West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA)

 - Class of 1940

Page 1 of 120

 

West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1940 Edition, West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collectionPage 7, 1940 Edition, West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 120 of the 1940 volume:

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'fp f iq X N 1 l ffsgi? Q ' Q. 1 -a,:L-'fu 2, Wi I ' ff W W IW :six Q 241 f HMM My JWQZVW - WK wfjff 510 V -N,-N M -MW-X-ww NOT as many members as they need, but doing things just the same. Remember-the football games, Thanksgiving assembly, Senior Play, the Christmas Cantata-- Babe of Bethlehem, Pow Wow, and Commencement? Our music department shares in just about any program you can mention. H. ...N-4Q-uw-M .,... . ..,.....sf....,a.-Q.. ..,. ..,..,....,. 3 - Leon Morse. DRUM,-,Maxon - ., ,N,,.....,.Q.,,......,.,,..,,m..,,s,v4 YS GLEE 1 Front Row Bob Morse, Bill Rae, Norman Burton, Bob Harnrnond, lack l-look, Herbert Scott, Weeloar Leecly, Back Row Bale Corliss, Warren Dale, Ray liter, Charleslolinson, Chester Elener, Gordon Cheney, Tamio Ishida. arms' outa B ' Front Row Mary lane lay, Lorraine Young, Kay Wilson, Margaret Lindell, Barbara lean Lyle. Beth Middleton, Evelyn Cliche, Bonnie Durrance, Betty Bevan, Kathryn Wilson. Middle Row. Margurite Sullivan. Mildred Fearno, Mary Louise Hale, Eleanor Fuller, Dora Davis, Kathleen Wetteraner, Aileen Wolford, Mary Meade, Marion Stephens, Vera Weyrick. Back Row Be-lva Haynie, Betty Strang, Iovce Bowerrnan, Emily Sobich, Eleanor Iohnson, Virginia Bernard, Myra Mac Lucas, Iudy Nelsen, Betty Schaefer. ' CHOIR . llly B Front Row Virginia Davis, Virginia Boling, Audrey Stoslcopf, Barbara lean Simpson, Pauline Marino-C vich, Marianne Sweeney, Evelyne Myers, Thelma Chamberlain, Bonita Helgath, Ieanette Williams, Donna Scott, Avis Monte, Ruth Gordon, Nona Hancock. Middle Row Don Gosse, Lawrence Fletcher, Earl Sander, Lorraine Young, Virginia Spurgeon, Eileen Perleberg, Kathleen Harrison, losephine Bodic, Mary -Galster, Georgiana Brooks, Charlotte Buckner, Donald Bell, George Penglase. Back Row Merle Suver, lack Church- ill, Chester Elsner, Bob Stratton, Bob O'Connor, Tamio Ishida, Iohn Payne, Donald Owen, Wendell We-st, Harold Davenport, David Potter. Pfam, 5 X ,r . . , , Q!! if , K ' F Q SSN R X X X 6 fs '-N R ,T , 'f 5 LL. .. :Ma . 44 R X? 3 gk. sv s N ' E- F xigg 0- QQ: Qx xwx x ! S' ww w,. XS X' S vt 'XX K S ix NX kk S ' Q fx W N i MK ' S - 'wwf .. ,,.A iv, ' , X X 2 f . A A W A A , Nw' Q:---. Silk 321 A, ., ,-gtg.. f.. ,-: -,Q X Q ,S t 3 K - 6 M z QA ,1.. ,, - nag. s ' 1 f H X K . ..:- z '--' ' x A. Y X 5 V wx XS, 1.r S13 Kiwi L 2 v Q A wil X N? I 'F Q 2 my X ww -S125 'K X .K X if x STAGE CREW . . . Front: Herbert Voigt, Alton Clay, jim Galletly Orland Young Grant Chabot Mrddle Noel Hancock George DeGrafl, Lowell Cray, Lynn johnson, ,lack Hemingway Bruce Peterson Back Mr Chamberlain Boris Constantin, jim Butler, Allan Landstrom, Manager, Charles Webb Ray Moore COSTUME Jeannette Dolen, Mildred Ridley, Bythella Cambridge AFTER every production the asbestos curtain is lowered and the lights blare up back stage so that the stage crew can work. There are props to put away, and equipment to store. Mr. Chamberlain gives orders then as he does during an assembly. The stage crew responds to his com- mands, taking care of all lights, mikes, and curtains. In another room the costume department folds away the clothes and stores them for further refer- ence. Side by side they pile togas, easant dresses, and doublets and liose, knowing that they have con- tributed to the smoothness of one more school performance. 7 ,77 Y , THA W' . V+ 0 ev' DRAMATIC CLUB THE woULD-BE Garbos and the would-be Hamlets flock to the Dramatic Club and Dramatic classes and their Little Theatre presentations. The training they receive there may help them to become known in the theatre world. Acting is only part of the job. There is make-up, stage manage- ment, producing and directing. All plays are produced by the students themselves, with the help and guidance of Mrs. Knettle l and Miss Phillips. .B up B In the picture above ore Bob Burke, jydio Georges, and Bob T johnson in the ploy Poor Madeline. H Allen Chomberlam fresfdem I ,Qpfv 1940 H1 A Nancy Chilcote, Assistant Art Editor Edith Floyd, Art Editor NWHO,S got that copy?+- Where's the dummy? Looking for me? Get to work on those prints. -and remember that deadline- We just ran out of No. 3- When this Kimtah was put into your hands our work was done and we heaved one big, long, drawn-out sigh, but the above dialogue was not unusual during the hec- tic weeks before the final deadline. With Slave-driver Pappy Parkinsw cracking the whip over our heads, and en- couraged by Mr. Goss, the Kimtah staff finished its yearly stint of organizing the annual, taking pictures, printing them, writ- ing copy, making layouts and seeing that the Kimtah was delivered-to you. Mickey Lynch, Photographer Ruth Mataftin, Artist Doris Malde, Artist atncla Lohmann . ,Artist Bob Stuart h o Clara Ruckhaber, Artjst P ot gropher i ,leanne Brown - A Artist Wilma Ward, Business Manager Verner Dotson, Business Advisor Dale Goss, Kimtah Advisor Bill Parlcins, Editor-in-chief Gloria Recchini, Secretary jimmy Georges, Assistant Photographe Betty Kemp, Artist Ruth Bachman, Literary Editor Iris Olson, Stenographer Faye St. john, Writer Eudora Radecop, Sports Editor Marilyn Quint, Writer Gene Plumb Sports Editor Dick Bechtold, Writer Phil A re Y Photoglrapher BUSINESS . . . Seated: Vera Ferrell, Nancy Nilsen, Ethel Anderson, Eleanor Statham, Wanda Legg. Standing: Tom Tague, Lawrence Benedict Barbara Aniclcer, Aaron Hibbert, Alice Peterson, Ruth Delaney, Betty Leahy, Myrtle Jacobs. REPORTERS . . . Seated: Mary Baxley, Margaret Wilhelm, Ruie Gray Margaret Mary Golden. Standing: Faye St. john, Marjorie johnson, Eileen Bannon, Dave lierney, Ray ltter, Patricia Deegan. BUSlNESS . . . Seated: Patricia Peterson, Lorraine Delaney, Stuart Hughes, Eileen Perleberg, Georgia White. Standing: Don Crosby, Margaret Lindell, Verna May Androff, Nora Austin, Cora McConaghie, Doris Daggett, Bob Leurquin, Howard Hawkins. CHI DUI-4 WORKING until 5:30 on late copy, being at the printers Thursday nights - the inevitable cries of Kill on galley fivef, Who's got the paste? and Oh no, Mrs. C., not my best joke . . . brings back fresh memories of the hours put- ting out the Chinook. Another issue goes on file in the morgue. Some day it'll just be a back number of a school paper, but to us it records all the happenings of 1940, something to help us recall our high school years. SPORTS . . . Seated: Wilma H llberg Aileen Morris, MJ Tapley, Marjorie Barr, Wanda Legg. Standing: Kathryn Lowry, Bob Peterson, Bill Pollock, Bob Hill. Ablyyx Sf, .fr J' mr W Here IS the brain-trust, the editors and the advisor. From left to right they are: Mary Lou Hohner, Harold Davenport, Rosemary Longmire, Henry Allcema, Mrs. Chamberlen, Bill Pollock, and Don Hansen. '-f- '------'-' - --'--- M ------------ - - YYQYK B09 19 V950 P3 vXX6vWS CP-5? . . . som Som Yxzwekoxh, 'YQA P-obewsoo, x-Boxgofs: Ommooob, Bob 6m'o'o,x-Bo-1. Conoco. Bog-X-. Yglgex Xlm6eXX, Bohn ?o'mo10,x-Ifoixoo Gow-, amos XXMO1, Xloq P-tcXfQ0oX6,Yxo1wixe'l5xo9,YNo1 oobwoo, Xeome?A10. WOWGX 566 o wooMoX'l 4 ou had eV' y-N .0o1N:xo soxpisses o qcfxddxgkwk meaimg oi We Bodi- ovim Gob? WX see qou ax Rn ml skobq koqoouoel 100!tQXOQZx0Qo , ROSS, GAO? Oo Qtogyp 9506 6001 YLWQJOB? e'0 iuvsyixbd rn' Ku got YW' 5 Pyagszxogsggysi exe' ofasxagsovt go'Ix0g5o966'1ooN ' o C5350 x x -. , , 'I Qxal ya W,o'.Xyt9 ' vow we ' '- -,S Wiows' Y-ogg? ce K. v '9 WSW P 19 5U 'd:X'foxAsii l0' Ba0 'me Q0 05 59 xes GV- ,Bias 92620061 06625 P66 'K' BLOB' 2 vxo oggilcxeill 'QYOG P 0 'gives' N9 Y5w 'al-3'9 as C' b ' Q0 vp Pri xe5 ::cio0 'W C'ja 'g.t. Y' Qtiflii. Y'-'Q 9' 60 ' V.. Q6 w fillQ,i'3e'Yo Q61 vgiooggl I WHAT could cause havoc in a boys' school? Women, of course. And what could give terror to a bachelor? Women. Four of them moved in on a professor of a boys' school, and provided the plot for Bachelor Bornf' Ian Hay's play which was presented by the Class of 1940. As the story developed, the audience came to love Charles Donkin, poor defenseless schoolmaster . . . and his attempts to remain single and happy. There were chuckles because of Bimbo and Button, and the innocent robin s egg. The applause at the last curtain made everyone who had worked 'for its success--the actors, makeup crew, stage crew, business staff, publicity agents and all the rest, feel that they had done a good job. The audience was sure of it. ' S .,.55!l6A:, i2Q-:Rfk - ' Jig V wb -A f4'--fAeZa,i,'-wg-A .,,.. - H -'-- I V A.,,:g fa, 9 S :IL 9 -:Z ...,. . ,.:,...-:..- Qzwii . .::1., . , I Coon ,Vote Qoffw Y-oosxookm XAeQ0etX OKOXA isa 009 Xqo gxqbe, .wk u CXXO eqe coke . XA Oil ex , X54 , ,S .3 ooo , eq ,QPR vi' X54 ,O P+ 99 M0 X y-BQC-o Ohm 0a oo oo. xNwXXe OP' A SXOQXXYX . ' X'Aeo9xdxs,Yf Sf-ova X-K66xe6 XXSX , Xlxo Hem A . Cinderson XXC. ogex oo Q-W6 Orxwox-X . . . SST: VN Cdxo, P-6eXXe Yobxeseoffoi OOYG. SY. 'l so O 0 OQXSO. CXBV- No X 5 1 x-Boixo co XXe Xo Lois dm? oxkaxsoo, P-t8xs'l3o6Xsoo, 0 0964-, Xooe obboxb, Y om Xioixo X A X'IooeX'-. Seoke vl WX'XV5VPg.9 SSE? ' ' , X .XAON VN Cowen 5oXXwov Xoqy- Xm-N . SXQQ3.. ylxggogxl P-056500. Chao xodsog. 9. X092 S es. 'lsovixo No fm Tj N lghf roelson pe ke, LE D FT 32:1 gm q O . NSY C'1'1f1:E-'Ie 1 Bbfgagwgliy, Sag' X.. XVXQ, Xx-XX-XP-YXSX , X249 Yoboxo gO66C-OQ,XAI6XO eowg u .,-R99 , XXJXQ Oqokixoexfx, Geosgso 'Lo 91264 yJXP30EX'x .g . . K Que , Xxdxo X51o'oxoexXx , 2 '99, XAXXQ Geowges, Ovwtwvbt ex , Ooxoivfl VX ow Loo Y-ovlx 9X4ooeV-. Woetg x-F' Yhee cop, . 'Lo-ulmg, 6xeKd0eo560o oboxo Xlobe- Cbeoxjxo ,.M,V.Xv.pAx-X ps Q-XSSXAXX-X6 Xlxobfy ,OOKOQNI 5oX'soo, ooooo. 62 Qtek ' o9 ee- x-Nm Xoetg ,Y om -. Leo Wop: . ok fxghk Yaokko Yxooget, Uoffxb Y oxXet . Ae Goobvfm Sosoqcix Om ooxb0o8e1 , vxomoo 92 O6 bed OYXYOM OOM ood 4 ooog, P+ ':c.o'6 ,Web X1 . . X ENN et fliomxg 1-NN 6exso9,9e1oob Yqbxon, ex ,iotixo 'xujxtfxo NRO rf' C-ooo, xdss , Yxe toXb 2 seo '50 Xoxtfxokh Boffoo, X e Gedw Kbo, e00e65c, Nm YXowN1xos, X8 6e'l-eNX1 on ov ,O6oo6 Qobbq eo O Mo -,M-XSXQ-'2,x,SxfNONN . . '4ooo9, Xcel- C2oux36S, X434- X-f'o1se,YXo1oX6 Xowwsoo ,969 Sow- , Ode o ,Sesame Yweodv ,Homo 'Lien ,5et1fxc.e ?1eosoo,0oixs owe Oe? odee, OYv4e 'E-obweseo, Soboxo Qyowseflo, Oooooo. Scooeiew, X600 vfbk exg Sfkoa X oo e ' Y oxixo OOXNX-XYXNXAA . . .'iSxo1.NoeQ0 C5AXesQe,SoX46xg Sf-'oo3i6o60oxo Yxogqdssx, x-XOX x-XOX , . .XSQXQ 4 eto9e1tQss,?'1NKxs Xxhoom ,Bahasa 'goxseQ0, C9Xoixo oxXexs,4'xoXex Send' x-NN eos, y-lvoxgoxex Owqom VXNN VAN ,QXY1-Obeax Ckxesgixe, YW: ages 095255 506 XX on No XAOXAY-'62 . . . 09,90 . . .YEXAYLYYEX . . .S091iX600100GZ, X , Ax S n . . . so R10 sv SXixAeqYa.C:x,'lNow21wXee1sYseXXq ,N1'xwfjx6xo P-06exsoqs,SeX44YN0,Qxe, 12:91 P' 0 0 WW' 306' OMG 1 W1 6X1-OYUBG5 o66Koo,0owoQN Co8e1,'Y'v610o C0o10N0e6dxn, oixs vx OSSOW Co8e1, ' OXseo WP' O 006 3661 95694 'Y P-SLE . . Nlkxgxmo X,oxXo,0w1ooA Yevoqx, Sw Og 0666, XOGQOJXOG Yixebmon , Comfxe Spotgeoo. W CLUB . . . Front: Bettie Anderson Catherine Archibald, Juanita Barr, Doris Jean Behymer, Betty Bell Vera Bemis, Bernice Benson, Mary Alice Biggs, Barbara Bjorseth, Dorothy Bolton. Back: Lenita Brady, Ella Cain, Marion Clark, Emily Cummings, Ruth Delaney, Jeanne DePartee, Margaret Drummond, Portia Duncan Annabelle DuVall. W CLUB . . . Front: Helen Egleston, Olive Endresen, Suzanne French, Christina George, Mary George, Elizabeth Gillespie, Helen Goertz, Jacqueline Haas, Barbara Hagquist, Vi Hansen. Back: Phyllis Hilborn Unice Hubbard, Joan Hunter, Eleanor Johnson, Peggy Kain, Norma Keller, Donnabe Leroux, Margaret Lindell Theresa Long, June Lowe, Georgia Lybeck. W CLUB . . . Front: Aileen Morris, Mae Mugler, Doris Nuyens Ethel Olson, lris Olson, Frances O'Neill, Helen Patterson, Miriam Rasmussen, Solveig Schau, Pat Sheets. Back: Muriel Smith, Betty Stratton, Violet Sundberg, Virginia Tapley, Arlysjlogp, Helen:-Iglin, Wilma Ward, Gloria Watters, Maxine Wedekind, lrene Wilson,'Lois Wilson. In 51 59 XJ 'fib- 'asf' r..Q'-,ggi W CLUB . . . Front: Len Aridersori, Jack Armtield, Jack Barlow, Ralph Boldt, Elliott Burdett, Henry Ercolini, Jake Gunderson, Bob Gilmour, Bill Hawkins. Back: Frank Ferrel, Aaron Hibbert, Orral Jackson, Jimmy Kourkoumelis, Jim Krenov, Ralph King, Bill Love, Sam Lowry. IN SOME schools it's an A or a B, but in this school the W reigns supreme. Here is Vera Bemis and Dorothy Bol- ton of the Girls' W Cluhg Jerry Luther and Jack McConkey of the Warriorsg and Jim Krenov and Bob Vi gers of ,the Boys' W Elub. WARRIORS . . . Front: Joe Agostino, Bill Ames Ted Anderson jack Armfield Art Baisinger, Dick Bechtold, g1:aFBeckman, Elliott Burdett. Back: Tom Christie, Burt Davis, Jim lDePartee, Stan Ilray, Paul Edquist, Ed Ewing, i enton. WARRIORS . . . Front: Bob Hallberg, Don Hansen, Howard Hawkins, Bob Hill, Jack Hunt, Don Hooks, Bob Kintner, Sam Lowry. Back: Roger Lindell, jerry Luther, ,lack McConkey, Dan McGill, Raleigh McKinstry, Phil Monaghan, Wib Morrow, Bill Parkins. WARRIORS . . . Front: Arvid Peterson, Gene Plumb, Bill Pollock, Walt Popich, John Putnam Gene Kaymond, Bob Roseta. Back: Ed Schwier, Bob J. Smith, Art Susumi, Mr. Liston, Tom Tague, Bill Whitesel, Dan Zoellner. W CLUB . . . Front: Bob Beaumont, Rene LeVitre, Charles Mahon, Ed North, Fred Osterhout, Gene Plumb, lim Popp Bill Sanderson, Willis Slinker. Back: Nels Sundbom, Bud Swanson, Bob Truckey, Bill Varns, Bob iggers, Ed Schwier, Benny Wheat, Earl Walker, Bill Wilcox, ,lack Wright. ,1v? Q Qh 16h NWT F bffxhot oke . NNW' 0 6 Benfxs, N1 emo Bemis, Beuixce Benson, Ooxokhq Bohon , 'Nkmixe X De-net, rfwoxgoxek Ommmono, YNeXen Eghskon, X Bexfxe P-noesso , Chombets , X9o1hXeiA oskoco o oN :img , ifxchoxo Yh 0 Ooxks Xeon Sehvhhet, 0 Comstock , Txoncq Chhc 6 Ooweoood, 'Exo Demon, cvimgex , Nw . Logon won 1 Cdxgho Box-.V-a Geowge C. Y 'ov4Kn Ylxomget E6 Y'- Loudme Ghck, YNeXen Goem., Phone Gooovfm, Hom ohh ,Behi Nw ,0oxKs Senseo,1+AotXotKe Xohnson, ? Q om: Eoxkh Hoqo, L1 oxo Geoxges, EX Bombowo Yxogodxsx ,Sl Rob Yxonsen, So meson ,?hqXhs Xxhbom , Mori Lou YX 6 Xieoshe, Sock WX01-GX , uh Gxhesoxe, dthixdh . rlvotgoxek xA X1-Ob6 net YX ohnex , 1 Gum, Boch: Rokh Yxe Ehxwxo Bone, Gxhne Hom: S moi XCou1V-oumehs,X4ohc-4 Xlwop , ? mxKdm Lehmann, Cxgxq 1+fKc.Ghee,XsXo rN,Coo6 , Ruth bN'.0oooX6, Ooixs hf'oX6e, Bohn Y okxhon , Hehe! Maison . Bochayxh Yvoqfms, Bekh fKso6Xe'coo, P-hoe NJN-X'-eXsoo, Eh1.obeth X4eoXe, EKheX OXson, hks Ohoh, Vfokh X+Ao'coY'im, ohkc , ' Odx9Xeq, YYeXen Yixchoxoson, vxowmo Yimehod, Chem Rucvhobet, Loom SchuXe1, Yokfwlxo Sheets, Bone Stenoex , Y oqe Sk. Soho NKoXe'c Sunoheug. ho P-on Sw eomek Bah-4 hemnosen, Bob NlK3?e1s,NNKXmo NN exe, yxomes NN o'Mm-so-n, oxgaiek 'Nh em, X.6xs'NKXson, xdxe Knoom, Poksq NNKs-ueX X! xhom , X500 v4 NN Soho Nl' Qxmo New , Mod hcov. Hom: ox Sxo Yohe X, Mo Hoon YxeXeh hxkese BGCY-1 6XowKo NN BA RBARA H AG ST President I 5 MARY BAXLEY Secretary-Treasurer ART SUSUMI Vice-President 1: , A f , ' fx. . ,X .