Shaw High School - Shuttle Yearbook (East Cleveland, OH)

 - Class of 1953

Page 1 of 132

 

Shaw High School - Shuttle Yearbook (East Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1953 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 132 of the 1953 volume:

.aw .K l .' ' . 5... '- Wai W A -'fi gfQ-M X f , ,T . 1 ' ..', f. A'-W,-I ' '1 .f M'-, f. .pf 4 ,Ts . my .V ,.,. . .W 1 'N .p- .V QQ, H VM. .i, A . 9. . f La . , ,I 5 ' f e X f , 1 G n 1 A 1 'Q , f. , A 1- 1 ' ' If I C a 4 1 ' 4 5. .ix 's .1 , A I I -4 Th Shulll Shaw High School Ea l Cleveland, Chic Vclume 50 Jack Walsh in 1923 IF YOU WERE A STUDENT 1905 - YOU ATTENDED THE OLD SHAW HIGH SCHOOL. QThe old building had not yet been built.j At the turn of the century, the boys suffered in stiff collars, and dreamed of the day when they would sport a handle-bar mustache. If you were a girl in 1903, you pinned your hair in a pompadour and waited anxiously for the latest issue of The Godey's Ladies' Book. At Shaw, your eight teachers offered a variety of subjects including Greek and drawing. Your world was rather simple then. The United States had just acquired Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philip- pines as a result of the Spanish-American war, but that didn't bother you much. Neither did the talk about building a canal in some Central-American country called Panama. At Class Day you debated whether or not labor organizations were detrimental to the interests of the laboring man. 1918-WORLD WAR I, THE WAR TO END WARS, was the main thing on your mind in 1918. One hundred and sixty of your former classmates were in the army and more were leaving every day. Your yearbook featured pictures from camps and letters from the boys at Versailles. The world was delirious with joy on November 11th, and you vowed you'd never forget the years before. In the meantime, your 41 teachers kept you busy with subjects like botany and expression. Middies were not required yet, but the girls wore them anyhow because they were in style. The varsity basketball team played in knee socks, while the girls' tennis dresses daringly displayed the legs clear up to the calf. A young man by the name of Ralph A. Brown was assistant principal in your one-building Shaw High. 1923-YOU LIVED IN A GAY, CAREFREE WORLD IN the Roaring Twenties. You were a Beau Brummel in your striped jacket and straw hat, and of course you were the life of the party with your ukelele. On special occasions you took out your raccoon coat and wowed all the Happers. If you were a girl, you coaxed Mom and Dad for a beaded dress to wear to the Senior Prom. The greatest day in your life was the day you won the Charleston contest. Shaw stadium was built that year, the year in which the tight-lipped Calvin Coolidge became presi- dent, and the City Champion football team played such opponents as Astabula Harbor, Detroit Northern, and Canton McKinley. The world was a great big merry-go-round in 1923, and you were swept along with it. 2 AT SHAW IN . .. 1935 -IN THE MID-THIRTIES, THE GOLDEN LIGHTS of the past decade had faded and were slowly blinking out. The country was deep in a depression, and you were feeling the effects. Milk was six cents a quart, and you could buy a pound of butter for 18 cents. Instead of federal money, your parents used scrip printed by the county. There was no such thing as an after-school job for you, there wasn't enough work for the adults. Your friends found the same situation and, as a result, there was an unheard of total of 28 extra-curricular activities that kept you busy. If you could have afforded them, suits and coats were sell- ing at 314.50 to 31950, but you wore your old ones instead. 1944-WORLD WAR II WAS RAGING IN EUROPE AND Asia, and that year 12 boys left Shaw to enlist in the armed forces. You could tell their homes by the blue stars hung in the windows. You were pretty worried about the fellow you knew somewhere in Europe, and you wondered when he would be home again. You, in school, did your part by buying the war bonds and stamps sold by the National Honor society. You saved old rubber and tin cans, while Mom used ration books, and Dad tried to conserve gasoline. If you were a girl, you wore your hair long and your skirts short. You were learning a new style of dancing called jitterbug, and you practiced to the tune of Bell Bottom Trousers. 1953-IN 1953 YOU WATCHED SHAW'S NEW GYM receive its finishing touches. You saw the varsity basketball team beat Elyria, and you went to the canteen dances after the games. You had a job after school or on Saturdays, and that weekly pay check made you feel pretty independent. Dad let you have the family car over the week-ends, and Mom didn't seem to mind too much-as long as you picked up the dry cleaning. As the time came closer to graduation, you worried about Korea and the draft, and for the first time you realized how small a world it really was. You saw Eisenhower inaugurated as president, and you couldn't help but wonder what the next four years would bring. 3 Donna Haas in 1903 And So . the student of yesterday fo the student of todayg the student of tomorrowg And Especially if-:vi ii .,- A M- 'Q-A Qi K N , ff. ' 1 4 . it .s i N as , fi ia gs , sf ,paw -i fi ' no il 4- 9 35. 1 -ik , - ' 1 8 s 11 KI-i ' i ii ' 5 'g i on '. 2-1 . . . . , . O ' . 0 x ' ' O ' . , , , . 5 fo Ralph A. Brown who has been at Shaw since 1907 teaching us the binomial theorem and the intricacies of quadratic equations, and being a friend as well as instructor. fo all these people we, the staff of the 195 3 Shuttle dedicate this yearbook. FACULTY. . . turn the page SENIORS . . . Page 12 ACTIVITIES . . . Page 40 UNDERCLASSMEN . . . Page 92 SPORTS . Page 66 SENIORS' ACTIVITIES . . . Page 112 ITS a long way from 1903 to 1955-lifty years, half a century. During that time there have been a lot of changes. The automobile grew upg radios found a place in every horneg and television was born. Your parents saw two world wars. You saw the last one and maybe we're all seeing the beginning of a third. In fifty years we haven't stood still either. Shaw has grown from a little red schoolhouse to the modern factory of knowledge that it is today. And the school yearbook, the Shuttle, went through its own growing pains, making the transition from a literary magazine to this reflection of school life. So you see, the years between 1905 and 1953 were ones of progress. The world, the school, and time-they all go . . . we-'M 'sun it ff!-F53 'fi-f 4!'e5Q'r?'wE'?s Wife t-Safes: ' 5 I V . 'G' 5--'Ps-aria! J'- . av S FORWARD 7 4- 452561 .10 ad-it -gig.-fl? I Z- 'Srl' I5 ' Nelson F. Leist, assistant superintendent of schools To the students: The golden anniversary of the Shuttle finds us in a world which no longer knows the answers. Rigid formulas have broken down, drastic, world-wide changes have created problems which the human intelligence, with its love of order, finds increasingly difficult to solve. Ancient peoples put their faith in absolutes, fixed axioms, royal decrees, divine revelations. Their youth sat humbly at the feet of their teachers-Wise Men who claimed to know almost everything. The future to them was a Utopia of perfect happi- ness and complete victory for their side. Now, however, we question our wise men's conclusions in the forum, the press, the classroom. Our teachers Ceven at Shaw!D are discussion leaders rather than infallible authorities, they sug- gest where to look for truth, what questions to ask, what angles to explore. Slow, progressive betterment of mankind, rather than Utopian paradise for some one race or nation, is seen to be the best hope for the future, we are as universal clay shaped by events that touch all. To you especially, our youth-more flexible, more buoyant, less set in some pre-formed mold-the world belongs. Shape it as best you can. Dr. O. Korb, Superintendent of Schools To the Graduates: A modern high school should be a place where ideas, materials, and persons are brought together to achieve a desired goal. Shaw's aim is to enable its students to become increasingly independent, educated and useful citizens, dedicated to maintaining and im- proving our American way of life. Your class has made a good start in this direction. You have had experience selecting your officers and planning, organizing, and administering class and school activities. You have learned to work as individuals as well as in groups. Throughout your school experience you have found it necessary to make choices. The school has tried to help you to choose wisely. The faculty takes pride in the way you have faced the many problems which have confronted you. We congratulate you on your achievements thus far. We know you realize that this is but the beginning, the commencement, of your lives as citizens, with many new responsibilities as well as privileges ahead of you. As your principal I have enjoyed our association. Working with you has been an experience I shall always treasure. I wish you every success in the years ahead. Wayne C. Blough, Principal 8 K. Lucille Provo, dean of girls Robert Cawrse, assistant principal l I Gail Bowden, monitor, shows office secretaries, Mildred Hoge and Jean Schroeder, an official-looking d0CUf11CI1I 9 Walter Bandlow Ralph A. Brown Margaret Campbell Wayne Carolf Harriet Carpenter Industrial Am Mathematics English Mathematicx H vme Ewnvfmvf Lois Dean Dramatic: Anna Devney Social Studie: ' Albert W. Dolan Science H. P. Frank Science ,f S ccr S L 'S . 'N lil 'i .' Z - -lit? . 'F - L Q ' U 1 if '.ll i 1 3 ' I' ll J J wx Hubert McNeill Social Studie: jack Moore Industrial Art: Ayleen Morley English Ralph C. Morris Science L , .ffl ist! S. Robert Fraser Muxic Bruce Holderbaum Art Howard K. Hunter Matbematicr Alice juritggus Phyxical E ucation Grant Kibbel Science Isabel Latta Language: Robert P. Louis Commercial Robert McGraw Social Studie! IO Mr. Blough samples cookies at the December faculty tea. Louise Baker - Englirls Clara Clendenen - Englifb Lois Crank - Englixb C. Cassil Reynard Languager Rosemary Schrader Home Economic: Margery Shields Muxic Edith Scribner Science William H. Morris Social Sludiex Harold Naragon Social Sludief Elizabeth Orr Languagexr Mildred Palmer Englixh 4' 45 ,.. xx., if 'K X ,Q S 1 it 5-1 ri EU fn if if-al ff. ' ' as X 2 45 a f 17 QXSE? il 0 is 'ffm P' v, Anna M. Soutar Commercial George Todd Englifla Edgar Vance Commercial Douglas Vivian Phyrical Education Elizabeth Wenger Commercial Roy Wisecup In urlrial Arn Helen Wright Englixb Alice Zuck Engliyh 'X 36 ,. li. ia f -u ,4. 'f' ', Yi 4-if ,5- 1'fv!'l , eu . -R ' W . - - ,':.X:. .ll , up . ,, n. HE picture on the next page shows an American government class that has just finished one of Mr. Naragon's tests. The students in it are all seniors. You'll find more of them in this next section. These are the people who survived three years of tests and homework, who finally managed to struggle through Vanity Fair. These are the fellows and gals who have earned for themselves the cap and gown, the diploma, and after twelve years, the right to be called-a senior. I2 f, ,.- .. ,,,...,.---f .1 4. 'Yi ,X- uwg, .. A' ,V M N. ' YSJVY X. vor CLASS OF JANUARY 1953 Big wheels of the January, '55 class show their Pepsoclent smiles. They are Vice-President, Bud Gtimmg President, Tom Blanchardg and Secretary-Treasurer, Janet Kathe.. Eighty-nine strong, our class entered Shaw in Jan- uary l95O . . . we were full of enthusiasm . . . looking forward to three years at Shaw . . . of course, we were a little bewildered at first Cbewitched and bothered toolb . . . but soon we caught on to things . . . became a part of Shaw. Could we ever forget the assemblies? . . . our first football rally . . . cheering and clapping way up in the balcony . . . football queen assemblies with their skits and jokes . . . National Honor Society installations . . . the tense minutes waiting for the secretary to read the names of the new members . . . the Christmas assem- blies . . . Mr. Edgar's adventures in space. Memories . . . inaugurating Senior Night at the Lorain game . . . the girls wearing white mmns . . . the mid-year play, Merton of the Movies . . . the Black-Red Review, hrst in four years . . . the swim shows . . . The Blizzard Bugle . . . We'll look back on . . . Class Night . . . the speech our president made . . . our class play, Will the Mail- Train Ride Tonight? or Love Saves the Day . . . our Prom at Park Lane Villa . . . Commencement at Kirk . . . receiving our diplomas. As for the future . . . we have varied interests . . . engineering . . . secretarial work . . . dramatics . . . medicine . . . members of our class plan to go into these fields and many more . . . but whatever we do . . . we'll never forget those years at Shaw. 1 Bob Albrecht Richard Altemus Kathleen Anderson Tom Babbitt Connie Blair Roseanne Blakemore Tom Virginia John Blanchard Brown Carlson Tom Patricia Lucy Chevako Ciomek Cirkova B f Nancy Carlson Don Clark 15, Donna Clark .Ed Conway Evelyn Cooper Ervin Davies Claudia. Dellinger Jill Denison Frank Dohm Charles Hagberg Howard Hanna Mark Hannan Carolyn Hay Joan Hershberger Frank Holan Ken Horton Q E 1 in Q Q i ' 3 W E. - J ' 4' , f Q35 Gene Donaldson Gerald Dougherty James Durkin Kenneth Fetheroff Dolores Fischer Carl Frederick Lauren Frederick Ronald Froelich David Gascoigne Michael Gay Bud Grimm Tony Giordano Henry Giunta Donna Haas janet Mark Kravi Karhe r Rita Lorenzetti Joyce MacKenz1e Nancy Marrone Isabel Mason Burton Maxim Phyllis McCarter Barbara McKnight Robert Myers Berry J ack Fred t L -'- -i X ' ' KX .. me X it V X , N Sk t , ' 7 Q 'R+ . Y' f ' W '25 -' 25 .gr Xt -. ' g McMasters Mentel Mueller jim Noble Harry Catherine Palmer Peters , tttr lg, Q 'aff' y r -f isa- g fa lf s T 19 W L , L tsasaels I JANUARY PROM COMMITTEE Tom Blanchard Bud Grimm Janet Kathe Ed Roth rms ' rw if ,. 93 - ,, T sig, I X 5: ff ., sf S r. I Edwin Roth ' , la' Louise Pinardo Helen Reid Ronald Sapatka Louis Schmidt George Schultz Jack Schuster r.-.----Q I -1 . A.nHv Roger Rowe Dolores Schwimmer Dennis Smith UNE PROM COMMITTEE George Dostal Phyllis Friedman Floyd Kregenow Bonnie McCutcheon Barbara Postle Alan Singerxnan 1953 CLASS RING 9.0 jean Sojeba D011 S0Pk0 Charles Solomon Dorrs ThomP50U Carol Vitale Robert Wagner Myra Walker Sally Williams M ,al Joel Weil Anne Wills fl Cl f .l Y, 1955 Q' 1 Class of June, 1953 Shililgn figs: Q:-ggi-q:EQ ' joljn Horkan Ray Lamcha .' -l : Shrrley Lytle 4 0- X 1 x Bob Prak .4353 . . 9 ' 1. r Q sift!-A ' .. ll, x 4 fl-Swv ' 3 NOT PICTURED 21 CLASS OF JUNE 1953 June class officers worry about post-graduation troubles. They are President, Floyd Kregenowg Vice- President, Alan Singermang and Secretary-Treasurer, Barb Posrle. Pre-Shaw Day, September, 1950 . . . our class of 217 was introduced to Shaw . . . remember when we were 1OB's? . . . worried about tunnels . . . teachers . . . tests . . . the next year, as juniors, we were self- conlident . . . knew the ropes. New horizons were explored during our high school years . . . fungi . . . French . . . hydrochloric . . . history . . . Milton . . . math . . . new ideas . . . new thoughts. Changes occurred while we were here . . . the longer periods . . . representatives-at-large in the Student Council . . . the five column Observer returned . . . Mr. Cawrse became Dean of Boys . . . the long-awaited gym opened. During our three years at Shaw we said . . . George . . . iris for the squad . . . groovy . . . there's a fungus among us . . . It's in the Book. As seniors we planned for the future . . . college for some . . . we suffered through the Ohio State Scholar- ship test . . . learned how much we could forget in 12 years . . . school days are over for others . . . out into the cruel world . . . for the fellows, maybe the Service. Now it's all over . . . three years of tests . . . football games . . . all-school parties . . . homework . . . and report cards. But welll never forget . . . Class Night . . . our senior play . . . the fun we had at the Prom . . . Com- mencement at Severance Hall . . . that long walk across the stage to receive our diplomas . . . the last time we sang the Alma Mater. 1 Joe Alexander Tony Armao Neil Austin Fred Babcock Steve Barbey Barbara Barch Barbara Barnard Dave Berger Joanne Barson Frances Biank S 1' A e n e H ,L Q X f r 'J 3 S L , N 7, S ..,, wg. 