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1951 


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Chicago  Teachers'  College  ...  82  years  rich  in 
tradition,  high  in  accomplishment,  higher  in  aim  .  .  . 
cherishing  and  fostering  ideals  and  ideas  .  .  .  famous 
with  the  names  of  Francis  Parker  and  Ella  Flagg  Young 
.  .  .  behind  it  all  the  motto— RESPONSIBILITY-  -at  once 
a  challenge  and  a  charge,  an  impetus  and  a  goal ...  all 
of  this,  your  heritage  .  .  .  yours  to  invest  in,  yours  to 
build  upon,  adding  to  the  lofty  solemnity  of  tradition 
the  lively  intimacy  of  memories  that  will  compose  your 
own  lasting  picture  of  college  days  ...  a  montage  .  .  . 
with  echoed  sounds  of  frantic  and  frequently  unmusical 
scales,  of  insistent  no-trumps  and  reluctant  passes,  of 
a  hundred  Parker  kids  at  recess  .  .  .  with  phantom 
smells  of  numberless  steaming  menus,  of  the  whole- 
some sticky  sweetness  of  flour  paste,  of  ten  minutes  of 
hot  basketball  .  .  .  with  mind's-eye  sights  of  the  worn, 
patient  figure  of  Tillie,  of  the  early  spring  in  the  green- 
house, of  the  rows  of  lockers,  jaunty  with  notes  that  are 
common  secrets  ...  all  of  this,  your  inventory  of  mem- 
ories .  .  .  Emblem  1951  .  .  . 


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Because  he  rendered  significant  service  to  our  great  profession,  because 
he  gave  substance  to  ideals  through  quiet  courage  and  unswerving  conviction, 
because  he  persisted  in  his  service  to  mankind  even  after  his  death,  we  dedi- 
cate this  book  to  the  fond  memory  of  Thomas  M.  Thompson — and  with  deepest 
humility  .  .  . 

George  W.  Connelly 


[  mm 


ASSISTANT  SUPERINTENDENT  OF  SCHOOLS 


GREETINGS  —  TO  CHICAGO 

TEACHERS  COLLEGE  STUDENTS 

In  Colonial  America,  the  elementary 
school  teacher  was  usually  a  "dame" 
without  training,  poorly  paid  "in  kind," 
and  held  in  low  esteem. 

Throughout  the  ensuing  years,  as  the 
need  and  value  of  an  education  became 
better  realized,  the  position  of  teacher 
gradually  improved.  But  as  recently  as 
my  own  early  experiences  in  rural  com- 
munities, teaching  was  not  too  attractive. 
Teachers  were  expected  to  board  at  a  cer- 
tain place,  to  sing  in  the  choir,  to  deposit 
their  anemic  checks  in  a  particular  bank, 
and  NOT  to  smoke,  play  cards,  leave 
town  over  the  week-end  oftener  than  once 
a  month,  or  get  married  (if  a  woman).  The 
teaching  door  was  likely  to  be  closed  to 
those  of  a  minority  faith  or  nationality. 

But  elementary  school  teaching  in 
Chicago  in  the  1950's  is  another  story! 

The  position  of  Chicago  public  el- 
ementary teacher  commands  respect.  For 
one  thing,  only  a  college  graduate  may 
enter  it.  And  many  young  men,  as  well 
as  young  women,  are  now  entering  it, 
particularly  since  the  war. 

It  is  satisfactory  to  work  in  a  profes- 
sion which  deals  with  young  folks  whose 
lives  and  personalities  are  being  develop- 
ed and  enriched.  Most  of  them  will  re- 
member their  teachers  with  affection,  and 
be  grateful  throughout  their  lives. 

Better  than  in  most  suburbs  or  smaller 
school  districts,  Chicago  offers  the  choice 


of  a  variety  of  interesting  work  experi- 
ences, e.g.:  adjustment  service,  teacher- 
librarian,  home  mechanics,  physical  ed- 
ucation, crippled,  deaf,  sight-saving,  un- 
graded, speech  defective,  kindergarten,  as 
well  as  regular  1-8  grade  teaching. 

Opportunities  for  advancement  in- 
cludes promotions  to  assistant  principal 
(salary  of  $5,067  per  year  of  ten  months), 
principal  ($6,860),  supervisor  or  director 
of  a  special  bureau  ($6,390  to  $7,810),  dis- 
trict superintendent  ($9,410),  assistant  sup- 
erintendent ($15,492),  and  general  superin- 
tendent ($25,000). 

Socially-minded  Boards  of  Education 
provide  cost-of-living  salary  schedules  be- 
ginning at  $2,700  for  ten  months  and  pro- 
ceeding in  automatic  annual  increases  to 
$4,540  in  ten  years,  good  conditions  of  em- 
ployment, including  leaves  (sick,  military, 
travel,  study,  maternity),  job  security 
through  permanent  tenure  after  three  years 
of  probation,  pension  and  annuity  upon 
retirement,  a  live-hour  working  day,  and 
no  prying  into  the  personal,  political,  re- 
ligious or  social  life  of  the  teacher. 

Finally,  no  profession  in  Chicago 
offers  more  job  opportunities  in  the  next 
ten  or  fifteen  years  than  elementary  school 
teaching.  At  present,  there  are  several 
hundred  unfilled  assignments,  and  1300 
to  1500  additional  elementary  teachers 
will  be  required  simply  to  serve  the  great- 
ly-increased number  of  pupils  known  to 
be  coming  within  the  next  four  years 
(24,000  more  elementary  school  children 
by  February   1955). 

For  many  years,  there  will  be  a 
seller's  market  for  elementary  school 
teaching  talent. 

May  I  conclude  with  CONGRATULA- 
TIONS to  you  who  have  had  the  wisdom 
and  foresight  to  enroll  in  Chicago  Teach- 
ers College  to  train  for  such  a  satisfying 
life's  work. 

DON  C.  ROGERS 

Assistant  Superintendent  in 

charge  of  Elementary  Education 


1  n 
J  U 

- 

Dean  Cook 9 

Administration 10 

Personnel    12 

Office   Staff 13 

Library 14 

Chicago  Schools  Journal 15 

February  Graduates 18 

Seniors    19 

Juniors   31 

Sophomores  'A' 39 

Sophomores   'B' 49 

Freshmen  'A' 53 

Freshmen    'B' 68 

North  Side  Branch 70 

Departments  and  Activities 80 

Athletics    118 

Homecoming    126 

Tempo   128 

Emblem  130 

School  Songs 132 

Senior  Directory 134 

Advertisements   137 


m 


H 


Dean  Cook:    Take  a  letter.  Miss  Durkin 


Big  plans  and  blueprints — Mary  O'Leary,  Geraldine  Bow- 
man, Peggy  Pfordresher,  Dean  Cook,  Shirley  Satek,  Earl 
Blanchard,   Virginia   Walsh 


^^«^.^^T:.^ 


r-.^-.r .     «^ 


ADMINISIIIAIIDN 


WILLIAM   KAISER, 

Assistant  to  the  Dean 


JAMES   I.   SWEARINGEN, 

Director  of  Student  Instruction 


EMMA  FLEER  MULLER, 

Registrar  and  Director  of  Personnel 


LUCILLE  A.   SAEGER, 

Director  of  Student  Activities 


OSCAR  WALCHIRK, 

Assistant  Registrar 


Andy  Penn,  Mr.  Kaiser  and  a  joke 

Lenore  Larkin,  Secretary,  and  Mr.  -Swearinqen 


Clara    Berghoefer,    counsellor;     Mr.    Walchirk 
and   Mrs.    Muller. 


D 


ERSONNt 


0M 


Esther   Hendricks, 
Lunchroom  Manager 

Dr.  Ralph  Goode, 
School  Physician  and  Teacher  of  Science 

Iva  Hume, 
Nurse 

Mary  Lowery, 

Matron 

Thomas  E,  Scanlon, 

Engineer  Custodian 


12 


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fAI 

GERALDINE  BERRY  MARY  DURKIN  GERTRUDE   KUEHN     LENORE  LARKIN 


MABEL  LULU  CATHERINE  McCAHEY      ELLEN   McGREAL      KATHERINE   MULCAHY 


ELIZABETH   MURPHY  JANE  POOLE         LORETTA  WALLACE      MERCEDES  WALSH 


The  Staff  -seated:  Fritz  Veit,  Head  Librarian;  Gaylord  Sledge; 
Marcjaret  B.  Murray;  Lucille  Boyd;  Lorene  J.  Wright;  Ora  E. 
Anders;  Hariette  O'Berry;  Margaret  Dalton;  standing:  Anne 
Roberts;  Ellen  B.  Weiss;  Ida  Luse;  Carol  O.  Paulson.  Not  pictured 
— Jennie     TenGale,     E.    Briggs    Caldwell. 


Searching'  in  the  Stacks 


GftAR 


Checking   a  choice — Grace   Dewar,   Colleen   McAnully 


The  CHICAGO  SCHOOLS  JOURNAL,  an  educational  magazine  for  Chi- 
cago public  school  teachers,  is  edited  by  mennbers  of  the  Chicago  Teachers 
College.  The  editorial  staff  consists  of  Dean  Raymond  M.  Cook,  Editor;  Louise 
M.  Jacobs,  Managing  Editor;  Coleman  Hewitt,  Art;  Joseph  J.  Urbancek,  New 
Teaching  Aids;  George  J.  Steiner,  News;  George  W.  Connelly,  Periodicals; 
Ellen  M.  Olson,  Books;  and  Mabel  Thorn  Lulu,  Secretary. 

The  Journal,  published  bimonthly  with  the  exception  of  July  and  August— 
18,000  copies  of  each  issue— is  distributed  to  all  Chicago  public  school  teach- 
ers and  is  available  to  all  Chicago  Teachers  College  students.  It  has  proved 
to  be  very  helpful  to  the  students  in  their  class  work.  The  Journal  is  also  sent 
to  educational  libraries  both  here  and  abroad.  The  mailing  list  includes  edu- 
cators in  Canada,  Republica  Argentina,  Germany,  Nova  Scotia,  Philippine 
Islands,  Puerto  Rico,  Russia,  South  Africa,  Sweden,  and  Uruguay,  as  well  as 
fifty-six  U.  S.  Information  Centers  in  Austria  and  in  the  American  and  British 
zones  of  Germany. 


OcTj'lL^ATER^^r. 


Janice  Kingslow  receiving  diploma  from  Dean 
Cook;  Adelle  Azoff,  volunteer  server;  Lillian 
Young,  Frances  Wilson,  Marianne  Walther, 
William  Orris,  Robert  Michaelsen,  Harry  McHale. 


ftMUAfl 
GftADUAIEE 


Audrey  Cicero,  Joan  Geisch,  Heliobas  Hart,  Jan- 
ice Kingslow,  Harry  McHale,  Robert  Michalsen, 
William  Orris,  Marianne  Walther,  Frances  Wilson, 
Lillian  Young  .  .  .  graduates  of  the  tiny  midyear 
class,  who  received  their  B.E.  degrees  without  tradi- 
tional cap  and  gown  .  .  .  but  with  a  commence- 
ment address  by  Mr.  Connelly  .  .  .  with  music, 
vocal  and  instrumental  —  Barbara  Kelley,  accom- 
panying William  Orris  singing  Panis  Angelicus,  and 
Harry  McHale  singing  Danny  Boy  .  .  .  Robert 
Michalsen,  playing  Tschaikovsky  on  the>  violin  .  .  . 
and  the  faculty  string  ensemble,  with  Andante  Can- 
tabile  .  .  .  and  after  the  ceremony,  the  reception, 
complete  with  sparkling  table,  for  attending  family 
and  friends  .  .  . 


mm  mum 


Robert  Murphy, 

President 
Virginia    McKinney, 

Vice-President 
Elva  BergEtrom, 

Secretary 
Barbara     Hackett, 

Treasurer 
Not   pictured:     William   Kelly   and   Pat   Duggan, 

Student    Council    Representatives 


Four  years  .  .  .  four  years  .  .  .  memories  crowded 
into  the  space  of  the  week  when  we  start  to  count  days 
.  .  .  5..4..3..2..1  .  .  .  and  then  the  day — graduation 
day  .  .  .  automatic  assignments,  last  minute  lesson  plans 
.  .  .  counsellor's  visiting  day  .  .  .  and  the  children  — 
seemingly  thousands  of  them  .  .  .  then,  for  some  of  us, 
the  sound  of  bugles  on  a  wintry  morning  .  .  .  the  whine 
of  bullets  .  .  .  war — a  stark  reality  .  .  .  democracy, 
taught  with  rifles:  democracy,  taught  with  chalk  .  .  . 
comparison,  resolving  into  the  big  question  on  battlefront 
or  homefront:  we  must  teach  democracy — how  shall  we 
teach  it?  ...  and  then,  the  thoughts  of  accumulated 
knowledge  .  .  .  four  years  at  C.T.C.  ...  a  tradition,  a 
building,  something  to  elaborate  upon  ...  all  of  this, 
flashing  through  our  minds  as  we  hear  our  names — Jog 
Senior,  Jane  Senior,  and  we  mount  the  stand.  .  .  . 


