Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL)

 - Class of 1937

Page 1 of 104

 

Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collectionPage 7, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection
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Page 10, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collectionPage 11, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection
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Page 14, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collectionPage 15, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection
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Page 8, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collectionPage 9, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection
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Page 12, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collectionPage 13, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection
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Page 16, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collectionPage 17, 1937 Edition, Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 104 of the 1937 volume:

55- FSU!! wr 141- F 'W-9. ? ws? 4. ., .. J - 2 f -ua '33 .33 B. vhul M711 f, .. , ..-1 1-4. ,M -, 4.9 1 mhz '. 'I+ ,. . . , . EEFMF, I., , , . ,rl . .M ,, .4 A- 5 I l ,'gidY'.mQL ' R e 'A f , , . ,. .lr ' , x If ? + :iff fs: .5 , ,. ?'.,3 Y..Q..'2 .'i'3. 4 M . . .Ay .W , .,: .., Q :..:.' 1.-' sl--Us ...,.. ..., 1 X 2A1s'r.e .U .'z1,l:'f3'l B. V. . w 3 v 1 Q ' Q 0.1 'K 1'!' , . N.. llfx U lblriuf 1:51 ff tu , wi , iw!! E V, 3 sg.-YH! If whirl ullmll llll HH! ul WNW, QQ Q32 Q MARGARET JOHN 5 LITERARY EIDITOR Xi IDAWVN-H-H0 MIPJIDN Pfaqll' EDITOR IDOBEMHEJWER BU! I NIEIJ' MIANAGIEIR WINE I IENI1 DID YHEQHQIBDUIK MW lpuulbllhflhedl IBLH -IWW klnimar CE Hcnff of lfwoa :nm no nm Tmvnnflh ii IP HH qglhjfnlhcoavll IE wanmrIlrD1n,H ll II ii Info Mr Wcnllulnmoa X X K mf .4 5 . S , ig. ' . 'If-f,7f::f.- -. ,W iyn- A-.4 Q 'g,v f,,w-'wif N.. 1. an gg ,Q ff ,fm . ff - . - . ffziigfgifiili .z ' ' - S:--fag-as-1, .5 -- ' ' - .lf ,rr fw f 1, 7?i1 3iiiiEQ' Z Y K ' 5:5 1 11- E --4- .Aff Y,-A -A H M 4- L, if ? ivsazg M - , f 4 1 ,.. ,gbigrli-Nh'--,11,5 f x- UT- ,KL .zriwggw --s-.Q A .+.-uL.C5:pwf-l,.A-xs,,m,, -:ti ' ' 'f-V.- : , ..v, N., , :Q- ID Q Q L3 Our last year at E. T. H. S. has passed. May the pages ihat we have gathered keep alive for you the friendships, places, and hours that have made these years happy ones. Il 'im W lillli Win 5 A qv.. Q ,V g A fjigl .3 3, - is ,3 .'-Q'?l'1 ' V '1 , lil . 0331 r X M2 1. 5 'por' ,A ir . yr t Followlnq his graduation from E. T. H. S. ln 1884, Mr. Linebarqer received his A.B. deqree at Northwestern. later studying at the Sorbonne and the School of Mines in Paris and at the universities of Ttibinqen and Gottinqen in Germany. For over thirty-five years he taught physics and chemistry in the Chicago schools. The founder and first editor of School Science and Mathematics, he is also the author of five textbooks in his field. ..5.. QQ gxxom It is to Charles E. Linebarqer. Sr.. ihe oldest known living graduate of Evanston Township High School- and one of its most distinguished- that the Class of 1937 respectfully dedicates its Senior Yearbook. ,wap f QIWQMW ii ' M- ute 1,1 A 'vf Lwnh N dih. ,aw I .W H- :Sm UN If M-'Q' A -1' 'N A v' I 'f:n , vb ffx, 1 ,. ,441 x A 4 .fm '14 '9 'fy' Wk' , 'i My W, fs T'-il! mf 'H F ,eff 4 Pi' 4., f' 131. ...1 ,M af -' rw L 1' M. ly ln ffm, u al ,'g',fQQ f- f 7 12.59 Q . F3 . W . LF,-ffnv, Hs 3- C.f11-.Mm ' A ' '- 'Uni-if ff'-'f ? '+ , .'? 'L'9'E'3I JS' ' Au fr V: 'YT V -'..1 if'.5'? . 5 5',s4j,A' J - 'f-..A:-kg i -5 .-nz-H. in' Env: . -14.711, ,:-v.l,xy jf-I Ura? ,2-.iq r' . , V ,- ' . 4' , , -'f 'f ':vz': xz,,,-. 1 g:':2 u!y V J' , .f-2,13 ff utv'1.f.,f ,L .gf ..-Riff? U-, I 4. CH , ' 1 .- .14-55' :1:i3f4.fg , .-f, 2 ww :nf- fifialdug.. ,. 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To ac- compllsh our purpose we are featuring the truly unusual pen and ink sketches made bY our art staff, each using an individual technique in portraying the views ln and about the school. V5507 sz Q GX 'E 5 YG S , -v-4 34 , 1' ' ,I H 1 . , 11,1 1. .- F' ' 11' I H 11 , l 1' 1'V.. 12 I 1 ,X 1. 1 ?'3'f '2f'1 fWx fl if ' I 1 ,. 1. -13 Q-gg-5 1,151 , ' I., 11, , '.- 111 wi'-ZX 1- f!9f 1 11!'lI' 1 gf 271111 X513-I ,W2Q541gQ5?, if ,ml 1id1 ,,,.jE111 1 , -. ,,f:,v, . , ,Q .W Q 11111 101- 11 1 11'111:1' 517' 1 .ms-.',.1111'112111'1 .'. 711 11111 1 1 '14 -1'-f 11, 1111.1 111111 'vw 131, , 11 -11 1 551R,2y,fyA'S.4Si2Xf ' , 11' 1 1 ,Li . 42192 11 11 11 111 1 1,11 3 T: l,J-H: I '111 111 5 .WU 'N Y 11 011 . ff -1111 '1. .U 1,1!-211. 11m wi , 1 .1 It - 15,1 gl ,lx . 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Imfaip-sxv1'S'l AXID FfIiIINHJHV IDNVKKCDN FRANCE LEONARD BAOON Mr Whipple Mi-.lNuckolx Miss Cleveland Mr. Gouldln Mr. Leach lD4 124 l44 164 204 Mr. Barnum Mins Murphy Heading the administration of Evanston Township High School is Superintendent-Principal Francis L. Bacon, with Mr. Walter L. Barnum as assistant principal and Mtss Clara D. Murphy as administrative assistant. Each of the eleven home rooms has a faculty director and several associates, with the iuntor and senior students on the first floor and the freshman and sopho- more on the second and thlrd. Each home room has its own set of officers, the president and treasurer being elected by the upper class and the vice-president cmd secretary from the lower group. The home room directors of the first floor rooms are Mr. George A. Whipple, Mr. Howard H. Nuckols, Miss Eunice I. Cleveland. and Mr. Layton Gouldin, who are aided in room activities by the senior presidents, Ray Garrett, William Blakeslee, Charles Corcoran, and William Iaeger, respectively. The freshman-sophomore home rooms are directed by Mr. Edgar S. Leach, Mr. Stacey B. Irish, Mr. Charles M. MGCCOhHSll, Mr. Oliver C. Hostetler, Mr. Linton Melvin, Miss Mary M. Wilson, and Mr. Leonard Parsons. Mr lrlsh Mr. MacConnell Mr. Hostetler Mr. Melvin Mlss Wilson Mr PCn'S0ns 224 244 264 304 324 344 SENIOR PRBIDENIS Huy Garrsit. William Blukealee, Charles Corcoran, William Iaeqsr -1g.. I-Xa wnfwwx . 5597 lm ,I if . I Zig., qinigl- E i f gn : il Aff ,WE E E E LslmllllllIINIIIHHIIllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIHIIHIE , 1 i1 ff 1 1, A- f'1,,.J ' V1 R' 1-11. 1 L, XX 5 5135? XXYXMXW' mf' 0 1 5 WI' idx, ' I IAXXXN' f'Y!XXX 1.1 x Q , ' ,WA his K an QI, i.Xf7'1'14111'1Q'w ,h ff f ,, ' 'X 1 N-'Egg-Q1,5X Wi! f- ,if gy1'. . , W, 1 'X XXV X.-X X1 ' If' 'lf X: 1.1 - X ' 1: 1 . . 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MXXXl' X 'X1 XXX' k Xl X' 'X1 XX7'?- X1f!X1'fXf1'fX'IX11fl11'X ' MXN W 1:111111f1111111111Wf1I11,1f1 3 111 1' ',111XXXX15XXXXX'X 1 XX11 11u'WHIX 1 11 .11 111 . 5 5ffflQX11 1Q,r' 1' 'XX11141 ,',X'1i X' '1' VIL X 1 ll 'XSX1 1-1 . 1111-1111 1111 1-1 '1 1,1 1 '1 1111111 111111111 V mu f 1 1 1.1.-11, .nlllm '.'.:, ,...1 1. ...A . 1.. .X .A .. 1 . Y ' ' . KE.-u.w..rfB12uc.c. MNH ILIE WITH if if E. T. H. S. Sports One of the many things the year of 1936-37 will be remembered for is the wide participation and interest evidenced for intra-mural activities. The sports included in the schedule this year were baseball, swimming. basketball, tennis, football, horseshoes, and track. The total partici- pants numbered nearly a thousand, a total which surpasses by several hundred the record of any previous Year. The boys are beginning to realize, stated Mr. Carl Parker. intra-mural head, that the opportunities offered for participation in intra-mural sports are vastly superior to those which they could get at home or on the sand lot. All the games are supervised, instruction is given, the equipment is better, and most important of all the boys get a chance to play against boys of their own age and ability, forming new friends and associations outside of their limited circle. . In addition to the major sports pictured in the following pages, E.T.l-LS. maintains a minor sports program. ln this field the Wildkit teams were not as successful as last year, but a great number of lower classmen received training in varsity competition and should help to produce winning teams for the next season. Members of the Ehranston tennis team did not fare as well as had been hoped, but they did, however, advance to the semi-finals tn the Suburban League meet in both the singles and doubles before being eliminated. In the regular matches they won from Deerfield but dropped contests to New Trier, Oak Park, and Proviso. Practice games with Maine and Tully resulted in Wildkit victories. Outstanding players will be. lost by graduation are Al Boulton and King Collison, doubles, and Leonard Terviranus, singles. Delbert Brannan, No. l singles man, remains, supported by cz full team to form the nucleus of the '38 squad. Although the Wildkit golfing record appears unimpressive, yet the season gives an indication of what can be done next year as only Bill Iunod and Stanley Evans, outstanding players, will be lost by graduation. This spring the Wildkits won from Waukegan and tied Morton, dropping one-point matches to Oak Park and Deerfield. New Trier and Proviso also won over the Kits. An interesting feature of next year's golf program will be a new 18-man squad instead of the usual few who now participate. Top row: Edward Kuester, Robert Brock, Francis Wemette. Grant Prizsr, Paul Feld, Alphonse Mledzlanowski, Robert Ratcliffe. Thomas Lloyd, lack Norman, Charles Worthington, Asst. Coach Haas. Third row: Coach Schultz, Fred Miller. Ben Alexander, William Stronach, Peter Fbuanick, William Iasger, Stanford Meigs, Robert Eppers, Lloyd Iewett, Iohn Jennings, Btrger Frohm. Second row: Walker Meyer. Andrew Singleton, Charles Prim, lack Kidd, Peter Di Francesca, Iomes Torcom, Iohn Beatman, Fred Busch. Willis Kirk. First row: Warren Hamer, Iohn Iohnson, Thomas Sollitt, Iohn Hayes. Stephen Iames, Fred Fischl, Raymond VanGeem, Harold Iohnson. Football With Coach Schultz in his first year as head coach of the Varsity eleven, the seniors were greatly pleased with the showing of the team. Besides climbing as high as third place in the Suburban League. Evanston also gained moral victories in defeating the Mishawaka, Indiana eleven, and that of Davenport, Iowa, the champions of their respective states. Starting their season with an out-of-town game with Mishawaka, Evanston fans were delighted to hear of an 18-O score in her favor, Their spirits received no dampner on the following week when she emerged victorious from a game with Waukegan, score, 6-0. On the following week, Evanston beat the Davenport team, and on the week follow- ing, the Orange again took a game, this one at the expense of Highland Park with a score of 13-U. Evanston's champion- ship hopes received a setback on the following week when Provlso was victor in a hotly contested game by a score of 14-6. Hopes went glimmering further when Oak Park beat her on the following week, 6-U. Then seeming to pull herself out of her slump by her very boot straps, Evanston finished up her season by defeating Morton 12-0 and New Trier 20-6. In the Mishawaka game, Evanston was held scoreless all through the first quarter, but she scored in the second quarter and again ln the fourth. Iewett and Worthington furnished the tallles, while Miedzianowskl kicked the extra point. The Waukegan game was played in a ralnstorm, with Chuck Worthington sliding and slipping to bring the ball into scoring position, and finally carrying it over himself for the only score. In this game, Waukegan brought the ball up to Evanston's one-yard line, and only the desperate work of the whole team saved the Wildkits from a tie or defeat. In this game, lack Kidd, star Evanston lineman was lnlured so severely that he was out the rest of the season. The game with Davenport was marked by the exceptional playing of Fischl, Worthington and Iewett. The accurate kicking of Miedzlanowski after each touchdown added to the score. This game was played before a record crowd and is avowed one of the best of the season. The game with Highland Park mainly brought two new Evanston stars into prominence, Moore and Alexander, who, with the aid of Worthington and Iewett, managed to score twice. Again Miedzlanowskl scored the extra point. .