed up enough on traflie regulations you can walk 5.279 feet between classes in one day. Leah Coleman is the sehool's best bet as a future talkie star. .lim Hall says he is not as dumb as he looks. John Tierney's ancestors were Scotch. The average weight of women faculty members is 130 pounds. Mr. Harbourt smokes a pipe. His middle name is Albert and his favorite aetress is Marie Dresslcr. Susie, the skeleton in the biology lab, is very llirtatious, and has actually been found with a eigaret in her mouth. Bliss Brown and Nlr. Allen are periodically mistaken for high sehool students by strangers to Shaker. Crosby in private life is ltfr. Rainey. Miss Anderson talks to an average of seventeen people a day on the library telephone. Fox Smith says he loves nature. It is possible to fall asleep in study hall. fSee Helen Levison for detailsj .lulius Czfsar was born in 53 B. C., landed in England in 1066 A. D.. and died in lil-92 A. D. fSee sophomore exams.j The number of people ejected from the library this year decreased from 27-L to 273. Page forty-sir Z- PHIL 'l- human ll: O lil X1 Lx Eli EPITAPHS Marie put out the Shakerifeg She wanted to make it read. There were so many Harbourt jokes That now Marie is dead. Here lies a famous Shaker man, The name is Ralston Smith. He died of heart attack one night- Now who do you s'pose he was with? For years and years and years and ye Tommy went to Shakerg He passed a history quiz one day, Now he's with his Maker. .lim Taylor was a football man-- Played tackle on the right. He died of shock the day he saw His picture in the Shakerite. Beneath this stone lies Philomene, Dead at last, we trust. She drove her ear at sixty per- Now both of them are dust. El l'S Here lies President Muriel Bell. Assemblies were her gameg Tragic the day when she passed out- She forgot the speaker's name! John Tierney, clever boy, to whom The gift of gab was given, VVent to the library late one time- He's now on time in Heaven. Lou Body was a timid chap. He seldom made a sound: He disappeared one day from class And's never since been found. The Don Juan of Shaker Heights Lies here beneath this stone. Four hundred tender hearts have broke Since Bill Dye's soul hath flown. Take warning, athletes. never train By going out on spreesq For look what happened to Sonny Quayle- May he repose in peaeel Page forty-seven BEHIND THE LINES A MOVIE SCENARIO' IN sux REELS REEL ONE Svlcxlltz 'I'In- otlim- of thv Slmkvr Sl'I'l'lIIll. '1llll'I't' is tht- usual UUHt'llSlUIl.'l'llI'lilllQ 1 of typvwritm-rs, :md l1:ir:issm'rl copy rn-:ulvrs with l'0llt'il'llP slm-4-vm-s. 'I'ocl:1y thvr' is :nn :itmospln-rv of ta-nsity in thv oflicv. 1,ifI'7'II'lH'l' and l,ifr.v lit- mlisrm-g:irulml in il vornvr. l'lVt'll tht- rruliutor is hissing with l'Xl'ltt'lllt'llt. Thr- llllNilll'NS IlIil!lIl,U,'1'l'. l,. li.. is svn-n spa-:iking Qwith gt-sturvsj to the- l'l::rm'st f'il'l'lll!lllUll Mrmngvr. l.. R. And this must go on-r :u liumu-rt pm-r m-nt. It is iIIlll1'l'IltlYt'. Utfvr 'vm :mytliing-f-:u fifty-1-m'l1t l'l'dlll'tlUll on m-:wh suhscription, if rim-Q-ss:iry: tha- ssh' must go on! v . H u lu. K. M. But-A l,. lt.. walking :around in 1-irclvs. Oh, for :1 sc-oopl A nit-4-. juicy sa-oopf 'l'h:rt would km-p thrm on thx-ir tovs. 'l'ht- Slzzzkrr Sl'l'I'lIIlI'l'llllCll'l'll vry for it li. C. M. Sir-- l,. lt.. hrushing him :isirlmx No talking Ill-tt'l' 8225! Ilow do you think I mn rm-:ul tht- :IllIl0llIll't'llll'IltS with :ill thvsc inte-rruptions? lV:n'ing :n pa-ncil. Lis- svn, folks. YVQ' want coopcrutiong th:1t's what wv nvcrl. I wzmt you to dig up in-ws +i'0llllllit niurclvr-clo :mythingg hut kvcp it clark. :md gin- us tht- first run. Now clon't 1-omv hm-k till yolfvn- dom' sompin drastic! Ql :ulm'-out :ls L. R. mops his hrowj lfnrl nj' liwl Um' K5 REEL TWO SCMNI-3: S. H. S.. midnight. tht' sznmc night. All is dark cxvvpt for tha- ghostly ulx ml ul vira-lv of :i flashlight that darts up and clown thx- main hull. Two lvl: -'--: figurcs :irc sccn crccpilig stcalthily Zlfllllnd tln- vicinity of thc trophy msc. The 1-in-lv of light moves on. Thcrv is thi- tinklc of hrokcn glass-:n grounf sllullling of fu-tfa 4-rznsli--silence-. Tho spot of light grows cwr smaxlln-r :xml smallvr. Thx' cunivrsi cm-ntcrs on thc il'lSCI'lltJil3lL' fum- of thu Slmkvr clock. whit-h ohligingly strike-s omg :ulding :ipprvviahly to tho suspvnsv of thi- situation. Emi of Ifrfl Two Pngv forty-Fight REEL THREE Sclf:Ni4:: 'l'hc otticc ot' thc Sliakcr Scrcanz. Thc ctlitor is sccn lolling :nt hcr tlcsk with :i frcshly printcd spccinl cdition in hcr hziucl. 4711 In-r l.Ili't' is thc cxprcssion of compluccucy that comcs with succcss. 'l'hc stuff is lim-tl :ulmiringly hchiml hcr. lucy. thc otlicc hoy, is rcuding in :iwccl toncs: UIilf1A'l' IlII,lll .SlIl'llM VASE S'l'OI,l'lN FROM 'I'Ii0l'IlY VASICYY NO l'l,l'l'l l.l'll 'l' l3l'llllNl3 lfHXCl'lP'1' A MUZZICY lllS'l'0ltY HOOK. IIOTSIIUT IlAltBOUR'l' UNIJICR SUSl'lt'ION.', l,. lt. lt's :i honcy. no lcss. Now. my ulnlc :illics4 Ll'olly lluslics in with :nu :artistic ullumlrcrl Pct' Ct-nt postcrg llircctor li. ll. tukcs timc out :md vigorously :ipplics his comlvg thc Ill-:nd of thc l,:1tin llcpurtiucnt wumlcrs clolcfully in :ind out again. lIllll'IIllll'lllg. This ccrtxiiuly is an Dill picl:lc. Yvork is l't'SllIIlt'tl.b l.. lt. YVc must lcnd 'cm :n uicrry chnsc to solvc this mystcry. 'l'hc circulation is skyrockctiugln Q'l'hc tloor of thc otlicc slums violcutly. A Bcll hoy cntcrs, throws :i tclcgruiu on thc dcsl-L. :md cxits. whistling. l,. ll. unfolds it jziuntily. hut iiuuicdizntcly :issuuics thc look of :i huntcd main. Nv1ltt'I'l1llI'll'tl. :i rcportcr. noting his constcrnution. picks it up :xml rcnmls: 'l'hc Stutlcnt Council Scouts. Dctcctivc Agcncy. not Inc.. hcrclmy givcs you noticc that :ill your actions will lac urulcr suspicion: cvcry iuovc will hc VS'1ltl'llt'll. This mystcry must hc clcnrcd up. or thc Qt't-JHVIIF' will havc :i had ct'l'cct on thc inorulc of thc stiulcutsf' tl.. lt. coll:ipscs.j lfnrl of Ifcfl Thru' :. ' fi qw: - 6 gn 1 -ig- Q .f 1 fl :Th I X VA., - F J , Yum, ,EM Pugc forty-nine Y f- ls RK 4 rl X gy, 4? I-B .X 1 -. L vi.. ,., -ii K D -g -. 73 Q. F - ' '15 Qi' Ali! REEL FOUR Scicxicz 'l'hc C'lcvcland Art Muscum. Jacolm, a young Saylor. Philo Yauca-'s undcrstudy. is sccn lounging in thc marhlc lohhy. fcasting his cycs on thc Guclph 'l'rcasurc. and at thc samc tinlc studying the announcvnicnt in thc Shnkwr Scrvanz that thc Latin llcpartnicnt is offcring a rcward for thc rciuru ot its trcasurc. and that l,. li. will douhlc it on thc day that thc Studcnt Council Scouts arc a hunncrt pcr ccnt in clucs. Hc wandcrs around that cxhihit for a whilc. whcn suddcnly his attcntion is arrcstcd hy a display that is attracting a grcat crowd. llc sauntcrs to cxaniinc it closcr and shows much surprisc at sccing a colony of unihrcllas rcsplcudcnt in a hugc Silvcr urn. Pulling furiously at his ltcgic. hc approachcs thc guard and in suavc toncs 1101115111115 thc history of thc vasc. Tho man gcsticulatcs and cxplains that it had arrivcd thc salnc day thc Guclph Trcasurc did. and. as it had no idcnti- fic-ation mark. it had hccn use-d to hold thc unihrcllas of honorary visitors. .lacoh shoots him a look that is cnough to cool a Volcano. stcrnly connuands hiui to rcmovc thc llllllll't'llJl9. and stridcs rapidly out. IJIIII of lff-nl Four REEL FIVE Sclfzxlcz Otlicc of thc Slzukrr Scrvnm. Aforcnlcntioncd atnlosphcrc prcvails as usual. 'l'hc cditor is waiting cxpcctantly for rcplics to thc ncw contcst offcring -i liftccn dollar prizc to thc honicroonl that suggcsts thi- worst punislnncut.for thc rohhcr if cvcr caught. and fivc dollars to thc hoiucrooul that niakcs thc -W.. ' xN X 5 Twfif zr- f - . . .,..n - . 1 .ii ,lx 5 . - , I --i Ti ,Q .-'L x ' 'R -' I 4 I ' 1 4 C fu Page fifly till' most lIlllH'0Vl'llll'Ilt ovvr its rcuord in the last Contvst. She clcars hcr throat, powders hur nosv. and dictatvs to Secretary Jeff ltics: Mltrplics to date: A month of L-ighth pcriodsg a month's washing dishrs afte-r fifth pvriod: a douhlv dost- of IIarhourt's quizzt-sg translating a hook of Virgil and an oration of Civ:-ro: rvading tht- Ifnrxylz- Saga in ont' night. fsllllllvllly tht- door opt-ns and a l'KYt'l't'llt sill-in-v marks tha- vntranct- of P1-ti-r Orcat. llc dvposits his wirv haskvt on tht- dcsk. and dt-livvrs an ultimatum whivh makcs Ycditor's hvalthy clwvks turn vhalk whitv c'lll'C'llIllL'Ol0I' not usm-d in this picturvj. My suggvstion is to lovk tht: vulprit up in thc- Towcr Room. and fcvrl him nothing hut hrcad and watvr until hc finds thc l ourth l,lIl1t'TlSl0I'llU I.. lt.. wltl 1 trcmhling hand. forks over both prizcs without l'Yl'll questioning wln-tln-r P1-tcr is a homcroom or not. lintur Jam-oh. A whispcrrd 4-onfcrcm-c vnsuvs with I.. It .. which m-nds hy lmoth of tllt'll1 making a stcalthy. hurricd vxit t0gIt'tllt'l'. L'1'his will canst' suspunsmzj l Iflllf of 1u'1'1 1 i'l'4' Y fl Saxo .FN P 2 Zvi! SFICN REEL SIX H: S. ll. S.. 12:01 A. M. This timt- it is moonlight. C50 thc t-lcctric-ity can hc savvd.j Again two iigurcs can ln- svn-n circling ahout thc hall. Ont- is carrying a bulky parccl. Again tht- trophy vast- is thc ohjrct of attcntion. Thr- smallvr of the prowlvrs stumlmlcs clumsily on a stray lulvklv ol' his galosln-s. A dull thud follows this. tlll'll'Sllt'IIl'l'. Thi- moonlight strsams through tht- door. and the arrvsting' figurc of .lacoh is sm-on ra-ading a small slip of papa-r pinnvd on tht- trophy 4-asc. Thr' nott- says that if no talvf. arc told. lw'll ln- sparvd tht- Sl'lIlCStl'l' NlglltlllJll't'. '1lllt'I't' is a 1-ravkling of papcr. a ln-aw of arms. thcn all is still again. Thr- sc-cnc shifts to tht- nvxt day. The Sc'rr'am cditor is sci-n rt-ading a ropy ot ht-r now one hunnvrt pvr cn-nt papcr. Tla- hc'adlim's arc fillvd with tht- ncws: IIlI.DESHH1M VASE Rl'l'1'L7ltNl'llJ BY NIGHT. VlOlI.ANC'l'l Olf' S'l'l'lJHN'1' COUNCIL SCOUTS IS OVER. ONLY t'l.L'l'1 IS A PAIR Ol MUDIJY. FOUR BUCKLE OAI.OSHHS. Thr' Ifnzl JEAN Tnoyms Page fifty-one SENIOR PRIVILEGES A DRAMA IN THREE ACTS ACT I Sci-:Ni-1: A hall in a school building QTwo bits what school It isj. TIME: During class period. fEnter two Seniors, talking loudlyj A Boos'rl-Zn: Hey, shut up. You're making too much noise. Sl-:Nlons fcalmlyj: Sez you. Boosri-:Rx VVhcrc'rc you s'poscd to be, anyhow? You'rc not allowed in the hall during class period. SENioHs: That's all right. VVe're SENIORS. Boos'rl-zu: VVell, I'm sending your names to Charlie. CURTAIN ACT II SCENE : Chemistry Lab. TIME: That afternoon. QA very bored class is listening to a very bored teacher expounding VVhy is an atom. Enter The Villain.j Tm-: XIILLAIN Qhanding a note to the teacherj: These boys are wanted right away in the dean's office. CTittering arises from the back row. The girls sit in the back row. Class not so bored now. Two Seniors walk out.j CURTAIN ACT III SCENE: The dean's office. TIME: A few minutes later. MR. T1-ioRN'roN: Eighth. ONE Sl-:Nlonz Eighth?! MR. TIl0RNTONZ Eighth. OTHER SEN1on: But Mr. Thornton, didn't you ever hear of- Bo'rH Si-:Mons 'rooE'rHER: SENIOR PRIVILEGESF? Mn. THORNTON! And what, may I ask, are Senior Privileges? QA squad of firemen rush in, but are unable to revive the two collapsed Seniors.j CURTAIN Page fiffy-two REPRINTED FROM THE SHAKERITE LUNCH MOB FIGHTS T0 GAIN CAFETERIA Flfv E1'IilNT,I U R'Ei1fi'I'NiIiU's fi .