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

 - Class of 1935

Page 1 of 96

 

Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collectionPage 7, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collectionPage 11, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collectionPage 15, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collectionPage 9, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collectionPage 13, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collectionPage 17, 1935 Edition, Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 96 of the 1935 volume:

i , . z 1 s ! E E 3 E I I l l I X + WWIW ff GQ ,ff jf if ffw f ww ff ,f 5 W 4 fb ff Qwf Wgjpffwfggffw jj ,QQQQL ? jfff,jCLf5m,mR,g-Zwswxi 1 9 RSX' ' ' ' .2 ff, Q, QM! 5 I i n I 1 I xv: a. :au m-mn1- r- r 'mn 1- ' -n vm- w 1 V' U Lmifg Ll M0 RED HND W H, HMI HQ f W H IT H www? SPHING 'jiildfwlx ?I5IETEETNJfUFN?3fE'E iw LQWHLL HIGH jk kX S C H 0 0 L ML M c VO'LUMEdA?f59D n Q3 fkglpfff M JM www IWW MW QW. . ami J R I' U! W PUB ISHE LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION N F DEDICATION Rarely has a man elevaTed To The principalship of a senior high school received The universal acclaim ThaT has been The iusT reward of Mr. Leroy I-I. STephens Tor his many years oT consTrucTive service To Lowell. l-lis abiliTy To be aT all Times human, To combine Tirmness wiTh genTleness, digniTy wiTh good-fellowship, has endeared him To all who have ever had The privilege of his guidance. l-le possesses The rare aTTribuTe oT being able To cope wiTh large problems and yeT execuTe The minuTesT deTails wiTh ease and grace. To Leroy l-T. STephens we dedicaTe This 55Th Red and WhiTe, and hope +ha+ iT may serve as a TiTTing welcome To one who we lcnow will lead Lowell wisely and generously To heighTs never before aTTained. A MESSAGE FROM MR. STEPHENS Many of us have never known fhe square red-brick building, called Lowell High School. To fhese especially, and fo fhe ofhers in lesser measure, fhe refurn in Augusf will be an evenf of marked significance. We long for a home of our own, even if if lacks fhe spaciousness, fhe sunny warmfh, and fhe many modern conveniences fhaf we have come fo look upon as acfual necessifies during our long sfay in Galileo. This experience, good as if has been, is over, and we are eager for a fuller life in our own school. l-lowever, we leave Galileo wifh a feeling of sincere appreciafion and hearffelf grafi- fude fo Mr. Nourse and his fine faculfy, and fo fhe enfire Galileo sfudenf body for fheir generous welcome and for fhe many sacrifices fhey have made fo make our exile a happy one. Youfh looks forward always, and if is wifh keen anficipafion fhaf we make our plans for fhe opening of fhe new ferm in Augusf. Mr. Clark, our principal for many years, once said: A greaf school musf look foward fhe fufure, guided by fradifion, nof bound by if. A greaf school musf have an inferesf in humanify and so frain all ifs members fhaf fhe learning fhey acquire shall nof be used for fhemselves alone, buf always confribufing fo fhe service of ofhers. ln fhe hisfory of San Francisco, Lowell's pasf achievemenfs sfand ouf nofable, disfinguished and worfhy of our name: and if shall be our proud dufy fo keep our record fine and clear, and fo prove fo our cify fhaf Lowell deserves a broader field and larger scope fo bring fo fruifion ifs aims for fhe beffermenf of youfh and for fhe fraining of sfrong and fearless leaders who will fake fheir place in fhe civic life of fhe fufure. We look upon fhe building on l-layes and Masonic Sfreefs as a fempo- rary home, remembering fhaf Lowell has been housed in many buildings and has had in realify buf a superficial connecfion wifh any one of fhem: for Lowell is primarily an ideal, a creed and a fradifion, an abiding belief in fhe value of academic fraining and in 'rhe worfhwhileness of spirifual values, an undying faifh fhaf fhe principles for which if sfands are a force fhaf will so mould fhe youfh of foday 'rhaf fheir lives will be happier, fuller, and richer in fhe years fhaf are fo come. ln fhe refiremenf of Mr. Croffs fhe school losf a greaf feacher, a frue counselor, and a lifelong friend: one whoseifaifh in youfh kepf him ever young. Our debf fo him can never be paid. Only by our efforfs fo live up fo fhe high ideals for which he sfood, his courage, his infegrify and fair- mindedness, can we render a slighf buf fiffing fribufe fo fhe many years of service which he so generously gave fo fhe welfare of Lowell l-ligh School. Q FOREWORD The AncienT Wonders oT The World! The GreaT Pyramid, symbol oT perseverance, Tomb oT Cheops, Towering 476 TeeT above The ever-shiTTing sands oT The Sahara .... The Hanging Gardens oT Babylon, reared upon a series oT mighTy Terraces and arches. a paradise in The land oT paradise .... The Temple oT Diana, lasTing TribuTe To The Goddess oT The I-lunT and oT The Moon .... The greaT sTaTue of JupiTer Olympus, ruler oT The gods. crowning masTerpiece oT Grecian arTisanry .... The wonderTul Tomb oT Mausolus. Tamed Tor exquisiTe sculpTure, a glorious Triumph oT arT .... The Pharos oT Alexandria. greaT lighThouse: sTanding on The rocky shores oT Pharos, a marble pillar oT sheer beauTy .... The Colossus oT Rhodes. magniTicenT TribuTe To The sun: sTraddling The harbor oT Rhodes, awesome guardian, ever waTchTul. Famed philosopher Bishop Berkeley once wroTe: WesTward The course oT Empire Talces iTs way -and so AncienT EasT has given way To Modern WesT: The Wonders oT The AncienT World have yielded To The Wonders oT The Modern World. ln This modern WesT Towering skyscrapers iuT reed-like inTo The heavens: greaT dams rear monsTrous concreTe walls across sTeep river canyons: huge bridges, bands oT sTeel. conquer rivers and bays: greaT TacTories and waTer-driven power planTs supply man's every need. Roaring auTomobiles speed Trom place To place: sTream-lined Trains hurTle across The conTinenT: wondrous sTeam-driven ships ply Their Trade To The Tar corners oT The earTh: man-made birds wing Their way from ocean To ocean, Trom conTinenT To conTinenT. The sTraTosphere-miles inTo The heavens! . . . The baThysphere-Thousands oT TeeT To The ocean's Tloorl Wonders! Wonders oT The Modern WesT. wonders oT The world oT Today. In presenTing These modern achievemenTs as The Theme oT The 55Th Red and WhiTe, we have aTTempTed To porTray Tor you panoramas oT anoTher greaT civilizaTion ThaT rears iTs mighTy head above The horizon oT Time: conquering, developing, invenTing: merging The ideals oT The AncienT East wiTh Those of The Modern WesT, To Torm The viTal and inTeresTing world oi Today, To herald The wonders oT The world oT Tomorrow. fy WSMWGAMWW A1 A I 9 95 Q qi Ng Q DY gf QJ f . f N, ,gf TABLE OF CONTENTS ,Agni ' ADMINISTRATION sr 13 CLASSES - 141 31 ORGANIZATIONS - - az: 45 MUSIC AND DRAMA BOYS' ATHLETICS - - 46 51 - - 52 to 69 6 ,. 7Q15 5 A 523242502 Q A 2223 A 15246 14 A J ADMINISTRATION Down, far down, in fhe greaf depfhs of fhe eerie, mov- ing wafers of fhe sea, lie mysfery, drama, advenfure, beaufy, -lures of fhis living underworld, lures fhaf have dazzled fhe innermosf souls of men and led fhem fo discover fheir darlc secrefs. Man firsf began his explorafions by diving from fhe calm. blue surface and descending info fhe cool currenfs of sub- ferranean caverns and moss covered plains. Buf only a very few minufes af a fime could be spenf in fhis wonderland, because of fhe laclc of oxygen. The invenfion and success of fhe diving suif followed. Buf even fhis was nof sufficienfg man wanfed fo fake phofographs and slcefch whaf he saw beneafh him. Many affempfs were made fo descend in mefal-lilce balls, buf disasfrous resulfs followed. Then Wil- liam Beebe, an eminenf scienfisf of sea life, announced his infenfion of exploring fhe floor of fhe ocean. l-le faced opposifion, buf some realized fhe value of such an expedi- fion and, accordingly, exfensive preparafions were made for fhis underfalcing. In I934, off fhe shores of Bermuda, fhis man sfepped info a small mefal-like gondola, and was slowly lowered. Peering fhrough small lenses, he found him- self in anofher world of grofesgue, living creafuresq fish of vivid color, fierce, serene, large, small, some glowing like sig- nals fo direcf fhe everlasfing hurry of fraffic. l-le wenf down, down, down, fo a record depfh of 3,028 feef. l-lis observa- fions and drawings have broughf fo fhe world a revelafion of fhe life in fhe nefher regions, comparable only fo fhe mysfery of fhe blue heavens. Z I 4 Y o E-I -Q: III II-I U2 ISI Z 2 l Q : '12 1 MMM ff 1 I M FACULTY ' SPRING ' 1935 MR. L. H. STEPHENS . ,v,., .. ...,.,,... Principal MISS E. LACOSTE .,..... . . ,,.,, Vice-Principal MR. H. M. MONROE .,.,. ., ,.,. ..Vice-Principal MISS E. P. HARRISON... .. .,,,.......... .Secreiary MRS. R. MILLER ............,.. ..,.,, A Hendance Clerk MISS LACOSTE MR. MONROE J. Alexander, Miss H. J .......... ......... M usic, English Alger, Mr. I. G. ....,.,,.... . Angus, Miss M. S. .. Badger, Miss F. B. ..... ., Balensieler, Miss F. .,,, . Barker. Mr. l. C. ...., . Barnes, Mr. L. B. ..,.. . ..................Hislory ...............French .............Music ......................English .. .....,,,,,...... Malhemahcs ..............Physics, Geomefry Barrell, Miss K. C. ......,,..................,............... Lalin Bass, Mr. G. W. ,,.......... Economics, U. S. Hislory Baxfer, Miss M. A. ........ General Science, Biology Beardsley, Miss L. J. .....,,.. .... ................... E n glish Builer, Miss L. ........,,,,..,........,,...,,...,.. Malhemalics Cleghorn, Mr. A. M. lHeadl ............ ....... H islory Crolcer, Mrs. F. M. ........................ Hisiory, English Cui-Is, Mr. J. G. .............. .............. Malhemalics Dobson, Mr. R. J. .................... Physiology. Biology Duffy, Miss A. G. lHeadl .......,.................... English Elslcamp, Mr. L. M. ............ .,....................,. B iology Flexsenhar, Capl. H. J. ............................ R.O.T.C. Flynn, Miss D. ............. ..... Physical Educalion Forbes, Mr. W. D. ..... . Forcade, Miss D. ........ . Gallagher, Mr. E. D.. .................,.,Chemisiry . ....,. Physical Educalion Gerlough, Mr. L. S. ,.., .. Gray, Miss F. H. ..... . ...........,.,.........Typing . ....HisIory .....................Spanish Graybiel. Mr. J. M. . ..................... Chemislry Harris, Mr. E. H. .......,... .......... P hysical Educalion Henderson, Mrs. E. W. .,.....,............... .English Henrich. Mr. L. J. ......... .,........ S cience, English Herrmann, Miss F. L. Hunf, Miss A. P. ........... . Jordan, Mrs. M. W. D. ..,.. . .. ,,,,. .............. A rl' .......His+ory ...........English Kasl, Mr. G. ..............,..., ....,.,...,.,....,....... B iology Kellogg, Miss E. E. ..... . Kifchen, Mr. C. L. .. Kuhnle, Mrs. V. T. ...... . Lee, Miss E. S. ........ . Libby, Mr. B. B. ...... . ........Physiology, Biology ..........Physical Educalion .........................English ........Ma+hemaIics, Lalin ....................Chemislry Lighlner, Mrs. A. ...... .......... S alesmanship Lillie, Mr. R. ............. ............... G erman Lorbeer, Mr. G. C. ............. ............. H islory Malcheile, Miss O. ..............,....................... English McCarIy, Mr. A. L. lHeadl .............. Malhemalics McCord, Mr. O. H. .............. Mechanical Drawing McDonald, Mrs. M. E. ................................ English Mensing, Miss B. M. ................ Physical Educalion Moore, Mr. S. W. ...... .................... I-I islory Morrin, Miss M. I. ..... ........ ........,. E n glish Morlon, Mr. F. W. ........ ........................... S panish Neff, Mr. B. I-I. ........... ........ P hysical Educafion Nepperl, Miss J. M. Oliver, Mrs. M. M. ........ Ollvlalley, MISS H. ........ ...... . nish .Freehand Drawing .........LaI'in, English Osborn, Miss E. M. ..... Osuna, Miss A. M. ....... ......... S panish, French Peckham, Miss G. C. ....,. . Polland, Mr. S. K. ....... . Resion, Miss G. I. ........... . Revoy, Miss H. M. ............ , Rolaerlson, Mr. A. Sanders, Mr. J. B. J.M .......... Schou, Miss E. M. ..... Schwarlz, Mr. A. ....... ....... . Scoll, Miss E. G. ..... Seawell, Mr. H. W. ................. . ................His+ory . ....... Dramalics ..........French ..........French .............Physics ..........MaI'hemaTics ....................I-Iislory Chemisfry, Biology ....................Library ..................Drawing Silbersfein, Miss E. ................ Chemislry, German Smufh, Miss A. G. ...............,........ French, German Smifh, Mr. T. A. lHeadl ......... .......... Physics Slack, Miss K. ...................,.. ........ ....,..... E n glish Tuclcer, Mr. F. B. lHeadl ................................ Laiin Voyne, Mr. M. ..........,............... Physical Educalion Walsh, Mr. C. F. ......... , ..................... English Welch, Miss H. A. ..,... ....,.. M alhemaiics Whilalcer, Miss A. .,.... ..,.,,.......,..,..,.... L alin Williams, Mr. S. .... . Wilson, Miss J. .... . ............HisIory, Spanish Physical Ed ucalion W Ns CFFICERS :ri usfiffff? Us mf . mfiffjjffg I-i ffvw 'J BENNETT Mc A J Pkesuoem J Qx S G W ij My M7 JAM 4 BARBAR A McADOO vlcE-PREsmENT I ERS IC FF r FH S12 S11 Po , s X .. si. L RAYMOND BRUNN N A N D The Scroll and L, l.owell's lradi- Tional boys' service sociely, has ren- dered a lerrn of valuable service , f Wi+h Brian l-lan? pr n+ Waller Krexnz axvice ' nl and Willia oelg asfsecrelaorjy dulies, ire dislr' ' eci51!d'fon , cieniou r orhrnehol, TlJQ,li:r1em bNrsfa4 lo be om w 7' They ftuvnis V arousing en J '4er+ainmen+ for lhe neWcomers. Order mainlained by Them al rallies and games was lhe rnosl nolable for many ferms pasl. Mem bership in lhis sociely is one of lhe highesl honors lhal can come lo a boy .T Lowell. dd, Rl V ,f!JlJf liLlJ 'fi QP Od lil 49,Jf,id 'O 1 . .yi lloflf Ayendeobjaorf lkeir slcilliuljhafgervi' e Fres KY rireicfepliori, al M 1 lfo I f ,- JV jj! l' f JUNE Y . ,M I , I ,ly i l ii il' ' ' f j , f I ' ' I! I ly! T Uh 1 If jgf ii T f 2 ff WMD 1 1 ij V' ,ALBXW !l 1' I o V ' 4 ' ' , ' l Ther' - i 'f 1- f f cieTy, dfbbfhe fi . andlf, upheld iTs Tra- i 95: 1. .. s c u-rTeous co- peraTio 'and assisTa e. Under he c ip oT June l-larrin n Th ir resi mem- bers have ac d conquered Their numerous responsibiliTies. BeTh Dahleen and Adelle Merri- man have Tilled The remaining oT- Tices oT vice presidenT and secre- Tary. Their chieT services have been rendered in mainTaining order aT The rallies, providing enTerTainmenT aT The Freshman recepTion, and serving boTh TaculTy and sTudenTs. A place on The membership roll oT This organizaTion is Truly a rec- ogniTion oT meriT. 