East Peoria Community High School - Epoch Yearbook (East Peoria, IL)

 - Class of 1945

Page 1 of 112

 

East Peoria Community High School - Epoch Yearbook (East Peoria, IL) online collection, 1945 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 112 of the 1945 volume:

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VY U77 ,gn rr EP 194 PUBLISHED BY STUDENTS O F THE EAST PEORIA COMMUNITY HIGH SC HOOL 'LW ,O Un Elillizm Qfltflzig gmturrzig Us une fnhuse nzuurzigenus spirit has spurreh us unfuarh, fnhnse helpful suggestiuns haha giirnn us suncessg Un une fuhusr: teanzhiugs haha hruughi forth nur hast, fnhuse faith sinh hinhness haha hrnught us nuhlenessg 'Glu gnu, miss gtiurrag, ine hehiczxte nur 1945 ftipunh- 76 1,. 'fb 553355-i X A - , t i 4 952 Qggf , fi - . ff' Q 5 kwkf Th ar EPCHS Ranch As the ranch house is to the cowboy so is the Bar E.P.C.H.S. to us. The years are hard, but once we have gone and are on the uoutside looking in we wonder why and how we made such a fuss. For your Stadium, for your ideals, For the knowledge you've given me, For your teachers, for your traditions, East Peoria, I love thee. MAP of our RANCH M QAM WMM datum V f 2 V K wqvfj ,iLf'fO552 KK 3 f 5 ff Q Q f ,f I 'A 3,2 Q0 gf qv vf A Q0 MJ! if W J v-tv 4V 1, --W X X I K XX! f . Ranch House 6 2. Ranch Boss 7 3. Bronchobusters 8 4. Corral Cfioundupj 9 5. Yearlings 10 1' I rw IT W fw kiiifdeo ia Two-year-olds Three-year-olds Thoroughbreds W1'3Hg'191'S Campfire Howdy! Turn the pages of this hyar book-- You'll find our bosses, true, And if you'd care to further look, The l'Roundup you shall view. The hard-workin' Wranglers are here Our foreman in the lead, Of our l'Rodeo, never fear, You may be sure to read. .vivvf Y ,J-:' .f We 4'-09.3 . 1 . 5 y M -is Q , 5,1 ,tg 6 . 4 ., Q ,Q 5 . 1 Q X 1 - 1 ,L 0 5 ex A M 1 xg as Q4- X, 'QF 4 - , ...ff 'mf H Q . WW 2' ,Q ,s ' F0732 f www f 'Mx if ,. M W wg, 'Y frrm wh, jr-M v.,V,fjYg,e ,ga 4, -Q, wh, Q, kg? 1 iff 'ff www H ' 'wi wil xi.. 5 , W .Ag .. wwf 'Q M f N3 . , Qi X, ,T 1,5-f',wQ'U .X V .Ja X.-4 BYRON R. MOORE Principal Lf MR. RAY SWIGFIR MR. MARTIN E L President COOGAN, Secretary -J 4 XV, 7 wi Eight JOHN W. FRITZ Assistant Principal DIRECTOR MR. ANSEL JONES MR. VVILLIS BAKER Nine ASSISTANT B 0 S S MR. HAROLD SCHMIDT BRDNCHO BUSTERS 5' Q gl J 1: 7,1 CLARENCE E. ALLISON 'f' f j A f LOIS .IAHNKE CAMPBELI i 0 f 1 l A'l'llliE'I'I4' l1ll!ICC I'UH , M V gh MA'l'HEMA'I'IC'S, ENGLISH lfmwtlwlll and wrnurn IIPYOI' mix. l 9 Wi: 'V l Q HQHUS fl Yflllllg limb' of f'hiU'm' XYlwu you think thvy flo, you .S M! 574,15 ' INR' SIZE- - h gl-1 in 3 fix, 7 Iflui' lqezultxix and utgu-hnig' will 'ffl gf sure y a 'Q 21 1 ' 0, I 1 dz P Gt 90 I Jffwsyf 4 GRACE BAKER CHRISTIAN DAUGAARD SIN ll'11?iE1 1 1NDI's'rRIAL Aivrs fu- is Vol ny Ovoryrme, v , - , , U I Always laughing, full of fun. ullggxvg gamtiimfg iigdthlmb' ll lu explaining their function. ho's really a whiz. I l l ROSEIVIARY P. TSEVIS DORIS E. BRUMMIT ELAINE EDDS SCIENCE f'OINlMI'IRf'IC PIUATE ECONOMICS Poisml and 22'l'Z'LC'0fll1 when sho 'Phough lust yc-ar she wasn't Through his St0mi1C'h ig the WHY Walks, here, to E1 man's healjt. And Dyes that sparkle when she This year we've found her Very IH 116-Blpiflg the gll'1S Will 111911, talks. dear, she does her part. Ten BARBARA ELDER IIINGLISH This little miss is also new, lint she insists On studvnts get- ting thrii' lessons, tno. CLARABELLE FREIDHEIM HOME ECONOMICS She teaches the girls to sew and mend, And every day tO try and make a new friend. If l CLF ,-4f lil X4 M X JOHN G. KNEZOVICH K PHYSICAL EDUCATION jj Om' drill svrgf-:int with 11 great I i 'oive Q Z Wibtli 'great big svorl-s he does - K r I U.l0lC'G. Q xsfiwf f I . Q JAY L. LOGUE INDUSTRIAL ARTS Another new memhoi' of the fzmulty this year. 'Fu assist tho hoys in shop he is allways ni-nr. ELSIE FULTON GEORGE KING MARY B. MEMLER CLASSICS. ENGLIS'-II MATHEIVIATICS SOCIAL STITDIES Quiet, aittrzicftive. and vvry nvut, H., kngyvg hig huginpgg glygut Shi- ITOVQI' fziils us Whc-n W9 ask IYhi-fn it comes to Latin she ,112-eb,-3 and math, for needs. Cami be beat- Anti to his new home, han ShP's Willimr to 110111. mam' ac- make a path, tivities she leads. Eleven up .- LILLIAN M. MURRAY COMlVllClif'lC :Kay IJ' 2 E 'C 5' 'I 'C S '4 F.: 'D '4 FP CD ,,,,. x,- Q , G X S ,P :-. 0 I Q ,g W'-1' E 4' x ,I u :ll '-...af N? She teavhos us to write in an odd sort of way. NX'e are lt'1ll'lllllAS1' to 21Illll'6C'lIl ' r ARLENE RASMUSSON SPEECH Smiling: :md vhnrming and very petite, Shes taught the sneer-h vlnssvs there is nu dt-feat. - Y 1 -. - ',-g. T - . Qwli' .V , .L........,,,.-1...l?'.g,.. HARRIET V. ROVVLAND WILMITH SATTERLEE SOCIAL STITDIES PHYSICAL l+2Dl'CA'I'ION She teaches the history of this A nicer gal you c0uldn't find, great cpuntry of OLQVS. Always friendly, understanding, And against :my misbehavioi' and kind. she does glower. Twelve VIOLA M. SCHROEDER ENGLISH She teaches English Ill and :id- vises Hobby Club, tml, Yqu learn about aflverhs. :ld- geetives, and what Ainerican authors do. JUNE E. SHALKHAUSER MA'l'I'lElVlA'l'lf'S She's liked everywhere, this girl with golden curls. Shes liked equally well by all the boys and girls. RUSSELL SMITH SCIENCE Mr. Smith is allways t0 be. Master of physics and Chemistry f-K ROBERT SOMMERFIELD ' MVSII I-Iis hobbiesghis home his stamps. his lmml To all he lends an he 'if' hzincl S f JHH5' Ji l u I fl i lpn 3 '. . , kiwi' MEDIA STUBBIJEFIELD MA'l'HEMA'l'lf'S Sho le-ads the lfroshies along tho path, That li-ads to good behavior and good grads-s in math. MIRIAM WIGOIJA MARVIN C. WILSON ENG IJSH ENGLI Sl I So tiny. so swf-ot, so pix-ziszmt. XVhe-n he walks flown the hull S0 11109. he Catvlws all eyes. That also holds .true about Especially when hw wvurs those sugar and spice. loud flashy ties. ' Thirteen GLADYS WVINCIIELL t'fJMlXlERC'lC Shv mnkcs us lilcu English and typing: too, Xvilillillt heir. I 1lon't know what wi- would clo. JUNE THORNTON SICURETARY Sha' sits in the offic-ri to lvnrl a helping hand, To all who nee-ll zissistanf-v shlfs always been grand. BETTY HARI SlCl'IlIC'l'AIlY Pin-tix' lrluv c-yn-s :mil hlonwl curly hair. Wlien you go to the bookroom shefs always there. The Roundup We'uns larned in the West A uRoundup is the best, So let us begin at the start And look at us so smart! This is what we've clone: The uYearlings are Number Oneg uYears Two and Three, it is said, Bring on the uThoroughbrecls. vm Fifteen FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS PRESIDENT - ----- WENDELL FRYE VICE-PRESIDENT ----- BILL MARTIN SECRETARY-TREASURER ----- CAROLYN HUFF ADVISERS ---- MISS BAKER, MISS JAIINKE, MISS STUIEHLEFIELD Just last fall we started As the freshmen of the school, We walked the main halls quietly For we were new to rules. Choosing subjects and getting books Was one of the first things to dog Then we hurried away to our classrooms To learn that which was new. Sixteen The reward of good work is honor Which each one is anxious to gaing Some are chosen for council And some for clubs and games. To end the year with honors Should be the goal of all the class, And with teachers willing to help us This airn should come to pass. First row, left to right: Clara liruehl, ina Evans, Esther LaRosh, Margaret Atkins, Marilyn Winans, Dona Lambert, Joan lXIcMacken, Nancy Murphy, Anita Craigmiles, Geneva Abbott, Dorothy Johnson, Joan Starr. Second row: Lois McCann, Mary Taylor, Catherine Corwin, Edith Elmore. Third row: George Mc-lloy, Bill Jenks, Norman Brown, David Zeh, Bob Henry, Howard Dice, Charles Brown, Louis Moore, Bill Kunz, Don Heininger, Quinton Doty, Ralph Beam. 3 KIHM First, row, left to right: Itobert Xvestbrook, Jeanette Ball, Norma Greiner. Joyce Arnett, Bernice llrenth, Barbara Hillman, Rosemary Lacoek, Phyllis Hill, Wanda Rentfro, Shirley MclViann, Elaine Zick. VVendell Frey. Second row: Gerald Lampton, Robert McDaniel, Lucille Bruhn, Eleanor XVinkler, Donna Antle, Iona Howe, Mary VVys, Grace Vinson, Geraldine Comer, Leroy Presley, Gwaine Johnson. Third row: Donald Rybolt, Charles Guynn. Roy Crebo, Jim Davis, VVayne Thompson, Dick Nel- son, Bill Hoey, Gerald Sering, Paul Fisher, Donald HHIHITIGIU Albert Fink. Svventwnn s. First row, left to right: Ruth Brown, Jerry Cashen, lla Mooberry, Mary Bayles, Louise Moushon, Surber, Lois Derrington, Henrietta Hisle, Margaret Parrott, Doris Van Winkle, Delores Hoffer, Doris Baker. Second row: Betty Smith, Shirley Rittenhouse, Evelyn Wright, Ray Vinson, Kenneth Medearis, Arthur Clanin, Vernon Jolly, Don Miller, Henry Almasy, Anne Krohn, Donna Volz. Third row: Ronald Crebo, Emil Jacobsen, Donald llitner, Edward Roberts, Ralph Shaw, Warren Leonard, Charles Simms, Joe Neff, Nick Martin, Robert Upperinan, VVilliain Crebo. Shirley 3 5144-4' First row, left to right: Shirley Joos, Delores Sullivan, Carolyn lluff, Harriett Tape, Doris White, Lois llill, Martha Rule, Laurel Strickfaden, Katherine Richrath, Helen Sternes, Norma Ruben- king, Norma Sherman. Second row: Eloise Fischer, Richard Hnfeld, Dean Dully, Martin Chasco, VVilliam Hines, Jim Rayner, Charles Hyatt, Jim Lowery, Ralph Mercer, Clyde Tucker, Donald Reed, Lloyd Leas, Betty Nixon. 415' Eighteen 'tv vmfll .J ff d 11.9 ...pf NSF' First row, left to right: Betty Lampe, Lenore Fuller, Lorraine McKee, Kathleen Cole. Joan Schniider, Reta Davis. Lorraine Lug-eanbeal, Norma Van 'Winkle, YVelma Gottfreid, Kathryn Jackson, Shirley Reeder, Enla Craig. Second row: Bernetta Pascoe, Barbara Brown, Anna Turner, Richard Worklev. Donald Colbert. Marvin Rohls, Rob Jordan, Jack Christianson, Jerelea Knight, Barbara Boundy. Barbara Williitmsoii. Third row: George Pfeiffer. Richard Thames, Robert Herren, Tom .Iohnson, Gerald Potter, Edniond Schonert, Lloyd Bair, Delbert Van Oppen, Kenneth Mueller, Tom Schmitt, Robert Miller, Don- J Klan. First row, left to right: lflvelyn l,aRosh. Carol Richard, Darlene Cook, Pat Cashen, Doris lla- nmaun, Evelyn Rathbnn, Evelyn Noll, Virginia Huser, Virginia Keayes, Patsy Gay, Rosemary Mitzelfelt Aleenv Giebelhansen. ald Garske. Second row: Lavon Tnriier, Margaret Carlton, LeEtta Largent, David Matheny, Ronald Oehr- loin, Arthur Ahten, .lim Siefterinan, Mildred Ltlbitz, Betty Howe, Ronald Rathbun. Third row: Richard Resler, Don McCnlley, Herbert Spinder, Robert Fryman, Bill Martin, Elmer lValkcr, Donald Silber. Ronald Turner, Bill Bnrchell. Nineteen w- - J 0 6 r K U' SOPHOMORE CLASS o FF I c E RS PRESIDENT - - - - - ROBERT CARSON VICE-PRESIDENT - - - - PAUL FRITZ SECRETARY-TREASURER - - - LOREN TANGMAN ADVISERS - - MISS WIGOIJA, MR. LOGUE, MR. VVILSUN A pencil and some paper We forgot to take to class, When we were just green Freshmen-- A year or so just passed. The teachers tried to teach us What we were supposed to dog Positively no gum chewing We tholt was all taboo. V Twenty Of course we're now big Sophomores And quite grown up, you seeg For we've been here two whole years, Not just months of two or three. I know we've all just loved it And most won't want to leave, Because it's such a grand placeg So to it we'll always cleave. 