'X ol ,Qi 5 Lois Carolyn Baumgarrner Benson Bob Audrey Blaxr Bortner he 'eee ,eg g A .AQ A 1 W K aiiggg 5 A li ff? El .xl 1 1 yy. x '3 23 John Carlozzi Louis Carlozzi Ray Cefaratti jim Childers Rita Ciasullo Mona Ciccotti George Clappas Virginia Cleeve Bob Coates John Colacarro Sally Colchin Kathleen Conway Anne Crossley Jerry Crowley is fi MN vfJ.- 1 . A' Warren Bower Barbara Bradbury Melvyn Bram Dorothy Brazus Ralph Briggs Philip Brussee Beverly Byers Q :T , ,. NX '-rim if ie.. Sally Cummins Carl D'Ambrosia Richard Dassel Harriet Dawson Merilyn DeMayo Wayne DeVore Leonard DiLillo si Qu Ideal Boy and Girl . . . Most Likely to Succeed: Al Singerman, Tom Blanchard, Phyllis Friedman, and jill Denison. Success-n. Degree or measure of succeeding or attaining one's desired endg kind of fortune. Dick Dirirsky Carol Eaton as l is I A 9.6 F lossie George Janet Dodson Dostal Dunlap David Wilma Elizabeth Edison Enkler Fisher 13 - 'ww -Q Fay Fisher Ronald Fisher Gary Fox Phyllis Friedman Nancy Froehlich Richard Froehlich Robert Raymond Ralph Furlong Gallagher Gang Anna Mae Dolores Frank GCIO Gerscheski Gillespie fr, .1 - , . v .5 Barbara Garwood Sandra Gochenaur 9-7 if Martin Goldfarb Nancy Good Joanne Grabert Janis Green Jack Greenberg Georgieann Gumto Barbara Hall fr 'eeG' wah rf f Q 3' .: .12 .J D f ' -L15 if S 1, ii' 51 -ff Qlffff T - wfisag H . 5.95-gi, Ronald Isaacson Wilma Jaback Carole Jablonski Betty Jones Elaine jump Dorothy Kase Gordon Keller mn,-p 1 553 Q 5 -t In 2 - gt. Fred Hamilton Steve Hamilton Elliott Hammetle N iami Hanson Nancy Hartland Francine Hasher Margaret Herbst Prudie Hesche Judy Holiman Marilyn Hoffman Irene Hougland Kay Hughes Alice Huston Barbara Ierg uv Ideal Boy and Girl . . . Leadership: Barbara Postle, Len DiLillo, Tom Kissack, and Janet Kathe. Leadership - n. Characteristics of one who leads or guides the way. Authority to organize and direct. Judv Keller Lois Kramer Charles Kelley Floyd Kregenow Robert Kent LaVonne Ladd John Kline Budd Lemmerman ,-ffif' . , i'lf?T- t T f 1 NX r :ag ,K .5 s s Fil M L 30 Margaret Leonhardt Phyllis Lowe Roy Lundstrom Betty Lutz Nancy Mackey Nancy Magnusson f Joseph john Howard -1-om L Mancini Manning Morse Marshall Joyce Gloria Ted Bonnie Martin Marvin Mathews McCutcheon ww-f tm- ....... . - ,. :Ei , In 'f ii13ZfV X fe . RR mart? an isiiflw V M. 5 KSN X as Q l i m e? X gl W W Wk xi ig Ku t .W .. . ,L R kin i 3- -- 4 wi 31 gn:Nvmt.sw . r Q :iii 55:3 1 X xx. Li fsif-5? yrs L. -W fx -52-AH? .LZ QQ. N X :ss ,. rl, X J -as -an 3' 'i ii A- T 'Q , .A 5 35? if . ..,,: t .:,:::..., , .,,:, .,.:..:,,,.. A ,,.L.,. , , - A , 4 it -ffmkftgtt-asset vt, ,qsmrsWy,.s, r ,S , iii- if A g. . 2YitM3Hs1,,-sig? H, 1 -,ti W i,,,6i,,1, it I ff .. .,.,, ,, .,., ,,,,,, e 1 i T of LVL i E525 V S, W fi yi?-i' -3 '5.EQl'iQ5ii1 X yu ali mf af1g1zwi1':4Ls,ff:si1-,444 f - 5 iw 'zffu zt E fi f ,L Maia- 5 -'gtfvgy Jean Milewski Charles Miller Ed Miller Ed Mirnides Don Mixer Eileen Mooney Gerald Moss Theresa Nardoia Lois Neidet David Paden Joanne Palicka William Parkhurst Dorothy Patterson Raymond Pauli I Kmkh A ' ' 7 al Z4-L -r f - ' ,sw -,E5.,.,., I, Tom McGonegal Louise McGrew janet McKee Earl McNeilly Janet Mendenhall Dorothy Michael Alex Michalos Dorothy Payne Harvey Peskin Barbara Peters Art Peysha Wayne Pieper Dick Pollack Angelo Pompignano fs-v Barbara Postle Ronald Rogel gn- nw' was we man Paul Radomsky Roy Ronke fwf 5, ,,lg--M I,-wksflfmwf-Iqqssfgiliail' 5 X wzelvwif' -'wgg,w -S . ' ilgzifafizzwwf l , - V L'LLL , , 3 1 my , . 7 A my Lk 1' 5 34 Ngtalie R1gg Phyllis Sanclsrrom r ,I JN i 'wen . T x Esther Sapia Alden Saxton Tom Schafer Shirley Schmunk Robert Scot: Larry Scully Allen Sebransky Walter Sherman Alvah Seibert Alan Shifrin Ruth Marc Shankland Shapiro Nancy David Simiele Simonis 35 Ideal Boy and Girl . . . Scholarship: Mike Gay, Tom Marshall, Catherine Peters, and Ruth Shankland. Scholarship - ri. Character or qualities of a schol- arg attainments in science or literature, learning. Alan Singerman Pat Sraiford Kathleen Skrbin Robert Sweirzer Lawrence Jane: Smith Sprinkle Vlfgiflia Beverly Thomas Travis, 9 36 fs ii: ai S Mary Tsevdos Pat Tulow Robert Turner Florence Valentino Richard Vath Phillip Vaughan John Vecchio William Walters I l e Charles Vogel Beverly Wood f ,r Jack Mike Walsh Walsh Allan Betsy Zambie Zowasky .A 37 no 'F W in AP? f Commencemenf . . . January 22, 1953 january Commencement Going Clockwise: Graduating seniors keep poker faces during the invocation. Carolyn Hay marches up to receive her diploma from George Nelson, School Board President. Dennis Smith walks the last mile of his high school career down the aisle past disinterested choir members. George Nelson hands Dennis his unconditional release. In the center is Commencement Speaker Allen V. King, putting his point across to the audience. 15l9J'u'z',q-qt ,ln,:,5f is 4' X Q S 5 fr Phyllis McCarfer, Connie Blair, and John Carlson smile broadly before receiving their diplomas. Q ':'f::nww1,.mv b r ,..y,-szeilzaazgffsLf-ssgrfgfgiz-.7., ,... 1. sn Q :W Jr-iggg m -hp' n ' .figfilgvr -gs-Qj,-L v, 'Q P, 7,4 J. , . ,. . -,Q-'e',1g.l?-.7,,.3g,,3Q5: 7-was 55.293425..-adrplg-.ifr-?':?.75i'i13':ga .- . -'mfr------v .f . , . . .. ... : -'rf-'E' bfliif-5i.',3lw.1:!-' -' -6 ITT? E :'-mfg' -'A lf'0f2Rp'1S115r!dfx4 '::. 5.5 7'-' -'-' 5, ,ug-'f' -fv.'- xv? -..v'-., '4, 'r:u.: ' -IP, ..f- ' Tl' ' fi- I'-'. '- . 'fm ' ' 5, : ,' ,v-., 't ' '. .1 1 , 1 1 '., Q- - H.. -'.- 1, . '.-.JH ,' . . 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There were those who, like the two on the opposite page, remained behind, putting in extra hours, and sometimes glossing over the next day's history assignment. 40 me X- S 7 ' ff . f 1 Q i J 2, X ,f , x 2 4: Q. Q BACK ROW: Jim Marinelli, Tom Paporus, Allan Zarhbie, jack Walsh, Len DiLillo, Bill Whitaker, Ken Horton. FRONT ROW: Barbara Last, Lola Zuchenga, Eileen Mooney, Patty Plunket, Carol Sabrack, janet Sprinkle, Alice Huston. Entrusted with the job of providing dances for the students after football and basketball games, the 20-odd members of the Canteen Committee meet weekly during football and basketball season to plan their hops. This year they attracted large crowds at their football dances and not so large crowds at their A basketball dances. From their profits, the organization contributed 3550.00 to the Charity Drive. One of the newest clubs at Shaw is the Future Nurses' Club. Part of a city-wide organization, F.N.C. was organized by Miss Nina McWebb in 1952 and now boasts a membership of about twenty girls. This year F.N.C. heard student nurses speak on nursing opportunities, and the members toured Huron Road, Mt. Sinai, and Fairview Park Hospitals, as well as the Visiting Nurses' Home. Olificiating at the monthly meetings are Irene Bilinski, president, Sandra Simon, vice-president, and Gerry Goske, secretary-treasurer. The purpose of the club is to familiarize girls with oppor- tunities in the nursing profession and help them in the choice of a career. BACK ROW: Beverly Beitzel, Carol Frantz, Diane Fellows, Jan Ainsworth. SECOND ROW: Connie Sciortino, Alice Henry, Margaret Barnes, Pearl Virotsko, Mimi Sala, Elaine Ott, Mary McGuire, Carol Rothenberger, Barbara Ayre. FIRST ROW: Marilyn Guffey, jane Evans, Sandra Simon, Irene Bilinski, Geraldine Goske, Shirley Chiles, and Harriet. Dawson. 42 CANTEEN COMMITTEE FUTURE NURSES CLUB DRAMATIC CLUB in scenes from Whistle, Daughter, Whistle Elizabeth Hunsicker, and Marion Budd Lemmefman and Jill DCYUSOU Goldman as Mrs. Calat and Mrs. as Alan Calat and Peggy Marlxs Marks. One of the oldest extra-curricular activities, the Dramatic Club, was organized in 1910. Created to give Shaw students a means of expression in the held of dramatic arts, the club has functioned steadily since itsorigin. Always a popular activity, the organization was so large that from 1924 to 1931 it was divided into two separate groups - one for the seniors, and one for the juniors. Through the years there arose the tradition of giving a mid-year play. Usually a studentarun Black-Red Review was also presented. Last year this show was supervised by the Dramatic Club, and given in place'of the usual mid-year play. Determined to make this year's club better than ever, the Executive council planned many active meetings. One of the most successful of these consisted of a movie on stage make-up followed by a demonstration and individual practice. Two one-act plays, Who Says Can't? and Whistle, Daughter, Whistle, were presented by Dramatic Club members. The latter was also given before the school. EXECUTIVE COUNCIL BACK ROW: Elizabeth Hunsicker, Carole Sabrack, Larry Smith, jack Walsh, Jack Dreifort, Par Condon, FRONT ROW: Ed Conway, jean Witter, jill Denison, Budd Lemmerman. 43 STUDENT COUNCIL Today's Student Council, under the guidance of Harold Naragon, has taken on many additional responsibilities since its 1921 organization. The big job of the year, the annual Charity drive in October, went over with a bang as student contributions topped the goal set at 31125. Acting once more as foster parents, the council adopted ten year old Maryvonne Foussard, a French war orphan. The group contributes 38180 a year toward Maryvonne's support. Few students realize the scope of duties and services undertaken by council members. They operate the Lost and Found, and the Cardinals' Nestg choose assemblies and moviesg supervise football queen electionsg clean the trophy casesg organize all ralliesg sell passesg supervise the monitor systemg give the broadcastsg and sponsor such social events as this year's two All-School parties. In their spare time, council members worry about school conditions and suggest improvements. s 1 -f-11 Harold Naragon, adviser, gives Student Council ollicers some fatherly advice. President ................... Vice President Secretary . .,.............. . Treasurer .......... President .......... Vice President ........ Secretary ................. Treasurer ........... FIRST SEMESTER OFFICERS Tom Kissack Len DiLillo Lola Zuchegna .. ................................................................................ , .... ....... T ony Beranek SECOND SEMESTER OFFICERS Len DiLillo Bud Cathcart Sally Reynolds Bill Parkhurst 44 'K School records disclose that student government was not organized at Shaw until 1921. Membership in this first Student Council was based upon the idea of class seniority. It consisted of two freshmen, four sophomores, six juniors, 12 seniors, the Shuttle editor, and three faculty members, one of whom was H. K. Hunter, math teacher. Among the early Student Council projects was the playing of appropriate dinner music in the cafeetria during lunch periods. Friday afternoon dances were regularly sponsored by the council, and students, rather than teachers, acted as monitors in the cafeteria. First Semester Council BACK ROW: Al Singerman, George DeMore, Bob Cathcart, Dick Freed- man, Len DiLillo, Bill Parkhurst, Tony Beranek, Dick Kohagen, jack Hanson, Derry Clay, Floyd Krege- now. MIDDLE ROW: David Peters, Dick Traci, Mark Kissack, Tom Kis- sack, jerry Dougherty, Bud Grimm, Tom Blanchard, Howard Hanna, Ed Roth, jim Kitsoii, Janet Kathe, Bar- bara Postle, Phyllis Friedman. FRONT ROW: Bev Byers, Sally Reynolds, Virginia Mackell, Bar- bara Barr, Janis Green, Pat Kabu- rick, Joanne Baumann, Evelyn Wel- niak, Gail Bowden, Lola Zuchegna, Kaye Pritchard. Second Semester Council BACK ROW: Chuck Pfahl, Joe Palvos, Henry Fisher, john Cola- carro, Bill Parkhurst, Tony Baranek, Bob Cathcarr, Bill Bennet, Gus Pallad. MIDDLE ROW: Dick Traci, Sydney Peterson, Len DiLillo, Ralph Briggs, George Garland, Jim Kirson, Don Asuma, Connie Sciortino. FRONT ROW: Lee Wellman, Diane Clay, Janis Green, Pat Kaburik, Anita Leicher, Carol Dietrich, Bar- bara Postle, Evelyn Welniak, Sally Reynolds. 45 MOVIE OPERATORS Seventh period daily, during assemblies, and during plays, the members of Shaw's stage crew are to be found pulling curtains, painting Hats, repairing costumes, and building sets. Under the guidance of Miss Lois Dean, the stage crew handles all the tech- nical details involved in the use of the stage. BACK ROW: Tom Marret, Howard Hanna, Ronnie Isaacson, Ronnie Rogel, Dick Freedman, Mark Kissack. MIDDLE ROW: Joan -Hersh- berger, Donna Haas, jean Saha, Barbara McKnight, Fern Kabot, Midge Small, FRONT ROW: Dick Traci, Bill Monroe, Jack May, john Martin. K P Movie operators trade a study hall for the opportunity to become familiar with the pro- jectors and slide machines. Under the direction of Mr. Albert Dolan, the operators learn valuable technical details and have the opportunity to see the same movie many times. BACK ROW: Phil Brusse, Roy Ronke. MIDDLE ROW: Dick Small, Ronald Froehlich, Jim Linn, Dave Berger. FRONT ROW: Chuck Pfahl, Fred Sterle. 'mkw' STAGE CREW WHIRLO CLUB BACK ROW: Dorothy Payne, Bob Bythway, Bob Aiken, joan Braun. MIDDLE ROW: Donna Mae Peterson, joy Reinhard, Wilma Enkler, Dorothy Kase, Mary Lessner. FRONT ROW: Kay Miller, Leila Furry, Virginia Conant, Carolyn Benson, Dorothy Bacon, Donna Grahling. Any Tuesday night at the Trianon Bowling Alley or Thursday at Skateland, members of Shaw's Whirlo Club can be found trying to better their scores or perfect their jumps. A comparatively new club, Whirlo boasts a membership of 38. RIFLE CLUB The Rifle Club was founded to acquaint the students with flrearrns and to teach them how to handle arms safely. Students who become inter- ested in the sport have a chance to enter competition under ex- pert instruction. Paul Corner, Phil Brown, jack Hudel- son, Tom Schafer. 47 J' ' N fgflxfili 'if.:7 I' 'V .wt '- - j,-Ou -:onlin 5,51 :Ny vcgzffap-1 an-1 C .. 554'-331' i'12 51s4'5ff'!:f'5'e,' 2:3ii2R'i-95 '5i7 .zy'l?:5ll:3i '1 ASk'5l'.. 2Yg??J.f?a'tvS,'J'ln'.?a1T Hi-Y dates back to 1911, but locally, it did not hold its first meeting till 1921 when the East Cleveland branch was formed. The organization's platform- clean speech, clean sports, clean scholar- ship, and clean living -is an ideal towards which its members strive. Meeting weekly at the Y House at Lee and Euclid, four clubs make up the present roster. In the past, there have been as many as seven Hi-Y clubs at one time. During the past year, speakers at Hi-Y meetings have included East Cleve- land's judge Stanton Addams, Dietman Schaeffer, a young German broadcaster, Paul Stickle, an F.B.I. agent, Rev. Brown, and jim Stratton, who was with the Armed Forces radio corps in Berlin. Focal points of the year were the annual Hi-Y show, an old-time melo- drama, and the joint Hi-Y-Friendship formal. Other club activities were the vote-and-tote service, the Youth in Government mock legislature, and the Community Fund team entered in the Metropolitan division. First Semester Officers Second Semester Ofhcers President .............................. Chuck Vogel President ......... . .................... Al Singerman Vice President .......... ..... F red Hamilton Vice President ,,,,,, Budd Lernmerman SCUCIHFY ------------------ ------- F fed Mueller Secretary ....................................... Al Zambie Treasurer ............ ....... R oy Ronke Treasurer ............ ................. L arry Smith Chaplain .......... ........ B 0b COHICS Chaplain ........ .......... F red Hamilton Delphi BACK ROW: Jim Kutcher, jim Leach, Dick Fol- lett, Tom Milligan, John Barkovich. MIDDLE ROW: jim Kitson, Larry Engman, Bill Barton, Halcyon , - jay Hunton, Tom Perkins. FRONT ROW: Rus- Bill Gemlich, Dean Louis, Derry Clay, B1ll-Ben- sell Krinsky, Dave Peters, George Garland, Tom nett, Don Campbell, Rollie Remley, John Willert Schafer, Dave Welter. B111 Braun- 48 Amigos BACK ROW: Eric Hall, leader, Bob Coates, Roy Ronke, Ronnie Isaacson, Gary Fox, Art Peysha. MIDDLE ROW: Paul Shaver, Allan Zamhie, Ralph Gang, Bruce Motter, Alan Singerman, Gordon Keller. FRONT ROW: Dick Froehlich, Larry Smith, Fred Hamilton, Chuck Vogel. A 1937 Hi-Y Club. Argus BACK ROW: Mr. Lawrence, leader, Ken Blum, Dave Glynn, jack Walsh, Dick Small, Mike Trivisano. MIDDLE ROW: Bob Vonada, Ken Schiring, Tom Poling, jim Barch, Dave Nokes, Fd Kish. FRONT ROW: Don Barkley, Fred Mueller, jerry Dougherty, Tom Schafer, jack Dreiforr, Budd Lemmermun. jim Mueller, Hat? 'E gQ+i:- fly :U QSg'?r j,.'Z.w'j1'i3 I-I- I .' 