-eg . , ff ,J 2 UB U ,f Helen Addis Henry Alkema Virginia Anderson arbara Baxley ichard Bechtold Stafford Bingham Beulah Blakesley Lenita Brady Jeanne Brown Margaret Brush Doris Cadley Dorothy Cadley Viviqn Ceelan Gloria Cornish Jeanne DePartee Ruth Dorr Paul Edquist Ben Fiedler James Georges Emilie Graf Phyllis Hadley Elizabeth Hamilton Bernice Harris Richard Holt Betty Hough Audrey Jensen Kathryn johnson Elizabeth Johnston Peggy Kain Marian Alford Madora Allin Pete Amess Jim Balzer Bill Beck Juanita Beck Bob Blackstock Phyllis Blichfeldt Joanne Bloomer Jack Bostick Earl Boyd Stanley Brett Phil Brewer Beverley Buettner Ruthie Butler Stuart Carfrae Mary Christ Loma Clarke Bob Craig Ardis Knudtson Elizabeth Liliegreen June Lowe Barbara McArtor Lottie Monaghan Elaine Mousset Jeannette Murphy Mary Nagasawa Bill Nicholson lvadell Oliver Ralph Osterman Patricia Patterson Joan Peters Arvid Peterson Bill Pollock Marilyn Quint Eudora Radecop Catherine Ransom Gene Raymond George Robertson Betty Schaefer Barbara Shadel Dorothy Thurlow Herbert Voigt Maxine Wedekind Betty Jeane Wesseler Jack Wright Howard Yates Royal Crooks Dolores Dachtera Betty Dalrymple Virginia Davis Birrell Dinnetz Robert Ebert Bill Eilers Jack Fancher Dorothy Fennelly David Fenton Charlotte Ferrell Virginia Ferulano Patricia Filer Jacqueline Friedman Carolyn Gaillac Ruby Gain Jimmy Galletly Walter Giles Madalyn Gordon Barbara Haley Dorothy Hall Bernice Harman Gordon Haskell Lawrence Hoffman Wesley Hotchkiss Betty Howard Ray Hudson Lloyd Hughes Jim Humphrey Glenn Hunsinger Paddy Irvine Joe James Cecilia Jensen Eleanor Johnson Bill Kautz Caroline Knudsen Barbara Layman Lorraine Layton Bill Locke Anne Loring Katherine McElvain Naomi McGonagill Jean McJannet Edward Maher Marion Mahon Jack Makus Betty Maples Pauline Marinovich Frederick Maurer Ernest Miller Avis Monte . Bob Morse Shigeo Nagasawa Janice Nagley Dorothy Nelson Maurice Nelson Rowena Newman Neil Nichols Roy Nilson Dick North Harley Nygren Reva Oakes Barbara Olsen Katherine Olson John Palella ' 1 , 4. 1 ,, .' , 1 ' A 1 1: .xt :VR . F - V:,, n Un I 4, X., N3 Lucrle Pedersgh 'I Florence Pette on ' rnebvale X Gene Resos U Q Pdtty Romsey ' f ff Rowan HudsdnS?tdler K, Ken Sagehorn-, . Ralph Schau fff':1 Gretchen Schneebefger Rachel Schultz Jean Schwenk Kyle Shaw Hal Shorrock Noah Showalter Evelyn Sideen Malcolm Smook Bob Snyder Erroldine Snyder Alice Sorensen Virginia Starne Marion Stephens Dorothy Stevenson Josephine Stevenson Mary Jane Stobie lris Stuck Margurite Sullivan Elizabeth Sward Bob Thompson Dorothy Thompson Leonard Thormod Bob Thorson Kathryn Thurlow Bonnie Jean Trimble Virginia Viggers Marigrace Waite Donna Waller Helen White - Bob Wilkinson Jane Williams Gregg Wilson Lois Wolin Ada Woodhouse Shirley Zoffel Dorothy Pettit AN-4 E 3 David' Potter 'fl I Ll GUISTS ERGE I TU I TER ATIU A Cecil Clark I , , Vg ' xx, i SPANISH CLUB . . . Front: Herburn Anderson, jenny Baker, ,lim Balzer, Eileen Bannon, Rosemary Bannon, Don . 'X is l v Beckwith, Edith Bell, Ralph Bene iel, Arva Bennett, Harold Berven. Middle: Betty Bolin, Bob Boorman Lenita Brady, ' ' . Max Cannon, Eleanor Carpenter, Allen Chamberlain, Many Christ, Marion Clark Willa Couch, 'llheresa Crosb . ,QL Back: Kay Daugherty, john Dinnetz Margaret Drummond, E Ewing, jack Fancher, Barbara Hagquist, Dorothy Han, if Agnes Halset, Bernice Harris, Kathleen Harrison. i E W .ar ,QQ Y vwll' l-VV 11 lid 'nggirf Q : ' YQQX NN. x X :fish N N 9515 Q53 ' fx -rff' J CLUB I' FRENCH CLUB . . . Front: Virginia Anderson, John Buchanan, Juanita Beck, Georgiana Brooks Ber le Burns, Ella Cam, Dons Cadley, Dorothy Cadley Vivian Ceelan. Second: Loma Clarke, Laurelie Davis Birrell' Dinnetz, Bill Erlers, George Eng e, Paul Fahey, Ruby Gain, Lydia Georges. Third: Mary Jane Jay, Emile Graf, Yvonne Haller Kathryn Johnson, Elizabeth Hamilton, Bernice Harman, lvy Hartman, Marjorie Hilker, Bob Leurquin. Back:Sigrid Johnsen, Thorleif Johnsen, Richard Hall, Elmyra June, Gilbert Kedslie, Getrude Kelly, Barbara Kessler, Ruth Kurtz. ohn Rogers Bill Kautz FRENCH CLUB . . . Front: Patricia Lohmann, Barbara Lyle, Suzanne MacNaught, Robert McAlpin, Ruth McDonald, Beth Middleton, Elaine Mousset, Gloria Shaw, Wib Morrow, Mar ie Windom. Second: Jeannette Murphy, Julanne Natolie Elizabeth Neale, Louise North, Katherine Olson, Lucia Pedersen, Virginia Viggers, Ada Woodhouse, Bernice Waugh. Third: Marilyn Quint, Norma Rinehart, Dorothy Nickolai James Rubart, Clara Ruckhaber, Gretchen Schneeberger, Elaine Scott, Joan Peters Betty Lou Wilson, Marigrace Waite. Back: Alice Sorensen, Faye St. John, Phyllis Stanmore, Vivian Steel, Walter Sltewart, Warren Stewart, Mary Jane Stobie, Carmen Sullivan, Drewann Tang- ba kan, Virginia Slate, Leon Morel. GERMAN CLUB . . . Front: Richard Anderson, Doris Jean Behymer, Mary Alice Biggs, Bob Bonilaci, do ce Bower- man, Lorraine Briggs, Bill Brooks, Beverly Buettner, Jack Burton, Winnie Ceis. Middle: Cecil Clark, obert Christ- ianson, Carl Conant, Harold Davenport, James DePartee, Jeanne DePartee, M rtle Dexter Paul Edquist, Olive Endresen. Back: Charlotte Ferrel, Richard Flickinger, James Georges, Ardis Knutdson, James Kourkoumelis, Marion Long, Georgia Lybeck Hugh MacPherson Ban-r-N ff 'few f- - f?ERW5!t'.FLU'?.- .FLOW Gsffge C9f'9C0f' Efnsf' W1!srf.E!G: '.Mi '.w!0.!'2 WF'f.,'S?i'l' HF!'P :ES'Eii LATIN CLUB . . . Front: Bob Blackstock, Beulah Blakesley, Joanne Bloomer, Shirley Boechier, Earl Boyd, Margaret Brush, Dorothy Burns, Ruthie Butler. Second: Eric Denton, Annabelle DuVall, David Fenton Virginia Feru ano, Carolyn Gaillac, Ramona Hall Shirley Hansen, Douglas Hawthorne. Third: Marion Alford Phyllis Hilborn, Don Hooks Herbert Hunting, Joe James, Cecilia Jensen, Dolores Leahey Donna Lewis, Bill Kautz, Back: Riosegrpry Condell Patricia Keck, Kathleen Kelley, Betty Keune, Dwight, Kramer, Virginia Latta, Doris Jensen, Mary Joh son, Ralph Greene. A 5 5. 1. -X ,I .. LATlN CLUB . . . Front: Madora Allin, Elizabeth Liliegreen, Donna Lewis, Jean McJannet, Jean . bqlddr, Blarley Nygren, Reva Oakes, Barbara Olsen. Middle: Doroth Pettit, Eudora Radecop Bill Rae, Betty Q. Vuhaefere, Evelyn Sideen Phyllis Spriw, Marjorie Steghens Audrey Stole F. Back: Kathryn Thurlow, Marion M odfftftlys Topp, Molly Tracy, Lois olin, Helen W ite, Boy Nelson, Thelllma Thorgensen. wif .rllffpfi . L nl: - the , xr Norma Grant Helen Patterson ALL, 1939 SPRING, 1940 james Kourkoumelis Spring President Bob Kintner Fall President Barbara jean Lyle Jean Meador john Rogers Mr. Hannaford -1 init W - ' :shi-H' M-- TUDE T CDU CIL IN A DEMOCRATIC institution there should be a legislative body, one with real representation and a fair chance for discussion. To meet our needs the Student Council was established. Problems are brought up and discussed, and the council takes action. Noise and messy halls became passe when they tackled the problem and presented their solution to the students. They are major factors in the paper drives. and coopera- tion reaches a high point for the Red Cross Fund. Yes, the Student Council is an important part of our democracy. I ::.f ' Bob whay Le a Brady WP stock nry Brandt armen Brezee Paul Campbell Walter Chase - Tina Dudler BettE Eastlund Bill 'le I U Konstantin Erenprais Aimee Faries Ken Guiles Noel Hancock Don Hansen' lvy Hartman . Betty Hayes Mary Lou Hohner Clayton Holtman Ray ltter Bob Kintner games Kourkoumelis, .ill Kuss Barbara ,lean Lyle Jean Mcjannet jean Meador whn Mills ib Morrow Patricia Nagley Gail Norton Helen Novito Bob Oschner Odd Ovesen Knute Qvale Barbara Radcliffe gohn Rogers ett Schaefer- Bill Stratton Tom Tague Lom Wakefield Connie Walker Ward Whitemarsh jane Williams Jeanette Williams li' ,.-. Ted Anderson Catherine Archibald Bob Beaumont Russell Bemis Lee Brewer Lillian Carlson Nancy Chilcote Elizabeth Conguista Betty Dixon Tina Dudler Betty Eastlund Norma Grant jake Gunderson Leonard James Mariorie johnson Dick jones Bob King Bob Kintner james Kourkoumelis Mary Anne Larsen Theresa Long ierry Luther oe Mason Harold McCann Ed Neuhaus Vernon Nilsby Odd Ovesen Helen Patterson Aim Peters atricia Peterson ?rmc:,Pickrell lm UPP Lorraine Quake Bill Ransom Betty Schaefer Marian Smith Malcolm Smook Bill Sprake Mary gone Stender Philip, uver Bob ate Helen White Ward Whitemarsh Dan Zoellner DEBATE SQUAD . . . Front: jim Rubart, Lydia Georges, Bob Bonilaci, Herbert Hunting. Middle: Arnold Nielson, George Costacos, Wib Morrow, George Robertson, Back: Marilyn Quint, Elizabeth Gillespie, Barbara lsham, Lois Wolin, Rosemary Longmire, Mrs. ansing. QUILL AND SCROLL . . . Front: Mariorie johnson, Mariorie Barr, Rosemary Longmire, Mary Lou Hohner, Margaret Wilhelm. Back: Henry Alkema, Harold Davenport, Sam Lowry, Bill Pollock, Bob Peterson. TOWN MEETlNG OF THE SCHOOL . . . Front: Henry Allcema, Bill Aller, Bud Bade, Bob Bonifaci, Elizabeth Gillespie, Kathryn McElvain, Ernest Miller, Alice Milclcleson, Arvid Peterson. Baclc: Albert Palmer, George Robertson, Faye St. john, Mr. Hays, Betty Lou Wilson, Koy Woodman, Ralph Osterman. 9.5 X 1 1. s S :iii ,ve t. E I Y-1 i ,S-gwttyqgxy E w S KI. I, 1 :ai Q Q 51 fx., S i . . L , .5 e .. sf ff .., .- ffl . .g Q AX, i . . 1 l ....v,.kgg,.,xx: i. g g 4 e r- , lt K' KYLE -- -15 f QNX? :X .. -. E Q ' Y . w:Q-?s ,.f-f'-ESQ-11. - g -A -Cy p. 5 . . .XQMXR . 5 1 . ve 1 r S SSf'f'i?X5i-R iii-'Ii X' . X .- Xe. max xi, t , .A .- .QF -xxzsriiyiixig s- w -A N N xx We-N iiiikkiixy' . TN A W xt .. W. .. . , ....X.Q...e,.e.s5?Sg ---.,i.frf . s. ,...Q,gN: be .4 xc... 'I . -- s Q- K :itz . . 5. to 1 i D eawve- K - - - ff.,-wzwrw L: .- zwwge Xl-f X.: . .s 4 A . X SX' .JIXXSR 3 534.-5535 .Qs , ' u 1.2, Xi., gf 32 '- f - 351 vXii'2i?f . 5 exif: ws- ,ae ,Q psy fn r X i2ii25f'Si1'eQQvi-Bw K .. get-e A., A .. . i J g 5 .QSNYAM is Q--iw . .. . we eq... sin- . .. 3.55. X . Q. ...KW , . ,M ., he ,N X.. .X . . .,.. Q.. -. s 5. . ,wx X x , ee... . . .. ,, ...,. W... N2 w Q - A x Q X . qw .Q .gtg 2. ,. .,,. r. W ..,. X., . ee Q y. -3 Xgsgqsvi ., S- N W.. .X . Q. , QMXN, .Weis WMM e-.X-1 1, . .ikslfv-.4-1: W fri t we . ww. . was-.:,g,N Q, :rev Q, W MAKE-UP CLUB . . . Front: Bythella Cambridge, Allen Chamberlain, Thelma Chamberlain, Marion Clark, Warren Dale, Lydia Georges, Mary Hattam, Gertrude Kelly. ' Back: Helen Patterson, Bert Roswold, Adele Smith, Miss Donaldson, Thelma Thorgerson, Betty Lou Wilson, Lois Wolin. TICKET SQUAD . . . Front: Bill -Aller Dorothy Stevenson, Vesper Dorr, Norma Weed, Faye St. john, Winston Shattuck, Badk: Ted Baker, Tom Christie, Bill Clonant, Jack Hook, Glenn Hunsinger, George johnson ,Ray Moore. FIRE BRIGADE . . . Front: Henry Alkema, Bill Aller, Ted Anderson, Ken Cadle, Cecil Clark, George Costacos, Harold Davenport, Ed Ewing. Middle: john Heib, Gertrude Kelly, Shirley Mason, Mr. Kaye, john Mills, Elwood Pelton, George Robertson. Back: james Lockett, vlan Scott, Clifford Shearer, Pat Sheets, Edwin Simonds, Martha Ann Sweazey, Tatsumi Tada, jim Watkinson, Charlene etterauer. V QM w wi Hoff of ffm W Qif i , ' ffm,4l'f'M df' fy L' lf mwfwif W ffl V 5f,fWgMfMD'f ' MRM M Mfwwwi 6 W WW m'gWgW?M9ff'i TWw H,Wfyfw WW YVWQMQQ 2 6 ff, 1 V WE 2.5!W2fWA7f+Q5w Mgf MW 9 V, ui 14- 1,- ,V - - ,-1 : ., X g . Y. J Fifi- VL. . '. ' - . ' -., J. :yu ,A .. 'A V - - A . ' Q i 1 QV - piggy 4 .A K. - 3'-fl' 'j ,, 1 . ' . , A ,, V ., , , . . Y - 1- , ,j V . .5 x ' ,:..1:f:1:i-,- '.f:,1',- Z- .1 . '. 3 glln 4 iq. If ,, , K J ,Q- .-iqif' im: ! ' 2: ' Z f' Aff? Q A KL- ,, 13- 1-Y-. ,., . 1 1-' -f l' ' 7' , h +V , - 3: Y-I.