4 gm fm .W E Ania afll J'7 - I H Cl-1 Zf'v6C55f w.z, fbvvfwdwwfg 1 - f ' i l'l 431.2 f 4 jx-jp c,7'7V4C' K z 3 p 'Q 4 Aff, ,LJ The Boys' Council has done much fhis ferm in fransacfing a large por- fion of school business, fhrough The unselfish efforfs of fhe enfire council. The chief acfivify was The sale of ficlcefs. Membership in fhe Boys' Council consisfs of represenfafives of every regisfry room in fhe school, who were organized primarily for The preservafion of school spirif. One of fhe func- fions of fhe body is fo selecf fhe assisfanf yell leaders. Roberf Shine and Roberfon Williams were chosen fhis semesfer. Wifh fhe guidance of ifs very capable Presidenf, Earll Shine, and Faculfy Advisor, Charles T. Walsh, fhe council has confinued fo be an excellenf help fo sfudenf seIf-govern- menf. Their willingness fo cooperafe has helped fo provide a very success- ful ferm. The represenfafives have been Kemp I5I, Philip I52, I-Ierman I53, I-Iills 20I, Trimbur 202, Sfrauss 203, Baker 204, Goldman 205, Garcia 207, Willi 250, Dragolovich 25I, I-Iarringfon 252, Werner 253, Musanfe 254, Sfein 255, I-Ianson 257, Williams 26I, Shoop 30I, Marfin 303, Sunfzeff 304, Dessel 305, Jones 306, Donnelly 308, Lopez 3I0, Caglieri 3I4, I-Ioughfon 3I5, Schwarz 3I6, Masonelc 3I7, Berman 350, Fleischer 35I, I-Iagen 355, Ellcind 356, Geffen 357, Sfone 358, Shine 360, Laplcin 362, Davis 363, Dannenberg 40I, Norfhen 404, MacGruer 408, Emerson 4I I, Ellcins 4I2, Kessel 4I 3, Dunlap 4I4, Curran 4I 5, Morgan 450, Jones 453, Rabiohn 454, Bufler 455, Guinee 456, I-learn 457, Azevedo 458, Mahoney 459, Youdall 460, Kahn 46I, Nell 462, Ray 463, Jaffe 464, Dagorf 465, I-Iannan 466, Quiros 552, Livingsfon 554. V SOPHOMORE BOY REPIESENYAYNES Fagigklff. ECEESEYIATI E5 lui aw, om, Mmm, ms.. my. oszm, s:ww.,1, C-M, mms... mp.. ,,,,,,,,QQ Wmbv, Hui imp , r,mlr.s',1s,..,, mn, L:vaf.9f+.n, wziissm, snwp, wnl:,em-mn mana, Hsuqnvnf., IEPIESENTAYIVES Muon! Garcia, Sem-nn, Sunni, Dagcri. . Hagen, Dmnanbmg, Youdall. Luskin, Dfagdavrcfr, Rablshn. , . .. 7 f f ' - I r 1 1 r f Eg- If liTff1'f'T'TIf'-if? ffPT Under The guidance oT Irene Spears as PresidenT, and Ivliss LacosTe as FacuITy Advisor, The Girls' Council has given iTs whole-hearTed cooperaTion in conducTing aTTairs oT imporTance in The school wiTh a considerable mea- sure oT success. The Girls' Council is in league wiTh The Boys' Council and is composed oT represenTaTives Trom all The regisTry rooms. This body has displayed splendid cooperaTion in TransacTing school business, especially in The selling oT sTudenT body cards. So well did They succeed ThaT a record number oT sTudenT body cards were sold, and Lowell led all The ciTy high schools in The number oT TicIceT sales Tor aThleTic conTesTs. The council worlced wiTh The greaTesT diligence, leaving no Task undone in iTs endeavor To carry on The TradiTional Lowell spiriT. This is The sevenTeenTh Term ThaT The Girls' Council has conTinued To prove iTseIT a valuable asseT in mainTaining The sTandards oT Lowell. The members Tor This Term have been Roche I5I, Cowles I52, Bercovich I53, WiTcher 20I, Dwyer 202, KaTon 203, LunT 204, Waller 205, Ryan 206, Raalca 207, Reardon 250, Reeves 25 I, BrunTon 252, SmiTh 253, I-Ienderson 254, MagheTTi 255, Bubb 257, Reade 26I, Barry 30I, ScoTT 303, Riddell 304, OnesTi 305, I-Iirsch 306, SchwyTer 308, McGahie, Greene 3 I4, SmiTh 3I5, I-Iinds 3I6, Perry 3I7, I-Iail 350, Bly 35I, Gould 355, Lee 356, PosTaI 357, Tylor 358, Spears 360, Iv1ingsT 362, SiIbersTein 363, I-IimmeIwrighT 40I, Proll 404, Gerdes 408, Kaufman 4I I, Koclcos 4I2, Dahleen 4I 3, Jamieson 4I4, FosTor 4I5, Reilly 450, Cerbine 453, Bergman 454, Ashlsenaze 455, Ivlurch 456, McDonald 457, Samuel 458, Erickson 459, Jaclc 460, Malm 46 I, O'Connell 462, Currany,4s6x3,I SpadpIyo'ngV46Ai, McDonald 465, Hyland 466, Sommer 552, Kerr 5545, Riffs' I' ,Q I ,,,' N i .- V Q H Al J I ,f 'ef' 1 1 ii 1. ,A is ' Il 'x I - l 'I.Jr V I 4 , , if' ' . ' ' if nl, I, . 'f , ,' if'I'I..x 'X' ,W X . 1 fr W CLASSES Skies-skies oT azure blue, skies of midnighT black, Tlecked wiTh sparkling, gliTTering iewels-on land and sea These glisTening diamonds and sapphires have guided The TaTe of mankind. Sailing vessels oT old plowed Through end- less waTers wiTh only Those brighT liTTle lighTs To guide Them on Their perilous iourneys. Weary Travelers, losT on land, looked upward To Tind a hosT oT vigilanT sTars whose Twin- kling rays senT messages oT hope and led Them To saTeTy and comTorT. BuT FaTher Time sped onward and wiTh his rapid march, man has perTecTed insTrumenTs oT direcTion unTil he no longer needs To depend Tor saTeTy upon The heavenly bodies. More Than Three cenTuries ago, in l609, Galileo, a Tore- mosT scienTisT oT ThaT Time, TascinaTed by The mysTery oT The heavens, invenTed one oT The TirsT Telescopes and cre- aTed a new scienTiTic inTeresT Tor asTronomy. Today Those glimmerings oT lighT are where They always have been, buT whaT a diTTerenT'aspecT They presenTl ln lonely sTudios, high above The busy, busTling ciTies and peaceful, rolling counTry, men siT aT Telescopes, silenTly waTching The spaces before Them so ThaT noT a change occurs which They do noT record. NighT by nighT and day by day, They consTanTly sTudy, sTudy, sTudy-so ThaT They can give To The world addiTional amazing TacTs To TurTher The almosT incredible scienTiTic Tindings oT asTronomy. ,M 'GN-.. WWh fm, M 'f f, fs 25? X XEEQESEQQ ix EX U2 FI-'I U2 CD HZ .-1 U af 'VJ 14 I n 1 n , ,M 1 , 5 . , . .-,W ' .-Q: - ,fi Af N ,L 11: I' T L l , I ' Q , . V nl K .IF . 1 5 T X ! 1 I . I r 4 W.. , . I w ml , 1. f Y Q ISI SENICRS Senior numerals become signiTicanT wiTh The approach oT June, l935. Carl Troppmann, Peggylee Amberson, and Olive WhiTe were The Tinal class oTTicers. L. l-l. S. S. A. oTFicers were BenneTT McGuire, Barbara McAdoo, Floyd WalTer, Raymond Brunn, and ArT Shearer. Brunn, l-larvey, Kessel, King, Krenz, Lee, McGuire, O'Connor, Shearer, Shine, and Troppman were members oT The Scroll and L g Peggylee Amberson, Marian AraTa, Burris Bly, BeTh Dahleen, Marie C5odT, June l-larringTon, Barbara McAdoo, Adelle Merriman, Caroline Orginos, Marie RigheTTi, Lucille Rodoni, EsTher Salvisberg, and Florence Waller, oT The Shield and L. Raymond Brunn was ediTor oT The Red and WhiTe q RoberT Mendle, associaTe. Vera SilbersTein, PaTTy de RoulT, David SchuTz, and Floyd WalTer held imporTanT Lowell posiTions. Mary CaToire, Field, KaTchinslci, Mar- golis, Reder, and Weisgerber debaTed. l-lerberT Ward was R. O. T. C. major. Upon The sTage were Burris Bly, Eloyas Cagle, RoberT Camp, Norman LowensTein, Barbara McAdoo, Adelle Merriman, BeaTrice SchwarTz, ElizabeTh Singer, Florence Waller, and Olive WhiTe. Edward RossTon headed The C. S. F. Girls' sporTs leaders were The Misses Meyer, O'Brien, Orginos, Perdicalis, Rader, RooT, and Waller. Boys' aThleTics claimed Blackman BonTilio, Dingle, Dowd, Egan, Ensler, Evans, Fahn, Feldheym, Franusich Guinee, Humphrey, Kessel, King, Koblik, Lum, Maxwell, Mooy, MusanTe O'Connor, Rogaway, Shrieve, STadTTeld, ST. Gaudens, STock, Troppman WalTer, and Weisgerber. I5 g ROBERT MENDLE VALEDICTORIAN HISTORIAN IT is wiTh a mixTure oT emoTions ThaT we reTrospecT The lasT Tour years oT our lives: Tor The saTisTacTions oT learning, oT compeTiTion, and oT achieve- menT, mingle wiTh The deiecTions oT Tailure and neglecT. The happiness in our hearTs Tor The realizaTion oT The educaTion we have acquired is sad- dened only by The knowledge ThaT all These opporTuniTies aT Lowell have come To an end. We are approaching graduaTionq aT Lowell we have noThing Toward which To look Torward: if we wish To visualize our school, we musT look back. We enTered The red-brick sTrucTure in The Tall oT I93 I or I932. Our ioy aT being LowelliTes was slighTly dimmed, even as iT is now, by The sorrow we TelT in leaving a grammar or iunior high school oT which we were iusTly proud. To The meTamorphosis oT Tadpole To Trog, we can compare The change which Took place wiThin us during The TirsT Tew monThs oT our new ciTizenship. l-liTherTo we had been guided, pampered, and coddled by lower grade insTrucTors anxious To see us given The besT opporTuniTies ThaT They could devise. Now, however, we were leTT To our own iniTiaTive: if we were in need oT advice, we musT seek ouT our class councillor or hold council wiThin ourselves: This laTTer course made inTellecT imperaTive, Thus our TirsT Term aT Lowell was one oT swiTT learning-noT merely oT English, maThe- maTics, science, and languages, buT oT a kind ThaT cannoT be classiTied. We learned To respecT comfidence in ourselves: To rely mainly upon +ha+ wiTh which God had endowed us, noT alone upon such wisdom as had been handed down To us. Our l-ligh Freshman Term was a careTree one. We were siTuaTed Tar up The l-layes STreeT hill aT Denman, away Trom Lowell because oT The lack oT TaciliTies Tor TwenTy-Three hundred sTudenTs in our aged edifice, or mighT iT have been ThaT Denman was an isolaTion ward wherein The Tever in our young blood mighT cool wiThouT arousing The zeal oT independence in oThers? For we had spenT a half year oT revelling in The honors and glories ThaT are Lowell's, and They had sTirred us so deeply ThaT we Too aspired To I6 Ihroughou heco do . re I : man op eager I Ihe heighI oIour essors,a ven do school iriI in hi ices - - d om Ip ei 6+ X J. him GIIICI III service ' ees I o GFIIC wp ma I er I r Uq IC op r, wa o w Pla S POrIarI aII Iou re ! a an m In sy an ' ere I- ' ' ri he FIS m a u w - w o b on e - I ' i usp if a .h x c' rd in ur J or 4 ' A ' . . 0 0 0 y x Iv ' N p 6 a :W 4 mfglle rIhq' alce .--I ck uIhe I a a I wa f I L llm' Ia sa Is og n bl h O r Ulldl w s ppe an unded ngi ers I' sIr d 1 rd II d g I 9 C I h Ii an I as X1 d el a e r I d I' In c c uld be conhnu d I as x e nob In II ' ' h I I ur ss on ' I ra s o pme nd I reor iza ' n I Iivi ' s in ou r w lile Iice. iII1' o --I es w eing eld in Ihes e m ras b ore our ex u . u i Q r s- io eha if iIaIion n a y r and a II, ss wa rea . Q Ire p ods wer s o - e ed. s ' cIs e on nsed Io Ihei I- Xe: sur cesf Il- Q ol ac 'viI s were e alI ge'rher oIhers I-X dor anI IIhe oI ow or Ie Ihe c e ho ad .II n our emed c he our oved v as elevaIed Io i. acanI s' y I ee 1 o ' fi is v rsaIile personaliIy Thus iI is Ih I we re M I-e n's Iir gra 'ng I ss: we hope IhaI in a e rs he i rem '- in pe nali an in ccomplishmenIs even s a r b I im. I I fi 'I We re I QI ny oI who e well om a iu gh aIIended men re sIran o us I Io us our own are we aI I ld s uc ge for Ihree I rms' h s enI ame period aI Iru y llIIes7 o we d ouI s a xample oI high school scho . a p Gali , a spbool e Ira 'o are n ou s, wh se xii ding and equip I , I ar 3 I . ' . s ' IasI' IliIyg ill ur eads Eve Ihe crowd in Iair play and sp smansrqfpiclf e p Ih acI I I Lowell has been IransplanIed Io a new e vironm I, she has en I and is Ihriving. F he p Io 'ears an s of one among us would be largely simila Io an e , uI no wiIh aduaIfon, iI is like seeds bursIing Irom Ihe pod sc red b e ur winds. AIIer Ioday never are we Io uniI ag In s Ah as o ne, I935g nevermore shall we meeI as Low Ies' ef we, i be classiIied only as American ciIizens-leI us hope, I yal, Iho Iful d consIrucIive, in meeIing Ihe problems Iha+ awaiI . - ROBERT A. MENDLE. I X , I-lisIorian. Class oI June. l935. I7 guide wasQhfaIire ' Fr is . CroII a r I rce ' . en , ho g r hi ody n i d as ed on cious of III I I. I. fm - i vi' Ih III I h x x d d n ri , . du I I ll -I I- r In - as h I I ' O QS 1 f 1, ' ,,-RX'MIj,','r.' T f A -1 R X' FX 4. ,, ' 1 H ' x lp H J ,' f A xl A 9 . 3. , if ' x x' F 1-Lf J -I- K 'V Y . x , . ,, X 4 xffrf 5 N N,Wkm0J KVvM.Jvvyv,,.v ',,, , f . , ,xx f f M A 5fq y'f'fhfi?'4f ,.Mx..x cwwf fx I 1 fs. A . 1 , 4 if 'E Sfavk S ,MM ' 4 , IV' ws Inf I I hifi IEIIB Isis , if!! I I 125 I -- JOHN GLJINEI: MII UIQ I fe A III!! 'f PAUL KAI-IN 2 ,Q BFE .L ,pr MARIE HARHSON NORMA HENDERSON GRACE HOLLING,-BERRY 3 JUNE HARRINQIDN ' JUNE HERKNER Eff WILUAM Homes BRIAN HARVEY DORIS HEAPS sfaaesm I N 1 feoksm Hman Q .5 Q 0 fx HERZOG LYDIA HILL MARY Zl?!15b+ 6.Cnbb-an. ' mm .. Mgt! ' Y, . 5 ,J fm 1, k,, . ' I - I A ,ff . , Us I .EJ ij- 'J ha EDWARD Hurss-me MARIIN JEFFERSON WMAM ,WSER 'GY ' fslfi 5 V fa- , , , f 4 3, if if I , D' I . A I 4 WALTER IRVINE ' LADRENQE Jos mow mumos MARIOIK HORWIYZ YVONNE JACKSON JAY JONES MURIEL KAMLER WILLIAM HOWDER ROSELLE JACOBS FLORENCE JORDAN L, TERUKO KANBA RAY HUMPHREYS JOH N HURLEY BRUCE JANG JOSE ,Iovgw in RUSSELL KANTER , ' 3, Q .. , , '- I ' ,Q - PEGGY JAWS Amman June ALFRED KATSCHINSKI . LOUISE KATSCHINSKY I 4, ff- ,M -. ,- ELOISE LYON JACK KESSEL MARY KING WALTER KRENZ ENID KLICHEL NORMA LANE LANSINKJ AUDREY LQPLIN HENRY ELIZABETH MACAULEY M151 ' , ,M W xnyff NCJRMAN LOWENSTEIN LLOYD MACKY ROBERT KING ABNER KUPERSTEIN DOROTHY LARSON JANET LEYEY HASKELL LUDWIG MARIAN MAGNER HAROLD KLANG in MELVIN LASER A, Haan Musa JANE ULIQN RICHARD LUM A ELISA MAINI JANE KNIGHT DAVID KOBLICK 'Y ,yy ', 1 I--gf 1, HOMER LAMBIE DALE LANE ,I ELIZABETH LEE TOM LEE MAMII: UM RICHARD LONERGAN PAUL LURMANN RICHARD LYNCH JACOUELINEUANSFIELD , CHARLES MANZONI HARRY MARGOUS , BARBARA MQADOO BENNETT MCG'-'IRE MEYER MAURINE MULIER FRANCES NELSON VIQLA MARKAHIAN MARGARET McALLISTER JACK McKANNAY Auonsv MARTELL MCANTIRE LEONARD MCKEE LAMBERT MEYER DORIS MICHELS JACK MURPHY meme Muszcu Mumsr. NEWSOM STANLEY NEYHART smsonn msouex some Mccweswev noaenr Mewms 1 HELEN MERIWETHER GEORGE MAXWELL Q MAN MCQUNE MOULTON MAYER enum MCDONALD . 3 AUELE MERRIIQAN MILLER LESLIE MUSANTE HENRY MOOY JEAN MYERS MURIEL MORRISON LOUISE NATHAN 'I ' M I M s iw A ,, , I ,I , . Mfiliflgaf-yf,. M ,.,.,,, I' I Y A' vQ'4I9f5i1IQQ'L-Qfgivu I- . , I UW 2 ',..gY-Iwi? , -1,1 , .Q ,, I W - I ,1.igzm5Sffi'fIf?iffzfv:ff 'M ' ' W if- 'lakh' Me' -. 1,gn,f,., r '- .. 'I-mu, A.. ,. ' - -ww .,, I ,g .pf f-'- I V- WL, 3 Mig . ' ' -1v:.4wii,f9v.f va Vt . , I iw I uf If J ' ',.fV. '. 'ARJOR'f 'MYERS I I Swwm MARJORIE NICHOLS MURIEL NIELSON mums QASJOHN MARE mbwzw ROD ROGAWAY 4ARLOe PADEP MARUN RIST BLAND ROGERS PATRYCIA ROHUCK BARBARA ROOT MARUN ROBACK GEORGE Roserwunsr EDWARD ROSSTON ROSE RUSHDOONY 1 ffl-M X . i dis 'Q- Q 1 1. V Q L 3 xg g ij' N my ,Q J' i ,WW ., , .. , W, , EVHYN SASM My 'xy MMORE' Jmoxpem AW ARTHUR SHEARER emacs swowsm owo scumz DON SAPHOLM eemfucs Scnwfwz SUZANNF SHEEHAN ESTHER SALVSEER9 PAUL SCHWARTZ COBURH QMCTUARY RABERT suns BARBARA swans WA SCHK3 l-ECN WAP' mm sums r ELISE SCHMODT RUYH SHA'-PIRO RICHARD SHRSEVl 1 VNV-105 wuw-.Ro sueeen L venmow swam 'A FUSE STEUER VERA SYLBERSTEIN EDMUNU SOLOMON JOHN STOCK LUCSLLE SIMMONS 1RENE SPEARS BERNHARD STONE JANE MARS-AREY sxmv ' MAumce ST. GAUDQNS : RACHAEL STUDABAKER 5L'N'CE BWWYT comma S'AlB vaw. Maven MARJORIF TAT? I HORTENSE TAYLOR MIRIAM UTTHQ STANLEY VIERECK 'CUGENE TINKER ROBERT WEGA JOHN CHARLES TOWNSEND , PEQGY VAN SHAICK MARTHA WALL CARL TROPPMANN EVERETT VAUGHAN - pgsgggwqjg VJALLER VIRGINIA TURNLEY LAVERNIE VAUGHAN CHAQLES WALSH ANNABELLE TYLER BERYL VICKERY FLOYD WALTER MARY wxLsoN wJ. 51.411 HERBERT WARD JAMES WELLS VIRGINIA WILSON WILLIAM WAIERS OLIVE WHITE JERQME WITHERS PHOEEE WATWOOD WILLIAM WHITE HELEN WOLF LUAYN KING W JULIAN WEISS E WEEKS KATHRYN WILDBERGER i IRMGARD WOLF EISGERBER JOSEPH WILLIAMS AMY WONG MARQARU wmsou EARL WONQ A.. ..il ln SENIOR ROSTER-CLASS OF TUNE 1935 Abend, Maurice Amigo, Frederick H. Ash, H. Rode Beasley, William W. E. Bernard, Jr., Bernhard L. Berriman, Dunstan S. T. Blackman, Alvin De Maine Blumenthal, Herbert Blumlein, John L. Bonfilio, Victor Brown, Archie Eugene Brunn, Robert Raymond Brotman, Herbert Ray Castagnola, Felix Theodore Camp, Robert Clairvaux, John E. Choy, Benson Colton, Edgar Louis Cory, Richard Henry Danziger, Philip Fabian Dehr, Albert Derin, Maurice Dingle, Raymond R. Domb, Leonard Eugene Dowd, William Gerald Doyle, Robert H. Dragolovich, Milan Duemler, John J. Edwards, Harry Welson Egan, Warren Bradford Elkins, George Ensler, Henry Evans, Errol Stanley Fahn, Jerome Alvarez, Mildred J. Amberson, Peggylee Annis, Barbara Elizabeth Arata, Marian Salinda Baer, Shirley Bailey, Katherinanne Bambarger, Janet lrene Barber, Dorothy Bernice Batmale, Jeanne Antoinette Batt, Adrienne Jeannette Bercovich, Ann Beuche, Siegrid Marie Bloch, Ruth Virginia Block, Gladys Blum, Beverly Lenore Blum, Lucille Bly, Burris Alene Bonadeo, Dina Esolina Bordi, Marie D. Bothe, Evelyn Florence Boverman, Anita Briggs, Mary Kathryn Brophy, Bettie Brown, Elizabeth Buerkle, Exa