5.3 .3.'t,ytfg Mr. Mac, as he is commonly called, still reigns supreme in his basement bower. The journalism class and editors Friedman, Stuchul, and Zambie make up the staff of hearty workers who burn the midnight oil every Thursday before publica- tion. It is then that staff, editors, and adviser remain in school till sometimes 8:00 P. M. putting the paper to bed. Mid odors of spaghetti and hamburgers and dissertations on why due to is an unpardonable crime, the bits of paper are somehow transformed into an account of events past, present, and future within the walls of Shaw. To climax the evening Mr. Mac has been known to honor the weary remaining staff with an inspired version of Gunga Din. This year's Obrewer staff has the distinction of being the first to run financially in the black since 1948. BACK ROW: Sid Herzig, Pat Tulow, Neil Akins, Wayne Croft. MIDDLE ROW: Don Mixer, Eileen Vajda, Joyce Martin, Jan Ainsworth, Carol Provins, John Tomcho, Diane Fellows, Judy Hoff- man. FRONT ROW: Joy Cappon, Maxine Cohn, Connie Sciortino, Violet Barbey, Judy Keller, Francine Hasher. OBSERVER The Obrerrfer, a bi-weekly publication, made its initial appearance on April 24, 1950. It was then that the student body realized the power of the press behind the six-column paper. The first advisers were Miss Mildred Palmer, English teacher, and Homer Gilford. In 1935 Miss Clara Clendenen, also an English instructor, became adviser, and in 1939 a fellow by the name of Hubert McNeill took over the job as overseer. A journalism class was added one year later. Judy Stuchul, Allan Zambie, Phyllis Friedman, CCenterJ Hubert McNeill, advisor. i f A 50 Among Shaw's most loyal athletic fans, there are those to whom the football season means only frozen hands, scraped knees, and laryngitis. These people, of course, are the cheerleaders who go through all sorts of antics just to get a Couple of hearty yells out of the student body. The kids are line at pep rallies, said Bev Byers, head cheerleader, but once they get down to the game, we can't get a whisper from them. The history of the cheerleading organization dates back to 1931 when a Cheerio club of boys and girls was formed to lead the traditional Rah, rahs! ln the more recent years, the cheerleaders have been an all-female group. This year, though, three boys were added during the basketball season. THE FANS, Cheerleaders-eye view. 51 CHEERLEADERS BACK ROW: Nancy Struggles, Catherine Peters MIDDLE ROW: Donna Corsillo, Bev Byers FRONT ROW: Sandy Dickerson, Elaine Stevens 5 - - Y .v.-.'.f ,. - -.. . . -...,,... ,... ... ....,,..,.,,. ,. .,., ..-. ,,,, . f'1 V12i'1-lf 'JL'3 '5 1lT 52 -IE 9. 7l'Iv-44-'L '-'l h ,1--,p 1- '-?'lRf.,.'lg'1f Q' -- ,: ?. 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EWz!27!eJ6f124IPs t,fS? Bird .1 i'-':?J J--c if-'-Qfdwsaafia gfreea-ws?-as . 5 ,,. 4-344,135 usa! QLQA-'lg-ha' '5- -Q11-r' E::M 2-.--Qi?-1'fh-'Y gl. ,Anim-PL-Z'. 51M 5,-522-1.1!-3?-5'-4,-'QE 'Alam-ifgffsbi-xiii 51514 'acc 15214 S23 ' ,-LQQ-gf,g:5.ngf-:.e1 ::'.aafs-towel: ?fif .t.-WV-ii'?f5' i?-Y5tPfi3iSG5 fr: Et'-lgvir-7-45 llfdr fast-1512132-Jia 'L-v '1l w .-4, Sveaggieijzfi Q ' 9' ! 59f1'Jxi-ibflkigifeif-E -N Q56 Nr? .LvY-85. 'E'-'IfaMiS3is4?5:-'f f.'e:f-g53.u,g,QcF.-:.:g.- -3.2-:hw 4- M -,9'-.,23gf-:a'2z.F:i. '1.-- wo' -I 1299.7--Q: ---ff-:fe -s':.'s I-1'-.6-122,-1'.: f ' SHUTTLE What is known today as the Shuttle was simply called the Shaw High Annual back in its younger days. In fact, it wasn't until 1921 that the already 18 year old book was christened the Shuttle The early books were literary ones featuring short stories and poems Written by the students. The grand-daddy of today's yearbook, the 70 page 1903 Shaw, was offered not for its literary or artistic value, but merely for 75 cents. Although printing costs have risen, the purpose of the yearbook remains the same: to furnish a written and pictorial record of school life. Laboring under slightly different conditions from those of past years, the '53 Shuttle staff found itself faced with the task of putting out a book that would somehow bridge the gap from 1903 to 1953. Whether or not we have been successful, we do not know. Yet we feel that this volume is worthy of all the efforts that have gone into it. Those who contributed to these pages have been many, and their contributions have ranged from pasting to writing to hounding you for your 33.25. If you've noticed gray hairs gracing our heads, be assured that there has been good reason for themg e.g., the time when the senior pictures were so well hidden that nobody knew where they were. But with all the work, all the rubber cement, and all the homework we haven't done, the entire staff agrees about one thing, it's been fun! The Editor. Shuttle Editors BACK ROW: Germaine Gibian, Phyllis Friedman, Judy Stuchul, Budd Lemmerman, Allan Zambie, Carolyn Benson. FRONT RQW: Judy Keller, Bruce Holderbaum, Advisor, Francine Hasher. , . , 515: 19: EQ'-a,,H5Q.--Q'-kgs Q. F A . , ..,,- ,-- -gg-If.w'lg1'1 5' NVQ' ' sr yzvult, atcifkitskfs-smweakg.. 5 , . , .. .N.R,3g,:awmw,tpm22.r5,?3-.fQ.:eg,sa52p- Auf-'zsaw ,aler- 5f.'Q.'-.,7, v.h,,5,'1-,v,,3'u,,.,f,-:.p,r.:,, F, wi, ..,.,,,.v,n.-.u.j,'?,1.53.,nL,,NZ.-,-1f.g,,1,.i5.J3T,.,,A.x1rg5l. .sap , - I .v L. cg- QS:-Ls: Q 6:v-132153 g242'3v5s'f.hF 'E-f I 12,fv Q1i'f! 'Q - . - .., - si-1:af l.Q?Qg!:'3f-4195011-W'G ef--'TgH-UQJQSU-Iifyvfli' YQ'-'43--I vf'v'2J-'QyVZfQ6'--1125-.. -2 , a'-1 - Q 'H 23-. 4 izifzzlliszizbbi .5'1dhZ??v3S -0:11932 Qc!- .l15E'SK''fiff-'55-'ECf? - X?: ' '- J1R'-'s 'v'3i7f '715'2 '1'l?'3 ' 559 5 ' ? 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BACK ROW: Harriett Dawson, Virginia Conant, Nancy Magnusson, Elizabeth Hunsicker. MIDDLE ROW: Esther Sapia, Sally Cummins, Anne Cross- ley, Anola Schenck, Sally Dunn. FRONT ROW: Niami Hanson, Charlene Maria, Howard Hanna, Ellen jean Price, Eileen Vajtla. 1 BACK ROW: Barbara Dwyer, Lee Wfellman, Georgene Krantz, Howard Hanna, Frank Gillespie, Bill Monroe, Emily Watkins, Diane Clay. MIDDLE ROW: Judy Keller, Diana Reynard, Sally Dunn, Dorothy Michael, Joanne Palicka, Anne Lintlsay, Judy Parkhurst. FRONT ROW: Barbara johnson, Gloria Cali Etlith Simese, Marion Goldman, Gertrude Lass, Rosemary Dohm, Rosemary Rogers. ?5 Gif' 5' V5': avv -'v an M75 151.1-.Af Lb gf 'f,7'u5 ?Vi'1f4u'PL't.'57::- TA., l YQ . X . 'v., , 14.21,-41,5-vI1'l1 xv-5f:,1f:m1'v-:pa Smqrlphthnfgi-I 'ii'-r-' Wir. ra Pxglaffiai-gag, -56g:1'S- 5ZiE'E: 1' 51424-31ffli '7Ai:24 Qb4 We Nag ' 84122 11425573251 iq-5, 89,3 5.1.1142 . Sym?- , E 9+-.'.l-f f.g!.fJh.9,i' '4 Qi?S'-fr' Q .gtfdusfbg ':42.'t14'P3'-A 31? 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VIOLIN Jeanne Ahearn Joan Brown Nancy 'Crall Wilma Enkler Freida Laubaugh Grace McDonald Louise McGrew Nancy Nelson Dorothy Payne Evelyn Welniak VIOLA Joanne Bauman Germaine Gibian Ruth Shankland janet Sprinkle CEIJLO Nancy Magnusson Catherine Peters BASS Nancy Struggles jack Walsh Emily Watkins Anne Wills FLUTE Harriet Dawson Helen Rendlesham CLARINET Beverly Beitzel Bruce Motter Ken Schiring Lucy Wallace OBOE Nancy Carlson Virginia Rose BASSOON Carol Eaton TRUMPET Tony Armao Don Felice Ronald Froelich jim Thompson FRENCH HORN Sandara Brown Diana Reynard TROMBONE Gerry Dougherty Gloria Marvin DRUMS Chuck Alexander Tom Grilliths PIANO Corrine Wiler Orchestra Officers President ........................ Catherine Peters Vice President .................. Al Singerman Secretary ..........,,............ Evelyn Welniak Librarian .......... ....... Wardrobe .................. .. Louise McGrew Anne Wills Germaine Gibian Nancy Magnusson Al Singerman Alan Singerman Music as seen by a violin Evolving in 1911 from a small mandolin-banjo club, the Shaw Orchestra has become a very complex organization. At the beginning, the group consisted of nine members directed by Miss Eastman. It had the distinction of being the first high school orchestra in Cleveland. From 1925 to 1950, the Orchestra was directed by Milton Niergarth. Today's group is led by S. Robert Fraser. The Shaw Orchestra handles difhcult symphonic pieces, not usually attempted by high school orchestras. The group plays works ranging from Bach to Berlin to Bartok to Be-Bop. The Orchestra, many members of which belong to local non-professional symphonies, won a first rating in Ohio State contests in 1949'and 1951. The group has played this year at the Armistice Day assembly, the Christmas program, Class Nights, Commencements, the Hi-Y show, the Spring Concert, and the Lake Erie League Festival. 54 There has been an organized choral group at Shaw High School since 1904. The 1904 group was only a Girls' Glee Club, but the next year it joined the Boys' Sextet and became the Shaw Glee Club. This group continued until the early twenties, when the first ACapella Choir was formed by Miss Shafier. 'The musical directors that have followed are: jacob E. Hinesg Edgar E. Vanceg S. Robert Fraserg and the present director, Miss Margery Shields. The present 92 voice Shaw Choir sings on various occasions throughout the year. Some of the programs this year have been: the Christmas Concert, Christmas Caroling at Halle's, Caroling on the Public Square, the Commence- ment programs, Open House, the Lake Erie League Festival, the Armistice Day program, and the Spring Concert. Miss Shields as seen by a choir member. Joanne Baumann Joy Hossel John Barkovich Lee Roy Mikut Christine Beach Marilyn johnson Tom Babbitt Bill Monroe Helen Bliss June Kapps Louis Cowles Bruce Motter Audrey Bortner Pat Kennedy David Davis jim Nelson Marilyn Cabot Doris Leonard Bill Dignin Gus Pallad Joy Cappon Barbara MacEachron Jack Dreifort Ed Panesky Patricia Ciomek Virginia Mackell Dave Edison Sidney Peterson Lucy Cirkova Nancy Magnusson Dick Faragher Chuck Pfahl Virginia Cleeve Gloria Marvin Don Felice Ronnie Rawley Nancy Crall Sally McCrory Ronald Frew Ken Ryder Jill Denison Bonnie MCCutcheon George Garland Jim Ruck Flossie Dodson Barbara McKnight David Grotenfend John Schalois Barbara Earley janet McKee Fred Hamilton Al Sebransky Barbara Ensign Dorothy Michael Alfred Hoffman Paul Shaver jane Evans Jeanne Nelson jay Hunton Alan Singerman Elizabeth Fisher Joan Patterson Chuck Kelly Renfrew Spence Elaine Forkapa Carol Sabfaqk Auguste King Fred Sterle Nancy Froehlich . Sandra Simon jim Kitson Harold Thornhill Dianne Gerscheski Nancy Struggles Walter Klauss jack Walsh Dolores Gerscheski Gioria Vara Warren Ledger joe Weinhofer Germaine Gibian E I W I . k Budd Lemmerman Dave Whitehorn Marilyn Guffy ve YH e ma Ronnie McCoy Allan Zambie Georgieann Gumto Anne Wills Nancy Hartland Julie Hatch Jean Witter Charlotte Wormald 55 Choir Ofhcers President .,................ . .............. Jill Denison Vice President ...., . ...... ...... B ruce Motter Secretary-Treasurer ............ jane Evans Librarian .............................. Janet McKee Wardrobe .................. Germaine Gibian Nancy Magnusson Chuck Pfahl Al Singerman BAND With a membership of 25 and a trumpet player as director, the Shaw band made its debut in 1924 in a small way, that is. In 1925 the organization had acquired one female member who was elected secretary. By 1926, the band had become a regularly scheduled class with the late Milton Niergarth as director. Uniforms were first worn in the late '20s when the 85 young musicians placed third in Class A competition. Shaw received state-wide honors in '35 when the band placed first in the State Band contest held in Columbus. At this time there was, by the way, a young assistant director named S. Robert Fraser. And the band played on . . Today's band, under the able baton of S. Robert Fraser, is familiar to everyone at Shaw through its half-time shows presented during the football season, and its performances at rallies. This year, for the first time, the band gave a Sunday afternoon pop concert, and showed color movies of the marching band. In the spring, the band, which last year was rated first in northern Ohio, gave a concert in conjunction with Brush and Garfield Heights High Schools. They also played at a hockey game, and practiced diligently for the annual Spring Concert and the contests. S. Robert Fraser, conducting. FLUTES AND PICCOLO Margaret Delvigs Doris Leonard Laura Moehl Carol Norwick Helen Rendlesharn Mary Lou Walton OBOE Nancy Carlson Judy Funk Virginia Rose BASSOON Carol Eaton Joanne McConnell CLARINET Charles Armao Barbara Barch Beverly Beitzel David Glynn Pete Golash Muriel Gordon Lois Gorman Georgieann Gumto Fred Hamilton Harry johnson Bruce Motter Ken Schiring Ruth Shankland Lucy Wallace John Whitehorn Joan Zahig BASS CLARINET Carolyn Hay SAXOPHONE Charles Eichler james Marshaus Terry Thompson TENOR SAX julie Hatch BARITONE SAX Tom Walworth TRUMPET james Barch Virginia Brown Dick Dassel Don Felice Ronald Froelich Dave Grotefend james janek Warren Ledger David Nokes Tom Peeling Sidney Peterson Carol Rothenberger FRENCH HORN Nancy Magnusson Diana Reynard janet Sprinkle BARITONE David Campbell Jim Mueller Dave Whitehorn TROMBONE Gerry Dougherty Curt Downing Gloria Marvin First Semester Oflicers President ...................................................... jerry Dougherty Vice President ........ ............ Secretary ............... Librarians ........ Wardrobe ........ Budd Lemmerman Ruth Shankland Chuck Alexander Laura Moehl Tom Grifiiths Budd Lemmerman Helen Rendlesham Janet Sprinkle Leroy Mikut Dorothy Payne Renfrew Spence TUBA Robert Aiken Bob Meyers Dennis Smith Phil Vaughan STRING BASS Emily Watkins BELL LYRE Ellen Jean Price DRUMS Chuck Alexander Tom Griffiths Edward Kish Curtis Lane Budd Lemmerman Bill Walters OCTET Formed to entertain at gatherings too small to accommodate the whole choir, today's Octet is an outgrowth of an all-male sextette which started harmonizing way back in 1905. Since then, there have been various individual choral groups ranging in name from the barber- shop quartet to the Sophisticates. Members of the Octet are chosen by Miss Margery Shields, choir director, on the bases of voice, harmony, and stage presence. Newest addition this year are the boys' white dinner jackets purchased from money received for the group's appearances. STANDING: Chuck Pfahl, Barbara Earley, Walter Klauss, Jean Witter, Jay Hunton, Georgieann Gumto, Dave Davis, jill Denison. AT THE PIANO: Joanne Baumann. From the earliest days of Shaw High School, there has been a Girls' Glee club. The tradition was broken this year, however, as the all-girl vocal group added boys to their midst, thereby becoming a- mixed chorus. Chorus, says Miss Shields, serves as a train- ' B ing ground for future choir members and pro- vides valuable experinece in vocal group work. FOURTH ROW: janet Leadbetter, Betty Kerrigan, Margaret Delvigs, Margaret Leonhardt, Evelyn Thomas, Corine Wiler, Florence Valentino, Marilyn Hicks, Carol Gibson, Dolores Bart, Darlene Mapes. THIRD ROW: Nina Pompignano, Carole jablonski, Carol Frantz, Ruth Hutter, janet Mendenhall, Claire Dell Pugh, Anita Leicher, jill Dreifort, Dorothy Kase, Barbara Luxemburg, Josepha Rust. SECOND ROW: Genny McWhirter, Betty Ann Leitz, joan Cosgrove, Donna Haas, Nancy Hall, Clara Pudnam, Shirley Chiles, Nancy Gabriel, janet Olhana, Judy Funk, Linda Washner. FIRST ROW: Evelyn Bosky, Gail Grey, Jane. Andal, Jane Berger, Dolores Iacobellis, Barbara Skelly, Margaret Barns, Connie Sciortino, Charlene Hall, Betty Ann Lutz. 58 MAJORETTES AND MAJOR I'--6 EX. XE? L-af 153 2' Peggy Wintersteller, Donna Felger, Rosemary Inzano, Joyce Martin, Barbara Garwood, Julie Hatch. What is cake without frosting or apple pie without cheese? Well, in a word that would be like the band without a drum major backed by a corp of high strutting majorettes, In 1926 the band under the direction of Milton Neirgarth first started its long and successful career. A drum major was chosen to lead the band on the field, but little thought was given to any added display work. The major, a member of the band, was chosen for his leadership and, although important, twirling a baton was secondary. Majorettes were first introduced 12 years ago when a group of girls gath- ered together, designed their costumes and became the high stepping Shaw majorettes, Leading the way down the field this year were major, Budd Lemmerman and majorettes, Donna Felger, Barb Garwood, julie Hatch, Joyce Martin, Peggy Wintersteller, and Rosemary lnzano. Budd Lemmerman. 