Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA)

 - Class of 1934

Page 1 of 94

 

Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 94 of the 1934 volume:

Mau , Ly V iz 6, k A 4 v M, 1 M T' jg' ,Q f J ' , f V 4. W.., r,,N?V'6f?l 4552 ,Q ,bi We ,Q K , MX VLK, -fggfkifzzflgfjvy. 5 3 4 Sm: ag Q V ,W f 2 A 5 5 wb., A mi Wea A1 Jw ,1- '3 ' , 5 F wal? if , 3 : V 55? f , F in 'f 5 ,E wi 'gf-Mtn , FQHJVVQQ J pyf. N 1 ,4 f - 9 ye ' ,. 11, . Q. nv. X is A g1f43'f 3' 4f 3:.q5. 4:-e3 fI'5Y L' 1 mfg, t?J:v45.,JQyL'f X A 4, , Vw, ki r 3 24 yu, - 32 3 6' Y .- .w , X N 1 . Wk GK, ,gf f?3fjWgJ' 'dw-qw 1 N ,W X' 'Q xwai a '5.5Q1f.nW' gym. Ahh! Q I 1 5 2 5' l- r a F 5 5 Q 3 S 4 5 G up E of '7 5 3 E S I3 7. 1 H E Q 51 L E .fu 1 .W w 1 -2 RED and WHITE DECEMBER NINETEEN HUNDRED AND THIRTY-FOUR S LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL VOLUME 54 S PUBLISHED BY LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION SAN FRANCISCO. CALIFORNIA D E D I C A T I O N MR. FRANCIS EDMUND CROFTS 4I Years in The Service of Lowell Teacher of MaThemaTics-I893-I927 Head oT The MaThemaTics DeparTmenT-l903-I93O Vice-Principal and Dean OT Boys-I9I6-i930 AcTing Principal-I9l8-I9I9 Principal-I93O-I934 RIVILEGED ThaT ours is The IasT RED AND WHITE Mr. CroTTs will receive as principal: saddened in The realizaTion oT The greaT loss To Lowell necessiTaTed by his deparTure7 inspired by sincere Triendshipg appreciaTive oT his honesTy, his Tairness, his democraTic ideals, and his unTiring guidance: enriched by our associaTions wiTh him, The man, we dedicaTe This, The TiTTy-TourTh RED AND WHITE To Mr. Francis Edmund CroTTs. V May good healTh, good TorTune, and good cheer aTTend him always during The many well-earned years oT abundanT leisure ThaT liTe should hold Tor him. 2 PRINCIPI-lL'S FAREWELL I-IE Time is near when I shall have To leave my daily companionship wiTh pupils and Teachers aT Lowell. This musT be meT wiTh whaT equanimiTy I can command. IT will noT be easy. I could have chosen no beTTer calling in life Than ThaT OT working wiTh and Tor yOuTh. This is realized more sensibly each year I live. IT has served much in helping me remain young in vigor, in spiriT, and in TaiTh, in spiTe OT The years. I shall miss The young people, whom I have learned more and more To love and sympaThize wiTh and Trom whom I have learned so much. I came To The service OT Lowell in I89I. There is buT one oTher now living OT The Teachers aT ThaT Time in The school. There were buT Three high schools Then in San Francisco, none OT Them wiTh more Than 500 or 600 pupils. Only a small parT OT The boys and girls Then in San Francisco even ThoughT OT going To high school. None wenT save Those especially ambiTious and OT demOnsTraTed abiIiTy. V The curriculum OT ThaT Time would now be considered very meager. There was buT IiTTIe OT science, modern language, music and arT, and in one school only was There anyThing in The naTure OT mechanical, indusTriaI, applied or household arTs. The sTudenTs aT This school-Then called Boys' I-Iigh School-were raTher highly seIecTed by reason OT Their anTicipaTed vOcaTiOns and The naTure OT The curriculum. STudy was Their one business in life. There were no Organized cOrnpeTiTive spOrTs-no program OT sTudenT acTiviTies. They accomplished as much Or more in The Three-year course Than is now done in Tour. ConTrasT Those Times and cOndiTiOns wiTh Those OT The presenT, when all musT go To high school unTil They are eighTeen years OT age, when There is a wide range OT sTudiesg when everyone can, and mOsT do, Take parT in some Icind OT socialized acTiviTy. V ReTIecTing upon These years OT work, I am moved To some words OT cOmmenT. Is iT all wOrTh while TO The STaTe, The pupils, The insTrucTors? Yes, iT is supremely so. This is The Time when boys and girls discover The elemenTs OT living as social beings. They learni beTTer how To live wiTh Their Tellows, To approve Tair play. They come To siTT permanenT values in characTer, conducT, respOnsibiliTies. They should learn The supreme value OT seIT-discipline, selT-undersTanding, selT-direcTiOn. They may begin TO Tix righT sTandards Tor iudgmenT, Tor TasTe, Tor ideals, Tor living. Courses OT sTudy, insTrucTiOn, acTiviTies, counsel, and example OT The Teachers all conTribuTe To such ends. They help To Torm The Truly good ciTizenship which The STaTe aims aT, which parenTs approve and hope Tor, and which every Teacher cOnscienTiousIy sTrives TO inculcaTe, exempliTy, prOmOTe. Many have already said These Things. I repeaT Them since They express my creed. They are my parTing words To Tellow pupils, Tellow workers-Triends all, FAREWELL. .bg i J fr, IN MEMORIAM , ARVEY EDGAR HARRIS was a member oT The TaculTy OT The Lowell l-ligh School Trom i928 To I934, Though his period oT Teaching service in San Francisco began asvearly as l9Ol. V As such he was ever The generous Triend and advisor oT Thousands oT sTudenTs who aTTecTionaTely knew him only as CapTain. Boys, especially Those who were anxious To enroll in his Mechanical and ArchiTecTural Drawing classes, will never TorgeT The knowledge ThaT he, as a pracTic- ing archiTecT, commanded and imparTed. V The Red and WhiTe always TelT parTicularly graTeTul To Mr. l-larris Tor his willing assisTance and counsel each Term in The selecTion oT iTs Technical sTaTT, The Bom' Decemberz' I873 mosT valued members oT which were carefully D' d, J 6, 34 , , , , Ie une lg Trained by him. V Voicing The sorrow TelT upon his deaTh by his co-TaculTy workers, Mr. CroTTs, as principal OT The school, apTly said: ln The passing oT Mr. Harris we have losT a kindly Triend, genial and courTeous. l-le was a man oT mild and even Temper, disciplined, consideraTe, ToleranT, paTienT, conscienTious: by TemperamenT a harmonizerg a culTivaTed and courTeous genTlernan, uprighT and honor- able. V BUT lvlr. l-larris' service To educaTion Transcended Lowell l-ligh School. For Three years he was presidenT oT The San Francisco Teachers' AssociaTion. This organiza- Tion expressed grieT aT iTs loss, in parT, when iT said: l-lis going has leTT a vacancy among The leaders who have worked Tirelessly To improve To The highesT degree The proTession oT educaTion in The ciTy oT San Francisco. The memory oT his loyalTy and unselTish devoTion To all The good causes which he championed should be a guiding inTluence To Those who Tollow. ArchiTecTural builder-Triend OT sTudenTs-worker and leader among Teachers-Tireless champion OT educaTion-l-larvey l-larris lives in achievemenT, ideal and inspiraTion. JUNE PARRISH Class oT June I933 Born, June I I, l9I5 - Died, AugusT 25, I934 4 IN MEMORIAM .-lE sralif of Jrhe Red and While feels parlicular regrer ar ihe unrimely dearh of Thomas Franklin, a senior of lhe gradual- ing Class of December I934. v In his capacify of rechnical ediror of Jrhe Red and Whire, he per- formed a diliiiculr Task mosr capably, nor only in doing his own work +0 a high degree of efficiency, bur consranlly supervising and aiding his co- workers. Undislrurbed by 'ihe arduousness of his lask, he was ever calm, smiling and cheerful, and ro him belongs much of rhe credil' of rurning our Jrhe prize-winning June, I934, journal. v A wide gap indeed was lefr in rhe Red and While siaff Jrhis rerm, one Thar has been almosr impossible To replace. A wider void was leil in his classrooms, al' his Boy Scour meeiings, and in his family circle, where his presence was always refreshing, helpful and endearing. V Those who knew him ar his full value will ever hold him dear 'ro Jrheir hearrs, and, conslranlly remembering his cheery companionship, will be all lhe beHer for having known him. Born, March 23, I9I7 Died, Augusl I7, I934 ROY STARK Class of June i936 9 Born, November 3, l9l7- Died, Sep+ember I6, I934 5 FOREWORD N The TiTTy-TourTh Red and WhiTe we have Tried To accenT The main purpose oT a high school year book: To make iT essenTially a memory book: To imprison beTween iTs covers Those Things dearesT To The hearTs oT Lowell sTudenTs. lTs very colors should recall games and rallies: iTs picTures recall Teachers and Tellow sTudenTsg iTs deparT- menTs recall acTiviTies and high poinTs in The school year. ln deparTing Trom our usual policy oT choos- ing an ouTside Theme, and depicTing in iTs sTead scenes Trom school liTe, we have dedicaTed This book in Theme, as well as on The Tormal page oT dedicaTion, To one whose liTe was Truly a School LiTe'. This Red and WhiTe marks The reTiremenT oT Mr. F. E. CroTTs, and is, we hope, an exTra-curri- cular TribuTe To a beloved leader. TABL ADMINISTRATION CLASSES . . ORGANIZATIONS MUSIC AND DRAMA BOYS' ATHLETICS GIRLS' ATHLETICS Pages 8-15 16-31 32-45 46-51 52-69 70-76 ADMINISTRATION Cl-lOOLii1fell-low much if means io us and Jro Jrhose, who, wifh indomiieble courage and sready spirilr, inspire us +0 worfh-while aims and high accomplishrnenis. Truly, There is a joy in being fogeiher, in working Jrogeiher, and in slrriving for perifeci coordinahon by way of sehc-government There is a simple, sJreaohfes+ ioy in feeling Jrhe sirengih of desire, The mighi of achievement - J --,,.,, -.w---- -- , ga 'gfgfn f Jrq. , -' 'I Q74-ts 1 IN I 15' ' :Q X' .Jn - s El , Y SL' i 'I' F fax- fwwwq 5 wH rg ixwmff Wijfyyff f ly ! lwfw M '?f3 Z0LjuH.pUQw. ex i .UWM 2--X I1 .EE Jlllfxymx WYXxQyj'!,?kW I1 qxifwvn f Q If 4 AV', ...Q 11951 N wx VZ .11 5, N -f ,L il Um dm- n,5,,,l,.n,. 5. 5-...ai---4 xl! NX XFX lvl Kxlffuxu ws'-711-L-1 A 5. F -L xi-,L v M , It 1' ' al 1 ..-- - ' ui . H 4 1 K : lXx QA iiymW5i55jlS5 '- T., ' 5-' ' - A+., -if-' E7 , , gfrT ifw . ?t'f:: y A 1lNy 1 L IL J Q... gk fl E 2 5 , . Q G' 1? ' 4 - 5 x1 7 T ,Q NP Qc TE . Q - 2 1i2i ff 221fff' eeLf rf- E Q '51 E In Q , f1f j5?9ffgf,f IF u F T 5 f 1 5375 bl 5 F '4 , E ig S f Es. A 'I -f Zi? 'I ' E Q AJ 5, ' - A f f ' Ez: E' 5' 15 .. ll A ' f .- , 1:1-0 X ' 'f- f ' -1 - g,'lk--L'-W' ' 'Q n i' ni..-L' I 'L A DM 1N1s'rRA'r1oN l Q 2 W 'W V ,.,5,N-gf!!- Q -w ,w5,,. .,, .,J 1': - , - ,.f.v sv,.5 v -'. , w ,g w fi'-M A 1, A . H ., , A . N , ,- x J X , f 1 H M w, ,, f ,aww H .1 1-' 1. U N 'J -'wi--fam., '. ' lf? a ' RMP p . , . , . . ,rf ' - V, , 1 V Y , swf? V Aw , , ' 1'4 fE 413 4- 3 wwf ff , ,,1 . f,, rf . , ,Q ,. f f ' 2 A '. 1' - 'r - . T1-, . 'u'rq.'1wv M , MI' -Il-4 Aff '-,ww wg F-'Wf'Qf5 'f ' ,WN X - A- M. , Jw my? M V ,1 W . -. A fr, fy ,-my M ' :, ,H 'Hz x 4. - . ' . , , , , , ,, . x 1 w f - , X , I ,ja . . 1 .1 'A 1 .V . .VE .em W V.-.-, f. f p wk- - w- X FACULTY MISS E. LACOSTE ,,,,,,.. MR. H. M. MONROE.. MR. L. H. STEPHENS ,,,. MR. F. E. CROFTS .......... . FALL . 1934 ...................Principal ..........Vice-Principal ..........Vice-Principal ..........Vice-Principal MISS E. P. HARRISON ....... ,,,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, S ecrelary MRS. R. MILLER .............. .......... A llendance Clerlc MISS LACOSTE Alexander. Miss H. J ...,...... ........ M usic Lighlner, Mrs. A ..,..,,,. Alger, Mr. I. G ................ ......... H islory Lillie, Mr. R .......,..,.. Angus, Miss M. S .......... ....... E rench Lorbeer, Mr. G. C ................. Badger, Miss F. B ........ usic Balensielier, Miss F .....,.... ..................,..... E nglish Barnes, Mr. L. B. .........,..........,. Chemislry, Physics Barrell, Miss K. C. .......................... Lalin, Spanish Bass, Mr. O. W ......... Economics, Economic Geog. Baxler, Miss M. A ....,,... General Science, Biology Beardsley, Miss L. J ...................... s.............. E nglish Buller, Miss L ..................,.................. Malherrialics Cleghorn, Mr. A. M. lHeadI .................... Hislory Croker, Mrs. F. M .......,................. Hislory, English Cur+s, Mr. J. G ........... ................. M alhemalics Dobson, Mr. R. J .........,......,.... Physiology, Biology Duffy, Miss A. G. lHeadI .........s.........s...... English Elskamp, Mr. L. M ....................... ......... B iology Flexsenhar, Capl. H. J ..........s..................s... ROTC Flynn, Miss D .........,,.,....,......... Physical Educalion Forbes, Mr. W. D .......... ....................s. C herT1iSlPy Forcade, Miss D .........s........... Gallagher, Mr. E. D Gerlough, Mr. L. S .....,. Gray, Miss F. H ......,... Graybiel, Mr. J. M ........ ,. Physical Educalion .........His'rory panish ............,...Chemislry Harris, Mr. E. H ......,............,... Physical Eclucalion Henderson, Mrs. E. W ..........ss..................... English Henrich, Mr. L. J ......................... Science, English Hermann, Miss F. L .................. Arl, Hislory of Arl Huni, Miss A. P ..............., ....................... H islory Jordan, Mrs. M. W. D ....... .......... E nglish Kas'l', Mr. G ....,...........,.. ........ ......... B i ology Kellogg, Miss E. E .......... ....,..........,...., P hysiology Kilchen, Mr. C. L ....... ....... P hysical Educalion Kuhnle, Mrs. V. T .......... .......,...,.....,,,,,,..,. E nglish Lee, Miss E. S ............ .......,. M alhemalics, Lalin Libby, Mr. B. B .......... .. ................Chemislry ....... .a.1.....L.. ,. .. Malchelle, Miss O. ............. . McCarIy, Mr. A. L. MR. STEPHENS ........Salesn'ianshi p ..........German ........HisIory .,.......... English lHeadI ......,,.,...,.. Malhmahcs McCord, Mr. O. H ............ McDonald, Mrs. M. E ............. Mensing, Miss B. M. Moore, Mr. S. W. ........ Morrin, Miss M. I. ...... . Morlon, Mr. E. W. ...... .Mal'h., Mech. Drawing ......................English Physical Educalion .....................Hislory ......................EngIish ..,..................Spanish Neff, Mr. B. H. ............. ......... P hysical Educalion Nepperl, Miss J. M. ...,... .........................,.. M usic Oliver, Mrs. M. M. ...... ......,,,,.,..,.......... S panish O'MalIey, Miss H. ....... .......... F reehand Drawing Osborn, Miss E. M. .... .............. L alin, English Osuna, Miss A. M. ..... . Peclcham, Miss G. C. Polland, Mr. S. K. ..... . Reslon, Miss G. I. ......... . Revoy, Miss H. M. ............. . Roberlson, Mr. A. J. M. ..,.. . Sanders, Mr. J. B. ........... . .......Spanish, French islory .........,DramaIics .........Erench ......,..French ...............Physics alhernalics Schou, Miss E. M. ...... .....................His'l'ory Schwarlz, Mr. A. .......... ......... C hernislry, Biology Library ScoH', Miss E. G. ...,... ..,,.,..,,.,,..,....,,,,, , Seawell. Mr. H. W. ....... ........................ D rawing Silberslein, Miss E. ................ Chernislry, German Smilh, Miss A. G. .......................... Hislory, French Smi'l'h, Mr. T. A. lHeadI ...... .................., P hysics Slaclc, Miss K. .............................................. English Tucker, Mr. F. B. lHeadl .................. Lafin, French Voyne, Mr. M. ....................... . Walsh, Mr. C. E. ...... Welch, Miss H. A. .... . ..PI'1ysicaI Educalion lish alhemalics Wnilalcer, Miss A. .,.,.,.....,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, German, Latin Williams. Mr. S. .......,.... Hisfory, French, Spanish Wilson, Miss J. .... ............ P hysical Educalion .