Burns, Elaine Nola Burroughs, Dorothy C. Cagle, Eloyas Lillian Carlquist, Eleanor Carlson, Mildred Jeanette Casey, Mary Margaret Catoire, Mary Stickney Celeber, Ia Chandler, Mary Jane Clarkson, Ethel Adelaide Cohen, Gladys Janet Cohn, Gladys Alva Collins, Patricia Anne Coogan, Jean Roberta Feldheym, Leland Roy Field, Martin E. Fleischer, Louis Walter Franusich, Anton J. Friedberq, Jack Furuta, Fuiio Gheen, John F. Ginsberg, Jerome R. Glassberg, Lawrence Gobar, John Francis Goldmann, Jack Beniamin Goldstein, Arthur Milton Goodwin, John Henry Goss, Laurence Greenlaw, Charles Shelby Gross, Burton W. Grosman, Donald Harold Grotte, N. Lee Guinee, John F. Harvey, Brian Hearn, Sargent Herman, Robert Sydney Herzberg, David Herzog, John H, Homer, Jr., William H. Howder, William Hurley, John Thomas Hutshing, Edward E. lrvine, Walter Jang, Bruce Jefferson, Marlin Ashley Joe, Lawrence H. Jones, Jay James Jung, Alfred Cowles, Dahlas Cropley, Janice Dahleen, Beth Danziger, Betty Margaret Day, Betty Deming, Betty De Martini, Anita Cecilia De Martini, Lois D. De Martini, Veronica R. M. de Roulf, Patty Dixon, Elizabeth lvl. Dooling, Faye Dyer, Margaret Eaton, Marie Eloise Edwards, Claudine Enwright, Josephine Essex, Constance J. Finlayson, Mary Houston Fortier, Helen Franchi, Dorothy M. Fujita, Martha Hana Garrick, Vir inia Marlyn Ginsburg, lfariorie N. Gittelsohn, Barbara J. Godt, Marie Green, Dorothy Guerin, Jean Harelson, Marie Lucille Harrington, June Heaps, Doris Marie Heller, Geor ia Felice Henderson, lforma Louise Herkner, June Frances Hill, Lydia Maria Hoffman, Mar Davis Hollingbery, Grace J. Horvitz, Marion Irma Jacobs, Roselle Jackson, Yvonne BOYS Joven, Jose Kahn, Paul Kalimos, Leon Kaiser, Jr., William F. Kanter, Russell Jacob Katchinski, Jr., Alfred Kessel, Jack Cooper King, Robert Klang, Harold Koblik, David W. Krenz, Walter Robert Kuperstein, Abner David Lager, Melvin Phillip Lambie, Homer Kythreatis Lane, Dale Edward Lee, Tom Alfred Leplin, Emanuel B. Lonergan, Richard Phillip Lorenzen, Henry Ludwig, Haskell David Lum, Richard Y. Lurmann, Paul F. Lowenstein, Norman Lynch, Richard Lyon, Donald R. Macky, Joseph Lloyd Manzoni, Charles R. Margolis, Harry Masonek, Sanford A. Maxwell, George Roberts Mayer, A. Moulton Mendle, Robert Alfred Meyer, Lambert Martin Miller, Robert R. GIRLS Jarvis, Peggy Y. Jordan, Florence Patricia Kamler, Muriel Leona Kanba, Teruko Katchinsky, Louise King, Mary Elizabeth Knight, Jane Kuchel, Enid Lane, Norma Jean Lansing, Roberta Leialoha Larson, Dorothy Louise Lauer, Helen E. Lee, Elizabeth Brechin Leeds, Margaret Winitred Levey, Janet Theresa Levy, Audrey Dee Lillon, Jane Winifred Lim, Mamie Lyon, Eloise Macauley, Elizabeth Magner, Marion Elizabeth Mains, Elisa Laura Mansfield, Jacqueline Markarian, Viola A. Martell, Audrey Mayers, Mariorie Lillian Meriwether, Helen Merriman, Adelle Parker Meyer, Charlotte Michels, Doris Helene Morrison, Muriel ldell Muller, Maurine Genevieve Murch, lrene Dorothy Myers, Jean B. McAdoo, Barbara Lucille McAllister, Mary Margaret McAntire, Georgia Milton McChesney, lone A. McCune, Mary M. Mooy, Henry Peter Murphy, Jack F. Musante, Leslie F. McGuire, Bennett McKanny, Jack Francis McKee, Leonard B. Neyhart, Stanley H. O'Connor, Gerard Orr, Robert S. Otis, Richard Pape, Henry E. Parramore, Thomas Peaslee, Frederic Reese Pedrin, George ' Pellett, Alex H. Phelan, James D. Philip, Alan Rae, H. Davidson Reder, Melvin W. Rist, Martin Riviello, Cosmo R. Roach, Joseph Edward Roback, Martin Shine, E. Earll Shrieve, Richard David Siegel, Willard Solomon, Edmund Stadtteld, Sanford Staib, Conrad St. Gaudens, Maurice Stock, John P. Stone, Bernhard Tilton, Ray W. Tinker, Eugene Troppmann, Carl M. Townsend, Charles L. Uyeda, Robert Yasuo Vaughan, Everett Viereck, Stanley Wagner, John Robert Walsh, Charles Francis Walter, Floyd Franklin Wansbury, Dixon Earl Ward, Herbert E. Waters, William Edward Weisgerber, King J. Rogaway, Roderick MatthewWeiss, Julian A. Rogers, T. Bland Rosenquist, George Rosston, Edward William Safholm, Don Schultz, David Newton Schwartz, Paul Selig, Robert B. Shaft, Leon Theodore Shearer, Arthur Vernon Sherriffs, Alex C. McDonald, Edith Nathan, Louise F. Nelson, Frances E. Newsom, Muriel Nichols, Mariorie E. Nielson, Muriel Elaine O'Brien, Patricia Olsen, Judith Penora Orginos, Caroline Ormsby, Helen Mary Oschatz, Eva-Susanna Papatinou, Olga Parkinson, Marion Perdicalis, Dorothy Person, Dorothy Ellen Peterson, Anita Pinner, Marilyn Platt, Jessica Helene Pohlman, Helen Overton Pontier, Lena Clarice Pray, Martha Mary Rabiohn, Phyllis Daphne Rader, Charlot N. Retalllck, Rosella Righetti, Marie Rondoni, Lucille Rohlick, Patricia K. Root, Barbara Jean Rushdoony, Rose Jasmine Sabia, Evelyn E. Salvisberg, Esther R, Sanctuary, H. Coburn Schic, Rita Schmidt, Elise Alma Schwartz, Beatrice D. Shapero, Ruth Pauline Sheehan, Suzanne Shields, Barbara L. Silberstein, Vera S. Wells, Jr., James Raymund White, William L. Williams, Joe B. Withers, Jr., William J. Wong, Earl D. Yamamoto, Thomas S. Yamamoto, Verlin Y. Youdall, Dees Young' Creighton' Zuardo, Vincent George Simmons, Lucile Helen Singer, Elizabeth Skelly, Margaret Amelia Skerritt, Eunice Sadowski, Clarice Rose Speers, lrene Bibb Sprenger, Alice M. Stelter, Elise Strittrnatter, Jane Studebaker, Rachael Tarver, Velma Mae Tate, tvtariorie E. Taylor, Hortense Catherine Thebert, Alice Rose Turnley, Virginia Tyler, Annabelle G. Utter, Miriam M. Van Schoick, Peggy Vaughan, Laverne Vickery, Beryl Winifred Wall, Martha F. Waler, Florence Watwood, Phoebe Jane Weeks, Luayne White, Olive Georgina Wildberger, Kathryn E. Wilson, Margaret V. Wilson, Marinora Wilson, Virginia Wolf, Helen Leslie Wolf, lrmgard Flora Wong, Amy June Yamazaki, Flora Michiko Yealland, Margaret Louise Zahler, Hedwig Zeller, Mildred E. WiTh buT a half year leTT unTil graduaTion, The pace oT The low senior class was acceleraTed in iTs various acTiviTies. The business oT The class was meTiculously cared Tor by Bernard De Bisschop, DoroThy Roger, and Eugene BlumenThal. RepresenTing The class in school governmenT were Jack Read, Treasurer: Richard Bishop, EdiTor oT The Lowell , Reese Peaslee, Publica- Tions Manager, and William GoeTze, AThleTic Manager. Those on The Shield and L were Barbara Bovyer, Barbara GilberT, Nola Keller, l-lelen Proll, Lillian Reeves, and MargheriTa SchwyTer, members oT The Scroll and L, boys' service socieTy, were Richard BarThol, Richard Bishop, John Brigham, Bernard De Bisschop, William GoeTze, RoberT l-larringTon, Jack Read, and Chad Reade. ConTribuTing TalenT To The publicaTions were lrving Alger and l-larry Pollock of The Red and WhiTe, and Frank Eng, RoberT l-larringTon, Jerome Nossen, and Mabel WaTson oT The Lowell, The League debaTing rosTrum claimed Richard BarThol, Eugene BlumenThal, and William GoeTze. DramaTic abiliTy was lenT by JaneT BonT, Richard Barfhol, Thomas Brennan, William Carroll, Geraldine Dolan, William GoeTze, Helen Proll, and KaTherine Solley. Girls' sporTs managers were Cornelia Cobb, riding: Lorraine Lelanne, Tennis, Marjorie Spirka, swimming: and Frances Weinberger, baseball. PaTTi l-larbaugh was secreTary oT The Girls' AThleTic AssociaTion. KaTherine Solley held a coveTed yell leader's posiTion. RepresenTing The class oT December, I935, on The various aThleTic Teams were James ArmsTrong, Ray Berger, William Carroll, l-lenry Chew, Francis Dam, Bernard De Bisschop, RoberT Dumesnil, Marvin Fairbanks, John Finn, William Forner, Ed T-larringTon, Lawrence Joe, Douglas Maas, WinsTon Murphy, Jack Read, Chad Reade, RoberT Redmond, STaTTord Repp, David RosenThal, PeTer Sales, Joseph Sanderson, William Schoen- Teld, STockTon Shaw, Richard Simon, Harry Takahashi, Elmer Tom, and Fred Wheeler. fxjiiy 'if' C7 A a PQWX 1 T desi, fir? 52 SSCHOP DOROTHY ROGER BUG E BL ENTHAL fifrifisf JJ FOX-J.,JbQ SENICRS T ,ffl MJ HIGH ' WiTh The elecTion oT Their class oTTicers, Hugh McPhee, PresidenT, Jane Anderson, Vice PresidenT, and Eugene Robinson, SecreTary, The High Juniors began a busy spring Term. These Three willing and able oTTicers have worked TogeTher and made This an inTeresTing and enjoyable Term Tor Their Tellow classmaTes. The Junior dance was given and was very success- Tul. The dance commiTTee deserves much crediT Tor The Tine work iT has accomplished. This Term The sTudenTs have been very much inTeresTed in school acTivi- Ties ProminenT in dramaTics were Norma C-5eoTTry, Sylvia OnesTi, and Dolores Riddell. The publicaTions also inTeresTed The High Juniors. Worlc- ing on The Lowell were Birdie ATTergood, Eleanor Eennon, Ellen Huggard, and Jaclc Schroeder. On The Red and WhiTe were Louise AlTieri, William BenioTT, Raymond CoaTs, MarTha Lou Gilmore, BereT Hagen, Virginia HursT, Mary Jane Norcross, and Barbara Raalca. Troy FinnerTy and Gabrielle Roger were members oT The Shield and L, and RoberT Harris and William Lee were members oT The Scroll and L. ProminenT High Juniors in The debaTing socieTy were Randolph BrandT, Virginia HursT, Wesley Jones, Caro Lippman, and Philip Verleger. RoberT Shine was assisTanT yell leader. The girls have been much inTeresTed in sporTs. OuTsTanding was Marjorie Sperlca, Swimming Manager. The High Junior boys as usual have placed on school Teams. On The UnlimiTed bas- lceTball Team were Raymond CoaTs and William Lee. On The I3O-lb. Team were VincenT Brown, Wayne Couch, RoberT Harris, and John lgnoTTo. We are conTidenT ThaT This class oT June I936 will conTinue The Tine Lowell spiriT iT has always shown. 29 IUNICRS From The TirsT day oT This Term, The Low Juniors have enTered inTo The spiriT oT being upper classmen wiTh a greaT deal oT enThusiasm, which They have noT Tailed To lceep. PoliTically They came inTo being wiTh The elecTion oT Their TirsT class oTTicers, PeTer Youdall, PresidenT, Lorraine LunT, Vice PresidenT, and Max Moore, SecreTary. These Three capable oTTicers have worked TogeTher earnesTly in giving The Low Juniors a very inTeresTing and successTul Term. The dance commiTTee was selecTed and The cusTomary Junior dance was enjoyed greaTly by all Those who aTTended. BeTTy Young was chosen a member oT The Shield and L, and PeTer Youdall a member oT The Scroll and L. RepresenTing The Low Juniors in The debaTing socieTy were Harold Asher, NercoTon Nalman, and Carl Yaclcly. The Red and WhiTe also claimed some inTeresTed Low Juniors. They were Alvin AlTTield and William Greggains. As in The pasT, The Low Junior girls have been very enThusiasTic abouT sporTs. This Term a large number parTicipaTed in The varieTy oT aThleTics oTTered by The physical educaTion deparTmenT. The boys, noT To be ouTdone by The Tairer sex, have puT TorTh Their energy in baskeTball, Track, crew. and baseball. and many oT Them give promise oT being TuTure Lowell sTars. PeTer Youdall was on The UnlimiTed baslceTball Team, and William Greggains, RoberT l-ladeler, Maxwell Laplcin, Paul Le Baron, and l-larold Meller were on The I3O-lb. baslceTball Team. We Teel cerTain ThaT This class will mainTain The enThusiasm and spiriT iT has shown This Term. 30 LCJWER CLASSMEN The lower classmen oT Lowell have builT up an admirable record Tor Themselves This Term. They have been well represenTed in all The school acTiviTies. AThleTics proved a very popular pasTime Tor The younger sTu- denTs. They had one oT The mosT ouTsTanding players on The championship baslceTball Team, Donald Burness. There were also many promfnenT mem- bers OT The I3O-lb. baslceTball Team. A goodly number have gone ouT Tor Track, crew, swimming, baseball, Tennis, and golT. Many oT The girls wenT ouT Tor riding, baseball, Tennis, volleyball, swimming, and golT. DebaTing claimed Ephraim Breman, lv1argareT Davis, Charles Ginsburg, Ilona Ghinsberg, RoberT l-loughTon, DoroThy McGuinness, Josephine Porras, and MilTon RigheTTi. All These showed promise oT being TuTure sTar debaTers. The music classes had represenTaTives Trom The lower classes: some were a parT oT The school band and oT The orchesTra, while some disTinguished Themselves in The glee classes. A large number oT lower classmen proved Themselves an asseT To Lowell in scholarship by receiving many high grades. The group was well repre- senTed in Journalism. Those on The Lowell sTaTT were Douglas MacMullen, BeTh Mccrone. Gene G'Shea, and ForresT Wilson. On The Red and WhiTe sTaTT were l-lenry ClaTlin, Jerome EdelsTein, William l-lamilTon, and Con- sTanTine lvlaTosich. A number of The lower classmen have served upon many commiTTees. As They were noT allowed selT-governmenT, They had capable and inTeresTed represenTaTives in The girls' and boys' councils. A large number belonged To The Lowell clubs, mosT oT The Chess and STamp clubs consisTing chieTly oT lower classmen. Lower classmen have enTered inTo every school acTiviTy open To Them and alThough Lowell has been new and sTrange They soon learned To lcnow and enioy iTs various amusemenTs. A delighTTul enTerTainmenT was given by The Scroll and L and The Shield and L. There was excellenT enTerTainmenT and The program was concluded wiTh dancing and reTreshmenTs. IN MEMORIAM ROBERT VERLEGER CLASS OF JUNE, I937 I92O - T935 3 I --J l' A if MMU ixic -, we We A, J CTN ORGANIZATIONS Long, long ago, away back in ages fhaf we know liffle abouf, man nurfured a desire fo falk fo his fellow men. As fime wenf on, fhe firsf feeble fhoughfs grew sfronger and sfronger and finally he began fo experimenf wifh his voice and hands. lf was hard in fhe beginning, buf affer much perseverance, his early experimenfs flourished and fhe resulf is exemplified foday in our own wriffen and spoken language. Buf iusf fo be able fo falk and wrife was nof enough, Man's imaginafion was forever progressing and leading him on fo greafer achievemenfs. Then one of fhe greafesf discoveries of all fimes was made-fhaf of elecfricify. Man began fo realize fhaf fhis sfrange power could be ufilized in com- municafion. Among fhe imporfanf invenfions in fhis field were fhose of fhe wireless and fhe code sysfem. Through fhe success of fhese firsf sfeps, men of science were spurred onward. l-low- ever, greaf difficulfies were experienced in laying cables across fhe frackless oceans fo infroduce fo fhe world fhe Telephone, invenfed by Alexander Graham Bell in I876, which had been successfully fesfed in our counfry. Never- fheless, like The rainbow affer an April shower, fhe second sfep was complefed. Crude, inconvenienf felephones were perfecfed unfil foday we have a mosf efficienf sysfem. Sfill looking info fhe fufure, we see fhe perfecfion of felevision, sfill in ifs infancy, which will complefe our sysfem of elec- frical communicafion. Mp fnffff WWMQW fm ,ff + U2 Z O I-'I E-I H1 N II-I Z HI U l DCI 0 w 115 J: , ,. ,,.f' C 4x4 fguklfj - -y 4 -5 141 f!...,3,. . 1, VI l W A , I . 1 . .