59 Q' BACK ROW: Janet Sprinkle, Nancy Struggles, Joanne Baumann, Catherine Peters. ERONT ROW: Louise McGreW, Grace McDonald, Evelyn Welniak. STRING ENSEMBLE The String Ensemble, organized at Kirk in 1949, consists of seven girls. CFour violins, a viola, a cello, and a bass.D Playing semi-classical music, the girls appeared this year at the Community Council dinner, the Football banquet, the junior Kiwanis dinner, and a Caledonia P.T.A. meeting. For the past two years, the group has received a Hrst place rating in the Greater Cleveland Solo Ensemble contest. Any money received for their appearances is donated to the orchestra fund. Phil Vaughan oom-pahs. Mr, Fraser supervises as Ruth Shank- land, Dorothy Payne, and Nancy Magnusson tune up. PQ! 'X-4 d Q Q 5 91 9 5 QV? 5 I SENIOR FRIENDSHIP CABINET BACK ROW: Donna Haas, Janet Mendenhall, Alice Huston, Sandy Gochenaur, Eileen Mooney. MIDDLE ROW: Joyce McKenzie, Joanne Palicka, Nancy Carlson. FRONT ROW: Joan Hershberger, Kay An- derson, Carolyn Hay. SENIOR FRIENDSHIP CLUB As can be inferred from its name, one of the chief aims of the Senior Friendship club is to encourage friendliness among Shaw girls. It offers an opportunity to newcomers to meet the girls who will be their classmates and to make new friends among them. Organized in 1919, the club also aims to give opportunities for service in school and community, and to have its members cherish the noble thoughts and ideas leading to growth in- personality and Christian character. . By 1926 the 300-member club had started a scholarship fund for worthy girls. This year, Senior Friendship activities included a Christmas party, a style show, and a carnival They also had a member of the Family Service Association speak to them on Boy-Girl Relationships. In the Held of service to the community, this year's Senior Friendship girls collected clothes for Rainbow Hospital, and made favors for hospital trays. OfHcers for the First Semester: President ................................................... Joan Hershberger Vice President ....................................... Phyllis McCarter Program Chairman ........... .......... K ay Anderson Secretary-Treasurer .......................................... Janet Kathe Second Semester Oflicers: President ........................................................... . Eileen Mooney Vice President ................................................... Barbara Ierg Program Chairman ........ .................. J oanne Palicka Secretary-Treasurer ..... ,... ....... Bonnie McCutcheon Janet Kathe, Kay Anderson, Joan Hershberger, Roseann Blakemore, and Eileen Mooney set up a booth for the Senior Friendship carnival. JUNIOR-SOPHOMORE FRIENDSHIP CABINET BACK ROW: Virginia Mackell, Susan Widlitz, Geraldine Goske Marjorie Small, Evelyn Welniak, Ellen Jean Price. FRONT ROW Jean Witter, Connie Sciortino ' Carole Sabrack. ir JUNIOR-SOPHOMORE FRIENDSHIP CLUB In 1950, for the second time in its history, Friendship club became too large for all its members to participate actively. And so, as in the years from 1922-1945 it was divided into two separate clubs. The Junior-Sophomore club, for which all IOB, 10A, and IIB girls are eligible, is under the direction of Mrs. Ayleen Morley. The club's big project this year was the making of stuHed animals from oilcloth. The hand-made toys were distributed as Christmas presents to needy children. Social events that helped members get acquainted Cand have fun, tool included a picnic, a splash party, and Halloween and Christmas parties. H. R. REPRESENTATIVES BACK ROW: Irene Bilinski, Carol Frantz, Gloria Vara, Margie D'Am- brosia, Donna Stam, Eileen Vajda, jean Nelson. FRONT ROW: Susan Marsh, Christine Hamilton, Sally Reynolds, Marietta LaGrasso, Char- lotte Wormald, Sandy Dickerson. 63 in FOOTBALL QUEEN Climaxing a week of posters, slogans and high campaigning, the results of the annual football queen election were announced at the Lakewood pep rally. Len DiLillo, Student Council vice president, held the audience breathless as he announced that the '52 queen was . . . Irish Bob McGraw! Later, more accurate reports proved the queen to be janet Kathe. Janis Green and Kay Anderson were attendants. B SANYJY lung QUEEN CANDIDATES AND MANAGERS Kay Anderson ...................................................... joe Mancini Connie Blair .............................. ........... E arl McNeilly Roseanne Blakemore .......... ....... T om Blanchard Janis Green ..................... ...... ........................ E d Roth Janet Kathe .......,............... ......... J ohn Colocarro Lee Wood ........ .............. E d Conway The royal trio, Janis, Kay, and janet. I And we announce that the '52 queen is . . . N COLLEGE CLUB Ng! College club president, Phyllis Fried- man, treasurer, Judy Kellerg and secretary, Janet Mendenhall read the latest college bulletin while Veep, Alan Singerman watches the birdie. Visits to college campuses, speakers from various universities, and discussions on college life are all part of the College club program. This year College club members initiated something new -by visiting Western Reserve, Wooster, Kent, and Hiram college campuses, Featured programs in the past have included a discussion on R. O. T. C. by ofhcers from John Carroll University, a movie about college life from the University of Miami at Coral Gables, Florida, a discussion on choosing colleges and vocations by members of the Western Reserve Debate team, a panel on co-educational colleges vs. men's or women's colleges, and one on scholarships available in Ohio colleges. Membership in this organization was originally limited to seniors but is now open to any Shaw student. This year, 70 sophomores, juniors, and seniors make up Shaw High's College club. The program committee is composed of jill Denison, Mike Gay, Connie Sciortino, and Allan Zambie. Miss K. Lucille Provo, dean of girls, is the faculty adviser. Guest speakers at the February meeting are: Mary I Jean Perry, Dave Santoro, Phil Traci, and Nancy College club members keep an eye on bulletin Hood. board in room 10. AT' Q 4- .7 f PQRT V .La 41 '-:3i52'f' 'lr'-N .ff 'fl' ,.f,T, fa N 'fl ' Q ' 0 .1 ., 'Vx P. 1.4 tb. gr SOMEONE once said, All work and no play makes jack a dull boy. Ask some of the boys on the teams you'll see pictured in this section, and we think they'll be inclined to agree. Some are three year football men. Some have experienced the biting cold of football, the trained muscles of basketball, and the bursting lungs of a track meet all in a single year. What they have learned is that intangible thing called teamwork: getting along with the other guy. If you saw the Lorain game, you saw the scene on the opposite page. It's Floyd Kregenow trying to evade a couple of his opponents. 66 .N ,Qw..w,wM.L,,,V if iw-B-112:-Mw..,.,,,,,,,N,...,,,, ,S N wwwwmfmxvwwmmk ,K In 32? J' ,,.., ,,,- ,pa-'4 .T- Q.. T4 .3 'S -9 ,,.,q ,ff V mas In 1902 sixteen boys clad in an assortment of sweatshirts and knickers walked out of the old Shaw Academy building to practice football. They wound up with a won four, lost three, tied one record. Fifty years later some 55 uniformed boys, playing six of their nine games in a large, lighted stadium, finished with almost the same record. As in any normal school, the intervening years saw both better and worse teams than these two. In 1913, the greatest year in athletics that the school had experienced thus far, a powerhouse squad defeated every team in the Quad League CShaw, East, Central and University schoolsb, amassed 297 points to its opponents' 22, and walloped Paines- ville 108-0. Two years later Shaw went undefeated, won the Quad title, and played the best teams in the State. The football team was undefeated again in 1918, but the season was shortened by two weeks because of the flu epidemic of that year. In 1923, Shaw again went unbeaten, copped the Quad title and the City Championship, and in a post-season game beat Salem High of Massachusetts, one of the leading teams. Unfortunately, after the close of the season, a Shaw player was discovered to be over-age, so the Quad cup was forfeited. Shaw stadium was opened during this banner season and Shaw celebrated by beating Heights 51 - 0. During the balance of the '20's the teams were well above average. In 1927, when Shaw squads had beaten Heights for the seventeenth straight time, we finished second in the newly formed Lake Erie League. The next decade saw plenty of ups and downs in Shaw football. In 1932, we tied Heights for the League championship. Then, three years later, a Shuttle writer sagely observed that the 1955 team lacked that element which makes teams greatf' The squad that year didn't score a single point. Lorain whipped them 70 - 0. From this low point, the team worked themselves to a first place tie with Lakewood in 1940 and a second place tie with Lorain the following year. The more recent past has not been particularly glorious, neither has it been discouraging. During the past few years it has followed a middle-of-the-league pace. And so, athletically speaking, through the years Shaw has blazed a place for itself in high school sports. Across the page you'll see some tangible evidence of that prowess. 68 W . . ,fait wigs: ' MR, s-'Q if . .. vw, . 8 w 5. x 3-f...,..- my? sf. gn- . , w at QQ, , ' .fwfjimfg , X. . V k ' ly'-'Env' SKA f 'lf -si I r , Q ff' Q' A 'JN .L X. ' I 1 53 I 3 Q .,' Ki .L ,F V X f U5 V. X Q ,in K.. 1 , 'fm 'eff' .f'vn'f .' g- ' QE. f ,, K an QQ' I L W X L' f 2 A Num Y ' '55 x sg 3 ' 'Vu' 'lumix 1'-X' ' -Jw' ' H ' ' ?' 5 A IW 'Q-, 3325 3 . I 'ORP 99 ' 0 i by X Q S S fQCTd 7.. ,:i, s,,1siT:- . ,z Q w -WEL--: :-x . , - ,mm- V,-X Mk ,Sz 11 x L, I 9 -Q- I ' as 'img- ' M. .M-. M ' . rl-n--.g...h SHN, - I AQ 5,1 K Q, 'fffxy fl A K-.fL - ' ff- 52.4 ,W-f' gg xpviix. gl Mr: o an JW aj Q ' f ' Q- l - ln1q. 4 Shaw Shaw Shaw Shaw BACK ROW: Manager Dick Rutherford, Manager jim Marinelli, John Carlson, Bill Ward, Rollie Remley, George Schultz, George Kalas, Dick Follett, john Kline, Bob Albrecht, Bill Parkhurst, Sidney Kershaw, Bill Bennett, Ray Lamcha, Bill Braun, Manager Earl McNeilly, Manager Gus Pallad. MIDDLE ROW: Coach Bob McGraw, Bud Grimm, Harvey Peskin, Alex Michalos, jim Thompson, SCORES 33 .................. Toledo-Libbey 19 0 ........................ Collinwood 21 44 ........... - ..... Maple Heights 7 0 ....................................... Elyria 33 VARSITY With 14 lettermen returning from last year's squad, Coach Bob Cawrse and his stall had high hopes for the 1952 football season. In their ,initial game with Toledo Libbey, last year's city champions of Toledo, there stood very little hope for the Cardinals. Showing a good running attack with, some good passing, the Cardinals whipped them 33- 19 as Ken Horton scored four T. D.'s. Scoring three times in the second half, the Collinwood Rail- roaders defeated the hopeful Redbirds 21 - 0. Coach Cawrse's Alma Mater, Maple Heights, was next in line and the Cardinals disposed of them with a 44-7 victory. Al Sebransky scored three times, Ken Horton twice, and Harvey Peskin on the first offensive play for Shaw. Powerful Elyria did everything right and the Cardinals every- 70 F Bob Cathcart, Vaughn Angle, Bob Morrison, Jack Hanson, Len DiLillo, Dick Dalesandro, Derry Clay, Sam Rondini, Coach Bob Cawrse. FRONT ROW: Roy Ferguson, Ken Horton, John Vecchio, Bill Whitacre, Tom Kissack, Bob Kent, George Dostal, Dick Kohagen, Tom Lowery, Ray Gallagher, Bob McKnight, Jay Hunton, Al Sebransky, John Borthwick. CCTBALL thing wrong as the Pioneers won 33 - 0. The win one, lose one procedure continued as the Cardinals defeated the Euclid Panthers for their first Lake Erie League win, 13 -7 with Dick Kohagen and Al Sebransky scoring for Shaw. A usually weak Shaker team upset the Cardinals 12 - 7 in the next game. After Jay Hunton ran 80 yards for a touchdown against the powerful Lorain Steelmen, hopes for an upset were in the making. But the final score was 26-12 against the Cardinals who, by the way, played one of the finest games of the season. This year's weak sister of the League, Cleveland Heights, fell before Shaw 20 - 6. Seventeen seniors bowed out in a blaze of glory as the Cardinals upset highly favored Lakewood 25-19 for a won five, lost four season record. 71 Shaw Shaw Shaw Shaw Shaw SCORES 13 ....................................... Euclid 7 7 ........ ..... - ..... S haker 12 12 ........ ............ L orain 26 20 .......... ................ H eights 6 25 .......... .......... L akewood 19 1 r Hzufwwgf ' -5 2-f . .QQ 1,-, K My wi Q' ' sw ,..-,-f 'MWMM naw-1'V 'wL AI.,-mf PMwM0r W Ms' xw ,arg 5 SE? in v Qf , mx f . Q . ex'-A .'.1 -'Q . A kk . s - M- - M vZf.13.-Q'h,Y1- ' 'X' Navi mini , : isvffi Sv' ' 1-' L - J 4. I' g -' A I 4.51 'L -3' V' 'W '. 'K 5 E I Q. 5 Nt' rg C' 49 on 1 vi J EQQBB of ..x 4 O, 1 X 15 - 'if F3 .Q.-. ' 'X QA ,ig N-. 35 5 ik I' , ,Q I is 4 . J D X an 4 ix gginii Si. ,dn g S? S.-'nm xg 5 4? . gfgS f H M' l X rf if YM 'fl' J if f- V i A x 'ii 5 X Ni' . I Q, -X .. v X V' mfr M, 5 X l Ken Horton Wayne DeVore SENIOR BASKETBALL PLAYERS VARSITY BASKETBALL Although there wasn't much height, there was plenty of fight. This seems to sum up the '52 -'53 varsity cagers, whose tallest player claimed six feet two inches. Mainstay of this year's squad was lanky center Floyd Kregenow who in the first game of the season, with Collinwood scored a near record of 35 points. Backboard prowess was also demonstrated by Dick Kohagen and Bill Whitacre. Mid-year graduation claimed Ken Horton, team SCORES Shaw 73 .......... ............ C ollinwood 69 Shaw 59 ...................,................... Elyria 56 Shaw 52 ....,,............ Shaker Heights 48 Shaw 62 ....................................... Lorain 55 Shaw 50 .............................. Lakewood 53 Shaw 55 ....................................... Euclid 67 Shaw 50 ............ Cleveland Heights 56 captain and guard who sparked the squad until january. John Abazio, Jerry Carlton, Derry Clay, Wayne Devore, George Dostal, and Bob Cathcart offered plenty of good bench strength. Bob was out of com- mission for some weeks because of a sprained ankle. The latter part of the basketball season saw Coach Roy Wisecup bring Junior Varsity players jay Hunton and jirn Marinelli onto the varsity floor. jay, it is said, is the speediest man on the squad, and jim the shortest. Shaw 72 ........ ..........,............... E lyria 59 Shaw 49 .........,........ Shaker Heights 65 Shaw 37 ......... ......................... L orain 46 Shaw 49 ........ ................ L akewood 50 Shaw 42 ....................................... Euclid 64 Shaw 87 ............ University School 33 Shaw 54 ......... Cleveland Heights 63 BACK ROW: Coach Roy Wisecup, Wayne DeVore, john Abazio, Bob Cathcart, Bill Whitacre, Jay Hunton. FRONT ROW: Dean Apple, Jerry Carlton, Derry Clay, Floyd Kregenow, George Dostal, Dick Kohagen, Gus Pallad. JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALL Although they never make the headlines, the junior Varsity basketball team plays games just as exciting as the regulars. Led by the fancy-dribbling jim Marinelli and George Garland, strengthened by the accuracy of Jay Hunton, jim Leach, Jack Hansen, and supported by Dick Follett, Bill Barton, Tom Walworth, jerry Bunt, and Forrest English, the junior varsity team was able to blaze a trail of wins for itself. This year's team was coached by Grant Kibbel, who helped lead last year's squad to seven victories and three losses. JUNIOR VARSITY FOOTBALL Starting the season off with two straight victories the junior Cardinals then lost their remaining four games. Elyria, the first victim on the schedule bowed to the Red Birds with a score of 19-13. Euclid couldn't keep up with the Cardinals as they won their second in a row 20 - 13. The next four games the Cardinals lost. Shaker won 20-6, Lorain triumphed 34-18, Heights was victorious 20 - 6, and Lakewood shut them out 25 -0. Next year the varsity will be in need of several members of the Junior Varsity to fill backheld and line gaps caused by graduation. Bill Barton, Hank Fisher, Tony Zampino, jim Leach, Don Newberry, and sev- eral other members will do their best to fill the spaces next year. T.: BACK ROW: Forrest English, Kurt Rusch, Dick Follet, jack Hanson, Tim Walworth. MIDDLE ROW: Bill Batton, Jay Hunton, jim Leach, jerry Runt, Harold Thornhill. FRONT ROW: jim Kitson, Jim Marinelli, George Garland, Don Asuma, BACK ROW: Ken Wolfson, Bill Barton, John Stewart, Tom Stemple, Al Lupatin, Jim Leach, Pat Webster, Hank Fischer, jack Hennen. FRONT ROW: Don Asuma, Nick Bucceri, Pat Pace, Harvey Weiner, Dean Apple, Donn Camlin, Jim Kitson, Don Newberry, Karl Smith, Mark Kissack. 