Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 1 Jun 1933, p. 23

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IN APPRECIATION 1 recali pausing once in the foot- his. of the Rocies to look hack across the beautiful, fresh valley be- Iow. 1 had flot realized the spien7- drof the landscape while passing tbrough, but it aroused my apprecia- tion as I turned to view the mist- covered peaks and ranges dimly ont- Iined against the horizon. beyond. in a like manner. I ow look back upon these high school days, and withi a refreshing thrill -seeL the panorama of four years of comradeship, of Co- operation, of trail and effort, of sut- cess ..and disappointments. So, often wedo ixot appreciate a thing untilwe, are about. to lose it, and so in re- view L begin to realize how unique, how unusutal, and h oW distinct ive New Trier bas been. Unique ir. iS plan and, purpose of school and 'stn-, dent :life.; unusual .in its physi.cal, equiîpment and facili ties; distinctive in its faculty and> the ir frieridlh; spirit, willing cooperation and sanu; coun cil. It has been a. great experience, packed with. thris, wbolesome fuai and fine friendships. As >1 turn toward college and the, other years ahead, there seenis to he, an urge and eagerness to go on, bc- cause New Trier High school dlav>. %vill always be a dreami of happiness. and mny experiences there make to- morrow a vision of hope.-Bob Sel- ler. Geologists ,Spend Much 'rime Discussing Fossils The New Trier Geology club this year bas spent rnost of its time discuss- ing fossils. Farly in.September, 1932, thé varions theories .concerning the gen- esis* of life on the earth weredicsd and 'put aside. Last month the fanxous dinosaurs were paraded before the club niembers, and at their last meeting, ac memnber who is bighly interested.in the1 .subject, will talk on the Indians of thef Chicago region.1 Wbenever it was possible ta secure1 sente touw Yorki 1>Kte~r patrons, i was later cbanged ta "God Bless Our Home" and finally to "The Youngest."~ Miss Elizabeth Stahwood and Gordon Van Kirk are coaching the production. Because of the large number of per- sons trying out,- only seniors were chos- en-and a do uble cast, at that. Only three of the eigbteen in the cast have been 'sen before on the New, Trier stage, but. the others, by dint' of excel- lent coachingand bard work, reeé pected ta do just as finished work as.the veterans. Tbe plotof the play is buit around the trials and misfortunes of one Richard Winslow, who, as'the youngest, of bis family_ receives very unfair treatment. Nancy Blake, the bouse guest "of Richard's sister, belps bii ta gain the, prestige -and. respect due bini.*0f course,:in the end he f ails in love with ber and she with bini, but that ýoften bappens. In. the Friday. nigbt cast, Miss Vir- ginia Smith and Sami Harkness have the leading roles. The other senors in the Friday nigbt cast are Hubert Pelott, Walter Merrill, Eleanor Chichester, Ruth Wilkin, Flor ence Carey, Mahlon Sharp and Alison Burge. In 1 the Saturday night cast, Miss [Nancy -Fisherý and Bill Sullivan bave the leading, roles. Others in the cast are Bob Walpoe. Bill Nordburg, Mary Jane EId er, jean Haskins, Barbara Anné Munn, Dick Steen and Catherine Hepburn. Deerfield Smothers Second-'St ring Team New Trier's second team was beat- en by Deerfield's second-string base- bail team, 13 to 1, on Wednesday, May 24. It was the second encounter for these îwo tearns, Deerfield having won the first time, 14 to 5; Lowy, the; startingpitcher for ýNew Trier, was flot sufficiently warm.ed, up at the* outset of the game, for Deer- field got four runs in its haif of the first inning, including a home run for Lange, - After: that. however, Lowy nothings and yet this h memnories is perhaps the ner of exprçssing 11hporxtàt d by mere !