George Washington High School - Surveyor Yearbook (San Francisco, CA)
- Class of 1946
Page 1 of 128
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 128 of the 1946 volume:
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Yagi .' 5 '!r,'Ii,Y -'-, 9- L'--.f ' -' .---.Lp ' X 1 .,.y:- - N' rr f- vi - -S' 1 - ' ay.:-x'f:,:rg,g.z w - 1 - ' 1 ..- .ff V., X G273'?f:1 11- -rf 'S '12 .15 A 1 if q . f ' ' ' 'fa El- - 4 MU. -3 .nw - 4 ,..t V Gerald Milton Bidgoocl I R.. . U. S. Army Air Force ' Died in Cabanatuan Prison Camp, Philippine Islands, PFC Martin Philip Becker U. S. Marine Corps Killed on Saipan, june 19, Q44 Presidential Citation Purple Heart Lieut. Albert joseph Bidgood U S Army lnfantr , , , y Killed in Normandy, july 16, 1944 Purple Heart ff 5' tt W i :R ' july' 6, 1942 l lr. f , .. P if gli H 15 3 a t ff af' A PFC Harold Bobrow A U. S. Army Paratroops 1 Killed in action, Negros Island. P.l. Presidential Citation ,Yi A , .lit fi A r to ,Jia -Y if at H P X C ijlggt ft . A Y Ensign Malcolm K. Cronin U. S. Naval Air Fume Pilot ' f Lost of? Agazu Island. in Aleutians. September 27, 1944 3' Am 5? T 5 .. 3, il F W I n M C P tm, h K ,t.ttt L ., ..--,.,.,,-.,,-,,,,, .,,. .,.,., ., , . . ....,.... 1, ,..,, Qi. , , , + A .. ,..,. ., ,.., ..-.. ...N .,..-...,,........ nt,,. .zr:...utv M Sunset and czfcning star, And one clear call for mc! Edward joseph Dellarocca U. S. Navy Seaman 216 November 50, 1942 A A' PFC Walter Leon Fox U. S. Army Service Battalion , Killed on Luzon Island, Killed in action near Guadal- canal on U.S.S. New Orleans, Purple Heart and three Scars LICLII. Richard Allen Fraenkel Pilot U. S. Army Air Force A Shot down over Mediterra- 'Y 'Ralf nean Sea November 15, 1944 ' ji. i 9, 5. N lf? is L. gov' N, , Lieut. Dominick J. Giosso U. S. Army Air Force Killed over France, March 25, 1943 Purple Heart Air Medal Lieut. Gayle K. Johanson Pilot U. S. Marine Air Corps Killed in line of duty, ' Philippines, Feb. 22, 1945 . . . , May 2, 1945, ll A ' uni. 1S'S:.!.,4gK?f5A rwf lefM,fi'wg,. - 1 Pur le Heart and four Stars mi, f ' f , - ' 4 Jacksonville, F Oil H Q. V , .. .H ,Qi FJ' i rsiwgg . elif- ur f' ' H. 5, r CQ . -,-- ,fgqigr-K Ia, ,--1 f y.:gg.m ik-5, ' w.1f-H,fii'e , f ' Wifi mir''5-T:f5i1Sf'fi'f . A A5i7f'5i?'ff2'?31?Y4'5f3iff . A 1 A 4 4 ,- .6. 1rj f'-l'i7rfif'fff!. -21311. lif7 '.'fQi'ji'eff-L i141ffgge3'2?j5Vjii1' - - Jing-Q' s ,Q ' - K f A And may there be no moaning of the bar, When I put out to sea, ,. .1., 1 1 PQ 321533 7 kk . 5 Q51 A 5, 3. - ' .2 .jfcxj-tgfjlw if 4f',.ffA - - 4 Mzfyi' ' A ' ' 1? rf., f 1 X - Lieut. jack P, McChest1ey U. S. Army Air Force Killed in line of duty, ' , October 14, 1944 Tonopah, Nevada ' PFC Michael M. Khenchelian U. S. Army Infantry Killed on Saipan july 10, 1944 N .. V+-..,. , A fl 1 , ' n Q .,:fMM i mmf, .9 1 1 mi VJ A. y ,S 1 ogy lf 1 ff ,mf 4 1 , X ff? 5 ' Q -2 'ik-eff L. 9 on V - V of Q' gf wffiwgf ' X I if .14 , Q- -Q3 'W' ,, 2.1 ,ff .4 I f' Q f .9 .ft 1. 5 if . f ' 1 h , . . . X 1' V lu . J' .L ...I 1 A Hi'-t... X 1 5 Wux- , 1 1: .af',..1: Q51 K.-'fo 1- .- ,rf ,fr-ip' 441 J 1 1 ,. f I ei Q . K 5 if ,N ri I M, la'i'i . 3 Q 1' rx ri if 41, 5 J 3 5 rf B 4 if if 1. z 1 g if 1 Q nf' W s Y .1 'i - zfgtfnvgiois.-, ..- l Lieut. Arthur H. Mellberg ' U. S. Army Air Force ' Killed in action over Gertoheim, Germany February 22, 1945 Purple Heart Croix de Guerre 1 1 Y' it . .sf 1 S ., .. A , .5 1 Q. A.:sq.fl,. MFm.. g5!.5igfgamg Q , Richard Varan Krueger 11 1 ,E Bernard Natov Q U. S. Navy Quartermaster 211: ' UPS.. Nayy Radio Tech. llc if Killed at Pearl Harbor, .,yf'q - 1 ' P Missing in action Dec. 7, 1941, , W Jay , ' f Q December 2, 1944 Q s Aboard U.S.S. Arizona I H Uk., Citation for invention con- fi Purple Hear: A nected with radar' Presidential Citation H qi ,WWA ' . . - K , , .1 5.fg+:'f,',.--1... T:?:Xtk'Mk K M . RJ i ...,Wi7i',.f,,, .whit 1-.A ' EMM ' - QM. But such a tide as moving seem: asleep, Too full for sound and foam, PFC George Paul Neiman .ered Infantry in action in Germany 29, 1945 - Heart William Louis O'Leary Staff Sergeant ' U. S. Army Air Force Killed in line of duly in England, july 7, 1944 Purple Heart Distinguished Flying Cross Corp. Felix F. Ordoquihandy S. First Marine Division oh' Okinawa Island July 17, 1945 Daniel john Patrovich U. S. Army Air Force Cadet Killed in line of duty Colorado, March 29, 1944 PFC Peter Edward Paul U. S. Army Infantry Killed on Okinawa May 22, 1945 Purple Heart When that which drew from out the boundless deep Turns again home. Arthur Sobol . U. S. Army Air Force- Navigator Killed in action over Morotai, P.l. Corporal Henry Reul U. S. Army Air Force April 30, 1945 PFC Sidney Lewis Speyer U. S. Army Infantry 'N Killed in action in German ' Killed in line of duty, October 19, 1944 New Mexico UCUI- BCUIIUV N. Scboenfeld U. S. Army Air Force Died in line of duty over Spain Silver Air Medal with four Oak Leaf Clusters T fir 'NL-I4 y 4 November 14, 1944 ' Purple Heart Lieut. Richard Serensky U. S. Army Air Force Killed in line of duty, July 14, 1945 Albuquerque New Mexico Twilight and evening bell, And after that thc dark! PFC john Cusick Sreffan U. S. Army Infantry Killed at Dorsreri, Germany, March 29, 1945 Purple Heart Sgt. George T. Vogiatzis U. S. Army Air Force Killed in line of duty England, September 16, 1944 ' PFC John Milton W'hiifen U. S. Marine Corps Killed on Saipan July 26, 1944 A Silver sw Medal A' Lieut. Morton Al Zimmer U. S. Army Air Force Killed in action on Mindanao Island, P.I. October 26, 1944 ' Purple Heart Sgr Richard Homer Zmk U. S. Army Arr Force . Mereorologist Killed in line of duty r August 5, 1945 ,Q-Missa And may llzcrc be no sadness of f6Z1'C'llfC'H, When I cmbarlg IN MEMORIAM Ray Brown No information john Bray U. S. Air Force Test Pilot Killed in line of duty Florida, 1945 Gordon Diard U. S. Army Air Force Killed in action, 1945 David Hunicke No information David Lampert U. S. Air Force Killed in line of duty , Livermore, 1942 Raymond Mandere U. S. Coast Guard Died in line of duty, 1942 Robert MacCarra U. S. Navy, Soundman 3fc Killed in action, So. W. Pac. September 13, 1943 Purple Heart Lieut. Roger Morse U. S. Air Force Captured on Arno ls. january 3, 1944 Presumed dead Richard Nieto U. S. Navy, Radar 3fc Philip Banks U. S. Navy Killed in action Dec., 1945 South Pacific Paul Roger U. S. Marine Corps Killed in action Guadalcanal, October 20, 1942 Purple Heart Lieut. Arthur Sommer U. S. Army Air Force Killed in action, Belgium December 17, 1944 Purple Heart, Air Medal Herbert Stein Merchant Marine Died in line of duty February 6, 1943 Ronald Willows No information Harold Winans U. S. Army Air Force Killed in action, Magdeburg September 12, 1944 Oak Leaf Cluster, 3 stars Purple Heart, Air Medal William Winter No information Harold Zahn No information john Holland No information Thomas Devine No information Harry Granlee No information Robert Harris U. S. Navy, Torpedoman 3fc Lost December 2, 1944 Purple Heart Earl jepperson Killed in japan March 3, 1946 William Young No information For tho' from out oar boarne of Time ana' Place The flooa' may bear me jar, I hope to see my Pilot face to face When I have crost the har. -TENNYSON. -ve-v-w-1-v-1--f-rwh 1--.-qv...-.,-,..,Y,,.- , .Mg .....-F.-..-... W... ,,. I 1 .eff ' zv .. A. M. . ww.. . In 2. nm ' ,. 1 r fc y-......,........,., 3 1 1 Jim, Mm. :gm GEORGE Caesar F. Abate Richard H. Abramson Robert Alexander G. V. Allen jack Anderson Albert Arens Richard Armstrong Louis F. Arnone Harry Aron Bob Arriola Norman J. Asher Benito L. Bacci jack Badaracco john E. Bagot T. P. Baldocchi Herb Barber Bob Barry j. S. Batanides Rudy Behlmer Richard E. Behrens Ray Bell Dave Bentley Frank Berkovatz Herbert Berreyess Byron Bertram Harry Bier Stanley Blackheld Allen Blumenfeld Kenneth C. Brahm George F. Brandt Frank Braun Marvin R. Braunstein Ralph Briggs Leland S. Bright D. Brosnan Dave Brown Glenn E. Brown J. R. Burke Phil Burton George A. Capanis Elton Carlomagne S. W. Carlsen james J. Casey Ernest Cementina Percy L. Chu Thomas Clark PAGE TWE LVB WASHINGTON Leland H. Cohn Frank Golclough Harold F. Colen Ray Cunningham Earle Dapper Maurice fBudl Davis julio De Mon Bud de Recat Nick Deurloo Kenneth J. Diereks R. P. Dilto Dick Dixon Eugene H. Doncette Bill Doyle William Drude, Jr. Brinsby S. Duher Houston Dunnigan Ross J. Dunnigan Robert F. Durnol jay R. Easterwood Bill Eckhoff Harold Eisert Gilbert A. Ellis Eddie D. Ezekiel David Favir johnny Figone F. F. Fillmore Ken Flexenhar Ed Flinn Morrie J. Flynn john Fopeman Peter Fotos Jerry Friedman Maxine Furstenburg Edward S. Gaper Alfred Garibaldi Nat Garibaldi George R. Geisner G. C. Genis Bob George Silvia T. Germano Andy Gerstle Pete Gerstle Louis J. Ghehsky, jr. G. A. Gluer Bud Goldman Mat Goldman john H. Goldsmith Homer R. Gracks Dave Gravem Samuel B. Greiff John J. Guaraglia Ross D. Guidice Martin C. Haderlin Art Hagstrom Jack Hanley Robert W. Hansen Myron J. Harband Stanford G. Hardeman George L. Harper Dick Harris Paul Hilkovsky Harlem J. Hoffman Roy H. Hoffman Orva R. Hoskinson George W. Howsey Bob Ingram Myron M. Jacobs Bob B. jarboe Thomas R. jocz Art Johnson Howard johnson Monroe johnson Paul johnson Allen jones Dick jones Kimon Kaddas George L. Kalish Eugene Kelley Lois J. Kennett Elbert J. Kimble Ronald King Dante V. Kingsley Donald F. Koch 5 Basil Kockos Arnold A.. Kohn Everett Korens Laurent Lamanet Frank W. Lawler Neil E. Leavitt Robert E. Leif Raymond A. Leresque HIGH SERVICE BOOK Louis N. Levinson A1 Levy Francis M. Lewis Robert S. Lilleberg R. R. Lindeman Bill Lindlow Harold E. Lister Gordon A. Littman Bowen Lloyd Rollin A. Lowe Donald Lucia Louis M. Luna Harold G. Lustig George Welling Madison George Maganaris Gordon Maillon Al Malauf R. B. Markis Ken Mavok Robert J. McAdams John E. McAtee M. F. McCarthy Burl McConnell O. H. McCormick Jack McDonald Preston Mendell William R. Merifield Ralph F. Meyer Harry B. Meyers Richard L. Mills Mickey Mitchell Gil Morgan Robert Moser, Jr. Byron Mosteller Gale Mountford jack Moynihan Daniel E. Mulahy Ralph Munowitch Ray F. Murphy Joseph Neely Leonard Neuman Edward Nissen Art Norack Louis J. North Walter H. Obermeyer Jim Ohlssen Daniel C. Ota john E. Owens Irving Palasky George A. Pallvinny A. J. Papagenge Herb Patnoe Ray Peaesall Reuben A. Penirian Stan Perkins Clay W. PfaeHle Edwin Pike Gordon H. Pond G. Y. Pong john O. Potts Art Ragan W. B. Raisner Edward Reese Harold fHapl Renfort Wally Renfort Gerard Rhine Alexander J. Rice Paul R. Rice Bob Riese Richard G. Roberts Ed Roder Rene J. Rodigon Harry Rosenthal Richard W. Russ Stanley G. Sadler Kenneth F. Schildt Clarence E. Schimmd Bob Sears Richard Seike H. Shapiro Clarence L. Shaw, Jr. Erskin M. Shaw Ray Simons Chuck Single Edward Slade Meyer B. Slivla Edward D. Smith Sid Solomon Laurent Soules William P. Spremick joel H. Springer Ray A. Springer Dick Stone Edward Stumes Robert E. Tamblin Robert Tatam G. H. Taylor Alan Timmons james Thorp Rod E. Tobias Fred Turkheimer john K. Ure Harry C. Valdespino Marcus Vanderlaan Al Varshawsky Paul J. Vavaris K Richard -I. Vogel Richard X. Wagner Warren P. Weinstock Peter S. Weiss Allan Wendroff james A. Wheat jack Whisman Ronald V. White R. H. Williams Bob Wise Leonard Woo Richard Words Robert L. Wright Robert Wyman Bill Yearsley William M. Young Clancy V. Yturriaga john L. Zotel PAGE Tl-IIRTBIN sua- WASHINGTQN ADMINISTRATION For centuries people have thought of the physical world as consisting of many partsffaoceans, continents, islands, climatic zones, etc. The human has been thought of in terms of nations, languages, customs, religions, and races. Today we have a new reality- that of a physical air world which has no barriers or boundaries, and no static physical divisions. In spite of this new reality, the separations on the earth's surface continue to dominate attitudes toward world problems. People the world over demand a solution to the problem of facing universal relationships. Mankind is facing its greatest test in history. Can man go one step further in that old conquest, the con- quest of himself? Could there he a birth of a new citi- zenship? The world is ruled by symbols. I.et's create a new symbol: world citizenship. The young people of today can do much to de- velop this ideal of one world. Their attitudes and ac- tions should force us to realize that only the greatest efforts of the spirit, the most generous attempts of the heart, can save the world from destruction. O. I. SCHMAELZLF Every great institution has a personality all its own. The personality that Washington is developing under the leadership of Principal O. I. Schmaelzle is one of friendliness and cooperation among faculty, parents, and students. The inauguration of the Principal's Cabinet, com- posed of representatives from all registry classes, has produced a spirit of unity among the students, and Fl growing feeling that they are participating directly in school policies. An increased sense of responsibil- ity has resulted, and an augmented pride in the title Citizen of George Washington High School. Family Night, now become a Washington tradi- tion, bespeaks harmony and friendliness between the homes of Washington students and their school. This function, initiated by Principal Schmaelzle in the spring of 1945, is an occasion on which parents, teachers, and students dine together in the school cafeteria, and later enjoy entertainment in the auditorium, witness games in the gymnasium, or perhaps, just visit, W'hen we work we work hard, when we play we play hard. Mr. Schmaelzle believes in this slogan. Go to it, boys and girls. The world is yours. Noth- ing has been done perfectly. Everything remains to be done right-everything, During your years here you have witnessed science removing barrier after barrier and making, in a phys- ical sense, of the universe, but one world in spirit re- mains yet to be created. What can you do about it? Much! Your one world at Washington has provided you with ideals of toler- ance and of cooperation. From your ranks and from the ranks of young people over the land, must come the makers of new patterns of human relationships, must come the fighters for world peace. One world needs you. G0 10 if, boys and girlrf' ELEANOR M. JACKSON Recently a young man came into my office. He had applied for a position of some importance. Whether he was to be considered for the position depended upon his high school record. Together we looked it up. It was the young man himself who finally suggested that it would be a waste of time to copy and mail the report. Day after day we are asked to furnish transcripts. All we can do is to forward the record which the stu- dent made. It is, therefore, of the utmost importance to you as an individual that your record in high school be clean and commendable. It may prove to be the turning point in your life beyond school. I think it was in the case of the young man who came to my office. And neither of us can do anything about it flow. G. M. KLINGNER Today the student body depends on you for leader- ship and unity. Tomorrow your country and the world will depend on you-on your trained minds and under- standing hearts, on your alert perception and your ability to keep your feet on the ground. The ground in this case is the history, the literature, the culture, and the civilization of the world. You have tasted of this history, this literature, this culture. This taste should whet your appetite to know every people, every country. To know people is to understand them and where there is understanding there cannot be hate. Strive then not to be understood but to understand, not to be loved, but to love, not to be pardoned, but to pardon. With love, pardon, and understanding as your goals you can go forth with confidence to meet this world. ELEANOR PARsoNs FACULTY MEMBERS PREPARE YQUTH ,-, A- w ww ' r I T S ' Wg. ' , ' f sgzsn. an 1 - .T J' , NHS .5 is ws 1 'N v i 1 A , 1. f ww' x lf. ,- Mr. Abercrombie Mrs. Ainsworth Miss Archer Mrs. Avina Mrs. Bannister Mr. Bartholomew Mrs. Bickel Mr. Knott Mr. Lapeyri Mr. Madfes Mr. Magner Miss McGovern Miss McMillan Mr. Morton YQ I W ' Sgt. Boggs Miss Murphy fun Mr. Brandt Miss Nelson S 'Q 1 . f Miss Browning Miss O'Leary , i ,413 ik 'Q 7, 5 Mr. Burke Miss Parsons X i ft X Mr. Bussenius Mr. Pearson - 7 sa f xx Mr. Carroll Miss Poole ti V I Miss Caulcy Mr. Raphael E ' '1 S Xu? Mr. Cofhs Miss Rauner I wk ima: C U ' Mr. Collin Miss Rausch 'S K kb . Miss Coopc Mr. Ripley Sgt... Miss Counihan Mr. Roberts 'xy 1 A. if, V' y Miss Cullinan Miss Scharff I , ii A V'u!!fZZ . Miss Davis Miss Selleck ' ' Mrs. Deehan Miss Shearer , Mfg, Denny Mrs, Sheehan l S 1 1' Mr. Douglass Miss Silberstein 5?'s!.f:g.ss Mr. Fagin Mrs. snnrlel I K2 , N A 4 Miss Forcadc Mrs. Swanson ,V , i'qW'i'w' 3 IQ, ,L , Mrs. Gowan Mr. Uhte J-f V Mr. Hamrock Mr. Vanderlaan 2 it ' ' tg Sgt. Henry Mrs. Wagstaff lf V Fly Mrs. Herrick Mr. Welds 'I L. ly? Miss james Miss Weinstein K l 3 an A Miss Kellogg Mrs. Williamson 9 , gala Mrs. Kennedy Mrs. Wilson I , J Miss Kenney Mn Wilson is 'iff 255 ,131 ' Mrs. Kern Mr. Wire n gif , Miss Kirwin Mr. Yager A ll' fifffwtti ' zifiiiii' , ' - '. -,a64nuL, ' 3 t f,'.g-utnnun. . vga ' - 3 !l 11n.-' . func- I . . .. . . H-..-ss , W. .,,AW,., -'I . vw 43? ff. - lin 'wi if ff ' W ' l .. l 19 Z I Q 5 A.. its 1 r Nh A sf A . 3, 5 ' in V I 'LJ V s. 5. ll. MRS. CATHERINE SHEEHAN MISS EDITH SILBERSTEIN MISS KERN Commercial Department Science Department Nurse MISS FLORENCE SHEARER MR. ARTHUR FAGIN Physical Education tGirlsJ Physical Education WILLIAM MAGNER MR. FRANK MORTON Shop Department Language Department PAGE SIXTI! E N FOR ONE ORLD-UNITED -- I S ' : I, M :I -' N . . wwf :, . '- .t ,W if L If nm- I., . 3. .5 1 gw.. -I s . , I N, ., M 4' 2 Q fs ., F' g!j'f1esFiWW?W ii 1 wg . it I ' I . ?i:::'1fiu2EKi. ai-.wi '51, . ..Sv i..,.t.,-n., .5 ,. . - . 5 B fe.,..Lg:E22 ,Ml .5,,. ,,J,W igRg3gL:3Hgg,32-,-.5 Efgig D in gi '4 15513.51 Ligeigiiigt 1-fun? fini IQ Fig? v . ' , Q y2v33.:215g f 'Tf-r-rf iggimzii I -...fd 2 gm ' J -. if I 55 5 I 95 ,-f:f9 ? 37i. ?5'::q .1 ' Y' E. .. .sr , , I . . ,. ,, , 5.5215 I ff I 345, if . gg I ' ' . Q - ff: ,:' , ,,-, Fry ' I ir V 1,5-,::.a.zI::'f-Q: ,- 1 'X - R 2 1 . 'k.VV if L. V1 J..:s.iL sway.. , it 7,5 .nga ,. I. If E' .s' 1.-S.. I P M ,i 1 ' 5 1 R7 x , P X ii, . VT.. r. 5 . a tar., -, ,S 3 .3 . lhj, 3 5 , ww RQ'-ff , MISS DORIS MCMILLAN MISS CATHERINE DAVIS Art Department Library MISS EDITH BROWNING MRS. MYRTLE SWANSON English Department Music Department MR. BRUCE BARTHOLOMEW Mathematics Department BPS MRS. ELSIE WILLIAMSON Home Economics MRS. BIRCHLYN BANNISTER Social Studies Department SXSGT. CHARLES E. HENRY R.O.T.C. PAGE SEVENTH EN Student Body Officers Fall, 194 5 PETER ZELALICH Prwsidmzl 1 Q . W I ' P ' a , I 'IRQ l.l1I,ll,l'f1ijOHNSON VIA L' Prwfmfffll PHOEBE NICHOLS GUSTAF j0HN50N S'm'relary Tm: . ,wwf DON f5l.UMENFEl.D WALLY ROLLING BILL STADFELDT Curmdian Atbletir Manager Yell Lmdvr PAGE EIGHTFFN Student Body Officers Spring, 1946 JACK KALMAN Prefident if-I I ? I il LAWRENCE LASH KAY BYARD Tfmfufff SC't'l'UldVj' , si I , 'fb- , BILL STADFELDT JACK BRUNTON Yell Leader Alblelir Manager .Q X, PHOEBE NICHOLS Vire Prefide nr PHILIP I-IOEHN Cuxlodian PAGE NINETEEN I ,ff 0 1,5 .- 1 1 7 ,f ,1 ff 'af W9 pf f fu ,f , f .N r'r ,f 1 1,49 ,. 1 1 11 ff ff 1 1,1 If 1 ff, fl ,H , fm, , I I ,O of uixhn., , , ff, D qQ,,,,h K f 1 f ' 4 M f ' , f xl . . N x , n f f, UL., ,',,4 L' Wy. Q 1,,..Aj:-.':,'. ,,5g.:,-..'-- ,ff I' 51 X '-'4111,'f, C11 ' 'll ' ' 25.17 'V , 1 ' 4-'f'fT fj, ,i,'L. In fgilf lfggf, ,il 4,11 ' Jy, J' . 7' 72 - '- I .- if .V ,g 7-7' , fy- 7? 221, 691. '4 f' a fzg , .. S' 1 ,u 1,52 '- c,- - , 2. ' ' :'I ,cqff ff ,', 1 y,1, 1' I 'L Ill' , f7':. 