Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Paye 4 ‘THE KEY WEST CITIZEN _ Wednesday, April 16, 1952) nidance Students Pitching Horseshoes STUDENT PRESS KEY WEST HIGH SCHOOL ¢ it th E 3 i 3 e i i | e : ope i 388 g : e : E fi f (lf te ith cn | i I i st i? | | E E t ef : ! F ; ! g A : H fi ZF I j | | Hl ile oF ai : Ee, 9 i E g 5 iE : i. f i i ; i i i gE i £ E ee HA 3 [ : i E 3 7 i sR : if rr ef, HH Ht al in dl fh H f i FE [ ! e 3 if see 2 i FH i Ff Rail : i i i a5 it : He li gare s28 FE Hi A i age ? WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1952 fu ue Official U.S. Navy Photo T. L. SLIKER, SOG3, USN, is earnestly striving for that ringer while M. C, Scharpeger, SN, USN, stands by for his last pitch. article was written so we will try to hold Billy true to his promise. We brought in $20 from the jam session and $20 from the jars. Saturday, April 5th you might have seen some Sr. High students on Duval Street selling cake and candy. That was also part of the Drive. Many of the students con- tributed lucious looking cake and candy but it all sold by 3:00 p.m. with a sum of $15. Saturday night we had a dance at the NCCS with the admission 35 cents or a can of food. There was a large attendence and we brought in about $20'on that. Each homeroom was given a cer- tain amount of.hings that they were to contribute. When everything was gathered and bought, it amounted to enough i fl : é A i i it it : jis! = bE ft 1 g ' 3 nt g i H E i fs zF Ef i Hl gee E & : H Hf i ies HL fe 8 Bs - g & 3 to fill 15 baskets. The baskets and boxes Were decorated with colorful erepe paper and piled high with good: things to eat. The following ‘things were in each basket: two cans each of corn, peas, tomatoes, green beans, baked beans, milk, applesauce, soup, fruit, beets; one package of lima beans, navy beans, rice, franks; one pound of bacon and oleo; 5 pounds of sugar; 8 pounds of potatoes; 1 loaf of bread; one fresh vegetable; and one pic- nie ham. Mrs. Bond, our sponsor, did more work and worrying than anyone. Hoke Holeome was in charge and did a lot of wotk too. Some others that helped were: Eugene Ro- berts, Terry Parrish, Ray Winkle, June Yates, James Baker, Harry Norviel, Pam Russel, Erme Val- dez, Edie Hampton, Donna Wil- liams, Evelyn Nettles, Esther Smith, Betty Rowan, Barbara Prit- chard, Whit Swain, Billy Osther- oudt, Blanche Alligood, Dee Touch- ton, and members of Mrs. Bond’s 6th period class. The baskets were delivered to needy families on Friday morning. i : HH FPFage it E & i Assembly News By Basil Tynes Junior and Senior High have | been trading assembly programs because each group wanted to see ; | what the others have been having in assembly. Last Thursday, April 10, the High ~ | School Chorus gave the Easter Ves- pers for the Junior High students. The Thursday before that, the Junior High students from the An-! nex presented their television show | with the help of some Senior High | members of the Band. On this program, which was writ- ten and directed by Miss Joanna! aid °F go away fi with other choruses. Food For The Needy Delia Teuchton “Won't you donate some money to help the Easter Bunny fill the Easter baskets for needy fami- lies?" This is the question that has | Wilson, only Annex students ap- | peared. They put on a show which | Was enjoyed from beginning to end | and which showed a lot of talent | over there in the seventh and | {eighth grades. | After flag salute, Richard Anti, Senior High Student | Jeanne Haffield, and Howard John wing canned | 50m played “America.” Colleen | Easter bates gave the Bible reading. Pen-| ny Rosam then announced the tele- | vision show. | Patrick Frobock, announcer for | j the television show, turned the pro- | | gram over to the master of cere- | monies, Michael Whitley, as the * curtain opened on a night club | scene with couples dancing to an led by Ralph Ro-| irl Sandra Car- hool Days.” Accordionist Su if the Juniors jsan Woodard played “Song of in their jars than | Love.” Beverly Thompson and Te- | n jTesa Banks, ¢ Street in « bunny costume | Western out 02 for the Drive. The Bare money wher ST a a t a2 * « us ' “I Didn't Know the Gua W 26 Load. ed.” Three more good acts were presented by Acrobat Toni Consul, Hawaiian dancer Katherine Sha-. mer, and ballet dancer Lanny Har- ris, . Of course the night club had sing- ers and a chorus, Eloina Ortega was the girl singer with the’orches- tra. The four singing waiters--Lee Castro, George Degtoff, Jimmy Mora, and Kenneth Pinder-gave us barbershop style singing. The chorus of the night club wag ¢alled the “Prides and Joys of Easter Time” and they promenaded in Easter parade style, showing off their new Easter hats. The singers with the chorus were . Sandra Knight and Juanita juez, singing, “Easter Parade.” The Promenaders were Marilyn Foh, Margaret Hoyle, Phyllis Fox, Bar- bara Taylor, Linda Bredice, Janice Nonnemacher, Elisa Malgrat, Ano- Jan Ybarmea, Miriam Machin, and Jo Ann Johnson, Naturally a celebrity was deico- vered visiting at the night club, and of course he was invited to play. The “famous pianist” Mi- guel Mariscal was called back for encores. This television show was spon- sored by “Stun,” the wonder sham- poo and hair restorer. Ray Ed- wards, who gave the commercials, interviewed Geraldine Belser, Lois ee and Gilbert Acosta, users “Stun,” The “‘customers” who were danc- ing at the club were: Winnie Stir- rup, Leonard Roberts, Linda Jolly, Donald Powe, Elisa Malgrat, Dan- ny Oropeza, Donna Newlan, Bill Doster, Mary Ellen Baker, Nolan Drudge, Dorilla Hernandez, Ben- jamin Pierce, Katherine Pratt, John Sellers, Jeanne Sanchez, Phil- lip Spencer, Sandra Kemp, and Os- waldo Alfonso. For the Junior High assembly on the Thursday before this program, March 30, the Junior Class gave the play which they had given in Senior High assembly. The play, “Everything Nice,” was selected by the Juniors’ assembly commit- tee, headed by Lorraine Warnock. In the cast were Blanche Alligood and Marlene Park as the two “ter- rible children” who published their Cousin Cornelia’s (Marie Russe) diary in their newspaper, afd sent off ‘the formulas for Happy Gas to the Secretary of War at Washing- ton. Their Uncle Orlando (Basil Tynes) was ready to kill them until it was discovered that his Happy Gas had done something nothing else had ever done-got the Demo- crats and Republicans in Congress to agree! Also in the cast were Orlando's long-suffering wife (De- lia Touchton,) Cornelia’s finance (Jack Malone,) and Orlando's sis- ter (Carol Reeves.) WANTED RAGS, LEAD, BRASS, COPPER Old Batteries and Scrap Metal Call Mr. Feinstein Phone 826-W 800 VIRGINIA _— THREE HOTELS mm ze : ig i i 5 aL aE I a a: ii z F ae PE un He ge Eee Cezanne was in Paris when Henri Murger was living and describing the Bohemian life which is now permanently as- sociated with Montmartre, ‘the left bank section of Paris where the artists live. The author describes young ba and Emile Zola in this set- “High on Montmartre at night, climbing the steep sidewalks alongside carriages that bumped over cobblestones, they could] ton of a girl who lived fifteen glance backword and be thrilled| twenty thousand years ago by the sight of Paris spread out! covered near Pelican at their feet, its maze of streets| Minnesota, shows that girls e gas, then collected lamps. A few more paces ahead | knacks in outlined by the glittering they would came to a little square hemmed in by tall houses with dormer windows poking up in relief against the night sky. Here and there on the dark facades were lighted doorways - behind balconies. Beneath, in the square, were rows of cafe tables. On each a candle flame made the rough linen gleam’ and gave a red glow to the wine decanters. Laughing, chattering people moved about among the diners . . .” And here and there was a Mimi, a Musetta, a Rudolfo. The most significant wisdom which this book has to impart to its readers is the long life- time of hard work and concentra- tion