-.Y.Y. . . . . . E., ,,. , I RAYMOND BRUNN Publicaiions Mdnager JACK BRUTON Secreiary A MOWAT Afhlefic Manager BRIAN H RVEY or x'Red Whi+e L. H. S. S. A. OFFICERS FRANK MORRIS Presidem' L. H. S. S. A. OFFICERS Ji':zi,i?::L f' fs X JM ,,. gf jf SHIELD AND L HE Scroll and L, un- der The leadership of Jack Cowden, presi- denT, and John Bryan, secre- Tary, raised The sTandards of valuable service To Lowell High School by working To- geTher conscienTiously and wiTh The desire To do Their uT- mosT. Each duTy was capably handled wiThouT The slighTesT hesiTaTion on The parT of any member. V Jack Cowden, chairman oT The Freshman RecepTion CommiTTee, pro- duced a worThy enTerTain- menT Tor The new-comers. Heading The PosTer CommiT- Tee was RoberT Sherman. John Bryan capably managed The AudiTorium CommiTTee and kepT order aT The rallies. BenneTT McGuire, chairman oT The ReTreshmenT CommiT- Tee, aided The Shield and L CommiTTee. Frank Morris supervised The work done aT Kezar STadium Tor The TooT- ball games. This commiTTee was largely responsible Tor The excellenT card sTunTs aT The Lowell-Galileo game. The en- Tire group helped The Hall Guards in keeping silence and order before school, and lcepT The spiriT oT The school on a high level by keeping order aT rallies. V The Scroll and L, Lowell's TradiTional Service SocieTy Tor boys, is an honor- ary group. Each member is worThy oT his posiTion, having high scholarship and a service record. SHIELD AND L OWELL l-ligh School can well be proud ol ils Service Sociely, lhe Shield and L, and ol Jane Yager, presidenl, who, wilh remarkable diligence, led lhe sociely lo higher slandards ol valuable service lo bolh slu- clenl body and lacully. This delerminalion lo uphold lhe slandarcls sel by predecessors did a greal deal in keeping lhe spiril ol lhe school on a high level, while lhe capa- bilily ol June Alloller, vice- presidenl, and Eleanor l-lamil- lon, secrelary, led lo lhe lul- lillmenl ol many dulies. Each member lully cooperaled in meeling lhese dulies wilhoul lhe leasl hesilalion, doing her ulmosl lo be ol unsurpassed and sleacly service. 8 Belly Kerns was chairman ol lhe Relreshmenl Commillee. Supervising lhe care ol losl arlicles was Belh Dahleen, chairman ol lhe Losl and Found Deparlmenl, while Killy Shaw was chairman ol lhe Library Service Commil- lee. The originalily ol lhe Freshman Receplion Com- millee lerminaled in an enler- lainmenl worlhy ol applause. Eleanor l-lamillon was chair- man ol lhe Lillle Sisler Cornmillee, while Jean Kelly and Jane Yager headed lhe Slunls and Rally Commillee. V Shield and L members are merilorious ol lheir high posi- lion. ll should be lhe aim ol every Lowell girl lo allain membership in lhis lradilional honor sociely. N . if fe wxiwh x BOYS FRESHMAN ROOM REPRESENTATWES HAROLD SAUNDERS Frou! Row Zersler LacosTe Prescoiv Mulholland ecc1:dRcw Srmfh Butle Mahoney Bovs som-iomoae Room Repnesemmruves F1on!Raw:Gun, Black, Grosman, Grave, Sobel, Lippnmn, Geballe. .F-ani. I Second Row: Morgan, Clalin, Nahman, Schaefer, FmldY50 ' Edelsiami Youddli' BOYS JUNlOR ROOM REPRESENTATIVES fron! Raw Redman Brigham Pods McPhee Second Row Elkins Garcia Berh-and BOYS' SENIOR ROOM REPFESENTATTVES Flon! Row: Ward, Chrisienscn, Benjamin, Fcihf., Berriman. Second RawEfMcGuire, Keene Vifq, Cahn, Gilkcy. BOYS' COUNCIL l-lE TacT ThaT Lowell l-ligh School has iusT compleTed one oT The mosT successTul Terms oT selT-governmenT is due in The main To The willingness To aid The sTuclenT body presidenT and The TaculTy, and The whole-hearTed cooperaTion oT The Boys' Council. v The Boys' Council consisTs oT a group OT approximaTely TorTy represenTaTives who have been elecTed by The various classes, one coming Trom each regisTry room in The school. The main duTy oT This organi- zaTion is To selecT The Two assisTanT yell leaders. William Carroll and ArThur Shearer were chosen This semesTer and have shown The council's choice To be a wise one. V Under The very capable leadership OT PresidenT l-larold Saunders and l:aculTy Advisor Charles F. Walsh The group has done much To aid The adminisTraTion and To pro- moTe The sale OT sTudenT body TiclceTs. IT is sincerely hoped ThaT in The TuTure equally successTul coun- cils will come To The Tore and lead The school To new and greaTer laurels. I4 GIRLS' COUNCIL ITT-I The unselTish eTTorTs OT PresidenT June ATTolTer and The indispuTabIe direcTion oT Miss LacosTe, TaculTy ad- visor, as an example, The Girls' Council, in conjunc- Tion wiTh The Boys' Council, has done an enviable service To The school by conducTing aTTairs of im- porTance wiTh a greaT degree OT success. Y, The abiliTy oT This group To promoTe The various school TuncTions such as The sale oT sTudenT-body cards, The sale OT TiclceTs To sporTs evenTs and To The vari- ous dramaTic perTormances, has gained The rep- resenTaTives an enviable repuTaTion. V Leaving no sTone unTurned in Their endeavor To carry on The TradiTionaI Lowell spiriT, The council has sup- porTed every school TuncTion wi+h a genuine en- Thusiasm ThaT is appreciaTed by The enTire sTudenT body. Their willingness To cooperaTe wiTh The TaculTy and To aid Their sTudenT-body presidenT as vigorously as The Boys' Council, has helped To provide a very successTul Term. I 5 GIRLS' JUNIOR ROOM REPRESENYATIVES :on ow: oc os, eam, irsc, arian, ear. F t R K In B H I1 P K II Second Row: Romanuv, Marshall, Allin, Whife, FinnerT GIRLS' SENIOR ROOM REPRESENTATIVES Fran! Row: Samuel, Zeller, Edwards, Af5oI5er, Whiiehead, B 'I' I Second Row: Cohn, McAdao, De Mariini. CLASSES OINED in bonds of lasiing friendship, uniled in youlhful lhoughls and deeds, siudenls find happiness as well as educalion in classes. School life lo lhem consisls of daily be+ween-lhe- period snacks in The caieleria, The resonanl clash oi bulky lockers being closed, a colorful foolball game . . . This feeling of happiness and camara- derie iorms a valuable slepping-slone To fulure social conlaclrs. I 1 1 1 Q M A. ,si HIGH SENIORS HE Class oT December i934 is graduaTing and The worlc oT Donald BuTler, presidenT, BeTTy Kerns, vice-presidenT, and BeTTy McNeil, secreTary, is compleTed. The class has con- TribuTed leaders To every acTiviTy. V Frank Mor- ris, Jean Kelly, RoberT Jacobs and Jack BurTon held sTudenT body oTTices. June ATTolTer was presi- deni' oT The Girls' Council and l-larold Saunders headed The Boys' Council. V Scroll and L mem- bers included AlTred Baer, William Brigham, John Bryan, Jaclc Cowden, Fred Drewes, William FuiiTa, Powell Humphrey, RoberT Jacobs, William MiT- chell, Frank Morris, RoberT Sherman, RoberT Walsh. Shield and L members were June ATTolTer, Eleanor l-lamilTon, Jean Kelly, BeTTy Kerns, Linda McNuTT, Barbara Merville, KiTTy Shaw, DoroThy Willcin, BeTTy Williamson, Jane Yager. V Reynold Cohn, Sam Silver, Adrian Scharlach, Leon Ben- iamin debaTed. 8 The sTage held Richard Crosby, George l-lagens, Jack Lipman, Adele SchwarTz and Marie Wallcer. V AcTive on The publicaTions were Reynold Cohn, Jane Jacobi, Richard Jones, Edgar Krieger, Adrian Scharlach, and KiTTy Shaw oT The Red and WhiTe, while The Lowell claimed June ATTolTer, Richard Glassman and Ted Tolclas. V Those who upheld Lowell's aThleTic presTige were AI Baer, Leon Benjamin, William Brigham, Jack BruTon, Don BuTler, Russell Clarke, Jack Cow- den, Jaclc Davis, Ed l-laas, Jaclc Lipman, Al Mal- niclc, Denny Moore, Franlc Morris, Jack Neuenberg, Harold Saunders, Perry SchoTT, Bob STabler, Diclc SuTTon, and l-larry Von Volkman. v Niels SchulTz was The R.O.T.C. major, and Jack Laughlin, Bernal Blaclc, l-lenry Kearney, Bill Brode, Owen McKeviTT, Adrian Scharlach, Louis Goldberg, and Francis Jacoby were oTficers. I 7 CLASS HISTORY ELLOW GraduaTes, Teachers, ParenTs and Friends: - As The class ValedicTorian musT be a propheT and gaze inTo The crysTal beyond The presenT, The class His- Torian musT reTlecT in The hour glass OT Time The high-lighT evenTs which shall Torm a parT OT our liTe memories. V lT was in The Spring Term OT I93I ThaT mosT OT The mem- bers OT our presenT graduaTing class were elevaTed Trom elemenTary school To high school. We were indeed dismayed by The ideals and pracTices OT secondary school liTe. Lowell honor sOcieTies and adminisTraTion leaders oTTicially welcomed us aT a Freshman RecepTion, a gala evenT ThaT leaves vivid and lingering memories. V The newness OT our enTrance inTo high school liTe had noT yeT vanished, when, in The Fall OT The year l93 I, we were TransTerred To Lowell's annex, The Denman School Building, because OT over- crowded school condiTions aT The main ediTice. lT was in This sTage OT our high school liTe ThaT a brieT disrupTiOn Occurred in our ranlcsp some members remained aT Denman unTil Their junior year, while oThers reTurned To The Lowell building as low sophomores. V Our sophomore year provided The developing sTage in our high school careers. ATTer a Two- year period as lower classmen, in The Spring OT l933, we emerged inTo The splendor OT The upper classmen's world. V Prior TO This Time we had been iniTiaTed only inTo Lowell's academic liTe, and Though, OT course, our high sTandard oT scholarship was noT only mainTained buT advanced, we were now inauguraTed inTo The realms OT Lowell's social and aThleTic worlds, in which many OT our represenTaTives gained prominence. v Now, like The Tlame OT a burning Tire spreading Trom The maTch, To The paper, To The wood, and evenTually To The coal, we had passed Trom Treshmen, To sophomores, TO iuniors, and suddenly were seniors. We endeavored To serve as examples Tor The resT OT The sTudenT body, while we were slowly buT surely approaching The Threshold OT graduaTion-a Turn- ing poinT in all our lives. v The hisTory OT our Tour-year Tenure aT Lowell has been analogous wiTh The growTh and developmenT OT our own UniTed STaTes during The same period. UNCERTAINTYI ThaT word expresses mOsT clearly The social, economical, and indusTrial condiTions in Our counTry during The hecTic years OT l93O and l93I when American exisTence was aT iTs lowesT ebb. The very ToundaTions OT our 6OvernmenT Trembled. CapiTalism, Communism, and Fascism, and oTher harsh phrases, new To The vocabulary OT The average American ciTizen, were direcTed Towards The naTion's capiTal. The American people Taced a serious crisis. V ln l932, a new man was placed in The PresidenT's chair in The WhiTe l-louse--a man brimming wiTh personaliTy, and possessing I 8 ThaT necessary TacTor in poIi+icaI IiTe, popular supporT. The people OT America gave Their TrusT and supporT TO Franklin Delano RooseveIT, oTTering cooperaTion, and expressing Their desire Tor The renewal oT American indusTry and business on a normal scale. Their hopes and beIieTs were noT misplaced. Under his program, policies, and personaIiTy, American business condiTions experienced a decided upTurn. The wheels oT American indusTry were once again Turningq The American people were once again conquering a depression! V Similarly, in The year I933, Lowell I-Iigh School Taced a crisis, aTTecTing each OT iTs sTudenTs. The Tirm hand OT NaTure had deaIT a Tragedy To The people OT SouThern CaIiTornia in The Torm OT a devasTaTing earThquake. Old, diIapidaTed school sTrucTures Tumbled and crashed as a resuIT OT The mighTy Temblor. The lives oT many school children, TuTure sTandard bearers oT Americanism, were endangered. Immi- diaTeIy, a bill was draTTed and passed by The STaTe IegislaTure, providing ThaT all school buildings in The sTaTe oT CaIiTornia musT pass a speciTied earThquake-prooT examinaTion. The old, red-brick building on Masonic and I-Iayes STreeT did noT pass The TesT. V Be- ginning in The Spring Term OT I934, Lowell one-haIT day sessions were held aT The Galileo I-Iigh School Building. The very paTh on which The TuTure OT Lowell Trod was shadowed by The eIemenT OT DOUBT! Was The pOwerTuI ciTadeI oT Lowell ideals and TradiTions To be smashed againsT The rocks? Were The enviable records made by Lowell represenTaTives in The Tields oT scholarship, organizaTion, and aThleTics To be aTTecTed? CERTAINLY NOT! IT was The duTy OT our senior class TO reorganize The STudenT Body TO meeT iTs new condiTions. I-Iowever, Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors alike all responded, and rallied around The Red and WhiTe banner. The crisis was SQUARELY meT and DECISIVELY conquered. Lowell ideals and TradiTions had survived an acid TesT! Y' The prime issue oT social imporTance in America Today is lndividualism vs. CoIIecTivism. IT is in The high schools OT America ThaT The youTh oT our counTry learn The True imporTance OT The consTanT relaTionship exisTing beTween ourselves and our Tellow ciTizens. Words cannoT express The Tull value oT The word- CO-OPERATION. IT is The key ThaT opens The door To success! V We, The graduaTing class OT December I934, Tully realize The imporTance OT a high school educaTion. We are aware OT The growing demands Tor leaders in The realms OT business, indusTry, and economics. We Teel graTeTuI To our preceding generaTion Tor granTing The school children oT Today such UNPARALLELED equipmenT Tor obTaining such a NECESSARY knowledge, preparing us Tor The ObsTacles we musT all Tace and hurdle in IiTe. We Teel proud ThaT we have been able To Take advanTage oT The widespread diTTusion OT knowledge in our world Today and Through iT we hope To answer as loyal, ThoughTTuI and courageous American ciTizens. The mosT sTupendous challenge OT our age-SOCIAL REFORM. R4 Eellow Classmenl . . . LeT us here resolve ThaT The educaTional oppor- TuniTies during These pasT Tour years shall noT have been wasTed! FREDERICK DREWES I-IisTorian, Class oT December I934 I9 J-D ,,, ,.i....L.4, .,,,.. .. -.. . ,, DOROTHY COHN JACK DA FREDERICK DREWES ,L A, LAURA FINO GRACE GAFFNEY WINSTON GILKEY 1 if JACK COWDEN I I I MARGARET owns MELVIN DUBINS ALICE FISCHER DENNIS GALLAGHER MILDRED GILL 3 U f.' K. JACK CRONIN MAJOR DAWSON I BFITY ELLIS PHYLLIS FOREMAN Q Lee enreusenes DANIEL GLANT2 3 g RICHARD CROSBY SAM DENBY JACK ENGLAND THOMAS FOX ROBERT C-SEE HARD GLASSMAN Q 4 II 5, I I JAME S CURRAN DENHARD Lounse Pecamen OLE6 FR EDM A HERBERI' GEINZER OPHIE' CSLAZKO ISI vs. I 55 5 I I I HHEN CUT LE R MAR Y DAMON mmerre oe vmss PAUL FECHTNER LORRAINE DOMB IDA FERTIG WILLIAM FUJIT JESSIE FUNG BILLIE MARIE GERDES RNICE GOLDBERG JULIE GETAS EVELYN GOLDENBERG -4- '1 WW' ffdivfms, EDWARD I-SAAB ,zfififk K- ' S - f, ' WILLIAM HURLEY RICHARD JONES JEAN KELLY ROY KIMBALL .,.- :Q ,. W? 1 kgs 'M I CSECPRGE HAGENS JAN E JACOB! EMMA JORDAN LUCILLE IGMP ROBERT KNOWLES BETH GRAFF ELEANOR HAMILTON we I A Niiw K . It' A P, ' JOSEPH JACOBS I V ., W . V. V -.gffgyfw ' ? 1- .ww MJ' xx f- M -fm:s?L new A1 Q- was I w I ,W 2 a ff' QE' , GEORGE HENRY KA fgfswzgw , N ,,,..,.f',, Lf? ' 2, GEORGE KERHULAS I img? ,515 A , LEONARD mms I A ..-, ' 1, x 1-I ',,, .fb as ' I ff A A A H :Z I5 Lffw, ww 1 If f sNagf 4 Ei A mvI, :M ACK GRAY MARGARET HANDY MARION JACQBS HENRY KAN BETTY KERNS EDGAR KRIEGER , K ,wk - , A I Y W A .ml Vykk kk 1 . f V. I I I ' I I I I I -I A A' 2 z g I f - Y AAVA , .,.V' V V RA GRANFIELD ALBERT HIGUERET ROBERT JACOBS GRACE KANZAKI FRANK KESELING STANLEY KRIHCER FRANCIS JACK KEANE SHIRLEY KESSLER JANICS KUSHNER GUAGLIDNONE POWELL HUMPHREY 'TL' KEARNEY JANE KIDDIE V Ks.. Thx f HAZEL LARSEN ' 1 A J JACK LAUGHLIN Y - ' ,A 4 1 'iii an eggs E wig 'W li S I8 -H S A S, ETHEL LEWN JAMES MacGRUER fffsxfs . H ' A Q , - Y -f A 55 E -- ' if K -f , ,E , 1 -an b af -iff: A X if X 'H' gg, f L f ' Q - Aw ki wi . .Qfi W ? - 'K 5 .-:..' A tUWARD Mc65NTY HAROLD MUELLER V if LOWHANEMOHR ' W i ff I Wm w. 'K if 3 F '35 ' i 1 'A A N , 4' in ,- at L 'X R . I -., MARJORIE LEVY JEANNIE MMGRUER 3 1 E . I t , M sf OWEN mdcevm ' DENNER MOORE ROBERT MSJNRO Q srums Lmoncms ii: 'ei '-f, fviligf ziaewwggigfiffg l t Y 7' .,:fY ' zlfasfgeggfiw .W .- 1 I? . I, . I Mes a, imp, LK , . -.f .Mu it N .. ,. - ,-:E , ,LV - ,v,' - Y ' w ,, '65 ' ' ' ' ii v V K rg A 1 z f sv S .. ' , ,, 11 , L A D- ,T V K -f ff ,'f-, ,, I 5 Q51-ia-351, 'Q H. K A V V:,,. .I .. k W, SLADYS LAYNE JACK LIPMAN L OLIVE MacDONALD M EQHYVAENEL 4 Loss MORE I NGRMAN MUNDELL , li 'Q idzz Q igi '1wI,E',fliiFimi5' ii FRANK uw DLAND ' JOAN LSPMAN KATHLEEN LINDA MCNUTT DORQTHY MQRRIS I KATSUC NAKAJIMA DCJROTHEA LEG EVELYN LAERMAN ALFRED MALNECK if l ,:k5fll,ifn5' , in 52312 r K L Km LZ x K vi? 2 Q dia - 1' ..::, f5i:' - wig 51 A ' FLORENCE MERKT JANET NELSON V FRANK Mmms Q f , . I E V ig All W f :av - ., K Vg . , 7 1 I , . ,, ' E ' 'L 5, ,,L. ' Mauom Lees i Norms Low Leo MANMNQ BARBARA Meavms A gow Mews JACK Nsueweeke A 2 ,, ' r M 7 V W , ff . ,f 'fjfffwb L,,',' f ff ' 'Q f ' ??w 'Q Q 2 ,, 4 1 i if 2 I Si A 1 ,, f . 