5- ,4 , f, , , . A , , Donlm- -.fg.:.,- . Rfk' KN ,., X f 3 ,fgp E Qi f ?,,. .'f ? , ,Q f ff , f,fk,,' ff f,f X, , , f,42, ff 1 ff! I -f fn, f qfffclyp, fm, A UATES ,mm Seaniors S Q 2 ', . :j i iff' ,V D if ..,Q . i W 1+ r Y I l 7 i L is, g 58 64 '1 l 3407 , 1 df will attend ,I.C .... INIAXINE BI.UMEN'I'l'IAI. H-I2 class secretary . . . senior advisor . . . likes dancing and swimming . . . a graduating editor of Surveyor . . . will attend l,C., then to California . . , MELBA BRAVERMAN . . . Student Council S314 . . . likes dancing, photography . . . plans a modeling career after graduation . . . XWILLIAM BROWN . . . likes swimming . . . on track team . . . future undecided . . . LEILA BOHALL . . . member of Music Club . . . likes movies and reading . . . plans to go into business world . . . BETTY BRITT . . . senior advisor . . . Eagle and Student Body Card representative , . . member of G.A.A .... will enter business world . . . VIR- GINIA BROWN . . . senior advisor . . . likes to collect records . . . favorite sport is riding . . . will attend LC .... RITA BUSCAGLIA . . . S'45 Student Body Secretary . . . president of G.S.S. . . . member of Tri-Y, G.A.A .... senior advisor . . . playing piano her favorite pastime . . . will attend I.C .... HOOPER CAINE . . . member of boxing team . . . sailing and building boats are favorite pastimes . . . will enter California . . . JO ANN CARO . . . A graduate editor of Sur- veyor . . . Tri-Y member . . . likes shows, barl- minton, football . . . will attend J.C .... JANE CHAMBERS . . . president of Music Club . . . member of G.A.A .... likes movies, dancing, bas- ketball . . . will enter j.C ,... MAY CHEW . . . member of Floral Arts Club . . . likes drawing and swimming . . . will attend l.C .... RAYMOND CLARFIELD . . . his hobby is music . . . will attend San Francisco State College . . . MARTIN LOHN . . . likes rowing, sailing, reading, foot- ball . . . head manager of football team . . . plans to travel and then to go into business world . . . LEO COYNE . . . favorite sport is football . . . will enter Merchant Marine . . . PATRICIA CULLORS . . . likes reading, dancing, skating, and tennis . . . will enter college to study nursing . . . SUE CURTIS . . . favorite pastime is singing . , . swimming is her favorite sport . . . a member of the Crystal Plunge Swimming team . . . will enter U.C. ie, FaH+l945 HARRIS ADES . . . member of the program com- mittee, Saber Club, president of C.S.F., senior advisor . . . likes making moving pictures . . . will travel . . . HENRY ARRIGHI . . . acting, fencing, boxing are his hobbies . . . plans to go into the field of exploration . . . IACOUELINE BECKMAN . . . senior advisor . . . likes dancing, badminton and swimming . . . will attend business college . . . AUBREY BEI-IR . . . hobbies are auto- mobile drawings and airplane models . . . likes swimming and playing tennis , . . will go to JC. . . . PAUL BICKEL . . . member of the stage crew. Red Cross Club, senior advisor . . . guns and radio are his hobbies . . . will attend j.C. . . . XVILLIAM BIGELOW . . . on 150 basketball team . , . plays in golf tournaments . . . will go to j.C., then to Stanford . . . GILDA BLANK . . . H-I2 council representative . . . Tri-Y member ...Z graduating editor of the Surveyor . , , senior advisor . . . member of finance committee attend j.C .... DON BLUMENFELD . . . Student Body Custodian . . . Eagle Society . . . senior advisor . . . is on swimming and tennis teams . . . i--- e iss I 3 ? . ,. ' 'Sw r, S is f,.': 'g,. i F' E ,' 7 Q s ' ii in , i Q. -, . . , Q E , r t ' l y 1 X N -...- -l.,- . 5 as ...XO awk, i l i I I we S f E35 n '1 J x. 4 ex 1 -s '. x ts X 'E X at Q X as ss 1, 'St X s Six QSSQ 3 X 1 PN T I 1 it in ii.. Seniors + Foil, 1945 ,i r r. WANDA DANIELS . . . member of G.A.A .... ' ' favorite pastime is reading, dancing, and loafing ,--- 4 . . . t0 go to .LC .... to become a dental nurse . . . Q LORRAINE DILLENBACK . . . favorite pastime is , 4, -Q I In E xx horseback riding . . . Dilly will enter business M W ,x world . . . Lois EASSA . . . likes bike riding. . . i,.., ' ii' i'-3 I I i Yugi senior advisor . . . program committee . . . to H vnbn ' enter business world . . . LEATRICE EASTMAN x . . . her pastimes are reading and collecting rec' ords . . . favorite sports are tennis, ice skating, and swimming . . . will enter modeling profession . . . VIOLET ESHOW . . . secretary of Reg .... ' , V 4 senior advisor . . . member of Red Cross . . . I K favorite pastime is collecting records . . . HARLAN . il H ' H , , ' EVANS . . . member of Chess Club . , . favorite J , . ,, 3 I pastimes are music, astronomical telescopes, tramp- Tw M ltf Q Q ing . . . favorite sport is football . . . will travel ,sw 'Q -5 2 , 1. i after graduation . . . BERNARD FELDMAN . . . ? . V senior advisor . . . favorite pastimes are swimming - W, 5 ,,' , 2, gf iii-I 4 ' ': 5 r and dancing . . . will attend ,l.C. and then to 5 university . . . SYLVIA FIGENBAUM . . .member I 'Q I I y ' , Y of G.A.A., Block W Society . . . senior advisor Lwjrl . A -i-A M, ,-wi W, X . . . likes to dance . . . plans to enter State College - ' f - . - . . . ROBERT FREEMAN . . . senior advisor . . . W , Q X ' ' member of track team . . . will enter the University QQ Za G' qi 3 ,,i- ' I If of California . . . RICHARD FRIBURG . . . al, ,. I . ig 'w -.1 -:r 'A i member of Sparks Club . . . Pan American League Q' 4, i ,f . rl, 5 'L . . . pastime is amateur radio . . . will attend radio f' school ..,, I ULE GEISENHOFER...Red Cross Rep. eg . E. . . . senior advisor . . . hobbies are dancing and all A A l is r sports...will attend State College . . . CHARLES s G i 3' r. 'Rr :Qt on --aww, 1 ..'.., M s 'ii in 5 s I, 5 J' ' is GIBBS. . .senior advisor . . . favorite pastime is all sports . . . will enter U.S.F .... MATTHEW GOLDMAN . . . favorite pastime is model boat building, cartooning, and football . . . will enlist in the Marines . . . LEONARD GREENDORFER . . . swimming is his favorite sport and pastime . . . will enter LC .... CORINNE GALE . . . senior advisor . . . favorite hobby is listening to records . . . favorite sports are volley ball and swimming . , . will enter business world . . . HELENGENE GRANAT . . . senior advisor . . . member of G.A.A .... music and collecting miniatures are her hobbies . . . bowling is her favorite sport . . . will enter 1.C .... BILL GRIER . . . football and basketball are Bill's favorite sports . . . will enter Stanford university . . . WILLIAM HAHN . . . Bill is president of Eagle Society . . . senior advisor . . . on 120, 130, and Varsity basketball teams . . . to enter college . . . JACK HAMILTON . . . High Senior President . . . ROTC colonel . . . football is Jack's favorite sport . . . will enter Northr western University . . . SEYMOUR I-IANDELMAN . . . senior advisor . . . on baseball and football teams . . . will enter J.C .... ALICE HANU . . . reada ing, dancing and going to movies are her favorite l1obbies...basketball and baseball are her favorite sports...will go to LC .... DUANE HARDER... all sports are his hobbies...on football team . . . future undecided . . . IEANNETTE HARSHAW . . . jan is a member of Tri-Y . . . a ticket seller and senior advisor . . . L-12 Secretary . , . will attend LC .... ERICA HARVEY . . . member of G.A.A .... senior advisor . . . her hobby is collecting books . . . will enter business world. PAGE TWENTY-THREE eniors t ,S g a ,gt , 1 1 l 8 E il 2 ',.. uf' ., ' r W 5g: ,,-f f 1 lacing are his hobbies . . , liasketball his favorite sport . , . to enter Stanford to study structural engineering . . , MONROE IOHNSON . . . Pres- ident of Sparks Klub , . , motors are his favorite hobby . . . basketball, football, his favorite sports . . . will enter Il. .... l.lLl.lAN IOHNSON . . . treasurer of senior class . . . president of G.A.A. . . . Block W Society . . . G.S.S .... senior advisor . . . Tri-Y . , . to enter Lux to become an interior detorator . . . l.Uf.ll.l.E IOHNSON . . . Lu was Student Body Vice President . . . member of Ci.S.S ..., Block W Society . . , senior advisor . . . rally committee . . . 'l'ri-Y . . . to enter ALC. . . . SAl.l,Y KALHIUIAN . . . her hobby is sewing for herself , . . dancing and baseball are her hobbies . . . to enter LC., then on to nursing . . . STEVE KAHN . . . Eagle Society . . , senior advisor . . . favorite sports are football, track, swimming, and basketball . . . entered Stanford . . . GEORGE KLIESER . . . photography and radio are his hobbies . . . favorite sports are basketball and baseball . . . will attend j,CQ .... MERLE KRANTZMAN . . . Reg. class banker . . . senior advisor . . . hobby is sports . . . going to attend 1.11 .... CAMILLE KRONFIELD . . . dancing, swimming, and badminton favorite sports . . . to attend art school . . . IANET LOHMEYER . . . member of G.A.A .... Block W . . . music, dancing her favorite hobbies . . . to attend College of the Pacific . . . GLENDLE LONG . . . swim- ming and hiking are her favorite sports . . . to enter business world . . . LAURA LAU . , . reading is her favorite hobby . . . volleyball her favorite sport . . . will attend LC .... DORIS LIPSEY . . . Red truss Representative . . . her hobby is photog- raphy and dancing . . . will attend California . . . IOAN MacDONAl.D . . . member of French Club and G.A.A .... favorite hobbies are ice skating .ind music . . . will attend business college . . . l.ll.Y MANOVELIAN . . . record and stamp col- lecting are favorite hobbies . . . future undecided . . . BARBARA MCGEE . . . Bains is a mem- ber of G.S.S ..,. senior advisor . . . program toinrnittee . . . President of C.S.F ..., dancing and tennis are her favorites . . . plans to go to tlalifornia. FcH+l945 VIOLET HAUGEN , . . Vi was a senior advisor . . . favorite hobby is collecting snaps of friends . . . future is undecided , . . KENNETH HEINZ. . . photography and woodwork are his hobbies . . . football, baseball, and swimming are his favorite sports . . . will enter college to study dentistry . . . GEORGE HENSLEY . . . sports are his favorite pastime . . . member of football team . . . will enter U,C.I..A .... BARBARA HIRSCIHFELDER . , Bobbie was a ticket seller, senior advisor , . her hobbies are collecting records and dancing . . . to attend LC., then Cal .... ROBERT HOD- SON , . . member of the Red Cross Club . . . Sparks Club . . . favorite sports are sailing, row- ing, and swimming . . . to enter U.C .... NADINE HORXVITZ . . . Deanie was a senior advisor . . . likes collecting records , . . likes tennis, and bowling . . . will enter LC. . . . EDITH HOTZ- NER . . . member of G.A.A .... Block W . . . senior advisor . . . dance band . . . to attend LC. . . . JOHANNA HOWARD . . . reading, ice skat- r ing, dancing are her hobbies . . . to enter business world . . . BRUCE JOHNSON . . . woodwork, lv 'A ' ' i . ' 11 ,., 5i3'frM r ' i if 1 ' A if-. -is in af F 1 N X W lt! -'Q . ii Ja .K Seniors + Fcill, 1945 THOMAS MCGOWAN . . . Tom is a member of the Eagle Society and 130 and varsity basketball teams . . . future undecided . . . DONALD MEI- Gl-IAN . . . Don designed two student body cards . . . senior advisor . . . C0-editor of Art for Sur- veyor . . . President of General Science League of California . . . will maior in far eastern studies at California . . . DOROTHY METZNER . . . Dot was Vice President of G.S.S .... senior advisor . . . most all sports are Dot's favorites . . . will atrend State Teachers College to become a music teacher . . . BASIL MIKHALKIN . . . airplane models are his hobbies . . . a member of the foot- ball team . . . will attend California Institute of Tech .... NORMAN MILLERON . . , machine shop is his hobby . . . was a member of the track and football team . . . will attend U.C .... FRED MUHLENFELD . . . member of Principal's Cabinet . . . on soccer team . . . favorite sport is basket- ball . . . to enter college . . . FRANK MULLER . . . member of Saber Club . . . Eagle Society . . . favorite sports are hunting and fishing . . . future undecided . . . ERNESTINE MURPHY . . . Ernie likes sewing, movies, dancing and basket- , .... 1 , i .1 ' A- ' : 5 . , :- K ' 5 ,twi ki H f F' s e K '-- - ,sg fs, I Q K I la? ijgtf' f Q' f f r I '53 Q, X 'bs' 'rf is:.'2 ' y i l -v ' v if F I I eayae , 7 :,- El A L I 5 A' es , , ss? ,, m l 1, ,Q if i Q X 2 l I ,YA ,, li i K ,. K t gg, tt , t A , 4 at 2 3, . .... I ' 2 , .. , sig W so new sl' I .. . l ' ' 4,12 'Sava 5 2 5 . K iv s L t . as aa ,W -at . at, L . V ..,. : Sv W Q i ,K ,, ic G13 , ball . . . future undecided . . . PATRICIA ORR . . . Pat is a member of G.A.A .... Home Arts Club . . . sewing is her favorite hobby . . . will enter Lux . . . DORIS OWENS . . . senior advisor . . . Sur- veyor collector . . . favorite hobby is dancing . . . favorite sport is tennis . . . will enter C.O.P. . . . KIMBALL PALM . . . Kim was a senior advisor . . . member of Saber Club . . . swimming is his favorite sport . . . will enter Stanford . . . FLOR- ENCE PATTERSON . . . favorite sports are ice skating, dancing, tennis, and swimming . . . upon graduation will return to New York . . . XVILLIAM PEDLEY . . . member of Masque and Gavel Society . . . hobby is woodwork . . . favorite sports are baseball and tennis . . . will enter college . . . LILLIAN PROCISE . . . member of G.A.A. . . French Club . . . her hobby is playing the piano . . . will enter business college . . . DOROTHY RA- DELEVICK . . . Dot is a member of G.S.S., C.S.F ..,. President of Music Club . . . her hobby is collecting poems . . . will attend State . . . future to play in symphony . . . ES'l'EI.I.E RANDO , . . senior advisor . . . member of G.A.A .... collect- ing records is her hobby . . . to enter business school . . . ROBERT RASMUSSEN . . . Bob was a senior advisor , . . his hobbies are commercial art and record collecting . . . was on baseball team . . , will enter service . . . LAXVRENCE REDER . . . member of Saber Club . . . hunting is his hobby . . . football his favorite sport . . . to enter college . . . LOIS REID . . . member of Red Cross . . . senior advisor . . . hobby is col- lecting records . . . favorite sport is swimming . . . future undecided . . . JULIAN RHINE . . . Vice President of Eagle Society . . . member of Saber Club . . . senior advisor . . . member of football and baseball team . . . to enter college . . . I-IERSCHEL RITTLER . . , member of the Saber Club . . . base- ball and football are his favorite sports . . . will attend j.C .... RUSSELL ROBERTS . . . Russ was a senior advisor . . . member of rifle team . . . likes swimming and basketball . . . to enter college ALICEROHR . . . member of G.A.A .... Tri-Y . . . G.S.S .... senior advisor . . . favorites are horseback riding, tennis, piano . . . to enter j.C. JACQUELINE ROHR . . . jackie is a member of G.S.S .... senior advisor . . . Tri-Y . . . likes music and bowling . . . to enter business world. PAGE TWENTY-FIVE D-, ,. 1 ,, . .J eniors xl i I I i State . . . JOANNE SIIEMANSKI . . . was senior advisor . . . dancing, badminton. swimming her favorite pastimes . , . to enter Cal .... RICHARD SILVERMAN . . . member of I30's basketball team . . . likes swimming . . . to enter junior college . . . MARGOI SIMON . . . member of G.S.5. . . . G.A.A .... senior advisor . . .likes football games, tennis and swimming . . . to California Medical School . . . DENNING SMITH . . . member of Red Cross . . . senior advisor . . . hobby is art . . . likes basketball , . . to enter California School of Fine Arts . . . then to New York to study fashion design . . . LAZAR SOMMER . . . hobbies are mechanical drawing and art work . . . likes basket- ball, football, and baseball . . . would like to make drafting a life work . . . NANCY S'I'EWART . . . member of G.A.A ..., Home Arts Club . . . likes swimming and dancing . . . to enter Marin IC. . . . IOAN SUMSKI . . . ticket seller . . . senior advisor . . . likes dancing and collecting records . . , to enter California . . . TRUDY STRAUSS . . . senior advisor . . . member of G.A.A. . . . likes skating, swimming, and tennis . . , to become a lab. worker after graduation . . . SHIRLEY SU'l'llERI.ANIJ . . . senior advisor . . . member of Ci,A.A .... hobby is collecting records . . , favorf ite sports are tennis and ice skating . . . to become a medical secretary . . . GERALDINE TAYLOR . . . Geri was a senior advisor and class banker . . . danting and bowling are her favorite pastimes . . . future undecided . . . RONALD TENNLER . . , member of Saber Club . . . collects minerals and stamps . . . likes swimming, tennis, and basket- hall . . . to enter college . . . GEORGENE 'IIIOMPSON . . . member of Floral Arts Club . . . tollects stamps . . . likes tennis and badminton . . to attend Ilaylor University, Watii, Texas . . . CLYDE TOM . . , likes swimming and basketball . , . to enter California . . . BURR WARK . . . senior advisor . . . likes model airplanes . . . member of football team . , . to attend j.C,, and then on to Stanford , . . AGNES WII.LlAMS . . . likes classical music . . . will attend j.C. . . . R0tiliR'l' WlNt.IlIEI,I ,... senior advisor . . . on H0 lb. track team . , . to enter ,Ili .... ALICE VVOOIJ , . . member of Ci.A.A .... Music Club , . . likes reading, skating, and basketball . . . to FaH+1945 SEYMOUR ROSE . . . likes dancing, horseback riding, swimming . . . member of football team . . . to enter Ulf, to study law . . . BOB ROSENBERG . . . member of Eagle Society and senior advisor . . . member of baseball and basketball teams . . . to become commercial artist . . . LEONARD SAGAN . . . senior advisor , , . member of football and basketball teams . . . has entered Stanford . . . LOIS SAVAGE . . . likes swimming . . . to attend S.F. State , . . secret ambition is to become a concert singer . . . CAROL SCHILLACI . . . member of G.A.A. . . , senior advisor , . . likes playing the piano . . . to enter secretarial work after gradua- tion . . . IIATTIE SCIIRIEIIMAN . . . collecting old coins . . . is I-Iattie's hobby . . . volleyball and badminton are lier favorites . . . to enter j.C, to become an accountant . . , MARGIE SCHXVARZ . . . collecting pictures and records are pastimes . . . ite skating favorite sport . LORENE SCHULKEN . ident . . . senior advisor .. . Ci.S.S .... Tri-Y .. to enter iunior college senior class vice pres- . member of G.A.A. enter San Francisco 41' c Q X 1 sl S X ii' 1:1 S X, . N ,ax gcc YV Q A x are c X x+ X i E s 1 I if Sins I T-B s Seniors + Fall, 1945 enter college . . . will major in sociology . . . CHARLES WING . . . Charlie is a member of the Saber Club . . . senior advisor . . . likes swimming . . . is in regular army . . . JEAN ZEBLEY . . . low senior vice-president. . . G.S,S .... chairman of sen- ior advisors . . . member of principal's Cabinet . . . rally committee . . . secretary of Red Cross . . . a graduate editor of Surveyor . . . to attend j.C. . . . PETER ZELALICI-I . . . Pete was Student Body President . . . low senior president . .. . Treasurer of Student Body for Fall '44 . . . Likes popular music . . . baseball and basketball are favorite sports . . . to enter j.C. to study radio and acting. Seniors + Spring, 1946 , 'gl CARMEL AHERN . . . President of the Tri-Y, member of Block W, G.S.S.. senior advisor . . . likes swimming, tennis, and collecting records . . . will attend U.C .... JOHN ALLEN . . . Student Council member . . . member of the Saber Club . . . likes football . . . to attend University of California . . . ROBERT ALLEN . . . likes going to movies and playing tennis . . . favorite sports are basket- ball and baseball . . . will go to j.C. after gradua- tion . . . BETTE ANDERSON . . . member of the G.A.A .... tennis and swimming are tops with her . . . favorite hobbies are dancing and records . . . is uncertain concerning future work . . . BAR- BARA ANGEL . . . Bobbie was a member of the Tri-Y, G,A.A .... likes collecting records, ice skating, and bowling . . . plans to go to iunior college . . . THALIA ANGEL . . . favorite pastime is playing the piano . . . tennis is her favorite sport . . . will attend J.C. in business training . . . WILLIAM ANGELLEY . . . bowling is Bil1's favorite sport . . . will probably enter service after graduation . . . MARY ANKER . . . member of Executive Council, Masque and Gavel, G.S.S., G.A.A., senior advisor . . . favorite sport is horse- back riding.. .plans to go to U.C ..... GLORIA ARAGO . . . basketball is favorite sport . . . un- certain about future plans . . . FRANK ARIETTA . . . hobby is drafting . . . played on varsity football and track. Will enter Marine Corps . . . RICH- ARD ASH . . . likes all sports, especially soccer, baseball . . . to go in the army or to j.C. . . . jEAN AZAR . . . member of G.S.S., G.A.A., Block W secretary, senior advisor . . . likes swim- ming and badminton . . . hopes to become sec- retary . . . MARTHA AZIMOW . . . senior advisor, Block W, and member of the Tri-Y . . . to take up Public Health Nursing at the University of California . . . JEANNE BACHMAN . . . G.A.A. member . . . collecting and taking camera snap- shots is her hobby . . . favorite sports are swim- ming and tennis . . . will attend S.F. State Teacher's College for a music maior . . . NETTIE MAE BECKWITH . . ., likes playing piano, basketball, swimming . . . to attend S.F. State College . . . to be a surgeon . . . LEONARD BEGUN . . . likes basketball and mathematics . . . to go to U.C. to coach sports. k PAGE TWENTY-SEVEN Seniors fist 5- W - - S Y Awrii, 'h 'ws Qfggiwgfik' rgglglgazs gs Q is . . . REX BROOKS . . . member of baseball team . . . tinkering is his favorite pastime . , . to attend U.C. after army . . . BARBARA BROOME . . . likes to sing and