19 


B9IL9 


Lorraine  Antimonik  Sylvia  Arnold  Joyce  Aurand  Emmerine  Avant 

Betty  Lou  Axelrod  Helene  Baginski.  Gisela  Balzweit  Dolores  Bartolozzi 

Anne  King  Bentley  Molly  Bergen  Elvo  Bergstrom  Constance  Bertha 

Francine  Birk  Robert  Birmingham  Marvin  Broaderson  Laura  Brooks 


IliS 


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Jack  Browne  Girtlee  Booze  Eleanor  Bprowski  Lorraine  Bosco 

Valene  Brandt  Jean  Brannon  Lois  Brodd  Dolores  Burch 

Laurence  Calloway  Winifred  Carmody  Margaret  Covcmaugh  Sally  Qaffy 

Virginia  Collins  Mary  Jane  Coursey  Stanley  Crockett  June  Crusor 


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Tom  Curtin 
Dolores  Dickman 
Mary  Dunne 
Lois  Ellis 


Joan  Dougherty 
Leo  Dillon 
Dolores  Durkin 
Yvonne  English 


Jean  DeBofsky 
Marian  Drebing 
Betty  Easoz 
Jeanette  Faber 


Phyllis  De  Simon 
Patricia  Duggan 
Audrey  Eggers 
Joan  Feichtinger 


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Irank  Fischer  Margaret  Fisherkeller  Vivienne  Fokkens  Marilyn  Fox 

luriel  Frelk  Robert  Frank  Edwin  Galewski  Betty  Gansinger 

janette  Gamer  Lorraine  Giambrone  Rita  Gibbons  Rosemary  Gleason 

hirley  Gustafson  Shirley  Hammer  Barbara  Hackett  Jessie  Heath 


SENIOE 


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Helen  Heitman  Charlotte  Hellerman  Estelle  Holzer  Beverly  Horecky 

Evelyn  Hudley  Gloria  Janousek  Avis  Jaris  Minna  Rae  Katz 

Rosemary  Kearney  Mary  Kearney  Audrey  Keefer  Bill  Kelly 

Jack  Kirby  Regina  Koehl  Belty  Koenig  Josephine  Komiak 


SOIDRS 


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Ted  Lenart  Virginia  Levy- 
Joan  Lowry  Tommie  Lucas 
Elizabeth  Manning  ^arion  Manning 
Ann  Memmesheimer  Colleen  McAnulty 


Betty  Lightfoot 
Jesse  Lyles 
Marie  Marciante 
Madelaine  McAnulty 


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Thomas  McGeoghegan  Virginia  McKinney  William  McMullen  Marlene  Michaelis 

Janice  Michaels  Earl  Miller  Jerome  Miller  Dolores  Minerva 

Patricia  Mitchell  Dorothy  Mock  James  Moore  Robert  Mueller 

Florence  Moro  Frances  Morrison  Helen  Munari  Robert  Murphy 


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David  Murray 
Doyle  Olander 
Marge  Parker 
Theresa  Plecki 


Eileen  Newell  Dolores  Nichol  Ella  Mae  Ohman 

Marianne  O'Meara  Carol  Palka  Cora  Parchia 

Rhoda  Ann  Pearson  Andrew  Penn  Marion  Pertel 

Maureen  Quaid  Clare  Ouinlan  Alice  Rakow 


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Mary  Alyce  Ransford  Eileen  Rasofsky 

Jean  Reuther  Joan  Riley 

Kathleen  Ruane  Leonard  Rubin 

Manuel  Sanchez  Helen  Sandors 


Margaret  Reichert  Joan  Reuter 

Helen  Romanelli  Kay  Rontos 

Marie  Ryan  Robert  Ryan 

Rogette  Schlammes  Dolores  Schmit 


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Ruth  Schneider  Gail  Schurmon 

Wilma  Smith  Sally  Stifter 

31aTice  Townsend  Alexander  Troas 

Eleanor  Urban  Salvatore  Vallina 


Mary  Siciliano  Virginia  Smith 

Barbara  Strickland  Delphine  Szulakiewicz 

Mary  Troy  Carol  Turner 

Dolores  Wall  Robert  Walsh 


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Celeste  Welsch 
Joanne  Walther  Francis  Ward  Irene  Warner  Margaret  Mary  Wood 

Rita  Williams  Jane  Woelkers  Grace  WoUenberg  Martha  Zaharchuk 

William  Woods  Rosemarie  Wotiska         Anne  Youstra  Gene  Gibbons 


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Marilyn    Thorn, 

President 
Marifran    McNally, 

Secretary 
Fran   Finn, 

Treasurer 
Mary    O'Leary, 

Student    Council    Representative 


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With  three  years  behind  and  one  ahead  ...  the 
junior  class,  first  class  to  compete  with  graduates  of 
other  colleges  for  a  Chicago  Certificate  .  .  .  and 
this  semester,  the  first  official  taste  of  teaching  — 
some  at  pre-practice,  more  at  settlement  houses 
.  .  .  beginning  to  see  the  unseen  rewards  .  .  . 
but  still,  a  bit  more  collegiate  than  career-minded 
.  .  .  with  more  time  for  activities  and  bridge 
games  .  .  .  and  swelling  the  ranks,  the  transfer 
students  ...  all  juniors,  sponsoring  a  fall  freshman 
picnic  .  .  .  coming  now  and  then  to  class  meetings 
.  .  .  and  looking  ahead,  with  mixed  feelings,  to  the 
time  when  they'll  be  looking  back  .  .  . 


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Bertram  Abelovitz 
Joanne  Anderson 
Gloria  Bertoio 
Marian  Borgstrom 


Leslie  Abernathy 
Marvin  Azriel 
Madeline  Betker 
Geraldine  Bowman 


Marge  Adams 

Roberta  Aiken 

Anita  Balzweit 

Jackie  Benson 

Chester  Blair 

Adeline  Bland 

Henry  Bronars 

Eileen  Brown 

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Joan  Alferf 
Norma  Bernsoh 
Don  Bober 
Orpen  Bryan 


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mice  Budish  Dorothy  Buehler  William  Bunch  Ruth  Burgeman  Margaret  Byrnes 

son  Catalan  Marjorie  Clowse  Gladys  Coleman  Marilyn  Conroy  Norma  Cooper 

osemary  Crane  John  Cronin 


3ssie  Cutt 

Mary  Dalianis 

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Richard  Davis 
Elaine  Feldman 
Fran  Finn 
Rarbara  Freeman 


Casimir  Durava 
Elvira'  Fiascone 
Mark  Frank 
Dorothy  Freeman 


Barbara  Ellis 


Lola  Farley 


Carol  Friedman  Patricia  Gaughan  Ann  Gallagher 


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Raymond  Gerlik  Rita  Giancola  Marcia  Grasse  Helen  Groetsema 

Joan  Hefferman  Therese  Horan  Clare  Hyland  Joan  Kellogg 

Annetta  King  William  Kipnis  Betty  Kloman  Irene  Knock 

Ruth  Lawler  Joanne  Lee  Shirley  Lee  Genevieve  Leonard 


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Charles  Lewis  Jeanine  Lux 

Alfred  Mate  Celeste  McDonough 

Margaret  McGregor  Patricia  McHugh  Paula  McNicholas  Pauline  Merbitz 

Lynn  Morgan  William  Mulligan  Mary  T.  O'Malley  Vincent  O'Neil 


Jackie  Meyers 
Angela  Otis 


ilORS 


iArnold  Perlin  Jack  Perlin 

JMargaret  Ratajczak        Dan  Remahl 


Avis  Perry 
Grace  Roessler 


Joyce  Ovitz 
Ann  Peknik 
Lydia  Poinsett 
Mary  Rohan 


Grace  Parker 
Bess  Perkins 
Renee  Pope 
Vincent  Romano 


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Shirley  Satek  Florence  Shapiro  Mary  Shea  Thomas  Solon 

Eleanore  Teske  Joan  Duane  Thomas  Charlene  Thompson  Marilyn  Thorn 

Jean  Thompson  Robert  Van  Hoy  Fearl  Waicosky  Betty  Walker 

Martha  Weiler  Ruth  Wesley  Virginia  Witzman  Rosemary  Zahn 


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Patricia  Scotly, 

President 
Gerry   Wall, 

Secretary 
Nancy   Rose   Mooney, 

Student    Council    Representative 
Mary  Shannon, 

Student    Council    Representative 
Not   pictured:     Dolores   Kazek,    Vice-President;    Pat   Ryan, 

Student    Council    Representative 


A  huge  class,  the  largest  in  College  history, 
swelling  halls  and  walls  and  classrooms  .  .  . 
promising  big  things  for  future  enrollments  and  a  big 
relief  for  the  Elementary  teacher  shortage  .  .  . 
adding  measurably  to  C.T.C.  size  and  immeasur- 
ably to  C.T.C.  spirit  .  .  .  carrying  through  to  this 
second  big  year,  with  a  few  losses  to  Uncle  Sam  in 
man-ond-woman  power  .  .  .  remembering,  with  the 
rest  of  the  school,  the  basketball  games,  the  con- 
ferences before  exams,  the  first  tastes  of  methods 
.  .  .  and  the  strange  June  feeling — 'we're  half-way 
through'   .  .  . 


Joan  Abrahms  Daisy  Adkins  Nancy  Aim 

Jim  Bailey  Lovinia  Baker  Carol  Bell 

Vinita  Beuschlein  Earl  Blanchard  Bill  Borgstrom 

Mary  Burke  Mary  Anne  Byrne  Margaret  Byrnes 


Mildred  Alvino  Clarice  Badauki: 

Yvonne  Bertha  Gene  Bethka 

Rose  Broniarczyk  Marge  Burke 

Dan  Bystrowski  Karen  Carlson 


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Marge  Carlson 
Vlarea  Chavis 
^at  Comiskey 
v^ary  Cunnea 


MM 


Claire  Carmody  Camille  Carter  Jean  Cates  Mary  Ellen  Cawley 

Doris  Coleman  Verma  Coleman  Ruth  Colguhoun  Doris  Collins 

Velma  Cooper  Louise  Cortiletti  John  Costello  Consuelo  Crump 

Millicent  Dahlstrom  Eleanor  Demovic  Frank  De  Paul  Conrad  De  Paul 


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//AW 


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Gertrude  Dickson  Dolores  Doody  Audrey  Dudley  Mary  Dyra 

Rita  Ewert  Lee  Fieffer  Patricia  Fiscella  Donna  Fox 

Phyllis  Furman  Patricia  Gary  Aretha  Gilliom  Joe  Gleason 

William  Granger  Irene  Green  Anne  Higgins  Dolores  Higgins 


Maureen  Enright 
Genevieve  Friewe; 
Ruth  Gosswein 
Jack  Hillebrand 


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James  Hilton  Roberta  Hodnett  Loraine  Horslev  James  Houtsma 

Myrtle  Ivey  Gloria  Jackson  Jeanne  Jockheim  Joanne  Jockheim 

Erlinga  Jorgensen  Alice  Judica  Irene  Jurkovic  Helen  Kalchbrenner 

Marion  Keske  Delores  Kazek  Phyllis  Kidd  Pauline  Kirby 


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Elizabeth  Kleckner  Mitchell  Krauszowski      Marion  Krik 

Irene  Kypros  Kathleen  Levin  Rose  Leo 

Shulamith  Lome  Jeanette  Lundy 

Georqe  Macklin  Mary  Madden 


Jerry  Kruchten 
Joan  Lillis 


Louise  Kuehn 
Isabel  Lombardc 


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Helen  Majerzyk  Jean  Mann  Dorothy  Marek  Pat  Martin 

Anne  Maturi  Marilyn  McDonald  Teresa  McNichols  Ann  Merwick 

Marilyn  Miller  Elaine  Mojzis  Marilyn  Monroe  Nancy  Mooney 

Rosemary  Maroney  Marian  Morris  Barbara  Mueller  Julie  Mulvaney 


Lucille  Matczak 
Donna  Meyering 
Richard  Moore 
Pauline  Nodovic 


//AW 


DU 


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Charlene  Naser 
Loretta  O'Neill 
Tom  Plain 
Marvin  Raskin 


Annie  Lee  Neil 
Jean  Oswald 
James  Porter 
Beverly  Reneham 


Aileen  O'Connell 
Lula  Parker 
Lorraine  Posey 
Marge  Riordan 


Diane  Oehlberg 
Mary  Paulson 
Barbara  Price 
Bette  Rivet 


Marge  O'Grady 
Warren  Pietsch 
Florence  Roguso 
Deloyce  Roan 


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nnnie  Mae  Robinson  Estelle  Rose  Lois  Rusco 

)1  Salario  J;seph  Samples  Joan  Sering 

Shea  Laura  Siewierski  Joyce  Smith 


Patricia  Ryan  Patricia  Scotty 

Helen  Shannon  Mary  Shannon 

Helen  Stringham  Marian  Szulakiewicz 


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Vivian  Tamplin  Jennelle  Templeton  Helen  Theiss  Jim  Tracy  Ruth  Turner 

Janice  Valentine  Elsie  Vano  Robert  VanVlierberger  LaVerne  Viering  Irene  Wagner 

Geraldine  Wall  Morlene'Wehrle  Barny  Weinstein  Marge  Whelan  Helen  Williams 

Jean  Williams  Lois  Williams  Margaret  Willis  Mary  Woods  Loris  Zubb 


//AW 


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John    Fewkes, 

President 
Robert   Korensky, 

Vice-President 
Geraldine    BrodsJcy, 

Secretary 
Barbara   Buckley, 

Student    Council   Representative 
Not  pictured:  Diane  diVita,  Treasurer;   and  Err 

Student   Council   Representative 


The  little  class  of  P.E.'s  and  Home  Mech's,  de- 
pendably independent  about  their  distinctive  status 
.  .  .  representing  the  first  official  sanction  of  a  whole 
class  with  mid-year  matriculation  .  .  .  returning  in 
September,  1950,  to  their  first  fall  term  in  C.T.C.  .  .  . 
and  greeting  the  spring  semester  with  the  gala 
'Goody-Goody  Party,'  complete  with  songs  and  spon- 
sored freshmen,  as  well  as  games  and  promised 
'goodies'  .  .  .  and  in  June,  a  backward  look  to 
things  like  the  first  sessions  in  an  elective  course  and 
the  last  and  hardest  final  exam  .  .  .  and  a  forward 
look  to  more  methods,  and  the  first  real  chance  to 
'teach'  .  .  . 


Marianne  Azumas 

Dorothea  Baxter 

Arlene  Bayk 

Joan  Bozeman 

Geraldine  Brodsky 

Barbara  Buckley 

Josephine  Cannatoco 

Barbara  Carlson 

Natalie  Coci 

Geraldine  De  Groc 

Carmella  De  Lucia 

Diane  Deutschman 

Dorothy  Drozd 

Diane  Ellis 

D 


// 


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in  Fewlces  Jean  Gade 

inifred  Gibson  Frances  Guzior 


Zoeann  Gadwood  Catherine  Galotta  Reginald  General 

Eva  Haworth  Joan  Hudson  Betty  Johnson 

Robert  Korensky  Shirley  Kubilius 

Maura  Lacey  Theresa  Melanowski 


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Michael  Jovavich 
Arlene  O'Donnell 
Helen  Rossa 


George  Michel 
Louise  Schultz 
Maurine  Shain 


Ellarita  Mills 
Shirley  Farrell 
Jean  Spears 


Dolores  Novak 
Robert  Orth 
Floyd  Wyrick 


Mary  M.  O'Connc 
Barbara  Reynolds 
Virginia  Zaleski 


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//AW 


Harry  Hague, 

President 
Eugene  Smith, 

Vice-President 
Margaret  Shannon, 

Treasurer 
Not  pictured:   Barbara  Stolks,   Secretary;    Dorothy  Smalf, 
Charles  Sheehan,  Student  Council  Representatives 


September  is  for  a  freshman,  green  and 
new  ...  a  little  awed  by  the  orderly  confusion 
of  registration  and  the  bewildering  freedom  of 
mid-day  liberty  ...  a  studied  casualness  for 
the  first  visit  to  a  campus  spot  .  .  .  abandoning 
newness  with  the  new  month,  and  with  the  first 
chartered  miles  to  the  Pottowatomi  picnic.  .  . 
throwing  heart  and  slogans  intd  a  big  election 
campaign,  and  block  members'  bodies  into  the 
exclusive  splash  of  the  frosh  swim  meet  .  .  . 
footloose  and  square-dancing  at  the  Sock  Hop, 
even  under  the  questionable  sword  of  final 
exams  .  .  .  then  roasting  an  April  wienie  and 
planning  a  May  dance  .  .  .  and  all  loo  soon 
...  a  sophomore  .  .  . 


//AW 


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Joyce  Adams  Irwin  Albertine 

Edward  Boumgart  Mary  Burke 

Rosita  Best  Connie  Bitel 

Rosemary  Brehm  Pat  Brdiges 


Melahrene  Amers  Shirley  Barrish  Angela  Batteas: 

Leonard  Becker  Muriel  Bell  Evelynne  Berg 

Connie  Boudos  Suzanne  Boyle  Stella  Brando 

Alpha  Brown  June  Browning  Mary  Lou  Buck! 