'f A , ear , X igmgk -A fig- -' 'ft A , ,... L f Aww, , V A. ff-My ' ':'f ff w fm' -- A ., A , , , ' PANSY LEONG Musa Lowmesa Geox:-ss Musumoro I wrumm MNCHELL I MOWAT A A EIJI NINOMWA mv , UV 'P 1 0' - Q a 'U , Il X ng! gf A 'HH 0 B I 5 , 1 f , 5 X , A 11 A 41 A 5 ug' M 6 Mx vwfwww- 1. -- .,.. sages K , : 5,,Kwmi,5mmM M' 'v ROBERT STABLER DONALD VV?-MTE ,Yfiafgrv HELEN STAHLE Q , R, 5 lx 36 E - 9 is QA 5 New e ,N , 2 nz i W J, 5 mmf' 2 Q '1 S S: S5 1 W rf All Hi: Vx Ml ..k, U ., -1 'A J' .2 K I A , ,M . X ,. . - , - L BETTY SUTYGN K' MARDN TREMONT HARRY VQN VQLKMAN ANN WHITEHEAD Qfmwwm,.,wM1,w,.v'g:..Mm,,f Abrahm, Paul M. Ades, David Advienlo, Placido P. Allsman, Paul E. Andres, Alvin Baer, Alfred Beardsley, Richard K. Beallie, George William Beniamin, Leon Black, Bernal Lee Blalleis, Roberl M. Bollier, James Allison Brigham, William Brode, William R. Brown, Frank Marshall Brulon, Jack Bryan, John R. Buller, Donald Carolhers, Francis Barlon, Carler, Charles Basil Caswell, Roberl Chrisliansen, Arlhur M. Clarke, Russell Cohn, Reynold Henry Cowden, John Peler Cronin, John J. Crosby, Dick, Jr. Curran, James Joseph Davis, John Burlon Dawson, C. Maior Denby, Sam Drewes, Frederick J. Dubins, Melvin England, Jack Fechlner, Paul E. Fox, Thomas H., Jr. Alloller, June Emmons Ailken, Janel Alfrey, Helen Faye Arnall Rulh Elizabelh Baker, Luka Marguerille Barrell, Lillian Barusch, Gloria Bennell, Barbara Ena Berlicevich, Horlense M. Bingley, Jean N. Blankslein, Evelyn Marian Brocalo, Anne Buenger, Erica Burgdorf, Anneliese V19 Jr. Cameron, Aileen Calherine Capurro, Calherine Anloinelle Carlos, Dorolhea Aileen Carney, Irene Evelyn Cohn, Dorolhy Eva Culler, Helen Claire Damon, Mary Elizabelh Davis, Margarel Jane Denhard, Alice M. De Vries, Annelle Pielronella Domb, Lorraine Ellis, Kalheryn Elizabelh Fechlner, Louise Paula Ferlig, Ida Fino, Laura Joan Fischer, Alice Harrielle SENIOR ROSTER BOYS Fuiila, William Kiyoshi Gallagher, Dennis J. Gallenberger, Oleg Alexandrovich Gee, Roberl Geinzer, Herberl S. Gilkey, Winslon Odiard Glanlz, Daniel Glassman, Dick Goldslein, Alberl M., Jr. Goodman, Harold Gray, John Harvey, Jr. Haas, Edward Hagens, George Higuerisl, Alberl L. Hooley, James C. Humphrey, Powell G. Hurley, William J. Jacobs, Joseph Jacobs, Roberl L. Jacoby, Francis H. Johnson, Philip Jones, Richard Kalb, G. Henry Kan, Henry Phillip Keane, Jack Paul Kearney, Henry James, Jr. Kellmann, Benhard Paul Kerhulas, George Theodore Keseling, Frank G. C. Kimball, Roy H. ' Knowles, Roberl Kraus, Leonard H. Krieger, Edgar M. Krieger, Slanley Laughlin, Jack Marsh Lavdiolis, Slalhis Leake, Alberl Thomas GIRLS Foreman, Phyllis C. Fung, Jessie Gallney, Grace Gerdes, Billie Marie Gelas, Julie Demelra Gill, Mildred Marie Glazko, Sophie E. Goldberg, Bernice Jacqueline Goldenberg, Evelyn M. Granlield, Barbara M. Graff, Elsbelh Granl, Charlolle Hamillon, Eleanor Marie Handy, Margarel E. Jacobi, Jane Gerlrude Jacobs, Marian Anila Jordan, Emma M. Kanzaki, Grace Toshiko Kelly, Jean Kemp, Lucile Kerns, Belly Corinne Kessler, Shirley Aubrae Kiddie, Jane Kushner, Janis Mae Laereman, Evelyn Frances Larsen, Hazel Bernice Layne, Gladys Helen Lee, Dorolhea Ann Lee, Marion Leong, Pansy 26 Lees, Millon H., Jr. Lindland, Frank Jay Lipman, Jack M. Low, Norris Grayson Lowlher, Hugh S. MacGruer, James A. Malnick, Alfred Jackson Manning, Leo B. Malsumolo, George Masaru McGinly, Edward l. McKevill, Owen Milchell, William F. Moore, Deniver, Jr. Morris, Frank Marlin Morris, John Townsend Mowal, Roberl D. Mueller, Harold Frank Mundell, Norman Mandevill Munro, Roberl S. Nakaiima, Kalsuo A. Neuenberg, John Bechlel Ninomiya, Eiii O'Hair, Douglas R. Omura, Kalsuichi Orlandi, Dino G. Rainsford, Edward J. Reinerl, Alberl, Jr. Relalliclc, William Roilenslein, J. Maurice Rosenlhal, Adolph R. Rude, Morlon Rossi, Eugene Samler, Maurice L., Jr. Saunders, Harold F. Scharlach, Adrian Scholl, Perry John Edmund Lein, Elhel Zelda Levy, Mariorie Lipman, Joan MacGruer, Jeannie McDonald, Olive Louise McLaughlin, Kalhleen McNeil, Elizabelh Margarel McNull, Linda Meril, Florence Eunice Merville, Barbara Lorraine Mohr, Lowhana E. More, Lois Morris, Dorolhy S. Nelson, Janel Nonaka, Chiyo Norlon, Palricia Anne Oia, Eleanor Pallen, Jenella M. Pinkierl, Audrey Claire Powell, Jeanne B. Quinn, Palricia Grace Rhodes, Theda Mae Rossi, Mildred Evelyn Rolhenberg, Mindell E. Russell, Jane L. Samuel, Edna Marian Sandler, Sylvia J. Schmulian, Delpha E. Schwarlz, Adele S Schullz, Niels J. Schwab, Lewis E. Sharp, William Sherman, Roberl, Jr. Silver, Samuel Roberl Silverman, Henry Skov, Thomas Burl Smilh, Charles E. Smilh, Deming Sobey, Arlhur W. Soear, John Slabler, Roberl Dwighl Slalhos, Gus Slein, Sidney J. Slernsher, Mervin Slewarl, Oley G. Sl. Gaudens, Maurice Sugarman, Myron Sullon, Richard X. Thurm, Gerson Toklas, Teddy N. Tom, Peler K. Tsuiimolo Masao Vanderburg, John Bolam Von Volkman, Harry Wagslalf, Harold Walsh, Roberl Morgan Wansbury, Dixon Earl Welch, Jack While, Donald L. While, Roberl J. Widrin, Slanley Beniamin Williams, William A. Wolf, William H. Wolfshon, Roger H. L. Yamazaki, Toshi W. Scovel, Rulh Mary Serensky, Lillian B. Shaw, Calherine ' Shaw, Mary Alice Sherwin, Carol Loraine Sherwin, Lois Jean Sholes, Shirley Virginia Shouman, Berdine Marcella Siemens, Lucille Bliss Slahle, Helen J. Slein, Lucille Marie Slimmel, Adele Sullon, Belly Swarl, Lois Annelle Thornlon, Elizabelh E. Tremonl, Marion Kingdon Truhlar, Doris E. ' Turner, Bernice Sonia Valsangiacomo, Rulh Mary Van Heekeren, Virginia Walker, Marie Welsh, Cecelia Whilehead, Ann Wiener, Marian Wilkin, Dorolhy Belle Williamson, Elizabelh J. Yager, Jane Yelland, Phyllis Zimel, Goldyne Roberla UN il 9 Franky Morris was the barnyard golf champion. Jean Kelly shocked all of San Francisco by wearing red bicycle bloomers. Al Goldstein was the daring young man on the flying trapeze. Janet Nelson gave Bill Brigham the mittenf' George Hagens first appeared in San Francisco as the villain in 'The Drunkardf' Betty McNeil was first kissed under the mistletoe. Neils Schultz was the roughest of the Rough Riders. Ann Whitehead wore a bustle. Jack Keane introduced checkered suits. Jane Jacobi wrote ads for Pierce's Pretty Pink Pellets. Dick Sutton was best bouncer on the Bowery. Jane Yager was noted for her quilting bees. Jack Cowden was the first Hetch Hetchy engineer. June Affolter was sassiety editor of The Evening Gazette. Renny Cohn first walked out in his brown derby. The Sherwin Twins pedaled a bicycle built for two. Jack Lipman was the fisticuffs champ. Kay McLaughlin was Only a Bird in a Gilded Cage. Ade Scharlach held a first row seat every night at the Hippodrome with field glasses. Ruth Valsangacimo was better known as Diamond Lil. Don Butler played rugby for his deah Old Alma Mater. ,Lois Swart modeled for the Bon Ton. John Bryan sped up Market Street in his first horseless carriage fiive miles per hourj. Dorothy Cohn was second girl from the right in the Floradora Sextette. Fred Drewes was better known as Emperor J ones. Emma Jordan was head of the W. C. T. U. Jack Bruton was the most infamous of the race-track bookies. Betty Kearns went on her first hay ridef' Bud Scove was just a Hcity slickerf' Eleanor Hamilton was the belle of the Mechanics' Pavilion. Bill Mitchell was a stage-door Johnnie Cflowers and ally. Linda McNutt wore pink twelve-button shoes fwith tasselsj. Bob Jacobs appeared in all side shows as 'fThe Human Fish. Ruth Scovel wore nine petticoats. Al Baer doubled for Barnum's Tom Thumb. Olive McDonald did the loveliest ceramic work. Deming Smith was just another Man About Town. Lee Benjamin dined at all the free lunch counters. Ida Fertig played fiddle for the Tsar. Ed Haas fought for a good ive-cent cigar. Barbara Merville lay for days at a time on a horsehair sofa. Bill Retallick wore flowing ties and hair cut shoulder length. Jimmy MacGruer had a passion for using girls' pigtails for paint brushes. Bob Mowat rescued a bathing beauty weighted down by ten pounds of skirt. Dick Crosby was president of the Thespian Guild. Russell Clark wore red flannel underwear. Bill Fujita downed the Spoils System and boosted Civil Service. Harry Von Volkman was the apotheosis of a Mid-Victorian Dandy. Jack England never missed a Sunday prayer meeting. Harold Saunders was elected chairman of the Council for Morals Enforce- ment. 27 -..........-....i......k..,.-..i.,-,,,, ETL. BENNETT MCGUIRE . f ........-.-.-......... A K L, -Q is : T 'gn Q ll ' vE'Z5Y'3.i. 5 ,is . :s2'.i' .. 1' 3 ry R 1 sa JANICE CROPLEY WALTER KRENZ ram .........u.......,, FOUR amos Lok-mrres' Me' c-f ' 5 .M 5 LOW SENIORS RESIDENT BenneTT McGuire, Vice-Presi- denT Janice Cropley, and SecreTary WalTer Krenz can proudly look back aT Their successTul Term oT leadership oT The low senior class. V A carefully selecTed dance com- miTTee, Tor once, losT no sleep over iTs work as no dance was given This semesTer Tor Their class. V ReloresenTaTives in The Shield and Lwere Marian AraTa, BeTh Dahleen, June HarringTon, Barbara McAdoo, Adelle Merriman, Marie RigheTTi, and Lucille Rodoni, while in The Scroll and L were Raymond Brunn, Brian Harvey, WalTer Krenz, Tom Lee, BenneTT McGuire, and ArThur Shearer. V Aiding Brian Harvey, ediTor oT The Red and WhiTe, were Barbara McAdoo and RoberT Mendle and Raymond Brunn was PublicaTions Manager. Floyd WalTer, ediTor OT The Lowell, was assisTed by Dave SchulTz and Vera SilbersTein. V DebaTing claimed Mary CaToire, AlTred KaTchinski, Melvin Reder, and King Weisgerber. V ArThur Shearer was assisTanT yell leader and Jerome Ginsberg, TooTball manager. V On The sTage were Burris Bly, RoberT Camp, Erhel Clarkson, Helen Lauer, Barbara McAdoo, Adele Merriman, Suzanne Sheehan, ElizabeTh Singer, Florence Waller, Olive WhiTe, and lmgard WolT. V Caroline Orginos was presidenT of The Block L SocieTy and Peggy- lee Amberson headed The Girls' AThleTic Asso- ciaTion. V Gerald Dowd, STanley Evans, Jim Eahn, Leland Feldheym, SarganT Hearn, Jack Kessel, Bob King, Haskell Ludwig, BenneTT McGuire, Bob Miller, Gerard O'Connor, George Pedrio, Sand- Tord STadTTeld, Maurice ST. Gaudens, John STock, Ed Toll, King Weisgerber and Joe Williams were The Low Senior aThleTes. R. O. T. C. oTFicers were Bernard, Beasley, Bury, Clairveaux, HuTshing, KanTer, KupersTein, LowensTein, Lurmann, Mooy, Roach, Rowlands, Shearer, Ward, and Weiss. 28 HIGH TUNIORS l-IE l-ligh Juniors have iusT compleTed an excepTionally successTul Term under The mosT eTTicienT leadership oT William GoeTze. PresidenT William Goehe was assisTed by Lillian Reeves and William Carroll, vice- presidenT and secreTary, respecTively. The class was headed capably by These very eTTicienT OT- Ticers. V On The sTaTT oT The Lowell, school bi- weekly publicaTion, were Richard Bishop, Frank Eng, and Mabel WaTson. v Barbara Bovyer, Lillian Reeves and MargheuriTa SchwyTer were members oT The Shield and L. ln The Scroll and L were Richard BarThol, William 6oeTze, and Jaclc Read. William Carroll proved mosT successTul as assisTanT yell-leader. v ProminenT in dramaTics were JaneT BonT, Richard BarThol, William Carroll, Geraldine Dolan, KaTherine Solley. V Richard BarThol, Eugene BlumenThal, and William GoeTze were ouTsTanding on The DebaTing RosTrum. X4 Among Those high iuniors who Turned ouT Tor boys' aThleTics, mosT prominenT were Richard BarThol, Bernard de Bisschop, John Brigham, Vernon Dale, Ed l-larringTon, Chacl Reade, Jack Read, Joe Saunderson, l-larry Takahashi and Fred Wheeler. if AcTive in girls' sporTs were Marcia KunedT, Frances Weinberger and Shirley WhiTe. V The Class OT December I935 has idenTiTied iT- selT brillianTly in The minds oT iTs Tellow classes This Term. 29 LOW IUNIORS Y ELECTING as iTs class oTTicers Jack Schroeder, presidenT, Jean Zeller, vice- presidenT, and Mark Thall, secreTary, The Low Junior Class celebraTed iTs enTrance inTo school poliTics. This governing Trio worked will- ingly and wiTh a greaT deal OT enThusiasm, pro- ducing a very ioyous and inTeresTing Term, despiTe The absence oT The cusTomiary Low Junior Dance. V Troy FinnerTy was a member OT The Shield and L, while RoberT l-larris was associaTed wiTh The Scroll and L. V The Low Junior Class was repre- senTed in The Tield OT journalism by Jack Shroeder, who acTed as a sporTs' ediTor Tor The Lowell. Barbara Raaka and William BenioTT were members oT The Red and WhiTe sTaTT. V George Vidal, a member oT The concerT orchesTra, was also chosen second violin wiTh The Lowell sTring quarTeT. v AcTive members OT The DebaTing SocieTy were Carol Lipman and Philip Verlerger. V The lisT OT Low Junior girls in sporTs was enormous and showed The greaT enThusiasm ThaT was evidenced by all The Low Junior sTudenTs. The Tollowing were especially acTive: Marie Chevers in hockey, PaTTi l-larbough in riding, Georgina Mayer in swim- ming, Virginia ValenTine in golT, and NaTalie Zisser in Tennis. V The boys were also represenTed in sporTs by a large group, oT whom The Tollowing were very acTive: Chandler Ennes and Jack Skahan in baskeTball, RoberT Farrell and Kay Lyman in Tennis, Gordon FeisT in lighTweighT TooTball, and RoberT l-larris in Fall Track. Alexander High was a member oT The TooTball managerial sTaTT. 30 LOWER CLASSMEN OWELL has been very TorTunaTe in having many OT iTs lower classmen inTeresTed in school acTiviTies. Unable To organize Tormally inTo class governmenT, These younger sTudenTs have inTeresTed Themselves in pracTically every scholasTic or- ganizaTion oT which Lowell boasTs. V OT course, aThleTics draw a large number OT Them. Those who did excellenT work in lighTweighT Track were Baker, Bell, CorbeTT, Davis, Gopal, Grossman, Ida, JaTTe, Keller, Lapkin, Li, Mailloux, Malarin, Nikashema, Perigone, Remy, and Wiener. Those bringing honor To Lowell in soccer were Bessone, Bunberry, Chandler, Deal, DespoTakes, Fahn, Hall, T-loTTman, l-lowaTT, Krause, La Nicca, Lawrence, Long, Melger, Minkler, Norris, Owik, Parkinson, Samuels, and Williams. T-leaded by Feerick, Mangan, RooT, and STewarT, as members oT The TirsT sTring, The Treshmen and sophomores oT The I IO-pound baskeTball squad were S. Cohen, Elking, K. Kessel, MaT- suda, McGreevy, Menius, Miles, OngerTh, PrescoTT, Sclar, Silverman, Sullivan, and Thompson. BlackTield and Nessier did excepTional work on The T20-pound baskeTball squad.Those also serving on The squad were CaTe, Chandler, Cowden, Davis, l-liTchcock, P. Kimball, Orginos, Rame, Seyms, and Underwood. V Many oT The girls showed greaT promise in The various Types oT girls' sporTs. V A number oT The names oT sTudenTs in The lower classes appeared on The rolls oT The various clubs aT Lowell. V Several oT The sTudenTs showed greaT promise in The DebaTing SocieTy, and will ulTimaTely be leaders OT our champion Teams. R4 OThers are doing Tavorable work as scribes on The Lowell sTaTT. R4 The various classes oT The music deparTmenT also claim many oT The school's diminuTive classmen. RepresenTaTives oT The lower classes have given invaluable service To Lowell by serving on various commiTTees. v Claiming represenTaTion on The library sTaTT were TwenTy-Tour younger sTudenTs. Working on The bookroom sTaTT were Ann Marie Erikson, l-Tarold Keller, Gordon Mailloux, and Edward Zeisler. V Many oT The lower class sTudenTs received excellenT marks and worked hard as room represenTaTives. Some, because oT Their capable and eTTicienT work, are proving ThaT They are TuTure leaders oT our sTudenT body. Q4 During The TirsT monTh oT The Term, a recepTion was arranged Tor The new- comers by The Service SocieTies. ExcellenT enTerTainmenT, dancing, and reTreshmenTs were provided Tor The coming leaders OT our school. 2 I .. 