-Q3 ' A -' - kk 1 F ' A ' : ' - A' ' T' I Z' 1 L ' U '- I Y ' +A' 'i' ' ' ' F' 'wl'- ' - -X ' 'J 5535 fa 1-F4 VUXCES N THHB HAPPY E AGES X ADNIINKST RATION fFACULTY f IUNIORS f SOPHOMORES f FR HMEN scum '1 T' 3 1 Ml ,gig-' 4 1 The determined effort each of us can make to place West Seattle in the front rank of high schools throughout the country is the finest service we can con- tribute. Consideration for the welfare of others, understanding of com- munity problems, ability, leader- ship, skill, independence and individuality may reasonably mark us all as worthy members of this institution. A. LYLE KAYE, Vice-Principal. T0 become a competent person socially is abasis for all morality, because morality itself is a social problem. Such competence sup- plies the ability to get along with other people in school activities and in school service. Lack of this social ability lies behind nearly all human failures, whole possession and practice of it eads to nearly al successes. EDWARD L1sToN, Boys' Advisor. F CULT HOW do we serve? First, in our thinking, seeing and understand- ing all things which are for the common good. Second, in our loyalty, desiring to assist in build- ing a greater school. And third, in our actions, accepting the responsi- bilities, working constantly and unselfishly in the cause of democ- racy. Why do we serve? Because in our veins runs the blood of an- cestors who spent their lives in creating and in defending the ideals of democratic government. Because in our hearts we know that tomorrow we must serve our country well if it shall prosper. REED FULTON, Principal THE willingness to be ready to do all ossible service. Here in your girls' Club creed is the solution of most of the problems of individuals and nations. As these words bear fruit in un- selfish thought and action, the world will become a better place for your having lived in it. MABEL CHILBERG, Girls' Advisor. N vw K 1 '1, W 'x V 44 L . H A Sli W I .l, I' IK. IQUT ITBIER Most likely to succeed-DON HANSEN Likeable lad-SAM LOWRY Likeable lass-BOBBY BUTLER Best all-around athlete-WILLIS SLINKER Student who contributed most to W. S.- ROGER LINDELL Spirit of West Seattle-JERRY LUTHER Prettiest girl-HARRIET GILLESPIE Most accomplished girl-ELAIN E WITTIG Best dancer-BOB KINTNER Best dancer-MARILYN WELLS Best looking boy-ELLIOTT BURDET T Miss Sophisticate--NANCY KRUPP Man about town-BUD SHERRITT Modern .Venus-ETHEL ANDERSON Fashion-plate boy-DAN ZOELLNER Page from Vogue-LORRAINE PETERSON Smoothest boy--GENE PLUMB Glamour girl--ANNE GANZINI Steady cou llwGLORIA WHITESEL and JACK lVllcCONKEY Modern Apollo-ED SCHWIER Peppiest boy-fl ACK HUNT Peppiest girl-CATHERINE ARCHIBALD Every year there are Seniors who contribute a lot of time, effort, and thought to their class activities. We point with pride to these unselfish workers who were chosen by a Senior class committee. Their individual pictures appear on the next few pages. SLIN RER v--fr-1-A--. i, 46 Xp R X X1 . New N MSN ,!,.. L l f i H 1. r, F Z, 5 L I E. 5 xo 49 if -.fi Ni i L , .mx ' ' I -- 'lkxxfl '15 S9 S5 , , - 3 .J ' .L X .xxx W ,x X Vt Qzi, Z ,vm jk? y, ,mx 9 PV ' X ke WW ,,.p.psf'F Aw , , lj, A Ca 1 j' 'i ' flu, :x ,L , 34,5 W ,. f , ffulffr' , , - . rs. X - I iz, 3 sigh. ' 5 ,. K' X A , K - il ' 'ffiux-S. e Q. . xg., W, WSTQQ:-xii 3 f , Y .rf ' xxx: S: - ' xx .svtgib E TED ANDE RSON was that grumpy col- lege professor of the Senior Play and th smiling se i e or of West Seattle. rs.. ee-W is N W. - . X1 X Xxx X vw-r Y F - KZ fN i rA.- ali' e ix Q XX an-A N. 'iz Sw N .r 'T .R 3iYf-ilf J Q 'rl Jrfseg- . , r. .ix-gsgw sf: 4 .. ,345 mi rgerz b egg-Xe 'il -rsfi' .ryw twirl fE'As.'ifX -'N ':i -' X-153: Jig? S. ' N. ,ny i A., r,m.ga.g1ffQ W N .,... , N X ti .M X 1 W X W 1. 4- l r W I er Q .r , r Rst sf V e e o t,.tg.:fgf,, fs ' A A L I 1 X l 'x 'W K.. X 'Elm- 1 Li . F X silk' A-'fi' x P' ,NX , V 1 X K W l Q . 1 XX-.Hx :i':31f.f,' R' . K- , - : fi ' ge lx Xb fx Q 9, FA as -, A . b kb . . E X, X- ,f , .,, ' . . fy 5 - iii - +5 m k fi ' i A A . X A S 2 l'?w-fi-ft .X X S fx AH, ,Xx,gf?g ' X SSQNLYXXK, XXX wi 'X . My ,kkxx yXX3ei1 3Xlf' . X kfikx .X . x N i .1 X X . .. J XFN giinqi '1. M ,Ybnnmb Y XXX. X X Y XXX ES 3+ E x' X X EXNXX .SEN X 1 Qi k I . ' Q ' ' its X :f1S3.5-5395:-WX H 'S vb .gXqNsT.XXX1Qwi:.s x XX 0 ,. X ' X. , X X.X.-A QXA5 X X Q . . - X X fv?W??fX E X QQQNTTQ X SS? X XXX XXXX X- 'A Yx X ,Q '. - his N X ,. ..L.: ...A - XX X .- X 5 .,,'.w'f X X Sgfxs XX X X X QXSX XX XR X xi XXX X XXX X X X X NX X XX XXX X X XQXX X xXx XXX XX XXX Na X X NX- R 'K XXXQNXNX X gk - X xii M X XXX X.. X vxm ' X .Ms XX x I .-lw xfsxilf X in , X NN W . .Wa 'in ' ,gk XX X X ,Ai-agikXs,QX:6S'W' ' X, ' . RQP BOB Gelman u n Pxes- I S Q5 ADE E N D R E - SEN added a lot of oomph ' to the Little Theatre and the Senior Play. LLE XX Q X X XX X X XX X X XX Q X x XX Q N NW X X 5 XXX , XX X 3 x XXXX x QQXXX X Q Q 4 XX X X XX , X Q XXX X X X gf X XXX SX 3 N Y S XX XX RN X 1 X XS X QXX X X X X 3X XXX X X XX XX XX N1 X X N X HX 'X X5 XX 'X Q X X XX XX X A X XX X X X X Y X X X X X XX 'fi , X in X XXXI XESXX X U X N XX X Mix Xxx 5 XX XX Ld Q QX XY N ,N Ngx X, .:: A M RN 3X 1 .. RET Xw X X X 'Q , XX S ,. , X. x'2fjfSX. -C Fei: . Qii N X AX 2. :isps 3 zialkgix eff: X glwqs N a -1 X X 1 wr: N SQXQFX IX 53.23 X .- E X X XX XX x EXXX: X N -3511 20 1 :XX ., Xt I x gfs-Tisb X ' X W - XXXTTEX-l iiilii ' XXsiGgl..xSg4iii X 'X X XQ , k I' X X -363. -x:.3f?XQQX?5q?X X- X N XXXX XXX xv Xxx- '-ay 1XX::.X .X -XQX X my XX- fs.-X'-X ., X .SRXRSQXXXXXX Ng. XX:X.,X5:1.qsQ ,gi XX we-X :XXX X K X X XX iffiix X XX X' Y A' ,. ,,Z:,f5Nf ,X ' 130.15 me 47 N9 Mgt . l1Iere's another blush- ing KINTNER5'1 B B-known in local mrcles as Doc. ' A lub Gab N 0x,,,..,v. f0'l milf' ,- X L A X X X X X-. Sw ,, Xjgff.XzX Q Y X Y -XXX f X52 N' 5 1 X sq ,gy 2 lb fx S X1PfLg.-g,-X l' 3 . 'if-X --sf X 'ef . X . Y KX 1 3:-X3 Xgairxx 0 .mx X. XXQ . ,RL 2 il X XX .N 'U X X X x X A Q ,X Y ,, . ,K X -'Q wid' .X xxx , X www W4 l ' ' .X ir. V, 'uv I A 1 .,,,.,X'Yqv.wK5-E 5 .. . X' -X S XX X ' X W KQV N xg' Q X X -N :N - ..,- X xX Q iw X XXX X R K X X QQR 3 Q S X XX X XX X 'wg Y S Q XXXX XXX 6 X X fx X SQ XE X' X, ' 'XX .. ,--- . 'f- X XX .Rf W X '51-'1 5' ' , .... , 'X X X Q.X:W, XXX N , X XQX X 1 X X r X X Xxx' X N Xb X X is X XX X X ig WN N XX X R X 5 X lx X X X ax x Nxxkx X Q X , X X X X X if XX Xgl SN X X X XXX XX XXX Wm ,X NN X NX X X 2 Sew A f 4- W X rs V 1' - XX Xw Y- XX tx- X ws' QN X I as S X Nlivg I' W sr S ' K ' XX . Fi' 3 X 1 XX. if - X X W- XX , i XLXXXXX MSX X fm-ff XX X' XX, ' l Y, gms -. ixfxq. K Vxfkfs:-1-JA X .N -XX: WXXS1 iff ' XS-IX W N X J 9 X , X S' X WEN Q K 5 FQ ..,,.. f :CNN H - A ..,, ,X . :gXQ.X-- X Q X, , .,, S . BX qktzsi' ,-xg. X X 13 A Nl .X X , QXL, .X 5 1 vs X u X .. . 'g 'X ...,-fmxgh 'q:4 f??-gWlW'X Y! 4, ,..- A vw ' Sl , L. :gi AXX, gy ' ' Z 4 ' N S X X 'k'-' H 'X A ,. Wwffim l sv' : ' - l will . . .- N E. XXX X NS 5 Q .1.. K . X ,L 2 W llll X 'Q ., X X 9? A ,,,,,f i W sf ': iffy X fs W N g igs ' Qxg xx XB X X X X A xx was 9 X X X 'ww XQ O X X E xi 5 2 3 X X by x 9 Q Sw X XX QKXQX H Xw we M I X. X K X x xk ' X XX ' mmf NE I Xxx ' .XX O Q X X, N ,, X S X sv, 3 Q is . N: + f X D X X f' If NX X X N X ,XXX . NX. Mm. -.X E5 My '-.XV X N s X-- XXXX. A ,X MYRTLE JACOBS is that shy senior who has been chopping down the m1ghty Oakes. X X X5 Nggmmg qv! Quin- K QNWVX o ! MYRTA JOHNSON is a shy gal who was partly res onsible for those hristmas decorations. 9,6 G,- , my A s ff 31: ososfs is -., 'JB o s X X Q94 1 is VN N x kiiw X F , W f Q me X ' s s Q Z T T' ,QST1 V' J f L Q1 A J sg 15 if 53 f . ,.-. V 2' J' :,,LG-A ,,,. -K HRX .3 S . ' s N., f ,- Nga --gf S' X sf . AMX .5 - 1 l PM r Msg X il . 5 K 5 ' Figs W M V J! f sv' ev , S X V V 4' ex + F if F N 1 SS 6 ffl' X .S S .. Ip Nr . Q ' Q' . HENRY que! ONXX P- HEL6 Ps - in? Connex ow X Pwnc. RU Yo dw Pow Wow, Yi CMM HENURUN NP-Rx N Sami own X b M 0:69 Bon Guk Cxllb Chtm ' Gab Gum PsuuuXx Bids Swv ev-, N RFU D 3 :gg 5 f V 1, ,. xi, vi 25, 9 Q .QC I Ox xx My S 9 X f r X A WX X Q, X , NX 5 ' Q XX Q X X X s Q S? EN X N 2 as A -' x , X Sig 1 N2 W .S 1 iw K , f ,A E I if 'uf .f RQ QP f 41 5, s ' +V? 1 f Q if CJ xv X sn 5 Q f Q 4' 5 fxiqx '5' X i S is .,,,, I., X if I A x ' 1 A X .X X Nagy RN. A T C 'NLM Chino R Xi. XML PR XOR Club A-sk Wom ouch, wow M Y xench wah VYN UAS T Q T o Moyox WXLLX PNK VIOLNSPKN ' ' Club Ot V ow 'Sponxsh chemo , ok qw 41 ACK G E N QQ E sm P-L 3,?,'13th.J'3v,9 STEP' - 9 n 1: 0 ooth seniogglogetggf - a XYZ Fi Qi w -' H P5 f f ,Nik . NR . 5'mlQ,X -. - gg - X., 'A Q A - - K 1, -I :sig-bg ix fli ey 2,24 . . -' . -1' jg J Q . - f X V. X ,, FN , . f ies! .1153 m Q , ... . SA . N x Xxx! msgs SX XXXX x QNSN -is S' 1 , , H xwsw CSX? ' wggxwgm X. :M X PKK.. ' NCD? V-epxesenxoixve NSS sfzkds' CNY: Q-lk nb HU M?-L Club PNBEL Moth. 'n Usb Bog! as and F nth Uoncs N'- Yuma ,Zia ENXQXR N9 ' 7' I1 s 1' 4 . . .... yep he . X .. YQ. MX- Q ,, X XV 'Begg QNX KX 'XTX X X SAY 5, , X . . , X: X. fktqkgfgg .. . 1 r- 5.5 N X K E w Xb X YS K X1 X X 'N N-X S W X N XX, X . Xe. , X, 1 ' X S xx Q E X S NN X Xgxx X s SXXX 1 X X X X X v X X k X XX 2 pkg Q Y X N X X L, x 5 . . Alfa.. X .L X il X Sf? S o WXQS X ,Xl X -as - f.-Zggfi-ff. ffg'1fX.1ff so 4 ' A sets-far:-M .NX Xue-.X , X -S Q-1 ' fir! is ' , 52 A 4 X. C Qi if X . M 3,3113 X' :S-- 5 - Yi-x3f :X . :Nm-2. M., ,. ..,XX. . X Yiizf ,ups K 1 of .Q . . . 2211 . . -. Q. wh .- K ' eww ' -I Xl QFXXX SMX, ew ew K .X 2 1.- 41, .3z.s:y- fs w NN JACK HUNT is wks! F ,- talkative and popular. Ymat- who is responsible or the good speakers xi g at the Thursday Mom ' ing Club meetings. XX N XQ . 1 v iii: . o f f? 'N':'rfe:.f.X1XX ' XC1. 2 x Y .s jg .X.X, GF 1 s sf X, l R W ,. Qi Wow Waxman Vans. Sun VXNCY: You W Q LO?-TW. vo Ge Vow W w NVQ!! D H105 Gob 9-ep Omksewa, eshys eo nd, P ubXKcAw 0K0 Quia L ONG has b t e0n 0 the 1. rlettes lft Lum Y-fKocUON ALO V PNLONWPH MPAA PNN NNPRG P35 MPAAONEY Cx Wo Opem Bus. Mgr. . Ubrow Sunken Rep., Sanken Rep. XOICB C.Qmm.Qx1m.,Y',i. P-.Tea VoXXeqbaXX . 1-NNW Q WLENE M ATTXLPQ BPNFBPNV-Fw Bench RUTH MP3 AYTWX Ydmtoh, Lime Theous NP Tosck Xxx-X MR M Ml Toads W ow . GRE ENG? 53 W9 1 7 K f 1 A N.'.kbbxi. .Lf - - ,. :Q ,, , svn Qi n ' g Y as X W s, , pf ,kg E 5 f 1 I BOB HALLBERG is one ofhthe strong men of the Chinook staff- We mean his column . W' ' x W sss HN 14' is 5 Z I ,SW N b X X Rh X v XS N Q x S HS x X X X N X X xx F' lx X Q KN 'Eff '-MXN Jgk - Kit-fl , 'M E 'V , .K fm x Nil 'Y x .. , X .' -. x is ram, x 7 x L Y JAH U :H xx X iv X ei' K X X S X Q xii XX gx XL X s Xi if X XX X Ms E 2 X25 xx xx X vs X if xx X X X0 X 130 Kg X ws N X , Aid! A XG 4 y 'K X X w J N W X xx Y I XX Xi 1 fi S N , , X R L 'X XM 1 QS X K X fi P ,yy v K YQQASX X 5 X x 1 ,. Q N 25 f Xi wx X Q xx X X Xxx X SQ X vb ' w 13 Q 2 , 4 f V if. fv ,gs -.1 , -ix, v p 4 P: IRIS OLSON the efliciency exper r ts enthusiast smile. XS SY fs if ,x'f5S QYQ ff -Q Na ik QX--: SNS X 55A A i L Lawn GLORI AWHIT - ESEL, wh ' ose smile has sunk the boats that Jack built, and has given her the nick ples. name- Dim- ,- , yt, ow k . f' .ff wi: ' i f - 0 . :. i f . i . 'N Q - .P Q , . A A S ' K ', ,Sf A ' xiii ' S TS . iff' X K Q 1 5 :Q-Swewv 'Hg ,-F ,F - - x L - .- , -M x if ' 5 'Q - 9 X- C . 1 1 - Q: x 1 . X X 2 -v-1' Q Q, f y ' Q.. - Sw x S .551 -f. N X 1 ST? ,fi iff :ST ' Ns Q- fri-Q Q- 5 xiii fa-,Sfxigx1 NS V- ,.-11.7. xx - . A ' Alltfgqs' g ' - :re .wimiyf 9 -new--f . . Wg' 1.-P ? :U 51 -- 5 Q , x Gia R fi , x . 3:55 wg jg. ,X M 5 3 X 1 'fsxfkf XX - .. 1 ff W ,w - gy ffsikwwiki Q gzsiwfffhii ...sg 1? Ekspwfg L X Q k j . K R-,R . - if x 'ie u. i I 44 xx X X X ,o -Q ,N M' X-.X vi xi3:Q 'X ' 1 - -- l-,A:.xN.,,-.-- - Q . ii au- . A o I Sud fl N :essex , X 5 QQ Six .P ' N. W ' 'Q A '55 . ' 4 X' l i i - - A if .f kV' 9 i fv ga ,jg L, ,I , Q, W HW, E3 ik CLAYTON HOLT- MAN'S dancing at- tempts have him bouncing around with the greatest of ease, but cheer up, Clayt, we all love you. we dub xvhw' pi HW XL?-ON vi V' pw' KNEE-QHSSYSQ 'xqyt 1 Gxee C g.:agfwz,vsff,aiaz A 'KINS-is the school veteran yeller of the I .Y Q ga RM QBNKUW5 N XGY55 QBYHS WJBSH CQCM Eari Bova Gene R aYmona Bwden Y Eiiioii E Hai Sho' Nond Hancock COUNSELORS Frosh, Herlin Slocomb Soph, Edna Babcock junior, Warren Mackey Senior, Stanley Kimball ob Be ckmon nm JR. Crook BeiW Sean own iednne B V. Moc-onkey C ja SPONSORS Senior, Raymunci Rowe gunilor, Warren Mackey 9 1 Riarcia Magillicuddy Frosh, Elmer Anderson Yi Y, E Bob ioimston Biofime' S ' E A 3 Qqnne Eta Secunia 59 1 Henry Allcema, Douglas Allan Audrey Anderson, Bettie Anderson Bob Anderson 2 Donald Anderson, Lois Anderson Richard Anderson, Verna Mae Androlf Barbara Aniclcer 3 Bernice Arp, Marie Atkinson Kaul Auditt, Eerald Balrer H awrence as e 4 Sarah Beasley Richard Bechtold Fred Beclcey, boris Jean Behymer Edith Bell 5 Roberta Belleman Shirley Berg Barbara Biorseth, Ruth Black William Blaine 6 Beulah Blakesley, jean Blomquist Shirley Boechier, Virginia Boling Lawrence Bonholzer 7 gean, Bonnilield, Russell Boyle red Boysen, Lenita Brady Richard Briggs 8 Georgiana Brooks, Betty Broughton Aeanne Brown, Margaret Brush ' uth Bruty 9 Glenn Buchanan, Charlotte Buckner Robert Burke, Beryle Burns Harvard Burns 10 Robert Burton, Phil Butler Virginia Buxel, Gordon Byers Doris Cadley Outstandin and up- standing is tai HENRY ALKEMA, leading fire chief and columnist. lu lon Dorothy Cadley, Ella Cain Mario Campagnaro, jack Capell john Carey Eleanor Carpenter, john Carroll Vivian Ceelan, Allen Chamberlain jack Churchill Carl Conant, Betty Cook Gloria Cornish, George Costacos Willa Couch Ralph Coxon, Ruth Crai Warren Dale, Helen Daiy Ruth Daly Burt Davis, Laurelie Davis Mary Dean, Gloria DeCamp tonne DePaltee yrtle Dexter, Bob Dickson Walter Dieter, Doris Doggett Lorraine Donaldson Annabelle DuVall, Paul Ed uistf Olive Endresen, George Engcle Ethel Estby Merle Eyclc, Mildred Fearno Alice Felton, Willard Fenton Bill Fetterly Ben Fiedler, Ph llis Fisher Gladlys Flack, Kichard Flickinger Ray orza Clinton Franlcenlield Suzanne French Bill Gaston, games Georges Charlesette ilbert tive. CL ,SS ,O Add to the list of Willing Workers FAY E S T. J O H N efficient and coopera C5 1 Elizabeth Gillespie, Lorraine Glick Emilie Graf, Virginia Granger 1 Ruie Gray 2 Anita Green Raynette Greenwood Jacqueline Haas, Hal Habenicht Phyllis Hadley 3 Helen Hale Mary Louise Hale Rufh Hale, kamonq Hall Gail Halliday 4 Elizabeth Hamilton, Irene Hamme I Viola Hansen, Betty Harding 2 Leon Harman 5 Bernice Harris, Howard Hartsfield Jim Hawkins, Beryl Hayes Vernon Hayes 6 Belva Haynie, Marcene Heimbigner Betty Helem, Gordon Helem Dick Hilber 'I James Hiltenbrand, Mary Lou Hohner Katherine Holliday, Donald Hooks 3 Betty Hough 8 Donald Hrachovina, Jane Hubbard Unice Hubbard, Betty Hudson R' h d H o rc ar ug 9 Lillian Hull, Viola Hunsinger Colleen Irvine, Beverly Isaacson Barbara Isham 10 Jerrie Jennings, Doris Jensen Sigrid Johnsen, Thorleif Johnsen Carl Johnson 4 I ? 