77 IT'S A ..... BASKET! Intramural Basketball JUMP BALL 78 From its start in the latter days of November to its completion in February, the Intramural basketball competition was tough going, even for the cham- pionship team. With live teams sharing first and second places in the junior- Senior league, there was plenty of keen rivalry and hot competition right up to the last hard-fought game. Following last year's pattern, the homerooms substantiated the fact that Intramural basketball is not to be considered lightly, for they gave spectators many exciting moments of championship basketball. Jack Moore, woodworking instructor, supervises the league competitions. Homeroom 30 triumphed over all challengers in the junior-Senior League, and the winner of the Sophomore League crown was Homeroom 59. Back Row: Gus Pallad, Harvey Peskin, Alex Michalos, Sydney Kershaw, Dale Parch, Don Clark. Front Row: Marty Goldfarb, jim Barber, Ken Ryder. ,ii ' . 3 , COACHES Taking up the helm of the Shaw football team for the third year was Bob Cawrse. This year's team won five games while losing four. The team, under his guidance, has a total of 12 wins, 13 losses, and two ties. Starting his 22nd season as basketball and baseball coach, Roy Wisecup also ofliciates at col- lege basketball games, and, in '52 he was the official at the Charity game held in the Cleveland stadium. In 1944 Roy brought the State baseball championship to Shaw. Grant Kibbel puts a little psychology into his football and basketball coaching. His main job is to help the junior varsity boys, but he also does a little scouting on the opposition during the football season. Robert P. Louis, athletic director, spends his time worrying about budgets, and whether the football team will make enough money to carry the cost of the rest of the sports. 79 Trying to produce a winning swimming team is the job of Douglas Doc Vivian, who may be found night after night in the pool helping the boys improve their swimming strokes. The newest addition to the coaching staff is Jack Moore, who took the reins as tennis coach and Intramural basketball head. He joined the staff in September after coming to Shaw from Coshocton. Assistant football coach and head track coach is Irish Bob McGraw. Called into active duty more than a year ago, Bob served several months in Korea before being released from service. An experienced football tutor, this was his first year as a track coach. The boys helped a lot though, he said, because there were so many back from last year. Wayne Carol? is the man who shows the in- experienced linemen how to block, tackle, and do various other fundamentals that are necessary in order to have a good team. SWIMMING Shaw tankers splashed their way to a rather unsuccessful season this year-no wins. Swift senior Larry Smith led the team in scor- ing, winning sixteen out of eighteen races in the dual meets. He also placed in the City, Lake. Erie League, and District meets. Aiding Larry in the scoring column were Vaughn Angle, Larry Johnson, Larry Landis, Jack Lewis, and Phil Vaughan. Although the team did not hnish in the top brackets this season, chances are they will make a good showing next year since a majority of the mermen will be returning. The only boys the team will lose are Larry Smith and Phil Vaughan who graduate in june. Since many of the returning boys are sophomores, they will have a full two years to develop their swim styles under the guid- ance of coach Doc Vivian. LARRY SMITH Back Row: john Willett, Edward Putman, Dave Glynn, Pat Webster, Brian Smiar, Peter Ness, Pat Burke, Ronnie jump. Middle Row: jimmy Elles, Larry Landis, Sidney Peterson, Bob Aiken, Joe Lose, Tom Marette, Bob Vonada, Coach Doc Vivian. First Row: Tom Perkins, Mike Bradford, Jack Lewis, Larry Smith, jim Vogel, Harry Johnson, Bill Monroe. 80 Tom Mormino Tony Beranek Dick Rutherford. FRONT ROW: Tom Marette, Fred Hamilton, CO U N T RY Bob vm' C S S BAcK ROW: coach Bob Meow, Gilbert Gray, Shaw's cross-country team copped fourth place in Lake Erie League competition at Forest Hills park on October 18, 1952. Tommy Mormino ran eleventh, followed closely by twelfth place Gilbert Gray. Fred Hamilton finished fourteenth. However, Shaw men were overpointed by the first place Lakewood squad. At Highland Golf course on October 25th, Shaw wound up seventh in the East Side District meet. There were two outstanding performances. Gilbert Gray was awarded a gold medal for finishing among the hrst ten runners, and Tommy Mormino won a silver one for being among the first 20 to finish. Other members of the team, coached by faculty member, Bob McGraw, are Tom Marette, Bob Vonada, Tony Beranek, Russ Knoefel, and Owen Dixon. TENNIS Battling their way to the top of the Lake Erie League, the courtmen finished with seven wins and two defeats in the spring season, and four victories and two losses in the fall season. The spring team also placed first in the district championship. Paul Martin led the way by winning seven of his nine singles matches. He also captured the district singles championship. Other top soloists were Case Sprenkle and jim Snavely, who-combined forces to win the district doubles contest. Martin, Sprenkle, and Snavely were aided by Ralph Briggs, Jack Greenberg, Lee Roy Mikut, and Al Seibert, who returned for the fall season. . sl .X A' TY 6 BACK ROW: Chuck Pfahl, Ralph Briggs, Bob Scott, Al Seibert. FRONT ROW: LeRoy Miket, David QQ, Peters, Jack Greenberg. 81 Shaw's diamond men finished last spring's season with three wins and nine losses. jim Gunder led the pitching staff with two vic- tories and seven defeats. He was followed by Gene Reeser with one win. Leading slugger on the '52 baseball team was sophomore Bill Whitacre who ended the season with a .541 batting average. He was followed by Chuck Westfall, Bud Grimm, and Ken Horton. Other first stringers were Derry Clay, john Kline, Bud Dostal, Wayne DeVore, and jim Capelletti. , sc BASEBALL Bill Whitacre, Ken Horton, Bud Dostal, Jim Gunder. BACK ROW: Mal Bram, Coach Wisecup, Bob Church, Francis Henry. THIRD ROW: Fred Babcock, Derry Clay, Jerry Moss, john Abazia, jim Cappeletti. SECOND ROW: Jim Gunder, Chuck Westfall, john Kline, Eugene Reeser, Jack Hennen. FRONT ROW: Wayne DeVore, George Dostal, Bud Grimm, Ken Horton, Bill Whiracre. BACK ROW: Manager Dick Ruther- ford, Bob Vonada, Len DiLillo, Sid- ney Kershaw, Dick Follett, Ray Lamcha, Carl Smith. MIDDLE ROW: Coach Bob Cawrse, Gilbert Gray, John Schalois, Tony Beranek, Dick Kohagen, Jack Hansen, Tom Mormino, Frank Dohm. FRONT ROW: Harvey Peskin, Al Michalos, Howie Hanna, Floyd Kregenow, Dick Baldau, Bob Beatty, Galen Mack. TRACK Records do not always tell the whole story, and this is true of the 1952 track team, Although the team as a whole did not place high in Lake Erie League standings, there were many outstanding in- dividual performances. The '52 track squad had 13 members who earned letters. Honor Day last spring saw Galen Mack re- ceive his third track letter, with Bob Beatty, Floyd Kregenow, and Alex Michalos earning their second letters. First year lettermen were Vaughn Angle, Dick Baldau, Len DiLillo, Dick Follet, Gilbert Gray, Fred .1 , f TQ W 'N....... Michalos goes up and over. Hamilton, Howard Hanna, Harvey Peskin, and John Schalois. Alex Michalos, piling up a total of 70Mg points, was Shaw's top performer in the '52 season. Alex won both the high and low hurdle events in L. E. L. competition. Galen Mack, half mile and mile trotter, ranked second to Michalos in points scored. Dick Rutherford and Karl Smith were the team's managers. LOOK WHAT THEY WORE GOOD CLD DAYS ATHLETIC COUNCIL , Janis Green ............................................................... Volleyball Connie Sciortino .......... ................. B aseball . Sandy Dickerson ....... .......... L ife Saving Anne Crossley ....... ........... S wimming A Julie Hatch .......,.......... ......... I ndoor Sports Diane Clay ......,.,............... ............ S wimming Dolores Gerscheski ......... ......... B asketball Evelyn Welniak ............. .......... B asketball Carol Gibson ........... .......... Baseball Kay Foxall ............ .................. V olleyball Lois Neider .............. .............,.,............... R iding Nancy Berry ................ .......... O utcloor Sports Barbara Garwood ................................. Modern Dancing Not Pictured Janet Kathe .....................,...................................... Volleyball Roseann Blakemore ........................... Modern Dancing u . IJ Y :ff-girgxfzjsgflbi! 51:1 ,ffm 'Q' 'qos- fzQi:.1:B-figs-iff. -te2ma:.F1.,av25' 12stg4?:Q2gx5e::1 uf-1-4:.wf.o:w LIFE SAVING BACK ROW: Judy Keller, Barbara Barch, Nancy Carlson, Judy Randal, Sandy Dickerson, FRONT ROW: Sally Dunn, Joyce MacKenzie, Carolyn Hay, Anne wins. 86 JUNIOR Diane Clay, Sally Dunn, Emily Wa Gibson, Barbara Ayre, Laura Moehl. SWIM TEAM tkins, Sue Widlitz, Carol Sabrack, Carol Cheesecake - 192 5. SYNCHRONIZED SWIMMING Doris Meyner, Sandy Brown, Barbara Ayre, Sandy Simon, Gail Mentel, Nancy Berry, Eileen Mooney, Lee Wood, Sally Dunn, Anne Crossley, Diane Clay, Barbara Batch, Carol Sabrack, Sue Widlitz. SWIMMING For some 25 years Shaw girls have been splash- ing around in the pool, regardless of the resulting wet hair and straight locks. Today on Tuesdays and Thursdays after school, G.A.A. takes over the swimming pool and members are free to enjoy its use. The Swimming Show presented annually by the girls is the big event .of the year. Special solo and group numbers are the result of many long and wet hours of practice. This year the girls held an Interclass Swim Meet. Elected as team captains were Dorothy Michael for the seniors, Diane Clay for the junior team, and Sandy Brown for the sophomores. The junior team, pictured on the opposite page, was victorious in the varied meet of races, relays, and specialty numbers. A class in Life Saving is held each spring, the graduates being eligible to HCI as life guards in any pool under Red Cross regulations. 37 RACK ROW: Lois Neider, Gerry Goske, Janis Green. MIDDLE ROW: Diane Clay, Roseann Blakemore, Joyce MacKenzie, Carole Jablonski. FRONT ROW: Connie Sciortino, Nancy Berry, Sandy Dickerson, Sandy Simon. LETTER WINNERS VOLLEYBALL ALL-STARS BACK ROW: Joyce MacKenzie, Janis Green, Sandy Brown, Lois Neider, Janet Kathe, Kay Foxall, Elaine Forkapa, Joanne Rayburt, Carole Jablonski. FRONT ROW: Sandy Dickerson, Anita Leicher, Evelyn Welniak, Nancy Blough, Joanne Palicka, Ginny McWhirter. 88 OFFICIALS BACK ROW: Susan Marsh, Lee Wood, Lois Neider, Roseann Blakemore, julie Hatch, Jan Ainsworth, Diane Clay. FRONT ROW: Elaine Forkapa, Carole Sabrack, Nancy Blough, Nancy Berry, Anita Leicher, Barbara Offenhauser, Martha Mueller. BASKETBALL CAPTAINS BACK ROW: Julie Hatch, Elaine Forkapa, Janet Kathe, Dorothy Michaels, Joanne Grabert, Janis Green. FRONT ROW: Sandy Dickerson, Nancy Blough, Anita Leicher, Nancy Berry. 89 RIDING A saddle isn't the softest seat in the world, but it's one of the most enjoyable. That's what the live girls pictured above can testify. Inaugurated a few years ago, horse- back riding is now a regular part of the G.A.A. program available to all those who want it. Riders are classi- fied as beginners, intermediate, or advanced. On the days chosen for an outing the girls are driven out to Sleepy Hollow Riding Academy where they spend an hour or two. atop their favorite horses. CAt least they try to stay atop themj Each member receives 10 points for the trip. Alice Henry, Arlene Taggart, Diane Clay, Lois Neider, Jean Rooks. MODERN DANCE BACK ROW: Lucy Cirkova, Roseann Blakemore, Barbara Garwood, Virginia Brown. MIDDLE ROW: Dorothy Brazus, Harriet Dawson, Sally Dunn, Judy Keller. FRONT ROW: Nancy Berry, Kinette Cole, Betty Blankschaen. Q0 SHUTTLE ACKNQWLEDGEMENTS Editor-in-Chief ......... Art Editor ......................... Phyllis Friedman Budd Lemmerman Senior Editor ....................... ........... E rancine Hasher Undergraduate Editor ..... ,.. Sports Editor ........................ Advertising Manager Judy Hoffman Circulation Manager .. Photographers ........... - ........ Art Staff ............. Writers ........... Typist ................... Advertising ..... Circulation ............. Bookkeeper ................. Faculty Advisor ..... .. .................................. .. .... . .... .. .... , .... - .... .. .... .. ..... ..... ........... Judy Stuchul Allan Zambie ........ . Germaine Gibian Bob Blair John Tomcho Earl MCNeilly Ellen jean Price Elizabeth Hunsicker Howie Hanna Mary Tsevdos Sally Dunn Joyce Hovanec Auguste King Nancy Magnusson janet Mendenhall Don Mixer Alan Singerman Larry Smith Pat Tulow Eileen Vajda Donna Renton ...N ..... Anne Crossley Harriet Dawson Barbara Ierg Carole jablonski Anola Schenck Barbara Barnard Ginny Conant Nancy Hartland Carolyn Benson Bruce Holderbaum The 1953 Shuttle Staff wishes to express its sincere appreciation to the administration, the faculty, and the students not mentioned by name who gave up study time or free time to work on this book. Without their help this book would not have been possible. B . -af' - ' '1 t'-.' ' fl 5 7 I ' ,- 1.11323 xc' P G I n f: I .-,g1 .5a . l ' '. ' .1 . - . 3 5.6 r Ei. ibizirzes ,, Q . gil 'J Yr ,'i.' - ,- . . ',. ' rt,-If .jar GN THE opposite page you see sophomore jerry Tucker looking pretty happy-even with all the books he'll have to read before he graduates. This section is an important one. Don't skip it. These are the faces that'll be around for a year or two. These are the faces that'll be up in the senior section pretty soon. These are the people you'll pass in the hall in '54 and '55. Look carefuly, for somewhere among these faces are tomorrow's Student Council president, next year's football queen, and maybe even you. 92 I ls ,,,.f-vm' 5 f N ww-,, . .L -0-.um-Q-.N-my iimffa F 1. XQ iw-arg-fx ff 'W lex K frm., f Q ,X . ,fr - gk ' ivgifxfa X YV k'5'Fb'?'. T .' Q . Sk' TM BIN' , .1 ,Q 1 ,S , .Q -M, ' ! ..,y: v, k 4' 3-L 3' F A L3Qjiwli,3f8?k4HPs1+ia1+,.x.g.g.Q,.,.Nm ' Wg' :ta ff T fi qqfw. R Maggy. . . an-+ ' ,git 'A .Xi : r . - , '.'- .. A af , Y, rites ' 5 w A' ,A . if . Q i if .f ff, 1 iw. -we ,e Q. ff X , ff' 'X KY s-' 2' XY, 4 p Et Q ' 'Q WH lil? K W 'Y 'Z Y f 4 L1 as , wg Q 3 X 3 A : , 1. 'I' A N35 ,m,. ., .. 'ff' 5, ,ir .f-,:'f Ifz. airigt' it . 'W K! , L 2 ti MQ! , . S W? -' If-tf gz ks- Atsi F i f - 'fi in N K at I 3. I' --f: A ..i P A A if ij! 5 nf? ,. Karl' 'F x i i Lx ff: my in r X' 'gtg it-, CLASS or JANUARY, 1954 john Abazia Neil Akins jane Andal Vaughn Angle Astrid Barbins Lois Bauer Bill Bennett Nancy Berrey Barbara Bourquin Loretta Bolden Gail Bowden Jim Bozell Sharon Brumley Bob Bythway Gloria Cali Jerry Carlton Edith Catanese Bob Cathcart Shirley Chiles Derry Clay Bert Cliff Donna Corsillo Mary Lou Croft Armando DeFranco George DeMore Owen Dixon Lillian Dohrn Sally Dunn Ray Ferguson Ilene Firestone Bill Gemlic Rolfe Hartwig Charles Holmes Joyce Hovanec Pat Kaburick Martha Kaelin George Kalas Russell Knoeful Donna Kramer Curtis Lane a L A Q ew A fmt . i , 4v Q .- .,,....,,,, 5. .- ' w , Z is f B' t 'EP J a A jx Par f t k A. sq. ..., 1 X K g ig G AI r y I K 'Q-pn J. I ,, I i .ww A .1. Q 94,l fl' A .ffm A . ' ta .4-an--i r.L- v K ff :Sei f' J q '5- R s ' v if Q 'ferr' foe? A 'A rg A ' -wud' ,M-rf A 5 I if t Q X ., 1 H ,f sa '- i ,, ' X :aff 6 . Barbara Last Lois Leverett Tom Lowery james Marinelli Charlene Matia Gail Mentel Joan Missar Bob Morrison Joan Owen Gus Pallad Archie Patrick Pat Plunkett Margaret Poirot Rollie Remley Carole Rothenberger Anola Schenck Donna Schmidtt Richard Small Merle Sobol Carol Spencer Patricia Stansky Jean Starkloff Sylvia Testa Don Vidmar Mary Lou Wettrich Mike Williamson Sue Winsor Lola Zuchegna Audrey Adams Mary Lou Adams CLASS OF JUNE, 1954 Joanne Ahearn Elaine Ahern Robert Aiken jan Ainsworth Charles Alexander Betty Anderson Helen Andresky Mary Aszolina Barbara Ayre Joanne Baker .,, is :xt Q., ,X 3? R 4 Y af re' t 55? A . of 19? A .C V if of W A A A 7 Y 'X A if adsf mf' ,Y 1 at I ,af i A W r r 1 X f .. '-is g L' Q f s. as V f 5 myf its 1- . , an gf, I i I X- . g. . -:-.Ji . ' r I A me . a ,sw i,X it I' L,-qt FA 1 A! ww. If . C? K if l Qse' fm t -9 X. , gl' X f if J' fi 5 ,X I li , A' , fl 5. f 'SM fig wp- N f aa it at I I' :Ji T2 mfg 2 60 F ks ' aww ,g K1 'rf is H S. ri 'Q' Af Q , ,X X , S ,W gtg: Sw v .W ' 5-,f 2 ff in wig if at r Arthur Barber Richard Barber Violet Barbey Robert Barclay Margaret Barnes Dolores Bart Joanne Baumann Christine Beach Carol Beattie Anthony Beranek , 5 we 1 li' it .