- Starving Crowd Overwhelms Patrolmen in Race For Food This noon tive pupils were severely injured during a rush which took place between the upper hall and the cafeteria. About 12:05 the lunch bell rang as usual and all the rooms seemed to belch forth with more than ordinary energy. The frantic mob ran and pushed, all striving to win the front ranks. Patrolman Needham was knocked aside and found unconscious after the crowd had passed. He was taken to the hospital and it was found that he had received merely a slight fracture of the skull and a broken arm. Patrolman Pomeroy not realizing the strength 'of the freshmen, was also unprepared for the onslaught. He met the crowd at the middle of the stairs and was later found in a serious condition at the bottom. There are several probable fatal- ities. Betty Seitz, VVaIter Beckert, and Courtney Bockstahler being badly trampled in the rush. In- spector Bell, after a quick count of the school, reports Bob Fisher miss- ing. No rewards are offered. A statement was received from Captain Thrailkill which reads: The disaster this noon was caused by lack of observance of our traHic rules, not by the inability of our patrolmen to subdue a riot. The trafiic system seemed to be. well es- tablished. but as was shown today, it will have to be revised. I suggest that we build large slides to be sub- stituted for each stair. Every pupil could furnish himself with a pillow to sit on while being transported to the cafeteria. :Continued on page 1'1I 7 BRUSH TRUMPED IN FAST BRIDGE FRAY SMITH, BROOKHART STAR Enormous Crowd Cheers Shaker Couple to Win Auction Conference Last night in a thrilling three- game battle, the Shaker team met the Brush bridge squad on the home floor for the championship of the Bridge Conference. Andy Meldrum opened with a fierce cross volley that all but swept the visitors from their feet. The opponents retaliated with an ace from the left and an equally dc- structive queen from the right. We were staggered by this vicious on- slaught. Time was called while Fox re- covered after the loss of a trumped ace. The enemy resumed play with a smashing spree which, along with a two-trick muff by Meldrum, netted four tricks. The half ended amid a flurry of Brush four-card gains. Haggard from the trying first round, our boys smiled grimly in the face of already overwhelming odds, as they resumed their places about the table. From then on they staged a stir- ring up-hill battle. Fighting Mel- drum succumbed under the unbear- able pressure of the contest. but was replaced by the ever reliable Brookhart, who always did throw a mean club. The score was finally tied when there was only a matter of seconds to go. At the last in- stant, putting their hearts into the game, Smith and Brool-:hart put the game on ice with a thirteen-trick march down the field for the decid- ing points. The two exhausted he- roes were carried off on the shoul- ders of a wildly jubilant mob. Page lifly-three SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 9 9: 9 9 9:30-Finish 9:4-5-Finish :01 SUNDAY NIGHT AT HOME OR AND SO TO BED o'clock-Finish dinner. assignments. :01 :4-5-Start looking for books. :06-Summon kid brother to aid search. 15-Kid brother summons kid sister to aid search. '31-Father inveigled into search. -Decide to spend the evening at home to catch up on heavy week-end school 4-1-Father suddenly remembers that he has left his office desk unlocked. :00-Mother, exasperated, begins hunting for missing books. :Ol-Mother, triumphantly, finds books. :01 :4-5 Cnew track recordj-Retire to library to study. :02-Deliberate whether to study Latin, French, history, algebra, or physics hrst :03-Decide to write English theme that is a week overdue. :04-Enter kitchen to procure a glass of water. '08-Return to library to write theme. 15-Decide that physics is more important, anyhow. 16-Notice King lying at your feet. 16:45-Exit King. 415-Finish first page of physics assignment. :4-6-Ask kid brother to play piano exercises softer. :4-7-Pick up French book. :00-Ask kid brother to play piano SOFTER. :03-Put down French book. 9: 03:15-Personally notify kid brother that you are trying to study. 04-Decide that practice is good for a young pianist, anyhow. 05-Realize that your mind will be fresher in the morning. Decide to hit the pillow to regain lost sleep. 15-Finish undressing for bed. washing for bed. telling family goodnight. 10:00-Bed. l0'l0-Thirst. 10 '15-Water. 10'16-Food. 10:30-Bed. 11 :00-Drowsiness. 1 1 :30-Sleep. Page fifty-four Pnvuss ISRAEL SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR CAFETERIA-GOERS 1. Thou shalt not be profane to the Booster when he refuses to believe that your friend has your luncl1 money. Your friend has probably already told him that you have his. 2. Thou shalt not take two spoons. Either eat your jello with the same one you used for your peas, or else drink it! 3. Thou shalt not order stuffed peppers and chicken and biscuits on the same day. Save your money and subscribe to the Shakerite. 4. Thou shalt not take two glasses of water. You can pour what you need out of your neighbor's glass. 5. Thou shalt not pay for any meal entirely with pennies. It confuses the cashier to see too much money at once. 6. Thou shalt not drop your French book into your neighbor's chocolate pic. It isn't good for the book. 7. Thou shalt not protrude a foot into the aisle when any friend of yours is passing with a loaded tray. Do this only to your enemies and teachers. 8. Thou shalt not mischievously empty the salt shaker in your neighbor's water glass. You might forget and pour some of his water into your own glass. EQ. Thou shalt not carry out any other person's tray. Only one chance a day is given to a person to drop a tray. 10. Thou shalt not leave dollar bills on your tray. They are washed peri- odically in Washington. so there is no need for special laundering. Thus endeth the reading of the lesson. Amen. THINGS I NEVER FOUND OUT HAT Thaddeus Stevens said on his death bed. fAsk Mr. Harbourt.j How to swagger into the lunch line without looking guilty. How Crosby can smile all the time. How anyone can smile all the time. Why Mr. Pitkin drinks cleaning solution. Why our basketball adversaries start fights with Quayle and not Comella. How to hold open a door for someone and get through before having to hold it open for ninety-nine other females who suddenly decide to enter. Who put my book in the lost and found department for me to redeem--at a price. Why the war wasn't over sooner, if reports told by two of our esteemed teachers are true. Why I can't stay in school forever like Fox Smith. Why I have to stay in at all. What they did with the doors they took. out at the foot of the west stair. What the cafeteria stuffs stuffed peppers with. YVhy I ever thought it would be nice to be a Senior. GARTH S'rlN1-: Page fifty-live GREAT MINDS AT WORK A BOOSTER Bnoons HIS harangue. as it may he prop- erly called. is spontaneous and most extemporancous. It is thc product of weeks of torment and dc- lihcrate ahuse. It has lmroken out like an oil gusher which has heen hoiling for months. It is directed against those pernicious females who cause all my trouhles as hoostcr in the cafeteria. These girls do not helieve in Rous- seau's theory of the rights of man. They helieve. however. in thc rights of women. They are superior to the com- mon herd. llules made for others do not affect them. My duty is to enforce the laws which the objects of this atI'cctionate essay take such a vicious delight in hreaking. No one is allowed to make his exit from thc cafcteria through the west door. Of course. girls do not have to go around. All they have to do is sidle up to me and smile. I stand. nnmovcd. They pout and proceed to embarrass me. I hecome suffused with a pink glow. and perspiration. damning evidence. hreaks out upon my hrow. YVith Just today. never again. I let them by. I ean't give them eighth periodg I'd be an awful sport. What can. I do? I can curse them. I can revile them. I can write an essay on them. But I've got to stop them. Some day I will stop them. My heart is getting harder daily. My lxurning hlush is getting less and less exercise, My gallantry is withering fast. I now give you warning. law hreakersl I am a hard, cruel. iron Booster. You Cilllit destroy my poise. I have spoken my piece. The law-breaking women can no longer get through. I am determined. But on through the forbidden pass they go. in a smiling. placid stream. Vvhat can a poor male do? IILLIOT Coal-JY. THOUGHTS ON A LOCKER llA'l' is a locker? XVI-luster defines it thus: I.ockcr. noung closed place that may he locked. I contend that the late Mr. XVI-hster is wrong. Lockers. those I have seen. at any rate. are seldom closed places. Neither are they locked: they may he hut seldom arc. To my way of thinking. a locker is a receptacle for anything that does not pertain to school. It is located at one end of the building when all onc's classes are at the opposite end. It is a meeting place for one's friends for purposes of gossip. giggling. and killing time. Now let 11S sec the contents of the average locker-sweaters. scarfs. hats, caps. ties. shoes. ruhhers. a jacket or two. and odd gloves. Besides these there are magazines, ice skates. a hockey stick. a tennis raquet. halls of all shapes and sizes. a ukelele. and reams of waste paper. But try to lind a text bookg it's impossible. Amer: Molvek Page lif I 11-sir SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 THOUGHTS