6 gticriikewi ites 'I 8 DORIS JEAN BEHY- MER was the leader of the Cheeriettes-a definite lift to this 9 year's ball games. . 5 .ftwss we N IU IDR Charles Johnson, Eleanor johnson Kathryn johnson, Marjorie johnson Mary jean johnson Robert johnson, Warren johnson Elizabeth Johnston, Dick jones Lucile jones Peggy Kain, Gertrude Kelly Betty Kemp, jack Kimble Ralrh King ,lac Kinzel, Adele Klein Klemmet Klemmetson, Adele Knapp Marjorie Knapp Garth Knott, Ardis Knudtson James Kourkoumelis, Georgia Kowing Dwight Kramer Ruth Kurtz, Eugene Lamb Allan Landstrom, Joyce Larson Virginia Latta Forrester Lawrence, Rene LeVitre Elizabeth Liljegreen, Aileen Lobb wmes Loclcett alter Loring, june Lowe Mary jan-e Luke, Cora McConaghie Raleigh McKinstry Suzanne MacNaught, Alastair MacRae Charles Mahon, Sheila March Shirley Mason Alice Mertes, Alice Mikkelson Evelyn Miller, Gloria Miller Miriam Miller Tbwurvllfff ARVID PETERSON can take bows for the Mother-Son Banquet, and was also responsi- ble for two successful Junior Dances. I-I Y C 5 1 2 3 10 4 X l l I . 1 I 7 I 5 l I . 'I if ' l ., . If!! x ,ii ffl J 'x ,J 1 l v 5 I 57 ,, 5 17 ' is i: !lJ f ,J , gglfdudf , f' Q ,ff .fffuy l 7 8 BOB J. SMITH is another of the Smith boys, an unusual one though, in his leader- 9 ship as a Warrior and a manager. 10 W William Minkler, Roberta Moore Bill Minser, Lois Mitchell Lottie Monaghan Hope Morris, Wib Morrow Lois Morton, Mae Mugler Betty Anne Murphy Warren Murray, Mary Nagasawa lxitricia Nqagley, lris Nelson orman e son Ronald Nelson, William Nicholson Arnold Nielsen, George Nilson Doris Nuyens lrma Oberto, Walter Ochsner Wanda O , lvadell Oliver Adelene Sion Fred Osterhout, Odd Oveson Anne Palmer, Coburn Palmer Eileen Pashea Patsy Patrick, Patricia Patterson john Payne, Margie Perry Joan Peters Arvid Peterson, Edna Phillips Mary Picinich Shirley Pitman Patricia Pittaclc Bill Pollock, Gloria Poole jim Popp Virginia Quarles Marilyn int Eudora d co , Francis Randolph Mir' Rasiyihn, Eugene Raymond M if B Reed 5 V f .I xr, 1 Hifi ,W nf J . V. ,I . if if IU IDR J ,J I fi Helen Richardson, jerry Robbins George Roberts, Bonnie Rogers Glenn Rogge Bob Sanis o, Juanita Sartin Betty Schaefer, Ralph Scherf Alice Schmidt Edwin Schmidt Minnie Schneider Elaine Scott, Herbert Scott ,lean Scott Barbara Shadel, Gertrude Sherlock Donald Shields, Dorothy Sievelt Edwin Simonds Paul Skoglund Virginia Slate Robert Smith, Raymond Soelter Alezena Spanier Phyllis Spring, Eleanor Statham Vivian Steele, Mary jane Stender Dorothy Stevenson Marjorie Stewart Walter Stewart Warren Stewart, liaye St. john Betty Stratton Howard Strum, Phili Suver Audrey Sweazey, Cllyde Sweeney Kaii Tada Tom Tague, Drewann Tangbakkan Howard Thacher, Bill Thorniley Dorothy Thurlow Cleone Tobin, Edward Totten Evelyn Tracy, David Truesdell Anna Mae Ufer Mf 1 2 3 WY? 4 1 7 8 In countin off the but- tons on ETJIZABETH HAM ILTON'Ssweater it goes like this: Rich mari, oor man, b man, gfing. eggar 9 10 1 I I N Q 'j X MX ffsf ' fc, r. 3. fl! 7- to -, ' rf. Q 1:5 1 xx O X x is X X is M X 4 s xg X Qvfg X RX it X Y X X i V N 1 ltalia Umbinetti, Zenon Valin, Bill Varns, Herbert Voigt, Charles Webb, Mary Webb, Maxine Wedekind 2 Norma Weed, Florence Wells, Vera Weyrick, Ward Whitemarsh, Bill Wilcox, Mary Eva Wilcox Virginia Wilkinson 3 Bonny Williams, Melville Wilson, Warren Wilson, Roliert Windler, Patsy Wiswell, Jack Wright, Billie joy Zerr UPHU UH Front: Colleen Adams, Marian Alford, Bill Aller, Madora Allin, jack Anderson, Henry Anderson, Virginia Anderson, joe Babich, Albert Bajocich. Back: jenny Baker, jim Balzer, Bob Barnhart, Barbara Baxley, Juanita Beck, Bill Beck, Bruce Beekly, Ralph Benefiel. Front: Don Beckwith, Arva Bennett, Dorothy Benson, Don Berg, Gloria Berry, Harold Berven, Clarice Best, Hazel Bierbrouer, Elise Bigelow. Back: Bob Blackstock, Joanne Bloomer, Barbara Boe, Bob Boormon, Eileen Boriesson, Kathleen Borlund, ,lack Bostick. X x xQXx N X X xXx-xx wx X XX X X.X k N X X X OX X V NX M55 NQQXXXX XSQQX x QWQQx wqwwwgi? X. M, XSSXW X' 1 W X XXWX X 'X - A ,K-X XXX-X-XX-Qi. A Q., .X XXXXXXXXX.--, X. XX-XX . X. X A ..f :gffff X Q X. X., 'Kk- 5l9i.:4 N5gi-x5'ffPQ 595LiffTilNwislkfixifffiifxi Q X FNQ X X X ttf i 'X - ,H aj 1 Y ,EZ 1 X ' , X Q. f X .. .. 1:- -X-XXX.. ? k ,,L. ' .XXff'5 .X:' ,584 NYLNXIXSV N Y X 'S' X X f' ' W' V :.:XX.,.Q:fXQ'Z:Q ' '-' ,-Y - X , X .-,. X X X WX Xxx N53 A N X . . Xyxx . xXx X xXx W xX xv -- V X13 Q2 f.. --'Scif X V Yzvil :X 'FP W-QYQXY mi .... 'X - SF? .-X vvsixxxfffif-s . Y' .NQNNQ - - X - x 7? .. X V ' ' Q 9 X . ,, - X , f . -NNN XX -X X vi: X , -:.-.:-nf, . -- X. X V .Xxfsf X...a.X1,,:, ,, ,, X . Y, v . X -- '1 ' X v X '- Q X ' -. X '- -, X W X X SQ -'fbffz f-2: 5 - XR? - ig 55 N , .X - -X , MQ X ' I .. x , . NX x X I QXXQQJ . N X X ,,,,. 1 as ' Q9 , X. X 1-S ' ..N. - - 'Qi' w -' - ' - X X X x Q , t X Q .:, X X ' Qian . X S SP , X K X vp? X . 32. vmisvwwweg , ii, K ,fx ig. Q :wr :X ,XX 53 X ., X ' 'N . . - A- L+ X fm Q X XS ' W: -4: ,NN Q :2:a:QfQ1fX2f .N V X , Q xi A X Q - XX . S' . I E . fb 295, . Q, X 3 'za , . A ...,fX, x X xx X B ,. K, 2 ly: Q EQ X N X in , . X X -2:5Xt,,iL,,, 4 ..., ..,., . X X m . SX 1- X Xi X-X NX RQ R X is X' NW X 55 - ix fi? X, EX - WX N Nl fi '3sfXW'l.f '9g 'S QQQQQ -wwf, X' sv 'Rfk' 5 A x Q is S. RS -5 WS' . 'rg- A 9 X Q X gg - X , 2:53. ' 'ff K X 5- , X X X Aww H Front: Cleo Fogg Don Forrest, George Fosberg, Stan Foyston, Julie Frazier, Kenneth Freeberg, Pat French, Jacqueline Friedman, Carmella Fritz, Eleanor Fuller. Back: Carolyn Gaillac, Ruby Gain, Mary Galster, Christina George, Jack Georgetti, Victor Gibbons, Denise Gilmore. Front: Eugene Goff Gloria Goodlriend, Maxine Green, Visco Grgich, Harrison Grove, Nancy Guthrie, Arnold Hagen, Dorothea l'lahn, Dorothy Hall, Jimmie Hall. Back: Dick Hall, Louise Haller, Bob Hammond, Walter Handford, Betty Hanson, Bernice Harman,Gordon Harthorn, Kathleen Harrison, lvy Hartman. Front: Van Ness Harris, Mary Hasten, Douglas Hawthorne, John Heib, Louise Heib, Bernard Henry, Warren Hewett, Carolyn Hewitt, Jim Hewitt, Earl Heyer. A Back: Lawrence Hoffman, Harold Hominda, Betty Howard, Tom Howard, Donald Howat, Joe Hourie, Ray Hudson. Front: Jim Humrhrey, Herbert Huntting, Bob Jacobson, Joe James, Lowell James, Mary Jane Jay, Audrey Jensen, David Jessup, E eanor Johnson. ' Back: Gladys Johnson, Bob Joscelyn, Elmyra June, Jim Kaye, Gerald Kedslie, Patricia Keck, Kathleen Kelly, Arthur err. Front: Vic. Kaloper, Patricia Karrasch, Barbara Kessler, Betty Keune, Juneve Key, Herbert Kimsey, Barrie King, Dick King, Betty Kingston, Seth Knapp. Back: Wilbur Knollmeyer, Eugene Knudson, Lottie Knutkowski, Mary Lou Kowing, Ethel Krupp, Bill Kuss, Eddie LaFave, Gloria LaFray, Leslie Lanksbury. m-wear:--We fe-m....g, -- V , , ...,,.,...M.....M..M-r--K-mmnmnua-as n-V V V :--Mmfwwmmnmmanmwsw-s----- -s-.M....- -ms-uf' ' -' - W x N mu. F ,.:,. -,f x X a-, was'- . Si Q N is , , X .,.,. aw? Q, X K: .. QX X A , N X R r, - E-s A-S Y X . X is. , vf..., 1 K - X I if 4 x A f x ,..1w f?Xi'4 X . - Q Q X X Q Q 'S Q ' X 3 Y . ,,sw'f+?R?s,gx :vis ' 5 3 u N X .wggsgg ' S Q. Zn, S z ' X :-: Si A ik S R wl- Q +..X s N m Fix X 75' NAS I N my S NX 5 A ' 55- . XX A, N N M X XS 5 I :I-:- 5 x v Q 5 mmf wsmgjg ff.e:.iH A Sifstt lv , . X 3 gm fbi .K x S N X-1 A - fi' N 3 .',,,... 3 . an -1 , X -x:,,.,:,,,.--,-': E , 5 Q 4, q,,::,, Sw A 9 s Exv ' .,.:, Q 2 1' we X we x Qi, ..... ' N . .. :..,. A J., X .N.. xx, gg Q Q, . . .I .. , .., , . ,Eur T2 X X f wk Q X as M X X Q X is X we N N ..-: v ,,,A . Q ., W, .. , .IL .,.., :Q-f. s-vlff ' . f:.z,s X .. 2 SF QQ ? Q , N w X .X ..., Q ., as N- 5' 'V ix Q Q QS X xx X x vfx -- x y- :5. 'Xfi5::'1 .. wx X X X ., .i xxx XNN R vw X f hx X 'SN-FX I 5 ' XX 535355 Q X Xi gy wmvwvwwu wwmwm-N. .wmv-mm l Front: Patt Romsey, Al Root, Vivian Roper, Doris Rorvilc, Bill Rose, Martha jean Rowan, Marjorie Rowland, Wilson Rutter, Karl' Schallca. Back: Ralph Schau, Lucille Schey, Arthur Schiller, Gretchen Schneeberger, Rachel Schultz, Emily Schwenk, Gloria Scott, LeRoy Scott, Bonnie Servis. Front: Al Selfridge, jack Shaughnessy, Don Sherman, Hal Shorrock, Evelyn Sideen, Glenn Simon, Barbara jean Simpson, Dolly Smith, Larry Smith. Back: Malcom Smook, Exrroldine Snyder, Bob Snyder, Emily Sobich, Que Vene Salloway, Alice Sorensen, Bob Front: Gwendolyn Stallard Frances Stanclift, Phgllis Stanmore, Marion Stephens, Marjorie Stephens, Dorothy Stevenson, Dwight Stevens, Gladys Stoaves, Ralph tewart. Back: Vella Stover, Patricia Somerville Bob Stratton, Annabelle Strom, lristStuck, Betty Stumpf, Morgurite Sullivan, Julia Supplee, Elizabeth Sward, Ralph Tallquist. Front: Carol Starr, Tatsumi Tada, Bob Tate, Barbara Tatham, Norman Taylor, Shirley Taylor, Robert Tench, Margaret Thomas, Bob Thorson. Back: Bill Tilley, Bill Titus, john Toellner, Raymond Tracey, Ed Tracy, Molly Tracy, Bonnie jean Trimble, Roy Tutt, john Vornbroclc. Front: Fred Vinton, Bill Waite George Waite, Marigrace Waite, Connie Walker, Donna Waller, Betty Lou Walmsley, Alice Warner, Bill Warner, Vlirginia Watson. Back: Lorraine Watson, Don Wayland, Lois Webb, Robert Weglin, Wendell West, Helen White, Bill Whitesel, Eleanor Weetzel, Gregg Wilson. M y W A- M--N -----st -e--w-new fi 'X in Nw-1-ww se-fs-we: - Maya :W 1.1.11 ev-'W -M Front: lrene Wllson Sally Wilson, jane Wrlllams, Joyce Wllllams, Lois Wolm, Avis Willis, Ada Woodhouse George Yoder, Shirley Zoffel, Richard Zwaller. QNX QS 'iiiiiiswm l Ni Front: Dick Ames, Lillian Anderson, Marie Anderson, Carlo Andrich, Pete Arness, Albert Audette, Ted Baker, Myrtle Beall, Russell Bemis. Back: Carol Berg, Ermand Bertoldi, Clifford Blackburn, Robert Blanchard, Betty Blyth, Frances Bodic, jack Bradshaw, Charles Boyd. Front: Dorothy Big s, Joyce Bowerman, Stanley Brett, Phil Brewer, Lorraine Briggs, Annie Brockmiller, Helen Brockmiller, AgnesgBrown, Alvira Bruns, Norene Buchanan. Back: Gene Bullock, Philoma Burns, Leona Caldwell, Marjorie Cameron, Aldo Campagnaro, Nadine Cantrell, jean Carlson, Lillian Carlson, Vivian Carter. sw g.ss.s.,,em,-.---We-A -...xs.-awe - :A - A 1 - --1 --- M . i ee , FRU H 92 .1 Front: Grant Chabot, Helen Christensen, Jean Christie, May Christie, William Clancy, Dorothy Clark, Alton Clay, lda Mae Coad, Bob Cochran. Back: Betty Collins, Bill Conant, Boris Constantine, Mary Cotton, Ramona Crader, Betty Jean Crook, Royal Crooks, Mariorie Day, Annie Deeb. Front: Louis Deeb, Marion Dettmer, June Dimmel, John Dinnetz, Elaine Doble, Keith Droullard, George Dubeck Jim DuVall, Robert Ebert, Maxine Eckerson. Back: Polly Anna Edris, lna Edwards, John Elliott, Phyllis Ely, Virginia Ferulano, Patricia Filer, Rayola Fitch, Louise Fonken, Don Gagnon. Front: Phyllis Freeberg, Eugene Gallagher, Jim Galletl , Betty George, Lucille Gidskehaug, Walter Giles, Shirley Goit, Madalyn Gordon, Margaret Greeno, Margaret Griffiths. Back: Leona Grubb, Lois Gullifer, Barbara Haley, Billy Hall, Anita Hammond, Ed Hampton, Noel Hancock, Nona Hancock, Patricia Harper. Front: Gordon Haskell, Jim Hastings, Marjorie Hauskins, Margaret Hawkins, Martha Hawkins, Harley Healy, Bill Hendrix, Carl Henry, John Hettel, Charles Hoppe. Back: Wesley Hotchkiss Lloyd Hughes, Keith Hulse, Glenn Hunsinger, Lester Hunt, Paddy lrvine, Chester Johnsen, George Johnson, Arnold Johnson. J Front: Shirley Johnson Wayne Johnson, Bob Johnston, Dean Jorgensen, June Kastrup, Nadine Kenny, Pat Kennedy, Bob Kang, Richard Kanlae, Louie Kmhe. Back: Dorothy Kurtz, Carl Larsen, Lorraine Layton, Walter Litch, Bill Locke, Robert Logsdon, Jack Love, Dorothy Lucke, Jean Marie Luke. Front: Jack Makus West Matthews, Frederick Maurer, Amy McArthur, Jack McCauley, Roy McCoy, Anita McGuire, Bob McFadden. Back: Jack McFadden, Bette McLaughlin, Don Meador, Betty Moe, Laurance Nettle, Richard Neklason, Janice Nagley, Al Moyer. ini -iiwbx X- ' . . . ' wXX fx if 2- . IW- xisiixfw Ns,- , . N mjf' -X 1- K- - x ' Jigwx.-wx-'.i qw Q-5 - Rh .- Mkxfmyi ' k ' 1 X I. Q X - YP N - -4 N -f-X513 X -. . . ' PW ' ' 'f . . fl? ' X X- v A 1 - -. . ,...s:f xx X.X -X ,. .1 - Xsga - X- in V '-1-5-1.:fX. ' . gg, .- A-5 . A .X h ...::.,, .,: ....,., x N- .. . X -wq. X XX. . QXXXX, ww w-N... ,rf , X -tm., Xf A X. -. -- Nw- .g::sas5rg5Q:q' sf X Q.: - X- X A -X N- . -if-:Q ' . - sv - - ...,,. wx X ,... qv .X 'gf X xi - S.:-'fi - K IFEX-2E:?'5'E' - Nr N Q52 X Xi X X s-1Xb.. -bg 'Q-:: -. 5-1 Q X 1- - -. + XX -a. X. x-XX X x : R XX-. YXX b x Q ' if Sq 5. X 5, X r ea-:Q X X X ws N igga, N . ,- ww-NXX XX- wig I S M x E is Ne X QXX Sf' N N wif- .W . - XS. -sm .