4l... l.A ORGANIZATIONS Cl-IIEVING an unparalleled measure ol good forlune and grasping every valuable opporlunily are 'l'l'lOSG who follow llie ever- enclianling lrails of Jrlme various organizalions. Arcliilecls of Jrlieir forlunes, +l'iey gallier al will The prolils of specialized sludy-journalism, de- baling, dramalics, mililary lraining and various club and commillee aciivilies-all of Jrliem a ioundalion for beller cliaracler and leadership. RGANIZATIO . 1gVVVV.V4 IQ if A, Q Q . V.,m, fi, vffdmwrfu-. Q :.-5.: X f- -,lf me www-' f q V-ilmvf Vw, ,-V,5 Q , vV I 1 - V -V ., . - 'F' ' .' V ' , 'WN-fr '1 ' 1 if W f A Y ,lrvfV1 ' 5 l1L '1'Wv . '- .frvw My wr, 'dfah ?f h.VV! 1 X' ' wwf 'U1Wm V -M1 V: W' W 'F51-'Ns V I fw.fLxVw .' fx V, - -':'1f'f-ww '-V' Vw: H TP. , ag.-ca 'L 1mw.V.1 1VV ' 44, , 1. V - 'Ulu 'la .MQV VV WW . V V rV 2' , V 4'W VV 1 4 V Q Sfdfe'- rw vw,-.V VV.: 1-v xf 'V.p . 'VV fV K.. V. x1f'.:'Vf vf'fg ,W--Mf'f'f5Qf?1H uf VV' ,MW ' Pa V Q Vw VM-W VAV WM .wfp.f?f. , ,Vw V VFi 'f .m 1+5w 's1.V f ?.'? Www: -V :Vw V , ?'r24 V - 1 - A ' ' M42- B+-V:'x.'V'SfVf'ff' 5,511 'xxx mf- A ' mf f-1-Wm-VZVV WW .42-ffx-w ww MQQVVVMVA 1- V 1 ' 1' H 'WM' Q' ' - ' V Vw V fl-'wf ' f.'Va:f fW: L 15 'V -VH Q .QQ 'V s V . QV . 37 ,V-,Vg-y-Q-' LV, V Vt -V Q,-A QQ ni V ..i. - A 'I . jV,:j,',i ., ,fwu ,Q.g1,Vf -QV fw' , Q 22-wh 'f' t' - ' : V .51 ? i 'if ' 9 VVV, V V -T ,- '!V 1. I V '-H. , , 32325: . ,lam-2' .fif 'V ' 52' ,gg ,,V J: : Vi I LQQQ W 4535. 1 11 ,7531 Q 'vi - 17 V if - 12-2 ' Q: VV , V e, f. J' V ' ,QT .i v-3, .1-V ff 5: Q V 15:VsQ'. : 5 M :fa- J, 'Q - - M 'E ., ' .4 , A., we in V, ,,,-. 1 Q If p '12 ,gg . QU' fel-'M '- il- , .Qi ,Q V 5- ' . 11' ' 1 L 1 ,EV . ,M ., .E .V Q.,,Q V jx: 141. M 3- .'f Q, A! M :- ?'lf'. 11. 'IQ' Q me . . VV, Q V Qi: .123 1 - H V .J,..2' f -Q. Q 2 . A lmgj .Q , , -'Tr if' .' . ' QV ' V? 1 ' lmifh fir . iz,-A sg. .ry V 92' V- Va Q VV fn wal-355:55 5'-+V V ' ' 'K aw Jw V Q Qw' Q, A ,V -Q, 1 1- :,- Q.V- NQ '34, 7 4 VVV - wvgfiw 'EWTLQA Q My ' f ' VV if a'w:v5'4.-' ' is Q.,Qxii5 .... I 5 Q- ,gf ' . JV K: ' '14 L1 - . Q fl'x?'f gf 'fn S Q-.rg-K ' V ' 1- V: K, qw z, F5 'riff' X . ' -ff-zlif., V f V ' H- wx, 'V . f ' . L V .. X ' Aw 5' V T?-31 ,Vg V V , H 'TW Pg, f Q Q Q , 5.Q1VQ.'Q Qty 'QV .V.V. :QV , Q V Q ' X K .' , W A .ZVK ' 1 , . ,- ,,,'f ,,,i Q . I X 11 vi' . 2 ' 1 ' 4' V ,ft - f ,QV QV V, '-: Vu. V4.3 ' gm M. VV hw, VV, .Q VA Y, , . Q,- if 'fTT1 f V . , Vw V 32 1 A ,Q3.?'.V JI -V mf V Q 2 ' Q! VV' . uw f 1534 . QV I X vm 4 VV,. Vs ' nfs AX-ffisifk, - f Q V J 7:54 Q f ' ' VQV14' 1 4 ' 1 1' r:w ':.w 'V' A- - K: AV E , ,yy V Q , ,,. .f . 1 A V -an ,Q,.,,V,M V Q L kg. Q f:'1,ggf'y'.,',y:K., a Q35 V ,..V.,N -Q, . V . 4,-,,, ww., . 1 .4-fQi7mg,,,: f Q --V Q 'V Y - - ' VV .EQ W V 'g ' - ' 1 ' il .' YK K . . . . f V of -V A J p , H- 15 v.'y.VffVaf:g Q 1 Q . V. F, 'lf1if3V Y11 VV . - V f Q H V-,V 'VQ-fi5,Q, N ,Q , ' '- ,A jj, ,gQQf,Q -QQ VVVVQ, Va 1. V ww 'QV Ape.-.V V ' ' 'f ,V V mf, ,wr-' ', vi Q . V AT s1i f'u1L'-Vi1+L, J,V1 4 R 5w'51'V- kv .- - V, V VV V . - f . V 19: V 1 uf V : V 'A tr:- ww Q Wi. :',V.4v-,-1V.if,s- VfQV, ,QV,-mf'-if Vg.: .v-vsfgly 5 ' Q ' V ' ' n'fq, ,' ,,, -X V +: - .V f rr ' f. - Q, V ,Vg V ,,,. .Q Q Q ROOTING Y VIRTUE OT The Tine worlc OT Earll Shine and his Two able assisTanTs, William Carroll and ArThur Shearer, The Lowell sTudenT body has shown more pep and enThusiasm Than ever beTore. V AT The beginning OT The Term one could noT buT sense The growing spiriT OT inTense inTeresT in The approaching TOoTball season. ThaT spiriT prevailed while The Lowell TOoTball Team easily deTeaTed her early-season oppon- enTs. Suddenly a depression hiT The Team. Our ever-alerT yell leaders sensed This criTical siTuaTion and, during The rally Tor The Lowell-Galileo game, roused The sTudenT body To such a Teverish piTch ThaT The players' depleTed spiriTs were mOmenTarily bolsTered. On The day OT ThaT game Earll Shine made such an urgenT plea To The Lowell rOOTers Tor co- operaTion ThaT The laTTer suppOrTed Their Team wiTh unTeigned vehemence, and The con- Tidence ThaT was lacking was inserTed inTo The hearTs OT The Lowell players. TOO much crediT cannOT be given TO our Tine yell leaders, Tor iT was They who sTirred The rOOTers To acTiviTy, helping TO puT The necessary cOnTidence inTo The hearTs OT our gridiron gallanTs. V Our Two girl yell leaders, Mariory Beam and Dolly FalTOn, have demOnsTraTed Their abiliTy in leading yells aT The diverse school aTTairs, and have been a greaT asseT TO The Lowell sTudenT body. Y, This year has produced The regaining by Lowell OT The aThleTic supremacy in The San Francisco Bay area. This momenTous occasion has been brOughT abouT mainly by The wOnderTul cOOperaTion OT The Lowell sTudenTs. We sincerely hope ThaT The TradiTional Lowell spiriT and enThusiasm will be carried On in TorThcoming years. 33 RED AND WHITE l-lE publicaTion OT The TiTTy-TourTh issue OT The Red and WhiTe represenTs work by The members OT The enTire sTaTT, and, parTicu- larly, The individual eTTorTs OT Brian l-larvey, ediTor, who overcame The handicap and inexperience in boTh Technical and liTerary work by Tireless eTTorT, and The applicaTion OT remarkable execuTive abil- iTy. lvlrs. V. T. Kuhnle, ediTorial TaculTy advisor, conTribuTed The Tull beneTiT OT her rich knowledge OT This acTiviTy. Reynold Cohn, associaTe ediTor, and ediTorial sTaTT veTeran assisTed in The super- vision OT The copy. V The gravesT Task which Taced The sTaTT was The vacancy caused by The very Tragic and unTOrTunaTe deaTh OT Tom Franklin, who bore The responsibiliTy Tor mosT OT The Technical work. Richard Jones became Technical ediTor and was assisTed by Barbara lv1cAdoo and STanley Behr. Y, KiTTy Shaw, liTerary ediTor, led a capable sTaTT. Jane Jacobi and Adrian Scharlach, veTeran sTaTT members, wroTe many OT The imporTanT ar- Ticles, while Barbara Raaka and William BenioTT, new-comers, gave promise OT brillianT TuTure possi- biliTies. V Edgar Krieger, sporTs' ediTor, Took charge oT The aThleTic secTion and wroTe several sparkling TooTball arTicles. l-le was ably assisTed by RoberT lvlendle who covered minor sporTs, wriT- ing wiTh accuracy and enThusiasm. VRaymond Brunn, business manager, proved himself a com- peTenT member OT The sTaTT, arranging phOTograph appOinTmenTs and direcTing The disTribuTion OT The book. Ted Toklas, sTudenT phoTographer, cOnTrib- uTed several excellenT picTures. 8 The arT sTaTT well perTOrmed iTs very imporTanT Task oT illusTraTing The division pages. This hard-working uniT included William ReTallick, arT ediTorq Clarence DanTorTh, Barbara Gibbon, James lv1acGruer, Olive Mac- Donald, Doris lvlichels and Deming SmiTh. lviiss Herrmann served helpTully in her usual capaciTy as TaculTy arT direcTOr. 34 RED AND WHITE l-lE purpose oT The Red and WhiTe is To presenT colorTully and accuraTely a record oT The Term's acTiviTies. WiTh This ThoughT in mind The sTaTT logically selecTed School Life as The Theme. Besides developing This inTo a colorTul arT moTiT, which has been skilTully inTerpreTed by The arT sTaT-T, all The arTicles were wriTTen Trom This viewpoinT. Y, This volume was dedicaTed To lvlr. CroTTs, our principal, in recogniTion oT his many years oT sTerling service To Lowell and wiTh The expressive purpose oT voicing The sTaTT's graTiTude Tor his aid in The managemenT and publicaTion OT This and pasT ediTions. Yr The compleTion oT The book TesTiTies ThaT The sTaTT has overcome The diffi- culTies beseT by a shorT Term, half-day school sessions and a lack oT proper TaciliTies. These obsTacles have been surmounTed by a sTaTT willing To sacriTice Time and energy wiTh The realizaTion oT The responsibiliTy incumbenT upon Them. The morale oT The sTaTT was high, represenTing The willingness To cooperaTe, The abiliTy To work, and The accom- plishmenT oT each single Task wiTh special care. CompeTenT supervision has blended These gualiTies inTo a well-TuncTioning organizaTion sTriving Toward a single goal wiTh a maxi- mum oT eTTiciency and perTecTon. v The general arrangemenT oT The Red and WhiTe has noT been radically changed. lTs Torm seems To have reached a sTaTe OT crysTallizaTion, in which The aTTenTion given each acTiviTy has aTTained a Tair proporTion. New page layouTs and supplemenTary TeaTures were added, lending color To The ediTion. V GraT- iTude is TelT Toward all Those who so generously assisTed in The publicaTion. They are Mr. E. E. CroTTs, who underTook The responsibiliTy Tor The signing oT The conTracTsq Miss E. LacosTe and lvlr. L. l-l. STephens Tor Their willing counsel: Mr. J. G. CurTs and Mr. E. B. Tucker who supervised sales and disTribuTion and managed The accounTs7 Miss E. Harri- son who gave her services in The oTTice: Mr. l-l. P. Fisher and Mr. J. l-l. DougherTy oT The Fisher PhoTograph STudio7 Mr. KenneTh Elder and Mr. Raymond PeTerson oT The W. J. Mann Engraving Company: Mr. John O'Neil and Mr. Charles Prelsnick oT The l-l. S. Crocker Co., lnc., prinTers. We regreT ThaT we have noT The space here To menTion all oThers who gave us valuable assisTance. 35 'xl LOWELL VETERAN slafi was responsible for Jrhe producing of superior edirions of The Lowell. Floyd Waller, one of l'he mosl' capable edilors The Lowell has ever had, had as his chief aids Associaie Edilor June Afioller, As- sis'ran+ Ediror Richard Bishop, and Sporlrs' Ediror Diclc Glassman. V The ol'her eflicienl edilors ol: his slalzl were Phyllis Foreman, PaH'y de Roulf, Vera Silberslein, and Dave Schulz. V Nalhan Cohn occupied 'rhe posl of Circulalion Manager while Ted Tolclas adminislered The clulies ol slall pholographer. V An eflicienl corps of reporlers, headed by slar reporlers Frank Eng and Mabel Walson, conlribured largely lo Jrhe success of The bi-monlhly. The reporrers were Birdie Afrergood, Donald Anlior, Viclor Bonliilio, Tom Caldwell, Eleanor Fenman, Flora Harshaw, Roberl l-lerman, Ellen l-luggard, l-'larolcl Klang, and Forresl Wil- son. V Special wrirers, conlrilouling many ex- cellenl' arlicles, were Edward l-lurshing, Douglas lv1acMullen, Slanley Neyharl, and Jack Shroeder. V Beslowing Jrheir services as lypisls were Befh McCrone and Doris Douglas. V The oursranding lealures of The paper were lhe boy and girl sporl arficles, which were wri++en by a compe+en+ srafi headed by Diclc Glassman and Vera Silbersleing The Klub Korner, wrillen by Jrhe brillianl pen of Phyllis Foreman: and rhe Lowell Day By Day column, wrillen by June Alloller. V The edilorials would be a credif 'ro any newspaper. V Ted Tolclas' pholography wem' a greal way 'ro help in The pro- duc'rion of Jrhe inleresling copies of The Lowell 'rhis lerm. V Allhough many of +he principal edi- 'rors and special collaborarors are graclualing, several will remain lo head Jrhe slafl nexl lerm. 36 LOWELL NSPIRED by The inTense personal inTeresT OT EdiTOr Floyd WalTer, The Lowell was produced wiTh a large number OT excellenT TeaTures. School liTe was clearly and deTiniTely TreaTed by a sTaTT OT hard-working iournalisTs. The ToOTball games in which Lowell was enTered, were parTicularly well wriTTen. They conveyed To The reader in an inTeresTing manner, every minuTe deTail OT The games. V The paper main- Tained iTs high record OT pasT years, alThOugh working under overwhelming diTTiculTies owing To our change OT envirOnmenT. For The Third successive Term The publicaTiOn was released Tinancially unaided by any Type OT adverTisemenT. V WiThouT The excellenT guidance OT Miss Osborn who Tilled The posT OT TaculTy advisor, The publicaTiOn OT The Lowell would have been an impOssibiliTy. l-ler unbiased and eTFicienT prOOT reading OT The various arTicles and columns provided a sTeady TOundaTion Tor The clever wriT- ings OT The various ediTors and reporTers. Because OT her invaluable assisTance, she has gained The respecT and admiraTiOn OT The enTire Lowell sTaTT. V EdiTOr Floyd WalTer, Through his excellenT ediTorials, was an inesTimable TacTOr in The school liTe OT The maioriTy OT our sTudenTs. Probably his wriTing had as greaT an influence upon The school spiriT OT The average pupil as The combined power OT our eTTicienT group OT sTudenT OTTicers. V The Tour-page sheeT, when produced, TeaTured very Tew columns. EdiTor-in-ChieT WalTer believed ThaT TOO many columns lessened The readers' inTeresT in a newspaper. l-le believed ThaT a Tew excepTiOnal arTicles are Tenfold beTTer Than a large number OT mediocre ones. IT is To be nOTed ThaT The Tew columns ThaT were pub- lished were perhaps The mosT inTeresTing The Lowell has ever inTroduced in several years. To balance The space leTT, because OT The laclc OT columns, The sTaTF released a number OT good arTicles On currenT school Topics. V The Lowell is one OT The besT mediums Tor conveying in prinT, The ideas OT The sTudenTs. The various arTicles and columns, all wriTTen by high-school sTudenTs, conTain Their views on school subiecTs. 37 DEBATING LIMAXING a mosT brillianT year, The Lowell High School DebaTing SocieTy was Tormally presenTed wiTh a plaque by The San Francisco DebaTing League. The plaque will remain permanenTly in Lowell's possession. lT was awarded To our school because we have won more league championships Than any oTher high school in The lasT Twelve years. OT The Twelve years championship debaTes which have been held we have won seven years, losT Two years, and Tied Three years. In This way our debaTing socieTy has won more championships Than all of The oTher high schools in This ciTy puT TogeTher. Having enTered 82 individual league conTesTs, we have won 72. This is indeed a record OT which The Lowell High School DebaTing SocieTy may be inTensely proud. The League debaTes OT This Term were quiTe successful. Held on November I6, our school was repre- senTed by Reynold Cohn, Melvin Reder, Adrian Scharlach, and Sam Silver. Reynolcl Cohn and Adrian Scharlach debaTed ThaT There should be Tederal aid in educaTion againsT Balboa High School. Melvin Recler and.Sam Silver debaTed The negaTive oT The same subiecT againsT Con- TinuaTion High School. 8 Because OT The excellenT work oT These Tour sTudenTs Lowell's name re- mained as The leader of San Francisco High School debaTing. Lowell, as The leader OT Torensic conTesTs in San Francisco high schools, has seen many oT iTs championship debaTers malce good in CaliTornia and STanTord oraTorical socieTies. The debaTing coach oT The UniversiTy oT Califor- nia, himself, was a member oT one oT Lowell's championship Teams. 38 DEBATING ORKING under The dynamic leadership oT PresidenT AlTred KaTschinski and The paTienT coaching oT Mr. George Lorbeer, The Lowell High School DebaTing SocieTy was enTered in a series oT very inTeresTing and educaTional debaTes. V Vice-PresidenT Adrian Scharlach and SecreTary Melvin Reder headed PresidenT KaTschinslci's sTaTT oT TwenTy-Tive debaTers. ConTesTs were noT only held againsT The high schools oT San Francisco and neighboring Towns, buT also againsT The Freshmen oT six neighboring colleges. V The Freshmen OT The UniversiTy oT CaliTornia were meT by a Team composed oT Reynold Cohn, Adrian Scharlach, and Sam Silver. The cjuesTion was Resolved: ThaT The Epic Plan be adopTed in California. V A Team, consisTing oT Richard BarThol, AlTred KaTschinslci, and Melvin Reder, debaTed The STanTord Fresh- men. The adapTion oT healTh insurance was used as a subjecT. V ln The U. S. F. conTesT, Lowell enTered Phillip Verleger, Harry Margolis, and MarTin Field. The cjuesTion was Resolved: ThaT judges should be appoinTed insTead oT elecTed. V Those chosen To debaTe upon Naval PariTy Tor Japan, againsT STaTe Teachers' College, were Leon Benjamin, Eugene BlumenThal, Lucille Simmons, and King Weisgerber. V Our newesT conTesTanTs, Golden C-3aTe Junior College, were debaTed by Ann BercoviTch and Wil- liam GoeTze. The quesTion was Resolved: ThaT CapiTalism has Failed. V AnoTher conTesT was againsT San MaTeo Junior College wiTh Marjorie Cohn, and NaThan Cohn represenTing Lowell. V DebaTing againsT ST. lgnaTius High School were Lipman, Gold- enraTh, and Jones. Sequoia High School oT Redwood CiTy was debaTed by M. Cohn, Loucks, Lees, and Wilner. Lowell held an inTeresTing debaTe againsT ModesTo High School on The Townsend AcT. DebaTing were Benjamin, KaTschinslci, Margolis, and Ver- leger. V This Term, Lowell enTered Two excellenT spealcers in The All-CiTy individual speaking conTesT. The Two oraTors were Ann WhiTehead and Maurice RoiTensTein. Ann WhiTehead disTinguished Lowell by being awarded TirsT place, while Maurice RoiTen- sTein received honorable menTion. This is indeed a superior display oT excepTional speeches and oT oraTorical abiliTy: The speakers being a crediT To The Lowell High School DebaTing SocieTy. 