BEFORE A CHEMISTRY EXAM ET me see. It's ten o'clock now. I think I'll stop studying and go to bed. Which one of my teachers once said that it was better not to study too hard before an exam, but get plenty of sleep? I think it was Miss Wickwire. No, it wasn't. Well, anyway, that's what I'll do. I'm not going to think about chemistry until 8:30 tomorrow morning. Instead I'll think about something pleasant. I'll think about what I'm going to do after the exams are over. Tomorrow night, I'm going to that dinner. That sounds fairly interesting. Thursday night I'1n going to the College Inn with i- now what is the formula for sulphuric acid? Is it HZSO4-? I wonder if we'll have many problems on the exam. I hope not. I'm not at all sure how you work them. Let me see. If the pressure increases, the volume decreases and-but I'm not going to think about chemistry any more. Gee, I wonder if I'll ever fall asleep. It must be about 3 o'clock. Now, I must get some sleep. I won't be able to work if I'm tired. I think I'll look at my watch and sec what time it is. Oh, it's only 12:30. I'm so tired. Mother would be terribly angry if she knew my light were still on. Maybe, I had better study the displacement series again. I'll study until one o'clock. I'd better look over the chapter on compounds of nitrogen, too. No, I won't. It will just make me more confused. Oh, dear, I'm so tired. I will not think about chemistry again. I will not --l. fCame the dawn.j Oxygen is a colorless, odorless gas--. Oh, good morning, Daddy. Is it 7:30? No, I didn't sleep a wink last night. I just worried and worried and worried. I'll have to hurry. I want to ask one of the Bettys a question about the bleaching action of chlorine. Good morning, Mary. No, I haven't time for breakfast. Yes, today is the awful day. I'm so frightened. I don't know what time I'11 be home. Will you please have Leonard bring the car around? Good morning, Leonard. Drive fast, will you, please? I must get to school on time. Oh, why did we have to miss this light? Well, here we are. I don't think I'll ask the Bettys about chlorine. It will only confuse me. Oh, why will Mr. Harbourt joke at a time like this? I wish he'd hurry up and give me that exam paper. No, I'm not taking physics. I'm taking first half year of chemistry. Thank you. Explain neutralization in the terms of ionzation. Oh, I know that. HELEN FL!-:Isl-IMAN Page fifty-seven SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 THE STRANGEST INTERLUDE fln which the wicked are rewarded and the good die young. It never happened, and it probably never will.j Jane fentering classj: Good afternoon, Miss Fiditch. II hope she won't call on me. That was my sweetest smile-Exhibit A. I'll bet Mr. Pepsodent has been looking for a smile like that all his life.j Prof: How do you do, Jane? fWhat an artificial smile that girl has. She is probably trying to imitate one of those Pepsodent toothpaste ads.j Jane: What a sweet dress you're wearing. fThat usually works. Anyway, it is a pretty dress-that is, if it were brighter and shorter and tighter.j Prof: Thank you, Jane. fHumph, she probably hasn't prepared her lesson. I like this dress myself, though. It might be a little duller and longer and looser. Q Jane: Hi, Betty! I didn't learn my memory passage, and watch her call on me! I suppose you've learned yours? f0f course she's learned hers-Shaker's Child Prodigy-subsists on Milton's poetry and English tests.j Betty: Oh, yes! I learned twenty lines extra. fWhy does she ask such asinine questions? She certainly is stupid-subsists on chow-mein and jazz.j Jane: Howdy, Bill! Howza boy? What a smooth tie! Orange and pink always were my favorite colors. IPI-ease! I'm glad my diet is balanced.j Betty: It's about time for the bell. fl wish it would hurry and ring. This class is so interesting.j Prof: It's about time for the bell. fl wish it were three-thirty. This class is so uninterestingj Jane: Howdy, Bob! Howza boy? That's a smooth tie. Red and yellow always were my favorite colors. fThere must have been a fire-sale, or is it just local color? Say, that isn't a bad joke. I'll have to tell it to s0mebody.j Betty: Ah, the bell! Prof: Will the class please come to order? fI've said that four times a day for the last five years. I wonder if Petersilge could calculate the exact number of times. j Jane: Again! fI've never attended a class yet that didn't begin with those words-.j Betty: Again! fYou would think the class would come to order at least once a year without being told to.j Males: Again! Q Q fThis indicates the thinking process of the males.j Prof: I suppose you've all prepared your lesson for today. KA harmless suppo- sition.j Jane, I think we'll hear your ten lines first. Betty: Tough luck, Jane. fIt serves her right. She should do her homeworl-nj Jane: Uuuuh- Come and trip it as you go, On the bright transparent snow: KI wonder if they wore galoshes in those days.j And in thy right hand lead with thee The Shaker Team to victory. fGee, I hope Bill asks me to the neat game.j Prof: That's enough, Jane. Quite clever, but I don't think in quite the manner Milton intended. fJust as I thought. She WASN'T prepared.j Betty: Good try. fHumph, I could have done better than that. Maybe she thinks she's a cheerleader or something.j Jane: Another zero! fWhat a break! Just the same, I think that would make a swell Shaker song. I bet I'm going to be a song-writerlj Prof: Betty, will you recite, please. KI hope she didn't learn the whole poem.j Betty: Come and trip it as you go, etc. Page fifty-eight SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 fThis ought to raise my grade. I only got 96' last time.j Prof: Excellent work, Betty. fWhat a bore. All she thinks of is grades. I think I'll only give her 95 next time. I'd rather listen to Jane. What was it she said- The Shaker team to victoryn? That ought to make a good song. Maybe she has the makings of a song-writer. I think I'll raise her grade.j Betty: fShe didn't seem 'very enthusiastic. Maybe I mispronounced somethingj Jane: fGee, she smiled at me. Lucky I said I liked her dress.j Prof: fl wish the bell would ring.j Bill, will you reci- fThe bell rings.j Bill: Thank goodness! Author: Thank goodness! Editor: Thank goodness! Reader: Thank goodness! MORAL: Bluff and the world bluffs with youg Study, and you study alone. ARTICLE-ATION, OR WHY NOT TO BE AN EDITOR Is your article done? I query, fSee that look of hesitation- All the best of his excuses Throng his mind in quick rotation.j Why-er-uh, he bravely answers, I've been worked to desperation All this weekg I really haven't Had much time for concentration- But don't think that it was my fault, fWith a trace of aggravationj When you look for news in this school, You don't get cooperation. All the teachers are 'too busy', Haven't time for conversation- And it doesn't pay to let them Vent on you their irritation ! Did you try P With practiced stcrnness I pursue investigation: Why-of course not, he reminds me, I gave you my explanation. Well, I'll have it in tomorrow, fGoaded to exasperationj I will work my brain to fury Just to get that information. And you'll really have it in, then? Thus I meet this declaration, CPrudence born of long experience Makes me doubt this revelation.j If you wish. lrVith gracious kindness And no show of indignation, He withdraws and leaves me standing Lost in speechless admiration. IWARIE DA!-:RR Page fifty-nine MONOLOGUES THE NEW HIGH SCHOOL TALKS 0, hum! I'm so sleepyl YVhy do men insist upon arriving at 7:30 to work over my vihs? You'd think they'd have more respect for an institution of higher learning. They know how young I Illllffl mere ehild-and they wake me up at an hour like this. Some one should tell them ' ahout the proper eare for infants. And I i- my swimming pooll It's so thirsty it's a shame. But they wouldn't give it a drink-no. they'd mueh rather pranee around on top of my dome and make wiseeraeks. Of eourse. mayhe they know what they're doing: I'll give them the henefit of the douht. hut I ean't help wondering why they don't elean up my side- walk trimming. I never saw so mueh mud. The whole walk needs a good hath or something. But they won't fix that. either. They want me to have the undying hatred of the Shaker pupils at large. I've heard them grumhle, too. And I don't hlame them. though I do think they eould manage not to drop all their hooks in the mud. One or two wouldn't make mueh ditferenee. hut giving them all a mud paek. and sometimes adding a poekethook and hat for good measure. is overdoing it. But I ean't wait till next year. I guess I'll he the hot shot around here then. I'll have hells that ring. and eloeks that gow-mostly fast-and lovely furnishings. and two nutsy looking auditoriums. and trees, and hushes, and a fountain. and talkies, and-well, I'll just have everything. The only thing that hothers me now is those workmen. Do they have to start work on me at 7:3O? I wish they wouldn't. Ho, hum! NOON MOVIE MONOLOGUE VVaitaminit. huddy. you only gave me four pennies. Trying to gyp the Couneil? Come on hack or-No. girlie, I ean't ehange a dollar right now. Give it here and l'll hring you the ehange later. You'll he in the fifth row? All right, wait till the movie starts. Hey, where's that kid that gave me four cents? Now, Iissen. girls. you ean't do this. Haeh one pay for herself. Now. lissen. you ean't pay all those pennies at onee. One, two .... hey, there's six of you and only twenty-five pennies-no, I havenlt got your ehange yetfnow. one of you girls didn't pay. Colne on, let's have that other niekel. And when-'s that eent you owe me. huddy? No. I haven't got your ehange yet. Can't you wait till the show starts ?