-podge of truc inan- THOUGHTS ON LEA VING NEW. TRIER: Freshman assemblies, innovation. of class yehls, the kindly, yet stern-voice of Mr., Clerk .. . awesonieness of huge gymnasium . . . surprise on finding teachers. to be really human and not the robots we believed theni ta be . . . rattlîng of windows in lecture room, clicking of 1eys in typing room ear splitting sound of riveting outside certain *first-floor windows. . . . getting used to the, unsavory odors w'hilepass- ing the chemistry. *lab... garrulous ga iety, of Tri- Sbip dance, sphinx-hike silence of iclassroom during an, exani singing "'New Trier Must Win This Fight" during the tax warrant drive, shutting off lights at .3 :30 o'clock ...decorating for class parties, the beautiful blonde at the junior prom, the big gorilla she was with .. closý- ing the Tri.ýShip ieoomn, opening thec Tri-Ship. roomn, closing the room, open- ing it, closing ... the day the thermnomea- ter touched ifteen below zero, the day in sumnmer school when ail the third- floor classes were forced to move ta the basement by the beat. . . Count von Luckner, Richard Byrd, William Beebe, Pratt and Sherman, Ellery Walter, et a.... Senior hop, few days unitil graduation ..,. and then... -Rux. Dr. Josephine de Baer Talks to Sptinish Club The Spanish club at its regular meeting on May 25, heard Dr. Jose-, phine de Baer give. an excellent- lec- ture on "Springtime in Spain." She displayed various articles of clotbin g which the women wear in Spain on religiaus holidays. Same pictures il- lustrating the gardens and art work of Spain werc also shown. The park. and Lauren Greenblatt played at the initial sack. For New Trier the pitchers wer1r Foslund and, Wilson. Foslund ivas relievedby Wilsonin the last,-hal of thé fifth inning and was changed to left field. Èoslund allowcd ten bits. walkt.d thrce men and struck out two. ,Wilson allowed thrce hits, no.runs. walked one batter and struck out one' in'the'anc and one third1 innings he pitched. New Trier had Aive bhits, a single by Radas followed by a triple by G ielen in 'the sixth inni.ng, whichi accounted for anc of NéeTrier's runs, and.sit.gles by Greénblatt. Watt and Bail. Chappas, Proviso hurler,- let in two runs, yielded five bits, struck out fine nmen and walked one. Proviso Cof- lected its_ eight runs by nicans of thirteen bits and a balk by Foslund in the fifth inning. Neither of the two New Trier.errors figured iii. the scoring. Barsema, Proviso catcher bit a triple in thec first inning' and Priest and',Hurrel each'got doubles. jWEW TRIER ab r h Po. a e Rados,ss.....3 1.1 1 5 Gielen.2b ........30 1 0 0 Greenblatt, lb ....3 01i 8 1 0 Hanson, 3b ........ 300Ô 2 2 1 Watt rf............. 3o0i1,o0o0o B3ucher, e............. 2 10 3 1.0 Ball,cf........01l 2 0 6 Kahler, If......2 O O 0 0 1 Foslund, p-lt....... 2 O 0 0 2 0 Wilson, p.......... 0 00 00 0 24 25 18 11 2 ]PRO VISO ab r hbPosa e Peterson, 3b ....... 4 1 2 1 i 0 Luhrsen, If .......... 3 2 2 1 0 0 Hurre, ss .......... 4 01 13 0 Chappas, p...... i2 0 0 0 Johnson, cf......... 400 3 0 0 Barserna, c........3 2 2 10 1i'0 Men, I b ---.........1 2 40 0 Tiefën'thal, 2là....... 1 1 0 1 1 . Priest, rf ............ 3 O2 0O Students Travel Duiring New rirler Thorsen, 2b .........2 Frazer, lb .. . . . . . . . .2 Homann, 2b .......3 Bucher, c .. .......3 Kahler, If.. ................. 2 Bail, cf .................... 3 Kasper. If.. ...............1 R.4 1 1 0 0 0O1 0 0 0 0.- O0 minerlc, 01 . .. .. ... . .. . . . u u ' E. Lowy, p...... ...1 0 00 1 Van der Vries, p ....... 0 0 00 0 Aschbacher, p ...... 1 0 0 0 0 Faikenburg ...... 1 O 0 0 0 Deerfield ........1.... 410 33 2-13 oNewTrier .... ... 100 000 0-1 Eleanor Li Todd, have' inembers sul cent booksc declares Ral New Trier yclub.. NAVAL-CAWALAtY, lov 14-19 WOOtDCRAFPT Nors P-14

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