'wr vi,-0' First row, loft to right: Bonnie Smith, Genevieve Lowe, Genevieve Geier. Pat Crothers, Doris Sliallvnberger, Mary Ellen Burke, Helen Corbin, Evelyn Phillips, Ruth Strickland, XVanda Meyer, Alice- ann Logan, Beverly Lee. Second row: Suzane Overend, Maxine Gibbs, John Clark, William Beard, John Bennett, Ray XVinkler, Clarence Davis, Donald Meiner, Donald Hooten, Marguerite Jones, Edna Mae Norman. Tliird row: Robert Crum, Raymond Geier, Horner XVells, Russell VVinkler, Bill Ellwanger, Jim Cloud, Wayne Cleer, Kenneth lleeser, NVilliam Brown. First row, left to right: Marian Johnston, June Mounts, Betty Kelley, .Io Ann Hoernian. Evelyn Keayes. Marjorie llall, Doris Stegmaier, Nina Cundiff, Pauline Bishop, Madeline Myers, liernadenm- Schrock, Doris Byrd. Second row: Doris Fellcer. Norma Foss, Floyd Davis, Charles Schmidt, Eddie Brewster, Eugene Felker, Richard Jourdan, Harold VVinkler, lVlarvin Doty, Betty Doemland, Carolyn Fandel. Third row: Arthur Rittlialer. Donald De-nsberger, Gene Jones, Donald Davis, Walter Butler. Ray lielser, Don Maras, Evan Bryan, Henry Noll. If A M ,Xg,,r 4N,,rw 'Jil 3... 'l'Wen ly-mn Fir: 1, row. left to right: Beulah Stanley. Mildred Smith, Mary Parnham, Veona Rittenhouse. Audrey Feeser, Clara Bacon, Carol Gvoich, Pat Cocgim, Lflllfil DO9I'i11E-T, B63 BIIITOH, D0I'0thY V311 Tassel, Mary Vinovioh. Second row: Ernest Van Dyke, Harold Overturf, Donna Millard, Grace McCulley, Santo lrrera, Jim Baker. Third row: Ray Tannhauser, Jim Davis, Howard Bishop, Dexter Travis. Bill Tilton, Dean Bass. Lloyd Stuher, Dale Gay, Everett Cottingham, Ansel Jones, John Jennings. Edward Fiedler. Fil-St I-UW, lgft tg 1-ight: Ruth Hall, Joyce Boynton, Betty Siever, Neysa Thames, Wilma Sullivan, Billie Ashburn, Peggy NVebb, Mavis Alderman, Donna Whitworth, Shirley Olfon, Carolyn Wiegand, Hazel Matheny. Sevond row: Kenneth Ary, Bill Stout, .loan Bouton, Mina Cundiff, Dick Lugeanbeal, Leonard Horsley. Third row: Richard Hart, Charles Link, Virgil Hornsby, VVayne Clanin, Harold Strickfaden, Alfred Bair, Ivan Berg, Jack W'ilson, Jack Bumgarner, Eugene Calhoun, Lyle Van Pelt, Amos Bennett. 'Pwr-ul,y-two an is Y, 1' , fix! First row, left to right: Delores Hornsby, Marian Schock. Juanita Taylor, Phvllis Sommer, W'ilma Eames, Eva Mae Hash, Edna Frye, Opal Taylor, Billie Marsh, Martha Moushon, Delores Giaco- letti, Vivian Noll. Second row: Lyman Urish, Charles McCormick, Phyllis VVirth, Mary Loew, Mary Schmitt, Don Hurd, Don Moretto. Third row: Gail Avery, Fred Denney, Clifton Grabill, Harlan Bessler, Willard llirge, Wayne Craigmiles, Hob Allen, Loren Tiillglllilll, Bob Carson, XVarren Giebelhausen, Kenneth Dickens. 50fZh.0.l7l.0!LQ, Klum, First row, left to right: Bonnie XVittfoht, Thelma Marsh, Dorothy Coleman, Mary Lou McAvoy. Jeanine Opperman, Mardell Mohn, June Lindgren, Mary Ann Kipling, Jane Preston, Evelyn Arnold, Jean Gould, Delores Stout. Second row: Paul Fritz, Bill Snyder, Kenneth Hersemann, Duane Van Winkle, Bob Elliott, Tom Alexander, Roy Petri, Jack Roberts, Luke Spinder. Third row: Arthur Gay, Harvey Gerbracht, Charles Geitner, Ray Christofferson, Jim McGloth- lin. Norman Hari, Glen Rainey. lyk! I, W Z- 'I'vvonly-tllrew Jlvmc- -Ulda, . . . JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS PRESIDENT - - - - IVIYRLENE JENKINS VICE-PRESIDENT - - ---- KENNETH CREEK SECRETARY-TREASURER ---- BONNIE SYLVESTER ADVISERS - - MISS BEVIS, MISS VVINCHELL, MR. KING Of all the schools in all the land, East Peoria High is mineg Its students and its teachers- Its fellowship so fine. Of all the classespin our school The best of all, you see, Is the class of nineteen forty-sixg So it's the one for me! Twenty-Your Dignified as upperclassmen With their privileges and powers, Junior' Prom and class play Pleasure bring this class of ours. Growing up? Just adolescence? Too sophisticated? No! It's from associations such as ours That life-long friendships grow. First row, left to right: Lois Gulick. Louise Maliongas, Marylou Ritthaler, Lavon Edwards Betty Kaywood, Margaret Colbert, Virginia Sparknian, Mary Carter, June Carter, Beverly Carson. Second row: Roland Mauschbaugh, Bob Jackson, Paul Arnett, Roscoe Fiedler, Paul Huwbecker Charles Mosher, Harold Kirk. Frederick Smith, John Hufeld, Jim Snyder. '1z,L'laM, First row, left to right: Delores Nimrnons, Helen Spring, June Curtis, Barbara Chick, Pat Glenn Caroline Hess, Mary Lindenfelser, lleulah Craig, Mary Bessler, Ruth Riggenbach. Second row: Carson Mellott, Bob Siever, Elwood Hersernann, Bob Frederick, Junior Stafford Ernest Timberlake, Eldon McClallen, Eugene Cutt, Carl Reed, Jack Crawford, Kenneth Richard. ,. Twenty-five First row, left to right: Jackie Habeck, Myrna Sharp, Jackie Amsler, Norma Marxmiller, Betty Gay, Doris Blackstone, Mary Tape, Shirley Randy, Bernadine Stout, Twyla Paluska, Marjorie Smith. Second row: Don Maloney, Kenneth Creek, Kenneth Davison, Jerry Short, Grant Martin, Willis Baker, Charles Lampe, George Graf, Mike Flanigan, Don Heppe, Jack Carroll. '1r,6'!au. First row, left to right: Norma Sutton, Lila Cotter, Irma Hedgcock, Virginia Vinson, Beverly Hufeld, Rosemary McNeill, .Juanita Hanks, Betty Patterson, Althea Lee. Second row: Paul Horton, Arthur Ebling, Jack Bouton, John Shepherd, Jim Shepherd, Robert Lowry, Gordon Blye, Dick Pfeiffer. Twenty-six First row, left to right: Frances Gregory, Ramona Hart, liettie Foss, Shirley XVicks, Carolyn Roberts, Janet Greiner, Charlotte Slusher, Bessie Carlton, Gertrude Burns, .loan Cook. Second row: Mitchell Mesecher, Jim Arnold, Eugene Suprunowski, William Schoedel, Garnet Reeder, Robert Stevenson, Ross Johnston, Albert Bloom. Robert Swanson, Jerry Schmidt. 'ftflaaa First row, left to right: Evelyn Strickland, Margarette Frazier, Helen Evans, Myrlene Jenkins, .lean Knight, Diana Dowell, Norma Hill, Doris Noll, Barbara Kelley, Bonnie Sylvester. Second row: Malcolm Amstutz, Herbert Ru19, F1'9fl91'iCk Frey, Francis Thacker, Ralph Graham, Miles Kozlowski, Howard Kemper, Thomas Matheny, Don Frey. 4 '5q,,, 1. figs 'Twenty-sevf'1i Jfwfwuqfwwzr . . . SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS PRESIDENT - - - - ELDON PARNHAM VICE-PRESIDENT - - - - BOB LANDER SECRETARY-TREASURER ----- NORMA MILLER ADVISERS - - - MISS SHALKHAUSFIR, MISS RASMUSSON, MR. SMITH In 'forty-one they were quite new- They ran from here to thereg There were so many rooms, it seemed Too much for some to bear. The second year they proved themselves To be a peppy classg For many things they did achieve- To Juniors most did pass. ,fi I -'nh -Q -c By this time they were known to all- The way they walked aroundg There was the Prom, and then the plans For next year's cap and gown. The time had come for them, at last, To leave their friends behindg And venture on to something new Remembering teachers kind. f . 'l'wm1ty-1-ig'11t Kenneth Acuff Aero Club 1.2.25 Intra- mural Basketball 2, William Ahten Junior Play Committeeg Aero Club 3: Radio Club 2: Student Council 4: Chirstmas Play 4: Sen- ior Executive Commit- tee. Lindy Arnold Student Council 1.2,fl,4. Treasurer 43 Basketball 1,1Z,3,4g Football 1,2.3.4, Captain 4: Trac-k 2: Ring Committee 33 Vice Presirient, Lettermcn's Club 3: Epoeh Staff 4. Twenty-nine Eleanor Adams Latin Club 1.2: Chorus 12,33 Student Council 1. 2.3.4, Vice-President 3: G.R. 23 Ring Committee 33 Enoch Staff 4: Sen- ior Executive Commit- tee. Marjorie Arnett Home Economics Club 1: Chorus 1,21 G.A.A. 1. 2.3,4: Pep Club 2.34: Epoch Staff 4: Christ- mas Play 4. Phyllis Barth G.A.A. 1,2,3,4g Pep Club 2,3,4: Chorus 2,3342 G.R. 43 Christmas Play 4. Eleanor Bauer Home Er-omimies Club 1 K' 'S Betty Biers G.A.A. 1.2.34 Treasur- er 3, Vice-President 4: G.R. 1,2,3,4g Intramural Basketball 12.3.43 In- tramural Baseball 1,2,3, 43 Home Economics Club 25 Bowling 23 Prom Committee 33 Assistant Director, Junior Play. Mary Ellen Blevins Chorus 13 Home Eco- nomics Club l,2,3, Pub- licity chairman 3. Earl Brown Aero Club 12.3, Presi- dent 33 'Fraick 21 Pep Club 23 Invitation Com- mittee 43 Epoch Staff 4: Senior Exec-utive Com- mittee. Thirty h Dorothy Beebe Home Eiooiiimmivs Club 1.23: Pep Club 2,343 Powwow Staff 4. Violet Blankenship G.R. 1.43 Home Eco- nomics Club 1,2,3,-13 Publicity Chairman 4: Hobby Club 3: Powwow Staff 4. Jean Bloom 'Fransferred from lndustry. Pat Brown 'l'I'2'lllSfQl'l'Cd from Anna-Joneslmro. Pep Club 3.4: G.A.A. 3. 4: G.R. 4: Radio Club 4. Secretary 4: Christ- mas Play -l. Robbrt Bryan Avro Vlub 1.2.31 lntrn- murzil -H1lSk4'tl'!lll 3.4. Frank Bury Intramural Basketball 23,45 Aero Club 3: Christmas Play 4. Alan Calhoun Student Counvil 1,2,3: Mixed Ch orus 1,2,3g Junior Play 3: Radio Club 3. Elinor Chiary Latin Plub 1.23 G.A.A. 12.3.41 Ulass Sevretziry- 'l'l'9ELSUY't'l' 23 Junior Play l'0I1'll I1l1fi1L'I Rowling 3. 41 Pop Club 4: Epoch Staff -lg GR. 4: Vhrist- mas Play 4. Thirty-one ff' ,UQ Betty Burton Horne Economivs Plulm l.2,2l: Bowling l,2,3.-lg G. R. 2.3.4, Publicity C'hz1irman 3: Prom Fum- mitteo 3: Junior Play Fnmmittev: S t u d 0 n t f'uunffil 3.43 E D 0 0 h Stuff 3.4. Cloeditm' 4: flll1lll'Il'l21ll, Se-liiol' Exec- utive Committee. Malita Buss Hobby Club 3,4, Pro- gram Chairman 43 Pow- wow Staff 4. Ketta Carpenter Home Economics Club 1: G.A.A. 1.23.43 G. R. 1,123.42 Pen Club 2.3.42 I-lol-bv Club 33 Powwnw Staff 4. Esta Copenhaver G.A.A. l.2.I!,4g Pow- wuw Stuff 4. Peggy Crawford Home Emmomios Club 13 G.A.A. 1.23.45 'Rowl- ing 1.2.3l.l, President lt Class Ser-rotary 23 Prom Committee 23 Christmas Play 4. Ruth Dancy latin Club 1.23 Chorus 1 2.33 G,R. 23 Class Committee 2.3.43 Junior Play: Epoch Staff 3: Pep Club 43 Powwow Staff 43 Christmas Play 4. J ack Davis Aero Club 1,23 Pen Club 1,23 Intramurals 1.2: Junior Play Committee: Christmas Play 4. Phylis Densberger Home Roonomies Club 1.23. Program Chair- man 33 G.A.A. 1.2,3,43 GR. 1,2,3,43 Bowling 1. 2,3,43 Junior Play Com- mittee: Epoeli Staff -13 Pep Clllli 4. Thirty-two Geraldine Cundiff Chorus 1.23 Home E00- nomics Club 12,33 Pep Club 3.4: G.A.A. 4. Kenneth Daughters Baseball and T ra 0 k Manager 13 Boys' Chor- us 1,23 Rand 1.2.3.4: Pep Club 2,33 Junior Play Committee: lntra' mural Basketball 3.43 Christmas Play 4. Welcome Davis Track 13 Football 23 In- tramural Basketball 1, 2,33 Christmas Play 4. Thelma Dickason Home Evonomios Club l,2,33 Pep Club 3.4. Doris Dismeier Camera Club 13 Latin Club 1.2: G.R. 1.2.3.4: Junior Play Usher: Li- brary Club 33 Pep Club 3.4. Don Duran Chorus 1,25 lntramurals 1.25 Latin Club 1,25 Band 1,2,3g Student Council 2,33 Junior Play. Donald Faught Aero Club lg Pep Club 2,33 Latin Club 1.2.-lg Band 2: Baseball Man- ager 23 Chorus 2,4: Christmas Play 4. Eileen Fisher Chorus 1: Home Eco- nomics Club 1,2,3g Pen Club 43 Powwow Staff 4. Thirty-three Lavern Doering Home Economics Club 1.23 G.A.A. 1.2.3.4' G.R. 2.3.43 Program Chair- man 4: Prom Chairman 3: Epoch Staff 4. Lucinda Dutcher Charles Filstrup Aero Club 1.2: Band 25 Radio Club 3. Jay Fritz Rand 1: Aero Club 13 Latin Club 1.2: Football l,2,33 Baseball 1,232 Boys' Intramural 1,131 Basketball Manager 3: Junior Play Committee. Bernard Geier Trac-k 1.2: Irltramurails 1,2,3.43 Pep Club 3.4. Mary Ann Gibbs Girls' Chorus 13 Latin Club 3. Betty Gilkerson Home Economics Club 1,2,3. Norma Gulick G.A,A. 1.2,3.4. Treasur- er 2, Program Chairman 33 Pep Club 23,43 Cheerleader 2,33 Traek Queen 2,31 Junior Play: Pro m Committee 3: Chorus 35 G.R. 3,45 Stu- dent Council 4. A, W.. Thirty-four Shirley Gerbracht Home Economies Club 1. 