-,.s. 2111113 Lwvzqll .L I 4:4 .H , - N-ri ,1. ,gg Q H , FL' ' i -fn-, -'1,-, ' 'Z' ur 4. , v-, E W , 1 117 f fa.. 1 .Jw . . . W. z n , Publications Manager U2 I-I E'l I-I :JI m D-I Lowell has always been TorTunaTe in mainTaining boTh a bi-weekly and a semi-annual publicaTion oT meriT. This Term proved To be no excepTion. One oT The mosT success- Tui Terms in The hisTory oT The Lowell has iusT been com- pleTed. Under Richard Bishop, The paper's never-Tiring ediTor, The Lowell has provided TacTs and inTeresT Tor The enTire sTudenT body. Thanks are due Miss E. M. Osborn, The TaculTy advisor, Tor her valuable supervision oT The Lowell, The paper's large and capable assisTing sTaTT is menTioned elsewhere in This secTion. The deep personal inTeresT and enThusiasm OT compeTenT EdiTor Raymond Brunn, combined wiTh an ouTsTanding assisTing sTaTT, headed by RoberT Mendle, AssociaTe EdiTor, has enabled The Red and WhiTe To carry on The high pubiicaTion sTandards ThaT have always prevailed. Mrs. V. T. Kuhnie, The TaculTy advisor, gave cap- able supervision which aided The morale oT The sTaTT. The SporTs EdiTors were Louise AlTieri and William BenioTT. OTher members oT The iiTerary sTaTT were: Jerome EdeisTein, MarTha Lou Gilmore, BereT Hagen, Mary Jane Norcross, l-larry Pollock, and Barbara Raaka. Technical sTaTT members included: Irving Alger, Raymond CoaTs, William Greggains, William T-iamilTon, and ConsTanTine MaTosich. Finances were managed by Reese Peasiee, assisTed by Alvin AiTTieid and l-lenry ClaTlin. Much praise is due The ArT STaTT Tor iTs exceilenT work. Doris Michels, ArT EdiTor, is To be complimenTed upon her unusual cover design and Tor her conscienTious leadership oT The sTaTT. Working hand in hand was Miss l-lerrmann, The ever- heipTui TaculTy advisor. Members oT The ArT STaTT were: Aiise Allison, Clarence DanTorTh, Eimerie Bald, Helen BrunTon, Lucille Davidson, Veronica DeMarTini, l-larrieT Evans, Johannah Fromming, Barbara Gibbon, Lydia i-lill, MarTha Links, RoberT Macdonald, JeanneTTe RenTere, RuTh Shapero, Eunice SkerriTT, and Arlo Wells. 33 ROBERT MENDLE REESE PEASLEE WILLIAM BENIOFF BARBARA RAAKA Assoc Boiron Hr-mn RAYMOND HRUNN Innes: ALVIN ALTFIELD LOUISE ALTIERI HENRY CLAFLIN RAYMOND COATS JEROME EDQLSTETN MARTHA LOU QTLMQRE BERET HAGEN VIRGINIA HURST MARY JANE NORCROSS HARRY POLLOCK JEAN SMITH JOHANNAH FROMMIN6 LYDIA HILL MARTHA LINKS .IEANETTE RENFERE RUTH SHAPERO EUNICE SKERRITT RED AND I-learTTelT appreciaTion is expressed To Those who, by Their cooperaTion, helped To mold successTully This TiTTy-TiTTh Red and WhiTe. To lvlr. STephens, who negoTiaTed conTracTs. much is due: also To Miss LacosTeg To Mr. J. G. CurTs and Mr. F. B. Tucker, who supervised Tinanceg and To Ivliss Harrison Tor her oTTice services. A voTe oT Thanlcs is also due To Ivlr. I-I. P. Fisher and Mr. J. I-I. DougherTy. phoTographersg Ivlr. John O'INIeil and Mr. Charles Prelsniclr of I-I. S. Crocker Co., Inc.: and Mr. KenneTh Elder and Ivlr. Raymond PeTerson oT The WalTer J. Ivlann Engraving Co. Edilor . . Assislanl Edilor . Associale Edilor . Sporls Edilors . News Edilor . Club Edilor . Eealure Edilor . Girls' Sporl Edilor Circulafion Manager R. O. T. C. Eclilor . Pholographer . . Eacully Adviser Tom Caldwell Norma Henderson Belh McCrone Reporlers Eleanor Eennon Roberl l-lerman Gene O'Shea Forresl Wilson Typis'I's Jane Russell Jean Troppmann CJWELL Richard Bishop , Vera Silberslein . Jaclc Schroeder . Floyd Waller, David Schulz . Mabel Walson Pally de Roull . . Eranlc Eng Birdie Allergood Roberf l-larringlon . Douglas MacMullen . Jerome Nossen Miss E. M. Osborn William Eorner Ellen l-luggard Gwen Smilh l l 1 4 1 DEBATING New laurels are due Lowell debaTers Tor Their splendid appearances in conTesTs This Term. Of The numerous sTudenTs who enrolled aT The beginning oT The Term, TwenTy-eighT were accepTed and have been acTive conTesTanTs Tor Lowell in pracTice, league and college debaTes. In The league debaTes, Girls' High School compeTed wiTh Lowell Three Times. The quesTion debaTed was Resolved: ThaT The UniTed STaTes gov- ernmenT should conTrol The muniTion indusTries. Speaking Tor The quesTion here were MarTin Field and Harry Margolis, and spealcing againsT iT aT Girls' High School were AlTred KaTchinslci and Melvin Reder. Lowell was vicTorious Twice. We were also awarded The decision over ConTinuaTion High School by deTaulT. Richard BarThol and Lucile Simmons were To have made up our Team. Ann BercoviTch and William GoeTze represenTed Lowell in The conTesT wiTh Balboa High School, which resulTed in a Tie. ln The lasT league debaTe oT The season, Lucile Simmons and Richard BarThol represenTed Lowell and were deTeaTed by Girls' High School. The college debaTes were wiTh The UniversiTy oT San Francisco, in which Lowell was represenTed by Caro Lippman, Philip Verleger, and Joseph Willnerg SainT Mary's College, debaTed by Randolph BrandT and Thomas Brennan: The CaliTornia Freshmen, meT by The Team oT MarTin Field and Harry Margolis: The STanTord Freshmen, againsT whom Eugene BlumenThal and Mary CaToire parTicipaTedg and The San Francisco STaTe College, in which conTesT we were represenTed by Thomas Brennan and Amy Wong. The Golden GaTe Junior College was also debaTed by Philip Verleger and King Weisgerber. ln The pracTice debaTes, Sequoia High School was meT here by Myron Haas and Mendel Herzberg and aT Sequoia by NewTon Nahman and Linnea Paulson. Also, Sacred HearT was conTesTed here by Wesley Jones. Caro Lippman. and Philip Verlegerq and aT Sacred HearT by Harold Asher. Marian Bubb, and PaTricia Cowden. SainT lgnaTius was debaTed by RoberT HoughTon, Virginia HursT, and Caro Lippman. EnTered in The debaTe againsT HumbolT Evening High School were Marian Bubb, PaTricia Cowden, and Virginia HursT. DebaTing relaTions were esTablished wiTh SanTa Rosa High School, and a new sysTem was inTroduced. The quesTion was Re- solved: ThaT The UniTed STaTes should adopT The Townsend plan, wiTh The Lowell aTTirmaTive represenTed by Ann BercoviTch and Melvin Reder. Lucile Simmons and Harry Margolis debaTed The negaTive aT SanTa Rosa. DebaT- ing has Turnished an inTeresTing and educaTional acTiviTy To sTudenTs who have, because oT iT, helped To keep The name oT Lowell in iTs TradiTionally high posiTion in compeTiTive conTesTs. 36 Responsible leadership has been a direcT cause oT The Tavorable spring semesTer oT The Lowell DebaTing SocieTy. Under The capable supervision oT Mr. George C. Lorbeer, many Triendly conTesTs have been sponsored in The inTeresT oT Lowell. This has done much To promoTe good will and To carry The name oT Lowell To neighboring schools. Melvin Reder has proved himselT To be a reliable presidenT oT The socieTy. The vice presidency was Tilled by King Weisgerber, while The secreTary was l-larold Asher. All members have been acTive in conTesTs This Term. Lowell has again been well represenTed in The All-ciTy Individual Speaking by T-larry Margolis, who was awarded TourTh place, and Lucile Simmons, who came in sixTh. BoTh speakers did well and are To be com- mended upon Their oraTorical abiliTy. AnoTher inTeresTing conTesT was held aT The San Francisco STaTe Col- lege on May I7Th and l8Th. Schools Trom San Francisco, lNlorThern CaliTor- nia, and The San Joaquin Valley parTicipaTed. Lowell enTered Tour debaTing Teams, composed oT Lucile Simmons and Philip Verlegery AlTred KaTchfnslci and Melvin Rederg MarTin Field and l-larry Margolis, Richard BarThol and William GoeTze: and one oraTorical Team, Melvin Reder and Lucile Simmons. These Teams discussed boTh sides oT The quesTion, Resolved: ThaT The CaliTornia Sales Tax Should Be Repealed. Teams composed oT Thomas Brennan, MarTin Field, l-larry Margolis, Melvin Reder, Lucile Simmons, and Philip Verleger disTinguished Them- selves by winning The San Francisco STaTe Teachers' College DebaTing TournamenT and added one more permanenT Trophy To Lowell's collecTion. RICHARD BARTHOL ANN aencovircifi MELviN REDER MARY CATOIRE MARTIN FIELD WILLIAM GOETZE T VIRGINIA HURST ALFRED KATCHINSKI BUB8 CLUBS Lowell clubs have Turnished many inTeresTing and valuable programs To Their sTudenT members This Term. Due To The irregular schedule, many OT The clubs have been Temporarily disconTinued. The Psychology Club pro- gressed rapidly This Term under The leadership oT Mr. S. W. Moore. The obiecT oT This club has been The sTudy oT pracTical psychology wiTh The aim OT selT improvemenT. There were many inTeresTing Talks Trom members and ouTside speakers. The oTTicers were: PresidenT, King Weisgerber, Vice PresidenT, Miriam Geballe, and SecreTary, Barbara Murphy. The boys oT The Riding Club have compeTed wiTh oTher schools and proved Themselves brillianT horsemen. The beginners meT aT The ParamounT sTables on Monday mornings aT eighT-ThirTy, and The more advanced mem- bers aT RoberT's sTables aT The same hour on Fridays. This group was under The supervision oT Mr. L. J. l-Ienrich. The Lowell STamp Club meT every Thursday, also under The sponsorship oT Mr. l-lenrich. Club acTiviTies con- sisTed oT Trading sTamps and improving Their collecTion. l-larold Keller, BaTes MeTzenbaum, and Allen Rowland Tilled The oTTices oT PresidenT, Vice- PresidenT, and SecreTary. Alexander JaTTe was publiciTy agenT and broughT many new members To The club. The Chess Club has consisTed principally oT lower classmen and can look Torward To a brillianT TuTure. The members oT The club played chess aTTer school hours under The direcTion oT Mr. A. L. McCarTy. The Team consisTed oT Alan Philip, aT TirsT board, Richard Bishop, aT second board, George Kirker, aT Third board, EvereTT Vaughan, aT TourTh board, and Edward Zeisler, The PresidenT, aT TiTTh board. The WriTers' Club success- Tully ediTed The Ad AsTra liTerary secTion which appeared in each issue oT The Lowell. The oTTicers consisTed oT STanley NeyharT as PresidenT, Raymond Cobb, Vice PresidenT, Frances Weinberger, SecreTary, and Beverly Blum, EdiTor. Miss O. MaTcheTTe was The TaculTy advisor. The OTTicers and SergeanTs' Club held iTs meeTings every Thursday noon beTore The BaTTalion parade. The club sTrove Tor beTTer R. O. T. C. drills. l-lerberT Ward was PresidenT and Abner KupersTein was Vice PresidenT. The Saber Club has also done splendid work, wiTh CapTain Clairvaux as PresidenT. The above clubs have provided an inTeresTing and proTiTable variaTion Trom required sTudies and have done much To encourage iniTiaTive and leadership. STAMP CLUB PresidenT . . . Harold Keller Vice-PresidenT BaTes MeT2enbaum SecreTary . . . Allen Rowland RIDING CLUB Presidenr . . . Ernes+I-Ieurer OFFICERS AND SERGEANTS' CLUB Presideni . . . I-Ierberi Ward Vice Presidenf . Abner Kupersrein SABER CLUB PresicIenI . . . JoI1nCIairvaux PSYCHOLOGY CLUB Presideni . . King Weisgerber Vice Presidenr . Miriam Geballe Secrerary . . . Barbara Murphy CI-IESS CLUB Presidenf . . . Edward Zeisier Vice Pre-siCIenI . Leonard McKee Secrefary . . . Nexander Jaffe WRITERS' CLUB PresidenI . . . S+anIey NeyI'iarI Vice Presidenf . Raymond Cobb Secrerary . Frances Weinberger Edifor ..... Beveriy BIurn ERNEST HUETER ,fl M W ' ' I JOHN CLAIRVAUX HERBERT WARD A1,i,oo.s.,n..,c .fm ww ma... an umm, mu. nm RO. mam-,,.. ii.,r.n,.,, ami, 'fmxmoe ssmmn nom Pew., my mi.. sabmri smpwic v..mmqQf mm.-A, Mm, Lqfmf RWM .,w1.-Q n,.i.,.a.. sf.r:n-M, rm... EDWARD ZEISLER WRIILRS CLUB uw Ro., Mimwii, M.M..iiqr. cqeb I-.qw rm, A.. mi nm. mm. MLAIIMU, w.,-ma., armi Gam,-ff, Dm nw,,.M KING WEISGERBER ami ref. ,1.:.,wi,up M.uu.,ii,.n 1.-rm, STANLEY NEYHART Q ' ., , V - . L K Q, ' .0 vw A' A I K f i il' 'if' i 513.2 'J M i L Q wi 5 FA .- I , xl Q I Q M. A . A , , nv- Q ., .n K, ,gr R.. . ' 'v' ., , -- ,im-,Q f . iw' s 1 A Y 0 -.V ' 7,4 L 3 .T ., .A i if -' , I 5 , i i . -2. in K J .. .,.., 4 V ,V ., ,. i AN A :iv X . . Ay : . f ,V , . . A - ,L U - fy . ' , . Q A. Z ., X . 5 A 3 I A J A K 3 . A ei? 1 Z , ll . ' We MS' 'ws . . W' i 'Nl 5 A -Li L v' A ' ' i f X6---Q fl 4, ' ' 1 , J . , I . 1 ' 11 V . ' f' PF . ,X ' ' UBFAFY STAFF immnv surr sm Rm.: muy, mum..-, Doyle Manqu, xsxqm, Mrrnioxh, Kaufman, M-we, em., main. My RW gp,,,,gq,N W,,,,.,,,, Hui, KW., Ai.,1,id. si,4wf,i,4, MM, 1 u:4al.Ro-fHmm, omam. Bmw, Semen, J,-fm, Mefidplwim.R.m1.xf..m,a.md5, Mm. M,d,,,t RN, Ddnxgqe, KM, iguiumn MW. s1uCwl.Rab,,i.., L Q! rms nw- Fw-.fl :Wy Ami.,--W swamp PM-Q1 ezleen.Jm.bm Amy. Pulmgkm, Mnoqmxa. :mi Rn.. HW., ,-.,Lq,,,.,g .. QQ, .L V ,. -A,-...Wm R,.,,.i won, aEFassHMeN1 seam, Kr:-m,Hnvinq1on. '3-Q 93:10-un. M-wif-ww Mclrlxn 22,4 ATTENDANCE surf e imp. vemri, Mwy, Wm sim, new and RM. n..l,,wf,c.iiu., Mew. cowl, J,m.wn. F' 4 ' ifwnbwq efmmm, Mo,xwn,i rmxmail A Middleka-1 nm cfmem um c,Q..M, new wmbmqm, , . . . W , , . .. .V 4 lin., Miiw. fwim eww sffiaum naman Camey Mu, Ma1lm,r4.fnmau, aku, neva. gmfxi' ,' ,,.,x Q 3 Q i M - M' V , , U 3' 2 H . S o l , ' f ' A Lmiw V r ' n . Q Czzficigi '-Q B 1 L LO2'?I?? vpgllbioil w-ir c .4 m,.vRws.1lv,im, PWM mem, ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' rw new K.,q.xf, LW sm, u.v.l..,n. office sun am Row: ummm, wafm, owning, uwf, Palm. Ma.. Hmm. Hukvier,MnNei1, s..io.,.,smyu,f. i TMFWC SQUAD X ff.,.nz.-.i Pmi., eww, xapm., sly, s.-Ny.f,ow,.-.,ef..g9.a,ws.i+., anemia. WW D2 9l fh'1PiWww'-5 viH,Bv'v Mmm' SERVICE Once more lhe adiuslrnenls necessileled by Lowell being housed in a building nol ils own have been made by lhe earnesl hard-working ellorls of cornrnlllee members. Such labors are unsellish and unpaid and should rneril lhe approbalion ol lhe sludenl body for worlc well done. 40 , yi , Al lf, W ,UAL H. ,W N J N ROOTING Champions-Teams and sTudenT body alikel This Term, under The excellenT leadership oT ArThur Shearer and his Two able and willing assisTanTs, RoberT Shine and RoberTon Williams, The Lowell yells have vibraTed Through boTh The Galileo AudiTorium and Kezar Pavilion. SpiriT has been The keynoTe boTh aT games and pre-game rallies, and The sTudenT body has ouTsTripped all rivals in baskeTball inTeresT and enThusiasm. WiTh Mr. STephens as principal, a new spiriT has been displayed by The Lowell rooTers. Special crediT should be given To Dolly FalTon and KaTherine Solley, The Two peppy girl yell leaders, Tor The Tine work They have accomplished ThroughouT The Term. This season, more Than ever beTore, There has been a keen challenge beTore The Lowell sTudenTs. Lowell and Poly conTesTed Tor The baskeTball championship. BoTh Teams needed The supporT oT Their sTudenT bodies, and The Lowell Team goT iTs needed supporT To win The championship. The nighT games have been very successTul in securing a large Lowell TurnouT. Seven Thousand TickeTs were purchased by Lowell sTudenTs, in comparison wiTh Tive Thousand TickeTs purchased by Poly, Two Thousand by Balboa and Commerce, and one Thousand by Galileo, Sacred l-learT, ST. lgnaTius, and Mission. This was a greaT improvemenT over lasT year's TickeT sale. lnTeresT shown by Lowell sTudenTs in Track, base- ball, crew, swimming, golT, and Tennis, has been good buT There is room Tor improvemenT here. All The Lowell Teams have wiThin Them The making oT champions if They are well supporTed. NexT Term we hope The same enThusiasm shown The bas- keTball Team will carry our TooTball Team Through To anoTher T935 A. A. A. championship. 1935 CHAMPIONS UnlimiTed BaskeTball LighTweighT Track Swimming Rugby Golf 4l bowl muon ART ss-mania A ii-uv' souiv' . T... ,V.. . V. PARENT-TEACHERS ASSOCIATION Under The dynamic leadership oT Mrs. J. A. Garry, The Lowell High School ParenT-Teachers AssociaTion hasicarried on a very successTul pro- gram. The board oT eTTicienT oTTicers perTormed Their duTies acTively and capably. Those holding oTTices Tor This year were: Mr. L. H. STephens, Honorary Vice-PresidenT: Mrs. Julian Cohen, FirsT Vice-PresidenTg Mrs. William Proll, Second Vice-PresidenTg Mrs. A. W. Lee, Financial SecreTaryg Mrs. George Dahle, Treasurer: Mrs. Harry Barusch, Corresponding Secre- Tary: Mrs. ClayTon Hover, Recording SecreTaryg and Mrs. D. W. Birnbaum, ParliamenTarian. Splendid cooperaTion has been received Trom The Teach- ers and has enabled The associaTion To reach heighTs never beTore aTTained, bofh in membership, which has been The largesT in The ciTy Tor The pasT Two years, and in iTs philanThropic worlc. STudenT aid has been The main inTeresT oT The Lowell High School Par- enT-Teachers AssociaTion This year. The associaTion has endeavored To assisT needy sTudenTs Through school by means oT card parTies, TheaTre par- Ties, and The lilce. On May sixTeenTh and sevenTeenTh The parenT-Teachers organizaTion gave a TheaTre parTy aT The Coliseum ThaTre To raise money Tor iTs philanThropic work. Prizes were given To sTudenTs who sold The mosT TiclceTs, and The enTerprise was pronounced a decided success. Lowell's ParenT-Teachers AssociaTion has been Trying very hard To secure a new building Tor Lowell, and a survey oT available siTes has been conducTed under The energeTic leadership oT Mrs. Garry. ConTerences have been held, good argumenTs presenTed, and many signaTures gaThered on peTi- Tions, buT so Tar These eTTorTs have been oT no avail. DeTerminaTion is sTill presenT, however, and no sTone will be leTT unTurned To carry on The TighT Tor The new building. This year The ParenT-Teachers AssociaTion has helped a greaT many needy sTudenTs wiTh cloThing and shoes. To do This work, The need oT which has increased so greaTly wiTh The depression, This sponsoring group musT have money. ThaT is why The P.