- 1 K Y G' wa E Q' it A 'Kami gi Q 3 X ria, t ,-aQ: f l ttcere f E K i'.' 'J' at ., I I Z 0 L 2 ii . ' if C Q- A W , X fs. f 5 ni R ilii 'La ' i . 1 . K lr - :,,,: F 5 f ,Q H '35 1: 'I Y ' . A pr .M fi' l F Joy Cappon Richard Carani Norman Cary Patricia Chambers Rita Chapman Lois Clark Diane Clay Marvin Cohen Maxine Cohn Kenetta Cole David Conner Louis Cowles Wayne Croft Marguerite Cusick Marianne Cusick x 5- ,ng wa E 'X 91 A- 'F' iw- 1 fn sfrr -' . - . 3 j H ts. - :E-F R trt 2 ...s,? 3 Irene Bilinski Kathryn Blair Betty Blankschaen Helen Bliss Kenneth Bluhm Harry Bolaney John Borthwick Gaylord Bradford Michael Bradford William Braum Phillip Brown Marilyn Cabot Carol Campbell Doris Canon Ray Canzone rf- - f., f . 2 Qi I :: ' in K4 :': pi if 1- . EP Eff H ,WLV 3 p.r. , be tree 'r'a' I p t R . B I' D x 19212-A M f fi , li f 4 V V s -if!! V -' L ! ..L, r ' 5 . K x 2 l 7, f ,,.. . . -ei 'D If -'CM Q f I i. .fb L i' ill 3541? , X , , ' ii ' T, .A K at K will 4. rg 1 '+A Y. is Barbara Ensign Jane Evans Dick Farragher Donna Felger Diane Fellows Sallie Finnie Carol Fligle Richard Follett Paul Forkapa Margo' Foster Kay Foxall Tony Francioso Ronald Frew Katharine Fullerton Judy Funk 1' dag s , in ka if ii F Q if 1 Qum- fx 1-5 - f S XXV if Af j, at ii A iiii F jr at Q G 2 lr , ff l f if Dick D'Alessandro David Davis Larry DeNardo Sandy Dickerson Robert Dinallo Joyce Dunlap Charles Eichler jack Eismon Florence Elliott Larry Engman pig 'sus M, , E554 i, f'i f Q F Q at isse we we Q S N K XE- 1. F K.-gk s F -1 . , J yW Q ,Ai F Af ' I 1 i ii I V .-'-:Q qy 3 E, HL ' X at ,as f - X, l F . 'i f f .,,.. KX 1, X 'A gif Ronnie Garber Germaine Gibian Carol Gibson Joan Gleason David Glynn Pete Golash jackie Goldie Marion Goldman Muriel Gordon Lois Gorman Geraldine Goske Donna Grahling Gail Gray Gilbert Gray Joan Gray I. 5 .iv 9 if K it I .. as tong a ' Q' E - is 1 lg' I I 40' s I lv, A Z gf Sie' ,Xe 5 l ,Q :. .r 1 fo. if ' Q' Q I i i Wx X f ' gui K C , xx V' f . ia- Fig , sg K 2 : e i 'D s -Q-1 t x X S Y X FSQYQQ: 97 X i ' xiii A 2 - -5.31 . ff Nia E 5 if .p W 5 at it ' fx X f if 5 ' 2' 1 'Q ms 1, fri in as Z -Q l 4 S 9 K Sr f f A K f 'ir kmayr-w.,7 julie Hatch Alice Henry Marion Howard Elizabeth Hunsicker Dale Jackson Marilyn johnson Ronald Jump Ferne Kabat Nancy Kalat june Kapps jay Kasmark Louise Kellat Sydney Kershaw Auguste King Mary Kinney .. af ywg ...,. U L ryl :Q W Q I ciaQ ' ei ee fa , ' l f R .., - e-i. uk ar' 3' if 1 me' Y ff, jerry Green jerry Greenberger Francis Gregory Larry Griffith Thomas Griffiths David Grotefend Marilyn Guffey Nancy Halliday Jack Hansen Wesley Harris H .V K K k ,. V ki lb 1:5 n n , t , ,ft f , 'X g up r if A -3 fl Frk . W n iiiii L it , f ---. . I at - V i i..i ' -i Q1 -, 3 an K, M XE VN, L' . Ki .- . J Q 9' X K f ,SP 1 L . . . as .fi ,..,,, v 'ix I K tv gg.. do ,-,,- K iiii sl my . a,Vy M J Q.. . .-. fi JT 1? f . 2 .i - if. i f if 5 Xa . . K. .rri x ig W , Q 2 S 'i ,Q l Y Q: M. ? si Ed Kish Norma Kish Walter Klauss Charles Kluster Richard Kohagen Kelvin Krarnp Robert Kraus Gertrude Lass janet Leadbetter Doris Leonard Mary Lessner james Linn joseph Lose Dean Louis Barbara MacEachron 98 ' if . ' X ,. , . kkrk gi in 41' S -.. . ' ' . - 5 J -' kg Sai: .. wi n 1 ,.,. Mis. it YEL xi K -. , Q- ,..' ' f- 'f ig' ' i 2 .' 1 . W ' 1 A Wi l K ft J-A ' H. s ts: 5- '- lfiii, . Q 8 -H-'F ls, ' ,L L- L E e lla S as , 1 1 if N G R3 rx u f -T: . L -1 , ,g, 1 I K 4 . Q, , 2 . '35 1. k X 5 , X X ' 1 ef? x .fa 5 . , li. at Yufl .J ff, fri . 44 i,. .. f., X ' i f ...uv .za fe af 3 . ' . ey.. 1 2.6,-s , A ,, 4' - X l We fis? ' . . il Darlene Mapes Tom Marette Susan Marsh Dick Marshall Joyce Martin Jack May Ruth McCall Joanne McConnell Sally McCrory Grace McDonald 'N r. X X 'SQ N l t As. Q ' Qi-W-.Q , ,-:at garb .. l 1 PM J. K a Xi A , . N553-pw ' . . , J VA Z fr jx E15 E f 9 ' 'ik' ' W3 J K - 455 , sass r 'af . N f r ar it QQ. at ,X as .Q - 71. Barbara Offenhauser Janey Olhava Roger Oswald Elaine Ott Tom Papouras Dale Parch Janice Parker Donna Pease Emily Penfield Joyce Petrucelli Charles Pfahl Joan Pranskevich Ellen Jean Price Kay Pritchard Carol Provins Q ,L . -p-vm If-. 4131. M. J. 2 .eg - A . f 'agar - . , . . 'P - ff A I-if W I 4 G.. ,J U iifmk ? mg . s 'MWTP Xe X.. If 1 .3-3. Q9 Robert McKnight Roy Meyenberg Marilyn Miller Sally Miller Laura Moehl Bill Monroe Tom Mormino Bruce Motter Jim Mueller James Nelson Jeanne Nelson Nancy Nelson Carol Neylans Loretta Novacek Nora O'Boyle - J . f ' . ,XS X33 .... ii n ' S' ff -H' ' :fi I E' is 3 'R' A Q 99 , Mgt NN 3 ff x 7+ 3 . f Qt 5' I .Lh , S fi 3 l W XF S 1 ef 1 5 .. , T' -' f .Q i 5 , .., 1 iQ L ,l -n::.-S3 ,M T, w. ' K , , , S, Q K li are -it R X as P' ,W at Z f A3352 swf' ,H r S tl . in FSA we .- V- t 5 ,A if X 4 Q g s S Q ? Q ii ta is ' , AQ' F 5 , g , T , ...Bs ' g as iam- .D ,g l Q S 'ii .L i '-155, K . . i istt . :i R Y ',., Q S ss r gl 'jf ig kk I kg. in I . l gi S ' Claire Dell Pugh Ronald Rawley Sally Reynolds John Ridenour Ann Robinson Sam Rondini Virginia Rose jerry Rundt Josepha Rust Richard Rutherford Carole Sabrack Mimi Sala Shirley Schatz Richard Schmolz Josephine Scibana Connie Sciortino Sandra Settles Paul Shaver Suzanne Sherry Sandra Simon Edith Sinese Sally Snyder William Soles Fred Sterle Elaine Stevens Nancy Struggles Judy Stuchul Dolores Sutkavtis Arline Taggart jim Thompson an ri. gi - -.. '- , f v-.,ts ,,. . S' i 'Qi fl , at F' ,sf t K J 7 X Q N S at 1 Q , . s v Q 5 11 fy rg Qtc 15 5 s rs f l as I f 'Qu' You K -it i S xg 5 QV g z r rrft fi - W. N 'SM ,.V , . ima X J S! t gg: .- if, ft- E f Eugene Torrence in f' t . P Mike Trivisano ll ' :' Vi U ,I Viola Turner i P K y S - Eileen Vajda P iiy E Bob Vonada t g si S ' , . K 'fl i-:, s ' f , my Lucy Wallace ' 1 Tom Walworth 'R V Q I g Bill Ward Emily Watkins gyg' l i A R g w Clarence Wehling 100 Ii' 35 ' fi 2 t.t, ix l i Q . . 'K cf sa ,.f:'2l 'I' lg , R iv Q - -. l , 4' la f Q B 5 in Q r , Sr 3 C I, sa , is A Hari! Ei: ,sc 'EQ' I are 3 . gl, K ...NNN are--1? is C a ,:., R -irf X R Q. are 4 1:5 :L r ii f . gi - KE , i f-W 'Q x ix si. gl f . we ,iii 4r 'S lewis -...,,. 5. V ' A . LLSI L . Evelyn Welniak Bill Whitacre Dave Whicehorn Susan Widlitz Shirley Wiseman Jeanne Witter Ruth Wolfe Bob Young janet Zahl CLASS OF JANUARY, 1955 Shirley Anderson Charles Armao Howard Arnoff Joanne Bachleder Bill Barton Beverly Beirzel Nick Bucceri Patrick Burke David Campbell Ruth Carlson Angela Catanese Ronald Cola Virginia Conant Joan 'Cosgrove Paul Corner Ronald Crane jill Dreifort Gay Elgin Richard Fenitzer Henry Fischer Carol Frantz Richard Freedman Nancy Gabriel Keith Gallagher Virginia Gerlosky Dale Gerscheski Diane Gerscheski Delores Giancola Berry Lou Gilmore F S Q S 'Nr gf ga I -. ff 1, - af X Q s QQ X rr ii 'za all -5 i f . '5' ,. c..: .K rrii K , 6 K R if-f'i?5'l A 1.- ff 4, ' -.f' ,. i 1 ' fi if , 5 f X 8, , .r in ig 6 -2 ww .49 X -X s i X . IR - NSR C.. alle . X 9 C Q' x c f I wx Uk Am ' , as Georgene Groynom IOI . B ,sa if ., 'T as SRF 3 . A sig . r S 2 X is at X 1' K K W 5, Q . 9 Jim Gunder Louis Hart John Henderson John Hennen Judith Herndon Sidney Herzig Eleanor Holan Carol Honroth Joy Hossel Anne Hunter ,Lk, 1 visa, A Q' oe i , eeae A 1 I ts --,,, '::, -gf 1 ,. -:--:: J ' , P J all K QE E ih- 'li - , Un' ?'i Q, ' 7 Y J 1541 ,Lt , J' M ,.., t ee X eouo ,neeu f Q .f :.. ' f A -' . ,f,. s, ,, t l 1 E ,.. : 'Q E h is f A f A : - we 3 . . K il 'i 's:c-.- A k' . K :-' 1 'iii .i 'N , A A 2 J is Helen Mischka ,,,,,,,z ,, L. ' ' I J if A yi, A Loretta Morrell Alan Morrison Gary Nank 'ee Peter Ness ,timid 's 51, N .w if it V 6' Q Q ,V N, .tae , , are S v ig H Carol Norwick Patrick Pace Edwin Panesky Judith Parkhurst Joan Patterson James Peak i J l , i ,.. tgp . , t rw I aw. , , on kr Qi P 5' an ii A A N ..... 1 5 5 , i ,i QA ii fe ,,.,g: m- i if . f 'L f - 'f' Z my W iii' ly, Thomas James Ted Kellerhall Wanda Ketron -. Bill Kifer A J Mark Kissack if vit J fs Q A ' Betty Kleinshrot w Adrienne Landis , J William LeMaster 1 t1.,, Bruce Lemieux ' A Marietta Lograsso Edith Luca Albert Lupatin J' A Bill McCallum -'A'-444 P' John Martin ' f j' Lee Roy Mikut 1 fl! A 5' fat X Sfsffja. - ' M 1135 K' f ,- Lf' . A t 6 All N53 f L is 1' X ,. A t A r Y i- ft is W L i., J f Sidney Peterson 1.t A P ' Allan Phillips it J ' 5 atiiiy Judith Randall Joy Reinhard IO2 ,QAJ or ,Ja X f Helen Rendlesham Diana Reynard A A Joyce Rondini S 'il 3 ge, S W' i YO K' Carol Ronke ' i Rosemary Ryskowich ' p I S Shirley Samtur ' ' i Q ns p li John Schalois - 7 zz. S A Elizabeth Scupino S' X X eh 1 ee'l S 9 miA-e y Marjorie Small Q S p ' ' Tjw SS S ' Karl Smith l l S ,ff Barbara Stanick I . A A 1 Marilyn Stone Q f 5 S SS Tom Thompson Donna Thoss W at S Beverly Toth A S54 . Slrerre A ' 'S' ' I Q il ff! l I Richard Traci A S 'H james Weber ' S ,gi S 2 i i S Pat Websfef 'fi' -:... iw r , ..,, A 'S SS MatgaretWheland ,2,' is p i gf Jennifer Williams ,Q tc iis., iiii J K ,YK I 'Q liii p 3, Spa, 1 l p 1 Arlene Wilson in '.., I A N. S A Charlotte Wormald - - ' S S N Af1fh0f1YZamPiU0 S Harry Alexander ' r K' ' James Althans ii fi 'i SrS e p ' CLASS or 71572 ye. M ,fra JUNE, 1955 Syb - . Q4 Sue Ammerman S p eil' .Q Q S H, SS.. S Dean Apple at Q ' A 5 l'ee l Don Asuma If ' If 2. leva Auzins ' Dorothy Bacon 7 j A ff William Balch ' A -W 1 , james Barch p S' 1 S john Barkovich 2 gy, Barbara Barr Barbara Beercheck w S Q. , saws, fm 7 K New .rays A mf, - Myrna Benke . Mildred Beres jane Berger Anthony Bevacqua Joanne Beyvl IO3 Q X 'QP : Y ' fd .. fl,2f'f 'tis Q s S if 3 K X . A ar I 1 . I if 5 I ff x cf Q' ., 1 T is S 9 5 lk A ln X Y 63 'T ' Q 7 Q-, l ,'f 'QS in N SS -G F fn 'VQYS S' I ,af :-:- y sffs-. f at 'i 4? ff 212211 'lEw,5,,, .wt Z K ' ww ,L-,' gi j if 'sw f M r l l ...ff - 5 r' ,k 5 it , W- -'--' - 'Wi ,.- if Af? ,. ' ,rr lurk' .V , ,, ,r K , , .3 iff- Ili. ., r Nancy Blough Lucille Boggs Charles Bonnell Evelyn Bosky Arlene Brelo Bob Broscheid Charles Broscheid Joan Brown Sandra Brown Carol Butterfield im Nancy Cadwell y n E, I A Don Camlin ' Molly Caplin fl in - M Cathy Caporale ' ,A wuuam carey C A, g yi g Aa Patricia Carney i n l I C If X Laura Carr 1 cci L i 'gif gm M Mike ciomek itw B ,E ww g e Donald Clark DQQE ' Dorothy Clark M lix ' t ' - J' Warren Clucker . t t Pat Condon ' r it . Robert Cooper . 4 C ' y tt y M 5 Nancy cfau y I Ruby Crosten 1 iihy 'V D g ii y ,I I r, if x - i n . f BABB D Q George Crumbaker Vr. 2 W iiii Ken Czerr my C EE' ' f iih' g' ' Dolores Dacobellis fx t' t. M Marjorie D'Ambrosia A i m. l Bob Dawson i ig I D G :KV ' g Marilyn Decker 3 4 'y . George DeFilippi ln g M Slzq Norman Delsanter g, 4, , Margaret Delvigs ,t,, ' 43, Atrr of joseph Dempsey ,Z 7 - V i sax J ' Elf! C arg- 7' K , I7 y xi ff' ,r Q- X k it f Www S Bob Deward Carol Dietrich Bill Dignin Rosemary Dohm Joanne Douglas IO wtf lf f 'Y' i ai it fs . is l is il' , 5 i . 'L I fm -A C 5 ' fi in re- mx .rw . , Q if fr 1 sa gs 3 iii D f' Q a R sltc 'W . ff Z t ,iiif 5 N X 3 , N in V. . X ,A yu, li X477 1 . l I a s X N irwi ,P I l f 'ht .5 9 've kg 3 is .mg t 5 t gg A - ., I.. :geis- jo , Q-is gi f fl grime 43 i X ,T 4, :,,. li skwifgimi-4 gs yy FQ T -is f l - iii xxx ,1nlI'il 4 5 v N X ' 8,5 52.5 'Z' if get Q Q. 'Q' , C Ks K '35 in A il gk X I if' 5 R ,fs use I S ,P Curtis Downing Thomas Drake jack Dreifort john Dunlap Barbara Dwyer Barbara Early James Ellis Forrest English Donald Felice Marylyn Ferguson if f i :': fs-3' ii rsi ni YQ' ,. , .. .ry .,:r .35 Wd A 5 Q nf f E .QQ N.: v is If f, J is 'Q .rs 'R 'su-av ... 3 E - C 49 is .Q . 1 3 of C l 5. ll. lr- 2' B x ll Rise X ' X Seba Ferlito Horst Fischer Robert Fish Elaine Forkapa Charles Foss Leila Furry George Garland Enid Gerson Bobbie jean Gibson Bob Gibson H g It F img Q Betty Golaboff 4- QAM? f Y Elizabeth Greenman ' Q, rl.. 4 lf 45 2 Leona Gregory V l.ii, ,-rii i Ei , V. e g ,lle , V ' Eveline Grossman I Q Marta Gunder i B ii Z Til Elliot Gussow 1 ef g C . if C Charlene Hall 3 gt Nancy Hall F sg ' Christine Hamilton lip s- , g g F i Stephen Havas fr F F ' , l fl l 1' I Wayne Hayes Nancy Henderson Diane Henry Marilyn Hicks Alfred Hoffmann Barbara Hook Violet Howatt Jay Hunton Carol Hurschka 'I a :fx I ' 'lu ' X 'i 5 ff . - 1 mf Ruth Huttet 1 Q 5 ' X .sa i X . so Y f' X 'Fr' . X W , ,gr ,I ' F X E .. e, xx :gl fs X . .1-L ig Q Q.. i rs' ' F ' ' 3 - we ii R 1 if ag s S 'S r if lp Fl I 2 Q! ix as T Q. Xa T In ts tg a K ' Y , i . . . 3-5 f 1 r f ,....,,1' Qi ' ' ,zaz Eiga? .vi-f ,. m,,,,g .,z,. r . 'Nl' ,fi f I gf Aix i i 1,T'5'v 5'L i + S lirrl . A :AV N Q1 E t i Q E. r. H :YQ , X 1, Q I l . , Q 2 9 3 5 ai ,g 1 free s 21' y N ' V it D X V r- f a .3 5' af' Q P Y gl L Sig xl- af J MK as ff r Rosemary Inzano James Janek Robert Jennings Barbara Johnson june Johnson Shirley johnson Gloria jones Berry Kerringan John Kessler Paul King James Kish James Kitson Nina Rae Klusker Nancy Knowles Doris Krause Russell Krinsky Nancy Krorner james Kutcher Dorothy Lakins Richard Lamdon Larry Landis Frieda Laubaugh james Leach Anita Leicher Lois Lewis Barbara Lexenberg Ronald Linamen Ann Lindsay June Lose Marie Lustig Shirley McCarthy Ronald McCoy Leah McHarg NancyiMcNamara Genevieve McWhirter Virginia Mackell john Magazine james Marshaus Grace Martin Joan Martin IO ll' F if L a-E' t s Mg L ig ' 0-jf ' me lat-L L 1 5 Us ,, X if A as. A f lx N .Ei t 5' is as S? Q Q .S X 'Qi il 1 . f E, ly ig i ,yi E at .. F. ,:i,., .ig RHP ya :Q .... .Q V x ,.. . if K ii :iii-iQrQ K. K israa- vi iiiii i 6 F, ,ww :Q ' K fr f A I 'W is .5 2 if r, ff H, Cll P te 1 f i Sf fi F , K ta 0 Q,'.,:-si X g 'f f P P. ,A P . X WP' LL4 ...X E P F ' ,f --qs 5 Q ti M ft 'Q- ' W Q .Q 'P . Katherine Mason Frank Massaro Doris Anne Mayner Virginia Mays Sandra Mellen Betty Meola Catherine Miller Thomas Milligan Bob Mills Paul Missar Phyllis Moyer Martha Mueller Gene Myers Sterling Neale Don Newbury David N okes Joe Pavlos Tom Peeling Virginia Penfield Torn Perkins David Peters Donna Peterson Donna Mae Peterson Ken Peterson Sue Peterson Marilyn Pfeifer Mary Pirro Antoinette Pompignano Catherine Poole Darlene Posey Ruth Pringle Clara Pudvan Edward Putnan Nancy Radis Miriam Raupach Steve Renton Judith Ridenour Rose Mary Rogers jean Rooks Kurt Rusch 107 ? si 3 if g M I fe fs l , -iii M at Sf: . P egg 'lil 7 Pl Na I . he XX .--W X A P Slit NV tttee . N : E'l y F sk A i,iii V gl P X f .Nr A , 2 g ,X i K K2 si . 'isa . 'Q Q 'L l X NN . X Q 1 It I p ,.., K Inky W Q ,. f . K Q.Q- W Mr... S , are .,.: . r aft Rella Silverman Barbara Skelly Anton Skojac Brian Smiar Renfrew Spence r V S Kenneth Ryder a-' S , i 'W , jerry Sapatka L y L ' ,fin W F ' i Rudolph Sarich ' -' Z hh1R R'r, f Tom Schafer , fi 'ww p ki , , I5 Ken Schiring li ' 'QSS T . . in - Sie, 'gr ,, ,ru if rl J- 5 e.. ,f ff Q, . rx, LA paul Schupp hm? p q y km.r, n Ronald Schuster Q TN 1, gf: :-- Herbert Selwyn 9 - S L 1 V Nancy Sheppard --,, ' zi. .,, T Leonard Short 't Q T2 is ww, wwf ta e raw vmre fav ,, eff' .4 '71 1' ,V V tl' ii H Y ta, , kyr- .. t .gi S K I K-i . , p fl ! , K '- ' ef' I ia- Q f ,V .ff exam! fe ,K-I 5 S rf' 7 3 iii ' Z ', ' '- 1: f n , , , ., f::aSi K K K X- gff' -it 3, :ty L 1- a 'Q ' , 2 in i 5 , P, N 3' 5 I zlp 5 1, l,pz ff E: lp. ,'.' , ' f my . , . , K,EL, 5 Li ikptk .55 5: 21 ,159 7. .L Sf Aki v if xx it f Q. if , get t , ia Hal' XF W, Fred Spurgeon Torn Staimpel Donna Stamm john Stewart jerry Sullivan H Donna Sweigert 3: .- Laura Tatone fi ' i Barbara Thacker 1 3: 2:.. --ig ' Evelyn Thomas p Harold Thornhill A A if Tilly Tiggeli 5 at -,H Mgt onmo :wwf tiee ion afar y zzs jerry Tucker E t ip: 'r g I yptp Norman'Ullerneyer typi 1 A Mary Lois Upholf A ,pp S , . exi f S it . if ' -X fi' . IL Gloria Vara ' fn 55 ,szup . tp Q K E T S hmm- a?m mmwmu cya ra e tener ' 't rt neeiet ali Mary Ann Vaughn S iaia J ':-t2-- S S Chuck Vfkos t S ttet fa ' S y Pearl Virostko 5 lrara 4 eel, f A 2: 4 .i L n S S Q, James Vogel if p.. --'- ' - L J ,mp , L rif t i P Judywachfff t iu L i .. '-: Lou Walton i N A V QT Q ffl z Ronald Warshawsky ',a Qi. L, ' ' y '- i ' ,ir yyr Y -l t Linda Washner 103 e ' . ' s x ' :F- f XX f fl? . . 