-22... Evanston received tts first defeat of the year when they journeyed to Maywood to play the strong Provlso eleven. Seemtng to miss the services of Kidd in the line, and the blocking of Torcom in the backfteld, the Orange failed to score till Melgs, Evanston end, leaped high and speared a blocked kick, tucked lt under his arm, and galloped a short distance over the line for the only score. . Evanston's second setback of the season was received at the hands of Odk Park who was held scoreless during the first half. The superior weight and power of the Villagers finally told, and they managed to squeeze one score across the goal line. Evanston ended up her football season with a qame with New Trier. As if avenging herself for her defeat at the hands of the North Shore rivals last year, Evanston rose up and pushed aside the Green Wave to the tune of 20-O. In this game, runs by Alexander, and line smashes by Worthington netted touchdowns for Evanston, while accurate kicking by Mled- zlanowskt added points, Besides gaining prestige through victories, Evanston added to her laurels by having the lion's shore of men on the All-Suburban team. Robert Eppers and Charles Worthington made the first string team, while Iames Torcom, Stanford Meigs, William Stronach, and Lloyd Iewett all made the second All-Suburban team. Other outstanding players with one more year of Varsity competition are Fred Ftschl, Warren Hamer, and John Iennlngs. An interesting stdeltght on the Mtshawaka game was that the team stopped at a prominent hotel in South Bend during their stay. and upon departure the manager of the hotel came to Coach Schultz compltmenttng htm for the behavior of his team. He said that his hotel had taken in a qood many high school football teams and had done so for many years, but that he had never seen a better behaved group of boys than those from Evanston. The two games that Evanston lost were dropped to the two most powerful teams in the Suburban League, Provlso, and Oak Pork. The fact that Evanston really had the old scoring punch was often demonstrated, for every time the Orange brought the ball wtthtn twenty yards of their oppo- nents' aoal line, they did not fail to score. This was due mainly through the efforts of the line which compared with the best in the Suburban League and the backfteld, thouoh a little slow, was very effective on line plays. Basketball After an early season slump marked by four successive defeats, the Evanston Varsity staged a comeback in the second half of the basketball season to earn ct final standing of fourth place with six victories and a like number of defeats. The Wildkits outscored their opponents 377 to 367. Although sickness ripped gaps in the squad early in the season, the team played fast and consistent ball at the end. With breaks, said Coach Roscoe Hampton, the team would have finished in second place. Morton gained this spot, although Evanston defeated that squad twice this year. Lloyd Iewett was the most valuable player on the team, according to Hampton. Hts consistent playing was a stimulant to the squad. Chuck Worthington took fourth place in the league, scoring 110 points. The Varsity opened the season against Oak Park in Beardsley Gym. The game caused sorrow for the local rooters with the Villagers winning 39-28. Although the Orange defense was excellent the forwards couldn't find the basket. Next came two non-conference games with two triumphs for Evanston. The Wildkits over-ran Senn to the tune of 54-12, the locals showing a greatly improved offense. The other victory was over Roosevelt High of Chicago. In spite of frequent fouls, the squad developed a smoothly-running scoring machine. After tasting victory, the Orange dropped four consecutive games. Following a surprise defeat by Waukegan, the champion Proviso team rolled over the Wildkits, 4l-26. It was after a 39-22 defeat by the rivals from the north, New Trier, that the Varsity experienced a revival. Evanston walked over Highland Park, 37-10. In winning its first conference game, the Orange predomtnated from the beginning. Then after trailing Morton for three quarters, the Evanstonians forged ahead to eke out a thrilling 34433 victory. The Wildkits then smothered Waukegan 49-29 with Worthington going on a scoring spree to garner 12 baskets. Two more victories followed, the first one over New Trier, 44-32, and Highland Park, 31-20. The team closed the season with a thrilling overtime victory over Morton. In the third extra period, Worthington broke the deadlock and the game ended Evanston 38, Morton 36. After the regular season, the Varsity took on former stars of E. T. H. S. in the annual alumni game. Reversing the decision of last year, the Varsity triumphed 40-31. Back Row: Francis Nordlund, Ralph Van Patten, Hamid Neetz. Robert Wells. Robert Godemann, lack Gregory, William Kelley Front Row: Alvar Steele, William Schmidt, Donald Knapp, Charles Worthington, Alphonse Mtsdztunowukl, Paul Cohan, Lloyd Inwett. . . Sw1mm1ng The 72 boys out for swimming started their 1936-37 season by defeating Senn High Sch0ol's team in a practice meet, 57 to 28. Coach Doc Parker collected the school's best material, and six afternoons a week the would-be Weisrnullers coasted through many lengths of the Y. M. C. A. pool, developing wind and muscle. Curfews were carefully kept and occasional time trials recorded progress. Coach Parker ironed out imperfections and drilled his squads on racing starts and underwater speed turns, in preparation for their first plunge into Suburban competition. Then Mr. Matt Mann, coach of many of the 1936 Olympic swimmers, qave a talk emphasizing that style and power can be developed only by persistent hard work. All this paid dividends when Evanston celebrated consecutive victories over Roosevelt Htqh and Highland Park. New Trier's new super-natatorium produced a team which out- polnted the Wildkits, but undaunted they came back a week later to overpower Proviso, a very formidable opponent. There followed a thrillingly close defeat at the hands of Oak Park and then an easy triumph over Morton. Competing against all the Suburban League schools at once, the Varsity took third out of seven: the Fresh-Sophs, second. Throughout the year Bob White and Russell Cobb drew cheers with their gruelllng breast- stroke races: Filipp Kreissl and Stuart Plettner shone in the 100-yard free-style: and King Collison, Stanley Lewis, and Captain Emmett Mclnnis, scrapped it out tn the crawl sprtnts. Fred Reiche and Don Wahlgren starred in backstroke. After an injury disabled Dick Mead, Richard Buckle carried on in fancy diving. Other maior letter winners were Manager Iohn Sanders and Fresh-Soph Captain Wes Whitchurch. Earl Asher, Charles Corcoran, Kenneth Eckholt, Richard Irvine, Compton Swanson, and Bob Vrooman, earned Varsity minor E's. Coach Parker was especially pleased at the interest shown in intra-mural swimming. Ninety-seven boys competed in the all-school meet, and a third of that number won places in the highly competitive finals. Many of the intra-mural qualifiers and champions found that they should have been on the school teams all year. The top home rooms were 124 and 104 on the first floor, respectively, and 324 and 304 on the upper floors. Back low: Coach Parker, Fred Heiche. Robert White. Emmett Mclnnts, Stuart Plettner, Dave Charleson, Earl Asher, Don Wahlq-ren. lohn Sanders. Front row: Compton Swanson, Russell Cobb, King Collison, Charles Corcoran, Stanley Lewis, Robert Vrooman, Richard Buckle. Richard Irvine. Track Last Ianuary sixty aspirants to the E.T.H.S. track team, handicapped by the lack of training facilities, began practice tn the drill hall under the guidance of Coach Emil Schultz and his assistant, Mr. Iohn Sobol. The Varsity squad began its indoor season by taking third place in the Suburban Leaque Indoor Meet. On April 3 the track team placed ninth in a large field in their last indoor meet, the Oak Park Relays. The Kits won this meet in 1936. K With the coming of warm weather, the thtnclads went out onto the athletic field and cinder track to prepare for the forthcoming outdoor season. They showed improvement, but were defeated by the strong Oak Park team. In the State District Meet held at Beardsley Field, May 8. Coach Schultz's proteqes came through to take second place, aarnerinq 3816 points in a field of thirteen strong teams. Needless to say, this was a real accomplishment. Sixteen places were won by Evanston men in the finals of this meet, while a total of 19 medals were earned. In the Final State Meet held by the University of Illinois at Champaign on May 15, Luther Thomas took first in the 110-yard dash, Robert Ralph earned second in the 880-yard run, and Robert Pierce took second in the iavelin toss. On May 21, the seven teams in the Suburban League met for the outdoor meet. Evanston as host was sixth in the field, with the strong New Trier team winninq another championship. Seniors who will be lost by graduation are Ben Alexander, Edward Bartley, John Beatman, Robert Eppers, William Iaeaer, Stephen Iames, Hoyt iones. lack Kidd. Fred Miller, Robert Pierce, and Ernest Wieder. Nevertheless, the Wildkits will be bolstered next year by the strength of this year's championship. Fresh-Soph team which won both the indoor and outdoor Suburban League meets. An unusual amount of interest was taken this year in the intra-mural track contest sponsored among the home rooms with a total of 174 students taklnq part in the 12 events having spent two weeks of preparation in the gym classes. The two traveling trophies were won by Room 104 for the upperclassmen, while Room 304 was victorious among the freshmen and sophomores. QD Back row: Coach Emil Schultz. Edward Bartley, Donald Knapp, Eg: Miller, Donald Smith, Harry Simon, Hoyt lanes. Robert Ralph. Ernest Wieder. Luther Thomas, Stephen Iames. Front row: Ray Fencl, Iohn Beatman, Robert Eppers, lack Kidd. Paul Feld, Fred Webb, Ralph Van Pottelit Robert Pierce. Fred