Albany Union High School - Whirlwind Yearbook (Albany, OR)
- Class of 1941
Page 1 of 122
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 122 of the 1941 volume:
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R : : ALBANY HIGH SCHOOL : WHIRLWIND A YEAR BOOK OF THE ASSOCIATED STUDENT BODY OF ALBANY HIGH SCHOOL ALBANY, OREGON Editor-in chief — DOROTHY STEWART 1940-41 SENIOR CLASS MOTTO: rifles make perfection, but perfection is no trifle. CLASS FLOWER Gecil 3$ runner lRose CLASS COLORS Thun and J3emon TABLE OF CONTENTS ADMINISTRATION Principal - Faculty................. Superintendent - School Board - CLASSES Senior Class History Senior Voting ... Senior Pictures - - - Senior Review ... Senior Will - Senior Signatures Baby Pictures - Junior Class History - Junior Pictures - Junior Feature - Sophomore Class History - Sophomore Pictures - Sophomore Voting ORGANIZATIONS F. F. A. .... Honor Society ... Literary Explorers Quill and Scroll - - - Associated Treasurers Bookkeeping Club Secretarial Club Radio Club .... Livewires .... Latin Club - - - - Home Economics Club Stage Crew .... Library Club Yell Leaders ... Girls' Federation Seventeen .... Hi-Y.................... Associated Bulldogs Candid Camera ... ACTIVITIES P. T. A................. Band Boosters - 57 Orchestra ... - 58 Chorus .... - 58 Girls' Glee Club - 58 Band .... _ 60 Annual Stoff - 60 Paper Staff ... - 60 Student Council - 62 Student Body Association - 62 Debate - - - - - 63 June Mad - 63 Carnival - 64 Assemblies ... - 65 Vocational Program - 66 SPORTS Coaches - - - - _ 67 Football - - - - 68 Intramural Activities - - 72 Basketball ... - 73 B. A. A. - - - - - 74 Wrestling ... Order of A - 74 - 76 Baseball ... - 76 Track .... - 76 Golf - 78 Boys' Physical Education - 78 Candid Camera of Army - 79 Girls' Athletics Coach - - 80 Girls' Honor Medal Winners 80 Girls' Letter Club - 80 Girls' Physical Education - 82 Candid Camera Girls' Activities - 83 1940 Graduating Class - 84 FEATURES Alumni - - - - _ 85 Commencement - - 87 Calendar ... - 88 We Thank You . 90 Advertisements - - 91 Autographs - 97 7 8 10 10 1 1 12 14 19 25 28 30 31 32 35 37 38 40 41 42 42 42 44 44 44 46 46 46 48 49 49 49 50 52 53 54 56 57 FOREWORD We, as the crew of the good ship, Albany High School, have weathered many storms and are now nearing the port. Under the guidance of Mr. Hudson as Captain, and Bill Mikkelson as Navigator, we have passed safely through the dangerous passage, and now the sea of life lies before us. Never once have we run aground, although a few snags, in the form of examinations, have been struck. We have passed through fog, only to come out into the sunshine again. The waves have broken over the ship, but have not sunk it. The faculty, as officers of our ship, have safely steered us; and now, as the sun sets upon another year, we shall set our sails for the voyage through life. It is our sincere hope that this voyage will be safely passed and that we shall be able to meet face to face the storms that will occur. We will meet these storms with a clear eye and an open mind, always remem- bering that down the sea of the centuries man sails the ship of his dreams, seeking the har- bor of happiness. Mr. Luper Mr. Palmer DEDICATION MONG our faculty we have two men who work unceasingly and un- tiringly for our school. In order to show our great appreciation, it gives us the greatest of pleasure to dedicate this annual to Mr. Loren J. Luper and Mr. Arthur E. Palmer. Mr. Luper has produced a band that has consistently received a superior rating for many years. He is always willing to provide music for the athletic games as well as for programs given in the auditorium. His orchestra has also been recognized as being an outstanding organization of young mu- sicians. The work of Mr. Palmer may be seen throughout the school in the form of bookcases and shelves; in stage scenery for our plays; and in equipment for entertainments and carnivals. In the Visual Education department he is responsible for the progress we have made in this new field and method of instruction. To these two members of our faculty, we owe a sincere vote of thanks. IN MEMORIAM Genevieve Godwin Leon Muller Keith Ewing Donald Tigner Eldon Shultz Our Master called. Our friends were among those who answered His call. Our friends answered. Now they are beyond the trials and tribulations of life here on earth. Maybe it is a good thing. Their lives were full. They shed their light on those about them, and before that light could be dimmed, they were called. Our friends answered, leaving behind them, at first, sorrow, then a certain feeling of contentment. Those to whom they were most dear knew that they had served their purpose and were now going on to higher and better things. Our friends answered. We cannot all comprehend these things that are beyond our control. It was meant in that way. As time lessens the ache in our hearts, it is easier to understand and to feel that The Master was right. Our friends answered, but their memory will linger on throughout the years. c(90 Mr. Hudson The sea of life, down which we all voyage, is at times rough and stormy; but in the end, if we steer our course true, we reach the harbor of peace, happiness, and security. Our high school days are one step in preparation for the voyage. In high school there is offered a varied curriculum so that each student may prepare for his own particular place in life. In this way, if a student really wants to make something of himself, he can take the subjects in which he is interested and go just as far as he likes in learning the course. The crew can't follow its course without a captain. Mr. Hudson has been the finest captain a crew could wish for. He thoroughly understands the school and its problems. He is a well-loved personality in the eyes of all the students. Mr. Hudson, our hats are off to you! We sincerely hope that our own Albany High School students will find their place in life as Mr. Hudson has done, and remember these words that are typical of him: Four things a man must learn to do If he would make his record true: To think without confusion clearly; To love his fellow men sincerely; To act from honest motives purely; To trust in God and Heaven securely. Henry Van Dyke 7 THE CREW Adams Jarmon Osborn e Read Swanson Anderson Johnson Otto Richter Tracy Chase Kurtz Palmer Sanders Voyen Childs Lehman Penland Spence Welbes Grigsby Luper Porter Stanford Worley 8 Faculty MR. DWIGHT ADAMS—Willamette University, B.A.; University of Southern Californio; Physi- cal Education; Basketball and Baseball Coach. MISS IDA B. ANDERSON—University of Washington, B.A., M.A., Oregon State College; Bellingham Normal School; Junior English; Adviser Honor Society. MISS FANNY D. CHASE—Albany College, B. A.; University of Oregon, M. A.; University of Californio; Oregon State College; Senior English; Adviser Literory Explorers, Adviser Annual. MRS. MARY CHILDS—Emerson College of Oratory; Albany College, B.A.; Oregon Stote Col- lege; Librarian; Coach Dramatics. MR. C. M. GRIGSBY—School Printer; Mechanical Adviser Whirlwind Paper ond Annual. MISS OPAL JARMON—Oregon Stote College, B.S.; Home Economics. MRS. VOLENA JOHNSON—Willamette University, B. A.; Oregon Stote College; University of California; Washington Stote College; Supervisor Grade ond High School Music. MR. W. H. KURTZ—Oregon Stote College, B. S., M. S.; Public Speaking, Mechanical Drawing, Curriculum, School Psychologist. MR. P. A. LEHMAN—Linfield College, B.A.; University of Oregon, M.A., Senior Social Science. MR. LOREN J. LUPER—Oregon Stote College, B. A.; Director of Bond and Orchestra. MR. WILLIAM MICKELSON—Oregon Stote College; Willomette University, B.A.; University of Washington; Industrial Arts. MISS CATHERINE OSBORNE—University of Oregon, B. S.; Mills College; Health and Physical Education; Adviser Girls' Letter Club. MR. HENRY OTTO—Albany College, B.A., University of Oregon; University of Washington; Chemistry; Adviser of Boys; Joint Adviser Hi-Y; Adviser Associated Bulldogs. MR. A. E. PALMER—Oregon Stote College, B.S.; Industrial Arts; Trade and Industrial Co- ordinator. MRS. MABEL PENLAND—University of Oregon, B. A.; Typing, Journalism; Adviser Quill and Scroll. MISS RUTH E. PORTER—University of Montana, B.A.; University of Oregon, M.A.; Oregon State College, M. S.; Physics, Mathematics, Junior Social Science; Adviser Radio Club. MISS IRENE READ—Southern Oregon Normal School at Ashland; Oregon State College, B. S.; Home Economics, Cofeteria; Adviser Home Economics Club. MR. CARLTON RICHTER—Oregon State College, B. S.; Bookkeeping; Adviser Bookkeeping Club; Adviser Livewires. MRS. IRENE SANDERS—University of Oregon, Public Health Certificate; St. Joseph's School of Nursing at Denver, Colorado, R.N., Oregon State College, B.S.; School Nurse. MISS WILMA SPENCE—Willamette University, B. A.; Oregon State College, M. S.; Columbia University, Dean’s Professional Diploma; Sophomore English; Adviser Girls’ Federation and 17 ; Adviser of Girls. MISS MARION S. STANFORD—Albany College, B. A.; Columbia University; Oregon State Col- lege; Biology; Adviser Sophomore Class; Honorary Member Literory Explorers. MR. TOMMY SWANSON—Oregon State College, B. S.; World History, Physical Education, Coach Football and Track; Adviser Senior Class. MISS M. VERONICA TRACY—University of Oregon, B.A.; Latin, American History; Adviser Latin Club. MISS CLARA VOYEN—Behnke-Walker; Shorthand, Typewriting; Adviser Secretarial Club; Adviser Associated Treasurers. MR. JOHN WELBES—Oregon State College, B. S.; Agriculture; Adviser F. F. A.; Adviser Junior Class; Joint Adviser Hi-Y. MISS MYRTLE WORLEY—Albany College; Algebra, Geometry. 9 R. E. McCormack, Superintendent Superintendent’s Message A successful voyage of life requires preparation, performance, and accomplishment. The preparation will in a large measure determine the seaworthiness of the ship used for the journey. Performance takes one to a destination. Arrival in port, a chosen goal, is accomplishment. The one who stints on preparation will likely hove an unseaworthy vessel; the unskillful navigator does not journey efficiently and may even meet with shipwreck. Our goals, the ports we enter, should be carefully chosen. They should be those that challenge our every ability; that take us as far as we should aspire to go; that enable us to reach full stature in service to mankind. The poet, Millay, has written: The world stands out on either side No wiser than the heart is wise; Above the world is stretched the sky No higher than the soul is high.” The personnel of our school board has remained unchanged for three years. These men know Albany and understand its needs. They are interested in the education of Albany youth and earnestly desire thot the plant and the program be as satisfactory and serviceable as con be provided. They give willingly of their time to serve the community and assume final responsibility for an efficient and proper administration of the schools. Our schools are a testimony to the fulfillment of their obligation as board members. THE SCHOOL BOARD O. P. Romaine D. E. Nebergall A. G. Senders C. E. Spence V. L. Calavan D. H. Brenneman 10 u L I I I I I I I I I L I L L L Mikkelson Wicks Mr. Swanson Hector Wilson Senior Class History In 1937, our Senior Class pulled anchor and set the course for the un- certain future, under the apt seamanship of Admiral Bill Mikkelson. We of the S. S. Senior have weathered the storms of knowledge, through the year 1940-1941, with the aid of Bob Mikkelson, Admiral; Richard Wicks, Vice-Admiral; Jo Hector, the Ship's Recorder; Priscilla Wilson, the Paymas- ter; Warren Cooley, Representative to the U. S. Navy (student representa- tive); and our Commander-in-chief, Mr. Swanson. Sixteen of our flunkies represent the S. S. Senior in the National Honor Society. The D. A. R. good fellowship medal is an annual award, and was presented to a charming gobette, Markie Weatherford. Rose Bikman edited the Ship's paper, the Whirlwind, for the first sem- ester, and being promoted to First Mate on the Annual Staff, handed the editorship over to Eva Mudgett. Dorothy Stewart was given the position as Captain of the Annual. Some outstanding in the band were First Class Petty Officers, Bob Mc- Clain, Bill Fuller, Don Johnston, and Wallace Bilyeu. Bum Oberson, Bob Morris, Dick A. Miller, Laird Hyde, Clarence Bates, Bob Redifer, Roy Wool- dridge, Andy Patapoff, and Eldon Starkey were the gobs of outstanding athletic ability. The gobettes representing the S. S. Senior in athletics were Emilie Konopa, Marylea Livingston, Eva May Hughes, Priscilla Wilson, Betty Haley, and Jerrelee Miller. Ours is a bright future, and we will steer our lives over the tremendous waves of life. 11 SENIORS Bill Mikkelson Weatherford L. Roth Stuart Wicks Stewart Pesheck Reid B. Haley Standish Cade Roberts J. Miller G. Anderson McCormack Wilson Bob Mikkelson Oberson Hector 12 Senior Voting BILL MIKKELSON Most Popular ond Out- standing Boy MARKIE WEATHERFORD Most Popular and Out- standing Girl LARRY ROTH Handsomest Boy PAT STUART Prettiest Girl RICHARD WICKS Most Intelligent Boy DOROTHY STEWART Most Intelligent Girl BOB PESHECK Most Likely to Succeed BOB REID Busiest Senior BOB MORRIS Best Boy Athlete BETTY HALEY Best Girl Athlete VERNON STANDISH Worst Pest PEARL CADE Best Dressed Girl KENNY ROBERTS Best Dressed Boy JERRELEE MILLER Peppiest Senior GEORGE JUNIOR” ANDERSON Laziest Senior ERNESTINE HALEY Most Bored Senior MARY McCORMACK Politest Senior PRISCILLA WILSON Most Talkative BOB MIKKELSON Worst Ladies’ Man VIRGINIA OLSON Worst Vamp MAXINE WOODFORD First to be Married NORMAN BUM” OBERSON Cutest Boy JO HECTOR Cutest Girl 13 SENIORS Acheson Alexander Allen Andersen Janet Barrett Jane Barrett Bates Becker Bikman Bilyeu Boesel Bowerman Burch Burck Burkhart Byerley Ruth Case Rita Case Chastain Coats Bailey Behrends BraRK Carey Coates I I I i i i i 14 I Cochell Copsey Elder Gay Haight Collin Davis Ernst Gearhart Halsey Cooley E. Dickson Falk Goin Hancock Copeland F. Dickson Fuller Gourley Hart Copple Edwards Gallatin Hadley Haselton 15 SENIORS Harditnan Hawkins Hcllwege Howells Hubler Hughes L. Hyde Kampfer Kelly Lacey Light Livingston E. Meting Marsh K. Mcling Hess R. Hunt Kitching Lucht F. Miller Horning V. Hunt Konopa Luther D Miller 16 SENIORS Mishler Morse M. MacHugh McReynoIds Owens Moore Mudgett C. MacHugh Nelson Jean Parker Morgan Murphy McClain Neuman Jack Parker Morrill Myers McCoy Ohling Patapoff Mornhinweg Myers McGuire Olsen Peebler 17 SENIORS Pengra Ralston G. Schlcgcl Shepherd VanLeeuwen Peterson Rawie B. Schlegcl Starkey Vian Phelps Redifer Schreiner Stoltenberg Voss Pratt M. Roth Senders Stoltz L. Walker Prince E. Schlegel Sharp Vandeventer F. Walker 18 Wallis Warnke Weigel White Wooldridge Dunning Wiley Camera Shy Budd Abney, Wesley Beemer, Clifford Chambers, Bob Christophier, Gene Coddington, Elton Conoy, Ellsworth Conoy, Bob Cosier, Loretta Goetz, Kenneth Golden, Ernestine Holey, Carroll Hyde, Jack Lamb, Wesley Lamb, Anna McMahon, Bob Morris, John Myers, Alex Ross, Juanita Sinnema, Poul Winterstein, Virginia Wilcox, Maxine Woodford. Senior Review OLIVE ACHESON Commercial A busy litIle woman. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Glee Club 3. Secretarial Club 4. Bookkeeping Club 4. Dramatics 4. PHILLIP ALEXANDER Math-Science No truer friend can be found. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Camera Club 2. Annual Staff 2-3-4. Photograph Editor 4. Honor Society 4. President 4. Latin Club 4. GLENN ALLEN General Style is the soul. Order of A 3-4. Football 2-3-4. Associated Bull- dogs 2-3-4. Basketball 2. Bookkeeping Club 4. Wrestling 2-4. B.A.A. 4. Secretary 4. MARJORIE ANDERSEN Language ” have a heart with room for every joy. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Seventeen 3-4. Honor So- ciety 3-4. Sergeant-at-arms 4. Debate 2-3-4. Manag- er 3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Whirlwind Paper Staff 2-3-4. Advertiser 4. Associated Treasurers 3-4. Literary Explorers 4. Latin Club 2-3, Reporter 3. Dramatics 2. Golf Club 3, Secretary-Treasurer 3. GEORGE ANDERSON General Forever a spirited nuisance. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Glee Club 3. Radio Club 2. Vocations 4. VIRGINIA BAILEY Commercial She is a winsome wee thine.” Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Livewire 2. Class Secre- tary 2. Annual Staff 4. Secretariat Club 4. Mixed Chorus 3. Literary Explorers 4. Glee Club 3. Home Economics Club 2. JANE BARRETT Commercial Speech is the basis of debate. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4 Debate 2-3-4. Speech Club 3. Vice-president 3. Secretarial Club 4. Dramat- ics 3. JANET BARRETT Home Economics She knows how to be polite. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Glee Club 2. Home Eco- nomics Club 2-3. Girls’ Letter Club 4. CLARENCE BATES Language Stately and tall, he moves in the hall. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Latin Club 3-4. Foot- ball 3-4. Order of A 4, President 4. Annual Staff 4. Sports Editor 4. Baseball 4. B.A.A. 4. IRENE BECKER Commercial Her heart is in her work. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Secretarial Club 4. WESLEY BEEMER Industrial Arts You enjoy all you do. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. SENIOR REVIEW—Continued LAURETTA BEHRENDS Home Economics Not a minute lost. Entered from Cambridge. Minnesota. 3. Girls’ Fed- eration 3-4. Home Economics Club 4. ROSE BIKMAN Home Economics Anyone can hold the helm when the sea is calm, hut not when the sea is stormy.” Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Seventeen 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Reporter 4. Glee Club 2. Reporter 2. Quill and Scroll 3-4. Paper Staff 2-3-4. Editor-in-chief 4. Annual Staff 3-4, Mechanical Edi- tor 4. Honor Society 4. Literary Explorers 4. Presi- dent 4. WALLACE BILYEU Language He. too. is talented. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Band 2-3-4. Orchestra 2-3-4. Latin Club 3-4. Literary Explorers 4. Li- brarian 4. MARY LOUISE BOESEL Home Economics Sweet gentleness. Glee Club 2. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Home Eco- nomics Club 2-3-4, Spirit of Home Living 4. Treas- urer 3. Girls’ Letter Club 3-4. Seventeen 4. EDNA BOWERMAN Commercial She. too. is not the noisy type. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Glee Club 2-3. Mixed Chorus 3. Secretarial Club 4. Annual Staff 4. GORDON BRAGG Industrial Arts Oh—-blond ic. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Speech 4. DONALD BURCH Agriculture He silent and safe- -silence never betrays you. F.F.A. 2-3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Speech 4. WILLIS BURCK Agriculture “lj at first you don't succeed, try, try. again F.F.A. 2-3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Glee Club 2-3-4. Secretary 3-4. ROBERT BURKHART Agriculture He may well be content. F.F.A. 2-3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. GLENNA BYERLEY Language A true jriend is forever a friend. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4 Girls Letter Club 2-4. Latin Club 3-4. Band 3-4. PEARL CADE Home Economics A lady richly clad is she. Girls Federation 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Livewire 2. FRANK CAREY Agriculture The tall man is forever blessed. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F.F.A. 4, Secretary 4. RITA CASE Commercial Pep and temper march hand in hand. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Girls' Letter Club 2-3. Library Club 2-3. Secretary-Treasurer 3. Home Eco- nomics Club 2. RUTH CASE Math-Science Diligence is the mother of good fortune. Girls Federation 2-3-4. Girls' Letter Club 2-3. Band 2-3-4. CLIFFORD CHAMBERS Agriculture A spark of life is truly wonderful. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F. F. A. 2-3-4. THELMA CHASTAIN General So silent. Girls Federation 2-3-4. Glee Club 3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2. BOB CHRISTOPH IER Vocations Success treads on the heel of every right ef- fort. Chorus 2-3. Glee Club 2-3. Track 2. Wrestling 2. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Order of A. 2-3-4. B. A. A. 4. BOB COATES Math-Science Deeds are greater than words.” Band 2-3-4. Radio Club 2. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Boxing 2. Baseball 2. Orchestra 2-3. B. A. A. 4. ELOIS COATS Language “A wise scepticism is the first attribute of a good critic.” Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Debate 2. Dramatics 3. Library Club 3. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Literary Explorers 4. Tumbling 2. Latin Club 3-4. Band 2. Orchestra 2-3. JIMMIE COCHELL General “Napoleon teas also a little man. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Wrestling 3-4. B. A. A. 4. GENE CODDINGTON Industrial Arts A distinctive feature of humanity. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. BETTY COLLINS Commercial She be a woman to oblige. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Secretarial Club 4. Treas- urer 4. Livewires 4. Secretary-Treasurer 4. Asso- ciated Treasurers 4. Girls' Letter Club 2-3-4. Speech Club 4. Secretary 4. Bowling Club 4. President 4. WARREN COOLEY Agriculture Agreed to differ. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Leader 4. Hi-Y 4. F. F. A 2-3-4. Secretary 3. President 4. Honor So- ciety 4. Boxing 2. Football 3. Basketball 2. Track 3-4. Class Student Body Representative 4. Livewire 2. B. A. A. 4. DAVID COPELAND Agriculture The very heart of politeness.” F. F. A. 2-3-4. Judging Team 4. Associated Bull- dogs 2-3-4. KATHRYN COPPI.E Commercial My friend my pen. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Secretarial Club 4. Com- mercial Club 2. VIRGINIA COPSEY General Speech hath a long life why hurry? Entered from Westerville, Nebraska 3. Girls’ Fed- eration 3-4. Debate 3. BOB COSLER Industrial Arts His work is his pastime.” Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. B. A. A. 4. Basketball 2- 3. Track 2. BERNARD DAVIS Math-Science For radio this man be. Glee Club 3-4. Radio Club 2-3. Annual Staff 4 Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. ELENORE DICKSON General Blessed are those with a sense of humor. Girls Federation 2-3-4. Girls' Letter Club 2. FRANCES DICKSON General Now and then she :an be seen.” Girls' Federation 2-3 4. Girls' Letter Club 2-3-4. Latin Club 2. Glee Club 2-3. Mixed Chorus 3. Library Club 3. Literary Explorers 4. VERDA DUNNING General Light of heart and clear of mind. Entered from Morland. Kansas 4. Girls’ Federation 4. Glee Club 4. JEANNE EDWARDS Language A lovely friend to all. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 3-4. Annual Staff 4. Latin Club 3-4. Treasurer 4. Associated Treasurers 4. Fumbling 4. Glee Club 3- 4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Literary Ex- plorers 4. PHOEBE ELDER Home Economic Fun maketh the girl. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Glee Club 2-3-4. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. 20 SENIOR REVIEW—Continued EDNA ERNST Commercial “Kindness if rewarded.” Girls’ Letter Club 4. Girls’ Federation 2-4. IRENE FALK Commercial “Her complexion be envied.” Commercial Club 2. Associated Treasurers 2. Glee Club 2-3. Home Economics Club 4. Bookkeep- ing Club 4. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. BILL FULLER Math-Science ”One country, one constitution, one style of haircut Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F. F. A. 2. Band 2-3-4. Orchestra 2-3-4. Hi-Y 4. Boxing 2-3-4. Wrestling 2-3-4. Track 3-4. B. A. A. 4. Radio Club 4. LORENA GALLATIN General “Joy thrives on gratitude.” Entered from Corvallis. Oregon 4. Girls' Federa- tion 4. LORETTA GOETZ Commercial “Good nature is one of the richest fruits.” Entered from Detroit Lakes. Minnesota 4. Girls’ Federation 4. Dramatics 4. Home Economics Club 4. ANNABELLE GAY General Oh warble, little nightingale.” Entered from Scio, Oregon 3. Glee Club 3. Girls’ Federation 3-4. BETTY GEARHART Commercial Her stature tall.” Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Dramatics 2. Speech 4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Glee Club 2. Girls Letter Club 3-4. Secretarial Club 4. LUTHER GOIN Commercial So far as man thinks, he is free.” Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Bookkeeping Club 4. KENNETH GOLDEN General ”His love of music embraces all. Entered from Tillamook, Oregon 3. Band 3-4. Or- chestra 3-4. RUTH GOURLEY Commercial .In unconquered will. Glee Club 2-3. Girls’ Letter Club 3-4. Literary Explorers 4. Vice-president 4. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Secretarial Club 4. Annual Staff 4. LOWELL HADLEY Industrial Arts “Gladness of heart is the life of man. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Radio Club 3. Glee Club 4. Band 2-3-4. Stage Crew 4. Livewires 3. LeANN HAIGHT Home Economics ”Continue to climb.” Girls' Letter Club 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. President 3. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. BETTY HALEY Commercial The mind of a scholar. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Glee Club 3. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4, President 4. Class Treasurer 2. Seven- teen 2-3-4. Secretary 3. Vice-president 4. Tumbling 2. Literary Explorers 4. Secretarial Club 4. ERNESTINE HALEY Home Economics Xice individuality. Girls Federation 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Literary Explorers 4. BILL HALSEY General To live is life.” Boxing 2. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Livewire 2. Baseball 3-4. Glee Club 2-3. Chorus 4. B. A. A. 4. PHYLLIS HANCOCK Commercial “Oh give her a pen and let her write. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Library Club 2. Vice- president 2. Quill and Scroll 3-4. President 4. Honor Society 4. Home Economics Club 2. Re- porter 2. Secretarial Club 4. Secretary 4. Whirl- wind paper staff 2-3-4. Business Manager Whirl- wind 3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2. Advertising Staff Whirlwind 2-3-4. Literary Explorers 4. Business Manager annual 3-4. HERBERT HARDIMAN Agriculture “A lover of the soil beyond a doubt. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F. F. A. 2-3-4. MARGARET HART Home Economics “A magnificent spectacle of human happi- ness.” Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. HARVEY HELLWEGE Industrial Arts Pleasure lies is activity.” F. F. A. 2-3. Baseball 3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. B. A. A. 4. PHYLLIS HASELTON Commere al She is a charming person. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Glee Club 3. Whirlwind Paper Staff 2. Secretarial Club 4. JO HECTOR Commercial He hers the striking beauty that never vanishes.” Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Seventeen 4. Treasurer 4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Tumbling 2-3-4. Dra- matics 4. Glee Club 2-3. Band Majorette 3-4. Secretary-Treasurer 4. Livewires 2. Vice-president 2. Secretarial Club 4. Archery Club 3. Treasurer 3. Class Secretary 4. Literary Explorers 4. IMOGENE HESS General “Tread the waves of deep thought.” Entered from Traer. Kansas 3. Girls’ Letter Club 4. Home Economics Club 4. Girls' Federation 3-4. DORIS HORNING Commercial “Studies her attention keep. Honor Society 3-4. Bookkeeping Club 4. President 4. Annual Staff 4. Girls Federation 2-3-4. Sec- retarial Club 4. Musician 4. Literary Explorers 4. JOE HUBLER Agriculture He is witty—every inch.” F. F. A. 2-3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. JIM HOWELLS Agriculture is gifted with the power of expressing his knowledge.” Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F. F. A. 2-3-4. EVA MAY HUGHES Commercial He praised an athlete.” Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Tumbling 2. Paper Staff 2-4. VERNON HUNT Industrial Arts Happiness lies in health.” Entered from Brown’s Valley. Minnesota 2. Associ- ated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F. F. A. 3. Baseball 3-4. RALPH HUNT General ”To be quiet—to be shx.” Entered from Brown’s Valley. Minnesota 3. Associ- ated Bulldogs 3-4. Order of A 4. Baseball 3-4. B A. A. 4. CARROLL HYDE General “No legacy so rich as honesty. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Radio Club 2-3. Secre- tary 2. LAIRD HYDE Math-Science True glory lies in noble deeds. Entered from Philomath 3. Order of A 2. B. A. A. 4. Associated Bulldogs 3-4. DON JOHNSTON Math-Science His speech is a burning fire.” Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Radio Club 2-3-4, Technical Adviser 3-4. Band 2-3-4. Golf 2. LYNN KAMPFER Math-Science “Studious, but yes!” Honor Society 3-4. Vice-president 4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Glee Club 2-3. Annual Staff 4. Baseball 4. VELDA KELLY Home Economics “She is to everyone a friend. Spent Junior year in Waldport. Girls’ Federation 2-4. Home Economics Club 2-4. 21 SENIOR REVIEW—Continued LUELLA KITCHING Home Economics Hers are dancing frrl.“ Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Health 4. Girls' Letter Club 3-4. Glee Club 2-3-4. EMI LIE KONOPA Commercial “Hers is a tout jor thr Arts.” Entered from Grants Pass. Oregon 4. Girls' Letter Club 4. Annual Staff 4. Senior Editor 4. Or- chestra 4. Girls' Federation 4. PEGGY LACEY Commercial Private sincerity is a public welfare.” Entered from Hoxie, Kansas 4. Girls' Federation 4. Literary Explorers 4. IACK LAMB Agriculture lie were born to cooperate. F F. A. 2-3-4. Camera Club 2. Associated Bull- dogs 2-3-4. Speech Club 4. WESLEY LAMB Agriculture Hope is the parent of faith. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F. F. A. 2-3-4. GEORGE VAN LEEUWEN General Our ideals are our better selves.” Entered from Lucca. South Dakota 4. Associated Bulldogs 4. ALICE LIGHT Commercial “She possesses a certain graciousness. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Secretarial Club 4. MARYLEA LIVINGSTON Home Economics Her very frowns are fairer far than smiles of many maidens are. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Seventeen 3-4. Secretary 4. Girls' Letter Club 2-3-4. Band 3. Tumbling 3-4. Class Treasurer 3. ANNA McMAHON Home Economics Athletes are to us a pleasant sight. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3. Tumbling 2. JACK McREYNOLDS General A handsome lad. both tall and dark. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Track 2-3. Cross Country 4. Football 2-3. Wrestling 3. B. A. A. 4. EDMUND MELING Agriculture For all to know. F. F. A. 2-3-4. Associated Bulldogs 3-4. Track 3. Speech Club 4. B. A. A. 4. KERMIT MELING Agriculture lle' a folly fellow. F. F. A. 2-3-4. Judging team 3-4. Associated Bull- dogs 2-3-4. BILL MIKKELSON Math-Science Personality plus.” Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4, Leader 3. Archery Club 3-4. Football 2-3. Baseball 2-3-4. Basketball 2-3. Class President 2-3. Student Body President 4. Whirlwind Paper Staff 4. Order of A 4. Hi-Y 3-4, Chaplain 3. Boxing 2. B. A. A. 4. Quill and Scroll 4. BOB MIKKELSON Math-Science He seems to be a man of the world. Football 2. Basketball 2-3. Baseball 2-3-4. Order of A 4. Hi-Y 4. Chaplain 4. Livewires 2. Presi- dent 2. Speech Club 4. Class President 4. Arch- ery Club 4, Vice-president 4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. B. A. A. 4. FRANCES MILLER Home Economics In her friendship there is pleasure. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Girls' Letter Club 2. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. ESTHER LUCHT Commercial To choose real thoughts is politeness. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Secretarial Club 4. Glee Club 2-3. Home Economics Club 2. LAWRENCE LUTHER General A merry heart doth fit a merry tune. Entered from The Dalles 3. Associated Bulldogs 3-4. Glee Club 3-4. Boys’ Quartet 4. CATHERINE MacHUGH Commercial ”Faithful is she in each small task. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Speech Club 4. Secretar.al Club 4. Girls’ Letter Club 3-4. MARY MacHUGH Commercial Her ways are ways of pleasantness.” Girls' Letter Club 3-4. Secretarial Club 4. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. MILDRED MARSH Math-Science Tis a pleasure to be with her. Entered from Redwood Falls. Minnesota 2. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Whirlwind Paper Staff 3-4. Sub- scription Manager 4. Annual Staff 4. JERRELEE MILLER General We all love a leader. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Library Club 2. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Speech Club 4. Vice-president 4. Glee Club 2-3-4. President 2. Mixed Chorus 4. President 4. Yell Leader 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3. Song Leader 2-3. RICHARD A. MILLER General He merits recognition. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Leader 3. Golf 2-4. Foocball 2-3-4. Basketball 2. Baseball 4. Track 2-3-4. Order of A 2-3-4. President 3. Hi-Y 3-4, President 4. Quill and Scroll 3-4. Vice-president 4. Whirlwind Paper Staff 2-3. Sports Editor 3. B. A. A. 4. WILBUR MISHLER Math-Science Consistency thou art a jewel. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Baseball 2-3-4. Box- ing 2. B. A. A. 4. TED MOORE Math-Science No one need ever say he cannot make good. Radio Club 2-3. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. BOB McCI.AIN Math-Science His hair as black as the raven's wing. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Livewires 3. Band 2-3-4. President 4. Orchestra 2-3-4. Baseball 3-4. B. A. A 4. MARY McCORMACK Commercial Artful hands of slender girl. Entered from Bend 3. Orchestra 3. Secretary 3. Girls’ Federation 3-4. Debate 3. Girls’ Letter Club 4. Annual Staff 4. Manuscript Editor 4. Literary Explorers 4. Secretarial Club 4. President 4. LEE McCOY Math-Science All things deep are song. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Glee Club 2-3. CLYDE McGUIRE Industrial Arts When the iron is hot. strike. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Camera Club 2-3. Foot- ball 2. Baseball 2. HAROLD MORGAN Math-Science Science does not know its debt to imagina- tion.” Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Radio Club 2. VIRGINIA MORNHINWEG Home Economics Cheerfulness doth help for success. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Glee Club 2-3. Triple Trio 3. Girls’ Letter Club 2. Home Economics Club 2-3-4, Squad Leader 3-4. Recorder 3. Literary Explorers 4. JEANNE MORRILL Commercial She is of exceptional gracefulness. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. ROBERT MORRIS General The higher of the highest in sports.” Entered from Myrtle Creek 2. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Leader 3-4. Order of A 3-4. Secretary 4. Hi-Y 4. Football 3-4. Basketball 2-3-4. Baseball 2-3-4. Track 2-3 4. B. A. A. 4. 22 SENIOR REVIEW—Continued ROSI: MORSE Home Economics Known by all as a friend. Entered from Harrisburg. Oregon 3. Girls’ Federa- tion 3-4. Tumbling 4. Girls’ Letter Club 3-4. Home Economics Club 3-4. Library Club 3. EVA MUDGETT Home Economics Everyone admires a champion. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Seventeen 2-3-4. Quill and Scroll 3-4. Honor Society 3-4. Secretary-treasurer 4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Secretary 3. Paper Staff 2-3-4. Editor-in-chief 4. Society Page Editor 3. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Secretary 3. Speech Club 4. MARJORIE MURPHY Home Economics Always a considerate word. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 3-4. Speech 4. JOHN MYERS Agriculture A genuine human being. F. F. A. 2-3-4. Seed Identification 3. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Basketball 3. JACK NELSON Industrial Arts Silence holds many secrets. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Band 2-3-4. EDDIE NEUMAN Math-Science Joy in music.” Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Wrestling 3. Band 3-4. NORMAN (BUM) OBERSON Industrial Arts A good personality is more valuable than many. Football 2-3-4. Basketball 2-3-4. Order of A 3-4. Hi-Y 2-3-4. Vice-president 3. Archery Club 3. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Leader 3-4. Class Vice- president 3. Student Body Vice-president 4. B. A. A. 4. BOB OHLING Agriculture A quiz whiz.” Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F. F. A. 2-3-4. Reporter 3. Paper Staff 2. Football 2-3-4. Basketball 2. Baseball Manager 3-4. Wrestling Manager 3. Track 2. Order of A 4, Treasurer 4. Honor So- ciety 4. Sergeant-at-arms 4. Associated Treasurers 4. Wrestling 4 B. A A. 4. MARQUITA OLSEN Commercial The genuine essence of truth never dies. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Debate 3-4. Dramatics Club 2. Girls’ Letter Club 3. Speech Club 4. Band 2-3-4. VIRGINIA OLSON Commercial For there be women, fair as she. but no fairer. Entered from Litchfield. Minnesota 4. Girls' Fed- eration 4. Debate 4. WADE OWENS General Knowledge is power. Entered from Sweet Home 4. Associated Bulldogs 4. Latin Club 4. Band 4. Baseball 4. JACK PARKER Agriculture Well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Wrestling 3-4. JEAN PARKER Commercial They win that laugh. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2- 3-4. President 4. Honor Society 4. Debate 3-4. Dramatics Club 3. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Sec- retarial Club 4. Literary Explorers 4. Band 2-3-4. Speech Club 3. Orchestra 4. ANDY PATAPOFF Math-Science The world still needs its champion as of old. and finds him still. Entered from Shedd. Oregon 3. Hi-Y 4. Sergeant- at-arms 4. Order of A 4. Wrestling 3-4. Football 3- 4. B. A. A. 4. President 4. Associated Bulldogs 3-4. DON PEEBLER Industrial Art. True generosity is a duty. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Track 2-3-4. Order of A 4 B. A. A. 4 BOB PENGRA Industrial Arts Life is not dated merely by years. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Basketball Manager 3-4. Order of A 4. B. A. A. 4. ROBERT PESHECK Math-Science The march of the intellect. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Radio Club 2-3. Secre- tary 2. President 3. Honor Society 3-4. President 4. NORMAN PETERSON Math-Science Originality is the one thing which unorig- inal minds cannot feel the use of. Entered from Aberdeen. Washington 4. Hi-Y 4. Associated Bulldogs 4. LLOYD PHELPS Industrial Arts Experience makes us wise. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. FRANCES PRATT Commercial Promptness is the value of time. Entered from Lincoln. Nebraska 4. Girls’ Federa- tion 4. Secretarial Club 4. JAKE PRINCE General He if the prince of all Princes. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Order of A 3-4. Foot- ball 2-3-4. Boxing 2-3. Golf 2. Track 2. B. A. A. 4. BOB RALSTON Math-Science I've always leisure to assist my friends. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Golf 2-3-4. Captain 4. Golf Club 3. Dramatics 4. B. A. A. 4. GLADYS RAWIE Commercial It is good to lengthen one's intellect. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Seventeen 3-4. Honor Society 3-4. Secretary-Treasurer 4. Associated Treasurers 4. Bookkeeping Club 4. Vice-president 4. Whirlwind Paper Stall 2, Exchange Editor 2. Library Club 2-3. Secretary 2. Secretarial Club 4. Glee Club 2-3. Girls’ Letter Club 4. Literary Ex- plorers 4. BOB REDIFER Industrial Arts Survival of the fittest. Football 2-3-4. Wrestling .3-4. Track 3-4. Base- ball 2-3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Order of A 3-4. Sergeant-at-arms 4. B. A. A. 4. ROBERT REID Language For courtesy wins all women.” Livcwircs 4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Intramural Manager 3. F. F. A. 2. Associated Treasurers 4. President 4. Honor Society 3-4. Hi-Y 3-4. Stu- dent Body Treasurer 4. Student Body Representa- tive 2. Debate 3. Literary Explorers 4. Latin Club 3-4. KENNETH ROBERTS Math-Science ” You will go a long way before you find a better man. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Order of A 3-4. Golf 2-3-4, Captain 3. Basketball 3-4. Honor Society 4. Vice president 4. Annual Staff 4. Feature Editor 4. B. A. A. 4. Literary Explorers 4. Sergeant-at- arms 4. ALEX ROSS Industrial Arts A mans size does not always cause him to be lost irom sight. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. LARRY ROTH Industrial Arts For what more could you ask? Football 3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Order of A 4. Basketball 2-3. F. F. A. 2. B. A. A 4 MARY LOUISE ROTH Commercial O beautiful eyes of brown. Literary Explorers 4. Secretarial Club 4. Speech Club 3. Cjirls’ Federation 3-4. 