-T. A. needs The supporT of The parenTs, Teachers, and sTudenTs alilce, in making iTs eTTorTs worTh while. Much crediT is due To Those moThers and Teachers who have spenT a large parT oT Their Time helping and supporTing Lowell in so many ways. 4? ,I ll 1 if ifwwfl A .Tv N . . , SCHOLARSHIP FEDERATION Back Row: Trenear, Gould, Eafon, Graeber, Hyman, Geballe, Reinhold, Hilldring, Ryan, Vaughn, Curry, Schieck, Brodsky Fifih Row: Roche, Rebok, Parin, Gordon, Hein, Williams, Lowe, Tidwell, Reeves, Fried, Moore, Shapero, Taliaferro. Fourth Row: Wifcher, Cannon, EhriTT, Cahill, Zeisler, Amemiya, Boyaiian, Gruggel, Roach, O'ConneII, Scadden, Bolhe, Hldekawa Third Row: Pape, Krager, Hess, Clark, Rebok, Bates, Facci, Jones, Cameron, Foster, George, Owyeng, Rose, Perry. Second Row: Danziger, Bordi, Sanderson, Dolan, Fuiifa, Magner, Kanba, Hafa, Takechi, Birnbaum, Lambie, Jacobs, Bolfer Yasukochi Weiss, Forner. Fronf Row: Nielsen, Simmons, Sfrandberq, RicherT, Maini, Lippman, Cohn, Rossfon, Bly, BarThol, Young, Davis, Alffield Cooper Geballe SCHOLARSHIP FEDERATION Lowell has ioined The CaliTornia Scholarship FederaTion as ChapTer number Two hundred and sevenTy-Three oT The cenTral disTricT. The Two hundred and sevenTy-Tive chapTers in CaliTornia are divided inTo souThern, cenTral, and norThern regions. To become a member oT The FederaTion, iT is necessary To receive Ten grade poinTs a Term. Six Terms, noT necessarily consecuTive, are necessary Tor liTe membership. Edward RossTon is presidenT oT The Lowell chapTerg Burris Bly, vice- presidenTg Richard BarThol, Treasurer: CreighTon Young, secreTary. Caro Lippman and Mariorie Cohn are members oT The principal's governing board. Mr. S. W. Moore is TaculTy advisor. Mrs. M. E. McDonald heads The commiTTee on programs and meeTings. Caro Lippman is The sTudenT man- ager oT This commiTTee. The scholarship commiTTee is headed by Mr. L. B. Barnes: The sTudenT manager is Mariorie Cohn. The obiecT oT The FederaTion, which meeTs aT Lowell once every reporT period, is To raise The scholasTic sTandards oT The public schools. The membership pin is a lamp, The insignia a burning Torch, and The moTTo oT The FederaTion is Scholarship Tor Service. 43 , Capt. Flexsenhar The Lowell uniT oT The R. O. T. C. has been progressing rapidly under The superior guidance oT CapTain lvlann, wiTh CapTain STarr and CapTain Flexsenhar assisTing him, and has disTinguished iTselT as one oT The TinesT in The ciTy. The baTTalion assembled every Thursday morning aT Ten-TorTy Tor parade. inspecTion and review. BeTore The weelcly parade, Theory classes were held Tor The oTTicers, sergeanTs, and corporals. They received insTruc- Tion Trom CapTain Mann and CapTain STarr on The TheoreTical side oT army liTe Tor The semi-annual inspecTion, and in The arT oT map-reading. This Term The baTTalion consisTed oT approximaTely Two hundred and Tive cadeTs, who were apporTioned inTo Tour companies. ThroughouT The semesTer. oTTicers. sergeanTs and corporals drilled paTienTly To geT Their uniTs in shape Tor The Federal inspecTion which was held on May TwenTieTh. The Lowell RiTle PlaToon and The Band boTh proved Their meTTle in compeTi- Tion wiTh picked uniTs Trom every baTTalion in San Francisco. The baTTalion marched in The Army Day parade which was held on April sixTh, and also in The Memorial Day parade. The cadeT privaTes drilled sTrenuously in hopes oT being chosen as one oT The baTTalion's Three mosT proTicienT cadeTs in The arT oT The manual. These were senT To compeTe againsT The Three represenTaTives Trom oTher schools Tor a medal, awarded The mosT ouTsTanding. ParenTs and Triends oT The cadeTs were inviTed To view The inspecTion on May TwenTieTh. lvlany aTTended and The baTTalion received due praise. YAMAMOT0 in usur. BAILEY mueur. Lowsnsrem in usur. neuerr ' gud ueur. aLAcKMAN zna ueur LIEUT. PEASLEE Ind LIEUT. PERRINE K 2nd'UEUT, ROSSTCN - - 2nd LIEUT. SEARCY 2nd LIEUT. SNPSON 734 UEUT- Superior efficiency and inTelligence were Two of The qualiTies which influenced The choosing of The R. O. T. C. officers. Capfain Flexsenhar, in paTienTly Training and guiding The new officers, has acquiTTed himself admirably, and as The resulT of This fine Training, never has There been a beTTer group of cadeT officers. Members of The headquarTers company who assisfed I-lerberf Ward, The BaTTalion's compeTenT Maior, in planning for The BaTTalion, are To be highly complimenfed. Major Ward, a firsT lieufenanf lasf Term, by perseverance and hard worlc raised himself To The highesT rank in The Lowell R. O. T. C. The members of The headquarfers company are: Major l-lerberT Ward, CapTain AdiuTanT Abner KupersTein, AssisTanT Capfain AdiuTanT John Clairvaux, SergeanT-Maior Ellis Rowlands, CapTain Charles Walsh, and Capfain Verlin Yamamofo. A Company was under The command of Capfain Paul Lurmann, wiTh FirsT LieuTenanT Russell Kanfer, Firsf LieuTenanT l-lenry Mooy, FirsT Lieu- Tenanf Alex Pelleff, Second LieuTenanT Edward Rossfon, and Second Lieu- TenanT Alan Voorsanger assisfing him. B Company was commanded compefenfly by Capfain Edward l-lufshing, wifh The following officers assisTing him: Firsf LieuTenanT Norman Lowensfein, Second Lieufenanf Harry Frusfuclc, and Second LieuTenanT Leon Kalimos. Capfain ArThur Shearer, Second LieuTenanT Ronald Simpson, Second LieuTenanT John Perrine, and Second LieuTenanT Reese Peaslee, commanding C Com- pany, are To be congrafulafed highly. The officers of D Company were: Capfain Joseph Roach, CapTain William Rowlands, Firsf LieuTenanT MarTin Robaclc, Second Lieufenanf Alvin Blackman, and Second LieuTenanT Allan Searcy, all of whom should be praised for Their fine work. The officers who conducfed The band and did much To improve iT are: Capfain Bernhard Bernard, Capfain Julian Weiss, and Firsf LieuTenanT Leslie Bailey. CapTain AdiuTanT Abner Kupersfein and Second LieuTenanT John Perrine, in The Ninfh Corps Area lnfercollegiafe gallery rifle mafches, Tied for eighfh place in compefifion wiTh many schools. Shofs were fired sfanding, kneeling, siTTing, and prone. Capfain Kupersfein received a higher percenTage sTanding Than Perrine, and so Kupersfein was presenfed The medal. A banquef was given for The officers and graduafing sergeanfs as The climax To a highly successful Term. 45 CAPT. BERNARD CAPT. LU RMANN CAPT. WEISS lsf. LT. KANTER IsT LT. MOOY Isf LT. ROBACK MUSIC AND DRAMA High above The husTling, busTling TraTFic oT sTreeTs, high above The Towers oT Tall skyscrapers, aeroplanes Tly over The ciTy. We look up a momenT Trom our hurry To see Them silhoueTTed againsT The blue, gliding like graceTul birds, and Then we search in vain-Tor They are gone-speeding onward across miles and miles oT land and sea. The piloT, sTeadily guiding his plane, looks down and sees beneaTh him a panorama oT modern civilizaTion. l-le reTlecTs on The prog- ress ThaT man has made in TransporTaTion. Man conquered The TirsT barriers which rose beTore him-land and sea- buT looming over him wiTh iTs huge black sTorm clouds was The air. This baTTle was much harder and more disillusioning, buT wiTh courage Tor a muskeT and The mind Tor The bulleT. The TirsT shoT To vicTory was Tired-The success oT The WrighT BroThers' plane in I908. Following in rapid succession came experimenTs and improvemenTs. and Tinally, The sensaTional hisTory-making TlighTs-Lindbergh's solo Trom New York To Paris, KingsTord-SmiTh's TlighT oT The SouThern Cross Trom San Francisco To AusTralia, Amelia EarharT's dramaTic solo TlighTs across boTh The ATlanTic and The PaciTic, and +ha+ oT The mighTy Clipper Ship Trom San Francisco To Hawaii and back: all memorable records To add To our progress in This Time oT modern wonders. Z QQ? Hi E H1 nr.: Q Q Z H2 U I'-I cn D 2 , Y 'il F 1? V -:A ES TK . ,-4 K. A I? if 'Z '14 Q ve ni-.w.' ' 'ws-11. ' 'v ' E ,i 1- 441: - -- ' ' ' 'L gf ,aria ppp-,,, ' - X-F 3242i - ' :iii ff: lr. , ' F 1 .41 ' 'L I 44 4 -1 ' H I ww! Q. 3 H 1' - ' 3 , . n ' ' V ,'- - Y Y I. Q A 1 .YQ wr Wifi'-L 1:1 7-uf 11.2 Elf: . F ,. . .5 rs .wr . if .. , ' .lr -- X ' I. W H' ' , ,N ' 1 ... V ,, W ,. , f .n- f-Y Q Lf... -.uiumf-ffm -H 1 as , ,. ,- V. N' 41, , .-, W - gn, up X if-.C .-f, Ks, , V , - 4 Qt- f 1 ' 1 , W ' 1 Q 3 -in .. ,.,, 5, Q . rt- I, -h Y f 'xpqvi - ,I , ,nib . V, .V H 1.3h,eA. W: ' . , U . .. , 11 L-:L ' Z' -mi . I f .--I X fi J ' 1 lf' , :ffl , , :tx . J x H 1 - ,., Nz:- 3 v-2 ggi! yy gl .Q -5-1 H . n., J- 1 , I. :W-.' , If Q A , 4: 'Tin f zqqfaff .55 'f-', zifpg ' . :QYZQF-ff,,f 1'?? , ,v , . , . ,,..,.. ..!, , . , -.,k,fv, ,.., Y ,, -1 ' N. . x .,.,:.1 n - - iw -Y 3: '1 U2 II-I E-I n-Il M The Boys' and Girls' Double Quarlels, under The capable direclion of Miss J. M. Nepperl and Miss F. B. Badger, respeciively, conlribuled many successful musical offerings This lerm. They could always be depended upon +o lend Jrheir able aid To school aclivilies. This year we have been especially forlunale in having such excellenl lalenl in all posilions in bolh of lhese quarlels. The Girls' Double Quarlel was composed of Rosella Relalliclc, Jane Knight Tirsf sopranosp Madelon l-lealy, Nalalie Zisser, second sopranosg Annabelle Tyler, Kalherinann Bailey, Tirsl allos: Edilh McDonald, Muriel Nuhn, second allos. The Boys' Double Quarlel consisled of Bennell McGuire, William Baber, iirsl Jrenorsg Alex Pellell, Bernard Wolf, second lenorsg Eugene Blumenlhal, Joseph Murray, barilonesg Bernhard Bernard, James Preovolis, bassos. Many fine seleclions of semi-popular and lighf classical music were presenled lhroughoul l'he Jrerrn. 47 We have been again forTunaTe This year in having Two commendable Cilee Clubs which have added much To The enioymenT of our gaTherings. The Boys' Glee Club was headed This Term by BenneTT McGuire. l-le was assisTed by Joseph Murray and James Preovolis as vice-presidenf and sec- reTary. STafford Repp and William Rowlands were The librarians. Alex- ander l-ligh was The accompanisf. This group was skillfully direcTed by Miss J. M. Nepperf. The Girls' Glee Club, under Miss F. B. Badger's inspiring leadership, elecfed EdiTh McDonald presidenf. Befh Dahleen and Marie Eafon were vice-presidenT and secrefary. Marjorie Cohen and BeTTy SmiTh were librarians. Muriel Kamler was accompanisT and hisTorian. The Cilee Clubs' mosT memorable performance was one given before The Parenf-Teachers' AssociaTion aT which The Mayor of San Francisco was guesT of honor. Affer The performance Mayor Rossi, who is an auThoriTy on music, was so pleased ThaT he reguesfed ThaT The members of The Glee Clubs be given a special half holiday. BoTh clubs were feafured arTisTs aT our CommencemenT. They were honored by an inviTaTion To sing over The radio, Their performances lgeing highly appreciafed. AN T if . , X NN J BENNUT M:GUlRl? EDITH MCDONALD BOYS' GLEE Eacl Row: Rogers, Murray, Rowlands, Collins, Hurley, Kaplan, Hugh, Cohn. Brofrnan. Middle Row: Young, Wolf, Cameron, lrvine, Searcy, Livingslon, Rosenihal, Evison, Fronf Row: Quancll, Chandler, Maqlurlo, Preovolos, Pellefl, Babe:-, BlumenTlial, Repp. GLEE Baci Row: Viclcery, Geo6'ry, Cummings, McDonald, Newsom, Knighf, Nalin. Middle Row: Vinson, Mayer, Lane, Essex, Fisher, Silbersfein, Jouve, Ericcsen, A., Ferfelberg, Pavers. Front Row: Tyler. Lemlie, Hsaly. Colm, 'fhichesfcn Huntington , Bailey, Ericcsen, D,, Neville, Eaton. . ' iiiiiinii, 1 H' 1 CONCERT ORCHESTRA . , Back Row: George, Bondolfi, Miller, Clayton, Magluilo, Jennings, Ellund. 5 Froni Row: Wolf, Urick, Annis, Vidal, Wesfberg, Abrams, Sisiren. GEORGE VIDAL DANCE ORCHESTRA 8065. Row: Urich, Magluiln. fron? Row: Annis, Preovolos, Barusch. The STudenT Body This Term has enioyed The Tine reperToire ThaT has always characTerized The worlq OT The ConcerT 0rchesTra. This group, under The direcTion OT Miss l-l. J. Alexander, was composed OT many Tal- enTed young musicians, who were led by George Vidal. OTher oTTicers were George Uriclc, vice-presidenT, and William Sislrin, secreTary. Each OT The orchesTra's perTormances was excellenT, The Tinal one OT The year aT The ComrnencemenT being especially well received. The Dance OrchesTra, also under Miss Alexander, wiTh James Preovolis, leader, made our class dances a pleasure long To be remembered. MOST OT The popular Tunes were played wiTh The slcill OT proTessiOnal orchesTras. Our school dances have become some OT our mOsT enjoyable occasions. largely due To These excellenT players. All in all, The OrchesTral worlc This Term has been a success, many OT The sTudenTs perTecTing Their insTrumenTal abiliTy, Thus giving Lowell ouTsTand-- ing orchesTras. 49 JAMES PREOVOLTS DRAMATICS DramaTic presenTaTions Tor This Term have been limiTed, due To The lack of proper TaciliTies. l-lowever, The subsTiTuTion oT Tour one-acT plays Tor The TradiTional VarieTies consTiTuTed an agreeable change. They may be summarized as Tollows: A Wedding, by John KirlcpaTriclc. An amusing comedy depicTing The Trials To which a young couple is subiecTed beTore becoming uniTed. All The acTion Talces place in The groom's room. The casT included: The Groom .............. William GoeTze The Bride . . . . . Olive WhiTe The BesT Man . . . BenneTT McGuire The Groomsman . . . . RoberT Camp The Bride's FaTher . . . Norman LowensTein The Bride's AunT ..,. ...... E lizabeTh Singer The Groom's MoTher .....,..... Eloyas Cagle The second play was enTiTled Five MinuTes From The STaTion. The ploT revolved abouT a series oT calamiTies which happened To a young couple endeavoring To enTerTain a supposedly hard-hearTed boss. The casT was as Tollows: NN' X BerT Adams . . . . . Joseph MorTon X James Mason .... ...,... H arold Chandler ' Carrie Adams ............ Adelle Merriman WT fx Amusing in iTs individualiTy was The Third play. showing The aTTempTs oT all The characTers To cure one oT The hiccups. The name was The Cure. and iT included The Tollowing casT: Mary ..... . . . . . . Sylvia OnesTi John .... . . William SalT Mrs. ParroT ............... Burris Bly Mr. ParroT .............. William Goelze The lasT play. Thank You DocTor, was laid in The oTTice oT a prominenT docTor. IT showed how a clever crook was apprehended. AcTing in This were: The Nurse ............... Sylvia OnesTi Dr. Gurney . . . . Norman LowensTein Mrs. SesTer . . . ElizabeTh Singer CorT . . . . . William GoeTze A PaTienT ............., Thomas Brennan Original cosTumes and sTage seTTings added much To The success oT These plays, To say noThing of The abundance oT dramaTic abiliTy displayed in Their presenTaTion. Also conTribuTing were The sTage crew. The orchesTra. and, mosT imporTanT oT all, hard-working DirecTor Samuel K. Polland. 