5 z W ' A A Lee Webb ' ij Joe Weinhofer Q .A -gg, J - h, 1 y is Lee Wellman . i i A I Dave Welter I V ,f ' .r K A ii r C -K , 5 5 ' 3 Marilyn Wesbecher C, 1 - M i Jaan whitehom A , l C I A X A A 7 A ' Larry Whitney fl llrn ,S Arnold Wiener I Q X W In Connie Wiler i. A , if l 2 f x 1 Duanne Williams , bahnznn t m Peggy Wintersteller A Egggkf ' llle A Kenneth Wolfson fc Q rrh: Y Sandra Wright Q iiie .13 A ' A W QR joan Zahig X f A 1 if.. I CLASS OF JANUARY, 1956 as Q C y ' Randy Abbey 5' 1 A f if . fi ' A Thomas Allen g A ' A Y h - ,ev Larry Ambrose ' - H if :i ii B . Dave Arnett ' Q' x'i I 5. X A ., - , Lillian Barbey A fwaf eilltl if X V. t J m K Nancy Beattie J., N Joan Carol Bode h Richard Brazus . L eey. ' Mildred Carlton it W e ,X 7 it gs I 5 Yr. 955 4 ' ,QW agfigffif 4' I il' 1 ' rg L- If ,, ,J-I Q Priscilla Burton ' , ,A-:s lf t f f Eliseo Cefaratti Joanne Chastain Guilford Crocker William Croft David Cundy Katheryn Daugherty Richard DeMarco Robert Eastman Vonda Eismon Bill Elliot Nancy Erickson Leslie Farnsworth Blaine Foreman Barbara Fracasso James Gardner 109 'X R a Q M S, .. -2 x , it I .Ei I M L 7 I ii P Bruce Gleason ff fn. , -P P. - -1 Q , ' N Bill Glover 45 A ii 111, if Dolores Gonzalez ' it up y John Good Lynn Gottron L' :'f I Anthony Graham y 43 V, l n ,Pg :'b E Q Bertha Grano V p ' V L Ralph Green KHY Gross if ' lril james Haynik Susan Henry Patricia Hoff Terry Iammarino f Frank Kettlewood David Knapp b gig, :':, ,rg t l is . 4 Carol Kraft F H Mary Ann Lee -Q. D . ,r.. y Carol Lubinsky P Larry Lucarelli ' if L Eli Mahler ' A fr' n i Angelo Marikis Vp Beverly Martin 1 L p ,H y pnu T Marcia Maxim Um' ii 5 -rrt Q ' , Don Mccoy t ri we Connie McCurdy ii -' P ew. X 5 X Q raft QL 'P ,F Torn McHugh P '7' X joseph McNeilly 1-3 6 John Muewski A Leslie Miller L ,gl Ken Milton . ffm ff X ' as , f . me Q H Jean Mowry at y Nj james Neylans --nr Q 5 Patricia O'Hara L L ,J Jane Parker ,I by ? james Patterson Carol Peters Frank Petrucci Coleman Posarcl Hazell Powell Ralph Pratt 1 'IO Nt. Q., K .JV X V: Kwik iii 1 ,Q . Ox I ' i Align, ii -5 of 'S' 45 yili P fa' Tl i Q' :.r 1 , 1 P l I ,P . ,, , f .. L I Efti it -i.i ' ifj i 'QF' X ' , as - I ai ir ia i 5. I gigs 4 .. SM , WW 'i. mia Q 1 X 2 -'avi P i iv- n. ' 1 ig - - . ir Q-.Q We ., 'Fw E -f Marlene Prove William Provident Sally Rapp Jerry Rawley Karheryn Regal Allen Roth jack Rowan Lucille Saunway Ronald Schwartz Karen Sebransky ,ww few it .nm -if N-i ,. Yip gi I .f 2 if 3 . . B s J- ,-' 4 S' X 1- 1: ,fr ' 1 xxhisg' .l r W' Z3 . ,O if I Q - fi , ,f -iz ,X I' rf ip Alberta Wilkin Barbara Williams Larry Wilson Ronald Wood T S r e -93 L- yah me g . S if T2 N S 43' 1 I .J fi ' ...x Q7 Gi 3 X Q I s JF,p ',n .4 43. . A F fa w 6 mf .X R X E QA I ,f 1 Arthur Shank David Small james Smircina Linda Smith Robert Smoyer William Srrack Roberta Trarka Susan Thompson Terry Thompson David Tichy Marie Trentenelli Bruce Turner Rimas Valaitis janet Vyse Bill Welch A aea , f : -1- - 5 - f- a igf e ' ., - xi J ' isdn 'S ' X N N Q L il llll 1 'll' S he 4. III Q.- SENIOR INDEX JANUARY SENIORS ...A- -F- -L- BOB ALBRECHT J.V. Basketball: Intramural Basketball: Football: Case: Enginering. RICHARD ALTEMUS Case: Aviation Engineering. KATHLEEN ANDERSON I G.A.A.: Friendship, Sr. Friendship Program Chair- man: Service Club: Swimming Show: Football Queen Attendant: Fashion Coordinator. SHELDON APPLE I 'Il:Iennis: Intramural Basketball: Finished at John ay. -B.. TOM BABBITT Movie Operator: Army. CONNIE BLAIR G.A.A., small S : Friendship, Service Club: Swim Show: College Club: Personnel work. ROSEANNE BLAKEMORE I I G.A.A., small S : Athletic Council: Friendship, Service Club: Swimming Show: Black-Red Revue: Kent State: Secretarial training. TOM BLANCHARD Camera Club: Student Council: N.H.S., Treasurer: Senior Class President: Case, Mechanical Engi- neering. VIRGINIA BROWN G.A.A.: Friendship: Band: Girls' Chorus: Secretary. -C- JOHN CARLSON I Football: Intramural Basketball: Engineering. NANCY CARLSON Friendship: G.A.A.: Life Saving: Band: Orchestra: Choir. TOM CHEVAKO Intramural Basketball: Fenn: Metallurgist. PATRICIA CIOMEK Senior Friendship: Black-Red Revue: Choir: Girls' Glee Club: Transferred from Lincoln: Interior Decorator. LUCY CIRKOVA Choir: Friendship: G.A.A.: Jr. Council on World Affairs: Baldwin-Wallace: Art. DON CLARK University of Kentucky. DONNA CLARK G.A.A.: Life Saving: General Office Work. ED CONWAY Intramural Basketball: Shuttle: Rifle Club: Camera Club: Dramatic Club, Treasurer: Kent State: Law. EVELYN COOPER College Club: Friendship: Obrerver: Western Re- serve: Government Stenographer. -D- ERVIN DAVIES Football: Ohio U.: Teacher. CLAUDIA DELLINGER Friendship: Secretary. JILL DENISON Friendship: Service Club: G.A.A.: Choir: Octet: Dramatic Club, President: Student Council: Swim Show: Black-Red Revue: College Club: N.H.S., Secretary: Ohio Wesleyan: Dramatics Teacher. FRANK DOHM , Track Team: Bowling Team: Cross Country. GENE DONALDSON Ohio Northern University: Pharmacy. GERALD DOUGHERTY Student Council: Hi-Y, Secretary: College Club: N.H.S., Vice President: Orchestra: Band, President: Case: Chemical Engineering. JAMES DURKIN Football: Ohio State: Carpentry. KENNETH FETHEROFF College Club: N.H.S.: Case: Metallurgical Engineer. DOLORES FISCHER G.A.A.: Friendship: Shuttle Solicitor: Black-Red Revue: Western Reserve: Secretary. CARL FREDERICK Engineer. LAUREN FREDERICK RONALD FROELICH N.H.S.: Orchestra: Movie Operator: Jr. Kiwanian: Case: Electronic Engineering. -G.. DAVID GASCOIGNE Intramural Basketball: Hi-Y: Kent State. MICHAEL GAY Shuttle Solicitor: N.H.S., President: Student Council: College Club: Jr, Kiwanian: Secondary Education. BUD GRIMM I Football: Basketball: Baseball: Student Council: Vice-President Senior Class. TONY GIORDANO I Football: Basketball: Baseball: Monitor Captain. HENRY GIUNTA Western Reserve: Doctor. ...H- DONNA HAAS Friendship: Service Club: Strige Crew: G.A.A.: Girls' Glee Club, President: ent: Ofiice Work. CHARLES HAGBERG Swimming: General Motors Institute: Engineering. HOWARD HANNA Student Council-: Football: Track: Shuttle: Stage Crew: Intramural Basketball: Kent State: Commer- cial Artist. MARK HANNAN Football: Cabinet Maker. CAROLYN H1Y Friendship, Ca inet: Service Club: Future Nurses' Club, Program Chairman: Life Saving: Band: G.A.A.: N.H.S.: St. Luke's Hospital: Nurse. JOAN HERSHBERGER G.A.A.: Friendship, President: Service Club: Stage Crew: Girls' Glee Club: Kent: Social Work. FRANK HOLAN Transferred from Benedictine: Southern California: Chemist. KEN HORTON Canteen, President: Baseball: Basketball: Football. HARRY JOHNSON Band: Swimming: Movie Operator: Senior Life Saving: Hiram: Minister. -K- JANET KATI-IE I G.A.A.: Athletic Council, President: College Club: Friendship, Jr.-Soph. President, Senior, Secretary- Treasurer: Service Club: N.H.S.: Football Queen: Secretary-Treasurer of Senior Class: Purdue: Interior Decorator. PAT KENNEDY Friendship: Black-Red Revue: Choir: Glee Club: Swimming Show: G.A.A.: Transferred from Heights: Kent: Business Career. TOM KISSACK I Football: Student Council, Treasurer, Vice Presi- dent, President: N.H.S.: Intramural Basketball: Jr. Kiwanian: Case: Engineer. GEORGEAN KRANTZ G.A.A., small S : Friendship: Service Club: Shuttle Solicitor: Girls' Glee Club: Kent: Secre- tarial Work. MARK KRAVITZ Ohio State: Accountant. GEORGE KRZEWINSKI Bowling Team: John Carroll: Engineer. IIQ RAY LAMCHA Football: Track. WARREN LEDGER Band: Choir: Toledo: Pharmacy. RITA LORENZETTI Friendship: Chorus: Secretary. -M.. JOYCE MACKENZIE I G.A.A.: Swimming Show: Life Saving: Friendship, Cabinet: Service Club: College Club: Jr. Council on World Affairs: Purdue. NANCY MARRONE Friendship, Secretary-Treasurer: G.A.A., small S : Monitor Captain: Kent State: Secretary. ISABEL MASON G.A.A.: Life Saving: Modern Dancing: Chorus: Secretary. BURTON MAXIM Ohio State: Agriculture. PHYLLIS MCCARTER G.A.A.: Swim Show: Friendship, Vice President: Secretary. BARBARA MCKNIGHT Whirlo: Choir: Stage Crew: Transferred from Glenville: Cleveland Institute of Art: Interior Decorating. BETTY MCMASTER G.A.A.: Friendship: Secretary. JACK MENTEL Kent: Commercial Art. FRED MUELLER Hi-Y, Secretary: Shuttle: Student Council: Monitor Captain: Duke: Minister. ROBERT MYERS Baseball: Basketball: Band: Salvation Army Train- ing College: Minister. -.N- JIM NOBLE Baseball: Fenn. ...P- HARRY PALMER I I Repair and Set-up International Business Machines. CATHERINE PETERS I G.A.A.: Cheerleader: Friendship, Cabinet: Orches- tra: String Ensemble: Ohio State: Music. LOUISE PINARDO I I Student Council: G.A.A.: Friendship: Long-distance Telephone Operator. .. R - HELEN REID Friendship: Service Club: G.A.A.: Kent. EDWIN ROTH Student Council: Intramural Basketball: Monitor Captain: Prom Committee: N.H.S.: Western Re- serve: Doctor iM.D.J. ROGER ROWE Ohio State. -5- RONALD SAPAKA Fenn. JACK SCHUSTER I I Transferred from Woodrow Wilson High, Youngs- town: Navy. Graduated in June. LOUIS SCHMIDT Intramural Basketball: Rifle Club: N.H.S.: Western Reserve: Doctor. GEORGE SCHULTZ Football: Play Production: Intramural Basketball: Ohio State: Salesman or Construction. CHARLES SOLOMON Student Council: N.H.S.: Case: Engineer. DOLORES SCI-IWIMMER G.A.A.: Friendship: N.H.S.: Ohio Wesleyan: Per- sonnel Director. DENNIS SMITH Band: Life Saving: Dennison: Personnel Manage- ment. JEAN SOJEBA G.A.A., small S : Swimming Show: Life Saving: Friendship: Stage Crew: Kent: Secretary. -A- JOE ALEXANDER Student Council: Case: Engineer. TONY ARMAO Band: Orchestra: Track: Intramural Ohio State: Government Agent. NEIL AUSTIN Baseball: Navy. Basketball: -B- FRED BABCOCK Baseball: Ohio State: Federal Agent. STEVE BARBEY Assistant Manager of Fisher Foods. BARBARA BARCH Friendship: College Club: G.A.A.: Band, Librarian: Flora Stone Mather: Dietician. BARBARA BARNARD Friendshipf Cabinet: G.A.A.: Service Club: Shuttle StaE: N. .S. .JOANNE BATSON Whirlo: Friendship: Service Club: Secretary. LOIS BAUMGARTNER Friendship: Secretary. CAROLYN BENSON Friendship: Whirlo, President: Junior Council on World Affairs: Shuttle Stalf. DAVE BERGER Intramural Basketball: Whirlo: Movie Operator: Ohio State: Lawyer. FRANCES BIANK Secretary. BOB BLAIR Shuttle: Stage Crew: Intramural Basketball: Kent State: Photographer. AUDREY BORTNER Friendship: G.A.A.: Service Club: Choir: Typist. WARREN BOWER Student Council: Case: Electrical Engineer. BARBARA BRADBURY G.A.A.: Senior Friendship. MELVYN BRAM Baseball: Transferred from East High School: Ohio State: Doctor. DOROTHY BRAZUS Friendship: Girls' Chorus: Modern Dancing: Seamstress. RALPH BRIGGS Intramural Basketball: Whirlo: Tennis, Captain: Ohio State: Mechanical Engineering: Student Council. PHILIP BRUSSEE Movie Operator: Mechanic. BEVERLY BYERS Friendship: G.A.A.: Varsity Cheerleader: Student Council: Monitor Captain: Baldwin Wallace. ..C.... JOHN CARLOZZI Ohio State: Office Manager. LOUIS CARLOZZI Ohio State: Navy. RAY CEFARATTI Transferred from Los Alamos High School, Los Alamos, New Mexico: Tool and Diemaker. JIM CHILDERS Case: Engineer. DON SOPKO Football: Intramural Basketball: Track: Carpenter. -T- DORIS THOMPSON G.A.A., small S : Friendship, Program Chair- man: Service Club: Swimming Show: Secretary. -V- CAROL VITALE Friendship: G.A.A.: Kent: Secretary. JUNE SENIORS RITA CIASULLO G.A.A.: Friendship: Swimming Show: Club: Bowling Green: Private Secretary. MONA CICCO'I'I'I Choir: Friendship: Airline Stewardess. GEORGE CLAPPAS Navy. VIRGINIA CLEEVE G.A.A.: Friendship: Choir: Swimming Show: Commercial Field. BOB COATES Dramatic Club: Hi-Y: Choir: Junior Council on World Affairs: Future Teachers' Club: Western Reserve: Teacher. JOHN COLACARRO . i Student Council: Monitor Captain: Hi-Y: Miami: Business. SALLY COLCHIN Dramatic Club: Friendship: Choir: Glee Club: G.A.A. KATHLEEN CONWAY Friendship: G.A.A.: Choir: Service Club: Secretary. ANNE CROSSLEY Friendship: G.A.A.: Athletic Council: Shuttle Staff: Carelton College: Social Work. JERRY CROWLEY Monitor Captain: Transferred from Benedictine: 'gexas Agriculture and Mining College: Military areer. College SALLY CUMMINS . College Club: Friendship: Shuttle Staff: Bowling Green: Elementary School Teacher. . -D- CARL D'AMBROSIA Sophomore Basketball: Intramural Basketball: Mechanic. RICHARD DASSEL Band: King's Point Maritime Academy: Oiiicer on a Merchant Vessel. HARRIET DAWSON Orchestra: College Club: G.A.A.: Future Nurses' Club: Friendship: Service Club: Dramatic Club: Shuttle Staff: Baldwin Wallace: Nursing or Home Economics. MARILYN DEMAYO Cheerleader: Whirlo: Friendship: G.A.A.: Secretary. WAYNE DEVORE l Baseball: Football: Basketball: Hi-Y: Ohio Uni- versity. LEONARD DILILLO Football: Baseball: Track: Student Council. Treas- urer and Vice President, President: Canteen: Intramural Basketball: Basketball: Junior Kiwanian. DICK DIRITSKY Tennis: Intramural Basketball: University of South- ern California: Engineer. FLOSSIE DODSON G.A.A.: Choir. GEORGE DOSTAL Igootlinmall: Basketball: Baseball: College: Football oac . JANET DUNLAP . I Friendship: G.A.A.: Service Club: Whirlo: Fenn: Draftswoman. -E- CAROL EATON Friendship: Band: Orchestra: G.A.A.: N.H.S. II3 .. W - ROBERT WAGNER Football. MYRA WALKER Friendshig: G.A.A.: William and Mary: Teacher. JOEL W IL Football: Student Council: Kent: Salesman. SALLY WILLIAMS Friendship: Service Club: G.A.A.: Stenographer. ANNE WILLS Orchestra, Librarian: Choir: G.A.A.: Life Saving: College Club: Friendship: Muskingum: Teacher. DAVE EDISON Choir: Transferred from Heights High: Factory. WILMA ENKLER Friendship: Whirlo: Orchestra: Secretary. -12... ELIZABETH FISHER G.A.A.: Choir: Dramatic Club: Miami: Artist. FAY FISHER G.A.A.: Friendship: College Club, Future Nurses' Club: St. Luke's Nursing School: Nursing. RONALD FISHER Transferred from Jacksontown Hi h School. Jackson, Ohio: Miami: Physical Edqrcation In- sttuctor. GARY FOX I-li-Y: Stage Crew: Ohio University: Salesman. PHYLLIS FRIEDMAN Student Council: Shuttle, Editor-in-Chief: Observer: Editor-in-Chief: Coils Club, President: N.H.S.: College: Elementary ucation. NANCY FROEHLICH Transferred from John Hay High,School: Choir: Eastern Nazarene College: Teaching. RICHARD FROEHLICH College Club: Hi-Y: Intramural Basketball: College. ROBERT FURLONG Football: Transferred from Cathedral Latin: West- ern Reserve: Insurance Salesman. RAYMOND GALLAGHER Football: University of Southern California. . -G- RALPI-I GANG Hi-Y: Intramural Basketball: Movie Operator: 'I.awyer. BARBARA GARWOOD G.A.A.: Athletic Council: Dramatic Club: Major- ette: Friendship. ANNA MAE GERO ' Oiiice Job. DOLORES GERSCHESKI G.A.A.: Athletic Council: Friendship: Choir: Swimming: Show: Stenographer: N.H.S. FRANK GILLESPIE Intramural Basketball: Western Reserve. SANDY GOCHENAUR h G.A.A., small S : Friendship, Cabinet, Junior Friendship Program Chairman: College Club: Service Club: College: Elementary Education. MARTIN GOLDFARB Intramural Basketball: Ohio State: Pharmacist. NANCY GOOD Friendship, Cabinet, Home Room Chairman: G.A.A.: College Club: Ohio Wesleyan: Elementary Education. JOANNE GRABERT G.A.A.: Swimming Team: Service Club: Friend- ship: Future Nurses' Club: St. Luke's Nursing School: Nursing. JANIS GREEN I G.A.A., small S , large S : Student Council: N.H.S.: Athletic Council, Secretary-Treasurer: Friendship, Vice-President: Service Club: College Club: Football Queen Attendant: College: Home Economics. JACK GREFISIBERG Tennis Team: Whirlo: Ohio State: Certified Public Accountant. GEORGIEANN GUMTO Band: Choir: Octet: G.A.A.: Friendship. -H- BARBARA HALL Business Career. FRED HAMILTON Track: Cross Country: Hi-Y, Vice-President: Col- lege Club: Dramatic Club: Band: Choir: Ohio University: Insurance Agent. STEVE HAMILTON Transferred from Cathedral Latin: John Carroll. ELLIOTT I-IAMMERLE Choir: Fenn: Chemist. NIAMI HANSON Oblenlef Staff: Shuttle StaE: G.A.A.: Glee Club: Journalism. NANCY HARTLAND Igiendship: Shuttle StaE: G.A.A.: Choir: N.H.S.: ent. FRANCINE HASHER Shuttle, Senior Editor: Observer: Friendship: Junior Council on World Affairs: Dramatic Club: Flora Stone Mather: Journalism. MARGARET HERBST G.A.A.: Senior Friendship: Transferred from Annettenschule, Germany: Kent: Secretary: Col- lege Club: Modern Dancing., PRUDIE HESCHE G.A.A.: Friendship: Swimming Show: Miami. JUDY HOFFMAN Friendship: G.A.A.: Choir: Shuttle, Advertising Editor: Obrewer, Exchange Editor: Dramatic Club: Junior Council on World Affairs: Miami: Pub- licity and Advertising. MARILYN HOFFMAN G.A.A.: College Club: Friendship: Miami. IRENE HOUGLAND Friendship: Whirlo: Chorus: G.A.A.: Service Club: Typist. KAY HUGHES Waves. ALICE HUSTON Friendship, President of Junior-Sophomore, Senior Cabinet: College Club: Canteen: G.A.A.: Service Club: College. -1- BARBARA IERG Friendship, Cabinet, Vice-President: Service Club: G.A.A., small Sf: Dramatic Club:- College Club: Ohio Wesleyan: Airline Hostess. RONALD ISAACSON Hi-Y: Stage Crew: Whirlo: Miami: Traveling Salesman. 