39 CLUBS HE graduaTion OT many oT lasT Term's club members leT+ The ranlcs oT many oT The clubs quiTe depleTed. BUT, Through The eTTorTs oT The hard-worlcing presidenTs, many new recruiTs were discovered To Take The places oT The vacancies, so ThaT all The clubs were able To loolc baclc upon Their records wiTh a greaT deal oT pride because oT Their successTul work ThaT They compleTed This Term. The Chess Club scheduled maTches wiTh several high schools, while The Boys' Riding Club enjoyed early morning rides every weelc. The Psychology Club was TorTunaTe enough To have several disTinguished spealcers address Them aT iTs gaTherings. The NaTional RiTle AssociaTion Tired shoTs Tor a naTional compeTiTion. The WriTers' Club ediTed an inTeresTing magazine enTiTled Ad AsTra. Several oT The clubs held dances and special ouTings, while many members oT The Radio Club had separaTe seTs oT Their own and locaTed Toreign sTaTions. Bac'l'eriology Club PresidenT Bernal Blaclc Boys' Riding Club PresidenT Howard Moser SecreTa ry Charles GeroTTe Camera Club PresidenT Theodore Tolclas SecreTary James lvlacGruer Chess Club PresidenT Alan Philip Vice-PresidenT Leonard McKee SecreTary Edward Zeisler DramaTics Club PresidenT Barbara lvlcfkdoo SecreTary Florence Waller 40 CLUBS Nalional Rifle Associa+ion Presideni Wendell Beasley Secreiary Owen McKevi+Jr Treasurer Jaclc Laughlin Officers' and Sergeanls' Club Presideni' Niels Schuliz Secreiary Jack Laughlin Pacific Relalions Club Presidenl Roloeri Selig Secrelary Mrs. A. McLaughlin Psychology Club Presiden+ Sam Silver Vice-Presidenl Belly Williamson Secreiary Barbara Ivlerville Radio Club Presideni Morion Rude Secrelary Powell Humphrey Regis Senac llzencingl Club No officers. Saber Club Presidenl Bernal Black Vice-Presideni Niels Schuliz Secreiary Edward l-luishing Wriiers' Club Presidenl Vivian Facior Secreiary Mildred Purser Edilors of Ad Asiran: Janel Aiilcen, Sianley Neyhari. 4 I V PVAY- V i'f E. W E E ' E +' 5 Q' EE., Q , A - - -. f ,E is ' 5 ffwsf lf 5 V1 S .Ei l 1 sss E f s hb f f ' E 1 - LW.L,'. if 1, J . ,k 5 , ,ff W F . .: -:fs 'uf 1 1 xv i he ff A f '- A SERVICE COMMITTEES LIBRARY SYAFF FwnrnovfR0dw.1:mNlm,B5rt1.nd. s.nvs.s,fq,Mwsm.n, cmv, sm, Am., wsu, xmex, Amsx, Henri U., man. mm. Second Row: Denziqar. Kahn, Huffman, Rhine. Cohn, MaiCILr:c1g1,:cnL:avs:i1Krnuse, MacDonald, Jack, Gilbnr:Pothlmy, Wood, mn. . A ., . . 1a.i,.41z0-fm,...,.,.v.1.a.f,mn1Fw-.ml,u,Sf..w.,v.1coc.p.,.,a..u.,,o'avsu,o.,4e,Mzng.f.Kingm,MEm,nfom.,u..4.uwu-K., COmI'T1Il'l'GeS have FJFOV- do-f.fv,S0cwav-1. Granl ifvnrrifx l N, E 1 .L ,N fn, g Q ' eol an invaluable essel and I hw: 5.3.3 ,, ,-an U ' . and ' Q necesslly In Jrhe school life of .A h . Lowell. Scrupulous care was exerlecl on 'zf' J, N lhe parl of every member +0 give The g .. ' sluclenls Jrhe be-sl' possible service and 1 f Q 'ff i Q 'F . . ' '1L , ,r g Jrhe exceedingly hugh slranclards show , f -1 J . Ne' xy :T ' A4 .. 4i - . lhe resulls of lhelr enclorlrs. sueme AND POSTER commmeis I 'fha QLzz:5i?:.?'a':gmz,5:':- g S23-' H4-f P-we 1 OFFlCE FORCE Fran! rem ofglm, Row, mehr., Mgmn, Man mffam, Nelson, eoae, mu. Snead new Finnerfy. Haas, emma., Dealing, sm., Remy. AWARDS commxrrss an szmhop, eugseax Lee 1 ,Lp ! E l ll aernssz-WENT commffee mmf RW: Hmenvon my Kem vaw, s-:md nw swam on.-den, ss-.H-mn, ATTENDANCE OFFICE Fmnt Row: Hamilion, McNuN, Kaplan, Birklfmd, Finiqywns Mn. Mllms,Hacrmciv-r,B-mwn, Km-new cmy,s.,f. Second Row: Gown, Salley, Davis, C.1imrn.Ge1dux, Redfam, Dolan Sudden, Goodman. LOST AN D FOU N D Fran! Row: Lum, Vhlkin, Grail Second Row: Robamon, Jacobsen. Dahlwn. IOOKROOM COMMITTEE rm.: new efecnm. emqgsn, Mr. Hem-ich, cM+.9n.u. smna new K.u.,4 as.mx.m, mznm R. O. T. C. HE high poinT OT This Term, as viewed by The Lowell R. O. T. C., was The issuing OT new uniTorms To The cadeTs. These garmenTs, made Trom a heavy serge maTerial, will be worn by The uniT upon Their reTurn To Lowell nexT Term. V The baTTalion cOnsisTed OT approximaTely Two hundred cadeTs. This included abouT sixTy recruiTs,' The largesT number OT new men in The uniT aT a single Time Tor several years. v Orders Tor The weelcly Thursday parade were read To The cadeTs on Wednes- day. This pracTice remedied The conTusion OT Torming The baTTalior1 inTo companies v The Lowell baTTalion enTered The COmmandanT's Cup CompeTiTion, held in The Pre- sidio oT San Francisco, and accrediTed Themselves admirably. The baTTalion puT on boTh an excellenT parade and review. The cadeTs proved nOT only a crediT To CapTain Flexsenhar buT also an honor To The sTudenT body ThaT sponsors Them. Y, The Saber Club and OTTicers' and SergeanTs' Club, sponsored by our R.O.T.C., were excellenT inTluences in The Torwarding OT The individual cadeTs. These organizaTions held many inTeresTing meeTings. This Term, again, many members OT our crack corps OT men were members OT The NaTional RiTle AssociaTion. This uniT was esTablished in The UniTed STaTes To aid in The promoTion OT beTTer marlcsmanship among sTudenTs. Many OT The various high school R. O. T. C.'s in This STaTe have joined The associaTiOr1. A large number OT medals, donaTed by This organizaTiOn, have been won by members OT our baTTalion. V Because OT changes in session, due To our using OT Galileo's parade grounds, The biennial VisiTOr's Day was unable To be held. l-lowever, all parenTs who wished To wiTness The excellenT' acTiviTies OT our R. O. T. C. were cordially inviTed To aTTend any OT The Thursday morning parades, in which our baTTaliOn marched as a uniT. As There were no class dances allowed in The curriculum This Term, The R. O. T. C. was also unable To hold iTs dance. V All in all, our Lowell baTTalion compleTed a very successTul Term, and we may well be proud OT iTs Tine work. V The R. O. T. C. exTends a greaT many advanTages To The average sTudenT. The Training noT only consisTs OT The sTudy OT miliTary Theory and TacTics, buT also oTTers a ToundaTiOn Toward The building OT good ciTizenship among The cadeTs. Courses in poliTical educaTiOn and marlcsmanship also come under The curriculum OT our baTTalion. 43 T Mnuoa scnuuz ,, nw. an-fwnun of-vi, vcmv-mu A571 AO BLACK 15 J. CAPT. smog CAPT. KEARNEY in LT. Mcicsvirr T LT. ROBACK lst LT. SHEARER Is? LT. WARD ar--V f ...um,:ww,fumaanevfs3,mv-smwewssfs:auzw,imumwawwm R. O. T. C. OFFICERS HE group oT cadeTs Thar has served The Lowell High School R. O. T. C. as oTTicers has consisTed largely oT sTudenTs recognized Tor being inTelligenT, and eTTicienT. This Term's baTTalion was com- manded by Major Niels SchulTz. l-le was ably supporTed by a sTaTT composed OT Ad- iuTanT Jaclq Laughlin and AssisTanT AdiuTanT Bernal Blaclc. Y, The capTains were greaTly responsible Tor The increase oT morale This Term. CapTain Owen McKeviTT, command- ing The TirsT period company, was assisTed by lsT LieuTenanT Ward and 2nd LieuTenanT Lurmann. The leader oT The 2nd period was CapTain l-lenry Kearney. l-lis lieuTenanTs were Louis Goldberg, Wendell Beasley, and l-lenry Ivlooy. Because oT a laclc OT capTains, 3rd period had as iTs commander, IST Lieu- TenanT Edward l-luTshing. CapTain OT The Norman LowensTein and Bill Rowlands as- sisTed him. The commander OT The 5Th period, CapTain Adrian Scharlach, was aided by lsT LieuTenanT MarTin Robaclc, lsT LieuTenanT ArThur Shearer, and 2nd Lieu- TenanT Edward l-luTschings. CapTain OT The 6Th period was Bill Brode. 2nd LieuTenanTs John Clairveaux, Russell KanTer, AlberT KupersTein, and Joe Roach, were his assisT- anTs. V The small yeT compacT band ThaT provided The excellenT music Tor The uniT was compeTenTly led by CapTain Bernard Bernard and lsT LieuTenanT Julian Weiss. This Term's division oT oTTicers, because oT sTerling characTer and sacriTices made Tor The welTare OT Their uniT, were in a large measure responsible Tor The excellenT im- provemenT OT The Lowell R. 0. T. C. BaT- Talion over lasT Term. These oTFicers have proven Themselves worThy To sTand wiTh The besT ThaT CapTain Flexanhar has ever worked wiTh aT Lowell. W Capt.Fiexsenhar , R. O. T. C. NCE again, fhe Lowell l-ligh School R.O.T.C. was under fhe unselfish and excel- lenf guidance of Capfain Flexsenhar. l-le was efficienfly aided by Capfain Sfarr and Capfain Mann of fhe Unifed Sfafes Army. 8 Our baffalion accredifed ifself remarkably fhis ferm and is indeed a credif fo 'rhe Lowell Sfudenf Body. V Cap- fain Flexsenhar, 'rhrough unbiased and capable leadership, has organized whaf is gener- ally recognized as a superior R.O.T.C. l-le has unselfishly sacrificed a greaf amounf of fime in pursuif of his one ideal, fhe advancemenf of our cadefs. l-lis goal has been par- fially affained. Many of our former cadef officers have graduafed from Wesf Poinf and Annapolis. Also, more graduafes from Lowell are officers of fhe Organized Reserve 'rhan from any ofher high school in fhis Sfafe. V Through his effecfive efforfs he has infroduced many varied milifary acfivifies fo 'rhe Lowell baffalion. The semi-annual officers' banquef, which he firsf esfablished, has become formally adopfed as a neces- sary assef by 'rhe ofher high schools of fhis cify. Lowell's officers' banquef is always held during fhe lasf monfh of fhe school semesfer. Anofher of his plans which has gained recognifion by ofher preparafory schools is fhe formafion of fencing clubs. These sociefies are used as a medium fo insfrucf cadefs in fhe ancienf lore of fencing. Anofher idea, springing from fhe mind of Capfain Flexsenhar, was fhe applicafion of a sand-fable in fhe insfrucfion of 'rhe cadefs in scoufing and map-reading. This plan is also emulafed by fhe ofher high schools and is being widely used. QA? sli- W A A' J' l I if Q A if f k Q 45 MUSIC AND DRAMA I-IYTI-IM! The very word irsehc suggesis ex- ceeding beaury-a grace of movement iranscendeni harmony. Wiihin The fasci- naring realms of music and drama, rhyihm Threads iis way . . . Voices, ioined in perfeci unison: dancers, each srepping a rhyrhmic grace: music. an awe-inspiring symphony of liliing melody-all lasring Thoughis in recollecrions of school life! USIC AND DRAM DOUBLE QUARTETS lTl-l Miss J. M. NepperT and Miss F. B. Badger ably direcTing Them, The Boys' and Girls' Double Quar- TeTs, respecTively, gained greaT success This Term Through The excellence oT Their singing aT many oT The larger school meeTings. These Two groups have always played an im- porTanT parT in The musical curriculum oT The school and are con- Tinuing To do so wiTh increasing enThusiasm. V The Girls' Double QuarTeT was composed oT Roselle ReTalliclc, Jane KnighT, TirsT sopranosg Mary MaTTeoni, Lucille Kemp, second sopranos: Jenella PaTTen, DoroThy Morris, TirsT alTosq Peggylee Amberson, Annabelle Tyler, second alTos. V Included in The Boys' Double QuarTeT were l3enneTT McGuire, Jack Welch, TirsT Tenorsg Mel- vin Gilroy, Fred KriedT, second Tenorsg Eugene BlumenThal, Chad Reade, bariTonesg Sidney Fridlcin, James Preovolis, bassos. V The Boys' Double QuarTeT added To The enioymenT Tound by all aT The Fall VarieTies OT T934. The Girls' Double QuarTeT sang aT The evening meeTing OT The ParenT-Teachers' AssociaTion. BoTh groups parTicipaTed in and were insTrumenTal in The success oT The CommencemenT Exercises. 47 wr' ., 'slay GIRLS' GLEE Flon! Row: MacDonald, Dahleen, Kemp, Bailey, Finnerfv, Morris, Miss Badger, Pallwlny, Knlghl. Heller, Sclvmulian, Neville Second Row: Slnouman, Williamson, Reielliclc, Erickson, Zisser. Jordan, Bearwald. Amberscan, Tylar, Gill, Ealon, Curry., fizird Row: Studebaker, Trulvlar, Glazlro, Eisner, Erickson, Wildberger, Ambrose. Mefloni, Essex, Viclrery, Valsanglacomc BOYS' GLEE Front Row: Shearer, Pellet McQulre, Pres., Miss Nepperi, Krledf, Green, Blurnenlhal. Second Pow: Murray, Frlcllrin, Welch, Maxwell, Preovolls, Reade, Youdall, lrvine. DANCE Flon! Row: Bernard, Hruby, Preovolis, Uriclc. Aslrelle, Goss, Pres, ' Second Row: Bas-usd1,Benjamin, Ginsberg. 375 DOROTHY MORRIS , BENNETT Mc6UlRE LAWRENCE GOS5 CONCERT ORCHESTRA Frog! Row: Ferfig, Pres., Uriclr, Foreman, Kaplan, Marlin, Miss Alexander, Vidal, Wesfberg, Wolf. Second Row: Nad, Underwood, Weallwsrly, Ginsberg, Danby, Freclmeville, Goss, George, Hansen, Bulion. W ., , , ,,,,,,..W ,,,,,,,,,i x 'iam .....:-7.,7w5t?5:.7w ., m . , 3 K 5 -,H ,W .. MMW-W,wv,-.jwyfbf l,.., f - r- QQ, -ffk , W L, ,.., ,. . . ,. f r - - 0 I ' ' 52 x f , mm gs a 1, J,,L,, lf 'x IDA FERTIG A GLEE CLUBS AVING become adiusTed To The new surroundings and a more resTricTed Tield, The Boys' and Girls' Advanced Glee Clubs conTribuTed on many noTable occa- sions To The success oT The Term. V The Boys' Glee Club was headed This Term by BenneTT McGuire. l-le was assisTed by Fred KriedT and Melvin Gilroy as vice-presidenT and secreTary. James Preovolis and Chad Reade were The librarians. Alexander l-ligh acTed as accompanisT Tor The Boys' Glee Club. This group was mosT capably direcTed by Miss J. M. NepperT. 8 The Girls' Advanced Glee Club, under Miss E. B. Badger's eTTicienT leadership, elecTed DoroThy Morris, presidenT. EdiTh MacDonald and Muriel Newsome were vice-presidenT and secreTary. Jane KriedT and Marie EaTon were libra- rians. Jenella PaTTen was hisTorian. Muriel Kamler was accompanisT. V The Boys' Ad- vanced Glee Club parTicipaTed in The Fall VarieTies oT I934. The Girls' Advanced Glee Club was aslced To sing aT The Evening MeeTing oT The ParenT-Teachers' AssociaTion. BoTh groups added greaTly To The beauTy oT The musical selecTions aT The Commence- menT Exercises. ORCHESTRAS ANY inspiring classic composiTions were oTTered Tor The approval OT The sTudenT body This Term by The ConcerT OrchesTra. The ConcerT OrchesTra is under The direcTion oT Miss l-l. J. Alexander. lda EerTig was chosen by This group as Their leader. She was capably assisTed by Samuel Denby as vice-presidenT and Laurence Goss as secreTary. Y, The beauTiTully arranged and excellenTly rendered selecTions were well received aT all oT The larger school meeTings. The Fall VarieTies oT l934, The evening meeTing oT The ParenT-Teachers' AssociaTion, and The Commence- menT Exercises owed Their greaT success in no small parT To The ouTsTanding perTormance oT This well Trained group. V WiTh Miss l-l. J. Alexander as TaculTy advisor, The Dance OrchesTra was organized and chose Laurence Goss To lead This modern group. V The popular hiTs oT The season were given novel arrangemenTs and when presenTed To The sTudenTs, were received wi+h applause. The Dance OrchesTra's acTiviTies were resTricTed as only The High Seniors were allowed To hold a class dance. This group ThereTore only had an opporTuniTy To show iTs eTTiciency aT The dance which Tollowed The Fall VarieTies oT I934. We hope ThaT The coming Term will aTTord a broader Tield in which The Dance OrchesTra may Tlourish. 