'Vl'6ilSl1l't'l' 13 Pop Club 4. Wayne Giebelhausen Football 2,3,4g Letter- men's Club 3,43 Student Council 3,-lg Christmas Play 4. Ellen Gove Latin Club 1,23 G.A.A. 1,2,3,4g Intramurals 1, 2,3.4g Library Club 1.2. 3,43 Epoch Staff 33 In- vitations' Committee 4. Doris Gvoich Latin Club l.!: Band 1. 2: CLR. 1,2,3,43 Student Council 2,3,4g Intramur- als 2,3,4, Junior Play: Prom Committee 3: Pop Club 3,4, G.A.A. 3.4: Epoeh Staff 4. Patricia Hanks G,A.A. l: Band 1.2.3.-lg Pep Club 13.45 Latin Club 3.1, Sccrctary 37 Chorus 4. Betty Hart G.A.A. 1,2,3,4g Pep Club 4. Patricia Haworth Latin Club 1,23 G.A.A. l,2,3,4: G. R. 1,2,3,4. Council Reprosentative 3, President 4: Pop Club l.2.3.4. Vice-President 2. President 3: Ring Committee 3: J u n i 0 1' Playg Chorus 3. Dolores Herseman Home Economics Club l.2,3.43 Hobby Club 33 G.A.A. 4: Pep Club 43 Powwow Staff 43 Bowl- ing 4. Thirty-five Kenneth Harmon Avro Club 1,2.4: Junior Play Committee. Zelta Hart Transferred from Smithfield. Junior Play: Home Eco- nomics Club 3. Betty Hendricks Bowling 1.2,3,4: G.A.A. 1.2,3,4. Shorts Manager 3: Intramurals 12.3.42 G.R. 2,35 Epoch Staff 4. Erwin Hersemann Football 1.13.41 Junior Play Committee: Lotter- men's Club 3.43 Student Council 4. Rodney Hinchman Class Secretfiry-Treas- urer 13 Football 1.2.3, Qcram Drive 2' Rasket K. 1 I -, , . ,- ball 2,33 Prom Commit- tee, 3. Leona Hunt Camera Club 1: G.R. 1. 2,3,4g B a n d 1,2,3,43 Home Economics Club 2: Latin Club 2,3, Treas- urer 3: Pep Club 3,41 Li- brary Club 3. Pauline Jones Band 1.23 G.A.A. 1,23 Tiatin Club 1.2,4: G.R. 1, 2.3,4g Pep Club 3,4. Lillian Klemm Transfererd from Kincaid. Rand 2: G.A.A. 2,43 Pep Club 2.3,4: Prom Com- mittee 33 Epoch Staff 4. Thirty-six Mary Hornbacker Chorus l: Home Eco- nomies Club 1,2,fi, Sec'- rrtary 23 literary Club 2.3: Prom Committee 22: llobbv Club 34. Presi- dent 43 G.A.A. 3.4: Iu- traimurals 3,45 Invita- tions Committee fl: Epoch Stuff 4, Covditor 4. Clifford Hurd Band 13 Track 1,3,4g Aero Club 2.3: Football 2,3,4g Basketball 2,3,4. Prom Committee 35 Pep Club 3.4: Lettermen's Club 3.4: Baseball 43 Christmas Play 4. Wilma Jones Chorus 1.2.33 G.R. 1.2 3: G.A.A. 1.2.7l.4, Secre- tary 3: Pep Club 2,3,4: Powwow Staff 43 Christ- mas Play 4. Doris Knight G.A.A. 1.23.41 Presi- dent 43 CLR. 1.2.3. Set'- rctary - Treasurer 2 ' Latin Club 1.2.3.4, Pres- ident 23 Intramurals l, 2.3,4g B o w 1 i n g 1.2.43 Junior Play: Prom Com- mittee 3: Enoch Staff 21 Chorus 2: Senior Exec'- tive Committee. Lauren Kohl Christmas Play 4. Shirley Lecocq Home Economics Club 1.2.31 Pvp Club 23 Fhorus 2. Myrtle Martin 'liansfvrred from Morton. Hobby Club 2.33 Home Economics Club 2.3.41 G.A,A. 45 Pep Club 4. Iris McDaniel Home Economics Club 1.2.31 Chorus Thirty-Seven Bob Lander Fmvtlmll 2.34: I' r 0 m Fummittec fl: IC p rx Q li Stuff 43 C111 s s Vive- l'1't-sirlvut 4. J ack Maholic llusketball 2.45 liuselvall 2,33 Student C0lll'lf'll 2, 3.4. President 4: Prom Committee 3: J u n i 0 r Plzxyg Pep Club 4. Patricia Mauschbaugh Home Economies Plub 1.21 G.A.A, 12.3.43 Pep C' l u b 2.3.4, Publicity Mmmger 3: Prom Com- mittee 3. Donna Meyer Uhm-us 1.13.43 Home lCr'1mnmiCS Club l'?.fl.'l' l,I'Ui.2'l'1lITl Cbairmmi 41 Pop Club 2.3: Clll'lStYTl2lS Play 4. Hildegarde Meyer 'l'l'2'lllSfk'l'I'6d from VVavvrly. S. Dakota. Pm-iv Club 43 Home Evo- uumic-S Club 4: Puwe wow Staff 4. Norma Jean Miller G,A,A. 1.2.-3.41 Tillllll Club 1.!.3.4, Sec'i'viz1i'y 2. Prosidvut 4: G.ll. 1.2 4, Couueil Representa- tive 1: lutramural Rasa-- ball 12.3.13 Bowling 2: Tntram1u'al Basketball 2.25,-13 Pen Club 13,41 Prom Committee 132 Class So01'ftu1'y-'I'1cas- un-r l. Donna Mooberry Czinwrzu Club 13 Baud 1, 2.3.4. Sooretary-'l'rc:1S- ui-or fl: Prom Commit- mittvo 33 Junior Play Cuxnniittoog Epoch Staff 4. Glenn North Avro Club 1: Baud 1.2. Il! .Iuuior Play: Stumlout Coum-il 41 Christmzls I'lay 4. iz .x Thirty-eight Nellie Miller 'l'1'ar1sfer1'u41 from 1Yood1'uif. ChriStmz1:4 Play 4 Florence Moldenhauer Home lCc'onomic's Club 1.23.43 Cliristmas Play 4. Melvin Morger Aero Clulv 1: Panfl 192 3.4, Prvsiclvnt 4: Prom Committee CZ: Junior Play Committee. Robert Oldham T1'HHNft'l'l'L'll from XVoml ruff. Intramuml Basketball 33 Pop Club 4: Christ- mas Play 4. Eldon Parnham Chorus 13 Intramural Basketball 1.23 Track 23 Football 23,43 Prom Committee 33 Pep Club 43 Class President 43 Lettermen's Club 4. Virginia Ritthaler Transferred from Morton. Band 2,3,43 Home Eco- nomics Club 2.3343 Hob- by Club 3: Pep Club 43 Powwow Staff 4. Alice Schmidt Student C o u n c il 1,23 Chorus 23 Pen Club 2,3, 4: G.A.A. 2,3,4. Dewey Sering Track 2,43 Junior Play Committee: Pen Club 4: Intramural Basketball -1: Christmas Play 4. 'lean Thirty-nine Marjorie Risen G.A.A. l,2.3.4. Vi ce - President 33 Pop Club 2,3,4, President 43 Class Treasurer 23 J u n i o 1 Play: Prom Committee 3. Melba Rubenking Latin Club 3,4. Alfred Schoedel Christmas Play 4. Charlotte Seward Chorus l3 G.A.A. 1.2.3 43 Pep Club 1334. Daryl Shaw Baseball 1,2,3,4g Bas- ketball 1.23.43 Football 23 Scrap Drive 2: Class Vice-Presiflrnt 2.3: Jun- ior Prom King: Letter- men's Club 3,4: Senior Executive Committee. Kathryn Stanley Home Economics Club 13 G.A.A. 1,2,3.4, Secre- tary 4: Chorus 1.23.41 Pep Club 2,3.4, Program Chairman 35 Powwow Staff 4. Shirley Starr 'Fransfererd from Pekin. Pep Club 13.43 G.A.A. 2.3,4: Hobby Club 33 G. R. 4: Powwow Staff 4. Charles Stevenson Transferred from Cullom. Pep Club 4: Band 4. Forty Mary Ellen Short Home Economics Club 1: Chorus 1,23 G.A,A. 1 2.3,4: Christmas Play 4. Lois Stanley G.R. 1, S6L'1'l'lZll'y lg G. A.A. 1.2,3.4g Intramural Paskotball 1,2,3,4g In- tramural Baseball 1,13 43 Rowling 1,4. Alice Stegmaier Rand 1,2,2!,43 Camera Club 1. Mary Stoecker Camera Club 11 Band 1 'E Marjorie Sweety Home Economics Clnh 1,2,3,4, Assistant Pro- gram Chairman 4: G.R. 2,3,4g Hobby Club 33 Junior Party Commit- tee: E p 0 1' h Stuff 41 Christmas Play 4. Norma Webb G.A.A. 1.2: Home Evo- nomics Club 1,21 Li- bmry Staff 1.2.35 Epoch Staff 32 CLR. 4. Ruth Wiegand Chorus 1.21 Home E00- nomivs 23 G,A.A. 2.3.42 Pop Club 2,3.4. Vuliliv ity Vlmirinnii 4: Fhrist' mas Play 4. Forty 'one Geraldine Van Winkle Helen Wiegand G.A.A. 1.2,3,4: Chorus 1,2,3,4g Pep Club 2,3,4: G.R. 3,4. Council Rep- resentative 43 Christ- mas Play 4. Doris Zimmerman Transferred from Metamora. G.A.A. 3.43 Band 3,4. Name Kenneth Acuff Eleanor Adams William Ahten Ma1'jorie Arnett Robert Arnold Phyllis Barth Eleanor Bauer Dorothy Beebe Betty Biers Violet Blankenship Mary Ellen Blevins Jean Bloom Earl Brown Pat Brown Robert Bryan Betty Burton Frank Bury Malita Buss Alan Calhoun Ketta Carpenter Elinor Chiary Esta Copenhaver Peggy Crawford Geraldine Cundiff Ruth Dancy Kenneth Daughters J ack Davis Welcome Davis Phylis Densberger Thelma Dickason Doris Dismeiqr Lavern Doering Donald Duran 1 Lucinda Dutcher Donald Faught Charles Filstrup Eileen Fisher Jay Fritz Bernard Geier Shirley Gerbracht Mary Gibbs Wayne Giebelhausei: Betty Gilkerson Ellen Gove Norma Gulick Doris Gvoich Patricia Hanks Kenneth Harmon Betty Hart Zelta Hart Thoroughbred Hobby sleeping singing talking sports dancing modeling jokes factory work money making people beautiful collecting selling airplanes driving fishing toe dancing riding speaking physics abolish bugs Crime Doctor cooking honesty business clerking getting up early asking questions to get a grade of 70 caring for children imitations to eat good food managing money fighting --ffV'qrking eating I talking fast the newspaper flirting with girls getting his bait telling people how to do things cooking standing in the rain horses typing, dictation turning on that personality men radio reciting in classes raising chickens giving parties Secret Ambition to set the world's record in sleeping to become an opera star to become a politician to become an organ grinder to become a new Fred Astaire to be a PoWer's Girl to be a radio comedian to be a defense worker to marry a millionnaire to be a beauty operator to be a cotton picker sell lingerie to to become an aviator to become a safe taxicab driver to catch the world's largest fish to become a famous toe dancer to become a street car driver to become a speech teacher to become an inventor to be an exterminator to commit the perfect crime to get married to become the most honest citizen to own a chain of restaurants to own a dime store to become a milkman to be an F.B.I. investigator to graduate to become head of an orphanage to be a blackface artist to raise chickens to be a banker's wife to be a wife beater to be a navy officer's wife to be a cook to be an auctioneer to get a by-line in the Chicago to be a ladies' romeo to be a street-corner wolf to become a teacher Sun to own a country inn to sell umbrellas in the rain to own a ranch to be a secretary with a good-looking boss to be a movie star to be the most divorced woman in the world to be the Singing Lady to be an interpreter to be a farmer's wife to give parties like Elsa MaXWell's Forty-two Favorite Song Lazy Bones Oh Thou Sublime Sweet Evening St Breathless Hinky Dinky Do Dance With a Dolly Cover Girl When Joe Miller Told a Joke Rosie, the Riveter Look for the Silver Lining You Were Never Lovelier South Bloomer Girl Johnny Zero Honk! Honk! Three Little Fishes Tip Toe Through the Tulips The Trolley Song Speak Low Don't Look Now Bugs' Parade Murder! He Says A Cottage for Two Abraham At Sonya's Cafe Million Dollar Baby Milkman Keep Those Bottles Quiet All Through the Night I'1l Get By Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby Who Dat Up Dere? Down on the Farm I Ain't Got a Dime to My Name You Always Hurt the One You Love School Days Mr. Five by Five Take It Easy Try, Try Again Love Affair Whistle While You Work An Apple for the Teacher The Waiter and the Porter the Upstairs Maid The Umbrella Man Pistol Packin' Mama Take a Note, Darling and Swinging on a Star A Good Man Is Hard to Find ,Night aiiil Day Hinky-Dinky Parlez-vous The' Farmer in the Dell The Darktown Strutters' Ball I A 'L 1 ,R .