23 SENIOR REVIEW—Continued BOB SCHLEGEL Agriculture “Ifisdom it great. Glee Club 2. F. F. A. 2-3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Baseball 2-3-4. B. A. A. 4. EVERETT SCHLEGEL Industrial Arts .111 words are pegs to han.g idtas on. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Order of A 4. Base- ball 2-3-4. B. A. A. 4. Glee Club 3. GLENN SCHLEGEL Agriculture “SHtnct gives ronstnt.” Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F. F. A. 2-3-4. Stage Crew 4. Basketball 2. B. A. A. 4. MAR I HA SCHREINER Home Economics Sht is tvtiling always. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Glee Club 2. VESTA SENDERS Home Economics Sht never fails to Jo htr best. Glee Club 2. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Whirlwind Paper Staff 2-3. Home Economics Club 2-3-4, Mu- sician 3-4. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Latin Club 3-4. President 4. Quill and Scroll 3-4, Secretary-treas- urer 4. Associated Treasurers 4. Literary Explor- ers 4. Tumbling 2. BLANCHE SHARP Home Economics Pleasingly plump, fair, and tvtll liked. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Glee Club 2. DARRELL SHEPHERD Agriculture Ifhen you sptak to him. you art surt of a civil rtply. F. F. A. 2-3-4. Vice-president 4. Associated Bull- dogs 2-3-4. Band 3. Track 3. B. A. A. 4. JUANI TA SINNEMA Commercial In htr fritndthip thtrt is nothing insinctrt. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Speech Club 4. Secretarial Club 4. VERNON STANDISH Math-Science Large. divine. comfortable words. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Radio Club 2-3. Latin Club 3-4, Vice-president 4. ELDON STARKEY Math-Science Ifhat is lift without fun? Entered from Medford. Oregon 4. Order of A 4. Hi-Y 4. Football 4. Basketball 4. Baseball 4. Associated Bulldogs 4. DOROTHY STEWART Commercial Taltnt is truly prized.” Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Secretary-Treasurer 4. Glee Club 2. Home Eco- nomics Club 2. Paper Staff 3. Annual Staff 3-4, Editor-in-chief 4. Secretarial Club 4. Honor So- ciety 4. Quill and Scroll 4. Literary Explorers 4. Associated Treasurers 4. BOB STOLTENBERG General A quitI man is ofttn tht wistst.” Entered from Tilden, Nebraska 3. Associated Bulldogs 3-4. PAT STUART Home Economics Sing away sorrow, cast away cart. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Archery Club 3. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Seventeen 2-3-4. Student Body Secretary 4. Glee Club 2-3. Livewires 2-3-4. Tumbling 2. BERNICE VANDEVENTER Home Economics maiden nti'tr bold, of spirit still and quitt. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2-3-4. Girls Letter Club 3-4. RUTH VIAN Home Economics Sht thinks in a ptactjul solitudt. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. GLADYS VOSS Home Economics Diligence is good fortunt. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. ETHEL WALLIS Home Economics In htr friendship thtrt is not prtltnst. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Home Economics Club 2- 3-4. Literary Explorers 4. Secretary-Treasurer 4. FLOYD WALKER Agriculture lit ht tht man of musclt. Wrestling 2. F. F. A. 2-3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2 3 4 B. A. A 4. LOIS WALKER Commercial You art uneasy; you have ntvtr ridden with me before. Girlsj Federation 2-3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Girls’ Bowling Club 4. Treasurer 4. Bookkeeping Club 4. Associated Treasurers 4. ROBERT WARNKE General He. too. is a man of few words. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. MARKIE WEATHERFORD General Ah. you flavor everything; you art the van- illa of society. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Treasurer 3. President 4. Annual Staff 3-4. Whirlwind Staff 2-3-4, Society Editor 2. Sports Editor 4. Livewires 2-3-4. Treas- urer 3. Girls' Letter Club 2-3-4. Sergeant-at-arms 4. . umbling 2-3-4. Seventeen 3-4. Treasurer 3. President 4. Archery Club 3. Quill and Scroll 3-4. Latin Club 4. Dramatics 3-4. D. A. R. Represen- tative 4. MACEL WEIGEL Commercial Deeds are greater than words. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Secretarial Club 4. BILL WHITE Industrial Arts He has a good word for all. Livewires 2-4. President 2. Band 2-3. Glee Club 3- 4. Boys’ Quartet 3-4. Chorus 4. Stage Crew Manager 4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Orechestra 2. RICHARD WICKS Math-Science Let knowledge grow from more to more. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Leader 3. Class Vice- resident 4. Hi-Y 2-3-4. Secretary-Treasurer 2-3-4. resident 4. Football Manager 2-3-4. Track and Baseball Manager 2. Basketball Manager 2. Golf Club 3. Golf 3-4. Associated Treasurers 2-4, Vice- president 2. Debate 2-3-4. President 4. Honor Society 3-4. Order of A 3-4 Annual Staff 2-3-4. Sophomore Editor 2, Sports Editor 3. Senior Editor 4. Literary Explorers 4. Student Body Represen- tative 3. B. A. A. 4. VIRGINIA WILCOX Commercial Ifel! worthy of a place in our remembrance. Entered from Vale. Oregon 4 Secretarial Club 4. Girls' Federation 4. VERNON WILEY Math-Science Some silent people are more interesting than talkers. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. Camera Club 2. PRISCILLA WILSON Commercial A little fun to match the sorrow of each day. Glee Club 2-3. Vice-president 2. Debate 3-4. Girls’ Federation 2-3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Vice- president 3. Mixed Chorus 3. Secretarial Club 4. Vice-president 4. Associated Treasurers 4. Vice- president 4. Class Treasurer 4. Tumbling 2-3-4. Literary Explorers 4. Archery Club 3. Livewires 2. MAXINE WOODFORD Home Economics She's good company and lots of fun. Girls' Federation 2-3-4. Girls’ Letter Club 2-3-4. Tumbling 2. ROY WOOLDRIDGE Agriculture Ifhy are they not contented like me? Order of A 3-4. Associated Bulldogs 2-3-4. F. F. A. 2-3-4 Wrestling 2-3-4. Track 2-3-4. Boxing 2-3. B. A A 4 24 Senior Will We, the Senior Class of Albany High School, being of fairly sound mind and body, do hereby will, bequeath, and leove upon those herein named, the gifts, prized qualities, and characteristics that we have struggled to attain during our high school course. To other members of the Student Body we leave our love, offection, and sympathy for the faculty and the school. As individuals we bequeath the following: I, Olive Acheson, will my bookkeeping book to Arlita Wehrli. I, Glenn Allen, will my speech-making ability to Betty Kummer. I, Marjorie Andersen, leave for 0. S. C. I, George Anderson, will not stop seeing Phyllis. I, Virginia Bailey, leave for California. I, Janet Barrett, will my width to some skinny junior. I, Clarence Bates, will to Coach Adams a nice, thick book to accompany him in his old age. I, Irene Becker, say Good-bye. I, Wesley Beemer, bequeath nothing because I have use for it all. I, Lauretta Behrends, will miss my boy friend. I, Rose Bikman, will my print-shop work to Griggs. I, Wallace Bilyeu, will my first chair clarinet to the most deserving clorinet player. I, Mary Louise Boesel, will my cor ond possengers to Gene Hamilton. I, Edna Bowerman, will my freckles to Shirley Pratt. I, Gordon Bragg, leave my blonde hair to a cocker spaniel. I, Don Burch, will my weakness for skipping school to Roy Wordehoff. I, Willis Burck, will my Model T Ford truck to whoever wants it. I, Robert Burkhart, will leave for the Marines—I hope. I, Glenna Byerley, will my height to Nellie MacDonald. We, Elton and Ellsworth Conoy, leave together, olthough it seems as if we had just arrived. I, Pearl Cade, leave, but I am taking Ernestine and Marge with me. I, Frank Carey, will my agriculture honors to Calvin Tigner. I, Rita Case, leave to go on a man-hunt. We, Ruth Case and Mickey Marsh, will the first period chemistry class back to the boys. I, Clifford Chambers, will continue my F. F. A. work. I, Bob Christophier, will my quiet nature and cyclone-like tantrums to anybody who has the nerve to accept. I, Elois Coats, gladly will my seat in the second year Latin class to Coral Doble. I, Bob Coates, will my chair in the band to Darrell McClain. I, Jimmie Cochell, will my height to Don Garrison. I, Gene Coddington, will leave as fast as I can. I, Betty Collins, leave to join my fiance. I, Warren Cooley, leave the F. F. A. to another orator. We, David Copeland, Herbert Hardiman, Glen Hawkins, and Floyd Walker, will leave the Ag. room with four fewer worries. I, Kathryn Copple, will dance through life. I, Virginia Copsey, hereby leave my quiet nature to some junior girl. I, Bob Cosier, hope to get married. I, Bernard Davis, bequeath all my date books to Mike Becker. |' Elenore Dickson, leave at last with my sister and my giggle. I, Frances Dickson, leove my skipping technique to Jean McReynolds. We, Verda Dunning and Edna Ernst, leave because the senior editors can't think of onything to say about us. I, Jeanne Edwards, will my little Chevvie to Betty Ferguson so that she can get to school on time next year. I, Phoebe Elder, will leave with many recollections (of Willis). I, Irene Falk, leave my dimples to Shirley Pratt. I, Bill Fuller, will let my hair grow. I, Lorena Gallatin, will leave for Corvallis. I, Annabelle Gay, leave to be gayer. I, Betty Gearhart, leove my lovely height to Ray Straw. I, Luther Goin, will come back and haunt you. I, Kenneth Golden, will my spelling to Jack Stiles. I, Ruth Gourley, will my packed locker to a can of sordines. I, Lowell Hadley, will leave for parts unknown. I, LeAnn Haight, will my Ford to anyone who can make it run. 25 Senior Will—Continued I, Betty Haley, leave my ability to make typing errors to Barbara Dawson. I, Ernestine Haley, leave, but I am coming back to see Mr. Otto. I, Bill Halsey, will leave to join the Navy—I guess? I, Phyllis Hancock, leave my sappy—I mean snappy—shorthand to Patsy Eakin who takes Latin. I, Margaret Hart, will my seat in social science class to some sleepy junior. I, Phyllis Haselton, leave my big blue eyes (they get me almost anything I want) to Morgie Robe. Maybe they'll help with B. J. I, Jo Hector, would gladly will my inch-thick glasses to anyone who wants them, but I have to have them to see with. I, Harvey Hellwege, will leave to be conscripted. I, Vernon Hunt, will continue to play baseball. I, Imogene Hess, leave with an unparalleled record of class absenses. I, Doris Horning, leave with a string of 1 's behind me. I, Jim Howells, keep all I have for next year. I, Joe Hubler, bequeath my place in Mr. Hudson's doghouse to whoever needs it. We, Eva Hughes and Jane Barrett, will our locker to anyone who has nerve enough to clean it out. I, Ralph Hunt, give Bob Reid the President's chair if there is ever a vacancy. I, Carroll Hyde, will my stubbornness to my brother. I, Laird Hyde, will my school spirit and attendance at pep meetings to the students of Albony High. I, Don Johnston, bequeath my influence with the faculty to some other benevolent cherub. I, Lynn Kampfer, will my seat in the first period chemistry to anyone who will enjoy it as much as I have. I, Velda Kelly, will leave Bob Ohling at home when I set out to make my fortune. (I don't want him robbed.) I, Luella Kitching, leave my nickname, Babe,” to someone more deserving. I, Emilie Konopa, do hereby will my piano-pounding to Bob Hermens. I, Peggy Lacey, leove the Who's Who to whom. We, Jack and Wesley Lamb, will our place in the F. F. A. to the Home Economics girls. We, Alice Light, Loretta Goetz, and Thelma Chastain, leave as graduates—we hope. I, Marylea Livingston, will my going steady to Shirley Bird and Bob Hermens. I, Esther Lucht, will my ability for collecting fifth period slips to Virginia Hobbs. I, Lawrence Luther, will sing for my supper. I, Edmund Meling, will leave athletics alone. I, Kermit K. Meling, will my judging ability to Bill Henshaw. We, Bill and Bob Mikkelson, will be happy to serve you. Thank you! I, Fronces Miller, will my stature to Betty Brinson. I, Jerrelee Miller, will my yell-leading job to Mr. Hudson. I, Richard A. Miller, leave to have my hat stretched. I, Wilbur Mishler, will my diagnostic tests to the future English classes. I, Ted Moore, will my chess-playing ability to Jack Van Radford. I, Harold Morgan, will continue to play sweet tunes on my Ford horns. I, Virginia Mornhinweg, will my position in the cofeteria to Dorothy Becker. I, Jeanne Morrill, will my absence excuses to Miss Voyen. I hope she doesn't use them as often as I did. I, Bob Morris, will leave the Bulldogs flat—how will they get along without me? I, Rose Morse, will my artistic obility in English class projects to Phyllis McCormack. I, Eva Mudgett, leave my Whirlwind editorship to Doris Mornhinweg. I, Marjorie Murphy, will my ability to sing to anybody who wants it. I, Betty Myers, will do my own Latin hereafter. I, John Myers, will my acid-eaten pants to some foolish scientist. We, Catherine and Mary MacHugh and Mary McCormack, leave the office to next year's shorthand class. I, Bob McClain, will my dance band to Tom Snuzz Dawson. I, Lee McCoy, will my Chevrolet touring car to the sophomore who can afford to keep it going. I, Clyde McGuire, will my intelligence to my brother. I, Anna McMahon, will my laugh to someone who needs a good laugh. I, Jack McReynolds, leave to fight fires. I, Jack Nelson, will my front desk in English to the first junior who applies. I, Eddie Neuman, will my sox to anyone whose neighbors can take it. 26 Senior Will-—Continued I, Normon Oberson, will toke Fern with me. I, Bob Ohling, will leave my agriculture record books to Stuort Gourley. I, Marquita Olsen, will leave the debate club in peace. I, Virginia Olson, will my long curls to Betty Barker. I, Wade Owens, will leave to Miss Tracy my natural ability to read Latin. I, Jack Porker, will become President of the United States. I, Jean Parker, will the Home Economics Club to Delores Haas. I, Andy Patapoff, hereby will the pigskin and wrestling to Lyle MacHugh. I, Don Peebler, will my bashfulness to any sophomore. I, Bob Pengra, will my manager's job to Hal Brunson. I, Bob Pesheck, will my good standing with Miss Porter to Bud Fortier. I, Norman Peterson, leave my hokum obout Hoquiam to the Aberdeen Chamber of Com- merce. We, Lloyd Phelps ond Alex Ross, will our mechanical drawing tools to the forthcoming juniors. I, Frances Pratt, leave without my stencils. I, Jake Prince, will go to college. (I hope.) I, Bob Ralston, will be selling you a new run-about. I Gladys Rawie, will my orchid stamps and green stationery to Pat Gilchrist to write letters to O. S. C. I, Porky Redifer, will my excess weight and speed to Bobby Jacobson. I, Robert Reid, will my standing in the DEMOCRATIC PARTY to some foolish republican. I, Kenny Roberts, will my golf clubs to Rex McReynolds, if he will take them. I, Lorry Roth, will leave to auctioneer. I, Mary Louise Roth, will my big brown eyes to any blonde. I, Bob Schlegel, leave my essays to Virgil Garland. I, Everett Schlegel, will my baseball position, warming the bench, to Archie Hayes. I, Glenn Schlegel, will my athletic ability to my brother John Butch Schlegel. L Martha Schreiner, will my wisecracks to Lloyd Voss to use for the next two years. I, Vesta Senders, present the Latin Club to Miss Tracy. I, Blanche Sharp, will leave to go to Portland. I, Darrell Shepherd, leave the vice-presidency of the F. F. A. to that industrious junior—Bill Henshaw. I, Juanita Sinnema, will my poetry to Lera Corke. I, Vernon Standish, do hereby will, bequeath, and leave my title of Termes Flavipes (Ter- mite) to Willie Senders for long and continued boring from within. I, Eldon Starkey, will Betty Ferguson to some awfully lucky junior boy. I, Dorothy Stewart, leave the annual to Mr. Hudson, Mr. Grigsby, and Miss Chase in the hope that they will get some enjoyment from it in future years. I, Bob Stoltenberg, will my oral English reports to the speech class. I, Pat Stuart, will my football figure to Jack Thompson. I, Bernice Vandeventer, will my secretarial job with Johnny Welbes to someone who can read his writing. I, George Von Leeuwen, will my left shoe and right sock to Charles Wicks. I, Ruth Vian, will my demure manners to Miss Worley. I, Gladys Voss, will my ability as o waitress to Lauralea Reeser. I Lois Walker, will my ability to drive a Model A Ford coupe to Don Garrison so that he won't have to take driving school in the future. I, Ethel Wallis, will my punctuality to Geroldine Jensen. |' Robert Wamke, will my shoes to someone else who walks. Markie Weatherford, leave the boys in sorrow. I, Macel Weigel, bequeath my meager knowledge of economics to Eileen Brenneman. |' Bill White, will my turned-up trouser legs to Rodney Russell. , Richard Wicks, leave Mr. Lehman in piece—er—I mean peace. I, Vernon Wiley, just hope to leave. I, Virginia Wilcox, leave my library position to Mrs. Childs. |' Priscilla Wilson, will leave with everything because I need it all. , Maxine Woodford, will my wooden shoes to the Navy. I, Roy Wooldridge, will get a job. (Maybe) We three leave oil alone, my echo, my shadow, and I. Signed and witnessed this 1 st day of June. DAVY JONES FATHER NEPTUNE 27 SENIOR SIGNATURES JJLp OA Z -sCL '- sr-rt-a -LS (ItJJbu XvJ U X Q, - 5 rfc Vw ■fe- o-i. £tdu'.OL. 7 a cs 3JL. bJtUy — £%4u - x ) ( W cJb L .JL JJ rt-d- yrTt o cr -nji G s - jl- uJU£l U 7T|qa u jlX v a- A tr 2 _. ' JL WqP CJvs-AaaA LOoj dljf. o-v-c-2 a_ Ss] o-±XX J S2ty- ___ _ y . (fa JstiJL ( B o- r -Va C 28 SENIOR SIGNATURES S-e -6 (L (Za. ° c ?jr - I YH.. y UL y jLe- ynsgtrt 2sUsr ''C% (s As0 _ ‘TS tdJUA J -S ' £%LAst ejCs _ i£c- -''i-- C- _ £ rm tw- (y ) suJzjl W±Sz%ju l tJ =c— - ( -e Asue +- it oLt 6 s $Ua+- yA£t A-c '£ j'Syn Qr Jp+- usu6 C 3ct-c UZ = %e CX '-1 - jzUZC ofo ju 3 6-e ud? ZL Q(o r X QuZA A JL Jk ytCbUj bhi z u LtuMxnXy 29 DON’T ROCK (A BYEi THE BOAT First row: (left to right) Phyllis Hancock. Phillip Alexander. Catherine and Mary MacHugh. Second row: Marylea Livingston. Mary Louise Boesel. Robert Reid. Phoebe Elder. Third row: LeAnn Haight. Glenna Byerley. Norman Oberson. Kathryn Copple. Fourth row: Etenore Dickson. Dorothy Stewart. Frances Dickson. 30 Burrelle Tycer Mr. Welbes Jacobson Gilchrist Junior History Ship’s Log of 'A. H. S. Class of ’42 September 1938 Sailing from Freshman harbor under the command of First Mates Ffarold Burrelle and George Tycer, the sister ships The Good Ship Madison ood The Good Ship Central plowed steadily through the grand old year of 1938 and finally reached their destination, the harbor of Sopho- more Isle. September 1939 The Good Ship Madison and Good Ship Central met and merged crews. The combined crews were transferred to the battleship A. H. S. Class of '42. Officers elected: Miss Spence, captain; Harold Burrelle, first mate; Don Sorenson, second mate; Pat Gilchrist, yeoman; Marjorie Robe, purser; Paul Kenagy, ship's agent. A high wind and a troubled sailing were predicted. May 1940 After nine months of troubled sailing on the high seas, the crew of the A. H. S. Class of '42 reached their destination and were en masse elevated to the rank of Juniors. September 1940 The crew of the A. H. S. Class of '42 sailed into the calm blue sea on its second journey around the school year, with fair weather and clear sailing ahead. October 1940 The crew of the A. H. S. Class of '42 elected the following officers: Mr. Welbes, captain; Harold Burrelle, first mote; George Tycer, second mate; Pat Gilchrist, purser; Bob Jacobsen, yeoman; Benton William- son, ship's agent. Among our crew there are many outstanding gobs: in football, Bob Hermens, Ray Wordehoff, John Hayes, Bob Jacobson, John Schlegel, Ralph Hassman, and Thad Looney; in basketball, Don Garrison, Bob Jacobson, and Ray Wordehoff. We also have talented representatives in debate, in the a cappella chorus, on the paper staff, and in many of the other organizations. 