dance . . . tennis is her favorite sport . . . may attend S.F.,I.C ..., IACK BRUN- 'I'ON . . . member of the soccer team . . . likes football . . . would like to attend Stanford Uni- versity . . . GEORGIA BULLOCH . . . senior ad- visor member , . . favorite sport' is swimming . . . will attend San jose State to study art . . . MAR- IORIE BUNKLEY . . . member of Tri-Y , , . likes singing, riding, dancing , . . would like to be a singer, but for the present will attend LC .... SHARON IIURNETT . . . likes fishing, basket- ball, and bowling . . . after graduation will attend j.C., then on to Cal. for singing career .... IIM BURTON . . . Saber Club member . . . likes rilles arid football . . . to college if not drafted . . . KAY BYARD . . . Student Body secretary . . . member of G.S.S., G.A.A., Tri-Y, rally committee, senior advisor, ticket seller and student council . . . will attend Cal. U .... ambition to visit Europe , . . MILDRED CANATA . . . President of G.A,A. and Illoik W . . . member of G.S.S. and senior advisor . . . likes music and basketball . . . would like to he a private secretary . . . RICHARD CARLSTON . . . member of Chess Club . . . likes baseball . . . favorite hobbies are stamps and chemistry . . . to go to j.C ,... FIERN CARMEI .... senior advisor and member of G.A.A .,.. likes dancing and roller skating . . . to become an elementary grade teacher . . . TODD CARROLI .... C.S.F. member . . . likes collecting loud ties, football and swimming . . . to attend Annapolis . . . CECILIA CHAPMAN . . . member of Choral and Latin Clubs . . . likes riding, sailing, writing . . . plans to enter Mary- Knoll, N.Y., and become a MaryKnoll Mission Sister . . . IACQUELINE COHEN . . . G.A,A., G.S.S., Illock W and senior advisor membership . . . likes ice skating . . . will attend S.F.j.C. and then on to Cal .... STANLEY COHEN . . . likes ice skating and soccer . . . will attend San Fran- cisco junior College . . . GEORGE COLCLOUGH . . . basketball, football, archery and bowling are his favorite sports . . . to enter army. Spring+1946 LARRY BELL . . , cars is his favorite hobby . . . likes all sports . . , will join the navy after gradua- tion . . . VALERIE BENTHEN . . . likes acting, bowling, ice skating . . . University of California is her next stop . . . JOYCE BLAIR . . . dancing and hiking are her hobbies . , . will attend ,l.C. to pursue business career . . . JOYCE BLEADON . . . Student Council member . . . likes to collect records, and bowling . . . will attend University of Cali- fornia...DICK BOBERG. ..member of the Senior Tri-Y...likes photography and basketball...mem- ber of soccer team . . . first to LC., then Navy . . . ,IOSIE BOIDO . . . Tri-Y, senior advisor, and mem- ber of G.A.A .... favorite sport is horseback riding , . . to attend junior college or nursing school . . . . . . PATRICIA BOYLE . . . member of the Ice Skating Club . . . likes dancing and swimming . . . to make professional dancing or commercial art her career . . . MARCIA BRENNER . . . Tri-Y, Block W, senior advisor, ticket seller . . . likes swim- ming . . . plans to go to University of California x st 3 S Q Seniors + Spring, 1946 radio school . . . DAVID DILG . . . likes wood- working and basketball . . . plans to attend ,I.C. to be an accountant ...A I AMES DIXON , . . air- planes is his favorite hobby . . . likes basketball and track . . . will enter army . . . MARCELIA DOHERTY. . .likes to collect records and go swim- ming . . . will attend Munson Business School . . . JOYCE DUARTE . . . senior advisor . . . likes sewing and the piano . . . to enter the business world . . , ELEANOR DUBACHER . . . member of Tri-Y and G.A.A .... likes ice skating . . . to attend iunior college and art school .... I EAN DULINSKY . . . Eagle Art Editor . . . member of G.A.A .... likes horseback riding . . . will at- tend Davis and would like to have a ranch of her own someday ..., I UNE DULINSKY . . . pastime is trying to keep her diary up to date . . . likes badminton . . . will either work or go to Davis College . . . SALLY DUNNING . . . President of G.S.S., C.S.F., senior advisor, and member of the G.A.A .... likes playing the piano and tennis . . . to attend University of California . . . ROBERT ECKHOEF . . . member of the Saber Club and Eagles . . . likes basketball and dancing . . . to enter the Army Air Corps . . . DOLORES ED- WARDS . . . senior advisor . . . likes swimming and horseback riding . . . will enter the business world . . . DOROTHY EDWARDS . . . member of the Pan American Club . . . likes horseback riding and swimming . . . to U.C, to be a laboratory technician . . . KENNETH ELKINGTON . . . likes swimming and basketball . . . to attend I.C. . . . DOROTHY ELY . . . likes dancing, badmin- ton, swimming, and tennis . . . to attend Marin LC. . . . PATRICIA EMERY . . . Pat was a Student Council member, senior advisor. and member of Girls' Choral . . . would like to work at Roos Bros. as a model . . . PRISCILLA EMERY . . . Pris was a Student Council rep .... member of Pan American League and junior Tri-Y . . . likes danc- ing and ice skating . . . to attend J.C. or business college . . . MARY ERHART . . . Block W, G.A.A., and senior advisor membership . . . likes music and ping-pong . . . plans to attend Stanford University and study iournalism. . , Q ' F x It I t W - 1 .,': S 5 1 I , , ! it an K I a SI' s' rx QW' si XE? ali Y X MARY COLLINS . . . likes collecting records and photographs . . . plans to attend iunior college . . . JANET COX . . . hobby is art . . . likes swim- ming and skating . . . will go to ,I.C. after gradua- tion . . . DEAN DASKAROLIS . . . senior Hi-Y member . . . likes basketball and soccer . , . on to college or else the navy . . . ENID DAVIS . . . member of Block W, CSF Program Committee, senior advisor, and G.A.A .... would like to become private secretary . . . NORMAN DEBUS . . . likes photography and football . . . will prob- ably enter army . . . THEODORA DECKERT . . . G.A,A. member . . . likes photography and horse- back riding . . . to I.C. and then on to Cal. . . . ALBERT DESHAIES . . . member of the Sparks Club . . . likes radio and swimming . . . indefinite about future plans . . . RICHARD DICKENSON . . . hobbies are postage stamps and radio building . . . favorite sport is golf . . . would like to attend E i PAGE TWENTY-NINE Seniors graduation . . . KIM I7l.ETCQHER . . . likes building model boats . . . to become a marine engineer . . . VIOHN FLOYD . . . hunting and fishing are his favorite sports . . . plans to enter the navy and then junior college . . . CAROLYNN FONSECA . . . member of the G.A.A., senior advisor and Tri-Y . . . likes dramatics and horseback riding . . . to attend Northwestern College . . . SARAH FRANK- l.lN . . . hobbies are coins and collecting iokes . . . likes volleyball and ping-pong , . . to attend ,Ili .... STANLEY GAI.I.AGI lER . . . Saber tlub and Tri Lhevron Society member . . .likes football, swimming and basketball . . . to go to Oregon State for a C.P.A. degree . . . MARY ROSE GALVEZ . . . senior advisor . . . likes to dream and swim . . . to go to dental nursing school . . . LOUIE GANEM . . . likes to collect stamps, auto- mobiles. and football . . . to work after graduation , . . RICHARD GANZER . . . Dick likes swim- ming aml dancing . . . is undecided about future plans . . . VIRGINIA GESS . . . favorite pastime is writing letters . . . likes to roller skate . . . un- iertain about the future . . . IOHN GIOSSO . . . was all-city basketball star in '45 . . . to attend junior college . . . DONALD GOTTLIEB . . . likes all sports . . . would like to attend San lose State . . . FRANK GRANAT . . . favorite pastime is playing the piano . . . likes football, baseball and swimming , . . to enter Stanford . . . BARBARA GRAYSON . . . collecting records and books are her favorite hobbies . . . likes basketball and swim- ming . . . to attend I.Kf., and then on to U.C. . . . STANLEY GREEN . . . member of the dance band . . . swimming team and soccer team member . . . to enter IC. or service , . . BEATRICE GROGER . . . likes playing pinorlile and collecting records . . . plans to attend S.F.l.C .... DONNA GUN- THORP . . . favorite sport is swimming . . . to enter business world in the field of merchandising. Spring+l9-46 ELAINE ERRICIKSON . . . senior advisor . . likes collecting photographs and roller skating . . . to attend ,LC .... ROSEMARIE FARBER . . . Rosie was a member of Student Council and a senior advisor . . . alsn a Tri-Y member . . . likes music and swimming . . . to attend S.F.,I.C. . . . MARIE FARLEY . . . member of G.A.A. . . . likes swimming and badminton . . . to attend iunior college . . . BETTY FARNSXVORTH . . . likes collecting souvenirs, roller skating, and swimming . . may attend ,LC .... NORMA FAULKNER . . . Student Council representative, Tri-Y, senior advisor, ticket seller, and member of G.A.A .... likes swimming . . . to attend Ulf .... STEWART' FELDSTEIN . . . basketball and baseball are his favorite sports . . . to enter army or LC. . . . ALBERT FITTER . . . Al was a member of the senior I-Ii'Y . . . likes photography and travelling . . . also likes basketball and swimming . . . to attend ILC. and later USC . . . RICHARD FLEM- ING . . . Dick likes all sports, especially football and swimming . . . will enter the service after i 1 a it R SSB? is S , 1 i I Xfbxxx l l XX X x N Y N Q 4 R59 1, X X ts Qs Q t x its if r Seniors + Spring, 1946 DEANE HAAS . . . lapidermy and guns are his hobbies . . . he is captain of the Rifle Team and Gunnery Sgt .... to do gunsmithing or enter the F.B.l .... GLORIA HAMMER . . . member of G.A.A., Block W, and senior advisor . . . likes to collect coins, basketball and softball . . . to attend J.C .... DONALD HANCOCK . . . L-I2 Dres- ident, head of senior advisors. Eagle Society, Hi-Y member , . . on swimming, football, and basketball teams . . . to enter service and then on to college to study engineering . . . DAVID HANLON . . . member of Engineers Club . . . likes motorcycling and football. . . to enter army . . . EDWARD HARLEM . . . Masque and Gavel, Saber Club, radio announcer, C.S.F., Eagle Society member . . . likes chemistry and billiards . . . to attend U.C. to study engineering . . . PATRICIA HARMON . . . Tri-Y member . . . likes dancing, swimming and tennis . . . to attend S.F.J.C .... FLORENCE HARRIS . . . Flo was a G.A,A. member . . . likes collecting records, and iigging . . . hopes to go to college . . . JOSEPH HEIECK . . . mem- ber of the Eagle Society . . . likes basketball and baseball . . . to enter navy after graduation . . . DOLORES HERRING . . . member of the Music Club . . . likes music and figure skating, also tennis . . . to be a student nurse . . . PHILIP HOEHN . . . Student Body Custodian, senior advisor, Eagle Society, and member of the Saber Club . . . likes photography, football, and tennis . . . to attend U.C. for mechanical engineering course ..., I ENNIE HONG . . . likes to collect pictures and listen to records . . . favorite sports are swimming and basketball . . . plans to attend college . . . MAX HOSEIT . . . undecided about plans for the future . . . HAROLD HOUGEY . . . favorite sport is basketball . . . to attend college . . . VIOLET HOWELL . . . likes art, ice skating and archery . . . to attend junior college . . . HUGH HUDSON . . . member of the Surveyor staff and unlimited track . . . future plans are yet to be dc- cided . , . MARILYNN HUNTER . , . G.A.A. member . . . likes badminton, swimming and ice skating . . . to go to college . . . AVONNE JACOBS . . . member of the Music Club . . . likes the piano and reading . . . to attend C.O.P. for a music maior . . . SYLVIA JACOBS . . . member of Tri-Y,BlockW Society, and senior advisor...likes swimming and dancing...to attend college...JEAN JACOBSEN ...senior advisor, Tri-Y and member of Block W Society . . . likes swimming and ice skating . . . to college . . . MARION JAMES . . . Block W and G.A.A. member . . . likes music and art, also softball and basketball . . . to go to J.C. . . . AUDREY JOHNSON . . . likes swimming, read- ing and tennis . . . plans to go to Zweegman's Medical Secretarial School . . . GUSTAF JOHN- SON . . . H-10 president, student body treasurer, Saber Club, and member of the Eagle Society . . . likes music and swimming . . . will go to college . . . BEVERLY JOHNSTON . . . Bev was a member of G.A.A .... likes horseback riding . . . to attend J.C .... DARREL JONES . . , member of the basketball and track teams . . . will go to college and forestry service. PAGE THIRTY-ONE Seniors talk i . . hopes to :ttteml Stanford . . . BARBARA KRAFT . . . member of CSF and Camera Club . . . pastime is vxritxng to French students and see- ing movies . . . will atteml University of California . . . LUIS Klllillflill . . . llloek W :tml G.A.A. member . , . likes nlaving the piano :xml swim- ming . . . will go to Zweegnx:xn's Medieal Secre- t.tti:xl School . . . Gl.OlllA KllCil.lfR . . . Kug2v was :x member of Ci.A.A., llloek XV :tml senior advisor . . . likes daming aml badminton . . . to .xtteml San Fiamiseo State Kollegc . . , IOHN KYRIMIS . . . member of Pan American League . . . likes dianxaties and languages . . . was on football, ti.xtk :xml basketball teams . . . to attend f,:xl,, and then Iohn Hopkins University to be l lCllH7-IWSY4lllLlillNIi . . . DONALD l.Afil,liROUE . . . likes wins .xml all sports . . . was on varsity football and ttatk teams . . . to atterxd College . . . RONALD l.ACilill . . . member ofthe Saber Cflub . . . likes stamps, photography :tml swimming . . . to :xttend ll.CI ..., FRANCES LANDAU . . . ir,A.A. and member of Camera Club . . . likes taking pictures, tennis and swimming . . . to get :1 seetetqirial or bookkeeping job . . . IANICE LAN- DIIN , . . lan was a senior advisor :xrxd Tri-Y member . . . likes swimming. tennis and daneing . , . to :xtteml ll.C.l..A .... ANN l.Al7AfflNA . . . lllock W, Ci.A.A. :xml member of Ci:S.S .... likes photography, horsebark riding :xml tennis . . . to attend S.F. College to become a tearher ..., I ANET LARKE . . . meuxber of G.A.A .... likes horse- hixtk riding . . . to attend San lose lunior College . . . I.liO LARSEN . . . likes swimming . . . to enter the ll.S. Army after graduation . . . MAR- KQARIET LARSON . . . member of G.A.A:, Block XV president, and senior advisor . . . favorite sports are basketliixll and badminton . . . Plans to go to iollege. . . RUTH l.liffl'lNliR . . . lee Skating Club iueixxber . . . likes daneing and swimming . . . to work in fl department store after graduation , . . MAXINE LIEVINSON . . , member of the Tri-Y . . . likes dancing and skiing . . . tu attend San lose State . . . l'E'l'l2R I.EVY . . , Masque and Gavel, and member of the Chess Club . . . likes the-mistry, basketball and swimming . . . to attend ffal .... IIZANNE I.EWlS . . . G.A.A. member . . . likes singing and dreaming . . . will attend some business school. Spring+19-46 ATHENA KALIMOS . . . member of the French Club . . . likes swimming and collecting retords , . . to enter the commercial field . . . IACK KALMAN . . . Student Body President, L-10 president, Eagle Society, Pan American Club 1'-resident . . . his favorite hobby is radio . . . likes football and bas- ketball . . . will attend college and would like to be a radio announeer . . . DORlS KENISTON . . . hobbies are nictures and perfume bottles . . . likes swimming and roller skating . . . to work after graduation . . , WIl.l.lAM KINNEY . . . baseball team. '45 and '16 . . . will attend college . . . ROBERT KISSIKIK . . . Bob likes all sports in- cluding baseball, track, basketball and football . . . to attend San ,lose State . . . IOHN KITTA . . . member of Prineipal's Cabinet . . . collects stamps and coins . . . on school track, boxing, baseball, and basketball teams . . . to attend J.C. . . . HERMAN KLEEMEYER . . . nhotography is his favorite hobby . . . future is undecided ..., I OSE- PHINE KOCH . . . Josie was a senior advisor and G.A.A. member . . . likes to iig, bowl, and Z , gt 15, . ' r W. t A Q ,-was lf? PEE' Q -:mr . ,wg 5. S 3 SE 5 sg, t 1, Q39 :ar ' Q F ages? l 'i 'EQQESLS i W is Seniors t Spring, 1946 NANETTE LINDY . . . Nan is a member of the Tri-Y and G.A.A .... likes collecting pictures, swimming and bowling . . . plans to go to Los Angeles and be a make-up artist . . . NOREEN LOVE . . . member of the Tri-Y . . . likes dancing, swimming and tennis . . . to attend junior college in Los Angeles . . . EARLE LOWART . . . senior advisor and member of the Eagle Society . . . likes sports and music . . . was on basketball, football, and baseball teams . . . to enter army or college . . . BEVERLEY LYON . . . Secretary of H-10 and L-11 class . . . senior advisor . . . likes dancing and skiing . . . to attend Oregon State University . . . JACQUELINE MAIMONE . . . favorite sports are ice skating, tennis and swimming . . . to continue working in the Bank of California after graduation . . . IRENE MAINAS . . . senior advisor and mem- ber of the Music Club . . . likes collecting classical and semi-classical records . . . to attend S.F.I.C. . . .IOSEPHINE MARKOVICH . . . member of the G.A.A., Block W. C.S.F. and senior advisor. . . likes reading and ice skating. . . will probably attend S.F.j.C .... RUTH MARLIN . . . member ofthe is - :eff 1 ,.... , - . . 'E - :afi- i . 2 L'-:E .-,, I.:I ': FI -' If' :' .Z' fi' . .. fill ' I' 4 ' ' fai l if Tri-Y . . . likes dancing and swimming. . .to attend I.C .... MARGUERITE MATHIS . . . member of G.A.A. and N.A.A.C.P .... likes going to the movies and dancing . . . intends to enter a school of Beauty Culture . . . JOANNE MCCLELLAND . . . likes collecting postcards and watching baseball games . . . member of the jams . . . to attend Fresno State College . . . PATRI- CIA MCCOLLUM . . . favorite sport is swimming . . . plans to go into secretarial work after gradua- tion . . . DOUGLAS MCEACHERN . . . wrestling is his favorite sport . . . will probably attend iunior college after graduation . . . SHIRLEY MCFAR- LAND . . . likes dancing and roller skating , . . to go to college next fall . . . OLGA McMII.I.IAN . . .senior advisor, jams and G.A.A. member . . . likes playing the piano, tennis and softball . . . to attend S.F,j.C. for a business course . . . CLAIRE MEDEIROS . . . member of the Block W. G.A.A. and G.S.S .... likes basketball and tennis . . . to be an airline stewardess . . . BARBARA MEN- SOR . . . Babs was a senior advisor, member of the G.A.A. and Pan American League . . . likes leather and ceramics . . . CHAD MICHEL . . . Art Editor of the Surveyor . . . member of the Eagle Society , . . likes art and was on the track team . . . EVELYN MIGLIAN . . . G.A.A. member . . likes collecting school awards, and records . . favorite sport is badminton . . . to go to college . . . IEAN MILLERON . . . member of the Floral Arts, G.A.A., G.S.S., and C.S.F .... likes ice skating, sketching and horseback riding . . . to attend U.C. and an art school . . . ELEANOR MILOVICH . . . belonged to Pan American League . . . likes car- tooning and modeling clay . . . to attend S.F. State College . . . MARILYN MIRSKY . . . member of the Pan American League . . . likes collecting records, swimming and dancing . . . to enter LC. . . . STANLEY MOBBS . . . hobby is collecting baseball pictures . . . was on the 1l0's and 130's basketball team . . . to enter service . . . BAR- BARA MOORE . . . member of the G.A.A. and Tri-Y . . . to attend S.F.,I.C ...., I OHN MOR- GAN. . .Student Council member and German Club and Mike Masquers . . . likes photography, and was on the soccer team. PAGE THIRTY-THREE Seniors Jllsg i tr- I- 'W 'ff 5 ,gf s. ei? S.F.I.tf .... LUCY PAPALIAS , . . hobbies are iollecting records and reading . . . likes skating and tennis . . . to goto LC. . . . IIEAN PARKER . . . Secretary of Senior Tri-Y . . . likes dancing, swim- ming and tennis . . . to attend San Francisco Iunior College . . . ARTHUR PARSONS . . . was on the 120 and HU. and varsity basketball teams . . , will attend S.F.I.Cf .... DARELYNE PAT, TON . . , advertising manager of the Surveyor and Eagle . . . member of the Red Cross, G.A.A. and Tri-Y . . . likes collecting stamps, volleyball and tennis . . . to attend San Francisco Ili.. and then nursing training , .. IANE PEKRAMEN . . . member of the Pan American Club. and G.A.A. , . , likes swimming . . . to attend LC. and then Oregon Ilniversity , . . BEVERLY PETERSON . . , Bev was a member of the Tri-Y and senior advisor . . . likes swimming, tennis, bowling . . . to enter the nursing Held . . . CLEMENTINA PETROCKIHI . . . member of the G.A.A. . . . likes Glenn Miller records, swimming, tennis and football . . , to become tvnist , . . FLORENCE PEZNER . . . senior advisor . . . going to attend junior college after graduation . , . member of student Council . . . RICHARD PICKENS. . . was All city on the San Francisco swimming team Sea Horses . . . to go to college if not drafted . . . ROBERT PICKENS . . . member of the Student tlouncil . . . was on swimming team in junior and senior years . . . undecided about future . . . BABETTE PIKE . . . member of the Pan American League . . . likes photographic paint- ing, swimming and badminton . . . going back to native country, Guatemala . . . MIRIAM PINS- LER . . . Girls' Service Society, senior advisor, and member of the Red Cross . . . likes table tennis . . . to enter LC .... CLIFFORD PORTER . . . likes all sports, especially football and basketball . . . to enter LC. or the navv . . . DONALD POTTER . . . his hobby is automotive work . . . a member of the Rifle Team . . . to attend iunior college . . . DOROTHY POTTINGER , . . senior advisor, and member of G.A.A .... collects rec- ords :md likes tennis and dancing . . . to enter business world . . . EDDIE RAYNE . . . likes music and airplanes . . . to work after graduation if not drafted. Spring+1946 CARMEN MOSS . . . senior advisor . . . would like to be a dancer in the future . . . likes football and basketball . . . HAROLD NELSON . . . home movies is his hobby . . . likes football and basketball . . . to go to college . . . KATHERINE NEXWUELI. . . . Kay likes music and playing the piano , . . to attend nursing school or LC .... PHOERI2 NICHOLS . . . Vice Prexv and Secretary of the Student Body . . . member of G.S.S.. Tri-Y, and Young People's Fellowship, Ci.A.A .... likes music and model airplanes . . .to Ulf. in Sept. and dramatics school . . . TSUNEO OKAXVACHI . . . basketball is his favorite sport . . .to attend S.F.I.C. after graduation . . . IACK O'KEEFFE . . . likes playing basketball and cards . . , plans to enter San Francisco Junior College . . . ROBERT ORR . . . airplanes and drafting are his hobbies . . . was on football team and likes swimming . . . would like to go to the Cal-Aero Technical School of Aeronautical Engineering at Glendale . . . MARIAN PALASKY . . . member of the Tri-Y . . . likes dancing and bicycle riding . . . to attend E 1 ss t . ' ,Q RFQ :E I , , 5 W ,gc A ' I ' of W - XM i 'K ow, f h is fi- 3, Q s. . 