+'I'here go the lights now-lVell. wait till the end of the show. Now. Iissen. you Onawayites. you ean't eome in after it's started. Go on haek where you helong. Quit hanging on that doorl Hey. somehody eome and help me hold this door shut. No. I haven't got your ehange- Pzzyr' si.rIy SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 WHO WON? PLACE: Moreland School Gym. TIME: 7:45 P. M. Friday evening of a Shaker basketball game. CHARACTI-:Rss A sophomore, chewing a whole package of gum, and engaged in one-sided conversation with a classmate. KNEW we'd get here too late for a good seat. What? Take those seats in the second row? What d'ya think I bought this new dress for, anyhow? Let's go up on the stage. That's where all the seniors who rate sit. Oh, do you see who just walked in-my secret passion-and look who he's with! Yes, he plays on the first team. Gee, these senior girls don't give us any breaks. I'm sorry, lady, we're saving these seats. Qln stage whisper.j There isn't any good reason for us to save these seats, but some of the fellows playing in this game might come over and sit with us during the big game. QTime out for a few energetic chews on the gUIl1., Yoo-hoo, Bob! What? There are three of you? I think there'll be enough room. Boy, I didn't think I could put that across. Assume a sophisticated air-I don't know what that is but they say the seniors have it. There's the end of the preliminary. Who won? What was the score? fLapse of time, during which our friend sophomore stretches her neck in all directions in a vain effort to find a missing friendj Have you seen Joan? She told me to watch her closely tonight. Tried to make me jealous, make me believe she was coming tonight, with a good friend of mine. What was that penalty for? I didn't see anything happen. Oh, well, that referee hates Shaker. This is getting boring. By now, I know where everyone here is sitting and who they're with, what else is there for me to do? Oh, there's the end of the game. Goodbye, Bob. Can you imagine that! He didn't even ask to take me over to the Village Drug Store to get something to eat. By the way, who won, anyhow? B1c'r'rv INIEBRELI, THOSE DRINKING FOUNTAINS Still, white, marble stands Polished and cold, Trusty cases Assuaging our thirstg Sweet running C?j water Flowing on demand. Who said a drink? Say, I got a bath! Page sixty-one 'SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 WHERE'S THAT POWDER PUFF? T'S twelve-thirty. Who goes on for the first scene? Everyone in the first scene come over here and be made up. Listen, people, we have just one hour to do you all, and if-Edith, you do Otto. Here, use this white ground, and plenty of it. Where's that list? Vincent, you're first. Sit here. Don't wiggle so! VVho has the cold cream? I want the cream. Will some- Hallye, give me that cream. Libby, don't use so much rouge on her. She'll look like a beet-and under those lights! Donald, stick around, because- Yes, Vincent, I'll finish you in a minute. Now, where's the powder? Here, Vincent, sit on this powder-puff, and if anyone asks you for it-you don't speak English! I'll be right back. Yes, Miss Ely, you can use my grease paints. No, there isn't any purple, but I have blue. Otto, your wig's crooked. VVhat? You'd better ask Sarge. No, I'll ask him myself. Mr. Sargent, how shall I tie these ties? Straight, or in a bow? Saylor, let me try this on you. No, I think that a single knot is best. Thanks. No, Devora, I haven't seen your hammer. Leah, will you please keep Tiny Tim with you? He keeps getting under my feet. Oh, yes! Where's the powder? Yes, Vincent, I'll be there in a minute. Say, Evelyn, have you got a lease on the powder? There, now you're finished. Saylor, you're next. Don't squirm! Close your eyes. Open. Look up- down. But Saylor, you don't need any shadows under your eyes. Let's see--who's next? Henry Irish. Henry! Bob, go get Henry. Never mind, here he is. You're supposed to be a 'young man'. Where's that tan ground? Lucerne, are you through with that stick? Just a minute, Henry. Hold on to this puff, and don't you dare give it to anybody. I'm going to get some tan ground. Well, that was quick. It's a good thing that I have big pockets, and can look innocent. I've got everything, for once. Cream first. Heavens, what a lot of forehead you've got. WVe'll lose money, making you up. Eye shadow? What for? You've got nice, big, brown eyes. Close 'em. Open. A little more lip rouge, and-there you are. Who's seen John Tierney? He's next. Aha, John Tierney, at last I have you where I want you. Put your head against the wall, and don't move. No, I won't hurt you. Not more than necessary. Where's that powder puff? Eye shadow? Say, there must be an epidemic among you actors. You all want eye shadow. You're supposed to be a young boy, and you don't need it. No, Devora, I haven't seen your hammer. To tell you the truth, John, I haven't any eye shadow. But I'll compromise, and give you a beautiful pair of eyebrows. Oh, Otto, I've got a needle and tllread to sew those buckles on your coat. Your wig's crooked. That's a good make-up you've got ong you look perfectly ghastly. What? Louder, I can't hear you! Oh-sh! Quiet, everybody-the curtain's gone up. John Van Valkenburg, be careful-that's chocolate pie for the Christmas dinner. No, Devora, I haven't seen your hammer. FLORENCE ConNswl-:ET Page sixty-Iwo Page sixty-three SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 SOLILOQUY IN ASSEMBLY HIS isn't such a bad seat, it's lots better than standing up against the wall with the freshmen. Freshmen look so young-and frightened. I wonder if I was that way four years ago. The lecturer looks pleased with Mr. Patin's introduction. What was it that Mr. Patin said about him? Funny, I don't remember. I think it was something about having the honor of announcing someone. Who is the boy sitting next to me? He has a distinguished looking profile. The sweater he has on is kind of pretty. Few boys wear yellow sweaters. Is he in any of my classes? Of course not, he couldn't beg he isn't more than a sophomore-he looks terribly young. I remember now, he's usually in the library first period. What did the man just say about careful observance that made everyone laugh? I always miss the funny things. That man would look better in a light suit, gray, perhaps. He looks a little like my father. I suppose I ought to do homework during this assembly so I can listen to Rudy Vallee tonight. I wonder who'll be his guest artist tonight. I think I'll learn French verbs. .Ie crois, tu crois, il croit, nous croyons-my, it's hot in here! Someone ought to open the windows. It's a wonder those freshmen standing by the radiator don't faint from heat. I know I would. I like the way the girl in front of me wears her hair. Maybe I could wear mine that way if I wasn't so tall. The lecturer must have been interesting, everyone is clapping a long time. Mr. Patin looks impressed. I'll have to ask Jane what the talk was about. She never listens either. Well, 'I guess I'll have to go and sit through an hour of history. Did I like the lecture? Yes, I thought it was real good. Walk up to my locker with me. I have to get my history book. RUTH BELL APOLOGY I sat me down to write a verse Of just two stanzas length, I wanted something short and terse, And yet with wit and strength. But when dull wits will not obey, Nor fancy lend its aid, I'm sure of pardon when I say That this is all I made. MAE Svosona. Page sixty-four SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 Cover label .... Frontispiece . . . Ex Libris ....... Classes heading .. Clubs heading .. Athletics heading . . . Scissor Cuts ..... lflpitaphs ....... Senior Prophecy . . . . Great Minds at Vl'ork . Monologues ...... Calendar ............ My Old School Teacher Behind the Lines ..... Snap Shots .... The G. A. A. Season . . . The Club Year ..... . Believe It or Not . . . Epitaphs ....... Senior Privileges . . . Strangest Interlude . . . Prophecy ......... . Calendar .... Senior Will . . . APPRECIATIONS ART WORK . . .Bernice Harte. . . . . . . . .Dorothy Ronk Mary Louise Boughton Mary Louise Boughton . . . . . . . .Rita Roseman . . . . . . . .Bernice Harte . . Katherine Flickinger .Courtney Boekshahler .........Edwin Lowe . . . . . . . .Dorothy llonk . . .Courtney Bockstaliler . .Katherine Fliekinger Mary Louise Boughton .........Edwin Lowe . . . . . . . . .Carrie Black . . . .Andy Meldrum. Frank Prendergast. Jim Card, .lean Harrington LITERARY WORK .. . . . .Ruth Slyh . . .Louise VVatkins . . .Virginia Garbison . . . .Jean Harrington . . . . .Elizabeth Pfeiffer . . . .Phyliss Israel, Helen Levison . . . .Betty Geismer, Helen Levison . . . .Helen Levison, Louise Watkins ............. .lean Thomas, Virginia Garbison ADVERTISING Tom Griffith. Florence Keplinger, Janet Hadscll, Hilda Benz. Adelaide Hamilton, Florence VanAken, William Martin Page si.-sly-live :BUS 'PHIL NURIEL 1951 IVICXTY YEARS! I van rt'nn'inhm'r trying to iinagint' whvn wt' graduatvd from high school what all ot' us would hm' doing at this agv. Init I m'rtainly nvvvr drt'ainL'd we' d ha' ahh' to han' a I-lass rvunion like this. hvrm' in thi' old auditorium. I gvt a thrill vvvry tinn' I sm' om' of thi' old crowd t'0lll' ing in. Ilvllo. lius forcyf l'w' just Iwcn thinking how inuch tht' world has changcd slum' wt' graduatrd. I always thought. I'd hs' toddling around with a vant- in twvnty yvars. and pvrhaps I would ln' if llr. .lark Brookhart hadnt dism'ov1'r4'd an antistoxin for old agv. YVt ll all lin' a couph' of m'nturit's. not to sprak of lwing ahh' to kc'1'p awakm' all that tinn'. thanks to your famous C'orm'y Suhstitutm' for Slcvp. I suppose' you rcad liuth Slyl1's'4'ditorial this morning in tha' lI'orl1l .Yf'n'.v on thi' 1'lm'4'tion of Murivl Bvll as Prvsif dvnt of tht- Unitvd Statrs ot' thi' lVorld. YVhy. I rt'nn'n1In'r Murivl whvn shi' usvd to wvar iniddirs and sit on Mr. IIarhourt's dcsk. I hardly darv spvak to hvr now. Of voursi' shi' would appoint I,awr1'nt't' l'onn'roy as vhairuian of tln- I,aw I'lllIi0I'l'l'Illl'llt Coin- inission. I hvar ln' is trying out a ncw systvin to avoid air traffic' vougcstion. I or instau1'i'. il' you want to go to t'anada from hvri' you IIIIYQ' to ily around hy way of South .'Xnn'ri1'a. YV:-ll. Saylorl Ilow you'ri' m'hauga'dl You look so dignilivd. I was just going to say that your suh- way liuvs ought to profit from tht- nvw air tratlia' systvni. You always did go in for digging around in thi' country. didn't you? NYhat van you tvll nn' ahout thi' rvst of tht- husinvss IllQ'll in thi' vlass? Iilll writing up a rvport of tht' rvunion for Thr' Sllllkfl' .l1umn11.v, ont' of thc inagazinvs Nlarit' llat-rr's vditing. Yvs. I had hoard ahout lit-ll. livll N llvll. Guin Manu- fac'turt'rs. Iiut I didn't know that Nlush Stallvy and .lustin Kuzvll had fornivd a llIll'tlli'l'5llIll. I supposi- tln'y'vt' inadt' millions on YI'all Strcvt. And liouald Arvhhold runs a halu'rdasln'ry? IIow's lloh 'I'rundlm'? Blarrivd? To-? Yrs, I thought in high school it was a prvttv good niatch. Iilll glad Andy hIl'ltII'llIll FIARION will hm' lll'l'1-'. I was afraid ln' and I'lT'ZlllIi wouldn't I rzgn' xi.rIy-si.r ln' ahh' to gvt away from tht' Itussian Art 'I'ln'att'r tln'y'rv managing. l,uc'ia II'arin'r's working for thvin. you know. I tuuvd in and saw hvr dancing a wvrk ago. And spcaking ol' thi' draina. tln'rv's Ralston Smith--W Ilvllo. lfox. Ilow's tln' idol of Ilollywood? fon- gratulations on your latvst talkin' with Mary Ann Black. 