//AW 


onald  Budil 

Anthony  Burke 

Rita  Brogan 

Noymy  Bumstein 

Dolores  Butler 

ois  Jean  Butts 

Dorothy  Callahan 

Charles  Carroll 

James  Carroll 

Albert  Cartwright 

larla  Chandler 

Barbara  Chartrand 

Gerry  Charvat 

Mary  Lou  Chears 

Georgine  Clancy 

3ck  Coatar 

Nedro  Collins 

Florence  Cooper 

Ann  Cortilet 

Rose  Cortina 

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Zelma  Curtis 
Shirley  Daluga 
Clarice  Dcrwkins 
Mary  Doherty 


Joan  Dalton 
Barbara  Davia 
Dorothy  Dawson 
Jean  Dombra 


Daniel  Deacy 
Marcella  Donnell 


Joan  De  Lacey  Marilyn  Dickso; 

Lois  Ann  Du  Mais  Winifred  Dunce 


//AW 


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j1  Fomatar  Virginia  Fritsch 


Kathleen  Flynn 
June  Glickauf 


Maida  Edelstein  Shirley  Ellis 

Ruth  Edmundson  Mary  English 

Mary  Flynn  Ruth  Foley 

Nancy  Glusack  Maybelle  Gough 


n    //AW 


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Marion  Graham  Frances  Graves 

Savoldi  Hall  Dolores  Harder 

Anna  Marie  Harris  Joan  Hash 

Lucille  E.  Heaney  Leo  Hennessy 


Grace  Graves  Barbara  Green  Harry  Hague 


James  Hicks  Richard  Higgins  Barbara  Hills 


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John  Hoffman  Angeline  Hurd  Anne  Hyland 


Lois  Icnes  Loretta  Jones 


Nancy  Jones 


Kay  Hynes  Carol  Jacobson 

Marianne  Jankiewicz  Marlene  Jarrells 

Vernita  Jarrells  Marilyn  Johnson 

Loretta  Jozwiak  Rosemary  Kamba 


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Elaine  Katzman  Barbara  Kazimir  Betty  Kearney  Marlene  Kendall  Koye  Kerin 

Marlon  Kerrigan  Joan  Kingsland  Betty  Knoth  Carol  Koch  Emeldu  Kotarski 

Regina  Kraft  Sue  Krump 

Joan  Kurowski  Edward  Laban 


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?lgnes  Long  Toby  Macak 

^hil  Manteca  Joan  Marquardt 

Mary  Massie  Yvonne  Mc  Cabe 


Sonia  Lawrisuk  Carolyn  Lawson  Margaret  Leonard 

Helen  Marie  Mack  Alice  Magnusson  Nancy  Mahoney 


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Barbara  McCann  Marilyn  Mc  Cree 

Pat  McFarland  Dolores  McLemore 

Doris  Mills  Harold  Moody  Mary  Moorman 

Rina  Naddio  Edward  Nicol  Beatrice  Noer 


Carol  Muehr  Delphine  Musia 

Marybeth  O'Brien  Rita  O'Donnell 


//AW 


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onald  Patterson  Lilly  Pedroza 

3verne  Pradd  Barb  Pegford 


Dolores  Penn 
Toby  Roitzik 


Edward  O'Farrell  Margaret  Oker 

Barbara  Page  William  Parker 

Joyce  Penson  Marilyn  Plank 

Jackie  Roberts  Deloris  Rayner 


//AW 


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Virginia  Reid 
Gloria  Roberts 


Chrystal  Richardson       Margaret  Riemer 
Billie  Robinson  Ruth  Ross 


Helmer  Ringstrom  Marlene  Rinker 

Helene  Russell  Dorothy  Ryan 

Joseph  Rybok  Janice  Samples 

Angle  Scalzo  Margaret  Schm 


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)iana  Scott  Marilyn  Shalin 

Irlene  Sluka  Dorothy  Small 

-dargery  Stanicky  Barbara  Stolk 

ban  Sullivan  Arnold  Teich 


Mary  Schalk 
Barbara  Smith 


Margaret  Shannon  Helen  Sheehan 

Gene  Smith  Evelyn  Stoginski 


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Marilyn  Tindall  Joan  Toannon  Marion  Toomey  Martha  Tragnitz  Maryann  Tucker 

Beatrice  Turner  Roberta  Turner  Phil  Valaika  Camilla  Vanco  Dorothy  VandernK 

Judy  Vanek  Bob  Waddick  Barb  Wagner  Lorraine  Wainauskis  Mable  Walker 

Mariann  Wall  Rita  Wall  Joan  V/olsh  Bama  Washington  Patricia  Watson 


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//AW 


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Richard  Weeks  Pat  West  Cecilia  Williams  Elaine  Williams  Naomi  Williams 

Woelkers  Joan  Yeschek  Ben  Yohanan  Dolores  Zachwieja  Had  Zoellner 


The  newest  of  future  teachers,  with  their  orienta- 
tion long  completed,  and  their  places  firmly  establish- 
ed ..  .  P.E.'s  and  Home  Ec's,  recruited  and  ready 
to  help  fill  the  need  ...  a  little  group,  big  in  inde- 
pendence .  .  .  with  spirited  elections  and  poster- 
pushed  parties  .  .  .  discovering  the  lounges  and  the 
campus  spots  .  .  .  watching  with  the  seniors  for  the 
warm  days,  when  the  green  grass  and  sunshine 
make  free  hours  a  picnic,  and  an  English  class  a  30- 
way  outdoor  conversation  .  .  .  and  then  June,  and 
the  new  warm  worry  of  final  exams  .  .  .  but  com- 
pensated for  by  a  precious  semester  of  seniority. 


//n\\ 


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vonne  Belm 
anet  Dove 


Muriel  Bell  Stella  Budzi 

Daphne  Hennings  Carol  Hudson 


Anne  Cakok  Dorothy  De  Pratt 

Bernice  Jackson  Yvonne  Montgomery 


Mia  O'Leary  Henrietta  Pow^ell  Arlene  Riebeou  Ruth  Walker  Barbara  Wright 

icrbara  Wyrick  Sylvia  Smith 


Heading  the  Branch.  Mr.  Raoul  Haas. 


Away  from  their  desks,    the  Faculty. 

Standing:    Miss  Mary  C.  Powers,  Psychology;  Mrs.  Margaret 

M.   Edwards,   Music;     Dr.   Ellsworth   Paris,   Jr.,    Hisitory   and 

Geography;      Miss    Elizabeth    J.    Wilson,    Library    Science; 

Miss   Merle   Silver,   School   Secretary. 

Seated:   Miss  Mary  A.  Cunningham,  English:    Mr.  Raoul  R. 

Haas,   Education  and  English,  and  Director  of  School;   Miss 

Violet  E.  Mau,  Art. 


NOfiif 


Nick  Raino, 

President 
Sandra  Cagen, 

Vice-President 
Bobbie  Kovar, 

Secretary 
Betty   Trojan, 

Treasurer 


m 


September,  1950— a  new  school,  established  a 
Schurz  for  North  side  freshmen  .  .  .  grown  indepen- 
dent, with  a  healthy  mixture  of  new-worn  traditions 
and  new-bom  vitality  .  .  .  extra-curricular  activities 
rounding  out  the  day — organizations  such  as  drama 
club,  music  appreciation  club,  glee  club — and,  for 
the  athletic,  two  bowling  teams  .  .  .  with  social 
events,  represented  by  coke  parties,  teas,  and  Christ- 
mas festivities  ...  all  made  mellow  and  meaning- 
ful by  the  warm  feeling  between  faculty  and  stu- 
dents ...  a  small  student  body  with  its  own  re- 
wards. .  .  . 


71 


Doris  Alfredson  John  Allan 

Mary  Barbato  Brtty  Backer 

Barbara  Brandt  June  Bryerton 

Anthony  Chiapoetti  Sandy  Cogen 


Robert  Anderson  Margaret  Balla 

Jewel  Beifuss  Lois  Berggren 

Mary  Cafferata  Marie  Cannizzo 

Mary  Joan  Cullinan  Shelia  Cunniff 


Barbara  Bambula 
Louis  Bier 
Dora  Carrera 
Betty  Dorenbos 


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Marilyn  Dudley  Rita  Eckstedt 

Carol  Franke  Gloria  Gindes 

Nicholas  Golemis  Esther  Gordon 

Yolanda  Gulino  Elaine  Haase 


Erna  Folkenstein 
Walter  Gibula 
Theodore  Gregory 
Joan  Hagen  Bart 


Charlotte  Finston 
Jessica  Gronek 
Dorothy  Gilson 
Jeanne  Hogan 


Barbara  Folkers 
Anthoula  Godellas 
Donna  Guerrero 
Peter  Jager 


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Bobbi  Kovar 
Mary  Krul^ 


Dorothy  Johnson  Mary  Johnson 

Mary  Jo  Korzeniewski  Rita  Katlarz 

Faye  Kozennczak  Joan  Kramer  Dolores  Krandel  William  Kretz 

Janet  Kulczynski  Diane  Lewandowski       Lloyd  Linklater  Lucille  Lipinsk: 


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Doris  Loehr 

Catherine  Lucey 

[ames  Lynch 

Joan  Mancusi 

Lucille  Paleczny 

Mary  Palm 

Nick  Roino 

Denyse  Ryan 

Harold  Sarnecki 

Dianne  Schaedel 

Geraldine  Schuyler 

Carol  Seng 

Ellen  Sheehan 

Lenora  Sherman 

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Joan  Sindelar  Stephanie  Stephanoff  Alice  Strusz  Arlene  Swierczek  Alicia  Sylvestri 

Dorothy  Tabor  Elizabeth  Trojan  Roseann  Tully  Mary  Jeanne  Walsh  Georgeann  Ward 

Ardith  Weintraub  Annette  Werle  Verdelle  Widegren  Wilma  Wiktorski  Beverly  Winthrof 
Clare  Zanatta 


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Officers:     Betly   Trojan,   Treasurer;     Nick    Raino,    President; 
Bobbi  Kovar,  Secretary;    Sondra  Cogen,   Vice-President. 

The    Girls'    Chorus:   Dora   Carrera,    Dolores   Krandel,    Rita 

Kotlarz,  Lois  Berggren,  Carol  Franke,  Joan  Allen,  Elizabeth 

Trojan,  Yolanda  Gulino,  Dorothy  Gilson,  Anthoula  Godellas, 

Diane    Schoedel.     Faye     Kozemczak,     Verdelle     Widegren, 

Mary   Barbalo.    At   the   piano,   Geraldine   Schuyler. 

Agqiegolion  oi  Council  Members.    Sealed:    Sheila  Cunniff, 

Joan  Allen,   Elizabeth   Trojan,   Maryjo   Korzeniewski,    Alice 

Strusz. 

Second  Row:    Bobbi  Kovar,  Marilyn  Dudley,  Sondra  Cogen. 

Nick     Raino.     Harold     Sarnecki,      William     Kretz,     Robert 

Anderson. 

Third  How:    Carol  Franke,  Lloyd  Linklaler. 

(Below)    Boys'  Chorus:    Anthony  Chiappetti,  William  Kretz, 

Lloyd   Linklaler,    Robert    Anderson,   James   Lynch,   Rudolph 

Zubb. 

Back:    Peter  Jager,  Walter  Gibula,   Harold   Sarnecki. 

At  the  piano.  Nick  Raino. 


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Girls'  Bowling  Team.  Standing:  Elizabeth  Trojan,  Joan 
Allen,  Diane  Schaedel,  Verdelle  Widegren,  Joan  Sindelor, 
Mise  Powers,  Sponsor. 

Seatedb        Mary     Barbato,  Marie    Cannizzo,  Maryjo 

Korzeniewski,     Alice   Strusz,    Alicia  Sylvestri. 

Men's    Bowling     Team.    Standing:    William    Kretz,     Lloyd 
Linklater,  Nick  Raino,   Dr.  Paris,   Sponsor. 
Kneeling:    Waller  Gibula,  James  Lynch,  Harold  Sarnecki. 
A  pause  in  her  studies:    Lucille  Lipinski. 


ib,    Arline    Swierczek, 


Tape     recording     tor     English:    Dorii 
Finston,    Beverly   Winthrop. 
Original    creations:      Ardith    Weintrc 
Gloria  Gindes. 

An  expert  takes  over:  Bobbi  Kovar,  Stephanie  Stephanofl, 
Joan  Bolger,  Marie  Cannizzo,  Mary  Jean  Walsh,  Sondra 
Cogen,  Joan  KraTno' 


EPARIMOIS 


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Part    ol    The    Faculty:    Seymour  Rosofsky, 
Ruth   Dyrud,   Henry   G.   Geilen,   chairman 


Three  rooms  with  varying  decor— varying  from  Greek  statues  to 
W.  P.  A.  paintings  to  the  abstracts  by  Art  minors  .  .  .  five  instructors 
v/ith  a  common  goal— giving  to  the  students  of  today  and  tomorrow 
the  exciting  tools  for  realizing  artistic  expression  .  .  .  numberless  stu- 
dents, with  ink-smeared  hands,  elbow-deep  cloy,  or  splotches  of  paint; 
numberless  others,  turning  out  paper  cutouts,  gay  bordered  leaflets, 
and  drawings  uncannily  naive,  done  with  chalk  and  gusto  on  rough 
paper  .  .  .  and  then,  things  like  the  campus  elm,  posed  patiently  for 
its  lollipop  portrait  .  .  .  and  that  69th  street  corner,  the  one  with  the 
floating  sidewalk  and  the  wash  line  cemented  firmly  to  the  sky — all 
are  part  of  the  Art  department,  C.  T.  C. 


Building  skyscrapers:    June  Gliclcauf,  Elaine  Kotzman 


More  Faculty:    Chester  Colson,  John  Emerson 


Wire-twist-toy!     Marilyn   Thorn,    Fran   Finn 


Playing  with  puppets:    Mary  Shannon,  Joan 
Serinq,   Irene  Green 


Sketching    scenery:     members    of    Mr.    Rosolsky's 
class 


The  Bnal  touch:    Pauline   Merbitz,   Virginia   Witz- 
man 


N 


D 


Hubcap  in  the  wheel  of  education,  turning  diligently  for  all  .  .  .  first  ac- 
quaintance, the  survey  course — ideas  from  Dewey,  Bagley,  Parker,  side  by 
side  with  even  newer  theories  and  the  reality  of  trips  in  the  field  .  .  .  methods 
courses,  vibrating  with  educational  changes,  drumming  the  messages  of  Pro- 
gressivism  .  .  .  philosophers  dissected,  studied,  compared,  and  newer  men 
with  new  yet  ageless  ideas — all  read,  questioned,  and  sometimes  assimilated 
.  .  .  then  the  initiation  period — pre-practice — confronted  with  40  sets  of  indi- 
vidual differences;  the  only  shield  a  unit  plan  and  a  waning  self-confidence 
.  .  .  then  it's  over — you  pass,  you  practice,  and  life  becomes  a  maze  to  be 
solved  with  units,  lesson  plans,  projects  ...  all  problems  brought  to  this  door 
.  .  .  and  behind  it,  sympathetic  counselors  who  check  the  weather  for  fledg- 
ling pilots  .  .  .  and  after  practicing  ,the  course  is  charted — solo  .  .  . 