31 J U N I O R S Allphin Ammon Anderson Arnold Austin Babcock Bacon Ball Bartcher Bassett Becker Bloom Brenneman Brown Byers Carter Chandler Christopher Cleland Cray B. Dawson T. Dawson Dickey Dover Eakin Erb Ferguson Fitzpatrick Flomer Fortier 32 i i i i l I l l I I l I I I I I I I I I I Fret tag Grail R. Hassman Hewitt Jenks Lindsay Garrison Groves L. Hassman Hobbs Kelly Linville Gingrich Haas Henderson Hoff Kennel Looney Gladhart Halsey Henshaw Hoffman Koos Luther Govro Hart Hermens Holst Kummer Lyles JUNIORS Miller McClain Nieman Russell G. Schlegel Stutz Millhollen McCormack Nutting Robe Slocum Talbott Moench McGuire Palmer Robertson Sorenson Thompson Mornhinweg McReynoIds Peacock Ryals Stellmacher Towery Murphy Nebergall Persons Schmidt Stiles Tripp 34 Vehrs Walton Wehrli Wendel Wicks Williamson Wilson WordchofF Zcmlicka Junior Camera Shy Everett Ambrosek, Tom Anderson, Betty Parker, Rachel Barr, Mike Becker, Rex Bishop, Ronald Bowerman, Cebert Bryan, Jack Buker, Virginia Lee Burkhart, Robert Campbell, Lera Corke, Everett Crocker, Coral Doble, Dorene Douglas, Helen Ellison, Gene Guinn, Glen Hancock, Medoine Hardiman, Vern Harvey, John Hayes, Dorse Hess, Sylvia Hinkle, Betty Hopkins, Lloyd Kenagy, Ward Kennedy, Sam Koontz, Alvin Kreger, Wilbur Lance, Jacob Leichty, Frank Love- joy, Martha Martinak, Roy Martinak, Harold Mayfield, Gwendolyn Moody, Nellie MacDonald, Almo McTimmonds, Allen Roth, Leo Schlegel, John Schlegel, Geraldine Schmid, Pearl Schrock, Horry Sharp, Donald Snyder, Ray Straw, Eldon Swank, Ted Tannich, Emery Thompson, Mary Torrance, Irene Wiberg, Roy Wiberg, Robert Wilson, Jack Wilt. Junior Seamen’s Chanteys Dorothy Allphin— My Lucky Star” Everett Ambrosek— When I was a Lad” Marianne Ammon—'Ridin' on the Rainbow Tom Anderson— Tom, Tom, the Piper’s Son Donna Austin— Crazy Feet Juneve Babcock— I Am an American Jock Bacon— They All Love Jack Betty Parker— We'll Touch the Strings to Music Betty Bartcher— Skate with Me Jeanne Bassett— I Dream of Jeanie Dorothy Becker— Down on the Farm Mike Becker — My Days Have Been so Wondrous Free’ Rex Bishop— Little Brown Jug Mary Bloom— Mary Ann Ronald Bowerman— Wake and Tune Your Youthful Voices Eileen Brcnncman— I Hear a Rhapsody Rowland Brown— A Good Man is Hard to Find Cebert Bryan— Sound the Loud Timbrel Jock Buker— I'll Tell The World Virginia Lee Burkhart— Castle of Dreams Harold Burrelle- Hail to the Chief Phyllis Byers— Home to our Mountains Robert Campbell — The Campbells are Coming” Richard Carter— When Do We Eat? Dean Chandler— Just Another Doy Wasted Away Betty Christopher— I Cannot Sing the Old Songs” Charles Cleland— Lazy Bones Lera Corke— Smiling Irish Eyes Lowell Cray— See the Conquering Hero Comes Everett Crocker— Asleep in a Dream” Barbara Dawson— Maid of the West Phyllis Dickey— Braid the Raven Hair Coral Doble— I Love Life Dorene Douglas— Little Girl Kay Dover— I’m Learning Now Tom Dawson— Little Tom Tinker Patsy Eakin— My Sweetheart’s the Man in the Moon Helen Ellison— Still as the Night Virginia Erb — Thinking It Over Betty Ferguson— My Heart’s in the High- lands Billie Fitzpatrick— I Love to Whistle” Lorena Flomer— Lorena” Joyce Fortier— Dark Eyes 35 CHANTEYS—Continued Clorabcllc Freitag— Merrily, Merrily” Don Garrison— 'Let Me Like o Soldier Fall Pat Gilchrist— Waltz Me Around Again, Willlie” Audrey Gingrich— The Lady With Red Hair” Gwendolyn Gladhart— You’re the One” Lucille Govro— There’ll be Some Changes Made” Carl Grell— Young Hopeful Gene Guinn— Peace of Mind Delores Hass— When I Was a Lady LaVernc Halsey— Happy” Glen Hancock— O Give Me a Home by the Sea” Medaine Hardiman— Catch the Sunshine” Harold Hart— Early to Bed” Vern Harvey— I’ve Been Wukkin’ on the Railroad” Lewis Hassman— True Blue Lou” Ralph Hassman— The Mariner” John Hoyes— When Johnny Comes March- ing Home Don Groves— The Farmer in the Dell” Phyllis Henderson— Who's that A— Call- ing? Bill Hcnshaw— Blow the Man Down Bob Hermans— Because You're You Dorse Hess— Blow, Boys, Blow Ella Hewitt— The Band Ployed On Sylvia Hinkle— Please Take a Letter, Miss Brown Virginia Hobbs— Knit One, Purl Two Dorothy Hoff— Kind Words ore Dear to All Raymond Hoffman— How Are You Going to Get Him Back on the Farm? Neva Holst— Blondy Betty Hopkins— You Wouldn't Fool Me, Would You? Bob Jacobson— Margie Marylea Jenks— Dainty Little Miss John Kelly— Anybody Here Seen Kelly? Lloyd Kenagy— Let's Misbehave Earl Kennel!— Hand Me Down My Walkin' Cone Ward Kennedy— How About Me? Sam Koontz— A Little Mon Doris Koos— I Don't Wont to Play in Your Yard Alvin Kreger— Minstrel Boy Bette Kummer— There's Music in the Air Wilbur Lance— Water Boy Jacob Leichty— Silent Heroes Jimmy Lcwelling— Ecce Quom Bonum Robert Lindsay— Peace to the Brave Robert Linville— The Cowboy's M edito- tion Thad Looney— I'm Always Smiling Frank Lovejoy— I Can't Give You Anything But Love Bob Luther— I Do Not Choose to Run John Lyles— Faithful Johnnie Martha Martinak— Contentment Ray Martinak— The Independent Former Robert Mayfield— I'm Glad That I'm a Former Norma Miller— O, Dear, What Con the Matter Be? Bill Millhollen— What Is This Thing Called Love? Gwendolyn Moody— No, Sir| Lucille Moench— Dost Thou Love Me, Sis- ter Ruth? Doris Mornhinweg— Keep Your Sunnyside Up Pat Murphy— My Wild Irish Rose Nellie MacDonald— Nellie Was a Lady Darrell McClain — I'm Alwoys Chosmg Rainbows Phyllis McCormack— The Lass with the Delicate Air Keith McGuire— Waiting to Grow Jeon McReynolds— Horses, Horses! Alma McTimmonds— Why Didn't I Sleep Lost Night? Jack Ncbergall— Little Man, You've Had a Busy Day Marilyn Niemann— If I Hod a Million Dol- lars Beth Nutting— Dainty Miss Byron Palmer— There's Music in the Air Ronald Peacock— A Warrior Bold Betty Persons— Some Fun Shirley Pratt— Californio, Here I Come Barbara Putnam— Out-of-Town Girl Marjorie Robe— Sweet Sixteen Ruth Robertson— I Only Hove Eyes For You Allen Roth— Sing, Smile, Slumber Marybelle Russell — Tiptoe Through the Tulips Leon Ryals— The Little White Pill on the Little Green Hill Roderic Savage— Pagan Love Song Leo Schlegel Geneva Schlegel We Three John Schlegel Geraldine Schmid— What Are Your Inten- tions? Carol Schmidt— Dear Old Pal Pcorl Schrock— Satisfied Horry Sharps— The Man is Solid Jean Slocum— Love's Old Sweet Song Don Sorensen— A Maiden's Wish Paul Stellmacher— The Hardy Norseman Jock Stiles— In Style All the While Ray Straw— Midshipmite LaVcrne Stutx— Maybe—Who Knows? Eldon Swank— Paddle Your Own Canoe Dick Tolbott— Franklin D. Roosevelt Jones Ted Tonnich— Out the Window He Must Go Bob Thompson — Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life Emery Thompson— Tell Me I'm Wrong Mary Torrance— Blue-Eyed Mary Bette Towery— A Merry Life Elsie Tripp— Small Fry George Tycer— For He's a Jolly Good Fel- low Dorothy Vehrs— Come Let's Sing a Merry Round Francis Walton— Cuckoo Waltz Arlito Wehrli— How High Can a Little Bird Fly Gerald Wendel— I Saw a Ship o-Soilmg Lrcncj 'jbcr9 Two of o Kind Roy Wibcrg Charles Wicks— Shoo-Fly, Don't Bother Me Benton Williamson— Singing Comedienne Jock Wilt— Ain't Misbehavin' Ray Wordehoff— The Football Game Henry Zemlicka— A Gay Caballero 36 J ,1 j : j ; j } j j j j The members of the sophomore class took their first uncertain steps up the gang plank September 16 of last year. After a very two-sided squabble between the crew of the S. S. Central and the S. S. Madison, Rodney Russell was elevated to the title of captain of the S. S. Sophomore Class, Doris Kelly to that of first mate, Shirley Bird as purser, and Vivian Cosier as official keeper of the ship's log. Later Wilbur Senders was elected second mate (class representative to the council.) The first unpleasant deck-washing came with the sophomore reception, held in the middle of October. A ferocious and merciless north wind (in the person of Bill Mikkelson) brought much trial and heartbreak to many un- fortunate sailors at this event. Prominent athletic gobs in football are Gale Sorensen and Bud Long, who did excellent work on the second string. Bud Long, Orville Volz, Bob Kelty, and Bud Fortier maintained the ship's reputation in basketball, as did Bud Fortier and Archie Hayes in baseball, and Larry Larsen, Lyle MacHugh, Oren Kennel, and George Ambrosek in wrestling. Harrison Weatherford and Elwood Johnson were members of the De- bate Club. 37 SOPH O M O R E Agre E. Allen D. Allen Anderson Banks Barker Barnes Barrett Behrends Berry Blodgett Bond Boy lan Brinson Bruckman Brunson Burkhart Childs Coates Cochran Colby Conner Cook Cooley Cox Cozad Crocker Daily Day Doty Drushella Eastburn Ellison Ficq B. Fisher E. Fisher B. Fisher Fortier Franz Fraser French Glasgow Stanley Gourley Stuart Gourley Govro Greene Grenz Gronso Gutierrez E. Hack K Hack Hall Hamilton Hayes Hector Henshaw Hooker Hopkins O. Howard M. Howard Hughson Huston Hyde Jenks 38 Jensen K iar Marquis Moriey MeReynolds Radford Carol Shafer Stauble Johnson Johnston Kean Keller P. Kelly Kelty Kennell Kullowatz Larsen Leonard Linn Long Luther Male Marsh Martin Mayfield J Miller B. Miller Mitchell Moench Morgan Muller MacHugh McClellan McCutchan McDonald McKinney Olson Packard Peacock Perry Peterson Pharis Pyburn Reeser Robertson Russell Rutledge Scofield Seavy Senders Clara Shafer Shultz Slavens Smith Snyder Sorenson Spencer Stewart J. Swander R. Swanher Swartzka Talbott Taucher Tigner 39 Most Popular Most Handsome Best Dancer Wittiest Most Studious Worst Chotterbox Most Athletic Most Polite Most Conceited Noisiest Laziest Silliest Best Dressed Friendliest Quietest Peppiest Most Popular Prettiest Best Dancer Wittiest Most Studious Worst Chatterbox Most Athletic Most Polite Most Conceited Noisiest Laziest Silliest Best Dressed Friendliest Quietest Peppiest Sophomore Voting Rodney Russell, Bill Mitchell Bill Mitchell, Gale Sorensen Albert Fortier, Don Hector Wilbur Senders, Bill Cochran Bill Fisher, John Gale Swatzka Jack Radford, Hal Brunson Raymond Long, Albert Fortier Bill Fisher, John Gale Swatzko Gale Sorenson, Hal Brunson Bill Miller, Bill Cochran Jack Daily, Stanley Molo Stanley Molo, Hal Brunson Don Hector, Albert Fortier Rodney Russell, Gordon Cooley Vern Grice, Wilbur Anthony Calvin Tigner, Gordon Cooley Shirley Bird, Doris Kelly Mary Villar, Elaine McClellan Beverly Spencer, Elaine McClellan Betty French, Mary Villar Betty French, Betty Fisher Phoebe Kjar, Dorothy Schultz Vivian Cosier, Doris Kelly Betty Fisher, Helen Ficq Elaine McClellan, Eileen Fisher Phoebe Kjar, Dorothy Schultz Maxine Colby, Betty Brinson Marjorie Perry, Darlene Govro Shirley Bird, Eileen Fisher Elaine McClellan, Betty French Helen Ficq, Betty Fisher Shirley Bird, Mary Villar “T 40 Front row: (left to right) Kroger. W. Cooley. D. Sorensen. Mr. Welbes. Ohling. Carey. Lovejoy. Shepherd. Second row: L. Parker. B. Miller. Weis. A. Miller. Van Order. G. Cooley. J. Copeland. J. Grenz. Stanley Gourley. Conner. S. Henshaw. Howells. E. Kennel. Third row: Bishop. Marsh. MacHugh. Wennersten. A. Hayes. J. Parker. G. Sorensen. Doty. B. Schlegel. Wooldridge. Hubler. Fourth row: Burck, D. Copeland. Walker. Burkhart. Hardiman. C. Hawkins. O. Kennell, Guinn. G Schlegel. Mishler, Burch. Fifth row: W. Lamb. G- Hawkins. Ambrosek. J. Hayes. Meyers. E. Moling. Allen. Lucht, Vian, teller. Stuart Gourley. M, Gourley, Crocker. Kerr. Van Leeuwcn, Martin, Looney, B. Henshaw, Groves, Wiberg. J. Lamb. Behrends, Linn. F. F. A. The Albany Chapter of Future Farmers of America carried on many activities during the summer. Among these were stock judging trips to various fairs and expositions. The Albany chapter was represented in the State Better Farming Contest by Bob Ohling, Richard Kar- stens, and Warren Cooley. Cooley was selected first in this contest; the Albany boys exhibited fifty-eight head of livestock at the State Fair and won $235 in prizes. The fact that they exhibited the best chapter dairy herd in the state earned Albany the plaque given by the State Bankers' Association. The Albany Chapter began the 1940-1941 school year with seventy boys enrolled. The officers elected were Warren Cooley, president; Darrell Shepherd, vice-president; Frank Carey, secretary; Bob Ohling and Alvin Kreger, executive committee. Arrangements were made to hold one business meeting and one social meeting a month. The Albany livestock judging team at the Pacific International, on October 5, was award- ed nineteenth place out of seventy-three. The boys were fifth highest in Oregon. The members of the team were Darrell Shepherd, Kermit Meling, and Glen Hawkins; alternates, Frank Carey, Joe Hubler, and Willis Burck. The F. F. A. sponsored an assembly for the entire student body on November 1 4. The program consisted of music, with Manning Becker and Fred Rau as guest speakers. Mr. Greenwood, secretary of the Oregon State Bankers, presented the plaque for best dairy herd in Oregon, and Mr. Welbes presented letters to Darrell Shepherd, Kermit Meling, Glen Hawkins, and Frank Carey for stock judging; and to Warren Cooley as the outstanding boy in thei Albany chapter. The Annual Parent and Son Banquet was held on November 16 with two hundred guests, parents, and boys attending. Albany entered a corn judging team at the State Corn Show on November 24. David Copeland, Jack Lamb, and Wesley Lamb, who were the members of the team, won the state championship and a beautiful cup. The F. F. A. boys donated Christmas contributions, which were given to needy families throughout the city. The Albany Chopter entered a team in the Sectional Parliamentary Procedure Contest on January 10; there were nine schools participating in the contest, and Albany ranked first. The members of the team were Bob Ohling, Alvin Kreger, Jim Howells, Darrell Shepherd, and Warren Cooley. Albany went to the Sectional Contest at Woodburn on February 1 8 and brought back 1 7 ribbons. Of these ribbons, there were 7 first, 5 second, 4 third, and 1 fourth place ribbon. Darrell Shepherd won second place in the Public Speaking Contest on February 18. Darrell spoke in competition with nine speakers from nine different schools. The second place winner was awarded four dollars by the State Grange. 41 Upper—Honor Society Center—Literary Explorers Lower—Quill and Scroll 42 The Honor Society The members of the Honor Society ore chosen by o closs ond faculty vote on o basis of character, scholarship, leadership, and service. This year the activities of the Honor Society consisted of a progressive dinner, a Christmas party, two initiations, some ice-cream sales, a conference at Cottage Grove, and a banquet. The Honor Society eoch year gives a prize to the senior who shows the most improvement in scholarship. This person is chosen by a faculty committee. The officers for the fall semester were Robert Pesheck, president; Lynn Kampfer, vice- president; Gladys Rawie, secretary-treasurer; and Marjorie Andersen, sergeant-at-arms. The officers for the spring semester were Phillip Alexander, president; Kenny Roberts, vice-president; Eva Mudgett, secretary-treasurer; and Bob Ohling, sergeant-at-arms. Miss Anderson is the adviser. Front row: (from left to right) Andersen. Rawie, Pesheck. Anderson, Reid. Mudgett. Second row: Parker, Hancock. Alexander, Horning. Stewart. Third row: Wicks. Roberts. Bikman. Ohling. Cooley. Literary Explorers The members of the senior English class who have maintained a grade of one or two in English and who have learned twenty-five selections from the Treosure Chest are entitled to belong to the Literary Explorers' Club and to become first degree members. Each year Miss Chase offers a prize to the student who memorizes his quotations first and to the member who is the first to complete all six degrees. Macel Weigel won a volume of the Treasure Chest for learning her selections first, and Gladys Rawie won a Pilot Wheel for learning all six degrees first. Mrs. Neptune was the guest speaker ot the February 20 luncheon meeting. She told us obout the libraries of the Presidents of the United States, and about some of the new library books in the city library. At the March 27 meeting Richard Wicks acted as Professor Quiz, Jean Parker won first prize and Peggy Lacey won second prize. A movie, To The Victor, based on the book, Bob, Son of Battle, by Ollivant was given for the entire student body on April 1. Bob Reid's program on Quoint Old Mexico ' with the Honor Society os guests, was presented on April 24. The officers for this year are Rose Bikman, president; Ruth Gourley, vice-president; Ethel Wallis, secretary-treosurer; Wallace Bilyeu, librarian and reporter; Kenneth Roberts, sergeant- at-arms; ond Miss Chase, adviser. Front row: Reid. Bilyeu. Gourley. Bikman. Miss Chase. Wallis. Roberts. Second row: Rawie. Roth. Homing. Parker. Bailey. Hdwards. E. Haley. Third row: Stewart. Weigel. Hector. Mornhinweg. Johnson. Wicks. Fourth row: Coats, Wilson. Senders. Andersen. Hancock. Quill and Scroll The Quill ond Scroll was this year composed of eighteen members. They met regularly on the first Monday of each month for a dinner and a business meeting. The activities in which the club engaged were numerous: It presented a moving picture, The Healer ; arranged an assembly on Leadership, with Dr. Irma Gordon os the speaker; sponsored a dance for the school; gave a banquet ond program with Mrs. Genevieve Turmpseed, director of dormitories, from the University of Oregon as guest speaker; supervised a trip through the local newspaper office and radio station; and ended the business of the year with the onnual picnic. For the second year, the Quill and Scroll has paid for the majority of the cuts for the Whirlwind. The officers of the Quill and Scroll were Phyllis Hancock, president; Richord A. Miller, vice- president; and Vesta Senders, secretary-treosurer. Front row: Mrs. Penland. Weatherford. Miller. Hancock. Senders. Mr. Grigsby. Second row: Bikman. Stewart. Eakin. Babcock. Mornhinweg. Russell. Gilchrist. Third row: Mudgett. Wicks, Mikkelson, Mr. Hudson. Becker. Dawson. 43 Upper—Associated Treasurers Center—Bookkeeping Club Lower—Secretarial Club 44 Associated Treasurers The outstanding reason for organizing the Associated Treasurers' Club, which has been in existence for several years under the direction of Miss Voyen, is to bring the school clubs into closer contact with the Student Body Bonk through their own particular treasurer. Another duty of the Associated Treasurers' Club is to teach the club treasurers how to prepare and read a financial statement. This year the organization went on a field trip to one of the local banks, where they gained much valuable knowledge. The Student Body Treasurer automatically becomes president of the group. Other offic- ers of the Associated Treasurers are the vice-president, whose duties are to assist the student body treasurer in the Student Body Bank and oct as president of the group in his absence; sec- retory-treasurer; reporter; and the sergeant-at-arms. The officers are as follows: Robert Reid, president; Priscilla Wilson, vice-president; Bar- bara Dawson, reporter; Don Sorensen, sergeont-at-arms; and Pat Gilchrist, secretary-treasurer. From row: (from left to right) Miss Voyen. Gilchrist. Wilson. Reid. Sorensen. Dawson. Second row: Walker. Collins. Andersen. Fdwards. Wallis, Stewart. Third row: Starkey, Senders. Bird. Hector, Wicks. Ohling. Rawie. The Bookkeeping Club The Bookkeeping Club is one of the new organizations in Albony High School, having just been organized this year. The purpose of the club is to further the interest of the members in the study of book- keeping, and to develop o greater appreciation for the value of systematic records. The membership in the Bookkeeping Club is open to any student who is taking book- keeping, and who is registered in a commercial course. The officers of the organization are as follows: Doris Horning, president; Gladys Rawie, vice-president; Dorothy Vehrs, secretary; Virginia Erb, treasurer; Mr. Richter, faculty adviser. Front row: (left to right) Mr. Richter, Rawie. Horning. Vehrs. Walker. Spencer Second row: Ferguson. Jenks. Fitzpatrick. Hughes. Olson. Allphin. Moody. Acheson. Third row: Halsey. Ammon. Peacock. Banks. Falk. Allen. Secretarial Club The Secretarial Club, composed of students taking their second year of shorthand, is maintained to enable the members of the class to know one another better and learn together some of the things that moke for likable and efficient individuals, wherever they are. The club's supervisor is Miss Voyen; and the officers, elected at the beginning of the 1940-41 school year, are Mary Aileen McCormack, president; Priscilla Wilson, vice-president; Phyllis Hancock, secretary; and Betty Collins, treasurer. Meetings are planned for every two weeks, and parties once a month. Some of the activities outside of the typing, stenciling, dittoing, and letter writing work done around the school, were a basket given at Christmas for a needy family; the yarn dolls and football pins sold at footboll games; an informal donee given after school in the cafeteria; and work as office staff. Front row: (from left to right) M. MacHugh. Mi Voyen. McCormack. Wilson. Hancock. Collins. Becker. Gearhart. C. MacHugh. Second row: Haley. Rawie. Bailey. Roth. Horning. Sinnema. Barrett. Stewart. Third row: Copple, l.ucht. Parker. Acheson. Pratt. Light. Gourley. Fourth row: Haselton, Case. Hector. Weigel. Wilcox. Bowerman. 