'I'ht' lVatt'rlwury-liockstalilcr scrwn pravti- vally rt'produ4'1's tht- actors in pcrson. doi'sn't it? I ': : Hlinort' disc'ovL'r4'd thi' fifth diinvnsion and t'ourtn1'y applivd it to tht' inovivs. I supposothat is what put thvin hoth on thi- Puhlia' Iinprovn'nn'nts Commission. along with .lohn Van Valkenburg, the painless dentist. To get back to the theater. I sup- pose you're all working for Bill Bellman, chairman of the Amusement Commission? All? Wvhy, yes. didn't you know about Philomene Shea--she calls herself the Shea-kespearian actress? And surely you've heard about Zim-glieldu Arnold's Betty Rc-vue, the hit that all the stage stars named Betty are in. l,et's see, there are Seitz. Hodge. Cofiicld, Chapman, Gcismer. Hunter. Jeffries. and Itferrell-all from Shaker. And then Bill has lots of sub-conunittees in his commission. There's the Music Connnisr-ion head, which has done so much to teach the public to appreciate jazz. Marion with Janet Iladsell at the Brown gave a concert just last night at Severance Ilall. VVait a minute--look-isn't that June Xvililfllllti of VVilliams, YVilliams K XVilliams, Gum Manufac- turers? But to get back to the subject, I wanted to ask whether Bob Fisher ever became a grand opera singer. No? He .vhoulrl have. Think of all the practicing he did in the Shaker halls. Then. of course. VValter Quayle heads the Sports Committee. VVhy, the Indians have won the series every time since Sonny had Austin Comella put in as catcher. And I understand Yvalter Beekert accomplishes won- ders on the Leisure Committee-just by his own excellent example. YVally was the one who organized school by radiofcdueation from nine to twelve with- out getting out oi' bed. Shaker sent some great edu- cators into this field. l,ouis Body teaches French in the manner of Maurice Chevalierg Miriam Zavclson teaches linglishg and Evelyn Itoscnstein is dean of girls in the radio school+of all soft jobsl Oh. par- don me a minute. l oxfisn't that Ted Ia-rman? llello. Judge I.erman. I've been reading about that YVhalen-Tierney case you're holding. Floyd is suing John for libel. isn't that it? Jolm always did say the right thing at the wrong time. Remember the time he got kicked out of the library. and he said -ewell. maybe I'd better not repeat it. But he'll win his case. Steve Hoover is his lawyer and he hasn't lost one yet. Nice English accent Steve picked up at Oxford. Tell me. isn't that Yetive Miller of Miller. Miller K Miller, Gum Manufacturers? I thought so. And have you heard anything about Leah C'oleman since she took over Aimee Semple Mel'herson's job? It seems to me J unyore IJyShere is preaching, too-Riverside Church, New York. BH-ll, hello. Bunny! The society pages certainly keep track of you. How does it feel being a mem- ber of royalty? Tell me about Florence Cornsweet and Dotty Ronk: you nmst see them often, now that they're rmming a hotel in Monte Carlo. Come on in to the banquet with me. I hear it's going to be per- fect--decorations by the Houghton Harte Company and nmsic by Si Fox and his orchestra. Aren't Shaker alunmi marvellous? .-. ELSIE RALSTON 'BILL ll BODY Page si Llffy-8011011 SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 FLASHBACKS SEPTEMBER 8--Our bright and shining faccs again! Hour pcriods. Groanl SD-No handbooks. Scniors procccd to gct lost. 10-Girls frcnzicdly comparc sun- burns. Fi55i:'55: A ' H ii:3mi 5ii:? ' Tiiiiiii ::: i' WEEE: :: ::::::g r. T:mLs!!YHm 95' 1 1, , f - .... . B lu QNX-ll ,f l' f ..ulI , ,. Lll, I Ai9iiwillllllwyplVllllillfiilbim.. i I5-Mr. Parks visits. Girls frcnzicd- not ovcr sunburns. ISP-97 girls and 3 boys turn up for thc first YVorkshop iuccting: thc girls pick .lunyorc for prcsidcnt. 23'-Thcy killcd thc iuousel 29-M iddics? OCTOBER I--Middicsl 2--Scnior dancc aftcr school. Our sophisticatcd alumni show up in collcgiatc clothcs. -if-Shakcr 4-I -A VVcstcrn R c s c r v c Acadcmy 0. VV:-ll ain't that soiupin'l 6'-'l'hc annual howl about class ducs bcgins about hcrc. Brubakcr Pcp VVcck LOW-w VVow-w-wj starts with a good salc of sca- son tickcts. Pugc sirly-cighl 7--'l'cachcrs havc a clam-bake: and play miniaturc golf. How about installing a coursc at the ncw high school? lllflirubakcr Pcp Yvcck cnds with Brush on a high-chair and Shakcr victorious to thc tunc of 16-0, I5-At last scnior privilcgcs ar-- ac- knowlcdgcd! Thc undcrclassmcn slaml at Plymouth until we pass outl Incidcntally wc cclcbratc Virgil's birthday. IT- -Gcorgc Moriarty. bascball um- pire, gots us thcrc from third. Shakcr Hb-Bcdford 7. First M. l,. S. dancc a big succcss. VVhatadayl A10-v Rcport cards. Ouchl 2-Frcshman and sophoniorc Parents' Night. More ouch! 24--fVl'orkshop 5 gircs us our 156 worth with thrcc plays instcad of two. Booby and Doris havc a fight. 25-LT. S. I3-Shakcr 2--lloggonc! Booby and Doris make up. li--Ncw traffic rcgulations. The idca is if you want to gct up-stairs you walk down or vice vcrsa. and if you want to gct any placc thc bcst plan is to go outsidc and walk around thc building! NOVEMBER 3-Sidney Landon. Edgar Allan Voc. Longfcllow, Bill Nyc. or who have you? Comc again. Mr. Landon. wc likc to laugh. 5-Various and sundry plots work and most of us gct out of last pcriod study hall-to hcar Byrd. of courscl Ill K ONDON llas its Picturesque country towns nearlmy, Paris its Bois rle Bologne, NewYorli its Westcllester - and Cleveland its Slxalxer Village. Except for tlxe great worlcl-capitols, few cities are fortunate CIIOUSII to llave suclx a cox xxxlm unity as Slxalser Village -a co xxlxxuxxxx ity forever set apart for tlle Letter types of llonxes, wlxere families of stancling may lzuilcl or lJuY, secure in tlle lsnowleclse tllat tlley always lae among approved neislx- lwors and surrounclecl Ly line llomes in keeping witlx tlleir own. All tlxe tradition, restrictions, developments wliiolt Love made Sllalser Village tlxe cleliglxtful co xlxx nunity' it is toclay are lneing carriecl over into the Slxal-ner Country Estates antl tlle new section now lacing developed east of Center Roacl. Here are talsing form today two of tlie most Beautiful anrl picturesque rlistriots in all tlie Slaalrer area. 9775? VAN SWERINGEN COMPANY 52,-J FLOOR TERMINAL TOWER - CLEVELAND, OHIO PHONE: MAIN 7960 Shaker Village Odice: Slmlser Boulevard anrl Center ' Fzxirmuunt 9100 II llllfll' si.x'Iy-Him SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 of- Miss VVim-kwirv givcs hvr sixth pcriorl class a lvsson in lnannm-rs. Visitors tomorrow. 7--lla4l's llay. It 1lidn't rain! liuclicl Uvntral 4-oinvs out at thc- hig ond of tht- scorv. 21313. 10--lioohy and llory have a fight. S4-niors spend sparc svhool timv rvarling fl1IilII'7'I'lI,.S' Plnyfimr' Jlagnsim' and voloring tht- pic-- tnrrs. Tskl 'l'sk! lloohy and lloris makm' up. MAJ I I--lloohy and llory havc a fight. QThc Arinistim- Day program lll2lkt'!-5 its lllllfko Boohy and Dory make np. I2-l'olly llonghton waits until day aftvr Armistice to get hur hlack vyv. '1'2ll'tflll. what I moan. IT-+Shake-r docs its Init for the COIN' munity l nncl. New llll'IIll!l'I' of Thrailkill family f'I'homas Lccj makcs his appvarancc. Mr. 'l'hrailkill happy. a h s 1' n t ' mindvd. I8--Phil Shea and Hahy Mc-'Faggart rcsponsihlc for two hlown fnsvs. lVhat liappcmwl to the camera, Mr. Kchrvs? QD-Mary Ann Blat-k's horsm- gcts coy. Shu joins the list of woundcd. l'olly's cyc turns purple. , Page' xvocnly 5- 'PL Thr' Qu4'r11'.v IIIINIIIIIIII a hig sno- vm-ss from falling plastvr to falling actors. Hn-r hoar of a warm hrirlal vvil? 25 Slight Coll, yvahfj snow Harris-s and Mr. Patin clirvcts traffic at thc' rvar 1-ntrancv. hvlliltlllllllllf 'Hi 'l'ratt'ic regulations div a painln-ss dm-ath. Sanity prcvails oncv morc. DECEMBER I-W l'olly's 4-yi' hawk to normal. YV a n t 1- dr anothc-r holocaust. VVu'rc hard up for nn-ws. Tin' cafvtcria prodllc-vs tha- annual Christmas trvv. .if-Miss I,2lltl'lIl'S l rvnc-h class givvs Lf' l1'ourg1'oi.v EIFIIHHIUIIIIIII' and a tva aftvrwards. Ur. lla-Sauzo talks l rvm'l1 exactly m.p.h. fastvr than Mr. llarhourt. lvliatzlspc-ul l nnual l oothall l3:mquct. C'ln'e'rs for Sonny. honorary captain. f'oam-h Brnhake-r. and thc- tvam which ratvd st-cond in thc Con- fcrf'ncm'. 8-lurtains in tht- lihrary. llow ahout sonn- window-hoxcs anal some' cloilivs for tht- tahlvs? THE - I I ., I M. A. HAN NA CLEVELAND OHIO 235 SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 U .Iohn QIIIIIIHPIIIJ Iilaa-kburn rv- Tfblr. Sargrnt is talking about his qm-sta-d to Ia-ave thc library for thu'--wc' 4-an't kvcp tI'Ill'Ii-tll IIIIIU. Trying to sn-t a rt-cord. John? I0 In l'Q'I.l'I'l'lll'1' to want ad of Ilwvlli- bt-r l. yi-ilitor obligingly snlznsln-s he-r own tingcr. Hi' WI 4' IIJIYK' a lICIHltlIIg' club! 'I'Iu'v'ru Ii4'solvi-d that tht: Five' Yvar Plan of Russia is Siu-4-cssful. Ur inaybm- tlu-y'rv not. H -'I'he' Sllakvr Club is a gn-at Illl' 'IN 1 n'm'nn'nt ov:-r I' I y mo u th C h u r 4- h for Senior-Alumni I Iamw-s. :Xlunini Day. thc l'hristnms play. . . ,V fp .incl bm-st XYIHIIUS tronl Ilnv Inn. y y . . , . Mr. Ihrallklll asks bantv tor a IIUWV CII l'. JANUARY 1 Anil in vast- any of you would Iikm' to know, I IlZlYt'Il,t broke.-n one- rvsolution yt-t. - You cIimIn't inakv any.-Shhhhl-Not so loud! Mr. Thrailkill coma-s to school in thc VIN-vy. No luck. 43 I.owe' and Poinuroy, Shakcr's bmviz boys, allow Art Young, archer and uxplorvr. to shoot at Qanil inissj the-nl. xx' ,LQ Q Ili, 141510 xa'vc'n1y-two rcmling contvst. Yvoulil this bv yc-t or again. Mr. S:1rp5m'ntf' 8+'I'Iu- niousi-'s widow visits thc- ww- ing' room. Svvm-t l't'V4'llgl'l Sl-Sliakvr 525+MapIc How long would it Imvt- takvn a M. II. tc-:nn to make- up thu vxtra points? I'In-asc ri-fx-r to Ili-bating Club. H4-ights 19. Hi-Iirushf YJ bags tin- too many bas-- kvts for a 29-I9 si-orc. I'I-4-asm-I 20YIlI'l'SIIIt'llt Parks of VVIM-:iton l'oI- Ii-gv tvlls us how long it took tht- nionkvy to climb tha- gn-:nsvml pole: 22+bm-nior A's gr:uInata-for cIon't---as tha' vast' nlay bm-. I'rrsi1Ix'lit Iloovm-r fthvy 4-lv:-tt-:I Ililn vlass pr:-sirlvnt on purposi-Q is going to Arizona to Tt'l'IllN'I'Eltl' from a yvar of wcaring rxvclltiu- du' tivs. -. 