'Ss , ,C . . 1 koi A ff i wat? ' X 51 Z X 5 .c,, I , ,Inv- Qif c c s X , Zi K 'Q 'R X , .I s 5 Seniors + Spring, 1946 JESS RAPHAEL . . . making furniture is his hobby . . . likes baseball . . . to work in a mill cabinet shop after graduation . . . WILLIAM RARIDON . . . likes chemistry, bowling and swimming . . . to go to J,C. or the army . . . LOUISE RAYNE . . . G.A.A. member . . . likes horseback riding and swimming . . . to attend LC .... JACK RED- MAN . . . member of Engineer's Club and stage crew . . . likes ice skating and hockey . . . to attend j.C. or the army . . . BARBARA RESTER . . . Tri-Y member . . . likes bowling, swimming, and iigging . . . is uncertain about future plans . . . may attend LC .... MAROUITA ROBIN- SON . . . likes swimming . . . is undecided about plans for the future . . . BEVERLY ROGERS . . . member of G.A.A .... likes to collect records and stamps . . . would like to be a bookkeeper . . . WALLACE ROLLING . . . Student Body Athletic Manager . . . H-11 class president . . . member of Eagle Society and Hi-Y . . . likes football and bowling . . . to attend J.C .... BETSY ROSS . . . L-12 vice president . . . member of G.S.S,. Tri-Y, and senior advisor . . . likes swimming and dancing . . . to attend University of California . . . RITA ROWELL . . . member of G.A.A .... likes volley- ball and basketball . , . not sure about plans after graduation . . . THERESA SARGENT . . . member of the Music Club and Mike Masquers . . . likes floral arrangements, swimming and riding . . . to attend some university . . . MARY SCOGIN . . . likes skating, basketball, and collecting records . . to go to business school to be a secretary . . . ROBERT SCOTT . . . to enter iunior college or the army after graduation . . . ALLAN SEBAS- TIAN . . . repairing cars is his hobby . . . likes football and basketball . . . to go to motor repair school , . . MELVIN SEMANS . . . likes working on his car and playing football . . . to attend S.F.j.C .... VICTOR SERVEL . . . likes collect- ing souvenirs . . . was on the track team . . . to have a career with the Telephone Co .... BAR- BARA Sl-IEPARD . . . Bobbie was a member of G.A.A. and a senior advisor . . . likes dancing, bowling, and eating . . . to attend Marin junior College after graduation . . . BETTY LOU SHEP- HERD . . . likes to collect trinkets and coins . . . also likes badminton and roller skating . . . to attend j.C .... MELVIN SEIGEL . . . head radio announcer . . . member of the Camera Club, Chess Club, and Masque and Gavel . . . to attend college after graduation . . . BERTRAM SILVER . . . member of the Composer's Club and the Dance Band . . . likes football and basketball . . . to attend S.F. State College or the navy ...V I OYCE SIMOT 'IS . . . likes music, art and swimming . . . to take a business course at I.C, . . . ALEX SIMP- SON . . . likes football and basketball . . . to ioin the army or else to S.F.J.C .... DONALD SIMPSON . . . H-12 president . . . member of the Eagle Society , . . likes sports and pushing his car around all the time . . . to take a business course at j.C .... IEAN SLITER . . . G.A.A. president, G.S.S. vice president, Block W and senior advisor . . . likes horseback riding and bas- ketball . . to attend S.F.j.C. and later Cal. PAGE THIRTY-FIVB Seniors 15 tt-ntl U.f .... MARIO S'I'lfl:ANlil,l.l . . . likes I 1w-+ tlmll :intl lmisketlwall , . . to enlist in the Mere ihant Maxine . , . l.AURl5NK li STEIN . . . C.S.F. life member, senior atlxisoi' and member uf the Saber I luh . . , enioys all sports . . . to enter UIC, . . . WAl,'I'lili STIfl.l,lNCi . . . likes basketball and suiniining . . , to go to woik oi into the aimv if tlmltetl , . . liVIil.YN STIQVIZNS . . . EviC likes Playing the piano, swimming, and roller skatin-1 , , , to he ii seeretaiv or enter l,C, . . . IANIZT. STIIXVART . . , Lin was ii member of 'l'ii'Y , , . loves to tlante .intl lie . . . to enter St. M.iiy's Nurses Toi.: 4... DIZNIZ STRATTON . . . member nl the Saber Club antl l.t. Cul. of the R,0,T.C,, and Rifle ililillll . . . likes nuns and foot- ball . . . to .ittentl college , . . MYRON SUSLOW! . . . his liubhv is leather . . . likes ice skating . . . to l,f , for ti.l'.A. or tlrfimatits stliool . . . GLENN SXVANSUN . . . his favorite sports are basketball .intl swimming . . . nntleeiiletl about nlans for the liituie . , l7OR0'l'llY TIIAYIZR . . , G.A.A. member . . . likes ballet and swimming: . . . to .ittentl the University ol Mitliigan , . . MAYE 'l'lll5Ol7ORlil.OS . . . Tri-Y :intl senior advisor inemheisliip . . , likes ite skating . , . undecided .tlmiit future plzlns . , . l,ORlIAlNlf TONIiI.I.I . . . likes to hike :intl ilante . . . also likes tennis and hntlininton . , . to .ittentl business college . . . VAIIAN 'l'O0l.AIlAN . . . member of the Rifle 'l'e.im. Saber I lub, :intl A Iabella thnir , . . likes guns .intl basketball . . . IACK TRACY . . . Masque anrl Gavel. Saber C lub, Eagle Society, and member ol the Stiente Clubs . . . likes radio, themistrv antl writing . . . to attenrl U,C. . . . RAYMOND 'l'RA'l'l-IFN . . . his hobby is stamp tollettim: , . , un track team . . . to enter army. . . tlil,Iil.IA Ul,Flil.DIiR . . . likes tn play the piano, tennis :intl swimming , , . to attend Stanford U. . . . OLGA VEKSIIIN . . . G.S.S. and senior advisor . , . likes tlrivinf.: ears :intl skating . . . to attend S.F.l.C. ,awe Spring+l946 .IACQUELINE SLOAN lackie likes drawing and airplanes . . . to work after graduation . . . BAR- BARA SMITH . . . likes going to basketball games, ice skating, and softball . . . to attend business school . . MARGARET SMITH . . . G.A.A. member and senior advisor . . . likes stamps and horseback riding . , . to go to work after graduation . . . MARY SMITH . . . member of G.A.A. and a senior advisor . . . likes softball and ice skating . . . to work . . . EDXVARD SOLOMON . . . member of the Band . . . likes photography and chemistry . . . to enter army and then LC. . . . CHRISTINE SPANOS . . , H-I2 vice president, senior advisor, and member of the Rally Com- mittee , . . likes music and singing . . . to attend VLC. and then the Calif. Secretarial Training Col- lege . . . DOROTHY SPEYER . . . Dot was a senior advisor and likes to play tennis . . . to attend the University of California in Berkeley . . . RUTH STADTNER . . . member of G.A.A. . . . lifles breeding English Cocker Spaniels . . . to at- I 2 W . ' , X e T' , I - a I r- 5 in I .-sf .,.., I - C 3- 3 I ...,: .. - J QE 1. , ,Af f -. 1:3 -:rx . fs: ,:., , Q V .,i.. ec W I i i I i 2 eniors + Spring, 1946 BARBARA VOGT . . . likes photography and swimming . . . to enter some school of photography after graduation . . . RUTH WARDA . . . likes the piano and art and swimming . . . to attend business school . . . MARCIA WEIDLER . . . was a senior advisor and likes acting . . . to attend C.O.P. to study dramatics . . . ROBERT WIENER . . . likes music and sports . . . to enter State College, if not to ioin the navy . . . JOSEPH WEINBERGER . . . hobbies are cars and airplanes . . . was on varsity football team . . . to enter Marine Corps, and then to I.C .... SYLVIA WEINIGER . . . senior advisor . . . likes collect- ing discs and playing gin-rummy . . . to be a career woman . . . SALLIE WHALEN . . . likes swimming, bowling and dancing . . . to continue dancing and has hopes of being a ballerina . . . PHYLLIS WIEBKE . . . G.A.A. member and senior advisor . . . likes bowling and horseback riding . . . to attend University of Hawaii . . . is in- terested in oratory and radio work . . . PATRICIA WILKINSON . . . hobbies are drawing and collect- ing miniature horses . . . likes volleyball and basketball . . . to attend college in the fall . . . FRED WERTHIEM . . . played on the basketball team . , . to attend J.C. after graduation . . . JUNE WILLIS . . . member of the jugs Club . . . likes singing and dramatics . . . to go to modeling school and be a photographefs model . . . BARBARA WILSON . . . senior Tri-Y member . . . likes col- lecting records and tennis . . . to go to J.C. . . . KAY WINSTON . . . G.A.A. member . . . likes piano and dancing . . . to attend j.C. and later U.C. . . . IRWIN WOLK . . . Composer's Club and member of the Dance Band . . . likes chemistry and photography . . . to attend college . . . BETTY LOU YATTER . . . likes ice skating and playing the piano . . . to work after graduation . . . FRANCIS LIPSON . . . likes dancing and reading . . . plans to attend State University after gradua- tion and then to travel. PAGE THIRTY-SEVEN -1.1- K xx x QR X Y Q XXX xskxx x xwg s x char, 'In x ,X x f ix s Q : C - N I 37- xx X xx , T: x X X , 3-3 QN X Qbi Q5 Jig? X , A 4 - 5 N gf 'Q - Ni X N xxx osx SX :- XXXK Q Class Officers + Fall, 1945 Il I me-I Aw IQ? V' HIGH SENIOR CLASS LOW SENIOR CLASS JACK HAMILTON .....,..........,........,............ President DON HANCOCK ........................................ President BETSY ROSS ................,....,..... ..,..,... LORENE SCHULKEN .....,.................. Vice President .Vice President MAXINE BLUMENTHAL .......... ............. S ecretary JEANNETTE HARSHAW ......... ............ S ecretary 5 - I I ' I I . ,:.s ' as , sii I I I - I Css , Q ! I i 'C - I I f I ' '-1- N I . E' Vi, ' ..,-- v S'f,IiIs2s I 'I gf h -:. . SF . If I PQI- ,L - , S HIGH JUNIOR CLASS LOW JUNIOR CLASS GROVER CLEVELAND .............................. President BOB LAVINE ......,...............................,......... President LAEL WYATT .................. .......... V ICC President BARBARA MCKNIGHT .,... Vice President N ATALIE BLUM ...,..... ............... S ecretary BETTY CICERONE ............. ............,.. S ecretary I I I 1334-i tl M va , I HIGH SOPHOMORE CLASS LOW SOPHOMORE CLASS BILL BERNSTEIN ........................,,......,....... President JAMES PHILLIPS ..........,............................. President MARGARET RUTTER ........... ......... V ice President GEORGE KARATSIS ....... ......... V ice President BARBARA POMEROY .......... ............... S ecretary BEVERLY BOGE .......... ........ I. ..... S ecretary PAGE FORTY Class Officers + Spring, 1946 W I If I X L HIGH SENIOR CLASS LOW SENIOR CLASS DON SIMPSON ...........,................................ President JACK HARE .................................................. President CHRISTINE SPANOS .......... .....,... V ice President PATRICIA HARRIS ......... ........ V ice President NORMA FAULKNER ......... .......,...,... S ecretary BARBARA SPECTOR ...... .............. S ecretary r , I . Q , I 'V ........... HIGH JUNIOR CLASS LOW JUNIOR CLASS BRUCE BERNHARD ,,.............................,.. President MERVYN HAMPTON .,............,................. President ' ' YALE LYMAN ................. ........ V ice President BEBE BOCAR .......,.,,,.......................... Vice President CARALYN HAFLEY ........ .............. EILEEN KANE ....... ........... S ecretary Secretary A 'Z J Effii m A ,- - ' 4 ., lf: . ff Q .5 O me -. K , A 3' in 1. ..gL g- if U - i 4 ' - Q I - , M 'j Q ' E Tee' EQ -. .,., ,. ' , M is H3 I Im 'W 5 5 :5f'2Ei . 2 1 1 3 F' - ..::L' X .. ' HIGH SOPHOMORE CLASS LOW SOPHOMORE CLASS JAMES PHILLIPS ........................................ President GARY NEWTON .................,...........,...,.,..,, President KAY MARSON ..........,..............,.......... Vice President GRACE ZEIBAK ...............................,.. Vice President ROSEMARIE SEAMAN .......... ........... S ecretary JEANNETTE ANDERSON ..,.i,,. ........,...,, S eeretary PAGE I-'ORTY-ONE Low Sophomores ROOM 129 Row one: Mary Jean Wiley, jean Varley, Mari- lyn Tucker, Pat Denny, Mary Crumpler, Judy Wag- ner, Helga Vandcnherg, Virginia Waters, Grace Wisnom, Drusilla Winsett, Grace Zeibak. .Row two: Andrew Vangelatos, john Ullman, Lillian Wong, Suzuko Yamasaki, Marilyn Wood, Robert Wolters, Ronald Brown, Charles Wraith, Donald Waldon. Row three: Gene Van Slett, Jack Yanotl, Ritchie Tryon, Dave Trimmer, Chris Vogiatzis, Philip Wong, Kenneth Wong, Allan Wong. Row four: Aubrey Dawkins, Austin White. ROOM 312 Row one: Slohn Rumble, Patricia Ryan, Irene Seal, Nancy herrill, Louise Stelling, Doris Sora- villa, Phyllis Souder, Shirley Stockton, Joann Tay- lor, Donald Smith. Raw two: Ronald Russo, Fred Rosenthal, Russell Shatz, Raymond Sterling, George Sevier, Walter Shaft, Bill Sutton, Harold Silen, Francisco Torres. Row ibree: Stanley Smith, Rob- ert Sue, Sim Street, Murray Rotbert, Warren Skero. PAGE FORTY-TWO ROOM 111 Rauf une: Beverly Morton, Enid Ng, Roberta Pastel, joan Richman, Lorraine Ribiello, Norma Parkinson, Elinor Robinson, Verna Parks, janet Polos, Louise Cailleaud, Dorothy Rogers, Donna Moore. Row two: Tommy Neill, Ruth Muellner, Audrey Moskovitz, Shirley Platt, Barbara Neal, Wilda Robertson, Chapman Riese, Henry Segrove. Row three: William Owen, Gary Newton, Rodney Hampton, Peter Passetti, jr., Bob Greene, Alfred Robertson. -H- r M- t- A -e ... - - A--5-susan-s' ROOM 227 Raw one: Emily McRowe, Peggie McNamee, Helen Landau, Louise Lindsay, Lois Koster, Zoe McCallan, Ann Less, Celeste Manley, Mila Mat- teson, Mary Lund, Sandra Marks, Ruth Mingst. Raw two: Richard Toth, Charles Michels, Ra ph Littleton, Shirley Mooers, Beverly Montgomery, Dolores Mooney, Etsuko Mochizuki, Roy Krzanich, George Lee. Row three: Morris Levy, Fred Krohn, Maury Kublick, Hollis Locke, Eugene Long, George Maze, Curtis Meier, Walter Matthes, Jimmie Mil- ner, Fred Minkin. -,, ilu ROOM 336 Raw one: joy Blaine, Corinne Abramson, Nadia Annen, Jeannette Anderson. Constance Allen, Ar- dith Asp, Lillian Bauer. Carol Bean, julia Ben- oun, Geraldine Caro. Row two: Donald Bacci, Roger Artoux, Robert Broune, Johanna Carson, Beverly Cassidy, Shirley Cliff, joan Crisci, Roberta Colman, Robert Cagarell, Charles Caito, Leonard Armstrong. Raw t ree: Gene Coler, Tom Cody, Richard Brodhead, Russell Bigelow, John Calvert, William Abend, Lloyd Chase, Win sor Bigelow, Bernard Blumenthal. SHOP 3 Row one: joan Ferris, Ruth Faulk, Pauline Fair- hurst, Marilyn Drude, Phyllis Donner, Mirna Frankel, Beverly Friede, Pauline Gerken, Hazel Foley, Beverly Fine. Raw lwo: Ken Foley, Michel Escalle, Watson Fearing, Rodney Edwards, Wil- liam Grazia, Donald Dickenson, Bill Diamond, Tom Fassett, Lloyd Faulkner, Stephan Gassman. SHOP 1 Row one: joyce Holbrook, joan Glendenninrg, jean Hagen, Peggy Hall, joan Goldman, Bertra Goldman, Shirley Hoover, Patricia Haucke, Willa jones, Elaine Klein. Row two: Aaron Hirsch, Bruce Harris, Bruce Herriges, Roger Heiser, Rob- ert Horn, Edward Khachadourian, jim Hontala, Ronald Kasabian, Richard Kelly. --P- 1 -Q High Sophomores ROOM 103 Row ane: Shirley Messina, joyce Pelmear, Car- olyn Walaschek, julie Banducci, Rosalie Resch, Clara Saccone, janice Chavez, jackie Tavelle, Bar- bara Thompson, Theresa Leyva. Row two: jack Arnold, Fred Matthes, jimmy Tyler, Martin Mel- nick, Al Stine, George Williams, Harold Frenzel. Rauf lbree: Bruce MacPhee, Michael Deane, Peter jackson, Richard Svihus, Bill Shaw, Bob Kurto- vich. Row four: Gerald Rapoport, Paul Maurice, john Quinley. ROOM 122 Rau' ana: Emily Gancm, Maxine Smith, june Henning, Giesila Frenzil, joan Nichols, Elizabeth Lindsay, Donna Nyberg, joan Wilkinson, Rickalee Herzstein, Diane Garhnke . Raw 11111: Helen Tong, Gabriel Yoldi, Robert Rudee, Al Dekelboum, Wayne Bowker, ljerry Krueger, Yerna Soll. Row llaree: Arlen Bel ah, Ray Niksarian, Bernard Sin- ton, Roland Bianchi, Walter Gordon, john Sia- rotos, Ralph Gevirtz. :Nils warg ROOM 115 Row one: Roxie james, Carol Goetz, Barbara Burke, Virginia Cotter, joan Bard, juliana Bauer, jackie Chavez, Rose Enomoto, Ayako Miyazaki, Barbara Meyer. Row two: jack Lipian, john Miedema, Elaine Graf, Rogene Holtzen, Evelyn Hinsch, Marilyn Peterson, Hanna Nagata, Nancy Uyeda, Gene Engle. Row three: Bill Thompson, Harnet Kaplow, jr., Don Choquette, Alfred Cati- mon, Harold Sutton, Allan Schlesinger. at ffl PAGE PQRTY-THREE ROOM 139 Row one: Ann Bohigian, Carol Wong, Susanne Weiss, Carol Simon, Bernita Khenchelian, Muriel Gardner, Patricia Doyle, Geri Moskowitz. Row Iwo: Daniel Snyder, Frank Perry, Andy Zorbas, Pierre Mareutin, Wassil Rolovieh, Bob Button, Pete Ledee, Leonard Cossitt. Row three: Raemontl Sammons, jjerome Aronson, Seymour Levitan, james jan, aul Gohr, Dick Myers, Richard Pat- erson, Art Smith. nun ? 1 ROOM 209 Rau' une: Dorothy Asch, Irma Ballew, jackie Draper, Becky Chuck, Mary Grooms, Anna For- takotf, Dorothy Provost, Margie 'l'arlin, Marion Peeler, Beverly Menend. Row Iwo: George Suz- dalelf, Frank Deering, Robert Mayer. Kleo Apos- tolides, Jeanne Kirkpatrick, Ligia Viales, jacob Arnautol . Gene Baker, Rauf rome: Alex Ulan, Dick West, Irv Rabin, Robert Harlick, Fred Meyer, Donald Mills. ROOM 235 Row one. Alhert Lattan, Mary Zikos, Barbari Raphael, Helen Bercovith, Louise jepperson Gloria Cutler, Mary Ellen Fitzhcnry, Ardis Me Lean, Lois Schwartz, Nancy Thole, Freddie Clut som. Row l11'n: Stefan Moses, Stephen Yuen, Fee Leon , Merv n Leih, Torn Gilligon, john Hith hrantt, Stan ey Sher, Leonard Chahan, Richard Rogers. Row lIJf:'e'.' Ralei 'li Lillie, Seymour Webb, Gary Thornton, Donald lzrow, Alois Pesak, jerry Franklin PAGE FORTY-FOUR ROOM 201 Row one: Dorothy Beldon, Inge Braun, Virginia Cromhie, Shirley Finnigan, june Fish, Bettie Hur- ley, Donna Kalisli, Shirley Newell, Margary Lilly, Ivy Chan. Row Iwo: jo Ann Lucey, Carolyn Pins- ler, Antica Saroyan. Helen Stoker, Patty Sinclair, Charlotte WtHi'k. Row !lJn'e.' Rohert Thoma, Ken- neth Hagemann, Boh Logan, Richard Lindquist, john Gardinal, Martin Cole, Rohert Lee. Row four: Vlfalter Thomas, joe Yuen, Alan Miller, Tlionaas Norman, Lihcrt Myers, james Phillips. - .o un- U f X 411 K-News ii P N ROOM 2 I0 Roll' one: Louise Citrino, Margaret Hotfschnei- der, Olga Davidolf, Florence Mazur, Greta Gor- lin, Lillian Deshaies, Mary Mikami, Ruth Ann Rosenberg, Beverly Olinsky, Madeline Theodorelos. Row Iwo: Bud Blumenfeld, George Bridgett, Er- nest Fricke, Lloyd Sankowich, Bill XVuerch, Rod- ney XVilliams. Row three: joe jmlriani, Bartlett rice-nan, Dick Hare, Irving Kipnis, George Roum- mms. r.,........a........,.1........