50 Under The skillTul direcTion oT Mr. Samuel K. Polland, This Term's dra- maTic presenTaTions have proven very successTul. The oTFice oT PresidenT oT The DramaTic AssociaTion has been Tilled by Richard BarThol. Many shorT ski+s have been produced beTore class audiences. ProminenT in These producTions have been Barbara McAdoo in None Too Good Tor Dodo : Richard BarThol, Florence Waller, and Adele Merri- man in lT's an lll Wind : Lois Von Morpurgo, BenneTT McGuire, and Irene Spears in BabbiTT's Boy g Jane STriTTmaTTer, Helen Proll, and JaneT Levey in WomenTolks : RoberT Farrell and Burris Bly in Bargains g Richard Lynch, l-larold Chandler, and Norma GeoTTry in BeTTer Days g Arlene Callahan and BeTh Dahleen in Saved p Barbara GilberT and Lydia Parin in Lady Luck p BeaTrice SchwarTz in Their l-lusband g Dolores Riddell, Thomas Brennan, and Norman LowensTein in The Dwellers in The Darknessug NaTalie Zisser and RoberT Camp in TeapoT on The Rocks : Claribel CoTTman and Virginia l-leiman in Woman oT JudgmenT g Eloyas Cagle and Geraldine Dolan in LeT IT Burn g and W.lliam GoeTze in ln The Spring a Young Man's Fancy. Each year The mosT ouTsTanding characTerizaTion in acTing by a dra- maTics sTudenT is selecTed and his name is added To The DramaTics l-lonor Roll, which is framed and displayed in The Lowell audiTorium. Two oT The presenT graduaTes have been Tound worThy oT This honor: Florence Waller, Tor her characTerizaTion oT Mrs. PeTers in TriTles, and Adele Merriman, Tor her porTraiT oT The young wiTe in a scene Trom OuTward Bound. Lowell was awarded The cup Tor The annual Shakespearean conTesT Tor Wfj l The second Time, when Richard Lynch was chosen Tor giving The besT inTer-T L preTaTion oT a selecTion Trom Shakespeare's works. Lucile Simmons, also excellenT, was The second enTranT Tor Lowell. Ten San Francisco high schools parTicipaTed wiTh Two represenTaTives apiece. The school ThaT is awarded The cup Tor Three Times will be allowed To keep iT permanenTly. The Shake- spearean dramas always provide proTiTable enTerTainmenT. i if Mlwfll K w ' My jf!! l I BOYS ATHLETICS Progress has urged humanify onward and forced iT To conquer obsfacles which frequenTly seemed impossible. Since earliesT Times we have builT dams To hold ThaT precious subsfance known as waTer wiThin our conTrol. YeT as laTe as yesferday The mighTy waTers ofThe Colorado dared confronf man wiTh an obsfacle ThaT finally yielded To even greaTer opporTuniTies for expansion and consTrucTion. Such a facT we have exemplified in The building of ThaT monsfrous pro- iecT, Boulder Dam. In I928 a bill was passed in Congress aufhorizing iTs consTrucTion. EnThusiasTic engineers drew up plans and calculaTions in a shorT Time, and work was begun immediafely on The masTer proiecT. Workmen, Thrilled wiTh The aspecT of such a monumenf, labored Tirelessly, and zealously. for days. weeks and monfhs ThaT lengfhened inTo years. AT The end of each day someThing. no maTTer how insignificanT, was finished To bring iT closer To compleTion. l-learTs of millions of counfrymen. as well as Those of The workmen, were consTanTly hoping and praying for iTs suc- cess,' ThaT waTer mighT combine wiTh sunshine To reap naTure's golden harvesf. The eyes of The world were follow- ing each small deTail. Today, sTanding before us. nearing compleTion. a masTerpiece of beauTy. arT, engineering, and workmanship. a sfupendous sTrucTure of five hundred and fiffy feeT-Boulder Dam is one of The lasfing monumenfs of The progress of This glorious naTion. rn U E-I Ill-'I n-J III E- '42 5 U2 P' O M WW WW M W M, J ,NX E Ei T7 X ...D MTX? BASKETBALL Wffillll FeaTuring a smooTh, sure, and versaTile oTTense, augmenTed by an almosT impeneTrable deTense, one oT The TinesT Teams ever To represenT Lowell on The hardwood baske+baII courTs capTured The coveTed A. A. A. championship, and supplemenTed This wiTh a vicTory over Sparks Union l-ligh, The Nevada STaTe Champions. A Red and WhiTe squad, well-drilled in TundamenTals by ThaT mosT compeTenT coach, Ben NeTT, sTarTed The season wiTh a win over CasTlemonT. This was Tollowed by vicTories over The CaliTornia Freshmen, Palo AlTo, San lvlaTeo, and oThers. The sTrong STan- Tord Frosh spoiled an oTherwise perTecT pracTice record by deTeaTing The Cards, 34 To I9. Because oT Lowell's very successTul early season accom- plishmenTs The Cards were insTalled co-TavoriTes wiTh Poly Tor The A. A. A. crown. The TirsT league TilT, ThaT wiTh Mission, proved To be as exciTing as any game played on local high school courTs in The lasT decade. The Bears were leading, 23 To 2 I, wiTh less Than Two minuTes leTT To play. Carl Troppman Tied The score aT 23 To 23 by virTue oT a beauTiTul Tield goal Trom midcourT, buT Fassler oT Mission made good on a Tree Throw To puT his Team ahead. WiTh less Than TwenTy seconds oT play remaining, Tony Franusich Took a desperaTe shoT and scored To give Lowell a 25 To 24 vicTory. Franusich wiTh Ten, and Troppman wiTh nine poinTs, were The leading scorers Tor Lowell. The vicTory was noT secured wiThouT cosT, however, Tor in The early parT oT The second halT NoTch De Bisschop Tell and iniured his leg and had To be assisTed Trom The courT. l-le was losT Tor boTh The Balboa and Com- merce games, and his absence was keenly TelT. DespiTe a belaTed lasT quarTer rally by a sTrong Balboa squad, The Cardi- nal Tive disposed oT This league opponenT, 23 To l8. Troppman, wiTh nine markers, was high poinT man. The nexT encounTer Tound The Indians vicTims OT a sTarTling upseT produced by a rugged Commerce Tive. ATTer Trailing Tor mosT oT The game, field goals by Burness. Franusich, and Troppman puT The Cards ahead wiTh seconds To go. A long one-handed shoT, coupled wiTh a Tree Throw, proved To be The deciding TacTors in The game wh'ch Tound Commerce on The long end oT a 28 To 26 score. Thoroughly incensed aT The manner in which The Commerce Team mis- handled Them, The Cardinal cagers loosed Their wraTh upon The unTorTunaTe Galileo Tive, crushing The laTTer To The Tune oT 4I To I3. Carl Troppman annexed high poinT honors wiTh sixTeen poinTs. The Indians conTinued Their winning ways by easily Taking The measure OT ST. lgnaTius, 32 To I I. Fine Teamwork enabled Burness and Troppman To elude The WildcaT guards and score on numerous occasions. 53 COACH NEFF DOUG MAA' T T S DAVE 'KOBLICK ART GOLDSTETN -HAiL'ii2dBLLERf7, T .sei-in sums, 6 Tom FRANUSTCH NOTCH L LBTLL LEE .Mm i ,Visa RAY COATS DONT RURNESS' 'J '66 A LZ, ' wmzneu seam immsv wow 4 were Younm In The sixTh game of The season, Lowell meT iTs arch-rival, The Then- undeTeaTed Poly guinTeT. Lowell enTered This game Taced wiTh The necessiTy oT deTeaTing her oppo- nenT if she enTerTained any hopes Tor The championship. Backed To The uTmosT by The sTudenT body and TaculTy, The Cardinals found The range, and aTTer a close TirsT halT, walked away wiTh a glorious 22 To I7 vicTory. Troppman and Guinee, Lowell sTars, were Torced Trom The game on personal Touls, buf Kobliclc, Egan, and De Bisschop proved able subsTiTuTes. Lowell now Taced a second ne- cessiTy, ThaT oT deTeaTing a sevenTh opponenT, The TighTing Irish oT Sa- cred I-iearT. An inspired Irish Team gave Lowell supporTers many un- easy momenTs in an engagemenT ThaT Tound The Cardinals, aTTer Trailing, 8 To 7, aT halT, coming Trom behind To score a 22 To I2 vic- Tory. Tony Franusich scored eleven poinTs Tor The Red and WhiTe sguad. ATTer This vicTory, which showed ThaT The Lowell Team was now a smooTh-TuncTioning uniT, hopes Tor a championship ran high. Aller compleling a successlul praclice season, lhe Lowell lighl- weighl cagers opened lheir league compelilion by delealing Mission, 34 lo I7. In The game wilh Balboa lhe Cards encounlered greal diffi- cullyin gaining a I3 lo I I decision. A lavored Commerce live proved loo much lor lhe Lowell aggrega- lion, winning, 22 lo I6. Galileo was held lo Iwo liield goals in a game which lound Lowell on The long end ol a 20 lo 9 score. Sl. lgnalius was overwhelmed, 20 lo I I, while lhe Poly skirmish pro- duced a I7 lo 8 viclory lor lhe Red and While. By delealing Sa- cred I-learl, 33 lo 22, The Cards cinched second place honors be- hind lhe undelealed Commerce live. The lirsl slring consisled ol John lgnollo and Bob I-Iarris, forwards: Diclc Shrieve, cenlerg and Jerry Grillin, Andy Moore, and Fred Wheeler, allernaling al 'rhe guard posilions. Diclc Shrieve was re- warded lor his very consislenl' and ever-dependable game by being named lirsl slring cenler on The ohlicial all-cily lighlweighl leam. JOHN IGNOFFO .SL GROSS PAUL LE BARON I 5 isdn HAUELER CENT BROWN BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS The vicTory over Sacred I-learT placed Lowell in a Tie wi+h Poly, Thus making a playoTT imperaTive. The playoTT consisTed oT a Two-ouT-OT-Three game series, wiTh The league encounTer counTing as one oT The games of The series. Because oT This, Lowell enTered The playoTT one up on iTs rivals. The ParroTs, playing superbly, bounced back in The running by deTeaTing The Indians, 26 To I9, in The second game. In The Third and deciding conTesT a long Tield goal by Franusich puT The Cards in TronT in The opening minuTes oT play, and Trom here unTil The halT The Cards held a Two-poinT advanTage, The score aT The inTermission being 9 To 7. As The second halT began The Cardinal Torwards sTarTed breaking pasT The Poly deTense, wiTh The resulT ThaT Lowell Tound herself seven poinTs ahead aT The beginning oT The TourTh guarTer. The Indians held Their lead, and as The Tinal gun sounded iT signal- ized The TirsT maior baskeTbaII championship in Three years ThaT was acquired by a Lowell Team. The Tinal score read: Lowell 2I, Poly I2. I-Iaving safely secured The ciTy TiTle, The Cards iourneyed To Reno, Nevada, where They encounTered The Nevada STaTe Prep champions, Sparks Union I-Iigh, a Team which had hereToTore won ThirTy-nine successive games. Lowell Took an early lead, holding iT unTiI halT Time, when The score was I4 To 7. Shor+ly aTTer The second halT began The Lowell Team lapsed and losT The lead, only To regain iT early in The TourTh guarTer. The Cards held The upper hand unTil The end of The game, winning 24 To 2 I . ParTicular menTion should be made oT Carl Troppman, Lowell cenTer, who was named The ouTsTanding player oT The Prep League. He won a place on The TirsT sTring of every all-ciTy Team published, and led The league in individual scoring. Too much crediT cannoT be besTowed upon Coach NeTl. I-Iis Tine Training plus The splendid spiriT and dogged deTerminaTion oT The Team were leading TacTors in bringing The A. A. A. TiTIe back To Lowell. THE ROAD TO A CHAMPIONSHIP Lowell OpponenTs . . Mission . . 24 25 23 . . Balboa . . I8 26 . . Commerce . . 28 4I . . Galileo . . I3 32 . . ST. IgnaTius . . I I 22 . . . Poly . . . I7 22 . Sacred I-IearT . I2 I9 . . . Poly . . . 26 ,zu . . .Poly. . . I2 23I- I6I 56 TRACK For The second successive year The Lowell unlimiTed Track Team climaxed successTul seasons by capTuring runner-up honors in The A. A. A. meeT. The Cardinals, wiTh 4Olf4 poinTs, Tinished second only To Poly, who amassed a ToTal oT si 5fI2 poinis. The lndians sTarTed The season by easily deTeaTing Balboa, 8I To 32. Berkeley succumbed To The sTrong Cardinal Team, bl IX3 To 5I 2,f3. The Cards nexT upseT Poly, 62 IX3 To 52 2f3, in a dual meeT Tha+ Tound STanley Evans broad- iumping 22 TeeT 3 inches Tor The ouTsTanding perTormance oT The day. The Lowell Relays Tound Poly barely nosing ouT Lowell and Se- quoia, who Tied Tor second place. The lndians led up To The Tinal evenT oT The meeT, The relay. Poly won This evenT To bring her ToTal To 25 poinTs, while Sequoia closed TasT To Take a second, Tallying 243g poinTs, The same number garnered by Lowell. NexT came The SanTa Rosa lnvi- TaTional Track and Field lvleeT. FirsTs by Evans, Long, Maxwell, Sales, STock, and Weisgerber, enabled Lowell To Take second honors. is-:spam Ensgsn .GEORGE JOHN FTNNT , Pere sALEs LJOFIN' STOCK , K, ..,- KING. JOE SANDERSQN E Tar Q gh 4. ya LEE, :swam T U TTED TRACK UNr,:A.f Raw: Ndlnnxon, Poduquis, Granf, Humphreyl, Sanderson, Weisqerbsr, Wolf, Fsldhynl, Ender. Wiliam, DTIH. Fr COACH HARRIS A week laTer The Indians won a Three-way meeT againsT LakeporT and Ukiah. The Tinal meeT preparaTory To The A. A. A. clash was The Roseville Relays, which The Cards handily won by scoring 49'f2 poinTs. ArmsTrong, Buckley, Evans, Fahn, Harris, Humphreys, Long, Maxwell, Sanderson, STock, Weisgerber, Williams, and WolT, all added valuable poinTs To Lowell's ToTal. In The annual A. A. A. meeT, a courageous Lowell Team, scheduled To Take Third behind Poly and Commerce, upseT The dope by gaining 40lf4 poinTs, To Tinish behind Poly, who won The championship wiTh 5l 5fI2 poinTs, buT ahead oT Commerce, who Took Third wiTh 34 M3 markers. I The hurdles supplied The Cards wiTh many unexpecTed poinTs when Ray Humphreys and Mel Long Tinished one-Two in The highs, and John STock TirsT in The 220 lows. Long also placed in This evenT, Tinishing TourTh. The discus Tound PeTe Sales geTTing OTT a mighTy winning heave oT I33 TeeT 3 inches, while Henri Ensler and Lee Feldheym placed second and TourTh, respecTively, Ensler also Took a TourTh in The shoT-puT. The sprinTs Tound George Maxwell placing TourTh in The I00-yard dash and second in The 220, despiTe The TacT ThaT an injured ankle gave way TwenTy yards Trom The Tinish oT The laTTer evenT. Evans also placed second in The broad iump, and Ray Humphreys came in Tor an unexpecTed TourTh. The TirsT evenT oT The day, The mile run, Tound Bob Harris running The TasTesT race in his liTe To Take Third. The high iump proved To be a big disappoinTmenT To The Lowell supporTers, as Lee, Long, and Weisgerber were Torced inTo a Tour-way Tie Tor Third place. The Lowell relay Team, weakened by Maxwell's iniury, was unable To place beTTer Than TourTh. This ended Lowell's scoring and, alThough They didn'T emerge wiTh The cham- pionship, The Indians made a mosT commendable showing. One oT The mosT powerful lighTweighT Track Teams ever To represenT Lowell romped home wiTh The A. A. A. TiTle by scoring an overwhelming ToTal oT 7I poinTs. The l00-pound division Tound AlTTield and Turner placing second and Third, respecTively, in The broad iump. FourThs were capTured by ShaeTer in The 50-yard dash and Davis in The I00-yard dash. Lowell's superioriTy in The I I0-pound class wenT unquesTioned as The Cardinals col- lecTed TirsTs in every evenT. Gopal, in The 75-yard dash, Remy, in The I50, and lda, in The broad iump, emerged vicTorious in Their respecTive evenTs. Mahoney Took second behind Gopal in The 75, while Bishop placed Third in The longer sprinT. Jim Fahn, I20-pound hurdler, ran The I20 lows in I4.2 To seT a new record in The Trials. He laTer won his evenT in The Tinals by barely deTeaTing his Team-maTe, Takahashi. Shinkai and OngerTh ran second and Third in The 75-yard dash, while Nakashima placed Third in The 220. 58 KR , 1: 'G I K 7 ,Q 1 Us R K , . ..,,5. 