2-v-Langston Huglxrs. who has a most m'ng':1ging sinilv. won tlu- hvarts of tht- Sc-ribblt-rs and gun-sts. and the- most IItl'l'ill'y'llIIllIIt'lI of thi' faculty. Euclid Cvntral gin-s us :1 so-so clrubbing. 245420. ll----Ya-s. I l'I'ZlIlIlIlt'lI. 26-29-Wt-'II draw a 1-urtain ow-r this. 250-Shorv gvts something to vry about with a I-2-I6 svorv. H- ' , l l l i w l w l l l l Ownership of a summer home with a snug harbor in Vermilion Lagoons, :lt l Vermilion, Ohio, brings to your family the opportunity for out-door life, boating, swimming, fishing, tennis, and golf at nearby clubs-and all at a price compa- rable to what you might pay for an ordinary summer place. Q N We personally extend to you a rordial invitation to visit Vermilion Lagoons. X THE WELLS REALTY COMPANY 30 Euclid Arcade Cleveland, O. 5 l l YOUR DRIVEWAY 1 Is it a nice, clean drive, surfaced with hard, durable l material, or is it one of those didn't cost much, that are Q tracked all through the house? l In order to have an attractive, dustless driveway, tele- phone us for No. 5 Red Crushed Granite Chips, graded from Mg to M without dust. ,st J' The Northern Granite 8c Stone Co. 403 Nlarion Bldg. CLEVELAND N lVlAin 1756 l Granite Block, Curbing, Crushed Granifes and u Marbles, and Road Building Materials Q Page sevcnly-three SHAKER SILHOUETTE 1931 FEBRUARY '-f Back again - A vvvryoin- having passvdfdid you? Nm,-itlu-r did l. Thi- quvstion in thc minds tif anyj of thc l r1-shman Ns- Zli or not ZH? f'l'his is a pun.j Iif- Mr. Thornton shuts himsclf up in thi- auditorium with a radio un- til a wily sm-nior dist-overs him. From 12:30 to 3:00 the salm- radio spouts Silas .lllnrnrr at in' trigucd QFD uppc-rclassmc-n. fi gi. ' .X mrs ff wmv 0'-ff-Plyinoutli again tht- sucnc of sol- vmn 4-clm'hration. Mora- honor l'l'I'tlli1'!ltl'S than vvvr lu-forv arc handed out to lwaming studs-nts. lilvvcn lucky uppc'rc'lassmcn make tha' National Honor So- vim-ty. i'ongratulations. cvcry- hody l 0---Burning Slzakwriizf campaign. Aftcr mum-h invvstigation, homcroom 303 gots thx- fiftcvn dollar prim-. hvlllldfl' what the-y'll do with it? 10-Mr. Harhourt is rcsponsihlv for any numhvr of wastvd films ln-V form' hc quicts down long 1-nough for tho faculty to stop laughing and havc its pin-turv take-n. l:Zff'vdar-Y t'TlSl'Illlllt' sings Dimir' and Paul Banks of the Gilpin Play- vrs givvs a nvgroasvrmon to cvl- chratv l,in1'oln's hirthday. Priya' Sl'Ul'I1Hl-f0IlI' li!-WT wi-rv wrong. 'I'raHi4- laws again lm Q- i n g vnform-xl. Yvhatalifcl Shakcr trims Maph' Ilvights. Conn' on. you championshipl Ili-Tllv mousv's grandchild Qprola- ahlyj COIIIUS to su- thu' Sllfllil'I' Playvrs gin' 11.11 Sun. 17-l,angston llughcs rvturns and rm'- charms thc sc-hool. Scrihlnlcrs vntvrtain at tva while- l'mnn'roy prvsidcs at thx- har. -s 2. --YVashington was a good sort after all. .36--l'lvci1 tha- vc-ntilator rm-sponds vn- thusiastic-ally to Bliss Nlansur's pon-try rvadings. YVhat wc'd like' to know is-who disap- pcarcd with tht- Stagc l,m-agua' candy? 27+YVv tic for tln- haskvthall crown hy walloping liuclid fcntral Ilii- I8. xVll!lt!lg2llllt'l Nl. l,. S. candy theft mystvry is ch-arvd up. MARCH lallr. 'I'hrailkill vonivs to school in a Hupmohilc that he- says is his. Santy is just two months latv. And now tlu-y'rc tvaring down tht- school to aid thc traftim' situ- ation. X... WW Illlllllliyi ' fyrrffjs 'Q Y ' '35 ,wftfmllxxllllf ui- , - 4 1 - 2' A GOOD INVESTMENT MONEY invested in a business education at Spencerian will pay you dividends for the rest of your life. Most of our graduates find that they have more than made up the cost of tuition, by increased earnings, I within a year after graduation. , l Spencerian Training involves the true principles of business and, by employing the laboratory 'method of teaching-using actual cases-em- I phasize practice rather than theory. Some of the courses given at Spencerian are Stenography, Book- keeping, Private and Executive Secretarial, Higher Accounting and I Auditing, Secretarial Science, Business Administration, and Law prepar- I ing for the bar examination. FREE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE Write, phone or call for bulletins and further information S P E N C E R I A N SCHooL OF COMMERCE, ACCOUNTS AND FINANCE 3201 Euclid Ave. HEnderson 3200 3200 Chester Ave. Chartered by the State of Ohio to confer degrees l I I THCS. B. JAMISON i g ' ELECTRIC WIRING QE V r 2 1 E' J Tj Hardware and Radio .. , A JAMISON ASERVICE 1847-49-51 Coventry Rd. l RADIO SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT Q FAirmount 1313 Cleveland Heights Page seventy-live SHAKER SHJ4OUETTE 1931 9 I0 ll I2 I3 ll- Ili I7- I9- 20- 21- 211- 26- 27- qu-.- I0- 17- --Somcone-'s dog must have died. People are wearing hlack rih- ons around thcir arms. --It isn't Jiggs. -,It isn't Dotty llayer's dog. --It isn't Marie l7acrr's dog. --It's publicity for Icebounrl. And what a show that turned out to hc! No, sir. Ur. Blackburn is not in right now. V--Even the seniors concede that the Sophomore Dance was a swell affair. Somebody hroke a hole in the face of the clock. Vvonder if it has anything to do with the tratlic system. M r. Harhourt pulls a can of apple- sauce out of his file. Someone was trying to get a good grade. .lovial ltfr. Kroescn makes us huy tickets for the C. A. C. track meet- and like it. VVc are to yell for Lee Sentman, hurdle record holder. G. A. A. party-if you've paid your dues. Hob Zimmerman makes a grand impression. Shaker, for the first time, dm-sn't tally so many points. Well, we weren't last! Sentman breaks a world record. Mr. Lang and music appreciation. Silly seniors stage Zilaclwfh. Boohy thanks thc audience for thcir pains. Faculty loses to varsity haskethall team. Yvhataheatingl APML Student Assembly Revue a good joh. Scenery stays putl The Tatterman Marionettcs in their usual more than entertain- ing program. Another student assembly-such talent! Page seirenly-sir J-- -Rome's birthday-with too many candles. Stage League Self- Denial YVcck begins. 7--You can't go into the study halls -the seniors arc taking exams! 'COME LE ME Ewgefq OMG E 4 AAAY -Yvorkshop llay. More excellently done one act plays. -It gcts 'em every time-that spring fcvc r. .J-Seniors sweat over Senior Play. -Seniors work on Senior Play. -Seniors excused from class to re- hea rsc Senior Play. la-Senior Play a knockout! Latin Banquet-and once again we brave all and cat Roman food. The Lawn l cte. Now it is springl JUNE The Junior-Senior Banquet. The juniors must have paid their dues. Thanks, juniorsl It was a good affair. Undcrclassmen begin exams while seniors dance the night away at the prom. Commencement-Shed a tear-for those left hehind. That's just about all for this year -and Yvhatayear I l DUSTLESS COAL Treated with Calcium Chloride and it stays dustless until the last shovelful is used Handee's Dustless Premium Pocahontas A BUSHEL OF ASI-IES TO A TON OF COAL THE CARL HANDY COAL CO. Phone WAshington 4188 Address East 127th and Erie R. R. near Miles Ave. l l i Charter House Conducts a Test l l Ilflfb eyei wide open Thousands of University fellows were asked 1 XVhm price do most college .nen want to 5 , l nay for il two trouser sunt? The answer wus. S55 :mtl Still. Charter House went to i V work. Here they are for spring. The most popular University Clothes in America at , I the most popular prices by choice. I CHARIER House 1 Two rRoUsER SUITS l l i and l 555 340 A NEVER BEFORE SOLD UNDEO' 1550 I BAKEIFSN EUCLID AT NINIH Slrathern lburt Page seventy-seven THE A. R. BRUEGGEMAN CO. HEATING, VENTILATING, PLUMBING AND POWER PIPING TERINIINAL TowER CLEVELAND I l I THE PECK ENGRAVING CO. 1066 Hamilton STEEL AND COPPER PLATE ENGRAVED STATIONERY Ave. Cleveland MQ MODERN PIANO STUDIOS Ill An institution devoted to the Promotion of Modern Piano Syncopation A l'Ik Modern Harmony I I r E Open Evenings A I , 5 4' I LEMENTARY DYANCEIJ 818-20-22 Carnegie Hall 1220 Huron Road 4 ' I - CHerry 2983 PICTURE FR OFFICE SUP AMING PHOTO-FINISHING GODFREY HOLMES Printer-Stationer PLIES 10628 EUCLID AVE. Page seventy-eight Vincent Arnold hitvlwd his star To :i second hand Ixus :ill mud and mr- ization P XVI: culled it :i joke that had gone: too liN 1d4'r!-fast: Blondes! far. 2 But Vince-nt called it his motor-L-:un Pitkin: xvlllit is clu-xnistry's most out- , standing contribution to modern civil- Bus Qrcuding Virgiijx 'I'lircu tinics 1 I strove to cast my :inns about hor 1 nook. and-th:1t's :ill thc fxxrthcr I Nr. Brown: 1Vlmt lIl1l1il'S the days longer in tht- sunnncr? Pc:l1xody: The heat expands 'vin. got. qnitv fur enough. Miss Blair: XVI-ll. I think that was i . i 1 ' THE 5 o 1 WHALE 1 I ' i i .. - COAL CO. GENERAL 1 i ELECTRIC 1703 Doan Avenue i ALL-STE E L I REFRIGERATOR with the Monitor Ep EDdy 2085 . i THE CUSHMAN A 1 REFRIGERATION CO. i 2251 Lee Road MAin 5900 THE HARRY L. DAVIS CO. Insurance-Surety Bonds 1331 Terminal Tower CLEVELAND Our Service Includes Every Kind of Insurance Page svveniy-nim THE WHITE TOOL AND SUPPLY CO. Supplies, Tools and Machinery I 1313-1317 West Sixth Street CLEVELAND, OHIO A TALE IN TWO TITTERS l'flPlSEW'ED ONE-FALL, 1930 NCB upon a dime there was a little girl named Red-Riding-QBettyj-Hoodge. l She had a pal-a Knight on a niekel. fThese are Seniors, hut-.D They were standing beside the ofliee tellusphone. which started it all. From the ofliee of Mr. Thornton. the gentleman dean, r-merged Frederic Bair, aeeompanied by Alfred Carpenter Bud Body land Soulj. Miss Kadlee Qwe'd hetter not pun thisj: lVill you people help seal these envelopes, please? They're invitations for Parents' Night, hut- Hoodge, Knight, Bair. Body Qhands to fourheadsj: Parentsl Sew:-dll Jsk for Eagle Stamps Vllinterxnission fConti11ued on Page Eighty-fwoj THE MILLARD, SON 8: RAPER CO. Funeral Directors 2092 East 105th Street Cleveland, Ohio Page eighiy The Pzfrfffvt Gift for Graduation .... l Swift, smart, snappy! Low-priced! And a six-with the zip and smoothness that only six cylinders can give. l l l Kinsman Square Clzevrolvt Co. 3224 East 93rd Street CREST RINGS .... . . . Smart, clever designs that yozfll like. or X And for that lifetime possession of your Fraternity Pin . . . . you will always be proud of it if you choose from our selection. - GIFTS - - TROPHIES - PRIZES -- ALLEN'S Cleveland Metal Specialties Co. 2025 East 14th Street 1753-S3 East 21st Street Hanna Building Factory Page' viglily-one 1 X Y V V Y Y i l For First Class Service Try . . . Compliments Shakerlan Barber Parlor l l 12805 Woodland Ave. C. J. McC llou h S I u g We Specialize in Ladies' and Rapid Transit Waiting Station l Childrenis Hairbobblng l Our Three Prides W Shaker and Coventry l Sanitation, Courtesy and Service W 4 A. LICCARDI, Prop. SHAKER HEIGHTS g l leg gg giggr Y W Y A'TALE IN TWO TITTERS EPISEWVFZD Two--SPRING, 1931 The plot sickens. Crosby is scene on ii ladder sprinkleaning the oflice wall. Mr. Tlirnilkill Qwe could change this, too, but-J is asking Miss Anderson if she has ever run across The Bridge of San Luis Rey, and why not. Our liherrism is telling' him she has just received Benjamin Franklin recovered in red. Sarge charges in. Surge: Wh:it's al-l-l this? Envy lopes? Miss Kadlec: These mean a little overtime work for the personknell of the school. Invitations for Parents' Night, but-- Crosby, Mr. Thrailkill, Miss Anderson. Sarge fhands to fourheadsj: Parents! Scwcdll Ask for Double Eagle Stamps MARY Louis:-: BOUGIITON Next door ........ TO EVERYTHING When you live at Moreland Courts you'll see more of your friends . . . most of them probably live in Shaker Village, next door. The luxury of Shaker Tavern for meals or entertaining can be reached from your home here without going out of the building. The shops of Shaker Square are at your door. Golf, tennis, riding, are but a few easy minutes by car. And downtown . . . if you MUST tear yourself away from this charming community . . . is only 12 minutes by rapid transit. L. M. VAN FOSSAN, Resident Mgr. GA rfield 9720 MORELAND COURTS Shaker Boulevard at Shaker Square Page eighty-Iwo i MADDAS l i JOE H. HETNEN i Fruit and Vegetable Jllarket i 16621 Kinsman Rd 1 We Specialize in T i N . l Quality Fruits and Vegetables l Extra Quality We lffflfvff i Meats-Poultry-Fish 16623 K'n-n Rd. l i WML 4900 ' 5' an l A Trial will convince You DEVELOP A STRONG JAW i EICKQFFS FLORIS'fS T AVOID THAT DOUBLE CHIN Flowers for All Occasions l Bell, Bell 8: Bell Williams, Williams 8: Williams Miller, Miller SL Nliller ' Kinsman Road just east of Center Road X Opposite Highland Park Cemetery i W GUM MANUFACTURERS T WAshington 3183 My MINISS MADE UP- 1 T ns THE m.AcE T0 suv l l i I Iriiifgtiiiigco i 1 maori MoioRs,me ITL? FRO 1 --iiclvr f- N I l W O O Page eighty-llzrcc 4 Page viglrly-four T SHAKER MARKET, Inc. i 3245 Center Rd. at South Woodland I Shaker Heights, Ohio FIRST QUALITY FOODS IMPORTED DELICACIES Prompt Attention to 'Phone Orders Phone LOngacre 7200 RADIO SERVICE QAII Makesj Sanborn Electric Co. ELECTRICAL REPAIRING T HARDWARE-DEVOE PAINTS 3481 Lee Road WAsh. 2721 DAVID I. JONES Funeral Director BRoadway 2136 MIchigan 5009 Invalid Car Service 9419 Nliles Ave. Res.: FAirmount B391 POSTAGE STAMPS For Collections Bought-Sold-Exchanged at the best rates GRECO STAMP CO. T 301 Erie Bldg. 1 i L The Dinglle-Clark Co. 1 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS I f 513 l 9 L Page eighty-live Enferpnfsefkclrllllfghfzkfglivlureslna -Engng - ozslanzns ,,Vf,,ff,,,,,,f flyflnf 5 MANUFACTURERS lmpon-I-ERS ,.L1ghlingF1xlurr5..: 9.51-plgu-fgpgg -.-: -wrzzzzi 6507-65ll Euclid Avenue . Cleveland The DeGaetano 8: Parrino Co. FANCY FRUITS and VEGETABLES Imported Italian Goods FREE DELIVERY Twice Daily-10 A. M. and 2 P. M. 13200 Shaker Square, Shaker Heights CEdar 5791 4 JEWELRY-SILVERWARE WOVEN ARTICLES Made in our own workshop BEADS RESTRUNG Wilhelmina P. Stephan 13125 Shaker Square CEdar 4535 LAUBSCHER BROS. Delicatessen GINGER ALES IMPORTED CORDIALS Finest of Imported and Domestic Delicacies 13130 Shaker Square CEdar 5548 J ON ES-RUSSELL CO. ...Flowers... Union Trust Bldg. 1430 Euclid Ave. Shaker Square Page eighty-sin: GIFTS For the Graduate Always The Most Unusual KATHAL WALES Shaker Square l Fw X Q ,J ' M373 X ' fi: 51 x V Congratulations to the Class of 1931 HELEN MILNER i HAIRDRESSER Q Shaker Square The prize for thc yu-:ir's hcst excuse goes without dispute to ono Andrew M4-ldrxnn, who gave Mr. Thornton to know that hc QAndrm-wj was lutugct- ting hack from lunch 1N.'l'2lllSC hc had In-ld thc door open for Mr. Putin, who was rt-turning at the same time. And thx- Slmkeritr' wins :mother prize for the best lnisprint of thu your hy dec-luring in an ln-:ndlinv that Sonny Quznyh- Runs el-l Yours for il Touch- down ! Xvlltlhlllllllll Dishro: Hvrds an joke :xhout :1 dlnnh guy who thinks :x foothall couch has four wln-I-ls. E1l'1ll1lilHZ Huh! huh! And how many does it have? Bus: VVh:1t's thu population of thc United States? Philonn-nc: Uh-h- Bns: VV1-ll. hurry np. En-ry minute yon hesitate it's gm-tting higgvr and bigger. LESLIE D. STAUFFER RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION ALTERATIONS REPAIRS ADDITIONS Eleven years of successful building on the Heights CEdar 6688 13111 Shaker Square Page eighty-sc vcn l WAshingt0n 1317 Open Tuexday and Friday evenings KELLAM Individual Beauty Service l l 1 16637 Kinsman Rd., off Lee SHAKER HEIGHTS School Girls' Permanent Wave, 35.50 For QUALITY and SERVICE . . Call . . Lynnfield Drug Co. Cor. Kinsman and Lynnfield Rds. WAsh. 3854 WAsh. 0684 The Mogg Cut Stone Co. 4133 East 123rd Sf. Ohio Sandstone-Indiana Limestone Stone Facings-Building Trim Stone Wlantels Phone WAsh. 4192-3 THIS FALL- THE COREY INSTITUTE OF NECHTOLOGY flow To Go Out On A Dime flee Cream Cones Includedl The H. K. Ferguson Co. Engineers and Builders I I l Hanna Building , C L E V E L A N D il l THE H. K. FERGUSON COMPANY ,................ Mar unou chi Building, Tokyo, Japan THE H. K. FERGUSON COMPANY, Ltd. ...... Northern Ontario Bldg., Toronto, Canada THE H. K. FERGUSON COMPANY OF MEXICO, S. A. ...... Monterrey, N. L., Mexico NEW YORK CHICAGO DETROIT BIRMINGHAM Page eigllly-vigil! THE E. E. BROWN as Vtlalk OPTICAL Co. 1 O 5 :55:::2 ver Prescription Opticians 1 S10 :O 803 Union Trust Building .- I 'Y 'U CLEYELAND Downtown East Side MAH1 2428 1020 Euclid 10103 Euclid fffwf f M ' f ,fi T 1 fWi'7'7' 7 V ' ff V A f tl i f s A 1 5 if 1 A C Secretarial I OPPORTUNITIES in Q16 business await v i young people who - 1: prepare themselves 4 I for Secretarial posi- , EEO s tions. :ie ' W t ' if l Dk s-h 1 --3, - y e e oo is in a I C l position to feel the l ' ' ' 5 pulse of business and . I will train you to meet 1 the exacting demands M t J ' A of the modern ex- , K , 7 ecutive. E z H -if-suv -Y f- ' N 1. I X7 E up a i Ii DEKEgHO0L Y' - 1 OH BRCE L 5- A L Ll 1001 Huron Road, Cleveland VELLJF IT l5N'T VlR.Bl?0VN,i'lY OLD SCHOOL TEACHE R nn' c i D ' 9'5 FOR YOUR FLOWERS . . . ZllECHMANN'S Warrensville Center and South Woodland Road illember Florists' Telegraph Delivery Page eighly-nim THE F. A. PEASE ENGINEERING CO. 1 E CIVIL ENGINEERS and SURVEYORS n l I 1211 Terminal Tower MAin 4273 1 l F f FAYNE'S CAFETERIA l l Restaurant 5 and ! Lunch Counter 13th and Euclid Ave. l GOOD FOOD LOW PRICES l l We welcome young folks ' MR. AND Mus. JOHN C. FAYNE f, W' f V . V-I 429 ly , lk, ' E 1 .1 . . x . Q ,E ' we 1 Vg NRE' ...fx . ff ' ' 'I Q . . 7 1111 ' B K 'M All QW JMIIIW 051: ii' 1 -4 5. Mal!!!-OCZ WELLJF IT ISNIT NI55 .SfLLER5.,l 1TOLD SCHOOL TEACHER 1 FENN COLLEGE 5 of Cleveland Y-Tech l ENGINEERING and BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION On the Cooperative Plan l Five weeks of College-Then Five weeks of actual experience in business and industry l Not more than 260 Freshmen will he enrolled in September, 1931 Z For Catalogues, address l The Registrar FENN COLLEGE 2200 Prospect Avenue Page ninely I RESIDENCE REPAIRS and ALTERATIONS l i I Jobbing Service SUBSTITUTE DeP 'me ' 1 l lm' D 1 i BUILDERS UALITY 1 . . N Q The William Dunbar Co. THERE ARE N0 2 I Si T'98fL 3?'T1C 'f iAlf?i'f-. SUBSTITUTES IN I QUALITY Ice Creams, Inc. perience of these two business manager of a 6519-27 Carnegie Ave. HEnderson 7700 i How to Make Your Job Pay! I Do you feel that you deserve more than you earn? Profit from the ex- men-one the great publica- tion, the other a salesman of second- hand sport w Meldrum 8: Quayle E8 F. I School of Business and Finance PLAY MINIATURE GOLF ...0I1... WA. 1068 LAST YEAR'S MOST POPULAR COURSE Located on Fairmount Blvd. just south of Cedar Rd. All Day-250 8-12 P. M.-3Sc Page ninety-om 1 Earliest with the Latest LOEBS CHARM SHOPPE Complete Beauty Service Guaranteed Permanent Waves by Mrs. Loebs i H EALTH BATH S BODY MASSAGE Hair Bobbing and Thinning by Experts SMARTEST LATEST STLYES 12609 Woodland Ave. CEdar 1348 AFTER GRADUATION, WHAT NEXT? Of course, you plan to continue to advance! Cleveland College, the down- town college of Western Reserve University and Case School of Applied Science, offers you a combination of opportunities found nowhere else. l. Class hours arranged for your com enience, 4. morning, afternoon, evening. Z. Full or part time schedules. 5' 6. 3. Wide range of courses.-120 in Business 7 Administration, 60 in Engineering, 400 in the Arts and Sciences. 8. Nlany other advantages. Phone, write, CLEVELAND Mfxinlloz The laboratories of Reserve and Case are available. Degrees of A.B., B.B.A., and M.B.A. Faculty of 187 specialists. Less expense. Closer touch with life. or call for further information. C O L L E G E Public Square Page nim'ly-Iwo SCHRICHTE i l i 1 . . THE CLEANER . . Call Us Wevz can y 12717 Woodland Avenue y CEdar 2786 'I'ia-rm-y Qovvr phoncj: Is this Mr. Putin? Mr. Putin: Yes. this is Mr. Putin. Ticrm-y: Hold the line a IIIIl'llltl', plcusc. Mr. Putin: All right. QA minute pusscsj 'l'im-rm-y: Your minute is up. thunk you QCli4-klj. Mr. Putin: Bang! lid Lows Qin cuff-tcriaj: Do you sm-rvv pork hero? Cook: Ycs. wc scrvv everybody hero. Move on. young man, movc on. l 1-'limkr-rz Mr. '1'lm.a1ki11, wil.-rc is l i your chivzilry? 1 Bus: l tr:1dc'd it in for :1 Ilup. TT? i Justin Kuzs-ll thinks thc grvutcst W Alllt'Tll'ZIH gvncrul is GQ-m-ral Motors. Tcucln-r: Now. Toni, is Univ:-ston in ,. , Y . . , I In-xus or m Arizona. RQ-vb Qde-:id to the worldj: Uh huh. 'I'c'aclu'r: I :iskvd you which one it was in. 1 lim-Im: lVcll-uh---UrvgonF L. Body: Anyom- can play lxridgv. , hut it take-s :I vunnihzll to throw up u hand. 4 l WM. MISHLER-General Hardware I FURNACES, SLATE ROOFING, SHEET METAL WORK, l PAINTS, VARNISH, OILS, GLASS, ETC. GArlield 2715 12734 Woodland Avenue 1 Page ninety-three Compliments of T T9 ' F DR. J. M. BELL ll! Z F Dentist Z E 12728 Woodland Ave. ' 3 E Office Hours 1 E, 9.00-12.00 A. M. 2.00-7.30 P. M. f j E- 1 1 1 H 4 E ffm 3' :: 2 15 1 li W 1-1 14 F Compliments 'WW E F Park View Florists 1 M .51 -V 1 9320 Kinsman Ra. 13917 Kinsman Rd. I 'S 1: N '12 IHII Mlchigan 2469 WAshington 1152 LWB . 