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Page 9 text:
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Qsbsiasvwt f ' r 4 2Qsfyu1Ys'f'P i if ' rkssizi. ' Esther M. enkin .ua-f Lives of great men all remind us We can make our lives sublime, And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time. -Henry W. Longfellow We are all agreed on two things: that South Park is anything but a sandy waste, and that Esther M. jenkins has left well-defined footprints all over the place. Were she to make a record like ours of her shining hours here, it would be an enviable one. Let us go back over her teaching career and list just a few of her outstanding contributions to the school. Few people know that she designed and made the robes which the three kings wear for each succeeding Christmas pageant. Not only that, the costumes of pages, shepherds, and angels are alike the result of her artistry and her nimble lingers. How beautifully she planned and executed this project is evidenced by the fact that she was asked to design, and did, the robes for the partici- pants in the first Christmas pageant given at Kensington High School. Furthermore, the sisters of lTYouville College came to South Park for consultation with Miss -jenkins that they might profit by her ideas for the robes for the annual Christmas pageant at their own school. We also owe to this gifted teacher our precious South Park banner, the large red and black one, and our red and black, gold-fringed satin school flag. D Quiet, unassuming, for years head of the home economics department in the night school divi- sion and of the sewing department in the day school division of South Park High School, Miss jenkins worked steadily, organizing courses, teaching people who knew nothing at all of sewing how to sew, and directing those who did in the further fascinating intricacies of this truly feminine art. The present Supervisor of Homemaking of the Buffalo Board of Education, Miss Arline I.. Grefe, was but one of her many pupils. Through all this, Miss jenkins had time to counsel and guide South Park's senior girls. And, as the years have passed, girl after girl, grown to womanhood, has been and will be able serenely and efficiently to adjust herself to the varying demands of her life because it has been her good fortune to have known and worked with Esther Marie jenkins. Miss jenkins' loyalty to her school and to her colleagues and her interest in the well-being of her charges has been boundless. She has been instrumental in gaining innumerable opportunities for others, both in the field of education and of industry. Her many philanthropies have been known, in most cases, only to herself and to their recipients. As long as South Park's shining hours are marked, the memory of Esther M. Jenkins will be a steady glow. She toiled, . . . . . . . to leave as her bequest An added beauty to the earth. -Whittier 5
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Page 8 text:
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the word, I'd like it heard- He taught me to love all, as he did That God-fearing man, I as best I can. say it again- down within. there- my prayer. Thank you, Pat. 2 Farewell Pat Patrick Brennan came to South Park as elevator operator in l9l-f, the year that our school opened its doors for the first time. During the forty-four ensuing years, he became a symbol, and even an ideal. in the minds of three generations of South Parkers: a symbol of devotion to duty. friendliness, and courtesy for above two-score years: the ideal of what a real South Parker stands for. Although he never attended our school, he represented all that is good in South Park. The following is our attempt to say 'l'hanks in the way he would have liked it to be said: 'l'hanks, Pat, for all the things you did for us in the many years that you were here at South Park. You were our friend, our confidant, our advisor. You listened to our plans, our hopes, our ambitions, our failures, and our successes. These may have been little things, but they were big to us. You were big to us, Pat. You were a true South Parker in every sense of the word. You may be gone, but you will never be forgotten. You will live in the hearts of South Park- ers for generations to come. For, upon the wall beside the elevator in which you faithfully served your school for over half your life, we have placed a plaque to serve your memory. It is inscribed :ls follows: Ein illllvmnriam 1Hatrirk 31. Brennan Svrrurh Stnuth Mark High Srhnnl 1514-1958 ln the future. when we stop and read these few. humble words. we will think of you and of all you meant to us and to our school. W'e miss you, and yet, life Ilttlst go on. Farewell. Pat. -Pflllf Dr' Fm'1'rl 4 No, he wasn't a teacher as we use But he did teach me something, and To spread happiness and friendship We've all said it before, now well Thank you, Pat, from deep I know, dear God, he'll always be In the elevator, in my heart, and in ' -Barbara Mack
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Page 10 text:
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.M my Ioan ll. Sniitli llusincss Editor. loan is fond of howling. of talking on tht- tt'lt'plion0. of South Parilivf' of john YYaync'. and ol' nursing. Ki-nnvtli V. 'l'rt'ndvlff -Sports Editor. Kvnnvtli is partial to pliotograpliy. to grvvn. to Mantovani. to hunting. and to A Place- in tlit- Sun. tiarnivn Cl. Campos Pliotograpliy Editor. cl2lI'lIlt'll likt-s badininton. classical niusic. pho- tography. hluv. and Gt-orgv Bvvt-rly Slit-a. fivrald ll. M2lI'l'll2lIlCl Art Editor. Gvrald indugvs in skvtcliing, in jazz. in truv- to-lili' now-ls. in gray. and in tc-nnis. l Dial Editors Linda Suc Kant Co-Editor in Ciliit-l' of tlu- Dial. Linda vnjoys arclu-ry. Yul lirunnvr. travvl. Quo Vadisu. and tvacliing inatll. Franklyn A. Pcrry- Co-Editor in Clliivli ol tlii' llial. Franklyn is intc-r't'stt'cl in tvnnis. in niodvl planvs. in tlu' Kingston trio. in rvd and in l98l. ' , .ki . ' 'B gf. . ' l . 1 if 'xi-5' , .: 5f'. f. . Douglas Failla l.iti'rary Editor. Douglas Clioosc-s l. 2. fl Infinity. spa-cd skat- ing, Frank Sinatra. inodvrn jan, and drawing Carolyn H. Roy Advvrtising Editor. tlt Carolyn dt-liglits in lwing busy. in atlilc' at'tix'itit-s ol' all kinds. in writing. in singing and in adding mort- to lu-r alrvady 1-nviahli stort' ol' know-liow.
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