The  Faculty— Marie  Tierney,  Claran  Fulmer,   David  Kopel,  Lucille  A.  Saeger,    Louise  V. 
Holslein.  Gorge  W.  Connelly,  Chairman;    Dorolhy  D.  Berg,  Louise  Tyler,  Irwin  Widen. 


Mr.  Connelly  in  conference — a   semii 
group 


Mr.    Widen.    Philosophising    in    Edu 

tional  Philosophy 


"Special  News  Bulletin" 


Top  left  —  The  Faculty,  iniormally:    Dr.   McMillan,  Chairman;    Jacqueline  Krump,    Joh 

Tarburton,    Rosemary    Murray,    student;     Elmer    Smith,    Jim    McCarthy,    student;     Louis 

Jacobs. 

Lower  picture — The  Faculty  pose  lor  an  Emblem  Picture — standing:    George  J.  Steinei 

Elmer  Smith,  John  S.  Carter,  William  Card,  John  Tarburton. 

Seated:  Mary  E.  Flynn,  Louise  Jacobs,  Jacqueline  Krump. 

Not  plcture<i<  Eloise  Thetford. 


r 


^  a 


itplains  things  to  Dr.  McMillan 


A  crowded  office,  steeped  in  personality, 
distinctive  and  always  alive  ...  in  one  cor- 
ner, a  timid  and  too-respectful  freshman  in 
conference;  in  another,  a  bantering  senior 
who  has  learned  how  surprisingly  approach- 
able, even  friendly,  are  these  Olympian  in- 
dividuals— despite  their  appalling  eloquence 
.  .  .  the  crowded  office  overflowing  into  other 
offices,  but  lending  to  them  the  down-to-earth 
dignity  of  the  English  dept.  .  .  .  revealing, 
enlightening,  broadening,  adding  poise  aijd 
magic  in  a  vital  field  .  .  .  from  the  first  awa 
of  Communications  to  the  revelation  of 
American  Lit.  .  .  .  from  the  amazing  re-dis- 
covery of  childhood's  literary  wonderland  in 
Kid  Lit.  to  the  earnest  and  sometimes  embar- 
rassing reviews  in  Methods  .  .  .  and  finally, 
to  the  special  province  of  Contemporary, 
Romantic,  Shakespeare,  all  reserved  as  elec- 
tives  for  that  courageous  and  esoteric  group, 
the  English  minors  .  .  .  and  little  things  a 
few  will  remember,  but  mirrored — modified — 
in  the  memories  of  many  ...  a  student's 
hesitant  smile  in  the  hall,  answered  by  a 
spirit-lifting  first-name  greeting  ...  a  flash 
of  poetic  insight,  timidly  offered,  enthusiasti- 
cally received  ...  cm  unwitting  witticism, 
and  its  undeserved  professorial  smile  of  ap- 
proval. .  .  . 


Tarburlon,    Mrs.    Ourieff — comparing    notes. 


No  madness  in  Dr.  McMillan's  "Method; 


Frank    Fischer,    looking    sinister;    Dolores    Dickman,    not 
impressed:     Dolores     Nichol,     Joan     Dougherty,     David 

Murray- 


ID 


The    Faculty — Barbara    Wheeler.    Ella    B.    Roark,    Gertrude 
O'Hagan,  Cha 


Shining  stoves  and  snacks:    Robert  Or 
Miss  Wheeler,  Mary  Dyra,  Anita  Bo'.r 


Home  Economics  —  two  funcuonal  rooms 
and  three  functioning  teachers,  with  a  small  var- 
iety of  useful  courses,  designed  to  give  a 
domestic  approach  to  education  and  an  edu- 
cational approach  to  domesticity  .  .  .  from 
Nutrition,  where  vitamins  count  and  calories  are 
counted,  with  metabolism  rates  and  meal- 
planning  rites  ...  to  Family  Life,  where  child- 
ren and  budgets  have  to  be  healthy,  and  week- 
ly panels  handle  weighty  problems  .  .  .  and  for 
the  Home  Mechanics  minors — from  the  cooking 
room  with  shining  stoves  and  dining  surprises, 
where  lab  hour  is  lunch  hour  and  lecture  ses- 
sions make  hungry  students  ...  to  the  sewing 
room,  with  humming  machines  and  hemming 
operations,  where  the  boys  have  a  challenge 
and  a  chance,  and  fabrics  and  fashions  share 
the  spotlight  .  .  .  and  the  little  dept.  office, 
where  the  Home  Ec.  instructors  are  at  home, 
and  inquiring  students  find  invaluable  aid  .  .  . 


Above — Fashions  in  fabric:    Vdlene  Brandt,  Dolores  Nichol 


Below    —    Humminq  machlnea:     Mary    Kearney,    Beverly 

Horechy,     Coleen    McAnully,     Madeline   McAnully,     Betty 
Gansinger  and  Avis  Jaris. 


^- 


i 


m 

ID 


m 


Industrial  Arts — where  an  instructor  must  be  jack-of-all 
trades,  with  the  mechanical  equivalent  of  a  green  thumb 

.  .  .  where  lab  work  is  creative,  and  new  skills  con- 
structive .  .  .  every  student,  learning  practical  and  excit- 
ing abilities  .  .  working  with  ceramics  and  solder, 
metal  and  mimeos,  wood  and  wire,  printing  and  plastics 

.  .  .  studying  tools  from  awls  to  augers,  and  electricity 
from  basement  to  attic  .  .  .  and  the  Home  Mech.  minors, 
probing  deeper  .  .  .  learning  by  doing,  and  doing  with 
ingenuity  and  assurance  .  .  .  and  some  of  the  work  — 
jewel-like  plastic  pieces,  colorful  ceramics,  platters  and 
paper  weights,  trays  and  trifles  —  posing  proudly  and 
festively  in  the  gay  lab  showcase,  where  finished  products 
ore  displayed  with  pride,  and  where  every  passing  stu- 
dent stops  to  look  with  wonder  .  .  .  and  again  inside  I.  A. 
— the  tool  room,  a  triumph  of  neatly  catalogued  cubby 
holes  .  .  .  the  office  and  its  store-room,  with  a  semingly 
endless  variety  of  supplies,  from  sandpaper  to  sudden 
inspirations  .  .  .  the  tiny  ceramics  room,  with  mild-look- 
ing, but  deceivingly  exotic  glazes,  and  the  remarkable 
potter's  wheel  .  .  .  and  the  press  room,  where  C.T.C. 
tickets  and  programs  are  often  printed  with  grace  and 
graciousness  .  .  .  and  the  wonderful  lab  room  itself — 
complete  with  drills  and  kilns,  jigsaws  and  big  sinks, 
work  tables  and  working  students  .  .  .  Industrial 
Arts     .  .  . 


At  the  wheel:    Potter  David  Murray 

In  the  runoif:  Printer  James  Hilton 

In    judgment:     Insitruclors   Coleman    Hewitt, 

Chairman,  and  Joseph  Byrne 


Expressing  approval:  Robina  Grant,  Henry 
Bronars,  Lorraine  Antimonek;  at  the  saw, 
Florence  Shapiro 


Displaying  dexterity:  Louis  Barnes,  Ruth  Colqu- 
houn,  George  Pfeilfer;  in  background:  Pat  Russell, 
Gloria  GroUa,  Lorraine  Antimonek 


Pressing  needs:  Charles  Lewis,  Roberta  Turner, 
Florence  Shapiro,  Jean  Gade,  Ray  Gerlik,  George 
Pfeiffer,  Henry  Bronars,  Ruth  Lawler,  Josephine 
Koniall;   behind  the  bars:    Janice  Budick 


The  Faculty:    Viola  Lynch,  Shirley  Stack, 
Ellen  Olson,  Chairman,  Dorothy  Willy 


Senior  KgP's  in  conference  with  Miss  Lynch 


u. 


D  niD 


92 


Kindergarten,  first  grade,  second  grade  .  .  . 
where  a  teacher  must  be  a  musician  and  magician, 
artist  and  athlete,  pedagogue  and  parent  ...  for 
these  jobs,  our  KgP  faculty  helps  the  future  teachers 
.  .  .  among  them,  practice-teaching  seniors,  paid 
like  half-day  substitutes  .  .  .  many  ostensible  jun- 
iors, accelerated  summer-school-wise,  and  now  really 
seniors  —  due  for  paid  practicing  and  more  late 
classes  .  .  .  and  elementary-trained  teachers  al- 
ready in  the  system,  now  working  for  KgP  certificates 
...  all  busy  with  reading  readiness,  paste  and  psy- 
chology .  .  .  taking  the  courses  intensively  offered 
by  a  vigorous  faculty  .  .  .  and  all  helping  to  fill  the 
needs  of  thousands  of  post-war  tots,  crowding  the 
lower  grades,  crying  for  a  fabulous  number  of  teach- 
ers to  help  them  start  their  small  careers  .  .  . 


Natural  arrangements:    Rosemary 
Joyce  Heifer 


This  discussion  is  paneled:    Joan  Kilgalen,   Shirley  Alter,  Dolores  Wall,  Janice 
Michaels.   Martha  Zaharchuk 


J. 


The  ACE  Tea:  Rosemary  Zahn,  Bess  Perkins,  Therese 
Horan,  Shirley  Satek,  Leslie  Abernalhy,  Maria 
Chavis,  Delores  Minerva,  Audrey  Eggers,  Yvonne 
English,  Peggy  McGregor 


The  Association  for  Childhood  Education  International — an 
imposing  name  for  an  imposing  organization,  with  580  branches 
and  56,000  members  ...  the  College  branch  of  A.C.E.,  working 
with  its  world-wide  cousins  to  achieve  the  high  purposes  of  A.C.E.: 
attaining  the  education  and  well-being  of  children  in  their  various 
habitats — home,  school  and  community  .  .  .  promoting  desirable 
educational  programs  and  practices  for  nursery,  kindergarten  and 
elementary  school  children  .  .  .  raising  standards  of  professional 
training  for  teachers  and  leaders  in  the  field  .  .  .  and  working  to 
bring  members  together  and  keep  A.C.E.  closely  knit  in  function 
.  .  .  and  the  varied  A.C.E.  activities — attending  local,  state  and 
national  conferences  and  conventions  .  .  .  sponsoring  lectures 
by  leading  educators  for  C.T.C.  slud3nts  .  .  .  and  now  a  tradition 
in  the  C.T.C  social  calendar — A.C.E.'s  Christmas  Candle-lighting 
ceremony,  an  inspiring  annual  ritual  .  .  .  the  Spring  Tea,  held 
yearly  and  graciously  at  the  home  of  Miss  Willy,  the  faculty  spon- 
sor .  .  .  and  the  always  successful  May  breakfast,  a  warm  get- 
together  ...  all  helping  to  create  the  important  social  by-prod- 
ucts of  professional  fellowship  .  .  . 


ACE  oUicers  —  top  to  bottom:  Rosemary 
Wotiska,  Rosemary  Zahn,  Virginia  Walsh, 
Shirley  Satik,  Annella  King 


Mmscio 


Library  Science  ...  a  field  newly  named  but  truly 
important  ...  all  C.T.C.  freshmen  acquiring  new  and 
amazingly  helpful  tools  for  effective  use  of  limitless  library 
resources  .  .  .  and  the  Library  Science  minors,  trained  to 
bring  the  library  into  the  classroom  .  .  .  with  a  wide 
knowledge  of  new  literature  and  old,  for  young  interests 
and  needs  .  .  .  seing,  sampling  and  digesting  hundreds 
of  books  of  all  varieties  in  each  library  sicence  course 
.  .  .  and  carrying  dozens  of  them  home,  armload  after 
weary  armload  .  .  .  but  finding  in  them  magic  doors  to 
childhood's  enthusiasm,  and  magic  keys  to  effective  moti- 
vation .  .  .  holding  classes  in  a  new  room  made  of 
two  rooms,  with  roomy  cabinets  for  books  and  book 
jackets,  and  light  wood  desks  for  teachers  and  future  teach- 
ers ...  and  in  the  room,  too,  on  special  days  —  the 
youngest  students,  accelerated  readers  from  Parker  Ele- 
mentary, giving  needed  experience  to  junior  teachers 
.  .  .  and  the  faculty — giving  inspiration  and  willing  in- 
struction .  .  .  helping  library  work  to  grow  in  fame  and 
function — from  Bus's  Subject  Index  to  consistent  counsel 
in  every  class  .  .  . 


The  racuhy— Eloise  Rue,  Chairman:  Frnz  Veil.  Elizabeth  J.  Wils 


Mary  Beth  Moran  and  Mary  O'Leary, 
with  Miss  Rue  in  the  background,  and 
accelerated  readers  in  front. 


The  Faculty:  Joseph  Urbancek, 
Chairman;  Jerome  Sachs,  William 
Coyne 


n 


Calculating      Calculus: 

Roessler 
Top:    Abaci  claiiniiiq  ottenUon;   Fran  Finn, 
Irene  Kelly,  Mr.  Urbancek,  Mary  Kearney, 
Mary     O'Leary,     Vinita     Bushlein,     Elvira 
Fiascone 

Mathematics — the  foundation  of  the  sciences,  the  base  of 
modern  civilizaticfti  .  .  .  personified  in  C.T.C.  by  the  Math 
dept.,  home  of  the  logical-minded  ...  for  some,  a  struggle 
through  higher  math — trig,  calculus,  analytical  geometry  .  .  . 
for  all,  math  of  measurement — the  ancient  and  recent  history  of 
the  age-old  problems  of  counting  and  calculating  .  .  .  and 
math  methods,  using  simple  examples  and  teaching  aids,  with 
pie  plates  for  fractions  .  .  .  the  math  faculty,  with  sympathetic 
suggestions,  and  helpful  hints,  cheerfully  given  .  .  .  units, 
courses  of  study,  areas  of  learning,  mimeographed  aids — all 
lodged  in  filing  cabinets,  all  free  for  student  use  .  .  .  and  the 
math  club.  Kappa  Mu  Epsilon,  an  honorary  society  for  math 
minors  .  .  .  where  numbers  are  amazing  and  amusing,  en- 
lightening and  entertaining  .  .  .  and  meeting  members  make 
plans  for  special  events,  like  speakers,  banquets  and  parties, 
and  the  officers'  trip  to  a  Missouri  Math  Convention  ...  all 
adding  interest  to  experience  and  good  fun  to  good  learn- 
ing .  .  . 


BoHom,  Methods  in  point:  Pat  McHugh, 
Mr.  Urbancfk,  Don  Nuzzo,  Gloria  Berloia, 
Marilyn  Thorn 

96 


K.M.E.  members,  first  row:  Dr.  Jerome  Sache,  spon- 
sor;   Genevieve   Leonard,    Marie    Marciante,    Helen 
Groetsema,    Jean   DeBofsky,    Mr.    Urbancek; 
Second  row:  Gladys  Coleman,  Betty  Kloman,  Carol 
Palka.    Manuel   Sanchez; 

Third  row:  Delphine  Szulakiewicz.  Joyce  Aurand, 
Virginia  McKinney,  Pat  Mitchell; 
Fotirth  row:  Helen  Farazis,  Grace  Roessler, 
Regina  Koehl,  Margaret  Mary  Woods,  Frank  Ward; 
Fiilh  row:  Alyce  Rakow,  Phyllis  De  Simone, 
William  Woods,  Mr.  William  Coyne. 