-vlfllf wifi' i Qt' r Name Patsy Haworth Betty Hendricks Dolores Herseman Erwin Hersemann Rodney Hinchman Mary Hornbacker Leona Hunt Clifford Hurd Pauline Jones Wilma Jones Lillian Klemm Doris Knight Lauren Kohl Bob Lander Shirley Lecocq John Maholic Myrtle Martin Pat Mauschbaugh Iris McDaniel Donna Meyer Hildegarde Meyer Nellie Miller Norma Miller Florence Moldenhauer Donna Mooberry Melvin Morger Glenn North Robert Oldham Eldon Parnham Marjorie Risen Virginia Ritthaler Melba Rubenking Alice Schmidt Alfred Schoedel Dewey Sering Charlotte Seward Daryl Shaw Mary Ellen Short Kathryn Stanley Lois Stanley Shirley Starr Alice Stegmaier Charles Stevenson Mary Stoecker Marjorie Sweety GSPFY Van Winkle Norma Webb Helen Wiegand Ruth Wiegand Doris Zimmerman Hobby staying home acting crazy flying doing his part chinning himself playing the piano traveling magic giving predictions dancing helping others saleswoman cooking taking care of people clothes to be good society doing nice things for people skating cleaning house baking making friends dreaming walking listening cars horses business girls singing planting flowers talking loud reminiscing love machinery flying observing odd things eating bragging collecting coins Starr gazing writing poetry inventing taking her time being sweet writing to get grades glamour .f ' handling men collecting hats Secret Ambition to become an old maid to become matron of an asylum to be a VV.A.A.F. to be a good sailor to own a circus to become a great pianist to be a second Eleanor Roosevelt to be a second Houdini to be a fortune teller to be a dancing instructor to be a Salvation Army worker to sell kisses for War Bonds to run a hot-dog stand to be a bouncer to be a dress designer to go to heaven to be a debutante to be Miss Santa Claus to be a professional skater to be a housewife to be a good baker for some man to be voted the most successful woman in America to dream of the one she loves to be the champion hitch-hiker to be a noted conversationalist to be a car mechanic to be a cowboy to sell peanuts in the court housexsquare to go to college to be a second Lily Pons to be a gardener to be a cheerleader to be a hermit to be a second Charles Boyer to become an engineer to be an air hostess to become a detective to become a fat woman in a carnival to marry a prize fighter to become a miser to become an astrologer to invent a mechanical man to be another Joyce Kilmer to sleep to own a sweet shop to become the world's best known author to become a quizkid to be voted number one pin-up girl to marry Charles Atlas to work as hat-check girl at the Stork Club Forty -three 'val LKB Favorite Song l'll Walk Alone You're Driving Me Crazy Beyond the Blue Horizon Anchors Avveigh Man on the Flying Trapeze Music Maestro, Please Far, Far Away That Old Black Magic Tell Me Why Waltz Me Around Again, Willie Ring Those Bells Any Bonds Today The Wienie Man Jersey Bounce Did You Notice Anything New? Open Up Those Pearly Gates Cafe Society Santa Claus Is Coming to Town Skating on a Cloud A Fireside Chat Here Comes Cookie Sweet and Lovely The Dreamer Don't Fence Me In My Topic of Conversation Flat Tire Polka Back in the Saddle Peanut Vender A Pretty Coed Has Gone To My Head Sing Baby Sing Honeysuckle Rose Stand Up and Cheer Alone I Love You Smoke Gets In Your Eyes With My Head in the Clouds I'll Find You Take It Big My Beloved ls Rugged Mister, Ain't You Got a Dime? Stairway to the Stars Lullaby of the Leaves Men of Iron Time Waits for No One On the Good Ship, Lollipop I'm Going to Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter Teacher's Pet You're My Little Pin-up Girl I'll Be Loving You Always Hat-Check Girl The Wranglers They think, they argue, they light For things they believe to be right, And the Council, you'll all agree, Speaks for both you ancl me. The Epoch Staff is here Whose book you buy each year, Ancl the Powwow Staff to you Brings news both fresh and true. w.. ,Q. Forty-five Forty- Um, Jn John Maholic President, Student Council e Q S E fini , M AE g ir - ,Q Knuncl OFFICERS 1 li if l x, if M4 l i fly lj xi 7 .Lk M 2 ' 2 5 W? ' . 7 + in I i 'f' wwf jp W , ,, , Llgl ,w1f3L PRESIDENT - - - - JACK MAHOLIC VICE-PRESIDENT - CHARLES LAMPE SECRETARY ---- NORMA GULICK TREASURER ---- LINDY ARNOLD ADVISER - - - MISS MEMLER First row, loft to right: XXY2ll'l'61f'l Giobellmnsun, Luke Spindvr, Eddie Browster, M, G. M4-secher. Hill Ahtln Barry Ciatt, Jim Snyder. Ser-ond row: Jacfkio Amslei: Helen Spring. Lani-4'-l Stric-kfziden, XVilmz1 Sullivan. Ruth Riggenlumli. IIUIIS Gvoif-li, De-lures Ilm-nsby, lfllezmoi' Adams, Joycl- Boynton. Third row: Betty Howe. Doi-is Null, Grant Martin, W':1yne Giebelhzlusx-n, Donald Miller. Earl Brown, Lindw Arnold. Chzirlvs Lzimpe. Jan-k Maholiv. Nurma Gnlin-k, Betty Burton, Glvnn North. Miss Memler, Adviser. I l1i'ty-Hmm!!! COVEDITORS - - Betty Burton, Mary Lon Hornbacker ART EDITORS - - Betty Burton, Bob Lander, M, G. Me-secher, Jim 'Snyder Q -wx In . CLUB EDITORS - Earl Brown, Lavern Dvering, Lillian Klemni MUSIC - - Mary Linclenfelser SPORTS EDITORS - - - Mz11'j01'i0 Arnett, FACULTY ' ' ' Witty Hfxlldricks Lindy Arnold, Grunt Martin CLASS ,E 'T0RS, TYPISTS - - Elinor Cliiznry, Marjorie Sweety Senior - Phylis Densbeirger, Donna Mooberry Junior A V - Mm,jm.i9 Smith PVIELICITY - - Eleanor Adams, Doris GVOiC1l. gophomore - Iama Pwqtou Mary Ann Kipling, Glenn North, Daryl Shaw lf're::lnnzxn Laurel Stricrl-gfxnleli ADVISERS - - Miss Menilvr, Miss Murray lfilst row. 14-ft to right: Miss Mvmlor, Advisor: Mary' Ann Kipling, lZ'l4-zxnur Atlzznis. Doris Gvuis-la, Betty llt-ntliir,-ks, lit-tty llurlun, Mary Lou II4Jl'llll2It'k1'l'. l.2llll't'l Stri1'kt'zulen. Mzxrjoriv Arnett. Mzxry I.iml1-nfwlst-r. Ilonnu Nluulwrry. I,2lV4'1'Il lJ1H'l'lllL1', lXlurjori4- Smith. Phylis IM-r1sllPl'S-21'l'. NWS NIIITPIY, Aelvist-r. S1-vond row: l+llino1' 4'lxizu'y, Juno Prt-:4tun. lll, fl, lXIesvrlxm', llznyl Shaw, Null llrown. Limly Arnold, Grunt iklzxrtin. limb I.i1llIl1'l'. Cllmin North, Lillian lilt-mm. Al!ll'jO1'i1' Swoety. 5 - K-.. Forty-night 'fb T ff, A, NEWS STAFF EDITORS - - Ruth Dancy, Dolores Ilerseman, Marjorie Risen ASSISTANT MAKE-UI' EDITORS Kathryn Stanley, Pauline Jones NEWS EDITORS - - - Myrtle Martin, Geraldine Van VVinkle FEATURE EDITORS - - - Malita Buss, Florence Molmlenhauor, Pat lvlauschbnngh CIRCULATION - ---- Shirley Starr BUSINESS - Eileen Fisher, Ketta Carpenter First row. left to right: Hilcla-g'zu'4lv Iwluyer. Mzllilu Starr. Pnl Hunks. Miss Ilnsnillssmx, Allvisvrl Esta Unlwmllx Ilvlty Hurt. GL'I'QIllllllI-' Yun XYinkle. SPORTS EDITORS - HEADLINE EDITORS Pat Brown, VVilmu Jonew - Hilclegarcle Meyer, Alice Schmidt COPYREADERS - Dorothy Beobo, Put Hanks PROOFREADERS - - - Esta Coponhaver, Geraldine Cunflifl - Betty Hart, Ile-Ity Gillierson XVI-XR PUISLICITY - HEAD TYPIST Virginia Iiitthaler ADVISER - Miss REISIIIIISIKOII Russ, GL-1'11I1Ii1iv 1'umliI'I'. xvllilllllil Iiitllizllvr, Shirley zxvvr, lXIui'jm'io lliswn, I':1t I!ruwn. Dorothy Iiuelmv S4-cfrlml row: Iizltliryn Stnnlvy, Dolmws I-Iorsenmnn. Myrtle M2ll'tiH, Violet, IZILLIIIWIISIIIII. IQIIUOII FISHVIN Bvuy Gilkm-Sony Ruth Ijunpyi Pal Muugg-hlmugh, XVilm:L Jones. Alive Svhmidt, Keltu f'2lI'lll'llfCl', Pauline Jrinos FlurenCe lxlllltlljlllllllltif. Russxll Sherwood. Furty-nine The Rodeo This year's exciting event in the West, I reckon you all know, Is the uRodeo, the cowboys' exhibition To which the ranchers go. Among East Peoria's you will find Basketball, football and baseball, And, along with the sports of the G.A.A., Our students we do enthrall. 1 L-fb? Fifty-one umm, Jmwazr The gridiron was as hot as Guadalcanal in the first game of the season, played at the Peoria Stadium against Manual. The inexperienced Raiders bowed to the heat and were defeated by Manual 20 to 2. In the next game, which was packed with last minute thrills, and played in a con- tinuous mist, the Maroon and Gold held Pekin to a 7 to 0 score at the half. The Chinks scored 19 points to the Raiders' 7 in the last half, closing the game with a scoro of 26-7. Fighting stubbornly against a Spalding team-undefeated for the season-the Raiders lost 19 to 7. The East Peoria Raiders next ran up against the powerhouse Gales- burg eleven and came out on the short endof a 26 to 12 score. After four losses, on October 13, the Raiders finally broke the jinx and romped over a good Washington team, 28 to 13. The following Friday the Red Raiders traveled to Canton where they spoiled Canton's final home game by wixlloping the oversized Little Giants 26 to 7. East Peoria was hoping for an upset victory over Central as they scored a touch- down in the first few minutes of playg but then Central's speedy backfield spoiled our hopes as they scored three touchdowns to win 20 to 7. Inspired by letters from former East Peorians, who are serving on the war's grid- iron, the Raiders opened the Woodruff game with all guns ablaze and scored early in the game. The final score was 6 to 6. East Peoria still holds the Silver Horseshoe! Fifty-two First row, lvft to right: Hill Rurvlwll. Man- ?lg4'l'I Kennwtli Crovk. Kvnnn-th Davison, Louis Siviiirlcxg Don lloppo, NOVIHZIII llziri. Jain-k Carroll. XX'g1i-1-vii Gif-iwllmiisvii. Don Maloney, Paul Fritz. Grunt Martin. Erwin Hcrsvman, Curl Ream-d, Rin-liurd Hufvld. Mzmzlgcw. Suvfrnd row: MV. linezuvif-h. Cmuflig G1-m'p.:'e Graf, XVaynv Gielwllmiisen. Charlvs Lampe. Lloyml Stubwr, Lindy Arnold. Ulifforfl Hurd. Jvrry Short XYillis Rakm-V, Eldon Parnhzlm, Clizlrlvs Arnulil, Miz Allison, Coach. FOOTBALL SCORES NVQ They 2 Manual 20 7 Pekin 26 7 Spalding 19 12 Galesburg 26 28 Washington 13 26 Canton 7 7 Central 20 6 Woodruff 6 Fifty-three Umar, awww The Red Raiders opened their basketball season with two defeats, losing to Metamora and Galesburg. The Raiders won their first game, defeating the Kewanee Boilers 42 to 38 in a well played ball game. Canton sent the Raiders into defeat, 49 to 4l, at Alice Ingersoll gymnasium. East Peoria tripped up the Woodruff Warriors 31 to 25 on the Raider court, annexing their first Greater Peoria win. Central invaded the East Peoria court, displaying a fine fast breaking team. We came out on the short end of a 47 to 40 battle. Traveling to Washburn, a new team on the Raider schedule, East Peoria played one of their finest games, swamping the hosts 57 to 41. East Peoria lost to the Rams from Manual, 37 to 32, after a fourth-quarter Ram rally. Meeting Pekin in a closely fought game, the Raiders were defeated 49 to 4l. The Maroon and Gold annexed another game from the Spalding Irish 41 to 31, the Raiders leading all the way. The fast Purple Raiders from Bloomington showed up the East Peoria Raiders in a splendidly played ball game. Washington also easily defeated the East Peorians. The Raiders invaded the Tremont battlegrounds, and edged out the Turks 49 to 47 in a free scoring encounter. Peoria Central sent the Raiders into defeat a second time 47 to 40. Leading the Maroons for three quarters, our offense fell apart in the final stanza. Avenging an early defeat, Woodruff left the VVarrior court with a 37 to 27 victory. ln a heart- breaker, the Raiders were upset by a scrappy Washburn team, 42 to 41. Losing their fourth in a row, the Raiders bowed to Spalding 38 to 34. East Peoria outclassed the Cuba five 55 to 37 in a free scoring game. Tremont was scalped by a red-hot Raider quintet to the tune of 53 to 25. In a spectacular third quarter the Raiders swished the nets with 25 points, missing only two shots. The Raiders made it three in a row against Roanoke. In an overtime thriller, East Peoria played one of its best ball games of the year, but was defeated by Manual. Washington displayed a red-hot of' fensive as they walloped the Raiders. The Chinks again proved too powerful, although the Raiders played a beautiful game. On the Bloomington court, the Raiders couldn't hit the basket so the Purple Raiders whipped them in their last regularly scheduled game. The Raiders annexed the Regional championship for the second year in a row, playing inspired ball. Fifty-four fy 1, BASKETBALL SCORES r XYO ..5 lXlvl:1mm'n ZI G:1ln'SlmllI'5.1' I2 K1-vnnlwv ll fvillllflfl CII XYumll'uI'1' lu f't'IllI'?ll 57 NVz1sI1bu1'1u I!! Mzllmlxzll