49 DRAMATICS R. S. K. Polland, well known direc- Tor oT The Dra- rnaTics AssociaTion, worked under greaT diTTiculTies in his successTul aTTempT To pro- duce a careTully selecTed group OT one-acT plays Tor sTudenT audiences. Lack oT Time Tor proper rehearsals, a shallow sTage, and limiTed sTage equipmenT were buT a Tew oT The drawbacks. De- spiTe all diTTiculTies, The pasT dramaTics season was en- joyed by parTicipanTs and on- lookers alike. v As iT was un- reasonable To aTTempT a Term play, a subsTiTuTe, The Fall VarieTies OT l934 was chosen. The VarieTies in- cluded The besT oT The choral, musical, and dancing TalenT OT The school. The VarieTies was presenTed buT once-an aTTernoon performance Tor The beneTiT oT The sTudenT body. lT was greaTly enjoyed by all who saw iT, being The only large dramaTic produc- Tion OT The Term. ,........A.,.h....., s. .... , . ......f.A.Ti 7 DRAMATICS N HE Fall VarieTies oT l934 produced many well known plays such as One Woman in The World, CaughT in One ACT, For England, The Daily Doesn'Tg also many shorT skiTs. V Burris Bly, Marion Bubb, RoberT Camp, Eloyas Cagle, Geraldine Dolan, Tom Fox, William GoeTze, George Hagens, Jack Lip- man, Barbara McAdoo, RoberT Monroe, Sue Sheehan, ElizabeTh Singer, KaTherine Solley, Gus STaThos, and Marie Walker lenT Their TalenTs and aided in The producTion oT The VarieTies. V Barbara McAdoo was presidenT OT The DramaTics AssociaTion and Florence Waller, vice-presidenT. V Among many of The more popular plays pro- duced by The dramaTics classes This Term were The POT Boiler, 'Twas Ever Thus, The GhosT STory, Russian Salad, OverTones, He Said She Said, The Clod, Gas, Air, and Earl, Pearly GaTes, HearTs, and Samson a la Mode. V Appearing in These plays were Richard BarThol, Burris Bly, JaneT BonT, Jayne Browning, Marion Bubb, AnTonio Calonico, DoroThy Carlos, William Carroll, EThel Clarkson, Cornelia Cobb, Richard Crosby, BeTTy Danziger, Melvin Dubins, Geraldine Dolan, Helen Eine, MarTin Field, Thomas Fox, Marjorie Ginsberg, William GoeTze, DoroThy Gray, Carol Hansell, PaTTi Harbough, Nancy HariTer, Helen Louer, Jack Lipman, Regina Mackey, Harry Margolis, Adele Merriman, Helen Proll, Elena Romanov, Barbara SchmidT, BeaTrice SchwarTz, Adele SchwarTz, Leon ShaTT, Olgo Siska, Deming SmiTh, KaTheririe Solley, Gus STaThos, Olive WhiTe, Lorraine Williamson, and Ingrid SmiTh. V The DramaTics AssociaTion did noT re-adopT lasT Term's successTul idea oT producing Shakespearean dramas buT benT all Their eTTorTs To The highly lauded producTion oT VarieTies. 5 I BOYS' ATHLETICS VER mindful of lhe laws of good sporlsman- ship is Lowell, home of Tradilions, mighly, inspiring. l-ligh are Jrhe aims ol her players, and lair lheir games-each slriying lo conlribule his share in mainlaining The symbol of glory, The acknowledged lolcen of superiorily-The name of Lowell. E , - ,T , W, Y -V Vw W , , BOYS' ATHLETI ...,. fu... . L.-..,,,.A. .N,.m1. w.., , ,. , . , Hail, Red cmd White, May you conquer left cmd right. COACHES AND MANAGERS UCI-l crediT is due This Term To Bob MowaT, aThleTic manager, and his hard- working sTaTF oT assisTanTs. Young aspiranTs Tor The posiTions soon Tound ThaT They did noT merely siT on The sidelines and waTch The Team play, buT ThaT They also had To Take care oT equipmenT, arrange schedules, and manage The Teams on various Trips. v Managing TooTball were Jerome Ginsberg, Alexander l-ligh, John MarTin, Mervin STernsher, and Frank Weaver. MerTon Sanders and STanley Silver aided Coach NeTT wiTh his Two lighTweighT baskeTball squads. Fall Track was in The hands oT Douglas GranT while BenTon MacMillan managed soccer. V A singular honor was awarded To Coach Claude KiTchen when he was elecTed presidenT of The San Francisco High Schools' AThleTic Board aT The WhiTcomb l-loTel, AugusT 22. Mr. KiTchen coaches swimming and crew and is co-coach OT The Cardinal TooTball squad. Y, Coach Elmer l-larris again coached boTh lighTweighT and varsiTy soccer Teams aside from his Track squad. V Coach Ben NeTT was kepT exceedingly busy wiTh his IIO- and IZO-pound baskeTball squads running OFT Their schedules and puTTing his I3O-pounders and varsiTy in Trim Tor The l935 season. V Coach Mike Voyne, assisTed by Claude KiTchen, senT TorTh a TooTball Team ThaT was The runner-up Tor The ciTy championship. as . ., . . .. : ., 'mg-:as, Lib-s., K, i 1, ,. . 1.5-'Qi 2. wg -sl' ,ff -- it . . iw ' .:. - nk ' 3-1 I 4 . ' 12-. T :.s ,, 5 w s ' 'fix 2191 COACH NEFF COACH HARRIS COACH KITCHEN COACH VOYNE E4 SCROLL AND L Fred Amigo, AI Baer, Lee ii Benjamin, Bob Berlrann, Carl Brogger, Frank Brown, Jack Joe Mahoney Brulon, Bill Carroll, H. Chew, Slan Cohen Jim Curran V. Dale, Jack Davis Nolch De Bischopp Jerry Dowd Bob Dumnesil Jack England Chandler Ennes Slan Evans Tony Franusich Bill Fuiila Jerome Ginsberg Dan Glanlz John Guinea E d H a a s Ed Harringlon Sarg Hearn Ernie Heuler Ray Humphreys Bob Jacobs Henry Kan Jack Kessel Roy Kimball AI Lee, Jack Lipman, Norris Low Funslon Lum Jim MacGruer Fred Wheeler, Jack Welch Russ Woods, Barney Woll Harry Takahashi, Mark Thall Floyd Wallers Carl Troppman G e n e Ti n k e r AI Malnick, Arl Marcler, Doug Mass, George Maxwell, Ben McGuire, Lamberl Meyer, Denever Moore, Frank Morris, Bob Mowal, Winslon Murphy, Kalsuo Nakaiima, Jerry O'Connor, K. Omura, Jack Read, AI Reinharl, David Rosenlhal, Morlon Rude, Pele Sales, Joe Sanderson, Hal Saunders, Perry Scholl, Bob Sherman, Dick Simon, Jack Skanon, Bob Slabler, Ted Sleiger, Merv Slernsher, 55 FOOTBALL FTER six long years, years in which The sTudenT body, despiTe many reverses, conTinued To back iTs Team, Coach Mike Voyne succeeded in Turn- ing ouT one oT The TinesT TooTball Teams ThaT ever represenTed a San Francisco high school. V Ably led by co-capTains Don BuTler and Jerry Dowd, The squad de- veloped Trom an unTried, green group OT boys, inTo a perTecTly coordinaTed squad oT men. Improving wiTh each game, The Team showed an unquenchable, TighTing spiriT, reaching a climax in The Galileo game, in 29' -F, which They proved The old axiom, ThaT a Team ThaT won'T be beaT, can'T be beaT. v ln The opening game wiTh Lick Junior College, Coach Voyne gave The enTire squad a chance To prove iTs worTh, and Thus many unknowns came inTo prominence. Midway in The second period, Frank KnowlTon, elusive Lick quarTerback, reTurned a punT 56 yards To a score. WiTh The counT 6 To O againsT Them, The Cards Turned on The power. From The 45-yard line, The lndians drove 55 yards To a Touchdown, BuTler going over Trom The I3-yard line on a decepTive end around. A 36-yard march produced The Tinal score, as l-larringTon scored on a l-yard plunge. CosTly Tumbles marred all oTher scoring chances, while The collegians never ThreaTened. Bourke, BuTler, O'Connor, Reade, and SuTTon looked well Tor Lowell, while KnowlTon sTarred Tor Lick. v Burlingame Then Tell beTore The Cards by a 24 To O score. BoTh BuTler and Reade scored Twice, The Tormer on a 20-yard pass, and again on an end around, and The laTTer on 4- and IO-yard plunges. l-lowever, in gaining over IOO yards Trom scrimmage, diminuTive Eol l-larringTon proved The sTar oT The game. V As a Tinal warm-up Tor The A.A.A. opener wiTh Balboa, The Cards Took on Vallejo, and were seT back by a 2 To O counT. Obviously The Cards were aTTecTed by The Terrific heaT, buT as Vallejo could do noThing againsT The Cards, The game would have ended in a deadlock had noT Les lv1usanTe inadverTenTly sTepped ouT oT The end zone in geTTing away a punT. BuTler, Pedrin, Reade, and SuTTon all looked good Tor Lowell. v Running wiTh an un- canny abiliTy, wiTh Dowd mowing down would-be Tacklers, Chad Reade proved himselT To be one OT The ouTsTanding ball-carriers oT The A.A.A. FourTeen Times he Took The ball, scoring Three Times, and gaining 86 yards. ln The TirsT quarTer, he Took a shorT laTeral Trom Bourke and raced I5 yards To a Touchdown. Following a beauTiTul coTTin-corner kick by Dowd, he again scored, ending a 23-yard drive. AlmosT single-handed, Reade 56 produced The Tinal score, wiTh an unsTop- able 47-yard march. BuT Tor a long prayer- Tul pass, Schiechi To I-Iurly, The Bucs would have been shuT ouT, as The aIerT, hard- charging Card Torwards ThroTTIed every- Thing ThaT came Their way. I8 To 7 was The Tinal score, buT so compIeTe was The Cards' dominaTion, ThaT They could have run up any score They chose. Bourke, Bu+Ier, Dowd, Saunders, and SuTTon again played Tine TooTbaII. V The encounTer wiTh Commerce was one oT Those games, in which The Cards gained aT will in mid-Tield, only To be halTed by a sTerIing Commerce deTense whenever They neared scoring TerriTory. Six Times The Cards advanced, and six Times The Bulldogs I' BUT-I-ER, 9. held. NOT once did Commerce advance be- yond The 5O-yard line, so powerTuI was The Lowell Iine, so The game ended in an un- saTisTacTory scoreless Tie. Lack oT scoring punch was The only Card weakness, as They were superb boTh on deTense and oTTense in The middle OT The Tield. Dowd, Pedrin, Reade, and SuTTon played Their usual Tine game, while CapTain Aronson oT Commerce played sensaTionaIIy, bringing his Team To The TighTing piTch ThaT enabled Them To hold The powerTuI Indians. V AnoTher scalp was added To The Indians' coIIecTion, when They rouTed CasTIemonT I2 To O. Once again The Team clicked, and Dowd, I-IarringTon, and Reade Tore oTT large gains consisTenTIy. Dowd scored TirsT on a 3-yard smash over cenTer, while I-IarringTon ended The scoring wiTh a 6-yard drive OTT Tackle. BuTIer, Lippmann, Pedrin, and SuTTon showed To advanTage in The line. V Receiving every possible bad break, The Cards were downed by a power- Tul PiedmonT Team, 20 To 6. AIThough gaining more yardage, and making more TirsT downs, The Indians pracTicaIIy handed PiedmonT Two Touchdowns, one on a blocked punT, and The oTher on a Tumble. The oTher score resuITed from a susTained drive, and was iusTIy deserved. The Cards also scored on a sTraighT march down The Tield. Though a 6 To 6 Tie would have been more in order, PiedmonT's aggressiveness Turned The Tide in Their Tavor. The Cards acquiTTed Themselves well, and need noT be ashamed oT This deTeaT. Dowd, Pedrin, Reade, and 5uTTon played good games, buT iusT could noT meeT PiedmonT's TighT. V The nexT league game Tound The Indians smashing Sacred I-IearT by a 20 To O score. WiTh only a minuTe To go in The TirsT haIT, Dowd Threw a I6-yard pass To Bu+Ier, who raced 55 yards more To a Touchdown. Dowd kicked The exTra poinT. The second haIT saw The Cards really geTTing under way. Reade, reTurning a punT, raced 48 57 II PERRY SCHOTT, q. I8. JACK DAVIS, T. lg .. 'ealm0'fei. -i ffm , -,v i 1511 s BARNEY BOURKE q. I9. B08 KING, c. iff' ' f ,-'Ulm' I 'L.'LL.' 3I. FRANK BENNETT. T. I I I X 1 nm NX.. . f I 7K'L N L ,sgmgeq I f, BILL EDWARDS, c. 9. BENNIE McGUIRE. q. 20. JACK COWDEN, I1. Q4 I 33 Cb6QJc151L,QweQM7M-T50 3'-1 -ovVuL, yards Through The enTire Sacred I-IearT Team To anoTher score. I-IarringTon Then sTarTed piling up yard- age and led The Cards To Their Tinal score, Dowd go- ing over, and Then con- verTing. A mosT graTiTying TeaTure oT This game was Dowd's Two conversions. Prior To This game, Lowell had noT converTed once in Twelve aTTempTs. Brigham, BuTler, Dowd, I-IarringTon, Pedrin, Reade and SuTTon looked good Tor The Cards, while The Sacred I-IearT passing aTTack gave Lowell supporTers many a scare. V Taking on Alhambra on Galileo Tield, The Card power smeared The Alham- brans under a 20 To O score. Dowd again proved The sparkplug Tor The In- dians, besides playing ex- ceIlenTIy on deTense. On oTTense he scored Two Touchdowns, and kicked Two conversions. A weak- ness on pass deTense ap- peared in The Card back- Tield as LiTTIe, Alhambra haITback, Tossed passes all over The Tield, realizing I78 yards and one Touchdown. Once more, all running plays were eTIecTiveIy ThwarTed by The Lowell Torwards. V The all-im- porTanT game wiTh Mission Tollowed nexT, and The Cards emerged wiTh a I3 To O vicTory. ImmediaTeIy upon receiving The kick- OTI, The Cards marched 67 ff MW if on sTraighT power for a Touchdowpl owcl oin Two-yard line. On The conversion, D he -zone buT iT was ruled illegal as T-larringTon, o hand The ball To Dowd had Touched his knee To The ground. he Cards Then coasTed along unTil The TourTh quarTer, when Dowd culminaTed a 39-yard susTained march wiTh a 4-yard plunge Tor a Touch- down. This Time he kicked The goal. The Tine vicTory, however, was somewhaT marred by a cosTly injury To Chad Reade, who pulled a ligamenT in his knee, and had To be removed Trom The game. Dowd and Reade Tor Lowell and KloTovich and Maloney Tor The Bears were The big guns oT The aTTack, buT once again iT was The Lowell line ThaT provided The margin oT vicTory. v Thus, wiThouT The services oT Their sTar saTeTy man and ground gainer, The Card gridders prepared To meeT The League champions, Galileo. Backed To The uTmosT by boTh sTudenT body and TaculTy, The Indians Took The Tield aT Kezar STadium on OcTober I8, a despised 2 To l underdog. Things looked very dark indeed, when, aT The end oT The TirsT quarTer, The Lions held an apparenTly un- surmounTable 9 To O lead. An unsToppable 60-yard drive had gained Them one Touchdown, Spirz had converTed, and Then, as Dowd had aTTempTed To kick Trom his own I4-yard line, Spirz had rushed in and had blocked The kick, and The ball had rolled ouT oT The end zone Tor Two more poinTs Tor Galileo. UndaunTed, The Cards Then swung inTo acTion. WiTh CapTain Jerry Dowd play- ing phenomenal TooTball, The Indians ToughT back Turiously and mixed passes wiTh line bucks and end runs, To march Trom Their own 25-yard marker To The Galileo I6. There a pass was inTer- cepTed and The march seemed over. BUT on The nexT play, Lacau hiT a sTone wall aT cenTer, and The ball spurTed Trom his grasp. Quick as a Tlash, BuTler snaTched iT up and raced unmolesTed over The goal line. The conversion Tailed, so The score remained 9 To 6. Inspired by Dowd's magniTicenT playing, The whole Team rose To greaT heighTs, acTually ouTplaying The powerTul Lions. Then laTe in The Third guarTer, Pedrin, playing a sensaTional game aT guard, recovered Lacau's Tumble on The Galileo 3 l-yard line. FighTing every inch oT 'The way, The Cards smashed and drove To The Tour-yard line. Dowd Then hiT guard Tor 3 yards, Dowd again Tor 2 TeeT, and Then l-larringTon Tor 6 precious inches as The quarTer ended. On The TirsT play oT The Tinal guarTer, Dowd, on a weak-side reverse, ThaT had The enTire Galileo Team Tooled, wenT over Tor a Touchdown. The impossible had happened: Lowell was leading Galileo, wiTh buT 8 minuTes To go. ln despera- Tion, Galileo Took To The air, buT wiTh liTTle success, Tor Dowd covered The Tield like a hawk, baTTing passes ouT oT The hands oT waiTing receivers, or Throwing runners Tor huge losses. Then, wiTh buT ThirTy seconds remaining, Ed l-larringTon inTercepTed 59 M 2. ED HARP.iNeToN, ii 23. Joi-iN SPEAR +. 22' 'NGK SUTTON' C- JACK NEUENBERG, lm. 39, WIN MURPHY, 9, 3 3. ci-mo READEJ1- 21. JACK uPMAN, e. P 5575 I7. BQLL BRIGHAM. 8- , M. GERRY O'CONNOR. 9 T one of Lacau's passes and crossed fhe goal line for anofher score. This fime Dowd did nof miss fhe con- version. A few seconds lafer, fhe gun ended one of fhe mosf glorious vic- fories for Lowell in many years. v Thaf day fhe Cards were superb. From an apparenfly beafen feam, fhe Cards, lead by almosf superhuman play of Jerry Dowd and George Pedrin, rose up fo sef back fheir more favored rivals. Af fhe boffom of every pile up, and fackling dead- ly, Pedrin, a former Galileo player, sfood ouf, even over fhe excellenf play of every line man on fhe field. X4 Alfhough responsible for 5 fumbles, Lacau played a wonderful inspiring game for Galileo, while De Vofo was amazing af fackle. Lowell's superiorify lay enfirely in fheir alerfness. Alfhough fhey received many breaks, fhey made fhem fhemselves by fheir fine playing. The enfire feam - Bourke, Bufler, Clarke, Cowden, Dowd, l-larringfon, O'Connor, Pedrin, Saunders, Suffon and Tompkins played fhe game of fheir lives fo bring vicfory fo Lowell. R4 Thus only Poly remained in fhe pafh of a Lowell champion- ship. The chances of vic- fory were excellenf, buf fhe Big Game has al- ways been keenly con- TesTed, especially This year as LoweII's chance Tor The grid TiTIe resTed upon iT. ATTer a biTTerIy ToughT conTesT, The Cards capTured The sTaTisTics only To lose by a 6-O score To Their ancienT rival, giving The championship To Galileo. Y, Even Though The Indians IosT Their Tinal game, The season will sTand as one oT The mosT successTuI ever experienced aT Lowell. AT The begin- ning OT The season Coach Voyne Took a group oT young boys and moulded Them inTo a Team oT men, exceIIenTIy schooled in The value oT cooperaTion and coordinaTion, virTues essenTiaI Tor Turn- ing ouT men who are To be asseTs To The communiTy. V All Lowell joins in exTending The hearTiesT oT congraTuIaTions To Coach Voyne and his squad. STaTisTics of The Lowell-PoIyTechnic Clash Lowell Poly. Yardage gained Trom scrimmage ..,,,... ...,.,. I 38 56 Yardage IosT Trom scrimmage ..,,,,.. Y,.. 