K.  M.  E. I 

Gen 


Lois    Rusco,      Anne    Higgins, 
Leonard,   Renee  Pope,   Carol  Palka 


K.M.E.    oiiicers.    Standinq:   Helen   Groetsema,    Gen- 

ieve   Leonard; 

Sealed:   Gladys   Coleman   Dr.   Sachs,   Betty  Klomarr 


m.[. 


I^ 


The  Music  Dept.  .  .  .  with  an  enthusiastic  and 
energetic  faculty,  working  in  classes  and  after  class- 
es to  encourage  musical  growth  ...  in  Methods, 
where  practice  in  sight-singing  and  rote-singing 
makes  right  singing  ...  in  Appreciation,  where 
each  class  hour  is  a  concert  hour  ...  in  the  special 
realms  of  the  music  minors — Harmony,  History,  Ear- 
training  .  .  .  and  in  the  extra-curricular  activities 
choir,  with  daily  rehearsels,  directed  this  fall  by  Miss 
Tahney,  this  spring  by  Mr.  Simutis,  and  heard  with 
pleasure  through  most  of  the  building  .  .  .  with  an 
annual  Christmas  program,  inspiringly  sung  in  the 
auditorium,  and  overflowing  into  carol -singing 
through  the  halls  and  into  the  foyer,  around  the  tra- 
ditional Tree  .  .  .  with  the  gay  and  twice-annual 
choir  brunch,  brightening  mid-semester  mornings 
.  .  .  and  the  newly-revived  Spring  Concert,  with 
well-seasoned  and  seasonal  sounds,  given  for  a  day- 
time and  an  evening  public  .  .  .  Phi  Alpha,  where 
monthly  meetings  feature  recorded  music  programs, 
and  an  annual  recital  helps  bring  C.T.C.  talent  to 
light  .  .  .  and  the  C.T.C.  —  Wilson  orchestra,  which 
plays  a  big  part  in  programs  like  the  ones  at  Christ- 
mas, Pan-American  time  and  pep-assembly  time     .  . 


The  Faculty:    Sylvan  D.  Ward,  Elizabeth  G.  Hennessey,  Catherine 
N.  Taheny,  Chairman;   Leonard  Simutis 
Bottom:    The  C.T.C.  choir  in  assembly 


^ 


Phi    Alpha    assembled 


The  College  String  Quartet:  vio- 
lin, Sylvan  D.  Ward;  cello,  Dieter 
Kober:  viola,  Paul  Carlson;  violin, 
Ernest  Liden. 


In  Hannony,  Seated:  Maria  Chavis,  Pat  Bourke; 

Standing:  Blanche  Kirch,  Mary  Woods 


Chamber      Music:      Mary     Lou    Chears,      Vivian 

Tamphn.   Sonio  Lawrisuk,  Mary  Woods 


n 


n 


You  can  tell  them  by  their  manner 

By  their  muscles  and  such, 

You  can  tell  a  P.E.  minor 

But  you  cannot  tell  him  much! 
The  P.E.  dept.,  promoting  well-rounded  develop- 
ment in  curriculum  and  muscles  .  .  .  appearing  tc 
all  Frosh  and  Sophs  in  the  form  of  children's  games 
and  dancing,  in  badminton,  tennis  or  the  cold  splash 
of  swimming  ...  to  Juniors  in  First  Aid  and  Health 
.  .  .  and  to  the  P.E.  minors,  in  all  these  plus  a  val- 
uable background  of  Science  courses  like  Anatomy, 
Physiology  and  the  formidable  Kinaesiology,  and  in 
the  strenuous  gym  electives,-  all  helping  to  give  the 
future  gym  teacher  an  insight  into  all  phases  of  phys- 
ical training  .  .  .  the  P.E.  dept.,  pointing  with  pride 
to  the  outstanding  coaghes  and  instructors  in  Chicago 
elementary  and  high  schools  .  .  .  and  promising  to 
turn  out  more  of  the  same  in  the  classes  to  come  .  .  . 


The     unproiessional     touch:     lames  Lilek,     Maur 
L^cey.  Jion  Eczemcin,  Joyce  Howland 


Waiting    their    turns    to    test    and    rest:       William 
Bunch,  Ed  Walsh,  Tom  McGeohagen 


The  Faculty:  George  Boyle,     Joseph  Kripner, 

Chairman;  Louise        Robinson,          Louise 

Christiansen,  Ursula       Maethner,       Gertrude 
Byrne 


Where  square  dancing  goes  round 
How  high  the  hancsland:    Betty  Koenig 
Crawling  over  the  waves:    a  Soph  srwim  cla; 


The  Squirrel  Cage 


t:m. 


The  Spring  Board.  Standing:  Doris  Neuby,  Virginia 
Zaleski,  Joyce  Howland,  Jean  Osiwald,  Lorraine 
Waunaiskis,  Joan  Marquardt,  Ruth  Edmonds,  Annetta 
King; 

Sealed:  Dolores  Zachwieja,  Louise  Schullz,  Lois 
Rusco,  Florence  Moro,  Marian  Kerrigan,  Carol  Koch, 

Arlene   Podewell 


Some  of  the  Fall  Board:  Irene  Jurkovich, 
Gloria  Berioia.  Belly  Kloman,  Barbara 
M'-Cann,  Ruth  Edmondson 


Hail  to  the  victors  valiant  .  . 
MA  A  Champs  oi  1951 


The   Junior   Class   Football    Champs: 
L.    to   R.    Vince    Romano,    Bill    Mulligan,    Tom 
Solon,     Al    Matz,     Dan    Remahl,     Dick    Davis, 
Howie  Freedman 


With  the  great  increase  in  the  number  of 
men  on  campus,  the  Men's  Athletic  Association, 
founded  two  years  ago,  was  able  to  sponsor 
intra-mural  tournaments  in  wrestling,  table  ten- 
nis, basketball,  track,  football  and  softball. 
Much  of  the  credit  for  the  success  of  the  organ- 
ization is  due  to  the  members  themselves,  for 
all  M.A.A.  events  are  student-planned,  student- 
coached  and  student-organized. 


Grunt  'n  Groan  Champs: 

135  lb.  class  —  Jack  Browne 
145  lb.  class  —  Tom  Solon 


The  W.A.A.,  a  much  older  organization, 
sponsors  sports  activities  for  the  girls  at  C.T.C. 
Represented  are  volleyball,  tennis  and  table 
tennis,  swimming,  bowling  and  square  dancing. 
One  of  the  most  successful  projects  was  the 
baseball  team,  which  ended  its  fun-filled  season 
with  a  'varsity-alumni'  game,  which  ended  in 
an  alumni  victory  and  a  party. 


The     "Basketeers 

Trophy   Winners: 

L.  to  R.  Pat  Hague.  Ed  OTarrell 

Ben    Reilley,    Ron   Budil; 

Front:    Leo  Hennessy,   Capl. 


103 


tramural     Basketball 


D 


D 


Faculty:     Clarence   Gilford,   Sol   Eilert, 
Edvin    Byre,    Chairman. 


A  small  department  with  a  big  job — for  three  instruc- 
tors, whose  duties  cover  classroom  teaching,  with  topics 
varying  from  self-delusion  to  standard  deviation,  from 
study  habits  to  schizophrenics  .  .  .  with  special  tools, 
varying  from  the  Inkblot  Test  to  the  strange  headgear  for 
cephalic-index  measurement  ...  in  the  tiny  office,  the 
faculty — meeting  every  student  in  conference,  with  the 
often  surprising  results  of  the  Personality-Adjustment  Test 
.  .  .  available  always  for  sympathetic  consultation 
.  .  .  and  the  psychology  club — Psi  Chi  Phi,  formed  for  the 
select  group  of  psych  minors,  and  others  especially  inter- 
ested in  the  more  complicated  'whys'  and  'wherefores'  of 
psychology  .  .  .  with  scheduled  meetings  and  unsched- 
uled experiments  .  .  .  with  special  lectures  and  extra- 
special  speakers  .  .  .  with  visits  to  State  Mental  Hospitals 
— Kankakee,  Elgin,  Manteno  .  .  .  and  the  Psi  Chi  Phi 
Banquet,  rounding  out  the  season,  where  social  tenden- 
cies take  precedence  ...  all  of  this,  psychology  .  .  . 


How   fast   can   you   tap?    —    Dorothy      Drozd,    Floyd 

'.Vyrick.   Dr.  Gifford 


n 


The  Depl.  Chairman — Earl  E.  Sherff 


The  Faculty:  Dorothy  V.  Phipps,  Herbert  Lamp,  James 
M.  Sanders,  Edward  C.  Colin 


From  the  greenhouse  to  the  cat  lab  .  .  .  covering  a  wide  area  in  square 
feet  as  well  as  in  the  field  of  science — with  due  emphasis  on  the  three  natural 
kingdoms  .  .  .  and  with  a  kaleidoscopic  array  of  remembered  impressions 

...  the  little  green  triumphs  of  botany  ...  the  first  friendly  introduction  to 
a  skeleton  ...  the  curious  satisfaction  in  growing  the  most  foul  and  bushy 
mold  culture  ...  the  surprisingly  lively  field  Jrips— bird  walks  and  tree  talks 

.  .  .  piled-up  paraphernalia  for  Science  methods — stuffed  birds  and  fish,  slides 
and  rock  specimens,  designed  to  channel  junior  interest  to  nature  .  .  .  and  cat 
anatomy,  with  P.E.'s  familiar  to  the  point  of  the  nicknamed  cadaver,  and  un- 
suspecting Kg.P.'s,  who  may  innocently  open  a  'cat'  drawer  .  .  .  the  obliging 
atoms,  who  sit  for  compounded  portraits  in  Phy.  Sci.  .  .  .  and  a  fascinating 
vicanous  trip  to  Africa  via  slides  and  lecture  by  a  faculty  world  traveler.  .  .  . 


106 


#  1  ^  %.3 

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Methods   celestial    and   teneslrial — lack    Kohler,    Vir- 
ginia  Collins,   Marion   Pertel,   Robert   Kirkpatrick 


Growing  ability 


These  cats  are  cool — Bebop  and  Sadness  with  Dan 
Bystrowski,  Mottie  Green,  Joan  Hudson,  Mike  Jovovich 


107 


The  Social  Science  Dept.  .  .  .  spanning 
eras  and  areas  with  equal  ease  .  .  .  giving  to 
future  teachers  the  magic  formulae  to  make  the 
heroes  of  history,  the  journeys  in  geography 
alive  and  interesting  .  .  .  each  instructor,  a 
specialist  ...  in  geography,  where  maps  have 
meaning,  and  where  everyone  has  been  to 
Tibet  ...  in  World  history,  where  Babel  is 
real  and  today's  news  is  news  ...  in  American 
history,  where  the  Indians  are  first,  and  people 
and  ideas  come  before  dates  ...  in  Economic 
Geography,  where  the  Eskimos  chew  hides 
and  the  rich  get  richer  ...  in  Community  stud- 
ies, where  the  field  is  explored  by  trips  and 
teaching  .  .  .  and  after  the  curriculum,  the 
club  .  .  .  one  of  the  oldest  at  C.T.C.,  ushering 
in  April  in  the  Pan-American  way  with  exhibits 
and  an  atmospheric  assembly  .  .  .  sponsoring 
lectures  on  subjects  like  Cuban  economics  and 
post-war  Japan  .  .  .  sponsored  by  Dr.  Branom, 
also  guiding  spirit  behind  the  inspiring,  in-sea- 
son  Social  Science  bulletin  board  .  .  . 


Ths  sixth  stale — Carmen  La  Bianca,  Gloria  Jackson, 
Philip  Marescljn 

Sighting  a  specimen  —  Joanne  BuKin,  Dr.  Branom, 
Angeline  Hurd,  Noami  Burstein,  Charles  Johnson, 
Georgene   Clancy 


Officiating   —   Maureen   Ouaid,    Jim     '.^  ^* 


Moore,    Barbara   Hackett 


The  "So  Sci"  Club — A  casual  sessi 


The     Faculty  Standing:       Vernon      Brockman, 

Charles    Monroe,    Joseph    Chada.- 

Seated:    Henrietta  Fernitz,  Fred  K.  Branoin,  chair- 


s 


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Faculty  member,  Verna  Outieff,  student 
Arlene  Bayuk,  and  unidentified  pleasan- 
try 

Part  time  Faculty  member  Romola  Hicks 
and  business 


Protege  of  the  more  extensive  English  dept., 
a  smaller  one,  large  in  function  .  .  .  located  in 
a  friendly  office,  containing  principally  a  busy 
wire-recorder,  a  cupboard  filled  with  props, 
chairs  for  nervous  speakers,  and  two  speech 
teachers  with  desks  ...  an  unambiguous 
arrow,  strategically  placed  outside  the  door  to 
the  well-hidden  room,  helpfully  announcing 
'SPEECH  APPOINTMENTS'  .  .  .  here,  those 
new  to  CTC  learn  with  astonishment  of  un- 
noticed lisps  and  fuzzy  enunciation  .  .  .  follow- 
ing the  revelation,  correction  closes  marked  by 
a  pattern  of  self-conscious  reading  aloud,  ses- 
sions with  the  cruelly  candid  recorder,  home- 
work of  endless  lists  of  words  to  repeat  —  and 
finally,  the  good  speach  and  release.  .  .  . 


110 


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Andy  Penn,   President  Marian  Pertel,  Secretary  Dolores  Wall,  Ti 


Student  Council  casual  —  Row   1:    Marilyn  Thorn,  Mary  Therese  O'Malley,   Miss  Lucille  Saeger, 
Faculty  Sponsor,  Marion  Pertel,  Dolores  Wall 

Row  2:    Pat  Scotty,  Patricia  Duggan,  Mary  Shannon,  Jackie  Meyers,  Mary  O'Leary,  Dorothy  Small; 
Row  3:    Andy  Penn,  Charles  Sheehan,  Bob  Murphy,  William  Kelly,  Celeste  Walsh 


With  grease-paint  and  set-painting,  pub- 
licity schemes  and  promoting  sales,  stage 
presence  and  stage  props  .  .  .  T.  W.  presents 
its  two  yearly  productions  .  .  .  this  season, 
two  wonderful  and  widely-differing  women, 
My  Sister  Eileen  and  The  Heiress,  successfully 
sharing  annual  honors  .  .  .  also  theatre  parties, 
to  commercial  and  college  plays,  and  ban- 
quets and  assembly  skits  ...  all  planned  in 
the  scheduled  meetings  and  the  sponsorial 
mind  to  expose  interested  Workshoppers  to  all 
possible  phases  of  that  fascinating  and  yet 
functional   field  .  .  .  drama  .  .  . 