-. gill ar-tai ta-1 an ROOM 307 Row znlv: judith Sterne, Mary Garland, Bar- hara Doherty, Marie Davis, Dorothy Connors, Carol Halas, Relda Aidelberg, Connie Tuff, Yvonne I-ludlow, Colleen O l'oole, Norma Lee, june Mei- ser. Row two: Don Engelfried, Kenneth Hansen, Ruthe Shapiro, Cecile Aeberhard, Kazumi Taka- hashi, Shirley Welch, jerry Reed, Robert Clancey. Irving Rosenthal. Row three: Milton Kaffen, Bill Peckham, jack Lucey, Steve Saribalis, Edward Neel, Harry Weidner, Walter Statlord, Monty Bandar, Keith jones. ROOM 322 Rau one Verna Carlsen Pat Davis Anne Eng land, Carol Gesenger, Shirley Komann, Marian Launchbaugh, Anna Louie, Beverly Molteni Mary Sue Moore, Georginea Rax, Florence Strauss Row Iwo: ack Brickley john Burkhead Ernest Flade Patricia de Lotty, Joy Spillman Charles Best, Wil liam Wagner, Albert Yanikian Row three: Henry Gronberg, Leland Smith, Arthur Ketteringham Wesley Little Adrian Palter Art Michael ROOM 327 Row one: Evelyn Barber, Beverlee Bozzio, Elsie Chin, Virginia Federmann, Marilyn Haber, Mari- lyn Factor, Shirley Helmke, Lucy Kafkas, Jocelyn Lighter, Kay Marson, Patricia Munn. Row Iwo! Frank Milholland, Estelle Schneider, Joan Sears, Mary Sargis, Tania Pensky, Vilma Rovetti, Pat Williamson, Donna Taylor, George Canellos, Man- uel Souza. Row Ibree: jack Wilson, Donald Hei- man, Maurice Edelstein, Peter Lai, Don Tipton, Floyd Parks, Stan Lager, Jack Cvar, Robert Mul- lin, Bill Wong. M sq-1 ROOM 314 Row one: Anne Brickley, Beverly Boge, ljler- moine Foster, joy France, jhan Hartzell, Merrilyn Keeley, Lorraine Malnick, janet Masters, Dolores Richardson. Row Iwo: Joseph Borden, Beverley Nalder, Rosemarie Seaman, Doris Sherman, Fannie Yep, Walter Perry. Row three: Ken Mrrch, Guy Chan, Monte Glaser, Bill Golinsky,ADon Hodson. Daniel Woodmff, Vance Lerner, Dick Moynrhan. Row four: Anthony Sherman, Teddy Yim, Stan Sydel, Ray Tobias, Robert Leih, Lawrence Ross, David Rosenkrantz. :ri 1' ROOM 32 5 Row one: Betty Doschef, Patricia Foster, jacquic Lane, Viola Landucci, Vivian Parrino, Marilyn Ross, Jackie Towne, Teia Tamaras, Nettie Grif- fith. Row rwo: Gilbert Dere, Gerry Neuhaus, Gil- bert Naumann, Dave Schoenfeld, Gabriel Plaa, Cecil Weinstraub, Richard Allan. Row three: Ray Romani, Joe Surdyka, Frank Brown, George Kar- atsis. v a- .H Q1 Low Juniors ROOM 107 Raw one: Dolores Engelhardt, Caroline Dewees, Lorayne Austed, Ruth Hippely, Carolyn Block, Vera Glynn, Dorothy Hart, Beverly Gleebe, Helene Heide, Catherine Hedden. Row two: Daniel Lew, Ben Markall, Edmund Jung, Barbara Bross, Bill Friede, Robert Silliman, Bob Haggett. Row three: George Mainis, Irving Wasserman, Robert Morri- son, Don Hummel, Charles Giggel, Hank Mettier. glowlfour: Leonard Rosenblatt, Roy Stevens, Isaac SFHC . PAGE PORTY-FIVE ROOM 141 Row one: Dolores Leach, Mary Louise Kardell, Betty Johnson, Norma Helle, Elfriede Fricke, Pat Lantheaume, Barbara Kruse, Carolyn Halley, Janis Kulherg, Keiko Kato. Row two: Stan Locke, Afrieda Maisin, Mary Fenneman, Amy Lum, Leti- tia Lee, Helen Pollack, Sally Potts, Claude Ditt- more. Row three: Bill Wrightson, John Weir, Larry Friedman, Mervyn Hampton, Victor Gins- hurg, Richard Groger, Edwin Wolff. Row four: William Lee, Art Ford, William Bussenius, Wally Gilmore, Theron Berry. -ii fini ROOM 213 Row one: Mary Akers, May Takakuwa, Betty Biierson, Arlene Goldrod, Sophie Chibidakis, Mar- gie Colclough, Anna Cunning, Marylyn Rasmus- sen, Elizabeth Schermerhorn, Jewell Webber. Raw Iwo: Michael McClelland, Hazel Hansen, Arden Fae Duncan, Marilyn Wyman, Idelle Zelver, Joan Young, Emma Vallve, Nancy Bohall. Walter Osscnberg. Row three: John Manning, Dick Roe, Robert Tellefsen, Charles Stanley, Jim Springer, Bob Schwartz. Raw four: Harold Raphael, Rene Maurice, James Sharpe. ROOM 301 Row one: Paula Jackson, Charlotte Shapiro, Shirley Moskowitz, Margaret Rutter, Barbara Kin- ney, Jane McGowan, Jac ueline Kingstone, Bar- bara Pomeroy, Betty Shallllcr. Row two: Walter Saltzman, Bill Haskins, Dorothy McMillian, Vio- litnlfiori, David Barnett, Jerry Tuttlcman, Russell I SUD. PAGE FORTY-SIX ROOM 208 Raw one: Marian Steineke, Elaine Mitchell, Lois Wendroff, Elena Popovich, Elisabeth Rich, Mary Alice McMurray, Janet Perkins, Marilyn Slatt, Janice Stern. Row two: Melvin Shafer, Robert Asnard, Jack Herold, Ernie Mathews, Bill Root, Ric Harrington, Edward Israel. Row three: Rino Di Pasqua, William Hon, Harvey Chin, George Jobe, Yale Lyman. ails dh ROOM 236 Row one: Jackie Lantheaumc. Betty Louree, Diane Rodney, Ninfa Selva, June Spelleman, Mari- lyn Waxman, Pat Brown, Joyce Fletcher. Midge Zimet, Jean Wildberg. Row two: Marcel Dera ruau, Anna Ruth Kanaway, Shirley Jung, Molly Lee, Carmen Ramon, Marilyn Marcus, Jane Yim, Glenn Caro. Row three: Allan Hudgens, Kirk Conragan, Alan Bonapart, Don Ayers, Robert Ehlers, Howard von Leevcr. ROOM 308 Row one: Marie Brainerd, Mary Dolores Dun' can, Jean Maisel, Andriana Litras, Jean Castro, Lucille Cohen, Jennie Lee, Caroline Linn, Annie Klieser. Raw two: Max Stein, Don Warto, Lelea Chung, Eva Ruth Lee, Martha Craig, James Parodi, Alfred Smith. Row three: Emil Russell, Ken Ros- enberg, Phil Plansky, Boris Mikhalkin, Joe Sharp, John Sheperd. ROOM 513 Raw one: Janet Bremmer, Frances Bnrnner, Bar- bara Andress, Barbara Straube, Carol Anne McPrke, joy Cross, Shirley Trathen,Ella Yallve,joan Corlin. Row two: Jerry Crumpler, Ed Michael, Andy Gam- bardella, Morrie Green, David Cosenza, .Walter Cryton, Leonard james. Row lbree: Cecil. Cza- chow, Dan Brown, Edward DuBois, Richard Cowden, Pete Krenkel. High Juniors ROOM 128 1 Row one: Bebe Bocar, Gertrude Bosch, Barbara Brooker, Lorraine Clayton, Sharel Cohen, Carol Freeman, .Kay Gerdel, Mary Conner, Nadine Gil- man, Hrlda Goldsmith. Raw Iwo: Marjorie Goody, Carol Hunter, Rosalie Kearney, Marcae Keefe, Doris Kern, Shirley Kutcher, Dolores Kyle, Shirley Albrecht, Lila Blumenthal. Row three: Marvrs McGee, Dick Gronberig, Anna Lekas, Ken- neth Knanlshu, Bob LaVine, red Loo, Helen Val- entine. Row jour: Robert Mills, John Oligny Bill Hambley, Richard Love, Gerald Grilin, Larry Mattal. ROOM 211 Row one: Ramona Gardiner, Mar Sklivas, Pat Smith, Carol Seibold, Carol Stelling, Dolores Sullivan, Nancy Welch, Mildred Israel, Rachel Warshavsky, Edythe Triger. Row Iwo: joan Rucker, Don Campbell, Nick Legendre, Gloria Zakarian, Clyde Stclling, Wilfred Wong, Martha Bickham, Setsuko Asano. Row three: Pat Clifford, Bruce Dietz, Reginald Ehlers, Bob Friedland, Bruce Gilbert. Row four: Richard Doyle, Bill Dunn, Robert Keropian, William Esser. li 14 If ROOM 105 Row one: Helen Blake, Elizabeth Maxwell, Cor- nelia Norell, Stephanie Goldsmith, Barbara Nau- rnann, Dorothy Mooney, Charlotte Mayer, Elea- nor Loewenthal, Barbara Martin, Loretta Gee. Raw two: Valerie Podesta. Joyce Risch, Dianne Rowe, Beatrice Sommer, Phyllis Thiebaut, Anna Thomas, Reba Veal, Arlene Yates, Loren Years- ley. Row three: Pat Pickering, William Bagot, Jack Barren, Daniel Conlan, Dave Devincenzi, jerry Lundgren, lack Kirkwood. Row four: Ken Sato, Dave Armstrong, Werner Einstadter, Bill Farrell, Harold Glew. . 'R-Vi 4-1 L-1 ROOM 140 Row one: Joan Carter, Natalie Bloom, Terry Hall, Sally Hon, Beverly jahn, Irma Knell, Joan Levy, Barbara Rathy, Helen Morrison, Marie Ber- nadou. Row two: jerry Unider, Carlos Corneio, David Cohen, Earl Rolling, Lila Friedman, Eleanor Harding, Eileen Kane, Betty Mailis. Row lbree: Nick Matve, Fred Owens, Irving Marblestone, Milton Mosk, Robert Skavlan, Edward Gee. Raw four: Robert Woodruff, Darryll Stroud, Lu- cien Zentner. if 4-1- PAGE FORTY-SEVEN ROOM 212 Row one: Persis Thau, Gloria Tallman, Norma Fisse, Eileen Lerer, Jeanne Shaw, Peggy Knudsen, Jean Klingman, Pat Taylor, Alice Krone. Raw rum: Alice Rogers, Janet Nyc, MaryLou Hahn, Charlotte Jac ues, Ann Stevens, Marilyn Good- man, Pat Hetims, Ann Poole. Raw zbrce: Ray Pollack, Edmund Wong, Richard Thulin, Harold Musin, Dick Sherr, Robert Brown, Kenneth Miller. ROOM 511 ,Row one: Neva Lee Cornish, Joyce Loty, Ber- nite Ersepke, Ruth Cahill, Renette Abraham, Rena Salvoni, Barbara Lyon, Pat O'Cnnnor, Geraldine Busseau, Marian Illers. Row two: Harold Men- zies, Barbara McKnight, Barbara Hobbs, Joan King, Vena Stevens, Beverly Fioehlich, Marian Brown, Jeanne Marsh, Eugene Smith. Row three: Dale Yastc, John Swan, Willie Shuceda, Irvin Weisser, Peter Shepherd, Aubrey Melton. Raw four: Richard Lewis, Don Mildon, Nathan Roth, Binh Slarzter. ROOM 532 Row one: Connie Navarro, Eva Ogden, Irene Pappas, Jane Papaiohn, Anna Sarganis, Annie Plaat, Cecelia Rando, Patsy Rouse, Doris Smith, Harriet Wecltle. Row Iwo: Stanley Sha iro, Marie Arens, Rosalie Scott, Valerie Radeliold, Dee Stark, Adele Ryst, June Welsh, Bill Crittenden. Row lbrec: Arthur Duffy, Eric Gitschel, Ed Pow- ell, Frank Isracl, Dick Chester, gohn Button, Tony Barhera. Row four: Maurice lantzman, George Chavez, Charles Drocco, Fred Esser. PAGE FORTY-EIGHT ROOM 231 Row one: Joan Major, Barbara Guedet. Betty Fuiimoto, Helen Koshaba, Artemis Angel, Barham Devincenzi, Verna Buzolich, Cherie Gregoire, Odette Joannes, Yvonne Levesque. Row Iwo: Don Raisner, Beverly Barsamian, June Brown, Reta Joakimson, Pat Leasure, Bonnie Fluitt, Anne Kick, Alex Shipunoti. Raw three: Jim Kline. George Hutchinson, Ernest Oppenheimer, Fred Rohrs, Don Thurkletop, John Henshaw. Ron' four: Maurice Tarrou, Nic' Prepouses, Bill Deg- enhardt, Jerry Wheeler. v vw- -iris F' 'W ...nn ROOM 32-1 Rnw 0716! Berge Melikian, Helen Savy, Helen Roller, June Snodgrass. Lillian Schafer, Eleanor Webster, Jacqueline Pult, Mary Rand. Josephine Recca, Gladys Wlelch. Row Iwo: Shirley Mun- roe, Janet Westerfeld, June Ryland. Satsuki Mo- fhida, Joy Nash, Hilda Schmidt, Nancy Uhler, Geraldine Stevens, Row ibrmn' Martin Green- baum, Robert Friedman. Robert Hack, Fred Isely, Bruce Bernhard, Kenneth Broadhead. Raw four: Irving Krueger, Bill Hayes, Eddy Gitschel, Bob Dempsey. :Q ROOM 353 Row one: Barbara Allen, Becky Benoun, Gloria Browne, Betty Cicerone, Jaeqi duJardin, Pat Ed- wards, Betty Engelbrecht, Eleanor Held, Leone Hettrich, Ruth Hildebrand. Row Iwo: Pat Kil- keary, Mary Lipscomb, Anita Patton, Sylvia Sil- vermann, Lorraine Booth, Evelyn Tilles, Nancy Loughlin, Joan Timmer, Mar ie Saul. Row three: Don Huston, Stanley Kane, Donald Lowart, Mel- vin Lucia, Bill Sargis, Ernest Simon, Dave Howell, Donald Woebcke. Row-lfauf: Dick Herning, Har- vey Cranow, Ralph aylor, Ralph Jacobson, George Toscanini. Low Seniors ROOM 303 Row one: Floyd Grier, Don Brinchmann, Mero Dahl, Martin Curtin, Bob Flemming, Bruce Frey, Don DeGraf. Row Iwo: Lawrence Lash, Jack Herrguth, Bob Duncan, Earl Saroyan, Shiro Sue- naga, Richard Robinson, Alan Jones. Row three: Gordon Yates, Ronald Sadick, Dick Pcarl, Albert Silva, Edison Stuart. ROOM 203 Ron' wma' Mony Lou Tiddy, Yvonne Piquet Barbara Spector, Constance Wyne, Jeane Cunning- ham, Patricia Harris, Mary Tosch, Laura Shea. Row two: Maxine Feldstein, Helen Venon, Cor- inne Harrin ton, Shirley Newton, Priscilla Small, Janice Bincir, Demona Ward, Jean Ostrander, Barbara Jean Meyer. Row three: Gloria Nor- iuiera, Lael Wyatt, Barbara Alden, Barbara Baurn- erger, Esther Cory, Margie Christotferson, Phyllis Bannatyne. , ROOM 529 Row one: Pete Kerreos, Milt Kastner, Steve Nor- ris, Dick Spargo, Robert Pearson, Norman Stumes, Denny Ragan, Robert Garbarino, Humbert As- tredo. Raw two: Ira Berman, Jerrold Rosenberg, Ray Peterson, Phil Hollenbeck, Frank Israel, Jack Hare, George Furness, James King. Raw lhfee: Maurice Koch, Jack Goldberg, Aldo Casanova, Stanley Goldsmith, Dave Arrillaga. it 1' ROOM 226 Row ow: Ruth Malavslcy, Pat Holmes, Roberta Parsons, Jacquelyn Kemp, Natalie Blum, Roberta Cohn, Barbara Ross, Marian Hammer. Raw lum: Maria Wilson-Walker, Anna Marie Jahn, Jo Kuret, Bernice Isrel, Eleanor Mulkccn, Veronica Ivanoff, Joann Miholovich. ROOM 315 Row wie: Russell Elledge, Bill Wilson, Clarence Santee, Bill Goldberg, Charles Harden, Bill Klinger. Row two: Dick Keegan, Milton Rhine, Bob Buehre, Ken Borgfeldt, Ronald Davies, Bob Stein. Razz' threw: E. C. Vanderlaan. v-9 -'I rg - Fl PAGE FORTY-NINE 1 ff, ' ff 1 fr? ff! 1 I 1 ff e 6 ,f9' f 'fn .Q S ,iff 1 fc zfzyl 1 ,ff Ziff , ll I , I Q' Z M A ff f ' ffl A 0,71 fl! 1'1 f J v 1:32 1 'f fd ff, f, 3 . , 0 ,,-'17 42, 1 91 ,,'fff filgf f' IZ' ?Z'f 9 1 6 !!fff?',', 1' s , f , I f, 1 V. ,,- , I, f6,Z,7,.' D ,, LP . I If ff ,fr C ' I I ,ff - X , 7 I ' r 1 f w f, - f K 6 7 QQ ,, 1 f 7 . ,,f 'FDQNITI QV 6' 'ii ifmxv -Viv' ' 1' km W EF' 1: JZ' pg. , fr N ,f-1.1: x 155:55 .K , .... M W A H .. ., A f x, ,, ,..,, , , ,W-.-1 a A , V wrewwf . JL 4 - - Q had Wahl 14 9 'F PRINCIPAIJS CABINET Row une: ,loan Maior, Kay Marson, Betsy Ross, Maye Theodorelos, Phoebe Nichols, joan Young, Betty Shaffer, Jeanne Shaw, June Du- linsky, Caraline Linn, Jane Hamilton, Jeanette Anderson, Grace Zeihak. Raw Iwo: Claire Medeims, Sally Dunning, Connie Wyne, jackie Towne, Alex Ulan, Chad Michel, Bill Sargis, Dave Devin- ccnzi, Roland Bianchi, jack Kalman, Mr. M. W. Welds, Mr, O. 1. Schmaelzle. PAGE FIFTV-TWO JUNIOR RED CROSS Row one: Ruth Mingst, jean Lon, Hilda Goldsmith. Bette Doschcr, Midge Daily, Neva Lee Cornish, Judith Sterne, Marcia Brenner, Carmel Aherne. Row Iwo: Louise Stelling, Helga Vandcnberg, Rose- marie Seaman, joan Rucker, Dorothy Thayer, Patsy Rouse, Barbara Ant: Bross, Shirley Reinisch. Row rl91'v1'.' Marian Sleineke, Richard Cfar ston. MUSIC CLUB Roiu-one: Beverly Menc-nd, Patricia Dcnng, Drusilla Winsett, Shirley Reinisch. Row two: Ed Khachadouiraurain, Dolores Herring. TRIAY Row one: Betsy Ross, Marcia Brenner, Rosemarie Farber, Norma Faulkner, Gloria Bulloch, Barbara Angel, Barbara Moore, jean Parker, Claire Medeiros, Noreen Love. Row two: Beverley Peterson, Barbara Wilson, Maye Theodorelos, Barbara Rester, Carolynn Fonseca, Maxine Levinson, Eleannr Dubacher, Pat Harmon, Carmel Aherne. Row three: Nanette Lindy, Marian Palasky, josie Boido, Martha Azimow, Ruth Marlin, Darelyne Patton. ENGINEERS' CLUB Row one: Ernest Simon, Roy Maddox, Dot Mooney, Mildred Israel, Johanna Carson, Shirley Komann, Robert Clancey, Daniel Snyder, Richard Cowden. Rowlwa : Alex Ulan, Don Choquette, Wayne Bowker, Warren Bartle, Fred Clutsom, Richard Lindquist, David Rosenkrantz, Erhard Schunemann, Lawrence Ross, Gene Vanslett. Raw three: Samuel Haynes, joe Browne, Alfred Catimon, Boris Mikhalkin, Dick Spargo, Fred Loo, Albert Mizuhara, jack Redman, Robert Tellefsen, Robert Payne. Raw four: joe Sharp, David Hanlon, Alfred Smith, jerry Grittleman, john Weir, jim Street, Walter Shall, james Paropi. COMPOSERS' CLUB Row one: Irwin Wolk, Ann Pool, Marcae Keefe, Bill Klinger. Row lim: Dick Keegan, Bertram Silver, Ralph Gevirtz. C 'W TICKET SELLERS Row one: Frances Landau, Norma Faulkner, Marcia Brenner, Janice Landen, Marjorie Goody, Barbara Andress, Barbara Allen, Maivis McGee. Row two: Maury Koblick, john Mor- gan, Hank Mcttier, Don Hancock, Ray Tobias. mg C.S.F. PROGRAM COMMITTEE Row one: Kleo Apostolides, Gertrude Bosch, Jewell Webber, Carolyn Enid Davis, Marjorie Zimet, Cornelia Norell. joy Nash. Row three: Halley, Helen Blake, Carol Hunter, Lila Blumenthal, Marjorie Goody, Marian Steineke, Rosemarie Farber, Martha Azrmow, Carmel Aherne, Harriett Friedling, Roberta Parsons, Bonnie Fluitt. Raw two: Merrilyn Sally Dunning, Jean Azar. Raw four: Grover Cleveland, Ernest Simon, Keelcy, Annie K ieser, Anne Kick, Barbara Naumann, Lillian Schafer, Laurence Stein, Gus johnson, Yale Lyman, Frank Perry. PAGE FIFTY-THREE ..,,, ,, . I rg,,,:...,.. L fnrzanyf t-, I V., . 41 GIRLS' ADVANCED C HORAI. Rau' wily' Helene llcitle, Klum Apmtiwlitlcs, Marilyn 'I'ut'lccr. lla-len Roller, Miirtia Wfcitllci, Maine Bc-rnriv tlnu, Margie ilolnloirglr, Adtica Sririvyan. Cleo Dun- nclly, Rosalie Kearney. Run' flaw: ll.irh.iiri Burke, jnycc Simutas, Brirhrnri Strniuhe, Juliana Hauer. Evelyn Hinsrh, Glnrin Z.ikilri:tn, Karol lirceman, Rosemarie F.irlvcr. lhlllflllllt Brinkley. Anita Prittnn. Run' rlmiix' Lois Kruulcr. Cilm'i.i Kuglcr. Mary Rinse Cirilvez, Bebe Borgir, Biii'bgir.1 Mcnsui, Gwen Tntkcr, Sally Potts, jnrin Niclmlx, lit-orgiilcn Rqix. A JAMS cgruis Kon' ami: Vnrinnc Harrington. Dismtliy Mt'Milli.in, Olga MtMillian, Ruth Murray, Marilyn Schlockrr. Ruiz' Inw: Aiden liric Duntan, Halen Knsli.ih.i, H.irb.ii.i ,lean Meyer. 1 l HN HOME ARTS KQLIII1. Ron- fmr: Miriam Pinslur. Mary Smith, Ruth Murray, jatqueline Kingxtnnc, Andririna l.iti'i1s, Lily XVung, Brirbarri Hyman. Rani In-nf 4'm'inne Harrington, liar- lwrirgi Russ, Rirlwltzl l'.irwns, -lzlcquulinu Ifnllun, ADVANCED MIXED CHOIR Row one: Bette Anderson, Mary Alice McMurray, Virginia Crombic, Sally Brown, Beverly Mencnd, Rogene Holtzen, Ramona Gardiner, Marion Pceler, jo Kuret, Barbara Spector. Row two: Loretta Backman, Donna Kalish, Maivis McGee, Teddy Deckeit, Maxine Levinson, Phoebe Nichols, Betty Lobree, Elizabeth Simson, Nancy Welch. Row three: Bd Powell, Christine Spanos, Betty Shaffer, Ruth Malavsky, PAGE FIFTY-FOUR Marilyn Waxman, Odette Joannes, Richard Rogers. Rau' fain: Gilbert Naumann, James Mitchell, David Devincenzi, john Morgan, Ed Khachadourran, Walter Matthes, john Floyd, David Arrillaga, Tony Barbifa. Ron' hw: Bernard Sinton, Mrs. Myrtle Swanson, David Treji 0. UU . 14' LATIN CLUB Row one: Nettie Mae Beckwith, Mary Erhart, Roxie James, Dorothy Asch, jackie Draper, Marjorie Goody, Phyllis Donner, Peggie McNamee, Caroline Linn, Hazel Hansen. Row Iwo: Eileen Kane, Jeanne Marsh, Marilyn Factor, Kay Marson, Margary Lilly, Shirley Newell. Harumi Matsuzaki, Janet Per- kins, Kazuko Sekimachi. Raw three: Bill Hayes, Peter Jackson, Stephan Gassman, Judith Sterne, Helen Stoker, Edythe Triger, Charles Caito, Dick P'--v Hare, Larry Mattal. Row four: Kenneth Wong, Robert Wolters, John Rumble, Alfred Catimon, Richard Svihus, Daniel Woodrun, Richard Ganzert. CHESS CLUB Raw one : Daniel Snyder, Kleo Apostol- ides, Marian Steineke, Greta Gorlin, Marilyn Factor, Bob Clancey. Rauf Iwo: Daniel Lew, Alan Hudgens, Har- old Raphael, Mel Siegel. Row three: Richard Carlston, Peter Levy. it FRENCH CLUB Row one: Jackie Tavelle, Dolores Rich- ardson, Athena Kalimos, Janice Lan- den, Joan Bard, Nancy Sherrill. Rau' two: Blossom Wickstrom, Annie Klie- ser,Demona Ward,Joan Rucker,Shirley Reinisch. C. S. F. Row one: Persis Thau, lleanne Marsh, Bernice Ersepke, Laurence Phyllis Thiebaut, Anne England, Merrilyn Keeley, Marcae Keefe, Pat Stein, Barbara Kraft, Sa ly Dunning, Ed Harlem, Natalie Blum, Ichioka, Tania Pensky, Marjorie Zimet, Row four: Marilyn Peterson, Kleo Apostolides, Louise Stelling. Row two: Carol Hunter, Barbara Barbara Naumann, Mel Siegel, Yale Lyman, Hollis Locke, Ernest Blair, Helen Landau, Harriett Friedling, Cecile Aeberhard, Beverly Simon, Marjorie Goody. Row five: Donna Moore, Marylou Rice, Boge, Virginia Crornbie, Greta Gorlin, Judith Sterne, Roxie Ilames. Roland Bianchi, Jack Liplan, William Abend, Marian Steincke, Gil- Row rbree: Josephine Markovich, Nancy Sherrill, Jean Mi leron, bert Naumann, Frank Perry, Warren Skerol. PAGE F IFTY-FIV' ur PAN-AMERICAN LEAGUE Rau' amz' Rose Enomoto, Phyllis Bannatyne, Carol Anne Mgllike, Harriett Friedling, Natalie Blum, Janice Binder, Mcrrilyn Keeley, Diane Schram, Shirley Helmke, Mignon Schlussel. Rauf I11'0.' Floyd Parks, Daniel Snyder, Gilbert Dell, Nancy Uyeda, Jack Tracy, Mary Conner, Mary Grooms, Martin Cole, Jerry Krueger. STAGE AND PUBLIC ADDRESS CREW Raw ow: Boris Mikhalkin, Edmund Wfong. Robert Lee, Jerry Lund- igen, Douglas Reinhardt. Rau' ruin: Dale Yaste, Roy Stevl-ns, Everett ing. CAMERA CI.IlB 5 Row 0715! Barbara Kraft, Connie Navarro. Corinne Harrington, Fran- ces Landau, Lily Wiring, Kay Gerdel, Jean Milleron. Row 1u'o.' Irving Kipnis, Ric Harrington, Edward ' Israel, Aaron Hirsch, Rau' lin-:'e.' Claude Dittmofc, Bill Friede, Alan Bonapart, Mel Siegel, .- rr.. ......a...-.Q .realli Qi GIRL SENIOR ADVISORS Rauf am-: Mary Smith, Rosemarie Farber, Maye Theodorelos, Martha Azimow, Junc Dulinsky, Elaine Errickson, Georgia Bulloch, Dorothy Puttinger, Carolyn Fonseca, Jacqueline Cohen. Row two: Dorothy Speyer, Florence Pezner, Valerie Benthen, Josephine Markovich, Enid Davis, Marcia Weidler, Carmen Moss, Margaret Larson, Carmel Aherne, Frances Landau. Row lines: Marguerite Mathis, Jacquelin Sloan, Jean Sliter, Sally Dunning, Mary Erhart, Mildred Canata, Jean PAGE FIFTY-SIX Azar, Irene Mainas, Anna La acina, Athena Kalimos. Rau' faur: Dol. ores Edwards, Fern Carmeii Kay Byard, Janice Landen, Norma Faulkner, Marcia Brenner, Betsy Ross, Barbara Mensor, Sharon Bur- nett, Gloria Hammer. Row five: MaryRose Galvcz, Josephine Koch, Bobbie Shepard, Mary Anker, Dorothy Thayer, Olga McMillian, Beverley Peterson, Christine Spanos, Phyllis Wiebke. W1 Q W' -V iwsafaqpf gag? X .iv L uu ur nn: 'ee '--- ' ORCHESTRA Raw one: Marian Launchhaugh, Betty johnson, Caroline Linn, Shirley Helmke, Doris Kern, Helen Valentine, Reba Veal, Blossom Wick- strom, Mildred Williams. Raw two: Irwin Wolk, Ric Harrington, Annie Klieser, jane Hamilton, Lois Arfsten, joan Timmer, George hu jobe, Bill Klinger. Row three: Dick Keegan, Bertram Silver, jerry Rapoport, Igor Sazevich, Cecil Czachow, Harold Frenzel, Warren Bowden, Monte Glaser. FLORAL ARTS Row amz' Becky Benoun, jean Milleron, Berge Mehikian, Ruth Hildebrand, Arden Duncan. MASQUE AND GAVEL Row one: Ed Harlem, Mary Anker, Kleo Apostolides, Janice Binder, Priscilla Small, Irving Rosenthal. Rau' Iwo: Alan Bonapart, Melvin Siegel, Peter Levy, jack Tracy. Raw i three: Roland Bianchi, Allan Schlesinger. I my ..