Syracuse Central High School - Scarlet Yearbook (Syracuse, NY)

 - Class of 1951

Page 26 of 68

 

Syracuse Central High School - Scarlet Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 26 of 68
Page 26 of 68



Syracuse Central High School - Scarlet Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 25
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Syracuse Central High School - Scarlet Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 27
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Page 26 text:

MARILYN IACKSON Tick Her eyes so blue, her curly hair, All go to help make her so fair. Lyceum 7-Qorrgspondingqjecre tary and President. Cheerleading 3, Head Cheerleader, Associated Activities 2, Maiorettes 4, Edwards Iunior fhshion Board l, Student Council 1. Rainbow 2. MARVIN IOHNSON Marv Here's a boy who's quiet you see, But he's as nice as he can be. Senior Committees. EUGENE KADLUBOWSKI Gene Eugene's the kind whom everyone knows, He's liked by all wherever he goes. Associate Activities 5. HELEN KARPENKO Red Quietness and reserve don't hold Her back, For her in friendships there is no lack. Arnorelta 5, Assistant Treasurer -Treasurer-Vice-President. a 1 I e 1 MARY LOU KARPINSKI Lou Personality plus has this teen. Her presence brightens any scene. Soangetahha - President - Vice- President-Hecording Secretary 6, Dramatic Club-President. Re- corder 1, C.C.G. 1. French Club 3 -Corresponding Secretary. Allied Youth 2, Red Cross 3-President. c 5 i S- R f ew. . 1 Q A O, .., 9, f' 4 at ' - I , , Q xr Stude --- ' 1 Thespian So- , . tqiggglinvl . 5 ' . ' , 1 ' ' I IOHN KESEL Schnokel Words of delight, brushcut and height, Makes him a boy who'll always bring joy. ELIZABETH KALLWEIT Betty AARON KING Sonny So gentle, serious, mild and Though quiet he may seem, staid, This boy is really on the beam. She 3391? seems a model Orchestra 6, Fencing 1. . HICI . C.C.G. 1.

Page 25 text:

AM ,a,,fwf'9?M . 4 , ff gf X NORMA HAGEMAN Shorty A pretty lace, a pretty smile, Sweet and friendly all the while. Alethean 5. Glee Club 6-Sec- retary-Vice-President. Allied Youth 2-Secretary. NED HANLEY A swell guy is Ned, and take it from us. He'll be popular ever, with personality plus. Football 2. 4 . O . lfYV'-Cf? ' 0,1 , ,ff 'Iwi F I DELORES HAYS Doe In sports she really plays her part, Because she plays with all her heart. CHARLES HINMAN Chuck Most popular and President too, He'll always be a friend to you. Senate 6, C.C.G. 2, Track 1, Bas- ketball 3, Student Council l. Cen- tral Savings Bank-President President of Senior Class, Base- ball 3. if y f 'ilu X ms i -is 3 4 I ' ,ff , I 55: V .. y Q Q 45? 512 ' ' ' fl if if 1? 49 is NANCY HUNT Nan Nancy's the girl who studies hard. And we all rate her with high regard. Glee Club 5, Muc Alpha Theta 2. IANET HUNTER lay lanet is quiet and very calm, The kind ot girl you rely upon. Amorelta 6-Critic. Glee Club 6. Associated Activities S. Special Choir l, Diving-YWCA. Vice- President of Senior Class. IOSEPH HUNTER , Scotty. Gunner Ioe is sharp and full ot pep, And with the girls-is he hep! RENE INTZE Renee Nice to have around, she's really grand, And when you're in need she's sure to lend a helping hand. Glee Club 2, Senior Choir 2.



Page 27 text:

