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Page 185 text:
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this time it is no JIVE! Gwendolyn Wilson Otis Wilson Paul Wilson Another busy day for Mr. President. NOT SHOWN: Craig Wiseman imming. Tennis, Cross- Age, Camp Waskowitz Counselor. Diana Zetzsche Viki Zigalla Dave Armstrong Debra Ashleman Timothy Barker Rebecca Brooke Robert Campeau Larry Couch Coral Crosby Frank Howard Virginia Gibson Victor Griffith Thomas Harlan Marc Heavner Keith Heller Barbara Heynneman David Hoag Karen Hoffman Michael Hooks Randolph Howell Jean Johnson Robin Johnson Bruce Kissler Thomas Ledray Michael Lynch Pat Mclnerny Connie McCormick Jenifer Miller Kathy Moen David Nichols Debby Purdy Sue Ritter Steve Richardson Richard Rochelle Mark Sommerfeld Mark Southern Joseph Stegman Richard Strasbaugh Kristie Sutton Teresa Taber Philip Thoresen Eldon Thorsteinson Philip Tuttle Perry Wilkins Robert Wiley Jeffery Wilson Cindy Wood Dan Woodcock ZinaZuchowski Kathy Zueger Todd Francis
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Page 184 text:
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So long Seventy- five . . . John Wells Crosscountry 10, 11, 12, Swim Team 10, Lettermen Club II, 12, Stud. Inter, pres. 12, Track 12. Terrance Westmoreland Student Council 11, 12, Football 10, 12, Track 10, II, 12, Waskowitzll, 12, Lettermen Club 10, 11, 12 Cheryl Wheeler Dorie White Sen. Class vice-pres., Honor Society 1 1, 12, Tolo Queen, Girls ' Track, Letterwomen Club. Lawrence Wiese Football 11, 12, Honor Society, Lettermen Club, German Club. Barb Fox keeps up the old ' 75 image
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Page 186 text:
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torn Lire bu CjMldfcp l ulld ' l»cl ' lS v s v hen on«uul«kive from rhiWcnuldAni £Vhe , had rebut n in file z spfenge things happened during the fi in the fourth periodtclassrooms. Milk emnantN of lunches went yHo the waste !r . you cap ima; Sot all the supplies agine whaXth 1 lie enure ceiling of the I (Ill-building »as filler! with I Jt V-, y H f rst P.T.A neJVng was Md thar Year in the in attendance, parents and faculty - - uHVv y Girls ' P.E class? Evergreen ha l no bleachers and ' s several time: Timberlines was organized in ' 55. All cli the first printgd paper was produced by thej or four-irrcfh stories. Thi voting age to eighteen. News on a job press. supplies had beenwrdered for this fledgling schpolTthis potential threat to th da nuke in thfc N P S I and set it rocking!) j ri classes suffered the students ma|e. sculptures. jVe fastened uhele -to 4he wall, hung them fro hpitk scu I plates, it seemed jjbtball tear n Puget Sound junior high school field. There, were no busses to transport stud to Puget Sound and, back; they did the same for basketball gam S While these things were going on, nothing had as yet been done to the school grounds and the parking lot. When the rains came in the autumn, the school had gn qflmpba,ed buildings, the 100 and the two 200 buildings, with no sidewalks, no breezeways . . nothing but mud! Students who walked to school past Lake Hicks jNrvy ' viith mud up to their knees, and teachers carried an extra pair of shoes from the parking lot, in order to change inside the classroom. The floors in the halls wVh mud. Finally, someone in a great burst of wisdom, spread sawdust on the ground, which settled into the mud, and then we tracked sawdust into the building ' . Atlong last, someone placed some wooden planks between the three buildings, which helped s In 1956. we had,a 9th grade football team and a sophomore team. Coached by Mr. Brigham and Mr. Dahl, the library was used a rooms in the 2 iO )uild. ings were finished, the teams moved down the hall, and finally found themselves using 300-building r arourra and over huge, heavy-duty machinery on the campus, the gyms were ready for classes 1957 saw Evergreen beat Toll in football, 33-0 for the first senior high victory with a team consisting entirely of sophomores Evergreen hosted Ne: came so far. that dinner was served by the P T A for them, and they were bedded down in sleeping bags on the floor in the gym that night. One Mr. Dahl how far we were from Seattle When Mr. Dahl answered, About eight miles, the boy from the metropolis of Neah Bay said, Yoi That year we placed second in the Lakeside League. Also, in ' 57, the first debate team prepared for only two days and won the debate. ' ibuted articles, typed by the office secretary, and the paper was produced on the ditto machine. In the autumn of 57, ass who prepared copy w ' ith one typewriter, drew the logo by hand, and the front page sported about a dozen three srs, a paper was published regularly by ' 59, and a hot issue featured on the editorial page was about lowering the ■ the first yearbook ... the Forester then was a small paperback of fifty pages which had been printed by the White Center As soon as Cascade Junior High opened, the 7th graders attended school there. The next year the Nth graders joined them, and Evergreen added a high school J the autumn of ' 58, we were a full-fledged high school. Wolverines entered the Puget Sound League, and began with a vengeance to try to beat the ' Pirate ' team from that other high school. The practice field had not been graded or filled and the track around it was non-existent, fellows were practicing on a field full of chuck-holes, and when it rained the holes became lakes of water One small lake in the southwest corner became so large andso deep, we feared we ' d lose the team in it. A faculty member, who shall be nameless, brought a row-boat, rigged up a sail, set it in this pond, and propped it up so that it appeared to be drawing about four feet of water. This same teacher whipped out his camera, took a picture. und enlarged the print to an 8 x 10 size, and took it to the administration building for display. In a day or two, machines came in and ictice field was fixed. i to be organized i poking the Duwamish Riv s the Latin Club. In ' 56. the first Roman Banquet, a costume affair, was held in the yard of a student ' s home off DesMoines Way South Students in Roman costume stopped traffic, so the State Patrol had to be called to clear up the congestion. Later club activities of the ;nt. At Christmas time, students went caroling in car caravans all over the district Some years later when a huge flatbed truck passed a i house and the students were singing, the parent was quoted as saying, There goes Mrs. Nerheim. She has the Latin kids on a truck this year As it turned out, i group of cub scouts. The group sold apples, hot baked potatoes at football games, mistletoe, held car washes, as many as seven at a time at as many stations und the district, The club made so much money its treasury was larger than the student bod fund. While waiting for the 300-building to be completed. er got cold, the teacher drove the bus around to keep v ; of the first biology classes were held c i, and they became the envy of thecntir ; parked at the front of the building. Whei stude and teach- The first s the game. Ah, these memories important part of yo I students in June ' 59, At basketball games. W ' olvi e, spoke all during the day until the final assembly emories are fragile wings which support the strong and robust body of the present. Flutter these wings for jet power into the Futlin Hi you . . . welcome those who made these memories and have returned today . . . tonight. Walk all over Kent-Meridian! • ■ i Nerheim aming ' 74 ■::-
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