-.., ll gm unlu- BOYS SENIOR ADVISORS -'C ff' K' ,wa-3 li . ffwamgiwm Row one: Robert Eckhotf, Grover Cleveland, john Kyrimis, Don Robert Fitzhenry, Victor Sawdon, Dick Pickens. Row three: Ronald Hancock, Philip Hoehn, Don Laclerque, Earle Lowart, Chad Michel, Lager, Maurice Koch, Gustav johnson, jack Kalman, john Morgan, Robert Pickens, Ronald Sadick. Raw fwui Douglas Reinhardt, Jack Laurence Stein, Dene Stratton. Row four: Stephen Norris, Bill Stadt- Tracy, Todd Carroll, Don Brinckrnann, Frank Arietta, George Furness, feld, Erhard Schunemann, Gordon Yates. PAGE FIFTY-SEVEN -kj. fl f 1 , aff , of ff f fm, , f , 0 I I iff' 'If f I fl ! fl 011 il ,H X f f fm M , I I ' 1 , 1 1 fn 'ffl' I hu , vfy 4 ,- f I ll iff ' :ffl f 'I' 'f f I f 1 f I 0 M M A I 1 f U if f XZ ' .cu ' Exif ., ff' flaw' ,, 1 I Ka- 'way f' W ff! HW4, J ,fy , l K-31 ' f IW, ,6l X 7 ff 5 1 X' ' Q ,ff , j . I 3' V1 ' ', 11,11 If Q Mn' mn iff' W L, 115577, ,,,, W '1- ' I 1 Mg, ,. 1, fu, 1. 1 f. 5 42,-j7'5f . ,', ' ,f f ff, ' 'xi f 'fy , , , L: 149, 391' ff ff ,.- 71, ,.'g- '4 427- M113 'VKM 144 X f ,f 7 af n 1 ,f, JA 4 f.f,!f ff 'f ' m f , ff M I f f ' f 2. V 1 f' 'fhtcy-I-Q PAGE SIXTY-UN F SIXTY-'IW 0 Wu PAGE SIXTY-THREE If SIXTY V0 PAGE SIXTY-FIVE 1 ,was may Q ,4 - Q, 1 7 'W lm 'f fgy, I 1-5171, ' I 1, W l 'nl fnf i v ,cg IU H gl ' if 1 'I I W X , I 11 1 ' N.. J, 1 ' 1 .f V 4 ' ' f fy M1 4 M4 'fDodNI 1 . . T. C. 0fficers'Fc1Il, 1945 Iii MNH! w..-...-f WY Q- vy, wa, ,,..-M I A .h...n.x1 H, I.,-fm. fm U, 1 lp.1,:,,H, 0.40, Ham 1 w 5., , 00 14, 4,0 .meg MWUM hll x4 .,.. W Q , 'fn' mm... :nd 1 ..u..mm :na :mmm-1 :nu Lmmm.-I mon n ...n. umm rm, CE? lxx l.lruu'u.mr .Ind lnutvxunl 2nd Lnculcnanl ' upw- mg..-1 y.,n......1 n-mm I Kmlzr F , vu D , -Q v laglain In Li-nnm.mu Ind Ln-uxmanc Ind ligummu X R me R.-an 1100... sm.- -ifwrune 'mm wwf'-W hpnin lsr Licurerunx 2nd Lieutenant Ind Livumum Stmum Wing Harlem Q Tcnnlrr PAGE SIXTY-ISIGHT m um.. an: Ada: Q..-wi In Lienmwmg Pa lm R. 0. T. C. 0fficers Spring, 1946 I mamma: ua mm Axsmurf' W Ijwlwmx -awww! Www ww! Ffa Capnin , Lagicr Chpuin Tracy lu Lieumwnx in limwmm - johnson , Gnlhghcz 1 i 2 3 2nd bzuxunm Smith ' 3 2 3 Capuid Isa Liwxwms nu muwnnf ' znd Limmmn HMM Toolaiian V Ailcn Hutchinson A N PAGE SIXTY-NINE T041-sgt' Iuslrvdf' 4, 44 stated that the battalion was one of R.O.T.lI. COMPANY B Row one: Santee, Brickley, Sawdon. Tracy, Sadick, Smith, Flemming,Tuttle- man, Lee. Row ruin: Caparell, Arnau- tofl, Calestini, Canellos, Musk, Dewey. Dittmore, Wrrchecke. Rau' ihree: Dav- ies, Saribalis, Yoldi, Menzies, Jones, Moses, Giggcl, Barren, Cherechukin. Rout four: Simon, Parks, Lillie, Rob- ertson, Lee, Harper, Snyder, King. Ruu- firc: Pesak, Surdyka, Stroud, Stevens, Sutton, Conscrva, Clutsom, Tnbias. Row fix: Wong, Wahl, Tong, Thornton. Row .u'1'u11.' Skavlan, Rogers. R.O.T.C. COMPANY A Firrl row : King, Phillips, Harlem, john son, Lager, Gallagher, Esser, Albert Morel. Row two .' Furness, Brown, Lar: sen, Ganzert, Reinhardt, Robinson Scott. Row three: Aaron, Minehan Blumenthal, Flade, Woodmtf, Souza, Sammons, Aronson, Conragan. Rau four: Weintraub, Baranow, jackson, Thompson, Abeno, Svihus, Hom, Rudee, Borden. Row live: Gilbert, Neuhaus White, Wiener, Dunn, Legendre. Roni six: Tellefsen, Zachoratos, Derruau, Elmore, Stelling, Grenland, Morrison, Krow. w .Li l ' as ' 'ma ih t 1 . if j' ' l tf j V aws fw ' ' ,,, ' ie ' ' Y , ' Q , i SF' V. z--'---- . - .1- If R .Mr .- Q z .J ,, v ,WrF,,.- . v an-air unn- ' . 225' j ' . 5 j 'W '- i - at 3, Y --In-:nun ' 11 3 in 1 iz X N ix' ' Thr- Q :, - :xy ' gm. .5 , ff. ,. -f ef' ss , 'Sgsx . Q . . - --'r ,' as 1- , in . .f . ' . ' z 4 if 'ie t .f ' 95 . j ----- ,. ....- f . ,..,. A - -.i - - W, bi. V, j. j. 4. I , i . 5 ,M L gunman:-g . L it 1 ,V ,. , - H V --ua-.- R.O.'li.C. COMPANY D Firrt row: Zenther, Israel, Gitschel, Mills, Lash, Cleveland, Bonapart, Slag- ter. Row two : Broadhead, Armstrong, Bartle, Knanishu, Bowker, Clancey, Conlan, DeGraf, Dere. Row three: Hirsch, Harrington, Israel, Harris, Hougey, Hayes, Melnick, Raphael. Rau' four: La Vine, Leever, MacCarthy Sharpe, Silliman, Williams, Dickenson. Row hw: Shcrer, Sintor, Varcados, Fricde, Marks, Woodruff, Riese. Ron' .tis-: Tong, Smith, Mattal, Sherman. The big event of the spring term each year is the federal inspection. Since the battalion has been formed here, George Washington has always been rated an honor school which entitles the cadets to wear a red star on the sleeve of their uniforms. This term has not been an exception as the battalion came through with a high rating. The cadets were inspected by Major Clark, representing General Eisenhower, Chief of Staff of the United States Army. The major PAGE SEVENTY R.O.T.C., LOMPANY C Rau' umm' Dickenson, Carroll, Hutchin- son, Allen, Hoehn, Burton, Haas, Her- old. Knut l1l'n,' Matthes, MacPhee, Payne, Suslow, Sander, Ulan. Ron' lhrvv: Ostrander, Myers, Mulkeen, Kip- nis, Gee. Loer, Gardenal. Rua' four: fiillftl, Siacotos. Univ annum the best he had inspected. Major Clark has inspected about forty schools in the United States, some of them colleges. About ten of these were formal inspections such as he conducted here, Principal Schmaelzle told the cadets that they are a credit to the school. The next important event was the awards by the Sons of the American Revolution to the best private, ser- geant and staff sergeant of the bat- talion. Another important set of awards are given to the battalion by the school. These awards are given to the best company, best platoon and best squad. The rifle team, an important part of the R.O.T.C., has made a record for itself. It is recognized as the hest team in the city and is compet- ing in the National R.O.T.C, rifle meet. The team has a chance of win- ning this event, and if it does it will be the tirst time a Washington rifle team has held this honor. RIFLE TEAM Rau' umm' jim Burton, Alex Ulan, Deanu Haas, Edmond Gitschel, William Esser. Rau' tum: Richard Ganzert, Anthony Sherman, Glenn Caro, Kirk Conragan. Row three: Ralph Gevirtz, Raemond Sammons, Robert LaVine, George Hutchinson. SABER CLUB Row one: Grover Cleveland, Philip Hoehn, Lawrence Lash. Row two: Ed Harlem, Edmond Gitschel, jack Tracy, Stanley Gallagher. Raw three: Ronald Lager, Geor e Hutch- inson, Jim Burton, jaci Allen, Gus johnson. Row four: Dene Stratton, Ronald Sadick, Robert Mills, Laurence Stein. Row fee: William Esser, Vahan Toolajian, Robert Eckhotf. BAND Rauf ami: Lurtis Meier, john Quinley, Gabriel Plaa, Ronald Russo, Ralph Gevirtz, George jobe, Nathan Oliveira, jerry Papoport, Walter Keith jones, David Arrillaga, Stanley Kane, Al Dekelboum, Bill Stafford, Dale Yaste, Richard Thulin, Michael McClelland. Row Klinger, jerry Prager. Row two: Hollis Locke, Bertram Silver, Milton four: Dori Raisner, Monte Glaser, William Bagot, Richard Keegan, Rhine, Ed Solomon, Warren Skero, William Owen, Wally Gilmore, Robert Morrison, john jeong, jack Sutton, Donald Huston, Fred Loo. Don Potter, Eddie Rainey. Row three: Alfred Regan, Pete Krenkel, PAGE SEVENTY-ONE '. 1 xxx ' W1 5:3 re . 5929 F , Q gl . . Block H H , MRS. MARGARET DENNY 5 i Q BLOCK W Rauf one: Jacqueline Cohen, Rosemarie Farber, Marcia Brenner, Norma berger, Mary Erhart, Ann Lapacina, Margaret Larson. Raw three: Faulkner, Janice Binder, Natalie Blum, Mildred Canata, Jean Azar, Gloria Hammer, Marion James, Lael Wyatt, gosephine Markovich, Carmel Aherne, Claire Medeiros, Row Iwo: Enid Davis. Lois Kreuzor, Roberta Parsons, Barbara Ross, Jean Sliter, Bar ara Spector. Evelyn Miglian, Gloria Kugler, Corinne Harrington, Barbara Baum- MARGARET LARSON Prerident .Q ' 4 3 if X Skye, X Z J 0 fi yy X PAGE SEVENTY-FOUR The Block Society is composed of those girls who have been members of the G.A.A. fGirls' Athletic Associationj for at least four terms. It is the honor society of those who have been faithful members of the G.A.A. Under the leadership of President Margaret Larson the Society has been active in fulfilling its pledges and promises. The pledge taken is in part as follows: I promise . . . to do all in my power to promote a spirit of fine sportsmanship. These girls have learned to be good losers as well as generous winners. They know how to play hard but fair and to win or lose honestly. It is their promise to try to teach others to be good sports. They cannot help but carry their message of clean sportsman- ship throughout their lives. Here, in the Block Society, are born the feminine leaders of the better world of tomorrow. G. A. A. Fall '45 Officers -IEAN SLITER Preridenl Vice Preridenl NATALIE BLUM JANET NYE ALICE ROHR Secretary Hirturian Yell Leader Preiidenl NANCY UHLER Vice Preridenl JANET NYE KAY MARSON PAT GILLESPIE Secretary H iytofian Yell Leader ANNA LAPACINA MISS MARGARET POOLE MILDRED CANATA The spotlight is directed on the girls who want to demonstrate that the weaker sex are not so weak. Those who love ice skating, volleyball, horseback rid- ing, softball, badminton and other physical activities, join the Girls' Athletic Association. Under the sponsorship of the physical education teach- ers, they learn to keep their bodies healthy and their minds alert. There are academic requirements for the members of the G.A.A. if they hope to win an award at the end of G. A. A. Spring '46 Officers each term. Four such awards entitle them to membership in the honor society - the Block W. In our fast-moving, active world it takes a sturdy sys- tem and a quick-thinking mentality to survive. The G.A.A. was organized to encourage girls to build strong constitutions. The Fall '45 president, jean Sliter, and her assisting officers led the organization in an active term. Mildred Canata, the Spring '46 president, and her oth- cers had many girls participate in their program of a wide variety of sports. The G.A.A. marches on! PAGE SEVENTY-FIVE r G.A.A. MANAGERS-FALL '48 R0ll'07I?.' jean Dulinsky, Barbara Baum- bcrger, Martha Azimow, Gloria Kuiler. Rau' two: janet Lohmeyer, Bar ara Martin, Mildred Canata. G.A.A. MANAGERS ---- SPRING '46 Rau' zn14'.' Harriett Eriedling, Pat Lan- theaume, Natalie Blum. R11u'1u'a: Ar- lene Yates, joan Major, Beverly jnhn, jean Dulinsky. s ! ! I I i f ex Xi? . fl if I Y :li:,lQ,J,ft K ,- I .W If ails x f Q T-:' I' X .39 4.0. X... -N X I ,X ,M 'Al 1 BEGINNING AND INTERMEDIATE BADMINTON WW Rau' umm' Namy Luughlin, Carol Freeman, Merrilyn Keeley, Jacqueline Kingston, Jeanne Lewis, Beverly Moltfm. Barbara Naumnnn, Diane Schiam, Yerna Soll. Rau' luw: Margary Lilly, Shirley Newell, Larolyn Pinsler, Judith Sterne, Olga Davldoll, Lillian Schafer. PAGE SBVEN'l'Y'SIX BEGINNING AND ADVANCED HORSEBACK RIDING Row amz' Mar Lee Lund. Anne En land Evel n Tilles osali Sc tt y g . y ,R c 0 . jean Dulinsky, Beverly Montgomery, Caroline Linn, Pat O'Connor. Rau' two: Barbara Rosenthal, Audrey Moskovitz, Phyllis Thielvaut, Bette Doscher, Gloria Cutler, Ardis McLean, joan Cfrisci, Row three: Patricia Ryan, janet Larke, Pat Edwards, janet Kulberg, jo Kuret, Mimi Hammer, jacqi Dujardin. Row four: jean Hagen, Mary Rice, jean Wildberg, Barbara Straube, Louise Rayne. ff! ICE Rau' one: Mary Smith, Mary Garland, Diane Garfinkel, Pat Davis, Elinor Robinson, Shirley Reinisch, Setsuko Asano, joan Carter, Nadine Hadley, jhan Hartzell. Rau' Iwo: Persis Thau, Viola Landucci, Pat lchioka, jacquelyn Hawkins, Ricka Lee Herzstein, Irene Lerner, joan SKATING Bard, Etsuko Mochizuki. Raw three: Dorothy Thayer, Dianne Rowe, Dorothy Rogers, Virginia Crombie, jean Milleron, Marilyn Peterson, gat O'Connor, Gloria Norguiera. Row four: Harriett Fricdling, jackie avelle. PAGE SEVENTY-SEVEN v. l Xi 6 9 , . .5 ffgfiir vA ' U 1 i is L Pi 3 B 'i 'l ' SOFTBALL Raw ana: Mary Smith, Shirley Kutcher, Maivis McGee, Ardis Mc- Lean, joy Blaine, Verna Carlsen, Dorothy Provost, Beverly Friede, Marjorie Tarlin, Ruth Ann Rosenberg. Row Iwo: Nancy Uliler, Hilda Schmidt, Gloria Hammer, Arlene Yates, Marilyn Factor, Anne Kick, lrenc Seal, joan Glendenning, Mary Duncan, Virki George. Rau' lhree: jackie Pult, Lila Blumenthal, Pat Kilkcary, janet Nye, Anna Louie, Ivy Chan, Pat Ta lor, Geraldine Stevens, Marian Launch baugh. Row four: Olga ldclviillian, jean Sliter, Pat Gillespie, Bar bara Martin, june Ryland, Marie Brainerd, Gcorginca Rax. f s. ,.,, ... ' X sw. ii Q . ., . . . ,.,. ...aaa ADVANCED BA Row one: Jacqueline Cohen, Barbara Brooker, Gert Busch, Claire Medeiros, jean Azar, Carmel Aherne, Marie Farley, Gloria Browne, Mary Conner, Shirley Munroe. Row tum: Beverly Froehlich, Evelyn Barber, Jeanne Bachman, Mary Erhart, Mildred Canata, Anna Lapa- PAGE SEVENTY-EIGHT DMINTON cina, Margaret Larson, janet Westerfeld, Joan Levy. Row three: Har- riett XVedde, Midge Daily, Evelyn Miglian, Josephine Markovxch, Phoebe Nichols, jean Sliter, Jeanne Shaw, Pat Gillespie, Barbara Martin. Rauf four: Carol Stclling, Marjorie Zimet, Beverly Jahn. ,-,,. f -M 1-s lx' av-my '1 an 'wanna sll INTERMEDIATE AND BEGINNING TENNIS Row one: Janice Binder, Natalie Blum, Betty Baerson, Dorothy Asrh Kleo Apostolides, Sally Dunning, Sharel Cohen, Dolores Engelhardt, Jewell Webber, Bebe Bocar. Row Iwo: Louise Lindsay, Shirley Lew- ellen, Pauline Gerken, Mirna Frankel Jeanette Anderson, Rose Eno- Dolores Leach, Jackie Draper moto, Carolyn Halley, Marjorie Goody, Row Ihree: Barbara Ross, Jean Parsons, Priscilla Small, Betty Johnson 1 Mary Kardell, Elaine Klein, Roxie James, Beverly Menend. Row four: Barbara Andress, Annie Plaat, Shirley Stockton, Roberta Parsons, Lorraine Riviello, Elena Popovich, Shirley Platt, Norma Parkinson. Row five: Judy Wagner, Demona Ward, Jean Ostrander, Carolyn Walaschek, Ligia Viales. - ' 1 i 5.-if VOLLEYBALL Raw one: Rogene I-Ioltzen, Evelyn Hinsch, Peggy Hall, Barbara Baum- berger, Mary Lou Hahn, Harriett Friedling, Corinne Harrington, Mar- cella Doherty, Barbara Doherty, Ruth Mingst. Raw two: Mona Lou Tidy, Akako Miyazaki, Ceechia Rando, Darelyne Patton, Marcae Keefe, Sylvia Jacobs, Evelyn Miglian, Yukiji Hirano. Row three: Mar- ilyn Wood, Louise Stelling, Sylvia Silverman, Miriam Schriebma-n, Joan Rucker, Jeanne Shaw, Betty Roach, Doris Kern. Row four: Lily Wong, Rachael Warshavsky, Mary Jean Wiley, Shirley Trathen, Naomi Takahashi. PAGE SEVENTY-NINE :fx 42 ,, U, f ,H H130 - I V ', 'f' ' 7,1 1 ,Q.1,f.w A 0 , .,, , 41,0 I W 1' 1 I 'V V 'lil 0-, I 1 ' 'V ,-7143 fm A f fhlb-I ,' I Ifn - I . .---.1 , A I 4 ' 4 X? Z L f f f f ' M IW j90,4fYl- 3f'5-zz. 'QQ When a long and very hectic football season came to an end last November, the team breathed a sigh of relief. It was as eventful as it was gruelling. Although Washington victories over Sacred Heart and their arch-rival Lowell rank as Washington's greatest efforts, our great stand against Poly somewhat overshadowed these triumphs. POly's fabulous team had rolled over opposition with magic-like ease. Wash- ington scared the daylights out of them when they com- pletely outplayed and outscored Poly for the flrst half, 7 to 6. Washington's Coach Milt Axt did a line job COMMERCE, 63 WASHINGTON, 6 The Eagles took on very strong opposition in their hrst game but fought their way to a tie with Commerce. After Washington had trailed for most of the game, Burr Wark made his sensational 88-yard run to tie the score. BALBOA, 13: WASIIINGTON, 0 The Eagles were slightly overmatched in this game but threatened on numerous Occasions. Hard running by Hank Becker and Duane Harder featured Washington's Offense. SACRED HEART, 18, WASHINGTON, 7 Displaying a new and unexpected aerial attack the Eagles had a field day against Sacred Heart. Bob Orr, Burr Wark and Dick Munday developed an unknown passing accuracy which, coupled with the accurate catching of Ric Adkins, placed the ball in scoring territory throughout the game. In the running department, Hank Becker, Norm Stuemes and Duane Harder made substantial gains. Lex ' Mis .. TNT ' sjsz MISSION, 273 WASHINGTON, 7 Washington was off to a fast start as they scored in the hrst few minutes. Aubrey Melton's bullet pass to Sam Danos put the clincher on a touchdown drive. LOWELL, 7g WASHINGTON, 15 Although favored, Lowell was never in the running. It seemed as though Washington could do no wrong, as time and time again they intercepted passes and recovered fumbles. It was a real held day for Hank Becker as time and time again he ran wild. WashingtOn's line deserved much of the credit for this great win. With fellows like Ken Mirch, Don Hancock, Seymour Handleman, Morrie Kock, Frank Arietta, George Lagier and Neil Gunn giving their all, the Lowell backtield was held to very little gain. POLY, 33: WASHINGTON, 13 Washington gained a moral victory although they lost to championship Poly. The fellows were out to beat the champs but injuries to top players in the second half weakened Our team and Poly took full advantage of tlIis. LINCOLN, 253 WAsI-IINGTON, 6 Washington was fairly well riddled with injuries from their previous game with Poly. Lincoln was in hne shape and were out after a victory. WashingtcIn's lone score came in the second half as a result of excellent running by Duane Harder and Norm Stumes. Stumes finally scored on a power drive through center. FOOTBALL n Row one: Seymour Rose. S. Handleman, Maurice Koch, George Lagier, Neil Gunn. Don Hancock, Sam Danos. Row Iwo: Dick Adkins, Bob Orr, Duane Harder. Rou' llJI'w.' Henry Becker. PAGE BIGHTY-TWO Varsity Foofball Team COACH MILTON AXT FRANK ARIETTA JACK KALMAN NEIL GUNN ED GITSCHEI. JACK HERRGUTH DON HANCOCK FRED ISELY JOHN HONTALAS DON LACLERQUE MAURICE KOCH PAGE EIGHTY-THREE W ws Gig, M- .vuw v L, I I m,,fwf v K J K I I 1 Af,.A.s RI! HARD LOYI? DUN LOXVART IEARL LOXVART KEN MIRCH STEVE NORRIS BOII ORR NORMAN STUINIES TSUNEO OKAXVALHI Varsify Football Team JUNIOR VARSITY FOOTBALL Rau' mic: Ernie Matthews, Pat Kililfnrtl, Florida Thompson. Phil Bnlansky, Cecil Lzachow, Red Smith. Rauf fuvzx Keith junce, Don Aires, Don Brinkman, Cfharlcs Stanley, jim Constantine. Rnn' Ilarvrr Phil Hnllcnluerlc, Don Howell Illll Wirttlr, Bill Rnscnfmnz, Don Iinplcfrcc. Rffr1'f0l1r,' Bill Stndtcltlt, Bob Fitrhenry, H-iris lhla'l!3IlUl'l, ,lim Phlllipft Dun Imwart, lnrlm Umrnclu. PAGE EIGHTY-FOU R X 1 Varsity Basketball Team 1 MR. TINY BUSSENIUS Our varsity basketball team showed promise at the start of the season of being a championship team. However graduation time came along after the team had played four games and four of the f-ive first-stringers bowed out. The hardest blow to the team came in the loss of Billy Hahn, a sure-fire candidate for all-aity. Only a little less disheartening was the graduation of center Bob Rosenberg. Our coach, Bill Bussenius, did a great job with the material that remained after graduation, but inexperience plagued the team throughout the remaining games. Featuring the Washington offensive in the latter half of the league were the Sutton twins, Bill and Leo. Leo was one of the finest guards in the city. Others who played excellent ball were Earl Lowart, Bob Eckoff, Theron Berry, Tom McGowan, Art Parsons and john Dilg. Boys also seeing action included Len Begun and Dick Hare. The opening game proved to be the most thrilling encounter Washington had all season. Our team fought their way to a 26 to 24 win over favored Poly. Bill Hahn swished home the bucket that gave Washington their victory. Forward Theron Berry sparked the team to an 11 to 5 lead in the first period. Poly went ahead at the end of the third period but Bill Hahn sank seven points for the Eagles in the last period. The Washington five avenged an earlier defeat in the J. C. Tournament as they smothered Galileoi under a 30 to 18 pasting. Bob Rosenberg, Eagle center, who was thought to be merely a defensive player, scored ten points. Bill Hahn and Leo Sutton held up their share of the Lscoring. The Suttons, Bill and Leo, showed marvelous backboard control. Theron Berry played another sparkling game. The powerful Mission Bears were at their best in winning a 30 to 16 victory over Washington. The Eagles tried hard but couldn't seem to cope with the superior Bears' defense and offense. Against Balboa, our team completely riddled by graduation, dropped a 32 to 28 decision. Leo Sutton handled himself better than good, scoring eleven points. Art Parsons led in the scoring with 13 points. Washington's spirit was typified by the fact that although the students realized we had little or no chance to win, they turned out in large numbers to fill our rooting section. Meeting our old nemesis, Lowell, on the Kezar hardwood, the Eagles lost, 27 to 20. Our team quickly disproved the assumption that they could not cope with the Indians, for the issue was in doubt going into the last quarter. We again displayed' spirit by coming in a big crowd and for awhile we thought Art Parsons, Bob Eckoff and newly returned Bill Sutton were going to defeat the kids from Hayes Valley. In the last game of the season our team engaged Saint Ignatius. The score was close throughout as the Wildcats won, 34 to 26. Leo Sutton scored 15 points and his timely field goals kept Washington in the game. Bill scored 4 points. The Mission Bears proved to be the strongest team in the league. However, the championship was divided three ways-Lowell, Commerce and Mission shared the crown. Leo Sutton took high point honors for the city's guards with 73 points. With such players next year as Bill and Leo Sutton, Dick Milkovich, john Dilg, Theron Berry, Milt Kaffen and many others coming up from the thirties, our team should be one of the best. DILG KAFFEN MI LKAVICH BERRY B. SUTTON HAHN LOWART PARSONS ROSENBERG L. SUTTON PAGE EIGHTY-FIVE HARE SYDEL BE GUN BERRY DILG ECKOFF GELINSKY KAFFEN LOWART MILKAVICH PARSONS B. SUTTON L. SUTTON 130 Pound Baskefbclll Team STANLEY BLUMENFELD CONSTANTINE GOLDBERG GOLDBERG SUSGOLOFF YUEN LOWART KEROPIAN MULLIN SHE PHARD STUART PAGE EIGHTY-SIX GLASSBROOK GOLDBERG GOLDBERG KEROPIAN LOWART MULLIN RAYBURN STUART SUSGOLOFF YUEN Baskefball-110' and 120' U s 120's BASKETBALL TEAM Row one: Frank Brown, Andy Gamberdelly. Row 114103 Mr. Welds, Stanley Sher, Charles Dracho, George Chavez, Dave Dilg. Rauf three: Robert Rosenberg, jim Springer, Fred Wertheim, Bill Grier, Stan Sydel. 