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Page 32 text:
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ii E in -- 'fa-ts f 5 1 A 'ff ysaen- P JATTLER Members Of The Class Not Submitting Photos Helen Dreyfus Commercial Salemanshi Club Booster Clulb Wynette Hughes Commercial Home Economics Club Mary James General Alma Johnson General Le Cercle Francais Edna Lee Commercial Glee Club Lourall Morrison General Q Fasces Club Matilda Pozarzycki General Alchemist Soc., Sec. Edna Rifkin Commercial Commerce Club Marian Rogolsky General Selma Superior Commercial Commerce Club Philip Abrams Academic Orchestra Kenneth Baker General Abe Brandman Industrial Arts Peiuper Club Bennie Chasin General Peiuper Club, Sec. Gtllfi Alvin Churski Fine Arts ' Art Klan Leonard Churski Industrial Arts Football Zeny Cieslikowski Industrial Arts Joseph Cone Academic Stanley Cyranowski Commercial Kenneth Dart General Electrical Club Afton Davis K Industrial Arts Joseph Felstein General Peiuper Club, Pres. Morris Fishman General Cheer Leader Howard Gilbert General Eddie Harris General Booster Club Fred Harris General Booster Club David Hollander General Peiuper Club Stanley J endzewski General Q and D Soc. Senior Hi-Y Lawrence Krulikowski Industrial Arts Q and D Soc. John Kryzanowski Industrial Arts Mech. Eng. Club Carl Marscheider Special Q and D Soc. Steven Murzynski General Le Cercle Francais Richard Pearce Industrial Arts Sam Rubin Academic Arthur Sisco General Paul Sprauer Commercial Glenn Taylor General Booster Club Russel Taylor General Basketball Elmer Ward General Baseball Morris Weber General Electrical Club Abe Wexler General Peiuper Club Joe Wexler General Pica Club Martin Zaenger Industrial Arts Pica Club Louis Ziebar General Basketball, Capt. Milton Zimmerman General . Basketball
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Page 31 text:
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RTT '+ . - W, - -J: ' ----- E - , . , , -- ----e 1 N r-Q if, i Lula Triestram Commercial Booster Club Art Klan Commerce Club Eileen Ward Commercial Athletic League, Rep. Periclean Lit. Soc. La Junta Castellana Henrietta Wasielewski Commercial Henriette Wielinski General Jr. Class, Treas. Friendship Club Rita Wiesehahn Commercial Commerce Club Booster Club Milderd Williams General Le Cercle Francais International Club Pauline Zarembski Academic Le Cercle Francais Fasces Club International Club Marvin Yewey Commercial Glee Club, Publicity Mgr. Booster Club Sylvia Yourist General Le Cercle Francais International Club Athletic League fr Dorothy Skiver Commercial Visual Education Soc. A Paul Boardman General Jr. and Sr. Class Pres. Glee Club, Pres. Q and D Soc. LaVon Weiser Commercial Athletic League Library Assoc. Commerce Club ' Ted Holasr General Basketball Lilyan Williams I General Alchemist Soc., Rep. La Junta Castellana Saga Staif Walter Kuszek - Industrial Arts Booster Club Mech. Eng. Club, Trea Arlene Wolcott Commercial Sarah Yourist General Le Cercle Francais Athletic League International Club Helen Dreyfus Commercial
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Page 33 text:
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X W - -fs: P aig - nl ragga Class History 9556 NCE AGAIN a class is to receive its reward-the diploma-for four years of struggle and achievement. Let us pause for a moment and look back upon its record. It seems only yesterday that the first freshman class entered the new Woodward High School at Streicher and Otto Streets. They were eager youngsters ready to estab- lish firm and worthy precedents under the guidance of Miss Wetterman and Mr. Crouse. As freshmen they were bewil- dered by the idea of schedules, by the constant changing of classes, and by their superiors, the upperclassmen. But time alters all, and they soon became accustomed to their new environment. Their first year, spent in making new adjustments and forming new friendships, passed altogeth- er too rapidly. When June came, they left for the vacation with happy thoughts of the past and high hopes for the future. As sophomores, these students returned to find a new leader had come to Woodward. Inspired by the wise and kindly guidance of Mr. Charles C. LaRue, all student groups were ready to assume responsibility. The sophomores, given the opportunity to organize and to elect class officers, were filled with new aspirations. Together with their leaders and willing advisers, Miss Cronk and Mr. Meek, they presented a series of activities which in their minds are not to be forgotten. Among these were the Soph Frolic, a conference hour movie, a Valentine Matinee dance, a con- ference hour play, i'Hot Air, and, to prove their progress, the Soph Strut, the climax of their social activities. This sophomore group did not confine its efforts to social activi- ties alone, it was establishing a scholastic record as well. Filled with ambitions to continue, these intrepid ex- plorers in the fields of education re-entered as Juniors. They walked decorously thru the halls, careful not to be misjudged by their followers. The junior calendar included such events as a conference hour movie, the J-Hop, and the class play, Anne Make-Believe. The delights of the third year were plentiful, but the pathway of achievement lay before them. Sedate, serene, supreme, they came back as seniors in the fall of 1931. Their sense of superiority was quietly laid aside when they were confronted by questionnaires, college professors, and business leaders eager to assist them in their various pursuits. With a glance at the senior events, they soon resumed their sophisticated manner. Theirs was a busy year with the Farmers' Party, a conference hour movie, Woodward Fun-Nite at the Ohio Theater, the Senior play, Oh Kay, the Senior Prom, the Banquet, the Picnic, Baccalaureate, and finally Commencement--the reward for four years of struggle in the home of Woodward. These first four-year seniors of Woodward, as they re- ceive their diplomas, the reward for unceasing efforts to attain success, pause for a moment to look back-then for- ward to the great Unknown, ready again to struggle and achieve. +5 312 g I we al-nw-fm Q9 eww- gauges 5 Hllnuise Qwuzniak, '34 'jUak'nrem:e Qslleeman, '35 Ella-mme Sierzkniuski, '31 :PE Q-
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