H P4-kin 41 Spalding 236 Blucwmiluxluxx 257 XYHSlliYH.:'lllll -lib 'l'l't'I!IOl1t -Hr f,'t'lllI'2l1 27 XxY00dl'1lff II XV2lShbUl'Il ill Spzxlding 55 Cllhu GI! T1'z-rnont 75 Rmmokc- .M Alillllliil Iii! YV:1shing'tm1 42 P4 kin Sill BlfP1lII1i!lg'l!Dll REGIONAL TOURNAMENT NVQ 55 C'hillif'0thn- fi Xhmslmilmgtml 57 EllI't'k2l f1'l'l2lH1lYiUllSllillW SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT NVQ 211 Blm1111i11::tol1 .lu Fl ll Imft to right: Don Mulmwy, Kvmu-th r. H14-y 17 HN -In 3.7 -17 41 37 -ESI 311 -iN -IN 47 47 227 42 :W 37 25 45 217 54 57 mil l'I14'y 523 543 li! T 11 0 y S31 C I'vv1i uk Mzlholic, Tom Alexzmdcr, Lindy Al'1l4Dll1. ifford Hurfl, Ross Johnston, Jim Arrmld, Imn vlmpc, MV. Allison. Umm-11. Fifty-five First row, loft to right: llill Burchell, 1Vl21llElH'0l'I Charles lleitner, lmren 'I'z1ngm:1n. Arthur Gay, Don Mc- l xv Bd 1 Duxlfl M ith nx h l fl Culley, Paul Fisher, Harvey Gerlwacht, Herbert Spinder, is .' . X su: 1 z e Ric an Hu 4- il. 1VI?lll2lgt'l'. Second row: Mr. liiiezovivli. Com-li: Don Moretto. llmmlcl in-lirlein, John Gay, limb Jordan. Alfred llziir. LeRoy Eckstuin, Arthur Ulzuiin, liu1'1'y Flatt, Mr. Allison, Coucli. J -.Soplwmofm jzwfball, The East Peoria Freshman-Sophomore team had another successful season under John Knezovich. They won 4 games and lost only 1. In the first game of the season the young Raiders defeated the Kewanee Frosh-Sophs 7 to 0 after a hard battle. The second game was against Manual one Monday evening after school. The East Peorians came off with a Well-deserved 7 to 0 victory. Traveling across the river to Woodruff, the young Raiders suffered their only de- feat of the season. They lost to the strong Woodruff team 13 to 7. The Central Freshman-Sophomore team came to East Peoria and was defeated by the Red Raiders 7 to 6. We played a fine game and really deserved the victory. On November 12, the Frosh-Soph Pekin- ites journeyed to East Peoria where they were badly beaten by the Red Raiders. The final score was East Peoria 25, Pekin 7, which was a fine Way to wind up a suc- cessful season. Several of the boys who played on this Freshman-Sophomore team will probably be on the varsity squad next year. Mr. Knezovich hopes that next year more boys will come out for his football team. if if if We They 7 Kewanee 0 7 Manual 0 7 Woodruff 13 7 Central 6 25 Pekin 7 Fifty-six . , . T tt to right' iharlus Simms, Dun Hurd. Huy 1 l Lloyd Stuber, Altred Bair, Kenneth Memlearis, Don 1' fI10ZllX'lL'l lvloretto luke Slllllllbll Paul Fritz, M I l, Coavl YVQ 16 23 14 19 36 27 32 20 42 27 34 36 41 33 3 Saphomoluz, Baaknflmll, Freshman-Sophomore Basketball Scores Metamora Galesburg Kewanee Canton Woodruff Central Washburn Manual Roosevelt Jr. High Pekin Spalding Bloomington Washington Tremont They 29 38 43 21 41 42 20 34 49 32 31 14 39 Fifig sc YVe 50 35 39 26 51 36 27 38 37 37 21 26 22 Central Woodruff Washburn Spalding Cuba Tremont Roanoke Manual Woodruff Roosevelt Jr. High Washington Pekin Bloomington They 41 34 24 32 30 27 25 42 48 38 25 50 41 ,Q First row, left to right: Don Moretto, Grunt Mzrrtin, Don Maloney, Tom Alexander, Bob Carson, Loren Tangnmn. Second row: Daryl Shaw, Paul Fritz, Roy Petri, Jack Maholic, Mr. Allison, Conch. BASEBALL-1944 BASEBALL-1944 VVe They We They 3 Pekin 2 2 YVOodrnff 3 2 Central 8 4 Pekin 5 li lVoodruff 7 and, 2 Canton 9 5 luillllllil 13 l Manual 3 0 Central 5 ll-6 Washington 2-4 9-3 Gulesbnrg 3-5 3 Pekin 4 First row, left to right: Pnnl Fritz, Kenneth Creek, Jim Arnold, Charles Geitner, VVi1lis linker, Lnke Spinder. Second row: Mr. Knezovich, Coach: Hob Swanson, Kenneth Davison, Ross Johnston, Frederick Frye, Eddie Brewster. Fifty-flight Left to right: Betty Kelley, Norma Sherman, Shirley Wicks, Carol Richard, Phyllis WVirth, Bal barn Billman, Mary Schmitt, Betty Howe, Barbzu-a Kelley, XVanda Meyer. O Qfzum, '772apJmftQ4, and 6' Left to right: Doris Noll, Santo Irrera. Roland Mauschbaugh, Bonnie Sylvester. lfifty-niinw First lww, ll-ft to right: lrmw-y Sw1'in,:'. Vlmrlvs Ge-itnc-r, .Im-lc Roberts, l,luyll Stulqcr. Turn All-xundl-r K'l1:1rln-s Stevenson. llumlfl Kirk, .lun-li Maholiv, Iflslllil- lfrvwster. Iit'l'll1ll'd Gcior. Second row: liosernelry l.:n-of-k, Jean flnnlll. Mavis Aldurmzln. Dun Mnluney. l':1t Coogan, Ilutli NVi4'gzln1l. Nl21l'j0l'lK' Risen. li.-ily Kg-llcy, Jim Arnold, Pall l'z1:4l11-ri. Doris Hamann, I221l'hfll 2l Kullvy. Third row: Norman Hznri. Mary Taylor. l!:11'ln:u:L Brriwn, Shirley XYivks, lluris Stwgmzlil-i'. lf!llllL'I'lllk' liil-lnsxlli. lllixrllial linlv. Czlrulyn liuln-rts. l'e-ggy t'r11wt'orLl, Lillian Klvmm, Clmrlntll- Svwarfl. Na-ysu 'l.llIll1lt'S. Vinh-1 Blankvnsliip. M:1rg'11c1'ill- Jfmvs. Edna Mm- NIIVITIEIII. Doris XYliit9, llarrietl 'l':l1w, Santo lrrs-ru. Fourth ruw: Nnrmzi Sln-rnmn. .Imam Stzlrr. Al2ll'g':Il'PfV Sliorwmnl, Put Huwrmrlli. G1':'10v Alc't'11lll-y. Mzlry Svlimilt, Phyllis Wirth, NOVIURI llill. lliunzi Dnwlill. Imris Gvoivli, NUVHIM Gulivli. V211 UVHWII. Vzllsy Huy. lizlrlulisu Williamson, llvnrivltzl Hislv. lbuluiw-s Sullivan. Mary Ellrn Short. Mn 6111-4' First row. loft to right: Tlulmrwt Omwermzin. Paul Fisher, Robert YVestlJrfiok, Gwuin Jnlinsrni, Donald Gnrsko. Roland AIz11isf'lilm11g'li, th-ini Jnnos, Donald DuiislJe1'fJ.'P1', Dun Iloi11ing'f11'. Snfmiicl row: lmlliu-s ll-irsi-inanni, Myrtlv Alzirtin. Aliuv Sm'lirl1i1ll,Nurn1z1 Millvr, lh-tty Hinrs, Ibm-is Kniglit. Pill Al1lllSUhllIlllg'll, l'z1l Hunks. llutli lmncy, Sliirlvy 114-iln':1Ql1t, Ili-lwn XYi9gz11ul, Phyllis llurth, 'Fhird rmr: Mzugiuriu Arm-lt, .lvrvlezl Kniglit, lVi2ll'l,lill'2l, lluunmly, Ulmrlutll- Slnsliwr. Xylllllil .loin-S. Keitzl l'ill'lH'llll l', llulli Slrivklzind. .Xltlu-:1 In-v, ICU-lyn Strivlqluml, Mary lim-w, De-lure-s llurnslry, l'ug:g.x'y XY.-lvlr. lb-mlm XYl1itwortl1, Sliirli-y Hlsnn. 1a1'lll2lll l'r:1ig', Jam-t Gl'l'llll'l'. Fourth row: Mary Burkv. M:x1'g.::m1'L-tto Frzlzin-r, fl1t'l'f1'llIl4' liurns, Juan Uuulc, lizunruna Hari. lh-tty llziri. l+'1'mwll-1'ivli Fri-y. fh'l'Qll1llllL' L 11ndil'f. lClinur Chialry. l'hyliS l.3L'llHlM'l'2J,'t'I', Dfnina Alillzxrll, June Uuriis, Nnrinzl Grein- ur, Mary Bm-ssll-r. Sixty I1'i1'str11w. I1-11 1111'igli1: I11111F1'uy. lG11p1-11t- l'1U1ktl', A1'1i1111' iii11l1z1l1-1'. 1lOI12l11l 'I'111'111-1', Ilia-1111111 Re-shi: I:11111's Al111,Jl11tl11ii1, I I11j'1l Davis. 1'l1111'les 1':11't1-1: l'h1lI'l1S Sviiiiiidt. S1-1-111111 1'11xv: iiiitli Hull, Yirgiiiin K11113'os. Puuliiiel Jfviivs. L,Ul'1SlI1iSIIl1ti014. T,1f111111 iiuiit. T1r1l111'11s Nimmfms. Betty filly, J1'11-lii1- 1111111-1-k. 1511 1111-1111. Mary l'2ll'TL'1'. H+:11'11 Svlilig. l,111s flulivk. 'fhiyd 1-1-,wg KH1111-yn S1,m11.1-V fqiiuiu irightq-, Milcliwl I,1111itz, 11111111 l'l'2lig, M:1d11Ii11e- Nye-rs. 'l'h1-lm11 Divk- :1S11i1. .11-11111119 l1I1I1l1l'IUIll'1, 11111'is Null, Boiiiiiv Sylwlsteix V11'H111111 St1f11k1112111f 15f11'11211'f1 1'111f'k. -1112111 1:111l11111. IP11111-th 111111-3 111111 lfgiiig-111. 111111111 3l111i11111y. 111111 N111'11tt11. K1111111-111 1'1'1-wk, K1111111-111 I12lYiSf1Il, l.i1111y A1'i111i1l 1'li1'1'111-11 Iluyd- J,.,',-1- 3111111 1'i1111I1-s i.z1mi11-, f:l'2l1ll Mmriii. l':I'XViI1 H1-1's1-111111111, 1411111111 I'z11411i111m. 4l1-111'g1- f1l'IlI-. Mila- I 1:111igz1i1. 1!.11'11111 111111111-1: Wm 61111- First rmv. 11111 to right: Rminld Rathhiin. Ray Yinsrm, Lyle Van P1lt, 12111 'l'ilt1m. Eugene 1':1ll1f11111. Ken- 1111111 T1i4'k1'11S. TC1111111' XY11Iko1'. 1111111 111151 S1-1111111 1'11w: X'ix'i:111 Null. 151-1'11i'ly Luo, llziximl 1Ii1111s, 311221119 UV1-1'1'1111, Mary 1211111-s. M1111 .xllll Kiluliiig' 1:11111 l'1'11st11ii. .I11 .XIIII ii0t'l'I1l2ll1, Ilillio BlVill'S1l, .I111111 wf4il111KL1l'1'll, Ma1'd11l Muliii. f'2lI'UlXI1 XYi11g':111cI. 'I'l1ii'11 Vow: 111-ve-ily 1':11's1111, I,z1x'1111 l':1lVV2ll'llS. N111'm:111 Suttmi, I11-tty PZltt1'l'H1lll, Fila 1'111t111'. Yi1'g'i11i:1 Yi11s1111, I1'm11II1-1Ig1-111-11, .Iu:111it:1 lluiiks, 111111-1'lyll11fol11, Iluzvl Mzttiu-11y, liotty lJ1111111Iz111d. 141111111 I+'1'y1-. 1111211 'I'z1yl11a-, l1Q'i11l'1JS tlizu-1111-11i, 1,1111111i1y Vziii 'l':1ss1-l. Mary X'i1111vi1-li, Miltliwml Smith. P211 f'l'11ll11'1'S, IIil1l1-111111111 Meym' If11111'th rmv: A11-1411s 1li11111li11111se1i. M:11gi111'i11 Smith, 'l'w5'lz1l'z1l11sk:1. X'ii'giiii11 IIi11l1:1le1'. 131-ttiv Fuss, P11115 K213'W11 f11 11011111111 1'21111211161'S- IYII11 Uvlg. 1if111v1't StuX'111s1111, 1'Y1z'1i'viic'11 Imvis, TJ11l11 1:1151 He-11111 1'r11'l1i11, 312111 'I'z11111. Alzirylcmu iii1111:1l1-1'. B111111i1- Smith. Julie- 1l111111ts. i'1'2lll','1'S 11i'eg1'1i'y. Alf-'iilil Sh111'11. 1 Sixtyvoiie V 7 ' JAJ . -- dn ,,,:5,, an .f' , xv'--'Y l il'Sl POW. left tu right: Gexievivw- Ch-ie-i', Billie Ashliiirii, Mary l zu'I4-V. Vliziilrwtle Sluslim-V. lC4t'1 Foiieii- lmvi-1', lil-tty Halt, f:i'l'2lldllH' Fuudiff, llzimuuzl Hurt. Juzm Vouk. Gertrude Iiums. llviiriettzi llisli-, llfvl4u'eS Sul- livin Sewmid row: Kzithryn Stanley. Jenin Gould, B12lYiS Allli-rmzni. Czzrulyii XYiug!:iml. Carolyn liulwcwts. Kath- criiiv Ilivliiuitli. Doris XVhitv, llarriett Tzllu-, l4:ii'lmi'a XYilli:uus4m. 'l'lii1'd row: Juan Slzirr, Normal Slwrnizm. Carol 1lil'il2lY'd. Mm'jm'iQ Arm-tt, Murtlia Hulv. llizimi Dowoll, Norma Hill, Hottie Foss, Myrllv Mzlrtiii, In-lurvs HCI'S11lYl2lIlIl, Holly Dowmlziml. I E I U I EO First row, 11-ft in rigfht: Mary Elle-11 Short. Ra1'l1:1i':i Kvllcy, Betty K4-llvy, Phylis INN'IlSlllfl',Llit'l', Pat H11- wurth. Ihrris Gvoic-li, Norma Gulick, Pat llrnwn. 1NfH1'j0l'l6 liisvn, llvlf-n xXvil'HJlllIl, Ruth NX'i1-gziliil. Phyllis Barth. Si-4-mid Huw: lfllimn' 4'liim'y, Giwu-w Mr'l'ull4Jy. Drama: Millard, Juno Vurlix, Yi1',L:'inia SIHll'kl1l1lIl. Patsy Guy. , Mzirgsxiw-I lziiiutt. Milclri-d Lulvilz, Luis llulivk. 'I'lii1'1l row: XYilmu Sullivan, livw-rly Hufelfl. Shirlvy llittwiilwilse-, NHVIHZI Fuss, Yeonzi liitti-iiliuiisw, 312111 Pzi1'nliz1m, Jllllllltkl Hanks, Mzirrlell Mohn. llvtty Patterson. Irma HGGQCUCK- VlI'f-filliil Villrwll- 1 N WV, wx ...r SiXU'-fwu Av I . X-A K 9 First rvw. left tu 1'ig'l1t: Miss Szllterlm-1-. Arlviseig Alice Sclimillt, Nu1'111:1 lX'lille1'. Lois Sl:111ln-y. Rvtty Bivrs. lluris Knight. Mary .-Xllll Kiimliiigp lC1'1-l3'11 ,Ql'll47ltl, Elllll GOV0, Ju ixllll ll+1e1'111z111. Lynn Grigslvy, Jz1111- Pl'1'Slf5H. Se-4'4111d row: :X'l1ll'j' Svlimitt. Phyllis Xx'll'li'l, ln-lows H01'11sl1y, lC11l:1 t'1'z1ig'. Mary' 1.09111 Rilliv BIZ1l'Sll, .I11111 l.i11mlg'1'1-11, lizirbarzi Chivli. .Ir1:111 R011lo11, JG1'9lt'2l K11ig.g'ht, NViIrr1:1 l':2llllt'S, M':11'iz111 Svlioc-k, IJ0lm'11:4 Nimmrms. Hvlvn SIDl'lllE.I, l201111i1- Syl1'1-Stall: Doris Null. Shirley Stzirr. lr2lf'k9l', XVil111:1 Juiws, l'z1t lXi2lllHCl1lJilllgl'l. licttzi C3l'l74'litGl', Hoa iilllfllll. Betty Iil'll1l1'lt'li!4. l,z11'v1'11 I111v1'i11g. Aiillj BI4'A1'41y. DLLL' ' uatw' '11, First IOVV, loft tn rigglilt I,l',L1'j.fY fNI'ElNVfUI'4l. Rusvmary Milzolfelt, Vi1'g'ir1ifL liflayvs. Louise Muuslimi, M1111 Iisiylcs, L411'1'z1i110 l.11gf'z111l:n-all, Sliirlvy Olsrm. 1311111111 XYl1itw01'tl1. l'egg'y XVQ-lmli, Julie mIllllIllS. lXl:1l'Y lhissli-1'. Nm'111:1 fiI'9lllOl'. Sec,-111141 row: D1-tty llnwo, f'l1:11'l41ti11 Sm-wairwl, Mz1l'j0i'iv Smith, 'I'Wyl:1 Pziliixkzi, My1'11:1 S11:11'11, Doris Zim- 111v1'111:111. li2ll'lJilI'2l l!41u11rly, N:111cy Ailll'lbllj'. Aiulrvy l4'uos4'1'. Bvlllilll r'1':1ig'. gxllllk' li1'11l111, fl111'z1l4li11v t'11n11-1: l,illi:111 lilv111111. Tbmutliy .l11l111s1111. 