1 111511.11 IT ISNT 121155 l 1AN5ELL,l'1Y ow 5cHoo1 mcum S S I 1 The Moreland Barber Shop , The Oldest Shop on the Heights 1 Our Steady Growth is Contributed to Our 1 Many Satisfied Customers 1 F f We specialize in Ladies' and Childrerfs 1 H aircutting I 1 1 1 1 12908 Woodland Ave. H. L. EVANS, Prop. 1 I , ,W ,, Page ninety-four Compliments of The l CLEVELAND PLASTERING Co. i Contractors for 1 LATHING, PLASTERING and ORNAMENTAL WORK i l on New shaker Heights High School i and i New Shaker Heights City Hall A fi i 1 5? T ag, I-n..-....... A. , , n ., ,MZ ng, U 1 fo 'x E.. . WELLJI' IT ISIN l'1R.LlN5CHElD,l 1T OLD .SCHOOLTEACHER i ' 1 if Q i i I -W if e 1' ,f iX K,i l ' Q's?:.'1 L-ll' 1 r a? in i i rhh df P' K, V an -,XJ f.: K- . I f,.,,. :, w 1 av n THE most insignificant Q e l in :will look quite clistin- e xi X I Mwguislred inthe New uni i i iDavis University Suiti i i 529.50 i i wma TWO TROUSERS TIEW B DAVIS C0 325-35 EUGJDMVENUE i Page nizzvly-live Pagc' llilwly-six SPIETH PHARMACY W'e Are at the Other End of Every Telephone on the Heights l ' East 128th and Woodland Ave. CEdar 3265 Prompt Auto Delivery T 2 l l Best Mzzterial and Expert Workman- f ship Used in Our Repairing A. 8: H. HANK DRY GOODS-NOTIONS-NOVELTIES LADIES' AND MEN'S x 1 Rapid Shoe Repairing FURNISHINGS W d A Shoes and Rubbers for the Whole Family X - 00 an Ve. v 12733 Woodland Ave. I 1' CARLUCC' GArlield 6385-w Cleveland ' Y 2 lelo 2, 3 clsdar 7700 CEdar 7498 wA5h. 4262 N . . . l Frank Bvrdonaro Umon PYOVISIOH Co. E FANCY FRUITS and Quality Meats 1 V E G E T A B L E S 5 12721 woodland Ave. 12701 Buckeye Road Free Delivery Service JOHN ZIEGLER, Proprietor CEdar 3950-51-52 Clover Farm Store No. 69 J. R. J A R E S 13002 Woodland Avenue FINEST GROCERIES AND MEATS The Heights Pioneer Store Three Deliveries Daily Page ninety-seven The Robt. L. White Music Co. 45 and 47 The Arcade N CI'Ierry 1903 Trout-Ware Studios Portrait Photography 424 Terminal Tower CLEVELAND, OHIO CHerry 3620 I Known as the old reliable place f gllusicnl Instruments I l f Compliments of O i 'human Huang uramra, Jlnr. Fine Orchids Your Educational Needs will be completely supplied . . EIJUCATIONAI. PUBLI- CATIONS: Harter has puh- lished 231 different work hooks and units of instruc- tion for all grades from first through high school . . . de- veloped for individual in- struction. COMMENCEMENT SUI'- PLIES: Harter has developed thru years of designing beau- tiful and varied styles of Commencement invitations and diplomas . . . See the new Harter line each year. PRINTING: Harter as printer of this Shuttle can handle any kind of school printing from forms. report cards to annuals. SCHOOL SUPPLIES: Harter stocks a complete line of school supplies and equipment . . . for teaching and administrative needs. EDUCATIONAL TOYS: Harter now sponsors a new line of educational playthings, which really teach children while they play. THE HARTER PUBLISHING COMPANY 2046 East 71st Street-Cleveland Page ninety-c'igI1t H 1 r L EVANGELICAIL A .,. cLlVlI.AND.o- H,-V, , wx fy! 5 YEAR BOOK PRINTERS W COMMERCIAL W V l GENERAL CATALOG Rs PRINTING ' 1 R H T No qjjtnrf if foo great to meer N az C1lJ'f0lll6'l .f wifbef w A 5 i W 1 v 1 R N F 1 PHONE PROSPECT 7700 Fon OUR REvnEsaNTA1'1v1z WV 1900 Superior Avcnuc ANA CjlCNClRUd,Ol1iIl fy W Puyc' l1I'Ilt'f!l-I 1 U 1 ity 1 r' 1 1 l N ,, V f ,,- , ,,,,.,,.... ,.-, -, , p - 4 ,, V , . 5-,-,','f' ' -,.' f- 1 C 1 ' ' 1 ' fi 71 fra. 3' K f . ,. , 'f ' .9 , W .V ri 'fv ' 'ff V ! .' , 'TX-li 2 . Tw-Q I , 'J . ,1.-qwwu ggr- ,f I 'LA .,- , 5 V, .. 3 V K 1 :few --f'-T A , - A 'f ,gig iiyfff, 5 J 1 ,f V, ..: - ' , ' ' mr - 1 3 'ffffif , .'v 'J f -- ,: ' ffl! :fill-Q., . I . 1 , A YW1-,f H' ' f xl! 1 n'.' 1, ' ', ' f if ', 'I'-i' I 1' ' -- , uf 'V P1 . I ' .-L ' gr, .V ' 'X ' ., , ' J ' 1 r ,,. . ' P - ' I, w ,,. 'Y ', I-' ff - M f 1' , if .T ,Y ' ' ,J ' I wlw ff F' ' , H v'.,,I' f, 4 ' X ' ', ,ff I ' 1 , ., ' ', xx f f . ' A , 1 '13 . ' X- 1- ,f f C262 wi 1 f gOff gJ5Q? gm 1 'we ajir 7011 afnexyi in arf and rrprodnrtioru crmlefl I Jroug mmcrientiouf .ren'ire, and in- , ' ,f , , .rpired by .4 gmuine darirc to dfllfiblllt the but K . Tb! JAHN B1 OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. Pbnfngrnlvbrr-r, Artirlf mul Mai:-rr affine Priullrig Plalufar Blazf ami Colm? 817 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago I g 'I'-. THIS ANNUAL ENGRAVED BY JANN A OLLIER Puyv nm' Ilnmlrvrl ltla-llliliml by llu' lraulc ll1lIlIl'H2 'QBICKEYE GR YM GGBIR I G WARMTO EBLFFM WGRAY CANYO llus for :nanny yours lwvn au-vomlvcl pronlinn-nl rm-ognilion in lln- lxuilcling lim-lml by ils sa-lox-lion for numerous outstanding lmiltlings in various sm-lions ol' lln- vounlry . lll'lllllNU-linansll us lim-11-al SilIlllSl0lll'lllII'lDlllg'1llll' slulnlalrcl vurlling in lllvvvluml :mil ullwr vilivs for uvvr hull' an 4-vnlury. SIIPICNYXl,liS-Qlh-rvu lslalgslolu-D wi' lay llIl'lll rvauly for inslunl usv. 'l'l1v Sumlslmu- imluslry is una- nl' llu- ulllosl imluslrics in Uhiu. gning lun-k als fur us l808. ll furnishes 4-lnploylnvnl lu lll0llHillHlH ol' mon. and xlislmrsvs annually svn-rul millions ul' dollars for pay rolls :xml supplies in llu- Hlull- ul' Uhin. he leveland uarries ompany 1125 Builders Exchange Bldg. Cl-lerry 8350 Cleveland, Ohio l'r1ya' um' lllllzrlrwrl um' Photographs Live Forever! Portraits and Groups in this Annual . 111z ide by . . . G. C. K li H R li S your neighborhood Photographer Portraits at Prices Prom 156.00 to 3590.00 Per llozcn at Your Home or in thc Studio When your liahy is at its hest. phone us. and hring it right over for in picture. It will he ovtr with hefore the hahy gets tired. Plenty of parking space for autos-no time limit. Special attention given to copying oltl and faded photographs. During the Spring and Summer months we will accommodate our customers with kodak finishing. und it will he of high order at popular prices. .llrmlwr-Nnt'l Photographers kssn. ol Amer.: Uhio-Nlich.-lnd. Assn.: Ohio Photographic Soc, .l:vunlx-lnternationul. llllfn: Tri-State. P3225 lntcrnationzll. 1926 2112 l.ee Road Cleveland llcights one hlock north ol liednr Phone. l .fXir. 4481: ltewidence. 3032 Vl'oodlmry lid., Shaker lleights I um' om' lIlIlIlfl'4'lf Iwo THE SENIOR WILL NDVI' all men by these presents that we, the illustrious Class of 1931. being in our right mind, and sane for the moment, do make our last will and testament. and hereby bequeath our cherished possessions to the following: ARTICLE I. To whoever can discover them we leave our Senior Privileges. , , . . . . . Io Miss Hollon we will a fund to lmy an automatic excuse machine. To Coach Brubaker and his successful football team of 1930 we leave our heartiest congratulations. To the l aculty. fond memories and regrets that such a gem of a class must depart. ARTICLE II. 'l'o the .I uniors we bequeath: Our pull with study hall teachers. Our ability to blow up the chem lab. Our front row seats in the auditorium and ehureli. ARTICLE III. lVe leave to the Sophomores our distinguished athletic ability and brilliant scholarship. ARTICLE IV. To the l reshmen we leave the hope that they may some day be Seniors. ARTICLE V. Bus Corey wills his athletic ability to Richard Senz. Saylor .Iaeoby leaves his title of l aeulty Darling to Leah Gentle. Ruth Slyh leaves her position as center on the basketball team to Betty Griesinger. Vincent Arnold bestows his speed in translating Cicero to Harold Roth. .lean Harrington and Marie llaerr leave the Annual and the Shakerile, with sympathy. to heaven knows whom. Blinore VVaterbury and Betty Hunter will their places on the honor roll to Louise Vlflatkins and Miriam Newell. lludley Ritteneutter wills his Latin pony to the highest bidder. Betty Geismer signs over her knowledge of history to Molly. Betty Hodge bequeaths her nickname of Pouch to Alice Coiiield. Mary Ann Black wills her string of dates to whoever needs them most. .lohn Tierney leaves his cigarette butts and old chewing gum to Norman Mellonough. llevora sadly resigns her taeks and hammer to lirnest Brooks. Louis Body hands his grin to .lim Card. Bob Bell's reputation for perfect manners goes to Bill Levy. Bill Dye receives Ralston Sinith's status as Principal Heart Breaker. Bill Bellman graciously gives his stage glory to Linda Widdows, who can best uphold it. Muriel Bell slips her cloak of leadership on the shoulders of-oh, well-may the best man win. Helen Levison leaves her vacated position of genius to lilizabeth Pfeiffer. Bob Trundle leaves Libby to WVade Helms. with cautions. ARTICLE VI. To future athletic teams we leave lots of spirit and success. To the student body we leave the tradition of keeping Shaker in the first ranks of scholarship, sportsmanship. service, and social life. Signed with due gravity before the assembled school court on this the . . . . day ol' June. 1931. To this we atlix our seal. Signed: Page one luzmlred lhrec Page one lrumlrwl fnur AUTOGRAPHS AUTOGRAPHS lflf' one hlIlllll'l'll liz AUTOGRAPHS CW . lc W iff. - ., . .YV , F A, .. .,.-4 ,- -v, . --A . ., -., -Q-.. . - A' . ,fn H ..' ., 9 'T e-'L A . x , fr' s, F 1 -',w.v- Z: af, Q' .1 ' -' L 5 . :gp Y - . , :' . , c L 'z' , ' - ..,,,gL. , A A .Xa N , 4 'w vw V ' , 1- J.. Qi -4 .J .' 3, 1 H V . r . -v , X I Q . w. . M X ., ',,-. vf If'- 391- ..-..,.'- W, ' ' .-5, - - n-4 P': , Nx- P. I ,Ni N, FF 4 ' 4' sq ,dx .- A 5,11 , V ..1 f 1 ' en. Nw ' 'fis -' H, , ' ' , 1 1 Yu.. I , , , X 4 . A 'ji' . ' V if rv V I ' N W- ,.: '- ' r .' , 'f L 'J-'fn xx '-x f'- , v P xx, , , , I ,X- lf. 'X'-A ' ' vt: x J - X? 1 .. 'fn' .., 1' ri? ' 4- ,H I , hi-.IQJC any ft' . - ' ' x - -.,t gv f' '-V' Q. ,V ' , ,, 4 . V ' ,-P.. .lm qgvx 7. ,,,, -.1 ' - ' x N f L L J 1 . , . fr ,..:- f ' in J, .A . F 1 ' 5, I AY., . -1.2 ' ' ' . 2 v I' , . , f 1' ', 4 - . . , V I . ' V ' V , . x . . ' s . ',' J- . 2 , - ,. 1 f .' , -V - . X ,- . , ,,. , 4 1 , - 4, - , , , , - . f. , ,, I 4 -,..g Www. . fx ' .,-' ' . A -X - -'f '-QT? ',Q - -, ' . V 1 I , . ' K --wc ' ' ' ' ' -45-. H .-gf-lg. .5 A , J - 4 , 1-fy. ,214 4, ' - A' Hr- ' '.N..4.. in ...' '. '. , - r' x--' -x W5 -A , ,T . 5- .h ' . V' .al V f V- mm, 9' -'T1?'.i ' Nuff . , X ,N ' ,fu ,'x I, 1 1 fu ES'-P196 iwa' I'E:f!'ILn-?,iQffFi'.C -fA 'w,:'iR- '1-I V' 'Z'
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.