Top  left  W.nna  Roe  Kalz  and  Marie  Marciante— costumed  period. 
Center  lelt — Dan  Remahl  giving  the  air  to  Lois  Butler  and  Peggy 
Keevers-My  Sister  Eileen' 


Bottom  left— Ovation  for  Mrs.  Ourieff— after  'The  Heiress' 

Top  right — Making  up — 'My  Sister  Eileen' 

Bottom  right — The  cas.t  and  crew — 'My  Sister  Eileen' 


Top — Wyn  Carmody  and  E.  E.  Gibbons — tenderly  Heiressing. 
Center  left — The  heiress  omd  suitor — Joni  Evans  and  Ed  Walsh 
Center  right — Dolores  Butler — Matronly  approval;  Marylou  Buckley 
— "maidly"  efiiciently;   Joni,  Ed — madly  in  love 
Bottom  left — Ed,  Joni,  and  Formidable  Frank  Dalton 


113 


Bottom  right — T.  W. — a  congregation — iront  row — Milton  Mayer, 
Jack  Hillebrand,  Mike  Jovovich,  Deanor  Borowski,  Mario 
Marciante,  Muriel  Frelk,  Arlene  Bayuk,  Mrs.  Ourieff,  Wynn 
Carmody;  back  row — Marv  Raskin,  Manuel  Sanchez,  Tom  Solon, 
Dan  Remahl,  Paul  Ernst,  Howard  Denton,  Dick  Davisi,  Gene 
Smith,  AUce  Rakow. 


Mrs.  Dorothy  Berg,  Co-ordinator  of  Teacher  Recruitment 


.A 


Sponsored  by  Miss  Marie  Tierney,  C.T.C.  s  Future 
Teachers  of  America  club  finishes  its  third  year  of  active 
professional  programs  .  .  .  with  a  functioning  member- 
ship of  151,  and  40  members  at  the  Northside  Branch  .  .  . 
with  advantages  including  junior  membership  in  the 
National  Education  Association  and  the  Illinois  Education 
Association,  plus  subscriptions  to  their  journals  .  .  .  and 
opportunities  to  participate  in  the  professional  activities 
of  the  club  .  .  .  activities  like  the  big  Spring  Teacher  Re- 
cruitment , Program,  in  which  an  organized  committee  of 
student  speakers  addresses  groups  of  high  school  seniors 
about  teaching  advantages  and  opportunities,  aided  by 
Mrs.  Dorothy  Berg,  the  College  Co-ordinator  of  Teacher 
Recruitment  ...  a  climax  to  the  program,  the  May  Open 
House,  with  C.T.C.  dept.  exhibits  and  displays  open  to 
high  school  observance  ...  a  Student  Teacher  panel 
discussion  ...  a  Mystery  Package  sale  in  the  Foyer  .  .  . 
and  a  Coed  Lounge  Square  Dance,  professionally  called 
and  generally  enjoyed  .  .  . 

High  School  Seniors — Open  House  Guests 

FTA   casual — Rose   Leo,    Andy   Penn,    Marion    Pertel,    Mary   Therese 

O'MoUey,   Miss  Lucille  Saeger 

Ted  Lenart  interviews  a  prospective  CTC  student 

The  Exhibit — Gertrude  Dickson  and  Joan  Sering 


D 


Fellowship — doing  charitable  work  for  many 
seasons  and  many  groups,  with  the  support  of  auto- 
matic all-school  membership  .  .  .  aiding  Chicago's 
needy  children  and  C.T.C.'s  needy  students  .  .  . 
collecting  toys  for  merrier  Christmases  and  eggs  for 
happier  Easters  .  .  .  welcoming  freshmen  with  a 
warm-hearted  social  .  .  .  extending  festivities  to  the 
Parkway  Settlement  party,  and  monetary  aid  to  or- 
ganizations like  Kiwanis,  Red  Cross  and  the  Cancer 
fund  .  .  .  raising  deserved  dollars  by  sponsoring 
bake  sales,  flower  sales  and  social  events — teas, 
Christmas  parties  and  square  dances  .  .  .  uphold- 
ing vigorously  and  consistently  a  chartered  tradition 
— support  of  all  school  events  .  .  .  and  crowning  the 
semester's  unselfish  activities,  a  Fellowship  banquet, 
where  active. members,  present  and  previous,  gather 
to  enjoy  mutual  and  immediate  personal  fellowship 
.  .  .  and  the  social  company  of  Miss  Saeger,  Fellow- 
ship's busy  faculty  sponsor.  .  .  . 


■m^ 


Fellowship  officers  —  Mary  Therese  O'Malley, 
TheresiB  McNicholas.  Nympha  Maturi,  Lorraine 
Posey,   Gloria   Bertoia 

Marion  Perfel,  Andy  Penn,  Dolores  Wall — fellow- 
ship business 


Fellowship  Bake  sale  in  progress 

115 


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Activities  Workshop  ...  an  ambitious  un- 
dertaking, sponsored  by  Student  Council  .  .  . 
with  a  twice-annual  purpose — co-ordinating  the 
school  activity  calendar  to  avoid  organizational 
conflicts  .  .  .  with  meetings  before  the  begin- 
ning of  the  semester,  where  officers  of  every 
group  meet  together  and  dates  of  all  semester 
meetings  and  activities  are  planned  ...  all  of 
this,  a  so-far  successful  venture  .  .  .  shown  by 
the  issuance  of  the  official  Tentative  Calendar 
of  Activities  for  the  Forthcoming  Semester   .  .  . 


Parent-Teacher-Student  Association  ...  a  vigorous  organization,  its  most 
important  phase — education  of  the  parent  to  promote  better  understanding  of 
teachers  and  of  school  aims,  and  a  development  of  public  opinion  that  will 
benefit  young  people  and  bring  the  home  and  the  school  into  closer  relation- 
ship ...  the  theme  of  this  year's  PTSA  program — Examining  the  Values  of  a 
College  Education — carried  out  in  various  phases  during  the  panels  and  lec- 
tures at  the  monthly  meetings,  which  also  featured  opportunities  for  exhibition 
of  C.T.a  and  Wilson  talent  ...  in  November  of  1950,  the  PTSA's  backing  of 
the  Gateway  Amendrrent  to  the  State  Constitution,  continuing  its  tradition 
of  promoting  interes)  in  civic  affairs  .  .  .  and  finally,  the  enthusiastic  moral 
and  financial  support  given  to  students  and  student  activities  by  PTSA  mem- 
bers, as  well  as  the  energetic  example  of  board  members,  working  in  adult 
education  programs,  such  as  Human  Relations  and  Civil  Defense  .  .  . 


D 


y 


m  CROSS 


Red  Cross  ...  a  flash  of  gay 
dresses,  high  heels,  earrings,  on  cheer- 
ful charmers,  going  to  Great  Lakes  to 
entertain  the  boys  in  the  hospital  .  .  . 
cakes,  cookies,  candy,  donations,  'fund- 
raising  bake  sales,  for  the  National  Red 
Cross  Fund  Drive  .  .  .  freely  admitted 
workers,  dressed  in  aprons  and  caps, 
collecting  donations  from  pleasure  seek- 
ers at  polo  games,  ice-shows,  roller 
derbies  .  .  .  and  all  students,  going  to 
First  Aid  classes  in  5A — triangle  band- 
ages, sterile  compresses,  six  man  lift — 
receiving  for  their  pains  and  treatment 
of  pains,  an  impressive  certificate  .  .  . 


The    ladder    of    success — Ther 
Francine  Birk,  Minna  Rae  Katz 


Lorraine    Giambrone, 


Left  to  Right  —  Joyce  Ovitz.  Mary  Dalianis 
Ruth  Biirgeman,  Morion  Krik,  Gloria  Bertoia 
Pat  Gory,  Marge  Whelon,  Millicent  Dahlstrom 
Pot  Thovis. 


Athletic  Director,  basketball  coach,  Physical  ed- 
ucation instructor,  and  an  outstanding  sports 
personage,  George   W.   Boyle 

Talking  over  team  possibilities  are  guard  Ed 
OTarrell  and  assistant  coach  Gene  Gibbons 


The  Colonels  One-Two  Punch 
Jim  Tracy  and  Jack  Hillebrand 


Typical  of  the  games  won  by  the  Colonels  was 
the  72  to  58  victory  over  Elmhurst  College  in  the  first 
home  game  of  the  season.  The  highly  rated  Panth- 
ers, led  by  high-scoring  Bob  Seller,  were  never  ahead 
after  the  fast-breaking  juggernaut  of  the  Colonels 
rolled  up  an  early  lead  and  maintained  a  near  20- 
point  margin  throughout  the  remainder  of  the  game. 
Forward  Helmer  Ringstrom  led  the  scoring  for  the 
Tutors  with  20  points  while  center  Jim  Tracy  con- 
tributed 14  tallies.  It  was  teamwork  that  won  for  the 
Colonels  in  this  game  and  in  later  games.  Guards 
Chuck  Sheehan  and  Jack  Hillebrand,  ably  assisted 
by  reserve  Don  Sparks,  soon  developed  an  uncanny 
accuracy  with  their  set  shot.  Sparks  was  equally 
effective  on  the  drive-ins  that  never  netted  him  less 
than  five  baskets  a  game.  The  backboards  were 
controlled  by  forwards  Marty  McGrath  and  Helmer 
Ringstrom  who  succeeded  in  gaining  a  high  percent- 
age of  rebounds  which  turned  into  sparks  that  ig- 
nited the  dynamite  fast-break  of  the  Green  and  White. 
Many  long  hours  of  practice  put  the  Colonels  into 
top-notch  playing  form;  many  locker-room  'skull' 
practices  and  pep  talks  by  Coach  Boyle  put  the 
Colonels  in  a  fighting  spirit;  and  an  ever  increasing 
number  of  spectators  gave  C.T.C.  one  of  its  greatest 
basketball  seasons. 


118 


CHICAGO  TEACHERS  COLLEGE 


Outstanding  Player 

One  of  the  highlights  of  the  year's 
Homecoming  celebration  was  the  pre- 
sentation of  the  Most  Valuable  Player 
Trophy  to  Colonel  center  Jim  Tracy. 
Tracy  broke  four  records  with  his  scor- 
ing prowess  and  is  here  shown  receiv- 
ing the  trophy  from  alumnus  Marty 
Gray  of  the  '47-48  Colonels,  the  captain 
of  the  Alumni  team  and  the  recipient  of 
last  year's  award. 


Frosh  Basketball 

For  the  first  time  in  the 
history  of  the  school, 
C.T.C.  had  an  inter- 
school  Freshman  Bas- 
ketball team.  Coached 
by  Gene  Gibbons,  the 
Freshmen  provided  a 
training  ground  for  fu- 
ture Varsity  members. 
The  Little  Colonels  held 
contests  with  such 
schools  as  Loyola,  Elm- 
hurst  and  the  C.T.C. 
North  Side  Branch.  The 
success  of  this  year's 
squad  may  guarantee  a 
continued  schedule  of 
games  for  this  newest 
of  all  C.T.C.  activities. 


BASKETBALL  SCHEDULE  1950-1951 

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JIM  TRACY 


"We've  got  the  team,  and  we've  got  the 
So  fight  on,  to  VICTORY!" 
—The  Colonels  of  1950-51 


DON  SPARKS 


JACK  HILLENBRAND 


HELMER   RINGSTROM 


^ 


"A    TEAM    IS    AS    GOOD 
AS    ITS      SUBSTITUTES  .  .  . 


C.T.C.  ESTABLISHED  RECORDS 
BY   '50-51    COLONELS 
Highest  number  of  points  scorea  by  a  team  in 
a  season — 

1203  points  in  18  games. 
Highest  number  of  points  scored  by  a  team  in 
a  single  game — 

88  points  —  against  Eureka. 
Highest  number  of  points  scored  by  a  single 
player  in  a  season — 

291  points  by  Jim  Tracy. 
Highest  number  of  points  scored  by  a  player 
in  a  single  game — 

32  points  by  Jim  Tracy. 


stand  together  fight  side  by  side," 
John  Costello,  Phil  Valaika,  Joe  Anderson 


"Just  watch   our   colors   fly," 

Norbert  Smolinski,  Ed  Nicol,  Ben  Yohanan, 
Milt  Mayer 


Sol   Salario,    Ed   OTorrell 
not   pictured 


With  only  four  lettermen  back  from  last  year's 
team,  Coach  George  W.  Boyle  had  to  re-organize  his 
Teacher's  College  basketball  team  to  meet  one  of  the 
toughest  schedules  that  a  Colonel  five  has  had  to 
face  in  recent  years.  With  returning  veterans  Jack 
Hillebrand  and  Jim  Tracy  as  a  nucleus,  the  starting 
team  was  rounded  out  by  All-City  players  Helmer 
Ringstrom,  Marty  McGrath  and  Chuck  Sheehan.  The 
Colonels  began  the  season  with  little  success,  drop- 


ping their  first  two  games  to  Wheoton  College  and 
Loyola  University.  From  then  on  the  Teachers  went 
on  a  rampage  to  win  13  of  their  next  16  games.  This 
was  the  season  for  smashing  records,  as  the  Green 
and  White  Quintet  broke  seven  of  C.T.C.'c  establish- 
ed records.  What  is  even  more  heartening  is  the  fact 
that  the  C.T.C.  team  of  '50-'51  was  composed  of  all 
Frosh  and  Sophs  with  only  one  Junior  in  the  group. 
With  the  entire  squad  due  to  report  back  next  Sep- 
tember, predictions  have  it  that  next  season's  Colon- 
els will  be  one  of  the  outstanding  teams  in  the  Middle 
West. 


122 


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r^V        55J  V,  ^i 


The   Victory   C  of  the    1951    Baseball  Colonels 

Top  row:    Bob  DiMuzio,   Ron   Budil.   Zeke   Bororian,   Ben   Yohanan,   AI   Matz,   Dan 

Brystrowski,   Helmer  Ringstrom 

Center:    Bob   Mueller 

Bottom  row:    John   Fewkes,   lack   Browne,   Ralph   Bunche,   Kavork   Boghosian,   Bob 

Kerensky,  Phil  Valaika,  Leo  Hennessy 


Led  by  team  captain  Bob  Mueller,  the  Col- 
onels started  off  the  season  with  two  victories 
in  practice  games  against  the  Illinois  Junior 
College  Conference  champs,  and  continued  to 
win  two  of  their  next  four  games.  The  Tutors 
were  hampered  early  in  the  season  by  bad 
weather,  which  curtailed  practice,  and  caused 
the  Boylemen  to  cancel  a  number  of  scheduled 
games,  but  the  Green  and  White  spirit  was  un- 
affected and  came  through  with  flying  colors 
as  pitcher  Jim  Lilek  earned  himself  and  his 
team  a  niche  in  C.T.C.'s  Hall  of  Fame  by  hurl- 
ing a  no-hitter  against  Elmhurst  College.  This 
feat  was  the  first  of  its  kind  in  Teacher's  College 
history.  The  Colonels  turned  in  superlative  de- 
fense exhibitions  throughout  the  season,  but 
were  hindered  by  a  scarcity  of  base  hits.  With 
five  lettermen  returning  next  season.  Coach 
George  Boyle  expects  to  better  this  year's  .500 
average. 