'I'l1i1'cl 1'm1': Ruth Sl1'im-klaml, Evvlyn lfl'ilYOS, I,.f1is De-1'1'i11gt011, lunar Howe, ilUSOII'lill'Y lizncfovk. JQ1111-1 fi!'Gllll'l'. BI2l1'L12ll'4'l 1'oll11-1-1. lim-tty K:1y11'11114l. lxlilli' .-Xllll 'l'z'1111-, C'z11'r1li11sf Hwss, Mary l,in1le111fvlse11', Anim l'1':1ig'n1ilvs. li:1tl11'y11 Jzu-ksoii. i'l9lUll Sluriies. SiXlY'llll'lAtf Thirzl row: 'l'l14-l111a IXl:11'sl1, lJo1'11ll1y l'11le1n1:111, Barlruiu l!1'0w11, Shi1'l1-y'XYir-ks, lla-tty li111't011, Mary Hc11'11- ARCH ERY LL ft to right: Kathryn Stanlvy. IC V ae l y n Arnold. Doris Knight, B1-tty Bit-rs, Mary Ann liipliiig. 'kirir BASEBALL-First Place First row. left tu right XYilmu Jones. Lois Stanley llotty Henrlrivks, Dori Knight, Kvttu f'lll'llPIlfL'l' Batty liiers. Second row Miss S2lItt3l'l0O, Coaullg Mary llnrnbuc-kvr, IC l l 0 n Gove Normal Miller. 17:.l.4,' BASEBALL-second Place BOW'-'NG-High '?0 'f First row. loft to right: llelort-:4 Hmnslmy, Nlnry Lcmw. Lelft to right: Bonnie Syl- 'Fhelmu Marsh. Mary MOAvoy. Dorothy C'ulem:1n. Evvlyn V ,t - 169- liitt v H, 1-' U BAD'Vl'N '0N, Arnold, Billiu Marsh. Sevund row: xlvlllllil Ezunns. Illzlry Whitt 1' H1 lift IGM?- Tlvit I0 Fight- N1UU'Yll Sc-hmitt, Miss Sattwlee. Uozic-hg Phyllis XYirth. Mm-inn j ' 5 'li' A ' Stunluy, xvlllliil Junvs. SCh0Oli. Jurie Arnett, 140. Sixty-four PING PONG Luft to right: Jane Pres- ton, Mary Ann liipliiipg. jpofria, BOWLING Left to right: Joyce Huyn- tun, Wilma Sullivan, Evelyn Keuyes. Anne Krohn, live- lyn Arnold, Shirley Ritten- house, Veena Rittenliuuse. . . , , . . VOLLEYBALL First row left to right: Mary Mc-Avoy. Betty Howe, Nurxna Greiner, Luis Derrington. Sec-ond row: Jr-relezl Knight, Hn1'lm:1r:1 Xvllliillflfflfl. li2ll'bHl'2l licnindy. Ruth Strivklnnd, Doris Zimmerman, Mary C'zlrter. 'Fhird row: Ellen Guvv. Iona Howe, Marjorie Ain:-tt, Janet Greinvr, Marry IIm'iiliz1m'lcv1', Uzirolyn Roberts. BASKETBALL First row. left tu ripght: Luis Stanley. Doris Knight, Betty llendrif-ks, H et ty liiers. Normal Milli-r, Kettzi f'Zll'I3E'llf0l', XX'ilmn Jones. ICI- len Govo, Sem-und rnw: Miss Szltterlev. Cnzivhi Kathryn Stanley. Doris Gvnil-li, Mary Carter. Marjorie A r n e 1 t . lmris NYhite, l'ni'ulyn Ruli- 4-rls. Mziry llurnlrzu-ke1'. 'k'k'k BASKETBALL First row. left In right: lmrotliy Cola-inzxn. Mary Mr'- Avoy. ll e l u r e s Hornsby, 'I'lieIm:1 Marsh. Mary Lm-W, Mzirizin Schovk, Evelyn Ar- nuld. liillio Marsh. Xxvlllllil linmes. Phyllis XYirtli, Maury Svhmitt. Sex-und row: Nm'- mzx Greiner, Lois Derring- ton. Iona Howe. Ruth Strivk- land, I7 ry r i s Zimmermzm, Evelyn Keayvs, Janet Grain- vr. Bc-tty Hrnwe. 'Fliird row: Anne Krohn, Pansy Guy. Joyce lluynum, li ll r b an 1' :L liuundv. Jervlezi K n i g li T. June Nlounts. Sixty-five SE N I ORS Filst row. left tn right: I Daryl Shaw, Rub I.anfIo1'. mldllll P:11'11I1z1m. ID e- W 0 y Se-ring. Sw-mul row: ISM'- uurd G1-ier, ICOIIIIQWII Acuff, Iisul IIIOVVII. ir 'lr MESECHEFVS TEAM S SEVEN First row. Ivfc to ught Jim Ilzlvis, IIOIZ .Tzu hmm Floyd Davis, I+Idwz11'd I-lui II-1'. S1-vuml www: Inchill LI Ilu 1114 Rm XX'inkln-, Idverott, Cottin,.,hlm I,L1g:Pz111Iu-1 . z LITTLE GIANTS Ifixwl row, In-ft tu 1'i,u'I1l: Q SCREWBALLS A V V VIVST WW- lfff UI I S M G 1VhNM,hm. Roland First row, I1-ll In right: Luku hlulmlvr. 00111-112 XM-rw lqm,1,44 lg,-Ml' Ismnk LUN BI2IlISi'III72lULLII IIVIIIZIII L'1 i:1Iu 'NH F 5'L Jim J m5'-S' S9f l Vow: 1121H'1'N 'IVV' I':xuI A1 m-tt. Se-cmnuI lt Secuml row: Ilzlruld Grulv. '11l'hf- WfU'1'1'1 Ui1IwI112111Sv11- BOP' f'f11S-HL fl1lI'I1t'Il Mu,-iss-I111e1'. l'I1:1!Il-x lfowun, John Guy. l IL'lIlCI', zxfthlll' XYM4-Ix Sixty-six 1 I yu 'L2'v'.,2i, If CONIETS First row, lffft tu riafhtz Jr. llurnsby. Clifton Iirzxlvill, Semin I1'1'01'z1. S4-rwnmel www: Rim-1111111 XXYHIKOII Paul Fritz, l'u:1c'h. a6'a4.4nf6alL SUPER FIVE First Vow. ln-ff lu right: lh-1'l'o1't Spilldur. .lwlm Iivu- 114-tt, lfharh-s G1'illlk'l'. Don Mv1'1'lI1-y. SL'L'Ul1'1I'IIXX'fIPUIX Fillljllll. T 0 m A11-x':1114h11'. f'U2lK'h: Richard Hurt. Cowboy Serenade You have covered half our ranch And if you further go, Pictures of uScrooge and other plays To you we'll gladly show. Then you'll see our music-makers With us around the fire, We wrote some ballads 'specially for you-- Our diary you'll admire. 1 my fr.: 3 Sixty-nine 91 I H. XF. 'fffwfbvdlfl Kwai' THE CHARACTERS In order of appearance Jasper, a bellhop ----- James Arnold Gladiola, a colored maid ----- Irma Hedgcock Herb Stanley, a joint owner of Treasure Trove Tavern - - Garnet Reeder Libby Ann, a Cockney cook - - Tommy Wilkins, Herb's pal - Elmer Sneed, another pal - Wm. Bates, the landlord Mrs. Spooner, a widow - - Ketura Katt, an old maid - Julie Mather, Miss Katt's niece - Messenger - - - Adam Pottle, an old bachelor - Caroline Van Gorden, a guest - Godfrey Van Gorden, her husband Celia Van Gorden, the daughter - The Ghost - - - - - - Director - - - Seventy - - - - - - Shirley Bandy - Bob Jackson - Kenneth Davison - Jerry Short - Myrna Sharp - Jean Knight - Barbara Kelley Roland Mauschbaugh - Jerry Schmidt Myrlene Jenkins - - Willis Baker - - Juanita Hanks Roland Mauschbaugh - Miss Winchell lVilliam Barry Grace Barry Beatrice Barry Mabel Warren Mrs. Granville Eddie Barry George Jones Ann Sherman - Tommy Granville Sally Davidson Mr. Merritt - Miss Dalrymple Assistant Directors Director - IISZZL 'Ailf' t!E 2 E ll THE CHARACTERS In order of appearance Charles Stevenson, Rod Hinchman - Doris Knight, Ruth Dancy Norma Gulick, Betty Biers Marjorie Sweety, Zelta Hart Doris Gvoich, Phyllis Barth - - Jack Maholic - Don Duran, Lauren Kohl - Marjorie Arnett, Pat Haworth - Robert Oldham, Jay Fritz Myrtle Martin, Marjorie Risen 4- Jack Davis, Alan Calhoun - - - Lois Stanley Elinor Chiary, Betty Hendricks - - Miss Rasmusson Seventy-mme First row, left to right: Mary Schmitt, VV:1nd:1 Meyvr. Ruth Hall, Billie Ashburn. .lane Preston. No1m1 Sherman, Betty Howe. Shirley Olson, Mary Mr'1-Xvoy, 'ihelnia Marsh. li2'll'lNll'Il Hillman. Shirley XYi1'lfS. Second row: HIll'llIll'R Kelley. Phylliw XVi1'th, Alice Steg'1n:1ier, Doris Zimmerinziii, Rllll'Q1lI'l1i l':11'1'ott. lltllll llunt. Lynn Hrigslry. Xyllllillll 'I'ilto11, Mc-l1'i11 M111'g2,'4-1-, lfumlru- flillllilllll. XYilli111n li1'Jll'tl, lloris Steg:111z1i4'1'. llo 1 'Xl1lUl7l'l'l'j'. lmuisr- ixl0llSll1lll. llclximl Z4-li. IS1-ily Kelley. Saxophones Cl Barbara Kelley Jane Preston Betty Kelley Shirley Olson Ralph Shaw Jack Bumgarner Raymond Winkler arinets Ruth Hall Leona Hunt Lloyd Bair Thelma Marsh Dorothy Coleman Ila Mae Mooberry Alice Stegmaier Donna Mooberry 'I'l1i1'1l row: t'l1z11'l1-x Stew-11so114 .luvlc XYils1111. lllmllll North. ll:11'l:111 llifsslmg 4'l1:11lt-Q liillllllw, liolrm-rt S Non. ll:1y XYllll'ill'l'. ClZll'4'llCt' llzlvis, .lack IY11111g:1111e1', lft'1llll'll1 ll1lllgllll'l'S, Lloynl l!:11r, Alt1'o1l l!:111'. ' Band Clarinets Billie Ashburn Alfred Bair Charles Lampe Margaret Parrott Cornet Eugene Calhoun Trumpets Lynn Grigsby Robert Stevenson Drums Mary Lou McAvoy William Tilton Charles Stevenson S1-Verity-two Horns Joyce Arnett William Beard Beulah Stanley Kenneth Daughters Ivan Berg Trombone Clarence Davis Bells Doris Stegmaier Louise Moushon Flute Betty Lampe Soprano .Iune Curtis llouluh Craig Norma Hill Dolores Stout Donna Meyer .lune Lindgroii Marilyn VVlll2lllS llurlene Cook llelon Wie-gzincl First row, lm-ft to ll S mum., Soprano Normzi Greiner Bornucline Stout Alto Kzilliryn Stanley liutlilweii Cole Putricizi Hanks Lenoru Fuller Beverly Lee Evelyn Arnold A Ito Bass Evelyn l.aRosh Charles Eloise Fischer Hamm .lllanitu Taylor Nancy Murphy Donald Estlior Lziliosh XVilmu Sullivan T Lorraine MCKE-9 enor- Phyllis Barth H-HUM Edna Mae Norman Homer Link Kirk Fuught Strickfaden Wells glitz Knfhryn Stunlvy, Dolores Stout. Marilyn Xvlllilllfi Kzillilvvii Cole Fuf-m11i1l row: llonnzi lxlQ'j'l'l', Norma llill, .lunu l.lllllfIl't'll. l'z1tric iz1 llunks. Third row: l4PllUl'il l'illlll'I', lil-x'v1'ly In-1-, lflvvlvii .Xl'lllDlIl, livelvn lziliosli Floise- l l4llltl th I1 w. Aung Murphy, lNo1m.1 in Rosh. Sixth row: Harold Strickfaden, NVells, Vilma Sullivan, Lorraine McKee, t,llll,l, l31,1n11 Charles Link, llziruld Kirk. Ihlllillll Fauglit. Homer Phyllis Barth, lflnlnn Mae Nurrnein. N55 QTEFQEH Qs, fi ,. Y 1 Yr W 112-1 1 Seventy-three Fourtli row: l,iil'l9llQ' l'llUli, .luunitzi 'I'1lfUlUl', flelr-11 XYi1-g:11nl.A.ll11n' Vurtiqs. 1B9lll2lll l'1'z1ig'A. Fif 'nu -' ' ' ' ' A -' 1' 'alinv Stout, Durutliy Johnson, lflsllior Ln- Around the Campfire We gather 'round to talk of Hobbys, G.R.'s, the G.A.A., and others too, We work on planes and radios-- The minutes are all too few. The ucampfiren seems our favorite spot When half past one comes 'roundf Sing or dance or merely talk-- You seldom see a frown. W. M ' 4' W W gd, up sf any aff m iA i 'S ilk 7T3'JK7f 3: E wr ma mm f First row, left to right: Elinm' ffliiziry, Edna Fiye, Phylis Dl'HSlJixl'L2't!l', Ruth lirown, Mziry liiwku. Opal Taylor. 1xI2ll'g'?ll'l'llL' Fraziur. Doris Sliz1llenbvi'ge1', Deloivs Hoffcr, Shirley Stzirr, Hziiiiett 'l':l1w, Mary 'lliiiu-. Svvoncl ruwi Miss XYigorlzx. Advise-1': fil'2li'C LIc'Cul1ey, Joan Cuok. Put Hrowii. Norma flulivk, lnwis Gvuivli. VIYVVXIIL 1'2llUSk2l, lilyriizm Sharp. A1LlI'jill'iL' Smith. 'l'hi1'd row: Jvrry Unslicn. lh-tty Smith, 4'le1'L1'1iclfe .i!u1'ns, 1:2lIT101lLl Hurt, Chzirlottu Sliisliur, llulrvlws Nim- moiis, llvlvu Spring, Mary l'2ll'lCl', Shirley Iizlmly, Doris Bluukrstoliu. Dzl. Humwm, i First row, ll-fi tn right: X'i1'gini:i Vinson. Bully 1':nttt-Vslm, lJm'is IPlSlllL'lt'l', Villlilllt' .lfvm-S. Jt'2lll llwuhi. Put, l'1mg 1ii, 1'z1L llziworlli. lrmzi Ili-slgm-uc,-k. Beverly llufcld, .l1LlVL'l'll Docrillg, 1i0St'lll2ll'Y 1,211-mn-li, Yinlvt lllzuikuli- Ship. Svc-ond row: l'3evs-i'ly l.0P, lmmm Hunt, Eloise Fischer, Suzzuie Ov:-1'cI1d. 1N'l2lXlllli Gibbs, Iivtty Iluuinlalml. C-cflievimrvu Geier. Mzirjoilii- Swm-ety. llcmmia Mvyer. 'l'hi1'd row: Mary Slziriq Nurnizi XVehb. Mary 'FRIYIOIQ Normal Miller. llvtty liiors. KL-ttzi 1'zx1'11eii1vi'. l'zi1'mlyn XXvil'gilllIl, Phyllis lizirth. Ruth Xxvllilillld. Hvlvu Xxvitlgilflll, Bea Burton. KW Seventy-six . ,,.w, 1 W1 '11 ,kfgjgigy , ,fum A.. wh I-'i1sl row: 11-1'I 111 1'1g'11t: Yi1gi111z1 1iit111:111-1: 1!1et13' D111-11114111-1. Myrllu Mz1rti11, 114111111-s HefI'Hf-111HI1I1. A11911- 211111 I.11g:111, lirtty Smith. 1111111 l:l'11XVll. f'2ll'1Pl 1lll'll2ll'l1, 1lSll',LZ'H1't'l Atkins. M11d1'v11 Smilh. llilde-gz1rdv A1b'yt'l', Vix'iz111 Noll. 890411111 row: 17111'is lfullu-1', N111'111:1 Mz11'X111il1v1'. D1-1f11'1-5 1111111-1', 3l:11'y XYys. Dllllil T.z1111bv1't. lxlillj' 11111011 1!111'kP. 1'll1'Ulj'll 1111115-1'1s. Lamvon 1'ztlVVill'4lS, M:11'i1y11 XYi1111r1s, Duris S11u111-11116-1'g'c1', Jerry l'21Sl1l1Il, l:tY0l'lj' C:11's011. Miss F1'vid111-im. Advis1-1'. 