7 I7 Forward passes aTTempTed ,,....,, ,,.. I 9 3 Forward passes compIeTed ,,,,,,,, ,,,c 4 2 Forward passes incompleTed ....,,,cA ,,c, I 2 O Forward passes had inTercepTed .,,.u.. ..., 3 I Yardage gained Trom passes ,u....,,,. cc,,..., 2 8 50 FirsT downs made ..,.,,..,A,....,, ,,,, I 2 4 ToTaI punT yardage ....,cc... ,,,,,,u I 54 202 Average punT yardage ,.....c,. ...,,,,c 3 8 28 Average punT reTurn ,.... ,... I 5 I3 Kiclc-oTTs ....,,...,,,....,c,...,,,u.. c,,, O 3 ToTaI kick-OTT yardage .,,,...c, ,,,, O I I6 Average Icicle-oTI yardage ...,,,. ,,,, O 38 Fumbles .....,,c....,,..,..c,.,,,,,, ,,,Y O O Number oT penaITies ..,,.... ,,,, 6 4 LengTh oT penaITies .,,.... ,,,,,,,, 3 O 30 Field goals aTTempTed ..,,,. ,,,, O O Touchdowns scored ..,,c...c, ,,,, O I Conversions aTTempTed ,,,.... ,,,V O 1 Conversions made .....,,. .c,,,,,,,, ,YVM O O 6I H Q, 15 414- TEM Q h .X VARSITY FOOTBALL F I Row: Neuenberg, Gross, Berriman, Murray, Harringfon, Burger, Cowden, McGuire, Schoenfeld, Edwards. Second Row: Saunders, Brigham, Clarke, Davis, King, SuI+on, Murphy, Tompkins, Schoff, Smifh, Spear. Third' Row: Von Volkman, Bourke, Benneff, Kimball, Bufler, Mr. Voyne, Reade, Pedrin, O'Connor, Sf. Gaudens, Schill ROSTER NO PLAYER POSITION AGE WEIGHT I-IEIOI-IT EXPERIENCE 71 Don BuIler End I7 I85 6.00 I year Ed I-Iarring+on I-lalfback I7 I55 5.7 I year , Chad Reade I-Ialfback I7 l70 5.lO Goofs I Dub Saunders End I7 l70 5.I I Goofs 7 Choc Bourke Quarfer I8 l60 5.I0 None Dave Schiller Fullback I7 I82 6.00 None Roy Kimball I-lalfback I7 I65 5.8 None BenneIT McGuire I-Ialfback I7 l60 5.9 None K. I0 Gus Tompkins Tackle I9 l90 6.00 I year J. I I Perry 5choH Quarfer I7 I50 5.7 Goofs - I4 Gerry O'COnnOr Guard I7 I87 6.00 I year I5 Russ Clarke Tackle I7 l85 5.l I I year I6 Pelre Youdall QuarTer I6 l70 6.00 None I7 Bill Brigham End I8 I83 6.llf2 2 years I8 Jack Davis Guard I7 l70 5.10 I year . I9 Bob King CenI'er I7 l85 6.00 I year 20. Jack Cowden I-lalfback I7 I84 5.lO None 2l Jack Lipmann End I8 I73 5.I0 I year 22 Dick 5uIIOn Cenlrer I8 200 5.l0 I year Q 5 23 John Spear Tackle I8 204 6.2 I year 24. Les Musanlre I-lalfback I7 l7l 6.00 None 25 Jack Nuenberg I-Ialliback I8 l59 6.00 Goofs 29 Jerry Dowd Fullback I8 I92 6.0lf2 2 years 3I Frank BerIneT'r Tackle I7 l9l 6.I None I 36 George Pedrin Guard I8 l70 5.I0 I year 39 Win Murphy Guard I9 I76 5.9 I year 40 I-larry Von Volkman Guard I7 I68 5.7 I year BerT Gross CenIer I8 l68 5.9 2 years Joe Murray Cenlrer I6 I65 5.I0 None 62 DQR fy f,,,...W - LIGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL FronT Row: Genning, Linane, BerTrand, Graham, Buck, Lewis, Feisf, Anderson, Berman, Marfin, Couch Quinn. Second Row: Long, Cohn, PoTTs, Widrin, Schoenfeld, Robinson, Lim, Boudous, STein, Landini Sime, Hood, Meller. Third Row: Williams, Morrison, BuTler, Brickwedel, PasqualeTTl, MacKenzie, Roll Blum, McPhee, Kerhulas, Mafosich, Tessier, Kaplan, Kafschinski. FOOTBALL RESERVES OR Two monThs a lighTweighT TooTball squad responded To The call Tor pracTice, during which period They weren'T engaged in a single pracTice game, scrimmag- ing only among Themselves. Coach Claude KiTchen, busied wirh his work as presidenT oT The A. A. A., was Torced To hand leadership over To one of his Tormer players, Suren l-lagopian, who capably TaughT heads-up TooTball. Yf OcTober IO meanT much To The young Cardinal Team, The Tirsl' league TooTball game To many: nervousness broughT on by This reason almosT cosT The game as a resulT. The TirsT Three periods were absoluTely unevenTTul Tor boTh Teams. l-lowever, in The lasT quarTer Conny lvlaTosich recovered a parTially blocked goal-line punT and reTurned iT 20 yards Tor The only score OT The game. CapTain Bing Meller played The mosT ouTsTanding game oT The day. R4 As The league schedule was run OTT very laTe This Term, The Commerce game was The only one played before publicaTion oT The Red and WhiTe. V Composing The lighTweighT squad were Gordon FiesT, Tullback: Bill Dillon and Eugene Robinson, halT- backs: Gordon Red Lewis, quarTerback: Roland Landini and l-lugh McPhee alTernaTed, while CapTain l-larold lvleller held The end posiTion permanenTly: Henry Anderson and Bill STein, Tackles: Jimmy Boudoures and Bergen PlanT, guards: CliTTord Lame and Russell Woods alTernaTed aT cenTer. Also eager Tor The coveTed ll posiTions were lvlilTon Berman, RoberT BerTrand, Paul Bloom, Clark Brigham, Wayne Couch, Donald Graham, Joseph Green, Charles GroTTe, Andrew lvloore, l-larry lvluheim, and James PoTTs. V NexT Tall There need be no Tear of lack oT TooTball maTerial, as only Two oT The reserves will have leTT school. 63 - ...,. ..,-, , ,. ,4 6r?ig! FX HENRY KAN E0 IAIJOHH fl Lowell OppOnenT 20 POW 22 23 Commerce 20 27 Sacred l-learT I I 35 Balboa 24 I O5 TOTals 77 JCKSKHN my snnn 1 ' 1, - E- ,A',:, f- 1 wm.um.E..Q T sue-sm Hum T sy if E? is 3 K ff AQ, CHANDLER ENNE5 gap Ngggggq 120-POUND BASKETBALL ARLY This season There came a prophecy Trom Coach NeTT OT Two championships Tor The Lowell lighTweighT baslceTball Teams-aT The presenT Time There is every indicaTiOn OT This predicTiOn coming True. PrOpheT Ben NeTT wasn'T going TO be proved wrong, so he wenT righT ahead and Trained a Team in every TundamenTal connecTed wiTh baslceTballg a Team which has lOsT buT one game is carrying The repuTaTiOn OT The coach. The one game lOsT wenT To a squad ThaT iTselT was laTer beaTen by a Team deTeaTed by Lowell, a biT cOnTused buT pOinTing Toward a Triple Tie wiTh The Cards in The cenTer OT The lcnOT. Y, ATTer a very successTul pracTice season Lowell's heavier lighT- weighTs lOsT TO a Tormer TradiTional rival, POlyTechnic, by Two pOinTs, 22-20. NOT discouraged by This deTeaT The TwenTies meT Commerce and leTT The Tray wiTh a 23-20 vicTOry. The Tollowing weelc Sacred l-learT bowed low TO a Tar superior Cardinal Torce, The score-27-I Ig Balboa, TOO, acknowledged deTeaT, 35-24, To The Cards. Y, ln The meanTime Commerce meT POlyTechnic and Toolc a vicTOry home wiTh Them, giving Lowell once more a chance aT The championship. AT presenT Commerce, Lowell, and POlyTechnic are leading The League wiTh a Triple Tie: winning Trom Galileo, Mission and ST. lgnaTius guaranTees The championship, and Lowell should do iusT This. V The Team consisTed OT Willard BlaclcTield, Tor- wardg SarganT l-learn, guard, T-lenry Kan,TOrward1 Rod- ney Nessier, cenTerg Jack Skahan, Torwardq and ROberT STabler, guard-pracTically a six man Team wiTh Black- Tield, Kan, and Skahan alTernaTing ThroughouT The games. Backing up The Team were Ward CaTe, Ralph Davis, Chandler Ennes, and Edwin Rabiohn. 8 Success can generally be aTTribuTed TO a smOOTh-running, TighT- ing Tiveg Lowell's can be ascribed To This and her liTTle maesTrO OT The baslceTball cOurT-Coach Ben NeTT, who Tor many years now has led Lowell Teams Through suc- cessTul seasons. NOT Once in This diminuTive cOach's experience aT Lowell has he Tailed TO seT TOrTh a Team nOT Teared by OThers OT The League. When The Cards win The championship, iT wOn'T belong alone TO The players buT To The menTOr OT The cOurTs, Benjamin NeTT. 64 110-POUND BASKETBALL ITI-I The nucleus oT Ias+ year's championship Team reTurning, combined wiTh a promising group oT new-comers, The I I0-pound baskeTbaII Team seemed quiTe capable OT reTaining The TiTIe They carried OTT IasT year. Regardless oT This, however, Coach NeTT immediaTeIy inauguraTed inTen- sive pracTice. Building his Team around AI Baer and Jack Kessel, he chose Bob Ferrich, Dick Mangan, and Carlos STewarT Tor The vacanT posiTions. V FirsT on The Cards' schedule was Their ancienT rival, PoIyTechnic, over whom They emerged vicTorious by a 29 To 22 score. WiTh Mangan accounTing Tor II poinTs and Baer Tollow- ing wiTh nine, The Cards goT oTT To a good sTarT and were never headed. Baer proved himseIT invaluable, noT only direcTing The play, buT consTanTly covering The ball like a hawk. CapTain RaTTaro and Teachen played well Tor Poly, buT iusT could noT cope wiTh LoweII's superior Teamwork. V Taking on Commerce in Their nexT baTTle, They conTinued Their winning ways, and capTured an easy 22 To I2 win. Once again Baer cap- Tured The crowd's Tancy wiTh his exceIIenT Tloor game, besides leading The scoring wiTh seven markers. if Sa- cred I-IearT nexT Tell by The wayside as The Cards deTeaTed Them, 20 To I2. Ferrich and Mangan ac- counTed Tor mosT oT The scoring, buT once again Team- work paved The way Tor The win. V The Cards had an easier Time againsT Balboa, submerging The Bucs under a 28 To I3 score. Balboa could oTTer liTTle opposiTion To The alerT, unerring Cards, and iT was merely a maTTer oT how large The score would be. Mangan, who is sTeadiIy developing inTo The Ieague's ouTsTanding cen- Ter, carried oTT high scoring honors. As usual, Baer shone wiTh his sTeady Tloor game. 8 A 30 To 26 win over Galileo Then Tollowed. GeTTing oTT To a poor sTarT, The I I0's swung inTo acTion behind Baer and overcame a 7-poinT lead To Take The vicTory. V Many promising cagers were uncovered who should perTorm well in The heavier divisions nexT year. The squad con- sisTed OT AI Baer, Bob Cohn, Bob Ferrich, Jack Kessel, Ken Kessel, Dick Mangan, Roy MaTsuda, Ed OngerTh, Ed PrescoTT, Lloyd RooT, Carlos STewarT, and Jack Sullivan. 65 iii' 7 Q .i T T., ,. ,. 'rr f f ! , mcx muem emacs srewnn J- :S if 35 L . Q r.., .pg son FERNE!-if -X. -f -I . 1 ,s., X ' ' Ae. neu g , I f ,,:, T I Lucio usszifij 4445, N 1 .4 .sr Q5 N. 3 K K qw., ra V max xesssr. ,,,,. A snm caan q g e sr Lowell OpponenT 29 Poly 22 22 Commerce I2 20 Sacred I-IearT I2 28 Balboa I3 30 Galileo 26 I29 85 ,51..,..- fSv'x-wfi-HN' .f I ,,. KT .,. ,kg it 3- JM , ,T Lowell OpponenT O Commerce O Galileo O Mission O Balboa O ToTals QNCENI zuu 010 CWUV Niwinl Lu N vxmm is nz - , Q so wuus xnsvo .V , Q , !W-5if5Tf.i-5 :ll'fE'.' ' A G n c e ' 1 umm: SMMH Q Ol CAM lil. DOI NGIIBQQ1 EOC UNLIMITED SOCCER FTER losing mosT oT iTs pracTice games, Coach Elmer T-larris' UnlimiTed Soccer Squad came Through a hard-ToughT conTesT wiTh Com- merce, ending in a O To O Tie. V Lowell, once con- sidered The mosT spiriTed high school oT The ciTy, com- pleTely ignored iTs Tormerly powerTul soccer Team, which wenT down To deTeaT aTTer deTeaT, sTiIl sTriving, however, To bring baclc a parT oT iTs losT glory and The aTTenTion oT The school. Y, The New Polo Field, Golden GaTe Parlc, was The scene OT disasTer when Galileo's mighTy squad won a humiliaTing vicTory Trom The Cardinals, The score-5-O. A 4 To O deTeaT Trom The hands oT Mission was adminisTered aT The same locaTion and TasTed iusT as biTTer To The s+ilI TighTing Team. JusT Three days aTTer meeTing Mission, Lowell bowed To a superior Torce senT TorTh Trom Balboa, The score was 2 To O. V CapTain Bob NorThon and VincenT Zuardo held The Tullbaclc posi- Tions: aT halT were Jan BlumchrusT, Maxwell Laplcin, and Edgar Wallis: aT wing were Jaclc Gray and Marvin GiomeTTiq aT Torward were T-larold Buclcley, KaTsuo Nakaiima, and Deming SmiTh7 Bob Crosby was goalie. AlTernaTing wiTh The aToresaid were RoberT Campbell, halTg l-lomer Lambie, Torward: BenTon MacMillan, Tull: Rudy Mildner, wing and Oroville Orvilc, halT. v To lose a game means, in all probabiliTy, The loss oT The cham- pionship--The aim oT every soccer squad produced by San Erancisco's high schools, buT The loss oT These Three league games meanT someThing else To The Lowell Var- siTy-iT showed ThaT eleven Team-maTes could Take iT. Even wiTh deTeaT none oT ThaT Tamous Lowell spiriT was losT Trom wiThin Them1They'll go ouT To meeT PolyTechnic iusT as conTidenT oT Themselves as when They played Their TirsT game wiTh Commerce. V To Coach Harris goes crediT-noT Tor a championship Team, noT Tor an undeTeaTed season, buT Tor The spiriT, Tor The courageous way in which a losing Team carried The winning spiriT. 66 LIGHTWEIGHT SOCCER lTl-l buT Two experienced players, Lowell's LighTweighT Soccer Squad passed Through Tour very inTeresTing and encouraging games wiTh buf one loss. They pracTiced Tor over Two monThs under The waTchTul eye oT Coach l-larris beTore enTering Their League schedule. V Like Their broTher Team, The VarsiTy, They meT Commerce as The League opener, and They also duplicaTed The score, O-O. From This poinT on The UnlimiTeds losT every one oT Their games: noT so wiTh The l2O pounders. They kepT con- Tinually improving. ln a very close game wiTh Galileo They proved Their worTh, winning 2-I. Mission was The nexT vicTim, losing 5-I. By This Time The lighTweighTs were seeing visions OT a championship-Three days laTer Their dreams were marred when Balboa kicked a penalTy shoT inTo a goal wiTh buT a Tew minuTes leTT To play. The game ended wiTh Balboa sTill leading, 2-I. V The lighTweighT squad was composed oT Cap- Tain Jim Fahn, George La Nicca, and T-lerberT Norris, Torwardsp John Bunbury, l-laskel Ludwig, and Loren Samuels, halTbacksg Ray Fahn and William Chandler, wings: Richard Hall and William HowaT, Tullbacksq Rob- erT Williams, goalie. The reserve sTrengTh oT The TwenTies was Tormed by Ray l-loTTman, Jack McFadden, Tom Parkinson and l-larvey Riser. V GeTTing down To sTaTisTics, one Tinds ThaT The lighTweighT squad has won Two games, losT one, and Tied one, a ToTal OT Tive poinTsg deTeaTing PolyTechnic will add Two more To bring The ToTal up To seven poinTs, and give Them second place in The League. High poinT man was l-lerberT Norris, who kicked Tive oT The eighT goals scored by The squad. V AlThough The Team did noT quiTe reach The Top oT The lisT, They came suTTicienTly near To 'enable a TorecasT Tor Their nexT season. WiTh only Fahn and Ludwig graduaTing The squad will noT Tind iTselT in a very diTTiculT spoT, probably a very good one-The championship. 67 .i'-i - sm, mu: ' ' We 5, S suis . i ' M 1 i. ,soma sumsnmr sa 5 ' mann moms I, ,, ,T Mi' EL' 5 , .ffstif GEORGE LA NICCA if , mn mmm T I LL MOWTU j is ION' WIN!! E T Lowell OpponenTs O Commerce O 2 Galileo I 5 Mission I l Balboa 2 8 ToTals 4 ROI wmmu 'lf J ,..,,, L, - ,mi Yr .. Ti 'r11'7'w K 1 DLQK 'LGR EN SAMUELS , 1 ,, wa 4 '7......'Z'h . . FALL TRACK nser, o, ow, slams, ame. econ cw: ie , a e , ier, e heym, ru on, FTR El TllL Wll G S dR DhlSTdfldMll Fld BT g ber, GranT, Armsfronq, Mayer, Takahashi, NorThon. Third Row: STock, Long, Porlugeis, Lake, Sanderson, Sales, Brinkman, Lee, Wolf, Harris, Carroll, Rebscher. A FALL TRACK OWELL cannoT help being proud oT The Tine showing ThaT iTs Tall Track squad has displayed in a series oT meeTs around The bay area. V A True example OT Lowell spiriT was exhibiTed in Oakland aT The Lake MerriTT maraThon when sixTeen Lowell men Tinished in less Than ThirTy minuTes To win The cup Tor The mosT placers Tor The TourTh Time. X4 The squad managed To Take a high score, 9Olf2-22lf2, home wiTh Them Trom Their meeT aT Tamalpais on OcTober 5. V A remarkable pericormance was made againsT San MaTeo Junior College's squad: The Cards did noT win buT scored enough poinTs To make any high school coach swell wiTh pride aTTer such a conTesT. The relay, lOO-yard sprinT, and discus Throw were won and seconds were Taken in The 440, broad iump and low hurdles. Jack BruTon, capTain oT The squad, showed excellenT Torm by deTeaTing Dean, oT San MaTeo, holder oT The iunior college lOO-yard record. 