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Page 16 text:
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i Twelve ,fa JERRY ANCIIES DAN ALUSIIN XVHEN SCHOOL opened in September, we found that Dan Allison had arrived from Roosevelt High. It didn't take long for him to become acquainted with the two outstanding features at Lakeside -boys fno girlsj and books. Soon Dan became wellfknown to the rest of us as a hardfworking student and an affable companion. He has done especially well in adjusting and fitting into an environment that was new to him this year. Here, he has been forced to restrict himself to club sports be' cause of the onefyear ineligibility rule and has been on the Brownell football, basketball, and baseball teams. Out of school Dan spends his time skiing and dating and helping out on numerous class projects. The versatility which he has exhibited here at Lakeside will help greatly in his study of law, and we wish him the best of luck. JERRY, AS EDITOR of the Tatler, has done an excellent job in presenting the student body with provocative and interesting editor' ials on school issues. His quiet, mature attitude towards almost every' thing will be remembered by all those who have read the Tatler. This attitude carries over into all his other activities too. It was largely through his well considered, always lucid opinions expressed in the Student Court that this new group has gained the respect of the whole student body. He is able to play a round of golf without breaking one hundred and yet not get too mad, and do his academic work so that he received respectable grades. Jerry has also participated in club basketball, appeared on the Gold Star lists, and served on the Numidian staff. His sincerity makes him a faithful friend with an individual per- sonality which is easy to like and hard to forget. Jerry's calm and composed nature will enable him to more than meet the requirements of adult life.
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Page 15 text:
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1 .jf I 3 . it LJL-EDS' , frffff f f,U 2 'ZIEIQJP 3 gfgs-4h,,7?Tf'x5 Born: To William Treadwell, aging first cello for Seattle Symphony, a human child. Married: Murray Marsh, balding fight promoter, to Vlaf damira Krunchuvitchsky, female shot put champion for U.S.S.R. Big Deal: Neil Bell recently purchased the Tumwater base' ball team, I've always been a supporter of athletics, he said. Honored: john E. Ryan, IU, honest used car dealer, ap' pointed honorary President of the Boy Scouts. Divorced: Frank S. Bayley, prominent social problems inf structor at the University: cause: She's simply incom' patiblef' Censored: jerry Kravilq, while fighting vehemently for national prohibition, in the US. Senate. Died: jeffrey M. Cornish, greying Lakeside School janitor: slight complications arose from last testament, con- cerning the inheritance of the gymnasium. Executed: jack Omar Lynch, in Saudi Arabia, after attempting to swindle local dealers and establish a tent monopoly. Killed: Most decorated Air Force Ace of W.W. III, Dan Allison, accidentally, while on routine flight. Patfon-the-back: To Donald Norwood, crusading private investigator for incriminating Ed Browne and Robin Luehrs for their unlawful conspiracy against the Humptulips municipal government. Married: Woodie Baldwin, famous for his interpretation of the historical influence of Lady Godiva's ride, Co' author of The American Bird, he for the first, she for the fourth. Born: To Dave Cole . . . Twins . . . he plans to use them in his wife's Burlesque routine. Lost: Nick Dabney, ExfRock 'n Roll idol and international playboy, near Pisht, Washingtcun. Found: Harvey Poll, one time Olympic miler and successful wind tunnel expert, practicing oratory on a box in Hoboken, NJ. Drowned: Calvert Craig, President of Drano Breweries after falling into his own malt vat. Divorced: Baseball umpire, Dave Steel, He's just not as cute without his little black suit on, the late Mrs. pleaded. Born: To Carl Sutter, a 22 lb. giraffe: Integration screamed the South, But I'm not a giraffe, sobbed the exfchess champion. Honored: Bill VanDenburgh, winner of the National Inf door Hopscotch and Pogo Stick Combined Competif tion, received the Athlete of the Week Award from the Sequ A.A. jailed: Bruce Hanson, when he argued with Supreme Court Judge Sam Baker, that the light had not been yellow when he went through it, and that he did not see the blind young mother in the wheel chair, whom he sub' sequently ran down. Married: jerry Anches, editor of Stud, Tool, and Duh, weekly magazines: to the wife of the late state poet of British Guiana. Merger: The 1. Horton corp. fWe build better baby blocks for bawling bratsj and the David Emery QEvery boy should have a train to play withj Enter- prizes. Promoted: jim Dieringer, Alaskan gas station attendant, to the chairmanship of the Experimental Station for the S.P.C.A. Saved: First Avenue downfandfouter, Gary Reed, by Gorham Nicol, recently appointed Commanderfin- Chief of the Salvation Army. Missing: Two tons of Fort Knox gold bullion, three blond Fort Knox stenographers, and Pete Van Ness, Free Again: Former bestfdressed man in U.S. and con' firmed celibate, Robert Levy, from his monastery in Tibet: reason- They won't let me be a ham, he moaned. Worried: Charles Lea-famed architectsafter twenty years of research on how to build a better mouse trapffinds it can't be done. Hospitalized: Dave Lycette, Chief judge, Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, after hitting himself on the left thumb with his own gavel. f r ' Class Prophet: X1 X gi gl! H61 1 Q J Q 1 bot' ll - , . F Rl 1132 WU :ie ,m-,afs Q 3, 14 fiEQSg', 3724233 3:25 Eleven
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Page 17 text:
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SAMUEL RUSSELL BAKER S AM is ONE or THE BEST students in our Class, and this fact can be attributed to his most outstanding characteristic--cinscientious- ness. Sam has accepted his responsibilities as both a student leader and a scholar, and he has surpassed all in his willingness to work. He has been president of our junior class, vicefpresident of our fresh' man class, and president of the Whitcomb club. He has also been a member of the Senate during all of his four upper school years, and has consistently appeared on the Gold Star and Honor Roll. Sam has won his letter in varsity baseball and has competed in club sports in all other activities. His determination has singled him out from his classmates, for there are few who attack each en- deavor with such fortitude. When Sam has Hnished the work which enabled him to be elected to the Cum Laude Society, he takes to the outdoors for fishing, hiking, or skiing. To this portrait must be added the touch that has contributed in making such an outstanding individual out of this short fellow- Sam's studious nature is pleasantly offset by his fine sense of humor. A faithful friend, an interesting companion, and a diligent worker, Sam will succeed in the future as he has succeeded in school. WIIHIIIE BALDWIN xv OODIE is perhaps the most easyfgoing member of our class, and he is certainly the most congenial. But even his carefree manner cannot assuage his determination. Woodie has appeared four times on the Gold Star, and he has served on almost all class committees. As chairman of the Student Body Dance and as Lakeside's repre' sentative to the Traflic Safety Conference, Woodie has shown a willingness to learn and to lead. In his four years at Lakeside, Woodie has participated in all major club sports, but his primary athletic interest lies with his skiing, both water and snow. In the 'Tatler oihce, this redfhaired fellow has often been seen, either sleeping comfortably, or, more often, writing an article. Woodie faces life with the most optimistic of views, and the gaiety and the friendliness with which he has met his fellow students prophesy of a rewarding future for him. Thirteen
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