Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH)

 - Class of 1933

Page 21 of 188

 

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 21 of 188
Page 21 of 188



Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 20
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Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 22
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Page 21 text:

Mr. Conser is approaching the microphone now, smiling and nodding in his usual genial fashion. Students, we pre- sent .... Mr. Conser, our friend and principal, in his farewell message to Waite seniors. 4'Seniors, you have been dialing at the radio Waite. Some of you have found your stationg others will continue the search. ln your quest some of you have met with a great deal of static, for others the reception has been clear. Some of you have restricted your dialing to a very short range, others have tuned in to that region beyond the class room. Many have been the helpful experiences and lasting contacts you have made. uWhat station will you tune in to after you sign off the sta- tion W A I T E? You will go 'Around the Dial, testing various stationsg some will stop at stations of pleasure, some will stop at stations of information, and some will stop at sta- tions of service. '4Be loyal to the .station of life at which you stop. Give that same loyalty of service and love that you have helped to broadcast at station W A I T E for the past four years. MAS each of you finally dial to your last station, may you hear the Father's commendation of cWell Done'.'7 Philip H. Conser, Principal Miss WEMP Miss BEIER Miss DARING H in 5 ,V ll, 419

Page 20 text:

185 MR. PHILIP H. CONSER . Miss Jos1f:PH1NE Goomu, '.We have with us Mr. Conser, the president of the chain, who will speak to us today. The chain owes probably more thanit realizes to its fair-minded chief, who, despite his larger responsibilities, has never been too busy to consider the prob- lems of the most inconsequential freshman. It is this helpful- ness, his disarming friendliness, and his amazing approach- ability that has made it easy for us to know him and to value him for himself. ln the studio also is Miss Josephine Goodall, invaluable program director of the Purple and Gold Network and be- loved assistant principal of Waite. To know Miss Goodall is to set oneself a new code of loftier personal ideas .... and to enjoy as inspiring an appreciation course as any high school could off er. Here, too, are those three affable and indispensable en- gineers of the control hoard, Miss Beier, Miss Daring, and Miss Wemp. An orchid to each of the trio!



Page 22 text:

l MISS ADAMS MRS. ALLEN Commercial linelixh Miss ADAMS-A perfect mar- cel, frocks of pink and baby blue, and a quick, cheerful smile - that's our busy com- mercial teacher, Miss Adams. There she goes, packets of mimeograph stencils and let- ters under her arm, on her way to typing, shorthand, busi- ness law, or the Commercial Club, or on a new hunt for an economics text whose prin- ciples are consistent with pres- ent-day conditions. MRS. ALLENZGCUSC your bean l U adjures Mrs. Allen, that genial friend to everybody. If you do, you'll find her leafing through the schedules of the junior and senior girls, whose class dean she is. And who, we ask, is responsible for those get-to- gether parties sponsored by the school mothers, and for the ac- tivities of the Hi-Y, of which she is honorary adviser? None other than Mrs. Allen, who is 1 MR. BAIRD MR, BALL Industrial Arts Muxiq equally popular with parents, girls, and boys. MR. BAIRD-Have you never known that Mr. Baird was a boating enthusiast? Step into his den and take a look at his collection of pennants, awarded him as the owner of several winning catboats that carried off honors in the Put-in-Bay regattas. A jolly fellow he is, too, despite the camouflage of gruffness he adopts occasion- ally. MR. BALL-The rear of an Essex vanishes down the street, the rumble seat stocked with a library of operettas. The che- rubic chap in the driver's seat must be Mr. Clarence Ball, di- rector of choral music, dashing across town to Scott, Libbey, DeVilbiss, or Woodward High Schools, or, if it is later in the day, setting out for Detroit to direct the J. L. Hudson Glee . L - I MISS BOERCER MISS BUMGARDNER Foreign Language Foreign Language Club or to assist engineers of radio station WWI in their de- velopment of a new television set. Miss B01-JRGER-All through those backward spring months Miss Fon Boerger glances from her Latin text toward the win- dow and wishes fervently for sun and gentle zephyrs. Golf greens must be dry underfoot before such fastidious ladies as Miss Boerger will venture forth to try their luck with a per- verse little white ball. Miss BUMGARDNER - Spanish and algebra are interesting sub- jects, but more so at Waite be- cause Miss Bumgardner makes them so. lt is efficient Miss Bumgardner who presides at the front of the auditorium when the seniors file into the inquisition chamber to take their state intelligence tests, and stop-watch in hand, calls ENGLISH DEPARTMENT When youive learned to differentiate between there and their, to and too, you may be given a chance to sample the literary flavor of Chaucer, Shakes- peare, Dickens, Mark Twain, and O. Henry. Waiteis English courses train you to speak forcefully, to write clearly, to read intelligently and with discrimination. Group discussions are employed to bring out the initiative of the student.

Suggestions in the Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) collection:

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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