- - X X Q. X A X - X .. f . XXQYR w. .X5 x N X.., . X... . X A Q' X N 31' w x X X w .mug-grx -xl - ' 'if N w I X x x X X v X is Q lik N X XX X . - ,. ...::.. -252. X-.Q ,K it X -AN - f Xwggimx . . ' :.: 5 X X Q X . .. in Q .. ..,. , :S ,SY ' X 3 , . :MX- Sf egg ' Vis X Q xx N: , X .::Q,.:s.,f5:' I X XXX :-A ., . X A N .QM 5 NX .- X X .. X X Sim-v? ' X w N X , xx X . -qi x X, S5 5 4 Q X Xxx . -X - X N 3- Qi 21 5 ,QQ x , mi XXSANHHX XX :A MSX XX XX QNX Nx x N X X Ax XXX- 4 QM X.. X NX x ' xx zz... --X W XX . wi X I x Q X . Im-. .:zafs:a::.:-::-:- lg:-NN fe. -X , A ' X .- ws X QX T X x .X j W 4 X X Qi A 3 QQ X QX YX x, X X X ww X - MDMWW My 4? I Www WM ff! MM N,- - ,X .' ,, --A Y ' - my AMW fffffjiii ffffwgff T Y fy i ilk ' MJ R- S ll iv I I .V fp! fs AV , 'vll i A it ,J M70 MW 'F 'ii' A f , . if ,j , il pf ' A! , if ,fi . M i! I ,V W 0 ff J Wf, l J, r 5 35,157 . 2 ,,f'Q f , ' ag ,z ff ' V ' Y fl i s ff I If XX 6 N U95 i . J, IN THE WRITING classes of West Seattle the stu- dents have been contributing material of real worth, important in their sincerity, and their up-to-the-minute interpretation of our school and the other things around us. However, little of their work ever comes to the attention of the rest of the school. We present a new idea for you, The Literary Section, which we hope will become a permanent part of the Annual. xg' X lv l , 'Il' l x , 1 ' T 'f' ' 7 T TREES NU-lllf' H D ENTINEL ll V Jl' . v bf! , , .Q , t x1F-,1'vEgL, K k .-,ul'.- LI f . , -U X ', 7 ' 1413!- 1'l 3isk j'?! V .. 1 T l li. l 7 I-LX . . x i ,VZ 1' 4,.y X i ' 4 lk ! '.?. 4, 5 ' , we , lp W in ,p .lv Al ky ,...s.QM3,fpWi By. RUTH BACHMAN ,if . l'! 63-:ig ...iz 1 drill R , Q., gf . .., I ,,. A , . n W ir X' . ' an rf p , V31 Trees marched, sentmels, upon the hill. lf! . L, :ad 4? V 1 Around me, muted echoes of the minor chords of war. - ljpil A . lf 1'Q5W-4- ' U the fill came men of trees .KV S 1 uk X. xxx r xy? I , P . .9 . 3 'xxllud' i Q Ng .1 lil T3 fa With conquering saws and oil cans on thelr belts 1 v K Xel' In I. .' I Q, 5 L-wit X Mlm. lily 9' rub ,Q To smooth the way of biting, tearing blades of hate. gl X44 'ii ' The valley's ringing with the cry of . ..,.-. in ,x X xxx ., ' ' , Jlgvgnq K 'N V , MSI 1 I QI!! If: M-if Qvrlinnberjo eecat up here.99 atlilvxgll A :Q ig ' --gh i. ,Y TY, Need the donkey engine now l Wigs: ' 4 'lx' I X X' 1 , , H ytljil ,ri , 1.5, me I Y y ca Or we ll be late. 91 W 5 'F mf' fl X lk ' ldv pref, ' .f . 1 T 1 , - MQ' 6 lx mp ly., EW WXM Q 3 9 L More than Just. some trees are gone. M ..5..w W, lpn ix! H , sul, Aix ,ll ' lgvlrjffl For each tall king, a man, a power ft ls W' limi 3 xl l, '79 M . That was here before is taken, . fxsukw' - ,R 'I U til M iiqqgylel Q lt l A gina And below me roars a river, TSX .1 Q Q it 1' Ig.-vigil -1 It 'i .T 5 A White with logs that lock on curves, Yk ll! iui L 5 U N jp -4 , :C 1 ,OA K Dead men. i- 'Q ' fl F11 wi-'ll gt' '1 t xfff' . 2 ..a,flEfS,?w AIM All K B 5 1.7 s' New power for someone else. M ,-Syl? t ' lm. '?Qsx,Ei,Ki,,7z4 Q7ig,4',Ef.n5ti4'il', T, P 5- 'WH ' 1,134 A Trees, once sentinels, into the mill 5' A1 ' '4 r ' 1 2. - 'fl' il, ,ian 1 .M ' ' i I- ' x., . p,ggllN 1 Eu ,Jigs -.V',g.'Qxty51.Lax l , Zig, Went peacefully, uncarlng, to the saw. lo . lf W' va . E I- wi wr 'wi'ta11. . . .v'. 'Y -f - , as srl 'Q' rf 1--. Q.,'i1-.Q-llklvtvll 164 T g X r- . .ij .2 3' ss,,9vg,Ug isg,:.A'-K., f:'1.lgQt:lw4'lliEi - 71,-lg ki t V, K Around me, dust, and echoes of the minor chords 'Nll.ll'3 ',li-Y. lil illfll 'll'-i--i' elif . Jil l i. of war. as 4 we wt A A T A , l ' ul 2' :A ll T if .. ' - . ' Hit, 1 4 ' l 1 X ' . I 6' .1-'Viiii-5' csJHl'3 'lwiiltlwll' my 'll in ' N xt, g QT A 1 ' -'.'.j'f1V,L,'. ,il -. A fxigv- y uit , llllf lift X' hxgpggffrf X , g a , K . . ,3 11, -J ':, .T 11' -3- 411 , ' f' ' ' M ws if xi:-iq . ...ea-in fe- 'eq I I 1 QS9lirt5fllglJ?L'F2v i '15 NFA 1-:U r Tiff 1 Tl'- wi H-' ' , A Ma' '- .N C ' .f - -pz' .. 'Pc :' .gl 5 fl L f lil' V2 it . c itffra'- 0f.f, w.Jgw5E,f wr ' -'1w i. ' Q I-,..5-22:5- ,.h' - ' J ' :U . fd fxb, '- - Ml T ww -' J.-fm -X Y' .. lv fer 'i2.fzJxQ,'-?Qiil'45RW-1:?- ft '. :lit gg ,'4gf?: J a . 'ff ' IJWATN il' Tn- IMAX' W ix'll ':?-Sift 5- 'lc:'x5'a ff 'llY'o.-v xf' 'lf l'.' il l lx t fl-W V -fa. ,.-it -'IM fs' af A . .Jl'.wr QI. ln -, .l .- . 2 , QQ-Nu A ': fi, lv-ff 711-1-. - , l G.m.uh'1' A -N yi - 5 v Qu., ,:l1q3',ifi5jl:a25,7j, Th x I fa. .wa-.-'iff -..+f.a,f1 mx f- T 'au A Q- A Wars 1 .ff-2 . fl ' 'f ' i H ' W- , ' ,Tiff 1i'gf1- ln ,Q ,un Q .4-sa. 'Rl,T' . 'U' J' Jil ':f'11ff- i t.1f '-,Q wr 1v5'g: ' -ff 1 -1,11 ' -' ft-1 fill af ii i va sf . +2- L f H g e S'S..Qrie W-:Ll Qwflsiw- Q-:Hn 1 QS, g ' , QW f- N3 1, ,,x,L gif ., fj,.4,s '? -X ' 1,' y i ' ln I me - 'f ffjl giai 'illK, u El, ,iff e -,'T' lQ 'v , niylfy,:f N'L jj .L ss, Si ,' ' iff1:'5 x-Y v' ' -Nj 1 I ' i, , ,,-.MA 1 Nia 4 , ,Mui - - Ap, , Ju t vx t i ll l , Kes Q1 N. fan, -Us T ' .4 A - K -W ..., , all E nf .sang 'i .A I , aff ,.- w k L imp. -Q, 552 ttf' so - 'i ffy 4.1.5 wat M f - 1 N NN Xl' W,,u 'N'-ix Xl ggi, .,f 1 li ia fl. K Li p' . . --'. . 1 X x V ' A ' lil, l- 1 ff' 'W' I ll - ME, , ffl av ma.. are saga, we 9. A . osx .4 H V... EUTH Bachmsnz as ' X- f H ,iff - . 'A A, 'I ffghgqgf- -'j.,3, .-Q, 'wing' :Irv , Eva. . as found an original style ! RFQ ,. 'G , in AR P 1',f?-11Vr5v-iii? 'e.. 1' fe- ' 3' ff' ' 'Q' f' ln free verse. Although li h .V ll , I X LA V , I.-U., V1 vgyjzggpfb 50,1 AW I, Mig-up 4QQq,llIM,l1l . . . V 13, - , h A KL ! .. ffgyl, g4',n7.ffyza1 ,c,'f' .7 5 MQW y A XM' H ' 'n ge-,ff she has been writing only W' - -VTl'Ty,.'-' ' it , X . --:ji P,L,ifi,j1flQf ,Q 'l' V is I1li1Yg'l,g.,. -ful, a year she has gained na- WAX? ' S I X MM-R ' l f' Q A Q- -- T '- 2? tional reco nition. Trees 'i:'aQfK fv , x f f V J' f ' - Matched, entinels won ' Q -' w f the first prize in the Har- lllustrations by Doris Malde per's Magazine contest for igh school students. fb- t l ' S - I BTW FUR FTER DE T we 'TN If . C-1 , 0 f . . . 05-57 l 71- .3 A I L - ' ll ' By LYDIA cEoRcEs -F E a .J , ff I i-A-I:-G-'iq si, X' 5' -vfff' ' , gf, ,X ' 'II Not the grave of soil, sharp-edged Q 0 s JM ., S .. ff-gggf Q A If . . . ' . 4 , ' Wlth points of rock and humid j A I Q11 U I O i ' . ' l l Wlth its life, for me: the bid lb?-fi ' wfj if X L'a'f ' :,,- , - W 1' :- For planks rectangular, wedged st ' f- : In a shallow pit, is not mine. . Vermln-rotten, earth-heavy, -,,.. g- ' 'MSX 'Q It 'KY' .Al f fyi. The lid sinks and moulds softly 2 IN Lg:f:' ' I I' - With tissue moist-earth in time. 7 fw 1553, ' . l ,f f , J!! r ' ' - ., fer- ':1A+. I' 51 'Hx A . . 0 lr- XR. V?-,- I Q Cool ln buo ant waters ma m bod sink ,' X ,. - , 1 AL: 0 N in I gg ,fs Y Y Y Y 'T -f ,,,,,,,,, , ,,, T d h f b ' 1115 'gfffafiw y l W I tl o ept s o green, not ound in proper state. A V a 5., ,,f.1w 4, , !.. x1l ,ff V, fff, . - V ' 'fi' 3, cr-i A WW xx ff' gy ,', V.-, Soft the bed of s on moss swelhn to abate X J f',- fil wrf 3 ll 'g, ,y ,' 1,- P 7 g , 1 1.3 its ' L I - ff ' The ocean's sigh. With decaying air my only link- , -X. .iffy ' CLARE ' - 'VI 1 Bubbles gurgling up from oozy loam. ,' ' gr 4 ' ' f ' ..,.y5,j'.,, , And over me a crest of wave will. foam. l 3' K ga :IJ 4, . ., ,J '-sz, -XW,,, I ,I l . ' , I u-- 1 . f A .,f- . ' ' ',:'4fZ2l ' '- Xi ' 7 I made my choice for after death. . .. P- ' V, V-:li if 'li i Fear throws its heavy net across the earth i S lin 1 Q- ' -grail Q ' . 0 . N 1 K' 'if QV? :V A .I 11.1, lf ...lil A , Q As bombs black the sky. Marching feet and . f ' ' .YQ i Q. g3Qll'i'7mN,S..?jgr55jf'f,'I . . . 1 a w 'Hd 2 i'.l1!'.-7 'f1'.l'1'LW '- 'f-' Rolllng drums, the weight of stone and slashing -' R ll jg. S ' . . -'-,- :wifi i'1,i-fg 1' ' -. scream. A I Rx il? K 'Mg I made my choice for after death. I ,J QL 9' 'J ' Nl I f ' 3? if 'I , zfxu. I -K U 'Qui L1 ir 'Mg-gif r 7 , X I . 5- -'I' if ' ---f f 'EQ 'Il f-ni-tif 7' 'X ' f:' l,A ' . I g ff is 'P 7.5, iq' 'Q '-iL?1gg2fgffAg2'1'it,gf,.Le 'I Wy ' 9 J qi-23373-' 3' ,gf '.l,,'f at , , r - , -A A ff -was um ' . as fr f as . 1' 1.13441 N Q! 4 J X'-,B W r mi- .A if, ,. 4, . N I li? f r',,Ql M .ft Q u., , ll A -gifi f l iii, iii ? fp y an :ia ,,.s t.!,, .sf -1-: . ,,ff'f A ,. f .'L7,5..mf, .f,- 1 5... . -.f' 1, 7 1 j A -ff' .I - ,gy-s,.l5'fS,2RQ 1 ff' r, ,N-2. , U . , , S . - 1 ,mn - -4 5 I Xi? - N , - as its t eg5 ',f.,sa il? ? f ' 4 f A .1 ra. NME? rf r ' w 1 J f':Q.4vMl' J---7 xy: 'eff ra -357 V, -A .1 A f if J. 'nf ' .2755 .gs - 11 22353 1 - ' A C-'I CO Q- if '25ig'+l5ic -fi , 33? 'Q,'-iz.: D ' i ' K' , JO , l f!s4I9,i g' ',3,lJgL1 5Q,?'f'1f' if Z ea s. if fi fif.. is 4,7ygz1,ga,,,,Qv5'-QM4 f ' Q ,Q L: viii n :Lil In -A 76 ' 'I' -I f 15 . l l Inf , I' J Ia turn' ' I rl' X F 1 LYDIA Georges, a Senior, Wu ' gigfkgzllpij'.ligwlagfhgx .fa ,ir , 1, qi! vmiipgiif is a fast-coming leader of '- j egff Q ' 1,- 1. , fiwf 3' -f 59252. I XY, , Q? the writers of West F-as 'sei' Kg. I V 'Iwi -:if Seattle. She has been writ- Q A ' - x eL,+ . . i A 'H ins Poetry for almost 8 ...,1,,'2 - -ff .N 1 ss 'ff' me -. A-1f -. GDN, H 1 fh Agfa. -fl: f-- FT, L 9 '7':'?Gv1rN5j- year. er oveo t ewater Qs V .ff-'C,..J1yL'i?'5 . , - s Qin -L- - QTL 4:.. ,,,--5. -Lf. is reilected in this, a good :,ii?fQfL , ' . ' ' 'M' N 'P 1111: example of her work. 1 ' . 3 S '- Y irc -A if f NWJMW7 4 2 - J L ff L V, I fe j 1 1 Y' I i, 7' -'r ' 4.VfZ .7 -- 1 43 Q 2 Q l A it ' ' L ll g p s :X ,Xa ' S I WX wi 'A X in ,+V Q THE ART UF USGULATIUN By KATHRYN JOHNSON Ole' Cleo wasn't very smart, She had two li sg she had a heart, Ole' Anthony didnit know the score, Didn't know what lips were put there for, I He and Cleo never kissed, Didn't know that they had missed THE ART OF OSCULATION Dear Helen, was a comely lass, She couldn't let a good ship pass, And Paris was a likely Joe, Altho he was a trifle slow, He never stole a painted kiss, Q N' Q, Never felt the sublime bliss, L X' '2 THE ART OF OSCULATION 1 'f f Shakespeare made a lo ely settin , fy ! Not a single prop forgletting, g Z' K IRIoses and moonlight, love and lace, . ff ero in the usua p ace, Z Juliet and Romeo, Golly, Chillen-Is it so? yf Crawling Crawfish- I 4 Didn't you know? Z M THE ART OF OSCULATION ll I - in mama's diay tlgley watcheii the moon, 5: 'QM U- , W, ,f f , n mama's ay t ey earne to oon, R ' - 16' ff Now, sister Aggie talks of necking? f if 1 ' Then, a ain she sa s it's eckin . Z J , 1 5 , s Y g My friend Runny likes to liack J , ' ah? saiys he s really iota the klnaclk, fa ,QQ gg - ,gif V. u t en again lt a ates ac - 1 1 R' THE ART or oscULAT1oN iw XX if ,X , A 65 Sv f . ' 7 Kathryn Johnson is new in the Writing Laboratory ' If classes, but has had lent of ex erience on the , P Y P ' K Chinook. You will see that she has a definite style. 50 , It will be an asset in newspaper work which she hopes to do. V fl ,, If X Q.. I ,J I , if ff f V. A 00 if J A V' f .L f ' f,,y , , . v, 2 Nw w. , f . . b V , ' i l V Xt X 1' r 5? Af f ff'VZ -A .:1'Z' 1 ' f f 4T7ff f f df if . ,f fL'fy ff'.27 ' ' 1 M 1 xx , f wb if 'ff f Ff a 1-N lr J ,J J '4Z 7 ' 4, f , I J , r , A f' , J .lf 7' f ,ff - I ,,,, , A , be: ,K .1151 1 fi., , A . U f , ,I ,A gif, 3, A. fx. if , f A J cra r N J My ,wily , ., A .f 26th THEET By ROBERT CHRISTIANSEN Twenty-sixth Street was quiet. The woman in the candy store across the street dozed behind the counter, and a small boy slipped a news aper from the wire rack. A man leaned out of a winribw on the top floor. His bare back gleamed in the dark opening. I looked down into the tiny garden of the apart- ment house. A tinkle of water came faintly from below, a bed of red begonias surrounded the fountain. a On the fire escape of the next building there was a geranium plant. It was spindley and had to be propped up. An old woman was watering it and stirring up the soil with a fork. I was conscious of three pots of geraniums on a table beside me. They had just come rom the florists, and their perfume reached me for the first time. Her stringy hair stuck to her forehead. She was as wilted as her geraniums. It was 760 and only 10o'clock. The woman ke t on puttering with the plant, sni - ping off a dead, leaf, turning the plant toward tlije ight. Say, Bob, take these stinking weeds and put them on the fire escape. As I set the last geranium out, the woman below looked up. She stared a minute at the plants gay with red blossoms, then turned away into her flat. Probably that geranium was the only one she had. In this apartment 'there were three geraniums, a collection of cacti and a bunch of violets in the hy- drator. Violets are only ten cents a bunch, fifteen cents for a Very large bunch. Bread is ten cents, milk is twelve cents. Geraniums are 31.50 at the florists. A member of the first Stanford Language and Arts class, Bob Christiansen is known as Christy. I-Ie is a well read student and has a beautiful library. This essay was written after a trip to New York last year. Illustrated by Ruth Mataftin X ' X , ,f' ,1P:'i , 1 f f Q . 0 I fl Q ,f I , 'I . Vg, It jr 5 -' I f-f , 1, 13-, , I f f' ff I G X , ,t A 4 4 ' lg 5' fig :i X T , ge Rae- ff f , XXX . Y A i' W ix . A , , . s . f7'..06f-Ziff 'E f . . X , . 355 Illustrated by Patricia Lohmann Harley Nygren is a sophomore who has been writing only one semester. With most of high school before him, we will look forward to his future contributions. Illustrated by Ruth Mataftin W . I , 1. ,.,,T.., , .. .. ...I' 1 ,M . .P By HARLEY NYGREN ' at 5 f My Grandmother is now seventy years old and is a pure Finlander, born and raised in Suomi. She sits by the radio for hours to hear the results of the Russo- Finnish slaughter for she lived in Finland a long time during her youth, when Finland was in Russian hands before. She probably would still be in her beloved old country if my adventurous grandfather hadn't taken passage on a clipper and immigrated to the United States. They settled in the bleak, raw, and naked wilder- ness of the Black Hills of South Dakota, where my grandfather mined for gold. My mother and her two . . A wen:-:,a,q-as.12.., '--wr ::'Q.2-' 2rf'.ii'f2-,A1E'f.'i-' J -' . WWE, ,.. ,-,. ,.