11... WILMA JABOCK G.A.A.: Friendship: Ohio University. CAROLE JABLONSKI Friendship: Colle e Club: G.A.A.: .S'bunle,' Swim Show: Michigan University: Teacher. BETTY JONES G.A.A.: Friendship, Secretag-Treasurer of Sopho- more: Swim Show: Bowling reen. ' ELAINE JUMP . Transferred from Heights High: College. -K- DOROTHY KASE Friendship: Whirlo: Chorus: Nurse. GORDON KELLER Hi-Y, Treasurer: Colle e Club: Intramural Basket- ball: College: Business Administration. JUDY KELLER Junior Council on World Affairs, President: Friendship: Colle e Club, Treasurer: Shuttle, Activities Editor: Student Council: G.A.A.: Dra- matic Club: Observer: Swim Show: N.H.S.: College. CHARLES KELLEY Choir: Navy. ROBERT KENT Football: Baseball: Telephone Installer. JOHN KLINE Track: Football: Baseball: Intramural Basketball. LOIS KRAMER G.A.A.: College Club: Future Nurses' Club: Trans- ferred from Republic High School: Bowling Green: Elementary Education. FLOYD KREGENOW Basketball: Track: Student Council: N.H.S.: Moni- tor Captain: Baseball: Junior Kiwanian: Class President: College. ..L... LAVONNE LADD Transferred from Colorado Springs High, Colorado. BUDD LEMMERMAN Band, President, Vice-President: Choir: College Club: Dramatic Club, Treasurer, Vice-President, President: Hi-Y, Vice-President: Shuttle, Art Edi- tor: Intramural Spom: Drum Major: Oberlin: Junior Kiwanian. MARGARET LEONHARDT G.A.A.: Future Nurses' Club: Senior Friendship: Transferred from Berea High: St. Luke's School of Nursing: Registered Nurse. PHYLLIS LOWE G.A.A.: Friendship: Commercial Work. ROY LUNDSTROM ' Stage Crew, Manager: Monitor: Woodworking Shop. BETTY LUTZ Chorus: Transferred from Niagara Falls High School: Stenographer. SHIRLEY LYTLE Band: Ohio University: Elementary Education. -M- NANCY MACKEY G.A.A.: Senior Friendship: Service Club: Trans- ferred from Brush: Receptionist. NANCY MAGNUSSON Friendship: Band: Choir: Orchestra: Dramatic Club: Shuttle: Northwestern, Music. JOSEPH MANCINI Track: Basketball: Hi-Y: Intramuiral Basketball: Ohio State: Navy. JOHN MANNING , . Cross Country: Transferred from Cathedral Latin: Duquesne: Scientist. TOM MARSHALL Junior Council on World Affairs, Vice President: College Club: N.H.S.: Case: Electrical Engineer. JOYCE MARTIN Friendship: G.A.A.: Maiorette: Typist. GLORIA MARVIN Band: Choir: Orchestra: Friendship: Oberlin: Music Director. TED MATHEWS BONNIE MCCUTCHEON G.A.A.: Shuttle: Choir: Chorus: Student Council: Friendship, Secretary-Treasurer: Service Club: Col- lege Club: Miami: Home Economics. TOM MCGONEGAL Transferred from Holy Name: Navy. LOUISE MCGREW String Ensemble: G.A.A.: Orchestra, Librarian: College. JANET MCKEE Choir: Practical Nurse. EARL MCNEILLY U Football Manager: Monitor Captain. JANET MENDENHALL Friendship, Secretarg-Treasurer: College Club, Secretary: G.A.A.: S unlef Service Club: Chorus: Miami: Airline Hostess. DOROTHY MICHAEL ' . Friendship, Cabinet: G.A.A.: Choir: Dramatic Club: College Club: Service Club: Senior Life Saving: Ohio Wesleyan: Teacher. ALEX MICHALOS Football: Track: Wooster: School Teacher. JEAN MILEWSKI 1 ' t , G.A.A.: Canteen, Vice President: Friendship, Vice President: College Club: N.H.S.: Cincinnati Uni- versity. CHARLES MILLER - 1 Transferred from Dillonvale: Machinist. 114 ED MILLER Muskingham: Doctor. EDDIE MIMIDES Basketball: Hi-Y: Baseball: Ohio State: Draftsman. DON MIXER Obrerver: Shuttle: Intramural Sports: Bowling Green. EILEEN MOONEY Friendship, President, Cabinet: Canteen: Swim Show: College Club: G.A.A.: Student Council: University of Michigan. HOWARD MORSE GERALD MOSS Baseball: Student Council: Intramural Basketball: Ohio University. ...N- THERESA NARDOIA G.A.A.: Friendship: Shuttle, Secretary. LOIS NEIDER G.A.A.: Athletic Council: Artist. ..p- DAVID PADEN g Football: Track: Intramural Basketball:-H1-Y: Red Cross Disaster Committee, President: Ohio State: Salesman. JOANNE PALICKA I Friendship, Program Chairman, Cabinet: Service Club: G.A.A.: ramatic Club: Executive Council: College Club: Bowling Green: N.H.S. WILLIAM PARKHURST , Football: Intramural Basketball: Student Council, Treasurer: Monitor Captain: Springfield University: Y.M.C.A. Work. DOROTHY PATTERSON Secretary. RAYMOND PAULI Carpenter. DOROTHY PAYNE Whirlo: Band: Orchestra: Friendship: G.A.A.: Western Reserve: Nursing. HARVEY PESKIN Football: Track: Intramural Basketball. BARBARA PETERS G.A.A.: Transferred from Jane Addams: Secre- tarial Work. ART PEYSHA n Band: Hi-Y: Case: Mechanical Engineer. WAYNE PIEPER Swimming: Indiana University: Pharmacy. DICK POLLACK Hi-Y: Dramatic Club: Intramural Basketball: Sbunlef College Club: Junior Council on World Affairs: Ohio State: Dentist. ANGELO POMPIGNANO Track: Monitor: Transferred from Oollinwood. BARBARA POSTLE H Friendship, President Sophomore, Cabinet: Ath- letic Council: N.H.S.: Student Council: Monitor Captain: Dramatic Club: G.A.A.: College Club: Huron Road Hospital: Nursing. ROBERT PTAK Transferred from Heights High. ...R... PAUL 1tADoMsKY ' Student Council: Hi-Y: Intramural Sports: College Club: Color Guard: Bowling Green: Accountant. DONNA RENTON Choir, Accombpanist: Orchestra: Friendshig: Col- lege Club: S utrls: N.H.S.: Eastman Sc ool of Music: Concert Pianist. NATALIE RIGG . Transferred from Orange High School: Commer- cial Artist. RONALD ROGEL Stage Crew, Manager: Whirlo: Intramural Basket- ball: Science Work. ROY RONKE Hi-Y, Treasurer: Junior Council on-World Af- fairs, Treasurer: College Club: Movie Operator: Princeton: Doctor: N.H.S. IM RUCK Choir: Basketball Manager: Intramural Basketball. -5- PHYLLIS SANDSTROM . I Whirlo: Vice , President: Friendship: Orchestra: Future Nurses' Club. ESTHER SAPIA Friendship: College Mather. ALDEN SAXTON College. TOM SCHAFER Basketball: Baseball: Basketball. SHIRLEY SCHMUNK Friendship: G.A.A.: Ohio State. ROBERT SCOTT Football: Tennis: Intramural Basketball: College. LARRY SCULLY Transferred from Holy Name. ALLEN SEBRANSKY Football: Basketball: Intramural Basketball: Track: Choir: Miami: Teacher. ALVAH SEIBERT Tennis: Intramural Basketball: Western Reserve: Architecture. RUTH SHANKLAND Eriendshga: G.A.A.: Band, Secretary: Orchestra: N.H.S.: tudent Council: Western Reserve: Medical Technology. MARC SHAPIRO Transferred from Glenville: Oberlin: Musician. ALAN SHIFRIN Cleveland College: Bookkeeping and Accounting. NANCY SIMIELE Friendship: Secretary. DAVID SIMON IS Carpenter. Club: Shuttle: Flora Stone Drum Major: Intramural ALAN SINGERMAN Orchestra, Vice President: Choir: Student Council: Hi-Y, President: N.H.S.: Dramatic Club: Junior Kiwanian: College Club, Vice President: Monitor Captain: Debate Team: University of Pennsylvania: Insurance and Bond Underwriter. KATHLEEN SKRBIN Nursing. LAWRENCE SMITH Hi-Y: Swimming: Tennis: College Club: Shuttle: Senior Life Saving: Dramatic Club: University of Colorado: Mechanical Engineer. JANET SPRINKLE Student Council: Band: Orchestra: G.A.A.: Friend- ship: N.H.S.: Canteen: String Ensemble: Swim Show: Secretary. PAT STAFFORD G.A.A.: Friendship: Shuttle: Swim Show: Col- lege Club: Transferred from East High: Bowling Green. ROBERT SWEITZER Transferred from Beall High School. Frostburg, Maryland: Dentist. - T - VIRGINIA THOMAS Whirlo: Service Club: Future Nurses' Club: Friend- ship: Student Council: G.A.A.: Huron Road Hos- pital: Laboratory: Technician. BEVERLY TRAVIS G.A.A.: Friendship: Choir: Stenographer. MARY TSEVDOS G.A.A.: College Club: Swim Show: Shuttle: Friend- ship: Dutch Art Committee: Hiram College: Com- mercial Artist. PAT TULOW 0b.rer11er,' Shuttle: G.A.A.: Friendship: College Club: Purdue: Psychology. ROBERT TURNER Movie Operator: Hi-Y. ...V- FLORENCE VALENTINO Friendship: G.A.A.: Glee Club: Canteen: Dutch Art Committee: Commercial Artist. RICHARD VATH Ohio State: Veterinarian. PHILIP VAUGI-IAN Swimming Team: Band: Whirlo: Purdue: Archi- tectural Engineer. JOHN VECCHIO Football: Intramural Basketball: Track: Monitor. CHARLES VOGEL Hi-Y, President: Football: Architecture. -W- JACK WALSH Choir: Orchestra: Colle e Club: Dramatic Club: Color Guard: Cross Country: Canteen: Hi-Y: Western Reserve. MIKE WALSH Transferred from Benedictine. WILLIAM WALTERS Band BEVERLY WOOD Choir: Friendship: G.A.A.: Swim Show: Wooster: Teacher. -Z- ALLAN ZAMBIE . Hi-Y: Choir: Student Council: Sbgttla, Sports Editor: N.H.S.: Observer, News Editor: College Club: College: Journalism. BETSY ZOWASKY G.A.A.: Modern Dancing: Swimming Friendship: Choir: Bowling Green: lementary ucation. ED'S RESTAURANT A Friendly Place fo Dine Complete Breakfasts 0 Lunches 0 Dinners Sandwiches and Lighf Snacks EUCLID AND TAYLOR MU. 'I-4828 115 George N. Nelson JEWELER DIAMONDS 0 WATCHES ' JEWELRY EAST CLEVELAND'S JEWELER SINCE 1920 1385 HAYDEN AVENUE GL. 1-4693 o Q l Dlarnond S A 1953 SHUTTLE Men's op OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER 13600 Euclid Avenue LI. 'I-6810 I SHAW GRAD '33 HIGBEE PHOTOGRAPHERS ONLY QUALITY IN MEN's WEAR 12 so ontario nouns HATS noksl-mm SHOES CH. 1-4600 DABNAY SUITS 116 CONGRATULATIONS TO CLASS OF '53 Ambassador Dress Suit Rental Pete Petrone at Your Service FORMAL WEAR IS OUR BUSINESS 1516 Hayden Avenue East Cleveland, Ohio GL. 1-1512 E VAN'S FLORIST CO. INC. 14130 Euclid Avenue LI. 1-8983-4-5 22 GREATER CLEVELAND'S FINEST FLOWER SHOP ii DON FISHER FOR TINNING AND ROOFING FURNACES 13444 EUCLID AVE. AT suPERloR II FOR A REAL DEAL! ! SEE SEE JACK WHELAN MOTORS INC. YOUR HEIGHTS DESOTO-PLYMOUTH DEALER EV. 1-7200 3957 MAYFIELD RD. OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 Guaranteed Used Cars One Owner Trade Ins EAST END NASH CO. INC. 13829 EUCLID AVENUE Ll. 1-5300 USED CARS- 16229 EUCLID AVENUE EAST CLEVELAND, OHIO WHOLESALE PARTS NASH Ambassador and Statesman Hydramatic Rambler Convertible Rambler Station Wagon 8 NOBLE WOODVIEW Hi 2230 NOBLE ROAD ND HEIGHTS, OHIO Evergreen 1-9821 -SPEED CLEVELA Road Service Lubrication JACK 81 FRANK'S SOHIO SERVICE 24 Hour 6A.M.to11P.M. Call Liberty 1-9814 11 IP. M. Call Ke. 1-9034 Towing Service Mu. 1-4492 SNOW PLOWING SERVICE Brake Relining L P9814 YOU GET THE DONUTS YOU LIKE For the Best in Drugstore Service JACK'S DONUT SHOP 15614 Euclid Avenue TW GL. 1,9872 STANDARD DRUG COMPANY EUCLID AND PAGE YOU GET THE DONUTS YOU LIKE CANDIES ICE CREAM MARI ' DEANE BAZAAR Gift and Children's Shop comP'imen's of Handmade Dresses and Gifts H O F F M A N ' S 1369 HAYDEN AVEN'UE EUCLID AT TAYLOR Mu. 1-1441 Mu. 1-9612 OWEN'S PLANTATION Weddin eetlngs Individual Dinners 0 Bowling Banquets g,Receptions 0 BusinessM ' We Specialize in Weddings 15357 EUCLID AVENUE Opposite Shaw GI. 1-2364 GI. 1-5880 FRED'S NOBLE BAKERY 2190 NOBLE ROAD Glenville 1-6750 We Make Delicious Cakes For All Occasions' ' 119 MOTTER'S MUSIC HOUSE Devoted- to Music Exclusively Specialized Instructions on All Instruments AII Lessons Private Complete Line of New and Reconditioned Instruments RECORDS SHEET MUSIC PIANOS GUARANTEED REPAIRS ON ALL INSTRUMENTS 'I862 Coventry Road near Euclid Heights Blvd. YE. 2-2407 MERCURY GET THE STRATTON STORY FlRST High Trades Good Service BETTER CARS AT LOWER PRICES STRATTGN MQTCRS INC. 15001 Euclid Ave. UL. 1-3500 120 SHAW KIRK CONFECTIONARY 14300 EUCLID AVENUE LII. 1-9693 Hamburgers 0 Sodas 0 Sundaes Cold Meats 0 School Supplies H. F. MARTIN 'DRY GOODS STORES 3940-3942 'MAYFIELD ROAD AT NOBLE 1378-1380 HAYDEN AVENUE AT SHAW Order Your Mlddles Today Selection of 50 Colors ALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE DRESS SUIT RENTAL SOMMER'S MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR POPULAR BRANDS AT POPULAR PRICES SPECIALIST IN BOYS' WEAR Cleveland Heights, Ohio Phone Ll. 1-2042 2179 Noble Rd. 5 nounmvs nssrAunANr 15532 Euclid Avenue East Cleveland 12, Ohio, ' WE CATER TO PRIVATE PARTIES Phone GL. 1-7613 ALTERATIONS LI. 1-8384 BELMAR FASHIONS DRESSES - COATS - SUITS - SPORTSWEAR FORMALS - ACCESSORIES - LINGERIE .HAVE YOUR DOCTOR PHONE US YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS STONEBRAKER'S GL. 1-7410 3 Registered Pharmacists 2153 Noble Road East Cleveland, Ohio ROSGIIG, Bill, SIOUGY L HERRINGSHAVWS ef Us Be Your Florist GOOD HARDWARE Be It ' E Black or Red Since 1875 THE FLOWER DELL 2169-71 NOBLE ROAD GL. 1-5906 Blll- MELTZER b Shaw Grad IQI PAUL HEISER, INC. 2151 NOBLE ROAD GL. 1-3909 Buy WISER . . . See HEISER . . LEONARD'S Quality Meat Market for APPLIANCES 1469 HAYDEN AVENUE CARPETING GL' M435 FURNITURE TELEVISION CATHY JANE FOODS 1619 HAYDEN AVENUE Best Wishes EUCLID SHELDON GULF SERVICE Automatic and Hydramatic Transmission and Motor Tune Up Specialists GL 1-3904 Accessories MU. 1-9792 15360 EUCLID AVE. FISHER BEAUTY SALON T 0 M W 0 O 2219 NOBLE ROAD CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, OHIO EV. 1-5655 Open Tuesday, Thursday and Friday Evenings by Appointment Noble Hand Laundry and Dry Cleaning 2217 NOBLE ROAD CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, OHIO Insurance That Insures HAMILTON INSURANCE AGENCY FOREST HILL BLDG. Cor. Euclid and Superior Aves. LI. 1-7361 Your Favorite Photograph Sealed in Plastic Identification Cards, Social Security Cards, Club Cards, and Badges THE CLARKE LAMINATING CO. 1753 NOBLE ROAD East Cleveland 12, Ohio GEORGE or Ll. 1-5400 ELLA CLARKE after 4 P. M 122 McNEELEY'S FLORAL COMPANY 1383 HAYDEN AVENUE INext to the Shaw Hayden Theaterl EAST CLEVELAND 12, OHIO BILL'S FLOWER SHOP Telegraph 0 DeliveryService Flowers For All Occasions We Deliver Glenville 1-2683 fwe wire Flowers Anywhere, MAE ALDERD 1299 HAYDEN AVENUE At Alder Meet Me At Mary's for Home Made Ice Cream and Delicious Chocololes MARY'S SWEET SHOP 1391 Hayden Avenue Ll. 1-9622 LOHR'S ATLANTIC SERVICE NOBLE AND GREYTON ROAD EV. 1-9784 Tires Batteries and Accessories GL. 1-3267 . HAYDEN HARDWARE co. ei. 1-3268 HARRY E- NOLAN HARRY W- REID Nol.AN HARDWARE co. BPS PAINTS 0 HARDWARE Sherwin-Williams Paints Steamers 0 Sanders 1505 HAYDEN AVENUE CL. 1-6642 Your Friendly Hardware Store PLUMBIING SUPPLIES ELECTRIC SEWER CLEANING COPPER WATER LINES INSTALLED Cleveland Heights, Ohio 2196 Noble Road JAYE 81 JAYE Portraits Weddings 'Nc' CHRISTIAN vlsuRs 14681 and 14715 EUCLID AVE. Photographers UI. 1-1880 14148 EUCLID AVE. Ll. 1-0130 For the Best in Home Appliances EAST CLEVELAND, OHIO 123 rf' W ' N THE 1 All f WILLIAM ABEL 5. soNs l When you're 2v,g'r C0' R, thinking of FUNERAL DIRECTORS l U career HENRY A. ABEL, General Mfnager 7010 Superior Avenue HE. 1-0250 FUNERAL HOMES 15317 Euclid Ave. Cor. Show Ave. 15333 Euclid Ave. Near Show Ave. We Carry o Complete Line of Caskets in Our Own Display Room Funerals Available to Meet Every Financial Requirement Phones: I.l. 1-1000 GL. 1-0614 PARKING IN REAR l ' l l I l Think of Ohio Bell... l l ll 0 A job with a future l 0 A good salary l 0 A friendly place to work l 1'IIE 01110 BEl.l l TElEPIl0llE CUMPAHY l L- J Compliments of A Friend 94 BUFFA 0 4 ' 55' -xf F s ,rv Y Q -w X , X 11 f Y . X ' 1 X EE Q 1. ,g,,g Ig -.-ff' uf :-wr-'Fi' Y Qiflff Q J' W 9 H 5 I ? 'rl 2? v 31-fsifc A ., . V -f-s5,:gif- ' ay-3-Y ' - - Finn - EL' ,,pf!c, ' 5'- X h fflfllifig v . 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Suggestions in the Shaw High School - Shuttle Yearbook (East Cleveland, OH) collection:

Shaw High School - Shuttle Yearbook (East Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Shaw High School - Shuttle Yearbook (East Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Shaw High School - Shuttle Yearbook (East Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Shaw High School - Shuttle Yearbook (East Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954

Shaw High School - Shuttle Yearbook (East Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

Shaw High School - Shuttle Yearbook (East Cleveland, OH) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956


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