CLASS PROPHECY SETTING: 1960 UNITED NATION MILITARY BASE-sci-is Report of foreign correspondants Ginnie McGean. Marvin Iohnson, and Gus Vasilliades to Scarlet G B1ue Press. QAII names disclose to us through the courtesy of Staff Officer Thomas Pinkowski.j Arrived at destination X late at night. Entire camp asleep: not even a guard awake. Strange rumbling from barracks we discovered to be chorus snoring of sleeping soldiers. 11:00 P.M.-Without arguments we found ourselves some abandoned foxholes, sharing our quarters with nature's crawl- ing insects. 4:30 A.M.-We were roughly pulled out of our sleep by yardbirds Ioe Brownstein and Bruce Reifenstein, delegated by Colonel Sam Markinson, chairman of the C.C.G. Welcoming Committee. The committee. Major Kay Cusak W.A.C., Lieuten- ant Alan Ayres U.S.A.F., Major Murray Berman U.S.M.C., Captain Malcolm Fields U.S.A.. Major Carol Alexander U.S. Army Nurse Corps, and Naval Commander Bob Ledger, was to be our escort for the day. 5:00 A.M.-Reveille!! In the cold empty streets of the camp, we expected to have to brace ourselves against the great flow of military personnel. Instead. no flow, only a trickle. To investigate the utter lack of enthusiasm of the men in getting up early in the morning, we stepped into a barracks. There. we were confronted with the sight of Frank Ballester. half asleep, trying to awaken Stanley Becker who was dead asleep, and other similar scenes. lust then a loud voice, that of First Sergeant Ierry Cappon, crashed the sleepy silence of the barracks. In the blinking of an eyelash, straight military ranks magically appeared on the company streets. As the command forward march! was given. however, the petrified discipline of the ranks was broken by some struggling sluggards: in this case they were recruits Bernard Caskin, Richard Noren, and Robert Eaton, the three musketeers. 6:00 A.M.-Chow. The welcoming committee and we picked up the rear of the marching men going to the mess hall. Mess Sergeants Marilyn Iackson and Robert Miner had already seated the feminine personnel. K. P.'s started slinging hash into the half starved soldiers' mess gear. Delores DePa1ma, Ioan Gibbons, Richard Persons and Frank Bertalli, the K. P.'s added gripes and curses to every gram of victuals they dispensed of. Seeing and smelling the mess, our stomachs revolted and added volume to the amount of food in the surrounding soldiers' food containers. 7:07 A.M.-Daily chores begin. The committee started taking us around to visit the sights. First we were showed the huge kitchens. As we entered. Chief Cooks Edward Weisblott and Caroline Arnold snapped at attention from behind their huge pots and pans. K. P.'s Ned Hanley and Don Taylor were so deeply attached to their task of peeling potatoes that they did not even bother to stop their refined conversation with the mutilated vegetables. They have now become part of the kitchen furniture. 8:13 A.M.-Walking to classes. While walking down the camp streets, the members of the C.C.G. Welcoming Committee tried to give us an idea of the functioning of such a military base. Said Colonel Markinson: This camp is operated on the most democratic basis. We find stationed on the island, representatives of all of the 60 nations . . This is a re- stricted area. Pass p1ease! was the sentry's courteous but peremptory demand. After having shown his pass Colonel Markinson went on: CorporaI Richard Lafferty is of the Third Irish Brigade on this island: a good man. As you see there is no partiality on the basis of any nationality. race, or creed. Everyone does his duty with the same ideas of inter- national security and everlasting peace in mind. Major Berman took over now: The entire camp functions with this spirit as stated by President of the Security Council Charles Hinman: 'Through the brilliant, world shaking doctrine delivered by world organizer Dr. Iames Burke, we have succeeded in establish- ing an international military fund to provide dull potato peelers for SCHS kitchen police. For reasons of language difficulties, men of the same nationality have separate bar- racks. To overcome this difficulty in the future, an international scientific language is being taught in the school department. 9:12 A.M.-Classes. As we entered the classes of Apple Polish Engineering Major Kay Cusak explained, as you see our military students get every opportunity for highly special- ized training in every branch of learning. In the field of Apple Polishing by the masters themselves, Prof. William Ballard D.A.P., and instructor Ioanne Adkinson, A.P., who both have had their first experience as far back as high school. The outstanding students in this class we were told, were privates Ianet Hunter and Aaron King. Upon entering the Physics Department we were confronted by the illustrious mathematical-atomic-mad-Physicist. Dr. Emmanuel Stern, P.H.D., CFrench Regimentj wrestling with a hugh cyclotron containing the famous physicist Prof. Pat Fox, right now in danger of being de-atomized. Those two eminent scientists working as a team, came to the drastic theory that HgO-- water-is 41W humid and saw wet. The rest of the educational departments are about as sophisticated as the ones just mentioned CS.C.H.S. places a great value on education.J 11:15 A.M.-The U.S.O. arrives. The stampeding hoofs of thousands of hungry males and females Clonesome typel brought us out of the Administration Buildings only to have us dragged along with the continuous flow. We ended our mad rush to find ourselves on the island's parade grounds directly in front of the grandstands. Immediately we saw the cause of our being here: crowded on the stage were the entertainers provided by the U.S.O. who had arrived several minutes ahead of us. The emcee CM. C.j was the Greek General Chris Nicolaos, who introduced the members of the U.S.O. entertainment. He was saying, We have with us today such well-known actors and actresses as the famous sorority sisters, Mary Ellen Ott and Pearl Russo: dancer Betty Craft, and singer Iune Lloyd: gorgeous models, Pat Walker and Diane Grovine, both dreaming of their band leader friends back home, are willing to display their charms and gracefulness. Here you see the great cast of Central students: Alan Alexander. Nancy Azoyan. Rose Balamoti, Barbara Blaker. Ilona Blasco, Robert Edinger, and Ioseph Hunter. They'll present a play for us later in the evening. And now to pick up our appetites we will enjoy the orchestra band led by Robert Dillabough, inspired by Mildred Greene, and with Aaron King as star trumpet player. 12:00 Noon-Lunch. We let ourselves be carried by the mass migration toward the mess halls. On our way we saw melancholy Harriet Schuyler and Alfred Reney absorbed in the painting of barrack walls, forgetting their lunch with the artist's usual zest. In the immense mess halls everybody stood while the Reverend Warren Otter ran off a quick benediction. Then with a clatter of plates everybody just slumped down. Our food just got stuck in the esophagus when the thunder- ing coughing of a sick jet took off the top of the mess hall's flag-pole. That was Lt. Tom Sands late for lunch again.

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