-. . , v. K., - - - p-.-.--L,,.,,v-.aw - f . n- -,.,. . If ,-1...,,.:4. X . -. . , -.--w . ,, --'r- f.-M :.-' g ' M --' -- fi.-' 1 n f-- ,g.,.Hf.L..., U . ,.e5q.1f5' N ggf. .. ifnwfrff iii:-M '- 'rqii-Z . --.-.:. , . i is A ix -1:3 JP. K y N.. Ak if-if . N ,vu rn. v- - . Y-.qlps .gg J' 4 'ff' j -RW I ,iff . J ' 4' . l r' 1 ' l I X ,'.., . 1 ji' 4 ,f I , , . ,. sisters were born there. The prospects in Alaska at- tracted my roving ancestor, so he took his new family to the Yukon Territory, by way of crowded steamers, muddy mountain passes and turbulent streams. Aedie Cher Finnish nameb has told me much about carriaging through deep mud, sleighing over deep, thick, crusted snow, traversing roaring White Horse rapids on a makeshift raft loaded with household equipment, and staggering over almost vertical' Chil- koot pass. She was a pioneer in the Yukon, living in a pioneer's shack, eating pioneeris food, and mining pioneer gold. Her family was increased by two boys, and Grandad moved them to Bear Creek, then Hunker Creek, then several other creeks in search of gold. He purchased a farm near Poulsbo in civilized country-eighty acres of virgin timber, five miles from town in a narrow, isolated valley. Grandma was glad to be back with company and culture, although it was five miles off. Later the land was logged. More hardships of living in a shack and helping cook for hungry loggers! A forest fire and other farm troubles hindered the place's growth. They conquered all to- gether. Then a young daughter died. Later Grand- father died and she ran the farm herself overcoming the difficulties as they came along. One son moved to Alaska and her daughters married. The house burned. Other small losses have struck her from time to time. . Now she is seventy and .the farm is still successful, f. . . Each time the terrific hardship of moving furm- still hers. She IS short, muscular, and healthy. Every ? - ' ture and little children through deep snow or mud or morning at five o'clock she milks fifteen cows, carries K water had to be endured, but she could take it. She heavy milk cans and moves heavy weights around. A was of fighting Finnish blood! One boy died, another Again at five-thirty P. M. she does this same work. was born, gold was mined, money was lost. There All seasons are the same, all days are the same. Same f 4- were frigid winters and cool summers with muddy work, same jobs, same news- Finland's forces falling Q if springs and wet falls. Gold fields changed, the Ainaly backf, All she has found it in her mind to say about Q i family followed until Grandpa pulled up stakes and the struggle is, What are they fighting for? What's r , . . Q' f transported his large family to a boat and thence to the use? If she can say a thing hke that about the yt.: Seattle. l' war, maybe I had better start wondering too. ' , '--Q if :gf-'zfsf F- ff-f . 4 iffy? A- it 5155, 1 , ,V , . ..: .-i-5.1.',,..'if:4'q.1 ,Ag ,If ,H-U. 'il' 3 1 , Agfa ' P7 , ,-:.g - .--. -. . - - . its --J J -.r --,p ,Y - - -:- .1-is:,'e.- wif. if J A s? .- -1 .Q i .4 - ' - . ff A, -- 'C5.11.xi .r-S91 .sf -. -. li nl -1 2 Diff s - '- - - - - :ff . 1' 0 .ffi:.'1'x,..m f:1fesf-fs'.:v.-:il vi . if .4 -1-L' s. n 'fi A- -f ',Qri'TV:3'5f.'. '-5 ,T 5 3? xl f ff 34, ' F-3 if.-f Q 3'-'O Q' fi S14 T 'I' ...rx . I ' i fr riff' . . e f 4 -4' .- :gig-Z1!g,Q-51,f.E: , .' 4. 5 4.13, n .. an A - M,-1--L:-, JV J-il.,pcQ?5E5,.1 J 'tor o. , o Q56-1.--' itz- L-Q., 352- pug, v S5 T-L' .gfljlg i5w..! lkgp f stvfs k fi Q -iss ' ,f p .'. flp .i...:,-, ffm . 1325 gg ff' l imp ' pi-piggy , tiff tif. . - 6 -,L-,Li up . f:? f5f -95:1-fi 21' ' is 5 f . 1 3-if - . f I ' : lf' i 'A - o - . ' f ' ' A 1 2 f E .sr -..-'51 aff' f: wa., 'Af r f' ' ' 5' if I fi' of t 2' J is zfszv- f te'f fe o f pg. Y Q :-rr.: 3 4 -. his 3 E H13 all A I xgg a ui? I.: .- .i32T: '1 I gf! ! a l. fi 1 4 1' ' 1 ,, ' 4 si f 'ig ' f iff . -vii. .223 -Zi2?f3 ' 2' Q: v 1 l ,,:-1.-:-' in .iq-' 1 .- , .. f 1 ' fg1g,.f 'i I., 1 . J.-,.... a-,-.3-.:. . ' W -.-T? W TU LEARN UPITU BETAUGHT? By LEE BREWER Illustrated by Nancy Chilcote Last Sunday I had some homework to dog Geom- etry, history, and comp. Stan had trigonometry, and Bob chemistry. We usually procrastinate doing our school studies until the last day of the week-end, and even then to the late afternoon or evening. Sunday morning my brother and I hopped over the back fence and walked the half-block to Stan's house. He and his dad were putting in a new fence post. Bob and I helped pry the old block of concrete out of the hole and to line up the new post. After we were finished I asked Stan if he was going to make an outrigger for the canoe like we were talking of the night before. He said, Sure, I've only got some trigonometry to dof, We sawed a four-by-four into the sha e of a pontoon on Stan's brotheris hand-saw and planed it down smooth. We've got a sixteen foot Indian dugout canoe and were going to put a sail on her so we had to build an outrigger or a pontoon constructed on one side of the boat so as to keep her right side up when sailing. Stan and I found some big bolts in his basement and we moved the scene of our building to our back yard where our canoe, the Kickapoo, is. I choked over the soup we had for lunch, anxious to get outside and to work again. We kept going and even had to be called three or four times for supper. When we were lining up the mast to get it just so, Stan said he could do it easily on paper with his trigonometry tables-oh, yes, our homework. It could wait a little longer- Stan said, Who wants to find out how high an airplane is or how many jellybeans Johnny can eat if we can fix the boats and go sailing next weekend? When we were putting some bracing on the out- rigger we used triangular bracing because it is the strongest, says geometry. Oh, yes, my geometry. But then why should I have to go ln and write down on paper just what we were doing? As Stan was tightening up a bolt on a brace he said, They ought to make trigonometry as interest- ing as building an outrigger. Look how much time we've spent today and I havenit written a darned trigonometry problem, but you can't say we haven't learned anything! Lots of guys must feel the same way sometimes and wonder why things shouldn't be different so they'd like to do them instead of feeling as though they had to do them. I wonder, too, because I learned more last Sunday that meant something to me through experience, than I have been interested in at school since then, and Iim going home tonight and go sailing. Lee Brewer is only a sopho- more, but his writing shows that he is aware and thinking. We will watch further development in his work with interest. Among the juniors whose work is promising is Doris Jensen. She in-terprets her story simply and well. NIR. FIXIT Most neighborhoods are made up of people varying widely in character and ours is certainly no exception. Our Mr. Fixit is normal in every, way except that he is con- stantly puttering around the neighbors yards fixing things to suit himself. His face reminds me of a small boy's, with a mop of curly, pepper-gray hair hanging over the left eye. The skin falls in folds around his mouth, which looks rather soft. He walks in a jerky shuffle, his shoulders sagging. His eyes are very large and dark beneath gray brows. His hands are the only part that really look strong, with the hair standing up on the backs and the palms calloused. He wears a greasy cap, a light-blue shirt Cwhich has seen many a washb, and a pair of tan, gabardine pants. He keeps his sleeves half- heartedly rolled, while his pants bag at the knees and his shoes are covered with spots of paint. His appearance is even harder to understand when you see his wife and how carefully she dresses and keeps her house. He's only bothered our family a few times. Weive a high lattice fence around our back yard where he planted a mountain-ash tree just outside one corner. I've never seen a tree grow so fast and bear as many berries for its years. We squish over mountain- ash berries in the alley every fall and they tangle with Mother's wash every Monday. 'I'here's no more familiar sound on Saturday than the clank, clank of his hammer against red hot metal as he works. He has a small coal forge built on a wheel- barrow so he can push it around into convenient positions. When he dug his basement, all the dirt went into filling the chuck-holes and rain ditches in the alley. Every time it rained, the dirt washed out. Now it's a battle between the forces of nature and him--building up and tearing down. He keeps dumping his furnace ashes just outside our back gate and it takes about three days of plowing through them, gathering clinkers in your shoes, before they pack down. One day when I was chewing off the ragged edges of grass on our lawn with a rusty pair of clippers, I looked up to see him hanging on our back gate with that look of concentrated interest on his face that we had all come to dread. He pushed the gate open and walked over. Those things aren't very sharp, are they? he said and with this he picked up a rock out of the gar- den. He proceeded to put our clippers forever out of commis- sion. He'd peer at them sideways out of one eye and then try to cut with them. I get the most helpless feeling around him. I hate to hurt his feelings and yet it's hard to let him get by with it. He takes everything so much for granted. When the blades refused to meet any more he laid the clippers down. They're too old-better come over to my house and I'l1 give you my pair. In one particular yard, he plants almost anything he hasn't room for in his yard, and that he wants to save. A few days ago a family began to tear up their front yard in large rectangular strips. Piles of pipe lay in a corner of the yard and along the side of the house. I was walking home from school and as I passed the corner of the house, I saw Mr. F ixit run- ning his fingers over the pipes, knocking here and there with his knuckles. He kept pulling pen- sively at his lower lip and nod- ding to himself. I hope they get their pipes laid soon. J MAR H By RUTH BACHMAN Seats 1.98 to .79-student price--.53 Polite society crowding in to watch- Reverently- She s fascinating, isn't she? Smugly- It's the thing to do, you known Laughingly- If you don't understand someone will explain. Columbiad-Deliberate-Expository, controlled, trumpeting, beating a self-song-ta ra, ta ta ra, ta ta ra- down to the front in a challenge for me- with a red scarf, a blue scarf, a white dress a whirl, and a turn and a challenge for me- A challenge, to keep the Columbiad moving, control- led, and directed, deliberate, trumpeting, beating, beyond the time of the curtain And a woman ahead saying My, it was lovelyf' a man behind saying What does she mean? beyond to the time of the lights glaring up for American Document Eric and Martha and Sophie with a first name friend- liness-strong in their job- The tall interlocuter telling the story and lifting his heel to the rhythm of-- Listen to what we say- Listen to what we say- Here is the story, a document story For you and of you. ' Listen, Listen, I have words for you- Words that ring like bells- Look out, Here they come- 'We hold these truths to be self evident- That all men are created equal-that they are en- dowed with certain inalienable Rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happi- iness.' A proclamation document-drumming and pounding with life-with American bodies moving and working-f and the story coming on- There are words that make my heart beat drum like-Look out. Here they come- Mississippi-Susquahanna, Alleghany- Illustrated by Clara Ruckhaber l GH I A D GROUP 4 Tom toms drumming a lament for the land-an Indian lament- for the brown earth turning for the lost hunting grounds- Heels and hands drumming in a tom tom beat- And the legend working forward to the right and wrong of things- To the love of a puritan-With red pioneer blood trying to be still and prim. A woman and a man in a song of songs. My lover is my only thought and I am his desire. And the Puritanic laws saying You are sinners. Everlasting fire is yours- you are sinners, sinners, sinners- The soft Puritanic voice frenzied to forgetfulness oi Purity-at a man and a woman in a song of songs. And the story and the legend and the drum beats coming on to the future, to the children, to the medley notes of crossfire to the year of 1940-to three women dancing-saying- We are the mothers of the hungry living. We are the mothers of the hungry dead We are the mothers of the hungry to be born Three women dancing, and a man standing tall with a sword thrust to his words- Listen to what we say- Listen to what we say- One-third of America living in a hell we built- Children crying for that right to live, to be free, To be happy--What are you going to do? Let those bell words hang in dust, or shake them out to ring? The music is dying with three women saying- We are the mothers of the hungry to be born. And the story going on beyond the curtain time- the lights dimming down-dimming down- But the story and the drum beats and the children crying the challenge there for me And polite society crowding up the aisles saying Goodness me-I don't understand- A student sitting quietly, shaking out the bell words- We hold these truths to be self-evident. THESE three, whose poetry appears on this page, are new to the ranks of writ- ing. ames Watkinson, Eudora Radeco , The Trout and the Fisherman By DICK HUGO Wavering shadows 'Neath ruffles of flow. A glance glare of sunlight Off bellies of snow. Fly beckoning up. A nip and too lateg Taut string, gleam, and splash: The aristocrat's fate. The Nameless Ship By EUDORA RADECOP A black ship at a grey dock, N0 name on her bow, No port proudly printed on the stern, Only one small flag to speak of home. A gull soaring in lonesome circles. I saw a sentry- A dark figure in the fog. A ship sailing by night, With no running lights. A lone gull flying between skies and seas And a black ship. Before and After By JIM WATKINSON A whirlwind came through the field, And crossed my road. The dust rose and took shape And was alive. Then the whirlwind left my road, The dust went back to the earth, But the whirlwind went on. and Dick Hugo, give clear and well- presented ideas. -1 A 'if .., xx VX if ,kQxXX i , I , R . in ' X' -4 .gi I 74' 'A K H ' if - rs C - 4 J,-.af-ily, I. V ,g X .f f ,lp .f A N -X Rwlhlk C S X ' 1 Ig :fill if A 'ff' .1-' , -S , if V, my K 'Q 'fig V.