34 ,E is . . Ai. ALTFIELD sos REM: -is oo N B RYA NX vmcsm aaowri 'sa 2 3 ms- ,- , Q,: 1 Us r gi. I . ffl . PETER IDA BILL CARROLL r LIGHTWEIGHT TRACK ' ' Cl fl' D 's Id G I Lawrence Wheeler Yasuda Back Row. Finlayson, a in, avi, a, opa, , , . Third Row: Schaefer, Shinkai, Joe, Jeong, Orr, Henshaw, Jacobs, Dufley, Bryanl, Brown, Hagen, Nakashima, Baker, Miles, Wax Mislhos. Second Row: sieichle, Li, Lim, Onizuka, Eisenberg, Silver, Darwin, Rowe, Underwood, Carler, Bishop, Ongerlh, Murphy, Mahoney alick, Williams. Fronl Row: Allfield, Corbell, Miller, Riser, Cohen, Fahn, R., Fahn, J., Carroll, Dillon, Takahashi, Mayer, Lane, Wells. The high iump lound Carler lied lor second, and Bryanl deadlocked in lourlh. Brown caplured lhe l3O-pound high lump, while Carroll look a lhird in lhe 440. Elkins and Cohen placed second and lourlh in lhe shol pul. The IOO-, I IO-, and l2O-pound relay leams won lheir evenls lo complele lhe scoring lor Lowell. ln praclice meels lhe lighlweighls look lhe measure ol Mission, I I4 lo 44, and Poly, I I9 lo 39. The unsellish and unliring work ol Coach Elmer I-larris in developing lhis championship leam deserves lhe plaudils ol lhe enlire sludenl body, and il is wilh pride lhal we look back upon lhe l935 A. A. A. lighlweighl champions, and wilh conlidence ahead lo lhe I936 A. A. A. unlimiled l'illiSl'S. 59 UNLIMITED CREW From a group oT ThirTy sTrong and enThusiasTic buT very inexperienced boys. Coach KiTchen was Torced To selecT a varsiTy crew oT TourTeen men: Twelve oarsmen, a piloT. and a coxswain. The Tive reTurning veTerans Trom lasT year's squad were Frank BenneTT, Jerry O'Connor, Chad Reade, who was honored by being elecTed capTain, Maurice ST. Gaudens, and Jack Tompkins. The TirsT race oT The season was held on WashingTon's BirThday, wiTh Balboa, Galileo, Lowell, ParT-Time, and ST. lgnaTius enTering The compeTi- Tion. AT The compleTion oT The quarTer-mile course, The Red and WhiTe boaT was in The lead, wiTh The TasT-Tinishing ST. lgnaTius in second place, Two yjrds behind. Balboa, Galileo, and ParT-Time Tollowed in The order name . On The Tinal day oT April, however, Lowell again encounTered ST. Igna- Tius, This Time in a dual race, and meT deTeaT on The same course by one and one-halT lengThs, Thus dividing The series. Balboa was anoTher Two-Time opponenT oT The Cards, buT in The second encounTer Lowell again emerged The vicTor, This Time by Three lengThs. The Third conTesT was held againsT Galileo, The champions, who besTed The indians, only aTTer a TerriTic sTrug- gle, by Two lengThs. The TirsT boaT, alThough selecTions are sTill TenTaTive. is composed oT: BenneTT, De QuisTo, Reade, O'Connor, ST. Gaudens, and Tompkins on The sTarboard side, wiTh Berger, Berriman, Fairbanks, Gross, Irvine, and OTTer- son, on The porT side. High is coxswain, and lvlarTin, piloT. F nf Row: High, Plani, King, Reade, Krenz, Berriman, Fairbanks, OTTerson, Lang, D'AcqulsTo, Rowlands, E. MarTin. E Row: Bufler, Morgan, Alberfson, Schoenfeld, Berger, Brown, O'Connor, Hill, Schoenfeld, BenneH, ST. Gaudens, ne. LIGHTWEIGHT CREW The lighTweighT crew, even Though iT emerged loser in all The races held This season. was one ThaT conTained an abundance oT promising maTerial. Since mosT oT The presenT oarsmen are sophomores and iuniors, The experi- ence gained This year will aid Coach KiTchen greaTly in molding champion- ship crews Tor TuTure years. LasT year's boaT leTT only Tour veTerans-I-lill, Klang, PoTTs, and Simpers -all oThers having eiTher grown inTo unlimiTecls or graduaTed. PracTice was held aT YachT I-larbor every oTher morning, The haIT-day schedule making iT diTFicuIT To Train aTTer school. Races were held on SaTurday mornings, over a quarTer-mile course, also aT YachT I-larbor. The iniTial opponenT on The LighTweighT schedule was ST. IgnaTius, and alThough The Indians were slighTly ahead aT The halT-way marlc, The Irish pulled sTeadily ahead and were Two lengThs in TronT aT The compleTion oT The race. Balboa. This season's champion, provided The nexT compeTiTion Tor The l3O's. Game as They were, The Cardinals could noT cope wiTh The sTronger Buccaneers, and wenT down To a crushing Ten-lengTh deTeaT. The Tinal race oT The year was againsT Galileo, and alThough iT was very close, The Indian oarsmen were deTeaTed by The Lions by one and one-quarTer lengThs. STrengTh was The laclcing elemenT, and if ThaT could have been improved, a vicTorious Team mighT well have been The resuIT, Tor There was more unison and coordinaTion in The l3O-lb. boaT Than has been seen among The ciTy high schools Tor several years. Back Row: Miley, Benard, Graham, Miley, Bucchianeri, PasquaIeTTi, Bacigalupi, Sadowski, Bunbury, Ambrose, Sam I Front Row: Robbins, Cunningham, Orginos, Simpers, Hall, Lim, Weisman, PofTs, Roback, Despofakis, Sfillings, Ell BILL BENTOFF BOB REDMOND BOB DUMESNIL wwe ROSENTHAL A RAY DINGLE BILL FORNER TOM PARRAMORE GOLF WiTh a Team composed largely oT veTerans, The Lowell dIvoT diggers climaxed a favorable season by winning The A. A. A. TiTle. ln securing The championship The Cardinal golTers seT a record wiTh a Team ToTal oT 295. ThirTeen sTrolces less Than Poly, who placed second. A sparkling 68 by Cap- Tain Bob Dumesnil, who capTured medalisT honors: a 75 by Bill Forner, and 76's by Bob Redmond and Dave RosenThal, comprised Lowell's ToTal. Those who represenTed Lowell in The A. A. A. TournamenT, in order oT rank, were: Dumesnil, Redmond, Dingle, RosenThal, BenioTl, Forner, Parra- more, Slcahan, Edwards, Sobel, Ginsberg, and Repp. Nine ouT of These Twelve qualified Tor The maTch play ThaT Tollowed The gualiifying round, Three worlced Their way To The semi-Tinals, and Two, Dumesnil and Redmond, enTered The Tinals, Thereby assuring an all-Lowell Tinal. Early season maTches included encounTers wiTh lV1onTerey l-ligh and The STanTord Freshmen. 62 TENNIS Climaxing a very successTul season, Lowell's Tennis squad Took Third place in The A. A. A. meeT, behind Galileo and PolyTechnic. Kay Lyman, The TirsT ranking player oT The squad, was The only poinT scorer Tor The Cards who reached The semi-Tinals in The singles compeTiTion. Six pracTice conTesTs were held during The monThs oT March and April, and The Red and WhiTe ragueT wielders, alThough winners in buT one oT Their sTruggles, made respecTable showings in all. The California Frosh were meT TirsT, buT The LowelliTes were unable To cope wiTh The older and more experienced Treshmen, and were deTeaTed, 9 maTches To I. Two conTesTs were held againsT San MaTeo Junior College. In The TirsT, The Jaysees were vicTorious. 6 maTches To 2, buT in The reTurn engagemenT The prepsTers showed a greaT deal oT improvemenT and held The MaTeans even, 4 maTches each. PolyTechnic was The nexT opponenT. The ParroTs, wiTh more experienced players, beaT The Indians, 6 maTches To 2. The only conTlicT in which Lowell was vicTorious was ThaT againsT San MaTeo High. The resulT was Tive maTches Tor Lowell and 3 Tor San MaTeo. Galileo was The winner in The sixTh Tussle, 6 vicTories To 2. AlThough The posiTion varied Trom Time To Time, The Tinal ranking oT The players is: Kay Lyman, Rod Rogaway, Chandler Ennes, AI AlTTield, Maurice Cohn, Henry Mooy, Bob Farrell, and Jay Jones. An enTirely new sysTem oT counTing poinTs wenT inTo eTTecT This season, as did The ruling disconTinuing The I3O-lb. Team. M y . val. RQDTROGAWAY 'CHANDLER ENNES syn A g L TT AL ALTFIELD f ,Lg 25,-V 1 . , Tlsn ' xnlssns 'T .QQ 1 A JAY JONES ia' .:z.j 'l f:. - .. T.'2.1.:lv -'f liix ffsfzgggg Tm X' i 1 1.5 Q l - 1 if iff?-in 5' , if ., , H . . T 1? tix T KAY LYMAN DICK 'HERNAN s ms. , E T . 'Sf-S? 12 UE HENRY moo! T lg E . . 3 QM .5 T Tu COACH KITCHEN SWIMMING On The basis of Their decidedly successTul pracTice season, Lowell's unlimiTed swimmers, aTTer being vicTorious in 5 ouT oT 6 pracTice meeTs, were TavoriTes To capTure The A. A. A. meeT, which was won The lasT Two seasons by The Galileo Lions. True To Torm, The Cards annexed The TiTle, Triumphing over Galileo by a margin oT I0 poinTs. Those Taking TirsTs were Ted Needham, ouTclassing all opponenTs in The diving compeTiTiong Jack Read, breaking a record in The l00-yard backsTroke, and Dick Simon, Taking The 50-yard TreesTyle. OThers placing were AI Blackman, Third in The breasTsTroke1 Johnnie Brigham, TourTh in The backsTrokeg Francis Dam, second in The l00, and TourTh in The 50-yard TreesTyleg STockTon Shaw, Third in The diving: Bob Shine, Thirds in The 200- and 400-yard TreesTyles and Earll Shine, second in The breasTsTroke, and TourTh in The medley. Read also Took a second in The 200-yard TreesTyle, and Simon a Third in The medley. All The six pracTice meeTs ThaT The Red and VVhiTe compeTed in were held ouT OT Town, so ThaT The Indians became Traveling mermen. The STan- Tord Frosh were The TirsT Team meT and deTeaTed, The Cardinals Taking all buT Tive oT The TirsT places, and coming ouT in TronT by The score oT 59 To 24. During The Tollowing week, The lndians engaged in a conTesT wiTh Sequoia High School and Trimmed The YellowiackeTs by 58 To I4. On The TirsT week-end oT April The Cards crossed The bay and deTeaTed Berkeley l-ligh, 46 To 20. Tamalpais l-ligh puT up a valianT TighT againsT The Indian mermen buT was deTeaTed by a score oT 52 To 29. The only seTback received in The six pracTice meeTs was adminisTered aT The hands oT The Palo AlTo Vikings, alfhough The Red and WhiTe squad was wiThouT The services oT l-lerb BroTman. While reTurning Trom an invasion oT The EasT aTTer compeTing in The naTional Y. M. C. A. meeT, BroTman, a likely winner in boTh oT The sprinT races and one oT The principal TacTors in Lowell's suc- cessTul pracTice campaign, was sTricken wiTh appendiciTis and was unable To compeTe in The big Triple A. swimming meeT. A TiTTy-TiTTy pracTice season was compleTed as Lowell's lighTweighT mermen besTed The sTrong Palo AlTo squad by The score oT 80 To 56. The I I0's and l20's engaged in only Three oT The meeTs: The l30-pounders compeTed in all Tour. While The unlimiTed swimmers were busy Trimming Sequoia, The lighT-weighTs were going down To deTeaT againsT The Yellow- 64 iaclceT Juniors, The score aT The compleTion oT The meeT being Sequoia 93 and Lowell 27. Berkeley l-ligh aTTorded The nexT compeTiTion buT The Cardinals won decisively, 95 To 36. Only The ThirTies compeTed againsT Tamalpais l-ligh, and losT by a score oT 3 I To I4. ln The Big ly1eeT The Lowell papooses failed To annex The TiTle, alThough placing second, behind Galileo. Bob Jacobs placed TirsT in The 50-yard TreesTyle, while oThers, including Maclvlullen. l-leuTer, Babcoclc, and l-larringTon, Tools seconds and Thirds. As in mosT oT The sporTs This year, The aThleTes were largely under- classmen and will be eligible Tor compeTiTion The nexT one or Two seasons This, wiTh The TacT ThaT many new swimmers will be coming from grammar schools and junior highs, rnalces The ouTloolc Tor nexT year parTicularly brighT .,ic Z 12. Aff? 9'- 4 - ' 4 s ,sremciss nm , WMA, RE D JACK A HERB BROTMAN BOB JACOBS Back Row: Brotmen, Read, Dam, Cerf, MacMulIen, Blackman, Simon, MacKenzie, Fouie. 1 Middle Row: Cohn, Young, Shine, R., Thompson, Berfhol, Shine, E., Needham. Front Row: Babcock. Chandler, Jacobs, Hueier, Harringfon, Ehrifl. It JACK NEEDHAM AL emczmm wwe, MMMTLLAN .2 1 ,gre f 'BAP' Dicic T SIMON' COACH VOYNE BASEBALL ATTer Two weelcs oT earnesT pracTice, The Lowell baseball nine opened iTs l935 season againsT The STanTord Freshmen, losing, I5 To O. AgainsT ST. PeTer's, The Cards again suTTered a deTeaT, This Time by a score oT 6 To I . The Cards were vicTims oT hard Iuclc in The game wiTh San lVIaTeo. AT The end oT The eighTh inning Lowell was leading, 4 To 3. The Cards were blanlced in Their half oT The ninTh, while San MaTeo rallied To score Two runs To pro- vide Their margin oT vicTory, The Tinal score being 5 To 4. Henry Fields piTched a Tine game and, wiTh beTTer supporT, he mighT have piTched Lowell To a vicTory. The San Francisco STaTe Teachers had a Tield day aT The expense oT The hapless Cards, winning, 25 To O. The Indians Then played The San RaTael lvIiIiTary Academy, losing, 6 To I, yeT on The same day The Lowell nine awoke Trom The leThargy ThaT had dogged iTs TooTsTeps Trom The sTarT oT The season, and won Their TirsT vicTory oT The year Trom The San RaTael High School. The Indians broke even in The Two games played wiTh ConTinuaTion I-Iigh. The TirsT game was closely conTesTed, buT The Indians managed To run Their winning sTrealc To Two games, elcing ouT a 5 To 3 win. In The second game, Wes Jones, subsTiTuTe ouTTielder, hiT a homer and a double, buT This Tine worlc was nuIliTied by numerous errors conTribuTed by Lowell Tielders, as The Indians losT a 5 To 4 decision. The Cards somewhaT avenged a previous drubbing by holding The San Francisco STaTe Teachers To a 5 To 5 Tie, in a game ThaT was called by dark- ness in The sixTh inning. This conTesT concluded a none Too successTuI prac- Tice season. In Their TirsT league TilT The Indians dropped a 6 To 2 decision To ST. IgnaTius. The Cards scored Their runs in The TirsT inning on WalTer's walk, and singles by Murray and lvIusanTe. lvlurray led The Card baTTers wiTh Two hiTs, while Franusich and MusanTe garnered one apiece. Jaclc Slcahan piTched good ball Tor Tive innings, allowing only Two earned runs. The Sacred I-IearT Tussle Tound a lasT inning rally by The Indians sTopped beTore any damage could resulT. Sacred I-IearT esTablished an early lead, being ahead, 6 To 2, aT The end oT The sixTh. In The sevenTh The Cards scored Two runs To prolong Their chances oT winning. In The ninTh. wiTh Two men ouT, Lowell Tilled The bases. A pinch hiTTer ended The game wiTh a high pop Tly To shorT. Carl Troppman and Floyd WalTer collecTed Two hiTs apiece To lead The Lowell baTTers. A sTrong Mission nine ouT-hiT The Indians To score a 9 To I vicTory. Les MusanTe scored Lowell's lone run wiTh a homer 66 -, 'I' ' 5' ---' J VTC BGNFMO HENRY HELD JACK SHAMAN ,uso omesm JOE Muaaaw li HAL M E LLE R FLOYDvWALTER J in The TirsT inning. A 6 To 2 seTbaclc aT The hands oT Poly in The annual Poly- Lowell baTTle lcepT Lowell in The cellar oT The league. The sensaTional Tielding oT Iv1iIT Berman, Lowell leTT Tielder, was The ouTsTanding TeaTure oT The game. Berman also conTribuTed Two hiTs. Commerce deTeaTed Lowell, 4 To I, alThough Dumesnil and Fields held The Bulldogs To The meager ToTal oT Tive hiTs. The score mighT have been larger, had noT OngerTh and WalTer robbed The Commerce baTTers by making sensaTional sTops oT hard-hiT balls. The Cards have yeT To play Balboa and Galileo, Two exceedingly sTrong Teams. AlThough The Cards will be underdogs in These Two games, They have an excellenT chance oT upseTTing The dope by capTuring one oT The games, if noT boTh. The mosT noTiceable Thing abouT The Indians all season has been Their Tine spiriT which, despiTe Their many deTeaTs, has never wavered. The TacT ThaT Coach lvlilce Voyne has been able To keep The players smiling despiTe Their many disappoinTmenTs is a crediT To his Tine coaching. The season need noT be called a Tailure, as iT has uncovered many promising prospecTs Tor nexT year's Team. ln This group may be included lvlilT Berman, l-larold lvleller, and Ed OngerTh. All These boys played on The TirsT sTring This year, and The valuable experience ThaT They gained will help Them To Torm a sTrong nucleus Tor The IQ36 baseball nine. 67 MTLT 'BERMAN RU BY IR ci T ml Q S Icle, Z., Bohmarr, Fairbanks, Brickwedel, Pofls, Robinson, Schoenfeld, Jennings, Roback, Buff F TR M Tosich, Shaw Koons, Berriman, Morgan, Jacobs, Hood, Bunberry, Graham, Alberfson, Moore, Gross. RUGBY The revival oT rugby, which has noT been played in local sporT circles since I9 I 5, is largely due To The energeTic eTTorTs oT Coach Milce Voyne, whose Iceen insighT led him To believe ThaT rugby could be proTiTably played by prep schools. Under Voyne's leadership, Two Lowell Teams began acTive pracTice as early as February. The TirsT Team played Tive games, deTeaTing The ArgonauTs Twice, 9 To O and 2I To 5, and The San Francisco Blues, I I To O. The sTrong STanTord seconds deTeaTed The Indians, 9 To O, while a piclced high school Team held The Red and WhiTe squad To a 3 To 3 Tie. AT The end oT The pracTice season, represenTaTives Trom Balboa, Com- merce, Lowell, Poly, and Sacred I-IearT meT and organized The San Francisco Prep Rugby League. Lowell enTered Two Teams, while each oT The oTher schools IimiTed iTs enTry To one. The Two Lowell squads were organized by Taking The ThirTy leading ruggers and spliTTing Them inTo Two Teams oT equal sTrengTh. AppropriaTeIy, The Teams are designaTed as The Reds and WhiTes. In Their only league compeTiTion To daTe, The Reds deTeaTed Sacred I-IearT, I2 To 3, and The WhiTes whipped Balboa by a score oT I4 To 3. AIThough iT is noT possible To publish The resuITs oT IaTer games, The WhiTes are Tavored Tor The championship, wiTh The Reds close conTencIers. The eTT rTs,oT Coach Voyne will soon be rewarded, as The success oT The league is ,gone conclusion. 