Rohlel. . - Baseball About the end of March when the student begins to count the days until school is out, the baseball fan begins to long for action on Beordsley field. At the same time Coach Floyd Wilson is intently watching such prospects as would make up his Varsity nine, while the dtamondeers themselves are looseninq up their arms and working out in the gymnasium. With the return of Frank Koscielak. Felix Fronczak. Robert Ratcliffe, and Lloyd Iewett from last year's team and the advance of a strong lunior Varsity squad and some promising sophomores. the prospects of the 1937 baseball team looked very bright. On top of this was Coach Wllson's determination To find the best hitters to make up the team. Such were the pre-season plans of the Kit baseball team, but the competition offered by the scheduled opponents proved very hard. ln the first ten games the team was able to win only five, but it gained a reputation for being a hard-hitting, fighting, spirited ball club as was shown in the memorable contest with Oak Park in which Ratcliffe pitched a no-hit game at Beardsley field to defeat the Visitors l to 0 in one of the greatest battles ever staged on the Evanston Varsity diamond. A The Kits launched their season with a seventeen-hit 15 to 5 victory over Waukegan which was followed by defeat at the hands of the New Trier team. Following that there were wins and losses in order, leaving the team with five games won and five lost. The Orange possessed a very fine infield which could rank with the league leaders. It contained Koscielak, catcher: Charles Worthington, first base: Francis Nordlund, second base: Fronczak, short stop, and Iewett, third base. ln the pitching and outfield positions the Kits were less fortunate. They had Ratcliffe, who was ably assisted by Charles Place. but the two comprised the whole pitching stalf and, consequently. had to carry the whole burden. In the outfield Coach Wilson was constantly shifting his men until he found the combination that could hit. Bob Kilby. Francis Wemette, Warren Hamer, Peter Ewanick, and Robert Tower comprised the main competition for the positions. Nine of the '37 team will be lost by graduation. Back row: Coach Floyd Wilson. Warren Hamer, Robert Rotclilfe, Kenneth Mackenzie. Harold Neetz, Charles Worthington, Francis Wemette, Peter Ewanlck, Donald Barreca. Front row: Robert Tower, Robert Kilby, Lloyd Iawetl, Charles Place, Frank Kosclelok, George Blanas. Francis Nordlund, Felix Fronuak, Peter Dt Francesca. Military Training Corps The M. T. C., led by Major Charles Corcoran cmd Captain lames Harney, with Captains George Tetlow, larnes Adams, David Light, and Thomas Lane heading the companies, has carried out another successful year. In the battalion, the first platoons were commanded by First Lieutenants George Sutton. William Tenney, Emmett Mclnnis, and Edgar Vanneman: the second platoons were headed by First Lieutenants Barton Walker, Torn Sollitt, Brayton Smith, and Stephen Denning. Captain Richard Lord was in charge of athletics, cmd First Lieutenant Edwin Bates handled the publicity. With the seniors leading the way, the Corps again taught drill, marksmanship, military science, and discipline to its 260 members. The Corps started its program with the entire body marching to Evanston's Fountain Square in celebration of Armistice Day, accompanied by the Drum and Bugle Corps. This band, made up of M. T. C. members, is under the direction of Mr. Arnold Oehlsen of Northwestern University, and led by Captain Iohn McAllister. The next event was the Muster-ing Ceremony in which the freshman cadets repeated the oath of allegiance to the Corps after the commandant, Captain Paul W. Iones of the Head- quarters Company, 108th Quartermaster Regiment, and were formally accepted into the Corps. Medals and stars were awarded for marksmanship, drill, boxing, and attendance by Mr. D. M. Ladd, head of the Chicago office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, United States Depart- ment of Iustice. Members of the Rifle Team also received their E's for last year. The Military Ball, with Captain David Light heading the committees, turned out to be the best, and had the largest attendance in Corps history. The feature of the dance was the grand march, with all the couples parading under the sabers of the seniors. The Chicago Tribune medals, awarded to the outstanding cadet of each class, were also given at this time. Next came the annual boxing tournament. A boxing ring was set up in the armory, and for six weeks the courage of each cadet was tested in at least a two-round bout-that is all except a few who were the victims of knockputs. The other important occasions were the Annual Government Inspection and the Corps Military Demonstration. At these events, the whole battalion reviewed their knowledge of military affairs before the public and government officials. The annual banquet, at which the new officers were announced and the seniors received diplomas for their work, finished out the main events of the year. Back row: Barton Walker, Brayton Smith, Emmett Mctnnls, Edgar Vanneman, George Sutton, Richard Lord, Thomas Sollilt, lack Harrison, Stephen Denning, William Tenney. Front row: Iohn McAllister, Robert Eeisang, David Light, George Tetlow, Charles Corcoran, lames Harney. IGIUOS D Adams, Thomas Lane, Ray Garrett, Iohn Baur. Rifle Team In matches with learns from all over the United States, the Rifle Team again demonstrated its superiority this year. The team, coached by Captain Paul W. Iones of the faculty, and headed by Captain Robert Beisanq. with George Tetlow, lohn McAllister, Price Brown, Robert Barker, Huston Olds, lack Karstrom, Charles Spoerer, Ralph Ensign, and Earl Schlebe making up the squad, placed consistently high in meets with some of the best high schools and naval and military academies in the country. The E. T. H. S. team, placed third and fifth out of fifty teams in the Mid-West match at Morgan Park. They also placed third in the Hearst Sixth Corps Area Meet, in which teams from Michigan, Wisconsin, and Illinois competed. Although the exact results have not yet been announced, our team is expected to place in the first flight of schools and academies of the United States in the Hearst Trophy Match. ln the dual meets, the Rifle Team has won eight out of eleven matches. They won both meets with St. Iohn's Military Academy, loliet Senior High School, and the Northwestern Naval and Military Academies: won and lost with Waukegan Township High School and the Morgan Park Military Academy: and lost their annual match to the Culver Military Academy. The team also participated in several postal matches with different groups about the country. With only four members leaving this spring, the Rifle Team is expected to have an even better record next year. An innovation to the school, were the International Bt-Weekly matches in which E. T. H. S. placed six rifle teams. These matches are carried on by mall every other week for three months, and include over one hundred crack teams from the entire United States and posses- sions. Over one-fourth of the cadets in the M. T. C. tried out for positions on these six teams. Evanston, incidentally, had more teams entered in these matches than any other competitor. After the members for each team were chosen, so many were using the rifle gallery, that special days had to be assigned to the team members to allow them to have their targets shot in time. Finally, after the last targets had been sent tn, the Fifth Team, consisting of Richard Weber, Richard Barbour, Mitchell Rieger, Fred Kaplan, lohn Washburn was found to have fared the best, winning the cup for second place out of all the teams ln its division. Back row: Ralph Ensign, George Tetlow, Charles Speer-er, Thomas Sollltt, Robert Betsanq, Verne Kennedy, lohn McAllister, Earl Schiebe, Brandon Decker. Front row: Iohn Koogle, Rohan Barker, Price Brown, lack Karstrom, Iohn Ward, Thomas Spoerer, Huston Olds, Thomas Kendall. l 1 mal Q -.. , W-:--if -1-W W 'Q 3+ ia I -mfg: V Q. ra- . gui gym fd Q F H 'H ,. fr' -:sd fi ' i 1' ?, , -, -M A fi k 2 2 .. gi 2 fe QQ Q if Q L if iii! SM- 5. 'F 2, 1 - 'ivaligi 5. ' 255- -- , , 'Qs .,, f-Y mf ,nf 1, A4 in im ff? 2-. N , A ,Q .Tis X ,S a W??ifiz'i5 w .5 W Mg.. , ' -:tag . Q Q. an 'F' .ww x i 31. eg. T FQ :nv ' -Qi INN FN 'Z H' , 'limi 1 iw In . ir -ll in ' K ' I ' ' ll' .?'?33Y m Wwe . 1 V , !,, I J, ,, f I - --.H-t:::11i ,'jfU5k ff' S ff' . , A f N ,W V 4 f f Ju' NZHIJS ...,, Z 155 --1-.. 2 X' Q- 'fan XJ, ,fn ' L x -f I ,-, ff ' F ,f f f 1' yy 'V 5 :MQW H . bw I jg f ' 2 ' ax: 'Ill 1 , ' HY! ' N 51,91 'V 1 -2 ffmwwl 'fIllff m ff I, Y 'pn N1 K , V, EM Fig,'f'i,p W P ml 'Ufl f . in I H 'ul f'f H? 2 Z 444 'I M ' l X f m?n?52QI fiiw1F V45 2- 1' NNT 1 ' I SW! 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'5 is AH MQ T3 Q1 , 2 1 f, E- P' ' 4 fu V: is fi A vgf' -.1-Hn hw' , N'jU .ei?fI If - -- AA ' ' Tr f.xirrnfx1-unmnmlvl1ll1nm1 ,,M I E M- - 5-Z ,fi L'::KI':141:lrl1llAnsulrmullnIWIVIUIIlllllllzmlnglginlgfylalgImgemmnHHTHI' IH Um W- 1 I ' I Q i , I mum AHIIHH I ll v , A . if A mm: X 1 li-lllllgyrznnlmnunmnumumlllfuullsr1gg5g,':m'fJ:g:lIHlr11lr1fl'u.n.l,.,,m,'q,, UH' ilfil' N, lqfllilllglllgguvglwqwlx-xx - 1 A- rx' , 'L H ..,-.W , ACWVIIXVRIWVII IEJI' .. La,2,f-wf3 W , 1 5.4.6411 , ,K 1 J.. -J., ,.Q.4'.'.'k 'J5. ., 1 if ,gyung g -1 gc, , -4.11: Q A--.ze,,,,?4'+!- -L -H-5 wg '. 1 'Arm f w fi 5-A I' V 'Eng -'- -'D x 4 I Mas 1- I 32 E. T. H. S. Activities Behind the bulwark of major activities like football, publications, and music, which presents such an obvious and imposing front to the outsider, we of E. T. H. S. have our hundred and one minor diversions-sidelines, some of which are relatively important and others of which have a peculiar sort of meaning only to us and our comrades-the never fading value of friendly cooperation and association. To enumerate these countless more or less obscure functions would be well-nigh-impossible, so we must be content with a sort of panorama-a glimpse here and there in E. T. H. S. after the three o'clock bell has rung. Every Monday one found Mr. Hughes and his proteges discussing high- lights and shadows or some other phase of photography at the meeting of the Camera Club. The members of this erudite body were renowned for the pungent odors they acquired from dark room chemicals. N o less famed were the incipient orators of the Forensic Club, whose every skill and resource was mustered to trap each other in debate, whose stentorian voices stirred up the echoes in room 229 about twice a month. And while we speak of vocal mat- ters, we cannot leave out that superb band of Dirty Desmonds and Hair- breadth Harries, vampires and ingenues, known far and wide as the Drama group. 