110's BASKETBALL TEAM Row one: William Hon, Vance Learner, Daniel Lew, Gilbert Naumann. Raw rum: Teddy Yin, Mr. Welds, Maurice Edelstein, Morrie Green, jerome Aronson, Jerry Kruger, Dave Dilg. PAGE EXGHTY-SEVEN VARSITY TRACK TEAM Rau' arm: Nathan Roth, Ralph Dunn, Dean Daskarolis, Dillie Matson, Charles Harden, james Hughes, Frank Arietta. Ralph Littleton. Raw two: Alex Ulan, Ray Peterson, Aubrey Dawkins, Chad Michel, Windsor Bigelow, Don Ayers, Reginald Ehlers, Eugene Long, Bob Kissick. Rout three: Arthur Swartz, Dick Hare, jack Smith, Bill Wrightson, Walter Shaft, Maurice Koch, john Kitta, Don Laclerque, George Roumpanis, Washington Track Teams On Saturday, May 18, 1946, S. F. high schools held an All-City track meet at Kezar Stadium. Washington had entered seven men, including Charley Bordin, 440 man, Dick Hare, broad jump, Bruce Bernhardt, shot put, Frank Arietta, shot put, Andy Gamberadella, broad jump flightweightj g Bob Keropian, broad jump flight- weightj, and Ollie Mattson, low hurdles. The relay team also made a fine showing. Ollie Mattson, Bob Kissick, john Kitta, Charley Hardin, Dick Hare, and Tony Olivera made up the team. The unlimited 440-yard dash was the most sensational race of the day. It was like the kind you read in comic books, Charley QChuckJ Hardin, who didn't get off to a very ,good start, was boxed in all the way to the turn by Poly or happy-ending novels, but never actually see and Lowell men, and was running a poor fifth. Going around the turn, Chuck found an opening, kept his head, and with all the spirit and strength he could muster up in those few seconds, outsprinted the rest of the field and brought glory not only to himself, but to the school he so nobly represented. The Eagle staff wants to thank our newly appointed track coach, jim Coffis, who did such a fine job with the boys out for practice every day after school. TRACK TEAM-130 LBS. Row une: Phil Plansky, Cecil Czachow, Seymour Levitan, Stan Lager, Werner Einstadter, Andy Ganbardella, Ronald Blessing, William Abend. Row two: Warren Pierce, Alvin Leong, Teddy Yim, Alfred Smith, Robert Harlick, Bob Keropian, joe Imbriani, Ed Michael, john Weir. Raw three: Harold Silen, Victor Servel, Bob Owensby, Dave I.um, Fred Meyer, Francisco Torres, Emil Russell. PAGE EIGHTY-EIGHT Q uf Q' f N -' . wibfftzlfizv- , iQl1 IQ4 we A f PAGE FIGHTY-NINE BASEBALL TEAM Rau' one: john Burkliead, Leonard Caben, Walter Clayton, Art Dutly, joe Dulik, Robert Friedman, Alex Glazbrook. jack Herrguth, David Rosenkrantz. Row two: Stanley Shapiro, Mervin Swift, Melvin Shafer, Richard Schoneneman, Robert Mayer, Aubrey Melton, Leonard james, Ronald .Kasabian, Lawrence Ross. Rauf tb'fw.- Leonard Begun, joe Altamerann, Bill Kinney, Richard Lindquist, james Phillips, Martin Grecnbaum. Row four: Neil Gunn, Saul Madfes. Baseball Team When a hectic baseball season came to a close, the Eagle team looked back on one of the most surprising and success- ful seasons in the school's history. Washington, picked to be the cellar club, clubbed out victories over some of the top teams. What the team lacked in experience and skill, they often made up in hustle and fight. The team fought like the famous Gas House Gang of old. The Eagles had a champion coach in Saul Madfes. Coach Madfes in his first crack at baseball mentor had all the an- swers when the Eagle team needed them and instilled the fight in the team which gave us that extra punch. So strong was the Eagle team that in their last game against championship Galileo they dropped an extra inning, 4 to 3 decision. Washington Eagles' Clayton proved to be one of the tinest pitchers in the league and with a bit more hitting support would have won an all-city position. Another outstanding performer was second-baseman Al Glazbrook. Al's batting average was over the 300 mark and he played steady defensive ball. The following is a revue of the games: LINCOLN, 6, WASHINGTON, 9 The Eagles got off on the right foot with this victory. Lincoln took an early lead but the Washington bats beat out a steady stream of runs. This game typified Washington's fighting spirit as they came from behind twice. SACRED HEART, 3, WASHINGTON, 0 Some weird umpiring and the luck of the Irish teamed up to beat the fighting Eagles. ST. IGNATIUS, 17, WASHINGTON, 5 Weak pitching victimized Washington as St. Ignatius clubbed out a series of homeruns and a barrage of base hits. Lowizrr, 6g WASHINGTON, 16 After the first inning the situation was never in doubt. Clayton pitched this tilt for Washington as the Eagle bats more than supported his effort. To show how one-sided it PAGE NINETY was, Coach Madfes put in an entire new team as early as the fifth inning. COMMERCE, 10, WASHINGTON, 1 The Commerce Bulldogs were just too strong for Wash- ington. George Granera started and was relieved by Ron Kasabian. Bill Kinney doubled in the second inning, ac- counting for Washington's only extra base blow. BALBOA, 2, WASHINGTON, 5 Balboa was picked to trample Washington, but the Eagle team had other ideas. Ron Kasabian turned in a brilliantly pitched ball game, scattering the three Balboa hits. Gorgeous Georgus Granera, with two out, singled in the winning run. George broke a long slump with this timely blow, but he picked the right time to do it. Earl Clayton took over left Held and smashed out a pair of singles. POLYTECHNIC, 2, VVASHINGTON, 5 Poly was picked as a championship contender but the Eagles were in a winning mood and weren't to be denied. The Eagles played tight defensive ball all the way. The Par- rots were limited to four base hits by Earl Clayton. Earl was in danger of losing his lead in the last inning but a nice play by George Granera, third baseman, helped to remove the pressure. Earhardt and Schuneman played a sparkling defensive game at first base. Al Glazbrook's booming triple was the best hit of the day. GALILEO, 43 WAsHrNa1'oN, 3 After leading all the way over the champs themselves, the Washington team faltered defensively behind their ace, Earl Clayton, and allowed Galileo to tie the score. In the second overtime inning, with rain drizzling down, the Lions smashed a single to center that careened off the wet grass to go for a homerun. Clayton no more deserved to lose that game than the man in the moon, but the breaks were against him. The team did a great job and deserve plenty of praise. They were dark horses but it didn't stop them. SOCCER TEAM Row une: Ken Rosenberg. Stan Green, Leonard jones, john Morgan, Stanley Clohen. Gerry Neuhaus. Rffrr lllvli Irving Marhlestone, David Barrnett, Bob Friedland, Ernie Oppenheimer, George Tuscanini, Fernando, john Burl-ahead. Minor Sports Avro Aaron. Witll the soccer season coming around again the students can look forward to one of the hnest teams we have had in years. Although the soccer teams of the past have been anything but champions, we can safely say that at least we have a really fine team to represent our school. One reason for our optimistic outlook is the fact that almost everyone of last year's team is returning. ln fact, the majority of the team has had two years' experience here at Wztsliirigton, The fact that they have been playing together for two years indicates strong teamwork. Teamwork is very important in soc- cer. Another reason that lends an optimistic note is that for the first time in years the team will have a coach. Some of the returning players are: Al Glaz- brook fwingj, a two-year man who should star next year, Bob lfriedland, another veteran of two yearsg George Toscannini, with two years' experienceg Ernie Oppenheimer, last year's captain, playing his third yearg Len james fgoaliej, in his second yearg Ronnie PAGE NINETY-TWO Meyers, a newcomer who promises to be one of the bestg Frank Torres, playing his third yearg and Ken Rosenberg tinside rightj, out for his second year. A flood of new talent is expected to bolster this already well stacked squad. The team has every reason to look forward to a successful season. Last year's squad had a bit of tough luck, dropping every game by a close margin. They missed beating the champions by a margin of one point. The team lacked coaching and teamwork. Ernie Oppenheimer was the team's outstanding player. He acted as coach and captain and had it not been for Ernie's efforts our school might have been without a team. The students did not support their soccer team as well as they should have. The boys gave their all in every game and deserved more credit than they received. Soccer is one of the roughest and most gruelling games, so turn out next year to support your soccer team when it embarks on a hopeful season. BOYS' TENNIS TEAM Raw one: Earle Lowart, Jim Springer, Bud Blumenfeld, Gene Coler, jack Lipian, Ernest Simon, Donald Krow. Row Iwo: Mel Gartenberg, Floyd Parks, Earl Saroyan, Harvey Cranow, Swimming Team The Washington lightweight swimming team came through to take a fifth place in the All-City Meet. The meet was held at Fleishhacker Pool on May 25. The team came up with a total of 28 points behind Lowell f58j, St. Ignatius Q52Q, Galileo 685, and Commerce with 40 points. Starring for the lightweight team were 130 pound- ers Bob Pickens and Dick Lewis. Pickens came up with a first place in the 50-yard backstroke. Lewis, who got a late start, came in to take a second in the 100-yard free style. He was beaten by Jack Wade of Poly, who broke the record by three-tenths of a second. Other members who placed on the lightweight team were Dick Pickens, who took a fourth in the breast- stroke, and Morrie Green, who took a second in diving. In the 150 medley relay the team came up a third behind Lowell and Commerce. In that race Bob Pick- ens swam backstroke, followed by his twin brother Dick, who swam breast style, and then by Dick Lewis, swimming free style. The varsity swimming team didn't do so well, only getting a total of two points. We got the two points by High Senior Don Hancock taking a fourth in the 100-yard backstroke. BOYS' SWIMMING Row one: Michel Escalle, Frank Deering, Stan Green, Maurice Koch, Eugene Long, james Hughes, Don Ayers. Gary Thornton, David Barnett, jack Barren. Row Iwo: Ray Tobias, Martin Cole, Ed Neel, Avro Aaron, Mervyn Hampton, Dick Fleming, Don Hancock, Dick Lewis, Bob Pickens. Raw fhree: John Calvert, Robert Mullin, Ken Rosenberg, Martin Greenbaum, Dick Pickens, Clarence Chan. Row faur: john Dilg, Paul Maurice, Frank Tarantino, Ken Sato. Y l PAGE NINETY-THREE I 'lf 1,1- 1- G! ff 'I fhf ,iff 1 ruff fl I!! X61 1 f ffl f!!l!,'f Iliff' I I 11 9 f I I f ll I ' Un' ffl I Ig, H . I 1 W 1 'I' f 'f ff, 1 1 , ,V f ffl? ,fff 1115217 I ' 1 f fff few' I ff 9 ff, , ff flu!! 'l, ,. Cf, If ,'f,1 ,fn 10, I f II 'lf ,IAQ In .,f'f 5 29011 m L World of Music MR. MARION KNOTT STRING SEVTION OF ORCHESTRA BRASS A BIT OF GIRLS' CHORAL WOODWINDS A SNAP OF MIXED CHORAL IST, ZND, AND 3RD BASE PAGE NIN ETY-SIX 'Kp-rf! 5 ' 3 .. .5552 : 5- ' -Ii, Dress Rehearsal -.tS'5l-5 ea A was MISS HELEN ARCHER Here they are, just as they looked at the dress rehearsals. Now if Miss Archer's picture at top left would start speaking f Move a little up stage, watch that exit, wait for your laughs, don't come so far under the lightsnj, the cast's pictures would probably come to life and follow her directions frefiex aetionj. The pictures above would emote lines from last term's production, Spring Green. jack Lipian and Marjory Saul were the enthusiastically applauded stars. Below, are scenes from this term's play, Quality Street. In Quality Street the drama class gave the finest perform- ance that Washington's footlights have yet shone upon. Lead- ing lady Colleen O'Too1e had the heart of the audience in the palm of her hand. She carried every mood, every scene, every line. She laid down every laugh and every tear right where the audience had to pick it up - or fall for it. Bob Schwartz and Marjory Saul shared the curtain calls with her. The entire cast was convincing and refreshing. Yet, for all their deftness and sureness on stage, the actors and actresses still can't escape the traditional backstage tur- moil. Once in the wings, poise and graceful movement dis- appear. Instead cast, director, stagehands, curtain men, make- up men, and prompters alike become gusts of wind as they dash about, attending to the hundred last-minute details that must be handled in split seconds. Opening night jitters overcome everyone. Director Miss Archer, standing in the wings, murmurs six lines to every one on stage. The cast chews Sen-Sen by the boxes. The leading ladies get frantic about costume changes. fAnd why not? In one act of Quality Street Marjory Saul had to make a change of heavy period costumes while no more than 14 lines were spoken on stagelj In between acts everyone restrains the overpowering urge to peek out of the curtains at the audience. fIt's not only had luck, but from out front it is the first tell-tale sign of an amateur troopj The act is on again, and a worried drama class marvels at that straight line that gets the laugh, and the gag line that misses it somehow. But when the final curtain call is over and applause is still ringing in every ear, an exultant cast whoops and em- braces each other. And not one of them would swap that nervous stomach or that grease paint smear or that itchy costume for a ticket to a plush seat in the auditorium. PAGE NINETY-SEVEN . M The World of l In the circle at upper left is Phyllis Thiebaut, Editor-in-Chief of the Eagle, Wasliington High School's favorite newspaper. In the smaller circle is Miss Elizabeth f The Ide-a j Murphy, the brain behind both publications. The always busy Managing Editor, Nancy Loughlin, paused a moment for the picture at left. Shown with them on this page are the newshounds who helped them round up all the news that's fit to print. -ny- PHYLLIS THIEBAUT lirxglr Erlilof-in'Cbief Managing Editor Nancy Loughlin Ileflj Artists jr-.tn Dulinsky and jean Millernn fright! l ELIZABETH MURPHY Publimtiinu Adrirnf 4 xx Sportswritcrs Phil Plansky, Jerry Uniderg ffnmc-ra-people Surveyor R.O.T.ff. Etlitnr jul: Barren, writer Phil Plimskv, Bonnie Fluitt, Ric Harrington. 254 is Girls' Sports lftlitm llarharn Amlrcss, Sports Editor Art Duffy. Managing Editor Lila Blunicntlml. PAGE NINFTY-FIGHT PRISCILLA SMALL Surveyor Editor-in-Chief Art Editors Chad Michel and Don Meighan. l F 9 A ff? Eagle and Surveyor reporters Jack Barren, jean Azar, Barbara Shep- herd. Jeanne Marsh, E izabeth Lindsay, Jean Parker, Pat Foster, julie Banducci, Richard Allen. .lourncllis Heading the Surveyor staff is Priscilla Small, Editor-in-Chief, pictured at upper I5 Caught in their favorite poses are the members of her staff. Together with Publications Advisor Miss Murphy and Art Director Mr. Brandt, they are re sponsible for this published record of another school year. FRANZ BRANDT Ari Dirertor it ,fi f., it Sa r fu Y ' ' , p g, 'f i ia 1 A .-gps N i .ff Business and Advertising Managers Lou Tidy and Darelyne Patton Exchange Editor Alan genes. Circulation Manager Dave Arrillaga. Clu Editor Richard Allen. Nw- Graduate Editors Mona Lou Tidy and Barbara Shepherd. PAGE NINETY-NINE Eagle Sociely Ylll.l. HAHN. Pm-rid 711 Sf,-F l K Tx W' l f W, A 4 IX I l 9 ,. Dun Blumenfeld Grover Cleveland Gu: johnson SICVK' Kahn james Phillgss julicn Rhine ' Bill Sndfcl r Ed Stewart PAGE ONE HUNDRED Bill Hahn lawrence Lash Wally Rolling Pete Zclslich + FaIl,1945 I 1 . 1: l '-5.5-li.-is-af -, Q S K 3 ', S 3 Q' , lx W K jack Hamilron Tom McGowan Bub Rosmhug Don Hancock I Frank Mueller Eagle Sociefy + Spring, 1946 EARL LOWAR'l', Pxwillml '. 1 GI dMid!Bl S . MCM Hfmvfw ' 1031-1 Bm . gags Elma' ,Wk - Don Laclerque K Dan lawn! l 4 A . L 'N Mud' 1 Guy Newwn Marvin sieger, i...,..w..2..aam. ,.,. ...a.m..m3m ,wxssL.akm. y , , , ., , , ,... - jad: Brunton - 1oe,Heieck Fqrle Lowm I -Don Simpson . Phil I-loebn Hcncq Muriel , X Jw' TMY ...z PAGE ONE HUNDRED ONE 4 u G. S. RITA HUSKIAGLIA, Pnwillwlf S.-Fclll,1 945 1 , Q lin lusaglia jarkie Cohen ' Dot Meunef Phoebe Nickols , juqucline Roht John Rucker Q Filly Small lg: Vekshin -4 H-H V N ,, -...... f A --- - PAGE ONE HUNDRED TWO Snly Dunning Rubens -Parsons Lorene Schulken jean Tebly l'! x ,,,. L ille ' D' Doxthy .x Margo: Simnnk QD 8sdhanMcGee ,gr Rohr C-.S.S.