Dolores  Wall — the  College  Queen 


umm 


Homecoming — a  gala  affair  beginning  at 
6  P.M.  and  officially  ending  at  midnight,  but 
representing  weeks  of  preparation  and  pub- 
licity before,  and  months  of  memories  after 
.  .  .  from  the  first  glimpse  of  the  decorations, 
red-white-and-blue  with  their  George  Washing- 
ton motif  ...  to  the  festive  feast  of  dinner, 
where  friendliness  was  the  keynote  .  .  .  the 
excitement  in  the  gym,  with  the  alumni-varsity 
game,  which  yielded  the  expected  Colonel  vic- 
tory ...  the  thrilling  sight  of  the  Homecoming 
Queen's  coronation,  with  throne  and  officially- 
placed  diadem  .  .  .  the  successful  mixture  of 
hilarity  and  nostalgia,  for  patrons  of  booths  and 
exhibits  .  .  .  and  the  final  success  of  the  Home- 
coming Dance  ...  all  accomplished  by  will- 
ing work,  with  alumni-student-faculty  cooper- 
ation, and  the  special  co-ordinating  job  done 
by  Maureen  Quaid,  Homecoming  Committee 
chairman  .  .  . 


Well,    Well— George    and    Martha!      William    Coyne    and 
Peggy  Pfordresher 


The  crowned  Queen  and  part  of  her  Court 
Erna  Falkenstein, 


§ 


Outscored    but    never    outfought— THE    ALUMNI    BASKET- 
BALL TEAM 

1st  row:   Joe  Tadelman,  Floyd  lacobson,  Joe  Podraza,  Martv 
Gray,  Dick  Excell 


2nd    row;     Spin    Salario,    Semen    Peltz,    Don    Taylo 
Dillon,  Coach  Henry  Smidl. 
3rd  row:    Morion  Sczwcek,  Gus  Jones 


D 


Tempo  —  pulsation  of  the  campus  .  .  .  beating  a 
deadline  every  two  weeks  .  .  .  galleys,  copies,  inserts, 
ads,  requisitions — all  piled  up  to  frustrate  the  ever-patient 
janitor,  who  shuts  one  eye  on  deadline  day  .  .  .  the  roar 
of  the  presses  equalled  by  the  roar  of  the  editor  when  copy 
errors  are  found  .  .  .  banquets,  parties,  and  a  never-end- 
ing supply  line  to  the  local  malt  shop  .  .  .  confidential 
columns,  written  by  an  unidentified  student  whose  victims 
thinly  disguise  their  glee  and  identities  .  .  .  news  stories 
and  feature  articles  telescoped  to  fit  space  ...  the  bi- 
weekly search  for  an  'interesting  person  on  campus,' 
with  the  not-too-great  problem  of  variety  ...  the  Tempo 
office,  official  and  unofficial  home  for  all  good  staff  mem- 
bers, gathering  to  discuss  everything  from  Tempo  to  teach- 
ing .  .  .  editorial  boards,  sounding  boards  for  news  .  .  '. 
divided,  united,  always  revising  .  .  .  Tempo  .  .  . 


Concentrating  on  layout  —  Eleanore  Borowski, 
Virginia  Levy 

The  Big  Staff  —  Front  Row:  Marie  Marciante, 
Eileen     Rasofsky,     Eleanore     Borowski,     Virginia 

Back  Row:  Dolores  Durkin,  Stan  Crockett,  Betty 
Manning,  Albert  Cartwrighl,  Emmerine  Avant, 
Barbara   Strickland,   Ted   Lenort 


Marie  Marciante,  Spring  Edi- 
tor; Ted  Lenart,  Fall  Editor; 
Eileen  Rasofsky,  Fall  Manag- 
ing Editor;  Jackie  Meyers, 
Spring  Managing  Editor;  Shir- 
ley Satek,  Spring  News  Editor; 
Howard  Denton,  Staff  Photo- 
grapher. 

Right:  John  Carter,  Faculty 
Sponsor 


This  Picture  was  not  posed— Left  to  right:  Minna 
Rae  Katz,  Eugene  Gibbons,  the  back  of  Irene 
Jurkovic's  head,  Shirley  Satek,  Betty  Manning, 
Eileen   Rasofsky,   Virginia   Levy 


Two  Tempo  fans: 


Marie  Marcianle,  Jackie  Meyers,  and  bulletin  board 


Rose  Leo,  Dr.  Carter,   Marie  Marcianle  and  copy 
in  question 


^ t^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^l 

r^gL    Wf 

^'V  _Jr 

Miss   Mary  E.  Flynn, 
Faculty  Sponsor 


Emblem,  annual  documentary  of  the  year's  projects,  pro- 
gress and  people  .  .  .  this  year,  the  Christmas  party,  attended 
and  enjoyed  by  staff  and  quota-filling  subscribers  ...  the 
periodic  flood  of  Emblem  posters,  complete  with  suspense  .  .  . 
the  last  minute  near  tragedy  of  the  lost  layout — an  unsolved 
mystery  ...  the  long-suffering  men  students  who  had  to  rise 
to  the  smoky  treble  of  the  women's  lounge  during  the  pho- 
tographer's long  run  ...  the  gradually  diminishing  staff,  and 
meetings  held  for  the  perennially  and  sporadically  faithful 
few  ...  the  conscientious  janitor,  at  first  dubious  of  the  legit- 
imacy of  the  late-working  staff,  but  permanently  convinced  and 
beamingly  cooperative  when  the  camera  pointed  his  way  .... 
the  patient  perambulating  photographer,  lugging  equipment 
from  dome  to  engine  room  for  casuals,  with  a  new  assistant 
every  hour  .  .  .  the  after-schoool  paste-up  sessions  in  a  music 
room,  accompanied  by  a  passing  pianist  .  .  .  the  urgent,  mad 
dash  for  copy  ,and  then  painful  Procrustean  editing  .  .  .  and 
Tempo,  graciously  offering  office  space  and  advice  which 
were  gratefully  used  .  .  .  the  assistance  of  vctrious  cooperative 
faculty  members  in  various  capacities  .  .  .  and  the  utter  in- 
debtedness of  all  Emblem  workers  and  readers  to  the  invalu- 
able and  tireless  guidance  of  Emblem's  versatile  sponsor, 
Miss   Flynn  .  .  . 


Muriel  Frelk, 
Managing  Edi 


Howard   Denton, 
Photographer 


]30  Business 


Emblem  staff  members — Charlene  Naser,  Pauline  Kirby,  Barbara  Mueller, 
Alyce   Rakow,    Jerome   Miller,   Gene   Gibbons,    Sports   Editor,    Shulamith 
Lome,  Annie  Lee  Neal,  Nancy  Aim,  Floyd-  Wyrick,  Carole  Hillman,  Joan 
Sering,   Janet  Samples. 
Seated — Wyn   Carmody 


Muriel  Frelk,  Miss.  Flynn — with  paste  and  print 


Staff   Members   Not   Pictured  .  .  . 

Joan  Alfers,  Norma  Bernsohn,  Arlene  Bayuk, 
Albert  Cartwright,  Howtird  Denton,  Winifred 
Duncan,  Maida  Edelstein,  Shirley  Ellis,  Lola 
Jean  Farley,  Jean  Gade,  Rita  Giancola,  Gloria 
Jackson,  Irene  Jurkovic,  Phyllis  Kidd,  Lucille 
Matczak,  Rina  Naddeo,  Avis  Perry,  Toby 
Raitzik,  Vivian  Tomplin,  Robert  Ward. 


Special  Thanks   To  .  .  . 

Mr.  Sylvan  Ward — for  the  School  Songs  page; 
to  members  of  the  Tempo  Staff;  and  to  Jim 
Moore,  Betty  Gansinger,  Maureen  Quaid,  Rose- 
mary Murray,  Pat  Maher,  Peggy  Hoggat,  Mary 
Alice  Ransford,  Alyce  Rakow,  Patricia  Mitchell, 
Jim  Porter,  Peggy  McGregor,  Paul  Ernst, 
Heliobas  Hart  —  for  help  .  .  . 


Pauline  Kirby,  Charlene  Naser  — with  big 
plans 


Dina    Zouras.    Pauline    Merbi 
pasted   layout 


n — with  a  sticky  probk 


HATS  OFF  TO  THEE! 

"Hats  Off  to  Thee"  has  been  used  as  a  sound  off  number  in 
C.T.C.  since  1938  when  Mary  Catherine  Brennan  was  enrolled 
in  one  of  the  music  classes.  Miss  Brennan  was  always  full  of 
pep  and  ready  and  anxious  to  do  more  than  her  part  in  the 
extra  activities  demanded  in  the  music  department.  To  turn 
up  with  just  the  right  song  at  the  right  time  was  typical  of  hei 
enthusiasm  and  interest  in  the  school. 

Shortly  after  she  completed  her  studies  at  C.T.C.  she  enter- 
ed the  Novitiate  of  the  Sisters  of  St.  Dominis  at  Adrian,  Mich- 
igan. After  several  years  of  additional  training  she  was  sent 
to  Dominican  High  School  in  Detroit  where  she  now  teaches 
piano,  organ  and  choral  music.  Extra  study  at  the  University 
of  Michigan  has  rewarded  her  with  a  Master  of  Music  Degree 
in  Piano.  This  little  school  song  was  just  a  start  in  the  field  of 
composition.  Her  music  pen  has  since  turned  out  two  "Ave 
Marias,"  a  "Hymn  to  St.  Dominic,"  a  "Welcome  Song"  and 
several  school  songs. 

Hats  off  to  you.  Sister  Gertrude,  O.P. 


\ 


C.  T.  C.  HGHT  SONG! 

"Come  on  and  fight  on  to  glory!"  That  is  exactly  what  James 
Sedlack  did  in  World  War  II.  One  of  his  missions  was  a  raid 
on  the  Romanian  oil  fields  where  his  plane  was  shot  down.  He 
was  reported  missing  for  several  months  but  finally  turned  up 
as  a  prisoner  of  war.  He  escaped  from  prison  camp  and  found 
his  way  back  to  England.  When  he  returned  to  the  States  he 
entered  C.T.C.  and  completed  his  course  for  a  Bachelor  degree 
with  a  minor  in  music.  Further  study  at  the  American  Con- 
servatory has  earned  for  him  a  Bachelor  of  Music  with  a  major 
in  instrumental  music. 

Before  his  graduation  from  C.T.C.  Mr.  Sedlack  composed 
the  C.T.C.  Fight  Song.  His  words  and  music,  as  well  as  the 
complete  orchestration,  made  a  terrific  hit  on  first  performance. 
Since  then  the  music  has  continued  to  enliven  many  assembly 
programs  and  pep  rallies.  Another  of  his  compositions,  "Im- 
pressions for  Orchestra,"  was  played  in  public  by  the  Wilson 
Festival  Orchestra.  Mr.  Sedlack  made  an  excellent  record  in 
his  singing  and  demonstration  classes.  In  one  of  his  practice 
schools  he  produced  exceptionally  good  choral  music  along 
with  a  fife  and  drum  corps. 

At  the  present  he  is  playing  trumpet  with  the  Atlanta  Sym- 
phony under  the  direction  of  Henry  Sopkin.  He  is  also  an  in- 
strumental teacher  in  one  of  the  high  schools  in  Atlanta.  He 
plans  on  receiving  his  Master  of  Music  degree  from  North- 
western this  summer. 


SOIOft  DIfttCIORY 


Alexander.  Troas  1 4519  S.  Champlain.     WA 

Aher,  Shirley 344  S.  Keeler,  SA 

Arnold,  Sylvania 4312  N.   Bernard,  JU 

Aurand,  Joyce  H 5710  S.  Albany,  RE 

Avant,   Emmerine 47  W.  Garfield,  NO 

Axelrod,  Betty  Jean 6602  S.  Riehmond,  PR 

Baginski,   Helens  D 5058   N.  Mango,  MU 

Bclzweit,  Gisela 8444  S.  Elizabeth,  ST 

Bartolozzi,   Dolores 2250  W.  Cermak,  FR 

Bentley.  Anne 3009  E.  80th  PI. 

Bergen,  Molly : 638  W.  Arlington  PL,  DI 

Bergslrom,  Elva  L 5717  W.  Race,  AU 

Bertha,  Constance  M 505  E.  33rd,  CA 

Birk,  Francine 1229  Cornelia,  BU 

Birmingham,   Robert  J 7351   S.  Dorchester,  MI 

Booze,   Girtlee   Ramey 5924   S.   Lafayette,  NO 

Borowski,   Eleanore  A 1740   W.   Augusta,  EV 

Bosco,  Lorraine  M 6623  S.  Karlov,  PO 

Brandt,  Valene  M 7710  S.   Normal,  CE 

Brannon,  Jean  M 4728  Evans,  KE 

Brodd,  Lois  Marie 900  N.  Lawler,  AU 

Brooks,  Laura  Louise 6603  S.  State,  WE 

Browne,  John  F 146  W.  70th  St.,  HU 

Burch,  Dolores 6119   St.  Lawrence,  MI 

Calloway,   Lawrence 5234  S.  Dearborn,  AT 

Carmody,  Winifred  J 5039  W.  Adams,  MA 

Cavanaugh,   Margaret   M 8937   S.   Justine,  HI 

Claffy,  Sally  A 2320  E.  70th  PI.,  DO 

Collins,  Virginia 9533  S.  Leavitt,  HI 

Coslello,  Mary  D 519  W.  44th  PL,  BO 

Coursey,  Mary  Jane 1634  Winona,  ED 

Crockett,  Stanley 1 1 128  S.  Loomis,  BE 

Crusor,   June  B 201   W.   94th  St.,  CO 

Curlin,  Thomas  G 7840  S.  Wood,  RA 

De  Bofsky,  Jean 5470  Greenwood,  DO 

Denton,  Howard 11309  S.  Bishop,  CE 

De  Simone,  Phyllis. 7755  S.  Ridgeland,  SA 

Diamond,  John  W 2610  S.  Normal,  DA 

Dickman,  Dolores  A 9345  S.  Laflin,  HI 

Dillon,  Leo  L 9422  S.  May,  BE 

Dougherty,  Joan  H 5721   N.  Virginia,  SU 

Duggan,  Patricia 7533   Chappel,  BU 

Dunne,   Mary 9345   S.    Laflin,  BE 

Durkin,  Dolores  A 7331    S.  Michigan,  AB 

Easoz,  Betty 10424  S.  Union,  BE 

Eggers,  Audrey  R 2749  N.  Leavitt 

Ellis,  Lois  A 6119  S.   Rhodes,  MI 


4-3572 
2-5946 
8-5635 
7-8260 
7-8082 
6-2001 
5-1443 
3-5072 
6-1072 


7-0258 
5-1597 
1-1351 
3-9006 
7-0705 
4-3734 
7-5803 
3-1007 
6-7276 
7-6492 
6-1194 
3-9793 
3-9301 
5-4845 
6-2567 
5-5017 
3-0493 
5-1555 
8-7952 
4-6789 
8-7832 
4-5034 
3-3920 
3-8598 
3-9230 
1-8445 
6-6219 
5-3923 
8-9504 
4-1592 
8-4841 
8-7780 
4-1543 
8-6111 