'I'he more prosaic sides of the theater, scenery-making, costume- designing, stage-setting and lighting, as well as the acting, were all part of the colorful existence of its members. Students with a yen for criticism found a haven in the new born Cinema Club, where they censored this and applauded that to their heart's content. And other critics of a slightly different sort used to gather on an occasional Thursday way up in room 341 at the Writers' Club meetings, where Informal- ity was king and Friendly Comment sat by his side. We who were among its members will never forget the unparalleled good times we had-the vigorous arguments-idle reflections-bits of praise and assistance. In this and all other clubs these trifling, kaleidoscopic incidents were what endeared us to the organization and to each other-the gossamer threads that make up friendship. Clubs like the ones we have mentioned, the hobby clubs, are perhaps the best for genuine companionship, but the departmental groups, such as the Commercial Club, the language clubs, and that rapidlygrowing toddler, the Math Club, are mighty hard to beat. Goodness! We haven't even touched upon the unofficial assemblies like the handful that strays into the physics laboratory of an afternoon and plays hangmcm on the blackboard. Nor have we brought up scores of other groups. Alas! Like Cecil Rhodes, when we eye this survey, we cannot but think, So much to do-so little clone. -33- -QF. f A K ,-- . -f fs. 1 L .,. L , . Robert Tower Margaret Iohn 2 ? Dawn Thompson Evanstonian Yearbook Probably the most anticipated publication of the year is the annual Evanstonlan Senior Yearbook, sponsored by the members of the graduating class for the purpose of recording the most important and interesting events of their senior year. Although the contents of the Year- book are mainly those charaoterlcally senior, we have attempted, as far as tradition and cir- cumstances have permitted, to represent activities in which the whole school ls concerned, so that the Yearbook may be as appealing to the underclassman as to the senior. Late last spring the editors of this Yearbook were selected by the iunlor class from candi- dates who had been named as being outstanding in their third-year English or art classes. When the ballots had been counted, it was found that Robert Tower had been elected to manage the business staff. Dawn Thompson had been chosen art editor, and Margaret Iohn, elected to direct the literary work of the 1937 Yearbook. The fall months found the business staff busily collecting assessment fees, arranging appointments for seniors at Bernle's, and handling all financial matters. Dawn Thompson and her art staff immediately began to study the technique of pen and ink sketches, for this year the Yearbook has featured the individual sketches of the views about the school in a distinctive sixteen-page opening section and four division pages. Then, too, off-set printing has been used instead of letter-press, allowing the use of more pictures and other art features. The members of the literary staff did not start to compose their masterpieces until late in the spring, when it became their duty to fill up the space left after the art work had been finished and fitted into the book. Editors went wildly around the building trying to acquire enough information to stretch a one-hundred word article into a three-hundred word write-up, or even worse, trying to reduce cz long and well-written article. Last-minute correcting and revising, late articles, and long hours were but some of the trials of the literary staff, when spring arrived and the Yearbook was scheduled to go to press. With the cooperation, however, of the three staffs, and the support of the student body. the Yearbook has been completed. The compiling and arranging of the Yearbook has been directed this year by Mr. Farron Turner, assisted by Miss Louise K. Goffe who supervised the art students. Third row: Stanley Page-Wood, Richard Thain, Edgar Vanneman, Emmett Mclnnis, William Hoster, Robert White, Iames Hamey. Second row: Margaret Iohnstone, lean Chubb, Ruth lensen, Phyllis Murphy, Roma Nagler, Suzanne Bnice. First row: Ann Abell. King Collison, Dawn Thompson, Robert Tower. Margaret John, William Altmeyer, Suzanne Maurer. eEfiQ 'f THE 5' fig? I , ,. 35f ' ' in ,fly F fff+f ff 'Tl1fEX6A S I GNIAN 1' - H55 m ? F1'?1'F , '1: 5 N' N VII. N NL It BVANBTGN TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL, IYANSTUN, ILLINOIS llmllli Uv WU' Boys' Club Offers Signed Basketball In Prize Contest Mr. Pawn Allu Pulllll. Fnnllly Ta Submli Nunn for Club lam. ..-.-mu. mu imny ...mm- mn rum... nw.. um.. ml mn in ... ..-f...,.. 1.- .M-Ar . .um 1.1 vu.. v..,-.- .-mv. M nz mm 'rn mf mm.. sn: I-....... .lu ..,. M n,..mv..n. my umm: L, mf ..,.1..v-uv ..4 mf uf. -... -Q-M. u.. fum. mfr. 1... mr vm- wx. me i.-v 1 -lmmn u-me u N-QI u nk wr ....mmm ...n ...I rn mn mn .M-.Q .M :... um. ..n -ppm 1 nw nm.. N.-... mmm- 1. ... nh. .u f...,ma....... wr-.-f.. .nu ...mn .. .,...., M-,... .. -my .ao-, Nu- .1 can rm 1--5: .mg nm. ... nw.-..4 .am -11. uf. .4 ....n,a1... -1. M. .4 lx.. .nm wr... ..... gm.. ... 4..-.lov n..4n.m,- an-1 ffaumnn-e,.. n- mn ll., ,mam ..s xx. v....,.. ...A sn, umm.. 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H.--1 an me asfmwx za-- Noted Poet, Profesmr Publishes Bulletin Announcing Speech Tournament Rules Mr. Bridge Stnuel Fmt Thu! Wlnmn lust WI-in 'hlh vw .uw mmm. --mul fo 1.-.L .nf mai..-c...fi.. nl - :K mu rm... mum I w -.1 nv muf. nm mn nn xx.-. uxfam. ....nu -mn- -m..1m. mf nn.. -I u -.u m...1.f mu -s..m :- .....1.... .rm -1 mu -un- nm.. an ... nm ummm 1. -L.. n.-fm my K.. nf na. mm mm Avon vw. mn.-. -vm .R nn fm mv. .n,.n.a.-. M -am' 1- ......f.4 an mu mam, mu rum In 1 .xu n..-nm. .funn --u .Wm I.. -mf fu..-N-1. ar... mv... nm me mf :- ..:.u,f. ... mm uv.. wma ... n.. ...man Wm. ns- r. .namm 1-ww. .mn -1-.nm .nu :mm mf- 4.4 .mam 0 ...um ... .M nm. gn 4... n..v....m -.yum .- I-f mn-nh: and will ..-...nn nr .-ma.. H .1-ry... ......u un na ...nun ln. - ... 1- mr.: mu up --Q wif Nvnfhn ny be url .v.m...n.f, w 4-fm:-w. .x ...mm ou . mu M mm. .an M sf -mu-4: Wnthnl on FII' v-......N nf --Q Ji Why Prupadlu Curl In Fin! Md M Meeting. Jan. 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Taurr. llllllrl Wlrl- rv. Hurry Sill. Hein Ilillhvltl. Guild ll Yin ll Cllcngn Wellelhy Club Mm Siliidlolunhlp rr- mm.. xvm.-hr an l- mn.. an ...ml uw .M-ua, 1. - rm 1. 0. ,ue Kuna. vu nl-an ua au, uf. -in r. ma. ... .nm w-uhm wx. he .. . 1.91-...-. an s-una.. smumk 'mmm -, n nu a- in w-may -nm muh- u an n.-: Bunn. mum ww.-M .ur 1- mu uf -fm. I. In sauna' Ano 1--.mm.uukqun.u.Llfnq sw cm-u Am-. cu-an u nn er-:mm Evanstonian Newspaper With the arrival of our fall term in September, this year's editors assumed the task of preserving the high standards of our newspaper. The senior managing editors, who have the responsibility of placing a weekly news sheet before the eyes of E. T. H. S., have been William Ketchum, editor-in-chief: Ray Ingham, associate editor: Dorothy Cook, news editor: Martha Carman, feature editor: Charlotte Gunton, Marilou Van Bergen, and lane Schram, copy-desk editors, and Robert Howat, sports editor. Several changes have been made both in appearance and organization. l..iterary supple- ments have placed the outstanding literary achievements of students in print. Then in the organization of the staff. an innovation was introduced. A press bureau was created to supply the local and metropolitan papers with news of Evanston High School. The efforts of this bureau have been responsible for the extensive publicity given school affairs. Betty Bradt has been in charge of this bureau assisted by lack Phillips, Bill Altmeyer, and Carol Hood. ln the spring the juniors were given the opportunity to try out for positions on next year's newspaper by Working on trial staffs. each of which produced an issue of the newspaper. At the end of the tryout period, the publications board selected the staff for next year. Announce- ment was traditionally made at the annual journalists' banquet in the spring. Not all the interests of the budding journalists lie in news-gathering. The newspaper is noted for sponsoring one of the best dances of the school year. The staff this year was faced with the problem of equalling the success of the two previous balls. After the Ben Franklin Ball and the very collegiate Harold Teen Hop, a reputation for originality had to be main- tained. The Five Star Final Ball brought them through-with flying colors. Novel decorations, good music, and an all-star floor show made the affair one of the high points of the social year. Another diversion from journalistic cares was the annual Christmas party held as usual just before the Christmas holidays. Editors forgot page make-up and reporters their deadlines to enjoy an afternoon of fun. The feature of the party was charades on the personalities in the news, each staff attempting cr dramatization of a news event. Gifts from the old gent in whiskers, ably portrayed by Mr. Charles MacConnell of the faculty. closed the program. And so passed another eventful year for the newspaper. Third row: Wllllam Hosler, Jeanne Lane, Ronald Webster, Evelyn Horder, Warren Ward, Phyllis Murphy, William Bristow. Barbara White, Iames Harney. Second row: Iohn Phillips, William Altmeyer, Norman Williams, Mary Breeden, Elizabeth Bradt. Robert Swenson, Ianet Hudson, Carol Hood, Chester Polad. First row: Robert Lanqewisch, Martha Carman, Robert Howat, Dorothy Cook, William Ketchum, lane Schram, Raymond lngham, Marilou Vanlierqen, William Crosman. William Ketchum Raymond Ingham HUHD the ODIHD s ,fairs 9 . fs. - 't' fi yt U 5 W! L, . -' if , ull. ., li l may 1957 Evanstonian Magazine About twice a year the student body of E.T.H.S. qets the urqe to express itself in a truly literary manner. When this happens, the Evanstonian magazine makes an appearance. Instead of the six eight-page volumes issued last year, the two reaular, bound magazines, put out in December and May, and favored by a ma- jority of students, have been printed. Five hard- workinq editors select and edit the copy handed in by teachers and class room representatives. An able staff of assistants type all the copy to go down to the printer, Then the editors, under the direction of Miss Dorothy Colburn, faculty adviser, go into an orgy cf proof readinq, dummy-pastinq, and last-minute correcting. When finished, the magazine is replete with stories, poems, hook re- views, essays, and clever illustrations done by the art staff, headed by Dawn Thompson. This year the magazine went in for something different and gave recognition to the two lower classes by print- ina a freshman supplement and a sophomore sup- plement, each appearing as an insert in the news- paper. The editors of the magazine this year headed by Suzanne Maurer were Constance Merrell, Stanley Page-Wood, Emily Pribbie, and Richard Thain. Back row: Ruth Peters, Annette Walker, Rosalie Harrison, lanet Clark, Martha Carman, Annabel Hackman, Estelle Blair. Front row: Dawn Thompson, Richard Thain, Emily Pribble, Suzanne Maurer, Stanley Paqewoad, Constance Merrell, Norman Russ. f Soft Pipes Therefore, ye .soft pipes, play any Not ta the sensual ear, but, more endeafd, Pipe to the spirit diltier of 110 tone. In the mood of these words of Iohn Keats. Soft Pipes, the E T. H. S. poetry annual, tries to present, at the end of each year, the best and most repre- sentative student poetry. The poems are selected from among those which have appeared during the year