-Spring,19-46 Carmel Aheme M Ani. . ary -er jean Auf l K C!u'isSpanos Natalie Blum Kay Byard Mildred Canata I Ann hmm Claire Medeiros' H jean Milierun joy Nash V Cornelia Nofell ' ' Y Mix-igm ' lc: Betsy Ross Jem Slim: Phyllis Thiebauz Lael Wynn 1 , . - , H' PAGE ONE HUNDRED THREE l raduate to a Telephone Compan Job! IQ l :Eli 9 Choosing that first pall-time job is a big step in a girl's life . . . Pay is important, of course. And there are other things to consider, too, such as opportunities for promotion -will you work with girls you'd like to have as friends- is the work interesting- the company a good place to work. You'll find the Telephone Company offers you all those things, and more, too. You may choose either telephone operating or an office position. And remember, you can earn while you learn. Talk if over of our employmeni' oilice oi' 140 New Montgomery Sf., Son Francisco The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Gompany PAGF ONE HUNDRED FOUR One of the jewels in the gem-studded panorama visible from Ylfashingtons win- dows, is the Golden Gate Bridge. In one long single span it stretches, four-titths of a mile long, across the en- trance to San Francisco Bay. The serene, undisturbed blue of the water is shad- owed by this great flashing streak of red steel. Below, the quiet, unchanging waves, above, a vibrating hustle of men and machines against modern steel. This bridge is the longest single-span suspension bridge in the world. Giant passenger liners passing beneath it are dwarfed, and look like toy boats, Its towers are 750 feet high. The distance between them is longer than on any other bridge span. lt was built by Sydney Taylor who grew up in Fort Winheld Scott, an old gar- rison on the San Francisco shore of the Gate He is now in charge ot' control- ling the traffic on the bridge. Witli the weather bright, and a week- end ahead, Vfashingtonians gaze out their northern windows and watch the sun light to flame the glittering steel that is another link between Wfashington and the great wide world. I, I. Those fresh sea breezes that blow over Hilltop have an earlier chore to do be- fore they sweep our walks. They must first turn the paddles of the old Dutch windmills that stand guard at the Beach entrances to Golden Gate Park. There are two of these windmills and they are more than decorative landmarks. By tapping an underground supply of fresh water they furnish water for the lakes and irrigation of the park. For the statistical-minded, the southern wind- mill is the largest in the world, pumping 40,000 gallons an hour, while the nor- thern mill comes close behind with a capacity of 50,000 gallons an hour. These facts should help the visitor to Washington to understand why we take that perpetual wind so good naturedly. When a rooter's cap blows off and rolls into a mud-puddle, he just chuckles with happy humor because he knows this same wind is turning the old mills that keep the grass in his favorite park green, that nourish the trees and flowers he loves, and that keep the water sparkling in the lakes he likes to dream beside. SENIORS! SENIORS! THERE ARE TWO EUNDAMENTALLY IMPORTANT FACTORS when CHOOSING A CAREER OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCEMENT PLEASANT WORKING CONDITIONS Anzericifr Largest Financial Institution Offers You BOTH Let's Get Acquainted We'lI be glad to send you the Pacific Conifer, our employees' magazine that gives you some idea of our Head Office . .. Drop us a card with your name and address . . . or BETTERSTILL PAY US A VISIT 'kLET US SHOW YOU AROUND'k METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY PACIFIC COAST HEAD OFFICE: 600 STOCKTON STREET PAGE ONE HUNDRED FIVE WE, THE STUDENTS OF REGISTRY 310, DEDICATE THIS TO OUR TEACHER AND FRIEND, MISS SCHARFF CLAIRE MEDERAS . ANNA LAPACINA SALLY DUNNINO JEAN ARDEN SLIIIER . . . NETTIE BECKWITH JANET cox DOROTHY ELY PATSY EMERY ROSE MARIE FARBER PAT HARMON FLORENCE HARRIS MARILYN HUNTER MARION JAMES BARBARA KRAFT JANICE LANDEN NOREEN LOVE BARBARA MENSOR IEAN MILLERON . . . . . President . Vice Preridenf . . Serremry . . . . . Treaxurer KATHERINE NEWELL PHOEBE NICHOLS MARION PALASKY JEAN PARKER CLEMENTINA PETROCCHI BABETTE PIKE BEVERLY ROGERS MARY SCOGIN DOROTHY SPEYER EVELYN STEVENS NICKI VEKSHIN CECELIA UEELDER JUNE WILLIS BARBARA WILSON WE, THE FELLOWS OF REG. 222, DEDICATE THIS TO MR. MARION KNOTT FOR THE WORK HE HAS DONE FOR US IN THE PAST THREE YEARS BILL ANGELLY DOUGLAS MCHERN FRANK ARIETTA HAROLD NELSON DICK ASH ISUNEO OKAWACHI GEORGE CALCLOUGH ROBERT ORR RICHARD FLEMING RICHARD PICKENS DICK GANZERT DON POTTER JOHN GIOSSO EDDIE RAINEY JOE HEIECK BILL RARIDAN MAX HOSIET BOB SCOTT GUS JOHNSON BERT SILVER BILL KENNY MURIO STEFFINELLI JOHN KITTA MYRON SUSLOW HERMAN KLEINMEYER DENE STRATTON DON LACLERQUE VAHAN TOOLAJIAN RONALD LAGER RAY TRATHEN LEO LARSON IRWIN WOLK PACE ONE HUNDRED SIX l Put a camera in the hands of a camera- fnn and he will make a bee-line for Gold- en Gate Park, head out the driveway to- ward the ocean and pause beside a small lake which is fed by a tumbling waterfall. On the opposite shore of the lake is an open doorway, Portals of the Past, a famous San Francisco relic. Prior to the Ere of April 18, 1906, this was the port- al of a residence at California and Taylor Streets, belonging to A. H. Towne, for many years vice president and general manager of the Southern Pacific Company. Following this fire in which the residence was demolished, Mrs. Towne gave the portal as a gift to the city. The Hames have cracked the white marble, but neither time nor disaster has altered the beauty of the six upright pillars, and the sculp- tured perfection of the beckoning door- way. Gleaming white in the midst of a clump of green foliage, it casts a clear reflection in the mirror waters of the lake. Oh yes, after the camera addict paused, he snapped the above picture. The Surveyor's ace photographer has an artists eye for pictures that tell a story. The snapshot above tells its own story of a peaceful world. The lake is one of the hundred magic spots in near- by Golden Gate Park. Against backgrounds of dense green- ery or quaint bridges, the Park's pools are mirrors of misty reflections. Frogs sun themselves on broad lily pads and croak a lusty chorus. Ducks float grace- fully on top and down below fat gold- Hsh swim lazily about. Around the pools strange dwarf pines and Cedars cast their shadows and the air is sweet with the haunting odors of the flowers of many lands. A picnic lunch beside one of these pools is an experience hard to forget. With a loaf of bread and a jug of Seven Up, there is no better place to relax than at one of these lakes with the ducks and the frogs, the goldfish and, incidentally, that algebra book with tomorrow's prob- lem. WE, THE STUDENTS OF 205, DEDICATE THIS AD TO MR. O. I. WILSON FOR HIS YEARS OF HARD WORK ON OUR BEHALF JACK ALLEN JAMES FLETCHER LEONARD BEGUN JOHN FLOYD LARRY BELL DEAN HAAS DICK BOBERG PHILIP HOEHN REX BROOKS DARRAL JONES JACK BRUNTON PETER LEVY JAMES BURTON CHAD MICHEL RICHARD CARLSON CLIFFORD PORTER TODD CARROLL WALLY ROLLING DEAN DASKEROLIS MELVIN SEMANS RICHARD DICKENSON VICTOR SERVEL DAVID DILG MELVIN SIEGEL BOB ECKHOEE ALEX SIMPSON KEN ELKINGTON GLENN SWANSON STEWART FELDSTEIN JOE WEINBERGER ALBERT FITTER FRED WERTHEIM Compliments of R E G I S T R Y 2 1 5 ROBERT ALLEN JOHN KRYRIMIS STANLEY COHEN EARLE LOWART NORMAN DEBUS STAN MOBBS ALBERT DESHAIES JOHN MORGAN JAMES DIXON JACK O'KEEFE STAN GALLAGHER ART PARSONS LOUIE GANEM ROBERT PICKENS DON GOTTLIEB JESS RAPHAEL FRANK GRANAT JACK REDMAN STAN GREEN ALLEN SEBASTIAN DON HANCOCK DON SIMPSON DAVID HANLON ED SOLOMON ED HARLEM LAURENCE STEIN HAROLD HONGEY WALTER STELLING HUGH HUDSON JACK TRACY JACK KALMAN ROBERT WEINER BOB KISSICK PAGE ONE HUNDRED SEVEN .I CK RICH RDS CO. Automobile Sales and Service AUTHORIZED PACKARD DEALER GEARY BOULEVARD AT NINTH AVENUE Phone BAYVIEW 4570 SAN FRANCISCO 18, CALIFORNIA THE FOLLOWING GIRLS OF REGISTRY 237 MISS MARGARET POOLE MARY ANKER JOYCE BLAIR MARJORIE BUNKLEY MILDRED CANATA ENID DAVIS JEAN DULINSKY DOROTHY EDWARDS BETTY FARNSWORTH BEATRICE GROGER JENNIE HONG SYLVIA JACOBS JEAN JACOBSON BEVERLY JOHNSTON GLORIA KUGLER FRANCES LANDAU JOSEPI-IINE MARKOVICH OLGA McMILLIAN BARBARA MOORE LUCY PAPALIAS DARELYNE PATTON IANE PEKRAMEN BEVERLY PETERSON BARBARA RESTER BARBARA SHEPHARD CHRISTINE SPANOS IANET STEWART LORRAINE TONNELLI DOROTHY THAYER RUTH WARDA PHYLLIS WEIBKE SYLVIA WEININGER SALLY WI-IALEN PAGE ONE HUNDRED EIGHT just a stone's throw Qfiguratively speaking, from the gymnasium toward the Golden Gate is China Beach. Here in a sheltered cove at the base of Sea Cliff is a wide expanse of smooth beach slanting into the blue ocean. This is a must on any Washingto- nian's list of things to do after school. The routine usually calls for a quick bike ride to the cliffs towering over the beach, then a scramble down the steep path to sea level. A short swim in the cool Pa- cific, then the bonfire and roasted weenies e4ah, what a combination! After the inner man is satisfied, the in- evitable exhibitionist starts turning hand- springs, the sun bather gazes earnestly skyward seeking the magic tan, and the scholar opens his history book and crams for the next day's test. Yes, every day is picnic day at China Beach. The setting is so condusive to fellowship that even a stray band of Low- ellites or an occasional Lincolnite can venture there and find a warm welcome. That's Utopia! As Washington students worked and studied in their classes on May 1, 1946, history was being made when the famed aircraft carrier Saratoga sailed through the Golden Gate on her way to sacrifice herself for humanity. Accompanied by the battleship New York the Queen of the Flat-tops left for the atom bomb test at Bakini Atoll carrying delicate instru- ments to record the results. While harbor tugs towed the huge Sara out of Pier 30 crowds of sailors and civilians watched from buildings adjoining the Embarcadero. A Navy blimp, several planes, and nearby ships joined her cheering friends on shore in giving the Saratoga a wonderful sendoff. More sailors waited with their families and friends by parked cars on the Golden Gate Bridge to say a last goodbye to their beloved ship. Pride and sorrow mingled in the hearts of the captain and the crew as they leaned on the rails of the Saratoga and sang Meet Me in Bakini to the tune of Meet Me in St. Louis -pride in the glory and honor that their ship had won in the Pacific . . . sorrow, deep and grip- ping. that now, for the last time, she would move down the bay, steam through the Golden Gate, and proudly face the open sea. A. R. Dankworth Co. Represented by VAN WORMER si RODRIGUES, INC. Mazzzzfacluring fewelerf 'A' 126 POST STREET SAN FRANCISCO 'A' COMMEN CEM EN T IN VITATIONS PERSONAL CARDS ir WASHINGTON HIGH CLASS RINGS CLUB PINS TROPHIES 8: MEDALS S U C C E S S TO THE CLASS OF '45 WILDBERG BROTHERS SMELTING 8: REFINING COMPANY DENTAL 8: JEWELERS GOLD 'A' 742 MARKET STREET SAN FRANCISCO 655 SOUTH HILL ST. LOSANGELES Congratulations to the SIIEBNIIIIDIIRQW LEXICON PRESS 500 SHNSOME ST. if Glflrfield 6859 PAGE ONE HUNDRED NINE BEST WISHES from Dwight Newton and KPO -A' SCHOOLCAST for SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 9: 30 a.m. 'A' Newton and the News for CROCKER FIRST NATIONAL BANK Sunday, 2:30 p.m. WESTERN UNION MESSENGER SERVICE THE PREP SCHOOL TO THE UNIVERSITY OF BUSINESS o ffers Congratulations to the Graduate: of George Warbingtofz High School CONGRATULATIONS CONGRATULATIONS to the to the GRADUATING GRADUATING CLASS OF 1946 CLASSES from from REGISTRY 313 REGISTRY 5 1 1 4 Barbara Andress Ina Mae Diamond Lois Arfstcn Melton Frankel Icrry Arnold Andy Gambardella Janet Bremmer Morris Green Dan Brown Leonard james Frances Brunner Pete Krenkel I0 the Clarence Chan Edward Lee Earl Clayton Edward Michael G R A D U A T E S Nell Cody Bertha Padilla Ioan Corlin Barbara Straube ltfam Dave Cosenza Shirley Strathen Richard Cowden Ella Valve R E G I S T R Y Ioy Cross Mildred Williams 1 0 5 Ierry Crumpler lean Zern Cecil Czachow Carol Amee Pike PAGE ONE HUNDRED TEN THE GHOSTS OF HILLTOP HIGH Super Snoopers Keyhole Peepers Gabby jahherers See all - Know all 'I 1 That's all! WY , LJIV... . H Riddle: Wlmat is it that sings without a voice, makes no sound, and yet you hear it? Answer: Carol Freeman and her pet victrola. Best of Luck to lhe Graduating Class from HIGH SENIOR GIRLS' REGISTRY G-30 Compliments 0 f REGISTRY 225 toour Registry Teacher M I S S O'L E A R Y Barbara Angel Ieanne Bachman Valerie Bethen Joyce Bleadon losie Boido Patricia Boyle Barbara Bloom Kay Byard Fern Carmel Cecelia Chapman Marcella Doherty Eleanor Dubacher June Dulinsky Dolores Edwards Iilaine lfrickson Marie Farley Carolyn Fonseca Mary Rose Galvez Virginia Gess Donna Gunthrop Hisalco Ito Ruth Lechney Ieanne Lewis Frances Lipson Nanette Lincl IXIarguerite INIathes Carmen Moss Ruth Stadner Kay Winston We, the Graduating Girls of REGISTRY 138 Dedimle thif ,fpare to our Regirtry Teacher, MRS. SHEEHAN ufho hm helped us through our three yearr at George Wa.rhirtzgl0rr ALOHA and GOOD LUCK Graduating Seniors from HIGHJUNIOR REGISTRY 231 af Artremis Angel Girada Barrle Beverly Barsamian Iune Brown Verna Buzolich Bill Degenhardt Barbara Devencenzi Bonnie Fluitt Cherie Gregoire Barbara Guclet John Henshaw George Hutchinson Rita joakimson Odette ,Ioannes Anne Kick lim Kline Helen Koshaba Tom Kramer Pat Leasure Yvonne Levesq ue loan Major Ernie Oppenheimer Nick Prepouses Don Raisner Shirley Reinisch Fretl Rohrs Farl Saroyan Alex Shiponotf Elizabeth Simson Gene Steers Blake Stothard Maurice Tarrow Bob Tomlinson Don Turkletop Jerry Wlieeler PAGE ONE HUNDRED ELEVEN COLISEUM sToRE for MEN WARNOCK'S PHARMACY . PRESCRIPTION Fff S Dnuccxsrs WASHINGTON HI SIGNET BELTS 32.95 for Belt and Buckle 4056 Balboa Street at 42nd Ave. 7 4 0 C L E M E N T 5 T R E E T BAyview 6711 San Francisco COLD WAVES AND PERMANENT T H E B O O K C A S E WAVING A SPECIALTY CIRCULATING LIBRARY STEWART,S Gifts - Stationery - Toys - School Supplies Greeting Cardx far All Ocraxiom BEAUTY SALON Verna Andenom, Mgr. 3608 Balboa Street Phone BAyview 8649 1441 Fillmore Street WAlnut 9726 Repair: Servire Sale: COMPLIMENTS f GEARY RADIO-ELECT RIC CO. o B 84 B PHARMACY 2655 BALBOA ST. RADIOS - APPLIANCES 'lr 5637 GEARY BOULEVARD Phone SK. 8016 BEST WISHES TO ALL ! ! NDAD!! V A R S I T Y 32nd and Balboa BETTY GAYLE FOUNTAIN LUNCH zvfh sl GEARY BLVD. Home-made Chili Our Specialty Sodas - Malts -- Milkshakes and THE BEST HAMBURGERS IN TOWN JOSEPH BEAUTY SALON Corner of Balboa and 38th Ave. Sllerializing in COLD WAVING PIN CURLS and PERMANENT WAVES Compliment: of CRISPI PASTRY SHOPPES 'A' 1475 PACIFIC AVENUE 5256 SCOTT STREET 1999 HYDE STREET BAYVIEW PHARMACY for your DRUGS AND COSMETICS MODERN FOUNTAIN NOW OPEN Geary at 26th SKyline 2621 GRAZZINI MARKET FRUIT Bc VEGETABLE DEPT. E. Grazzini, Proprietor SERVICE 8: COURTESY 5747-5753 Geary Blvd. SK. 4664 8: 4665 CONGRATULATIONS, GRADUATES from H O L L Y W O O D F O O D C E N T E R 'k Geary Blvd. Bc 26th Ave. SKyline 2518 G. Munroe Auto Paints MUNROE BODY 8: FENDER WORKS 838 ELLIS STREET PRospect 0681 FAY CLEANERS LILLIAN BEAUTY SALON Cfffiffd PERMANENT WAVE SPECIALIST DRY CLEANING ,md -k HAIR STYLIST 1454 NORIEGA STREET Corner 3951 Balboa SKyline 1049 OVerland 5262 San Francisco NEW LOCATION PAGE ONE HUNDRED TWELVE AUTOGRAPHS AUTOGRAPHS WILL KING'S COFFEE CUP BANQUETS al PARTIES 'A' GEARY AT 18TH AVENUE Go Where the Crowds Go Say Now . . . Get Your GOLDEN STATE MILK SHAKES at the GEORGE WASHINGTON I HIGH SCHOOL CAFETERIA G O L D E N S T A T E DAIRY PRODUCTS 366 GUERRERO sr. Hamlock sooo COMPLIMENTS MICHAEL A. GORB to ,he Watcbmaker SENIOR CLASS emi OF '46 fewe er 'A' CRESCENT GARAGE 5645 GEARY BOULEVARD 2035 DIVISADERO BAYVEW 3077 YOUNGER - SET COMPLIMENTS ' of the Apparel for the Mifhmd HOLLYWOOD Youlbful Womarz F L Q R I S T ' 1 145 GRANT AVENUE Telephone YUkon 1080 403 GEARY STREET CONGRATULATIONS COMPLIMENTS TO THE ef GRADUATING CLASS MELVIN SOSNICK CO. of 801 McAllister Street ' SPRING '46 S from WHOLESALE TOBACCO and CANDY PAGE ONE HUNDRED THIRTEEN COMPLIMENTS MINCHIN'S PHARMACY or PRESCRIPTION PHARMACY CAMEO BEAUTY SALON C. F. MINCHIN, PH.G. T Fmmnng 3600 Balboa St, at 37th Ave. San Francisco TIN ING - DYEING Phone SKyline 1828 3620 BALBOA ST. BAyview 1515 6 LAKE MARKET WALTER'S CREAMERY 2 TH glUALlTY MEATS HAMBURGERS GROCERTES, FRUITS az VEGETABLES SHAKE5 f:fiNDWfCHE'S Free Delivery oun OWN ICE CREAM BA. 9613 . 9614 2501 Lake Smeg 3715 BALBOA STREET EVergreen 9528 BALBOA PAINT 8: WALLPAPER CO. Wbalamle-Retail PAINTS, VARNISI-IES. ENAMELS. WALLPAPER. Etc. 3444 Balboa Street, near 56thAve. Electrical, Hardware and Plumbing Supplies HEINE'S HARDWARE STORE H. N. FLATOW GENERAL REPAIRING BAyview 9371 E. dz L. Voester SKyline 8828 3614 Balboa St. SKyline 1520 Service Bc Quality Courtny Service N A B o R H o o D QIEQXFKET P H A R M A C Y Puccmr 8: VxvAi.o1 pRB5CR1p1'10N Dealer: in Choice Meal: I SPECIALISTS ' SKyline 5132 SK l' 5134 WA'-TH' FMNKUN' PMP' sxyune sm sxlligg sm 5300 Balboa Street Cor. 34th Avenue 5841 - 5843 GEARY BOULEVARD BALBOA'S s sf 10c STORE C H5535 M ' COATS gg' -Vg DRESSES at ar . CHILDREN S WEAR EVERYTHING 9 0 5644 Geary Boulevard at 21st Avenue 3615 BALBOA SAN FRANCISCO Phone BAYViCW 8110 FAMILY PHARMACY Drug and Fountain Service GEARY STREET at T WENTY-THIRD AVENUE Ice Cream, Ginger Ale on Ice, Sandwiches We Serve Golden Slate Ice Cream BAvvrEw 5437 F. Henry Lang BAyview 7122 The MERIT SHOPPE Women's and Chi1dren's Wear MIDDY 8: REGULATION SKIRTS 5629 Geary Boulevard at 20th Avenue San Francisco HOUSE OF FLOWERS Flower.: for All Orrurianr 6040 GEARY BOULEVARD San Francisco SUGAR BOWL PASTRY SHOPPE Full Line of Assorted Fancy Cakes, French and Danish Pastries, Delicious Coffee Cakes and Piesg Cakes for All Occasions Made to Order Baked Where S old BAyvicw 7940 We Deliver Flower: Telegrapbed Anywhere 5640 BALBOA STREET BAYVWW 4135 GOOD LUCK and BEST WISHES -I-CALL GEARY GIFT SHOP THE GRADUATES GIFTS JEWELRY . Charms 50C-33.00 DAVE'S CREAMERY 5815 GEARY BOULEVARD Mrs. Maria Kelly SKyline 8580 PAGE ONE HUNDRED FOURTBEN AUTOGRAPHS AUTOGRAPHS V I N CE'S SMO KE SHO P 2086 Chestnut St. Phone WEst 9881 San Francisco 23 California QUALITY and SERVICE ATLOWPRICES LA SALLE LAUNDRY O 4020 Balboa Sc. SKVHHC 8674 BAyview 8649 The BOOKCASE Grate E. Weimtein GREETING CARDS Gifts -- Toys - School Supplies 3608 BALBOA ST. CLEANING and DYEING SERVICE GRAND CLEANERS Laundry Service Hats Cleaned and Blocked 4051 BALBOA STREET K O R E T of California GIRLS' SPORTSWEAR - SWEATERS JACK AND JILL SHOPPE 3621 Balboa Street EVergreen 4019 BLUE BIRD SHOPPE juvenile and Women's WEARING APPAREL 3604 Balboa St. RECORD YOUR VOICE . . . YOUR TALENTS . . . at AIRBORNE RECORDING STUDIO iso POWELL STREET ABC EMBLEM 8: PENNANT CO. 1251 MALKE-r STREET San Francisco Phone YUkon 1531 Suite 311 G R A D U A T E S Make a B8:BGRILL RECORD! 2018 CHESTNUT STREET San Francisco SOUND RECORDERS 421 Powell Street GOLDEN GATE CYCLERY 2218 LOMBARD STREET LONGWELL'S FOUNTAIN 2060 CHESTNUT STREET Flllmore 6843 COMPLIMENTS OF Rod Daley's THE IGLOO ICE MARINA MEN'S SHOP CREAM ' 0 2172 CHESTNUT STREET 2355 CHESTNUT STREET HOW GOOD IS YOUR NEXT YEAR'S FOOTBALL TEAM GOING TO BE? B O B A L L E N Studio of Popular Music 150 Powell Street BALBOA SWING SHOP SMARTEST APPAREL FOR CASUAL WEAR Block Sweaters Marie and Tom Benmn, Owner: 3626 BALBOA STREET PAGE ONE HUNDRED FIFTEEN Phones: SKyline 6397 - SKyline 4144 P I N E L L I'S FLOWERLAND J. V A R s 1 C o. The Flower Shop Beautiful R. J. BIAGINI NS Proprietor L WERS FOR ALL OCCASIO F 0 GEARY BLVD. AT 19TH AVENUE 714 CLFMFNT STREET BAyview 5436 EVergreen 9699 WHS' 3966 FW Ef'f ff GENERAL PETROLEUM SERVICE R A Y C O X Carr Called Far and Delivered PAIN-I-ING Phone EVergreen 9550 Interiors 8: Exteriors Specializing in LUBRICATION 19 Collins Street San Francisco 18 Ed Rogers, Mgr. 24th Ave. 8: Geary For ANYTHING in HOME FURNISHINGS JACK BARREN ROOFING COMPANY Vim Tar and Gravel Shingles and Tile RICHMQND ROOFING Sz DAMP PROOFING FURNITURE CO. omfe at 3931 Geary Blvd. 953 CLEMENT STREET 5flf1Ff3f1ClSC0 F I N E J E W E L R Y EXPERT WATCH mms DR. W. E. FRANCIS O P T O M E T R I S T I, 81 B Eyer Examined LAKESIDE JEWELERS Ofiice Phone: DOuglas 0952 2550 Ocean Avenue Rlgndolph 2435 109 ELLIS ST., bet. Powell and Mason Sts. SUNSET HOUSE OF MUSIC 1244 NORIEGA STREET OVerland 7869 Bet. 19th Br 20th Ave. OPEN EVERY EVENING Till 9:00 P.M. Uixcept Wednesdayj ED TIGGES, jewelers Diamonds 8: AWatches Clocks and Silverware EASY CREDIT TERMS Expert Swiu and American Walcb Repairing 5847 Geary Blvd.-BAyview 0804 ALBERT W. WALASCHEK FINE DIAMOND JEWELRY Made to Your Special Order Manufarluring jeweler 101 Posr STREET DOUGLAS 6603 RECORDS - RADIOS ACornpleleStacL DOUGHTY'S S031 GEARY BOULEVARD BAyview 0056 GEARY MEAT MARKET LOBECK AND HOFFER The Bert in Fine Meat.: AUTOCEYEEEEANCE COHBN BROTHERS, Proprietors iv 555 GEARY BOULEVARD 55rd Avenue and Balboa Street EVUSWCU 9722 EVergreen 9818 San Francisco COMPLEMENTS C A R L H. W A C H T E R 0 HIGH JUNIOR REGISTRY 211 MEAT MARKET Select Mean, Firb, Pouliry T OMKINS FOOD STORE BAyview 1877 5247 Balboa St. PAGE ONE HUNDRED SIXTEEN AUTOGRAPHS AUTOGRAPHS GOOD LUCK tothe 1946 GRADUATES -A' CANDY STORE NEXT TO FOX THEATER M. NA'rov GREEN'S MEAT PIES ARNOLD GREEN BANQUBTS - PARTIES - CLUBS Our Specialty Frencb Fries -- French Daugbnutr 3221 Balboa Street SKyline 1622 Service Quality NABORHOOD PHARMACY PRESCRIPTION S P E C I A L I S T S Walter Franklin, Proprietor 3300 BALBOA, Corner 54th Ave. SKyline 1520 BEST WISHES from REGISTRY 333 Barbara Allen Becky Benoun Lorraine Bootn Gloria Brown Betty Cicerone Harvey Cranow jackie Du Jardin Pat Edwards Betty Englebrecht Harriet Friedling Jack Grossman Dick Harning Eleanor Held Leone Hettich Ruth Hildebrandt Don Horston David Hdwell Ralph Jacobson Stanley Kane Pat Kilkeary Mary Lipscomb Nancy Loughlin Don Lowart Melvin Lucia Anita Patton Bill Sargis Margery Saul Ernest Simon Sylvia Silvarman Bill Stewart Ralph Taylor Evelyn Tilles Ioan Timmer George Toscanini Don Woebke DIXIE DIXON'S LUNCHEON - DINNER SODA FOUNTAIN After-Show Snacks - Parties of All Kinds Milt Mosk, Assistant Mgr. E D Y T H E'S LINGERIE - BLOUSES - DRESSES Come and Look Around- Na Obligation 3251 BALBOA STREET 1176 MARKET STREET MArlcet 5115 BAyview 2562 Compliment: of sale: SKYHM 4074 Semin BA Y V IEW HARDWARE STANDARD ai' Phone BAyview 4764 6114 GEARY BOULEVARD MAINTENANCE CO. ELECTRIC SHOP Appliances -- Radios - Lighting Fixtures J. J. GOLDBLATT 6245 GEARY BLVD. RICHMOND SKyline 2162 PAUL LEITNER, Prop. L A U N D R Y NEW PROGRESSIVE REASONABLE PRICES GROZZISSKELQUITS ALL wonx GUARANTEED VEGETABLES 4429 CAERILLO SKYLINE 6992 45:11 AVENUE er CABRILLO KING'S TENNIS SHOP Rackets Restrung, Repaired, Rented Hours: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. - Sun. 8 to 1 6300 GEARY BLVD. SKyline 4557 PAINTS 1vIAzDA LAMPS BALBOA HARDWARE 4052 BALBOA ST. at 42nd Ave. BAyview 5718 PAGE ONE HUNDRED SEVENTEEN AUTOGRAPHS AUTGCRAPHS AUTOGRAPHS . A-E Pi? 522 . 21225 P1 5-ff 4 44-L2 . .. ' - .. - 351. .,..V , 7.9 ,Z-A 1' , Vi.:v35: ?fi'3gi:kLigf Aff 'W' 41- , :t.m3'f5,A V ' - -.f:i3f,?ff5' A M' -,w1AVQ , :wi - I pp . 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