45 Upper—Radio Club Center—Livewires Lower—Latin Club 46 Radio Club All students interested in the study of radio and modern physics may become members of the Radio Club. use much of the electrical equipment, such as voltmeters, ammeters, etc., which ore used to test the simple sets which they construct. The work also gives them an interesting avocation which many continue after leaving high school. The officers are John Kelly, president; Dick Talbott, vice-president; Lowell Cray, techni- cian; Barbara Dawson, secretary; and Miss Porter, adviser. From left to right: Talbott. Wick . Anderson. Brenneman. Cray. Kelly. Dawson. Miss Porter. Lennard, Packard. At the beginning of the school year, one student is elected from each home-room to the Livewire Club. The club holds a regular meeting each Wednesday throughout the year. resentative whenever there is a need for one, to promote school spirit, to advertise all regular high school events, to promote the sale of tickets to all regular high school events, and to home-rooms and the school as a whole. The officers for this year are Bill Morgan, president; Virginio Olson, vice-president; Betty Collins, secretary-treasurer; and Gordon Cooley, reporter. The members are Marjorie Robe, Pat Suart, Morkie Weatherford, Betty Ferguson, Billie Fitzpatrick, Bill White, Lowell Cray, Don Groves, Eileen Fisher, Bill Mitchell, Bob Reid, Henry Zemlicka, Virginia Hall, Ruth Hack, and Mr. Richter, the faculty adviser. Front row: (left to right) Groves. Collins. Olson. Fitzpatrick. Fisher. Reid. Second row: Robe. Cray. Hall. Weatherford. Stuart, White, Ferguson Third row: Mr. Richter. Mitchell, Morgan. R. Hack. Zemlicka. Cooley. Third row: Lewclling, Stellmacher, Reid, Owens. Goin, Bates, Williamson. Alexander. Bilyeu, Franz. Students taking this work have o chance to learn more thoroughly much of the work on electricty and radiation. In particular, they have a better chance for really learning how to Livewire Club The purposes for which this club is organized are to give each home-room an official rep- serve as an organized group. The members of the group act as ticket-takers and ushers at all athletic events whenever it is necessary, ond also act as a coordinating group between the MOTTO: Ad astra per aspera COLORS: Purple and White PRESIDENT: Vesto Senders VICE PRESIDENT: Vernon Standish SECRETARY: Elois Coats TREASURER: Jeanne Edwards ADVISER: Miss Tracy Sodalitas Latina is on organization of Latin students whose purpose is to maintain an interest in Latin ond classic culture. Business meetings are held every two weeks, and a social meeting is held once every six weeks. SOCIAL CALENDAR OF THE YEAR Election of officers Initiation of new members Guest night Afternoon tea Front row: Talbott. Kennedy. Babcock, Coats, Senders. Edwards, Standish, Weatherford. Second row: Brenneman. Byorley, Eakin. Gingrich. Hoff. Myers, Mornhinweg. Murphy, Nutting. Doble. 47 Front row: Barrett. Bikman. McCormack. F. Miller. Gladhart. Parker. Wallis. Holst. D. Becker. I. Becker, Miss Read. Second row: Kitching. Bilyeu. Ammond. Douglas. Colby. Fitzpatrick. Mornhinweg. Boesel. Persons, Goetz. Morse. Schmidt. Austin. Gearhart. Third row: Robertson. Stutz. Hopkins. Hall. J. L. Miller. Edwards. Jensen. Scofield, Morgan. Behrends. Fourth row: Ficq. J. Miller. Swander. Bruckman. O. Howard. Myers. Senders, Elder. L. Vandeventer. Haas. Govro. Peacock. Fifth row: Kelly. Brinson. Berry. Drushella, Gronso. Childs. Haight. Flomer. Hess. Freitag. B. Vande- venter. Reeser. Mudgett. Kelty. Ball. Koos. Home Economics Club The Albany Home Economics Club has increased its membership this year to seventy-two. The purposes of this club are to be of service to the high school, to acquaint the girls with one another, and to use the knowledge of home economics in everyday life. During this school year, the club has conducted successfully a number of activities. Among these were a faculty tea, two initiations, a Christmas party for underprivileged children, an all-girl nite-club party, and a party for the F. F. A. boys. The officers for 1940-41 are Jean Parker, president; Gwen Gladheart, treasurer; Rose Bikman, reporter; Donna Austin, custodian; Frances Miller, historian; Mary Louise Boesel, Spirit of Home Living; LeAnn Haight, Depen- dability; Irene Becker, Charm; Luella Kitching, Health; Lorena Flomer, Happiness; Miss Read, adviser. Every girl in the club is placed on a squad with a leader picked by the officers. During the year each squad has charge of a month of meetings, thereby carrying out its aim of giving each girl a chance at leadership. 48 The Stage Crew The stage crew, under the direction of Mr. Palmer, takes care of all of the lighting and the stage management for all performances given through- out the year. The stage settings for June Mad, the senior play, were re- conditioned and set up by the stage crew. Before each assembly and motion picture, a manager is chosen, and he has charge of preparing the stage. All noon motion pictures are shown by the stage crew. The members are Bill White, Paul Winterstein, Ralph Hunt, Vernon Hunt, Harvey Hellwege, Edmund Meling, Glenn Schlegel, Lowell Hadley, and Kenneth Golden. The Library Club The Library Club is an organization of students who volunteer their services to help in the library. They check books in and out, repair books, keep the library in order, and do the hundred and one different tasks that must be done in order to have a well-managed library. They do not receive credit, but they probably work as hard as any other volunteer organization in the school. The students feel that they are benefited by their work, in that it gives them poise in meeting the public; and they learn much about library procedure, which will give them experience in carrying on research in other libraries. The Library Club is headed by Mrs. Childs, who aids and instructs the students in their work. The assistants to Mrs. Childs and the members of this organization are Dorothy Hoff, Paul Winterstein, Mary MacHugh, Le- Roy Robertson, Elois Coats, Gilbert Whitney, Jack Ralston, Geneva Schlegel, Anna McMahon, Joseph Toucher, Jack Thompson, Doris Koos, Virginia Wilcox, and Patsy Eakin. Yell Leaders This year the yell leaders were, as they always are, valuable assets in their job of instilling the old fighting spirit in the Blue and Gold athletic forces. Their pep and ability in organizing the loyal Bulldog rooting sec- tions was no doubt a factor behind many of the athletic honors won on the field. The yell leaders for the 1940-41 season were Jerrelee Miller, Shirley Pratt, and Calvin Tigner. Jerrelee Miller, a familiar figure at all athletic events, graduated this year, and because of her pep and enthusiasm will be greatly missed next year. Shirley Pratt and Calvin Tigner will be back next year, along with Bill Morgan. 49 Upper—Senior Girls Center—Junior Girls Lower—Sophomore Girls 50 Girls’ Federation As the following calendor will show, this year has been a busy year for the Girls' Federa- tion. The Council, 17, reports these special events: September 20— Get Acquainted Assembly. September 21—Big Sister party. October 4—Sponsored movie for the school. October 1 1—Sponsored Roily Donee. November 2—Sponsored Miss Lui, Chinese girl from O.S.C. November 5— 17 -Hi-Y Hayride. November 9—District Girls' Meeting at Sweet Home. December 6— School Talent Assembly. January 21—Sponsored movie, Little Red School House. January 23—Dad-Daughter Banquet. February 7—Sponsored Etiquette Committee from O.S.C. February 13— Feed for boy helpers for Dad-Daughter Banquet. February 14—A. A. U. W. Hostesses to Girls' Federation. Februory 1 5—Girls' Conference ot Lebanon. May—Mother-Doughter Tea. By the end of the year the organization will have earned o hundred dollars. This was done by selling candy ond hot dogs, ond sponsoring o movie. Ten dollars of this money goes to on outstanding senior girl ot graduation; ten dollars to the P. T. A. student loon fund; twenty-four dollars to the Annual for organization pictures; ten for new dishes bought for the school; the remainder buys new furnishings for the girls' room and pays the expenses of representatives to the Girls' Conference. SENIOR GIRLS Front row: (left to right) Gourley, VC eatherford, Andersen, Wilson, Hector, Kitching, Copple, Goats, Walker. Collins, Gearhart. Olsen. Second row: Sinnema. E. Haley. Marsh. J. Miller. Haselton. Edwards. Rikman. C. MacHugh, Lacey, Johnson. Goetz. Parker. M. MacHugh. Third row: Stewart. Morrill, Lucht. Jane Barrett. Janet Barrett. Ernst. Sharp. Livingston. Kelly, Meyers, Horning. Becker. F. Miller. Acheson. Fourth row: Roth. Schreiner. Elder. Morse. Falk. Hughes. Bailey. Olson, Behrends. Wallis. Boesel, Mornhinweg. Vian. Chastain. B. Haley. Vandeventer, Workinger. Fifth row: Voss, Hancock. Hart. Senders. Dunning. Rita Case. Ruth Case. Byerley. Copsey. Gay. Haight, Wilcox. Sixth row: Hess. McCormack. Cade, Weigel. Woodford. McMahon. Konopa, Gallatin, Stuart. Pratt, Light, Bowerman. Rawie, Mudgctt. Murphy. JUNIOR GIRLS Front row: (left to right) Jenks. Stutz, Douglas. Martmak. Barker. Vehrs, Ferguson, Robertson. Bartcher. Smith. Moody. Ball. Second row: Fitzpatrick. Dickey, Corke. Brenneman. Gladhart. Persons, Tripp. Koos. Bassett. Gilchrist, Mornhinweg. Pratt. Miller. Third row: Towery, Hopkins, Slocum. Arnold. Hoff. Bloom. Hobbs, Freitag, Babcock. Bityeu, Wilson, Ammon. Fourth row: Shrock. Gingrich, Nutting. Robe. Erb. Halsey, Becker. Russell. Dawson. Kummer, Flomer, Christopher. Fortier, Dover. Fifth row: Henderson. Ellison, Nieman, Wehrli, McCormack. McTimmonds. Doble. Hardiman. Haas, Hewitt. McReynolds, Allphin. Eakin. Holst. Austin. SOPHOMORE GIRLS Front row: (left to right) Perry. Colby. Cosier. Smith. Trihub. Villar. McClellan. Kjar. Peacock. Govro. Second row: Snyder. French. Ficq. Clara Shafer. Hall. Carol Shafer. Rutledge. Barrett, M. Howard. Hill, Banks. Bird. Hughson. Third row: Childs. Luther, B. Fisher, Greene. Cox, Knight, Jensen, Huston. Gutierrez. Vandeventer, D. Kelly. Fourth row: E. Fisher. O. Howard. Miller. Zehr. Scofield. Swander, Gronso, McKinney. S. Garland. Ander- son. Fifth row: Toby, Coates. Hopkins. Cook, Shultz. Spencer. Stauble. Morgan. Reeser. Bruckman, Weigel. Sixth row: Brinson. E. Hack, P. Kelly. R. Hack, Ellison, McDonald, Pharis, Drushella. Jenks. Agee. 51 One: Weatherford. Haley. Livingston. Hector. Boesel. Rawie. Becker. Babcock. Seven: Miss Spence. Andersen. Holst. Gladhart. Stuart. Ferguson. Mudgett. Bikman, Barker. Gilchrist. Seventeen The Girls' Federation is headed by a committee of seventeen girls called Seventeen. This group, which is selected by all the girls, holds a meeting once a week to transact the business of the Federation. Each of these seven- teen girls heads a committee into which all of the girls of the school are di- vided. These committees provide a medium through which the girls of the school may work together for the common good, either as leaders or as in- telligent followers. Seventeen meets every Tuesday noon except on the week when there is a social meeting. Attendance is compulsory. Seventeen chose the following girls as excelling in service, character, scholarship, personality, and athletic ability: All School—Priscilla Wilson Senior—Dorothy Stewart Junior—Eileen Brenneman Sophomore—Doris Kelly 52 H: Wicks. Miller. Fuller. Cooley. Bob Mikkelson. Bill Mikkelson, Mr. Oito. Starkey. Peterson. Reid. 1: Patapoff, Oberson, Jacobson. Y: Mr. Welbes. Hermens. Tycer. Burrelle. Hassman. Mitchell. Kelty. The Hi-Y During the past year, the Hi-Y club has shown marked progress in many fields. The most outstanding accomplishments of the club were the induc- tion of an entire new club at Lebanon and the sending of three delegates to the Northwest Hi-Y Congress. The boys who attended were Richard Wicks, Bill Fuller, and Bob Reid. Another achievement was the church attendance for which the club received high acclaim. The outstanding social functions of the club were a Mothers' Day break- fast, the annual picnic, and visits to other Hi-Y chapters. The regular projects carried on by the Hi-Y consisted of selling hot dogs and ice cream at football and basketball games, handling the various fire drills, and policing the annual carnival parade. The club contributed $10 to the scoreboard fund and $10 at graduation as a prize to the most out- standing senior boy who is not a member of the Hi-Y. The club also inno- vated a new method for receiving members. This was felt to be a step that will greatly help future clubs. The officers for the first semester were Richard Miller, president; Bob Hermens, vice-president; and Bill Fuller, secretary-treasurer. The joint ad- visers were Mr. Otto and Mr. Welbes. The club had an advisory council of six businessmen—Lew Hurd, Roy Stenberg, Roy Collins, Leo Bird, M. R. Cooley, and Roy Nutting. 53 Upper—Senior Boys Center—Junior Boys Lower—Sophomore Boys Associated Bulldogs The purpose of this society is to have each boy participating in a sport. The program is played on an intramural basis and is so arranged that each boy can find a sport he likes. Every boy in school is placed on one of twelve teams. Six of these teams are in the major league and six in the minor league. By using index numbers, the boys are placed in either the major or the minor leogue, according to their size. This is a good plan because many times boys have to compete against others who are much larger than themselves. In each sport the teams participate in their own league. The champions in each league meet to decide which team is the champion of the school. SENIOR BOYS Front row: (left to right) B. Schlegel, Hyde. Roth. Allen. Miller. Anderson. McClain, Johnston. Wiley. Second rOW: Schlegel. Hadley. McGuire. Halsey. CochclI. Ohling. Walk er. Nelson. Myers. Parker. Bill Mikkelson. Wicks. Oberson. Third row: V. Hunt. Wooldridge. Copeland. Wilbur Mishler. Morris. Roberts, Cooley. Neuman. Reid, Luther. Fourth row: Hellwege. Goin, Shepherd. Bob Mikkelson, Davis. Alexander. K. Meling, VanLceuwen. Fifth row: Willis Mishler, Winterstcin. Howells, Ralston. Pesheck. Morgan. Starkey, Patapoff, Phelps, Warnke, Hubler. Sixth row: Moore. Bilyeu, Standish, Ross. G. Schlegel, Hyde. Cosier. W. Lamb. Peterson, Coates, McCoy. Fuller, Stolz. Redifer. Seventh row: J. Lamb. Stoltenberg. Abney. Coddington. Burkhart. Beemer, Carey, Chambers. Bates. Outka. Burch, E. Meling. Owens. R. Hunt, McReynolds. White. JUNIOR BOYS Front row: (left to right) Talbott. J. I hompson. Koontz. Wilt, Kreger, Lyles. Campbell. Lance, McGuire. Second row: L. Schlegel. Martinak. Nebergall. Walton. Grell, Cleland, Becker. Dawson. Straw. Lewelling. Wiberg. Third row: B. Thompson, Tycer. Luther. Groves, Sorensen. Zemlicka, Morgan, Cray. Kennedy, Anderson, Jacobsen. Hermans. Fourth row: R. Anderson, Chandler, Palmer. Burrclle, Bishop. Hart, Ryals. Carter. McClain. Hassman, Bond. Wicks. Fifth row: Peacock. Kelly, Hess, Tannich, Wordehoff, Stellmacher, Wendel, Linville, Leichty, Harvey, R. Hassman. J. Hayes. Millhollen. Williamson. Bond. Hcnshaw, E. Kennel. Sixth row: Brown. Hancock, Swank, Looney. Bowerman, Guinn. Crocker, Stiles, Lindsey. Garrison, Buker, Roth. SOPHOMORE BOYS Front row: (left to right) Mayfield. Marcus. Wales. Hooker. Crocker. Henshaw, V. Garland. Martin. Weis. Zeller, Stuart Gourley, Copeland. Walker. Second row: Day, Fraser. Grenz. Anthony. Wells. Bond. Morley. Malo. Still. Swander. Olson. Miller Taucher. Third row: Rodney Russell, Mitchell. Larsen. Brunson. Roger. Russell. Kelty. Voltz. Sorensen. McReynolds. Voss. Kennel. Donovan. Fourth row: Robertson. Kean, Seavy. Doty. Lennard. Cooley. Wordehoff. MacHugh, Long, Fortier. Senders, Tigner, Behrends. Fifth row: Daily, Eastburn, Allen. Flyde. Wennersten. Pybum, Outka. Stewart, Cozad, McCutchan, John- son, Keller, Burkhart. Hawkins. Stanley Gourley. Sixth row: Peterson. A. Hayes. B. Miller. Van Order. Linn. Barker. McCombs. Hamilton, Boylan, Wallis, Marsh. Ambrosek. Talbott. Winn, Leichty, Slavens. Franz. Muller, Glasgow, Cochran. Seventh row: Blaylock, Kerr. Barnes, Weatherford. Mitchell, Hinkle, Byers, Johnson, Fisher. Moench, Paar- mann, Parker. Groat. Weddle, Hector, Radford, Packard, Kullowatz. 55 Parent-Teachers’ Association The Albany High School P. T. A. has had a most successful year, with one hundred forty members, the largest membership in the history of the organization. Many prominent speakers from various places of higher education were enjoyed throughout the year. A panel discussion was held with teachers and parents participating. It was with the help of the P. T. A. that the Dad- Daughter Banquet was sponsored by the Girls' Federation. Several projects have been carried out. The P. T. A. has maintained the student loan fund and helped with the final payments on the picture pro- jection machine. The following officers wish to thank all members who have helped in making this a year of progress and success: Mrs. E. G. McReynolds, presi- dent; Mrs. J. J. Looney, vice-president; Mrs. R. H. Collins, second vice-presL dent; Mrs. I. A. Persons, secretary; Mrs. L. M. Dickson, treasurer. MRS. I. A. PERSONS Secretary Band Boosters’ Club The Band Boosters' Club is composed of parents of the members of the band. The club was organized in 1937 under the leadership of Mrs Tom Gilchrist. The Boosters' Club was responsible for raising approximately $2000 for band uniforms. On April 1, 1939, the Boosters financed a trip for the entire band to Tacoma, Washington, to attend the Northwest Music Educators' Conference and put on a marching demonstration. On Novem- ber 28, 1940, the Boosters sponsored Varsity Night Show, which was one of the outstanding shows of the year put on in Albany. The present officers of the club are Mrs. T. N. Gilchrist, president; Mrs. Edward G re 11, vice-president; Mrs. Paul C. Dawson, secretary; Mrs. Ed- ward Grell, treasurer. 57 Upper—Orchestra Center—Chorus Lower- -Girls' Glee Club Orchestra The Albany High School Orchestra is one of the traditional organizations of Albany High School, having been organized in 1913. On January 1 1 of this year, the orchestra presented several numbers over KOAC during the Albany High School Junior Matinee program. The orchestra appears regularly on such special occasions as the Senior play, commencement, gen- eral assemblies, and other high school functions. Front row: (left to right) Konopa. Barker, Stauble, Parker, Bilyeu, Golden. Second row: Stiles, Persons, McCormack, Dawson, Coates. Third row: Fraser, Mr. Luper, Zcmlicka, Fuller. Chorus The Albany High School Mixed Chorus was first organized this year. It consists of fifty voices singing four, six, and eight-part music. Practices of one hour are held daily. The chorus has included in its progrom some a cappella work also. Its aim is to sing in harmony and to develop an appreciation of music. The chorus has sung for assembly, radio, and community programs. On April 25-26 the chorus entered the State Contest at Corvallis. The accompanist is Margaret Banks. Front row: (left to right) Miller, Edwards, Arnold, Robertson, Corke. Ellison. Haas. Austin. Western- house. Elder. Stutz. Second row: Moody. Douglas, Vehrs. Tigncr, Volz, Kennedy. Govro. Freitag. Allphin, Mrs. Johnson. Third row: Schmidt. Nutting. Slocum. Paarmann. Groat. Russell. Stuart. Hess. Fortier. Pratt. Fourth row: Holst. Christopher. Gingrich. Chastain. Muller. Cray. Davis. Luther. White. Fitzpatrick. Bassett F'ifth row: Henderson. Towery. Dunning. Halsey. Bacon. Peterson. Hancock. Martin. Murphy. Kitching. Sixth row: Hopkins, Doble, Wehrli. Palmer. Buker. Lindsay. Garrison. Roth. McTimmonds. Banks. Sophomore Girls’ Glee Club The Sophomore Girls' Glee Club is composed of forty girls who meet three times each week. Although they have made few appearances this year, they expect to appear more next year. The girls sing three-part music and, under the able supervision of Mrs. Johnson, are also leorning the art of sight-reoding. The objective of the Glee Club is to learn appreciation and thorough understanding of music. The accompanist is Betty Jean French. Front row: (from left to right): Brinson. Colby, Smith. Shultz. McClellan. Kjar, Peacock. Jenks. French. Second row: Snyder. Hall. Knight. Zehr. Jensen. Huston. Hill. Howard. Mrs. Johnson. Third row: Hopkins. Miller. Garland, Berry. Trihub. Scofield, Bird. Kelly. Fourth row: Drushclla. P. Kelly. Banks. E. Hack. R. Hack. Anderson. Childs. E. Fisher. Glee Club Concert The Albany High School a cappella chorus presented a concert at the auditorium on April 1 8. The chorus is composed of fifty-five mixed voices. Several numbers were sung by the mixed chorus, and the Girls' Glee Club assisted them. The program included Lo, How a Rose, by Praetorius; Oh, Lamb of God, by Kalinni- koff; Sunbeam Out of Heaven, by Christiansen; and Pilgrim Chorus, by Wagner, all by the mixed chorus. The mixed chorus was accompanied by Margaret Banks. The Girls' Glee Club then contributed A Maiden's Wish, by Chopin; Lift Thine Eyes-Elijah, by Mendels- sohn. They were accompanied by Betty French. Next was featured on operetta in three acts, The Princess and the Commoner. The narrator was Bill White; the king, Byron Palmer; th2 commoner, Lawrence Luther; the princess, Jeonne Edwards; and the prince, Don Garrison. The chorus then presented A Violin is Singing in the Street, by Koshetz; Drink To Me Only With Thine Eyes, arranged by Johnson-Blakeslee; All Through the Night, arranged by Blakeslee; Rain and the River, by Fox; and Oh, Susannah, by Foster-Cain. Ticket sales went toward the purchase of sweaters, which were worn at the State Contest at Corvallis. 