from the Evanstonian newspaper or magazine and from contributions through the Enq- lish classes or from individual students. This year the Soft Pipes staff, headed by Con- stance Merrell, Ethne Forster, cmd Katherine Charleson, and under the direction of Miss Mil- dred Wright, convened early in the year as a. - poetry club to study types and ways of judging poetry. Actual work was not begun on the an- tholoqy until the second semester, Miss Elizabeth Page and Miss Nellie Collins supervising the art and rnultiqraphinq, respectively. Always a distinctive publication, limited to 150 copies and hand siqned by all the authors, this year's edition of Soft Pipes has cr musical motif, with the divisions Lyrical Notes, Blended Har- monies, and Lighter Strains containing the contributions of twenty-five students. K.. X WE' K rfllklx I , 9,197 - 'uf , 1 1 7x I , fo iff 6 WTPIPE Back row: Colwell Harris, Davide Steinberg, Edwin Bates, Katharine Charleson, lane Noyes, Palmer Brown. Front row: Marian Heltzel, Suzanne Maurer, Constance Merrell. Ethne Forster, Helen Clark. J.m.1 - .z I' . :-na Hur r ,f 'ff few SH 'l 5 TFL? la -wir W? N Zsliglsifis ' 936'3' The Pilot A new publication of The E. T. H. S. Pilot. made its debut with this school year. Filling a long-felt need, The Pilot offers a concise and pleasant en- cyclopedia of information on all phases of school life. This handbook provides a map to guide the hesitant steps of the. little freshman and tells the junior who gets his first green slip the procedure for redeeming himself. The name of the bright orange and blue book summarizes the purpose of the publication to act as a guide to school activi- ties. The staff, under the guidance of Miss Martha Gray and Mr. Farron Turner of the faculty, was selected from the outstanding students in English and spent many hours of work during the late spring and early fall months in preparing the book for publication. Heading The Pilot was Dcwlcla Steinberg, assisted by Edgar Vannemarm, with Gregory Whitson as business manager. All budget subscribers received this helpful publication free of charge. Every question that might arise in the mind of the student seems to be answered here. Athletic awards, social activities, home room information, cafeteria regulations, holi- days, eligibility rules, school traditions, songs, and cheers are but a few of the subjects covered in the hope that The Pilot may serve as the guide and counselor of every student and open the many comradeships and creative enioyrnents to the view of every pupil of Evanston Township High School. Back row: William Altmeyer. Mary lane Frazier, Barbara Ohab, Ellen Iohnson, Phyllis Murphy, Marforte Wiley. Harry Simon. Front row: Elizabeth Bradt, Mary Robinson, Gregory Whltson, Davida Steinberg, Edgar Vanneman, Bihar Crouse, Frances Klein- Musical Activities While E. T. H. S. has always had an extensive music program, particularly for the students enrolled in the various classes taught in the music department, the past year has been one particularly filled with activity. One of the innovations, which included the entire student body and has proved exceedingly popular is that of the home room singing con- ducted at intervals throughout the year. Led by Miss Sadie Rafferty, director of music at E. T. H. S., who was assisted in this prolect by Mr. Roy Shuessler, the programs consisted of a wide variety of songs, such as light opera numbers, folk tunes. and school songs sung by the students in unison. Occasionally talented performers from the music classes presented in- dividual numbers. Many were the dull, listless mornings that were suddenly transformed by the fun and novelty of the programs. The first of the traditional activities of the department was the Christmas program pre- sented in the general assembly, when the members of the chorus, assisted by the orchestra, gave a group of twelve numbers from Handel's famous oratorio, The Messiah. In addition to the solos of Mr. Shuessler, Mr. Eugene Dressler of the Northwestern University faculty was a guest soloist. The accompaniment for the program was played by Miss Hadassah McGifftn. Vlfhen the members of the P. T. A. held their Christmas meeting at the high school in December, members of the chorus and choir presented a group of carols from other lands, as well as many traditional airs. On the last afternoon before dismissal for the holidays, the Madrigal Club, directed by Miss Erlis Brooks, sang carols from the balcony of the library during the seventh and eighth periods. With several student soloists the same group also furnished the Christmas music at the annual holiday tea for the faculty members the same afternoon. Of chief importance on the musical calendar, perhaps, was the annual spring concert held the evening of March 20 in Beardsley Gymnasium. Singing before a crowded audi- torium, the members of the a capella choir and the chorus of four hundred voices presented a flvell-balanced program that included both heavy numbers as well as some light opera se ections. . A feature of the program was a violin choir, directed by Mr. Lawrence Swihart, and composed of five students and two alumni, Kate Alice Merrell and Donald Evans of the classes of 1936 and 1934, respectively, who also presented some excellent duets. Miss Helen Hedges Back row: Norman Chtncholl, Lewis Chamberlin. Wayne Norton, Raymond Hanson. Donald White, Edwin Shanks, David dePackh, Stanley Worden, Ross Bellamy, Wesley Whitcl-turch, Ichn Phillips. Second row: lsalael Tucker, Louise Brcdt, Constance Merrell, Phyllis Loveioy, Edith Bjorklund, Elaine Chalberq, Barbara Whtte. Betty Ross, Leah Lehman. Barbara Malott, lane Burtt. Front row: Betty Burger. Betty-Anne Slddall, Mariorle Burgess, Eleanor Pearson, Virginia Teutert, Evelyn Block, Elaine Wright. Eleanor Sexton. Elizabeth McCreary, Betty Mullin. was a quest soloist upon this occasion. Creating a distinctive part of the program was another alumni, Harry Hamilton '32, in a group of original dances. Especially interesting was his interpretation of Schubert's Ave Maria and the Beautiful Blue Danube of Strauss. For its spring operetta, the musicians returned to Gilbert and Sullivan after a year's absence when they presented the tuneful Gondoliers. Imagine a more romantic situation than twenty-four girls in love with only two men-but that was only the beginning. From picturesque and fairy-like Venice, the delightful comedy moved to a mythical kingdom where all the difficulties were at last straightened out to the accompaniment of numerous charming songs. As last year two casts were used for the solo roles on the respective evenings. One of the most interesting concerts of the year was that presented late in October when members of the music faculty gave an evening recital for the benefit fund towards the new Steinway grand piano recently purchased by the department. With Miss Rafferty as com- mentator, an exceedingly ambitious program of vocal and piano selections was given by Miss Frances Hunter, Miss McGiffin, Miss Brooks, and Mr. Schuessler. Organized for the first time this year was the boys' octet, composed of Raymond Hanson, Wesley Whitchurch, Dave White, Wayne Norton, lack Phillips, David DePackh, and Dan Iones. Another phase of the department's activity was the annual class song contest in which there were twenty compositions entered this year. Winning the vote of the students cmd of the faculty members was that composed by Betty Burger, while Geraldine Gunn, Raymond Hanson, and Martha Whitehouse placed in the order named. The winning song is reprinted elsewhere in this book. From left to right: Beatrice Hanson, RCrYmond O'Keefe, Ieaneite Hartzell, George Wemecke. lean Agne. The Gondoliers Boys Octet Front row: David DePackh, Lewis Chamberlain, 'Wayne Norton Wesley Whitchurch, Iohn Phillips. Back row: Edwin Shanks, David White, Raymond Hanson. Perhaps no organizations reflect school spirit more than the band and orchestra directed by Mr. Swihart. The band with its stirring marches ushers students and faculty members in and out of all the assemblies and arouses the fighting spirit at the football and basketball games. During the first part of the year, members of the band spent their practice every clay the eighth period in studying and playing the marches and music written for military bands. In the second semester the time was devoted to the playing and interpreting of music com- posed for concert bands in preparation for the annual band and orchestra concert in the spring. In addition to the band, E. T. H. S. can boast of three orchestras, all of which take an important part in school activities. The junior orchestra is the stepping stone to the senior organization. In this orchestra members receive training and instruction until they merit icin- ing the advanced group. The newly-formed ensemble, consisting of members of the senior orchestra, played for the P. T. A. open house and created atmosphere for the play, Take My Advice. The senior orchestra participated in the Christmas assembly and will present musical selections at the commencement services. Together the band and orchestra gained real success with their performance at the Musicians' Club and at their first public concert held May 7, with Miss Marion Bridgman, flutist, Miss Lillian Poenisch, clarlnetist, and Miss Ienslca Slekos, cellist, as quest artists. Bruce Wisharcl, student conductor, held the baton for the final number of the band, while Stanley Evans conducted the orchestra in its concluding selection. To these musical groups of E. T. H. S. we give our praise for their efforts and accom- plishments. Robert Wood, Muriel Purwin, Iohn Norris. Fred Dorband, Warren Ward, feanne Payne, Rodman Ioyce. Dramatics How would you make up a grandmother? or How would you play Iuliet in the balcony scene? are the type of test questions, which confronted boys and girls who wished to enter the Drama Club in September. After two tryouts instead of the usual one had been held to accommodate all applicants. seventy-six potential actors and technicians were admitted in October They immediately began hammering nails land thumbsl and rehearsing lines for the Florist Shop , a one-act play given during the lunch period. Soon afterwards in December followed Rip Van Winkle, a full three-act costume play in which Warren Ward and lean Payne portrayed that famous sluggard and his nagging wife. On the evenings of December 3 and 4, two amusing hours told the tale of Rip's twenty- year's sleep. The applause had barely died down, it seemed, before the tireless members were again at work on a second three-act play, although formerly only one large production of this sort was presented each year. Crews transformed the stage of Social Hall into the setting for Take My Advice, a show which had been in Broadway lights a few years back with Gene Raymond and Frank Morgan in the leading roles. In this play Warren Ward, exchanging his tattered Rip Van Winkle garb for a professor's well-tailored suit, straightened out the diffi- culties of the Weaver family, whose members were enacted by lean Payne, Muriel Purwin, Robert Woods, and William Ioyce. - To save large rental fees for costumes. a new costume department the first one established in E.T.H.S. began collecting garments which it then rented for plays and other productions for a very small fee. ln Ianuary E.T.H.S. playwrights throughout the school could be found studying faces and scribbling on manuscripts, for the Drama Club was sponsoring a play-writing contest, in which the chosen drammer would be presented during the lunch periods. Rutheen Taylor, contest winner, received the realization of a playwrights dream as she saw the characters she had created come to life on May l2 on Social Hall in her comedy, Daddy's Wife . Pour other oneact plays, including The Boor . concerning Grigory Stepanmovitch, and Rosalie , about a non-too intelligent servant girl, completed the versatile productions of an exciting Drama Club year, directed by Mr. Mervin Severance, post-graduate of Northwestern. Warren Ward, president, Catherine Stockbridge, vicepresident, Betty Thompson, treasurer, and Ellen Rhea, secretary, retired in June from offices well-executed. 