1 X y, y K wQIJI,'f'x,WiTi If . xmT'il1!if ' T wWT , , me I 'lE,7lf5vmTfls V RUGBY IWII T I ' R d , Murphy, Siickie, Y., Annis. Dillon, Planf, Benneff, Ward, Saunders, Tompkins, Pedrin, O'Connor, Hnom. F TR HqhSh'II D L'J Bq B KTh'I:iKhI D in , owd, Bour e. , f U Qafiisfi, 9' f v phi ka TW 'W f'fIl!.l'ZYNAGERIAL 1, if' ix' NTT 1 ' ' 4,55 if - fl '11 'rv' X x - -. iff K .ATS :JT T' Lf L 1 'if' BL f' i l S BLOCK L ' MANAGERIAL STAFF Back Row: Read, Troppmann, Maxwell, Humphreys, Ginsberg, Sales, Sanderson. Back Row: Redmond, Ly M ddl R Huefer, Wolf, Barfhol, Maas, Ed d K g R q y G S F T R w: Jacobs, Sand M rder, Hearn. F T R C h , Meyer, Geomeffi, McGuire, D B h p H gf T pk G ld T n, BerT d, Fahn, Wallis, Sk h William GoeTze, and his very eTTicienT corps oT assisTanTs, The pasT Term arranged and execuTed one oT The busiesT aThleTic Terms ThaT The Boys' Managerial STaTT has yeT encounTered. By skilTully planning schedules and meeTs Tor The diverse squads oT Lowell sporTs, by careTully supervising aTh-- leTic eguipmenT, and by perTorming scores oT aTher deeds beneTicial To The school, They became an imporTanT TacTor in The success oT This Term's sporTs. For The managemenT oT The l935 championship baskeTball Team and The second place lighTweighT sguad, Coach NeTT selecTed Tour very able lads. They were RoberT Feerick, RoberT Jacobs, Richard Mangan, and MerTon Sanders. Feerick and Mangan were members oT lasf Term's IIO-pound baskeTball Team, while Jacobs and Sanders were busily occupied as mana- gers. The Two picked by Coach Voyne To manage Lowell's iniTial rugby Team were Marvin Fairbanks and Malcolm Jacobs. Fairbanks, besides managing The rugby Team, was also one oT iTs mosT valuable members. Kay Lyman and Rod Rogaway, boTh experT players, had charge oT The Tennis sguad. Lyman was number one man oT The Team, and Rogaway was ranked as number Three. Coach KiTchen picked, as manager oT The swim- ming Team, Jack Read. Read has been an ouTsTanding sTar oT The waTer churners Tor Two years. William Rowlands and Edward Wallis, boTh experi- enced managers, were selecTed by Coach Voyne To manage The baseball squad. GolT was under The conTrol oT RoberT Redmond, who was TirsT rank- ing man among The divoT diggers. The Track Team, under The direcTion oT Coach l-larris, was managed by Two compeTenT boys, Douglas GranT and Leonard McKee. A surprisingly large proporTion oT The members oT The Managerial sTaTT Took parT in The sporT They direcTed. OuT oT TourTeen managers Tor The spring Term, seven compeTed in Their respecTive acTiviTies. A championship Team musT have an eTTicienT coaching sTaTT. Lowell, we believe, has led The way among all high schools in boTh The coaching and managerial deparT- menTs. AND BLOCK L W uhm GIRLS' ATHLETICS Wonders which were never ThoughT To be possible have come To pass unTil Today vasT, deep oceans and sTrange, once unknown lands are Tied TogeTher by a neTwork like ThaT of a web of a spider. Through The colorTul discovery of ThaT viTal elemenT in our daily lives, elecTriciTy, one of The many wonders of Today was made possible-The invenTion of The wireless by Marconi in I896. As a resulT oT The perseverance oT ingenious minds groping in The darkness oT a sTrange and invisible field, This modern wonder has proved iTselT To be an invaluable parT oT The work oT The naTional powers. Speed, The essence oT all liTe oT The presenT age, is exemplified in iTs compleTe and concise operaTions. IT has helped To unify The world and bring TogeTher people Trom The Tar corners of The earTh, boTh in The sereniTy of peace and The TumulT oT war. lTs Tall Towers, like senTinels. sTand high on The edges of The conTinenTs, and iTs Tar-reaching arms sTreTch ouT over hills, valleys, plains, seas, rivers, lakes-over all The earTh, ever vigilanT, awaiTing The command oT man. The success of The wireless has broughT progress Toward The compleTion of The hopes and expecTaTions oT all peoples oT The universe-The overcoming oT ThaT greaT forbidding, indomiTable barrier in The paTh-space. . y i 55 'VW ' YM i X 53' LN XM ,LM - ' Uyflyf ff ' MT T yy. ,,?fA5 ,vu if fi 'V It OJ J L :ff zfzfbdr' if , 'T Z' Mahi WWW WM!! of , if E , Vi , - f' shew-M5 VT 'T ' i ' if 44'-' '94 . Ag!!! U2 U I-'I I-I I'-I-'I n-1 III' E- Hd U2 1-ll DI'- U FU 1 W w el' I E, , .,.z515i5 H ',-inf' , ' 'T 1 .J , ' 1.. H -ew- -:-,yi - nd U ' :.1 f- , Swlaiiiqx , .nA rf 'HV ,-J A I w Q ,.,, irr T . r sg? .J X ' W, -V ORGINOS m ve: .L,..,:., , ,. Q' Q' PATRTCTA O'8RIEN Hooker Maman 'Lila I I I M . 421 x 3 , DOROTHY PERDTCALIS ' vovmimr MANAGER l ROOT f ' N I' G. A. A. membership grew beyond all records This semesTer. This achievemenT was made possible Through The capable insTruc- ' , Tion oT The TaculTy coaches and The cooperaTion oT The G. A. A. f oTlicers who planned The sporT meeTings and The awards brealcTasT. ndaitiy The coaches who rendered Their unTiring eTlorTs are Miss DoroThy Flynn, who insTrucTed in gohcg Miss DoroThea Forcade, Tield Mfr, hockey and Tennis: Miss Barbara Mensing, swimming and ice slcaT- ing: Miss JaneT Wilson, riding: Miss CaTherine Faulkner, a special insTrucTor, direcTed volleyball and baseball. 7l ,A Sf' ,J i'-.11-1 aasruci A i i i i ' sauna. mam roam umm Bam iam ev.. Q... K A 'L 1 Mimi-nc. k:..,vsM 1-f-aqosa, Aiiwqscau wezssm,-1, ITM uw ii in ii M,,,,x,, ,, , , HW M f,.wifz.s.v 'Www vm is,,J..,i, TAM. Nami, . . had noT yeT been organized. ln I9l5 The Physical My menT sponsored a Tew aThleTic Teams EnThusiasm and li , W 9 .1 Q I A n ' h re e Tew acTiviTies in which l.owell girls could par- : e r spibiq d I n ff all nT e Ti ese sporTs grew rapidly and Today organized aThleTics play an !9 M im o nT parT in The lives oT over halT The girls oT Lowell. f g. Gohf sTarTed in I926, riding in I929. LasT semesTer Treld hoclcey was MW f lNlineTeen-eighTeen inTroduced volleyball, baseball, Tennis and swim fx inTroduced and This Term, ice slcaTing was revived. More sporTs Than ever beTore were oTTered This Term. This TacT, coupled wiTh The large member- ship oT The G. A, A., proves ThaT sporTs, which are necessary To so many iils, are an esTablished parT oT The school curriculum. By her choice oT a sporT, a girl is allowed To express herselT and malce Triendships. Pleasure is derived Trom worlcing wiTh people oT s'milar inTer- esTs, pleasure ThaT is lasTing because iT is Tounded on such worThy principles. As girls' sporTs have grown Trom obscuriTy To Their presenT sTage oT impor- Tance, so has leisure. Years ago To have leisure Time was a luxury, now, in The mosT humdrum oT lives, There is Time Tor play. There is no beTTer ouTleT, nor means oT recreaTion, Than aThleTics. Organized sporTs noT only build characTer, buT also develop resourceTulness in The worThy use oT spare Time. 72 Jwvf mwyw ' . !ZQM W6 'QMWWW FWMMWWTMA wi -ffwwfw ie? SLHMMAD BASEBALL Baseball is one oT The oldesT sporTs aT Lowell and has always been popu- lar. IT was more so This Term, because, while aT Galileo, iT has been impos- sible To play baseball during gymnasium periods. The TaciliTies oT FunsTon Playground were used. The arrangemenT oT playing on This large green, where iT was noT necessary To suppress enThu- siasTic shouTs, proved mosT saTisTacTory. CaTherine Faulkner, a cadeT Teacher, coached The Teams. Frances Weinberger served successTully as manager. The main evenT was The inTer-class TournamenTs, which began May ninTh. VOLLEYBALL Volleyball, one oT The oldesT sporTs aT Lowell, is sTill very popular, having a TurnouT oT over TorTy girls. There is liTTle wonder ThaT This sporT has so many devoTees. lT is inTeresTing and Tull oT acTion. lT requires a Trained eye and sure Touch, aTTained only Through pracTice. PracTice meeTings were held each Friday aT FunsTon Playground. DoroThy Perdicalis, a veTeran enThusiasT, was manager. CaTherine Faulkner coached The Teams. There was no ouTside compeTiTion. The main evenT oT The Term was an inTer-class meeT which began May TenTh. TENNIS Tennis compleTed a very successTul Term, wiTh over nineTy girls parTici- paTing. AT The beginning oT The semesTer The girls were grouped as To Their skill. Beginners meT Mondays. Advanced and inTermediaTe players meT Fridays. PracTice was held aT FunsTon Playgrounds. T Miss DoroThea Forcade, TaculTy advisor, insTrucTed. Lorraine Lolanne served successTully as manager. OThers assisTing in coaching were Elaine KaTon, Enid Kuchel, Barbara ScoTT and Nancy Sparks. The doubles TournamenTs oT The inTermediaTe and advanced groups were The culminaTion OT The sporT. SWTMNHNG SevenTy-Tive girls parTicipaTed in swimming This semesTer. This TurnouT was The largesT in The long hisTory oT swimming aT Lowell. The manager, Marjorie Sperka, acguiTTed herselT quiTe crediTably, being an excellenT swimmer and diver. Miss Barbara Mensing was TaculTy advisor. The girls were divided inTo groups according To Their abiliTy. Girls more advanced were insTrucTed in diving. The graceTul swan dive and The back dive were The Two dives pracTiced. Weekly meeTings were held aT CrysTal Palace BaThs. An inTerschool swimming meeT TerminaTed The sporT. 73 GOLF Because of fhe small number of golf parficipanfs, affenfion is focused on fhe oufsfanding golfers. Those deserving special affenfion were Marjorie Ginsberg, Barbara Roof and Virginia Valenfine. Beginners mef on Tuesdays and Wednesdays in Lincoln Park, and were insfrucfed by Mr. Cuneo, a professional. Advanced compefifion, in fhe form of ladder fournamenfs, was very keen. The championship was decided by fhe fwo highesf confesfanfs play- ing eighfeen holes af bofh Lincoln and Ingleside golf courses. Miss Dorofhy Flynn was faculfy advisor. Barbara Roof served capably as manager. RIDING Each year riding has become more popular. This ferm fhere were eighfy-six parficipanfs, more riders fhan af any fime before. Miss Janef Wilson, faculfy advisor, and Cornelia Cobb, who was manager, confribufed much fo fhe success of fhe sporf. Weekly rides were held Tuesdays and Thursdays for beginners: Wednes- days and Fridays for fhe advanced class. Bofh groups were faughf fhe hurdling of nafural barriers. Special feafures were fwo-hour rides and moonlighf rides around Lake Merced. A l-lorse Show, in which all fhe gfrls rode, was fhe culminafion of fhe sporf. FIELD HOCKEY Enfhusiasm for field hockey ran high fhis ferm, as was affesfed by fhe greafly increased number of parficipanfs. Miss Dorofhea Forcade, who infroduced fhe sporf lasf semesfer, was faculfy advisor again. Pafricia O'Brien proved herself capable as sfudenf manager. Pracfice was held on Mondays af fhe spacious fields of Funsfon Play- grounds. Before fhe games were acfually played, special sfrokes were explained and pracficed. There was no oufside compefifion: fhe games were played befween Lowell girls, who were divided info feams. ICE SKATING lce skafing was again organized fhis ferm. One hundred and forfy-nine enfhusiasfic girls parficipafed in making fhis sporf a success. Charloffe Meyer, an excellenf skafer, filled fhe posifion of manager. Wifh fhe able help of Charlof Rader, Miss Meyer insfrucfed fhe girls, who were divided info groups according fo fheir skill. Miss Barbara Mensing was faculfy advisor. Meefings were held Wednesdays af fhe San Francisco Rink. Though ice skafing was sfarfed once before, and was disconfinued, fhe inferesf shown fhis ferm predicfs a very rosy fufure for fhis fascinafing sporf. 74 f 5 Many acTiviTies, aside Trorn The acTual pracTicing To improve one's slcill in a special sporT, have resulTed Trorn The developmenT oT girls' sporTs. These are The Girls' AThleTic AssociaTion and The Block L SocieTy, as well as inTer-school compeT,Tion, aThleTic exhibiTions and playdays, which have become an essenTial and enjoyable parT oT The sporTs Term. IT is every girl's ambiTion To receive a Block L, and Then her pin. The pin is The highesT award, and signiTies The con'1pleTion oT eighT Terms oT successTul parTicipaTion in aThleTics. On obTaining a Block L, one is adrniTTed inTo The Block L SocieTy, which meeTs weelcly under The super- vision oT Miss DoroThy Fl This Term The Block L SocieTy planned The T which The awards were given. The SocieTy The Lowell Playday, in which compeTiTion was girls. bi-annual sporTs brealocas also successTully beTween The Lowell Torrn a linlc oT good sporTsrnanship and Triendship and Their sTudenTs. On several occasions The oTher sTudenTs parTicipaTed in inTer-school playdays, s aT aThleTic exhiloiTions. One oT These evenTs was oT CaliTornia. The G. A. A. oTTicers waTched The and oTher perTormances oT s+uden+s represenTing TTerward, The visiTing oTTicers were privileged To enioy ' in one oT The UniversiTy's lovely pools. Organized To een The diff and also held aT TeaTures oT The sporTs Terrn serve To sTrengThen The main reliance and good sporTsmanship, which are unconsciously hoclcey Tield, The Tennis courT, and in any oT The branches oT iaThleTics iq I Ti B- figs? moms .mx RW. w...,n. mcm., Musa.. nous, Gaiam, sun., Davin, Lipman, Mmqfaf, mmf. Middle now- wefmiqsf, Schmid' Km, Kahn, P., vzmmy w.iia.m, iswuw., Malmi Anger, cam, moss, fum nw: wsu, mem, Gruggall. Lmy. einer.. cuss, Hovbsuqb, L:.m,H4fm1r, Browning, Mccimhy GOLF Gnu oxum swam. Marque Kmvev Mai, waim H.ii.z9 ww, La nam eoua new-M TENNIS Bac Raw- ni-arm om ri-me ouraian un Awe K pl H Gab im. v.im1f..i Meena.. cfmi., Mm, csnwg, Pau, nm 1, union. alle. Garden, Van Der AA .o o t ,M we ,M .Q ,F .S.,-wif,rsn.gmsiAm.m.,., Middle nw Bishdvv, icmm, Luca, Pawn-mn, HoFman Mclauqhlin, Pfcavd, n.mwLaWs Mo nw aw rfznzs., mms., czsim, Hzmmeiwzqm, Nelson, Larissa, swan, xnuisf, Tmppmw., H ss if , i. Aiw, ch.m:.,q. ooagn. ic of.,e..s, Lsiw.. mmf. undef, mn, scoff. Wil v .3 ,vga f?:'?'vQ3g5,,Q s a ,-X, W w W ?2f:ffi,,ffif +5Y5Sgcf My f if r w 1 . s wiv? bw W V , EQ S Qffm U!! Cm W , 7 5 f f,f' ' wlm gf!! WWOMMK S fp fi? W Q T5 Ei5ii ix J Q f X ST? My 'SMF ' f , 4,,, GW MWAMZWM VW M ff WW V Rf fb eww WE Z f .azz WWW W wfw Q ' if ,,.. I p JV iff ' Awe ,,?, A' A A A E l F Www S r F E


Suggestions in the Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) collection:

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

1932

Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

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

1937

Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


Searching for more yearbooks in California?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online California yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.