59 Upper—Band Center—Annual Staff Lower—Paper Staff 60 Band The Albany High School Band with an enrollment of seventy-two members is the largest in its history. The Band Boosters Club, with the assistance of Mr. Luper, sponsored the Var- sity Night show. The profits were used for the purchase of new uniforms. The band appeared at all football games, where they put on marching demonstrations between the halves of the home games. The band also appeared at all basketball games, besides marching for the Spring Opening. Cebert Bryan has acted as drum major, with the able assistance of the drum majorettes: Pat Gilchrist, Jo Hector, and Marjorie Robe. At the district contest in Corvallis, April 25-26 the band played Richard III Overture by German, and Huldingungsmarsch by Grieg. The band officers are Bob McClain, president; Pat Gilchrist, vice-president; Jo Hector, secretary-treasurer; and Ella Hewitt, librarian. The band entered the Regional National Marching Contest at Tacoma, May 17. Front row: (left to right) Mocnch. Brcnnenun, Morgan, Reeser. Bryan, Gilchrist. Hector. Robe. Mr. Luper. Hadley. Hewitt. Fraser, Hector. Nebergall. Second row: Kummcr. Wiberg. Bycrlcy, Gladhart. Parker. Bilyeu, Olsen. Cook. Jenks. Cox. Swander. Agee. Fisher. Third row: McClain. Case, Savage. Coates, Dawson. B. McClain, McCormack. Nelson. Harvey. Spencer, Eastburn. Persons, Neuman. Stiles. Fourth row: Hyde, Gearhart, Barker, Packard, Groves, McDonald, Clcland, Grell, Zemlicka, Fuller, Kullowatz. Owens. Anderson. Sorensen. Annual Staff Work on the Whirlwind Annual began in the latter part of December, with Dorothy Stewart as editor-in-chief. The following staff wos chosen by Dorothy, Miss Chase, and Mr. Hudson: Rose Bikman ------- - Mechanical Editor Mary McCormack - -- -- -- - Manuscript Editor Phillip Alexander ------ Photograph Editor Ruth Gourley and Lynn Kampfer ----- Organization Editors Jeanne Edwards and Bernard Davis ----- Activity Editors Virginia Bailey and Kenneth Roberts ----- Feature Editors Markie Weatherford ------- Girls' Athletics Editor Clarence Bates - -- -- -- -- Boys' Athletics Editor Paul Stellmacher - -- -- -- - Candid Camera Editor Richard Wicks and Emilie Konopa ------ Senior Editors Coral Doble and Benton Williamson ------ Junior Editors Betty French - -- -- -- -- - Sophomore Editor Doris Horning and Edna Bowerman ------- -Typists Phyllis Hancock...........................................Business Manager Mildred Marsh - -- -- -- -- Subscription Manager Miss Chase - -- -- -- -- - Manuscript Adviser Mr. Grigsby - -- -- -- -- - Printshop Adviser Mr. Hudson - -- -- -- -- - Business Adviser Front row: Edwards. Horning. Stewart. Bikman. Hancock. Alexander. Gourley. Bowerman. Miss Chase. Second row: French. Mr. Grigsby. Bailey. Roberts. Marsh. Stellmacher. Mr. Hudson. Third row: McCormack. Wicks. Konopa. Williamson. Doble, Weatherford. Bates. Albany High School Whirlwind Staff Albany High School is the only high school in the state which is fortunate enough to have its own printshop. For the sixteenth year, the Whirlwind has been written, set by hand, and is published by the students of the journalism class. Mrs. Mabel Penland is editorial adviser of the paper, and Mr. C. M. Grigsby is mechanical odviser. The printing department is a student activity. All equipment is purchased and is owned by the student body. Mr. Grigsby is hired by the department, and is paid by proceeds from the department. The paper has been improved this year by the use of additional pictures, and by specialized columns. The editor-in-chief for the first semester was Rose Bikman; Eva Mudgett was editor dur- ing the second semester, and, in addition, there were four page-editors the second semester— Juneve Babcock, Barbara Dawson, Dorothy Becker, and Charles Wicks. The business manager was Phyllis Hancock, and her assistant was Pat Gilchrist. Mildred Marsh was subscription manager. Front row: Mr. Grigsby. Marsh. M. Weatherford. Mudgett. Bikman. Gilchrist, Hancock. Mrs. Penland. Second row: Senders. Gronso. Knight. Babcock. Fisher. Miller. Howard. Third row: MecHugh. Becker. Dawson. Russell. Bilyeu. Mornhinweg. Cox. Fourth row: Andersen, Eakin. Wicks. H. Weatherford. Mikkelson. Brunson. Agee. 61 Mr. Hudson Cooley Williamson Senders Student Council The president of the Student Council, other student body officers, a representative of each class, and Mr. Hudson, the principal, compose the Student Council. The doss representatives for 1941 are Warren Cooley, senior; Benton Williamson, junior; and Wilbur Senders, sopho- more. The publishing and distributing of the student handbook was the chief project of the Council during the year. Other duties of the Council are the planning of the annual carnival, scheduling all school programs and functions, nominating the succeeding student body officers, taking charge of all elections, and supervising affairs pertaining to school clubs and activities. Student Body Association All students who pay their dues at the beginning of the school year and are regularly enrolled in Albany High School are members of the Albany High School Student Body. By paying this fee, they are entitled to attend assemblies and student activities, and to vote at all student body elections. The electing of the queen to rule over the annual carnival is done under the auspices of the student body association, along with many other student activities. The student body president, Bill Mikkelson, presides at all meetings and assemblies. The other officers are Norman Oberson, vice-president; Pat Stuart, secretary; and Bob Reid, treas- urer. Bill Mikkelson Oberson Reid Stuart 62 Front row: (left to right) Buker, Olsen. Wicks. Wilson. Williamson. Coats. Winterstein Second row: Johnson. Olson. Haight. Weatherford. Andersen. Parker. Barrett. Mrs. Kropp. Debate Club The debate squad for this year probably did more along the actual line of competition and winning honors than any other debate team in the history of the school. The club was under the oble supervision of Mrs. Walter Kropp and Mr. Otto. During the first of the year, the members of the club decided to form themselves into a regulor organization with officers. The officers elected were Richard Wicks, president; Ben- ton Williamson, vice-president; Marjorie Andersen, secretary-treasurer and manager; and Harrison Weatherford, reporter. The contests in which the club participated were the Linfield College Debate Tourney, the Willamette University Speech Contest, District Debate Tournament, University of Oregon Speech Tournoment, and several oratorical contests. At Linfield the squad was represented in serious declamation by Marjorie Andersen and LeAnn Height; in poetry by Elois Coates who won second place; in the Congress of Human Relations by Elois and LeAnn; in ofter-dinner speaking by Richard Wicks, who won second place; in Junior Division debate by Morquito Olsen, Virginia Olson, Harrison Weatherford, Elwood Johnston, Jeon Porker, Jane Borrett, Priscilla Wilson, and Benton Williamson. The latter four won first place in their division. In Senior Division debate, the club was represented by Marjorie Andersen, Paul Winterstein, Jack Buker, and Richard Wicks. These four succeeded in getting a second place tie in their division. “June Mad “June Mod, the senior play, was presented in the auditorium Friday evening, December 6. The play wos an amusing three-act comedy hit, directed by Mrs. Harry Harvie during the ill- ness of Mrs. Charles Childs, who started the directing. Because of the splendid cooperation of parents, students, and friends, the play yielded $120.50. Because of the various expenses— advertising, 10 per cent for the stage fund, and $25 for royalties—the senior class netted $69.48. The business monager was Priscilla Wilson; Marjorie Andersen was property manager; Betty Gearhart was costume manager, and Paul Winterstein was stage manager. The cast included Markie Weatherford, as Penny Wood; Warren Cooley, as Chuck Harris; Mary McCormack, Mrs. Wood; Darrell Shepherd, Elmer Tuttle; Bill Mikkelson, Dr. Wood; Betty Myers, Effie; Jerrelee Miller, Milly Lou; Jim Howells, G. Mervyn Roberts; Bob Mikkelson, Roger Van Vleck; Bob Ralston, Mr. Harris; Jean Parker, Shirley Wentworth; Bob Reid, Ralph Wentworth; and Josephine Hector, as Julie Harris. The whole cast was congratulated on their excellent performance. 63 1941 Carniva Carnival Capers of 1941 were cut for the court of Queen Markie I on Friday evening, May 2. The queen was crowned in an impressive and lovely ceremony. The princesses who paid homage to the queen were Pat Stuart, Marylea Livingston, Marjorie Robe, Phyllis Dickey, Billie Fitzpatrick, Alma Scofield, June McDonald, and Shirley Bird; their escorts were Richard A. Miller, Don Sorensen, Bob Jacobson, Clarence Bates, Norman Oberson, Roy Wooldridge, Wilbur Mishler, and Bob Hermens. Showboat achieved another triumph when the senior class talent, under that title, won first place in the annual contest. The sophomore Wild and Woolly West entry, Uno-bar Ranch, was accorded second place, with the junior interpretation of sophistic Manhattan taking third. Not competing for a prize, but none-the-less noteworthy, were the be- tween-act tumblers under the direction of Miss Osborne. After the show, concessions were held in the gym with a record-breaking crowd. The annual noon parade was held despite a drizzling rain, which did not dampen the spirits of the participants. Floats from four home rooms tied for first place: Paul Bunyan depicted by the first period sophomore English class; Melon Time presented by the home economics girls; Aloha portrayed by the chemistry group; and the tank replica entered by the senior English class. Each group won a two-dollar prize. First prize for individual cos- tume went to Byron Palmer. Both the show and the parade were considered to be equal in excel- lence to any similar event that the high school has ever produced. The carnival was also a financial success. The total receipts this year were $538.90, in comparison with last year's receipts, $506.13. The ex- penses, approximately $200, have not yet been deducted from these figures. The profit from the carnival each year is given to the Whirlwind Annual to help defray expenses of printing. 64 Assemblies Sept. 27: A lyceum number was given by the Studer Brothers, a trio of musi- cal entertainers from Switzerland. Oct. 21 : An interesting movie was presented to the students. The movie was a story of Chico, a boy of Mexico. Nov. 6: Mr. Alva Brower gave a ventriloquist demonstration. Music was furnished by Mr. F. Avis McDonald with his vibra-harp. Nov. 19: The DeMoss family presented an old-fashioned concert type of program. They were sponsored by the mixed chorus. Nov. 20: The students were entertained by the local chapter of Future Farm- ers. Letters were presented. Dec. 10: The Quill and Scroll presented the picture, The Healer. Dec. 16: Miss Muriel Goodspeed entertained with dramatic sketches, songs, and duets. This was one of the series of lyceum numbers. Jan. 13: A lecture New Wealth from Old Sources was given by Mr. Frank Johnson. He showed samples of synthetic products. Jan 17: The annual Hi-Y assembly was presented. One of the high-lights of the program was a skit, Tarzan of the Apes, starring Bob Reid. Jan. 24: The Girls' Federation sponsored a movie entitled The Little Red Schoolhouse. Mar. 10: A movie The Barefoot Boy was enjoyed by the students. Madi- son and Central Junior High Schools attended. Mar. 21 : The Mississippi Jubilee Singers presented a program of Negro spirit- uals and plantation melodies. Apr. 1 : The Literary Explorers sponsored a pay movie, To the Victor. Apr. 4: The Debate Club sponsored an assembly for the choosing of orators to be in the Elks Contest. Apr. 15: A program was presented by the Blind School talent. A demonstra- tion of Braille reading was given. May 8: A pay movie Coconut Grove was sponsored by the Library Club. May 13: The Sophomore Class sponsored a pay movie in the auditorium. Shadows Over Shanghai was the title. 65 Vocational Education The par-time cooperative vocational program is a new addition to the high school curriculum. This program, sponsored jointly by the Albany Public Schools and the State Board for Vocational Education, provides an opportun- ity for students to obtain trade training and experience as a part of their high school work. The plan operates in the following manner: Students over sixteen years of age who are employed in local industries on a half-time basis for the ex- press purpose of learning a trade are offered special class work in the school as well as school supervision in their trade-training program. For this class work and trade-training received on the job, they receive regular high school credit which will enable them to graduate and to go on to college if they choose. This plan offers many advantages to the employers who need to train their own help and is a definite asset to the community, in that it trains Al- bany people for Albany jobs. To formulate and control the policies, a local apprenticeship commission was formed consisting of two employers, two employees, and a neutral chair- man. They are as follows: employers—Mr Alton Coates and Mr. D. O. Mc- Clain; employees—Mr. Frank Howe and Mr. Dalton Gibbs; and chairman— Mr. Tom Palmer. Ex-officio members of this commission are the Superinten- dent of schools R. E. McCormack, Principal E. A. Hudson, and the local coor- dinator, A. E. Palmer. Included in this year's class are apprentices in shoe repair, machine shop, retail food stores, hardware stores, service stations, auto repair, lumber yard, and meat cutting. The apprentices are organized in a club called the Albany Future Crafts- men, which is a department of the Oregon Safety Junior Congress. The of- ficers of this club are as follows: Superintendent, Delbert Weigel; foreman, Bob Christophier; timekeeper, George Anderson; gatekeeper, Jake Prince. A highlight in the activities of this club was the attendance at the state convention in Portland, during which contests were held in safety demonstra- tion, public speaking, parliamentary procedure, safety posters, and first aid. Representatives of the Albany club attended this convention and were pre- sented with a banner indicating their participation in the convention. Bob Christophier received a second prize award in the safety poster contest. Field trips to various industrial plants were also included as a part of the convention. 66 ATHLETIC Tommy Swanson Dwight Adorns Coaches COACH DWIGHT ADAMS Dwight Adams, physical education director here at Albany High, was educated in the Salem schools and received his initial training in football, basketball, and baseball at the Salem High School. He entered Willamette University in 1929, where he proved his ability in basketball and baseball. Graduating in 1933, Mr. Adams accepted a position at the Salem Y.M.C.A. as physical education director. A year later he took over the head coaching duties at Dallas High. Coming to Albany, Mr. Adams assumed the duties of head coach in basketball and baseball. His teams have shown great fighting spirit and sportsmanship in playing and at the same time have turned in some fine records. COACH TOM SWANSON Coach Swanson hails from Hood River High School in Hood River, Ore- gon, where he graduated in 1933. The following year he enrolled in Oregon State College and earned his numerals in football and baseball on the rook teams. The remaining three years he was a regular blocking halfback on the Oregon State varsity football team. After graduating in 1938, he accepted a position as assistant football coach and head track coach at Milwaukie High. Coming to Albany as head football coach and track coach two years ago, Mr, Swanson has proved himself to be an outstanding coach of boys' athletics. This year he coached a football team that was champion of the No- Name League and which proved to be one of the finest teams in the history of Albany High School. 67 ON 00 Front row: Chandler. MacHugh, Jacobson. Hyde, J.Schlegel. Morris. B. Ohling, R. Wordehoff, Long. J. Hayes. Second row: Bishop. Peterson, R. Hassman Redifer. Patapoff. Bates. Looney. Prince. Miller. Burrelle. Ewing. Keller. Third row: Coach Swanson. Coach Adams. Palmer. Franz. Roger Russell. Starkey. Allen. Hermens, Stiles. Roth. Milhollen, Bond. Crocker. Winterstein, Kelly. A. Hayes. Fourth row: Tycer. Moench. Weatherford. Ambrosek. Hector. L. Hassman. Spencer. Merrill. A. Ohling. Larsen. Football With a reputation to maintain, a determined gong of grid aspirants turned out in early September under the watchful eyes of heod mentor. Tommy Swanson, and his assistant, Dwight Adams. With one lone defeat and one tie to mar their record, the Fighting Bulldogs sailed through a season unequaled in many years, and classed themselves as one of the finest teams in the state. Faced with a tough No-Name League schedule, the Bulldogs came through to tie Salem as co-champions with four wins and one tie. Returning to the Bulldog fold were six linemen and three backfield men. The linemen were Richard A. Miller, Robert Hermens, Glenn Allen, Earl Kennel, Norman Oberson, and Robert Redi- fer; the backfield men were Robert Morris, Laird Hyde, and John Schlegel. Jake Prince, hard charging guard, was lost to the squad for the first four games, on account of National Guard duties, but he returned later to bolster the squad. Norman Oberson, regular right end, was unable to play in most of the games because of an injured knee. Albany 19, Oregon City 6—there. Journeying to Oregon City, the Albany High Bulldogs opened their 1940 No-Name League schedule with a decisive defeat over the Oregon City Pio- neers. On the very first play, Morris took a reverse from Hyde and scompered 60 yards for a touchdown. From then on, the outcome of the game was never in doubt. It was indeed a fitting opening for what wos to be a very successful season for Coach Swanson and his boys. Miller, captain. Albany 21, University High 0—here. Scoring all their points in the first half, the Albany High Bulldogs defeated the Golden Tide of University High. Midway in the third period the Bulldogs lost the valuable services of Eorl Kennel, giant left guard, when he suffered a broken leg. This was a serious setback, but Earl's position was capably filled by Thad Looney. Oberson, captain. Albany 7, Bend 20—there. Suffering the only loss of the season, the Blue and Gold team went down to defeat at the hands of the Bend Lava Bears on the lotter's field. Albany's lone score came in the first half. With the ball on the Bend's 15-yard line, Morris passed to Jacobson for the touchdown. Starting the second half, Albany's offense and defense bogged down, ond Bend scored 20 points. Miller, captain. Albany 38, Tillamook 0—there. Forgetting the previous week's defeat, the Bulldogs traveled to Tillamook and completely submerged the Tillamook High Cheesemakers. The game was enlivened by Bobby Morris' fourth period sprint for 90 yards through the entire Tillamook teom for a touchdown. Patapoff, coptoin. Albany 28, McMinnville 0—here. The first few minutes of this game forecast a defeat for the Grizzlies from McMinnville, for within five or six plays, Hyde, hard charging fullback, plunged over to pay dirt. Morris and Richard A. Miller snagged passes for two more touchdowns in the first and third quarters, and Hyde contributed another in the fourth frame. Hyde, cop- toin. Albany 53, Milwoukie 6—here. The Bulldogs were complete masters in every depart- ment, scoring at will, in this scorekeeper's nightmare. Gaining revenge over last yeor's defeat, the Swanson crew scored eight touchdowns and five conversions. Morris' 108 yard run behind perfect interference featured the evening's scor- ing. Morris, captain. Albany 6, Lebanon 0—here. An over-confident Bulldog eleven struggled through four quarters against a hard charging Lebanon teom ond eked out a 6 to 0 win as a result of Hyde's last minute touchdown. A Lebanon fumble late in the fourth period paved the way for the belated six points. Bates, captain. Albany 18, Corvallis 0—there. Playing the traditional Armistice Day game at Corvallis, Albony added another victory to their No-Name League record. 