8 Low- ell's Team consisTed oT John Finn and Ed Toll, lOO-yard dash: Richard Buckley and STanley Evans ran The 440, Bill Carroll: Bob l-lanson and Bob NorThorn were The Three besT halT- mile runners ThaT Lowell has had Tor some Time, according To Coach l-larrisq James Arm- sTrong, l-lerberT Game, James GranT, and Bob l-larris sTrided The mile: Bill Lee, Melville Long, Joe Sanderson, SandTord STadTTeld, and King Weisgerber were ouTsTanding in high hurdling and high jumping: John Diehl, James Krause, John STock, and Joe Williams are expecTed To be The leaders oT The ciTy's low hurdlersg Paul Brinkman, Jim Eahn, Jack l-lenshaw, MilTon Miller, and Sandiford STadTTeld pole vaulTedg l-lenry Ensler, Leland Eeldheym, and PeTer Sales, all oT whom compeTed lasT year, should be good enough To aspire Tor all Three A. A. A. discus posiTions, wiTh Bernard WolT closely Tollowing. Un- TorTunaTely The Card shoT puTTers are noT up To The sTandard seT by l-lerc Lipman earlier This year. STanley Evans and Melville Long also compeTed in The broad iump. V Coach l-larris believes ThaT nexT season will prove To be Lowell's besT Tor Track, as The squad will have The opporTuniTy oi meeTing prominenT bay Teams, such as Berkeley, PiedmonT, and San Jose, which will prepare Them Tor The Kezar grand Tinale. 68 SUMMARY l-llS ferm has wifnessed fhe almosf complefe dominafion of A. A. A. sporf by Lowell afhlefes. Foremosf among fhe successes was fhe remarkable showing of fhe Cardinal gridders under Coach Mike Voyne. Rafher unsuccessful in fhe pasf few seasons, fhe Cards sef ouf for fhe championship, and a foof of furf in fheir final game was all fhaf sfood befween fhem and fhe covefed frophy. 8 As usual, fhe lighf- weighf baskefball feams gave excellenf accounfs of fhemselves. Af presenf fhe l O's are unclefeafecl, and seem almosf a cerfainfy fo refain fhe championship fhey carried off lasf year. V Though once defeafed, fhe 2O's neverfheless are fied for fhe League leadership and have an excellenf chance of capfuring fhe crown. Even soccer, long regarded as a game af which Lowell could nof win, appears fo have developed a possible championship feam. The lighfweighf shin-kickers have only a fie in fheir opening game fo mar an ofherwise perfecf record. Only fhe unlimifed soccer feam received confinued reverses buf fully made up for fhese wifh ifs hard-fighfing, clean sfyle of play. V Under Coach Elmer Harris, fhe fall frack feam laid fhe foundafions for a fine and possibly a champion- ship squad nexf spring, as many promising afhlefes were uncovered. High hopes are held for fheir developmenf. V Afhlefic success are always accompanied by a reiuvenafion of sfudenf inferesf. While fhe spirif has always been enfhusiasfic af Lowell, fhis fall if was doubly so. Graaf numbers of roofers greefed fhe afhlefes af every game, and gave fhe feams fhe confidence fhaf is so essenfial for winning games. The afhlefes, coaches, and sfudenf body alike paved fhe way for fhese hard-won successes, and all alike should share in fhe glory. Buf even wifhouf fhese vicfories fhe season would have been a successful one. For affer all if is characfer building fhaf is fhe essenfial goal of sporf. Nof once during fhe enfire season has anyone connecfed wifh Lowell carried himself in anyfhing buf fhe mosf sporfsmanlike manner, a record of which Lowell may well feel proud. 69 GIRLS' ATHLETICS HERE is a rlwrill in galloping down a sunlil' pallw, in placing a ball precisely over llwe nel -a Jrlirill llial comes only willi praclice and a knowledge of Jrlwe arl. Girls, parlalcing in vigor- ous, lwealfliiful sporls willw Jrlwe desire To have slrong, liealrlwy bodies and a knowledge of good sporls- mansl'1ip,lind conlinuous happiness in working and playing Jrogellier under llie cheerful guidance of llweir facullry advisors. 3V syn, 6 41. 4 V' 3-gf f on-QS. - 2 5' I xwlgo I3 A A 15' 5435 if -Tig '- 4-'9 ' 9 I I x A' rf mv' V sw 'I udy, riff vdydiufi- V x 55904, 'ssgzii Q . fem. Q 4- ff M5 'gf' v 2mql?Q G uf 1 'lm' 9 xqh Y . . . x -REM, , Gash Q I A E: 'il' M! f Q T. La N wa I I 2 Af' W M1490-' , X ff I Q -Y - , 5 - x mmf, f ' ' -' WW ' 11 - - - ' ' ,ff w ...-.. 3.- '...-:':.. -P 1, ' 1-'1': '-' ::.:.-' C 8 - K Il:-'T'- f 55.-21-. - , . 1 f 2 1--?F - .- f AN 53.1 P 'ff 5 M if . 3 'Q .. ,F A . - 'Ill' YY ,- ' K xv -- X 1? kill, T ' n -1' xxxlhxx 1 ' X N114 I X ,,1 Qtxxxxgn - Rx 0 --3:5 X ww w - Qiifxgvxx. X.- azze.. --------1:-:.-aw.-:.-::.-:.':-.-...11-:La-....fe:fii. - fp.. . Nigafvxiff 1 GIRLS' ATI-ILET ICS GIRLS' COACHES I-IE successTul close OT The girls' sporTs Tor This Term was due To The exceIlenT guidance and unTiring eTTorTs oT The coaches. Miss DoroThy Flynn coached golT and baslceTbaIl7 Miss DoroThea Forcade, a new coach, was TaculTy advisor oT Tennis and very successfully inTroduced Tield hoclceyq Miss Barbara Mensing coached swimming, and Miss JaneT Wilson was TacuITy advisor OT riding. V Weelcly meeTings Tor each sporT were held in The mornings beTore school. The TaciIiTies OT FunsTon Field proved invaluable Tor TournamenTs and games oT compeTiTion. Tennis courTs, volleyball courTs, parTs oT The Tield, and some equipmenT were reserved Tor The use oT The girls Tor Their sporTs. More girls Turned ouT Tor sporTs This Term Than ever beTore, which shows a growing inTeresT in Them. A sporTs brealcTasT, which Toolc The place oT The usual semi- annual G. A. A. sporTs supper, proved To be one oT The mosT colorTul evenTs oT The sporTs season. V The Block L SocieTy arranged The decoraTions and negoTiaTed The various business problems. Each girl who received an award was enTiTled To aTTend. EnTerTain- menT was provided by The sTudenTs, and higher awards were presenTed by Mr. DougherTy. The mosT sTril4ing evenT oT The Term was The girls' play day, The TirsT oT iTs lcind To be given by Lowell. IT Toolc place on November I7 aT FunsTon Playground, Trom 9 o'clocIc in The morning Till I o'clocIc in The aTTernoon. Every high school in The ciTy parTicipaTedQ also STaTe Teachers' College, San MaTeo I-Iigh School, and San MaTeo Junior College. From each oT The schools came Tour girls. Teams were composed OT one girl Trom each school on a Team, and Lowell girls acTed as capTains. The Teams roTaTed, playing volley- ball, baseball, baslceTbalI, and Tield hockey, while an eliminaTion Tennis TournamenT was consTanTIy being played. An enTerTainmenT was provided by Lowell sTudenTs, wiTh Peggylee Amberson, Marjorie Beam, and DoT FaITon on The commiTTee. Caroline Orginos, presidenT oT The Block L SocieTy, and The Block L girls sponsored The whole evenT and closed one oT The mosT successTuI sporTing semesTers ThaT Lowell has ever lcnown. Awards were given all Those girls who Toolc parT in some sporT and Tilled special requiremenTs To win The coveTed prizes. f 7 I e, A. A. omcens on no.: o.a.,ano., Af,-n,......, w.ans.f9.fL me new ww, me-. sum. uw. wr new Hmmgm, comm., K.,-P. Kuchni, EGGYLEE AMBERSON BARBARA R001 ' GIRLS' GOLF f,..m.-.:w.s..r,..,, vnna.m.-, emn.+...h.f., Aww.. Arm, mmm, Mwamn, esmmq, Mew, 5.0.4 nm a..,f.f., sow, curry, Mew, o'ce.-W, andy, s..,..aw. negro.. GIRLS' sAsxmAu. fm.: Rav: umm, A.a.mf., Lum. w.uL s.Mcw,, Joram mum. MM, anus, wnqm, mms... eumss, sum, swan.: nw sumvawa, wmlwqef, Hindu, x.m..., am. Men, nkegm, Nq...x..,c1.mman9., am, scmxuz, Nonaka. me Ra-v:Kroqu1, H.,ns..9s..y, serqmn, Mum.-, m.cnam.n, amen:-.s, M. am..+a.r. n, Rupp, xunm, wane, Amfgwa, s Afmgwd. LUCILLE KEMP MAME CHEVERS rm.: nm shag, sumxwm, cum, am, L.n.m, unify. Second Raw: Wolnbevwgerl Muhvim. Covina, Raed, Hlilbnd, Weifenhansf. ma Raw: cwm o'a.iw, P...1.q.., amz, G. A. A. UCT-l crediT is due To Miss DOroThy Flynn, Miss DorOThea Forcade, Miss Barbara Mensing, and Miss JaneT Wilson Tor coaching and sponsoring The girls' sporTs Tor This semesTer, M WiTh Peggylee Amberson occupying The presidenT's chair and Frances Weinberger looking aTTer The minuTes, The sponsors and The girls' managerial sTaTT meT every Friday. V Under Their careTul arrangemenTs, assisTed by The Block L SocieTy, The G. A. A. sporT brealcTasT and The girls' rallies were planned and carried ouT. GOLF OLF had a larger TurnOuT This Term Than iT has ever experienced in The pasT. Because Barbara Groves TransTerred To anoTher school, Barbara ROOT served as manager and Miss DOrOThy Flynn as TaculTy advisor. V The beginners were Trained as usual by a proTessiOnal coach aT Lincoln Parlc, and The advanced golTers had Their semi- annual eliminaTiOn TournamenT aT The end OT The semesTer, V New sTudenTs have been especially promising This Term, many showing TraiTs OT TuTure champions. BASKETBALL ASKETBALL, usually played during The winTer, has had a very successTul Term wiTh Lucille Kemp acTing as manager and Miss DOroThy Flynn as TaculTy advisor. v The girls were divided inTo Tour groups, according TO class: Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors, and Triendly cOmpeTiTive inTerclass games were played aT FunsTon Play- ground. V CaTherine Faullcner, a Tormer sTudenT OT Lowell, assisTed Miss Flynn in coaching The girls in good sporTsmanship and in The TundamenTals OT The game. FIELD HOCKEY IELD HOCKEY, a new sporT inTr'oduced by Our new coach, has had a mosT successTul Term wiTh Marie Chevers as manager and Miss DorOThea Forcade as TaculTy ad- visor. v AT The beginning OT The Term The girls learned The rules and regulaTions OT The game and pracTiced Tor Torm aT FunsTon Field. LaTer, when They became more skilled, Teams were Tormed and cOmpeTiTive games were played. X4 NexT semesTer, however, The girls expecT TO play regular inTerclass games. 73 sms- sLocx L ' ' :Me an-I xuem, Lum. mmm, swf., ofqsm, H.w.f.,m, clan, amz, adam, Second Rav: Hier. Msrriwnuhee, Well, Mef-MIG, Whitw-end, Denhmd, Kanuki Numan CAROLINE ORSINOS ENiD KUCHEL, L Y ' fc A W J QQ M Q .. U qi may Q iv 1 L ' .Q In if , . 5 if 3 X Q ' y 9-I' 7 W K Q -4 V Q 9' -W W 4 J rv , i Q W., , , , W I ,,,, AWA , ,Y k 7 LV Y ,...,,. ' ., 1 . 7 ' V ,l , h I if 52- I e v K . W gyglw E Q, A i 74 T ', I ' : M fy W if J -f, gm, I HW .,,. A55g,,5H' 1, . - 5 , 1 We 1 , ' ik ' Q, S' ' ' 23 4 W :mms rm: no.. erm, swam, Mew, Annu, La,.pm..,, csmqges, H...f.,'9.faf, mf. cmh, cmyssw, Am, com a.f..,...,n,, Am. cms., mm., Am, cms., Kwml, Mgt. :mud RW smam..., Kngm, awry, meme., Hou-mn, c..+m.f, Mmm, oiaam, emu., cena., Mum. md aw, s:s....+1, Haus-, Lebwv, Mau... rw, s.w.,sn, Mm, cwmn, mama, sawn, Hmm, Mccmhy, vm. Auf.. fwfh zz,-,.,.,of.,am, Am. com, mmf, Am. emu, susnam, K.-so-,, ow, enum, am, smaaw, wqmsa am., Kf.,...K, mgmn..-, riffs Ro.: sum, sam, ond, sum-.., Mmumofb, Am.mz,.,, McN.m,Lm.1u, M.fa91.s. Lammg, stan-Du, xcnhxm, M..,a0.m, sm a,wH,,fim,sQl1ey, Daman, sf-X, vm.-.4 Aw, Hymn, mm, eww, wwamn. mums ffm no., ciusazw., Jmbw., sam, emu-., mf., Mmme, vamns, H.rb..,gs., cpm., sau bw, DM, M. mm. mem, smzm, J,, senmm, om., n.,m,,.., won, second Raw: vm. Mmwgu, H.-mer, sauna, La Nam., vw., com um, J., Wim, eymmf, fmxmasgf, mm, rn-, f..mf4, snumf, Awami, wn,a+,ns.a, Hmm, sem, nom., mmf Row, mmm, msm. ewgerl, Jmbx, soda, om-mm, Her:iesgVon,SmG1ls,P,,Sr64Vi4Iu, vccfw, mm vasm, Ama, K.,:.,s-Q, cfmwer, Wall, scum cuff, Dam. J., o'N..ff, Williemx. AI+n-mn. T. '- L ,, 1 v X. , J ,A , ' 'm I 2152 1 fi--i.,,1, PYWFWPEYSQHV- 1 -1 ..f As,,s,:M'- 'L xQ'li5i1i?i52 SJ , iff .f .A?5rQfL,3m. 7 Qsgwfw msg -r., Q H 'W 5 QR ' - TTI HARBAUGH GEORGINA GIRLS' SWIMMHNG BLOCK L AROLINE ORGINOS was presidenT oT The Block L SocieTy and Phyllis Yelland was secreTary. The socieTy meT wiTh Miss DoroThy Flynn, who served as TaculTy advisor. All oT The girls who belong To The socieTy deserve a greaT deal oT crediT Tor The successTul sponsorship oT The Lowell play day and The sporTs breakTasT. 8 Members included: CliTTe, Cohn, Denhard, l-larringTon, Henderson, Kuchel, Larson, MereweaTher, Merriville, Meyer, Rabiohn, Rader, RooT, Rossi, Russell, Tyler, Wall, WhiTehead, Yager, and Yelland. TENNIS ENNTS This Term claimed The largesT TurnouT, T60 girls parTicipaTing. Enid Kuchel, manager, and Miss DoroThea Forcade, coach, supervised The Two divisions: The beginners, who were TaughT The TundamenTals, and The advanced players, who had weekly round robin TournamenTs. 8 There were Tour groups: Freshmen, Sophomores, Jun- iors, and Seniors. VeTerans who helped To coach The beginners aT FunsTon Field were: Loraine Lelanne, Elaine KaTon, CharloTTe Rader, Caroline Orginos, BeTTe Crysler, Elvera l-luenergard, Virginia Sullavan, and DoroThy Burroughs. RIDING IDING is always a popular sporT among The girls. Under The able managemenT oT PaTTi l-larbough and Miss JaneT Wilson, TaculTy advisor, iT has had a mosT suc- cessTul Term. 3 Weekly rides were held Tuesdays and Wednesdays Tor beginners and Mondays and Fridays Tor advanced riders. A Two-hour nighT ride around Lake Merced was held. A horse show culminaTed The sporT, Tollowed by The semiannual riders' dinner. SWIMMING WIMMING, as usual, has had a good represenTaTion in The Tield OT sporTs This semesTer. Georgina Mayers acTed as manager and Miss Barbara Mensing as TaculTy advisor. The girls were divided inTo Three groups: beginners, inTermediaTes, and advanced. DiTTerenT colored caps disTinguished The divisions: red Tor beginners, whiTe Tor inTermediaTes. and blue Tor advanced. V VeTeran swimmers helped Georgina Mayers To coach The beginners, while The inTermediaTe and advance groups pracTiced Tancy diving. 75 s. I- I o-.54 SCHOOL.-CALENDAR Q- Auguslr I3-Galileo again. Why can'I we Slay In Our Own Baclc Yard. Augusi I6-Shield and L and Scroll and L iirsi meeiing. CuIIing Paper Dollies. Augusi 22-Class eIec+ions. WinIergreen for President Augusl 24-Firsi council meeiing. Talking Io Myself. Augusi 30-Pirsi Lowell Out I+'s a I-Iumdingerf' Seplember Seplrember Sepiem ber Seplember Sepiember Seplember Seplember Seplember Ociober Ociober Ociober Oclrober Oclober Ociober Oclober I O I I November November November November November December I December December IO-Admission Day. We Love You, Caliiorniaf IO 3- I2-Columbus Day. I-Iey, Sailor! I3-Lowell I3, Mission O. ConIen'recI. I8- I8- I9- 24- 3-Labor Day. Lazy Day in Ihe Sun. -Balboa 7, Lowell I8. I'm Sa+isiiecI. I2-Newcomers' Receplion. I Knew You When. I3-Mr. Polland quoles, No Term Play. Were Your Ears Burning, Baby? I8-Lowell O, Commerce O. SI'raigh+ from The Shoulder. 25-Firs+ reporl cards. From Now On. 27-Lowell 20, Sacred I-Iearf O. On Io VicIory. Firsl Board of Direcfors meeling. I'm Counlring on You. No class dances. ForgoHen. Lowell downs Galileo, I9-9. Who Said Thal' Dreams Don'I Come True? Lowell wins All-Cily Speaking Coniesl. Say II. Varieiies. I Saw S'rars. --Lowell vs. Polyfechnic. You Sofia Be a Foolball I-Iero.' -Armislice Day. 0ver There. I5-Lowell debaies California. If I Could Only Read Your Mind. I6-League debales. Ii You Believed in Me? 29--Thanlcsgiving Day. I-lol Dogs and Sarsaparillaf' 2-Commencemenl exercises. Wha'r Are Your InIenIions? I2-Senior Prom. I Love Io Dance Wiih You. , I4-School closes. LiHIe Man, You've I-Iad a Busy Day. 76 r ff'Nbf . if V


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Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

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1933

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1935

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Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937


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