144-. Pentanqle officers: Patsy Donaldson, Iacquelyn Anderson, lane Durand, Martha Whitehouse. Seniors in style show: Frances Besser, Dawn Thompson, Marianne Sellberq, Betsey Weeks, Palsy Donaldson, Nathalta Burt, Phyllis Murphy, Lyle Wegner, Rosalie Harrison. Marjorie Moore, Iane Noyes. Pentangle The Pentangle star, with its five points symbolic of its five maior activities, has radiated more brilliantly than ever this yearg and news of its varied activities and exciting meetings has merited five-star rating. Ever original, Pentangle made E. T. H. S. open its eyes in November with a most successful Plantation Ball. Entering the blooming flower garden of an old-fashioned plantation, Pentangle's Southern belles and their beaux danced the Carolina Trip to the tune of Dinah . Proceeds from the dance went into the fund which aids some deserving girl in obtaining a college education. The social service committee, in its November drive for canned food and money. Provided many Thanksgiving dinners throughout Evanston. Visitors in the Woman's Club in the same month saw on exhibit the dainty infants' garments which Pentctngle's needlework guild had stitched by hand. Many small grade-school children enioyed their Christmas at the holiday party, where they laughed at Mickey Mouse movies and exclaimed at the gifts which St. Nick presented. The activities committee found eager purchasers of the Pentangle Christmas cards, portraying two photographs of the school. For the first time in the club's history, the girls formed their own orchestra, the Pentangle Pantacles, and performed at the lanuary meeting. Mothers of junior girls-and boys, too- were guests at the February tea. A double feature program of two one-act plays entertained the participants in Pentangle's miniature conference at the subsequent meeting. April found a bus-load of gay members on their way to Maine Township to attend the Girls' Conference. Martha Whitehouse was vice-president, while the winning theme for the conference had been submitted by lean Sollitt. ' Pentangle mannequins forecasted fashions at the spring style show, to which mothers were invited. The girls met for the last time amidst bright balloons, barkers, and freaks at the riotous spring carnival. Elections decided next year's leaders and thus did the fifth Pentangle parade come to a finish. with officers Martha Whitehouse, lane Durand, Patsy Donaldson, and Iacquelyn Anderson at the head. -45- Quadrangle Club Seated: Fred Fllchl. Vlilltam Roberts, Harry Simon. Standing: Albert Bailey, Robert Bliss. lack Shumway. Roger Chapman The boys of E.T.H.S. now, after many years, have a club of their own which corresponds to the two girls' clubs, Pentangle and Trlreme. The name of this new organization is the Quadrangle Club, derived from the four classes which it includes and the four obiectlves tt has in view. Its purposes are as follows: to unify the boys of the school, to direct their activities towards service to the school, to serve the community, and to promote friendship among its members. The club in spite of its short existence has already adopted two activities, an annual Hobby Show and Dad's Night, the latter featuring an alurnnt basketball game. All boys who are subscribers to the school budget plan are sustaining members, entitled to enioy full membership rights. The club will afford the boys of E.T.H.S. a chance to have more social activities of their own. It is readily becoming established with its recent adopted constitution and its election of officers this spring for next year. To establish friendlier relations among all the gtrls of E.T.l-l.S. and to brtng all their school activities closer together have been the alms of the Girls' Activities Committee: and in this, its third year, it has taken a long step toward tts goal. Because its membership includes the presidents of Pentanqle. Trlreme, and G.A.A., the Committee has been able to reach all girls in its projects. In cooperation with these three girls' organizations, the Committee started functioning early ln November by presenting its first get-acquainted tea. Each of the girls who entered Evanston new this year was escorted to the party by an old student and there drank tea with many new acquaintances. While you may not have heard much of the work of this group, at every monthly meeting it has been quietly remedytna difficulties and solving girls' problems under the able direction of its chairman, Phyllis Murphy, and secretary, Sally Dunn. From left to rlqht: Betty Vilas, Elizabeth Whtttemore, Kathryn Westerhold. Martha Whitehouse Meredith Davla, Jayne McLean, Phyllis Murphy. Katherine Falley, Sally Dunn, Lucille Blacker, Emily Prtbble. Mary Knapp. Catherine Lawrence, Barbara Baird. Girls' Activities Committee Virqlnla Lomb Thom Lane Champion Debate Team Forensic activities for the seniors were chiefly confined to the second semester when early in the new year speakers commenced to vie for places on inter-home room debate teams. The students of each first floor qroup selected a negative and cr positive team, each consisting of two members and an alternate. Discussing the question of every cittzen's moral duty to support his country in case of war, Mark Howlett and Paul Cohen of 124 were declared the winners by the judges-their fellow students. Runners- up were Albert Boulton and Charles Hlrth of 104 who were later matched in an exhibition discussion before the local Rotary Club. Speech Contest Winners One of the decidedly unique features of E. T. H, S. ts the annual speech contest sponsored every year in all the English classes for the purpose of acquaintinq all pupils with the technique of public speaking, and also to encourage by competition those who are particularly talented in this fleld. Seniors surviving the judging by student and faculty members to reach the finals, included Virginia Lamb who won the topic division with Albert Boulton, second. The extem- poraneous contest was won by Thomas Lane with Richard Thain as runner-up. First and second-place winners in the senior division receive books awarded by Principal Francis L. Bacon. while the other class prizes are offered by the P.-T. A. Mark Howlett Paul Cohen Senior Evening It is the night before Valentine's Day, February 13, and the first-floor corridors resound with the laughter and chatter of the all-important seniors who have discarded their dignity to really enjoy that delightful, gay, informal festivity-Senior Evening. On arriving at 7:30, each senior finds that he must have a label bearing the name of a prospective college. He is then told that the people with the names of certain schools are to frolic together. Hurriedly Iohnnie attempts to get a Dartmouth slip so that he may be with that new girl he has just met, and Sue tries to get a Harvard one because she knows she'll never have a chance to go there. The next stop is the lobby, decorated with red and white streamers and Valentines and glowing with warmth and cheer. At the ringing of the familiar bell the different groups of seniors rush to their first game. On this night of nights they think nothing of getting a tie wet in blowing ping-pong balls across a pool of water, getting red in the face in trying to persuade a recal- citrant balloon over a volley-ball net, or even bumping noses while coaxing peanuts into a circle on the table. From such games the crowds pass jubilantly into darkened rooms, giggling, and laughing upon seeing the baby pictures of many outstanding classmates, dressed in gingham rompers and buttoned shoes. Then they swarm into the mysterious fortune-telling rooms to have their futures predicted. After these stimulating games the seniors trot up to Social Hall to be entertained with that traditional, tragic, tear-wringing melodrama, Wild Nell of the Plains. The lights go out and the audience settles back, when suddenly Ed Williams, clad in tails, derby, and blond wig, appears, while Bud Lochridge in red flannels races wildly down the aisles on a diminutive tricycle. The curtain rises and Ray Ingham as the sympathetic master of cere- monies introduces the talented male cast. Lady Vere de Vere, stunning in a lace dress, turns out to be that football hero, lack Kidd. Nell is passionately portrayed by Ed Bartley, while the object of her affections, Handsome Harry, is the gallant Richmond Mead. Wild Nell, finding herself in the eternal triangle, sets out to win Harry's love and has Lady Vere de Vere kidnapped by Indians, well-pantomimed by Iohn fChief-One-Sock-in-the-Washl Hibbard and Pete fBull Durhaml Buhmann. Handsome Harry, however, heroically saves his lady and little Nell, broken-hearted, stabs herself. The curtain falls on this tragic scene and the seniors, hungry from such emotional exertion, rush to get the ice cream and cake. Refreshed, the boys look for their favorite girl, and dancing to the tune of lohn Seippel's Swing Band continues until the stroke of twelve. It is the night before Valentine's Day. Once again the halls are quiet and another gay Senior Evening comes to an end. -4g.. 'Q 1? , K Y vi: 5. '43 1 J: As 5. X 'sm i 5 1 u, M 'Ev Who's Who . BARBARA WHITE ..... RICHARD THAIN. . ..., . WILLIAM BLAKESLEE.. IEAN MEHAN .......... MARTHA WI-IITEHOUSE ..... .... WILLIAM STRONACH., THOMAS LANE .... '. .. JOHN HAYES ....... LUCILE BLACKER ..... MARK HOWLE1'r ..,.., GEORGE KINCAID ..... ALVERDA WALKER .... . . . . .GENERAL ACTIVITIES .. . .COUNCIL 164. TENNIS .........LEADERS1'I1P124 ............SCI-IOLARSHIP .PENTANGI.E, COUNCIL 124 .FOOTBALL. COUNCIL 124 ...............FORENSICS . . . . .COUNCIL 164. FOOTBALL . . . . .FORENSICS . .... COUNCIL 104 ..........i.SCI-IOLARS1-IIP IANE ULREY ............ ..... W RITING, SCHOLARSHIP WILLIAM ALTMEYER. . . . . .COUNCIL 144, WRITING IRAN CHUBB .......... ..... C OUNCIL 124, CINEMA CLUB WILLIAM IAEGER ....... ..... LE ADERSHIP 164, FOOTBALL RAYMOND HANSON. ..... ....! .,................. MU S IC SUZANNE MAURER ..... .............. W RITING WILLIAM HOSIER ..... .... S C1-IOLARSHIP. IUDY WARREN WARD ...... ..........DRAMAT1CS LLOYD IEWEIT ....... PATSY DONALDSON. . CHARLES CORCORAN ...... MEREDITH DAVIS ..... PHYLLIS MURPHY ..... IOHN I-IIBBARD ...... PAUL COI-IEN ..... . I-IOYT IONES. ....... . ROBERT WHITE .... . .. EDGAR VANNEMAN ...... MARGARET GROARK .... . EMMETI' MCINNIS ..... EMILY PRIBBLE ........... CONSTANCE MERRELL ..... WILLIAM KETCI-IUM. . . STEWART MARQUIS. . HELEN CLARK ....... KING COLLISON ........ DAVIDA STEINBERG ...... . Among Seniors ...............A'I'I-ILETICS T. C.. LEADERSHIP I44 . ..... ..... .... S C HOLARSHIP, G. A. C. SCHOLARSHIP. SAFETY COUNCIL . . . . . . . .FORENSICS, BASKETBALL ....COUNCIL 124, SWIMMING . . . . . .IUNIOR RED CROSS. PILOT . . . . .SCHOLARSI-IIP. COUNCIL 104 . . . . .FRENCH CLUB. PENTANGLE ...............MUSIC, WRITING . JOURNALISM, SCHOLARSHIP COUNCIL HSCHOLARSHIP. G. A. A. . . . . .COUNCIL 164, SWIMMING . . . .SCHOLARSI-IIP, PILOT -51- Mfixf 6 af L 32.7 Exif? k-Mg if Q ata CLASS SONG OF 1937 P4 M IJ- ,Q STE at Ev ' ans' ton SWlft'b' pass mg' by Will -PEL E :W J 5 Qi 'E F If gi ggi tg Vg 'ififl H 'im WS' 5 f 1' J? sf E 1 5 ,im Ego 556 F H ,E 4 ' E 55? S F'5iffE5 .ii i,'.LgJ? '533f5nSNfff' H M 5 Q f 2 Saga Eine, j Zin 'io F E ? F Q E U ,-t ' N!'1,wf9 ' 'W' 'I hh, W, w w, I Wm, ' WV I lNIL I JNENIIGDID CKLAJUI Senior Class History Under the power of that slave-driver, Time, we of the class of 1937 find to our amazement that four years have slipped by-four years of good times, hard work, and transformation from stubby freshmen to tall sophisticated seniors. I-low hard it is to realize that we are reading the history of our class, a history covering four happy years. Why, it seems but a short while ago that we entered this school, as freshmen, bewildered and rather frightened by the long winding halls and towering seniors. We were so anxious to grow up, so eager to do our best, so pleased with the number of clubs there were to join and dances to attend. With our freshman year came the new Activities Budget Plan and the promise that if we purchased a ticket we would get newspapers, magazines, yearbook, and admissions to all games. The freshmen knowing a bargain when they saw one, whole-heartedly supported the plan. Showing that fresh- men could ably judge leadership, they elected for the home room councils: Donna Iean Ed, Virginia Lecey, Hoyt Iones, Charles Corcoran, Anne Gridley, Caryl Cotter, Virginia Richardson, lean Crawford, Richard Lord, Marian Sol- litt, Bill Blakeslee, and Bob Bailey. With the more dignified title of sophomore attached to our name, we began to make our own way into activities, helping on the newspaper, plan- ning dances and parties, and making good scholastically. Martha White- house, outstanding in girls' activities, was elected president of Trireme with Patsy Donaldson, treasurer. In the home rooms Robert Tower, William Blakes- lee, Merrill Meigs, and Donna lean Ed, were chosen to wield the gavel with Peggy Taylor, Kay Lynch, Mary Louise Huggett, Charles Corcoran, Ruth Dalgety, Iean Chubb, Ann Scott, and Margaret Iohn on the councils. Then came our junior year and we proudly strutted along the first hall corridors, proving to ourselves that we no longer had to climb the stairs to our home rooms. This year seemed to be cr year of privileges, for we girls were permitted to go to the Pentangle Room, formerly 319, and relax on the soft chairs and sofas, and also to attend the movies free with our English teachers. Elections drew near and from the battle of words came Ray Garrett, Bill Blakeslee, Charles Corcoran, and Bill Mellick triumphant as new junior presidents. Music, too, wove itself more and more into our school lives. We will not forget for a long time that gay, entertaining operetta, The Marriage of Nanette with Betty Burger and Marjorie Burgess, feminine leads or the Music Festival with Alec Templeton as guest artist. Then into that last and fullest year of all-our senior year, which has been recorded in these pages. And so Ave Atque Vale -Hail and Fare- well. .. 55 .- ANN ABHL SYLVIA ABHAMS ELIZAB!'.TH LAFON ACREE IAMES McEWEN' ADAMS BERNICE RUTH ADLER IEAN CAROLYN AGNE ALICE EVELYN AHLEN ELMER HENRY AHXSTROM BENIAMIN LOUIS ALEXANDER EUGENE WALLACE ALLEN MARIORIE RUTH ALTBIBURG WILLIAM TBELOAR ALTMEYER GEORGE MARION AMIDON DOROTHY ALVERA ANDERSON DONALD PECK ARMSTRONG Louxs nr-:ummm Anus. rn. GLEN mmm As:-nav mm. nmmorm Asx-rm NORELLA IUDITH.ASH'l'ON ALLYN-IOY AUSTIN IAMES WILLIAM AVEHY ..55- ANNETTE AVGERINOS ROBERT RAYMOND BAILEY. IR. PAULINE ANN BANGS JAMES ARTHUR BARBOUR PRISCILLA IUSTINE BARBOUH SALLY HENHIETTA BARKER DONALD BARRECA HELEN EDITH BARTH EDWARD ROSS BARTLEY, IR. HELEN MURIE1 BARTON EWIN RICKER HATE JOHN CARL BAUR MARTHA JANE BEAMSLEY' JOHN JOSEPH BEATMAN HELENE RUTH BECK BERNICE BECKER WILLIAM JAY BECKER. IR. ROBUT EUGENE BEISANG ZENA BERYL BEISEL IOHN ROSS BELLAMY HELEN JUNE BENESCH 157.- EL'.,.1L.1,ff1fL 5,1 . .f -Xl x G -7,4 - 4 - XE , 5-Z,-T - - H ' fgg L Q +2 F , .f,1 'q gui: 2 V , ,: E5 . ' , . -2 , ,I A i --s - ,ffnr - W. ' ' .1525 I ' , 25 . ' ' A I : ' Q 44- . :fig .. . :f 1- . rjff ff . 5 , MEL? -,. If 5321 ' . ' ll v -if , 2525: , f -- I Eff, A 1 43. g , I i, ' 'W lit- -iz: T, sn... 5 '- 5' If fi! - .'2.?9' 1-1: 351 ! : w.... ' V 1 L V I V IQ' 11. - 125: 1, K 0- ,iff A 45 A 4 , ,am N' U +- I . 7' V ' fi' 1, ,I gfa'L13f..A , L. I, I X4 , L15 , L 1.gFiIQf1f-'v ,kh, i f f -.B .'Z, 'v 15 ' kga.1g,i '11 5-1 fi ., e 1, . K 'fig , ,, k if . -- , ROBERT EDWIN BENNEIT WILLIAM EDWARD BENSCH JOHN DYER BENT FRANK ADOLPH BERNSTORFF. IR. RAYMOND FREDERICK BERTRAM FRANCE ADELE BESSER IOHN MASON BEITS CLARK PARKER BEVERLY DORIS GILLETI' BIDDLE MARION VIRGINIA BILEK EDITH REGNHILD BIORKLUND HELEN MARY BLACK LUCILE ANN BLACKER ESTELLE GERTRUDE BLAIR WILLIAM WALTON BLAKESLEE GEORGE BLANAS ELIZABETH WINIFRED BLODGI-TIT GEORGE CHARLES BODINE. IR. SAMUEL DAVIES BOGGS MIRIAM FRANCES BOGUE DOROTHEA ELISE BONEBRAKE -58-. FLORENT ARTHUR IOSEPH BONTZE MARIE ABIGAIL BOOTH EARL IULIAN BORGESON LAWRENCE JOHN BORRE, IR. IAMES BOUKIDIS PETER THOMAS BOUKIDIS ALBERT WELEY BOULTON CHARLES OOCKLE BOWEN ELIZABETH MARGAREI' BRADT EVELYN BRAYTON HARRIET RAE BREDOW MARY BOYINGTON BREEDEN EDWARD FREDRICK BREITZMANN WILLIAM ALLEN BRIGGS WILLIAM BRISTOW IAMES BRODKORB. IR. LOUISE WELS BRODT HOWARD EUGENE BRONSON DHWYN STANAGE BROWN FRANCES IUANITA BROWN PALMER BROWN, IR. 1591 Os! -5 . T' if :f :V I I' ' 3 q, Q5 1 M- 2 f- , , . a r. . hw - I 5 y 'Qffrgff I .-'I I V if ' ,. Ai . QL , W. 15 w I r Q 4 gi L - ' 5 5 r-,V f!0 '. gw ,K A::g 41 -I 1- Z Q IG. A N I , K: ., A v Q - CI' . A , 3 Y Sf ' , 5315 -' ' jffi., ' ' , -4, A 1- f 'R E 9' I , , If :V -nv , . 1, f 144' . 6- 1- fuf 35:3 5 +- E Q- ' f'1r':1.. --we , va ,. , -IRL-g . va: Hel . :Q we no sf .i we T Sam V , E . 1 SLVLANNE BRUCE MARY ALICE BRUNDAGE IAMES OLIVER BUCHANAN IANNEITE TOWNE BUCKLEY IOHN HENRY BUECHLER PETER CALDERWOOD BUHMANN BEITY MARIE BURGER MARIORIE BURGESS LARRY WILLIAM BURNS PRESLEY WILLIAM BURROUGHS, IR. NATHALIA GEORGIANA BURT SAM ROBERTSON BUSH, IR. ALICE BLENDA EMELIA CARLSON ALICE L'I'HEL CARLSON GEORGE WELDON CARLSON Q LOYAL IRWIN CARLSON WOODROW FRANK CARISON Am 5' la x 531: Q y ? , L-W, , 5 L F 5 . , -L1 ii ' 7 5 A MARTHA MARIE CAHMAN 'E F N, 'r'f:. ' EE: ' 'WJ :jig 4, .3 ms ' ' Yi ' Y , A -SD- 2... I! 101-IN BERNARD CARROLL LEWIS CARTER. IR. ELAINE CONSTANCE CHALBERG LEWIS CHURCH CHAMBERLIN, IR. IMOGENE MARGARET CHANDLER DAVID MALCOLM CHARLESON GERTRUDE ELLEN CHARTER ARTHUR DANIEL CHICK IEAN FRANCE CHUBB HARRY IOSEPH CLARK HELEN GARAGHTY CLARK VIRGINIA GRACE CLINIC ODESSA MAE COBB PAUL CURT COHEN EDGAR KING COLLISON, IR. DONALD WALTER COOK DOROTHY LOUISE COOK DOUGLAS WILLIAM COOK IOHN EDWARD COOK BI-TITY IANE COOKE GLENNEITE ELIZABETH COOPER CHARLE WARE CORCORAN EARL COSENTINO CARYL COTIER ,51- EDYTHE FRANCES COX EUGENE H. CRAIG FRANCES RUTH CRAMER VIVIAN ELEANOR CRAMER IESSIE IEAN CRAWFORD MARIORIE TRUTH CRESSEY WILLIAM VINCENT CRESSY BESSIE GOLDIE CROST ESTHER CLEO CROUSE ELEANOR HANNAH CROWELL CHARLES FREDERICK CUDELL KATHLEN MARY CURRAN MARVIN LEO DAHL MYRTLE RUTH DALGETY DOROTHY LOIS DAUDERMAN MARY MEREDITH DAVIS NANCY DAVIS CHARLOTFE BERTI-IA DAY HALPORD BRANDON DECKER KATHRYN ANN DECKER ELIAS DEMOPOLUS -SZ- STEPHEN WOLL DENNING MARIAN ELIZABETH DENTON S, DAVID CALVERT dePACKH ' ELEANOR LOUISE deVARENNES IEAN MARIE DeWI'I'l' THADDEUS NEWNAM DaWOLF IAMB WARREN DICK PETER TOM DIFRANCESCA CLAIRE DOROTHY DODSON IACOUEJNE FLORENCE Down 5' 9 ' PATSY ANN DoNALosoN A mci-msn H. num-IAM - Tl DOROTHY JANE DUNNING GEORGE HUGH DYE ANNE EADIE FRANCE ELIZABETH EBERLEIN jg 4. 5 , Q A , I 8 DONNA IEAN ED -' f ' - Guoacss THOMAS msw A MARY ELLIS HARRY BYRD EMERSON. IR DAVID GILL ENERSON tw . Y fgi--- ,M .F Pi, .QE 4- ' , L' A , ' Jia-LQM I . Q si 1- 'G T G. , ARTHUR EPPERS ROBERT FRANK EPPERS WILLIAM HAROLD EPPERSON LORRAINE AUDREY ERICKSEN BARBARA BETH ERICKSON ROBERT WALTER ERICSON PATRICIA CLAIRE EVANS STANLEY ROSS EVANS IOSEPH I OHN I-'ACPO PETER EWANICK ETHEL DOROTHY FIRING VIRGINIA ANDRICE IEAN FLEMING LOUISE F LANINGAM DOLF FLERSHEIM. IR. HELEN CHRISTINE FORSLAND RICHARD MICHAEL FOSS ADRIEN MORELL FOX CLAUDIA MAE FRAZIER ROBERT LEROY FRAZIER CLESSON WARD FREY ER -64 BIRGER SVEN FROHM FELIX ADAM FRONCZAK IOSEPHINE HOPE FURLONG DENISE GAIR HELEN BERTINA GARDINER RAY GARRETT. IR. ANN MARIE GARRITY PETER FREDERICK GEBEI.. IR. ADELAIDE IOSEPHINE GEUSS CLARENCE THEODORE GIBSON CLIFFORD GILBERT EDWIN MII-ION GILLEN GEORGE DONALD GIISZMER ELIZABETH IANE GLASS WILLIAM DAMUDE GORDON YOLANDE LAWRENCE GRAUTEN ROBERT HANDLE GRAY THOMAS GREY ROY IOHN GRIFFIN ANNE GRIDLEY GRETA COLLINS GRINNELL BOYD ALLEN GRISWOLD -55- MARGARET AGNE GROARK LYMAN HAMILTON GROVER HARRY IOHN GUENTHER VIRGINIA ELIZABETH GUST GERALDINE GUNN KENNETH EDWIN GURTIZ MARGARET LINNIA GUSTAVSSON DOROTHY IOAN HAHNE CHARLES EDWIN HAIGH CHARLES HAMILTON HAILE ROBERT ARMAND HAMEN BEATRICE FLORENCE HANSON EIBIE VIRGINIA HANSON JOHN WILLIAM HANSON RAYMOND DAVID HANSON MARGARET ANN HARDGROVE HELEN KERENHAPPUCH HARDIN IOHN HORACE HARKER IANIES MOREY HARNEY CHESTER ARTHUR HARRIS, IR. IACK ALFRED HARRISON -55.. IEANEITE ELIZABETH HARTZELL f- i . aosnur: mm 1-mmuson I wnusn GRANTHAM HARTZELL EDITH ELIZABETI-I HAYB IOI-'IN WILLIAM HAYES LENORE PATRICIA HAYES BEITY IANE HAYNE WILLIAM FREDERICK HEGMAN MARGARET ELAINE HELD mmon rmmcss 1-n:1.'rzm. Q noasncs MART:-m Hmm . N Lommma umm: HBS -- S, L ,. ffl EF 'If F ' vsgsff sf' a., 'iv 3f1?,1 !' IOHN BARR HIBBARD MARY VIRGINIA HICKOX ROGER ARNOLD HINES CHARLIS PI-'IILIPP Hmm, IR. MARTHA JANE HOLTHOUSE CAROL MAURINE HOOD ALLISON DARLING HOOPER EVELYN WINIFRED HORDER , THEODORE HORWITZ -e - -gi K I G ' I I A as d-- I-,Qfvga ,. ,,fQ.. gg I WILLIAM ALONZO HOSIER MILDRED MARY HOTH ROBERT WILSON HOWAT ' S MARK KOUGHAN HOWLFIIT W IANET COUPER-KELTIE HUDSON MARY LOUISE HUGGETT . '11 f 3-5-:-Qf-W:'W ff ' 1 15, I 6- 3 ' TQ, HERBERT wn.uAM Huasn-xousE 41. , g '25 i, mul. FREDERICK uc ' A if all , .2 WILLIAM Aucusrus ILLSLEY fl gif , fa .5 . if RAYMOND WYLMER INGHAM I , f , X ' f, . W'1Sf,, IANE ELIZABETH moons ' f if , gh . - : f 5, WILLIAM DONALD IAEGER I i I e ' I -, - -. I 3 ,, I W f STEPHEN wn.LmM xmas . ! yf'q 7 gig: mom-man IOHN IASPER If Ti -gtg , X I f V Emu. wn.uAM IENNINGS E I ' ,.-vz Y , -i- .-. I ' -- W: ISABEL IENNINGS 1. 