69 First row: ( left to right) Coach Swanson. Hermen , D. Miller. Looney, Coach Adams. Second row: Starkey. G. Sorensen. Prince. Ohling, Bates. Redifer, Hyde. Third row: Roth. Jacobson. R. A. Miller. Stiles. Schlegel. Fourth row: Patapo . Oberson. Allen, Hassman. Morris. 70 Football—Continued Bob Redifer's interception of a pass on the first play set the stage for the first touchdown. Laird Hyde carried the ball over from the two-yard line. Jocobson, pint-sized half, intercepted a Corvallis pass in the second quarter and raced 52 yards for a touchdown. Hyde made the final touchdown in the last frame from the one yard line. Prince, captain. Albany 0, Salem 0—here. In one of the most thrilling games of the entire 1940 season, Salem ond Albany, age old rivals, fought to a standstill on Central field before one of the larg- est crowds of the year. Bobby Morris, right half, almost put the game on ice in the third quarter when he took a Salem punt on his thirty-yord line and raced to Salem's eleven before he was brought down. In a last minute stand, a field goal was attempted by Moms but missed by inches. Albany chalked up a total of 169 yards from scrimmage while holding Salem to 74 yards. The Bulldogs completely outplayed their opponents but lacked the scoring punch when needed. Redifer, captain. Albany 27, Eugene 0—here. The Bulldogs, under the leadership of Coaches Swanson ond Dwight Adams climaxed a brilliant seoson by defeating Eugene High 27 to 0 before a large Thanksgiving Day crowd. The first touchdown was scored by Morris on a pass from Jacobson. The second touch- down was made in the second quarter by Hyde from the four-yard line. Bobby Jacobson scored the remaining touchdowns in the 3rd and 4th quarters on wide end runs. Allen, captain. Sideline Chatter The Bulldogs were well represented on the No-Name League all-star team with honorory berths going to Bobby Morris, Richard A. Miller, and Andy Patapoff. Leading scorer for the season wos Bobby Morris with 73 points. Laird Hyde followed with 54 points, with Jacobson coming in third with 48 points, ond Schlegel with 18 points. A little bit of the ability of the Bulldogs is revealed in the fact that no points were scored against the starting eleven in League play. Albany scored a grand total of 217 points to 32 for their opponents. After Milwaukie hod driven to Albany's four-yard line against third string players, the first string was sent in and added insult to injury by holding the Maroons to four downs to foil the Milwaukie lads' hopeless stand. Speoking of the Milwaukie game, Bobby Morris' 108 yard run in the last few minutes was probably the longest ever seen here. Porky Redifer's greatest ambition was to make o touchdown, but he had to wait until the last game, and then it was only one insignificant point after touchdown. Bum Oberson showed a lot of spunk by fighting his way back to a first-string berth after being benched for some time because of an injured knee. With his leg as strong as ever, Earl Kennel should be an outstanding performer on the gridiron next season. The almost forgotten art of dropkicking was skillfully displayed by Bobby Morris, and it was seldom that he missed placing the pigskin between the uprights. A shorter schedule will be played next year, which will leave room for any post-season games which may be played. Several of Albany's regular opponents will not renew their playing contract, as they have found they cannot compete with the always tough Bulldogs. 71 Intramural Activities Because the plan for intramural sports in Albany High School is compara- tively new, Mr. Dwight Adams, director of physical education, who intro- duced the plan on his advent here, submits the following: It is the purpose of the boys' intramural program to provide an activity in which he may have a particular interest. The basis of all competition is centered in the organization known as the Albany High School Associated Bulldogs, consisting of twelve organized clubs, whose members include all the boys in the school. The responsibility for the administration of the program is vested in the hands of the intramural board, composed of the twelve club leaders, the director of physical education for boys, and two additional fac- ulty representatives. The intramural program attempts to provide situations which tend to establish those habits of sportsmanship, loyalty, cooperation, leadership, in- itiative, courage, intellectual honesty, and other qualities which are desirable to good citizenship. The following activities are included in the intramural program: basket- ball, volleyball, touch football, golf, boxing, wrestling, swimming, badminton, pingpong, softball, track and field, horseshoes, and cross country. The T. N. T. Runts of the minor league defeated the Blitzkriegs of the major league in the basketball play-offs. SEA FEVER I must go down to the seos ogam, to the lonely seo and the sky. And oil I osk is o toll ship and o stor to steer her by, And the wheel's kick and the wind's song ond the white sails shaking, And a grey mist on the sea's face and a grey dawn breaking. I must go down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied; And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying. And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the seagulls crying. I must go down to the seos again, to the vagrant gypsy life, To the gull's way and the whale's way, where the wind's like a whetted knife; And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover, And quiet sleep and o sweet dream when the long trick's over. —John Masefield 72 Basketball 1940-41 The Albany maple court forces, under the tutorship of Dwight Adams, amiable director of athletics at Albany High, finished the 1940-41 season with nine wins and twelve losses. Starting the season with five lettermen from last year. Coach Adams directed his proteges through a season that wasn't especially great as far as wins go, but, nevertheless, gave to Albany fans a team that had plenty of team spirit and good sportsmanship. Incidentally, the attendance at the games this year greatly increased over former years. Handicapped all year by a lack of height and experienced reserves. Coach Adams was forced to experiment with various combinations. Albany struggled hard to win the district championship and the chance to compete in the state tournament but was eliminated by Corvallis late in the season. The Bullpups, coached by Tom Swanson, won a total of eight games out of their eighteen games played. Albany 30 Albany 8 Albany 25 Albany 36 Albany 37 Albany 21 Albany 19 Albany 29 Albany 42 Albany 28 Albany 31 Albany 34 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE - Dallas 20 Albany 33 - Tillamook Jamboree 5 Albany 34 - Ashland 46 Albany 41 Eugene 37 Albany 37 - - Toledo 33 Albany 53 - - - Oregon City 37 Albany 49 - Salem 66 Albany 51 Tillamook 37 Albany 60 - Sweet Home 27 Albany 31 McMinnville 31 Albany 33 - McMinnville 26 Tillamook 40 Albany 23 - Lebanon 41 Corvallis 36 Salem 56 Oregon City 34 Sweet Home 29 Milwaukie 15 Milwaukie 33 Toledo 30 Eugene 48 Lebanon 26 Corvallis 40 73 Lower—Wrestling B. A. A All boys toking part in some high school sport organized this year ond elected officers to form the Boys' Athletic Association. The B. A. A., unlike former years, proved to be a very active club. At the beginning of the basketball season the B. A. A. undertook to step up the atten- dance at the games. By advertising the games by signs, promoting the contest between the seniors, juniors, and sophomores for the highest attendance at games, and other propaganda'' methods, attendance and interest were greatly increased. Officers for the year were Andy Patapoff, president; Ralph Hassmon, vice-president; Glenn Allen, secretary; and Eldon Starkey, treasurer. Front row: (loft to right) Kelty, Straw. Roger Russell. R. Peterson. O. Kennel. Wooldridge. Rodney Russell. Ryals. Wiberg. Hess. Second row: J. McReynolds. Morris. Fuller. Burrelle. D. Sorensen. Ralston. W. Cooley. Allen. Stiles. Cochell. Kelly. Third row: Patapoff. E. Schlegel. Larsen. R. Wordehoff. C. Wicks. Coates. Starkey. Roberts. Mishler. Thompson. R. McReynolds. Lewelling. Fourth row: C. McGuire, Brunson. V. Hunt. J. Hayes. R. Wicks, Oberson. Fifth row: G. Sorensen. L. Schlegel. Chandler. Tigner. L. Hyde. Jacobson. Hermens. Bill Mikkelson. Neu- man. Bob Mikkelson. B. McClain. Roth, Parker, Ohling, Fortier. Voss, Mr. Swanson. Sixth row: Shepherd. E. Moling. Eastburn, Tycer. MacHugh. L. Hassman. R. Hassman, Luther, Ambrosek, Linville. Millhollen. Voltz, D. McClain. D. Mitchell. Long. Mr. Adams. Seventh row: R. Hunt. A. Hayes, N. Wordehoff. Looney, Bates, E. Kennel. Garrison. Buker. B. Schlegel. Miller. Redifer. EXPLANATION OF BASKETBALL PICTURE Front row: (from left to right) Morris. Starkey. Hyde. Roberts. Jacobson. Back row: Wordehoff. Hassman. Garrison. Long. Sharp. Coach Adams. Wrestling Much enthusiasm for wrestling has been aroused in Albany High in the last two years under Tommy Swanson, who took over the directing on his arrival here. The wrestling tournament of the intramural program brought to light mony boys of prom- ising wrestling ability and, at the same time, afforded valuable experience for those who had won their letters previously. Six regular matches were scheduled. Albany lost the first two meets with Longview and Dallas, but went on to win two from Salem ond two from Corvallis. In the district meet, Roy Wooldridge and Mike Becker were champions in their class. Three boys ploced in the semi- finals of the state meet and one in the finals. The boys earning letters were Andy Patapoff, Deon Chandler, John Kelly, Oren Kennel, Lyle MacHugh, Roy Wooldridge, and Wilbur Mishler. Front row: (left to right) Redifer. L. Hassman. Mishler. Looney. Wooldridge. Chandler, Becker. Second row: Ambrosek. Hayes. O. Kennel, Larsen, McClain, Coach Swanson. Third row: MacHugh, Patapoff. Allen. Kelly, Brunson. 75 Upper—Order of A Center—Baseball 1940 Lower—Track 1940 76 Order of A The Order of A is a club made up of those boys who have earned letters in the four major sports, football, basketball, track, and baseball. The Order of A established a precedent this year, at least concerning the type of initiation. In a general assembly the new members were called upon to perform various more or less embarrassing stunts. At all assemblies the members enjoyed the privilege of having a reserved section. At the annual carnival the Order of A not only kept the parade in order but also acted as a kangaroo court on Loud Sock Day for those who did not dress for the occasion. The officers for the year were Clarence Bates, president; Bob Jacobson, vice-president; Bob Morris, secretary; Bob Ohling, treasurer; Bob Redifer, sergeant-at-arms. Front row: (from left to right) Wooldridge, E. Schegel. D. Sorensen. Miller. Morris. G. Sorenesen, MacHugh. Redifer. Kelly. Second row: Patapoff. C. Wicks. Ohling. Roth. Roberts. R. Wicks. Starkey. Bob Mikkclson. Long. R. Wordehoff. Hermens. Jacobson. Third row: E. Kennel. Stiles. Looney. Oberson. Bill Mikkelson. R. Hassman. Sharp. Allen. Bates. L. Hyde. Fourth row: R. Hunt, A. Hayes. J. Hayes. Mr. Swanson. Mr. Adams. Baseball 1940 Coach Dwight Adams's squad of diamond hopefuls turned out for the 1940 season with three returning lettermen. The Bulldogs played fifteen games, winning 5, while losing 10. Heartbreaking to the coach and the boys was the fact that many of the games were lost by one or two-point mar- gins. At the annual Strawberry Fair Ihey finished in third place with two wins and one loss. At the Fair four Albany pitchers hurled a no-hit, no-run game against Tangent. Those who earned their letters were Ralph Hunt, John Kelly, Archie Hayes, Earl Kennel, Bob Hermens, Courtney Dooley, Bill Mikkelson, Jim Shough, Bob Morris, Harry Sharp, Bob Mikkelson, Bob Jacobson, and Everett Schlegel. Front row: Miller. Hermens. Shough, Dooley. Morris. Jacobson. Sharp. Second row: Mr Adams, Hayes. Kelly. R. Hunt. Kennel. W. Mikkelson. Thompson. B. Mikkelson. Third row: B. Schlegel, E. Schlegel, Fortier, McClain, L. Schlegel, V. Hunt. Ohling. Track 1940 Coach Tommy Swanson's 1940 squad of Canine Cinder Sifters finished the season with two triangular meets to their credit, placed second in the district meet, and ended in third place in the No-Name League meet. The Bulldog squad took part in eight meets, including the state meet. In the Albany, Eugene, Sweet Home contest, Albany took first place with 47 points. In the Albany-Corvallis- Dallas meet the Bulldogs won with 52 points. Six Albany boys participated in the state meet, but none placed. Those earning letters were Jack Bird, Bill DeWaal, Dick A. Miller, John Schlegel, R. Hul- burt. Bob Morris, Ray Kalina, Wallace Hunter, Don Peebler, and Dale Stillwell. The outstand- ing competitor was Jack Bird, who competed in the sprints, weight and pole vault events. Front row: Wordehoff. Luther. Stillwell. McReynolds, Hunter. Miller. Meling. Peebler. Second row: Coach Swanson. Kalina. Schegel. Hassinan. Redifer, Sorensen. Cooley. Morris. Wicks. 77 Golf The Bulldog squad of golf enthusiasts started the season with a schedule of nine matches on tap. The Vancouver Invitational and the state high school meet were two of the most important tournaments. Sam Glass, instructor and owner of the local course, guided his proteges through a schedule that also included matches with Corvallis, Salem, Univer- sity High, and Eugene High. Those on the team were Captain Bob Ralston, Kenny Roberts, Rex Mc- Reynolds, Leon Ryals, Lloyd Voss, and Leonard Blodgett. Boys’ Physical Education Inter-scholastic athletics are a part of the physical education program, which includes the following phases: (1) inter-scholastic athletics, (21 re- quired physical activity class, (3) health instruction, (4) intramural activ- ities. It is the endeavor of the athletic department to provide an equal op- portunity for every boy to earn a position on a competitive team representing Albany High School in inter-scholastic athletics. Although the department fully realizes that public interest will favor certain sports, nevertheless, from the standpoint of competition, no discrimination is made between major and minor sports. The program includes the following: football, basketball, baseball, track, cross country, wrestling, and golf. The directors of the inter-scholastic athletics program have attempted to provide as varied a program as possible, considering the facilities, equip- ment, and coaching personnel available. DWIGHT ADAMS Physical Education Director 78 I J J J J J .1 J J J J J ; j j j j ; WE'RE IN THE ARMY NOW On parade Neuman. McClain. McKee Stryker Robertson Byerley McKee. Neuman Stewart Leabo Montgomery. Neuman. HainesNeuman Haines Unidentified Schram Montgomery Bryan Huston Haines McKee. Neuman 79 Upper—Miss Osborne, adviser; Betty Haley, president Center—Honor Medal Winners Lower—Girls' Letter Club 80 Miss Osborne Albany High School is most fortunate in having os head of its girls' physicol education department a capable, understanding woman. Her sense of humor is as familiar os her red hair and her practical way of analyzing situations. She insists that girls' athletics should make a well-balanced individual, not a big, brawny girl, but a citizen with poise, self-possession, and understanding. She has brought girls' athletics to a place of importance in the four years she has been in Albany High School. Her tumbling classes have won acclaim from outsiders os well as from members of the high school. Miss Osborne. Girls’ Honor Awards Physical education in Albany High School has as its objective the development of all- round girls. In view of this, each year the Girls' Letter Club presents honor awards to girls who best comply with the qualities of leadership, sportsmanship, cooperation, attitudes to- wards health habits, general character traits, and interest in school affairs. One award is al- lowed for each twenty-five girls in the graduating class. This year four girls have been chosen. Betty Haley has played on first teams in both basketball and volleyball and has spent some time on the tumbling team. She served her class as treasurer in her sophomore year. As a junior, she was secretary of the Girls' Federation. As a senior, she was president of the Girls' Letter Club, vice-president of Girls' Federation and Seventeen. Priscilla Wilson has played on the basketball and the volleyball first teams. She is one of the two girls who have been tumbling for the three years that they have been in high school. As a junior, she was vice-president of the Girls' Letter Club, and, as a senior, she was secretary of her class. Priscilla is one of a very few girls to earn two stripes for her sweater. Markie Weatherford has played on basketball first teams and has been a member of the tumbling closs. As a junior, she was treasurer of the Girls' Federation. As a senior, she was president of the Girls' Federation and Seventeen. She is a member of Quill and Scroll, na- tional journalism honorary, and has been on the annuol staff both junior and senior years. Eva Mudgett played on first teams in both volleyball and basketball. As a senior, she was editor of the Whirlwind for a term and has been on the staff both junior and senior years. She is a member of the National Honor Society, Seventeen, ond Quill and Scroll. As a sen- ior, she was sergeant-at-arms of the Girls' Letter Club. All four girls ore members of the Girls' Letter Club, and the organization is proud to odd their names to the list of outstanding girls who have been Gold Honor Pin winners. Honor Medal Winners: Betty Haley, Priscilla Wilson. Markie Weatherford, Eva Mudgett. GIRLS’ LETTER CLUB: Front row: (left to right) Stewart. Ammon. Haight. I. Becker. Byerley, Senders. McClellan. Haley. Col- lins. Ferguson. Koos. Bloom. Hughes. Mudgett. D. Becker. Second row: Boesel. Berry. Erb. Gourley. Rawie, McCormack. Edwards, Weatherford. Wilson. Kitching. Bartcher. Walker. Gearhart. McTimmonds. Stuart. Third row: Jenks. Miller. Ernst, Hardiman. Howard. Arnold. Barker. Mornhinweg. Vehrs. Banks. Bird, Kelly. Gladhart. Persons. Fourth row: Gutierrez. Hall. Haas. Austin. Allphin. Hill. E. Fisher. French. Jensen. Moody. Freitag. Tobey. Coates. Cosier. E. Hack. Cook. Fifth row: Miss Osborne. Gronso. Murphy. Scofield. Swander. Shultz. Dickey. Fitzpatrick. Hobbs. Colby. Dawson. Morse. R. Hack. Kjar. Huston. 