'I'11i1'11 row: M:11'g:11'1-ite 14'1':1zi111'. N1llil K'1111m1it'l'. HQ1'11:111i111- S4-l11'11c'k. M2111 Taylor, A111121 Uundiff, 311112111-1'itr .11111es. 111111111 Mau No1'111z111, 1'I1e:111111' l2:1u1-1'. ,lmris 11:1111im11. Pill l':1s111-11, Mavis .XldL'l'lllZi1l. 1'z11'411y11 XYi1fg:11111, .11-:111 4'I11111d. Un1cativnaL Hama, mnomica, Klub 1:31-St roxy. lpft 10 1-ight: Shirlf-y Jfms. IZz11'1ri11':1 Hillman, He-1'11i1?e lll't'1l1l1, .Tr1:111r1 Sv111111r1111'. llflllllil M1-yer. 11:11'j01'i1- SW1-sity, 1'5i11i1- As1111111'11, ICVEI Hash. Viule-t 1111111111-11shil1, DIHVIUTI 11111. 41l'flf'11 VNIHHYI. 1'fV915'l1 Nwll. Second row: D4l11HZ1 1X1i11z11'11. R1-1:1 linvis, t'1:11'z1 11?1'11vl11, lfflflllll' Zivli, 1341111121 Anilv, Twis Mvfwilllll, IWPIPIB' NVQ-1111, A111121 'l.'Ll!'110l', K:11111m-11 F1111-, Iivlty 1':1tt1-1's1111. licttiv Foss. Nr11'111a Fuss. llCIll'l4'tIll llisll-, M:11'gz11'1-I f,'Sll'l11ll'l. '1'l1i1'1l row: Ruth 111111, G1-110Vi4-vw 12111011 IJ1'11'u111y Yun 'l'2lSS1'l, Mary Vi11c1vic'11, C11:1rl0t10 Slusher, -li2H.l1IOH2'l 1 Hurt. Jmm Nook, Gea1'l1'1111e l3L1l'YlS. Mary f':11'1e1'. 1.o1'1':1i110 McKsw-, llGll'YlU1l l'x11tl1kllt'l'. A11-111111 tiielu-111z111s1-n. l':11'- UlYll Huff, Carol llL'DtJl14JllHl1. Dtlllllil Volz. --v ,, 1- f , M, , A lf? Seventy-seven . ,, . ,, , I bf, L6ft to right! lwiss SCh1'0cd1 x1', AdYiHP1'3 Aud 1'ee y Fe1-Ser, Norma FOSS, Doris Felker, Malitzl Buss, INIz H baf'k91', Norma Murxmiller, June C'z1l'teI', Pauline Tlishop, Betty Patterson, Louise Moushon, Norma VQL I kl muy, gm OFFICERS PRESIDENT - - - - - MARY LOU HORNBACKER VICE-PRESIDENT - - - - NORMA MARXMILLER SECRETARY-TREASURER - - - JUNE CARTER PROGRAM CHAIRMAN - - MALITA RUSS ADVISER ---- MISS SCHROEDER xx Y , ' ' i fi ' ,. , M If . D f ,7 ' ' 5- -1 K, -' ,- fx'--,V W V, 3 'Q 13' I ' G X R- , ,, , ,fax A , 4220i ffA,, in I 1, xi' W 'IV ' 455233. I' I jf- 1. ff ,f f Z f'f ,. f , JS C, WX' 'O 'ff f y, Wm . 7: f4Q ' 4 f7','1ff'fJP 4, 7 .S Ifrffyfd '-?s , L ff ' L' V' 1 .L Seventy-eight First row, loft to right: Dolores Stout, Helen Storries, Normal Rubenkinfx, Delores Sullivan, Billie Marsh Norma Miller, Ilzi Mau- Mooberry. Santo lrrera, Pat Hanks. Pat Coogan, Eloise Fischer, Patsy Guy. Sm-4-ond row: Audrey Feeser, Plural Bavlon, Martha Moushon, Bernadine Stout. XXYGIITHI Gottfried. Doris Knight, Jn-rclea Knight, Lorraine Lngx-unbeal, Lziurel Strickfadtin. Harriett Tape. Margaret Parrott, Puulinv Jones, Jzivkie Amslor. Miss Fulton, Adviser. 'l'l1ird row: Mellm Ruhenking. George Mellor, Kenneth Dickens, Richard Lugeanbeal, George Graf, Lyle Vnn IH-lt, Don Mort-tto, Eugene Calhoun, Donald Fauglit, Robert VV9StbF00k. Betty LHIHD6- .gm NORMA MILLER SANTO IRRERA MAE MOOBERRY BILLIE MARSH OFFICERS PRESIDENT ----------- VICE-PRESIDENT - - - - SECRETARY-TREASURER - - ILA PROGRAM CHAIRMAN ---- ADVISER -------- - - - Seventy-nine MISS FULTON X G7 Q , 1 , af -LX ,Eg Sgt .gf :ion I, I xx.-. First row. loft to right: Vvill'l'L'll Leonard. Ilulsml Miller, Malcolm Amstutz. Bob t zu'ltmi, William Brown. Homer Xhflls, Milos Kozlowski, XVillizxm Snyder, Uharlus GIIYIIH, Robert Crum, Donald Ilvell, Jim Lowery. Svceond row: 'XVi11iam Hinvs. Ralph Shaw, KL-nnvlh Harmon, Rzly XYitlwreIl, Jzlmnls Siesfformzxn, Mike M'0Donoug1i, Tom Johnson, Chzirle-s Link. Mr. King, Amlvisvr. Third row: Howard Dim-. John Clark, F1-:mn-is 'l'l1:1cke1', Ralph Grzxlizmi, Ray NVink1e-r, Vormxn Jolly, Jack tlliristianson, Charles Brown, Ric-lmrd Lugeanlwal, fy .f - . yqf' 3 Z , , f 'dai' Lf, Club . OFFICERS PRESIDENT --------- MILES KOZLOWSKI VICE-PRESIDENT ------- WILLIAM SNYDER SECRETARY-TREASURER - HOMER WELLS ADVISER ---------- - MR. KING ff , ,ffff f A gf- ,j M ji, I f, E. ,f itil fi 'Q . Q liixxlit y ,X 'N Fir:-at ruw. Ivfl to right: Ri1'h2ll'1I IIUKI-ld. Uhm-115 Guynn. Jfmhn Iiufeld, XYi1liam SChcn-del, Put Hrown. Dunne Van XXIIIIKIE. Kennvth IfIL'II2ll'lI. I-Imil .1211-uhsen. Mr. Smith, Adviser. Sf-Qnnd mwg C1131-I4-S Simms, Chzu'leS Carter, Rubert Swanson, Clmrles Brown, Arthur Clzmin. Richard I'fviffel', Ilowurd Dicw, Je-1'1'5' Srzhmillt. .KM OFFICERS PRESIDENT - - ----- DUANE VAN WINKLE VICE-PRESIDENT - - BILL SCHOEDEL SECRETARY - - - PAT BROWN TREASURER - CHARLES COWAN ADVISER - - - MR. SMITH Eighty-one fum , First www, In-ft In right: G4-no Jrnm-S. Szmto l1'1'1-111, Hill Ilurvhvll. Din-k Ilufuld, Ilulzlml BI2l1lSCh17illlg'h. Sofwmllmi lwwz Dun Fzlught. XYi11is Iizlkx-V, Jerry Short, lion Iflvppv, l'h2l1'lL'S Arnold. Kelmvth t'rvsk. Don 1ln11oy, T.u1'4-n 'I'ilI1fIITl2lIl. 'l'h l IIYZ, Iusid inl row: Jzu-k fjil1'l'4Yu. Grunt Marlin, Jim Alllold, Daryl Shaw, Ke-mu-th llzlvisun, Lulu- Spimiur, Paul iv Iix'vwHLv1'. Mr. 1fllPZUX'il'h, Conch. Fourth naw: Llwyd Stulrer, Jay Fritz, Clmrlvs Iilllllltu 151111111 Pzmrnhum, Lindy Al'IlUld, 1'liI'lo1'd Ilnml, 'go Graf. .KM 1 . J5 m fr, ff wgiflgfk. , saws? . fn 5f55,'-ff'-X MAN W ' Ima ef I , 0 w ' ll ' f 40 6 - f , , , W fm. ,N ', A4. A ff . x h f 1 Zx jg, W PM X5 If K f , X R ' - 01 1. .ff 1641 U f ? ' ,f f f f' f , gf . LX fl 'K J N 3-:Eat J 1 , gfwi-' Eighty-twu Front to bark and right: XVilli:im Taylor, Arthur VVelCh. Junior Lewis, Leioy xVt'll14'l', Le-mlzil Lobb, Huw'- mond XVithe1'elI, Mike lxTCl7llll0llgl1, Vernon Sundin. Gngnett lVlq-ischnc-1', Harold Grup, Lester SDZ'll'liIl'l?lH, John Guy. Mr, I.ogLiu, Instructor: Barry Clzitt, Bill t'hristoff, Robvrt Carlton. Jim, Clam, nf, Jnaqotten, The day for the Epoch pictures arrived. And what a day it wasp The sun was shining in all its splendor As it so often does. Group number one was right on the dot To have its picture takeng We quickly snapped the Freshmen, thinking None had been forsaken. Eighty-three But, alas! a grave mistake we made, A misunderstanding the causeg The Freshmen were missing a few of their men Contrary to all our laws. Better alone than never at all, We thought, amends would makeg So don't feel so badly, dear boysg there remains Three years your pictures to take. Our Ballads Sittin' 'round the campfire Alter the chores are o'er-- Of this we never tire, And our ballads high do soar Perhaps you'd like to hear Some ballads we have tried, But please don'l be severe For that would hurl our pride. Eighty-fix'4 NNN f+fBaII cl CHARLIE It was bright and sunny, it was early morn, In a ranch house in Utah, a son was born. They named him Charlie, after his Dadg His hair was curly, what eyes he had! It was in summer when Charlie's sixth birthday came, He was given a pony, both young and tame. He was ten years old when he learned to ride, Charlie and his companions, side by side. . Over the prairies and down the hills, Into the valleys, they rode! What thrills! Now Charlie grew up to be a thrifty lad, One who took care of the things he had. His ranch, which had been his father's pride, Now belonged to Charlie after his father died. He managed the stock and took care of his mother, He stuck to his business and bothered no other. As time went on and Charlie grew older, Some of the nations in Europe grew bolder. It wasn't long after till they were at warg Land, money, and riches, they each wanted more. The United States, too, soon was at war To preserve and protect what they fought for before. Now Charlie has grown to be a fine young man, He is now abroad fighting for Uncle Sam! -Kenneth Harmon, Senior Vx' Ik 22,5 fl -It - , ,en M, . sl!! A: ' r ,gg 7 . 4 ,fri s y, ' I , I ' V ,fi Z! . 5 , Y -ff x :gf g H 4' U gf 1 1 3 x 7 X e -157 ,ff-J Eighty-six Contes +R f + THE BANDIT'S LAST RIDE Riding down the valley, Riding up the hill, Riding o'er the meadow At last he saw the mill. The race is but half over, The horse is breathing fast, If Jed can't reach the junction, He'll be gasping out his last. Far back in the distance, Racing hoofs are heard, But Jed just keeps on riding. He utters not a Word. The junction now has loomed in sight. The train is on the track, The engine now is puffing Black smoke pours from its stack. The train has left the junction, The night is dark and still. Sharp hoofbeats now are closer, Pursuers hunt the kill. Jed's horse now has stumbled, He's forced to make a stand. Shots ring out all around him, There are bloodstains on the sand. Jed's killing days are over, He finally met his match. Now there's an empty cabin With dust upon the latch. There's peace now in the valley. No longer is there fear. All homes are filled with gladness. All homes are full of cheer. -Mary Lindenfelser, .luuioi Eighty-sc iff THE AVENGER Pete Sloan leaped quickly upon his horse And sped across the plains, He was followed by another horse Jake Dorn was at the reins. A volley of shots then rent the air Jake faltered in his pace, He reeled dizzily in his saddle And hurtled into space. When Jake awoke from oblivion He slowly followed Pete's track Which ended beside a shallow stream- A rundown adobe shack. Jake limped to the shack with a painful stride And flung open wide the doorg His six-guns belched blue smoke and flame And Pete Sloan slumped to the floor. Jake turned slowly to leave the shack His wounds still freely bled, He took a few slow and faltering steps He fell to the ground and was dead. And now Jake Dorn could rest in peace Because he'd stricken dead The man who, on the day before, His brother's blood had shed. --Kenneth Dickens, sophomore ' - M i s -. Eighty-eigl t Blld Contes ff ff f PACIFIC FIGHT Somewhere in the South Pacific A ship sails through the night The men Wait in a panic Ready for a fight. The restless wait was monotonous The crew they had no sleep Then out of the dark the action came The enemy met its defeat. That long old night was weary Then finally the dawn peeped through The Captain of the ship O'Lea1'y Was congratulating his crew. My men, I am very proud of you For the job you did in the night You defeated your foe and saved our ship And that's the way to fight. The victory day is sure to come And when it does I say You men of this wonderful fighting crew Shall celebrate that day. The ship was now homeward bound They sailed a Week and a day 'lhen came in sight the beautiful docks Of the good old U. S. A. V-Lloyd lieas, FVOSIIIIIHII 1 Eighty-nin The Rancher's Year In England with a gentle tap They'd write, HO! cheerio! old chap In the East I reckon they'd say uDeah Diary and begin the day. But here in the action-packed West, Where simplicity is at its best, We lust begin at the start And merely say, 'iHowdy, old part! I ga ,ba '-QQ. -1 ' - , 'fl' QV fi Q w ,K N Nine-ty-one Ninety-two .WL Howdy! Have a good time on your vacation? As fer me, I had a mighty good rest. Say, did you see all them thar new broncobusters yet? L 0 o k s like we won't have much trouble this year. And, boy, did the old Bar E.P.C.H S. look different-new paint and everything! Now, who in tar- nation could that young gal be-flirtin' with Bob already. Sure beats all how these younguns find new ones ev- ery year. I reckon you been wonderin' about the sports of the ranch. First of all, football is started -with only a handful of our old cowhands Cguess Uncle Sam needs 'em worse than we doj, but the team looks pret- ty good anyway. And to help them out, Roland Mausch- baugh's cheerleaders are do- ing a pretty good job. Oh! oh! thar goes the chow bell. Be back again next month. Hank. Unfobm, Whew! Never been so rushed in my life. Why, the things I got to do would choke my best riding horse. You see, it took me quite a spell to fix up good enough for