-pi' .-'..'.? l ,' if 'Qi 4 J , A . ,Aa xg? ' ,e ,, gs ,4-fig l-g-j1vlS,,'f- XMI ,ff A if 37 11 N-X ii l yi ' X Xc i ' 'ff' :W Il 1 Z ' ' f iff' . T. .' , ' f ' - ,E ,,. -, t ,K l1.i ' 9,184 ,H ,Y s nr' fa at' L x - o f fs , 1- wig -?1 141521. 4 'F' x ig. 1, I 1' -v . 5 X ' -0 gig , , , ., 'fe'-'. 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B3 .rig-g,y35!f,,' Q- yy f - - , 1 an-'Pr ff. if I fa.. l 1+ , ' M ' .f--ff e G. 'I'-N . -wg .' -29 V ' 1 'Qf?'ftw'rrfW 19.9 .s.g...., ,-11 1y12'wH., 2 5411. : gifs 'ff' .sic A ., 6, Tv .5 -1,7 fl 2 ' 2 'f Q' .Wlf ' The '29 Oldsmobile sto ped before the farthest of the tourist cabins. Dag got out, stretched, said Here we are. People were standing in the doors of the other cabins, watching, not moving, not s eaking. They watched. I was amazed, somehow. Wlien Dad came after us in the Oldsmobile I had plans all made about the trees, and creeks, the rocks, the canyons I would explore. All the way on the long trip from Omaha to South Dakota I had plotted with myself in the back seat, takin care of everythin . But I hadn't thought of people. Iflad, I knew, wouId be busy running the veteran's C. C. C. ca-mp of which he was C. O. Mother, my two brothers, my sister, and the do s were the only living things I had included in my p ans. Yet here were the people, still watching. They took in the trunks, the dogs, us kids, my mother. I stared, baffled, uneasy before their unexpressive faces and sober, undecided eyes. My father spoke to one of the men in the yard. The man grinned suddenly, freely and expressively. The tension broke, kids in the doorways, between the cabins still watching, but with a shyness I could feel and understand. The sun went slowly behind the pine-blackened hills, leaving the canyon in a deep green shade, a little dusty, and beautiful. My brothers and sister and I played with the dogs, self-conscious and show- ing off a little with too-loud laughter and big sister and brother discipline. The people moved all about us, talking, splitting wood, pumping water, all around us but never through or with us, never including us in their activity ..... Soon we were playing with the kids, climbing trees, hiking, learning each others names, traveling' up and down the canyon. We went in their houses, played with their things, talked to their folks. They didn't come into our house, they admired, but even the younger ones, seldom touched our toys. Dad they knew and liked as a parish knows and likes its priest. He was their leader, but not one of them. Mother stayed in the house, going places only with Dad. The women offered her talk and dutiful friendliness on Dad's account, because their husbands wanted to make 'Cap' Drummond's family welcome. They came, men, women, and children, grave, friendly, willing to help. The canyon opened and absorbed us into its life, we moved through that life as the Capn's family, courteously met, and saw none of it. The families of the C. C. C.'s moved inon the can- yon, building Shantytown in the tag end of the long, wide meadow of the canyon. Homestake territory, but there was no other use for the land, and they had to go somewhere. The big com any could afford to be lenient. Besides the C. C. wasn't permanent- then. .. 1' --nr fT??: biw , K X- X ,gr 'Y ' sa X N f ,V--1 lv, hxtqkggigl ,VI nw J - ,... iiijf- up f I tiff' r, .Q 151, N5 1, 3 XX 3 g f if ,, ghgf ,fkzaff-ff' 5 xo X - X -., ' was X . .. ,f -T ' .. , - A-144 -3.-. re s 'Qs f.-. i' - - x , ,, ff?-fr f . M WQQQ-Seri . X X ,, Q. .- f ' X' 'J A Most of them left the tourist camp for Shanty- x g - , town, sometimes called Hungry Hollow or Starva- K W YI 3 tion Gulch, building varied, half-paid for, tar- ' . gag-x fff 7 f gt ' I papered houses. Shantytown resemb ed its people, gggzgx j s Q, shabby, tired-looking, with a defiant, hard-hit fee ing ' X f . . - 4-,rv -R -5-- 5 . about lt. x fx X 'rffxgff' r NN . Y It grew, and when the camp was fully established 's ,f ' 4, , ,M - there were nearly sixty kids o school-age in the can- an 2 lm I yon. September was near, Dad went to Stonevllle, T ' xy e three miles away, to see about school. Q 'es X W 'fi ,LX Q1 1 5. gi.. 'I ,'flLg:,:g.Q:,-.J A - Sorry, No books, no money. We have no room. QLQVQ, G2-. fig x Q1 l You aren't residents, N o taxes, no votes. Pay tuition 6s,,wt,'ff -5- ' E5 j' X X dlae ik . 2:- ,At . . X' -RQ-Q Tuition, on thirty dollars a month per famlly. , 1 fe ' - , ee h - f f X -X AJ? n .NX . X. 7 KA, M Get t e counties you came rom to pay or tak- X K X 4 N H-323:-421 -H . . Q 7, . A X . .-I.. X X . -jj' ,' ' '- - D R jf, g 1 mg you ln. . U D rf 5 his F , I X XQ. I ? s5 -6 ymvft An immediate negative answer from the counties. xg? ln ' . , , ,. ,A ' N September was closer, the people bewildered' and SX- f ik' 1,13 Wg' Z' ,EQ f- e el ' . . . 1 . gi --., . 3- ..+:,,.,-.s:,' - - , t shamed under this new hurt, retreating farther into si:-M ii fl 'gg' 532,515 , I '4 ' Xxljzzrsvgv, their group, bitterness creeping lnto them. Yiet, ' Qf + ,9 J , Z, gy , N Af X . 4 throug my Dad, they fought desperately, repeating , .. lggyghg v A ,N ' N to themselves maxims America teaches its people ' i f - X? ' ' ' ff- . f X ref gi'-2'-'Q . . . . Q'-- ..-ff' ' , ' ' ahoult equlallty, the begefitts of educagicgn, the vlison M51 J Q ',,hi:,f'1 37' ,Ls N lf 1 I KV F o w at e ucatlon can o or a mans '1 e, remem er- S P g ' ' 'T , My -f, f ing that education might bring security to their C'-1-r . .f',4 . . i - .- I Ziff- Children. It was warmer lnslde the grey building because of The county superintendent. The state slaperintend- ,f the ble, fuetyv black heaters, 0316 In each ef the two 1 . X ent. The county School board. AI-my O cials, my L4 rooms. We were careful and did not need to be re Dad, and behind him the people. ,gif mlnded to shut the door. lnto the hall lest some of f In Stoneville the residents were proud of their new fy the eeld get In and our fnendll' warmth 'fave brick high school and grade school, with its showers, and gymnasium, drinking fountains, cleanliness and newness. The old school, a two story, wind-shaken, weather-grayed frame building, stood on the same street, a discreet distance away from the new build- ing, hiding its rickety steps, rusty fire-escape, and slanting outhouses from the eyes of those who did not want to see. In September the dirty-gray building shook with unaccustomed action. The county had discovered desks discarded years before, books discarded with them, and the C. C. C.'s installed them in the school. Relief teachers came, the army trucks from the camp made ready to carry the sixty to the small town along the highway. These arrangements made, Dad turned to come back to the canyon. Oh, Captain Drummond, of course you'll have to enroll your oldest ones in our high school, and Pm sure we can find room for the others in the grade school- Dad left the room with short hard steps, the em- phasis a little greater on the left step as his heel clumped down, the lop-sided strut he always uses when he is angry. The army trucks carried us over the asphalt high- way, canvas tops tightly fastened down over us. Toward November it got so that once in a while the littlest ones cried with the cold and the wind through the cracks, but mostly we were too crowded to feel the cold. V Z The bigger boys chopped and carried wood during recesses and the lunch hour. The other boys made hard, round snowballs to throw at each other, or at us girls if we left the hall where we played hop-scotch or danced the Virginia Reel and the seven-step, wait ing for the teacher to ring the bell saying we could go back to the warmer school rooms. I hardly ever ate all my lunch, usually soup in the thermos, sandwiches, and fruit. Mother always asked if I wasn't hungry, so I usually got rid of what I left before I got home. I couldn't feel comfortable when they ate lunch. Most of them had bread, few had anything more. We didn't study much. We threw things at each other and wrote notes while Mr. Holden was teaching one of the other four grades in the room. We made ,-1. 'S -, -gs 14-2 if - 2 , an QX ,iii- , -l 1- 1 I 1 3 , -Y Yfli W ' 'N N Wage. ' 1 In - ' ,. I . , - 5 , ,jf 4. G1 '14 nA, A .2'-' ' N f ,,. I, x 4. V H' l , 'Q' V. :- ,. X tai XQ ,I ' v ' . x , PQ-2' ' 21 ' xi 'x ,X - , 1 -' ' ' ' C s J A 'J' sfxsp' --- - 2: '2 1 T-s o x , X Q . XL 4,5 W , y X X , N' X 1 I lg t frequent trips to the water pail. It stood on a stool by Mr. Holden's desk that rocked a little if we leaned on the wrong end. There was a place where the bucket had been mended, down near the bottom. We watched for that to show. The first to see it went triumphantly to Mr. Holden. If it was a girl she chose someone else to help carry it. The boys had to go alone, so the girls went most of the time. The spring was across the road in a little meadow. When it was warm, Mr. Holden often had to come to the door and call. We said the dirt and leaves clogged it, or the cow had muddied the water, not saying anything about how free it seemed out there with W P L D . l F f V ? -ga.. 173 f:-1: 4- ,zcvg ' ' iid , , ' ,- - ' sz' - ,b -. X . Q Q' .- 'V v 5 -5. ' ' '. 7 'i 5'rx -.4571 - , - fthe- D r c ' r as X 11 t t ' bl' ' f fl f 5 ,2 f gfggwg come ome, no rusting, not e 1ev1ng, ear u o 1 M argaret Drummond, who - 'K f fgy N another hurt, lgnorant of the direction it would take. . ,, ' Thelma had hysterlcs once when the truck skldded -is one of the most compe- X 4h 91-atriwa-1'...g-feftga'is - th 1 h d d f h - h ,P f W S I , . K ' ln e s us. an mu o t e spring t aw. n tent 0 est eau e S Writ' ,! QfIE'!j5,:fj ' '5- They bullt a school house of peeled logs and chlnked ers, has been -writing for . , ,aigZ44f . lt with cement up in Shantytown. They paid for it - lf 7' f .f' i' ' ' u A I u o n 4 i Several years. She is Sensi- ff,-' ggff-f f,'j',fg . and built it ln thelr spare time, shoutlng sometimes - ' N 1' KC' -H 4,1 AQ - , tive to the meanings of her cm , sep - experiences, and retells that meaning faithfully.This essay Z 930 -'I if -D nybx-'PAQ' , - ' -f ' 1 1' I - x ' ,-453' ., - L1 f54f Q' ' I - iff.-f ff' 1 I I Q, 'rg-gf., ,, ' -,,, 1 -,O 'taxi 7,13 fwon Hrst place in the Schol- , Q if ' , astic awards this year. D' .Q 'Q , Leg, ,, , , ,, -ff'Q' 5 i Q, ' -If I I 1,5 if 'iff Wx. - ' ir? I iq.-. I ia' .Y gh Qrzf . ' . so km'-'Lg' 'fe' 4 : - 3'1 D R X N ,. e was . D 33:7 . N1 I 11 g ft t -:if isa Q.-' -Drs.. :F WZ - lt' sg- ' A IE 1- :iEx 563 '32-X. 3 A 1: -' - X' W ' ':, ,. I- . x '- 1-Q X , 5? r 5 f 5. a X ' X X-Q, V rg dvr- 4 Nas i r- I. 4:9 V -f'.1',f'i 1' Xe . ffl? I .. ,f ' sie: ff , 72' X . r be if' 4' - '-'X' ' ' A Xfkgx F - .4 t, nobod around but the cow and the cars over on the E h' h Y 7' 1 way. ix oward the last of December, Fort Summit said we couldn't use the trucks anymore. More work and ' fighting, until the county discovered a bus, in the xv' same way it found the desks and books. I g, e us was somet lng new in t e canyon, an so N2 - Th b h' ' h d 5 ' exciting that we didnit much mind when the wheel N came off after just half a mile. One of the army trucks . 