81 Girls’ Letter Club Betty Haley.................................................President June Babcock...........................................Vice-president Dorothy Stewart ------ Secretary-treasurer Eva Mudgett ------- Sergeant-at-arms The Girls' Letter Club, as well as initiating a large group of new members and serving the school, has been active socially this year. The club pays for the girls' section in the annual ond buys the honor medals which are presented to its chosen members. This alone is a project of which any club should well be proud. The service of ushering for basketball games, which the members who have earned their sweaters render, was increased this year because of the greater interest in the games. The club sent representatives to Corvallis and Salem play days, held a covered dish dinner, a swimming party, a skating party, and a co-ed party in the gym. The G. L. C. co-ed party is fost becoming an annual affair, for it is a very popular social event with boys and girls alike. Girls’ Athletic Activities Because it is perhaps the newest of the athletic activities in which the Albany High School girls take port, bowling might be mentioned first. Though this is not directly a part of the school program, a bowling club has been formed, and some of the girls have become quite proficient in this sport. Tumbling this year brought favorable comments from outsiders os well as from members of Albany High School. A special program was given for the girls' party which the Home Economics Club planned. Performances were given for May Day at Central Field ond for the high school carnival. Basketball enjoyed its usual popularity among the girls again this year. The first team tournaments were held in the seventh period as were inter-class games. The girls on the first team were the following: Seniors—Eva Mudgett, Priscilla Wilson, Mary Boesel, Marylea Livingston, Jo Hector, Edna Ernst, Glenna Byerley, and Markie, Weatherford; Juniors—Phyllis Byers, Betty Parker, Virginia Erb, Gwendolyn Gladhart, Neva Holst, Dorothy Allphin, Delores Haas, and Doris Mornhinweg; Sophomores—Alma Scofield, Maxine Colby, Jane Luther, Nancy Banks, Doris Kelly, Virginia Gutierrez, Shirley Bird, and Jane Miller. Volleyball was played with vim by all in the class. The first team games created interest: Seniors—Eva Hughes, Jerrelee Miller, Dorothy Stewart, Mary Boesel, Emilie Konopa, Marylea Livingston, Betty Haley, and Alice Light; Juniors—Virginia Erb, June Babcock, Phyllis Byers, Dorothy Becker, Betty Barker, Doris Mornhinweg, Alma McTimmonds, and Betty Ferguson; Sophomores—Nancy Banks, Darlene Govro, Alma Scofield, Doris Kelly, Ruth Hock, Shirley Bird, Virginia Gutierrez, and Vivian Cosier. Dancing this year was principally the basic steps to help girls gain poise and dignity. It was also the basis for modern social dancing if one wished to continue practice. Dancing was one of the most popular of the girls' activities. Badminton and stunts were well received in the gym classes. Corrective foot and pos- ture exercises were a valuable part of the girls' physical education. 82 GIRLS' CANDID SHOTS 83 Alumni Ardys Alexander U. of 0. Theda Allen Eugene Trode School Leland Ammon Home June Anderson U.ofO. Kathryn Arthur P. G. Ada Ashling Home Roy Ashling Home Robert Austin 0. N. G. Edith Bailey Rialto Theatre Elinor Bankhead Mrs. Raymond Meyers Dorothy Banton Frank's Store Betty Barrett 0. S. C. Myrtle Behrends Working in Washington Don Beight 0. S. C. Jack Bird Montgomery Ward Betty Ann Bishop P. G. Cornelia Bond Home Deloris Bowman 0. S. C Eugene Brandt 0. S. C. Rufus Bryant 0. N.G. Lois Burck Goshen College, Indiana Ralph Burrelle Snow Peak Dairy Georgia Ann Campbell 0. S. C. Conny Case P. G. Leland Chambers Home Douglas Chandler P. G. Raymond Clark Home Rae Cleland Eugene Trade School Edith Cox Working Royol Cox Working at the First National Bank of Portland Donald Crooks Home Ronald Daggett 0. N.G. Donna Densmoor 0. S. C. Bill DeWaal Southern Pacific Railroad Victor Downs Americon Academy of Ac- countancy Dorothy Dvorak Beauty School Ruth Ehrlich Monmouth, Oregon School of Education Margaret Elvsaas Married Betty Erb Salem Beauty School Mary Evans Greyhound Ticket Office Gus Ficq Home Pete Fisk Clark's Dairy Kyle Folsom Home Muriel Forster 0. S. C. Troy Freitag Home Jane Furrow U. of 0. Margaret Gatchell P. G. Hazel Gerig Home Audrey Gott Doll's Variety Store Harold Greene Working at Home Bill Grenz Home Floyd Grice Scars Roebuck Wendell Gronso U. of 0. Elaine Harader American Academy of Accountancy Chet Henshaw 0. N. G. Jim Hendricks Fisher Funeral Home Felix Hermansen Eugene Trade School Wilbur Hess Home Velma Hewitt Portland, Oregon Emanuel Nurses' Training Bill Hobbs Willamette University Jack Hogevoll 0. N. G. Bette Hubbell Bible School Willard Hulburt 0. N. G. Wollace Hunter U. of 0. Bill Hutchins 0. N.G. Ardys Jenks Beauty School Marvine Jenks 0. S. C. Raymond Kalina Home Richard Korstens Working at Home Warren Kelly Home Bob Kendig 0. N. G. Max Kennedy Scio Sawmill Glcnvo King Howard's Real Estate Leona Klebey 5-10 Dinette Edith Light Waitress David Madsen Navy Helen Marks 0. S. C. Helyn Marsh Alco Adjusting Bureau Harold MacHugh Working at Home 85 Alumni—Continued Lila McCutchon Behnke-Walker Nina McDonald Monmouth, Oregon Oregon School of Education Edward McKee O. N. G. Marilyn McKinley O. S. C. Clement Miller O. N. G. Velma Montgomery Chamber of Commerce Margaret McPherren Working Dick McReynolds Dorothy Mespelt Jeanne Miller Marjorie A. Miller Ruth Moench Gladys Morley Dorris Motley Frances Muller Loren Murdock Raymond Newtson Wilma Niemann Ruth Nissen Lyman Olliver Leonard Olvis Leatrice Pape Jean Pesheck Zoe Pettit Lois Porter Eldon Propst Jack Ralston Leonard Roth Marie Ryan 0. S. C. Home O. S. C. Beauty School Home Home Marks' and McMahan Home Door Factory Home Salem Beauty School O. S. C. U. of O. O. N. G. Home Oregon Normal Home Working Home P. G. Working Mrs. George Kelty Dorothy Scofield Mrs. Ralph Williamson Jimmie Sheler 0. N.G. Dole Stilwell P. G. Jimmie Shough 0. N. G. Ailene Sliger Granada Theatre Bruce Straney 0. N. G. Vivian Strotman Married Marjorie Street P. G. at Corvallis Marjorie Ann Stellmacher 0. S. C. Lillian Tannich American Academy of Accountancy Katherine Thomas 0. S. C. Mae Thomas Beauty School Bernice Thompson Married Robert Torrance Door Factory Glen Vandeventer Army Engineers Delbert Weigel P. G. Mildred Wendel Home Gilbert Whitney P. G. P. J. Whitney Snyder's Blacksmith Shop Colleen Williams Portland, Oregon Nurses' Training Helen Willard Northwest Christian Bible School Donn Wilson Astoria LaVerne Wilson Portland, Oregon Emanuel Nurses' Training Louis Winterstein Albany Hotel—Working Bob Witherite Creamery Ice Cream John Wooddy Home Fern Zemlicka P. G. e c) The boom of the waves, the sting of the spray. The taste of salt in the air, The curve of the gull as he whips down the wind, To me there is naught to compare. A wet sheet and a flowing sea, A wind that follows fast, And fills the white and rustling sail, And bends the gallant mast. 86 Commencement of 1940 Processional March Militaire Schubert A. H. S. Orchestra, directed by Mr. Loren Luper Invocation Rev. H. H. Hubbell Instrumental Trio Scarf Dance Chaminade Billy Hobbs, Betty Erb, Ruth Moench Katherine Thomas, Accompanist Mixed Quartette A Tiny Seed Became A Shrine Words by Harold Skeath and Music by William Coburn Ardys Jenks Georgia Ann Campbell Ronald Daggett Robert Torrance Katherine Thomas, Accompanist Trumpet Solo The Wanderer Harlow Don Beight Katherine Thomas, Accompanist Commencement Address The High School, Albany's Unique Exhibit Presentation of Scholarships U. of 0. Scholarships, Ardys Alexander, Wendell Gronso; O. S. C. Scholar- ships, Katherine Thomas, Georgia Ann Campbell; Monmouth Scholarship, Jean Pesheck; Business and Professional Women's Club Prize, Dorris Mot- ley; Secretarial Club Prize, Helyn Marsh, Margaret Elvsaas; R. L. Burkhart Vocal Music Prize, Ardys Jenks, Robert Torrance; P. E. O. Club Award, Jean Pesheck; A. G. Senders English Award, Katherine Thomas, Jimmie Hen- dricks; A.A.U.W., Jeanne Miller; D.A.R. Award, Helen Marks; A.H.S. Schol- arship Faculty, Gus Ficq, Jean Pesheck; A.H.S. Activities, Muriel Forester, Lyman Oliver; Commercial Club Award, Frances Muller; Hi-Y Club Award, Harold MacHugh; Girls' Federation Award, Betty Barrett; Democrat Herald Current Event Award, Jimmie Hendricks, Felix Hermansen, Gus Ficq, and Dale Stillwell; Girls' Athletic Award, Mary Evans, Elaine Harader, Lila Mc- Cutchan; Boys' Athletic Award, Dick McReynolds and Royal Cox; Reader's Digest, Jean Pesheck; National Honor, Dorothy Mespelt. American Legion Award Presented by Commander George Wilson Presentation of Class of 1940 Principal E. A. Hudson Presentation of Diplomas Mr. A. G. Senders Chairman of the Board of Education Class Song Benediction Recessional Senior Class Words by Helen Marks, Music by Lyman Olliver Rev. H. H. Hubbell Stuart 87 PILOT HOUSE LOG Calendar Date—September 16, 1940 Date Name of Headland Distance by Barometer or Place Days 9-19-38 Sophomore Isle 00 29.97 9-16-40 School opened 00 29.84 9-17-40 Senior class organized 1 29.90 9-27-40 Swiss Yodelers 11 30.05 10- 1-40 Harter World Tour 15 32.64 10-7-40 Girls' Letter Club Party 21 31.59 10-15-40 Junior Closs Hay Ride 29 30.55 10-21-40 Movie Chico 35 29.72 10-24-40 F. F. A. Assembly 38 29.02 1J- 4-40 Brower--Ventriloquist 49 30.83 1 1-13-40 Honor Society Initiation 58 30.41 11-14-40 Quill Gr Scroll Banquet 59 31.65 1 1-17-40 Hi-Y Party 62 31.23 11-19-40 DeMoss--Variety 64 32.94 11-26-40 Band--Varsity Nite 71 32.76 12- 6-40 June Mad Senior Play 81 30.81 12- 7-40 Senior Party 82 28.07 12-10-40 Movie Healer 85 29.97 12-16-40 Muriel Goodspeed 91 31.58 12-18-40 Flu--School closes 93 28.65 1-10-41 Glee Club Assembly 1 17 28.99 1-11-41 Glee Club Cr Orchestra 118 29.00 over OAC 1-13-41 Frank Johnson 120 29.50 1-17-41 Tarzan of the Apes 124 30.00 1-17-41 Girls' Letter Club 30.64 swimming party 124 1-23-41 Dad-Daughter banquet 130 30.78 1-24-41 Movie-- Little Red 31.13 Schoolhouse 131 1-29-41 Order of A Initiation 136 28.92 1-31-41 Semester ends 138 29.15 2- 7-41 Debate Invitational 145 29.46 2-14-41 A.A.U.W. Assembly 152 29.98 2-15-41 Girls' Federation Dance 153 30.62 2-26-41 Honor Society Confer- 31.78 ence at Cottage Grove 165 2-28-41 Quill Scroll Assembly 167 31.17 3- 7-41 Boys' Assembly 174 30.29 3-10-41 Movie Barefoot Boy 177 30.61 3-11-41 Evaluation 178 30.00 3-12-41 Si 179 30.00 3-13-41 ii 180 30.00 3-18-41 Secretarial Club Party 185 29.82 3-21-41 Spring Prom 188 32.99 3-28-41 Eastman movie 195 31.00 4- 1-41 Movie To the Victor 199 30.63 4-14-41 Spring vacation 201- 202 30.61 4-10-41 State band contest 207 29.84 5- 2-41 Carnival 229 32.98 5- 5-41 Library Club assembly 232 30.72 5-20-41 Junior Class assembly 247 30.93 5-29-41 Junior-Senior Prom 256 32.64 6- 1-41 Baccalaureate 259 30.09 6- 4-41 Commencement 262 33.33 Steamer S. S. Albany High Sailing from Freshman Isle to Graduation Bay Weather and Remarks Long journey ahead Barometer falling fast Barometer Falling; wind refreshing Barometer rising Barometer continues rising Barometer falling--crew disturbed Wind freshing--wild night Barometer falling Continued bad weather Borometer comes up Unsettled Barometer rising--clear weather Good weather in store Barometer rising--sun shining Borometer rising only to fall Barometer folling--storm Barometer falling--colm night Crew enjoys peace Good day--storm approaching Barometer falls--beginning of siege Siege continues The quiet after the storm Barometer rises--crew becomes acquainted Passengers had a good time Passengers enjoy trek Clear weather ahead Serious storm approaching Bad day--crew uneasy Clear day Crew worried Peace restored Clear weather--wind refreshing Barometer rising Peaceful day Male sex enjoys sunshine Peace--entertainment Crew nervous--visitors Crew nervous--visitors Crew nervous--visitors Weather unsettled Barometer rises--crew swings it Crew entertained Begining to fall Crew undecided Quiet--crew happy Joyous day--possengers have a good time Storm approaching Continues unsettled Barometer rises--crew has a good time Barometer falling--crew excited Barometer rising--clear water ahead for crew 88 A. H. S. HEADLINES Defense Program In A.HLS. Juniors Enjov Class Frolic Classes Jy r, . v , F.F.A. Activities Increased tlect Year S Start of School Year Since ff Officers A r £ vCi Driving School Hi-Y Presents f ° -fa •C k Started Annual Show 'V' AV.. a. CtS Editors Attend C,aJsses Press Conference xPant School Calendar Of Events m yceum Sweetheart Featured At Numbers Tonight’s Spring Prom ? Announced Sweet Home Subdued 42-27 Senior Boys To Announce Their Ideal Girl; Dancing To Begin At 8:30 School Spirit Factor in Keeping District Record. Spotless A.H.S. Joins Bausch and Lomh Group S(u Bulldogs Spill Dancing School Goldentide To Commence M New Editor To Pro A nd Con F.F.A. Initiates Assume Duties Of Evaluation. . New Members ,, Social Whirls Honor Society Schools Afford . r To Attend First Chances For Lross Conference Scholarhips Livewires Bulldogs Nip Organize Gnzzl,es2W) Night Club bulldogs Score Attracts Many 38-0 Victory Roll Call Debate Team Wins First in Speech Tourney B.A.A. Has Meeting Bulldogs Take „ _ Armistice Tilt “Grammar In New Members The Making” Albany Girls Sissies Sports Attend Meeting By Mark., W.aknl.,1 Magruder Speaks Mind Your To Albany P.T.A. Manners, Students No-Name League Title At Stake Tonight Vikings Out To Gain Revenge Over Dogs BULLDOG SPORTS 89 We Thank You As you read through this Annual, it is our hope that you enjoyed the picture of school life that we tried to bring to you. We chose a nautical theme for our Annual this year, not because we live near the sea, but because we wished to pay tribute to all of the things pertaining to it. We do not often realize how much the sea and the ships that sail it mean to us. It is the basis for all travel abroad and of trade with other nations. It is the source of much of the beauty of the coastal states. And to come down to the necessities of life, it also provides food. The ships on the inserts and on each page carry the nautical theme throughout the book. Probably most of you do not realize how much work there is in printing a yearbook. After the copy is written, it must be corrected. The pictures must be taken, mounted, and sent to the engraver, who makes the cuts. Covers must be ordered and art work decided upon. When everything is in readiness, the material and the dummy book are given to the printer. After the book is printed, it is then forwarded to the binder, who puts the cov- ers on it. And finally it is distributed to the students. Many people have been active in making this Annual a success. We ore especially indebted to the members of the staff for their faithful work on the copy. Many of them worked on Saturdays os well as on school days in getting their material ready. The teachers were very kind in helping to choose the staff and deserve a vote of thanks for their cooperation. Phillip Alexander and Paul Stellmacher are responsible for the pictures appearing in this book. They spent a great deal of time in preparing them. Miss Chase and Mr. Hudson have been invaluable as advisers. The school certainly owes them a vote of thanks. Many other people have assisted in the printing of this book, and we thank them heartily. As the Annual is supported by the carnival, all those who worked to moke it o success should have recognition for their efforts. We have enjoyed editing this Annual, and we hope you like it. In the years to come, may it remind you of the happiest days of your life—your school days. —The Editor 90 ADVERTISERS ROMAINE'S ALBANY FLORAL Flowers . . . the per- fect gift for every oc- casion. THE BLAIN CLOTHING COMPANY Albany's Men's ond Boys' Store 224 West First Street INSURANCE Stuort's Service Satisfies I 06 West Second St. MOUNTAIN STATES POWER COMPANY Hove Light for Tonight thot's Right HAMMOND LUMBER COMPANY 415 East First St. RAWLINGS Office ond School Supplies Stationery Cx Printing 121 Broadolbin St. DAWSON'S High quality drugs ond gifts. 238 West First Street STAR TRANSFER Always at your service Phone 366-J PAY AND SAVE MARKET E. J. Way Quality Courtesy Phone 58--59 205 Lyon Street KANDY KITCHEN Home of good candies Fourth and Lyon WOODWORTH DRUG STORE Friendly store in the friendly city 120 West First St. BANK OF ALBANY Albany's Own Bank 203 West First St. 91 ADVERT S E R S CUMMINGS' TRANSFER Anytime— Anywhere 1 24 Ellsworth St. F. M. FRENCH Cx SON Albany's Jewelers Since 1879 326 West First St. MASON'S Albany's Oldest Drug Store 318 West First St. GROCERVETERIA--1 Albany's Leading Grocer 317 West Second St. STIFF'S Home Furnishers to Linn County 304 West Second St. WARD'S ALBANY STORE Second Cj Broadalbin HUB CLEANERS Casual Clothes need expert cleaning — We take pride in cleaning them nicely. Phone 499 or come to 1 22 South Ellsworth Plant on 1 305 East Eighth St. DOOLEY BROTHERS Albany's Leading Independent Store 226 Broadalbin GROCERVETERIA--2 East Albany's Food Center 21 I Main St. F. B. SCHOEL JEWELER 337 West Second St. UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK An Oregon Bank Serving Oregon 133 Broadalbin St. 92 A D V E R T S E R S FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS Cr LOAN Better Returns, Equol Safety 231 W. Second WYND'S STUDIO We Thank You 134 West First St. FRAGER'S Quolity for Less' First ond Lyon M. SENDERS Cr CO., INC. Wool, Mohair, Coscora Bork Feed, Seed, Fertilizer 435 West First KURRE ICE COMPANY General Cold Storage lce--Lockers Fur Coat Storage 639 West Third St. CLIFFORD'S STUDIO We Thank You for Your Patronage 333 West First St. GOLDEN MUSIC COMPANY A Musical Home is a Happy Home Bikman Building FRANK'S 5-10-25c STORE Our new goods' serv- ice gives you the new goods first 122-124 West First eo cri 'c GILMORE SERVICE Tires and Batteries on the Budget Plan. First ond Washington COPELAND'S Complete Building Service End of West Second WARNER'S Home of Good Sporting Goods. 330 West First St. HOOKER'S Headquarters for Electrical Supplies and Services 410 West First St. 93 ADVERT S E R S HELEN - MARIE It pays to look your best I 30 South Ferry St. STERNBERG'S Where Styles Originate First Cj Broodalbin St. ALBANY CREAMERY ASSOCIATION Manufacturer of Linn Butter Cr Ice Cream Phone 21 Second Cr Washington PENNEY'S It always pays to shop at Penney's 317 West First St. FISHER IMPLEMENT CO., INC. John Deere Imple- ments and Tractors Caterpillar Tractors 122 N. Broodalbin ALBANY MAGNOLIA LAUNDRY Quality Work Prompt Service 200 Ferry St. PARKWAY SERVICE STATION Shell Products— Goodyear Tires Third Washington DENSMOOR S Chevrolet Sales ond Service Second Or Washington SNOW PEAK DAIRY Protect Your Health Quick and Efficient Service 210 West Second St. FERGUSON'S Clothes for men and young men 303 West First St. BRIDGEWAY GOLF COURSE How's Your Score? TEXACO PLANT Wherever you go, use Texaco 94 ADVERT S E R S LEE'S TEXACO STATION Let's go with Texaco Main St. ot Salem Rd. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND Albany Branch 300 West First St. PAT'S IMPERIAL CAFE Quality Food 209 West First St. NISSEN'S MOTOR COMPANY Ford — Mercury Sales and Service Albany, Oregon BROWN AUTO CO. Chrysler--Plymouth Sales and Service 1 34 West Second St. THE GREYHOUND TAVERN A place that is distinctly different 222 West Second St. ANDERSON'S BAKERY Pastries to please the eye and the stomach. 212 West First St. WARDROBE CLEANERS We always try to do our best 1 20 West Second St. LEE'S BAKERY 333 Lyon St. THE SHADE SHOP Dependable Materials--Always 331 Lyon St. BULLDOG TAVERN Right across the street from Albany High School CRAVMORE Fountain Service 1 40 West First 95 ADVERT S E R S HARRY'S MARKET Quality Meat at Low Prices 224 Broadalbin St. CALAVAN'S DRUG STORE Headquarters for school supplies 203 Main St. HURLEY'S PLUMBING AND APPLIANCES 1 36 Ferry Street HURLEY'S DRUG STORE A girl never forgets a boy who remembers 204 West First St. GIL'S FRIENDLY CAFE Where Good Friends Meet 1640 East Eighth St. VENETIAN tj GRANADA THEATERS Phone 230 Both on Downtown First Street FORSTER'S SERVICE STATION Fred Forster First and Baker Sts. PATE'S CREAMERY Ice Cream, Ice Cream Novelties 440 East Fifth St. McDOWELL- FAIRLEY CO. The Home of Nationally Advertised Shoes Broadalbin at First RALSTON'S For the Best Deal in Town See Ralston's Dodge-Plymouth 630 Lyon Street SAFEWAY Groceries, Fresh Fruits, Cj Vegetables 2nd and Ellsworth Albany, Oregon SQUEED 'N LEE 125 West Second Phone 79 Engraving By Peterson-Schon Engraving Co., Portland, Oregon Covers By Kingskraft, Kingsport Press Inc., Kingsport, Tennessee Printing By KoUe-Chapman Printing Company, Eugene, Oregon Inserts By A.H.S. Printing Department, Albany, Oregon Binding By James, Kern, and Abbott, Portland, Oregon
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