which went into making Paul Cezanne a great and orig- inal painter. He was more than fifty years old before any real recognition was taken of his work. Despite this he painted from dawn to dusk every day whether it was in the forest of Fontainebleau or under the sky- light of his littered Paris studio, whether in Aix-en-Provence or on the quais along the Seine. Miss Downer thus describes his contribution to painting: “The ideas, original with Paul Cezanne, dealt. with three ‘ele- ments of art: form, color and composition. His purpose was to. utilize them all in putting an intensely living quality. into pic- tures. He knew that this aliveness or realness was dependent on depth . . . so he found new ways to express a deep reach into a scene, new ways to round out the objects in the fore: nd ofa picture. He wanted to lead the observer into the depth of a forest, or within the enclosing walls of a stone quarry .. .” As an art critic in the New Yorker once said... Manet is respected, Degas admired, Renoir! loved, but Cezanne is revered. (AMERICANS BEFORE COLUMBUS, by Elizabeth Non-fiction, Hotel Hotel 192 E Flagler St. 1% NE ist Ave 8 BE. lst Ave ms 100 Rooms 80 102 Room Elevator Heated 3 BLOCKS FROM UNION BUS STATION } | | | LTJG Weeks Has | Year Sentence ™ Reported For CHARLESTON, W. Va, @ = Charles Lovejoy, 22, got a year’s sentence in jail for involuntary manslaughter, and. his minister. father says he will fast “until God is moved on the throne in behalf of my boy.” The Rev. Ira Lovejoy, of the United Gospel Mission here, vowed: not to eat or drink after the judge passed’ sentence Monday. The younger Lovejoy pleaded guilty to a charge of killing Clyde Casdorph, 23, in a fist fight last October. One of the University of Ala- -|bama’s top candidates for the | varsity tennis squad is David Riggs, nephew of the famous net their own. They concocted it out in of the semidesert where a dis- tant rain looks like a hanging loom upon which Indians weave Oh our Mother the Earth, oh our Father the Sky, Your children are we, and with ired backs rain, May the border be the standing rainbow. That we may walk fittingly where birds -sing, N green, : Oh our Mother the Earth; oh our Father the Sky! ‘Minnesota Minnie,” the skele-| sfs ff Lake i 8 a variety nie’s turtle shell the bones of a Joon leg, and a that she, carried a gh al was not like the Nile, whicn overflowed at regular irrigating the wild develop the mathematical science of geometry, or measurement. of the earth.” She reminas us. that the Pueblo Indians were great story- tellers and in their. tale telling had no competition from funny Papers, comic books, radio and movies. Children of the tribe learned the dances, rites, arts and stories their ancestors had known for hundreds of years ‘be- fore them, and felt they were mecessary and important. And in the last book she’ points: out, mounds of Central and South pe ar have revealed ‘something lumbus never knew; ‘that the | Pages of the} “excavations | in thousands. of jungle-covered | fore reporting aboard the Vesole. He is entitled to wear the follow- Giz LOVE-BuG BUT MOST Srinvowe OFS OVER.FT The-Cleveland Indians’ pitch. ing staff of Feller, Lemon, Wynn, Trade: with us cece > Save the sting and seve the difference. DICE’S TIRE SERVICE Ph, .778 929 Truman Ave. Hi t VENETIAN BLINDS EXCLUSIVELY WITH The MAXWELL COMPANY The Maxwell Company 909 Fleming 3, BE A REAL ESTATE BROKER OR SALESMAN Real estate offers » profitable lifetime career—$20,00° in commissions collected in 1951 by one of our graduates. REAL ESTATE LICENSE COURSE (Prepares You for State Exam.) Te be given in,jKey West at St. Paul's Parish Hall ON MON. AY NIGHTS, 7 to 10:45 F. M. (5 WEEKS) TO BEGIN MONDAY NIGHT, APRIG 26, ot 7 P. M. Over 2088 Graduates . .. ail of whem passed State exam except four! ‘This is the enty real estate course we will offer this season in Key West. To enroll ate tend first class Monday night, 7 P. M., April 28, at the St. Paul's ‘arish Hell,