1.3 and my Dad's car got us there in time. . h The l6us had to marike rtwo trips to bring all the kids Q ome. n e secon t ere wasn t enoug room or U Q1 j the bus and the truck loaded with barrels of molasses ' i A and drunken driver. yflag The Red Cross helped a lot. It gave hospitals, the ,I 'Nl patch for Helen's unseeing eye, false teeth for Thelma, crutches for Ruth-when she was able to use them. It financed the mass funeral at Seaton for seven of Q he kids YM? I ' . . . The people were silent after their first agonized cry, asking questions of themselves. CI still see Mrs. gzmx Syler running out of the camp hospital and down the gjgjfj, road toward Seaton screaming Tom's name after Dad 551123, told her, and Dad on the steps not realizing he was lf-hi. . . . Q, ,, . f,:..,, whispering. Stop her. Sto her. Bud tossed in the ambulance-I saw him -- ying, while his father sat .1- on the running board with his head in his hands.J I hated the smug people who came from outside to tell my mother how tragic it was, and I could almost laugh at the frightened way in which they scurried out of camp, not understanding what they saw in men's eyes, and felt all around them. The people hired a man from the canyon to drive us in his truck, out along the black asphalt highway to the grey school. Each day they waited for us to , A gi ., at the kids under their feet, but more often letting them help. The desks and books came from the hated gray school, and two new teachers came, one for each room. The wind blew into the two rooms and the snow banked high against the peeled logs outside. The ink froze, and we held classes, those of us who came, huddled around the stove, sitting on blocks of wood. Later we opened the door to let the wind in to blow on the cement from the inside out, till the dust began to whirl. Then we shut the doors and windows, but we couldn't shut the cracks. Our eyes grew red from the dust, our hands sore from it in our clothes, our books, on our desks, in our ink. It dried our mouths and noses till we coughed and sneezed and choked. It gritted in our teeth till the teacher got up and ran home one day, leaving us a freedom we could not use. The peo le did not complain. They ate the snow and grittedp the dust without the desperate aggressive- ness with which they first fought, still not with resig- nation. They took what came wordlessly, waiting, growing into something more firm and real and fright- ening than the depression which made them. I knew these things because they had allowed us to do so, they accepted and liked us. But we did not, could not, be- long to them. I asked Virginia why she wouldn't come into my house. , Pm difruntn she said. I'm difrunt than you. Then for a minute she lost that barrier between us, and her face changed till it was one I knew and could understand, that of a twelve-year old child- asking someone it thinks should know Why'? Why are we difrunt? Mother don't tell me nothin only we're difrunt, that I ainit like you---11 ain't abruptly, and her face lost the familiar look. I couldn't answer. I got good grades in school, but the books didn't give me that question or teach me how to answer it. The bonus came. Those who could left, with the dust gritting in their teeth and searing their lungs, carrying their difference with them to join others like themselves, traveling the country in search of a place for a home, looking for the sercurity that might destroy that difference, wandering Americans who will leave their rogeny a dangerous heritage of difference. School dijd not teach me that these people are different, nor that it is wrong that they should be different. School does not recognize them. I have done this for myself. But I can find no reason they should be, must be different. I can find no way to destroy that difference. It bothers me. I do not like lt. . Wfffw WW 1 1 Q Wi i , if Q W EXAM Xwk fQ2NQS2 Y a N W K ggi x -' E . 3 y 5 FH S Mk ww W WW WW G R f 5 ' . 2. X l 4 1 i E ARCHERY . . . Peggy Kain, Willa Couch, Marjorie Winchester, Helen Goertz. f'ARoUND and 'round she goes, and when she'll stop -equally applic- able to the sports schedule and to the girl who turns out. Leave it to the Athletic Council to keep everything from getting too dizzy. Each year more girls turn to the gym and the athletic field for beauty and fun. Hiking and golf are responsible for many gorgeous suntans, and swimming has be- come one of the prominent sports since girls found it aided the figger.', They may lose arrows but West Side girls have found that archery helps their posture. SWIM CLUB . . . Elm ra june Bett Moe, Faye St. john, Elizabeth Gillespie, Barbara Biorseth, Caroiyn Gaillac, Buthie Butler, Betty Bolin, Kathryn Olson, getty Klgure, Patty Romsey, Barbara Kessler, Martha jean Rowan, Reva Oakes, nne a mer. F S 3 l E s 3 3 2 3 r 5 ss E Q i GOLF . . . Viola Hansen, Betty Hough, Phyllis Hilborn, Dorothy Bolton, Peggy Kain, Dorothy Benson, Barbara Shadel, Coleen Irvine 'Vera Bemis Dorothy Bolton Suzanne French Helen Goertz Barbara Hagquist Viola Hansen Phyllis Hilborn Peggy Kain Margaret Linclell Aileen Morris Ethel Olson lris Olson Solveig Schau. Violet Sundberg Virginia Tapley I Wilma Ward Irene Wilson Miss Waters VOLLEYBALL . . . Front: Ella Sanderson, Phyllis Hilborn, Doris Nuyens, Vera Bemis, Solveig Schau. Back: Barbara Hagquist, Helen Goetrz, Margaret Lindell, Wilma Ward, Violet Sundberg. MORE sfnorts are added each year, but volleyball, basketball, and baseball have a steady following of girls who want good old fun. Horseshoes has been adopted and badminton follows by leaps and bounds-just try to sign into a badminton class! Ping pong, like death and taxes is always with us, and any time girls may be seen g the little white balls the floor. Baseball teams hadn't been formed, but here are some likely prospects, hard at it in the gym. BASKETBALL . . . Front: lrene Wilson, Mary George Helen Trulin, Suzanne French. Back: Ethel Olson, Violet Sundberg, Virginia Latta, Mary Ehrist. HEY THERE' NSPEED it up-gimme that basket right there O. K., yells the basket girl--hand- ing the checks for three purses to their owners. B asket room hurry-con- tinual babble. Speedball, a com- bination of soccer and basketball played on a hockey field, has taken an important place in the girls' turnout schedule. SPEEDBALL CHAMPIONS Front Elizabeth Glllesple Betty Ann Murphy Suzanne French lrls Olson Dorothy Bolton Viola Hansen, Georgia Lybeclc Back Burrell Dlnnetz Bernice Benson Ethel Olson Bonnie Rogers Theresa Long Peggy Kam Margaret Drummond. BADMINTON . . . Front: jack Anderson, Donald Bell, Lee Buchanan, jim DuVall David Fenton Don Forrest, Glenn Rogge. Middle: Gordon Holloway, jim Humphrep, Bob johnson, Bill Minlcler, George ltlilson, Ralph Cssterman. Back: Glenn Newitt, Neil Nichols, Elwood elton, Art Susumi, Roy Tutt, Diclt Zwaller. . PlNGPONG...F t:j' DVllGd Hll ,J' G , Back: jack Kinzel, hmilchellnCoifliclil BillcBe::Jl2 Rdlpchw8lster:1nan,elw2Bbr Weglin. 1 T R A M U R I-I This picture was taken in one of the tumbling and apparatus classes. Other classes 2 F include volleyball, basketball, play-ground ball, indoor track, and individual gym. INTRAMURAL sports were originated so that those boys, who could not or did not desire to turn out for the major sports, would be able to know the competition and fun of participation in athletics. Intramural also has proved invaluable to those boys who don't have the skill or talent necessary for the bigger teams. Since it was started, intramural has expanded and now furnishes activities for many boys. Among the different activities are: basketball, indoor track, the Hundred-mile Club, badminton, and ping-pong. TENNIS . . . Hal Habenicht, Don Shields, Gail Halliday, jack Bosticlc, Bob Hill. GOLF . . . Front: Art Case, Bill Burke, Karl Schallca, Ben Fiedler. Back: Bill Brooks, Charles Snider, Chuclc Mahon, Ralph Greeno. QM. TENNIS and GULF ALTHOUGH they don't receive as much fame and glory as players who parti- cipate in the more popular sports, the golfers still deserve just as much credit. Steve Bri nck, Tennis Coach Don Frame, Golf Coach As the Kimtah went to press, the Tee men were experiencing a rather poor season. They had lost eight out of eight matches. They won't win many matches this year, but look out for them next year. This sums up the general opinions con-I cerning the 1940 tennis team. All matches scheduled should be close, but the team's inexperience may fail them in the pinch, said the man- ager. In practice matches the Indians had defeated Cleveland twice. At ri ht: Outstanding men on the tennis team, Jack idYlOW, and jim Krenov. 'Y ni' '-Y-ir' Y' A ii' ' -Q I Len Anderson Art Baisinger Henry Ercolini B Bull Hawlans Orral jackson Luther jones Sam Lowry Ed North Fred Osterhout John Payne Bill Sanderson Ed Schwier Wlllrs Slmlcer Nels Sundbom Bill Varns Bob Viggers Benny Wheat jack Wright FOOT L FOOTBALL SEASON was tough this year-tough but exciting. The West Seattle Indians lost all six games of the year. A superior Lincoln team defeated us in the first game with a score of 13-0. The next in an eventful line was the close battle with Ballard and a 7-6 score. It was the season's heart-breaker, and the next games were losses to Roosevelt, Cleveland and Garfield. Then, last was the Queen Anne game, where the final gun left the score at 13-0. The gold football inspiration trophy was awarded to Willis Slinker, whose good work at halfback position, and great leadership on and off the field were outstanding. The second team won none and tied one during their scrambles of the season. The scrappy third team had the best record of all, with four victories in six games. H YY... --'hi' ' H- K . .. Sup Q! f mwggafwf' W ' ,, ' ' in is Q 4. aww NNE N SM Q 1, N dmwsw. MQ. XFN N ' , NK QA .X Qw wx A W. SSM ,Q X , Q L Ang at xw xg X V - . ' -1: . 'X q f f w X Q A X N. A -i X wif 'lm x C -sz V W 51, X 5, Q1 , ffgixxgx wi . . - wxisif NXNWX X. .ww . .. j 1:2 1 .3 X N Q f vwx,X Aw.-'nf X '1 . Q M XXX . xx ' , ,x 'gg , ,ly Q3 . 355 xsEQfA5a Q 1 X: . Mx' X .2 X X ' au' 'sl Qwfbw Q, FQQXQQ 'ig . F X wg .QSEE X SKS we QQ Qu avg nw M ,-,mx ,e,. . 'tzfwnw Q 9' In W 5' X . X N x 5 5 R , 'Q si? Rb 4, 1 .vm Q q x :ss 3 'WW' 'B fa Q xxx ,N K A wg? Q i - x A 4. , , N J gk QD x, E K M . A ,. SSW rvkqixksx ex . '55 'RB XNX' X 3 SSSQQVWA F- A9 Nwwm' W N . tw x Q 15 5 ig QQSF, X, W ,A-'SN 'Q 555 FET? fgfgsliia -lan? stu wi + Q Q 4' X www ix . wx Q X ?i W .L M ,. X5 een: - wffw- --'- -x ---- ' 'IO3 l x 1 imp: JUL-.V gr LI., .2 Asa' ML 'vlfv LeVlTRE HAWKINS BEAUMONT m l l SUND OM T3 X POPPV V,,j?l'RU .KEY 1 QVALE THIRD TEAM. . . Front: htel: Bosticle, Dale McLoughlin, ,lack McKinstry, Al Selfridge, Ken Sagehorn, john Mitchell john Palella, Bill O' eill Back: Gordon Haskell, Aldo Campagnaro, Dwight Stevens, jack LaVassar, Bob Craig, Bob Thorson. ARMFIELD KING WEST SEATTLE,S basketball team could be called the tough luck team of the year. The 1940 Indians de- serve more credit than the record indicates, for they lost five games by a one to three point margin. The highlights of the season were our victory over Cleveland and our near-upsets of the strong Ballard and Roosevelt quintets. , But, regardless of the losses, none of us will forget those afternoons in the noisy balcony of the boys' gym -rooting for the team, talking to our pals, and having a swell time. Least of all will we forget the work of Nels Sundbom who has been given the inspiration award. BARLOW' SECOND TEAM Mario Compagnoro jim Eckholm Ralph Kung Walt Loring Dan McGill Walt Popich Howard Ken Gifford lVlANAGEP1S Henry Anderson Bud Bode Milford Bemis Paul Edqulst Don Bob Smith , . 85.4 . f X ASQ H - ga '-'K Y F 'xc a ,Ji W is P. :AS xg .Lwem QW? ,, Q 9 N . x R595 X Sggikf x f3?v'3f A 1 gb As 9 f P S X - W, W ff uw 4 'M Q ' 3 Q 9 . Nm X , W - , Q S X- 3 1 , 5 S, , ws Q ' .IN Q 3, Q 1 xw. Q ,h , .E ,S it .5 si . Q Q X Q. Y .2 S Q -P S' E: S, sv S R if M . Q 'NX it ,li LT: K X GTG fxf -fi-us wx SL K 'Q 'H 3' H ' XS . .X ' N ' If A .6- A f 50 SSS? F + , Q S , K S ET xx , N13 X i E X I s u 5 X X ,A -xnq .V ,Q EQ Y 'wr I E xg N X X ., X5 N Hurdlers Gene Raymond BASED ON THE Prep league standings over a period of years, West Seattle's best athletic team is the track squad. The cindermen don't get the crowds and applause of football, basketball, or baseball, but they usually turn in good performances. When it was announced early this spring that track aspirants could start practice, Coach Frame had one of the largest and most enthusiastic turnouts he has ever seen. The field events were the only places where there was not a real struggle for positions. Many events were left in inexper- ienced hands when the 1939 graduat- ing class had gone. Because of this Coach Frame predicts only a fair season. Q-XSS?- .X ,Xmiw .- XSX, 'wb Q XXX, ix 1 fx ,Xc- .Xw 'w K ig kfif S +4 wwf M, WWE? +, RW-Ri 1 ' 5 1 RN' we .Y is VX 'si .V W ig 5.3 ,X - . X- :S X X X X 5 1 --:X A X. Sw . W - - - 1 if .- x x X. -is 'A Sf if QQ X .XXXWi.wXwxixmmX5 .A i ' -N N W- 1 QX1-XM . ., .Xwxw-Nh AX w' Xmum . .X X X .. , X A. X. M.: .,XX,X., mai. i - I X . . . . . ,X - - . .. x N X wx -X-X X Q ,, X .Q Xl x. X . ..x. ...x!,:,..:. 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'42 . x V' C y-cy, 1- w P 1 . win- X . . . Heres forward to. Commence- ment: in the basement, donning caps and gowns before the grand march upstairs. something to One scene at the HU UP1 AND AWARDS THIS PAGE is where the persevering workers and contrib- utors to our school get their deserved glory. They are the students who do a thorough job-in work or play. There are also those who work against tremendous odds of health. Two who really deserve honors graduate this year, after having completed high school at home. Bob Upper has never been to school but has finished all the requirements with the help of a visiting teacher. He has an amazing collection of Indian relics, which he has been gathering for many years. i Scholastic leaders . '. . Vaiedictorian Harold Davenport and Salutator- ian Wilma Ward. 5 1 W l r fffflffff if 'MMHJmQQ0fbf f QA . 5 ' 'Zhi' afzfffo 70?? MWw7WZWwM' ,ff 1 ' . 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Suggestions in the West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) collection:

West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

West Seattle High School - Kimtah Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943


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