1' , .9 2 A - num 1oNE IENSEN I A Q' i VA :gn I wEsx.EY JENSEN - 2, 3.4525 I ., . A , rg, - 1 '-ff - - A fgeiyg., , LLOYD IOHN IEWETI' MARGARET IOHN CLARENCE ALBERT OHNSON Q- ' -www- ' W 4' ff , 3 E DAVID IUSTUS JOHNSON. IR. ELLEN MARIE IOHNSON I-'ERN GWENDOLYN IOHNSON HAROLD DEAN IOHNSON IANICE IOHNSON LEROY ERICK JOHNSON LILLIAN GRACE JOHNSON ROBERT EMIL IO!-INSON MARY LOISE IOHNSTON MARGARET JEAN IOHNSTONE HOYT LLEWELLYN IONES ROBERT MARSHALL IONES WILLIAM BOYDEN IUNOD IRWIN KALENA IANET DORIS KAMSCHULTE HARRIEITE AGNES KASPER SHIRLEY IANE KAYE GERALDINE RUTH KEMPNICK PATRICIA ANN ICEMPSHALL WILLIAM FRANCIS KEPCHUM IOHN RICHARD KIDD, IR. -69... 51: GEORGE REDFIHD KINCAID HARRY WARREN KINGSLOW WILLIS EDWARD KIRK ELOISE MAI-ION KIVLAN WILLIAM WALTER KIAR MARION MATILDA KLUGE ROBERT EDWARD KOONZ FRANK KOSCIELAK LIBERTA ISABEL KOUYOMIIAN .-fa I -, 'F Q 5 :EAN MARILYN KRAMER . i 1 - LORAYNE MARIE KRAMER ,J . 3, L,', V , PHYLLIS KREISCRER 4, Q: 5- r EJ., - Y flf Af if A FE 5:3 EDWARD Kucx-1Kowxcz A Ani- '- EDWARD FREDERICK KUESTER. IR. 1 f , L ,D 1 ARTHUR ABRAHAM LAIBLY K rx Qi J 8 .. viz. .1 A X. A Y f WT ' - , , ,J . P . L E Tfqrf , , f . L , 1 ' 5 ii A A-'Fl' 53792 VIRGINIA JANE LAMB Li 5 ,R :fs CLARA VIOLA LANDECK . W . .- :'. ,.:1:',. THOMAS O'CONNOR LANE A 'QA - TTT. ,.- 1 ILA.. r - A A '.:f'-1-xii-?9i'::' 2 A f T7-5533 . ' 4552+ A ',, 2ff1.- .- ' -E. W V34 . :Qi . , , G: E7' . LEONA LANGDON .1-A Age Q A ROBERT w1u.IAM LANGEWISCH A , 4155339 -5-4 E: . LN! ' 3- PEGGY JOYCE LANING . Y 1' ' e : '- ,532 . A, g 35 A ARDELI. IANE LARSEN MARY IANE LATER FELIX HARTWIG LAUTER ELIZABETH LEAMY VIRGINIA GRACE LECEY NORMA IEAN LEHRACK ANGEUNE ESTELIB LEIDER PEGGY LOU LEIMERT KATHERINE RUTH LBSSARD STELLA LEVAS CHARLES EDMUND LEWIS MARY IANE LIDDHLL DAVID MATTESON LIGHT. IR. NILS WALFRED LINDBLOOM, IR. JANIE RUTH LINDSAY ALICE BEFSY LINDSTROM HOWARD LINSTAD MARIAN IANE LIPKE ROBERT IOHN LIST THOMAS IOHN IJ.OYD BENIAMIN STURGES LOCHRIDGE 171.. RICHARD BENNEI'I' LORD FRANCE GERMAINE LORDEN FRANCES IEANNE LOTHIAN MARIE ELIZABETH LOUEN PI-IYLLIS ALBERTA LOVEJOY AUGUST FREDERICK LUECKER, IR. WILLIAM HOWARD LUECKER ROBERT STANLEY LUNDBERG OLIVE IEANNETTE LUNDGREN KATHERINE I-IARLESS LYNCH CONSTANCE BERNICE MAAS IEAN ACKLEY MGCCONNELL ALAN HUNTER MACDONALD KENNETH LEYS MacKENZIE IOHN FRASER MUCLEAN MARY BARBARA MAGEE ALLEENE MAKEMSON BARBARA IANE MALOTI' GEORGE APOSTOLOS MANDIS STEWART DEINT MARQUIS, IR. ROY DELANO MATSON ...12- SUZANNE MAURER MARTHA IANE MAXWELL JAMES MANDEL MAYER CHARLES RENNIE MAZARR IOHN GRATIN McALLISTER, IR. ELIZABETH I EAN MCCREARY ELIZABETH GIBB MCFADZEAN ' IAMES ALEXANDER MCFADZEAN CHARLES SLADE McGAURAN EMMETI' EMORY MCINNIS. IR. RUTH ANN MCINTOSH ANN' CATHERINE McMILLAN DAVID WILLIAM MCNAMARA IOHN THOMAS MCNEIL RICHARD VANCE MEAD RICHMOND ARMSTRONG MEAD MARTA' EUGENIE MEEKER IEAN MEHAN SUZANNE IANE MEEKER MERRILL CHURCH MEIGS, IR, DAVID GRAHAM MELDRUM - 73 - ROBERT ANDREW MHJNE WILLIAM HARRISON MELLICK PATRICK IOSEPH MENIHAN. IR. CONSTANCE ANN MERRELL HENRY IOSEPH MERSCH. IR. WALKER TRIGG MEYER EIILO BONNY MICHELEITI FREDERICK A. MIHELL, IR. NANCY IANE MILLEN ELEANOR MILLER PRED MILLER, IR. GEORGE HALL MILLER IOHN HARPER MILLER MARILYN RUTH MILLER IOHN HENRY MILNE. IR. PEGGY ELIZABETH MILNES ROBERT IOHN MOLITOR. IR. CATHERINE CRATIY MOORE MARIORIE KATHEINE MOORE PEGGY IOAN MORAN MARY ELIZABEYH MORBY -.741 BETFY IANE MORRES CHARLES HENRY MORRILI. MARY JANE MORSE VIOLA LOUISE MOSES ANNA WILI-IELMENE MUENCH EDWARD ARTHUR MU!-ILICE, IR. BEITY ANN MULLIN IOSEPH HENRY MULLMAN IOSEPHIN E ELIZABETH MURPHY PHYLLIS EDNA MURPHY ROMA IEAN NAGLER IOANEITE ISOBEL NATEMEYER ANN NAZARIAN IOSEPH NEEDELMAN HAROLD BERNHARDT NEEIZ ANNA MARIE NELSON LAWRENCE NELSON MARGARET TAIT NELSON BURLINGAME NICHOI5 HENRIEITA LOUISE NIEBUR MARY ELIZABETH NOGGLE 175- EX . G s- 4 6 A ' 0 C J' if 1 s fn- A V 'P fri A , eaizgza 1,15- 1 L! f!f:. f .iz t. C Q, N r -v A 'I l' 2 Gr X..-: . Q0 4 ' 4, I' ' - :EIU F c i ' Jw,- '?f . QGS5- Rn ' I .4 I .'S-I ' V ' 0 9 4 f 'I 'Ex 'HEL , 1 1 x .wwf - ?3'?i' ' 3m I 1.. i I iw 'i' I , .0 , 1' 4 ,S B ? .- QL A T. V . fi 1 .Q 51 I 0 F CARL LESLIE NORDBERG ISABELLA MARIORIE NORMAN IOHN WILLARD NORMAN. IR IANE NOYES ESTHER SADIE OEI-ILERKING WILLIAM BLAIR OGG MARSHALL ERIC OISON ROBERT FREDERICK OLSON PATIY IEANNE O'NEILL MARGARET LILLIAN ORR VIRGINIA MARIE OSBORNE STANLEY DEMAREST PAGE-WOOD MAIZIE MARIORIE PALESE RICHARD LAMBERT PARKIN MARGARET HELEN PAYNE EDWARD PEACOCK BEITY FRANCES PEARCE ELEANOR MARY PEARSON MARGARET IOANNA PEARSON QUENTIN ROBERT PEARSON SHIRLEY REED PERKINS 176.- DORA RUTH PERRAULT EDWARD IAMES PERRAULT GEORGE WENDELL PERRY MILDRED CAROLINE PETERS ELINOR ELIZABETH PETERSON ROY CARLTON PETERSON IOHN NOBLE PHILLIPS, IR. HUGH PAYNE PIERCE ROBERT BYRON PIERCE CHARLES EDWIN PLACE FRANCES MARIORIE PLAISTED STUART CLIFFORD PLETTNER ERWIN FRANKLIN POETTER CHESTER GEORGE POLAD MARY ELLEN POSEY RITA ELIZABETH POWERS ELIZABETH STUART PRESS HOBART RONALD PRIBBENOW EMILY HITCH PRIBBLE EUNICE COBB PRICE RAYMOND HORACE PRIMMER .-77.. .XA I G P S N. A A' B' Q w 'te X v' I ff-e MV I -0 ,,, .I S, A VER' I 2.45. mf' TRP., I 4A , 5 ,- 4? K A .. Q aLs'!'A' 959 I ET.. I U ' 5- , at , ' V ' .,, , C N, ward t' , f -' C: ii Al 1. A s ,, 4 . Q -I '92 .P Ip 1 'W'W ' ' I 1 'f G sf- 7' A CHARLES LAWRENCE PRIMS DOROTHY MARIE PRINGLE TERENCE IAMES PRYDE CASIMIR IOSEPH PRZYBYISKI GEORGIA CATHERINE PULFORD MURIEL ELAINE PURWIN BARNES TI-IURMAN PYLE DOROTHY LOUISE RABICKI ROBERT ALPHONSE RATCLIFFE REBECCA RATHVON DOROTHY MAE READING IOSEPHINE HEMPSTEAD REEVES FREDERICK OSCAR REICI-IE STANLEY IOSEPI-I REMUS ELLEN FOSTER RHEA VIRGINIA LEE RICHARDSON MARY ELLEN RIDDELL MARGARET EMMALINE RIEMANN IOHN FRANCIS RING HERBERT WALTER RITCHELL VIRGINIA ROBERTS 178.- MARY FRANCE ROBINSON , WILLIAM FREDERICK ROEHM, IR. HELEN MARSHA ROGODZINSKI DONALD EVERET1' ROSENTHAL ELIZABETH BALDWIN ROSS GERTRUDE LOUISE ROTH HELEN MAY RUDOLPH GENEVIEVE KATHERINE RUGEN VIVIAN AVELENO RUNGE FREDERICK AI-IRENS RUSCH KATHERYNE GRACE RUSSELL MARSHALL SALZMAN SHIRLEY SAMMIS DOROTHY IEAN SAMPSON RICHARD WARREN SAMSEL IEANNE LOUISE SAMUELSON VIRGINIA RUTH SANDELL PHYLLIS IENNINGS SAPP WILLARD STEVENS SAYLES CHARLES FRANCIS SCHAEFER ELIZABEFH ANN SCHAUB .-'lQ... g. ff If I W .- RQJ-'S 'I-is Q , ,Nut I QF . T as he L ' as . A fs I Sw 4 ' L' L gif ll ' ' 'L 5 A f 5, A ix ' 523 0k ' , an N, .1 Iwi I Ar . iq I X .Lx Y ,fm '55 Z 5' 3 5. ' K. . gy sw 5- QA PEARLE NEEITA SCHLUFIER WILLIAM THOMAS SCHMID1' JOHN PETER SCHMFIZ ,X 7, . , IANE ELI'ZABE.'I'H SCHRAM LAWRENCE EDWARD scHuEMANN JAMES SHIRLEY SCHUEIT 3 A 4 ARTHUR HERBERT SCHUIZE ,M A ANN ELIZABETH scovr aft. 9 , 6' tl Sf? ,D ' . fm-Q' :QE GLADYS I A NE SEABERG ALICE IRENE SEARS ROBERTA SEAVER JOHN SEIPPEH., IR. MARIANNE ELAINE SELLBERG MARION STUART SELLERS HOWARD ROBINSON SENIOR RALPH DAVID SHANBY. IR. EDWIN MEAD SHANKS CLARA MAE SHAW VIRGINIA HELEN SHECKLER CATHERINE IOAN SHERIDAN WILLIAM LIONEL SHIPLEY, IR. LEO SARKIS SHIRVANIAN ELIZABETH ANNE SIDDALL ROBERT ELMOR SIDDALL ANDREW DAVISON SINGLETON CHARLES WALKER SIZEMORE WELFORD WILBUR SIZEMORE BERNICE LILLIAN SMITH BRAYTON SMITH MELVIN SCRIBNER SMITH SHIRLEY ANNE SMITH BETTY SMOTHERS ANNE MARIE SNOOK GERTRUDE SOBEL GEORGE THOMAS SOLLI'l'I'. IR. MARIAN GERTRUDE SOLLITT ROBERT WILLIAM SONNEN SALLY JANE SPALDING CI-IARLE GOITLIB SPOERER. IR. WILLIAM HELD SPURRIER PAUL PETER SPRATIZ, IR. IEANNE GERTRUDE STAUDT .-811 1 O- pe I . I 'N Q . x gesnz 6' A Kc.-f es, I i' , , 'I'L 'LJ ma-J. 'S' 9. Q .' -fc Q9 Q3 Q19 , 1 -1 ,. .m 3i . ..,, ? :F K B G-,I Q ps Qi ak L. :JH S- I LL QP sf ALVAR OICE STEELE DOROTHY ANNE STEE!.E IOSEPH GERHARDT STEFFENS DAVIDA LEONORE STEINBERG ROBERT HARRY STERNER HARRIET LEE STEVENS IOSEPH ALLEN STEVENSON GEORGE BARR STEWART MARION ANGELA STEWART IEAN CATHERINE STOCKBRIDGE ROBERT LEE STRINGER WILLIAM CHARLES STRONACH ELIZABETH ALICE STRONG IODIE STRONG, IR. JEAN AUGUSTINE STUEBE FRANCES RITA SUMMERS GEORGE COOKE SUTTON MARIAN VIRGINIA SWANSON ROBERT THURE SWENSON PEGGY ELIZABETH TAYLOR WILLIAM RANDOLPH TENNEY -32- LLOYD STANLEY TENNY, IR. DAVID IOHN TESNOW GEORGE LESLIE TEFLOW VIRGINIA RUTH TEUFERT RICHARD IENNESS THAIN. IR. BARBARA THAYER ROBERT CARL TI-HEL CALVIN CHIPMAN THOMPSON MARCIA ROSALYN THOMPSON vxvum DAWN 'raowuison wmman BLACKBURN 'mompsou IEAN -momsou SIGRID HARRIFI' THORGERSEN SUZANNE TILLSON JAMES LANDIS TORCOM ROBERT EMIL TORP-SMITH ROBERT GRAY 'POWER LEONARD TREVIRANUS CHARLES EDWIN TUCKER. IR. DOROTHY IEAN TURNER GRACE MILLICENT TURNOCK -831 I 'J W -, .1 A- I f 7 5? ' S K '95 ijgi' .Q ,A Em za if -1 ET IW we I Fw H -X . cs -an VC? . I 6 ,b L . 'C' ' 5-1 MARY IANE ULREY CLARA IEAN UNDERHILL MARILOU VAN BERGEN WILLIAM MAURICE VANDEN BROOK LOUISE CORWIN VAN DEVENTER ALICE IEAN VAN DYKE VIRGINIA ELLIOTT VAN GUNTEN IOHN HERBERT VAN LANDINGI-IAM PATRICIA VAN METRE EDGAR VANNEMAN, IR, RAYMOND DANA VILAS, IR. HORTENSE BERNICE WADE IANE CHRISTINE WAGNER ALVERDA WALKER ANNEITE LOUISE WALKER BARTON FELLOWS WALKER. IR. DORIS VIRGINIA WALKER IACOUELINE WALKER VIRGINIA IUNE WALLACE MARGARET LINDSLEY WAISI-I WARREN HAYDEN WARD, IR. -.84.. ARTHUR CLINTON WARNER JOSEPH EDWARD WARREN ROBERT DWIGHT WASMUND ALICE BERKELEY WEAKLY MARY LESLIE WEBSTER RONALD WEBSTER, IR. BEFSEY ALDEN WEEKS LYLE FRANCES WEGNER WALLACE HAROLD WEIDENMILLER MURIEL RUTH WEISE CASIMIR VINCENT WEIMAN CLAUDE ARNOLD WELLES, IR. MARY CAROLINE WENELL LESTER WENNLUND LOUIS RICHARD WERNECKE RUTH IETHER WESTERBERG BARBARA McCLURE WHITE DAVID CAMPBELL WHITE EVELYN MAY WHITE ROBERT NEWELL WHITE MARTHA WHITEHOUSE -B5-. BE'I'I'Y IAYNE WI-IITMORE WALLACE GREGORY WHITSON ERNEST COPELAND WIEDER POLLY BURRUS WILCOX DOROTHEA WILDE BERNARD WILLIAM WILI-IELMSON EDWIN VORHEES WILLIAMS NORMAN EDWARD WILLIAMS CLARENCE JOSEPH WIISON DONALD COYNER WIISON, IR. CHARLOTTE GRISWOLD WING GRACE JULIA WINKLE HELEN IEAN WINTER LOIS FLORENCE WINTER MARY ELLEN WIPRUD RAYMOND BRUCE WISHARD LEROY PHILLIP WITI'Y DAVID MONTZ WOOD IOHN SMILEY WOODRUFF CATHERINE ANN ZICCO EFI-IEL MAE ZIN'I'Z .-86... l Acknowledgments ..... The members of the 1937 Senior Yearbook Staff wish to thank all of those students and faculty members who in any way aided in the production of this book. We are also deeply grateful to Mr. Bernard I. Burns, of the Bernie Studio of Evanston, official photographers, and to Mr. Paul K. Robertson '20 and Mr. Wellington W. Brothers '17 of the Gunthorp-Warren Printing Company of Chicago, official printers and enqravers, for their splendid and untlrinq advice and assistance. ..g7.. ol --QU' R-ri 5,49- 4 . 159- 4- 4 1 t xt M I K ii, .f ,v 4. ' ' U., ' ,V a 9 x x ,, - ,wifi ..-0 V4,?,,,,M4sw -of Ay? wifi , ' so 1 N4 - K 'iwsoikxkfh D! Q' - 'M I Q A, M 'Y Sk ' , Q' . - 5' 4 K 0 x sl Q LQ F- 00 '- ' - ' 291' -M' - 'I' QNQQ, rl uv 177 'gli' , -.Q 9' ' ' . 4 :' 1-ff.-php ui' fu nn il f'.J' ju Q W. W' ' ,.,,g V , . .Q--31 H -F fa. ' ','e.,., ew v . ' ' . i K cd' wi., v 5 'F 1 ' . I. x '- ' . ,FS , ' r ' X' E' - ' M : 1 as


Suggestions in the Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) collection:

Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Evanston Township High School - Key Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940


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