English,   Yvonne  L 6117   S.   Bishop,  PR  6-3819 

Faber,   Jeannette 942  N.  Washtenaw,  HU  6-6532 

Feichtinger,  Joan  L 8226  S.  Bishop,  RA  3-5894 

Fischer,   Frank   P 7539   Drexel,  HU  3-8462 

Fiaherkeller,  Margaret 5437  Haddon,  CO  1-7690 

Fokkens,  Vivienne  D 7318  N.  McVickers,  RO  3-2348 

Fox,   Marilyn   J 6446   Eggleston,  AB  4-2659 

Frank,  Robert 4624  N.  Central  Park,  JU  8-5755 

Frelk,  Muriel  J 1729  N.  Maplewood,  HU  6-1258 

Galewski,  Edwin  E 4407  W.  Thomas,  SP  2-9512 

Gansinger,  Betty  C 3923  W.  66lh  PL,  RE  7-4197 

Garner,  Jeanetts 2339  N.  Kilbourn,  BE  5-0057 

Giambrone,   Lorraine 4704  N.   Rockwell,  ED  4-3611 

Gibbons,  Eugene  E 6559  S.  Albany,  PR  6-2052 

Gibbons,  Rita 6230  S.  Justine,  GR  6-1736 

Gleeson,   Rosemary 8111    S.   Wood,  RA  3-6875 

Gustafson,  Shirley  J 2141   N.  Kilpatrick,  BE  5-1956 

Hacketl,  Barbara 8526  S.  Throop,  HU  3-7909 

Hammer,  Shirley  R 6801   S.  Parnell,  AB  4-3790 

Heath,  Jessie  C 566  E.  36th  St.,  AT  5-4680 

Hegarty,  Belle 10642  S.  Talman,  CE  3-4711 

Hellerman,   Charlotte 5016   N.   Troy,  KE  9-8761 

Hoggalt,  Marie  M 1850  N.  Humboldt,  AL  2-9797 

Holzer,  Estelle  S 1 549  N.  Leamington,  ME  7-7198 

Horecky,  Beverly  M 10258  Avenue  L,  SA   1-1660 

Irmen,   Eleanor   Marie 6822   Ridgeland. 

Janausek  Gloria 1611    S.   60th   Ct.   Cicero,     TOwnhall  3-6095 

Jaris,  Avis 76  W.  Hickory,  Chicago  Hghls.,     ChL  His.  610W 

Katz,  Minna  Rae 7252  S.  Yates,  HY  3-0965 

Kearney,  Mary 1253  W.  97th  PL,  CE  3-6376 

Kearney,  Rosemary 9301    S.   Justine,  HI  5-6455 

Kelly,  William  F 9927  Longwood,  CE  3-1445 

Kilgallon,  Joan  K 4432  W.  Jackson,  MA  6-6796 

Kirby,  Jack  R 4726  Evans,  KE  8-2922 

Kirkpatrick,  Robert  J 4707   W.   Washington,  AU  7-2656 

Koehl,   Regina   T 8143   Peoria,  VI  6-5866 

Koenig,  Betty  J 655  Junior  Terrace,  EA  7-2622 

Kohler,   John   F 7416    Euclid,  BU  8-2732 

Kramp,  Charles 3525  Winchester,  LA  3-1883 

Lahey,  Marilyn  P 1352  N.  Mayfield,  ES  8-1932 

Lenart,  Thaddeus  W 4928   S.  Paulina, 

Levy,  Virginia 825  Independence,  KE  3-7195 

Lightfoot,  Betty  B 6541   Rhodes,  DO  3-9386 

Linklater,  Laurel  M 1926  N.  Kimball,  AL  2-2091 

Lowry,  Joan  S 8037  S.  Sangamon,  HU  3-6540 

Lucas,  Tommie  Jean 33  E.  Garfield,  MU  4-7906 

Lucich,  Dragana  L 3245  S.  Princteon,  CA  5-0729 

Lyles,  Mary  J 3549  S.  Wells,  LI  8-8734 


134 


s 


D 


L    U 


fltCIOIlY 


Lynch,  Dolores 7539  S.  Chappel, 

Lynch,  Margaret 8201  S.  Throop, 

Maher,  Patricia 3^36  S.  Rockwell, 

Manning,   Elizabeth 5478   University, 

Manning,  Marion  A 8418  S.  Throop, 

Mariante.  Marie 3452  Southport, 

Maturi,  Nympha  A 4938  N.  Rockwell, 

Mawst,   Patricia  L 6145  S.   Maplewood, 

Memmesheimer,   Ann 7617V2   Saginaw, 

Michaelis,    Marlene 7300    Bennett, 

Michaels,  Janice 7952   Rhodes, 

Miller,   Earl 10822  S.   troy, 

Minerva,  Dolores  M 6134  W.  Warwick, 

Mitchell,   Patricia 4324   N.  Francisco, 

Mock,  Dorothy  Alice 4984  N.  Kolmar, 

Moore,  James  F 7039  South  Park, 

Moro,   Florence  M 5934  W.   Grand, 

Morrison,   Francesj 10147    Parnell, 

Mueller,   Robert  F 9567   Prospect, 

Munari,  Helen  C 1 142  W.  Grand, 

Murphy,  Patricia   M 9923   S.   Morgan, 

Murphy,  Robert  A 6559  S.  Maplewood, 

Murray,  David  A 6233  University, 

Murray,  Rosemary 6565  S.  Yale, 

McAnulty,  Colleen 8242  S.  Clyde, 

McAnulty,  Madeleine 8242  S.   Clyde, 

McCarthy,  James 6037  S.  Union, 

McDowell,  John  A.._ 6037  S.  Union, 

McGeoghegan,  Thomas  R 821 1   S.  Perry, 

McKinney,  Virginia  M 6732  S.  Loomis, 

McMuUen,   William   R 6537   S.   Parnell, 

Newell,   Eileen '. 1502   N.   Crawford, 

Nichol,  Dolores  M 9335  S.  Lafiin, 

O'Brien,   Lois   M 10026   Charles, 

Ohman,  Ella  Mae 10825  S.  Maplewood, 

Olander,  Dayle  R 6719  Newgard, 

O'Meara,  Marianne 6716  S.  Maplewood, 

Palka,  Carol  Ann 6321   S.  Whipple, 

Parker,  Margie  T 1314  Hyde  Park, 

Pearson,  Rhoda  A 5729  S.  Homan, 

Penn,  Andrew  J 8126   Indiana, 

Pertel,   Marion  E 6541   S.   Whipple, 

Plecki,  Theresa 4402  S.  Maplewood, 

Poray,  Richard  T 2939  N.  Albany, 

Ouaid,  Maureen  C 9401   S.  Justine, 


DO  3-8725 

ST  3-4006 

LA  3-2682 

HY  3-9820 

ST  3-1377 

LA  5-8285 

AR   1-5660 

WA  5-0195 

RE  4-3703 

RA  3-3435 

VI  6-1776 

CE  3-0583 

PE  6-1665 

KE  9-2573 

PA  5-511,6 

RA  3-2143 

BE  8-1504 

CE  3-3273 

BE  8-4283 

MO  6-5796 

CE  3-0245 

RE  7-7619 

PL  2-9288 

ST  3-3396 

ES  5-2447 

ES  5-2447 

WE  6-4515 

WE  6-4515 

ST  3-1855 

RE  7-0441 

WE  6-1659 

AL  2-7690 

CE  3-0432 

CE  3-3082 

BE  8-8741 

RO  1-1007 

RE  7-6152 

RE  7-7393 

WA  4-0318 

GR  6-3047 

TR  4-7792 

RE  7-8065 

LA  3-0778 

HI  5-5360 

Ouinlan,  Clare   A 7819   S.   Cornell,  SO  8-4470 

Rakow,   Alyce  M 4449  N.   Springfield,  IR  8-7373 

Ransford,   Mary   A 4836    Jackson,  AU7-0337 

Rasofsky,   Eileen 4633   S.    Drexel,  DR  3-4456 

Reichert,  Margaret 7954  S.  Wabash,  TR  4-9359 

Reuler,  Joan  M 8246  Vernon.  TR  4-8721 

Reuther,   Jean 2845   N.   Francisco,  EV  4-7921 

Riley,  Joan  Patricia 4351    S.  Greenwood,  DR  3-5259 

Romanelli,  Helen  M 430  W.  97th  St.,  CE  3-6472 

Rontos,  Katherine 1543  W.  21s,t  St.,  CH  3-9729 

Ruane,  Kathleen 8036  S.  Justine,  VI  6-0429 

Rubin,  Leonard  M 4448  N.  St.  Louis,  KE  9-9114 

Ryan,  Marie  T 5525  S.  Wolcott,  PR  6-4302 

Ryan,  Robert  F 6049  N.  Albany,  BR  4-3469 

Sanchez,  Manuel 4507  S.   Justine, 

Sandors,  Helen 4853  W.  Rice,  AU  7-7849 

Sayre,  William  R 6817  S.  Carpenter,  AB  4-8573 

Schmidt,  Dolores  A 7116  N.  Western,  SH  3-2608 

■Schlammes,  Rogette  M 1522  N.  Parkside,  ME  7-6759 

Schneider,  Ruth  G 2324  N.  Harding,  CA  7-5064 

Schurman,   Gail  A 653  Cornelia,  EA  7-3639 

Sherlock,   Charles  W 9740  S.   Hamilton,  BE  8-9849 

Diciliana,  Mary  C 7743   S.  Greenwood,  RA  3-5206 

Smith,  Virgie  Jackson 3739  S.  State,  OA  4-3629 

Stifter,  Sally  S 1 142  S.  Kedzie,  SA  2-6091 

Strickland,   Barbara 9438   S.   Forest,  PU  5-7532 

Szulokiewicz,  Delphine 2439  W.  47th  St„  YA  7-2775 

Townsend,  Clarice  H 9120  S.  Stewart,     WA  8-1922 

Troy,   Mary  E 5438  S.   Union,  AT  5-4131 

Urban,  Eleanor  D 1 81 6  S.  59th  Ct.,  Cicero,     OLympic  2-7635 

Wall,  Mary  Dolores 7816  S.  Euclid,  RE  4-5244 

Walsh,  Robert  J 1644  W.  79th  St.,  TR  4-6055 

Walther,   Joanne 7435  S.  Euclid,  BU  8-1732 

Ward,   Francis  G 7515   Yale,  VI  6-8961 

Warner,   Irene   T 3344   Maple,    Brookfield.     Brkfld.  8958R 

Welsch,  Celeste 7130  S.  Hermitage,  HE  4-3442 

Williams,  Rita  L 601 1   Prairie,  PL  2-0686 

Woelkers,    Jane   F 8121    Ellis,  RA  3-7249 

Wollenberg,  Grace  R 4934  W.  Jackson,  ES  8-7148 

Woods.  Margaret  M 1 133  E.  81st  PL,  RE  4-4859 

Woods,  William  E 5217  S.  Halsted,     LI  8-4313 

Woliska.  Rosemarie  J 5849  N.   Magnolia,  RA  8-1792 

Youstra,  Anne 11718  Wallace. 

Yule,  Elsa  Lindenberg 2053  E.  80th  St.  RE  4-2577 

Zaharchuk,  Martha  A 2735  N.  Lockwood,  BE  7-5020 


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THE  CHICAGO  TEACHERS'    UNION 

CONGRATULATES 

THE    1951     GRADUATES 

OF   THE 

CHICAGO    TEACHERS    COLLEGE 

AND    WELCOMES    THEM 

AS    FELLOW   TEACHERS 

INTO   THE 

PUBLIC    SCHOOLS    OF    CHICAGO 


CONGRATULATIONS 


TO   THE 


GRADUATING    CLASS    OF    1951 


CHICAGO    TEACHERS    COLLEGE    ALUMNI! 


SALUTE  TO  THE  NEW  GRADS! 


Another  June  has  rolled  around — with  another  large  group  of 
CTC  students  entering  the  teaching  profession. 

OUR   SEVENTEENTH   ANNIVERSARY 

Each  generation  of  CTC  students  since  1934  has  found  us  to 
be  a  dependable  source  for  their  text  and  college  supply  needs. 
Next  September,   1951    will  mark  the  seventeenth  anniversary  of 
our  existence  as  a  college  store  serving  the  CTC  Campus. 
WE  GLADLY  SERVE  YOU 

It  has  been  a  pleasure  to  serve  these  developing  community 
leaders  during  these  years.  We  look  forward  to  more  years  of 
service  as  more  CTC  students  matriculate. 

YOUR  COLLEGE  STORE 


WERKMAN'S  BOOK  AND  SUPPLY  STORE 

N.E.   CORNER   STEWART   &   69th  STREET 


CONGRATULATIONS   &    BEST   WISHES 

TO  THE  1951  Graduating  Class 

Jo  -  Jo  BOOK  Store 

401     WEST    69th    STREET 

Southwest  comer  Stewart  and  69th  Street 

STewart  3-9768 


HAVE  FUN! 
ENJOY  YOURSELF 
on  a 


GREAT  LAKES  CRUISE 

On    a    Sister    Queen    of    the    Great    Lakes 

S.S.  NORTH  AMERICAN  .  . . 
.  .  .  S.S.  SOUTH  AMERICAN 

The     ONLY    ocean     type,  exclusively    passenger 
cruise  ships  on  the  Great  Lakes 

GEORGIAN  BAY  LINE 

128     WEST     MONROE     STREET,     CHICAGO      3,      ILL. 


140 


CHICAGO  TEACHERS  COLLEGE 


COMPLIMENTS 
OF 


STUDENT  COUNCIL 


COMPLIMENTS 
OF 

CAMPUS      LUNCH 

6846  STEWART  AVENUE 

WHERE    THEY    SERVE 
GOOD    FOOD 

COMPLIMENTS 

OF 

TEMPO 

COMPLIMENTS 

OF 

CHICAGO  TEACHERS 
COLLEGE  CAFETEHLA 

PHONE  AB  4-4212 
OPITZ     CATER  1  NG 
& 

DINING     ROOM 

BANQUETS,   WEDDINGS    and 

PARTIES 

344  W.  69th  ST.,  CHICAGO  21.  ILL 

COPY  PAPERS  SALES 

&   SERVICE  AGENCY.   INC. 

700  West  Lake  Street,  Chicago  6,  111. 

Complete  Line  Paper  and  Supplies 

for  all  Duplicating  Machines. 

COMPLIMENTS 
OF 

K.  M.  E. 

COMPLIMENTS    AND  THANKS 

TO    THE 
1951    GRADUATING    CLASS 

VINCES    SANDWICH    BOARD 

525  West  69th  Street 

FROM       YOUR      FRIENDS 
OF 

W.  A.  A. 

COMPLIMENTS 


OF 


BETA  OMEGA  CHI 


*♦ 
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HOWARD      DENTON 

—  0  — 

Candid    Photographer 
Weddings   and   Portraits 

CE    3-9230 


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