the pictures they were takin' for some kind of a book theylre gonna make-call it the EPoCH, I think. Well, those that are going to leave us this year chose their invites to that last doin's of theirs. As I recollect, they were mighty pretty, too. Did you hear of the big Halloween celebration we had? Dick Weber and his fiddlers fur- nished the music and guess what-that pretty little gal I been makin' eyes at, went with me. We had some more laughs when some of our cowhands put on a play called Wieners for Breakfast. We had to get along without our broncobusters for a few days while they talked with others that do the same thing in other ranches. CI must 'fess up-I didn't do my work while they were gone, either.J The cowhands' council has been busy this month, they put out a reference book telling where all the gals and guys are and giving their phone number Know I w0n't have to ask Mabel her numberjg they also elected some new members. Still have some chores to do so . . . Hank. P.S. When I got done I happened to think I didn't tell you that one of our broncobusters left us. Mr. Scheidecker went to get his doctor's degree. We'd like to have him back, but we're glad he's going on to gain more knowledge. Ninety-three Eg-all E-saw. Wnuunbm. The cowhands chipped in their share and then some for the Red Cross Drive. That shore was a patriotic thing for all to do. Our boys in the service certainly appreciate the work the Red Cross is doing and know that it takes help from us folks back home. So keep it up fellers and gals, do your part whenever you can. We all held our breath during the latter part of the Woodruff vs. East Peoria foot- ball game, and it was really something to hold our breath about. But in a split second the game was over, the score a tie, and good old East Peoria kept the honor of having that beautiful silver horseshoe to decorate our halls again. A fine group of guys and gals turned out for that much-looked-forward-to band party. Let me tell you those kids had a grand time. My, we certainly have a talented group of juniors this year. Wasn't their play just super? Who knows, maybe some day we'll see those kids acting on Broadway. Ah! turkey, chicken, goose, or duck, it's all Thanksgiving. That is the most fill- ing day of the year. After going to Grandma's for the occasion, we all had a three-day vacation-plenty of time to get over that beautiful stomach ache. Cary Robards at the piano, the gym filled with students, and music galore. We shore had fun singing to his won- derful fingertip rhythm. Hope it isn't too long before he drops around again, for his music just sends me right up on the front burner. Out goes the football sea- son, but don't pout, for in comes the basketball season and a beautiful team just rarin' to go. Hank. Ninety-four 1 Qncembm, Say, we just received the news that one of our big football heroes, Lindy Arnold, a senior, has been selected for the all city first team in football. Good work, Lindy. Buy bonds and stamps, do your part, don't let our boys down, were the words posted around the halls lately to back the Sixth War Loan Drive. I hope you kids all did your part. T. B. spangles were galore before Christmas. We bought to help the cause along. The senior class' loss was a gain to Uncle Sam when Butch Hersemann left us. The class gave him a farewell gift with loads of luck wrapped with it. We hated to see Butch go, but we know he'll make a fine addition to Uncle Sam's Navy. l Freddie Stevens and his orchestra? Why of course I'll go to the Pep Club dance if thatis the kind of music they furnish. Yes, everyone had a wonder- ful time at this dance that was held to celebrate the end of the f0O'Gbal1 SGSSOH. Another of our fine senior boys left for the service. Melvin Morger joined the Mer- chant Marine and our best wishes went with him. We can be proud of these fine, cour- ageous lads. Just look at all these handsome senior pictures being flashed around! The seniors all looked so proud the day they received their pictures. They had a right to for they were very nice, indeed. Hoboes, hoboes everywhere. Well, of course, the senior class held a hard times party that really went over with a bang. Everyone looked like a raggamuffin or some- thing. They even had a real barn dance. The Powwow came out-a big, wonderful Christmas edition just packed full of laughs, gossip, news, and a Merry Christmas for everyone. See you next year, folks. Hank. Ninety-five Quite a bit doing 'round the old Ranch House. The Two-Year-Olds, I hear, had a lot of fun at their skating party. A couple of weeks ago I went over to the Big House just in time to see the ranchers who are interested in Latin in their Hard Times costumes. From the looks of them, they were purty bad off, too! Mabel said she had trouble seeing my cheeks for the bags under my eyes. Our bosses gave us some exams to see what we learned so far, and did I ever study! After they were over I cele- brated by going to the Bloomington game, then on to the post-game dance. The Thoroughbreds got together the other day and chose the cowgirl they Ninety-six L xix. thought to be the most qualified to re- ceive the annual D.A.R. award. So far she's a deep, dark secret. We ranchers have had some purty ex- citing adventures: a talk on the caves, and Doris Knight produced a Gay Nineties Review, giving us laughs as well as beauty. Speaking of laughs, you should have seen the kids at the Kids' party the Wranglers gave for all of us. It sure seemed good to go back to the time when we were little tikes fand some of us really went far backlj. Well, getting back to the present, it's time for all ranchers to hit the hay - have to get up early, you know! , Hank. Jnlmuafuf, Four score and seven years ago . . fi Yes, Abraham Lincoln is one of the first of whom we think when February comes and we held an assembly in honor of him. The word assembly brings to mind Susie. One of the broncobusters and a few of the ranchers put on a barn dance-cow, cowbells, and all. It's not often that we see a barn dance with a cow as pretty as Susie. Susie and her pals made me feel like getting up and dancing, too. More talks on courtesy! We can al- ways use them! Mr. Fletcher of the Caterpillar told us that manners pay in dollars and cents. This ranch of ours shore keeps the secrets-this month it was Chief Red Fox. They had all of us guessing for awhile there. Not much more to tell except about our basketball games, but, on second thought, maybe it's just as well to keep quiet' Hank. P. S. I knew there was something else! Cupid celebrated this month-Miss Hari and Miss Jahnke got married, and I got reckless and sent Mabel a comic valen- tine. It was really funny. I also bought her the other kind-you know-the sentimental kind. CI guess that's what you'd call itg we cowboys aren't much on that sort of thing.J You should have seen the look on her face when she re- ceived them-it was better than the comic Valentine. Hankering Hank. djrxtryvm. Ninety-sox' March winds have had a blowy time. Our music makers also had a good time at their get-togeth- er. Mabel and I got out our party duds and Went to the Thorough- breds' party. Looking back at the others they've had in the past four years, I'd say they are bet- ter every year! We had some more dancing when the Pep- sters had their dance. Pepsters is right-I declare I never saw a more peppy roundup in my life. They jumped up and down the Whole time they were there. CWe let some other ranchers know how peppy We are when We attend the Tournaments, too!J I better leave you for now-I have to make way for that East- er Bunny that's just around the turn of the road. Hank. Ninety-eight , ,...,. -4 I spent a lovely Easter - at home with last year's drab looking outfit. What a joke! Well after all, it isn't every year that Easter and April Fool's day fall on the same day. Even so, there have been some m i g h t y flashy dudes around the ranch since Easter. Ho hum, a beautiful day! Romeo, oh R o m e o, wherefore art thou, Ro- I meo? My! My! those l seniors are certainly of f busy with that senior play. A little bird told me that itis to be a fine performance. Just wait until the twenty- seventh and twenty-eighth of this month and we'll find out for ourselves. Ho hum, what a day-kinda s-l-e-e-p-y. Yes, that senior play was a Thoroughbred production. It shore was. That bird was right after all. Kinda makes me wish I was back in vaudeville again instead of punchin' cows on this hyar ranch. I remember back in the 90's when I was playing the . . . ho hum-oh well, it wasn't interesting anyhow. Say, have you all got yourself a date for the J unior-Senior Prom yet? Better hurry, it's not far off now. Spring is here-now I'm sure of itg cause there are new romances blooming all around the ranch and-Ho hum! Hank. Ninety-nine May is said to bring lovely things and it certainly did. They came all decked out in lovely formals escorted by tux- edos Cwith men in them of coursej to the annual Junior-Senior Prom. The Three-Year-Olds are a frisky lot. Heavens, what was that that just whizzed by like greased lightning? Oh yes, the district track meet is underway and that was one of the fleet footers practicing up. Think hard seniors, those exams will tell you is you is, or is you ain't gonna graduate. It certainly would be a shame to make your place on the graduation picture a blank now. Just do your best and l'm sure you'll all make it. The G.A.A. had a Mother-Daughter Banquet the other night. School letters were received by many of these athletic cowgirls who really earned them exer- cising on our ranch. The Senior Hop was a gala event with which to wind up our social whirl. The kids certainly enjoyed themselves. I'l1 bet quite a few ration stamps were used up that night. Ah! Finals again, but not for seniors. This time the younguns are given the third degree. Study hard, buckaroos, and perhaps you'll make it in four years, just like the seniors are doing. One of the most wonderful times in the life of every school girl or boy is Commencement Day. Not because they are heading for The Last Roundup, but because graduation is a wonderful ceremony. It is one never to be forgot- ten with all its seriousness and formal- ity. So long and good luck, seniors, we hope that it won't be too long before you come back to see us. O And so long to you, too, underclass- men. We hope to see all your faces around the old ranch again next fall. Lonesome Hank. One Hundred - that gufxernmenl nf ilqe lpeuple, ling llqe penple, anim fur llqe penple shall uni perizlq from the emily- ,AL V 'X in-s b k JE ffl 'iw N , ' 1 Qs, v A 11,1 x x x X! X :EN -. fx 1ff3Q 5 U - X. 'fzyxxix WHL ,f If jilxxb W O HIIT Quia One Hundred Three L if I lv? XJ, rf V, X X Nw 'G y ,,gf 1. 177 lf W . ff? 1 xy 45. f ffm f c itt 'L ff X Wg, V I W ,Iwi fl Lf, ff? 1,1 f, Q , ,, V ,fd Nfl Q If , I QV V7 kg! ff f- f Q 1, fx 1 If V J 'WQU ,f 2',gf lf? ff 7' ..J SCD LUNG One Hundred Four


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East Peoria Community High School - Epoch Yearbook (East Peoria, IL) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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